The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 70, No. 101, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 28, 1964 Page: 2 of 6
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EVERYONE
READS THE
NEWSPAPER
EVERY DAY!
Is Your
Business Firm
Represented In
Today s Paper?
To Plare An Ad
lo Til* Ouern Rernr<
Call C* 5 JIM .
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THE CUERO RECORD. Tues.. April 28, 1964
TODAY'S GARDEN-GRAPH
■ Re*. V. 8. P*t*»t Ofllc*
7, WAT EX
READy TO BLOOM
IN SECOND YtAK
5OAK BULBL^-Tf
■i*(em, $
motse
SCOTT'S SCRAP BOOK
By R. J. SCOn
1964 Top Winning Gladiolus
By EDNA HALUOAV
Ihstnlwted Op Centrai Press Association
THIS year LUree magnificent
gladiolus join the All-America
parade. Dringtng the total to la.
The newcomers are LaFrance.
Blue Sapphire <»nd Snowspnte
LaFrance is a fresh, cool,
pink and white. Petal edges
are slightly deeper and the cen-
ter creamy white. Blooms are
of heavy substance and heavy
ruffling, and should satisfy any
connoisseur.
Blue Sapphire is the fourth
b. -e to be so Honored, the others
being Caribbean Blue, China
Biue and the first All-America
miniature Little Pansy Blue
Sapphire is light blue with 1
white throat It is an early
bloomer, very petite and grace-
ful- being especially good for
si ranging.
Bnov. sprite
very graceful, with ruffled, re-
curved white flowers having a
greenish tint and green throat
Frequently 1 am asked how
to plant the young bulblcts at-
tached to the mother bulb. As
shown in the accompanying
Garden-Graph, moisture is very
necessary to their germination,
so soak them in tepid water for
several days or a week, because
the shells must crack before the
grass-like leaves can sprouL
Some people peel or crack the
sheila out this must be done
very carefully so that the tiny
crown is not injured.
Plant them early, and not
over two Inches deep, in a
Dear Heloise- | quilt stuffing’ Ml bet they wash Dear Heloise:
I just discovered a new trick I and dr> nicely. flowers. I sprayed them with.;
-new to me, anyway. 1 Mary Johnson I goJd paint land some silver j
To wii - connect your plastic! - ' spray paint 1 and used them for,
garden hose to the drain on the Dear Hcloise: ornaments.
bottom of youi HOT water heat-j I !>»•«“ my P«.stry boardj These gold artificial flowers j
er and drain the beater. Then across the wash basin when j are very cute, for decorating j
proceed to unsnarl the kinks I cleaning out my medicine cab-; gifts. They could also be pinned
& knots in vour synthetic hose, j i«*t. I find it a very handy ‘J-. on a curtain for added beauty,
stretching it out' to i1s full 1 We to hold all those bottles and ; O. F-. G.
length tars while I am cleaning the |
Now disconnect the insc from 1 cabinet Copyright, 1964. Kl*g Features
die water heater, coil it and put j
it hack into its original storage
place
So . . you have killed two
birds with one stone. First, you
have drained off the sediment
from the bottom of your hot wa-
ter tank, which should be don» HACIENDA
once a month anyway. Second, j q-pp. James
Mrs. D. Vigo
Syndicate. Inr.
Youth Gets Stuck
In Tree Trunk
the hot water softens the plas- j-
tic hose and makes it pliable j
and manageable again. Leave 1
garden hose stretched comple-
tely out before re-coiling again. 1
Mr. R. ■ I
HEIGHTS. Calif.
Rolierl Stokes,
got himself trapped head
down in the hollow trunk of a
75-hvit oak tree Sunday while
hunting far an owl’s nest.
Stokes was stuck for
trench, as shown, like peas.
Never let them dry out and keep
them weeded. When six inches
is a lacy glad. I high, give them a good feeding.
IO USA. King gestures Syndicate. Inc.)
Try and Stop Me
By BENNETT CERF-
A POIGNANT tableaux was revealed in Yellowstone Na-
tional Park one day this summer: a father with four un-
ruly kids in tow gazing pensively at a sign reading, “Deposit
your litter here ’’ The
father sighed, and con-
fided to a bystander,
“Don't think I’m not
tempted!”
* • •
A restless cub scout, teas-
ing his six-year-old brother,
accidentally pushed him off
a boat dock into the lake.
He rushed home to his
mother in tears and ex-
plained to her, ”1 did my
best to give Malcolm artili-
c.al respiration after I
pulled him out of the lake
—but he kept Jumping up
and running away.'1
oBB'u
gk°
iM*!
QrOTABLE:
"I consider my ability to arouse enthusiasm among people the
greatest asset I posses3Steel Tycoon Charles M. Schwab
“Take a perfectly beautiful day, add six hours of rain and fog
—and you have Instant London.’ -Bob Hope
"The most successful wolf I know is an amorous Eskimo who
takes girls for dog sled rides and runs out of dog food.”—Milton
Berle.
“Statistics may be likened to Bikini bathing suits. What they
reveal is enticing but v.‘h’at they conceal is vital.’’—Dr. Ridgeway
Trimble.
C 1964. by Bennett Cerf. Distributed by King Features Syndicate
Ladies, if you will look <vi 1
jour hot water heater you will j
| see (perhaps for the first time! |
i that directions do say ’'dram
'this tank every’ month or tw
| Draining keeps hot water hea-
ters from rusting out and jrei-
haps might save your budget be-
cause you won’t have to buy,
another one if you follow the 1
directions on the heater. Right |
now go and look at your hot. wa-
ter heater and see what the dir- |
ections say. Sure would be nice 1
to use the money (you might ]
have spent on repairs 1 for some-1
thing else, Eh?
Heloise
I _....... I
1 Dear Heloise
i When the middle of my cotton 1
| sheets wear out. I rut off the top ,
I and bottom and sew them on the 1
! ends of our flannel sheets, thus |
' making them long enough to -
tuck in at the end and foot
This sure keeps those shorn
flannel sheets in place.
Jennie Guzzetta
1 — *
i Dear Heloise:
With a family of young child-
ren I discovered a way to use I
up those small pieces of left - I
oyer soap: Here s what I did: !
I took a wash cloth, turned I
| down about one-half-inch hem |
1 at top. then sewed up the other j
two sides T then ran a tape j
: through the hem for drawstring
j Presto, a small hag' ’
1 T hang this bag on the fan-1
ret of the hath tub and put ill.,
small pieces of soan into it.
When reasonably fuB. I tie the
tape, but still "keen‘it- on the;
'auret Tt scrubs the little ones j
clean and saves soap and the
■ children Just love bo use this
1 bag of soap pieces.
1 Martha
■I ____,v
Dear Heloise:
Some of your readers have as-1
ked for ideas for the use of old
nvl< n storking-. I give mine to
a friend wlx> uses them for
three hours before firemen took
a buz/ saw to the tree, cutting
the trunk completely away t o
get him out - all the wht-H
1 pumping oxygen into the hoi-
1 low and talking to the youth to
keep his courage up.
GETS DIFFERENT BOOK
NORWICH. England tUPD
! A woman who wrote to the city
i council for a copy of the town's
guide book received instead a
about c 4>y of the controversial novel
scups
OU WCE of
THE ARTIFICIAL
FIBER*) W YHl$ fHEER.
5'f0c:KlH^ FORPt<> A
Thread 800 mill*
LONCj.
nr
O0
Fanny Hi 11.’ that . lias been
banned in many [jails of Brit-
ain.
MAH. A MA1URA1. ROCK ^
tORMA'l’lOH iH'fHE BLACK
HU-L1) oF bOUTH DAKOTA-
I T tiG'ii *;
V/AHT A IiTTlL
OAK IK YOUR HOME-
?
plant ah acorM
m half ah orahce.
5H.ELL AND T'RlMd'ME
ROOT* A$ THEY CJ ROW
<Krouc,h The rind.
■ '.■*«. *8:4 t |I-U
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5/fARE15H -
CAUGHT HLKH
3ZR.HUDA*
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DON’T YOU READ BEFORE YOU BUY?
Newspaper ads. Magazine ads.
Catalogs and brochures. This is
where sales get started. Tills is
where people turn to ferret out
the facts which allow an intel-
ligent buying decision.
People can linger with a printed
page: twominutes, five minutes,
ten. They can come back to it
again and again. I hey can com-
pare one product with another.
They can studs styles, features.
sizes, prices at (licir own pace.
1 hey c an rip out a printed ad,
save it. show it to friends, make
notes on it. < lip coupons. J hev
can and they do Don't y«uJ
If you've something to sell, it
One of a series presented b}< the Print Advertising Association/and
(Eucro ftfrord
will pay to promote it in print
—where people on the brink of
buying can get their hands on it.
Print makes sense because print
makes sales.
1
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Mills, Lin. The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 70, No. 101, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 28, 1964, newspaper, April 28, 1964; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth697224/m1/2/: accessed July 2, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cuero Public Library.