The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 73, No. 244, Ed. 1 Monday, October 16, 1967 Page: 4 of 6
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Page 4 THE CUERO RECORD Monday. Oft. 16, 1967
Editorial—
Johnson And Crime
President Lyndon Johnson's recent speech before
the International Association of Chiefs of Police In Kan-
sas City was a prune example of a politician telling his
audience what it wanted to hear.
The President said violence in the nat.on's cities
in 1967 was a “new kind of disorder" and lashed out at
it as something led by Vwretched, vulgar men" and
“poisonous propagandists." The words could not have
been more appropriate had they been chosen by Barry
Goldwater.
They came late from the President, to the nations
police forces. Anri, in fact, the violence in the country’s
cities this year is not very different from the pattern
vividly exhibited in the Watts rioting in Los Angeles,
which has been obviously developing for some time.
Property rights of innocent people have not been re-
spected by crusading civil rights groups for years—and
neither the President nor the federal courts have done
much about the trend.
The politically expedient thing lias been to remain
silent, and alienation of organized and militant rights
organizations has been avoided at all cost. Federal
courts stretched things to reverse lower court findings of
violations of local ordinances and state laws.
This encouraging of violators of the law has pro-
duced in part the present attitude of today's militants,
who feel they can ignore the law President Johnson’s
somewhat belated indignation as expressed to the na-
tion's police chiefs is welcome. But it would have been
more impressive had it. come when it was not politically
expedient, and could have prevented some of the looting
of recent months.
THE BAD GUYS
i legal notice!!
LEGAL NOTH T.
“AMERICA Is succumbing to
a creeping obsolescence" in
Its foreign policy, Richard M.
Nixon tells a seminar on
world hunger conducted tn
New York by the National
In-lirstna! Conference Board.
Teacher Strikes
Major teacher strikes in several of the nation’s
largest cities have closed the public schools and halted
the educational process for thousands of children in
recent weeks. Such action focuses attention on the ques-
tion of strikes involving the public interest.
One cannot argue such strikes are as critical as, for
example, strikes in key defense industries in wartime;
nor are they quite comparable to nurses’ strikes in hos-
pitals.
However, one regrets to see the education of chil-
dren interrupted by pay disputes, disputes in which the
average student and parent have little voice. It would
seem that such strikes should be precluded by some-
thing akin to compulsory arbitration by an impartial
hoard or panel of qualified personnel It, may be that In
the future teachers and teacher unions will be asked!
■tv agree to such procedure a-s a condition of employ-
, ./m.
As with strikes in transportation and communlca-
media, the public interest must not be ignored in
g .-f settlement of management-labor disputes
the: state of tkxas
COUNTY OF DEWITT
In the name and by the
authority ol the State of
Texas notiee is hereby
givpn as follows: TO
Tom Alexander, Reverend J. M
SEEKS IBJ’S JOB — William
W. Evans Jr, Wyckoff, N.
J., lawyer, smiles into the
problematical future as he
announce.s he will enter the
Republican presidential pri-
mary in New Hampshire. He
is a former state legislator.
liianging Our Holidays
A startling modern detective thriller
Wrath
by J.J.MARRIC (John Creasey)
From the novel published v Harper V ft,,» ... J. \ t- , ■ , ic,. -
br John Creawy. distribute* by Kins tvjuurm Svntlifit,'
; force. Out tne three men who ' door and it clanged sharply
appeared in the powerful car, j A yellow light, some distune.
juat after he had seen the man ' off, seemed to glow brightly.
come from the telephone kicsk. j then it went out.
"He's neard us,' Good ways
whispered. "Go ahead ”
On that Instant, first he and
then Hodgson switched on pow-
erful torches as Hodgson called
tn a depp, carrying voice which
echoed with strange resonance
CHAPTER 2
«n»T HAS IMITtMID
Kiip (Jr.’cnwood m-cDI to a Dondon
filled with remorte after
'.libra a woman, Margaret Ent-
“tu.vtle. A» he prayed tn anguish
n tr.c chape I shallows, a alight
r.f'i-f imule him raise tus head to
witness a man. stealmg the altar
b'lte Shocked by the sacrilege, he
tel. phoned Scotland Yard abonv.
incusly of the robbery at 8t_
biidd'a.
were from the Yard. The two
forces worked very closely to-
gether, sometimes almost as if
they were one. The first car had
only Just stopped when another,
i—Pic cRtTwmn j from the City, pulled up on the
URIC GREENWOOD turned oUM.r side of St. Rudds close
— again, and heard a car ap-1
One of the advantages of the proposed world cal-
endar was that several holidays were proposed for Mon-
days—the idea being to give workers a long weekend by
adding Monday to Saturday and Sunday.
In recent days Congress has begun to move on this
question and it seems likely some action will be taken
in the near future One proposal which has excellent
chances of acceptance is that to change the traditional
dates of five of our holidays to the nearest Monday.
The five to be affected by the change are Wash-
ington’s birthday, Memorial Day, Independence Day,
Thanksgiving and Veterans Day. If observancec of these
holidays fell on the Monday nearest their traditional
dates the national calendar would then include six three-
day weekends. The dates for Christmas, New Year’s
Day and Easter would remain unchanged.
Support for such legislation — to be ratified by thf j
states — is growing steadily and endorsement recently
by the U. S. Chamber of Commerce was significant. Both
business and workers thus support the proposal, a
logical one In the Interests of the majority.
JREAKS WITH GOP - Sen.
Thruston Morton, R Ky,
breaking with other Repub-
lican leaders, tells a business
executives meeting in Wash-
ington that Vietnam fight-
ing should be de-escalated
sharply and "search and de-
stroy missions" stopped.
®Ijp (tern ffcrord
Established In 1894
Published Each Afternoon Except Saturday and
Sunday Morning
proaehing at great speed, from
Ludden Circus. He also heard
a squeal of tires, and glanced
over his shoulder to see a car
pulling up m front of St Rudd s.
The police, he thought the po-
lice he had summoned, they
would catch the thief who had
6a.re.rl to commit sacrilege but
not the man who had disobeyed
the command. Thou shalt not
ktU. As he made hts way, some-
thing of the earlier anguish and
tear and remorse returned, but
the anguish was not so acute,
not so obsessive. He could think,
ns well as feei. He could recaJl
the picture of Margaret's face,
so round and pretty and so gay,
and the sudden change In It to
distress, as she had said, “I can't
go on. Eric, my darling! 1 can't
go on."
It had been like a great iron
ball, smashing into his head.
"You must understand,” she
had pleaded. “1 can t go on de-
ceiving Geoffrey like this. I
can t look him in the face. It
was bad enough when he was
to the Crypt Gate. At once, the "Dan t move! We know you're
men began to station themselves j there."
by Uie exits, and Glenn joined I One torch he.vrn shone on a
a man who stood by the statue I pale statue, the other on the
of Queen Anne
"What's up?”
"Had a tip-off "
“What about”
"Burglar in ther* Pier*
was indicated by e j-i-k of th«
thumb
"Blimey!'
"If it’s not a hoax, the other
remarked. "You seen anyone?"
"Saw a chap come out of the
kiosk. He was tn a hell of a
hurry.”
"Probably the one who tipped
us off,” the Yard man remark-
ed. "Get a good look at him ?'*
"Not bad.”
"Might come In useful.''
Still another car arrived and
figure of s men carrying a big
suitcase. At fimt he did not
move; It wa* as If he reatired
that he nad no choice but to
give himaelf up However, as
the two detectives went toward
him, and two more of leaner
rank followed th»m in the thief
uttered an obscenity m a vhnll,
neared voice
you:"
He turned and tv pan to run
toward the great doors of Si.
Rudd's. The hurried uncoordi-
nated sound fell as desecration
in that house of prayer
• • •
No one with the name ol
Gideon could be oblivious ot the
the main entrance to the cathe-
dral. The whispering of voices
sounded clear on the still air.
and the shapes of the men were
sharply defined in the soft light
away, but now he s home again ; of ,h„ moon ClJt 0, the *looni
two big men got out, going up fact that to many people the
the steps Immediately and con-! Biblical connotation sprang im-
ferrlng with a man already by mediately to mind. There were
even those who sold that given
a flowing tvard, a voluminous
By THE CUERO PUBLISHING CO. lac.
110 E. Main, Cuero, Texas P. O. Box Ml
FACES JAIL-Albert Sharker,
United Federation of Teach-
ers president in New York,
tells reporters he doesn't
want to go to Jail over the
teacher strike, but will if he
must. He says city is "trying
union-busting techniques.”
Second class postage paid at Cuero, Texas
/967-
RESS ASSOCIATION
South Texas Press Association
Southern Newspaper Publishers Association
IACK HOWERTON ..............
1 C. “PETE" HOWERTON
URS. JACK HOWERTON ...
President and Publisher
______... Vice President
____Secretary-Treasurer
The
Family
Lawyer
Natlooal Advertising Representative*
Texas Daily Press League Inc., 960 Hartford Bldg., Dallas
Accusing the Wrong
Man
Late one night a widow, liv
ir>g alone, heard footsteps ap-1
it's impossible.
He bad thought in a spasm
of wlk fury, "She wants to
leave me. She wants him!"
“You re tired of me! That's
the truth, you re tired of me!”
"No. It isn’t that. It's lust
that I can t go on cheating him
—and I ran i leave the children.
Eric, you know 1 can’t. Eric.
Eric.”' Suddenly, as his hands
had closed about, her throat, her
voice had risen to a scream
"Brie!"
Now, she lay dead.
• • •
Although (jondon slept and
the great churches were as
empty as the great blocks of
offices, the museums, the stores
and schools, the hails and ttate-
, ly homes, at one place there
was an ever-watchfuj eye. That
was Scotland Yard, the head-
quarters of the Metropolitan
Police. In fact, however, only
one section of the building was
wide awake: the section which
housed the Information Room
and the offices of the Criminal
Investigation Department. From
here, the center of the web of
j London s police, the Divisions
and the subdivisions! police sta-
j lions were controlled.
a police constable named
I Glenn, on duty that night st St.
i Rudd's was in fact from the
I City of I xmdon Police, another
I Supplj : Abst 193. 009909 R!
j Shell Brush} Guti, AhH lo',, G
|P Dflniflk. 91 al, 985.55 aero*;
: H.M Sally, 180 acre.-:, .001172 r.:,
Geo. W. Graham. et al. O L.
, Camilla rs; JT Tinsley, 25' >
! Carr. Mrs. A. W. Cutliff. Will acres .000586 RI. UR Ok..
Dailey. Mack J. Peoples. Mack smith, et a). Adolph F. Spi"---
J. Peoples. Jr., Anton Schroet- .'{01.fi acres in Absl. 414, P,;
or. Oscar Guttschnli, Pedro Ragsdale. .001172 RI Colon*
! Villarreal. Eufemia Villarreal, Oil & Gas. HJ Gohl.ke: Ah. ,
E. P Zincke, W. O. Gohlke, 4J4, Pc' Ragsdale 230.8 acres,
j Eitzgrald, Bernice Hill, Appell .001172 RI Colima OAT, Anie-
! Petroleum Corporation. Wilson lid Roldt "A": Abst, 414. P. C
i Carter, J. B. Coffee, Diana Ragsdale 290 seres. .001758 RJ
Hirseh. David P. Hoover, Har-, Column O A G. Amelia Roldt;
{rison S. Lilly. Donald Manuel.1 Ah-t. 226. M House, 253.5 ac-
j Mo-Kd-Ro Co.. Morris Sir* cl. res, .001914 RI. On. Am Oil
, Florine R. Nutter, J. Paul M. Co Melanie niohel: H ui.se,
| Uicavd. Saratoga Pr.viueti.m Quinn. 353 aero*. O03RS2 OP.R
Co.. Loreno Sager. Hazel 1 Atlantic Ref. CV. Bitterly Rat
| Stines. Lydia M. Webstei Ran- Uni1 Sunrny-M.d Continent-
j ney Drajvr, Ms. f, O Wtl- Poetter Gns Unit i a Mil OS RI;
| liams and Mark T. Wilson Sr.,! Abst. 9fi, W. C Brown 70 acres.
| All of the Stockholders all <-( Sunray-Mid Continent Riedel
whom are unknown to plaintiff i Uillng Gas. .000212 RI and
and his attorney, of each and .000210 RI; Broun Marshall.■
off of the corpirate defendants Sunray .Mid Continent WLC
'enumerated above; all part-! Poetter "A" .000244 RI. Sun-
tiers, nil of whom are unknown ray Mid-Cop’ W1C poettt.-.
: to plaintiff and to his attorney, .000214 RI; O Marshall. 83
of each and all of the defend- acres, Sunray Mid-Cont WRc'
ants enumerated above, which Procter B\V,.000244 RI: Brown,
are or were partnerships; all Marshall 50 acres Forest Oil
members, beneficiaries, and in- Corp. Wlk' Poetter. 000214
terest' ladders, nil of whom are |;t Abst 28.3 ,Ias K-’lles, 1S1
unknown to plaintiff and to his .ires. 008738 RI t.R
attorney, of e.ach and all of the smith, C,e,. Starr ho* ,\o I
defendants enumerated above All of the ntxe * and foie^ouig
whieb are or were trusts, joint described property Iwing loo-yit
stock companies, or other unin- «1 ln DeWitt County, ’t, \m«,
corpora ted asso. tations: all of . n.t all of the deed reference,
such (Kisons and their legal tea rig to the J Ve,| Recoils of
status \i/ ubethi r Ineorpof-' DeWIlt County. Texas to whi. n
a ted or unincorporated, ami if referenee 1* here made for .«
moorjiorated, whether in g<«.d more particular dr-vription "f
standing or ■defunct, le-ing un- each respective item of proper-
I known to plaintiff and his at- ty,
torney: Which said propi rty m dehm
11 living, and if any or all of the quent to Plaintiff in the folio-v-
1 aliove named deferstanls he mg am-Hints
dead, the unkmiwn heirs of *1,447.29. .x lusive of interest,
.. each or all of the said above penalties and costs, ami there i.«
named persons who may lie included in this s-uit In »ddit.«n
dead and the unknown heirs of iu the taxes all said interest,
; the unknown heirs of said penhltie* and costs thereon, -d'
o«>\‘ named jicrs-ms and lowed* by-law up to and incliidf< g
: the unkm .wm lAvner or .iwners the day df judgment her* in
>1 Ub hereinafter d-sserdM-d You arc hereby notified that
land and the executors, adnu- suit has l>-er, hnnight by
mstrajors, guardians, legal re- The State of Texas »« Plauttitf,
present at i ve- legatees, devts- against the ,bn» named p».!
I ee.«. husbands, and w ives of th” « >ns. as Defendants, by jv-ti-
above namr-d persons, and any tion filed op the lfttb day of Is.
and all other, persons including cemlicr, 196t. In a certain suit
j adverse claimants, owning or1 styled The State of Texas vs.
having o; claiming any legal or Tom Alexander, et a! fo
equitable interest in or limupon lertkm of the taxes on said pr>*
’he foikming des rih<-<! pro[M»r-, perty and that said suit is now
j 'v delinquent to Plaintiff here-1 pending in the District Court A
m b-r taxs. all of said property j DvWitt Ounfy, Texas 24th ,*u
being located in raid County dirial District, and ti*e fiie
j and -'ate. to-u it number of laid suit is 7155 that
! r* acres John MeG>v [/-ague j the name* of all taxing units
\b«t 39; 1/4 aer* John May'which asses* and collect taxes
i I/‘ague Abst 3i 2 96 «'-res. .1 on the property herenah »
• J Tiitnltfison league No 45, , described, not made ptrtie* m
Vol. 127. Page 71,; 2.0 a- res, R this suit are
Amador league, Alwt 1 Vo!. Plaintiff and all other »ax.ng
123 P tgc 435, and Vol 42, Page units who may set up the.r
226 ’» acre. 2 J, Tumlmstin, tax claim* herein seek recovery
ly.igue Abst 45 Vol 144 Page of delinquent ad valorem tax-s
251; 1.09 acres, S: Rest I Ague, on the proprety hereinab e
Ah%t. 66. Vol 133, Page 597; i described, and in addition to tiy>
1 8th acre, John May. Abst 34; taxes all interest, penalties, and
113554687 Ml B. C. Ika-hrmann. > costs allowed by law thereon up
Pat Quinn 208 acres; .0689603 to and including the di> -if
MI, Wendrl Gas Unit No 1. Pet-1 judgment herein, and the ejtab-
lus A- Turner. .320 acres; .000302 j lishmcnt and foreclosure ,,f
RI. Continental Fed. Land liens, If any, securing the pay.
Rank-Wood Unit 000170 RI. merit of same, as pnwided by
Sunray-MW Cont Riedel Iailing law
Gas; 0013.39 RI. ContinentaJ-Fe-j All partir* to this suit. IneJud-
deral Lind Rank; .000224 RI. ' ing plaintiff, defendant*, and tiv
Sunray-WH Riedel "A”; .031250 tervenor*. shall take notice that
RI, Abst. 329. John May. 15.67 claim* not only tor any taxes
acres, Wendol D
at one side of the cathedral a
man in a dreaamg gown appear- (Gideon would laugh, but it never
ed, toualed, bright-eyed. He jus ! failed to touen him with un
a verger disturbed by a call I easiness
staft, tne Gideon who was a
Commander at Scotland Yard • r , Simrav Mid-Continent OIL
would make a pas-eble Old Tes-
tament pronhet. Ge. ,„g tbl*
from the police. The whispering
continued.
"What doora are open 7 '
‘"Only one, on the south side
Near the High Altar.”
"Quite sure of that ?"
thould be open
“Well put a man at each of
the others and try the one on
the south side," decided Detec-
tive Inspector Goods* ays of the
City Police. "No need for you1 from the Cathedral and the
yet. sir. Well use torches be j murder of Mr* Margaret Km-
easier to surprise this chap ft whistle, nothing was
I art her
you'd care to put some clothes (from Gideon s mind. He had a
on I family preoccupation as well as
"But I can't believe " , an administrative one He want-
"Have to make sure sir.' (ed to concentrate on a matter
Goodways insisted. (of high policy in Uie Criminal
“Yes, ot course.' the verger: Investigation Department but
said. "Very well, I'll get dress- was unable to forget the face
lev, et al: which were delinquent on said
gown and a Ihie-k and heavy Abst. 36-432. Sewell, Brown, 80 property at the time thi* suit
j acres; .000091 RI WH Riedel, wa« filed but all taxes becom-
j ing delinquent thereon at any
Abst. 96 W. r. Brown. 70 acre*, , time therafter up to Die day of
'WOO! RT WH Rb-del A”, Sun-; Judgment, Including all interest,
ray MidT'ontinent Oil; Abst. 619 penalties and coats allowed by
Gf'.rp A M. V) arret 009001 Rf law fhere<tn may upon request
Wood F>d Land Rank f ontin-1 therefor, he recovered herein
ental Oil. Ahxt 619 CLIP A M without further citation or no-
2175 acre*. ,990003 RI Fed flee to any partie* herein, and
Bank (’onttnenlal Oil. Absf. j all nald partie* *hat) take T»t
396, Pat Quinn, 320 acres. 022687 lee of and plead and angwei *o
RI Appell Petr Corp.. A R. F7 ; ah claim* and pleading* now
Smith, et al. Paul Wendel; ; on file and which may her»af-
,001956 ORR Mathew Newsom ; for he filed in said cause by all
I nit. Harkins A Co., Abst. 189, other partie* herein, and all of
J. R Foster, et al. .320 acres: tb"*e faxing unit* above named
004007 ORR Harkins A Co., et; who may intervene herein and
«l Steimrtan-fiarretl t'nll Ahxt set up their respective tax
123. HY Chamberlain, .359 acres; claim* against said property.
.003208 RI W estern Natl C.a*.! You are hereby commanded
Milligan Heirs, Abst. 228. AJ j to a pear and defend such suit
Hunter. 849 acre*; Abst. .330, on the first Monday after the
Hy Chamberlain. 340 acres, j expiration of forty-two."■<42) day*
.095127 ORR, Harkins A Co., et/from and after the date of I*-
He wags of an age, tn Ms early
fifties, and of * nonconformist
religious upbringing, which
could give a puritanical slant to
moal matters having to do with
religion and he hoped h« was
Well, it's the only door that I neither aa puritanical nor as
forbidding as many of the Old
Testament prophet-* seemed to
him
On the meriting after the at-
tempted theft of the alter plate
ed and send for the canon.”
A* he disappeared a whis-
pered order was sent out, and
Boon four men converged on the
door through which it . mur-
derer had escaped Detective
Inspector Goodways and Detec-
tive Sergeant Hodgson from the
Metropolitan Force went in,
making very UttJe sound for
such big and heavy men. But
aa they stepped Into the cathe-
dral ttsetf, someone brushed the
From tb« novel published Bv Harper A Row; copyrtant © ISfff. by . reassy;
distributed by Kin* Feature* Syndicate.
of hi« youngest daughter.
Poor, sad Penny: she had just
failed her Royal College txnmi
nation in music, an examination
which was to have set her on
the road to a career as a pro
feasional pianist. The letter with
the results of the examination
had arrived just before Gideon
left home, and ao he had been
delayed, which won exasperat-
ing In itself
(To Be Co nfinurit To morrow/
Selina Mernitz and 359; «u«neo hereof, the same being
iicrcv .002827 ORR Harkins A 'lie 20th day of November, A. D.
Co., et al, Steinma.n-Gnrrrtt Un-11967, (which is the return day
it; Absl 647 and Abst. 648. J. R. of *uch rltatlortc before the ho
Foster, el al. .320 acre*. .001956 J norable District Court of DeWitt
ORR Harkins A Co., Matthew-! County, Texan, to be held at the
Newsom Unit; Abst. 15, Green! courthouse thereof, then and
DeWitt. 140 acres. .003439 ORR there to show cause why judge-
Gasoline Pr >d. Corp. Mussel ( me»m shall n<>! be rendered for
man-Stale No. 1.2.3; Absl. 34, | *uch takes, penalties. Interest
John May, 130.08 acres. .0009.301 3costa, and condemning said
RI Chandler, Industrial Gas property and ordering foreelo-
Supply; Alist. 55-329, Ja*. A ! sure of the constitutional an<l
John May. 42.40 acres, ,04»M401 -HtHtiitory tax Hens thereon for
RI Turner Unit Indusiritil Gas i i"- '* due the plaintiff and the
taxing units parties hereto, and
tious atmut imposing liabil- j those who may intervene here-
by on an accuser. For if such! in, together with al) interest,
[liability was imposed tool penalties, anil cost* allowed by
freely, people ml^ht be discour- i law up to and including the day
I proaehing her bedroom. While [switch from a defendant into a said a person cannot be held j malicious .prosecution because he aged from reporting Crimea to [of judgment herein, and all
! she lay in terrified silence, an plaintiff. He filed suit against responsible for malicious pro- brought unfounded theft char- i0 autliorilics. Even liie well- i cteds of this suit.
Subscription Rates
' Feeling sure she had recog- ” making the original accusation lnK a debt. |Us pains. I the elty ol Diem, DeWitt C.;un-
nized the man a* a neighbor- j “since her accusation against | even if the charge did not i^n<^ another man was held lia- Law enforcement relies hrav-' ty, T"xas. this 3rd day of Oio-
hood gardener, she filed bur- me was a mistake,” lie argued i staiK up in court. ; blc for malicious prosecution !*-'• jJy on its lines of eomniuni a- her A. D.
glary charge* with the police.! in court, “she ought to pay for If an accuser do"* bring char- [ cause he brought unfounded Ires- Hon with the general public. Giv- 'Signed
But at the trial, the gardener j cal',ng me a criminal and mak- :ge* without having pnobah 1 e ri**sing charges against a ncigii n2 sr cm "t reasenab c pin.
produced such an airtight alibi' ing — — “—"''u •
| that the jury found him inno-
I cent
tatties, Gonzales, Lavaca and Jackson Counties, one year S3.00
jn< month 85c. Elsewhere in Texas, One Year 512.00, one month
93.10. By mail in U.S. outside Texas, One Year $14.00. 1 month
{1.25.
getnl-Weekly Edttku (Sunday ft Wednesday) by mail in DeWitt
and adjoining counties, One Year (4-50, 6 months J2.50. Elsewhere.
Qn*Qtfldafoigaa qty°rf Cuero and County of DeWitt
intruder enteied the room,(thp widow for damages on secution so long as be had atjges against a business rival ‘^^^'Ihe?Ihin^tlS j sntl given under my
f o r| -simply as a means ut collect- rjsj, 0f being sued afterward for [hand and seal of said court in
Dicn
this 3i
1967.
me go through fire ordeal esuse to believe they are true, (iw simply as a mean* ol tec Pun again*-! oiSiuv* ol mall-
ii a tiial." (lien he may indeed he held lia- j 'browing a scare into other pnv ,-i ,u* prosecution i* on* way <»l
But the court refused to hold.bl* for damages. For example:: *ible trespassers keeping ilvi.se lines ol commii-
At this point he decided t oj the widow liable. The judge| One man was held liable fori But as a rule, courts are rau i mention "pen
Ret->hlng Hitler
t.’l'-rk ol the Dhir -t ( rpt,
DeWitt t/SIlltJ . Texas.
24tli, Judirisf I>i- tr.r-t
19 A l«
4
4
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The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 73, No. 244, Ed. 1 Monday, October 16, 1967, newspaper, October 16, 1967; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth696956/m1/4/: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cuero Public Library.