The Wave (Port Lavaca, Tex.), Vol. 100, No. 24, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 1, 1990 Page: 3 of 28
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Calhoun County Area Newspapers and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Calhoun County Public Library.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
Port Lavaca Wave, Thursday, Nov. 1, 1990—Page 3
SPORTS
00
m.
ion
s
I
_
I
7 pc. DINETTE SET
2 only
2 only
HIS RECORD
A
1
i v
• I
»
Ai
i
l
88
u.0a4g
LET'S KEEP STEVE WORKING FOR US IN AUSTIN
4
FURNITURE
FLOOR MODEL CLEARANCE
SALE
Nov. 2 - Friday
9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
Port Lavaca
Corner of East Main & Colorado Downtown
Tables, Coffee Table
$‘
Up to 50% OFF
JOhll COtten'S (1 No Phone Orders Accepted
202 E. Main • Port Lavaca
10 Reasons Why John Cotten Sells For Less!
John Cotten's
RE-ELECT
STATE REPRESENTATIVE
DISCOVER
Financing Available
Pol Adv Pd By Holzheauser Campaign, P O Box 4944, Victoria, TX
Deer season starts Saturday
Antler production reported up for this year
Reg.
*799
? The games are scheduled
to begin at 5:30 with the
END TABLES,
COFFEE TABLES
Beechwood, Pine
& Oak Dining
Room Suites
Border,
urday,
s and
202 E. Main
Port Lavaca
(512) 552-5427
Sale:
1 to
trailer
bar,
pans,
tmas
lots
cheap.
Point
) ■ I
• J
11
11
STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP)
— Second-seeded Boris Becker
defeated top-ranked Stefan
Edberg6 4,6-0,€ 3 in the final of
the Stockholm Open on Sunday.
Becker earned $137,450 for his
fifth ATP Tour title of the year.
: Yard
Friday
girls,
knick
Rum-
sale,
iam to
wel-
loving:
, twin
many
1810
d Sat-
ALL 1/2 OFF
SUGGESTED RETAIL PRICES
Port
Jeffer-
iture,
and
Satur-
d
ace
Satur-
4pm.
f Hall
sored
Pack
• The junior varisty and
freshmen Sandcrabs play El
‘ Campo tonight.
Steve Holzheauser shares our
concerns and cares enough to act,
not just talk about it.
Start at
$3800
Like us, Steve Holzheauser is
concerned with the ability of our crimi-
nal justice system to get criminals off
our streets. That's why Steve passed
legislation expanding the jurisdiction
of local County Courts at Law, and
creating and funding a new District
Court for Victoria. He also passed
legislation increasing the penalty for
resisting arrest, and voted for more
prison beds to get criminals out of our
County jails.
(2) 2% Up Charge on Credit Cards
(3) Outside Financing Available
with Established Credit
Mon.Sat.
9 a m.-5 p.m.
Mon.-Sat.
9 a m.-5 p.m.
6 pc. DENWOOD
ARM GROUP
Sofa, Rocker, Chair, 2 End
LAMPS, BEDDING, SLEEPERS, RECLINERS, DESKS, LOVE SEATS, CHAIRS
"Up to 50% OFF—Drastic Reductions"
Table & Chairs
$13800
ALL ODD
BEDROOM PIECES
Dressers, Chests,
Headboards, Nightstands
Up to 50% OFF
102 E. Main
Edna
(512) 782-5437
A
J.V. Sandcrabs look
to district title
’I—
Furniture Store
"A Texas Furniture
Liquidation Center"
WMX
(EI*
Friday
every-
othes,
|eous. :
Friday
am till
behind
awers
eramic
s and
5 pc. DINETTE SET
Table & Chairs
$8800
lacks:
used
510
er of!
Texas is nothing if not liberal
in terms of hunting seasons and
bag limits.
For a $10 resident hunting
license fee, hunters can take as
many as five deer in a season.
That would include a mule deer
buck in West Texas or the
Panhandle.
Regular deer season, which
is the number one hunter activ-
ity in the state, lasts a whopping
65 days this year. Most of the
state will open Saturday and
run until Jan. 6, the first
weekend of the year. South Tex-
as counties open a week later
on Nov. 10 and close Jan. 13.
Hunters legally may take four
whitetails, no more than two
bucks. There is also a mule deer
buck tag on the license. Mule
deer season last 16 days, Nov.
17-Dec. 2 in the Panhandle and
Nov. 24-Dec. 9 in the Trans-
Pecos region.
— Sports —
briefs
...... ■■ 11 ....... n ' *
TENNIS
00 6 only
a A
h on
jrsday
। 5pm.
boys
arseat,
iscel-
garage
m-2pm,
pm. A
I, furni-
no, etc.
84._____
Lursday
8am-
dishes.
! 0(
freshmen, followed by the
junior varsity at 7.
The j.v. are going into this
game undefeated and are
looking for another district
championship.
R #
" QTFVF
HS7HEAUSER
All furniture items that have
stayed on our sales floor for
over 6 months have been
priced at drastic reductions.
If It Don't Sell Quick, We Dump It.
This is your opportunity to pick up a
dinette set, dining room suite,
bedroom suite, livingroom suite,
occasional tables, lamps,
sleeper/sofa, recliner,
odd chests, odd dressers, bedding.
All of these select items will be
sold as-is, where-is.
Don’t Miss Out on these
Terrific Close-Outs.
Bring truck or trailer-
Cash or Credit Card*-TODAYH!
‘3
d
—I
n\
[Mastor arf
C 7~_ 21
Furniture Store *
riday,
Run-
nfort,
Avon,
pishes
items,
hodist
er 9,
Baked
cue
ants,
othes.
DN:
urday,
br and
poking
arseat, i
d mis-
Interstate 35 down to Laredo.
Antler development is going to
be above average, and hunters
will be looking at hunting a
strong age class from good pro-
duction years in 1985-86.
The southern and eastern
parts of the region remain dry,
and that’s probably going to
show up this year.
Piney Woods — Biologist
Gary Spencer in Jasper said he
is predicting good bucks and
hunting this year. Acorn pro-
duction has been excellent, and
that should allow hunters to
zero in on certain areas. The
deer population is steady, and
Spencer said 15 20 percent of
the bucks are in the 3% -year
age bracket.
Gulf Prairies and Marshes —
This area, starting south of Aus-
tin and running down to Corpus
Christi then along the coast to
the Louisiana border, is in very
good shape. Vegetation is good
for the deer, harder on the hun-
ters there, but deer overall are
in good shape, and the bucks
should be above average for the
region.
Post Oak Savannah — This is
one region where the drought
has caused a decline in deer
numbers, but that’s only rela-
tive. Deer should still be there
in good numbers, with antler
development about equal to
last season.
Trans-Pecos — Mule deer
have been having a tough time
in Texas, and if anything, num-
bers will be down slightly due
to the drought. Antler produc-
tion is expected to decline as
well, although deer should be
in excellent body condition
after summer rains that have
improved the habitat.
Panhandle — The only area
of the state with stable popula-
tions of mule deer and white-
tails, the Panhandle isn't noted
for big numbers of either. The
quality of the deer is generally
excellent, however, and biolo-
gists are expecting good sea-
sons for both.
Cross Timbers and Rolling
Plains — The area around
Brownwood and west to Big
Spring is having one of its best
years, and that should be good
news to the hunters who have
been taking good bucks there
already. Range conditions are
good, so bucks will be hard to
find for a while, but antler
development was above aver-
age, and that gives hunters
something to aim for.
1. Low Rent Area 6. No Warehouse Expenses
2. No Commission Salespeople 7. No Delivery Stall
3. No Salaried Decorators 9: No iddten pteres t0 trve
4. No Delivery Trucks Delayed Payments
5. No Staff Office 10. No Frills, No Fancy Stuff
Sale continues Saturday
e 1 n .-4, B 1
AUSTIN (AP) — Texas deer
hunting is never perfect. The
weather is either too good or
too bad.
So far in 1990, it looks as if the
complaint is that the weather’s
been too good. Spring and late
summer rains have much of the
classic deer range looking like
some fertilizer company’s test
plot, and that’s going to mean
tougher hunting for most folks.
Antler production, on the
other hand, is up in most areas,
according to Mike Reagan,
assistant deer program leader
for the Texas Parks and Wild
life Department. That means
hunters could find themselves
hunting better deer — if they
can find the deer.
Many deer managers are
praying for a continuation of
the cool weather we’ve been
having and hopingsome freezes
come in to knock down some of
the lush vegetation that’s
sprung up. Otherwise, deer
won’t be forced to move far for
food, and they’ll be harder to
hunt.
Still, deer and habitat in good
condition are better than the
alternative, which means most
Texas hunters are expecting
good things from 1990 91. The
following is a look at Texas
Parks and Wildlife’s forecast
for the state’s major ecological
regions:
Edwards Plateau — Not
much change from last year in
numbers, but good range condi-
tions mean the bucks out there
should have better antlers than
they have the past couple of
years.
. South Texas — Most of the
country is in excellent shape,
4 especially in the belt along
s:
V
4
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Matching Search Results
View one place within this issue that match your search.Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Surber, Chester C. & Fortney, Paul, Jr. The Wave (Port Lavaca, Tex.), Vol. 100, No. 24, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 1, 1990, newspaper, November 1, 1990; Port Lavaca, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1613063/m1/3/?q=technical+manual&rotate=270: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Calhoun County Public Library.