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Las Vegas Daily Optic from East Las Vegas, New Mexico • Page 3

Location:
East Las Vegas, New Mexico
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

LEGAL, NOTICE STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OB" MORA IN THE DISTRICT COURT In the Matter of the De- etj'nmiation of HeirshSp of Antonio Romero, No. 130 deceased NOTICE OF HICAKIMJ OF PETITION TO DKTKRMINK HEIKSIUP TO: Isabel P. Romero, Santiago Romero, Sylvia Romero, Roy Uomei'o. iind Timotoo men); AND, to all the heirs, iogalee, and divisees of ANTONIO ROMERO, Deceased. AND, to all the unknown Ht-lrs of said Decedent, AND, to all unknown persons claiming any lien upon or right, title oi- interest in to the Estate, of said Decedent.

GKKET1NGS: YOU, and each of you, are hereby notified that Santiago Romero, has filed in the above entitled cause- a petition to determine Helrship and ownership of certain real estate owned by find in which Antonio Romero had an interest, at the time of his death, on. to-wit: As hereinafter described, there having been no administration of his es- tale; and the Court has appointed Friday, 22nd day of March, at the hour of 10:00 A. 11)0 day, and the Mora Coimty Courthouse, at Morn, New Mexico, as tho place for a hearing to determine the huirship of said dacedcnl, the of each respective claimant in and to the real c-slale involved, and persons entitled to the distribution' thereof. "A tract of lund shunted at Hot- mail, Precinct No. 0, Mora Coimty, New Mexico, and more fully described as follows, towit: Beginning nl an iron pipe marking the! SW corner of the 11.

C. Wells property and the East right of way State Roiid No. J21 from whence Highway Station No marked b.y a mil b'cnrs E. 70,0 feet; thence S. 140.0 feet to the point of beginning on tho West right of way of State Noaci 121; iheiico following the west right of way In a northerly direction in accordance with New Mexico liglwtiy Deportment Right of Ways Maps for project A.S.

No. 1427 distance -of 2757.30 -feel to Highway Station' No. thence S. SS'40'. E.

J72.50 feet crossing the highway lo an Iron pipe; thence S. tilpng the north boundary of Heirs of Andres Ilomero now Sam Romero a distance of 11180.0 feel to iin iron pipe on the ridge to Ihe east; thence N. 54' feet to an iron pipe marking Hie NE corner, of the herein described property; thence S. W. 210.0 feet to nn iron' pipe -on the north thence N.

W. feet to an iron pipe; thence S. W. 230.0 feet to an Iron pipe; thence N. 80" 15' W.

3032.0 feet to nn iron pipe; thence N. -W. 1705.0. feet to un iron pipe; thence N. W.

3522.0 feel to un imn pipe; thence N. 57 22' W. crossing Slate Road No. 121 A of 652.0 feet to an iroii pipe; thence N. W.

500.0 fec-t to nn iron pipe; thence S. 1825.75 feet to nn iron pipe; thence S. W. J900.0 feet to an iron pipe marking the NW corner of the herein described tract; thence S. E.

G98.0 feel to an iron pipe on the west boundary; thence S. E. 330.0 feet lo iron pipe; thence S. 26-30' E. feet (o an Iron pipe; thence S.

E. feet to an iron thence S. E. 274.0 feet to an iron pipe; thence South 250.0 feet to aii iron pipe; thence S. E.

194.0 feel to an Iron pipe; thence S. W. 182.44 feet to an iron pipe; thence S. Sli-OO' W. 539.0 feet to nu iron pipe; thence S.

E. 864.0 feet to an iron pipe; thence S. 00' E. .882.0 feet. to an iron pipe; thcnco 514.0 feet lo an iron pipe; thence S.

34'40' E. 2855.0 feet to an iron pipe; thence E. 872.0 feet lo an iron pipe; the point of beginning." The nttorneys for Petitioner, Santiago' Romero, are Chacon and Melcndez, P. O. Box RR, Espanola New Mexico.

WITNESS ITonorablc LUIS ARMIJO, Judge of the Fourth Judicial District Court, Morn County New Mexico, and the Seal of this Court this 5th day of Februnrv, American Team Sets Out On An Ambitious Climb KATMANDU. Nepal (UPIi 19-man American team sets out today on one of history's most ambitious mountain-climbing tripk' assault on Ml. Kveresl and two slslor peaks In tin? llimniayas. The Americans, accompanied by a virtual army of Khorpa guides and high-altitude porlers. planned to spend about jjjx months gathering scientific diila on the perform a nee of men under extreme stress.

The stnrtlng point was lianepa, the end of the roud for vehicles andji from the of Everest. A truck caravan carried supplies to (Janetiu, 20 miles from Katmandu, Tuesday. The unprecedented assault on Ml. Everest, the world's highest mountain, and the nearby peaks of Lhotse and Nupiw is the brainchild of Norman (i. Dybrenfuilh, 44.

of Santa Monica. Calif. Starts I'lunnliiK Dyliri'iifiirlh began phimilitg Hie expedition in June li)C(J. lie received official permission from the government in May, and slarli'd assembling Ills team of niomitalneer-scienllsls. Under present plans, ihri-e (cams of (wo men each will make the assault on KvereHl.

Two teams of two men c-ach will make (he subsequent titlenipls on Nuplse mid Uiolse. The Jictun) scaling of peaks will not bogin for sonu; time. The Ilrst several weeks will be xpent establishing oainps high up the mountains, Rep. Adam Powell Says It Isn't So 'J'lie Everest has been conquered only twice. First to gut to the summit W( re Nuw Xealaml's Sir Edmund Hillary and Sherpa lenzing Norkay In A Swiss expedition made it to the top In The l.holse ffonrth highest) and the 850-foot Nupt- se (I8lli) have scaled only once each.

The -Swiss expedition which lopped Kvcrest also climbed J-liotso. A IJritlsli mountaineering team readied the Nuptse In JiXJl. The American team medical doctors, physlml- physicist, glaclologlsl and sociologist. (SEAL) (s) Dolores Clerk of the District Court Pub. Feb.

13, 20. 27, btitmu'cej Talks Continue On Strike Issues Talks continued without appar- cut progress today In (lit- long Now York, and Cleveland newspaper sli-Jkes mid the threatened runway dorks walkout against the- Pacific Railway A blanket of snow quieted the in the troubled Tennessee, conl fields, but the rnsh of 1 sprcnd to fe'arment factories In Clevelniul anr, nn atomic works in Riclilund wash. The strikes were costing the nation economy an untold a.mmnl. The Now York strike alone was estimated to cost $4 million rtullv one time duiug the. current siege, more than 130,000 workers were idled.

The publishers of Cleveland's I ress and Plain Dealer, blacked out since Thanksgiving, were to today with (luj non-strik- "ife No progress was reported In their talks with the non-striking stcrcotyper.s. r-m 1 li Und Newspaper Guild which had been one of the striking unions, planned moethms for Friday nitlfy agreement's. Tie Pl ai Ucalci ac krif at S9.75 mid the Press settlement at $9.25 a week An ofridul of the striking printers in New York said subcommittees of other craft unions would mcot today with the pub- lishcrs discuss a work C. 0 Technical online posted pickets against the llanford atomic plant at Richmond. Wash 1 ork construction nf a million production reactor A spokesman for the Associated General Conlraclors said the en- Mmcers apparently were protesi- the assignment of some work to members of a Hy AKNOLI) SAWISI.AK WASHINGTON (UPI) Hep Adam Clayton Powell says it- isn't no.

Tiie coiitrovr-rsln) New York Ocmoi-rat Tuesday broke a lem-e of several weeks about criticism of Ills operations In and out "Inaccuracies, nil.s:;1;jli-m(.'i>l.s mid hi Imititni-t-h lies," lho Negro eongrt-Ksmaii xald of by .1. Williams, thiii tiie Kennedy admin- i.slnillon was going ail-out to give him favored Ircatmcjil, "Vindictive," IKJ culled by some of liis HOII.SC to cut his request for to run the House Kduciition and Labor Committee', "I don't waul to have any more Hum any oilier congressman," he said. "Hut by the grace of I'm not going to Sake any k'KK." Reversing a "cloned dour" pol- h-y towurd In ills office, Poweli gave all coiners his views of the (jriUci.sm has been piling up about him for weeks. He said mure complete answer to his critics would come later. Sonic Support Powell also got some support in his reject Ion of Williams' Keb.

5 charges from Alty. Gen. Robert K. Kennedy and Hup. Koo- Kevt'lt, a member of the education find Inbor committee.

Kenni'dy, testifying before a on the President's Youth Conservation Corps bill, Coverage Of White House In Abeyance Today WASHINGTON (UP!) Press coverage of While House social events was "in abeyance' todny as a result of a brief uproar that elicilcd charges of snobbery from a Republican congressman. all began when the White House announced clampdown on covcivifiL' of prosldeiitlnl social evenls. A few hours later the stiileiiient was reversed and tho matter left open. Unt in the meantime, Rep. Abner W.

Sibal, became irate. "Tiie Kennedys are not the owners of the White House," he said. "They just have a four-year lease. The American people own it and are interested in who is being wined rind dined there by the First Family. "This is 1GOO Pennsylvania'Ave- nue, not Buckingham Pulacb.

There is no plnce In America for a royal family. The 'While House is not it private Is the center of social entertainment for the entire nation. shrine that belongs to all of us." Pamela Turmire, Mrs. Kennedy's secretary, first an- that there would be "limited" press coverage of a Kennedy reception for the diplomatic corps Thursday. The limitation applied to the practice of allowing reporters to mingle with guests.

Miss Turmire said it was felt the reporters Interfered with the guests' freedom to meet the Kennedys. She said newsmen would not be allowed to mingle. But later she said she checked with Press Secretary Pierre Salinger and learned she had "misinterpreted" the situation. She snid the position of the While liou.se was that the matter was ni "abeyance" and "no final decision has been made on press coverage for the diplomatic reception." said a $250,000 juvenile project i Powell's Ilarli-m district, was "very valuable file project, of which Powell is a board member, was one of Williams' chief objections. ItooKcvelt, at the name hearing, objected to another member "in- iimallng that there Is something bad" about the Adam Clayton Powell Foundation.

He said the foundation was named for J'Mvdl's father "and It is doing a wonderful Job." On Senate Floor Williams charged on the Senate floor two weeks ago that govern- muni agencies had been "scrambling around" to do Powell's bidding. He cited alleged loans to PuwT-ii-tt'li'itcd foundations dealing with housing for the elderly. Powell said lie used the word "lie" specifically to apply to Williams' statements on his tax housing loans, Powell had no apology for keep- Ing tils wife on his congressional payroll. He said Mrs. Powell, a Puerto Kican, performs an invaluable service at home by translating and handling correspondence IK; gets In Spanish.

As for grumbling by some congressmen about liis recent two- week lit ay in Puerto Kico, Powell said that un this and other personal trips to the island he had paid Ills own expenses. Obitiuary Archulcta Santiago Arehulctn, 91, died Feb. 8 at his family home, 1214 Second St. Archulcta, -son of Jose Eusebio Arclnileta and Victoria Blea Ar- fhulctn, was born May I. I87X.

at Valles do San Au.stino. Archaleta's wife 1 Petra Jemenez Archu- letn preceded him in death in llwO at her family home in TYujillo. Archulota i.s by five daughters, Mrs. Juan Nielo of Denver, F'ulgencio Trujillo of Denver, Mrs. Feliberto Trujillo of Las Mrs.

Albert Garcia of Santa Fc and Mrs. Arscnio Gon- of Albuquerque; two sons, Andres Solman Archulcta and Jose F. Arehulcln; grandchildren; 102 great-grandchildren and three grcat-greal-grandchildren. West Braces For Expected Flu The West Coast braced today for its expected epidemic of res- piralory ailments that have sent thousands across the land to bed and left countless others cough- nig wheezing. Sickness stayed at epidemic proportions New York, Ohio and the Southeast, and thousands affected throughout the Mid- Wl'St.

New York City Health Commissioner George Jumcs said there were 98-1 more deaths than normal during the first seven weeks of this year. He said the situation was not as serious as UK- 1U.17 siege during which 750,000 persons were affected. Six counties in West Virginia reported 1,000 new cases. Last week's count in that state was 18,044, more than a 100 pur cent increase over the preceding week. Alabama officials said the state showed signs of being in an in- epidemic with 150 new cases reported Sunday and Monday.

Michigan reported at least a lialf confirmed cases of Asian flu, with absenteeism on the increase in Detroit. Ohio sources said the firsl confirmed cases of the Asian type have been turned up In Columbus and Cincinnati since early in the winter of 1000. Respiratory infections, none confirmed as Asian flu, also raced through Indiana where action was delayed in the House of Representatives due to missing members. Hundreds of school children missed classes. Memphis reported 1,000 cases of influenza and hospital visiting was restricted in Memphis, Bristol and Johnson City to prevent spreading of the disease.

Mayor John Duncan was down with pneumonia. Formally Labor Holding. Midwinter Meet MIAMI I1EACH (UP'n The mid winter meetings of the AFL- C1O executive council were sidelined today for a session of its powerful Committee on-'Political 'i Tile'committee bus a major say In setting AFL-CIO political policy. The meeting of the- 'influential committee, however, was ''expected to be routine because 'this is an off-year, politically. AF'L CIO President planned to attend -today's session of COPE.

The council spent, abouf an hour and a half of its sessibn' Tuesday listening to and questioning Labor Secretary Willard Wirtz, primarily about unemployment. Wirty. said he told the council that the administration will count primarily on President Kennedy's, tax bill to fight unemployment. Meany said he thought the tax bill wns a "step in the right direction," but questioned whether it would be as effective as Wirtz indicated. Meany said.

however, that agreed with the council that unemployment was the nation's No. 1 problem. But the labor chief said he felt the administration could do more toward pointing ui) the urgency of the problem to the country. Enforcement On Indian Reservation SANTA FE Full law enforcement was back in effect today on New Mexico Indian reservations, backed by a State Supreme Court opinion to eliminate further questions. The court issued a unanimous opinion Tuesday holding that the state has jurisdiction over non- Indians who break the law on Indian reservations, unless Indians or Indian property is involved.

The court ordered Dist. Judge Clyde C. McCulloh of San Juan County to try Alvin K. Warner for driving while intoxicated. The charge against Warner was dismissed by McCulloh.

on grounds lie was arrested on the Navajo Reservation and state officials did not, have jurisdiction. the slate had appealed McCulloh's decision, with Walter Kc- formerly district attorney from Santa Fc, acting as special attorney general in arguing the case, for the state. opinion, written by Justice Noble, settled simply whether the state has jurisdiction to m-rgst and try a non Indian for a criminal offense which occurred within an Indian reservation when non-Indian property or an Indian is. involved. "We conclude that the New Mexico state courts have jurisdiction over criminal offenses committed on an Indian reservation within tliis state by non-Indians, which are not against an Indian or involving Indian property," the opinion said.

Hijacked Venezuelan Freighter In Brazil BOSTON LONDON LOS ANGELES CHICAGO CHRISTEN SCIENCE' MONITOR Inter estiiiff Accurate Complete International News Coverage The Christian Science Monitor One Boston Mass. Send yu.j ncwpafar for the lime checked. Enclosed find my check, or money order. fj yeQr $22. a 6 months Sil 3 months $5.50 THINKING OF SUMMFK BURLINGTON.

VI. (UP!) Sgl. Norbert Heauvais bought the first season ticket Tuesday for swimmlni; privile es at Lake Cliamplain's northside municipal The lake presently i full of lee and snow. Nome Address City Zone Check Your List For What You Furnace Plumbing Wiring Roofing Painting Fencing New Rooms Then See Us! Installment Loan Hcpartmcnt FIRST NATIONAL BANK 513 Sixth Street II. DKNNV DAVIS MACAPA, Bra7.il (UPII The hijacked Venezuelan freighter Aiuoatojmi wns formally surrendered to Brazilian officials today by its pro-Communist "pirate'' crew.

The AnzoittcKui anchored at 10:20 p.m. Tuesday at Santa, a mining company lending point 12 miles downriver from Mac.ip.-i, a remote Amazon River port. Five minutes later a group of marines boarded the vessel from an outboard motorboat without incident as newsmen watched from the shore. The marines were led by Francisco A ran jo. a six-footer with tho nnd auility that comes from 12 years of junRle garrison duly.

Situation in Hand He swuns up to the deck of the freighter wearing a 4.1- calibe-r aulomatic and a jungle knife and dressed in khakis. He wn.s followed by three steol-hel- metcd marines carrying submachine jjuns. Orlnndo Snboya. acting governor of Amapa territory in this isolated northeast section of Urayjl to which the Herts brought thoir hijacked vessel after eluding Venezuelan destroyers, fallowed tho marines aboard as the civilian representative of the Brazilian government. AU-deiros forbade newspapermen to go aboard on orders from tiic Hrazilian navy.

"The navy doesn't want this operation to be used as a forum by the politicians behind this mutiny," he said. "That is Venezuela's business and we are just carrying out a military mission." The husky lieutenant smiled and acided: "A marine expects to gel all kinds of assignments, but this is the wackiest." Kebcls Interned Before lie went aboard, Medeiros said he understood the rebels Who hijacked the freighter week ago Tuesday after it sailed from the Venezuelan port of La Guaira en route to Houston. already had been "interned" by representatives on the ship. He added that command had been returned to the legitimate Venezuelan captain. Me he understood the Hra- zilian corvette Solhnoc-s would anchor alongside tho freighter and the rebels would be transferred to that vessel.

Saboya had orders to assume formal command of the (lie name of President C.oulart nnd take the rebels into custody, pending an investigation of Venezuelan charges of piracy for seizing the government-owned ship in the Caribbean last week Venezuela has requested extradition of ringleader Wismnr Medina Kojas nnrt eight accomplices but Urnzil has indicated it will grant them political asylum. The Brazilian government has agreed to return the freighter to Aenezurla. and the Venezuelan Co. has flown a new second mate to replace Medina for the return trip. US Charges Reds Avoid Agreement GENEVA (UPI) The Uniled States charged Russia today with avoiding an agreement on a nuclear test ban treaty but said it would continue pressing for "give and take" bargaining.

Chief U. S. negotiator William C. Foster told the 17-nation disarmament conference that the gulf between the Soviet and Western positions on a test ban "lias deepened." to the Soviet refusal to resume direct negotiations on a nuclear treaty with the Western powers, he said "I reluctantly conclude that the Soviet Union rather than the United Slates and the United Kingdom is intent on avoiding agreement." The Russians have been claiming here that the two Western powers have been trying to avoid an accord that would end testing. are willing and intend To engage in give and take, negotiations on all major issues which must be agreed upon if we are to reach agreement on a nuclear test ban," Foster told the conference.

Foster's speech came before a Big Three lunch and was a final attempt to crack Russia's hard nuclear position before be flics lo Washington later in the day for consultations with President Kennedy. The Russians, who broke off nuclear negotiations in Washington Jan. 31. refuse to discuss a test ban treaty unless the West accepts their mioin of three annual oil-site inspections to police a ban. They have defied West cm and neutralist demands to reopen the talks.

Satellite May Be Lost WASHINGTON" IUPD space officials say the missing Syncom communications satellite may have blown up deep in space. Dr. Hugh Drydcn, deputy direr- tor of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, said there was speculation that the solid fuel "kick" rocket on tho satellite exploded at the height of its miles above tiie earth. EAST LAS VEGAS PTA presidents and City en't office Monday school administrators met in the superintend- (Photo by Ma'gill) PTA Presidents Meet With Administrators East Las Vegas PTA presidents and discussed school and community plans for civil defense plans at a luncheon meeting held in the superintendent's office Monday. Other items considered were general safety procedures for school children en route to and from and the Robertson High School unit's problems in sustaining parent interest in its PTA activities.

Mrs. Earl Dellinger reported that Mrs. E. E. Gardner, Las Junior High School civil defense PTA chairman, had conducted an exhaustive study of community plans for civil defense, in particular, how present plans affected the safety of school children.

Mrs. Dellinger said that as a result of this survey PTA was able to offer parents a brief summary of necessary home safety and precautionary measures in the event of disaster. Tom Clark, city school superintendent then reviewed civil defense plans for the city schools. He pointed out that the plans had been originally put out in 1959 and that it was lime for possible revisions. Clark said that the school plan called for two types of procedures: Evacuation of school children provided there be sufficient warning time.

Retaining -the school children at the school in the event of immediate attack. "This latter alternative," said Clark "needs to be examined. Although our plan will keep these children in school, plans need to be made by stale and local civil defense authorities for subsequent emergency provisions for these children, that is, food, water and such." The group then agreed that PTA units should discuss all civil defense procedures and stress that the utmost cooperation was neces-' sary rot- the home. The group also indicated that no one liked to face up to the possibility of an attack but that the ultimate responsibility was to the children and steps needed to be taken to fulfill this responsibility. Mario Barela, chairman of the safely committee, presented an interim report concerning the planned measures to provide for the safety of youngsters en route to and from school.

Barela said lhat the committee was functioning and Admittance Of Negro Problem MACON, Ga. (UPI) The question of how to handle the application of a Negro from Ghana to all-white Mercer University today was in the hands of a special committee on integration. Sam Jerry Oni, 22, of Takoradin Ghana, has applied for admission to the school. Mercer officials have not decided whether to treat his application as that of a foreign student or that of a Negro. Mercer officials announced Tuesday the matter had been turned over to its integration committee, headed by Dr.

Walter L. Moore. A spokesman said the committee is expected to make a report in April on possible integration and presumably will decide on Oni's application at that time. Mercer's president, Dr. Rufus B.

Harris, has gone on record as favoring admitting qualified Negro students. It was his motion that set up the integration committee. Oni's application was disclosed by the Christian Index, a publication of the a'Baptist Convention. Tiie Index said Oni had been converted to Christianity by Harris Mobley, a Baptist missionary and 1955 graduate of Mercer. Oni plans to enter Mercer as a ministerial student, the publication said.

The Index recommended that his application be handled under a policy for admission of foreign students and said Mercer- "must separate the application. the issue of admitting Negro students now being considered" by the integration comittse. would have a detailed report at thd next meeting. Wr William McDonough, presU dent of Robertson High School reported that as a. result of laclj of interest and participation' in meetings of the Robertson High School unit, there was some question as to whether or not the-unit would continue to function.

In the discussion which followed, it'was indicated that a meeting of the Robertson High School PTA wpuki be called for the express of determining whether or. -iiot- th6 Robertson High School PTA' would be discontinued. PTA presidents present were: Mrs. Dellinger. Mrs.

Galen Ewihg; Mrs. John Janssen, Mrs. Fr'anfc Crcspin, Archie Gardiino McDonough. Others present we're Marela, Miss Mary Fulgenzi, Mrs' Edith Moore, Miss Arietta Bailey, Paul Smith, Trammel Ford, and Clark. Murderer Executed, HUNTSV1LLE, Tex.

(UPI)' Leo Daniel praying ly and clutching a rosary in his right hand, died in the. electric chair early Wednesday, at Huiits- ville State Prison for the" 1960 of a Dallas grocer's Luton seemed almost jovial'-be-' fore the execution. "I to. thank, everybody-far being so nice to me," he He smiled and laughed in aii interview with a newsman an hoiit before his execution. 7 "I'm ready to meet my he said.

The Board of Pardons and Paroles turned down a last ditcli appeal for clemency. Luton was ponounce'd dead at 12:07 a.m. USE SILENCERS PARIS (UPI) Members of the famed Surcte Nationale take, target practice wearing 1m: ear-' muffs to keep out the noise their automatics. I las Vegas DAILY OPTIC 6 New Mexico, Feb. 20, 1963 WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY SPECIAL Your favorite STACKED HEELS 3 AL'S SHOES 609 Douglas Ave.

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About Las Vegas Daily Optic Archive

Pages Available:
57,973
Years Available:
1890-1967