The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 68, No. 292, Ed. 1 Friday, December 14, 1956 Page: 4 of 8
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AUSTIN. —Mutatim turn Add-
ed twa more “wvhsT Sterna to
the 1st af toereaood money de-
mands awaiting the Incoming
Legislator*.
Flret at the new Commission on
Higher Education strongly reean-
meads tefautag oailage faouMy
■ YOUR Money STAY9H
inCUERO
whan y®8» mk
CUERO I
SAVINGS
STAMPS I
vnnH
salaries in line with
year* «f tea»
tion.
Texas taltiau ehsrgM of $» a
semester tar Instate
$150 for mateiden, lags tar behind
those of ether states. Bat swb
srouM^neet oalr a’portion of the
east at eatery raises, it
atoned.
Public asheoi teaahsrs aloe
higher pay. They tern the need
an “immediate estate* end ash
that the Legislature treat it as an
Teacher salaries were last rais-
ed in m State minimum wage
for a beginning teacher with
bachelor’s degree Is S2.S0S per
year.
Texas State Teachers Associa-
tion's House of Delegates also
called tar a toll study of the
“Cavinos plan" to earn school fl-
State Auditor
C. H. Cavnesa proposed some 18
ago that mty Tl% per
eent at revenue from aehool-own-
ed oil lands be invested to) the
permanent school fund. This
would free 72% per eent at this
an oatimated $30,000,000
to $35,000,000 a year, to asset cur-
rent expenses.
BEATING THE PLEASURE DRIVING BAN IN HOLLAND
H8RS*$ NOW one motorist Da beating Holland’s ban on Sunday pleasure driving. Ho hna tea auto
pulled into Went Germany, whara there la no ban, by a home. Then he oan fill ’er up and pleasure
drive to ble heart's content. Town la Zoll. The ban waa decreed «ft» clocking at the Sues canal
brought ea n gasoline shortage. fintarmtioaaU
Incoming Gov. Price
GREAT WESTERN OFFERS
INSURED SEASONAL LOANS
Great Western hw
«ver to yenre and
er Jest
A. f.
da. are
GREAT WESTERN
LOAN a TRUST COMPANY
1M B.
said he believe* there are a mul-
titude at other problems with
which the legislature can deal
more effectively than school inte-
gration. He favors local determi-
nation. rather thah state-wide leg-
islation.
At the outoet of a series of eon-
feraneas with lawmakers, Daniel
Issues: (1) ov-
(3) narcotics
(S) teacher pay raises,
(4) water eanaarvatioo, 45) lobby
Carr.
psalter of the House, tools that
people to each watershed area
should devise plans to meet their
own unusual eondltiona and carry
ms out with possible aid of
state credit He termed “futile”
any further effort to finance wri-
ter conservation with a state-
wide tax that would be fair to all
ales limitation act
la up for its first legal test
Stale Supreme Court is consid-
ering a oaaa stemming from the
19BB law which prohibits grocers
tales of Items ad-
vertised at below-cost prices.
are a San Antonio
who defied the law and the
San Antonio Retail Grocers Asso-
ciation which sought enforcement
through a court injunction. A San
Antonio district court refused to
Injunction.
for the defendant
contend the law is unconatitution-
*Reds Conviction
JOHN J. KILLIAN, Sl-year-old
labor loader, la shown in Mil-
waukee, Via, following his
conviction on two counts of
falsely denying ho aver was e
Communist when be filed an
affidavit Dec. 11. 1952. with
the NLRB. The conviction cli-
maxed a five-day trial by a
Jury at six men and six wom-
an. Killian faces a possible pris-
on term of 10 years and fin* of
$30,000. {Intemattonait
al and discriminatory. It applies,
they point out, only to grocers
and not to other retailers selling
the same merchandise.
Association attorneys counter
that control of “loss-leader” sell-
ing is needed “to keep the big
These included the State Beard
of Morticians, Agriculture De-
partment, Austin State School,
Surplus Property Agency, State
Board of Medical Examiners,
State Parks Board. and Waco
State Home.
Cavness noted that certain sec-
tions of the General Land Office
are understaffed, but present per-
sonnel seemed qualified.
WOTfiJ Strategy-
Banning of alchdic bevenfees
in grocery stores will be the
prime legislative goal of the
Women’s Qaristian Temperance
Union next year.
A petition to this effect, bear-
ing ItyMMO signatures, was ex-
hibited at the WCTU convention
In Austin.
A resolution, aimed at the
Legislature, urged that public
text books “have no discussion of
moderation, but simply teach the
students th® bad efteeta of
hoi."
A Mac, CMa.. man noted th»„
may have a ‘bonanra and wMh
SKUNK WCBMJER0 _
"S-aiE a d. -am-pjsss^sii ?
United Preaa dispatch brought No. 1 skunk hollow ___
glVA dli «r. a** '
A United Preaa dispatch brought
plenty of advice to a Hot Springs,
S l£' dCteh toid of the city’s KTiSSfc around town
skunk troubles. The animals
No. 1 ’skunk hollow’---
A York. Pa., man suggested the
nuisance could be abated by scat-
.. . mi ______ Jl IaMIM
came Into town from the weed*
at night A local taxpayer wrote
the editor that the town might
well be nicknamed “Skunk Hol-
low” and advertised as the
'stinkingest town in the United
States.”
'The American sense of hunter
is known universally,” he wrote
the editor.” and such a claim
might be Just the ticket to bring
curious and interested people of
this fun-loving country into Hot
Springs,
DO-nr-YouasEur note
OAK PARK, Mich. _(UP)-
When officer Walter J. Andrus of
the public safety department
drove his police car into an auto
driven by Robert La Chance. An-
drus issued Mmelf a ticket for
not yielding the right of way.
The first Sunday paper In tba
United States was the Sunday
Monitor which was published
In Baltimore. Dec. ». 110.
WHY NOT GIVE HER THE GIFT SHE
WOULD CHOOSE HERSELF -
| man from gobbling up the little
man.”
j Shivers Honored—
J More than 2,000 Texans and a
distinguished ”ex” paid tribute
to Gov. and Mrs. Allan Shivers
) at a mammoth dinner party in
! Dallas.
Uresident Eisenhower se
personal greetings. Leading
statesmen and businessmen sa-
luted the man who in a few weeks
ends a record-breaking tenure as
chief executive. Mrs. Oveta Chip
Hobby termed Mrs. Shivers an
expert in “glass house living.”
Wit abounded. Example by Su-
preme Court Justice Rad Walk-
er: “I came not to bury Shivers,
I came here to praise him.”
State Regulation Championed—
A tty. Gen. John Ben Shepperd
has gone to bat against federal
regulation of Texas insurance
companies.
Shepperd filed a friend of the
court brief in behalf of American
Hospital and Life Insurance Com-
pany’s fight against a Federal
Trade Commission ruling.
American Hospital is a Texas
firm. Its case has now reached
U. S. Circuit Court at Appeals In
New Orleans.
Shepperd contended the McCar-
ran-Ferguson Act specifically au-
thorizes states to regulate insur-
ance to the exclusion of the feder-
al government or any at its agen-
cies.
Auditor Reports—
State Auditor C. H. Cavness'
lengthy annual report on atatede-
partments unearthed no scandals.
But he suggested several agenc-
ies toe the mark a little better In
their financial record keeping.
The aaachta* to hna
Betty what yes need
backward and *
• raATun
acre taste
totemtmao
• F1ATUKI
Sofia
• FiATOR!
wttij SSST Voo'wjj
to «5ai to torn Oaa
ATLAS SEWING CENTERS
tea
CM _______
Fin fSE£ Heme gggJLSS
prime at Ste.SO la
ATLAS
SEWING
CENTERS
405 Mesquitte St.
Corpus Christi, Texas
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•••••••••••■••
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•••*•*•#
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The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 68, No. 292, Ed. 1 Friday, December 14, 1956, newspaper, December 14, 1956; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth695729/m1/4/: accessed March 28, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Cuero Public Library.