The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 74, No. 306, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 26, 1968 Page: 2 of 6
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Paw 2 THE CtTEHO RECORD Thurs., Dec. 26, 1968
SPORTS PARADE
It’s the Biggest One
And Namath Knows It
SPORTS
COMMENTS
(W*.)
By Cl Alter. HOWEBTON
lUrord Staff Write#
a»»iu»umm»mmi«m«mwg
^ARSON’S POINT OF VIEW ON:
On Financial Forecast for 1969
(Continued From Page 1)
peat perform ance” In 1969. It
Sure enough I made it back to
! the desk but I'm all mixed up —
nr MILTON RICKMAN
'-NKW YORK CHI - Joe Nn-<
■math i'-'n’t trying to kid himself being especially
4»r-cn.'b eisc, quarterbacks, on
It ought to be Monday and here
Rough on Quarterback* J on the shoulder of his 25-year- i is is only Thursday. Guess I
The Raiders have a history of I old quarterback the same af- j will stay mixed up til alter New
fectionate way a father might j Years when we will celebrate
do with his son. The whole thing ! by having another day oil and
took less than 15-seconds after T will wear out my eyeballs
of that which Kwbank moved on, but
miss catching
on l
rough
, , _____________ „. Namath in
lie bn’t trying to wisecrack | „ , . .. . ,
h s way around it or give out Particular. He s aware of that which Ewbank
with any of that la-da-da about history, but It isn’t letting it ruin Namath didn’t
Sunday's game being just an-
other game.
H» knows it is THE game of
his football life. He knows this
is the farlherest he ha* ever
brought the once-bedraggled,
once-laughed at New York Jets.
He also knows if they aren't
able to beat the Oakland Raid-
ers at Shea Stadium Sunday,'
there'll be no AFL title, no j
Super Bow] ,no tomorrow , no
nothing.
*'I always wanted to be part]
his Giristmas.
“Look, they’re gonna try and
hit the quarterback as hard as
they can,” he said. “Tliey can't
hit me any harder than they hit
any other quarterback. They
can only hit so much before the
whistle blows. If they do
something wiring after the
whistle, that’s 15 yards for us.
I’ll take it anytime."
Roughest of all on Namath in
of a champion team," Namath, thp t has biff
said thoughtfully, sitting in : i)avjdson. Oakland's not-so-jolly,
front of his locker and putting 5_f00t_7> 280-pound giant defen-
no his coruroy pants and brown j sive end wjth the hand]e bar
suede shoes after a workout in
the biting, windy cold.
“This is something all of us
here want to achieve. It means
more to be than anything else I
can think of. We can be the best
In the AFL. Maybe, the best in
the world.”
ORGANIZATIONS
Meets 2nd A
4th Tuesday
each month 8
p.m.
can
O vie Center.
Calvin Webb, Commander
Jimmy Bulgerin, Adjutant
Meets 2nd ft
4th Thursday.
7:30 p.m.
N.Y.A. Bldg.
City Park
A. W. Schaffner, Commander
Wilfred Leist, Quartermaster
All visiting members
welcome.
7^?
Cuero Lodge No. 409
A. F. ft A. M. meet*
second and fourth
Thursday each month
at 7:30 p.m. Visiting
brothers are always
welcome.
Glean Coffey
WJI.
H. E. Weatherly
Res'*.
HERMANN SONS LODGE
KO. 19
Meets every 1st Tues. «f the
month.
For Membership See
President—Bennie B. Prause
Secretary—Louis Buchhom
moustache. Davidson has sha- j
ken up Namath more than once i
the gesture.
Wecb Worked Hard
“Our coach really taught me
something about work this
year,” Namath said later on. “I
never saw anybody work hard-
er. He worked his back off. I
thought it was the most Incred-
ible thing I ever saw' for a man
of his age. He’d get up at 6 in
the morning and keep going
until late at night. He really
taught me something about
work."
In his private office. Ewbank
spoke of what Namath had
taught him.
“You have to be with him to
appreciate the guts he has,"
Ewbank said while sitting be-
watchlng football games. In a
way, it will be * relief to get
back in the groove. But, the
groove is a long one — next
holiday for The Record force
will be the Fouth of July.
will be the “hard line” for the
Kremlin throughout the coming
year; and the Nixon Adminis-
tration will be shoved off ha-
lance many a time. Most omi-
nous is the powerful strength-
ening of fee Soviet Mediterran-
ean fleet; for there it is in di-
rect contact with American
and other NATO warships. Once
more, it will be a case pf ur-
gent defense needs taking pre-
cedence over pressing social
demands. The issue of “guns
or butter” will persist through-
out 1969. Too much attention to
either or both could well lead
in
•—■“ I to a price-wage spiral in our
Christmas Eve afternoon was j #conomy. . . with all the threat
rather a hectic one around the ! o), R deflationary plunge therc-
offlce. Everybody wanted to, aftef
get away early with the unfor- j
tunate result that a good many
mistakes were made that had to
be corrected and we got out later
than usual. However, we did
make it without any blood abed.
and the Jet quarterback has! hind his desk. "The only draw-
suggested that the Raider end
put a little too much enthusiasm
into his work on occasion
Namath isn’t letting that bother
him now, though.
“I wouldn’t say I love the
guy," he said, referring to
Davidson, “but, for that matter,
I don’t like any of the opposing
players on the football field.
How can you like any guy fixing
to hit you? I don’t blame
Davidson. If I were him, I’d try
to hit the other quarterback as
hard as I could. That’s the
name of the game.”
Weeb Eubank, the Jets'
coach, came by as Namath
talked. Without interrupting, the
60-year-old coach put his arm
WHEN EAST MEETS WEST
STANFORD, Calif.
Quarterback Brooks
the University of Texas
Paso and tackle Ed White of the
University of California were
named Wednesday co-captains
of the West team which will
meet the East, Dec. 28, in the
Shrine Game.
back the man has is his
wheels. I’ve seen his legs hurt
so much he cringed. But, he’ll
never ask out
“I remember a guy coming
over to me and wanting to write
something about him,” Ewbank
continued ."It looks like Namath
is a privileged character," this
fellow said. ‘He’s the last one
Floyd Hendricks postcarding
from Tampa, Florida, that he
and hi* trusy Ford made it all
inflation still
INCUBATING
1968 will go down In econom-
ics hlstoriec as "the year of
the great boo-boo.” Early it
was recognised that the econo-
mv waa overheating... that a
right and that he would see us
soon. Some of the folk* in the
office doubted, not that Floyd
would make it, but that his car
would. He had no doubt* what-
soever and took off with the
greatest confidence. He should
be back at hia post the first of
the week.
cooling off was necesaary to pre-
vent runaway price booats and
I the Inevitable aftermath of re-
The SMU Poniea and the
Oklahoma Sooner* football
team* were slated to arrive in
Houston today to begin workouts
out and he doesn’t take that lap I for their New Year’s Eve bat-
around the field like all the
others.’
"I told the guy I was glad he
spoke to me before he wrote his
story. Namath is the last one out
because it takes that long to put
the brace on his knee, I told
him. And he’s not supposed to
do that lap everyone else does.
We don’t want him to.
Believe me, he gets no
(atment around here.
whereby If
pays $25.
That goes no matter who he is
and no matter what the reason.
Anytime Joe is late, he’ll oome
right over and call right out,
‘Joe Namath, twnty-five dol-
lars!”
9 WMi DCUUVC IUC| IK
. (UPD —_ .special treatment an
Dawson oT W^^vea^mtem i
?xas at El anybody is late he
tie in the Astrodome. There’s
something new for this year’s
Bluebonnet game — a sell out.
Up to now the game has been
staged in Rice University Stad-
ium and a body could ahvaya
count on a ticket at the last
minute. With the announcement
of the move to the Astrodome,
however, the picture changed
and tickets were snapped up
almost at once.
I’ve got the “Day After
Christmas" blue* and cannot
think of another thing to say
except that I do hope the day
before our next holiday (Wed.)
ia somewhat leas hectic than
the day before Christmas waa.
North’s 3-0 Victory
Highlights Defense
By FRANK EIDGE
MIAMI (UPD — In a year of
weak pro football defeases, the
pro scouts are pleased to note
today a bevy of fine defender*
emerging from hie Christmas
Shrine college All-Star game. In
which the North beat the South,
it).
The only offense which
CUERO HEADQUARTERS
FOR ELECTRIC MOTORS
Tel-A - Win Co.
lit N. Esplanad* CB MIS
Christmas Is a Great
Day to Take Plcturesl
counted was a 23-yard field goal
in the first period by Michigan
State’s Dick Bedlinaki.
A pair of University of
Colorado stars, Rockey Martin
and Mike Schniter, produced the
defensive plays of the game
which preserved the North’s
third consecutive victory and
ninth win of the series.
Martin intercepted a pass
thrown by Sonny Wad* of
Emory ft Henry in the first play
of the second period at the
North three yeord line and shut
off one southern threat.
The second North save cam*
with 11:51 left in the game.
Larry Renta, Florida’s splendid
splinter of a quarterback,
playing with a tom nose which
had to be sewn up in the
dressing room late in the first
period, bad moved toe Souther-
ners 57 yards to a first and goal
on the North one yard line.
On second down, Martin
threw Eugene (Mercury) Mor-
riss of West Texas State for a
three-yard loss. On the next
play, Schniter jarred the ball
i from Renta’ hands and Dennis
Dinaea from Xavier pounced on
it.
There were many other de-
fensive standouts, including
linebacker Bill Bergey from
Arkansas State, who won the
South’s MVP award* North
comerback Dennis Hale from
Minnesota, who stole three
South passes, and Miami’s All-
American end Ted Hendricks,
playing linebacker for the first
time in his career.
Notre Dame running back
Bob Gladieux waa the game’s
leading ball carrier end waa the
North’s moat Valuable honors.
The score, lowest in toe 21-
year-history of the game, could
have been higher if to* most
spectacular play of the game
had not been called back by a
penally in the third period.
Notre Dame quartreback Co-
ley O’Brien lobbed a short
screen pass up toe middle to
teammate and fullback Rea
Dushney on a touchdown strike
of 40 yards. The play was
nullified because the North
team had an illegal man down
field.
BIO GAME IN COLOR
NEW YORK (UPD - The New
York Jets • Oakland Raider*
Amreican Football League
cliampkmship game will be
televised In color from Shea
Stadium Sunday by the NBC
television network and broad-
cast by the NBC radio net work.
The colorcast will start at 12:30
p.m. EST.
cession. The government opt-
ed for a fiscal “wet blanket” to
smother the inflationary fires
... and belatedly the surtax
on personal and corporate in-
comes was enacted, effective
m id-1968.
But the boom rolled on
confounding both the Federal
Reserve — the country’s mo-
ney managers — and the Pres-
ident’s Council of Economic
Advisers. What happened T Two
things: (1) The Fed thought toe
surtax would cause “overkill
in business, so opened the mo-
ney spigots wider. . . stimulat-
ing buying Just when the tax
was supposed to “j
(2) Mr. and Mrs. J. Q- Public
sharply cut their rate of »*v-
ings and went on a buying
binge. . . - augmenting their
fling with big gobs of borrowed
“SS; to Owo* - 8o her. w.
.rJTionth. after the “Uxto
kill inflation,” prices of good*
and services are still spiraling
upward, ’nils, of course, goads
to* workingman to support hit
labor boas when he demands
in pay and bene-
disappear. Then, too, our nation
did move toward fiscal res-
traint when it enacted the sur-
tax. Finally, with the pound
sick and the franc tottering,
the other stable currency areas
such as the German. Swiss, and
Dutch just did not have suffi-
cient size and room to accom-
modate all those financial re-
fugees who might have been
seeking shelter.
Could Be Only Temporary —
But It is too early yet to crow.
Our dollar may still fall victim
to a recurrence of the persist-
ent weakness in our internation-
al payments position that has
marked our relationship with
the rest of the Free World for
90% of the last two decades.
Actually, the final-half 1968
strength in our balance of pay-
ment* has not been the result
of an improvement In our trade
or payments position. Ita good
health then waa more apparent
than real. . . resulting from fi-
nancial transactions, capital
movements toward our shore*
— some of them flights from
the currency ill* of Europe,
some of speculation in our
■tock markets, some “deal*’’
between our Treasury and Ger-
many to keep the mark from
getting too strong and the dol-
lar too weak.
Barring catacyclsmic deve-
lopments on the military front,
the dollar should occasion us
no great concern in 1969. How-
ever, the Babson prediction still
standi. .. that to* dollar may
be living on probation, even on
borrowed time. If the new Ad-
ministration let* prices and
costs run wild, . . oi even if it
cracks down too hard on infla-
tion. touching off a recession.
The things it must do: (1) Keep
the federal budget close to ba-
lance; (2) persuade the money
managers to maintain a moo-
erate, not too stimulating in-
crease in the money stock; (3)
crack down on speculative ex-
ecu; (4) curb the underlying
causes of our deficits in inter-
national payments. . - namely,
faltering exports, soaring
ports, non-competitive
nations abroad) P^ces
costs (which are the faults of
both business and management
year-enrfler period. . . . they purchasers with patience,
may even equal the strong final life Insurance — Hailed five
six months of 1968. Here again,
however, squeezed by infla-
tionary costs and somewhat
less boisterous demand, we look
for a downdrift in profitability
before 1969 has advanced too
fur.
MONET TO STAY COSTLY
The first half of 1969 may ex-
perience some moderate easing
In short-term interest rates. This
will be occasioned by lessened
federal demand for loan*. . . as
the budget moves from deficit
to surplus and the Treaury has
no need to borrow. Most of the
easing, however, will show up
in the Treaury 90-day bill rate.
Long-term money may exper-
years ago as "the greatest’’ for
appreciation, life company
stocks overshot their dynamic
possibilities and were disdain-
ed by speculators for several
years. In 1968, however, life
stocks — with management be-
coming much more aggressive
In diversifying — again began
to stir. The persevering spe-
culator might find opportunity
in Life Insurance of Kentucky.
Electric Utilities — Electric
power stocks, one of the. sound-
est growth areas, are showing
signs of emerging from the In-
vestment pail that has ensh-
rouded them for eoto# ’ time.
They offer both Income and
ience some temporary down-, growth. Try Texas Utilities for
jiggle. . . but over all Babson's : and latter and Ntgara Mohawk
for the former.
BONDS STILL ON BARGAIN
COUNTER
With stock all the rage, bond
buyer* among individual* have
Reports Is not expecting any
sustained slide-off from the
most costly credit of the cen-
tury. Also, as Uncle Sam comes
back into the bond market la- ______________ _
ter in the year, rates should; become “scarcer than hens’
again stiffen. teeth." Yet bonds are selling
Mortgage Coete — No real; nt the lowest pricea ahd the
relief is in sight here. Avails- j highest income yietda of this
billty and rate may be tome-1 century. , . ye*, in many caaes,
what more favorable in the i for t fyu ipo years. We atate
first half of 1969 than In the emphatically: If the fnflatl >n
last. No incentive to postpone
building or buying plan*.
Basinets Tr****1,<‘—If the Trea-
sury bill rate declines In the
first half — ** we expect —
there will be much talk of low-
er loats tor business loans
Here gain, w* feel that any
easing will be tiny and tempo-
rary. _
another high Df
COMMON fTOCKS
The buy - stocks - to - proteet-
prospoets are as sure-fire, as
pervasive, and as unpresenta-
ble as many would have us be-
lieve, we doubt that the owner-
ship of common stocks will pro-
vide a truly safe passage
through the inevitable mael-
strom that will fallow in Infla-
tion's wake. If the atorm comes,
high-quality bonds may ride It
out better than stock*. If It
docs not ume, 6**4, 7% and
.even higher inconu* from ae-
agalnst-lnflatlon "bug” has bit- jecuritles will furnish food
lm-
(with
and
ten deeply. Moat investors are
convinced that a stock-buying
formula is the beat antidote
for soaring living costs. New
common » stock . oriented in-
and shelter to those dependent
upon savings . . and afford
something left over with which
to “feed” inflation.
For Big Income - tt current
stitutions are being formed **a; return 1. your major need
mil* a minute.” Foreign invest-: _ retired or supplemental
•fingers croased" about the
course of stocks during to*
time after mid-year. espe-
cially if market “fireworks’*
S^EvJ^though'toe Fed now
gives signs of having moved to Headers),
lessen the money rise from gu- dollar is now to the "eye”
shar rate to a more gentle of a tremendous national ana
flow, the flood# of prior months j mternMtio0ai inflationary hur-
will continue to seep through. rieane. its respite wUl be but
bwkjm'.a - a* s .ids-
the year: Higher price tags, ye “tightrope act” »bova the
further wage raises to excess Sc>Ua of inflation on the one
of productivity gains, continued and the CharyMls of dls-
up-pressure on costs all around, inflation on the other. 1969 win
and to* inexorable fattening of wltncM the first scenes of the
the tax burden — not alone L**.
from toe perennial upsweep of BUSINESS TO SCALE NEW
state and local levies, but also PEAKS IN IMS
from the substantial step-rate j momentum built by ris-
in social security charges. In- yg business volumes and pro*
deed inflation is still ineubat- ductioo will surely carry toe
ing. The virus is virulent. The MU&t measurements of Gross
* - - - National Product and the Fede-
ral Reserve Index of Produe-
tkm onto new aO-time high
te not the Whole story. Whet
fo know is what toe
ors are flocking back to U S. tofMiuallty corporate issues of
securities markets. And eorpo- recent flotation are y>or beat
rate tales and earning* trend* ^ Return* here run from
are supporting to# convictions to 7% for the “eream ”
of the multiplying herd* of: rtaa Profit - Those
bulla. who can take somewhat less
On pur* momentum atone. j currently, but with equal eer-
we anticipate new ati-titoe highs , t^ty of income, should pick
to the Dow Industrials, as well up best-grade drop discount
as in the more comprelwnsive bunds. Middle-term maturities
averages, during the forepart. _ g to 12 years - glv* you
of 1969. If such does occur, high current return. . .
however, w* shall have our and a cptt4] gaii, if held to pay-
off tone.
F*r toe Afftwmt -«* Never
have tax-exempt bonds been
so attractive. Follow to# *#»*-
rli titles laid down above. Buy
Equipment* — One
antitoxin is known. But the po-
litical medicos that will ad-
minister it have not yet oome
- W*i«. - Mr
Ninon know# that Inflation is
vidends In 1969 than "piaytog
the field.
Farm
group that has hardly
off the ground in IMS has been
the agricultural machinery
makers. Some good long-range
values exist here to Issues such
as Deer* and
Harvester.
Conglomerates -
multiple * activity
tod»hew. long-term exempts of
bah "huoitty . . if to# bmt to
income right now la your need.
IT saving for toe future, h«w-
tfvei, there are plenty of n*?ar-
add middle-term maturities *v-
atikbia te n .ntaxaHe that will
tftve on your annua! tax blit
did give you a capital gate at
maturity.
t1” Convertible*? — At a time
International j tuch as now. after stocks have
had a kmg and sizable runup.
t, __________ i you want —__. T
the one free# that can destroy r4te of gate will be imd what
this nation — financially, mo-
rally, even militarily. He alao
knows that to move aggressive-
the shape of the year, business-
wise. Will took 1»«-. —
Grom National fWPM' W’
to against it could plunge the ui dollar value of all goods ana
UJ. into a depression. The lat- wrvices finished 1966 on “
CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD
ATLANTA, Ga. (UPD - J. Paul
; Austin, president of the Coca
i Cola Co. at Atlanta, Ga., was
! elected Wednesday as chairman
of the tournament player divi-
sion of to Perofessionai Golfers’
Association.
ACES BACK TO BACK
Be you tomawbar haw yarn chMraw looted test Christ-
mast Pa toy* they rsetived... the* starryeysd
This tear dart on# way to im your Christmas.
la fMwwl Just eback yaur Ctetetmas M and aa# hew
ml a Komk insTMMTice Camara gees with any name
an ft And put a Kodak gift on your awn list tool Than
1 a* the tun ot Christmas so that next year
at target Drop In and do your Christmas shop,
r the Kodak ftos that say “Open Us First ”
you can save a
ym won't targi
itel ham-tart
It HONOLULU (UPD - Leroy
Keyes of Purdue and 0. J. J
j Simpson of Southern California, j
geenrally considered the two 1
I best college backs of the 1968
season, will oppose each other
■ for the first time at the Hula
1! Bowl game Jan. 4. Keyes will
play for the North and Simpson
for the South.
PAKISTAN
CKA DRUG CO.
PHARMACY
RALWALPINDI, Pakistan (UPD i
— Soviet Defense Minister An-1
I drei A. Grechko will make a 1
lft- day visit to Pakistan in the
! test week of January, the gov-
of Pakistan said Weft
First Place
Award
Best Radio
Editorial
Ot IMS
GIVEN BY
KCFH RADIO
MMfShm;'- «**»;*,
against the incubus of perpd* tj,e first 1989 quarter • • •
tuafiy climbing cost* and pric- p^aps equivlrot to the lUI-
es. Fortunately, toe incoming j bimon advance of to# third
president has the advantage of resun, w* look for no spectacu-
the anti-inflationary moves ter of next year many #»P *
made in the late days of Pro*- bit from the first; but the up*
ktent Johnson’s tenure. W# «** j coming half year will show a
pact that he will move cau-lclirob m dollar values perhaps
tiously to augment these. Aa d ^ 3364bUlion W6N.,J§P,
HIS stretch. The second guar- L^t bulge of a yew
ter attack on the country’s mim- Assuming no dropping of toe
bar one enemy in the opening j fUrt*x, w# took for a ltoeer
day* of Ninon’s office. That rate of gate in to* final 19M
means there will be further L#jf. . . another big year, but
portents of inflation early next tapering *• it w**” *
year. . . later in 1961 you c*njover all, expect * GKP uft
took far many sign* of a top- j thrust over Ml of otose to 1%
ping off. ebon maybe acme de- j (about 160 billion),
flationary signals.
STRONG WART FOR
KCFH
Volume — physical
output”is_»ot expected to match
.the dollar value of increaa# to
Unites a yew earlier - j 196t. . . not surprising, as more
when the dollar was utotor than half of the looked-for im-
worid suspicion and attack — j provement will result from
the “food ola buck" will start higher prices. Assuming the
HH witii a hole over It The Federal Reserve Index of Prft
big bad wolf - Pmldeiit del duction averages around 165
Gaulle of France — who led on tor \m, we can project about
all-out offensive against the dot- ft 4-point climb to the year
ter to 1187 and early 1988 to ahead. But again, w. think to*
MW pretty ’’dead” insofar a* beat will bo SdM early id 1989.
any lethal threat to it to 1161 to
concerned. His own franc had
to have a good many blowout
patches applied at to# end of
im to keep it rolling. led
ot that the dollar has equipment. Look
any real fundamental .tart - perhaps as
fa recent months; *ft
ther it
the fr an
have certainly failed to shine
to the year now ebstef. Some
issues may hold low risk tor
Investors with patience. Among
such an# Textron. Gulf A Wes-
tern Industrie*, and TKW I no.
Chemicals - This onoe-fa-
vorite of securities fan* has
again passed • year in the ma&
ket doldrums- Some indieulions
of a turn-to-tbo-maklng or* be-
ginning to appear. We foci
there to not too much risk in
oldllne concerns like Allied
Chemical and Union Carbide at
recent levels.
Containers — Another group
that dots not seem to have ex-
hausted Its Investment pit«•-
tlsl is toe containers, . . though
they are not a* ehenp as they
were a year ago. Oyr choice to
this field would be Continental
Can.
Fertilisers — After a long
nd painful stretch of being ”(wt
through the wringer,” ther* arc
now acme sign# that moderate-
ly more profitable days may
lie ahead for the plant-food
makers. International Minerals
ft Chemical — with vast poten-
tial raw materials resources on
more than one continent -
appears to hold little risk at
The big we at Babsun’s Report*, tn:.
companies j ^ nut attracted to convertible
bonds. , . fading that, te m?*t
cases, the coot of toe gall on
the common has become inflat-
ed. Convertible* are nwet at-
tretiv# after a stick market
shake-out. - . Whan ancetefttety
exists nd when you are not lay-
ing too much above the invest-
ment worth of the toted far a
sail <>n
**> faKTlft *KAR
The nati£Klf!STto the day*
of hope- . . toe honeymoon of
the electorate with toe new Ad-
ministration. But to# "chang-
ing of the guard” at toe White
House is not likely to be ac-
complished without cauetog un-
certainties. With business and
the stock martiet bwriing along
toward new highs, ihe risk* of
change lean toward increasing
exposure as the euphoria of
early poat-eleetion comes to
full bloom.
As w# pear Into Ufa, the staff
3t Babson’* Reports, lac. fore-
fronts. But we alao ore atm-
vteccd that as the year length-
crease.
will
levels far long-term with esutton.
projecting inn
hr new plant
Wm
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The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 74, No. 306, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 26, 1968, newspaper, December 26, 1968; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth702835/m1/2/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Cuero Public Library.