The Whitewright Sun (Whitewright, Tex.), Vol. 77, No. 10, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 8, 1962 Page: 4 of 8
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THURSDAY, MARCH 8, 1962
THE WHITEWRIGHT SUN, WHITEWRIGHT, TEXAS
PAGE FOUR
The SPICE of LIFE
Churches
NEW YORK, March 4
word
Plastic violins have been made that
SPRING Is Coming
WE HAVE ALL YOUR NEEDS IN
GARDENING AND FENCING
HOES, RAKES, WATER HOSE, SPADES, ETC.
9 x 12 Rugs
Paint
COME IN AND SEE THE NEW 1962
NORGE REFRIGERATORS
STILL TOUGH JOB
NOW ON DISPLAY
WHEN YOU NEED HARDWARE, COME TO
COOK HARDWARE
Phone FO 4-2650
"llseye
MS
J
4 6-oz. Can
35c
12-oz. Can
HORMEL
Reg. Size
49c
SPAM
25c
Quart Size
Giant Size
AJAX
CLEANSER
21c
6-oz. Jar
12-Count
BREMMER
Jumbo Pies W©
U. S. D. A. GRADED
Pound
LOIN, T-BONE 75*
Pint
TRIUMPH
ALCOHOL
IOC
DECKER’S ALL-MEAT
Attend Church Sunday.
FROZEN FOODS
PRODUCE
ROBINSON’S
NO. 1 RED
10-Lb. Bag
FOOD STORE
Potatoes 39c
FRESH
Friday &
Saturday
6-oz. Can
2 <»' 15c
4
WE GIVE S & H GREEN STAMPS
4
k—3
GRAPE
FRUIT
SHURFINE
Lemonade 10c
SMOKE MORE,
LIVE LONGER,
REPORT SAYS
91,000 Died In
Accidents Last Year
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
Sunday School, 10 A. M.
Worship Service, 11 A. M.
The Missionary Society will meet
Monday, 2:30 P. M. with Mrs. Floyd
Bassett as hostess; and Miss Ruth
Cox, leader.
We invite you to worship with us,
if you will.
CENTRAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH
Preaching services on the first and
third Sundays of each month at 11
a.m. by David Breeding.
INCREASE IN CRIME
REPORTED IN U. S.
' FOOD KING
Shortening
HAWAIIAN
Punch
Patience!
Coed — “Stop that man. He tried
to kiss me.”
Ed — “Aw shut up. There’ll be
another one along in a minute.”
Candid Comment
To some people, prosperity is the
period between the last installment
payment and the next down pay-
ment.
When man was first made, he was
given only 20 years of normal sex
life. Naturally he was horrified. Only
20 years!
The monkey, too, was given 20
years, but replied: “10 years is plen-
ty.” So man asked for the monkey’s
other 10 years and it was given to
him.
The lion was also given 20 years,
but he, too, said he only needed 10.
Again man asked for the other 10,
and the lion roared, “Of course.”
Then came the donkey and he also
was given 20 years, but like the other
animals, 10 years was enough, and
again man asked for the extra 10
years and got them.
Now this explains why man today
has 20 years of normal sex life, then
10 years of monkeying around, 10
years of lion about it, and last of
all, 10 years of making an ass of him-
self.
There’s a new cocktain called “The
H-Bomb.” You don’t fell a thing
after the first blast—but when you
get to the door, then begins the fall-
out.
The question was put to a student:
“If an athlete has athlete’s foot, what
does an astronaught have?”
“Search me.”
“He has missile-toe.”
low 50. It also carried a downtrend!
through the sixth consecutive year..
The 1960 rate was 51.7.
Traffic accidents remained the na-
tion’s No. 1 violent killer taking 38,-
000 lives. This marked a 1 per cent
decline from the 1960 toll of 38,200r
the first drop since 1958. Home ac-
cidents killed 26,500, down 4 per
cent. A total of 13,500 lost their lives
in work accidents, a 2 per cent de-
cline. Another 16,000 died in public-
accidents excluding motor vehicle, a.
3 per cent decrease.
Despite the reduction in accident
fatalities, one in every 20 persons in.
the United States suffered a disabling,
injury during the year.
PILOT GROVE BAPTIST CHURCH
Ruben Macado will be guest speak-
er of this church Sunday, March 11,
at 11 a. m. and 6:30 p. m. He will
speak on fleeing his homeland of
Cuba, where he • was a professor in
the Baptist Seminary of Havana. He
is now attending the Baptist Semi-
nary in Fort Worth. Everyone is in-
vited to hear Mr. Macado.
BETHEL BAPTIST CHURCH
Sunday services:
Sunday School—10:00 a. m.
Worship—11:00 a. m.
Training Union—7:00 p. m.
Worship—8:00 p. m.
KENTUCKYTOWN BAPTIST
CHURCH
Sunday School—10:00 a. m.
Worship service—11:00 a. m.
Training Union—6:45 p. m.
Worship service—7:45 p. m.
Wednesday night services:
Officers-teachers meeting—7:00.
Prayer meeting—7:30.
3-LB. CAN
49c
©
FOREMOST FLAVOR OF THE MONTH
ICE CREAM y2 Gal.
Cherry Cherie 69c
FREE SAMPLES FRIDAY - SATURDAY!
Pound
Bologna 39c
ASSEMBLY OF GOD CHURCH
Sunday School—9:45 a. m,
Worship—11:00 a*, m.
Worship—7:00 p. m.
Christ Ambassadors—Saturday at
7:00 p. m.
Wednesday prayer meeting—7:00
p. m.
CHURCH OF CHRIST
Sunday:
Bible study—10:00 a. m.
Worship and communion—11:00 a.
m.
Worship—7:30 p. m.
Wednesday:
Bible study, all ages—7:30 p. m.
ENERGY
DETERGENT
PUREX
BLEACH
Quart Size
21c
I
> I
MEATS
In the U. S. more births occur in
August than in any other month.
One Crying In the Wilderness
“Our economics prof talks to him-
self. Does yours?”
“Yes, but he doesn’t realize it— he
thinks we’re listening.”
If fallout shelters are such an im-
mediate necessity, how come they
give you 24 months to pay?
MAXWELL HOUSE
Coffee 85c
* rnV
FOOD KING
Salad Dressing 39c
WASHINGTON— Preliminary fig-
ures compiled by the Federal Bureau
of Investigation (FBI) show that
crime increased 2 per cent last year
in U. S. cities with more than 25,000
population.
FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover said
the increase was “significant” be-
cause it came on top of a 14 per cent
jump the previous year. Increases
were reported for all crime cate-
gories except robbery.
FRESH Pound
Ground Beef 45c
U. S. D. A. GRADED HEAVY Pound
Beef Roast 55c
L •1
f!
MRS. TUCKER’S 3-Lb. Ctn.
SHORTENING 69c
Literal translation of the
“mortgage” is death pledge.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
THE STATE OF TEXAS
COUNTY OF GRAYSON
TO THE CREDITORS OF T. W.
HOOPER
You are hereby notified that T. W.
Hooper, of the County of Grayson,
on the 17th day of February, 1962,
executed a deed of assignment, con-
veying to the undersigned all of his
property for the benefit of his credi-
tors and that the undersigned has
accepted said trust, and has duly
qualified as required by law. All
creditors consenting to said assign-
ment must, within four months after
this notice, make known to the as-
signee their consent in writing, and
within six months from the time of
the first publication of this notice file
their claims, as prescribed by law,
with the undersigned who resides at
829 S. Andrews, Sherman, Texas,
which is also his post office address.
Witness my hand this 7th day of
fttarch, 1962.
William H. Harrison, Assignee
Published in The Whitewright Sun
March 8, 15, 22, 1962.
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+
■ill
F- I
I ; -J
A British executive of BBC, mak-
ing a study of techniques in this
country was impressed with the slick-
ness and perfection of American TV.
He was questioning a stagehand a-
bout the perfect teniques he had ob-
served.
“That’s because mistakes are not
tolerated,” the stagehand said. “For
instance, in a show I was working on
last night the script called for me to
rush out and sprinkle catsup over an
actor who was supposed to have been
shot.
“Unfortunately, a camera swung
around unexpectedly and caught me
pouring the catsup on the actor.”
“Terrible,” The British executive
explained. “What did you do?”
“What could I do?” the stagehand
replied. “I ate him.”
It took the University of Michigan
Medical Center 10 years to establish
scientifically what everybody has
known all along: it’s tough to get rid
of warts. The University’s report
comments, sadly, that “despite caus-
tics, curetting, electro-surgery, and
cryotherapy (freezing)” removed
warts reappear.
After some years of nagging by his
wife, a hill-billy up and shot her.
The law taking its course, he was
arrested and jailed. In the jail he
was visited by his local sheriff, the
county doctor, the prison doctor, and
finally a State psychiatrist. Each of
them put him through a long riga-
marole of questions.
As these examinations went on, the
questions began to irk the simple-
thinking brother from the woods. By
the time the psychiatrist finished
working him over, he was really
frothing.
“Tell me,” said the psychiatrist as
his interview drew to a close, “act-
ually, aren’t you sorry you killed
your wife?”
“Sho am,” muttered the hill-billy.
“Ah nevah would’a’ don it, nohow —
if Ah’d knowed there was so much
red tape.”
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
Friday, March 9,
10:30 A. M. WMU meeting at the
church for mission program and
luncheon.
Sunday, March 11,
Sunday School 9:55 A. M.
Morning Worship; 11:00 A. M.
Training Union; 6:00 P. M.
Evening Worship; 7:00 P. M.
Monday, March 12,
2:00 P. M. Rex Ray Circle
7:30 P. M. Mary Dale Circle
7:30 P. M. Quarterly Youth Meet-
ing, First, Sherman.
Tuesday, March 13
2:00 P. M. Lottie Moon Circle
2:00 P. M. Joy Russell Circle
Wednesday, March 14,
4:00 P. M. Primary Sunbeams,
Junior GA’s
7:00 P. M. Prayer Meeting
7:45 P. M. Choir Practice
CHICAGO—Accidents killed 91,-
000 persons in the United States in
1961 and injured 9,200,000 others at
an estimated cost to the nation of
$15,000,000,000.
But the National Safety Council
said preliminary figures show the
death toll from accidents was 2 per
cent less than the 1960 figure of
93,000, with reductions made in all
general classifications — motor ve-
hicle, home, work and public.
Because of a 2 per cent population
increase in 1961, the death rate was
the lowest since records have been
kept. It was 49.7 per 100,000 popula- I are better than medium-price wooden.,
tion, the first time it dropped be- I ones.
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FIRST METHODIST CHURCH
Sunday School—10:00 a. m.
Worship—10:55 a. m.
Methodist Youth Fellowship—6:00
p. m., and on fourth Sunday of each
month at 5:30 p. m.
The Women’s Society of Christian
Service meets every first and third
Monday at 3:00 p. m., and The Wes-
leyan Service Guild meets every
other Monday at 7:30 p. m.
The
American Tobacco Company report-
ed to its employes Sunday the latest
three-year chapter in a study of
death rates among 11,000 fellow
workers.
These employes, the report said,
“smoke more, live longer and have
had fewer deaths from cancer or
heart disease than the general pub-
lic.”
A statistician from the American
Cancer Society, commenting on the
study, said employe groups generally
have a lower death rate than the
general public, since the public in-
cludes many people in high death
rate groups such as the chronically
ill, indigents and so forth.
The American Tobacco Company
said their employes who were studied
smoked cigarets at twice the average
U. S. rate but had less-than-average
death rate. The average death rate
is the percentage of persons who die
in this country each year compared
with the entire population.
The company said their group’s
death rate was 71 per cent of the
average, and also was 71 per cent
of the average death rate for respira-
tory cancer over a 14%-year period.
The company cited a study pub-
lished in the March issue of Indus-
trial Medicine and Surgery'. It was
written by Robert K. Heimann of the
American Tobacco Company and Ja-
cob Cohen of New York University.
They said, “These results are in
direct opposition to the hypothesis
that cigaret smoking causes higher
mortality rates generally and for
lung cancer and, or heart disease.”
“How long will it take to pull my
tooth?” the patient asked the dentist.
“Only two seconds.”
“How much will it cost?”
“Five dollars.”
“For only two seconds work!”
“Well,” the dentist answered cool-
ly. “I can pull it very slowly if you
prefer.”
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Doss, Glenn. The Whitewright Sun (Whitewright, Tex.), Vol. 77, No. 10, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 8, 1962, newspaper, March 8, 1962; Whitewright, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1369384/m1/4/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Whitewright Public Library.