The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 135, Ed. 1 Sunday, June 11, 1939 Page: 2 of 6
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939
SUNDAY, JUNE 1
PAGE TWO
THE CUERO RECORD, CUERO, TEXAS
he
37 YEARS AGO •
Morning
•*.
S'.
''I
WASHINGTON, June
TELEPHONE NO. L
awful Gardens
Mrs.
&
That catalogues politicians.
t
E ,13
J*
N.
i.
i
•vtf
loss of hearing. Twenty-five per
3
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6
1
7
&
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II
12
i
IN
13
/5
16
l&
17
■
20
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21
Y
22
i
26
2N
23
27
21?
30
31
32
33
3W
35
37
33
military,”
Bashan
j '
N
Seems as if there’s been an
unnecessary to-do in this
-
Copyright, 1959. Kmg f'ihun Symikite. •
AIN
Mi
ftf
girt
now
■H|A
s]a
L
2&
25
hot dogs.
X
■
to the already-
would be legal.
President I
Publisher
Editor
Sports Editor
By Wilbur Dodgebullet
(Record Staff Imaginator.)
fc
0
I
f jt
fl
I
23—Flattened
at the
poles
27—To miss
20—Capital of
Latvia
30— Small
child
31— Artificial
channel of
water
32— A viper
34— Hail!
35— An elec-
trified
particle
87— Hawaiian
wreath
88— R '.ver in
West
Virginia
36 i
dE
r cl
T
R
t
7
28—Muddle
30— River in
Africa
31— Sliding
piece on a
wheel
33—Snake-like
11 sh
THE CUERO RECORD
Established in 1894
Published Each Afternoon, Except Saturday, and
by THE CUERO PUBLISHING CO..
» 5
1 /. fACTi
Mr 'od .«■*-
resolution com-J1-7 for relaxation at
' Fjir
rnittee presented the following reso- • __
■d y
I
Sunday
Inc.
HTownTalk.
Continued From Page 1
dry ' colored children within the schplas-
,^r>.
----------- J f -M }*►
S. C. Lackey and Mr. jWMliqms
5
M
I
L
T
g
F
E
M
£
L_
RAI
Answer to previous pustie
A
_T
L
E
N
E
R
V
E
DALY CROSS WORD PUZZLE
2
L
L
E_
y
1
Ki<.’.'v ______
MRS. J. C. HOWERTON
JACK HOWERTON
HARRY C. PUTMAN .......
tfcTE HOWERTON
, FEDERATION
HOLDS MEETING
'' t,
1— U. S Su-
preme
Court jus-
tice, who
died 1938
2— Go in haste
3— Dispute
4— Solitary
6—Type
measure
among .K"
Moslem®’
DOWN
6— System
7— Covering
for the
hand
8— Ninth day
before the
ides in the
Roman
calendar
9— An ovum
'$1
Think how annoying It would be
for Jack to have a girl around who
gazes ga-ga-eyed when he looms
up. I’ve always hated women who
wanted men who loved other wom-
en.”
“Jack hasn’t seen me much for
so long. Maybe he—feels that
way, too."
H
■ t
1 But there's always-a heckler ini ....
(every campaign. Some bird, doubt- suage mv heckler.
on 1
11 ,‘iition bloc, wanted to know what
ACROSS
1—Who was
a famous
king of the
Franks?
10— Mien
11— Single unit
12— Bulky piece
ot timber
13— One of the
daughters
of King
Lear
15—Strip of
leather
17— Employ
18— Own
19— Lyric
poems
20— Humblest
22—Title of
honor
among
rf
■
■
-<£31
* The eyelash industry doesn’t seem to be doing
lately. It’s surprising how many girls are wearing their own.
’■> ____________
They were asking for their Bible
school teacher, who was Sarah
Anne. They wanted to be told
stories. The doctor thought their
wish should be gratified, so they
would relax, maybe go to sleep.
It was an hour or more before
she was able to slip from the room.
The big hospital was quiet Night
lights burned down the corridor.
Bob’s room was around the hall, in
the left wing.
She decided to look in on him,
for a moment She stopped, in sud-
den surprise, at a tall figure sil-
houetted in the wide window at the
end of the wing.
She knew the profile, the width
of the shoulders, the clean lines of
the long body. It was Jack. But
even at this distance she got the
bafflement in his posture.
He did not know what to do
about something. Maybe his ship
and Bob and the destructive force
that had tried to reach him and
touched another man. Maybe about
Judith. Poor Judith!
She would not talk to him now.
She would look at Bob and go
home. She expected to find him
asleep and alone. Instead, a nurse
in a stiff white dress was sitting in
the circle of light made by a read-
ing lamp and Bob was awake.
| He grinned and held out his
A
P
E_
■f
a]w|a|r
b|a|s|k|s
N
YESTERDAY: Sarah Anne sees a pla-
crash at the airport. Out of t
wreckage tumbles Bob Kennedy v. it
a broken leg. At the hospital s!
learns he is a close friend of Jack s
1
DODGEBULLET.. •Correspondent Plenipotentiary
J_
o
|T1H|U|G
fIsM
■p[u|p
11
E~|S|5
our first American hospital, the
Pennsylvania Hospital in Philadel-
phia.
The more one knows of Benjamin
Franklin, the greater he becomes.
and he is inventing^ f ------
FUfiA,".! “«»- i;j» A.n EDITOR’S NOTE: Dr. Clendenin! has
■even pamphlet* which can be obtained by
renders. Each pamphlet sells for 10 cents.
For any one pamphlet desired, send 10
cents in coin, and a seif-addressed envelope
stamped with a three-eent stamp, to Dr.
Logan Clendening, in care of this paper.
The pamphlet* are: "Three Weeks’ Reduc-
ing Diet". "Indigestion and Constipation",
“Reducing and Gaining”. “Infant Feed-
ing”. “Instructions for the Treatment of
Diabetes”, “Feminine Hygiene” and “Th*
Care of the Hair and Skin.”
metropolitan noises — radios, traffic
sounds, horn«blowing automobile
drivers, asses who sit in traffic with ‘
their hands on the horn.
I salute Dr. Knudsen, and convey
his recommendations to the people
who run our large cities who could
restrict and minimize noises by 70 j
per cent. Schopenhauer said that a |
man’s intelligence could be meas- i
ured by his sensitiveness to noise. (
The United States birth rato
is rising after a decline for a
few years. 1937 and1938 showed
an upturn for the first time
since 1920. The 1938 birth rate
in the United States is 17.8
births per 1000 population.
““ Ehtered in the post office at Cuero, Texas, as second class matter
Under Act of Congress. March 3, 1897.
.......- .....
The mechanical age never wins a complete victory. Men
i^ary of automobiles and come back to race horses, and boys
swing back from powerboats to sailboats.
The title, “Father of American
Medicine,” according to the Health I
Officer, belongs to Benjamin Frank-
lin. Although not a doctor of medi-
cine, he was a good, all-round scien-
tist, a member of the Medical Society
of Paris, and the Medical Society of
London. His claims rest on his work
in hygiene, in which field he recom-
mended fresh air, exercise and bath-
ing. In preventive medicine he was
an early advocate of smallpox inoc-
ulation. He invented two practical
medical, devices-—bifocal spectacles,
and the flexible catheter. He de-
scribed an epidemic of lead poison-
ing which he called the “dry belly-
ache.” In the field of psychiatry he
' Wfi
Sap train this evening.- Mr., Williams %
represents the Deering Machine Co.
and goes out to put in a copj .grind- .
er- I < j
— ~ ■ t
Mrs. E. Bonham, who for the past |
few weeks has been in tlie hQfptal
here returned to her home inQqJiad
1 ; -v»m
—
Mrs J. B. Chaddock left fpo^Vic-
■ well Dodge- i toria thts evening where sije Ao
so .smart, tell how be at the bedside ot her ^iappjater,
the *Passamaquoddy Mrs. F. C. Weber, who is quHftfiiek.
above! What in the; * Hollan came in
Pussamaquoddy? If he'd is evening and reportedtr
me about Tunisia. Al-;“?at wa* -H« also
I Home Circle No. 2 as doing
—— r»
• 11
tool 3
It is seldom- Cuero experience®
such a dull day as was toddyt AUtane
time this afternoon, betwdMUfl and
3 o’clock, not a person couidsM*w«ii
on Main street except a boakrtdaek,....
and he as a' general
mighty little trade.
CHAPTER EIGHT
SITTING AT the parsonage din-
ing room table, eating big red
strawberries from dark blue bowls,
Sarah Anne and Judith and Jack
might have been the three sympa-
thetic people who had gone to the
raft the night before
But Sarah Anne knew they were
not Something had happened to-
day. Something had happened to
these two whov zoomed away in
that ship this morning for a brief
day that bad turned out to be a
long day.
Now she smiled at Jack as she
waited for his news, not even re-
membering how troubled and
mussed her frock and hair were,
not caring that Judith wore a yel-
low suit with a saucy brown turban
and wide brown belt studded with
gold nail heads.
“Lady, I hereby announce that I
take charge of the local flying
field,” Jack said with mock cere-
mony. “Besides, I shall become the
head of a small school in aeronau-
tics about-to be opened in your fair
city. The plans went through to-
day."
Not for worlds would Sarah
Anne have said the next words had
she been less tired, less troubled.
She wanted to reach out, take
them from the air, destroy them
once they were said: “So ’Judith
knew it first?”
But maybe it was better she said
them, she thought later. For no one
could have failed to catch the
swift look which passed between
the two, a look -hat said: “She
knows! But she must i’t know! We
won’t tell, ever!”
Sarah Anne turned her remark
into a jest the next minute, and
her voice laughed. “That isn’t fair,
• darling! Didn’t I say prayers for
you all the way across the ocean?
But it’s marvelous. You’ll be living
right here all of the time!”
“You and I will be living right
here all cf the time,” Jack correct-
ed, and reached for her hand. “It
took a long time to get the papers
signed—a lot of red tape.”
Maybe she was being silly be-
cause she was so weary, maybe
this pressure of Jack’s hand was
as real as she wanted it to be,
maybe she had better stop using
her imagination. Anyway, Jack I their temperatures were higher,
must kflftabout Bob.
He amrrt wait half a minute
when he heard the news. His eyes
narrowed, he asked a few terse
questions, then he was at the door.
“What’s he like, this Bob?”
Judith asked.
“Something like Jack, only-
well, he laughs at everything, even
shattered legs. Happy-go-lucky, I
guess. But I liked him. You will,
too. You’ll have a long time to get
acquainted. You can read to him—”
“I don’t like to read to people."
Her voice was a little annoyed, yet
Judith was usually patient. "You
take on the job. Besides, I won’t
ke here.”
“YcM'rr ^clng to the mountains
cr seashore ?•* Funny to be re-
lieved. though. “Oh, you can’t! You
have to be my maid of honor. Ycu
8,ee, It will be a church wedding
because the whole church should
come.”
“It’s to be scon?” She looked up
brightly. “Maybe I will stay over.
No, I m not going to the shore or
mountains. 1 think It will be Eu-
rope."
Sarah Anne asked the next ques-
tion softly, because she knew the
answer before she spoke.
"Why. Judy?"
“Because I fell in love with the
wrong flying guy, Sally Anne deac- |
Just my luck, and 1 think I’ll be a’hand. “Do you live here, too?”
nicer person If 1 go traveling. I The nurse stood up, anxiety Ln
They came down the hospital steps haad ia hand.
her face. “But visiting hours aj
over for everyone but families, an
I; « *
coll day will be observed in recog- ;,,f a “°rnin8- what will be one’s tak^ or leave it alone.
' . ■ nlnnlz I 1 Iy»-a/-I
nitjon of this marvelous gift.
Mrs. DuBose gave a report on the ! *s a^°ut on^
entertainment program, , - - . . i
thp Tnninr rinh hinmiet was ont-'1 arose Just war coiF^spon-! tears welled up into mv big brown take care of on such short notice, i you
s?andYng and all foXl of entertX i ™ ^ve from arduous duties in (eyes. j Of course. I ran for gov™, project.”
ment were roval Mrs Kqehler,;Uie forei«n field 1 had come ; I thought what a lot of service I i year on the platform of "Two tayi ( Heavens
chairman of the resolution com-:for relaxation at the World’s | could be to my country for $75,000 pons on every hook.” but as jfou world was
;FJir. a year. 1 know. I was suffocated in a cloud of j only asked
flour. ! bania. or the Free City of Danzig. I
• My friends,” I said, “I’d rather could have fixed him up. Well.
, have a little time to ?vork out my j there was nothing left to do but fall
platform. But I can give you a back on an old political trick, to-
general outline of it now. With- wit: When in doubt, quote a quo-
, out hesitation I got on recort unequi- tation. So I braced myself and de-
i vocally for economy in government; blared in self-assured tone:
reduction in taxes; neutrality; social “Sir. Thermopylae had its mes-
| security: and I pledge to aHeviate senger of defeat, but Passamaquoddy
' " .'L’» of the down-trsdden had none."
By LOGAN CLENDENING, M. D. turbed* sleep and frayed nerves for ( farmer.”
1 figured that ought to hold the face.
Dr. Clendening’s
Medical Scrapbook
----------- Society pays a heavy toll in dis- the plight
' Subaeriptlon Rates:
: * By Mail or Carrier—Dally and Bunday, One year $5.00, six months
$2A0, three montbs fil-25. one month 50c.
ifftaskky Edition by mall only, one year 82.00; six months 81.00 in DeWitt I
«n4;>4jolnAng counties. Elsewhere, i year $225, 6 months $1.26.
Organ of ths City of »hiero and DeWitt County.
IL- r-
»■ -■** ■■
Bag Trouble
Some of the pilnor. prdblem^ art a4 troublesome
ft the major ones, particularly for the people whose job it is
W solve them. , . --
* There’s the superintendent of schools of Decatur, Ill. I
General Assembly, in a moment of patriotic fervor, pass- jbv a group of smiley young people, j
of physics at the University of Cal-i
ifornia, laments that Nature did not'
provide us with a way of shutting
our ears as she did our eyes. We
need “ear lids,” ’ ’ ’ 5 "
j an efficient artificial “ear lid” de-
vice. Prolonged exposure to the1
noises incident to many occupations
(riveting; pneumatic drilling, forg-
i ing, etc.) may result in permanent
loss of hearing. Twenty-five per
cent of all cases of nerveCbr cochlear
impairment of hearing result from
better j exposure to such occupational noise.
.1 _____
a bill requiring that every school room contain a flag of
United States. A minimum size was fixed.
j The new law took Decatur, at least, by surprise. The
fthool budget made no provision for flag-buying, and there
are 330 school rooms which must be so equipped. The flags
dpght to be of good enough quality to last more than a school
yiar. The superintendent has figured that if he goes ahead
i orders flags of the most suitable size and quality it will
— an unauthorized expenditure of $1,380
tardened budget. He wonders whether that
fe may break the law either way, getting the flags or going
without them.
That is the way with many of. our ordinances and laws,
local, state and national.
fe-Discovered Continent
• Western Reserve University’s summer institute on cur-
iSnt affairs this year will be a discussion of inter-American
■pblems. The general title is “The Americas in World Affairs.”
4)0 speakers'will come from both North and South America,
including representatives of professional groups as well as in-
tftstry and trade.
4 This is one of many evidences of our rapidly growing
awareness of our southern neighbors and our mutual interests,
pother is the recent rise in traffic through the Panama Ca-
rQU, much of the increase caused by new cruisers and tours
^ound South America.
• A few years ago Latin-America was not much more than
Aection of geography we studied in school and forgot about
Ijter. Explorers occasionally got lost in the Amazon jungles.
Archeologists talked about the Maya and Inca Indians and
(©covered ruins of their ancient structures. We knew of comic
cetera revolutions, and we landed Marines
pftces.
Today we have discovered a continent full of sister re-
jflilics, nations with interesting cultures of their own, modern
(ftles and much up-to-date social legislation, melting pots in-
t$which have gone representatives of most of the European
I^oples and out of which have come independent nations. It
i||a belated but tremendously important discovery.
Uh __
x Our Decoration Day parades might be called
twt they are not “militaristic.”
THE TWO great expositions this
year naturally record many medical
advances. I shall have occasion to
describe them to my readers in due
course of time.
At the New York Fair one ex-
hibit is called “The Maze of Super-
stition,” and deals not with ad-
vances but with the age-old enemy
of progress in medicine. In this ex-
hibit the “Medicine Man” is shown
w—■— ..... — ■ . .....- -
Dr. Clendening will answer
questions of general interest
only, and then only through
his column.
in action. The “Medicine Man” be-
longed not only to the American In-
dian, but to all races and countries.
Indeed, he still exists in the form
of fortune tellers, numero)ogist%
healers with magic papers* laying
. . rteiw
ous herbs, etc., etc. “Black Magic*
still endangers the work of the pri-
vate physician and of public health
—
It is estimated that at least h
30 babies will be bom on the 1
grounds of the New York
World’s Fair. AU provisions >
are made for these blessed x
events. It is also estimated that J
40,000 persons will require some 1
mxziical aid at the Fair. Pro- 1
vision is also made for them. *
There will be ten first-aid sta- :■
tions, a mobile X-ray unit, and ’ .
a staff of 100 nurses and doctors. ’ unmasked mesmerism. And he was
* the prime mover in the founding of
Dr. Vera O. Knudsen, professor
_—__—___A A. _TT_* • > a
A. . l°t
provide us with a way of shutting
i “My friends." I said,
j honor vou would give me — I ni; *'
I : X.
! sure I don’t deserve it — I’m un- ■ ‘
worthy of such a trust. What’s ’.he! r
j matter with Garner or Roosevelt or |
I Dewey or Vandenberge?”
i "What’s Garner got that Dodge- ;
j bullet hasn't got?” they wanted tol
I know. "Or for that rtlatter Roose- i
j velt?”
"Well, friends, Jack Garner has □ !
i Hitler. Chamberlain. Stalin. Mus-. pair of eyebrows that I can’t tou-.h
(solini and other professional bud-' with a 10-foot pole.
(EDITOR’S NOTE:—A mythical I di’s of mine had promised id send 1 ists alone will practically elect Him.
war correspondent globetrotter and (me a postcard if anything big broke And Mr. Roosevelt has a record to
I interna tipnally^ ] run on. 1
So what happens? So my U. S. ■ Taft have hopes.
Dodgebullet-for- got?”
You know how one of those favor-
ite son booms'are. It doesn't mat-
ter whether you're qualified or not;
(Continued from Page 1)
! of today was the thought of war. j
I We should studv the problems of
| youth and sympathize with the
young people. She stated further
that, the home is the natural set-
ting for the youth and here is
where the proper training should
be given. She reported , that the
Junior clubs of this district are ;
sponsoring a home for crippled chil- ; adviser to kings, dictators and peo- i ii
dren at Marlin. Mrs. Boothe also pie, Wilbur Dodgebullet is covering I •
told of Mrs. Driscoll presenting the ; in his highly improbable manner i friends - tart a
i <ji trx- events here and there over the world. President boom!
as to clear the debt on said club i Don’t take his make-believe seri-i Fiankly, that threw me. They
house in Austin: she said Mrs Dris- fously; we don’t) ' cornered me on the .steps of the cap-
coll said this was a serviq£< she I - ------ I’1'1 b^..t-=d me to their shoulders , it's favorite son or bust,
wanted to render so 1080 clubs j WASHINGTON, June 10 —Well • and began a noisy demonstration for ' 1_
would have a right to enjoy thisi”ir- th'ie’s one thin8 :’bout lifeI
club home. In the fall a Clara Dris- |One never knows, when one gets up. Well I always was one who could less
. ------1.’ ■_ J __ '----- ------- But as L,------
•destiny before night s cloak again i looked down into that sea of up- my platform was.
(turned faces, all shouting, "Dodge- ' Boy. he had me there.
lution:
Whereas, It has pleased God, in i
his gracious goodness, to give to i
Texas Mrs. Clara Driscoll of Cor- |
pus Christi, who has served this '
State and the men and women
thereof in. many and various ways,
but who is known as “The Savior of
The Alamo” throughout the length
and breadth of the land becatre of
her magnificent gift of Texas’ '
Shrine of Liberty, when it stood in i
imminent danger of destruction, and !
Whereas, Once again, Mrs. Clara ■
Driscoll has been moved by gener- j
osity and deep understanding of •'
the common heart of worn? nhood to:
essay the role of savior in freeing
the Texas Federation of Women’s
clubs from the overpov/ering debt!
against the state headquarters I
building at Austin, thus releasing
the organization from virtual en-
slavement to greater services to hu- I
manity, therefore be it
Resolved, that the DeWitt County
Federation does hereby express to
Mrs. Driscoll its gratitude and as-
sure her that in the hearts of the
1100 members of this organization
she will be held in loving remem- j
SYNOPSIS
SARAH ANNE MELTON, glister’s
daughter and close friend or
JUDITH DRAKE, daughter of luxurj
had a childhood romance with
JACK COURTNEY, who attains sud
den fame by flying the Pacific.
Judith shook her bright head, j down and planted a kiss^swif^
“No, honey. It’s been you, in his
watch case, his pocket, his heart,
always. S®rry I got maudlin. Skip
it, won’t you ? I’m going home and
to bed.”
Twenty-four hours could upset
the world, 8*rah Anne was think-
ing, as she sat curled up in the
swing. Twenty-four hours could
make a war, break a heart, destroy
a country with cyclone or gas,
could put a chasm between two
people, or throw a footbridge
across a chasm.
The telephone was ringing and
she reached it before Mattie came
from the kitchen. “Yes . . . yes,
this is Sarah Anne. . . . They want
me? Oh, surely, I’ll be right there.
Instantly."
The Miller twins were nervous,
14—Abeustof lurxisa
burden magistrate
16—Turn to the' 27—A craze
left
20— Falsehood
21— Winged
shoes
22— Russian
leader
24— Well done!
(It.)
25— Cklh made 36—King of
of flax Eashan
JUNE 11. 1902
J. A. Groves, tlie hustling
The cartoon-ig(XMlK man. ; pent last night in Yoa-'jic age. or a total of 772. «
' kuin looking after his business in-
.vrw-n <1 Jt-uuiu V) - — ■■■■■»■ KJ. Ky. DOLAcy oxiva
Dewey, Vandenberg and niost fastidious of opponents as far (left fof the Weldon rojich, , on^the
. But What've I pb-informs go.
“And. oh yes. — tariff! I al-
most forgot I am for tariff in a big
way. In fact. I might go so far as
to say that tariff is the backbone of
my nlatfonn."
Even that didn't completely as-
They must have
the payroll of the oppo-! given him a bonus for working on this morning,
i me.
“So .reti re going to run for presi-
1V U1, W1V ( .. That's ■ dent. eh?, he raid,
site said i ’ For instance. a couple of days ago ! bullet for President!" and “Speech!" [ one little item I hadn’t had time to; bullet, if you're
! T orot’rt n»-»o ♦ »* 1170 v r'ac?r\r»»-. i I, tn!/o Z>O 1’0 Cif Ztt"» Qlloll Oil
this great ’ * ¥¥ ** ¥ 9 terests there. It is rumored 1
* is figuring on purchasing
¥ lot in that city.
Af
j.- if. >r
(The following interesting
item; we Clipped from an is-
sue of The Record of the year
1902:
L MNwftoo much sinful individualism, it seems, still survives in
Jhe hearts of collectivised Russian farmers. It seems to be
jiuman nature for a man to want to eat what he himself has
Raised, and even to hold out a little . surplus to trade to a
neighbor for something-else he needs. So the Soviet govern-
ment has had to crack down again on the peasants.
& Peasants they are now, as they used to be under the au-
tocratic czars, although for a few years after the recent rev-
Jrtution, when they grabbed the land they had farmed as
Jerfs, they were their own masters. Rural Bolshevism seems
Jo be merely a new and more efficient copy of the old regime,
k In every farming community under the present system,
<he bulk of the land is held and operated in common as a lo-
tal unit, producing crops for general use and contributing a
%xed share to the state. The government, however, recog-
nizes that even socialized man has a taint of the old Adam
•eft in him. So it has allowed farm workers to possess pri-
vaU garden plots varying from half an acre to two and a half
acres, according t^.f^^tility. It is here that the innate wick-
idness of the human heart appears. Farmers have cheated
<$y enlarging their family gardens and holding out on the
government.
J So h*6m now on, every garden will be carefully measured
gnd the rights of the collective state safeguarded against
juch skulduggery.
S It is probably local enough, and the sort of thing that
Sas to be done when a country takes that road to economic
[Uvation. But it certainly seems contrary to human nature,
Ieast white man’s nature. The old Mexicans and many
fther native tribes in this hemisphere seem to have been lo-
Sal collectivists
National Advertising Representatives:
r <exas Dally Press League, Inc., 507 Mercantile Building, Dallas. Texas;
affitt T^singtnn Avenue, New York City, 180 Michigan Avenue, Chicago,
HF* 80S. Star Building, St. Louis, Mo., 801 Interstate Building, Kansas
• oevn® KY_____v.____ T ent* Annaloo • 1A£
ioo»Street, San Francisco, Calif.
oh au r ■ |
: -“■•n IF
nM-HTj-.jlJ
lifted
John North was among,a^riv-
‘ My. my. but he turned red in the als on the 8:20 train this ^nprning
from the north. r, -
WRITTEN TOR AND RELEASED BY I / Sy/f£LENW£l5M^\
- CENTRAL PRESS ASSOCIATION ’■ itiUlrf l
I aiM !.
wnpd f ‘ f'
<• 4i tar-
x gnibn*<
brance always, that their children ; on of hands, spiritualism, myste:
and children’s children shall know
her and revere her, and that, in i
their homes her name will stand [
symbolic of patriotism, generosity^
and gracious humility, and that th/j
secretary of this organization be’j
instructed to set aside a page in her
book for this Resolution and to
transmit a copy of same to Mrs.
Clara Driscoll.
X • Signed; a .
Mrs. Fritz Koehler 1
Mrs. S. P. Boothe
Mrs. E. H. Putman. I
A musical program was rendered
A COMPLETE PRINTING
Yes, we’re a queer race. Kindly people like to read murder *"“*• 7716 Cuero Record is
Bfthd-murdereM like to read sentimental stories. Librar- P*5 81VP vou the best for »he
ians and prison officials are authority for this statement. least.
las follows: Piano solo. Miss Martha
Smith; Violin solo, Louis Patter-
son: Flute and Trumpet duet, Mor-
ris and Louis Patterson; Piano Trio,
Misses Nelda Jean Patterson, Made-
line Anglica and Martha Smith, j
Miss Gaston introduced Miss I
Myrtle Murry, the main speaker of;
the day. Miss Murry is Home Dem-
onstration agent for District 10. She
spoke on urban and inter-urban re-
lationship. She said the poor and
rich alike should have I "
homes in which to rear boys and
girls. She told how we depended on
the soil, then haw we are dependent |
on industry, each being interdepend- [
ent to make a life and a living. She
stated making a life was more im- i
portant than making a living. Home !
makers must know more than ‘
cook, sew etc.- They must know
how to live, she said we all can- ;
not have money, but we can all use j
our opportunities, a home maker j
must be an executive. There must I
be a business side to home making •
and the boys and girls of the home I
can share in this if the home is a <
well directed, one. Boys and girls,
must be taught to be honest she ;
said, that when they take part in J
contests etc, the fundamental of j
honesty, should be stressed. The
afternoon was given over to club j
reports.
At noon during an hour s recess a
chicken dinner was served by the
Westhoff clubs. This proved an en-
joyable hour as the women from all *
four corners of the county chatted |
and had a real visit. The meeting .
in odd-sounding I Thc Fe
=» | win meet in Nordheim m Septem- .
I ber.
Mrs. Nic L. Ladner
DeWitt Co. Federation Reporter.
m! Ic “ *4
AkUBIO'i-'
then only on the direst emergen.
cies."
“It’s afl right,” the remariotbi*
young man said lightly. “This I®
my fiancee. I always have to kisi
her goodnight” Then his tv®
strong hands pulled Sarah
commanding, for all its lightne^
on her startled red lips. “Now rx£
home," he said.
’T think you’re crazy,” she tor
him slowly.
“It was my leg that ‘gF
bumped.” he answered. “Jack w* ’
here a minute ago. He’ll take ytd
home.”
Sarah Amne was glad that a®,
did not meet Jack until she reacl£
the main entrance. He looked Q
inquiringly, and she said:
Miller twins needed a dose of Dao
and Daniel, so I brought it Tn
look tired.”
She was glad that he couliM
hear her heart jumping throqh
hoops. That cock-eyed, preposW
ous, dare-devil young aviator nedr « .
ed a lesson. Didn't he know Ag .... !
loved Jack? Well, she would ff
him fast enough.
“I’m worried,” Jack said simQ,
as he used to do. “Somebody w«-
ed to get me out of tke way, * <?»l
unfortunately Bob took the rap!
“Maybe he* 3 such a scattr-
brained pilot he took too ratiy ,
risks?”
She said It with such vehemqce
Jack started. “Who? Bob? Nolon
your buttons! He’s got guts-ex-
cuse the words, but it says a it—
but he doesn’t take chances. Wlat
have ycu got against the gMy?
"Nothing, except he broke 4ur
ship.” ■
"And got himself into a hepi-
taL” His tone changed. "Love®aK
honey?” ‘A* •’
He was here. He waa sm^ng:
down at her. He might have ien
killed. She forgot her wornes.tror-
got the little fear that had Wwn
after het like a midget wind. ’
“For always,” she answered
“And I love you, my sweet-lfo^
ever,” he said. »
They came down the wide step® >
of the hospital, hand in hand.They
were looking at each other, eqtbey
did not see the car that was paa®>
ing the entrance nor the ts
at the wheeL They did not
why that car shot ahead sud
fast and furiously, as thoi
must get somewhere in a hurry, or
get away from somewhere.
(To Bo OoattBoedl
C. B. Moore left on tlie Sap this
morning for Yorktown and other
points on business. I . .
• —»— » f »act
The scholastic census of < Cuero,
l just.completed by Assessor Grafton.
I shows 545 white children xuui,(a27 fl
sician should bp sent for. the
patient’s tight clothing should 1
be loosened at neck, chest, I
waist and he should be kept ’
warm. The patient should not j
be moved until he is breathing ;
normally and then should not |
so well be allowed to get up but •
should be carried in a lying '
position to a place where he I
can be kept warm and receive '
gfjeat democracy about feeding a King and Queen a couple of ,niPd'cal atten»'on.
hot does. - . *------
Avenue, New York City, 180 Michigan Avenue, Chicago,
, M6.; KX15 New Orpheum Building, Los Angeles, Calif.; 105 San- $104,000 to the club women of Tex-
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Putman, Harry C. The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 135, Ed. 1 Sunday, June 11, 1939, newspaper, June 11, 1939; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1357972/m1/2/: accessed July 12, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cuero Public Library.