The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 251, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 21, 1951 Page: 1 of 8
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9
The Weather
T
CUERO, TEXAS, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1951
EIGHT PAGES
s.
E
Wg
ON THRESHOLD
13
OF WORLD WAR,
BOOK CLAIMS
1
i
I (
*e
areas -have
v
suggested one or two miles.
The UN command had wanted the zens of friendly powers to treason.
Q
•2
L Thc^play the game
4--
4
21-’
i
void-
give
the Reds an excuse to break off the
clover.
County this week that this
farmers were setting a “good ex-
cent conference in Austin with Wm.
.n
$
Sunday.
Kahlich, el
the bamly,losing youngsters
tor of Grace Episcopal Church, and
and
enth Province to be held October
skirts thrusting
in an informal conference with the
Mr.
at San Antonio.
The governor listened interested-
PERMITS FOR
the architecture commission of the
WEEK $16,190
»
of West Texas; . Church
$
H
1
Football
will
TKAR8 WAR
for $25 in repairs to be made at his Westhof ever since.
Cuero Civic Club and Organiza-
present Tuesday night st 7 o’clock
San Antonio; nine grandchildren; •
four sisters Mrs. Paul Goelring and
Scout Troop No.
t
Treasury Department from San An-
Legion convention here Nov. 17—8.
z:=t-
is to be open to all eligible Vet-
p
gree mark.
. will be announced latar.
Bonds.
ad
i88^L>4*
(ye
h
3 &
EPi
COMING EVP
LEGION POST
OPENS DRIVE
FOR MEMBERS
Cuero American Legion, Din ter
Post No. 3, has launched an inten-
sive membership drive, Post Com-
mander Ray Mauer has announced.
The drive got underway Saturday
C. C. Smith, deputy director of
the U. S. Savings Bond drive, will
Cuero Young People To
Condud Sunday Might
Services at (heapside
at 9:30.
noon.
ample” in Improving and conserving
farm and pasture lands, and that
BAND PAYS
TRIBUTE TO
DAD IN SHOW
AT HALF-TIME
Farmbilt Mills To
Build Addition
For $11,500
Survivors include his wife, five
sons, Edward of Bay City; Henry T.
of Fort Hancock; Victor G. who is
serving with the U. S. forces in Ger-
governor is a strong advocate of
soil * conservation and pasture im-
tion
women.
■
, A
Week-End Due To Be
Slightly Warmer
several members of the Cuero con-
gregation are planning to attend
sessions of the Synod of the Sey-
revolution?” Howard asked.
"We never had such plans
Intentions," Stalin repiled.
"You appreciate, no doubt.
grouped to support
still fighting for hils
tween them.
The UN proposed—and the Com-
An addition is being made to the
Marion Calhoun residence by New-
mans’ also in the amount of $2,500.
A hot house to cost $300 is being
built at the Green Garden by New-
man’s of Chero, F. L. Barber taking
out the permit.
$1, $1,000 remodeling ob is being
song-leader. Martha Edwards
be at the piano.
Warns Against Taking
Soviet Statements
At Face Value
erated’ countries by turning them
Into Soviet-run police states.
"They have preyed on the loyal-
ties of free men, inciting the eiti-
Stalin, that much of the world has
long entertained a different impres-
sion,” Howard said.
‘This is the product of a mis-
understanding,” said Stalin.
Allied lines which were
two miles from the burnk
town.
After raking enemy pos
They have cut off their own people
by an Iron curtain. They have car-
ried their aggressions to the thre-
shold of World War IU.” ,
The booklet cited quotations by
Lenin and Stalin on the “inevita-
W. L HEDGES
RITES HELD
SATURDAY
A
withdrawing without a
Two companies of
• Westhoff Farmer
Dies Friday
Afternoon
2-
2
security zone confined to the road
itself.
The only remaining question still
to be settled is the right of UN
planes to fly over the Kaesong area.
The Reds insist on an agreement or
Truce Talks
Expected To
Reopen In
Circus Tent
and balloons to turn aircraft away
from the area, but pointed out that
the UN had no right to erect these
in the Communist base area at Kae-
song.
and Mauer said they hope to have at the Chamber of Commerce of-
it completed before the 14th District fice to hear a representative of the
COLLEGE
Arkansas 16, Texas 14
TCU 30, Texas A&M 14,
Baylor 40, Texas Tech. 20.
Minn. 39. Nebraska 20. .
Harvard 22, Army 21.
Oklahoms 33. Kansas 21.
Notre Dame 33, Pitt 0. J
ED. KRUEGER
RITES SUNDAY
Ration relative to the lack of
freprtectin in some areas ■
h oc-
week.
Cattle Market Holds
About Steady
Friday
Big
I ;
By United PressI
Fair and cloudy skies with slight-
ly higher temperature readings were
promised for the weekend in Texas.
Early morning cloudiness result-
ing from fog in some sections soon
burned out and skies generally were
clear over most of the state by mid-
morning. •
Ovenight low readings generally
were in the 50’s, but ranged from
ie
k
A coffee will be given at the Muti tonlo speak. George M. Blackburn.
Hotel Thursday morning and the' chairman for the Defense Bond
members are also planning a Stag drive in DeWitt County, has an-
Party to be held at the hall that nounced.
Itive
43
-
82
Lsc
A
7p.m. <2
L O. O. P. Lodge-8 p. a.
Flight -B" VART—Armor
p. m.
W. O. W. Legion man-• PJ
WB.A—K. P. Hall-7:20 »
ezac-sge z’
sigs
Young people of the First Baptist
Church of Cuero will conduct the
service Sunday night at the Bap-
tist Church in Cheapside.
The service, beginning at 7 p. m.,
will be dedicateed to young people.
Jimmy Rice will preach the ser-
mon, and Charles Bush will be
are alsq growing’within them.
.Fer-----------
Improvement Practices
newly included
igmet theirshare of the burden.
DEFENSE BOND
MEETING
ON TUESDAY
war between capitallsth
252'
w
hn— sc ? .
2a
.6cs I
823 8
Building permits issued last week
at City Hall amounted to $16,190
which is a considerable jump over
the past few weeks.
An addition is being built to the
Cuero Flower Shop which will cost
$65, according to a permit issued to
W. A. Laake, Gottschalt duing the
work.
Sam Weaver is making repairs at
the home of Mrs. R. H. Buehrig in
the amount of $200.
George Nami took out a permit
19
g."
For All
Departments
Of The Record
Telephone No. 1
66 at Brownsville and Galveston to
44 at Salt Flat. Junction, with 46 I
degrees. Marfa and Texarkana at 47
and Wink and Dalhart at 48 were the
Governor Allan Shivers told a
group of farm leaders from DeWitt
-
I
2,9'7 -a;
ewa )
i be learned in
> group of young-
gat some compet-
.8. fche
y - . ■■■■
KEEP UP THE GOOD WORK—Governor Allan Shivers tells Wn Kahlich chairman of the DeWitt County Committee at
duction Marketing Administration: Herman E. Reidesel, vice-charman, and Claude C. Jennings, admiistrative officer. The o
tions to DeWitt County farmers for an outstanding record on winter cover crop planting came at a recent visit with the go
Austin. More than 150,000 pounds of winteer legume seeds have been planted i the county so far this year, with two miliq
of phosphate used to fertilize the crop. t . 2 —Recor Si
-United Nationa tanks
into Communist-held
Saturday and Shot up the i
,6. i
g
8,
mins
; ■■ he
ego
A TO It
7201
En.
Cuero’s water mains, sewer
lines,can be extended only,
aftert property owners in
Included in the Seventh Prov-
mee are 11! dioceases and, mission-
ary districts in the Douthwest,
• The Synod opens at St Marks’
Church at 9:30 o'clock the morn-
ing of Oct 23 with educational
forums open to all. The subjects
and leaden are Church Architec-
ture, Henry Steinbomer, member of
l
dent and well-knwn bars, 1s re-
. ported to ba in a most critical con-
•te Ycsttown Memorial
■baptist aWfulpg from a heart ail-
. ment. Areon informed the Record
Ha hni lag afternoon that all the
family have been called in and
the doetan do not hold out any
•hope foz-the patient.
rhe Rev. John W. Herman,
-
VOL. 57.—NO. 251.
only other points unden the 50-de-1 done to the interior of the Rialto
| Theater by Newman’s of Cuero'.
“A Tribute to Dad” was the clever
and perfectly executed presentation
of the Cuero High Gobbler band un-
der direction of Band Director W.
W. Wendtland at Friday night’s ball
game here, the presentation being
one of the mot clever ever seen
here.
Long hours of preparation were re-
quired for the half-time show which
opened with a precision march by
the entire band, the group complet-
ing the drill by spelling the word,
“Dad” in the center of the field.
They followed with a "$" sign,’
carrying out the theme that Dad is
the man who pays and pays, and
then concluded with musical num-
bers which carried out the theme.
Fans were loud in their praise of
the show.
Ednas elaborately dressed and
expertly trained Cowboy band also
won acclaim with their presentation
at the half.
formal understanding that Allied bflity” of
atrerat t willhe barred from the—
yTheUhas
many. The girl was a passenger
on the "Freedom Train" which
"ereshe" the border from Czecho-
alovakia, bat remembering promise
to escape with Kamil, she returned
to re-escape (International)
Communion at 7:30 a. m. follow-
ed by the official Synod meeting erans.
Un’s “peace” statements and his
famous 1936 assertion to Roy W.
Howard, president of Scripps-How-
ard newspapers, the Soviets never
had planned world revolution.
The deportment cited the key
questions and answers between
Howard and Stalin on world revo-
lution.
"Does this, your statement, mean
that the Soviet Union has to any
degrees abandoned its plans and in-
tentions for bringing about a world
many; August A. and Richard B.
Krueger, both of Westhoff; two
fing and without acquir-
an undue swelling of the
ttd not easy to adopt a
ntarg handicap, quietly
het it need not be noticed,
effecuvely so as to even
,gi0
armistice talks again if there “were
any formal ban. / g
Chief UN liasion officer Col. Ed-
ward J. Kinney nevertheless indi-
rated he expected theHaston teams
to reach some sort‘of agreement at
a meeting beginning at 10 a. m
CUERO — Cloudy and cooler
Friday night. Saturday partly
cloudy. Lowest Friday night
near 58.
daughters, Mrs. Everitt Pettit of
Kerrville, and Mrs. Doris Radicke of i
•a
practices this year. An average of
a thousand acres a year is-being
made in clearing pasture and range
lands of brush and mesquite, and
subsequent planting of KR bluestem,
buffel grass, crimson clover and
Services will be held Sunday at 3
P. M. from the Chapel at Freund
Funeral Home, Rev. James F. Vor-
koper, Lutheran minister from Wee-
satche. officiating. Interment will
be in Hillside.
mumnists agreed—that the security have exploited the hungry
and the homeless. They have “lib-
vice-chairman, and Claude C. Jen-
nings administrative officer. The junction city for one
stimulate interest over the entire
state.
More than half the crop producing
LACK OF CARS Shivers Praises
SLOWS BUYING Farmers On Th
COURAGGOUS young Zdena Hy-
biova, 16-yearold Czech girt, and . , . .__.. —
herboy triend,kvapn Kamil, 16. zone should be 400 yards wide. The
are shown atw yalca camp in Commnists at first had demanded a
Bavaria shortly after their escape three-mile wide zone, but Friday
in of the DeWitt
Music, led by the Rev. Walter WIl-
lams of the National Department
of Christian Education; Church
School Teaching, Miss Mary Louise
Vilaret and Miss Eleanor Snyder
of the National Department of
Christian Education, and Financ-
ing the New Church, led by F. M.
Gillespie, chairman of the church
committee of the Diocese of West
Texas.
The Rt. Rev. John Bentley will
preach at the opening service at 8
p. m. Tuesday at St. Mark’s.
On Wednesday, October 24, there
will be Holy Communion at 7:30
a. m. followed by a joint session of
।
the Synod and the Woman’s Auxil-
iary with the Rev. Gresham Mar-
mion of Dallas and Mrs. E. G.
Lasar, president of the provincial
Woman’s Auxiliary, presiding. Be-
ginning at 2 p. m. will be depart-
mental meetings on missions
church education, promotion, soc-
ial relations, finance, youth, college
work, laymen's work, and town and
country work.
At 7 p. m. Wednesday night the
Synod dinner will be held in the
Plaza Hotel with the R. Rev. Ar-
thur Lichtenberger, bishop coad-
jutor of Missouri, as the special
speaker. His subject will be "The
Church Faces the World.”
The final day of the Synod,
Thursday, will open with Holy
MTownTalk State Department Flays Soviet Aggression
Much has been said, and '
som statements made hastily ___
and without thorough invest!- Flees Reds Twice
rec- a Kinney said he had proposed the
I use of “technical aids” such as lights
Sessions to Be Held
in San Antonio
Oc. 23-25
often do that, too; for sports-Diocease
manship and brotherliness
Services for William Leslie Hedges
54, were held Saturday at 4 p. m.
from the Chapel at Freund Funeral
Home, with Rev. A. C. Peterson.
Methodist minister, and Rev. Nor-
man A. Sanders, Baptist minister,
officiating. Burial was in Hillside.
Mr. Hedges died Thursday evening
in a local hospital after an lilness of
five months.
For several years the deceased was
associated with the Cuero Fire De-
partment and one of the trucks was
included in the funeral procession
in tribute to his past services.
Survivors include his father,
Archie Hedges, and two brothers,
Russell of Cuero and Claud of Olney,
Texas.
Pallbearers were, Joe Reuss, Joe
Hunter, Tom Kennedy, Earl Dodds,
Dick Blackwell, and Herman J.
Schaefer.
Adjournment will be at, The exact date of the Stag party speak on the importance of Defense
Governor Shivers complmented
county"* DeWitt county farmers uring are-
UN ADVANCE BASE, Munsan, Ko-
rea, Oct. 20.—(UP)—United Nations
and Communist liasion officers Sat-
urday cleared the next-to-the last
obstacle to resumption of the Ko-
rean cease-fire talks.
There was speculation here that
the armistice conference will be
re-opened in a circus tent at Pan-
munjon next Monday or Tuesday.
A compromise broke the dead-
lock over the width of the security
zone to be established along the
road between the UN truce camp at
Munsan and the Communist camp
at Kaesong, 15 miles to the north-
west. Panmunjon is midway be-
city ot-<hastate. It can’t be
averted:All of us regret such
2 incidents as the one
eum4 during the I
but youcan‛t build water
told him of the progress that is be- .
Ing made by DeWitt county farmers spite heavy Communist
ih spreading soil improvement prac- and artillerx fire, the t
tices, and the paying results that hack without losing a ma
(Continued on Page 8) side the city, the tanks
farms in DeWitt County affiliated . _ ...
with the Production Marketing provement and he talked at length tanks rumbled into
Edward Krueger, 53, Westhoff
farmer, died Friday about 5p.m.
in a local hospital following an ill-
ness of three weeks.
He was born in the Clinton com-
munity February 16, 1898, the son
of August and Augusta Schulte
Krueger. •
On February 28, 1920, he' married
Miss Helen Pruitt here in Cuero and
they had made their home near
l
-
Mrs. Justina Goehring, both of
Westhoff, and Mrs. Henry Bada JiHto halt—T p. m, io
and Mrs. Felix Bade, both of Cuero. . "Bcout Troop No. JU dw
h9
• 4
• E
20:.,
WASHINGTON, Oct. 20—
(UP)—The United States has
accused Russia of carrying
aggression "to the threshold
of World War III through “one
of the most blatantly ag-
gessive policies in modern his-
tory.”
The State Department, in a
sharply-worded 37-page booklet en-
titled “the Kremlin Speaks,” also
accused the Soviets of using their
United Nations membership to “ob-
struct and subvert thepurposes" of
the world organization.
"They have preached division
and hatred,” the department said.
Administration’s agricultural pro- 1
grams are carrying out fertilized DeWitt county farmers,
winter legume cover crop planting
place by Hadamek Lumber Co.
R. M. Cowey took out a permit
to build a car port at one of his
renthouses, the permit reading $250.
Roof repairs at the F. M. Goehring
residence will be made in the
amount of $350. Goehring is do-
ing the work himself.
Newman's of Cuero are construct-
ing an addition to Farmbilt Mills
which will cost $11,500.
’ "“3
2 e o
■ Mosi
“9 - i
1
directors men and
are urged to be
Eme whlb being
beaten badiy.I
—--g--to be so much eas-
ier attimes to walk off the
field, or calltora change in
the gam. sometimes that
happens, but more than likely
w
ec HH
keep at for grit and deter-
Aminatlonare growing within
them; "a*”* with their bones.
। I akes even more forti-_____
tude towin gracefully. It is not 23-25
7
of Cuero
i i In al fairness to the city,11
it should ba pointed out that I
“she ares in question only re-
cnty were taken into the city |
Due to the lack of cattle cars
available, buying was somewhat
slow Friday at the Cuero Livestock
Commission Company, Raleigh
Blackwell said.
“Buyers want to be able to have
the catttle shipped right away and
we have been experiencing a great
deal of difficulty during the past
few months securing enough can
for shipments,” Blackwell declared.
The market remained about steady
with fat calves bringing around
$35.50 per hundredweight.
Lightweight stockers brought
from $33 to $37.50 per hundred-
weight Butcher calves, $30-$35;
heavyweight stockers, $35; light-
weight Braha stockers, $28-28.50;
canners and cutters, $15-$17; beef
cows, $22-$22.50; good bulls, $22-
$27; fat cows, $22-$23; cows with
calves, $175-$235.
Thirteen hundred cattle went
through the ring.
I- :
sHge
the results they are getting should county PMA, Herman E Reidesel,
“t3EIWAL _
X SYNODSLATEDE---
ey he DDe- ■ — ------ a- . ® ' W, -=
Chinese Communists south oE
song.
nited Nations briefing
said Kumsong apparently wao
pied by few—if any-Qgmmi
troops.
"The have known we We829
way, so they Have probably 1
out* their troops and as ma035
ply stores as they could” ONO
cer said. , •
Altogether three Allied dhlfl
the U. 8. 34th and South Keratol
and 6th—weregconvergmg on
song which has been the 4M
main troop concentration SteH
ply center since the fall of 4
“Iron Triangle" to the west a
Kumsong already was IB fa
it has been bombarded for das
Allied planes-and loug-TangNjl
Uhp Uurru RRrur
limits, and property owners in
such-areas have not. as yet j
contributed any city taxes to
the coffers of Cuero, taxes
necessary to provide the f a-
cilities discussed.
May tax payers contribut-
. J Ted for years before revenues
1 were sufficient to bring them
fire protection, sanitation and
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Craze, Victor. The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 251, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 21, 1951, newspaper, October 21, 1951; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1418244/m1/1/?q=Lamar+University: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Cuero Public Library.