New Ulm Enterprise (New Ulm, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 52, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 1, 1959 Page: 2 of 8
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Texas, Thursday, October 1st, 1959
Ulm.
NEW ULM ENTERPRISE. New
CARD OF THANKS
CARD OF THANKS
- - PURE
- - WHOLESOME
- - SATISFYING
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father
Nitsche’s
SPOETZl
BREWERY
k*
— MENUS —
SHINER, TEXAS
QUIET REVOLUTION! ON DISPLAY FRIDAY! HOORAY! SMALL WONDER!
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to
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••• • •
visit
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There's nothing like a new car—and no compact car like this de luxe Corrair 700.
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See your local authorized Chevrolet dealer
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INDUSTRY. TEXAS
PHONE NO. 19
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s
The engine's in the rear where it
belongs in a compact car!
... For a hot weather treat
call for SHINER BEER - aged
and brewed to suit your taste
Edgar Maehinsky,
Third Grader
* Ask for Shiner Texas Special
Reer at vnnr favorite tavern or
dining place.
News—
Larry Brune picked 100 pounds
of cotton after school, oue after-
noon.
Charles
Highlights of. . . .
WEST END SCHOOL
Gon/air
BY CHEVROLET
THE REVOLUTIONARY
uonrair
BY CHEVROLET
iltf1
It?
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*UN
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America's only car with an airplane-
type horizontal engine! America's
only car with independent suspen-
sion at all !> wheels! America's only
car with an air-cooled aluminum
engine!
- ~~
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■ > -
• *4*1 ' » •
Monday, Oct. 5th
Meat Loaf
English peas and carrots
Pickles
Bread, butter and milk
Tuesday, Oct. 6
Chicken stew
Crackers and bread
Chocolate cake squares
Milk
Wednesday, Oct. 7th
Pork and beans
Cheese and crackers
;; 1 .
4
cot-
one ’
one I
dealer's the man to see for
all the short, sweet details.
REVOLUTIONARY TURBO-AIR <
Gets up to 30% more miles on
a gallon, needs no antifreeze,
provides quicker warmup with
less wear on parts.
ONE-PACKAGE ROWER TEAM
Wraps rear engine, trans-
mission and differential together
into one compact lightweight
unit. Takes less room, leaves
you more.
MH >1
Here’s the car created to con-
quer a new field—Chevrolet’s
low-priced compact Corvair.
The product of nine years of
research and development at
the auto industry’s most ad-
vanced facilities, it’s Ameri-
ca’s first truly compact, eco-
nomical car that retains the
ride and 6-passenger < omfort
you’re used to in a big one.
The key to this small miracle:
America’s first and only
modern rear-mounted alumi-
num engine—a lightweight 6
that’s so revolutionary it can
be packaged with the trans-
mission and drive gears as
one compact unit.
By putting the engine in the
rear, Chevrolet has made the
floor practically flat, front
and rear. There’s plenty of
foot room for everybody, in-
cluding the passengers in the
middle.
Shifting engine weight to the
rear also makes for smoother,
easier compact car handling
and gives glued-to-the-road
traction on ice, mud or snow.
Corvair's size—some 5 inches
lower, 2J^ feet shorter and
1,300 pounds lighter than
conventional sedans—makes
it • joy to jockey through
busy streets, a pleasure to
park (no need for power
assists). Its revolutionary
Turbo-Air 6 gets up to 30%
more miles on a gallon of
regular (a real magician on
mileage). And, because the
We wish to express our deepest
and lasting appreciation to our
relatives and friends for their
many nets and expressions of kind
ness during the passing of our be-
loved sou and brother,
Harold Gene Gross
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Buechniann,
Eldy spent Sunday iu
i,
3 SHORT AND SWEET! SMALL WONDER! THREE COMPACT CHEERS!
BUENGER CHEVROLET CO.
STYLING—PURE ANO SIMPLE
Clean, uncluttered lines shape
both 4-door models—the de luxe
Corvair 700 and the standard
Corvair. Each has its own dis-
tinctive trim, and you get more
visibility area than in many
full-sized cars.
FOLD-DOWN REAR SEAT*
Works easily, instantly, adding
to Corvair’s versatility by
enlarging rear seat cargo space
to 17.6 cu. ft.
PLAT FLOOR
Corvair is America's only com-
pact car with a practically flat
floor, the only one with the kind
of relaxing room that U.S.
motorists are used to.
UNISTRUT BODY BV FISHER
Does away with conventional
frame, incorporating all struc-
ture into a rigid body-frame
unit that gives you more inside
room with less weight.
UNDER-HOOD LUGGAGE
COMPARTMENT
Trunk’s up front (like an ele-
phant’s) where it’s convenient
for groceries, luggage.
4-WHEEL INDEPENDENT
SUSPENSION
There's no conventional axle—
front or rear. Wheels, cushioned
by coil springs, take bumps in-
dependently of each other, for
smooth, road-hugging ride.
‘Optional at extra cost
engine’s air-cooled, you never
have to fuss with antifreeze,
you get quicker warmup with
less wear on parts even on the
coldest mornings (even heat
for passengers comes quicker
—almost instantly—from an
airplane-type heater*).
Yet, wonderfully practical as
all this sounds, you’ll find the
most practical thing of all
about this new Corvair is its
remarkably low price. Your
Tsp snisrutamsfit — TBs tMnsh Slurs Ckwi Show — Sundry! NBC-TV —Pal Bom Chan Showroom—Woo* ly ABCTY - Pod Skattoe Chovy Spacial Friday. October I. CBS-TV.
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My Poor Glasses
I always leave my poor glasses
at home. The glasses always walk
away. It seems that they must
o „ jump off my face. When will
going to have their cotton picked they stay on my face?
with a cotton pieker Bob went
along with his father to borrow
a big trailer to put the cotton
into.
Norbert Riexinger learned how
to drive n traetor this summer,
and almost ran into a post.
Lois Elaine Weinert went to a
baseball game Saturday night at
President's Field. The score was
5 to 0 in favor of the Shelby team.
The Boy Scouts awarded the tro-
phy to the Shelby Lutheran
church team.
Dorothy Faye Frank went to a
football game at Bellville, Friday
night. The Bellville Brahmas and
the Waller Bulldogs played. The
score was 8 to 7 in favor of the
Waller Bulldogs.
Clarence Mueller picked about
one hundred fifty pounds of coU
ton last week after school.
Marie Marek won an electric
ice cream freezer at the New Ulm
Firemen’s barbecue.
Joyce Nitsehe rode a horse at
her uncle’s, Sunday.
Bertha Faye Luetge picked wild
hot peppers to make pepper-
sauce.
Betty Hill’s grandpa came
visit.
Edgar Maehinsky went to New
T im to visit bis brother who had
a birthday.
Shirley Neumann went to Hous-
ton with her brother. Saturday.
Burnie Guile’s dog has started
chasing the eats up a light pole.
Leander Luedeker went to La
Grange. Sunday to a family re-
union and also visited at Monu-
ment Hill.
Calvin Petrnsek went to
Bobby Richter.
Karen Blezinger rode the ponies
at the Firemen’s barbecue.
Gayle Krebs visited in Taylor,
Sunday.
Three third graders observed
their birthdays this week. They
were Joyce Nitehe, Gene Krivac-
ka and Burnie Galle.
The ninth grade had a very suc-
cessful cake sale Wednesday.
Everything was sold They are
planning a magazine sale for the
near future. More will be told
about that later.
This year’s second graders are:
Marie Marek, Jimmie Voelkel,
Alma Mueller. Roy Hill. Bob Nit-
sche, Gayle Krebs, Gloria Rud-
loff, Alfred Eckermann. Jr.,
Lois Luedeker, Jerry Shupak, Lin
da Wittneben, Barry Bean, and
Glenn Markwardt. Their teacher
is Mrs. LeRoy Luetge.
— STORIES —
My Family
My mother’s name is Mrs. Bean
and my father’s name is Mr. Har-
old Bean. My brother is Harold
Eugene Bean, Jr. I have a sister
named Donnie Faye Bean.
Barry Bean, Second Grader.
My Dolls
I have four dolls. Oue of my
dolls name is Linda. Robby likes
to play with dolls. He likes to
play with me.
, Lois Luedeker, Second Grader
? My Doll
My doll is pretty. I like my
-doll. My brother plays with my
doll and when I come home he
puts it away.
Gloria Rudloff, Second Grader
Mowing The Yard
I was mowing the yard and I
-was having fun, but I was getting
tired and I quit. Daddy took my
place. Then he mowed the whole
yard.
Mark Wittner, Third Grade.
Why I Like To Pick Cotton
I like to pick cotton because I
get $2.50 for 100 pounds of cotton.
I like to play on the ectton trailer
on the way home from picking.
Onee I picked 25 pounds of
ton in one saek. I picked
hundred pounds of cotton
day
Gene Kricacka, Third Grader.
I j Y
__________7—______—- 'j
[. ... ..................... - J
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Uhlig of
Hungerford, Mrs. Wadinc Keeh
and Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy Walh-
berg and family, all of Houston,
and Mrs. Selma Muench and Bon-
nie of New Ulm, were visitors in .
'('at Spring this pas; week with' Mr. and Mrs. M. (’. McKay of
Mrs. Ema Eekardt and Mrs. Ruby i Houston and Shelby were New Sr. and I
L. Hill. ' Ulm callers Saturday. Sealy visiting with' relatives
1 would like to express my
thanks and appreciation to those
\\ ho sent me cards ami nice letters
and to my friends and relatives
who came Io visit me during my
recent stay at the Memorial hos-
pital in Houston. My sincere
■thanks to Doctor Hauser, Bayer
and to all the nurses for their
many services rendered.
Again may 1 express my thanks
to all those who gave their ser-
vices to me in any way.
Your thoughtfulness will long
he remembered. May God bless
you all.
Love,
Mrs. Willie Wangler.
Cooked cabbage
Dewberry cobbler
Milk
Thursday, Oct. 8th
Chiliburgers
Piekies
Corn
Mixed fruit
Bre.id, butter
Milk
Friday, Oct. 9th
Fish sticks
Crecintd potatoes
Bread and butter
('atsup
Lettuce salad
Milk
Peaches
Especially do we wish to thank
the doctors and nurses. Rev. Mil-
roy Gregor, Pete E. Ettinger Fun-
eral Home of Bellville, the Ladies
Aid and Missionary Society, all
who sent the beautiful flowers,
memorials and sympathy cards.
The pallbearers, the church choir,
and neighbors and friends lor
food and their help, also anyone
who helped in any way, anti those
who attended the last rites.
Your thoughtfulness in our
hour of grief will always be re-
membered, and may God bless
everyone of you.
Mr. and Mrs Roy Gross,
Delroy Dale Gross
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New Ulm Enterprise (New Ulm, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 52, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 1, 1959, newspaper, October 1, 1959; New Ulm, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1231353/m1/2/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Nesbitt Memorial Library.