The Whitewright Sun (Whitewright, Tex.), Vol. 79, No. 28, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 9, 1964 Page: 2 of 8
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I
THURSDAY, JULY 9, 1964
PAGE TWO
BANK NOTES
By KENNETH FRISBY
S I
To sell it . . . advertise it!
SLEEPING MACHINE
Adding Machine Paper.—The Sun.
4^
%
PRESCRIPTIONS
Can Earn
Texoma Savings Association
It’s Just as Easy as ABC . .
A
B
MAY PHARMACY
c
GOMER AND KIRK MAY
219 North Travis
SHERMAN
Phone 892-6101
Medical Arts Clinic Bldg., 501 N. Highland
USE THIS ORDER BLANK
Ci
Send The Whitewright Sun for.
year___to:
Name.
Street or Route
4
S
0
City.
Zone____ State.
Please check whether this subscription is:
Renewal
^Anticipated earning rate
■111
You may, if you like, have your doctor
phone the prescriptions to us and we’ll
deliver them to you while you wait at
the clinic.
When you see your Sherman doctor,
for careful
Worker May Switch
Jobs Seven Times
[J New
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
■ Any address in Grayson or Fannin County__
Elsewhere in United States, or APO number_______
$2.50
$3.00
A for AVAILABILITY . .. your money is always available when
you need it, and it earns 4%% per annum* paid or com-
pounded semi-annually beginning July 1st!
THE WHITEWRIGHT SUN
WHITEWRIGHT, TEXAS
Enclosed find check or money order for $.
Texoma Savings offers the convenience of
drive-in service ... ample adjacent parking,
no meters ... modern quarters for your
comfort and pleasure while transacting
your savings or home Ioan business. Fi-
nancial corner: Crockett & Washington.
| B is for BONUS! The bonus of dividends from the new, higher
/ 4%% anticipated earning rate from your home-owned,
/ home-operated savings headquarters.
I C is for COMFORT ... the comfort of knowing your money
la is safe, insured by an agency of the Federal Government.
^Deposits in by the 10th earn from the first.
TEXOMA
SAVINGS
A hot-water heating system was
added to the White House in 1853.
First commercial wool in the 16th
century was produced by Spanish
merino sheep.
FEMALE FAGIN OF
YELLOWSTONE PARK
(P. S.: Turn in your news items
early in the week ... as soon as
they happen ... to insure publi-
cation!)
TEXOMA SAVINGS ASSOCIATION
Of Grayson County / Sherman, Texas
HAVE YOU
had visitors
been visiting
been divorced
bought anything
sold anything
had a party
been to one
got engaged
been jilted
joined a club or been
thrown out of one
had triplets
quadruplets
or even one
baby?
THAT’S NEWS!
and we, and your friends
would like to know about it.
TELL THE NEWS
We’ll write it up:
and we’ll all know it!
Or If You’re Scared
We can’t spell your
name, or somebody else’s
THEN WRITE IT UP
on a piece of scratch paper
or something
and bring it in or
mail it to us
and we’ll all be happy!
THANK YOU!
fii.
The French have invented a device
which uses a rhythmic yoga tech-
nique to induce natural sleep. The
work of Robert Lasserre, a writer,
the mechanism consists of a small
TV-like set called a somnidor. It is
placed on a table seven feet from the
subject. Switched on, it generates a
cold, pale blue light on the screen.
The light expands and contracts
while the patient adjusts his breath-
ing to the light rhythm. Six or seven
breaths, and the subject slows down.
Ten more and he’s fast asleep. Las-
serre plans to market the Somnidor
-in America later this year.
taken time to trace the handiwork
of God in the commonplace things of
life, or if you have learned to count
out things that really do not count,
or if you have been a little blinder
to the faults of friend or foe.
You are richer if a little child has
smiled at you, and a stray dog has
licked your hand, or if you have
looked for the best in others, and
have given others the best in you.—
Old Scrap Book.
bring his prescriptions to us
and accurate filling. We have all the
drugs prescribed by Sherman doctors.
You are richer today than you
were yesterday ... if you have
laughed often, given something, for-
given even more, made a new friend
today, or made stepping stones of
stumbling blocks; if you’ve thought
more in terms of “thyself” than of
“myself”, or if you have managed to
be cheerful even if you were weary.
You are richer tonight than you
were this morning ... if you have
----
Now You
S : J
Ml M
I - :
The Renner Foundation has proved
that burning of wheat stubble costs
the farmer $5.00 to $7.50 per acre in
valuable humus and fertilizer deteri-
oration. Yet every day we see smoke
and flames billowing into the sky
from such practice.
With the many new types of im-
plements which can be used for
shredding wheat straw, and the com-
parison in labor costs to what is tak-
en from the soil plus the increase in
yield next year, it might be well to
re-consider before you strike a match
to your stubble field.
The Weather Reporter to which we
subscribe says that precipitation in
this area should be 150% of normal
with temperatures “less hot” than
usual for the month of July.
* * * *
Fort Worth cattle and calf supplies
advanced sharply during the week
ended Thursday, June 25th.
* * * *
The cattle run of an estimated
6,500 was up 55% over the previous
week but was down 2 % from a year
ago. Prices for the limited supplies
of slaughter steers and heifers were
considerably higher than recently.
We still make Cattle loans here at
the bank and think it is a good time
to replace some of your older cattle
with younger bred heifers.
THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK
Whitewright, Texas
ENGAGED.— Mr. and Mrs. William F. (Jack) Thruston have announced
the engagement of their daughter, Miss Ronnett Thruston, to Harold Ray
Rash. The couple will be married August 22 at the First Presbyterian
Church in Sherman. The bride-elect is a graduate of East Texas State
College where she was a member of Chi Omega Sorority. Her fiance is a
graduate of Trinity University and is working on his master’s degree at
Florida State University, Tallahasse, Fla. He is the son of Mrs. J.W. Rash.
The couple will reside at 731 N. McKown in Sherman after the wedding.
ST ;■
-<>.-■ W.. :
You Are Richer Today
THE WHITEWRIGHT ||UN, WHITEWRIGHT, TEXAS
YELLOWSTONE PARK, Wyo.—
That mamma bear sitting beside a
road near Sylvan Lake never budges
as cars whiz by.
She moves her paw when a car or
truck pulling a camp trailer ap-
proaches—enough to push a cute
bear cub onto the road, stopping
traffic.
By the time traffic resumes, the
trailer has been looted of food.
A number of tourists have report-
ed being robbed this way in recent
weeks.
The average 20-year-old male
worker can expect to change his job
about six or seven times during his
lifetime, a U. S. Labor Department
study on job switching habits shows.
The 2.0-year-old has a work life
expectancy of almost 43 years, and
almost two of his job changes will
occur before he is 25.
The study advises that “the initial
training of young men should be
broad and general in order to give
them the flexibility necessary to
meet changing job conditions.
The average 20-year-oldl male
worker can be expected to spend
about five and a half years on each
job during his working life. But at
least one-sixth of such young men
will stay on one job more than 20
years.
The average 35-year-old male
worker can expect to change jobs
two or three more times during his
ramaining work life of almost 29
■years. His average time on a single
job will be about eight years—two
and a half years longer than for men
15 years younger.
At 45, the average male worker has
a working life expectancy of 19.7
years with one or two more job
changes in store for him, according
to the study. He can expect to re-
main on a job an average of 8.1 years.
The length of time a 55-year-old
man can be expected to stay on a job
is more than seven years; six months
longer than for a man of 25.
This finding produces a plug for
the idea of job training for older
workers in the Labor Department’s
report: “Training a man of 55 for a
particular job may provide him with
as many years of profitable employ-
ment on that job as would be pro-
vided by similar training for a young
man. The need for job training and
retraining may arise at all ages
throughout the entire working life of
men and women.”
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Doss, Glenn. The Whitewright Sun (Whitewright, Tex.), Vol. 79, No. 28, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 9, 1964, newspaper, July 9, 1964; Whitewright, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1369491/m1/2/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Whitewright Public Library.