The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 66, No. 12, Ed. 1 Friday, January 15, 1960 Page: 6 of 6
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k -J «
ft Tfir CTF.no KF.CORD. rrlflaT, January 15. 1960
Louisiana 'Report Washington
CAR WASH
Let Us Wash And
ubncatr Your Ca:
Scon! We Make
Sure To Do The
Job Right!
vu i,i\ k M mo
\M'’S
Arnold Bros.
SERVICE
STATION
CR 5-3113
Ferdanide A’ Broii(1"»v
jjjiti'l&lM Dean Held Textile Study Slated;
PRE-SPRING K
TRACTOR -
DON'T WAIT
Till It's Time
To Plow Before
You Have Your
TRACTOR
OVI lill U LF.D
N, . I - T«mL» \
I *»r I rn I "tim.ii*
We Give
n^MpV,N<,> \&
vuj , * IfuTr
/Jf. | Wnihle Stamps
P-L f\m<y «rn
I , s. purchase
I n ir.v fe n- we sell
STEW ART’S
• \;,( , Si r\ K f’ Station
* |(i | tiro:*.<iu :\\
Mrs Morns Yomry i nd Mi--
I', ti. Spann both of Corpus
Christ) ucicr here Thursday to
visit at Form Hospital. Mrs.
Conroy voted her sister. Mis.
H F Slvopparc! and Mrs Spann
railed on, her mother, Mi>. Hfu-
u-y Sh-.'v
y’i> Cabell Ln< key left for
1 ii 11stun Fi tday to \ isd Mt
and Mrs .loo Lackey for several
days.
Summer Place" at gr Rialto
rut !ur children under LI. Nat l.
PTA Rat mg Ph. i'll 3-4851. 115
Mrs. Charles Bush and daugh-
ter 1 >ohl>ic, vv h- have been v is-
itinlure since Christmas. left
'Friday for their borne in New
Orleans. La They were nccom-
panied to Beaumont hy Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Myer; of Cuero and
Mrs Haywood Matter of Victor-
ia who will visit the Charlie
Mauri s in Beaumont. Charles
Bush met h.s family in Beau-
mont
William Sterner of lit. 3 Yoa-
kum. was a visitor in the Cuero
Lerotd office t-Tid.-iy „-morning.
see the Bell Telephone Hour
on "'lor TV at Keesler's tonight
at :.:;o 113
Mrs Frank Baros was dis-
missed from Cuero Hospital
Friday Lydia Mendo/a was avi-
mitt< (1 Friday Aumitteu tnurs-
. ,,v v i re Mi- duanita Suarez,
Leon Nngci I' C Sehotflei and
Mrs Aorv • ion/alrs
Vr tuna W i'r/e It. Ri _ H
Cue; i w a- i i’i 'i. v i - .tor f ri-
day morning
M. ton life/ i'ue.o Record
h.eiti-tr.z manager. returned
h;. j, if Frid tv alter being
i . ituned to h.s home since Mon-
day due. to nines*. i
Light ( old Front
\ .jut ■ ,’i f on' move.l in*
. .Cue:' Thursday. dropping
me temperature from 7a to 40
vie grees
I'he 5 i-.iegfco '.o ww ,.s the
. ,.iciest weather Cuero expert*
en e.| e canu iry 9 when
•ire t.-ei mom-cter dropped Jo i
Hits Khrush Speech i
NFW YORK CPI Sen. Hu-
bert 11 Humphrey; P-Minn said
Thursday night he would refuse
to v"te for ratification • f any
"world disamlar^.t treaty
which did not include Red Chi-,
nil. He said S >viet Premier Ni- ;
ki-.. S. Khrushchevn disarnia-
trent plan , was "a convenient j
announcement inasmuch as he
had Red "Chinese armies to
ha. k him up
Nixon Schedules Meeting
MIAMI CPI Vi.e Presi-
dent Ra hatd 'P Nixon was srlvo-
• billed to eel with Florida state
Pemibii. hei e today, lie will
hoi.f , j'/’v conference Satur-
In Slaying Retirement Taxation?
ft7*pj
l C* ... d'
Cuero R cord
ARE YOU
SATISFIED
\\ ifh I’rofits
You Made In
1959?
I f not v - • Ti y.
advertising with
i.t Record It has
been pioVcL li.at
idvertismp is an ■
nvestment in the
.lure - - - NOT AN
EXPENSE
THE
CUERO
RECORD
! BATON ROUGH, l.a. CPI
Dr George H. Mickey, distin-
guished scientist and dean of the
Louisiana State University Gradu-
ate School took breakfast in ihc
parish tail today charged with
murder in the bludgeon - slaying
of his spinster scientific protege.
Pressed in the jail regulation
white T-shirt and blue leans, the
biologist, world lecturer and chur-
ch hoard member "hose ap-
pointment last April a* gradu-
, ate dean was supposed to boost
11k school’s prestige sat with
.three other prisoners in a cell on
block No. 1
Mickey's attorney, Robert L.
Kleinpeter, emphasized the dean
had not confessed to any thing. He
I said the dean knew nothing
| about the slay ing
stii|( Body Home
But the sheriff s office which
hooked Mickey at dusk on the
fifth day of unflagging investiga-
tion. said it had done so on the
district airorney 's warrant ' i'bar-
ging him with the murder of
Margaret Rosamond McMillan.
The body of “Rosie McMillan.
'33. a tall, statuesque woman with
naturally grey hair tinted blown,
was shipped home to Lvanstnn.
111., for burial.
The red letters on Mickey s
jeans. “KRB for Fast Baton Rou-
ge parish jail," were symbolic
of the sho. ked talk around the
hotel lobbie-. statehouse. and ac-
ademic community. Not sir., e
'Gov. Karl Umg was hustled off
to a state mental institution and
hustled hack under his own steam
- 1.1 set spring has the town awak-
ened to such startling new -
Ale Donald On Vacation
palm springs, t'.-.ii;
: p' j id .1 Mel >on.ild ;
. ;** of the United Steer I
• i - V e. a ..
; l: day for
arrived hoi e
- \ acation Me-
jia rued by hi -
- .id tit.” i1'«t.tv •
indefinite
fPOOOM lOG
KCFH-1600
von:*' fHRO'w'OH fgiDAr
3'j O'-
‘ Vote 3 So-’ & •
S' /• o/.n *t
Vo'c.-'J P -:”'b •
o, - o' Pp ■ 'f •* . .
i ‘ A j • . N» - * »*>
S-. ’ P ‘ O' A J
• ' - .1 C U ' N e 5
O'-1 CoOefc J-» e
jO Loc a'
s A’ O' lO or.P 1 P * O t ^P *
' 4w Ip. U '.Ga:.M I
4 S Co^Uf 1.
0. H -* C> U.i r'.e>
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»o pg ot «
C.Ow-
>'CV. ’*»'■)
TO J' H'orr ,9 'o*"
.Vo.a ftcdl >'oW & ’• Ho“'
■ Fr oo, C..ttK l'-•»’«* C*.
<oc" o-d (tones I.odir* fon
H?C O'" tS
vah r~e
Wo’H Nf*t
Mo'-nei V«'cii »•
ir'oi N» e i
M.o'ipfl A* P od P I
lens Nf *■ j
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'Hu p .• r H-sedr *
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r* d i H5»ao*"
Spor’i foj'dip
Summot r
[/trefl Serer.oP®
Pc ,or»
Sgn OH
I0CAI GRAIN MARKET
quotations Courtesy?
Sehaffner « Market
Milo 1 90 cwt
Yellow Shelled C ur. 1-5 bu del
Yellow Far Corn Flo
mn the farm! ‘
Yellow Ear Corn 115 bi del
NOON COTTON PHI* KS
l nited Press Internallonat
New York: March .13.b?.. up 5;
May 33.23. up 2
New Orleans: March 33.12. up
2. May Unquoted.
i9«0 Futures
New York • March-May Un-
quoted
New Orleans: March 51 C up
3; May : Unquoted
TK.XAS POULTRY PRICKS
AUSTIN UP! SLA P
trv ■
Last Texas Market fully
steady. Undertone steady. Of-
fering-- and supplies adequate
for the ga.d demanu: Ttading
nualer.ate- to nun oil. Volume and
e./itfi! in. d sales, not including
exchange sales broilers and fry-
ers 2 5 1 - 3 -■ lbs . 191.000 total.
5 per rent.fit lfi ■ ents. 1.3 per
rent, at 1. cents. -1 per cert ir-
*ra - company' transfers. S! per
reru open price basis hr unde-
termined.
The >< dhw e-a P"Uit,''y 1 A.-.
change . (.'fried 1*: H">. !'ni 1
Thursdav. so'd .......... tiv'
rolfev. ,rg t.a-i’s 9 l-’iff head 51
per cent a’ l9.fi- ''W- I"ir
rer. a* L 7 corns 17 fee head
off-qua 1 i’ • ,57 pe cent at 1«1-
IS pen's fis per (rn' at Is 1 Is •'
'rent-.
Sou'll Texas Market and i;n-
de'i tuire s'ea'I;. Supplie's fl'i"-.
f..... tjie rxwi: to s 1/av (I.
r-A i-11;t:.i>er- o' '
o the I'uti-kel' i’>L i ''
.. v , c .. .. ;:»l,t , Pro e- a1 tile
K VN S' \S < il l I I' I s I * ’* *'
KAN 'AS t IT.Y UPI . 1 :>h»\
Livestock l at lie f - 1. • -lives 75.
i.anghter. steel« most;
j-tlU lbs... 7 1 75 fully
(CKRO RKCOKU
Washington Bureau
10<*0 National Press Building
B' HOW ARD H. SIMS A
.lA'tlSON < AIN
WASHINGTON, IY C. Should
Sen, .lohn F Kennedy take on
Sen Hubert Humphrey of Min-
nesota in the Wisconsin president-
ial preference . rim ry next
April, the present fit Id of five
leading contenders for the I'emo-
i i ■ ■ t11 pees dcnti.d' m min at on
will probahly be n.'irrovved to four,
top Washington political observ-
ers believe.
Humphrey has served notice he
intends to run in the Wisconsin
primary’. Kennedy was reported
to he trying to decide whether or
not to challenge Humphrey in
Wisconsin.
If he decides to run, the loser
will very probably have killed his
chances of getting the presidential
nod at Huy Democratic convention
next duly.
High Lomocratic party sources
in Washington also indicate that
should Humphrey defeat Kennedy
in the Wisconsin primary. Kenne-
dy will probably wind up in the
second ;jiot on lie Lomocratic
ticket
Greater, enforcement ■-in. the field
of civil rights during 1959 than in
any previous y ear was reported to
Attorney 1 ieneral William B. Ro-
gers by Acting Assistant Attor-
ney General .loscjvh M !■ Ryan.
Jr., in his vear-end aeeounting for
activ ities of the Civil Rights Divi-
sion of the Justice Department
“I ■ should like t" emphasize.
R; an -.iM. that although the pri-
mary obligation oi projecting the
rights of citizens rests w till en. It
ite. Lie tederal g.iv ernment w ill
take swift and vigorous aetjon
to pr.,;ei t th.e rights of citizens
•ain r, ',c. the state tads to fulfil!
its oblig itf.ns and a legal basis
exi.-t for iOficra! action.'
The U. S. Lepa'.tir.en: of Com-
merce ha- announced it ,u ii! uml-
erta.xe a study of long-term
trend--ot lex), e- in l.lte nation -
ec ii'.',.n.y v.iii- ii wiil mi iuiie con-
sider.iti ui .4 measures that the in-
dustry 01 government might adopt
to stiengthen demand.
The survey . The fourth :n a ser-
ies dealing with textile problems,
will be based on historical data
relating to textiles. The findings
will be due sometime after mid-
VJfiO and will lie made available
to industry'.
Senior < iti/ens who receive re-
‘titement benefits may be com-
pelled to pay taxes on their, gov-
ernment pensions if tlie House
Ways and'.Means Committee a-
dopts ;i [iroixcseij new tax reform
bill , and if Congress enacts it
info law
The Committee, headed by Rep,
Wilbur Mills of Arkansas, has
been conducting hearings on -ev-
Yandals lip Over,
Paint Tombstones
tn Jewish Cemetery
CHICAGO ITI Fifty . tomh-
-tr.n.i-- were tpirierl over and an.-
nliier 55 to L painted w-Pi- -w as-
at a Jew ivh cemetery in
' -ubiir'i'-ari K'.rest Park, po.ee
said tod .y
Van'iais trampled lrandre/ls of
grave- and scrawled in lil.ck
jcaint ,v to,--’ the side of a mau-
soleum. “N i/ii-rn i-n t dead l>ut
the Jews' dr - are nutphriTd."
Si.'.alier ' ti .mbsti'iiies were knoc-
k'll over it! the JcA.i-l.i Waldheim
'cemetery ■ and the larger, niottu-
rnents c ci e Oiaubed w ith black
- a, i-tik i-'
{’olice I'.t I ..mcr'.Sclin'tir.-tcin of
Forest Park police Is,iid ‘tile • v are
dil li’pj lucntly slitijn'd it'ii the
and' comimnc'il’ the- do-c iatc.ns.
rial proposals for reform of the
tax -vstem.
Various tax experts have sug-
gested that elderly citizens should
n t continue to receive the bene-
fit of special deductions on their
retirement pay from the govern-
men' The tax experts testifying
before the committee have stress-
ed that there is little or no differ-
ence between young married cou-
ples w ho earn '1,9(10 annually and
retired couples who receive that
much a vi-ar under the Social
Security System. Yet the elderly
couples do not pay taxes on their
income while the Young couples
do.
(*! New
/ M
Arrivals
Four new at riv als made their
appearance at Burns Hospital
Thursday . The parents and their
i hddivn are Mr. and Mrs. Til-
ford Stinemann of Rt. 3. Yoa-
kum. daughter. 6 lbs.. 3 ozs.;
Mr. and Mrs Manuel Villareal
ot Cuero. daughter 3 lbs.. 7L
o/s Mr and Mrs. R. J. John-
son of Rt. 4 Otero, daughter, 7
llis . 15 .and Mr. and Mrs.
John Prater of Cuero, son 9 lbs..
\ o/s.
Workers Gel First
Pay In Six Months
TI NAS CITY UPI
Hourly
empiovo.s who returned to work
at Amen, art Oil Company s Tex-
as City refinery Jan S after a
pq . day strike received their
lust paychecks in more than six
months today
Norm;.' payday for hourly em-
cloves i- every other Friday, ac-
cording i ) plant manager, B. F.
Babin
The refi.net v. meantime, contin-
ue. 1 to lemtn to normal opera-
tion. Babin -aid the plant should
reach its pre-strike capacity some,
.time next week.
Influenza—
(Continued from page 1
High Absenteeism
1 >ctiini sL ity-rounty health di-
rector. Lr. Joseph Milner, said
teachers have l>een absent from
school at double, the normal rate.
A spot check indicated that fac-
tory absenteeism vvas 2 per cent
above normal. Molner said 40.000
per-ons in the Detroit area were
stricken with, some type of flu.
The In -t two eases of Asian flu
were reported in Iowa Thursday.
State officials said large numbers
of people were suffering from an
unidentified virus..’in the Daven-
port area and believed -the flu
Wiis spreading in Iowa..
Thousands were ill in a Texas
flu outbreak., but state health de-
partment official Dr. Howard K.
.-m,ta said the illness was at
st »tus quo."
French factories turn out
ah,,hi one. million, 500 thousand
bicy les a year.
' Funeral Services
For Thomas Green
Sr. Set Saturday
Funeral services for Thomas
Green Sr., Cuero Negro who died
Wednesday, will be held at Little
Zion Baptist Church in Yorktown
at 2.30 p.m. Sunday.
Burial will be in Yorktown. Kl-
der K. C. Choice will officiate at
both services.
Surv ivors are the wife of Cuero.
eight children. Verna Mae Green
and Alfred Green, both of Cuero;
Thfimas Jr. of Austin, Silvia Gre-
en. Odessa Smith and Willie Mae
Hodge, all of Corpus Christi. W il-
lie Mae Cross of Yorktown and
Robert Lee Green of Itockport;
and a step-daughter, Jimmie Lee
Littlefield of Smiley. Three ..chil-
dren preceded him in death.
City Council—
(Continued troni page 1 i
owners are ready to pave.
Councilman L. A. "Skeet"
Bauer Jr. said a number of per-
, sons who are opposed to the
plan have approached hint
If Mrs. Herring's entire sur-
vey reveals sufficient interest on
the part of projierty owners. Hie
l San Antonio firm will be called
in to conduct its survey and 1 lo-
gin signing paving contracts.
Paving, curb and gutter work
would l>e let on competitive bids.
Council failed to take action
on a Chamber of Common e re-
quest that two-hour parking
he permanently enforced in a
nine-block area in spaces where
i jiarking meters are not located.
Councilman Penn Beakley
said he heard many pro and eon
; statements on the temporary'
! parking plan that expired Janu-
^ ary 10,
He said the biggest complaint
is that the city is using ta.xpav-
ers' money to control jinking
in a nine-block .area and. as
Councilman William Cusack
added-, in places where meters
could lie installed
City Attorney Frank Sheppard
said Ixith systems (meters and
parking limits> control parking.
“Why take the one that costs
more." Sheppard asked.
i Kd. Note: Money taken from
parking meters is used to pay
the salary of meterman Charles
York and lias in the past built
a surplus in the meter fund.
which vvas used to aid * other
[’funds. The two-hour p u Mr :
limit that is no longer tn cl In t
was enforced hv a full-time paid
jiolireinari A
Police Chief Jesse Tavl >r su'd
the parking meters and the for-
mer two-hqur junking /ones
could not lie enforced by otic
man.
Taylor said if More .cmpl'V-e*
■would not park . on tl c in.mi
business street, there wot i'l b" .
no parking problem.
Several, Coumulmen and visi-
tors at the meeting said the
meters and the two-hour park-
ing limit greatly aided 111 -
parking problem tliirirc: i-ie
Christmas season.
In other btisine— Cmin.M
passed on ordinance {'t. !i: 1 ■11n■.
non-residents t" use the, Miy
dump oif the Sait Antnt’c !'■ 1
way ; agreed to adva itisc I n
Hills on a new s.initatn n ' i u, k
a new police car and icj> lirm.t
I of the underground w titer tvser
' vmr on S Esplanade .and .mi' 'I
to have the building l'ep.med ii
the city's old pump station.
The Soviet 'Lass news agency
-aid meanwhile the l . S. State
I vp.irtiiii nt statement on Kltrush-
vT,ov s dis.aintament resolution
"attempt- to cover up a reluc-
larvee 1" take reeijiroeal disarma-
ment -steps"
TOD" ami SAT.!
| Adults a.-,, < hildrcn Lie
owl. ■' 1 W A
Tonight Only!
Town Talk
(Continued from page 1
! constitutional: Ho was back
j eel principally by insurance
1 company reprosentativi s
The law could well become
a major political issue nt
j the 1960 statewide can.
pa ip ns.
; We'll just have to wait
and see what we shall sec.
Russian—
•Continued tram Pace D
workers were m demand every-
where. especially in Siberia, th*1
Urals, the Far Hast. Kazakhstan
and the north country in me mm
ing. coal, timber and omistnu'-
turn work He also s ml tin -.c mgs
in cutting the armed tor. e- ■ • a ild
construct 1(1,000 limitin'
All Moscow newsp ij ' 'ed
the full text of K: 1 '• s
speech, with Kontsoniol-k i Pra-
vda. the young t’ornmunist or-
ganization paper headling. "rea-
son Dictates. DiMinr.amcr.t •' Pea-
rUEROffij
-i
Starts Satuiday
n.ix Ollier Opens ti:.'!<! pan.
Xdiilts .-(tic Child Free
First < liero Showing
! OU’LL BE SICK,
sick
FROM 7 AUGHING!
gmmmrm r— n\
It Ycm
j Did Cl
I Hr!
t i;
Two load
lv ii:gu-g <•
ferai!;.
Hog
ro.
Sow
21)0 Fail lv a. five, P.ar-
i guilt- 25-5" - higher,
idv to 25 lug'ier: 19*1 -240
in hutciters 15 2'-15.i<i sow x
3411-400!I)>. lo 70-1.(1.75.
Sner-p Lift No' 'enough fo. ! .-
Jed -laughtr:-. ’i--cs
711 0<t
Firp Destroys Savings
1 'ANVIL!.1. '7a ’Ti "i!
viP Milan' a ‘ni- k driver w hrse
wife and baby ate m the ho'pij-
j. r-1 s • ,y c-fi r;iiii iif sir-
ing- ,n h'is ti7.ee to pay the lv
’i'hur sd.-o. his hone,
monev an'l all rnw-'-nai hrlong-
dr-! roved tiv fue.
It You Miss Tour Kecord
Diol CR 5-4246 or CR 5-9068
•uze pe1' n IS railed upon omV every 17
i ..tn i ir.*-:V 1- i e,;nd f iif-1 ai In-.it if. *
, in r\D i iM i:
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The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 66, No. 12, Ed. 1 Friday, January 15, 1960, newspaper, January 15, 1960; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth695276/m1/6/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cuero Public Library.