The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 69, No. 293, Ed. 1 Tuesday, December 3, 1963 Page: 4 of 6
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J~L«“
died the otter
mm and Mm Minister of Qmt Britain.
his asst with a tamer ConosrvsUve margin than was xtv-
•1 •
IRi^
lawT woTmoTST mm.
■cratobhoard to malt teTto
oaoole In that. WPS aartt. .
'9&'b
Beautiful bougatovilto and
pyraeantha bushes "outdoing”
themselves in tte yard at Mrs.
Fred Mugg*. They ate worth
driving by to ate.
da, who once awaUowod polaon
rt it was completely safe (he
pumped out SO minuter later).
7£3Rtrsi,s
»er one—a etoeky, burly man
defended Wayne Lonergen in
. Xt to true, of course, tbat four years have elapsed
■ s
since that that and Oonaerrattte fortunes have un-
doubtedly declined in these years. Nevertheless, mr Alee
la the party's top sun and he would draw some extra
support from voters for that reason alone.
Thus the election makes it dear that Sir Alec will
have to produce in the next tmivo months it his party
(and most Americans favor the Conservative Party) Is
to maintain control of the government.
Obviously he has his task cut out for him, and on
his success or failure hangs much that will affect United
States and European foreign and defense policies. Sel-
dom can it be said that Washington Is pulling tor a cer-
tain political party, or personality but If this can ever
be said, It would now be said about Sir Alec and the
Conservatives.
get clipped regularly with contempt-of-court fines. Ae it de-
veloped, the judges ultimately got the same ldet and did begin
ejjjOlg him. ■ f -A
However, if you hang around Special Scciiona or Magistrates’
these months, mostly you see cut-and-dried. unemotional barris-
ters who deal only in facts and underplay their soanes even more
than Perry Meson. I suppose this la a good trend—but unfor-
tunately, It also la a dull and boring trend.
Numerous local! tes making
plans to attend the murder
mystery "Write Me a Mur-
der” being presented by Trail
at Six Flags Theatre in Vic-
toria beginning Wednesday ev-
ening. The theatre is a non-pro-
fit organisation and draws tal-
ent and membership from towns
throughout this area.
J. ROLAND, ON THE OTHER HAND. WAR A GASSER. ON
both sides of the bench. He waa a magistrate Here for 10 yeats—
for one term; he wee not reappointed—after Fiorello LaOuardla
appointed him, and you can get an idea of what a swinger he waa
when I tell you that he otoe aet bail at $100,000 for % man
brought before him In 104$, accused of having given the Nasi
Salute in a bar and grill.
Without Shakespeare to quote from, J. Roland would have
been lost In 1044, for instance, he had a minor civil auR brought
in front of him—and he settled it by instructing the participants
to donate a pint at blood each to the Red Cross, after having
filled the oourt with sonorous declarations from "The Merchant
of Venice." Sals waa, naturally, a one-time student at the Ameri-
can Academy of Dramatic Art
In 1051, his bench appointment not renewed, J. Roland re-
turned to lawyering—and the newsmen loved him. He defended
the notorious Pat Ward during the prostitution case involving
Mickey Jelke, the oleo heir, and he did everything but stand on
his head in court
In 1953 Sola appeared in court as a defendant J. Roland felt
it his inalienable right to park his car anywhere—so this time
he paid $250 for nine unanswered traffic summonses. He said
the stiff fines were an outrage—forgetting that during World
War H, as a magistrate, he boosted the Illegal-parking fines in
the vicinity at Belmont Park from $4 to $15, In his effort to dis-
courage racetrack attendance and help the war effort
to a “bug” and ill enough to re-
main in Sunday and Monday.
Ernestine McClung reporting
a nice Thanksgiving trip to
Michigan to see her family, but
wishing tha- it could have
been of longer duration.
Kaiser Steel And labor
It to too early to make final statements, and in fact
no editor could sensibly predict too much at this mom-
ent, but there are solid indications Kaiser Steel has
pioneered a successful approach to the labor problem
which often faces big business.
Steel, as the reader knows, has a long history of
labor troubles, strikes and shutdowns. Millions of dollars
in wages have been lost by union workers and others,
stool production has been disrupted and economic hard-
ship to owners and stockholders has resulted — on num-
erous occasions.
Eaiwr sought to circumvent this regular cycle, of
trouble some time back by sitting doom with union
loaders and working out a plan to divide with the work-
ers any savings which could be effected by automation.
ID the past year thousands of workers have receiv-
ed bonus Shocks from the steel producing firm, checks
which come from savings effected in utilising better
and more efficient production methods—automation!
This, it is reported, has helped business, for buyers
know production at Kaiser will be uninterrupted and
f>n order with confidence their order will be delivered
an time.
It has prevented costly shutdowns, strikes and the
bad results which come from such disputes. It to not too
much to say that in some ways the Kaiser program to
a model. It might not work in every steel plant and
might not prove satisfactory in every other industry,
but would seem to have possibilities.
Nesta Taylor and daughter
Helen of Mexico Gty arrived
in San Antonio during the
weekend ana are expected here
Tueaday evening fot a visit
with her parents, Byrd and
Mate! Davis going to Austin
today for a pre-holiday visit
with her brother and his fam-
ily.
« Copyright ISO. by Arcadia Houae.
Distributed by King Venture* Syndicate.
Congratulations to a couple
of birthday celebrants today:
Merritt and Al-
"d*t*n*mF,<n?5ed to1 hlTn ,lk4 *nU *warn,,BS over •! *w they were carrying and
* ‘ Vipt"%w wich hug. I were pushing nastily oack from
■raet aae replace them | Johnny outdid the Insect among tne sheep Another was
lahaM the more* wouldj struggling. Twice he aimoel cursing. ru» voice snnll with
r* -i-L--r*rr>>> J,,Meon’ broke away before a gun barrel anger and neipleee rage.
rain the ^rMM iMke! slashed alongside his skull He | She caught enough of what
J remain with Oen- fell oack. his need feeling at if i he was mouthing to onderatana.
wne qo » «• |, trad lust been cleaved, pain, spa the mgnt wind blew cold
* ‘arpet for e rifle shot bursting through the top of hie 1 Then e riel smashed against the
’« •“HU- speakers month and silenced
'aois where ne found As from a long way oft. Mm.
, Mn^t$<?£ Johnny heard the voice of Cy It was Johnny they had lug-
••raer Vaacom tad the Robbins, methodically cursing geo rut there. Johnny, probably
red'her* rirffn***” ota* his captors. No ode paid muen tied, certainly oeipiess. Now
abia tad attacked nun attention. It was Johnny they they were suiting to yell, try-
rT»refnrTTsntT>l"rt1|nnlltnt wer* after, and they bad bias. tug to run the sheep over ntml
Mism vi*i«n enabled They ascertained that ne was That much of then purpose
nV"baby* to' lh*nh®* h®0 UAdly *>«**- MM» UMt W cleat. Johnny Malcolm was
pleased them. They dumped the to die oeneath the noote at the
* ominous* Mart ‘wild bucket of tor over him and It sheep he'd brought to that land.
Male deliberately ins- soaked Into his clothing, clung Myra pried wildly and drove
^d,irias**M!et,St8?2 “d h*bL h« non* forw»«>- »n® "° one
»p leaded la two trains. The sack was upended, spilled tried to stop net. The sheep
■com was not the worst ’‘B * fluttering cloud. A torrent' were Hesitant and uncertain
ias and uaicoim. vivt- of feathers stuck and clung on- not quite ready to run The
-s-rb»' n?iiimu tre$M u* 1,4 waa 1,1(4 40,1,4 groteeque shouting men fell silent as some
mine r sheep tnirrKew j fowl. of them recognised net It wae
”partST>am that* d"<? i The ,h#eP *hled. but stupidly. Myra M’Oinnis, o* Vaacom—
lain hu> determination , not tar. They were pressed too slid they were at a loss.
> range at any eost... closely to move much. There She reached Johnny and was
IAPTER 19 were nearly five thousand head oft net none and Kneeling oe-
n.i____ - in the band, and the men were i side mm. crying out. cradling
t*"” dragging him to the center of his need In ne» arms, careless
a. u,e m*u * the tar, shocked and enraged
e nao guns on win. they dropp4<] Wm thal at mgnt ot the feathers, as un
.Hah' R hi. m4de their way tack out Wild derstandUig came.
“ rp . tcn t>n J118 yelling signaled the final act. She turned with a burst of
op mem from m- w ^ sheep. They were angei which would nave done
to be stampeded Into frenzied credit to any of the Vaacom:
more lorc*‘ movement, with Sim helpless in as some of the men pressed
that there was an mldat F closer.
J. ROLAND WASN’T A COMPLETE ZANY. WHILE ON THE
bench, he conducted a great campaign to get newspapers to drop
the then-current practice of identifying criminal defendants by
race or color. The campaign worked: today It’s pretty hard to
find a New Yolk dally that describes a prisoner before the bar
as a Chinese, a Negro or a Mesopotamian.
Mre. Harry
fred Koenig.
home Hint for today
French Etiquette
In France
cheese is seived after the main
course and before the dessert.
A whole cheese, such as Came-
bert, is set before the host who
cuts louse one portion which he
sets aside, then passes the
cheese to guests. This is to em
courage guests who might oth-
erwise tesMnto to cut into a
whole cheese. And also it tor
suras the host that the cheese
is perfectly rip*.
DAILY CROSSWORD
ACROSS DOWN 19. An ap-
1. Reaches 1. Lustrous pen-
across mineral dago
9. Head of a 2. Rate of 20. Encoun-
monastery movement tered
11. Yellowish 3. Sacred bull: 21. Check
fruit; Egypt. 22. Wine
South. V. S. 4. Girl’s nick- re-
12. Distress name ceptacle
light & Sound of 23 Good
IS. Drupelets whip cut- friend
14. Dlspha- ting the air 25. Bind
nous fabric «. Astern 26. Greek
15. Legal 7. Edible letter
action suit berry 27. Reputa-
16. Therefore 3. To foil tion: si.
18. Pieces out 9. Voided 29. Born
t$. Hitch- escutcheon 32. Spigot
hiker’s 10. Golfers' 35. Ok
signal mounds 36. Wanders
!l.Bark fiber 17. Retired about idly
37. Spokeit
38. Twining .
stem
40. Man’s name
41. Suffered
42. Good
Queen —.
44. Permit
46. Mimic
Erhard And War .77^
nhanresiw Ludwig Erhard recentlty spoke to NATO
military leaders and outlined his ideas on the defense y
effort of Went Germany. The speech was all-important, The moo
as fair as U 8. interests and policies are concerned. It J
was also gratifying in this respect. t*r, Saturr
First, Erhard rejected the De Gaulle theory of nat- On this <
lonaltam and nationalist defense forces, in the 19th cen-
jury pattern. He said the times demanded a Joint com- in ^
nteky defense arrangement and that Germany’s de- tiret tiruly
tense could be assured only through a multi-nation ar- **¥
rangement. in i#», t
Hie hm the NATO defense alliance was a model for P*ny raise
the world and called for it® continued strengthening,
Thus the new German Chancellor lined up squarely be- in 1948, i
hind the concepts of the White House and the Penta-
gon. low pumpA
This is vitally important to the United States be- Whittaker (
—Erhard is the key to continental success or failure __~
of the Atlantic community defense plan espoused in IllJlirOO
Washington. He is. in effect, quietly casting aside the
v»is arrangement championed and dominated by a nu-
ilear-armed De Gaulle.
DAILY CBYFTOQUOTE — Here’s how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW
Each day the code letters are different
A Cryptogram Quotation
TU BP VGLWSZGZK HBDSL NQL«
QRD XZQ IV BO LBSXYOZK Ug.
ESZWXZHS.-GWXVOXZ EUBRSUO
™",D
• ***•' W«t Skahwee Syadieate, to,
Soeond close postage paid to Onto. Thxhs
10 and 28 Vears Ap
inin ttreort Hies...
Doe. 3, tan
John Ronald Cbppedge wrote
a letter to hunts Clous and
wanted a b-b gun, a tool chest
Mrs. Fred
and other things
Bohne was elected the new pre-
sidmt of the Lutheran Ladies
Aid ---------- lire. Chkries Howe
had retunted to ter home to
Corpus anti altftr a visit hero
with Iter mother, Mrs. Joe Ca-
ul -...... Mi. apd Mrs. J. D.
Bremlette ted Mr. and Mrs.
S. C. Lackey toft tor a trip to
Monteney, Mexico ------ Ray-
mond Wjltocc and Charley
You don’t have to be ft Status Seek-
er to want to buy this one, when you
*ee and drive this beautiful, blaok
1959 98 Oldsmobile Holiday Sedan.
We took it in trade on a 1964 Olds-
mobile from a local 2-car family. It
it equipped with factory air, too. AH
we had to do is polish this one, and
•ut »y Lampase* Spring!”
I dropped What- (To Se Cow Irenes lanwrew;
itonatin oj Kias Feanues syoaieaw.
Home delivered by carrier: Onr Ytef W*
| months tUk. I month ».10 B> mail v
LRU tad Karnes Gonzales Lavaca and Jactaun
I SUO ato month* $4.50. one month lie- 8>
Texas One Year 09.00 ato month* &S0 I
tail outside Texas, One Yarn $12 00 6 months
-26 I month $1.10 Ssml WOteto Edttiom- By
I adjoining counties. One Year|4-W. * months
tee Vast UM. 9 monrhs $2 50.
i the Chy at Ctere and County at DaWttt
Cuero whh them ----------E. C.
Barnard attended the Texas
Masonic lodge meeting at
Waco — December draft call
waa heavy........Pres. Roosevelt.
Chtong Ka.-Shek and Winston
Dec. A MAO
Mrs. Ray Voelkel was to a lo-
cal hospital — Mrs. Tom
Moorman and Miss Veto Moor-
man were ut San Antonio visit-
ing Mrs. T, F. Wiley and child-
ren The latter returned to
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Mills, Lin. The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 69, No. 293, Ed. 1 Tuesday, December 3, 1963, newspaper, December 3, 1963; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth697685/m1/4/: accessed March 28, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Cuero Public Library.