White Deer Review (White Deer, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 24, Ed. 1 Friday, August 15, 1941 Page: 2 of 4
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WHITE DEER REVIEW, White Deer, Carson County, Terms
FRIDAY, AUGUST 15, 1941
Notice To Creditors of The
Estate of A. D. Smith, Deceased
White Deer Review
Published Every FRIDAY at
White Deer, Texas
Notice is hereby given that or- ^
iginal letters testamentary upon •
estate of A. D. Smith, deceased, he
were granted to me, the under-
signed, on the 6th day of August, . , ,
1941, by the County Court of Car- , f
son County, Texas. All persons coulf|C
having claims against said estate ^ £gw
are hereby required to present the ^
same to me within the time pre-
scribed by law. My residence and pyoR
post office address are White pop^
Deer, County of Carson, State of ^re
Texas. +W \
JENNIE SMITH, 1
ExGCutiix 011 the __p
Estate of A. D. Smith, or ,
Deceased. ._
(Aug. 8, 15, 22, 29) 15,0
-- pullets
Liars’ Department tested,
“I know a dairyman who has Clarer
one of the best bass lakes in the Texas.
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.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Per Year, in Texas--------$
Per Year, outside Texas----$
111!!!
ax, band chairman; Sibley Jines,
parade, and Lawrence Ellzy, ro-
deo chairman. Ford Hampker,
publicity chairman, although not
pictured, completes the arrange-
ments committee.
orful north plains program of the
year.
Left to right, are Mayor Bill
Lance, general chairman; John
Sammons, concessions; Glenn Tru-
Perryton’s 22nd birthday anni-
versary celebration Aug. 21-22,
has required months of planning,
and pictured here are the men who
promise the largest and most col-
Classified and Legal Advertising
Rate: 12c per line first insertion;
6c per line each additional inser-
tion.
MVsAtoUL
Getting The Terracing Job Done
0 BoohAnd
Cafe Cheeks
A>'V''*3p(
% W
SEPTIC TANKS
and
•CESS POOLS
had not grown soft nor weak in
patriotism.
There may have been those m
the dark dawning day of 1861
who believed or feared that Tex-
ans had grown soft during the
long years after 1836. But go
yonder in the beautiful grounds
of our beloved capitol; look up at
the monument to Hood’s Texas
Brigade and read these lines by
President Jefferson Davis:
“They have shown on many
battlefields their willingness to
die for Dixie, and have a right to
wear on their banners the motto
of Hampden, ‘No steps back-
ward’.”
Go to the other side and you
will find these words of General
Robert E. Lee carved into a mas-
sive block of our own Texas gian-
ite: ,
“Their ragged clothes make no
difference. The enemy never sees
their backs. Hood’s Texas Bii-
gade is always ready.”
No, I can say to the mothers
of Texas—none of us want war.
All of us deplore the signs and
portents with which the sinister
forces of dictatorship threaten
our peaceful ways, but if war does
come, I can say in advance to our
people, that historians will write
of the men of Hood’s Brigade:
“Texas is always ready.”
And we, who do not go to
training camps nor advance to com-
bat, have a responsibility to
bring out the iron that is in us.
Any weakness that is among us
must be put off as a man sheds his
light summer raiment and pre-
pares himself‘ aaginst the cold
esteptese
large31**'
plows vn'
mdteYWf
h*e
nnd to*
CLEANED
With modern
equipment
Phone 350
STOREY
PLUMBING CO
533 S. Cuyler
PAMPA
* '
Young County’s terracing machine, top, constructs a 40-foot terrace
on a farm operated by Pete Reynolds of Newcastle. Lower left, D. A.
Adam, county agent, gives instructions to John Downey, terracing ma-
chine operator. Lower right, James H. Crawford, Young County AAA
secretary, confers with Adam about the AAA’s conservation materials
and services program which is being used for terracing work in Young
County for the first time in Texas.
RECENT BRIDE IS
HONOREE AT PARTY
1942 CARSON COUNTY
BUDGET FILED THIS WEEK
iSSfld
Misses Evelyn Osborne and Ed-
ith Harvey Avere hostesses at a
post-nuptial shower honoring Mrs.
Calvin Thompson, the former Miss
Tressie Wheetley, Wednesday aft-
ernoon at Sunbeam Hall.
Various contest and games were
played.
Refreshments were served to
Mines. J. W. Wells, Jesse Wood-
ard, Elzie Barnard, Bill Walker,
T. G. Brewton, H. G. Hynds, 0. C. F
Williams, J. C. Wheetley, R. R. •
Fleming, J. L. Harsh, and J. W.
Evenly; Misses Eunita Woodard,
i ta * * - T D lin n vrl on/1 1 llP
Carson county’s budget for 1942
has been tentatively set and is
now on file in the county clerk’s
office at the court house for pub-
lic inspection before the budget
hearing for final approval Aug.
25.
Proposed in the budget is a 5
cent hike in the county tax rate
which will make a rate of 75
cents, compared with the 70 cent
rate of last year. However, this
hike will be more than offset by
the state reduction of 11 cents
' from last year’s total of 69 cents.
This Avil make the total state and
county tax rate $1.33, compared
Avith ‘$1.39 last year, and $1.42
for 1940.
The tax levy of 75 cents will
be divided as folows: Jury fundi
.07, road and bridge .1925, gen-
eral .25, permanent improvement
.11, road and bond sinking .02,
road and bridge sinking .0350,
and road and 'bridge refunding
.0725.
Amounts estimated to produce
in each fund, Avith a valuation of
Jury fund, $10,000;
U. S. PRODUCES 63 PER
CENT OF WORLD’S OIL
At the end of the last war, a
leading British statesman made
this signifcant observation: The
allies sailed to victory on a sea of
oil.”
In World War II, thinks many
an expert, the decision Avill again
be largely determined by the pe-
troleum assets of the antagonists.
And that is Avhere German is
weak—and Britain and the Unit-
ed States are strong.
The oil companies of our coun-
try produce 63 per cent of the
world’s oil. And, usually impor-
tant, they produce an even higher
percentage of the high-grade gas-
oline that is necessary to obtain
maximum performance from air-
craft engines. According to one
authority, our gasoline is so su-
perior that our military planes fly
30 per cent faster, carry 20 per
cent more bombs and can climb
above anti-aircraft fire 25 per
cent more quickly than can Ger-
many’s comparable types. Ger-
many can obtain only 3 per cent
of the world’s natural oil supply
from within Europe.
We are similarly blessed in those
other basic materials which are
necessary not only to maintaining
a completed military machine, but
to fueling the factories which are
building it. Indispensable sources
of industrial poAver are coal and
electricity. In the face of defi-
cits, legislative problems, and la-
bor troubles, the coal industry
has maintained its high state of
production. And1 the private elec-
tric industry has persisted in go-
ing ahead in spite of years of po-
litical persecution.
The future of free nations is
dependent on the output of our
great natural resource industries.
A wise governmental policy will
now do everything possible to en-
tourage them to greater achieye-
jaents than ever before.
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HOW TO SAVE ON
YOUR REFRIGERATION
$16,000,00
By observing a few simple rules,
homemakers can economize con-
siderably on the cost of refriger-
ation, whether their ice boxes are
cooled by electricity, ice, or gas.
These tips are offered by Bernice
Clayton, extension service special-
ist in home improvement:
Don’t open your refrigerator
any oftener or any longer than is
actually necessary.
Don’t put hot food or dishes in-
to the refrigerator. Let the left-
over foods and the dishes they are
in cool to room temperature be-
fore putting them in the box.
See that your refrigerator is
properly placed in your kitchen.
A refrigerator should be placed
in the coolest part of the room,
not near the stove or where it
would be in the sun. Even more
important than that, it should be
placed so that air will circulate
road1 and bridge, $29,640; general
$38,000; permanent improvement,
$16,720; road bond sinking, $3,-
040; road and bridge sinking,
$5,320; and road and bridge re-
funding, $10,640, making a total of
$114,000.
Four of the levies had been
increased over last year, one re-
maining th same and two being,
lowered. Highest raise in the lev-
ies is in the permanent fund
which will get 11 cents in 1942,
compared with 6 cents this veai\
Tentative figures for expendi-
tures on the 1942 budget have
been totaled at $222,695.53, com-
pared with an estimated $201,-
896.98 this year, and $170,’863.11
in 1940.
The expenditures would be di-
vided as follows: Jury fund, $12,-
622; road and bridge fund, $121,-
000; general fund1, $56,231; per-
manent improvement fund, $12,-
192.50; and county interest and
sinking fund, $20,641.03.
Assessed valuation this year
will be around $16,000,000. For
1940, the assessed valuation was
$15,652,685; 1939, $15,243,4)85.
and 1938, $14,607,395.
This Advertisement Paid for by Various Units of the Industry and Sponsored by
TEXAS MID-CONTINENT OIL AND BAS ASSOCIATION
are allowed to gather a covering of
dirt, this covering keeps the coils
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Simmons, W. W. White Deer Review (White Deer, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 24, Ed. 1 Friday, August 15, 1941, newspaper, August 15, 1941; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth874991/m1/2/: accessed June 20, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Carson County Library.