Hudspeth County Herald and Dell Valley Review (Dell City, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 23, Ed. 1 Friday, February 10, 1967 Page: 2 of 6
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PAGE 2, HUDSPETH COUNTY HERALD-Dell Valley Review, FEB. 10,. 1967
IF MacARTHUR WERE IN VIET NAM--Paul Harvey
to the Editor
PAUL HARVEY
MR. LINCOLN SAID IT . .
YOU
DEPUTY SHERIFF HEARST LAV S, AND IN THE FORT HANCOCK
AREA, DEPUTY SHERIFF J. C. STUBBS'
in an
1512 EAST YANDELL
TIRES
Hudspeth Counting /h
and DILL VALLIY RIVIIW X^/ldul
307 S. SANTA FE
INTERESTED IN PRICE?
FARMERS NEED
ORGANIZATION
1.
2.
3.
— RETAIL —
— WHOLESALE —
E. A. WRIGHT
TAX-ASSESSOR COLLECTOR
Jan. 30, 1967
Box 454
Dell City, Texas
PASSENGER-TRUCK
FOREIGN-IMPORT
TRACTOR-EARTHMOVER
AIRCRAFT-INDUSTRIAL
Hudspeth County Herald
Dell City, Texas
.......Publisher
■.......Publisher
Sierra Blanca Editor
Ft. Hancock Editor
Salt Flat Editor
One of the Southwest's Largest Stocks
of New and Used Nationally
Advertised Tires"
Dear Mrs. Lynch:
I would like to express my app-
reciation to you and the Hudspe-
th County Herald for buying my
pig in the sale at the Hudspeth
County Junior Livestock Show.
I also realize that, you and
other buyers have made the live-
sotck show a success by buying
our show animals.
Many thanks.
Sincerely yours,
Jakie Hill
Dell City F.F. A.
AjlL PROPERTY OWNERS, BOTH REAL AND PERSONAL, SHOULD
RENDER THEIR PROPERTY TO THE TAX ASSESSOR COLLECTOR
bumiie-hutches such as his.
We applaud Mayor Lindsay's
crusade but fear he is laying him-
self open to the most humiliating
form of defeat - to be laughed
out of court.
OBSERVER
BEFORE NffXRCH 31, 1967. FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE, THE
ASSESSMENT BOOK FOR DELL CITY WILL BE IN THE HANDS OF
DIAL ~
S33-6231
533-6680
ALL
MAJOR
BRANDS
UNCONDITIONALLY
GUARANTEED
(Hudspeth County Farm
Bureau
Ray Collier, President)
At one time in our history, rur-
al areas in general and farm
people in particular were in
firm control of the political pow-
er of this nation. This has long
since changed and now rural
Americans, especially the far-
mers, find themselves in a dis-
tinct minority.
Agricultural producers now
constitute only about 8 percent ,
of our total population. The re- I
cent Supreme Court ruling on I
re apportionment further dilutes ■
the voice of rural people. In
addition, the economic position
of farmers has worsened because
of the cost-price squeeze. Not
even a spectacular increase in
productive efficiency has enab-
led the farmer to offset product-
ion and living costs brought on
by spiraling wage and price in-
creases.
If there ever was a time when
farmers and ranchers needed
strength through organization
that time is now. The Hudspeth
County Farm Bureau is seeking
to increase its membership str-
ength through a county-wide en-
rollment campaign. Nationwide,
the Farm Bureau is the largest
of all general farm organization^
but it needs the support and par-
ticipation of even more farmers
if agriculture is to have the str-
ong voice it so badly needs.
The organization is truly de-
mocratic with policies adopted
by majority vote in county, state
and national conventions. It de-
serves the support of all farmers
and ranchejsjwho want to uro-
tect their economic future and
guarantee their voice in affairs
of government.
From Page 1
tions. Some of the poorest S-3
yields in 1966 were from fields
where there were excessive pl-
ant population and rank growth.
Plant population is not as cri-
tical where plant height is less
than w aist high and thicker st-
ands may be permissible or ad-
vantageous in such situations.
Observation and management
of the crop throughout the sea-
so is particularly important.
Irrigation and fertilizer prac-
tices must, of course, be varied ,
for each farm and field, however
irrigation and fertilization for
S-3 should be on the conser-
vative side especially where
the cotton tends to be tall and
rank. Late fertilization and ir-
rigation should be avoided. Irr-
should not be necessary except
on very sandy soils. All nitro-
gen fertilizers should be applied
before June 15th.
In summary, Pima S-3 has
diiierent growth characteristics
than those of Pima S-2, and
the producer must learn to ch-
ange his mangement practices
accordingly. This undoubtedly
will require first hand experience
in growing the vanery.
Approximately 200 tons of cer-
tified S-3 seed will be available
for Texas and New Mexico gro-
wers for the 1967 season. This
would plant approximately 1 4
of the allotted extra long staple
acreage.
The really odd thing about this
furor in New York is that the
topless craze has already reached
the ho-hum stage in other parts
of the country. In El Paso, for
instance, a few planned police
raids for publicity purposes re-
sulted in the arrest of a couple
of blouseless waitresses, but no-
thing much came of it.
Vulgarity is so commonplace
that it has to be presented in a
special way to catch the jaded
‘ eye. Hugh Heftner, the high
priest of the Playboy cult, is
making millions out of his exploy-
tations of nearnudity as enter-
tainment for the tired business
man, but the small-time oper-
Any erroneous reflection upon the character, standing or reputa-
tion of any person, firm or corporation which may occur in the
columns of the Hudspeth County Herald will be gladly corrected
upon being brought to the attention of the editors of publishers.
The publishers are not responsible for copy ommissions of typo-
graphical errors which may occur other than to correct them in the
next 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 Post Office to be Paid in Advance
PUBLISHED ON FRIDAY OF EACH WEEK
For Hudspeth County, Texas' Third Largest County
Notices of church entertainments where a charge of admission
is made, card of thanks, resolutions of respect, and all matter
not news, will be charged at the regular rates.
NEW-USED
FOR ALL PURPOSES —
----DILI VALLIY KIVU W
Second Class postage paid in Dell City, Texas 79837
Subsideiary MARY-MA RY INC.
Mrs. James Lynch .,
Mrs. Michael Lynch,
Dianne Addington..,
Julia Brown
Joyce Gilmore......
\ General Douglas MacArthur was required to wage an unofficial
\ war in Korea very similarly to the manner in which General West-
■' moreland is required to wage this one.
MacArthur was required to use less than our best weapons... as
Westmoreland is.
MacArthur was advised that he could bomb the "southhalf" of a
Yalu River bridge; that was his military prerogative — but not the
, "north half"; that was a diplomatic decision.
Similarly, in Vietnam, the
enemy's major port, Haiphong,
and the enemy's Hanoi industry
and major Mig bases are "off
limits" to our bombers.
It is not easy for a man,
schooled for a lifetime in wea-
pons and tactics, to wage a
one-handed no-win war where
the announced objective is a
stalemate on the fifty-yard line
If MacArthur were in comm-
and in Saigon — and if as before
a Congressman should ask his
opinion on the prosecution of
the war — I wonder if, knowing
the consequences, he would
speak out again.
General Westmoreland, a bl-
ending of Eisenhower and Mac-
Arthur, manages to bite his lip
and follow orders.
General Earle Wheeler, Chair-
man of our Joint Chiefs of Staffs,
recently returned from Vietnam, hinted at the restiveness of our
field generals. General Wheeler discreetly let it be known that
command dedisions are vetoed by Washington diplomats.
That is as close as our top brass has come to saying publicly what
all of our general officers in the field have said privately: That
they could, in fact, without nuclear weapons, neutralize this enemy
and end this war within 45 days!
Former Senator Barry Goldwater, homebound from a warfront visit,
will be saying what he too has been hearing — unofficially: That
we can't win the war this way, that we must hit the fat targets.
And when you hear the enemy bleat about our fnerciless bombing
of civilians, " remember this: This enemy has so little regard for
civilians that Cong troops often advance against ours behind a
shield of women and children.
When the Cong abandon a prison camp, they slaughter captive
women and children.
They purposely encircle military targets with concentrations of
civilians.
So the propaganda which they have been promoting through mis-
guided newsmen is patently hypocritical.
The fact that they are hollering so loud about our bombing means
only one thing: It is beginning to hurt.
No, I cannot know what MacArthur would do if he were in comm-
and in Saigon. Perhaps he, too, this time, would hide his time.
But I do know what he would want to do. He would want to de-
molish all enemy airfields, destroy all enemy power facilities,
warn civilians out of Hanoi and then obliterate it. He would block-
ade Haiphong harbor with sunken ships — no matter how many of
them are British ships. He would abbreviate the war in Vietnam
with the same maximum effort with which he brought Japan to its
knees.
But to Doublas MacArthur, then and now, neither fear nor timid-
ity is a worthy premise for a military decision. Wars are to be
won.
And not one American son should ever be required to die a hero's
death for a coward's reward.
VJngraving • ^here is always a first
choice for business and social stationery.
That first choice is genuine Engraving.
MODERN ENGRAVERS
533-9759
IT WAS A LITTLE SURPRISING to learn that Mayor John V, Lin-
dsay of New York has declared all-out war on topless waitresses
and go-go girls, Not that Mr. Lindsay isn't a notably upright young
man, but in a city famed for its easy tolerance of an infinite va- '
riety of abberations, the topless fad seems a fairly minor breach
of decency..
But the Mayor is serious about
it. He finds toplessness neither
"cultural" or "artistic", and he
condemns those who promote it.
”as "catering to purely prurient
interests. "
Three city judges were called
in to view the goings-on at a
club called The Crystal Room,
where a bevy of topless cuties
were serving drinks to an enthu-
iastic clientele . The owner, a
Miss Di Salvo, had received a
summons accusing her of violatin;
the city's administrative code.
Unfortunatley for the mayor's
cause, the judges were so carr-
ied away with the quality of the
service, or something, that thev
tamed in a verdict of not guilty. ator’can.t compete wlth plush
Inis only made the mayor -
madder,he promptly widened
the topless ban to include even
transparent blouses and pasties.
Unfamilar with the latter term,
we looked it up and learned that
pasties are "small savory meat
pies favored as an article of diet
by the Welsh. " Obviously, an
absolute definition.
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Addington, Dianne; Brown, Julia & Gilmore, Joyce. Hudspeth County Herald and Dell Valley Review (Dell City, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 23, Ed. 1 Friday, February 10, 1967, newspaper, February 10, 1967; Dell City, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1178308/m1/2/: accessed May 22, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .