Hudspeth County Herald and Dell Valley Review (Dell City, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 46, Ed. 1 Friday, July 19, 1968 Page: 2 of 4
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days which honor our God, our
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splitting head-
WILL SHIP THROUGH AUGUST 12
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THE OBSERVER
Contractor
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By Job or Hour
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hard asawin1 as we do startin' this thing, we'd have
10,000 acres cleared I"
En Espanol
From Page 1
Jim Regan,
WILL WORK BACK-HOE FOR GENERAL EXCAVATION-
TRENCHING -- UNDERGROUND PIPELINES--
SWIMMING POOLS
Phone 964-2320
GET YOUR FAMILY TOGETHER AUGUST 11
by Paul Harvey
..........Publisher
.........Publisher
Sierra Blanca Editor
Ft. Hancock Editor
.... Salt Flat Editor
0 Ace 7?eid
JLL
GAS COMPANY
P. O. Bax 6
DELL CITY. TEXAS 7*037
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Mrs. James Lyncn...
Mrs. Michael Lynch,
Mrs. Joe Abb Neely
Julia Brown........
Joyce Gilmore.....
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THE OBSERVER...
tre la raza negra tai vez uno de
los jueces de la Suprema Corte.
Entre los judios el senor Ein-
stain o tai vez el Senador Gold-
water. Pues para sorpresa de
usted, ninguno de los antes ci-
tados hubieran sido admitidos
a varies clubs que existen en
el pais de costa a costa. Difi-
cil de creer? Pues entonces hay
que repetirlo.
Las Avispas estan tan fuertas
y bien organizadas que se dan
el lujo de tener clubs donde los
socios tienen que reunir lo de
raza blanca y protestantismo y
ser de linaje y descendencia
estableci da y al mismisimo
presidente de la nacion se le
negaria ser miembro del club
y no solo eso, sino que no puede
asistir ni como invitado. Vamos
a pedirle prestada una puntada
al autor de "Catch 22". Yo creo
que a las avispas les da rabia sa-
ber que el Dios de ellos es tarn-
bien nuestro.
yEs.
There are but two regrets in my
boy scout, I should have gone on J
severance required would have been
discipline.
"COMMON SENSE"
■
for stamp collecting and boati- Y
ing.
Food faddists have sought
and ,von a national "Eat Yo-
gurt Day, " thus making ludi-
crous what should be an offi-
cial honor.
Yet, for all the crass comm-
ercialization which surrounds
them, perhaps the half-dozen
days which honor our God, our .t.4 ,,
country, our veterans and mo- ||
1
finally, one morning, he had
to call her in. And, as she step-
ped through his door, it sudd-
enly dawned on him, in a blind-
ing flash, that it wasn’t the poor
girl herself, but the dress she
was wearing, that was giving
him the hebbie-jeebies.
It was a bright red dress with
an overall design of zig-zags
and polka-dots in vivid sha-
des of orange green and shock-
ing pink. Shielding his eyes
Mr. Z. shooed her out of the
office and, with the door be-
tween them, shouted out an
explanation. He begged her
never to wear that dress again
in his presence or he’d have
to sack her. He said to buy
herself a new dress and charge
it to the firm.
A prominent ophthamologist
commenting on the case, said
seizures such as Mr. Z’s were
becoming quite common and
that it was the arrangement of
polka-dots and clashing colors
of his secretary's dress that br-
ought on his symptoms. He no-
ted that viewers of op and pop
art, and visitors to psychedelic
night clubs are frequently over-
taken by dizziness and nausea.
If the story has a moral it is
this: never go anywhere with-
out your dark glasses.
I w
w
Service Station
GOOD IGNITION BATTERIES $8.00 each
FOR IRRIGATION MOTORS’
POINTS as Iw as $ 2. 20 PLUGS as low as $. 75
J. W. HILL,
Granite Falls, Minn., Tri-
bune: "Common sense is the
real key to the safe and pro-
fitable use of agricultural
chemicals on farms. Every
farmer has a lot of this val-
uable commodity—if he isn’t
such a
in such a hurry that he fails
to use it. Use common sense
and agricultural chemicals
together—they will save you
a basketful of trouble—and
money, too. "
Any cnoneou* reflection upon the character, standing or reputa-
mon of any person, flrm or corporation which may occur in the
column* of the Hudspeth County Herald will be gladly corrected
upon being brought to the attention of the editor* of publisher*.
Tne publishers are no- responsible for copy om mission* of typo-
graphical errors which may occur other than to correct them in the
•ext 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 ?oet Office to be Paid in Advance
published on Friday of each week
For Hudspeth County, Texas* Third Largest County
Notice* of church entertainments where a charge of admission
is made, card of thanks, resolutions of respect, and all matter
not news, will be charted at the regular rates.
Second class postage paid in Del^ City, Texas 79837
Subsidiary MARY-MA&Y inc.
"If we worked as
W.1 *
WE’VE BEEN WONDERING when somebody would be blinded by the
wild melange of psychedlic color that has invaded every' phase of
what we laughingly call our modern culture. That no such inci-
dent has been reported may be due to the fact that everybody and
his dog wears dark sun-glasses these days, day and night, indoors
and out.
But word comes from England of the strange case of Mr. Z., a pro-
sperous young bachelor, who suddenly began to experience extreme
dizziness, spots before his eyes, palpitations, and a splitting head-
ache whenever he looked at his
pretty blonde secretary
At first glance, the symptoms
indicated a severe attack of
love at first sight. But Mr. Z.
pooh-poohed the idea. He flat-
ly denied any romantic inter-
est in the young woman, who
had been in his employ for
well over a year. He said he
admired her efficiency, and
their relationaship was friend-
ly, but on a purely business-
like platonic basis.
A second M. D. suggested
overwork as a cause of his dis-
tress. Mr. Z. also rejected this
diagnosis. His business was
doing well, he said, and wh-
ile he put in a good days work
he never permitted himself
to become fatigued.
Thus matters stood for several
days, with Mr. Z. avoiding
his secretary and getting so far
behind with his dictation! that
J Wu/7'W
( ilBLw
TJt
thers and fathers are worthy '' * ’’W
reminders of what they are ......." z~ ’ " -
supposed to remind us of. PAUL HARVEY
Family Reunion Day will become one of the worthy ones.
r own half-century of living. As a
from first class to eagle. The per-
i an earlier experience in self-
The other regret is that I did not visit my own mother more often
while she lived.
I think the umbilical cord between a mother and son is never reallv
severed until the death of one or the other, yet too frequently we
take mother's presence for granted. She's somebody who is "always
there" and we somehow imagine she always will be. Yet we don't
write often enough and we don't visit nearly often enough. Mother's
Day always meant at least a phone call.
History says the decay of civilizations starts at the hearthside. When
family diminishes, when the young lose sight of the light in the win-
dow— they get lost.
Look about us: strong, stable governments derive from a strong
family life. Conversely, weak governments and societies are chara-
: cterized by loose family ties.
Before the Oriental began to become Westernized, family ties were
so tenacious that among many generations of Chinese-Americans
there was not one conviction for adultery, desertion, rape, robbery—
or even what we casually call "juvenile mischief. "
In those days, the Chinese children were "always home for dinner. "
Let's get the family together Aug. 11.
We've been searching too far from home for tire people who really
ITPprf UC-
PAGE2, HUDSPETH COUNTY HERALD-Dell Valley Review, JULY 19, 1968
COW POKES By Ace Reid
Any excuse for a holiday !
There are now so many "special days" set aside for celebration
that they are being written into union contracts and Congress is
moving to bunch them around weekends thus to minimize the in-
creasing disruption of production. Patriotic holidays, once meant
for honoring and parading our Flag, are most often merely an ex-
cuse to goof off. Even Christmas is frequently profaned with over-
indulgence.
. Now along comes another one. Freedoms Foundation and Kiwan-
is International are co-sponsoring Family Reunion Day Aug. 11.
I think this one makes sense. ..
Nationally and locally, our ' .
politicians have used procla- . Xi-
mations of "special days" as M
an easy payoff for commer- 'tyl
cial, ethnic and social groups. |
Even hobbyists, if they re- ®
present enough votes, are
honored with special "days"
PERRY HARDWARE
AND
SUPPLIES
Dell City ph. 4-2151
Jexasj^p R E SST
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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. 46, Ed. 1 Friday, July 19, 1968, newspaper, July 19, 1968; Dell City, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1337426/m1/2/: accessed July 12, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .