The Tulia Herald (Tulia, Tex), Vol. 49, No. 47, Ed. 1, Thursday, November 24, 1955 Page: 1
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Tocker Foundation Grant and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Swisher County Library.
Extracted Text
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JOINER that Ralls fire
ERNEST
hall turns from the crooked
politicians to humor in his latest
column
Here are some of his observations
Two Cadillac drivers drew up a
longsldo each other at a stop signal
Hollo stupid one called to the
other which quest < n did you
miss
How can you expect > u > uung
slcrs to get an education at sihonl
when thoy cant find a A riark
their cars
Hometown A plat i when ivery
bodyvonders how sou not far as
you have
TOWN TOPICS
LSO SUE IN the Ralls Banner
where a Lubbock highway
patrol told the Ralls Rotary club
that safe driving is nothing more
than applied Christianity
Practically every traffic accident
can be blamed on either an outright
violation of the law or else n vio
lation of the Golden Rule
TOWN TOPICS
E READ more crackpot let
ters in the Amarillo Daily
News and Lubbock Morning Avalanche
than in all the oth < r papers
we read put together
Almost everyday some farmer is j
lamenting the fact that it Is immoral
to accept subsidies which
must be paid for by other groups
such ns big business The thing is
all informed people know that in accepting
socalled subsidies the
farmer is not accepting anything
that for years has not been given
to other segments of our economy
including big business
Why do these crackpots not know
this
Perhaps it is because ihey don tread
the right papers Perhaps the
biased onesided coverage of the
facts by many daily papers is responsible
for this abysmal ignorance
of the facts I
ITER THIS weeks editorial j
had been printed we had an j
other thought on the subject In
mentioning the long list of rules i
and regulations covering the motorist
who drives on a highway the
bought occurs that practically none i
of these regulations existed even 50
vears ago
Whv
Because there was no need for <
them Modern technology the inven j
hon of the automobile the increase
of travel and the number and speed
of automobiles all have combined
t create government regulation j
that was not necessary in 1900 when
people traveled by horse and buggy
on unpaved country roads
Changing times create needs
which in the past did not exist
TOWN TOPICS
INSTANCE the agricultural
FOR picture has changed through
tun vnv Time was when there was
aivavs ready market for nearly
tvLivthiig the farmer produced It
wis aliost impossible for him to
overproduce Back in those days
it often wa said that the farmer
independent person on
w as the most
earth because he could raise his
living at home
because it
simple
rami in was
ilJnt require a huge investment
sufficient in
a mule and a plow were
that a farmer
some cases It was true
with a minimum of
er could get by
cash because he could raise most
everything he needed
TOW TOPICS
TODAYS farming is differ
BUT ent A large outlay of cash
required Butane for irrigation
motors must be pa for in cash
and the price of i ane and wel
motors is not influenced in the least
of maize or cotton i
hv the price
cant make his liv
A farmer just
ing at home any more Too many
things demand cash
Farming today must be governed
bv sound business principles And
sensible way to approach
the most
this problem is through controlled
production limiting production to
actual needs and at the same time
conserving both water and soil
controlled production
wasnt necessary in 1800 doesnt
mean that it isnt necessary in IOjj
Because CO mph speed limit wasn t
necessary in 1900 likewise does not
mean that it is not necessary in
1955
TOWN TOPICS
HERE ARE some writers and
farm spokesmen today who
to go back to the 1900
want us
method of farming Thoy tell us that
the farmer should return to the way
he farmed several generations ago
Because he could plant what he
pleased in clays gone by he should
be allowed to do so today they tell
us The government should turn
everything loose they tell us in
discussing controlled production and
price supports
But they want to confine this
progrcss to the farm Nothing is
said about returning industry to
1900 methods
Whether or not we like the day in
which we live we must adjust ourselves
to it Maybe some of us liked
farming better in 1900 than in 1955
but wo just cant turn back the
clock Wo must meet the challenge
of today
TOWN TOPICS
NE PRINCIPLE of the Demo
cratic party has been its
willingness to change with the times
It must undergo a constant change
as it adapts itself to changing times
One weakness of Republicanism
has been its proncness to advocate
See TOWN TOPICS Page 8
Almd Quartet T Picsy
i i mi ll i < > ii i V > < iation will pi i cut the
Qiuitet Mondav ninlit ii H o c lock in the auditorium of the
igm liffe
Ml Meet
Joe Barnhill Tulia Junior high
school coach who entered the meet
and represented himself was the
second annual West Texas AAU
weight lifting and odds lifting contests
outstanding athlete The
meet was held Sunday afternoon
at the Amarillo Youth Center
Barnhill captured three first place
trophies including the 181 pound
class weight lifting 148181 pound
odds lifting division and was the
outstanding Olympic weight lifter
However Barnhill had a battle for
the 181pound weight lifting title
Me was tied by Sherm Manning of
Lubbock each hoisting CSS pounds
The officials then weighed the two
athletes and Barnhill scaled only 171
pounds while Manning hit 174
pounds The rules call for the lighter
athlete to become the winner in case
of a tie
The judges for the successful meet
were Rip Rogers Roy Heff and Luis
Martinez three outstanding professional
w rentiers
Tulia faculty members are rehearsing
Old Doc which will be
presented Dec 3 and 5 hy the
Tulia Classroom Teachers AssociationAlnd
First
Methodic iluirih according to r Fied V Richards piesident of
the lsO itioil I
The quartet is composed of Seymour
Wakschal violin Donald Hopkins
violin Arnold Wagnes viola
and Jorge Sicrc cello
The four young men of the quartet
former students of the Juilliard
School of Music are under contract i
with National Concert Artists Cor j
poration for 195057 season and will i
make their Town Hall debut in New I
York City next year
They have been asked to play a j
concert in Washington D C dur j
ing the coming concert season for J
the Pan American Union plus a
The Presbyterian Womens as
day from 5 p m to 10 pm In the
basement of the Presbyterian
church They have invited the public
to do its Christmas shopping
at the bazaar AH proceeds will
go to the building fund
Booths will feature many homemade
gifts as well as food items
The apron booth is under the dir
pies cakes cookies candies and nephews
jellies These will be specialties of i
K R H Bralv is directng the various church members
The will be The handiwork booth will include
The Hornets took an early lead
when Jeff Carlile carried the mail
over for paydirt George Washington
kicked the extra point to make it
70 in favor of Tulia
In the early part of the second
quarter Carlile scored again from
three yards out Washington kicked
the extra point to make it 110
Muleshoe scored on a 15yard run
to make it 14G The PT was no
Tenure Ss Factor In
High Plains farmers in 1952 were
in a position to weigh the economics
of stripping versus handharvesting
and to select the method that would
yield the highest return The early
killing frost made machineharvest
practical Their decision was neither
to handharvest their entire crop nor
to harvest it all by machine
Instead says a study just rcle rd
by the Texas Agricultural Experiment
Station most farmers chose
to first go over their good acreage
by hand and then complete the harvest
by machine Low yielding acre
ages were stripped by machine the
first time over
Tenancy reported W G Adkins
and W II Meter appeared in
Instil the 1951 and 52 surveys as an
The Holla
a page iti in
ournalistii
l > r
sfr
Dallas Toxrs
BUT WHAT OF THE FUTURE
Farm Life Made Easier During Past 15 Years
Hit lOir itrrii iiliuril utiMh recorded t total of 2r2 nlo farm
111 l < xa Jlie total number rlt < trificd lat November tood at
2bi 210 fr i percentage total of 1 By < ontrat in FMO only 22 tit
ii nt of the farms reporting were electrified by IT the number
1 I jumped to 2f > 0371 farm or 70 j percent
In 1910 only 170 percent of a
firms in the state reporting had
tr Iphoncs During the next 10 years
th percentage rose to 239 percent
but from 195051 the percentage
i Mpi d to 3S percent
summary of the preliminary
r ports from the 1151 C msir of
VOL 49 NO 47
Agriculture covering Texas also
show that rural residents have
equipped their farms and homes
with many electrical appliances for
making life m the country more en
jntble and also have used electric
ity to s labor and increase
E
uDiicaiion wins s
bock Journalism Meet
lull High school newspaper which is published
I ilia Herald won first prize in the Texas Tech
it In Id Saturday on the campi s of the Lub
Funeral services for W E Jo
well 87 one of Swisher countys
earliest pioneers were held Saturday
morning at the First Baptist
church with the pastor the Rev
W Neil Record officiating Burial
in Rose Ilill cemetery was directed
by Wallace Funeral Home
Ixx k coIIccti
i Gracelyn Hansen is editor of the
Z Tulia publication and Mrs 1 W
Adams is sponsor
The Texico Wolverines Tale and
the Paducah West Wind received
honorable mnion
About GOO persons attended the
luncheon in the ballroom of Texas
Techs Student Union at noon as
1 a part of the activities Dr William
E Hall director of pablic information
at Tech was master of cere
monies and an entertainment pro
Mr Jowell was born Sept 11 gram included a baton twirling ex
1868 in Palo Pinto countv He died at1 hibition by Bennie Dunn a dance
is home of Tulia late Thurs by JeanElliott and KayAtkinsand
concert in Havana CubT On Ma rch I west
> He had been in failing health thee songs by the Kappa Sigma
20 and 30 they will appear with the
for several > ears manmba band Adrain Vaughn as
Cincinnati Svmnhonv I
1 He came t0 the plains first in sistant director of public information
The concert i own to all Town
HilI members 11887 helping a cousin George Jo at Tech announced the winners of
school for
well drive 867 head of cattle up to j high competition news
this country for grass They left the papers and individuals
cattle at Sunflower Draw and re1 There were 232 students and teach
turned to Palo Pinto county He went ers at journalism day including del
1 with his family to Oregon where egations from Lefors Pampa Shall
they reniained for several years re owater Floydada Dalhart Morton
turning to Swisher in the spring of Estelline Clnvis Tulia Big Spring
1890 The father J C Jowell filed Muleshoe Dumas Tom S Lubbock
on land two miles from the land Monterey of Lubbock Hereford
I that Will Jowell later filed on and i Palo Duro of Amarillo New Deal
i lived for the remainder of his life Texto Slaton Plains Meadow Am
When he first came to the Plains herst Eastern New Mexico univer
he spent the night at the Parish sity and Hobbs
home The only fence they saw was Attending from Tulia were Rutliie
sociation is having a bazaar Mon I one Parish had erected The Parish Massey Delia Murrcll Diane Mc
and J H Settle families were the Donald PatNuzum Jack Flippo
only people the Jowells saw at theWayne Porter Billy Lankford Mrs
time Henry Settle later become Adams and Mrs L E McDonald
Jowells brotherinlaw The first
Christmas celebration in Swtsher
1 county was held in the Parish dugout
A Christmas tree was brought j
I from the canyons i
Survivors include one brother M i
ection of Mrs J W Miller and will i b Jowell of Edmondson two siss
display a large variety ters Mrs Ollie Settle Tucson Ari1
The foods booth Mrs J D Harris 1 and Mrs Tennie Scott Gar
prodeion play present j
d M pm in the junior high Plllow casos tea towols stuffed toys TO JUCICje KntTieS FOI
schov auUuormm
Characters include Dr John Hillary
portrayed by Gorden Gatewood
Dr Robert Hillary Joe Bob Barn
hill Pa Brown Kermit Mitchell
Ma Brown Mrs Gorden Gatewood
Margaret Burrows Gloria Iiarman
Dick Burns Travis LaDuke
Janet Martin Mrs Helen LaDuke
Mr Hepple Douglas Burrous Dr
Edmond Brand O V Barker Helen
Brand Mrs Nell Martin Mary
Selby Charlotte Love Mrs Rossi
Mrs W L Walker Mrs Cronin
Wanda Young Mrs Mellon Mrs
Beulah McGlaun Lois Warner Mrs
Jeanette Love
Price range from 25c to 75c for
general admission Reserved seats
are 1
Bedrooms Are Needed
During Pony Sale
The winter Shetland Pony sale
set for Monday and Tuesday by Mr
and Mrs Leonard Smith and Mr and
Mrs Norman Btirk is expected to
bring hundreds of outoftown pony
fanciers to Tulia Sponsors of the
sale are again asking Tulians to
open up their homes to the visitors
Persons willing to rent a bedroom
to responsible persons are requested
to phone 53755
Mrs Edna Hall
Accepts Snyder
Hospital Position
Mrs Edna C Hall superintendent
of nurses at Swisher County hospital
has resigned her position to accept
a similar position in the 47bed Bat
tenfieldJones hospital at Snyder
She moved to Snyder last week
Judge SMectde Griffin
doll clothes potted plants and oth c j r Js
rreedoms tOUndaiiOn
er items Mrs Frank Henry Cullum
is chairman of this booth Judge Meade I Griflin member
Another booth will feature a book of the State Supreme Court has
display with books for all members been invited to be a member of the
of the family Mrs E B Cosby will j Awards Jury for the 1955 awards
be in charge j program of Freedoms Foundation of
The white elephant booth Mrs Valley Forge PaN
H Baldwin chairman will fea This will consist of reading and
ture unused items from homes that grading various speeches magazine
may be of use to someone else articles books and other published
Mrs Ted Sponholtz and her helpers material put out during the last year
will have a fishing pond that will for the purpose of determining who
yield many surprises for young and should receive special awards
old Chairman of the Awards Jury will
From the kitchen Mrs Norman be the Chancellor of the University
Holcomb will be in charge of serviof California at Los Angeles Other
ing donuts cookies coffee and cold I judges will include state judges
drinks as the patrons shop The wo1 chairmen of various patriotic organ
men of the church have been pre izations and service clubs
paring their home made gifts for j Judge Griffin formerly of Tulia
many months and invite the public is the son of Mrs W F Griffin
to patronie them
Tulia
Game
32 N Briscoe
rlornets Take Final
ess
By HILL NKKLEY
Tulia Hornets picked up their initial win of the season by defeating
Muleshoe 1H13 before a small homecoming crowd at Mule
shoc Friday night It was the last game of the season for both teams
Tulia lias a 19 season mark Muleshoe finished the season with a
010 season standing I
good
Washington caught a long pass
from Wayne Potter that covered 55
yards for a Tulia touchdown Washington
converted to make it 210
Billy Chandler bucked over from
the 1yard line early in the third
quarter to give Tulia a 276 lead
Muleshoe came right back to
obstacle to the use of mechanized
harvesting Landlords object to ma
chineharvesting on the basis of
grade losses and lower returns while
the tenant profits from the lowor
harvesting costs Recent studies
say the economists indicate that
grade losses are a matter of harvest
time rather than of the method
used The carliness of a killing
FBI Address
Is Listed
City Investigates
Power Situation
Tulia City Council met Monday
morning to authorize Joseph W
Smith representative of the Central
Investment Co of Lubbock to act
as fiscal agent for the City of Tulia
to determine the status of its electric
power plant bonds outstanding
and to report to the city by Dec 6
The agreement puts neither
Smiths company nor the city under
obligation
After the report is made to the city
council the various methods of
handling the outstanding bonds as
they affect future bond issues will
be given publicity before plans are
made to alleviate the citys current
power inadequacy
Harold Poage Accepts
Arney Pastorate
Harold Poage of Tuba has accepted
the pastorate of the Arney Baptist
church He will continue his
work at Wayland college whore he
is in his third year while serving
the Arney church
Carlile made another Tulia score
early in the fourth quarter Potter
converted to make it 3113
Carlile ran G5 yards for another
score after a long TD drive They touchdown but it was called back jigg jjg
ran over the PAT to make it 2713 because of a penalty against Tulia i
production
The summary shows that by October
of 1951 308 percent of all
farms had television CSl percent
had piped running water 321 percent
had a home freezer 12G percent
had a power feed grinder 3 1 j
percent n milking machine and 8
percent used electric pig brooders
It must be remembered points
mi Extension Agricultural Engi
w er V I Llch that the pe rrc nt
iiit wmmm mmmx
TULIA Swiiher County1 TEXAi
dist pastor will read the scripture
and lead in pray
The Rev I ewis
During recent weeks several per jKoerselman Presbyterian pastor
Mna
i Jr chairman will have homemade J jenia Calif and several nieces and I j cmpcoma I ci tnf i will deliver the sermon and
It will be a quiet Thanksgiving
in Swisher county
Most stores will be closed Manv
will attend the bidlstrict football
contest between the KrCSS Kangaroos
and Wilson Mustangs to be
played Thursday afternoon at Bulldog
Stadium in Plainview The
game will be broadcast direct
from Plaitiew by KTUE
Both teams are rated among the j
strongest teams in the state in their
class
Tulia Ministers Association is sponsoring
a union Thanksgiving service
for Wednesday night at 730 oclock
in the First Baptist church
The Rev Alby J Cockrell Metho
the
Federal Bureau of Investigation In j Rev w Neil RecorU win jve the
the telephone directories callers are j benediction i
told to call the operator and ask
for the FBI
i The operators have appeared con
fused and did not know how to
handle such calls
The FBI may be contacted by
phoning William A Murphy special
agent in charge FBI 1114 Commerce
Street Dallas Telephone number is
Riverside 6101
Bob Callahan will be in charge of j
special music j
Happy churches will have a community
Thanksgiving service at the i
same hour at the Happy Baptist I
church The Rev J R Wood pastor
of the First Methodist church will
deliver the sermon A laymans test1
imony of Thanksgiving will be giv1
i en by O H Rahlfs of the Happy I
Presbyterian church Lex Roby Bap j
tist music director will direct the
music The Rev C B Hogue will
be host pastor
O Doolcy Dawson
CC Banquet Speaker
Tickets remain available for the
annual Chamber of Commerce banquet
to be held Dec 2 in the Tulia
school cafeteria Speaker for the
event will be O Dooley Dawson
vice president of the Second National
Bank of Houston He is also manager
of the agricultural department
of the bank
A holiday menu will consist of
roast turkey and dressing
Tickets may be purchased from
any CC director and nt several Tulia
business houses
Since seating capacity is limited
tickets will be sold on a first come
first served basis Price is 250
per person
Rev II A Somervillc and son of
Amarillo were in Tulia Saturday
morning where he broadcast the
International Sunday School in person
on KTUE
frost was also found to be an important
factor in determining which
method of harvest should be used
For the 1951 and 1952 seasons
10 percent against 42 percent of all
bales were machine harvested on
the High Plains Only 8 percent of
the farm operators hundpulled all of
their cotton in both 1951 and 1952
but 1G percent stripped all their cot
STAY TUNED TO
fe
L
1000 Watts
ages are for all farms in the state
and that percentages vary with almost
every county In the case of
feed grinders he says the greatest
numbers arc found in the counties
where much grain and forage is j
produced and fed to livestock and
poultry Milking machines are most
numerous in the counties where
dairying if of major importance i
f leriricity he adds has provided
th enerjr wcded to replace man
HURSDAY NOVEMBER 24 1955
LEWIS KOERSELMAN
Carl Holler has been named manager
of the Tulia Chamber of Com
morce succeeding Bennie Young
who left Saturday to accept the I
same position with the Gainesville j
Chamber of Commerce
Holler has been a resident of
Tulia since December 1952 when he
was stationed here as a patrolman by
the Texas Highway Patrol
A native of Wichita Falls where
he was born and reared Holler was
graduated from Wichita Falls High
school and attended Midwestern university
He served V > > ears with the
Ar Corps in the Pacific area during
World War II For several years
he v is a salesman for Internationa
Harvester Company at Wichita Falls
Carl and Mary Holler 222 N El
Paso are the parents of two chil1
dren Joe Edward 10 and Cheryl 7 j
years oM sTfiey are members of the
First Methodist church and he is a
Mason
His duties with the CC will begin
It nday
Holler said that he intended to do
everything possible to cooperate
with every person interested in the
growth and development of Tulia
and Swisher county and that he is
seeking the same fv Uoperation
from the public that was extended
to him as a highwa rauolman
Bobby Royce Perkins
To Be Inducted
Bobby Rnjii Ivik of Kres
will > inducted in the Armed
Forces Dec 5 acc < rd g to Local
Board No 15
The lamdies of induct es are invited
to attend a short piogram to bo
held on the second floor of the Plain
vuvv courthouse between 5 am and
0 a m The program is sponsored by
the American Legion W O W and
a church minister
Senate Majonu leulei Ivti
his first jMilhicaj speei h sun e hi 1
quet in Whitney Mondav nisrht
The senator said there is the
smell of victory in the air and he
added it is keen and unmistakable
lie is certain the GOP will
be defeated next ear whether or
not President Eisenhower is ill
But Johnson urged Texas Democrats
to be united because he says
this is no time for bickering However
Governor Allan Shivers was
not present at the dinner He is the
leader of the conservative Texas
Democrats and he has already announced
that he will support Eisen1
hower again if the President runs
Texas Democrats have been divided
ever since Shivers swung the state i
behind Eisenhower in 1952 j
I As for himself Johnson said he i
will not run for any office next
year Tile senator urged a constitutional
amendment abolishing the
1 poll tax and senate action including
a 90 ier cent of parity farm support
bill and a free enterprise natural
ton in 1952 against 8 percent in 1951
The combination of hand and ma j
chine harvesting was used by 34 percent
of the farmers in 1951 and by
7C percent in 1952 I
lull owners cut back on machine
hirvesting while tenants increased
their use of machines In 1952 owners
machineharvested 45 percent of
tluir cotton compared with 58 per
cent the year before Tenants on
the other hand jumped their use of
machines from 26 percent in 1951 to
U percent in 1952
The research workers report that
apparently little effort is made to
use strippers to their potential Strippers
were used by most farmers for
cleanup work rather than for harvesting
the bulk of their crop
power and bring more efficient production
to the farm Motors and appliances
handle the chores which
formerly required human labo
and they do it faster and cheaper
Research he says is continually
coming up with new machinery and
equipment for making the job of
farming less tiring and more enjoyable
and electricity is a major
source of power in the changing
pictuie
w MumummM w
TWO SECTIONS
ulia PFA Cops lop Honor
At District Leadership C
I ulia Hrh School wih two
li di its hare of top Iidiiois at th
I nnraa l < aderhip contest held
Mamed C C
cf3i3
fust place winner coj > > i d more
annual district Future Farmers
Saturday at Plainview
Plainview High took three first
places and Hale Center took < no of
the six contests whi < h attracted 90
FFA members and their leaders
from M high schools in the Plain
view Vocational Agriculture District
The meet which is preliminary to
the Area 1 contests schedule J n
Plainview Dec was held it Planv
iew High school
Miss Sharon Thompson of Cotton
Center was chosen District Sweetheart
Miss Thompson daughter of
Mr ind Mrs I runs Thompson will
represent the distnc in the area
v eel heart contest
Tubas firsts were m senior chapter
conducting and Turgor FFA quiz
Plauniew Future Farmers won firsts
in junior chapter conducting senior
iarm skill and junior farm skill contests
Hale Center s team excelled in
radio broadcasting a > il came off
with the top honor
Winners in the contests listed in
order of their places were Senior
chapter conducting Tulia Plain
view Floydada Hale Center and
Silverton FFA quiz i ulia Plain
view Silverton Floydada Matador
Quitaque Abernathy Petersburg
Happy Cotton Center and Hale CenterRadio broadcasting Hale Center
Silverton Abernathy Quitaque Junior
chapter conducting Plainview
Tulia Floydada Hale Center Silver
ton and Petersburg Tunior Farm
skill Plainview Tulia Quitaqre
Floulada Roaring Spr ngs
Umbers of first place teams
ri Senior chapiei conductina
lulia Iimmy Hoodi np e Wyatf
It iriin Jimmv Ketch1 m Donald
Jenntnga Gium
Elliff
FFA quiz Tulia
Teddy Carruth Da
Tulias jun > r cl
team which i n
> c mposed
irii and 1 vi
hai les Ncwr if
1 Madura
i conduc
icid hnirs
K < Vars Ail p
fdi i John Reeves iice Pauer
I aPty Paul lpps ipes Acock
and Plly Whitten
1 he local junior tarri s ull demonstration
team which alo won sec
end high was composed of Thoran
Avent Jimmy Cummings Keith
White Bobby Hagltr and Tommy
Barnett
SHIVERS WILL VOTE FOR IKE
son
lo Man Can Carry
EiepiJDI
e
don B Jcihnon oi levi niaj
Heart attack last spring at a ban
gas law
The senator had some words for
the Republicans He said the GOP
gave what he calls our air academy
to Colorado and it is trying
to give Fort Bliss to Oklahoma and
Ford Hood to Louisiana Ralph Yarborough
said the same thing last
week Johnson said he hoped there
was someone at the dedication of
Big Bend National Park Monday
to restrain Secretary McKay from
giving it to Mexico
Johnson said he did not question
Eisenhowers integrity or patriotism
but that he did question his taste
in political parties He said that no
man regardless of his personal
qualifications is strong enough to
carry the dead weight of the Republican
party He said that even the
most rockribbed Republican would
admit that the party is more responsive
to the rich boys and fat cat
than to the voices of the folk
The complete study is given in
B1S3 Tenure and Mechanization
of the Cotton Harvest Texas High
Plains and is available from the
Agricultural Information Office
College Station
Mrs Ruby ONeall left Monday
for two weeks visit with lu r d ugh
ter and family at Snydi r
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Baggarly, Herbert Milton. The Tulia Herald (Tulia, Tex), Vol. 49, No. 47, Ed. 1, Thursday, November 24, 1955, newspaper, November 24, 1955; Tulia, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth46230/m1/1/?q=wichita+falls&rotate=90: accessed July 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Swisher County Library.