The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 68, No. 87, Ed. 1 Monday, February 26, 1962 Page: 2 of 6
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» TH1 CUERO RECORD, Mon. Feb. 26, 1061_ SCOlTS SCRAP BOOK
East German Labor
Need Calls Mothers
II!
if”
ha* a population o/ about 17 mil-
lion compared to 53 million in
West Germany. More than 3.5
million refuges have gone to the
West since the end of World
By WILLIAM BRIDGES
United Press International
LE1P21G, East Germany UPI
- in Leipzig's Rosental Park on we$T m
sunny "spring days one can often ^-ar ^ j
see groups of small children A familv 500 marks
playing games or spinning hula 1 (J125v ^ its firS!t child. 750
hoops under the supervision ot maTjKS ($1*71 for its second, BOO
girls in their 20's. i marks t$200> for its third and
The children, el) under school ^ marka ($2501 for its fourth,
age. are there because their j ^ s1ud<>nt said
mothers have been encouraged ; For children the
to work to help alleviate Fast fampy receives 500 marks each,
Germany’s pressing labor short-, an<j fh<, SCVenth on up
age. -- - ~ ' ~ ’•*
East' Germany’s
Communist Party Chief Walter
Ulbiicht is an honorary god-
parent.
The student said children are
allowed to receive only “gvxxl
German names.’’
"You coldn't name one
Bobby,” lie said.
He added that the state has a
__________ _ state - ean-
n\slle<T~nurseries are not design-
ed just too take a child off moth-
er's hands for a few hours.
If the child is small enough -
font months to about a year-and-
*-half - the nursery will care
*n it -night and day. six days a
week. “The mother picks up the cjaj program for helping un-
child on Saturday night w hen she < wp(j lnothers. and requires the
finishes work and brings him 1 fa1 }y,rs t0 contribute 30 marks
back ivn Monday. J < $7.30» each month until the
Children from one-and-a-half wV>;M i(I 1K
to about six can b? left in the;
itu.series eight hours each day.! commcnted wryly,
and school age children can be yjng one myself,
placed in special classes after;
their regular school hours.
The charge is 3 marks (about;
71) cents* a weak.
\ Ivipzig University student
vr-.o guided visitors about the;
«utv said "almost all” young
about this.” be
'because I'm •
Research Seeks ^ ™£*UW:
scon
''"Ml
.
\/( m fcAMfk
7 ' KlQKf EHD
ARE.
Cooimq oF<KE SuK
YfOULD MAKE -"The EARTH
BLEAK AHD FROZE.K- A-
come< Miqrtf SKASrt mib
YHE EARrfK- <KE KOOK
Could FALL info <KE EARm
- <KL EAjtfH V/0ULD 5HJ0VEL
-SCRAPS
FLARED )H<0
AU0VA.
3,000,000 X* PAfEHT
ISSUED BY-'fUl. U.S.
OFFICE
Bird 1$
OFYHE PARROT”
irMXl>OHC
A METHOD OT IDEttflf/l^
AMD SElECrflXf} CHECKS
BY EEE.CTROH.lC
KUMSERS.
KOH XEYi
ARE OHE Of
THE OlEAHE-ST
Of AHlKALS* __
C’ Kioj Fubira byruikjtt, loc, l'Ml. Wv*W n^hu nskycsL
husbands and wives in this area
have jobs.
I He estimated that BO to 70 per
($mt of the children sp?nd part
o* (heir time in the nurseries,
i-hich are set up frequently in
?h- factories where their par-
k's work. j conducted by the Texas Agri ,
cultural Experiment Station to j COLLEGE STATION - March | porhmities offered to 4-H mem-, ^ auentl
I find a practical chemical con- j_10 ha$ ^een designated as 4-H 1 bers to grow in citizenship, lead-j Jhe'week
, trol for the sorghum midge. _ . u- v. iM -p^vac The same ershin and oractical skills are: Mw-iut the
Y/ihdEP
MAMMAL
yfe SAf.
r 1-31 ^
tl
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m
if!
MW:
'7' y
kBEHSpi'
PCmi
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Research In Wash-
Wear Cotton Fabrics
^ ^ I _^___
Sorghum Midge March 3-10 To Be 4-H
Club Week In Texas
COLLEGE STATION - Dur-
ing the past year, tests were
. The girls who supervise
nurseries receive a 10-week i
training course, he said. They!
are prid an average working
vjvge here — between 450 and
munity and county 4-H organi-
zations throughout Texas and
the nation, as practical demon-
strations of 4-H in action. In-
terested persons, especially
youth, have a special invitation
Since grain sorghum
—, *1™ . early in the season usually
bOO marks (3100 to SIoOl munh*j(ioes not berome infested with'nation
‘The student said the Common-' ^hum midge the Plants m-
bh have .instituted an elaborate jed in the tests v e, e planted
4-stem of rewards for large tarn- j du£in8 ’ ' ^ ,
population shortage. (It now * day Mon thf> hea(ls
regulate nudge-
oa -1-.* .v. ...----------------- | ,ne Wees in orner 10 is
T'T'd i Club Week in Texas. Tlie same 1 ership, and practical skills are | about the organization.
P ; week will be observed across the ! especially valuable to them, to j -----
the Stale and Nation. 4-II Clubs VT p. j it,.,,,ro/i
. , are a proving ground for the i Man ^ Olllld Hanged
framing of future leaders.
In his official proclamation „TherrfCjV L as Governor of
covering the wee_ong i Texas, do hereby designate the
said, "The development of citi-
zens and leaders for America is
to attend a 4-H meeting during ________
in order to learn more i and colored wash-wear
College Station - Longer last-
ing collars and cuffs on men’s
wash-wear shirts and a single
treatment that gives cotton
wash-wear properties and also
permanently dyes, starches and
adds other finishing agents to
the fabric were announced to-
day by the U. S. Department of
Agriculture.
A cotton interliner was treat-
ed to give it wash-wear qualities
and then bonded by an adhesive
to outer layers of untreated cot-
ton cloth to make the collars
and cuffs. The finished fabric
only has wash-wear qualities
similar to those of the treated
interliner but also has high re-
sistance to fraying or abrasion
that is ordinarily associated
with cotton. Samples made with
the treated interliner were some-
what stiffer than the usual soft
collars and cuffs but less stiff
than acceptable starched ones.
The wash-wear qualities were
rated excellent.
The new multipurpose treat-
ment involves use of divinyl sul-
fone derivatives. These chemi-
cqjs have the unusual ability to
react with cotton's cellulose
molecules to produce a good
wash-wear finish and at the
same time to attach other fin-
ishing materials permanently to
the cellulose molecules. The de-
rivatives could prove even more
versatile in cotton processing.
They may be capable of attach-
ing to cotton many other chem-
icals, including those that give
resistance to fire, heat, rot, mil-
dew and some repeilency to
water and oil.
By adding both dye and starch
to a solution of divinyl suifone
derivatives, the scientists ob-
tained a permanently starched
______ lored wash-wear fabric.
j Laundering tests indicated the
cessing temperatures.
Research workers at USDA’s
Southern Utilization Research
Division at New Orleans worked
out the new treatments.
THEALMANAC
United Press International
Today is Monday, Feb. 2fi, the
57th day of the year with 308 to
follow in 1962.
The moon
last quarter,
There are no morning or eve-1
ning stars.
On this day in history:
In 1846, “Buffalo Bill” Cody, a
man who personified the ro- j
manee of the frontier West, was:
bom in Scott County, Iowa.
In 1870, New York’s first sub-
way line was opened to the pub-
lic.
In 1919, Congress established
Grand Canyon National Park in
Arizona.
In 1935, Germany started the
operation of Its air force.
A thought for the day: Rus-
sian author Dostoyevsky said.
“Tyranny is a habit capable of
being developed, and at last be-
comes a disease. . .The man
and the citizen disappear for-
ever in the tyrant.”
SHADE LAUNDRY
NEW YORK (UPI) - To clean
soiled, washable window shadeo,
place them unrolled on a flat
surface. Dip a cloth or sponge
into suds, — two teaspoonfuls of
liquid detergent to one gallon zf
water. Wring out. Wash the
shade in a circular motion. Then
wipe with a damp cloth wrung
out In clean, coo) water.
This prescription from Mary
Jane Forest, home economist for
a household craning aids firm,
is coupled with this suggestion:
work on a small area at a time.
beinR sure to overlap each area.
When side is finished, wine the
entire surface with a soft dry
cloth.
SILVER CHOICE
N.NEW* YORK (UPI) - Con-
I temporary elegance with sleek,
is approaching its J sculptured contours and delicate
ornamentation appear to be the
trend in sterling flatware de-
signs among future brides.
The taste in silver is based on
a study by the Sterling Silver-
smiths of America. In the study,
conducted in 45 states, 70.000
high school graduates reported
their pattern preferences.
Finally Pensioned
MANCHESTER, England
(UPI)—The government award-
ed a disability pension to Ber-
nard Sweeny, 45 years after the
64-year-old army veteran was
gassed in World War I.
An Inspiration
LONDON (UPI)
Astronaut
DENTAL DUTY
NEW YORK (UPI) - A sur-
vey by the American Denial As-
sociation shows that the average
dentist in private practice works
a 43-hour week. But three out
of every eight dentists work
more than a 45-hour week.
The 43 hours are distributed
this way: 34 hours at the dental
chair, four hours doing labora-
tory work, two hours doing other
office work, and three hours in
free office time. The average
dentist, it was reported, takes
a three-week vacation each
year.
GALVESTON (UPI)- Ernest
John Brown. 66, was found
KCFH -CUERO
1 GOO On The Dial - 500 Watts
- MONDAY THRU FRIDAY
5.39 Sign On
■Mateo Perez
"1 .eon Bold!
Top of the News
Coffee Time
Polka Parade
Ken s Korner
Tops in Pops
’World News
Texas Today
•Local News
Trading Post
Farm Report
Spins & Needles
Musical Showcase
Metting Matinee
Tops in Pops
Ken 'letting
Sports
Tops in Pops
grtm Off
SATURDAYS:
Polka Parade
John Du in Show
SUNDAYS:
Sunday Serenade
.Sacred Heart Program
Presbyterian Church
Hour of the Crucified
John Dum Show
„ ... Rosary
PNewCof the Hour” on the Hour
•Headlines” on the Half-Hour
Y .00
*7.00
o :30
8:00
9 05
10:05
11 05
32 00
12:05
1” :1~
12:13
12:40
12 45
; 105
-2:05
. 2 30
:30
’5 30
*5:35
!5:59
, emerged to
i laying activitiies. Bags were
removed for 24 hours from 10
! plants for 10 consecutive days
! to expose each head to midge
| oviposition. It was determined
j that egg laying by midge oc-
j curs most frequently on the
j third day following head em-
j ergence. By the end of the
j fourth day after emergence,
approximately 90 percent of
tire egg laying is complete.
| From this information, it
j was determined that insectic-
' ides should be applied to sor-
i ghum heads 1 to 4 days after
, emergence. In the tests, plants
j that were treated soon after
■ emergence showed much great-
i er yields than those treated
when the heads were in the
partial bloom or full
stage.
.week ol March 3-10. 1962, as; hanged from the rigging of a
! 4-H Club Week in Texas.” I pile driver yesterday. A justice ______ _____ ,
— -----------. . , t , j Special events and programs ; of the peace withheld a ruling • to remove excess solution, then j heart, life can
a “Tl^^lT^mgram ,~tresses°the i aIe Panned by both com- pending further investigation. dried and cured at normal pro-jous.
development of head, heart:. |*~ . ......' . . ............. ..... ■' '" . ■'............-.....—
STORE CONDITIONER
LINCOLN. Neb. (UPI) - No
matter what type of air condi-
tioner you have, winter calls for
a covering to protect from soil—
and a cleaning before covering.
___ _______^ Clara Leopold, extension horns
I treated fabric was highly resist-j John Glenn's orbital space! management specialist at the
! ant to damage from chlorine | flight is as much an inspiration {University of Nebraska, said
I bleach. I to middle-aged parents as to; the filter is the main cleaning
The new treatment can be ap-j their children, a reader of the job. Plastic and aluminum fli-
pped with conventional textile I Daily Express said today. iters can be washed with hot
1 finishing equipment. Fabric is j In a letter to the editor, Jessie' suds. Mrs. Leopold said they
! dipped into the chemical solu-jE. Dent wrote, “Glenn has giv-j should be dried thoroughly be-
! tion, run through squeeze rolls ten hope to 40-year-olds. . .Take .fore being replaced in the unit.
’—'1------ ,:r----still b e marvel- Cleap spun glass filters with a
vacuum cleaner.
7:30
05
00
:U0
:30
45
10
51
. 1
;i
>5
tested, and most gave good re-
sults. Of those tested, howev-
er, only Dibrom, endrin and
toxaphene have been ap-
proved for use on grain sor-
ghum.
Complete results of these
tests are contained in Experi-
ment Station publication PR-
2206. “Control of the Sorghum
Midge cm Grain Sorghum.” A
copy of this publication may
hands and health as well asj
teaching the latest practices in j
agriculture and home econom-j
ics.
“Since the 4-H prograrn was j
inaugurated by the L'nited States j
government in 1914. the move- j
ment has spread across our na- j
tion and established bridges of j
understanding to more than 50 j
foreign countries. 4-H Club;
members learn by conducting
result demonstrations and par- i
ticipating in 4-H activities. By]
putting into action what they j
learn, club members improve j
their homes and communities.
“Voluntary adult leaders;
tne working with the club mem-
I bers provide a key to the suc-
n.oom , cess Q{ 4 H Parents and friends
of 4-H give support and encour-
agement to club members. The
Agricultural Extension Service
of the A&M College of Texas,
through county extension agents,
directs the 4-H Club program.
“Any boy or girl from ages
nine to twenty-one can take
part in 4-H Club work. The op~
be obtained from the Agrirul-
tural Information Office, Col-
lege Station, Texas. Ask for it
by name and number.
The Cuero Daily Record
BY CARRIER
1 MONTH........-
__________$1.10
3 MONTHS......—
__________$3.25
6 MONTHS -........
.......... $6.25
1 YEAR_____________
_________$12.00
FLUB t% STATE SALES TAX
r 1
♦
• IP
dk
i j
*
• 0
♦
*
1
If i$
yA
,* *•
: ' .
3
BY MAIL
DeWitt Or Adjoininf Counties
6 MONTHS
____H50
1 YEAR......................#•»
PLUS t% STATE SALES TAX
ALL RAXES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE
' ■' . . ■ 3 ■ :
QUOTE: “Newspapers are the best medium for food advertising and for mar-
keting information on food. The printed word can be read, reread, clipped, and
filed. And for some reason or other it commands more authority than casual
statements on radio and television.” Unquote.
So says the U.S. Department of Agricultural And this authoritative
medium is so flexible that it allows you to get your message across in the most
powerful, most effective way YOU can devise. The only limits are the bounds
of the advertiser’s creative imagination....
1
What’s YOUR sales story? You sell it best when you tell it in the pages of
the daily newspaper.
*Souree: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Federal Extension Service Study
. r------ .... >1
EVERY DAY...ALMOST ALL YOUR CUSTOMERS READ A DAILY NEWSPAPER
, jp*. L ; '......
>.....-
ISL ^ , • . „
- I
...
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The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 68, No. 87, Ed. 1 Monday, February 26, 1962, newspaper, February 26, 1962; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth695686/m1/2/: accessed May 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Cuero Public Library.