The Cuero Record. (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 18, Ed. 1 Friday, January 22, 1937 Page: 2 of 6
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THE CUERO, RECORD, CUERO, TEXAS
FRIDAY. JANUARY 22, 1937
• CUERO RECORD
Established in 1894
Published Each Afternoon, Except Saturday, and Sunday Morning by
THE CUERO PUBLISHING CO.. Inc.
Epteyed in the post office at Cuero. Texas, as second class matter
under Act of Congress, March 3, 1897.
* »♦♦♦♦♦♦ ►♦♦♦♦
’ 37 YEARS AGO *
•Y X # * * * Y- .v.
WHi’SWHATATAGfjC
The following interesting items
were clipped from an issue of The
Record of the year 1900:
JACK HOWERTON
. Publisher
HARRY o PUTMAN
................................ Editor
PSTS HOWERTON
TODD TILTON ..................*..........
Advertising Manager
•
National Advertising
Representatives:
JANUARY 22 1900
War News:—Fighting cn the east
bank cf the Tugeln river, which hr>s
been crossed by most cf Rul'. : s
force, i* new continuous and on Fri-
day very heavy. The Boers are f"II-
uig back and the British a o c. ''try-
ing captured ground. The -Beets are
net using their artillery to much a.i-
Texas Daily Press Leafbe, Inc., 507 Mercantile Building, Dallas, Texas; j vantage, while the British have wen
170 Lexington Avenue, New York City; 180 Michigan Avenue, Chicago,! their present position by heavy
ni ; 905 Star Building. St. Louis. Mo.; 301 Interstate Building, Kansas j shrapnel fire.
City, Ado.; 1015 New Orpheum Building, Los Angeles. Calif.; 105
San Francisco, Calif.
Subscription Rates:
By Mkil or Carrier—Daily and Sunday, one year $5.00, six months
$2.50, three mouths $1.25, one month 50c.
Wednesday Edition by mail only, one year $2.00; six months $1.00 in
DeWttt and adjoining counties. Elsewhere, 1 year $2.00, 6 months $1.25
Official Organ of the Citv of Cuero and DeWitt County.
The British report
San- j about 500 killed and wounded since
| crossing the river, which shows the
1 Boers are using their rilles with
deadly effect. The big fight is ye u
come.
TELEPHONE NO. L
! The Cctten Market. A rather un-
usual fluctuation in the cotton1
market for this season occurred i
day. amounting to about 12 points ‘
It reached 7 cents for middling and
closed at 6 7-8.
' WIDOWS’ MIGHT
Chirped the standing jest of the indignant rear guard of
the American Expeditionary Force, holding (as the American
forces in .Germany) the Rhine bridgehead until early autumn
In 1919, MWe have paid our debt to Lafayette./Who in hell do
we owe how?”
Members of the M. P. H. Co. No. ;
j 1 are hereby notified that tomorrow ■
j night, Tuesday. January 23. is the
regular monthly meeting night and
a full attendance is requested as
business of importance is tc be
transacted, including nomination of
officers for the ensuing year. Don't.
! forget to bring funds for yctir dues.
’" Uncle Sam may ask the same question as he surveys bills j g^reterv^ Pre5ldeni' Hug l Ha a -
already Introduced in the lower House of Congress which!
anffiSs new war veterans’ demands, ranging from flags for fu-1
One of the pioneer 'cit'zcns of;
South Texas passed away ye^terdoa
afternoon in our city and his re-
mains were taken to Victoria today '
for burial. M. H. Thomas, one of the
best known and wealthiest stock-1
men of Calhcun county at death was
nqjflffiTto new pension proposals and refunding of interest
pdfd on bonus loans. This last demand is just enough and is
3n*y fairness to those few veteran borrowers who did pay in-
fcetest. Those who did not saw the entire amount forgiven.
The new pension grab sponsored by the Veterans of For- j in his seventieth year and had been
eign Wars calls for a minimum pension of $22 a month to the making cuero his home fer the past |
w^ow of any war veteran and other benefits to children. This
is Jill familiar history. We are paying undeserved pensions now
widows of veterans of all other wars, without excluding
the teen age youngster who may have wedded an oldster
dotage. Incidentally, the veterans of no other wars ever
the bonus paid to World War veterans and had no
war risk insurance protection.
.-.The principle of the bills submitted is unsoqnd; the cost
would be enormous. But lest these considerations suggest to
tl^e Nation that Congress will not pass ultimately a bill of this
type,”It would be just as well to read history.
J By the way, widows always last longer than war veterans.
Only a year or so ago there were surviving widows of soldiers {were certainly successful.
of! the War of 1812 and Mexican War (1848) but no veterans, i -
Government on June 30. 1935, was paying pensions to ; Inquirer office yesterd£iy ani left a
soldiers and nurses of the Civil War Union Army and to j basket of Early Mountain radices
widows or other eligible dependents. Those gay young of the white and biack variety- Ti'*? j
BBil women of the colleges who demanded last yeai a ^ much as three pounds each. They i
bdnus as veterans of the next war not far wrong. They wear jare very tender.and juicy and their’
tax service stripes as the victims of all previous wars.i—Dallas 1cize W0l,ld ai,r*ct attenticn :n rny j
HfeMB. ' ’ market.—Gcnzales Inquirer.
several years, boarding with his
family with Mrs. Kyle on Gonzales'
street, where death overtook him
yesterday.
Want to make a dollar? Tc eve- v *
child whe brings us six yearly sub- 1
scriptions to the Weekly Record be-
fore February 1 we will give <x>!
dollar in cash. Do you know how to
make a dollar as easy any other i
way?
i
—
A cartload of young Indies, with a j
pair of escorts, were parading the |
! streets tedav in a dump cart. If they
1 were out to attract attention they
W A S H I N G T
By CHARLES P. STEWART
‘ Central Press Columnist
WASHINGTON, D. C.—Con-
gress really does not know what it
thinks of" President Roosevelt’s
plan for reorganization of the ex-
ecutive branch of the government.
Perhaps it would be nearly cor-
rect to speak of the plan as Louis
Erownlow s. Brownlow having been
chairman of the committee which
framed it.
Perhaps also it would be more
nearly correct to speak of the plan
as contemplating a reorganization
of the bureaucratic rather than the
executive branch of the govern-
ment. To be sure, upon the plan’s
adoption the consolidated bureau-
cracy would be placed more effec-
tively than ever hefore under presi-
dential control. However, the pres-
ident. now the government’s chief
executive, would become its bu-
reaucratic chief alsa He would
have dual functions, with an enor-
mous increase in authority.
PROCESS
A cabinet officer Is an executive
assistant to the White House.
Nothing but an executive.
A bureau is somewhat executive,
but many of them have semi-judi-
cial powers also, and managerial
and investigatqria). The head of a
bureau always has been much
more broadly subject to- congres-
sional dictation than has the head
of any cabinet department.
The Brownlow scheme contem-
plates the freezing of the various
bureaucracies into the various cab-
inet departments—the five depart-
ments which the government start-
ed with, the five additional ones
w-hich have been added since then,
and the two extra ones which the
Brownlow program seeks to have
created.
• • •
CAUSES WONDER
An executive set-up, all of it!—
pretty independent of congress.
Briefly, each departmental sub-
division of it would resemble that
of the postoffice department.
It must be admitted that Uncle
Sam's mail service has been pass-
able, in comparison with a few of
the others. Still, no one can have
failed to notice how grievously that
has degenerated under the auspices
of the last two postmasters gen-
eral, Walter F. Brown and James
A. Farley, So it does not follow
that strict bureaucracy is remedial
of all evils. For the postoffice de-
partment has been the strictest of
them.
ON -WORLD
A “SUPER-SENATE”?
Besides, there is the problem,
plus two new cabinet members, of
the six assistant presidents recom-
mended by the Brownlow report.
They are not to be VICE presi-
dents, elected by the people.
They are to be assistant PRESI-
DENTS—appointivelv chosen.
Certainly they cannot be much
less potent than cabinet members.
Ten cabinet members now! Two
to be added! Also six assistant
presidents! ,
Eighteen!
“A little but super-senate!”—
members of the upper congression-
al chamber cry! And I don't mean
that all the outcry comes from Re-
publicans.
CHOOSING ( vegetables
You ’re Telling Me!
By WILLIAM RITT
Central Press Writer
REMEMBER THIS, my boy^
never put off doing tomorrow
what you can put off doing to-
day! Yes, indeedy.
* * *
The key to the Pearly Gates
of Heaven is not a gem-studded
affair. Auto manufacturers call
it the accelerator.
• * • ■ c- *
The office souse still is sticking
to his New Year’s anti-redeye
resolution. He’s just grinning
and beering it.
* * *
Europe’s dictators are behav-
ing as though they live in fear
someone may aocuse them of
being humanitarian.
* * *
Children, a survey indicates,
are losing their faith in fairy
stories. But their parents still
believe campaign promises.
* * * *
Don’t be too impiessed by any-
one whose face hides their
thoughts. Maybe they haven’t
any to hide.
* * *
The snowflake is a creation of
beauty, but a sidewalk full of
them is-nothing short of an un-
mitigated nuisance.
• * *
Dictators, it seems, cannot
learn not to point—their siege
guns at the neighbors across the
boundary.
m m m
China, the most poorly armed
of nations, discovered gun prrv«
der. But it forgot to patent tha
idea.
How Much Milk Should
Children, Adults Drink?
Winter is apparently back with us for a lengthy stay. If
it Was a dry norther there probably wouldn’t be so much com- i Victoria and occupy
plaint, but most folks are tired of tramping through the mud.! yktor^1 *”vo'^ntbusiness locatlon-
Of course, weather is always a reason for complaint on the
part ot some of us. Some want it cold, some want it hot. The
complaint won’t be serious if tomato plants are not harmed,
protected in hot beds, there’s little chance of the tiny
plants suffering to any extent
Folks who park half way across a parking space, taking
up half of the space next to them and making it mighty dif-
ficult for the man who parks next to their car to back out aie
apparently mighty thoughtless. Let’s be a little more care-
ful in parking our cars and try to stay within the boundaries
of a single parking space.
It is correctly rumored that Koen- ;
ig & Van Hocgenhuyze, recently of i
Cuero, will engage in business in !
a prominent j
BLACK-HEAEDED GULL
NEWBURYOPRT, Mass—NS.) j
After weeks of patient waiting, or-!
nithologists have succeeded in cap-'
turing a black-headed gull on the
flats of the Merrimac River har-
bor, the second of that species ever!
observed in the Western Hemi-r
sphere. The other time was in
1930 and the bird then was also
seen here.
By LOGAN CLENDENING, M. D.
EVERYONE now recognizes the
Importance of milk in nutrition.
For children, it is the staple. For
adults Doctor Tobey has suggested
that “the foun-
tain of youth
is filled with
clean pure
m i 1 k.” The
number of
hale and
hearty old peo-
ple in dairy
countries indi-
cates this.
The public
has become
"milk c o n-
scious”. Milk
supplies all the
e 1 e m e nts of
n u t r i t ion in
Dr. deadening
See where the former Cuero man who received the first
$200 under the Townsend plan test in Chelan, Washington
spent his first eighty dollars for an overcoat and a money
couch. His wife sported her first permanent wave in years and
a feast loomed for the children. Can understand everything
out the money pouch. The two hundred dollars won’t be forth-
coming next month you know.
Moore to Run
German citizens are required to save all potato peelings
nd deliver them to designated centers as food for pigs.
Clndllng wood is exchanged for the peels. Hitler is going to
e telling his citizens what to eat next, and at thq rate he’s
ohig it looks as if the good citizens are goifig to get nothing i
man? than the “peelings” before long.
v We shudder when we read that several hundred Chinese j I
narcotic addicts are to be put to death because they failed to : !
* ike the cure, but at the same time we view with unconcern
the fact that 555 persons were killed in automobile accidents i *
diring the holidays
---------- I Ns
, A discerning editor suggests that it looks like there is
going to be plenty of people who will need social security in
tlieir old age, as we read where over 30 million dollars was bet
ni\ six Chicago race tracks last summer.
Four things come not back; the spoken word, the sped ar-
row, the past life, the neglected opportunity.—iviarden.
If
f
assimilable for m—protein, car-
bohydrate, fat, minerals and vita-
mins. Lack of iron is a defect of
a milk diet for infants, but this
can be easily supplied.
Every person in the United
States is estimated to drink a pint
of milk a day. Tobey figures that
there are 56 gallons of whole milk
consumed per person in the United
States per year. This is a little
less than <t pint a day.
In Philadelphia, government
bodies investigated carefully the
per capita consumption of milk for
1924, 1929 and 1934. It was high-
er in 1929, the boom year, than
any other. In 1934, as nearly as
could be computed, the native
white population used 0.73 pints,
the Negro population 0.45, the
Italians 0.52, and the Jewish popu-
lation 0.72 pints. This would indi-
cate that milk, even though a
standard nutritional need, varied in
HAPPY ENDING TO MURDER TRIAL
It is not how great a thing we do. but how well we do the
tilings we have to do, th»t/puts us in the noble brotherhood
of artists.—Haliburton.
The ladder of life is full of splinters, but they always
P--*^Ck the hardest when wo re sliding down.—Bromwell
Men and nations can only be reformed in their youth;
they become incorrigible as they grow old.—Rosseau.
Senator A. Harry Moore, chatting
in Washington
U. S. Senator A. Harry Moore of
New Jersey, who already has
served two terms as governor of
the state, will be the Democratic
nominee for the governorship this
year, according to an announce-
ment made by Mayor Frank
Hague of Jersey City, state Dem-
ocratic leader. The announce-
ment was made following a cau-
cus of the Democratic majority
of the new’State assembly.
—Ccnhal in.jJ
lit dcx.il <=UutL
I’J
DIRECTOR, A & P
10,UJ
KITCHEN
fpHE tin can has,probably done
-I more than anything else to
make good food available at reason-
able prices. But whefi you buy a can
of food, you
must do it on j
faith. You can’t i
see or taste
what is inside
it until you
open it up at
home.
The label on
it tells you
what is inside
-whether peas
or corn or
what. But it doesn’t tell you enough, j
And even if the various canners at-
tempted to describe accurately on
the label what the can contains,
each canner might use widely vary-
ing expressions. The result would
be confusion.
Wkhin the past few years, the
Department of Agriculture has
clearly defined standards for many
canned fruits and vegetables. Ac-
cording to these standards a can of
tomatoes, for instance, can be
readily classified as Grade A, Grade
B, Grade C, Grade D. Many can- !
ners have adopted these standards
and now print the correct grade on
their labels.
The importance of this lies not
so much in that it enables you to
select the best tomatoes, or corn, or
peas, but rather the right grade for
your particular cooking purpose,
and at the right price for that
grade. For instance, you want to
make scalloped tomatoes. You buy
Grade A tomatoes. They cost more,
partly because they are whole to-
matoes. You break them up when
you cook them. You have spent
money unnecessarily because Grade
C tomatoes are not whole to begin
with, and would have been just as
good for the purpose, and are con-
siderably cheaper.
All the tomatoes canned in this
country cannot be selected whole
tomatoes, of uniformly good red
color, free from pieces of skin,
cores, blemishes, with the typical
flavor of naturally ripened toma-
toes. If you insist on always having
perfect tomatoes, or as nearly per-
fect as possible in commercial can-
ning, and you are willing to pay for
them—then insist on Grade A. But,
of course, that would be about as
intelligent as insisting on the finest
silk for every house dress, or on
handmade Italian parchment paper
for a scratch pad.
Study the Government Grades,
they will tell you clearly and truly
what ia in a can of vegetables—and
then buy the grade you need foe
your purpose. , <
That method of buying canned
foods is growing in popularity by
leaps and bounds. Thousands of
women’s clubs, demonstrators, con-
sumers’ organizations and individu-
als have become keenly interested
and have written for government
bulletins on tha subject. Ia .1936
about 180,000,000 labels carried tha
Government Grades printed on
them so people could tell at a'
glance what the can contained.
Make use of Government Grades.
But do not make the mistake of
considering anything less than
Grade A as undesirable. By far the
largest class ia Grade C. Grade C
foods are good, wholesome foods.
The raw products in them may not
be so carefully selected as to sise,
color and maturity, but the food
is just as nutritions. Certainly it
i will cost you leas.
consumption with the economic
status.
Eight per cent of all families in
Philadelphia did not use milk at
all. In a suburban group 3 per
cent of families did not use milk.
Children should have a quart of
milk a day, according to all health
authorities.
If so—if this is the actual sup-
ply, and it probably is—that cuts
the adult consumption down con-
siderably. Except as used in cook-
ing, probably less than half the
adult population drinks any milk
regularly.
There is probably a reason for
this. Many investigators have
found that the hydrochloric acid
which is a regular part of the di-
gestive juice of the stomach, be-
comes less and less in most
healthy people as time goes on.
The large amount of alkaline sub-
stance in milk may make the
adult instinctively avoid it. In
those countries in which a large
amount of milk is consumed by
adults, it is notable that they do
not always use whole fresh milk
but are inclined to use soured milk,
buttermilk, ^ skimmed milk, or
various kinds of cheese.
This again accounts for the lik-
ing which adults and middle-aged
people show for buttermilk. It is
instinctive. And it is a very good
food in cases of decreased acidity
of the stomach, because the condi-
tion favors the development of
various bacteria in the intestines.
Indeed, some investigators think
that the growth of these bacteria
produces toxins which tend to
cause the degenerative diseases of
late midile age.
So let the buttermilk or acid-
ophilus milk user alone. Man is
the only animal that uses milk
after the period of infanev.
CHAPTER 1
“DEARLY beloved, we are
gathered here ia the sight of Cod
tnd ia the face of this company
to join together . .
Janet’s eyes lifted from the
white head bent over the book.
Her vision, Synchronized with the
:umultuous beating of her heart,
wavered so that for an instant the
;hina dogs on the mantel back of
die white head seemed to rise and
settle. She was aware, as in a
dream, of the echo of the music
af the old-fashioned organ expiring
on the air. Outdoors she heard
the passing of a heavy motor on
thcountry road, the distant bark-
ing of a dog, the shifting of feet
at her back.
"... this man and woman \n
holy matrimony . .
She turned her head ever so
slightly and saw Joel standing
straight and solemn at her side.
He was framed by the room that
seemed smaller with his tall
gauntness. The light streaming
through lace curtains lent a nobil-
ity to his head. It pointed up the
clean shabbiness of the worn car-
pet where so many other couples
had stood like these two. It
showed the careful darning in the
linen doilies on the plush chairs,
the fading colors of the yellowing
wallpaper.
Janet thought: this is my
background. Joel doesn’t belong
here. I can smell bread baking.
I’ve known that smell all my life.
I was brought up in a home like
this and 1 thought that one day
I would end it in just such a home.
But this is not for Joel Oh, Lord,
make me a good wife, the right
wife for him!
~. . . . and, is commended by
Saint Paul, to be honorable among
all men; and therefore is not by
anyone to be entered into unad-
visedly or lightly.**
Martha Colby, standing at Ja-
net’s left, cleared her throat. The
sound in that room, silent save for
the soft, old voice speaking so
slowly, sounded harsh. She
dropped her eyes.
As though Martha had spoken,
Janet protested within herself:
We are not entering into it light-
ly. We loved each other from the
moment we met. Time doesn’t
matter.
Martha thought: It’s the most
unadvised thing I’ve ever heard of.
Who’d ever think that those two
would fall in love ? Janet, you
should have better than this! A
sane, sweet child marrying a
stranger. He’s a temperamental,
second-rate actor. What would
your Scotch father think of this?
Martha thought of little Dr.
MacLeod, as she had been think-
ing of him since Janet had called f£oin& to see you again. I love
uiZ An-,, you and I want you. I w
Robert Simpson in happy reunion with parents
Happy reunion with his parents in their New London, Conn., home
climaxes the murder trial which ended with freedom far Robert
Simpson, orchestra leader. Simpson, shown with his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Arthur Simpson, and his pup, Peppy, at home, was freed
in Norwich court on charges of murder in connection with the fatal
plunge from a. dance casino of his 17-year-old sweetheart, Ellen
Sullivan, several months ago. •
her on the telephone the day be-
fore. There had been something
singing in Janet’s voice then:
“Martha, I want you to stand up
with me tomorrow. I’m going to
marry Joel Paynter. Reverepd
Fisher is going to marry us at his
home in Chester. . . . No, you’re
not dreaming, it’s true! . . . Yes,
he's the boy I met two weeks ago
but I know it’s right, Martha. . . .
Will you?”
"If any man can show just cause
why they may not be lawfully
joined together, let him *now
speak, or else hereafter forever
hold his peace," the minister in-
toned.
The faintest smile played mo-
mentarily at the comers of Janet’s
mouth.
Almost the first words Joel had
said to her were, "I’m not a mar-
rying man.” Before that he had
said, “I don’t know your name but
I’ve struggled through this jam to
get across to you ever since you
came in. Do you care .very much
for this party or will you get your
things and leave with me? I want
to talk to you."
Janet had obtained her things
and when they were in the park,
driving from the Taylors’ cocktail
party, they hardly speke. Yet be-
tween them there was a quickened
■case of understanding.
Joel took her sensible little hand
in his big one and looked into her I ing to her. Jdel was shaking
.0
!
Joel stood straight and solemn at her side.
face. Janet wished then that it
were a pretty face. Just as she
sometimes wished that she were
tail. “I’m a half-pint and plain,”
she labeled herself. Her five feet
of small proportioned perfection
and her face that was distin-
guished by a broad brow, by deep
gray eyes and a wide, generous
mouth. If her cheekbones were
high and her nose as Scotch as
heather, her soft light, brown hair
broke away from its smooth tight-
ness to curl softly about her fore-
head and cheeks.
“I’m not a marrying man,” he
said suddenly and surprisingly.
“Does it matter?” she said.
“I’m afraid it might,” he had
answered.
That had been only a fortnight
before. Janet thought: It can’t
have been so little time ago. I’ve
lived a lifetime in these two weeks.
I’ve known what it is to be in
love, to have known the fear of
losing him and to realize that I
can never be happy without him.
After a week he had said, “I
can’t stand this, Janet. I’m not
you ana i wane you. i want you,
do you understand?”
He had said other inarticulate
things and because she was afraid
that she could not withstand them,
she said she thought it best for
him not to see her again.
But nothing could keep Joel
Paynter from Janet MacLeod once
he had kissed her. “You know
how I feel about marriage,” he
said four days later. ‘T revolt
against ties. I hate the whole
idea of possession. I am depressed
by the very word ’husband’! But
I ... oh, Janet, I have nothing
but an uncertain future and my
love to offer you. I need, you and
I want you to marry me at once.”
. . and forsaking all others,
keep thee only unto her, so long
as ye both shall live"
“I will,” Joel said clearly.
Then Janet said, “I will.”
“Who giveth this woman . .
Her brother, Ian, stepped for-
ward. Janet raised her hand and
the minister laid it in Joel’s.
The cold circlet slipped over her
finger. She felt far removed as
the next words came to her.
. . she who wears it may
abide in Thy peace."
Then Joel's arms, were around
her, lifting her from the floor to
meet his kiss. Her fur toque was
knocked askew by Ted Jevers
claiming first privilege of kissing
the bride. Mrs. Fisher was talk-
hands with the minister.
Martha shook confetti oo her
saying, “It’ll take a week to get:
this stuff off blit we only get mar-
ried a few times during the oourse
of a lifetime.” Her tone was gay
enough but her cheeks were wet-
She stroked the tiny mink collar'
of Janet’s new green suit. Fool-j
ishly she remembered doing some-j
thing like that to Janet 20 years
before. It bad been an angora
bonnet.
Mrs. Fisher came in with a tray
of wine-filled glasses. Janet stood
very proudly by Joel's side while'
they were toasted. Then Joel gave
her a signal and she fled with him
to the borrowed roadster waiting]
at the door.
He swung off the road suddenly^
and quietly the car came tb a'
stop. “We ll wait here bade of
pines until the rest of them
gone on. 1 haven't much
and I’m not going to share my
bride. We’U only have an houn .
darling, before I have to go to the.
theater.”
“Not I, Joel. It’s we now. Ajs
I not going to the theater?”
“You may. You are free to dc
anything you want all your life •
Remember that, Mrs. Paynter, you
are always free."
“Joel I don’t want to be free
this minute. I want you . , , J
want to feel like a wife.”
Joel’s answer was very solemn,
“Janet, I don’t want you to feel
like a wife. I only want you to be
my sweetheart. Always.”
“All right, darling," she laughec
softly. “Shall we have dates aftei
the theater and lunch during the
week? You’ll have your careei
and I’ll have my job and we’ll visii
each other at our apartments?"
He regarded her sternly. “N<*
indeed! You’re moving into mj
place tonight and quitting youx
job tomorrow. No career tot
you.”
Janet thought of her pleasant
two-room apartment, of Joel’c
dark little one room “near the
theater”. She thought of hex
steady ralary as assistant furni-
ture buyer at the department store
and how hard she had worked to
attain that position, and her plans
for the future. i
She said, “Whither thou goest
Joel.” But she thought, I didn’t
expect this. Joel’s ideas of mar-
riage were modern, why isn’t fee
liberal about my job?
She sighed a very small sigh,
thinking how little she really knew
of this boy she had married,
(To Be Continued^ y
* ;
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Putman, Harry C. The Cuero Record. (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 18, Ed. 1 Friday, January 22, 1937, newspaper, January 22, 1937; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth995473/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cuero Public Library.