The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 67, No. 241, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 12, 1961 Page: 1 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Texas Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Cuero Public Library.
- Highlighting
- Highlighting On/Off
- Color:
- Adjust Image
- Rotate Left
- Rotate Right
- Brightness, Contrast, etc. (Experimental)
- Cropping Tool
- Download Sizes
- Preview all sizes/dimensions or...
- Download Thumbnail
- Download Small
- Download Medium
- Download Large
- High Resolution Files
- IIIF Image JSON
- IIIF Image URL
- Accessibility
- View Extracted Text
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
For All
Departments
Of Tho Record
DM CR 9-3131
: ivtdtl i* z.orv 5 c ^; r.:
iO'£w:
Slfp (ttufro S^roro
" “A NEWSPAPER REFLECTS ITS COMMUNITY"
The Weather
«
SOUTH CENTRAL TEXAS —
Cloudy to portly cloudy and con-
tinued warm through Friday.
Widely scattered thundersbow-
ers Friday aad In the south por-
tion today. Highest today 85 to
h&. Low tonight 68 to 75.
VOL. 67—NO. 241
CUERO, TEXAS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 12,19C1
6 PAGES - PRICE 5e
f^Town Talk
Under ordinary circum-
stances, a knock-down-and-
drag-out between two maj-
or railroads over control of
a smaller line In the Far
West 1,500 miles away from
here would hold little In-
terest for Cuero.
But what makes this bat-
tle nut West of some Inter-
est at present here in Cuero
IS the fact that one of the
major contending railroads
Is the Southern Pacific Co.
And the Southern Pacific
Co. Is the parent corporat-
ion of the Texas and New
Orleans Railroad, which
seems hell-bent on aband-
oning 63.92 miles of branch
lines in the Cuero area a-
galnst the determined op-
position of the seven cities
involved — Cuero, Yoaicum,
More Texas Demos
Change Allegiance
To Republicans
AUSTIN (UPI) — Texas’ political pace intensified
today with the announcement of more defections from
the Democratic party to the Republican party and a
widening rift between Oov. Price Daniel and Atty. Oen.
Will Wilson.
Daniel called Wilson’s statements before a State
Democratic Executive Committee meeting Monday “fal-
se” and “desperate.” Wilson said Daniel wanted Navy
Secretary John Connally to run for governor while Dan-
iel runs for lieutenant governor. He said this would let
Daniel control state government without running for a
fourth term.
Yorktown, Shiner, Nord-
helm, Kenedy and Runge.
What is going on in a hearing
at San Francisco before the In-
terstate Commerce Commission,
with the Southern Pacific and
the Siyita Fe Railway as the
major contending lines over
the control of the Western Paci-
fic Railroad, has at least one
point of similarity with what is
going on in this area.
That point rente on what
seenia to be a rather com-
plete breakdown In the pub-
lic relationa rating ot the
Southern Paelflr. Thla rat-
ing la pretty low right now
In the Cuero area, and It
aectna lo be Jt*it about aa
low out In the area nerved
by the Western Pacific Rail-
road. which la paralleled la
■tome Instance* by the llnea
of the SP. That would aeem
to Indicate that the public
relationa pollclea of thla
giant corporation are conal-
dcVabiy below par just a-
bout anywhere you might
want to ask.
This information comes out in
a release from Len Cassell, the
energetic public relations repre-
sentative of the Santa Fe who
operates out of the railroads
home office at Galveston.
Cassell’s release, which is
dateitned San Francisco, starts
aff as follows:
‘•Aa the long, grit-ling pub
lie support campaign waged
by Hanta Fe and Southern
Pacific In the Western Pact-
He control case neara con-
elualon, Arthur C. Jenkins, a
San Francisco trans|(ortat-
Ion consultant, testified be-
fore Interstate Commerce
Commission Examiner Pnul
C. Albus that Santa Fe sup
port lopped Southern Paci-
fic’s by a ratio of two lo
one.
"Jenkins, whose engineering
firm conducted an exhaustive
analysis of public support inter-
est in the case, introduced evid-
ence Jhat of 8t>0 petitions of in-
tervention formally filed with
Uie ICC. 589 (or 08.5 per cent)
supported Santa Fe and only
271 (315 per cent i tavored Sou-
thern Pacific.
"Jenkins also found that
Southern Pacific was aot
popular la Its own backyard.
Of Santa Fe support, 64 per
rent came from Socvhern
Pacific territory while one
per rent o( Southern Pacific
support came from Santa Fe
territory.”
This last item of (he report
would seem to be extremely re-
vealing — that is to say, that
Southern Pacific was least pop-
ular among the people who had
occasion to know this corpora
tion best.
This survey of public support
covered six stRtes, and agencies
which had filed petition! of in-
tervention with the ICC included
county boards of supervisors,
city councils, public districts
and commissions, chambers of
commerce, agricultural organi-
zations and labor organizations.
Santa Fe led in the petitions by
a score of two to one.
Public relations is a field of
activity in which huge corpora-
tion* such as tire Southern Paci-
fic can be expected to spend
million* of dollars every year.
The vital importance of public
relations is constantly stressed
in the operations of such vast
enterprises.
But the soriy state to which
the Southern Pacific's public
relations rating has descended
is well reflected in what is go-
ing on out West.
If such a survey were to he
conducted here in the Cuero ar-
ea, there is little doubt that the
public relations rating would be
•VW considerably lower.
1
AFL-CIO
And Hoffa
Square Off
NEW YORK (UPD- AFL-
CIO President George Meany to-
day characterized as "the fun-
niest thing I’ve heard in a long
time” the threat of Teamster
President James R. Hoffa to sue
Meany for defamation of char-
acter.
Meany, who Wednesday was
empowered by the executive
council of the AFL-CIO to give
charters to any dissatisfied lo-
cals which tweak away from
Hoffa, had termed teamster
leadership “corrupt and crim-
inal.”
Meany made his brief com
ment as the executive council
began a final day of sessions
in preparation for the AFLCIO
national convention in Miami in
December. It was to hear re-
ports today on inter-union juris-
dictional disputes and discrim-
ination against Negroes within
unions.
Hoffa and the AFLCIO were
squaring off for a head-on fight.
Hoffa said he would ask $1 mil-
lion damages and make Meany
go to court to “prove his charg-
es.”
Hoffa faces a posible court
test himself. He was reindicted
Wednesday on mail fraud charg-
es alleging misuse of more than
$500,000 in union funds on a Flo-
rida land development scheme.
“It is sad," Daniel said, "that
any man honored with a high
public office by the people of
Texas would conduct himself so
desperately as the attorney gen-
eral did before the State Demo-
cratic Committee. Any fair
minded person who reads the
entire statement is bound to
know it is false and a concoction !#»•■# , a
of his imagination.” ! Uln jCOUlS UR6
In Austin, three prominent cit- ... . •
izens announced that they have Ql Ul AQ6IKI6S
joined the Republican party.
The three are W. H. (Spot)
Collins, insuranceman who man-
aged the 1960 Democratic prim-
ary campaign of Breckenridge
oil drilling operator Jack Cox; I
Dr. Stuart A. McCorkle, a Uni- j
versity of Texas professor, and
W. D. (Bill) Youngblood, form-
er member of the executive
staff of former Gov. Allan Shi-
vers.
The converts appeared before
a Travis County Executive Com-
mittee meeting to announce their
change.
ROCKET EJECTION—A new life-saving, rocket-powered ejection capsule carrying a life-
size dummy with moveable Joints shoots up from a B-58 Hustler bomber at Edwards Air
Force Base, Calif. The capsule Is designed to shield three airmen and give safe ejection
in case the bomber runs into trouble on takeoff. In this test, the 10,000-pound-thrust
capsule shot 250 feet into the air. The Hustler is the world’s fastest bomber.
50,000 In U. S.
UnitsT oEurope
In Berlin Stand
WASHINGTON (UPI) The the first 500 troops at Cher-
Defense Department has order-i bourg, France.
ed another 10,000 troops to Eu- _________________________
rope, bringing to 50,000 the nu- WASHINGTON (UPI) — The
mber of men to be sent over- Defense Drplirtm<.nt ^ ^
hon* in° Berlin “ P°*1' th“ Active Service System
Within little
month from n
more than a!
jw. all 50,000-
provide >0.000 draftees
the Army in November.
The department said
plus hundreds of thousands of j neMla the Navy. Air Forc6
tons of equipment should he in | !lnd Mari„,. Corpi| wnu|d
Europe
The big movement began on
Wednesday with the arrival of
Presents Credentials
BRASILIA (UPI) — U.S. Am-
bassador Lincoln Gordon is
scheduled to present his cre-
dentials to President Joao Gou-
lart on Oct. 20. He succeeds
John M. Cabot.
Lunch With Queen
LONDON (UPD — President
Leopold Senghor of Senegal and
his wife will lunch with Queen
Elizabeth at Buckingham Pal-
ace on Oct. 25 during their five-
day official visit lo Britain.
I’he Senegalese leader is sch-
eduled to arrive here Oct.24.
PERRYTON (UPI) — Five
Perryton officeholders, charg-
ing the Democratic party has
“forfeited all claims to the loy-
alty of conservatives" announc-
ed Wednesday they are switch-
ing allegiance from the Demo-
cratic party to join the Repub-
lican ranks.
Ochiltree attorney Bob Close,
school board members Gordon
Shackleford and Dr. Roy K.
Sanford, and city councilmcn
Charles F. Taylor and Walter
LaMaster said they were de-
fecting to the Republican party
to “stem the tide of socialism."
At the same time, a Young
Republican Club was organized
in Perryton, H. C. Brillheart Jr.
was elected chairman of the loc-
al group.
Girl Scouts of America I"
one of the participating ag-
encies in the Cuero United
Fund, which is now conduct-
ing its annual drive. A *11.-
000 goal is being sought.
The t»«l membership of
(iirl Scout units in Cuero is
Is 63 girls and 19 adult lead-
ers organized in three
troops, two Brownie and one
Intermediate.
A neighborhood committee
is In the process of being
organized.
The Girl Seoul movement
is a |tart of the world wide
Association of Girl Scouts t
Girl Guides. It was arganlz-
ed In the United States 1b
191*.
The nation • wide mem-
bership totals 3,419,138. This
includes 1,319,660 Brownies,
1,223.934 Intermediates, 102,-
136 seniors and 7*3.408 ad-
ult leaders.
National offices arc locat-
ed In New York City. The
Golden Crescent . .Council,
which includes Cuero. has
headquarters in Victoria.
$1,607 In
Fines For
Rayburn Reported In ’September
I A frvtal /xf tl 4ifV7 irs fiHAn ..
‘Miraculous’ Rally
con-
tinue to rely on volunteers
through November.
The same Army quota pre-
viously was set for October.
The total of draft quotas set
since the start of the Berlla
crisis — the four months be-
ginning in August- — now
stands at 78,000.
DALLAS (UPI) — House | unchanged since the change for
Speaker Sam Rayburn, 79, dy-j the better.
ing of -ancer, was making a
“miraculous” recovery today
from pneumonia which put him
in a coma only 24 hours ago.
John Holton, Rayburn’s ad-
ministrative assistant, jubilan-
tly described Rayburn’s impro-
vement as miraculous. A bull-
etin issued by Rayburn's doc-
tors at 9 am., said:
"Mr. Rayburn is out of coma.
He is definitely improved and
the major change occurred this
morning. He looks and appears
stronger this morning and re-
cognizes hin family and asso-
ciates. His temperature is nor-
mal. His pulse, blood pressure
and respiration have remained
Outlook For Cool
Weather Fades
Rayburn's basic ailment—the
cancer which has spread thro-
ugh at least half his body, re-
mains the same. There is no
hope.
Doctors hoped that by giving
Rayburn an experimental can-
cer remission drug they might
slow down the progress of the
malignancy enough to allow
him to return to his Bonham
home to spend his last days.
They had given him three
doses of the special drug w hen
the pneumonia struck Wednes-
day. They had to stop the drug
and fight the pneumonia.
His temperature went up to
103 degrees. He was in coma.
But with the help of a breath-
ing machine, oxygen and anti-
biotic drugs. "Mr. Sam” began
to recover.
Later, Defense Secretary Ro-
bert S. McNamara ordered an-
other 10,000 including the 2,500-
A total ot $1,607 in fines was I man 3rd Armored Cavalry Re-
giment. whose fame goes back
to the Indian Wars, and 11 Air
Corporation Court
during September, according to j National Guard ‘ighter squad-
Englidi Workshop
House Committee
Sets Area Hearings
Services Held For
Mrs. Arthur Thigpen
Services were conducted at
Freund Funeral Home Thurs-
day for Mrs. Arthur Thigpen,
a monthly report released Thur-
sday by Police Chief Jimmy
Cowing. Included in collections
were $334 in traffic fines.
During September, the police
department made 32 arrests,
issued 31 traffic tickets, issued
53 warning tickets and deli-
vered six emergency messages.
Officers investigated 15 mo-
tor vehicle accidents which in-
jured three persons and caused
property damage estimated at
$3,275.
Police were summoned 14
times to handle dog and cat
nuisance calls. Officers handled
186 miscellaneous calls.
The department provided es-
cort service four times, lo-
cated four missing persons,
were called out three times
due to loose cattle and horses,
made five fire calls and dis-
covered nine open windows and
doors during routine patrols.
Officers investigated three
thefts and tvVo burglaries.
They picked up six prisoners
! for other departments.
rons to Europe.
The 3rd Armored, commanded
by Col. Donald H. Cowles of
Westfield. Mass., is now at
Ft. Meade, Md. It traces its
lineage to a famous cavalry
outfit in the Indian Wars and
one that raced across France
at the head of the 3rd army in
World War II.
The air units, McNamara
said, "will result in a signi-
ficant increase in the tactical
fighter strength in Europe.
"Certain heavy equipment
and vehicles required by both
armored and infantry divisi-
ons will he shipped to Europe
and held in readiness there,”
he said.
“This pre-positioning of sev-
eral thousand track and wheel-
ed vehicles and more than
100,000 tons of equipment of
will permit movement of
Army divisions to Europe in a
matter of days should the need
arise.” McNamara said.
He is known to be consider-
ing sending as many as six
more divisions to Europe if
necessary. The United States
nc has five divisions in Ger-
I By United Press International
A mass Canadian cold air
i expected to bring cold weekend ' DaA|«aJ F__ f
| weather to Texas faded fast in DwllllCII rWl UJSlO
! the Panhandle today.
I The warm temperatures and
humidity that have gripped the
j state the last few days were ex-
i pected to continue.
The warm, moist air from the j .
Gulf and the Atlantic Coast | Te,xas A*M- wl11 thc Pnnc>- ct>’ PoIl,’e " was orga- f f
not only brought continued hu-1 P®* speakpr _ nize(l ln September, now has j jGiS rCdYCF j€fVI(6
'y ", VT ‘ ,1'Z miditv but dense fog in almost committee was held in Cue- iso
6d, who died Monday in San. ro Tuesday to make plans for
Antonio. Rev Philip Riley. | °\5iy- Tcxa9:.., j the trorinhop.
During the past month, the
A workshop for English teach- police department shot for
ers from a 14-county area will | score against thc Cuero Rifle ,
be held at Cuero Hgh School and Pistol Club and National 1 a ‘
Nov. 4. Dr. Lee J. Martin, as-1 Guard. . . , _' ~
sociate professor of English.! Cowing said thc Junior Saf- MCfflONdl BdOllSf
Ghana Cadets Arrive
MOSCOW (UPI) — Sixty-
eight officer cadets of the
Ghana army arrived hereto
begin three and a haf years of
training in the Soviet Union,
they are the vanguard of some
400 cadets who wi be sent here.
of First
officiated.
189 mem hers.
Work done by Auxiliary po- Memorial Baptist Church will
lice officers during September hold its weekly prayer service
State Senator Bill Patman of
Ganado announced he had been
advised that the House General
Investigating Committee will be
in Victoria, Port I^avaca, and
Edna Friday to gather informa-
tion on hurricane insurance
claim payments.
The I waring* are to be pub-
lic, and persons desiring to give
testimony or offer ot her evi-
dence are asked to appear at
district courtrooms at Victoria | grandchildren,
at 9 a. m.; Port Lavaca at 1
p. m.; atri Edna at 4 p. m. \ YOU ARE?
Attending the hearing for the! DERBY. England
Committee will be Rep. Bill Pie-! Local
Methodist j Tcmperatures^eraigh^i j Mpmbers of fhp planning com- included the follow ing. Friday at 7 p. m. at the Lions
i and 74 aa Galveston and Corpus ! n’*”ee are Mr. Ntagdalene Boyle Set up road blocks at fires, j Club picnic unit in Cuero Muni-
m I nom Miirh Vontvi ehaitwan ■
Cliristi. U’ednesday’s high ^ Hurricane Carl! c,pa. Park-
Miss Jean Dabney of Victoria
| College Program chairman. Mrs.
Jessie Wamlas of Victoria Col-
lege. recording secretary: Mrs.
. , 94 at Presidio,
bearers.
Survivors are a son, Crock- ,
ett Thigpen of San Antonio; jCiltt AM I
two daughters. Mrs. Evelyn Wie- j BOSTON (UPD The Bos-! Ada Kirk of Cuero, Correspond-
land of El Paso and Mrs. Eu-j toil Museum of Fine Aids has j ing secretary, and Mrs. Virg-;
nice Cockrell of Germany; two j received nine paintings valued inia l.ewis of Cuero, publicity;
brothers, Walter K Gerhold of | at moi* than a half million | chairman. I
Cuero and Louis A. Gerhold of! dollars from the collection of! —----
Victoria; a sister. Mrs Henry' the latte' Alvan T. Fuller, a j J^w Study Center
Schlein of Victoria; and nine former governor of Massach.su- • ;
la, worked with regular officers j The service will include the
while other regulars were on j monthly business meeting. A
vacation, and helped work j covered dish supper will be
traffic at accidents and foot- 1 served All members are urged
ball games. ! to attend.
LATE OFF THE WIRE
planner) j r
1 hnviirrlv! '
| ]S[E\V YORK (UPI* A I I DKTROIT (1 PI) —— Thp V Auto Workers I nton h 180*
eivrr: t" £t,n, irrvv>e %
exhibited as a group in the established by Columbia I’ni- thr union and Kord Motor <0
museums sla.r gallery from! versify as a center for grad- The agreement was reached when the l\H and Ford agreed
uate study
Chaplin Freed
LOS ANGELES (UPD - Actor
Charlie Chaplain Jr., 36, was
free on $276 bail pending h i s
scheduled pleading to a drunken
driving charge.
The actor was arrested by
two policemen who said they
saw him driving erratically. “I
had five or six brandies With
a friend,” the officers quoted
Chaplin.
, , inter-American nn lust two national issues — production standards and
ratt of Giddings; David Witts of a demonstration march through' "l^s Canotiers." by Auguste affairs. „nion representation. Money matters were not at stoke. Thes
Dallas, attorney for the com- London that is slightly different. Renoir; "Woman and Child! The institute will enroll as were agreed to last week just before the strike started on
mittee, and Milton H. Lindsey, j Their banners and postris Playing Dominoes." Renoir estimated 75 graduate students ; Tuesday,
field analyst for the State Board will proclaim: "We are happy and "Nympheas et le Pont” j when it formally opens next
of Insurance. in our work." by Claude Monet. September/ the university sAid
Take First Ride
CHICAGO (UPI - Sixty elder-
ly women residents of the famed
Hull House settlement have
agreed to take their first air-
plane ride — providing they
do not leave the ground.
Trans World Airlines, which
issued the invitation, agreed to
the condition. The plane will
taxi from the terminal ramp to
a service hangar with the
women aboard.
President Gives Conference Thoughtful,
Grave Evaluation of East-West Tension
Pact Averts Strike
PATERSON. N. J. (UPD -
Some- 5,300 employes of the
By MKRRIMAN SMITH
..UPI White House Reporter
WASHINGTON — President
Kennedy has no "immediate
hope” of settling the Berlin cris-
is. He has warned that this is
“the most dangerous time in the
history of the human race."
.Kennedy said Wednesday he
hoped there would not be war.
but that it would take skill,
nerve and sacrifice to move
through “a period of maximum
hazard.”
Such was the President’s slow
thoughtful and grave evalua-
BEYERI.V Hit,I S (I I’l) — The Marx brothers, who gavs
so much laughter to the world, wept today oxer the death *f
brother < hieo. a heart attack x ictim Wednesday at the ag*
of 70.
Chico, (he xx ltd piano playing Italian dialect member of the
zany act. died in his Bexcrly Hills home xxith a nurse and hts
; xxifr. Mary, at his side. He had been lit since last May, suffer-
ing a heart condition xxhich grew considerably more serious in
the past four weeks.
NEW YORK (UI’I) — The chairman of thc Inter American
Press Association Freedom of the Press Committee charged
today that “the Communist goxernment that rules Cuba ... I*
directing the conspiracy to destroy freedom ot expression In
Argentina."
such protection was necessary I test* it had defected. This w as Jules DuBois, chairman of the committee and Latin America
because "we are going tu live done to protect the security the Odcago Tribune made the ^.rge at «*£
through a long period of con- of the U. S. detection system. T * i "'7xl I xZo
slant tens km with these danger-! Moon Shot: Wh.le a major ef- th" an"Ual UIA <,en"ra' W",bl> M"nda>’
ous thermonuclear weapons'fort already has started, he will! BOGOTA (UPD — President Alberto IJeras Camargo rlamp-
which will be proliferated." ! continue to be dissatisfied with ed martial law on C olombia Wednesday night In hope* of putUag
Taxes: Because of heavy mili- the U. S. moon shot program un- a stop to attempts at subversion such as Wednesday's short-
tary expenditures, prospects of j til we have a man on the moon, lived “lieutenants' revolt.”
a tax cut next year have vanish-! GOP Criticism: He was un-| IJeras announced Ids proclamation of a “state of siege” —
ed. Kennedy said he still wanted moved by Republican criticism ' «l«»lv*lrnt to what other countries call martial law la n
tion of East-West tension reflect-
Wright Aeronautical Division ofjed in Berlin and Southeast Asia • assist the Vietnamese govetn-
CUrtiss Wright Corp.. have voted as be discussed xxwld affairs at ment in resisting
to accept a nexv contract, avert-! his news conference. j threats.
ence was carried "live" to thejdio- active fallout in event of; that the government had not
nation by all major radio and enemy attack. Kennedy said | announced all of the Russian
television networks.
By subject, the President
made these points:
Berlin: No solution is yet in
sight. His talk with Soviet For-
eign Minister Andrei Gromyko
"did not give us immediate
hope" that differences with Rus-
sia over Berlin would be easily-
settled
.Southeast Asia: Gen. Max-
well 1). Taylor, his special mil-
itary ad\ isor leaves Sunday
for South Viet Nam to study
how the United Slates can better
a balanced budget next year but of itis foreign policy except to
did m»t promise one. As ft>r pox- say constructive «. suggestions
sibly higher taxes, this will de- j xxere welcome. t>ut be doubted
l>end on how “excessive and the xxisdom of generalized nega-
natixMiw hie broadcast
MIAMI BEACH (IT’D — The United Stoles wttl never
accept peace till coexistence xxith Fidel Castro’s Cuban govern-
ment, Secretary of State lleun Rusk said Wednesday.
“There ts no prospect of thal. No pros|>ect xxhatever,’’ Rusk
told nexvsmen before he addressed the national assembly of the
substantial" military costs be-; tion
come. Rayburn: He Quickly rejected
Nuclear Tests: The Russians] a suggestion that he discuss a I United Church Women Wednesday night.
Communist i have fired "more than 20" atmo- possible successor to Spcakei
spheric explosions in their cur- Sam Rayburn, critically ill with
DALLAS (UPD — The State Fair of Texas announced today
it will gixr members of the 1‘ith Armored Division and their
ing a strike scheduled for Wed- Cloae to 400 reporters eroxxded Fallout Shelters: By mid-No- rent test series. Until the Presi- cancer Kennedy said the Hous- ,anlnJe^ frrF pMS_es to lhe (nir grounds next Tuesday,
nrsday The contract calls for a the State Department Auditor- xfmher, »he government will be dent spoke, this government had has a speaker and that xxhen i’ j jamrs H. stxxeart. general manager of the fair, said H waa
fi\e-cent-an-hour pay raise. Skil-| ium for the Chief Executive s
led worktrs xxlll reeeixe inereas- first question - and - answer ses-
e* up to nine cents an hour. *ion in *ix weeks. The confer-
readv with plans whereby every' announced the detection of only elected one again, it would be
homeowner can gix^j his family 19 .Soviet tests. The White unwise for anyone outside thc
minimal protection against ra-i House said later R was true) House to express e preference |
i going away present for the dlxlsinn. which will be
nto federnl service <>n Sunday. Its adxance units kav* nez8
Wednesday, Oct. 17, (or Fort Polk, La.
i
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Matching Search Results
View two places within this issue that match your search.Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 67, No. 241, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 12, 1961, newspaper, October 12, 1961; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth698769/m1/1/?q=Lamar+University: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Cuero Public Library.