The Whitewright Sun (Whitewright, Tex.), Vol. 72, No. 44, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 7, 1957 Page: 3 of 8
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PAGE THREE
THE WHITEWRIGHT SUN, WHITEWRIGHT, TEXAS
Thursday, November 7, 1957
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Sell it with a Sun. Want Ad.
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See Us For Dependable
INSURANCE
19
In Sound Stock Companies
FAMILIES STAY JUMP AHEAD OF
• FIRE AND WINDSTORM
BANKRUPTCY, EXPERTS REPORT
• PERSONAL FLOATER
• CARGO INSURANCE
A Want Ad wlil get results for you.
0
NOTICE!
ate
3’/i%
COMPOUNDED SEMI-ANNUALLY
$
SHERMAN SAVINGS &
PHONE 3672
SHERMAN, TEXAS
tete
ill
Our dividend rate on all Savings and Investment
Accounts is now . . .
All accounts received by the 10th of any month are
credited from the 1st.
Each account is fully insured to $10,000.00 by the
Federal Savings & Loan Insurance Corp., Wash-
ington, D. C.
Woman, 73, Wins Out
Over Taxes—Can’t Pay
CAN YOU PUSH A BUTTON? THEN
YOU CAN DRIVE '58 MODEL CARS
loses his job or is incapacitated by
illness.
THESE PANTS JUST
WON’T AID FIREMEN
• COMPENSATION
• FARMERS’ COMPREHENSIVE
LIABILITY
• HAIL INSURANCE
• AUTOMOBILE:
COMPREHENSIVE
PERSONAL LIABILITY
REPORT TELLS
WHY SCIENCES
ATTRACT FEW
•53 FORD TRUCKS—
FIRST
WITH THE FEATURES
THAT COUNT!
NEW '58 FORD PICKUP ...
Modern Styleside body is as wide as
the cab and standard at no extra cost!
NEW '58 FORD RANCHERO ...
America’s first work-or-play truck!
LOAN ASSOCIATION
213 N. TRAVIS
tel
WHITEWRIGHT MOTOR COMPANY
Whitewright, Texas
STEPHENS & BRYANT
INSURANCE & REAL ESTATE
Phone FO 4-2220 May Badgett, Notary Public
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CITATION No. 64801
THE STATE OF TEXAS.
To: LILLIAN ESTELLE SPOON, Greeting:
You are commanded to appear by filing a
written answer to 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 9th day of December, A. D., 1957,
at or before 10 o’clock A. M., before the Hon-
orable 15th Judicial District Court of Grayson
County, at the Court House in Sherman, Texas.
Said plaintiff’s petition was filed on the 22nd
day of October, 1957. The file number of said
suit being No. 64801.
The names of the parties in said suit are:
BOBBY JOE SPOON as Plaintiff, and LIL-
LIAN ESTELLE SPOON as Defendant.
The nature of said suit being substantially
as follows, to-wit:
Divorce on the grounds of cruel treatment.
If this Citation is not served within 90 days
after the date of Its issuance, it shall be re-
turned unserved.
Issued this the 22nd day of October, A. D.,
1957.
Given under my hand and seal of said Court,
at office in Sherman, Texas, this the 22nd day
of October, A. D., 1957.
S. V. EARNEST, Clerk,
District Court, Grayson County, Texas.
By GLADYS HAMILTON, Deputy.
(Published in The Whitewright Sun October
31, and November 7, 14 and 21, 1957.)
the money must immediately be paid
out to cover bills and demands for
the family’s current subsistence.”
Olson said many families “have a
financial sword of damocles hanging
over them.”
“How can they ever achieve peace
of mind or family tranquility under
situations like this?” he asked.
Even with the continuing inflation,
Miss White and Olson agreed, there
are concrete steps families may take
in order to ward off catastrophe.
Miss White emphasized the need
for sound personal money-manage-
ment—based on a practical budget
and recognition of the fact that “out-
go must never exceed income.”
CHICAGO.—The average Ameri-
can family is only three months from
bankruptcy, two experts have agreed.
The experts are Helen White, exec-
utive secretary of the National Thrift
Committee, and Jack Olson, vice
president in charge of the disability
department of the Combined Insur-
ance Company of America, Chicago.
Their comments, released in con-
nection with National Thrift Week,
was based on a recent survey—con-
ducted by leading insurance com-
panies—on the financial standing of
middle class American families.
The survey showed, they said, that
the average family is just 90 days
from disaster, financially-speaking.
Only a few families accumulate a
financial cushion to carry them be-
ll BE.6U1Y »
i $
NEW TILT CAB
TRUCKS...
Lowest-priced*
Tilt Cab line
in America!
NEW capacity! Extra-wide
Styleside pickup bodies have
23% more loadspace than any
other competitive pickups . . .
biggest loadspace per dollarl*
NEW easy ride! Scientific
Impact-O-Graph ride tests have
proved amazing superiority of
Ford's suspension over competitive
pickups ... a ride mighty close
to that of a carl
NEWcomfort! Driverized Cabs
have non-sag seat springing, sus-
pended pedals and weather-
protected inboard steps.
THE BIG FLEETS BUY MORE FORD TRUCKS THAN ANY OTHER MAKE!
FORD TRUCKS COST LESS
... LESS TO OWN ...LESS TO RUN... LAST LONGER, TOO!
Criticizes Practice
The survey showed, Miss White and
Oson said, that this payday-to-payday
form of financial existence is taking a
psychological and sociological toll. It
creates marital strains between hus-
band and wife, plus anxiety and ten-
sion among children.
“The results of the survey repre-
sent up-to-date proof that many fam-
ilies have little or no reserve to tide
themselves over an emergency that
suddenly cuts off current earnings,”
said Miss White.
“In many instances, the family’s
paycheck undergoes a lateral pass the
minute it is picked up at the payroll
office. The check is cashed or de-
yond this point if the breadwinner ‘ posited in a checking account—but
and low-
do not stimulate
INVITING THE UNDERTAKER-
CI
HR
CHICAGO. — The federal govern-
ment has given up; after nine years
of trying, to collect income taxes from
a 73-year-old woman inventor and
engineer.
Two government suits to collect
$4,056 in taxes from Mrs. Irene Whet-
stone for the years 1947 through 1951
have been dismissed in U. S. District
Court. Donald S. Lowitz, assistant
U. S. attorney, in asking for dismissal,
told Judge Joseph Sam Perry that
Mrs. Whetstone is broke.
Mrs. Whetstone started her fight to
withhold tax payments in 1948, con-
tending that income taxes are uncon-
stitutional because part of the sum
collected goes for foreign aid.
Some 200 hearings have been held
and Mrs. Whetstone was once sent to
jail for two days by Judge Perry aft-
er she ignored a court order directing
her to appear before the director of
internal revenue with her tax rec-
ords.
Lowitz said Mrs. Whetstone from
1943 to 1951 paid $10 a year income
taxes, making the payments only to
file counterclaims against the govern-
ment.
Her suit against the government
for recovery of the $1,891 tax she had
paid and for removal of a property
lien against her for $1,389 she had not
paid was dismissed in federal court.
The dismissal was upheld by the Cir-
cuit Court of Appeals. Mrs. Whet-
stone appealed to the U. S. Supreme
Court, which refused to review.
Lowitz told Judge Perry the gov-
ernment was interested in establish-
ing the principle that taxes are con-
stitutional, and that Mrs. Whetstone
had advised the Justice Department
she had no funds.
NEW power! Powerful, more
rugged V-8 engines! And only
Ford offers Short Stroke economy
in both Six and V-81
NEW safety! "Safety Vision"
dual headlights . . . Lifeguard
steering wheel . . . and double-
grip <joor locks . . . standard on
all Ford trucks!
NE IV "fine car” conveniences!
Ranchero offers all power assists,
even power windows and air con-
ditioning, factory-installed, at
Ford's low prices.
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will be free for other things on long
driver. In case of desired speed
changes, a touch on the accelerator or
brake frees the car from “auto-pilot.”
One car has made sure there will
be no more babies slipping out from
under safety belts in mothers’ head-
on collisions on the way to the super-
market. A child’s zippered safety
jacket is option equipment with the
car’s safety belt package.
If you see your neighbor backing
his new 1958 car around the block
and stopping every 10 feet, don’t re-
port he’s flipped his lid. He’s prob-
ably just doing a fast job of setting
his self-adjusting brakes. That is
the way it’s done.
Of course, the 1958 engines are
more powerful than ever. They
come equipped with triple-deck two-
barrel carburetors, superchargers and
fuel injectors.
“F*
NEW FORD TRUCKS * '58
rw
*Based on a comparison of
manufacturers' suggested retail prices.
SANTA BARBARA, Calif.—A sur-
vey of chemistry teachers in Califor-
nia to find out why more students do
not take up scientific careers resulted
in a report that listed these seven rea-
sons:
1. Many students just don’t like
mathematics.
2. Science courses are more diffi-
cult than others.
3. High school curricula over-em-
phasize non-scientific activities.
4. The social and economic ideas
of students do not encourage the self-
discipline and admiration for intel-
lectual attainment necessary to a vig-
orous scientific culture.
5. Crowded schools
teacher salaries
science.
6. Student advisers rarely know
enough about science or are enthu-
siastic about it.
7. Lower grades in school pay too
little attention to science.
DETROIT.—Relax, America. The
1958 automobiles are out and their
gadgets prove beyond doubt that Rus-
sia’s scientists cannot match such
marvels.
Never before have designers so
cleverly hidden gas caps from filling
station attendants. The 1959 models
will be here by the time gas tanks are
located on some 1958 cars.
There’s no use looking through
portholes and under taillights for gas
caps any more. Some designers have
even gone to the trouble of design-
ing massive rear and “grilles” and
buried the gas tank spouts in the
middle of this gleaming chrome.
And buyers of 1958 cars are going
to be warned about everything but
the cop hiding behind the billboard.
On some dash panels there are
clusters of red warning lights for gas
supply, oil pressure, lubrication
pump, door locks and speed limit.
The car makers deny responsibility
for heart attacks suffered by drivers
■who run out of gas at high speeds
with an open door and a broken oil
line.
There’s no use spoofing the useful-
ness of these new features. Do you
remember how you once had to fid-
dle around with the button of an
automatic six-way power seat every
time you changed it? Your worries
are over; the power seat now returns
by “memory” to the previous se-
lected position.
The new air suspension systems
will raise the car back up to normal
level no matter what the load, and if
the car has to clear ruts or a ramp
top, just push a button and the car
can be raised by as much as five
inches on some models.
This is also helpful if you run atop
the bumper of another car.
In the new air suspension of one car,
if six people climb in the car they
just hold the doors open and the cour-
tesy door lights start an electric mo-
tor which pumps the car back to nor-
mal level extra fast.
Turnpike drivers no longer need
suffer from “tired feet” with the new
■“auto-pilot.” Just set the “auto-pi-
lot” at turnpike speed and both feet
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with all that's new...costs less,too!
• Meet America’s newest, most
modem trucks—Ford for ’58! Dis-
cover the new advances in this
pace-setting line. See the many ad-
vantages that help you do your job
better and at lower cost!
Then match your requirements
against Ford’s over 300 models.
Whatever your need—from pickup
to heavy duty tandem—Ford’s got
it! And you’ll get a truck that costs
you less to own, less to run and
lasts longer, too.
So see your Ford Dealer today
and step ahead with America’s most
modem truck—built modem to cost
you less.
CITATION No. 64793
THE STATE OF TEXAS.
To: C. E. Harvey, L. A. Harvey a widow,
Lilly Harvey, a widow, Lillie Harvey, a wid-
ow, C. F. Harvey and wife O. L. Harvey, O.
U. Wilson, and wife Lillie Wilson, John Ring-
ler and wife Lucy A. Ringler; John Ringler a
single man, and Lucy A. Ringler a widow, if
living, whose residences are unknown to plain-
tiff, and if dead the legal representatives of
each of said named defendants, and the un-
known heirs of each of said named defendants,
the legal representatives of the unknown heirs
of each of said defendants'; if the unknown
heirs of said defendants are dead the unknown
heirs of the unknown heirs of said defendants;
if the unknown heirs of said defendants are
dead, whose places of residence are unknown
to plaintiff, Greeting:
You are commanded to appear by filing a
written answer to 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 2nd day of December, A. D., 1957,
at or before 10 o’clck A. M., before the Hon-
orable 15th District Court of Grayson County,
at the Court House in Sherman, Texas.
Said plaintiff’s petition was filed on the 15th
day of October, 1957. The file number of said
suit being No. 64793.
The names of the parties in said suit are:
DALE STANLEY as Plaintiff, and C. E.
HARVEY, ET AL (the defendants are the ones
first named and to whom this writ is di-
rected) as Defendants.
The nature of said suit being substantially
as follows, to-wit:
Plaintiff prays judgment of the Court for the
title and possession of the following described
land, to-wit:
Situated in the County of Grayson, State of
Texas, and more particularly described as fol-
lows, to-wit: Lot Thirteen (13) in Block Sixty-
six (66) of Miller’s Second Addition to the City
of Denison, Grayson County, Texas.
If this Citation is not served, within 90 days
after the date of its issuance, it shall be re-
turned unserved.
Issued this the 15th day of October, A. D.,
1957.
Given under my hand and seal of said Court,
at office in Sherman, Texas, this the 15th day
of October, A. D., 1957.
S. V. EARNEST, Clerk,
District Court, Grayson County, Texas.
By GLADYS HAMILTON, Deputy.
(Published in The Whitewright Sun October
17, 24 and 31, and November 7, 1957.)
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not sb
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AHOSKIE, N. C.—Fire Chief J. D.
Linkous is seeking to dispose of a
dozen pairs of yellow plastic rain
pants purchased recently by city of-
ficials for the fire department.
Inside each pair was a tag reading:
“Do not use near heat.”
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Doss, Glenn. The Whitewright Sun (Whitewright, Tex.), Vol. 72, No. 44, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 7, 1957, newspaper, November 7, 1957; Whitewright, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1369171/m1/3/: accessed July 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Whitewright Public Library.