The Cuero Daily Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 66, No. 147, Ed. 1 Sunday, June 26, 1927 Page: 2 of 8
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'-'T
THE CUERO RECORD
SUNDAY JUNE 2ft’
_ RECORD
Classified
Rates
IMUM CHARGE
TWENTY-FIVE CENT*
MHO
ft dftily lnaestioB.
•• weekly lBftftrtlon.
Bneboth Insertion».
lae tUc eoneecathre
*vi
Haft tow oouocaUTft
dafly ftftd weekly.
9MI wm ttw wmto* toee*-
dosft one ftMinth daily-weekly
Dteflay Rate*.
Me per coUuftft lnctt daily.
• Ho par eoluui inch weekly. .
•Oo per colnmn inch single in-
sertion dally and weekly.
fl.00 pR column took dally and
weekly ope week.
Ada accepted e» to 1:10 p. m.
tat pabUeatkm same day.
TERMS:—Cash to advanoe ex-
cept to tkoee having recator
eharge aoeonnta.
FOB SALE
— BAPTIST CHURCH —
A. H. Clark Pastor
Sunday school 9:45 a. m.
Morning worship 11 a. m.
Subject for meditation -‘The Call
of'the Heights.”
B. Y. P. U. 7 p. m.
Evening church service 8 p. m.
The evening sermon will he on:
The Restful Refuge.
Thep ubiic is cordiajly invited to
all services. ♦
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
W. A. McLeod Pastor
Sunday School 9:45 a. m.
Bible classes for men and women.
The regular services Sunday at LI
a. m. and S p. m. and the insuing
week.
Subject Sunday morning "Teaching
Souls to be Quiet.”
Sunday evening "The Wings of
Lindbergh”. A heart talk to young
people. This evening service will be
short and prompt. We invite you to
come with your young people.
Visitors welcome.
Ford Celebrates With Three
Most Famous Automobiles
Production of Fifteen Mil-
lionth Ford Car Marks An-
other Chanter in American
Motor Historv.
E
VERY day if a big day in the
life of !I»;ii v Ford, tut
Ihrv? of his days in particu-
lar have L>--n tremendously impor-
tant historically to all the rest of
the world.
These was that dr.v away hack in
rarrtrrr::'; vsxsjskshkbb
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'm'jmmsmmm
4
ill
GOOD
LUMBER
For a
GOOD HOME
REMEMBER this: how well your new home hi
built, how long it will last depends upon the lumbar
you put into it. As important as the right plans
and true carpentry is GOOD lumber. We furnish es-
timates at no charge on what GOOD lumber will
cost you—whether it is for a fence or an apartment
house.
Cuero Lumbar Ca
F. C. Scbrvk, Mgr.
.V .
rV
Waiter FielfTert
Wm. Prcb#M
H. RUNGE & CO., Bankers
K
«» central Hotel furniture Phone 167.
>41
Radio Set for Safe
1 * « ..
New Atwater Kent 6 tube Radio
With all accessories at a bargain.
(Terms given.
I-
NAGEL MO*POR
3T
FOR RENT
GOOD retail business location ut
Westhoff for rent. Good building, fine
location. 6. B. WIed, Westhoff,
f
UN
FOR RENT—Furnished light house-
_ peeping rooms. Mrs. H. B. Edgar.
MISCELLANEOUS
METHOR1ST CHURCH
A. T. White, Postor.
Sunday school at 9:45 a. m.
Regular preaching services at 11 a
m. and 8 p. m.
Every one cordially invited to
these services.
ST. MARK’S LUTHERAN CHURCH
. Rev. F. F. Eberhardt, Pastor
Tonight closing exerxttses of the
Daily Vocational Bible school. Come
out and see what the children have
done.
Sunday, June 26, 9:30 Sunday
school. Alfred Marquis, Supt.
10:15 English service.
8:00 p. m. English service by Rev.
:J. C. Pfenninger, afiter service a
short meeting of Lutheran Brother-
hood.
t -
Ppppfs
ip
1
-: '
' 1Ui
rMorsfe tor
■anhaottoe.
Storage * Forwarding Co.
Public Warehouse.
Household Furniture
etc. H. W. Nagel, Mgr.
*4
LOST AND FOUND
LOST—Kappa Sorority pin on the
of Cuero. Kindly return
cord office for * word.
. ST. MICHAEL’S CHURCH
Francis Pallancbe, Pastor
III Sunday after .Pentecost..
6:30 Holy Communion.
7:30 first Mass, announcements.
General Commhnlon for children.
9:30 Second Massl Sermon.
.7:45 p. m. evening services. •
’triage
Boom Bunge Building
CUEBO - - TEXAS
*
How is Your
PRESSING
SERVICE ?
Are your clothes being
pressed out of shape or
in shape?
Pressing is an art which
comes from experience
and carefulness. A gar-
ment must be pressed in
shape for it to fit the
body correctly. That is
what you get from our 15
years of pressing experi-
„ ence.
*
Try our Service and
Notice the difference.
IF YOU A.RE STRUCK BY
AUTO. IN PfaaS. iT is
YOUR FAULT LEGALLY
PARIS, France, Jane 25.—American
Legionnaires in Paris September 19
to 23 for the ninth annual conven-
tion wil Ibe surprised to find that
‘"ja.'l walker^’ who are strif'k by
automobile or trjdn will be held to
blame by the French courts and made
liable for damages. II has aiways been
against the law for a pedestrian to
be hit by a*n automobile in Paris, the
blame for all these accidents being!
assumed to rest on the walking party.
Glaring signs. “PieLons Traverse*
de la Chaussee." which translated
means pedestrians cross the street
with the arrow, remind the veterans
that they must use as re. It was the
Military Police who introduced the
first traffic cops in the French capital.
Yesterday and today in motor car histdry. Lower picture shows the three wear famous Ford* car«—
the first built, built by Henry Ford in 1893. the first Model T. huilt in 1908. and the fifteen millionth Ford.
In insert. Henry and Edsel Ford.
the early ’nineties, when he chug- est associates foresaw that the long | supervised the assembling of the
line of. descendants of that first fifteen-millionth motor and stamp-
Eaubllftped to toft*
(Unincorporated)
General Banking and Exchange. Interest on All Time Deposits. Safety
Deposit Boxes for rent, in the safest flee and burglar vaalt to
south Texas. We solicit your ^"M"| Tin sine—
CUERO
rim
the streets of
first “horseless
ged forth upon
Detroit with his
buggy.”
There was the day in 1908 when
he introduced the first of the Model
T Fords.
Then there was that day—just a
few days ago—when, with his son
Edsel at the wheel, he rode the
fifteen-millionth Ford automobile
off the assembly line at the great
Highland Park plant.
The true significance of the. first
of these three days was apparent
to no one at the time. To be sure,
the noisy jerky littlehorseless
carriage was the first automobile
De*roit had seen and, for that mat-
ter, one of the first three the world
had seen. But to observers it wa?
just a curious sort of freak vehicle
—a toy. Even Henry Ford himself
had not yet dreamed of the tre-
Model T Ford would revolutionize
automobile manufacture, aid per-
haps more than anything else in
the development of paved roads,
and place the automobile witton
the reach of almost every family in
America.
But on that late spring day in
1927, when the fifteen-millionth
Ford car came off the assembly
line, the whole world knew it was
a day of days in the history of the
ed upon the motor block the num-
bers “15.000,000.”
When the entire car had been as-
sembled, Henry Ford and his son.
Edsel. who is president of the Ford
Motor Comply, drove it from the
Highland Park plant to the ad-
ministration building of the com-
pany at Dearborn. There it was
met by Mr. F.; i’s first automobile,
the old “horseless carriage” and
by the first of the long line of
automobile and ot American indus- model T Fords,
try and life in general. While news and motion-picture
On the day bpfore, the Ford cameras clicked, Henry Ford drove
Motor Company bad issued an offl-1 his little gas buggy of the early
cial announcement that a new Ford
automobile “superior in design and
performance te any now available
in the; low-priced, light car field,”
would be introduced during the
nineties around tl^j area way where
the three most-famous motor cars
in history had met. Also he talked
in his characteristic manner to
newspapermen and others who had
present Summer. The annouqcc- gathered.
ment meant that the fifteen j Mostly he talked of that little
mendous development of automo-j mi,tionth pord marked the begin-1 old first car.
niug of another long line which | “I was proud of that car,” h«
biles {hat was to follow in its wake.
Tdkewise, the world was unqw^re
of the impoitanc of that day in
190S which saw the advent of tjie
Model T Ford car.. - Automobile
manufacturers were multiplying by
that time; the automobile already
bad passed the plaything stage amLl-Uoa,
was showing promise of becomingAe. build
a factor-in transportation. But only
Henry Ford and a few of hip clo«-
may play an even greater part in
providing improved trau^ppr union
for the masses. ? !.*ji ,b j
The completion of the flfteen-
milliouth car was the oo«*tiiPkt tpr
a celebration in the Ford organizg-
fitoktot the men whmltelped
ike first* ModaL.X-motor
who aye now executives of
W* a i^aisatipn,
*“!T
and
srJd, “but almost everybody else in
Detroit either laughed at it or ran
jfrom it. I remember one day a
family party jumped out of a
lju>£y and r*n as I approached
With my car. The horse wasn’t
afraid, though. While the family
W«rs scampering up the road, he
moved off to the side ot the road
.ftnd began to graze.”
Don’t Forget Our
Ready-Made ■
Trellises
in your space, we will be fled
to call-take the
make one to fit your requirement at the riffht price.
Alamo Lumber Co,
J. X. NEWMAN, Mgr.
TTie first} complained that blowing
the whistle tiikled his lips and for a
time French traffic ran riot, paying
no hee<l to roppers. It is different
now. The traffic cops are on duly
along the boulevard much the same
as in the United States.
&
4'
DANDRUFF
i K.T. M WAV
ran* of daodraff. falDno h
ftJO-a-OAKDCM oteorW
* *1 “l
Han hotter W« noil it ondor monoy-boek voarutoo
L L BUTTERY. W. O. Cuoro, Tuu
Style Shop for Men
See our Window*
310
“ The Wings of Lindbergh ”
A Message for Our Young People
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
, SUNDAY 8 P. M.
“Teaching Souls to be Quiet,“ 11 a. m.
Special Music—Electric Fans—Short Service
Hearty Welcome.
W. A. McLeod, Pastor.
. ’-V
's’
ft’ rT
Main Street Cafe
Chilafes,
Mexican
Ben Hemande*
—
** 1, „
Xantttr.
CHURCH of CHRIST
According to the Scriptures, Jesus Christ establish-
ed a church, that is, a visible religious society. He
built His Church upon the Apostles as spiritual teachers
and rulers giving them of his own authority. This
qhurch is to last “all days” and may be recognized; it
must have Unity, of faith, of means of salvation and of
government. It must be universal or catholic “teaching
ALL nations ... to observe AIT, things. The Church
must be Apostolic for it was founded upon the Apostles;
it should have their doctrines and its spiritual rulers
ought to be able to trace their authority back to the
Apostles.
fi
! i;
j
-s if
*
•<
OUR BIG SALE
Just Passed, HAS BROKEN ALL PREVIOUS RECORDS In Point Of
Attendance an VALUE GIVING
We Thank You
This week we are still featuring some wonderful Bargain* in Clothing, Dresse* and Ladies
Hat*. Men’* Straw Hats still selling at One-Third and One-Half Regular Price.
9;
As Displayed in our Show Window.
Koehler Dry Goo
New Goods On Display
See our new shipment of B. V. May Hose, THE BEST VALUE ON *j*HE MARKET
FOR 50c PAIR. MADE STRONG WHERE THE WEAR COMES WITH NO DARN
TOES.
New Shipment of Nellie Dunn Wash Dresses at Popular
Prices.
See the HANDY DANDY APRONS AT
The House of Quality
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The Cuero Daily Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 66, No. 147, Ed. 1 Sunday, June 26, 1927, newspaper, June 26, 1927; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth995397/m1/2/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cuero Public Library.