The Whitewright Sun (Whitewright, Tex.), Vol. 76, No. 30, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 27, 1961 Page: 2 of 8
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PAGE TWO
THE WHITEWRIGHT SUN. WHITEWRIGHT, TEXAS
Thursday, July 27, 1961
Who Will Run the Country?
CLEAN-UP - DON'T BURN UP!
Nevada,
e
*TD BETTER GET THIS JUNK OUT OF THE HOUSE BEFORE IT STARTS A FIRE’
Baptist W. M. S.
for
came
LUCKIfS
DON T
SKIMP
J
THAT’S WHY THEY TASTE SO GREAT.
It's All Very Simple
■
in everything else, you usually
Well-Built
BE SURE—BE INSURED!
Quality Homes
ETTES
C
G
R
1
A
Built to Fit Your Budget
FHA
May Badgett, Notary Public
Phone FO 4-2220
Phone FO 4-2973
I
FREE KODAK FILM, 2-in-l OFFER
Banks Largest
Lenders To Texas
Farmers, Ranchers
Texas Counties
Ruled Eligible For
Development Aid
REMEMBER HOW GREAT
CIGARETTES USED TO TASTE?
LUCKIES STILL 00
Mrs. O. J. McKnight is visiting her
children at Dallas.
Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Haker and Miss
Mabel Ables of Dallas, and Mr. and
Mrs. L. B. Kirby of Sherman spent
the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Otto
Cunningham.
We Heard
About...
They’re so round, so firm, so fully
packed-so free and easy on the draw.
They’re fully packed with fine tobacco.
They’re firmer than any other regular
cigarette. And Luckies smoke longer.
Get Texas-size taste ★ Get Luckies today!
© THE AMERICAN TOBACCO CO.
STEPHENS & BRYANT
INSURANCE & REAL ESTATE
The Whitewright Sun
T. GLENN DOSS, Editor and Publisher
PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY
Entered at the Whitewright, Texas, post office
as second class mail matter.
r
Conventional or
Loans
S. V. EARNEST, Clerk,
District Court, Grayson County,
Texas
By SHIRLEY DAVIS, Deputy.
(Published in The Whitewright
Sun July 27, and August 3, 10 and
17, 1961.)
Mrs. Elizabeth Routh of Shawnee,
Okla., and Miss Jewel Clark of Bon-
ham visited Mrs. C. J. Meador Sun-
day.
Leon Bennett of Reno,
has concluded a visit with his par-
ents, Mr. and Mrs. George Bennett.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl May visited
their son-in-law and daughter, Mr.
and Mrs. J. T. Follis Jr., at Denison
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Atnip and
daughter Cathy of Dallas spent the
weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Charlie
Ayres.
Weekend visitors in the home of
Mr. and Mrs. A. L. McCurdy in-
cluded Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd- Compton
and Steve of Greenville, Mr. and
Mrs. Clyde Tidwell and Roger and
Douglas McCurdy of Dallas, and
Mrs. Maud McCurdy of Mesquite.
CITATION NO. 67635
THE STATE OF TEXAS
To: Anson Jones, President of the
Republic of Texas; S. R. Caruthers;
Samuel R. Caruthers; John K. Miller;
James G. Thompson and wife, Mar-
tha J. Thompson; I. M. Standifer; G.
G. Randell; R. Maltbie; J. K. Miller
and wife, Arena Miller; J. W. Perry;
O. H. Dean; E. Eastburn; E. J. Per-
ry; Overton Harris and Hiram
Brooks, doing business as Brooks &
Harris; F. Kohfeldt; Alice Denny; W.
B. Munson; J. T. Munson; A. R. Col-
lins; W. P. Rice; J. M. Ford; F. R.
Guiteau; W. R. Caruthers;
Joseph A. Layne; William H.
Johnson; R. S. Brooks and wife, Liz-
spent the
Mrs. Billy
of bureaus,
no freedom. Your
Your job eventually
Mr. and Mrs. John Jarvis and
family have returned from a vaca-
tion at Colorado Springs, Colo.
Bird City, Kan., was not named
for the birds. It was named for Ben-
jamin Bird, an early-day cattleman.
missions run Washington,
racy is running amuck.
The proposals by Kennedy were to
revamp the National Labor Relations
Board, the Federal Communications
Commission, the Securities and Ex-
change Commission, the Federal
Trade Commission, the Civil Aero-
nautics Board and Home Loan Bank
Board. Broadly, more power would
be given these bureaus in the sim-
plification of them—and more power
to Mr. Kennedy and his staff over
the bureaus.
Congress so far shows a hesitancy
to approve all these plans. Friday it
NO. 12473
In RE: Estate of Sara Nora Red-
dick, Deceased.
In the County Court of Grayson
County, Texas.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS OF THE
ESTATE OF SARA NORA
REDDICK, DECEASED
Notice is hereby given that original
Letters Testamentary in the estate of
Sara Nora Reddick, deceased, were
granted to me, the undersigned, on
the 20 day of June, 1961, by the
County Court of Grayson County.
All persons having claims against the
estate are hereby required to present
the same to me within the time pre-
scribed by law. Claims may be
presented to me by mailing to Jewyl
Reddick Williams, 6706 Pemberton
Drive, Dallas, Dallas County, Texas.
JEWYL REDDICK WILLIAMS,
Executrix of the Estate of Sara
Nora Reddick, Deceased.
(Published in The Whitewright
Sun July 13, 20 and 27, and August
3, 1961.)
IKODACOLOR 0<New .
I »Uexp?3.00-8exp?X4a
1 Black & W. 60c
Writ# for Frt# Moilen. Trial offer with thl* ori-
_ DE LUXE FILMS, MONBOE^tOUIStANM,
WASHINGTON, D. C.—Forty-sev-
en Texas counties have been desig-
nated as eligible to participate in the
rural area development program to
help economically depressed regions,
the Commerce Department said Fri-
day.
The department said designation
means that officials and private citi-
zens in these counties can get to-
gether with the government to work
out development programs.
The designated Texas counties:
Anderson, Angelina, Bowie, Camp,
Cass, Cherokee, Delta, Dimmit, Free-
stone, Franklin, Gregg, Harrison,
Henderson, Hopkins, Houston, Jas-
per, Kenedy, Lamar, Leon, Madison,
Marion, Montgomery, Morris, Nac-
ogdoches, Newton.
Panola, Polk, Rains, Red River,
Robertson, Rusk, Sabine, San Au-
gustine, San Jacinto, Shelby, Smith,
Terrell, Titus, Trinity, Tyler, Up-
shur, Vai Verde, Van Zandt, Walker,
Waller, Wood and Zapata.
=T2tZ-—1
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......
Mrs. J. G. Muirhead of route 3 has
returned from Wilson N. Jones Hos-
pital, Sherman, where she was a
medical patient.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
In Grayson and Fannin Counties........$2.50
Outside Grayson and Fannin Counties... .$3.00
Foreign Subscriptions (Except Soldiers). .$5.00
MEMBER
AND TEXAS PRESS ASSOCIATION
The Sun is a service institution. Its columns
are open to individuals and organizations for
the dissemination of news, and it invites all
persons to send in news items. The editor re-
serves the right to decide what is news and
what is not news. He reserves the right to
reject news items that are too old to be con-
sidered as news. The promotion of any organi-
zation is not news, and the editor reserves the
right to reject items which he considers to be
strictly promotion material and not news.
Mr. and Mrs. Newman Wood of
Fort Worth have concluded a visit
with his brother-in-law and sister,
Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Henson.
Frank Whitworth returned Friday
from a Sherman hospital where he
had been under treatment for a
week.
was revealed that increased powers
for the National Labor Relations
Board were turned down.
Remember this: When a bureau
gets more power, it takes away from
Congress the job of passing laws
when it exerts that power. It takes
away from courts the powers of lit-
igating your grievances.
A powerful bureau set up to reg-
ulate the airline or broadcasting in-
dustry becomes lawmaker, judge and
enforcer unless it is checked by safe-
guards.
This is where you, your boss and
your job come in. If the federal gov-
ernment is going to run everything
in the country, through the arbitrary
rulings and directions
then you have
boss has none,
will be gone.
You ought to concern yourself
about that, just as you are concerned
about the threats of a ruthless ego-
maniac in the Kremlin.
Mrs. Elmo Wallace, Mrs. C. J.
Meador and Miss May Badgett
visited Miss Jo Anne Gray, patient
in a Mt. Vernon hospital, and Rev.
and Mrs. E. P. Wootten at Pittsburg
Sunday.
the unknown heirs of each of said
named defendants; the legal repre-
sentatives of the unknown 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 unknown
heirs of the unknown heirs of said
named defendants are dead, whose
places of residence are unknown to
plaintiffs, 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
zy Brooks; John G. Dameron; John being Monday the 4th day of Sep-
G. Dameron, Sr.; John G. Dameron
and wife, Mary J. Dameron, also
known as Mary J. Damron; John G.
Damron, Sr.; M. A. Daugherty;
Samuel Hanna and wife, Sallie M.
Hanna; Daniel Groman and wife, El-
len Groman; D. Jorman; W. S. Lowe;
J. B. McDougal; Dan Groman; B. W.
Merrill; W. H. Mills; C. W. Pyle;
Munson and Brother; First National
Bank of Denison, Denison, Texas;
R. E. Prince; The Texas Loan
Agency; H. G. Damon; J. William
Perry; N. S. Ernst; J. N. Johnson; J.
R. Handy; Edward Perry; John Per-
ry; H. D. Martin; A. E. Hughes; B.
C. Harbert; L. L. Maughs; Albert T.
Gordon and wife, Ellen Gordon;
William G. Meginnis; Jesse N. John-
son; Margaret B. C. Johnson, a feme
sole; Charlotte Elizabeth Johnson
Pugsley; Mary Scott Johnson Crabbs,
a feme sole; Charlotte Johnson Pugs-
ley and husband, Frederick N. Pugs-
ley, also known as Fred Pugsley;
Margaret B. C. Johnson, Charlotte
Elizabeth Johnson Pugsley, and
Mary Scott Johnson Crabbs as exe-
cutrices of the estate of J. N. John-
son, Deceased; Charlotte Elizabeth
Johnson Pugsley and Mary Scott
Johnson Crabbs as executrices of the
estate of Margaret B. C. Johnson;
William Lewis, Jr., and wife, Rosa
Lewis; James Taylor and wife, Viola
Taylor; Hardee Taylor; Alonzo Tay-
lor; Henry Taylor; and Cleveland
Taylor;
If living, whose places of residence
are unknown to plaintiffs, and if
dead, the legal representatives of
each of said named defendants, and
Mrs. Grace Roberts
weekend with Mr. and
Roberts at Honey Grove.
Ricky and John Nall of Sherman
and Alice Gault of Dallas visited
their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Tom Brown, last weekend.
Deviled eggs make a pretty gar-
nish for a cold meat platter. Halve
and stuff hard-cooked eggs as usual,
then cut the eggs into halves again.
If you’re serving eight people, you
need only two eggs for this attractive
and nutritious garnish.
Miss Laura Bess Rich of Dallas
spent the weekend with her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Rich.
tember, A. D., 1961, 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
on the 19th day of July, 1961. The
file number of said suit being No.
67635.
The names of the parties in said
suit are:
John Taylor, a single man, and
Berneola Gardenhire as Plaintiffs,
and Anson Jones, et al (The defend-
ants are the ones first and to whom
this writ is directed.) as Defendants.
The nature of said suit being sub-
stantially as follows, to-wit:
Plaintiffs pray judgment of the
Court for the title and possession of
the following described property, to-
wit:
Being Lot No. seven (7) and Lot
No. eight (8), in Block No. two (2),
of J. W. Perry’s Addition to the City
of Denison, Grayson County, Texas.
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 19th day of July A.
D., 1961.
Given under my hand and seal of
said Court, at office in Sherman,
Texas, this the 19th day of July A.
D, 1961.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Mangrum and
Mrs. Gomer Graves of Sherman
visited Albert Mangrum Sunday.
So why not be sure when you insure? Get the
expert, round-the-clock service of a local agent to
whom you’re a neighbor, not a number. And insist
that he write your policies only in reliable Capital
Stock Companies, the “Standard of Perfection” for
more than a century.
(Dallas News)
If you drive a truck or pound a
typewriter for a living, you know
who Nikita Khrushchev is. You are
worried about him. You know about
Berlin and its potential war, and you
are worried about that. You are
loyal. You will pick up a gun and
fight to protect Dallas, Texas, and
America at the drop of a hat.
But how worried are you about
your own federal government? How
concerned are you about the fact that
it is spending beyond its means, go-
ing in debt every day—most impor-
tant, grasping more and more power
over your life and the business that
supports you?
Not long ago President Kennedy
sent to Congress his ideas about re-
organizing and revamping certain
bureaus, powerful bureaus that have
life-and-death control over your job
and your destiny.
He wanted them made more “ef-
ficient.” That is laudable. But if
efficiency means more power for the
bureau, what about that?
If anything right now ought to be
clear to the American people, it is the
fact, that the federal government
more and more grabs power that be-
longs to an individual and to an in-
dividual business.
Washington runs the country; the
2,500 bureaus and agencies and com-
Bureauc-
The women’s Missionary Society
met at the Baptist Church at 9:30 a.
m. Monday for a Royal Service pro-
gram. The Martha Bryan Circle had
charge of the program on Rescue
Missions.
Mrs. Ronce Morgan, chairman, pre-
sided. Mrs. Joe Rich led the opening
prayer. The group sang, “We Have
a Story to Tell to the Nation,” led by
Mrs. Joe Bodine. Mrs. Morgan gave
the introduction, and Mrs. Joe Bo-
dine sang softly, “Rescue the Perish-
ing.” Prayer was offered by Mrs. C.
P. Lawson for mission work.
A round table discussion on the
mission of New Orleans, La., was
led by Mrs. Morgan. Others taking
part were Mrs. Bodine, Mrs. Pat
Murphy and Mrs. Bill Johnson. Mrs.
A. R. McMurry led in prayer.
Mrs. Carl May, president, presid-
ed during the business session, and
Mrs. Morgan led the closing prayer.
Seventeen members attended.
In insurance, as
get what you pay for . . . nothing more.
Texas banks were serving farm-
ers and ranchers with more credit
and other financial services than any
group of lenders at the beginning of
this year, according to Kenneth Fris-
by, president of the First National
Bank. During 1960, the state’s
banks maintained their leadership in
agricultural credit services.
Based on the 20th annual farm
lending summary of the Agricultural
Committee of the American Eankers
Association, Mr. Frisby reported that
at the beginning of the year, Texas
banks were helping farmers and
ranchers with $386-million in loans,
2 percent more than a year previous.
This total included $338-million in
production loans and $48-million in
farm mortgages. At the same time,
$321-million in farm loans was held
by life insurance companies; $236-
million by the Federal Land Banks;
$121-million by Production Credit
Associations; and $58-million in non-
real-estate loans plus $35-million in
real estate loans by the Farmers
Home Administration. About 65 per-
cent of the production credit extend-
ed by lending institutions to Texas
farmers and ranchers came from
banks.
Mr. Frisby said that “farming na-
tionally is a $200-million industry
which means that an average farm
represents better than a $50,000 in-
vestment, with many commercial
family-type operations running well
above this figure. Capital require-
ments to operate today’s farm bus-
inesses are increasing and farmers
are finding a greater need for the use
of borrowed funds. To meet this
changing need, banks in Texas have
the job of seeing that the legitimate
credit needs of farmers and ranchers
are met on terms which will bring
returns to both borrower and lender
and strengthen the economy.
“While farmers ' have not been
sharing fully, for a period of years, in
the relatively favorable national in-
come, agriculture is not insolvent.
Bank farm loan delinquencies are
very low and farmers’ equities gen-
erally are in a favorable position.
“As a further service to help farm-
ers and ranchers keep pace with in-
creased mechanization and technol-
ogy, about one-third of all bank ag-
ricultural loans have a repayment
progran longer than one year.”
Mr. Frisby believes that “farmers,
ranchers, and bankers working to-
gether in this way help make Texas
agriculture more prosperous.” He
reported that 92 percent of the in-
sured commercial banks in the state
are serving agriculture’s credit needs.
That’s the kind of service you’ll get from us all
the time, any time. Our worry is your peace of mind.
We’re as near as your telephone, day or night.
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Doss, Glenn. The Whitewright Sun (Whitewright, Tex.), Vol. 76, No. 30, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 27, 1961, newspaper, July 27, 1961; Whitewright, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1369353/m1/2/: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Whitewright Public Library.