The Cotulla Record (Cotulla, Tex.), Vol. 47, No. 1, Ed. 1 Friday, July 2, 1943 Page: 3 of 6
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N THE COTULLA RECORD
■
mm
OUR INDEPENDENCE IS STILLATSTAKE
This year, on the 168th Anniversary of our Country’s Independence, Americans
everywhere are soberly aware of how near they came to losing their precious her-
itage of liberty and freedom before the treacherous and deadly attack of Asiatic
and European dictatorships.
We in Laredo and Webb County, like you in LaSalle County, are fully awake
now to the terrible seriousness of this war---a war we are fighting to preserve the in-
dependence which our forefathers won.
Like you, we are offering and giving everything we can to help to win this war
as quickly and decisively as possible. Naturally we have to curtail some of our
services and our stores are not as fully stocked as in peacetime.
However, we realize our responsibility to those in our trade territory and we
will continue to serve our friends and neighbors to the best of our ability within the
limits of war conditions, and we will continue to greet you with the same sincere
warmth when you come to visit us.
ADD SALT TO YOL’R
DRINKING WATER TO
PREVENT HEAT CRAMPS
m=--
-
g
8
Austin, Texas, July 1—To help pre-
vent heat tramps, salt should be ad-
ded to the drinking water of thoso
persons whu^c woi'K is such as zo
cause excessive prespiration. Dr. Coy
w. Cox, State Health Officer, ad-
vises in an attempt to forestall a
< possible increase in the number of
heat victims as the Texas thermome-
ter hits the HO degrees and above.
Laborers, mechanics, farmers, and
white collar workers whose work caus-
es them to sweat profusely are in
danger of having their body salt con-
tent become deficient, with resulting
heat cramps or heat fag. Salt is a
; prominent constituent of sw'eat; tlr>
body may lose as high as forty to
fifty grams of salt during hot days.
Workmen whose duties require mus-
cular exertion should be especially
careful to add more than the usual a-
mount of salt to what they eat and
drink.
In industry, a method of preventing
heat cramps it to take a tablet of
pure salt or a mixture of salt and
dextrose with each drink of water.
However, salt deficiency may be pre-
vented by taking salt in various ways.
Where prepared salt tablets are not
available, a pinch of table salt may
be added to each drink of water. Milk
is a source of salt and will help to
make up for the deficiency caused by
sweating. Alcoholic drinks should be
avoided.
Heat cramp is characterized by pains
in the abdominal region, headache, and
In stvere cases, by nausea and vom-
iting. The body temperature remains
about normal, likewise the pulse rate.
Body =alt losses occur without the
knowledge of the individual until
there is a deficiency; then the abdomi-
nal muscles begin to cramp.
=
= 'z£
111
They Gave Their Lives--Surely We Can
LOAN OUR MONEY FOR INDEPENDENCE
Joe Brand
Odette’s
Laredo National Bank
Ward Insurance Agency
Mayor Hugh S. Cluck
Laredo Bridge Co.
James Moore & Co.
Herring-Price Lumber Co.
Inter-American Sales Co.
Fritz Werner Hardware
& Implement Co.
Border Foundry &
Machine Co.
CON. ED and BILL MIMS
Casso Guerra & Co.
Welders Equipment Co.
Teodosio Guiterrez
& Company
Texas Harvest Hat Co.
Judge M. J. Raymond
L. Diaches, Jewe!er
Laredo Steam Laundry
Sheriff J. C. Martin
S. N. Johnson, Jr.
BUDWEISEP. DISTRIBUTOR
This Message is Sponsored by the Above Patriotic Firms and Individuals of
LAREDO ■ WEBB CO
INCOME TAX CALENDAR
—v—
Note: The following is a “calen-
dar of events” provided for by the
new Pay-As-You-Go Income Tax law.
There are a number of things which
both the employer and employee must
do during the next several months.
It might be well to clip this, for pos.
!gj sible future use.
§j| 1943
HH June 15. Second Installment of
HH 1942 income tax due and payable, and
HI must be paid.
== July 1. Employer starts with-
§j| holding from wages at new rate3.
HU Victory tax withholding discontinued.
HH July 31. Due date of employer’s
\JL return of Victory tax withheld dur-
|gi ing second quarter of 1934. Tax
§g§ payable with return.
HP September 15. Due date of decla-
im ration by individuals of estimated tax
gp for 1943 and one-half of the estimated
tax payable.
HH October 31. Due date of employ.
= er's return of tax withheld during the
|H third quarter of 1934. Tax payable
=s= on this date.
HH December 31. Due date of second
== qne half of estimated 1943 tax of indi-
g| viduals.
s January 31. Due dftte of employ-
U er’s return tax withheld during la*-t
g§ | quarter of 1943. Tax payable on this
HU j date.
|gj | March 15. Due date of individual
!H income tax return for 1943. Any ex-
mi i cess of tax shown on this return of
amounts withheld and paid in 1943
Iliij.flP must be paid on this date.
Trr'i
Brighten Up the Home with
Paint
A little Paint will go a long ways to-
ward brightening up your home.
Come in today and get our prices.
T. R. KECK & SONS
OUR WEEKLY SERMON
THE BEAUTY OF CHRIST
By Max I. Reich, D. D., Director of
Due date of certain additions tv
cause His call to repentance fell upon
deaf ears—they felt no need of it;
they were self-righteous.
And is not the same true of Gen-
XEWS DEADLINE
the Jewish Missions Course, Moody I tiles also? Why do so many pass by j
Bible Institute, Chicago. the invitation of the gospel? B"-‘
i . , , . , , cause they do not feel their desperate
Isaiah the prophet, who makes many nee{j t p
predictions regarding the Messiah. A '
tells us in his first reference to Him ! . °nly ** Relate the phy-
that there is a day coming when “tin *““n- °"ly th* drown,n* app,e
Branch of the Lord shall be beautiful C'ate the °ne wh°Se stron* arnl can
Our deadline in receiving news for
our regular edition is 10 o’clock
Thursday morning.
Please do not bring in copy after
this hour. We welcome all news stor-
ies, but urge that they be brought in
as early in the week as possible.
THE PUBLISHERS
and glorious, and the fruit of the
earth shall he excellent ^Jid comely
for them that are •sejped Israel”
(Isa. 4:2). 4 \
By this double figure of the Branch
of the Lord and the fruit of the land
(the holy land) the prophet sets 1
save th»m. Only the hungry appre-
ciate the bread set before them. Only j
the consciously lost turn to the one
who came as the Savior of the lost.
After long centuries of disappoint-
ment and humiliation the Jewish peo-
ple wiH remember Him who once plead
LIFESjLittle TROUELES
BARBECUE
t Good Fat Calf -- Every Wednesday and Saturday
Dressed Fryers at all Times
Nice Fat Dressed Hens
R. C. McCOMBS
forth the twofold nature of the Me*- j ^ befell to Hri gl^and'b'ctu-
stall—divine and human. One day. . 4l , . . . , A
, n . , *>• The.\ will then be astonished nt
he says, after Israel s tr.bulat.ons, the their lonjf blindness> that they shouId
. I hilve P«m«1 Hi"’ by - who spake as
never man spake, and loved as never
man loved, and died a death such as
no one else ever died.
this glorious Man who is more than
man, the very Branch, that is, Son, of
the Living God.
But this has not yet come to pass.
In another part of this prophecy the
prophet tells us that “He shall grow
*lr.
For as the steel attracted by and •
attached to the magnet becomes j
changed into a magnet itself, partak-j
up before Him as a tender plant, and jn of the life of the magnet, so does I
as a root out of dry ground: He hath
no form nor comeliness: and when
we shall see Him, there is no beauty
that we should desire Him” (Isa. 53:2)
That is how He is still regarded to
day.
How is it that the Jewish people
this Christ powerfully transform the 1
lives of those today to whom a glimpse ■
has been given of His wonderful beau- J
ty and glory. For before He becomes
“the glory of His people Israel,” He
is the light to lighten the Gentile’s” in
saw no beauty in Hint when He first this present “acceptable year of the
appeared ? They rejected Hint he- Lord.”
,
-CANT SLEEP-
No need to lie in bed—toss-
worry and fret because CON-
STIPATION or GAS PRES-
SURE won’t let you sleep. Be
sensible—get up—take a dash of
ADLER-I-KA
as directed, to relieve the pressure
of large intestines on nerves and
organs of the digestive tract. Ad-
lerika assists old food wastes and
gas through a comfortable bowel
movement so that bowels return
to normal size and the discomforts
of pressure stop. Before you know
it, you are asleep. Morning finds
you feeling clean — refreshed and
ready for a good day’s work or fun.
AdleriAm from yomr druggist todmy.
1943 tax.
Due date of declaration of estimat-
; ed tax for 1944. One fourth of esti- ‘
mated tax payable on this date.
fyJhal tycu. feuy With
WAR RRAIJS
Winter flying jackets for both the
Army and Navy Air Corps are regu-
lar equipment for our aviators. They
cost from $12 to $13 and are made of
hnrschide leather lined with sheep
shearling.
GADDIS PHARMACY
Purchase of one $18.75 War Bond,
for which you receive $25 in 10
years, will pay for one of these jack-
ets so necessary for our airmen fly-
ing at high altitudes and in northern
climes. So you and your neighbors
can do your hit by investing at least
10 percent of your salary every pay
day in War Bonds to help pay the
cost of this equipment for intrepid
American flyers. Join the parade,
and help top the War Bond Quota in
•fur COUnty. r 5. Trras t-, Urt'attmmt
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The Cotulla Record (Cotulla, Tex.), Vol. 47, No. 1, Ed. 1 Friday, July 2, 1943, newspaper, July 2, 1943; Cotulla, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1162329/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Alexander Memorial Library.