The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 245, Ed. 1 Friday, October 12, 1934 Page: 3 of 4
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PAGE THREE
THE CUERO, RECORD. CUERO, TEXaS
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1934
lJINIR foods
• r-k ^ ^ . TTT ------—
This Newspaper Guarantees Every Advertisement On This Page To Be Truthful And The Products To Be As‘ Represented
fiECIPES AND,
MENUS
By Department of Home Economics |
Texas State College for Women
(CIA) •
the mixaure and add the well; Friday at 7:30 p. m. Senior choir
beaten whites by cutting and rehearsal.
folding. Pour into a buttered; Saturday at 2 p. m. Catechetical
baking dish and bake 30 minutes; class.
in a slow oven. Serve at once, j —:--
This serves 6 to 8 persons.
Angel Food Cake.-*1 c sifted i
cake flour. 1 c egg whites ‘8 to 10 j
eggs) 1-4 t salt. 3-4 cream of tar-!
tar. 1 1-4 Imperial sugar (sifted) j
CULTURAL OR COMMERCIAL
CONTROL OF RADIO-WHICH?
* DENTON, Oct. 12.—During .the
months when eggs are, not so ex-
pensive is a splendid time to in-
clude liberally in the diet
3-4 ; vanilla. 1-4 t almond. Sift
... , ...... ; the flour once and measure, andj
milk and eggs furnish all the nec-i .... m .. „ .
sift four more times. Beat egg
whites and salt on large platter i
with flat wire whip.
essary food constituent which
meat could furnish it is suggested
•'< v
Crucifier, Mr. Maurice Brown.
episcopal cnUKCR .
W. A. Allan. Rector
20th Sunday after Trinity.
Holy Communion 7:30 a. m.
Sunday school 9:30 a. m.
Confirmation classes 9:30 a. m.
Morning prayer 11 a. m.
Evensong 7:30 p. m.
This service will be conducted by!^ederal Communications Commis-( clause makes it mandatory
i sion. From these rules and regula-jthe Commission to "study the pro-
j selecting a suitable spot, parked
their auto. After locking the igni-
tion and doors to the car, the fatu-
ity took their lunch and walked to
a table nearby to spread the* lunch.
Glancing toward v.nere the car
was parked. Mr. Bailey saw some-
The next eight or ten months will ’ National Advisory Council on Radio
i witness vital developments in the ; in Education, which will be hpld in
i regulation of communications, par- Chicago. October 8 and 9. This in-*cne drivin& it off. He was, unable
; ticularly radio broadcasting. These terest has be< n intensified by a : stop them theV sped away,
developments will take the form of clause in the act- of Congress which i and officers have aince failed to find
rules, regulations and procedural, established tin* new Federal Com- 1 “ny trace of the stolen car. The
methods established by the new, municatiens Commission. * The thief evidentl>’ carried “pass keys’*
Delta county has gone in few on-
ions. L. E. Foster made a net profit
of $40.50 on one-third acre. Jive
carloads wera shipped from Cooper
this year and file market few onion
plants and seed is brisk.
P. T. Calhoun erf Charco commu-
nity in Goliad county says it does
his heart good to waten nls terraces
work during a “gully washer” rain.
He has some around 3,000 feet long
and worried at first about their
-Gonzale's Inquirer.
source of protein. In rural sec- cream, sugar, milk.
lions adhere it is inconvenient to]
market every day, it is often ad-i
visable to use eggs in place of
meat if the refrigeration in the
.home is not adequate for safe-
Lunch—Baked
brown
keeping erf perishable foods. Since
I
CRISP
*-Tl . ' -- i
‘^YAAFFLES are a real treat . . .
y^/ when they’re golden brown,
crisp and tender. GOLD CHAIN
Waffles melt in your mouth ... they’re
satisfying, served for breakfast or
■ supper, stripped with crisp bacon
or sizzling sau>i
sage! Try waffles,
maAt with GOLD
CHAIN Flour,
it’s clean flour . . .
a perfect all-pur-
' pose blend milled
in the South’s
most modern mill
from the finest
wheat obtainable.
LEADING FEED AND
GROCERY STORES
beans,
! bread, creamed carrots,
milk, pickled beats, iced
cookies.
Dinner—Escalloped cabbage with
egg, baked potatoes, chilled pear
and cheese salad, mayonnaise, Gra
ham- biscuit, butter, lemon,
sherbet, angel cake.
Breakfast—Chilled tomato juice*,
omelet, muffins, butter, coffee,
cream, sugar, milk.
Luncd—Cheese Souffle.hot his-
cuits, butter, raw carrots, gelatine
salad, mayonnaise, peaches,
i dream’.
| Dinner—Ham loaf, sealloped po-
tatoes, creamed brocoli, rolls, but-
iter, caramel custard, coconut mac-
^ aroons, iced tea, leman, sugar.
, Scalloped Cabbage with Egg. —
! Wash and cut one large cabbage
tions will come the policies
principles which will govern
and ^ pofeal that Congress, by statute, al-
the; locate fixed percentages of radio}
KrnoiHAQcfiiiM ~ ___L.___il '»
to hold up in
are not dry. Fold in sugar two
T at a time. Fold the flour inj Alms*Bearers Mr^WaUpT Rreeri.! They will determine whether en-
the same way, then the flavoring.; Tames'r-ocoi trenched commercial interests in
butter-. Pour the batter n ungreased An- Address- “Our rhi.rrhiv Pnsroms iadio broadcasting are to control _ m______
cocoa, gel Food Pan and bake one hour ^ Good Man . th ‘ House of j the air or whether educational and’- cuteqd at the forthcomftig assembly
in a very slow oven. Begin the, , i cultural matters are to have the bv noted eduentm-c and mihiidctc
- - s.’ — — - »• » V .1
ing the country is to have. They types or kinds of non-profit radio i
will be far reaching in their effects programs" and to report to Con- j
gress’ by February 1. 1935.: j
Various phases of the radio T
broadcasting question will be dis-
baking at 275 degrees and after 30
minutes increase fleat slightly to
325 degrees. Remove from oven.
milk and invert pan for one hour,
until cold.
God ’ by the Rector. , cultural matters are to have
I weight their importance to our civ-
f 'The children invite everybody to ... ..
! their service.) ' .ihzation demands.
Thursday. St. Luke's Dav. Holy1 Those who want freeddm of
or. Communion 10 a. m. ; speech on the radio definitely es-
! The Bishop of West Texas Dio-: tablished and not 'subject to c6m-
, cese will visit the Parish on Sunday} mcrcial conveniences or private
'morning, 28th October < St. Simonl censorship shouid, it is urged, lose
| and St. Jude’s Day) to hold a Con-[nc time in making known their
j firmation Service at 11 a. m. Please 1 wishes to the Commission,
keep the date open. j The International Typographical
by looted educators and publicists
who have given ipuch thought td
the subject.—Scottish Rite News.
MISSION FEST
St. John’s Lutheran church of |
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
W. A McLeod, Pastor
Sunday School 9:45 a. m. j Lindenau will celebrate its annual
A place for you. j Mission Rally Sunday. October 14.
Public worship 11 a. m.. ! Sunday School at 9:30 a. m.
Mrs. J. E. Wteuts. Supt. of our' German services at 10:30 a. m.
Orphans Home at Files Valley English services at 2:30 p. m. •
into1 quarters. Cook until tender.! will visit us at this time. We have Rev. Hankhammer from
Meanwhile prepare two cupfuls of! Evening service 7:30 p. m. ; Yorktown for our guest preacher.
C. E. Societies 6:30 p. m. j You are cordially invited for the
Monday 3:30 p. m. Women’s Aux
BEBE MAN LOOKS ON
WHILE THIEF STEALS CAR
. i • j
Mr.' and Mrs. Vance Bailey and
family of the Bebe community had
their car stolen in San Antonio Fri-
day afternoon tvhile they watched
a short distance away.
The family had gone to Brecken-
(K.
Tv*
well seasoned medium white sauce I
to Which add one tablespoonful of!
minced onion has been added.
Hard cook and slice three eggs
Arrange the cabbace, white sauce
and eggs in alternate layers in a
greased casserole having white
sauce on top. Cover with one-
half cupful fine bread crumbs
mixed. Wjtd three tablespoonsfuls
of fhelted butter or margarine and
bake in a moderate dver of 350
degrees for 30 minutes. Serve 6.
| Cheese Souffle—2 T butter, 2 T
j flour, 1 1-2 c scalded milk, l-,2 t
salt, 1-2 c grated cheese, 3 egg
yolks. 3 egg whites, cayenne. Melt
butter, add flour, and when well
mired add scalded . milk. Cook
until It thickens, an^ then remove
from the fire. Add salt, cayenne,
cheese, and well beaten yolks. Cool
Union, at its Chicago convention
September 14. declared that the ma-
jor networks virtually control radio; ridge Park for a picnic and after
facilities at present -and urged thej — - ■- ■ ■ — ■ 11 —
Government to hold back at lea’st
50 per cent of all licenses from pri-
vate'hands for the use of labor,
farm, educational, religious and fra-
ternal groups. i
Many agree with Mr. Edwin L.
Davis, vice-chairman of the Feder-
4* £r ^'
& & &
m !
IMPERII
xxxx
POWDERED/^T
SUGARS'
AMERICAS FINEST" QUALITY
iliary. | be served in the Parish Hall.
Wednesday 7:30 p. m. mid-week1 _ M. J. Lorfing, Pastor.
service. The Auxiliary, in fharge.J--
Visitors welcome to our services. J Seven Persons Die
LUTHERAN CHURCH
John W. Kern. Faster
20th Sunday after Trinity., .
Sunday school 9:30.
Classes for all ages.
Morning service at 10:30.
Anthem by Junior Choir.
Evening service 7:30.
Anthem by Senior Choir.'
.Tuesday at 7:30 p. m. S<4Kor Lu>
ther League meeting.
services an dthe dinner, which will a- Trade Commission, who declared
in an address before the National
Association of Broadcasters in Cin-
cinnati, Ohio, on September 18. that
“the primary function of radio Is
not to sell goods." “The statutory
basis for granting a broadcasting
license is public convenience,
necessity or interest. In other words.
HALIFAX, N. S., Oct. 11.—(INS) j the station is authorized to render
—Seven persons were killed in a ) public service. There £s no justifi-
mysterious explosion which wreck-: cation for the Federal Government
In Halifax Blast
(PIGGLF
ed a three-story apartment build-
ing today.
j The dead, including two women
i and four children are:
Mrs. George Cruse, Kathleen
I Kruse, Joseph Cruse, 4, Donald
Wednesday at 7:30 p. m. Inter- j Dudas, Sonny Dudas, Edna Dudas,
mediate Choir rehearsal. j 7, and Peter Dudas. .
Friday at 4p .m. Junior Choir; Several victims were hurled to
rehearsal. . j the street by the blast. Others
were trapped in the wreckage and
_ ! burned to death.
Cause of the explosion^ was un-
determined. though it was believed
to have resulted from igniting of
powder or gasoline.
Police are seeking a Russian
named Cashen. a frequent visitor
to the house, to question him
about alleged threats.. I »
maintaining an internment for the
benefit of advertisers.”
“Who Owns the Air?” is the sub-
ject of ain editorial in the August
22 issue of The Nation in which the
writer reviews radio as a cultural
agency and concludes: “The Gov-
ernment, we think, might also very
reasonable insist that certain hours
of certain days be reserved for non-
commercial agencies, and that bally-j
hoo should not always and inevit-,
ably take precedence over every-
thing else.”
More than usual interest is cen-
tering in the 1934 asembly of the
ThereJS a DIFFERENCE!
aUNUi
1 . u look y
,u^,.o»«:;lookthe
^ While vatq'^sT.thele Is »
same. Br,n hich
SKfflS&’WSS
Government •t*®*Vi*£ * 5
WORLD’S LARGEST SELLING BRAND
OF SPICES AND EXTRACTS
SANDWICHES and BEER
to Suit Everyone’s Taste
SPANISH GARDEN
Broadway
Phone 320 ’ We Deliver
' ■ • • j
VTT
WILLIS BARFIELD’S
I *
SELECTED
FRESH MEATS
SOLD EXCLUSIVELY •
» at
Handy-Andy’s Market
QUALITY MEATS
EVERY DAY IN THE WEEK!
been in danger of breaking.
t ------ 1 1 ■,l"
John C.Ley
FOOD MARKET
FRIDAY and SATURDAY
'y ' « i
Page’s MILK- ili
3 tall or 6 small ... *■
MiUers CORN
j FLAKES, large^
MAZOLA SALAD OCd
» OIL and pkg. Linit
Gerber’s or Heinz
Baby Food, can . .
* *
Cremel, 3 pkgs and OOf
steel helmet . . .
k Staley’s Cream 1
Com Starch 3 for . «
5^
Black TEA, bulk O
lb. 39c, half lb . . «
V
Morton’s SALT 1
2 Boxes for.....■
»
15-PHONE-
We Deliver
. .ik
• 1?
QUALITY S. ECONO MY
Friday and Saturday
HARVEST TIME
Boanty of Field and Orchard —Offered
to you now in qplendid variety, at thrifty
wise prices at Piggfy Wiggly. Boy and
Save the Piggly Wiggly Way!
Potatoes
a
W ^ ^w GOOD COOKERS W
LETTUCE hm4 5c
; v. • * ; __ . • . j
CARROTS Banch
5c
CELERY
Stalk ' ........ 9C
ORANGES 1
9c
D_______ Fancy Fruit - _
*
®\
POUND
.. ■*,
. I :
SUGAR
PURE
CANE
LBS.
FOR
10 Lbs: 50c
Prunes
90-ieo
2 Lbs.
15C
Raisins
Seedless
Lb.....
Macaroni
Q. & Q.
2 Pkgs.
Pork & Beans
Van
Camp’s
5'/2C
Catsup
Glen Valley
2 Large Bottles
25c
Catsup
..L......, .
15c
Sardines
King Oscar
Norwegian 2 Cans
25c
m
NBC PREMIUM
Crackers
Y-t Pound
Box
Powell Market
EVERY DAY PRICES
CHOICE CUTS VEAL ______;... 12^e
STEW and BRISKET Lb........ 8c
GROUND MEATS, lb. ...........10c
We handle the best of
Meats and ask a trial or-
der.
Located on West Main Street
between Ffliskal’s Bakery and
The Cuero Gin.
CREAM
STATION
Wfll buy No. 1 and No. 2
SQUR CREAM
Paying .-Top Prices at
All Times
Fair Weights and Fair Tests
Our Motto7
HENRY MEYER
411 W. Main
Next door to Pliskals Bakery
McCLUNG’S
• . »
Cuero’s Original Cash & Carry
Friday Afternoon t
and Saturday
October 12 and 13.
r/V
POTATOES '
California No. 1
10 lbs. 20c
HAMS
’ Black Hawk
» Per Lb.
Half or Whole
SUGAR
Pure Cane
10 lbs. 50c
MILK 13c
WESSON OIL ™ 2Qc
PEAS __17c
RAISINS —9c
TOILET TISSUE 16c
SODA sbr±......._1_L__5c
FLOUR
48 lb. An.
Maid $1.95
24 lb. Am.
4'
Maid „$ M
Syrup
Staley’s
(No. 10)
53c
Snowdrift
3 Lb.
Can ..
41c
Hy-Pro
Bleacher
Cleaner Qt.
15c
Lye
Mendelson’s
3 Cans .: ...
23c
Shot Gun Shells
Complete
Assortment.
COFFEE
Fancy Bulk.
PEABERRY, 2 lbs. 3 #C
31c
MARECHAL NEIL
FLOUR48 *1-9*
24 lbs. $1.00
Save Your P. W. Adding Machine Slips
4 and g^t a
19 Pc. Luncheon Set
For Only 99c
—IS WISE
ECONOMY
Say good-bye to ceiling leaks and
expensive fuel waste with a new
MULE-HIDE roof. Statistics show
that 5 out of every 100 homes
standing today need re-roofing.
How much longer will yours serve
you? Let us give you a free roof
inspeetion. Weil tell you honest-
ly whether you need a new one or
not. Phone us. 19.
ALAMO LUMBER COMPANY
J. T. NEWMAN, Mgr.
Fruits and Vegetables
Jonathan
Fancy, Doz.
APPLES
BANANAS
Sweet Potatoes Yams
SQUASH
DI7 A C Fresh Cream
IT' Per lb. I......
Per
Dozen
5 lbs. for
Home Grown
Per lb. ...........
T~
SALMON t
Baking Powder t
MACARONI
ASPRIN
No. 1 TaO Can
for ——---
Dairy Maid
Lb. Can ..
or SPAGHETTI
3.1
1
RATERS
lTs
FLOUR
Fresh Meat
« i*
Department
Hot Barbecue
-# I “v ir£'
Hot Sausage 1
Veal
Choice Cute
Lb...—f...........
.k
Beef ir* ^
Stew Meat l
S n
IOW
r i
f t
6 Lb. Can
Now you cun ifave nice light, fluffy bis-
cuits and good fried chicken with Snow-
drift and get a .bargain, too.
3 Lbs. 43c
w 4g
For m a k i
n
__
_iij
ig o o d t-h i n gs to cat
S.ow4rift U iu
«*ledair-.<kp«t
GONGOLEUM RUG OCT. 13 at 4 P. M.
1
i
,! '
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Howerton, J. C. The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 245, Ed. 1 Friday, October 12, 1934, newspaper, October 12, 1934; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1073591/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Cuero Public Library.