The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 71, No. 34, Ed. 1 Wednesday, February 10, 1965 Page: 4 of 16
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iUM U«W>U FkibwW****, ntu.| fci/iuiljl All, ititid
m
n
—
Editorial
SPLIT YOUR BRITCHES?
jraEKru
Looking Ahead
..by Dr. fawn $. Inm
MiMOf NT—NATIONAL
•UCAIIOM noiuti
hirqf, AiImm>
BAILING OUT
Splitting one’s britches is a good old American ex-
pression that isn’t used much anymore. We hate to see
it pass into obUvlon.
We hate to see it pass into oblivion because we could
use it more now than we used to In the days of yore.
There are more people splitting their britches today
than ever before.
To split your britches you do something or say
something wrong. Little things don’t count. You split
your britches good when you do something big wrong
or say something big wrong.
Yoy can split your britches, too, just by being silent i der’s Digest, i agree with my
. .... . . .. . . . , .. . j friend from Texas that enoroa-
or being still. This is where the business about the early chmcnt of th0 fedoral establifh_
bird’s getting the worm started. inent into job placement and
It’s easy to split your britches. That’s the reason; employment counseling is a
we write things here sometimes that are a little bit non- terpri*e svs,em
sensical. We don't want to split our britches by writing His letter states; “I believe
something we are not all too positive about. But here j ^ SV5itcm; at Ieast'
MAX PO WEB GRAB
A reader from Houston. Tex-
as, who has no a *o grind or
financial stake, other than as a
taxpayer, writes of his concern
about the invasion of flic feder-
al government into a field
wher* lie think■? it d<x's not be-
long. Our reader Is one of ma-
ny Americans shaken to the
roots by an article, '‘The Great
Manpower Grab," by U. S. Re-
presentative Frank T. Bow, in
| the October issue of the Rea-
WASHINGTON
MARCH OF EVENTS
BLISS APPOINTMENT
pleased only somi
hv-'
In itself is a good example of splitting our britches. In
should afford a |>orson the oj>
Iportunity to seek employment
the sentence Just before the last we ended a sentence; in the traditional manner and
with a preposition. You’re not supposed to end a sen-j permit the employer the same
tence with a preposition. But we do it all the time.
We like to end sentences with a preposition. We may
split our britches. In a way, but we feel it is only a sir.. 11
split. A preposition is not a very big thing, anyway.
Trouble is,’today you split your britches if you do
and split your britches if you don’t. You can’t win.
We don’t know where the term of split your britches
originated, but we suppose it started back yonder when
most of us had only one pair of good pants You were in
right to evaluate the prospec-
tive employee, without the gov-
ernment running a closed shop
employment service ... Any
government agency which pur-
posely changes statistics to jus-
. tify its own existence, as sta-
ted in this article, deserves the
(fullest opposition."
A Basle Liberty
; One of our most essential per-
j sonal liberties is that of choos-
mF
uo>JO* v
. 'P O'.*. .
,;vv. .••. 7. j
sv.
IfinL......
something of a fix if you started off to Sunday School j ‘7vhorf a^for whom
and split your britches on the way. In those days only
men split their britches. But now that women wear
slacks and things like that just about as much as men
iifiTT
Healing effect
of time T
N“."7'V/1 w*-
1 ' It J '
Vi,V’ ti#.
•vvyv^ 7* * v • *v \ “
we chixisc. These basic frre-
doms, it appears, may soon he
challenged by a federal agency
which proposes to become the
do. they’re splitting their britches, too. j manpower agency for the Ha-
lt’s bad when you split your britches. fion- thro'Th which every work-
Politicians are noted for splitting their britches. But j S^‘aS>*M Uk/
practices, union hiring, and ev-; enterprise system He believes- | ci«pt v vm r s sent to ><11 :o
en professional and managerial j that legislation The Congress ; f:'l a job ..r you w:li fis« ’ct'.rtg I
job placement. All this for an : will fate could completely fed-! on t.!w 'g'u-ernment’* black j
agency that was set up to mo-; erali/e ,jo!> placement and Seeking a Mom.|Kily
bilize labor in World War I, ! clamp on the whole country ' The U.'KS • up My >„>,*
the modern word to describe those In our government
who spilt their britches is inept. Some of them have a
fight poverty in the front lines
by "mobilizing the troops.
way of mending their splits, and some don’t. When you j IsVcparing To^useThlt uTr’io
don’t have a way to mend your split britches, you're press its control over American
really In a mess. J employment.
_ , , . Representative Bow's well-
Business people can spilt tl. r britches in various; documented article ought to lx?
ways. So can a farmer. Little boys are great britches j read by every member of the
splitters, and now and then a preacher splits his. No-
body is free from the danger of splitting his britches.
j Congress. He shows that under
1 m
and
( x to
ineitv-
n -
found new life in the Thirties • federal "closed shop" that tough r<,n'v.| over •' e
with the unemployed, and in might even make getting a jo>> • -inn* employment .-.ffict
1964 en.ioys a budget of some J require political clearance < 1,•w i„ : M-.w •:.» *
j $300 million. Recent and pro- every communi'y of the land | l.rn:: 'hi • • ! , !p ■<> the
| posed legislation could give it; He wrote; Here is just what! ploj ,-<l u n A <• r
untold millions. | thrs will mean to citizens, if ! plowed ! cnro itagcs t-if* pad-
Th« dosed Shop j v.rtj are a high school'or college 1 d'ng > t ptai e.r.cnt sta'istics to
Representative Bow shows j student you w;i! have to accept ' meet nu' -'r.- ari l mak«- u a;x
that instead of concentrating on j the guidance of a government.; pear. dose-ving of p.ihhc sup-
the jobless, however, the USES , employee or rsk being number- ;xin i ant -• ni-ttr rtronev
is expanding in direct i o ns ed among the forgotten urn m- :. r>st . ('.. more |«*ir to
where it is neither needed nor i ployed. If you vs to change ! fore o ,\ », 10 :v,;i«;e;-' all
wanted.
I • , - —........- ------ -------- ------- ‘If this is permitted to. jobs and ihercbv better your- jot- op.:
; the guise^of helping the unem- ■ continue it can only result in self, you will have to win the an> :hsng
j ployed USES is extended its j absolute control of American [approval of a govern men! cieik "'>i».n t.,
The way we figure It. though, is a fellow's got to J tentacles into high - school test-‘manpower and its allocation." j before you .-ah be referred
split hifi britches now and then or he isn’t human. —i ; counseling, college; he .said. That would mean the, a new position I
mgs v :*h them and
t:;.!' vs,II S:,-ie n mon-.|
oj*A I., tl-.c n.'.'tay It- parent |
i<) ■ b»xiy, tl-.* Bureau of Employ- j
you are an j[mem Security w.'h a staff of I
Copyright 1965 by Sam Gerald.
• placement, company personnel I complete surrender of our free ( employer, you will have to ac-1 nearly GtMXio
o 0 r* rwBtEMS
FAN FROM SETTLED i
By 1IENBY CATHCAKT
Central Press Washington, Writer
xw"rA'xHTNGTOX—While Republicans ha\c solved some of thelf
\\ ‘problems with the naming of Ray HU?<, of Ohm to succeed
to the national committee chairmanship, the edge of the. wood*
still isn't in sight bv imv stretch-of an optimistic imagination.
There U a predominant belief that the Boss appointment has
appeased ore faction of the GOP at the cost
of antagonizing another. If this should pro.®
to be the case, the Nirvana of unity will re-
main far out of reach.
The Bliss appoint men; will have Its effect
throughout the state GOP organizations. It
will greatiy retard, if not stop completely, ths
ppst-electlon effort of Ooldwater Republicnnt
to "capture the state party apparatus
through the devices of purge and frccze-out.
Tins kind of take-over was one of the
things most feared by the moderate wing of
the party. It war willing to accept the Novem-
ber, 1 Ski-1, defeat, partly because truthful eval-
uation pointed to a loss regardless of whom
the GOP had nominated.
V. hat the moderate wing didn't want to --0*
happen was a re-structuring of the GOP or-
ganization that w->uid favor another nght-wdng candidate and
presage another disastrous defeat m 1868
Buss and many of those who ere hacKing him are pinning their
hopes on the healing cAe< u of time. From almost any viewpoint
it can be conceded that elected Republican officeholders arc now
at or near rock bottom and that Uie only way to go is up. The
congressional electiona of 11166 should show net gains for H--
publicans in the .Senate and House, and perhaps in governor*,
state legislators and other contested offices.
With this kind of a 1966 showing, the BUsa backers hope that
presort party divisions will heal arid that the GOP will be abie
to go into the ii>68 presidential campaign united once a gum
« * • *
• POWER OK THE PRESS—In these times of shifting power
ienters and waning influence, the Washington press corpa can
take ri good deal of satisfaction out of a trivial incilent-
i The mamgement of the National Press Building in Washing-
ton, which houses many of the newspapermen assigned to the
Capital notified the news stand operator in the lobby he'd have
i to v acate because a new drugstore was coming Into the building
, and it would handle that line of merchandise
The news tenant immediately rose in rtghteoua wrath It seme
Lhat the verioi^- not omy net their every reading need but did
so rxi a sympathetic credit basis that allowed
them to manage their office expense accounts
in a "satisfactory" manner.
C-ommittees were form -d, petition* circulated,
meetings held In Die end, the building and drug Victory
store management receded fr.un the.r decision
and announced a new s aland would be built Into a re designed
lobby and that the present vendor* would be side to continue
their operations. It seemed that the drug store manager* didn't
like, the idea of starting up an operation with most of the build-
uig * tenant* angry at them.
In any event, It m the greatest—and perhaps the only—victory
won by the Washington press corns in recent years I
fa ore a
wdj' tnend m fis-
Good Motto
The majority ol overseas passengers now use. the i
rirlines. The Air Transport Association of America re-
ports that last year, based on data covering the first six
months, 80.7 per cent of all international passengers
moved between the U. S. and foreign countries by air. j
The airplane's dominance in world travel has come
fbout with astonishing speed. It was only a few years!
ago that international air travel was a novelty, pursued 1
only by the wealthy and the daring. There were doubt-'
ers who believed that it never would amount to much. A
brief span of history has proved them wrong. Masses of
people of moderate means, many with only short vaca-
tlons, now' thing nothing of traveling thousands of miles1
to some foreign country of their choice. The jet plane, j
with its enormous speeds, has all but obliterated time
in transit.
The Association also says that about 64 per cent ot
all air travelers last year were U. S. citizens. But only!
1.0 per cent of those travelers flew aboard the U.S. -!
Hag airlines. Our lines just aren't getting their proper
share of the business. And there is no reason why that
should be so. Their rates arc competitive and their stan-
dards of comlort and service are unsurpassed. They
make a substantial contribution to our economy. "Fly;
With Our Flag" would be a good motto for the traveler.!
A
teast
foolish idea a day keeps the mind working at
E±ptfrt&
agree
is ♦ ♦
are like ordinary people
they seldom
®I|p (tow SUrnrd
E*labtl*hr() In 18»|
' I’irtilHhcd Each Vtcrou.in Exccpi Saturday and
Xundar Morning
Why We Are Broke
You, the taxpayer, have been most generous with your money for
quite a few years. If you will keep in close contact with Washinqton,
you will learn that some of the elected representatives are continu-
ing to dispose of your wealth, without your consent to foreign nations
oil over the world, for every type and kind of purpose you can ima-
gine. They give this money to enemy nations who believe in Commu-
nism and everything it stands for-whose ultimate aim is "TO BURY
YOU".
Below is a list of gifts, and it includes your money since the end of
World War II. This list of your gifts, as an American taxpayer, is well
worth studying.
Don't you think that it has cost us enough?
You can contact your United States Senator bv addressing Hon____
---------------------, Senate Office Building, Washinaton D. C., or
vour Congressman ------------------------------- House Office
Building, Washington, D. C. It would be wise to write vour Congress-
man or your Senator, or Congessmen and Senators of other states,
your opinions in regard to the wa ' vour tax money is being given
away. ? ? ?
>-al 1965 mor* than J455 million*
! a!>ive x-xne 13 billion* collect-
| p-l :n unemployment taxe*
Representative Bow cites one
Car Roller
TYLER, Tex
6 T9 - r> « a
employment service official who Henry Brown. 21, »■»* iRanding
predated that USES can enjoy beside hi* overturned 1965
a virtual monopoly in five years ,;rr1J f8_
if adequate funds without re- _ .. w „
strictions are provided by Con- rr,'m IV’h,iy M‘!lrr invest:gated
press. “We are not living in a ,'#l accident,
free enterprise system, hit ra-1 One h-mr later patrolman
j'*hcr operating under a control)- \ Miller Investigated another ar-
ed economy," this official com- cident. Another 1965 mod*! rar
j merited The American people was overturned, u* wi,-e| pent,
truly should act fast in deman- upward Brown was *iand-
j ding that Congress clarrp down j mg lw-s>de that car. again un.n-
i on l SES expansion I hope bisjjured. Miller took him home a
readers and mure wall resjxtnd j **rond time
with vigor, before one
basic freedoms is lost.
of our
Twenty per rent of all Ameri-
can families own 12 rats each.
Brown said hofh times he
ewerved to avoid another car
and his car went out of con-
trol. Damage to the car* wa*
estimated at J1.N00.
DAILY CROSSWORD
rHE CVERO Pt*HIJt*HIMJ t*».
If9 f- Main (Hero, Irxxa
Sect no Has* postage 'pfttit a' Cuero Texas
TEX
/965-
RESS ASSOCIATION
I Afghanistan
1 Albania
■ I Argentina
! Austria 1.170,900,000
Belgium I I-tixomb'g.
1.949,500.000
; Berlin
! Bolivia.
' Brazil
British Guiana
(British Honduras
i Burma
J 1*2,900.000 j Greece
20.000.000 Guatemala
537,900,000 Guinea
Haiti
Honduras
Hungary
Iceland
India
Indochina
131.000.000
221.800.000
1.698,500.01 '0
South I ex a. Frees A^kovieUoo
Southern Newspaper Publishers Association
JACK HOWERTON „ _______
J L. PETE* HOWEHTON UL-L.U.
MRS JACK HOWERTON______
Sam Gerald.....................................
ERNEST H JENNES__________
_ President and PubUaht>
________ Vice Presiden'
-----Secretary Treasuiei
Editor and Asst. Gen Mgr. [ Colombia
—-........— Managing Editor I Congo
Cambodia
Cameroon
Ceylon
Chad
Chile
China
Natteaal MreitMai RepraaeataHve*
Daily Pre*s League Inc.. 980 Hartford Bldg.
Dallas
Mttaertptioa Kale*
Daily A Sunday; Home delivered by earner: One Year SU.JL
sts month* 16.25. 3 months $3-25. I month $1.10. By man tr
peWItt. Victoria. Goliad Karnes. Gonzales Lavaca and Jackson
Counties, one year $850. ala months $4.50. one month 75c. b>
mail elsewhere la rasas. One Year $10.00 six months $5.50 I
month $100. By Mali outside Tessa. One Year $12.00 « month*
*8». 3 months $3 25. I month $1.10. Semi-Weekly editions. By
mall to Dewitt and adjoining counties One Teat $4 00. 6 month*
*235 Elsewhere. Ode Teat MM. f months $2-50-
mflelaJ Organ of the City at CUero and Cbunty of DeWItt
Costa Rica
Cuba
Czechoslovakia
Dahomey
Denmark
Dominican Republic
East Germany
Ecuador
El Salvador
Ethiopia
Finland
France
Ghana
1.900,000; Indonesia
1,600,000 : Iran
94.500.000 • Iraq
289.100.000 ’ Ireland
2,100,000! Israel
74.900.000 | Italy
2,000,000 i Ivory Coast
512.700.0001 Japan
4,! 61,100,000 | Jordan
319.300.000 Kenya
78.300,000! Korea
80.100.000 I^os
52.000. 000 | Lebanon
191.000.000, Lib«-ria
1.400.000 ‘ Libya
856.900.0000 j Malagasy Republic
8.900.000 Malaya
17.000. 000 j Mali
96.400.000 | Mauritania
16.700.000 i Mexico
181.300.000 Morocco
87.000. 000 Mozambique
9.431.400.000 Nepal
6.600.000 Netherlands
3.213.400.000 | New Zealand
149,600,000! Nicaragua
3,800,000 : Niger
92.600.000 j Nigeria
40.500.000 ; Norway
27.000. 000 | Pakistan
70.200.000
3.071.900.000
1,535.000,000
583.500.000
1,195.200 000
67.000. 000
146.200.000
793.300.000
5.641,900.000
160,01)0
Panama
Paraguay
Pern
Philippines
Poland
Portugal
Rhodesia an^ Nyasaland
Saudi Arabia
Senegal
3,574,000,000 S ierra I >eone
303,1X10.000 Somalia
7.400.000 | Spain
5.029,600,000 j Sudan
371.400.000 i Surinam
89,900,0001 Sweden
116.300.000 j Tanganyika
190,000,000 | Thailand
300,000! Togo
22.200,000; Tunisia
2.500.000 j Turkey
1.500.0001 Uganda
630.300.000 iU/F. S. R
307.700.000 | U. A
12.500,000
11.006.000 j Uruguay 80,200;000 i
-nn'fwln ’ Vrn,,/lM''ia 10l.noo.ooo}
16 WoOfli Viet Nam 2,118.500,000 j
1.082.000,000 Germany 1,997.11X1.000
1.130.990.000 West Indie* Federation
75.700.000 j 17 000 000
42.600.000 y 7 000 000
388.700.000 „ , ii.i8W.U00
1.675.700.000 YuK<'s,',v:« 2r280.300.000
514.500.000j Other Aid;
402.200.000 : Int i. Banking Org s.
4,875,200.000
33.300.000 j Regional—Europe 2,574.300,000
46.600.000 Regional—South Asi."
945.100.000
Far East
417.200.000
1.631.000 000 i Regional -Latin America
53:300,000 138,100.000
2.900.000 ; Regional-Africa 75,400,000
108.900.000 Regional Brit. E. Africa
4.5QG.OOO' 1,200,000
632.600.fi00 Refugee.*, Oiildren. etc.
E900.000 3.715.500,000
■255;200,(XW ' Central Treaty Org'n.
3,491,600,18X1' 25,000.000
' 1,100,000 Varioti* African Mic
3 600,000
1.000,000 Regional-
13,300.000;
ACROSS
1. Head
coi-ertng
4 Likely
7. Wander
8. A blemish
in china
10. A back-
water:
So. U.S.
11. Tha Pen-
tateuch
18. Revoke*:
Roman lave
IS Group of
three
18. Little girt
17. Hie: Fr.
19. Girl’s name
20. Torrid
3L Combustible
material
23 Aforesaid
thing
25. Promenade
28. Drinking
veesel
81 Swedish
coin
32. Support
34. Single unit
35. Fleet
87. Palm tree
39. A de-
scendant
41. Raises
42. Ghostlike
43. Evenings:
poet
44. Tiny
45. Varying
weight:
India
DOWN
1. Moet
coquettish
2. Plant of
lily
family
1 Juicy
fruits
4. Astern
5. Scheme
8. CoTered.
a* with tar
7. Means of
cxxnmuni-
eaUon
9. Forego
10. Smash:
dial
12. Grayish-
whits
11. Colonist
18. Perch
22-Nega.
live
lepiy
28. Pertona
24. Sick
25. One's
hetra
28. Vestige
27. Ex-
amine
l-)OWU1»W MONAia
|*I:I|S Sdu lev
isisiivi usStiwsR
:<r.va *
twunefti
TOCtiS ill*,*
i:J.D IttOO i&(*.!»
WWJBJ laMtSDAHi
SKTi
again
28 A TMefar'i **«
strongbox 83. Strong
29. Parts of winds
whole* 88. Old time*
30. Vegetable. 38. Nnmhej-
good with 40. Phea*.
creamed ant
chicken brood
7
8
9
IO
%
II
12
iT~
%
JT
i*r
17
IS
tr
w
%
H
22
~
1,1
wmm
32
15
1
fL
I
37
38
41
D
45
i
1 io
419.(XX),000 ^ 12.400.000
R. iEgyr>t and Syriai 7 —..............
• •' 4 38.800.000 Total $96,175,800,000
43,a00,000 j United Kingdom 8.685,600,000 Data compiled: Coneress’ Log-
2,450,300,000 | Upper Volta 1,300,001' • L.lahv? Reference? Service
Reprinted From The Victoria Minor
DAILY CBYFTOQCOTE — Here’s hew to work Ht
iXTDLIiAXR
Is LONOF1LLOW
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A la used
for the three L's, X for the two Cl, etc. Single lettera. epos-
trophies, the length end formation of the words are all hints.
Bach daj the code letter* are different.
A Cryptogram QmotaMm
N VEFDAED 18118 8DVFMN1CDY
MO TGJXDM FllT TOL AH D J V FT
EGVK,—1BFMD8DNH
Yesterday’s Orjptaqoote: SCIENCB ALWAYS DEPARTS
f ROM LIFE AND RETURNS TO IT BY A DETOUR- *
GOETHE
16 itofa BMW
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Jennes, Ernest H. The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 71, No. 34, Ed. 1 Wednesday, February 10, 1965, newspaper, February 10, 1965; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth698451/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cuero Public Library.