The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 72, No. 293, Ed. 1 Friday, December 9, 1966 Page: 1 of 6
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1
Microfilm Service & 3alos
P.0. Box 8066
plt UN Black Nations Press
News
Compiled From Wiroi ©f UP1
For Anti-Rhodesia Moves
-A NEWSPAPER REFLECTS ITS COMMUNITY”
ffluprn
Sfrnri>
Partly Cloudy
Decreasing rtoudli.e- • and
older tonight and Saturday
Tempt* 45-62 Saturday for Cu
rm. Yorktown and Yoakum
U 5 w »«•?»»- lento, fortccrv
Fo» CL»re accf OtWif Covt'4'-
coot, MAN, COOl — Th)»
voung woman strolling Chi-
cago's Michigan Avcnii
seems more concerned about
keeping her none warm than
protecting her underpinnings,
which moves Cook County
Health Department Director
Dr. John Hall to say that
mini-skirts and thin hose
*ren t for cold weather
TEXAS PARKS and wildlife
omnv.sitioners may u, 1 out
: oday whether they will hays lo
■veal donors of funds for Lyn-
don F Johnson state park
Dist. Judge Marvin Blackburn'
lr. at Fredericksburg «. ex-
pected to rule on ;ui attempt by
\fr and Mrs K.ui \V. .'weciipv
to subpoena ill records kepi
VOL. 72—NO. 293 CUERO, TEXAS 77954. FRIDAY. DECEMBER 9, 19(16 6 PAGES - 5c
City Dads Bitter
Over Bond Defeat
Arctic Front
Cnero Bound
R "cr a. :rorn the A:' t •
w as sweeping deep into To.v
By M) IMIERSUS bitteme.-- erupted among tain and pas-age ot tiie l.-sue," a-s tt'dax and the Curro Area
Staff Writer , councihnen at a called -os-ion t'.e ■ ma.ior replied j *s no1 expected to escape the
A $950,000 bond issue for a ■ last r\igbt j Steen -aid the mayor had ui'v wintry blast
Snow' was failing ovei all
capital improvement program | Councilman Lies B. Steen made- no speeches in favor of
here proposed by the i ity said he did not feel that all the , the issue as lie, Cusack and
(lounc;) -was soundly beaten last j council had w Imleheartedly. B ttntzer had done.
Xov. 29 by property' ownerssupported the issue. Council- [ I wasn't united
iK'ie and as an aftermath some 1 men ppp, Blutit/er and William any talks on the
Council
Given
Warning
to make
subject,".
j Cusack indicated they felt the i said the mayor |
'same way. "Neither were we at. all.
It was ev ident they felt May-! times! but we spoke for it j
or Rill Nani: and Councilman nevertheless. said Steen.
11 K. Weatherly had not push- “Where was this mass meet-
led the bond elect on. ing w hich the Chamber of
Mayor N'ami objected to this.' Commerce called according toj
’"I was for the tend issue and the newspapers on ti e issue.1
felt its .rejection to lie a set- 1 but I never saw that meeting
(bark for Caere." be said.j take place""
I "What I contended then was | A voice in the audience sa.d
of the Panhandle' and-along
Red Riv er : early today
I .oca! weatherman II A
Taylor reported Thursday's
tiigh temperature here was
80 degrees. The Friday morn-
ing low was 44. McAllen85
degrees was the state’-
warmest Thursday.
The new cold wave is ex-
pected to drive ail the way to
the Texas coast by Saturday
morning
The Pacific . on. front
t\Town Talk
By FT) ANDERSON
I Cl.FRO CHAMBER Ol COM
MEKCE directors promptly
pointed DovV'cy flcnderso:i to
lie ti e organisation s manage)
effective Jan. 1 'after the ; re-,
.simat on- of S M Patterson.1
hut' a' tl« •:! is. not ,ding to sw ft-
's o'> or in mi. th.sir.ng Yoakum,
hive chamber , manager .there.
Wiih' r Coidcwey is resigning
effoctiv c IV c ;; bn .lircc.i:-:
liavc do'c.ded to ‘ail- Dvi” "."ic |
,:ii naming his .-D'eros.-or
I Coidcwey gave or. y tnii'l
time lo the job and sad he -
I quitting do devote fhorc tnic to
personal 1 intci e-t.«.
Tliere was some ta.k -it i f
employing full-time m.iiac-er.
j but l/'v.'i- Shows, the president.
' [said I hi' elyitnlH'i • Lnutvia'
situation mad*' sit . "T of
i the question '
! The director- approved
i ':,: ,-tm."s. 1> ■:r i-■ - - t.. h re-
• tr: r ana gcr C"t oh: '•• - ■
u'rctary Mrs Virg.c Rutledge
.. who has heen or* i1. ,’ mh to
| the pas- V. ye.,
IN OTHER CIIIMIUR of
■('on aicrcr ;nr a- - -a ,r ■>
n.-.. Oon/uie- in,- fixer 1 Dec. I
lie ,iv "MttHa Cl..Us I ' ey San-
ta is going to-m'di! h's eiitran- '
r tliere .on a fire trueli.-and set
'up headquarter-, on Confeder-
ate square F.igV.eer: stores
there arc holding p1 '•• i-aw-
, mgs
THE 1ORkTOH V ll b -
j f.xed next Thursday tor the
arrival of Santa Clan- Store-
Will stay open until 8 run.
THE t.OUAD (HWmt.li
has fixed Friday , I >e. tor
, "Santa to arrive wu.i a wart of
sirens and bells." He do tlv-
drayvlng for $300 in gifts a.- a
("bonus week" on the court
.house square Twenty, two
Envoys Demand
Embargo List
Have Oil Also
I Ni l LD .ATiON-
ITT Hi .. s
put a diplomat
U.N Sec'.irity . Chuhoil !.-lay ir.
an cifo. • to fo.. *e Krita.n to go
ail-o’uf si it- economic war Britain's
. lain-' wh.i., - rule*I nil dc.-n vin. Don
A- tire
•j repaired
the. I Rhode,* c-isi?, Af-F
African nations can diplomats made ;t ekar
squee/v ■ -a ,.<r .mey ■ would press demands that
an oil embargo be included in
of proposed' trsd»
a jain.-t , the repc
.l.*-ii:i't:on council southern African cotm'rv.
:me debate on Br.tish Fo,ejgn s^retarv
. George Brown urged the com
cli Thursday to apply imiiie
iiiiatc mandatory no - trade bar?
* against Rhodesia,.. But the or.h
■ sjK'cific sanctions requested
' were on 10 key- expo-ts that
prov.de Prctmer fan .smith *
regime with a.i cMimatcct
$235 2 million annually
Demand Oil Fmbar|>n
The Afro-As,an natiors.. tf-c
ii’-ny '. ‘mpard largest pbw<-r hi n fbe C N
u-god ill residents of General As-embiy.. a* want *
to m, a . .invert.s: ef. j sanction again** oil. a vita
! import fo-. PJxdp a* 8ancron?
cover trade go.n?' ir.v, or out of
a country
But Brown sk: -cd th« «ms:
■five issue-aiyare that an o-’
Sheppard
Asks Zip
Code Use
t< day
('.lier n
fort ;'o lii*.Judo tee five
rip r,'?iic rember it! both
.'iddii-sv and return a.jdre
thfdr hol'day mail
ut ti ex -j me tain's recuperatifig ecnrwrny.. He
a pa ce of said Brittain would not opj^r ?
for an oil embargo-
war q made in
teitns" tr> the
ion. He wanted
digit '
the;
of
Zip Code helps
humte.T of times
mail mu,-it be sorted ou* ra
tvfore reaching its final destina-' provided
tion 'r:.is' saves timp
pry and cuts do vn th
in dcliv- "acceptable
cost of British dele.
A former city manager
dial the timing tor Die election "If the meeting had been held «'hieh reduced temperatures merchants are purm-ipM n:
by Lie three Texas parks and chifT engineer of "plans for was b,ui ' i there wouldn't have heen four, early today set off ten-
wildlife eoinniissiOiiers In theii-j the Texas State Denartnicnt of* 1 VOT'' against' people there.' \V rams along the Gulf
pr v ate fund drive. Health in the water pollution ‘ ca*^nff l’ ,h,,nV asked Blunt- Councilman Weatherly said 9oastl Beaumont got 1.35 in-
A*so before the j idge were; control division told Cuero's iMr' j be supported passage of the is-
" Be cause 1 vvas (or tile elec-* (See CTTT DADS. Pate 8) ....................... -
-------m2 | ber there is sponsoring a I >e.
“ IT distribution of proa.
ches in six Ivours.
motions by the state seeking to; oity Council last night the city
bavr the Sweeney Suit thrown j was % iolatinjg its permit to chan-
out. Tie full trial s to begin nej sewage to the Guadalupe
G - River and warned "Dtat. some-
Tie Sweeneys w.-acr* farm; thing his to be done about it
across from President Johnson's soon ••
ranch has been eindemned for nw engineer was R B Rid-
'62,.*00. It is part of a 24 4-acre ^le 'who said he spent 14 years
Crist cotviemne*! ;by Gillespie jn city managerial posts before
'5»mty for t.BJ State Park. taking his present 'position.
"We've been fussing around
E\ K.RETT I.. RIMiS, one of your inadequate facilities- g, Jack Rickman
• e J.RJ s 10 Most Wanted ( r un- for years," Riddle said. He add- Reeord .Staff Writer
;nai Tmr-day agreed to be re- ■ TT-i,-. time is coming when a $92,000 home for the .m;.1 >
•urned tn , Tuisa, Ok!:-.., <o.state health authorities• will -tie. . charges of Cueiv.Higb
■ , (ede*. rank i.ciiiery char- have no alternative except to sk-hoo! was approved by mc:n-
, , take action. You were elected bers of the school board in a
.Hy"-- "u; ■' T barged vvim the to look after your city's needs,; meeting lasting info the
$.T 006"irohtery of » Tulsa ;in<i ,lo what lawrequir-' hours of early Friday momin
STRANDS ()» tlKItOl.OR
rd lights decorating the coin-
house have teen fumed iv: a:
Hallettsville where flic Cm: -
irii'viiig tiie me;!, tie said. ! that "san’t.r.n,-- must no’ Iv
"We exp**' t a recnr J-t). eak.ng , allow ed to escalate into an
. mail volume this Cin-i.-tmas and . economic confrontation with
wdll. teed a!! the hjelp we ran thirdcoumr.es'
gey " Postmaster Sheppard sa.d. Ah oil embargo could drew
"Tltere are ' three easy ways j vvbfte-riiied South Africa ;n'o
in winch yyiu can cooperate, tire, eurren* ■ r;--.- it .»■ a ?
w."L the Post.if Sen ire and at Rhodesia's chief supplier of
the same time a.-cue that you petre-le-um Soutli Africa has
get c.n-timc delivery fo •• y-«nir vowed to shun any gu*-s
iioltdliy gif;- arxt greeting-. You embargo a move which would
siiould <hdp early m.i’.f ear!v‘! force the I'nited Nations ?e
and it--: Z":> ("odes ■ . apply sanctions against it. 4on.
Zip Co*ie- f ?.- ■ i -"- -e ’ ar Dourvter Preponala
.*• "brained from the Zip Code | y.Siimc African .delegahon-
dire:4(>ry .rt the ;«>■! off.cr !ol>, hoping to bring down the irrl
iy or 1 >v telephone. Tiie Zip'African government also, were
Code inlorr.'.ation number
CR 5-5.123, Sheppard said,'
is openly hostile to Brown's pro-
(See in; BIACK, Page Si
School Board Gives
$92,000 Arena Okay
EN KENEDY, tte . t: .m.
iiLLshing development o! "i b
Kenedy Hot Wells in the hopo-
of making it a health and r*-
* reation -'pit for winter visi-
tor.-. A mi's meeting to prw
mote the plan and make K-
edy a rival to Lower -R o
Grande Valley Mm* to- >• in-
ter' tourists;w !' he b<-5l M- -i-
The stadium i- being pi.inn**'
* * *
Nixon Reports
4 Polio Cases
; „nk Oct. 21.
lb was arrested by E-B. He * Jed oases at Orange
> an'- l at i - r* titad -inj por, \> hes wbeie sewer-
1 . arc m .s-iiVnji- Mil Broomfield :i-P j>:n*i elections parsed after
v h m' lived wub hi- wile jjle municipal govenirnents
.m l -iy children. He suri ender- were warned they faced fines
• : w-ithovi’ .a fight ranging from $100 to $1,000 a
day for polluting nearby
\ tn A KAK-OI-U .vomati streams.
-. reamed and collapsed to the fjp , Gonzales as a city
1,1 n district court • room which t»w had a "tip top plant."
T'ursday in Denver after her Riddle appeared here at the! „s of TK,Iio have
>n wax sentenced t.. . .prison1 invitation of the council in the
f .r ’ ic -ex as-ault ■- kklfiPpplng • -wake of a Nov. 29 bond ele<>
y .; 20-yId.girl. tion which turned down the is-
Why don't they make Dm s;„an.,, of 5225,000 in revenue
w o nen in th;-- -tate dress de-. hpnda to extend the sanitary
entb . Mr- Shirley Shuster ] j.ewer system vvliich has teen
v ah 'o. "I* s tii*' tress manufac-t railed "long inadequate" by
' .re,-- who oil..ht he pmse- statp health niithorities. A $90‘-
n.- I far t'vc clothing they put (XX) grant to help the project
here had been approvevt by tiye
L e worn ui; w s '.u-iied out state. Tils’ issue was defeated
' the * ourtroom !tl the order, ;;sg to did.
The n idem occurred ^ aft- j "n,r facilities we have now
•• List. Judge V.dvvrird J, Keaf-jare inadequate eve i for the
- . e half sentenced the worn- j present population and we're
m s son. Stanley Garner, to " talk about bringing in new
. 11-years in prison for the at- industries.” said Councilman
William Cusack.
I "I'm not in f a v n r of
M.CRETARl Of STATE (See COOfClK, Pafe X)
D ii Ri.isk, .encouraged by _
■Hie.I military advances but 3.-T.T T-XT.T 7TT iT *-1 IT ..ITT I IT.i
s-imistie over chances for an-
■"dendeil holiday truce, today!
wned talks in Saigon w 11 h |
v >: r; in and Vietnamese of-
f-auals on the progress on the'
Hearing
Delayed
Tt.e
Mill air t.l-
Dr .loiin Wheeler luu
dentist and school hoard
member, last nicht to-.l Die j
Otero School board toui ea-
been con- t
fimfed in Nixon since Sept. 1
The board added polio ..m- .
nnmization to its list ot re- I
quired mcsllrati.ms tor f.r-t |
graders.
Also added was a require- |
ment for whooping c<nigh im- j
■ munization, Board niemlwr
Dr. Harold High; a local Ml'), |
told the Imard Cuero ha.- 'had
an epidemic of v.. taping
cough and it jioints t.. the |
lack of an ''immunization pro-
gram.
i First graders are now re-
quired by the district to
have the following immuniza-
tions: smallpox, diphteria,
whooping cough. lock jaw. ;
1 polio and tuberculosis te-t.
\ 'r «chon}« in
.'i rpii.
foi the area now being cleared j the board a^o approv co a
and leveled to tiie Cast of Die | textbook committee for 1966-67.
big!: scIkhJ plant Kirkman will serve as chair-
.T!ib' stadium is -not being bililt man.
lust to have a n.nv sports arena j "Other, 'members are Frann?
wee, hut rather for much needed M Ashby. Mrs. Rena Aldrich.
-pace at Die elementary com- 'Ed Harberson, Mrs. Gertrude
plev Supt Mnn in Kirkman McBride. George Saleher. Mrs.
evni; .iiixil to me board. He said I^ona Hancock, Mrs. Bef
u yv.-s imperative lie have the, Barclay. Mrs. F.lin* r. (kxxlwyn
.i.c.i now valicvl V iohbler Stad- Mrs. Jackie Jenson. Mrs. Far- bo: p:,*, t-i* ■- against I,onp Star
aim tor use as a pliysicaJ edu-; line Jenkins, Mrs Jessie j Textiles. Guadalupe division,
at .on area foi tn*' chibtren in EXidds. Mrs. Florence RMdon. in c.\ier<> origin.iliv -e* for ixa-
the Mrs. Francis Morgenroth. and a hearing .before a trial'exami-
Maurice Mathis. i tier froni the N’atidna) Laten;
--—-- Relations' Hoard was postpon-
ed due to tin .line.- of t’a1 tex-
tile company's attorney. Henry
■'Scott of Houston
O. L. <kied.'.'k«' V.f 11 allot*s-
v die sard Scott suffers fro*:: a
form of Leukom a, although, not
a tei’niinal variety . . (fo.edevke
is vice-president of Die textile
firm.
Linployo*of Die. Cuem Ind*’-, ,ed the eampa.gn and t'no. H-rman Caraway, piedaer
pemlent School IVistrK't *ontii- amount of them Contributions of Textile Workers Tnion ,*
huted a total o. SX;X) 5o toward Were reparted by Mi-. Kirk- Anierica local 1658 said he'had
supiH.rt of Die IDiT Otero Unit- man. The report showed ent- been infurmed. of the oosipme-
a npaign. it .V* a- in- ploye*’- <,f the adnv.nist.atidii nient and was undol the im-.
the Junior High 'School, pressi.-n it would be reset
United Fund
Short Only
$63 of Goal
Cuero Teachers
Give UF $890.50
i o's United Fund .was only
*•'• '• short of r- god Friday
nioaiurg as three awitidbutors
aided V98 to.- Die' Ulltd'.
Tata! girts oral picalge- re-
ve.ved■ Up to 9 o'clock. Friday
morning .amounted fc> s
99.3 •. per cent of •
q l )*.."■
1 .atest r.KHribUJiotte
from: employees, of tiie
Indi pendent. School
Supt. Mar-in Kirkman - final
Te;x?rt issued today showed to-
tal coiitributiotis amount>yl
SfcOo rather than $-8..2 as
biously reported adding $28 ?•
the fund.
: ! " !7 oi
l10.800
anie
I'uvrr
d.strici.
fo
Mrs Rosemary 7 -Cheatham,
wife of District Attorney Wiley
Cheatham and Coordinator oi
Vocational Office Occupat.on*
at Cuero High School mailed in
a .hank draff authorization for
$6;
Mrs '.r M Stone, secretary
anil, office manager for Bert
Kirk Ji-.. local attorney brought
in a check for $10
Drive chairman Jack Hower-
ton said Friday' he felt certain
Tiie Record which has con-
ducted the -ampalgn on a vol-
in'ar.v basis for'the past three
yeare vill.te able to announ--e
sudees-fu! completion of tte
campaign in Sunday's edition.
ed Fund
non need Friday by Marvin W. dept.
Kirkman. super ntendent. ! (Aiero Klementary SJiool. John late January .
TTiis amount is $28 more than C French School. Oak View The local union me com-
tiie initial incomplete rejxjrt I school, DauJe Sclwol, Cafeterias .painttint in the NLRB trial,
issued two weeks earlier whirb j and maintenance departments They have alleged lzme Star
showed 8882 bad been contribuf- all contributed 100 per eent. On- i Textiles was diserimnatory in
ed at that time j Iv the High Se.xxil and the Bus labor practices before .«’ b. e
A list of all tiie employees of Department fell short of the AFL-CIO sanctioned a strike
the school district who support- (See TEACHERS. p»ge D i at the local plant in April HHW.
Vandals Damaging
Gobbler Scoreboard
: i: i n ui:
:n :: n :;
:tt t ru:: : ;: u
Churches Call for Viet Bombing Halt
The recently pur» iiased $.
OtXi s ore bo ird at. Gobbler Stad-.
iurn .is teing damaged ’ey s -hool
age vandal.-, Su;c. Miirv.n Kirk-
man laid Cuero Seteo! R ' trd
last nigh*.
He said evt; - r a e wer would
tie built for it or it .would have
to be di-mun'led and «*ored.
lx>tn te.ng an ex-.vnsr '<> tte
district
Children are .using "the area,
as a play ground af'- s hoql
hours-;
Kirkman cited an adage.
ai— tendered
Kirkman said the district has
9x1 batting average on secure
mt miuestcd Title 1 funds
The John C. French building
is scheduled to he completed
during Die O.rLstmas holidays
A few changes have be-*n
made in the Area Vocational
building. Conduit was run to the
five offices in the Building for
telephones at a cost of $125
Also the faming display wrn-
dow was en.arged. Tne window
is used to reach students To set
Rti<k aiTived for an official
vc-d i\ visit - his seventh to
w.,r.to'-p n.i ’on amid «trln-
-Tit ■ r-.-iirity precantions at
-a'gun's- busy Tan 5oh Vhut
■Vii'tert, the seen* of a number
T Communist terrorist attacks
(See TEOn-E. Page >1
MIAMI BEACH 1 P*1 The The National Council of day- -a--.or.- Urged the gssvernmcnt to
Genera! ^Assembly of tte Churches is the nations In preliminary votes Tnurs- give "most serious consider*-
N'aticma! Council of Churches | largest cooperative religious or- Day. the assembly tion" to a halt in bombing ra,ds
called up for final action today; sanitation, embracing 34 Pretes-1- Threw its full support on North Viet Nam "even
on t 800-word policy statement | tant and Orthodox deDimin- behind the plea of Pope Paul though tliere may lie no
advance assurances of recipro-
cal action by North Viet Nam
government." The halt in
bombing raids was proposed as
an alternative to a complete
cease-fire if the latter should
prove unattainable.
—Registered a "concern" that
the administration has been less
calling fra- a unilateral halt to ations w ith 41 million mem-, VI for extension of tte Christ-
bomhmg raids and other "risk J bers. The General Assembly, I mas cease-fire in Viet Nam.
action to bring about peace its top policy making body, j Calling on the U.S. government
meets every three years. Its to “respond affirmatively'' to
1966 session began last Sunday the Pope's proposal, the Protes-
and etals today, J tant and Orthodox church lead-
The Viet Nam statement, ers said that extension of t h e
overshadowed all ot the busi- j ceasefire could "contribute to
negotiations in Viet Nam
"Hus war must be brought to
ao end soon," declared tiie
statement, whloh on prelimina-
ry votes Mtiunanded the
support of an overwhelming j ness in the minds of the a climate in which the possiblli- ______________ >r.v„ „„
majority of the church leaders | assembly delegates. They debat- j ties of negotiation mav be than candid with the American
participating in the assembly. |ed it line by line through two! nourished. '
people about tiie war. "(Ymflict-
ing policy statements by big'1:
oftieia's provide such confusion
that a near crisis of credibility
is at hand," said a section
which the delegates refused on
a test vote to soften. "M ore
frankness is possible without
damage to security than has
so far been in evidence."
While opposing "precipitous
and unconditional U. S with-
drawal" from Viet Nam. the
statement expressed grave mis-
givings about America's in-
creasing reliance on massive
military intervention" in South
e.i«t Asia.
"Lock- a;-- *o help .:onest peo- up commercial displays,
pie -tay hone-t." Someone has, Tiie board wall call a special
broken locks on he re-essbox. ; meeting to discuss the preb-
"Tte mischief of children, lems of the district in integrat-
seems to run in cycles and this; ing it- system. The meeting will
cycle seems to want to play: be called after Christmas,
a little rougher than in the j In other action the board au-
past few years " ! thorized the purchase of five
In other business, the board Remington typewriters from
memter-s authorized Supt Kirk-
man to make a change in the
plans of the Hunt Elementary
cafetorium, if he can get Tide
I funds of 50 per cent of the
$7,000 kitchen.
To add the prop' ed kitchen
lo what was forme, y on v a
Russell Office Equipment Co.
In Victoria at $150 each.
They also accepted a bid from
Sechrist • Hall of Victoria
to replace 49 defective skylights
ui the high school plant at a
cost of $894
Ronton Sheet Metal Co o f
i »jsewsjuna»ff.5jiKi: -M” st Tm i
dirung aro.a w’ll cost the Uvalj Cuero entered a bid at $2 940
; m tjtg its Fra an,:j; i:: t r:;.; p r-tj i-j sxsxn uriN sMamniJigagir gg a-^r:: :rr:n.t z as i: jt A-arsig *stnnt $vv» tf *» s»a*« hmd« *w tne ^
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The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 72, No. 293, Ed. 1 Friday, December 9, 1966, newspaper, December 9, 1966; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth699258/m1/1/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cuero Public Library.