The Whitewright Sun (Whitewright, Tex.), Vol. 78, No. 43, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 31, 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, October 31, 1963
THE WHITEWRIGHT SUN, WHITEWRIGHT, TEXAS
PAGE FOUR
Down Memory Lane
Scientific Advisers
Churches
TURN>
Q
r
49c
45c
SUNKIST LEMONS, doz. .
39c
29c
WHITE KARO SYRUP, qf. . 53c
TOTAL CEREAL, 8oz.
31c
NIAGARA STARCH
PUI__LING
REYNOLDS WRAP, 25 ft.
29c
DOUBLE S&H GREEN STAMPS ON TUESDAY
Social Security
Information
Boom On In
Belts For Cars
Russet! Potatoes, 10 lb. bag ...
TALL KORN RACON, lb.....
Six Plentiful Foods
For November
m.
m.
About 24 per cent of the nation’s
steel is produced in Pennsylvania.
ARCHITECT’S DRAWING of the proposed Grayson
County Junior College layout on which county tax-
payers will vote in a Dec. 7 bond election. Not all
the buildings shown here are contemplated by the
bond issue of $1,900,000.00. The remainder of the
layout would necessitate further bond elections in
the future. Operating costs of the college are not
covered in the bond election. A brochure of infor-
mation concerning the college establishes the col-
lege’s operating cost at $650 per student for a year.
The State would pay $375 each year of this cost up
to an enrollment of 350. It will pay $285 per student
annually for all in excess of 350 students enrolled.
Each student would pay a tuition fee of $100 a year,
and Grayson County taxpayers would pay the dif-
ference between what the State pays and the stu-
dents pay.
Campbell’s No. 2 Can
PORK AND DEANS.....2 for 27c
21/2 Can
2 for 65c
6 oz.
2 for 39c
15 oz. Can
... 65c
12 oz. box
...21c
Del Monte
PEACH HALVES
Ireland’s
PORK BARBECUE
Comstock
PIE SLICED APPLES
lowana
DECKER OLEO, 2 lbs.
Nature’s Best
PEANUT BUTTER
Hershey’s Semi-Sweet
CHOCOLATE CHIPS
Prem
LUNCHEON MEAT
White Swan 4 oz. Jar
MARASCHINO CHERRIES 2 for 37c
CENTRAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH
Bible study and communion every
Sunday at 10:30 a. m., directed by
Ross Orendoff and Dr. C. J. McKis-
sack of the First Christian Church of
McKinney.
REACHING
Grandma — “Would you like to
go to the fair and ride on the merry-
go-round?”
Modern Child — “I don’t mind if
it will amuse you.”
12 oz.
38c
Bp...
12 oz.
33c
20 oz. Can
... 23c
Although this is the age of science,
there are no scientists in Congress.
Representative Abner Sibal, Republi-
can of Norwalk, Conn., has introduc-
ed a bill to create permanent scienti-
fic advisory staffs for both houses of
Congress. Under the provisions of the
bill, the Senate and House would each
employ three scientists for the fields
of physics, chemistry and biology.
Two of the three scientists in each
house would be selected by the ma-
jority party, the third by the minority
party. Congressmen now have the
power to vote money for many scien-
tific projects they understand little or
nothing about. This bill would afford
them some access to expertise.
employee who makes $50 or more
cash wages in a three month period.
If your employer pays you as little
as $4 a week on a regular basis, your
work is covered by social security,
and your employer must make a re-
port for you; and if more than one
person pays you more than $50 a
quarter, each of them must report
your wages.”
Jones said that household workers
should get in touch with his office if
their work is not being reported.
They can get a copy of the booklet,
“Social Security and Your Household
Employee,” which tells employers
how to get the forms they need to
make the report.
w
Hi-Way Grocery & Market
Phone FO 4-2580 James V. Williams, Owner
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY SPECIALS
35 YEARS AGO
(From The Sun November 1, 1928)
C. A. Giles was knocked to the
ground Saturday evening by light-
ning while on his way from the bus-
iness district to his home.
Miss Robbye Broyles and Mr. Wil-
lie Lee Martin were married on Oct.
18.
T. A. Taylor has announced the
opening on Saturday of his grocery-
hardware store.
Mr. Alton B. Hemphill of Dallas
and Miss Mary Johnson of White-
wright were married Sunday.
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.
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.
30 YEARS AGO
(From The Sun November 2, 1933)
Up to Oct. 18, 36,741 bales of cot-
ton had been ginned in Grayson
County.
Miss Edith Mae Sears, junior can-
didate was the Halloween Carnival
Queen of the high school. Members
of the party were. Edith Mae and J.
Y. Russell; Dorothy Ry on and Thom-
as Sears; Dorothy LaRoe and Othal
Ray Adams; Betty Jo Morrow and
Jack Meador.—Reflector.
Don Cato, 17, west of town, fell
from a tree Sunday and fractured
both bones in his left arm just above
the wrist.
Mrs. Bud Pierce, 62, died Thurs-
day.
Sarah Belle Gillett, Sara Kathryn
Arterberry, Joe Willa Stuteville,
Aileen Pennington and Hamilton
Vestal were on the Dunning Music
Club program.
PUSHING
Chrysanthemums are available
most of the year as potted plants.
Hartex No. 2 Can
CRUSHED PINEAPPLE .. 2 for 41c
Are you getting the proper social
security credits for your work? Ac-
cording to Gus Jones, district man-
ager for social security in Sherman,
you may not if you are a maid, baby
sitter, or other household employee.
Jones went on to explain that some
housewives do not know they must
report wages paid to domestic em-
ployees. “This report,” he said, “is
made to the District Director of In-
ternal Revenue for any household
rSwi /■
COLLEGE STATION — November^.
1963, finds Texas grocery markets
and food trade channels brimful of
good things to eat, reports the Texas
Agricultural Extension Service.
It has been another banner year on
our farms. Packers, processors, trans-
porters and handlers have been busy
preparing the farm produce to your
liking. They have it readily avail-
able for your kitchen and table.
Six popular fall foods are particu-
larly abundant, this Thanksgiving
Month. They make up the U. S. De-
partment’s official list of plentifuls
because supplies actually exceed our
normal needs, as determined by
USDA’s Agricultural Marketing Ser-
vice.
Turkeys and cranberries, naturally
enough, are featured on the list.
Apples, grapes, potatoes and Maine
sardines also will be plentiful all
month. So look for lots of these typi-
cal fall foods, at modest cost. Serve
them often.
The marketable supply of turkeys^
many from this area, is expected to-
be about the same as last year’s large
crop. A cranberry harvest of 1,317,600'
barrels is the third-largest of record..
Apple production forecast at 122.2'
million bushels is higher than aver-
age. California’s grape crop of 620,-
000 tons compares to 578,000 tons in
1962. Fall production of potatoes,
estimated at 190.3 million hundred-
weight, is almost equal to last year’s
huge harvest and well above average.
And current inventories of Maine-
sardines, the small ones, is almost 50
percent more than what is considered,
normal for this time of year.
FIRST METHODIST CHURCH
Sunday School — 10:00 a. m.
Worship — 10:55 a. m.
Methodist Youth Fellowship—5:30
p. m.
Evening Worship — 7:00 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.
Bib
BETHEL BAPTIST CHURCH
Sunday services:
Sunday School—10:00 a. m.
Worship—11:00 a. m.
Training Union, 6:00 p.
Worship service, 7:00 p.
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
Sunday School — 10 A. M.
Worship Service — 11 A. M.
We hope you can be there Sunday.
“I was glad when they said unto me,
‘Let us go unto the house of the
Lord’.”
FIRST BAFTIST CHURCH
SUNDAY
9:55 A. M. Sunday School
11:00 A. M. Morning Worship
5:00 P. M. Junior & Intermediate
Choirs
6:00 P. M. Training Union
7:00 P. M. Evening Worship
MONDAY
Workers’ Conference
TUESDAY
2:00 P. M. Rex Ray Circle
2:00 P. M. Joy Russell Circle
2:00 P. M. Lottie Moon Circle
4:00 P. M. Primary Sunbeams
WEDNESDAY
3:30 P. M. Primary Choir
6:00 P. M. Junior & Intermediate
G. A.’s
7:00 P. M. Prayer Meeting
Conference
7:45 P. M. Choir Rehearsal
25 YEARS AGO
(From The Sun November 3, 1938)
October this year is believed to
have established a new record for
dryness, with only .05 of an inch of
rainfall recorded.
Cull and Albert Reeves attended a
cleaning school in Ft. Worth Sunday.
Raymond Cates has purchased
from Jack Harper the grocery and
filling station on the “Y.”
Mrs. Lucian Andrews will present
the following pupils in a juvenile
operetta Tuesday evening: John Dale
Reeves, Henryetta Jackson, Gene Pat
Gray, Nova Hughes, Don Newman,
Winnie Queener, William King, Mar-
garet Burnham, Martha Vestal, Bet-
tye Nell Yeager, Foucheaux Vestal,
Joan Anthony, Bettie Oliver, Arvin
Vestal, Jane Meador, Shirley Thorn-
hill, Betty Ann Darwin and Leroy
Martin.
Mr. Roy Belew of Whitewright and
Miss Dora Garland of Pink Hill were
married Monday.
Miss Onie Scott, formerly of
Whitewright, and Mr. Floyd Ken-
nedy of Dallas were married Sunday.
Miss Mary Hartwig and Mr. James
R. Ball were married Saturday.
. w-b ■
___________
DETROIT — A drastic increase in
the number of cars equipped with
seat belts has delighted practically
everyone connected with the auto
industry.
This includes not only the auto
makers, auto dealers, but also your
local traffic safety leaders and civic
groups which seek to make highways
safer.
A recent survey show’ed that 20
states and the District of Columbia
passed laws requiring seat belts in
new automobiles. Fifteen of the
states took the action during the 19-
63 legislative session and six others
are expected to vote on similar bills
shortly.
Allied Chemical Corporation,
which manufacturers caprolan nylon,
used in the webbing of many seat
belts, estimated that enactment of the
laws in the 20 states and D- of C. will
affect nearly 46,000,000 of the na-
tion’s 65,500,000 cars.
40 YEARS AGO
(From The Sun November 1, 1923)
Ruth Bartley, 9, of the Ely com-
munity was accidentally shot with a
small-caliber rifle Tuesday.
J. J. Looney, 69, died at the home
of his son, James L. Looney, Wednes-
day.
Mrs. Mary Ryon, Mary Lee An-
drews, Mary Johnson, Mrs. J. W.
Wilson and Miss Ernie Harper were
on the PTA program.
Joe Riddle and Virgil Thornhill
have opened the new Farmers’ Cafe
here.
Maggie Horton, 13-year-old daugh-
ter of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Horton,
northeast of town, is seriously ill of
typhoid fever.
Joe Logan, Negro, lost his garage
and automobile by fire Saturday.
You have 639 muscles in your body. You can exercise and develop
them for life-long health and vitality. Or you can live lazily and grow
fat or flabby. And possibly become a premature victim of diseases
of the heartland blood vessels.
There isn’t a shadow of a doubt that physical well-being at all
ages depends to a great extent on regular activity or exercise. But
there s so little incentiveto exercise now—what with push buttons
and sedentary pastimes—that flabbiness begins in early childhood.
Yet, more than half of our children do not get at least 15 minutes*
of planned, vigorous, body-building activity during each school day!
Consequently, nearly one-third of them can’t meet minimum stand-
ards for strength, agility and flexibility.
The development of physical fitness—for all boys and all girls—
should begin early in life.
What about the physical education program in your child’s
school? Is it planned mainly for students interested in varsity
sports? Or is it geared to the development of average boys and
girls—those most in need of physical conditioning?
The President's Council on Physical Fitness urges you to take as
much interest in this phase of your child’s development as you do
in his academic development. Work with your school officials and
community groups to establish a program that emphasizes vigor-
ous activity daily. Bringing up youngsters with strong, agile bodies
is essential to their future—and the future of our country.
To help you evaluate the program in your school, the President's
Council on Physical Fitness will send you a free booklet The ad-
dress is Washington 25, D.C.
CHURCH UF CHRIST
Sunday:
Bible study—10:00 a. m.
Worship and communion—11:00 a.
tn.
Worship—7:30 p. m.
Wednesday:
Bible study, all ages—7:30 p. m.
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Doss, Glenn. The Whitewright Sun (Whitewright, Tex.), Vol. 78, No. 43, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 31, 1963, newspaper, October 31, 1963; Whitewright, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1369464/m1/4/?q=music: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Whitewright Public Library.