The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 54, Ed. 1 Friday, March 5, 1948 Page: 3 of 6
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maanolia
Me AUSTER
SWEETSHOP L
Announces
' Opening of his office at the
Bums Hospital.
Caste tn any time and
M and explain more ii
our plant incurs m
are here to serve you
■e who take advantagerf
so Burial VauK are ease
Mdenoe and kindly hanri
s is the eomf orUng thou,
Truly, a service and beai
THE CUERO RECORD, CUERO, TEXAS
FRIDAY, MARCH 5, IMS
xt Bust' Will Be
Former Gobbler Enters E. Texas State
After Good Season With Pro Champions
Bilious, Labor Is Told
Ji 'de ,v . I •" . - . • - AL . r--- ’ _
¥ ¥
, By ROGER W. BABSON
k.only
By POLLY HOWERTON
2 BROADCASTS
obliged to operate at a
it?
710 te.
Howtos
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KH.T
Sow Aaiomo..... rsir
BY EMPLOYES
ft
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FEATURES
Make The
International Harvester
FREEZER
Bohne Cleaners
of the
The World'll Finest
WE FEATURE
tGLMHLlN’S
Night 963-W.
Burial Vault Company
Tiffin Studio
that will always last.
the meet perfect tribute we
j w
CUERO RECORD
Be always grateful you need this wonderful burial service
Printing Department
man? concerns have re.
bond interest, etc., yet
KCMC
WACO
have
to ex-
TMoriofM
Waco--------
Wailoco
‘ Peter Cragin out In the element?
this morn.
Nolll Collins, daughter of
M. Collins, Winnsbore,
a new home recently
is majoring at East
physical education.
1400k«*
»23flE*
l^odiivoai
BOOTH WILL
TRAIN WITH
DALLAS REBS
TCU's CAGE
COACH QUITS
MENTOR POST
let us show you the Surface Burial
in de tai I Sts exclusive features. A
obligation whatever on your part.
FORT WORTH, iviar. o.—CUP.)—
The head basketball coach at Texas
Christian University has resigned.
Hub McQuillan resigned today. He
Will remain at the Fort Worth school
as a football scout and an assistant
fotbAU each.
The TCU Horned -Frogs have just
ended their second consecutive bask-
etball season with only one confer-
ence victory.
also understand a Cuero
has set May for a wedding
used the Surface Burial
Is eirilisattons greatest sd«
Repositories.
at taxes and labor costs have
illy increased. Therefore, the
;-even point is much higher to-
H0H it was. We all are now
president in charge
th# Republic National
aurance Company, the
which was awarded the Associations:
group insurance contract. It was1
reported that over 7,000 members of
the Texas Public Employees Asso-
ciation were participating in the
new low cost insurance program.
when the break-even
fit was approached on
BAKERY TREATS TFROM
. - i .. s' '' • ' . ,
• ; McAEISTER'S
GlVXA PLAIN MEAL
*'-? ft. . .'
A LIFT!
J. P. Bridges out in the cold and
rain this morning minus his over-
coat or raincoat.
WE PAINT SIGNS A
Call Us For Any Job ">■
Big er Small <.«
• f f.-VJt ■
BOLDT SIGN SERVICE
Call 619-R 197 Bailey S
BASKETBALL
SAT. MAR. 6th StU
The
Austin reporting they ran into real ’ imct^withThe Browns'
which they used id.
I The above means that the sm
You’ll Want the proper announcements or cards for it
You’ll want them worded correctly, engraved or printed
perfectly on fine quality paper stock. We’re ready with
the answers to your questions, the experience and the
equipment to serve you well.
the Individual MausstsoM
of having provided UM
ean provide.
We
couple
date.
Frank Boothe, son of Mrs. Nell
Boothe of Cuero, will report to the
training camp of the Dallas Rebels
in Dallas Monday,, it has been
learned here.
Boothe has received orders from
the Boston Braves, who signed him.
up at a training scohol in Cuero last
year, to train with the Dallas Club •
in the AA Texas League. How-
ever, he is scheduled to play for
Lubbock in the West Texas-New
Mexico League.
Boothe, a former Gobbler foot-
ball player, played for Richmond in
the Ohio State League and for
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Eflw *
mer all-American at Tulsa Uni-
versity, as cadets in the Army Air
Forces were roommates in training j
at Austin College, Sherman. Dobbs
later became a star and scout for
I the Brooklyn Dodgers in the All-
| American League.
t - Brooklyn Debut
I “I sent Dobbs a Christmas card,
1 just friend to friend,” Mayne said.
He replied with a note asking
5Wk
540 kg.
1490 kc.
l3$0kcj
1490 ke.
tatau
IftOOfcc.
taioiw.
. 6ooM.:.
1»0 kt. -
1400 ke.
740 be.
.1320 he.
prage rates an<1 br the slowdown
k in mucn grt&ter uiwmpioy- *
than Otherwise would be the ’ P™*5**5 whtch rnahy Wagework-
* Rich cookies ....
' PJESand CAKES
Fresh and dainty. Lovely to
Wot at fend oh so delicious to
'taste. w>4ch them smile
*hen you serve our Goodies.
Imo im <
1450 kt.
1230 5-/
IMfrte. .
MMtta.
COPIES OF LEGAL PAPERS, PLANS,
LOGS, MAPS, TRACINGS, Etc.
Continuous Prints up to 42-in. wide.
Lewis (Mickey) Mayne of Winnsboro, regular
season of the Cleveland Browns, national champions
and former Cuero High school back, arranges class schedule nt
Texas State Teachers College with Miss Martha Nell Fowler, .egww
lion clerk of Commerce. Mayne is finishing work fora ttacheior>de-
gree in physical education. The -former University of Texgk; star
plans to coach when he is through professional football. •
bad time in our games with the! «—.~i. J
Dodgers,” Mayne. laughed.
they are good sports. They gave
me a hand when I took a pass for
15 yards from Otto Graham, Brown
back of Northwestern, to beat the
Dodgers.”
A successful season In Cleveland,
where an average of 52,00 persons
KEPT BUSY
CHICAGO (UP) — Chicago’s 54
drawbridges were opened 54,870
times in 1947, standing open for
8,681 hours and 46 minutes, V.*il-
lian J. Lynch; harbor master, said.
than heretofore >when t>* bust comes unless
M ‘ _ labor union leaders now turn over
. a new leaf. If labor to sensible, it
will not only cease asking far more
wAges, but it will deliver more in
production. Members of labor unions
should get after their leaders .and
insist that something ■ be done to
check this present dangerous situ-
C. WOODERSON, Mgr. Phone 127 or 747-R or ingulro
Freund Funeral Home.
Labor-Saving
Many readers know Uiat the large
FAINTING
24 Hour Winch Truck Service
Electric Welding and
General Repairs ...
tinued good business at least
through 1948. Most concerns have
backlogs of orders which, if they
are not cancelled should carry the
concerns profitably for a couple of
years. The Government, moreover,
has so many artificial stimulants up
its sleeve that it could keep busi-
ness good for several years - longer..
Someday, however, prices will be t
so high that the public will stop
buying. Then people will be thrown
out of work and a crash will come
as in the past. The Government
can prolong a period of prosperity,
but it cannot finally prevent it
from falling over the brink.
Owing to this increase in the
break-even level, when the next
bust cones it will come very sud-
denly. Instead of employers being
able to reduce wages or let people
go gradually, as heretofore, they
will be forced to shut down quickly
without warning. Hence, the next
movement in the employment cycle
will cause many failures and heart-
breaks.
not supply any more power until
their new generators are delivered,
two w more years hence. Peeling
that general business would not be
oo good at that time, I suggested to
these public utility men that their
customers might , not need the
power from this new capacity when
it is ready for delivery.
t To this they replied: “In order |o
offset the attitude of- labor leaders, Whone. then in Austin they ran into^ro”f”n; *^o follow “their nXh-
the large manufacturers have nqxR -
orders in fot labor-saving devices
which will npt be delivered fqr .K
★ Quality Work
★ Prompt Delivery
We Take Pride In Our
2ft- Service
Can't We Serve You?
DEMENT GARAGE
Day Phone 106
I ten stories usually requires
'Mhrn stories be filled with
B^kloxe the hotel makes a
■■peqme from business above
jrofit; but a hotel
hree-quarters full
«. Now the same
to business in gen-
ftttil World War n most man-
iwers had a fairly low “break-
point," as the above lllustra-
Is called. This also applies to
agnts and business in general,
her words, the low break-even
acted as a cushion so that
ms were able to withstand a
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Second Annual Session Is
Addressed In Austin
I COMMERCE. Marell 5 — Mickey
| Mayne, a four-year letterman ^eight
i years ago as a back at Cuero High
School, has completed his second
year in professional football.
During off-season months Mayne
completes work at East Texas State I
Teachers College on the bachelor's
degree he started in 1940 at Uni-
versity of Texas. Although he is one
I of a handful of players who earn
I professional football glory while
| they still are in college, he has taken
.these honors with a modesty that
i has typified his gridiron career.
Fricncs are receiving one of the | This unuAial situation was start-
most original birth announcements)^ by a Christmas card four years
we’ve seen in some time, the proud ^^yne and Glenn~Dobbs, for-,
parents being Mr. and Mrs. John ” * '
Monroe. Here it is:
Monroe Productions
present
Their Great New 1948 Production
"Marilyn Louise”
Released Wednesday, February
25, 1948
? Directed by Dr. F. A. Prather
World Premiere held at Cuero'
Hospital, Ouero, Texas Due to high . ..
cost of production, there ^111 not ^tb;erJ„*0UlriJlke pl*y ,pr?
be another Monroe release
some time.
niCOME TAX SERVICE
O. A. ZIMMERMAN
Barrack! Bldg. — 514 E. Sarah
After 5 p jn. Call 422.
both of which were class D loops.
He batted 355 for Owensboro.
------------------------------- r->
Austin is the capital of Texas. '
If v,_ ~ ......
“Only through active organiza-
-jtion can a representative democ-
racy such as ours continue to tunc-!
tion,” said Zollie Steakley* ’ to the
assembled delegates of the Texas
Public Employees Association at
their second annual meeting in
Austin Monday.
? Steakley, former assistant Attor-
ney General under Gerald Mann
and Grover Sellers, and now practis-
ing attorney, sounded the -general i
tone of the one-day meeting when I
he reminded the delegates of their
serious responsibility - to keep in
mind the broader objectives
Association at all times.
Broader Goals
“Though a group must
‘narrow or selfish’ interests
1st, it must never forget the broad-
er goals,” said Steakley, “such as
TPEA’s aim to promote the prog-
ress of public service in Texas in
tny and all wayns compatible with
the best interests of the State.’’
Over 6,000 votes were represented
by delegate and proxy at the Mon-
day meeting, which was held in the
Hearing Room on the ground floor
of the Highway Building. Thirty-
six chapters throughout the State
sent delegations.
Four vacancies on the Board of
Directors were filled by the re-elec-
tion of the former members. The
12-man Board previously drew lots
for one, two and three-year terms
The four re-elected Directors, who
had drawn the one-year terms, are
Gus Farrar of the Comptroller's
Department, TPEA president last
year; H. Morris Stevens of the
Treasury Department; D. H. Askew
of the Highway Department; and
Ed F. Reidel of the Health Depart-
ment.
, Watches Given
At the luncheon for visiting dele-
gates in the Driskill Hotel, wrist
watches were presented to D. T.
Harkrider, outgoing president of
TPEA; and Gus Farrar, president in
1946. Ed Riedel, toastmaster, intro-
duced Dr. Carl Moore, who present-
ed a half hour of magic for the en-
tertainment of the delegates.
Among the distinguished visitors
were Herman Jones, Austin attor-
ney; and George R. Jordan ,vice-
of a group for
Life In-
cocnpany :
bWnjpfann that before the war . utility companies are now operat-
iployers could stand a consider-; Ing at about fun capacity and cAn-
le reduction in gross business be-
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KAISER-FRAZER NEWS
Deliveries of 1948 Kaiser-Frazer Cars are now be-
ing made. Place your order now for early deliveries
of this real post war car. No trade-in’s necessary.
All cars are sold at factory list price and acces-
sories are noLadded unless requested.
Come in for free demonstration and
COMPARE THE RIDE.
CUERO MOTOR SALES
Phone 623
SLOT MACHINES
SAGINAW, Mich. — <UPi— Sagi-'
naw officials are wondering wheth- j
er the state's ban against slot ma-
chines has created a maiss of frus-
trated coin machine addicts. They
advertised for a man to collect!
nickels from the city's parking me-|
ters and received 35 applications.
see every game the Browns play,linRon champidpship cluir that
has sold Mayne on professional defeated Georgia Tech in the. 1943
football for sure." 1 Cotton Bowl game. • > ■' •{
Good Showmanship 1 an<^ Mrs. Mayne, the former
. r XTx^lIl ’ J____
Some of the better points in pro
ball can be transferred to the college
game,” he said. “Franchise owners
are moving ahead of the college en-
tertainment between halves. Drum
majorettes and musicians, as well as
players, are breaking into pro foot-
ball.’’
| When he. is through with\the pjpS?
“But J fessional game, Mayne plans '.’to^
coach. He has ah abunttihce
experience to qualify.-
After lettering four “y^ats W’-r*
back at Cuero High' SctK^UjMkytoe
played football at the Unfvendty’bf
Texas from 1940 through' 1H2,. be-
fnr|ball. I finally wrote back that I
101 I would.”’
_____ | When discharged from the Air
We understand wedding bells will F°rc.eS’ ^ayi?e s.ig^ed a con-
be ringing .soon for a Cuero widow. • ‘ kicked
and passed to help the Dodgers win
I five, tie, two and drop seven in 1946
to finish second in the All-Ameri-
! can’s eastern division.
| Mayne rejected offers from both
„ . T . . . . , i the Dodgers and the Chicago Bears
Cabell Lackeys back fromti„qt cummer Z -
.. .. . .; last summer to sign a better con-
Texas weather in the days trip.' —f (^p^-
Hdny when leaving Cuero, later the -ing bowls ln piatbush aEd J’
Weather cleared up and the sun (^ieve^nd fans as well as Winns-
’the cold front and a fur coat was bor-s p7^re^‘touchdown by touch-
comfortable. j down.
Hot Battle
“Everybody remembered the hot
time we had in Brooklyn in next-to-
the-last game of the 1946 season
with the Browns.” Mayne said.
In this contest Mayne and a
Brown tackle went to "Fist City”
over a questionable play. Both
players were evoked from the game
and fined $100 eoch.
Cleveland fans, however, forgave
Mayne for the incident. His per-
formance. in turn, was enough to
convince them that he held no
grudge. He scored 24 points to help
the Browns win twelve, tie one and
lose one to win the westeren division
then wallop the New York Yankees,
14 to 3. for the All-American title.
“Brooklyn fans gave me a rather
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Corpim Chrirti.... KEYS
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8 jmd still" continue the erfi-
of most M the people.
|MT the situation is very dif-
it. Not only is there a much
fcr and noprower operating
»ta cushion than there was in
ptis booms, but the labor and
? wsts are much higher. Fur-
nore, owing to the increase of
Am during Uie l«t :ISjears.
te fllndL ikMm difficult to ____________ . >
W tet Explain theJHany Features
of This Fine Box.
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Aldridge, C. C., Jr. The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 54, Ed. 1 Friday, March 5, 1948, newspaper, March 5, 1948; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1189646/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cuero Public Library.