The Cuero Record. (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 172, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 24, 1935 Page: 3 of 12
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WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 1935
THE CUERO RECORD, CUERO, TEXAS
ia Will Be Used To
Spread Disease During
Next Great World War
Seeks Jobs for 500,000 Women
FORMAL OPENING
SATURDAY, JULY 27th-
Marvin’s Cash‘d
Grocery fj
South Esaplnade St
Specials Throughout the stove
FREE Coffee. Cake, Iced Tee
TWO BASKETS GROCERIES
TO BE GIVEN AWAY
•SUITOR’S NOE: The spread of
attaease by bacteriological warfare
In the next world conflict, wreak-
ing. untold>horror upon armies and
ttviUan populations alike, is being
considered as a preparedness mea-
Wre in Europe. H. R. Knickerbock-
er declares in the eighth article of
hto series “The Great Chaos. ’
\^jtompanwn
}f Good Health
-L.
By 6. R. KNICKERBOCKER
ienudional Rews Service Staff
Correspondent
ftrdi Copyright, 1935. by Inter-
zonal News Sendee. Reproduc-
n in whole or part strictly pro-
Pure, wholesome food and drink are nec-
essary to have and to keep a healthy body.
Because it is pure, nourishing and rich
in tonic qualities, BUDWEISER has long
been the favorite beer of those who guard
their health. It is brewed from the cream of
each year’s barley crop and from selected
American and imported Bohemian hops.
BUDWEISER is sealed in sterilized bottles
and every bottle is pasteurized. It is
strength-building as well as refreshing—a
sensible and satisfying drink at any time.
|Mrt. Ellen Woodward
is- fected artificially with glanders,
ed and rinderpest might be spread
he among the enemy’s herds. Profes-
of !sor Cannon suggested that air-
's- planes might- spread plant' para-
ity I sites which might destroy the
■se enemy’s crops.
^ Professor Pfeiffer admitted the
)ly possibility of projecting highly vir-
>n’ ulent strepto-staphylo-cocci, or the
>m i germ of anthrax, glanders or rabies
,ut ; in shells, grenade's or shrapnel. But
he thought it would be much more
dangerous “if for instance, airmen
,at were to throw glass tubes filled with
^ l virulent gouillon cultures of gland-
it:- ers on closely packed crowds
ild ••The shock of hitting the ground
would dissolve the germs contained
to in these tube's into a cloud of fine
r-S infectious spray Vhich ytould be
very likely to cause cases or gland-
n* ers by means of inhalation and
small injuries from injected glass
i splinters.” .
ie^ Professor Madsen opined that
n® “airmen or persons with a knov/1-
n; edge of the topography of localities
JV might infect the central sources of
the water or milk supply of a big
city, and thereby propagate epi-
^ demies of typhoid fever, cholera, or
r‘" ct'.ier intestinal diseases.”
He also -thought that “the vol.ni-
tary propagation of influenza epi-
demies, even more serious than the
r j last general epidemic might per-
haps be possible in the future.”
Most military men in Europe
scout the idea. They say bacteriolo-
gical warfare is too dangerous for
the user. But what discourages the
proponents of peace is that the
k same objections were raised at first
\ to poison gas. and yet the three of
A four years of scientific work by
■ belligerents discovered ways to use
poison gas with a minimum of
danger for the user and a maxi-
mum for the victim. It is argued
that precisely the same evolution
may take place in the germ arm.
Self-interest may check this arm,
^ {but nothing else.
Death rays to stop motors are
another category of weapons which
military men are leaving largely to
the scientists. Yet there is plenty of
evidence that war ministries are
interested, and as long^go as two
years the Charlottenburger Tech-
nique Hochschule in Berlin had de-
veloped a-ray which was capable of
killing a 'small animal at a distance
of 50 yards.
Dispatches from Rome describe
experiments by Senor Marconi in
stepping internal combustion en-
mag-
JOBS FOR WOMEN
ANHEUSER-BUSCH* ST. LOUIS
odic Pains, write that they I
used Dr. Miles Anti-Pain ]
with better results thaw they
even hoped for. «* -
Counties American fiai
wives would no more tl
of keeping house without
Miles Anti-Pain Pills than W
out flour or sugar. Keep a pi
age in your medicine cabinet
save yourself needlese suffei
At Drug Stores—£5o and $2
Mrs. Ellen Woodward is head of the new federal, bureau established
to provide jobs for 500,000 unemployed women now on relief ThU
gigantic task will involve training and placing individuals, ranging
in age from school girls of 1€ to elderly matrons of 65, in-more than
250 different professional fields. Domestic, cultural, professional
and social pursuits will be included by the bureau in its employment
program, the first organized effort on a national scale to solve fhe
problem of unemployment among needy women of United States
WAprprpr gou ash for it —
be »nre yon get the genuine
THE HEALTH DRINK
vV, f-* - *
BREEdEN-RUNGE CO. Distributors
Nordheim
(Mrs. Rudolph Mueller. Cor)
We have a cool breeze blowing
at this writing which is very re-
freshing after the hot days which
we had the past week
Most of the farmers are through
hauling hay and feed stuff, and
we are preparing things for cotton
picking. The farmers aren't ex-
pecting much cotton and will prob-
ably all be through picking in a
few weeks unless we get a top crop
Since the leaf worms are destroying
all the little squares that are
forming now.
Antonio Perez, tenant on the P.
Menn place a few miles south of
town, brought in the first J>ale of
1935 cotton last week Wednesday
morning. It was a light load and
a light bale, but the turnout was
good and the bale was merchant-
able without penalty.
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Onken are
the proud parents of a baby girl,
born Saturday morning.
Those spending Sunday at Smith
Creek for a picnic and fishing were
Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Harbers, Mr.
and Mrs. Rudolph Mueller, Irene
Ehlers, Walter Baumann and Al-
vin Pfeifer.
A large crowd enjoyed a pleas-
ant evening at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. M. G. Mueller last week
Thursdap in honor of his birth-
day
Mrs. Rudolph Mueller
Saturday morning with
Mueller.
A. H. Ideus. Rubie Lena Gisler and
Bernard Zengerle. We wish them
many more happy birthdays.
Miss Agnes Jacobs spent a few
days last week with her sister. Mrs.
Edgar Komfuehrer.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Koehring
of Dobskyville, Mr. and Mrs.'’Willie
Seiler and children of Goliad and
Mr. and Mrs. Gus Seiler and chil-
dren of Weser spent Sunday at the
home of A. J. Gisler.
Mr. and Mrs. Freedom Bruns
spent a plsasapt Sunday at the
home of Myand Mrs. Oscar
Bruns, /
Mrs. Fred Bruns. Mrs. Rudolph
Martin. Mrs. A. J. Gisler, Mrs. Os-
car Bruns and Misses. Helen Bruns
NCUILWUICDS
550 BATHS
DLL mOD€«n
CflTCRinG fflCILITieS
gines by extinguishing their
neto sparks. Radio authorities ad-
mit this is a theoretical possibility
and that its practical application
depends largely on the radius of the
extinguishing rays.
Obviously development of such a
ray would have enormous effect up-
on aerial warfare, with sufficient
power behind the ray to project it
to average flying height, it could
be used to bring down enemy planes
without firing a shot. This would be
the greatest invention of all to
“humanize” war. But it could not
be used against Diesel engines.
Germany has been developing
Diesel airplane engines ever since
the late Professor Hugo .Junkers
brought out his first model five
years ago.
Another extremely interesting fu-
ture airplane type will be the
Mosquito plane, originated by Ernst
Udet, who with hfc fifty-four air
victories ranked next to the great
I Manfred Von Richthofen in the
j war and is today Germany's great-
I est living ace. The Mosquito plane
| was taken in hand by Rohrbach.
one of the leading airplane manu-
facturers of the Reich.
BERLIN, —(INS.) —The fourth
year of married life is the most
critical, one. official statistics re-
veal. Of 42,485 couples divorced in
1933, the highest number had been
married for four years.
spent
Adele
Weser
(Edna Gisler, Cor.)
Mr. and Mrs. B. J. Zengerle and
To give away only what you can
not use is the worst form of char-
ity.
Scientists Record The
Songs Of Rare Birds
Expedition in tic Southwest Preserves Voices of Unusual
Species Before Their Extinction
TRACKED by Albert R. Brand, Associate in Ornithology at
JD the American Museum, the American Museum of Natural
History-Corn ell. University Ornithological Expedition, a cara-
van of mud-spattered scientists and two truck-loads of delicate
apparatus, are somewhere in one of-:-
the southern or southwestern song of a bird at a distance of
States picturing rare and common 1000 feet can be caught; at 400 to
birds and recording the voices of 500 feet sounds are faithfully re-
aoosuai species. produced.
Catching the song of a rare bird, The bird’s song is recorded in
■avs The Literary Digest, is a straight lines, like a spectrum, at
gamble. At four o’clock in the right angles to the long way of ih«
morning the scientists are up, have film. The thickness of the lines
AWN MOWER
;er-Tip Adjustment
imatic Sharpening
maid, entertaining, food—you can get them *
better and at lower c6st just by hiring, rent-
V . . 1
ing, buying them through the ads m The
Daily Record.
be dodged
f \ LD shoes and rice can
“lousy” wedding presents can be ex-
changed—but the expenses that pile up at
a newlywed’s front door! They can’t be
sidestepped so easily.
A young couple’s budget is a delicate thing.
It won’t stand stretching. Yet no one ex-
— '5- - _
pects a bride and groom to live, dress and
act like a pair of old misers.
Here's where that tried and trusted friend of
all newlymarrieds—the Daily Record—steps
-> . - ■ - . . V ' ' -
in to help you. You can solve all those new
expense problems—a home, furniture, a
1 Hardware Co
he House of Service
(E UP YOUR
ER BILE-
out CALOMEL
STOP THAT ITCHING
If you are bothered by the itching
of Athlete’s Foot, Eczema, Itch or
Ringworm Klecka Drug Co. will
sell you a jar of Black Hawk Oint-
ment on a guarantee. to kill the
itch. Price 50c and $1.00.—(advt.)
Ri ll Jump Out of Bed in
Morning Rarin’ to Go
..................
Photographed by A. A. Allen, Cornell University
Apparatus recording bird's song.
their apparatus In place and if |! represents the volume of sound:
their position is favorable, tdev j the number of lines to the inch,
may be able to record the song of the pitch; and the film travels
a rare specie which may be extinct j through the camera at the con
In the future. The collapsible plat stant rate of eighteen feet per
form on the top of the truck, will second.
permit photographers to have The “mike” disclosed the fact
camera, microphone and blind , that, though the bird’s song may
twenty feet above *he ground. | be of short duration, ft contains
The recording ’mike"’ has its many notes. The winter wren’s
back to the source of the sound, song. lasting a little more than
Like a telescopic mirror, its sens:-j seven seconds, contains 113 notes
tive side, located at the focus of a but an experienced ornithologist
three-foot parabolic reflector, brings ; listening by ear, could oniy detect
the distant sounds to a point. The * five separate notes.
Ask anyone who has been married a year
CHICKEN
FEED
Read—Use—The ADS in
Hegira, New Crop
100 lb. Sack $1.25
The DAILY RECORD
JOHN C. LEY FOOD MARKET
(BILIOUSNESS 1
TmvwiDR.MILM1
/£
L
V*1
f A
/ V
I VI
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Howerton, J. C. The Cuero Record. (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 172, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 24, 1935, newspaper, July 24, 1935; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1073376/m1/3/?q=%22~1~1%22~1: accessed July 14, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cuero Public Library.