The Whitewright Sun (Whitewright, Tex.), Vol. 76, No. 28, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 13, 1961 Page: 5 of 8
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Thursday, July 13, 1961
THE WHITEWRIGHT SUN, WHITEWRIGHT, TEXAS
PAGE FIVE
Presbyterian M.S.
353,370.98
Failey & Hiil
Total Assets
$1,304,997.43
a©)© b
Mo-
Thur. - Fri. ■ Sat.
Total Liabilities
..$1,205,909.74
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
Ground Beef
Chuck ROAST
Total Capital Accounts
99,087.69
...$1,304,997.43
39c lb
39c lb
S3
49c
10 lbs. 89c
r
SUGAR
FROZEN FOODS
DONALD DUCK ORANGE JUICE, 6-oz 2 for 39c
20c
37c
BIG D
ALMA
65c
OLEO
SPAGHETTI
GLADIOLA FLOUR
?
TALL KORN BACON, lb.
47c
29c
2 for 25c
3 for 25c
DECKER'S LUNCHEON MEAT, 12-ozs
39c
25c
BISCUITS
I
. 3 for 25c
CONCHO PORK AND BEANS
WAPCO Or RO-TEL KRAUT
3 for 25c
1-lb. Box PREMIUM
Blanton-W illiams
3 rolls 33c
SCOT-TISSUE
CRACKERS
25c
ORBS
Tuesday is Double Stamp Day!
RATH'S PURE LARD, 3-lb. eta. 39c
i
FARLEY & HILL
WHITEWRIGHT
We Deliver
Ph. 4-2415
4
Buy or sell it with a Sun Want Ad.
No. 1 RED POTATOES, 10-Ib. hag
MAXWELL HOUSE INSTANT COFFEE, 6-oz.... 69c
Airmen No Longer
Will Rake Greens
USDA Reports Crop
Acreage Cut Sharply
GRAYSON OLEO, lb. . .
LIPTON TEA, ^-Ib.pkg
Delivery: 10 A. M. and 4 P. M.
WE GIVE S & H GREEN STAMPS
8-Plate Pkg.
24c
l-Lb. Pkg.
. . . 55c
Each
19c
Can
22c
Capital Stock:
(a) Common stock, total par $25,000.00
Surplus
Undivided profits
Mr. and Mrs. Dee Smith of Gar-
land visited her mother, Mrs. John
Vestal, Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Cole of Sher-
man and Mr. and Mrs. R. Lee Hill of
Van Alstyne spent Sunday with Mr.
and Mrs. Ralph Wallace.
Mrs. Frank White and daughters
of Sherman spent Tuesday with Mr.
and Mrs. T. J. Lilley.
Mr. and Mrs. Reuben Bradley and
son Lawrence and Miss Lucille Shaw
of Dallas spent Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. Tom Shaw.
Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Linsteadt of
Sherman visited Mr. and Mrs. A. A.
Hudgins last Friday.
$316,129.84
236,601.40
5,546.19
$25,000.00
35,000.00
39,087.69
1,800.00
372,851.57
18,697.45
269,246.77
192,061.44
53,365.83
6,850.56
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Dyer of Du-
rant, Okla., visited Mrs. Mary Mc-
Gaughey Wednesday, and with her
Mrs. Levi Hall at Honey
visited
Grove.
W. K. (Bun) Alexander has sold
his service station, corner of Main
and Bond streets, to Shorty Nicely,
who is now operating the business.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Farmer of Dal-
las spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
T. D. Caylor.
Mrs. Earl Boggess and daughter of
Midland visited Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Cook Sunday.
Following too closely causes near-
ly 15 percent of all traffic accidents,
according to an insurance company..
U. S. Highway 1, which runs north
and south along the East Coast, grew
out of an old pack trail down the fall
line of the Eastern Seaboard.
6-oz. Pkg.
2 for 35c
l-Lb. Box
. . 25c
We Heard
About...
Hi-Way Grocery & Market
Phone FO 4-2580
■■
SUNSHINE
KRISPY CRACKERS
Youngblood’s Frozen
CHICKEN DRUMSTICKS
Cleans and Deodorizes Toilet Bowls
VANISH
Diamond
DE LUXE PAPER PLATES
Hartz
DOG YUMMIES
Cook’s Makes 12 Gallons
STOCK AND BARN SPRAY 85c
Foremost (Free Sample Saturday)
RIG DIP LOW CALORIE ICE CREAM
1 Gal.
.49c
Lb.
Yellow Onions 5c
Hi-Way Specials
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
i/4 Lb.
LIPTON TEA 39c
Mrs. Charlat Vantrain and daugh-
ter Ann of Okmulgee, Okla., spent
several days last week with her
aunt, Mrs. Berniece Davis, and with
her visited Rev. and Mrs. T. H. Mc-
Spedden in Denton and Mrs. Lillian
McSpedden and Jimmie McSpedden
in Sherman.
Sunshine Chopped Turnip Greens with
Diced Turnips 2 cans 25c
U. S. No. 1 Lb.
ARIZONA NEW POTATOES, lb.. . . 5c
$1,205,909.74
. 911,662.97
294,246.77 •
2Yz Can
2 for 45c
16-oz. Can
. . . . 52c
Mr. and Mrs. L. F. Jacks, Mr. and
Mrs. Dave Beazley and Mrs. Jelly
O’Neal spent the weekend in Fort
Worth with Misses Doris and
zelle Jacks.
C. H. LACKEY, Cashier
We, the undersigned directors attest the correctness of this report of
condition and declare that it has been examined by us and to the best of our
knowledge and belief is true and correct.
Weldon Davenport of Dallas spent
Saturday with Mr. and Mrs. Tom
Shaw.
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Alexander and
sons Jerry Don and Richard Lynn,
and Mr. and Mrs. Troy Owen and
children Melvin Lee, Leta Ann and
Danny Glynn of Sherman, and Mr.
and Mrs. Doyce Worsham, Jimmy
Doyce and Janna Kay, and Mrs. W.
T. Bradshaw were recent guests in
the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Wor-
sham.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Rogers of Chi-
cago visited Mr. and Mrs. Homer
Tate and other relatives in the com-
munity this week.
I
Leon Bennett of Reno, Nevada, is
attending the bedside of his father,
George Bennett, heart patient in a
Sherman hospital.
p
The rainstorm Wednesday after-
noon dumped nine-tenths of an inch
of rain on Whitewright in about 20
minutes. It has rained about three
inches in July thus far, including
eight-tenths of an inch last Sunday.
The Lottie Moon Circle of the Bap-
tist Missionary Society met Monday
in the home of Mrs. Joe Miller. Mrs.
Clyde Sadler presided. Five mem-
bers and one visitor, Mrs. Raymond
Brown of Berkeley, Calif., taught the
lesson on Sharing My Saviour with
the Deaf. Mrs. Brown, the former
Billie Hatfield of Whitewright, has
had training in the field of work with
the deaf. Mrs. A. L. McCurdy led
the closing prayer. The Circle will
meet with Mrs. A. R. McMurry Mon-
day for mission study.
Visitors in the home of Mr. and
Mrs. R. W. Lansford during the
weekend were Mrs. Verna Lansford
and children of Dallas, Robert Lans-
ford and family of McKinney, and
Mrs. Douglas Coppenger and sons
Charles John and Robert of Green
Castle, India.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Munday of
Helena, Ark., are visiting her par-
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Tree.
WASHINGTON.—The Agriculture
Department’s first comprehensive
crop report of the season indicated
today a sharp drop in the total acre-
age of crops being grown this year.
It estimated that farmers planted
306,000 acres or 5.3 percent less than
last year. It predicted that the acre-
age for harvest will be about 295,-
000,000 acres, down 6.5 percent from
last year.
Much of this reduction in acreage
is in grains diverted from production
under an emergency feed grain pro-
gram designed to halt over-produc-
tion.
The department said the produc-
tion of all crops combined this year
may be down as much as 9 percent
from last year’s level, which tied
records set in previous years.
WASHINGTON.—Airmen no long-
er will stand duty as lifeguards at
officers’ swimming pools. Nor will
they manicure golf courses.
Rep. Frank Kowalski, Democrat of
Connecticut, complained recently to
Secretary of the Air Force Eugene
M. Zuckert that 20 enlisted men at
Forbes Air Force Base in Kansas had
been relieved of regular duties and
assigned to lifeguard duty at an of-
ficers’ pool.
The congressman said also, each
squadron at the base was required
to supply a man each day for “golf
course detail.” This, he said, con-
sisted of “questionable military
tasks of cutting and raking up the
grass on the golf course?’
“There certainly is no excuse for
wasting taxpayers’ money to provide
lifeguards at an officers’ pool,” Kow-
alski said.
Zuckert agreed. He wrote Kowal-
ski that except in rare instances air-
men will not be detailed to work in
recreational activities. He said he
had so advised all Air Force base
commanders.
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Cleveland of
League City visited friends here
Monday. Mr. Cleveland is a former
minister of the Church of Christ
here.
Total Liabilities and Capital Accounts
MEMORANDA
Assets pledged or assigned to secure liabilities and for
other purposes $236,601.40
I, C. H. Lackey, cashier, of the above-named bank do hereby declare
that this report of condition is true and correct to the best of my knowledge
and belief.
■
Morton’s Frozen
POT PIES, Turkey or Chicken
Black Knight
WHOLE APRICOTS
JACK HOLLENSED
E. H. GANT
E. O. THOMAS
Directors
TIDE or OXYDOL, Reg. Size
New Faultless
SPRAY-ON STARCH
3 cans
Lb. | Lb.
ROUND STEAK 79c | BOLOGNA 39c
Dan Hollingsworth of Oklahoma
City visited friends here Wednesday.
Dan, who grew up in Whitewright,
has attained national prominence as
a safety expert. On the back of his
business card which he left on our
desk is the following quotation from
the New York Times: “Safety comes
from man’s mastery of his environ-
ment and of himself. It is won by
individual effort and group coopera-
tion. It can be achieved only by in-
formed, alert, skillful people who
respect themselves and have a re-
gard for the welfare of others.”
THE V
The Whitewright Bloomer Girls
baseball team will go to McKinney
Friday night for a game with a Mc-
Kinney girls’ team. They will leave
the Little League park here at 6:30
o’clock, and persons expecting to go
should be there before that time.
Game time is 8 o’clock.
Jeanette McCarroll of Leonard
spent Wednesday with her great-
grandmother, Mrs. A. R. McMurry.
LIABILITIES
Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships, and corporations $684,385.14
Time and savings deposits of individuals, partnerships, and
corporations
Deposits of U. S. Government (including postal savings)
Deposits of States and political subdivisions...
Certified and officers’ checks, etc
Total Deposits
(a) Total demand deposits
(b) Total time and savings deposits.
Cape Canaveral, the 15,000-acre
missile test center, is closed to the
public. But an exhibit of Air Force
Titan, Thor, Snark, Matador and
Bomarc missiles is on display in
front of the Technical Laboratory at
Patrick Air Force Base, 15 miles
south of the cape.
Charter No. 11019 Reserve District No. 11
REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF
THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK
OF TOM BEAN, TEXAS
At the close of business on June 30, 1961
(Published in response to call made by Comptroller of the Currency)
ASSETS
Cash, balances with other banks, and cash items in process
of collection
United States Government obligations, direct and guaranteed..
Obligations of States and political subdivisions . A. .
Other bonds, notes, and debentures (including $353,370.98 se-
curities of Federal agencies and corporations not guaran-
teed by U. S.)
Corporate stocks (including $1,800.00 stock
of Federal Reserve Bank)
Loans and discounts (including $1,156.28 overdrafts')
Bank premises owned $14,876.40, furniture & fixtures $3,821.05
(Bank premises are subject to no liens)
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Blanton of
Whitewright have announced the
marriage of their daughter, Priscilla
Ann, to Raymond Winston Williams,
son of Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Williams
of Commerce.
The double-ring ceremony was
held in the Lamar Sb Baptist Church
in Greenville at 8:30 p. m. on the
evening of Saturday, June 24.
Mrs. Williams is a senior at East
Texas State College. She is a mem-
ber of the Chi Omega sorority, Beta
Beta Beta, and Angel Flight.
Mr. Williams is also a senior at
East Texas State, and is a member
of Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity, Al-
phi Omega, and the Air Force R. O.
T. C.
The couple plans to reside in Com-
merce and to resume their studies at
ETSC in the fall.
WHITE SWAN COFFEE, lb. can..
5-lb. bag 35c
The Presbyterian Missionary So-
ciety met Monday with Mrs. H. H.
Taylor as hostess and Mrs. Emmet
Penn as program leader.
The business session was presided
over by Mrs. H. H. Sears, who dis-
cussed the aims of the Trinity Pres-
byterial.
Miss Ruth Cox read the minutes of
the last meeting and Mrs. T. E.
Sears gave the Year Book of Prayer.
Mrs. Sears introduced the special
guest for the day, Mrs. Millie Ann
Hunt. Mrs. Hunt, a member of the
First Baptist Church, gave a most
interesting program, which included
a song, “Come To Jesus,” and a de-
votional entitled The Great Invita-
tion. She closed her program with
a song.
Twelve members and three guests
were present.—Reporter.
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Doss, Glenn. The Whitewright Sun (Whitewright, Tex.), Vol. 76, No. 28, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 13, 1961, newspaper, July 13, 1961; Whitewright, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1369351/m1/5/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Whitewright Public Library.