The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 19, Ed. 1 Friday, January 23, 1948 Page: 3 of 6
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Surface Burial Vault Company
CUERO, TEXAS
n. Nursery and Kinder
Morning Prayer and
504
AND PRESSING
time on any typewriter
CHAIN
the New Remington!
This Weekly Series of Church Messages Made Possible by The Following
CUDAHY’ PACKING COMPANY
T. NEWMAN ASONS
OFFICE SUPPLY STORE
Telephone No. 1
CUERO MOTOR SALES
Kaiser-Fraser Dealers
FARMERS STATE BANK
& TRUST COMPANY
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
Sunday School 9:45 a. m.
Morning Service 11 a. m.
Young peoples meeting 6:30 p. m.
No evening services.
Special
at 6:00
Youth
Nursery
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
Dr. Ben M. David
Those who take advantage of the Individual Mausoleum,
or Surface Burial Vault are assured of having provided Ute
best that science and kindly hands can provide.
were maybe only 17, the young ladies
threw themselves into their work
With avidity and battled for Miss
Russell’s autographs.
But, as mentioned, it was only act-
RIALTO & TROT THEATERS
John Monroe, Manager
Copyright 1MT by
> E. Keister Strasburg. Virginia
WILLIAMS HATCHERY
Neil Williams
Be always grateful you used this wonderful burial service
and not regret later that you did not.
These hands might have painted the world's greatest masterpiece.
These hands might have played faultlessly the most difficult concerto.
These hands might have mixed a compound that would destroy disease.
These hands might have been raised in blessing over a trusting mankind.
SURFACE BURIAL VAULT CO
D. C. Wooderson
CUERO LUMBER COMPANY
R. Hoffman, Mgr.
ry was . Patty Lou
i oould have had a!
Rosalind Russell but
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
Rev. Ben M. David, Pastor
SUNDAY:—
9:45 Sunday School.
10:45 Morning Worship.
6:30 p. m. B. T. U.
7:30 Evening Worship.
WEDNESDAY:—
5:30 p. m. Choir Practice.
7:30 p. m. Prayer Meeting.
, Hands do not act by themselves. Personalities control them—per-
sonalities swayed by impulses and convictions, good and bad. The
Church, your Church, is waiting to guide hands, minds, hearts and lives.
Here good impulses, right convictions are born and nurtured. Here, in
<jrod s House, hands learn to move aright to find life's work, unchained
and triumphant
Instead they are chained. ‘Somewhere, somehow, they failed. Per-
haps they reached over a counter and steathily snatched a jewel.
Perhaps they searched a safe and took what other hands had worked for.
Perhaps they held the gun that wiped out a life. Somewhere they went
wrong. Somewhere they failed.
BASS SHOE STORE
Myron Bass
PRIMITIVE BAPTIST CHURCH
Stratton. Texas
Elder Jasper Chamoers
Services every 2nd Sunday, and
Friday and Saturday proceeding.
lf:00 a. tn. 2nd Sunday in month.
STOWERS FURNITURE CO
Bill Young. Mgr.
CHUKCn OF CtiKIST
E. French at Henry St.
SUNDAY:—
Bible study 10 to 10:50 a. m. -
Preaching and Lord’s Supper 11 to
12 noon.
Evening worship 7:30 to 8’30.
WEDNESDAY:— /
Bible Study anu Prayer Service
1:30 to 8:30 p. m.
Morning worship 10:45 a. m.
SOUTHWEST NATURAL GAS
COMPANY
ASSEMBLY OF GOD CHURCH
313 W. lave Oak St.
Rev. JI. WESLEY JONES Pastor
Sunday School 10:00 A. M.
Yours is the comforting thought of having provided toe
BEST. Truly, a service and beauty that will always last.
NIELSEN 7-UP BOTTLING CO.
E. H. Nielsen
ST. MICHAEL’S CATHOLIC
CHURCH
Father Wm. Jansen, Pastor
Sunday, Masses 8:00 and 10:00
u.a result, European think
in pictured are cheap, un-
Mt VJhase thrillers,? Pre-
skid. "And we look on Eu-
plctures as heavy, dull, un-
ing and laborious.” ,/’
irijM, now under* contract
-it is an Argentinian whose
S^uth American pkil,” was.
Batin-America’s best pic-
i major upheaval on
[dependent,*-.
Touch,” in which
FIRST METHODIST CHURCH
A. A. Carter, Pastor
Week of Jan. 25,
SUNDAY:—
Church School 9:45
Morning worship 11:00
M. Y. F. Evening meeting 6:00
Evening preaching at Nursery.
MONDAY:—
Womans Society 3:00 p. m.
UIURSDAY:—
Choir practice 7:00 p. m.
11:00 A. M.’ Woman's Auxiliary Monday at 3 JO
‘ 6:00 P. M. p. m. , ..
7:15 P. M. [ No mid-week service.
2:0* P. M. ’
Mass on week days 8:30 a. m.
Religious Instruction, Saturday
2:30 p. m.
Confessions always before masses
and Saturday 4:00 to 9:00 p. m.
Morning Worship
C. A. Service
Evening Service
Tuesday: W. M C
Wednesday and Saturday Week
night service* 7:45 P Jf
GRACE CHURCH
(Protestant Episcopal)
Rev. F. Randall Williams, Rector,
7:30 a .hr. Holy Communion.
10:00 a. m .Church School.
' 11:00 a.
garten.
11:00 a.
Sermon.
7:00 p. m. Young Churchmen.
ST. MARK’S LUTHERAN CHURCH
Rev. A. A. Hahn, Pastor
Sunday.
9:30 Church School
7:30 Program. Open house by
Luther League. All members of all
churches cordially invited.
10:30 The Service
Thursday:
7:00 St. Mark’s Bpy Scouts
7:30 Senior Choir
Friday
4:00 Junior Choir
Saturday:
8:30 Junior Instruction
10:00 Senior Instruction
The Surface Burial Vault is the most perfect tribute we
can pay to the memory of those who are gone. Ask the many
satisfied families who have already used the Surface Burial
Vault lor their loved- ones. It is civilizations greatest ad-
vancement in Memorial Repositories.
Sunday, Jan. 25, will be National I
Youth Conrereace liepoi t i>ay in our I
Church. Delegates. Patsy Lang and i
Vonicle Winston will speak to the
• J
congregation at the Morning Wor- J
ship hour and also to a
Meeting of the M. Y. F.
o’clock in the evening
Representatives from the
and the Gcliad Methodist Churches
will be Guests of the local Youth;
Group at the 6:00 p. m. meeting to I
hear the Reports.
A nurse will be on duty to take
care cf children at both the Sunday ,
School and the Worship hours each
Sunday so that parents who desire ■
to attend services can do so.
An children have a
f interests. They con- I
hysical activityJ
rica turns out many
ant stories each year,
1 moot of them and'
wpular ones are mu-’
A or action films. <
♦ ¥ a I
i in bobby-sox ranks
when a HoUowood
irned down an auto-
MACHA CLEANERS
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Macha
RIALTO ‘ CONFECTIONERY
Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Hensley
FREUND FUNERAL HOME
J. D. Bramlette, Josie Freund
CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
KOEHLER’^
Cuero’s House of Quality
CUERO FEDERAL SAVINGS
* LOAN ASSOCIATION
“And how!” Miss Russell chim-
ed in. “Why, the last time I was
there. . . . . .
A truce was worked out. I twas
accepted by Patty, on behalf of her
group, that all were actresses por-
amd for tastes differ i trayi"g leSS enliKhtened, less
zt S 2™ . S ’ ^P^ticated type of New York
of .bobby-soxer, who still seek auto-
in developed in Europe}
.ye8ra’ Tld* B: I Remembering back to when they
Bltfid la 10 or 12 in Eu-1 .
» been exposed to
re. he can name most 888BBI S88| S®B
si in music from
ars; he has classic lit-’
history down pat, and ■ ^F
erentiate generally, be-
«^lhoun Electric
315 Stockdale *ve.
Mergin-arfting <m the keyboard — theC» really something to be
happy about I Now, just petition the carriage, flick the KMC* keyi
and margins are eot instantly, perfectly without reaching or
tinkering New Keyboard Margin Control, plus a truly Personal
*7ouch and a dear, distinctive typescript that gives you letters
you’ro proud to sign ?»• all these are yours on the New Remington I
ELECTRICAL
WIRING and
INSTALLATIONS
of Any Type.
641 — CaU — 641
r PATRICIA CLARY ’. , Rosalind Russell was supposed to be
press Staff Correspondent. ' besieged by autograph hunting
YWOOD, —(UP— A noted bobby-soxers as she comes out the
Wrerican movie director says stage entrance of a Broadway
£ence between European ' theatet.
Srican movies It the dif-| Director Jack Gage wasn’t up on
in European and American bobby-sox trentft. He didn’t know
/ i that among the Hollywood young
oafi education concentrates set, autograph - hunting was as
peusse as last week’s dream puss.
Patty set him straight. The as-
sitant director instructed the bobby-
soxers to clamor loudly for Miss
Russell’s signature during the scene.
The 23 bobby-soxers did an unen-
thusiastic job during the first take.
The assistant director asked why
and got his answer.
Don’t Do It
‘‘Bobby-soxers don’t do that any
more,” Patty said firmly. x
Gage consulted his assistants and
then offered to negotiate with a de-1
legation from the bobby-soxers.
Then sent Patty.
' It was explained to 'her that in
Manhattan, where the picture takes
place, bobby-soxers are sort of old-
|Mr The picture's claim fashioned and still go for auto-
i right up to a full-length ‘ graphs.
rich not only is arty but "And how!” Miss Russell chim-
young history of the country,
r Hugo Fregonese said. Amer-
otles consequently are filled
itdoor action.; ..*
pean education developes ap-
Lon of art, and European pic-
i their subtieties reflect cin-
R. GARRETT ABSTRACT CO,
R. L Wilkes
THE CUERO RECORD
Daily - Weekly - Sunday
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Aldridge, C. C., Jr. The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 19, Ed. 1 Friday, January 23, 1948, newspaper, January 23, 1948; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1189884/m1/3/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Cuero Public Library.