Hudspeth County Herald and Dell Valley Review (Dell City, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 31, Ed. 1 Friday, April 4, 1969 Page: 4 of 6
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9
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YOUTH
LEWIS LLEWELLYN
Church Changing
9
Too Much?
DON'T FORGET THE
AMBULANCE FUND!
Yield: 6 servings
9
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DELL CITY, TEXAS 79837
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J5-00
The Dell V Iley Chamber of Commerce's Annual Talent Show
will be held Saturday, April 12, 7:00 P. M., at the Community
Building.
Everyone is urged to participate. First Prize: $15.00; Second
Prize, $10. 00; Third Prize, $5.00.
Burritos and cold drinks will be sold.
1 ni
2
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2
Dell Valley. Mrs. Jack Oli-
ver, "Aunt Dot" to her many
Dell City friends, sent a $5.00
donation to the ambulance
fund.
Don't you think when some-
one so far away can remember
us here in Dell Valley, that we
should all remember to donate
ourselves.
Have you donated to the am-
bulance fund? Please do so
today.
£'
PAGE 4, HUDSPETH COUNTY HERALD-Dell Valley Review, APRIL 4, 1969
---------------------------------------------- FAITH IN OUR
2 cups cooked rice
1 cup (6-7 oz. can) tuna,
drained and flaked
'A cup chopped parsley
1 cup KELLOGG’S
SPECIAL K‘® cereal
1 teaspoon regular marga-
rine or butter, melted
Economize With Style
iSH •WSMfc ^2^11
Is the church changing too
much, too fast?
A recent survey conducted by
the Ladies’ Home Journal, in
which 1,000 women were asked
about their attitudes toward the
church, contains some interest-
ing information and raises some
disturbing questions.
Some women objected to the
social-action programs of their
churches.
“Churches are interfering
more than is necessary in civil
rights and other social problems,
endorsing strikes, parades, and
. disorders,” said one.
Others are dissatisfied with
the kind of sermons they are
hearing. “Sunday sermons don’t
penetrate my life,” was the re-
sponse of a young mother. “They
always slide around issues of
right and wrong."
Wrong Program?
In the Journal article, written
by Kenneth L. Woodward, the
replies of women across the
country paint a picture of dis-
satisfaction with the message
and the methods of some of the.
churches today.
Are these women justified in
feeling as they do?
Have some churches left the
program established by the
Founder of the church, to follow
a different course?
Certain church leaders have
gone so far as to redefine the
evangelistic mission of the
church, stating that the goal
of the church in evangelism now
is not just to reach individuals
and bring them to acknowledge
Christ as Lord of their lives, but
rather to work to bring about
changes in the entire society.
To make cheese sauce: melt the 3 tablespoons margarine in
saucepan over low heat: stir in flour. Add milk gradually,
stirring until smooth. Increase heat to medium and cook until
bubbly and thickened, stirring constantly. Add salt, paprika
and cheese, stirring until cheese is melted.
In buttered individual ramekins or a I’/z quart casserole,
arrange layers of rice, tuna, parsley and cheese sauce, ending
with sauce. Measure Special K, then crush to (6 cup; combine
with the 1 teaspoon margarine. Sprinkle over tuna mixture.
Bake in hot oven (425° F.) about 15 minutes or until
thoroughly heated. Serve immediately.
'®> Kellogg Company.
iii'.a )
This may sound like a better
plan, for certainly there are
changes that need to be made
in our society.
But is it God’s way?
Is it the task which the Lord
set for the church?
There were great social prob-
lems when Jesus walked among
men. What was His approach to
them?
Did He favor political action
to right these wrongs? Did he
organize marches, protests, dem-
onstrations, and sit-ins?
Never did the Lord participate
in political action to accomplish
His objectives. His objectives
could not be achieved by these
means.
The Lord’s Message
His message was always to
the individual, "Follow Me.”
His final command to His
disciples was, “Go ye into all
the world and preach the Gospel.
He that believeth and is baptized
shall be saved.”
This is the message that the
church has to proclaim. This is
the work that Christ expects His
church to do.
Actually, this is the best way
to bring about changes in the
society. When men are changed,
the society in which they live
is changed automatically. This
happened in the time of the
early church.
But the primary objective of
Christ and those who truly fol-
low Him is to lead people indi-
vidually to become Christians—
“sons of God and joint-heirs with
Christ.”
Anything other than this is
no satisfactory substitute.
TRUCKS.
C L MACHINERY CO.
TBACTORS 4k IMPLEMENT!
Dell City —
L V
... -__
J®
Need to stretch your food dollars? Then resolve to do it
with style. Economizing on family meals need not mean plain,
monotonous fare. Tuna Rice Casserole, for example, is an
easy-to-maike, penny saving main dish to suit the fussiest
appetite. ’ This nutritious meal-in-one dish, needing only a salad
accompa'niment, can be baked in individual ramekins or in a
family 5 style casserole. Special K cereal, slightly crushed,
crisply t.ops the creamy rice, tuna and cheese layers.
Tuna Rice Casserole
3 tiab Jespoons regular
n aargarine or butter
3 ta .blespoons regular
all-purpose flour
<■ cups milk
teaspoon salt
teaspoon paprika
cups grated Cheddar cheese
A new type of youth group is
roaming the streets of Ann Ar-
bor, Michigan. It calls itself
the Gillnet Gang. Its members
describe themselves as "guer-
illas for good. " As the Altoona,
Pennsylvania, Mirror observes, "
... the Gillnets roam Ann Ar-
bor streets at night doing some
rather odd things for a youth
gang. On one recent night they
painted a bridge which had
been covered with obscenities.
On another, they boarded up an
abandoned house, which had
been dangerous but popular ren-
dezvous for neighborhood chil-
dren. They made a number of
adults ashamed of themselves
by filling downtown planters,
which had remained barren of
flowers because of a squabble
over which group was responsi-
ble for them. "
An assistant professor at the
University of Michigan is fre-
quently consulted by the gang
for advice. He concedes that
some of their activities are
"extralegal. " To this, the
Mirror concludes, "Some will
undoubtedly say any extralegal
approach smacks of the vigi-
lantes of old. But who will ar-
bue that the Gillnets are not
providing a community service
no one else seems capable of
giving?" Perhaps there's ground
for retaining a little faith in
humanity after all._________
Planting stock is produced at
around 5 cents each for fingerling
size. Every care is taken to produce
quality channel cats. Any runts or
mud cats are tossed aside.
Through the cooperative effort a
processing plant will be built to pro-
vide for the proper care of the fish
before reaching the market. This
also will make it possible for ready
markets to be established in larger
metropolitan centers. ,
These men also are working with
other government agencies, such as
the U.S. Soil Conservation Service
and the Farmer’s Cooperative Service
of Washington.
Another effort is made to produce
a fish that will not have the usual
“fishy” smell. This the housewives
will greatly appreciate. •
So, the famous catfish and hush
puppy dinners soon may become as
popular as fried chicken or broilers,
thanks to the men in this cooperative
East Texas movement; And who
knows, some of the ponds may be
opened to pole and line fishermen,
who can catch their own fish as they
desire.
As the program develops in East
Texas, like the broiler industry, it
probably will spread to other parts
of the state. Senator Charles Wilson
of Lufkin is president of the East
Texas Economic Development Dis-
trict, which is promoting the program.
P. O BOX 236 ’
---
A new agricultural industry has
been started in East Texas among
the tall pines. This time it is not
timber cutting, but catfish production.
For the last several years attempts
have been made to produce “cultured
catfish” but usually they were on the
part of an individual with insufficient
capital, or some Jandowner who just
wanted to experiment. Now it is a
different story.
More than 150 East Texas farmers
have entered into a cooperative pro-
gram which will supplement cotton,
grain and rice income. They have
formed the Tri-County Catfish Co-op,
for Jasper, Tyler and Newton coun-
ties. They have already prepared a
feasibility study. Through the Deep
East Texas Development Assn., they
are asking for federal assistance in
getting a successful program under
way.
Recently one of the original groups
harvested more than 5000 catfish
from a lake 50-feet wide and 900-feet
long. Those that weighed more than
1T4 pounds were marketed and the
smaller fish distributeed to other
lakes. There are 21 lakes already on
the Stringer farm near Kirbyville.
These catfish sell for around 60
cents per pound liveweight, which
i puts them on a more profitable basis
than poultry. Men behind the East
Texas movement feel they now have
a project that will surpass the gi-
gantic East Texas broiler industry.
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Cooper, Violet; Brown, Julia & Gilmore, Joyce. Hudspeth County Herald and Dell Valley Review (Dell City, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 31, Ed. 1 Friday, April 4, 1969, newspaper, April 4, 1969; Dell City, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1235080/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .