The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 69, No. 50, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 28, 1957 Page: 8 of 8
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| t— rono EBCOKP, Tlwndty, rebraarv M. »W
ANOTHER SCHOOLYARD CRASH
Houstonians Get
Free Polio Shots
First Baby Bottle
A UGHT PLANE which crashed du« to a faulty fuel Range is shown
jn n schoolyard in Covina, Calif., where it struck. A number
of children playing in the yard had to scramble to safely. The
pilot. John Sterli. is In middle background, on the wing. On
ground 14 Rudolph Notz. who was Hying with Slcrli. Not* suffered
cuts and bruins. The fuel gauge, ipgistered full when they took
off, but over Covina—no gas. (International Sound photo/
HOUSTON. Feb. 28 (UP)— outiside doctors' office — where
Hundreds of Houstonions receiv- higher fees are charged — but
cd polio shots free 01 at "cut-! later came up with a countywide
rate’’ prices in two mass inocu-1 program of their own.
lations Wednesday under the The doctors expect to get then
frowns of the organized medical I program under way in mid-
fraternity. March.
The inoculations were at Kos-1 Two American 1-egion posts
ter Place Methodist church Wed-, have also scheduled muss inocu-
nesdav morning, and at an hlks lations of members and 'heir
lodge Wednesday night A total families. One clinic will operate
| of about 1,000 inoculations were * from 2 p in. Saturday and an-
j giv<>n other will begin Sunday at 9 a rn .
Howe vet .• I>i. M. D. Levy, The "shots'’ of Salk vaccine
president of the Hams County will cost $1 each,
j Medical Society w hile permit- j
! ting the m< ovulations to proceed
j — classed them as implying
■'lowered iiicdicai standards.'’ 1
"There are ceitam groups lhat
i insist that tiie medical society
i lowci the medical standards of
the community so ihey may have
| special consideration, ' l>r I-evy
said.
The medical so< irty originally
disapproved mass inoculation
Valentine Boy
Gets Valentine
Bow and Arrow Hunter Wins $ 10,CXX) College
By Bringing Down Two Elephants
SAN ANTONIO. Feb. 27. -
Vi - William Negley has bag-
ged a couple of elephants
with a bow and arrow, ac-
cording to a telegram his
wife received, and thereby
wins $10,000 for the San An-
tonio Witte museum.
Negley. an independent
oilman, had a 10-1 bet with
William K. Carpenter Jr.,
of Delaware that he could
bring down an elephant with
a iww and arrow. According
to the telegram from the Bel-
gian Congo Tuesday, Neg-
ley won his bet and added an-
other pachyderm for good
measuie.
The cable said, "killed
two elephants according to
Wager "
Had Negley failed in his be,
he would have had to do-
nate $1,000 to the museum.
Carpenter had agreed to do-
nate $10,000 if Negley could
bring down an elephant with
archery.
Negley was parking a 100-
pound maple and fiber glass
how with 28-lnch steel tipped
arrows. Negley has bagged
a number of elegants with
a rifle
Negley's mam purpose for
the trip was to collect spec-
imens for the new African
hall of the museum, for which
he is chairman of the Ad-
visory Hoard for Natural
History
< Continued from Page 1»
stand the studer”* problems,
those who do not understand but
pretend to. those who know'
'but ppetend not to know and
| those who know the problems
and show understanding.
I 4 Teachers should learn as
much about the home life of
the students as possible.
. 5. Should fulfill the respons-
ibility of teaching students how
to utilize their spare time
6 Instructors should teach for
individual achievement and n-t
|for social security,
j 7. Teachers should inspire
(their students to high ideals
j Moore was introduced by Mis.
!o. M. Boyle. vice-president of
the organization. Bob J~hnson
presided over the meeting.
PERSONALS
EFI.tM''. I’l all
notices specifically erdwed la °PP*a
10 tho Pm tonal column will bo- billod
„i «0c pm count lino. Sotos lot classt-
fiod ond tegvlat omusomont column
od'Crtisinp will romom unebonged.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Simms of
Port Lavaca were gupsts in the
James Jenrv home Wednesday
evening
Congratulations to H \V. Oster-
hout who is celebrating his 81st
birthday today.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Dartman
motored to Flatonia Wednesday
evening to visit relatives and
friends
Mrs. K. D. McManus, o( Apop-
ka. Florida, arrived Tuesday,
lor a short visit with her sister.
Mrs. W.
j Mr. and Mrs. l-e Roy < iriffin
Jr. of Yorktown arc the proud
'parents of a baby hoy born
Tuesday at Yorktown Memorial
Hospital. The lad. who weigh-
ed 8 lbs.. I ozv, was named
Stephen Wayne. The mother is
the former Jo Ann Warzecha.
The father is employed hv the
Yorktown News ns a »inoty|>c
operator.
Baby Strangles
On Raw Carrot
DALLAS. Feb. 28 tlJPi Tan-
TT VISIT wim net
G. Stubborn an, both of | ya Farmer, one-year-old MtiKh-
rhom plan to visit relatives In
lay City and Palaeioa Friday.
ter of Mr. and Mrs. Billy Mark
Farmer, ehoked to death Wed- j
Yi. Guarantee Car Batteries ncxday on a piece of raw carrot
Her mother and her grand-
mother. Mrs. R. W. Bethunim
watehed her die hut could do
nothing to dislodge the piece of
rarrot.
Man Kills Wile In
Scuffle Over Gun
9.85 exch 2'» Yr. - MIPS
xch "Early Bird Sale ’ Wcst-
m Aulo Assoc. Store. <1
Congratulations to Mr* llelan
lolzheuser who rbscrvrs her
irthday Fehniary 29.
Mr and Mrs James Moore of
inliad visited Cuero friends
riefly today while passing
n-oueh Cuero ennute to Hal-j ,I0UST0N ,.vb 28 a P, Thr.
?tt*\ntie to be at ice bedsideof ■ Rr-olcI wife of a rookie po-
les. Moores mo her, sriio_ was I - ^ deil1h
r/nfined to a Hate t.svile hospi-1 Wrdnesdav night in a family
1 alter breaking her hip in a | M|)e ^ , „ l>(.PI,ran
1 Wednesday. !,having episode in a bar.
Mr and Mrs. Gene Roberts | The victim was Mrs. Florence j
re m Houston today to attend j Wood. She was dead on arrival
io Houston .Stock Show and ro- \ «t a hospital. Her husband, B.'
F. Buck Wood, also 27. and a po-
liceman since Jan 2. w as charg-1
OWN TALK
(Continued from Page ] i
tent weapon, with a 10,000-
mile range and an overall
performance beyond that of
any known comparable
plane. We built 383 of these
machines, and the cost,, in-
cluding .spare parts and en-
gines and other needs, came
to $2,589,600,000.
Today this bomber is vir-
tually obsolete. US. News
says that it . . is being
scrapped, taken out of ser-
vice as fast as replacements
can be built.” A few will be
used for atomic-engine ex-
periments. The rest will soon
be good only for salvage.
Its place is being taken
by the all-jet B-52 — a far'
superior machine on all!
counts. These cost $8 million ■
each — more than twice the
cost of a B-36. And it is
likely, before many years go
by, that the B-52 will grow i
obsolete and worthless In
turn. (
The point Is, the maga-
zine continues, that in past,
eras weapons normally last- ’
HAILED bv millions of mothers,
the first baby bottle created a
sensation when Introduced at
the Great Exhibition of 1831 In
London. More than a century
later, the “O’Donnell bottle” is
one of the rare items to be ex-
hibited at the 1.9th Annual An-
tiques Show, which opens in
New York City, March 11. The
infant pictured here ts demon-
strating that the bottle had a
flexible tube that allowed her
to move without losing milk.
HOUSTON. Feb. 28 ♦ UP - • A
1-3-year-old 4-1! boy from Valen-
tin'*, Tex., has- won the grand
1 champion junior steer awaid at
the 1937 Houston Fat Stock Show.
The award made "Pug" eligi-
ble In show for the grand cham-
pionship steer award. The grand
champion will he picked at 9
p m. tonight.
An Angus calf owned by Hun-
tis lilac k, a University of Hous-
ton student, won Wednesday's
junior reserve champion award
Black raised the 1 .(KG-pound
annual, named "Doug," at Lo-
meta, Tex.
—---------- Jdioolleadier Who
Superintendent saved Scores From
(Continued from Page 1 >
then attended Columbia Univer-
sity and the University of Hous-
ton where in 1954 he was award-
ed the degree of Doctor of F.du-
calion in Educational Admini-
stration.
The new superintendent serv-
ed four years in the United
Stales Navy during World War
II, his operations confined to
the Pac ific theater.
As a student at Texas A & M,
he was a member of the football
team for three years, lettering
in 1941 as a guard on the same
team which boasted the lamed
John Kimbrough.
He, his wife, and his children,
are members of the College Sta-
tion Presbyterian church.
MARKET NEWS
local Groin Market
Courtesy Parmbilt Mills
, j An automobile battery has
'lower; bulk U. S. 1-2-3 barrows j just two-thirds as much starting
and gilts 190-250 lbs. 17 50: few power at 32 degrees as it does at
dots to 17.75; heavier weights j® degrees,
j scarce. Around 170-180 lbs 16-17;
(ISO lbs. 15-15.50; 150 lbs. 13-14; no
pigs on sale; sows fully steady
at 15-16 for No. 1 to 3 grades.
Sheep 1,500. Active. strong,
fire Dies Of Burns
Yellow Shelled Corn— $160 per,spots higher; most of run slaugh-
ter ter lambs; good and choice wool-
Milo- 12.05 per 100 lbs. jed slaughter Iambs 19-19.50: one
, Hegira—$2.05 per 100 lbs. j small load 20; good and choice
j - fall shorn lambs 19.25; load good
POULTRY MARKET No. 3 pelt lambs 18; load most-
i AUSTIN, Feb. 28 — <UP> — !>Y ut,lity No. 3 pelt lambs 17;
good wooled ewes 8; good and
choice wooled feeder lambs 19-
_ (SDAi - East Texas -Market
steady. Supplies scarce most
areas, about adequate in others.
Demand fair. Moderate to nor-
mal trading. Broilers or fryers
between */»-3 1/4 pounds, 20 cents.
East Texas - Market steady,
supplies adequate. Demand good.
Feb. Moderate to normal trading,
school Broilers or fryers between 2'a-
3 1/ pounds, 20 rents, few high-
er and lower.
Waco — Market steady. Sup-
for the slow to
fair demand. Moderate trading.
Broilers or fryers between 2‘i-
I 1/4 pounds 20 cents.
WINSTON-SALEM N C
27 i UP i An elderly
teacher who led all but one of
her students to safety from a
burning Mount Airy, N.C . school, plies adequate
building, died of burns in a hos-
pital today.
Mrs. Cora Beasley, third-grade
teacher at Flat Rock Elemen- FORT WORTH LIVESTOCK
tary School, died at 4:45 a rn. |, FORT WORTH. Fell. 28.—(UP!
i;ST. j tUSDA) — Cattle 700. calves
It w as largely due to her ef-; 100. Market generally steady on
furls that all but one of the 400 'laughter steers, heifers and
student*, of the school escaped r0"s> slaughter calves ^and^stock-
Ti 1 i\• . although 33 teachers and,cr*
students were burned m the
new .superintendent during
past few years are.
Distinguished honor student,
A & M College, 1940-48.
President Industrial Education
Club. 1940.
Texas A & M I-cttermuii. 1941.
President. Gulf School Re-
and feeders fully steady;
hulls unchanged; seven loads
slaughter steers and one load
heifers on market; about 30 per
flash fire lari Friday, authori-
the tu s said. Lent supply cows. 15 per cent
,aii.\ ’ i stockers and feeders; two loads
' third-grader, was trapped inside ■ phoj (> st(?ers 20.50; good and;
choice fed steers 19.50-20.50 on i
19.50.
ed as long as 20 years. When search Development Association,
changes came they usually, ca^'s,JJ° m Amrnian i;,iu'
amounted to modifications Member Board of
bought to arrive basis; good
yearlings 18-19; good and choice
fed heifers 19: utility and com-
mercial cows 12-13.50; cutter and
utility bulls 11.50-14; mixed good
only. Now weapons
Member
rarely i State University lntei scholastic
I
■makes smell' and hear through ««d with nmrdri
Ur tongues.
Wood said his wife was shot
ton t hesitate to call 5 3131 and
him. He said she was trying to
1 prevent him front returning to
a tavern.
for ‘•Neighbor” Hensley who
J *pe that you get one. Ho can
o t>« reached at 5-9068.
last as long as 10 years, and
radical new types take over.
All kinds of examples can
be cited. The F-86 jet, cost-
ing $250,000, was the me-
chanical hero of the Korean
War. It is being replaced by
a new $640,000 model. When
World War II ended, we had
a great fleet of $90 million
aircraft carriers. But they
too are going into retire-
ment. The new supercarri-
Leagutf, 1956-60.
Member .State Hoard of Direc-
tors, Texas Safety Association.
Member Advisory Council fin
Department <>l Education, A A
M College for indefinite period.
He lias been active in civic
endeavors in College Station, be-
ing President of the Recreation
Council, member of the City
Charier committee, chairman ol
Youth Activities commission and
lias served m many other such
capacities.
Dr. Richardson is a profession-
al writer and is author ot sev-
eral publications regarding
the burning struetuie and pei
islied.
Mis. Beasley returned for the
boy after leading her other stu-
dents from the building hut she
hoi sell was trapped. She was
dragged from the building by |and choice slaughter calves 20;
Principal A. P. Phillips only sec- good calves 18.50-19.50; standard
Directors i oll<*s 1,1,01‘‘ the root collapsed. (16.50-18; medium and good vear-
—------ -----------— (ling stock steers 16.18.50; med-
Army limiting Souvenirs ium and good stock steer calves
SAN ANTONIO (UP* Fourth 16-19.
Army ordnance experts are con-! Hog* 300. Rutchcrs mostly 25c
tinuing their search for danger- i
ous war souvenirs unexploded
relics of the battlefield. Tuesday
the ordnance crew collected an
unexploded. 90-millimeter shell
Lett for two sears in an elemen-
tary school principal office.
Juneau is the oldest American
settlement in Alaska, Its name
was taken from that of Joseph
Juneau, who discovered riches
which made Ihe district famous.
TERMITES? ANTS?
ROACHES?
Texas Sanitation Co. Inc.
“BUGMOBILES”
HI 3 *361 — N l.aurent
\ It TOKIA
HEAR GOEBEL
A short historical sketch of
DeWitt count} was-read by Jane
cs Goebel today at a mce'irg
of the Green DeWitt-Arneckc-
villc Junior Historian Club, ac-
cording to Joint Lassmann. club
reporter. .
here in June.
CIS, such as the Forrestal, school operation and activities,
cost $200 million. And com- 1Ic as"u,,H's his ..cm duties
ing types, atomically-driven,
will carry a much higher
price tag.
Intense work is being done
on missiles, to take the place
of
4around Broken for TI Plant
DALLAS - tl Pi Sunlight —
converted into electricity — de-
tonated a charge of dynamite
Tuesday to bieak ground lor
certain piesent weapons, tPXj,s instruments lncorporat-
h
^ G .' •*
Cuero t/xice No. 409
A F L A M meets
ovary second and
fourth lhursday each
month at 7:30 p.m
Visiting hi-others are
always welcome.
Homer Wright \V M.
O A 7,in>merman,
iecty.
Falcon up
I.AREDO tUT' Heavy flow
from the upper Rio Grande con-
tinued today at Falcon Dam. Wa-
ter depth rose six inches Tues-
day at the dam. All water re-
leases from Falcon for down-
stream use were stopped when
the lakr reached an all-time low
Feh. 16.
BUSTER BROWN
SADDLE OXFORDS
Sadddle
A - B - (
Widths
Perennial favorite of the
younger act. Buster Brown
Makes the kind thov like.
4.95 to 7.50
BASS
SHOE STORE
used by all three of the for-
ces. These missiles will soon
be m large-scale production,
and they are almost unbe-
lievably costly — several
times as costly, in every
case, as the weapons they
will replace.
U. S. News covers the inches thick
general situation in these
words What's happening.
. . is a major speed-up of
the rate at which weapons
become obsolete, with near-
ly every new weapon involv-
ing a basic change that in-
creases casts in rising pro-
gression over the cost ol the
weapon replaced. There is,
moreover, no apparent end
to this revolution in wea-
pons anywhere in sight.”
This is one of the grimmer
facts of life in a world
which seems to have em-
barked on an arms race that
knows no limits. U.S. News
sums up by saying: “The re-
sult is a record for peace- j
time spending for defense,
planned at $38 billion for
military outlays alone in the
year ahead.”
ed's $4 million plant for its semi-
conductor - components division
The building will be the lust U
S. industrial application of a
hyperbolic paraboloid ihon-sholl
pre-stressed concrete const ruc-
tion.
A hippopotamus may weigh up
to three tons and have skin two
PIALTQg
Tonito is Gifl Mite’
TODAY & FRI.
ANTHONY
Qu/nn
MAN
FROM
DEL RIO
ilM tliiimi
mtyJURADC
•"•MX Dn U«n» MT«
Plus: Cartoon
News
Last Times Tonite!
THE
STEEL
JUNGLE
MtuMfto avWARNw Bros. -
PERRY 10PEZ-BEVERLY GARUWD Rfi
FRI. & SAT.
Wilt Disney ~~
ip fi’-A' y.
PLUS!
MEN AGAINST THE ARTIC’
And
• HOW TO HAVE AX
ACCIDENT”
|l)on't Let The Title Of This Picture Fool You!^
IN ALL THE YEARS - - THIS IS ONE OF CHE FINEST. CLEANESTl
FAMILY MOVIES EVER TO BE SHOWN ON THE SCREEN OF THISf
CUERO THEATRE!
Here’s Gary Cooper In Tho
Toworin* Role That Topa
Any Of His Biggest Hits - -
In The Down-To Earth Out-
Door Drama Which Offers
Excitement. Laughter. Joy
And Romance In Equal
Quantities. So Proud Are We
Of This Attraction That It
carries jjjy personal recoin*
GARY COOPER
Friendly
Persuasion
CO
Dorothy McGuire
A-.’—O'.V Pt-'NKINS
_____ Mawjohie-Main
as a lO*l>l »f|DCUl»r
mendatioa
HEAR PAT BOONE SING - FRIENDLY PERSUASION’
and money-hack
satisfaction!
Starts Sat.
Thru TUESDAY
PUtlTOft
guarantee of
—The Manager
P S. 1 urge yon to see it
from the beginning!
WHAT WILL HAPPEN TOMORROW? NO ONE
CAN SAY * - * BE PREPARED • • • INSURE TODAY!
HOSPITALIZATION - POLIO - oURIAL INSURANCE
Let Us Explain The Advantages Of Our Insurance
FREUND FUNERAL HOME
Ph. tt-4341
(Ask For B. R. Pinch)
Ph. MRS
NO PICTURE' NO FIGHT TONIGHT'
One weak tube can spoil your TV fun
Get our TV tune-up today and
avoid disappointment later.
Our technicians can give your
old set a new lease on life
SfQWXDiMMfD
RECEIVING TUBES
^ Beil for any set
Cod tsdsy for eer teea-sp specie!.
Visit Is Frl- 4: Sat.. March I ft 3 During Our
Formal Opening In New Quarters. Register
For Free Priies. No Purchase Required.
Baker's TV and Radio Service
601 E. Clayton St. Phone 5-5294
KOEHLER'S
invites you to
III 1 k
9.95
Navy Mesh
Hi Heel Pump
B . AA • AAA
and 6t. you can hardly
ihrv'ra vour
fMhK»b-d«K
m a wide ran*e of tne
—■yzXZzZZ"
___..oemc f»<n.5€
Hi Heel Pump
B - AA • AAA
Anv Many Other Spring: Styles
KOEHLER'S
Cutro’s House of Quality
Since 1890
Phone 5-5121
:
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The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 69, No. 50, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 28, 1957, newspaper, February 28, 1957; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth699119/m1/8/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cuero Public Library.