The Winkler County News (Kermit, Tex.), Vol. 6, No. 21, Ed. 1 Friday, August 7, 1942 Page: 2 of 4
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Page Two
THE WINKLER COUNTY NEWS
Friday, August 10,1942
September
revenue based on the laws -
with
reference
$
4
mental statements shall be sub;
1942, there was duly filed in the of- Institutions of higher education.
membership of each House, no 1: rance of bonds to pay off State
draw nor pay a warrant upon
bill
appropriation
d
l
CAN'T YOU
SLEEP?
«
(SEAL)
BOARD
4 ’
OS
IN WAR BONDS
public may bring civil suits for
greater), plus attorney’s fees
1
6
$
1
hundred
marriage
>
4
Jun&, 9n!
on his
J
b
dollars
‘A
99
i
2223
*:3
!
:23858239828
' BEAUFORD JESTER
TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY
W
j
3
1
Friday, August 7th
9:30 to 9:45 P. M.
Political
A nnouncements
minimum
overcharge
$0.00
$15.00
$10.00
$5.00
said
write
proposed
or have
be for
store-
buying
the Treasury of the State of Texas,
not otherwise appropriated, to pay
War shipments from 432 automo-
tive plants, representing 72 per -cent
jpf the industry amounted to $420,-
p00,000 in April, or 46 per cent a-
bove that in February.
Any erroneous reflections upon the
standing, character, or reputation of
any person, firm, or corporation
which may appear in the columns
of The News will be gladly correct-
ed upon being brought to the at-
tention of the management.
ONE
SUCK
District Offices
County Offices
Precinct Offices
City Offices ...
Houston ranks fifth among the
list of 17 cities in the United States
whose population increased ten per
cent or more from 1930 to 1940.
During this deca,de, Houston’s popu-
lation increased 31.5 per cent.
the
and
National Advertising Representative
American Press Association, 225 W.
39th Street, New York City.
a
the
COMMISSIONER PRECINCT 3
E. M. (Gene) Crutcher,
(Re-election)
FOR JUSTICE OF PEACE Pct. 4
B. F. Sand-el
Emery (Mutt) Spangler
COMMISSIONER PRECINCT 1
W. K. (Dirty) Wharton
FOR DISTRICT JUDGE
William L. Kerr
COMMISSIONER PRECINCT 4
G. P. (Pink) Mitchell
J. M. Hollowell
More proverbs from the French:
Wisdom is on the lips of those
about to die.
Cowardice is the mother of cruel-
ty.
He who lives without folly is not
so wise as he thinks.
On the Home Front
(Official Release of Office For
Emergency Management)
FOR CONGRESSMAN,
16th District
R. E. Thomason
There were no wrinkles
brow.
Said he, ‘I’ll take three
now.”
FOR COUNTY CLERK:
Mrs. Floyd M. Ellis
(re-election)
FOR COUNTY ATTORNEY
H. L. “Button” Robensua
(re-election)
A. T. Folsom
FOR CONSTABLE Pct. 4—
R. E. “Bob” Leese
(Re-election)
FOR SHERIFF, TAX ASSESSOR
AND COLLECTOR:
F. Ellis Summers
(re-election)
ef Navarro County
will open kis campaign for
Railroad Commissioner
By: V. C. Marshall, Administrator
Dated this the 21 day of July, 1942.
20-St
FOR COUNTY TREASURER
L. R. "Jake” Tarver
(re-election)
FOR COUNTY JUDGE
J. B. Salmon
BARGAIN DAYS! 2 adults 29c; 2 children 14c to see
The Andrews Sisters with Jane Frazee in
“WHAT’S COOKING”
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
$1.50 Per Year in Winkler County;
$2.00 Per Year Elsewhere.
I Give You Texas
By BOYCE HOUSE
IT THEN the stress of modern’
W living gets “on your nerves”)
a good sedative can do a lot to
lessen nervous tension, to make'
you more comfortable, to permit
restful sleep.
I Next time a day’s work and
worry or a night's wakefulnesss,
makes you Irritable, Restless or
Jumpy—gives you Nervous Head-
ache or Nervous Indigestion, try
Dr. Miles Nervine
'(Liquid or Effervescent Tablets)
Dr. Miles Nervine is a time-
tested sedative that has been
bringing relief from Functional
Nervous Disturbances for sixty
years yet is as up-to-date as this
morning’s newspaper. Liquid 254
and $1.00, Effervescent tablets 354
and 754. Read directions and use
only as directed.
Announcing
Change of Ownership
J. H.Hale's Feed Store has been taken
over by T, R. Watkin and will
will be known as
I. R. WATKIN’S FEED STORE
I WOULD LIKE TO SEE ALL THE OLD CUSTOMERS
AND MANY NEW ONES. I WILL CONTINUE TO HANDLE
A FULL LINE, OF PURINA FEEDS.
T. R. Watkin
...Over Stations KAND, Corsicana;
i WOAl, San Antonio; KPRC, Houston;
KRIS, Corpus Christi; KRGV, Weslaco;
KFDM, Beaumont; KGKB, Tyler; KOCA,
Kilgore; KFRO, Longview; WFAA, Dal-
las; WBAP, Fort Worth; KRBC, Abilene;
KYFO, Lubbock; KNOW, Austin, and
KGNC, Amarillo.
Last times tonight 4, and this is the BIG NIGHT’ BE
PRESENT FOR THE
“CARDBOARD LOVER”
with Norma Shearer, Robert Taylor and George Sanders.
a
1609
THURSDAY - FRIDAY, JULY 30-31
The Laff-Fest of a gal with Remote Control
(No connections between her brain and actions)
Irene Dunne and Patric Knowles in
“LADY IN A JAM”
These are the nights when you want to be present
Treasury in favor of any person,
The Winkler County
. News
Published every Friday in Kermit,
The County Seat of Winkler Coun-
ty, Texas, by
H. G. VERMILLION,
Editor and Publisher
shall be considered as passed or
sent to the Governor for considera-
tion until and unless! the Comptrol-
ler of Public Accounts endorses his
certificate thereon showing that the
amount appropriated is within the
amount estimated to be available
SATURDAY ONLY
Hear Gene sing “ANY BONDS TODAY” Gene Autry and
Smiley Burnette in “
“HOME IN WYOMING”
And . . . Our gang in “DOIN’ THEIR BIT” and
“Perils of the Royal Mounted” No. 8
Mrs. Bowm1 Gentry of Cm pus
Christi visited nr s:ster. Miss Ed-
die Mae Mo.sley, his week.
with a four-fifths vote of the total available funds, providing for is-
printed on their ballots, the words:
“Against the Amendment to the
ENJOY AN EVENING IN COOL COMFORT AT THE
TEXAS THEATRE
containing an
thereto.”
Sec. 3. The Governor c the State
of Texas is hereby directed to is-
sue the necessary proclamation for
said election and have same pub-
lished as required by the Consti-
tution for amendments thereto.
Sec. 4. The su mof Five Thousand
Dollars ($5,000), or so much there-
, of as may be necessary, is hereby
Comptroller finds an appropriation 1 appropriated out of any funds in
bill exceeds the estimated revenue
he shall endorse such finding
The Winkler County News makes
these charges for publication of
candidacies in this column:
h
fice of the State Soil Conservation
Board, at Temple, Texas, a petition
pursuant to the provisions of the
State Soil Conservation Law, as
enacted by the 47th Legislature,
known as House Bill No. 444, re-
questing the establishment of Upper
• n in
And give you then a
clear,
if I should find the
thereto.”
Those opposing
Amendment shall
BE IT RESOLVED BY THE
LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE
OF TEXAS:
Section 1. That Section 33 of Ar-
ticle 16. of the Constitution of the
LEGION ELECTION
DELAYED TWO WEEKS
Election of officers for the Am-
erican Legion, scheduled for the
meeting Tuesday night, was post-
poned because several of the mem-
bers were unable to atend. The
election will take place at the next
meeting Aug. 18.
| A JOINT RESOLUTION
proposing an amendment to the
Constitution of the State of Texas
by amending Section 33 of Article
16, of the Constitution of Texas so
as to permit the accounting offic-
ers of this State to draw and pay
warrants for salaries to officers of
the United States Army or Navy
who are assigned to duties in State
1, 1943, and fixing the duties of the
effect that will be receive - Ly ar. , Legislature and Comptroller of
for the State from all sourc s ! Public Accounts
Statewide Slash
In Fire Insurance
Rates Announced
Austin, Aug. 6 — A sweeping,
statewide reduction in fire insur-
ance rates, announced today by
Marvin Hall, State Fire Insurance
Commissioner, will result in an es-
timated saving of $3,200,000 to Tex-
as policy holders during the next
12 months. The new rates involve
an order by the Board of Insurance
Commissioners, and were effective
on fire insurance policies written
after Aug. 1.
The broad reduction affects many
classes of insured property, and in
the case of dwellings amounts to as
much as a 25 per cent saving in
future insurance costs.
A few classes of property will re-
ceive increases in rates due to un-
usually heavy losses experienced in
these classes during the past few
years, Hall said.
“The revision of rates,” Commis-
sioner Hall added, “has resulted
(whichever is
public was the revelation that the
sugar supply situation was tight-
ening again as a result of enemy
action in the Caribbean and the
war needs for shipping space that
had been used for sugar.
On the other side of the ledger,
the War Production Board took
cognizance of the population shifts
that are accompanying the war pro-
duction and military training pro-
grams, and increased coffee and
tea quotas for critical areas in the
Southwest.
Miss Ruth Hoose • f Carlsbad, N.
M., visited her si ter, Mrs Floyd
Ellis, this week.
, , Constitution of the State of Texas,
ted at any Special Session of the I __u ,1,
T requiring appropriation bills passed
Legislature and at such other times k, r. . , ,
. | by the Legislature to be presented
as may be necessary to show prob- i . .. lie a , .. e , 1
,, 1 to and certified by the Comptroller
I able changes. cMi, . . ,
1 of Public Accounts as to available
From and after January 1 $.5, funds for payment thereof, limiting
save in the case of emerrenc, and । appropriations to the total of such
for salary or compensation as
Inflation continues to be a prob-
lem on the Home Front, in spite
of the Price Control Act. It will
continue to be a problem so long
as there are exceptions to the Act
and some commodities remain be-
yond the reach of the various OPA
regulations.
To housewives of the Southwest,
it wasn’t news when it was an-
nounced during the last week that
the cost of living continued to go
up, in spite of price control. It has
been evident from day to day as
they have shopped to provide the
proper diet for their families.
The answer is the Price Control
Act itself. Under, it, many unpro-
cessed farm products aren’s subject
to control. What happens to those
products is answerable only to the
law of supply and demand—and,
PREVUE AND SUNDAY-MONDAY
A host of grand stars in a grand picture! Spencer Tracy
Hedy Lamarr and John Garfield in
“TORTILLA FLAT”
of $50, or treble
beans and spaghetti. You just turn :
the can upside down, punch four
holes in it, wait 10 minutes and the
contents are piping hot—or so I
was told . . . and there’s a bit of
the romantic connected even with
the blankets they sell. Pointing to
the design, a friend said, “This is
a 3 1-2 point blanket,” and ex-
plained that — in the 1700’s—In-
dians swapped furs for blankets
and a “3 1-2 point” one meant it
was priced at three large beaver
skins and one small skin.
Price Administrator Henderson
said the government control of
prices and rents, where it is in ef-
fect, is doing a good job of holding
down the cost of living, but that
uncontrolled prices are showing a
definite tendency toward danger-
ously high levels. Nevertheless, he
added, the President’s program will
prevail and the battle against in-
flation will be won.
One of the measures that will
work toward winning the battle
will be the voluntary enforcement
of the act, where controls are pos-
sible, by the nation’s retailers who
are as anxious as the shopping pub-
lic. And assisting will be the shop-
ping public.
During the week, regional OPA
officials at Dallas called attention
to one section of the Price Con-
trol Act that will work toward this
enforcement. This section provides’
that beginning July 31, housewives
and other members of the buying
A JOINT RESOLUTION
proposing an amendment to Article
III of the Constitution of the State
of Texas by adding- a new Section
thereto to be known as Section 49a,
requiring all bills passed by the
Legislature on and after January 1,
1945, appropriating money for any
purpose, to be sent to the Comp-
troller of Public Accounts for his
approval, and fixing the duties of
the Comptroller with referenc
thereto; authorizing the Legislature
to provide for the issuance, sale,
and retirement of serial bonds,
equal in principal to the total out-
standing, valid, and approved obli-
gations owing by the General Rev-
enue Fund on September 1, 1943;
providing for the submission of this
amendment to the voters of this
State; prescribing4 the form of bal-
lot; providing for the proclamation
and publication thereof; and pro-
viding for the necessary appropria-
tion to defray necessary expenses
for the submission of this amend-
ment.
BE IT RESOLVED BY THE
LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE
OF TEXAS:
Section 1. That Article III of
the Constitution of the State of
Texas be amended by adding there-
to, immediately after Section 49,
a section to be known as Section
49a, .to read as follows:
“Section 49a. It shall be the duty
in the affected funds. When the
showing the fund accounts to be
credited during the succeeding bi-
ennium and said statement shall
CGtain such other information a.
may be required by law. Sup
Such enforcement will
the benefit of the honest
keepers as well as for the
Entered as Second Class Matter at
the Postoffice in Kermit, Texas, un-
der the Act of March 3, 1879.
Donors Of Records
Are Given Thanks
Mrs. Jack Nelson, president of
the American Legion Auxiliary,
has expressed her thanks for the
response given in the recent drive
for old phonograph records. About
250 records were turned in. Special
thanks went to Mrs. S. T. Johnson
and Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Walton for
the large number donated by them.
Contrary to general belief, real
poets are/ not long haired dreamers
but are men of action. Byron swam
the Hellespont—no mean achieve-
ment — and he died while aiding
the Greeks in their fight for free-
dom. Those were not empty words
he wrote:
“The isles of Greece, the isles of
Greece!
Where burning Sappho loved and
sung ..
Eternal summer gilds them yet.
But all except their sun is set.
The mountains ook on Marathon,
And Marathon looks on the sea;
And nursing there an hour alone,
I dreamed that Greece might
still be free . . .
For standing on the Persians’
grave •
I could not deem myself a slave.
Really expressing the deep rev-
erences that all men truly feel for
womanhood are these lines:
“They talk about a woman’s
sphere
As though it had a limit;
There’s not a place in earth or
heaven,
There’s not a task to mankind
given,
There’s not a blessing or a woe,
There’s not a whispered yes or
no,
There’s not a life, or death, or
birth,
That has a feather’s weight of
worth—
Without a woman in it.”
costs, against any storekeeper who
charges them more for an article
than OPA regulations allow.
Honest storekeepers, and they are
in the great majority, have nothing
to fear from this section of the law,
the OPA officials said. In fact, they
will have the assistance and the
protection of the Office of Price
Administration itself if actions are
brought unjustly, for spite or to
satisfy a grudge.
With the passing of the July 31
deadline, Administrator Henderson
in Washington announced that the
OPA will turn from educational
work to enforcement in areas where
the OPA’s explanatory activities
have reached a majority of retail-
ers.
public, because it will penalize the
overhearge (whichever is the
has continued to operate outside
the law while his honest compe-
titor has tried to comply by keep-
ing prices under the ceiling.
:3 $ * * : *
In addition to the treble-damage
suits, violators of the Price Control
Act and the various price regula-
tions face criminal prosecution
with maximum penalties of $5,000
fines and a year’s imprisonment or
both, civil injunction suits, or re-
vocation of the license which was
granted to each retailer when the
general maximum price regulation
went into effect.
One definite move toward en-
forcement during the week was the
announcement that legal steps were
being instituted in 138 cases of ap-
parent price ceiling violations by
beer dealers in the Dallas OPA re-
gion. Surveys in 11 cities showed
establishments selling beer for
prices higher than they charged in
March.
And now for something in light-
er mood, written no doubt by a sour
old batchelor:
“The knot was tied; the pair were
wed,
And then the smiling bridegroom
said
Unto the preacher, ‘Shall I pay
To you the usual fee today,
Or would you have me wait a
year
Also important to the shopping 1
s= 10% OF INCOME
F IS OUR QUOTA
Memories of a visit to St. Paul:
In a sporting goods store, you can
buy self-heating cans of coffee, I
Pecos Soil Conservation District;
and
WHEREAS, the lands described
by said petition, and other lands
which will be considered for inclus-
ion in said district, are located in
Loving, Winkler, Ward, and Reeves
Counties, described substantially as
follows: All lands lying within Lov-
ing, Winkler, and Ward Counties,
and all lands lying within Reeves
County except those now included
in the Toyah--Limpia Soil Conser-
vation District No. 209.
Now, therefore, notice is hereby
given that a public hearing will be
held pursuant to the said petition,
on the question of the desirability
and necessity of the creation of such
district; on the question of boun-
daries to be assigned to such dis-
trist; upon the propriety of the pe-
tition, and of proceedings taken un-
der the said Act. The said public
hearing will be held by the State
Soil Conservation Board on the 11
day of August, 1942, beginning at
2:00 o’clock P. M., at Pecos, in the
county of Reeves.
All interested parties are invited
to attend and will be given oppor-
tunity to be heard a tthe time and.
place hereinbefore specified.
STATE SOIL CONSERVATION
STATE SOIL CONSERVATION
BOARD OF TEXAS
NOTICE OF HEARING UPON
ORGANIZATION OF PROPOSED
UPPER PECOS SOIL CONSER-
VATION DISTRICT, EMBRACING
LAND LYING IN LOVING, WINK-
LER, WARD, AND REEVES
COUNTIES, TEXAS.
WHEREAS, on the 20 day of July,
state
As happy as I estimate?’
The preacher lost no time in
thought,
To his reply no study brought,
agent, officer or apointee, who at
the same time holds any other of-
fice or position of honor, trust or
profit, under this State or the
United States, except as prescribed
in this Constitution. Provided, that
this restriction as. to the drawing
and paying of warrants upon the
Treasury shall not apply to officers
of the National Guard of Texas,
the National Guard Reserve,, the
Officers Reserve Corps of the Unit-
ed States, nor to enlisted men of
the National Guard, the National
Guard Reserve, and the Organized
Reserves of the United States, nor
to retired officers of the United
States Army, Navy, and Marine
Corps, and retired warrant officers
and retired enlisted men of the
United States Army, Navy, and
Marine Corps, nor to officers of the
United States Army or Navy who
are assigned to duties in State In-
stitutions of higher education.”
Sec. 2. The foregoing Constitu-
tional Amendment shall be submit-
ted to a vote of the qualified elect-
ors of this State at an election to
be held throughout the State on
the third day of November, 1942, at
which all ballots shall have printed
thereon:
“For the Constitutional Amend-
ment permitting the accounting of-
ficers of this State to draw and
pay warrants for salaries to offi-
cers of the United States Army,
or Navy who are .assigned to duties
in State Institutions of higher ed-
ucation.”
"Against the Constitutional Am-
endment permitting the accounting
officers of this State to draw and
pay warrants for salaries to of-
Undertakers have removed more
Inqusitiveness is fatal to real
than any other class of people.
from an exhaustive study of fire
losses experienced in these classes.
“Recently the board urged com-
panies . to reduce their operating
costs in order that this saving- also
might be. passed on the public. Co-
operation of both companies and
agents to this end has been splen-
did. The agents, as a whole, are
due particular credit in the unself-
ish attitude displayed in a willing-
ness to see all savings possible
passed on to the insurance buy-
ers.”
The greatest saving in any class
will apply to dwellings. This bene
lit, estimated to exceed $2,625,000
within the next 12 months, wil
reach more individual propert;
owners than any other class Pre-
miums on insured dwelling j last
year recounted for approcmatel:’
40 per cent of the fire insurance
business written in Texas.
Savings to insurance buyers n
Texas as a result of today s ord.r,
coupled with reductions domring the
past six years, reach an appro.-
mate total of $10,000,000, Hall said
1
The Gleaners Class of The Bap-
tist church entertained their hus-
bands with a baanne steak sup-
per at the 3. M. Wa. 1 I1 ranch
Tuesday nisht.
J
nSAg
One Buck oufoF Evory Ten
you earn should beqoinq g
into US.WarBonds-Stamps,
Buy War Bonds
Every Pay Day
* * ★
Let’s Double
Our Quota
ficers of the United States Army
or Navy who are assigned to duties
in State Institutions of higher ed-
ucation.”
Each voter shall scratch out one
of said clauses on the ballots, leav-
ing the one expressing his vote on
the proposed amendment.
Sec. 3. The Governor shall issue
the necessary proclamation for said
election, and have the same pub-
lished as required by the Consti-
tution and laws of this State, and
the sum of Five Thousand ($5,-
000,00) Dollors, or so much thereof
as may be necessary, is hereby ap-
propriated from any funds in the
State Treasury, not otherwise ap-
propriated to defray the expenses
of printing said proclamation and
of holding said election.
h"
hmn
To feed and clothe the troops in
one Army Corps Area requires 98,-
000 miles of highway and 131 miles
of government-owned railways
connecting 20,000 buildings of near-
ly 2,500,000 acres of military reser-
vations.
the expenses of such publication
and election.
State of Texas, be amended so as
to.readas follows: uexuversnip or eacn nouse, no ug-tsuance of bonds to pay off State
Section 33. Ihe accounting of- propriation in excess of the 'obligations outstanding September
ficers of this State shall neither I cash and anticipated revenue of the j l, 1943, and fixing the duties of the
the i funds from which such appropria- Legislature and Comptroller of
I tion is to be made shall I valld Public Accounts with reference
From and after January 1, 1945, no
of the Comptroller of Public Ac-
counts in advance of each Regular
Session of the Legislature to pre-
pare ' and submit to the Governor
and to the Legislature upon its
convening a statement under oath
showing fully the financial condi-
tion of the State Treasury at the
close of the last fiscal period and
। an estimate of the probable receipts
■ and disbursements for the current
I fiscal year. There shall also be con-
। tained in said statement an item-
there’s plenty of demand thee
days.
Take lamb for instance. The price
isn’t controlled. Between mid-May
and mid-June inflation ran the
cost to the housewife up more than
10 per cent. For roasting chickens
the rise was nearly 9 per cent. Ap-
ples, which aren’t controlled, went
up 25 per cent----50 per cent above
the prices of March.
On the other hand, the price of
controlled beef, veal and pork fell
off and prices of other foods which
are under the price ceiling either
remained steady or dropped.
******
*****
ized estimate of the anticipated obligations outstanding
thereon and return to the House in
which same originated. Such in-
formation shall be immediately
made known to both the House of
Representatives and the Senate and
the necessary steps shall be taken
to bring such appropriation to
within the revenue, either by pro-
viding additional revenue or reduc-
ing the appropriation.
“For the purpose of financing the
outstanding obligations of the Gen-
eral Revenue Fund of the State and
placing its current accounts on a
cash basis the Legislature of the
State of Texas is hereby authoriz-
ed to provide for the issuance, sale,
and retirement of serial bonds,
equal in principal to the total out-
standing, valid, and approved ob-
ligations owing by said fund on
September 1, 1943, provided such
bonds shall not draw interest in
excess of two (2) per cent per an-
num and shall mature within twen-
ty (20) years from date.”
Sec. 2. The foregoing Constitu-
tional Amendment shall be sub-
mitted to a vote of the qualified
electors of the State of Texas, at
the next general election to be held
on the first Tuesday after the first
Monday in November, 1942, being
November 3, 1942, at which election
all voters favoring said proposed
amendment shall write or have
printed on their ballots, the words:
“For the Amendment to the Con-
stitution of the State of Texas, re-
quiring appropriation bills passed
by the Legislature to be presented
to and certified by the Comptroller
of Public Accounts as to available 1
funds for payment thereof, limit-
ing appropriations to the total of
such available funds, providing for
issuance of bonds to pay off State
Mrs. . E. At.,, n her ten-
sils removed at a local ho~pital
Thursday.
"Elect a World War Veferan as
your Wartime Railroad
Commissloner"
I fl (Paid Political Adv. J]
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Vermillion, Henry G. The Winkler County News (Kermit, Tex.), Vol. 6, No. 21, Ed. 1 Friday, August 7, 1942, newspaper, August 7, 1942; Kermit, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1418482/m1/2/: accessed July 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Winkler County Library.