The Whitewright Sun (Whitewright, Tex.), Vol. 78, No. 36, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 12, 1963 Page: 4 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Whitewright Sun and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Whitewright Public Library.
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Thursday, September 12, 1963
THE WHITEWRIGHT SUN, WHITEWRIGHT, TEXAS
PAGE FOUR
About Your
Churches
HEALTH
k weakly public service feature from' A
the Texas State Department of Health.
a
EASY DOLLARS
your
has
Don't Be Half-Protected
N. Chandler of Dallas,
I
a.
I
r
Phone FO 4-2220
Bi
3 MINUTE OATS ...
Post
Nabisco
1 lb. Can
».< • •
SPAM, 12 oz. Can ...
... 45c
IS
4
This is the life1
LIVE
to enjoy it 1
k BE CAREFUL-going” and coming-
the life you save may be jour own!
Car Inspection
Stickers Available
If your insurance program doesn’t ade-
quately cover you against major possi-
bilities of loss, you may wake up one
day to find yourself in serious trouble
financially. It is wiser to let us check
your insurance needs now . . . for your
home, car, family or business. We will
give you a prompt, frank appraisal of
your situation without obligation.
Aggie Proposes
A&M Girl College
police
is why most
It’s the Law
«a in
Q' Texas
CENTRAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH
Professor Dean Brigham of Texas
Christian University will speak at
the Central Christian Church at 10:30
a. m. Sunday.
_s
Hi-Way Grocery & Market
Phone FO 4-2580 James V. Williams, Owner
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY SPECIALS
Russell Potatoes, 10lb.bag .... 59c
49c
Bath Size
PALMOLIVE SOAP......2 for 29c
STEPHENS & BRYANT
INSURANCE & REAL ESTATE
Bruce
CLEANING WAX ..
Reg. $1.10
COMMAND HAIR DRESSING . 86c
Griffin’s
WAFFLE SYRUP ...
Kelloggs Gold Medal
ELBOW SPAGHETTI....
2 lb. 10 oz.
.... 45c
1 pt.
... 19c
TALL KORN BACON, lb.
Armour
PURE LARD ............
3 lb. Box
... 59c
CHURCH UF CHRIST
Sunday:
Bible study—10:00 a. m.
Worship and communion—11:00
m.
Worship—7:30 p. m.
Wednesday:
Bible study, all ages—7:30 p. m.
Morton House 12% oz.
Brown Gravy and Sliced Pork .. 44c
New Improved 14 oz. Container
DUTCH CLEANSER......2 for 30c
OREENl
ISTAMPSj
“Madam,” remarked the sheriff,
“I’m amazed that you had the cour-
age to attack a burglar — and in the
dark at that!
“Oh,” replied the woman, a little
embarrassed, “I didn’t know it was a
burglar. I thought it was my hus-
band.”
12 oz.
... 18c
©
[WE GIVE,
EkH
GREEfJ
.STAMPS]
m3
1 lb. 8 oz.
...27c
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
Sunday School — 10 A. M.
Worship Service — 11 A. M.
I
t J
My
ASSEMBLY OF GOD CHURCH
Sunday School—9:45 a. m.
Worship—11:00 a. m.
Worship—7:00 p. m.
Christ Ambassadors—Saturday at
7:00 p. m.
Wednesday prayer meeting—7:00
p. m.
25 feet
KAISER QUILTED FOIL.....34c
■
Excpt for guardians and others in
positions of great trust, the law as-
sumes that persons deal at arms
length and have equal ability to pro-
tect themselves. The law, in short, ex-
pects you to use your head in check-
ing out claims and facts. This goes to
the ancient Roman principle: Ca-
veat Emptor (let the buyer beware).
The law expects you to look into the
claims of the party, and not to agree
to any old paper shoved under your
nose as a “standard” contract.
12 oz.
GRAPE-NUTS FLAKES.......30c
11% oz. box
WAVERLY CRACKERS.......29c
[WE GIVE i
CREEM
.STAMPS]
The Whitewright Sun
T. GLENN DOSS, Editor and Publisher
PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY
Entered at the Whitewright, Texas, post office”
as second class mail matter.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
In Grayson and Fannin Counties........$2.5fr
Outside Grayson and Fannin Counties... .$3.00’
Foreign Subscriptions (Except Soldiers). .$5.00'
MEMBER
TEXAS PRESS ASSOCIATION
The Sun is a service institution. Its columns
are open to Individuals and organizations for
the dissemination of news, and it invites all
persons to send in news items. The editor re-
serves the right to decide what is news and
what is not news. He reserves the right to
reject news items that are too old to be con-
sidered as news. The promotion of any organi-
zation is not news, and the editor reserves the1
right to reject items
A
People who suffer with hyperten-
sion, or high blood pressure, nowdays
have more reason for optimism than
they would have had a generation
ago.
In itself hypertension is not a di-
sease. It’s a sign that something is
wrong, like the stuffy feeling that
comes with a cold. The danger accru-
es because of the possibility of stroke
or serious heart or kidney damage
when blood pressure is consistently
high.
But ever mild elevation in the
blood pressure considered normal for
the person involved — if the increase
persists — may cause the walls of
blood vessels to toughen, exactly as
callouses are formed on hands by
regular use of an axe or hoe. Re-
search has shown that temporary in-
creases in pressure do not really
make much difference.
In the most common type of high
blood pressure, called “essential hy-
pertension,” the tiny branches of ar-
teries which carry blood to all body
tissues (called arterioles) begin to
tighten up. Blood passageways be-
IT IS NOT SO EASY
To apologize.
To begin again.
To take advice.
To admit mistakes.
To be considerate.
To endure success.
To obey conscience.
To think, and then act.
To be content with little.
To accept just rebuke gracefully.
To value character above mere
reputation.
But it pays.
KENTUCKYTOWN BAPTIST
CHURCH
Sunday school, 10:00 a. m.
Worship service, 11:00 a. m.
Training Union, 7:00 p. m.
Worship service, 8:00 p. m.
Nothing like splitting the fairway with that first whistling drive of the season!
But, along with our best wishes for many par-shattering rounds this year
• • • when you drive your car, keep in mind this sober reminder:
Bad accidents happen in good weather, too!
high blood presure.
There is nothing to gain from wor-
ry about your chances of developing:
hypertension. Just make it a point to
have a physical examination at least
once a year. And worry and argue as
little as possible.
Low blood presure, on the other-
hand, seldom causes trouble. Afflict-
ing relatively few people to a serious
extent, the condition is usually a
symptom of a specific disease which
can frequently be traced successfully..
%
$
f /
//
r
d H
AUSTIN — Col. Homer Garrison
Jr., director of the Texas Department
of Public Safety, has announced that
the new 1964 vehicle inspection stick-
er became available September 1 at
all official inspection stations in
Texas.
. “During the summer months, the
department has conducted intensive
re-training schools for all owners and
mechanics of inspection stations,”
Garrison said. “These men are now
qualified and they are ready to serve
the motoring public in their vehicle
inspection needs.”
More than five million vehicles
registered in the state are required
by law to be inspected at one of the
5,000 official stations between now
and April 16, 1964. Operators of ve-
hic!es not displaying the new sticker
by that date will be in violation of the
law. ~
Garrison urged motorists to get
their vehicles inspected at the earliest
possible time and pointed out:
“Since the vehicle inspection pro-
gram began in Texas, vehicle defects
as causative factors in motor vehicle
accidents has been reduced from 13
per cent in 1951 to five per cent in
1962. We have every reason to hope
that with continued voluntary com-
pliance with this law, accidents can
be further reduced.”
come smaller and smaller, and
jcREENB IgRELnI IgREUNI iCREENl
^STAMPS| IsTAJURsJ JSTAMPSj ISTAMPSj
DOUBLE S&H GREEN STAMPS ON TUESDAY
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
SUNDAY
9:55 A. M. Sunday School
11:00 A. M. Morning Worship
5:15 P. M. Junior Choir: Inter-
mediate choir
6:30 P. M. Training Union
7:30 P. M. Evening Worship
MONDAY
7:00 P. M. Brotherhood Meeting
7:00 P. M. Association Training
Union Meeting
TUESDAY
2:00 P. M. Rex Ray Circle
2:30 P. M. Joy Russell Circle
3:00 P. M. Lottie Moon Circle
4:00 P. M^ Primary Sunbeams
WEDNESDAY
3:30 P. M. Primary Choir
6:30 P. M. Junior GA’s
7:30 P. M. Prayer Meeting
8:15 P. M. Choir Practice
8:15 P. M. Deacon’s Meeting
The First Baptist Church
scheduled a series of revival services
September 29 through October 6. The
evangelist will be Dr. Russell Dennis
of Oklahoma City. Ronce Morgan, the
church music director, will direct re-
vival music.
n
It costs approximately $45 billion a
year to meet the payroll for the 9%
million Federal, state and local gov-
ernment civilian, employees, Tax
Foundation, Inc., reports. This figure
does not include the $13.1 billion
military payroll. The Foundation
estimates that one of every seven
employed persons in the U. S. today
works for the Federal, state or local
government.
At last count there were 2.5 mil-
lion civilian workers employed by the
Federal government inside and out-
side the continental U. S. — not only
in Washington, D. C., but scattered
throughout the 50 states.
Federal civilian payrolls are now
nudging $16 billion a year, about half
again as much as ten years ago.
Edging Up
The Federal civilian working force
has slowly edged up in recent years
although 175,000 quit their Federal
jobs every year, according to one esti-
mate.
The fiscal 1964 budget would add
36,000 to the rolls.
There were approximately 6.9 mil-
lion state-local government workers
in 1962 as against 4.5 million counted
only ten years before. The cost of the
state-local government payroll, now
approximating $31 billion annually,
has been climbing, too. In 1952, state-
local government payrolls were less
than half as much.
Gov't Employee
Payrolls Now At
$45 B Annually
DALLAS — Texas A&M Univer-
sity must have a course called Tena-
city I. Also II, III and IV.
The grads are still at it — fighting
the admission of females to the col-
lege — begun this year in a limited
way at the historically all-male uni-
versity.
Latest proposal comes from Derrell
who was
graduated last year. He wrote the
A&M board about it.
Chandler, salesman for Lone Star
Sash and Door, wants A & M to cre-
ate another college for women only.
He wants the new institution called
“Mary Smith College,” or, as he said
Saturday, “Any woman’s name. I just
picked ‘Mary Smith out of the air.”
The idea, he says, is that the old
grads can still claim A&M is an all-
male college although women would
be in the same classrooms. Diplomas
for women would carry the name of
the woman’s college.
Some other colleges operate under
the same system.
Chandler, still single', says he is
personally against making A&M co-
educational. He pointed out that
several ex-students have said they
will stop their financial support be-
cause of the end of the all-male sta-
tus. k
BETHEL BAPTIST CHURCH
Sunday services:
Sunday School—10:00 a. m.
Worship—11:00 a. m.
Training Union, 6:00 p. m.
Worship service, 7:00 p. m.
Red Pitted
TART CHERRIES....... 2 for 52c
Of all the world’s currencies,,
easiest to counterfeit is the U. S. dol-
lar. That’s the opinion of Marcel Si-
cot, secretary-general of Interpol, the
international police organization.
This is why most counterfeiters
througout the world concentrate on
turning out fake dollars. Most diffi-
cult currency to copy is the French,
banknote.
the
heart has to work harder to push the
blood through. After a time the blood
vessels lose their elasticity and the
heart muscles thicken with the extra
work load. Result: high blood pres-
sure, and ultimately heart damage.
What causes the arteries to tighten
and constrict? !No one knows.
High blood pressure sometimes
goes up for a period of days or weeks
—or even longer — and then drops
back to normal. Sometimes it may
jump from pure nervousness while
physician is examining you.
Perhaps there is a connection be-
tween hypertension anad strain of
modern life. People who work under
constant stress, who worry too much,
are often susceptible. Heredity is a
probable factor, and the condition oc-
curs most often in persons between 30
and 50.
The thing which will count most in
adding years to the life of hyperten-
sion sufferers is the willingness to
change their living habits, following
the rules of moderation in everything.
By securing a doctor’s care and fol-
lowing a few simple rules for moder-
ate living, they can probably work
and enjoy life as long or longer than
their next-door neighbors without
F42-5
MISTAKE AND FRAUD
When you get the short end of
deal you feel inclined to claim mis-
take or fraud to get out of the con-
tract.
But courts are not inclined to cor-
rect your business mistakes unless
they also find serious injustices. For
to charge the other party with fraud
is serious since fraud is a crime as
well as a civil cause of action.
Our courts, therefore, demand more
proof than usual in civil cases where
one sues to get out of a contract on
the grounds of fraud.
Suppose Smith and Black agree to
do something in clear language, but
Smith does not grasp the terms of a
plain contract. This failure of Smith
will not void the contract and our
courts will enforce its terms.
But suppose instead Black .well
knew that Smith had made a mistake,
and he still didn’t explain it to Smith.
Then if this can be proved, Black may
have trouble enforcing his contract.
Both parties often make a. mistake
which may void the deal. In one case
Raffles agreed to buy and Smith to
sell goods arriving on a ship named
the “Peerless.” But it just so happen-
ed that two steamers had the same
name. Raffles and Smith had in mind
different steamers. No contract. Why?
No meeting of the minds.
But to end such a contract both
parties must make a mistake about
something in the contract.
People often make oral agreements,
and later write the terms down. Sup-
pose they make a mistake in doing
this. When they find such a mistake
they can go into court and have the
contract reformed.
To induce the other party to agree
through fraud makes the contract
void. For a court to act in a fraud
case one must prove five things:
(1) A false representation;
(2) The speaker’s knowledge of its
falsity;
(3) His intention to mislead the
other party;
(4) The other’s innocent reliahce
on the statement; and ;
(5) Damage resulting from the de-
ception.
Unless every one of these elements
are proved, there is no legal fraud.
✓
/
g
■
■
FIRST METHODIST CHURCH
Sunday School—10:00 a. m.
Worship—10:55 a. m.
Methodist Yo”th Fellowship—6:00
p. m., and on fourth Sunday of each
month at 5:30 p. m.
The Women’s Society of Christian
Service meets every first and third
Monday at 3:00 p. m., and The Wes-
leyan Service Guild meets every
other Monday at 7:30 p. m.
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Doss, Glenn. The Whitewright Sun (Whitewright, Tex.), Vol. 78, No. 36, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 12, 1963, newspaper, September 12, 1963; Whitewright, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1369458/m1/4/?q=music: accessed June 20, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Whitewright Public Library.