The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 75, No. 103, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 1, 1969 Page: 4 of 6
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J
, *r J Til? rrr.fK) RECORD Tburs , M«v 1.
ial
TnoTifei Pueblo.....~r~r~’r~~
i : j r '-hf *f.r, r.* the Amfri
, , ; • f|;,v of ?•>-,! K "I < c
,ji, , t>j.,t tii" j’ss J’■:< bio
, , .. r Mv N;t
•. Korea • tr-rrt
;v 1'
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:> \v i ,1' <
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fact
'hat ;tta
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r>i:« '..
mrv '••> .:’i
j ; VulVIl'j.’
Ill I HR 'i
' 1 hr •
give if an
r."
f n -• " V
t ; ■• ' :
\K ,\'
T * (
straight
fta33s:
H , jro\f f! nv
nil I AKMIJi r>f I n\ 11
(rl I Ills II \l.‘l
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( r t h ■ i n 40 lO'J1
t • V (4 \X+L ATX
t hf* d<- \vhfl
>rr a u rf* a I >}4-*.r ♦
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In H ,. Nnr'll
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:±xij.’S. :l: 1 a!,fi
■ lv’t tiovn
11 v I r;! at 'ini i ■ of.
thr
;rml
a;j’'C'oa''h O'
0-4- -d-i a n
r.i nih' fpiir,
tev f.'or'll K'
fa *■ a erf i nir ill. in n'rj rm. ini'
, jt nutty ha.v in", i-r been r.uriribrlecl
•' M'l'ci .Status is still very much at. war with*
itori a regime.
'vH>falc intmiaUon.o law T hr Unit' d
, ,. ii.i- it: . rf; lit to liar lotrrnatIonai
I■ jOi-i without in!erfr'icncr' Even if the
j,;:ii,i had violated North Korea trrri-
,, r j the -hip nr drstrur'toii of thr aircraft,
ho rlr..th of- 3.1""American.'- would
<lp<
man
pr>,d i.
not be
pn
■ ■(.(hirr i In warn the intruder and
H'
mill:.
1’
HU-in ,i';v
or rn.iM
j'.- •
■ '.t'l'i i ■
>\ or mi. ..
:-I'.ortani‘y to dr;-art •Iris D what thr United g0verr'fniat
flmiP when, Pin -1an fU-hina trawlers,
i...., ...j, i; r rjuipnirii' have
ti,0 I,a t (.'part:
t ,-.! . .. ; I,,!. North Kon a were
f IWashington, Richard
, .I,;, , t .lohnmn for his handling
mi i; i; no more such Incident:
Y.-i hi., re.-poit.se Is not
itlR
known
Awhile h i,( - nf , ,
entered
,, 'el, I- '
loid Amy I1.', ; '
the III1.' '. ■■■ ' . '• Ui".
.Mift by
do. |,| ' V |I : , c : ! «»! 1,
Nixon
1 lc th, "i ,c ■■■! 1 he .' r
of the
V ieis to re Cl,1,' I*,,' ;vn k
..... . ., . . . , .4 ■ . ,V.
I t )u>
r....
DAILY CROSSWORD
\< no
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44
r.i
on
under
unlike that
William Rue. is assertion that
i ..fhlit
». A : j' .i'Cr.l ,
■ f 'll iirrdcc".- or
LSeereta-ry rd Sta'i
,).f. At: I an hr rash, the powerful must be restrained '
.,.] jty have been said by Der n Rusk durlntf
,. , jci i- is. president Johnson decided attains!
p ' ii;.-ion. Ho did Pre.sideiU Nixon.
Join'..-.on', diplomatic effort was low-keyed. Nixon’s
ntontri'ie note to Nor'h Korea elves new meaning to
tb' word "re-.trail',! It ronelm’ by telling the North
.Koreans -WC. ••expeef that .'vn'
n;, hi prevent similar iin
Sinrt the [’ia bio affair, Wa
a chahfie of administrations,
■The rnorr thlmTs rliniutr.
rrnrir ''
I tjr’-e appropriate
in the fufure."
iRton has undergone
as the adage goes
the more they remain the
s.'i'vi, ,'in, n
r,*1.o \: .. -: i: ■ • :; i .it1,
uinouni "I III',! a ■ -it t
arid p,,: k a i I -1 ’■> : Tii ns
III,- Pc." I-!,'Ml ' hi'- I 'il l. 'I
SIan. 1 ii S' : .-l:,r\ , -I A.;'
culture indicaP M-.that : 'll, Fo,mI
ci ,s t - an' i,«, h:vh a ill I , r-
mer.- are to b!am.' !u 11 .i■
' 111 11 ,. All Until ■ . K
knew -1 !•’,)."I pen , - • "a ..ii !
mV is praclicaiy cvcrytiiiM : ,.-!>■
c\, opt iojiy d:Hjuc.i' t.h -
[lie ,iio ralrs >,, t!i" "■ , i nnc nt
is rcla11at a" ■ !," ini','"! ■■'ai:*
Nmerie.'in T,-lor,hop,' a:: ! Til''*
■: i pi i i i'M'.
is a t ):■/!< ,■
j■,,\ > , l,nil in
■ ii\ What we ;i' ■ )
h m\ ,'slii.; ainn <*1
The prim,", 'ilp- it
:.. ,, > ,• inf la 11, ,n iry spiral is n.,l
!'-.vi* (ana, i nor t:i, mail'ilacl-
a,r nor the proecssn". It is
, i i11n. rit \MiV I" a 1, >"r
i x'n-iit. M e i..........ing -anions
wI, vh i ■ cn i.f IP's .!• m.aid .and
-.-I ci. ,',* and niore m,in, s and
iici],'fits for l,
iiTt only the
Mans
, a -d
..'iiidi'd and ar.;n-
thinKs die.
farmcr is gcttihg Ins take out
,,f tha a,instantiy inflating food-
prices. 'Die farmer aetualiy gets
only 3 to-I e,Tils out of tile -’1!-
eeilt cost of a lo ,f of hr, ,td \>
cent's f<," cacii M sjs'nt for
choice beef. J S e":lls for the
eorn in a ,'iu-eent l«,\ ol cur.ii-
y .
. iMe-Vole -1 T1.I,id :
t'.s, i v.isis l-i.ivc n» n l.ir I
than most consumer items since"
tfljr K,,r instance, food is up in
that period about TV whereas >
medical care is tip-SoU. Except
for the housewife’s demand for
more and better packaging, i
",'onv Til > aiing, frec/ing. deliy-|
dr.aiing, hcat-awt-serve. tiuilt-in
and I.'— * work : ilakes and AJ <• Tits for die eol-'m'd service," the cost of foo. '
p'.-deral- (i,i\ern- ton in a man's fd. dr, ss slur', "ou.d !»■ up very -littie.
met;! la .motley p'r"<se< it ba.>
a vu" Idl. iiveioiioly oil iiif!:,'a>:n.
but
i jKAU&e
Mwashington
—MARCH OF EVENTS-
Tiiats what tile .shushes I'm. 'Tlie cost of marketing food |
' reading say hip they don't tell. nt up fw>:n di billion ini
ri,’ '.viiere I can buy a if-i dress ifl-T to m,',r,' than Sad i iitilion
siur't i a: Itkjti Tab' i ih Ai years !
rile farmer gets about y! The fanner iia- 'benefit.si less
per hour for his farm work, than any other sector of ..our i
.compared' with the factory , society during this inflationary i
worker's 1966 av erage of JA71 period. The farmer's share of j
Column
in
Prostitution Plan
N was headlines were made recently when tire Detroit
Council approved a plan to legalize prositit.ution
rerU.m isolated sections of the city and asked the
federal government to approve and subsidize the urban
redevelopment plan
The members of the Council who voted for the plan,
b-2. behoved isolation and health .supervision of "the
oldest profession’:' wmi'id. reduce the extent of its evil
and thi' g. a view shared by many in various countries,
in the United State-, however, with its strong puritan!
F,,l heritage, any proposal admitting snch facts or actual
conditions is unvisual, and when exposed to the wrath of
moralists, idealist.....id politie.ians eyeing t.heir votes
usually dies frieh'' :-.<'d. early death.
One often wonders, however, whether such a plan
would not be 'he .lever of two evils Uv* present system
consisting oi pick-up bars and Golddigglng. drinking B-
t,7. not supervised ot inspected, gangster control of
p, it notion because if is illegal and various resulting
health, crime and community problems. Often In life
or.e must choose the lesser of two evils if being practical
those honest otio eh to do so. however, usually find ti'r"t
indentions tinappreriated or dtstoerted.
1
REP. WILBUR MILLS IS
DEMANDING ACTION
Wilbur Mill*
Hr \ranti
progress
Health Is something that Is appreciated hr 'hose
who need It most
^ v v
There is never and scarcity of excuses for doing
what you want to do
Qlfyr tera firrorii
Es’ab'.tshed in 1894
Puhli'hed Each Afternoon Except Saturday and
. gunday _Moming__
119 E.
By THE CLERO PLTsIJSHING CO., Inc.
Main, Cucro, Texa* P. O. Box SSI
Second class postage paid at Cuero, Texas
TEX
1
/969-—
•RESS ASSOCIATION
South Texas Press Association
Southern Newspaper Publishers Association
TAX REFORM SCON
IS POPULAR SUBJECT
By HENRY C" VTIU AKI
Central Press Washington Correspondent
re rAMlINGTOV—Tax reform h»s become one of the nio-t pop-
V\ ular topics for discussion among legislators tn Washington
these days.-Everyone seems '•> favor it, although, like most mat-
ters of this nature, th» question of scarifies tends to get lost in
pious declamations
Ponie Pemoeratie loaders in Congress havr
so mcrossfiilly pressed for reforms in tax laws
that, the Nixon administration's timetable was
set in motion faster than the vag a "next
year" that hitherto had been the stated time
for tax recommendations
House Ways .and Means Committee Chair-
man Wilbur Mith, p-Ark.. is Insisting on sub-
stantial progress this year, and Is also de-
manding further goyrnment spending cuts
beyond those already proposed by the Presi-
dent. It was.Mills who insisted that a tax in-
crease ought by th. n-President Johnson must
be offset by deep reductions ir, government
spending. Observer*, believe that Milts can de-
mand no less of the present Republican Presi-
dent than he did of the previous Democratic
White House encumbent,
President Nixon will find it even more difficult to resist Mills'
demands than Johm-jon did. Further, when it comes to tax reform,
Nixon and the Republicans in Congress may be on the spot In
either advocating or opposing specife proposals when it rom»a
to plugging tax loopholes
Even though the lax-paying public ir, aroused, there are nu-
merous cynics in Washington who don't believe the present "tax
payers revolt" will be productive of the kind of reform that Mills
and his supporters are talking about Tax reform is a matter of
legislating against strongly intrenched groups u ht"h tn the pcst
have succeeded in winning special concessions from Congress
These various groups can combine into an extremely powerful
lobby coalition when threatened.
You can almost see them drawing together to fa re the com-
. mon foe—the. public.
* * * t
I • TREASON—Tn a conference room »+ the Treasury Pepart-
1 ment, a meeting was underway to promote the safe of TT r. sav-
ings bonds. Outside the room was the bond program's most web-
known slogan' ‘Invest in your future security.”
Some skeptic, with a touch of treason scran.-ten h»!,ow the
| • 'ogam
i “Buy gold."
* ♦ * »
; • COMMUNICATIONS GAP—Republicans got a nasty shock
| when a Democrat, defeated the Repubiicar, candidate for Congress
to fll! the vacancy caused by the res'g- ation of Melvin Laird,
of Wisconsin who was appointed Secretary of Defense in the
Nixon Cabinet.
Some of these disappointed Republicans attnb- Basketball
Ute the defeat, in part at least, on a commimlca- Affected
tlons gap, or rather blackout, their man suffered
on t.hc eve of the special election. Election
It seems that basketball is big in Wisconsin and
a team in Wasau. biggest city In the- district, was involved in a.
high school tournament. The Democratic candidate tied up at! the
radio and television advertising time during the tournament
before the election, thereby getting all of the attention of the
listeners and viewers of the sports event.
per' hour. Our- fanner. t<
.:*'! !.,■ - lowest shore of the gross
ii.Tt„,!i;il pro-i-uri. tin' c.onxunvr
dul!:,r. Die food iloilar, the least
return op c;, lutal i:i rest
lit, smallest .perv, 'ntit go of gross
• ales than at any time in the
past decade.
Food in America is cheap.:-
titan anywher* else in tlie yorM
fpiv other things '.even, i • • -
t.cians, are chi'iiper in .inter , .
•inn an;.evil' re ,6s.• in die world
Win ” Amen,- in foo l i. s,,i)si-
di/ed by die tn-\p iypr an ! tty
the food ddjia-r has declined
Anirrirnn tiny I'lntuns.
iIIEALMANA(
,.f f-
t.n-f
2,1: Lay in wad
2.6 Him',.-!
2,;. -V n Em, r - ,
■A ejrk
27.'Tt,» ii. eir.'-"
sign of the
.zhUiac
25. SlITlflOT
26. Indian
lion iir,g
(.’.t'ltto
br.inier
32 Incur- .
rectiom .
Turner
.13. Tall ■'
drinking
vessels
37 Editorial
writer's
pronoun
3*. Ester
39. Lachrymal
drop
4.1. Thin coating
of frosting
42. Royalist's
DAILY CKYPTOQUOTK— Here’s turn W> work it:
A X V D L B A A X R
l» I. O N Ci F E L I. O W
One letter simply stand.* for another. In this sample A i»
used fgr till' three L's, X for the two Os', etc. .Single letter*,
apostrophies, the length and formation of the words arc nil
hints. Each day the oxle letters are different.
- si A t’ryp(°8rum Quotation
X E X W W RLB K M N B P M B ELDER
P M J l! R L F P M A M F B V A - B P U N PMJU
M I X S SIIAURB L R T! U J U A N I M. N . —
P UXP.U
Yesterday's Ers-pfcpuntc* THE TVELL-DRESSED MAN 154
HE WHOSE CLOTHES YOU NEVER NOTICE.—SOMERSET
MAUGHAM
lb 1963, King Feature* Syndicate. Inc >
rn 1873. tile penny ;>ost card j HEMSE TREATY
went on sale for the first time. | WASHINGTON (IPD — Re-
in 18S4 work was started in : present;dives of the United
Chicago on a lOsstory building j States and FYan. e will in,., t :n
that was to bo cubed "the sky-j Parts .Tunc 2 to -revise tin ir
scraper."
estate tax treaty The Treasury
In 1931 the Empire State | Department said the m- , drig
Building, world's tallest sky- j w as called because the J966
...v .. Lt, /s L*. O’oirrw I m c.c t. . r- c- \ \ ♦
By I uited Press lnti rnulional
Tii'i'.y i. Tlnii’s-'! i.v. May 1. !l02 stories,
lb' List clay of with 211 In 19(>0. the
to ; v
Uv ........ is ‘ ciween "s first
qu.,1"hr and fu.ii pi,a->
'Tt"' Mi.'rr.itig -lars are Ve-
tlie f I’nier. txith of whom haw uu M o's and s.i'ur'n
tieen defra . l"d by, the socalf' d ■ Thr . -an,'/ start, are tier
farm program.”, 'lie tax sy s-. cur; and I,i,
tern union racketeering, the Or, bus day in history
raper. was dedicated by Gov. ‘ Foreign Investors Tax Art s ib-
A1 >niith in New York. It has jstaritialiy reduced Uv taxes
ion etti/ens of fowicn . qtinlM"*
Russians sival i'with assets in the Untied States,
dow n an American 12 plane on i --------—
an intelligence mission over! EASY MONEY'
the Soviet Union j COLOGNE Germans IT1
| A West Germany felevtson. sty.
A tie night for the day. i tion paid 60 teen-ag. ,-s S12 SO
William Gladstone said, 'Sel- [recently to strip to then bath-
fishness ts tlx- greatest curse ing suits and swat earu other
of the human race.” Iwith bags of dye.
«w v zeccvr* After &wall.ow’v& tsjf
CAPEU1-E& THE OCCUPANTS OP Thie.
<H/P BEl~n to face away,.,.
H P
vqPiu ve:
T5 2L M'M to Ut'OCK
I LOT I'CANT j—
"f C'~A!-D THAT o'..*.
\ INTERNAL A-S'S-
mm
'■OF =
KEIGMS09S J'J
CALLLO. AND
OTcrrO
FIFTEEN
s^ R'ii-R
l \CK HOWERTON ...............—
C • PETE" iiOWEP.TON ...
"RS TACK HOWERTON .......
President and Publisher
............... Vice President
_______ Secretary-Treasurer
National Advertising Representative*
Texas Daily Press League Inc., 960 Hartford DIdg., Dallas
•J.imes Arrested
I SAN FRAXaSCO DPI - The
i Rev Jesses J fantf - ^t- -x .
j convict from Sing ring "■ho
founded the Mission. Rebels a-
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TELEPHONE 275-31S1
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The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 75, No. 103, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 1, 1969, newspaper, May 1, 1969; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth702534/m1/4/?rotate=90: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Cuero Public Library.