The Cotulla Record (Cotulla, Tex.), Vol. 34, No. 14, Ed. 1 Friday, June 26, 1931 Page: 6 of 8
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LOUISVaU. KT
ROUGH DRY, 4c per lb. Minimum 60c
WET WASH, 3c per lb. Minimum 60c
FIRST CLASS WORK PHONE 136
CITY TAILOR SHOPS STEAM LAUNDRY
R R. CARPENTER
All our machinery is is Steam and Electrically equipped
which insures better and cheaper work
WASHING-IRONING He lb.
Minimum 51 00
THE COTULLA RECORD
3
YOU CANT SEE
THE END OF
INDIA TIKF
ini/pavp
BECAUSE IT WOULD
CO CLEAR AROUND
THE WORLD AND
COME UPAND HIT
YOU IN THE BACK >
Fowler’s Service Station
News of Week
From Los Angeles
Los Angeles, Texas, June 23.—Mr.
end Mrs. B. J. Lignau from Falls
county spent a few days visiting H.
H. Fiedled and family.
Mi', and Mrs. E. J. Fuchs spent the
week end with relatives in Pfluger-
ville.
(Jus Munson from Georgetown and
Fri dholm from Waco were here
rii business Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Adolph Gebert and
sons spent Sunday at Somerset.
Fred Felder from Bishop visited his
father Gus Felder here Saturday and
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Rountree were
| la re from Beeville last Saturday.
| Last Sunday afternoon the Mont-
! gomery-Ward baseball team from San
Antonio crossed bats with the Los
j Angeles team on the local diamond,
j It was a very interesting game and J
1 it took 12 innings to decide it. At
! the end of the 9th the score was tied
j at 5 and 5. Montgomery-Ward final-
ly scored another run in the 12th,
| and won the game by the score of 6 j
j to 5. Carter pitched the entire game
j tor our boys and struck out 13 men.
j J. Norred did the catching in fine i--------
j style, although he got crippled he ‘ PRODUCTION OF STAR TIRES IS
It’s Never Too Late
Rohe Daniels, left, and Ren Ljon, right, were married a year ago,
but it was just the other day that they finally escaped the duties of
the set and boarded the Malolo en route to Honolulu, on their honey-
moon.
| stayed through the
game.
The South Texas Bean Company
report that pear are coming in right
along and that the first carload will
be shipped out within a few deys to
Memphis, Tenn. In many of the
fields the peas are still partly green.
The coming week a large volume is
expected to be marketed to the local
buyers.
baptist church.
Our meeting will be held beginning
j the last Sunday in September. Wed*
| nesday following the close of the
I meeting the Rio Grande Association
will meet with our church for its
1931 session.
| Next Sunday morning the pastor
1 will deliver a special message to boys
and girls. Sunday night he will
j preach to the young men and women
i of the church and community.
You who are under thirty come and
I bring your wives, husbands and
sweethearts. You who are over thirty
i may come and just listen.
LEONARD S. KING, Pastor.
AT HIGH LEVEL.
Star tire production has been step-
| ped up to the highest point in its
j history, M. H. Russell, local Hicks-
Star associate, has been advised by
the Hicks Rubber Company, the Texas
tire house which owns the Star Rub-
ber Company, of Akron. Ohio.
“Present sales of Star tires are so
far ahead of all expectations for
this season that factory production is
running behind the demand.” said Mr.
Russell.
“While the ‘rush’ tire season is now
on, which means increased sales,
Hicks-Star production was maintain-
winter months, when other tire manu-
facturers were laying off men and
cutting shifts.”
Mr. Russell is still featurtng the
33 1-3 per cent trade-in allowance for
old tires traded in on Star De Luxe
balloons, but is urging investigation
of this opportunity to make a one-
third saving before the special off r
is withdrawn by the Star Rubber
Company.
ed at a high level, even during the corn.
If all of La Salle county could have
received the rain that fell at Cotulia
Wednesday evening, it would have
meant a great deal to the corn crop.
Particularly in the Western part of
the county a rain would greatly help
COTULLA BAKERY
I;'.' l ■=
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==->:
PRACTICAL RELIGION.
By WM. A. BLACK.
This is not a sermon; merely some
friendly observations by a layman on
the dilemma of our churches. Church
assemblies and conventions are tak-
ing note of the unnatural conditions
and deplore the sad spectacle of in-
creasing poverty and want in the
midst of plenty. They find chaos in
production and distribution of wealth
and stand helpless for a remedy,
other than some emotional appeals to
the rich to share with the poor.
Let’s look at this thing from a com-
mon sense point of view. Take a few
facts as we see them and use rea-
son to give these facts their proper
place.
God created the earth with all it
contains.
He created man, giving him a phy- I
sical body adapted to meet every phy-
sical need. He endowed him with
mind, with reason and with unlimited
capacity for growth. Man is given j j
money but there is one thing certain
i he " ill have something to eat if he
takes care of it.
The Golf Course was opened up
this week and will be open every
night till ten o’clock.
Herring’s
MEAT
Market
i
dominion over all the material things
of this earth for his use.
Here are some thngs God did not j
do. He never created a bushel of i
wheat or a bale of cotton. He never !
built a house, a railroad or mined a |
pound of ore. All this man had to j
learn to do, using his mind and body, |
and we have gone far in these en- j
deavors.
God never gave a title deed to any •
man or group of men for the exclu- |
sive use of a piece of ground.
Both reason and experience ap- j
proves the practice of exclusive and I
secure possession of parcels of ground. :
The Common Law based on reason !
and experience confirms this practice.
The title to land is a law made priv-
ilege and like all law made privileges
should be paid for and paid into the
public treasury.
The privilege of holding and using
an acre of ground in the heart of a
large city is very valuable. An acre
at the margin has little or no value
The one is worth a million and more a
year. The other but a few cents. We
graduate these values in our every
day transactions but we have not as
yet learned that justice demands that
these values should be used for the
common good. That would give every
THICK JUICY STEAKS
COLD MEATS
man, woman and child an equal right
in the use of the earth, and a share
in the benefits of all public improve-
ments. I can then surrender my
privilege of ownership and still keep
and enjoy all I produce or the value
of any service rendered.
I respectfully submit these obser-
vations to the hierarchies, clergy and
lay leaders of our churches. They
are also submitted in the belief that
the common man will give them a
place in his thought and test conclu-
sions by his own reason and experi-
ence.
As leaders in Church and State are
hopelessly befuddled over conditions
it is up to the farmer, mechanic and
other struggling groups to take a
hand, using common sense that can-
not be distorted and dulled by some
emotion or some artificial scheme of
relief.
The price of roasting ears was so
small this year that farmers were
reluctant to sell, and yet because of
high freight rates, when this product
got to the Eastern markets it was too
high for the average person to buy
The price of all other products is
equally low. Black eye peas are sell-
ing for SI.50 per ewt.: watermelon:
are very cheap; corn is expected ti
be around 40c a bushel; a big feed
ciop with practically no market. The
farmer has little chance to get any
Aspirin
BEWARE OF IMITATIONS
LOOK for the name Bayer and the
word genuine on the package as pictured
above when you buy Aspirin. Then
you’ll know that you are getting the
genuine Bayer product that thousands
of physicians prescribe.
Bayer Aspirin is SAFE, as millions
ot users have proved. It does not de-
press the heart. No harmful after-effects
follow its use.
Bayer Aspirin is the universal anti-
dote for pains ci all kinds.
Headaches Neuritis
Colds Neuralgia
Sore Throat Lumbago
Rheumatism Toothache
Genuine Bayer Aspirin is sold at
all druggists in boxes of 12 and in
bottles of 24 and 100.
Aspirin is the trade-mark of Bayer
manufacture of monoaceticacidesler of
salicylicacid.
.
. ... _ • *---■ • . —- - • • . —— • • —— — • • —
I'll
, =-•=
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JUST OUT OF THE
OVEN
WHICH DO YOU
PREFER
Delicious
Baked Goods x
jjQeejtJeer uowt /i
it*
n’t Hasp Your Throat
With Harsh Irritants
"Reach for a LUCKY instead’’
When you visit your physician for your periodic
health examination, one of the very first things ha
asks you to do is to open your mouth wide, and to
say "Ah." Ha is examining the delicate lining of your
throat. "At.:" There is not a man or woman who
eouid even make this sample sound, if In the throat
there wore no Adam’s Appie. For your Adam’s Appla
your Ics-ynx —the voice box containing your vocal
chords. And what a delicate piece of Nature’s handi-
work the Adam’s Apple is. A slight cold—even a tiny
parvids lodged in tho throat—and our voice often
crows husky. In acuto cases, wo may even loss our
voice for several dGys. Don’t rasp your throat with
harsh irritants—Roach fer a LUCKY Instead-—remem-
ber, LUCKY STRIKE is the only cigarette in America
that through its exclusive "TOA5TING" process ex-
pels certain harsh irritants present in all raw tobaccos.
Those expelled irritants ere sold to manufacturers
of chemical compounds. They are not present in
your LUCKY STRIKE. Mo wonder 20,679 American
physicians have stated LUCKIES to be less irritating.
LUCKIES are always kind to your throat. And so ws
say "Consider your Adam’s Apple."
It’s teas-ted
Including the use of Ultra Violet Rays
Sunshine Mellows—Heat PuriTes
Your Throat Protection — against irritation — against cough
© 1»81
WJf The A T . Co
Utj Mfr*.
TUNE JN-
T he Lucky
Strike Dan* a
Orchestra*
every Tucu
day, Thurs•
day and Sal*
urday evening
over N. B. C.
networks.
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The Cotulla Record (Cotulla, Tex.), Vol. 34, No. 14, Ed. 1 Friday, June 26, 1931, newspaper, June 26, 1931; Cotulla, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1163135/m1/6/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Alexander Memorial Library.