The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 70, No. 72, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 1, 1958 Page: 1 of 8
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1 f f < y*,
.liccof lira Service
; o Sd;: SOGG
DftlXtia Texas
,cu
For All
Departments
Of The Record
Dial 5-3131
<IIhD (£tu>ro Swnrii
The Weather
801TH CENTRAL TEXAS —
Mostly cloudy through Friday
with widely scattered thunder-
shower*. Warmer north por-
tion tonight.
Services For
Dr. Kleinecke
At St. Mark’s
Death came in the waning hours of Wednesday after-
noon’to claim one cf this city's pioneer citizens . . one of
the last surviving natives of Old Indlanola . . and a man
who had lived the life for which he was named ... Dr.
Louis Christian Kleir.eck“e, age 89 years and 6 months.
Dr. Kleinecke died shortly after 3 p.m. in a Cucro rest
home where he had lived for the past year and one half.
Hr had been in ill health for ma-
years and the end came as
Hs
K
: ’' i*
Ks
P'
f# ■
L
« Nr
■*.'*
Homes And Highways
Flooded In North
Central, East Texas
i,
iaTowti TaUc
The DeWitt County View.
blessed relief to courageous suf-
fering.
Funeral sen ices were to be
conducted from St. Mark's Lu-
theran rhurch at 4 p.m. today,
with Rev. John A Jacobs, pastor
of St. Mark's officiating. Burial
aS&A
published bv our good friend was to be in Hillside.
Louis Christian Kleinecke, son
of H, A. I^ouis -Kleinecke and
and Nordheim, presents a Mary Gruner Kleinecke, was
born November 17, 1868 in the
little seaport city of Indianola.
and this week had a little when his parents moved to Cue-
story we think you'll enjoy. ro >n 1878,1 he YY'lY "Vln_
J dianola to live with «n aging
It certainly hits the nail aunt, Mrs. Caroline Fuhntan.
There he lived until the disast
Paul Schmidt of Yorktown
weekly "Chuckle'1 column
' " . *bx"
* ■ * 1 • > *v ■
on the head in so many in-
stances, and since Cuero is
going to adopt a United
Fund program, wc think the
item timely . . . and it is
offered with no offense.
Says the DeWitt County
View:
A wealthy broker
admission to the pearly
gates.
vous storm of 1886 which wiped,
the little city of Indianola from
the map of Texas.
Dr. Kleinecke, along with ma-
ny other residents of the once
thriving seaport city, moved in-
land to Cuero, his first job in
Cuero being with the John Grav-
es Dry Goods company.
■UN FOI fOUB IIVISI— Firemen and Coast Guartlmen
•curry up a nil) to satety as anutnei giant Esso Standard
Oil tana goes up U) an explosion ot flames at Newport
News, Va. Thi* photo wa* made when the fire had raged
into the eecond day. and had eaten up 13.U00.U00 gallons
of oil, don* *4,000,000 damage. (International Soundptiotoj
Emergency Telephone
Numbers To Be Changed
Changing home and business
Guardsmen
Fight To
Save Town
By I MTEI> Pit ESS
National Guardsmen and \n(-
untrers. fought to sate lhe com-
munity of Garland City, Ark,,
from flood', liters b day in the
ur.kc of live straight days nf.\jo-
lt nt w eather in the Solilli'vf st.
Weathermen predicted rio te-
.Imf f.ir rain-drenched Aik;ir. as.
The lore> ast was for showers
and Ihundershou ns fn.iii Tex ns
cast through the Gulf states to
lhe .south Atlantic coast.
I About IPO National Guards-
men. Air Force personnel and
; (ivilians worked ihrough' the
: nigj t sandhaggmg a levee on
I McKinney Bayou south qf Gar-
lajid City.
Orders Out Guard —
Tlte bayou, swollen
Paternity Pattern Places
Portly Politicos In Pickle
1MN MOINES, May 1 —(I P)— The Iona Supreme Court
w resiled with nn unusual -paternity auit.
It nil began when Fred .lurgena's Shorthorn bull vaulted
propriety and a neighbor'* fence. The neighbor*. I>e B'ltt and
Arthur Mallory, entered a Milt eharglng that the bull hail "bred
fiye of the plaintiff's eons."
The Franklin County District Court, noting that the Mal-
lorCs inns were “part of a valuable herd of purebred regis-
tered Aberdeen Angus rattle,” awarded them *?.W0.
-Iiirgenn Wednesday asked the high ronrt to dismiss the
suit.
Fifteen Awarded Medals
By National Guard Unit
File m oft ti er s and enlisted
men of Company M. Cuero Nat-
ion'll Guard unit, acre awarded
Texas Faithful Sen ice‘ medals
Miration at Camp Bullis.
Jarobs, firing the M-l rifle,
snored 193 points out of a pos-
sible 210. Laske, firing the car-
bine. scored 157 points out of a
teleplione numbers in Cuero for
"The telephone is-your best
friend in raise of 'emergency;”
In 1898, he left Cuero to enter j the new numbering system May j Davis said, "and everyone
fOUgnt c0]iCgC of Denistry, N'orth-|4 Vvill mean changing the long should be careful to dial the cor
... then returned to Cuero to enter
Who are you. , as . practice of dentistry.
Peter. I He was lirst associated with
"I'm a Wall Street brok- Dr. W. R. Rathbone who operat-
,, ed one of Cuero's first dental
western University in Chicago' familiar- numbers for emergency
from which he graduated and j calls.
Along with all other telephones
dim 15 inches of ram sinec .Sun-
day, already has inundated
about 60,000 acres of low farm-
land.
Arkansas Gov. Orval Fnubus
number." Life’ saving" time “'^ed a second National Gu*..1,
unit to the scenr In an effort to
Wednesday night at the regular possible 160. Ramirez scored 260
by more (|r,;i |*, j<-,d. Ti e medals. gi\en out of 350 possible on the .45 cal.
in Cucro, the. lines to the fire
1 Cct
mav be lost when a wrong num-
ber ,s dialed or when the caller! Invent a second
is not familiar with the new num
in recognition of five continuous ! pistol range
years service to the National .---
guard, vvc.ro presented by Maj.
Robert Allen of Ruling, 3rd. Bat-1
talion loniriiandcr.
He; ipients • of the award were,
1st. Lts. I.eRoy Cobh, Joe Mar-;
Report On
Rainfall
her in;; system.
"What have you done that1
entitles you to admission?"
-Well, I saw a decrepit old
woman on Broadway the
other day and gave her two
cents."
"Gabriel, is that on the
records?"
"Yes, Saint Peter.’’ j
"What else have you!
done?" i
< Well, I crossed the Brook-
lyn Bridge the other night;
and met a newspaper
half frozen to death
gave him a penny."
"Gabriel, Is that on
records?"
"Yes, Saint Petfr."
"What else have
done?"
"That's all I can think of."
"What do you think we
ought to do with this guy,
Gabriel?"
"Give him back his three
cents and tell him to go to
hell."
¥ * *
We understand that
youth program
clinics, and later with Dr. Brink-; ing System.
ley Peavv and then Dr. Cornel-J Emergency numbers are 1 ist-
ius Mueller. ed in the front of the new tele-
His return to this city was in 1 phone directory,
the year 1902, and after death of Ed Davis, manager for South-
the men w ith whom he was orig- western Bell Telephone Co , sug-
inally associated, he opened his gested everyone remember to
own dental office, which he!look at the new directory before
Continued on Page 8t ' celling an emergency number.
Malinovsky Appeals
For Soviet Vigilance
By HENRV SHAPIRO After Malinovsky's speech the
b°y United Press Staff Correspondent Soviets held one of the briefest
Bhd MOSCOW, May 1.-—(UP) De- p>ay military displays in re-
fuse Minister Marshal Rodion- cept Western military
the ^,hTSlCy • *PPC r i y sources said no new weapons were
the Soviet armed forces for vigilance____ T «... _______ „n«i.
against the "threat of a new war
by American Strategic Air Force
bombers flying toward the Rus-
J'ou sian frontiers with nuclear wea-
pons . __
department, police and similar
emergency spots will switch to: the manager asks 1hat telef
the new Metropolitan Number- ‘ phone users listen for the hum-
ming of the dial tone before dial-
,ng and take . are not to contuse (f heJ71
the letter "O w ith the number |
zero or the letter 1
figure one.
with the
Court Of Honor
Set For Tonight
break w hich | f;j-iez and Clinton Richey', 2nd. (
authoiities said would flood t’. 'Jj,;. Sammy Riopamonti, CWO I
homes of Garland City's L6uO,Ray Mauer, M/Sgts. I^eBell! A total of 1.38 inches rainfall
Kuecker and Rudolph Rivera, I received, during April brotight
Sgts. first cIrss William Dierin- the total fall of the year to 13.44
get , Norris Gottsrhalt, Richard ! inches, weather records main-
■Guerra, Hilbert Hahn, Carol ! tained at CPAL dam revealed
Markowsky; and Michael Sturm today.
and Rgts. Clifton Bean and An- Fall for the first three months
tonio Cart isale/. Jj\ of the year was 5?06 inches in
V isitors and wives of officers anusry, 6.42 in February and .58
and enlisted men who attended jn March,
the piesentation w ere Mrs. Le- j Residents of
Roy (obb, Mrs. Ray Mauer, Mrs. eneed a temperature range of
1-cebell Kue. kcr, Mrs. Charles 35 degrees the past month, when
Franke, unit nurse, and Mr. and j a hjKh of gg was recorded April
Mrs. Elis.' A. Guerra parents i 24 and a low of 43 Api-ji 6. Av-
residents and inundate another
60,000 or 70,000 acres of land.
In the North, a new inass of
I cold air invaded North Dakota
Minnesota on the
Continued on Page 8)
No Relief
In Sight
For Area
By United Prea
The U 5. Weather Bureau
promised no relief today tot
*ogg.y and bruised North Cen-
tral and East Texas, where rain,
hail and high winds have flooded
homes and highways, beat down
crops and unroofed farm build-
ings.
A small tornado awiahed
through Hendereon Wednesday
but miraculously did little dam-
age and Injured no one. Ruak
County Sheriff Herman Orr said
the twister passed through the
"main part" of town.
Dallas police aaid "about 75 to
100" families had moved from
the Roosevelt addition along the.
Trinity River after police cars
with loudspeakers warned resi-
dents the river was expected to
reach 34-35 feet early today..
Both the Dallas police and Civ-
il Defense department denied
reports of a reported planned
masa evacuation of 2,500 persons
from the area. They said such
a move would not be necessaiy
Continued on Page 8)
Further Tests
Recommended For
Nine Band Members
Cuero Boy Elected
Silver Spurs Officer
AUSTIN, May 1 J U\ Piepcr.
University of Texas student from
Awards will be made to Cub Cuero, is the new vice-president of
and Bov Scouts tonight at a Court1 the Silver Spurs, men's honorary j of Sgt. Guerra,
of Honor to tie held in Our I.ady service organization. Pieper, a Maj. Allen also
of Guadalupe Catholic Church, senior petroleum engineering stu- three marksmanship
The court will be held in eon- dent, is the son of Mr. and Mrs They went to Sgt. Charles Jac-
junetion with lhe celebration or Walter Pieper, Route 2. He is a obi. Sp-3 William I^ake and .,fs.
Mass which begins at 6 p. m. member of Scabbard and Blade, Joe Ramirez. Trophies were won
Rev. August Otto, Our Lady of honorary organization for ROTC , last Sunday w hen Company M,
Guadalupe pastor, said May de- officers; and received a Jesse H. joined, by other
votions will follow- the Mass, Jones naval scholarship.
presented
trophies.
companies in
lhe 3rd Battalion, fired for qua-
Mrs. Clara
Pease Dies
Mrs. Clara Mae Pease. 60.
Civil Engineer From Far
East Is Visitor In Cuero
Nine Gobbler Band students
\ were reported to have shown
this area experi- poSjtjVe reactions to the Patch.
Test given Wednesday to mem-
bers of the senior high school
band
These sludent* have been re-
erage high for the month was 82 j commended to fake further teats
and the average low was 57. i i0 determine if they are vic-
April's wide range of tempera-1 tims of tuberculosis,
ture Was nothing new for this The Pair It Test was made
ares. In January it ranged from; available by school authorities
a low of 26 to 76, in February after a ease,of tuberculosis was
23 to 80 and in March 34 to 85 '> diagnosed In a hand student.
Committee Recommends
Income Tax Cut “If”
idly.
seen. Low-hanging clouds cancel-
led a scheduled fly-past.
The Russian marshal, standing
in an open convertible before Len-
in s tomb on Red Square, ordered ■ A. I c \/ s O | f f I IT I - 11 p 1* A WASHINGTON, Mav 1 - 'UP' spending berause it would stliru)-
his troops to he "fully prepared d, O l Id VlOlLWl A 11 V_> VI Ks 1 Committee for Eronomie late-the economy much mort rap-
to repulse the new threats of w ar. I
He cited specifically the SAC alert Vira Poomviscs, 31. a civil en- The foreign visitor was a< com- Thailand. Development told Congress today
flights. !giijecr from the Far East country panied to Cuero by Terry Smith, Thailand was described by it ghould plan now for a tempor-
Red square was thronged with of Tliailand, was in the Cucro agricultural engineer who n'oiks P,kjiivviscs hs a 1 ountrj about *ry 20 pei cent cut in ini oine tax-
a crowd estimated at 10,000- per- area to study the small drainage with the Soil Conservation Servn e f,>ur!hs lhe si/./e of-Tex. He es if there art no "clear" signs of
sons, including hundreds of for- system at the Ed Ix-Lon farm off in Victoria county. While studying - , business improvement this month
near Cuero. Smith and P- m- f 'M'l Ihail.ind s 1 hief export 1 The CED a private research or-
United vises were accompanied by Cuero rue. which makes up 40 p«T.en (fanjj,>tion (rf t„uinesjmrn and
. , . another im- ■•conomists, aaid the tax rut should
her home in Cheapside after lie- f. S. Ambassador Llewellyn of the engineering phases of soil sen. r,‘ ' be simple enough to assure pas-
ing critically ill the past few Thompson. conservation v.-ork being carried Room vise*, whose wife and Pf'r*'*nt '. . h sage without lengthy committee
the months. She had been in ill President Abdel Gama! Nasser out in Texas. Washington, Colo- three rhildien remained in Ilia,- yn uotmisc* •rnv ' ■ gearings. It said it should also
-aPh the past few vears of the United Arab Republic, here rado and Nebraska. His tour is land "-as graduated from ( hula- n. t ■ ■' ft ',rr m^ rarrv »n au'omatie termins'Vm
Mis. Pease, a lifetime rest-’on an 18-day' state visit, stood* be.ng sponsored by the Interns- lonkorn University in Bangkok, in r.e .unoer ten, a nrr+ > date of Marsh 31 1959.
planned for the City is to be dent ri Cheapside, was born alongside Premier Nikita S. lional Cooperation Administration, 1919 with a B. 8. degree Before tulon in .as.i.ng-on, • ------ "
1897. a daugh- Khrushchev and the other Soviet an agency of the U, 8. govern- coming to th» states, he sen ed most o t e ti, e r - ’ :
to offer educational as designer for the Royal Irn- ing English, a subject definitely
gallon flept of the government of_( >.nt-n i«'d on Pago 6.1
eign tourists, many of them from the Vi< !->ria highway,
the United States. All of the dip- Poumviscs is .m the
...— ------- — ----- - uic- ciuicu v,, | H ... ganization of b'rsinesjmen
died at 10:30 p.m. Wednesday at lomatic corps was there including States for a 10-month study period -Soil Conservationist !>>ui* L'ler- 0 ]l '1ln'• -' * '* ' **’
summer
Frazar B Wilde, rhairman of
Fellowship
Day Friday
The Cueio (Txtncil of Cliureh
Women will observe May.Fellow-
ship Day Friday at Fir*" Pres-
byterian Churclt annex-. Them*
of the observance, which begin*
r. most complete one, and
Uiat Is good news for Cuero
Continued on Tage 8
UUuiUb&U/-
STUFFED SHIRT
7*
there October
ter of the late John and Har- leaders on
rift Owen Stain. She was mar-
ried to Roy Pease January.- 16. “
1916. "
Survi vors include her husband
of Cheapside; one son, Jimmv of
Cheapside: two sisters, Mrs.
Jake Murriel of Odessa and
Mrs. Joseph Russell of Cheap-
side. and two brothers:. Tom
Stain of Cheapside and George
Stain of Odessa.
Funeral services will be ror-
du'ted at 2 pm Friday at
Freund Funeral Horn* chape1.
Rural *• ill ,be in Belb.ir*.- Cern-
etery. at Cbeaprid*
a parapet
I.enin s ment ret up
aid tn I'ar East countries
WORLD WEEK
AMtttCAN STAOfc Th* *xpf*^
•ion -Stuffed shirt.' for tom*on*
who imagines that he la more
important then he actually is, w**
atarted in 18W by Aneriw
•ctrets Fay Templeton The epithet
wes thrown at another rtage per-
sc-tlity. John Gates, who was e
g-t»' pratender at having was-n
I* was rumored that Gates padded
>«• •h.m tp # d hi* appea's^c*
Daule Homemakers
To Serve Supper
Membor* of the Cuero School
Board, other school official* and
their wive* will be guests of the
Daule homemaking department at
a supper to be served tonight
pr.or to the regular iiionttily tn.ard
:i.retire; at Junior S» hoo! Jitcaiy.
The supper will begilft at b (JO
p m a' Daule .Srhojl The meet-
ing a'artj an hcrir la’er. 1
[u s ant
I IN SIATO
I M«HU
1
A I w
*
'1
TUCOStAV SUSIOINT TITO
1
UIIIT 1IIVI1I MU’* VV—m 1
IHUOC.INO to OIT TO IM
AT SMITHSONtAN INSTITUTION F~\
WEST GIB MANY TO ASK NATO
TO BEVXW TBIATY CU*BS~
"WANT . . . SAMI WEAPONS
A POTENTIAL ENEMY HAS
AND MOSCOW AT OOOS ACA1M,
HI ■!AllliMS INOIMNDINCI,
Hit VIC( MltlOINT ACCUSIS
SAtlllltfS Of 1HAISIN1NO
US tHI OlO AND »USTT
WTASONS OT THI COMINTOIM
* - J
LABOt DEFAITMENT SAYS
MICE INDEX AT AMOTHEB
—e> \\
jr
'A It TIM I HIGH aHOSTlY
OUI TO FOOD MICE*
IKTISH. THAI TtOOFS JOIN
ATOM »OMt DfFfNSI
MAHfUVftS fM TMAHAMO
UN NOH * SOVUT
• 0 TO GIT U »
CrTID FOi MUCH At
lOMBIt HiGHTf
CHINA
C A
TflNAGMl ACCOUNT
FOt 47 1\ OF MA>Ot
CtIMI OF Ifjr. FBI
Pnufu
^/nn/ir
r^.wL
U1AF JIT-UNITIO Alt UNIS
MIO -A -t CtASM WIST OF
IAS VKGAS KILLS ALL 44
TWO Alt UNIS tllOTS SAT A
usaf flam stunted between
THEM IN THE AHA LATE!
ION WINDS CAUSE
S DEATHS. INJUBT
- ,*r u \
^Sl
TO 1ST IN MASS
Y'-v
\ . 'i
JUMP BT 101 ST
A TSCtNI (AM*
CAMPBEU «T
J . *• ^
AUSTRALIA
()..
V «
SMAMFO' DI40 COf^NTFO
ATM fyy> IN TfA* LONG
EAST FAIISTAN FFtOIMlC
TOUOFY JOBOAN
StOTLIGMTS fStAfl S TOTH
ANNIVlBSABT CIlEBIATl&N
BBITISM BUSH
tEtMOtCf MINTS
TO ADEN YEMEN
BOtDIt ABIA
.9,M
CED'* rnansr-h and polity com- a' 4 p m . is "A P are To I.ite.
mitte". made the recommendation Inriijded on the program are
in t-atimony prepared for deitv-' " '*or«hip service ahd social
cry l>efore the fiscal polic-. sub- hour. The committee in charge
committee of the Joint Omgres- «t the program and arvange-
sional Economic Commioee merits includes Mrs Ixiui*
Wilde said the CED held to its Srhorre, Mis. Marion I.eonardt
belief stated a month Bgo that and Mr*. Lias Steen.
Congreai shtajld take no "strong
anti-recession action unless the
erondm-.- de< lines f -r two m irths
tmlow the Febroar-. level Rut he
noted that the economy slumped
further in March.
He as id if the April figure*
»hoo a fu-ahe’ d^op and tbe-e u
no clear sign of an upturn tn May
Congress should have a tax rut
ready for speed; enactment.
Wilde said the CUD preferred a
tax cut to expanded p ihlie works
BIBLE VERSE
iiet all things be dune In
decency and tn order. 1 I ur,
14 M
Life shuuld no* be J bap
hazard srq.ienic of uniel.it-
e.S events V.t- tia\e ttu-c
» ore yeau and ten n..i :*
to perform deeds that w I ‘e
rememkjrrt'l fw eternity
' The women will study housing
as it is related to people hose
it contributes to the dexe'opment
or retarding of personality end
l< iclates to other conditions Iri
the community which also affe.-t
human persona-|it' Among tii*
que«tions to be s”id:»d and die-
russed ar°:
Ho-, ran r<-.■;• rh women help
provide riv-ug ■ low-1 ost houspi
so that ail residents ma; lt\e tn
health and <!«■ ’■ r,- y ?
Htnv can chun h women help
pno ide adequate housing for
farm workers
How can church women help
itiit* the .*t,i roachint :J *’f alum*
and conim R- tov.,ud urban i«-
iiewai - -
II,. ,.n - t. .m o' lue-'i stun-
.,.a-c -ic • ..Jd.i.., *t "k'U.li
people « an aI-
tv>U«e'
ford:
a' j>"'
«. - -i
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The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 70, No. 72, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 1, 1958, newspaper, May 1, 1958; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth699003/m1/1/: accessed April 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Cuero Public Library.