The Hereford Brand (Hereford, Tex.), Vol. 76, No. 249, Ed. 1 Friday, June 16, 1978 Page: 7 of 12
twelve pages : ill. ; page 21 x 14 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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To
3
Want
NTED
‘Jew for Jesus9 Kidnapped
camp caretaker with unlawful
11-242-tfc
TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY
>
AUSTIN.
l-249-5c
II
ll-237-22p
11-144-tfc
IM
11-54-tfc
8-248-6c
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land needed.
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4
9-248-Sc
ICE
lereford
ons Club
12. LIVESTOCK
CUM CM
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2 PUBLIC NOTICE'* '
SERVICE
17
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:in
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th*
DEMTER
>AGENCY •
U-l-tfe
And bethought
fastcars
wereathrill...
for 590-900 paata Mfor
W «■ 4JO tomr ranO"t
OPEN
Tili
pOfflD
hLDNLYJd
WINKLER
is
Apply in
Restaurant,
199-3546.
8-240-tfc
ch
0
IANO TUNING. $20.00. Way-
e Huff Piano Service. Phone
55-4241. 2707 3rd Ave.,
any on.
Christians. causing President
Carter's sister, Ruth Stapleton,
MARK
HAMILL
who you loved
in“StarWars” |
to do our work."
Chief Justice Joe Greenhill
said the court is now passing on
20 to 25 cases a week plus other
writs and requests.
_ _____airs
USUhlSVIlM
— -I ISM til
tress will do
No Saturday
tn Fox, 317
IES
Kuetten
■aercW
lai
IATES
aantap.
GRANADO ELECTRIC CO.
ELECTRIC CONTRACTOR
. Wiring far electric
ranges-dryers
air conditioners
v Call 364-6102
11-218-tfe
CUSTOM COMBINING
vo combines and trucks. Call
3-7349 or 258-7396.
s ll-245-15p
■' ---------------------------- ......
Hair trims, wash, roll, blows,
perms. Monday. June 19.
Wednesday through Saturday
noon. Nila Chambliss, Magic
Kurt 364-6001.
KID SHOW!
, SATURDAY-SUNDAY MATINEES ONLY>—>
A Lee Mendeteee-MII MtMti PredecHeui
lace For fear Life,
Charlie Brown!
IICK UP Junk cars free.
64-3777.
OPEN
9:15
SHOW 9:45
Hon will not
'or any in-
ti by Nancy.
Food. chain link, industrial and
larbwire fences. QUALITY
INSTRUCTION. Competitive
rices. Contact: Sanders Fenc-
ng Company 806-647-2477
Ihnmitt.
S
HEALTH Try low-fat varieties
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
and briefing cases for the
justices.
Bring this ad and get 10 off any live animal at
THE PET STOP -Sugarland Mall
MfTRO-GOLDWYN MAYER Presents
MARK HAMHl • ANNIE POTTS «'CORVETTE SUMMER'
Written bv HAL BARWOODind MATTHEW ROBBINS-Music by CRAIG SAFAN
Produced by HAL BARWOOO • Directed by MATTHEW ROBBINS
METROCOLOR « PANAHSION $
bVMMAfMs
A Ranaamanca CaMM"*
X
Cherl—M. tchwte LmMuewtoteeeiundBIIIMniwidM
...... *<*• ..............I
■uwn—rmq JCaRw^^WtRyWWUd»aa*wa9tnBi>a*u km ABa^mfog^r ■ *
SHOW 1
AT
1:30
54 37
54
STAR**
"The Texas Supreme Court is
one of the three independent
branches of the government of
this state,” said Associated
Justice Sam Johnson at a
Legislative Budget Board and
the governor's budget office.
"That indenpendence must be
preserved. The judiciary must
remain independent and you
must not intrude upon it other
than to provide things we need
— **
vm rm
MVS MM
■mw ww raw
g
RRt
Jta
•rem Tun
CUSTOM LIVESTOCK ORDER
BUYER. O.G. HUI. Jr. 364-1871
home; 364-0034 answering
service. A life time of
experience handling cattle and
.horses.
12-245-tfc
where he was kept had a
squeaky hinge, he said he
-------1 ._ ft wrttl
'to silence it. and that
hi*
slept, sneaked out and walked
BOBBY GRIEGO
DRAGLINE SERVICE
TAIL WATER PIT CLEANING
LOADER DOZER
Phone 364-2322
Mobile Phrne 375-4741
11-136-tfe
LOCK CASH GRAIN
(A* of 4 ml 6-15-71)
TEXAS CATTLE FEEDERS
Tn* Storr
Mam 3000
Stan 55 JOO to 5U0
Hefois 53 JO to 54D0
LOCAL CASH GRAIN
Coni 2.49
Matt 2.74
tote 3.35
Sojtaa*a5.71
BEEF-TrtawMtarwtt
dtnuNid Stoic 8m( wm
200-2J0 tomr mJ Htofor IM
am 1M2M tow. Al pric**
MtaM aa^MU
CelWCl j*OQ
SsT®Sai*NNntt Saar:
BM to* a* campartoM ranging:
9125-91 JO for 70M00 paanfo. :
Mfor brt yfoM paOa 23 aha •
ta aa cMtotota at I3J0 tor :
500-700 paata
MIOWEST-Tita mb rtau wM •
taRMilW- In Mm
ZJQ-UOfowrMMiOtJMMO
lata wan sfoady at 10100 for
14 paata ani tarn Mi
10M0 for 14-17 pavta HaM
wm75-2J0 tomrat 7710for
14-17 paata and ranging
en for feed
maintenance
a large cattle
excellent
insurance,
haring, and
We are
ing the most
available. If
e or come by
ig, P.O. Box
Located one
mmerfield,
254.
8-245-tfq..
*d
O
£q
ience," he says.
But now, back with messianic
Jewish friends, staying tempor-
arily in the San Francisco area,
and married in a substitute civil
ceremony in Reno, Nev., to
Christine Cox, 24, a Christian
'Tn still Jewish, according
to the God of Israel, the God of
Abraham, Issac and Moses, and
I also believe Jesus is the
messiah of Israel. I'm just as
Jewish as hi* apostles Peter,
Matthew and Paul."
Although abductions and
deprogramming procedures ha-
used agi
Jesus,"
evangelical view of Scripture.
But tensions over their
proseletizing fervor has been
“T
SIM O H
94 M M
*S 22
M
. iso*
W.fW.
KELLY ELECTRIC
Virgil Kelley
Electric Contractors
Residential-Commercial
11 bids & Wiring competitive
i. 364-1345 -Nights 364-1523
or 364-5929
P.O. BOX 80
11-15-tfc
V/POLLYS POINTERS
Polly Cramer
Tips for travellers
By PeUy Cramer
POLLY’S PROBLEM
TOWER’
ANNIE
POTTS
whoyuuH
, never forget
rNEAR
RD
sal samplers „
rk. Must be*,,
years college ~
y in your
k and give
>x 673 PPA,
045.
8-242-106''
-The Commissioners of Deaf
uSmith County will open bids for
a truck for Precinct 2. Bids wUl
also be opened for a tractor for
Precinct 2. The bids will be
opened at 10 AM on June 26,
1978 in the Courthouse.Specifi-
cations may be picked up at 242
E. 3rd in Hereford. The
commissioners reserve the right
to reject any and all bids.
w 2484c
REHABILITATED
SANTA BARBARA, Calif.
(AP) — After a two-month rest
and recuperation, a brown
pelican suffering from a bruised
wing was released back to the
ocean by the staff of the Santa
Barbara Zoological Garden*.
The Impound bird with no
name was “om of many we
keep, treat, and feed until
they're ready to be released,"
said Paula Paxton, the mo's
The son added: "k's very
sad. I'm upset about it. 1 love
my parents very much and I'm
, sure t^ey love me. But it's an
P overprotective love aad they
"He kept telling them not to don't understand.
10-248|5p
ORMAHOf
n alcoholism
counseling,
>e subject of
oholism. call
n. till 12:00.
>.m. Monday
HEREFORD VACUUM h
EWING MACHINE SALES.
ARTS. REPAIR. All makes.
98 Avenue E. Phone 364-7683.
ll-247-22p
OHIO CHABLES |
> work while
illie’s Beauty-
8-248-tfc;
7 .:9
has an open
I and bridge
Applications
the office of"
rk in the
qua! oppor-
tS
EXAS
well trained..,
>r operators.-^
by calling
een 8 a.m.
(9
8-174-tfq,,
• TV* STEREO
RENTALAGENCY
Blak* White RCeler
364-5977
, Open 9 a.m. te 9 p.ai.
Closed Saadays * Holidays
x Gary * Peggy Bette
” 709Semhwie
11-136-tfc
DEAR DR. LAMB - I
think I read in one of your
columns that you stated
most cholesterol problems
come from eating beef and
drinking cow’s milk. I hope
I'm right. Yesterday we had
a dinner of venison. There
was no trace of any fat at all
in the meat. Would it be
better if we used this meat
more"
Recently we obtained a
roast of grass-fed beef and
that meat seemed to have
less fat than regular meats.
I’m inclined to think that
beef fattened in pens like
they do to make them get
fatter is not good for the
health of those who eat it. I
would appreciate your an-
swers on the subject.
DEAR READER - I’m
^iTfoconUin^and tar to. qMrt
as you add the grease,
will be thick like honey.
Thomas Jefferson's
father, Peter, was a civil
engineer of Welsh descent
afraid the cholesterol prob-
lem is a bit more complex
than you have represented
my column as indicating.
Lean beef contains only
about 70 mgs per three-and-
one-half ounces of raw lean
separable meat. Skim milk
which has almost all the fat
removed is quite low in
cholesterol. The trick then is
not to eliminate beef or to
eliminate milk but use the
low-fat products from these.
That's what you're doing
when you use grass-fed beef
and the same applies to
venison. I would agree and
have stated that individuals
who eat such lean meats are
less prone to obesity and the
fatty-cholesterol problems.
Not too many decades ago,
before the heart and stroke
feed sprsying-slley cleaning,
jyder's Lawn * Garden,
M-3356.
DEAR POLLY -1 am going to do some extensive
traveling and hope you can help me with my
wardrobe. I would like to know what kind of fabrics
will not get messy and crumpled looking while
traveling and will look neat and fresh when I get off a
plane. If there is any special care they would need I
would like to hear about that, too. Thank you for any
help you can give tne. — DEBBI
DEAR DEBBI — I have found 1«» percent
polyesters and nykms with a weavedike Jersey
prove moot satisfactory when traveling. They can be
rolled up to take less space In a bag and are light in
weight. Aay wrinkles seem to disappear very
quickly when the garment is spread oof hr l b*. A
friend with whom I have traveled frequently always
uses a wash cloth wrung oat of warm water to go
over aay wrinkles la her clothe* and then hangs
them an a shower rod to dry.
One of the most important things to consider when
planning a travel wardrobe to to be sure M to eater
coordinated so that the least number of shoe* ata
parses, sweater* ata eeat* tn rsqtasd. Plate basic
clothes that can acqaire a different look by chaagiag
occeeoories are Invaluable. — POLLY
DEAR POLLY -1 would like to suggest that the reader
with grease drippings use them to make soap. The
following will make 12 pounds at snow white laundry soap.
I use ( pounds of dean, strained warm grease, one can of
lye, one cup of ammonia, and one-half ctm borax. I strain
my grease into a shortening can as I cook. For the soap I
______o_r— aad **<* Blum loom Im • ftf
IISC * 1MMVMBMMS vvsrvw—w ^.a.. —— ’ -y ~ —- — ~w---
warm water until dissolved and cool. Stir with a wooden
spoon and continue stirrf
FtJItoMly’toe a’^ooden bra wife doth, pow the soap
mixture into box and let stand until hard enough to ctri in
blocks or squares. Store for two or throe weeks before
using and find you have very good laundry soap -
DEAR POLLY -lam. custodian who has the job of
caring for several green plan** in an office. I used an
“deafTtolL^-*0White*rtattoned with.»be army to
Kotos I learned the following to the probtem rf
hard sugar It seems sugar to sprayed down with wrtm for
easier shipment oversea* ata personnel M the cemta*'
sary told us to place such • bag of sugar I. thejresesr
overnight or longer if necessarrlt w,u,bec”nfl“*
This worked to me the two year* I was there. — A
MILITARY WIFE
PILOT SCHOLARSHIP
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Whirly-Girls Dori* Mullen
Scholarship was established in
memory of Dori* Mullen of Jo-
liet, Ill., who was fatally in-
jured in an airplane accident in
19*5. Mr*. Mullen was a mem-
ber of the Whirly-Girls, inter-
national women helicopter pi-
lots’ group, which sponsor* the
scholarship to further th* in-
volvement of women to avia-
tion.
Ncate* warn M ml
taaMWM *t (3jOO for 44
I4.7M5J5 for 5»7OI pawta MB* aM 5175 for I M>*
AMMILLO-OmmM kb l(M
wMi as* coFtarim for Sfoar
BM brfocta >7JMLOI for
500400 poMta HsiforM
was UOO-2H taw at KJ5 for
SK-TOOm"*
POM-TnA mb ifow aOh
Maata MM is Dm Eart OmbL
.. . • — — • qk
Mar
S’
WH . ----
Tatol apen Mtlwrcb* Wwrt-
55 30 HIS SSH
T. _ C3.4S M W IS
MIS 51 W 40« SO*
si * s« w sow ::r
“ ““ WJS MM
M »M MH UM
W MM HIS M»
" ss M n os —
MM MM —
Min Wert. M<
Eventually, he said, he wss ■
r taken by car to * camp to the managed to "grease'
Kenneth Mark Levitt. 25, “I was niqne generally hasn’t been Catskill mounts1** where he
very confused, scared and used against the “Jews for was I ” J *“
depressed...But all the time,
1 knew inside I was right "
As a “Jews U/ Jesus”
member in Massachusetts, he
says he was seized May 18 by moutning. with Jewish leaders
deprogrammers on the eve of keenly critical, as well as some
his scheduled marriage to a
Christian bride, and held in
various places until he escaped to cancel a recent scheduled
June 2. appearance before a messianic
“It was an awful exper- Jewish group on Long Island.
Levitt said that on a visit at
the home of his parents, Mr. AUSTIN, Tex. (AP) -
and Mrs. Albert Levitt, of Members of the Texas Supreme
Newton, Mass., just before his Court let it be known Thursday
planned wedding in a nearby that they do not consider the
Boston suburb, he was seized by court a state agency, except for
several men, bound, a hood put budget purposes,
over his head, and was taken in
a closed van to a boarded-up
attic.”
“They worked on me in
six-hour shifts, interrogating
and badgering me, yelling that budget hearing before the Texas
what I believed was wrong, that
belief in Jesus as the messiah
was unfounded, that it contra-
‘ soap
jainst the “Jews for was kept under guard* but he njght, while
who stress customary began planning bis escape,
treasuring a dime he found as a
means of telephoning police,
MA MM MJ2
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MM W4S MTS MM
MM 41 M NN 41.M
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MM MB MM
2.M1. WKt WM
utarnt WW. “
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UN MM
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f«MI BPM MtaPM WM- HIM
«Storm cellars to build. Call
• 364-7448 after 5 p.m.
! 11-246-lOc
Court Not State Agency
justice's secretary be upgraded
in salary and title to an
administrative assistant.
The central section of the
. w court also is asking for six more
“By the last Wednesday in attorneys to help in researching
July we will have looked at and
in most cases passed on every
case that has been filed with the
Supreme Court by June 1,”
Greenhill said. "That's about as
current as you can get."
The Supreme Court is asking
$3.04 million from all sources
for its operations in the 1980-81
period, compared to the $2.21
million received for 1978-79.
Greenhill said one of their
primary requests was that each
than 1 can
r customers
dee. $4.00 to
I Busy Fullq,
78.
8-180-tfc
AUTHORIZED
IJ APPLIANCE SERVICE
^General Electric. Hotpoint,
I Admiral. Hardwick.
t Fast expert service on all major
;brands.
, Doug Barker, Technician
I TAYUOR'S FVRN. * APPL.
603 Park ave.,Hfd.
Phroe 364-1561.
11-158-tfc
NEW YORK (AP) - After 14' ve been common for members of dieted Judaism,
days of captivity aad pressure to various insular cults ruled by
abandon his beliefs, say* authoritarian figures, the tech-
Edditioas-New Homes-Remodel
" Custom Furniture
h Caston Cabinet* f
Raised Panel Door*
Remodel Old Cabinet*
7 Entry ata Passage Dooes
HEREFORD CABINET *
GENERAL CONTRACTORS
235 Avenue J
Hereford, Texas 79045
i Gilmore 364-4200
■st Gilmore 364-2351.
11-214-tfc
diseases became epidemic
in our society, most of the
beef that people ate was
grass-fed beef. It's usually
tougher and has a slightly
different flavor which turns
some people off. However, M
can be boiled or roasterLto
tenderness if a person
wishes to do so....
You can accomplish part
of the same thing at the
grocery store by buying the
leanest cuts and trimming
away ail of the extra fat
before the meat is cooked
and then preparing it with-
out adding fats.
To give you more informa-
tion about this I am sending
you The Health Letter num-
ber 8-12, Red Meats: Good
and Bad. It will give you
some good guidelines on how
to choose meats and still
have a relatively low-fat diet
of the type which we believe
helps prevent fatty-choles-
terol blockage of arteries.
Others who want this issue
can send 50 cents with a
long, stamped, self-ad-
dressed envelope for it to me
in care of this newspaper,
P.O. Box 1551, Radio City
Station, New York, NY
10019.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I am
really frightened and I hope
you can help me. I am
almost 15 years old. Almost
ail of my friends have
started menstruation. I
haven't I’m worried that
there's really something
wrong with me. I'm pretty
old not to have started by
now. What should I do or is it
all right to start at this age?
Could you tell me what is the
normal age for girls to start
menstruating? I know this is
a delicate subject but it is
one that needs some atten-
tion. Please help us.
DEAR READER - Don't
worry about it. You’ll proba-
bly have to cope with this
regular event soon enough.
The usual onset of menstrua-
tion is between the ages of 10
and 15, although normal
girls have been known to be
delayed as late as 19 and 20
year* of age.
If you have no other ap-
parent medical problems, I
rixuld think you wouldn’t
need to concern yourself
about checking into this until
you are at least IB. Even
then it may still be all right
in your case and you may
merely be one of the girls
who start later. Everybody
doesn't do everything at the
same time and maybe that’s
justasweU.
j::
mi: “■
HM - -
[>n to clean
nee a wcdLv-Jz
6 p.m. w
8-247-trc^|
May 247 2 47*2.44 244'<
M 2.47 IM 246 2.4M5
ww
Ttaai opta intanf Wta 1UH1
5* frem Ttm
oan
MN Mm rtMtorv
art ap Brtfawmrtatate J4
1J4 Mtfw at 53N for S-l®
patai taM art tofoNt
54J0MJ0 for 12-14 pMta
GRAIN FUTURES
CNKA6O <AF) - Farttata
ffevrMoy m me ChXMrt trttart M
Opta Mv Ohm CM
4VNCAT Ji.
MM taM rtNton par foa. ***
111* >14* IM* 1I|M
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2 27MJ21 IN
IN IM
Ml 111*
in* noretora txano-rnaay, Jtm* is, i«/a-r*f* i
EEEEGEEW
Revenue Sharing Proposed Use
Budget for 10th Entitlement
Period October 1. 1978 to
September 30. 1979
Public Transportation $125,000.
Health Services 3,000.
Law and County Library 7,000.
Museum 5,000.
General Government 66,765.
$206,765
Final hearings on the budget
will be held on June 26. 1978 at
the Courti,ou*e in Deaf Smith
County. 248-6c
CK*
M U>
ask* cam*
au cam m ca-
se»
SI U BJ“
m i, ii ri
tin
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MCS 15“
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a 137*
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De. i l.* ■» i.4M« 1.
Mm 151* 154* I St* 154*
^ CATTLE FUTURES
CHICAGO (AM> - FufoXM
TtartaM •»»
UtaNft
MM
OflB I
Jta
MtM: 37441. W«rt. i
Brtta mrtatkl Wrtrt M.Ht.
♦rom lutv
FKtMA CAmi
«2AM ---
a
M
Mw
7ta
mm
Tk
INI
r ___ hart me," young Levitt said,
imprisonment. A* for the others Effort* to reach the parents for
involved, he said. “I hadn’t their comments were unavaB-
aeen aay of them before." He ing.
guards said hi* parent* had tried to
“ 1 break up his engagement to
10 mile* until he found a bouse Christine and when he was
where the occupants let him call seized, hi* father had been
since his wallet had been taken police at Phil’.piburg, N.Y.
from him.
Since the door of the cabin He said they charged the
ismiw
row >xs
3?
51 27
321
in
i:
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tjjm Yun
MM M.; AMNFk — —
Jta 2» 154* 1>I4*
. w w w W 257* 1W
72M73J0 for 17-24 paota E
• ••••••••••••••••e*e***** - • *♦*****•••••*
I. a, ami * Cmm 6mm*m
For further information about hedging or
commodity trading, call or visit our office*
at 145 W. 3rd, Hereford, Pho. 3644971.
STEVE A DAN McWHORTER
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Sims, Paul. The Hereford Brand (Hereford, Tex.), Vol. 76, No. 249, Ed. 1 Friday, June 16, 1978, newspaper, June 16, 1978; Hereford, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1348165/m1/7/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Deaf Smith County Library.