The Whitewright Sun (Whitewright, Tex.), Vol. 75, No. 20, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 19, 1960 Page: 4 of 8
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PAGE FOtfR
Thursday, May 19, I960'
THE WHITEWRIGHT SUN, WHITEWRIGHT, TEXAS
The Liar and ihe Hypocrite
About Your
HEALTH
according
to
and
"0
has met
FARMERS!
West's Leaders
Don’t Take Chances! Buy
Review Summit
LAW TO PROTECT SICK
Hail Insurance
On Your Crops Now!
S. H. MONTGOMERY AGENCY
age
“INSURANCE THAT INSURES”
GIVEN NEW LIFE
Consult Your Insurance Agent as You Would Your Doctor or Lawyer
£
the
he
I s
' V Ii
/
SEE US FOR ALL KINDS OF
FARM SEED & FEED
Electricity is your better way
WE HAVE A FULL LINE OF
To Reach
to cook...because it’s FAST
the
When minutes count, you’ll appreciate the speed of electric cooking.
High-speed surface units
Public
instantly . . . reach full heat in seconds . . . cook as fast as food will
CUSTOM GRINDING
Quickly
cook. Electric oven cooking is fast, too. An electric oven is insulated
on all six sides to keep heat inside for fast, sure baking and roasting.
and
And the electric broiler needs no pre-heating . . . cooks broiled
Our FARLEY FEEDS
Economically
for a modern electric range.
Use
Cook better . . . live better
Sun
HEADQUARTERS FOR FERTILIZER!
D
electrically!
Pascal Farley
Advertising
LOKEY EDWARDS, District Manager
Governor Offers
Warmed-Over Plan
To Raise Revenue
American Legion
Convention To Be At
Sherman May 21-22
Let us grind and mix your feed and add molasses, giving
you a palatable, nourishing feed at low cost. Check our
prices on meal and molasses.
Saves time
at mealtime!
RATTLESNAKE CLOGS UP
HER WASHING MACHINE
is
for
SUN-GLO FEEDS
FOR HOGS, DAIRY CATTLE, RANGE
CATTLE AND POULTRY
govern-
that
gp
r
lie declaration Wednesday about the
events of the last three days. They
left the public scene almost entirely
to Khrushchev.
on today’s electric ranges start heating
A weekly public service feature from*
z the Texas State Department of Health.
A machine which makes graphs of
sound is being used to record pic-
tures of birds’ voices. Studies of the
graphs at Cornell University are dis-
closing similarities between bird
music and human music.
f m
SHERMAN. — Legionnaires
Auxiliary members from the First,
Third, Fourth, Fifth, Twelfth, and
Twenty-second Districts, comprising
the First Division of The American
Legion, will assemble here on Sat-
urday and Sunday, May 21-22, for
PARIS. — President Eisenhower
and his two Western partners en-
gaged Wednesday in a sober post-
mortem on the hopes each had placed
in the abortive summit meeting with
Soviet Premier Khruschev.
Presidential Press Secretary James
C. Hagerty announced that Eisen-
hower would leave Paris for Lisbon
at 7:45 a. m. Thursday, advancing his
visit there by four days. He was
scheduled* to remain overnight in
Lisbon, returning to Washington Fri-
day.
President Eisenhower’s mood, ac-
cording to highly placed Western
diplomats, was divided between an-
_ger at Khrushchev’s insults and dis-
appointment over the missed chance
to end his administration with a ma-
jor contribution to world peace.
None of the Western leaders came
to Paris with illusions concerning the
likelihood of far-reaching settlements
of major problems. The gap be-
tween the Eastern and Western posi-
tions was too great. But it had been
anticipated that a week of talks with
the Soviet leader might pave the way
for a gradual improvement of the at-
mosphere.
British Prime Minister Macmillan,
too, had devoted much of his time,
talent and energy to the task of re-
ducing East-West tensions, begin-
ning with his trip to Moscow in Feb-
ruary-March 1959. Tuesday, he saw
the substantial hopes engendered by
that diplomatic reconnaissance crash
to earth.
Perhaps the most philosophical at-
titude was that of President Charles
de Gaulle of France. In a sense, his
were the most ambitious hopes—no
less than the gradual return of Rus-
sia to the European family of nations
as.the revolutionary bite of Bolshev-
ism is dulled by prosperity and peace.
But this was a long-range hope—to
be realized over 10, 20 or 30 years.
The collapse of the summit confer-
ence was, in this view, only a tempo-
rary setback in a long, evolutionary
process.
None of the three made any pub-
their annual spring convention, Man-
ning Barnes, Commander of the local
post has announced.
On Saturday at 1:00 p. m. the con-
vention will open with registration in
The American Legion Home. The
registration fee will include the dance-
Saturday night and lunch on Sun-
day. From 3:00 to 6:00 p. m. there
will be a social hour, followed by the
annual convention dance, commenc-
ing at 9:00 p. m., with music by Paul
Brewer Orchestra.
Activities will get under way Sun-
day at 8:00 a. m. with a Commanders’
and Adjutants’ breakfast at the-
Grayson Hotel. The registration,
desk will open at 9:00 a. m. at the Le-
gion Home in order that late arrivals
may register.
The joint session for The American
Legion and Auxiliary will convene in
the auditorium of The American Le-
gion Home at 10:00 a. m. with Vice
Commander E. L. Giles of Fort Worth,
calling the meeting to order.
X.
PHOENIX, Ariz.—Mrs. Thomas
Hamrick cabled the sheriff’s depart-
ment for assistance in cleaning out
her washing machine.
She was preparing to dump in a
load of clothes when she discovered
a 2-foot long diamondback rattle-
snake in the machine.
foods really fast! See your local appliance dealer soon
Ground Corn, Ground Maize, Ground Oats, 16% Dairy
Feed, Corn Chops, and Chicken Feed. Get our prices
before you buy anywhere.
WASHINGTON.—The Consumers
Union urged Congress today to take
fast action on new laws to protect the
sick from the danger of low quality
drugs.
Dr. Mildred E. Brady, of Mt. Ver-
non, N. Y., an official of the non-
profit organization, told Senate in-
vestigators that the rising cost of
drugs and the possibility that some
might be of poor manufacture
amounted to an “absolutely intoler-
able situation.”
(Dallas News)
Premier Khrushchev made this un-
usual statement to Paris reporters
with respect to spying, the U-2 and
subsequent incidents: “As God is my
witness, my hands are clean and my
soul is pure.”
It shows what a liar he is, what a
hypocrite he is and how insincere
and double-dealing he is. Commun-
ists * don’t recognize God—and even
the lowest among us know his hands
and soul are far from pure and clean.
Remember Budapest?
His last-minute slap at President
Eisenhower, withdrawing the invita-
tion to our chief executive to Mos-
cow, should be eternally convincing
that no Communist wants to get
along in this world with a competing
nation or ideology.
It is heartening that congressional
leaders in Washington reacted to the
support of the American President.
This is a crisis but only another in a
series deliberately instigated since
1946 by the godless barbarians in the
Kremlin driving toward total Com-
munist conquest of the world or de-
struction of that world.
The President, as usual,
Mr. K’s snub and diplomatic dyna-
mite with his usual decorum and
' ggk M |H
AUSTIN. — Governor Daniel’s
handpicked finance committee got a
broad picture of its problem Mon-
day, but little help on the answer.
The 34 business and professional
leaders were told the state is going to
be $68,800,000 in the hole when the
fiscal period ends in August 1961, in-
stead of the $45,000,000 to $50,000,-
000 the governor predicted during his
recent third-term campaign.
And they were advised that at
least $62,500,000 a year in additional
money will have to be raised to meet
costs of expanded services in the
^planning stage.
To produce the nearly $200,000,-
000 which next January’s session of
ihe Legislature will need, Daniel
gave the committee a batch of
warmed-over proposals, most of
which met defeat or alteration at last
year’s four legislative sessions.
There was nothing new in sight as
the governor unveiled the tax plans
he refused to outline during his cam-
paign.
One suggested source—a boost in
college tuition fees—was not consid-
ered last year, but was one of the
fees hiked in 1957, when officials de-
clared the state got by without vot-
ing any new taxes.
Daniel himself told his brand new
State Finance Advisory Commission
that one phase of his plan to erase the
deficit was second hand.
The 1959 Legislature “used very
little of it,” he said of a five-point
program to raise $25,140,000, and “it
is nearly all available.”
One was the hard-fought proposal
to levy an additional $15,000,000 a
year from corporations doing busi-
ness in more than one state.
Also battle-scared was Daniel’s
idea to cut out the tax exemptions for
cigarets and beer sold on military
reservations.
And one of the most controversial
items on last year’s legislative agenda
was Daniel’s abandoned property
bill, which he revived Monday as a
“conservator act.”
The governor advocated continua-
tion of the temporary surcharge tax
on corporation franchises as another
source of income, and a cent-a-gallon
increase in gasoline tax to take effect
when (and if) the federal
ment’s. temporary increase of
amount expires.
Other features of his talk to
body he has asked to recommend a
fiscal answer were things he has
sponsored before.
One is a higher tax on natural gas
covered by the severance beneficiary
levy now up in court; another is a re-
vision of the 1951 gas gathering tax
that was held unconstitutional.
He tossed out for study higher ex-
cise taxes on liquor, automobile sales
and utility bills and higher license
fees for liquor, beer and wine retail-
ers.
And he suggested a 10 percent in-
crease in all items covered by the
omnibus tax bill—except cigarets, to-
bacco and franchise taxes.
Citation By Publication No. 12085
THE STATE OF TEXAS
To All Persons Interested in The
Estate of Walter E. Kolb, Deceased.
No. 12085, County Court, Grayson
County, Texas.
Irma Kolb, Administratrix thereof,
filed in the County Court of Grayson
County, Texas, on the 17th day of
May, A. D., 1960, her Final Account
of the condition of the Estate of said
Walter E. Kolb together with an Ap-
plication to be discharged from said
Duties as Administratrix.
Said Final Account and Application
will be heard and acted on by said
Court on the first Monday next after
the expiration of ten days from date
of Posting or Publishing this citation,
the same being the 30th day of May,
1960, at the Courthouse thereof in
Sherman, Grayson County, Texas, at
which time and place all persons in-
terested in the Account for Final Set-
tlement of said Estate are required
to appear by filing a written answer
and contest said account and appli-
cation should they choose to do so.
The officer executing this writ
shall promptly serve the same ac-
cording 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 17th
day of May, A. D., 1960.
J. C. BUCHANAN, Clerk of the
County Court, Grayson County, Tex.
By CONNELL ROGERS, Deputy.
(Published in The Whitewright
Sun May 19, 1960.)
Women apparently withstand the
effects of being overweight better
than men do, recently released results
of a study by the Society of Actua-
ries show.
The study included the experience
of women aged 15-69 years accepted
for ordinary insurance in the period
1935-53 and traced to the anniversary
of their policies in 1954.
In the broad age range 15-69 years,
the mortality for women 10 percent
or more overweight was 18 percent in
excess of that for standard female
risks. For women 20 percent or more
overweight, the excess was 25 per-
cent.
The excess mortality rose steadily
with increase in degree of over-
weight—from nine percent for wom-
en 10 percent overweight, to 30 per-
cent for those 30 percent overweight.
Excess deaths were 20 percent for
women 21 years of age.
The findings are probably lower
than actual for the entire population
because insurance companies only
take persons who pass strict physical
examinations and this study was
based on those women.
For any degree of overweight, the
excess mortality among women is
less than among men.
For example, for women who at is-
sue ages 15-39 years were 20 percent
overweight, the mortality was 15 per-
cent above that for all standard fe-
male risks. The comparable group of
men had a mortality 24 percent high-
er than that for all standard male
risks.
A major reason for this difference
is that normal variation in weight is
relatively greater for women than
for men.
Overweight women in every
period have a higher mortality than
those whose weight is close to aver-
age, the excess mortality increasing
with advance in age.
The degree of excess mortality
among overweight women did not
vary significantly
height.
The elevated mortality of over-
weight women is due primarily to the
excess toll from cardiovascular dis-
ease, the heart disease death rate
among the overweight women
about 50 percent above that
standard female risks.
firmness. His good faith not only
with respect to the Big Four meeting
but with every other crisis has been
demonstrated.
In view of Russia’s broken agree-
ments (50 out of 52) since 1947, he
had ample reason not to sit down
with any Communist. But this is a
cold war. It is a word war, a prop-
aganda war. If there is a chance to
avert a shooting war by negotiating
—even if the odds are against con-
crete results—we must do our best.
It is plain that Mr. K has not done
his best; on the contrary his whole
regime, and that of his predecessors,
has worsened prospects of a peaceful
climate.
To a Communist, there can be no
peace—except on Communist terms.
Even if those terms were accept-
able to decent, freedom-loving peo-
ples, there could be no assurance of
Russia abiding by them. Their tech-
nique is to keep the brew boiling in
the pot. The deluded souls in this
country, including those misguided
intellectuals who complain we don’t
have “intelligent guidance,” should
be convinced that fruitful negotiation
is impossible with a godless Com-
munist regime which uses the lie and
the double cross with brutal reck-
lessness.
BRISTOL, ENGLAND. — Tony
Williams, 60-year-old itinerant work-
er, was trudging down a Bristol
street when a policeman told him the
city had buried him recently after he
was struck by a train. Scotland
Yard fingerprint experts later iden-
tified the victim as Ernest Price. An
inquest was needed to bring Wil-
liams officially back to life.
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Doss, Glenn. The Whitewright Sun (Whitewright, Tex.), Vol. 75, No. 20, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 19, 1960, newspaper, May 19, 1960; Whitewright, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1369299/m1/4/: accessed June 27, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Whitewright Public Library.