The Tulia Herald (Tulia, Tex.), Vol. 69, No. 1, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 6, 1977 Page: 6 of 20
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PAGE SIX
THE TL’LIA (Swisher County) HERALD
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fulia 47-tfe
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mower. N hnrae engine. eatH
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ddS 4-«i7 110% Maawrll lift
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NUSINfSS AN0 I NOUS I »Y
OH - - CM AJI Oil ANP Hrtl CONPitlCddirs
Ml'AVI C. I AN-Nii PtOCHTCTk
Jfklm .mil Joy Hif'Vfs
• IS — BOX IPS UHIA HAAS MOM «0<a 4«A 4»S?
iONAAAAAAAAAAi ■VWWWVWMWWMWWWA
CONKLIN]
Newmac Farm & Ranch
Steel. Inc.
For your steel building needs call
or write Vinson Smith Box 216
Silverton Texas 79257
Phone 806 823 2287.
SINGER Real Estate
Mr. cV! Mrs. \orman Singer
Office 995-4371 Home 995 3678
120 S. Armstrong
• •. •.’h
HAH (Ji H K AM Sale* and
aeraut If.tuar well*, aubmrrg
i hit irrigated! well* Phone
Wain* Hamilbdi, ddA 2504 or
Prlt Hardy. ddS 4 MJ 2d ill
Will AT PAAfl'NI Wanted
Hrrnl M.dr ddS 7MO .* I ugrnr
S1 r. 4Hdl 41. If.
WANTI Ii ( uaiom farming i»
men y.mr ape.tfk alnma. nc*
equipment I.Jinny A Ir. n
Malonr I all ddA 1077 id AJ.’
44IA 57 II.
( I MOM MAT If Al I INI# A
ATAI klN4, 157 ?Ad1 5J 2i
FOR RfNT
MlH HI Nl One A («o bed
fiupfii fu<f»i«hrd ipft HiH% [MKl
Aim b«v hrlor yeilfn lift h
II. jilskA. !*• e*# i :h if
I l»H Ml M I 4|-4f *
menu M> ihr nrrl ■ »f month
Nns traifrt h*»mr% fully furn
inhrd Nrfnurrntrd air, tiMe
IV trailer parking i|>«ir« Hill
(reii Mn(rl and frailer < **urt%
Owner and operator. K and
Virginia < rouih 99^ 4022 Ml if*.
U2X2nZ3i
Id 1-. I |. I . irmrtl
Larm Hand ( all Jack Hnmfta.
r. u i | if,
WAN III) I iprnrmrd. per
manrnl farmhand Year mund
. • .IlddS III ,nghta H N
Ivan. Ilk
WAIINISSIS Appla in per
aim Hru.r a (trill 0 lit
I X( I III Nl OIToN rilNITY
ltd mathmiai id aulidnaik atrew
ma hmr nprralor I) A Mfg
■ > . I2A2 _ 41 it
HUP WAN II If Tulta H
Prixlu.la I dg4r Walkma 627
M00 JOlfi
SPECIAL NOTICES
AM HI IININO ami would like
In liar m Tulia Trade 5 mir
rrnlal units. S5I5 per month
mtomr ltd hrlik h.dnr not over
M S()0 ( tmsidrr one nrrda rr
(•air VS nir d|d A Hryan. Amaril
hi UN) CaRJTJ N'4<i i i.
GROUND WATER
APPRAISALS
F«:r Huarrs ne Sellers
BILL WATKINS
(rmum/ W ulrr (rVo/<i#Mf
N72-7V 5 5 luntcsu
FOR SALE
Closeout Price
18.4x38 Firestone
All Traction Field &
Rd. Rear Tractor
Tires
*32500
Tax Inc. Mounting
Available
Ron Love
Tire Ser.
995 2181
loes your car need
shock absorbers?
Heavy duty Life
Time Guaranteed
shocks »*|0,s
each installed.
Load Leveller
shocks *29ji
each installed.
Air shocks *59*9
pair installed
WHERE?
Lonnies Muffler
& Brake Service
N.HiWay 87
995 4733
Tulia Texas
if Manurla (Lni/
would like lo raprraa ihrir
drrpral apprrtialutn lo fnrnda
and nnghbtdy ltd all Ihr nkr
ftutd. Oowrra igrda and ei-
prraaudia of yympalhy during
Ihr lot* of our loard one
I HI LAMILY OL
MANl LIA ON 11/
•
Wr lakr Ihia meant uf nprra
amg our loar and apprriialum lo
ihttar who did comfort ua in uur
limr of aorruw Alan for Ihr
brauitful fbtwrra Wr were and
drnrd by ihr bias uf our darling
ha by Kriatma Nhnra Pi.kmng
tlaughlrt of Mr and Mra
( harlra Pukrrmg May thr dear
lord blcaa ra,t. one ta our
prayer
MN AND MN5 ( MANILA
PK M NINl.
MNA WI’HA Pl< M NINl,
MH AND MNS M2PFORD
MMtNSTON
MNA IIMPLANAON
MNA PI ANI JOHNSTON
•
fhanka lo rath and every one
for Ihrir prayera. igrda fmid and
aiaila during our lime of aorrow
II waa aery much apprenaled
1111 lift IAI DAY f AMII Y
•
WALL PAPER ^
U CERAMIC TILE fk
rAU
# FRANK ROSSI
£ 995 3030 £
MELTING
f arra Ian
THL kll< HLN
M ruling loom
fl UA IOD(.L NO. 711
Hugh W Kinlrn
VA M
W O Punt Sec y
Qfrr Aialed Meelinga
4ih Mon ra Month
POTTERY &
iflwi;
Tulia Texas
We do all types of
Indian jewelry
repair work.
We Design and
Have Custom
Made Authenic
Indian Jewelry To
Specification
C C DRILLING CO.
WMIK WIllS AND
n ST HOI F.S
P O Box tv#”
INauk-N*! '«S25J(|
MIX (UMO
lulu. Texas
Man has yet foot on the
moon'a fop. No* Se needs lo
lay hand on the son's hoftom
Fencing Materials
Hlumhing Supplies
Sewer Hooter Service
Decorator Supplies
Electrical
Armstrong Linoleum
Johns-Manville Hoofing
Designing Service
HuilJmg
Remodeling
Financing
Insulation
Mound City Faints
Supplies
Building Material
Merchants
ED HARRIS
Lumber Co.
luha
Hart
f Look at at! the dirt
I RINSENVAC got out
I_of our carpet!
You II be amazed when you see
how really deep down clean your
carpets can be RINSENVAC
rinses and vacuums out dirt and
grime in a single sweep Cleans
the way professionals do— but at
a fraction of the cost*
fn proftstiotil cunt clitt/tf
ret cn 4o rttittif „ t
0»ty
RENT RINSENVAC $12 00
Ramsey Furniture ,<Jy
100 S Maxwell D^A-Uld
David Wesley
995-3687
or
995-3684
Swathing & Baling
Crawford and Lee
HI II.DFKS
Al l TYPCS CONST ANI)
CONCRETE WORK
Koace W5-4B0I
Don 995 .147*
RAINBOW REX AIR
SALES—sum il A
SERVICE
1482W Nth
Amarillo, Texas
806/373 2J06
»jU> STOCK RFM01AL
Seven IXias A Week Nervier
LAnme (all la Saaei la ISuuJMe
Yim- Ineal l wed (a* IVsaler
6TVXXI
TIX1AH PKOOUTS
CONSERVE ENERGY
SAVE FUEL COST
THERMA CELL
HOME INSULATION
row arrica *no w»ui
ran INer»«CTlON» AND taTIMAtta
RICHARD HALE
006 909 462 I
1027 N Wf 9TM
tulia tcxas Teoaa
LOANS TO BUY • BUILD • IMPROVE HOME
REASONABLE RATES AND TERMS
l el us discuss \-our needs with you
Savings r«c«iv«d by Hi# IOth
earm from EEv# first of tb# montb
Central Plains Savings
ASSOCIATION
OFFICES
"O' Mam Si.
Hale Center. Tex.
Tulia
MON Maxwell
416 Main St.
Plainvtew Silverton. Tex.
2804 Olton Rd. (Opening Soon)
Probe Indicates Nixon
Bypassed Merit System
Ha JA( K ANDERSON
and l.fcS WHriTKN
WASEMNGTON — The
last of the W’atcrgate inaesl-
igatiuns. an exhaustive,
year long prnbe of Richard
Nunn’s efforts to circumvent
the federal men* system, has
just been completed.
According to (he confiden-
tial findings, the Nixon
White Eiousc set up a politi-
cal clearance system, which
checked the political philoso-
phies anil connections of
hundreds of applicants for
government jobs.
The applications were pro-
cessed by a special White
House Personnel Operation,
which was established to
tighten the Nixon grip on thc
Icdcral bureaucracy. The po-
litically favored applicants
would Eh- ranked, depending
on how influential their back-
ers were.
Then the White House
• would plant them in key
career jobs which, under the
law. were supposed fo be
awarded according to merit
The hiring was arranged
through a network of central-
ly controlled “special referr-
al units.” which operated
quietly inside various gov-
ernment agencies
Even more shocking, top
officials of the Civil Service
Commission condoned and
even participated in the poli-
tical manipulations. They not
only were aware of the illegal
l>atronage system but used if
themselves. Yet they are
responsible for safeguarding
the merit system.
These startling findings,
perhaps the last echo of the
Watergate years, are con-
tained in a report by the
House subcommittee on
manpower and civil service.
The jfainslaking study, which
hasn't yet been released to
the public, outlined how the
Nixon administration tried to
restore the discredited jpolitt
cal spoils system, which was
abolished 94 years ago.
According to the study,
political favoritism in the
civil service system reached
PRODUCTION
Applications now being
accepted for process oper-
ator positions. Openings
lo he filled between Jan. I
and Mar. I, 1977.
Experience with evapora-
tion. filtration, and refin-
ing equipment helpful,
however, some entry level
openings will he avail-
able.
(mod wages, excellent
benefits, adaaneemenl
opportunities and perma-
nenl employ menl. C on-
tact Prnasarl Office:
Amstar
c pt»0 • A T • ON_I
7110 EJ. Jones
P. 0. Hoa IfiU
Dimmitl. lrxas 79027
Equai Opportunity Em-
ployer M F
MARGIE HUGHES
Weddings All Occasion
Photography by Margie
APPtMVTVOOVTN
Eli M4-2&35 Box 4*4
Kress. Texas "5X152
PE NNY RIC H •
Bras ..Still the Best if
Jerri Crawford < >
DISTRIBUTOR
200 N How te 99> 42(V4
■» » •» »
NEED A RUBBER
STAMP MADE?
THF STAMP SHOP
is the’place for fast service j
90S 4.182
90S..U35
Attention
Irrigation Farmers
New Water Well
Acid Stick.
Proven In Oilfield.
Improves Your
Irrigation Wells.
Rex McFadden Co
806-792-4446
For sale
11-LX 15
3 rib Front Tractor
Tires *46"
Swisher Tire Co.
L
FORREST LACEY
PAINT CONTRACTOR
Contract or bv the hour
Call after 6 «*>5-48<x3
a peak during the Nixon
years. 1969 through 1973.
Here’s how it worked:
Patronage units were set
up within each federal agen-
cy to find positions for indivi-
duals who were given a
’■preferred” status by the
White House Personnel
Operation.
The applications had to be
forwarded to the Civil Ser-
vice Commission, of course,
for approval But top CSC
officials, instead of policing
the illegal preferential hir-
ing. aided and abetted it.
Using their own "pink-tag"
system to segregate the fav-
ored applications, they help-
ed to expedite them.
The subcommittee report
charges that Commissioner
Ludwig J. Andolsek was
personally responsible for
expediting 100 to .MX) special
pink-tag cases. In one case.
Chairman Robert Hampton
intervened at the request of
former Rep. Rkone of the
ex-congressman's relatives.
As an example of how the
patronage system operated,
the study cites the General
Services Administration,
which hired more than 300
employees through the pa-
tronage system.
One GSA official gave an
affidavit that he had been
instructed by his superiors to
hire a driver for former
Attorney General John Mit-
chell during a hiring freeze.
The official said he was
also directed to hire the sons
of two former Nixon cohorts,
ex-Attorney General Richard
Kliendienst and cx-Budget
Director George Shultz. For
Shultz, testified the GSA
aide, “we established a job
we did not need and at a
location of his choosing.”
Yet six weeks earlier, the
GSA had dropped a custodial
laborer with nine children
from the payroll, because
there was no money to pay
his salary.
Nixon's first GSA chief.
Robert Kun/ig. came out of
the Pennsylvania Republican
organization. He allegedly
established a special "Pen-
nsylvania Connection,"
through which Pennsylvan-
ians received preferential
treatment
According to the report.
Pennsylvania's powerful sen-
ators. Hugh Scott and Rich-
ard Schwciker. sent 95 and
134 job referrals, respective-
ly. to GSA. One applicant
recommended by Schweiker,
Jack LeMav . played an active
role in the patronage opera-
tion.
At the Health, Hducation
and Welfare Dept., patron-
age placements were made
bv the Office of Special
Projects. This was a special
political office which was set
up. according to a confiden-
tial memo, to serve "as a
central jHtint of contact on all
politically sensitive matters
w huh ought not be broached
thrinigh regular Department
channels.”
The office' was headed
temporarily by a political
THURSDAY. JANUARY 6. 1977
commissar, named Sam
Schulhof. who explained his
function to Undersecretary
Frank Carlueci in this confi-
dential language: "Patron-
age." "information.” “ad-
vice.” “political coordina-
tion" and "quiet implemen-
tation" are key words which
descriEie our mission.”
The office checked the
political philosophies of hun-
dreds of job applicants and
esen contract applicants.
This political skulduggery
was kept so secret that the
Office of Special Projects
wasn't listed on HFW's offi-
cial organizational chart
The reason, according to
the Schulhof memo, was
"The sensitivity of its func-
tions and. frankly, an unwill-
ingness of anyone to really
admit parental lineage.”
Footnote: A CSC spokes-
man told our associate Larry
Kraftowitz that neither
Chairman Hampton nor
Commissioner Andolsek had
ever "exerted pressure on
anyone" to procure jobs for
favored individuals, although
Hampton acknowledged that
referrals he made before
1974 “might well have had
the appearance of impropri-
ety." A sjvikesman for Sen.
Schweiker insisted it was
“proper and legitimate" to
help constituents find gov-
ernment jobs We were un-
able to reach Scott for his
comment
Custom Swathing
& Stacking
W.D. McCarley
Happy. Texas
764-2848
The cost of living remains
high, but it's still a bargain.
who's mil in politics
lo tdkc politics opart.
THE STATES United They Fell
by Frank Trigpett
m.. full of Wit and ironically under
staled outrage Mr I nppetl tells the
mostly scandalous story of slat#
governments . he pokes about in
the murky monkeythinet of the leg*
(Matures like a foual cotoner per-
forming *n autopsy . . . Ian.oat-
tag...-
— Tirfima Ktrltita Serr fee
-. . . timely reading . . would be
smart for taxpayers to secure a
copy .. .-
|S tS meats Journal
•
The hard hitting ed<tc tHtfR ¥ Bgggtrff
THE TEXAS COUNTRY EDITOR
A grass roots look at
Netionei politics
compiled by Eugene W JoneB
’ It s tike to know that m l!»e »r* of
Al. t luh..n a ituS wth e I ape**'tier
and hoecst coIykiio^s can still
make people listen . .“
— The Setc f eeder
“A pungently written commentary
for popular reading . . .**
- Library Journal
THE OSWAIO AFFAIR
An Eaeminetion of the
Contradictions end OmrsalewB
of the Werren Report
by Leo Sausage
“Seuvagc writes with the iMce-
aity ol aa old fashioned pMirnakst ta
pursuit of a story . His arguments
rai*e troubling guestions not likely
soon lo be aaxwered "
KM
At your bookstore
THF WORLD PUBLISHING CO
We Specialize
In All Glass &
Upholstery Work.
Call Or Come By
Today.
TULIA GLASS &
TRIM CO.
110 N. Austin
995 4895
Tulia, Texas
CABINET
DICKENS’ shop
CUSTOM MADE CABINETS & VANITIES
Cahmet Hardware and Materials. Formica.
Carpets and Paneling.
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Baggarly, H. M. The Tulia Herald (Tulia, Tex.), Vol. 69, No. 1, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 6, 1977, newspaper, January 6, 1977; Tulia, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth506160/m1/6/: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Swisher County Library.