White Deer Review (White Deer, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 28, Ed. 1 Friday, September 22, 1939 Page: 2 of 6
six pages : ill. ; page 22 x 14 in. Scanned from physical pages.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
WHITE DEER REVIEW, Whit# Dw, C#n#a Cowty, Traaa
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1080
ffUe Deer Review
Published Every FRIDAY *
White Deer, Texas
NOTED AMERICANS,
—JOHN NANCE GARNER, of Tex**
W. W. SIMMONS, Editor
Catered as second-class mail mat-
ter at the Post Office at White
Deer, Texas, under an Act of Mar.
8, 1879.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Per Year, in Texas---------$1.50
Per Year outside Texas-----$2.00
Classified and Legal Advertising
Rate: 12c per line first insertion;
8c per line each additional inser-
tion.
TO PLAN SALE OF
CHRISTMAS T. B. SEALS
PANHANDLE, Sept. 18,—Mon-
day afternoon in the high school
auditorium, Miss Helen LeLach-
ueur, of the Texas Tuberculosis
Association met with a group of
people interested in organizing a
committee to sponsor the sale of
Christmas Tuberculosis seals in
Carson conty. If the sale is spon-
sored locally, 60 per cent of the
funds from the sale of the seals
will remain in Carson county for
T. B. probems. An organization of
this type may be a separate com-
mittee or bandied through some
local health organization.
Plans for a Carson county
organization will be further dis-
cussed at a county-wide health
meeting in Panhandle October 2,
and a decision made concerning
the sale of the seals in Carson
county.
Miss LeLachueur spoke to mem-
bers of the County Council of
P-arent-Teachers at a school of in-
struction at Skellytowp Tuesday
evening, outlining plans for the
sale.
NEW SCHEDULES
CUT ALLOWABLE
John nancc Garner was born
NOV. 22, 1869-EDUCATED IN
PUBLIC SCHOOL.LAW EDUCATION
in private office. Admitted
BAR 1690. EDITED UVALDE
LEADER. PUBLIC LIFE BEGAN
1694 AS COUNTY JUDGE.TWO
TERMS TEXAS LEGISLATURE-.
MARRIED MISS MARIETTA
RH FINER, NOV.25/95-ONEfON.
44
■ptA
1 tfVi iV
CARRIES OWN DEER TO CAMP
I938J OUTDOOR ENTHUSIAST,
FEARLESS CHAMPION OF THE
RIGHT; ALWAYS ON THE JOB.
IN COW CAMP OR CAPITOL,
"CACTUS JACK" QARHERCAN
BE DEPENDED UPON.ONLY
LIVING MAN WHO HAS BEEN
PRESIDING OFFICER BOTH
HOUSES OF CONGRESS.
% ........
/John Nance Gar/,e/l
ififiif
; .ti
IP::
Eliof[)S8'“amCI!K 1905-serving toSvbe-
CAME VICE-PRESIDENT.SINCE START OF CAREER, MRS.
GARNER HAS BEEN Hit SECRETARY IN WASHINGTONS
MOST REMARKABLE POLITICAL PARTNERSHIP. HE HAS
BROAD COMPREHENSION OF NATIONS POLITICAL,
SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC PROBLEMS, GAINED FROM
SERVICE ON MOST IMPORTANT WAYS AN D MEANS GDMr /
MfTTEE UNDER WBODROW WILSON. SOUND JUDG-
MENT AND UNERUAIED LEADERSHIP.
'1
At democratic national convention in 1912
-GARNER HELD MORE THAN90VOTES FOR PRES
IDENT-BUT RELEASED TEXAS AND CALIFORNIA DEU*
GATIONS TO FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT. SHATTER-
_ IMG PRECEDENTS A GARNER TRADITION. TODAY
./ RANKS AS FOREMOST PARLIAMENTARY AUTHOR-
t^N ITY OF THE NATION.
John nance garner has always been consistent in his every attitude toward “ ***
national politics - and the inalienable rights of the people, his philosophy of
GOVERNMENT IS SIMPLE HE EXPRESSED IT IN HIS ACCEPTANCE- SPEECH IN 1932,:
"THERE ARE JUST TWO THINGS TO THIS GOVERNMENT AS I SEE IT, THE FIRST IS TO
SAFEGUARD THE LIVES AND PROPERTIES OP OUR PEOPLE. THE SECOND IS TO INSURE
THAT EACH OF US HAS A CHANCE TO WORK OUT HIS DESTINY ACCORDING TO HIS
TALENTS. THIS INVOLVES PROTECTING HlAA FROM BEING INJURED OR OPPRESSED
BY THOSE OF SUPERIOR ACQUISITIVENESS AND PERHAPS LESS CONSCIENCE,14
FSA EMPLOYEES REPORT
ON CROP CONDITIONS
Farmers who are following a
balanced plan of operation are in
a much better position to with-
stand the onslaught of a drouth
which is spreading into many
large areas over the Great Plains
region, according to L. H. Hauter,
regional director of the Farm Se-
curity Administration, with head-
quarters at Amarillo, Texas.
At a meeting in Amarillo, last
NEWSBOYS, ATTENTION!
$1,500 FOR 1,500 PAPERS
Although a daily paper today
can be purchased for a nickel
and a Sunday edition for a dime,
newspapers in California once
sold for as much as $1 per copy,,
says Dr. John W. Caughey, as-
sistant professor of history at the
University of California.
Writing in the latest issue of
the Pacific Historical Review.
Dr. Caughey tells of a passenger
week, FSA field employees gave who came around the Horn dur-
reports on conditions which lead j ing the gold rush with 1,500 cop-
many Department of Agriculture j ies of Horace Greeley’s Tribune:
officials to believe the drouth may Within two hours the whole lot
become as severe as the one in had 'been sold at $1 apiece.
1935.
“Those farmers,” Mr. Hauter
said, “Avho are dividing their op-
erations into various sources of
income have experienced the fast-
est recovery from the last period
of crop failures and depressed
prices of farm products. It is i velt Road ’ ’; the other:
reasonable to assume that those , Travel At Own Risk. ’ ’
families hawing more than
TWO ROAD SIGNS
Tn Peoria Heights, Illinois, re-
ports a reader of The Nation,
there are two road signs hanging-
side by side. One reads: “Roose-
D anger,
one
FOR GAME
Lffili-
© 1939 TtXAS NEWSPAPER FEATURES
AUSTIN, Sept. 21,—New sched-
ules of allowable production by
Texas oil wells began going into
the mails today as the engineer-
ing department of the state rail-
road commission put into effect
the regulation cutting back sub-
marginal wells to the amount of
oil they can produce daily.
Carrying the wells on total
marginal allowance was banned by
the commissioners for reports that
Texas production was in excess
of the estimated market demand.
Dr. F. V. L. Patton, head of
the engineering division, estima-
ted that all new schedules will be
in the mail by tomorrow. This
afternoon he said, the division
will make a check on new-fieid
allowables and prepare a list of
the fields that will he reduced
under the commission decision to
serap arbitrary top allowable for
new fields and place each one
under a production maximum on a
parity with the nearest similar
field.
Computations that the new
rules will take 54,933 barrels
off the scheduled production had
not been changed today. No pro-
test against the changes had been
received.
No 'word bad been received
from Commission Chairman Lon
A. Smith nor from Chmnissioner
Jerry Sadler who left for Wash-
ington by airplane yesterday for a
conference 'with U. S. Interior
Secretary Harold Ickes.
He Got Back 15 Cents
Just before the opening of the
special session of Congress in No-
vember. 1987, Vice-President Gar-
ner arriving In St. Loui? from San
Antonio, en route to Washington,
made a bee-line for a barber shop.
For 25 minutes, the Vice-Preei-
dent relaxed for * shave at the
hands of Dexter Davis, Union Sta-
tion barber who ha* had Garner
in his chair four of the eight times
in recent year* he has stopped in
St. Louis.
As he left the barber shop, he
handed the Negro shine boy a
quarter.
"Thank you, suh." smiled the
boy.
“That’s a quarter," reminded
Garner.
"Yes, Buh, 1 know it’s a quarter,"
replied the boy.
"Well, i want eomt change,"
Garner demanded.
He got back 15 cents.
WALLACE BEGINS DRIVE
ON! PROFITEERING
Secretary of Agriculture Henry
A. Wallace asked a food industry
conference Thursday to cooperate
with the government to prevent
profiteering.
Wallace told the first meeting
of the agricultural advisory coun-
cil, made up of representative#
of labor, industry, and farm org-
anizations, that price fluctuations
detrimental to both farmers and
consumers could be prevented
through industry-government co-
operation.
_ He said that he wished to avoid
regimentation and warned that,
once regimentation is restored to,
it will be difficult to eliminate.
Industry speakers pledged “full
cooperation” officials said.
DOWN PAYMENT FOR SALE
CENTENNIAL STUDY CLUB
HOLDS FIRTS MEETING
COUNTER ATTACK
He: “Now that wTe arc married
The Centennial Study club held; perhaps I can point out a few of
" ‘ 1 ' 1 ’ ” J’ your defects.’’
She: “Don’t
the first regular meetin of the
year in the home of Mrs. I. E.
'Walker.
The newly elected president,
Mrs. Grimes, outlined a very in-
teresting year. The theme for the
coming year is to be The Ameri-
can Home. The subject for the first
meeting was “Family Relations,”
“Personality problems of men and
women, ’ ’—Mrs. V. Crumpacker,
Art of Living together,”—Mrs.
Paul Kennedy.
Those present were: Mrs. E. H.
Grimes, Mrs. Zetta Edwards, Mrs.
Neal Edwards, Mrs. Paul Kenedy,
Mrs. Girtha McConnell, Mrs. C.
B. Martin, Mrs. H. H. Kuykendall
Mrs. V. D. Crumpacker, Mrs. Con-
ner O’Neal, Mrs. R. A. Thompson,
Mrs. George Coffee, Mrs. Glenn
Davis and the hostess Mrs. I. E.
Walkoe.
The next meeting will be with
Mrs. R. A. Thompson, Clara Dris-
coll day will be observed and the
topic will be “Housekeepers,
yesterday and today.”
bother dear, I
know all about them. Its those
defects that kept me from getting
a better man than you.
without fighting all the timet”
“Nosah, Jfedge, leas|wise we
eouldn’t ’joy ourselves an' be hap-
py*”
According to some of the names
of Texas towns and communities
the early settlers of 'the state
must have been lovers either in
beauty appreciation or appetite,
of the wild game they found.
For instance, the following:
Quail, Turkey, White Deer, Ante-
lope, Antelope Gap, Badger, Bea-
ver Dams, Buffalo, Buffalo Gap,
Buffalo Springs, Crow, Deer Creek,
Deer Park, Dove, Eagle, Eagle
Flat, Eagle Lake, Eagle Pass,
Goose Creek, Swan, and Crane.
source of income will fare better j TEXAS TOWNS NAMED
than those who are dependent on
one-cropping system.
In the Panliandle-Plains area of
Texas the drouth was said to be
seriously affecting farmers in
Swisher, Hale, Donley, Cottle
Collingsworth, Cochran, Childress
and Briscoe counties.
Rex B. Baxter, director of the
FSA program in West Texas, said
crops in these counties would be
shorter than in 1935. He said 90
per cent of the farmers in Cottle.
Childress, Donley, and Collings-
worth counties will have to start
buying feed soon.
Applications from farmers for
loans and work grants from the
FSA showed an increase in August
over July in practically all affect-
ed counties, according to officials
of the regional FSA office at
Amarilo.
There are 3,443 farm families
being assisted by the FSA in the
seven stricken counties in Texas
Panhandle and in New Mexico.
The total number of families
working with the FSA in the eight
drouth-stricken counties in Texas
is 1,790.
Mr. Hauter said that although
the Farm Security Adminis-
tration’s program is designed to
help low income and distressed
“Now don’t you think you and
your husband could live together
“But how do you know my opin-
ion?” inquired the barber.
“I don’t.” admitted the man,
“but you have the razor.
farmers over a period of years
in their plans of rehabilitation, it
is also able to meet emergencies
such as might arise from the pre-
sent threat of drouth. He said
FSA has farm and home manage-
ment specialists working in all
counties and the needy farm fam-
iles should make application to the
nearest office.
STORY OF SHINING RAILS
TO BE NBC RED NETWORK
FEATURE SEPTEMBER 22
happened to the
having his foot
A $200 down payment on a new
Plymouth 4-door sedan for sale
for ony $50. See H. U. Harah,
at the Service Barber Shop.
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Phillips re-
turned from Denton, where they
Moris White
misfortune of
crushed under the heavy drill stem j took their son, Oscar, to attend
when he was working with a ro- J North Texas State Teachers Col-
tary. About one third of his foot lege.
was caught under the drill stem,
where it remained until power was
attached to lift it off.
Send News items to the Review!
Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Chunn re-
turned the first of the week from
a tour of the West Coast with a
side trip to Canada.
The building of the Santa Fe
over Raton Pass and its historic
conflict with the Denver & Rio
Grande at that point, is to he
dramatized in “The Battle of Ra-
ton Pass’ over NBC red network.
Friday evening, September 22. The
half hour program is part of the
series of the Pacific Coast Bo-
rax Company’s historical presen-
tations on the building of the
west.
An epic of railway development
in the Southwest, replete with
thrills and dramatic situations, is
to be heard from 8:30 to 9:00 p.
m.t Central Daylight Saving Time,
7:30 to 8:00 p. m., Central Stand-
ard Time, 9:30 to 10:00 p. m.,
Mountain Standard Time, and
from 8:30 to 9:00 p. m., Pacific
Standard Time.
Subscription
Price Reduced
FOR SALE
About 100 rods of hog wire for
sale at half price. See W. G. Eller.
Send News items to the Review!
New England Remembers These Scenes—Do You?
m
Your renewal of your subscription at
this time will be greatly appreciated.
You wfill want to keep up with the
growth and developments in the White
Deer Territory.
$1.00 a year
To new and old subscribers in Carson
and adjoining counties we make this spe-
cial offer for your early acceptance. This
offer is for only a short time. Those not
now taking the Review should take ad-
vantage of this unusually low offer.
Just a year ago this Thursday European war scares were pushed from the front page by one of the
worst hurricanes disasters in American history, a storm which took 682 lives and caused millions
of dolars' damage in the New England states, New York, New Jersey and. Long Island. Above photos
show a boat in Morkey square, Providence, R. I., and all that was left of. cottages at Pinehurst beach
on Cape Cod.
WHITE DEER REVIEW
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. 16, No. 28, Ed. 1 Friday, September 22, 1939, newspaper, September 22, 1939; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth871942/m1/2/: accessed June 19, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Carson County Library.