The Whitewright Sun (Whitewright, Tex.), Vol. 79, No. 23, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 4, 1964 Page: 3 of 8
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THE WHITEWRIGHT SUN, WHITEWRIGHT, TEXAS
PAGE THREE
Thursday, June 4, 1964
It’s the Law
MAY BE THE ANSWER
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Quick!
Lost something? Try a Want Ad.
AMERICAN BRAND
FOR WE GREAT HIGHWAY PERFORMERS
Chevrolet Impala Convertible
Chevrolet Impala Sport Coupe
DON’T FORGET
. • . to turn in your news items
to The Sun while it is still news.
KI
Chevrolet Bel Air !t-Door Station Wagon
CHECK THE T-N-T DEALS ON CHEVROLET • CHEVELLE- CHEVY H • CORVAIR AND CORVETTE NOW AT YOUR CHEVROLET DEALER'S
the next issue after it happens.
42 9157
Older than that, it usually isn't
news at all.
jv. y
t .....
in
Texas
Veteran Questions
And Answers
MAN OR MOUSE?
BOTH, THEY CLAIM
TRADE ’N’ TRAVEL
< time >
Arnold Haden recently told his
optometrist, Dr. I. Brodsky, how he
, first plunged into a continuing habit.
Haden said when he first began
wearing contact lenses several years
ago he had trouble removing them.
“I started sticking my head in a bowl
of water and blinking them out,” he
related.
The practice was so succesful and
refreshing Haden’s still at it.
ment of Science.
The studies showed that, from the
genetic standpoint,man is most close-
ly related to the monkey.
A sheila is a girl in
slang.
SOAKING HEAD
GETS LENSES
MEMBER
TEXAS PRESS ASSOCIATION
PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY
Entered at the Whitewright, Texas, post office
as second class mail matter.
Cotton Chopper
THE JOHNSON GRASS AND WEED KILLER
The Whitewright Sun
T. GLENN DOSS, Editor and Publisher
r i
n
Edwards Chevrolet Co., Inc
Whitewright, Texas
FARLEY & DONAGHEY
Whitewright, Texas
I
Come in and get complete details about this modern
method of weed and grass control.
.............VvXx.
Birth Control Breakthrough?
TINY PLASTIC DEVICE
Now's the time to see the great outdoors in a great Chevrolet buy!
Here you are on the brink of vacation
time. There’s your Chevrolet dealer in
the midst of Trade ’N’ Travel Time;
You two should get together! Object-
celebrating the joys of summer in a new
Chevrolet.
Why a Chevrolet? Well, with 15 models
in four series, what possible reason is there
to look further?
Take the Impala Super Sport
(and a lot of people do just that).
Comes as a Sport Coupe or
Convertible. Has trimmings like
front bucket seats, center con-
sole, special trim—all as stand-
ard equipment. And offers a
typically Chevrolet array of extra-cost
options.
Plain Impalas are anything but. They
come in all popular body styles, including
wagons. They’re dressed up to a fare-
thee-well: fully carpeted interiors, uphol-
stery as durable as it is attractive.
Bel Airs and Biscaynes, the lower priced
Chevrolets, make a practice of
hiding it. All the conveniences,
no sacrificing comfort or style.
Did we mention that Trade
’N’ Travel Time won’t last
forever? It won’t. So see your
Chevrolet dealer. Then go fill
in the spaces.
rsbb
your lawyer on hand.
As a rule most honest differences
over taxes are settled without suits.
But not always. Whenever taxes are
challenged, take prompt steps to pro-
tect your interests. People have lost
good defenses or claims by failing to
act within the times set by law.
The workload of the tax office has
brought on automatic data process-
ing. Magnetic tape and other devices
may store and analyze returns on
each taxpayer, say, by 1970 or soon-
er. Then more audits.
or plane.
WASHINGTON — Are you man or
mouse?
Answer: Both.
Three scientists with the Carnegie
Institution here today offered “chem-
ical evidence of evolution” which
shows that man is at least one-fifth
mouse.
In a series of intricate experiments,
the researchers proved that human
beings share some basic hereditary
characteristics with all other 'back-
boned animals — from fish to mon-
keys.
On the other hand, no such genetic
relationship could be established be-
tween men and microbes.
The scientists are Dr. B. H. Moyer,
a microbiologist; Dr. Brian J. Mc-
Carthy, a physical chemist, and Dr.
Ellis T. Bolton, a zoologist. They de-
scribed their studies in a report to
the American Assn, for the Advance-
Q — Where should I send a change
of address notice for my compensa-
tion check? It comes from some
place in Chicago.
A—You should mail the change of
address notice for any VA payments
to the VA regional office where your
records are maintained. This is the
VA office which authorized your
payments. When you move to anoth-
er regional office area, the VA will
transfer your records to this new
regional office if you request such
transfer.
Q —How do you get a veteran who
requires medical treatment into a VA
hospital?
A — The veteran or his physician
applies for admission which is forth-
coming if he is eligible, needs hos-
pital care and a bed is available. (In
service-connected cases, a bed is al-
ways available.) In the case of a
sudden emergency, the veteran may
be taken directly to the hospital but
someone acting for the veteran
should communicate with the VA
hospital by telephone or telegraph
beforehand to facilitate admission.
Q — Are women veterans eligible
for VA benefits?
A — Yes. Women veterans are eli-
gible for the same benefits and under
the same conditions as men.
A TAX AUDIT
More and more taxpayers are get-
ting audited as a part of the govern-
ment’s revenue collection. If select-
ed, you may well ask, “Why pick on
me?”
Well, you may have made an arith-
metic mistake, deducted too much,
claimed a large refund compared to
your income, had a big income, had
too small an income. Or, you may
have been picked out by chance.
There are many audits. An auditor
may ask you to bring in your records
to talk over your return. Often one
talk is enough. Again you may have
several talks before the matter is
closed. You may bring your lawyer
along if you like, or anyone who
helped you make out your last re-
turn.
Sometimes a federal agent may
come to your home or place of busi-
ness to check your records in person.
Just showing the agent your records
may satisfy him..' But he may “ad-
just” your return. You then must
take steps to payjkor to challenge his
conclusions. K
When a special^hgent comes to see
your records, it may be well to have
Pick a Chevrolet and fill in the spaces
H
# I r~Kx .
This means for publication in
How do you use COTTON CHOPPER?
The Sun is a service institution as well as a
business enterprise. Its columns are open to
individuals and organizations for the dissem-
ination of . news, and it invites all persons to
send in news items. The editor reserves 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 considerd as news.
The promotion of any organization is not news,
and the editor reseves the right to reject items
as news that are strictly advertising. Where
charge is made for admission or otherwise, it
becomes advertising and will be charged for.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
In Grayson and Fannin Counties...... $2.50
Outside Grayson and Fannin Counties.. $3.00
Foreign Subscriptions (Except Soldiers). .$5.00
that the breakthrough is imminent,
he points to a federal government-
supported birth control program in
Washington, D. C.
“Congress appropriated $55,000 for
the first year’s support of birth con-
trol clinics in Washington, D.C.,” he
says, “and there are no limitations
requiring women to be married.
IN A BIRTH control program in
Illinois now—“a remnant of what I
put into effect”—women have to be
married to receive assistance, he
says.
“People are worried about the
morality of supplying birth control
assistance to the unmarried,” he says.
“Such an argument assumes that
people won’t have sexual relations
without contraception, and that we
won’t support the children born il-
legitimately.
“Since neither is true, we come to
the real question—whether it is or
is not a greater immorality to permit
children who aren’t wanted to
brought into the world.”
(Miriam Kass in Houston Post)
A tiny piece of plastic coil may be
one key to a total breakthrough in
birth control in this country, a Chi-
cago industrialist said Friday when
he came to Houston as guest speaker
for the Planned Parenthood Center’s
annual luncheon, at the Houston
Club.
In an interview, Arnold Maremont
gave the plastic device as one of two
reasons for his belief that the birth
control movement now stands where
polio research was 10 years ago, just
before the Salk vaccine.
THE NEW contraceptive — called
an intrauterine device— can be plac-
ed in the uterus by a physician. As
long as it is there, Maremont says,
conception is prevented.
When conception is desired, the
woman simply has the physician re-
move the device.
“There is no maintenance, and no
effort is required on the part of the
woman, once she has been examined
and it is inserted. It does not inter-
fere with any of her functions.”
The device, which has been used
in Europe for years, also has been
tested successfully in studies with
thousands of women in Puerto Rico,
Chile and Taiwan; and in this coun-
try, Maremont says, it is being used
experimentally by thousands more in
New York, Chicago and Los Angeles.
BESIDES BEING effective, the de-
vice is cheap. Maremont estimates
that the actual cost of producing one
can’t be over a nickel.
“I think they will be sold in large
quantities very soon,” he says, adding
that the intrauterine devices are not
likely to be as effectively promoted
as contraceptive pills.
“They have no commercial impli-
cations. They are in the public do-
main. There are no pharmaceutical
companies hiring thousands of people
to convince the doctors they should
use them,” says Maremont.
The device, which can be used even
by the poorest or most unschooled,
requires no counting of days and no
fund of last-minute will power.
“IT COMPLETELY changes the
whole problem of effective birth con-
trol programs,” says Maremont, who
served for eight months as chairman
of the Illinois Public Aid Commis-
sion.
Maremont has been a major figure
in a long-standing controversy about
the distribution of birth control in-
formation and devices to Illinois
state welfare patients.
He predicts that within 10 years
birth control programs will be avail-
able all over the United States.
As his second reason for feeling
There are many ways to use COTTON CHOPPER.
Several of the more popular ways are:
a. Preplant broadcast with cotton spray rig
b. Directed spray beneath cotton.
c. Spot treatment.
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Doss, Glenn. The Whitewright Sun (Whitewright, Tex.), Vol. 79, No. 23, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 4, 1964, newspaper, June 4, 1964; Whitewright, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1369489/m1/3/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Whitewright Public Library.