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ATTENTION, MEN! Train To Be A Heavy Equipment Operator SCRAPER POWER SHOVEL BULLDOZER GRADER AND OTHERS TRAINED MEN $165 ARE EARNING OVER PER WEEK Complete Training Program, Including Actual Experience on Heavy Equipment. No Previous Experience Needed. Mail Coupon For Complete Information. QUALIFY NOW For the many high-paying jobs in heavy construction, building roads, bridges, dams, pipe hines, homes, office buildings, etc. Local and foreign employment opporturritiets. No need to quit your present job until you are trained. UNIVERSAL EQUIPMENT OPERATORS SCHOOL, Inc. 400 Wayside, Houston, Texas Name Age Street City State Phone Hours tat Home in the City of Austin, this the 3rd day of March, 1961. 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 Ralph Stephens, Defendant, in the hereinafter styled and numbered cause: You are hereby commanded to appear before the 98th 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’clpck 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 3rd day of April, 1961, and answer the petition of plaintiff in Cause Number 121,036, in which Patricia Stephens is Plaintiff and Ralph Stephens is defendant, filed in said Court on the 16th day of February, 1961, 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 and plaintiff separated on April 8, 1958, and have not lived together since; plaintiff alleges that on divers occasions defendant was guilty of excesses, cruel treatment and outrages of such a nature as to render their living together insupportable and that plaintiff did nothing to bring about this treatment; plaintiff alleges that no community property was acquired and that two children were born of this marriage, to-wit: Trent Stephens, age 4 yrs. and BambiRae Stephens, age 2 yrs., and asks the Court for custody and control of said minor children; Plaintiff asks the Court for a reasonable amount of money for the care of said children; Plaintiff prays for judgment of divorce, care and custody of the aforementioned minor children and for child support money, and for relief, general and special; All of which more fully appears from Plaintiff’s Original Petition on file in this office. and 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 offirce in the City of Austin, this the 16th day of February, 1961. 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 Doris Tullos, 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 17th day of April, 1961, and answer the petition of plaintiff in Cause Number 120,770, in which Jerry Tullos is Plaintiff and Doris Tullos is defendant, filed in said Court on the 26th day of January, 1961, 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 commenced a course of unkind, harsh and tyrannical conduct toward plaintiff which continued until their separation; plaintiff alleges that on divers occasion defendant was guilty of excesses, cruel treatment ./nd outrages toward plaintiff of such a nature as to render their further living together insupportable; plaintiff alleges that no children were born of this marriage, none were adopted and further alleges that no community property was acquired during this marriage; plaintiff prays for judgment of divorce dissolving the marriage contract now existing, and for such other and ‘further relief as the court shall deem proper to grant to either in law or in equity. All of which more fully appears from Plaintiff’s Original Petition on file in this office, and 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 he 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 27th day of February, 1961. 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 Ida Louise Pipkin Defendant, in the hereinafter styled and numbered cause: You are hereby commanded to appear before the 53rd 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 3rd day of April, 1961, and answer the petition of plaintiff in Cause Number 121,021, in which A. L. Pipkin is Plaintiff and Ida Louise Pipkin is defendant, filed in said Court on the 15th day of February, 1951, 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 left him in March of 1957, and that he has not communicated or seen her since; Plaintiff alleges that five children were born of this marriage, to-wit: Sylvia Jean; Age 19 yrs., Joyce Ann, Age 15 years., Sherry Lynn, Age 12 yrs., Arthur Carroll, Age 10 yrs., and Marylin Fredonia, Age 6 yrs., and that defendant has children with her, or at least plaintiff does not knew the whereabouts of said children; plaintiff alleges that no community property was acquired during this marriage; plaintiff prays for judgment of divorce, and for relief, general and special; All of which more fully appears from Plaintiff’s Original Petition 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 15th clay of February, 1961. 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 Bobby Williams, 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 17th day of April, 1961, and answer the petition of plaintiff in Cause Number 119,922, in which Gffney Darleen Williams is Plaintiff and Bobby Williams is defendant, filed in said Court on the 4th day of Nov., 1960, 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 bond of matrimony heretofore and now existing between said parties; plaintiff alleges that defendant began a course of unkind treatment toward plaintiff and that defendant was guilty of excesses, cruel treatment and outrages toward plaintiff of such a nature as to render their further living together insupportable; plaintiff alleges that one child was born of this marriage, to-wit: Gerald Williams, male, age 4 yrs.; plaintiff further alleges that no community property was acquired during her marriage to defendant; plaintiff prays for judgment of divorce, care and custody of minor child, Gerald Williams, and that defendant be required to contribute a reasonable amount of money toward support and maintenance of minor child, and for such other and further relief as the Court shall deem proper to grant; All of which more fully appears from Plaintiff’s Original. Petition on file in this office, and 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 1st day of March, 1961. 0. T. MARTIN, JR. Clerk of the District Courts, Travis County, Texas By: A. E. JONES, Deputy. Comments on Campaign, Sit-ins, a Native Son Agreement Sirs: We agree: “. . . Only folly and disaster will emerge from a sustained illwill within the liberal camp . . .” And it certainly follows: “… Logic and good sound sense dictate a tolerance and an understanding which reputedly are the wellsprings of liberalism . . .” But, as you asked in your editorial endorsing Maury Maverick JUNIOR, a good man, we know, because you told us so: “. . . Are these the words of a man who can understand what now lies in the hearts of young non-Americans in Africa \(and in these parenthesises of ours, we and in Asia?” In the career of Henry Gonzalez, you accurately saw . . .”a classic re-enactment of the great political dramas of the oppressed immigrant groups in the East one, two, and three generations ago the relentless desire to break through old bonds, the quest for greater prestige and greater hope . . .” Maverick .. . Latin America. I realize Castro is a menace, but let me say this the greatest menace is not Castro, but the disillusion and poverty and injustice that produce a Castro … “Yet it isn’t just enough to talk about making democracy work in the far-off Congo. It’s got to work right here in Harris County too, because the kind of democracy we have at home demonstrates our attitude to the world and on it hangs our survival. “My family for a long time has had a great rapport with you people. Do you know who the Negro was who was shot down in the Boston Massacre? Do you know his name?” \(Several in the audi”That’s right,” Maverick said, “Crispus Attucks. My ancestor, Samuel Augustus Maverick, was shot down by his side.” Maverick said he was the only candidate who criticized Sen. William Blakley for attacking Robert Weaver in the Senate hearings. “It was wrong,” Maverick said. “Blakley was indulging in racebaiting.” We Americans are part of the world now, he said. “Who talked to Gandhi? Thoreau talked to Gandhi. Who did Gandhi talk to? He talked to the teeming millions of Indiaand he talked to the Rev. Martin Luther King. Yes, he did.” From the pews came clapping and shouts of approval. His father took him to the White House when he was a small boy, “and I shook hands with Franklin D. Roosevelt, and remember how impressed I was by the strength of his hands and his shoulders, and I loved him, and he wrote me a letter once when I was a little boy, after my father had been defeated for mayor of San Antonio. He wrote me, ‘If the people of Texas are told the truth long enough and often enough, they’ll do right.’ “I want to go to Washington to help John Kennedy,” Maverick concluded. “I’ve got a chance to get in that run-off if you’ll help me.” Outside the church, in the glaring noon sunlight of the early spring day, Maverick walked over to a group of small Negro children standing by a fence in a front yard. He shook their hands and tousled their hair. Then the campaign caravan started off again, for Baytown, Pasadena, and the refinery country. W.M. There is another classic reenactment that occurs in most Texas elections. And this must have occurred to you many .times. The re-enactment I have in mind is classic in the sense that Greek and Shakespearian tragedies are classic. In Texas elections, again and again, knowing they can’t win, or have little chance of winning, liberal candidates play their roles before audiences of the electorate who pay their annual admission of $1.50. Their fate is decided by factors outside their own lives. But, as they must, they play their roles. They are not always “oppressed immigrant groups.” But “. . . the relentless desire to break through old bonds, the quest for greater prestige and greater hope . . .” never dies in them, or those of us who will continually support them for ours is a tragic role, too. “. . . These things we understand . . . “about Senator Henry Gonzalez and we are proud to play a supporting role. Sincerely, Jim Maloney, Houston, Texas. Native Son Sirs: George Clifton Edwards,