Hudspeth County Herald and Dell Valley Review (Dell City, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 22, Ed. 1 Friday, February 3, 1967 Page: 2 of 6
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*
a fraction of his unused income-
X
BOY SCOUT WEEK
♦
WELCOME LIVESTOCK SHOW & RODEO
VISITORS
BON4NZA STEAK HOUSE
4
RANCH - STYLE BREAKFASTS
FINE STEAKS CHARBROILED
REASONABLE PRICES
*
5441 Montana Near Trowbridge El' Paso
I
JERRY
WOLFE’S
RESTAURANTS
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Rodeway Inn
Editor
A
1/30. 67
FEATURING THE FINEST IN FOODS
r.
CHOICE AGED STEAKS
FULL COURSE LUNCHES AND DINNERS
Seafood —
Mexican Food
PANCAKES
Yessir, TOP QUALITY... all the way.
33 VARIETIES OF
In GINNING... CROP FINANCE .. .FIELD
SERVICE ... COTTON MERCHANDISING.
♦
I
QUALITY. . .
ALL THE WAY . . .
I
Letter To
The
Large Selection Of
South Of The Border
Mission Inn
Pancake House
and Restaurant
Il
Interstate 10
at Bassett
EL PASO
Knight’s Club
1.15
.75
1.65
1.00
1.65
1.50
1.65
PAGE£, HUDSPETH COUNTY HERALD-Dell Valley Review, FEB. 3, 1967
Notice! THE OBSERVER...
NOTICE TO BIDDERS ' ^llL V k
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B
■ w
WEEKLY LUNCHEON BUFFET
Children Undtr 12 ------------
WEEKLY DINNER BUFFET____
Children Under 12------------
FRI. NITE SEA FOOD BONANZA
SAT. NITE MEXICAN FEAST __
ALL DAY SUNDAY BUFFET __
PARTIES — MEETINGS — BANQUET FACILITIES
i a
sour note. Especially at this time of year, when he is about to make
Rodeway Inn y
Restaurant
6201 Gateway West'£
It,
Bv
PAUL HARVEY
who loved to kill deer and would
" says, be-
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..
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WHY FARM BUREAU NEEDS MEMBERS
The county-wide membership drive which the Hudspeth County
Farm Bureau is staging February 6 through the ICth is of special
importance this year. The efforts in this county are being matched
in some 200 other counties over the state in a gigantic drive to en-
roll more than 100, 000 members in the Farm Bureau in Texas.
Due to a number of factors, most important of which is the Su-
preme Court decision on reapportionment, rural areas in Texas
stand to lose their former strong voice in the affairs of this state. A
strong organization representing both the farmers' and other rural
people's interest is the strongest bulwark against complete domin-
ation of urban areas.
The Texas Farm Bureau has compiled a commendable record in
the State Capital. It has been a strong factor in promoting and pro-
tecting rural interests in legislation on items such as farm-to-mar-
ket roads, animal health, farm labor, agricultural research and
education, egg law, insecticide and herbicide regulations, seed
law sales tax exemptions, water programs, annexation, and many
others.
The policies which guide the organization originate in the coun-
ties. But, it takes a large organization with active support of its
members to implement policies. With political power passing to
urban areas, the need for a bigger and more active farm organiza-
tion will become more urgent in the future. Thus, it behooves all
farmers and ranchers to join and support and organization that can
protect their common interests beyond the fence row.
J L-i
I
DR. MILTON FRIEDMAN, who coined the term "negative in-
come tax, " explains it as a plan to supplement the income of the
poor by which "the Government would pay part, but not all, of the
l“ difference between a poor person's actual earnings and a given in-
’ come level, " or, in other words, "a fraction of his unused income-
tax exemptions and deductions. "
According to Dr. Friedman, professor of economics at the Univer-
sity of Chicago, this would assure guaranteed annual income to the
poor, and at the same time eliminate much of the administrative
cost of our present inadequate and inefficient welfare system. More
importantly, in his opinion, the poor would be spared the indignity
of having to account for the way they spend their welfare money.
To the average taxpayer, a considerable part of whose income
goes to support people on relief, Dr. Friedman's ideas may strike
his annual gloomy trek to the Internal Revenue office, where he
will be told in no uncertain terms how much he owes the Govern-
ment for the privilege of earning his living.
The proposal that the Govern-
ment pay non-taxpayers for
NOT earning a living may irk
him. As a reasonable man, he
knows that people totally inca-
pable of supporting themselves
must be cared for at public ex-
pense, but he looks with a j aun-
diced eye on schemes to subsi-
dize a growing army of maling-
erers and malcontents who could
work, but won't work, because
they think the world owes them
a living.
Staff members of the Wiscon-
sin state employment service
conducted a two-week survey
among the unemployed in Mil-
waukee where they went from
house-to-house searching for
potential workers who, as one
of the staffers put it, "are too
discouraged, timid, or reluct-
ant to hunt for jobs on their own."
When they found prospects,
they put them in station-wagons
and took them to the employ-
ment office where contacts were
made with potential employers.
It didn't stop there. When a job
was obtained, a staffer took the
new worker to the job-site and
saw to it he got off on the right
foot. How long the pampering-
period is supposed to last, or
what happens to tire back-sli-
ders, wasn't mentioned in the
news account of the experi-
ment.
Anyway, those who conduct-
ed it were so pleased with the
results that they are asking for
federal funds - naturally! - to
expand it. Providing nursemaid
service for those "too timid" or
or "too reluctant" to go to work
by themselves, will cost money.
President Johnson has asked for
a tax boost to make sure that
"social progress" at home will
not be curtailed by reason of
our costly war in Vietnam.
The average, middle-class
taxpayer, who is destined to pay
for both, may regard this latest
experiment in helping tire poor
whether they want to be helped
or not, a" ’ st another example
of wplfs.ism cone wild.
Observer.....
U i j 4 4 >
Notice is hereby given that
Hudspeth County is advertising
for bids for a Depository Bank
for the next biennium and ann-
ual bids for butane service, am-
bulance and burial service, gas
and oil service for country eq-
uipment, and hospital care for
county indigents.
Any and/or all bids may be re-
jected by tne Commissioners'
Court.
Bids should be submitted to
Tom H. Neely, County Judge,
Sierra Blanca, Texas. Said bids
to be opened on Monday, Feb-
ruary 13, 1967, at 10:00 A. M.
Bernice M. Elder
County Clerk
Dear Editors:
Approximately 400 people en-
joyed die Hudspeth County Jun-
ior Livestock Show Barbecue
Dinner, Saturday, January 28.
Good cooks from all over the
county prepared and served deli-
cious potato salad and cakes al-
ong with the beans ami barbecue
cooked by James Peace and hi>
helpers.
Pop Bryan was there all even-
ing to cut the meat so that it
could be served hot from the pit,
ami Mr. 8 Mrs. Robert French
helped keep tilings rolling in the
kitchen. Mrs. Bernice Elder
and Mrs. Stella Kelcy took tick-
ets and greeted all at the door,
then went to the kitchen and
worked as clean up crew with
Mrs. Joe Abb Neely and Mrs.
John D. Honeycutt.
’ Special thanks go to the Sierra
Blanca School for making avail-
able all their facilities, and also
a big thank you to the Meads’
and Kahns Bakeries of El Paso
who furnished all the bread for
the barbeque.
Cont'd. Pg. 2
Missile Range X
Rodeway Inn
Restaurant
¥9487 Dyer Street.*! I 765 South Majn St.
i EL PASO
A Jet Set Club
•S
CHARACTER ASSASSINATION POLITICALLY DEADLY
Paul Harvey
Can a book about the assassination of one President "assassinate
the image" of another?
Is that the big idea behind the public emasculation of the Man-
chester book?
In the first place, no national figure has ever before allowed his
or her unexpurgated memoirs to be published during the lifetime of
the principals. This is a first.
The author cannot be blamed for the manner in which Mrs. Jac- '
queline Kennedy and others recited their recollections. Nor can the
author be held responsible for the resultant furor which focused
world attention on both the expurgated and unexpurgated editions of
his book.
It would appear, instead, that Senator Robert Kennedy wishes --
while pretending otherwise — to
throw an ugly shadow over the
person of President Johnson.
Why, otherwise, would the
Kennedys insist on deleting those
portions about the deer-hunting
trip three years prior to the assa-
ssination, and then turn right
around and allow "Kennedy fami-
ly sources" publicly to recite
particulars of that expedition?
January 23, as another install-
ment of the censored book app-
eared in print, "a source close
to the Kennedy family" said the
whole first chapter of the book
had been omitted "because it
pictured President Johnson as a
man of violence. "
That chapter, says this "family
source, " dealt with LBJ's love
for killing deer and his insistence
that JFK kill some.
The "Kennedy source" said the
chapter showed Johnson as a man
force others to do the same. But, the "Kennedy source
cause the symbolic overtones were unjust they were omitted.
If they were "unjust, " if they were "imporperly included, " if such
innuendo is inappropriate and cruel, then why does a "Kennedy
source" now publicly recall in detail that hunting sequence ?
On the other hand, if this book's challengers want to assassinate
the character of Lyndon Johnson, this would be the way to go about
it.
Indeed, the author says that Senator Robert Kennedy is surrounded
by political hitchhikers who have only one objective: to see another
Kennedy in the White House. Author William Manchester says the
compromise which averted a law suit "modified" fully one-third
of his original manuscript.
Let's watch: Throughout the remainder of the serialized publica-
tion, will "Kennedy sources" continue to focus public attention on
the very deleted portions to which they profess to object?
We'll see.
However history may add him up or cut him down, President
Johnson's surely painful silence during this deplorable debate elo-
quently shames his unsubtle detractors.
The Boy Scouts of America celebrate the 57th anniversary of their
organization February 7 to 13. Today there are over five and three-
quarter million scouts in the United States alone. Scouting is dedi-
cated to teaching boys how to do things for themselves and others.
Working to build friendship and understanding between the people
of all countries, scout associations of 86 nations now coordinate
their efforts through the Boy Scouts World Conference. Although
each national association is independent in its organization and me-
thods, the World Conference works to establish common ground in
thinking and action among all its member associations. One of the
major highlights of 1967 will be the Twelfth World Jamboree to be
held at Farragut State Park in Idaho next August. The first to take
place in the United States, it will bring together more than 15, 000
scouts, from 100 free nations. Although they will speak many dozens
of di/ferent languages and come from widely varying religious,
economic and cultural backgrounds, they will for a time share
common experiences and pleasures and be united in the purpose of
building world friendship.
In the work they are doing, the Boy Scouts deserve the respect
and support of allot us. Building character in boys today shapes
men of whom all the world can be proud tomorrow.
OIL MILL CO.
A DIVISION OF ANDfltSON CLAYTON A CO. NC
DELL CITY. TEXAS HO 4-2291
r
X
¥
Las Cruces, N. M.
El Toreador Lounge
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Addington, Dianne; Brown, Julia & Gilmore, Joyce. Hudspeth County Herald and Dell Valley Review (Dell City, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 22, Ed. 1 Friday, February 3, 1967, newspaper, February 3, 1967; Dell City, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1235040/m1/2/: accessed May 22, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .