The Tulia Herald (Tulia, Tex), Vol. 50, No. 49, Ed. 1, Thursday, December 3, 1959 Page: 10
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KNAPP AEROTRED SHOES
fi nunng Quality and Comfort
L G RAYMOND
iiirit WY 5 3633 Tuha Texas
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Thoughts for Thursday
By H M BAGGARLY
ONE OF THE most tnikod about motion
pictures fn recent years is The Ten Commandments
Millions of Americans have
turnrd out to see this multimillion dollar
production But we wonder if the lesson of
this spectacular even the 10 laws given by
God to Moses was not lost as Americans
marveled at the skill of the motion picture
producers and technicians in creating on film
a reasonable facsimile of the parting of the
Red Sea the tender love story in which
Moses was involved the plagues and the
miphtiness of Pharoahs army
We wonder how many persons who saw
the film can even quote the Ten Command
mc nls
IHOOGMTS fOR THUSSDAr
A REEXAMINATION of the Ten Commandments
would provide the key to the
olution of all of the worlds problems How
imple and effective would be the work of a
Summit Conference if its principals could
onl embrace the Ten Commandments
But before we heap criticism upon our
in > ids of state it is better that we examine
our own inability right here at home to solve
our problems It is better to censure our
tves for failure to abide by the Ten Com
i inJments in our daily lives
THOUGHTS FOR THURSDAY
REAMS COULD be written about anyone
of the Ten Commandments and how it
affects the behavior of men
Consider for example the sin of covetousnessTo covet is to crave to desire ardently
something belonging to another person It
v jl this sin that caused Satan to be cast from
htuven God created him and gave him a
position of high authority much higher than
that of other angeis But that wasnt enough
Hr couldnt be satisfied with what he had
Ho longed to be even greater than God
It is this sin that has inspired all our
world dictators who have arisen through the
arvi Ijbnrier
hursdllr bp Th Tuho Hea d Inc ol 124 130 North
1 J Swrsher Couny T ai fnteed al second Clou mar
ice or Tulia Te os under the oct of March I 1879
I Astoootior Prue Winning tJewsprjper 1957
sjciatien PrlM Winning Newlpaper 1951 1952 1953
56 1V57 1958
Association Prlxe Winning Newspaper 1951 19SS
1959
ii Auoooiion Pl Winning Newspaper 1953 1954
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Otaptnt ol Treto Sitjmc phi Te os Techologlcal Col
ing Newsriper 1953 1954 1955 1956 1957
DEAOIINIS
Display Advertising Mondoy 6pm
OattifiecJ Advertising Tuesday 4pm
Newt Tuesday Noon
SUtSCRIPTION RATES
Aiyw + iere In the World I year 14 00
6 months 12 50 1 monlh SOc
Notional Advertising Pepretentives
WEEKLY MAJOR MARKETS INC
10 East 40th 5 New York 16 N Y
v Chicago Dallas Detroit San Francisco
A WeeUy Major Market Newspaper
j > sne it not responsible for copy omission or typogra
which occur other than to correct them In the
it it brought to hit attention ond In no cove doet
hold himself liable for damages further than the omoynt
t t for actual space covering the error The right Is
reirrt or edil oil odperttung Advertiung ordwl are
rim basis only All published letters to the editor must
OillCHP 6 1
11 room
time and so still twothirds unhealed
to A M
DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY
1760 kc TUUA
ages They crave power and possession They
arent interested in staying in their own backyards
and developing what they have Rather
they want that which belongs to another
They want to enjoy the fruits of their neighbors
labor
WE SEE THIS same sin in operation
much closer to home than Moscow or Nan
king Two children are given toys One wants
not just his own toy but that one which
belongs to the other He wants both and lie
takes steps to get both
Even more often we sec the sin of covetousness
in operation within adults
The covetous one cannot tolerate success
or prosperity in another If someone appears
to be getting along then the greedy
one immediately sets out to get some of that
easy money Hes unwilling to go out and
duplicate the efforts of the successful person
who has made what he has the hard way
Rather he wants a short cut He wants to
climb over thdone who has earned success
THOUGHTS FOR THURSDAY
WHY CANT MEN adopt a liveandlet
live philosophy of life The world offers unlimited
opportunity for all who would pursue
success and it is never necessary to walkover
a neighbor to achieve success
THOUGHTS FOR THURSDAY
A TWIN BROTHER of covetousness is
malice The same germ which causes a person
to covet the possessions of another also
causes him to hate to be full of spite
THOUGHTS FOR THURSDAY
TO BE PITIED is the person who succumbs
to the sin of greed and covetousness
in the same way that another becomes the
victim of alcoholism Although he may already
possess more than he could ever utilize
still his insatiable desire for worldly
possessions drives him on and on until he
becomes the slave instead of the master
A man has known no slavemaster until
he yields completely to his own lusts
Catholic Group Hiis Alcoholism
> newspaper for several years has carried a
if provided by the Paulisr Feature Service a
organization of Washington D C This ma
i usually thought provoking and worthy of the
t takes to read it
Ecause this weeks Paulijf column is particu
y timely we are publishing it in this space It Is
ly because there is already evidence that the
v I problem it becoming greater in Swisher coun
ow that the sale of alcoholic beverages is legal
y ad0imng county It is timely because at least
T ilio man has lost his job as a direct result of
o s legal liquor
Here s the column
With four and a half million alcoholics the
it ted States has the largest alcoholism rate In the
wirld Only 12 per cent of these people however
are found on skid row Eighty eight per cent of our
alcoholics ore hidden sufferers living next door to
yoi in the apartment above you the house down the
reef Or > out of every five and a half of them is a
wiman is it any wonder then this is considered a
sior national health problem
Alcoholism is a triple disease physical mental
ard spiritual The tragedy of alcoholism has baffled
01 > thinking fof over two thousand years because we>
ave ocver treated the alcoholic patient as a whole
V vave treated only onethird of his illness at a
he has re
lapsed again and again
Defeated and despaired of the alcoholic victim
himself with his fellow outcasts only two decades
ago distilled from his own bitter experience a remedy
which finally treats the patient as a whole This is
the way of life prescribed by Alcoholics Anonymous
in its Twelve Suggested Steps of Recovery
To begin the sobered alcoholic must avoid not
the second or tenth but the very first drink one
day at a time If need be For sooner or later if is
the first drink that sets into gear the inevitable
physiological craving for more and more This 24
hour resistance protects him against the physical
third of his illness
Next he must learn to discipline his emotions
and Intellect This implies a whole reeducation of
thinking and emotional reactions in order to treat
the second third of his illness the psychological
side
To do these things he must accept himself in
humility as ho is through what AA calls a personal
inventory of his adequacies and Inadequacies and
he must walk with his hand in the hand of God Thus
ho treats the last third of his illness
If however 200000 alcoholics in the world
have recovered why in America alone are four and
a half million of them still hidden away in trogedy
houned homes
If is because the social stigma attached to the
alcoholic has blinded most people to the full threefold
nature of the disease In fact the saddest offenders
are most often the family even those who
want desperately to do the right thing Although the
alcoholics core illness Is a deep sense of inadequacy
insecurity and selfdepreciation the family s attitudes
toward him or her are often so wrong so
defeating that they perpetuate the very needto
escape which drives the alcoholic to drink
In this age of increasing alcoholism we must
deal with it at one of America s most critical problems
Unlike the cold war cancer and a hundred
other problems it is one which we create right herein
America We can t blame Krushchev inflation or
foreign aid for this onel
No one is born with a desire for alcohol say
the psychologists It is a manmade created desire
The habit is sparked with that first social drink Like
the forbidden tree in the Garden of Eden it excites
the curiosity of the youth Through rigged advertising
it is been made socially acceptable and desirable It
is an economic evil It gnaws af the paychecks of
working people who cannot afford the luxury
We congratulate the Paulist Feature Service for
ending its influence to the cause of sobriety
M O ELLIOTT
All TYPES OF
INSURANCE
Phone WY 5324E Tulia Texas
LISTIN TO
mLnmrndLut
COOPERS
WE SERVICE ANY MAKE
OF TELEVISION
OR APPLIANCE
PHONE WY 53205
BROWN BROS
GARAGE
General Repair
JOHN i WALT
304 N 87 Ave
Tulia Texas
IDEAL
BARBERSHOPMR AND MRS WILLIS WOOD
Phone WY 53114
In Ciowi Building
V
The Living Sctiplum > fack inn hi
For Each A Mastor Plan
BROWSING DOWN
MEMORY LA
5 YEARS AGO
O B Barnes to be inducted into
armed forces Swisher farmers
to vote on Underground Water District
membership Joe Calloway
is feature of Town Hall State
approves widening of South 2nd
street Bom to Mr and Mrs
Jewel Avent a boy R B Dawson
jr attends agricultural school
for bankers at Texas A M
D D Monroe is CC streaker
Cpl Wilbur Sluder of Happy promoted
to that rate Allen Doan
ii guest of AlllsChalmers on all
expense tour of plant Guy Smith
becomes petty officer Jon Ray
Whittcn home for holidays bringing
a friend with him Walter Tierney
of Beaumont senior at NTSC
Mr and Mrs Orvllle Kiker of New
Orleans La recent visitor in home
of their relatives Mr and Mrs Q
B Workman Mrs Mamie Gray
Cochran seriously ill in Hereford
hospital Mr and Mrs John Butler
of Happy have as their guests
last week his sister Betty Butler
and two of her friends Mr and
Mrs Morris Sims and children of
Happy have moved to California
Mrs Elmer Bass of Kress has
surgery at Baylor hospital in Dallas
Mrs Kenneth Hart of Kress
undergoes surgery in Swisher
County hospital Milton R Reid
returns to States
15 YEARS AGO
Sgt Mayo M Duke awarded DFC
in England Shirley H Pitts promoted
to army corporal Raymond
McCoy of Tulia who lost his
right leg in a Jeepbus accident In
North Africa almost two years ago
suffers compound fracture of the
other legnear Plainview and lay
for several hours in a roadside ditch
before he was discovered
Billle J Holland attends 4H club
meet at Chicago guest of Santa Fe
Railway Kirby Musick commissioned
in army infantry Dr J
A Hill of WTSC tells Kiwanians of
post war plans of college Miss
Pauline Ramsey elected club queen
at ChlUicothe Business college in
Missouri Harold M Cox gets
commission and slver wings
Sgt Robert Mahan is killed in Germany
Sgt Lee S Stith home
after 21 months overseas Sgt
Virgil Davis is metal manufacturer
at air depot in England Rain
snow and sleet bring 182 inches
moisture to Swisher Nile O Ted
ford discharged from army and will
make his home in Tulia Dana
Jane is born to Mr and Mrs Willis
Reynolds Ernest Bowers home
from Southwest Pacific
20 YEARS AGO
Fire razes Happy Wheat Growers
elevator The 27500 loss is covered
by insurance Funeral services
held for Clyde N King Swisher
wheat farmer who died in Childress
from injuries received in an Estel
line garage He was working on his
car lying under the automobile
when a jack slipped and his head
was crushed Tulia Hornets battle
Perryton for bidistrict Jackie
Ballenger honored with party on
his seventh birthday Mr and
Mrs J L Crum observe 55th wedding
anniversary Mr and Mrs
DR LYNN McCARTY
OPTOMETRIST
Phone WY 52262
22 N Muxwell
Twlla T oi
il
sfjvS
IllillliUl
I
iitiiiinu
T D Sims announce marriage of
their dauhter Monte to Wilbur C
Minor of Amarillo Miss Louise
Henderson of Kansas City and Joe
Asbury of Omaha Nebr are married
Mr and Mrs Grady Price
and Mr and Mrs F S McCune are
Sunday dinner guests of Mr and
Mrs Woodruff of Kress Services
held Thanksgiving day for J A
Finck 78 who had lived in Swisher
county for 2 years
25 YEARS AGO
Brent Anderson native of Norway
dies at home of his son in Kress
Adolph Anderson Born to Mr
and Mrs O G Staggs a son Billie
Bob Born to Mr and Mrs Howard
Love a girl to Mr and Mrs
Bailey Roper a girl Doris Mr and
Mrs Alford Berner a boy Chester
William Ethyl Marie Anschutz
and Winston Smith on THS senior
class honor roll Hornet season
ends with win over Olton
30 YEARS AGO
On 2nd grade honor roll were J
O Bass Marjorie Cochran John
Ellis Culwell Ada Helen Marrs
Everette Lee Mangum Emery Mudd
Mozelle Ormsby Viola Seale Bernice
Self and R L Stringer
Lee Ward and Lena Wilkerson are
married Henry J Kohls of Nazareth
dies Mrs J L Stallings
dies after fall in which she broke her
hip Tulia relatives attend funeral
in Happy of little Greta OBry
ant daughter of Mr and Mrs Clark
OBryant Mr and Mrs Clarence
Todd guests Thanksgiving day in
the home of her mother Mrs M
F Hendrix in Canyon Niece of
Mrs Maxter of Vigo Park dies
Miss Marie Gardner of Vigo who is
teachin at Friona spends Thanksgiving
at home The J M Tucker
home place was destroyed by
fire at Valley View George Tucker
and his wife who were living there
discovered the fire soon after it
started and worked diligently to put
it out but the house being old and
dry and with a stiff wind blowing
they soon saw they could not save
the house so after getting their
three children in the care and at a
safe distance they managed to save
part of their household goods
35 YEARS AGO
While on her way to Tulia Mrs
Frank Scott accompanied by her
friends in her car collided with
another car driven by Rufus Bennett
of Canyon on the Happy road
Mr Bennetts car turned over and
he was hospitalized at Plainview
The women were slightly injured
and both cars were ready for the
repair shop Born to Mr and
Mrs John Lee Francis a boy J
A Abernathy of Floydada will build
a new flour mill in Tulia soon
Ruby Lee Smith and Joe Adkins
both of Kress are married Little
Mona Darling Townsend daughter
of Mr and Mrs J A Townsend
happened to a serious accident when
the car door was shut on her index
finger on her riht hand almost severing
the end of the finger L D
Townsend accepts position with Les
lieFloyd Elevator at Lockney
TINYS
Welding Blacksmlthlng
128 So 87 Ave
Phone WY 52804
Call The Tulia Herald WY 53535
i
THE TUUA S lhf County HERALD
SBKfc
No Job Too Large or Too Small
For Free Esrimare Call WY 53535
WEDDING INVITATIONS
CALLING CARDS
CUCULARS
ENVELOPES
LETTER HEADS
BUSINESS FORMS
DALTON WOOD in The Shallowatcr Star With
the earlier Democratic primary In Texas next year
interest has picked up sooner in politics I read a
story the other day which said Attorney Gen Will
Wilson Is making noises like a potential candidate
for governor
I already had figured out that Wilson is angling
for something because n few weeks back I received
a long series of stories on Texas boundary disputes
from Wilsons office The series wasnt bad but I
decided not to run It since It had so many references
to Will Wilson in it It was too obviously an attempt
to get Wilson some free publicity
I dont know much about Wilson I did vote for
him a couple of times though and 1 feel sure that
no matter what he Is hed be as good a governor as
Daniel
On the national level Texas Lyndon Johnso has
been working like mad to get the presidential nomination
Id like to see a Texan as president but for
the sake of the nation I hope its not Johnson
If the Democrats run Johnson and the Republicans
run Nixon itll give the voters a choice like choosing
between Death and Pestilence
QUOtAUie QUOTES
BEN EZZELL in The Canadian Record Texas
political candidates who have traditionally waited
for the dogwood to bloom before publicly announcing
their political intentions will have to find some
exceptionally early blooming dogwood next year or
miss the primary boat
Under Texas newlyrevised election laws filing
deadline for party primaries will be February 1
a cool season for dogwood but one which a variety of
candidates may make exceedingly warm in 19C0
Earliest bird in these parts anyhow Is Arthur
Glover of Amarillo who lists his occupation as certified
public accountant and his ambition to succeed
Walter Rogers as congressman from the 18th Congressional
District Mr Glover filed for the Democratic
primary ballot on October 30 which was certainly
being forehanded
We doubt If Candidate Glover needed to be in
such a rush The race fnr Concressman from the
18th district isnt apt to be overcrowded TheHon
orable Walter it seems to us has been doing an exceptionally
conscientous job of representing the people
of his district during the past ten years and we
doubt that the antiRogers contingent will be cither
very long or very strong
Strange things are done in Texas poltics however
and if old Walter turns up with a dozen opponents
next February we hope he doesnt blame us for putting
a hex on him with a bad guess
QUOTABLE QUOTES
HAROLD HUDSON in The Ochiltree County Herald
We must have missed this item in the Amarillo
Dally News but the Tulia Herald carried it John
R Dowd and Joe Jones owners of DowdJones Furniture
Co were found guilty of false advertising
according to the Herald The court found the two
men guilty on two of seven counts with only the
two counts being tried The state alleged the company
advertised merchandise for sale at cost or below
when in reality the prices were above cost
For example their cost was 23995 on Hamilton
dryers when actually their cost was from 210
down to 15285 The second count alleged the defendants
advertised air conditioners for 119 declaring
this price was cost or below A second tag
alleged to be the regular price tag quoted 169 as
the usual selling price Testimony disclosed the firm
paid 9719 for the air conditioners in question
This trial Is of some solace to Perryton merchants
who are tired of hearing and seeing these advertisements
selling stuff at cost or below Any
jackass knows that a business will not stay in bus
iness1 long selling merchandise at cost or below but
this firm apparently convinces a lot of people
Maybe this trial will convince people that there is
such a thing as false advertising
OUOTABIE QUOTES
ERNEST JOINER in The Ralls Banner Before
the language emblazoned in threefoot letters is erased
from the north and west sides of the junior high
school building it would prove profitable to every
Ralls adult to drive by and see for himself a graphic
display of filth and obscenity There is no more
classic example of the resurrection of the most degenerate
expressions in a thousand years of English
gutter language than that placed In flaming red upon
the walls of an educational institution by two eighth
grade students Monday night Not only is it difficult
to realize that any child possesses such a vast repe
toire of obscenity but even more difficult to understand
the attitudes of students and parents over the
affair Many adults approve the project One is
quoted as saying all these words and expressions are
commonplace written and used by children and
adults alike A few I have spoken with admit the
boys shouldnt have done it as It will cost money to
remove the paint To them it is a matter of taxpayers
having to cough up from 200 to 500 to cleanup
the mess Some have actually sided with the
boys As for students themselves the school principal
estimates that 50 of the student body believes
the boys were right In their act Of even greater
concern to me Is the fact that so many girl students
BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY
TULIA FLORAL
MRS OLETA BATES Owner
flowers for all Occatlom
Pertonal Service
Nile WY 52516 Day WY 52111
P O Box X TULIA TEXAS
35 YEARS OF DEPENDABLE
PRESCRIPTION
SERVICE
DIAL WY 53525
CITY DRUG
Guaranty Abstract
CoW
I HUMPHREYS Mgi
13 W BciodSnoy
Tulia Teiai
received an apparent erotic charge from a careful
scanning of the billboard of vuganty Monday morning
I saw them clustered in groups giggling and
laughing as they apparently discussed the merits of
various passages of pollution Perhaps a psychiatrist
or a psychologist can explain those reactions It is
beyond me
OUOTABIE QUOtES
CHARLES DIDWAY In The Post Dispatch We
are not personally acquainted wi h Weldon Callaway
advertising manager of the Brownfiekl News but we
know most of the other fellows there and since they
nro such good fellows wo know Weldon must bo too
elso ho couldnt have worked sldj by sldo with them
for these last few years So were sure Weldon wont
mind us using this piece of his Perfect Newspaper
Never Published which appeared in Sundays News
The newspaper which would entirely please
every reader has never been published
An editor learns to expect complaints about
everything from his usage of a comma to the spelling
of a name Occasionally he hears complaints about
the amount of advertising his paper carries
Perhaps any editor could do a little better Job
of proofreading but even if he wished to there is
nothing he can do about the elimination of advertisingNo newspaper has been able to exist In this
country without the income from advertising Even
If such a paper were possible very few > ooplc would
be interested in subscribing to a newspaper which
did not contain advertising
A study conducted at Northwestern Universitys
school for Journalism makes it clear that housewives
for instance would not tolerate a newspaper devoid
of advertising
A large sample of Chicago housewives wore
asked if they would prefer their newspapers with or
without advertising Newspapers with advertising
were favored by 93 per cent of the women In fact
41 per cent of the women indicated that newspaper
advertising was more useful to them than any other
kind of advertising
In contrast to the high regard for newspaper
advertising 63 per cent of the women said they prefer
radio without advertising Only five per cent of
the housewives indicated they found radio more useful
than other forms of advertising according to the
Northwestern study
So there you have it What editor would wish
to do battle with more than 90 per cent of his female
readership What subscriber would wish to pay
five times the present subscription rate to get a newspaper
without advertising
OUOTABlf ouotr < i
ARCHER FULLINGIM in The Kountze News
Do you remember way back in 1952 and then
later in 1956 when the IkeLikcrS were saying that the
Russians were ignorant and did not have any sense
and that all they knew was what their spies stole
from the United States And there are actually
some people now who believe or profess to believe
that the Russian brains are contained in the heads
of German scientists stolen by the Russians These
are the same geniuses who say well what If Russia
did hit the moon The truth is that Russia has
never had to steal any secrets from us so far ahead
of us have they been But Ike and his Likcrs are
treating the Russian education menace a menace
only because they arc ahead of us Just as Ike did
when he vetoed the bill to provide additional classrooms
for U S colleges Now Kruschchev is over
here and nobody is too happy about it least of all
Ike who has looked glum in comparison to Mr K
As for Mrs K in her dowdy dress1 she stole the show
from Mamie who was dressed fit to kill Even John
Blair an IkeLiker and dyed in the wool Republican
said he really went for Mrs K She looks Just like
a grandmother John said Well we Democrats are
just looking on We take no responsibility for Mr
and Mrs Kruschchevs visit to this country We take
no responsibility for Russias hitting the moon for the
missile superiority of the Soviets But if you want
to know the significance of Russias hitting the moon
with a mlssle you can just put it down that If the
Russians so minded they could fire a mlssle from
Moscow with an atom bomb on it and hit the water
tower in Kountze If they so desired We will let
the Republicans take all the credit for the Soviet
moon shot and while they are taking credit they
can also take credit for Little Rock and the thousand
other Little Rocks in the south But what did you
expect when you voted for Ike Something different
from U S Grant Warren Harding or Herbert Hoover
You should have known that when the Republicans
are in power the South always gets just what its
getting under Ike unshirted hell So in 1960 go ahead
and vote for Nixon or Nelson Rockefeller because
Kennedy is a Roman Catholic or because
Humphrey is a Liberal or because Stevenson has
been beat twice Go ahead and vote for the Republican
again Its your own grave youre digging
WILLARD JONES in The Hamlin Herald One
Qulpster from Anson way was reryming the other day
that when one of these modern women writer had
written that All American men should wear soms
thing to indicate that theyre married he jibed
But lady arent a fiveyearold suit and a harried
look identification enough
DR R L MASSEY
DENTIST
First National Bank Building
Phone WY 53250 Tulia Texai
RCA
SALES SERVICE
CANTRELL
RADIO TELEVISION
111 N Au tln WY 52298
HANSEN INSURANCE AGENCY
Safety Security Service
115 Njrth Maxwell
Phone WY 53318
Tulia Texaj
TEMPLE
HOUSE MOVERS
300 W 24th
Phone CA 4 2483
Plainview Texaj
CESSPOOL TROUBLE
END CESSPOOL TROUBLE WITH
ANAEROBICUL
MONEYBACK GUARANTEEI
YOU MUST BE SATISFIED
ASK FOR IT AT YOUR FAVOMK
TULIA SUPER MARKET
ALSO CONSUMERS SUPPLY HAW
DICIMMt 3 1939
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Baggarly, Herbert Milton. The Tulia Herald (Tulia, Tex), Vol. 50, No. 49, Ed. 1, Thursday, December 3, 1959, newspaper, December 3, 1959; Tulia, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth46117/m1/10/: accessed May 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Swisher County Library.