The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 37, No. 243, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 15, 1931 Page: 2 of 6
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* - .
THE CUERO RECORD, CUERO, TEXAS
THURSDAY, OCTOl
► RECORD
—
L—
iy> and <
IG CO.
»y Morning by
pose office at Cuetc, Texas, as second class matter
Act of Canorav.. March 3. 1897.
» —
_ BdKer-Publlsher
^- City Editor
_ Associate Editor
Advertising Manager
ir.u. New Tor», Chicago, Philadelphia
ie year 8880. fe
NO. 1
Little
.. we part,
to my heart.
*;
r—
r touch where we
Airplane design-
will squeeze
in & the same.
of, figures
over the new
daily tasks,
rush Just as
and get back
s into
more
rushes
'••5
irA5>M^a
^^|ever|lo?)
to ' *
eDSO#5.waire
Ok)a
It is strang? that America, the
land of prohibition, should find it
necessary £6 pursue * ah Intensive
campaign for the purpose cf detect-,
ing motorist^ Fbo have lccksd up-
Rangers Ordered
To Scene of Trial:
WICHITA PALLS, Oct. 15—Cap-
tain Tom R. -Hickman and his
company of Texas Rangers have
been ordered here to assure order
at the trial of two negroes charged
with the murder of A. N. (T^ti)
Nodurft and attack on his fianaee,
Miss Beulah Smith.
The trial is scheduled to begin
Monday. The negroes .are Richard
Brown and Richard Johnson and i
they will betried first for the mur-:
der. The two were held. mftil
They Holt! Germany s Fate
on the hooch when it was red.
Yet it is the truth and a vague their arraignment here this wegk.; .
, idea cf the thoroughness • with
Which the police are t adding the
matter can be guaged from the fact
feat a doctor has invented an ap-
paratus which detects en alcoholic
breath even if it is disguised in
cloves, coffee, peppermint, or any
ether cf the time-henared aids
calculated to defy discovery
The apparatus is portable and
immediately he suspects a driver of
having had one over the eight, the
ccp merely asks the suspect to blow
up a toy balloon. The balloon is
then slipped on a pipe attached to
a container filled with a pink
tigid. If fee suspect's breath is
pure end undefied. nothing hap-
pens. If there is tire Slightest trace
cf alcohol, the pink solution turns
white. . ' ..
Should the suspect refuse to un-
dergo the test, the cop has mere-
ly to hold a small suction tube to
the victim’s nose and the result is
TEXAS NOTES
? r- '•: A.-
0. P. ti L. do.. San Antonio, Texas
Department of Public Information.
I y Large numbers dr sheep are bein'?
fed leedHy and fattened for ‘the
throughout South
and Sbathwas* Taxas.
Citrus frptts are now moving
from the Valley District in largo
quatities.
lie: According to railroad
oars of fruit moved
Kingsville up to and in-
<rf this week as
for last season this
rty-Rcark No. 1 indicated
It'fgOduction of from 1,000 to $5,000
oil. This well is
west r.f Corpus
iChristi and the showing was made
at 4.832 feet. ImK ■
Etea: Vegetable crops in our ter-
ritory continue to look very good.
Citrus has started to move and it is
expected that quite a quantity will
*---*by the Ifrth or 20th of
The Missouri Pacific
„— their new produce house
i week end is equipped to handle
fruit. It has a toll set of
sorting, and pecking ma-
Afecrton: The pAst week there
- mt ten cerloads of cattle
Oatarim to be fed.
"'7 expect,to tgpgive about
i mere sheep fcFifes near fu-
. This Will give,feern in the
cf 15.000 head which
the Oaterina Ranch.
Monday about 100.-
■ have
growers received
J fire to forty-five
*5 them.
T.-jwo^q ■
clean up
bushel for
Pert Lavaca: Thre* carloads of
fip Hdve been shipped from her?
week arid fee oyster shipments
■ve been unusually good for tills
-time cf fee year.' W , *
=
RECORD W» A MONT?
l that the United States
tojoring about a peace-
controversy in Man-
arry other
a settlement,
stay out. Why
i fee know that tto|*£
As the 'old saying
bites the hand that
■*» ink is one of tlfe
seems slow.
J
If he loses them that is his
If tot make* them, that
famous humorist and
—
1 pecan crop will be smaller in quantity
observers say A gain tn quality al-
to) quantity.
has perfected an automobile which can be
air. That is nothing new. Hot air
for considerable driving, this hot air
i—■ —----
efmsh is fdtng to oceur in the vicinity of
some individual stops his practice of mak-
out of the state highway right-of-way.
e?tMtf^cxs Hotel
MARKET ai SEVENTH
’A‘MTRJCXN?&rNT?(
MARKET at SIXTH
♦TEXACO*
in jail at Fort Worth, as a
caution against violence.
Attorneys for the negroes indi-
eated. when the trial *was set for
Monday, that they will ask for a
change of venue and a continu-
ance. _ V •
CREDITORS LEND TO
PAY THEMSELVES
American citizens have loaned to
Germany one-third of that coun-
try’s stupendous private debt of
$3,500,000,000, a debt that exceeds
by more than a ,billion dollars the
amount Germany has paid in rep-
arations. In addition, ^ fee United
States together with other leading
powers, has loaned Germany hun-
dreds of millions to forestall a
threatened financial collapse. What
has been dene with this borrowed
money? Why do Germans still be-
wail their country’s plight? „
These facts and questions are set
forth by Garet Garrett, noted, eco-
nomic writer, in a recent Issue of
The Saturday Evening Post. Mr.
Garrett writes that for six years in-
ternational finance has teen “pour-
ing money into the German treas-
ury, into German industry, into
German banks, saying: ‘If the world
expoote Germany to pay reparations
it must lend her enormous sums to
build up her internal economy.’”
=========
j liciting an international loan of
j $900*00,0000. there was cn deposit
j in foreign money centers a billion
1 dollars cf Oerman money that
| could- have been called home. “The
j Germans did not want their own
! money,” the writer concludes. They
; wanted other people’s money.”
“Helpless Germany’ is now the
worlds second greatest ' industrial
power, built up, Mr. Garrett shoys,
cn borrowed money which she can-
not repay—except with mere bor-
rowed money and through a light-
op the breast
the toft*" - -
T--
She Smoke*
Empress Eugenie,
France whose prefe
recently come into;
smoker. Alexandra,
land’s most beautiful
served, cigars at
gave to feminine fir
was a cigar
Government.
In the hands of feese five men a great share of the fate of Germany
now rests. Heinrich Bruening (upper right), Chancellor and Por*
eign Minister, charged with the formation of a new eabinet, selected
Hermann Dietrich (lower left) as Vice-Chancellor and Finance Min-
ister; Gen. Wilhelm Groener (lower right), as Minister of War and
Interior, and Dr. Kurt Joel (upper left>, as Minister of Justice. If
this group of men falls before the Reichstag, Adolf Hitler (center).
National Socialist (Fascist)* leader, may take over the reins of Gov-
ernment on the request of President von Hindenburg.
Now, Mr. Garrett Shows, Germany is miny uses a threatened repudia-
saying to her creditors: ‘“If you ex-tion of her private debts to obtain
pact to be paid you must go on more loans and reparations corices-
lending us the money to -pay you sion. Furthermore, according * to
with. To wave, your investments Mr. Garrett, she has used the
you must save Germany first.’” same threat to prevent withdrawals
“What is It Germany must be. of foreign deposits from her banks
ved from?” fee writer asks, and and at the same feme has sent her
“First and always, money into foreign banks. When the
from nijqyfttoiu.” In brief, Ger- .German Chancellor in July was so-
Amy Lowell,
ensd reparations burden. No wonder WOman poet, was a
when she cties, “Save me!” her «j«h* French
creditors rush to her aid. j owns the nation’s
-“--:- has recently begun
A PSALM Or COTTON 1 (rffJtts -for wolnofc.
The fottaftifg Psalm of cotton) however the cigar
was clipped frem the Cotton Trad? j guarded as the last
Journal ayui mailed to FaiWi and1 culins torn of smoke. ^
Ranch by a subscriber. It Was writ-
ten by a Southern cotton farmer.
Cotton, thou are my shepherd and
* I am In want; '
Thcu has caused me to feed in a dry
pasture, thcu hast destroyed mf
Credit: thou hast led me into
tire paths cf poverty, law-suits,
liens and near nakedness
Thou bast destroyed my soul and
my happiness, }<*
Thou hast caused me to bow to a
tanker.with my hat under my
arm and mortgaged the muscle
and produce of my farm. v,/
Thou hast caused me to live in a
rented house in full view erf fee
moon, while stare come twinkl-
ing through the cracks., ^
Thcu appoihtest my head wife ig-
norance, superstition, poverty
and unpaid accounts. How can
I trust thee? '* • J
Thou hast kept my children out of
school* church,- and society,
^, thereby
which
vai
Thou
” .
5MRP*
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fe :y'iA: thy
lem
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Howerton, J. C. The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 37, No. 243, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 15, 1931, newspaper, October 15, 1931; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth999841/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cuero Public Library.