Zavala County Sentinel (Crystal City, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 23, Ed. 1 Friday, October 1, 1954 Page: 2 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Texas Borderlands Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the UNT Libraries.
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ZAVALA COUNTY SENTINEL, CBY8TAL CITY, TEXAS, OCTOBER 1, UM
3te Jr -
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OCTOBER
7:30 P.M.
Vr! NEWS
Hast
VfTTM*
iiim
ipi'ii’
ce i:\ity has. patient for care of the mentally
■as. This] ill and $2.85 a day
een the, for tubercular cases.
nsura
ick into t
a feud be
Insurance C >mmission-
t’tomey Eenne Allred.
• s dc-st.ned for court
Bis; Wells News
By Mrs. Perry Bowles
mm
i patients. State hopitals are now
F ...-e-up between the board caring for 25.000 wards with 6,-
ir.ci A.'.red. attorney for the liq- 000 employees,
aidaiing division, came after the
aoard dismissed the attorney and |
tired Austin Attorney Emmett
Shelton..
Allred refused to leave um , , , , ,,
—* of the previous draft
per patient, „ , „ „ „
1 Mr. and Mrs. Perry Bowles and
Margaret Lea Brice spent last
$2.01 daily per patient for meh-1 weekend in Eagle Lake with the
tal cases and $4.15 a day for TB Gilstrap family. Stephanie re-
• 1 turned home with them for a
At present the state is spend-
mon m-
uirtt the
-ucn ue-
jiasnec s-iim- ..
itrir t&tdr in.it-
nhiiTStf OK -vT.
mnmnjnr tfe»* :
understand rru
Jtu: mar
i. rutSTir- rrrTTi-
enhens TV t
shot. Tfrt C2542S
2at.: tua: . at’
causnu xjk xn
any raix. xr_r
-m-m..
It—
LtS
iTm&naac -
V7!i>KiijTht
-ITi4
post, claiming that he was re-
sponsible t; tiie courts which had
ipproved him as attorney for
L.qu;dator J. D. Wheeler.
He charged in a public letter
to the commission that he had
been discharged after he refused
‘o ue:ete the name of a commis-
■ or. employee from a suit he is
to r.'.e. The suit is against per-
- ns connected in fraud charges
.nvoivmg the Texas Mutual In-
suranee Company of Beaumont.
The .nsurance board said it had
never authorized the appoint-
ment of Allred. It also warned
Wheeler that he will be consid-
ered ' possibly liable” if he con-
tinues paying Allred's salary.
Board Chairman Garland A.
Smith said that he felt the issue
vouid be settled in court. The
is needed to clarify the law
: r the insurance industry and
tr.e public, he said.
Texas Draft
Texas’ draft quota for Novem-
I ber is good news to 60 Texans
... somewhere. That’s the number
call
ZTZIk
Al^afc
JJfr
in
short
for October.
Quota for November is 1,062.
A total of 2,565 men are sched-
uled to take physical and mental
exams, during the month. Oc-
tober exams, will call 2,630 men,
State Selective Service Director
Paul L. Wakefield announced.
Walker Appointed
Governor Allan Shivers has an-
nounced the appointment of Ruel
C. Walker, Cleburne attorney, as
associate justice of the State Su-
preme Court, Walker will replace
the late Graham B. Smedley.
Appointment of Walker, as
well as naming of 10 district
judges and two district attorneys
by the governor, followed nomi-
nations of the state Democratic
conventions at Mineral Wells.
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US7WS.
an
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fail n
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in-suei
a.it- >t tne
>r "title evi-
;e-;res may
u\ ; ir>~
- to squeeze
xt )n hand.
ten tral
:u *ne “pit-
e jntangie-
^ vtth the
>n Blank
ery thing Ls
or®
Laugh lin
C. Woodrow Laughlin. 79th
District Judge removed by the
Supreme Court and later voted
uck .n the July primary, faces a
at attempting to disbar him.
The State Bar Association filed
’:te" ratf- iri "AiiUF' ruongh -.V.ttu —'
tey Earl P Hall of Austin. It1
-ntuiiis 11 counts against Laugh- j
-lit, similar to the 12 charges by j
attorneys responsible for his first'
aster from the bench.
"I’ve been expecting this for
-vo or three days.” Laughlin!
-a.when notified of the suit.
Decision as to whether the attor- i
ney. a central figure in Duval'
C auntv controversies, is to be
iisbarrea will be left to a judge
and jury.
Negro Sues :
A 17-year-old Houston Negro.!
ienied entrance at the Univer-1
sity of Texas, has taken his easel
to Federal Court.
John Winfred Walker filed his j
rase on behalf of other negro!
students in the same situation, i
Walker was turned down by
the University on the basis of a !
poiicv that permits entrance of |
. , negro undergraduates only when j
1 ' ‘heir academic course cannot be!
pursued in the state’s negro col- j
ages.
Six Negroes have been turned ;
down by the University this!
month. They planned to study en-1
gmeering or architectural cours-
es.
—THINK bidfcre you buy an Air
Conditioner' Anything we sell—
we service. KRAKOW Refrigera-
tion & Air Conditioning. 12-tfc
visit.
Mrs. Vernon Standifer was
called to Freer Sunday. Her son,
Hazel, had the misfortune to get
his leg broken in two places
while roping calves.
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Zimmer-
man spent last weekend in San
Antonio with Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Carter.
Rev. J. Kosicki was host to
the Methodist Men last Saurday
with a breakfast at his home.
Mrs. Kosicki assisted in serving
10 men.
Mrs. H. Hayes and Henry Lee,
Mrs. Y. S. Parr and Mrs.‘j. W.
Ward attended the birthday of
Mrs. Roath at Cova Chapel Sun-
day. She was 90 years young.
Mrs. Richard Mills is keeping
her two grandchildren while
Mrs. Dorothy Rhinelander is in
the hospital after having surgery.
Mrs. Glenn Zimmerman was
hostess to the ladies of the M.E.
Church with a come-as-you-are
coffee last Thursday morning.
There were 12 present.
Bob Willoughy
Leo Brice
Farm Pond
A site has been cleared for the
construction of a farm pond for
better distribution of livestock,
and to permit uniform grazing of
rangeland on the Mundine Ranch
just north of Batesville. B. Ross
has leased the Mundine Ranch
for five years. He deferred the
5.000 acre ranch all summer to
give the better range grasses a
1 chance to become vigorous and
to seed and spread.
Irrigation Reservoir
Paul Elmore, farming 2 miles
northwest of Crystal City is con-
structing an irrigation reservoir
to store overnight pumping and
to give him a larger quantity of
irrigation water for a shorter pe-
riod to increase irrigation ef-
ficiency by saving water and la-
bor.
Sealing Reservoir
Gilbert Marshall, farming 14
miles west of Crystal City has
done something new in the Win-
ter Garden Soil Conservation
District in the way of sealing ir-
rigation reservoirs. Marshall
disked 6 tons of salt into the bot-
Baddv Freed, Chairman
Kirbv Atwood
Howard Willmon
Buy -- Sell - Trade
With Classified Ads
tom of his reservoir and firmed
the soil by running his tractor
over every inch of the bottom.
Now, here is the story- the res-
ervoir, prior to treatment, leaked
very profusely t4 feet per week)
—after treatment, it has only
gone down 2 inches per week and
seepage seems to be decreasing
every day. Soil Conservation Ser-
vice technicians helped Marshall
plan this sealing job.
SCD Election and Barbecne
October 5
The election of a Supervisor
for Zone 1 of the Winter Garden
SCD will be held at the farm of
Orin Bookout, located 7 miles
southeast of Crystal City. Every-
one in the district is invited to
come out for the barbecue and
election to be held at noon Oct.
5.
here : . and there
Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Dismukes
spent Thursday of last week in
Uvalde. ^_
★
Miss Miriam Campbell spent
the weekend in San Antonio.
HOLSOMBACK & FORD
COMPLETE INSURANCE SERVICE
Phone 369 Crystal City, Texas
others just want it!
FORD OUTCLASSES EVERY 1954 COMPETITIVE CARt
~~H.n ■
>n;i
JiiV
IF-'
>n .e^ai
ami by
and uii-
State Home
Corsicana Home. 65-year-old
state orphanage, should be kepi
■n operation, ex-students of the
rpnanage have told state offi-)
1**3! ■£.
Twenty-one ex-students, in-
hading Rooert W. Calvert, As-
-oc.ate Justice of the Supreme
Court, presented their written
petition to tr.e State Board of
H ps.ta.s and Special Schools.
Tie Texas Research League
nad recommended abolishing the
orphanage and placing orphans
130-h.p. V-8
i:d
has no pres- ■
bolishing the'
State
Colleges
ges need $3 million 1
;ar to provide first
n for students, rec-!
a state commit-
tteemc
fcnrr ti «**; «o ml Al
earn*; 9 *■ ara»»~«2M
«*t Repast: 3. Palate
Tltt «3Tt w
** *W ta mf
v *o *et nto ....
fan *o«r my-offs
nr -‘armings. How
my m ~ou go.
■msr m "opr temam «rtry
il pRhiuw «rv» nwv to pay
• "wat «ssm t. !T«at »ay you
m at Ur o inamnai
aaaiy. First -uep:
finance committeemen of the
Texas Commission on High Ed-
ucation. created by the legisla-
ture. made the report after
checking 18 state-supported col-
eges.
The money is needed to raise
the qua.ity of education during
the school year 1953-56. The
-PimBipaa also recommended
515 million more for major re-
pairs during the period.
At present the colleges are
nosing about $7 million per
senooi year through tuition and
other sources, the commiss.on
said.
Ford’s new 130-h.p. Y-block V-8 is the only V-8
in the low-price field. And with low-friction
design and deep-block construction, it’s the
most modern in the industry.
Ball-Joint Suspension
Ball-Joint Front Suspension is the most
important, chassis development in 20 years, for
easier riding and handling. And Ford is the only
low-priced car that has it.
Trend-setting styling
Ford’s trend-setting styling has set the pace for /
the industry. It is forward-looking styling that’s |
out front today and will stay attractive for the u, :
years ahead, too. \
Highest resale value
An analysis of used car sales statistics shows that
recent-model Ford cars return a greater portion of
their original cost than any competitive make of car.
! s
SWiSSRIkllvv.\
BUY WISELY!
/#
't BUY FORD!
BUY NOW!
H' ■ v.
State Hospitals
Texans have oeen urged to re-1
quest their legislative representa-1
lives to support appropriations1
for state hospitals.
Drt James A. Bethea, admins-
trator for the board, said his de-
ls due to seek an in-!
of at least SI per day per
You’ll get a GREAT DEAL with
DON TAYLOR MOTORS
^FORD
1001 N. 1st. Are.
Crystal City, Texas
Only Ford Dealers Sell Used Can’s And Ti
mmm
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Dry, Roy, Jr. Zavala County Sentinel (Crystal City, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 23, Ed. 1 Friday, October 1, 1954, newspaper, October 1, 1954; Crystal City, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1112692/m1/2/?q=%22~1~1%22~1: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .