White Deer Review (White Deer, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 16, Ed. 1 Friday, July 7, 1944 Page: 2 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Carson County Area Newspapers and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Carson County Library.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
■FRIDAY, JULY 7, 1944
WHITE DEER REVIEW, White Deer, Carson County, Texas
White Deer Review
Published Every FRIDAY at
White Deer, Texas
Phone 43
P. 0. Box 517
W. W. SIMMONS, Editor
Entered as second-class mail mat-
ter at the Post Office at White
Deer, Texas, under an Act of
March 3, 1879.
WHICH ISSUE SHALL I BUY?
There Is a Fifth War Loan Security to Meet Every Investment Need
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Per Year, in Texas--------$1.50
Per Year, outside Texas----$2.00
Classified and Legal Advertising
Rate: 12c per line first insertion;
6o per line each additional inser-
tion.
POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENTS
The following announcements
for public office are made subject
to the action of the Democratic
primary, July 22, 1944.
Tor County Judge;
W. J. WILLIAMS.
0. R. (Reese) BEDDINGFIELD
For Sheriff, Tax Assessor and
Collector:
CLARENCE C. WILLIAMS.
Tor County Treasurer:
MRS. EVA E. CRAIG.
For County and District Clerk:
HARRY G. VANCE
MRS. OPAL CLEEK
MRS. FANNIE WILLIAM'S
For District Judge 84 District:
JACK ALLEN
For Commissioner, Precinct 4:
H. T. DICKENS
FOR MAXIMUM SAFETY OF PRINCIPAL—All issues. There are no safer investments in the world.
FOR MAXIMUM YIELD—Series E Savings Bonds (2.9%*); Series F Savings Bonds (2.53%*); Series G Savings
Bonds (2.5%*). *If held to maturity.
FOR CURRENT INCOME—Series G Savings Bonds, Treasury 21/2’s of 1965-70, Treasury 2’s of 1952-54.
FOR DEFERRED INCOME—Series E and F Savings Bonds (for tax purposes income may be deferred or
accrued).
FOR SHORT TERM—%% Certificates of Indebtedness (slightly over *11 months); Treasury 114% Notes of
Series B-1947 (about 2% years) and Series C Savings Notes (6 months to 3 years).
FOR MEDIUM TERM—Series E, 10 years; Treasury 2’s of 1952-54 (10 years); Series F and G (12 years).
FOR LONG TERM—Treasury 2!4’s of 1965-70 (26 years).
FOR MARKETABILITY—Treasury 2’s and coupon or registered form; 114% Notes and %% Certificates
of Indebtedness, coupon form only.
FOR BANK LOAN COLLATERAL—Treasury U4’s, 2’s, and 214’s, V&% Certificates of Indebtedness, and Series
C Savings Notes.
ESPECIALLY FOR PAYING TAXES—Series C Savings Notes (acceptable during and after second calendar
month after month of purchase at par and accrued interest for Federal Income, estate or gift taxes).
FOR MY ESTATE—Series G (redeemable at par on death of owner), Treasury 2V2* (redeemable at par for
estate taxes only on death of owner).
FOR GIFTS—Series E (or any other issue depending on needs of the recipient).
FOR EDUCATION OF CHILDREN—Series E.
FOR SELF RETIREMENT PLANS—Series E.
FOR INVESTMENT OF BUSINESS RESERVES AND OTHER TEMPORARY’ FUNDS—%% Certificates of
Indebtedness, Treasury 114% Notes and Series C Savings Notes. The last named are redeemable at par and
accrued interest during and after sixth calendar month after month of purchase, except where owner is a
commercial bank, in which case redemption will be made at par.
Workout at a Red Cross Aquatic School
RATION REMINDER
Meats, Pats—Red stamps A-81
(trough V8 are good indefinitely. 1
Processed Fruits, Vegetables—|
Hue stamps A8 through V8 are
ood indenfiitely; W8, X8, Y8, ZS,
nd A5 became good July 1.
Sugar stamps 30, 31 and 32 in
100k IV are good indefinitely for
J5S each
Stamp No.’ 40 in Book IV is good
'or 5 pounds of canning sugar
hrough Feb. 28, 1945.
Gasoline—In the Southwest, A-
.2 coupons are good through Sept.
!L
Shoes—Aii-plane stamps Nos. 1
md 2 in book III are good indefi-
litely.
DISABLED VETERANS
ro GET TRAINING
Disabled veterans of the present
ivar may apply for job counseling
and vocational training and rehab-
ilitation at centers to be estab-
lished at colleges and universities
throughout the country, according
to the Veterans Administration
and the Office of War Mobiliza-
tion. The Veterans Administration
eligible disabled veterans, trans-
portation to centers, meals, com-
fortable quarters, medical service,
aptitude tests to determine veter-
ans, abilities, interests and occu-
successful, and professional advice
on vocational training. The first
of the proposed centers will be
opened at the College of the City
of New York.
CARSON COUNTY WAR LOAN
QUOTA IS $460,000.00
Can me meet our quota and how
soon is the question on every lip
at this time.
Divided into school districts it
is as follows:
White Deer, including Skellv-
town, $134,550.00, individual E, F,
and G Bonds $45,337.50.
Panhandle, $170,200.00
Groom, $74,750.00
Liberty, $6,900.00
Pleasant Plains, $9,200.00
Deahl, $9,200.00
Hobart, $4,600.00
Cuyler, $16,100.00
Conway, $13,800.00
Lark, $6,900.00
King, $9,200.00
Tony Ridge, 4,600.00
Total for the county $460,000.00,
with E, F, and G quotas of $155,-
000.0°. , , _ . .
J C. Freeman is the local chair-
man and J. C. Me Collough again
heads the county organization.
Last vear farm people bought
$1,200,000,000 in War Bonds— a-
bout ten per cent of their net m-
colme. With an estimated net farm
income of 13 billion dollars for
1944, bond purchases by farm peo-
ple are expected to be higher this
year than last. The War Bonds
bought during the Fifth War Loan
will enable our governmentHo get
more and better war equipment
for its fighters than the bonds
bought a vear ago, according to a
compilation of war equipment
costs by , the War Department. A
heavy bomber, which a year ago
cost $500,000, today costs half
that muchl A Bbfors anti-aircraft
gun formerly cost $25,000, now
mt
MARCHING WITH MARTIN
THE EX-MARINE
QUALIFIED!
EXPERIENCED!
JESSE E. MARTIN
FOR
ATTORNEY GENERAL
The Only Ex-Service Man
in the Racel
r
HOW MUCH DOES IT COST 1
TO BOMB BERLIN?
The American Air Forces are bombing
Berlin. Suppose in the dusk of an Eng-
lish evening 1.000 huge bombers soar
over ihe channel and head for Berlin.
By Ihe iime those planes return to Eng-
land, their motors will have consumed
2,400,000. gallons of gasoline. The cost
... of gasoline ALONE . . . will be
more than $380,000. To pay for ihe gas-
oline used on ONE such raid, 96,000
Americans would have to invest at least
10 percent of their next pay check in-
War Bonds.
You get a big kick out of reading about
those 1,000 plane raids. You know that
such raids, if repealed often enough,
will soften up the Axis. But . . . What
are you doing to help PAY THE COST
of ihose raids?
Think it over. And every time you're
tempted to put a nickel in something
you don't absolutely need—put it in
War Bonds instead! You get $4 bacK
for every $3 invested . . . besides help-
ing to lick the Axis. Eomb Berlin With
War Bonds!
I ^
Soul Western
PUBUC B£B¥/E£
CorapaBf
-
Here you see a class of future experts in water safety undergoing
part of the training provided by the American Red Cross at its many
aquatic schools throughout the country. The need of persons skilled
in the techniques of water safety, life saving and first aid, brought
about by the demands of wartime, has placed upon the Red Cross the
responsibility of providing skilled replacements. (Photo by Eaten
— American Red Cross.)
wm
WW y, V"-
Preview of a Postwar Catalog .
costs only $13,000. A year ago the
Garand rifle cost $80. Today it
costs $35. A few items, among
them the good old army mnle, have
gone qp in price. A year ago Uncle
Sam paid $190 for an army mule.
Today such a mue costs Uncle Sam
$225.
MORE FARM IMPLEMENTS
j Certain small manufacturers are
permitted to produce unlimited
quantities of any farm machinery,
' equipment and repair parts made
entirely of surplus (materials or
materials needing no (allotments or
priorities assistance higher than
AA-4 preference rating. WPB an-
nounces. Items most manufactur-
ers will be able to produce under
this relaxation, including feed
grinders, pitchforks, band cultiva-
tors, rakes, bioes, shovels and barn-
yard and poultry equipment-_
NOTICE TO TAX PAYERS
BUDGET HEARING
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN:
That there will be a public hearing
at flhe School Board office for the
current year, on Monday evening
at 9 o’clock, July 10th, 1944, at
which time the Board of Trustees
will adopt and approve the 1944-45
School Budget.
E. C. SHUMAN, President,
School Board, White_ Deer
Independent School District
Attest: J. W. Wells, Secretary
'M
Vi
H. H. SMITH
Lawyer
Specializes in Probate, Admin-
istration o,f estates, Titles and
Taxation—Federal and State.
Surratt Bldg.
Panhandle, Texas _
LErS LOCK THE BARN DOOR NOW!!
"s. 1
Mplg >'^V-
liP§t! W
mmm
§:‘-V & &
' | - '
m:
■t
i
. --,3.
■/ I
WAR BONDS WILL BUY THEM!
i; : : . £ W
**>
HR,
m
V
;V
lx
&
ifPX-
X
HOW MANY OF THESE WILL YOU NEED? Maybe
you can’t get new equipment now. The firms that
supplied it are doing just what you are—working
hard for the war effort. But you’re looking forward
—and planning ahead—to the day when new cata-
logs full of up-to-date, improved machinery and
materials will make grand reading again.
YOUR PLACE IN THE POSTWAR PICTURE. Owners
on farms all over the country are keeping careful
check on the places where money will have to be
laid out after the war. Barns and buildings that need
repairs and paint. Fences to be rebuilt. Improve-
ments for the house. New stock. New tractors.
Against these future needs they are putting money
away in Whr Bonds—the safest, easiest way to save.
How about you? Are you doing your postwar
planning?
YOUR BOY’S PLACE. Don’t forget that to those boyl
of ours in the Services, home’s the thing they’re
fighting for. They yearn to get back to it—and it’s
up to us to see that it’s an even better place than
before. War Bonds will hasten the day of Victory;
and at maturity the money will come back... for the
farm. Make the future a goodone. . .with War Bonds!
YOU NEVER GET LESS THAN YOU LEND! And
you can get % more than you invest. When
held 10 years, Series E War Bonds yield
2.9% interest compounded semi-annually.
You get back $4 for every $3.
Of course, no one should cash a Bond
unless he has to; but if an emergency comes
along, Uncle Sam will redeem them in cash—
at full purchase price—any time after you’ve
held them 60 days. BUY WAR BONDS!
FACTS ABOUT WAR BONDS (Series E)
You LEND Uncle Sara: Upon Maturity you get back:
$18.75 $25.00
37.50 50.00
75.00 100.00
375.00 500.00
750.00 1000.00
You can buy War Bonds from your bank, postmaster,
rural mail carrier or Production Credit Association
For America’s future, for your future, fdr your children’s future—keep on buying WAR BONDS
KEEP BACKING THE ATTACK!
Pvt. Winfield C. Powers
Mrs. W. C. Powers, Acting P. M,
This is an official U. S. Treasury Advertisement-
prepared under auspices of Treasury Department and War Advertising Council
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Simmons, W. W. White Deer Review (White Deer, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 16, Ed. 1 Friday, July 7, 1944, newspaper, July 7, 1944; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1159023/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1&rotate=270: accessed July 12, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Carson County Library.