
Lyndon Johnson on the
1964 presidential campaign trail in Nashville,
Tennessee. (Notice the outdoor board in the background)

Miles Ezell Sr. (left)
founder of Purity Dairies, also known affectionally
as "Pop", is shown here with Jim Varney.
You may recognize Jim as "Ernest". Jim
began producing TV commercials for Purity in the
early eighties.

1963 - A Purity secretary "doubles"
as a model for an ad that introduced Purity's
new "scotch plaid" carton.

1955 - Purity trucks
lined up on Murfreesboro Road, ready to make deliveries.

1952 - Before refrigerated
trucks were introduced, ice was shoveled on top
of Purity milk to keep it cold and fresh.

1961 - Miles Ezell Jr.,
Purity's treasurer, holds Nashville's first "no
wax" carton.

1965 - Purity introduces
Nashville's first one-gallon milk carton.

1946 - Mr. Luther Head
cases half-pint bottles with "cellophane
hoods" in newly opened plant.

1961 - Mr. Porter Clinard
operating the new Sealright no-wax cartons filler.

1956 - Bill Ezell monitors
the new "vacuum-pasteurizer" - Nashville's
First.

1962 - Ray Rottero heads
up Purity's "state of the art" certified
laboratory.

1948 - Chinky Brewer,
Miles Ezell Jr. (Driver unidentified), Jennings
Davis and Bob Brewer gulping milk at David Lipscomb
College.

Mr. Albert Gasser (right)
receives an award from the Civil Defense Agency.

Purity was, and still
is, a leader in the promotion and advertising
of dairy products.

1960 - Employee checks
the volume gauges on milk storage tanks.

1958 - Purity introduces
one of the first refrigerated delivery trucks.

Those who have carried
on the Purity family tradition are (left to right)
Mark Ezell, Stan Ezell, Bill Ezell, Miles Ezell
Jr. and John Robinson.
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