The Whitewright Sun (Whitewright, Tex.), Vol. 73, No. 26, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 26, 1958 Page: 6 of 8
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PAGE SIX
THE WHITEWRIGHT SUN, WHITEWRIGHT, TEXAS
Thursday, June 26, 1958
IT'S ALL IN A POINT OF VIEW
We Heard
&gg****^
About...
is
of Houston
a
says
winner of
r
Primer in Economics
in
Adding Machine Paper.—The Sun.
V8 WITH VITAMINS!
When you feel the full-blown vigor of CHEVROLET’S TURBO-
you’ll agree that here’s a car with a healthy heart.
And it looks as good as it goes — the only car of the low-priced
three with Fisher Body “fitness” and that fine new Chevy shape.
Try it on the road . . . and in your driveway!
The only all-new car
F
1
in the low-price field.
and
111
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PS
eb
7‘
VK
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The beautiful Brookwood Station Wagon. Every window of every Chevrolet is Safety Plate Glass.
See your local authorized Chevrolet dealer
FO 4-2227
£
CHEVROLET
! - ■■
Q • • •......
<<jTf
HIS EXPENSES
JUST PEANUTS
Mr. and Mrs. Buford House of Ec-
tor were Sunday guests in the home
of Mr. and Mrs. W. W. House.
Mrs. Ed Doss moved to Pilot Point
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Thrasher and
children, Donna Lee and Oogie, of
McKinney spent the weekend here
with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ho-
bart Thrasher, and other relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Pannell of Sher-
man, Mr. and Mrs. Tom Ford and
son of Dallas, Jackie Pannell of Ok-
lahoma City and Weldon Fleming of
Bells were guests in the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Edgar Ayers last weekend.
Mrs. H. G. Vandagriff spent Sun-
day with Mr. and Mrs. Jack Vanda-
griff at Sherman.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Johnson spent
the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. R. A.
Essary at Dallas.
Mrs. Wayne Gault and children of
Dallas are visiting her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Tom Brown.
Mrs. Myrtle C. Aldridge of Hobbs,
N. M., visited Mrs. Olivia Whedbee
last weekend.
Mrs. O. L. Jones and Mrs. David
Price and children spent the week-
end with Miss Jeanette Jones at Dal-
las.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Baxter and son
of Richardson spent Sunday with her
grandmother, Mrs. Frank Phillips.
Mrs. Sarah Kilgroe and Mrs. Paul
Ryon attended the Wesleyan Guild
convention held at Mt. Sequoya at
Fayetteville, Ark., last weekend.
Mrs. Bob Benish
visiting here.
and
Miss
and
his
last
Mrs. Floyd Williams of McKinney
is visiting Mr. and Mrs. George Ben-
nett.
Mrs. Oscar Layman of Sherman is
visiting her son-in-law and daugh-
ter, Mr. and Mrs. Guy Stepp.
Miss Dorothy Hamilton of Dallas
spent the weekend with her mother,
Mrs. Guy Hamilton.
Mr. and Mrs. Dee Smith and son
Jerry of Garland visited her mother,
Mrs. John Vestal, Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Rascoe of Irving
and Miss Peggy Wolf of Florida vis-
ited Mrs. Roy Talley Sunday.
Mrs. W. H. Russell is a surgery pa-
tient at M&S Hospital, Bonham.
OS
In
MB
At
COMPLETE
HEARING AID
SERVICE
CUSTOM-FITTED EYEGLASS
HEARING AIDS
New Hearing Aids
Cords — Batteries
FREE CHECKUP
W. T. May, Pharmacist
PEELER DRUG
Bonham, Texas
EDWARDS CHEVROLET COMPANY
Whitewright, Texas Bond at Maple
Elect Judge Sarah T.
HUGHES
To Supreme Court
(Political Advertisement)
31
X
THRUST V8,*
I
Here’s a gentle giant designed to just dream along at cruising speeds, using only
a velvety fraction of its tremendous strength. So everything Turbo-Thrust does
is superlatively easy, supremely quiet. Ultra efficient too—with fully machined
combustion chambers for exact power-metering, aero-light valve gear for effort-
less “breathing,” extra-short stroke for long, long engine life. Cradled in a more
rigid, road-holding Safety-Girder frame, Turbo-Thrust offers a whole new way
of going—as your Chevrolet dealer will be delighted to demonstrate!
★Optional at extra cost.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Wallace and
Miss Lola Scott spent the weekend
with Mr. and Mrs. Robert Cole at
Sherman.
Mrs. Jim Simmons has returned
from a visit at Dallas.
Mrs. Jim Grider has returned from
a visite at San Diego, Calif.
Jerry, Darlene and Keith Brooks
of Sherman and Mr. and Mrs. C. W.
Reagan of Dallas were weekend visi-
tors in the home of Mr. and Mrs. D.
D. Brooks.
Jim House returned Sunday from
a visit at Hot Springs, Ark.
Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Parker of New
Hope, Ark., spent the weekend with
their son-in-law and daughter, Mr.
and Mrs. W. E. Stanford.
Nowell Waldrop of Lubbock spent
the weekend with his mother, Mrs.
Clyde Waldrop.
Next to the diamond, the sapphire
is the hardest stone.
* ’
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Surratt of
Sherman visited Mr. and Mrs. Edgar
Ayers Monday.
Miss Nellie Brown of Sinton, Miss
Joan Brown of Alice and Mrs. Maude
Smith of Dallas are visiting Mr. and
Mrs. O. M. Brown. Mrs. Jim Hard-
castle of Saginaw spent the week-
end in the Brown home.
Mrs. Charlie Ayres is visiting her
son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and
Mrs. Ralph Judd, at Oklahoma City.
■j
major
cost of
- ‘‘lJ. ~'n
Mrs. C. K. Smith and daughter
Cynthia returned Saturday from
Visit with relatives at Amarillo.
MH
Mr. and Mrs. Ira Fleming visited
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Luther
Cambron, at Denison Sunday.
Cutback: What they should do to
those new sack dresses that bag out
in back.
Estimate: What you figure you can
get by on, by using your credit to the
full.
Deficit: The amount by which your
estimate was optimistic.
Deficit Spending: A term used by
married men when their wives go
shopping.
Mrs. Bill Bradshaw visited Mr. and
Mrs. W. T. Holloway at Sherman
last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy G. Blanton have
been advised that their son, 1st Lt.
James Barry Blanton, graduated as
an outstanding student from the Air
Police School at San Antonio. Pre-,
sentation of a certificate of award to
Lieutenant Blanton was made last
week by the commanding officer of
Custer Air Force Station, Battle
Creek, Michigan, where he is now
stationed. Barry was recently pro-
moted to the rank of first lieutenant.
Mrs. Reta Kincaid has returned
from a visit with her son-in-law and
daughter, Dr. and Mrs. Don Williams,
at Ada, Okla.
Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Truett of
Denison visited Mrs. Adah Gillespie
and Mrs. Olive Myrick Sunday.
DEBTORS AND CREDITORS NOTICE
NUMBER 11719
Notice is hereby given that on June 10,
1958, original grant of letters testamentary on
the estate of W. Y. Coats, deceased, was made
by the County Court of Grayson County, Tex-
as, to the undersigned whose residence and
post office address is 705 East Sears Street,
Denison, Texas. All persons having claims
against said estate are hereby required to
present same within the time prescribed by
law, and all persons indebted to said estate
are requested to make settlement.
Dated June 11, 1958.
ZELMA F". COATS,
Executrix, Estate of W. Y. Coats, Deceased.
(Published in The Whitewright Sun June 12,
19 and 26, and July 3, 1958.)
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Dockery of
Trenton visited Mrs. A. R. McMurry
Monday.
J. C. Atnip of Dallas spent Friday
night with Mr? and Mrs. Charlie
Ayres.
Mrs. John McAlester returned
last Thursday from Community Hos-
pital, Sherman, where she under-
went surgery.
■ ■■■
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Mrs. W, C. Musser and sons of
Sherman visited her mother, Mrs. T.
J. Giles, Sunday. They also visited
Mr. Musser, patient at the veterans
hospital at Bonham.
MOMENT OF DECISION—A seemingly Endless sea of dream
cars, designed and built by boys from all 48 states, await judging
in Detroit where professional auto designers and industrial arts
instructors are determining winners in the 1958 Fisher Body
Craftsman’s Guild model car competition. Winners will share
$115,000 in university scholarships and cash awards.
■JB
Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Martin
son of Port Neches have concluded a
visit with Mrs. W. J. Martin and Mr.
and Mrs. Otto Russell.
SANTA FE, N. M. — A candidate
for the Democratic nomination for
governor in the recent New Mexico
primary election says his
campaign expanse was the
peanuts.
John Burroughs, winner of the
nomination in a five-man field, is a
peanut processor.
He passed out peanuts instead of
cards during the campaign — $800
worth.
becomes a political crime. The
truth of course is that whatever the
other fellow does is always so much
worse than what your side does.
Sherman Adams is right in affirm-
ing that few, if any, of his auditors
in Congress have not accepted favors
from grateful or covetous admirers
and/or constituents. But it was
Sherman Adams who was having to
testify about rugs and vicuna and
hotel bills, not those that he ad-
dressed. '
Just for the record, you might
write down that whoever comes to
or stays in power will learn little
from the Adams case. Once in, they
will watch the checks picked up by
others, receive gratituties with won-
der and reflect what a good world
this is until it caves in on them.
'All Wail
I M
I I
jui
Air Conditioning-temperatures made to order. Get a demonstration!
TOP TV—The Dinah Shore Chevy Show—Sunday—NBC-TV and the Pat Boone Chevy Showroom—weekly on ABC-TV.
By William B. Ruggles
In Dallas News
The woes of Sherman Adams
brought a good lady to the telephone
tire other day tq discuss the 1960
election. “All of us campaigned in
1952 for a change from deep freezes
and mink coats,” she said. “We felt
deeply as to that. Now we will be
reminded of floor rugs and vicuna
windbreakers. And what sort of an-
swer do we have for that?”
Well, Sherman Adams made a
good case for himself before the
committee, but not good enough.
There is plenty of agreement with
him that he had been indiscreet.
And in politics, one indiscretion is
tantamount very often to a defeat.
Remember James B. Blaine and
“Rum, Romanism and Rebellion?”
Blaine didn’t even say that. He just
said nothing when the zealous
preacher said it. But all hands are
agreed that it defeated Blaine.
Politics has been always a devious
industry, a hard, rough life. Every
effective politician tries to find
something on the other fellow. And
the worse he can make it look, the
better he feels.
The worst of the present situation
is that personalities have become
about the only difference between
the political parties. You can say
that you are a Republican or a Dem-
ocrat, but that means nothing until
you define what kind of a Democrat
or Republican you are. A Republi-
can conservative means the same
thing as a Democratic conservative;
a Democratic liberal today has the
same cockneyed economics as a Re-
publican liberal. In each party, the
effort of conservatives and liberals
is to get the upper hand in hopes of
shaping the party closer to their
hearts’ deside. The voter who wants
to do what is best for the country is
reduced to deciding not whether
GOP or Democrat is desirable but
whether Bill Smith is preferable to
John Jones.
That is why Adams’ impropriety
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Martin
children of San Antonio and
Helen Glass of Corpus Christi are
visiting Mrs. W. J. Martin.
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Wilson attend-
ed a family reunion at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Meisch at
Clarksville Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Brown and Mr.
and Mrs. Frank Davis and son of De-
Kalb spent Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Wortham.
Softening: The swell dinner your
wife cooks before telling you about
her shopping.
Consumer Indexes: The fingers
women use for pinching fruit
supermarkets to see if it’s ripe.
Purchasing Power: What you had
before you were married. — Ex-
change.
Mr. and Mrs. Billy Roberts
son of Honey Grove visited
mother, Mrs. Grace Roberts,
weekend.
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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/m1/6/?rotate=90: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Whitewright Public Library.