The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 126, Ed. 1 Monday, May 19, 1947 Page: 2 of 6
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I
THE CUERO RECORD. CITRO. TEXAS
Four Generations Present At Barbecue For Joe Boehm
*
CONOCO SERVICE STATION
Now
LJ
i
*
i
I
WELL* YES AND NO
OKLAHOMA
I
served with a Ik. of the trimmings, i span of allotted time, three-score
the barbecue on the lawn of the E.’iced in white and lettered “Happy
OUNCE OF PREVENTION AT UN ,
*
I
W. Main st.
Phone SC"
AKff -
1
J
!*■
• i
FOOD CRITICAL
8
Macha Cleaners
M
i
East Mato. Joe Macha, Prop.
J
I
KASPER SERVICE STAT
Res. 748W
man's case before admitting him to the meeting.
—-
*
i
>ZC.
4
tortillas,
STRIKES THRICE
Freund
I
For That
I
Want a
I
1
I'
I
NEAT?
LAY OUT A
•I
•t
%
i
■ -
A
I'i
I
i
SURE,
1
■
t
■
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1
s
McLarty's Groc.
13$ E. MAIN ST.
'■■Ahum
<
A
4
I
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i
1
1
Bohne
Cleaners
Bill Hartzell Announces Purchase off
Interests in the Cuero Machine & Plumt
Ife*'
1
A PRODUCT
Of SWIFT
Company and Invites Your Patronage, a J
• i' x I ' . 'i • : *
men
by
Bring Us Your
SLACKS
For Expert
Attention
I
I
1
I
BATTERIES
$16.45 up
$J.5O Allowed on Old Pattery.
wa
w.
he
. FLOWERS
For Every Occasion.
„ HAAK’S
128 E. Sarah
Bernine & Wagner
JEWELERS
Carl R. Wagner
with
John H. B*njtog
Optometrist
121 Main St. Parking Lot
Ln rear on Railroad Street
CITY FLORAL and
GIFT SHOP
113 Austin St.. 1/2 block off
Old S. A. Highway.
K.
Ifcfev
FLOWERS
Pot Plants . . . Gifts
Corsages . . . Wreaths
Sprays
i
i
i
at your
Hamburgers 15c
SANDWICHES and
BEER
COKER'S
Lunch Stand .
501 W. Main
! TO BE DOUBLED
UFHAM'
HOME A AUTO
STORES
.1
f
i
ESCAPE A
HOT KITCHEN
BY EATING WITH US.
POP’S PLACE
JOG N. Esplanade
Alfred JuKnson. Prof
I
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CUERO RECORD
COMMERCIAL PRINTING DEPARTMENT
By “Purchase Loan” we mean a loan
that will enable you to pay cadi far
the new goods you may wish to bujt
You may use our easy payment plan.
Come in to see us about the details.
BUCHEL NATIONAL BANK
Member Federal Deposit lusur—s Carpar*Mah
CUERO, TEXAS
LETTERHEAD
"PURCHASE LOAN"?
^9
ps ~~ Tjiiia
‘w
' \ft
Is#? 1
Al 106, Finds Tortillas
Make For long Life
... .—Tip-"-'
A GOOD PLACK TO TBADE
STEVENS
GROCEBY A MARKET
W. Main St TeL tt
rprr.....
IP* k If
L • I'fl
a. 4. J t
K I ”
^£vn'/'*aE|
Ii~
ad-’aLI-
Dream Proved True,
He Finds In Court
Plants thrive when they get
the proper nourishment they
require from the soil. The
easy way to be sure your
lawn and flowers are proper-
ly fed is to feed everything
you grow with Vigoro, com-
plete plant food.
Vigoro is clean, odorless,
sanitary, and easy to ujj.
It’s economical, you only
need 4 pounds of Vigoro per
100 sq. ft. We have the sup-
m plies you need.
FOR BOHNE DOES
My
CLEANING AND
PRESSING
‘ I
J old Robert Murphy.
Murphv told a Seattle judge that
i charges cf <’
-mnst him were
dream.
McALLEN. Tex.. — <UPl— Trini-| he had
dad AgUilar de Zuiga, 106 years old
NEATER LOOK
li Newman s Tailor Shop
BURIAL
A88N-
Cwero, Texu
PHONES - 468 and 428
iV .
been j
Ml
HADAMEK REPAIR SHOP
103 Heaton •• Ph. 1881
-
Cuero Iron & Body Works
I Phone 84 JrxM Powltnek Owner
Roy Parker Garage
FHek Building PheM 114 ’ 1
Tira and Battery Service W HAUSMAN
General Repair Service Manogrt
B. F. GOODRICH PRODUCTS
I
> A
Shafi
VANDALIA ,Mo.—<UP.)— Light-
ning struck the h.me of Mrs. N. E
Fuqua during a spring etorm and
| tore plaster off the walls and put
i the phone and lights out of order.
It was the third time the house
' had been struck by lightning.
WSSSfW
Special To The Record
I ORANGE GROVE, May .'(.—Joe Originally it was planned to serve and ten years. A huge birthdav cake
| Boehm, of Orange Grove, celebrated I
his eighty-first birthdav last week I
with a famous South Texas barbe-!
that about one-
nation's 300.000 to
boxes are on “dime
IN A CLEVELAND POLICE WAGON, these Bell Telephone Co. strikers
leave the picket line after splattering eggs over non-stnkxig ein-
ployes entering the company's building in downtown Cleveland.
Mounted police broke up the melee arresting seven pickets, five of
them women, for “roughing'* tactics. (Internatn>aal)t
i
Nations Security Council at Lake Success, N. Y„ 50 UN gukrds,
augmented by 200 New York policemen, take every precaution to
prevent violence on the grounds. These guards examine a canjera-
xnan’a case before admitting him to the meeting. (InternatJOna/)
i
REVOLUTION IN MOTOR
LUBRICATION
OEIO MACrt & PLUMBWft.
' ; BILL HARTNELL— Phene 748-W. f glff
112 McCOLLOUGH — Bear of Alamo Lumber Co?
. ’ 1 • r* ’»a(f
PAGEtTWCfel;; :
WARUHE JOBS |
SHOW DKUNE 3
FRANKFURT May iK -(UP)— |
The American commander in Eu-1
rope. General Lucius Clay, says the
food situation in Germany Is criti- f-i ‘
cal and that It will get worse unless
fanners meet the coming deadline
. for their produce quotas.
COMPLETE SERVICE
Our service is very complete in
that every detail is considered
and anticipated so that the fam-
ily will be spared in the time
when it will mean the most.
Our services are reverent, com-
plete, and economical, yet fully
adequate to custcms of the com--
munity.
The greatest pleasure we get
from life is memory of the ex-
pressions of gratitude for our
thoughtfulness and cuns.JeratLuu
from familie- whom we have
served in their hour of need.
Cuero Veterinary Hoapital
LjyestQefc Vaccines and Supplies
? Free Poultry Service ' ’
DU C. R. TUBBS
Oflee Ph. Mf* U VETBRINABIAN
Looking For Jobs Thru
Club
«T U<T- ?
Get ready tor Spring. Have
your Lawn Mowers sharpened
now.
Saw Filing — Axe Sharpening.
WE DON’T FEATURE
QUALITY, WE SELL IT
* EXCLUSIVELY
liid:
\U>iK3
r.LTBUTTERY'FrW
PHONt DRUGS cui«c‘
3> m:*IU MtlttWTlM «»SIC£ -tXAS
One-lhird Of Machines In
Nation Already Are
Reconverted
■4® J
I
★ When was your leHer-
heed designed? Isn’t it
time you had a now ona?
Why not lot us design you
a new letterhead that will
POSSESS a certain atmos-
phere of dignity and char-
acter? You know of our
reputetion for fine letter-
hood printing. For absolute
correctness in ell printing—
see usi
The Boston fish pier is the larg-
est in the work! devoted exclusively
SNOHOMISH. Wash.- <UP>-Most to handling fish and seafoods. As
persons say they wish ther dreamn ‘much as 400.000 pound, of fish
would come true hut not 21-year- have passed through it in one year.
."MM-Q----——IS....... _ . - - ----- —
IN CLEVELAND PHONE STRIKE MELEE’
land personality to qualify for club
It all happened I membership.
The club never has failed to place
a member in a good job. It “sells”
its members to employers, convinc-
ing them that experience often pays
off better than youth.
Lower Pay
Gilmcur said the club’s major
problem now is to persuade a man
who earned good money during the
war to take a job which pays less.
“A man could get a $15,030 a
year job in a factory during the
war because hie salary cut down i
the ccmpany’s excess profits tax,” j
he said.
“Now be'a lest that job. and he
can’t understand why the same I
type cL joh still isn’t worth the same
kind of mocey .”
* - W'WB II
WITH THE TROUBLED Palestine problem on the docket of the Uaited
truck.
by her own count, credits her long I ine
i di cam
._3 ’.a tortillas, or Mexican pan- ]ont;ed to
‘ [Hoyer, a Seattle garbage disposal
*’I j company.
The judge nointed out- that his
----1 was true. The truck be-
Murphy’s former em-
< -.V^rietFIn ..
.- v . , FQRM - ..
Equal In
: SKILL
Prescribed medicine may be a
liquid , . powder . . . cap-
sules . . . pills—but no matter
in what form your medicine
comes to you. you can rest
assured that it has been pre-,
pared with the painstaking
professional care and skill
that guarantee letter-perfect
compounding when you en-
trust your prescription to our
experienced hand*.
ATTENTION LEGIONAIRES
The club room at the American Legion Hall
in Cuero is open to all Legion members’and
their guests.
Plenty of refreshments, tables and equip-
ment for an evening of recreation.
FOR THE BENEFIT OF OUR RURAL
MEMBERS THE CLUB ROOM WILL OPEN
AT 12:30 P. M. ON SATURDAYS. * * "
The hours for other week days are* "
5 p. m. to 11 p. m.—Sunday 1 p. m. to 6 p. m.
Next Legion Meetings May 27- and Jun* 10
-X---------------------------
local Farmer Says-I
Sleep AH Night No
More Getting Up
What a comfort not .to have hfcj
sleep disturbed by getting up two or I
tnree times a nignt. Z. ___
when he was telling a friend how i
wom out he was every morning. "I
had the same ■ trouble,” said his
friend, but a f^o bottles of
CTT-ROS put a stfip to that monkey
business by eaMing-i' the pain and
banishing the aoreneae^-
CIT*ROS is Composed of ten val-
uable drugs that soothes the kid-
ney bladder, v neutralises the
body watte so tBe kidneys can elim-
*♦ - bottle today
By keeping year Mltojliill tract rune
tioning- Over eating, poor f x>d •elec-
tion, too little steep, and 6*erwock moy
cause a otew doran -of your crtgr»tbr»
pruceues. Where this <rcuf* . a grntte
laxative like MOMLIA MUJ gHn wet
O'tne results. Buy them at your drus
■tore—2Bc. ■
CHICAGO-tUPi— TJie juke box
I j industry says
i, i going up.
I j James T. Mangan. director cf
! Coin -Machines industries.Inc., re-
I i ports that the nickel record player ..
I ’ is fast disappearing. Music with1
I 4your beer costs a dime these days.
I j C. M I. represents about 800
manufacturers. suppliers and dis-
I 1 tributors of juke boxes. Mangan ;
F (Said two manufacturers. Rudolph,
(Wurtlitzer and Co. and A. M. I.. Sarah Pe!.rring,ton. .89,
«Inc., have reconvert'd most of their -cressed the plains in
■ existing machines add are building , - .
new ones to give out only for dimes. CabfOrnia. r~ ' '
Prices Rise itravei: “I felt good-part of the time j
He estimated that about one- _and not good p3rt of the time'
- i
’ ’ i
I
I
F •
LikT £
LET US EXPLAIN OUR NEW RO
ION LUBRICATION** MOTOR-S
GREASE JOB. : r U '
WHILE CAR JS AUTOMATICALLY IN
MOTION, ALL MOWG PARTS ARE
THOROUGHLY GREASED^ .mb
• ---------------------1’--- ■ ■■ - -■ - T ,it.
AN INNOVATION IN CAR GREASffiBP
BETTfcR JOB AT NO“EXTRA COWi/f
TO YOU* TF3
HIKE ROX PRIfF
X luvw joff bec.nist* ii the litinor an.l beer
shortiage. . o his potential
is down. 1 here's onlv
left (or him to do
He saiii the
brings
nickels.
f'
DAYTON
mark.tj. TIRES
™-.. kasper bros
average juke box
in less than $20 a week in j
SI Per Week
"Ten dollars of that goes to the
location—tire owner of the tavern
or restaurants.’’ lie said/ Sav he put:
in four hew records a week at 50
cents apiece. That's another $2."
In addition the owner services
the cost of jiving is his machines and makes collections.
Or he hires someone to do the job
for him.
i "We figure he nets about SI per
week per machine,“ Mangan raid.
(“And he's got a $1,000 investment.
Brother, can vou ipare a dime?"
MONDAY, MAY19. 1947 |
---—----------------;
Stomach Canrfort
Wiry suffer with inengesnon, Ga^|
Gall Bladder Pains or HlgTi I
Pressure? Restore your Potaa
balance with Alkak> inc-A,and I
troubles will disappearSold 1
money-back guarantee ,' y, L.
Hutterv Phv. %
WELDING?"
WITH A MONEY BACK
GUARANTEE:
a/*'
4 -
life to
cakes.
“Meat is ret gcod,” she said
have net eaten much meat.
“I have eaten the tortiilled, the j
'eggs, the bananas and the milk !
The tortillas are the best.
“And I sleep well. I say my pray-j
Jers go to bed and sleep, I am not
' afraid to be in the htuse alone.”
damage to property
..j the result of a
Murphy said he dreamed
driven home a garbage
CITY. — <UP,1 —
who once
a covered
wag:n. fiew to Oklahoma City from i
----------- Her judgment of air ;
IICAGO. During the i
Mr. X held a key job with the
M in power Uimniis5iOn. Today
forking for work.
Mr. X and other middleaged
like him. Tasod but of good jqps
th£ closing o/, governnaenf agencies
ana **r Plants, are the personal
codbern of the Men-dfer Forty!
ChftM .............. rm ra—
. .. J*bs Last
“During the war capable execu- ■
tires and white collar workers over
40 could gat sk the good jobs they
wanted,” ha said. “But row hun-
df.tda — perhans thousands — of
them are wanting the streets look- j
ing for ^brk.”
Gilrr.ota, a retired business man,
ergaoized khe blub in 1938 as a free
empjoymer^t agency , for men over
40 who had earned at leAst $4,000
a year in their orevious jobs.
The club almost went out of bus-
iness during the war — nc thing to
do — but now it averages 40 appli-1
cants a week. Of them, only four or I
five have the education,, experience
l
third of the
■ioO.GCO juke
Play.”
{ “The little guy with the string
of juke bsxes is having it rough."
Mangan sad. "A box that used to
■< ccst $600 or $700 now sets him
C. Bcehm heme, but because of in- - Birthday" centered the dining table,
clement weather the celebration was 'The only low note of the celebraticn
wi-m » laurwuo ovum xexits uaiue- i neld indociv. Pictured above are the ! was occasioned by the news that
cue which approximately 80 guests I members cf four generations who i relatives in Cueio and Victoria
and members of his immediate fam-' were present. Reading from left to [could not be pre- ent for the birth-
ily enjoyed. Fdr the special occa-i light: Alvin Boehm, age 10: Edgar [day party.—Photo by J. L. C. Bea-'
;sk>n more than one hundred pounds I Boehm. E. C. Boehm and the hon- man courier:’ The Orange Grove
c of mutton were barbecued and 1 ored Joe Bot4jm. representing alObserver.
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Aldridge, C. C., Jr. The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 126, Ed. 1 Monday, May 19, 1947, newspaper, May 19, 1947; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1358260/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cuero Public Library.