The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 259, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 29, 1949 Page: 3 of 6
six pages : ill. ; page 21 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
*
Hunter Accidentally
Former West End PTA
Decorate Your Doorway to Reflect
£
Killed Near A
Aiding In Movement
The Holiday Hospitality Within
p.1
■
Brer Rabbrt says
I
< f
arrange- •
f<7 .
f
4
2:
: j
to and the
Of a man
■4
r
fated plane.
♦
-
- .3*
/
&
*
i
i.'-l
sqoo
nA
*
I S'
•rS
i .
|Sr-
».
ACT TODAY
and mail or bring it to this office.
di
i
to
Ki.
a sturdy can or crock for a hold-,
er and a single outdoor socket with
a colored bulb for a* flame.
The simple dignity of the door-
■h|||
H ■ *
j
>sr ’Z.s*>
fcYETTE,
A special
‘.Wj
yl
I
5---
g
I I
I I
I
One Full Year
Six new members were Accepted
into the organization.
. -
~ X "**
One Full Year
For Only
• ■ :4*s
V >.
: ■ '■ ■ sex
i
K ‘ '
| •
■MS
wi
of an automobile.
The impact of the crash splintered
the plane, throwing mail pouches
and luggage, and human beings, out
in wild confusion.
In the middle of Lore Field drive,
a hundred feet away from the
smiting remains of what was the
fuselage, federal officials and Dal-
las postal inspectors worked hours
later on a tarpaulin, gathering up
what was left of the plane's mail
cache. .
- Albert Brddy pt Brooklyn, N. Y?,
a brawny field superintendent of a ...
contracting firm, was a passenger j plane’s wing as flames burned my
* * ■ J hands and face,” Brody said. ‘T saw
only one man stagger out behind
I:'
A
Ml Vui?
k ■ ■
Pere Antoine,
recognized as a i
r
me. I’m the luckiest man alive.”
A sister of Miss Van Bibber, one
'bf the two hostesses, is also a hos-
tess for American. At the time of:
the crash, Miss Carol Van Bibber,
|sister of Margaret, was on another . Ill J
American flight inbound to New |0 InCfCdSC AllCIlddnCG
York City. American said she was
returning to Dallas immediately by
air.
This rate applies only to mail subscribers of The
Daily Record in DeWtit and adjoining counties, who
receive their paper exclusively by U. S. Mail Gov.
ernment postal regulations do not permit the mail-
ing of a local newspaper to any person on an estab-
lish city delivery mail route, within, the city of
publication. No subscription accepted at this special
rate, for less than 1 year. •
You’ll never have the opportunity to buy The
Cuero Daily Record at a lower rate and this offer is
good only between now and New Year.
For complete coverage on local news, state and
national news, sports, comics and many other high-
ly interesting features, you’ll find The Cuero Record
complete in every detail.
Don’t deloy . . order today. Fill in the coupon
*
Kb
_r ,
•
NR DOUpMM MR. four-year-old Emelle Jo Twitty is shown In
kgo hospital as she prays that she may soon become well enough
& home. The prayer may never be answered. According to doctors,
hwat muds time to live. Two operations have failed to check
wous growth near base of her spine. (International Soundphoto)
--—
itan fe piece* of the late
toe Moraatot tomes
said he held tip .relic
incMsto -wmr grasped a
Brer Rabbit Syrup, it’s a mouth-
Tell your grocer that you, too, want
Brer Rabbit Syrup. Packed in New
Orleans by Penick & Ford, Ltd., Inc.
——
picture of Pere Antoine.
The next day, Theriot said. Dr.
beartaga Aycock came to dress the incision
toy to AMermine whetiw a and pronounced him out of danger.
His recovery was rapid.
< Dr. Aycock has since died. But
he is understood to have written
’Ifo Catholic authorities saying that
‘ -the cure was/ unexplainable and
The church is now trying to de-
termine whether ^Theriots cure
<
Members*: of the former West
Epd Parent-Teacher Association
aii cooperating in the movement to
increase the average daily attend-
ance in Cuero’s public schools.
The group met Sunday after-
29 (UP) The!ncon at Cuero High School and
District' heard a discussion of the attend-
ance problem by Rafael C. Gon-
zales, president of the association.
The members pledged their support
to the task of trying to get more
Russell's resignation as judge of children in school.
the 64th Judicial District will be
come effective Dec. 31.
AUSTIN, Nov. 29—(UP.)— uouia
A. DeVinney of Fort Worth died
last night at Brackenridge hospital
as the result of a gunshot wound
suffered earlier in the day in a
hunting accident. \ L
Deputy Sheriff Perry Miller said
that QeVinney, 42, was fatally'
wounded when a gun he was carry-
ing was accidentally discharged as
he climbed through a fence.
The accident occurred about seven
miles south of here near the Fred-
ericksburg highway. DeVtanay,
alone at the time, lay unnoticed by
the roadside for some 30 minutes be- •
fore he was discovered by Joan '
Dykes, a 13-year-old schoolgirl.
> '»"■ ■ ■ ■ - ■' ■ ■■
SPECIAL MAIL SUBSCRIPTION OFFER
.• L • ■* i
J/_____
of the plane and In the buildings
around it, came under control.
The biggest piece of the wreckage riding up near the front of the ill-
intact was no bigger than the side
........J
RO DAILY REC<
iy Mail Only In DeWitt County And Adjoining Counties
He said the outside, left propeller
was feathered as Claude brought the
plane down toward the runway.
“We were kind of low for the
landing, and then the pilot appar-
ently saw he couldn’t make it,"
Brody said. “He started to race the
engines, but all that happened was
a terrific amount of vibration, fol-
lowed by a tremendous smash.”
Brody said the plane was not afire
before it clashed.
“I kicked out the emergency doo£
near my seat and sprawled onto the
- - -
way at the right above is achieved
by placing a projector floodlight in
a swivel-type holder and position-
ing it so that it is aimed at the
handsome wreath of Christmas
greens on the door.
Another simple yet effective
lighted doorway shown at the low-
er right uses strings of colored out-
door Christmas lights and long
needle pine boughs. Three glisten-
ing silver bells with musical clap-
pers proclaim the gold-lettered
message JOY as the door is open-
ed for guests.
When using spot or flood to high-
light door arrangements, General
Electric lighting specialists recom-
mend that lamps be concealed by
shrubbery, boxes or cans so that
only the effect of the light is vis-
ible fro mthe street.
THIS OFFER IS VOID AFTER DECEMBER 31, 1949
Get the habit! Eat BRER RABBn
SVRUP...Styai, on HOTCAKES
ho is not now
. , it by the church,
founded the Congregation of the
Catholic was
ting the case of Herb
t ct Franklin, La. The fi
f to held Saturday. 4k.
12, IMH ^Dr Guy Ayr
I Franklln et«Hted on Ther- through pere
d found that tatfcrene hod
at the appt nd hr The doctor
the todsfcm and said Ther-
b a "hoptieaa*1 etoe medfcal-
1 V ■
lurch chokesnaa Raid that
Theriot U in good health "to ,
aasetneat of medical science-
tot said that after Dr. Ay-
tave him up fee ■■tori Stater
a, superior of SL John’s
Studying Man’s
“V As Miracle
„ Nov.
jtoitotive of
IO
■ •
FOR MAIL SUBSCRIBERS
■HE ;
k -v - ■ ■ _>
For Only
&. -riir*-
• Let the festive holiday spirit be-|
gin at ycur own doorway. A special
decoration for the front entrance
not only extends your holiday hos-
pitality but is a friendly greeting
to all who pass your home during j
the Christmas season.
The three suggested arrange-;
ments pictured above might be 4p- I
plied to almost any home—large or!
small—with slight modification.
Bells and boughs, accented with
glowing illuminated candles, create
an attractive setting for a recessed
door-way. As pictured at the left
above, colored bulbs are used in
the three fireproof papier-mache
bells above the door.
Strings of colored outdoor bulbs
are also nestled in the evergreen
boughs along the eaves. Twin
candles flanking the doorway are
products of a home workshop. Al-
though the candles shown above
are made of painted composition
board with flames of translucent
material such as plastic, cellophane
or spun glass, you can make similar
In one crash, at Bryce _ones Quickly with a piece of pipe,
Holy Cross in southwest Louisiana
to 1846 and is said to have/grant-
ed many favors of Miraculous
character to members of. his con-
gregation during his lifetime.
D 7*' KILLED IN CAB
DALLAS, Nqv. 29.—(UP.)—MUdred
NOb|e.kD<MtoB, xras kiUto tito-MWB- Hres. both in toe-.broken wreckage
ing as she backed her car out of the
driveway at her Oak Cliff home. Po-
lice speculated that the car might
have been charged- with dynamite.
Ffcis syrup gives you real sugar com flavor. Good
you, too. Contains IRON—needed for good rod bl
TJ1VERY day, folks all over town are hoi biscuitoor com bread. Any way
Fj asking their grocer for Brer Rabbit serve 7
Syrup—because it has real sugar cane watering treat,
flavor... and also because it contains
iron that’s needed for good red blood.
Delicious on hot cakes... and on bread,
__________—
R. ‘■'F-
K
>
I
f- •-fe.iAX5
I
>Sr
I
I
E
I
1'
F'- M'
■.... .w
K ,-.4 ^*1
^Hr~’
'-X
TOT PRAYS FOR RECOVERY Plane Crash- I
■ twnunuea rrom Page 1)
I then he veered off to the left,” Me- j
II Kendree said. “On the radio he said
I ■ something the tower couldn't un- ;
I. derstand clearly, but it sounded like
la ‘we are losing.' That^s all we could
I hear.” / A
The plane, off balance, skittered at
II telephone-pole altitude between two
I buildings on the fringe along Love
! Field drive, the street that is north
border of the /airport.
It apparently crashed in the street
and then ^flammed sideways into
the building occupied by Magnaflux,
an aircraft spare parts house.
The plane had left New York at
mid-evening Monday, and had
stopped briefly at Washington. It
was due to stop briefly in Dallas,
and then resume its flight, non-stop,
to Mexico City.
j The captain, Claude, his flight of-
| fleer, Robert Lewis, and his flight
engineer, William S. Forbes, were
among the survivors.
Two hostesses were among the
dead. One of them was Miss Marga-
! ret Van Bibber, a niece of Gov.
Sherman Adams of New Hampshire.
The second was a Texas girl, Jose-
1 phlne Cadena, of San Antonio.
Neither American Airlines nor
any of the witnesses could tell
whether the plane ever touched its
wheels to the runway as it made
the landing approach. If it did the
pilot applied power and pulled up
quickly and then the plane fell off
to the left, on the side where one
of the engines was out of operation,
American technical sources said.
Claude was not in serious condi-
tion at Parkland Hospital, but re-
porters got only a word from him
before they were ordered out.
*T squared away, and then it
happened,” he said.
This was the third major tragedy
involving a DC-6 since the big lux-
ury liner went into service after
the war.* 1
Canyon, Utah, on Nov. 24, 1947, 52
persons were killed and evidence
showed the plane—operated by
United Air Lines—caught fire in
flight. On June 18, 1948, another
United DC-6 struck a power line
near Mt. Carmel, Pa., and smashed
into a hillside. Forty-three passen-
gers and crew members were killed.
Thousands of automobiles and pe-
destrians jammed around the crash
site, even while the flames were still
leaping high and driving back fire-
men and other volunteer workers
trying desperately to get into the
white-hot fuselage. Police lines
stopped them a block from the
wreck.
Daylight came about the time the
Judge Russell Quits
64th District Post
AUSTIN. Nov.
resignation of Plainview
Judge C. D. Russell and the ap-
pointment of E. A. Bills of Little-
field as his successor was announc-
ed by Gov. Allan Shivers.
.... .... .... -----
M
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 29,190 ■
EE
THE CUERO RECORD, CUERO, TEXAS
J
•Uli
• i, I-
, ♦ ’’>r f.
CLIP AND MAIL
THIS COUPON
CLIP AND MAIL
THIS COUPON
;<■
'■ J
OR SIGN IT AND BRING IT
OR SIGN IT AND BRING IT
—
TO THE RECORD OFFICE
■ ■
TO THE RECORD OFFICE.
Gentlemen:—
Name
R F D
Post Office
State
CUERO DAILY RECORD
CUERO, TEXAS.
Please Check
which
I am enclosing $5.00 to pay for THE CUERO DAILY RECORD
for one full year, by mail.
RENEWAL
( )
NEW
( )
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 259, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 29, 1949, newspaper, November 29, 1949; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1418123/m1/3/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cuero Public Library.