The Mathis News (Mathis, Tex.), Vol. 37, No. 40, Ed. 1 Friday, October 3, 1952 Page: 1 of 6
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VOL. XXXVII
MATHIS, TEXAS", MATHIS NEWS, FRIDAY, OCT. 3, 1952
SIX PAGES NO. 40
F. M. Boykin, Sr.
To Head ike
Drive In San Pat.
F. M. Boykin, Sr. has been
appointed chairman for San Pat-
ricio County in the “Texans
For Ike” Drive, according to an
announcement made by Masten
Nixon, one of the originators of
the program and sponsor of
Club No. 1.
“Texas for Ike” is operating
as a part of the statewide Texas
Democrats for Eisenhower group
which habits headquarters in
Austin. Th^Vwo groups develop-
ed independently along parallel
lines but they are now coopera-
ting in every way possible. “Tex-
ans for Ike” organization has
formed and is now forming Six
Clubs covering 35 south Texas
Counties.
Club No. One includes Nueces
County, v/ith Dr. Franklin Yeager
and Bill Gandy as co-chairman,
San Patricio County, with F. M.
Boykin, Sr. as Chairman, Jim
Wells County with David Grose
as Chairman, .Kleberg County
with A. L. Kleberg as Chairman,
and Brooks County with J. O.
Ware as Chairman. ,
Club No. 2, sponsored by Hill
Coke of Harlingen included Cam-
eron, Hidalgo and Willacy
Counties.
Club No. 3, to be organized
with headquarters in Victoria
will cover Victoria, Jackson, Cal-
houn, DeWitt, Goliad, and Re-
fugio Counties.
Club No. 4, Sponsored by Terry
Scarborough of Kenedy, in Bee,
Live Oak, McMullen, Atascosa,
Karnes and Wilson Counties.
Club No. 5, Sponsored by John
Hurd of Laredo, in Webb, Duval,
Jim Hogg, Starr, and Zapata
Counties.
Club No. 6, sponsored by Jack
Eubanks of Crystal City in La-.
Salle, Frio, Medina, Uvalde, Za-
vala, Dimmitt, Maverick and
Kenney Counties.
Nixon said the Texans for Ike
drive will reach a climax when
Eisenhower comes to Texas on
his birthday October 14. A birth-
day party has been planned for
Eisenhower in front of the Alamo
in San Antonio in the afternoon
of October 14.
M r. Boykin stated today
that work has already started
toward appointing chairmen and
workers in each of the 16 pre-
cincts of San Patricio County.
Local Railroad Crew Receives 0. K.
For Placing Signal Lights At Bad
Crossing On Highway 59 In 90 Days
I near accidents, and the light has
Railroad officials made known been needed there for many
this week that a signal light will j years. Mayor Caffall said this
be placed on the Front Street
crossing by the Missouri Pacific
depot.
The signal will be erected
within the next ninety days,
they assured. The order to do
the work has already been given
to Pete Zapata, section foreman
for the Mathis district.
The light will be put in as
soon as crews finish the placing
of two lights in Kingsville and
five other lights between Mathis
and Odem, and should be in
within ninety days.
Pete Zapata received letters
this week confirming the work
orders and giving the go ahead
to the placing of the lights. He
and the station agent, C. R. Ni-
chols, and others connected with
the railroad at Mathis, were ins-
trumental in getting the lights
approved. ,
An article which ran in the
September 12 issue of this paper
dealing with a council meeting,
during which the question came
up of getting the railroad to
place the light, was clipped and
sent in to the division headquar-
ters of the railroad. After which,
the letters were written to the
local men saying that the work
had been approved.
This crossing has been the
scene of numerous accidents and
week that he wanted to thank
Mr. Zapata, Mr. Nichols and the
others for helping to get the
lights put in.
Baptist Revival
Begins Sunday;
Vaughan To Sing
Gavin Vaughan, student from
University of Corpus Christi, will
lead the singing at the revival
being held at the First Baptist
Church Oct. 5 to 12.
The services will be held at
6:45 and 7:45 with the Sunday
sermons beginning at 11 a.m. and
8 p. m. Rev. A. A. Palmer, pas-
tor of the church will lead the
services. The theme for the mor-
ning services will be ‘The Bible
Speaks”, and the morning ser-
vice will last about 45 minutes.
Evening services will be an
hour in length beginning with
a spiritual song service. Mrs. Gar-
lond Hollon, organist, will play
for the services.
Coffe and donuts will be served
at the church at 6:30 each mor-
ning of the services. Rev. Palmer
extends an invitation to everyone
to attend this revival.
State Patrolmen
To Be placed
In San Pat. Co.
Wm. Nicholas, county judge,
stated Wednesday morning that
he received a letter from W. J.
Elliott, chief of the Texas High-
way patrol, stating that he ex-
pects to have highway patrol-
men in San Patricio County by
December 1.
Several weeks ago Judge Ni-
cholas had contacted the High-
way Patrol and had asked for
a patrol car and two men and
that is what he expects to be
placed in Sinton. They will pat-
rol all of the county.
The Mathis Pirates were de-
feated Friday night 20 toO in
what turned out to be a rough
game with the Taft Greyhounds.
The Pirates never did threat-
en the goal line any time during
the game, but showed some good
playing in the first quarter.
Penalties ran wild throughout
the game on both sides, with the
Pirates penalized 65 yards and
the Taft eleven 120 yards.
Taft’s first score came late in
the first quarter when they had
Mathis backed up to the goal
line and downed the ball for
two points when Mathis fumbled
behind the line.
Taft’s second score came just
before the half on a pass to make
the score 8 to 0.
A third score was made on the
third play of the second half
but was called back when off
sides was called on Taft. The
score became 14 to 0 at the end
of the third quarter when Chino
Gonzales went over for a touch-
down, Mutcher went over for the
final tally in the middle of the
final quarter.
Chino Gonzales was the out-
standing player on the Taft team
and couldn’t be stopped by the
Pirate eleven before he made
good yardage.
The Mathis team was handi-
capped by the lack of its regular
Premont Cowboys
To Invade Mathis Tonite
The Premont Cowboys will
come whooping and hollering in-
to the Pirate’s den tonight seek-
ing their fifth straight win of
the season.
Kickoff time is 8 o’clock and
what follows may be the fourth
straight loss for the Pirate elev-
en, according to sidewalk talk
in Mathis.
The Premont school officials
have said that at least 1,000 fans
will follow the Cowboys to Ma-
this to see the game.
Coach Fred Rich’s Pirates have
been working out plays all dur-
ing the week and except for in-
juries should be in good shape
for the game. As in the past,
the Cowboys are expected to take
to the air like birds, and unless
this passing attack can be stop-
ped, the Mathis Pirates may be
on the short end of the game.
However, history can repeat
itself and this shouldn’t ever be
over looked. Last year the Ma-
this club went to Premont with
an unbeaten record, until the
Cowboys turned on a passing at-
tack, and left the home boys in
the dirt. This could happen in re-
verse tonight, and local fans will
be there to see if it could happen.
The Mathis team is a good
LADIE S NIGHT
When finaf "plans of organizing PROGRAM HELD
has been completed further in- gy ROTARIANS
formation relative to organiza- j
lion will be announced. | The Mathis Rotary Club held
Motto for the “TEXANS FOR another of their “Ladies Night”
IKE” Drive is “Remember
Tidelands, November 4th.”
the
programs Tuesday night and en-
joyed a chicken dinner. Forty
seven members and guests at-
tended.
Basil Westover was program
chairman for the evening and had
the guests to participate in a
“guess whose hand this is” game.
Before dinner, the men were
placed in a room and then one
at a time, showed . one. of their
hands to the ladies—the object
being for the ladies to try and
guess their husband’s hand. They
missed only two or three times,
too, but the men played a trick
on them, of course. Every man
switched name cards with one
another and thoroughly confus-
ed the women, who thought they
had guessed their husband’s
hand.
After dinner, the play was re-
be in attendance at the meeting, versed and the men had a chance
and the general public is invited I to see how well they knew their
Ben Guill To
Speak In Interest
Of Ike Campaign
Ben Guill, one of the state’s
outstanding young Republican
leaders, will be the principal
speaker at a county-wide Eisen-
hower-for-President rally which
will be held at Sinton high
school auditorium next Monday
night at 7:30, it was annouced
this week by Percy L. Johnson,
Republican Party County Chair-
man. Prominent local, county and
area Republican leaders will also
to attend.
Guill, who only a few years
ago enjoyed the distinction of
being Texas’ lone Republican
congressman, is Chairman of the
wife’s hand. Every man guessed
right, too, but the women played
the same trick. Fun was had by
all.
Members and guests who at-
Texas Eisenhower campaign. Inj tended were Mr. and Mrs. E. L.
that capacity, he has traveled all ; Davenport, Mr. and Mrs. T. A.
over the state in the furtherance j Harbin, Mr. and Mrs. Oran Sides,
of the Eisenhower-Nixon cam-1 Mr. and Mrs. E. G. Frels, Mr. and
paign, and is widely recognized j Mrs. L. T. Porter, Mr. and Mrs.
as a very able and popular spea-
ker. Among other things, Guill
will explain the entire organiza
Adolph Bomer, and Kathy, Mr.
and Mrs. Gordon Cabaniss, Mr.
and Mrs. B. E. Caffall, Mr. and
MATHIS ELEVATOR
OFFICE “On FIRE”
MONDAY MORNING!
Chas. Foote, Bill Parrish, and
others at the Mathis Grain and
Elevator Corp. became a little
excited Monday morning when
O. W. Winsauer, who had just
stepped out of the elevator’s
office, noticed smoke coming out
from under the office.
He called to those in the office,
who went running out to see
what was on fire. Sure enough,
there -was smoke boiling' out;
from under the office and the
wood wall was hot. Everyone
went running back inside to see
what was burning. When they
found nothing, they went back
outside, and soon discovered that
the “smoke” was steam coming
from a steam pipe which runs
under the office.
Needless to say, everyone was
relieved.
Mefhodist Church
Plans Revival
For Oct. 22-Nov. 2
Rev. W. O. Schultze announc-
ed this week that a revival will
be held at the First Methodist
Church from October 22 to No-
vember 2.
Rev. and Mrs. R. L. Flowers,
evangelists, will be in Mathis
to lead the services. The Flowers
are an evangelistic team, and
both preach. They have preached
for a good many years.
In addition, Mr. Flowers leads
the singing while Mrs. Flowers
plays the instrument. They are
well known throughout Texas.
Rev. Schultze extends an in-
vitation to everyone to attend
tional set-up of the campaign, Mrs. A. L. McCraw, Mr. and Mrs.
down to the precinct level. j C. D. Caffall, Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Johnson stated that Guill’s j Dickerson, Mr. and Mrs. David
speech will serve to officially j Hutcheson, Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Eg-
kick off the Eisenhower-Nixon ’ gert, Mr. and Mrs. Basil West-
drive for votes on November 4th j over, Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Dor-
in San Patricio County. Unoffi-1 ris, and Karen, Mr. and Mrs.
cially, however, the local and Paul Stone. Mr. and Mrs. Bill
county Republican campaign has Messer, Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm
been in progress for some time. Maedgen, Mr. and Mrs. George
County Eisenhower - Nixon Henderson, Mr. and Mrs. John
Headquarters was opened here Crouch, Mr. and Mrs. Milton
Tuesday afternoon at the for-
mer Sinton Chamber of Com-
merce office on Rachel Street.
Mrs. Phil Johnson has been em-
ployed as secretary and will be
on hand daily to distribute litera-
ture and campaign buttons to
interested persons.
I. S. Butler attended a district
.meeting of Central Power and
Light officials Monday in Alice.
He spent most of the day at the
meeting.
Boatwright,
B. G. Helm.
and Mr. and Mrs.
TAX STATEMENTS
GO OUT IN MAIL
WEDNESDAY, OCT 1
Through a typographical error
it was reported last week that
city and school taxes had to be
paid before January 1st, but
the correct date is January 31st.
After that date a penalty is
added for each month the taxes
are not paid. The statements
went out in the mail Wednesday.
Methodists To Have
Ooen House Sunday
Everyone is invited to an open
house at the Methodist parsonage
Sunday afternoon from 3 to 5
o’clock.
The parsonage has been com-
pletely redecorated on the in-
side, with the addition of new
furniture for part of the build-
ing, including rugs drapes, lamps
and other items.
The redecorating was done un-
der the supervision of the Par-
sonage committee composed of
Mesdames C. N. Freeman, Mal-
colm Meadgen, and Charles
Brown.
Vocational Schools
Close In County
The San Patricio County Voca-
tional Schools at Mathis and at
Taft closed Tuesday due to low
enrollment, Jack Jones, county
rr n>:c ir. ator from .T i.t <■ a>. i The
school at Sinton *. osed ?e; eral
months ago.
Only eleven stud v'ts were en-
rolled at Mathis and 1 1 at Taft.
Ten of Hhe student:- have been
transferred to the sc’’-' r,] at Robs-
town where they will somplete
their training under the GI Bill.
The county schools have been
in operation since 1946 and over
200 students have been enrolled
since the program was started*
backfield. Curt Lambert was un-' ball club> but injuries are going
toAElay to an in>u:y-?to hurt things in tonight’s game.
When Allen Doubrava was ta-
ken off the field, a big gap was
left in the team which the Taft
b o ys managed to hammer
through each time.
Few Call This Week
To Identify Farm
Callers in the Mystery Farm
contest this week were: Mrs.
Clifton Jennings, Carl Beall
Mrs. Dan Beautnagel, Mrs.
George Ramsower, Mrs. Gus
Willman, Lonnie Huddleston,
Charles Beckendorf, Barbara
Hendricks.
ine identity of the farm and
the name of the first person to
call can be found on another
page of this paper. Also, this
week’s photo can be found else-
where. Look at it, and phone 72
and guess whose farm it is.
F.H.A. CLUB HAS
FIRST MEETING OF
YEAR TUESDAY
The F.H.A. club held its first
meeting last Tuesday in the
school library. New officers were
elected and are: President, Dor-
othy Hollon; vice president,
Theresa Krnavik; secretary, Bar-
bara McGee; treasurer, JoAnn
Salge; reporter; Sharon Dehnisch;
parliamentarian, Betsy Hill; his-
torian, Ofelia Villarial; and song
leader, Joan Wren. Miss Margaret
Cash is chapter advisor.
Committees for the year were
also appointed.
J. W. Nichols Speaks
At Corpus Meeting
James W. Nichols, the 24-year
old evangelist who was largely
responsible for the raising of
$250,000 in three months time
to put the churches of Christ
on the national airways, deliver-
ed an address to a crowd of about
250 people gathered at the Ayres
St. Church of Christ in Corpus
Christi last Monday. Represen-
tatives frorp fifteen churches of
Christ were in attendance.
Coach Rich is handicapped by a
lack of reserve power to throw
in when the team gets weary.
Scouts To Leave
Sat. To Attend
Football Game
Twenty-six Boy Scouts and
their advisors will leave at five
o’clock Saturday morning for
Austin to see a college football
game.
They will go in one of the
school buses to see the game bet-
ween Notre Dame and Texas
University. They plan to return
after the game.
Men who will accompany the
boys are W. L. Huntsinger, Ar-
nold McCraw, Gordon Brown,
Gene Miller, Milton Boatwright.
Several others, including Frank
Dehnisch, have not decided whe-
ther they will go with the group
or not, W. L. Huntsinger said.
The Pirates will field the same
starting lineup as last week. The
Premont team will probably be
led most of the way by Quarter-
back Bailey Hyden, the team’s
passer. Others on the tea mwill
be ends Larry Durrett and Ra-
mero Tamez; guards, Vic Webb
and Benito Gonzales;; tackles,
Johnny Miller and Alfredo Gar-
za; in the backfield it will be J.
B. Kiser, Tiquio Amaya, and
Luiz Tamez, and fullback Lonnie
Livingston.
Mathis FFA Chapter Will Sponsor
"Better Livestock" Day Mon. Oct. 13
Local Stockmen T© Participate
Boys of the Mathis Future going to enter stock in the San
Patricio Fair to be held Nov.
10 and 11, Gordon Cabaniss said
this week.
All stock will be washed, clip-
ped and groomed up, and the
public is invited out to see the
show.
Farmers of America chapter will
sponsor a “Better Livestock
Day” Monday, October 13,
On that day, beginning around
8:30, the boys will bring their
beef cows, calves, dairy heifers,
etc. to the school grounds or to
the empty lot in front of the It
theatre and show them until 2 800 PERSONS
sometime in the afternoon. T1 A T^’TTVT/~< pTT? ct? c
Several ranchers in the Mathis IdlVlINu
area will also be invited to bring j AT A&I COLLEGE
their purebred stock in and
show them along with the FFA
boy’s stock.
Texas A.&I. College is provid-
ing instruction for approximately
Purpose of the show is to let i2,800 persons during the fall
the public see for themselves semester, enrollment figures re-
what the boys and the stockmen leased^ today by Dr. George^ W,
of the community are doing to
improve stock. It will also be a
preliminary build up to give the
boys some experience who are
TYNAN CHURCH
TO HAVE SAUSAGE
SUPPER OCT. 12
St. Paul’s Lutheran Church at
Tynan is sponsoring a home-
made sausage supper next Sun-
day from five until seven o’clock
in the evening.
Funds from the supper will
go into the church’s building
fund.
Tickets to the supper will be
$1.25 for adults and 75c for
children under ten years old.
Cake and coffee will be served
with the dinner. The congrega-
tion invites everyone to attend.
ROTARIANS ATTEND
BEEVILLE MEETING
ON WATER PROBLEM
Six Mathis Rotarians attended
a meeting in Beeville last Thurs-
day which dealt with the water
problem of South Texas. The
meeting was an inter-city meet-
ing of eight Rotary Clubs, and
the principal speaker was Paul
Weaver of Houston chief geol-
ogist for the Gulf Oil Corp., who
is an authority on underground
water.
The Beeville Rotary club was
the host to the meeting which
was held in the Rose room of
the Hotel Kohler at 7:30.
The meeting was worked up
by Dr. George Samson of George
West, who asked the Beeville
club sponsor tlie event. Other
clubs which attended were
George West, Three Rivers, Ken-
edy, Goliad, Pettus, Sinton and
Mathis.
Thai;nton Thatcher, governor
of district 185, of McAllen attend-
ed the meeting. Those from Ma-
this were Adolph Bomer, D. C.
Brown, I. S. Butler, Joe Dicker--
,son T. A. Harbin, and W. O.
Schutlze.
Mr. Weaver spoke on sewage
disposal and pollution of streams
above the surface and also un-
derground water.
McCulley, registrar indicated.
Students engaged in work for
resident credit total 1,912, of
whom 1,078 are men and 834 are
women, Dr. McCulley said. This
includes 251 students attending
Saturday classes on isA.&I.’s
Kingsville campus, 185 enrolled
in night classes here, and 264
attending academic classes hold-
ing night sessions each week on.
A.&I.’s Valley campus, the Citrus
and Vegetable Training Center
at Weslaco. Full-time students
in regular day classes at Kings-
ville number 1,212.
Scattered over all South Texas
and at many distant points are
320 persons enrolled for study
in correspondance courses con-
ducted by A.&I.
In addition about 560 students
are enrolled in classes at A.&I.
extension centers. Almost half
these are residents of Valley
towns and others attend classes
at towns in the Laredo-Corpus
Christi area.
Ag. Classes Talk
To Local Farmers
About Farming
Gordon Cabaniss, Vocational
Agriculture II class has been
interviewing several farmers
during the past week and asking
them questions concerning their
own fanfiing operations;‘’their
likes and dislikes, and in general,
finding out information which
may help the boys when they
start farming for themselves.
During the past few days they
talked to Rex Gregory, C. S.
Brown. Arnold McCraw, and
Malcolm Maedgen. Many ques-
tions were asked these men and
the class came up with the fol-
lowing conclusions as to cotton BUILDING LOANS
farming in the Mathis area. rniAV Bir T? a crpn
They found that the farmers iV-lAx r>Hi HiAbllliiv
thought there was a definite i TO OBTAIN SOON
place for mechanical cotton pick-
ers and strippers. The men reas-1 D. C. Brown reported this
oned that in order to do success- ; week that homes may become
ful picking with mechanical; easier to buy in Mathis some-
means that farmers must plant j time in the near future,
cotton which is suitable to har- He said that in the past, due
vesting by machines. Such cot- to the size of the town, that re-
ton has to have locks of lint | Pair and new construction loans
which is easy to pluck out by the j were hard to obtain, and that
spindles of the machines. They many people were discouraged
also concluded that many farm- from building when they found
ers see a greater use of mecha- out about the difficulty in ob-
nical strippers in the latter part | tain-ing loans,
of the cotton season. Here too,! Mr. Brown spent the past
cotton must be planted to suit Saturday and Monday in Hous-
the strippers. The boys learned ton talking to various loan com-
that a ‘storm proof” cotton such panies about the situation ^ in
as Lankart is more suitable to Mathis arid came back feeling’
picking by stripper methods. that something would be worked
The V. A. I class has been out so that loans, particularly
visiting "each other’s projects FHA loans> would become much
during the past week. The class i easier to obtain in the near fu-
is the biggest to ever take the j ture.
first year agriculture course. | Mr. Brown said that making
There are 26 members. They vis- I loans easier to obtain would be
ited Robert Karkoska’s farm and an inducement for individuals
saw his dairy heifer; then saw; ancl companies to build more
Billy Miller’s two heifers. They houses to ease the critical short-
visited and saw the broiler pro- ! aSa of dwelling places which now
jects being raised by Rudolpho exists in Mathis.
Villareal, Roy Dennis. These
INJURED MAN
REPORTED BETTER
■ A. L. Hadley, who was injured
Tuesday in a fall from a derrick
on the Vahlsing Farm, was re-
ported in good condition at the
Mathis Hospital Wednesday.
He has a broken hand and
shoulder, and chest injuries. Had-
ley is employed by the Layne-
Texas Co., which is drilling the
irrigation wells on the F. H.
Vahlsing farm.
Mathis Teachers
Attend Meet
Every teacher in the Mathis
schools attended a meeting at
Sinton Monday night of the San
Patricio County unit of the Tex-
as State Teachers Association.
The teachers met with their
respective sections, English, Math,
etc., teachers meeting together.
This marks the first time that
the meetings have been carried
on in such a manner. Usually
they all meet together.
Approximately 250 teachers
from all over the county attended
the meeting, . but the Mathis
school was the only one with 100
percent attendance.
Plans for future meetings
were worked out during Mon-
day’s meeting.
T. A. Harbin is president of
the county unit and Griff Moore
is secretary.
broilers will be sold when they
reach 9 weeks of age.
They also saw the feeder hogs
being raised by J. M. Edmond-
son and Don Stone, and then saw
the Angus heifer being raised
by Loyd Mengers.
Fire Department Answers
Call Wednesday
Members of the Mathis Volun-
teer Fire Department were a
bit confused Wednesday when
the fire whistle blew. A car was
reported on fire one mile out
Highway 9 toward Edroy. The
truck raced out the highway and
after going as far as the road to
West Sinton, they began to won-
der where the car was.
They turned around and head-
ed back to town and discovered
that the fire was in a pickup
parked behind the Mathis Used
Auto Parts. It wasn’t on the high-
way at all, and the truck had
gone past the place on its
way out.
Luckely the fire was out and
caused no damage. It was caused
from a leak in the gas tank of
the truck.
Dirty Streets Given
Cleaning This Week
Several merchants hired la-
borers this week to clean up the
streets and side walks in front
of their respective stores.
The clean-up started last Fri-
day morning when six men were
seen working on the street in
front of various stores. Two men
worked most of the week, until
Thursday, the streets had a few
inches of dirt scraped from them.
More Chlorine Now
Being Added To Water
If your water has been a little
rusty lately, it has been because
all the lines have been drained
and are stirred up somewhat.
The fire plugs were opened
this week to allow the lines to
be flushed out, and the rusty
water should settle out soon.
Monday 100 percent chlorine
was added to the water instead
of the 10 percent which has been
used in the past. The chlorine
is being added at the rate of 4
tenths parts to every million
parts of water. This is not much,
chlorine compared to what other
towns have to use, John Standlea
said.
j
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Helm, Bobby. The Mathis News (Mathis, Tex.), Vol. 37, No. 40, Ed. 1 Friday, October 3, 1952, newspaper, October 3, 1952; Mathis, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1039719/m1/1/: accessed June 21, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Mathis Public Library.