The Canadian Record (Canadian, Tex.), Vol. 88, No. 28, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 14, 1977 Page: 4 of 28
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CANADIAN. HEMPHILL CO.. TEXAS
THURSDAY 14 JULY 1977
At Memorial Home
Orville Lange
^ Betty Hill sings for
first recordings
Orville Lange is one of the newer members
of the staff at the Edward Abraham
Memorial Home, and a first-timer in one
respect: He is the first man to hold a job as
Licensed Vocational Nurse at the Memorial
Home.
Lange is employed as an LVN in charge of
the afternoon shift.
A native of Mason, he grew up in Llano,
where he graduated from high school. He
attended Draughon's Business College in San
Antonio.
Orville entered the United States Navy in
1956, and served for four years at Naval
bases in Key West, Okinawa, the Philippines,
Japan and Hawaii
He entered the nursing field in 1967 at
Frederiksburg, and took his LVN training at
the Hill County Memorial Hospital in
1972.
Orville and his wife, Dominga, have nine
children ranging in age from one to 18 years.
Six are still living at home.
Dominga also works at the Abraham
Memorial Home as a nurses' aide.
The Langes were interested in coming to
Canadian because they have a married
daughter, Mary Jane Glover, already living
here. Orville has worked in nursing homes in
Fredericksburg and Llano, and has done
private nursing duty in Amarillo.
Orville and Dominga have worked in
nursing home together for eight years.
The Lange; have found Canadian a friendly
community., 'the friendliest town" they have
ever found, they tell friends.
Orville's acceptance as a member of the
nursing staff here came easily. After the first
surprise of having a man on duty as a charge
©
ORVILLE LANGE
nurse, the residents of the Home have
welcomed Lange as a member of the staff and
as a friend.
A
CANADIAN
ROTARY CLUB
REGULAR MEETING
TUESDAY NOON
BEEF COUNTRY
RESTAURANT
All membra and
visiting Rotarlans
are urged to attend
J
Mathers
Drag lin« and
Bulldoxwr Strrice
RANCH Ik OILFIELD
DIRTWORK
Call Daytime 323-6617
or 323-5631
Evenings: Jim Lay.
Operator. 323-6523
ABRAHAM MEMORIAL HOME
CANADIAN. TEXAS
FOR PERSONALIZED NURSING
AND
CONVALESCENT CARE
Appro^dior Mucoid Ut.in PrWat.cmd-ml-pri**.
and ul rooms
Varloty o! Activities 24 Hour Nursing Cars
Professionally planned diets
ROOMS NOW AVAILABLE
Starting at $1100 par dor
008 Birch Call 000/323-6453
Betty Hill, well-known
Spearman singer (and a former
resident of Canadian) has just
released her first record.
Betty (Mrs. Vancil Hill)
recently signed a five-year
contract with the Caprice
Recording Company of Nash-
ville, and her first recordings,
numbers titled "West Virginia
Style" and "I Can't Come to
Austin", are now on the juke
boxes and being aired over area
radio stations.
Mrs. Hill is a beautician in
Spearman when she's not
singing. She attended schools in
Canadian, Perryton and Spear-
man, began singing as a child
over Radio KEYE in Perryton
and appeared on many amateur
programs including Ted Mack
and Al Rodgers.
The former Betty Randall,
she is married to Vancil Hill of
Spearman, and has two
children. Norman and Wendy.
Her parents are Mr. and Mrs.
Willis Randall of Spearman,
and she has sisters Marilyn
Scroggs, June Spencer, Phyllis
V
BETTY HILL
Schell and Cecelia Randall, il
of the Spearman area.
It's a bunch of hooey,
snorts Judge W. Pond
The hBowif aews item is
repriated ia its entirety frem
the Sanday edition al The
Canyon News. The proMini it
reviews apply alaa fao Hemphfl
Ceanty, aad the lanclariea el
Ceaaty Jadge Waady Pead...
lenoKjrly al Raberts Ceanty aad
weO-kaewa ia there parts...wffl
he eehaed here aa wel.
The legislative session al-
ways produces them, but that
doesn't make them any easier
for local officials to swallow.
They're the little legislative
items, passed by Texas
Senators and Representatives
biennially, which officials knew
nothing about but which pop up
after the session to surprise
them.
Randall County commis-
sioners got wind of two such
laws last week, laws they
hadn't followed and hadn't
anticipated, but laws which will
have an impact on county
finances for years to come.
Justice of the Peace W.A.
$10-025
AWmIc
Efficiency
Aptsxmd
Rooms
Bills Paid
Furnished
Color TV
Call 652-4174 Collect
Tom Detrlxhe. Hlggins
"Bill" Wilson told commission-
ers about one, which he aid
will cost between $1600 ud
$2000 additionally per year for
operation of his office.
And Mrs. Audrey Bruse,
county tax collector, told them
of the other one, a law which
she couldn't even put a price
tag on.
Wilson said that under a new
law he just recently learned of
his office and that of Justice of
the Peace W.W. Hancock must
begin notifying all persons
fined by his office of their fines
by certified letter, return
receipt requested.
The cost, he said, will be
between 90 cents and $1 pw
letter, and he said he sends
about 150 per month.
The law went into effect June
16, Wilson said, but he said he
"can't understand why."
Commissioners, during *
budget discussion session,
added $2000 to Wilson's budget
to cover the cost of
mailings.
But they didn't let
without comment a report from
Mrs. Bruse about a new law0D
motor vehicle registration.
The law requires that mo
vehicles beginning this year
registered according to
digit on the license plate o
vehicle. If the 'J
example, the renew.! wJM
due in September rath jw;
Mr.. Bruse t«W
sioners it is likely s®"1® ,wjce
will have to be registered ^
due to the law ')eC8U ^
registration in February
M"That's a bunch of bjtf
responded County
Woody Pond.
vehicle®
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Ezzell, Ben. The Canadian Record (Canadian, Tex.), Vol. 88, No. 28, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 14, 1977, newspaper, July 14, 1977; Canadian, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth136496/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Hemphill County Library.