The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 73, No. 167, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 18, 1967 Page: 6 of 6
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I
page 6 THE CUERO RECORD Tuesday. July 18. 1967
mi;
Ronnie Bfy’nnt. son of Mrs.
Jatk Worthington, left last !
Wednesday for training with ;
the U. S, Navy at San Diego.
Calif. He was accompanied to j
San Antonio, where he enplan-j
ed for California, by his moth-j
er, grandmother, and Daphne
Bishop.
O’ERO COUNTRY CI.l’H
be closed We t. nights July ID.
26 and Aug, 2, (adv. 19
BURNS HOSPITAL
Admissions: Dalis Walleck.
Y)aria Tristan and Nettie Eifc-
mann.
Dismissals: Oscar Deist.
(tt'KItO HOSPITAL
Admissions: Mrs. Joseph
Dane, Otis Edwards, Arron An-
| zualda and Wilson Carsandra.
• n | Dismissals: Mrs. Agnes Ja-
cob.- Sterling . Ochner, Eddie
I wick and Mrs. Dovie Hess.
POLLIWOGS
By POLL! HOWERTON
Parker is attond-
ri School at Kerr-
Mrs. .7. W.
ing a Miss a
Ville.
Mrs. Paul Harris and chil-
dren, Paulette and Charles
Lee, r.f San I’.'dro Sola, Hondu-
ras are visiting here with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ervin
Kasper.
Miss Debbie Wright of Tus-
caloosa, Ala. is visiting in
Cuero with her aunt and uncle
Mr. and Mrs. Deon Polzin.
MARKETS
LOCAL GRAIN MARKET
Courtesy of
HAVSF.N FEED A SUPPLY
CUERO CASH GRAIN MKT.
Carolyn and Bill Ferguson
back Friday from California
and they report that hippies
were. just about everywhere in
that state, dirty looking, un-
kept and barefooted.
Helen and Marion Fetters
are back from a weeks vaca-
tion at the coast.
Herman Schaefer
up the lawn at his
East Main.
prettying
home on
NEW FAB
PARIS DPI — Designer Paco
Rabane who created metall i e
Someone remarked that the
recent cool mornings made
Milo 2.47 per 19b : him think about getting out the
Yellow par corn .... 1.35 per bu. j ()ld dper riflp which reminds
Yellow Corn shelled 1.56 per bu. j us (o rcmin(j you jt's time to be
—j thinking about the deer hunting
MART | ,casp jn fact, it may be too
POULTRY
AUSTIN (UPIt
steady; movement
about
dresses, gfftJSSJT
latest creation is a jewelled eve . ________.__
patch for ladies, inspired by]
Israeli Defense Minister C. e n. j
Moshe Dayan who wears aj
patch to cover a missing eye. I
_ . | icnnt.. ah
Poultry | jatp cven now to be starting
nor-
15.4-
Watch
Repairing
Reining & Wagner
JEWELERS
Lester Frers
WATCH REPAIRS
Cuero. TmM
FORT WORTH LIVESTOCK
MARKET
FORI' WORTH (UPD — USDA
— Livestock;
Cattle 1200. calves 800; stea-
dy: only a few steers offered;
eood to most lv choice 725-875
lb. heifers 25.25-25.75; cows
16.50-19.99; bulls none sold
early; high standard and good
400-525 lb. calves 25.00-26.00;
feeders: good-choice 710-870 lb.
steers 23.50-25.30; good-cltoice
| 450-600 lb. heifers 23.50-24.80;
j high choice 372 lb. steer calves
i 33.50 choice 403 lb. heifer calves
| 27.60.
j Hogs 400; steady; 1-3 grade
: 220-260 lb. barrows and gilts
i 21.00-22.25; sows 1-3 grade 340-
720 lbs. 11.00-12.50.
| Sheep 800; steady; good-choice
: 66-67 lb. spring slaughter lambs
; 20.00-23.00; choice-prime 63 lb.
spring feeder lambs 19.00.
I : -
Railroads—
(Continued from page 1)
out to get a lease.
Bill Stockton of Houston in
our office Monday and showing
us two handsome plaques he
has been awarded for outstand-
ing work with the State Em-
ployment Commission.
Sara Aronstein trying her
hand in the advertising depart-
ment at The Fair.
We've just read that lawns
should be watered deeply and
infrequently. And the coarse
sprinklers are better than the
mists, the article said. We’ve
been using the soakers and
finding them to do a good job,
we thought.
Balated congratulations to
Oscar Adickes and Frances
Blakeslee who had birthdays
Monday. Happy birthday today
to Mrs. Hugo Zengerle. The
Walter Gains who moved re-
cently to Abilene "C observing
their wedding anniversary to-
day.
Murdered At Abilene
mm
g . - - -
, i •
v. . l ,
. •.*>> J- *■■■•> fjw;
WALLS DO NOT A PRISON MAKE—One of the most popular pastimes for Inmates of the
Missouri State Penitentiary in Jefferson City Is playing miniature golf on this 18-hole
‘•country club” course. It was constructed with funds from the prison canteen, and golf
clubs and other equipment were donated by various golf dubs.
GLAMOR GIRLS
1969.
WASHINGTON <TPD — Pres-
ident Johnson today named a
blue-ribbon panel headed by
Sen. Wayne Morse to seek set-
tlement of the long-standing
railway labor dispute. He said , -------------- •—
he was "very hopeful we can suits as well can be cared for
eel "agreement between the I at home if they are labeled
Home Hint for Today —
If You’re Buying Clothes,
Think About What You Want.
Are they washable or cleanable
clothes — or both. Sometimes
cottons (particularly those
blended with other fibers) can
he either washed or dry-clean-
ed. Women’s dresses and men’s
I parties.”
"washable.’
LAST
Box Office Opens 6:30 P. M.
t Features at 7:00 and 8:45
Mon. thru Frf.
Adults 70c—Children 25c
B!H^
Mid-East Cease Fire
Being Honored Now
JERUSALEM UPI - United flew * ^^JfltS^fol-
Nations observers stood watch
on both sides of the Suez Canal
today and reported both the
Israelis and Egyptians were
honoring the Middle East cease-
fire.
In Cairo the authoritative
newspai>er A1 Ahrani said the
presidents of Algeria and Iraq
To make inquiry before being compelled to do so,
elimiates the strain of last minute decisions.
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Oklahoma Kidnapper
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Cuero Publishing Co.
Publisher Of The Cuero Record
talks of major importance" fol-
lowing their week-long confer-
ences with Egyptian President
Gamal Abdel Nasser.
The newspaper said the
Moscow talks would deal with
"an analysis of the general Mid-
dle East situation from the
viewpoint of the Arab states
which participated in the Cairo
meeting and these states’
assessment of all possibilities.
In New York, the U.N. Gen-
eral Assembly had 48 hours to
reach agreement on any further
Middle East resolutions. The as-
sembly president said he would
definitely terminate the month-
old emergency session Thurs-
day.
The observation posts, picked
out by U.N. personnel Sunday,
are situated along the canal’s
banks and at roads along the
waterway.
The four observers on the
1 Israeli side wpre an Australian,
an Italian, a Belgian and a
Swede. Two Frenchmen and two
Swedes were placed an the
Egyptian banks.
A U. N. spokesman said there
would be no direct communicaa-
tions between the two teams.
Such contact has been opposed
by Egypt.
hot shot
CARNOUSTIE, Scotland UPI
_ Golfer Jimmy Hay al-
most scored bis own 1‘hole-in-
lone” Monday when he drove a
I ball into a bunker just inches
■ from a rusty mortar shell.
Hay calmly played the shot at
the Scottish Amateur Champion-
ship Tournament and then
called in the army, which
removed and exploded the
, live mortar round.
ADA, Okla. UPI - A giant
prison escaper was the object of
a manhunt today in the same
area where lie allegedly kidnap-
ed six persons two months ago.
Emmett Ray McCarthy, 34, a
six-foot-10 , 245-pound armed rob-
ber, allegedly broke out of the
Pontotoc County jail Mond a y
night after holding the jailer at
knifepoint. On May 8. he had
escaped from the University of
Oklahoma Hospital in Oklaho-
ma City and had gone on a 150
mile dash for freedom during
which he held hostage or ter-
rorized 16 persons.
Sheriff’s officers said McCar-
thy was last seen on foot in
Ada.
“What I fear,” said Dist.
Atty. Gordon Nelson, “is that
he used that knife to catch the
first person who came along,
and they may be anywhere."
A deputy sheriff said there
had been no reports of stolen
cars, and the area had been
cut off by roadblocks.
Jailer Don Kaiser, 32. said he
had let McCarthy out of his
cell about 10:30 p.m. to take a
shower.
Kaiser said as he opened the
cell door, McCarthy pointed a
knife at him, forced Kaiser to
lie on a bed in the office,
tied his hands.
This was the one night when
LETTERS TO
THE EDITOR
Dear Mr. Howerton,
Yesterday I received my first
issue of The Cuero Record. I
would like to take this opportun-
ity to thank you and your staff
for sending the Record not only
to me but to the other Cuere
servicemen over here in the
Vietnam area. It Is a fine mor-
ale booster!
I am stationed aboard the
attack aircraft carrier U.S. S.
Constellation (CVA - 69). We
launch aircraft which bomb
various points in North Vietnam.
These “strikes” go on for
12 hours everyday. Ours is a
very important assignment
and security forbids me to say
more about It.
Even though we are in t h e
Gulf of Tonkin, we still send
and receive mail every day.
This is one advantage of being
on an aircraft carrier. We have
our own T.V. and radio sta-
tions and also a daily newspa-
per.
Thank you again and I’ll be
looking forward to future issues
of the Cuero Record.
Yours truly,
Walter DeDear, ETN-3
| Dear Sir:
In the past few years you’ve
I put a lot of things in the paper
I about draft dodgers and draft
ABILENE, Tex. UPI — The
gray and red of the Texas High-
way Patrol uniform filled row
upon row in the crowded chap-
el of Elliott’s Funeral Home.
Nearly 200 more persons gather-
ed from the doorway to t h e
sidewalk outside.
‘God is not the author of vio-
lence, viciousness or brutality,"
said the Rev. Bob Rich, pastor
of the Belmont Baptist Church.
“He is merciful and gracious.
The Lord has a blessing and a
comfort tor every tear.”
Lt. Col. Wilson E. Speir, assis-
tant director of the Texas De-
partment of Public Safety, head-
ed a delegation of DPS officers
from Austin. More patrolmen
came from district headquarters
in Midland and still others from
other sections of the state.
One of the troopers was Al-
fred P. White, 37, a patrolman
for 14 years.
It was the funeral of White’s
wife, Joyce, 38.
Mrs. White was beaten to
death In a savage attack on her
and her husband Friday night
by intruders who were In their
house when the couple returned
from a movie.
Their assailants tied up White
and his wife and beat them with
chains and a length of steel
pipe.
“I am sorry to say we have
no good leads,” a DPS spokes-
Funeral Rites Held
For Patrolman’s Wife
man.
More than a dozen persons
were questioned in the slaying
but none checked out as sus-
pects.
Ex-Cueroite To
Instruct At
Army School
William E. (Bill) Bridges,
formerly of Cuero. will report
to Fort Chaffee, Ark. July 22 for
two weeks service as an instruc-
tor at the Fourth U. S. Army
Area Intelligence School.
Bridges, now a major in Mil-
itary Intelligence, was an en-
listed instructor at the first
such school held at Fort Sam
Houston in 1947. He has complet-
ed 23 years of active and re-
serve service, including World
War EL and the Korean conflict.
The former Cueroite now re-
sides In San Antonio, and oper-
ates a training aids business
there.
LOSE WEIGHT safely with
Dex-A-Diet Tablets. ONLY 98c
at L. L. Buttery Ph. G.
(11-18-25
members Is $35,000 a year.
SALLY'S SALLIES
SQUELCH
; LONDON UPI - Foreign Se-
cretary George Brown, replying
to a question in the House of
'Commons about two Invitations
to a government reception going
to the wrong adress, was
received with laughter when he
j id *
“The cost of public funds of
! sending these invitations was
eight pence 10 cents whereas
the cost of answering this
I parliamentary question has
baaa about *vt panda 114 ’
"inis was me one lugm ----- . T
I didn’t have somebody up here card burners. Here at Lackland
to help me," Kaiser said. “I Air Force Base, they are no*
knew better than to let him out, even considered part of toe
hut I tost did.” United States. This is how the
Kaiser said they went to a boys, I should say men in my
men’s rest room on toe first flight, feel about them. And we
floor, where McCarthy tied Kai- are not by ~rad*ea. A lot of
ser to a pipe and escaped us may go to Viet Nam. If we
through a window. do. fine. At least we are serving
Last May, McCarthy had been our country now and we are
transferred from the McAlester not ashamed of it
State Penitentiary, where he Here, we have a code in which
was serving a 12-year term tor we try to live by. The part
armed robbery, to the univer- of the code that meansithe mart
sity hospital for back surgery, to me goes like this. I am
" He overpowered his guard at an American fighting man and
the hospital and went on a six- I am ready to give my life.,,
hour flight that ended at Mat- Let the "weekend warriors
ietta Okla., just north of the and the draft dodgers and what
Texas bonier ever, if they can, say that they
Authorities said McCarthy has are true Americans. If so, they
a record of 33 arrests in nine don’t love their country too
states and had escaped four much.
times previously. I lost an uncle I never knew,
McCarthy was now awaiting and a lot of other people lost
trial on six charges of kidnap- loved ones, too, so I can live
ine Charges were also pending here in the United States with
aeainst McCarthy in Ardmore, out fear. And now I’m paying
Okla and at McAlester. them back in a very sma 1
’’ way. I can’t bring them back
.by serving in the armed forces,
The salary of U.S. oabinet but I am a true American. And
The salary « | _ wherever they may lie
in peace — would approve of
my actions and beliefs.
Friday, July 14th, I - along
with 200 or 300 other men
marched in review. And when
you stand there in front of your
flag and the band plays the
National Anthem, you have a
feeling that you could never feel
as a civilian because now you
are a true part of that flag a-
long with all those who fought
and gave their lives so we
could live free.
I’m proud to be a member of
the United States Air Force and
an American and most of all to
have lived in Cuero. When I
leave the service in June 1971,
I plan to return to Cuero and
live.
I miss all my friends and
hope every one is getting along
fine
Thank you .
AB David C. Newman, Jr. |
| OUTSTANDING
CHICAGO UPI — Victor Ga-
raze, 25, was charged Monday
with driving with no city
sticker, no driver's license, il-
legal use of license plates and
obstruction of driver’s view.
Patrolman Raymond Egan
said ha stopped Garaze on an
expi cmway when he noticed a
pony standing in the back seat
R oman s acnvertible.
Troop Mothers
Meet Tonight
The mothers auxiliary of Boy
Scout Troop 243 will meet at 7
p.m. Tuesday in the new scout
hut off the Stratton road, ac-
cording to Mrs. Travis Spears,
reporter for the group.
The new scout hut is located
on property belonging to Scout-
master John C. Hamilton near
the Cuero Rifle and Pistol Club
range.
Elder To Get
BBA Degree
Patrick Brown Elder, son of
Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Elder of
Cheapside, is a candidate for a
B.B.A. from Texas A&I.
Commencement exercises are
scheduled for August 25 in A
& 1’s Javelina Stadium at 7:30
p.m.
Elder, a graduate of Cuero
High School, is one of 382 per-
sons expected to receive bache-
lor’s and Master’s degrees dur-
ing the exercises.
(Pak *rmnrial
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lustles, a Cuero Record Class*-
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right car for your family and
Midget Just follow me back to
JUssification 00. “Autoa la*
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WANT a better job? It may
be waiting under “Help Wan*-
AnnuMi/
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SHOES
REDUC ED
“Yotfm right We’il have to aplit up m iBOMiaatag, 1 «*■*
wmt any «*»**■ sort
SEMI-ANNUAL SAVINGS ON
FAMED BRAND SHOES
All Our Spring and Summer Shoes By
LIFE STRIDE — PERSONALITY
MISS AMERICA
At Exactly Vz of Original Price
Regular price range 11:00 to 14.00 —
Now 5.50 to 7.00
ITour MISS AMERICA- PERSONALITY
and SENSATION
Flats and Little Heels at exactly Vz Price
AUOur Children’s White Patent and White
Leather Shoes
At ONE-HALF PRICE
"one Table DRESS SHOES and FLATS
Now 2.00,3.00 & 4.00 _
One Lot Boys’ Shoes at ONE-HALF PRICE
One Lot Men’s Brown FLORSHEIM -
ROBLEE - HANDCRAFT Shoes
5.00 - 7:50 - 15.00
RICHARD'S of Cuero, Inc.
1M E. Main
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The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 73, No. 167, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 18, 1967, newspaper, July 18, 1967; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth695523/m1/6/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cuero Public Library.