09 - The Unger Memorial Library

Transcription

09 - The Unger Memorial Library
rg With
'elopes S rprlse
TouehdowD In Final Seeonds
With 12 seconds left on the clock.
Antelope quarterback Brian Smith
falted a handoff. took a few step! back.
and found tight end Randy HOUlton all
alone in the end zone to put the Lopes
ahead 12·7 over the Petersburg Buffa·
loes. Brian Smith ran around the side
on the keeper for two extra points
making the final score 14 ·7.
Excluding the first drive by the
Lopes, the first second and third
quarters were defensive battles and
neither team would let the other score.
forcing errors. The first time the Lopes
got the baU In the 2nd quarter. they
fumbled on the fint play on their 15
yard line. Petenburg fumbled on the
next play. we got the ball and fumbled
again. Petenburg got the ball on the 15
yard line again. but the Lopes held
them the next 4 times .
The Lopes got the ball 3 more times
before halftime and Petersburg 2 more
times, but neither team could produce
any offense and the first half ended
O~ .
.
F1ntH.1f
The Lopes received the opening
kick-off and started' from their own 25
yard line. Smith picked up five yards
on a ~eeper , followed by an impressive
22 yard run by halfback Chester
Cooper, a 160 pound sophomore. Smith
ga ined a nothe r 7 ya rds on the next
play . The Lopes a dvanced to the
Buffa loes 25 yard line . Then Smith
threw the first pass of the game to
tight end Alla n .Leste r . The pass was
good for 20 yards a nd the Lopes were 5
ya rds from the tind 20ne. And much
like a ny fi rst game of the season, a
fumble came on the next play and
Peter:sburg took over for the first time .
Petersburg could not put anything
tollether a nd made 1 fi rst down in the
firs t quarter . Abernathy got the ball
two more times in the fi rst quarter and
were also stopped ma king only 3 first
downs.
The second quarte r was even a more
defensive game . Both defenses were
Second Half
The third quarter was a repeat of the
second quarter. The ball was traded
back and forth . Finally. the Lopes put
together a good drive at tbe last of the
third quarter .
The drive started on ~he Lopes 43
yard line. Smith picked up 9 yards,
Cooper 8 yards , halfback Mark Riddell
6 yards , and the highlight of the drive
was a pass from Brian Smith to Randy
Houston for 11 yards . The Lopes had
advanced to Petersburg 's 6 yard line
and the third quarter ended.
The first play of the fourth quarter,
Brian Smith:· kept the ball and ran 6
yards into the end zone for the first
score of the game. The PAT failed and
the Lopes led 1Hl .
Pete rsburg came right back, and
after 8 plays and two first downs,
advanced to the Lopes 11 yard line.
The Lopes defense came through allain
and stopped Petersburg from moving
·1
three yard line .
The Lopes advanced to the three
yard line wi th 16 seconds left . Sm ith
tried the keeper a nd was stopped s hort.
Then Mark Riddell tried to go through
the middle and was stopped . With 12
seconds left Smith connected with
Houston and the Lopes went ahead .
Smith added two more points a nd the
Lopes won 14·7.
past the 11 yard line.
All the action came in the fourth
quarter. The next time Petersburg got
the baU. they advanced to their 45 yard
line after a short Antelope punt. The
next play quarterback Stacy Swopes
connected with a Buffalo tight end on a
55 yard pass play which resulted in
Petersburg's first score. The PAT was
good and Petersburg went ahead 7-6.
Touchdown Called Back
The Lopes had less than three .
minutes left to score in the final
stanza. A 15 yard penalty against "
Petersburg, following the short kickoff. positioned Abernathy on the
Petersburg 49 yard line. On the next play, Smith ran 14 yards to the Buffalo 35 yard line. Two plays later, Cooper
ran 10 yards to the 25. On the most
exciting play of the game, Smith kept
the ball on the next play and ran 25
yards for a touchdown. Surprisingly,
the touchdown was called back by the
referees because one of them acciden· •
tally blew his whistle before Smith
advanced down field . Tough luck for
Abernathy was the general consensus
by the referees when Abernathy coaches inquired about the caU.
The tough call did not discourage the
Lopes. With 1 : 44 left in the lIame, and
from the Petersburg 25, they continued
their drive with a 9 vard run bv Smith.
Three plays later, interference call
was ma~ on Petersburg when Smith
attempted a pass to a receiver on the
,...
STATISTICS
First Downs
Ya rds Rushing
Yards Passing
Tota l ya rds
Fumbles
Punts
Penetrations
Penalties
3
3
5 for 39 yd. average
4
10 for 92 yds .
13 for 112 yds .
5 fo r 28.2 yd . average
CATCH 11IAT WON mE GAME for
Friday night against the
was a two yard pass from Brian Smith to Randy Houston with 12 seconds left in
score put Abernathy ahead 12 ·7. ( Review Photo by Mike Bean)
VOLUME 61 NO. 43 11IURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1982 1 SERVING HALE, LUBBOCK COUNTIES]
Shooting Incident Results In
ForlDer Abernathians Death
DAVID K.R rSOlKE. paSll receiver COld! for the Teua Tech Football Teem,
the guest speake r a t the Uons Club meetillll held la. t Tusday, August 31.
He is pictured Ullking to Richard DuBose. ( righl) . Krilchke stated that
recru itinll is the " na me of the game" when acquiring. good footbaU team. He
also sta ted that the Ra iders are lloing to s urprise a few tellll this yeer. ( Review
,P;l :0) .
_ a _ a _ a _ a _ D _ a"_ _ a
_a_a_I_._D
ON THE COUNTY LINE
U\' KElT" TOOI.EY
_a_a_a _ _ _ a_a ___
"ERE ARE SOME IMPORTANT
footba ll terms you should be familiar
with now that we a re In football
season. I "'onder what dictionary these
definillons came out ol~
Quarterback · This is the Amnan
25 cent piece one team must lIet from
the other team . The fa ns often yell
" Get the quarterback ."
Pigskin . This is what the hotdogs
sold in the concession stand are made
ol .
Grid Iron · This is a misleadiDil term .
it refers to the playing field which is
neither a Krid nor made or iron.
End loot . The parking lot farther·
est from the admission gate. This is the
parkiDillot you park in no matter how
early you get to the game.
Tourhdown . A s trange ritual the
runner prac~tices each time he scores.
He performs a strange dance. runs in a
small circle and throws the football
down.
"airtime . A celebration signifying
the game is half over. This celebra·
tion is marked by musicians in oddly
colored uniforllll perfonniDil drills to
music. The viewers at home watching
the lIame on TV do not see this. Instead
they are treated to boring announcen
givinll boring statistics on equally
boring lIames.
RefnH . A supposedly nonblased
individual who makes sure the game Is
played by the rules. He often becomes
a scapegoat for the 100ing team. They
\ say they would not have IOIt lf the.
referee had not ~ted .
Bleachen . A group of peroxide
blondes.
Forw.rd .... . A wink to the cute
glrrtn the fifth row.
p .... latereepdoa . The IIGII-IO-Cute
8irnn lHe tIlird -rowwho- acknow'
Iedaes the wink.
..... Ia.....er.ce . A penon in U.
fourth row lUddeDly
up In .n
eIldUII/I point of the pule bIoUInI the
view of the girl In the fifth row.
.tan.
._I_I_I_.
when the crowd gets tired of the fan
who insists upon playing his radio
tuned to a country and western station.
Pisre kJcker . One special player
who stands on the sidelines. plays only
a few. minutes each game kicking only
field goals and extra points .nd let
paid as much IS the rest of the team .
• , ~ . One of the favorite words
used by the coach.
Gat«ade . A welfare program for
needy alligators.
Red Dol . A cheap beverage the
winning team drinks after winning an
important game.
Blltl . What happelll to the players
who drink too much Red Dog.
FIeld 1011 . The amount of crops the
farmer hopes to harvest from • parti·
cular field .
Penon.1 foul · A player's very own
chicken.
Holdial . What you were doing with
the hand of the girl In the fifth row ,
Shotllln . A device used by the father
ol the girl In the ftfth row when he
doesn 't believe you were just hoIdilll
handJ.
From Wes Brown·Floyd Country
Hesperlan.
I WAS TALKING to • feUow the
other day who wu concerned with the
way clop .r& treated around town. He
said that juat recently be baa IIeeII
three dop that were killed beca\lle
they were either knocked out of the
. back of pick.,.. or fell out of pictupI
beca\lle they dkl DOt .ntldpete tuma,
. quick stopa. etc.
It Is ~ that dop
IIItIclpate
tunII, fut ..,.... quk:k ItDpI and
otIIIr thI-. the dri.... of • pIicIIup will
encounter OIl the 1'1*1. ADd iOIDItImea
clap )lUI jIuJIp out willie thI pickup II
ca.-
~
A shooting incident Tuesday resulted
in the death of a former Abernathy
man who was shot at a house approxi·
mately one mile west of 16th street,
Abernathy ..
Ronald Patton. 35, of Lindale. Texas
was pronounced dead at 7: 58 p .m .
Tuesday by Justice of the Peace, Jean
Marr. The death was ruled a homicide
by Marr.
Jack Patton, former father uf
Ronald, was arraigned on murder
charlles at the Hale County Courthouse
Wednesday morning, according to Jus·
tice of the Peace Marr ,
Patton was reportedly shot in the
stomach. The body has been trans·
fered to Lemons Funeral Horne by Joe
Beat
Olton!!!
The second annual ClWnber of
Commerce sponsored ' ;Octoberfest"
will be held Saturday. October 30 at
the City Hall complex at 6: 30 p.m.
All local clutil aud organizatiODI are
urged to participate In the celebra·
The " Fab Four" Cody Connell,
Kevin Riddles, Darrick Stallings and
Roger Howard won the Yellowhouse
Canyon Raft Race Monday at Lubbock
and broke t~ record for the best time
ever.
They won first place in the commer·
cial category. first place in the four
man raft category. and first place
overall for having the best time for the
tlon this year. It is time for clubs to
make plans for the activities and
booths they will have at Octoberfest. .
Booths may be rented for $20 each
by contacting committee chairman
Betty Neve at 298-2984 after 5 p.m .
John Rui2 has been recruited by the
Lubbock Christian ColJege track team.
Rui2 placed third In the state 3·A
meet thilipriql with • lime of4 : 27.3
in the 1.600 meter run. He also ran the
800 meter run In I : 511.5,
Two other recruits Larry Moorhead
of Roscoe and Jeff Wilson of Medina
Valley High School in Caatorville, have
also been awarded scholarships to the
LCC track team. The LCC track coach
is David Conder.
MaSORS To Dave
Two Meetings
£Ity £ouaell A .. d .
Se.ool Beard To
Meet Meaday
The local chapter ol Muons wiU
have their regular meeting today at
the Lodge Hall. All memben are
encounged to .ttend.
Thursday. September 16. the Masens
will have. special open meettrw to the
public. A film on the Muons, and what
they are .bout. will be sbown .t this
meetl11l. It will be held .t the Lodge
Hall. .croaa from the acbool. and
everyone II invited to .ttencl.
.....
SOMEBODY NAIIIED VIC OIJVBR
aye this-.bout peapIe .... 1DIIIII1 ~ . ~
maD . . .
aftIr 1DCIIlIJ, . '•
.......................... ..........,...01. . "
aad ~ the...,..,.
found by someone who entered the
house and tha t the shooting was believ·
ed to have occurred early Tuesday
aft ernoon.
The shooting is presently under 'investigation by the Hale County
Sheriff's Department and Hale County
Deputies.
Abernathy's "Fab Four"
Win Raft Race Again
Kutz Awa.rded LCC Seholarship
maney.mad. If ._ .... It ..... •
moriiIIcapAtaIiIt; If be ....... It, "'. •
playboy; If ......'t 111110 _It, •
"",,,&y, tile CODCerDId ..........•
ed that dol ownen let tb* . . . ride Iacb .......... U ...... It . . . .
.................. ·Wlat ......
10 ........ 01 ............ ..... wwkInI-tt. ............; ... If
....
thI_
boJIriend
of ........
tile girl in tile I _110 .... _ _ yaur dol. the ..". . . .~It ............ fl
lUUl ....
_
bud ..................... ...
............ ~ · . .tba. . . .
Chambers, where an autopsy by a
Childress pathologist was started Wed·
nesday morning .
The Abernathy EMS was sent to the
house where lhe shooting took place
about 7' 30 p.m . in response to a report
of the shooting.
Mrs. Marr stated the body had been
entire race of 18 minutes 56 seconds.
They broke the Yellowhouse Canyon
Raft Race record by three minutes .
The four Tech students won the raft
race last year too.
Their sponsor is Pinson's Pharmacy.
who provided the funds to build the
raft. Roger Howard designed it and all
four of them built it.
They received belt buckles, paddles
and plaques for winning in three
Oetoberfest Slated For Oetober 30 categories.
"U.
180
185
3
).\8ER"IJ.\"ft-IY '1VEEKlY
~
RE"IE'/V
25~
"IN 'Nf P"l .. nII.tIl ".......
\\'8S
Petersburg
10
110
70
Abernathy
13
152
33
The City Council will meet at 7: 30
p.m. Monday night at the small meet·
11111 room at City Hall. The School
Board will meet at 8 p.m. in the School
Administration building. Everyone Is
Invited to attend either one of these
meetIqaI .nd lee how your tax doUan
are being spent.
'
Bartlett T. Teae.
'.Pa'.tla. Cla88
U;S.P.S, NO. OU3·34t
SunsbJDe -Gre"p
Meets Sept. 18
The Sunshine Group will meet at II
a .m Thursday , September ' 16 for a
program and lunch will follrlw at 12
noon . Clayton E~er will have the
program at 11 . a .m. Everyone is
invited to come and have f~lIo.....shlp
with the Sunshine Group.
Antelopes To
Play Olton
Friday Night
The Abernathy Antelopes will play
Olton in the second game of the 1982,
football season Friday night at 8 p.m .
at Olton.
Hale Center crushed Olton last week
33-0 and Abernathy squeaked by
Petersburg 14 ·7.
U)st year the Lopes breezed by
Olton.
Everyone should attend this game
and show the Lopes that they are
behind them.
• .G. II1II _
LO.... Ju
. . . . . ONIIui_tIIe
t
.,
_. Bart ... fudIy ~
1:MtIImd. met tbem at lin.
1IoywI.
.....
SeeD JoaInIIaround town
was Bro. Lloyd Rldd .... On
two different day.. I laW
Bro. Ridd... out Joaing and
it was on very hot after-
Y.F. ud Mary Joe Sood, ..... villbod In Alamosa.
Colorado over tile Labor
Day .....end with Mr. and
i MrI. LonnIe Brownlow. The
BrownIow's are former
Abernathy residenta.
'Ibey atteodecl Sunday
eburdI . . " . at FIrIIt
Baptist Church with the
., Browa1ow·. aDd, beard Bro.
-,Rliyc:e JI!IIJ1iDp preach.
Bro. Je!\IIInp II a former
.-tOr ~'cOunty lJne BaP-.
,. tilt qwreh.
.
,
.....
[
J_
SpnIIII fin III AIIItIa J'r\.
cIII7 to Qit tbeIr _ K..tIy
aDd dallllbhr-In·law !CaW.
'DiI1 ret1IlIIId .....y to
Abernathy.
,........ 1..___ JaIl'.
1IIOdIIr. lin. ..,... n.Ir
noons,
Sunday moming was considerably cooler and it
_med llke a bint, maybe
fall is approaching.
.....
'Deray Isbell ~ Colleyville. is visiting her lister,
Delayne. of Abemathy. She
came Friday and stayed til
_'Manday Digbl
'
Mrs. Ollie Selke celebrated her Birlhdlly Wed·
nesday night, Sept. t with
herfamUy.
Thole attending were her
daughter. Maxine Courtney
and husband; her son. GJen.
non and Alice Selke of
Abemathy; her grandchild·
. reno Sherlan. Gwen and
Becky of Lubbock; and two
nieces. Blanche Tucker and
Vila Peel. also of Lubbock.
Cake and ice cream was
served and a good time was
had by everyone.
Long-Bu·fe
Engagement
Eilablllhed In November of 192t ...publlshed "on
Thursday of .ach week in Abernathy. Texas. Second
aas. postage paid at Abernathy. Texas 79311. located
at916 Ave. D. in the city of Abernalhy. P.O. Drawer D.
Phon. [ 1I06J 291-2033.
~ny .rron..,._ r.Oeclion u....n the character of any
rirm. corporation or individual which may appear in the
.columns of the Abernathy Weekly Revi.w gladly will be
corrected upon being brought to the all.ntion of Ihe
There will be a Doll Show
and Sale Saturday. September U at the Hale County
Agricultural Center located
on South Business Ir1 in
Plainview. The show wtll be
from 9 a.m. til Ii p.m. Admission is free. This show is
~
Lakeview
Loeals
By Mn. Normal! Matthew,
~
Mrs. Ethel Pierson. of
Abernathy. was the featured
speaker
for
Lakeview
Methodist Church at Wed·
nesday night services Sept.
Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Long
of Lubbock. aJUlOUnce the
engagement and approachIng mlUTiage of their daughter. Tracey Dee. to Darrell
Bufe. son of Mr. and Mrs.
Raymond Bufe of New Deal.
The couple plana to marry
September 25 at 4 p.m. at
Quaker Avenue OIurch of
Christ in Lubbock.
Tracey graduated from
Frensbip Higb School in
1981 and Darrell Is a 1981
graduate of New Deal.
.ABERNATHY WEEKLY REVIEW
----------------------------~
1.
Charley Akin. Martha
Phillips's father. is in
Methodist Hospital.
Josua Pope has been in a
Research Institute for Can·
cer in Houston. Dr. Burzyn·
ski. a Polish doctor bas been
treating him for this rare
Mr. and Mrs. Chris Wilson
are proud parents of Tyler
Steven. bnrn August 31 and
weighing 7 Ibs. and 2 OZS ,
. Grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Ernesl Wilson and Mr,
tumor. He is home now.
There will he a drawing
for a large Bye-Lo and a $1
donation for this drawing.
Mr, and Mrs. Gene Collins
visited in Abilene last week
with his mother.
Mr. and Mrs. Gale
Meadors. of 'Lubbock, spent
Ibe weekend with his
parents. Mr. and Mrs . H.N.
Meadors. of Lakeview.
Mrs. Louise Childs. and
her grandson Kevin. of
Wichita Falls, spenl the
weekend with Mrs. S,M.
Harrison.
tI~·
! Elliott's Custom Draperies!
I
!
I
'--------------_.---1
ZltZ'"
I
'.
;,-,
.... ,...,.
...
FIrM . . . . CllIIft~
I . .ZlIT
u.,. 1:. RlIWIeo
Abern·a lhy
Weekly
Company
4 11 11II1JCree1
Sav-A-Lot
...........
1.....1.,
'tMI .......
CIIIIIr~
CMnII
'S - . . . . .
_Det..OUvu
I",. *"
Re•. lAIIIa HenalNlel
ZII-2IT.
Family
'Cente,
V.... we ea. !be dninka
~ out ud failing over
tile curt. aDd lrY.iDI \0 pi
up aDd bavlal to ban belp.
Same pmbIed all JJiCIJt. W.
bid \0 lit aut ~ town \0 ftnd
1II)'CIIe1ll- bnMfut.
We,... taIkiIII ud
. , . . far lIII I\atIIriDc
IuIIIIIIty that we cDerved
aDd .......... toward Cali·
..... on HlIInra" _. we
......... I IMUd up aDd it
f..una
$1 19
lb.
DEL MONTE FRUIT
FAMILY FRESH
OCKT AIL
START
12114 oz. RAID FLYING
LEMONADE STAND WEA'I1IEIl.Dd u.e four YllUDlllten tooII advanta.. of tile heal by
putting up a iemonade stand on \he comer of 13th and G. Pictured from leIt to right Is Lance
Phillips. Mall Thompson. Rusly Hamilton. and Korey Ellis . They were oelling lemonade for
25 cents a cup and made approximately U , ( Review Photo)
of Cameron. announce the
birth of a daughter. Ashley
Nicole .• She was born September I ,
Maternal
grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs, Buddy
Grigg of Sherman and paternal grandmother is Mrs .
Joel Bray of Abernathy ,
Rusty and Debbie Householder. of Lubbock. are the
proud parents of a daughter.
Lindsey
Lanette.
born
August 28 al 5: 36 p,m. She
an assortment of unusual
points of interest. We soared
up to 14 .264 feet on MOWlt
Evans and we saw the con·
tinental Divide which separates the AUantic Ocean
[rom the Pacific Ocean
drainage and runs north and
south through the state.
From the beauty 01 her
mountains and lakes. we did
not wanl to 'return to the
plains. but we came OIl
home Saturday and believe
it or not. it was " Home
Sweel Home to us."
$ATTENTIONS
lIomeownen
Insurance
Up to 35%Off
Call 218-4121
weighed 7 lbs, and 12 018,
Grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Pete Knox and Mr. and
Mrs. Ralph Householder of
Idalou. Great-grandporents
are Mr. and Mrs. E ,M, Crow
and Mrs, Rubye Knox of
Abernathy a nd Mrs , House·
holder of Lubbock .
nett. Lubbock and Kevin
Lester of Abernathy .
Sunday. August 29. bibles
was presenled to lhe follow·
ing children who were promoted from the 2 nd to the
3rd grade : Tana COl. Shan·
non Peeples , Jeff Rhodes.
Micha Riley and Kristl
Robinson.
Germany 's olden college ,
the Uni .. ,.ity of Heidelberg ,
wa5 fOJ,Jnded in 1386.
Parks Promoted To
Plainview Superintendent
said . Welcome 10 Utah and I
said. "Wayland. we are
going east instead west" , So
we got off the main road and
hunted for a way to gel on a
northwest road , We got iost
and wandered ' around on
small country roads a nd one
time we came 10 a dead end.
but just over the railroad. it
continued. We "'ere only five
miles from the main road.
but had to drive and drive to
ever find a road leading
north to it. Thai made us a
day late to California .
We left Wednesday and
started home from Caiifornia Wednesday. a week
later. We had never seen
Salt Lake City. Utab. 10 we
decided to take a n....' route
home , We got to Salt Lake
Ci ty just in time to hear the
organist in the temple play
one of the iargest organs in
the world. Mr, John Long.
hurst gave a thirty mirute
recital and il was the tnoBl
beautiful organ music we
bad ever heard played.
Mter touring around the
city we headed for colorlul
Colorado. Colorado boasts
$
$
$
Guests at First Unite<
Methodist Church Sunday.
August 29 were Robin Ben·
$
$
$
Farmers Inlurance Group
INSECT BOMB
STEAK
25 lb. ALPO BEEF FLAVOR
Former Tulia Methodisl
pastor Bruce Parks, no"
pastor a I Dumas has been
promoted 10 disirici superintendent of the Plainview dis·
trict of JIIethodist churches.
Bruce and Mary will move
to Plainview Septem ber 15.
District
superintendent
Weldon BuUer will move to
the
Hereford
First
M.ethaillst ~~, .. u. pas-(Dr Marvin J ames. had ~
signed.
Bruce was in his second
year al Dumas, H. has also
paSlored churches .t 1)<,0ver Ci ty. Slaton and Lorenzo
in this area .
Bruce is a graduate 01
McMurry College and Per·
kins School of Theology.
3 lb. TYSON CHICKEN
STRIPS
2.5 oz. 4 PERSONAL
LIQUA
$1 99
$7 99
49~
69~
5 oz. 4 BATH SIZE
LIQUA
school teacher in Tulia and
was teaching in the Dumas
school system .
DOG FOOD
28 oz. JIF PEANUT
BUTTER
$5 49
$1 9
1 gal. PAY-N-SAVE HOMO
MIL
15 oz.
DEL MONTE
PINEAPPLE JUICE
46
---------------------------
BORDEN'S 112 gal.
ICE CREAM
DEL MONTE CATSUP
POPSICLES
2-8 oz. CUPS SOFT
69~
PARKAY
I'_--::::::!!~
$1891~~~
SLICES
32
JUG
6PK.39'
DEL MONTE TINY
ILLS
$1 59
112 gal. KRAFT CHILLED
49~
oz~99~
17 oz.
ORANGE JUICE
SM/CR
PINEAPPLE NJUIC
'1 10 OFF
16 oz. KRAFT VELVEETA
Mary was an elementary
65~
EL MONTE SLICE
LESS CHUCK
Methodist Church News
17 oz .
7S$ OFF LABEL
r/--,-".""-
F'a)'e Ann Nelson
"The 23rd ,Channel"
rtntu.... .......... a.a
BEEF
County Liue Chit Chats
Weekly Devotional
In.ur~nce
4 oz.
FRESH GROUND
I
I
69~
PEPPER
sale.
Mter lea ving there. we
headed up to Reno. On the
publish.r.
:---~--------------, way. there was a marked
Subscription Rales : $7 .00 per year in Abernathy.
difference in the terrain ,
'17.50 per year in rest or Texas and U .50 per year when
MINI BLINDS
WOVEN WOODS '1 The solt rolling hills of Cali·
I m~i1ed out of Texas.
.
!ornia faded into dots on lhe
k~ilh Tooley. . .
Editor
horizon as we entered the
... Iayne Thomason. .
,St'(.'rNar}' I Ty pist
mountain range surrounding
. .Society
1I"len Wad•..
Reno. Nevada. The land·
scape color changed from
FREE ESTIMA rES
yellow to dark grepr. , The
freeway slithered through
the enveloping
Hillside
,
Phone
forests , It was astonishing ,
to see snow on the blue
SHERRY ELLIOTT
298-2337
mountains and slill be sweltering heat on the freeway .
Fancy billboards advertis·
ing the casinOll. decorated
the freeways as we came
closer to Reno . Evenl,uaUy
we were over the crest of the
range and cruising down the
hill to the city ,
It is not as glamourous as
Las Vegas. We stopped in
Las Vegas just'\o see what it
was like. Entering the Casi·
nos was like step!li~ into
another world , Row after
row of slot machines were
played by people fighting
The TV set is my shepfuriously with the law of
of God's word, It leadeth me
eth me from doing impor·
herd. My spiritual growth
averages
in a wild bid for
in the paths of failing to
tant things witlj my family .
shall want. It maketh me to
wealth.
attend the evening worship
It fills my head with ideas
sit down and do nothing for
At
night
the city exploded
services. and doing notbing
which differ from those set
His name's sake. because it
her 24-hour lifestyle onto ·
in the kingdom d God. Yea.
fortb in the word of God.
requireth all my time. It
the
streets
as gamblers
though I live to be a bunSurely. no good thing will
' keepeth me from doing my
flocked 'to their meccas , The
dred. I shall keep on viewing
come of my life, because my
ooty asa Christian. because
my TV as long as it will
TV offereth me no gocd time
whole area resembled a
it presenteth ao many good
work for it is my closest
to do the will of God ; thus I
fa try place-alight with
shows I mlllt see. It recompanion. Its sounds and
will dwell in the Place of the
color and vibrant life. Passtoreth my knowledge of the
its pictures they comfort
Devil and His angels forsing by. one can hear the
things of the world. and
me. It presentelh entertainever.
sporadic bunts of coins
keepeth me from the study
ment before me. and keepfrom the one-armed bandiu.
From Church 01 Chrlsl Bull.Un
One grandma was sitting
with her old black purse full
Allembly Of God
lletbel Bapllst Church I
66 Butane
d sliver dollars and playing
1404 Av•. B
Eat lit St. 291-2118
the one-anned bandit. She
ReaayRlce
. R.v.J.B.Leot.r
Wolf
said she always comes out
And
with more than she puts in.
I
We beard a clang and the
Irrigation
Fertilizer
Lakeview M.tIHIcUol CIIareb
Iilver
dollars flew out and
Cburcb Of Christ
I
3 MI. North' MI. E. or Clly
she would put the old black
11th" Av •. E 291-2118
Rev. HB CotlgID
purse under the spout and
catch them and start all
Joe
Abernathy
over again.
It was with uller amazeThompson
lit Cbrch Of Nauren.
ment that 1 observed the
Farmers
St. hldore Church
""St. Ave. E
bever-ridden
JMlople. There
South Ave. D
Z_ZU2
Implement
were elderly ladies seated
Rev. Matlb.w D'Souza
Rao....11 B......tf'
Co-op Gin
011 ltools c1utcbillllthelr coin
Co.
trays and scrutinizing tile
fruit dials at the same time.
Other peopte were seated
IgJeoia Del Nal.,..o
Couly LIDe 118,lIIt C1Iarcb
around the game 'tables
Brightbill
Pay-N-Save
Av• . A "5lb St.
RI. 2 • 757·Z134
examing the odds with careLeIter AJlderson
Rev . DuDY Jacu.
ful caJculation. My lilting
Z... III
H,eatlng
impresalon of \he dly. after
Supermarket
_ing her nighttime perAnd Air ,
aonality. was one d an enlightened
penon who had
NCII1IIsIde 118pUol a.areb
Priao... IIiiaa... Baalilta -------discovered the crock at gold
1l1li St. "Ave. E. -ZII-2.,1
Z_Z113
Richard "
at
\he
end
of
the rainbow.
Rev. K_1II11on
Rev. " - RaoIriIj...
CO-Op Grain
The nellt mOl'lliJlC as w.
...
drIYiD1
out at Las
DuBo.e
(TEXAS
"'~:PRESS
' ASSOCIATION
SCHILLING BLACK
sponoored by Plainview 001Iers of Texas. Madame
Alexander Dolls wtll be on
Mr. and Mrs. MIke Flores.
and Mrs. Carroll Bradley.
.fr.• of Abernathy are proud Great-grandpal"'nts
are
to aMOUnce the birth 01 Mrs J B B dl
nd M
twins. " a son weigJiiitg· 5
. . . ra ey a
r.
pounda Il V. ounces at 5: 45
and Mrs: V.A, Struv~.
p.m.• and a daughter weigh. _ Great-great gra~dmother IS
ing 5 pounds 13 .... ounces at
Mrs. Martha Pbilhps.
5: 45 p ,m, Wednesday. SepMr. and Mrs. Bruce Bray.
tember 1. in Methodist Hos·
pital.
ThOl. To Remember
Prices Effective Sept 9 - \I
45~
0~.119
150Z·79¢
-;9-
DEL .MONTE SWEET PICKLE
RELISH ------------------------120z.• "
DEL MONTE WttOLE
24 oz.
._._ -------I
HAPPY
Rev.
GRANDPARENTS' DAY
10 lb. RUSSET
96
POTATOES
I
oz.
99~
54 oz.
GIANT
7112
Grandparents' Day is Sunday.
September 12th, Tell them you love them
with fresh flower.; or a plant. Right now we
have an excellent selection of both. Just stop
by or give us a call.
oz.
TIDE
PILLSBURY
SWTMLK IBTRMLK
II
BISCUITS
I
I
J
'l
--------_.-A Plower Is VUbrthA Thoaaaad Words.
ABERNA THY
298-2334 FLORAL
Tumbling Classes In
Abernathy
THURSDAY, SEPT. 16
COMMUNITY CENTER
Starting at age of 3
Instructor Robin Walker
Contact
Robin Walker 782-5833
Sharon Shadden 218-2977
2 lb.
,.,.! .
KRAFT GRAPE
JELLY/JAM
ASSTD
PRINGLES
DOUBLE S & H GREEN STAMPS
MINIATUAE/100,000 BAR
ICRUNCH NESTLE CHQC
CHIP MORSELS
.
12
oz.
$1 59
. SATURDAY SEPT. 11
-
79~ '
THUMID"Y, ..,.1111£111, I..
y!le .,. 14
PLAINS GRAIN a
FARM SU~PLY
a..-..ck
_·IUI
The T_ AMI u.....
Iity E.~ment StIllion .t
Halfw.y will concIIIc:t • Flelcl
Abernathy, ':'ftM
Day, September
.f'OR ALL YOUR ..ARMING NIIEDII
"9E THOMPION .I"'t:EM~N~ ,
PHONE
....
. :".
' 105A~ D' ·
.Abernathy. Texas 79~ I I
Abernlthy, Tel..
ZI8-UU .
•
.;
.
.
\
,,'\~_hargoes,
Bumper Crops
Overtax :. Grain Bins
Gr;IIn IItOraIJll elevators
tIIIIi year's
bumper wlieat croP and 1980
~ sold but not delivered
to RWlllia wlU create "mas~e" storage problems for
West Texas producers this
raU, a grain official said
Monday.
Elbert Harp, president 0{
the Grain SorgJwm Producers Association, said emera,ncy storage facilities apJlI:Orid last week by Agriculture Secretary Jobn Block
w\U do litDe to 'stem the
Itnpendlng storage problem.
Block
approved
the
storage ,0{ exceU Brain in
surp1us barges, rail cars and
Other faclliUes riot normaUy
quaUfied to store harvested
briJnmIria with.
~op&,
sorghum crop carry-over
will be more than can be
used in Texas, Oklahoma,
New Mexico. Kansas and
two-thirds of Nebraska,
"That's how much too
mucb was grown this year
for next year," he said,
"Add to that, the surplus
we're already carrying,"
Harp,said.
"We had a surplus 0{ aU
grains. Then, an 'all-time
record' wheat crop was
piled on top 0{ that. 'I1lere's
just so much storage available," be said. "A lot of
elevators are full."
He said with the com and
milo ha,",est underway, p'Oducers In the Texas Panhandle and eJsewhere will
have "massive storage
problems" this faU .
The High Plains region
produced about 64 million
bushels of wheat this year,
with large carry-overs remaining from the record
1981 harvest of about 71
million bushels,
He said this year's corn-
li~at~:,,~~ aot;"u~o~o ~~
300 ,000 bushels of grain
sorghum were carried-over
from 1981 ,
"With the corn-sorghum
harvest underway, storage
will become a problem," he
said, "An area from Plainview to Muleshoe north will
have problems. It will vary
from one town to another."
Harp said some of the 200
storage elevators In the
High Plains have been lull of
corn since 1980 , ' when the
USDA purchased crops that
had been sold to Russia, but
then emhargoed by thenPresident Jimmy Carter.
About 40 million bushels
of corn shipped from Illinois, Wisconsin and Iowa
have remained in Texas elevators since the embargo.
About 40 million more
bushels are stored outside 01
Texas, he said.
"If not for the embargoes
of the past several years, we
would not have the supply or
storage problems, " Harp
said,
COTT®N
T®DA
EXPORT SALES JUMP:
Net new .. lea lor the 198283 marketing year Increaaed
by 301 ,SOO runninc balea for
the week ended Auguat \9 to
bring the new season's total
commitments to 2.238,100.
It was the largest sales
week of the season. The
major buyer was South
Korea with 208,500 bales,
COTroN USE EDGES
UP: The seasonaUy adJusted aMual rate of cotton use
by U.S. textile miUs reached
5.3 million 480·lb, bale
equivalents in July, up 6.7
percent from June but 16.1
percenl below the year-ago
level, accordill8 to the
National Cotton Council.
Cotton'. share 01 total
fiber use reached 25.B percent, compared with 25 percent !he,previous month and
Plains Pest Management Report
Soybeano
Corn earworm
(podworm) infestations are on
the increase in ilDybeans.
Infestations
have
been
spotty, with some fields
having heavy popu1ations
and others with very few,
Many fields remain below
economic threshold, but
should be scouted regularly
to prevent excessive pod
lOIS, In a heavily infested
field In which 14 sample
sites were checked, counts
Tall8ed from 1 to 25 per 3
row feet and averaged
around 13 per 3 row leet.
Scouting soybeans can be
very easy with the aid of a
shake cloth, A shake cloth
can be made by cutting a
piece of white cloth to a size
of 42 x 36 Inches, Along the
36 inch margins 0{ the cloth
two wooden dowel rods cui
to this length can be attached with stapels or small
nails. To use this shake cloth
in sampling, place the margin of each wooden rod next
to plant stems on each side
of the row so that the cloth is
completely stretched out
and the center of the cloth is
in the center of the furrow ,
On each side take J 'h row
feet ~f soybean plants ; then
bend them over the cloth
and shake. Now count the
com earworms and other
pest that fall into the cloth.
This sample will then constillite a 3 row feet sample.
Each field should be sampled in 10 locations. If counts
average greater than 3 com
earworms per 3 row feet
then
control
measures
should be considered.
Cabbage loopers and a few
beet a rmyworms are being
found feeding on the foliage .
The economic threshold for
the leaf feeders is when
defoliation exceeds 20 pert-ent during bloom to pod,
Several fields of soybeans
have been found to be infested with a longhorn beetle
known as the weed borer
( Dectes texanus ). In past
years this pest has caused
Indging problems east of
Plainview. With the increased acreage of soybeans this
pest has sp .....d to other
areas of the county .
If you find that your
field is infested, the only
alternative is to harvest the
beans as soon as they are
ready before extensive lodging occurs
Cotton
Ope n bolls have been
found in several fields in the
Hale Center area, Overall
the bollworm populalions
have declined greatly , Egg
lays hav e ranced from 8,000
to 69,00U eggs per acre ,
averaging around 15,000 .
Small larvae counts have
ranged from 0 to 6,800
averaging 976 per a cre
Medium larvae rall8e from
0-10,500 averagill8 985 per
ac re. Large larvae have
ranced from 0-19,200 aYeraging 1.696 per acre ,
Spider mites are being
found in several cotton
fields . Mile damage has
been minimal in most inota nces,
but cases 01
damage to plants alonc margins of g rain fields and next
to turn rows have been reported.
To sample for mites examine 25 or more leaves from
various areas 0{ the lield
looking at leaves from the
top, middle and bouom of
the plant. If .plder mite
numbers are averagmg
more than 26 per leaf, con-
Partners make the
(lifference.
You and SPS are partners. You, Ihe
customer, are the use r o f electriclly, and
we are the producer and dis tributor of
that electricity. Tha t makes us partners
As partners , we work together
toward common goals. We combine
our talents and effo rts to better manage
electricity. And , we share ideas and
responsibilities fo r a better way of Ille .
Partners make a differ ence. The
difference is how efficiently electricity
is used today and ho.w its supply is
managed, which affects Its cos t In the
future
23 .4 percent In July, J 981.
MID use 0{ man-made fibers
roae 1,5 percent above the
-J une rate but ~ 23 .4
percent from July la8t year ,
. For the mariletlng year
which ended July 31 , domestic colton ole 8IPIled approximately 5,3 million bile
equivalents, down 10,2 percent from the 1980 -81 total
0{ 5,9 million.
trol may be needed. Mite
damage usually appears as
a yeUowinl of the leaves,
Under heavy infestalloM,
leaves tum red and may be
shed from the plant.
Sorghum
Continue to scout fields for
headworms ( fall armyworms and com earworm.l
and for spider miles, The
spider mite populations
have continued to increase
during the past wed< and a
few growers ha ve lreated
fielda for this pest.
ComiDg Events
The entire Extension Staff
in Hale County wwid like to
call your attertion to 5
major functions that will be
happening in Hale County in
the upcomill8 luture, I ) On
Wednesday, September B,
the Hale County Extension
Service Crops Tour will be
held in the Plainview and
Hale Center area of the
county, The tour wi ll
. assemble at the Hale County
Agriculture Cenler parking
lot at 9: 00 a .m. This year '.
tour will include a grain
sorghum and so)<bean fertili·
zer test, a yellow com
variety test , soybean herbicide test, and a couple of
tests on short season vari·
ties of cotton ; 21 The Texas
A&M Experimenl Station
Field Day at Halfway wiU be
on Sept. 14 al I p.m - 5
p.m,; 3 ) On Tuesday. Sept.
21st begiMinI at 2 p.m.,
wiD be the dedication ceremonies of the Running
Water Draw Watershed Pr0ject at site 3 in Hale County :
4 ) There will be a Livestock
&. Wheat Grazing Program
conducted at PetBsburg in
the Firsl State Bank Community Room on Sept . 30 al
7: 30 p.m. 'I1le same pr0gram will be given at Halfway on Oct. 14 at 9: 00 a .m.,
( morning) at the Halfway
Farm Chemical Store at
which time the soil conserva tion director from that
area wlll also be elected.
You and your friends are
invited and urged to attend
all of these meetings,
For additional informalion
ca ll : office-293-8481, ext.
273 or 274 or mobile phone293-6114 or bome-298-6939.
Information contained In
this newsletter is lor educational pu.".... only. Re-
.. ..
~
'
,t;
COTTON TAlkS
flOIol "'...., COfl0N _ _ , .....
LUBBOCK, Friday, September 3,1982
Extensive testing at Texas Tech's Textile Research Cen ter has shown t hat e lectronic instrument.s
g ive accurate , rep eatab le m easurem ents of cotton
fiber properties.
However T RC research has found considerable
variations in the fib e r p roperties in different parts
of whole bales and e ve n in single sampl es, which
h as pro mpt ed Do nald J ohnson, Executive Vice
President of Plains Co tton Growers, Inc ., Lubbock,
to cau t ion that "cotto n producers sh o uld no t interpret t he 'accuracy and re peatability ' of instrum ents
to mean that the same re suits can be expected fro m
multiple instrument testing o f a give n bale ."
The fallac y of such an inte rpretation was most
clearly illustrsted by an instru me nt testing study
just conclud ed at TRC in which two complete bales
of cotto n were divid ed in t o one-q uarte r pound
samples fo r testing o n th e Cente r's high volume
inst rume nt (HVI) system .
Beca use o f d ifferent
weights, o ne bale yi eld ed 1,780 and the other 2,179
sampl es, Four tes ts we re made on cac h sample fo r
len gth, le ngth uni fo rm ity , strength and elongation,
and two tests were n"ad e o n each fo r m icro n aire and
leaf.
Th e result s. pu blished in the Ju ly issue o f TRC's
"Texti.le T o p ics ," sh o w hi glH,o ,lo w differences in
measurem e nts o f a ll q uality co mpo nents that will
b e surprisi nK to m ost wh o are un sc h ooled In the
fin e r p o in ts of call a n techn o logy .
O n th e small e r ba le, called "short t o medium "
stap le and morc representa t ive of High Plaln s produ c ti o n. le nl'.lll m easurem ents ranged (rom a h igh
of 1.13 Inches down La .88 o f 8/1 inc h, a differen ce o f
.25 o f an inch . Th e av e rage o f aJl tests for length
c am e to alm ost an inc h a t .998 ,
Length un ifo rm It y ranged from 83 perce nt down
to 72 pe rcent and averaged about 78 perce nt ;
' micro naire tests gave readings from 4.4 down to 3.8
With
average of 4 .1 ; s trength, measured in grams
per text, st o wed (ro m 32 down to 17 and averaged
just ove r ~4; leaf content recorded a h igh o f 50,
a lo w o f 20 and ave raged 40, wh ile fiber e longation
measured from 6,2 p e rcent. d o wn t o 4.3 perce nt
with an ave rage of ·1.9.
According lo Reva \\~l i tt , head o f TRC's rna
l erial s eva lu a tion labora lo ries. th ese wide variatio",
do n ot stem from instrument incon sistency. Instead ,
sh e say s, th ~y arp th e result o f actual diffenon e"J
in th e make -up o f th e small num be r o f fibe rs ~st..cl
from eac h sampl e .
Mo re co mpl ete informatIo n on te st resul ts frorr:
both bales may be obtained from TRC or tro m
PCG, Box 36'10, Lub boc k 794 52.
an
rerences to commercial produc ts or trade names is
made with the understand·
ing thai no discrimina tion is
inlended and no endorsement by the Texas Agricullural Extension Servire of
the Texas A&M Universit,y i.
14
belin·
nlne . t I p,m, .nd end~ .t
5 p,m " accordi,.. to County
Implied. Educational pr0gram. conducted by the
Texas Agrlcullural Exten·
sion Service serve people 0{
all ages regardl .... of socioeconomic level. race. color
sex , religion, or national
origin.
Agenl OllIe Liner.
'I1le Research Stall .....t
Lubbock and Hallway altl!rnate every other yar .II to
.where the Field Day will be
held. ThIs year It wiD be at
the HlIllway Stallon which is
14 mile& west of Plainview
on U ,SoHighway 70 .
'I1lere are a number 01
things that Liner say. will
be important to farmers to
see and hear scientiats disCUSII , At this time 01 year
lall weed control 00 takeweek , nutsedge, Bindweed,
plus
whiteweed
and
Johnsongra.. is important
to farmers because it is at
tllil time 01 )'tIr II1II, till
chemlc.1I worIJ btttIr 011
weMI 0{ tlllI kind that are
arowllll .nd daInII well,
Uner ataled,
Information on In1ptlan,
cotton breedinl and variety
tests, cotton boI1W\11'11l c0ntrol, sorghum improvement
research, mite .-rcb, soU
lertiUty and soybean research wiD allo be diacwIed ,
Farm machinery and irrigation equipment wlU be on
display,
Liner stated that many 0{
our
Extenalon ' Service
specialists and researchers
from Teul AiM , Lubbock
and Hallway wID tie on hand
to discWII and visit with
farmers on any personal
problem that they might
have. TIle Hale County Ex-
Leekaey 12.8
IV8ka tok8
__ till
ta\IehdtWII
".. JV AIItIIot* IkuMed
lilt JY I..oekIwy t.oactII~ lilt 'I'IIIndIy DlPi .t
1.ocIInI7.
BWf 110ft ran lllto the
!rom two yardl out
end _
MANY PEOPLE ENJOY
rummaliDl throuIb pra..
ules .nd other \lied cloth~ aalel. You can ..ve
dollars 00 f.mUy c1oth1n, II
you are Iood at restyling
and have an eye lor quality
COIlItructlon and fabric.
tension staft wiD be in
charge 01 the tours and if
these people need to be located lor a farmer , Uner and
his .taft wiD be able to do
thia.
'I1le agent invites a II
farmers and bIIIi.....men
interested in thia Field Da y
to attend,
PATTON'S
PARTS PLACE
604 Ave D
298-2558
And FFA
'::ar.Traeter Wash Satarday
'I1le Cotton Center FHA
and FFA are having a car
and tractor wash Saturday.
Seotember II lrom 10 a ,m,
until dark in front 0{ the
High School.
The charge will be $5 lor
each car and $10 for each
tractor ,
All earnings will be given
to the fund for Jared Horsford , son of Mr , and Mrs .
Tommy Horsford. He was
burned August 28th. Any . ABERNATHY FFA 8'ftJDENT8 recenUy built two ticket booths lor Antelope Field to be used
donations will be aJllirecia- this seallOll. One booth was placed at the northwest gate and the other at the northeast gate,
ted.
Pictured are several 0{ the builders with one 01 the ticket booths. ( J\eview Photo)
SHIPMAN AGENCY
OLTON!!!
B1 LLY s:c 'P1\t/\.;-J
R0L ·\ '1 . CI1I' [Y
ROIlD Y S I'IJ PMA~
D 'A Ui-J SIlJP:-'l-'!.:'\
919 Ave D
Plainview Hwy
T..1lIeI
Cody Payne 16
Eugene Crumpler 8
Lin Da vii 12
Rene Vecchio 9
Bryan Stallings 8
Randf H....ton 8
ADan Lester 8
RUShin g
Brian Smith
Chester Cooper
Billy Cooper
Mark Riddell
19 for 55 yd"
10 (or 3 8 yds.
5 for 12 yds.
II for 39 yds .
Passing
Brian Smith - 3 of 8 for 33 yds ,
Rand y Houston · 2 for 12 yds
Allan Lester · I for 20 yds .
Big HlI Award
Lin Davis'" Rene Vecchio
1- - ---Vi~t~y Ro~-t~-; --
Olh.. Di.trict Scorn
Littlefield 13
Frenshlp 8
Dimmil 6
Floydada 19
Muleshoe 13
Portales 6
Friona 6
River Road 21
Tu Ii. 28
Lockney e
I
Abernathy 14 Petersburg
7.2:
_ __ _ _ _ _ _ _
_
___
105 Ave D
306 Main
* Safe Deposit Boxes
* ~hecklng Accounts
:* Certificates of Deposits
* Bank By Mall
*Night Depository
* .Loans·Farm, Commercial and Installment
You and SPS, p~artners managingelec:tridtS-', m~ke the--differeJR:e.~
FOR-AI;L YOUR BANK-ING NEEDS
ABERNATHY
FIRST STATE BANK
91h Sireet Member FD C Phone 291-25'
IIqIIIId, he II a IIefenslve aOO
offensive tackle and II a
oenlor thia yeer. He II the
101\ 0{ Mr, and Mrs, LellOy
StaUinCS,
298-2627
298-2924
guard and defe..ive end and
is a Junior this year. He is
the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Golden Furgeson,
ABERNATHY
S & H WELDING
315 Main
8COTI'
-Ill In
his first yeer on the varsity
tquad, He is an otrenslve
_IAN ITAlLINGI-1lI In
hII third year 01\ the varsity
PAY-N·SAVE
* Savings Accounts
DAVID KEMP-Ill In Ids
first year on the varsity
squad. He is a dot_lve and
offensive tackle, He Is the
son 0{ Mr, and Mrs. Eugene .
Kemp.
HENRY'S TEXACO
OIL CO.
709 Ave. D
298-2255
BEARD~S
- JENNINGS '
GOhF SHOP
BURGER HUT
328~52'1
298-2541
NEWTON
RADIO & T.V.
298-2527
,
298.ta507
IMPLEMENT
298-2584
405 Ave. D
298-4127
JOE THOMPSON
CONSUMERS FUEL
ASS'N .
ABERNATHY
FARMERS CO-OP
GINS
Our role, as Southweslern Public
Service COmpany, is to invest the
money to build and operate plants,
and to provide the skilled prolessionals
who make sure safe, dependable
electricity is available when needed.
We depend on each other. Witho ut
us , your iife would be less comfortable
" ~ less productive, Without you , our
SlJrvices would not be needed. We 're
Jl8I\!l8I;S, working togethe r to make the .
di1Ierenoe, Hand in hand.
STEVE MILES
INSURANCE
Hwy. 54 N
I
Box 218
298-2451
STRUVE
IMPLEMENT
298-2511
829 W. Service Rd.
Plainview Hwy
Meet The Antelopes
CO-OP GRAIN CO.
714 Texas Ave_
298 - 2467
SIXTY-SIX
BUTANE &
FERTILIZER
418 9th St.
298·2521
298-2313
FARMER'S
TUCO GIN
Individual Statistics From Petersburg Game
PLAINS GRAIN
& FARM SUPPLY
701 Texas Ave
ties .
.::.tt•• Center FHA
8:00 P. M.
298-2084
4029th
ICOre lor the remalnd.. 0{
thepme.
The Lopes had 112 yardo
rushing and 4 yuda pauln,
Ind m.de 8 first dowIII.
Lockney pined • yardo
rushing, 58 paul", and
made 4 first dlJWllll.
Billy Rowe was the leadill8 rusher lor the Lopes
gainill8 50 yards in 15 car-
THIS FRIDAY AT OLTON
STADIUM. GAME BEGINS AT
ABERNATHY
BODY WORKS
ABERNATHY
FIRST STATE BANK
flrllt
In till aaeond qua,. aDd
the LapII led M aftar till
COIIv_ion falled.
TIle aaeond and fIIIIl
toucbdown WI' made In lilt
fourth qlllrier when Marlt
BeU ca\llhl a 4 yard PIlI
lrom quarterblldl I>onnIe.
Williamson. ThIa made the
score 12.0 and the IIefe_
would not aUow Loekney to
BEAT
298·2534
417 S. Ave D
PAGEl
303
Aw.
D
2"-2174
Hwy.87
298·4101
-SANDERS
AUTO SUPPLY
Lubbock Hw,.
2...2211 ·
298-2338
RIG HARD DUBOSE
INSURANCE &
REAL ESTATE
924 A've D
298-2538
A·1 LIQUIDAfORS
& SUPPLY
298-2880
'NUUDAY. _
i
.eer·
Fair Sept. 13
I
t·R ........ PI!-.
"---claalllc:a
' af . . . . . . . _ _ _
~Brttllli~
f 1M!! 21 liliiii . . . . pea. (JIIIreIIncI or I11III grade
.... will .. ~ In tile Aapa. Herefard. Polled
jaIarI ..... aM M tile I&&b ' Herefordl and Shorthomal
~ ........ Soutb
and ~recI and other
PIaIna Flir bare SePt., 25- breeds.
and die · otweu
TwIna. Sept. 31; > Conway
TwItty and-Helen ComeIiuII.
Oct. I; Roy Clarl. Jimmy
Honley. Fancl, Rodney Lay
and the Wild Weet &nd,
'S a_
Oct" 2.
at the Collleum ball oftIce.
Dunla~I, '
IfMnpblU·W.u.
( mall atore GIlly) and at
Luskey'. Western Wear.
F
=....
Ne •••••e.
I •• ff
A••••• ee.
SIIaIIoft.. HIIIt 9dIooI
- .. . . . .If _11m
are: SeaIan DIbj. DIrieboa
and KriIt7 '1'1""';' J. . . . .
Pam G.... _. IIendI Pair.
David Staller. Lae! stuart
and ErIc ThomJllOll.
Mail order' requests may
be sent , to, Show Tickets, An _rdi"nial. it h. bien
P.O. Ek\lt " Z08, Lubbock. .aid, i. die only Ontl who
TIoxaS. 7lM08. and mUll be . can ._dully play both
Oct. 2.
.
, ~Champlonl and reserve
'I1Ie . . . , . .dU_for tbb
mplOllll in each division
IIbow and ~ other Hveetoc!I
receive UOO 'and -UOo,
divlst.. ~Sept. 13 , .~.
re8pt1!:tively. plus a hanner.
inII to (air I_al IIUlII8&er 'l1Ie Brand champion of the
Steve L. Lewis.
show will collect $1.000 and
Youb from the following
a tropby while the reserve
countiea·
are
eligible:
grand champion will receive
. BaUey, Borden. BrlKoe. , $750 and a trophy.
Castro. Cochran •. 'Crosby; '
' Judging will begin at 10
Dawson, Dlckeaa. Floyd, a.m on Oct. I in Fair Park
Gaines. Garza. Hale. Hock·
Livestock Pavilion.
ley, Kent. Lamb. Lubbock,
Belinda and Jodie Wheeler
!!I,n n. MoUey.
Parmer.
of Goodland exhibited the
SCUrry, !jwtsher. Terry and
1981 grand champion sleer
YOI\kwn. .
at last year'. fair.
Each memher will he
Culling horse competition.
limited to two _.teer entries.
two horse shows, pigeon.
Exhibitors must hav~ owned
poultry and rabbit shows
and cared for their steers at
also are on tap during the
. least 90 days prior to the
eight -day fair run this year.
as well as other popular
show and , each entry must
be certified by the super·
favorites.
vising county agent or FFA
Seven
country
and
instructor.
western shows have been
carded for the stage of Fair
A $5 entry fee is charged
for each entry.
Park Coliseum, including
Bob Benson of Colorado
Mickey Gilley and Johnny
Lee on Sept. 25 ; Crystal
City will judge the event.
which carries a premium
Gayle, Sept. 27; Don WiI·
• list totaling '$5.560. Stanley
Iiams and Lee Greenwood.
Young will be the super·
Sept. 28; Ronnie Milsap and
intendent and Denny Belew
the Maines Brothers. Sept.
29; Louise Mandrell. R.C.
will serve as assistant.
Show times are 5: 30 p.m.
and 8 p.m. dally and ticltets
are $7 and $8. All seall are
I
SHALWWATER VOLUNTEER FIRE DEPARTMENT responed to a fire at the Simpkins
farm. The firemen fought a grasS fire. There were no serious losses reported.
......................................
BOB MILLER AUTO
1
.1
!
.I
J
SUPPLY
&
HARDWARE
Automotive, Hardware,
Veterinary Products
HIGH WAY 84 EAST '.SHALLOW,ITER.
.,
••
'
i
......................~.............t
~
AMERICAN
*(:J*
* 'I' ..
*
*
GROWERS
~~:=~a~~~~:a~.ta!m
;:
ped.
end. Iglinst the middl •.
'l'llia Ia tile y.r cI tile
SenIon 01 '13 I AU J.r _ .
the -..aper aIaff will be
u..
~
Very
special people. 'I'I1II week we
have aelected Jell Cutro
and Pauline AlOIIIO.
Jeff Caltro Ia a new .tudent at SIIal10water HJih.
He says beillll a lenlar Ia a
nice feeUna. especially in
ShaUowater! . "It hal been
Idnd of .trange becoming a
senior because before I had
seen other people who were
seniors and had graduated,
and now I find myself in the
aendIa& blm GIl •
ytIIr. Paull.., daUllhter ot
Manuel and Marla Alonzo,
Jr.. enjoY' many ..peets of
being a senlor. She feels that
the only problem with
graduatlllII wl\l be loalng
touch with her frl«KIs. Some
of her favorite activities are
listening to mUSiC , ( Rack
and Roll espeeiaDyJ. watch·
ing "Gimme A Break" , and
playing volleyball . You can
also find Pauline munchin '
down on Pizza and " all holi·
day foods ."
Pauline said that she
wanted to try and be as
active as she can in all the
senior activities , Her luture
plans consist of going to a
business college somewhere
otid becoming a legal secre·
tary. eventually.
By Kristy Tipton
Re&ton'
wu aIIo
a
aI Qua\1fIer. Jelf
~ u
"Who', Who
AmOlll
American
stooenlll"
In hla' .IIl"'; time. Jeff
enjoY' bike tkIng. reading,
drawing.
llatertng
to
country and pop rnualc. eat·
ing plua, hamlKqe ... and
barbeque, and watching
"Dallas" GIl T.V. Sounds
li1Ie he lreIIsures his .pare
time! Afler graduation, he
plans to attend Tech where
he will be majoring In Com·
puter Science. No wonder
Clleml8try is his fa vorite
subject!
Our next senior is Pauline
Alonzo. She wUI be attending
Texas leads nation
in cattle production
produced 32 1 m illi o n po unds
of red meat la sl month .
representing a snen percent
decrease in producti o n fro m
January a year ago . .'\gncultUT<:
telescope to be located atop The first ·colony to grant
Mount Fowlkes in the Davis suffrage to women was New
Mountains.
near UT's existing Jersey, which 8)(tended the
telescope planned
McDonald Observatory on vote in its 1776 constitution
bul rescinded it in 1807 .
AUSTIN , Texas (Spl. ) - Mount Locke.
The University of Texas hopes
The proposed 300·inch I ,
to build the world 's largest primary mirror will embody a
ground· based. single· mirror revolutionary design .
telescope.
resulting in a thickness of only
UT will seek outside funding four or five inches compared
for the $45-million project . with a thickness of four or five
which calls for a 300·inch feet if designed according to
" c lass ical" lele sco pe
methods.
SEH\'li\(i .\I!E.I F,lItMEHS \VITI!
.\ IOIIEH"-EFFIC'lE!I;T (;1'0 SEltlKE
!'IIO"E H:I~·nllll
SII .11.1.0WAn:H. n :x . \S
Commissioner Reagan
.,
V. Brow n repo rt s.
"This decline III red mea t
production wi ll 11 0 1 cause a
shortage of beef. Iamb a nd
pork in the grO(CJ Yst or(~. In
fa cl . Texa :, cOI1lITlt."rcial
slaughtermg plant s repon ed a
figures
In
we
arc
~ 13ug h lc r ­
K i ll
day!>
f~r
Januar~
included 21 \Io ('(' k.da', (one
h o lidB ~' ) and 1"1\(' SalU·rda) s as
co mpared wit h 22 \Io l'dda ys
(o ne h olid a~ ~ In January
1981.
19.000 head whii< Ihe
U
;
lamb s laughtered la,t m onlh
)
was down 20 percen t al H6. IOO
and th.: numbe r of ho~:s
!'. laughtC' red totaled 12.1.700, a It ' l believed th e eating of
three per ce nt dedlOc from the beef was introd uced to
Japan in 1856 bv American
prevIous year.
diplom'1 Townlend H.rrit.
red mta!
seeing
("o mmadal
ing planl s BerOS' th e Unll ed
Slate s rep o ned a 100alof 3.15
bilh on dow n C'lght p('rccn l
from Janu ary 19MI ..· Bro~' n
said .
down eighl percenl al 458.700
head .
The number of ~hc('p and
pro dw:ti on . Eve n th o ugh the
num~r !'l are down from last
year
li o n
number of ca llie slaughtcrc-d
durin g the same period W8 :i1
fi ve percent in crease over the
Decem~r
"Texas is n OI alo ne in Ihh
decline in rell 111t'a l prnd uc-
increasing trend for 1982,"
Brown said.
The Texas Crop a nd Livestock Repo ning Scr ..·ice
report s that the numbtr of
calves Slaughtered during (he
mon th of J anuary was up
three percen t from a year ag o
AUSTIN -- Cnmmercial
slaughtering plant s in rcxas
10II1II . . . . , . , .......
Sha1lowater for her second
aurnmer. He 11Il10 lavolved
In UILSpeUIDI and ~
3rd place hancn Ia DIItrid.
an
In the .plrIt departmental
SHS, many _
, . _ are
appeari .... Newcomers leadilll clleen will be junlon
ReneI Applepte, Dawn DuLaney and aenlors. Terri
Bartlett, and Angie Blahop.
Cindy Sawyer will be cheer·
ing her third year and
Rhonda Ellia her oecond.
The glrla are ealer to
perform new clleen and
stunts they learned at camp
thl8 pa.t June. They also
have many fun aurpriIeI for
Homecomillll. Esdi FrIday
they wiU sell ribbora for 25
:a:w:
*1tlilidI*
GROWERS
An after-dinner speaker has
been defined as the man who
talks in other people's sleep.
Shallowaters 8th Graders were presented at Mr. Football
FHA News
"A Friend For Every Season"
Well. it's another school
year and along with every·
thing e lse, FHA is getting
back into the "swing 01
things ~.. t' ormer members
met Thursday to select
"Little Sister" and to dis·
cuss the upcoming years
activities.
There are many new
members this yea r and
that's the key to a great
group. We 're all hoping and
working toward the best
year in FHA ever !
By Kristy Tipton
SHALLOWATER FLOWERS,
& GIFT SHOPPE
606 Clovis Rd.
,
The fallowing article 18 a
public service by the Aber·
nathy Review through the
cooperation of Richard L.
Moore. District Attorney . Its
purpooe is to make you
a"'are of. JIfOSf"Ulor's role ,
<l your responsibility as a
resident of this COUnly. and
how we can work lotIether to
allev iate sotTlt of society 's
prob lems .
I BIRTH! i
YOUR DADDY TAUGHT YOU TIlE VALUE OF A DOLLAR AND TIlE REWARD OF
HARD WORK. BUT YOU KEEP WONOERING. HOW MUCH OF TIllS REWARD YOU
CAN STAND. YOU EXPEcTED TO RIDE HERD ON EVERYTHING FROM CASH
FWW TO TRACTOR DRIVING. YOU ARE A PART-TIME GAMBLER. ACCOUNTANT.
MARKET EXPERT AND MECHANIC. AND NOW WHEN PROFIT MARGINS ARE
TIIIN. YOU ARE NOT SURE YOUR · BANKER WILL UNDERSTAND YOUR
PROBLEMS.
SURE. MOST BANKS WILL STAND BY YOU WHEN PROFITS ARE GOOD AND
MONEY 18 PLENTIFUL. BVT IT TAKES A BANKER WI11I A GREAT DEAL OF
TRUST AND INSIGHT TO STAND BY YOU WHEN TIMES GET TOUGH. FOLKS UKE
MJ. W1LLI.\MS. DOYCE MIDDLEBROOK. AND GARY GRANT AT FIRST STATE
BANK HAVE 11I1t KNOWLEDGE AND EXPERIENCE TO HELP YOU IN GOOD
'I'IMIt8 AND JW) TJME,I.
•
WE REALIZE THAT HARD TIMES CAN BE TIlE BEST TIME TO 8TART A GOOD
RElATION...... AND WE WILL BE TlJERE WHEN YOU NEED US. THAT 18 WHY
WE A,RE GROWING AND WE WANT YO~ TO ACCOMPlJ8H YOUR GOAL
'~IRS:T' SlATE' BAN-K
A LlTTLE ... BETTER lANK
MEMBER FDIC,
CongratulatiOll! to Mr.
and Mrs. Steve Conner on
the birth 01 a daughter,
Courtney Shea. born September 4 at 4: 15 a .m. al
South Park Hospital. Court·
ney tipped the scales at 7
Ibs. 7 OZS . and was 22 'h
inche!i long at lirth.
HIPPY Birthday
Happy Birtbhiy to the
following
Shallowater
locals: ' Denagay Potter.
Azhar Hasan. Danny Stan·
ton. Michael Lawrence.
Mary Lou Lara. Chuck
Kerry
Pender.
Mason,
Cathy Hohertz;,Jerry O'Neal
Ritchie. Ray f'lckerd. Ray·
bourD
Gartin,
SUI8lIII8
DeAnda , Jadt DanIela, Mar·
jorie Green. NeD HaYIUp.
Leo E . Cottenoir Jr .• Dora
Potter.
Becky . Walker,
SbeUy Tyree. Alfred Barron,
Ro)' Gam.. WIllIam Ham·
.JamIe
LoqorIa.
Maraie - Ramaa. TinIIIIy
Herron and Gl'llcie 0 -.
DIIIII,.
HAPPY ANNIVBRIIARY
Happy AnIII_ry to
die followla& Shallowater
1oeaIa: Mr. and M....
JI'eIleIano Hernandez and
Mr. Ind M,.. G.B. Jom-t.
the concession .tand during
footbaU
and
basketball
games . They have a stock
show every January and a
banquet a t the end of the
year .
.
The FFA advisors are Mr.
Curtis Hoover and Mr. Joel
King. Dues . are $8 a year
and anyone who is taking an
biggest
these
account
cent 01
mitted.
problems, In fact,
property
crimes
lor almost 90 per·
the crimes com-
PRI1TECT YOUR
U\' ESTOCK
Livestock !hell is row one
ot the easiest and m06t pr0fitable crimes. The mndem
rustl... moy use a car. light
plane. or helicopler to spot a
likel y talllet , usually stock
in isolated pastures and un·
locked corrals. Then thieves
mav. in quickly with campers. vans. 01' traile .... load
up 10 to 15 head
cattle
and drive away . In just •
few hours the thieves can be
in anolher. county or state.. sily putting hUndreds ot
miles between victim and
buy .... " crlm. that takes to
minutes can nel the rustl...
several thouaand cIoIlaro.
The risk is low, toa-the thef1
otten goes undetected for
sev.... 1 days.
What can you do to saf..
guo rd your animals from
today ',
sophisticated
or
• A t' ull St'rvkf' Hometown
Pharma('\'.
(]f'
CHRIST
' l'rulc:h.
~.lkpr
&
"'·heel
Ch.lr Rentat .
LET US PROVIDE YOUR HEAL1ll NEEDS!
M..... FrI. t I .m. . S: 11 p.m.
SIll. II I .m .. Z p.m.
t'IIl~T
""!'TlST Cln 'I\( '1I
9 : .5 Bibl .. CIOh l'o
10 : 55 W... hip
7: 00 Sun. Ni~hl "' ors hi~
7: :UI ",rd . ~il(ht ( 'hurdl
10 : UO Hiblt: ( 'Iu s
J0;
6: 00
.. a Wnrshlp
Nllr: ht Worship
S unda~'
; : J II Wf'd. Nighl "Ibl. Stud,
METIIfIllIST CHUltt' lI
ST. !'IIII.UPS IIt:M: ZI
C"THOLW'CII UHCII
9: .. 5 Sunda\' S<-hool
10 : 4S W~rship
6 : UU
It a.m , Sunda~' l\Jornin~ Ma s!!!
H p.m. Thund.), NIMhl M. ss
Sun. Nlghl Worship
7: 00 Wed, Night Choir proctlc.
Stand now with rhine
enc hantment s. and with
the multitude of thy
sorceries , wherein thou
hast labored from thv
you th ; if so be tho u
shalt be able to proHI. if
so be thou mayest prevail
ThOU art wearied in the
multitude of thy counsels . Let now the aslre>-loaers , the stargazers ,
\\ ()HI>
lit COl>
Ihe monlhly prognostl·
cators , stand up . and
save thee from these
th ings that shall co me
upon thee .
Beho ld , Ihey shall be
as
stubble :
Ihe
fire
shall burn them ; they
shall not deliver them·
selves from the pOwer
ot
"
ThuS s hall t hey be
unto th ee with wh om
thoiJ has t lao ored , ellen
thy merchant s, from Ihy
you'h : Ihey sha ll wan.
<.1e, everyone to his
quarter : none shal l sa ve
thee .
wa"''''
re'."
~()lJlo.tek cpkes~.t .
r;\r$ g~OPpe ?010,f
might make an expensi\'e
decision in buying a model
thaI ca nnot meet your
rT11,--S
H_
. u.oWATIl~'
S I
~~OOlMENU
TAKt: SOME Til'S on
..,I..,ting pantyh..... says
Becky Sa und ers. a clothing
specialist with the Texas
Agricultural Extension Se r·
vice.
Since this item represents
a sizable budlet amount
throughout the year. consi·
der these points:
• sheers and semishee...
fit best, while ultrasbeers
lend to hag.
• h06e with reinforced toes
and top will last longer as
will support hooe. which are
alm06t indestructable and
can he madline washed.
• price does not always
determine lasting qualities.
70> CWVI S RIlAI) D RA\ ~EIt 2" .
SIIALW\,·ATER. TEXAS 79:16 :1
\ ~U t : I ~:t~ -4~1~
NIlR~lAN S. "NJ)ERT(lN.
~
Buchanan & Associates
Real Estate
==
mort.
'l'1li ,.., tllrla will certain-
ly be ....... aharp tbb
ytIIr.
tllrla have _ unIfOl'l1ll and wW be WU'Idn&
with brand . -
n- •
na.s.
'l'1li drumI will alao be
a ....rlnaln new IIDIlorml.
'l'1li band baa two new
lnatl'llmeta, the marchinl
IrOmbooe and the limptoma. Mark Davil will be
pJaYinl the tlmp-tOl1ll.
The Shallowlter Muatang
Band iI a band the Shallowater .tudent body can be
proud of.
By Mendl Pair
Speee. Cia. Plans Exeltlng Events ,
Have you ever tried to ad
out the IOIIfI "I Cut Myaelf
on Your Brott... Heart" III a
game of charades? 'I'I1II Ia
ju.t one ~ the activities that
has been going 01\ in the
Speech I clua. Obaerven
ha ve
walking
carrots.
1em0llll and I4matoea. p_
sibly you have also Mud
SOI1IIII about applea and
Cla~
peaches coming from room
106. AU of U- activities
have been plamed by Mn.
Cathy Jabaaton, the Speecb
I teacher.
Mrs. Jabaaloll baa other
things planned for her
speech c\uB besides imlta·
tinl fruits. The .tudenll will
beIin worl<u.i an various
types of .peeches. 'I1Iey will
be doing informative. demonstrative. and persuasive
speeches. Later on in the
year, they will be reading
prose and poetry. If time
I '
permits. the spech class
hopes to do some acting.
Mrs. Johnston plans to
have two-man debates this
The Seniors will start sellyear instead of the usual
ing their community calen·
four·man. In order to do all dars in the next two or three
ot these speeches. students weeks .
do breathing and articu\a· . The co.. unity calendar
lion exercl8es .
- is a tradilton here at ShaUoOne of the main goals of water. Every year the
the class is for the students
Seniors sell calendars to
to develop self confidence. raise money for their many
Several students who are activities . These catendars
normally shy, feel that have a group picture of the
speech class is a place seniors . They also list birth·
where they can come to life. days and anmversartes 01
By Lad Stewart th e people of the com·
is hot iron branding. otten In
conjunction with ear tattooing or with earmarks.
Brands and tattoos are hard
to alter and provide a per.
manent record. To he safe.
do not rely on earmarks
alone .
SOphomores: Stacey WiI·
liams·President; Stan LewIs
Vice President; and Greg
Mitchell-Secl Treas.
Timmy
Freshmen:
LeMon·President;
Kelly
Thompson· Vice President;
and Sberri Bownds-Sec·
Treas.
By Debi Dirickson
CRIB
MATI'RE88ES
SHOULD fit lnugly 10 an
infant can't get caUllht bet·
ween them and the crib
waD . If you can fit more
than two finge... between
crib and mattress , the mat·
~ iI too
aid Dr.
Peggy Owens, housiJlII and
home furnishinllll specia1iat
with the Texas Agricultural
Extension Service. Tezu
AiM Unive ... ity System.
.maII.
10 <:MMe. Potato Chi..,
Freth Fruit J'lIo.
"".raday : Hlmburle"',
Lettuce, Tomato. Pickle ,
Onions,
French
Fri• .
WI Catsup, Peanut Butter
Cookies .
Frklay: Rout Beef ,
Gra vy. MaBhed Potatoes,
Combination Sailld. Hot
Rolls, Pea.... .
'" pt. of milk .erved with
each lunt:b.
Senior Calendar Sales
Coming IIp
Offteers Eleeted
Shallowater Higb School
elected class office... last
week, 'I1Iey are aa follows :
Seniors : Stuart Smith •
President; Rod BlII1Iett •
Vice President; and Rhonda
Ellis . Secl Tnti.
Juniors: TracY Cobb-President: Dawn DuLaney·Vlce
President; and Babette Rat·
liff-Secl Treaa.
SepI, t3 ·17. 1111
Manday:
Com
Doll
WI NUltard , French Fries
WI Catsup, T08Ied Salad
W/ Dresalllll,
Chocolate
Cake WI Fudge Ieinl.
Tu ..... y : .
Burritaa
WI Chili , Cheese, Mexican
.Style Beans, Cabl)age Car·
rot , Pepper Salad. Com
Bread, Cherry Cobbler.
Wednesday : Homemade
Soup WI Fresh Vegetables ,
Sandwiches : Tuna' Pimen·
r
~
munity.
This calendar is a super
thing to own. Please buy one
and help tbe seniors .
By Debi Dirickson
SOS, Ihe tradilional call for
help from a ship in distress,
does not actually stand for
anything. It was chosen be·
cause it could easily be
sent as a wireless message.
~~~~~~~~'
J
Little Folk's Da!' Nursery
604 7th Street
Shallowater, Texas
2
5
2
3
"Drop Ins ,. Welcome
Slale LIcensed Doy Care
CompeliliLJe Rales
Rides To And Fr om Sch uol
Doug and Barbara Rowden
832 ·4039
8324307
!
~
L
GO MUSTANGS
Business Phone
~
Mlel' 6 : 00 p .m .
---'~~~---'~~
Beat Cooper
I• I• I•
Friday
At
Cooper
At 8:00
Ill~>ds .
RPh
Meet
Victory Rost.r
Shallowater 7 Idalou
I
o!
ONl. Y S7 00 FOR A YEAR
SUBSCRIPTION TO THE
SHAl.LOWATER REVIEW
Real Estate
Corral
Shallowater
Insurance Agency
Horton's
Frame Gallery
TrU_8 Yalue
Hardware
.Zlp::-_-_ :... _____--.,;._ _~_
Vera's
Automatic Laundry
Germania
Insur.nce
SHALLOWATER REVIEW
DRAWER 0
AHRNATHY, TEXAS ,18311 .
N'm.: __--.,._______
Addr.s8::--'--...;.....,-_ _ _ _ __
. M8J1 To:
T~e
Mustangs
STUART SMITII will be
wearing number 38 on tbe
field and serving as cap- '
lain for the team also. He
has played on the va ...lty for
the past three years. He has
. played as a tigllt end for the
past three years and defensive end for the past two
years. This will be his rtrst
year as a punter for the
Mustangs.
MONTE JUNGMAN will
~:~.'\.::swn~hial~fi:
::,
year on the team. wbere he
, plays the position of quarter·
back. He will be starting at
the position of linebacker.
"
MITCHELL
VIRGIL BETTS
STANDARD SERVICE
CONSTRUCTION
GaM_... Ga!!!
AZ-5e38
AZ .. " .
__~,~:=~~:_
~~------------+-------~~----r---DRIVE . IN
SUBSCRIBE NOW!
ROD BURGETI' will be
wearing number 12 on the
field and serving as a captain for the team. He has
played on the Va ...ity for the
past three yean and will be
returning
as
starting
quarterback. He has started
al quarterback for the past
year, and his sophomore
year. started at safety 011
defense,
JULIA'S HAIR CARE
HUTTON'S
Jsuu," 4 7: J2· 16
The Following Merchants Sponsor These Churches
Shallowater
Review
WHAT CAN YOUR PHARMACY
DO FOR YOU,
We wlal ... be .1Ia1 your ","rma.y .eeda
... he . Whll p....cta or ..... Ices .MId you
III1e 'or ..... prov""
Com. loy IDC! viall or lorIDa by a DOte. II
yOu
pal a _
iD tile mlU ta m•• I
wHl
yeu ZS CftIII ... co.... y..... c.t
on yOOIl' ".,.1 pardla...
Ihe fl ame Ihere shall
no l be a coal 10 warm
at . n or fire 10 511 oetore
INTEHF.-STED IN BUY·
home-computer
ISG . a
svstem"
. list the types of applica·
tions you .. peet the a ppli·
ance to do. and ask sales
personnel to demonstrate
soflware tha t will perform
these activities. advises
• :\tulc'r C,rdl VI .. Accepl·
..t,
• Sr . Cilia"n DistCMInt
• Mt4IC'arf' Appro,'H .
I 2T11 ST CHUIICII
pref.rred martting method
Bonnie Pie rnot . a family
rcsoun:-E"
management
After
Sen'le. I 7~OU I.
• Pt'S .. !'Ild H. !'retiCrlplion ('ard. lIonor..t.
WELCOME YOU
rustlers? Try these suggestions :
( I ) Check your stock frequently. II possible. take a
dailv count. If you 're going
to ~ away. arra"lll' to have
a neIghbor keep track of
your animals, Do the same
lor your neighbors when
they 're away.
( 2 J Rep<rt missing stock
immediately . Rustlers move
fast. so report the laas even
if you aren 't sure whether
the missing animals are
stolen or have strayed.
DOt"t wait .<Jelay insures the
rustler a safe getaway.
( 3 J Mark your animals .
Be sure to make marks dis·
tinct. Mark young stock soon
al~ birth. Relister your
marks and brands with your
enfo~ent
local
law
agency . For be>of cattle. the
special is t with the Texas
Agricultural
Extension
Service .
Other",i..,. she says, you
·I=."mf'ri.nt'y
we AL· LUBBO CK DElJVERl ES D AILY
SHALLOWATER CHURCHES
agricultural class can join
FFA . Meetinl!ll are held
whenever the omcers and
advisors feel one is neces·
sary .
"All in All " , says Mr.
Hoover, " this is going to be
a very good year for us as
weil as for the school .. a
By David Stalter
whole."
ttoun
• F'omt!}· itl RKorda .
Sat.
e32 - S71?
HOSPITALIZED
Ewell Spivey, Jr ., has
been moved to St. Mary 's
Hospital in room 502 . He is
doing much better.
Kermit Giles was admit·
ted to Methodist Hospital in
room 631 with pneumonia
this last week.
C.R. HILL PLUMBING
SIIALWWATER . aZ~"1
For IU your pl ...bIa" Ha"
Ing .nd Itr cocotIl\IoIllal
nHd. . Saieo. Se",ke IDC!
Repair .
Rememiler Grand~Jr en~s Day
9-5:30 Sept. 12
g-1.
Mon.- Fri.
High. She look. forward to
sponaorillll aflllin. "II'I fun
and makes teaching more
interesting" Bbe says, and
plana to do it again next
year .
Mrs, Darden teaches hlstory and resoorce at SHS.
She lives in Sbal10water with
her hushand. Coach Chuck
Darden. They have a oneyear-old da~ter. Meg.
By Pam Greaves
L~r'jr.~
'hII .......... to the 1111,
Patti Mldd1lbroall, 8Gpbo-
Rural Crime Prevention Guidelines
ruNE BL~ HO P - O WN ER
Three of the B vitamins thiamin , riboflavin and
n i a c i n - p I a V a central
r o l e in the rel eale of
energy from food ,
den. Mn. Darden volunteer·
ed fOl' thIa I*ition after
learnlllfl that the previous
'(lOIlIOI' had lett.
She baa set her goal to
help the girla reaUze their
moat important responslbl.
Uties: buUdi~ school spirit
and keepl~ the team moli·
vated and the fana enthu·
sla.tic lor eadl game, She
wants yells to 100II sharp
and Jl"'Cise.
M.... Darden baa had past ,
For. quick window cleanup, wash with. cloth soaked
in white ¥ineta, .
SHALLOWATER CO-OP GIN
BOX 130
cents,
Another newcomer Ia their
'poIWOI'. Mn. Carolyn Dar·
...... bu a bIIIrF cI ..
1IIIIIIben, " . II II _
_bin IhIIIIIt bIIIrF bed
Iuty.ar.
HoFdlDl the l*itIGa ~
dnIIn major for tIriI y.r II
Kalrlaa
SeFIarI.
llllperlenc:e l)ICIIIIOrIna the
The band baa three retunIcheerleaden at Eva.. Jr.
inI
twlrlen.
'I'be1 aN
High in Lubboclt and also
led clleen heneIf in Jr., Jackie Whaley. Sr.; Mendi
Shallowater FFA Uas 85 Members
The Future Farme... ot
America (FF AI 18 a well·
liked organization known
nation-wide for its dedica·
tion to young people with a
future in Agriculture.
The FFA Chapter of
Sha lloWater hal 65 members
and takes part In many com·
munity activities, They run
RURAL CRIME
!'REVENnON
Crooks aren 'l just loc city
fo lk anymore . They li1Ie
country Iivu. too . Look It
the facts . More than 8 mil·
lion cri mes occur each year
In rural lreas Ind smaU
to"'ns. The victims report
that crimes lik. theft , lar·
~n)' . and bullliary are their
AMERICAN
SHALLDWATER. TEXAS 79363
PAOlI t
N __r . . . . . . . . . . .... . . . . . . . . .ePe. . .
••.1
f! ••'re
'''eAI_ _ '
A•••
same position. I t
Jeff also feels that extra·
curricular activities are an
important part <i school. He
was sent to the Honora Colloquim at · the Uriverslly of
Texas at Austin this past
i World's largelt
TEXA~ . 7936 31'
. Phone: 832-5500
~
'lllUlilDAY, ....
_ i_ _11 .. I .
PAOlI I .
AZ.. .,.
SHALLOWATER
THE JIMMY
llllallcnralel'. TeltBl
THE JOE COX,
I
. FAMILY
W.S...... 11IeM. . . . .!
FOERSTERf---Ste--=r
=.:.
. co-~
.". -(Jwa. ,. . -at-iw
j
SUPER MARKET
FAMILY
TlJEIDGIILItY8
SHALLOWATER
vALUE
SHALLOWA'ER
TEXACO
•
(Wee MaMa b o.r IfadaI&y
We Gat fte &,a Of .... __ oW
Da.rim~o::
1-_._l_.A_ft_-_P_______~---.--I..
--.-f--4_--~~W~~~~~~~,.~Ge
....
~_IL~~.----i---------~~~~~.~~- ----
TRUE
HARDWARE
_ . ._Clltrla....
--...:.."'::-~~
_....'"
......... ,...
SHALLOWATER
AUTOIIOn\lE
Ge,...... 11
.......
Sponsor Gr•• ti y N••d.d
t
For This Spa,.
'llRllMliDAY. _ ,
~~~""_"'_"'_ _ _ _ _.I_ _
•
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-.......
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. . . . . . . . . . . . . . ....,
till _
'" all
. aatMt, .. . HIIe
c...,. far till ~ few
:-s-:-
..... ' It II IDimedlaWly
... " AlllmatbJ. ... _ t
ar: .......... .
SevwaJ
tneta ba.. be.a Ieued with
IlaaulpllI'aIIIIn8 u hIIh u
, .. JIll' .... lMINIt _
WI GIl tile T.B. Lu&rIeII
..uoa 17. block D-I GIl
~ HuIDbIIo drIIIId two
weill ... JIluIIId tt.a In
1"."" Iruautb at·the
weIJ Hlllllble atIII opnlel
011 tile J .A. Lutriet -uc..
'I1Ie IeuInC Illy. rile to
. speculation tIIIt tbeiIe two
weUa may be .-..entered.
&bOwed
inItitai procIuelion at 3 barrell ,nd tile
ODe
... _
u...~."'.l'
'AG.II
ilia""'"
DIheoII ftIIIR · ''Ifal
. . . . . .....,.. will
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ftI,.... ...... lint 01 ....MIrIII II.
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AmartIIo..........
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1In. x-tbO...... PIaJD.
" . New DIal ~,. lIIroIIIb"III ........... 10 .... 11 II .......... Jar II III IIIIINt.r ~
'hal . . . . . . . . . . YIn....... the bIfGn .... p....fun..... .... l1li&. . . , -tIrIaIIJ ('1.00 JIll' ..... - . . . ... •......,.. ......... at SIK rIllE 0... a-tII.
dIampIeII . . . . . . . . LJIIII
die ~ FrIdaJ aIIIIt ........ fIrbIN"
trudllMd.)
111m . . . . leta. Jay II tile AI. I'IIIUI& " _ _ III RIJe)'. II, . . . . . " Mr.
at1.ubuddle bJ I _
at moblJelDdulltrJ. TIlt.....
Spec\III It 1iICAlImn, . . . . . at MrI.
baCh lib .,.,. puIIa, be .... MrI. BII RIJe)', Aller·
1M. QIII1UrbedI na,c:e II - - tbu two leltlllart· s.pt. 11 .... 11 IN: Cit· at AbenIIIh)'. How .... be did IU . . . . 111 till caiIIID- 1IItb)', ....... tile .-w
die....
point CCIIlvenloll.
oa.,...
or IIId IIIne-qurtwI at I
MIdcDIbroaII rID Il'OUDCI
ri&bt end late III tIIe .._
for New o.J'. Ioae touebdaWII. HaUbIIdI Wendell
Attebury made (!ClOd tile 2
IIIPo DIll IIIIIIIIe eadI 17
CIIIIIa; jIIIa I for 15 CIIIII;
Velveeta KNIt·•• 2 l1li. 71
CIIIIIa; bIIcuIII, KImbell', I
for U cenII .... NortbenI,
liIIIIe 3 for 3a cenCI.
ton ...... tbu • IlIIIdIrd
19118 Fri Yet, tile J'1Ieaa ..
a sill. . . . . . . car. wlUI
InIerIar ~ Ipprodmatill8 tIIIt at .laDdard
MIddle-
do tlletT JIY·. voIc:e _ _
I\'om tile dlltlnt eeIJar or
aut at ......... receiver.
He I11III. IOUIIdI at clop
berlllnl 01' I babY cry\III
_
to come from under
ntUIIIDAY, .............. ~..
Two Hale Ceunty 4·H
cIIIr yar 011.,. ODe at tile
II 10 Irpe.
J.y hII IJII*I'8d 011
_eral m- .... quII pro(li'liiii111 1foIIywoad.
dlllllpiClFllIeNfGrd.
Mill 1'henII G~ PopI
.... Hly Mac Pili" ....
cbaDled double rInI weddInI vern It • p.m. FridoIy
Jan. 17. III the home at the
..
tilt Cburcb al Lubbock, affI·
IhInII JIY .... ~ do
..uaUIT-12
lS
,.
•
,.
!.
~~wrm ~ I1CID~(j) ..~
...
SPECIALS
EXTRA LEAN
..
·
iC
1411 Ave. D
..
Abernathy, TexIS '
GR0 UN D
ABERNATHY:
PHONE 298.2266
Jt
t WHERE YOU SAVE EVERYDA Y
..
S 8 9 • =;~~Ot\a~o::.~
LB.
tc ~ are~..,.:rad~
..
ColI.
1 .
t [~~~i~~~~
dlled.tthe.ceremcMl)'. Mr.
BEEF
lor
.~~~
From
TIN!
Abe....U.y
,.
..
'
Prices Good Sept 9 - 1 5 . . . . .
~
.. ..........................................................................................
M
..
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W..,kly Review D.IM
~ 14n:e"~
KRAFT
JUM
SALE r<.~'e>'-~~.
~> -.. VELVEETA
• ~.I;=~~ndt!~ppn~
.... ' .i ' PRODUCE
cint!k,~ar-rA"ji
.
S
3
3
9
•
.
.
E.
2LBS.
..
25
_.H ..""-'"
...
;. . ~
- . ,.... GRAPES
~.!'.!~!~. . . . . . . ~:. . .H................. 59
BEEF TRIPE
39~~ =~:~:=~~?~
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SUPER DOGS
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It'. true that finn cooperlt. relied the mood Ind
economic cirewmllncea at
the I.rmer, Ind curnntJy
the ouUook for botb II dim It
best.
"Advene w..!her condl·
tlOIIII in the HIgh Plaa have
sharply redu<:ed cotton and
grain sorghwn J)lUpecta lor
this laU. and many areu
won't have enough volwne
to operate all cotton gina.'!
said Dr. BiU Black, econom·
ilt in marketing and pollcy
with !be Texas Agricultural
ExtenJion Service, Texas
AIoM University System .
"Because 01 this, the
IIIIIIt decide
10
DECEMBER-8::!
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Since PGC', port eleVitar
In Corpua ChriIti hal been
sold, lannen mllit turn ta
FarMirco
or
Agi·
indultrlea ler mlrketJng
which II ... will opente Ind
which wiU dOH," he IIkI.
"It's more economicil to
operate a few 11111, even
lllough cotton mUlt be haul·
ed lrom • wider area."
Reduced prodUction also
allecta a cooperative' s cash
now . Black pointed out, be·
cause lannen lack income.
Teus larmen must also
decide how to market
cooperatiyely·stored tI1'ain
since the Producer's Grain
Corporation has shut down.
"This decision ."ects not
ooly High Plains growers
but a Iso those in the Rio
Grande Valley and C088l1l
Bend
" Black said.
services.
And the ability of coapera·
tlYea to move and RIIrket
grain economically iI affect·
ed by lhe continued high
coot 01 energy. credit and
abandonmeru,
railroad
Black added.
The current situation "lII!'
gests that many grain
cooperatives, especiaUy in
the High Plains. should con·
sider merging into larger,
units, !be
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Abern.llly School Menu
Breakf.st Menu
12
19
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14
J5
16
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28
29
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School Lunch Menu
o
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T EST S('M[ OU1.£ - ], )0 dlSl!Iuul
1~ ... o!l'Ibrr 10t h a nd 21st - snow da y .. lr
WHY IS IT ...
~f o r" Ch r utl,.,as
J,l1lu tlry 17th an d rebruol r y 28th - .now
I ! n eed .. d d ! t~ r C h d ~ tlM S
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dl ~l"'I U5 .s1
A MAN WAKES UP IN THE
MORNING AFTER SLEEPING
VNDERAN ADVERTISED BLANKF'!'
ON AN ADVERTISED MA1TRESS
AN D PULl.'; OFF ADVERISED
PAJAMAS.
lia(:C41 "urol4te
:: ~ :'.;::
HI(}h Schoc } CO"N! n(" e~nt
Jur, l ('I r H1Q t"
r,ul_.st l en
~
Be q ll ,r :n.q Se!'W:'ster
f n ~l '" ~ St'-..(', t "r
TAKES A BATH IN AN
ADVERTISED TUB.
SHAVES WITH AN
ADVERTISED RAZOR.
WASHES WITH AN
ADVERTISED SOAP.
PUTS ON ADVERTISED CLOTHES.
PUTS ON AN ADVETISED HAT.
SITS DOWN TO BREAKFAST
OF ADVERTISED COFFEE.
kinds. handle pipe and steel.
t ~;Z;;
•••••••••
2/81C • ~th:' ~~e
.
inM~:~
w':i.
Morrison oponod till! P ....
handle Cable Television
.•
•
RlIl"S TO HIS OFFICE
IN AN ADVERTISED CAR.
"'RITES WITH AN
ADVERTISED PENCIL ...
: HIIIIIIIII BREID...................... _'-119 ~H~STICIlS ....................................~109 COBBLERS. . .........~.........................'-.1 59; ~~~i~:±l~:~:~
_
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..... .
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SUPER
SUDS
$1 39
4001.
01 cable in
but
channel iI lhat Mrs. Mom·
broadcalt loc.1
* * * **
.. '
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1
•
BREAD.
~
.
1~
..
'. -. - EGGS
1
BLEACH
news and announcements in
print I ...... the screen by
mealll 01 a keyboard in her
oInce. A $5 illlIlU.Uon I..,
.. will be charged and It wiU
.. coot II 0 a month 1M tbe
Golden Bake
•
~
.~ • .
...
•
' ;. ,..
. - .
Large
nine channeil : a
M
lee 01
-: '117.50 will be charged lor
!he nine channeil plUi Home
.•
t
,. '
~
·
Whtle
M
~....
Swan
,
~
112 Gal.
~
•
•
:
<il!JJI PARKAY
•
Bo. Office and • $2 charg'
.. lor every additional TV set
in !be boule receivi/l& the
I LD.
.. cable lI!rViCt! .
1~
: ~~r:Jte::i~+1::
't
...
TOWELS
WISK
•M
:t
....
Gladiol.
•
FLOUR
•
Tyson C~cken.
..
iC
iC
FRANKS
6 Oz.
5 L~.
12 Oz.
t
..
..
..
M.
....
•
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M
...
:
....
•
:;
~
.1 OZ Hormel
·
~~ted
TRANSITION
,
OIurd1" CbrIat with Coody
:.. .:?:~
QIImben FuDeral HolDe.
15 0..
.• _._lIItbI . . . .
~ __
!'" 0aaImuDItJ
~:a=.:
:-.!:ri:!
1... He
.. burI~
"11
fr
•
1 ..;................
1lurYt...1DeI1acIII bII wife.
. . . . . ; I - . BID at Allor·
111l1li; ........... "-11M
1.
-**********************-*****." "." ••••••••*;; ••:.**********..*.****.: .....
.
. can male and his uncle. of a ppro. ;'.
ma'.ely 60 yan of age and also
Mexican·American. resu lted ID the
younger man being cut with a kn ife
and the older man getting shol ~tonday
nighL August 30 at HOg Avenue M
Abernathy . accordil18 to Police Chie l
Raymond Naron.
The incident DCCUrTed .bout G: 30
Monday night when !be two men got In
an argument . The older man tried to
s!JIb ~e younger man In the stomach,
but ended up slashi/l& !be younger
man 's hand . Then the younger man
pulled a n RG 22 ulibur piltol and shol
lhe older man through the upper part
01 the left leg. Naron said.
The older man ( uncle l jumped into a
nearby pickup to avoid getting shot
again. The yomger man lired two
sIIota into !be pickup, but the bullets
never penetrated !he door . The young.
er man went back into the house and
by ~is time !be neighbors had called
the Abernathy Police Department and
Naron arrived , Naron aaid .
The older man ""as taken to Lubbock
General Hospital by EMS in the ambu·
•
•
I
•
..
XaIIId"~;··
~~..:..-.:..::
nat tire on tbe car 01 the
lour women . While he was
fixing it , two 01 the women
went into the station ollice
and took $643 from the
money bag. which was in
sight, Naron said.
.
Mauldin noticed that the
money had been taken a
while after tbe lour women
had left the station. The
women told Don earlier they
were headed lor Lubbock,
but they were not caught,
even though Lubbock olli·
cers were asked 10 be on the
look-out lor them. Don also
told Naron that he had never
seen· any 01 them before,
Naron ended.
PUBLIC NOTICE
81'11f IXPtANATURY SIATlM fNI'>
OF PROPOSED
CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENTS
GENERAL ELECTION
NOVEMBER 2.1982
PROPOSITION NO, I
ON THE BALLOT
PROPOSITION NO.2
ON THE BALLOT
Hou •• Jolnt Reaolullon
1 propoles. constitutional
amendment that prohibits
any atate ad valorem tax.
"oulRe Joint Resolution
62
amended by Senate
Joint Reso lu tion 10 propoaes
a
co nst it utio nal
a mendment that would
elimina.. .he $80,000.000
ceiling on state welfare
aid during any "aeal )lur.
The amendment would
set the s tate welfare
spen ding limit at $160.·
000,000 for the 1982. 1983
bien nium,
"he amendment further
provides that, for ' each
lubsequent biennium , the
maximum a mount spent
for state welfare ahan not
exceed one pefC!ent of the
atat. bud",!.
The propoaed .mend·
ment will appear on the
ballot al followa ,
"The
conltitutional
amendment to authorile
the I.ai, l.ture to pro.
vld. a.ai.tante throu.h
the .pproprlaUona protela. IOf nftd7 penona
and tAl pl."" • o.illn.
on peym.nll for need7
dopondlnt ehUdre" .t
0'" pe...nt of Ih. Illt.
budpt."
Receipt. from prevl oualy
authoriaed •• ate ad v. ~
lorem ta.J:fI' that are 001·
leeted .fter the effective
date of the propoled
amendment. .hall be de·
poli •• d to the credit of Ihe
eeneral fund of the county
eolteelin, the taxes and
may be •• pended for
count)' purp0le., Tuea
collected before that da ••
Ihan be dlatributed by the
lecialatuN amon, educ.·
. tlofta\ inatltuliona .II,ibl.
to neti •• t)ao.. fund. un·
der prior I.w. The pro.
poNd ame.dment .Iso H·
peala a HCtion of tb.
Conltltutlon levyin, an ad
ValoreM tu tor a con·
atrudlon fund for 17 atac.
coll...a and unl..nltlel.
Th.- pnlpooad amondm... t will .p....r on tb.
ballot u 'OUowI:
''TIIa
eoutttudonal
~t
repealln.
tile _
....J*lT .....
.1
PROPOSITION NO.3
ON THE BALLOT
Senate Joint RHolut;on
8 propose. a cons titutional
amendment that wou ld
e.x empt machinery and
equipmen t used in the
production of farm and
ranch produC!t.a from ta.... tion . No doll ar limits
would be imposed and the
exe mption would appl y to
corporatlona and partners hips as well .. to famil ies
and individuals.
The proposed amendment will appear on the
ballot 81 folloWI :
liThe
constitutional
amendment exempt in,.
implements of husband4
ry
(acricultural ma
ehin ery and equipment)
from ad valorem taxation."
4
PROPOsmON NO.4
ON THE BALLOT
Hou.. Joint R..olutio.
!l ::::=e:te'h~ttit~t~:ld
authorl.e tb. Leri.l.tur.
to aet • tour year maximum term ot office tor
board member. ot certain
",ater di.trlet. and conaerYation and reclamation
diatrieto.
Th. propolOd amend·
mont will .ppear on the
ballot al foUowl:
''The
oonatltutlon.l
....ndm...t .utbori.l,.,
tho lArial.tuN to pro·
vide c..... a
to ••eeacI ~our J ••n for mom"'"
of .......Inc ..... of
terlaln w.tar diatrieto
,.nd eon..nation ancI
...I....tion dItUIet.. "
".t
Breves Declaraciones Erplicafiv as
De Las
PROPOSITION NO.5
ON THE BALLOT
House Joint Resolution
proposes • constituti ona l amendment
that
wnuld author ize Tarran t
and Bee, counties to hold
county· wide elections to
abol is h t he co unty treasurer'a offi ce by majori ty
Yote.
Should the cou nty treasurer's office be abolished.
the duties. powers, a nd
(unct ions of that office
would be transferred to
the C'ounty auditor or the
succeaso r to the auditor's
functions.
The proposed amendment will appear on the
ballot .1 follows :
~fThe
constitution.l
amendment to abolilh
the office ot county
trea.urer
in
Tarrant
and Bee count;es."
Reaol'udOn Conj,mtG tie
Camara fie RepreHntan·
Ie. I propotte una en mien·
Senal. Joint Reoolullon
S propose. a conllitutional amendment that would
rail, the conatitutional
intereat rate limit on atate
central obliration bona
from 6% 10 11t;l. . Th. new
12% cellinr da.. not, hO ....
4
.".r•• pply to bond. illued
bJ tho V.t.r.nl' Land
Board.
'rI\' propoaed amlnel·
ment will appear on til,
ballot I I followl:
,
'.,-...
eonltitutional
..... n.ment Incnuin.
tba maximum InC.reat
rale allow" on alat. ·
...... obU. .Uon bondit
tAl ii .......1aoI
.nnual 1,,1_1 l'lie of
11%."
."1'1"
Rewl"ci." Con}."". 4e
Itl Camara dct Repre.en.an·
Ie.
da con,titucional qwe 111'0hiba cualquier i mpuesto
elltatal por aval1io. Los re
eibos de iml}Uestol elLataln por avaluo atttenoTmente autorizado, que Bon
,.brado. dUl'ut. d. la f.ella ,feetiva de /a propu•••
(J
62 tal como /u e en-
m.etrdada por R e.oluci6n
CO"i"nto del S.nado 10
propone una enmienda
4
ta. enmienda.
PROPOSITION NO. 6
ON THE BAUOT
PROI'OSfCION
NUMEROZ
EN LA BOLETA
~.
constitutional que elimine
d limit. d. $80,000,000 de
Oo$istencia pwblica tatatal
durante cu.alquier aio fucal.
uta .ecnon
,enin depotitadolJ 01 cr~dit. d. 1 fondo g<m.,al d.1
condado que cobra lOB im-
l.a enmienda e.tobleter!<J eI I/ ••il. d. glJOeo. d.
asistencia pti.blica estatBl
1/ ,..0<1....... g... a 1160.000,000 pa.... • 1 bi.·
tado. ~ I•• fi .... del ' ttio 1981-1 9811.
co"dGdo.
i1tt1*esro. " Adenttis la tttmit1tda
que
cobrado" antel de
e,a l echa. set'o n di8tribuf· "ro vte que pam cada. bUnio tublig.ac"tte la ta1ltido. "... Ia L ' gu/at14"" .n· dad md::eim4 fltt! . . pwMla
tre la.tJ .".dt\tnoJteB educ(V gCl.!lt4r eft. aaUtmtcta. ptibli~
tivas que S-o", elegi~k. co. no Itr4 eK tie'fo th 1 %
.partJo ncibir e808 londo.
dd pr""PIt""to .. tClta!.
bajo "11 l'... via. La pro-pauI.ta ettmimda ta.mbU"
La prop....14 .,...unda
rlV~ "1lA 1J4cti6ft de lo.
apa......ni ... /a bo/eI4
C....!iluci61t que impo... como sill"-:
"''' i",paUl,to pot" avalVo
pa'" '''' fondo po.... Ia .....
"La ...........m_it1&-
,,1U.tO.
'0"
,toB
,!r-.r.cci61t de 17 eo'.gio. 11
-
",Mv,ri'idod•• ut4.t4l...-
.... .n
.._ ......
La "..."....14 ."ml....
:
Ia
bol4ta
.
"La ..........,.. ...... lihl. eiosoa/ ............. '11m·
,.....eo .. t4t4j .."'" Ia
.............
-
'*
donal
t.>lda _
4lttotVo CI
14
tM
l..giw/ae ...... ,.,...,......... -
., _
~._"""'"
~ tat46'- ... ""'It."
.."'" IN _ _ ,..... .
Jti... ~._
c,oitdbt tM ... ".......
',......,....,fa.taI. ..
I ....
ADVERTISE
THE ABERNATHY
WEEKLY REVIEW
Ruol..doll COftjlUde Ul
PROPUESTAS
ELECC ION GENERAL
2 DE NOVIEMBRE DE 1982
I'ROI'OSICION
NUMERO 1
EN LA nOLETA
IF YOU BELIEVE IN
YOUR BUSINESS
AND WANT TO BUILD IT...
Senado B propane una t1l.4
mien" c0118titucional f1L6
fzencione de la impoM6ft
de impuesto. la maquiMria ~ el eq-uipo qlU .e WIG"
en 10. producci6n dt produttos agr ko l08 '1/ ganez.-.
deroB, No ae impondria
Umites de dolarea W 10
exel1ci6n se aplicaria a
las 8ociedade8 'Qn6nimaB V
. colectivas tanto como ala.
familias 'Y 101 individUal.
£NMIENOAS CONSTITUCIONALES
11.
IF A BUSINESS
ISN'T GOOD ENOUGH ro
ADVERTISE ...
HE ADVERTISES IT FOR SALE.
I'ROI'OSfCION
lVUMERO 3
EN U BOLETA
AVISO PUBLICO
~=?dt:::
Male Athlete in AHS In 1m
in addition to ""rving IS
~.!t,:~dent as a junior
.,
:
l<~;~
'1
,_UIEIIII!A~!~IIE ..•............4 c
2/7 9 t
t•
PORK BEANS
~
Barrera, who holds !be AHS
record 012 : 00.0 in the haU·
nille and 40 .0 In till! 330·
intermediate hurdIr:s, .Iso
• dvancedtotheReclonI-M
meet IhI.s y .. r in the hurdlea
.nd long jump alter earning
honorable mention AII·Dilt·
rict 4·M hem,,", in botb
lootbaU and baaketball .
in
a::ed
.t 72;;;;:;;
........ .......
:
EuipoiATED MILl••~ ••••• 2/11c
t
An Irgurnfflt between an approxl ·
mately 40 year Did Mexica n·Ameri·
lance. The yOU/l&er man was
driven to Methodist Hospi.
lal by his wile. Naron said.
Both are recovering Vr"ell
Irom the injuries and no
charges have been filed by
either man , Naron ended.
1643 Taken From
Gulf Station
Last Friday night at
approximately 8 p.m .. lour
Mexican-American lemales
took $643 in cash lrom
Don's Gulf Ststion, located
on the west service road on
the north side 01 lown.
according to Chiel Naron.
Don
Mauldin.
ststion
owner, was reported fixing a
..
1~
1~
1
PiA'iUT BUnEl•••; ;••••••••U48
~
Argument Results In Shooting
straight yean. hal signed to
run track at W.yland Col·
leae in III'/H) , WBC Coach
. . Gary GoodIn has announced .
• az.
t
rhe wo.d " Iiclion" come.
f.om .he Lal in [;etio. which
melns some th ing invented
..
...n_IH
$
SVRUP.
228
••••• ••• •••• •••••••••• •••• •••••••
....iC
( ~Yiew ~h«OS by Mike Bean!
BAlUlONI!I WERE BEING DI!111UBUTED by Abemlthy AthIetJc s-ter CIub.-ben
befo~ till! game Friday night The balloons were released lrom I.... in the slldlwn loIlowinI
the schooloong. I R"'iew Photo l
1.. . .
D e l t & .
.M
THEN, HE REFUSES ro
ADVERTISE. SAYS ADVERTISING
DOESN'T PAY,
nIaI\ ar9IIIId..l,be . . . JICIe OIl ~ f.aC, two
Aberna~y·Petersburg game. in the top photo. In the holtom photo,
HauMoo
for a pass lrom Smith which was good lor ""yeral yards . The Lopes won the game 14·7.
P.nhandle
.. son can
PRICE SMASHERS
...
.Ueya.
:.. ~!lt)~y~J::":t.:~:
eatlngleatu~oIthewe&ther
_!her
******
f
iI
Aberna~y
=~to!0't:
:
Thursday : Chile Bea ....
Ca bbage
Slaw.
French
Fries. Corn Breao. Apple
Cobbler. Milk
Friday :
Hamburgers,
Lettuce. Pickles, Onions.
Vegetable Sticks. ChoColate
Pudding . Milk .
HQ LlOA YS
~. ~~ t;=:-~ill,.~:
:
Tuesday :
Ilologna
Cheese Sandwich. Lettuce.
Tomato. Pickles, French
Fries, Mixed Fruit, Milk .
Wedn.sday : .
Taco
W/ Cheese,
Lettuce
&0
Tomato, Pinto Beans, Cow·
boy Bread. Milk.
(
r1eed&d
9
!Iea'-- : Prelldent · Alan
LeIter, Vice-Prelident
IIIIT)' TIlley, Sec.·Treu. .
Angle Attebury, and Repor.
ter . Darren ){n0i .
Monday :
Corn Dogs ,
Macaroni" Cheese, English
Peas, Fruit Pudding. Milk.
School
Menu
Monday: Apple Juice, Hot
Wheat Cereal, Milk.
Tuesd.y: Pineapple Tid·
bits, Sausage Biscuits, Milk.
Wednesday:
Banana,
Cereal, Toasi, Milk .
Thunday: Ora/l&e Juice,
Eggs , Toast, MiIl<.
Friday : Stewed Prunes,
Cinnamon Rolls , Milk.
MTWTHF
13
Reporter . PbII Vlndylriff.
s.,IIe-_: Prelldent ·
Kelley HlIl, Vlc:e-Prelldent .
Kevin LeIter, Sec.·Trea •.•
Billy Rawe, and Reporter .
Sept. 13·17
MAlL-B)
T
I.
AberatbJ fIIIII 8cbaaI
cluI amc.. ....
MleeWd reetnII)'. "., IN :
F ...... _ . , ~ •
TOlly RadrICt*, Vice-Prell·
dent . Iflro1d Mm., Sec·
reIIry . P,trIet LewII, Ind
LB. 98~; =:~:2~:~~
,... DIfI
mACAROll1 DIIIIIER
28
10
Bobby Thomason. formerly
wi~ a motor lreight com·
pany. iI manager of A·I .
...
...................................... J:!: ......H.................
9
W
and still in the process 01
settil18 up In the old bowling
~ ~~IlII=to~1 ~fw:~:
GARY'S
27
9
MTV"'"
II
ouUit in town.
parenl company , iI being
V,",
10
....dy lor buainesa yel. It's a
branch 01 Wolf IrrigaUon
"
_._....
C
:';t..~ ;:~DE.S·_·· ··-·····-·~-. -· . -· · .
H ........
..
"Ij
!
'.
I"T
parenta.re Mr. •nd lin.
Earl
Poale of Plainview.
•
Wayland IIIptill
:
•
,
.tIIf*********************************..."I Ir...·....r...·*~r*·*~r...·*********************_ ::ew':~:U!:~HI~C:
~.
I
"'. . . . .y.
•••• c;la. 8ffIeen
F ..... £ooper.tlve8
£ru.e lal TI_e8
'EPTDe....a
K'f'wt'Hrs
PAGIa
l.a propuuta enmienda
a.parectrd en 10. beida
como IJigue:
uLa e1tmienda con.titucioJl al que eze"t1'o,u~ hi.
implemento. de prodNeti6Jl agricola (maquift4-ria 11 equipo, agncltlhtroll d. Ia ImI"Miei6K de
impue.toa por avaA1o,"
I'ROI'OSfCfON
NUMERO 5
EN LA BOLET"
ft_lIdia c.,A/8AM /II••
lJ.9 •
la
c......... "__
prueata:"t.. pt"OJ)C»I.
Wl4
.w.mienda.
comtitaacio'll4l
que autorice a. los. con.dtldo!
de Tarrant 11 Bee celt:brar
electio,"" eta la, do. t01ldado! para 4"uJar JXW ma~
v.na . , ofiei. de to..... ro
,
del e""dado.
Si .e on"la el olicio de
tnot'tro del condado, Ie
cederd", 10, delleree, poderes " funcirme. de dicho
oficio al auditor d.1' <"".
dado 0 01 81tc:e.Of' de la
/u:1tciofteB del auditor.
La mmienda pro,,,,..ea
en lo bolda
apaTecerli
como "gue :
4fLa
~mieMa
eOlUtitK-
ei.rtal que 4Kw14 . , • ficio
de teaoref'O lUI COtldGdo
en 10. co'll.d4do. d. Tor-
ra71t .. Bee."
I'ROl'OS1C10N
NUMER04
ENUBO~"
RNOlIld'" C_Joo_ •
I.C......... R . _ te. 77 proJ)O'" "714 "'minda comtihccioJUU flU
autorice a la Ll'l1u14htra
utableeer "" Umit-. d. cwafro aio, pot"U 101 plein. cI.
10. ",icmbro. d. lao
i...."'"
de eimo. dUtrito. ·d. !!pa
11 dl.trieo. de C01II~
IIr.e~
La ...",indo propi..lto
III! /a boWa
,,""""""'
COMO , ; , . . :
uLc .,.. . . . eoutictt-ciou/ _ CIMtoriIa· .....
L.gio"hI... - pie._d......... _
... ... ........
..,._........ .
" ,....
........
d.z...~
I. . . . . . . . .
"'""*-
--.w..u...........
I'ROl'OSfC10N
NUMEROIS
EN LA BO£EJ'''
R..."..... c-}oo- ...,
!i._a 6
14KG nmiestd4
.''''''''\1
P"!>"'.'
t ..."lituciortal
.!
"'"
1f,,"1. de. ...
,.".lil1lciotoal •
1"f.,.4. n 10, hftM
,..,.. ..1ataIu tM ~
ci61t • '''' • JI,.. Sfot _
t4rif"
•
,ft,-
...,...• • 1 . _ ,, ,,,,,""
JI'" 100 . . ..".... . . . . .
.....,-. . . . J. . . .
r..
........ ,.,.V"--
,
'nMIIDAY, _
, _ _ .. • •
,AGlla.
TH\J1U\DAY ~ " " " ,...ER t. IItIl
I
...,.
'~
0...
u..
. . . . . 1_ faoIbaII
~ , . • .YieIIarJ
~
. IIIabth
....... K.- by • crIIIIIIDI
3700 - . 1. No CII!I reaDy
~
• IIauIbter
like
jIII8, ..,.aAn)' KnI., .'
LIoIII .cUd It with ...
qUIck, ~ blltIai deI_
that allowed the KaIlll8I'OO1
on!)' 11. totaJ )'ards. New
Dtial II4:IIr1Id In the lint
quarter on ai )'anl nm by
RGtieI1 JacaoD behind
auanl Ken Rlebardson. The
alra pOint attempt railed,
Sc:or.e at the end of !be fll'St
quarter was New Deal 6.
Kreu"O .
In the second quarter, !be
name of. !be game was de-
:n.
r _ as neither teom could
get anytblng going offensively. The score remained
New Deal 6, K...... 0 at the
hall
The
rireworks began in !be
thinl 'q uarter as the Lions
took !be opening kickoff and
marched in for the score.
The scoring play covered 16
EAT HAtE CEN:fER
ews
~, tllallllllothe .....
aDd tbrIfty IIIOYII of HIary
~ aDd fine blod!lPl
FRIDAY NIGHT HERE AT 8:00
KNuO .
by Sliarla AIIe~ury
A mlnule Into the • th
quarter, another KNu mil·
of the
off_lve lIIie.
take led to more pointa ror
'l)Ie LIonI2 point convenlon
At.letle •••8ter8 To
the LloM. On the 4 th down.
attampt wa. good 81
deep In their own territory,
quarterback Craig Harring!be snap rrom 'center went
Sp••8.r F18. Fry
ton', pall W81 Upped. but over the punter'. head, and
,
caugbt by Nathan · Sbannon
the punter was tackled in
The New Deal Athletic night at7: 30 during football
while lyin8 (lat on hIa back.
the end zone by Tommy . Booster Club will 8JlO1WOr a season in the high school
The score was New Deal 14
fISh fry tomorrow night be- cafeteria. Go Lioos-Beat
Ahetcrombie for a safety;
to KreaaO .
so the score was New Deal fore the Lions ¥S. Hale Cen- Hale Cenier! I !
The next Lion score was
Remember - there will be
lO Kress O.
ter game In the high school
,
cafeteria. Serving will start a pep rally today in the Jr.
. set up by the fl1'lt or two
interceptions by Steve John- .
at 5 p.m. and end at 7 p.m. High Gym at 2: 30 for !be 7,
With less than 4 I:. minutes Admission
is
children 8 and JV teams, games will
son. Henry Ramirez was
remaining in the game, and through 5th grade $2 and start at 5: 00 p.m . at Hale
twisting and t~ for
the Lions trying to run out adults $4. The Athletic Center. Come on out and
every yanl he cOiiJd get! He
the clock with mostly second Boosters would like to invite support these leams, they
was hit at the goal to Score
leamen; playing, quarter- everyone lD come on out to will soon be our New Deaf
from 12 yards out. Ramiback
Robert Lee Villegas the fish fry on their way to Lions Val'llity teom.
rez's PAT made the. score
gave the " ball to Henry the always ' exciting New
New Deal's Band BOOINew Deal 21, Kress O. A
Ramirez one more time. Deal Lions vs. Hale Center ten;, will meet Monday,
fumble recovery by Robert
Ramirez was really pounded Owls game.
September 13 at 7 p.m. In
Jackson put the Lioos in
by Kress defender at the 20
If you're interested in bethe band hall . They will
scoring position again at the
yard line, but bounced off coming a member of the
Kress 35 yanlline. Facing a
meet every other Monday
and roared into the end zone New Deal Athletic Boosters. after the 13th at the same
3rd and 4 situation, at the 4
for his fourth touchdown of they meet every Tuesday
time.
yard line. quarterback Craig
the night. His third extra
Harrington called Ramirez's
point
climaxed
the
scoring
number again and got
AnnOUDeemeDts
another 6 points. Ramirez's giving the Lions a 37-0
triump.
PAT made it New Deal 28,
Several New Deal resiand resumes classes January 3. Sorry about that.
dents have started a Helen
Happy
Birthday
thia
Sharp fund at First State
week
, Jerry Lumpkin. John
Bank in Ahernathy to . help
George and Helen with Johnson, Clyde Pumroy.
RaY'1'ond Sherman, Carlton
medical expenses on Helen's
Kress New Deal
STATISTICS
Peters. Rachel Duran. Kelly
illness and fight with can17
First Downs
7
Blagg. Jamie Styles , Cindy
cer. Donations are very
265
Rushin Yards
78
much appreciated and can Fairman and Robin Dunn.
Passing Yards
57
38
Happy Anniversary lhis
be made at the bank In
Total yards
322
116
week : Mr. arid Mrs , Tom
Ahernathy.
3·9
5-17
Passes-Com pi Att.
On last week's school Ahercrombie. Mr. and Mrs.
2
Passes Intercepted by
o
calendar, we forgot to put in Ricky Murdock , Mr. and
Fumbles Lost
2
that school dismisses De- Mrs. Karl Rieken and Mr.
cemher 17 Cor Christmas and Mrs. Marvin Dudley.
SCORING SUMMARY
Pep Rally
Word of Appreclallon
1st Quarter - Robert (Ramirez ki~k)
The fans would like to let
Jackson, I yd. run (kick Henry Ramirez. 4 yd. run
Today
the players know tha t we
( Ramirez kick )
failed)
'!bere will be a pep rally
3rd quarter-Henry Ramirez , 4 th Quarter-Tommy Aber- appreciate the team effort
tomorrow at 2' : 30 p .m in the
16 yds. run ( 2 pt. conver- crombie tackled punter in and sportsmanship on and
high school gym for our
off the field, We would also
sion-C, Harrington pass to end zone for safety
varsity team . Everyone is
10
thank
the
coaching
like
Henry Ramirez. 23 yd. run
Nathan Shannon)
invited to come and help our
staff for the long hours put
Henry Ramirez, 12 yd. ( Ramirez kick )
cheerleaders cheer
our
forth in preparing the Lions
Lions to victory N2 .
for each game ! We love ya
Game time is 8 p,m . at
Lions , keep up the good
New Deal.
work .
Stats For New Deal ,Kress Game
SCORING BY QUARTER
lSt 2nd 3rd 4 th
0 0 ' 0
0
, NewDea160
2
9
:Kress
Final
o
. 37
: Mark Harrington, New
, Deal, punted 3 times for a
i 41 yd Fumbles Recovered
I by-Robert Jackson ( 1) and
: Ken Ricbardson ( I) Passes
I Intercepted by-Steve JohnI son (2) . Leading Rusher for
: J<ress was Lynn Freeman
, with 9 carries for 33 yards.
1-
uo..
Victory Roster
New Deal 37 Kre •• O
MEET EM'
-
LANDMARK
~ R t. A ITORS
ROBERT JACKSON. a
senior. will wear number
44 on the field. He plays
pooiUons of Fullback and
Linebacker. He is the son of
Mr, and Mrs , Dean Jackson
d the New Deal area .
207 Av• . M
2 Beclrooms - 2 bath . 2 ca
garage. largo 2 BR. Hom
wlll1 lorgo kitchen de.
area·has large utlUty room
with .Ink It pantry. See Ihll
ver,.· good value that Is
or SO.OOO .
,.
GO'
LIONS
BEAT
HALE
l o ~ n" ' , ou
CENTER
( 42·2tp)
:! Hft I ha th
:, lilt . :' " '.•r ,'
ANN HENRY GIFTS
NEW DEAL GIN CO.
N.w Deal. T... I
Phone 748-5168
New Deal. Texas
Phone 746-1232
FARMERS DEPOT
Pbooe 748-5510
For Rent
$99.5 00
S \ U ,liUlI
" 1"C,O\~"h
ment Two rooms and bath.
ATTEBURY F ARM STORE
New Deal. T...s
New 0.01. T.xII
HUB CITY MACHINE &
MANUFACTURING, INC.
PboI!e 74f.5Z57
bth linlv....lly • 11511> SIred Labboek
_745-3313
JONES .PRODUCE & FARMS
Wanled: Ride to and from
work. [go to work at 8 a.m .
and work at 28th and G. WiU
pay 14 .00 a day 5 days a
week. Call 298-4042 .
( 42-2tl')
,
Grant's real name
was Hiram Ulysses Grant.
Way In Showing Confidence,
In Economy
Ya rd Sale , Thursday . Fri·
day. a nd Saturday at (409
Ave . H. Clothing. men suit .
and m isc . i t em s.
in sta llm c nI d eb l la sl mo nlh t han (hey
For it new decor, enam" shabby wastebaskets and
paste on calendar pictur.es. Shellac over the pictures.
in hi . . .
Rig 1,,' 11.\ nc\\., re porters- have ca ugh t
nt l\4 ca h,: ula l c :1
'l.la nd tng III a r,u'e b~ th e
amounl 01 t.:umpatgn mo nc\' h(· · ..
rai ~ L' d , T hl,,' o ne \'-ho rai !ol(,~ (he mosl I ...
mo.., 1 IIhh II) w in , lilc..' ) sa~ . but m ll..,1
o n 10 [ h l ~ (f c nd an d
c.'il nd id :I IC'",
rL' p ll n l'f ~
ha\ l' nev c r stud ied C.' cono
do n' t kn o\\ Ih al all a
n tnd id al L' i., dllin g I...
... h,n, ing Clllltidc ncc i n thc fUlur e
I' ll ,; h\)~ SlI m e cu nfide n(,e in Ih e
f Ui u rl' a nd b u \ a nc .... ! raClOr if 50 n 1('
l' alld i d ':il l~ will ' lel nl<.' 111 un the SCHL' t
of ra! ., i n~ ~'ontr i b u tltln::. fur ,h e pmj erl
A ft L' r a ll. gl.' lI i ng me a nc'" Ira('lt lr
\\ \lu ldn' l be..' an~ Ic~ ... helpfu l for t he
b i g.~pend 1ll g
cu nfidenl'e i n t he future, alt houg h
so me would ar gue It' S a sign mure
peopl e arc havi ng troub le ritaki ng e nd s
111(,'1.: 1
For Sale
\
~
I -I tP I
For Rent : F urnis hed apa rt ment. 'l'\A1o rooms and bath
Mrs . J .D. Webb. 298·2700 .
~o children or pt'ts .
2 Lou t'or Sal"
loca (ed 910
2nd St Ca ll 806-266-51115 or
ru ght 266-«002 W.M. Butle r .
~tor l on . Texas
, 43 ~ Ipp l
Toml.- . EI.ven mil..
north of Abernathy. I mil.
west Farm Road W. .t 37.
Ca il 879-4571 .
( 42 -21<: )
A..- ..... Sal< : Can $200 1
Availl bl. at loca l gov 't
.. Ies. Ca ll ( refWldable,
1·714 ·>6lHl 241 ext. 3813 for
di rectory (hat sho.... you
how to purchase, 24 hn .
\ 41 ·3tp)
( 40 ' rts l
Job
Opportunity
Earn Extrl , .. :
For
Christmas . Sell Avon part or
full time . Call 298-2191 ,
( 4Htp)
Plano Lnloal
Priva te pi a no lessons . beginners , intermediate, advanc -
ed Child ren and adults .
Phone 87'3 ·3583 .
( 39-9tp l.
,
Business
RHponllblt Penon
Service
Wanled to own and operate
candy or Confection vending
route . Abernathy and sur· TR EE It SHRUB sprayi ng,
rounding area , Pleasanl State licensed Phone 298business , High protit items. 249-1 G"ne Slepllens.
( t4 ·rts )
Can start part lime. Age or
export.nce not lmportad_
Requirel car and $3718 to
$124 52 cash Investment.
For deta ils call Eagie
Industries 1-800 · 3 2~723 .
( 42-ltp )
A rso n is becomin g a m~ .
jor 3ClivilY in ou r stal e and
Ttxan s are genin g rhe bi ll.
Last )'ear. more rhan 5.000
build ings w~re' destroyed, a n
cs limated' loss of 100 mill io n
dolla rs in STru ct Ur es.
Wh en crimi nals pla y " ilh
fi re for reven ge or p rof it ,
yo u pa y the pri ce with hig her
ins urance rat e-s . A key element in d etect ing an d pro .. e-
.... hi..:h
Fo r the
mo nlh o f Septembe r. t he
Cri me Stop pers A d\'iso r y
('ou ndl I ~ fo("'using il s ~Iate ­
\\ Ide "Cri me of the M o nth "
011
ar~on , " n~
cili z.en ha\ing
bC' t" ee l1
concern ed 1~lw .
abi d ing citize ns, I n ~ uran(e
companie-s and pu bll ..: o ffi ·
cia ls, By faC ilitatin g th t" ("'- ,
change o f IIlform ati o n, morl'
fraudulen t a r~o n cl a l m ~ Yo 111
~ deniC'd and the num ber o f
arrests and co n\ lclio n5 \\ III
25 2, riPS. C a,., h re\\ a rds a rc
;I\Jtlabli.' fo r IIlfo rma l io n
lead In!! l\) I hl.' a rr ('~ t and in,
dl(1 1ll1.'111 of Ih ese cri mi nals
I f :1r ~on ~c hc m es are to be
OJ! tailc:d or I.:olllro ll ed . we
Ill.'cd ~ o ur hel p. Call 1-8QO.
2'''1 · riP S lodar a nd help
burn a n
For All Your
a r~o nis t,
C&G
BUILDERS
CEMEN1' need.
CaU
R~ad y
Mix
Hemod(' hng,
c..' un ~ l i tu t~ ll' ~~ Ihan J
p. \puliu iul1 , ~ minu rn :.
hardl:.
\\ Il rlh
n!pa Ir
..\\'('
~(\
.J ob to sma ll 1609'
1> ,
Abernath y ,
:! ~ - :! UKti
.-.n 3ma ll
bolh e rl ng \l> llh ,
Yours fait hfu ll y ,
J . A.
"
The first wristwatch of
which there is anv record
dates from 1790, and is
itemited in ,t he accounts of
the Swiss
watchmakers
Jaquet -Oroz and leschot
of Geneva as "a watch to
be fixed On a bracelet,'!
DEALERSHIP OPEN
Pre- Assembled Log s
l~ .... aus assembl ed OIl ou r
al ,m , e reCI6(l .. your lob Sflt!
OUf ea pen enced crew. New
prOCUI SOlveS Ihe 10(lr big ·
geS I prot lems '09 dell er s ell ·
t>e"eocl! 11 Poor 100 con ·
SHu( l'Qn, 21 l ... e ~ pefle ncl!(1
Clil ""' 5. 3l U 'I s uuaDle b u" oJlI1g
C(lSIS 4J lnCeC ISlfte ' ,nanc.,n g
0)
M'g r 0 1 the lamou s l tf"com
lOt,j Home , 10 seelo.mg (11 51", t
CE'jl le.s tl) e5 1i1 0llSh le l" 1
salt'S .. ,1 " '" • a rOlec leQ · Ier·
, uor~
Unl,m l led
ftichard DuBo~e
Income Potential
•
NEW DEAL HIGH SCHOOL BAND practices their marching routine down • street on the
school campus , ( Review Photo by Sharla Attebury )
D.C . WRECKING INC.
WESTERN GLOVE CO.
tor $1 pet S>Q tI
sem biI' op l lOoal l
Ph .... 712-8739
JOE KIRK WHOLESALE MEATS
NEW DEAL COOP GIN
New Deat. TexIS
Phone 746-5313
RI. 3 Lubbock
ABERNATHY
KELLEY'S GARAGE
W~EKL Y REVIEW
Now Deal. Texa.
NEW DEAL
BAND & ATHLETIC BOOSTER
CLUB
FARMERS CORNER
45Z.ClowIlIW. Lu..... k
STEPHENSON
PORTABLE WELDING
746-60 )5
Lubbodt. T.....
sollr ami
Illeplace ICIal nome I'IfI. T,
,ng i y51em c ul S ulll lllfi S
up 10 60"\
• ExcluSl fte
Wealnel La ..:
~'
G & G Aero-Service
Lubbock International Airport
747-1288
NEW LISTINGS
709 5th - 3 bedrooms. Z bath
Priced To Seu ,
1111 Ave. F . two story needs some r epair . .
.1I!"ke Offer
Very Nice Trailer On
TWo LoIs !ZtO-IIh
COtt'let3
~ .-,~~
• 501'0 6'
log'
een
...
• P re·a s5t!mbleo Ot you erecl
~
We would like to help you with your invitations, and 2
~ other accessories. We have th ree wedding books to S
Zchoose from. We have the latest additions to the
wedding invitations.
Sjaacloul It Comfortabl.
3 bednom. Z bath. 1202 2nd
One Of The NlcOII!n Town
In d tvld Uill selec ted m UST I'tjve
atl! lI t ~ TO DurChase Of mon o
gage I $17,000 moo.l home,·
Can MI , Sloan CO LLECT f1O.il
1317 Avo. H
3 Bedraom and Basem.nl
ltncoln lOO Homes,
932. t51
1908 N M' II'I ,
N, C, 2808 1
KI M'DOIIS,
PO 80J\ 580. 924 AWInuiI 0
Pbo,. 18061 298,2536
Abern.thy , T'l'Ia 79311
.762-14eO
----
_ 1~~i;J[~1;~ -fi~~~
- = ~g~::7 [~~:~
JIM SMITH REAL TV
RAitGAIN IllINTERS!! '
3 bedroom, 2 baths, basement,
~__
, -DOCTOR
large modern kitchen.
VANMOOItE
'Comfortable-medium priced 3 bedroom. 2 bath. basement,
. tove and refrigerator slays , Seller will make allowance for
'repairs .
DON EVEL VN FONDY
Bus. 71$..tstI
ALOE VERA HEALTH
~
a
- HOUSEHOLD- BATH-CARE
,
BY AVA CARE
DO CUSTOM DAAP~RY WORK
Gerl Gartin Division "ana,et:
rna)' notice a mIllIy spot In
~
the .pupI1 01 JOIlI' .,., wIIIcb II
IIIrmaUy bIacII,
A catanct II • cIautIiJtI of IIIe
. . of !be .,. !bet . . . . .
willi the ...... 01 liIItl t1JIa
_
bIuITId ..... AcaIaraCt
caD _ _ .. . . . , II1It
.... DGl._
ys're
-
...
.....,..
..............
.....,...
Il . . . . _
01 It fir . . .
-
.. ,...
...
..................
.......... _.
_
. . . . wIII,.. ......
1I\qIrJ" tIJID .. ~ ..
,-.
...,.~
fl11 Awe E
...... 2
-2711
Of OI'TOMETRY - - - - - -
Cataract Symptoms
Trouble with liIIlla is <me of
the symptoms of cataract. So are
.oots IX' IIIIaat ~. Or yOll
UN1QUE .. .UJXURY ... ENEHGY EFFICIENT ...
3 Bedroom, 2 balla. elltr. storage. Ip«ial features.
BEAUTY PRODUCTS
Abernath'l Weekly Review
Good Buy
INVESTMENT 106%
SECURED 8Y
MODEL HOME
(Wedding StatioM"" J
Iz Invitations · Announcements Jj
I
Accessories
i
916.Ave. 0
un.' Ot m Irea l ec
• l ,l H, Ir ' IIiS 10 Insu re s ue·
~--..-.--.~~~IUI____~
i
I
real estate
(Pl e-. .·
• uSSt ' Nlb, ·M ,nl
747-3711
Clovis Hwy.
il'\~Urallc.e
- FEATURING Qulh ly IOQ kf\S INII retail
The misalng 1_ has to be
f'el!laced for you to be able to lee
apin. Fortunately that is not a
problem. Your CIIIIometriat will
pretICl'it
eyep.. ....
caaIact lenIeB. Tben yaI caJI
"1OOd .. - &pin.
·.tanet
*.
If fau're "villi truubIe WillI
\IIIlIa ar notiee aJI)' atIIa-' .,....
.,._.......
11,1\\
Pl' l' n'nl of Ih<'
'
Panelilig.
;Storm I )oor !) a nd Wmdow s
i Paln t ln~ ~I II Iypes of home ,
t-Inlsh.r .ndl.abor
a\'lil.bl. II desired
1101. Coater l!3t-Z I OZ
~' .. nlrih uIHr ... inl c rc'\.tc d , F.lrn1t' r!o.
~
.~-
I
1-
;t;a ragr ( 'on\'crs ions . Patios.
AT
WES T BUIWERS
Sl: PPLY
uf the .:: an d i d alc..' ~ n ~ \ '" run n tllg
11 :.., gpi ng III bc..' h ard I hl'ugh to gel
~ lIm ('
Inform,lltOn n:ga rdi ng arson
a(II\IIII.'\ 1~ ur ged 10 ca ll the
:HHH,: r IIllC hOl llll(, at 1·800,
Cenle r
\\cll · bc..'lll g til I hl.' C!)Un lry than dC('tin g
4.r
[ 0 p r meC UIC,
cUli ng an ar 50nl)t is the e\·
change
of
IIl forrnalio n
mcrcase.
No ne th e less , h(' in sisled, sli ll m urt.:
s ud s p('ndin g co nfidt' nce in I he fUl ure
is nceded ,
I can (ell hi s whe re 10 l('Iok fur ~o m c
Ih a L
Jud gi ng from the ',I, :ty they'rl' s pe ll '
ding muney 10 ge l ('I(,(-T ed , I don 'l
kno,", llf an y gr\lup Y>I [h mun,: ('u nfi ·
dc ncC' in th e fUlu re thai Ih i, ~' e a r ' s
l:'rop of cOi nd ida tcs , frum Gll\ l.:rn u r ~ un
up III Cung ress m(.· n, or do wn, whi (:hncr w a ~' you w anl to pu t it.
A man who' ll collec i and ~pe nd
Clt,' me n( :md [he Texas Legi ~ lalu r e h3Q," p ro vid ed t he
!)!;lIt:'s crim inal justice syslem
\\ i[h ne\\ lOoh 10 fig hl cri me
in Tc"a~ and :o l i ff laws ..... ith
;tnc!
mil"
pa id o ff
Miscellaneous
.
,
,
all \' lh ing, fro m u ne million doIJar3 10
tc n mill ion h) gt.'1 ('l ct.'lcd IS leading
lilt' \~ a\ HI .... hn\\i ng I'lI lIfid e n<:l:~ in Iht.'
l'O U nl r~>~ ('~'I)fWml (' fU l ur e, ur al lea . . [
He 'ices fh al a s a s ign of mo re
TOTAL TABS: The best
nU lrl tional diet plan. Conta ck Be tty Cagle , 298-2282 ,
\ 31·rts l
.
~~~~~~~
EDITOR' S NOTE: The Lakovlew Pbll·
'osopher
on his Johnson grass (arm
claims he has round a sign or res.lorcd
confidence In the C(.'OnomL
DF.AR EDITOR '
.
Accordin g lu a gove rnm ent ecunu'
misl in W a~ h i n g (o n . one Ihi ng I hal ' s
nceded 10 whi p (he rC(T 'i\lIl n is mure
confidl'rll..'e by cu n!) umcr s, A n ('n cou r ·
aKin g s ig n. he sa id . is Ih e fa ct that Ihe
publ ic loo k u n SI .S bill iu n more in
Yard
Sal. ,
110!H4th
Street. Saturday. Aug. II th
8 : 00 a ,m .. 4 : 00 p.m.
143 ·11pl
II' ,
~~~
Candidates Are Leading The
u.s.
Ga rage Sale : Saturday 11th
160J Ave t· . Three family
gar age sale 8-4 ,
( 43-lIp )
Napkins Bridal Books
NEW DEAL
FIRE DEPARTMENT
.-
-
.
( 41 ·rtS)
:: Hit . "! h;'lh
Lhill J! IIMUI1 '" (t .. n SI 'I,;.fllI
TOMMY IIEALD is •
junior and will wear number
24 on the field . lie pla ys the
pooilioll.'l of Tight End and
Come r Back , He is the son
ol Mr. a nd Mrs . Byron
Heald of Lubbock
..
"
-.
f1a
Lakeview Philosopher .
Wanted
Garag. Salo : 3 Families.
sofa
s leeper.
clothes.
childrens ' clothes. curtains.
toys. school desk, books.
lamps,
misc
1206-4th.
Sa turda y onl y , !Hi.
( 43·lIc)
E.I>r Renl : Furnished apart Mrs . J .D. Webb, 298-2 700 .
SI II , UHf
For Sale : bv Owner. 2 be<Iroom . 2 baih. living room .
kitchen and den comblDa·
ti on. 298-2 120,
Garage Sale
\ 43-1tpl
For Ront , 2 Houses. Two
bedroom 11 0, Ave . D. One
bedroom is 11 03 Ave . D. No
pets . no Children . prefe rably
elderl y
people.
Phone
298-2809.
MARKHAM'S GROCERY
Phone 741-6t1611
Rt'du n .' d
IIIJ( . • :-...~· "
",II S\J .utn f'
JAMES BRISCO is a
sophomore and will wear
number 50 on the field . He
plays the positions of Guard
and Nose Tackle , He is the
son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Brisco of the New Deal area .
These Concerned Businesses Support The New Deal School And Town 1000/0
New Deal,
For Salo, Kitchen Aid Dish·
washer. brown, In excellent
working condition. Will deliver , $100 .00 . Call 832-4061
or 1319 - 6th St. Shaller
wat.er.
New Deal MaD Writes A.J.
'I1IE NEW DEAL LIONS defeated . Kre.<. : 37-() In their season opener. Plctui-ed, the Lions
linemen block for a rumer going up the middle for several yards. (Review Photo )
DEBATING WHETHER
TO PURCHASE fresh, can·
Making out your
ed or frozen produce?
Wedding lists?
According to Dr. Dymple C,
C'OME SEE us
Cooksey. food and nutrition
.ABERNATHY
specialist with the Texas
WEEKLY REVIEW
Agricultural Extension SerSf,o ,,.. c.aw,.,.on WeOd'"a '''''
ot E
.....~' S,.,_,. ,h.L""
vice. Texas A&M University
:,o~::'.:r:~~.p<~,~".:~.~~
System. fresh produce-when in season-is almost
Celebration by
T.,o,COII'lI
always the most economical.
For SII. : 1978 Ford Fiesta,
Hatchback. AMI FM. New
tires, front wheel drive,
good
condition.
S2 .500.
Phone 808-_3535. Nights
995-4442 .
I 42 -rta )
29:3-2440
Edltor'S Note, 1be follow·
ing letter was printed in the
Avalanche Journal recently
and was written by a New
Deal man.
Area Reader Sa)'l Tbanto
For Help On Farm ReU.f
Editor. Avalanche-Journal
It took the efforts of a
great many people to get the
story of this years' crop
disaster before the federal
authorities who were able to
provide farmers with some
relief; but [ think if anyone
person were to be singled
out for his role in this effort.
it would he Kent Hance,
As our congressman, he
has consistently shown himself to be aware of his
constitutents' needs and
always willing to do his
utmost in their behalf.
We appreciate. too. the
coverage given this continuing
story
by
The
Avalanche Journal and its
very ca pable ' farm writer ,
Kathleen Davis.
For Sale: U74 MG Mldlet,
good condition, maroon,
flood IOUnd system,. $1 ,295
Phone 808-_3535 Nights
995-4442 .
( 42 -rta)
Real Estate
t.u tllal . . . . ,.. ~ ha".
• eaIaract, ,... IIIouId l1IIYe u
....................
...........
it' s
'l'llUlllDAY, W i ' "
--........
.....
....
....y
Nit ......... ~, a erocIIIbid ...................... '· ... ccqIIe mMd laeD tile 8artaD ~
laid. ""'- DIW . . . . . . . . ...... willa JIll ........... _ IICIdltlollal Blair- , ted ........d, !brow nil. a baby
put bIIIIad 'tile- maatU."
cue was later I'8IOftd.
chair, an lroII .ta. . .~ toy and
we __ped paIDt ID the
DuriDI 'the ~ the . . . . aCClllOriel. inch.... a coIlara and
ldtcben don to the ban woocJ. we' stood vacant ........ iii.- wIdIe tile
cuff. box, 800118 CbocoIatea box: .ilcould . . a bevel.cfline ...... a built· Jack 8utoa family left till ..... to . . . ver comb and CUI'IbII iron aad Ivory
In cabbllt with a paII-~ CIpIIIinI- anploymtmt. In the lIarlm, the boule
dreuer set, are otberitema.
so vivid In family memories-had collected a lot 01 duat and wu In
Tbe Bartoo kitChen features a black,
tllllIIIrt..... 1Ie ......... .......
ftN"
.~""'01""""""
, they
''WbID
..... ,... 01 wwIl ......... ADd
I'fttWW lUCIa .......... wIDdiDI to a
dale at tile 8u1aa II-. '!'be com.
\.... . . , 01 tile turD-oI-tbe-ceDtury
.......... .... lta ... 1I,iJmoIt ready
I." .... ..... at
tqac.ter.
tile
RaIlCblnl Bert- '
1'he Bal'tlall Hell.- .yrilboIIIes randi
IlIe ~ and comfort. Ita builder,
Jcapb "aa,tGD, wmed to tangibly
JII"Oft tbat South PlaiDI settJen,
tJuooucb bud won aad initiative, could
mike tile.
01 the land their
• own. TIieJr effarta wen boletered by
railroadI. ~tion and paved,
ric.......
rural1'Ol!dl.
Restoration of 'the bouse has been
evolvinl at the biatorlc exhibit site
aiDce 1975. It was Willed to the cent,e r
by JOBepbine Waddell Barton, who had
moved to' the Hale County home as a
bride in 1917.
The
parlor. dining room and
entry hall were historically refinished
'
by Ranch Day, 1981.
- This Ranch Day, Sept. 18, visitors
may view the completed south parlor,
first-floor bedroom, the kitchen and
bathroom. Upstairs rooms also will be
open and partially furnished. The project should be finished by Christmas,
according to Maxine Blankenship, a
museum volunteer and member of the
Ranching Heritage Association Board
of Overseers.
Blankenship of Lubbock, and Betty
Albers of Abernathy, a Barton family
descendant, have been key members of
the restoration team. They are redoing
the Barton House as it was from 19091917, with furniture dating back to
1875. Furnishings throughout represent
prominent West Texas ranch familiesthe Bartons, the Keiths and the Halsells.
Barton family members who lived in
the house and friends and neighbors of
the Bartons have provided information
about the house. The research team
has studied early 1900 's publications
like "Ladies Home Journal" and Sears
and Wards mail-order catalogs. Furniture research references were consulted to determine appropriate furnishings.
County histories have providedchies
to the Barton family and ita role. in the
community. Other pieces of informa. ,: ~ bave come from the house itself,
Blankenship said.
"We were seeking the original wallpaper. When we removed mantels in
both parlors, we could tell the original
paper for those rooms - the mantels
north
actually been, " BlaDII:..aatp said .
"Warlunen have reeoaatructed a
cabinet according to the design on the
waD."
Layers and layers of wallpapers
were peeled in other rooms until
original designs were determined.
Getting back to basics In the house
was necessary to restore it as closely
to the original as posaible and to
represent a particular era authentically.
Built in 1909, the· house was VictorIan with ~ixtures of Eastlake and
Queen Anne architectural designs.
Round porch posts, spindles on the
upper story frieze and contrasting
molding around windows and doors are
Eastlake styles. Queen Anne 'designs
include a multi-pa~ roof, projecting
attic gables with a recessed upper
story porch, horizontal siding, an encircling porch, fish scale shingles, tall
chimneys, verge boards and variations
of the Palladian window.
Joseph Barton-wanted his new ranch
home to influence and oversee the
settling of Bartonsite. He patterned the
house somewhat after his family home
in Calvert, which had burned in 1884.
Architectural ,plants were ordered
from "Modern Dwellings" magazine
for $45 and altered to meet family
needs and to use available materials.
The
two-and-a-half-story
tiome
included 14 rooms, an attic and partial
basement. Ceilings were 10 feet high
on the first floor .and nine feet on the
second floor. A meat and milk storage
room was attached to the house adjacent to the kitchen. A water tank
topped the storage room.
Beveled glass windows, brick chemneys, built-in kitchen cabinets, a chinacabinet, blanket boxes and a desk were
other features of the elegant house.
In addition, the house contained
amenities unusual in rural houses of
the period - running water, space for
two bathrooms, sli~ doors and builtin c1OBets. Two parlors and a large,
dining area indicate Barton's dreams
for the house to be a social center for
the propOsed town.
Around 1917 the house went through
some renovation - a staircase was
added and an upstairs bathroom remodeled - to accommodate two families. John Sneed (Jack) Barton had
married Josephine Waddell and the
Ranae.
serious dlIrepalr.
.
)(aJ.tlc
with outlets COIJMCtec:\
to the wood·burning stove to warm
About 1M 0, It wa. remodeled to
water In a galvanized water heater.
make it more Colcxaial than Victorian
atyle. The larp pardi and milk and
The sink was free-standi~ with a
splashboard. A drop-leaf work table,
meat room were' removed and the
small root gable enlarpd. A small,
cane-bottom chairs and built-ins, including the paSs-through cabinet,
central porch with large coIum.. was
added.
operat.es by a pulley, are other furnishHlItoricai restoration revived the
ings.
Victorian look and brought back the
The Bartons' four-poster bed, moved
meat and milk storage area. Both stair
from Calvert, and their youth bed,
cases are included, but the basement
purchased in the ll!te 1890 's ,from
was not restored.
Eakle Brothers Furniture in Amarillo,
To combat the West Texas environare planned for upstairs rooms .
ment, the restoration team has layered
, According to Sam Barton of Denton.
walls with both brown paper and
who was four when the Barton House
canvas. The procedure will keep out
was completed, the Barton's furnishsome of the dust and give the wallings were things accumulated through
paper a smoother look, Blankenship
the years.
said.
,
He says they were "in good taste."
Scalamandre of New York has duplibut not "elegant" and "for use" and
cated original wallpaper for the entry
not "show."
hall and the dining rocm. The entry
Conservative selections could have
hall paper is a reproduction of an
been due to economics . Historians
international paper in the art nouveau
suggest Barton's expenses in trying to
style at the tum of the century and the
promote a rail line and a town put
dining room. 1907-1909 paper from the
financial stress on the main who had
obtained peak prosperity around 1906.
Cooper-Hewitt wallpaper collection.
A lily pattern art nouveau paper has
When both projects were doomed and
been reproduced by Scalemandre for
his house completed about 1909, there
RESTORING MEMORIES - A built-in kitchen cabinet with a
the south parlor. A beige background
was probably iittle money for furnishpass-through opening into the dining room- so vivid in
paper with small houses, barns and
ing the home. A railroad line built
family memories- has been reconstructed in the Barton
flowers in red, yellow, blue and green
between Plainview and Lubbock elimiHouse at the Ranching Heritage Center at Texas Tech
is an old paper purchased In New York
nated any need for Barton's proposed
Uni versity. Originslly built in 1909 and restored at the
to decorate the kitchen.
line through Bartonsite. Eventually.
center, the elegant house represents life enjoyed by
The south parlor is furnished with
ranchers during the era from 1909-191 7. Betty Albers of
buildings and businesses moved, with
Keith family furniture, includi~ an
Abernathy, a Barton family descendant, has been a key
the railroad, into neighboring Aberintricately carved oak table with
of_
the_
restoration
( Tech
Photo
) _ _ _ _ _ _ _,
nathy
and
the _
Barton
House
started
Europe
around
__
__
___
_ _alone
_ _ _ _ _member
___
_ _ _ team
_ _, _
__
__
deer,
a style legs
animal-head
- a in
fox,
pig. dog
and . ._
remained at Bartonsite.
1880-1905. Other pieces include black
leather chairs, an oak buffet and court
cupboard, used to display the family's
china or mineral specimens, as a sign
of wl'.alth. A wine set, an antique lap
desk, pitchers and a lamp are accessories.
The first-floor hedroom displays
items from the Halsell Ranch. An oak
bedroom suite - marble-top wardrobe
with a beveled mirror, marble-top
dressing chest and bed - was purchased from the st. Louis Stix Baer Furniture Hardware and Department Store
around 1885, after the sale of 5,000
grass-fed steers in Kansas City. The
Eastlake influence set also represents
the Bartons who received Eastlake
furniture for a wedding present in
1884 .
Chamber Of CODlmeree Meets
The Abernathy Cbamber
of Commerce met Thursday,
September 2 at 7 a.m to
IATTENTION,
Good DrIven
Save Up To to% '
On Your Auto Inlurance
Can 298-4121
Farmers Insurance Group
PAO. II
I.
discuss several items of
business.
The invocation was given
and minutes of the previous
meeting reviewed
Chamber President John
Hale conducted the meeting
as approximately 22 members were present.
In an earlier meeting,
Arno Struve suggested that
the minutes of OJamber
meetings be sent to all
members with their monthly
SfrilG
Talk
PROPERTY TAXESGOOD INTENTIONS AREN'T ENOUGH
I want to talk this week
ting all property at its full
bout taxes and good intentions,value-as residential or com·
As I travel around Texas. I mercial property or as land
otice that what's known as
used for agricultural purposes
e Peveto Bill is the subject of Taxes could then be levied on
much talk and controversy.
this accurately assessed property according to the needs of
is bill. named after state
representative Wayne Peveto. the taxing entities .
is a tax refonn law: legislation
It sounded good'. but it
of the best intention .
hasn't worked. The biggest
The law was designed to
problem is that the people on
end confusion and unfairness the appraisal boards are apin the way property taxes were pointed. not ~Iected . They are
assessed, Property was often not accountable to the taxon different tax rolls at difpayers. So DOW we have a
ferent values. Older properties new. faceless bureaucracy to
went years. sometimes decdeal with. It amounts to taxaades. without being revalued tion without representation.
or updated . New construction
My opponent has been on
and newly sold proper,ty was both sides of this issue . first
on the rolls at more correct
supporting the bill in the legis·
values and so people who
lature-then.dolng an aboutowned it paid a higher share of face and calling II bad leglslacues. Some property was sim- lion after it was passed,
ply left off the rolls entirely.
The Peveto Bill . though
'hie system was confusing and well-intentioned. has created
iaequllable.
problems which muSI be dealt
In III anempc to correct
with in the next legislature an
dIae problems. the Peveto Billa your next U. Governor. I
aated JIIIIIPUIY lax ippnisal will do just that . If you have
for eech Texas county. ,IllY thousl"s on this subject.
1'IInc bcwds were cMJed
please write me at 1213 W.
willi'" ~ibility oLset- ~ 34th. A_u~in . 7870~.
statements. It was agreed
these questionnaires out and
and everyone received the
return them to the Review
minutes this past month.
or mail them to the ChamThis will help Chamber
members to remember the
Keith Tooley recently remeetings and keeps them
ceived a letter from Crime
informed of what's going on
Stoppers asking if Aberif they cannot attend the
nsthy would like to join by
meetings. ,It has also imhaving their own Crime Line
proved attendance slightly.
program . The chamber
Bumper sticker sales are
agreed
that
Abernathy
coming right along as $68.76
should pursue this 'program
worth has been sold. There
and Keith Tooley will be in
are many mire available
charge of getting informa·
and can be acquired at most
tion on how to get the
businesses
and
many
program started.
Chamber members have
A delicious breakfast was
some.
prepared by Tommie Beck,
The Chamber of ComDan Ward and HB Coggin.
merce promotionsl souvenir
The breakfast committee for
bags have arrived and are
the October meeting will be
available from now on for
announced later by John
anyone who visits AberHale.
nsthy . It will be something
special to remember AberTELEVISION 18 HELPnsthy by.
ING older adults stay in
The railroad depot com- closer touch with the world
mittee has not met yet, but than elderly people of the
Hoppy Toler reported that past could. As older adults
'the del!Ot is 65 feet long and with visual and hearing imis going to be heavy, as it pairment find less satisfacwas made with heavy tion with just books or radio
timber. It was also suggest- alone, television can step in
ed that moving it be funded to fill the perceptual ( hearthrough donstions. This ing and sight) gap, explains
matter will be discussed at Judith L. Warren. a family
the next meeting after the life education specialist with
depot committee has met.
the Texas Agricultursl ExThe 4 th of July evaluation tension Service, Texas AIrM
sheets have been printed
University System.
and will be distributed this
week through the post office
and local businesses. It is "Golf i, a good w.. k spoiled."
Mark Twain
asked that all locale fill '
Serves men as well as
wom,en with perms & cuts.
If you are not satisfied
...... MeIiII. 'JaIl 71'705 . ..... ~ n-urer.
liCE 'II SOFT
PlPElTOWnl
SPILL-MITE
with your hair, then give
our hairstylists
I
chlnce to
- lin pfove your trllr ,groom Ing •. - -
BILL'S HE • SHE
HAIRSTYLING
..ILL
Pli.
8BC
5BC
~-
ALLSUPS
_CONVENIENCE STORES_
~--------------------------la. .'I·...ma
" • • '1
~
FRUIT
DRIIK
COTTAOE
CHEESE
C
Ia.BBC
'::.·78
FIRESIDE
RATH
A3S0RT ED OA ': K
MARYLAND CLUB
COFFEE
1LB.
SAUSAGE
COOKIES
1 LB :
$1 99
PARKAY
1 LB.
MARGARINE2/99~
MEID'I flEll caalED
_ • •'1
CORII
DOaS
PUDDIIiI
BARS
3m l ,
,::.$,88
PRICEI EFFECTIVE IEPTEMBER 8-11.1882- WHILE IUPPLIEI LilT
JOIII THE AllSUP'S MIRITHOII
OCTOBER 8.1882 - 7:00 1.1. - M.D.T
CLOVIS. lEW MEXICO
a
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ADD"'"
cln 298·'2800
,..,'....... AIMrt-.-...... forScrllle 1213 W 34th
1111. . . . .
ber.
Bill's He & She Cuts
1506 Ave D
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$I...
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