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LEGALS CITATION BY PUBLICATION THE STATE OF TEXAS TO Elizabeth Gilliland Defendant, in the hereinafter styled and numbered cause: You are hereby commanded to appear before the 126th District Court of Travis County, Texas, to be held at the courthouse of said county in the City of Austin, Travis County, Texas, at or before 10 o’clock A. M. of the first Monday after the expiration of 42 days from the date of issuance hereof; that is to say, at or before, 10 o’clock A.M. of Monday the 21st day of December, 1959, and answer the petition of plaintiff in Cause Number 115,993, in which Don. F. Gilliland is Plaintiff and Elizabeth Gilliland is defendant, filed in said Court on the 6th day of November, 1959, and the nature of which said suit is as follows: Being an action and prayer for judgment in favor of Plaintiff and against Defendant for decree of divorce dissolving the bonds of matrimony heretofore and now existing between said parties; Plaintiff alleges that defendant began a course of unkind, harsh, cruel and tyrannical treatment toward plaintiff, and that during this time defendant was guilty of excesses, cruel treatment and outrages toward plaintiff, making their further living together insupportable; plaintiff alleges that no children were born of this marriage and no community property was acquired; Plaintiff further prays for relief, general and special; All of which more fully appears from Plaintiff’s Original petition on file in this office, and to which reference is here made for all intents and purposes; If this citation is not served %vithin 90 days after date of its issuance, it shall be returned unserved. WITNESS, 0. T. MARTIN, JR., Clerk of the District Courts of Travis County, Texas. Issued and given under my hand and the seal of said Court at office in the City of Austin, this the 6th day of November, 1959. 0. T. MARTIN, JR. Clerk of the District Courts, Travis County, Texas By A. E. JONES, Deputy. CITATION BY PUBLICATION THE STATE OF TEXAS TO Mamie T. Whittle Defendant, in the hereinafter styled and numbered cause:. You are hereby commanded to appear before the 126th District Court of Travis County, Texas, to be held at the courthouse of said county in the City of Austin, Travis County, Texas, at or before 10 o’clock A. M. of the first Monday after the expiration of 42 days from the date of issuance hereof; that is to say, at or before, 10 o’clock A. M. of Monday the 14th day of December, 1959, and answer the petition of plaintiff in Cause Number 115,916, in which David R. Whittle is Plaintiff and Mamie T. Whittle is defendant, filed in said Court on the 30th day of October, 1959, and the nature of which said suit is as follows: Being an action and prayer for judgment in favor of plaintiff and against Defendant for a decree of divorce dissolving the bonds of matrimony heretofore and now existing between said parties; Plaintiff alleges cruel treatment on the part of defendant toward plaintiff of such a nature as to render their further living together as husband and wife altogether insupportable and further alleges that he has not seen the defendant since 1939. Plaintiff further alleges that no children were born of said union and no community property was accumulated. Plaintiff prays for other relief, general and special, all of which more fully appears from plaintiff’s original petition on file in this office, and to which reference is here made. If this citation is not served within 90 days after date of its issuance, it shall be returned unserved. WITNESS, 0. T. MARTIN, JR., Clerk of the District Courts *of Travis County, Texas. Issued and given under my hand and the seal of said Court at office in the City of Austin, this the 30th day of October, 1959. 0. T. MARTIN, JR. Clerk of the District Courts ., Travis County, Texas. By ELI GREER, Deputy. CITATION BY PUBLICATION THE STATE OF TEXAS TO Roy H. Goodman and Mary Josephine Goodman, if living, whose place of residence are unknown to Plaintiff, and if dead, the legal representatives of each of said named defendants, and the unknown heirs of each of said Defendants; the legal representatives of the unknown heirs of each of said named Defendants, if the unknown heirs of said named Defendants are dead; the unknown heirs of the unknown heirs of said named Defendants, if the unknown heirs of the unknown heirs of said named Defendants are dead; whose places of residence are unknown to Plaintiff; all of said parties being defendants or Intervenors in said cause, and hereafter called Defendants, in the hereinafter styled and numbered cause: hereby commanded to appear be fore the 98th District Court of Travis County, Texas, to be held at the courthouse of said county in the City of, Travis County, Texas, a t or before 10 o’clock A. M. of the first Monday after the expiration of 42 days from the date of issuance hereof; that is to say, at or before, 10 o’clock A. M. of Monday the 7th day of December, 1959, and answer the petition of plaintiff in Cause Number 115,821, in which L. C. Purnell is Plaintiff and the hereby above named are defendants, filed in said Court on the 20th day of October, 1959, and the nature of which said, suit is as follows: BEING an action and prayer for judgment in favor of Plaintiff and against Defendants for title to and possession of the following described premises, to-wit: Lot No. of MOCKINGBIRD HILL ADDITION, SECTION I, an Addition to the City of Austin, Travis County, Texas, according to the map or plat of record in Volume 5, Page 159, of the Plat’ Records of Travis County, Texas; Plaintiff alleges that on September 30, 1957, was, and still is, the owner in fee simple of the above described premises and that on said date she was in possession of such premises, the defendant unlawfully entered upon and dispossessed Plaintiff o f such premises, and withholds from Plaintiff his possession thereof, to which possession he was and is legally entitled; Plaintiff further prays for such ‘other and further relief as he may be entitled to, either at law or in equity; All of which more fully appears from Plaintiff’s Original Petition on file in this office and to which reference is here made for all intents and purposes; If this citation is not served within 90 days after date of its issuance, it shall be returned unserved. WITNESS, 0. T. MARTIN, JR., Clerk of the District Courts of Travis County, Texas. Issued and given under my hand and the seal of said Court at office in the City of Austin, this the 20th day of October, 1959. 0. T. MARTIN, JR., Clerk of the District Courts, Travis County, Texas By A. E. JONES, Deputy Notice is hereby given that George W. Foote, doing business under the firm names of Twin Oaks Fashion Shop Cameron Village Fashion Shop and Highland Park West Fashion Shop, all in Austin, Travis County, Texas, intends to incorporate such business under the name of Twin Oaks Fashion Shop, Inc. TWIN OAKS FASHION SHOP CAMERON VILLAGE FASHION SHOP HIGHLAND PARK WEST FASHION SHOP By George W. Foote Owner To Whom It May Concern: Notice is hereby given that Fred Woodell, John H. Robinson, Jr. and Lucian A. Roark, heretofore composing the firm of Sovereign Instruments Company, have dissolved, and that Fred Woodell and John H. Robinson, Jr. intend to incorporate the business of such firm without change of firm name after the expiration of thirty days from this date, the 1st day of October, 1959. SOVEREIGN INSTRUMENTS COMPANY By: Fred Woodell John H. Robinson, Jr. L. A. Roark Partners Johnson Before Union Men PREJUDICE CHARGED IN A BELL JOB AD SAN ANTONIO Organized labor in Texas, admonished in advance to be polite, received Sen. Lyndon Johnson with formal courtesy and some coolness. He delivered a middleof-the-road speech in which he defended the 1959 labor legislation, said “responsibility,” not labor, will be the issue in 1960, and told the labor delegates he was not afraid of them or for them. He described his role in thee passage of the labor bill as assisting in the protection of various union rights. His speech was generally regarded among the labor delegates as effective under the circumstances. He was given standing ovations on his arrival and departure, but not the enthusiastic applause received earlier by Sen. Yarborough. Jerry Holleman, Texas labor council president, said to the delegates before Johnson arrived: “I’m sure that this convention with courtesy and respect.” There were a few guffaws, to which Holleman said: “I would be awfully disappointed should anybody disappoint us in that regard. He should be received with respect.” Introducing Johnson, Holleman recalled his “kind and generous reception” of labor delegates in Washington; said Johnson had advised labor on how the 1959 bill should be handled and that it may have been a mistake that this advice was not followed; noted that both Texas senators “voted consistently to keep anti-labor amendments from being added”; and that this had “pleased” labor; called Johnson “the master parliamentarian of the Senate, a man whose talents are recognized by his enemies as well as his “We have worked hard for this man; he has worked hard for us,” Holleman said of Yarborough. “He has worked hard for the people; he has made himself their champion.” Holleman presented Yarborough as “our senator from Texas.” Yarborough said he has received a few letters hostile to the Democratic Party because of the Landrum-Griffin bill \(which passed the Senate overwhelmingly, YarHe said the bill was passed by Republicans with a “splinter faction of the Democrats” in the House and was rejected, then modified and accepted in the Senate. He will favor Sen. John Kennedy’s bill to take some of the “harsher” provisions out of the law in 1960, he said. On the other hand, he said, Democrats achieved, in the labor area, 7.5 percent more in social security benefits and health and hospitalization for 2,300,000 federal workers. Yarborough noted “the great metal acceptability of labor” now in Texas among people “who put over the Port Arthur story” and warned that when they sit down with these folk and hear them say, ” ‘Boys, we’ve been misunderstood’,” they should beware. “Boy, while you’re chomping on those oats, keep your eye on that bridle,” Yarborough said. He said some loyal Democratic Party officials have been elected, “notably Mrs. R. D. Randolph,” whose mention was cheered lustily. \(She had wired she could not attend the convention “because of the activity of the Freedom in Action organization in Harris County.” Organizing every day is necessary to carry the county “for friends”; and presented him as “the Democratic Party’s leader in the Senate.” Some thought had been given to this introduction: it was written out, and Holleman obviously was being careful not to say more than he felt the situation called for. There was no mention of Johnson’s presidential candidacy. Johnson named Holleman, Fred Schmidt, Marcus Loftis, Bill Petri, and Bob Bryant and said he has had a “fine working relationship with them. They’re fair, they’re reasonable, they’re effective. I want you to know that the doors of my office are always open to you,and I’ll do my best to see that you’ll always receive a fair shake.” He was interrupted for moderate applause twicewhen he said he was going to “talk turkey” and when he said the U.S. has “the greatest government in the world.” He urged unity over division. “Some are afraid of organized labor. Some are afraid for it. Out of the exploitation of these fears on both sides they would turn the year of 1960 into a first skirmish of a war between the classes. … I am not afraid of you and I am not afraid for you. But I am concerned with you” over issues like unemployment, the tight dollar, oppression, inequality of opportunity, and education. “You will not be served well as free men if the nation’s leadership is subservient to any political bloc,” he said. He said ‘.twice, in the_ same words, that more than half the people of the world “exist on a weekly income barely more than many of you draw in one hour.” “This is *great and this is good and I’m the loyal Democrats in 1960,” she The junior senator gave extended pitches for higher old age pensions in Texas and his cold war GI bill for college grants to veterans. The average social security benefit for married couples in $113; for widows, it is $56; the old age pension in Texas is $52.06 per person, 39th in the states. These must be raised, he said. “These are real objectives, part of the Judeo-Christian heritage that intelligent people ought to be for whether they have any religious faith or not. These are the things we should do for our peo tion cannot be callous to their lot,” he said. Middle-income Americans have many debts and hopes: “It must be the commitment of our policies to continue the advances middleincome America has made,” he said. “This is no time for us to expend our national strength trying to hobble business or to shackle labor. … The issue of 1960 is not labor, it is not business, it is not the budgetand it certainly is not cranberry sauce. The issue is responsibility.” In a reference to equal opportunity, he said citizens must “have their civil rights protected, have their educational opportunities preserved and enlarged.” He emphasized that the labor bill first passed the Senate 90-0 after he had voted against laborrestricting provisions like the McLellan’ bill of rights, turning cases over to states, barring organizational picketing, and letting states regulate public utility strikes. In the House, he said, a substitute was adopted \(Landrumon the floor of the Senate and answered questions of 98 other colleagues.” With the support of the minority leader the bill was sent to conference. There 20 changes were made, guaranteeing, for example, the right to publi