The Tulia Herald (Tulia, Tex.), Vol. 60, No. 44, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 31, 1968 Page: 1 of 27
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CtiM It Happei A|aii? 4615 Residents Qualified To Vote
imssm DEMOCRATS
mmm
&
w
li
wiH Wm
cans in Hm fat
k*M TwUay.
will opwi at •
7 |Mik
qualified
at other Aimri>
•cal slactlan In bn
Locally, the pads
a.m. ami data at
Voting boxes are as follows: Pet.
1, clerk’s office in the courthouse;
Pet. 2, tax office in courthouse;
Pet. 3, county courtroom in court-
house. Pet 4. extension office in
courthouse: Pet 5, Lakeview com-
munity building; Pet 6, south room
lesson’s Restaurant at Kress; Pet.
7, Happy city hall; Pet. 9, Vigo
Park community building; Pet. 10,
ClaytonviUe Gin office; Pet. 11,
Lions Den, Kress; and Pet. 12, Cen-
ter Plains Elevator office.
A complete sample ballet appears
an another papa si Ibis week's
Herald.
Tomorrow is the last day for new
residents of Swisher county to vote
in the c-ounty clerk’s office if they
wish to participate in the general
election. Tomorrow is also the last
day for absentee voting and for vot-
ing by persons who qualified to
vote in the presidential election as
new residents of the state during
the 15 • day application period in
September.
I*ersons who have lived in Texas
more than a year but who have
moved from one county to another
since May 5, 1968, may vote on all
statewide offices, including Presi-
dent and Vice President, and on the
14 proposed constitutional amend •
ments, but they may not vote on
loc al offices. In order to vote, per-
sons must be registered as voters
for the 1968 voting year.
Mr*. NpH Cmby, county dark,
said that tha volar should have Ms
I wJlMlBlUB CaMlllCwTv WHH
whan ha applies
Ms ballet.
clerk’s office.
If the voter has lived In the same
congressional, legislative, or JimUc>
ial district for six months, he may
also vote on that district office.
far
he wiH bo permUted la
make an affidavit of its teas 11 he
has leal or mislaid Iho certificate.
Formerly, persons who moved
from one county to another could
not vote during the first six months
after the change of residence, but
a new law now permits them to
vote on all statewide offices, in-
cluding President and Vice Presi-
dent. and on constitutional amend-
ments. #
Instead of voting at the regular No one grows old by living —
box on election day, they must only by lasing interest in living. —
vote prior to Nov. 1 in the county Marie Ray.
Af
MIS
Of the 151 absentee votes re
quested as of Tuesday, 55 war
from men in military service.
The Tuua Herald
★ * COVERING SWISHER COUNTY
SUNSHINE *
VOL. *0. NO 44
TUIIA, (Sw.thcr County) TEXAS 76066
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 31, 19M
POUR SECTIONS
By H. M. BAGGARLY
I
VHP IZZARD OP WAS, high priest and ruler of
I hi 'piritu.il kingdom known a> Nut Country,
imo again in-uitcd the jnlitical moderates of the
Gulden spe ad la -t Ttiur-itav morning b> quot -
ing \m-n an- for i on-;ituttonal \<tion to ’'prove"
that the ,.wintry t getting more con-w-rvutivc and
b> citing th< ’ grad* - assigned our Senator- and
t'ongn - -man bv the V \
The trend toward Walla, e and Nixon doe- not in
it'-elf mdii.ti a trend toward con-erv ati-m It indi-
cate' a trend toward re.o tion t>v frustrat'd people
too jn'lit ■ alls ignorant to under-land the fa«t- of
life |»..||e af. will alw a\- \a-iillate from one
extreme th< other when they must face the
normal jiroLtem- of life
J* SSUMINO THAT THE GRASS on the other vide
.if th< ten i I greener e not a -tgn of political
intrlhgen. »• It . n t cn-n indicative of a change in
poli'n al pbiki-ojiKv If conservative «n-r» now in the
saddle, they would <» „.ttirg the blame for \ietnam
for lawlt -s/>. - .,nd fur inflation \nd writer- would
b* writing a'lout the liU-rai trend
The in would be taking 'b» blame for every-
tt mg including grandma s arthriti-, whatev«-r their
politic at tag
ZZARD WAS TM« ROT. you may recall, who
predated in 1964 tha' if only '.he jwople were
giwn a chime . if only the GtiP would nominate
Goldwater we would fw given proof of \mern a’s
“conservat rr. in November of that year
VO HAVE THC BLISSING of the ACA i- the
I equivalent of h.iv.ng tIv bl<--mg of the John
Bir> h So iety.
It «-* everything -- black or white It as-
signs grail. to our lawmaker- tn Wa-hington ac-
cording to th. w ay they pi,a the Mirth Society
and other far right extremi-1 group* Lew lawmak-
er- ever rate between 10 and 90 t -uatly a far
Tighter get - a gradi of 99 or too. while a moderate
(pt- a grad* of 0 or pc Tha)*- 2 This in Itself should
UHlti ate th* character of the At \
SSfE ALL RECALL that our former ( ingress-
If man Walter K.ig« • *a- a- con-enative as
one dare be witf .ut h* ing an extremist The mnd-
era'i and li’»Tal- of lh» tsth tii-tncl were often
unhappy with Walter t»-. ,iu«' h* would often be
aligned with former (.op ( .ngres-men Foreman
and Mger t>n (.articular t--ue-
W alter - redeeming feature wa- that we of the
agricultural counties of his district could always
count on him to go to hat for anything that was for
the ta n* fit of the farm* r t nlike- hi- -accessor.
Boh pji.i he did not e-tabli-h a record of knifing
the farmer in the- back
W4LAHAT KINO OP GRADES do you think Walter
wW got from the \CV He rankrel among the
flunker- and wa- hi ancle d by the- AC A as a
wild - e-ved liberal’
Sei whe-n We- lizard brag- that Boh Price gets
a grade- of 97 or 9s from the V V it is the same- as
admitting that Hob Price is approved by the John
Bireh S«h le'iy ot the Minutemen 97 or 9* pe-r cent
of the- time'
Senator Ralph Yartairough whose- grade with
the- V \ h.e- tM-en 2 or 3 must have swung to the
right’ III- latest grade- is 8’
\miTi< ans feir Demoe ratio Aetkin. a liberal or-
ganization. better known as the- \I> \, gave Senator
Yarborough a grade- of 57 This is suppos'd to tx-
that awful ultra-ultra ultra liberal” senator, ae cord-
ing to the- Lubbock. \martllei and Dallas pape-rs
t 'ongre—man lYtce got a grade of 97 by the
rightwing V A
Now if Yarborough pleased the liberals just a
little- over half the time', while- lYicc pleased the
ultra conservative* 97 per cent of the time, which
of the two ap|ieats to I* the- more moderate?
mGRHAT WOULD BE the- practical effect of a He-
Ww public an vklory ne xt Tuesday, so far as
agriculture i- concerned''
So far ;i- the- Presidency is concerned. it would
mean that agriculture would teel the effect of his
appointive power The IYeside-nt appoints the ad-
ministrator of the KEA, the- AST'S, the St'S, the
THA. and other agencies in the Department ot
Agrie ulture
\n agency, such as SCS or KEA. is no more- ef-
fective than its head Every agency head has to
fight for everything his agency gets There is never
enough money to go around . so these agency
heads gather'around like a bunch of hogs around
a trough, try mg to get at least a fair share for his
•gency
m|OW IP SOMEONE is appointed administrator
|s| who isn’t sold completely on the worthiness
at his age®cv and this Is the technique a Pre-
sident uses to cripple an agency which he disap-
proves . it i> quite easy to see how he can kill
the agency men-h- by being passive
Should the* Republicans capture control of the
House, of Rc-pre n'a'ivcs, the present ranking Ke-
IHibluan member i>l the House Agriculture- (ommit-
te-e-. who would tiecunit- chairman, has already
s.nd nn proposed (atm legislation would ge-t out of
his lommitle-e- unl<--s it had the unanimous
batking of all farm group-'
Thi- is le> say that propoM-d legislation, to get
out ut the- ' ommittee- and on to the floeir, would
have to !»- approved by Farme-rs l mon. which
fax or- effective tarm (trogr.tm-. the (.range, often
allied wi'h Kaimc-rs 1 men. but also the- farm
Bure-au and NKu which generally join in opposing
farm pri>i-r..m- twit violently disagree on olhe-r
issue-- Nt-o generally favor- the labor union ap-
jit. ai h to get higni-r prut-- while f arm Bureau
generally favor fns-dom ot the- tarme-r to take
hi- chance with a fr. • ■ working law of supply and
de mand Wh.it l-t.-lat;on would please a group that
want- No legislation
To -uppei-e that all group- ciaild e-ve-r agree- on
a pmpn-ed agricultural program i- like -uppo-ing
that wi could bring all Tulia churches together un-
der e*f>e- Ito ll
This will ha|>|» n you know whe-n'
The HetKibltian- have -ant in effect . elect
a G(»l’ Heal-e, and there will be no more farm
legislation'
VHE FARMER HAS SEEN the d.-peJuid U.uur
I e.onomy, ..nd certainly there i- ri-om for "a
change fur th- tje-tte-r But there is also such a
thing a- • a i hange for the worse
One (ourth of Swisher county s total income
come- from the federal govemme-nt Most of it
comi- from the tarm jerogram Be-fore- we take- it
ax.iv we had be-tte-r have- something in mind to
replace It'
If Swi-h.r farmer- want to continue- to “suti-
-idi/e the- cua-umer, out of the bigne-s of their
heart- that i- OK hut they -houldn t apeilogtre
lor reeove-ring ju-t a little- of this subsidy through
a mod# -t govemme-nt (arm program.
^VHET HUNTLET in a radio commentary the
other night -|*4a quite frankly of the- time-
when the- family farmer would be- “liquidated” and
all agriculture would ts- turne-d ove-r to giant cor-
ja.ra' -n- wits heade|u.irti-r- thousands of mile- from
the land they controlled
He- -aid that the- primary diffe-re-nce between
corporate- farming and family farming would be-
that for the first time agriculture would be- put e« a
payirc ba-is ju-t a- is the- manufai ture-r e*f autei-
mohile - or te-lc-vi-ie>n -e-t- \nd he- said that no long-
er would agriculture- be- in the position to be “erf-
fe-reel a jrrice for what it produces . It would
e- t.dilish its own jtrice ju-t a- the manufacturer
de» - . and the cost to the consumer would be
highe-r'
Huntley wa- n-it iru-ading. not arguing for or
against new trend- in agriculture he wa- mere-
ly accepting it a- a fact ot life-, -pe-aking of it as he
would -|» ak of the dav not far distant, when we ll
fly from Ne-w A otk to l.os Angeles in two hours
l*o we- want Bob Price to carry the- ball for us
in agru ultur.il time- lik<- the-se?
VHE REPUBLICAN PARTY no doubt will sur-
I vive the raid Ge-.rge Wallace ha- made upon
the GOP . hut not without a scare!
The- fact is. it was the Republican party which
created a demagogue like George Wallace.
In an e-ffort to -lande-r the Democrats, the Re-
publican- -ince l^i have be-en carrying on a cam-
paign de-signe-d to convince the \me-ntan people
that our leaders have -old u- out to ( ommum-m,
have bankrupt our nation, have been responsible
for a breakdown in law and order, have been soft
on ( astro and Ho Chi Minh in short, that wc
are in a big MESS and on the verge of collapse!
UT THEIR PLAN twikfired' They oversold their
program’ And now, those who believed the
GOP an- so frustrated that they want a iTiange
. . .but they aren't camlnf te the
Mwy're •etna la Wallace!
It's like a man who tries to steal another man's
wife . hut after he succeeds in breaking up the
marriage, the woman di-cides -he doesn't want him,
instead she wants somebody else!
MRIOR TO MOST elections, an effort is put forth
■ by the press and radio to get Americans to
the polis After begging, pleading, cajoling, and of-
fering fn-e transportation, we may get out 10 to 15
per cent of the brethren . if we re lucky.
And we are so jwmid of those who c-on-ent to
vote that we give them everything but the Congres-
sional Mtdal of Honor
We even tell them that since they have made
sinh a '’sacrifice”, they now have the right to
bellyache about the government.
RjkfB WON'T BUY the old cliche that merely
ww casting a vote, by doing nothing more than
• making it” lo ihc polK entitles a person to com-
plain about the government.
He whose partu ipation in politics is limited to
the casting of a vote, if he can “make it” to the
cC.rr.uuxl ja p i.-v 2)
CpL Aguilar Presented
Purple Heart Award
Marine Line* Corporal Vincente
Afuiler Jr., M, ten of Mr. and
Mr*. Via cent* Apdar Sr. of Telia,
The presentation was made dur-
ing ceremonies at the Naval Air
Station, Corpus Christi.
He earned the award for wounds
sustained during combat operations
against the enemy in Vietnam while
serving with the Second Battalion,
Fourth Marine Regiment, Third Ma-
rine Division
Corporal .Aguilar entered the ser-
vice in May. 1967
Bullets and mortar rounds were
hitting all around Cpl. Aguilar, a
Texan at War, moved through
the heavy fire for a better vantage
point.
over me at first. Then I was numb
after that.”
Aguilar's company m a d e tt
through the hedgerow and routed
the North Vietnamese.
For his “conspicuous gallantry
and intrepidation” Aguilar was a-
warded the Silver Star.
The 26 - year - old had been in
the Marine Corps not quite a yew
when the battle occurred on May 1.
He went to Vietnam in October
of 1967 and was attached to the
2nd Battalion, 4th Marines.
CRL. VINCENTE AGUILAR
ter a
Mr* Grace
________ „ .... ■ Aguilar remained exposed to ene-
SAI ESMAN OF THE MONIH is Raymond Mata, employee my fyy directing his own their wounds, he still carried one
of C K. Anthony Co . in Tulia since 1965. with the exception Marine machine gun team where to jwyj. t0 j.js .omoanv neri-
523* Raymond of ^stiuT'fJii wTSn weapon, he XT h!f!n£*22J5 ilfa.SS
his customers has gamed him this recognition. ran 0f ammunition He moved The Marine platoon moved for-
(Herald photo by Joe Foster) about, still dodging bullets, to col- ward, but heavy fire burst from an „ ard;., r s *™* CTiapman,
lect more ammo An enemy bullet enemy bunker.' ”
Patients in Swisher Memorial
Hospital Tuesday were: Mrs. Mel-
vin Harris and sou, Mrs.
Adams and son, Mrs.
Contreras, M. L. Ju
Although the men had died of Evans, Mrs. Addiar Conway, Eu-
gene Long, Mrs. Euna Cantrell,
Mrs. Bertie Hendrix, Mrs. Susie
EiUutd, Mrs. Bell Scott, Mrs. Jim-
my Davis, C. E. Mason.
Dismissals since last week: W. B.
City Adopts
New Budget
City uf Tulia antH ipatc-s revenue Refund. $5,183.75: Fire Apparatus
from all sources totalling $748.6Ud Fund. P12.000 Departmental Ex •
during the coming fi-val year, ac- jx-nv -. AY14.519
cording to a re-ume of the 196s- Special projects included are:
69 budget Seal coating. $12,000; Maintenance
Total e-timated revenue for the Storage Tank. $7,000; Street Pav-
1967 68 fi-cal year was $732,000 ing $4,000 and Power Plant Main-
The following requirements have tenance. $6,000
tw-en budgeted for 1968 - 69 Bond Thi- leaves an anticipated re •
Requirement-, $184,335. Developers serve of $3,562 25.
Hornet>Muleshoe
Clash Is Friday
By HARRY COLE last Friday night the Hornets
Thi- coming Friday night Tuba traveled to Perryton and tangled
Hornets will be at home again-t the with tin Numlier 1 ranked Rangers
Mule-hoe Mules The Hornet- are From the opening kickoff until the
0 - 1 m district and will be seeking final whistle the Hornets were
Monte Clayton, Danny Barth, Mrs.
Sostenes Gonzales Gerald Smith,
h“h,LOWZ.r*r- brtSkmg15 Aguilar spotted t h e bunker Mrs wulle Maclas w _ . aies
half The Tulia Marine then picked thriMieh a hedeernw and headed r!r ^ *acias’ 2-1.. *eS|
up a North Vietnamese AK47 rifle KHe toSahaSmnlde Mrs' l"^
and beean finne it f°f w^sed a nana grenaoe Gene Sim mom, Alex
ana negan nring » mto the bunker, killing three men Trevino Mrs jn>e ramhna Rmv.
Returning to his position, he saw ^ ^ the ^*0^ J Gamtmn, Ueor
two wounded Marines lying 166 Aboutthat Ume a mortar shell
yard- away. exploded a few feet away, serious-
**WHh cimpliti Airtfirf f • r •> wounding him in both legs,
b I • own safety, he cressed the “I didn’t feel any pain,” he said
fires wept area te aid Me
cemredes," terete Me
ing effker In
Mr. and Mrs. Willie Macias, Batt
559. Tulia, a boy.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Adams,
at the U. S. Naval Hospital in «« '» tuij. a htw
Corr ant*, be is J
eratutg. “It felt like electricity all s> a ^y. ^
Martin, Lawyer, Cenklm
Are Grid Contest Winners
their first victory.
B
Happy Man
Accident
Victim
Funeral services for Galen Doug ______ ^
fr;
P.Tl P* ‘mil
l<» v Jam* s Merrell, pastor, ottic j,.,^ vicWhortcr also showed
.ated. Burial was in Happy Ume- ,h(. Horm>,s hls hwls. as ht. vl,rtnt.
,erY’ ed 26 yards for their third six
New meter connections reported
by City of Tulia since last week:
Paul Caraway, 697 N. Floyd; Rob-
ert Hurt, 197 N. Fannin; Mrs. Put
Fore, 702 N. Armstrong; A. N.
, Bullard. 299 N. Floyd; Julian Gmb
By JOE ROSTEB the same losing games and took zajeS| gg §W 2nd.
The annual football contest last Perryton 55 over Tulia 9, Utah ’ £
week netted a total of 190 entries, State 31 over WTSl Canyon 20. Marriage licenses issued since
the biggest week yet! Of those en- loming in for the third place jast week by the county clerk: Vir-
tries, 15 entries missed only four spot was David Conklin, 1510 W. g,j Dean Morris, Happy, and Mar*
games eac h, and three missed only 9th of Plainview. again with the gie oean Wiley, Tulia.
three games each. Most missed same three wrong guesses He pick- m
game of the past week was East ed Perryton 49 over Tulia 0 and New subscribers to The Tulia
Texas State at Sul Ross (a 28-28 l tah State 34 over WTSU Canyon Herald since last week: Georgn
tie) a n d falling next in I i n e 20 • Knight, 1000 E. Foster St., Pam*
were Notre Dame at Michigan Final scores were: Monterey 21, pa. Texas; Win R. Matsler, Box
State, Monterey at Amarillo. Tex- Amarillo 7: Farwell 90. Kress 9; 477, Canyon, Texas; Monard Preu*
as A&M vs Baylor. SMC at Texas Hereford 48, Canyon 0; Estacado ton. Box 127, Tulia. Texas: Mrs.
and Spnnglake at Bovina. 60. Slaton 6; Michigan State 21, E. B. Campbell, Star Route, Kress,
Lynn Martin. 207 N. Dallas, Tul- Notre Dame 17: East Texas State Texas: Jeanette Spear, 3820 War-
ia was first place winner with and Sul Ross tied 28 to 28; Dumas wick St., Kansas City, Missouri;
oniv three incorrect guesses. She 21, Muleshoe 6: Hart 41. Nazareth Hayden Morgan, 629 W. Arch St.,
crowd what was to come. Vernon puked Notre Dame over Nichigan •: Baylor 19, Texas A&M 9; SMU Nevada. Missouri; E. J. Cooper,
I'shignda ignited the fireworks for state Sul Ross over East Texas 39. Texas Tech 18; Lazbuddie 38. .308 Ukeview Drive. Casper. Wy-
1'em ton with a 3 - vard plunge Slate and Texas A&M over Bay- Turkey 0: Siherton 26. Claude 0; oming: Randy Foutch. c-o Swea
La rrv Roberts kicked' the first of tor She puked Perrvton 60 over LSI' 10. TCU 7: Texas 38. Rice 14: Erik Nielson, Snave pr. Hem lose
six extra (Kiint- Randy Terns also Tulia 0 and t tah State 28 over Clarendon 29. Happ.x 0; Arkansas 5632. Funen. Fyn, Denmark; Mrs.
scored from three yards and Rob- vtTSl ’ Canyon 20. 17. North Texas 15; Bovina 28, G. E. Mcllroy. 4204 64th st., Lub*
ert- ku ked once again Perryton Second plac e winner was Doug Springlake 14: Sudan 49, Vega 6; bock, Texas: Mrs. M. H. deDiax,
held down a 14 - 0 had Lawyer. Box 578. of Happy with Perryton 98. Tulia 6: a n d Utah 3509 23rd St., Lubbock. Texas;
Perryton poured on the steam three wrong guesses. He picked Slate 20, WTSU Canyon 10.
during the second period to put 20
••mix'd and hog tied" by the Ran-
gers.
The first quarter showed the
Opponents Score 157 Points
To None For County Teams
Mrs. H F. Ratjen, Box 461, Happy,
Texas: Mrs. Myrtle Knorpp, Hip*
py, Texas.
Weather has been dry and tem-
perate this week. Cotton harvmk
is getting underway.
u I,.« . _ , — - . — — ----.----— a disastrous weekend ht solatkm to the local teams, accord-
McDonald was dead on arrival pointer of the quarter l^rry Rob- h , c h Swisher county football mg the the Harris computers
Fndav night at a tanyon hospital, erts converted 2 of the 3 to give tj., ir wors, sh0wine Harris says Muleshoe is 2 7 p
He had arrived in Happy h> bus ,he Rangers a 34 - 0 half-time lead,
and was walking to his home loc at- The -cx-cmd half action saw the
Last Friday, the opponents of
Tulia. Happy and Kress teams
scored 157 points to none for tbe
teams made their worst showing Harris says Muleshoe is 2 7 points
in history, the teams will take to stronger than the Tulia Hornets:
. „ . . .. _ - ------ — »h, field' Fndav night to attempt Rovina Ls 2 8 points better than
ed on Highway 87 in the north part Rangers continue their relentless ^ g P Kress; and Wheeler is 5.5 points
of town He apparently suffered a slaughter of the- Hornets Dick Me- ^ _ -
se izure and fell to the pavement whorter |*assed 29 yards to Scott
almost in front of his home. He Doom- for one touchdown and ran
was struck by a passing automo- 31 yard- for his second of the „
bile night Roberts once again kicked cwunl> leMms-
Born in Happy. McDonald was a the extras. Younger brother Danny Perryton defeated Tulia 68 • 6:
graduate of Happy High school. He McWhorter look over and promptly Farwell defeated Kress 61 • 6: and
was a blacksmith and a member of tossed to Richard Trayler for a Clarendon defeated Happy 29 - 9.
the First Methodist church 54 • 0 lead Donnie Click ran the *^is week offers little con-
Survivor* include his father, Gus extra to increase the score to 5M.
of Happy: his mother, Mrs. Ova Fourth quarter play revealed no yard and 2 yards to their credit.
Mayo Dr I‘am pa of San Diego. Cal- letup whatsoever. Both extra point tries failed
iforma; and a brother, Reed of Del Ilenricks and Danny Shac- ryion had stomped
Happy. kdford capped the scoring with 1 time of 68 • 0.
tougher than Happy.
According to Harris, Perryton is
23.2 points better than Hereford;
Dumas is 194 points better than
Canyon; Clarendon is 29.2 points
better than Silverton.
Harris lists Perryton in 6th posi-
tion among the state's 147 AAA
teams; Dumas, 50th. Hereford,
63rd. Canyon. 117th: Muleshoe.
130th; and Tulia. 136th. The only
Per- area team nearer bottom than
STAY TUNED TO
KTUE
I960 la
Back Tn Iho BMo I
9M om BAIIY-
Tulia to the Tulia is U'velland, in 140th place.
(.CerrUrrje-J on pige 2)
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Baggarly, H. M. The Tulia Herald (Tulia, Tex.), Vol. 60, No. 44, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 31, 1968, newspaper, October 31, 1968; Tulia, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth506734/m1/1/: accessed June 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Swisher County Library.