The Tulia Herald (Tulia, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 5, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 3, 1966 Page: 1 of 22
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8066
Dallas, Taxas,
Swisher Voting Strength
This Year Is Near 4,000
School Costs Higher
Than Anticipated
Apparent low bidder (or the new
Highland Elementary underground
school to be constructed in North
Tulia is Panhandle Engineers and
Contractors of Amarillo, according
to school officials.
Swisher county’s voting strength
this year could be as high as 4,000
or more, according to Ralph Roberts
county tax assessor - collector.
As of the dose of the poll tax
paying date Monday night, 2,547 poll
tax receipts had been issued. In ad-
dition to this number, the county year and who are entitled to a free than the almost 3,300 who paid poll
has from 1,200 to 1,500 persons over vote. Two persons registered with- taxes in 1964.
60 years of age who arc qualified out paying poll tax in order to voir Approximately. 200 residents paid
to vote without payment of poll tax in federal election* only which is poll taxes at Kress while 121 person
and do not have to register in Swi- possible now as a remit of logisla- paid at Happy.
shor county. Seventy exemptions were tkm. 1111
issued to persons becoming 21 this The 2,517 is a much lower figure Chuatfted Ads Get KeauM*
The bid. otic of eight, was submit-
ted during a meeting of Tulia school
board Thursday night. AH bids were
higher than the figure anticipated by
the architect.
The low bid of $692,970 was more
than $70,000 more than the specifi-
cations less the alternates. The low
bid with alternates was $1,058,167.
Some federal participation on some
limited phases of the program might
be available.
The school board was scheduled to
meet last night to consider ways to
bring the project within the amount
of funds available.
The bond Issue was for
$725,000
and insurance on the burned building
amounted to $150,000.
$25 Offered
COVERING SWISHER COUNTY LIKE THE SUNSHINE * *
For Best
The Tulib Herald
Answer
Tulia FFA Boys Win Several
Blue Ribbons at Amarillo
Tulia FFA boys received several heavyweight Crossbred,
first place ribbons for animals ex- Jerry Williamson showed the 9u>
hibited in the Amarillo Fat Stock place Hampshire,
show hold recently in Amarillo. Kelly Ewen also showed pigs at the
■Mike Brooks won first with his exhibition,
light weight Duroc which also be - In lhc shcpP show, John Herring
showed second place lightweight
City Accepts Paving Bid,
Appoints Zoning Officials
The Tulia Herald \wll award %'£>
for the establishment of a savings
account at Tulia Savings & Loan
association to the person who writes
a letter on the subject. "Is the cost
of the memorial lo bo constructed
at the grave of former President
John F. Kennedy in Arlington ceme-
tery. worth the cost witich is less
than half the cost of conducting the
war in Viet Nam for just one day?"
The contest was suggested by the
above question which was asked by
an area editor whoso implication was
that the memorial is not worth the
cost.
There are no rules to the contest
except that the letter must have been
postmarked not later than Feb. 15.
At the rate of interest currently
paid by Tulia Savings & Loan, 4!£
\
cer.
Mm twin hart first' nlmn h«wv lightweight Southdown. >« »»•'■“J * mg me new mgnianci underground Total ,ost of the m.ole,., wm be v;au3'-' ul “ m ™
Mac Devin had P‘‘^c h^v>- B Finck slx)wed a Iiweford may result from the snow and low school in ll0rth Tu,ia. This contract a ‘ °oxiinMelv 152 000 The sc ooFs !'ePorts “>0 U. S. Department
also 5th place temperatures which occurred t h e is subject to ratification by the Tulia iiA rot tonTu< tm iddiMcmal of -^ ‘culture. The enzyme makes
----- .... . . l„et rtf .Tannaru 9tvf I rcl nf Cnhniiru ___, i :_________(>‘*1 t IS JIb.WJI.OU pIUS an additional
per cent' compounded quarterly, with
Tulia city council awarded Squire coating even though the trend in re- school, city and private property own- 1X) additional deposits, the $25 would
Stevie' Po we | i 7i ml third place light- P^ing Co. of Hereford a contract cent years has been about a five Staflte increase 1° in 10 i’pa‘-s and to
» ** ,».
extra la(0 [ia^cs may jjg on (iie WUy be-
came reserve champion.
DR. ALTON B. GOLDSTON, prominent Amarillo sur- H“mp?hi* lamb'
aeon and president-elect of Texas Division, Amarican Cancer S n YorXtoS ^ * p
Society, win be speaker at a coffee to be held tonight at 7:30 Clem Bozeman' had the reserve n,n «« B 642 »“S'tv dfictata sMd ttot 7h“is nm council lucsaay mgm a.so a- Jhe privale propcrty owner, tl
the 12th place ~ SLS^Sl “*
al damage to the city’s streets which ing the new Highland underground
cause of a new enzyme found in the
ri.
weight Duroc and
.#
The
nuivniv EDITOR
By H. M. BAGGARLY
Wayne Seeks
Second Term
Several of these boys rtaniiad
travel to the Fort Worth show.which
got underway yesterday.
$16,607.50 plus
to last of January and first of February. school board inasmuch as the school if™ wWr.u ,.pn..0^nw of
This bid was two per cent lower will be participating in the cost. The ,tjJ, cxtra (.osl dac ,0 th0 w-uicr street. cessing-
the flakes sweeter and softer for pro-
tlian one accepted in 1964 for seal- paving cost will be shared by the
• |T MAS a I, WAVS RUEN interesting to us to study people in an cflort
'...-I t0 understand their behavior. We have gone into this subject in to-
.day's editorial, on the 'editorial page of this edition.
,,\ff Wp at’n IrvtnVivetivI in mink tkinno mk..
Slate Representative Ralph Wayne
of Plainview, announced today that
lie will seek re - election and will file
for the office this weekend. Wayne,
Milner Succeeds Sturgess
As Swisher GSPA President
which comes to a total of $18,437.50.
Tlie city’s share will be $4,573.37 plus . Polk County led all Texas counties
$720, its share of the extra cost. «’tih an output of 75.719 cords
Cost to the private property owner °f pulpwood.
'Members and directors of GSPA ing Morgan Sturgess. who had been placing Carl Pate. Harold Hipp was
who was elected in 1964, represents from throughout the county held their active in that position for the
■ rr1..iai.c j*1 such things as why sonic people tend towards tlie 89th District composed of Briscoe, annual meeting at Bruce's Grill at several years.
V- 'Catholicism, the.^Cnurch. qf Oirist, or Baptist. •••*— "■■— *—* • L - — • - ~
come Unitarians,
o • w • .-why a’ey tcIld 10 be- Floydada, Hale and" Swisher count- Tulia, Tuesday. In the business ses- Tom Garrison was elected vice -
---ybrisuan Scientists or Rosterucians. ics; liowever, under the redistrict- sion, Harvey Milner was elected pre- president and C. C (Pap) Reed of
‘ . Wc find (hat -in some areas of thought such groups often are 180 •— «
degrees apart on doctrine but. simitar in their way of thinking.
'11#* FIND WK samei thing in poMtto^ The difference in ouV two ^ wil1 ^ •"«* 10 Dis*
will be $4.55 per foot or $5.15 jter
fool on 44 - feet streets.
In otlier business Tuesday night,
tile council named a board of ad-
justment and a Planning and Zoning
Commission as required by the zon-
ing ordinance passed in December
Tlie ordinance was passed after sev-
eral years of study.
Tlie Planning and Zoning Comniis-
Pntients m Swisher Memorial lios-
ng by the 59th Legislature, the Dis- sident for tlie coming year, replac- Kress was elected a director rc
trict would be renumbered 79, and
majorr-pqiUitad':jpnrtt«gi;tan't--so 'mactHthctrJvotes-^'on "si'^gcide *—Waync.’Tiamhd Outstanding-Fresh-
|, ... —■
sues’ak^it is - their.- philosophies of' g^ertt'ment. their* way-of‘thinking.- nuui of the 59th-Session; served on
When we must, choose between two men running for tlie same office five commmlttccs, including the'Im-'
in a primary, we'..are ..far less interested in their votes on specific portant Rules Committee.
. ... _________r _____ ____________ _____________ „. _________ . _______ His other
or isolated issues ,d^ we 'arc interested in how they think, in their basic committee assignments by Speaker
philosophy. Are they, concerned about the general welfare of ALL the ,Bcn B«nios wcre Conservation and
-people, including the;massbs, .or do they believe, like Alexander Hamil- Reclamation, State Schools and Hos-
-lon, the father ebiise.rvatiVc politics, that “our real disease is de- Pitals> Aeronautics, and Pcmtentiar-
mocracy.”' that "all1 communities divide themselves into the few and ics. The Freshman Legislator- was ap-
County 4-H Youth
On Stock Circuit
tlie many. The first are rich and wcUbonv, tlie other, tlie masses of the Pointed to tlie Economic Develop - Two Claytonville 4-H members are Others from Swisher County who alinnc Ilnfl ■ -
people. Tlie masses; are turbulent and changing, they seldom judge or me,lt Conference Meetings by Speak- exhibiting steers at the Southwestern attended the Show at Ft. Worth and sorghum stocks arc one - half tha zoning applications ancltc> listen to tlai;I0 Tejeda, Mrs. Norman Mailict,
dctcrniinc right.’’... ‘ cr Barnes, and he was also appoint- Exposition and Fat Stock Show in assisted with the activities were: of corn. He also pointed, out that appeals, if any. us a^ result of: de- m,s. John Hutton, Mrs. Dean Nolen,
past elected elevator representative re
placing Robert Morton.
Norvell Breedlove of the local ABCS
office answered questions relative to sion is campoaed of R. B. Dawson, pital Tuesday were D. G. Shelton,
the 1866 feed grain program. Bill Don Bookout and Ray Barbour, 1 - Mrs. Reno Ledesma and son, Mrs.
Nelson, executive vice president of year terms, and Otis Harman, Jack Alex Casanova and- daughter, Juan-
GSPA of Amarillo, reported on tlie Stumian, Sidney Hooper and Way- -lla Cruz, Mrs. Norman Strange, Mrs.
current and changing research mar- mon Fcalhcrston, 2 - year terms. Clyde* Bradford,' Mrs. S. F. Flores,
.ket development..and. actyice pro - Function of the commtaaion. wlU be . j,. y. . .Whits**,' Mrs. A.- W. Milisj' -17'x
grams of tlie association. ‘ to plan zoning restrictions in new Mrs.' A? T Young, B. B. Burrow,' 1
’ Y. F. Snodgrass, GSPA South additions annexed as' well as other Hugh Parker, Mrs. Wade Bates, Mrs.
Plains representative of Abernathy, planning activities. j. c. Rlioderick. Mrs. Frank Jett -
reported on the area - county as- The board of adjustment is com- nitigs, Mrs. 'Mattie Umberson, Mrs.
sociation activities and membership posed of Bob Goodwin and T. L. Fore, jqc palmer, Joan Lacey,
expansion efforts. 2 - year terms, and Luverne Klcman, 'Dismissals' since last week: Mrs.
Nelson pointed out that seven Fay Tidwell, and Jack Cantrell, 1 - r. \v Riley, H. F. Martin,i Mrs. E.
times more corn is produced annual- year terms. Function of this board \y. Clifton, J. R: Woolfolk, Mrs. Bes-
ty than grain sorghum, yet gvain is to make recommendations on re - s)e offield, Mrs. Thelma Colbert. Ig-
-i----- ...—— ‘half that zoning applications and to listen to —**— —------
s"i
u
■ft
^Robert Welch, fattier of Birchism put it, democracy is a «d by Gover^Tc^naiFto'‘repre- ^ 4-ttos a’™ Mel- Mr. and Mre^d Mrs. U D. com exports duringthc. past five cision made by appropriate autborit- ^
fraud, the people', cannot .be trusted, there aren’t two. sides to" every ^pnt Texas at the Southern Regional Vjn Young and Jackie Gilleland. Young, Mr. and Mrs. Billy Ray Car- Vest's ^av.c ^"creased 300 per cent ics.
question, so dissenting opinions- in the Jolin Birch Society “will not be Education Conference to participate
tolerated." - ' - • ......... in a study lo improve quality in
higlicr education. K
K THING ^ THAT makes both the John Birch Society and Com - sponsored by Wayne
niunism so. dangerous is their philosophy which is almost identi- ,0 increase gross weight limits on
' cal.’Both believe they vare right so strongly that strong arm tactics must
-'be Used to get dispeople on "the right side’’ with or without their will.
Both believe that t h e end justifies the means. Both believe that people
arc incapable of coming up with the right decision. The Birch Society ^ uS^al Mstrict-' increase
says quite frankly .that to fight Communism effectively, we must adopt
4n the Shorthorn division Melvin
ter from Sundown who are the daugh- while grain sorghum exports have As an economy measure,
T. I. Bonds, H B. Pyeatl,
Mary Lou Vallin, Mrs. Ines Zapata,
the city joe Serna, Jr, iNolberto Gonzales,
V
..... ... „ „ lK1. and son-in-law of Mr and Mrs. increased only 30% and that these arc has eliminated two positions and as- A. C. McDaniel. Tony Medina,
Key Legislation had the 2nd place Senior Steer Calf L D younK Stanley Young, Ronnie sonic of the situations graui sorghum signed their duties to other employ- Mrs Adeiido Munoz, Mrs. O. W. Nu-
le included bills and *n the Angus Division Melvin v-nc'rcj ,\orman McAnclly. Jack producers and the area grain trade cos. ’ . zum. Mrs. Imogene Wright, R. L.
— iiad tile 4th place Senior Steer Calf. 6iuciand’and Chile Smith ^ — ‘-----1 ^.......*>— *™ni ni-iiiti.nu'n ....
iciys jiniiM.v .rail w v-uinmiauaiu t-nt.-i.uvi.-ij , we iiium nuopi ,T anrf
Communism’s oivn lacfics, we m u s t fight fire with fire, we m u s t S’ and
borrow its methods. B o t h employ harassment, infiltration, secrecy,
and the like.
Communism,
must be
Rogers Dinner
Set for Friday
are faced with when seeking admin- Under the new zoning ordinance, Clark, Mrs. David Woodsidc, Mrs.
Istrative decisions affecting ucrcs, South 2nd street is commercial from pectj-o Garcia, Mrs. Raymond Gur-
be^wffi t^tairineyfOTEV Pasa on pricc’ stocks dislribulion- or olhcl' thc ,wspit!l.l west to the city limits. ztl) Mrs. Roy Fra]icis, Mrs. Elias
bers will be leaving for El Paso on HWClopmcnts. North 6th is residential from the al- pcrL.Z) vVaync McCutcheon, M r s.
The new Swisher County GSPA ley between Ha]e street and High- Troy Stewart.
F>ktag February f for the South - dc^°P"’™IS';jvv.......
weokirn J^crnati«r^Li^m^ o{ directo,^ wjh meet’T in a lo- Way 87 cast to the Vigo^Y slio|>plng born TO:
The Appreciation Dinner for
utMtn, 6 heifers, and 3 barrows.
Those with entires from the Hap-
py 4-H club arc Dwight and Debra
Sen- Currie; front tlie Tulia 4-H dub arc
ing of imported metes.
Tiic Plainvicw Legislator presently
> IT- WOULD BE interesting to study ail the "types" that compose our named the Outstanding Young Man of Wcst’ gGneral cha.rman. are Janice Carter, Dickie and Nan-
cal program planning session Tues-
day, Feb. 8, for a breakfast meeting.
center. Broadway is residential from ,^jr> an<j Avtrs. Elias Perez. Box 9X
Hale Street eastward to tlie alley be- Kress, a girl.
political parties, those who compose the liberals, those who coni- ''p^LntaUvc Waymi and his wife,
pose the conservatives, those who compose tlie extremists among both Suc hav(> threc children and reside
,!U‘ ' ’----................... at i302 Floydada in Plainview.
All tickets purchased for the
date will be honored. Cost is $5,
prior cy Jones, Stanley Young, Mclv i n
i. Young, and David Pigg.
X-Ray Unit
At Happy
Friday
tween Briscoe and Crosby.
Multi - unit dwellings must " be
built south ot South 2nd with several
exceptions.
f liberals and conservatives.
Today we n8e Inking a look at just ore group which is an important
group among the conservatives. Jn- some instances they have become
extremists while in otlier instances, tliey compose tiie respectable
‘branch of political conservatism. Jbis group lias been called "tlie young
executives" who have'come into living since World War H. Some were
■■ old enough to be involved in World War II. But many others just missed
J it. Tliey got,out of high scliool just in time to feel the effects of prosperity
which’followed WVV If.
Their parents, who had suddenly become prosperous .during the
r '. w.ar, were able to send them off to college with a convertible and a fat
Fielder Rites
Held Friday
First Baptists To Host
Group Training School
Happy P-TA is sponsoring the Lub-
.bock - Hale County Tuberculosis As-
sociation Chest X - ray unit for a
C-C Banquet
Is Tuesday
Mr and Mrs. .David Woodside, 615
NW 3rd, Thalia, a boy.
Mr. and Mrs. Pedro Garcia, Route
S, Tulia, a boy.
Mr. and Mrs. Adeiido Munoe, Route
1, Tulia, a boy.
Air. and Mrs. Raymond Garza, Box
7, Tulin, a girl.
Mr. and Mrs. Rene Lcdcsoia, Box
16-1, Tulia, a boy.
★ ★ ★
New meter connections reported by
City of Tulia since last week: Clyde
Messick, 711 S. Austin, Apt. 6; Gra-
421 ~
^-irars.in5 JS
will be at tlie school.
. until 5 p.m. The unit clement ivcatiler, will be held Tucs- wuhnr’ tm cS\«^li!n\niPlin?;’rmliS
j school. . day night at 7.30 o’clock in Ezra ’ li}
Everyone over 10 years of age is joncs Memorial cafeteria.
Smith, i0-l S Gaines; Ivan Crosby,
, - irionthlv pay check. Tlie older group, tlie
Girbencfits in addition to a subsidy from daddy.'
Funeral services for Mrs. Ethel
Mayfield Fielder, 70, were held Fri-
day afternoon in Wallace Funeral
veterans; also enjoyed their Chapel. She died Thursday morning will be host to
_ _ daddy.' < 1 in live Dimmitt hospital as a result
0 ’ ; ...... "" . . ’ ’ of burns. She had been a patient in
BUST LIKE EVERY generation, many,.of this group were intelligent, a Dinimitt convalescent home.
had good minds, were ambitious, and were able to sail through Earl Cantwell, minister of Rock
1 ••’college and perhaps ..graduate, schooj,, if. necessary, .with dcgifces in btisi- £.reck Church of Christ, officiated at
f ness administration, law, engineering of some kind, medicine, or in some *bo service. Burial was in Silvcrton
i -oltV^r specialized field** « " cemetery. ^ (
: ' Almost before the; degrees were granted, big business which liud Mrs. I ieldcr was born in Silvcrton
: 'grown fat during the war’ und had nunici'ous.jobs to do for a prosperous al'd ,lad lived in Sherman until 1962
’- .- iiosl - 'war economy, rbegim bidding for -Die seivices of these grad- ^hen her health failed. She was a
’ nates 'even before .‘theirr diplomas had been signed. Big business sent member of lire Church of Christ.
'uepreseMalives to college,.campuses to Interview these graduates, to Survivors. la(d?d<! h c rbrotlier,
• • bkl for their scr-'ccs. -r Chris Mayfield of Raton, N. M.; three
»' V.TnimnvW dichi’i liavc to seek a iob. . .fobs Were handed to sfatera. Mrs. J. D. Finch of Tulia, Nursery will be held Sunday, Feb. 13. ers of classes for all ages.
;llieni on silver platters. . .theii- only ’ problem was deciding which Neva Mc^o^ of Id a ho at 2 p.ni. in the Chandelier Room of ———
•job to take.
; i Finally, the big decision wasj-niadc.
‘ work at salaries seldom paid n>cn at their prime just a Mw years before.
Springs, Colo., and Mrs. Estelle Tho-
and the graduates w e n ,t to mas of Silverton.
ffjSg3|'||
The First Baptist church of Tulia school for Baptists from throughout t0 pay. Tlie minimum cost barely Featured speaker will be Bob Mur- * * *
a group training the area Feb. 7 - 10, according to covers the cost of materials. phey 0f. Nacogdoches, Lawyer, former New subscribers' to' The Tuba Her-
Joc Whitten ot tlie church. it js emphasized that tlie x-ray is sergeant at arms of the Texas House aid since last week are- H L. Jones,
‘Among thc out-of-town teachers for not limited to tuberculosis discovery 0[ Representative, wartime Merchant Route 5, Bax 624, Eugene, Oregon:
tlie school will bo Bob Callahan of ixit to various abnormalities ot the -Marine officer. R. C. Lloyd, 604 E. Alston St., Hobbs,
Amarillo; Haze! Moseley, Amarillo; chest including lung cancer, tu ,- Master of ceremonies at the ban- New Mexico; Robert Rex Aycock,
Maureen Poe, Oklahoma'City; Mrs. 'mors, enphysema and, heart condi- quot will be Clyde Greer, junior 5203 14th St. Lubbock. Texas: Fred
Frank Royal, Seminole; Mrs. C. L. flons. At toast one Swisher county high school principal. ■ E. Wankin, Sr, Old Decatur Road.
Sullivan, Amarillo; Mrs. Robert Bur-^"resident was found to have lung can- Invocation will be given by thc Athens, Tennessee; Mrs. Jo Kendrick,
nett, Amarillo. . ccr during one of these mass x-ray Rev. Alan Abraham, pastor of tlie 2105 S. Harvard Drive. Perryt o n.
Local. tcadiei-s will '.indudc -Mrs., projects. First Christian church. .Troop 263 of Texas; Wayne Collins, Box 992, Floy-
Gcorge Neill, Mrs. Harlan Vandcr- The x-rays will be filed in the Lub- the Tulia Boy Scouts will present dada, Texas; Melvin Harris, Route
Zee, Mrs. Fred Richards and Mrs. bock - Hale County Tuberculosis ot- colors. Special music will be pro- S, Tulia, Texas; East Texas State
Bob Goodwin. (ice in Lubbock. The films arc avail- vided by Joe Whitten, vocalist, nius- University, East Texas Station, Com-
.Courses will be‘'offered (or teach- able at all times to physicians. lc director of the First Baptist chur- mercc, Texas.
'Persons x rayed will be notified ch. if it •it
their chests are normal. Abnor-
Day Nursery
Annual Meet
Is Slated
Annual meeting of the Tulia Day -'
f
•r"
■\v \ Unlike those doctors; and krwycre a generation before who starved
, • ho death in some country. town for. ten years betorc tliey could make
’ - i’decent livings for.'-" their"; families, .these new doctors and lawyers were
:‘offered high paying positions. with unlimited opportunities in somc.es-
"hablished- law -office or cliiiic.;,Within a year they were buying homes- in
h-tho suburbs acquiring new Cadillacs, second and third cars f.ir their
h*vK-cs and children, enjoying-all the comforts and luxuries of post-war
So il was with engineers,'‘corporalion employees, anttisU-4hc.-othera. 7
if their cliests are normal, Abnor- Officers and directors o( 1965 will Wcatlier during the past week lias
the First National Bank. Get rid of tks» anwMtod task by a malitics will be reported to the per- Ixi recognized by Boyd Vaughn, out- been cold and disagreeable. No addi-
■Intcrcstcd persons are invited. garage nale •dinttlnet la TVe Herald .son's phsyician as well as to the going president. Don Bookout, in - tional snow in measurable amount
individual. , coming president, will present tlie has been received since last week’s
Persons are encouraged lo have 1966 officers and directors. six inches. Thc mercury has dropped
chest x-rays made once a year if Charles Sharp will make tlie "out- to zero, a few degrees above or be-
possible.
i
Swisher Farm Bureau Sets
Goal Of 900 For County
Death Claims
.
Former Tulian
I i;.... , • .
12 has from all over the county, the mem-' Lubbock Wednesday night and in Son
— u—l:_ -L..J-----*J ‘ntonio, tonight., . Funeral services for Mrs. Ir b y
H. T. Copeland of Tulia is chair- While of Rising Star were held Wed-
standing Citizen" award.
The Rev. D. R. Phllley, pastor ot
Calviny Baptist church, will give
tlie benediction.
•Dinner,music will be.provided by
Mrs. Hoi Ed Totes and Mrs. Donald
Crocker.
low, almost every’ night.
STAY TUNED TO
y f; _ .7,nc|. EVERYTHING one’s heart could want had been developed officially designated “Farm Bu- berahip chairman said. Antonio, tonight.
r-A,MS I.i.'nlc rettl* Membership week" in Swtaher Kick - off speaker will be Ed Me- H. T. Copelan
. PA during ;uid lf/l)owmg Hie wai years, Luxuries once ixsea cd fof counly.' The locaT county farm organ- Kay, Texas Farm Bureau director, man of the local county Farm Bureau nesday afternoon at "the First Bap-
Mrs. Harrington's
Father Succumbs
KTUE
•:*
'•‘tlie gocls-bad i>eett niadd' hvaiiablc to the young executives,'Te^'izatloriv. wifi havea'^ectalenroll - from Austin and Waco. membership committee.’ , i ’ list church of that town. Mrs. White,
W.'Vision )md arrived. Modern, homes were air - conditioned, had central ment;drive underway as part ot a Swisher County Farm Bureau now The committee chairman said ev- wife of Lee White, is a former rcsi-
V1 healin’', electric dishwashers, automatic washing-machines, electric statewide edort to pu*h Farm Bureau has 7U) members and will be out to ery farmer and rancher in the coun- dent of Lakeview, west of Tulia. At
X ’can openers and' airihousand, other gadgets had become commonplace'.' membership in TsxM 'to 100,000 by .' increase this number to 900.-The drive ty is needed "as a member and a that time she was known as Mrs. E. D. White, 85, of Chilicotiie,
^‘Children wtere given a'U^.tha'fkdvantageS' of modern living. They'’Were October.31. '- f .. ?.•.?’a v•'<,'• is a part of a statewide cflort to on- leader by the Farm Bureau." Bill Tucker. She remarried folloing died Tuesday afternoon at Chilicothe.
: sent lo Europe (Jijmg their, vacations from school. Some had to;b«drive will be laiinched with a roll 100,000 members in Texas Farm ‘'Each of ug in ^griculthre has too Mr. Tucker’s death.. He was the father of Mrs. J. Y.
: content with an exclusive summer camp. kick - off supper at Wayne's ^tstaur- Bureau in 1966. The state organiza- great an outlay in our business not She was a sister of Mrs. Truitt Harrington of Tulia who had been at
Like all humans of, any generation, these young executives jncrea*; ant,. FbbnMury.8,a4v7,pjsi. in Tulta. tion.-.ended. 1965 widi 15,201 . .to do all that we can to.prptect our Stovall of Kress and had been an his bedside during most of the lost
; W their .outgo faster tkon Jheir income. Soon; that $25,000 a yeor ntar]' AttanghH; ttM raky .wtl be ooomun- The statewide drive wan launched iawsatoimt in capital,' ttroe, and la* officer ..in. the ..state organization of three months.
" CCooUaund oh pay 4)" '';v' ity meiWOilp caguias so — ... -.....
iSNkc
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Baggarly, H. M. The Tulia Herald (Tulia, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 5, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 3, 1966, newspaper, February 3, 1966; Tulia, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth636530/m1/1/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Swisher County Library.