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Ashley Molesworth Classen, a minor, who resides in El Paso, Texas; Kathleen Molesworth, a feme sole, who resides in Austin, Texas; Frances Molesworth Long and her husband, Ernest T.,ong, who reside in San Benito, Texas; Travis County as tax collector for itself and the State of Texas; and City of Austin as tax collector for itself and the Austin Independent School District. Such parties are also alleged in the petition to own or claim an interest in the property. The defendant, Edward Molesworth, is the owner of an undivided one-fourth interest in said property. The exact interest of the remaining defendants, including the unknown owners, in the remaining undivided three-fourths interest in said property is unknown. If this citation is not served within 90 days after the date of its issuance, it shall be returned unserved. The officer executing this writ shall promptly serve the same according to requirements of law, and the mandates thereof and make due return as the law directs. ISSUED on this the 28th day of July, 1961. L. THEO BELLMONT CARL T. WIDEN C. B. STERZING Special Commissioners NOTICE OF INTENTION TO INCORPORATE Notice is hereby given that J. J. Lampis and G. C. Sarris doing business as Christi’s, 3130 Broadway, San Antonio, Texas, intends to incorporate under the name of Christie’s, Inc., on July 1, 1961. Dated at Austin, Texas, June .., 1961. Owners J. J. LAMPIS G. C. SARRIS Notice is hereby given that W. Roland Lund, J. A. Ramirez, Jr., and Edmund X. Ramirez, doing business as Dallas Trophy & Award Center, 4028 Swiss Avenue, Dallas, Texas, intend to incorporate without change of name. Dated at Dallas, Texas, July 24, 1961. Owners: W. Roland Lund J. A. Ramirez, Jr. Edmund X. Ramirez CITATION BY PUBLICATION THE STATE OF TEXAS TO Charles D. Meilleur, 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 28th day of August, 1961, and answer the petition of plaintiff in Cause Number 122,890, in which Madeline Meilleur is Plaintiff and Charles D. Meilleur is defendant, filed in said Court on the 14th day of July, 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 treatment toward plaintiff and that plaintiff did nothing to bring about this treatment; plaintiff alleges that defendant was guilty of excesses, cruel treatment and outrages toward plaintiff of such a nature as to render their living together insupportable; plaintiff alleges that they acquired an equity in a home at 207 W. 551/2 St., Austin, Texas, household furniture and effects, a business known as M & M Embossing Company located at 5200 N. Lamar, Austin, Texas, one 1959 Mercury Station Wagon and one boat, motor and trailer, and plaintiff owns as her separate property a vacant lot at North Shore Colony, Travis, County, Texas; Plaintiff prays for a judgment of divorce against defendant, for a partition of community property, that the Court find the vacant lot located at North Shore Colony, Travis County, Texas, to be the separate property of plaintiff, and for such other and further relief, in law and 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 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 14th day of July, 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 Walter Sheffield, 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’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 28th day of August, 1961, and answer the petition of plaintiff in Cause Number 117,672, in which C. M. Sheffield is Plaintiff and Walter Sheffield is defendant, filed in said Court on the 27th day of April, 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 bonds of matrimony heretofore and now existing between said parties; Plaintiff alleges that defendant is a resident of Kansas City, Missouri; plaintiff alleges that defendant commenced a course of unkind, harsh and tyrannical 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 they acquired as community property one 1951 Ford and one TV set, and further alleges that one child was born of this marriage, to-wit: Angel Sheffield, age 2 years; plaintiff alleges that defendant is well able to contribute a reasonable amount for support and maintenance of said minor child; Plaintiff prays for judgment of divorce from defendant, division of community property; care,-control and custody of the aforementioned minor child and a reasonable amount of money for support and maintenance, to be paid in monthly payments, of said minor child until child reaches the age of 18 years, and that defendant pay costs of court; 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 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 13th day of July, 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: Guy Brown, the legal representative of Guy Brown, deceased, the heirs of Guy Brown, deceased, the legal representatives of the heirs of Guy Brown, deceased; You, and each of you, are hereby commanded to appear before the 126th Judicial 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 10:00 o’clock A.M. on the first Monday after the expiration of 42 days from the date of issuance hereof, that is to say, at or before 10:00 o’clock A.. of Monday, September 14, 1961, and answer the petition of plaintiff in Cause No. 115,260, in which M. Z. Piland is plaintiff and Paul K. American history except dur against it; YarborOugh said heads ing the first hundred days of will roll: Schwartz said the corn Roosevelt.” position of the Senate can be Yarborough said he has “voted changed in 1962. with the people.” It is, he said, a Congressman Jim Wright of GALVESTON American labor has come to a standstill and may be breaking ranks, Asst. Secy. of Labor Jerry Holleman told the Texas labor organization of which, a year ago, he was president. The turbulent Texas labor convention mirrors the problems of the labor movement nationally, he said. Figures indicating labor has “passed its organizational peak,” Holleman said, show that in 1945, 34 percent of the non-farm work ers were organized; today only 35 percent are. Again, 18,500,000 workers were organized in 1956, and the same number in 1960, although the work force has since increased by 4,000,000. Some have said labor is losing “its sense of purpose” and “no longer is idealistic as it used to be,” mainly interested now in “feathering its own nest.” There is the danger, he said, “of turning inward upon itself; of complacency; of contentment with gains for members only. It is the danger that comes when a group is afraid to fight for an abstract, but humane cause. This is what happens when labor adopts the corporate dedication to private gain or self-interest. As unionists, you do not achieve peace and brotherhood or even full employmentby compounding selfishness.” Taken together, Holleman said, these troubles are “a kind of invisible crisis.” Texas labor problems reflect the crisis, although in Texas labor does not yet com 7 mand the strength it does nationally. While making progress, “you have not yet really captured the heart and the respect of this state. . . . Largely before you is the day when labor is no longer a taboo expression, signaling something vaguely un-Texan.” For this reason, division now is especially tragic, he said. Holleman said Texas labor should fulfil five responsibilities: Continue to make common cause “with migrant workers, whether organized or not; with the R.E.A.; the farmers; with the school children; and senior citizens who have no other spokesmen; with the school teacher; with the Latins, with the Negroes, and many others.” Make themselves appealing to unorganized workers teachers, technicians, retail workers, white collar workers. Help launch a new labor era in the South, victim of “exploitation and demagoguery,” in which some areas, including parts of Texas, “have never accepted either the Ten Commandments or the first Ten Amendments.” Contain “the forces of reac tion which could destroy Texas from within” with programs for the public good, rather than concentrating on legislative objections “of special, even private, concern, to the trade union movement.” And maintain public dig nity, keeping internal problems out of ‘the public record. “Newspapers, as a rule, are ingenious institutions give them enough rope, and they’ll hang you,” he said. * * Ralph Lauds Kennedy GALVESTON Senior Senator Ralph Yarborough reported to Texas labor in convention here this week that more social progress has been made this year under President Kennedy than “any other comparable time in principle of his political philosophy “to do more than I promised to do.” He “would relish nothing better than a good hot election in Texas and we’d see how this pure Goldwaterism would do,” he told the whooping union men. Enumerating legislative changes since January, Yarborough cited the $1.25 minimum wage law extended to more than three million more workers; $5 billion new money for low-interest-rate housing; 35-year loans for hardship cases and 100,000 new public housing units; another $1 billion for FHA housing; extension of veterans’ home loans; retirement on social security at 62 and an increased monthly minimum from $33 to $40; higher assistance payments for the aged and blind; 13 additional weeks’ unemployment compensation; loans to the railroads to “keep their heads above water”; presidential extension of food parcels distribution; and drouth relief for the Great Plains. Blasts from a Trio GALVESTON. Three politicians addressed the state AFL-CIO’s Committee on Political Education session during the convention here ; in vehemence they compensated for their number. Sen. Henry B. Gonzalez, announced candidate for Congress from San Antonio; Don Yarborough, probable candidate for lieutenant governor or governor in 1962; and Sen. Babe SchWartz of Galveston affirmed their opposition to the general sales tax. Gonzalez pledged all his resources LEGALS THE STATE OF TEXAS TO any Sheriff or any Constable within the State of Texas GREETING: You are hereby commanded to cause to be published once each week for 4 consecutive weeks, the first publication to be at least 28 days before the return day thereof, in a newspaper printed in Travis County, Texas, the accompanying citation of which the herein below following is a true copy. CITATION BY PUBLICATION THE STATE OF TEXAS TO the Unknown Owners of the following described property or any interest therein: “Archway”, a subdivision of Outthe City of Austin, in Travis County, Texas, as shown by the plat of same recorded in Volume 2, page 208, of the Plat Records of Travis County, Texas, and being the same property as that described in the deed from Mary Ellen Martin to Mrs. E. C. Molesworth, dated June 9. 1921, ‘,and recorded in Volume 349, pages 557558, of the Travis County Deed Records. GREETINGS: You are hereby notified that on the 21st day of September, A.D. 1961, at 2:00 o’clock P.M., at County Courtroom in Travis County Courthouse, in the City of Austin, Travis County, Texas, the undersigned Special Commissioners, appointed by the County Judge of said county to fix the market value of, and to assess the damages, occasioned by the condemnation of the fee simple title to the above described property. will proceed to hear evidence and