The Whitewright Sun (Whitewright, Tex.), Vol. 73, No. 26, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 26, 1958 Page: 2 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 23 x 16 in. Scanned from physical pages.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
ft
JOB
K-
1
f ",
Jtf
ftt
A
FACTORY
p^UOlN
' _>l the .
p
oi
i
I
I
freedom
lb JoiM,
OR NOT
To JOlfJ
A
UN(O(4
■iwl
igt
Si
w
y.-xs
W
■A
:• Z I : '
t- '■■-, _Z ~~
COAtpuL^
Oa//oN^7
STAT^
pS>J0lM
' THE
i^eyuNioM
WYour
■I UOB
%•
_■ 44
•d ■ • JO fl '
{® rCj/Ts fei W
K ‘JiliM
T '/ ■ I
i d I Ls^
IfeOA
wwi ttu
|O V-
■~ “h M '
LV' I i"'
po ■
B'
w
W>7
u‘
Li,A
poiSm
■W^
fefe
J-LU
WJ
l. i
| ij( j’/’d
i/ 1
#
e
I
I?
dOft
TCrei^^Au)"
'"•■ --<jz g4&‘
i
I
I
I
I
i
i
HOW IS IT IN YOUR STATE?
If you don’t own your home, figure out some time how
much cash you’ve put out just for rent alone. Then,
you’ll know just how near you would have been to own-
ing a home of your own for the same amount. When you
find a house you’d like to own, see Sherman Savings and
Loan Association for financing suitable to your needs.
i
1
“HOW MUCH DID YOU SAY WE’VE SPENT”
Cancer Researcher
Rebuffs Smokers
manager
delivers!
ONLY
$
$19995
with aU these deluxe featured f
• Glass oven window
Fully automatic Super Oven
Three storage drawers
• Pushbutton controls
Extra-heavy oven insulation
NORMAL
INSTALLATION
FREE
SEEING DOUBLE PUTTING
ODDS OUT OF FOCUS
• Calrod bake and broil
units
• Four surface units, including
Superspeed unit —
"World's fastest"
$8.95 down—$8.95 per month
for 24 months
Minute Minder with signal
bell
to cancer society volunteer workers,
many of whom devote hundreds of
hours to the “cancer cau8fe,” for con-
tinuing to smoke in the face of what
he called overwhelming evidence of
the link between cigarettes and lung
cancer.
“If we active workers ignore our
own research, who can we hope to
save?” he asked.
“Nothing makes me angrier than
to watch a person take a puff, smile
I and say, ‘well, if I’m gonna go, it’s
a wonderful way to go’.”
He will go all right, Dr. Samp said,
“and there is an excellent possibility
the way will not be so wonderful.”
DALLAS.—A well-known cancer
expert exploded some myths and |
chided cancer workers themselves in
a speech before the annual meeting
of the American Cancer Society’s
Dallas County unit.
He is Dr. Robert J. Samp, member
of the cancer research staff at the
University of Wisconsin Medical
Center in Madison, who addressed
nearly 200 society members and
guests Sunday afternoon in the Re-
public National Life Insurance Bldg,
auditorium.
Dr. Samp said too many people are
“clutching at straws” for a cancer
cure rather than concentrating on the
medical advances that are now avail-
able and could', if used in time, save
nearly 50 percent of all victims.
A cancer cure, he warned, may not
come for many years—perhaps not
in the lifetime of anyone alive today.
And cancer, unlike polio and similar
diseases, takes many forms, as many
as 10,000. The cure for one might
have no efficacy for another, he said.
The speaker turned his criticism
ERIE, Pa.—Twins average only
once in every 87 births but Mr. and
Mrs. H. L. Scully of Erie make the
odds look bad.
They have just had their fifth set
of twins.
Scully, 41, branch manager for
Bearing, Inc. in Erie, and his wife,
Betty, celebrated their 12th wedding
anniversary this month. They have
10 children with the new set of twin
boys.
CITATION No. 64991
THE STATE OF TEXAS
To: S. H. Bolen, G. H. Bolen, Jr., Mildred
Bolen Porter and husband ........ Porter,
Grace Bolen Corbett and husband R. A. Cor-
bett, John Bolen, Helen Bolen Essman and
husband Buster Essman, Clemmie Bolen Tur-
ley and husband G. O. Turley, and Rinda
Bolen Truett and husband Walter A. Truett,
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 14th day of July, A. D., 1958,
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, Tex-
as.
Said plaintiff’s petition was filed on the 6th
day of February, 1958. The file number of
said suit being No. 64991.
The names of the parties in said suit are:
J. M. Bolen and Jessie M. Dereberry, a
widow, as Plaintiffs, and S. H. Bolen, et al
(The defendants are the ones first named and
to whom this writ is directed) as Defendants.
The nature of said suit being substantially
as follows, to-wit:
Plaintiffs pray that upon final hearing a
receiver be appointed to take charge of the
following described land and sell the same
under the orders and direction of this Court:
that after the expenses and cost thereof have
been paid that such sums as may be received
from the sale of said properties be divided in
accordance with the proportionate respective
interest of the parties hereto; in the alterna-
tive and in the alternative only, in the event
the Court finds that said property be capable
of partition in kind; then they pray that com-
missioners be appointed, and writ of partition
issue and for possession of that portion that
by judgment of the Court may be ascertained
and declared to be the property of the plain-
tiff:
Situated in Grayson County, Texas, on the
waters of Red River being part of the Head-
right of Chas. Smith, and being the east half
of the following described land, to-wit:
Beginning at a chinquepin oak on the south
bank of Red River to be run to the whole
length of said survey up or down the river
and south for complement and being the same
land as shown by Volume 35, at Page 552 of
the Deed Records of Grayson County, Texas,
and also being the same land as shown by
Volume 744, Page 503, of the Deed Records of
Grayson County, Texas, less that land sold
to J. L. Jones as shown by Volume 41, at
page 321, of the Deed Records of Grayson
County, Texas, and less that land sold to
Louis Davault as shown by Volume 86, page
633 of the Deed Records of Grayson County,
If this Citation is not served within 90 days
after the date of its issuance, it shall be re-
turned unserved.
Issued this the 28th day of May, A. D.,
1958.
Given under my hand and seal of said Court,
at office in Sherman, Texas, this the 28th day
of May, A. D., 1958.
S. V. EARNEST, Clerk,
District Court, Grayson County, Texas.
By SHIRLEY DAVIS, Deputy.
(Published in The Whitewright Sun June 5,
12, 19 and 26, 1958.)
CITATION BY PUBLICATION No.. 11465
THE STATE OF TEXAS
To All Persons Interested in The Estate Of
Fluella D. Hanna, Deceased. No. 11465,
County Court, Grayson County, Texas.
North Texas Loan & Trust Company, ad-
ministrator with will annexed thereof, filed
in the County Court of Grayson County, Tex-
as, on. the 19th day of June, A. D., 1958, its
Final Account of the condition of the Estate
of said Fluella D. Hanna, deceased, together
with an Application to be discharged from
said duties as administrator with will an-
nexed.
Said Final Account and Application will be
heard and acted on at 10 a. m. by said Court
on the first Monday next after the expiration
of ten days from date of Posting or Publish-
ing this citation, the same being the 7th day
of July, 1958 at the Courthouse thereof in
Sherman, Grayson County,. Texas, at which
time and place all persons interested in the
Account for Final Settlement of said Estate
are required to appear by filing a written
answer and contest said account and applica-
tion should they choose to do so.
The officer executing this writ shall prompt-
ly serve the same according to requirements
of law, and the mandates hereof, and make
due return' as the law directs.
Given under my hand and the seal of said
Court, at office in Sherman, Grayson County,
Texas, this the 19th day of June A. D., 1958.
J. C. BUCHANAN, Clerk
Of the County Court. Grayson County, Tex.
By CONNELL ROGERS, Deputy.
(Published in The Whitewright Sun June 26,
1958.)
i
Dial TW 2-4191
Sherman, Texas
213 North Travis
SHERMAN SAVINGS &
LOAN ASSOCIATION
Uncle Dan from Tom Bean Says:
►j»-*******X,4-*4<*4**4**X********Z**i**i***4 *♦**♦■* *♦**♦**♦■**♦*****♦**♦■**♦* ****♦■’
Veteran Questions
And Answers
I amount per bale from one day to an-
other. I’d like to see a law saying
the length of a woman’s skirt
couldn’t fluctuate more’n one inch in
any one year. It’d save a heap of
money. But with them Wall Street
boys having a heavy interest in the
garment industry, I ain’t got no real
hopes fer such a law.
I reckon it would be better fer me
not to worry about such things, bet-
ter if I’d just go along tending to my
crops and leave wimmen’s styles to
Sears and Roebuck, but so far I ain’t
let that idea git any further than the
thinking stage.
Yours truly,
UNCLE DAN.
Eligibility requirements
for aid to the blind administered by
VA state that the veteran must be
entitled to compensation for a serv-
ice-connected disability and be blind
in both eyes. The blindness itself,
however, need not be service-con-
nected.
Q.—As the widow of a veteran
who died of a service-connected in-
jury, I receive monthly survivor ben-
efit payments from the VA, based on
my husband’s pay while in service. I
understand my payments will in-
crease somewhat, now that the pay
for most military ranks has just gone
up. When will my increase show up
in my checks?
A.—It may take several months to
adjust accounts of all widows en-
titled to the increased payments,
since each case must be examined in-
dividually. Any increase will be
paid automatically, and will be dated
back to the first of June, the day the
new military pay scale took over.
Q.—We’ve just had a new addition
to our family, and as a Korea veter-
an with a 50 percent service-con-
nected disability I’m now entitled to
compensation for myself and three
dependents. I have not yet reported
the birth of our second child to VA.
What does VA consider the effective
date of the increased payment—the
child’s birth date or the date of my
reporting it?
A.—The effective date will be the
date VA receives evidence establish-
ing your entitlement to extra pay.
Q.—My permanent plan GI insur-
ance policy has lapsed because I was
unable to meet a premium payment
when I was out of a job two months
ago. I have a new job now and want
to reinstate my insurance. How do I
go about it?
A.—As long as you are in as good
health as you were when your GI
insurance lapsed, you may reinstate
it by paying all premiums in arrears.
No interest will be charged if your
application for reinstatement is sub-
mitted within three months of the
date of lapse.
A.—A veterap friend of mine re-
cently became blind in both eyes as
the result of an auto accident. Al-
though his blindness has nothing to
do with his service in the armed
forces, he does have a service-con-
nected disability. • Is he eligible for
special aids for the blind, furnished
by VA?
A.—Yes.
DEAR MISTER EDITOR: 1
Wimmen’s styles, like football
schedules, is announced about a year
in advance, and I’ve been reading
that skirts will git longer this fall. I
ain’t paid much attention to it be-
cause it ain’t official until you see it
in Sears and Roebuck’s catalogue.
And anyhow, I been too busy keep-
ing up with the situation in the Mid-
dle East to give it much heed. But
last night I was turning the pages of
the catalogue to see what kind of la-
bor saving devices has been invented
in case I wanted to do a little farm-
ing, and I got over in the wimmen’s
section by mistake.
Right there in the catalogue it said
skirts was gitting longer. That made
it official. Now here’s what makes
me mad about the situation. I ain t
particular interested in what wim-
men wear or don’t wear, but it’s the
fluctuations that git me riled up.
Knee-length, garter-length,, calf-
length, ankle-length, or dragging the
ground, it don’t make no difference
to me. It’s the switching ever year
that worries me. And they never go
from low to high, you notice, be-
cause wimmen like my old lady
would just git the scissors and whack
off a foot or two, but they fix it so’s
a woman has got to buy a new out-
fit. They ought to be a law about it.
Just imagine how it would be if a
man’s pants went up or down a few
foot ever time some guy with a wax
mustache in Paris got a new idea.
And there ought to be a law agin
the catalogue coming out and saying
wimmen’s dresses will be a foot
longer this fall than last. This is a
new form of taxation, what you
might call “hidden” taxes, hiding a
gal’s legs and hiding the tax all at the
same time. Congress has already
took notice of fluctuations in other
things,.fer instant the price of cotton
can’t fluctuate more’n a certain
►<»<
COMMUNITY
PUBLIC SERVICE
FULL-SIZE . PUSHBUTTON
■' '.J
■Hdtoouit -~o=ric
Hear
Sfafew/de Radio
Broadcast
8 P.M.
MONDAY
JUNE 30th
IB
•j
GOVERNOR
PRICE DANIEL
for
A SECOND TERM
Pd. Pol. Adv. by Price Daniel
*2^
!
620 South Charles, Sherman, Texas
OWNERS:
ALMA R. BABB, R. N.
J. C. MULDER
24-HOUR NURSING SERVICE
About Your
HEALTH
A weekly public terviee feature from' dh HENRY A. NOLLE, M. D.
the Texos State Department of Health. Commissioner of Health
people,
can
the
in tight areas
I
It
fowl
even
Time Out
Overheard in Government build-
ing coffee bar: -
“Gee, I’d better get back to the of-
fice or I’ll be late for quitting time.”
not cause
scratching
itself does
harm; however,
Infection can result, causing
painful boils and leaving a scar. In
some areas of the world they are
believed carriers of disease, but in
the U. S., there is no such proven
danger. It is the scratching which
causes all the trouble.
Gross infection can bring on gen-
eral bodily disturbances, fever, and
loss of sleep caused by forced peri-
ods of scratching during the night.
Animals, birds and domestic
suffer from chiggers also,
snakes are not immune.
The severe itching occurs when the
chigger, in its efforts to feed, injects
an anti-coagulant material to melt
the skin layers so that he may feed.
They do not burrow into the skin as
commonly/ believed — they merely
feed themselves and drop off, but the
itching stays on.
They congregate
you | such as sleeves, belt lines and neck-
You can protect yourself by the ap-
plication of a suitable repellant to
these critical areas whenever you are
about to enter a suspected chigger-
infested area.
If this fails, there are known pal-
liatives to soothe the itching such as
baking soda solution, ammonia wat-
er and alcohol.
Chiggers are impossible to control
except in cleared areas such as
lawns, greens, camp sites, and picnic
grounds where the ground may be
mowed closely.
For these areas, a treatment of five
percent chlordane or toxaphene dust
is effective at the rate of 40 to 50
pounds per acre (1 to 1% pounds per
1,000 square feet), and lindane dust
of one percent concentration (10
ounces or more per 1,000 square
feet). Sprays may be substituted.
All are dangerous to people!
Fifty to 70 gallons per acre, fol-
lowing the mixing directions on the
label, is usually sufficient (1% to 2
pounds per 1,000 square feet).
Bear in mind the dangers in
use of the dusts or sprays—use cau-
tion and put them away safely. Re-
member, insecticides can kill; chig-
gers only itch.
If you’re like most
hate chiggers!
Red bugs, as some persons call
them, are those tiny, almost invisible
mites that frequent grass lawns
(especially Bermuda), tall weeds,
and other grassy areas such as un-
dergrowth in wooded sections.
They are usually a light red or tan
color. While a hungry adolescent,
this pernicious little parasite
send strong men into spasms of itch-
ing misery, and into fits of scratch-
ing.
The <mite
much
will.
i"
Mulder Nursing Home
Thursday, June 26, 1955
THE WHITEWRIGHT SUN, WHITEWRIGHT, TEXAS
PAGE TWO
illjlMM
wq
1■■■Binmis■■■■■!■■■
l............:......A.........S....................................................................................
h • "■ ■
' Isbis
!■«
........
-""y«
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Doss, Glenn. The Whitewright Sun (Whitewright, Tex.), Vol. 73, No. 26, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 26, 1958, newspaper, June 26, 1958; Whitewright, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1369203/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Whitewright Public Library.