The Whitewright Sun (Whitewright, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 3, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 21, 1943 Page: 6 of 8
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PAGE SIX
Thursday, January 21, 1943.
A Week in the War
was
36,000
sufferers
FRIDAY & SATURDAY, January 22-23
the
Orient
ST
A
\
SUN. MATINEE, SUN. NITE & MON., Jan. 24-25
If You Don’t Need It
EXTRA
SELL IT
A WANT AD WILL FIND A BUYER
SALLY GRAY
%
EXTRA
— COMING ATTRACTIONS —
7
A
A
With MARJORIE REYNOLDS, VIRGINIA DALE, WALTER
ABEL
Extra: Superman Cartoon in Color, “Destruction, Inc.”1
Good Pictures Are Better at the Palace!
, Follow Label Direction*
_______
t 1
A\,REPUBLIC PICTURE
iMr
New Food Allergy
Test Helps 80%
Of Population
Buy More and More
War Bonds & Stamps
You’ll find a Want Ad also effective in lo-
cating lost articles and estrayed livestock,
and in finding something you want to buy.
’THURSDAY, January 28
(One Day Only)
EXTRA: Harry Langdon in “PIANO MOVER”
Chapter No. 6 of “GANG BUSTERS”
TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY
January 26-27
in
be a
doubt
the
ex-
cost
Canton
walbrook
THE COST IS ONLY lc PER WORD
(Minimum Charge, 25c)
Passing Parade,
“MADERO OF MEXICO”
Pete Smith Special,
“FIRST AID”
THE WHITEWRIGHT SUN
Your Home Newspaper
A best-selling laxative
ALL OVER THE SOUTH
because it's thrifty and
fits most folks needs
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
€
s
-'7'\
THE WHITEWRIGHT SUN, WHITEWRIGHT, TEXAS
—------<■..............- ■ — - .....
The Sun’s large number of readers make a
Want Ad the most economical means of
finding a buyer for your unneeded posses-
sions—livestock, household goods, poultry,
pet animals, real estate, musical instru-
ments, jewelry, automobiles, bicycles.
“Wake Island,” “For Me and My
Gal,” “White Cargo,” “A Yank at
Eaton,” “Lost Horizon,” “Some-
where I’ll Find You,” “Invaders,”
“My Sister Eileen”
De-
1942
livestock
home
1
fern Pennsylvania Hospital, Pittsburg,
in a large scale study at Stevens Col-
lege. Subjects of food allergy who
have been freed from allergic symp-
toms through appropriate diet, are no
longer susceptible to colds.
fl
ISUBCIDEI^L
SQUADRON
CITATION NO. 49433
THE STATE OF TEXAS.
To: Samuel David Stephens, Greet-
ing:
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
1st day of March, A. D., 1943, at or be-
fore 10 o’clock, a. m., before the Hon-
orable 15th District Court of Grayson
County, at the Court House in Sher-
man, Texas.
Said plaintiff’s petition was filed
on the 4th day of January, 1943. The
file number of said suit being No
49433. The names of the parties in
said suit are: Marie Stephens as
Plaintiff, and Samuel David Steph-
ens as Defendant. The nature of said
suit being substantially as follows, to-
wit: An action for divorce on the
grounds of cruel treatment, plaintiff
asking for divorce, costs of suit, and
general and special relief.
Issued this the 11th day of Janu-
ary, 1943. Given under my hand and
seal of said Court, at office in Sher-
man, Texas, this the 11th day of Jan-
uary, A. D., 1943.
S. V. Earnest, Clerk, District Court,
Grayson County, Texas. By Nancy
Hatfield, Deputy. 4T-Feb.4
J fl
12
THE STORY THAT THRILLED
THE WORLD...NOW ON THE
SCREEN FOR THE FIRST
•TIME ... WITH ALL THE
ADVENTURE AND SPIRIT
TO WHICH THESE BRAVE
FLYERS IN BURMA DE-
VOTED THEIR LIVES! . . ■ WHfe
J , PAUL KELLY
l gordon jones
BILL SHIRLEY
MAE CLARKE
A CAST OF THOUSANDS
BLACK-
DRAUGHT
f
Girl Copy “Boys”
The influx of girls on a midwest-
ern newspaper brought up the prob-
lem of just how to summon them. It
didn’t seem quite cricket to bawl out,
“Boy!” at the pert young things. It
was solved for all time when one of
the copy desk crew shouted, “Miss
Boy!”
PALACE THEATRE
Admission on All Pictures, 9c & 20c, Including Tax
4
; v
-
’ - THURSTO11MJ
1
lOOKMVff
BY GEORGE S. BENSON
i’resideHt-Jiarclinff College
Searcystfakansas
vr^stsi
di
o
CLEVELAND.—Discovery of a new
test for food allergy which promises
to show specific dietary means for re-
lieving a large part of the population
from troubles from migraine, indi-
gestion and epilepsy to susceptibility
to common colds was announced by
Dr. Arthur F. Coca, of Oradell, N. J.,
at the Fifth Annual Forum on Aller-
gy here today. Dr. Coca received the
Forum’s gold medal “for outstanding
contribution to clinical allergy.
By means of the new, highly accu-
rate test foi' food allergy, Dr. Coca
stated, he is able to define a new
category including migraine, indiges-
tion, constipation, sinusitis, dizziness,
tiredness, nervousness, epilepsy, high
blood pressure, and a number of oth-
er symptoms.
The well-known skin tests for al-
lergy are useless in this group, which
probably include 80 per cent of the
population, Dr. Coca said.
About two-thirds Of the
from food allergy can be wholly
freed of the listed symptoms by mere
avoidance of the foods identified by
the new test, in which the culprit
food is shown by a specific speed-up
of the pulse beat.
In a small series of cases in collab-
oration with Major Laurence Miscall,
M. D., U. S.,Army, the Crile operation
of sympathectomy, a nerve-cutting
operation, was found highly effective
in the control of the listed food aller-
gic symptoms.
Food allergy. Dr. Coca has pre-
viously reported, is the most impor-
tant pre-disposing cause of common
colds. This has been confirmed, he
said, by Dr. Arthur Locke, of West-
Did. He Get Gypped!
A precocious five-year-old
taken to the hospital to see a new ba-
by brother. After sizing up the new
member of the household, he asked
where he came from an how much he
cost.
“I got him at the hospital,”
plained the mother, “and he
$300.”
“Gee-mi-nee!” whistled the young-
ster. “No hair, no teeth, can’t walk
and can’t talk! Boy, did you get
gypped!”
h
to
SR II
it
Izw
Jr
■&K' WSRt/W SOItOSf r
'^7 M°,e,hon b,f<,r*’’Y /
| i ' America’s No. 1 music manl
8lN$ CK°SSV AT WJ
HISSING 8SS7!/
Hear hissing "Be Careful, It’s My
Wft*" 1 /
■JI AS™"* w™ s
——Jif .Seine
J|l^? HI. ..Motional ••Fir.crock.r
® Dane#’ will have you gaspihgl
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‘SljKvsgHF :: «
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f A STAR-STUDDED, TUNE-FILLED
f HIT, LOADED WITH LAUGHS AND
fl' jfeiSk THRILLS! ... See America’s
A' Favorite Cowboy In ACTION In
His Greatest Film Triumph!...
as the
in
on
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Japanese Propaganda
After the Navy identified
Hornet the aircraft carrier sunk
the battle of Santa Cruz Islands
Oct. 26, 1942, Japanese propaganda
attempted to exploit the American
announcement by asserting that the
Hornet brought the North American
bombers for the air attack on Tokyo
last April 18, a Tokyo broadcast re-
corded by OWI declared that the
sinking of the carrier was “revenge
for the raid,” adding that Japanese
air units had been concentrating on
this ship.
Unfavorable weather in April and
during almost all the last 45 days of
the navigation season produced de-
lays in vessel operations but could
4iot stop Great Lakes freight. The
bulk freight commerce on the Great
Lakes in 1942 reached the staggering
total of 178,577,929 net tons. Ob-
viously the outstanding feature of
this shipping record was the move-
ment of iron ore, which, originally
scheduled to reach 89 million gross
tons, actually totaled 92 million. In
net tonnage, this amounts to about
103 million, and to this achievement
must be given much of the credit for
helping the steel industry maintain
uninterrupted operations at a month-
ly rate of more than 7 million ingot
tons of steel for war.
War Budget
The President’s budget message to
Congress forecast federal expendi-
tures of $108 billion in the fiscal year
1944 and called for $16 billion in new
collections by taxation, savings or
both. Proposed war costs for 1944
were set at $100 billion.
(War expenditures for 1942, as re-
leased by the OWI, totaled more than
$52 billion—3.8 times the amount
spent in 1941—but at the end of the
year, they were running at an annual
rate of about $74 billion.)
Emphasizing that methods of taxa-
tion should be determined by Con-
gress, the President asked Congress
to put taxpayers on a pay-as-you-go
basis, simplifying the tax system, and
effect certain reforms in the tax
structure. Specifically, these reforms
would include changes in the deple-
tion-of-reserves provisions, exten-
sion to all income of the present lim-
itation of $25,000 net on earned in-
come, removal of the tax exemption
from future issues of securities, and
curtailment of the advantages of joint
income returns still allowed married
couples in some states.
Pay-As-You-Go Tax Plan
A Treasury Department statement
said the simplest and most effective
method of placing individual income
tax payments on a current basis is
collection of the taxes at the source of
the income. Stanley S. Surrey, tax
legislative counsel of the Treasury
Department, explained that if income
tax collections at the source were
made applicable at the normal (plus
first bracket surtax) rate, the vast
majority of our taxpayers—about 25
million of the estimated 35 million in-
come taxpayers—would be placed on
a current basis and would also have
their income taxes automatically
budgeted for them.
Americans are already subject to
one withholding tax—the Victory
Tax. Treasury officials have pointed
out that withholding, in this case, is a
collection device rather than a tax in
itself, a device designed to help the
taxpayer pay his 1943 Victory Tax
when it falls due in March, 1944. The
methods developed for administering
the withholding provisions were de-
termined upon as the most equitable
for all taxpayers affected, under the
terms of the statute imposing the tax.
Women in the War
This week, WMC Chairman Mc-
Nutt, announcing that 4 million wom-
en are now working in war plants,
predicted that in a very short time
one out of every four workers
American war industries will
woman. To meet 1943 war production
goals, the number of workers must
increase, until, by the end of the year,
6 million women will be engaged in
war production work.
An intensive campaign is to be
launched this month by the Red Cross
nursing service to recruit
graduate registered nurses for the.
Army and Navy Nurse Corps, 100,-
000 Red Cross nurses aides to assist
professional nurses in civilian and
government hospitals, and one mil-
lion students in Red Cross home
nursing classes, teaching methods of
protecting health and preventing ill-
ness in the home. Mr. McNutt as di-
rector of defense health and welfare
services, announced that if even min-
imum civilian and military needs of
the nation are to be met, 65,000 young
women must enter schools of nursing
between June 30, 1943, and July 1,
1944.
r
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FOR THIS CRISIS
Personal character is what enables
a man to do unenjoy able things be-
cause he knows they are right. For
example, everybody likes to lie in
bed mornings for a leisurely stretch,
but those who can’t afford the luxury
develop character enough to get up
for breakfast and be at work on
time. In the same way, people who
are in debt find it easy to spend ev-
erything they earn, but those who
have character deny themselves a few
wants and manage in some way to
meet their obligations.
A scholar might write a lifetime
and not do justcie to the enormous
subject of Personal Character. The
above illustrations are not com-
prehensive. They were chosen for
homely simplicity, purposely to high-
light the two traits that made the
United States of America great; hard
work and honesty. To industrious
pioneers whose word was as good as
their bond, we owe our debt of grat-
itude for a home land of unsurpassed
prosperity.
Medium of Exchange
, Professional credit men ' divide
credit into three component parts
which they call the “Three C’s,”
Character, Capital and Capacity. And
they agree that the important one is
character. Regardless of wealth and
earning power, men without charac-
ter can (and do) default their obliga-
tions. To whatever extent business is
done on credit, people are trading on
personal character. Obviously, if a
nation’s moral structure weakens it
forecasts commercial ruiii.
The war to save America’s freedom
and prsoperity for ourselves and for
future generations can not be won
completely in carnal combat. Favor-
able accounts from scattered battle
grounds, however comforting, serve
also to illuminate the perils of the
home front. Forty years ago America
was said to be the most law-abiding
nation in the world, and now no na-
tion leads the United States in
number of crimes committed.
Forsaking Religion
After eleven years in the
studying the religious philosophies
that keep hundreds of millions of
people in fear, ignorance and ill
health, judging them by their fruits
in contrast to the enlightment of
Christianity, I returned to America
six years ago and was astonished at
the sight of abandoned church build-
ings, our own people avidly pursuing
godless philosophies in the midst of
an appalling breakdown of moral
standards.
I am persuaded beyond a
that the chief task confronting
good people of America in this crisis
is one of character building. No oth-
er nation has a youth problem that
will compare with ours, and there is
no easy solution. Nevertheless, the
plainest route to political and eco-
nomic safety is the path beaten by
our pioneers who laid the corner
for the finest civilization the ''world
has ever known, guided by deep re-
ligious convictions, an abiding faith
in God, and fidelity to His revealed
message to the race He created.
Three Freedoms
Founders of the democracy we now
enjoy, and now are called upon to de-
fend, fought and died foi' three car-
dinal liberties: The right to worship,
the right to a voice in government
and the right to engage in business
with their own money at their own
risk. Religious liberty is parent of
the other two. It is most important of
the three. Godliness offers the only
dependable foundation for good char-
acter and satisfactory government.
There is no modern philosophy, no
set of slogans and no code of laws
that will take the place of religion in
good citizenship because it is impos-
sible to control a man’s conduct with-
out controlling his thinking. Man
may become partakers of a higher
nature by what the Bible calls regen-
eration, which is a complete change.
Men find God by faith. They become
like Him by studious application of
His word. All the blessings we have
in America came directly or indi-
rectly as a result of the lives of peo-
ple who did just that.
with affidavit of publisher attached
to a copy of this writ showing how
you have executed the same.
Witness H. Grady Thompson, Clerk
of the ■ County Court of Grayson
County, Texas.
Given under my hand and seal of
said Court at office in the City of
Sherman, this 15th day of January,
A. D., 1943.
H. Grady Thompson, Clerk County
Court, Grayson County, Texas. By
Iva Medlin, Deputy. IT
r R R EP U B II ( P I [ I U R E JOE DOROTHEA KENT
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CITATION NO. 1973
THE STATE OF TEXAS,
To the Sheriff or any Constable of
Grayson County—Greeting:
You are hereby commanded, that
by making publication of this Cita-
tion in some newspaper published in
the County of Grayson for at least
one time previous to the return day
hereof, you summon all persons in-
terested in the estate of Latitia Ful-
ler, Non Compos Mentis, that Cora
Lee Fuller, Guardian, has filed in the
County Court of Grayson County her
final report upon the estate of said
Latitia Fuller, Non Compos Mentis,
which will be heard on the first
Monday after ten days service has
been had herein, Probate Court being
in session, at the Court House in the
City of Sherman, on the 1st Monday
in February, A. D., 1943, at which
time all persons interested in said
Estate may appear and contest said
report if they see proper.
Herein fail not, but have you then
and there before said Court this writ
with your return thereon, together
Agriculture and War
Calling on farmers for unprece-
dented production in 1943, President
Roosevelt said food already sent to
the people of North Africa is saving
the energies and the lives of Ameri-
can troops there. Food, he said, is a
weapon in total war and the record
crop produced last year by American
farmers is a major victory of the
United Nations.
Year-end estimates from the
partment of Agriculture show
output of livestock and
products (for sale and home con-
sumption) up 12 per cent over 1941,
crop production up nearly 14 per cent
and total agriculture production up
more than 12 per cent. But it is still
likely that, due to unprecedented na-
tional income and rising government
requirements, 1943 demand for farm
products will rise well ahead of pro-
duction. Attainment of the 1943 food
goals would mean a 12 per cent in-
crease (over 1942) in livestock and
livestock products, a 4 per cent in-
crease in total agricultural produc-
tion, and a total food production in-
crease of about 6 per cent. If these
goals are attained, 1943 will be the
seventh consecutive year to set a
food production record.
After government requirements
have been met, the volume of 1943
food production left for civilians is
expected to be about the same as the
1935-39 average, which was adequate
to feed the nation five years ago but
is 10 per cent below 1942.
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Doss, Glenn. The Whitewright Sun (Whitewright, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 3, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 21, 1943, newspaper, January 21, 1943; Whitewright, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1337392/m1/6/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Whitewright Public Library.