The Cuero Daily Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 61, No. 86, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 9, 1924 Page: 2 of 8
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—**
100,000 in 1922.
encoui
DoesThis Mean You?
and make them even more generally available
Retail
active civic force. Until a
ort Bayard had no public
is straying through the woods
if the tarkeys subject to attack
wolves, and now and then the
alien of a nice turkey dinner
passed. '■]
utility service in that sj
and years that went be:
electric service;
St" to fanners as much with cotton
24 cents a pound, as they would if
Ion were. worth 15 cents a pound
t turkeys 25. «Most people .will ad-*
one
the day
This smile
old1 -
Wa$ it you?
<W»wmeat started by
Ctab, which is an or-
■ears in the military
are known
Missionary Bazaar.
The Missionary Societies of
these days .Guess I’ve had three
plies from women to one from men,
and they are all very nice about it,
And soon hard words were
around— | J
Was it you? ,z
(nary losses to turkey flocks at-
the little turkeys have passed the
pf soroij^R^Jljyp and kindred
Uses, sometimes run as high as
ity-flveer even fifty per cent.
l|£ With unrestrained liberties,
turkey flocks oftentimes give up
HM^Aeeds and grasshoppers in
pastures for the easier living in
>rn field, water melon patch or
patch of peas, where they waste
Can you walk into any credit
store in Cuero,
Buy anything you need, and
have it charged? .
If you can—You
as a prompt pay customer,—
If you can’t, well you know
Adbiwstemwnt
Achievement, of whatever hMU is
the crown of effort, the diadem of
thought—James Allee.
Hdfag was made possible by
Beus contribution. of >25,000
me by the Supreme Council,
fc Ancient and Accepted
Bite *f the Northern Juris-
^mwever, the quantity of turk-
o be marketed is to be smaller
^ar, the quality will be amply
tahjed as the range has been
for some time ad turkeys have
taking advantage of liberties in
ees and fields. Turkeys need a
spell of two to put on their
te is bad enough when the field
turkeys belong to the same own
at when the field belongs to one
and the turkeys to another own
This system of correcting the rolls
will be put In use every year from
now on, the auditor says.—Houston
Post-Dispatch.
o settle, and it maltofi *as muchf dlf-
erepce in the estimate of turkey
wner and corn owner, as to amount
t damages as It probably did in the
agra of Aesop the table writer, as
•flfiff cm was gored and whose did
ns, Oct. D,
.Secretary, T<
Association, ati
ie of the n
affecting'-n
TU BE RC U >- O
MOST CG8TLY OfBEAfil
NOV AFFECTING MA
Some one started the
Was it you?
Some one made it happy and
Was it you?
Early this morning, we are-t
Some one smiled and f all
on Sat. Dec. 6, in the building next to
the Berning Jewelry Store. Chicken
salad lunch will be served. (adv)
jpg an attorney” Mr, Washburn joint-
ed out
Most of the people are very nice
about replying, Mr. Washburn says,
but now and then some one gets high-
ly insulted and informs the auditor’s
ofllce he does net o«n the property
any more and will not pay taxes on it
‘If they could just realize we at*-
trying to correct such errors as dou-
ble assessments and the like, they’d
be glad to reply to the cards,” Mr.
Washburn say®.
“I’ve learn1 vu —the women
seem to be handling the propert\
V should be in good condition by
» tbio the taarirt opens.
baa aa yet been posted
OWfcuja, but local sales, if is re-
Red have been running around
■My cents a pound, knd unless the
ankagiving market offers that
ich many farmers will be inclined
hold back for Christmas and New
ar prices, in the belief that the
V is generally abort and higher
gNR’itro justified by . actual condt-
rffi, throughout the turkey raising
iff With all these trials and tribu-
J^to contend with, the under-
Bx of a great flock of turkeys
Ba* to bo stimulated by the hope
a good price for the turkeys, or
BPh’t be uatdertgte wk all, and
MTfUm city cousins of the north get
M^Xfiateing about the high price
Thanksgiving and Chris tm as
key, and the price slumps, the de-
<m of the turkey raiser right then
Mkely to be to quit the game or
down the size of the flock,
L«ach was the Condition last sea-
>VEL PLAN THAT* .
dOUNTY AUDITOR ADOPTS
Batteries recharged Davidson El.
Public utility services are now essential services,
le had a half to two miles, and
and then they are- so far from
J at roosting time they‘forget to
> back to their roosting tree or
s, bufbed up tor Jihe night* elsb-
THE CUERO RECORD, THURSDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 9, 1924
Merchants’ Ass’
Of Cuero
AUSTIN, Texi
Bred, Executive
Public Health
that tuberculosis is (
costly diseases now
kind, both in treatma
lost because of sickness.
In 1922 there were 104,000 -4
from tuberculosis in the I
States, and it is estimated that
were about 954,000 a
berculosis cuts off 1
yeafs of life froth t!
pec tat ion of every in
individual were to a<
the community wealth for
tuberculosis would cost jj
nuinity $2£o.OOper peraM
the 5,000,000 persons is <!
loss M" over a billiofi ancF
dollars. 1/
_.It has been estimated. 1
berculosis patient,i« under <
average^ of two and one tt
tagg turkey crop of DeWitt and ad-
Mff counties, which has been
fcScnt tn years past to give Cuero
b distinction of being the turkey
dropolis of the whole" United
generally regarded by
jkey raisers to be considerably
ter last year’s figured, due primar-
^b^ tbe slump in price which oci
ted .last season right in themidst
the Christmas holiday buying sea-
THE BTAftT.
Some one staged the Whbfe
wrong?
Was it you*
Some onfc robbed the
Was it you?
Eariy tBis ‘ morning gome ohe
in Prices During Holi-
- Season of 1923 the
Reason.
MnMmg has been erected
the beaefit of the one thous-
iroalar patients who are io-
• th* United States Veterans
for every memSer^tam fi
out how you pay your debts
Through the
The forty years that represent great progress are these just
1. Far more has been done in thedevelopmntof public
ce than was done in the seven thous-
re. They brought the telephone and
More than five thousand yean were required to evolve illum-
ination from a burning fagot te a candle. The cahdle grew
into a lamp fin seventeen hundred more yean. One hundred
yean after the lamp gas came. About seventy-five years later
great improvement was made in gas lighting, and
rived. Forty yean after electricity was first us£d for lighting
it reached its present amazing perfection.
potton. V-
irkey raising requires more care
HfiMbu th$n cotton raising,
nfbw of the more successful
i he is unable to earn
i can estimate the average ann
ings of a person at '
i / The Texas Public" Health?
ption, through the money raise
are sometimes damages1 s County Auditor H(. E. Washburn
has inaugurated a system for correct-
ing the delinquent tax rolls which in-
cidentally win protect the taxpayers
He has mailed out cards to those
on the delinquent tax roll asking it
|hey have paid their taxes on such
inH such property. In some instances
the reply is that the property has
been sold and a check shows that the
new owner has paid the taxes, but the
former owner is marked delinquent.
The auditor corrects the roll and
probably saves the former owner from
being sued for taxes in the long run.
“Of course if they do not own the
pfoperty they can not be forced to
pay the taxes, but bv Correcting the
roll we save them the cost of employ-
Bitp of the Soii^ieni Jurisdidtifin,
Co-operated in financing the en-
terprise.
There are patients in the hospital
from virtually every Grand Jurisdic
tion in the country and efforts are be
Ing made to raise a national fund to
i extend the work of this Masonic be-
nevolence.
The Sojourners' Club at Fort Bay
ard is an
year ago
school, but through the efforts of his
Masonic organization a school has
been established with more than one
hundred fifty pupils, with the best of
teachers, using the most modern edu-
cational methods. The equipment for
the school has been provided by local
contributions.
The Masons of New Mexico are co
operating generously and although
the total membership is less than
6,000, cthey have contributed approx-
imately ten thousand dollars.
...........
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The Cuero Daily Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 61, No. 86, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 9, 1924, newspaper, October 9, 1924; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1215123/m1/2/: accessed July 5, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Cuero Public Library.