The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 66, No. 306, Ed. 1 Friday, December 23, 1960 Page: 6 of 6
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1: ,V "'f' ' PP
CI ERO RECORD, Friday, Dec. 23, 1960
Mr. and Mrs. Pete Pllskal
Jr. and daughter, Pamela, of
Corpus Christ! will spend
Christmas with Cuero relatives.
J Mr. and Mrs. Fred Lentz
) and, Mr. and Mrs. O. G. Brown,
all of Houston, and Mis. Myrtle
Thompson of Becville will ar-
rive Saturday to spend Christ-
mas with their mother, Mrs.
Artie Boothe.
Congratulations to Vicki Jo
Keesler whose birthday is Fri-
Vlc tor On man of Smiley was j dai‘-
in Cuero on business Thursday.
Harry Berger Jr. of Wharton
Will spend the holidays with Cu-
ero relatives.
Congratulations to Marvin
Junker whose birthday is Fri-
day.-
Live Oak Restaurant will bo
closed Christmas Eve and New
Year’s Eve. (Avt.
Frank Ford was admitted to
Bums Hospital Friday. Mrs.
Alvina Schrade was dismissed
Friday. Mrs. J. A. Gawlik Jr.
was dismissed Thursday. Ad-
mitted Thursday were M. W.
Chambers, Charles Brown and
Layion Sample, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Horace Sample of Smiley.
Mrs. W. G.
Thursday for Fort Worth to
spend Christmas in the home of
her son, Alfred Stubbeman, and
family.
Anna and Molly Doggett, Sal-
ly Lewis and Janice Benton,
students at Austin College,
Sherman, are home for the hol-
idays
Moon Mullins of Nordheim
was a Cuero visitor Thursday.
Nelson Hensley, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Tommy Hensley, is
(confined to Station Hospital.
Stubbeman left jje underwent a tonsillectomy.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Tappe
and daughter will leave Satur-
day night to spend Christmas
in Brenham with Mrs. Tappe’s
parents. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
Schroeder.
Mr. and Mrs. William R.
Dunn and daughter, Mary
Katherine, will arrive Sunday
for a visit in the Charles Rieb-
schlager home.
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Frers (
and son will spend Christmas!
In Houston with relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Elmo Sample
J of Smiley were dinner guests
in the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Diek Hartman of Corpus j Charles Marquis Thursday
Christi was in Cuero Friday night.
morning visiting friends. He
was accompanied by two Cor-
pus Chris ti boys, who were
here with him for a deer hunt.
MARKET NEWS\
LOCAL GRAIN MARNE!
CUERO DASH GRAIN MKT.
Sctmffner's I ic.
Milo ................ 1.80 cwt.
Ear com .......... 1.10 bushel
Shelled com ........... 1.15 a bu.
General Denies____
(Continued From Page 1)
never even discussed use of live
atom bomb in Korea, and that
it was not needed "any more _____ .. T_________________
than we did in the war against fault It is the fault of the Eis-
the United States," Gromyko
said.
"Unfortunately of late, rela-
tions between the United States
and the U.S.S.R. are tense and
have worsened. This is not our
CHICAGO MARKETS
CHICAGO, Dec. 23.~(UPI)—
Live poultry 13,000 lbs. Recenpts
too few to report prices.
Cheese single daisies 43-44 1/2;
Longhorns 44 1/2-45 3/4; pro-
cessed loaf 41-43 1/2; Swiss
Grade A 50-53, Grade B 48-51,
Grade C 46-49.
Butter Easy. 897,000 lbs. 93
score 60 1/4; 90 score 60 1/4; 89
score 58 1/4; car lots- 90 score
60 1/4; 89 score 58 3/4.
Firni. 16,200
Japan.
Truman snapped back today:::
“The use of the atomic bomb
ended the war. Any man can
win a football game on Monday
morning."
Christmas Visit
The former president is in New
York for a Christmas visit with
his daughter. Margaret Tru-
man Daniel. He said he had no
intention of visiting MacArthur.
"I’ve been in New- York 50
times without meeting him. I
don’t have to now," Truman
said.
Truman, who ordered the drop-
ping of atom bombs on Hiroshi-
ma and Nagasaki which brought
the war with Japan to a close,
has said repeatedly that he did
so to save the lives of thousands
Eggs rum. J6.2W cases
White large extras 48 1/2; mix-J
I'd large extras 48 1/2; mediums )os, jn „„ invasion. W°
37 1/4: standards 48 L’2; stand-
ards 42; dirties 39 and checks 39.
and checks 39.
Mrs. Joe Casal will spend
the Christmas holidays with
Mr. and Mrs. James Albritton
in Victoria.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Mar-
quis left Friday for Dallas to
spend Christmas with their son,
Charles Marquis Jr., and fam-
ily.
Rayburn...
(Continued From Page 1)
Congratulations to Jennie
Rae Goode whose birthday is
Friday.
Mrs. Elgin Fehner of Cheap-
side was in Cuero on business
Thursday.
Donald Bitterly of Rt. 2.
Yoakum, visited here Thursday.
Charles Wayne Wanjura was, would mean that the new Con-
dismissed Friday from Cuero‘gross is likely to be more iib-
Hospital. Willie Hoffman and eral than the last one even th-
Henry Miller were admitted ough the Democrats hold fewer
Thursday. i seats. It would remove a ma-
jor roadblock to the approval
Bennie Roggenka.-tp of Mus- Df Kennedy s legislative pro
tang Mott was a Cuero visitor gram
Friday. j Kennedy has assigned top pri-
com-
FOWIED DOWN—Here is the "evidence" at Boston airport,
where starlings sucked into a big Eastern Air Lines jet-
liner engine forced the plane to land with its 108 persons
aboard. You can see parts of the chewed up starlings in the
intake, and on the landing strip. Investigation of a takeoff
crash there previously' led to theory that starlings caused
It. More thaq three score persons lost their lives in that one.
KANSAS CITY LIVESTOCK
KANSAS CITY — (UPI)
USDA - Livestock:
Cattle 50. no calves. Not en-
ough for market test.
Hogs 1,000. Strong to 25 high-
er. 200 - 270 lb. butchers 17.00-
18.35: not enough sows to fully
establish trade. 380-450 lb. 12.75-'
13.25.
He removed MacArthur in 1951
from command as U.N. forces
under MacArthur neared the Ya-
lu River which separates Red
China from Northern Korea.
Relations...
(Continued From Page 1)
Id head off a war.
During the course of his bid
for warmer relations with the
Kennedy administration, lie lash-!
enhower-Nixon government."
Complaint on Flight*
He said that “while preach-
ing friendship" the United Stat-
es "committed treacherous viola
lions of the sovereignty of our
country, namely the U2 and RB
47 flights. When they were cau-
ght red-handed they not only
did not apologize but declared
they were right."
Gromyko said the Western
"imperialists" had been surren-
dering one position after another
and that the anti-Communist SE-
ATO. NATO and CENTO groups
were decaying.
Airliner...
(Continued From Page 1)
Preston radio signal to show up
on his instruments when he hit
the TWA plane, killing all 128
persons on the two planes and
seven persons on the ground.
Suspect Transistor Radio
Why was tlie United pilot ap-
parently so far off course wi-
thout realizing it? This is what
a Civil Aeronautics Board in-
vestigation opening Jan. 4 must
determine.
Some kind of navigation In-
strument malfunction is a possi-
bility.
Federnl Aviation Agench Ov-
id Elwood R. Quesada has said
a preliminary investigation in-
dicates one of the planes two
navigation indicators was not
operating properly. A veteran
accident investigator and safe-
ty expert suggested this might
have been caused by interfer-
ence from stray signals from ■
transistor radio operated by a
passenger.
A second question is why did-
n’t idlcwild approach control ra-
dar spot the jetliner and warn
that it was off course. The an-
swer from the Federal Aviation
Agency is that radar surveil-
lance was not supposed to be-
gin until the plane had arrived
at-its holding point over pres-
ton.
Town Talk -
(Continued from Page 1)
found that a great majority of
both graduates and dropouts had
no plans for further education or
specialized training. When ask-
fA what kind of work they would
most like to do, they mentioned,
with few exceptions, jobs which
were already within reach.
. . ed out at President Eisenhower
Mieop 50. Not enough for mar- and Vice p^id^ Richard M.
ket test.
NOON (X)TTON PRICES
Nixon.
"The Soviet government tries
to have not only normal, but j
New York: March 32.25, down good and friendlv relations with
2; May 32.71. up 1.
RAMSEY'S STEAK HOUSE
Goliad Hiway-Across the River bridge-Victoria
Bring The Family - Prices You Can Afford
OPEN 24 HRS. DAILY—Exe. closed Sat nlte 10 p.m. to S aJB.
Treated For Burns
U. S. Stainless Steel
Sales to Increase
According to market research ||
studies by International Nickel,
GALVESTON UPI -Luis Can- stainless steel sales in the Uni-
tu, 43, received treatment for j ted States will reach 1,112.000
critical burns today at John [ tons in 1967. This is an increase j
Seaiy Hospital after being j of 87 per cent over sales in 1957.
flown in from Brownsville by a
border patrol plane Wed. Cantu j Money in America wasn’t |
lr, To_„ k-mi- ority to federal aid for
e k o' AuM’n and Mr. and Mrs. muniri‘>s offering from chronic
p-v-.H Elder of Victoria wUl ex£55 ££
: ’ Mf and age and an increase in the Sl-
" Henson. . an-hour minimum w age, medic-
| ^ al care for the elderly under
Sfatrb Anil m.
Jroif Irjj w
I Erjiairs g|
I Ettgranittgs jj
I LESTER FRERS p
I Watchmaker - Cuero Mv
I f&eralng A Wagner W
I . Jeweler* W
T^WTlHBIWf
suffered third degree burns ov-J always used to pay bills! Back
WORKING WITH W:OOD er much of his body Dec. 11. ■ in 1649. a young Harvard stu-
Termites j His clothing caught fire while dent settled his college bill by
Termites eat wood. They was lighting a stove. j handing over an old cow. To-
can destroy a house. Many of * * ! day, people have found that
Student Killed j paying bills by bank check is
wood. Home owners dread ter- j i very much easier— than us-
mites and rightfully so, un- I*h PASO t P. Thomas L. mg cows or even cash! In fact
less safeguards are taken Dumas, 19, an honor high school, more than 90 percent of all
against them. The best pre- s,.uttem- was fatally injured i bills in the country today are
vention from termite damage ^ednesriay night when a car paid by bank check.
is through the use of
proven insecticides or
time i his motor scooter from be- -
wood1 hind- 0011135 "as dead on ar* TrA4 Doflinil
the Social SeeuritvVroeramand 1 preservatives properly applied ™'al at ® hospital. He was the 11VI KBIUlIU ■ • •
Program and to all himhpr lispd nn or npar 28th traffic fatality in El Paso (Continued From Page 1)
expanded federal housing pro-
I grams.
! The big obstacle to passage
of these programs is the rules
to ail lumber used on or near
the ground.
A knowledge of the
ance and habits of
this year.
. Electric Department will recei-
appear- (---ve a refund check of S300. The
termites f old Turkey $250 contributors will get re
alition of conservative Republi- s,ze as s°me ants.They nest j * f Agriculture 0f their^contributions.
in the soil and are often called reP°lts- ... I Tlie 1960 refund is just 5 per-
cans and Southern Democrats
|jhas dominated the rules com-
mittee since 1938.
Imtt ytur Christmas nancy ia
year round picture pleasure
Christmas
CENTER PIECES
• Roping • Boughs
RYAN’S
Flower (top
102 N. Gonzalea
CK 4-3441
Kodak and
Brownie Cameras
, HERE;
White ants. But they are not
ants. Ants have a pinched
I w aist, whereas, the termite
body is thick throughout. The
ant s antennae, or feelers, are
bent in elbow fashion. The ter-1
mite's antennae are straight
or only slightly curved. The
j wings of flying ants extend 1
: rearward only one-half the to- j
tal body length, in comparison
with termite wings which ex-
tend backward a distance as
long as the termite's length.
And when you’re shopping you cent below the amount returned
probably will find that prices for ,to underwriters of the 1956 cele-
large size birds compare favor- bration but Riebsehlaeger bla- |
ably with lest year’s prices. Cost med tliis on unfavorable wea-
of the smaller, Beltsville-type ther conditions during most of
birds, may he a little higher U^e week that cut down atten-
though. There are fewer of them dance at the Carnival grounds
this year, the USDA said. j and the exhibit buildings.
— -— ' He said he would release a
Platinum Aids Rayon Production detailed financial statement of'
Rayon fiber is made by ex-iTurkey Trot reeipts and expen-;
truding viscose through a spin- ditures for public information
nerette made of a platinum al- within a very short time.
We Give
oueao ravings
SWAMPS
Double Stamps
EVERT WED.
with 52 W Purchase
on any Item «v* aefl
DONALD CALK’S
TEXACO SERVICE STATION
L. CSTEVENS
notMM 100
KCFH-1600
Monday through Friday
gg-a—*
*,00 Nw
*1
*13 >«« Nmi
H**»
BROWNIE Quterdk,
DWt CAMERA
Electric eye makes
your settings for you!
Al lost you con hove a complete-
ly automatic movie camera with
electric-eye exposure control —
at on amazingly low pricel No
settings to make — you just aim
and shoot in sun or shade . . .
even indoori with photodood
lamps. The electric eye sets the
exposure automatically. Hat fast
f/2.3 lens, easy loading. Uses
thrifty 8mm him.
loy containing minute holes so
Ants do not eat wood. But some j smail tha^ ^an haully tie
ants build nests in tunnels j seen the naked e^e
which they cut across grain of j -
wood. Termites feed on the J
wood in channels cut parallel
with the grain of the wood.
This coming spring note
carefully insects in or around
the house. Termites may be
seeking to establish new colon-
ies at your expense.
KLECKA
DRUG CO
Cuero, Texas
INC.
Ex-Texan Pleads Guilty
SAN FRANCISCO UPI —Wal-
ter Alfred Youngblood, on trial
in connection with a fraud sch-
eme involving an alleged trea-
sure plane in a Mexican jungle
changed his plea to guilty Wed-
nesday. At tiie same time, the
; self-assured soldier of fortune
and author complimented Asst.
; U. S. Atty. John Kaplan on his j
; prosecution of the case. Kap-i
Ian replied that if Youngblood
i would devote his energies 1o hon-
est living he could make a mil-
lion dollars. Youngblood lived 1
recently in Houston.
j Corro«ton-Resistant Nickel
Nickel is second oniy to silver j
i in resisting the corrosive effects:
jot highly-concentrated caustic1
•soda.
WHY FUNERAL INSURANCE
Because it is one of the few plans that you may obtain with-
out a physical and without having to pay a high premium to
obtain additional coverage.
c» 3-4343 FREUND FUNERAL HOME<* 5
at (over pHchl
DrXtffcflRi
Today
■H» JOHN GENTRY "WfSCftfr fate**) fMMS hmf
• ids IflMKI KWR • J Iskytii Iks fid,.’* ■ I&m! hr hsa Nenttm
ADULTS S5c
23c
3:43
Nothing to mix • Nothing ta
spill • Copies in seconds •
Automatic Papar Ejection • Ca-
pacity to legal size • Portable-
light weight • lew Prica
N*w automatic paper »af*» end ejec-
tor provide light-tight ttarage end
proper ottembly of poper, automatic
ejection in proper order.
NOTH1NO TO MIX . . .
. . . NOTHING TO $PIU
New Itedi-Pak Developer container
diipemet fluid and comervei supply.
Sealed platlk bag eacily diipotoble.
FREE DEMONSTRATION
CUERO RECORD
OFFICE SCrrULS
If You Give
SLIPPERS
- - Give The Best
Give Daniel
Greens
FOR MEN - - -
Fine Leather
SUPPERS
$6 to $7.50
FOR WOMEN - -
Corduroy, Felt,
Satin, etc.
$5 to $6
other Slippers 1.98 up
BASS
Shoe Store
SIFTS for UIV
T$ Hm Ht» (km. Ohm Htn!
Gifts from here win choars from men at Christmas ...
because it’s our business to know v *•-;
t~tn fikei
L
*
*
We
Have The
Gift
Your Man
Would Like
The Best
jj’*.
It’
n
• mi
lJMjg
• gi/ivu
4.M
• SCARVES
IN
• JACKETS
IJSIIM
• SUPFKRS
MMJf
• BU.TI
lJW-4.ee
• SPORT SMrte
I.M-7.M
• PAJAMAS
S06 4.es
• SWEATERS
1.M
• UMBRELLAS
I.M4.M
MMJS
• HANDKXR.
AS-i.gg
love Asm, eove itepi ky giSHOg off fas
fer off your erne ender ear got ml
KOEHLER’S
Cuero'a Hou£2 of Quality
Since 1890
n. CR 5-5121
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The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 66, No. 306, Ed. 1 Friday, December 23, 1960, newspaper, December 23, 1960; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth698277/m1/6/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cuero Public Library.