The Cuero Record. (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 272, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 18, 1936 Page: 2 of 12
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TWO
THE CLJERO RECORD
Established in 1894 |
in. Except Saturday, and Sunday Morning by
CUERO rUBLISHING CO.. Inc.
in the past office at Cuero, Texas, as second class matter
under Act of congress, March 3. 1897.
C. HOWERTON
Q. PUTMAN
OWERT
m^ERTON
HOWERTON
i- i
SOUTH TEXAS
TjHI^ CUERu. KhCoRl/. Clt.Rij j t>3.S
IMAiN, lRih KfcAMJNJcNr; ammal
Fmm
Bil
fOU
ill Elliott
KNOW?
...........
.............. Publisher
...4..................... Editor
........... Sports Editor
. Business Manager ,
, , * 4
National Advertising Representatives:
grass r^gini ipc.. 507 Mercantile Building, Dallas, Texas;
Avenue. Sew York City; 180 Michigan Avenue, Chicago,
3«ar Building. St. UmIs, Mo.; 301 Interstate Building, Kansas
lots Now Orpheum Building, Los Angeles, Calif.; 105 San-
dal*. j:
util or nil lid prilj and Sunday, one year $5.00, six months
mouths $1.25, one month 50c.
me year $1.50. six months $1.00, in DeWitt
Conn<Be«. Elsewhere, 1 year $2.00. 6 months $1.25.
Official Organ cf the Citv of Cuero and DeWitt County.
* * x.
Plrin Studied l
This grerr cat-
tle piloducticn sec-
tion (cf Texts 4
se venal milliqri
head; of citT:
graze on Tangos
in grjeatei Scutli '
Texaf;— will lx
interested in the
fact that the Tex-J
as Plan n i n «r i
Board. thru its
it fee. (is making, a ,
estab- '
Bill Einott
Land Use Comji
. study of the feasibility cf
lishing a slaughtering and ,
plant in the area. Considerable I
packing
TELEPHONE NO. L
SECURITY ON THE WAY
These is such a factor in present-day life as selfish busi-
most business and industrial ei;t£rprise realizes
own success Is based on the contentment of its em-
ld be se
... , .1*1 ,.. .the Port of S<juth
Tke social program lags, due to the preference of hu- pU6 <5*^^ .;
We have the cattle here and it
t4 look backward instead of forward. Business is tim- , ...--------—-------- ------
new e^ rlments .n hours and wages, having few I
inoss on which to guide action. farms and our ranches. We haie i
Roosevelt ikbntoisfcration undertook early a broad j the facilities for movipg beef proof
program with ams that no one opposes. Effort to leg- ,ern market5 by(clleap 4.atel. trans. |
the various provisions into being have not always been portation where they cpuid ccm-1
-or wise. But the President and his advisers have no
ring apd
j data has been gathered .and com-
: piled and. at a recent meeting the
I committee was Said tc Have expres—
j ed the opinion (that Corpus Christi
j is the ide^l spot for such a plant tt>
; process beef raised here.
The board's Research men now
are engaged in gathering more j.
economic facts‘abcut the business ,
and especially about the markets j,
which could be Isefved by ship from
f
at Cor*
of accepting defeat on any front of their social war.
VRsMegtoa comes the assertion that the States will be
fornraj&te abor laws broadly aimed at fe^er hours
it wages w th assurance of Federal rf-enforcement,
go as far is a proposed constitutional amendment,
insertion emerges in logical sequence from the elec- f
single issue in Roosevelt vs. Landon was the new
the new deal is nothing more than the Roosevelt
r. Nat anally he regards the topheavy popular
a mandate t > go ahead at full steam,
proposed legislation will make its way. It may pro-
Fly but it is lltimately sure of success: The form that
m takes sha aid be shaped, not by Congress but by j
sa industry. In the ranks of the latter are
irpriros that have taken forward steps toward sat-
lfeber conditions. From their experience should be
program fair alike to employer and employee, a pro-
pete favorably with products trans- !
ported much shorter distances by ;
other means. A great packing in- j
dustry would seem to be a logical j
development. It has been discussed ;
for a number of years and there are l
indications that/tnaterial progress (
may be reported soon.
Such a development would be
well in the fcrqtront of the indus-
trial expansion which Texas ex-
pects within the next few years if
we work earnestly to attract indus- j ■
try and curb any tendency to pen-
alize industry fey unfair discrimi-
nation..
O'
V
:
a
Cy
JihjiWt/
Wr Be FUNKY!}
WHAT DO I
WAHTTfOGtVE.
vs
1 JA-
mss WHAT AT A
----. , . J ,
WASHINGTON -
TfJ]
,ICU»—*■
p
is
J • <£>
By CHARLES P. STEWART
Central Press jStaff Writer
WASHINGTON. D. C.—it is
surprising, how well satisfied the
anti-Roosevelt element throughout
the country seems to be with the
re rent election result.
One'/vould have thought, to hear
the ‘ antis" campaign conversation
that business would fall into ;t tail
spin directly fallowing a New Deal
victory, and that it would have
crashed in flames as the inevitable
sequel to a victory of such pro-
portions as the Nev$ Deal actually
did score.
Counting the votes electorally—
only 8 for Landon out of 531—It
would be reasonable to argue that,
even if the 8 did holler bloody mur-
der, they would make compara-
tively little noise.
feut popular voting is a diffjrent
thing. In that classification the
Kansas candidate chalked up not
much worse than 1 to 2.
A beaten block of nearly one-
third of the national electorate, if
genuinely scared half to death,
should have been able to screech
loudly enough to make the vwelkin
ring—all the more, so because it
wa* so badly licked.
Mima Approves
cently or
wfaieh
dictates.
should
i are alike.
and
hand oitar
enterprise would be willing to give
need bef changed only as economic ex-
no war between capital and labor. Their
Remarks made here
industry and discriminate legisla-
tion are commended by Lewis Mims ?
who has been interested, as a mem- j
ber of the South Texas chamber of
commerce, in the industrial progress
of Texas and especially in securing '
One-Minute Test j hand at a time, into a finger bowl,
1. Who is the newest member of &e hands should be dried on the
the U. S. supreme court ? • napkin used throughout the meaL
2. What great American city has ... .. ' .... . ‘
a section known as “Back Bqy"? „. "ords *
_ Oblivion is not to be hired.—Sir
3. Name the commoner who Thomas Browne,
ruled England between 1649 and _
j Today’s Kcrofjeope
j If your birthday is today’, you
Hints on Etiquette may be an independent thinker, but
After dipping the fingers of one people usually trust you.
Horoscope for Sunday
A person \yhose birthday is Sun-
day may be prompt and reliable.
and he knows how to keep his own
counsel, He is apt to have many
friends;
BUSINESS BOOMING
Nothing of the kind has ensued,
j To the contrary, businessi al-
ready -in the ascendent, has been
materially chirking up ever since
election day.
i The .wihners naturally are hi-
larious.
The loser3 apparently don’t care
a hoot. They are not alone grace-
ful in defeat. They give what is
| at lbSLst an extraordinarily good
imitation of liking it.
• # »
r
A UNITED FRONT? ■
Labor, of course, is in the win-
i nirig class. The John L. Ltwis-
•ites were vociferously pro-Roose-
velt. The orthodox A. F. of L. was
predominantly so.
Agriculture manifestly was
Rooseveltian, as witness the pres-
ent White House tenant’s capture
of his^ rival’s almost 100 per cent
farming atate iof Kansas—no
ly Republican.
And business? . ''ji
Business wai supposed to be'ffl-
most solidly Republican.
Yet, as an election aftermath t ji
the United States Chamber of*'*
Commerce, re] lutedly one of tb»-»
most conservat Ive organizations im 4*i
America, announces; .. 'tail .
American lusiness, since
the most substazj- ,.(j
any period in .
momentusa,
The
1935, has mad#
tial record of
past 10 year#.
which has beep gamed is impre*-^
sive in extent ind promise for tfis
i
period ahead."
<&■
You3re
graph w’ell it
have a negati
*
Maybe the
buildings is
I Ji
\A
\ellingMfJf
- Vita-
■:inr
By WILLIAM RITT
Central Press Writer
NO USE PICKING an AIK v
America football team this sea-
son. Roosevelt ofBigPtoral col-
blvw won all pov,^
lege seems tc
sitions.
•
A prize to anyone who remem- (
bers the poin s of all those po-
litical arguments that made him ‘
so mad just tiro weeks ago.
• •
When frien is say you photo-.
nay not be a com-
pliment. Maj be they mean you
Ire personality.
« •
fkitC
reason dictators ■
like to talk frrkn balconies of tall v>i
because they
only high-souading phrases. ^
' • m
At this timb of the year Papa
doesn’t need a fortune teller to„
warn him to beware of a man
with a beard, initials S. C.
• I • •
New Yorkets were so excited,
over the election Times Square
was almost as completely crowd-
ed as a new movie opening.
•[* * «
A new medical caqnera has
been invented * which is so small*
it may be swallowed. Hereafter
D -<c will tell up to sey “Ah!" and *
look pleasant at the same time.
I 1
Port at
One-Minute Test Answers
1. Benjamin Nathan Cardozo,
2. Boston.
3. Oliver Crbmwel!.
new developments for the
Freeport.
“The moral support of the com-
munities in which industries are
require orderly profitable operation to :nw located,”, he writes, ami a
. VT ... . ........ friendly public policy on the part of ,
nds. Neither can be permitted to hold
The
dther, used to selfish advantage.
Seattle is as obnoxious as the sweatshop
the state, as eaitfessed. in its laws
with respect to taxation, will be J
much more effective in promoting
industrial development than flowery
of crowds garment workers. Government obvious- rhetoric and empiy premises.;* • j
b» an MB* ire not a participant, but it WiH insist on Mims commended also the recent
latter instead of the former, unless American, era-
ti ie* field and play the game.—Dallas News.
FLOWERS AT HER FEET
By MARIE BLIZARD’
....... — COPYRIGHT IBfAWI IV CBiTRAI PUSS ASSOCIATION-
Bole Played by the Eye
In Expression of Fa
jeret'* | i
has It*
presence
ly beshto
if what
year*, me
3ers is t
e end* *f
d th« eye!
UNEMPLOYMENT
tnmuncenmYt of the Commerce Department that
taped is to be conducted early next year
to snlvlng one of the great mysteries of recent years,
bom many pr^p1* able and willing to work are actual-
to find jobs. The answer to this mystery may leave
statistician^ “out on a limb*' as did the election.
American Federation of Labor has kept its guesses
tl|e ten and eleven rrfillion mark, many be-
the thought that the more unemployed there seem
more chance of rushing through legislation it de-
IT ITT
Commerce Department which admits that its figures
estimated that unemployment was below
n October 1 and win be under 7,000,000 by the end
r. The New York Sun. which during the past Spring,
the most extensive canvass of the sitution by send-*
ittujoughout the country, figures that actual-
;nt isl below 4,000,000. President Roosevelt, in
l. pointed to the end of the emergency with busi-
Ktantly improving.
lalTy the only real knowledge on the subject deals
(acturing industries, where employment levels
per cent of the 1929 level, and many eco-
befieve that it will reach the 100 per cent level within
Mims commei
action of the
pressing, through a ce
entertainment, its a
its oil industry, galling
pneesion of apprecia
should be observed an
by all other industrial
in the state. ] . .
Taft
in ex- i
on and :
tion i or
an ex-
which j
duplicated I.
im unities
CHAPTER 49 | take No’ for an answer. <cep
KIM PUT h^s wife’s arm frqyn y°ur fingers crossed for me. Kira "
* i Kathleen ('j-oppccl in at the shop
whert Alix worked the next morn-
ing.
• “Don't think I’m going to make
a pracl.ce o.r.-ev^.-ng you!”
she said to Alix. T ee really come
Heads Area FFA
him and said with mock severity,
“Kathleen- Preston, I thought I
made an honest woman of you
when I married you.” "She had
just phoned Adelaide Compton she
would be glad to serve on her hos-
pital entertainment committee.
“So you did, Kimball. Aren't
you pleased with the results ?
Aren’t you glad that I’m develop-
help you, Kathleen, but what could
I do?"
There was exactly the right de-
gree of pleased gratitude in Kath-
leen's voice, “Would you, Alix?
Why, my dear, you would be sim-
ply wonderful. And do you have
an act? I should say you have.
could arrange to :.a\ mat old
Queen Anne chair a: ninae recov-
ered through th.T ii:p? . I'm ter-
ribly fond of it tut it i?-rather a
wreck.”
It will be like new. Kathleen, if
mg a kind heart and want to help you want us lo do it. wait a min-
5 . . A, T.ll ^^11 IT.-------1
New president of the
Parmer of America org
the Pactflc
‘i
eluding an of Texas south of a line j maybe I don’t share enough of my
drawn from San Antonio jto Houston, great happiness with other people,
is Ed Jr. Springer of Runge. Other rm the luckiest and happiest girl
officers, elected recently, are Sam the world." She started blithely
Ruegg of Robsttown. vice president;
rea Future
izaticn in-
people?'
, “Explain,” he said sternly.
“Gladly. Some timesj I think
Joe Beard of
Sinton. treasurer;
but as always, when she thought
ute. I’ll call Mr Howard and
he’ll
“Don’t beth'er If you'll take
care of it, it will te r.ll right ”
She mr.de a great show of
glancLng-^nxioqsh- at the clock.
“I've got to get out and Ido some
telephoning,” she sa:d. “I’ye got-'
ten myseli mto a beastly situation.
Here it is Wednesday with a corn-
jack Gates of Pcteet. reporter; Ow- o{ her own b^P111633^ lt brimmed mittee meeting at noon and I
en Dunham of Boteet. band and up in her eyes and heightened the
song leader; Gerald Coe of Odem. “«w beauty that had come into her
.historian; T. A. White of Kingsville | plain face. , r *
advises, and C. D Parker of Kings- J "Proceed." 1 '
'vflle. supervismfrf^ •
I
She tried to recapture her
. [* . ‘ ] i gaiety. “Why I thought it would
BeeviOe Oranges j | be nice to help Adelaide. Her com-
Beeville boasts that California^ ! mittee does do very good work.
Florida and our own Rio ~
haven’t done the job that was as-
signed to me.".
“But you can use our telephone,”
Alix said.
“Thanks." Kathleen followed
Alix into the tiny office and sat
down. “Alix, perhaps you can give
rrte a suggestion. Adelaide Comp-
ton has roped me into promising to
help her out by arranging a num-
ber for Sunday niglit. She’s on the
the
strike ou the East and West coast got Washing-
Grande The Avondale hospital you know
Valley have nothing in the citrus ig ^ charity hospital. It’s quite a [ entertainment committee at
line more *t>eautiful than it has in a wonderful institution. The very Avontiale hospital.
400 acre citrus orchard in which ^ surgeona 0 tben to ^ Uie night they get up
aden wath golden, blind at no cost. There are a great the P^ients. Its really a very
1 i many poor little children there I cause but ■ . • ,
St? S-W S®
movies like other youngsters.” | Alix said quickly, “The Avondale
Kim was not taken in.* “Kath- ; hospital ? Olr, Kathleen, you must
leen,s you’re breaking my heart.
Tell me the rest.”
boys at Odem are working cn orange \ ^ m fryinH she said pa-
projects. trying j to stimulate the ! tienHy- ‘Adelaide s committee ar-
trees now are laden
yellcw oranges’
Geo. H. Atkins, BeeviUe pub-?
lisher. has Satsuma oranges, grape-
fruit. kumquats.’ and lemons in his
own back yard. [ ” . I J
Citrus fruits are now restricted
to the galley.in South Texas FFA
on business. Alix. I —>r.der if I! How about doing those Mother
Goose songs?”
“The • ones I did Christmas
night?”*
“Of course! I’ll have Roberts”
—Roberts was Kathleen’s maid—
"take in trfie costume to fit you.
You look darling anyway in that
high peaked hat and the white
dress. The children will adore1 it.”
Alix was* beginning to get stagfe
fright. “Are you quite sure that
I’m good enough?”
Kathleen picked up her gloves
and bag, “You’re the best ever.’
Children are never hard to enter- ’
t-ain- There’ll be a few old people.
It’s not like a Broadway perform-
ance, you know. I’ve got to hurry
along how. You’ve saved my
reputation, V011 lamb. Come over
tonight if you have time and we’ll
get that costume ready and go
over the songs. I’ll loan you my
guitar.” *
Sunday night, at seven, Kathleen,
held a wrap for Alix to slip over
her costume and hoped that Alix
didn’t -see the nervous way her
hands twitched. She kept up a
„ _ . ■ , .running fire of chatter in the mo-
Exery Sunday | ^ that took them to the Avon-
scmething for
By LOGAN CLENDENTNG, K Bk
FACIAL expression plays a great
role ih our lives, both practical and
pleasurable. Most of our judg-
ments of our fellow men and worn,-
en. our delight
in their com-
pany, our con-
fldince IB
them, come
from expres-
sions on that
curious and
fascinating in-
strument, the
human, face
p a rtnerships,
marriage*, are
founded and
wrecked on
that rock. Un-
happy the hue-
go home to old
dal3 hospital.
“Don’t be nervous, Alix, dar-
ling,” she said when she sent Alix
on her way unintroduced into the
children's ward.
Alix was nervous, but when she
saw the sea of little sightless
| do it! I happen to know some- faces, the countless pairs of big
thing about that. It. was ... it1
Dr. deadening
bend that has to
sour face: Lucky the phyriefen or
lawyer whose appearance bring*
trust and hope.
Of all parts of the face, the epee
are most expressionahte. But it is
not t£e eyes, it is the mitsdee
around the eyes that make the ex-
pression.
You laugh with your eyes—there
are plenty of wolf grins where the
smile shows but the eyes remain
cold and suspicious.’ Franz Hals’
“Laughing1 Cavalier” is laughing
with his cheek muscles and with
the wrinkles in the corndr* of hie
eyes—his orbicularis palpebrarum,
his Ieavator labii superioris, and*
his zygomaticus major, if j
want to get down to real facts.
There is a muscle which tha
early anatomists named the riso-
rius, which draws the corners of
the mouth back. But if is not
really the laughing muscle.
Does Mona Lisa Mbf
What give# the “Mona Lisa" her
mysterious and challenging smile?
Is'it really a smile? She seems
to. be saying, “You and I have a
little secret” Or, as til*
passage has
“The presence that thus rose
strangely beside the waters la
preasive af what, hi tha waya of
thousand years, men had con
<Mr* Hers is the head
which The ends af the wost<
come’, and the eyelids are a
weary. She is aider than the
among which. she sits; like
vampire, she hah been dead
times and learned the secrets
the grave; and has been a diver
deep sefs and keeps
day about her."
Pater is right, the whole
is in the heavy eyelids. It isl
relaxation of the pyramidalis
and the cerrugator eupercilii
is the Mona
The eyes themselves give
little to expression. When we
suffered an enaction half of i
and half of tenderness, the
mat gland spreads just a
moisture over the eyeball so 1
reflects light and gives that
appearance of t exaltation—of 1
rag recently
whose feelings are
ing stirred.
Women used to put
the eyes to make them
don’t know whether
that or not.
they
Ap I remember it,
drops used to be belladonna (
tiful lady), so named for that rea-
son. The
'iadnnna is
•its effect, if it
the pupil
ber behind th» iris
light in a somber glow.’
But it defeated its own pv
because the dilated pupil
make light difficult to bear
overcome thi^ the lady would
squint, bringing out aH her wrta-
kles. Then a beautiful eye is moiat
enough to reflect light, and
donna stops this because one
effects is to stop secretions,
ing that of the tear glands, so tt
belladonna eye Is dry and harsh.
was one of John Sayre's pet char-
ities. I remember one time we had
* T r— ~ ------- , .... .- - A j., , | ranges Sunday night entertain- to stop there when we w?re going
up IB the* air. It worried some labor leaders too, for lowing Of Satsumas on farms .or ments for these peopi^ The little somewhere else. He had forgotten
the general public what a terrible weapon a general*
wavld be
was why Eti McGrady, Assistant Secretary of Labor.
C »st. That was why the President and his
nred tto strike. That was the reason for the at
to put fedenl influence behind an agreement calling
home use. , ■■
Falfurrias. Brooks Couqty Center!
is making rapid strides in the de-
velopment of a citrus industry.
Faced with its best crop in
this fall it unfortunately is meeting
trouble in marketing and efforts are
being made to ^et the government
to take several carloads, lor relief
lesumption of normal trade while the minor points in dis- distribution SimHar apti.cn has been
taken in Florida} for rclier. of grow-
er?.
Falfurrias probably will market 5|
carloads'cf fluid,this semen
Farrn" Prices
Plight of the Brooks County ci’ruS
growers and of tne turkey producer#
arbitrated!. The strike is much more serious than
In this seition. far from the actual scene, realize,
ds are out t if work and it is estimated that the na-
ecaaowbc loss
trouble is a
tolerated.
Death still rides
>n.
to take a new
■ it -■toT.
is around half a million dollars a day.
fight between two unions. Strikes are not
dark glasses, the patients in wheel-
chairs being wheeled to the back
of the wdrd, she lost her. nervous-
ness.
“Oh, let me do it well and make
ones and the poor old people.; to nraiT a check and he wanted them happy if only for a little. <
Don’t you want me to do it?” ; them to have It before the first of time,’’ she*prayed, and smiled at
“And what are you going to the month.” j all of them. Her own eyes were
do?” he asked flatly. . | “Oh. really?”, Then Kathleen filled with.sympathetic tears be-
year# r “Why ... I ... I thought per- sait* t0 herself: “That explains it! cause she had to face those little
haps it would be nice for Alix. "Why don’t you ask Grace |ones %vp0 COuld not see her.
thought she might like to do her Neville to help you^>ut?^ She does | She. struck a chord on the guitar
~ ~ ~ ~ id wpnt* intn hpr snnw ® \ ' i
little act for them. Something, awfully cute readings. Most of the an(j went into her songs.
you know i . . to . . . to make her i patients
feel that she was* doing good."
Kim lifted his wife’s chin ten-
derly, “Kathleen, did Mr. Gar-
are chiLdren and they’d
the highway. Don’t make him your com-
Cuero deer hunters apparently made a “dry haul" Tues-
9 haven't he«rd of any one getting a buck as yet.
Social Security act requiring that qne live to
i of age bei tore b$ can cash in on his benefits, we are | to bring some decree of
oI Scotchmen in the United States are
lease on life.
of SPuth Texas.! whe ape
their birds frem the mar be-’)
cause cf prevailing low prices, em-
phasizes the fa^r that agriculture! |
our basic mdustjrv is the only one
in which thp pioducer operates on
the blind chancj that Hi? finished
Hn a market which
lair return for.Ins
at national admin-
praise for us,effort
regulation*
! into the industry through it s vari-
ous production programs and mark-
eting agreement i for certain crop.4
k j . .1
product will sell
will (give him a
work The prose
istraticn deserve:
She sang them through , once,
love that.” And then again. And still they
Kathleen appeared to think it wanted .more,
over as a bright idea Then her -j’u sonie more for you,”
rity’g call have anything to do with ^ace graml sbe saj(j willingly. “Is there any-
this?” hut Grace is still in the south ” . thing special you’d like to hear?”
“YesJ* she said. *• ’ She,had met <,race shopping only, . Through the clamor she heard
“I thought so. Tell me about a ^ew days before! the voice of an old man. at the
it.” | “But, Alix.” # she looked up back of the ward. “Will ye sing
brightly, “you’ve given me a grand i Love's Old Sweet Song’ ?”
idea. That is . I mean .’. . 11 “I will,” she called and strua^
don't suppose ...” j another thord. ,
'“Don t suppose what?”' I "In the gloaming, oh, my dar-
Katlrleen shook her head, "No. ling ...” She started to sing and
I’m not going to do that IVs looked up to see the rhan.who had
enough that Adelaide has to rupV asked for it but her eyes, went to
another sile of the* room—to a
"Kim, you’ll piobably think I’m
a meddling old woman but please
holding j believe that I'm doing what I think
Mr. Qarrity came
is right,
from . . ."
So Kathleen tokl Kim’what her
plans were.
“I hope jyou’re doing the right me in without getting all my hard-
thing,” he [said when she h$d fin- j working friends,, too.
ished. “It will be a good thing for
Alix to feel! that she is doing some-
thing for cither people. But don't
you remenjber that she said she
had to go j to Greenwich on Sun-
day ?”
Alix laughed, “What are you
talking about?”
“Well, the grand idea you, gave
nie was that yoij might help oat.
But it would be an imposition to
ask you to spend your Sunday eve-
“That was last Sunday,” she ning at a hospital. I won’t ask
said. “I ni going to stop at her • you to,”
shop In thfe morning and I won’t | Alix was surprised - “I’d love to
man who Jialf rose from a wheel
chair, who§e eyes were . covered
with great black glasses. *
“. . . oh, my darling! John!”
His na,nie broke from her in a
cry and th^n. she lsang again until
she had finished her song, At last,
she coul l see tha “flowers at her
feet.”
(T^ Be Continued) (
Building Materials
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Mouldings
Wall Board
Sheet Rock
Corrugated Iron
*
Roll Roofing
Hard Materials
Cement
Lime
Brick
Plasters
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Hollow Tile
»4
i
IF ITS VOU WANT RtMCMBtO T
----m—akgr-
• QUALITY
ALAMO
f*NV
vice *
T. NEWMAN, Mgr.
Cuero, Texas.
A. .
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Putman, Harry C. The Cuero Record. (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 272, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 18, 1936, newspaper, November 18, 1936; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1073374/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Cuero Public Library.