The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 70, No. 235, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 4, 1964 Page: 8 of 10
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THE CUERO RECORD, Sunday. Oct. 4. 1964 ?
Editorial
4-H Club Week
Across the nation citizens are observing 4-H Week.
To many, especially those who live In big cities, Nat-
ional 4-H Week would probably be classed with such
weeks as Be Kind To This Or That Week.
But to those who live in the smaller communities and
those who know the facts of our nation’s economic life
realize the credit that is due this group of boys and
girls, men and women.
As you can well imagine, 4-H activities are not the
most popular in the larger cities and their schools. A
few rumbles, a knifing or two daily, a swig on the bottle
and a fast shot on a narcotic needle are, to a growing
majority of city slickers, the thing to do.
Not so in our smaller communities, the cities in
which the 4-H Club primarily flourishes. Few, if ever,
does the narcotic needle puncture the skin; knifings are
something they read about, not participate in; and the
majority of the fights is good old-fashioned horseplay.
We are convinced the sage who said, “An idle mind
is the Devil’s workshop” was right. We are convinced
that It is the activities encouraged by the adult leaders
of the 4-H program that helps keep the “workshop”
filled with healthy thoughts.
And, In addition, the projects which these club mem-
bers work on so diligently teaches them leadership and
other qualities useful throughout their lives.
It is these same 4-H club activities that encourages
the farm boy and girl to remain “at home”; to work the
place with family; even though the grass looks, and
possible may be, much greener on the other side of the
fence in the larger cities.
We need our farm families in the future just as we
need them today and needed them yesterday. We need
our 4-H Clubs today as ’fn t'he past and we will in the
future, to encourage tomorrow’s agricultural leaders.
The
®WIL®(©IK
Strauss & Germany
Joseph Strauss, leader of the CDU affiliate party
in Bavaria, is again a rising figure on the German po-
litical scene.
Of all German leaders who might gain the Chan-
cellorship at some future time in German politics, Strauss
is the one who could be Germany’s postwar strong man.
He appeals to nationalistic Germans because he
feeds irreconciled former Nazis and soldiers, and those
who wish to make Germany THE European power, with
anti-Allied propaganda.
For example, he tells provincial Bavarian audiences
that if the Allies had allowed Germany to clean up its
own mess at the end of World War n, Germany wouldn’t
be having the troubles it is having today. It is the old
German nationalistic refrain-blaming someone else for
Germany’s guilt.
(In the case of this latest anti-Allied poke by Strauss,
it is well to remember that Germans, in 1945, were not
only unable to clean up their own mess, they were un-
able to even feed themselves and the Allies had to feed
them. In addition, they had been so thoroughly brain-
washed and shielded from truth by the Nazis that they
frere Incapable, themselves, of cleaning up the Nazi
mess.)
The former Defense Minister, and Bavarian party
leader, continues to call for close alignment with Pre- price 3.'
sldent Charles DeGaulle, in the hope that France and
Germany will become a separate or third power voice in
the world, in addition to that of the United States and
.■Russia.
- The democratic West needs Chancellor Ludwig Erh-
The Organization for Econom-
ic Cooperation and Development,
an international body of which
the U. S. is a member, recently
issued its second report on pol-
icies for price stability. An ear-
lier reDort dealt with policies for
restraining wage increases and
this one deals with prices, prof-
its. and other non-wage incomes.
These reports reflect chiefly
the concern of the European
nations with their mounting in-
flation, although reference is
made to the experience of the
United States. In Europe the
effort to restore price stability
has taken the form of “incomes
policy.” This rather vague term
refers to government interven-
tion— by admonition or by reg-
ulation or by various subtler
forms of pressure —in the pri-
vate wage-price determining
mechanism.
A report released in 1961 by
the OEEC (predecessor to
OECD* had caused some eye-
brow raising by concluding
that, while wage increases could
be and have been an independ-
ent cause of inflation, the same
was not true of business pricing
policies. This exoneration of bus-
iness made labor unions around
the world unhappy and appar-
entiy the new report is intended
to appease them by pointing
out ways of regulating prices
and profits.
The report is equivocally
worded throughout and careful-
ly avoids any firmly stated rec-
ommendations. As vve lead it, it
seems to say that there is
probably no very good economic
case for controls of profits and
prices: but that such controls
are unavoidable since wage re-
straints are necessary and la-
bor would not accept them
without parallel restraints on
profits and prices.
Don’t blame this column if
other observers interpret the
OECD document differently. It
really is a thicket of double
talk).
This is a peculiar position for
a working party of internation-
al economists to take. One would
have thought that they would ex-
ert themselves to correct biased
and unsound economic reason-
ing. Instead they have simply
shrugged their shoulders and
gone along with it.
Certainly the post-war expe-
rience of the U. S., Britain and
other countries with direct price
controls illustrates abundantly
their distorting and growlh-sup-
oresfiirvg effects on toe economy.
But the OECD report seems to
wobble back and forth in its
attitude toward government in-
0 0 0
LI U
is for boys
girls who are
GOING
PLACES I
JOIN TODAY
9nbula
WASHINGTON
MARCH OF EVENTS
SCHOOL CHIEF'S SALARY |
TORS D. C. COMMISSIONERS' |
ONLY CHAIRMAN'S INCOMI
IS AT HIGHER MOURI
COI ALAN I SHCPAID, J».
NA1A Ainotuilt
Cdr. Alan Shepard, first American NASA astronaut in space and a former 4-H Club member, urges
boys and girls to use 4-H Club opportunities to “go places and do exciting things.” The 4-H
youth movement began more than 50 years ago. Now 76 nations have youth movements similar
to the 2 million-member-strong American example. 4-H is designed to provide urban, suburban
and rural boys and girls practical experiences in the American Agri-business system, economics,
leadership ana citizenship through projects related to pets, agriculture, the home and other youth
interests. It is administered in Texas by the Agricultural Extension Service, a part of Texas A A M
University.
By HENRY CATHCART
Central Press Washington Writer
¥TTASHINGTON- 1The fact that this national capital is run by
\\ Congress rather than by a locally elected group of offi-
cials gives rise to all kinds of peculiarities. One of these deals
| with the pay scales of high officials In relation to ths people
Congress provides for them to supervise.
Washington is administered by three "commissioners,” ap-
pointed by the president with the approval
of Congress, at an annual salary of 119,000.
Twelve of the subordinates of these men, also
paid by funds appropriated by Congress, have
been receiving higher salaries than their
bosses.
When Congress undertook to raise the pay
of government employes recently, it alao de-
cided to do something about this particular
topsy-turvy matter. It raised the annual pay
of the commission’s chairman to 126,000, and
that of the commissioners to $25,000.
Now, only one hireling of the District of
Columbia makes more than two of his bosses
—the superintendent of schools, whose salary
equals that of the commission chairman. It
Congress rum probably will take another across-the-board
the city. government pay hike to straighten this one out.
D. C.'i City Hall
Bins West
By FRANK WYNNE
rrom the novel publlehed by Avelon Books; © Copyilrtt, 1M4
by Brian Uartleld. Distributed by King features Syndicate
take over as superintendent of the
trouble-plagued construction on Hie
Arizona Western. He bad wanted to
Ue through with railroad building
after his experience working for
Owen Murdock. Hut he is at a
rowdy railhead camp with respon-
sibility for grading crews, bridge
bulldera. and track layers on Col.
Charles Evernlghi's line. There arc
tVHAT has HAPPBNr.1* i trv crosscut with a good tnanv
reason to regret being induced to gullies. A certain amount of fill
would be needed to cross these
gulches, and culverts would
have to be drilled to allow water
to pass through them during
mountain storms and spring
snow run-off. It was not a com-
plicated Job, though.
Following his small band-
drawn copy of Lessing's map,
Chance curled up into the scrub
plnon country and saw a long,
gently rising plateau extending
up and forward a distance of
several miles. The grade did not
seem to be more than two per-
cent: thus tar, at least. Bob
Corliss' survey, as it was re-
no more than 95 days for the iob
ighr hi
money for steel and payrolls via
because Evernighr had to secure
short-term mortgages ami he can t
get other loans unless trains -an
run all the way. Murdoclt got hold
of the mortgag-s, determined to fix
tiiing3 by bribery or disruption for
'—-l<
his foreclosure alter 95 days.
Phil has disturbing suspicions ol
•Overnight * engineer. Curt Lessing,
despite Curt's saving him from
being a gun target for Ed Craig,
one bf Murdock's goons. Phil Is
more disturbed, though, by two
father™-MU**0 isMfe^A-W. nected on Lesfiin^s master map,
foreman. and Owen
daughter. Lena, who
Murdock's
..... came to
Chance'a hotel room with an elope-
ment In her mind. After letting Lena
snow he is on watch for connivings
oy her father. Chance went off to
-heck for certain on Curt Lessing'a
blueprints for the work ahead.
CHAPTER 12
CHANCE let the dun
was accurate. Still. Chance
wished he had been able to find
Corliss.
The man seemed to have dis-
appeared almost a week ago;
nu one had seen him since. It
suggested foul play.
The deep-chested dun carried
| him steadily upsiope until he
DHIL
r>,run .oft ** energies | yeaito^t^^head'of'the'pIatea'iZ
before he pu led it down to a ^ here , narrowlng canyon
canter. A while thereafter he wouJd lead him up into Hays
slowed to . want, and there- He di d fnto a lu>e
upon began to alternate. w^- meadow flUed with pine, at the
ng for a time, then trotting, | center of whlch , ^-border
then cantenng. 1 *
He had a long distance to
travel and it was good to have
a mount under him of kindred
vitality. Hp drummed toward
the brush-studded foothills and
saw, beyond them, the Jagged
lift of the sawtooth mountains.
Up there in the hazy blue dis-
ed creek meandered. He watered
the horse, stepped down and
loosened the cinches, tethered
the dun and stretched out be-
neath a pine on the needle-
carpeted ground to take a brief
noon rest. He Upped his hat
forward over his eyes and fold-
ed his hands over his belly.
:*rd and the policies he stands for, which are close co-| rffertS
^Operation of the Western democracies, and among Eur-
opean democracies — but with the United States as
-Germany’s foremost ally.
What the nation needs Is more officeholders who
-will vote as they think and let the voters vote as they
think.
* ¥ ¥
Never overlook the fact that a smart aleck can con-
found his critics by showing that he is smart.
¥ ¥ ¥
A smart writer says there is plenty ol horse sense
in the world but the horses have it.
Thus at one point the rejiort
recognizes that "... a eompre-1
hensive and detailed system of j tanc® was Hays Pass.
price control, in the strict sense. Tihe frouncl he cov’er*‘d was j \V/HEN the sun came past the
is neither practicable nor desir- j made Packed eartJl support- j W fr.AtAn ,nH
able.” But then a little later:, ,nR a" maiiner of *emi-and
growth: c a t c I a w, sagebrush,
manzanita. green-trunked palo-
verde, prickly cholla, stunted
. mesquite trees dripping With
unless the government is known
to possess reserve powers t o
intervene in the last resort.”
Inflation has been dormant
here for some years b'd if and
when it wakes up we will nrob-
ably hear discussion or a U. S.
“incomes policy.’’ although per-
haps under some other name.
We already have an approach to
such a noliev in the Adminis-
tration’s wage-price guideposts.
When the problem comes up
let’s hope we have some clear-
clicking must have unnerved
the arabusher. A second rifle
bullet crashed into the tree, ana !
Chance’s quick eyes picked up |
the drift of smoke from a gun-
barrel In the brush not thirty
yards distant. He was thanktui,
at least, that the man was with-
in pistol range. He took off his
hat and lifted his head Just tar
enough to see over the ground -
cover; he balanced the pistol
grip In both bands and squeezed
off a shoL
The gun bucked In his fist Jn
answer be heard a man s howl,
and the rifle spat three quick
shots. All of them went wide,
and by that sign Chance sus-
pected he must have winged the
rifleman. He fired lus pistol
again and crawled back Into
thicker cover.
The rifle started to talk in
harsh signals. When It ran out
of ammunition, and the man
paused to reload, Chance got to
hia feet and ran crouching
through the grove, making a
half-circle. He dropped flat be-
hind a deadfall and peered cau-
tiously over the downed, half-
rotted tree-trunk.
The ambusher had heard him
running; the man’s rifle was
now seeking him out in the trees
some distance to Chance's left
It meant that the ambusher had
him placed in the wrong spot.
He crawled around the uplifted
root-fan et the end of the dead-
fall and had a glimpse of the
patchwork pattern of a red-and-
whita flannel shirt: he took aim
on that spot-and fired.
The shot bounced against his
eardrums. He saw a rifle tumble
out of the brush. After it came
the limp torm of a man. Cock-
• NEVER ENOUGH EFFICIENCY!—The Johnson administra-
tion has been relentlessly stressing "efficiency” In government
, departmental operations as a major part of the federal economy
program. So it was the other day that Treasury Secretary
Douglas Dillon found himaelf listening to his experts aa they
told of the glowing accomplishments they had made In thla field.
Unfortunately, these same experts kept Interspersing their
fine reports on progress with comments that the Treasury could
make still better use of its manpower—93,000 strong.
After Dillon had listened patiently for awhile, he wrlly recalled
that when he was a student in school getting mediocre marks,
his teacher kept commenting on his report cards that he “was
not working up to his full potential."
Taking the comment to heart, Dillon said he studied harder
and progressively raised his grades, but that teacher’s comment
was always there. Finally, he got a report card with all “A’a”
and swelled with pride until he looked down to find that same
comment still there.
Arid that’s how Dillon feels about "efficiency"—there's never
enough of it to suit some perfectionists.
• at*
• BARRY CALLING—Barry Goldwater has long pointed to hia
hobbies as proving that while he is a "conservative,” he is not
a moss-back in the sense of wanting to return the country to
the 19th century.
Goldwater flies jet planes, drives a souped-up sports car, and
is a camera bug. and & good one. He is also a
long-time amateur radio operator. In fact, while Ham Radle
the San Francisco convention was at work de-
liberating over his choice, Goldwater spent con-
siderabie time talking to other amateur radio Outfit
operators throughout the country and the world
via a portable transmitter he had installed in his hotel suite.
His hobby lias given rise to a quip that has spread rapidly
through government. Should he win the election, the Joke goes,
he’d have the largest ham radio outfit In the world to play with
— the Voice of America!
my now york f
la?.'’-: .
BY MEL HEIMER
treetop and began to warm
his flesh, he knew he had rested
long enough. He sat up and
stretched, pushing his hat back.
There was some Jerked beef In
long yellow bean-pods, greasy^8 faddleba*- W,th that and a|and walked forward cautiously,
creosote biwhes. and ironwood : drink of watc‘r he ,nade “ *»“Ch.! his gun trained on the motion-
on the arroyo eutbanks. | H* stalndln8 ^the hor8e8 les8 fl^,le'
lie felt healthily in tune with shoulder when the dun ,ai<a ,ts j But the ambusher was not
the sun that wanned the plateau ea”i^aCk 801 tUrne<1 .,t8 hend bluffing. Blood welled from the
And slapped his shoulders, with . a ^ * j corner of tiis mouth and from
the crisp taste of the open air. i .. fC waa a warn,nK' and Chance ; the bullet hole in his throaL
with the vast sweeps of |;ind 'd,d not miss lc s°me animal or Chance recognized him—Jack
visible in ail directions. This Jman wma comln8 UP tfie Ptc**-1 Stobo, a cheap saloon tough
trail. He remembered the rider from the mining camps. Stobo
Vi A
.*
*s
Mel Haimer
Ah! Autumn's
here again!
JVTEW YORK —The desperate hunt for the
I 1 electric blanket (I know I put it into th»
linen closet) the other morning, and the sud-
den reappearance in Sixth Avenue of a chest*
nut vendor, brought home the chill truth. Lo,
the summer is ended and the voice of the
turtle no longer is heard across the Bowery.
Here in Manhattan, the coming of autumn
Is, of course, always exciting. The new show#
begin pouring in. the women haul out their
black and pearls, the saloons atart to fill up
once more as the. headliners return to the cafe
circuit. It always is tragic when summer goes,
naturally, but autumn Is a good time In New
York.
Looking ahead, however, there are certain
inevitable happenings.
The college basketball season will get underway, for instance,
ing his pistol. Chance stood up j and there will be enthusiastic, large crowds until about halfway
through the schedules, at which point the district attorney’s of-
fice will announce that 14 student players have been arrested on
charges of shaving points or dumping games. On the other hand,
the professional Knickerbockers will play two exciting games at
the .start of the year and the sports writer* will say this may be
the season when the Knicks stop being the joke of the National
Basketball Association. The team then will lose 40 of its next 60
games.
was his land, in a short time. I
lie would build rails across this
plateau.
He dipped through a gully and
he had seen behind him. He
patted the horse s ueck and
moved av.ay trom it, walking
er thinking to guide us than is j paused * momentarily" to”"linear! the timber grove. He
contained in the OFCD treatise. , ■ 1 l°. - ^ ,lad ^oped a heightened ten-
<tero fiprord
Established in I MM
Published Each Afternoon Except Saturday and
Sunday Morning
!Newsoaper Ads
Are Better
Than Ever
his canteen nnd take a sin of
water. When he looked back
across the flinty leagues he
thought he saw the moving dot
ot a horseman far behind him.
•sitivity to little signs of instinct.
He palmed bis sixgun and
moved torward bent over.
dismally through graying eyes;
he tried to talk but the bullet
had shattered his voice.
Chance knelt by him "Hard
luck,” he said. "You should Ua\e
taken more care with your first
shot. Jack. Who put you up to
That was when ■ rifle bullet o,jS7"
Stobo squinted at him as If
he could not see very well.
By THE CUERO PUBLISHING (t)
119 E. Main Uuero. Texas
(nc.
, rammed into a tree-trunk be-
lt was lonely country: it would S1(le hlm ud lhe c
j be,"nusual 10 P*ss uUllin of a shot struck his ears .
j n,,les of ® ft other human being. He thre<v mm3en flat rolled 'Ttie,e was noth,n* Chance coma
j NEW YORK (CPI. - Nation- “S ”™ «• *“ •»« ,T5|,S
•a) advertising in newspapers- ™ ‘ Gun up, nt surveyed the round- j,aul ,or this ’
Let* manv more reader!; and There were easy grades here, about timber. Nothing stirred ! Stobo 0 1 inked Hi; band
' c ' !t would require a few middling To aim through these thick Wretched out along the grouna
Second class postage paid at Cuero, Texas
1964
TEX/Sja^PRESS ASSOCIATION
South Texas Press Association
Southern Newspajier Publishers Association
JACK HOWERTON _ - .
J C ‘PETE’' HOWERTON
_MRS JACK HOWERTON __________
ERNEST H. JENNES ...............
-•erry •
■hvw
Hs.y-
President and Publish**
_____ Vice Presides
__SecretarvTreasiuei
------.... Managing Editor
National Advertising Representative*
Texas Daily Press league Inc. %0 Hartford Bldg
knbecrlpUoi) Kales
much more attention from them
-:arP turns to stay with them, trees, the rifleman must not be
nothing dangerous. The tar
’v.ay! Chance scanned the
than hitherto believed, a mas-
sive study by the Bureau rf Ad- foothill country gradually lifted ncru ny pine trunks with deliber-
wrtismgjx the American News- mm through a series ot rising ate, care, cocking the piatol.
Dallas
Duly A Sunday: Home delivered tty earner one *eai Uk.ji
' ftlx montii* $6.25. 3 months $3.25 1 month $1 10 By man u
- DeWift. Victoria Goliad Karnes. Gonzales Lavuca ana Jackson
Counties, one year $8.50 six months $4 50 one month 75c «•
- mail elsewhere in Texas One Yeai $10.00 six month* 15..U
.month W OO. By Mail outside Texas, One Year $12.00 fc mown
”"P.25. S months $3.25. 1 month $1.10. Serai-Weekly Editions, h.
-'-mail In DeWift and adjoining counties. One Year $4 00. 6 month-
Sufi. Elsewhere One Ye«t $4 50 6 month? $2.50
Official Organ ol the City ot Uiert me County ot DeWm
1AJLEFBOMC Ol Mitt
paper Publishers Association
indicated today.
The study was presented to
advertising executives bv the I
bureau ,
Charles T. Lipscomb Jr., j
president, said the study goes1
a step farther than all pre-|
vious advertising surveys in |
that it opens up many oppor-
tunities hardly suspected in!
the past.
Dr. Leo Bogart, vice presi-
dent of Market Planning of Bu-
reau, said that while it has
been known that 87 per cent of
all households get a daily
newspaper and 81 per cent of
all adults read daily newspa-
pers, toe new study pinpoints
reader attention to national ad-
writing something in the dirt,
but then nis body went lax and
hia breathing stopped.
canyons into rock-strewn coun- Tire sound of that brittle! (To Be Coutinven Hominy)
From the novel putillg ied o> Avaion Book* |* Copyright. !9t»4. hy Rri»n Uaifl'-iti
Di;tnl>iiitJ oy iC.ufc Foaitirea Syndicate.
ON BROADWAY. THERE WILL BE ENDLESS AN-
blinked and looked up at nun | nouncemenLs that a sew musical comedy is being brought in at
; a cost of three-quarters of a million, and the out-of-town reviews
i will herald it as a genuine blockbuster. On a cold night it will
open in New York, with more ermine, sable and emeralds on
hand than you can whistle at, and it will be terrible. The critics
will try not to be too harsh, but it won’t really matter. 'Hie ad-
vance sale will keep it going for at least a year and eight mohths
later a critic will see it again and write about what a charming,
gay show It really is.
There will be three fistftghts in several of the better gin mills
in Manhattan, each involving a model, a cafe socialite and a
movie matinee idol. No one actually will be. hit by a punch, hut
the fights will liven up an otherwise dull Page Three in the
papers, and the Little Club-Morocco set will talk about them for
weeks, each soul explaining that he/she was THERE when they
happened.
A new star will evolve on the theatrical scene—a James Dean
or Geraldine Page type, for example—and much will be written
about the sensational overnight success of the performer, who
actually has been kicking around for eight years and appearing
not over-successfully in off-Broadway productions.
and ne seemed about to try
mmmr
On this day in history:
By United Press International
Today is Sunday Oct. 4, the
277to day of 1964 with 88 to fol-
low.
The moon is approaching its
new phase.
The morning stars are Jupi-
ter, Mars and Venus.
The evening star is Saturn
Chinese doctrine
i war” could end in catastrophe.
Party Ship
Those born today are under j
vertising. It shows, for example | the sign of Libra.
that there are national ads on) Rutherford Hayes ... the 19th ^
82 per cent of the pages most President of the United States; man Commanis' leader" Walter p^iple and hiring
commoniy perused by , readers^, was born on this date injuibricht denounced Communist j the best way out.
in 1851. Abhihem Lincoln Communist movement,
made his first great political Uibricht s',id in a speech the
.speech at toe state fair -'ChlneSe doc,rine “8lorif>ing
Springfield. I!!.
In 1958. trans-Atlantic com-
mercial jet flights began.
Ill 1S60. 61 persons were killed
when an Eastern Airlines Elec-1 SOUTHAMPTON, England —
tra crash in Boston Harbor. 'iUPIi - An oil firm has hired
In 1962. President Kennedy the 35.600-ton ocean liner Mau-
announced the L. S. would bloc- .
ade ships to all natioas trying!f°r a par,y next mon*
to travel to Cuba. -10 mask the opening of a new
-------- I refinery.
Denounces Red China "There was difficulty in find-
BERLIN *UPD - East Gen-' tng a hall big enough for 400
a ship was
a spokes-
man E WILL BE TWO GIGANTIC SNOWFALLS AND THE
kite TV news programs will say cheerfully that 5,000 Sanitation
- * Department workers and 700 pieces of equipment are working
expelled from the international1 skillfully to clear the street*. The next morning, however, you
will try to drive up the 18I»t Street hill and finally have to
abandon the car in the middle of the street. There will be a
ticket on it that night.
There will be any number of benefit fashion shows, for
charity's sake, and one of the guests will be a beautiful actio?,
who will turn up backstage at. say, the Waldorf ballroom and
| be stoned out of her mind. She will be profane and belligerent
and the day will be saved for the show's producers when aha
passes out.
Qiina but said it would not be! man said today'.
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Jennes, Ernest H. The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 70, No. 235, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 4, 1964, newspaper, October 4, 1964; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth697379/m1/8/: accessed June 28, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cuero Public Library.