The Whitewright Sun (Whitewright, Tex.), Vol. 75, No. 5, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 4, 1960 Page: 3 of 8
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Thursday, February 4, 1960
THE WHITEWRIGHT SUN, WHITERIGHT, TEXAS
PAGE THREE
THE AMERICAN WAY
About Your
Down Memory Lane
HEALTH
Big-Hearted,
Isn’t He!
and
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Veteran Questions
And Answers
Adding machine paper.—The Sun.
As CLEAN and SAFE
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HEART GIFTS
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SEE US FOR ALL KINDS OF
Hybrid SEED CORN
ELECTRIC
Bathroom Heating
WE HAVE A FULL LINE OF
SUN*GLO FEEDS
electric heat is as clean as electric light. You’ll like the
CUSTOM GRINDING
safety of electric bathroom heating, too. It’s flameless and
uses up none of the oxygen in the room. And with thermo-
Our FARLEY FEEDS
appliance dealer or electrical contractor soon about an
Electric Bathroom Heater for your
home. Easily installed in the
HEADQUARTERS FOR FERTILIZER!
wall opening for your
present heater.
Pascal Farley
LOKEY EDWARDS, District Manager
Sun Want Ads do the job.
iigfg
static control, your Electric Bathroom Heater maintains any
selected temperature automatically. See your electric
Your bathroom walls and tile stay bright and new-looking
when you install an Electric Bathroom Heater . . . because
Danger of Implosions
With TV Tubes Cited
FOR HOGS, DAIRY CATTLE, RANGE
CATTLE AND POULTRY
BARBECUE NETS $500
FOR SAVOY CLINIC
COMMUNITY
PUBLIC SERVICE
Live in your heart as though ev-
ery day were Christmas.
A weekly public service feature from-
the Texas State Department of Health.
WHAT EVERY MAN
KNOWS
The Whitewright Sun
T. GLENN DOSS, Editor and Publisher
as electric light
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IT’S THE LAW
A public service feature
of the State Bar of Texas
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JUST REMEMBER.—
EVERVTUINS YOU MAKE
BELONGS TO THE GOVERNMENT''
BUT- YOU CAN KEEP
A LITTLE TO LIVE ON/
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Am I auto-
to another
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25 YEARS AGO
(From The Sun January 31, 1935)
Dr. George W. Truett of Dallas will
preach the dedication sermon for the
newly completed Baptist Church at
a service to be held at 7:30 next
Tuesday evening.
A son was born to Mr. and Mrs.
Neil Brittan of Oklahoma City on
Jan. 24. Mr. and Mrs. Emmet Penn
of Whitewright are grandparents.
Freeman Page and Miss Flossie
Mae Whitworth were married Satur-
day.
Miss Frances Riddle entertained a
group of friends last Thursday eve-
ning, it being her birthday.
60-
KVwJasvV'®.-'-.
In the next 24 hours three Ameri-
cans will die from accidental poison-
ing and 425 will get sick after eating
or drinking something not intended
for human use.
The toll is high, yes, but a brief
decade ago it would have been twice
as high.
Why have accidental poisonings
declined, even in the face of rising
populations and vastly increased
availability to toxic control centers.”
More than 200 centers-are operat-
ing throughout the nation today, sup-
plying prompt information on treat-
ment and toxicity of poisons to phy-
sicians on a 24-hour daily basis. Nine
centers are currently functioning in
Texas. State health authorities, who
cooperate with state and local medi-
cal societies in setting them up, would
like to see at least three more put in-
to service.
Centers are now active in Austin,
Corpus Christi, Fort Worth, Galves-
ton, Houston, Tyler, Abilene, Dallas,
and Grand Prairie.
The opinion is generally held that
a center to serve far West Texas, one
in the Panhandle, and one to serve
South Texas and the Rio Grande
Valley would complete the state-wide
network.
Among the main items of equip-
ment in a poison control center are
a telephone with a well-publicized
number, a reference library on toxic
substances, and an index file of com-
mon, non-edible household products
—including brand name, poison con-
tent and antidote or prescribed meth-
od of treatment.
At the request of local health de-
partments the Texas State Depart-
ment of Health will aid in securing
a comprehensive index file on pois-
ons for any community desiring to
establish a poison control center,
function, imagine this true-to-life sit-
To see how poison control centers
uation:
A youngster accidentally swallows
PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY
Entered at the Whitewright, Texas, post office
as second class mail matter.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
In Grayson and Fannin Counties ........$2.00
Outside Grayson and Fannin Counties.. .S2.5O
Foreign Subscriptions (Except Soldiers). .$5.00
NEW YORK.—The American
Heart Association reports it received
a recorded total of $24,004,865 in
contributions during 1959. Dr. A.
Carlton Ernstene, association presi-
dent, said in announcing the total
that it was $1,659,147 more than in
1958.
Let us grind and mix your feed and add molasses, giving
you a palatable, nourishing feed at low cost. Check our
prices on meal and molasses.
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 the
right to reject items which he considers to be
strictly promotion material and not news.
30 YEARS AGO
(From The Sun January 30, 1930)
Due to continued rainfall since
January 7, practically all roads lead-
ing out of Whitewright are impas-
sable.
Manuel Alexander, Loleita Coffey,
Dorothy Hamilton, Janice McIver,
Alwilda Ryon, Laura Jean Fleming,
and Estelle Binion were on the 11th
grade honor roll.
Lee and Roy Norris are opening a
garage in the building west of the
Smith Hotel.
1. That he’s young for his years,
wise for his age and a better golfer
than his score indictes.
2. How to brag about his income
by moaning about the tax.
3. That his wife deliberately hides
his things where they belong.
4. He has a way with dogs
women.
5. One way to' economize is to >
grumble about household bills. That
an even better way is’ to shave with
a dull razor blade.
—Harold Coffin.
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SA
FORT WORTH. — Television pic-
ture tubes can be dangerous if han-
dled carelessly or if subjected to rap-
id temperature changes, the editor of
a trade publication warned in Fort
Worth Saturday.
The warning came after a tube im-
plosion, a bursting inward, Friday at
Byron TV Supply, 1403 S. Riverside
Dr., injured two employees, Jim
Goode and Troy Hood, and left glass
embedded in the ceiling.
Both men received painful cuts but
returned to work Saturday after hos-
pital treatment.
Leonard R. Smith, editor and pub-
lisher of the Texas Electronics Asso-
ciation Times, said there have been
reports of an increasing number of
tube implosions recently.
The potential pressure induced by
the extremely high vacuum is around
10 tons, he said, and bits of glass and
metal from an implosion have been
blown through a four-inch board.
The implosion Friday occurred as
Goode carried a set from a warm
room into the cold portion of a ware-
house. The sudden temperature
change caused the tube to implode,
showering glass all over the room.
Smith warned that an implosion
may be set off simply by the tap of a
ring or any other hard object on the
tube.
He said the safe way to turn on a
TV set is to make sure the room is
warm first, since the sudden warming
of a tube in a cold room may cause
it to burst.
B
Ground Corn, Ground Maize, Ground Oats, 16% Dairy
Feed, Corn Chops, and Chicken Feed. Get our prices
before you buy anywhere.
20 YEARS AGO
(From The Sun February 1, 1940)
Mrs. R. T. Pennington, Miss Tom-
mie Chenoweth, Mrs. Glenn Doss,
Miss Frances Wilson and Miss Viva
Phillips were on the Music Club pro-
gram.
The senior class of WHS has
elected the following favorites: Ru-
dalph Russell, most studious boy;
Claire Doss, most studious girl; Em-
ma Joyce Hinton, most beautiful girl;
Robert Benson, most handsome boy;
Cathleen Blackerby, most athletic
girl; Brazwell Alexander, most ath-
letic boy; Martha Jo Darwin, best
all-around girl; Howard Wallace,
best all-around boy; Drunette Farley,
most popular girl, and George Han-
sard, most popular boy.
35 YEARS AGO
(From The Sun January 29, 1925)
Miss Sallie E. McRady died at the
home of her sister, Mrs. J. F. Fender,
on Jan. 23.
Rev. A. E. Major, Clyde Johnson,
Maxine Roberts and Mrs. Guy Ham-
ilton were on the PTA program.
Mrs. Olivia Whedbee of Savoy has
bought the Mrs. E. W. Savage farm.
The consideration was $23,225.
Silas (Uncle Si) Jackson, 85, for-
merly of the Pilot Grove communi-
ty, died at the home of his son in the
Whitemound community on Jan. 18.
The Desert school building was de-
stroyed by fire Tuesday morning.
Miss Louise LaRoe, Miss Ethel
Gordon, Miss Nell Montgomery, Miss
May Badgett and Mrs. E. J. Lilley
attended a bridge-luncheon at the
home of Mrs. John Livingston at
Sherman Tuesday.
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Trust Arrangements
Explained
When property is placed in trust
it is turned over to a trustee who will
see to it that it is properly managed
for the benefit of a person or persons
you name as beneficiaries. It is a
method of disposing of your proper-
ty and may be used in conjunction
with a will.
Trusts have many advantages. A
trust may be used to provide income
.for persons unable to support them-
selves, to provide funds for a child’s
education, as a means of establishing
an annuity, or to provide a gift for
a charitable institution..
In these days of high taxes, a trust
may be utilized to minimize the tax
burden. If carefully planned, a trust
may decrease income and inheritance
taxes.
A trust arrangement works, rough-
ly in this manner: A person who de-
sires to create a trust is called a
grantor. The grantor chooses a
trustee. The trustee may be a bank,
an individual, or a trust company.
The grantor through a trust instru-
ment tells the trustee how to distrib-
ute the trust property or income. The
trustee will then manage and dis-
tribute the trust proceeds or proper-
ty in whatever manner the grantor
desires.
A very common arrangement is to
place the property in trust with di-
rections to pay the income from the
property to a wife for her life, and
on her death the trust is to end and
the property is to be distributed to
the grantor’s children.
An interesting type of trust is that
which is sometimes called a spend-
thrift trust. This is an arrangement
whereby one sets up a certain sum
of money to be given out to another
at a definite rate per month or per
year, or under definite restrictions.
This type of trust is generally used
in wills where a person desires to
leave money to an individual, but
feels that the individual is not cap-
able of properly caring for the mon-
ey and that if left to them in full that
the party receiving the money will
spend and waste the money and not
receive the maximum benefit from it.
Trust property quite often consists
of securities. The law regulates the
type of property in which trust funds
may be invested. However, the
grantor may designate the type of in-
vestments the trustee may make.
The effectiveness of a trust is de-
pendent largely on its proper crea-
tion. To avoid the pitfalls and dan-
gers of lawsuits and ineffective trust
operations, a trust instrument should
be properly prepared. A poorly plan-
ned or carelessly drawn trust in-
strument can not only defeat the ob-
jective of its creator, but may prove
costly as well.
Your lawyer can advise you
whether a trust arrangement will be
advantageous in your particular sit-
uation, and is qualified by education
and experience to prepare properly
the legal papers necessary to set up a
trust. If you have in mind some
bank or trust company to act as trus-
tee, that firm’s trust officer will be
glad to discuss the matter in a con-
ference with you and your attorney.
some insecticide he finds under the
kitchen sink. The label is missing so
his mother knows only the brand,
name.
She calls the family’s physician,
who may in turn call the nearest
poison control center. A quick
check of the card file reveals the
poisonous ingredients in the insecti-
cide, the antidote and suggested
treatment.
Or, if the center has treatment fa-
cilities available—and many of them
in Texas do have—it may be neces-
sary to rush the youngster there for
emergency care. In either case the
center gives the child a vastly better
chance of surviving the unfortunate
incident.
*5* *J**t**J**J»*t**t**+**t* ♦♦**♦* *•*•*♦♦* ********* *♦**■♦*
Q.—I have just retired from the
Armed Forces after 30 years of serv-
ice. Would it be possible for my GI
insurance premiums to be paid by
deduction from my retirement pay?
A.—Yes. All that is necessary is
for you to authorize the deduction,
through your branch of service.
Q.—I have just sold my GI house
and been released by VA from liabil-
ity on the balance of the loan, which
the buyer is assuming,
matically entitled now
loan?
A.—No. As long as VA’s guaranty
of the loan is outstanding, no restora-
tion of loan rights can be extended.
Even in cases where the loan has
been paid in full, restoration of en-
titlement can be made only when the
property was taken by a government-
al agency for public use; destroyed by
fire, flood or other natural disaster;
or was disposed of for reasons con-
sidered compelling by the VA-
Q.—Who is supposed to apply for
War Orphans schooling, the child of
the deceased war veteran or his liv-
ing parent or guardian?
A.—If the prospective student is
under legal age, his parent or guar-
dian must apply in his behalf. If he
is of age, and has no known disabil-
ity, he may apply on his own.
Q.—Is there any special procedure
for notifying my VA district office
of my change of address? I have a
GI insurance policy.
A.—No special procedure is neces-
sary. However, it will be best and
most convenient if you will use the
premium payment envelope VA
sends you. Print or type your new
address on the inside flap, sign and
mail it to the VA, which will change
its records accordingly.
SAVOY.—Savoy netted between
$500 and $550 Saturday night with
the barbecue for the clinic building.
“We fed between 750 and 800 Sat-
urday night,” Claude Strickland,
chairman of the fund raising com-
mittee, said. “But by the time we
pay for the meat and other food, we
will show a profit of between $500
and $550.”
Strickland said the next barbecue
would be held in the high school
gymnasium where there was more
room and the large crowd could be
handled better.
Strickland said it was hoped work-
could be completed on the clinic
within the next month.
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Doss, Glenn. The Whitewright Sun (Whitewright, Tex.), Vol. 75, No. 5, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 4, 1960, newspaper, February 4, 1960; Whitewright, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1369284/m1/3/: accessed May 22, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Whitewright Public Library.