The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 83, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 12, 1939 Page: 4 of 8
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T*
” WEDNESDAY, APRIL 12, 1939
. ---------------------------------------------------- I,.
FOUR
*
*
BARCLAY ON BRIDGE
37 YEARS AGO
was
* ¥
¥
¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥
¥
*
and
following
among
*
Albert
They '
Street, San Francisco, Calif.
N
i
E
Eminitt Wishert of
3
S
a short ' home of Mrs. J
N
was
a
E
TELEPHONE NO. 1.
Woods |
s
We
| Beautiful
(abeza School News
£
A plav entitled “Under Western'
VW t eJorchids
WRITTES FOR AST RELEASED by RinA r»F\
news-
Ralph l fice. prices reasonable.
Riley.
°/ Marie B lizard
More Cancer Deaths
I
Reported Every Year
«
c
I
it weapon against either of these “isms” is a job.
Hitler s Bill
swung
the
4
rw_-x-
1‘J
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
I
R-
11
and
Phil? 1 forgot to get any lunch to-
modest, invincible spirit of the man
g.
7
/'o
*.
s
is her escape
l
i
J
I
‘them in a convenient and attractive form for general dis-
tribution.
Entered in the post office at Cuero, Texas, as second class matter
Under Act of Congress. March 3, 1897.
BUSINESS SPEAKS
FOR ITSELF
spent
mother.
has been ill
How can we tell if a growth is
cancer? By examining a small por-
usually harmless, and malignant or
cancer.
Difference Explained
What is the difference between a
i xl Tiiigiii ue Liie iniie, ne odiu.
• looking not at the black satin Hud->
. son that flowed beside them, but
WRITTEN FOR ANT RELEASED Bi'
CENTRAL PRESS ASSOCIATION
A A Q 3
V A 9 7 5 3
♦ A 4
♦ 732
10 9
8 2
J. C. HOWERTON
HOWERTON -------
,Y C. PUTMAN---
HOWERTON ....
1
A J 9 7 5
V Q W
♦ Q J 7 2
* A J 6
■ r
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report
‘A
*
f o
\\
Eleanor’s eyes followed his ^es-
. "Do
¥
to
- "
•1
**—••'**—— * r
Texas Daily Press League, Inc., 507 Mercantile Building, Dallas. Texas;
S’:
goes elsewhere.
¥
sorry
«
*
I
i
r
Si Im
I
Mrs. Robert
Mrs.
I room rent and meals out.”
“I don’t know if you’ll like living
in the Village," he said dubiously.
“We can’t afford the places in
nice neighborhoods.
the Village doesn’t seem prosaicai-
CONSIDER VULNERABILITY
ALWAYS KEEP YOUR eyes
open for a chance to make either
a penalty double or a business pass
of an informative double if your
opponents are vulnerable. Setting
them a trick or t,wo -then may be
worth much more to your side than
any score that can be made by be-
coming declarer yourself. Many
more of these occur among very
fine players than among average
players, for they-have figured out
the percentage in favor of them
more thoroughly.
K 10 6 4
6 2
9 8 6
therefore knew he could safely taka'
action himself, which he did with
an informative double.
South made the sound deckriofi.
He passed this, and the contract
was down 2 tricks, the defenders
taking three tricks in hearts, ona
in diamonds and three in clubs, for
a score of 500. That was much bet-
ter than anything North and South
could have done themselves. They
could have made either 2-No trump
or 3-Diamonds, either of which
amounted to much less than 500
points.
0,000,000. In comparison with the country’s
nrces, that would be equivalent to a debt
00,000,000,000 in the United States. Some
. Jr- v’e been estimating the German national
leaded items, as high as $25,000,000,000 or $30,000,000,000.
I whatever it is, it is rising today more rapidly than ever
This is part of the price that the German people are pay-
g fok Hitlerism. Before the Fuehrer gets through with them,
j may run up as big a bill as the Allies handed Germany af-
r the Versailles conference.
me as an |
man says, t
Rev.
ichurch
Tomorrow’s Problem
A A J 6
V A J 10 6 2
♦ 532
* A 4
the sham
of Com-
same breed—wolf
. ing tier ot a iob he has landed in New
i ...
I
• / ■?
/>
/
on. “Taxes are so
SHILOH
(Emma Gonzales, Cor.)
A shadow of sorrow
he had a bit of
he was passing;
the second round
message. North
Copyright. 19)9. King Feature* Syndicate, Inc.
Mfeam Bailie" ,
The Ohio legislature has gently put to death a legislative Braull(ul „oral oBert„gs
proposal for a “red hunt.” The Senate is reported as “washing I banked high on her grave.
It is a
unterparts
1
Fk - . 1
£ 1
J .
APRIL SHOWERS!
Here East bid 1-Heart, West 1-*
Spade, East 2-Hearts and West,
passed it. North knew his partner
as a sound player who does not stick
his neck out with overcalls when he
might be caught between two very
strong hands. It was easy to read
that this time
strength which
West s pass on
conveyed that
» '
If East had bid diamon4$t jmM
leads hts club 9 to the 10, K and A
against North’s 4-Hearta* ftttr
should North try to drop ‘ 11'
ton heart K?
symptom and when it occurs the
growth is often far advanced.
Early Cancer Signs
What are some of the early signs
of cancer ?
1. A persistent lump, especially
in a woman’s breast.
2. A sore that does not heal, par-
ticularly about the face, mouth or
lips.
3. An unnatural bloodstained dis-
charge from a natural body open-
ing.
4. Sudden changes in size or color
of moles and warts.
Are all breast lumps cancer?
Not more than 10 to 15 per cent
are cancer. Only by a careful exam-
ination can it be definitely deter-
mined.
Do freckles ever turn into can-
cer?
Simple freckles do not. However,
inles containing certain pig-
-----and looking like dark freckles
may become cancers and should be
watched.
By LOGAN CLENDENING, M. D.
FROM THE 50,000 letters from
the public asking information about
cancer, the following, concerning
distribution and diagnosis, were the
most frequent. Honest answers ac-
company them.
Iscancerincreasing ? Moredeaths
from cancer are repotted each year.
Some attribute this increase to in-
■T’.
Snore wheat, and other grains too, if they could get them.
Dr. Clendening will answer
questions of general interest
only, and then only through
his column.
.J
’ and adjoining counties. Elsewhere, 1 year $2.25. 6 months $1.25.
Official Organ of the City of »?uero and DeWitt County.
Subscription Rates:
j*y Mall or Carrier—Daily and Sunday, one year $5.00, six months
$2.50, three months $1.25. one month 50c.
Whirly Kriition by mail only, one year $2.00; six months $1.00 in DeWitt)
EDITOR S NOTE: Seven pamphlets by
Dr. Clendening can.now be obtained by
■ending 10 cents in coin, for each, and a
self-addressed envelope stamped with a
three-cent stamp, t« Dr. I-ogan Clenden-
tng. in care of thia paper. The pamphlets
. are: "Tbre* Weeks* Reducing Diet” ••In-
digestion and Constipation". "Reducing
and Gaining”, "Infant Feeding". "In-
structions for the Treat ment of Diabetes"
"Feminine Hygiene” and “The Care of ths
Hair and S»
moment, from
with the world in J
CHAPTER FIVE
BIG green bus
I down at the eyes of the girL
"You make it a real Bohemia,
Phil. Don’t ever let me wake up
and find life is like I was afraid it
was.” ,
’’We’re the kind of people who
can make it what we want it to be.
Look here, that’s Grant’s Tomb on
the left . . . and Columbia is over
I here to the right.”
I lures obediently. She said.
; people on honeymoons ever eat.
. Phii ? 1 forgot to get any lunch to*
I day.”
“My poor angel! We’ll go
straight back to the Village on this
. bus. You can get the best food In
j New York there,” he said not’quite
I correctly, but adding, "and the Vil-
I lage is within our purse.”
j “Phii—today I
| apartment on . .
SIS
- r
F1
. -I
I ber? This is the night we decided
' to call it off to do a little honey-
i mooning. Let’s look at the river
I instead.”
“It might be the Nile,” he said.
I night? It’s in the Village.”
j “You’ve been lookirtg at places
all day. Let’s skip ...”
“No, let s see it, Phil. I’m dying
, to have a place of our own. We’re
i spending too much money now for
creasing age of the population;
soine to improved methods of diag-
nosis; others to a real increase in
the occurrence of cancer.
Second Place
How does cancer compare with, *mi
other diseases as a cause of deatKr
It occupies second place, as seen
from the following table of deaths
from leading causes in the United
States in 1936:
Heart disease 341,350
CANCER 142,613
Pneumonia 119,378
Kidney disease 1x5,865
Apoplexy 104,334
Tuberculosis 71,527
Why do more women than men
die from cancer ? Because it occurs
so frequently in the breast and
I uterus -of women. Nearly 60 per
J cent of cancer deaths in the United
States occur in women.
Are all growths cancer ? No. Tu-
i mors are of two kinds—benign and
• rr^HE American business man has j
I been tbe butt of censure, ridi- i
cule and blame for almost every !
unpleasant condition in our eco- ■ * ... a
nomic life. He has been maligned, i ben’.?n * cancerous growth?
badgered and misunderstood ana |
he has said very little about it. In
the May issue of Cosmopolitan
magazine under the title of “Auto-
biography of America — 1939,” a
typical business man relates the
simple yet thrilling story of his life
Eleanor began to peruse the want
ad colniuns of tbe newspapers, fihe
thought of askiqg Phi) to try and 4
get her something on the paper
where he worked, but now that alp
had lived with him for two months, S
she knew that be would not want “
ber to work where he did.
She'd find something and thee
tell him about it when she did.
It was a very small thing ah»
found:
Wanted: Writer tor part-
time work. Prepare propagan-
da booklets on political sub-
ject. Appeal to women. Bring
sample work Room 806 Jack-
son building, Fifth avenue.
Eleanor bought all the morning -
newspapers and read every word
of the political news. Then she
wrote four pieces of copy.
That night she said casually:
“Phil, 1 want you to look over sosnr
things I wrote today.”
Phil read the neatly written
pages with a frown on his brow.
“They’re okay. But why all the
sudden interest in politics?**
“Phil!” Siie sat on his lap. *Tm:
going to land a Job writing them.
I'll bet you 1 can get it if you say
they’re okay.”
He spilled her off his lap and
went over to the window. “You’ll
not land any Jobe as long as you’rS
my wife.”
Anger whitened Eleanor’s cheeks.
She said: “I thought I was going
to be free. Well, I ami You can
have a fine free life in a newspaper
office where something stimulating
and exciting happens all day. but I
can sit home and twirl my thumbs
and get oored to death. I suppose
that’s your idea of fun!’*
He said in a low voice: ”1 thought
maybe it might be."
"And I suppose you think it’s fun
never to have an extra five dollars
in my pocketbook. We have fifty
dollars a week. Of course we have!
Sometimes we actually have an
extra dollar at the end of the week.
But it doesn’t buy us anything.**
He went into the bedroom and
came back with his hat and ooat.
He went past her arfd out the door.
When midnight came, she went
to bed and cried herself to sleep*.
She was still sleeping when hs
left in tbe morning. When she went
into the living room she found he
had set a breakfast place tor ber.
Beside the coffee urn there was *
typewriter with a note on it.
“I'm going to write the great
American novel on this, honey,”
Phil had written. “Just be patient
I’m sorry I didn't understand.** *
Eleanor tore up the pieces sbf
nad written.
(To Be Continued)
THE CUERO7 RECORD
Established in 1894
Published Each Afternoon, Except Saturday, and Sunday
by THE CUERO PUBLISHING CO., Inc.
Z is
“If I had the right, I would require that every child
in the public schools of the United States learn—
“The first part of the Declaration of Independence,
which tells why we severed our ties with England;
“The Preamble to the Constitution;
“The First Amendment to the Constitution which is
the Bill of Rights; t
“The Gettysburg Address;
“The Multi-lateral Pact for the Renunciation of War
—the Kellogg Peace Pact signed in Paris in 1928.”
Mrs. J.! were enjoyed too. A party of Vic-
Gonzales, pioneer citizens of De- 1 toria relatives and friends
, She was born in the (whom were Mr. and
Publisher [ Shiloh community. October 23. 1884; Dedear and Mr. and
to young woman- > Beamer were among the guests.
CONCRETE
(Beatrice Prewitt, Cor )
Wc have another dry noither bu'
"Phil—today 1 saw an ad for an
. . let me see . . .
Blane street. The rent was only
I forty a month for a large living
I room, one bedroom and kitchenette
I and bath. Could be look at it to-
¥ ’
*
¥ .
¥
*
i APRIL 12. 1902.'
I. T. Morris, pastor M E. ’
at Runge, and son. E u nest, j
------, circulating among friends in
i Cuera yesterday and today. ’_ ...
(The following interesting
items we clipped from an is-
sue of The Record of the year
1902:
A
V
A K 9 8 5
A K 5 3
V K c
♦ AQ10
9 8 T
A Q 9 $
THE „ r „
■ around the corner into Riverside
i drive and Phil Parrish tightened
his arm around his bride. Their two
heads bent back in unison as they
j looked at the tall apartment houses
; at their right.
“Some day we’ll live in a place
• like that, honey,” he promised her,
' pointing to one of the tallest!
Eleanor said, “Let s forget house
; hunting, Phil. Don’t you reinem-
A » 2
V K J 8 4
♦ K 10 5 3
A Q 10 4
(Dealer:' East. Both sides vul-
nerable. )
York.
go with him. .
(NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY)
ing peace must be built.
It would be a fine patriotic service for someone to print! captures ihe gemiineVpirit of
■ __ ,_ _ _______i__.__j . ..__— _ r____ r . .. whn m 'il'r.- «>> ... .......
Eleanor had told him she could
: do wonders with the rooms. And
| she did. She shopped in bargain
■ basements, at warehouse sales, and
[ auctions. One by one she trans-
' formed the bare rooms with her
' treasures. A box spring raised on
I wooden blocks, and covered with a
I Mexican blanket made a lounge,
t Coarse, generously pleated home-
! spun in bright orange and green
! hung at the sides of the paned win-
| now. Bowls of brass and copper
that Eleanor polished until the
' metals were tilled with greens pur-
A Q
i
I
i
M. J. Baker left this morning for (
: his ranch in Love Oak county look- i
ing after business.
¥ ¥ ¥
Mr. and Mrs. John Muti returned
Io Cuero on the noon train Uiday j
from a trip abroail.
¥ ¥ ¥
Dr. D. S. Pearce of Nopal was a ,
! visitor in Cuero today. He is with'
lus in that Cuero-Nopal road propo-
sition aiid says it will bring consid-
Is pain an early symptom of can-
i or
nerve tissue. Fain usually is a late
Suddilh. Helen Rilev. Ruth Ckodrc. ¥
Leo Sturm. Marjorie Riley. Adelia ■¥
Buendel. Ruble Ckodre. Alice Drey-j ¥
er. Helen Dreyer and Fred Roeben. >
The. play is being coached by Miss
Lula Belle Kasten. 4
The 4-H club met Tuesday. April1
11. All members except one were!
present. For recreation we played a‘
game called "Vegetable and Fruit;
Love Letter." Our sponsor. Mrs.!
August Helmers, brought a number,
of wild flowers which we discussed
at Jhe meeting.
Joe Butler and family and Irene [
and one | Laura May Marshall and attendedButler of San Antonio visited rela-I were
Surviving are 1 Holy Week services at St.Micheal s 1 lives Sunday and Monday , Oxczl. .---------.. - -----.
Elma, i church i Carl Buendel and family spent the i teturn home tomorrow.
Miss Louise Dedear is spending a | week end with Mrs. Elsia Woelke of i
Dave _■ Jourdanton.
agency,
to un-
it! a*lot of it somehow, though at a considerable loss. And
need net make a very big fuss about some of it going to
many—if it is going into bread for hungry people and not
military storage for a campaign of conquest.
At the same time, if our surplus wheat must be sold be-;
edit of production, isn’t there some way by which a lot
UK it may go to provide bread more liberally fvi um uwiii wi. wt uusuma man—a min owner
•people? There must be millions of Americans who would eat* -discusses some °f the things which
M9nr» whpat and nthpr trrains tnn if thpv cniild apt. thpm,
I ■- -------------------------------------------------------------
Joules For Democracy
Z Judge Florence F. Allen, first woman federal circuit judge.
3s keenly interested in democracy and peace. She has been ac-
tive in the movement to outlaw war, but she realizes that both
^eace and democracy depend upon more than laws and pacts
•nd the right to vote. In a recent address on “The Constitu-
tion of the United States as an Instrument of Freedom” she
laid:
M
He cites in addition the heavy tax
on his time made by government and
i state officials.
| In this article Boyden Sparkes
a man
who makes an effort to reveal per-
suasive proof of the validity of
America's system of free enterprise.
The story of his life is a testament
. ... . to his belief in this sv.-tem. It is the
“A womans hat. says a psychologist, is her escape, .story of initiative, hard work, re-
.“Ves. she gets away with it, even when she ought to be ar- 8ponsibility and honesty. '* -
i story which has many coc r_.
io th® fabric of ulir national life.
at Yorktown. Rev J C Johnson of | Mr. and Mrs W B
i the First Presbyterian church of j were accompanied home
i Yorktown assisted by Rev. Ray P. Calliham who will make
Water. Methodist minister of York-: visit.
town, conducted impressive services; Mrs. J. R Wright
at the home knd at the grave, inter- visitor Sunday.
ment being made in the
cemetery’ Monday morning
through for those evenings Hhen ■
Phil came home, bringing «’^ang *
with him, or coining alone with a i
suggestion of something for th* X
two a>f them to do together. 5-
Without saying anything to Phil,
if. if. * if. * if.
THE C UERO RECORD, CUERO, TEXAS
i ’
I was here for a day’s visit with her
j parents. Mr and Mrs Oakes.
i Last Thursday night. Mrs. Wm.
cast Dedear was given a surprise on her
lover our community when the mes- birthday by the arrival of a large
sage came that Mrs. Felix Hoefling number of'relatives and f.lc..2„.
| Mrs W. W. McCormick Sr., chil-
dren and relatiTO. celebrated a
family reunion by* having a picnic
plus Wheat
Tbe Federal Surplus Commodities Corporation
IB reported as selling wheat at 38 1-2 to 40 cents a bushel, for
Shipment to Germany and other countries, while American
uyers have been paying 70 cents a bushel at Chicago.
Perhaps it is necessary for such a governmental
verloaded with wheat as a result of bumper crops,
Barth at-
how large it/tended the “Easter Hunt" at Center(
B school, in honor of the Lutheran i
Sunday school Sunday afternoon.
Norris and Mary Howell of Smiley j
are spending a few days with their,
parents. G. F. Howell, before mov- ;
ing to their new home down on the;
Rio Grande.
Mrs. C. T. Lambertson was a Yoa- j
kum visitor Sunday.
James Richie Piewitt being one'
of the F. F. A. boys of Yoakum high i
school enjoyed the trip to the Lu-;
ling Foundation Farm of Luling j
Tuesday.
•Darling, you’re the most wonderful woman in tbe world.*
wall. There were odd chairs and an
old table, oiled and polished, that
served them for dining and held
bright magazines and a bowl of
fruit at other times.
There was a big chair for Phil
and a small one with a sewing bas-
ket on a stand for Eleanor.
Eleanor sewed curtains
chintz covers, polished and painted, ,
and the days passed like light
songs on the autumn air.
Eleanor learned to cook—not the
familiar things she had cooked in
the little frame house—but exotic
foreign foods, and to mix a salad
in a oig wooden bowl. She learned
to make qui^H- rich suppers . . .
and to make cocktails and canapes.
For proud of his new home, and
his bride, Phil had begun to bring
home the boys from the office.
It was his boss he brought firsL
'We live rather humbly.” he’d said
to Mr. Link, “but Mrs. Parrish and
I would like to have you and Mrs.
Link to supper if you’d care to
come down some night.”
The day they were coming,
Eleanor snopped all morning. And
when the Links arrived, it was
Phil whose eyes were frankly star-
tied; the Links did not show their
surprise. After the shabby street,
*he dark nail where they had
walked up three flights of stairs,
they were not prepared for candle-
light and flowers, for tender duck-
ling cooked with white grapes and
Served with a delicate wine. Nor
were they prepared for a hostess
who was a slip of a girl with the
poise of a woman long accustomed
to entertaining.
“Darling, you're the most won-
derful woman tn the world,” Phil
said to her as they washed dishes
hours later. "Some day 1’11 have
eight footmen and a kitchen full of
cooks to do things for you.”
“If you do, my darling, I’ll never
be the kind of a woman who says
she’d rather do it herself. Why
don’t we have a party next? I’d
like to get to know people.”
So Phil asked a couple of the
boys from the sports department
and their girls. Eleanor loved it all.
The mounds of spaghetti, the
cheese and crackers and red wine,
the music and the chatter and the
shop talk. Newspaper talk.
Soon the apartment was "fin-
ished.” There was no more sewing
to do, no more furniture to be
painted, no more brass or copper
to polish, no more shopping to do
except for the food that furnished
their dinners.
Eleanor, having no money for
clothes or trinkets, shunned the
shops It wasn’t any fun for her to
shop in department stores and she
wisely kept away from the ex-
pensive specialty shops. She read
a great deal and sometimes she
went to the movies in the after-
noon. But she didn’t like going
alone and all the girls she knew
worked. She lived the long days
Its hands of charges and counter-charges about Communists
' and Marxists.” Instead of such punitive expeditions, the law-
makers have “settled down to the serious business of drawing >
up a permanent relief program."
*/u"That is regarded as more to the point. And there would a
* e still more value, no doubt, in a permanent employment'
fcgram. The American people need work more than they
ieed inquisitions.
This incident seems to go naturally with
•de by Roy W. Howard, head of the Scripps-Howard
papers in the conclusion of a series of articles on the Euro-
An situation.
. “Finally,” he says, “turn the floodlights on
ittle being waged in America under the names
’ monism and Fascism. Both are of the
pups. Neither can stand against the light.”
Our American life and institutions should be able easily
to rise above both and sweep them into the dust-bin. Our
chased cheaply in the flower inar-
A deep-blue rug, picked up for a
song at a warehouse, covered the
; cracks in the floor, and bright-hued
I paper travel posters of European
scenes covered the spots on the
; D T. Forbes was in today be-!
tween trains from Victoria, which,
! place he reports dry and dull. i
i
QUALITY PRINTING IS
are Gus'not extravagant at The Record of-i
i ...
i When Eleanor saw the big room
' lacing a court, she didn’t see the
I cracks in the floor, the stains on
I the wall, the dreary view. She
| didn’t hear the cries and screams
j and noisy laughter out of doors; she
saw the quaint fireplace, the high
ceilings, the large small-paned win-
dow and was enchanted. The noises
out of doors were part of the sym-
phony of the city.
i "Please, please, let’s take It.
j Phil, darling. We can do wonders
. with it. I have enough furniture
I from our place at home to furnish
the bedroom. You could paint the
| furniture and I’ll put up chintz
■ drapes. And it will cost practically
I nothing to do wonderful things
i with this big living room. Please!”
So the Parrishes went to live in
' a tenement and called it Bohemia.
that Mrs. Felix Hoefling number of'relatives and friends.
had passed away Sunday morning. ‘ Many pretty gifts were received and j
Mrs. Hoefling was the eldest daugh- j lots of cakes and good things to eat
j ter of the late Mr. and
Gonzales, pioneer
President1 Witt county. C—
— Editor i where she grew
Sports Editor j hood, was married to Felix W. j Mrs. T. K Burrow spent a few
-------------j Hoefling, December 20. 1908 to this '• days in Cuero last week with Miss'
National Arivertisinf Representatives: 'happy union three sons- auu iviay xviarsuuu and tn,«rnucu
j Jn,,rry>tnr XYIOVO O»* a»i rr «TTV-O 1 T-Trsl*’ XKF/-n-»le rnt-i'innr o Qt AflPHDO I c ’
• I n rt U RU VV I ’ ’ U 1 U UU 111. K-r V** » * • • » • o *■— • i • a sxa » » « x. V. fczs. * • * w — —
M Daily FTCSS League, WC., pul mciukuuic ouuuAAig, xcam, '
Izrington Avenue, New York City, 180 Michigan Avenue, Chicago,, her husband, her daughter. Elma. < church
$05 Star Building, St. Louis, Mo., 801 Interstate Building, Kansas i Mrs. Elliott Boldt and son. David, j
Mo.; 1015 New Orpheum Building, Los Angeles, Calif.; 105 San- I and one grandchild. Charles Elliot! few days with Mr. and Mrs.
e Street, San Francisco, Calif. Boldt, three sisters'. Mrs. Raymond ! Dedear near Stratton. Little Glenn Gruetzmacher at-;
——-------------— ---[Hanna. Mrs. W. E. Caruthers, and' Mr. and Mrs. Philip Braden and tended an Easter Egg hunt at the
! Miss Emma Gonzales. She was a 1 two daughters of Hochheim spent home of Miss Grace Oetkcn Satur-i
’member of the Presbyterian church , Sunday with Mrs Braden’s parents.! day.
— — Calliham and [ Emmitt Wishert of Charco and,
by Mrs family were Sundav visitors in the
I M.. J L Ckodrc.
, Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Dicycr and I
Cuero Edward Dreyer Jr., of San Antonio’
I spent the week end visiting rela-
Mr. and Mrs. Hy. Hotz and boys | tives here.
Pall spent Sunday near Victoria with j Mrs. Willie Waskow and daughter'
bearers were Chas. Schostac. Ferd Robert Dedear and family.
Schostag. Arthur Spies. Willie Me- j
I Sunday
| Mr anef Mrs. O. J. Payne of
in I Kenedy were visitors in the home
| of Mr. Willie Waskow Thursday.
'j H O Braden and family ‘
Price's creek I Sundav in the home of Ben Janecek 1
j of Charco
I Mr. and Mrs. Otis Shoemaker and!
i Joe Hilscher Sr . of Yoakum were
•visitors in the H O. Braden home!
I Sunday evening.
»
THOMASTON
(Mrs. T. K. Burrow, Cor.)
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Wildman
and little daughter of Victoria spent
Sunday with their grandparents.
Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Oakes.
Mrs. Ethel Young also of Victoria i
V 9 4
♦ J
A K 8 6 3 2
4 7 4
V Q 8 7 5 3
♦ K 6 4
♦ J 10 7
(Dealer: North. EMt-Weet Vul-
nerable.) J » .Tf/
with m-s a J era hie bu mess to Cuero that now
l and Hazel Joyce and Albert Pres-i
j Mr and Mrs. Ferdinand Gisler of ton Payne, were visitors in the home I
Millen. Edward Brandt. Max Wehe. I Mission Valley spent Friday with; of Ed Raves and family of Garfield! J'. S™‘' v/dl-^kled Th- !
were: relatives in this place i Sunday. I . . . , .
n >> >< j <-> , rv r accident happened Wednesday even-'
I D B McManus and Chas. Mur-1 Mr and Mrs. O. J. Pavne of . , , . , . .„ I
I , . . . .. I , . . ' ; ing and last night the little fellow'
1 phree were business visitors in Kenedv were visitors in tlic home „ . ? , , ,
’ . r. , „■ J suffered a great deal. He had a;
Cuero Mondav afternoon. of Mr. Willie Waskow Thursdav. t
r ! pan of boiling water in his hand. I
i ,Thc teachers and pupils enjoyed h O. Braden and familv spent!’ „ . , , . i
„ „ i, , ... r „ ' , i fell backward and the water scald-,
an Easter outing on Prices creek Sundav in the home of Ben Janecek . ., . f
' ed the entire front of him.
I Monday afternoon of Charco ; „ .. „
' Z-XJ • _ t ,| ’T* T*
good rain would have been wcl- j
jcorned, as it is getting dry and'
crops and pastures are suffering.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Weber and I
children were Cuero visitors Satur- ’
a statement'day- , ;i j Skies" will be presented soon Those j
! taking part in tire play
: Warzecha. Maurice
op the McCoy creek Sunday All re- •
ported a good time. ;
Mrs. Myrtle Howell spent the *
week end with her mother Mrs I
Mattie Freeman, who
for some time.
Mrs. Minnie Parks was a Cuero
visitor Saturday
Onley and Donald attended Na-
>ple need work more than they need inquisitions, and the tionai Guard in Gonzales Monday
night. »
Mrs. Ima Baylor and children and
Cleveland Baylor motored to Cuero.
Saturday.
Mrs. W. W. McCormick Sr visited
It may be interesting to turn, for a moment; from: Mrs. ciaudia Barth Sunday night
tar’s expansion plan and his quarrels with the world in'. Henrv Barth attended
■ pvrieral, to look at his account book. It’s an eye-opener. |Sh0W Sunday afternoon
r jL. When Hitler came to power, the German national debt] Leonard and wiima
didn’t amount to much. It is hard to tell Just 1
^ was, because of the different kinds and values of reichmarks,
but it might have been as much as $3,000,000,000.
U The latest report, just given out, shows an acknowledged
I public debt of $11,244,000,000, of which $4,000,000,000 has been
Ided in this last year.
" But this is apparently ony a part of the real debt. Other
pores seem to admit that the government owes more than
natural re-
el more than
experts lately
debt, including
Reader: "Please inform me of
the significance of albumin in the
urine.”
Answer—This subject was taken
up very fully in the column about
two weeks ago. Briefly, albumin
figpears in the urine during fevers
•fid sometimes in young people it
appears when they have been on
their feet too much (orthostatic
albuminuria). Usually it means
some kidney degeneration.
R. M. H.: "Please tell me what
causes one to have a sore tongue
and the corners of the mouth to be-
come sore and inflamed. Frequently
there are blisters on the tongue, ac-
companied by general sensitive-
ness.”
Answer—A frequent cause is
anemia. Another frequent cause is
lack of fresh fruits and vegetables
in the diet. It may be a functional
nervous disorder similar to fever
blisters.
iTr
Morning
! uvrv0i! l occsu piusai
i ly poor. Let’s look at this one.”
And besides.
j ing and last night the little fellow
suffered a great deal.
spent
!
HEAD THIS FIRST.
Eieanut Cvmoy. 18. decides to try
: for a newspaper job when she learns
' that hei sister s approaching marriage
! will deprive tier of a course at Ousi-
uess college. Phil Parrish, one of the
I reporters, begins to show an interest
in Eleanor. After several months on
' the paper. Eleanor realizes she is in
, love-with Phil. Returning from a va-
cation Phii surprises Eleanor by tcll-
He asks her to marry him and
Benign growths usually hfive a lim-
iting membrane. They never spread
to other parts of the body. Malig-
nant cells grow among normal cells
and prevent the latter from func-
tioning normally. Unless adequate-
ly treated, cancer cells spread to
* n j o 1“ mi. • i °ther Parts of the body.
to Boyden Sparkes. The sincere, I How can we tell if a growth is
, modest, invincible spirit of the man cancer? By examining a small por-
I emerges in this reticle. Without bid- fjon suspected tissue under
j ding for sympathy or asking quar- . the microscope.
for OUr own j ter, the businessman—a mill owner 1 - • • - -
-aiscusses some oi me tmngs wmen cer? No e t in carcer of bone
give him the most worry in his job. I nerve ti33Ue Pain IlsUQ|Iv k a h
Chief among these are strikes j
which he calls hideously wasteful. [
1 “The people on iny mill payroll 1
I never want to strike, it seems to i
me,” he says. “Why, I know most of '
them by name and we are friends. )
Yet they are being told in insidious
ways that 1 am their enemy. I hon- i
estly believe that in these times '
strikes are a stupid form of beha- '
vior. I do not question the sincerity i
of thos$ who promote strikes, but
before God,f I question their intelli- *
gence and their fitness to be treated i
as leaders of human beings.
The next most pressing worry is 1
' how to get orders for goods at a
I price on which the mill can make a
j profit. This is a widespread problem I
> with all manufacturers w ho find that !
their customers are unwilling to
carry any inventory and send in
rush orders for amounts—too small i
to even bother wuh in normal times.
Taxes are a prevalent scourge of
j this industry. When there is a profit, i
; taxes can take a large part of it.
' When there is no profit or even i
I when there is a loss, heavy taxes go !
on. “Taxes are so high today and so ;
. . . . .. „ I sure to be higher, that I am afraid ,
* An American who understood those five great documents; they will b<- the end of
4vould understand what democracy is and how it may be pre-1
•erved, and also the foundations upon which a true and last-1
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Putman, Harry C. The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 83, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 12, 1939, newspaper, April 12, 1939; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1357921/m1/4/: accessed July 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cuero Public Library.