Bastrop Advertiser (Bastrop, Tex.), Vol. 95, No. 16, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 26, 1947 Page: 2 of 8
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BASI KOP ADVERTISER JUNE 26, 1947
IP
I
Notice
The A. N. Edwards
Lumber Company will
be closed from July 2 to 8
A. N. EDWARDS
TSCW TO HAVE
INVITATION GOLF
Derton, Texas.—The Texas State
College for Women invitation golf
tourr.amnt has been set for July
8. 4. 5, and 6th, according to an
announcement by L. H. Moore
tournament manager.
The State Of Texas
TO; John D. Williams
GREETING:
You are commanded to appeal
and answer the plaintiff's pet-
ition at or before 10 o'clock A. M.
jof the first Monday after the
{expiration of 42 days from the
date of issuance of this Citation,
the same being Monday the 4:h
day of August, A. D., 1947, at or
before Hi o'clock A. M , before
the Honorable District Court of
Bastrop County, at the Court
Cher 100 entries are expected House in Bastrop, Texas.
for this annual tournament. Prize.-. Said plaintiff's petition \va<
will be given for winners and run- 1'led on the 21 day of June. li*47.
ners.up in all flights and for ' The file number of said suit being
consolation flights. Arrangements , No. 11,043.
are being made for contestants,; The names of the parties in said
to stay in one of the college dor- FU't are:
mito: ies. The tournament fee is Russell, as Plaintiff, and
John D. Williams, as Defendant
The nature of said soit being
substantially as follows, to-wit:
That since June 19th, 1945. de-
fendant is indebted to plaintiff
for storage on one 1934 Buick
four door sedan. Motor No. 287128,
Arizona Certificate of title No.
2739!*!, License No 6C-375 in the
sum of $620.00. That Plaintiff is
entitled to a first lien on said
automobile by virtue of the vernal
agreement.
$5.
Qualifying rounds will begin on
the TSCW links July 3. Players
may qualify on home courses by
sending in a card for 18 holes to
reach Dr. Moore by 6 p.m., July 3.!
Flights will consist of 16 play-
ers with the exception of the
championship fjighl which will
be composed of 32 contestants j
Match play will begin July 4.'
Friday, and except for the champ.
ionship flight will be completed .... . ... . .... .
July r, Th, Ctamptonrtip find ! .
for M holes will be July 6. 1* hole.. c""i «"<>
tain, plaveft in the morninf ,n,i h"' «
IS in the afternoon. he h.ve judgment foreelo,,,,,
said lien, for attorneys fees and
t har.ie Tims, Arlington, was costs of suit and tha; said car be
Championship flight winner las, ordered sold in satisfaction there.
of, for such other and further
year.
V. F. TAYLOR
ATTORNEV-at-LAW
POWELL BLDG. - Ph 25
Smithvilie, Texas
M. E. (Jake)
RABENSBURG
General
INSURANCE AGENT
• TORNADO
• THEFT
• FIRE
• LIFE
SEE ME FOR YOUR
INSURANCE NEEDS
'h. 81 — Bastrop, Tex.
j relief as may be necessary.
Issued this the 21st day o!
June, 1947.
I Given under my hand and seal
Jof said Court, at office in Bastrop
Texas, this the 21st dav of June.
A. D.. 1347.
VERNON ESKEW, Cierk
District Court, Bi>. iiop
County, Texas 16-1
TEXAS INDUSTRY
IN FULL SWING
OF GROWTH
FACTS ABOUT
BUTANE
CHOOSE WISELY
Since the heating of build-
ings is an exacting science, it
is m>st important that the
choice of heater types or com-
binations of heaters be made
only after consulting a dealer
whose experience covers a wide
range of heating installations.
No two installations are exact.
Iy alike.
YOUR HEATING BILL
To give you an idea of how
fnuch your heating bill may be,
remember that one gallon of
butane contains approximately
100,000 BTU's. Thus, if you
had an average house and were
using five 20,<>00 BTU heaters
full on, (which would happen
for a very short time each day),
you would use one gallon oi
butane j er hour Average con.
sumption of butane in January,
the coldest month, is 120 gal-
lons. Siemember, this is only
ari average. You may be more
extra v a gent or more thrifty
than the average usei
BOWEN C. SIMS
Phone 319 P.O. Box 2*7
Systems & Appliances
SMITHVILLE, TEXAS
With the industrialization of
Texas in full swing a:id recon-
version problems a thing of the
past, Texas industry is looking
forward to an era of intense acti-
vity and growth. The rapid chang
' e.« which have taken place in the
Eniimir" industrial picture during the last
few years will be charted in a new
DIRECTORY OF TEXAS MANU-
FACTURERS being prepared by
The University of Texas Bureau of
Business Research.
Compilation of the 1947 edition
is in full swing in the Autin office
of the Bureau, with Chambers oi
Commerce, postmasters and in-
dividual manufacturers furnishing
the information scheduled to cover
ALL Texas manufacturers with
all their products.
Name, address, home of'ice, tyj«
of organization, name and title
of principal officer or partners
date of establishment, territory
served, number of employees and
produd s manufactured will V
covered for each manufacturing
plant in the St; te, giving a com-
plete and thorough picture of man-
ufacturing activity in- of mid-1947.
Die l! 4 i edition of the manufac-
turers directory wtn sold out in
advance of the publication date
with 2500 copies being distributed
Since ism7 -an reconversion end
and industry enter a new period
of adjustment and change, demand
for the 1047 edition is expected to
lie even greater than for earlier
editions of the directory.
As in the past the directory
will represent the most complete
and up-to-date information avail,
able on the manufacturing indus
tries of Texas.
burial of wab dead
Washington, D. C. The Veter
ans Administration has announc-
ed that because of the limited
number and size of its cemeteries,
burials are restricted to veteran#
who die in iU !5M hospitals and
homes and whose relative* do not
desire burials elsewhere./
DEFECTIVE BRAKES
FOUND ON
AUTOMOBILES
Fourteen million automobiles arc
being driven with defective brakes,
according to indications in a cross,
country inspection of vehicles made
for MoToK. the Automotive Busi-
ness Magazine. This is approxi-
mately half the passengers ir
use. Many of these vehicles will
be a menace to highway safety,
the magazine states, unless re-
pairs are made.
Dealer service stations and In.
dependent repair.shops in a ma-
jority of states made the in-
spections fur MoT«'R, removing
a front wheel on a large number
of cats on which neither the driv.
ers nor their service men sus-
pected anything wrong with the
brakes. All he vehicles had been
driven in for other kinds of ser
vice.
The inspections showed badly
worn brake lining on one car out
of two. leakage in the hydraulic
braking system on one out of
three and scored brake drums on
one out of three.
Results of the inspections were
m.t surprising, the magazine com
mented, in view of the age or
most vehicles. Before the war,
when 2~> per cent of those regis-
tered were only one or two years
old. compulsory safety inapections
in a number of states usually rv
vealed that al>out a third of the
cars had defective brakes. Now
only 10 per cent are comparative-
ly new postwar models, 10 per
cent are three to nine years old
and 50 per cent are 10 or mors
years old. with owners reluctant
to finance extensive rej airs.
MoToR estimated that if all
the indicated brake defects were
corrected the resulting service sta.
tion revenue would exceed $400,.
000,000 Even if only the mn«t
urgent work were done, to cor.
rect immediately dangerous con.
ditions, motorists would «|*nd
$150,000,000.
The magazine urged the auto
motive service trade to "pull
wheels" for brake insnection of
customers' automobiles whenever
time permits. Many motorists, it
was pointed out, would appreci
ate warnings that their cars were
potential accident . makers and
would authorize recommended re-
pairs.
TWENTY-NINE
FATAL HUNTING
ACCIDENTS
AUSTIN. Texas. — Twenty-nine
fatal hunting accidents throughout
Texas during ll 46 were reported
in a final tabulation by the State
Game, Fish and Oyster Commis-
sion.
Figures were compiled from re-
ports of game wardens.
Fatal accidents occurred as fol-
low:: While crawling through fen-
ces. 5; mistaken for deer or
turkeys. 6; accidental discharge,
l i; heart attacks, 2.
Non-fatal accidents were record-
ed as resulting from te following
causes: Discharge, 2^1; stray bul-
lets, 1*; lost and suffered from
exposure. 8; overcrowded hunting
condition* in the White Wing dove
area, 1">; falling out of trees, 7;
mistaken for deer and turkey*.
snake bite, 1.
UT TO STRESS "
STUDY OF MEXICO
VETS REEMPLOYMENT
SET UP
I \n
Washington. D. C.—A Veterans
Reemployment Right* Div.s'or ha--
r>een established in the Depart
toent of l«abor to aid ex-aervke-
men seeking their old >ob back j trraPhy. sociology, trade relation
under the conditions set forin in Brv' economic*.
the Selective Service Act
AUSTIN, Tex.— With the an-
nouncement from Carnegie Cot
juration < f New York that the
University of Texas will receive
$11,200 yearly for five years for
the advancement of its Latin-Ame-
rican program of studies, the In-
stitute of Latin-American Studies
has announced plans for enlarg-
ing its staff and program.
The University of Texas is
sharing a $250,000 grunt from
O rubric Corporation with the
Universities of North Carolina,
Tulane and Vanderbullt, as well
a $26,000 grant over a five-
year period for the purpoce of co-
operative summer sessions and,
coordinated planning centers
With the $11,200 to be received
yearly the University's Institut*-
of Latin-American Studies will get
additional library material, will
add to the staff, have increased
technical assistance and assistants,
and will have special fund« for
clerical and library aid. Dr. Charles
W Hackett. professor and direc:
or of the Institute revealed.
The Institute of l- .,tn. Ameri
can Studies was set up severe!
years ago to *erve as a cento
or all I.-atin-American under,
giaduatc and graduate work, re
search, publication, and cultural
activities
Four summer field school* have
peen conducted at the University
of Mexico, and each year a eri>**
Of lecturer" who are «p«N-i lists in
the I.*tirs-Ajnerican field are
brought to the rampu*
The University of Texas will
stress a study of Mexico in geo-
FOUR-DAY TUMOR
PARLEY HELD AT
GALVESTON SCHOOL
Galveston.— Cancer is the most
curable of the fatal dh-uses at
an early stage. J. Louis N'eff of
Houston, executive-secretary of
the Texas division of the American
Cancer Society, said at the own-
ing session of a four-day post
graduate tumor conference held at
the University of Texa . school of
medicine.
S:.caking on the cancer control
j problem in Texas from the point
I of view of the public before the
ISO Texas physicians attending
the course, Neff stressed a need
I for public education programs
(throughout Texas
i "If patients and physicians alike
were educated to recognition of
early cancer stages the taUm of
fat*! cancer would be wiped out,"
N'eff said. "Cancer need not U*
second only to heart disease a a
cause of death "
Best Coffee in town at COZY
CAFE.
Superior Ice Cream at, COZY
CAFE.
Children love iU
...AND NUTRITIOUS
NUCHA
PLAY POOL
FOR MY HEALTH
J. L GOODE
IS SO GOOD FOR THEM!
The follow ins Bastrop tirocer*
slink "Nucoa" for our enjo).
ment:
Cochran's
RED & WHITE
I.G.A. GROCERY
C & P GROCERY
BRYAN WHITTEN
PIGGLY WIGGLY
Juicy Steaks at COZY CAFE
Come
CAFE
in and try us, COZY
ANNOUNCING
a new
feature
Eager Beaver brings you
BARGAIN DAY
EVERY MONDAY
at
JESS WALKER
£ rURSIiHINCl NOtlONt
BASTROP.TEXAS
rL *vf. rol
Work refreshed . . . have a Coke
DRINK
%
• OTHI0 UN0II AUTHOIITY Of TMI C0CA-C01A COMPANY |y
BASTROP COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY
/]
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Standifer, Amy S. Bastrop Advertiser (Bastrop, Tex.), Vol. 95, No. 16, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 26, 1947, newspaper, June 26, 1947; Bastrop, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth237120/m1/2/: accessed June 21, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Bastrop Public Library.