The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 70, No. 151, Ed. 1 Friday, August 1, 1958 Page: 3 of 6
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PRESBYTERIAN
CUERO assembly of
CHURCH
Rev. C. W. Rlgley
9;45 Sunday School
LI :00 Sunday morning Worship
Service
.1T30 WM.C’i Sunday evening
-L7 30 Sunday rjght Evangelis-
■tic Service
—7 30 Thursday night mid-week
aer-v. Ice
BAPTIST
<>OD 'Wednesday:
7:3C p. m. Bible Study
Prayer Service._
CATHOLIC
XALVAKY BAPTIST CHURCH
— Ilev. P. D. Fullingim Pastor
.. .Sunday School 9:45 a. m.
Morning Worship 10:50 a. m
Tiaining Union 7:00 p.m.
. TTiening Worship 8:00 p.m.
You h Fellowship 9:00 p.m, I
-Monday —
• .-W. M S. meeting at church 1
.9:30 a.m.
Wednesdayj
Prayer meeting 7:30 p. m.
The first Monday night after j
the first Sunday of each month
-‘-‘Family Night" 7:30
You will always find a warm __________
welcome at the Calvary Baptist j CHLRCH OF CHRIST
Church
OUR LADY OF
GUADALUPE CHURCH
Father August L. Otto, MSF,
Pastor
Sunday Masses
1st and 3rd Sunday 6 and 9:30.
2nd. 4th and 5th Sunday 6 and
S.
Confessions: Saturday befere 1st
and 3rd Sunday, ? to 4 and 8 to 9
Saturday before 2nd, 4th and
5th Sunday, 4 to 6 and 7 to 9
Other Masses will be announced
every Sunday in the parish bulle-
tin.
ST. MICHAEL'S
CATHOLIC CHURCH
Father ffra. Jansen, Pastor
Sunday. Masses 6:30 and 8:30
a.m.
Week days. Holy Communion
6:45 a.m., Mass 7:30 a.rru
Confessions before week day
masses and Saturday 4:00 to
6 :00 and 7:00 to 9:00 p.m.
FIRST PRESBITERLAN
CHURCH
Morning worship
Sermon: "The Two
Friendship"
I Evening Worship
Sermon "Joy in Christian Liv-
ing"
Sides of
;Sunnday
10:00 a. m. Sunday ichool
11.00 a. m. Morning worship 1
7:45 p. m. Training Union
8:30 p m Evening Worship
3:0C p. m W.M.U.
Wednesday :—
8:00 p. m. Prayer meeting
7:45 p. m. Evangelistic service.
Church School 9:00 a. m.
—o—
ZION LUTHERAN CHURCH
Arnerkevllle
D. Lee Muehlbrad, Pastor
Church School 9:30 a. m.
Worship Services 10:30 a. m.
PRESBYTERIAN
BAPTIST
LUTHERAN
V--.
■ ■ ..' ****««*.'**».
fciiiJNe
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
Norman A. Sunders, Pastor
—Broadway at Gonzale..
Ord<T of Services For Week of
August 8-9, 1958
SUNDAY—
9:45 a. m.— Sunday School —
Freman Schultz, Supt.
TO :35 a. m. —Worship Service —
'Sermon by Pastor on subject:
"Monstrous Trifling"
7.00 p. m.— Training Union.
Fred T. Buchel, director.
8:00 p. m.— Worship Service.
Song Service directed by Don In-
gle. Sermon by Pastor on sub-
ject: "Life Abundantly."
MONDAY-
3:30 p.m. Women meet for busi-
ness. Sunbeams and Junior girls
meeting.
7 30 p. m. - Deacons meet.
-WEDNESDAY—
4:00 p. m. —Intermediate girls
meet. Junior boys meet.
7:30 p. m.— Prayer meeting and
church business meeting.
JERUSALEM BAPTIST
CHURCH
J. E. Timmons, Pastor
Indianola at W. Court Housu
Sunday
10:00 a. m.—Sunday School
11:00 a. m.—Morning Worship
7 00 p m.—Training Union
7:30 p. m.—Evening Worship
Wednesday:—
7.00 p. m.—Bible Study and |
Prayer Service
CHURCH OF CHRIST
James L. Wilson, Minister
Cor. E. French and Henry Sts.
Sunday School 10 a. m.
Worship service 11:00 a. m.
Evening Worship 7:30 p. m.
Wednesday :—
7:30 p. m. Mid-week Bible Study
EPISCOPAL_
GRACE EPISCOPAL
CHURCH
Esplanade at IJve Oak 8treet
Rector The Rev. John Battle,
104 E. Live Oak, S-3423
Sunday Services:—
7:30 a. m. Holy Communion
9:45 a. m. Church ichool
11:00 a. m. Worship Service
and sermon, with hymns. Nur-
sery care at 406 N. Esplanade for
small children.
Other services and events as
announced from time to time.
FROSTED WHITE silk or-
ganza flounces prettily around
the hips of this short bouffant
party dress by Arnold Scaasi.
Banded low across the bodice
and fitted through the torso, it
is covered with a floral-printed
middy jacket—its wide collar
and cuffs trimmed in white or-
ganza.
day 7:00 p. m.
Church School Teachers and
Leadership Training Fourth
Thursday 7:30 p. m.
Church Council First Tuesday
7:30 p. m.
Young Peoples Confirmation
Instruction October-May 9:30 a.
m. anil 1:30 p. m.
CHEAPSIDE BAPTIST CHURCH
V. E. Bottorff, Pastor
10:00 Sunday School
11:0f Morning worship with pas-
tor in pulpit first and third Sun-
days.
7:30 Fvenlug Gospel Service.
9:30 a. m. Baptist Womens Mis-
sionary Society. Monday after
third Sunday.
A cordial welcome Is given to
alt residents in Cheapside area
anu to all visitors We sing old
time gospel hymns and songs. We
prea-h Bible centered on old time
gospel.
PRLMITIVE BAPTIST CHURCH
Stratton, Tessa
Elder W. J. Chambers, Lampasas,
Pastor
Services every second Sunday
of the month at 10:30 a. m. and
7.30 p. m. and the Saturday be-
fore at 7:30 p. m. Fourth Sun-
day of the month services are the
same. i
■
HOCHHELM BAPTIST CHURCH I
C. L. Vermillion. Pastor
ST. JOHN’S LUTHERAN
CHURCH
We-thoff
R. F. Wolber, Pastor
Sund: / School at 9:30 a m.
Divine Service* at 10 .00 a. m.
CHEAPSIDE PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH
Pulpit Supplv
Sunday: j
Sunday School 10 :00
11:00 Morning Worship with
supply pastor, preaching each
second and fourth Sunday.
7:30 Evening gospel service.
2:30 p. m. Presbyterian Wo
[ THE CLERO RECORD. Friday. August 1, 1958 3
SURVIVAL STOCKPILE
jODCM Has Vast Supplies
In 'Bank’ If U. S. Is Hit
Church Council meeting the
first Thursday of each month at mens Missionary meeting
7:30 p m. A cordial invitation is exlended
Luther League on the »econd to all visitors and to all residents
Sunday of each month at 7:00 p. 0f Cheapside and vicinity.
'mceTs on° Tl ec o nd °T u esday * of CONTRAV NATURE
each month at 7:30 p. m. Most plants have their biggest
The Sunday school slaff meets growth in summer, but evergreen
on the second Thursday of each trees of the Pacific slope states
month at 7:30 p. m. grow fastest in the wet spring
The Ladles Aid meets on the months. The lovely grain of IXiug-
thlrd Tuesday of each month at I las fir lumber, for instance, is
2 p. rn. caused by the wide growth rings
Brotherhood on the third Thurs- of the spring period, which are set
day of each month at 7:30 p. m. off by the darker, slower grow-
—o— j ing summer ring. This dense
I
One of the nation's largest
"bank accounts" against the pos-
sibility of enemy attack is the
Office of Defense and Civilian
Mobilization's stockpile of stra-
tegic materials.
Stored away in 43 ODCM ware-
houses across the United States
are about $225,000,000 worth of
medical and engineering supplies
—enough to aid millions of
Americans after an attack.
• • •
MEDICAL STOCKPILES In-
clude 1,932 civil defense emer-
gency hospital units and back-up
supplies estimated sufficient for
the emergency medical care of
4'« million persons for three
weeks.
In the engineering stock-
piles are approximately
75,000 tons of equipment ami
supplies. They contain mate-
rial Hwentlal to restoration
rf pnbllo facilities — water j
pomps, generators, purifiers,
storage tanks, pipe and siml- , '
lar Items.
To assure that this survival
“hardware" will be located
whore it would be most needed
after en attack, ODCM has chos-
en warehouse sites convenient
to but outside the nation's 93
critical targets.
Among these storage sites are
three "general reserve" ware- '
houses with stockpiles designed
to supply any section of the
country. Most Unusual of these,
reserve storage areas is the vast,
underground warehouse in a con-
verted limestone mine neap
Neosho, Mo.
• • •
IN THIS HUGE pnvatelv..
owned cave, shared by ODCM
with the stockpiles of industrial
concerns, is 14 acres of spac^
served by special automatie
sprinkling and ventilating equips
ment.
ST. JOHN’S LUTHERAN
CHURCH
IJndenau
D. Lee Muehlbrad, Pastor
Worship Services 8:00 a. m.
j summer wood and softer spring
I wood is what gives fir and west
| coast hemlock their incomparable
grain and texture so prized by
i architects and builders.
Italics are 2.7 per cent more Chess is said lo be the most uni-
diffieult to read than Roman versa! of all games. It has dfe-
type, according to the Better voters in every civilized land
Vision institute.
of the world.
METHODIST
LUTHERAN
Fall Months Schedule
ST. MARK’S LUTHERAN
CHURCH
400 N. Esplanade
John A. Jacobs, Pastor
Divine Worship 8:00 and 10:45
a. m. each Sunday
Holy Communion 8:00 a. m.
each First Sunday 10:45 a. m. as
announced.
Sunday Church School 9:30 a.m.
Auxiliary Meetings United Lu-
theran Church Women. Quarterly
meetings Third Thursday of May,
—o— Aug., and Nov. 7:30 p. m. Circle
MEMORIAL BAPTIST CHURCH meetings 2nd week of each month.
Corner Stockdale Are.
and Newman Street
R. Bartlett Mllla, Pastor
Sunday:—
9:45 a. m. Sunday School
10:50 Morning Worship
6:45 p.m. Training Union
8:00 p.m. Evening Worship
United Lutheran Church Men
(Brotherhood) Third Tuesday*,
7:30 p. m.
Luther League 7 .-00 p. m. 2nd
and 4th Sundays.
Choir Rehearsal Wednesdays
? :00 p. m.
Couples Club Each first Sun-
FIHST METHODIST CHURCH
Rev. E. P. Neal, Pastor
Sunday School 10:30 a. m.
Sunday morning Worship 9;30 \
Youth Fellowship, 6:$0 p.m.
I Sunday Evening Worship, 7:30
Women’s Society of Christian I
Service 3:00 each Monday.
Wesleyan Service Guild, 7:30 p. |
m. each third Tuesday.
Prayer Meeting, 7:30 p.m.-
each Wednesday.
Choir rehearsal 7:30 p. t!L eJfc&"|
Wednesday.
Ladies prayer meeting,X+OO-«. |
m. each Wednesday.
Official Board meeting 7 t30"’|
each second Monday.
Methodist Men’s Club 7:30 each
fourth Monday.
Committees and intereat group
meetings 7:30 each Tuesday.
PENTECOSTAL
Guarding Our Freedoms
CHRIST SAID TO ABIDE BY HIS WORD AND KNOW
THE TRUTH FOR IT WILL MAKE US FREE
Ecripturo—Amoa 7:10-17; John 1:31-31; Arts 4:lS-»0; 1:17-31;
Galatians 3:13-11; 1:1-13; Coloaaians \:l; 1-9 PhiUmon.
By NEWMAN CAMPBELL
THIS LESSON Is principally
concerned with the matter of
freedom, a word we hear fre-
quently discussed todsy. In our
country freedom Is an ideal, as
shown In, the second sentence of
our Ufclcrration of Independence.
It would be interesting to see
how many of the pupils who havt
studied this document in history
desses can recite it: 'We hold
these truths to be self-evident,
that all men are created equal,
that they are endowed by their
Creator with certain unalienable
Rights, that among these are Life,
Liberty, and the pursuit of Happi.
ness."
The late P’-esidfnt Franklin D
Roosevelt said that our country
looked forward to a world founded
upon four essential freedoms:
freedom of speech, freedom of
worship, freedom from want, and
freedom from fear.
tivlty. Amatiah the prlaat In-
formed the king of these proph-
esies, then told Amos h# should
leava his native land and propb-
eay In the land of Judah—Amoa
7:11,12.
Amoa wsa nut conspiring
against this wicked king—Just
warning him—and he was not
silenced by the rebuke
Christ a words to "those Jew*
which believed on Him." were: "If
ye continue In My word, then are
ye My disciple* indeed; And ye
shall know the truth, and the
truth shall mske you free."
Jesus shows u* the way to be
free. We cannot be free If we do
not follow His example, If we are
unkind, unjust, hurting others, or
criminal In our action*. Con-
science will keep us In bondage.
The apostles Peter and John,
who healed a lame beggar, were
arrested and brought before the
temple Sanhedrin or council. Peter
PENTACOSTAL CHURCH OF
GOD
Hy. 77 North
B. G. Lee, Pastor _____
Sunday school 10:00 a. m," "
Morning Worship, U .00 ygir|
Sunday. tm
Evangelistic service 7:30'.
Sunday. -*^
Bible Study, 7:30 p. m. W*3n*a—
day- ~
Jubilee service, 7:30 p. nT.'tSat-’
urday. ——
Wednesday:— ~
9:30 a. m. Prayer GroifflC---- j
Other events and services to be"
I announced from time to time-.
Dallas fashioi'eetlef
VV
MEMORY VERSE
■ If •/» continue In My xcord, then ye are My diaeiple* indeed,
and ye ihall knoio the truth, and fk« frvfk ehaQ make yon
free.”—-John 1:31-31. __
Millions of people In th« world ■ began to preach Christ, and while
do not have freedom from want., the two were set free, they were
There is no freedom of speech In commanded that they must not
_ - i__ __J I M#iiaa/( ♦ n
the Communist countries, and
freedom from fear only Christ
can giva.
Freedom of speech must neces-
sarily be restricted in a sense. No
man or woman haa the right to
apeak libelously of another, or to
exhort others to overthrow our
government or to give away
aecreU that he may posses* be-
cause of employment In technical
government work. I am quoting
In part from th* words of Dr.
YViibur M Smith as given in Ms
r-otes on this lesson
Briefly we must call attention
preach Jesus. They refused to
obey, saying that they must lis-
ten to the vole# of God. not of
men. for those devoted to Christ
must proclaim the truth In spite
of opposition, as did the** men.
The teachers should read and
study th* noble words of Paul In
Galatians and Colosslans, and, if
thsre Is time In th* classroom
period, convey to the classes
what lessons they teach. In the
story of Onsstmu*. this formsr
Slav* who 1* dsariy lovtd by Paul
as Ms co-worker and brother In
Christ, is sent by Paul to tl* for-
to the dramatic incident* assigned j mer master. Philemon from
In our lesson. Amos, who proph-' whom Gnesimus haj fled. Paul
*«ied about 785 B C . tried to warn ! tskf that Philemon welcome him
K.r.g Jeroboam that his death 's* his brother, ar.d ask* forgive-
v as near, and that th* children ness of Philemon for both hlm-
ef Israel were In danger of cap- self end the former slave.
Distribute! by Kiag FWares »j*4iests
*4 fie*
“erfectly patkable and perfectly at
< >m» in fashion anywhere is ,thii
heath ly Charles Dickey. Jt'* r>».
ir!v eons'ruc'ed of cotton str.n*
ititrned onto a fabric hj
<oa«-Ze!din »d {•»'jftj a Ctrj
t£LzuHci —- —'- 11
*— •
m ■ t
iZ3k*wZ*i.:.x,m
That This Page Be
An Inspiration To
Many Is The
Sincere Desire of
Cuero Ministers
Assembly of God Chnrch - W. Court House St.
Rev. C. W. Wlgley, Pastor
THE CHURCH OF THE LIVING GOD ’
"Christ also loved the church and gave himself for It"
Ephesians 8:25
Christ loved the sinner but also loved the church. Ho built the church upon
Peter’s confession of Hla dlety as being “The Christ the Son of the living God",
therefore we should think of the church aa the continued Christ, for the church
strive* to fulfill the commandments of Christ.
We love the church because of the enemies that tt has made. There has
been those who would have loved to destroy the churrh but Its truth is marching
on to victory. The church will always have enemies, Christ had them. How murh
greater Is the servant than his Master. Although there are enemies there are
also those who love the church for the good It is accomplishing.
We love the churrh because It has blessed the world, fhrlst came preaching
the Gospel to the poor, grilng sight to the blind and giving deliverance to the
captive, peace for the soul. The churrh a* a message of hope for the. world.
There It not a location In the world that I* civilized but what Chrlstanlty has
not blazed the road. Where Christ haa not been preached, women arp dishonored,
men are not respectable. The rhurrh has certainly blessed the world, brought new
hope.
Msy we all give our hearts to the I^ird and join this l.hing Church of God.
REX . < W . VVIGI EX
SOUTHERN GROCERY
Mr. and Mr*. J. E. Soothar*
CUERO FEDERAL
SAVINGS & LOAN
ASSOCIATION
KOEHLERS
Dnero a House of Quality
W. R. GARRETT
ABSTRACT CO.
r. i. tnm
FARRIERS STATE
BANK & TRUST CO.
GUADALUPE VALLEY
COTTON MILLS
i
BARFIELD MEAT CO
For QnaUtv Prod new
KELLEY’S FOOD
STORE
Crazy Day Low Prices
KLESTERS
BUCHEL
|
GROCERY
NATIONAL BANK
Llndenau, Texaa
«
/
it
CUERO FLOWER
MANFORD MILLER
*
SHOP
HATCHERY
Complete Selection at ail Times
Pollorum Iestrd Chicks
J
BASS SHOE STORE
STOWERS
Shoes For All Die Family
FURNITURE CO.
WOODWORTH &
N
DENT
&
Every Form of Ins. A Rond*
This S«rie« Of Weekly Church Messages Made Possible By The Above.
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The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 70, No. 151, Ed. 1 Friday, August 1, 1958, newspaper, August 1, 1958; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth697599/m1/3/: accessed April 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Cuero Public Library.