The Hereford Brand (Hereford, Tex.), Vol. 74, No. 75, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 18, 1975 Page: 3 of 26
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mber 18. 1975
Th* Hereford Brand, Hereford, Texas, Thursday, September 18, 1975
Page 3A
Chamber Opposes Farm Exports Ban
Obituaries
Mrt. Northcutt
to assist durng
Martinet Infant
101 AVENUE E
364-5812
E2E2i
NEW SHIPMENT OF MACRAME
JUST ARRIVED
888982883888989684688829888848889828488
20% off toddlers’ wear.
F. Y. Moreman
" )
rAxAco
LAST 3 DAYS
"E
V2
‘4
A
r
-12
caravan
Hundreds of
Annie Gollehon
Latest-look bra sale.
Authorized
¥¥¥¥*¥¥¥¥44¥*4¥444¥¥¥444¥444
FOR INFORMATION CONTACT:
!
DON HENSLEE - VICTOR CANTU
4
DALE JONES
4
i
l \
2
(4
FIRST LADY
Downtown
FIT FOR YOUR JOB
A
3
5
A
r <
3, '
4
\
REDWING "
Downtown A
Sugarland Mall
l
Dodqe
e 1
(ptfhonj/i.
Longines-
IFittnauer
a very
limited
time.
styles are
here for
COWAN
JEWELERS
producer has consistently thro-
ugh the history of this nation
made it the best fed nation at
the lowest food cost compared to
spendable consumer income in
the world said Yeager, and in
recent years the American
farmer and rancher have been
called upon for full production
: have one of the
utifully appointed
vuthwest. We are
e can bring such a
the people of
nd Arrowhead
Ml the results of
tarty tests with
•embers at the
e revealed that
ptable to the
votk on the new
final proof of the
e public's "taste
(/
‘4
Chargen.
Or a small deposit
will hold it
In lay-away.
ford High School
orock High School
ided West Texas
11970 Lambda Nu
itute of Mortuary
formerly with
il Home.
JUDGE RETIRES
DALLAS-U.S. District
Judge Sarah T. Hughes,
79, who administered the
presidential oath to Lyn-
don B. Johnson aboard
Air Force I in 1963, has
retired.
4
1 sewer lines be
feet.
I submitted a bid
wer lines and
es, for a total of
had submitted a
sewer lines and
es. for a total of
). had submitted
sewer lines and
es, for a total of
& Co. submitted
sewer lines and
es, for a total of
*e8}
, -ri
orted that his
from the school
o no action on
ing.
EEN FEE for
had been set a
commissioners
is figure was too
nor) Brownlow
make the green
about collecting
-there’s no way
igure."
annual fee for
e is $175, and
at a $175 figure
g proposition,
fees be sold
that fees be set
motion carried
ners agreed that
al payments of
Sam Berryman
Michael Joe Martinez, infant
son of Mr. and Mrs. Erasmo
Martinez, Jr. of 316 Lake Street,
died Tuesday at Northwest
Texas Hospital in Amarillo.
Services will be conducted at
10 a.m. today at St. Joseph’s
Catholic Church with Father
Jose Gilligan, pastor, officiat-
ing.
Interment will be at St.
Anthony's Cemetery under the
direction of Gililland-Watson
Funeral Home.
The infant was born August 5.
1975 at Friona.
He is survived by his parents;
a brother, Noel; grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. Erasmo Martinez
of Hereford and Mr. and Mrs.
Funeral services were con-
ducted at 2 p.m. Wednesday at
Avenue Baptist Church for Mrs.
Mary Bernice Northcutt, 57,
who died Sunday at Westgate
Nursing Home.
Officiating was the Rev. Lynn
Dehart of Dallas. Burial was in
West Lawn Memorial Park
under the direction of Gililland-
Watson Funeral Home.
Born in Moriarty, N. M., Mrs.
Northcutt moved to Hereford
in 1942 from Belview, N.M. She
was a member of the Hereford
Rebekah Lodge and Westway
Baptist Church.
She is survived by four sons,
Jim of Lubbock, Woody of
Brookings, S.D., and Ray and
John of Hereford; a daughter,
Mrs. Sue Deyke of Hereford;
her father, Tom Welch of
Portales, N.M.; three brothers
James Welch of Hereford, R.J.
Welch of Longview, and Barney
Welch of Shreveport, La.; three
sisters Mrs. Rosa Lee Yar-
brough of El Paso, Mrs. Ruby
Cockrum of Hereford and Mrs.
Dea Claxton of Amarillo; and 15
grandchildren.
The family asks memorials to
the school for the Blind in
Lubbock, and the Westway
Baptist Church and Hereford
Meals on Wheels.
JCPenney
OPEN TILL 6:00 WEEKDAYS "
8:00 ON SATURDAYS
Sale
2.80
Reg. 3.50. Jr.
Intimate bra of
nylon/spandex with
lace cups White.
Sizes 32-34A,
32-36B.
Sale
‘4.00
Reg. $5. JCPenney
Seamless Bra with
Lycra* spandex
Natural cups, white.
sizes 32-36A
32-38B/C.
With contour cups,
32-36A, 32-36B.
reg 4 50 Sale 3.60
With padded cuos.
32-36A, 32-36B,
reg $5 Sale 54
with higher inflationary price,
for his tools of production. He
has no way to mandatorily raise
the price received for his
livestock and crops to include
increased costs of production as
do other types of business and
industry.
s here have two
r buy a year's
hey can pay the
ne holes and $3
s on weekdays,
id $3.50 for 18
7
8).
M‛“e‛
"YES, VIRGINIA, THERE
PULL-ON PECOS
COMFORT
so that surplus agriculture
products can be sold abroad,
and create an export payment
balance that will save this nation
from bankruptcy caused by
excessive import spending for
foreign oil."
"The American agriculture
producer is continually faced
JONES
MOTORS
345 E. FIRST
364-3150
Ignacio Aguilar of Carrizo
Springs, Texas; and a great
grandmother, Mrs. Juanita
Davila of Carrizo Springs.
Red Wing
Cures
5olok
Don’t miss
JCPenney Coat
and Jacket
R Paul Abalos
I, submitted by
Amarillo-based
Phe vote was
alos‛ motion.
; approval of the
being built and
hool by the city,
ict. The school
ability for the
ject to approval
.___~ ■
Sale 9.60
uld be ready and
begin within a
3 will be done
a network of
wtors who will
I to provide a
loaf of bread to
Mind loaf of this
coat very little
ommercial loaf,
nutrition will be
First Christian Church for j
Frederick Young Moreman of
Westgate Nursing Home, a
veteran of World War One.
Moreman died September 10
at Westgate Hospital. Officiat-
it he feels the
d for good health
luced in a bread.
research and
i is the first step
duction of the
ISA FUNNY FARM."
UM
ej
Here's a man's boot
every step of the way’
Rugged, handsome,
ready for a rough day's
work anytime. Easy on
the feet, too Stop in —
try on Pecos.
J
- er*
4 2
( A
/e
1
Church, and Lon Connor, pastor
of Frio Baptist Church.
Interment was at Rest Lawn
Memorial Park under the
direction of Gililland-Watson
Funeral Home.
He was born February 10.
1897 in Alvord, Texas. He was
married to Daisy Scott Decemb-
er 17, 1924 at Hollis, Okla.
He came to Deaf Smith
County in December of 1930
from Hollis. He was a retired
farmer.
He is survived by his wife of ।
Kings Manor; two daughters,
Mrs. Frank Robbins of Rt. 2,
Hereford and Mrs. Glenn
Edwards of Commerce, Texas;
one sister, Mrs. Lillye Ragland
of Plain view; 11 grandchildren
and two great grand children.
x had received
atural Gas Co.
regular city
ctober 6 include
rates. The
»ked Pioneer to
s in the cost of
the current
nits a 100 per
t adjustment of
ers agreed to
the October 6
e next regular
ission.
1974 PLYMOUTH VALIANT
4-Door Sedan
Power and Air
*¥*¥************
WE HAVE 4 PLYMOUTH VALIANT & DODGE
DART 4-DOOR MODELS TO CHOOSE FROM.
ALL ARE FACTORY EXECUTIVE CARS - ALL
ARE LIKE NEW.
SPECIAL PRICES
**********************
1970 CHEVY MONTE CARLO
1974 PLYMOUTH SATTELITE SEBRING 2-DOOR,
FACTORY EXEC. LOADED
1972 DODGE CORONET 4-DOOR EXCELLENT
USED CAR
1974 DODGE %-TON PICKUP
1972 PONTIAC
1974 PLYMOUTH DUSTER-6-CYLINDER
1975 CHRYSLER CORDOBA
1975 PLYMOUTH STATION WAGON
Annie Paralee Gollehon, 79.
died at 3:30 a.m. Monday in
Deaf Smith General Hospital
after a lengthy diness.
Services were at 3 p.m.
Services for Sam Berryman.
36. of 239 Beach in Hereford
were conducted Sunday in the
Avenue Baptist Church with the
Rev. Stanley Richardson, Bap-
tist minister from Tucumcari.
N.M., officiating.
Burial was in West Park
Cemetery under the direction of
Gililland-Watson Funeral
Home.
Berryman died Friday. Sep-
tember 12, after a traffic
accident near Dimmitt in which
he was involved. The accident
occurred on FM 2397 six miles
north of Dimmitt.
Survivors include his wife.
Eileen: a son, GeDon of the
home; a daughter, LuAnna of
the home; three brothers,
Richard of Hereford, Cecil of
Lancaster, Calif., and Gary of
Lubbock.
ion. we will strive
personal and
i dealing wih the
able to the people
Smith added.
Reg. $12. Toddler boys reversible jacket of
frosted acrylic modacrylic pile with vinyl trim
Zip front, drawstring hood Reverses to
quilted nylon ski jacket. Brown or blue
2T. 3T. 4T
Sale 54.79
Reg. $5.99 Infant Girl's Quilted
Jacket. Nylon Taffeta Shell Quilted To
Polyester Interlining. Zipper Front , Pile
\ Lined, Drawstring Hood. 1,2,3,4
ing at the last rites were Gene !
Brink, pastor of First Christian j i
Tuesday in First Baptist Church
of Littlefield with the Rev. AJ.
Kennemer, pastor, officiating.
Burial was in Littlefield
Memorial Park under the
direction of Hammons Funeral
Home of Littlefield.
She was a 24-year resident of
Littlefield and retired clothing
store clerk. She was a member
of the First Baptist Church.
Survivors include a daughter,
Mrs. Lloyd Crume of Here-
ford; a brother.Sam Wilson of
Slaton and a grandson.
The family requests memor-
ials to the Heart Fund.
« >
Queiity, quantity and tashion. Weve
gotten • e together tor your
convenience and at prices youw reelly
love ■ Junlors’, misses and hell-size
coats, pantooats and ackets in warm
wood, leathera, leather-ooks and
much, much more Many with take hr
tom an importent took tor Fai 75
Shop now from this tantnstic colection
The West Texas Chamber of strikes.
Commerce has called for In its position paper WTCC
immediate action by the states that the longshoremen
Executive, Legislative and cited “ one justification for a
Judicial branches of govern- ban on the loading of wheat
ment to prevent future loading destined for the Soviet Union
bans on agriculture products for the protection of U.S. interests;
foreign export contending that the sales
On November 19, 1971 the negotiated by private business.
West Texas Chamber of utlizing the free market system
Commerce adopted a position and the free enterprise concept,
calling for Congressionai Action will be unfair 10 the American
that would assure the continu- consumer by causing a drastic
ous flow of farm commodities rise in domestic food prices
exported from U.S. ports. This The WTCC points 001 that
action was perpetrated by the consumer prices predicted as a
loss of sales of agriculture result of the previous wheat sale
__. . . . to Russia did not materialize,
products to foreign markets r, . „ . . t
.. C r .. The dollar per loaf price of
because U.S. producers could . . .
. c. . . , bread predicted in 1972 proved
not assure foreign countries of a to be false. It is noted
continuous supply of products prices have remained at. or near
being moved through U.S. ports f. . . . . .
.u’ . . ° . a , the same level, even with the
without stoppage due to dock . . . . ...
strikes depressed wheat prices which
g*.. , followed the first Russian sale.
Recent work stoppages by . : .1 .1 _
. . ; u u indicating that other factors
longshoremen, supported by . 51 . _
George Meany, President of the havea muchigreater influence
AFL-CIO. have halted grain on the cost of bread than the
shipments and jeopardized wheatcontent.
future sales to Russia," says In itsposition paper’ the West
Dick Yeager of Vernon, Texas Chamber of Commerce
L.:. .c wre,, A i maintains that a labor union
chairman of WTCC s Agncul- . . . . .
ture and Ranching Committee. does not havesthe authority to
"The WTCC again restates its set foreign policy or to dictate
previous position and registers products in «
stringent objections to such domestic market °
highiy questionable dock "The American agriculture
f7
/ 7
I t mssa
Funeral services were con-
ducted Friday, September 12, at
Save on yarn, kits.
Sale 77
Reg. 996. Dupont" Orlon" acrylic yarn in a
choice of fashion colors Worsted weight shrink
resistant, and permanently moth proof 4 oz skein
Grd
. 2-c6
—st*
Our fabulous,
once-a-year
extravaganza
8 la back in
S t own and
859 better than
FNever.
/ N
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4,
42.
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Nieman, O. G. The Hereford Brand (Hereford, Tex.), Vol. 74, No. 75, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 18, 1975, newspaper, September 18, 1975; Hereford, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1429656/m1/3/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Deaf Smith County Library.