The Cuero Record. (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 54, Ed. 1 Wednesday, March 6, 1935 Page: 9 of 12
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»hn A. Held Address
s Packed House
Sitnda \r Night.
i 1||
•“** y; -.1
M:' ' ’Uv • • , ft" -'?'. ?
;'ii*! At: ^s^xi-v ■ %.v£- I
President Goes Sleigh-Ridingi at
pictures shown as a basis
Evangelist’s lecture were of
or . pagui Rome. The
said in the beginning of
ttre that the three cities of
pent were Jerusalem, Baby-
t Rome They are perhaps
■ee most famous cities in
■Id. The llvangelist declared
amascus is the oldest city
world toe ay, while Rome' is
at import mt city in the
oday. 7 he fame of Rome
s due to its many historical
nd the irfluence of the
nr 275 million Catholics in
kg the pictures shown by
angehst were: The Ancient
which a as erected during
n of universal man, under
man rule. It is ^■
a
church. Several pic
the arch Vs of triumph were
The two most significant
arch at ‘Pltus who destroy-
aton in A. D.’70; when 4,-
: Wttre hrng, and the arch
an tine i hich is the lines.
•Vrved. The picture of
ilecteos Hills, where the
ahripnt palaces stand to*
I the Ccliseum, which the
declared was the most im-
«pot to archealogists to
e a fair conception of the
itejr plactd on art. ”Thc
k, which is the largest
ever ■ er« cted in the world
l used 1 y the Romans to
Use all cf the famous Ro-
rsoaages. The Coliseum
their ste tues to inspire the
| all ages to be somebody.
> speaker. Two views of
iseum wire given, that of
eat. ruins and as restored,
ge enough to accommo-
DQO people. The inside
id Mrs. John Boe-ttinger, went for
pme at Hyde Park, X. Y. Roose-
a drij&tincar h%
velt-rtjoyi thesiort.
Storm Maroons Cars in Alleghenies
eight motor buses, above, hear Blairsville, Pa.,
forcing the passengers to spend the night in their
cars and in mountain cabins. This scene was typi-
cal throughout the seetkon.
is Christ.” In his in-
words!! Dr. Held said a
Ige In New York City,
y “The greatest force to
oday is the Sunday
a his experiences in
general among the so-called white
collar workers. And it is here that
ments.
nent and the cradle roll
aent of thi modern Sunday
Baptists
Is. message the Evangelist
jd three things. 1. The
Sation
In naming
concept ioi i of religious
on. He gave three of
L Intel eqtuality instead
duality. 2. Ritualism in
fellowshib with God thru
Ohrisd * Having an exter-
v Instead < if an internal ex
Bpr ,!> ’
Tip: CUERO RECORD. CUERO, TEXAS
HERE
LARGE
ANCE
. Graphic Pictures of Tornado Which Swept Kansas
SHOWN
Pictures Taken in
land to Illustrate
TUks-
. (By.JkL R. SOILEAU)
fohn A. leid, famous Euro-
st of Waco, is lead-
recovery campaign
i locwl Baptist church.
began his cam-
iday rrjoming with a full
£Junda> night the crowd
to>whjre many extra
were .plao :d in the audi -
to accommodate the con
whioh furnished the
», packe 1 house.
momipg at the 9 o'clock
spoke to a fine
Interested worshippers.
r.,14ondlay night session
many admirers of fine artl
lppers together for a
ive lecture on anci
J and a very helpUil mes
j on the sabji scty’Ygm^Ar^Ye
CUERO SCHOOLS DRUGSTORE
WEDNESDAY, MABCH
WOULD RECEIVE
NEARLY $24,000
Per Capita Apportion
ment Depends Upon
Scholastics.
ROBBER JAILED
Leo Curry Charged With
Robbery, Brought to
This City Sunday.
CENSUS
||-
Em: • # ::W
Ti:: fur.n'I-.-aapeti dai«: cioui, left, is a striking photo of a tornado
vv.ieb srrgck vith gr.-at -st fc-r? near Wichita! Kas. - At the vortex
o’" the ,tv. i ter ili..- t.-rilfic pressure dcstrcjled buildings and injured
i.o: s cf p- r. c*ns. Two fare!lies cf nine people living'in the wrecked
l-on. *, at the right, cd serious injury when the tornado struck:
Leo Curry, alias Jack Connor, is
being held in the county jail here
pending investigation pf the rob-
Tivr\i?Di*7 • »*ry of the Voelkel Drug Store in
L iNUlliXvVv x Nordheim February 9tt.
Curry was brought to this city
Sunday by Sheriff Emil Markowsky
and Deputy Bob Ried;l of York-
tows, who motored up t( Fredericks-
burg when they learned Curry was
in jail.
A third party, alleged to have
taken part in the robbery, has not
yet been located. Another negro
(Blackcat) Fisher has (has been in
jail here the past few I weeks, hav-
ing confessed to his pairt in the
robbery.
! Mrs. Hadley Edgar Now
Taking 1935
Census.
perience; and 3. A belief without
a saving faith. A mere acceding
is not sufficient, it takes faith, said
the Evangelist.
3. The true foundation, Jesu.-
Christ. The sublime, the true,
the only sure foundation is Jesus
Christ. Thank God for it. Faith
in Christ makes 'saints in this life,
sadi thl Evangelist.
(1 ( Jesus is a precious founda-
tion, true and sure.
(2) Jesus is an exchanging foun
dation. *’ t
(3) Jesus is an everlasting
foundation. . The blood of Jesus
clears us from all sins. The great
and sublime question is “How is
your relation with God?” Have
you placed your faith in Christ?
That is the question, said he, for
Jesus says: “Him that cometh un-
to Me. I will in no wise be cast out.’
His message for tonight is “Can
We Believe in God?” , The general
public is asked to hear that mes-
sage. It is a message intended to
help the fellows who question God.
Better Weather
Reporting Cuts
Risk of Flying
Commercial airplanes last year
flew 3,400,000 miles, on the aver-
age, between accidents that were
caused by weather conditions. This
was more than twice as far as in
1931, when there was an accident
caused by adverse weather for ev-
ery 1,600,000 miles flown by com-
mercial planes. This improve-
ment in the safety in aviation is
due in large measure to the well-
coordinated efforts of the air
That popular old-fashioaed sport of skigh-ridir.g
came in for a new deal when President Fragklin
D. Roosevelt, accompanied by his daughter and
transport companies and the gov-
ernment agencies concerned with
weather services, according to W.
R. Gregg, chief of the Weather
Bureau.
Commercial' aviation is employ-
ing more men with training in me -
teorology and as .a result transport
companies are better able to de-
cide when it is safe to fly and
when schedules had better be 1
abandoned. Some companies are [
now requiring their pilots to keep '
full rtcords of the weathery they
meet on each trip and to report it-
promptly to the Weather Bureau,
with wild beasts and 11115 15 Pr6vin& a valuable supple-
thei| fellow men. The ment *9 the a‘™ay weather ser-
arena of the! vlce and 15 helping to make air
of the wild transport still safer for pilots and
our the Chris I
The Cusro Independent School
District will receive- approximately
$24,000 in state per capita payments
in 1935 if the scholastic,census now
underway reveals as many schol-
astics in the district this year as in
1934.
Mrs. Hadley Edgar is now busy
with the 1935 census, and is anxious
that every child in the Cuero school
district of school-age be included.
She is asking the; cooperation of
parents.
There were 1460 scholastics in the
Cuero district last year, and the
j per capita apportionment was set at
$16.50. It is expected that a like
figure will be established this year.
A total of $7.00 has been remitted
on the per capita apportionment
since the beginning of the scholastic
session. September 1st, and $2.00 has
been paid on last year's deficit.
State Superintendent L. A.
Woods has announced that the full
$16.50 will be paid out by the end of
tRe scholastic year, August 31. This
is in contrast to the $2.00 per child
deficit on August ,31, 1934 and $5.00
per child deficit on August 31, 1933.
Junior Hawthorne
Club Organized Here
Saturday Afternoon
(By MARY BETH McCURDY)
A group of the young women
met on Saturday afternoon at 3
o’clock In the Hawthoriae Club
rooms and organized a Junior
Hawthorne Club. > The purpose of
the Club as stated by Mrs. W. R.
Gillett, the sponsor, is to keep the
young people who are out of high
school informed on current activ-
ities and reminded of things learn-
ed in the past. A great deal of in-
terest was manifested by those
present and a constitution was
drawn up and adopted.
Officers elected were: Josephine
Wofford, president; Frances Tully,
vice-president; Virginia; Putman,
secretary; Ellyce Morgan, treasur-
er.
Tht president of the Hawthorne
Club, Mrs. Alex Hamilton, and
Mrs. Will DuBose assisted Mrs.
Gillett in serving a salad course
and coffee from a gracious lace-
laid table.
G(®BLERSHAVE
TRACKTEAM
Will Be Represented In
Interscholastic League
Meets.
Woman Convicted
In Mercy
Is Given
LONDON, Mar. 2—((INS)—-Prison
doors opened today for
Killing
Release
win her
Public
and the
BrowniRU, 62 year old
put her imbecile son
painlessly as an act of
She Was sentenced to
Leds in December of last
a jury convicted her of
the firs; degree. She
proved and a mover
chroughbut Britain
freedom,
opinion favored
government
mc-untici mass of petitions
witness bo popular feeling.
Night Watchmen
Face ^
DALI AS, Mar. 2 -
motorized night watchman
crimina assault charges
for an alleged attack one
on a 16 year-old high
ter two city detectives
investig ition yesterday,
for W. 1 [. Moore and Lud
watchmpi, was set for 9
day.
Nemo
the girl
attack,
with hM
entered
making
Cecchini, 22,
on the night of the
told police he
companion when
the car on
an arrest and
girl in the back seat,
tempted to aid her he was
ed: Cecdhini said.
Mrs. May'WEEKLY RECORD $1.50
■4s
S'
PANEL
500 In This Shi
0
Each
Plain Tailored Net with ft
Colors are Ecru
PENN]
J. C. PENNEY COMPAN
Speaking before the National
Safety Council in New York City,
lured to their i today (March 5) Mr. Gregg outlin •
; ed the way the Weather Bureau,
j The War, Navy; and Commerce
„ ^ / j Departments, and the commercial
Bust read a portion cf airway officials co -operate to main
__ of first Corin- tain an effective weather service
• eleventh ver' ] for aviators. The Weather Bureau
text. For other founda- he pointed out, provides service fori
tliat laid, needs. It co-operates with
practically all other government j
organizations. In connection! the weather bureau has been able
with aeronautics, however, it co -1to 00 operate in the collection, use,
operates most actively with the | an<3 interpretation of weather ob -
Heavy' snow' storms accompanied by blizzards
.which lashed widely separated sections of the
countt/ piled up 10-foot drifts in the Allegheny
mountains and marooned more than 100 autos and
War, Navy, and Commerce Depart-! servations.
|udge said out of The Army and the Navy, Mr.
whom he sen- Gregg said, have had their own
diabetes potently and Increasingly
flourishes.
Thus it is noted that
profes-J
sicnal men and women. Educators,;
bankers, business executives, servers
of food and drink, laboratory and j
Cuero High School will be repre-
sented by a track team in the 1935
Interscholastic^ League meets
Coach (Skee)" Kozelski emphatic -i
ally announced Monday.
He blamed a misunderstanding
for the statement to the effect
that the Gobblers would not be
entered in track meets this year,
and declared that the Gobbler
thinly clads were working olit
daily, and that Cuero High would
boast a fair squad.
Kozelski admitted that several of
his most promising “sprint” men
would be ineligible, but stated that
the boys now out for the team
were working hard and that Cuero
should make a bid for honors in
the coming league meets.
■ M
m
Contracts between weathermen,
and pilots have become particular-
ly close, Mr. Gregg; said. Records
were regular j meterological units ever since the I of conditions in the upper air
•y School. World War showed the need fori brought back by the fliers are cfjdcsk and bench people in general— Takes Prisiners Back To
t the real j trained men and special meterol - i sreat value to the Weather Bureau in short the sedentary workers* are
School was a ogical equipment for military and i for drawing an accurate picture of i more likely to become victims of this
.Qt Sunda;
deacon. The starter °* j naval campaign. The personnel
lUonal S. S. Lesson, Mr. Qf tnese units Is assigned mostly to
Chicago, was a Baptist; I ajr station and to aircraft cav-
itarpers of the home [ riers. The Department of Com-
merce is vitally concerned with
weather service because of its re
sponsibility under the Air Com-
the Evangelist merce Aq£, for the development of I
bings. 1. Tlie safe antj efficient civil air trails -!
weather conditions. Discussions' disease than are those who'labor
with the meterologists before de- manually. And to this list must be
ciding on a flight, in turn., lessen added the housewife to whom elec-
the hazard of flying for the aviator. Iricity and leisure in this connec-
rion have in numerous instances
Border To Te De-.
ported.
Weekly Health
Letter From Austin
Immigration officers were in Cuero
Fiiday to receive three prisoners
held in the DeWitt countj' jail, the
Said he “if the port. Co operation between these
is fa se, the structure departments and the Weather Bu -
beautiful, but will j rcau, in preventing
_ duplications
Idolitory ii a false founda • j and in making the facilities of
Hi Id, yet there are each available to all, has contrib-
of idolitors in the United uted materially to safety on North
themselves Chris American Airways.
the forms of Co operation with air transport
today the Evan
Mid netole worshiDDed ! ,GregK ^‘nued, j lowvnees for undiagnosed cises injsical examination at least We aj
mkL 1.people worshipped 1S a-comparatively recent develop | earlier days, and increasing deadly Vav; ;regularly exercise the huge
Many companies have j power of this malady thus bis
■liver doll irs, boys and i ment.
and flocks than of the p;Weather
three to be deported to Mexico.
The prisoners, sent here by Fed-
eral courts to serve jail sentences
inci'“time" for fines imposed in
Federal courts, have served these
pioved to be doubtful blessings.
•‘Therefore, it is plain that adults
whose living habits involve a mini-
mum of physical exertion and a
--' [ maxjmum of food, including sweets :
AUSTIN. Feb. 28.—“The general could i profitably determine tojicmcncos and-will be deported to
increase in diabefes throughout the :-about face” and gear themselves i Mexico. AH were Mexicans. ’
United States during ihe pist few *.p a moie normal living regime. The1 The DeWitt county jail is still be-
years is eloquen ]y reflected jin the ru les involved in this suggestion are:'!n" used as a Federal unit.. Federal
Texas figures. In 1923 cr.ly 367 per- Under the doctor’s direction, avoid: pi'i-sonerg convicted at- Victoria,
sons were recorded es bavin died : overweight: oat proper foods in! Houston and Corpus Christi being
of this malady, while last year about | proper amounts shunning excesses! jaii°d here. •
i00 succumbed. Even making al-jof sugar and sweets, hare a phy J
MKENZIE MAY
FACE CHAIR
Was Pronounced, Sane
After Killing Fellow
Convict.
CLOSE OUT
I ,j H -I T |« V
j Ladies
Oxfords
tAirt-thA stftrv nf! ^ . , i >—— **•“ j ufccmes; muscles of the body either, in work
knewmore ;about TTh 0a,‘CaI urutsf whi«h j apparent. And while perhaii* it is , nr play,”
RIBS IN HER NECK
SYDNEY. Feb.—(INS.)—A wo-
PRODIGAL FATHER
than who had two ribs in her neck
is in Parrqniatta Hospital, New-
South Whales. where surgenos
succeeded in removing one of them I rver. he admitted that
m. -ii« ... ,. Bureau. Government j killers, it nevertheless dcM-rfc.- an
-his dauglite: kepy t weathermen, of course, can assume j appreciation of some of Ihelpredis
religiops foundations or, no responsibility in deciding j posing causes as'well as of t^e me-S ST. LOUIS.—(INS.)— Homesick j^he had the usual 12 ribs on each
religious whether flights shall be made onthods to combat thom." states Dr. j lor his wife and three children. A. -side up to the chest bone and two
three of j cancelled. The air transport of- John W. Brown. State Health Offi-1 Seillman, -42, returned here to
AUSTIN. Mar. 4.—<INS)—John M.
“Pete’’ McKenzie, San Antonio’s no-
torious killer, is again in jeopardy
of the electric chair.
It was established here today that
superintendent’s of three state in-
stitutions for the insane have ex-
amined the killer at Huntsville state
prison—where recently he added
another victim of his list when he
killed a fellow-convict—and pro-
nounced him sane.
McKenzie was examined on the
direct instructions of Governor ]
James V. Allred, it was learned.
“We are looking into the case,” j
was all that Allred wuold say. In re-
sponse to thd direct question, how-
McKenzie
200 Pairs
While They Last
ficials making these decisions, how cer. » j surrender in a two*year-old rob-
ever, need some training in [ It can b° said that!, whatever the; bery charge. Though facing a pro-
exciting cause of its development bable one-year workhouse sentence
weather facts. With the growth
of the meterological sections in
the large air transport companies,
may be. diabetes is definitely as-
sociated with the soft living now so
Seillman said he was happy to see
his family again. *
_
extras at the back and sides of her
neck. She had never been trou-
bled by the extra ribs, but paralysis
suddenly began in the arms and
hands, and an X-ray picture re-
vealed the abnormality.
had been examined recently, that
the state's pxperts had pronounced
bmi sane.
A. F. Moffitt, Texas Aggie1 stu-
dent. Was home over the week end
/or a visit with hist parents, and
incidentally, the dentist.
Penney’d Sport Oxfords in Whites
and Blondes
PENNEY7!
I. C. PENNEY COMPANY, Ir-------
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Howerton, J. C. The Cuero Record. (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 54, Ed. 1 Wednesday, March 6, 1935, newspaper, March 6, 1935; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1130572/m1/9/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Cuero Public Library.