The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 28, Ed. 1 Friday, February 2, 1934 Page: 2 of 6
six pages : ill. ; page 27 x 22 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 2, lfl
THE CUERO, RECORD. CUERO, TEXAS
CUERO RECORD
FIFTH AVENUE FASHIONS
_By ELLEN WOTfTH
The Sleeved Dinner
Dress of Velvet V .
n, Except Saturday, and Sunday Morning by
CUERO PUBUSUNG CO.
The following interesting items
were clipped from an issue of the
Record of the year 1697:
e port oSot at Cuoro. Texas, as second class matter
nrvtar Aat of Congress. March 3. 1897.
__Editor-Publisher
_____________ City Editor
Advertising Manager
Sleeves are very much a part of
• the evening picture, this season.
They give a dress such versatility,
for the sleeved dinner frock such
as this can be worn not only for
formal occasions, but also when
your escort doesn’t dress.
Interesting cutthig ewes this
model a suavely fitted line which
breaks into a swirl about the an-
| kies. Notice the new shallow neck-
line, the drop shoulders, the ahir-
rings at the sleeve tops, widc-at-
' the-elbow sleeves and fitted wrists.
The blouse closes with tiny but-
i tons sn back On formal evenings
j these might be left unbuttoned
and the frock rolled back in rever
fashion. Choose velvet in the ever-
popular black, or midnight blue.
Size Id requires 4% yards 39-inch
material. Width about 2 Vs yards.
See the Winter Fashion Book far
other dinner and dance frocks,
equally easy to make.
Pattern Mo. 6424 is designed far
sizes 14. 16, 16, 20 years, 52, 54,
36. 38. 40, 42 bust.
FEBRUARY 2. 1897»
The following item clipped from
the congressional report of January j
30 will be of interest to parties who ‘a
waft1 nere the beet garden j
seed, and may prevent them from
being humbugged with an inferior i
quality:
“In the course of the keed debate ,
which had been diverted by Mr. I
Mon dell. Mr. BrooaweU (Rep.) of
Ohio asserted that a seed firm. ;
May & Co., of Minneapolis, had of-
fered him a direct bribe of. 1500 j
packages of seed to prevent him •
from calling the attention of con-
gress to the poor quality of seeds
furnished the Department of Agri-
culture by the firm.”
Referring to above will bay that
Heaton Bros., handle BUISTS, the
old reliable seed, and do not have
to bribe congress to give their seed
a reputation.
NaUonvl MwrthBf Representatives
r. CLARK CO., me, new Yont. Chicago, Philadelphia.
on Rates:
rill HI mm yorr 44.04. six months
$120, one month *0c.
SI.SO. etx months Site In DeWttt
tare, 1 year ftfit. 6 months <125.
<5 Kaxow. dsbtt a saloon business
on East Man street, was tttk morn-
ing closed out by W. J. Baker, trus-
tee. and his saloon fixtures, billiard
and pool tables, etc., were sold at
public outcry to the fagftMt Udder.
Baker bought .for bte prtpclnfd pad
kcfld it back to Karow «t onee, who
continued business.
On aoeount of its Mpeg the firs'
of the month <b® nighrting day)
news w« be searce*5*<he We card.
of the
cbtnery and the local man’s
lias been given to that mm
day.
code..
Approval of the supplemental
code, submtted January. 6 “cannot
he given” hy the Ameftcan Pubbsh-
ers, Haaasn daoiared. after Edgar
Rickard, obahnsn of the code
authority had painted ‘the news-
print industry *s one in great dis-
tress. .
RECORD WANT ADS
. TilnUdf
(IN8)
MY VCXJNG e*lBNOS
£'M VJE«?V VUOU& f
-7 0P 'AJUi f-*
W^u the unex-
PGCTCP AetPIVAL
o«
KSZATZ. fW A
«3uce »OAT
TWfe xjhPTuet
OP^HE SUCK
3*A KlCmA**-
GAN6 «M*»
EASILY ACCOM -
ALtSMED &CKZJK
M6CGES tBB HQ*
PSAG6FWU.V CM
7S4E«? WAV 64Ck
MO TUBr A4A1VJ-
land m
SEEM MBS
«O0f YEARS
hi Him unity
Rfe LlR
R fa *a amdmtmmbe u4o taae Ms sight there is
ttfcy thrown bis way became be cannot read.
whe can seed Mk te take advantage of Us
become a maws tofwwiag dtteen, should not the
dhy fie extended to him in his awakened state?
my «f the paqpie you associate with have any
new developments that emtomt the world, who
thd jdfcuary policies of flbe world affairs, who try
o the mysteries of ecopaodcs, or anything that is
*yv i 'narU*
It seems, is the assertion that man is en-
JnteUactual capacity but continues to be
(tens, deed, before ending this dissertation,
me about the problem for yourself?—Ex.
THIS 15 NOT l_
A VIOLIN.
LITTLE, ClRL.
OO' LOOKA
what a
QtQ VIOLI N
HOWOOYOtf OLAV
THAT
-7 VOV H46C H ?
IT 15 A <—
OASS f \ DDL E
Y«V i.15T€M - ILL
PLA*T IT FOR y
voo ,—
ITS SUPPOSED
TO OE IN A
Gamp, ain't it
's an open season cm kidnapers just now. it looks as
sffleers. steaming to the fighting point by the Kan-
ease ere, acre mafctag good their boasts to clean up on
and racketeers. And the general public says go to it.
Eaa produces one-third at the American cotton crop,
ousts lor only one thirty-third of its cotton textile pro-
L Half the population of Texas is interested directly or
tty In the product lea of cotton, yet only 5,700 are em-
in transforming ft Into cloths. In other words. Texas
las are sadly lacking
Texas produces ft5 per cent of the U. S. sulphur, hut ships
the bulk of it to at her states and countries for processing in-
to commodities of higher value than the raw material.
Fw
rteral
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Howerton, J. C. The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 28, Ed. 1 Friday, February 2, 1934, newspaper, February 2, 1934; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth999633/m1/2/: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cuero Public Library.