The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 150, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 25, 1936 Page: 3 of 6
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* ***■•«>
THE CUERO RECOI
J Representative Lemke
Bandits Escape
IF IT'S LUMBER YOU WANT
Budweiser gets the best of each year’s bar-
ley crop. Wherever the best barley grows
in a season, the Home of Budweiser goes
after it... and pays premium prices. No
barley accepted until our laboratory has
analyzed and germinated every sample.
Order a carton for
your homo —NO
DEPOSIT REQUIRED
—Be prepared to on*
terfain your guests.
sure
VISITORS TP ST. LOUIS
CORDIALLY INVITED TO
INSPECT OUR PLANT
LIKE BUDWEISER
m
^y,1 bi
if
=§r - <
v'
RESTS
BOSS TRIAL
bitinued P tom Page 1) er- saying that he couldn’t
after wit less who related I slong with him Rizzo said.
action., of the accused
» ' X
b'expressed opinions re-
mgntal condition.
Zazana, i grocer, said
on one occasion visited
and wanted to borrow
and that vhen he refused
Wt
it H
- ~e an
testifying Boss was insane.
| Cosmo Rizzo, a first cousin of
I the accused youth, Houston auto-
■ mobile salesman, testified Boss
also came to his home to borrow
; money. He was cursing his fath-
Linked in Rumor of i bird Parry
.Rizzo stated that he contacted
County Health Officer J. B. York, j
of Harris County, by telephone to
•‘see what we could do' about the
boy.” He declared the health of. 1
fleer told him that a charge of $5
would be made for his visit to the \
Boss home unless the boy was put
him the ihoney he threat-I "‘f*'' Boss'
BStirT f J father to see York, he stated.
the loor in.
1 iinself
He said
Rizzo on cross examination ad-
that thi defendant mitted he signed a note wUh Steve
trouble. Boss, father of the accused, to
sa esman of Hous-
jtuy that Boss was
'foiling with his fath-
as££ -enu
inron
. 7.^ • 1
raise money to hire defense coun- j
sel. •
Tony Barcelona, of Bryan, uncle
err’ank that Boss “did of Boss- told the Juty that Boss re-
-jg£» He admitted on * Peatedly cursed and threatened his
hat he was not father
a—t—4—_ ' B. F. Mauro of Bryan said that
, he had noticed a change iri Boss
! after February of this year as did
j Joe Mauro, a first cousin of Steve
boss. ■ :•
Mrs. Charles Ramsey of Bryari
told of a visit by Boss to her home,
and that at the time he threatened
to kill one of his cousins. She de-
clared in her opinion Boss was of
unsound mind at the time.
O. E. Hall, Harris county dairy-
man, J. I. Frazier, Pioneer Oil Co.
representative of Houston, and
Pete Palasota, a Bryan barber, were
among the other witnesses.
Frazier testified that he heard
Boss threaten to get some dyna-
mite and blow up some of his,
Boss,’ relatives in Harrisburg.
Tony Rizzo, a first cousin of
Boss, said that the defendant be-
' a bad man, and that
he told him on one occasion that
Clyde Barrow didnt have a thing
on him, that he intended to make
Barrow and the rest look like a
bunch of babies.
Rizzo quoted Boss as saying that
if he wds ever put in jail that he
would be cut In fifteen minutes be-
cause of friends he had on the out-
side. Rizzo said he argued with
Boss, telling him that he couldn’t
“beat the law” -but that the defend-
fident he could “beat
th^ law” and informed him that he
was going to get $4000 or $5000 in
a few days.
He branded Bees as a coward and
a braggart.
Laughter rippled through the
court room when Pete Palasota,
Bryan barber, on cross examination
told Judge Harris that he thought
any man who curses in a barber
shop is not normal.
He had previously' testified Boss
4-c^me into his shop and had bragged
hew tough he was and how many
dances he had broken up, punctuat-
ing his conversation with curse
words.
Examination of witnesses was di-
rected for the defense by Sidney?
Benbow .chief counsel of the Boss
legal talent.
7//
Rev.
Charles
Coughlin
'Continued from Page i* ,
Jacobs si; j\V. T. Lambert SI; Blue-
bird Sandwich Shop S:; E C.
Frfcbie' SI.
i I E(ml Mat kowskv S2 50 Mayer,
Red White Store S2.50; Cfabrirlj
M ljSie S5; Junker Service .Station
to; Thomas M. St'ell S2 >0; S. P.
Hebert S2; S. D. Hefner SB;. Breed- i
1 n •Brcs. $25; E. B. Meynhrd S2.o0.
Barney Bvr'ne S2; O A. ZimmV-
man 95; C. H. Dofnbuth :;10;
v Thigpen $1.
THURSDkY, JUNE 25, 19J
THIS TRIAL NEED NEVER
HAVE BEEN HELD!
.... .J. . ... , ... V *
"HAVE YOU DECIDED
WHY THAT PAIN
nr r i r ri 9
MBERMAN BLAMES
R, THE PAINTER
UMBERMAN AND
PAINT!"
I
Prospects of a third national political party, with Representative
'Villiam Lemke (R.) of North Dakota,, inset, at the helm, loomed as
rumors persisted that the Rev Charles E. Coughlin planned to back
i.ech an organization. The Detroit radio priest announced in New
Turk he was ready to support an unnamed third-party leader provid-
ed the mart announced a platform suitable to the the National Union
i t Social Justice. Lemke is the co-author of the $3,000,000,000
farm mortgage refinancing bill defeated in the house several weeks
ago Father Coughlin staged a vigorous but fruitless battle to put
* the bill atrUs.
Famed Lafayette
Gates Reopened
• • * • ! j ‘ j
PHILADELPHIA. June 19.—(INGi
j 1—The faipous “Lafayette fates” n• :
his oric Pennsylvania ; Hospital, j
• founded in 1751 by Benjamin i
.] Franklin, have been opened to the
i public, .for the first time sjnee Laf-
j ayette phased through them .in
i The huge iron doors weae closed
after Lafayette • drove i through
them cn an inspection trip 112
years ago while lie was making his
triumphal tour of the United
! States. According to legend they
lv.ee never-openpd again. A new
i main entrance was established in-
| stead. • * • 4
Ten feet high and of iron scroll-
work.. the gates are in two sej,s.
guarding the entrance and exit to
a horseshoe- drive. They yrere op-
ened for a garden party £nd tab-
leau in which the history of thr
hospital—reputedly the oldest in
! America—was reenacted.
Two Jump From
Springboard To
Marital Bliss
A First Coat of
SUPERWHITE PRIMER
is Essential!
Most paint failures not due to moisture from
within are caused by improper thinning of reg-
ular house paint for the priming coat. Since
house surfaces vary in paint absorption, it sim-
ply isn’t reasonable to expect them all to be
primed successfully with a thinned coat of paint
originally intended for a finish coat! Cook’s
Superwhite Primer has revolutionized painting
practice, since it does what no prime coat of
house, paint can ever do—it seals all surfaces
uniformly! »
Then Apply
Cook's HOU$E PAINT
for the Finish Coat!
Cook’s fine House Paint over Saperwkitc Primer
for — long yean of
processed oils insure
gives you what you pay
beauty and service. Its heat
a paint film of uniform thickness over the entire .
surface, with no “weak spots” to break dears ,
under weather attacks. On every cooat-
age, hiding power, and durakiiity—Cook’s House v
Peint is "Best for Wear and Weather”, yk ft ''i
actually costs less per year ff itrvice then erdi-
nary paint!
.
DANVILLE. Ky., June 1S(.—»INS)—
* - ‘ a
\ On Texas Farms *
* By W. R. DARROW. ] ♦
* Extension Service Editor +
* +
t + + ♦,+ + + ♦♦♦*♦♦ + ♦
! Marriage on a spring board. Yes it’s
-- true.
1 Miss Adelia Sherman 21 o{
# Louisville, and Edward M. Schmidt,
With Diamonds a!so of Louisville, were wed on
• the diving platform at Gwinn’s Is-
land. neas here.
The ceremony, conducted by the
Rev. C. E. McLean, of Stanford,
Ky., was s arranged by the bride-
NEW YORK. June 27.—(IMS) —
; Four | armed bandits, today stole
; $25,000 worth of diamonds in the,
1
$22.05
ENOUGH PAINT FOP
THE AVERAGE FIVE-
ROOM HOUSE—ONLT
Three gallons of Supcrwhite Primer and
three gallons of Cook’s fine house paint
will paint the average small house, two
coats.
PAINT
'■!
WITHOUT
READY CASH!
No mortgages—no lien*—no red tape!
Up to 1* ntonths to paf fpr both lnber j
and materials. Pay aJ little as $4.1*
per month. Ask us!
nr:-.
Diamond Setting Establishment of j groom’s uncle. Dr. J. N. Sherman
Under the non-interprefative title ! Jacons and Levinson, in i of Chanuie, Kan-., formerly of
-.....
ies of Texas have been meeting dur
ing the last six months ahd analyz-
ing land use customs on Texas
farms and ranches.
the center of the business district in Bardstown.
All of the parties, including the
The gunmen held up and bound
seven persons upon entering the
shop.
minister, are ardent sportsnien, and
the rites were witnessed by a group
of bathers and swimmers.
The object of this work which '<
was inaugurated by the Extension j
Service, is to start a flow of live !
information from the farm to the
Department of Agriculture, and the
method was for small groups of j
neighbors to meet and. using pre- J
pared schedules, map their ow n ,
and the whole community’s land i
use. t
Two hundred and four counties j
having been engaged in this wo^k, j
70 of these ’counties made out!
schedule seven which had to do'
with gardens, orchards, and sweet
potatoes, all for home use.
OVERNIGHT!
Tint 1 tnith family moved oat of town botwoon
bocaaao Mr Smith's Job moved and be
I with It. The Smiths weren't worded
movtnq their ELECTRIC refrigerator, be-
. they knew there would be no disconnoc-
or installation expense - they would Inst
M tn.” tar immediate refrigeration. They
that wherever they moved, there would
be Electricity available at a moderate
. > The Smiths knew. too. that the sup-
, Phr Electricity Is always Increasing, win
u never ran out and that the trend of electric
r -j rates no* alwqys been downward. . . . That's
» , worth
Figures compiled for the Sta^e i
from these 70 counties are very |
revealing; 31.649 acres mo:e of or-1
chards are needed in these 70 1
counties to supply fruit fer th e |
heme tables; 20,716 more acres-of j
garden are needed in these 70 j
counties to supply vegetables for
home use; and 6,128 acres more of
sweet potatoes are needed by the
families in these 70 counties.
thinking about when you buy a refrig-
e*ata4 See die new models at Your Dealer's
Power and Light C< mpany.
WHmuiiu>tnnttnttt»mnin!iiiiijitnffltnntn:tttns3Stta3sr
Anthony Martin
In releasing these figures which j
he has assembled from the county;
reports, George E. Adams, assist- j
ant state agent, who had charge ct j
this project comments: “Thes$ ere j
not the findings of county agricu’-
tural and home demonstration j
agents, but of the men and women!
who themselves live’ on Texas [
far©s and ranches. Having
come to the conclusion that thev:
need this additional acreaareun food
for home consumption, it is logical
to expect that 1936 will see a con-
siderable increase in home garden.-
and orchards.”
!
10 ’tU! 2
tfnwHimn
fibmd^y^
and His
"Swings the Thing"
Orchestra
Featuring
Joy Lee, Neil llord
Frank Monaco
Bill Cummings
ag-
Island
Victoria, Texas
une 26th
Admission $1.10
SAYERS—Robert Crow. a i-H
jelub boy in Bexar county. inter-
:|i planted one and one-half acres cf
i white corn with cowpeas 'as. a (club :
demenstration, according to H. F.
Schlemmer, assistant county
ricultural agent.
“This corn is making excellent!
growth." Schlemmer commented in ,
a recent reiiort. "and now apJenr;!
to be making a much better Crop)
than ur.ual because of the iater-!
planting.”
As a pure strain of corn was
planted. Robert Crow expects to I
■select seed corn from thU aerfa^ ,
for the entire farm for next |
year’s crop and to feed the balante
to a brood sow and a litter of tigs;
11 as an additional club demonstra-
tion. !
LIPSCOMB —\V. P. Freeman! ol
the Darrcuzett community in Ijiii.s-
comb county, terraced 100 aent of
la ml in 1931.
“The terraced land made right
| bushels of wheat more per hue
[than the land that was not terrar-
ed, over a period of three yiars.
Freeman is going to terracp 1.700
more acres of land in 193^ '' stltivi
a recent report of William j;
Hocser. assLsIant county ' agricul-
tural agent.
No Balance.
t * f p j
Brewing, like cake-making and biscuit-bak-
ing, is really a matter of knowing how to bal-
. j, - . - ’ j *. f • * L t
ance the ingredients. It’s just too bad for the
beer, the cake or the biscuits if the ingredients
are out of balance. It takes skill and experience
to bake cakes or biscuits that guests rave about
It takes skill and experience to make Budweiser
— the beer that guests rave about. Of course,
the Budweiser process is exclusively ours. If
it were not, there would be lots of beers like
Budweiser. As it is, only Budweiser tastes
like Budweiser. ’
Budueiser’s Imported Saazer hops
cost six times as much as the finest
domestic hops with which they are
blended. Budweiser’s Saazer hops are
rich in the flavors and fragrances
necessary to give skillfully brewed
beer a plus in taste and bouquet.
D~T
mi
T
ANHEUSER-BUSCH ST. LOUIS
1 V
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Putman, Harry C. The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 150, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 25, 1936, newspaper, June 25, 1936; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1015591/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Cuero Public Library.