Hudspeth County Herald and Dell Valley Review (Dell City, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 29, Ed. 1 Friday, April 2, 1971 Page: 4 of 6
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PAGE 4, HUDSPETH COUNTY HERALD-Dell Valley Review, APRIL 2, 1971
LEWIS LLEWELLYN
FT. HANCOCK
e
IMPROVING COTTON
BRIGHTNESS
ji —
e
FOR COMPLETE INSURANCE NEEDS
cover
the buttresses?
Are the heels finished without sharp edges?
Is the shoe concaved
Cont'd. Page 5
Is the shoe the correct size for the foot?
£3
FOR SALE
a
FOR SALE
* COTTON SEEDS
+ FERTILIZERS
»
» GRAIN SEEDS
+ CHEMICALS
FRANKLIN ELECTRIC CO,
FARMERS
1512 E. YANDELL • • EL PASO 2. TEXAS
533-9759
Protect your farm
income NOW
FOR SALE: FARM within
mile or two of Dell City.
Presently leased. Call Andy
Gonzales. Home: 566-0379.
Office: 533-6886, El Paso
Eggs tend to keep longer
when stored broad end up . .
because this position protects
the sealed air cell just below
the broad end of the shell.
413 Chrysler pump motor-
S600.00 Call, Waverly Dug-
gar, 963-2697
Will the -weight of the shoe provide reasonable wear and protectior
to the foot ?
was
friends
one of
WEDDING
INVITATIONS AND
5 Room house in Dell City
$2,500,00 - $500,00 down,
the balance at 6%. Call Fa-
ther Casey 964-260L
FarmersUnion
INSURANCE
FOR SALE: 200 ACRES, two
10-inch wells and pumps, all
cement ditches, 2 bedroom
house. Workman's quarters,
and a 30 x 40 tin barn. For
information call 964-2674.
BETH BREWER
Dell City, Texas
DR. ENSMINGER
From Page 2
I Ill I
McNary* J
ASSOCIATION
DELL CITY, TEXAS
964-2566
HORSES!
HORSES,
ORSES,
M Sty PHONE: 4-2131
For Top Quality Service
Oar Social Advising Sorvlco
Anurot You tho Proper Form for
Waddings, Announcement., Invitations,
Colling Cards, Informal., etc.
Mcmtfashmos Atfodotfen—
MODERN ENGRAVERS
GALA
7
CLASSIFIED
ADVERTISING
so t hat it does not rest upon the homy sole ?
Are the nail heads properly seated?
tor Craws'e Nne Papura
H Pom'* Ooty IsteMlsfenaet
©olw® OoovIm Stool Eagranring
TULIA BROWN-
Word has been received that
three former Ft. Hancock High
School students were named
to the Dean's List at Sul Ross
State University, these same
three being in the top five
per cent at the university.
They are Johnny Luedecke,
son of Mr, and Mrs. J.H, Lue-
decke, now living in Tornillo;
Mary Ella Talley, daughter
of Mr.' and Mi's. Lester Ray
Talley of Esperanza, and Ch-
ula Brown, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs, O.C. Brown,Jr., also
of Esperanza. Johnny and Mary
Ella are 1970 graduates and
Chula is a 1968 of Ft. Hancock
High School.
***
Some of our former residents
who moved away about four
years ago have returned to the
area, Mr, and Mrs, Jim Selbe
and children Jimmy, Judy,
and Beth Ann, formerly with
the U.S. Border Patrol in Ft.
Hancock who were transferred
to Detroit, Michigan, have
returned to EL Paso. Mr. Selbe
will be an Assistant Chief
with the U. S. Border Patrol
office.
saltllat
WEDDIl
INVITATIONS Al._
BUSINESS STATIONERY
DOWN IN
THE...
,1
Have the ragged particles of the homy frog been removed?
PERRY HARDWARE
.AND
SUPPLIES
nlblr
Are the heels of the shoe of sufficient length and width to
***
Congratulations to Jackie Den-
man, daughter of Mr, and Mrs.
Ike Denman, on her selection
to the National Honor Society
at a meeting of faculty and
advisors last week at the high
school. Jackie is a senior;
The only other member of
the senior class to be a mem-
ber is Eddie Dominguez , son
Mr, and Mrs. Jesus Dominguez,
He was selected last year and
maintained his membership
this year. Provisional members
selected from the sophomore
class were Angie Dominguez,
daughter of Mr, and Mrs. Je-
sus Dominguez; Melloy Miller
daughter of Mr, and Mrs.
CfradyMiller; and "Kenneth Kue-
the, Jr., son of Mr, and Mrs.
K.W. Kuethe. These provision-
al members may become full-
fledged members during their
junior year, but will have to
be re-evaluated by the en-
tire faculty on their scholar-
sliip, service, leadership, and
character,
***
The Ft. Hancock Chapter 992
O.E.S. honored the Deputy
Grand Matron, District 2,Sec-
tion 10, Mrs. Helen Wood,1st
Monday night in the Lodge
building. Prior to the meeting
a dinner honoring Mrs. Wood
and her guests, as well as
officers and members of the
local Chapter, at the home
of Miss Anne Shelburne, Wor-
thy Matron. Mrs. Wood brought
greeting and instructions to
the chapter from the Worthy
Grand Matron, Mrs. Frances
Key Herrin of Houston. Fo-
llowing the meeting a social
hour was held with, O.C. Brown
Jr., and C.C. Arthur furnish-
ing refresliments.
***
A 1958 blue station wagon
belonging to Zacarias Domin-
guez, Sr., was stolen from in
front of the First Baptist
Church Sunday evening. As
of this writing no trace of the
car has been found, nor any
evidence as to what direction
it might have been taken.
College Station -A method
for improving whiteness and
brightness of cotton durable-
press garments throughout
their wear life is now being
developed, announces Miss
Joanne Thurber, Extension
specialist in clothing at Tex-
as A&M University.
A team of U.S. Department
of Agriculture scientists in
New Orleans, La., are work-
ing with selected polymers,
adding them to the chemical
formulations used to make
durable-press cottons.
The polymers remain on
the surface of tire fibers and
aid in absorption of optical
brighteners that are included
in most laundry detergents.
In addition to absorbing the
brighteners, tire polymers
improve the smooth drying
appearance of tire fabric.
Miss Thurber explains that
the optical brighteners are,
in effect, uncolored "dyes"
which fluoresce or shine in
tire presence of light and
make white garments appear
whiter and colored garments
seem brighter. These "dyes"
are rapidly absorbed by un-
treated cotton, but only
slightly absorbed by cottons
that have been chemically
treated to give them durable-
press characteristics.
The textile finishing indus-
try ordinarily incorporates
brighteners in the chemical
solutions used to treat the
HAIL
DESTROYS
INCOME
by
Dr M. E. Ensminger, Ph.D
Clovis, Californio
C;
r/,
Many are beginning to realize
that marijuana. LSD, speed,
mescaline, heroin, and other
narcotics are destroying thou-
sands of America's young
people.
While the full record on the
effects of marijuana is not yet
in. and research is still con-
tinuing, Dr. Davis Wade, Texas
state commissioner for mental
health, has stated, “We are get-
ting substantial research evi-
dence to indicate that marijuana
is causing brain damage. . . .
This is organic cellular dam-
age. . . . Persons who suffer
such brain damage do not ever
recover from it."
Started in High School
Steve Clements, 21, tells about
his experience with marijuana
in this way, “I started smoking
grass in high school. It
very simple. All my
were smoking it and
them asked me if I had and I
told him, ‘No.’ He asked me if
I wanted to try it and I guess
I must have said, ‘Why not?
Everybody else is doing it.’ . . .
“I / smoked that first joint as
sort of a gesture, looking for
something in my life that
seemed to be missing. . . . And
then it seemed so easy to go
on to the others—LSD, barbi-
turates, mescaline, and other
hallucinogenic drugs but, thank
God, no heroin.”
Steve was arrested for a nar-
cotics law violation while he
was a student at St. Petersburg,
Fla. Now off drugs completely
and looking forward to parole
and going back to college, he is
one of the lucky ones.
His experience with drugs,
starting with marijuana, points
out the utter folly of the argu-
ment that marijuana should be
legalized.
Ben Gilmore made a trip to
Van Hom on Friday.
***
Dewayne Grable went to
Dallas Friday night.
Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Ainsworth,
Julia Ainsworth and John Tex
went to El Paso on Wednesday.
Visiting with tire Gilmores
and Hammack's Saturday
were Mary Pruett, Brenda
Wilhelm and Jamie of El Paso.
***
Ginger Hall and Helen Keys
went to El Paso Wednesday.
***
Home from South Plains Coll-
ege were Glen Gilmore,
Denny Gentry, Eddie Lewis
and Brent Snodgrass.
***
Visiting with tire Hammack's
and Gilmore's was Pauline
Steed of Adrian, Texas. Mrs.
Hammack, Pauline Steed and
Isobel Gilmore went to El
Paso Wednesday.
***
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Hammack
and John Gilmore went to
Van Hom Thursday,
lt a
/WIL
1
_ How Dangerous
BOWS ls Marii“ana?
Another who has found the
way back from drug addiction
and the miseries which accom-
pany it is Gary R., now serving
a three-to-six year prison term
in Pennsylvania for crimes com-
mitted while he was an addict.
Here is Gary’s story: “I
had been taking drugs steadily
for two years and I had gotten to
the point where drugs were all
that meant anything. ... It was
as if something evil had at-
tacked my head so that I
was sure I was going insane. . . .
My thinking was twisted. Not
my own. I would go into spells
of deep depression.”
While addicted to drugs, Gary
met a girl named Wendy. They
started to live together, though
they were unmarried.
"Finally,” he continues, “I
got so bad I couldn’t care
for her any more ... so I
took her home. Her Mom is a
born-again Christian and I’ll
never forget the night I brought
Wendy home. Her Mom just
took us both in her arms and
held us, and cried, and gave
thanks to the Lord. Her prayers
had been answered. . . . That
night I accepted the Lord.
“Wendy and I are now mar-
ried. . . . How I thank God for
the new life we now have in
Jesus.”
Freedom from Bondage
Though he is in prison, Gary
now has a freedom — and an
inner peace — that he did not
have while he was free to walk
where he wished — but in bond-
age to drugs.
He has proved true the Bibli-
cal statement, “He whom the
Son makes free shall be free
indeed.”
There is hope for the drug
addict who will take advantage
of this offer held out to him by
the hand of God.
Does the shoe rest evenly on the bearing surface of the hoof,
covering the lower border of the wall, white line buttresses?’
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Snyder, Darlene; Brown, Julia & Gilmore, Joyce. Hudspeth County Herald and Dell Valley Review (Dell City, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 29, Ed. 1 Friday, April 2, 1971, newspaper, April 2, 1971; Dell City, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1235192/m1/4/?rotate=270: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .