Hudspeth County Herald and Dell Valley Review (Dell City, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 8, Ed. 1 Friday, October 24, 1969 Page: 6 of 6
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Il
LEWIS LLEWELLYN
GRASSROOTS
I
I
CITATION BY PUBLICATION
SEED
T 0 K A K
BARLEY
NEW MEXICO WINTER
$
GAINES
WHEAT
t-
1>.
T A S C 0 S A
r: r
$4.00 OUT OF COUNTY
NAME:. i
BOX OB ST. ADDRESS:
CITY...
•“•••STATE
•Zip Code
Box 88
’ cf-jaoa
I
I
He learns to sympathize with
the youngster coming into
the business, because he
remembers how bewildered
he was when he first started
out.
He learns that he who loses
his temper usually loses.
He learns that it doesn't
pay to be a sensitive soul..
that he should let some
things go over his head like
water off a duck's back.
DELL CITY, TEXAS
964-2841
Salt Flat got two and seven-
tenths inches of rain Mon-
day night.
***
Bobby Young went to El Pa-
so on Monday.
Visiting with the Bobby
Young's Friday were Mr.
and Mrs. Doug Brown of El
Paso.
Bernice M. Elder Clerk
District Court, Hudspeth
County, Texas
i
I
p.O. BOX 236
.DELL CITY. TEXAS
He learns that all men have
burned toast for breakfast
now and then, and that he
shouldn't take the other
fellow's grouch too serious-
ly.
He learns that most of the
other fellows are as am- •
bitious as he is, that they
have brains that are as
good or better, and that
hard work and. not clever-
ness is the secret to succ-
ss.
GETTING ALONG
Sooner or later, a man if he
is wise, discovers that
business life is a mixture
of good days and bad, vic-
tory and defeat, give and
take.
I?
fe®
He learns that buck-passing
always turns out to be a
boomerang, and that it
never pays.
He learns that carrying a
chip on his shoulder is the
easiest wayto get into a
fight.
He learns that it doesn't do
any harm to smile and say
"Good Morning", even if
it is raining.
He comes to realize that the
business could run along
perfectly well without him.
-4
***
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Scaler-
cio, Vincent, Chris and
Clyde-Grable went to the
races Saturday.
***
Mr. and Mrs. Emmit Mc-
Adoo and Pauline Speed of
Amarillo, Texas, visited
with the Hammack's and
Gilmore's Friday.
***
Mrs. Glennie Scalercio,
Vincent and Chris, and
Mrs. Catherine Grable went
to El Paso Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Hammack
and Don Gilmore went to
El Paso Monday. Mrs.
Hammack is in Sun Tow-
ers Hospital.
Ben Gilmore went to El Pa-
so to attend the El Paso Gen-
eral Baptist Convention on
Monday.
jcity si cm a’ blanca
$3,uuin COUNTY
I
!H
Misunderstood,
Misrepresented
“When the parents, teachers,
and authorities don’t crack
down on students, they have
no right to complain after-
wards.”
Where have we failed the
young people?
Some of us have failed to
obey the Biblical admonition,
‘‘Train up a child in the way
he should go and, when he is
old, he will not depart from
it.”
Some oi us have listened
too well to the once popular
but now discredited theory
that children should be al-
lowed to do whatever they
want to do, rather than be-
ing required to obey their
parents and other authorities.
How about returning to the
teachings of the Bible—the
book which was so highly
honored by the men who led
our country to greatness?
Useful, Respectable Citizens
Of this book, John Quincy
Adams said. “So great is my
veneration for the Bible that
the earlier my children begin
to read it, the more confident
will be my hope that they
will prove useful citizens to
their country and respectable
members of society.”
Henry Ward Beecher said,
years ago, “The Word of God
tends to make large-minded,
noble-hearted men.”
If the Bible is eliminated
from the education of a
young person, the surest
foundation for a successful,
satisfying life has been left
out.
We should not be surprised
when a building collapses, if
we have failed to build on a
sound foundation.
&&&
He learns that bosses are not
monsters trying to get the
last ounce of work out of
him for the least amount of
pay, but that they are usu-
ually fine men who have
succeeded through hard
work and who want to do
the right thing.
He learns that the gang is
not harder to get along
with in one place than
another and that "getting
along" depends about 98
percent on his own behav-
ior. A
THE STATE OF TEXAS TO:
GEORGE WILLIAM PRUETT,
GREETING:
You are commanded to
appear by filing a written
answer to the plaintiff's pe-
tition at or before 10 o'clock
A. M. of the first Monday af-
ter the expiration of 42 days
from the date of issuance of
this Citation, the same be-
ing Monday the 17th day of
November, A. D., 19.9, at
or before 10 o'clock A. M.
before the Honorable 34th
District Court of Hudspeth
County, at the County Court
House in Sierra Blanca, Tex-
as. Said plaintiff's petition
was filed on the 29th day of
September, 1969. The file
number of said suit being
No. 1711. The names of the
parties in said suit are:
SHIRLEY JEAN PRUETT as
plaintiff, GEORGE WILLIAM
PRUETT, as Defendant.
The nature of said suit be-
ing substantially as follows,
to wit:
Suit for divorce and child
custody.
If this citation is not served
within 90 days after date of
its issuance, it shall be re-
turned unserved.
Given under my hand and
Seal of said Court, at office
in Sierra Blanca, Texas, and
issued this the 29th day of
September A. D., 1969.
He learns that the quickest
way to become unpopular
is to carry tales and gossip
about others.
OB
l. -t' if/4''
■ II
ESPANOLA, N. M., GUN:
"It is frustrating to law-abi-
ding citizens to observe the
tortoise-like pace of our
courts, and it must be par-
ticularly frustrating to those
law enforcement officers
charged with gathering evi-
dence and making the arrests.
It must be very satisfying to
those charged, for the lon-
ger the cases are delayed
the better their chances of
being acquitted. Shoot up a
couple of lawmen, kidnap
two people and assault the
courthouse and you go free.
But beware of getting caught
Saturday night after imbib-
ing a bit too much. The
courts move quite quickly in
cases such as those. "
***
MOUNT OLIVE, N. C. TRI-
BUNE; "President Nixon's
plan for changing the wel-
fare system in this country
to a program of 'family
assistance'... could scarce-
ly draw killing opposition
from anybody except dead-
beats among welfare recip-
ients and those political and
social leaders who, for some
reason, have always promot-
ed deadbeat welfarism. "
COTTON REPORT......
From Page 1
percent graded Middling
light Spotted, nine percent
Strict Lew Middling Light
Spotted, four percent Strict
Low Middling Plus, and two
percent Strict Middling. Two
percent was reduced in grade
because of GRASS content.
Sixty percent stapled 1-5/32
inches, 25 percent 1-1/8 in-;
ches, 11 percent 1-3/32 inc-
hes, two percent 1-3/16 in-
ches, and one percent 1-1/16
inches.
Average mike remained
high at 4.1. Only one per-
cent of the total mike below
3.5.
Fiber strength was very
strong with average readings
at 93, 000 pounds per square
inch.
Upland spot prices were
unchanged from the previous
week. Middling 1-5/32 in-
ches was quoted at 27.00
cents per pound. This quota-
tion and all USDA upland
spot quotations are for cott-
on with mike readings 3. 5
thru 4. 9, in mixed lots,
uncompressed, free of all
charges in the warehouse in
the market.
Cooperatives continued to
advance $41.00 per ton for
cottonseed. _
S
PAGE 6, HUDSPETH COUNTY HERALD-Dell Valley Review, OCT. 24, 1969
THE ART OF
SALT FLAT J,
OPINION 11 AREA NEWS i
J once Gibiv.ore I
The young people of our
country are being grossly
misunderstood and misrepe-
sented.
They are being misunder-
stood by their elders, who
have associated youth with
irresponsible rebellion.
They are being misrepre-
sented by the three or four
percent of their age group
who have rebelled so vocifer-
ously against all authority
that they have created the
impression among some of us
that they constitute a ma-
jority.
The truth that often es-
capes our notice is that there
are many reasonable, re-
sponsible young people for
every one of the miniminori-
ty of militant malcontents.
What a Student Thinks
One of these young peo-
ple—a high school senior—
has told us what he thinks,
in a letter to the editor of
his home-town paper.
"The violence and disrup-
tion going on in colleges
across our country today are
a disgrace to the American
nation.” he says. “When I go
to college, I don’t want to be
kept from classes by a few
asinine idiots . . . Millions of
dollars are wasted each year
by putting up with spoiled
brats that want everything
their own way.”
This young student—who
is, I am sure, far more typi-
cal of the majority than are
the bearded militants who
are bent on destroying what
they cannot control—points
out that students sometimes
break the rules and he adds,
5 0 -LB. SACKS TAGGED
C1 RANCH
WHAT’S THE NEWS';
<Sukscr/ief
CAN'T WIN FOR
. LOSING!
GOSHEN,’ INC., NEWS:
"Congressional correspond-
ence has been running hot
and heavy this session. A
lot of letters from the folks
back home have been in-
spired by concern over taxes,
inflation and government
spending, including no doubt,
the 41 percent pay raise Con-
gress voted for itself. Some
congressmen complained
they were being swamped
by the volume of mail. The
result: The House of Repre-
sentatives has authorized
the hiring of 535 extra clerks,
one for every member. The
cost: $3. 8 million a year.
Sometimes you can't win
for losing. "
***
£ ,A1L‘J
A
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Cooper, Violet; Brown, Julia & Gilmore, Joyce. Hudspeth County Herald and Dell Valley Review (Dell City, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 8, Ed. 1 Friday, October 24, 1969, newspaper, October 24, 1969; Dell City, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1235030/m1/6/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .