The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 73, No. 10, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 12, 1967 Page: 1 of 4
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Area Weather
.Partly .• cloudy and warmer
t!ii::h Friday except consider-
•ihlr i-F'ii'liiv'-ij tonight. Temps
for (’uero, Yorktown and
Yoakum
V A *#<»**•i Sueoi roiKOW
!*•* Co**’ bounty
Microi'^l-n Service 0 S'.l.s
P.0* tiox (5066
Dalins, Tex
(tern ifororfi
“A NEWSPAPER REFLECTS ITS COMMUNITY"
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VOL. 73—NO. 10
CUERO, TEXAS 77954, THURSDAY, JANUARY 12. 1967
4 PAGES - Sr
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Supersabre Jets Blast
Red Snipers From Trees
Fire Kills
2 T ots,
Grandpa
WACO ITT • Fire swept a
two-story fry.me house Wednes-
day, killing two children and
their grandfather. A heroic
neighbor saved five other chil-
dren.
The dead were Vanessa
Moore, 1, and Lula Mae Moore,
5, and their grandfather, Lee
Hampton, 65. The younger child
was found in a downstairs bed-
room, the elder girl in an ap-
stairs bedroom and the grand-
father in the kitchen.
...Edward Hendley, 10, who
IWes next door, was walching
over the children while the par-
ents were at work. The father
of the children, Hampton
Moore, works at a service sta-
tion six blocks away.
Mrs. Mary Lee Moore, their
mother, collapsed when she ar-
rived at the burned-out house,
home to three families. She was
hospitalized for shock
Hendley saved a third child
of the Moores and four children
of Mr. and Mrs. William Moore
who also lived in the house
The fire was blamed on an
open gas heater in the bath-
room.
Fire Chief Leslie Summey
said it looked as if Hampton
was trying to get out of the
house.
Handley said he was going to
go back in the burning house
after Hampton ‘ Rut I could not
because of the smoke and
heat,” he said. "I could not see
the man but I could hear him
moving.”
Jungle Law Forced On Armored Force
Them; Claim Unions Swarms Over
5 Base Camps
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SAX FRANCISCO UP1
decision to end the bracero pro-
gram and efforts to unionize
farm workers drew criticism
Wednesday from Allan Grant,
new president of the California
The presented to the Notional A<l-jwe,k slatisttlcs showed hie de-
risory Commission on Food and j vision to end the 'bracero pro-
Fiber, a /.o-membor group ap-: gram was correct,
pointed hr President Johnson Three AFL-CIO officials testi-
to review American farm poli-Jfied earlier that strikes, b o y-
c.v. , J cotts and constant harassment
The hearing was the seventh j would continue until farm work-
ers overcome a system of
Mr. led Andt i >n i r • t>,■ i
Cuoro. Ton.is T t -pc.-dci lh
Dear Ed: leap'.
Afli i reading r >ur edii.ori d ini 1' a 16-15
rowx TALK! tie .wojSl I . :ir> hit. • . i : vr ’h I; in
fastened it .e!f on mv n.eid so i! ' n'tepeth a
I w ill |>en down a few of the j i'S'l.
many citations Cod has given
. n Hi- w ifil.
\i>rr as to, your expiessldn
iimshed, an.1 he
:es -Tali not *»s-
!’He that nideth
lips, and he
mder is *
IVov. 12;2: 'Lying lips are
altorninai.oh to c,e Eord, but
they pint de d truly are his de-
light.
Now the last of all liars.
State Board of Agriculture.
But union leaders said such j,and final one held by the coin-
weapons as strikesj mission throughout the nation
and boycotts were forced upon i fa nn lS-monfh study,
them by the ‘'law of the jun-i Grant, who was appointed
gle” that prevails in agricul-
tural employment.
Testimony by both sides was
Ley Buys
Local
Auto Store
president, of the State Board of
Agriculture by Gov. Ronald
Reagan, criticized the decision
to end the bracero program
two veark ago and said the
"near bondage.
Cesar Chavez, director of the
United Farm Workers Organiz-
ing Committee, said the nation-
al political power struggle had
forced farm workers to choose
“a course of struggle and
strife” by denying them bene-
SAIGON UP! A flight i
three U. S. Air Force Supersa-
bre jets screamed in at tree
top level t<xlay and blasted Com-
munist sniper* out of the trees
where their intense fire had
blocked U. S. armored columns
moving deeper into the Iron
Triangle.
"Jack Ruby was a liar and the
huth rv-is nut in him.’ To this Xorv the last of all liars. Rev
T agree and would like t > look 21.-8: "And ■ ’! Iiirs Shall have
further w in' God's word teach-j their part in the lake which
jbvimeth with fire and brims ton*
x will Unit >i>ui proof in which i- the second death.”
St John s II- "He was n mur-| .1. M. Mny.’r
dci'ci’ from lire beginning and I (.'uero, Texas
door must not lie shut on the j fits and rights accorded indus-
Poenisch
Mistrial
Is Granted
Judge Joe Kelly of the 24th
District Court Thursday granted
a mistrial in the Leonard Muxie
Poenisch rape trial being tried
here.
The motion for the mistrial
was filed by defense attorneys i
due to certain evidence present- j
ed by the State during Wednes-,
day’s session of the trial.
Attorneys Errol Dietzc of
Cuero and Joe Blown of S a n
Antnnio were defense attor-
neys. Poenisch was being tried
for the alleged rape of his
minor daughter fa Cuero on
Sept. 30, 1965.
The case has been re-schedul-
ed for Feb. 13, in Calhoun Coun-
ty in the 24th District Court.
The Jury, selected Monday an
Tuesday, has been dismissed.
In other court news, Joseph
Frailer and Harvey Howard,
charged with acting together to
commit burglary, were tried on
n plea of guilty before the court
and sentenced to seven years in
the Texas Correctional Institute
where they had been serving
time when brought to Cuero on
a bench-warrant for the char-
ges here.
Carroll Lev, who serves as
chief of Cuoro's Volunteer Fire
Department as a civic, duty,
was “feeling” i s way around
today in a new business — the
local Western Auto Supply As-
sociate Store, 131 East Main St.
He now owns it.
Announcement that he had
purchased the home-owned
business from Mrs. Penn Beak-
ley was announced today.
Ley is the Schlitz and Mil-
ler’s High Life beer distributor
for Cuero. Before that he
was a partner in the Cuero
Foodcraft Store here.
A native of Cuero, Ley was a
football end and letterman on
the local High School team in
the early 1950’s. He served
eight years in the National
Guard. He and Mrs. Ley have
one daughter. 7-year-old Karen.
Ley succeeded Lester Frees,
the watchmaker, ns Chief of the
local fire department.
He said the store’s personnel
will remain unchanged. Mrs.
Beak ley who has been operat-
ing lire store since the death of
her husband in 1965, has not
announced her future plans oth-
er than that she plans to contin-
ue to live in Cuero.
Workshop Is
Slated Here
For Teachers
use of supplementary foreign
labor” on California farms.
"Contrary to certain U.S. De-
partment of Labor reports;” he
said, "some rather heavy loss-
es were experienced by grow-
ers of strawberries, tomatoes,
asparagus, cantaloupe, brussel
sprouts, cucumbers, tangerines,
grapefruits and oranges."
Undersecretary of Labor John
F. Henning said earlier this
trial workers for more than 30!
years.
H. S. (Hank i Brown. presi-l
dent of the Texas AFL-CIO. de-i
fended the strike by farm work-!
ers in the Lower Rio Grande!
Valley. His statements said the I
total unwillingness of growers1
to bargain collectively had'
forced workers to strike in an
effort to escape a life that is
"worse than peasantry.”
Suffocation
Is Ruled
Death Cause
The supersonic jet's laid down.
a deadly spray of 20 mill.ineler y <’1' ' ''n'1'~ a '’u?
cannon fire just 500 yards ahead v
of the two columns spearhead- j
ed by f inks, jungle-chewing i
bulldozers and infantrym an do-1
termined to neutralize the Com-!
munisf stronghold 32 miles j
northeast of Saigon. |
A. U.S. military spokesman j
said the operation which began
Sunday - the biggest of the war:
-so far had killed 1S!> gueml-j jj ,lf chairman of Sel-les Whitley and Stayton Ford, all
Ins, raptured 40 and detained , , , , v. ! , v. , ,,, , * _ ’ ,
256 suspects tor questioning.,60,1 Vl’ •Vm<'° b”'"'d N” l" 'wa.k'm,: ( harles> D. Ltncke
The two armored columns'^ reported seven men from "f Yorktown and Domingo B
tore up dozens of heavy forti-1 Dervitt and Goliad counties left
fications and swarmed across 'cuero Thursday morning for in-
7 DeWitt Men Leave
For Army Induction
De Witt Soil Board
Picks ‘ Outstan’
DeWitt County's outstanding
rancher and farmer were named
Wednesday by the DeWitt
County Soil and Water Conser-
vation District.
Bcnno Lippe was named the
"Comeback Farmer” and
Raetzsch Wagener "Outstand-
ing Conservationist Rancher.”
The selections were made by
the board of' supervisors.
The supervisors, ^rwin Met-
ting, Yorktown, chairman, Hei-
nie Bade of Cuero, vice-chair-
man, Hugo Bachie of Nordheim
secretary, Wilburn Pargmann
of Yoakum and Wagener. made
a tour of county farms and
ranches.
They were accompanied by
T. L. Edmondson of Cuero,
conservationist with the Soil
Conservation Service; Herman
Kerlick of Yorktown; Arthur
Baditig of Seguin, representa-
tive of tlie Guadalupe - Blanco
River Authority; James Met-
(See SOIL BOARD, Page 4)
ZIP Code Will Make
Package Mail Easier
and
Radio Day Set
By DE Students
The Cuero Distributive Edu-
cation class will hold their
fund-raising radio day event
Feb. 18. The students will re-
ceive all proceeds from adver-
tisements sold during their pro-
gram.
The students will act as an-
nouncers at Station KCFH from
J :30 p.m. until signoff that day.
Three DE students will com-
pete at the youth leadership
area conference Jan. 28 fa
Corpus Christi.
They are Alton Hardt, public
speaking, Gary Lassman, sales
demonstration, and Melvin
Squyret, job interview.
Retha Arndt, DE sweetheart,
and Cass Haetker, DE coordi-
nator will accompany the hoys
to the meeting.
An in-service workshop
train the teaching staff
teacher aides of Cuero Public
Schools, Westhoff Public School
and St. Michael’s Convent in
better usage of audiovisual
equipment and materials has
been scheduled for 2:30-4:30 P.
M. Jan. 13, Feb. 3. 10, 24. and
March 3 and 10, Supt. Marvin
Klrkman rei>orted today.
All sessions of the workshop
will be assigned to the Cuero
High School building with Dr.
A. F. Gross, Chairman Audio-
Visual Communications. Texas
A. & J. College, Kingsville, Tex-
as, and two members of his
staff serving as Instructors
and consultants.
Students not riding a school
bus will be dismissed at 2:20 P.
M. each day of the workshop.
Bus students will 1* required
to stay on the school campus
until regular bus route time.
Use of Zip Code will make it
easier to mail packages after
Jan. 15, Postmaster Henry
Sheppard said today.
New rates and a new system
for identifying parcel post zones
will go into effect on that date
j as provided in legislation sign-
I ed into law by President Lyn-
don B. Johnson on Sept. 20, 1966
the Postmaster pointed out.
The rate increases will aver-
age about 10 cents a parcel, the
Postmaster said. Starting July
1, the law provides for a series
of size and weight increases on
packages mailed between first
class offices. Cuero is a first
class office. The size and weight i
increases will be in five annual |
steps, the
1, 1971.
Use of Zip Code in the re-
cipient's address will enable the
sender or a mail clerk to quick-
ly determine the proper zone,
and thus the rate, for the pack-
age. The zones will be based on
the distance a parcel travels
between the 552 sectional cen-
ters in the country. Sheppard
said.
By consulting a simpl ' chart,
which is available at all
offices, the zone can be readily
identified because the first three
numbers of the ZIP Code
represent the center. This
method replaces a system in
which a directory often had to
be consulted to locate the pro-
per zone for each of the na-
tion’s 33,000 post offices.
The new rates will range
(See ZIP CODE, Page 4)
By NINA HARWOOD
(Special T<* Cuero Reconi)
KERRVILLE — A coroner's
inquest has ruled that Claudia
L. Mason, 50, whose scantily-
clad body was found in brush
on Cypress Creek a week ago,
died of suffocation.
Justice of the Peace Ray-
mond Orr said Dr. D. L. Galin-
do of San Antonio who perform-
ed the autopsy had informed
him that the woman’s death
was caused either by a hand or
cloth being placed over her
mouth and nose.
With foul play indicated, the
investigation is continuing here
by Texas Ranger Ed Doodeing
and other officials.
Formerly of Cuero, Mrs. Ma-
son was a licensed vocational
nurse employed tn the state
hospital at Kerrville.
The body was spotted clad
only in shoes and a pajama top
lying face down in heavy brush
close to the creek in Tivy Hill
by John L. Geeslin of Kerrville.
Geeslin had parked his car on
the road not far away and was
taking his dally two-mile walk
prescribed by his doctor.
Authorities said the woman’s
face was scarred, but this was
evidently caused by hef lteing
dragged in the brush. It wa:
estimated she had been dead
from 18 to 24 hours when found.
Officers said a single plate on
the dining table of Mrs. Mason's
apartment indicated she had
eaten her last meal alone. Her
1962 Ford was found parked on
a downtown parking lot there.
Duque of Edinburg.
Orders to send local men to
„ , _ , .., ■ - i San Antonio for physicals have
! | fr:
! "T !‘l , '7 V? ? Th"v «"* Henry Edward Selective Service is out of funds
'with thousands of tons of bombs j Tlierck c;„)ifu1. Glftnn L(I. The Lnduction caU {or th ,
ward Mueller of Nordheim; local board in February Ls for
Glen David Chilik, Craig Jam-'one man.
barely a mile ahead of the
troops in (lie closest support
operation yet reported.
The operation, Cedar Falls,
moved steadily forward after
the repeated strafing attacks
against the Communist snipers
and flushed out hundreds more
civilians who are being trans-
ported to a resettlement camp
further south.
As the operation moved
forward tiie troops uncovered
vast quantities of Viet Cong
supplies - ammunition and rice
- in the areas where the Reds
had ruled unchalleneged since
the days of French colonialism.
c&kct incaaBsa z&si sxr
■t
;T
y
mTntm'xaamE
PEOPLE in the NEWS:
IIAKRY K. BELL. 32, of Al-
buquerque, former employe of
the Albuquerque Federal Sav-
ings and Loan Association, was
Extra Busy Session
Is Seen By Newman
Cars Collide
Near Yoakum
There were no injuries ami
only light damage in a colli-
sion on U.S. Highway 77A Wed-
nesday near Yoaaum, Highway
Patrolman Gene Barnett said
Thursday.
Eddie Nickerson. 57, a Cor-
pus Christi longshoreman, at-
tempted to pass Minnie Kutac,
67-year-old housewife of Yoa-
kum, on the right shoulder of
the road.
Mrs. Kutac made a right
turn while Nickerson was pass-
ing. He said he thought she
was going to turn to the left.
Charges had not been filed
in the accident Thursday.
arrested by the FBI Wednes-1 ley.
day.
He was charged with misap-
plication of $24,967 in associa-
tion funds.
Leonard Blaylock, special ag-
ent n charge of the FBI’s Al-
buquerque office, said tne niis-
I application of funds was \ made
j between July 18, 1966, and* Sept.
27, 1966. He said deposits of the
association were insured by
the Federal Savings and Loan
Insurance C'orp.
u
He took his wife and four
children to Plains, Tex., and
made a new life5, using the
names L. E. and Leonard Lem-
Baptists Slate
Easter Revival
GEN. EARL G.. WHEELER,
chairman of the U.S. Joint
Chiefs of Staff, said today in
Saigon the Viet Cong do not
have a chance of winning the
war in Vietnam.
Wheeler, touring U. S. facili-
ties in Vietnam, said: “In my
judgment, any hope that the
Viet Cong and North Vietna-
mese may have had of
achieving a military victory is
gone.”
He said his Vietnam Comman-
der Gen. William C. Westmore-
land has "dynamic” war plans
for 1967 that will “keep
,, pressure on the enemy, keep
/ ' him off stride and maintain the
I initiative which we seized from
1 the enemy about a year ago.
Sanders, pas-
“TIIE ARTFULNESS of the
female is a matter of record
and of history of which the
court takes note without either
condemning or praising it.”
So spoke City Judge Herman
VVeinkrantz Wednessay fa New
York at the first test case of
whether, as one police officer
put it, New York is ready for
San Francisco’* topless wiat-
resses.
The trial resumes today In
New York City Criminal Court
with four girls and the
management of the Crystal
Room charged with Indecent
exposure. It is the first spot In
New Yoik to adopt the top-
less style of serving.
Patrolman John Napoli de-
scribed the attire of red-haired
Miss Ventura.
"She had on black stockings,
black tights and a belt. Her
body was exposed except she
wore a bat insignia pasties.’
FRANK SINATRA. JR.,
ep. J. T. (Terry) Newman
last coming on July of Cuero who represents DeWitt,
Lavaca and Gonzales Coun-
ties in the State Legislature,
reports from Austin that he
"can sec an extra busy period
ahead for the 140-day regular
session of the 60th Texas Legis-
lature.
“There will be many bills in-
troduced, possibly upward of
2,000 but only about one-third
of these will go through to final
post passage,” he advised The Cuero
The Rev. N. A.
tor of the First Baptist Church,. „ ,
Record. Thursday announced the annual, f<»l!owroi h.s singing father into
Senate members weie still1 revival services will begin business, now will follow
discussing the effects of Wed-1 Easter Sunday, March 26. |h „ the alter,
nesday’s so called ‘black i Guest preacher will be the j Youna Sinatro salfl Wednes-
bean” drawing in which 15 sen- j Rev. James Adams, pastor of j
ators fround themselves w i t h j Victoria’s First Baptist Church.
the expense and worry of J ------
running again in 19j68. TOURISTS SET RECORD
The house is expected to! LAREDO UPI — GUberto Gar-
eonsider curbing the power of
conference committees with
Speaker Ben Barnes expected to
announce committee appoint-
ments before the members go
home for the weekend.
za. immigration chief in ad-
jacent Nuevo Laredo, said 214,-
743 tourists entered Mexico
through Laredo In 1966, a 5 1/2
per cent increase over the
previous high of 203,605 in 1965.
Yoakum Couple
File Suit Here
A Yoakum couple filed a dam-
age suit in 24th District Court
Thursday seeking recovery of
damages incurred when they
were involved in an auto acci-
dent Dec. 23.
Mr. and Mrs. Adolph Jamelka
of Yoakum alleges James Hen-
ry Barber Jr. was negligent
when cars driven by Mrs. Ja-
melka and Barber collided al-
most headon on State Highway
111 near Turner Hall, about six
miles from Yoakum.
In their petition the Jsmelkas
claim the amount they will ask
cannot be determined. The
petition said the two are still
undergoing medical treatment.
2 Marines Convicted In Slayings
DA NANG, Vietnam UPI -
Two more U. S. Marines have
been convicted in the mutilation
slaying of two South Vietnamese
villagers last tall. It was learn-
ed today.
Marine Corps spokesmen
identified the Marines as QjI.
Stanley J. Lueske, 20, of
Gardner, Mass., and PTC.
Ronald A. Piatowski, 90, of
Trenton, N.J. Lueske seas the
leader of the reconnaissance
patrol allegedly Involved in fiM
shootings.
Lueske wee sentenced tn life
imprisonment at herd labor on
two charges at murder by a
ski was found guilty of
mutilation and attempted mur-
der and sentenced to 10 years
in prison.
A West Virginia Marine was
convicted and sentenced to life
Imprisonment in the seme case.
The South Vietnamese villag-
ers allegedly were shot to death
last Sept. 21 At least one of
the bodies was mutilated end
an attempt was mads tn con-
ceal both oorpses, Marine
nurses said.
Piatowski was sentenced
Deo. If and Lueske on Jan. XL
Marine Pfe Charles W.
martial. Piatfeo#- Keenan, * at Nitre,
had been sentenced to life at
hard labor.
His conviction drew the wrath
of his father, former Marine
Henry Keenan, who vowed he
was "going to take steps to free
my eon.”
Young Keenan told UPI he
felt he was made a "scapegoat”
end that ’1 don’t believe, in my
asm met, ted I received a fair
trial.”
The eoaviettens ef an three
are op for review before Gen.
H. Nteksrson Jr.eommander at
the 1st Marine Dtvtekn in
Vietnam.
foe two
villagers shot were seen running
from a house from which
gunfire was heard. He said they
were mistaken for Viet Cong.
Keenan declined to discuss
details at the ease pending the
review. But he Insisted Lueske
had given "Hit proper orders"
and added, "If I receive an
order, X obey It” ,
“I telt it was a matter more
ar leas that they (the Marine
Corns) bad to convict some-
one, Keenan said. He said toe
sort at "Incident” of which ho
was accused "gees on with
Inersaslng regularity” In Viet-
nam today.
day in New Orleans, he slipped
a ring on the third finger, left
hand of a green-eyed, blonde
airline stewardess he met while
flying to a night eiub singing en-
gagement one year ago.
Sinatra said his decision to
propose to Pamela Peterson of
Yardville, N.J., was “a spur of
the moment thing.” Miss
Pettersen, he said, had “no
idea” he was proposing until he
gave her the ring.
Sinatra’s father last year
married 21-year-old Mia Far-
row.
AN ESCAPED murderer who
lived an exemplary life for 20
years said In Austin Wednes-
day "it has been a nagging bur-
den never knowing all these
years when I might be separat-
ed from my family."
At an extradition hearing, he
was told he must wait a few
more days to find out if
he must return to 17 more
years In an Alabama prison.
Leaman E. Lemley, 57, was
a trusty at Atmore Prison In
1946 when he escaped by hitch-
ing a ride with two guards who
failed to recognize him. He had
served three years of a 30-year
term for shooting a man in an
flgument over Lemley’s wife.
A .to-YEAR-OLD woman was
in good condition Wednesday
night at a Norman Okla. hos-
pital after being locked In a
walk-in refrigerator for more
than three hours on the Oklaho-
ma University campus Wednes-
whojdav night.
Mrs. Lois Bidack was work-
ing fa the refrigerator in the
Kellogg Center when a fellow
employee accidentally closed
the door and left the building.
■Mrs. Bidack said she called
for help but was not
discovered for three hours. Fin-
ally, a night watchman heard
her screams at 10 p.m.
Fatalities
Number 3
DeWitt County recorded tore#
rural traffic fatalities In 1981
for an increase of one over toe
previous year, Lc. F. C. Carpen-
ter of the Texas Highway Pa-
trol Region HI headquarters la
Corpus Christi said Thursday.
The Information given by
Carpenter shows DeWitt bad
127 accidents in 1966 SS cam-
pared to 108 In 1965. The 31 ate
eldent Increase amounted to M
more injuries. Seventy-one par-
sons were Infored in 19M aa to
47 the previous year.
The month of December, 1IN,
•corded 13 accidents, M
nth* and * Injuries to Da-
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The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 73, No. 10, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 12, 1967, newspaper, January 12, 1967; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth695529/m1/1/?q=Price: accessed July 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Cuero Public Library.