The Whitewright Sun (Whitewright, Tex.), Vol. 59, No. 15, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 13, 1944 Page: 3 of 8
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’Thursday, April 13, 1944.
THE WHITEWRIGHT SUN, WHITEWRIGHT, TEXAS
PAGE THREE
THE KIND OF RAISE WE ALL WANT!
Do
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and
from
Plenty of
Asphalt
Shingles
■
The Kind
Mobiloil
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COME TO US FOR DEPENDABLE
I Give You Texas
Fire Insurance
That Last
For Better Lubrication
BY BOYCE HOUSE
SEE OUR LINE OF WALL PAPER
THE OLD JUDGE SAYS...
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We Sell
BIRD BRAND
MW
Composition
Shingles
of 2-Way Help*
We Appreciate Your Trade
suggests you try
Wall Paper
of Alcoholic Beverage Industries, Inc.
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62-Year Record
FOR WOMEN
CARDU1
You
Agree?
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You can depend on us to give
your-car the attention it needs
to- keep it performing perfectly.
You get top quality products as
well as the best service here, at
no extra cost.
A COMPLETE INSURANCE SERVICE THAT
PROTECTS AGAINST ALL HAZARDS. ASK
US FOR ANY KIND OF SAFE INSURANCE!
SEE US IF YOU WANT TO BUY OR SELL
CITY OR FARM PROPERTY
ARMY AND NAVY TO GET
32,000,000 MORE CIGARS
NEW YORK. — Effective Monday,
the Army and Navy will receive an
extra 32,000,000 cigars monthly to be
withdrawn from civilian trade, says
I
SAVE WITH SAFETY
At the Rexall Store
Stephens & Bry.ant
INSURANCE — REAL ESTATE
May Badgett, Notary Public Telephone 20
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Mobilgas
For Better Mileage
Farm Income Rises
To $19,009,000,000
G. C. STUTEVILLE
Service Station
Phone 19
Whitewright Lumber Co.
“Neighborly Service”
Paints, Varnishes
L. LaRoe & Co
EVERYTHING TO BUILD WITH
(WHEN AVAILABLE)
Amortized Farm Loans
LOW INTEREST QUICK SERVICE
Annual Payments at Sherman
Farms For Sale — Property Insurance
A. Y. CREAGER COMPANY
M. & P. Bank Bldg. Sherman, Texas
Childress Pharmacy
R. P. Childress, Manager
This advertisement sponsored by Conference
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A passenger on the famous “slow
train through Arkansas” said to the
conductor, “You ought to put the
cow-catcher on the back end of the
train because there is absolutely no
chance that we will overtake a cow
but a cow might overtake us and
wander in.”
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In the southeast corner of Mon-
tague County are the ruins of a cabin,
near a stream in a heavily-wooded
area, which was a hideout for Sam
Bass, the famous outlaw, according to
Joe Benton of Nocona, who has made
a life study of the history of that sec-
tion.
Allied Air Forces
Draw Heavily on
U. S. for Suppl ies
Do everything you can to prevent fire—but don’t
depend on fire prevention to protect you against loss
for fire may be beyond your control. Come to us for
dependable fire insurance on your property, then if
you do have a loss the insurance company will step
in to help replace your destroyed property. The man
who can least afford to pay an insurance premium is
the man who is in greatest need of the protection
insurance affords.
RO
By Inez
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CITATION NO. 52637
THE STATE OF TEXAS.
To: Grace T. Bryant, Greting:
You are commanded to appear
answer the plaintiffs petition at or
before 10 o’clock A. M. of the first
Monday after the expiration of 42
days from the date of issuance of this
Citation, the same being Mndoay the
1st day of May, A. D. 1944, at or be-
fore the Honorable District Court of
Grayson County, at the Court House
in Sherman, Texas.
Said Plaintiff’s petition was filed
on the 16th day of March, 1944.
The file number of said suit being
No. 52637.
The names, of the parties in said
suit are: Joe C. Bryant as plaintiff,
and Grace T. Bryant as Defendant.
The nature of said suit being sub-
stantially as follows, to-wit: Divorce
on grounds of cruel treatment.
Issued this the 16th day of March,
“Quite a stack of newspapers 1 left you
yesterday, Judge. Aren’t goin’ in the news-
paper business, are you ? ”
“No, I just enjoy reading different
papers so my nephew George sends them
to me whenever he takes a business trip.
I got a big kick out of some he sent me
from several counties where they still have
prohibition. Particularly from some head-
lines that read ‘Drunk Driving Arrests Rise’.
on the 8th day of April, 1944.
The file number of said suit being
No. 52682.
The names of the parties in said
suit are: Luther Cox as Plaintiff, and
Ruby L. Cox as Defendant.
The nature of said suit being sub-
stantially as follows, to-wit: Divorce
on the grounds of cruel treatment.
Issued this the 8th day of April,
1944.
Given under my hand and seal of
said Court, at office in Sherman,
Texas, this the 8th day of April, A.
D., 1944.
S. V. Earnest, Clerk, District Court,
Grayson County, Texas. ”
Steed, Deputy.
'Bootleggers must post Ceiling Prices’,
'Federal Agents seize*Trick’ Liquor Truck’.
Doesn’t that go to prove, Joe. that prohibi-
tion does not prohibit?
“I watched conditions pretty carefully
during our 13 years of prohibition in this
country. The only thing I could see we got
out of it was bootleg liquor instead of legal
liquor... plus the worst crime and corrup-
tion this country has ever known.”
1944.
Given under my hand and seal of
said Court, at office in Sherman,
Texas, this the 16th day of March, A.
D„ 1944.
S. V. Earnest, Clerk, District Court,
Grayson County, Texas. By Nancy
Drake, Deputy. 4T-A13
Candidates are proverbially opti-
mistic. It is related that an aspirant
for office approached a voter who
grew red in the face and bellowed:
“I think you are a contemptible
reprobate and I wouldn’t vote for you
if you were the only man in the race;
do I make myself clear?”
The candidate replied, “You surely
do—and I’ll put you on my doubtful
list.”
A drug store is more than
just another store—it’s the
guardian of the community’s
health. Isn’t it a wise plan
to fill your drug needs here,
where a deep interest in this
community’s welfare assures
you of only RELIABLE
products?
Hr
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The Agriculture Department esti-
mated cash income from farm mar-
ketings for 1943 recently at $19,009,-
000,000, compared with $15,336,000,-
000 the previous year, according to an
AP dispatch published in the New
York Times. Livsetock and livestock
products contributed the major fac-
tor in the rise.
ing to an AP dispatch published in
the New York Times. Livestock and
livestock products contributed the
ajor factor in them rise.
Hog sales made sharp advances
over 1942 and there were marked in-
creases in poultry and eggs, at higher
Dr. N. W. Crain, who has been
practicing medicine since 1886, re-
calls that, when he went to Spanish
Ford (on Red River) in 1880 that
there were no ruins remaining of
the old fort (of Spanish, French and
Indian days) but that there were
large pits, which apparently had been
dug to enable some 20 men to lie in
them, their feet in the center and
facing outward in a circle, making it
possible to oppose enemies attacking
from any oi’ all directions.
treaty to make periodic cash settle-
ments to a specific percentage of aid
received. Another type of Lend-
Lease requires the foreign govern-
ment, receiving aid, to be billed im-
mediately on delivery, and the third
type of agreement requires the de-
posit of a cash sum with the United
States, and as materiel is shipped, our
government receives payment from
the deposit.
Brazil a Big Customer
Brazil falls into all three of these
categories, and recevies some direct
aid in return for which'we are given
certain raw materials like mica, man-
ganese and rubber. In the midst of a
large pilot training program of its
own, Brazil receives a large number
of primary and advanced training
planes. These are on regular Lend-
Lease. However, down in Southern
Brazil at San Paulo, where the Bra-
zilian government is building its own
plane factories, lathes, machine tools
and dies are needed. . These are
shipped, but on a cash-on-the-barrel-
head basis.
At the same time, even those gov-
ernments that are on true Lend-
Lease are in a measure, large or
small, depending upon their capacity,
returning to us raw material, food,
rubber, wood or thousands of items
that our armed forces can use.
Brazil, for instance, is now setting
up a rubber factory in which will be
made tires and furnished to our AAF
on reverse Lend-Lease. England
furnishes to the Eighth AAF, sta-
tioned in the British Isles, gas, repair
parts, food, and items of equipment.
Australia feeds the hundreds of thou-
sands of troops we have stationed
there, and also sends us whatever
raw materials they can spare
their own active war plants.
Canada, which insists on paying in
cold hard cash for everything it uses
for its own defense or offense against
the Axis, is rich in grain and other
raw material. These are furnished
the U. S.
average prices.
Oil-bearing crop income was 70
percent higher. This source of in-
come was more than three times the
1942 figure. Receipts from peanuts
in Texas were six times as great as in
1942 and income from soybeans was
twelve times as great.
Income from vegetables and truck
crops from January to November,
1943, increased in all regions. The
largest gain was in the South Atlan-
tic section, where receipts were 52
percent greater than for the same
eleven months of 1942.
Wheat income increased 13 percent
in the north central regions but drop-
ped 2 percent in the western area. In
North Dakota, receipts from wheat
were 40 percent greater than in 1942
but in Kansas they were down 5 per-
cent.
Income from livestock rose 20 per-
cent in the eleven months, up 40 per-
cent in the South Atlantic region
alone. In Georgia, income from eggs
and poultry was nearly twice as great
as in 1942, while income, from live-
stock as a whole was 57 percent
above 1942.
Receipts from hogs were high in
all sections and increased 41 percent
in the west north central regions. The
gain in income in Iowa was 39 per-
cent.
J
Sun advertising is economical.
CITATION NO. 52682
THE STATE OF TEXAS.
To: Ruby L. Cox, GREETING:
You are commanded to appear and
answer the plaintiff’s petition at or
before 10 o’clock A. M. of the first
Monday after the expiration of 42
days from the date of issuance of this
Citation, the same being Monday the
22nd day of May, A. D., 1944, at or
before 10 o’clock A. M., before the
Honorable District Court of Grayson
County, at the Court House in Sher-
man, Texas.
Said Plaintiff’s petition was filed
DAYTON, O.—Resembling a pre-
war League of Nations convention,
officers, key civilians and staffs rep-
resenting foreign governments are
assembled in an office building here.
They form the receiving end of an
“international pipeline” that is trans-
mitting America’s industrial might to
the skies over the front lines of the
world.
It is called the United Nations
Branch of the Air Service Com-
■ mand. It is the Lend-Lease center
for the United Nations Air Forces.
A.nd, contrary to popular belief,
Lend-Lease is not a one-sided affair.
A. study of the United Nations Branch
reveals that.
Greatest Air Freight
The supplying is done by the Air
Service Command’s mammoth head-
quarters at Patterson Field near here.
From it rims the longest air freight
line in the world, 14,000 miles from
Ohio to India, and others to all points
of the globe.
Every plane from a Piper Cub to a
gigantic Fortress, every spare part,
every bit and piece for replacement
that the United States lends or leases
to its Allies is directed from a base-
ment cornei' of the mammoth Air
Service Command Headquarters
building at the field.
Each of the larger foreign govern-
ments has a representative here in
Dayton. A handful of men working
with our offices of the AAF direct
the supply of immense quantities of
materiel.
14,000 Miles in 72 Hours
Tons of vital and critical material
marked for China make the 14,000-
mile trip to India in some 72 hours.
From the plains of India the freight
is taken over the “hump” 20,000 feet
above sea level in an air route in-
vested with Zeros and dangerous in
all weather.
There is a 9,000 mile supply route
to Australia which is matched by an-
other route from San Antonio, Texas,
to Rio de Janeiro, over the swamps
and mountains of Central America.
There is that terrifically tough route
to Russia.
Every minute of every day for the
past three years $2,000 worth of air-
craft and equipment has been sent to
our Allies, to a staggering total of $2,-
500,000,000.
Actually there are three types of
Lend-Lease under which the United
■States receives cash reimbursement.
Seventeen countries have agreed by
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Director Harry W. McHose of the
Cigar Institute.
McHose said the extra cigars would
be added to 59,000,000 monthly al-
ready being supplied to the armed
forces. The extra supply will be
divided among domestic military and
naval stations on the basis of the
number of men in each establish-
ment.
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Doss, Glenn. The Whitewright Sun (Whitewright, Tex.), Vol. 59, No. 15, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 13, 1944, newspaper, April 13, 1944; Whitewright, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1331697/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Whitewright Public Library.