The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 70, No. 10, Ed. 1 Monday, January 13, 1964 Page: 4 of 6
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THE CUERO RECORD, Mon., Jan. 43. 1964
Editorial—
Vital Assignment
| |B<Mppi!|Hnii|iiii............................
’ M
HOME TO ROOST
Thomas C- Mann, now finishing up his chores asj
JS Ambassador to Mexico, after being named Assistant I
Secretary of State for Inter-American Affairs on Sat- j
urday and given additional eminence as special assistant'
to the President on Wednesday, could well be the Wes- j
tern Hemisphere’s man of destiny.
P U 1.11 M 0 <i S'
I PMLLI IkmUIUN |
\vl
/
We'vt noted
poinsettias Id i
ol potted |
from the
President Johnson told his press conference that holiday'' am’ still looking prot-
he wanted Mr. Mann “to be the one man in the Govern-!
ty. Owners art- waiting usually
for favorable weather
ment to coordinate the policies of this hemisphere,” and; them out in the yard.
added: "As special assistant to the President to coor- ——
dtnate our policies In Latin America, he will be dealing j ^‘X-e'drll^
with many other American agencies and other inter-I ing duh-huun a cat named,
national agencies. We expect to speak with one voice who demands a
on all matters affecting this hemisphere. Mr. Mann. coffpo nlon,, v..;ih his im)w| of
with the support of the Secretary of State and the Pre- milk each morning!
sident. will be that voice ,, ~
Margaret Vnr Smith harvest-
ing enougl pretty white chry-J
hot yard fori
Cureh altar.’
as
wmnpH
SUCCESSION
/,
/
problem
Mr. Mann, who Is a Texan and a friend of the Pre-1
sident, is particularly well equipped for what could well i »anthemum.s from
Je the most important post that any American holds, i
Grace Episcopal
Sunday
A native of Laredo, Mr. Mann grew up on the Mexican
border and absorbed his Spanish with the mother ton- Cigarette smoking getting1
gue j: top hiflir.g in conversation dur-!
„ . , . n . ,, .. . ir*g the weekend Someone want-1
He graduated Irom Baylor University in 1934 and|im; H rt pipc and rigarl
practiced law in his home town until 1942. when he left concession fu, Cuew just
to be special assistant in the Foreign Service Auxiliary | °|' 1>>v‘ f:ar|'pf1:
:i
... .. Probably xnu'f dipping and to-
and was sent to Montevideo. Uruguay. Moving upji^,,^ ..hewing'will come back
through various jobs in the State Department, he be-1 into favor
came special assistant to the Assistant Secretary of
... . Heavy ic< on containers of
State for American Republics Affairs in 1947. His service vvatw. y^mday morning. Uo-
in Washington has since alternated with diplomatic as-jtards “land,-in' wearing appar-|
signments in Caracas, Venezuela: Athens, Greece; in 1 __
Guatemala, San Salvador and most recently in Mexico.! joan Ann Sheppard observing
In view of the highly explosive area in which the her birthday Sunday
new presidential assistant must operate, and in view;
of our long history oi errors from Tierra del Fuego to|«e had tor lunch today bark-
the Rio Grande, together with the looming crisis, it may t>onp ^ked sweet potatoes,
be important in days to come to know of Mr. Mann’s1 '
background On the record, he is highly qualified.
And in fact, he will have to be - or we shall have Happy btnhday to Mark-
whole new Soviet in our hemis- i Henntkp Vu. Nam. Elroy Pet-
'K
ft
vSr/
' * J''
<0
v
not just a satellite, but a
phe re.
j eps, Gave Weber. Bill Berning,
j of Austin and John Zimmer-
i ma.li of Houston.
Race Emotions
HOMK HINT FOR TODAY
& , AFTER the FINE WEATHER
li
j Tired of rummaging through
I hat boxes t< find the hat you
Ot* tftkt it/fim* Sttft tftkt
wtr/J-tffiirt tttptttt - tlvttftrt
tovtk: -domwb mm.
Jjr™ the noial niUlabed by Harper £ Row. Inc. Copyright ft
lt<63 by Michael Gilbert Distributed*by King Features Syndicate.
point
by
MICHAEL
GILBERT
. , . , , .. . | want to wear' Then cut a tw«>
One dividend of stirring racial tension and dlscrl- inch VV1()(, slo, dovvn tho si()p ((f
the liox and cover it Imm the
or other
, transparen- material. It mak-
roes, from the North to long prison terms for the death.1 :l ,^^1 window through
mination, was the murder of a young Southern soldier
recently in France. A military court sentenced two Neg- j
The sentences may be appealed.
i which it. view the
Between two races disagreement, some differences,
contents.
THE ALMANA
can be expected. But when racial tension reaches the
point where soldiers fight and iron rods are reportedly
used to kill a fellow American, wc have reached a poor -
state of affairs.
The same can be said when it comes to the killing
of Negro children in churches, the bombing of their fh<> jjq, ^Hy ^ ^3!
own homes. In short, the racial climate has become j to follow
electrically charged and dangerous. .Lew'^ww ' lS approachinK its I
It is in this atmosphere, that President Lyndon The evening stars are Venus, j
Jupiter and Saturn.
TI>om- born today include the
author of "Hags to Riches" j
novels, Horatio Alger, in 1834 I
On this day in history:
In 1733, Janies Oglethorpe
, , , . . imd soni- HO British colonists
and give thanks for their many blessings, and pledge grrjVPf1 a, charleston, S. c.c
themselves to restraint, equal opportunity and orderly j with a chartei to form a settle-
is. now (jeorgia.
»,»ham nAPprvicn j on youi ooinl of
i‘ioa-i)1) „trhne'tC„rr„.,r'i/^ ;V>ew. Thy Italians say ihey re
Ijengtxat prison in tile Tyrol rv- ; just governing them —maintain.
Even w,r ! >nB and order. The Germans
unri m n cache ne was observed o> say they're dtscrlmlnatlne
powprnii binoculars Th# earh^ con- . .. „ •
lamed t/ie (fiin currency and an j tiiwn And tftcy dot) t
ItaliHo pssspon ne buried three like it, particularly since there
tdnoruj/at“lens* warn I *** •bou* twr,ce “ many Gar-
e<l him e wap observed and AJbm 1 man#* aa Italians.**
fled 10 railroad tracks, whvrt an on-
coming tram forced hlrn to flatreo
ajrain*r a wire fence An tJbe cart
parsed
ntrn
a clr* atared direct |v
Tlie girt, uauia Hart, vaa travel
ing via the Koine-Liens express to
_ visit ner orothei Charles. British
Vire-Con.vuJ In Liena Another pas
By IJniteft l*ie«s International ,en^pr wn" American newspaper
~ , ’ 01110 Keller who r»ad struck up
iortay Monday. Jan T3 • •cquainian.-eahlp with her. . . .
CHAPTER «
^T LUNCU Joe Keller t&M.
Johnson has come to power. He has a magnificent op-
portunity to do much to heal the nation’s racial wounds,
to bring about a better climate of understanding, toler-
ance and good fellowship- "from sea to shining sea "
It is time for all Americans to pause and take stock
why don i Uiey let them join
Austria ’ i expect that's what
they want to do. len't tt?"
“It isn't nr simple aa that"
“It isn't," said Laura "Poll-
tlca never la Teh roe whnt'e
actually happening "
"The Germans are blowing
up pylons and raliwaya The
Italian federal police are trying
people have been killed yet. but
there are one or two atrocity
atones filtering out Pretty ugly
"it really is a coincidence,
both ot ua going to Liena I bet
you nadn’t heard of tt until
your brother was posted there "
“1 still muddled tt up with
Lin* even after he'd been there j ones, lately,
for some time,” Laura Harr | "Atrocities by whom f
responded “By the Italian police — on
“1 don t suppose one person , »uapeeled terrorists or on inno-
Ui fifty could tell you. offhand ]cent P«aaanta, according to your
It's an important little place. P0*01 ol view."
to stop them. There's been quite ment for communications am
a 16t ot shooting. Not many j another for light and power
government.
Few men who possess a monopoly believe too
strongly in the advantages of competition.
*. * *
You can't make driving safe for everybody but you
can almost make it safe for yourself.
* * V
Never give any advice, and you will be surprised
how easy it is to mind your own business.
* * *
If public speakers would prepare their speeches bet-
er, more people might listen to them.
* * ¥
Almost any politician will explain to you, in detail,
]ust why he is the man the people need.
merit which
Tn 1877. a literary critic for
the New York Times te>-me<! j
Murk Twain's. "Toni Sawyer" !
something "unnecessarily sin-!
ister ’
In 19G'. Hi esiden’ Sylvanus i
Olympio of Togo was assassi-
nated by insurgents in front r'
the U. S, Embassy in Rome
though. And going to be more
important (till If this trouble
ui the Tyrol develop*
"What u ihl*T“
“tfa <'ha bits a sort of white
Burgundy, only a bit more so.
“And ta this the bit ot trouble 150 Zou ,lke 11
"Yes 1 do. How doe* IJeiu
come into It?"
"If you'd look at a map," said
Joe 'you d see the answer to
vour—er—your noa* m leading
you to?"
The nltch, to the mkldJc, waa
(IJIjp (Euprn &?rnrit
10 and 20 Years Af>n
Irom Krmnl Files.
Bvn
nought a bottle of wine? Then
you could share tt with me "
"Well—'
10 YRS AGO
Jan. IS. 1MU
Johnny Johnson had moved
to Victoria Eugene Holzafe
fel was .icheuuled to receive i
his Bachelor of Science degree i trouble
from Sul Ro.-s College at Alpine j Nazli»
Pvt Ir! James Parr who’ ‘
was sUtionen at Fort Hood ivas t>he looke<, at lllm lo see If he
in Cuero visiting his wife and’ w**“Tl™* Apparently ne wan
"Vasia 7 V a.,. ___ >___
who got on the track of things inro h NorU) „ far „
'u"*,1 n0t. ShPr' ,th* Brenn" That-, the gap be-
lock Holmes a On the contrary. I lwepn ft)0I!e two J* Aft#r
^°at ,*nUb' that you're in 8outh Tyrol-the
1 .h ^ ' ,aid Joe [Brenner'a the Auatrian-ItaMan
Thai a the bit or trouble, border
Would it be a good Idea it I
where all the
“And that s
trouble ta?'
'Right But If you go east
.. .from ttie Brenner—which you
t^’e _ha^ * ,et}lea 11,6 real | can t. because there are too
many mountains tn the way-
bill come a bit farther south,
to Btxen - which the Italians
call Breaaanone—“ he shifted a
the Tyro! 1* the '
'Naxtr? You mean Austrian pepper pot —"and then go east.
Established In IM*
Published Each Afternoon Except Saturday anil
Sunday Morning
ftv THE CUERO PUBLISHING CO
lit E. Main Caere. Texas
toe.
Second dais postage paid at Cuero. Texas
TEXA#P
KfcS* ASSOCIATION
South Texas Press Association
Southern Newspaper Publishers Association
... „w„ waye ui One's up the
the> Drsvt from Vlllach—that a not
ACK HOWERTON ______ President and Publish*'
I C PETE’ HOWERTON _____ Vice President
MRS JACK HOWERTON ....................Secretary Treasurer
WILTON L. BINZ Assistant tn the Publisher & Adv Mjn
,.IN MTIX-S __ .... _. Managing Ed'tm
National Advertising
Texas Daily Press League Inc
Representatives
960 Hartford Bldg..
Dallas
Subscription Rates
Gaily A Sunday Home delivered by earner One Yeat ID a
six months $6.23. 3 months $3 25 I month $1.10: By man in
DeWitl. Victoria Gohao Karnes Gonzales l.avara anc Jacks,.n
Countjes. one veai $8.50 six months S4 5C one montl T5c Kv
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Offtetal Organ of the City of Cuerc sne County ot DeWttt
hahv son The habv arriv- w
ed T;pc :>0*n at Boh man Clinic j Nazi® | you'd get bock tnto Austria,
end Hos,,'a| I^g on Min-1 1 mea/1 G*rman Naztf Th* Austria etteks down a lot tar-
si re! was to ht stared Feb Ifi °la' tnje dyed-in the-wool Hell- j thcr there. That's the new dle-
loumy Dads set salaries! Hltier gan*' Plenty of the,r '•« jtrlc' «» Blen*. O.K. ?"
nf county offic.als Mr and " ,°ermany " I "O.K..' sold Laura, "hgt
Mrs Anthony War/cchaha had „ 'h "?•* “v«> to , what', epaeial about It ? Lou of
arrived home from Japan where dV*rlu’ ^e Tyrol ? ' ( countries jut out into ether
they were xe„ Aug 22 1953 at „ ,Any of Uwl* emintrl^"
Yokahanu, Mrs Beverly l“lrlesa n*M for '* hhe, -What'* special about It la
Marie had resigned Iron, the ^ ^nev don t UeaJ w prttty ^ cut off
local tacuity j ^ °* a8kM ln ttct' 1 from the reat of Austria. There
_ should guess most ot the Tyrol ar# two
20 YRS AGO the" ‘rUU BU’
Jao is. i»44 d"' P“8 UP “PPortifl'ty much ot a road, and it doesn't
Mr. and Mb V. L Hilhei toe Tyrol.■ »• favo' really lead into tha main part
and son arnved ftx>m Houston. ^ °’ ""
for a visit with his parents foreurner.x.'
Mr and Mrs Gus Hiller Jjeforr rorel,rners'
V’ L. was to enter the service
Mi. and Mrs C Klgin,
had purchased' the old Mugge j
homestead.....Cuero was I
blanketed by snow, the first |
since 1940
fell Cahal-zation
iupe Rivet was a proposed
post-Wdi fiuject It whs
like the TyroL It’* their favo-
rite sort of trouble—German
from the north. That a over the
Groat Glockner, one of the
highest main roads tn Europe.
And tt needs only one good rail
From, the novel published by Harper a Horn lac. Copyri*tit © 1W by Michael Gilbert
Oletrlbiited bv Klnr Fcsdires kvnillcata
’Are the Italians oppressing
them ?"
Separate from Innsbruck, the
la"
"Doe* your instinct augges
to you what's going to happen ?
asked Laura.
"Well.” sold Joe thoughtfully
U they stopped blowing up py-
lons and blew up a trainful o:
passengers, now I d call that ar
Incident Let ms fill your glass
“Thank you." said Laura.
When ah* got back to tier
carnage she found that th,
Chablts was combining against
her with lack of slaap She tank
back into (he corner. Outside
the autumn sunlight A anted a
cross tha Lombardy plain A
bead, full tn vlaw now stood th*
mountains. Bh* waa asleep be-
for* her chin tiad touched her
chest.
The Austrian customs official
who boarded tha train at Cor
Una waa a klndhearted mar
He looked of the girl sleeping
In the comer, looked at the la
bela on ner luggage, and sai<
to his Italian colleague, "She is
British "
"Evidently,” said the Italian
"Then she will have a British
passport."
“Inevitably."
They let her sleep on.
It was evening before she
stirred, remembered where she
was. stretched, and looked out
th* window
They were running down a
long narrow valley, a deft u
the mountain* holding railway
rood, ana nvs». Where they
were tha sun had set, but n
was still crimsoning the hlgi
tops and casting a reflects,
glow into the valley From th
atraam on evening mist »i
billowing up, creeping over th,
meadows, blanketing the roan
A man waa standing besld
the track, just inside the bound
ary wire. She had the Illusion
that be waa looking straight at
har.
(To Be Continued Tomorrow)
WASHMtrrON
MARCH OF EVENTS
SECOND $ESSION TEST
OF CURRENT CONGRESS
LEGISLATORS SMI
FROM INACTION 4
By HENRY CATHCART
Central Press Washington Writer ,
XT WASHINGTON With opening of the second scrJion of )
W 88th Congress there is a deep feeling ln Washington t|
it is the beginning of a cruoial testing period. Not only IS
considered n time of testing between Congress end the Johnf
administration, but a test of Congress as un institution, as vl
Most ot the attention will be focused on the pcrXormancd
the .Johnson administration, for It is here tf
1 the 1964 presidential campaign will have;
A < base. President Johnson has but a few *h*
Jf. months to make his mark across the naH
and the only feasible course he can folloMf
to use Congress as the vehicle.
Privately, leaders on Capitol Hill exp«
that he will do better than his predjcessof
the matter of cajoling legislation out of^
congressional' mill. They base this view i
on the late President Kennedy's inefflck
which w as far ft on, the case, but rathet*
the history of the Johnson performance wjh
he served' as Senate Democratic leader dull
the Eisenhower years.
As a matter of fact. Johnson ha* evm
thing going for him. To the extent that Cl
gre.ss accepts his program he can chitm
leadership victory. To the extent It opposes, he can l&mbaet \
recalcitrant opposition and arouse blocs of voters to hia cult
In a deeper sense, however, Coil cress faces a test of Itself
an institution, in the aftermath of the 1963 session -longest
peacetime history-legislators aie smarting over w-ideaprf
criticism of its inaction. Faced with an e!e« lion year when
of the House anti one-third of the Senate seats luc to be vol
.11.1.'a is
'mm
Tha Capitol
Will it fall
short tlr/iiin f
upon, the spurs are there to galvanize Congress Into action.
• FAMOUS SI.ATE-- Some years ago at Los Alamos Dra. 1
ward Teller and Stanislaus Ulam were puzzling over practk
application oi the physics theory behind the hydrogen bomb,
one of those moments of sudden light, Ulam stepped up to
blackboard and with chalk scribbled out a form ula that eolf
the problem of how to bmld the bomb.
That famous blackboard, a very prosaic-appearuig. rlasaro#
I type of thing, now rests in the rooms of the Joint rongresaiof
| Committee on Atomic Energy. No one will nay how the slf
! was euchred away from the Los Alamos atomic installation $
they're awfully proud that it now is located on Capitol Hill.
Anyone can see it, but if you should go there hoping to rei
the formula that was written there, you're due for a disappoir
ment. The blackboard has been wiped clean.
,of snow to block (hut So most
ot Uu yea* an Uuisbrucker whe
wants to get to Liena goes ovet
the Brenner — which is always
open —ana through Italy."
And now he can't?"
“He asui, but It'e much mor*
difficult. When the trouble start
! ed. Italy tmpoxed special vlsa.-
there are more Germans. I and a lot of new restrictions
tightened up th* customs tor
mallties. and so on. Tf the situ
au m gets worse, they may clos,
the Brenner altogether Thei
Llcnt is out on s limb. That >
wny a few months bock they
handed then over n bit ot an
tooomy. They control their ov,
Landes police and security now
and have got a separate depart
• CONGRESSIONAL RECORD The Congressional Reef
faithfully prints ail of the , u ,al doings of the Senate q
House ln session. It also carries u lot of useless Guff Insets
by legislators as a privilege to them.
Recently, Sen. Kenneth Tl Keating, of New York. iqoMUfil
executive who had been cited us "man of the year by an indual
magazine Renting had the citation entered tn
the Congressional Record,
What he did not realize U that a letter which
called the matter to Keating's attention and
naked him to make the insertion was inadvert, at
)y attached to the citation The letter was tn- *
tered Into the Record as well as the citation Tic la'ter {
from a Washington resident who th miked KraUti T <cr the “
propriate gesture" and "for your many courtesies ar 1 vo.ir he
Keating's staff wonders how their man will take ,1 wlief
learns their clerical error caused disclosure that he was ntlHi
the Retold as a means of doing favors for a man who is
even a constituent. 1
Com Of
Tee Mis
FHroedT
w
c
\'K'A
!'N
The Italians were frying to stop Uie Germans from blow*
Ing np pylon* and railways.
(Illuitrslloo by A. 8. Picker)
Try and Stop Me
-By BENNETT CERF--
CXJRMER Mayor John F. Hylan suffered a minor dab«l
* the day he delivered a speech that he had not bothfa0
to read over in advance. Along about Page Five he carat’
phrare that read.
one
Thia reminds me of my
'avorite story about a
“iveling salesman."
It developed that the
■layor had never heard
die joke before, and he
■aughed so hard his glass-
es fell off and smashed
on the floor. The chair-
man of the dinner fin-
ished the speech for him.
wiiJMsTiTIwy Bet On
IV Lawyers
proposer' by Congressman J. J.
1 GLASGOW. Scotland iL'PD
Minst.cffi in a measure calling ^_
for the qx .il i,., of $120,000,000 Glasgow Isjokie John Banks laid
for rive, , no harbor improve- odds o' 20-1 Sunday tha! Perry'
wrong. But he was right and
Perry, who last lost ahou, two
years ago, won again.
"We'll bet on anything,"
Banks said, adding that the
money would go to charity.
telephone cr s tin
ment* duougliout the nation a! j Mason would win his case
the end of lhe war A ” 1
Sawyer* ixa. chairman of the
Foiir*b War I--'n dcie* i
SECOND GHUJ)
HOLLYWCXDD (UPl)
Pierre Boulc, the map
who wrote "Bridge on the
River Kwal,” haa Just had
a new book published in
boy was named David Micliael -
MUs Brown jt the wife of tele- , Ce Cialed 4 lie Planet of the Monkeys," which will be put C
vision director Moik Sandrich; 11 to.‘.^M^ted. Baule's n<
tOMMl.N'IRTb DENIED
AUSTIix 4UPD— The Com-
munis Party USA, was denied
„ Ac‘ Informatior, or, how it could,
^re.ss \ ancssa Brievn gave buih1 enter candidates in Texas eler-
Gen Waggoner
revealed.
A B , television Sunday night.
Bettors put up more than 100 Saturday to her seeorvl child, * j ,Jons A'n"
pound* f$280, that Banks was boy, at Temple Hospital The | Carr reves
story is a shocker. The time is several hundred years heticc-
and mankind haa retrogressed to the pithecanUiropoid etage- •
creature with no brains to speak of, orating from instinct Tl
monkeys, meanwhile, have become so sman from imitating hi
mans and playing parts in innumerable experiments that the
now run the work.. They have put the men into cage* and it
the monkey* who are conducting the experiments on human
Pretty prospect to contemplate!
o 1»M. by Beuneit Cert Distributed by Jtlag Features bmlloata
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Mills, Lin. The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 70, No. 10, Ed. 1 Monday, January 13, 1964, newspaper, January 13, 1964; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth697091/m1/4/: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Cuero Public Library.