The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 35, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 14, 1946 Page: 6 of 6
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POLLIWOGS
By POLLY HOWERTON
I
NEW
TELEPHONE DIRECTORY
GOES TO PRESS
MARCH 1
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HELP PROTECT YOUR
FAMILY’S HEALTH
and FIGHT TYPHUS
FEVER by using
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CUERO, TEXAS
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Mrs.*Jack Howerton motored to
Goliad Thursday afternoon to visit
Mrs. Pettus Moore.
Sees Ice Anesthesia
Gaining With Patients
clinic on anesthiology at the Center
for Continuation Study at the Uni-
1930.. . 13 CASES IN 6 COUNTIES
1933.. .. 398 CASES IN 67 COUNTIES
1942.. 1204 CASES IN 113 COUNTIES
1944.. 1740 CASES IN 137 COUNTIES
READ THE FACTS ON
TYPHUS INCREASE
NOTE: Ask your local Public Health
Authorities about the Typhus Control
Program in your community
*
*
Sara Edgar in search of a pretty
white hankie she lost last week.
James H. Edgar is now tempor-
arily stationed in Shanghai, China,
and is attached to the U. S. S. Estes,
the.Flagship of Admiral Cook of
the 7th fleet.
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There’s still time to change
your directory listing, or
order an additional listing.
Please call the telephone
business office.
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HUNE5UK
AMERICA'S MOST 1
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DISTRIBUTED BY
GROCE-WEARDEN CO., Inc.
inctn
at LAM
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Our thkk* have a ruputolien that'* herd
beat. Felks soy they really do pay, that they
lead the way to greater profit* from both
poultry meal and vgg>- •*'» true, and there's
a reason! We’ve always been leader* in
flock Improvement and egg breeding.
a brood of our superior, egg-bred chick* and
let them lead your way to bigger poultry prof*
its! Order new!
Lff
Albert Jaeger of Yorktown was a
business visitor here Thursday.
$1.25 per bushel, with an increase of
a bushel of com per acre, one would
get back the dollar plus 25 cent., for
interest, which is not bad interest
in any mans country. Get the seed
now and be ready to plant at
proper time.
I "
Mae Edgar wearing very beautiful
ear-bobs and pin of coral and . old
gold at the Hawthorne Club Tues-
W ASHINGTON, Feb. 14.—(UP)—
The senate labor committee today
approved a bill to raise the mini-
mum wage to 65 cents an hour. It
added amendments which would
bring between two-and-four million
additional persons under the wage-
hour law. ,
L * * ta o|Lmmpa
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LAST DAY
TELEPHONE 75*
Tlamohr
&
iV' w0*LC5 M0ST SEA^T|p^ «crse.
*, DOOR ADMISSION—ADULTS M—CHILDREN M (Lncl. tex.)
AU Children la Cuero Schools 50c (tnei. tex) regardless of age.
ADVANCE SALE: ADULTS .75—CHILDREN M (inci. tex.) -
' AT COZY NOOK CONFECTIONERY
————————
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omcwous
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low
wMsor.
Tfle chapter’s xpembership
We’re off to Goliad this afternoon
and Pettus will Join us for a visit
out to the Fischer ranch pear Bee-
ville where Lee and Lee ’ ’
arrived for a short visit.
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5 111 ............. ■ - ■ —R 1 ■ ■
' senior high auditorium
f TUESDAY, FEB.
1 PERFORMANCES 4:38 P. M. AND 8:09 P. M.
rf w**4>e at Blanton & Lien-
■aturday. Feb. 16. F “
MEMQtbexs’ Cfab.-tedvt.)
C A Gap and Mr'. A E. consists of the following boys:
*x were San Antonio- visitors ~
Sr '
H. C. Hatfield kft^Wednes-
g a sfcort visit with Mr. Hat-
Vantty Fair Beauty Shop
B dosed Feb. 18 thru 21 for
ting —^advt) ‘•
orfctown visit-
...
Red Cron Drive To
Be Held In March
s i________
WASHINGTON, Feb. 14.—(UP.)—
President Truman has designated
March as Red Cross month and
urges the public to contribute as
much as possible to the support of
the humanitarian cause.
The organisation’s drive for funds
will aim toward a national goal of
100 million dollars.
FFA BANQUET-
(Continued From Page 1)
cream and coffee.
The Father-Son banquet will pre-
Fat
Stock Show which will be held late
in March. Date and details for the
show have not yet been announced.
The Officers
Officers of the Turkey Trot Chap-
ter are As follows: Claud. Thigpen,
president; Melvin Macha, ’ vice
president; Edward MgElroy, secre-
tary; Harold Lapp, treasurer; Bryan
Stubbs, reported; Cart Tx»rd, parlia-
mentarian; Rollie Simon, sentinel;
Clvde McElroy, song leader; Davis
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HIDE SUGAR
Hide the precious sugar, and add
I cup crushed peanut brittle or -
Crushed peppermint stick candy far
sweetening to a tasic scone dough •
recipe to transform it into cookies, effort to see that he gets ba^k
The dough may be dropped from a
spoon to nrtike drop cookies, or it
xpay be spread in a greated pan to
make ba* cookies. /
/ r -- ' I(1P F !
Well paid, well insured, your Tu-
, ture secure—enlist in the Regular
Ernest Army today. •
■. ■■ ■■L1BF-L-
Rollie - <
MINNEAPOLS, a' So—(UP) —
Dr. Clarence Dennis, associate pro-
fessor of surgery- at the University
of Minnesota, says research at the
University hospitals has revealed
that patients frequently- prefer ice
anesthesia to other forms.
Dr. Dennis addressed physicians
from many parts of the United
Williams Hatchery
Nell Williams, Owner Ph. 207 * S. Esplanade
New Rules Listed Forw^
Choosing .Sweetheart
AUSTIN, Feb. 14.—(UP.)
1946 sweetheart of the Univei
Texas will havp more obstacles*^!
the race for preferment than other
sweethearts have encountered..
New rules, as announced today,
limit the entry to 15 candidates to
be selected by a nominating com-
mittee. The 15 are to be '■ afir
nounced on March 25. The next
day, the list will be narrowed to five
by student vote, and on March 27
one of the five will be elected by the
students.
Mrs. A. C. Zingelman of Moulton
was a visitor in Cuero Thursday.
O. F.-Gips of Yorkown was here
Wednesday on business.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Harrison and
son. Stewart Harrison, and her
mother, Mrs. Law, dt Beaumont,
came in this morning to visit his
mother, Mrs. F. Harrison, and sister. ver^y-
Mrs. Wm. G. Btubbeman, and to
attend the Hamilton-Schmidt wed-
ding tonight.
Mrs. H. E. Miller left Thursday
afternoon for Beeville on a few
days’ visit with her sister, Mrs. Fred
C. Weber and Mr. Weber.
Look ahead for summer. Arrange
now for your attic fan. Best
Electric Co—(advt.)
Mrs." Charles Marquis cn double
duty this evening as she sings the
bridal solo and plays the nuptial;
States who have been attending a wedding marches for the Schmidt-
Hamilton wedding.
Ann Smith down on her hands
and knees planting flowers in her
y-ard on East Main Street.
day. They were worn by her great-
grandmother when she was a young
lady. ■
Your State. County and City Health Author-
ities are waging a vigorous fight on Typhus
Fever Many downtown public and business
properties have been thoroughly dusted with
10% D DT Powder to kill Typhus-carrying
flea* on rats. But that may not protect your
home.
Here s how you can cooperate and help
PROTECT YOUR FAMILY S HEALTH Use
Cook s 10% D-D-T Wonder Powder in your
home and out--buiidmgs Typhus-carrying
flejis may get into your home and other build-
ings without your knowing it D-D-T is the
best recognized means of comba’ing Typhus!
5 GartK, HEbbb Mpraentative
Bmomm FWera-
ffiM—err’ meeting
ECHHllMiMt Wffiimttay.
taMMge tf love in
k. Ob RL Talenttne’a Day,
Bjmr Mbttawmtq fittingly pyA boyg’ annual
tawHir flown or a beautiful ■
I fliaat HaaTs Hower Shop.
ft -
K HtefeaMson of Floresville,
gr of HA dM-rtct of the Fann
a Bsfleraaon. was at the
aefay meeting of fanners of
iMM at ttw Courthouse Wed-
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The fact that Brayton couk
go to other locations, bul
wants very much to build his
new business in Cuero, should
make Cuero put forth «very
*
the
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Jcy Mugge stopping over for a Of t
brief visit with friends Thursday en-
route from Yoakum to Yorktown,
where she was going primarily to
check up on a small nephew that
she hadn’t seen in some time.
COOK’S 10* DDT WONDER POWDER IS "MICR0NI2ED"
It is widely recommended for control of Typhus carrying fleas.
It s Micronized” for greater killing power, Cook’s Wonder
Powder is just as effective on roaches, water bugs, silver-fish,
and certain other insects. Use it, for ridding your dog of fleas,
ticks, etc. Also excellent for poultry lice. Get Cook s Wonder
Powder today for your family’s protection.
Buy a can today from your Grocer or Druggist
“Wide interest has been express-
ed in the possibilities of amputation j WdS th€ gift of a friend,
of extremities where the only anes- ____
thesia used was refrigeration’’, DY.
Dermis said.
“Patients who have had one ex-
tremity removed in this manner
and the other by means of another
method of anesthesia all express
their preference for refrigeration.”
t-------------------------------»---------
Minimum Wage Of
65 Cents Approved
WILLIAMS CHICKS
^b Loodsrs in lhe impor- Our thick* have
tafion of famous egg
bloodlines! ,
M loaders in Pullorym
Testing for High Livabil-
& I »y»
r - W ^°®ders in the use of
scientific methods of
hatching stronger, bet-
ter chicksl
AvTown Talk
ft------------------'-*—**(
(Continued from Pbflb D
Henry Koenig, Jr., celebrating his
birthday on February 12th. Many
happy returns of the day.
here*
And Cuero doubtless will do j, -
that veiy thing. « ...
an economic way. .
And most of them feel, as
the' Council feels, that should
Clyde Arndt. Troy Bingham, John
Robert Bitterly, Claude Blackwell,
Leroy Boehl. Nick Bomba, Temple
Chaddock, John Coppedge, William
Egg, Melvin Elkins, Phineas Flem-
ming, James Friedel, Dalton Fried-
, Johnnie Garcia, Alton Goeb-
el; Harold Goebel, Weldon Goebel,
Robert Gohlke, Billy Joe Hare,
Ralph Hartman, Staphen Hebert,
Davis Hensley, Preston Hemfly,
Lloyd Hiller, Charles Hoffinan, Wil-
liam Holzapfel, Harold Holzapfel,
Harold Lapp, CUAon^Lau, Albert
Ley, Carl Lord, Norvan Eichholz,
Raymond Kahlfck, Albert Kuecker,
Lee Bell Kuecker, Billy Kuester,
Charles Peters, Maxie Poenltach,
Henry Marquis, Marion Mauer,
Melvin Macha, Clyde McElroy, Ed-
ward McElroy’, Kenneth McMahon,
Arthur Means, John Means, Bterl-
foa Moefler, Bruce Miller, C__r
Moreno, Dale Neweoffi, Mariano
Salazar, Raymond Shows, L____
Simon, T. C. Simon, Wayne Stev-
ens, Carl Sehwab, Bryan Stubbs,' *
Claud Thigpen, Cart Weber, Odell)
White, Ralph Waif, Ivan Woods and
Bobby Yaws. . jwbjc
FKDCROPW
(Continued from Page 1)
1. Prepare a good seed bed. 2. On
mixed or sandy soil, use commer-
cial fertiliser. 3. Use the best seed.
4. Keep out weeds and grass that
compete with the crop for plant
food and moisture. One must do
more than list the land to prepare
a good seed bed. Loosen the sou by
1 plowing, diking, and-harrowing. Do
,a large portion of the cultivation
before the seeds are planted.
“A conservative application of
fertilizer would be about 200 pounds
of either 5-10-5 or 4-12-4. This may
be applied at the time of ptanting,
if one has a fertiliser attachment
for one's planter, or may be ap-
plied far enough ahead of planting
to allow the ground to settle: the
former method is preferable. If the
fertilizer can be placed two inches
to the side and an equal distance
lower tnan the seed, the plant will
use the plant food more efficiently.
Hybrid Variety
“As for seed, I would not fail to
plant a part, preferably all, of my
acreage to an adapted hybrid va-
riety. There are several varieties
of hybrid corn produced in Texas,
and two or three that are produced
outside the state that are showing
up about as good as the Texas va-
rieties. If the seed cost a dollar per
acre, with the average per cent of
increase, one can make several ci-
tra bushels of corn per acre. At this
time, with the ceiling price around
AND HE SALE
Benefit of Hensley, historian; and Gus T. Cage,
deal be made with him for assets.
'the Airport property which
iwould enable him to return
>f here in a civilian-commercial
'capacity such as he has out-
lined, it again would be one
City’s finest business
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Strap Platforms
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Brow, hll! Shot St
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Designed For The
Young In Heart
Navy
Black Calf
Plastic Patent ....
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Spring
Styles
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WIDTHS
E. 0. KUNITZ
“The Rexall Store”
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n-jaM
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. . . . Spellbinding strap styles to win your «
heart and coddle your feet. For that look,
of high-arched, slender-angled femininity..
Platforms with double sole, double beauty/- L
and double wear. Choose from these small
strap charmers, with nailhead . trim on
platform. — 20-8 heel.
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SlTlEAMLDiE
FOR JUNIOR F
Koehler’s
Since 1890
The House of Quality.
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1 DuBarryDbrma-Src
- Special Offer—2.0&
for only 1.00
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Also Black Calf, hi-heel sling pump .
toeless ............. .-.L *..
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Glamour Junior Flats in Brown Calf
low heel stiller . /.. ,<...
ioa '>
A BUSTER BROWN TEEN
* * " Russett Tan Leat*^-
Sizes 5 to 9......’
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THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 14, l«4t
THE CUERO RECORD, CUERO, TEXAS
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Aldridge, C. C., Jr. The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 35, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 14, 1946, newspaper, February 14, 1946; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1358105/m1/6/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cuero Public Library.