The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 70, No. 270, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 13, 1929 Page: 2 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Cuero Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Cuero Public Library.
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THE- CUERO RECORD, CUERO, TEXAS
RECORD
Another Form Of Farm Life
MEldflr Aot of Congress. Mareh 3. 1»7
‘ t..• 1 1
Chicago Zoo
Shows Cow For
Benefit of Children
General Banking and Exchange. Inter cat on Ml T
Safety Deposit Boxes for rent In the attest fixe i
vault in South Texas. We solleft your Banking
_____. Editor-Publisher
_______... City Editor
___Associate Editor
Advertising Manager
I thought aaav&e
VC 13 WANTEX3 SOME
HEVP CCU-EcrnN
VC'OR PUMPKIN
^ CROP- V
CHICAGO.— (INS) —City reared
pouniters may new marvel
Inc_ New York. Chicago, Philadelphia
.......‘"'‘y*- ■ ---——*■
over
the strange looking animal known
as—the cow. A pure- bred Holstein
ccw and, calf were given quarters
in the animal exhibit at Lircoln
Park. zoo for the benefit of chii-
! dren to whom they are as strange
as the mountain bon and the
rhinodOros. The newcomers ' were
• shipped from the stock farm of
Mrs. Ruth Hanna McCormick near
Bates: \
lay, one year *5.00, six month*
IB, one month 50c.
00, six months 03-25.
the City of Cuero and DeWitt County
THE-KNOW-YOUR-COU
prepared by
The National American
THER AND CROPS
The American i
How Many Can You
ife could probably just about fill up this column
k Weckljy Record with events of the pa9t week or
gys. chargeable to £he weather, but as it would
ignore urtder the head of “rubbing it in” than nev*s,
Idl pass up the opportunity of doing so.
office it I to say that with all the rain we have been
g and stem lih^iy- to get, some other sections ^re
g more jof it than we are, the Waller section hav-
eehred aiarae fourteen inches in a very short period
What do you know about the U
ably not one-half aa muefy aa ye
These games are designed to brin
knowledge about this great count
ten questions.
hereabouts has its good points as well afc
that we have a good winter season and
dous to.start farming operations the land
i wflPwobablv remain that way for some'
comtf* ji'he trouble with our seasons * of
ten it kfciijs/it rains too much and when it
s raituiifc ad together, overdoing niatter
The Loy« Doctor’*
AH Talking
Comedy, Collegians in
“Graduation Daze”
Admission 10c and 35c
1— What is the lust* city in Utah?
2— Which is more densely populated. Da
J—What large dves riffin* In Oanada bee
two states? * t 'A " V"-,- *> '
4— What is the qapgal of Ohio?
5— Whl is the third state la area?
6— What state has a large river tar Bs m
7— When did the Cabal Zopo become par
8— What state hsAhe largest {
9— Which is nicknamed the Hoorfer stab
10— What is the eighth largest city in the
Pimk
ecked up the rush of Thanks-
key^ ie slaugJrijfiring housed fo some extent
of the county have' been
Nto their receipts, and probably will
rash under ffontrol for the reat of the season.
*f _ ~ax u*Vg Tm. ?^ii Jf T Td
■ Friday
Jack MuHiaH and
Dorothy Mackaill
nftfcu
Hall of Farr^p
To Adorn Great
Library at Yale
Two Week* Off’
Answers t^> questions of
rtaueps toe fanners are filing their fancy
[Jing’fh^seconds apd eulls back home to
grow some more, and shipments made
a so far are about the best ever sent nor^h-
'hanksgiving trade. * %
(K and tbe Sager boys ware roifnding up
td of hogs to be shipped out of Cuero to-
\ probably be the ikst shipment for sever-
ippegs are not as plentiful as they, were.
NEW HAVEN.—(INS)— A Hall of
P2DH haz 'seen established by Yale
University in figures adorning a
portico of the ^exterior of the great
. . . | sterling Memorial Library. No liv-
before giving It. iln« persen is included in the group
. of fifteen marbles that were elect-
ive ^ to'represent as many divisions
TWse u. lnnumtoakle oOm q
answered on tea ana five-color V
condensed atlas, which The Agiei
cost in connection wBh these fan
copy by sending ten cents in omn
formation Bureau. Lagkm Divisiac
this newspaper and be sure fo 8ive
Tlie Land of the
Silver Fox”
ARTICLE XXXVI ' j cine is very convenient as he fast-
NE£D TAPEWORMS jifeg is necessary* I
TAKE the MEASURE j Caution should be used, however,,
OF YOUR FLOCK? I ss same cases, A pcfe'.fing 1
- resulted from giving Kamala. The 65 th^ in vh? library are to
The Evil Reputation of These Elo- j usual practice is to try it on a few! classified. The figures and the
gated Pests Will Be WeU Demon- Cf ttye less valuable birds about tS j division represented are:
si rated If They Are Allotted to hours before the rest of the flock, i Moses, religion; Socrates, phi! 06-
Get a Good Start in the Pout- if'the test fcwls show favorable re- ophy; Herodatus. history; Colum-
try Flock. 1 suits, the rest m*y be treated with bus. geography: Vcrro, language;
- reasonable assurance at safety. Shakespeare, literature: Da Vinci,
Tapeworms are probably among In the case of Sapewom. Zdee- jartsi Bach. music; Adam
the worst offenders d the thirty- tinn. as with moak other poultry Smith, economics and sociology;
six or more species or .variety of Afecaoeo. sanitary measures are of Justinian law; Aristotle. natural
worms that find parking spec* in prime importance. Clean up runs t sciences; Gallileo. astronomy and
a fowl's intactiaes, They mayj and houses, and keep them dean *a»theqaatics; Sir Isaac Newton,
cause serious Ices'in any flock tod well disinfected with a good Phy^cs and chemistry; Aesculapius,
cnce they get swifted, ac it # wefl diemfectant. Remove all droppings Medicine; Petruvius, engineering.
tQ kncwxvhat are the signs of their j op other fly attracting material1 ““' J --
presence- and vhsl «re the best;every morning and remove it to a Report Shows Cotton
measures for getting rid cf them. safe distance. Cover all runs with p i -• a a
Tapewcrnss are very common in!» heavy coating of hydrated lime. tO be 1U,D1U
poultry and some varieties do not "hich sho^W he ployed or spaded ^^nrr
seem to cause any particular trou- uader otters, and a quick growing ^ Oo/emment cotton report
ble. There are at least two kinds, planted. j for November 1st as given the Rec-
i Copyright, MB9, [ord by James R. Huvar, of Poakutn.
by Dr. L. D. LeGcar, V. 8.) showed 10,610 bales for 1929 as
Foil the losses sustained on the hog market,
hi ^ ere offered glightly less than eight cents
OCa, the lowest price since last spring. p Hog
have already gone well above the previous
t-lb* a sifcgje y«aar, with probably a few more
18 the ej>d of the season. f
toe he) fans north of Cuero has delivered its
ttop! of tfabbage to. the Moor© A Meishner
produce firm hero and it was mighty fine cab-
m ^ . 'V ' . M
Heisler,. foreman of the Buchel farm has held
t fh tt Guadalupe Valley has the, edge on
andfe Valley for early cabbage of the winter,
putting his theory into practice. His idea is
y have ft on as for somewhat milder winters,
on them" for somewhat more moderate sum-
t an i that young cabbage properly handled
ttf a good start in the late summer when
Bm up down in the.Valley section^. t
v of! the fact that cajjjbage that^s reidy for
R before Christmas is-worth two or three
he open market, more than th4 cabbage that
ft'January and February, it will be seen that
% advantage. '
r says ha pan confc -but on cabbage that sells
lars a tori? but ft be can get twenty, it* is jtodt
jod dr him, and since the opening order Was
bund $2.50 a hundred, we can see that the
la » FrescrtptJon for
Colds, Grippe, Flu, Dengue,
Bilious Fever and Malaria.
IS la the moat speedy remedy
KNOW Y<
DEFINITE
The trend of prominent autc
towards Durant goes hand in
general trend towards 4-Fo
Durant pioneered in this vit
advancement. And Durant; a
important advantage of a 44
Six under a thousand dollars.
trouble if allowed to gain headway.
Them worms are small seldom be-
ing ever five inches long. They
bury their head* in the walls cf {
titd fowl’s iptestinhs. but, apparent- j
ty*. cijiy t« anchor theruelyes. Tfie |
greatest damage they (Jo is de- j
th-ive the bird cf its natural nour- >
'ehment by absorbing all or most of
it themselves. The chickens eat as i
touch as, /tfiey ever did, or more, i
hilt, it does little good. A careful}
observer will see that hi* fowls are 1
gradually losing weight and get |
pale from, no apparent cause.
The only sure way to det-ct tape-
worm is to kill one or more of the
fcwls most seriously affected and
conduct a post-mortetp examina-
tion, or “post” amy that die. Cut
open the ones selected »fto) exami-
nation; and slit the intestines .from \
end to end. If the'intestines are)
held under wafer, Jt will be‘easier j
to detect the worms *tf any are
present. Tapeworm* are easily
recognized » being fiat, made up of
jointed segments. They are- white J
cr gray in color. There may also
be >cund worms present. Round |
worms are a serious ^enough prob-
lem to be featured in an independ-
ent crticle which I hpve written
for separate publication
Tapeworms must have an inter-
tnedfaje host, or they cannot spread
to r*hev fowls Tgpeworm - ggi will!
not hatch in the intestines of
chickens
The recent heavy capital investment
Durant dealerships possess profound pi
significance. They emphasise the ggnAi
of leading merchants in the executives
now control Durant—a confidence base
proved ability to produce motor cars
build lasting good wifi*
Watch tbePontiacBigSix on tbo open ro> d, revesling
top speeds uscha* no other car in its fieU cannxtch.
See it leap eagerly ahead at a green lipb t, ax tolerating
with unrivaled snap and spirit.... Pontiac is equally
far ahead of its field in stamina anil long life.'due
to many wear-resisting features *ucb, as crankcase
ventilation which prevents dilution of engine oil —
positive full pressure lubrication at all speeds—and
the Harmonic Balancer w hich counteracts torsional
vibration in the crankshaft. . . . Come in today.
Leana how easily you can own and enjoy the finest
car the market affords at its low price.
EwUS* ftf S4». $745 l* MS, /. *. |k Pontiac, Vif«!.. .phi. rlc'ivcry char fat*
Bmoftya, •prims cmyrtjtmd Lovcjoy mltack oboorW. rmfnlar rqaipmmc
oat i» very IlatteriBg up to now. , Orly a real
q- woilld do them material injury now.
otr^cted rainy spell is holding back the
if t|re late cotton prouction, which^ really
r<a£|)er and more sunshine if it to Open well,
nre+thet keeps up indefinitely those who had
i might get two or three bales of cptton y.ill
j if they realize .half their estimates,
rali agreed that we have had enough rain
kt a s^astitt of that type of weatheir we were
before the rain set in, w ould be very highly
i for about* six weeks or more.
The eggn of tapeworms
are passed with the dropping of
infected chickens and may be eat-
en by fll^s or earth ^orms. They
hatch inside the fiy or earth vtorm,
and-, then chickens eat them ani
the worms will develop and grow
in the chicken. 'Flies are the meet
common host*. If. therefore, fowls
are confined to yards which are
kept free of‘ dropping* and <Mcay-
ed matter, there will be less iftLhle
from tape warms If ^11 such mater-
ials are removed some distance
frem the poultry ruhs. flies will be
attracted elsewhere.
.Kamala is known to be the most
effective remedy against tape-
worms in poultry, and is recom-
mended by the United States De-
partment of Agriculture. It is best
given in the form of individual
dose pills—one gram being a dose
for an adult chicken. This medi-
.iSSMNdpHro w tccllam thattmtff.a. 6.) price uhea comparin g
r caluwm . . . Omklant^Pantlat dcMtfrrml arirem include mu,
cJfcKrgM /of freight ond ofgHnorv amf the rhargt for guv n idi-
tionmi Kcftrorlfi or finmneing
FUNfRAL OmkCTOV
AND MORTICIAN j
GUADALUPE VALLEY MOTOR CO
Cuero, Texas
PONTIAC
CMS)
bigsix
ARNOLD
j 11
f* 3*7 r_.“ ig-riig' v i3t fjr-
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Howerton, J. C. The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 70, No. 270, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 13, 1929, newspaper, November 13, 1929; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth999389/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cuero Public Library.