The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 66, No. 19, Ed. 1 Sunday, January 24, 1960 Page: 1 of 10
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• *
/
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m
• o^d^oogg
• '* .
Tor All
Departments
Of The Record
Dial CR 5-3131
(Blft (Ettprn 2Urnrii
* “A NEWSPAPER REFLECTS ITS COMMUNITY”
The Weather
SOI Til ( LNTR \l Ti:\ \S —
Mostly cloudy with occasional
rain through • Sunday. Not much
change In temperatures. Lowest
tonight So to 10 extreme north.
VOL. 66—NO. 19
CUERO, TEXAS, SUNDAY, JANUARY 24, 1960
10 PAGES — PRICE 5c
si
f^TownTallC Urged To
Plant Full
Thought .up until Wed- A llottYIPTlt^
nesday that The Cuero Re-: “ . ,
cord was a pretty fair coun- 5iRAN^'E ~ Jhe °*d Cotton
. „ . . .; I^elt Association, through its pre-
try paper, but it appears it sklent, Wm. F. Hofmann of La
has gone to the dogs. Grange, this week urged cotton
At least, that is what one farmers to plant their full allot-
of the long-time readers of !ments ,hi* year or release excess
acreage for reapportionment.
sheet believes. jf we are t0 re(ajn our au0t-
This particular sub-I ments, we urge cotton fanners
scriber lives in a neighbor- everywhere to plant their full al-
i
hood, she says, where al-
most all their neighbors
have dogs for pets and while
lotments, or release to their coun-
ty ASC committees any acreage
that is not going to be seeded.
Such acreage may then, in turn.
Crews Continue
Efforts To Reach
Trapped Miners
our informant has no bone ;lH? P>ven ,0 farmers who will plant
to pick with folks who have ^ Hoffman
____, . , . , I To show just what the release-
such pets, she does not re- | redistribution of acreage allot-
lish having the canines re- j ments means in dollars, it is poin-
move the Daily Record
from her premises every day
oi so.
And we can't say we
blame the complainant, but
the writer could not help
but wonder if the pesky
animals who give her trou- Another glaring example of how
ble read any other publica- jtlle Textile Workers Union mis-;
t 0 ’ Alld ^’en though the literaturf, passed out t0 Guada.|
Record subscriber misses iUpe Valley Cotton Mills employ-
her paper
(Continued on Page 10)
Cotton Costs
GV Mill More
Than A Year Ago
ANKARA CRASH — Biggest piece left of the Scandinavian airlines Caravelle Jet which
crashed approaching Esenboga airport near Ankara is thla tail aection. Bodies of the 42
killed and the rest of the plane were scattered over a 1,500-equare-foot area. The French-
made plane was en route from Copenhagen to Cairo. The Caravelle has two tail jets.
Irop Mine
Holds Man
15 Hours
Replaces Seguin Man
-—-=- | ELY, Minn. UPI — Joe Mis-
mash grinned like a man whose
life had been saved and it had
-- and announced that he "might
go fishing tomorrow."
Then he showered tip and went
home to end a 15-hour ordeal that
began when he was trapped 1.500
feet, below ground in the sprawl-
ing Pioneer iron mine here.
Mismash. a 50-year-old veteran
miner, was repairing a raise, or
Frank Guittard, Victoria law- San Marcos. Cape continues his tonio in the Cuero area would tie room-like area 15 levels below
once In a while ees has been called to the at ten-1 "'ll? I?ircc,?r ofj,l£ agency office of General Counsel for GB-the hands of all upstream dove- ,h_ surface early Friday when a
once a wm d ° P *d,,s,nce 1954> was elec,cd Chairman; RA hut had recommended to the lopers in the Guadalupe area as cascade of mud water, rocks and
which we most certainly , of ”is newspaper by Powtsjof thp Bonrd of Directors of the!Board that it pass on to Vahren- well as stop short any further tie- earth crashed down to wall him
Wish would never happen, ™ iGuadalupe - Blanco P.iver Auth- kamp the general management re- velopmedt downstream in the Vic- off deep in an isolated arm of
we wish the dog or dogs Who! Tarkineton appears in a printed' 2,ri,y ? hurs<?ay at ,he Authority s sponsibilities. Tom Bishop of Se- toria area, the Authority's offic- the mine.
m e responsible would let; by "he ™ ia'» claim. HIM............ «.W, work.
„,K.'workers Union AFT -CTf) and heart, ,u • ’t.P-,acPS Tdgar Lngelke dive Asst. and. Forrest and Cot- Meanwhile, the City of San An- ing in four-man crews, hammer-
subscription depart- ^ r.._ n{ SeBuin in office. Engelke ton. Inc., of Dallas, was again tonio still actively pursues, in the ed a wav tor 15 hours at- a I t-fo<>t
Victoria Lawyer Named
GBR A Board Chairman
%
our
ment know. Every paper
ed "I>ets Make Die Sixties Sun-
asked to Ire relieved of the chair- retained ns Consulting Engineer, courts, its attempt to lay claim thick chunk of -ore before break-
The brochure states "Riw ma- ma"s!1'P ^ut continues with the Following disposition of routine as well to all waters of the upper ing through to tin- trapped miner
terials are cheaper (raw cotton ’Aut*101 *,-V as l,nc of its nine mem- business matters, the Board of Guadalupe River Basin. The city's shortly before midnight Friday
o ________ i______o.;. **'r ^°an* BPP°inted for overjap- .Directors laid further plans to pur- 1956 application for a permit to night
ping G year terms by the. GOv* ■ sue., a • vigorous opposition to an divert all the yield from the Gan-
DAMEI. W. AUTREY
Dan Autrey
Candidate
For Office
wants as inanv subscribers
as it can get.
mastriTighborsWWOauldSUy “^^SJnSVTexar"* " °°'VsUe * 'V™* opposition ,0 an the y.c.d.front the Om- Happy T« Be Out 1Mmi, „ AU . loaKunj t)Us.- ,ru,v snfm wmj0
to correct such a practice Sdling’ebSon K Ss^and °tha[ ,'oa,.d affi(ers plp<''ed CioTo gain aVrmVfor^h" div- was denied by the state Board ami': airying’Gris^nn^V'rLriin^n
ill one way or another if misleading when applied to the were Hartwell J. Kennard of Gon- ersion of 280,250 acre-feet of wa-• water Engineers hut is still greeted mine officials- and news-
Emergency
Airshaf t
Try Made
COALBROOK, South Africa,
Jan. 23—(IT’I)—A new rock-
slide furred rescue workers to
flee Saturday and all hut end-
ed any hope for the 440 men
and 70 horses trapped flOO feet
deep in the Clydesdale coal
mine.
* ’OALBROOK, South Africa —
UPI Drillers tried Saturday to
sink an emergency airshaft into
the Clydesdale coal mine, hoping
that some of the -140 min-
ers trapped in a gas -filled shaft
600 feet underground may still be
alive.
Using a special drill rushed here
from Rerhuanaland, they tried to
drive a hole 14 inches in diame-
ter down to tiie chamber where
the miners were trapped, about a
mile f: :n the entrance to the pit.
Then sumnors could, get air,
water and food thru the emerg-
they „»-„bd me guilty dbg gr.de _c«;on UK ZZiZ ........ "
and if they have been read- processed by the Guadalupe
-------- Vaiw PrtHnn \fiiic fels as 'he Board's
ing the Record brought „My fjrm is ,P(IinK low Krflde Treasurer, Robert
Secretary- in thp Cuerr vicinity. The Author-,are 1° he heard on February 10
Fears for his safety etvled when
Daniel W. Autrey, Yoakum bus- envy shaft while other arrange-
to bring them
>ri/e(t Hie Record to announce back to the surface,
his candidacy for State Represent- Threatened By Cave-Ins
alive from the 34th legislative The shaft where the men were
District which includes IVWitt trapped was believed to be filled
rid Goli.,-1 counties; in a pre- with methane gas - the "fire
H. Vahren- ity's engineers see this figure as ! J^ore the appellate court at A us- 1TMlr0 workers M.oved a three parc<, statement",ssuod'for" press damp" all coalminers fear
more '- ■ quarter inch pipe into his.cubicle .release Mr Aiit-ev said
In spite of arguments over eon- k(,p,( hjm suppil,.(| w,„, ' AU',fJ
the Authorit\ for some years with per year it is calculated by them frol the f.uadalupe Basin s wa
xy.-
home bv their animal, may- coUoa to ,he mill today for 6 kamP- Assistant General Mana- representing a great deal
rFisrS^* “illlsiW=i=ri= ~~~~ *
-After today, dear reader, Tarkington said his cotton firm Authority, taking over that office iopment of the Guadalupe Basin tinues. ( any on Dam. in which the
we hope you'll miss no more doe! lots&of business with a num- fr,m lan^,imc Counsel- with storage reservoirs.
her of textile mills in South Cnro-'(-meral Manager h, M. Capo ,,f A successful hid hy San An-
! lina and Other southeastern stat-
papers.
-y- -y y-
Employes of our paper
have taken a bit of ribbing
about the snow predicted
for southwest Texas Tues-
day night nr Wednesday
morning
es and only a very few of them
are unionized.
Long Time
Resident
Cooperation Of Parents
Scholastic Census Asked
Authority participates to the ex-
tent of about 43 per rent, of the
total estimated cost of more than
SIT million, is under construction
and some 25 per rent complete.
Die Authority's proposals for de-
velopments in the Gonzales-Cu-
ero areas are rapidly being read-
ied for presentation to the State
While, the drill sank .steadily
"I hereby announce my candid- toward its ..goal, diggers braved
•i-ey for the .office, of State Repros-! the threat of new cave-ins in an
dilative i'll the 51th District which i effort to tunnel through a mile of
includes' DeWitt and Goliad Coun-1 rubble blocking the mine. An esti-
' es.Texas subject to the Demo- mated 8,000 tons of coal and stone
cratie Primary election to be held lay- between them and the trap-
May 7, 1961.b < pod men.
"In tossing rn.vv hat in the race “H's sheer hell down there5’
for State Representative. I wish fnp of ,ho d'fiSers said. "While
tia slate that I believe our repros- "e wwk dear the rubble, we
dilative form of government was ran ,he r(>of tracking.
Since the filing deadline for the f,,rmrd -in(| Sfl, wj)h ,,)e ]n. iContinued on Page 111'
Democratic primary is at mid- !ont;,,n ,;f having men represent.
Filing Deadline
Demo Primary
Midnight Sunday
, Cuero Independent School Dis- pear are those of children who Congress ..... kod boforo thr deadline will be tjn" , rnprrv fnr ,hlt nllr.
rst Temperature Rises nlnSn'or'Kuck ani,%tr'u!Th
If those folks would take serve the-lOth anniversary of Rev. Donnell urged'Cooperation of all dependent '.^ho^rDisWic^onVib- Uva^ea^riv'spring^nidav'as the 'Totdiliar’lgmcbdaic. were ur."h° ,n!"n"'"V "f M'w* ^,i,iral
A Cun/oec' -xn cmro to nnt*nnfe ....... 1 1 nro v ' n
Water Board and to the Federal ni«hK ^un,la>’- Janunr>' n,ail‘' the people who were and are wd- PViniftYtniA
Congress. ed application* that are p-wtruar- ,lnK ..-t,.rifi, o some of them V> II d. 1 I 111 C II
Appointed
the trouble to re-read the
Tuesday headline on the
subject they would see;
•Weather Bureau Predict.*
Snow Southwest Texas".
temperature zoomed up to 60 do-
a mild 47.
on th<? ballot.
Norman A. Sanders’ pastorate parents. i-ruary 1, 1960
was” cal'led^toCCuernIFebruarj^ 2? graSeralor^xt ^"(children ^s-"imv'Friday’night 'was ; tl.a't 'they may get them names
1950, and moved here March 1 district, the parents and all stu- Who are six years of age on or
of the same year. dents involved. ; before, September 1, I960), who
Alvin Wvatt will serve as gen-; Census blanks will be distri-jhave no brothers or sisters in
oral chairman of the event. A. buted to children Tuesday. Par- school, are requested to contact
This newspaper has no ()arbecue dinner will be served j ents are asked to fill out the the school business office, CR-
at 12:30 p.ni. to all visitors, mem-j cards and have them returned 5-4251, so that the school may
hers and former members of the j the following day. issue a family census card for
church'. Clayton Finch is chair- The only ..antes that should ap- those children.
This is extremely important to
the Cuero public schools in that
career men or men who could tie; •('omtnjt.tee chairmen for-1966
ged to terftemlier die deadline so controlled by pressure groups were- appointed Wednesday at a
"Our State Legislature is tho meeting of ’the Fr.b M>!e Home
weather bureau and there
fore, is in no position to pre-
dict what might be forth-
coming w catherwi.se.
And, as a clincher, all
owners of
Tex as-but 11
Two DeWitt County 4-H
Club Members Honorees
Cuero Girl
Will Tour
(Continued on Page 10)
man for the barbecue.
Guest speukers will be Dr. F.
S. .lames, editor of the Baptist
the paper are 1 standard, and Dr. O. D. Martin,
and Texas- sui>erintendent of missions for
, , District 4 of the Texas Baptist
rearecl. a Hie! which tends (.>int.n,-m
to, make all ol us, a.s well as Dr. Janies, who preached here
ail other natives, - wary of f,,,- one week a number of years Mr and Mrs Willard Kleinecke
bciii^ iOolish enough to say "'iH. iR Ibe pulpit in the ^ucro will l>e with the Texas
morning. He has lieen a close Lutheran College concert hand
friend of the pastor for a number- „,|ien jt niakes an annual tour in
of years. January and February.
Dr. Martin, who will he niak- f]1(? senior music education ma- Valley Cotton Mill's, Saturday
,n.k'. h|s fuT aP^arar!T.ln.5_V.?r2' .i°r P^.vs percussion in the 60- noon caused only slight damage,
what wc'rc having in wea-
iher "foniorrow.
-y- -Y-
Jeannie Kleinecke, daughter of F|fg DflfTlSgC At
Mill Said Slight
Two DeWitt county 4-H- '.Club They . are Man Nell Card arid
members will be among the 40 Ronnie- Tiel/.
it helps tiie school determine the outstanding members of rural Die .40 .youths are members' of
facilities and number of teachers yollt|, organizations who will tie the Future Farmers ol America,
that will be needed for beginning honored February 12 at - the Gun- Future Homemakers-, of. America
ter Hotel at a banquet sponsor- and .4-H.'(-dub's- and • were self t-
ed by the Sears-Roehuck Foiiinla- . ed fur. their outstanding - wirri;
tion in cooperation with the Rur- with their. oTaa-ivi/afions.
al Youth Committee of the San Waldo. •Rciningci:.; Alike Pas'sjir
Antonio Livestock Exposition.'
Pidic-y forming" branch of tiie St- Det-ndnstration ■ Club.-
ate Government. 'Hie House of A[>poihted hy -the president,
Representatives'. is composed of Miss I.'rna (Vohmert. w ere Mrs,
150 members, each member re- Newton Gohmeit, finance- Mrs.
presenting roughly 4(1.500 people Moincrt Mtiedcr-, .mat k.-ting . Mrs.
hie term .of Office is two years. I.oe Young, expun.s. M:s. ! .an-
il ic pay for the Representative eil Post, ci\:l d<tense: Mrs !>>
11 'out im!»■> 1 on Page 10» nard Letup.i, cxI. J a- Mrs Will
ScJjiorro. . ■ recreation: and Mrs,
Waiter Pieper, < . -ur'esy.
A demonstration, on sod sam-
ples was given J j M s Karl B io-
tiger. Council recommendations
mere accepted and Miss Knmne
E. L. Pearson Is
Union Organizer
James -Pearson, Cuero truck
fiver, asked Th- Record Friday to 1S Home Perm-
' ,ur;t"t "■'P'-Mon hcM 1 >' stration Associa:ion district mcet-
A fire which spread to a dust
cellar and a roof at Guadalupe
It is rjuitp possible that
I>rWitt, county landowners
rrr passing up Rood bet
1;. not devoting a few acres
,t in 'the production of ptek-
I ]es
A packing industry rep-
resentative visited Cuero
Monday night for a meet-
lug with area formers, but
I the twelve farmers present
would c'ommit onlv nine-
teen acres for pickle pro-
duction. The Alamo City
man wanted 2(K) acres, and
Mas ready and willing tu .
tsteti ttiem up uti a eon tract
La .i s
(let into the act boys.
What have you got to lose?
Should, for ar.y reason. ih°
icontrael deal fail 'through,
or: cat; be reason..h'v eer-
fin that the government
ill pay you for not raising
. i
t
will preach »♦ Die night service.
_ PRAYER • POEM
Py GEORGI SltlY^jJtYlkEI
LF1T ALL MY WAYS
ACKNOWI.F.DtiE YOU
Let me in all my ways, O
Ixird, acknowledge You, I pray
. . for only then can I be
sure of eaeh directed way . . .
Each time I try a task alone and
leave You far behind ... it:
is not long before 1 fail, and
then 1 always find . . . that
I must turn to prayer again-
and pause awhile with you
piece concert band which w ill tour Chief Lester Frees reported,
five states and perform 15 rnn- The fire started in a hopper
eetf-'’- and spread to the- cellar and the
First stop on the tour is at roof of a new addition. Mill em-
Rosenberg January 28. The fin- ployes had the fire under control
al concert is scheduled.for Cuero when firemen arrived.
February 7. Other stops include Frees complimented the em-
tContmucd on Rage 10) ployes on (heir efficiency.
Daule High Principal
Urges High Attendance
38 Make
Honor Roll
Presort f--r the : moetmg were
.1 members ,-e-T 'four vim tries,
inc i luad-al-upe Valles Bos-:;cr f Toledo, Ohio;
Mr- ('> • ! .'oins. hkie and Mrs.
• ■ me ■ th-i* he is the Pearson,
and C T. .Johnson, representi/hit ’".entumpd by’this., news-pafier as
the Sears F'oiindat;o;y \si 11 lie ir. attempting to .itvite and organize
■ •barge of 'lie h/inquct 'and pro- worker's ,
gram., to he held at 5-3(1 put. * "" M s.
fire addition to -(hr. rural yi.uith, .The Pearson to uJionr. Die Re K-^mg, Kith of Yor.ktoivn. -and
honorees will be Stale FT A Pie- ,-ord has referred in several of xp« Georce Gohmert of Cuero.
sident, Jatnes Prewitt Kerrvil- its news stones and editorials is; Hostesses were Mrs, Berner Ra-
le. State FT I \ President Mar- I. I Pearson, admitted paid or- dc, Mrs George Trow ell and Mrs.
garet King, Ivnton; Chairman ga.mzer. (or The Textile Workers Lionel! .Post-.
The third six weeks honor roll Texas 4-H Courted- -Kenneth Lew- of America. AF'L-CIO _ 1_
at St, Michael's Catholic S<-hool is, Hidalgo County; Vice-Ghtir- Mr. Pearson gives .as his Cuero'.
listed 38 students who excelled in man Texas 4-H Janice Berry; Co- address Airline Motel Room No i
academic work. By grade, the
students are :
Grade 8: Anna Arnold, Sydney
Grunder.
Grade 7: Janet Boldt, Michael
Koenig, Thomas Respondek. Sher-
rie Weber, Rose Marie Zuber,
Grade 6: Laura Aschenbeck,
Larry Barfield. Sunja Bohmnn,
Kathryn Kauffman Patricia Kau-
iGontmued on Page 1<U
2. Cuero; Texas.
Fifty-Six High School
Students On Honor Roll
UUmUUSaii"
SON OF TcufT^SB
I"2J . 1
fifty - mx Cuero High School Yuitrtg and Charlotte Zimrherrpan,
Struggling to maintain a higfj ly because of illness. U, John Macha, James Meitzen. students were listed on the third, Juniq! -; Donna Haros, I.arry
. before 1 know the right' average daily attendance in or- Humphrey said 114 students Grade 5: Catherine Arnold. Bar- six weeks honor roll released Sat- Coker, Ann G x-du wi. Alan Kah-
wa\ Ixjrd and know Just what der to quality tor another state were absent Wednesday, 95 Thurs- bara Macha, "David Polasek. .unta-y by Principal Glen Morgan, lich, Jud> K -elilor, Margie Koen-
t paid teacher next school year, day and 98 Friday. tirade 4: Mark Fischer, .An- Honor students are tong. Jobnnv Meitzen. Carol Ann
Forgive riie tor the many times Daule Principal T. W Humphrey Tiie heavy absenteeism is being' thony Fuchs, Cathryn Fuchs. Duri- Senior- 1 .aw rence Bade Judy Nagel, . Alfred. Roever. Diane
tiiat 1 have failed to share . .. Saturday urged parents of all stu- catised by a flu. epedimie which me Hartman. Sandra Mi. ulka. Biiteiiy. T ola- Hiown, M.u> NVfl Spedni.-m,. J.-> Wltartoit, Marvin
You as I Petits to have their children in has struck the city. Attendance Cynthia Parks. Card, F.nuly Aim fVrgrtSon. Mur- vvillatxl-an,! Marx ( Kauffman.
sciioot Whenever possible'. bin thti vvtiile sc’hools is also do^vn. Grade 3: Diane Aschenbeck, garet (ion/ales. Alice Hausmann. Sop-iti.ir. f- Barbara Altlis, An-
Htiinphiey said he realizes but not as low, according to fig- Charles Korenpk,: DetKifah Meur- Pinna Indorf, \i, ki Jo KeesU*r, netie Aine.-'cr. Atvrtle Arndt,
many students have been ill w ith ures released bv Supt Thad Me- er. Donna Kesebng. Nina King, Joan Norman Bade Aotores l»enton.
j influenza, hut be urged that they Donnell. . ’ Grade 2: Mary 'Arnold, Bat bara Koehler, Sandy I/ucr-sen. F'ain. Barbar a Buetiget. . NA.ne-v Kgg.
return to classes as soon as posxi- Humphrey said the state will Bohnian, John Clarke. Philip Hut- Mclknigal. \,v.i > ;e M irk.:’. -■ -1 Kieuie kc J.aiv Adele
hie. - , make allow antes when an eped- chison. Stephen Krause. Deimiese x;(.u,,5jnn '-Brenjla. Ten ley. Kie-ine. km Hilly Michlmg. Penny
Danje. a 12-grade school has an imie is about to make a school Polasek. Michael A’ackar. , 1 • r>. ,,, , , p ,-1 fr -aa MUeder. Linda
eni Iment of 484. As miirh as lose a teacher, hut makes no Grade 1: Cynthia Henson; Itel- . ' _' • . ‘ ,n "V- War ..Mi l tepet Dad
?? prrrrht nf fh^ stuflrnt hor|\ aiitm.<n» r for trying to g^in .lahn, Krnmv Kauffjnv^n Lor- ^ v - ,*'r 'h '^r 1 ^ ^r' Sv\int
, h&A been absent on one day, most-, an uulraM*» i^^ulka, Robert Refvs-. jtailgtd,. Lei \\arwsu, S’.ef^n, and Kathy Urbaa.
my ptobletns vvitti
shoultl hi moments spent in
prayerA
in % r o*«r-Fc«m i« fey fejthar
';*• Qo-*t 11n 0i A Co act on »t
P j er Pot^t " put'■»' #d by Vo; 'oy«
P es*. N#,v Vork City Th* a..’-Of >•
;-> '3 oaf ti t'CTi tna to •
o’ 11 i rook ’o friar.am p Vg og».
a nn vp’V't Hor^a raftrai paop-a.
CwarU. j Cer •• fe^a a o 1-
fir a of t** CiP * ’NfM
offica. rsr 4r9rr • - jr ©cow’Ora, pr
treat vents** frtu.
M 4F4
g im
BKITISH SAILORS: This exprel-
•ion comes from the British Navy.
At oo« time wives were showed
to qo to see with the : hesbends.
A son born ©n these trtps wet
ce-'ed a "son of a g.n’' beceuM
was literally bom b*!ow tfia
SMg* I «ftft —»
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The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 66, No. 19, Ed. 1 Sunday, January 24, 1960, newspaper, January 24, 1960; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth698504/m1/1/: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cuero Public Library.