The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 48, No. 28, Ed. 1 Wednesday, February 4, 1942 Page: 6 of 12
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THE CUERO BECORD, CUERO, TEXAS
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1M2
Morris Trank, Houston Post sports
writer and Master of Ceremonies at
the recent Gobbler grid banquet,
writes expressing appreciation for
the hospitality shown him during
his brief stay in Cuero and declar-
ing the Gobbler banquet to have
been one of the most enjoyable he
has attended this season.
Nature and Treatment FAMED PICTURE
Of Mucous Colitis Cases HERE SUNDAY
ff*^**1* ft t mi *** ***»tK:
A DASH OF
GLAMOUR
A TOUCH OF
TASTE
A LOT OF
.COMFORT
IN BROWNBILT SHOES
FOR 1942
In Cuero Tuesday,
ith Jr., now a visitor
By LOGAN CLENDENING, M. D.
THE TERM colitis, so common-
ly used today, means nearly any-
thing to the average person from
a feeling of discomfort in the
abdomen to serious irregularity of
the intestines. “Irritable colon”
Sergeant York,” Great
American Picture. Heads
Rialto Bill
Subscriptions
Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Combs were in
Kerrvllte to spend the week end
with their son. Bill.
Mrs. Julius Haak had as her week
end guest, Miss Ewell of Goliad.
Mre. Henry Reiflert of Houston is
spending several days here visiting
with relatives.
Mrs. Berthold Schiwetz is in
Houston with her sons for a while.
• Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Berger, who
live cm Route 4, were in town Wed-
nesday. Berger took occasion to
call at The Record office to renew
his subscription. Mrs. Berger at-
tended the Green DeWitt club meet-
ing held at the home of Mrs. Ralph
Buehrig.
Renewals and new mail ¥
subscriptions have been re-
H- ceived recently from the H-
following:
Dr. Clendening will answer
questions of general interest i<
only, and then only through
his column.
Heralded as one of the greatest
pictures yet tp come out of Holly-
wood. “Sergeant York." the story
of one of Amerlta’s greatest soldier
heroes in World War No. 1. comes *o
the Rialto theater for a Saturday
midnight preview and as the fea- j
ture biding for? Sunday, Monday j
and Tuesday.
Gary Cooper plays the title role \
and the lean and lanky actor gives a j
performance* that can only be called j
great.
Based on Sergeant York's own '
diary, the film tells a brave and
straightforward narrative, the hon-
est saga of a plain American who
believed in God and hv. country
and acted on his beliefs. Before the
outbreak of the World War, York
was a “fightin an' hell raisin"
mountain farmer down in the,
Cumberland1 Valley of Tennessee.
His days of hell-raising ended
when he “gets religion." Shortly
(the colon is the large intestine)
is probably a better term.
Mucous colitis haa a much nar-
rower meaning and applies to a
special group of cases of unstable
colon and periodic attacks of mu-
cous diarrhoea, alternating with
constipation. There is always a
sense of fullnees or tightness, if
not actually cramping in the ab-
domen. “Tension headache” is
common.
It is a fairly common disease,
certainly a troublesome disease—
hardly a mail comes to me without
three or four letter# asking for
advice on this subject The condi-
tion is often mistreated. It is prob-
ably responsible for the removal
of more undiseased appendices
than any other one cause—the
cramps are over the appendix
region in 78 per cent of cases. It
may result in chronic invalidism.
Most ei the sufferers are victims
of the cathartic habit It accom-
panies many of the states of emo-
tional tension ^countered in daily
life. . r,.. j .
Nervous Tension
Emotional tension — nervous
tension -that is the first impres-
sion the patient with mucous coli-
tis gives. This haa suggested to
two Boston physicians a study of
the physiological and emotional re-
action of their patients. a
It la a disease of early adultli/e
—the average age of onset ia
twenty-three years. Examining
the patient, the colon ean often be
Pat Peebles, Cuero-Stratton Rte.
H. J. Bade, Arneckeville.
Mrs. Sid Sitterle, Victoria.
Antonio Smith, Cheapside Rte.
Fletcher Bunjes, Westhoff.
Dr. E. Von Brandenstein, Cuero-
Cheapside Rte.
Dalton* Brandt, Rte. 2, Victoria.
Gottlieb Hoff. Goliad?
Mrs. G. W. Johnson, Victoria.
J. E. Lord, Cheapside Rte.
H. P. Houston, Kilgore.
Frank Borchardt, Westhoff.
Prank Lempa, Rte. 1, Yorktown.
George V. Junker, Rt. 4, Cuero.
W. G. Miller, Rte. 4„Cuero.
A. D. Nobles, Rte. 3, Cuero.
Wm. Sauer, Rte. 2, Cuero.
—Remember Pearl Harbor—
RADIO TUBER UTILIZED
Bell Aircraft Corp. has developed
a measuring device for drilling
which, through the use of a radio
tube, automatically measures the
thickness of the material and ad-
justs the countersinking drill.
—Rememoer Pearl Harbor—
' PERFUME HARMS CLOTHES
STATE COLLEGE, 'Pa.—(MS)—
Ladies—put your perfume on your
akin, not on your clothes. This ad-
vice comes from Dr. Charles R. Phil-
lips, instructor in textile chemistry
at the Pennsylvania State College.
Based on work in the drycleaning
research laboratory at Penn State,
Dr. Phillips found that placing per-
fume on clothes is not only bad
form and bad grooming, but that it
will also stain or damage garments
on which it is used.
—Remember Pearl Harbor—
Featured exclusively at KOEHLER’S.....
America’s Smartest 100% Waterproof Hat!
WHITE PUMP
COLORADO JUGGLES FIGURES
DENVER.—(INS.)—Colorado may
not be <as large a state as Texas but
there is more of it, the State Cham-
ber of Commerce contends. And
the C. of C. brings forward figures
to back up that claim. The chamber
argues that if you take Colorado's
103,948 square miles and multiply
it by the state’s mean altitude of
630Q feet you get a^bulk of 133,872
This is almost twice
The MIRIKAL
Is here for you to see
cubic miles,
as great as Texas’ bulk of 72,837
cubic mites, arrived at by multiplying
the Lone Star State’s 226,299 square
mites by its mean altitude of 1,700
feet. S £ .
Mirikal Hats hold the shape longer—Water-
proofing tightens the felt, assuring longd
life. The color is set and connot “bleed.”
All Mirikal Hats are 100% waterprdof..
They can be left in open without fear oi
moth holes.
New Spring Colors, Light and Service
i Weights $5.00.
BLACK PUMP
B and C Width
f«K through the abdominal walfc
as a tender, rubber-Hke tube. The
inside of the bowel shows great!
engorgement with dilated blood
vessels and the mucous membrane
covered with glairy mu&us. The
X-ray examination shows a small,’
Mirikal Wright Airflow Hats with
ented sweat band which gives pei
circulation in the top of the hat, mi
ing a hat a pleasure.
New Spring Colors . . ...........
100% Waterproof...............
jrfnNE PUMP
id B — up to 9v
Rothschilds Fur Felt S]
Weights and Colors ..
Bring your ▼/
Ford in To- F
day. Let our i '
expert Fora*
mechanics put it
J*n tip-top shape
for the miles
ahead.
um5r£*T™.> -
Groundwork for a re-trial of tbe
much-litigated Lone Star Gas Co.
rate is now being prepared by tbe
Gas Utilities Division of the Tfexas
Railroad Commission. Commission-
er OUn Culberson said today.
But your Ford in A-l mechan-
ical condition for the added
miles of service ahead—ond
pay for the repairs as you
drive thru our convenient
Budget Plenf You’ll never miss
a few dollars a week.
Bring your Ford to us ond
let our expert mechanics,
trained in foctory methods,
check it thoroughly to give
you an estimate of the needed
repairs. Then ask for details
of our Budget Plan, with the
payments suited to your
income.
I W4 nv Nt Ub v bA I* iwm.
'4 circat«ti«4. Cm 9* *»*,» in
FNOOkSfcO IY EVBtv OOCTO* WHO HAS SEEN fV*
BOSTON, — (INS.)—'Jfce Martin
Stoddards, moving their five-room
home two miles to open expansion
space for an ammunition depot,
lost one of their rooms enroute. An
Prevue Saturday Nite
THROUGH TUESDAY
Roadshow Engagement
automobile nicked the structure.
But a truck picked up the “lost"
room and brontfit it along to the
new site.
PRICES — ALL SEATS
Nights and Ail Day Sunday
OUR BANK VAULT
OFFERS THE BEST
ADULTS: 55c
Stop in ond ask about the
Budget Plan today!
MATINEES
TaXts are included in above
Prices.
Children 9c
LOW HEEL PATENT 8
AA and B — up to 9____ i
let
t SMTOK’S NOTES hr. Clra drain* W
^VJSJsaajeAs^-
lUmjd wMi slknMnt otomp, to Dr.
SSSmSarfa HE:
sdSS*- »»4 Constipation1’.
Rcdneia* ma4 Maine". "Infant Fe«d-
1’Inotractiora for tho Trratmrat of
Dlnbtw , "Fomidno Breton*" and “Tho
Cor* of do Hoi* mA Skin".
—Remember Pearl Harbor—
PATRIOTIC AMERICAN
PHILADELPHIA.—(INS.)— John
George Eisa, a naturalized Ameri-
can of Palestine birth, doesn’t take
second place to anyone when it
comes to giving for Uncle Sam. An
employe at the Philadelphia Navy
Yard, Eisa recently offered to take
his pay in stamps and bonds for the
next six months.
—Remember Pearl Harbor—
SCORNS TIRE RATIONING
WORCESTER
One of the Most Heroic
True Stores of All Time.
A simple Tennessee mountaineer
becomes the world's greatest hero.
Bent a safe deposit box now
for your U.S. Defense Bonds.
Keep insurance, policies,
birth certificates, citizenship
papers, military documents,
all important papers, where they
will be safest from the increased
hazards of war time.
Be prepared. Keep your papers
in a safe deposit box in our vault.
The rental is small. Act now.
r Your
luables
Our willingness and readiness to lend
continue unchanged. However, now Nte
thought foremost in our mind b American
victory in the war. Loan applications for
purposes that in any way help the war
effort will hove first call on our attention.
We by no means wish to discourage OfF*
plications for other types of loans. If you
need money for any sound purpose, coNM
in and apply. Borrowers are always
welcome here.
FARMERS STATE BANK
& TRUST CO.
Always Look for This Sfgo
HIGH HEEL PATENT
AAA — AA and B _____
GARY COOPER
Many other new styles are here
too. We invite your inspection,
soon.
WEBER
MOTOR CO
WALTER BRENNAN
JOAN LESLIE
EL NATIONAL BANK
BASS
BROWNBILT
SHOE STORE
Mass.— (INS.) —
This tire rationing business didn’t
give Rev. Hugh Strouppe even a
moment’s pause in his parish calls.
| He makes the rounds by bicycle,
j averaging 50 miles a week, and his
] cyclometer has topped 11800
the last eight months.
After years of refusing Alvin C.
York Anally permits this great
American story to come to the
Opposite Post Office
RlflLTU
THE
WIZARDS
of the
AfOW/
A BUPCtl
PLAN fOR
REPAIRS.
'JUNCTION
The WEAVER BROS.
ElVIRY ^ 'r±!
IT PAYS TO
CET OINUINt
FORD SM/Ci
Buy U S Defense Bonds
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Putman, Harry C. The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 48, No. 28, Ed. 1 Wednesday, February 4, 1942, newspaper, February 4, 1942; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1090047/m1/6/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Cuero Public Library.