The Fairfield Recorder (Fairfield, Tex.), Vol. 88, No. 46, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 30, 1964 Page: 2 of 8
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PAGE TWO-THE FAIRFIELD RECORDER, FAIRFIELD, FREESTONE COUNTY, TEXAS, THURSDAY, JULY 30, 19*4
THE FAIRFIELD RECORDER
THK t Ol NTY l*.\PKK—KSTAHI.ISHKII IsTfi
Published I'm.-Ii Thuredtu :it Fairfield. Texan. Kreeiitone County
••Win-re I be l.renl lll«hnn>» of le\n» Cri>»»"
TEX&m
/963-.
•RESS ASSOCIATION
WA SHINGTON AND
"SMALL BUSINESS"
By C. WILSON HARDER
JOE l.! i: KIHGAN it.
1‘ublislu’i-Editor
latirrd an n i i: t i it the Poet Of flea > I Otlftl#M,
Under Ai t of Mtrch 6. 187
P#l B • |
M HSt HIT I ION It \ I 1>
One Year. Freentone anti joining counties ............ .........$:t 50 j
Six Months. Freest ne »r I joining l OUntieH
One Year, outride F*c.>: .n. and Joining count ten
Six Months, 'ujtsid. Freestone and Joining lountien $-5 ?5
Overseas . . ................ $ ' ~0
No Subscriptions W 11 lit \ • pted for t l’eriod of l.« sh Thin Six M nths
A n v
. . | ©
Fairfield Itfi . d» r will be corrected gladly upon being brought to the
attention of ‘lie t ublisher
Tributes of 11 s*pt f. : a.tries and cards • * r ’hank-' 4 cuts a wo:d
Privilege of omittii l; ill poetry reserved by this j apei All news items
», - • • i nt In foi p bl 11 ion must • idgnad bi p©nd#r
t.*-/5 MEDITATION
from
The World's Most Widely Used
Devotional Guide
Cbc Upper Room
C 1M£ UPrCR ROOM NASHVIlll TENNESSU
Read Psalm 42
My soul thirsts for God, tor the
Living God. When shall I come and
behold the face of God? (Psalm 42:2,
RSV)
My Argentine physician friend was
thirsty for God. He sought Him
everywhere He forsook civil life
and went to a monastery. Later he
left it. thinking he would never find
God. For twenty years he gave up
the search.
One evening as he passed in front
of a church, the singing of a hymn
caught his attention Unwillingly,
he entered the sanctuary and sat
down "If you want to find God, you
must follow Christ," he heard the
preacher say in the midst of his
sermon. He found God and came re-
joicing to tell me
Then came the supreme surrender.
To be just a member of the church
was for him not enough! He dedicat-
ed hi> life to Christ's kingdom Sev-i
eral months later he was in Bolivia
working with the Indians of the High
Plains Now he is in the jungles
carrying on under untold handicaps.
God s love sings in his fingers and
lips while he brings alive in his i
ministry of teaching and preaching
the real meaning of the gospel of
Christ.
PRAYER: Give us, 0 God eternal,
the blessing of finding Thee in lowly
paths of service; for religion is not
just a contemplation of Thy face,
but the carrying on of Thy passion
of love in a ministry of service. In
Jesus' name we pray. Amen.
THOUGHT FOR THE DAY: Sur-
render to Christ and loving service
in His name satisfies our hunger for
! God
Sante I'berto Barbieri
Argentina
New Hope Baptist
Church, Winkler
RONNIE CHESSER. Pastor
10:15 A. M. -Sunday School.
11:00 A. M —Preaching.
8:30 P. M.—B. T. S.
2:00 P. M„ Third Sunday—
Singing.
7:00 P. M. Tuesday—\V. M. A
7:00 P. M , Wednesday—Pray-
er Meeting.
7:15 P. M.—Preaching.
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Automatic
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plus all these other Maytag features:
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• Afttenutic Bleach Dltpen**
a Aatamatfe Water Laval Control
• ZhfrcaaM cabinet guards
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• Separate Wash and Rissa
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• federated Tub for cleaner rinsing
• Rastpraef Hd huigtt
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FROM
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'UaUUUMA.
Phans 389-2438—Fairfield
Sooner, or later, the Congress
must come to grips with the
problem of how to build up the
Social Security fund, rather
than spend time seeking ways
to increase the benefit pay-
ments out of the fund.
* • *
This year, when the required
report on the status of Social
Security was given to Cong-
ress, Rep. John Ashbrook.
Ohio, took the trouble to read
all 24 reports
that h a v <-1
been released I
since t h eI
plan was
started. He |
found some I
Interesting!
matters.
• • •
In the six
years 1958
through 19C3, C. w. Harder
the fund has paid out more
than it has taken in. The defi-
cit of pay outs over receipts
runs as follows; 1958 $216 mil-
lion, 1959 $1,271 million. 1960
$712 million, 1962 $1 billion. 274
million, 1963 $687 million. Only
in 1961 was there a surplus
amounting to $72 million,
a * *
In 1950 payments had nol yet
reached $1 billion. Last year
Social Security paid out $13
billion, 845 million.
a • •
When the system started in
1937, the contribution to the
fund was IT each by employee
and employer on the first $3,(100
of earnings in a year.
• * •
This has steadily Increased
until now the combined em-
ployee and employer tax Is
7!4% on the first $4,800 earned
in a year and four years from
now that will go up to 9*4%.
• • •
Or expressed in another way,
by 1968 an employer paying a
(c) National Federation of Independent Bmlneaa
wage of $100 per week will pay
almost another $5 per week in
Social Security taxes, and the
employee w-iU be actually
drawing, before income tax de-
ductions, $95 per week,
a a a
An average of 1,250,000 new
beneficiaries are being added
each year. In 1947, Rep. Ash-
brook reports, the Social Se-
curity report for that year pre-
dicted in 1952 payments would
reach $965 million. Instead, in
1952 they totaled $1 billion. 982
million. The 1949 report pre-
dicted total payments In 1954 of
$1 billion, 167 million Instead,
they reached $3,276 million,
a * *
Thus, it seems reasonable
that in order to keep faith with
the people on the present sys-
tem, new taxes from other
sources will have to be raised
to maintain payments.
a * *
This is a major reason why
the nation’s Independent busi-
nessmen, voting through the
National Federation of Inde-
pendent Business, hare con-
sistently voted against using
Social Security to finance medi-
care, or other welfare plans.
As evidenced by the data de-
veloped by the Congressman,
when bureaucrats project po-
tential income and outgo, It
is only a guessing game,
a * a
And as further pointed out,
there are claims from Washing-
ton now that people with in-
comes of $3,000 or less are liv-
ing in dire poverty.
* * •
But people in those circum-
stances are even now paying
much more out in Social Secur-
ity taxes than they are paying
in income taxes. Thus the ques-
tion becomes this. Can people
In poverty bn made more se-
cure by taxing their poverty
even more?
Warranty deed from W. L. M.
Hunter et ux to Riley Lee Snider,
covering 160 acres of land in the
M L. Lee Survey.
Warranty deed from W. L. M. |
Hunter et ux to Eddie G. Snider et
ux, covering land in the I. Jessup1
Survey.
Warranty deed from Henry Ser-1
vance et al to Alice Servance, cover- j
ing 53 1-3 acres of land in the C. \
Jones Survey.
Warranty deed from J. B. Suttle
et al to Mrs. Kate Byers, covering
part of Lot 3 in Block 24 in the City
of Fairfield, Texas.
Warranty deed from R. H. Wald-
rop et ux to James L. Jones, cover-
ing land in the J Lawrence Survey. '
Warranty deed from Henry Ellis
Wynne et ux to Delight Certified
Farms. Inc., covering land in the j
C J. Galbreath Survey.
Marriage Licenses
Bradley Alice Anderson, Jr. and
Anita Louise Ward.
Sydney Stripling Ivy and Janice
Childs.
John Wesley Hawkins and Mrs. |
Irena Berthalee Pope.
-o- I some
Church Of Christ
News
Sunday Service*
10 A. M.—Sunday Softool
11 A. M.—Worship.
| the land-grant colleges of the nation,
4,000 home demonstration
Homemakers will be honored when agents, assisted by nearly 700,000
a new postage stamp goes on sale
August 1, Postmaster General John
A. Gronouski has announced. The
new five-cent commemorative post-
age stamp will pay tribute to the
American woman and also will honor
the Extension Service of the U. S.
Department of Agriculture, which
came into being half a century ago, |
with the passage of the Smith-Lever \
Act. Under the USDA’s Extension |
Service, working in cooperation with 1
women who serve as local leaders,
are aiding millions of women to be-
come better homemakers.
S'
m
&
I HIRED IT
THROUGH THE
WANT ADS
COURTHOUSE
NEWS
Warranty deed from John W. Car-
penter to Mattie Earl Estes et al,
covering land in the I. Holman Sur-
vey.
W'arranty deed from Mary E.
Warranty deed from W. W Lam- i Chumney to Frank Farnsworth, cov-
berth et ux to Clarence Henderson ! ering ^ 10 in Block 103 in the City
et ux, covering 27 acres of land in j T<?aSu<\ Texas,
the F. O'Neal survey J Warranty deed from Eugene
Warranty deed from Anna Lee to | ^"ipsey et ux to M. R. Seely cov-
Willard B.' Satterwhite et ux, cover-1 erin« Part of ^ 7 and 3 ln Block
ing lots 11 and 12 in Block 72 in the 103 in the Clty of Tea§ue' Texas-
City of Teague, Texas. I Deed from Mattie Bess Dunlop to
Warranty deed from Harry W. jFlorence Dunl°P Ta>'lor- covering
LeGro et ux to Hugh D. Reed. Jr -land ,n Freestone County, Texas.
covering land in the R. Gainor Lea-
gue.
Warranty deed from W. T. Me-;
Coslin et ux to O. J Christie, cover- |
ing 50 acres of land in the John
Hume Survey.
Warranty deed from Carl F. '
Mims, Jr., et ux to Michael Con-'
Quit-Claim deed from Frank Farns-
| worth to Abe Cox, Jr., covering Lot
,11 in Block 103 in the City of Tea-
gue. Texas.
Quit-Claim deed from Frank Farns-
worth to Abe Cox, Jr., covering Lot
j 10 in Block 103 in the City of Teague, j
Texas.
Warranty deed from Mrs. Mary E.
way Felts, covering part of Lots 11 French et al to C. C. Jones et ux.
and 12 in Block 33 in the City of covering lots 11 and 12 in Block 12
Wortham. Texas. j 0f the Wheelus Addition to the City
Warranty deed from Donie Jane 0f Teague. Texas.
Paschal to American Laudry and! Guardian’s deed from Helen M.
Dry Cleaners covering Lots 17 thru j Gilbert, Guardian to Mrs. Eva Gil-
24 in Block 79 in the City of Teague, j bert, covering land in the City of
Texas ' Streetman, Texas.
Warranty deed from Carter S.
Richardson et ux to Mrs G. A. Rich-
Warranty deed from Helen M. Gil-
bert et al to Mrs. Eva Gilbert, cov-
ardson covering land in the J. Lee erjng Lots 10-11-12 in Block 33 in
Survey. the City of Streetman, Texas, also
Warranty deed from Joe Richard- i Lots 7 thru 12 in Block 40 in the
son et al to Mrs. G. A. Richardson,
covering land in the J Lee Survey.
Warranty deed from Mrs. G. A.
Richardson to Carter S. Richardson
et ux, covering land in the J. Lee am Survey.
Survey.
Warranty deed from Weaver Rob-j
inson et ux to Jerry Robinson, cov-1
ering land in th J James Survey |
Warranty deed from W. I. Ruth-1
erford et ux to Billy S. Wills et ux, j
covering land in the Thos Middleton
Survey.
Warranty deed from Dora Reisberg
Balias to J L Huckaby et ux. cover-
ing Lots 7-8-9 in Block 151 in the
City of Teague, Texas.
Warranty deed from Mamie Bag-
gett to Ruth Baggett, covering land
in the T. H. Davis Survey.
Warranty deed from Ethel Mae
Brown et vir to H. D. Reed, Sr., et al,
covering 155 acres of land in the A.
Telano et al Surveys.
Deed from Henry H. Carter, Jr.
et ux to Virgil L. Bounds, covering
land in the City of Wortham, Texas.
City of Streetman, Texas.
Warranty deed from C. R. Harris
et ux to C. R. Harris, Jr., et al.
covering land in the R. B. Longboth-
SKK UR FOR WATCH
•1C JEWKLKY REPAIRS
When It eoueee to the flxlni
trust to us for a perl
watch or Jewelry.
or Jewel
ENGLAND'S
Jewelry Store
Phone DU 9-2150
ect Jo!
fb
EVERYONE NEEDS FUNERAL
SERVICE INSURANCE
We Write $100 to $1,000
Capps Funeral Service Insurance Co.
B. C. CAPP8, JK-, Secretary-Treasurer
CALL U8 COLLECT FOR INFORMATION
Phone Dl 9-3484 — Fairfield, Texas
Take A Look At Your
TV REPAIR BILLS
Ports----$19.50
Service - - - 6.00
TOTAL - - $25.50
DOES YOUR SET STILL ROLL, WIGGLE, JUMP, LOOK
FUZZY OR VOICE FADES! IF SO, YOU NEED PROFES-
SIONAL CARE!___
Our Service Technician, Jerry Bor-
zik, Will Save You Money. He Has
Had Factory Supervised Courses In
Black And White And Is Also An Ex-
pert On Color. Jerry Has Been With
Us 5 Years. He Guarantees All Parts
And Labor. He Uses U. S. Made
Tubes (No Imports!).
OUR LAST 100
HOMEANDSHOP
PARTS AND
SERVICE CALLS
AVERAGED
ONLY
Service -$4.52
Parts--- 4.24
TOTAL - - $8.76
CALL FOR TECHNICAL GUARANTEED SERVICE
RE 9-2601
DU 9-3370
Western Auto
Application Forms
ARE NOW AVAILABLE AT THE
Teague Chronicle
AND THE TEAGUE
Chamberof Commerce
For Employment
IN A NEW AIR CONDITIONED
Dress Factory
To Be Built In Teague
IF YOU ARE INTERESTED IN EMPLOYMENT,
PICK UP AN APPLICATION FORM NOW!
./
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Kirgan, Joe Lee, Jr. The Fairfield Recorder (Fairfield, Tex.), Vol. 88, No. 46, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 30, 1964, newspaper, July 30, 1964; Fairfield, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1106423/m1/2/?q=Lamar+University: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Fairfield Library.