Hudspeth County Herald and Dell Valley Review (Dell City, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 22, Ed. 1 Friday, January 26, 1968 Page: 1 of 6
six pages : ill. ; page 19 x 12 in. Scanned from physical pages.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
lot Copy
VOLUME 12
NUMBER 22,
COUNTY LIVESTOCK SHOWSATURDAY
WHITE AT SOUTH POLE.,.
t
K
r
*r J
NEW OFFICERS..
EARL EADS SUCCUMBS
z
SCHOOL TAX DEADLINE IS JANUARY 31, 1968. THERE WILL BE
AN EIGHT PER CENT PENALTY (8%) ADDED TO ALL DELINQUENT
TAXES FEBRUARY 1, 1968.
EVERYONE MUST REGISTER TO VOTE
OF AGE.
ss
A NEW LAW EFFECTIVE FEBRUARY 1, 1968, REQUIRES ALL
PERSONS ELIGIBLE, MUST REGISTER TO VOTE REGARDLESS
Brewster, 338, $54, 601. 45;
____________ Cont’d. Page 5
1
I
B
I
I
I ‘ZWkr.
I.-
1 ■ I
Voter Registration
Austin -With the deadline
for registration only a few days
away, Texas voters over 60
years old have been reminded
of a new law which requires
every voter to register, re-
gardless of age or place of
residence. Heretofore, voters
over 60 years old were requir-
ed to register only if they
lived in a city of ten thousand
or more inhabitants. Wednesday
of next week, January 31, is
the last day to apply for a
registration certificate.
Texas Secretary of State John
L. Hill issued the reminder
in a statement summarizing
registration requirements. As
Cont’d. Page 5
OUTSTANDIN G CITIZEN...
F 1
assist children of low income
families and other disadvan-
taged children. Department
of Education figures show there
are 11, 991 such children in 11
counties of the. 16th District _
eligible for aid. Loving Coun- fiscal year 1968 are as follows:
ty, smallest in the District,
has only 4 eligible children
Bus Crash
Victims Show
Appreciation
Employes and their families
of-the Guadalupe Compressor
Station, El Paso Natural Gas
Cb., and a number of trainees
the U.S. Army Training
center, Ft. Bliss, renewed
acquaintances Saturday under
njore pleasant circumstances.
The event was an indoor
picnic at the Guadalupe Sta-
ten, sponsored by the officers
and men of Fort Bliss.
Its purpose was to show the
A«my’s appreciation for the
s« r v i c e s rendered by the
G&adalupe employes in assist-
ing 39 soldiers who were
Cont’d. Page 5
En Espanol
El idioma latin fue llevado
a Espana por los romanos y
alii dio nacimiento al gallego
que es el portugues de hoy en
dia y dio nacimiento al Cata-
lan y al Castellano. Es el Cas-
tellano el idioma que hoy per-
manece en los primerisimos
lugares en cuanto al numero
de habitantes en el mundo que
lo hablan, como por su liter-
ature. Lo mismo el gallego
que el Catalan podian haber
tornado el lugar del Castell-
ano y set ellos los represen-
tantes latinos en el universe,
pues ambas lenguas tienen la
suficiente riqueza de expre-
siones, pero debi do a la su-
premacia de Castilla que ocu-
paba los estados centrales de
la peninsula iberica, fue el
Castellano el idioma oficial.
Cuando llego la dominacion
arabe a principios del siglo
octavo ya se hablaba Castell-
ano, sin embargo no se tienen
documentos hasta la aparicion
del siglo doce, de los cuales
el mas famoso es el Cantar
De Mio Cid, el cual por las
narra clones que hace y el vi-
gor conque se describen, lle-
Cont’d. Page 5
Dell Valley -voyie z.ner, long-time farmer m Dell Valley, was
awarded Outstanding Citizen for 1967 during the annual Dell Valley
Chamber of Commerce Banquet last week in the Community Build-
ing. Over 100 people were in attendance. Guest speaker was C. B.
Ray, President of the El Paso Valley Cotton Association. Roy Nix,
1968 President, received the gavel from outgoing president, Deron
Kasparian.____
16th District Receives Funds
The United States Office of Education has notified Congressman
Richard C. White of the allotment of $1, 936, 859.08 to public
schools of the 16th District for fiscal 1968, under Title 1 of the El-
ementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965. Under thfe Act, the
funds are to be "used to provide additional educational facilities to
under the Act, and therefore
does not qualify for assistance.
By counties, the number of
children to be assisted, and
the amounts granted for the
Ft. Hancock-Funeral ser-
vices for Mr. Earl Eads of A-
cala, who died suddenly last
Wednesday, January 17, while
in Ellis Chevrolet in Fabens,
were held on Friday at Hard-
ing-Orr-McDaniel Montana
Avenue Chapel at 2:00 p. m.
Friday. Mr. Eads had been a
lower valley resident for 50
years.
He is survived by his widow,
Mrs. Mildred Eads; one son,
George Eads, both of Acala;
and a sister and a brother
Pallbearers were M. L. Ste-
vens, Jack Fairless, Jim Bow-
den, Jerry Rogers, James Stra-
chen, and Johnny Surratt. Hon-
orary pallbearers were Jess
Glover, E. A. Wright, J. T.
McKinney, J. B. Bean, Gor-
don Jonsoni, Harry Moore, Jr.,
Lenox Moore, and Jack Strick-
land. Interment was in Rest-
lawu Cemetery.
Cotton News
Western Area
Prices continued a downward
trend for most growths in wes-
tern markets, according to the
Consumer and Marketing Ser-
vice, USDA. Trading was mod-
erately slow, unchanged from
a week ago.
Mill demand was fairly good
for low grades and Below
grades. Buying of better qua-
lities was sporadic at declin-
ing prices. Vietnam, was in the
market for Arizona Deltapine
under Public Law 480. Japan
purchased some Below Grades.
San Joaquin Valley merchants
bid 36. 00 to 36. 50 cents for
pre-rain Strict Low Middling
1-1/16" and higher qualities.
Very few sales were made,
however.
The Phoenix Deltapine mar-
ket was weaker for Middling
light Spottted 1-1/32" and
better, 3. 5 to 4. 9 mike. Strict
Low Middling 1-1/16", 3, 5 to
4. 9, brought 28. 00 cents. Pri-
ces were steady for Low Midd-
ling and lower grades. Below
Grades sold for 16. 25 to 17. 50
cents.
Fresno Strict Low Middling
1-3/32", 3. 5 to 4. 9, was quo-
ted at 35. 50 cents, down 50 h
Cont’d. Page 3
I "w.
i v
■ . ju A*
I
-
ANTARCTICA......Congressman Richard C. White and Mr. Les-
lie Coleman, Scientific Leader of Pole Station, stop at the geo-
graphical South Rale during a tour of U. S. Antarctica Research
facilities at Pole Station, Antarctica. Average temperature at the
South Pole is minus 56 degrees Fahrenheit--—altitude 9, 186 feet--
ice thickness over 9000 feet.
-r
III
. I : ' '
I
fl
JFP’
-
Jun
I V JI
I
If J™
w’
J I
y y I
Se>u2Ln^ iSi«^Aa BEonca and KudapcdA (Eauntq
6 PAGES FRIDAY, JANUARY 26, 1968, DELL CITY, TEXAS 79837
r > Jr s
3E0GRAPHI CsnUTH'POLE ft
< AVCPASfc TtMP MINUS 567 B1
£ Aimurc lj
« rrow nv® 9ooo„.t I
IgtS
Sierra Blanca - The Hudspeth
County Livestock Show will
be held on Saturday, January
27, at the Show Barn just
north of the Court House in
Sierra Blanca.
Sifting will begin at 10 a. m.
and will be gin with the .
calves, then sheep and finally
swine* The Horse Show will
begin at 9 a. m. The Bar-B-
Que will be at the Sierra Bl-
anca School at 5 p. m., and
the Auction Sale at 7 p. m.
with Harry Moore as Auction-
eer. The day will culminate
at 9 p. m. at the High School
Gym with a western style dan-
ce ending at midnight.
L
Dell Valley - The 1968 Dell Valley Chamber of Commerce offi-
cers were installed at the annual banquet last week. 1. to r. Roy
Nix, President; Dorothy Collier, Sec.-Treas., Vice President,
Father Casey; Outgoing President, Deron Kasparian, who did an
outstanding job as Chamber President for two years.
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Neely, Mrs. Joe Abb; Brown, Julia & Gilmore, Joyce. Hudspeth County Herald and Dell Valley Review (Dell City, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 22, Ed. 1 Friday, January 26, 1968, newspaper, January 26, 1968; Dell City, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1235220/m1/1/: accessed July 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .