The Hereford Brand (Hereford, Tex.), Vol. 81, No. 21, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 30, 1980 Page: 3 of 12
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Ann Landers
Ethics For Gum-Chewers
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1
Small Talk
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By SUE COLEMAN
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Hospital Notes
Car Wash Held
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By Local Assn.
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BM
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’41 off
3980
10-band radio cassette recorder
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301 W 3rd. Hereford
1351
Prices cut from Spring and Fall '90 Books.
NONTGOMERY
Me INTGOMERY
Our
lowest
The U.S. Court of Appeals
in New York ruled in 1923 that
polygraph tests should not be
admitted as evidence until
is born Oct.
ma. He had
i during the
ling here un-
He was a
Iks Club. and
cher for the
ment here.
Lie Carter in
0 in Tucum-
tied him in
70. He was a
‘irst Baptist
time of stress? If you keep
your head together can they
be of help? Ann Landers' new
booklet, "Straight Dope on
Drugs” separates the fact
from the fiction. Get it today.
itablished as •
)1. converted to
I. to five times
e
WHITE SOCKS BECOME
WHITE AGAIN WHEN
BOILED IN WATER WITH
A SLICE OF LEMON
Miami early this week, and
will be back in England Sun-
day.
PATIENTS IN HOSPITAL
Mark Andrews, Lucio Blea
Amie Carr, Steffan Hacker,
Bob Hammock, Audrey
Heard, David Hutchins.
Leo Price, Ramona Torres,
VINCON
Icon, 74, of
Inday in a
ling Home
illness. He
reford resi-
NYAN
mother of
sborn of
uesday in
A couple of examples of English as she is spoke by TV
announcers, heard recently! "Between two and three
employees will be required for this work" and "If females
and women had been allowed to register...”
Not so long back home from a trip to Europe, Mildred
and Ronald Fuhrmann took a shorter trip on the weekend,
to a reunion of her family at lake Canton near Canton,
Okla.
Earlier this month they made the tour of Europe, flying
from California on the Great Circle route over Canada and
Iceland to Scandanavia, then down to Germany,
Switzerland, Italy and other countries on the continent.
Their starting point was on the West Coast because they
had gone to Northridge, Calif. for a visit with their
daughter Wanda. The twin daughters, Nedra and Naomi,
stayed at Wanda's while their parents traveled.
Audine Dettman and Vida Hicks were the Hereford
passengers on a recent bus tour to the Northeast and into
Nova Scotia, Canada. The tour escorts were Robert and
Alice Thompson, who regularly conduct Trailways tours
from Amarillo. Another member of the party was Doyle
Hinrichsen of Roswell, Alice’s sister.
There were people from about a dozen West Texas and
New Mexico cities on the tour, and two from Sarcoxie. Mo.
One couple, Frank and Maurine Jordan of Amarillo,
celebrated their Golden Wedding during the trip.
The three-week tour went up through St. Louis and Pitt-
sburgh into New England and over into Canada to the
Evangeline country, then back by way of Boston, New
York, Washington, through Virginia, the Smoky Moun-
tains and Nashville.
V
M
A Hereford couple enjoying visits from grandchidlren,
Robbie and Walter Seeds have Tamara and Charles Kiel
of Austin as their guests for a few days. The visitors are
children of the Seeds’ daughter Cynthia.
PEANUT /
BUTTER ——2
HAS BEEN KNOWN
TO REMOVE TAR
Ie Thursday
Steed-Todd
N.M. with
Bergstron.
kt Baptist
rtales of-
will be in
Memorial
wis, under
teed-Todd
The ring that Mary Williamson lost last week, and still
hopes to recover, was of more value to her than its weight
in gold. She was a WAVE in World War II (ask a grand-
parent if you don’t know what that was) and bought the
ring at Ships Service at Bethesda, Md., Naval Medical
Center.
It has the US Navy insignia with letters denoting the
WAVES. She believes it was lost at Deaf Smith General
Hospital, where she had been doing some Hospital Aux-
iliary duty, or at Furr Food, where she bought groceries
on the way home.
BRAND (USPS
Ld daily except
I and Christmas
I Brand.Inc . 130
rd, Tx. 79045.
I pard at lira post
T« POSTMAS-
changes to The
P 0 Boi »73.
Joy Gibson
will be hosting Pioneer’s "Inflation
Fighters" school and demonstration
Very special congratulations go this week to Kerrie and
Jim Steiert on the birth of their daughter, Jaime Lee, Fri-
day morning.
Each of the parents gave her a part of her name, com-
bining the feminine form of Jim’s name with Kerrie’s
middle name. She weighed 6 pounds 7 ounces at birth and
is the prettiest baby you ever saw.
My congratulations are special because the parents are
two of my favorite people and have been since I met them
both when we all worked in the Brand newsroom a few
years ago, and I've admired them and their writing
talents tremendously ever since.
Jim is still the Brand farm editor and Kerrie left the
women's editor's desk a couple of months ago.
Jaime Lee arrived in time to give them an extra reason
for celebrating their fourth wedding anniversary Aug. 14.
Kerrie's parents are Joan and Benny Womble, and the
paternal grandparents are the Pete Steierts of Hart.
CATSUP
REMOVES
TARNISH
ON
COPPER
POTS
Resident of
Moving to
ago.
survivors
in Califor-
urtis and
both of
er, Bessie
irtwright,
Ida ughter.
CALF
liam Met
t are pen-
> Funeral
Please call for reservations -
364-1322
28
’ 2o"
4
merly of
day mor-
anornur-
itt where
e past six
COTTAGE CHEESE STAYS FRESH
TWICE AS LONG WHEN
STORED UPSIDE DOWN
NANDEZ
anuel Her-
lied Sunday
Hospital in
kid today at
mas-Garza
uto.
es will be
L.m. at St.
Church in
burial in
orial Park,
ANNOUNCING
Charles H. Gilliam D.D.S.
opening practice in
General Dentistry
909 East Park Ave.
Hours: 8-5 Mon.-Fri.
Phone: 364-1340.
PIONEER NATURAL GAS COMPANY
(A Division of PIONEER CORPORATION)
_ —» .F
c-
e/
Ites By carrier
onth or 834 pOT
beaf Smith and
834 per year;
840 per year
member of The
which it exclu-
for republication
spatches in this
to local newt
rights reserved
special dispatch-
Publisher
Managing Editor
Advertising Mgr
Circulation Mgr
,23
s
MARY BAUM (center)
...with brother Samuel Flannigan and wife Rita.
|.S flag was
rst time ffi-
m on July 4,
I McHenry
ent in Balti-
9988
- $140.95
• t
*. K
price
ever!
L who was
enito, was
ster Grain
2.72
i ) b
6 Z
14*7
i
710:2
The United States seems to
be moving toward a white-col-
lar economy, says the Confer-
ence Board Since the end of
World War II. employment in
professional, technical,
administrative and similar
occupations has grown twice
as fast as blue-collar employ-
ment.
F-
4He#8e
.= •
The Flannigans, who were
only in Hereford for a
weekend visit, returned to
Save 820
AM/FM radio with LCD clock
4188
$61.95
Sleep or wake to music-automatically! Set
30 to 60 minutes of music to wake you or lull
you to sleep. Or, wake to alarm. Battery-
operated l not ind.lto travel perfectly.
4’*
ved by a
Ie B. Vincon
IK B Vincen
I a brother.
If Portland.
Ir. Maureen
.: two sister-
eLaney and
n. both of
andchildren
great-
2•
$, X
ude three
Andrade of
alupe An-
astine An-
n Benito;
tamos Her-
eford; six
r: and 10
Versatile, portable, dependable-and never priced lower!
Sensitive built-in mike records “live” or directly off any
radio band: AM/FM/Shortwave 1 & 2/CB 1 & 2 Aircraft/
Public Broadcast/Weather/Ham. You’ll love the sound you
get from the big 4-in. speaker. AC/DC operation.
Q= q4: 9-
15) 19
imiy "6.
‘4 d,
Nona Voyles, Adelina
Galvan, Danny Castillo, Bet-
ty Webb, Patricia Varner.
Katherine Ruland, Hector
Vasquez, Jim Marr, Pamela
Carrothers, Gary Parrack.
what is planned to be a bi-
weekly event said a
spokesman for the group.
A simple wash will be $4,
and a wash with an inside job
will be $6.
Money raised by the car-
wash will be used to aid the
retarded citizens in the
Hereford Community.
The Association, a non pro-
fit organization, will hold its
next car wash on Saturday,
August 9.
&r*
S-
Glass is one of the most
versatile products manufac-
tured by man. It can be made
lighter than cork or as mas-
sive as cast iron, as strong as
steel or as fragile as a spider
web, cotton soft or diamond
hard.
A Better Bargain
STJi
3
(-• -
-1
*,
V,3
In Our Flame Room. Monday.
August 4th at 10 30 a m and 7:00 p.m
NN E3—I—i
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3
For each booklet ordered,
send a dollar, plus a long,
self-addressed, stamped
envelope (28 cents postage)
to Ann Landers, P.O. Box
11995 Chicago, Illinois 60611.
-
‘0—2
4 T 32
U ,8
i ei.fi
" 1 ■
ices are
ly at 3 p.m.
I Church at
eral ar-
being con-
g Funeral
yourself and not offer one to
others. If you happen to have
only one stick, offer half. If
several people are present,
wait until you are alone.
Gum sneaks (people who
pop gum into their mouths
furtively) are in the same
category as cigarette or can-
dy mint sneaks. One minute
you look at them and they are
doing nothing. The next
minute they have a cigarette,
a candy mint or a piece of
gum going. I would not care
to play cards with individuals
who are such sleight-of-hand
experts.
DEAR ANN LANDERS:
My wife has been accusing
me of seeing another woman
for over a year now. So help
me, I am innocent. I go
straight home from work
every night. I never go
anywhere without her. She
knows where I am every
minute, when I am out of her
sight, she always telephones
to make sure I am where I
said I’d be. It is very embar-
rassing.
Are lie detector tests ac-
curate? If you say, “Yes,” I
will take one - and maybe it
will get her off my
back.-Wrongly Accused
DEAR WRONGLY: A
polygraph (lie detector test)
can measure the heartbeat,
blood pressure and respira-
tion rate. So, actually it can-
not determine if a person is
lying, but it certainly does
measure the fear of detec-
tion.
e95.
Irish .... from Page l
Italy, Spain, Aragon, or friends the best hotels and
Yugoslavia, Greece, and all the best places to eat,” Mrs.
over Europe. They especially Flannigan said.
liked Pompeii and the Isle of “They always ask you
Capris. where you can find a good cup
"It was our vacation time of tea and a good breakfast,
again," said Mrs. Flannigan, The English don’t like the
"and since we’ve been continental breakfast."
everywhere else, we thought “Tourist places like the
we’d try it. (America).” British,” she said. ’’All the
"And I wanted to come and English stick together and br-
see my sister,” said Flan- ing in the crowds."
nigan. “A lot of bars cater to the
Arriving in Miami, Florida, women by serving tea,
Mrs. Flannigan said it was because the women are
raining. always wanting a good pot of
"And to me, when it’s rain- tea. I usually end up having
ing, it looks the same all over two pots of tea," she joked,
the world, she laughed. "But "When the women get in,
the next day it was pretty,” they bring in the men, who
As for West Texas, “well, will have some beer, and
it’s flat, let's put it that way,” they'll stay there drinking all
she said. night."
"We've tried just about “I was so surprised (in
everywhere," she said. "The Miami) when they served hot
tourist company (travel tea with your dinner," Mrs.
agent) tells us which is the Flannigan said. “That's an ,
best buy every year. Hong English habit. And water.
Kong is next year, I think. Most places don't serve water
I’m game for anything.” because they want you to
"Everyone does ask you drinkthe wine.”’
what is it like. We always tell
Stashing it behind the ear is the technique gained general
so vulgar I hesitate to men- acceptance. Today some
tion it, but I have seen it done courts allow the results of the
many times. polygraph to be used along
A considerate, well-bred with other evidence.
person never would spit out From what you say about
gum on the street or sidewalk your wife, I doubt that
where an unwary pedestrian anything would convince her
is sure to step in it. of your faithfulness. Has SHE
Rule No. 4: It is impolite to been tested for paranoia?
take a stick of gum for Can drugs be a friend in
}
364-5801 114 E. Park Avenue A‛AA"-
There are literally hundred! of uses for many of the kitchen and
household items you already have setting on the shelf at home
As cleaning agents Beauty aids Furniture polishes And you can
discover thee extraordinary uses and see the marvelous results at
Pioneer’s "Inflation Fighters” cooking school and demonstration
We’ll pass along tips to save you time and money in the kitchen
and show you some interesting ways to use your gas appliances
wisely
So make plans to attend now and see how you can take a
bite out of inflation
/ 1
, ■ 1
c ‘ s
SHAVING CREAM
D IS ONE OF THE
MOST USEFUL
UPHOLSTERY CLEANERS
A car wash will be held
Thursday from 4 to 6 p.m. at
the Rainbow Carwash on N 25
Mile Ave. by the Deaf Smith
Association for the Aid of
Retarded Citizens.
This wash is the first of
=er1/,*e
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-<vgass.
′*
A ,2
^21
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Is
there a code of ethics for
&um-chewers? If not, there
should be. How about it, Ann,
are you afraid the Wrigley
Building might fall on you?-
Call Me Buster
DEAR BUSTER: I have a
code of ethics for gum-
chewers - born of private
prejudices. Here it is:
First, let it be known that I
neither condemn nor condone
gum-chewing. Some dentists
say constant chewers have
more cavities unless they use
the sugarless gum. On the
other hand, many behavioral
authorities claim gum-
chewng is an excellent way to
relieve tension and to keep
food out of your mouth.
Rule No. 1: Gum should
never be seen. Chewers who
display a wad while talking
commit a grievous social
blunder.
Rule No. 2: Gum should
never be heard. Snap, crackle
and pop are OK for breakfast
cereals, but chewing with
sound effects is verboten.
Moreover, noisy gum-
chewing can lead to violence,
particularly among office
workers. I once read of a
gum-popper in an insurance
office who was clobbered
with a nine-pound
paperweight by a fellow
employee who said he had
been "pushed to the brink.”
Rule No. 3: Disposing of
gum is an art, if not a science.
The technique also says a
great deal about a person's
manners and sensitivity.
Once gum is chewed, it
should be disposed of per-
manently. Sticking the wad
on a dinner plate is gross.
Schools will also be held in these area towns
Pampa - Thursday July 31 at 10 30 a m and 7 00 p m
Hereford — Monday August4 1030a m nd3Q9p.m..
Call the local Pioneer o6e fonteservaodi
VINEGAR IS (
I A NATURAL !
MEAT "
I TENDERIZER
-2370*
(E4eg,
VEae
The Hereford Brand-Wednesday, July 30, 1980-Page 3
* FI:
/ U.LMHK
I LOU \L NEEDS
Cree ii and flowering plants
planters - figurines ■ vasrs
lasket- • -ilk artangrmenis
fresl flower arrangrments
corsoges - Iwutonictes
weliliny anil funeral
catrrine.
DELIVEI) SHI \ ICE
I III. YELLOW I* MSI
2:23 N. 25 Mile \v,nw
161-41:
Vonelay - Friay -
. '1 a.m. ('■ 5:30 |'-m.
Pk Salurlay
e\ A '• a.m. in b
• 2pm 8
7) Ad-S
144V E
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Sims, Paul. The Hereford Brand (Hereford, Tex.), Vol. 81, No. 21, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 30, 1980, newspaper, July 30, 1980; Hereford, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1429836/m1/3/: accessed June 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Deaf Smith County Library.