Hudspeth County Herald and Dell Valley Review (Dell City, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 26, Ed. 1 Friday, February 23, 1968 Page: 2 of 6
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DID SUPREME COURT GET THE MESSAGE?—Paul Harvey
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According to Paul Scott's "Inside Washington" report, documents detailing the creation of chaotic
THE OBSERVER
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A John Deere Tractor
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C L MACHINERY CO.
DELL CITY
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..........Publisher .
.........Publisher
Sierra Blanca Editor
, Ft. Hancock Editor
.... Salt Flat Editor
PAGE 2, HUDSPETH COUNTY HERALD-Dell Valley Review. FEB. 23, 1968
COW POKES By Ace Reid
GAS EXPLOSION
From Page I
HAiK cots
EN ESPANOL
From Page 1
I JO MN DEERE]
tevV*C*
■Ag? j o
puts man and machine
at their working best
arfare in the cities are being openly circulated.
ominous and dangerous as tire
hate-fantasies of his rivals in
the black power hierachy, as
presented in Paul Scott's re-
port.
The hour is late.
Ml
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i
It's a great combination —you as operator,
an implement, and a John Deere 70 h.p.
“3020” or 94 h.p. "4020” Tractor. Tractor
hydraulic power takes over the heavy work
— steering, braking, shifting, equipment
control, PTO control, engaging the differ-
ential lock. This, along with maximum
riding comfort and operating convenience,
helps keep you fresh at the wheel. John
w
11
1967,
. * A
necesita pasar de los diez mil
dolares anuales para entrar en
la verdadera clase media,aque-
que puede traer coche del ano,
y que tiene seguro de hospital
y de vida y que en general es~
ta a salvo hasta del "mal de
ojo".
THE OBSERVER...
THE PILING UP OF 100. 000 tons of garbage in New York's streets was a preview of what can happen
if plans of black militants for disruption of all types of public service are carried out a^, scheduled.
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Mr. Rose who was unable
to attend the funeral because
of his injuries, were transferr-
ed to William Beaumont Hos-
pital on Monday. He will be
confined for several weeks.
Ramage toczop^f/zom
INSECTS AMOUNTS TO OVER
4 MILLION DOLLARS ANNUALLY.
CONTROLLED USE OP
PESTIC1PES TO ELIMINATE
THIS DESTRUCTIVE MENACE
LIAS NOT ONLY RAISED
THE WORLDS NUTRITIONAL
STANDARDS, PUT IS RESPONSIBLE
FOE DRAMATICALLY INCREASED
CROP YIELDS - IN SOME
CASES MOIRE THAN
25 REE CENT /
Second class postage paid in DelVtity, Texas 79837
Subsidiary MARY-MAtxY INC,
Deere Tractors help implements work bet-
ter, too. There’s power and speed for
drawn implements, an independent PTO
for power-driven machines, Load-and-
Depth Control for hitch-mounted equip-
ment. Ask us for a demonstration of how
a John Deere Tractor can help you farm
easier and better. Convenient Credit Plan
terms will help make ownership easier.
Mrs. James Lyncn...
Mrs. Michael Lynch.
Mrs. Joe Abb Neely .
Julia Brown.........
Joyce Gilmore......
_ Any erroneous reflection upon the character, standing or reputa-
tion of any person, firm or corporation which may occur in the
columns of the Hudspeth County Herald will be gladly corrected
upon being brought to the attention of the editors of publishers.
The publishers are no responsible for copy ommisiions of typo-
graphical errors which may occur other than to correct them in the
next issue after it is brought to their attention and in no case do
the publishers hold themselves liable for covering the error. The
right is reserved to reject or edit all advertising copy as well as
editorial and news content.
Required by the tart Office to be Paid in Advance
PUBLISHED ON FRIDAY OF EACH WEEK
■ For Hudspeth County, Texas' Third Largest County
Notices of church entertainments where a charge of admission
Is made, card of thanks, resolutions of respect, and all matter
not news, will be charged at_the^regular_rates^____________■
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would quickly spread from
tire urban centers, according
to Williams, whose battle
plan against the white in-
cludes the following:
" While unsparingly setting
the torch to everything that
belongs to the enemy in the
cities, these fire teams would
not neglect the rural country-
side. Fires would be started in
the rich timber resources and
among crops and in rural fa-
ctories. "
Meanwhile, Martin Luther
King, who abjures the mili-
tant label, is planning a "rhas-
sive dislocation" campaign'
in Washington - and simult-
aneously, in 50 other cities -
when he leads several thousand
of his followers to the capital
in April. Tactical details are
not revealed, but the Nobel
Peace Prize winner promises
"prolonged and relentless "
King clothes his threat in
tire pious hypocrisy of non-
violence. But they are just as
conditions as a prelude to insurrection and guerrilla
He quotes from one such docu-
ment prepared by Robert F.
Williams, a black militanr
fugitive now living in Red
China:
The American economyand
its delicate and automated
society cannot withstand sus-
tained and violent dislocation.
Massive violent disruption
would set off a chain reac-
tion that would fragment the
entire nation and usher in an
all-consuming state of anar-
chy. Out of the ashes of an-
archy and chaos a new order
would be constructed. "
He uses the word "ashes"
in its literal sense; his plans
call for the organization of
hundreds of "fire teams" th-
roughout America. These se-
cret groups, unknown to the
militant organization as a
whole, rvould masquerade as
concerned middle-class Ne-
gros, or "Uncle Tom's even
seeming to work with the po-
lice during initial stages of
the coming holocaust. But the
fire teams' sabotage missions
"I wanted to be a cowboy, but I wuz so clumsy at dehornin I had to
give it up ter barberin'l"
an aeronautical engineer,
stopped near his home at
2:30 a. m. and asked for iden-
tification. When he refused,
he was arrested.
Tire Supreme Court, with
only Justice William O. Doug-
las calling for a hearing, de-
creed that it is a citizen's
duty to identify himself when
he is stopped by police.
Presently, there are three
other important cases involv-
ing police procedures pend-
ing before the court. All of _
them involve persons who were W.
arrested after acting suspicious- ™
ly in public places. The ques- PAUL HARVEY
tion is whether police have tire constitutional authority to detain
and question.
In tire pending court cases, the persons detained were "guilty. "
One carried a loaded pistol, one carried burglar tools, the other
was in possession of narcotics.
But they are trying to convince the court that the police had no
right to question or detain them. Their constitutional "liberty" is
being interfered with, they say.
They are supported by tire American Civil Liberties Union and the
NA A CP.
Sixteen states authorize police to "stop and frisk" suspicious per-
sons. The Supreme Court could, with these decisions, erase those \
state laws.
Tire Department of Justice and the District Attorneys Assn, contend
that a policeman, suspecting danger to himself, cannot be deterred
from frisking a suspect. The policeman surely has a "right" to de-
fend himself.
Hopefully, the Supreme Court is getting this message. In the past
six years 335 policemen have been killed. Crime and rioting have
become a paramount political consideration.
During President Johnson's State of the Union message Jan. 17, the
loudest and most prolonged applause -- and it included cheers and —
yelps — came when he said: "The American people have had enough ™
of rising crime and lawlessness in this country'.
Most of us instinctively and rightly resent any increasing invasion
of what little privacy we have left -- in our homes, our papers
and our persons. But one of tire prices we pay for protection in a sar-
dine society is to stay in line — behave ourselves according to
accepted standards of deportment — and to be inconvenienced when
we do not.
IIV -
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Instant exhiliration for a lawman is being shot at -- and missed..
When Supreme Court decision-day rolls around, lawmen every-
where squinch their eyes, scrunch into their collars and await tire
worst.
But on Jan. 15, 1968, the High Court, after examining a Califor-
nia stop-and-search case, found in favor of the policeman!
Can it be that the court has turned the corner?
I refuse to believe that Supreme Court decisions, even in an el-
ection year, can be influenced by politics.
But 1 fully believe that these men have the intelligence to inter-
pret our crime epidemic for what it is: tire result of a decade of
court decisions favoring law- ...wMttw*.
breakers, restraining lawmen.
until we've had a virtual op-
en season on crime.
Tire California case involved d- J
•3
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Neely, Mrs. Joe Abb; Brown, Julia & Gilmore, Joyce. Hudspeth County Herald and Dell Valley Review (Dell City, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 26, Ed. 1 Friday, February 23, 1968, newspaper, February 23, 1968; Dell City, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1235188/m1/2/: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .