The Whitewright Sun (Whitewright, Tex.), Vol. 64, No. 29, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 21, 1949 Page: 3 of 8
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Thursday, July 21, 1949.
THE WHITEWRIGHT SUN, WHITEWRIGHT, TEXAS
New Angles
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partner,
FREE
FREE
Babolene
The Doctor Says:
MOTOR OIL
BOLL WORM
By William A. O’Brien, M. D.
coun-
ican Public Health Association
When the aged and disabled have
worm
Paraguay lifted gasoline rationing.
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Findley Haile
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fOR LASTING BEAUTY USE-)
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Come in today for FREE booklet, "Color Dynamics for Your Homo‘S?
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PITTSBURGH PAINTS LOOK BETTER LONGER!
12 to 15 Pounds per acre of DDT and
Sulphur is recommended for
control.
For Cars, Trucks
and Tractors
Vets Learn Hard Way
About Business Risks
Crankcase
Service
AGED MUST BE ACTIVE
TO BE HAPPY
ANTS HARD TO FIND
IN BARREL QUANTITY
$10.00
$ 5.00
100 DEGREES?
PSHAW! YOU
CAN TAKE 240
AFTER THE SHIN-DIG —Wallace Wender and his wife Jean
display their plaster casts following an operation in which a por-
tion of his shin bone was grafted to hers in an attempt to heal
an old injury to her leg. Both casts will be removed soon if the
oneration proves successfuL
■
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15c
quart
Hili
AIM
Whitewright Lumber Co.
“Neighborly Service”
X.5O
For 5 Gallons
In Your Container
Babcock Auto Store
W. E. Stanford, Owner
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Ute
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Annual Premium for Entire Family
Annual Individual Premium ............
Stephens & Bryant
INSURANCE — REAL ESTATE
May Badgett, Notary Public Telephone 20
Your church is calling you to place
your influence on the side of “What-
soever things are true . . . honest
. . . just . . . pure . . . lovely . . .
of good report” to place yourself on
the side of God and His Christ by at-
tending regularly. Start next Sun-
day and let every Sunday find you
in the presence of God in His house
in the midst of His people.
Attend the church of your choice
Sunday!
In Vastervik, Sweden, an apart-
ment house landlord tried to evict a
tenant for loud snoring, and the rent-
control board, compromised by order-
ing the tenant to soundproof his bed-
room.
PHILADELPHIA. — Waldo,
Philadelphia Zoo’s new South Amer-
ican anteater, is quite a feeding prob-
When You Paint With Mound City's
Lead-Zinc-Titanium House Paint
This Modern, Super Quality House
Paint is made of properly balanced pro-
portions of Lead, Zinc & Titanium Pig-
ments, which assure finest paint protec-
tection and enduring beauty;
Its Titanium Pigment content produces a beautifully
white finish that will make you proud to say, “That’s
my home!”
Because of its extra coverage and added wear, Lead-
Zinc-Titanium House Paint assures a real economy in
money saved on labor and material costs, and longer
life of the film; It costs less To Preserve and Protect With
Paint the Mound City Way!
Comes in white and flattering selection of colors that
remain bright as long as the paint film lasts!
• This Summer! •
• Cool vacation lands brought near ?
• you via fine Katy trains, through the •
• famed St. Louis or Kansas City gate- •
• ways. Relax all the way...enjoy the •
e best in modern comfort, superlative •
• meals, friendly hospitality. c
• •
• Your vacation begins •
• the moment
• you board
In Norman, Okla., newlyweds at-
tending the University of Oklahoma
were presented with a bus as a wed-
- ------ ding present by a kind friend, who
day his advised them to convert it into a
The in- home.
company suspected fraud,'
. It had
- wl
In St. Joseph, Mo., two very hun-
gry but stony-broke women told a
restauranteur they were “steak in-
spectors” for the health department
and ordered expensive meals to de-
termine if the steaks were “up to
standard.”—New York Times.
Explanation Due
A merchant took out a fire insur-
ance policy and the same
store burned to the ground,
surance
but couldn’t prove anything.
to content itself^with writing the fol-
lowing letter:
“Dear Sir: You took out an insur-
ance policy at 10 a. m*. and your fire
did not break out until 3:30 p. m.
Will you kindly explain the delay?”
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In Canton, Ohio, a dairy farmer in-
creased milk production by 25 per-
cent by de-lousing his herd with the
furniture brush attachment of his
vacuum cleaner.
In Albuquerque, N. M., when a I
filling station operator ran out of gas, ■
he draped the pumps in black to
save the trouble of explanations to;
his customers.
Reports indicate that boll worms are
showing up in cotton in this area.
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I
In Los Angeles, a butcher was ar-
rested for placing an electric fan so
as to blow down on the scales, adding
several ounces to every purchase.
HOWt ^SHOc£J
L-Z-T
House
paint^
Sun-Proof Two-Coat House Painting
System equals the performance of three
coats of old type paint, while saving
you the extra material and labor cost
of a third coat. Sun-Proof is extra dur-
able because it is made with "Vitalized
Oil" which stays in the paint film keep-
ing it live, tough, and elastic.
PITTSBURGH.—Hundreds of ex-
servicemen set up in business here
by government loans are learning
that being your own boss isn’t what
it’s cracked up to be.
The fatality rate is one out of ten,
with trucking businesses accounting
for the greatest number of failures.
Among the most successful are motor
vehicle service stations and grocery
stores.
The government has underwritten
2,539 loans in the 3-county Pitts-
burgh district for ex-GI’s who want-
ed to set up their own businesses.
Failures have totaled 148 and an ad-
ditional 101 are about ready to close
up.
Veterans in this district have ob-
tained $10,000,000 in business loans
and failures have cost the govern-
ment $128,000 to date, according to
Edmond C. Campana, loan guarantee
officer of the local Veterans Admin-
istration office.
suit are: Cora James as Plaintiff, and
Herschell James as Defendant.
The nature of said suit being sub-
stantially as follows, to-wit: Divorce
on the grounds of cruel treatment.
Issued this the 7th day of July,
1949.
Given under my hand and seal of
said Court, at office in Sherman,
Texas, this the 7th day of July, A.
D„ 1949.
S. V. Earnest, Clerk, District Court,
Grayson County, Texas. By Nancy
Drake, Deputy. 4a4
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ilies were larger there was always a
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The idea of
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MINNEAPOLIS.—If you are won-
dering how much hotter ft can get
and how much longer you can stand
this sweltering summer heat, scien-
tists have an answer for you.
If the temperature were 240 de-
grees Fahrenheit, instead of the 90 to
100 degrees your outdoor thermome-
ter may be registering, you could
probably stand it for about 23 min-
utes.
This ‘average limit of human toler-
ance,” 240 degrees Fahrenheit for
approximately 23 minutes, was an-
nounced at the meeting here today of
the American Society of Heating and
Ventilating Engineers.
The limit figures were discovered
in studies with student volunteers.
Hot air inhaled by the students in
the tests was cooled as much as 100
degrees Fahrenheit in a few inches of
travel down toward the lungs. This
cooling action of the mucous mem-
branes lining the nose, mouth and
breathing -passages, was one of the
observations made.
Although the heart rate was speed-
ed from the normal of around 75
beats per minute to 160, electrocar-
diograms taken before and after heat
exposure showed no distinct signs of
heart damage.
Protect Your Family
From These Dread Diseases For LESS
Than Three Cents a Day—
Poliomyelitis (Infantile Paralysis), Scarlet Fever,
Spinal Meningitis, Leukemia, Diphtheria, Smallpox,
Encephalitis, or Tetanus (Lockjaw)
Pays up to $5,000.00 for each insured — Pays hospital services
anywhere in the world — Pays doctor bills — Pays for nurse
services — Pays for ambulance service — Transportation to
hospital by train or airplane — Braces, crutches as recom-
mended by attending physician.
L.LoRoo Company
EVERYTHING TO BUILD WITH
WHITEWRIGHT, TEXAS
lem.
When he arrived at the zoo, attend-
ants put him on the standard diet of
milk, raw eggs and ground meat.
Waldo drank the milk and eggs but
wouldn’t touch the solids. The cura-
tor offered Waldo strained baby foods
to give him solid nourishment in a
form he would eat. Waldo liked the
new fare but it wasn’t quite what he
needed.
Officials decided the only solution
was to get Waldo his favorite food-
ants.
That’s as far as they have gone.
They have no idea where to get ants
by the barrelful.
Native flowering plants "of the
United States number from 12,000 to
15,000.
Intention To Incorporate
To Whom It May Concern:
Notice is hereby given that Joseph
Herbert Parker, doing business under
the firm name of JOE PARKER
USED CARS, intends to incorporate
such business without a change of
the firm name after the expiration of
thirty days from this date the 7th
day of July, 1949. Business to be ,
transacted at Sherman, Grayson
County, Texas.
J oe Parker
Parker, Pres.
The file number of said suit being
No. 57395.
The names of the parties in said
See me now for your requirements.
I have a limited supply of this poison
dust at $6.50 per hundred.
Compulsory retirement should fol-' life more than institutional life,
low the recommendation of a retire-
ment board of i ’ ‘
trists and administrative officials.
Dr. A. J. Carlson recommends a
tapering-off in the work required of
older employes, with a corresponding
wage reduction. But older workers
should be given the privilege of re-
tiring if they do not care for this
idea.
Your Home/ Too, Can Reflect the
"PRIDE OF POSSESSION"
Citation No. 57395
The State of Texas.
To: Herschell James, Greeting:
You are commanded to appear and
answer the plaintiff’s petition at or
before 10 o’clock A. M. of the first
Monday after the expiration of 42
days from the date of issuance of this
Citation, the same being Monday the
22nd day of August, A. D., 1949, at
or before 10 o’clock A. M., before the
Honorable District Court of Grayson
County, at the Court House in Sher-
man, Texas.
Said Plaintiff’s petition was filed
on the 16th day of June, 1949.
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? NATURAL ROUTE SOUTHWEST •
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Notice of Sheriff’s Sale No. 57280
The State of Texas,
County of Grayson.
Whereas on the 23rd day of June,
A. D., 1949, The State of Texas,
County of Grayson, Plaintiff, and
impleaded intervening Taxing Units,
recovered a judgment in the District
Court of Grayson County (for the
15th Judicial District of Texas) No.
57280 on the docket of said Court,
against H. B. Nevins and wife, Mat-
tie L. Nevins, both deceased, un-
known heirs of H. B. Nevins and
wife, Mattie L. Nevins, and the legal
representatives of said unknown
heirs
for the aggregate sum of 139.46 Dol-
lars for delinquent taxes, interest,
penalties and accrued costs on the
same, with interest on said sum at
the rate of 6 % per annum from date
of judgment together with all costs of
suit. Said judgment directs that a
foreclosure of plaintiff’s lien togeth-
er with lien of the taxing units which
were parties to this suit and estab-
lished their claims thereto for the
amount of said taxes, interest, pen-
alties and accrued costs as appor-
tioned to each tract and/or lots of
land as described in said order of
sale.
By Virtue of an order of sale, is- I
sued by the Clerk of the District
Court of Grayson County, Texas, on
the 14th day of July, 1949, as directed .
by the terms of said judgment.
As Sheriff of said Grayson County,
I have seized, levied upon and will,
on the first Tuesday in September,
1949, same being the 6th day of Sep-
tember, 1949, at the courthouse door
of said Grayson County, between the
hours of 2 o’clock P. M. and 4 o’clock
P. M. of said day, proceed to sell for
cash to the highest bidder all the
right, title and interest of H. B.
Nevins, et al, in and to the following
described real estate levied upon the
23rd day of June, 1949, as the prop-
erty of H. B. Nevins, et al:
Being Lot 7, Block 10, Sunnyside
Addition to the City of Denison,
Grayson County, Texas,
Subject, however, to the right of
redemption the defendants, or any
one interested therein, may have, and
subject to any other and further
rights the defendants, or any one in-
terested. therein, may be entitled to
under the provisions of law. Said
sale to be made by me to satisfy the
above described judgment and fore-
closing the lien provided by law for
the taxes, interest, penalty and costs.
The proceeds of said sale to be ap-
plied to the satisfaction thereof. Said
sale will be made subject to the de-
fendants right to redeem the said
property by complying with the pro-
visions of law in such cases made and
provided.
Murkel Dicken, Sheriff, Grayson
County, Texas. By J. H. Brown,
Deputy.
Sherman, Tex., July 14, 1949.
INfCHURCH
Limited Partnership Notice
We, the subscribers, have this day
entered into a limited partnership
agreeably to the provisions of the
Revised Statutes relating to limited
partnerships; and do hereby certify
that the terms of our said partnership
are as follows:
The name or firm under which the
partnership is to be conducted is PAT
& MIKE TOY HOUSE, LTD.; the
general business to be transacted is ■
the . trade and business of operating'
a wholesale and retail business in
the sale of children’s toys and other
related and similar articles; the
names of all the general and special
partners interested therein, distin-
guishing which are general and
which are special partners, and their
respective places of residence fol-
low; •
Frank W. Ozment, Jr., special part-
ner, place of residence Denison,
Grayson County, Texas;
Pat Aldridge, general partner,
place of residence Denison, Grayson
County, Texas.
The amount of capital which the
special partner has contributed to the
common stock is $5,000.00 in cash.'
The period at which the partner-
ship is to commence is the 1st day of
May, 1949, and the period at which
it is to terminate is the 30th day of
April, 1952.
This 15th day of June, 1949.
Pat Aldridge, General Partner,
Frank W. Ozment, Jr., Special
Partner. 6j28
In Beaver Falls, Pa., a home build-
er cut his expense considerably by
tacking a three-room house on the
back of a highway billboard.
w -------------- t
In Roanoke, Va., when a postal
clerk asked for positive identification
before turning over a registered let-
ter, the addressee removed his false
teeth and pointed to his name on the
plate.
them to
and partially disabled? They cannot! size of the average American family
be turned out to pasture and ex- ■ which has taken place in this coun-
pected to enjoy life, for people are try. In the pioneer days, when fam-
not happy when they are idle or sick.: ilies wcie lai
Dr. Theodore G. Klumpp expressed, way for the
in a recent addre^ before the Amer- j cared for by their
ican Public Health Association his brothers and sisters.
belief that since physiological age is i putting aged individuals away
not synonymous with chronological j then unheard of.
age, compulsory retirement on a cal- I But with the smaller families
endar-age basis should be aban-! today, necessity has
doned. Hiring is selective and change in our attitude.
based on fitness to do a certain job,’ ”T'____ ___/ ______________
and retirement should also be selec-; a job to do they are less of a burden
tive and based on unfitness to do the on others and are happier. All
job. ' j things being equal, they enjoy home
! mnrp IMS tit Lit! 0229.1 Ilf6.
Useless work is not the answer,
physicians, psychia- I and the hours of labor do not have to
-~u—l:— be iong, but there must be a definite
daily assignment if health permits.
A successful large family has or-
ganized as a “corporation,” to which
each member contributes toward the
support of the mother according to
his income. The mother lives in her
own home and is encouraged to do
her own work.
Homes for the aged and disabled
must be modernized to include all
developments which contribute to
the total comfort of the occupants.
Age is no longer a barrier to ex-
pert medical or surgical care. Even
though the patient’s days are num-
bered, operations or treatments
should not be withheld solely be-
cause of his age.
of
dictated a
i We are just beginning to reap the ‘
'What is to be done with the aged ; social results of the reduction in the
and partially disabled? They cannot! size of the average American f
be turned out to pasture and ex-; which has taken place in this
pcLicu iv ci±jv\y me, xvjt jjcvyic cuc.i
not happy when they are idle or sick.I
Used Cars. By Joe
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Waggoner, J. H. & Doss, Glenn. The Whitewright Sun (Whitewright, Tex.), Vol. 64, No. 29, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 21, 1949, newspaper, July 21, 1949; Whitewright, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1331851/m1/3/: accessed July 8, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Whitewright Public Library.