The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 70, No. 28, Ed. 1 Monday, February 3, 1958 Page: 2 of 6
six pages : ill. ; page 24 x 18 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:
/
THE CTEltO RECORD, M©nd*r, February S. 1S5I' th# time hew** Intentionally
blown through a plexiglas cock-
pit canopy.
Tender Skin —
The structure of his joints is
human-like, his weight distribu-
tion is like a man’s and his out-
side layer i* ns tender as a
l woman's skin. Me came equip-
p'd!, hello everybody! Sure the rest have the knights and p^j wllh * repair kit to patch up
WHAT THE YOUNG FOLKS ARE DOING
News OF Teen Agers
By RALLY LEWIS
d-esp't seem like a whole week
Ims passed, docs it’ This may
l \r born a short week, hut a
cuts and bruises, hut so far most
♦own: Terry 0f abrasions have come from
• distinguish- handling rather than eje< lions.
what ha\e you
Scenes around
Calk now rides in
1 -* f things have been happen- ' rd <??•?• \ehide which featuies „ trilrutf to the scientific enlcii-
i, I no seat, wail to wall carpeting ■ |ations of Chance Vought engi-
7-'ii sf the ini ket race finally an(t or no bead room .... neers,
r-dc 1 End >y with the seniors i Buzzy Muenter at the Hairy Malt t jn ]>av-p's chest cavity is an
the moon first. The 'be otler night telling all about instrument railed an n'-rrlcio-
IWc nlH limoc jn C. H. S.
Texas Association
Asks More Acreage
The Old Cotton Belt Assoeia-' July 31, there will be an aetite
tion of Texas literally “darted : shortage of those qualities of
Ihe ball rolling" in the quest for; cotton next seaaon unless produc-
more cotton acreage recently. , tiqn next year is larger than ex-
when it sent the follow ing tele- j pected at present and we shall
gram to Kzra Benson, .secretary he unable to supply the normal
of agriculture; j needs of our domestic mills and
“Request increase in cotton al-1 bueign < ustomers. Be believe an
lotment acreage for 1958, in immediate announcement of ir>-
Rusiia Has Little
Garage Space For
Automobile Owners
reaching
cdmcM was figured on a per-
. nt.i1:1' havs. and the seniors
i • t ;ynilH oh tie moon, but
t’’e\ did a little exploring . . to
the nine of 1 * 1 percent. Congra- ,
"P hoji'ns. seniors’
. B ck t> the seniors again.
-,t itijie Hi nton's attic romp room
y.a- the scene of a rollicking
4 :r;.v Thurstliiv night when the
senior girls threw a party for
j!:o si mol i iass We heard it was .
11 .11 > sotnoilung '
i lie i . css fad is Mil! going
fic.ng around C. H. S. after lie-:
1: . the i lin-: pasttime of the |
pvtor quite a few
v.ci ks ».•' i Mi r y <1 the kids
l.a.j n hr. '. i of lule books
i nd ic :'n d li e more technical
jsiir.’- oi liie game. Too often it
'to I - I. 1|. he quite a M IlfflC
cni'ii trie opponent doesn't seem
ii- wed edu ah'd on the matter.
. In order tv survive. one must
k. o.v .oi liie u.iusi. u little rules
1 — main um hold. Many have
u si lsed to slit k |o fish and ict
his old times
Basketballprs all dressed up Fri-
day afternoon at school for the
tup to Robstown that eve . . . .
T he new high school on the hill
taking shape fast after looking
almost abandoned during the
past few weeks when rain pre-
vented much progress.
To those of you wr.o relish the
latest jokes :
Knock, knock:
WIki's there?
Sam n Janet
Sam n Janet who?
Sam n Janet evening.
And to nnjlxxiy who hasn't the
faintest idea what tact U — it’s
the ability to jawn with your
mouth closed.
One last news item . . . late
TV watchers Friday night learn-
ed ua frequent nev s bulletins
that the U. S. has launched a
satellite. For all >ou moonwatch-
et s. keep ybur eyes pealed.
Weil, so long for now. Madame
parole will be seeing you!
view of tie shortage of white
cotton. Additional acreage not
aci eplahle for Soil Bank.
The message' was signed by
H'm. F. Hofmann of La Orange,
CX’BA's president.
The American Colton Shippers
movie camera studies, gives a Association is also < oirni/nnt of
true picture c.f what hap|>ens. i the need for the hettei grades of
meter, more like a brain than a
heart. It measures Dave's acce-
leration, hence loads on him.
throughout an ejection. This in-
formation along with , exacting
creased acreage for 1958 would
deter increased production of
outside growths, prevent furth-
er inroads front synthetic fibers
i talk, and naively asked why' he
I didn’t protect his car from the
i freezing weather and keep it in
a garage. Bannikov burst out
! laughing, and said :
_______ ^ “Garage? This is my garage.”
By WHITMAN BORROW ffc wajve(j his hand at the snow-
L’nfted Pres* Staff Correspondent covered streets.
MOSCOW - con— Sergei Pav- j “Don't you know that there
lovlrh Pannikov is the proud j are practically no garages in
owner of a new, grey Pobeda Moscow? The only place you can
sedan, Russia’s most popular keep your car is on the street or
car. in tho yard.
After almost two-and-a-half | “Of course, there are a hand-
years on the waiting list, he final- 1 ful of so-called communal gar-
jy got his car last December. 1 ages where private car owners
just in time to heat the Increase ran park their ears. There are
j that boosted the pi-ice tag from
20,000 to 30,000 roubles ($3,000
and would tie of great benefit to *t the tourist ratei.
Dave is one of a family of
four test dummies at Chance !
Vought. All will have roles in fu- j
turp programs as the company 1
works toward • ever-safer sys- |
terns.
When Dave was blasted through
the canopy he had only slight 1 90 percent of the cotton produced
cotton. Its president. K. F.
Creek more of New Orleans sent
tins telegram to Secy. Benson
Monday :
"It is firm conviction of mem-
bers of American Codon Shijv-
pers Association who market
American cotton farmers.
"For these reasons file As-
sociation respectfully urges your
prompt and active support in se-
eming cotton acreage for 1958.”
damage. A pilot in an actual
fhrough-the-ennopy bailout de-
finitely would have survived.—
with bruises.
And with the canopy off as it
should be^ He didn't get a
scrati h.
in the United States that, while
the supply of better qualities of
cotton which domestic mills usu-
allv use and our foreign custo-
mors noimalK- require may be > 1 h<“ curr,,nt Law Angeles elassi-
sufficienl to see us through the j fied directory has 2,112 pages
present cotton season ending ; and New- York s Manhattan book
' has 2,008.
Chicago Directory I-argent
CHICAGO - »LT> - The new
Chicago “Red Book” again is
the nation's largest classified
telephone directory. The new edi-
tion has 2,348 pages—12 pages
moi-e than the last book, which ]
A mechanical engineer at a
large machine-building plant on
the outskirts of Moscow-, Banni-
kov needs the car to get to and
from work. Travel time via sub-
also many one-car garages in
courtyards and in backyards
which car owners themselves
have built.
“You ran buy a pre-fahrirat-
ed corrugated iron garage for
5.U00 roubles and put it together ,
yourself. Or you can build it out
way and bus took almost an hour | of wood."
one way; with tke Pobeda. 20
minutes.
Bannikov was observed one
Friday morning carrying a pail
of steaming water to his car.
parked in front of an apartment
bouse. |
He poured the water into the .
But if you want to do this, he
added, you have to get permis-
sion from the district authorities
and pay a small annual rental
for the land.
Winter tar Care—
Moscow's 100.000 car owners
(estimated' probably have at
also was the nation's
The current
HOLLYWOOD
FILM SHOP
Itv ISON I’.l RTON
l ain-il I'rc-s *-1aif ( orrripnmlont
HUi.l.VWOOD rt'Hi— Kighty-
ii '! M'iv 11 < 11,11 came to
i; :
i
P'
a
bl>
\\ ■ «I fr >1:1 I - m?>n to make
Am,i 111 an i;'m d< hut and
f'UiM herself learning
• v rr,- k >r Srper.de Ta-
• •vrr. ir :riv .life did I expect
tn I'nav billiard*. liie veicrnn
c-m -i -• hi tf' ss said. "L'ts of
t.i.i gs 1..1V e n happening I ■> me
s n c ' .;ve hi re, but this I nev-
* .•'•y;.-,patcd.
:i -.tiling about billiards
f jir-r voir of tiie i-ru-ty spinster
who bets mi the ponies and reads
Mi. key SpiUnne talcs of homicide.
T > ’ ic same part she played in
ti.e d ige version of the play in
L-md-iii and Broadway.
! didn't .have to Minot billiards
in ;!ie play." she said. "That's a
t iii. ii of Hollyw .>k! added, hut I'm
determined to do my realistic l*»st
although I suppose 11 is a little
1 de h r riie to start learning1
s •!:•■ *limg.
'I've liven told by people here
tb..t I have a go.Hi eye and a good
s:an-e. and that's encouraging.
J: tin- lessons .are successful, I
may come to like the game and
k- p at it. Then won't my pals
l.'.Ik'"
This isn’t exactly the first trip
to this area for Miss ■ Hallatt,
whose co-players in the Hecht-
Hdl-Lancaster production include
David .Niven, Deborah Kerr, Burt
Lancaster and Rita Hayworth
She was here w ith a touring dra-
matic company in 1904.
"I can't tell you how this
place has changed since then be-
cause at that time Hollywood, of
course, didn't exist,” she aaid
“My impressions of it start from
age 80."
Miss Hallatt aaid many things
have happened to her in Holly-
wood in addition to her -billiard
leasona. One of the nicest, she
•aid, U the name by which the
veteran actress is referred to on
the set.
“They call me ‘the starlet,’ "
(he said. “1 can t help but smile.
Big Dave Helps In
Ejection Tests
j DAI.LAS, Tex. - 9P - Big Dave
sh- Mill in ihe cockpit as engi-
neer-; from Chance Vought ir-
■ raft Inc., atta -hod the few- re-
maining wires from their instru-
ments to the morkup of the
plane's nose sections.
Seconds later. Big Dave shot
from the cockpit. zoomed 50 feet
into the air, and separated from
his eic-tion spat. landed in a
net. He plays one of the many
roles at the aircraft plant * r«-
senr. h department to make fly-
ing safer and easier for military
pilots.
Dave is a handsome figure of
a man. That's exactly what he
is — a figure of a man. a dum-
my. lie's 6 feet, 1 inch and 200
pounds of soft plastic over a
steel skeleton.
Daves ride was part of an
ejection seat study intended to
make ejec tion safe at very- low
altitudes as well as higher in the
air where the automatic para-
chute his plenty of space and
time to open.
Since Dave came 1o Chance
Vought a!x>ut a year ago, he has
made alxvui half a dozen of
these ejection seat tests. The
only time he suffered any dam-
age from being catapulted was
Special
BAKED ENAMEL
AUTO PAINTING
AS LOW AS
7526 Colors To Choose From
1-DAY SERVICE—IN AT 9 A M. OUT AT 3 P.M.
ONE YEAR GUARANTEE
BEBRICK CO.
1414 N. LAURENT — VICTORIA — HI-3-3066
“Where Painting is a Science—Not a Sideline’’
. . I radiator, replaced the cap and j long wait before there is ade-
f* 1 ' 1 turned over the motor a few tim- quate garage space for all of
e* until it started. j them. Few new garages are he-'
Few Garage*— | ing built, and these principally
The next morning, the same 1 are near the new- housing devei- !
scene. This time 1 stopped to opments in the southwestern part
1 of thr elty.
; Elsewhere, car owners have
to shift for themselves. Now
1 and then a frustrated and irate
car owner pens a letter to some
Soviet newspaper bewailing ihe
lack of garages, but these lei-
\ tens don t seem to have much
effect.
Most of Moscow’s autoixts are
resigned to keeping their cars
on the street all night, even in
below - zero weather, which Js
| good neither for the car nor the
I driver's disposition.
| How do they beat the freeze?
There are three ways.
1. Empty the radiator every
night. The Pobeda can he easily
emptied via accessible radiator
and motor taps. In the morning,
carry two pails of hot watqr
down several flights of stairs;,
fill the radiator and start
cranking. The Pobeda, Mosh:-
vich, Zim and other Soviet cars
still have hand crankcases few
this very reason.
2. Keep water in the radiator,
hut add a product called "ami-
fuz ' which keeps the water
liquid when the temperature
goes ns low at 50 degrees below
zero Centigrade. If it drops any
lower, even the "antifriz" won t
help. But that's hardly likely in
Moscow.
3. Empty the radiator, take
ou* the battery, cover the car
with a tarpaulin — and leave it
standing in the yard until spring.
VJOWEE!
Blind Bowler
CHICAGO — (UP! — Robert
Deane of Chicago set a city rec-
ord when he bowled 186, 199 and
224 for a 609 series. Deane, 19,
la blind.
WXHA* lOO
K CFH-1600
l 30
b,3i
*06
6 CX
6>X
t>.* 5
ttC
t 55
>:X
7 y.
7 3i
? 'J
7 45
e -,
f .
t
t.
4 3
4 * '
5-X
55
V*5
monoat maouon rciOAi
biyrv On
Morning lamftrt*
Work)
Mor n r*g ». ^mb*#
Ltrn 1 tev-vvk
VScxlO NFtari
f«*C» New*
1 oca1 ji'wi
CoHtt [>mi
loro'
V' O' '0 ar>o I*VfM
t > a 1 Sport* Htwi
T im*
Heoa
Cof*« ■ -m*
k'-.J1 N*«w«
Um#
o»
Ff-.O F>0?00*
C Ntr>i
. o"Q Country f\thm
v. 'J Ne«r*
• cV". c a Country Ik*n*
1 U«Ol >4*wv
c go Country U*m
t * o c
out fR«vyi ,
rt/v.x r»orri« town
5'Jw'd i««ci For* A Hunt Hum
•»r..jo> C I#rc l'v«*tock CtJ
g r quo konc* Trading fan
M#0 ’ -•!
‘ ' G ‘ - !»• KA«iodi«t
v 0 NOW*
Mu' Matorfit
' O
KAO' Maiodl—
•koi
•1’b •> HotdOM
w<y >d Nm
loco' (laaa
Sport*
Ivaomg
«r
ts
EVERYBODY
Likes To Read
The Newspaper!
4 There is something inter-
esting for every member
of the family in every
issue. Dad reads the news
and sports. Mom reads
the personals, society sec-
tion as well as fashion
and recipes, and the kids
read the funnies. You’ll
find neighborliness, in-
formation. and guides to
buying.
Because everybody likes to read the newspaper, advertisers can
be sure their advertising message is read by their customers.
Just stop and think a minute ... to send 4,000 2c post cards
to prospective customers in this area would cost $80.00 plus
the cost of printing and addressing but those same 4,000 custo-
mers can be reached with much less work and expense with an
ad this size in a Wednesday Cuero Record for only $19.40. Be-
sides the savings in dollars and cents, you get much more
space and you can even use pictures, like the one in this ad,
at no additional cost
Yes! The Cuero Record can illustrate thousands of items,
many exactly like your own merchandise and you pay nothing
extra for this eervice.
Why don’t you have one of the Coero Record
Ad men help you work up your own ad soon!
This Is Often Said About Specials
Being Offered By Our Cuero Merchants - -
BUT---
Too Many Times We Take It For Granted That Our Local Stores
Cannot Supply Our Needs At Bargain Prices And We Sometimes
Don't Take The Time To Check Our Home Town Stores To See.
Cueiro Merchants Depend On You And Your Buying Dollars---
Why Not Give Them A Chance To Serve You Before You Buy
Out Of Town. Your Cuero Merchants Are Responsible For
Cuero's Progress.
Next Time You Shop — Shop Cuero First — And Save!
PATRONIZE YOUR CUERO STORES
The Money You Spend In Cuero
Stays In Cuero To Work For You!
Farmer's State Bank
& Tnist Co.
Chamber of Commerce
& Agriculture
IHE CUERO RECORD
BUCHEL
National Bank
STOWERS
mtNmjHx co.
i
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. 70, No. 28, Ed. 1 Monday, February 3, 1958, newspaper, February 3, 1958; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth695904/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cuero Public Library.