The La Coste Ledger (La Coste, Tex.), Vol. 30, No. 23, Ed. 1 Friday, January 5, 1945 Page: 3 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Castroville Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Castroville Public Library.
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FRIDAY, JANUARY 5, 1945
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fantry Division.
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Respectfully,
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Aet
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16 g
*
It doesn’t mean anything to aim
right unless you know when to
*
Technology, and Erich Gimpel, 35,
$
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-
$)
Geiger,
the C, S. fighter base in England,
“secret weapon" against mice.
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0330
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CASH SPECIALS
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CXe
FLOU
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LAYING MASH. 25 lb. Sack . 904
a $3.59
100 lb. Sack
"a
' ' 22
$2,90
100 lb. Sack
«
"TRADE WITH SCHOTT’S AND SAVE”
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13.15
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333
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THE
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12.75
13.25
13.15
12.95
13.50
daughter, and Miss Ella Hughes.
Diner guests in. the homie of
with Mr. and Mrs. Richard Ahr
and family and Mr. and Mrs.
Frank George and family at New
4‘Texas” Division Has
Taken 17,000 Prisioners
Castroville News
P ATRICM SUEH S, Correspondent
men as William Curtis Colepaugh,
20, a native of Niantic, Conn,,
Mrs C. ‘C.: Chiles and family
spend Christmas with Mrs. Odilia
Beck and sons at Rio Medina.
George Muennink,
FitzSimon i and
»
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{
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Mr. and Mrs. Howard Tschi-
J hart-and daughter, Joan, and Mr.
and Mrs. Harry Hans and daugh-
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Schott and
son of San Antonio visited with
Mr. and Mrs: Emil Halbardier
Sunday.
MEL)’
There are a lot of things to
learn about living that many do
not learn until it is too late.
Beal puts • piece of bread on
/ 557
■ i
D’HANTS, January 16, 9 a.m. to
4 p.m.
9
0
by the Leatherneck at an advanced base, evidently sent by someone
who doesn’t know what the well-dressed combat veteran is wearing.
Hester was in the battles of Tarawa, Saipan and Tinlan.
,9’
A ;e ,,
THE LACOSTE LEDGER, LACOSTE, TEXAS
/t,
e,‘,
.a.
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bucket of water. 13; The mouse
crawls out on the ruler after the
4
Miss Kathleen Kami of Uvalde
visited with her father, Albert
Karm and family over the New
Year’s holidays.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Karm and
daughter, Sandra, of San Antonio
visited with relatives and friends
Friday.
- PORTLAND MUSEUM
4 Hugh McLellan built the Sweat
Mansion at Fortland, Maine, in 1800.
General Joshua Wingate, son-in-law
of President Jefferson’s Secretary of
War, General Henry Dearborn, lived
there. " '* »-----4
The Highest Prices Are Paid For Country Produces
At AU Times
Notice To Tax,
in a lemonadery two salesmen
were swapping troubles. Blowing
the foam off his drink, one of
them produced this pearl (as near-
ly as we can recall it);
“I always let the bird with the
complaint get me out'. I make the
r
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, 1
ration depots and even bakery,
butchery and sanitary companies.
Also processed through the divi-
sion cages were cadets from the
Lyon Air Signal School, the
Biarritz Anti-Aircraft School, and
several divisional battle schools.
Members of the Nantes Harbor
Schott Brothers
CASTROVILLE, TEXAS
good reason for not doing it.
-—*-
i a- N '
Mr. arid Mrs. P.J. Zuerchor and.'
pull the trigger.
—«
Bathing Beauty: a girl who has
a wonderful profile all the way
down. o
clearing stations soldiers from 10
German infantry divisions, one
armored division, and a multitude
of diversified military and semi-
military units.
Prisoners have varied in age
from sixteen to fifty-six, in na-
tionality from German to Jugoslav
to Central Asiatic. Not all of the
prisoners were German sqldiers.
Scores of marines, sailors and
even flight personnel were taken.
Aside from making heavy inroads
into the infantry strength of the
Wehrmacht, troops of the 36th
have captured men from twenty-
seven different anti-aircraft bat-
1 22}
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46-
-l-.
, -- TEXAS «
uowwwwowwwwwww
l a A
of your good customers, what
would you do?’ And the guy al-
ways feels sorry for me and helps
patch the Whole thing up. Then
J. Edgar Hoover, director of the
Federal Bureau of investigation,’
announced Monday night the ar-
rest in New York of two men
whom he described as German a-
JAMES R. DUNCAN
. Assessor and Collector
, of Taxes, Medina Co.
- , —-------«--------- ' : J
Mrs. Marlin Naegelin oi Nor-
man, Oklahoma, arrived last
Thursday io visit with relatives
and friends..'., . .dm . ' .
STARTER MASH, 25 lb. Sack $110
100 lb. Sack . . $4.10
GROWING MASH, 25 lb. Sack 11.00
100 lb. Sack .. , 13.84
BABY SCRATCH, 25 lb. Sack 84
50 lb. Sack V c , $1.55
HENS SCRATCH, 25 lb. Sack 4 30
RED & WHITE stores
, -
,09
Tschirhai- .............
tonio, Mr; and Mrss Milton
Bendele and daughter of Sturm
N/
7
}i2m3peee
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289
Montel and Mrs. Adella Koenig.
Supper guests in the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Burell and
family last Wednesday evening
were Mr. and Mrs. Reinhart
-4
Sa.
The “Texas” Division has pro-
cessed through its cages and
Pvt. and Mrs. Emil
re and son all of San An-
-----------------
Dr. J. D. Williamson
Surgeon
Office Hours: 2:00 to 7:00 P.M.
No Sunday Office Hours
- \
v /
Police Force, the Marseilles
Gestapo, the Spanish Border
Guard and the Toulouse Industrial
daughter, Tukie.i Me. Charles’
Suehs-r and son, Mrs. Linda,
Peters, Mrs, Lzzic Starek, Mr.
Hill, Mr: and Mrs. Wilfred Tschir-
hart and son, Mb. and Mrs. Hilmer
Fschirhart and family, Mrs. F. A.
Burell, Mrs. Adolph -Tschirhart
'and daughter, Edna, Miss Dorothy
f Haby and Harey Tschirhert,
Mr. and Mrs Louis Schott New
Years bay were Mr. and Mrs.
of Jee Hans. Mr. and Mrs. Harvey
----------
.. . ? i .. -
The R.A.F., in one of its biggest
night raids I of the war, dropped
6,000 tons of bombs from more
than 1,000 heavy bombers Tuesday d
night on Berlin and the German
industrial centers of Nuremberg ,
and Ludwigshafen. Th? attacks
followed daylight hammerings of
American Army concentrations
and cmmunications behind the
enemy, wedge in, Belgium by U. S.
8th Airforce Flying Fortresses
and Liberators.
who he said was a former student
at the Massachusetts Institute of
t
• : >.
.3
TH.
1 "/1
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Wolff and
chiklren of Sau Antonio and Miss
Lorine Lutz of St. Louis Missouri,
visited in the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Fred Lieber and family New
Year's Day.
Little Miss Fannie Lea Wurz-
bach of Smithville, Texas, visited
with her grandpavents, Mr and
Mrs. Fred Lieber for several days
latt week. 0 . j <
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Meny and’
daughter and Mr. and Mrs. Tony
FitzSimon and son of San Antonio
and Miss Mary FitzSimom of Hot
Springs, Arkanss,, were' dinner
guests, in the hdmne of Mr. and
Mrs. Bernard FitzSimiin on New
Year's Day. n 1
Guests i|i the home of Mr. and
Mrs, Charles Suths Sunday were
Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Sehwerman,
Sr., and daughter, Mary. Mr. and
Mrs. Bernard Shweginan, Jr., and
after that whenever Icall on him
bread; ‘tips it off balance and I say, ‘Remember the day you
plunges into the bucket. It sounds saved my life?’ And I’m telling
elementary, but it has been get- you they eat it up. Well, here’S
ting a mouse a night .—A. P. mud in your eye.”
With The 36th “Texas” Division
Of The Seventh Army in France
—The 36th “Texas” Division has
turned in quite a. combat record
sinee being in France and proof
of their capabilities is revealed in
a recent compilation of prisonor
of war figures.
Included among the 17,000 pri-
soners taken by the division have
been Major General Neuling,
Commander of the LXII Reserve
Corps, with his entire staff, and
Brigadier General Richter, Com-
manding General of the 198th In-
Mr, and Mrs. Ferdinand Tschir-
hart;, and family and Shirley and
Melrose Tschirhart spent New
Year’s Eve and New Year’s Day
kick look like it’s got trie down and
licked. Then t say something like
is being hailed today for hiB0hiS: ‘Heaven be my judge, Mister,
" . ---------" -t ‘this puts me on the sprit. If you
were on a spot like this with one
gsg
---Bonds---
Over America
_____j_________________________
and assessing for the year 1945.
MEDINA LAKE, January 2, •'
a.in. to 11 a.m. 1 ,
CLIFF, January 2, 1 p.m. to
8 p.m. ' 1 '■. 2 ,
RIO MEDINA, January 3, 9 a.m.
to 4 p.m. . -a , ■ .
CASTROVILLE, January 4, 5, 9
a.m. to 4 p.m.
BIRY, Januaty 10, 9 a.m. to 11
a in ' . '
COAL MINE, January 10, 1 p.m.
to 3 p.m. ‛ '
LACOSTE, January 8, 9, 9 a.m.
to .3 p.m. -/02 . ’ .. - . .
NATALIA, January 15, 9 a.m. to..
Ph,"
,".,r
, daughter and Mr.*and Mrs,. Clark
E. Tondre and daughter all i .
San Antonio visited with their Ilans and children, Mr. and Mrs
mother and grandmother, Mrs. A. Thomas Hans and daughter, San-
H. Tondre, on New Year’s Day. dra, all of San Antonio, Mr. and
,20 —9 .‘- Mrs. Herbert Keller and family of
LaPryor, Miss Lena Mae Diltz of
Sabinal, Mrs: Margaret Keller and
William Lamon of LaCoste, Ralph
gents landed from a U-boat on
the coast of Maine on November . e
3 29, last. Hoover identified .the
the end of a ruler projecting from
the edge of a table and just
balanced. On the. floor below is a
The Castroville Chamber- of '
Commerce and Fire Department doing something; then you have
died, It became the property of the
Portland Society of Art. In its Mu-
nicipal Art Gallery hang Gilbert Stu-
art's portrait of General Wingate,
Douglas Volk’s portrait of President
Lincoln and other notable works. De-
fenses set up by U. S. service men
and supplies purchased with War
Bond funds have kept these treas-
ures unscarred through three years
of war. More War Bond funds will
insure their protection. ।
28, V. S. TrfOnirf Drpartmrnl
» FEEDS «
,»unu«
"4
1
Mr. and Mrs. J. E, Blackman
and daughter and Mr. and Mrsi
August Haas arid family of San
Antonio yisited, with their father
Eugene Mangold over the week-
end. ' ‘ “ Me m
wwwwwww
Notice is hereby given that
will be at the following nam
places on dates given below i
the purpose of . . .
COLLECTING 1944 TAXES
roMe s
Jie $
Me : 1
17c 3
164
1 4
15-. "2,3
M,ti *
Mrs. Bernard
Hope is the dream of a man awake. ,n
A friend of mine— let's call him Jim—used to like to tell about the
time when, a green boy from the ranch country, he took a carload
of steers to market in Kansas City; He was walking down the Street
after the deal, with the most money he'd ever had, when he saw a
sign, “Oysters,"
Entering, he seated himself at the counter and paid, “Bring me
some fried oysters.” The waiter said, “Yes sirs they’re forty cents
a dozen; how many Will you have?”
Now the only kind of oysters that Jim had ever seen were in a
can—cove oysters, with a "nigger head” on the label, (you old-timers
can remember). Those oysters were about the size of your thumb-
nail, so Jim did some rapid calculating and then said, “Bring me three
dozen."'
It seemed to him that the waiter sorter blinked but pretty soon
he returned with a big platte? full of oysters-fresh ones of course
and much larger than Jim’s canned variety. '
“That was the most oysters I'd ever seen,” he related, afterward.
“But I pitched in and ate ’em. Just as I finished, the waiter came
back and said:
" 'That was the first dozen; I’ll have the second dozen ready in
a mine. ” o
“Well, but he came with another big plaiter and I ate them,
much slower than the first ones because I now realized that the cook
and his assistant had been working in relays on my order and put
would soon come the third dozen—which it did.
“I hated to admit I was just a humpkin so I started in on it It
so happened that I had on my overcoat and, when I'd catch nobody
looking, I’d drop a couple of those pesky oysters into the pockets.
In this way, I finally got rid of that third platterful and staggered
up to the cash register, and asked how much I owed.
“The waiter replied, 'I don’t own the place but I been talkin" it
over with the chef an’ anybody that could eat three dozen pysters-
why, the show was worth the money) you don’t owe a cent!’
“But”, Jim concluded, “it was eight years before I could stand to
gaze into the frank and open countenance of an oyster.”
Ability to shoot a good game of pool has been said to be evidence
of a mis-spent youth. \ •
Mr. and Mrs. Alex Tschirhart
B. and family from Noonan, Mr- and
" - Mrs. Richard Ahr and family from
New Braunfels and Mr. and Mrs.
eu, Hjr. Ahr and Mrs. Emma Tschir-
hart spent Christmas Eve with
Mr. and Mrs. Ferdinand Tschir-
_________ hart and family.
( UTTLE
» BOTBLUt
r "P
will hod its regular meeting in
the St. Louis Parish Hall Tuesday
nite,'January 9, 1915, at 8 o’clock.
AU members are urged to be pre-
sent' as there will be an election of
officers. A social will follow the
meeting.
-----*-----
, Lt. James C. Beal of James-
town, N. Y., an ordance officer at
4.2
If you haven’t a good reason for a native of Merseberg, Germany.
•a
a
$ MUSTARD, French, 6 oz. Jar..;.......... 121 A 8^
> OATS,IGA,20OzPkg.3M, ,9e ■
I FLOUR, IGA, 5 lb. Bag 26? — 10 lb. Bag 50? $
J MAYONNAISE. IGA, 8 oz. Jar 18? >
!■ SPLIT PEAS, Devon Green or Yellow, 1 lb. Pkg. 13? $
I FLOUR, Gold Medal, 5 lb. Bag... 306-10 lb. Bag 55? ' I
> 25 lb. Bag . $1.12 3
PRUNE JUICE, IGA, Qt. Bottle 26?
POTATOES, No. 1 Idaho Russet, 5 lbs. 224
ONIONS, No. 1 Yellow, 2 lbs. . 0? ; 1
CALAVOS, California, Each . 1.3?
! APPLES. Delicious, 2 lbs. . 21? '!
PEARS, D'AnJon, lb. 15?
3 ORANGES, Texas, )b. 8?
। COUNTRY SAUSAGE, Swift's Pure Pork Smoked, 1b. 44 $
; BRICK CHILI, Swift’s Oriole, 1b. 25?
I! DAIRY LOAF, Hormel’s, 1b. 42? 3
MEAT LOAF, Hormel’s Roast, 1b. 30? ।
I LIVER U)AF, Rnth's, 1b. 28?
; SOUSE, Rath’s Black Hawk, 1b. 25?
$ —SPECIALS ON FEE Ds —
man plan of attack which was to
take place the day preceding the
36th Division’s final destruction of
the Montelimar pocket, in which
the remnants of the German 19th
Army rearguard were trapped.
Hundreds of maps, sketches, over-
lays, strength reports and similar
lists fell into the hands of the
36th, enabling them to gain a de-
tailed picture of enemy strength,
dispositions Arid equipment.
As the Texans paSsed over the
crest of the Vosges Mountains, the.
prisoners captured from the
Riviera to Alsace soared over the
17,000 mark. The 143rd Infantry
Regiment alone processed more
than 5,000 prisoners. The high
point for a single day was 1,530,
the number taken on August 30.
These figures reveal a strange
history. In one case, a German
reserve battalion yielded four
hundred and forty-four prisoners,
more men being taken from it
than it had ever had at one time.
Another regiment was totally de-
stroyed in the first week of 36th
Division action. Many other
Kraut divisions have had a com:
plete turnover since being in
action against the 36th
Hitler’s once-formidable Fes-
tung Battalions, originally intend-
ed as crack defensive troops of the
Wehrmacht, have been reduced
not only in strength but in the
quality of manpower. These units
are now being used as farming-
out battalions for over-age, seri-
ously wounded or physically in-
capacitated soldiers. Prisoners
have been brought in with frozen
feet, paralyzed arms, and even
glass eyes. Some of them are
veterans of the Russian front, be-
ing discharged for wounds and
then later redrafted to fill gaps in
the Western Front. Some of the
men have been pulled from enter-
tainment troupes to act as infan-
trymen, thrown into the line with
a bare minimum of training and
indoctrination, then left with
meager rations and sub-standard
communications as a holding force
while the more-seasoned troops
move back. i -gt,
Scraping the bottom of their
manpower barrel, the Germans
have organized special battalions
to handle men with specific
disease* or ailment*. Men have
been brought in from Ohren Bat-
talions—for the deaf; Augen Bat-
talions—for those with eye
trouble) > and Magen Battalions
for those with functional stomach
disorders.
So the war of attrition con-
tinues, with Hitler digging deeper
and deeper into his manpower
supply to replenish and back up
the few still-powerful units re-
maining to him. How much long-
er can he continue to dig?
g.. . . (U.S.MatineCorpsPhoto)
talions; Luftwaffe ground units; • Not even in the far reaches of the Pacific can Marine Corporal
Carroll S. Hester of Anderson, Ind., escape the inevitable, loud
Christmas tie. The brilliant red and white neckpiece was received
nfva.
OSXc
Phone 82
CASTROVILLE, TEXAS
-— --rr ..
Cpl. and Mrs. Ehmett Wurz
bach visited in the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Fred Lieber 'over the
week-end, ' -0 <: ATd " .
/4
> Mr. and Mrs. Richard Ahr arid
family wore hristmas- dinner
guests of Mt. and Mrs, Ferdinand
Tschirhart and family. -'
Inspection Corps were represented
among the captured groups.
Many of the prisoners were un- Braunfels,
able to identify any unit to which
they belonged other than a squad
or platoon. '
Along with these prisoners
came a tremendous quantity of
documents. On doquinent, a
divisional order, outlined the Ger-
ter, Jacqueline, visited Henry-
Schott in the Medical Art Hospi Fand Nrs; Bert Pope and daughter,
tul Sunday. : Laverie Mis heonora Ehlinger
, ______ jail of San Antonio, Mr., and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Poseh and I Emil and daughter Frances,
son, Arthur, and Jake Walker of Mrs Rodolph. Tschirhart a.nd
San Diego, Texas, were visitors famits Mrs.
in the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Bernard FitzSimon and family
last Wednesday.
$ APPLE BUTTER, Musselman, 38 oz. Jhr 25?
LUNCHEON MEAT, Treet, 12 oz. (an 304
> INSTANT OATS, Quaker, 29 oz. Pkg. 12?
; CAKE FLOUR, Sno-Hheen, 41 oz. Pkg. 25? $
MARGARINE, All Sweet, 1 lb. (tn. 24?
b SNOW DRIFT, 3 lb. Jar 64? ]
< PURE PLUM JAM, Win You. 16 oz. Jar 214
i NAVY BEANS, Devon, 16 oz. Pkg. 10?
’Oh, Boy! Just What I Wantadl’
Fri. & Sat., Jan. 5-6, 1945
----
PEARS, Red & White, No. 2 % Can, 60 points 37?
TOMATO JUICE, Red & White, No. 2 Can, 20 points - 12:
46 oz. -
ICATSUP, C.H.B., Regular or Chili Flavored. 14 oz. Bottle,
80 points . L -201
TOMATOES. Extra Fancy, No. 2 Cam - ... . 154
LIVER SPREAD, Underwoods, 3 oz. Can. -——---124
TOMATO PUREE, Texas, No. 1 Can.......—4-.....—-,54
PEAS, Purple Hull, No. 2 Can........ ..... -176
PORK and BEANS, No. 300 Can.. ..... ■ ...... 151
COFFEE, Red & White, 1 lb. Glass Jar .....30?
COFFEE, Red & White, 1 lb. Paper Pkg. 27?
■ BAKING CHOCOLATE, Bakers Premium, % 1b. Pkg. 17?
CRUSTENE, 3 lb. Cartoni-—- ' - .544
FLOUR, Flaky Bake, 10 lb. „ 49? - 25 ib. 2115
APPLE JUICE, Apple Keg. %Gal • - 456
PRESERVED FIGS, Tommy Tinker, 10 oz. ---256
32 oz 4le
GRAPE JELLY, Red 4 White, 16 oz. Glass 22?
DRESSING, Sun Spun, 8 oz. . .. .15e - 16 oz 251
PEANUT BUTTER, Tommy Tinker, 16 oz. Jan ... . 24c
MEAT SAUCE, C.H.B , 6 oz. Bottle - - . 21?
SAUSAGE SEASONING, Old Plantation, Pkg. ..16?
CHILI POWDER. Gebhardts, Small H? — Large —274
VINEGAR, Red & White, Apple Cider, Pints — - 11?
Quarts ............................ -- -......g-- ' -9
OATMEAL, Red 4k White, Cup and Saucer or Dinner
Plate Pkg 2%£
CREAM OF WHEAT, Small Pkg 14 - Large Pkg- 244
RUBBING ALCOHOL, 70%, Pint Bottle -.....-174
TALCUM, Mavis, 25? Size, Plus Tax-------------- -------194
FLOOR WAX, Red & White, Pints—_ .s- 334
POTATOES, U. S. No. 1 California White, 4 lbs. for .10?
POTATOES, U. S. No. 1 Colorado, 7 lbs. for 4---------29?
CAULIFLOWER, Extra Fahey, Head up -.....W
CARROTS, Medium Size Tender,’2 Bunches for..----------13?
YAMS, U. S. No. 1, East Texas, 2 lbs. for............17?
CALAVOS, Genuine California, Each —— ... 156
ORANGES, Texas, 2 lbs. for---—— -............131
APPLES, Washington Delicious, Ib-4-,—..........
GRAPEFRUIT, Valley Pink .Seedless, 1b. ------------- 6%4
ONIONS, U. S. No. 1 Idaho White, 2 lbs. for------------------15?
GRAPEFRUIT, White Marsh Seedless, 1b. 5H?
SHORTS, 100 lb. Sack.......--------------------- 2245
BRAN, 100 lb. Sack...............--L.....-......-224%
LAYING MASH, Pioneer, 100 lb. Print Back 83.30
SCRATCH FEED, 100 lb. Print Sack -—$3-00
COTTON SEED MEAL, 100 lb. Sack...— 8
COW FEED, Pioneer, 100 lb. Sack J;
। DAIRY FEED, Pioneer, 100 1b, Sack J;
: GROUND WHEAT, 100 lb. Sak.- 2
CORN CHOPS, 100 lb. Sack-------------.... . ...............2
-------------PELLETS, 100 lb. Print Sack —$
। su!
L. M. Tondre & Sons
■
4 pm. ,
.“SSrftStt DRVINE, January 11, 12,9 a.m.
to 4 p.m. ?
CONCENTRATE, 100 lb. Sack $410
LAYING MASH, Dittlinger, "
Eclipse, 100 lb. Sack .... $3.39 s
PELLES, Diulinger, Eelipse,
100 U>. Sack $3.44
WHEAT SCREANING,
100 lb. Sack T. ...... -$2.30*
Eri
-
68838823885285
h..
SPECIALS FOR
Fri-A Sal.. January 5-6, 1945
COFFEE, Maxwell House, 1 lb. Jar 31?
TOMA TO JUICE, Sacramento, No. 2 Can 10%e
BEANS,, Standard, Green Cut, No. 2 Can 4,
SANDWICH SPREAD, IGA, 8 oz. Jar
KRISPY CRACKERS, Sunshine, 1 lb. Pkg. . ? : ,
CORN, IGA, Golden Whole Kernel, No. 2 Can 164,
PEAS, Trophy Early June, No. 2 Cap .' . . ’ 14?
PORK and BEANS, IGA. 11 oz. Can > 10e -
TOMATOES. Westvale Solid Pack, No. 2% Can ; 18? $
BEANS, Ranch Style, 15 oz. Can 8>j? >
TOMATO SAUCE, Sacramento, 8 oz. Can . 60" >
‛/
1, . :
"rfee sa
TONDRE FUNERAL
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Ambulance Service 12’
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Biediger, John C. The La Coste Ledger (La Coste, Tex.), Vol. 30, No. 23, Ed. 1 Friday, January 5, 1945, newspaper, January 5, 1945; La Coste, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1593219/m1/3/?q=central+place+railroads: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Castroville Public Library.