The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 37, No. 35, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 12, 1931 Page: 2 of 6
six pages : ill. ; page 27 x 22 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1931
THE CUERO RECORD, CUERO, TEXAS
1 toines newest coifures with tbe
: eurts brcR over the ears and tow
I left side parting. Spiral curls at tee
back of the head and round the
side sometimes completely hidt the
i ears. f V ,
• Valentine Parties May
Be Season’s Cleverest
RECORD SPORTS
CUERO RECORD
Utotoeto (estep Saturday) and Sunday Morning by
T*E CtttO PUBLISHING CO.
Make Highways Sightly
Several local garden club^ in'Ttx-
as have taken as their iitimedihte
work the plant tog and care of trees,
shrubs and flowering plants cm tee
State highways in their counter
The movement should be State*
wide.
Sport's Sign of Spring
- By HARDIN BURNLEY -
SPORT LIGHTS
___Editor-Publisher
---City Editor
— Associate Editor
Advertising Manager
When Coach Francis Schmidt i
and his band of Horned Frog
cagers invade the lair of the Baylor
Bears Saturday night, they will fco
fighting with their backs to the
wall endeavoring to regain their
early January ferm and mak? good,
their pre-seasen iftahtn^p for thd
basketball crown of the Southwest.
By virtue of their loss to Arkansas
and Southern Mtii-kodist the
Schmidtmen are faced with the
possibility of having to win the re-
maining games on their schedule in!
order to finish the season at the
head of the percentage column. j
' Bread Croustades
Croustades are large sized hollow i
croutons to hold creamed foods or *
purees. Use bread at least 24 hoars
old. Cut in heart-shaped portions (
2V£ inches thick. A sharp knife may
be used, though cotters are mad* I
for the purpose. After the bread is
in the required shape, cut a lina
around the top of the slice aboot
half aa inch from the edge, and !
carefully remove the crumb to form j
a cup. The walls should be half an
inch thick. Spread lightly with soft- !
ened butter and brown in tbe ov*»
as croutons, or try in deep fat.
EBK CO, Sac. Hew York, Chicago, Philadelphia
PTNCOB * WALKER, Iae, Dallas. Text*
JIM
W<2Ay-.
ANO» TWE OTHEe.
CISEW COACHES
A1EE GETTIM&
(Z6AOY Foe THE
1931 SEASOMi
1 qt. strawberries 1 cup evaporated
%. cups sugar milk prepared tot
1 ttwp- lemon juice whipping , '
Hail and wash berries. Rut
through a chares sieve or potato
ricer. There should be 2 cop* of
pulp and symp. If berries are soar
Vi cup more sugar will be needed.
Add sugar to pulp and let stand la
refrigerator 20 minutes. CUB and
whip tbe evaporated adUr. Add
lemon juice amd whip until stiff.
Fold into berry mixture. Pour into
heart-shaped molds or pot In freez-
ing pans in electric ice-box. 2 to 8
hours are required for freezing.
practice is ]
Much of the week’s
being devoted to monotonous
labor from the foul line. Weakness
in making the gratis shots has aosf
the Frogs .400 paints in the confer-
ence percentage column. Coach
Schmidt will also .fashion new
scoring plays, endeavor to smooth
the passing by elimination of th°
wild and reckless throw*, and build
a defensive to slop the two Bruin
scored sees, Capt. Alford, forward,
and Strickland, stellar tenter. ^
FAMIUAC SIGHS
OP COMiHG
EPS)MG’.' J
tee Turkey That for 1981 brought a
M who spoke of the Turkey Trot
Mon this year. Let's start work on
nuch to be dtme.
tween the present-day styles and
the boyish “crops” favored a few
years ago.
The parting is either In tee mid-
dle or slightly on tee left-hand
side at the head. This parting ts
taken right back to tee crown of
the head tad tee hair wared
down on either side to the saw
where early Victorian ringlets (Aw- j
back around the nape of the neck.
whre tee hair is caught up and
brought back againim a peries-flf
• that we live.
Is not what can we get, but
do we give. —Author Unk
GIVING
What have you done for the out-
stretched hand.
And the cry of misery sweeping
the land?
Haw yon taken the stand of grasp-
v • ing greed— ,
Turning deaf ears to the cry pi
! . need? •
' •
I -a- v V' V.) •
Oft have-you listened wiUVr sfm-
i j pathy’s glow
To the hungry voices pitched tired
and to*..
And there reeolve that they would
be fed?*
Hare clothes to wear and a place
to bed?
from vividly
Victorian Curls
To Soften Lines
Of New Coiffore
Ballyhoo for outdoor boxing
show* already untfrr way; annual
newsprint bout between Sharks;
erva Donpsey authors edds in the
two Jack* Making hands ^ sad-
dle of the Sphinx.
Our Whiter golf tourists are now
swinging through their Southwest
tournaments, with bright Florida
days in tee immediate future, and
an CfcfcBth sextette—featuring
featuring Diana Ftohwick, British
woman's -ehampion—will complete
as individuals in the important
ladies’ events Miami and Palm
bc«e|ies. Spring is always hist
For little we know vjhen we strive
for self,
That there is room for no one else.
And many are trampled Jn the
i-osh for renews,
But who goes up must come down.
coiffures have decided that the ]
natural shape must always be
shown, but with plenty of little
ringlets either round the ears • or
low down on the nape of the neck
which make afl the difference be-
The Bam Heads South
aa investment ef wamothtog like haif-a-dollar
It manages to mi us eight dollars worth ef
lew Englander buys fifteen cents worth of Tei-
r ut back a forty dollar suit of clothes. Facts
to tee ingenuity and enterprise of other states,
l upoh Texas. Surely we Texans can match en-
jther states. We should make it a state-wide
r» more factories. The value added by manu-
eater than the original value of the rarw ma-
Mb sbat aonrcec of mv njwha la budding up other
fdbtetag tee thing nesnsny for the success of their
t star hsesatf stta bs the background It lies within the
m people to make Texas a Meat Industrial as well as a
|M state. But we hare pet to learn to think in terms
A product instead of the raw material; we must think
of hides, yards of cloth instead of pounds of wool or
a. Bight here In CUero we are shipping out thousands
te of raw material white will be created into millions of
of the finished product. Our tomatoes are shipped out
r hides, carloads ef them, go to factories in far off states.
lire turkeys which could be transformed into a score or
(Z ■
hot dShctoua canned neats, are shipped out on foot, to
Be tbe far corners of tee earth. We are satisfied with
MB. We hare not taken the time and energy to create
a Mere factories far South Texas, more factories for
IP should!* our endeavor in the rear at to come.
the bashing bambino will begin
Spring training. With him in
tbe picture are Mrs. Ruth (sec-
ond from left), their di
JuKa (right) and Dor<
Babe Ruth, who knocks’em over
the skyline, leaving frigid New
York for the sunny South where
STOP HL THIS
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ME.COKTUHJED
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COfTAlA GIVE THEM UTTlf TWt TO
MAKE. UP TtfclR MINDS.
We should join in the drive.
eg teen sating
THE CMPCROQ OUT GENERAL dHTML TO
DISPENSE C0M&RC99
FILLED PGlSOMS WTTH THOSE WHO DlRED
LIH A VOICE AGAWST HIM.
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Howerton, J. C. The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 37, No. 35, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 12, 1931, newspaper, February 12, 1931; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1097321/m1/2/: accessed July 12, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cuero Public Library.