The Whitewright Sun (Whitewright, Tex.), Vol. 74, No. 46, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 12, 1959 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:
Thursday, November 12, 19591
THE WHITEWRIGHT SUN, WHITEWRIGHT, TEXAS
PAGE TWO
/2-Year-Old Is 'Dimes' Poster Girl
i
last
1
Friday Literary Club
r
and Live Better ELECTRICALLY
You Are
Elected
are
with
LOKEY EDWARDS, Manager
and 19, 1959.)
LIGHT FOR LIVING — properly located fixtures and plenty of
outlets and switches for beautiful, efficient, sight-
saving light.
When you build or buy a home that qualifies for the Live Better
Electrically Medallion, you can be sure it’s a home that is electrically
modern and will stay modern for years to come. The Medallion certifies
that the home is equipped with:
FULL HOUSEPOWER — with large enough wire and ample circuits
and outlets to take care of your electrical needs, now and in the future.
Social Security:
Whose Money Is It?
Nearly 3 of 4 Homes
In U. S. Have Phones
Just call us ... or bring in
your clothes any time.
Ask your builder about qualifying
your new home for the Medallion.
It’s your assurance of better living
and built-in better value that makes
your home a better investment.
WORK-SAVING ELECTRIC APPLIANCES — much-wanted built-in
appliances and outlets for others . . . designed to save your time
and energy.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Meador were
Tongview visitors Tuesday.
Miss Helen Glass of Sherman spent
the weekend with Mrs. Gene Jarvis.
Mr. and Mrs. George Brown visited
relatives at DeKalb Sunday.
Grover Hardcastle of Sherman was
a Whitewright visitor Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Pietzsch and
grandson of Dallas spent the week-
end with Mr. and Mrs. Bill White.
Mr. and Mrs. Buel Range and chil-
dren spent the weekend with Mr. and
Mrs. C. S. Sims at Mt. Pleasant.
Miss Lena Mae Gowdy visited Dr.
and Mrs. David White at Dallas first
of the week.
Mr. and Mrs. Al Petty of Denton
spent the weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Russell Summers.
Mr. and Mrs. Dick Gibson of Sher-
man spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
E. O. Head.
Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Neathery
children of Irving visited Mr.
Mrs. W. C. Thornhill Sunday.
Linda Crawford, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. W. L. Crawford, fell at her
home Sunday and fractured a bone
in her right ankle.
Mrs. J. L. Elam of Wichita Falls
visited her brothers, N. L. and O. A.
Bennett during the weekend and at-
tended the Needham funeral services
at Greenville.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Ayres of Dallas
and Mr. and Mrs. James Ayres and
daughter of Denison visited in the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Ned Ayres last
weekend.
WE PICK UP AND
DELIVER
and
and
Mr. and Mrs. Grady Williams of
Dallas and Mr. and Mrs. John Ball
and daughters of Sherman spent the
weekend with Mrs. Beulah Huseman.
i
Whitewright
Cleaners
Phone FO 4-2933
We Heard
About...
I] 1
11
I
1
1
. . . to look better and feel
better by wearing clothes
that are properly cleaned
and neatly pressed by us.
We do the job right.
Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Carpenter and
son and Mrs. M. Carpenter of Dal-
las visited in the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Willard Young last weekend.
’’aS®
LJ
We use the best cleaning
methods to insure the pro-
tection of your garments
while at the same time
getting the dirt and grime
out.
Joe Meador spent the weekend in
Houston.
Mrs. Guy Hamilton and Mr. and
Mrs. Hoyt Taylor visited relatives at
Dallas last weekend.
Mrs. J. P. Livingston will spend
the winter with her children at Sils-
bee and Richardson.
Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Wilson and
Mrs. Leia Ryon and granddaughter,
Dottie Marie Whitt, spent last week-
end in Lubbock.
The acreage of forest land in Rus-
sia is more than 44 percent of the
country’s total area.
Diving for sponges began off Tar-
pon Springs, Fla., in 1905.
Blgii
Mr. and Mrs. N. B. Nicholson and
son of Garland visited his mother,
Mrs. W. T. Nicholson, Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Brown and
daughters spent the weekend with
their son and brother, Jimmie Wayne
Brown, who is stationed at Ft. Riley,
Kansas.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Collins and
daughter and Mrs. Fred Garner spent
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Jor-
dan at Fort Worth.
Mr. and Mrs. Leon
Dallas visited Mr. and
Harper Sunday.
■
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Ford and son of
Austin spent the weekend with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Ayers.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Jones and
son of Sherman visited Mr. and Mrs.
Bobby Mathis Sunday.
Wolford of
Mrs. J. A.
........V
I *
Miss Percy Darwin of Abilene
spent the weekend with her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Lonnie Darwin.
Mrs. John Inzer of Dallas spent
last weekend with her sisters, Mrs.
Adah Gillespie and Mrs. Olive My-
rick.
A prominent Texas club woman,
Mrs. L. E. Dudley of Abilene, was
guest speaker for the annual guest
day observed by the Friday Literary
Club in its meeting last Friday at the
home of Mrs. C. P. Johnson. Each
member was asked to bring a friend
for the coffee and book review.
For the occasion the home
beautifully decorated in
flowers—chrysanthemums.
Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Atnip and
daughter Cathy of Dallas spent the
weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Charlie
Ayres.
and her mother kept boarders. Ivy
grew up in Bingham, Utah, and from
her mother she inherited a liking for
government and politics. She met
her husband, Roy Priest, on a blind
date. They were married in 1935.
She steadily advanced in Republican
circles in Utah and was active na-
tionally in the Eisenhower cam-
paign. Her present position, she ad-
mits, is a long way from her girlhood
in Bingham. Her homes now are in
Salt Lake City and Washington.
At the close of the review Mrs.
Dudley was presented a gift from the
club and the 'hearty congratulations
of an audience of forty women of
Whitewright.—Reporter.
IF ALL CANS MADE
WERE PILED UP
THEY’D REACH FAR
IllifSg
KsL_.
Mary Beth Pyron, 2. daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. James T.
Pyron of Florence, Ala., has
just been chosen national
poster girl for the New March
of Dimes 1960 campaign in
January. Her picture will ap-
pear on. millions of posters
(above), canisters and coin
collectors in every town and
village of the country, sym-
bolizing the New March of
Dimes attack on crippling birth
defects, arthritis and polio, dis-
eases that affect one in every
four U. S. families. Mary Beth
was born with an open spine
and water on the brain. Med-
ical science knows no way of
helping her. Hope lies in sci-
entific research supported by
the New March of Dimes. Mary
Beth is a sunny, affectionate
child and loves to ride her
new walking horse (left). Her
brother Tommy, 4, is a nor-
mal child. a.-,__—---
NO 12052
IN RE: ESTATE OF
DONNA E. RAINEY, DECEASED
IN THE COUNTY COURT OF
GRAYSON COUNTY, TEXAS
NOTICE TO CREDITORS OF THE
ESTATE OF DONNA E. RAINEY,
DECEASED
Notice is hereby given that orig-
inal Letters Testamentary in the
estate of Donna E. Rainey, deceased,
were granted to me, the under signed,
on the 28th day of September, A. D.,
1959, by the County Court of Grayson
County, Texas. All persons having
claims against the estate are hereby
required to present the same within
the time prescribed by law. Claims
may be presented by mailing to
Frances Lenore Rainey, 606 East Pa-
cific Street, Sherman, Grayson Coun-
ty, Texas.
FRANCES LENORE RAINEY,
Executrix of the Estate of Donna
E. Rainey, Deceased.
(Published in The Whitewright
Sun October 22 and 29, and Novem-
ber 5 and 12, 1959.)
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Morton and
children of Irving visited her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Grover Stuteville, Sun-
day.
Mr. and Mrs. Hollis Ashford and
daughter of Mineral Wells were
weekend visitors in the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Wilson.
NJ
un
U
o
o
111
on the 23rd day of October, 1959. The
file number of said suit being No.
66390.
The names of the parties in said
are:
JAMES LEO MILLER, ET UX.,
CLARICE MILLER, as Plaintiffs,
and A. T. GORDON, ET AL (the de-
fendants are the ones first named
and to whom this writ is directed) as
Defendants.
The nature of said suit being sub-
stantially as follows, to wit:
Plaintiffs pray judgment for title
and possession of the following de-
scribed land and premises situated in
Grayson County, Texas, to-wit:
Being a part or portion of 1000
acre Survey originally granted to W.
R. Caruthers and located in the City
of Denison, Grayson County, Texas,
and described by metes and bounds
as follows:
BEGINNING on the south line of
Johnson Street, at a point 100.0 ft.
west of the intersection of the west
line of Armstrong Avenue with the
South line of Johnson Street;
THENCE South parallel with Arm-
strong Avenue 160.0 ft.;
THENCE West parallel with John-
son Street, 127.76 ft., more oi’ less;
THENCE North parallel with
Armstrong Avenue 160.0 ft.;
THENCE East along the South line
of Johnson Street, 127.76 ft., more or
less to the place of beginning.
If this Citation is not served with-
in 90 days after the date of its is-
suance, it shall be returned un-
served.
Issued this the 23rd day of October,
A. D., 1959.
Given under my hand and seal of
said Court, at office in Sherman,
Texas, this the 23rd day of October,
A. D., 1959.
S. V. EARNEST, Clerk,
District Court, Grayson County, Tex.
By GLADYS HAMILTON, Deputy.
(Published in The Whitewright
Sun October 29, and November 5, 12,
CITATION NO. 66270
THE STATE OF TEXAS
To: ELFRIEDE WEIRICH, Greet-
ing.
You are commanded to appear by
filing a written answer to the plain-
tiff’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 De-
cember, A. D., 1959, at or before 10
o’clock A. M., before the Honorable
15 th District Court of Grayson
County, at the Court House in Sher-
man, Texas.
Said plaintiff’s petition was filed
on the 28th day of August, 1959. The
file number of said suit being No.
66270.
The names of the parties in said
suit are:
Lemoyne J. Weirich as Plaintiff,
and Elfriede Weirich as Defendant.
The nature of said suit being sub-
stantially as follows, to-wit:
Divorce on the grounds of cruel
treatment.
If this Citation is not served with-
in 90 days after the date of its is-
suance, it shall be returned unserved.
Issued this the 30th day of October,
A. D., 1959.
Given under my hand and seal of
said Court, at office in Sherman,
Texas, this the 30th day of October,
A. D., 1959.
S. V. EARNEST, Clerk, District
Court, Grayson County, Texas.
By SHIRLEY DAVIS, Deputy.
(Published in The Whitewright
Sun November 5, 12, 19 and 26, 1959).
agiijavv/
John Livingston Jr. and children of
Richardson visited relatives here
Saturday.
Clarence McMillin spent
■weekend in Fort Worth.
NEW YORK.—It’s enough to make
a dog’s tail sore just thinking about
it.
Since the first “cannister” was pat-
ented in England in 1810, more than
800 billion cans have been made in
the United States alone. American
Can Co., which figured out these
statistics, says that if these cans were
stacked end to end they would
stretch beyond the planet Mercury,
which is 40 million miles from earth.
There are more than 600 different
sizes, shapes and styles of cans made.
Americans open about 42 million
cans a year, an average of 940 per
family. And, as a statistical clincher,
Canco reports that American can
openers travel more than haif a mil-
lion miles a year opening cans.
> g i ■ ' ■ L : . < ' : ' 'J; '.'';'-;
T *1 JI 1/1 * MM Alli M ■
in uour new home tdans*. .
' t ..L'
CITATION NO. 66390
THE STATE OF TEXAS
To: A. T. Gordon; Effie B. Alexan-
der and husband H. G. Alexander;
Thomas J. Secoy and wife Flora Se-
coy; J. William Perry; Dan Gorman
also known as Daniel 'Gorman and
wife Ellen Gorman, if living, whose
place of residence are unknown tq
plaintiffs, and if dead, the legal rep-
resentatives of each of said named
defendants, and the unknown heirs
of each of said named defendants;
the legal representatives of the un-
known heirs of each of said named
defendants, if the unknown heirs of
said named defendants are dead; the
unknown heirs of the unknown heirs
of said named defendants, if the un-
known heirs of the unknown heirs of
said named defendants are dead;
whose place of residence are un-
known to plaintiffs;
The Trustees and members of
Northwestern Baptist Association of
Denison, Texas a religious organiza-
tion; Northwestern Baptist Associa-
tion of Denison, Texas, a corporation
by citing its Moderator Ernest C. Es-
tell Sr., G. B. Williams, J. L. Holford,
B. K. Johnson, Rev. Westbrook, E. B.
Hurd, L. Coleman, Mrs. L. K. Kim-
brough, last known Trustees of
Northwestern Baptist Association of
Denison, Texas, and T. M. Chambers,
Moderator, and their successors in
office, if any; Northwestern Baptist
Association of Denison, Texas, a de-
funct corporation, and its successors
and assigns, Greeting:
You are commanded to appear by
filing a written answer to the plain-
tiff’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 7th day of De-
cember, A. D., 1959, at or before 10
o’clock A. M., before the Honorable
15th District Court of Grayson Coun-
ty, at the Court House in Sherman,
Texas.
Said plaintiff’s petition was filed
Japan depends on foreign sources
for close to 20 percent of its food
supply.
It is said that Congress is likely to
amend the social security law to per-
mit an annuitant to earn $2,400 a
year (instead of $1,200) without re-
ducing the amount he receives as
social security.
As the law now operates, after you
become eligible for social security
and begin to receive it, you are, in
effect, subsidized for and in consid-
eration of your refraining from doing
a full-sized job for a full-sized pay.
■ Nobody has ever legally answered
the question of whose money it is
that you receive as a social security
beneficiary. If the fund is actually
sound and self-supporting—then it
is your money as truly as the pro-
ceeds of a fully paid-up annuity re-
ceived by you. But if the deductions
from your pay are a tax, then it
ought so to be credited on your in-
come tax.
If it is figured that these deduc-
tions are not a tax but a voluntary
saving by you, then you ought to
have the right to refuse to save in
this way and save in some other plan
more suitable to your investment in-
terests.
But, whosever the money may be,
this matter of hiring you not to work
after you are 65 is bad—and penaliz-
ing you for working after 65 is still
worse.—Dallas News.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Farmer and son
of Dallas visited Mr. and Mrs.
Drewie Caylor Sunday.
WASHINGTON.—Nearly three of
every four households have ’ tele-
phones, the Census Bureau said Mon-
day.
It estimated that as of March about
36,500,000 households, or about 73
percent of the national total, had tel-
ephone service.
Phones were most common in
households of more than one person,
in urban areas and with higher in-
come. About half the households
with telephones had incomes of
$5,300 or more. The median income
of households without telephones
was $2,600.
Phones were found most frequent-
ly in households embracing a family
group—about 75 percent as against
59 percent of single-person house-
holds.
Mr. and Mrs. Luther Armstrong
and son visited Mr. and Mrs. S. E.
Armstrong at Bonham Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Grady Stepp and
daughter of Dallas spent Sunday
with Mr. and Mrs. Guy Stepp.
lap J
Mrs. Anna Hardy and Mrs. G. H.
Jordon of McKinney visited Mrs.
John Vestal Friday.
was
the fall
The cof-
fee table accented the colors of yel-
low and green in the mums, sand-
wiches and candy. Mrs. H. H. Sears,
president of the club, poured coffee.
The entertainment of the afternoon
was introduced by a short musicale
of Russian music presented by Mrs.
Burgher Reed Vestal. She presented
a “cross section” of the Russian com-
posers who have gained world-wide
popularity. She presented selections
from “The Sable Dance” by Khacha-
turian, Tochaikovski’s “Concerto,”
the same that was played in Moscow
by Van Cliburn; “Kamenoi-Ostrov”
by Anton Rubenstein, and the Pre-
lude by Rachmaninoff.
Mrs. Dudley, who was introduced
by Mrs. Sears, is an ex-president of
the State Federation of Women’s
Clubs and is at present the chairman
of the executive board of the State
Federation. . This was her second ap-
pearance in Whitewright, the other
having been during her term as state
president. In her introductory re-
marks she explained that she always
tried to select books for her reviews
that are related to women’s club
work, civic work, or public affairs,
since her own interests are in those
fields.
Her selection of “Green Grows the
Ivy” was particularly fortunate for
it embodies all three. It is the auto-
biography of the present Secretary of
the Treasury, Ivy Baker Priest. Mrs.
Dudley, in an ususual and charming
manner, gave a resume of the book,
stating that it was in the true Horatio
Alger fashion, being a “rags to
riches” story.
Ivy Baker is the daughter of a
Mormon. ' Her father was a miner
> * Bl
||||f 1 of
■KeSI......
HRB
IISTn i
smsim
Oww
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. 74, No. 46, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 12, 1959, newspaper, November 12, 1959; Whitewright, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1369273/m1/2/: accessed June 28, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Whitewright Public Library.