The Alto Herald (Alto, Tex.), No. 25, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 19, 1964 Page: 3 of 8
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!S':-
PUBLICATION
L U WILLIAMS
tanded to appear
i n answer to the
,, at or before It)
it!), first 3[«nday
r ,,i,„i of 42 days
L. watitoofthis
being Monday
])ecenit)cr, A. D.,
hi,] re lOo'ctockA.
tl morable District
County, at
in Rusk, Texas
.(ill's petition was
day of October,
haulier of said suit
,f the parties in
^YJR, H
n Piaintiff.
t Wiitiams as He-
, f said suit bt-ing
K<t)t)]v f')Hows. tr wit:
raet in scii thu fol-
t. ) property:
tnt certain tract or
KfA'! ituated in Chrro-
i \;is. and ijeing lots
and a)i of Lot
[) EXCEPT 71 feet
' *
t end of said Lot
tjEHh) Trible Addition to
m to the Map a'-d
.'n)(iiti'-n as the same
.id in Vol. 1 page
!' and l'!at Record..
your home or
for Fall and
then paint
[jidden's quality
)m the
Paint Store
[to, Texas
New Banshee Sound in Roller Skates
JHE ALTO HERALD. ALTO. TEXAS, NOVEMBER
j
When an unl^no^Ti Dutc!mian invented roller spates about
250 yeara ago because lto wanted to skate in thp summer when
the Mnyla weren t frozen over, he had no idea t!iat roHer wkntin^
would hecoma one of the wor!ri'a most popular sports. Even
James Plimpton, an American who invented wheels that would
ftkato in a curve al)Out 100 years ano. would have bceu amazed
at the latest development—sound in the wheels of roller skates!
Such Hanshco jct-wailing skates wern unveiled in New York
City*B Centra! Park to scads of gleeful youngsters from tho
Cardinal Spellman Center. Tho new skates, whieh don't uso
the old-fashioned, always-lost key, arc easy for vounx 'uns to
put on (No. 1, above). Then comes tho action (No. 2)* and the
children quickly Hnd out that tho jov'n in the noise. The sheer
joy of Banshee sound is reflected in tho delighted faces (No. 3),
as the group wails up a storm.
The verdict: Banshco sound is (forglvo tho expression) a
howling success.
of Choi 'kc^ County. Te\n I !.-.ut-dtht.- t!n'2(!th day of
Alro f"rt)ic removal 'flje-j')'t<*'-!' A. !).!3n4.
fet^ant' hot: int.i fmnilmf' under mytiand and seal
fromth'prcnii-'s nn<
rfsuit.
fort'ostl fsHidCtm-t. at office in Rusk,
!'<\a t!ii^the26tlidayt'fOc
itit.'iin3'' !aysaf'L'rlhetiatoofl
it^issttn.icc. it slin!!!' raturtu !
unserved
eturlty
W. . Parrott. Ocrk
' ' '.tiL'tCimtt. Cherokee
C'nu.iv. Tsas. 2C-p
19, 1964
CHILD IS ALREADY OVER 18
AT THE TIME HIS FATHER
(OR MOTHER ON WHOM HE
WAS DEPENDENT) DIES OR
BECOMES ENTITLED TO A
RETIREMENT BENEFIT U N-
DER SOCIAL SECURITY. BEN-
EFH'S CAN BEGIN AT THAT
TIME T O THE DISABLED
CHILD IF HIS DISABILITY
BEGAN BEFORE AGE 18 AND
HAS CONTINUED.
AfreebooKleton social se<
eurity along with a "check-up"
post card so you can chf lk your
sociat security record wiilbe
maitedupon request. Address
your requests antl questions to:
MR. C„ SOCIAL SECURITY AD-
MINISTRATION, P. O. BOX
3427. TYLER. TEXAS 15705.
QUESHONS
AND ANSWERS
Q. My brother-in-law is a
refugee from Cuba. He had
been in the United States be-
fore and had a socia! security
card which he had to give up
when he returned to Cuba. He
has found a job but needs a so-
cial security card to go to work.
What can he do?
A. WE CAN GET HUM A DU-
PLICATE CARD BUT IT WILL
TAKE A FEW DAYS AS WE
HAVE TO GET His OLD NUM-
BER FROM OUR CENTRAL
OFFICE RECORDS IN BALTI-
MORE, MARYLAND. IN THE
MEANTIME, WK CAN GIVE
iHM A TEMPORARY RECEIPT
WHICH HE CAN GIVE TO HIS
i'MPLOYER. THE EMPLOYER
SHOULD ACCEPT THIS R E-
CEtPT IN LIEU OF THE
NUMBER AT THIS TIME.
Q. My son receives social se-
curity tbenefits on his deceased
father's earnings record. He wit),
he ]8 next Aprit but is crippied.
Wi![ his payments stop?
A. PROBABLY NOT. A
CHILD'S BENEFIT ORDINAR-
ILY ENDS WHEN HE BE-
COMES 18. HOWEVER. BENE-
FITS CAN BE PAID A CHILD
DISABLED BEFORE AGE 18
FOR AS LONG AS HE RE-
MAINS UNABLE TO WORK.
PROOF OF DISABILITY MUST
BE FURNISHED BEFORE PAY-
MENTS CAN CONTINUE AF-
TER 18. IN MANY CASES. OF
COURSE. '1' H E DISABLED
^WARRENGAS* FUEL
COMPLETE HOME SERVtCE M the coat of eiectdcheJTwrre!!!, dean air drcuiate! throughout your home-Tamperatarw
contro) ia automatic.
PURiFiED
273-Ei
"Your thrifty partner
for modern iiving"
OCEANS OF HOT WATER can be your! economicaiiy with hard-worhin! Gutf-Warrengas * New
COOK DELUXE with Cuif-Warrenga! * Cooking*! < rea! pieaaure with t modern range that u:es
ciean-burning New PURiFiEO 273-E * Automatic controh !et you dhi the temperature you want * it
burn! ctean-no $mohe or fume!.
ROZELLE BROS. BUTANE
ALTO, TEXAS
!'
J n
i a
cttHgm]
exa!
usa
!ne
of
0/
FAMOUS CHEFS
coott mcmcAur, 100
Your famitybeiieves that YOU are the
greatest "chef" on earth and you can be-
come an even better "chef
with LOW COST ELKCTRiCtTY. Regan -
]esa of c!aims of other forms of cuu^"i:'
there'a no denying that Etectiic Cookm^.
tho cleanest, most desirabte... comp e e
automatic and time saving!
AND. ir COSTS
$0 UIHE!
TRMBK
TRMtM'
TOUGH: !ike durab!e, powerfu!; unequaied !oad capacity. TRUCK: !ike Dodge buiids
tough ones. TRADiN': tike priced nose-to-nose with Chevy and Ford. T!ME: !ike now!
PEARMANMOTORCOMPANY
207 MARCUS STREET
PHONE 188
ALTO, TEXA8
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Mrs. Frank L. Weimar and Son. The Alto Herald (Alto, Tex.), No. 25, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 19, 1964, newspaper, November 19, 1964; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth215854/m1/3/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Stella Hill Memorial Library.