The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 68, No. 268, Ed. 1 Friday, November 16, 1956 Page: 6 of 6
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3$ TH CfJBKO RECORD, Friday, Nwwbw li. 1»W
IBM
Qmgratulations to Hoy Butt-
fry, Courtney Ann Combi and
tula Daniels whose birthdays
ire today.
to-
SAVE
THIS AD
It's Worth
Money To You
On Cash Purchase
Any Pair of
Shoes Over $4.00
It’s Worth
$1
On Cash Purchase
Any Pair of
Shoes Over $8.00
It’s Worth
On Cash Purchase
Any Pair of
Shoes Over $15.00
It’s Worth
OFFER EXPIRES
7 P.M. SATURDAY
BASS
SHOE STORE
For Shoes that Fit.
Mrs. Horace Parks left for
Houston today to visit with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jimmie
Vick, and to make the acquain-
tance of her new neice.
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Goldman
left Cuero today to take their
daughter. Mrs. Bob York, ard
grandchildren to their home In
Houston, where they will join
Bob who spent the weekend In
Cuero.
Herman Ringley of Corpus
Christi was a business visitor In
Cuero today.
Just received large shipment of
I nice shrubs. Come out and look
around. Lewis Nursery. Itf
Guests of Miss Vera Blakslee
for the Turkey Trot were Miss
Lydia Snaer of San Antonio. Mrs.
Frank Walker, Mr. and Mrs. S.
Sanders, all of Houston, and
Mrs. T. J. Anderwald and daugh-
ter, Mrs. Calvin Callahan, of
Bandera.
Henry Canon of Cheapalde vis-
ited in Cuero today.
Richard Adcock of Thom as ton
was a Cuero business visitor to-
day.
The last day to order Christ-
mas cards from the order book
will be Nov. 21st Cuero Record.
(30)
Mrs. Jim Angersteln and Mrs.
A. W. Pettit spent Friday even-
ing in Victoria.
Mrs. H. L. Mueller Is spend-
ing the weekend In Hallettsville.
Alois Hoff of Goliad county was
a business visitor In Cuero Fri-
day.
Mrs. G. C. Ware, Mrs. David
Nelmes and Mrs. Louis Blank
are patients at Bohman Hospital
and Clinic.
Msyimilli Wssmh
Rita On MarMy
life-
Mrs. Josie Bammert, 59,
time resident of Meyersville,
died in a Corppus Christi hospital
at 2:30 a. m. today.
Funeral services will be held
at Freund Funeral Home chapel
at 9:15 a. m. Saturday and at
St. Peter and Paul Catholic
Church in Meyeraville at 10:00
a. m.
Burial will be in Catholic Cem-
etery in Meyeraville.
Hewn Deer
Guests of Sgt. and Mrs. Jerry
Baldwin for the Turkey Trot
parade Monday were T/Sgt. and
Mrs. Bob Daugherly and fam-
ily. T/Sgt. and Mrs. BUI Tallman
and family, 2nd Lt. Prater. aU
of Victoria, Seaman Bill Boner
of Houston and T/Sgt. Amos of
San Antonio.
Congratulations to Ella Schorre,
Ray Katzmark, Frank Thomp-
son. Anthony Fuchs. W. F.
Thompson, Helen Richards, Mrs.
Charles D. Peavy, Jack Wayne,
Mae Mauer. Garlan Weber and
Larry Wayne Keesler whose
birthdays are Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Froe-
lich and family of Port Lavaca
were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Les-
lie Froelich Sunday and Mon-
day for the Turkey Trot.
Mrs. Travis Smith was releas-
ed from Nix Hospital in San An-
tonio today after undergoing sur-
gery.
Rudy Demmer, who had been
laid up for awhUe with a sprung
ankle, was reported this morning
to be up and about again. 1
Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph Zimmer Buckskin” can be mailed to:
had as guests Thursday even- j Volunteer CouneU for State TB
ing Mr. and Mrs. Evan Schultz Hospitals
of Beeville. _ j Baa S. Capitol Station. Austin
The use of the hides in occupa-
tional therapy has the approval
(dent Charles Rlebschlager be- reach oat to grab
of. Cc
Pmil
Oneir
ASSOCIATION
BYLAWS CET
FINAL OKEH
Guadalupe Area Devel-
opment Assn. Set up
Approved
Articles of Association and By-
laws of Guadalupe Area Develop-
ment Association were approved
at a meeting of the board of di-
rectors held in Cuero, George
Williams, secretary, reported to-
day.
The approved Articles and By-
laws will be submitted to par-
ticipating Chamber of Commerce
boards for ratification.
The proposed Articles and By-
laws were presented by Jim
Cross, chairman of the commit-
tee to draft the Articles and
president of the Yoakum Cham-
ber of Commerce. I
L. S. Paine, of the engineering neighbors mount In a time
experimental station at College when flourishing economic
Station, appeared before the condltlon5 ought to be a po-
board and gave an informal talk ... „ f.
accomplishments of North- *<>«* spreading the
fore the organization’s next meet-
ing, to be Held December 12. At
the December meeting the com-
mittee will present a proposed
program of work.
Representatives from New
Braunfels appeared to obtain in-
formation on the GADA. Attend-
ing were tfr. D. Kuhn, manager
of the New Braunfels Chamber
of,Commerce, Claude Scruggs,
W. John and Frederic
im.
Also attending the session was
Jimmie Lovell of San Antonio,
manager of the public relations
department of South Texas
Chamber of Commerce.
Cities represented in addition
to Cuero and New Braunfels
were Victoria. Yoakum, Gonzal-
es, Nixon and Shiner.
share.
That may be what is hap-
pening now. The unpalata-
ble fact seems to be that the
ethical level of our society
has not risen as fast as our
material prosperity has ris-
en.
an extra Trading very light.
fryers 2H-3 1/4 lbs.
Broilers or
16-19 cents.
very
east Texas Development Associa-
tion and Colorado River Indust-
rial Association.
A Program of Work committee
will be appointed by GADA Pres-
Itul Grain Market
UNitMj FarmMIt Mills
Yellow shelled com—SI .60 %
bu.
Milo — S2 05 per 100 lbs.
Hegira — 12.05 per 100 lbs.
POULTRY MARKET
AUSTIN, Nov. 16 —(UP)-SDA
Poultry:
South Texas — Market about
steady. Undertone weak. Actual
supplies relatively short. Howev-
er, buyers report no difficulty ob-
taining ample supply for the pres-
ent slow to fair demand. Trading
moderate with some processors
off market. Large volume moved
undetermined prices. Broilers
or fryers 2H-3 1-4 lbs., 18-19
cents.
East Texas — Market weak.
Undertone weak. Supplies fully
avaricious hands 'adequate for a slow demand.
TOWN TALK
(Continued from Page
planation lies in the
fact that we live in an era
of such plenty? How incon-
gruous lt seems that lawless
acts of men against their
spirit of brotherhood. Yet lt
does appear that whenever
there is an unusual flow of
money.
FORT WORTH LIVESTOCK
FORT WORTH, Nov. 16 -(UP)
—(USDAl —Cattle 300. Steady;
standard and good yearling steers
and heifers 13-18; most of the run
comprised earner and cutter
cows selling from 6.50-9; a few
cutters to 9.50; shelly canners 6
down; utility cows 9.50-11.50
bulls 12.50 down; Stockers scarce.
Calves 25. Not enough offered
to test quatations.
Hogs 100. Few butchers and
sows steady, but trade poorly
tested. No. 3 around 240 lbs. 15;
sows mostly 13.50-14.25.
COTTON MARKET
New York: Dec. 34.39, up 3;
March 34.25, unchanged.
New Orleans: Dec. 34.39, up
3; March 34.23, unchanged.
1057 FUTURES
New York: Dec. 33.68, down
4; March 33.64, down 2.
New Orleans: Dec. 33.65, down
7; March 33.61, down 6.
Cuero Min....
Continued from Page 1)
in Texas before he found the 46-
pound bird delivered to mem-
bers of the police department.
The turkey was located near
Gonzales.
Shortly before leaving for
Washington, D. C. Wednesday
night, Carson said he will pre-
sent Dale Evans and Roy Rog-
ers a turkey at the 1957 Houston
Fat Stock Show In recognition of
m
(Continued from Page 1)
Llano, Fredericksburg, Kerrvllle,
Junction, Rocksprlngs, Sonora
and other “deer towns”.
At least 90 per cent of the 2,500
tuberculosis patients in the state
hospitals at San Angelo (Mc-
Knight), Kerrville (Legion), San
Antonio, Harlingen and Tyler can
be helped in occupational thera-
py during the next year if the
fund donations for bucksknis suf-
fice. That was the estimate of
Helen Colburn, of the agency
known as State Advisory Council
for Volunteer Services in Tuber-
Hospitals.
Checks payable to “Bucks for
Turkey Prices
(Continued from Pact 1 8
Fred Hansen and Gus Cage,
operators of 4SRKO Feed A Seed
Co. said commercial growers,
they are financing are receiving
26c for their hens and 23c for
their toms.
“We have contracts for the do-
ll very of some 40,000
during the next two
these prices,". £■•*'•
Record. - - ......... „.
While the price Is not ae
good as it should be, or too
would ike it to be, nevertheless
the growers can come out with-
out a loss at these prices," Cage
said.
Ony a small number of tur-
keys have sold at the 19c and
22c prices reported in Thursday's
Record a checkup by this news-
paper revealed.
They were range fad and not
properly finished turiteys.
To Compete—
(Continued SrMtt Page 1)
Sager, vice-president, Byron
Wolf, reporter, Billy Miller, trea-
surer, Talbot Wendel, sentinel,
Louis Hood, secretary, lack Ater,
acting advisor, and Garland Ray
Pakebusch. member, . ”
Virgil Warzecha, Letxr Ram
pondek and Anthony Fetter*.
make up the Greenhand Quit ■
team.
........... w II ■ w ■
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SOBS TOUR PAVERT __________
boa t imitate U call M1M —^ !
,rtii m that Toa get am. Ha caa sociation and the state hospital
eeaeax* at SMS. tystem.
Look how much the Big Jffi
has grown for 1957_in size,
power, vveight_iii everything
v. w
that counts in a car!
Perf
Ck
Gifts
ect
ristmas
y„. H.
NIW WMVM—Notice how the bic u’s new breadth is dramatized by a massive
new Jet-Flo Bumper. The oval shape of this graceful new bumper design is as
functional as it is beautiful. It acts as a double bumper—provides both high
and low protection. Notice the matching ”twin”-styled rear bumper (right).
NIW ovnsizm INimioaS—There's more comfort in the front and back seats
of the new bic m. There’s new hip room and leg room. As much shoulder room,
for example, as in many of the most expensive cars. The floor fl now re-
cessed between the frame. The result: more headroom Jhatt etser before.
Mm
k. ME
»■■• wv.v,,. '*w.v.-w—— .. . ••• ~ -.........-— ......... . .
NIW 1IN0TH, NIW WMIILBASI—CLOM TO TWO-TONS BIO. Every important And the 1957 Mercurys are up to 225 pounds heavier, too. A far lower center of
dimension is bigger. In addition to the new length, wheelbase is a big 122 inches, gravity gives you an amazing sense of "nailed-down” stability on curves and corners.
lieatiful nvlons \tj
115 to 195 ri)
Llam&mfo
Slii’i a fUuncb lovor of CloMMMr
Nylon* olrtoJv - or you con loo tke
firot lo introduce tkom I* loer.
otylo — oifiy fo*kinn-rifkl
color i* ktt*. Wkon you
(loufintr, yon |i?o omort8«ii ->s
long wear... perfect fit.
fo*L 7fioil Ulho Mil tfct. final
KOEHLER’S
Cuero’* Holum of Qumlttp
Since 1890
Phono 5-5121
NEW POWER—UP TO 290 HP
A 255-ltp Safety-Surge engine is standard. A
290-hp Turnpike Cruiser V-8 is optional. And
there are two Mercury engine "firsts.” A
Thermo-malic Carburetor controls the temper-
ature of air the engine breathes. The results:
extra power and economy. And, in the Mont-
clair series, a Power-Booster Fan coasts when
not needed for cooling—saves horsepower.
NEW DREAM-CAR DESIGN
1957's most advanced styling—a clean-cut,
dynamic look that makes other cars look old-
fashioned. The roof is gracefully slender—
sweeps back out over the rear window to
provide extra headroom. The tail-lights have
an imaginative V-angle slant. Here's America's
first production dream car—styling that will
influence the shape of cars for years to come.
DRAMATIC NEW FEATURES
Everywhere you look there’s a new idea: an
exclusive 7-position Keyboard Control that
outdates ordinary, push-button transmissions,
an exclusive Floating Ride with a cushioning
action you have to feel to believe. You can
even get a power seat that "remembers”—
turn a dial and it finds your favorite Seat
position. But sec everything. Stop in today.
Wo invite you to see this straight-out-of-tomorrow car today at our showroom.
THE BIG MERCURY for 57 with dream-car design
!«; *,
Don't mil. the big tolovition hit, "THE ID SULLIVAN SHOW.” Sunday evening, 7:00 fo 8:00. Station KENS, Channel S.
V. J. HERMANSEN MOTORS
Yoakum, Texas
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The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 68, No. 268, Ed. 1 Friday, November 16, 1956, newspaper, November 16, 1956; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth698114/m1/6/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cuero Public Library.