The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 136, Ed. 1 Monday, June 12, 1939 Page: 1 of 6
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Tex
Univ.
TELEPHONE NO. 1
Hccovd
THE WEATHER
r
•1
A NEWSPAPER REFLECTS ITS COMMUNITY
CUERO. TEXAS, MONDAY, JUNE 12. 1939
Annenburg Judge
VOTE IS 68 TO 60
I
£
:• J
PICKETT TO SPEAK
£1
■>-
■ f-
1
I
■
by
men per mile. Beck said.
I
1 1 9
29 3 4 34
PHILADELPHIA, Pa ,
the planes
!
Slovak
on the
I
f
t
I
I
A '
ersville-Exlensions
Planned
esl Regular Session
In History
Jaroszewski Family
Holds Reunion Here
' Lumberman's
Assn. Slated To Address
Gathering
DISTRICT IN
SESSION HERE
Tiny Pig Weighing
30 Ounces Owned
By Cuero Youth
trouB in the
Southern
to induce
fuse -to go home until the problem of
financing old age pensions is solv-
H. L.
New'
financing old age pensions is
led.
SHANGHAI.
—An official
launched today into
1500,000 in taxes between J 933
and 1938.
r
i
I
K*'
TEXAS HOUSE
REFUSES SET
* I
Cuero Lutherans
Attend District Meet
In Goliad Sunday
—
Approximately one hundred coun-
; I
W Cucri
traveled to «
E.
NINTH INNING
RALLY SCORES
WINNING Rl
MU1M H0U>J BUDS
on all of the economic and so-
often
come with the industrializa-
tion of a region is a problem
i "When the supreme test of war
comes—and I hope it never will—
com
I
r
Mostly cloudy, local thunder-
showers north portion tonight and
Tuesday. Cooler north central per-
tion tonight. Wanner Tuesday. ^’'^3
Small Asks Permission To
Introduce Bill In
Senate
Second Staking Crew At
Work Today Beck
Reports
ments in national life.”
This was the significant burden
com-
the
The Kleberg and Congressman Lyndon
1939 wine reportedly made more than 20 B. Johnson of Texas. Miss Fore now,
thereafter the guests at the banquet violently ill. is connected with the state office of j
Members of the F. D. Jaroszewski
family attended a reunion and out-.;
June
12. (INS.q—Byron Nelson, a
long-legged voung Texan play-
ing out of Reading, Pa., today
won the Rational Open Golf
Champknship by subduing and
almost swamp.ing Craig Wood,
htrky, hard-hitting Mamoro-
neck, N. Y.. veteran in the :ec-
and 18 hole play-off for the title.
ab r h
4 1 2 2 4-^
1 3 1 •
1 0 • •
1 9 9 9
Grant, cf.-lb.
j MOSS, SS. .
1 Gordon, lf'-cf.
They will make j Kashouty, rf.
! Hickox, If. ...
j Pickett, c.
fl
i >
fl
t ■ ■■■. fl
Il 1
■. 41
■i
i
B I
1
WEST POINT, June-12.—(INS.) j Rev. Edward Blown
Conducts High Mass
Al Cuero Church
•.‘'3
a ' * ■■■■■ j
"vX;
L/brai?.
AUSTIN, June 12—(INS.)—East
Texas proration, as enforced
the Texas Railroad Commission, was
ing at the Cuero Municipal Park!
Bunday.
About 100 attended. The par- ’
ents are both dead but the following
the Lutheran churches in s°ns and daughters and their farni-
Funeral I this section gathered in Goliad Sun-
k 1
OIL PRORATION
HELD INVALID
Measure Is Confiscatory'
secretary of the Herman of the Cuero Lumber Co., and J. T. [ Federal Judge McMil- |
■ Ian Rules
Funeral Services
- ‘Held Al Yorktown
Sunday For H. G. Gips
' Special to The Record.
YORKTOWN. Texas, June 12.
F W i
0
W '* i
O ..J
to jfl
A second REA staking crew I
was on the job Monday morn-
ing and was driving- first
cooperates, Cuero stakes on a rural electric line
toward Concrete, C. W. Beck,
REA superintendent said.
The first staking crew, also
on the job, was making good1
progress, and was about to go
into Meyersville, Beck report-
ed.
At the same time the project su-
l an i
E^nge
The changes
laws proposed are .<
statutory tax is passed, and longer those suggested by Secretary of the and
’ a constitutional amendment
i favored.
Mrs. Annie L. Flick, long time
in at Cuero resident, widow of the late R.
I C. Flick and mother of. Raymond
■. Flick, Cuero business leader, died
at her home on Espianace Street
D
a
( Services were dances, one a rope tap, and the
Cw.x, held at the home at 4:30 p. m. Sun- other a routine tap. Mrs. A. J.
who became one of thTcity’s lead- day afternoon and interment was Philips will be accompanist.
----j Towns represented will be Vic-
Mr Gips died in the Allen hos-(toria, Refugio, Hallettsville. York-
,” 2, Nordheim, Runge,
died ini 1924i andi thebusinessbees Juries received when he was struck Gonzales, Shinto, Moulton, Flatonia,
tablished is now being carried on , -
successfully by their son. R. F. post office Tuesday afternoon. i Cuero.
Flick, who has taken his father’s I Mr- GiPs was secretary of the: Arrangements for the meeting
place in the local business world. Garfield
He survives, as does- their only L®* was
I
' -1
'i- -1
PT? W’
L ’
dent whose home is located
the proposed lines of
Electric Cooperative to send
- {UEJk-oOce in the city hall duero j
g as prouhptiy1 as possible,” he added. ,
peck said there are still a few
easements to be secured before the ’
lines can be completed and request-
ed cooperation of the land owners in Pected
At the request of Senator Joe Hill
jof Henderson, who wanted, time to
talk it .over with Smail. Small with-
btn guilty Of parking our au- drew his request temporarily,
tooblle over the line on I Four-fifths of tlw Senate
rrw. O 4. concur before the bill
m»e than one occasion. Sat-
uny there were at least n the new law
ordi-1 nuuiiUii nan
.1 the i
Miss Ann Montgomay, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Montgomery
of Austin, was married on June 7th j
st Christ Episcopal church. Houston,
to F. M. Gibson.
their home in Houston.
The bride and her family made
Cuero their home for many years, I
and she is a graduate of the Cuero j
public schools. Her many friends
the 1 military academy.
PREPICT EARLY GERMAN
O< < I ’PATION OF SLOVAKIA
I LONDON. June 12 (INS)- Early
German occupation of Slovakia was |
by occupants
military
F r
Kk :? -
If ij t
< ’ It
' —
>OL. 45.—NO. 136. 66
L /.vTownTalk NEWREACREW
I? STAKING LINE
Giero Chamber of Commerce TO CONCRETE
The elders are J. C. Ley.
Mueller and J. W. Jackson,
deacons are Walter Reiflert, Louis!
Schorre, A. J. Phillips and Frank
I A. Stockton.
PENSION DELAY
IS SUGGESTED
a. (
- ■' - jfi
balls, off Martlnek 4, off Schoener 1,
off Lucas 1. Sacrifice hits Dever*
1 aux. Gordon, Woods. Struck out by
i Martinek 8. by Schoener 1, by Lucas
! 2. Umpires Newman, strikes; West- •
er. bases.
N° En.dJn_Si.9h,rFoLLon9’ Fish Fry Planned Al Mu-
nicipal Park Al
7:30 P. M.
R
010 100 100—3 1
- 003 000 001—4
SUMMA RY—Three base hit. Lu-
cas; 2 base hit. Martinek. Bases on
36 4 12 27 11 1
^Wagner batted for Stoevto ta
9th
SCORE BY INNINGS
Victoria ..
Cuero
9 yaw paper to not delivered
promptly, or yon know a Mt of
httoreitinf news. Telephone
Number L
Mrs. Zeke Fowler and two 1
sons have left for a month** g
cation trip to Dallas and other * J
points. They will be joined in, a S
few weeks by Mr Fowler and will
continue their trip to Dickens and'
Carlsbad Caverns.
Cuero Southpaw Lit
League Leaders To
Four Safeties
_____ ' 'f
K C? 'm
L St. .fl
Ofl
■
F
a '
A tiny pig weighing thirty
ounces, a week old. which can
crawl in a baking powder can
is the new possession of Roy ”
Benz.
Boy says the pig is one of a
litter of ten. It is normal in
every respect and perfectly
healthy He says he didn't know
a pig could make such a nice
pe.t.
SIX PAGES TODAY
i________ " ----------------------------
Trotters Defeat Victoria
LJVf A - Z
CLOSING DATE In Thrilling Game, 4-3
_______ !-----------------------—, x _ » »
Adjournment Resolution
Setting June 20 Is
Tabled
Head bowed, Grant Cross, of Chester, Pa., WPA instructor of athletics,
I is shown in Upper Darby, Pa., police station as he heard himself accused
appeal to of abducting Marion Chandler, 6 (shown beside him), and holding her
members of] captive for an hour in hia automobile. The little girl said he made no
effort to harm her, that he patted her head and “told me I was a pretty
little girt* • -
j : AUSTIN, June 12—(INS)—Once
l again the Texas House refused to-
,dav to set a date for the end of the
46th Legislatures regular session, al-
! ready weeks longer than any other
i [ After amending a sine die ad-
journment resolution to make the
date June 29. the House tabled the
[resolution, 68 to 60.
I The vote was construed by some
meaning that a majority will re-i Slxtv 1,,raber “”>>»■» managers j
and employees representing fifteen i
towns in District 9 of the Lumber-1
men’s Association of Texas, are ex- j
pected to be present Monday even- f
ing at a fish fry at the Cuero Mun-
icipal Park at 7:30 o’clock.
Joe Sanders, Jr., publicity direc-
I tor of the Insulite Company, ind
Neal Pjckett, secretary of the Lum-
bermen's <
[speakers on the
f 1
M j j
! in history.
1
o * w
ubort. - T . j
Johnny Grander shared the to
ors of the day as be smacktol
three base knocks in four txfejp
turned in a beautiful catch t
Schoener’s long left field foul la:
fourth.
Chief honors however went to
tie "Lefty" Martinek, Cuero's <
man hurUng staff. Limiting
Buds to four blows and driving
the Trotter’s first two taHlec w
a scorching doubje, Lefty hail
great day.
Eight Rosebuds
bench via the strikeout routi
Lefty took complete charge of
ball game from the initial inn*
THE BOX SCORE
VICTORIA ab r h
Deveraux, Sb 3 0 0 1
Lx>yd, 2b 4 • 0 • •.
■. - 40010
...... 3 1 0 1
.3 0
“Old Folks” Walter “Bully”
Wagner provided the set-up
for a sizzling single off the bat
of Monroe Kiel that broke up ,
a bang up ball game here Sun-
day afternoon between th* ?
Cuero Turkey Trotters and ’
the Victoria Rosebuds at
---,-------„ -------- 1VUCXOJ UMUgC UCLXIXCO W U1XC1 OVII
Association, will be chief listens intently as tax-evasion trial Cuerd Park. The Trotters
— program. Little 1 of Moses L. Annenberg, in Chicago, ’ 4 to 3 and sent a h4^^H
Miss Claudia Anne Kolodziej will j proceeds. The Philadelphia pub- ’ smmng throng of local fattaSI
their homes.
The score was tied at three all said
Henry Wood WM on first base as ft-
suit of his second baaeknock of the
day. when Wagner, pinch hitting
Eddie Stoever, came to bat as oUL
time Cuero fans rocked the jsfhHgJ
with their cheers. He
their confidence with a wo
ed single over second base.
Kiel walked filling the beat
M'vnrbe Kiel who broke up
game with a Texas lea
center field.
Sunday’s victory was a a
for the game was a real I
from the start.
Henry Woods was the sp
the Cuerg defer
three flashy plays
nr----------.
I aig in Brenham today to se-
cue first hand information on
tin Calvert Livestock Com- ’
to - - minion Company’s auction
sals and will bring that in-
lation back to DeWitt
ty stockmen and farm-
> opinion of the torotAMma
hber of Commerce, and^ PROGRESS REPORTED
opinion of --
, communities fjrsf (jew |s Nearing Mey-
leading stockmen that thej *
Calvwt company . is going to
be a Host valuable asset to the
farmer and stock-
this community. Wej
» one thing. If the
and the stockman of
j CUERO
. Wood, ss
■ Stoever, 3b.
•Wagner.... .... ..
G. Kiel, lb. ....
M Kiel. 2b
Speckles, rf. „..
Laufer, cf.
Woods, c
Grander, If
i Martinek, p
I-
comment
— - - '
Held on Kidnap Charge
Monroe Kiel Drives tn ]
Run After Wood And I
Wagner Hit
“average '
men «f f
do knkw
farm<
this i
is going to be one of the most
active cattle markets in this
section of the state.
¥ ♦ ¥
The Sbuthern Life Home
and Gaiden Magazine brings
us a pertinent and timely
l in the following
voiced
editorial Which we pass on to rural residents, and
our readers for their enradd- 1 DeWitt County Electric Co-op-,
ierative. who have not yet sent in
*; their house wiring agreements to do
-There are still a number who ]VTf*S Cj fP 11 C* 1AQ
have failed to send in their wiring 1 1
^T^^Vp^ZjHere Monday Morning
for bringing electric energy here “
and making it available to DeWitt
county farms be not delayed that t
these agreements be sent
once. I appeal to every rural resi-1
near
the DeWitt
or (
; Monday morning at 8 o’clock. I
,4 was 70 years of age and had been a
resident of Cuero since 1886. Funeral
services are set for 10:30 a. m.
I Tuesday from the home.
Mrs. Flick’s death was not unex-
Apparently in good health
respect i untll two weeks ago she was strlck-
The superintendent said the local.en a heart alhnent ^e after-
REA office is now engaged in work-1 noon May 29 as she sat convers-
ing up another 100 miles of exten- I ^’llh her sister. Mrs. F W. Abel,
sions to rural lines already author-i th« lattfr s home on s- VaUe>’
toed for this area and asked that: street she to th* i
tural residents, not along the pres- . Lutheran Hospital for treatment, Mrs. L. A. Bauer, all of Cuero,
ent route who are interested in removed to her home last [ Mrs‘Flick was a life-long mem-
service, see mm ai once, extensions; . • , . , . uituvu <uki an
can be made on a basis of two custo- i spend the last hours of amid_( active and interested worker tor '
" Fansllinr rnrr/MinrHnrrc ttt4EV» a»v»_ ."k. —.
many years. Rev. Allen R. Day,
rector of Grace Episcopal Church,
will conduct services at the home at
10:30 o'clock Tuesday and at Hill-
side Cemetery, where her body Will j cilmen of
be interred. Freund ‘
Home will be in charge of arrange- I day at st John.s Church for a
ments.
----------i trict meeting.
The meeting was called to order Cuer°. Mrs. Selina Hlrsch of Shiner, j
at four o’clock by Rev. Fred Kern, I
who acted as conductor.
11/\rV WTVrVTVfiT/m featured speaker was Donald Elder
Mln DrrrNSr !ofHouston i
* VIl 1/1^1 JuIImIj Those attending from Cuero were: i
Reverend A. A. Hahn, Oscar]
Adickes, A. C. Schorre. Joseph Pan-
nen, Dr. L. C. Kleinecke.
; Stahl, H. C. Boehl, Frank '
W. A. Schorre. Albeit Koenig. F. C.
Schaefer. Albert Fischer and Willard
Kleinecke.
eration. The editorial refers1
to the so called “real” eco-
nomic problem of the South, a
question of vital importance *
to each and every one of us
and says:
The real economic problem
of the South has always been
and will continue to be tor
some years to come, a rural
problem. How to develop a
ontiplanade that could have
bee used had the driver of
theffirst” car been a
moi careful. As is was, it
wasmpossible for anyone to if
(Continued on P»ge 3)
must
may be
is allnwpd tn nn r'J.L * i “/'o ‘ \ |statpd the German troops were be-
is anouea to go Repeal of tlte undistributed profits L,,,, . . , . , .
- >ii'g concentrated on the Slovak
■ clu-nges border
remove ; _____________
were approved j SHEPPARD HAS BILL FOR
Hoijfee NATIONAL FLAG DAY
Be |
L ?
i ■. cial problems that tfto ..
come '
r” tio
that demands the best brains
this section can produce. We
are delighted to see that in
the most • recent- advertise-
ments of the South, sponsored
by the Council of Southerp
Governor, we are not ad-
vertising for industry with
the bait that we have a
large supply of contented and
cheap labor in this section.
Nothing could be more disas-
long tlew of
development than
manufacturers to
come South in the hope, that
they could exploit labor.
Many of the palliatives sug-
gested for the South are just
that an dnothlng more. So
long as such a large percent- '
age of our people are illiterate
or just above the border line
of literacy we cannot hope to
build this section up to the
ideals of its people or the pos-
i si bill ties of its resources,
i More money is going to have
zto be spent in training people i
to be self-reliant, self-sustain-
ng members of society.
¥ ¥ ¥
Cuero and DeWitt county !
I 4tizens who are perhaps a
It careless with their park-
ig apparently never stop to
aalize that they are making
1 tnighty inconvenient for the
rxt fellow when they park
heir automobiles without re-
ft
e
ers4t is the
ChtinUx w
incilentally, the
fc- masg of this
4 0
1 0
5 0 3 1 0 0
4 0 0 1 0 0
4 0 11 0 0
3 0 0 8 1 0
1 3 2 0 0
110 5 0
-------- VUU1U LV1UJ lll-ipctl x <11 IN. blUCIJ .
I AUSTIN. June 12.—(INS.)—Stat-I was being completed Monday.
J ing he was acting at the Governor's ; New lawn furniture is - being 1?39 graduating class of the U. S.,
request. Senator Clint Small of I purchased for the terra'e at L..
Amarillo today asked Senate per- park and visitors will be given '’urb ;
mission tn introduce a bill suspend- service according to Mrs. Farmer
ing until Nov. 1 the effective date Other additions a.e being made to
of S. B No. 9. which liberalized old accommodate the growing business.
grd to the marked lines on age pension payments,
tl principal streets of the 1
cf. You and I have both
Four Deacons
Ordained Al Special
Service Sunday
Special ordination and installation '
services were held at the Presby-
terian church Sunday morning I
when three ruling elders and four
deacons were ordained and installed
with Dr. W. A. McLeod officiating.
Plan To Devote fnlire^Fale Of Weak Nations
Time To Park Club ] Cited To West Pointers
tote ] By President
A deal was closed here Monday | t---------
whereby William Burt, Jr., of Vic- —The recent fate of ‘ undefended
toria become owner and operator of nations.” President Roosevelt de-
the American Cafe in this city. Burt, j dared today, requires “still greater i
who formerly owned an interest in emphatus upon the vitalization of
the Cafe and lived in this city for ]our defense.”
many years, will return to Cuero to
make his home.
The deal was announced by Mr. ian army to be effective must
and Mrs. B^n Farmer, who said they niand the co-operation of all ele-
will devote their full time to opera-
tion of the enlarged Park Club Cafe |
at the Cuero Municipal Park, which .of bie message the American
mander-in-chief delivered to
' held confiscatory and Invalid today
by Federal Judge R. J. McMillan.
The ruling applied only to one
firm. Rowan & Nichols, who brought
the suit, but the same set of facts
applies almost equally throughout
the field.
Judge McMillan awarded the com-
J pany an injunction restraining the
lies were gathered here for the oc- commission from Interfering with
cas£on: V21Ua“ of Yoakum- Otto: them in producing their “fair share”
of Beeville, Rudolph of Moulton, Gus ] of the oil
i of Austin, Leo of Moulton. Henry of i __
Emil of Taft, Robert of San An- : Ann Montgomery
: tonio and Mrs. Sophie Triplow of i ■» n • i
Ano,h'r Yoakum Becomes Bridge Of
Mrs. June Rose Flournoy of San ■■ _t
Anotnlo. an accomplished acQordi-1 nOUSlOR MflR
anist. furnished music during !
1 afternoon.
™Xj Mijs Fore Will
Wed Mr. Keach
FLORESVILLE, June 10.—Mr.
and Mrs. Sam Fore Jr., of this city
announce the approaclfing mar-
riage of their daughter,
William Carroll Keach
I
I
I High Mass at St. Michael's Catho-
lic Church was conducted here Sun-
former Cuero boy.
Mr. Gips was secretary of the
Insurance Company and were made bV Zeke Fowler, manager
daughter, Mrs. Alfred O Frob^se Of '00115 and a prominent clti- Newman, manager of the Alamo,
Yoakum and only grand-daughter, i Lumber
Miss Forest Frobese of Yoakum. j *s survived by his widow, four “
Four sisters also survive: Mrs. dau8bters and a stepson and a step-
, A. C. Dietze of Karnes City; Mrs. A. I daufbter.
aalred that i01,1She was the F Lienhard, Mrs. F. W. Abel and *--
> Lutheran Hospital for treatment, Mi-e t. a na>..r .n I .
' - - I but was removed to her home last j ]
service, see him at once. Extensions Thursda-V in order to be allowed to ] ber of the Episcopal church and
j familiar surroundings with members*!
of her own family.
Mrs. Flick was tlje daughter of a ;
pioneer Texas family and was born
1 in the ill-fated seaport city of In-
' dianola October 29, 1868. She came
I to Cuero with her parents. Mr. and
i Mrs. Gus Wasserman. Sr., after the ments.
FARMERS SELL NEED IS CITED
CAFE TO BURT
approacifing
Marion, to
i of Austin.
The marriage will tak^ place June ■
24 at the home of the bride-elect’s
parents.
Miss Fore is a graduate of Flor-
esville high school and attended
He made bis Westmoreland college in San An-
I from the University of Texas.
She was selected queen of the
Democratic national convention at
Philadelphia in June. 1936. She had
been named by former Governor
James V. Allred as Miss Texas
j Centennial at the convention. As
Miss Texas she was chosen by Vice-
President Garner to represent, her
native state in Philadelphia and
participated in the contest with rep-
resentatives from the 48 states of
June 12—(INS >— the union, resulting in her being !
investigation- was named convention queen. For the j
a fantastic plot Past Hiree years Miss Fore has been !
to kill a score of high Japanese and associated with the National Youth ■
Chinese officials of the Nanking gov- administration state office in Aus- 1
ernment with poisoned wine at a tin
Mr Keach is the son of Mr. and j
Mrs. W. E. Keach of Houston He I
1 5 6 J
10Q91
McCloskey, lb. .... 2 0 13 0 1
1 o 1 o 9 i
4 1 0 2 9 1
Schoener, p. ....1 0 0 9 0 1
Lucas, p. j.„’—..J 0 1
will read with interest of her wed- I
. ding.
Byron Nelson Wins
National Open
day by Reverend Edward Blown.
former Cuero boy.
home in Victoria after leaving Cue- *on2!° Jece'v^d A degree
ro, where he was a student at St
Michael's Catholic Church.
After the service a luncheon was
served in his honor at the Muti
Coffee Shop with approximately
twenty-one present.
Investigate Plot
predicted today bv occupants of fin Ian fifftrialc
t three Slovak military airplanes V!l JflP VlllUfllS
landing at the Debhn Military Ay--
)>ort in Central Poland, it was
stated in an Exchange Telegraph
[Dispatch from Warsaw.
I The six occupants of
Judge James Wilkerson
Federal Judge James Wilkerson
I of Moses L. Annenberg, in Chicago, J 4 to 3 and
. - i Proceeds. The Philadelphia pub- f
t give an Hawaiian dance assisted by “5*}er js charged with evasion of
------- i Funeral services were held Sunday 1 Marjorie Mae Boothe, and Anna
disastrous 1886 storm. The foltow- for H G GiPs- a prominent) Louise Phillips will give two tap
ing year she was wed to R. C. i community leader.
Flick, young Cuero business man.
ing merchants and civic leaders and Westside cemetery.
who established the first automobile L -
She dealership In this city. B. C JBfck »«turday morning from m-| town. Goliad
D’ ' by an automobile in front of the 1 Sweet Home, Edna, Port Lavaca and j
Repeal Undistributed
Profits Tax Gets
Committee' Approval
WASHINGTON June 12 —(INSr-
thit parking spaces on East in^ “eied.7 ^mt:i^‘rihm - Z' !^de;nCentrated °n tiie S1°Vak TX Xanese
Mei and at least a half dozen ton would result. Small said, with m the tax structure to remove]------- Consulate General
------ xu.* .----J!l!Lni,TPy P’Ll?e 40 000 tO 50>* ‘‘business irritants" were approved j SHEPPARD HAS BILL FOR Nipponese sources revealed the plot has spent .several years in Washing-’
000 old people added to the rolls. tentatively todav by the Hotue NATIONAL FLAG DAY as a “daring attempt' by Chinese ton in a secretarial capacity in the j
Ve,I i. S sess on votes more Ways and means tax sub-commit^w I A concurrent resolution has been enemies of the new regime" to as- offices of Congressman Ri*hard M
little ta*e» f°r the pensions, he added, it1 The changes in conxiration tax submitted by Senator Sheppard of sassinate officials wholesale
will be at the minimum 90 days if a laws proposed are substantially; Texas providing in the year
, ' ' I in every \ear I " „ _
i> Treasury Morgenthau to »encourage 14th of June offii .ally shall be de- but no casualties thus far have bcea the National Youth administration!
.expansion of business and industry. I clared "National Flag Day" , noted. , in Austin. • I
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Putman, Harry C. The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 136, Ed. 1 Monday, June 12, 1939, newspaper, June 12, 1939; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1357973/m1/1/: accessed July 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cuero Public Library.