The Clarksville Times (Clarksville, Tex.), Vol. 86, No. 1, Ed. 1 Friday, January 24, 1958 Page: 1 of 12
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Red River County Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Red River County Public Library.
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TOUR SUBSCRIPTION
Tt The Time* Is AmtlkM 1h*
WdnttM date Is shewn opboaRa
your same, each Issue. Pleas*
watch this date. A renewal befor*
expiration time wfll prevent yens
Wqz CtlarkstriUr GLxmts
The Clarksville Time* is the Oldest Baslnvss InatlUnion in Red Riv«-r County
10c Per Single
Copy
ESTABLISHfD JANUARY 18. 1873
CLARKSVILLE, TEXAS, FRIDAY, JANUARY 24, 1958
TWELVE PAGES IN TWO SECTIONS
VOLUME 86 NO 1
Mass Meeting Called Monday Evening to Plan
Action for Control of Rabid Foxes In County
&
Dangerous Undercurrent of Rabies is
Found in Broad Range Texas Wildlife
Alarmed over the peril to hu- f This condition has been building
man and animal life in Red River I up. In The Times of December
County as a result of the presence
of rabid foxes, landowners and
county officials met in the o^ice
of County Judge Gavin Watson
27 the following statement from
Dr James Kejty, Clarksville vet-
erinarian. appeared:
“Due to the positive idcntifiCa-
whim .ihuc^r»hI<»m will be consid-
ered. with the Idea of concrete sug-
MERITORIOUS SAFETY AWARDS were presented by
Texas Power & Light Company to Dewey Wilburn, (or 12
years of service, three in Clarksville, without loss of time
due to accidents, and J...C. Aikin, right for four years in
Clarksville with no time lost. Awards were presented by
Manager John E. Davis.
Dairy Short Course Here Next Week
Designed to Interest JBeef Producers
Officers NeTseO
Council Installed
Approximately 200 Scouters and
TFirnda viewed the presentation of
Silver Beaver award* and the in-
stallation of new officers of the
NeTseO Trails Council of the Bop
Scouts of America for 1958 at the _
Council’s annual dinner in the1* requested from Robert Smith,
basement of the First Methodist
Church of Patja.
Receiving the Silver Beaver
Awards were Walter Bassano of
Parts, Richard Higgins of -Bonham,
and Sam Parker, Jr„ of Mt. Pleas-
ant. Making the presentation was
Ben Marable. a Beaver Scout him-
aelf and an executive board mem-
ber of the Council.
Officers for the 1958 year o f
Scouting in the NeTseO Trails
were Walter Bassano of Paris.
pVesident; W. L. Means" of Mt.
Pleaaaqt, vice-president: Byron
Black of Clarksville, vice - presi-
_ dent: Ike Webb of Hugo, vice-pres-
ident; J. O. McKenzie of Com-
merce. vice-president; Jim Castle-
man of Bogata. Council Commis-
sioner; Gyles Norwood of Paris,
treasurer, and James Smith o f
Paris, assistant treasurer. These
officers, along with the Council op-
erating committee chairmen, were
elected in the business meeting
held before the banquet..
Appointed at the business meet-
ing were the Council operating
committee chairmen. Chairmen
are: Leadership training. Gene
Belewr camping and activities,
Tom tferash; advancement. J.
Walton Skinner; health and safety,
George Stone; organliation and ex-
tension, Travis McKenzie, iqd
camp development. Louis Wil-
liams. AD of these men are from
Paris. Byron Black at Clarksville
win head the finance committee.
AiuiQnaSchool is
Spr^ll|8$ite
First meeting of the five-day
dairy short course will open at
7:30 p.m., Monday, January 27, at
the Chamber of Commerce, under
direction of Dr. R. E. Leighton of
the Dairy Department Texas A.
& M College.
The five consecuUve clas-es are
designed so as to be of Interest to
beef cattle producers as well as
dairymen.
Anyone desiring to attend will
be given such information as may
Tuesday to consider steps t h a 11 ,ion ^ , abies in the dog and the
might be taken to combat the men-1 fox> residents of the north central
ace —This conference was prelim- j art^ of Red River County are eau-
Inary to a mass meeting in the
district court room, called for
Monday. January 27. at 7:00 p.m
cqn
te s
gestions for action being adopted.
North of Clarksville in the geg-.^
eral arpa of the fire tower and
Hopewell the situation bas recabed
a point where rabid foxes are not
only attacking dogs and .livestock
but people. John Lewis, who lives
east of the fire tower near Hope-
well was attacked last week by a
fox. He is now taking anti-rabies
treatments
.Route 4.-Clarksville; R. L. Jones,
Route 2. Detroit, and Patti
Herschler, county agent, who wfll
handle registrations for the course.
Outline of Course
The five-day course of instruc-
tion to be given by Dr. Leighton
is outlined as follows:
First Day
Developing a good dairy herd—
Importance of good cows, produc-
tion and profit relationship, how
to XcU ACfid—cows, selection and
care of herd sires, artificial insem-
ination, production testing and cul-
ling, breeding difficulties.
, Seared Day—----
More Than 10,000
Acres Pledged to
Soil Bank Here
Three hundred, thirty Red River
County farmers have offered 10.-
339 acres of their 1958 cotton allot-
ment under the acreage reserve
program. When the acreage re-
serve program opened a register
was started and is still being
maintained for all producers who
indicated they wanted to partici-
pate. This determined the order
in which agreem?nts^were filed.
The county office was'Thstnicted
not to execute any agreement* af-
ter Thursday afternoon untR furth-
er notice. -
It seems that participation was
greater than had been anticipated
and K was necessary to halt op-
erations until tt can be determined
the amount of funds still availably
As soon as this can be determined
the State Office will give the coun-
ty an allocation.
Agreements will be approved in
the order In which they were filed
as long as funds are available.
Those who are on the register who
did hot get an agreement filed will
till hold their place and subject
to available funds they will be no- Grayson, Hardin, Harris, Hidalgo,
tified in the order they are listed.
] After notification by the A.S.C. of-
-flee they wIR have fifteen days to * ktogle case
Raising calves and heifers--Care 1 which to file an agreement If they
of cow and calf at calving time, still desire to participate
milk and milk replacer feeding, i ___
calf disease control, simple rations
for dairy heifer*.
Third Day
Feeding for milk production—
Proper utilization of pastures, for-
age programs, balancing concen-
trates with pasture and roughage,
concentrate mixtures for dairy
cows, the value of special formula
mixtures of mineral, vitamins,
etc, —-v
Fourth Day
Silage making and feeding—Suit-
able crops, types of silos, silage
making precautions, use of preser-„
vatlves, silage feeding methods.
ll^llking machine methods—Fast,
clean milking, mastitis control. '
V* T r\*
A meeting was held at the
B»ver County courthouse,
d»v afternoon, January 18. to or-
gantze the soring meet for thla
Flfto Day
General management problems
—Disease control, bangs disease,
other diseases;-dairy buildings.
Although the course normally
follows this outline, each session
emphasizes those problems which
the dairyman’s questions during
the course indicate need for con-
sideration.
Forest Fire Loss
Tt was decided that Red River
Cc««nty school* would not partici-
pate in track fleld.
schools Invert
itt
meet for this .. f it
Down m District
1 Lfnden —EdneatMmal Officer H.
K. “
Medford of
-
..
■ ;lWP®
V ‘ :::
Payment of Poll
Taxes Lagging
Approximately 2,000 poll tax re-
ceipts have been issued to resi-
dents of Red River County, accord-
ing to Tax Assessor-Collector Ma-
rlon Hines. Business in this de-
partment has not been so brisk as
had been expected.
With only seven business days
left in which to pay poll taxes,
the.jcollector’s office is due to cx-
perince a rush if .the number of
receipt* approximates expectation.
Since 1958 is an election year,
some 4,000 poll tax receipts are
anticipated.
January 31 Deadline
January 31 Is the deadline for
.paying poll taxes. Persons who
wait until after that date will be
out of luck, since the tax does not
become delinquent. It Just ceases
to exist after the end of the legal
paying period, Hits is a form of
taxation tied to the privilege of
voting by the Cohstttotion of Texas
Which people pay voluntarily. No
assessment of Jbe tax is made
igain-t anyone.
Rain
^ -’our _
■ifirrsai
month’s total to more
6r •
tioned to exercise due caution in
contacting both domesticated and
wild animals.
“The incidence of infection is ap-
parently already extremely high
and an increase will most likely
occur. The principle vector is the
fox and therefore all residents are
urged to place all dogs under posi-
tive restraint in order to prevent
further contact.’’
The fox population is distributed
throughout Red River County. All
areas are therefore alerted to the
danger which exists. Since this
is a matter of county-wide impor-
tance, residents frpm every com-
munity are being urged to attend
the ” ’ '*
ing.
Monday evening mass * meet-
Uabies Menace Widespread
in Texas
A dangerous undercurrent of ra-
bies runs throughout the broad
range of Texas wildlife. The con-
dition, while not new. could erupt
into a full scale epidemic in an un-
guarded moment, according to the
Texas State Department of Health
Rabid wildlife species infect
dogs, and dogs infect other dogs.
Therein lies the greatest source of
danger to humans.
* Twenty-eight cases were diag-
nosed in State Health Department
Laboratories during December. In
addition, six positive, cases were
diagnosed in dogs by the El Paso
Cqunty laboratory.
The 28 cases were
from 15 counties. Included in the
total were 12 dogs, 11 foxes, three
cats, and one bat and one coyote.
J asper County In deep East Tex-
as was hardest hit. Situated in the
center of the most active focus of
wildlife rabies, the ebunty reported
eight positive cases — six foxes,
one cat and one dog.
tip of the State was second with
four cases, all in dogs. Freestone,
llano, and Red River Counties ex-
periencedjwo^cases apiece Bexar.
Marion, Presidio, Tom Green, Ty-
ler, sod Wichita Counties each had
There is general agreement
among health and veterinary of-
ficials that only a small fraction of
the actual number of cases is re-
ported. Thus, rabies in Texas is
much more prevalent than indicate
ed by heads submitted for the lab-
oratory analyses.
Authorities also agree that we
need not tolerate the constant
threat of rabies provided we are
willing to take these three tried
and proved^ steps to erase it from
tlie Texas scene.
1. Enforced vaccination of all
dogs and cats. Some vaccines give
effective protection for a year.
Others, composed of egg - grown
live virus, may protect for as long
as three years without revaccina-
tion.
2 Adopt and enforce stringent
city ordinances against stray dogs.
Ownerless dogs—those without li-
censes or vaccinations—should be
e impounded.
3. Set up local programs of thin-
ning wildlife populations In areas
of overabundance. Of greatest con-
cern In Texas are foxes and
akunka.
England and the Scandinavian
countries have taken these steps.
So have several of our, own north-
eastern states. Their reward has
been complete freedom from one
of the most dreaded of all dis-
eases.
All three steps demand full co-
operation from all pet owners and
local governing officials. Without
such cooperation, rabies eradica-
tion Is doomed to failure before it
■tarts.
Weight, License
Violators Listed
For Region One
The license and weight service
of the Texas Department ofTublic
Safety in Region One filed a total
of 1,619 cases during the period of
September - December, announced
Captain E. C. Law, -commanding
officer. Of these 436 were motor
carrier violations
As a rcshjt of action taken by
this service of the stale police or-
ganization. justice of the peace's
courts throughout Northeast Tex-
as were able to collect fines
amounting up to $41,275.85 In ad-
dition to this. Law pointed o u t
that $26,140 25 worth of additional
registrations were secured as a re-
sult of the effort put forth by his
personnel.
The license and weight service
in this region consists of 10 spec-
ially trained men who work 30
counties.
FFA Boys to Visit
Fat Stock Show
Thirty' Hiembers of the Clarks-
ville FFA Chapter will attend t h c
Fort Worth Fat Stock Show and
Rodeo, Saturday. January 25.
The boys will leave Clarksville
at 5:00 a m,_and wilt arrive in
Fort Worth in dime to visit all the
livestock expositions before Rodeo
time at 2 00 p.m. Immediately
after the Rodeo the boys wtH re-
turn to Clarksville.
Accompanying the members to
Fort WorUTwill be Roy King, local
chapter advisor, and several of
the FFA boys’ fathers.
Restored Building to Be Reoccupied
By BankWith Open House Wednesday
Novel By William Humphrey Pictures
Clarksville He Remembered as Youth
Kmmf, \Y<
(>|Yn- house has Ix cu announced
b\ tlie Kitt^t N.ilionil Bank for
\\ nliK mI,i\. .laniui y 29. marking
‘hi- ieuri iip.iimu ol tin- building
C irh h.id to be vacated on ac-
( mint of tin- fire last Angus!. T rie
whole Interior of the building was
i<• i■ ki 11 Since that event a coin-,
plctc rebuilding of the structure
nitbiii tin* main walls has been
mid. i m.iv F-pslairs offices ps
'.veil .is ground floor quarters have
bi-i ii res'ored and modernized
I list National began doing l>us-
mt ss m (lie IMiesch building on the
south side of the square, fnrmelj
occupied bv Shoulders Furniture,
on the day following the big fire
Business has been carried on with-
out mlei nipt ion. although not ?o
conveniently as it might have been
m the hank building.
Not only has the space occupied
by*the hank on the first floor been
Well Known Authorities to Speak at
7-Step Cotton Meeting Here Jan. 29
Employee’s W-2
•utJJEarms Now Dne
Employers were reminded that
their employees are er.,!'.ied to re-
ceive two copies of a “Withhold
ing Statement,” Form W-2, on or
before Friday, Jan. 31.
In making this announcement,
Charles Mann, of Internal Revenue
Service. Paris. Texas, said, "This
CameroiT'cotMtp'at the southern t statement shows the total wages
paid and the income tax and social
security tax withheld, If any, dur-
ing the calendar year of 1957.”
Total wages shown on an em-
ploye’s W-2 should Include
amounts received as sick pay from
his employer, evert though no tax
ha* been withheld an such sick
pay. Sick pay is not required to
be shown separately.
Mann stated that if it becomes
necessary to correct a W-2 after
it has been given to an employee,
a corrected s*atement must be is-
sued and marked “sorrected b y
employer”
, published b\ Ajfryil
\ ..in
| I .art Harks amt other character
Islic. of I he undisclosed East Te\
I as cumuum'tv m anil armmll which
the actio: ol • Home From the
Hills'’ takes pi.me -public square,
Confederate moi.ument a group of
| men killing time whittling, cotton
toil mill in operation, with t.inlib-
zing odors of crushed, rooked seed
wafted ovyt the town when the
I wind mas from the north are re-
minders of Clarksville when the
author lived here as a youth
! Amid these scenes, familiar to
so many people who have known
Clarksville, the story opens m an
atmosphere of mv sterv. with the reworked and finished, but t h e
arriv al of a funeral coach eon- ' exterior walls of the building have
taming tlie IhmIy ol Hannah Hunm- been cleaned and all woodwork
c'i". a former resident At the freshlv painted. The structure
cemetery where she was to be | looks many years newer than he-.'
buried without funeral rites were 1 the fire,
three gi ivc markers in a row. one llughston 4 Son Return
bearing the name of Wade Hutun . to Former Offiee*
cult, another inscribed with Han-j Hughston & Son Insurance Agen-
nah s name and a third, placed ,y. which occupied offices on the
for an unoccupied giave, on which | second floor of the bank building,
was the inscription. "Thcron. only | h-av'e returned to the same toca-
child of Hannah Hunnicutt . All j tion This firm moved back to the
markers bore the same date. Way j bank building several weeks ago
|28, 1939 _ | but did not advertise fhe fact
Hannah s burial and the strange | pending the time when the bank
circumstances •surrounding it would be in a position to return
marked the introduction to the, Hughs'on A Son occupied a portion
story of the Hunnicutt family in | „f ,)lP P T Taylor building on
the years following the marriage l ,|,c north sido of U)e sqllarc sev_
of Wade and Hannah, climaxed by er.,| mon(hs whilp lh,,ir offic,.s
the tragic events of May 28. 1939 ! werf. being restored
( aptain Hunnicutt, who had! Tlie hank will remain open until
served with the Ameticah Expecli- ( p m Wednesday in connection
^ ^ , .Hilary Forces in World War I. ' wt,h the open house observance
planned by the Red River County . had achieved the status of a| Hugh^on * Son extend an in
7-Step Cotton Committee will be (wealthy landowner He was a Su" vitalion to the public to visit their
held Wednesday, January 29. at collector and hunting was the sport I restored offices while visiting the
width meant most to him He had bank
a way with women and his phi!- ! ________
jndiring was known to nearly ev- 1
1 erybody in town, including Han-
nah. who.became resigned to his ;
unfaithfulness
Their son grew up idolizing hisj
father whose faults the mother I
never disclosed until after an un- . in •
fortunate incident when it appear-' Av*ff]fW| \pi*Vlf*PQ
_ , , , . .. 4 , ed expedient that'Thcron know the ! Cl* IlIvU kJVI T IvCD
Cotton farmers have asked »h*l | lruth He hJ() Konr to u„. borne
WILLIAM HUMPHREY
A Clarksville native, William
Humphrey, has written a novel,
“Home From the Hill,'' which
reviewers are acclaiming as a n
outstanding contribution to current
literature His first volume, "The
Last Husband and Other Stories,”
appeared in 1953. Both books were
The annual cotton meeting
1:30 p.m. in the National Guard
building at Clarksville
According to Paul Herschler.
county agent, the speakers for the
program will be C. B. Spencer of
the Cottonseed Crushers' Associa-
tion. Dallas, and Dow Porter, ag-
ronomist vith the U. S Cotton
Field Station. ,a research station,
in Greenville.
More Texans Quit
Than Enlist in
cotton varieties, mechanical har-1
of Libby Halstead to take her to a u*tin—The number of Texans
vesting and chemical weed control
be the main topics for discussion ; cr_ ord,.rcd him out of the house. ) ('trees in 1957 far exceeded those
Local mashiMI? dealers h a v {He dtd not know the reason The [entering. Colonel Morris S.
been asked to have some of 1the rian(|,,s|ln,. relationship between Schwartz. st,i(e Selective Service
equipment used In cotton ; Thplon and ,Jbby which followed i director, said, ,,
tion on display at the Guard .inci«u»^. tuH- tFs unfm innate j A of fi2.hl6 was discharged
tog during the meeting '"TTrPTT^
consequences, which, when his!°r transferred to reserve status
ptreek of equipmen will include lrM)lhf>r !t,arned about it. brought! during the past year, according to
P^,Cr .r°aryJ h°r ,h.arVe.S , the explanation that his father’s I reports of discharge and transfer
equipment, land preparation ecjulp- | r#v,u)ation as a woman chaser was ! received by state Selective Service
Traffic Accident
Report for 1957
Captain Glen Warner, command-
ing officer, Texas Highway Patrol,
Tyler, released the rural traffic
accident summary for Red River
county for the yekr of 1957.
Twenty-two property damage. 10
personal iniury and one fatal.
These accidents caused a total
property damage of $15,891 00 with
14 persons Injured and one killed.
Captain Warner pointed out that
we had a good reduction in traffic
deaths in 1957 as compared with
1958. There were 29 leas people
killed, which he said the motoring
public played an important role
in accomplishing. We must start
thinking now about 1958, and work
together and Join forces to have
a reduction of sorrow and suffer-
ing eaUeed by automobile acci-
dents In 1958.' v------
ment. etc.
C B Spencer, who is one of the!””
QUtstand<ng authorities on cotton
production, will speak on all the
phases of- cotton production Fm- ,
the real reason that he had been headquarters from the armed for-
in the Halstead home cos
From this ;>oint the story moves ' During the same year, state Se-
moro swiftly toward its climax Service headquarters re-
........ . , , | Halstead's slaying of Wade Hunni-j reports show ing that 33,317
phnsis will ** pi a c i-d on chemical Clltt is f0n„wed bv Thcron aveng- Texans entered the armed forces
and early weed and grass ^control, | jnfc, hjs fa(h(.rs dt.a(h in th(1 j„ng. (Of this number 26.047 ctered by
les of Sulphur Bottom What may ' vobmtccring and 7.270 were draft-
have happi-ned to or become of. r<l
him after this violent moment! Actually, a good many of those
Spencer spoke a» r1os,.d story in an atmosphere ! wh° In through the draft hoard
the annual cotton meeting here f>^ myS|erv ' enler service by voluntary ac-
two years ago and was received i jfumphrev was horn at Clarks- ‘'on.'’ Colonel Schwartz pointed
so enthusiastically that local cot-, vJ)Ie ,„no ]fi ]924 fhr 5f>n of Mr jout The draft law permits vol-
different types of harvesting
equipment, cotton varieties and
some Information on the National
' Cotton Council
ton producers asked that he return
again this year.
and Mrs Clarence Humphrey-
jft,; (interring through a local board”
r_ . father was killed in nn automo- Selective Service in Texas for-
Dow Porter is superintendent of |fls mqtber moved w'irded 16 645 men for pre-induc-
.. _ ... . , _ htlc accident .................. -------
the Greenville branch of the Texas j.from nal ksvin,, before he finished ',ion mental and physical examfna-
,u. *.M experiment Station, At W(jh soh(M)| ,,js education w a S ,ion* fluring 1957. state headquart-
this branch, testing of cotton va- rnnt)nuPd fU)WCVer He graduated rrfi records reveal Of this num-
rietles for production, mechanical —
harvesting, etc . is their main con-
cern. During the 1957 cotton sea-
son, fifty varieties, were on test
Porter will report on (he outcome
at Southern Methodist University j brr- 10 077 were designated acrept-
and the University of Texas ] u01*’ for 'ervice'by the Army and
Married and a resident of Rhine- j 0wer,< rejected
beck. Now York. Humphrey is n I During 1957. the state's 137 draft
professor of literature at Bard b°!*rds registered 64.149 males,
of these tests as well as progress r„)|p most of them 18-year-olds. Fed-
made from previous experimental j „js mofhpr )flp former Nell Var-1 <’ral law requires nyaies to register
data ii— -r ----- •*, lat ngr “18, or within five
•lev of Clarksville, is now Mrs T
thereafter.
days
This cotton meeting should be of i , Trot|ghfon and ,lpr homp is
much interest to anyone interested , cirVelancl. Ohio Under present retaliations, no
in cotton production ; Professor and Mrs Humphrey1 om is drafted until age 22. except
The machinery on display will | arp p|anning to visit in Clarksville ;,llfl5(’ "ho vdiunteer. or d e 1 i n-
be an added attraction, as this - npxt summer Thls wnl be the duents: but registration is man-
equipment will be the newest mod firM trlp bapk to hls naUvp home datory at 18 Texas has 1 million.
In some 15 years
Mr. and
tended th«
Texas A. &
WILLIAM BYRON W1TMER
AWARDED M.S. DEGREE
and MrsT'Hugh Wltmer *t-
graduation exercises at
A M. College January 18
their son. William Byron
Wltmer, received hls master's de-
grees (h chemistry.
Byron wfll continue hls work
there toward ■ Ph D., as be haa al-
ready finished over half of hls doc-
tor's In chemistry.
tiJil; -p' - ■ -afca
Cancer Groups to
Meet at Tyler
Tyler More than 190 delegatee
from twenty counties comprising
~ * Eleven and Fifteen of the HEW FI AG FOLE AT
Division of the American FOOT OFFICE
to «t* A new flag pole was placed in
r the afrhei at the CUrkcvflie Poet Of-
js.ls.2saw
H. Ban. oaraMT of the btoldtof and reeta oo
els available. i
“We encourage a 1 1 Interested j
parties to be on time at 1:30 p m .
Wednesday. Jan 29 at the Nation- Wjtm«r ;n llnlKfnn
al Guard Armory. Clarksville,” ” "ICr in MOUSIOn
said Agent Herschler.
53,000 males registered Of this
number, boards have classified
! more than 990.000
Counties Listed
For Crop Loans
Calf Scramble
Washington —(ill— The Agricul-
ture Department Tuesday desig-
nated 97 ■ counties in Texas In
which the Farmers Home Adminis-
tration may make emergency
loans to farmers whose crops were
damaged by adverse weather eon-
dltiona tost year.
Iha 97 ooonttes, which were des-
ignated for ■ period ending'
Dec. SI. included:
Bowie, Camp, Cess, Delta,
raaklin, Hopkins, Lamar, Morris,
Bates. Bed Bhrer, Titus and Wood.
I Twenty New Game
Erttest Wltmer, a member of the Wardens Training
Clarksville FFA Chapter, will par-____--- ^
tlcipate in the Calf Scramble at7 Austin — Twenty new . game
the Houston Fat Stock Show waedena will be enrolled at Texas
Krnest is scheduled to Scramble, (A & M for the gate’s game ward-
Sunriay. March 2. at 6 00 pm.len school this year, according to
There will he 30 hoys to scramble the director of law enforcement of
for 15 calves. If a boy Is fnrtu-.thc Game and Fish Commission,
nate enough to catch a calf he will j All of the men but one Joined
be awarded a $125 00 Purchase the force in 1957 They have been
Certificate to buy the calf of his working with other wardens, get-
choire not to exceed $125 00 ting in-service training Accord-
The regulations Itste the boy is! ing to tho director, approximately
to feed the calf out and show it in
the Fat Stock Show the following
year
F.rnest is the son of Mr and
Mr* E. T Wltmer. Rt. 4, Clarks-
ville
75 per cent of the present wanjena
ere- graduates of the school.
After completion of the court*
la June they will he reassigned.
They also wfll receive a 995 per
month Increase hi pay.
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Pinson, Joe. The Clarksville Times (Clarksville, Tex.), Vol. 86, No. 1, Ed. 1 Friday, January 24, 1958, newspaper, January 24, 1958; Clarksville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1005992/m1/1/: accessed April 24, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Red River County Public Library.