The Whitewright Sun (Whitewright, Tex.), Vol. 76, No. 28, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 13, 1961 Page: 6 of 8
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FORD DIVISION,
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Giluif;;. the most elegant expression of the Classic Ford
Look. And like all Fords for 1961, it is beautifully built to
take care of itself... and you!
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The right tools in the hands of a skilled mechanic mean a
quick solution to your repair problems.,In this fully equipped
Ford service department, friendly Ford specialists have Gen-
uine Ford Parts at their finger tips. And with the newest and
most highly specialized Ford equipment to work with, It’s easy
to understand why they can give you a better job in far less
time to save you money.
Falcon Ranchero... combines the savings of a Falcon with
the durability of a Ford Pickup truck. Totes 800 pounds;
with tailgate flat there’s IV2 feet of load length.
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This completely modern Ford Dealership is conveniently located to give you the finest pos-
sible Ford service—before, during and after the sale. Whatever your needs—a new car or truck,
a good used vehicle, parts or service—you’ll find these Ford specialists anxious to serve you.
Bring your present car In soon and get a special Introductory trade-in allowance when you buy
any new 1961 Ford I
Faleon •.;. the world’s most successful now car. Now, ono
year newer ... one year better, Falcon offers a new
optional 170-cu. in. engine for top performance.
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TAX-MAN SAM SEZ:
In 1785 the Potomac Company,
with George Washington as presi-
dent, was organized to develop the
upper Potomac River as a gateway to
the west.
“Henry, you got your
refund!”
food properly in the home.
Dr. Buchbinder said milk and
water can be effectively purified,
particularly by pasteurization and
chlorination and by “terminal steril-
ization” — which guarantees they
can’t be recontaminated after being
cleaned.
Watch out for an enforcement
drive on so-called sub-contractors
by our tax people. There has been
a growing practice among many em-
ployers to say their employees are
contractors or sub-contractors. This
avoids social security tax on the part
of both employer and employee.
Most of these so-called contractors
don’t file a self-employment tax re-
turn to pay their social security
taxes. In many cases they don’t
even file an income tax return or
else they claim business expenses
not allowed an employee on their tax
return. Social Security taxes are
not optional and they must be paid
the same as any other tax.
Whitewright Motor Sales
Whitewright, Texas
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Ford Division takes pleasure
in announcing your new Ford Dealer
My Neighbors
s
Gathering of the Clan
Buy or sell it with a Sun Want Ad.
Statement of the Condition of
The First National Bank of Whitewright, Texas
At Close of Business June 30, 1961
RESOURCES
LIABILITIES
$774,065.77
$50,000.00
Capital Stock
Loans and Discounts.
1.00
100,000.00
Surplus
Banking House
2,467.80
Reserve for Contingencies.
25,000.00
Furniture and Fixtures
63,000.00
4,500.00
Undivided Profits
Stock, Federal Reserve Bank..
1,707,922.52
DEPOSITS
$394,847.52
United States Securities.
.... 100,012.50
U. S. Agency Issues.
158,586.37
Total „...
$1,945,922.52
$1,945,922.52
Total.
County, Municipal and
Other Bonds
band of First Lady Jacueline Ken-
nedy’s sister Lee. Former Polish
royalty, now a London businessman.
Would have to renounce royalty and
become U. S. citizen to qualify for a
government job.—Fort Worth Press.
Wood Resists Heat
Air conditioning engineers have
less of a “heat gain” problem when a
house has wood windows. Frames
and sash of windows of ponderosa
pine are natural insulators. The
wood resists the flow of heat from
outside instead of conducting it into
the house, as metal sash and frames
do.
Cash and Due from Banks.. 511,441.56
----------- 1,164,887.95
agreed to be a dollar-a-year man.
Under state law, however, pays $250
a year into a contributory pension
fund. Net loss: $249 a year.
R. Sargent Shriver Jr.—husband of
sister Eunice, director of the Peace
Corps. Has waived $19,500-a-year
salary.
Stephen E. Smith—husband of sis-
ter Jean, consultant to the Develop-
ment Loan Fund. Has waived $50-a-
day consultant’s fee.
Clouds no bigger than the clan’s
hand: Only two male Kennedy rela-
tives haven’t been called up so far:
Peter Lawford—husband of sister
Patricia. He’s the actor.
Prince Stanislas Radziwill—hus- ’
In the likely event you have lost
track of which Kennedy has been
called up to do what on the New
Frontier, here is the scoreboard to
date:
John F. Kennedy—President of the
United States. Salary: $100,000 a
year, plus $50,000 a year expenses,
plus fringe benefits, plus pension.
Robert F. Kennedy—brother, in
cabinet as attorney general. Salary:
$25,000 a year.
Edward M. (Ted) Kennedy—
brother, serving as assistant district
attorney, Suffolk County, Mass. Had
waived $5,000-a-year salary and
Food Poisoning Can
Be Slopped
the
the
WASHINGTON.—Between 500,-
000 and one million Americans are
stricken each year with food poison-
ing, a health official estimated to-
day.
Yet, he said, little is being done to
curb this needless sickness because
most people mistakenly think food
poisoning is as inevitable as catch-
ing cold.
Generally, Dr. Leon Buchbinder
complained, about all these victims
do is sigh: “It was probably due to
something I ate.”
Then they suffer through cramps,
nausea, diarrhea and other intes-
tinal discomfort with a “fatalistic
attitude”—ignorant of the fact such
illness can be prevented.
Dr. Buchbinder assailed the lack
of food-poisoning control in an ar-
ticle in Public Health Reports, offi-
cial journal of the U. S. Public
Health Service. He is assistant di-
rector of laboratories for the New
York City Health Dept.
He blamed the situation on
“unawareness and apathy” of
general public plus “complacent”
health officers and physicians.
Dr. Buchbinder said this, in turn,
stems from the fact food poisoning
today is usually mild, rarely fatal
and seldom affects children. This
makes it hard to get people excited
about it.
Nevertheless, he said, the public
must realize “the magnitude of the
problem” and take steps to erase
this health hazard.
Among other things, he suggested:
—Applying improved sanitary
rules to restaurants, bakeries and
food processors.
—Increasing research to find bet-
ter ways to assure more sanitary
food preparation and packaging.
—Teaching the public, especially
high school students, how to handle
We Heard
About...
of
and
spent
Barbara
LITTLE LINES
Mr. and Mrs. Ira Fleming visited
Mrs. J. D. Fleming at Ector Satur-
day.
Mrs. H. T. Arterberry of Sherman
visited Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Mc-
Millin Sunday.
Mrs. Jim Sadler of Bowie visited
her mother, Mrs. P. M. Wrenn, Sun-
day.
Mr. and Mrs. Ron Faison and chil-
dren have returned from a two-week
visit at Williamsburg, Va., and New
Jersey.
Jan and Larry Billner are visiting
Mr. and Mrs. George Rutherford at
San Antonio.
Mrs. H. T. Flingerland and chil-
dren of Colorado Springs, Colo., are
visiting her mother, Mrs. J. A. Ab-
ridge, and other relatives here.
Mrs. E. T. Doss and Mr. and Mrs.
Elbert Thompson’of Pilot Point, Mr.
and Mrs. Eugene McIver of Bonham,
and Mr. Jack Hansard of Sherman
were Sunday visitors in the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Doss.
By Margie B. Boswell
Opportunities don’t pose and wait
to be chosen.
Good fortune reads the cues and
needs.
Elation is a fruit of guided con-
centration.
Time implores the mind to open
its doors.
Hamilton
with
Ball
Miss
Mrs. Marvin Smith and children
of Dallas have concluded a visit
with Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Sadler.
Miss Dottie Whitt is visiting her
father, Roy Whitt, at Lubbock.
Mrs. R. L. Sears visited Mr. and
Mrs. Bob Mitchell at Dallas Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Max McCollum of
Glasgow, Ky., visited Mr. and Mrs.
Royce Lay Sunday.
Mrs. Neal Galbreath and daughter
of Fort Worth visited Mrs. Myrtle
Menasco Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Whipple and
Mrs. Ray Boatwright and children
spent the weekend in Lubbock with
relatives.
Mr. and cMrs. J. M. Jarvis, Mrs.
Frank Whitworth and Mrs. J. U.
Jarvis visited relatives at Leonard
Sunday.
B. F. Blanton of Denison
the weekend with Mr.
Frank Smith on route 3.
the Smith home Sunday
Woody Blanton of Denison, Mr. and
Mrs. Grover Smith and children,
Don and Kay, and Gaynel Smith of
Sherman, and Mr. and Mrs. Clyde
Stephens of Leonard.
The Rex Ray Circle of the Baptist
Missionary Society met Monday with
Mrs. L. R. Dossey. Mrs. C. P. Law-
son taught the lesson of Sharing My
Saviour’s Death. Mrs. Carl May led
the opening prayer and Mrs. Ira
Fleming the closing prayer. Re-
freshments were served to eight
members. The Circle will meet Mon-
day with Mrs. Lawson.
spent
and Mrs.
Guests in
included
Misses Dean and Jean Pope and
Carolyn Clark of Bonham visited in
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Dick
Walker last Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Hamilton of
Dallas spent Sunday with Misses
Winnie and Sallye Hamilton.
Recent visitors in the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Jim Grider were Mr. and
Mrs. Aubrey Rangsly and son of
Corpus Christi.
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Billner
Sherman spent Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. W. J. Billner.
Weekend visitors in the home of
Mr. and Mrs. O. E. Head included
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Burden and
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Burden Jr.
and children of Littlefield, D. H.
Head of Dallas, Orval Head of Ft.
Sill, Okla., Mr. and Mrs. Jack Hicks
and Mr. and Mrs. Dick Gibson of
Sherman, and Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Faulkner of Abilene.
Miss Barbara Lumpkins
Sunday in Fort Worth with Mr. and
Mrs. H. M. Crouch.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Ball and
children of Dallas and Miss Leta
Ball of Tom Bean visited Mr. and
Mrs. Leon Ball Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Ross of Dallas
visited his mother, Mrs. C. N. Ross,
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Jap Turner and
children of Bokchita, Okla., visited
Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Whipple Sunday.
David and John Jones of Sherman
are visiting Mr. and Mrs. Alton
Bowen.
Thursday, July 13, 1961
PAGE SIX
THE WHITEWRIGHT SUN, WHITEWRIGHT, TEXAS
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Doss, Glenn. The Whitewright Sun (Whitewright, Tex.), Vol. 76, No. 28, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 13, 1961, newspaper, July 13, 1961; Whitewright, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1369351/m1/6/?q=%221961-07%22: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Whitewright Public Library.