The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 11, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 14, 1947 Page: 2 of 4
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I
Philip.
CHILDREN’S PLAY CLOTHES 1
s second class matter
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4SR ARQpT'FHIS
BRAND NEW SERVICE.
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Editor
*
WWc
IO ENTERTAINMENT
- • * *■ -* '• -* ••
KEESLER’S
REdQRQ SHQP
Plumbing and Gm Work
' Elxtvrpf - Appliapees
TEL. 34
SEAT GOVEAS
Most Models
. w » J
It He wi
Ujetuto
ave Jeentoi
poring
Wan, dl<
Use .Our Daily Pickup and
Delivery Service.
Qur Motto
A JOB WELL pONE
MEANS ANOTHER FRIEND
, ’ -For
if'
I’ll
ss
irway.
’ell—”
[pi and
r- V
■' ’ ■
BOY PAIkKCH
'• MUTO ELECTRICAL AND BOMK SDTH.T
FHek Bulldin,
WtfTHfci i*i iii i'n lniiwia a*ii i II I
CUERO RECORD
EirtaHMieiff in ISM
■Mb Aftenooa'fimmt Saturday, and Sunday Morning
By Tfctf cVErO PUBLISHING CO., Inc.
______*' TUESDAY, JANtMft-H,-
Cuero Veterinary Hospital
Livestock Vaccines and Supplies
? ?rit
j;
Telephone 3f j.
•J
‘■vJfc
a
r<
1 a.
*‘n*
<7 *d
mux4 H
A dkt, a
SSSTe
. ,isu-nriat..
-- **«* %”
Jj^toSTO. *
A. A , .....
j___r—_ ___ . —._.uon
e friends.of ours in their
SEDAN QR COACH HnsUMed.)
(Including Bucket Type) ~
15.9& to 22.00
4
' L
4 a
fr
■*. «T is
-a i*»t |
; t'
rft time at that/Ue*'
" M long as these
SB
“Do dogs remember like peo-
'P^Vell, no, not exactly. But look
arc Unnbav fex ka
tn
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fi
—as
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1 IS
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6,
By
HARRY C. PUTMAN
:. i . .' . . •
Freund ™
Cuero, Texas
Phones . 443 and 428
• I ' ‘‘ ® ■' * • ■
’ QOUpp (Jrote&i)
8J5t<dU5 ‘
I know most of you'haye seen
that now famous picture of six
U. 8..Marines hoisfing Old Glory
in the shambles of Iwo Jima,
and that many of you have
heard that the picture was faked.
Take it from young Bill Hart-
sell, Cuero mechanic and former
Gunners Mate in the U. S. Navy,
the picture was not faked.
“It’s the gospel.” declares
HartselL ‘T know for I was
watching thru a five inch range
finder aboard ship less than a
mile off Iwo when the flag* was
raised. We were on gun watch
for Zeros. There was no fak-
ing of that picture, and the next
morning the flag was in ribbons.”
The scene is one which'will
long live in the mind of v this
x young vet. ““ **'
Porrtaits ... Ct^nercial P^ptyfraito
Tiffin Studio
pwrosorr
Supplies for Amateur Cameraman
Graven Buipi^g - 2M E. Main St.
OPEN 9:M A. M. TO 8:W P. M.
Other Houfg Day jr flight by Appointment
TELjESgONE 552
' WTO Siqiw^ritj: ■
— * - 1 4
________________
g« avsftalance
y W» fiBd 8h°rt
Understand that even the ducks
on the Cudahy farm near Cuero are
complaining of the present brand of
weather.
• ■ .
nt a
4 ~ T r
¥ 'V
>V V
MONUMENTS- ot "
■ VAULTS— pry — Sanitary — 1
GRAVE SLAB-Complete G»ve Batecttm
CURBINQt Concrete and PiAPiJa
Granttex Grave Crazies * Flower Tami
. .......... , —■1. --------Al"/ill
5tȣi guess to. I can't very well, Htonkey, gain
»Kht a»in rather
£r*- askeS ibgf^L'' ’ " * 1
some fr_________ _ a __ __
tage dp the Merrlfnac. They haie ..
SEK-sg «■
if afre does spoil her to dUth.” < -
T«p, J^ary would b? an right,
Anpe thought helplessly, Put
would this dp to her—to know
Philips mindyas on Sheila all t£e
_ sc^s. J>y» frr
R.)?» sowinmm* <*P^8y yw -
g»im4 <«nd» another gg^nj^nt, m far go-
ttt ea«r to selae the refajj of ^gg
l«ht grow treat and opera# IpesBon^bly under toes-
-3n th!* realm that ndddte-pf-Jhp-j’o^d
U- to a^aert gap W$»S? «
■■uV....._" ............ Vice-Prestont and 1
—-- ...........Ass’t. Abll^r &
______,....,, —
• BL, fit. Louis, Mo.; 448 So. HiB St., Loe Angeles, Caltf.; 5
l. Mn Praacisco, Calif., 1902 Stem Bld?.7' Memphis, Tenn.;
F*r.. hearer. Colo.
1 (
"AS WE SEE IT’
t J
k—t
fits CtTftO RECORD, CTERO, tfe^AS_____________________, ,________
\^Ub Zl^e f
|£k' COWOI!11S
tom
between them without A str
He might As VAft go *aiop
Wbuldtft ! any Mort* t!
than Mary.
’’All right, fella. Want to go?”
It was even eaiteritc puiAe dogs
happy than It was to pl^Sf chU-
QTfitL
"Philip, can’t I take Mic)ty to
St. Lopip?”’
A DRAW NEW SERVICE IN CUERO
QfNERAL REPAIR SHOP
FOR FINE FOOpS
gggO MF4TS
>!$ke Qifr Store Ypur
Shopping Center.
BERGER
®*P«RY’
I ' ■ • ■ * -
We are Equipped to Repair Everything froip
Yfitf De-ci^ Toaster to Ypijr AutompbUe..
Skilled Mechanics, Work Guaranteed . . . .
F This it Our First Step upward Giving Cuero
I Machine sind Re-
U P»irSkQP3W This Area.
J ^riws
3MFJ8V&'
CALHOUN ELECTRIC CO.
215 Stockdale Avp.
The following editorial which ap-
peared in the San Antonio Express,
throws further light on the dire nec-
essity of legislation which win pro-
vide a living wage for teachers of
our public schools. We offer it for
its worth:
Prtanarly because they could not
live on the salaries they were get- nd
ting, four in every JO Texas teachers
quitted the profession during the
past Bve years. i
The greater number found jobs in
war industry and did not return to'
the schoolroom after V-J Day" Gon-
sequently,' Texas schools are still
of teachers. Last September,
10,000 inexperienced instructors were
employed. Emergency certificates
were granted to 1,500 others, just to
“hive someone in the classroom.”
r - - ■ -
be filled. -i
The outlook for tomorrow’s
schools is not brighter. ''Wore
young people than ever before are
going to college?* bat relatively
few are preparing to teaeK. The
reason is not far to seek: The
average salary of Texas’ 43JM '
classroom' instructors Ipst year
was |I,493. The typical* teacher’s i
take-home pay was 325.70 a week.
P^*nt *
not enough to five upon; begin-
ning wages in almost any field
in population.
rank of states as
BRINGS ¥SU
WUB WN-eyEHP"
EVERY WEDNESDAY 3:4:0# P. #.
A PROGRAM DEVOTEP TO
cyfRO 9»d cverp Mis,
... .....I ■ —
* * '^< '7.4 \ , *
BW w AS 01^X TOJE
INK SPOTS CAN
syvjw it ...
Come in today and heart
* their Lalesf Hits.
We havf a Big Supply of
PAPEJ8 NA^JIJNS.
‘‘Just Twenty Years Ago To-
day:”—Grocery specials featured
by Cuero stores tnclude^’ the
following items: 45 pound can
of lard, 54.99; Country sausage
30c per pound; baked ham. 75c
per pound: flour 51.95 for 48 lbs.;
beef steak 15s per pound; veal
steak 18c per pound. Lux flakes
10c per package; and sugar 10
pounds for 74c; — Dinter Post
American Legion was making
plans for its annual Legion
Minstrel with Dewey Schorre
heading the planning commit-
tee.—John Arthur Bums, was
christened by Dr. H. P. Almond
Abbott at a service at Grace
Church.
feulmow it’s » lie,’.’ said pen. '^en ask9d
TflBprted prpaidcniial ambition. O. K., Boss—but when
-e?
tL -.4. " ■ -----------
BQHNE CLEANERS
204 Broadway — Telephone 504
Prlc“ W? ?” w». w w w
who carry on ttto incur-
bnt U will, S»wste»»^ y. Iftwof, gfp^ral sales
jChmter Corporation.
W IB WP > m
buying lust because the
FTOw “*y *
11, JMpen tno^rwhen
ylll UwftfP soin^y Bwy p#lc
acflln among debtor*
mu il ,i i i~ i ■■ i W
UM W WW iW ” u
sifn that nothing serious is happening to the
jYujwn Ten-iljory J&gy h|yg At-
|P Wjr/fid dose th® schools yheo the thermometer
>70 below, they reopened them aa soon as the wea-
P P°¥ K°
F#11* busipffli as usi dal. The outrider wonders how j
i Start in either temperature. ;■
;e8 self-restraint not to wonder what the neighbors
jtecn the pohce car stojp d«pr.
should read g ipfi of American history.
boiae for president: invent^ pf a Ure that pori-U
Sh W ot «ur<^i. wpulX p^-
|wt«d, too.T ‘ .
er .drfps, coal rlsea” says g stopk y^qr^-take ydur
Ahbig'fiursheiia . . w®
'did' this ’hayfr'to happen''jusf
she wtt Hanning td'gst ftJld of
hertrif ? Sheila h®d given u£ Wftf
hnd Mary of her own accord. Why
did she have, to reach .put fdr them
...
e met Qriip’f ewg <
n$ersU£dingin Qfey
er fildrriiff <fc
-*■
T—
YOUNG'S
k * mut^t
YOU DON’T WIRE YOUR HOUSK ; *
BUT ONCE IN 20 YJEABS---- v
A Good Wiring Job is the Best Kwo,
Insurance Yqm Csn Pbfaii,. ; >(f
r
Livestock Vaccines and Supplies
Free Poultry Service
DR. C. R. TUBBS
Office Ph. 831 VETbRINABIAW B$s. 749W
? TbtAfHONjS NO. 1
. j
•WAH Pi!
Installed RIGHT by Bill Kaultxian. *-
* «*. ' |
’4MI
MUM !
3®
?*
had’dlbsetMip,
•eft end’left
—
KVIC
1344 QN YOU*
VICTORIA, JE
---------——=------:--
Furniture Repairing gn4 *
102 E. Newman A- B. MueHdr, Jr.
(pis Question Mark as Business ^Jggest Year” read
|tiqb as the n^jr year peered over the edge and be-
sculate on the view and its portents. Things in gen-
^kejd rapier good prince those first days. But always
been a background of ^oufct.
I. be tbe Hggest and m<^ W Jfl fft® P?’
fcry-dependlng malply /gf L&f*. fts JiQUflSB fnd
tr: K eould be »n .overw^jolnsly PfOAWS ?nd
| year, or a year of internal y^rlarg apd 4eW.
Lteiy the outcome seems to depend primarily on
s which are usually in ,
fct . politics now that g
• We have a wide selection of Children’s
Overalls and Trousers in our Clothing Dept. •*
. Buy Now and Save.
j |UFHAM
HOME & AUTO
I | STORES .
ha filial ~ i • ■< e--. <->1 - •.*— •
TMV -
a long
but not
long aa these lait two weeks.
«y*« incessant Wk about her
i ara ‘ sheila" Aiid
and Sbefla—Arfhe would have
sport tode^ to takfe
1‘Mfd had the nerve
^w^iy^n Sh.eil£ to
" "S riid >oufd
^Jr
. l^’t^S wtULt ejge had
pted the feeding of cofffidencS
itf^eHUAPding that had been :
ECJMt W «A4 let
J £he hpd tried ao h&rd to
ME; & M
XJSS&W
r, Mthfirfewn mto iftr-
film baffled and re-
to natural
wealth, such a* crude oil. qul-
W- <as. irop ore Wd !
11 can jKly fts teachers a* living
wage. Otherwise, It cannot go oft
commanding the services of
<Wriifie4 j*wche«> In that event.
Texas would lose more ground < ■
in education.
To avert such a condition, Teygs
State Teachers Association will re-
quest the Legislature to authorise
arid provide a. ne^ salp^y ypaj^. Xt •
would begin at U000 a year for •
holder of a bachelor’s degree, and
would provide foj- an annual $54 in-
crease ip pay through 12 years.
Thus the young teacher vould be
under incentive to remain in the
profession.
The Association’s spokesmen point
out that a $55 per capita apportion-
ment, as against the cuirept 335,
would provide for ttfe new galary-
scale. Counting rural school aid.
the State would be increasing its
outlay on the common schools by -?5
million dollars a year.
Texas aan afford’ the added ex-
penditure’. The educators cite Whaj
other ("some less wealthy) States
have done: California, Michigan,
Oregon, Utah, Arkansas and Wash- (
irtgton, for examples—all by popu-
lar. vote—lately have increased
teacher-pay substantially. Texas
cannot afford to be less generous or
less progressive. T •
Since 1930, turkey production in
the U. S. has increased 160 per cent.
RELIEF FROM
BACKACHE/
TWi suffering from soreness, gch-
ing, irritation, swollen ankles, rheu-
matic prins can be relieved. Bal-
arice the ph. in the body nui4f |y
buying CrT-ROS, and your system
qufckjv removes the paih/sorenfen
and discomfort. Secure ffiT-ROS
>1.00 at your druggi For
r L. VUTTEBY DHUO BTPW
k‘______j.--------T— ---------yfi
/ JI ••
To Vpur Pfbthes, Keep Them
Spotlessly Cl£$p- We Can Do It.
,. ■ ■■ 1 -■ r
^cr«aripg tlje
in Our Parto i. J
SeeUsFjjrt. |
(”UER0 FARM EGUIPMENT CG.
Werner Auerbach
gw:
hand,
stamp.
ever. "Dear Philip and Anne,” he
___J aloud. "I am having a good
tiini. ShfeYa got me K biciker. “I fel
off twice. I did not cry. Goodby.
_ _ Jfi? didn’t, the little mon-
11'"kune held out her hand for the
letter. She wtbte it herself,” she
murmured, “spelling and an.”
•"Xqu wouldn’t think she’d have
~ - - ■ ’ - - . a
I you ?
de tpe
cottage.
f, one year 36.00, six months
I, one month 60c.
>ro and DeWitt County.
to run through instead of carrying
it back to the table. “I ihustn*t
start tots again,’' ihe said to her-
self. "Oh, I 7riustn't!’F ’
* • •
'Take me with you,
pleade?*
' "Sorry, Monkey, not this time.”
."gut, Philip, I’m going away to-
morrow.”
.Philip paused in the dooi
'Thgt’e fijpit, you 'Afe.' Wi
Mary dashed out past him
raced to the cAr. Anne 'laughed.
“WMkt will.'she'do when she can’t
wortfthat any’ rtibre?*
"HaS’She tried'it before?”
she? It’S rAntij, I won’t be
here *?Very long. Please teiFfhe an-
other story,’ or ‘Arine, I’ll be gone
your nevf dress to dress up in?’”
“And what does Arine say?”
“ That’s " right, you ■ won’t.
WeU—*” 1
” “Well—how about another kiss ?
I won’t be here in a minute.”
,______ She was a good sport, Philip
IbdkSdl thought, going down the walk with fast n
s head.’ Micky at his heels.' Micky had Mary'
soffits- started 'to. follow 'liary aria thbri 'Tc
led back. He never could choose
(tween them _without a struggle.
oublb
5
CHAPTER THIRTY-NINE
ANNe thought afterwards ths.t
she must have had a premcfriltlbp
about SheiTk; bift When she “sat
down to dinner that night, she
thought nothing except that Philip
WM’a little quieter’ thafi ukdri.
Tjley y/tti firiuhVig thdr tosseit
when Mary bxokf a rriher Jbng
silehce.
“Philip, Mary Jane has a bike.”
Philip piirdoWfr his coffee cup
and looked 'at her reSljpi
“Maiy Jane ffiust he ei^nEf
■ Put abe'a only a little bit big-
“Well, you won’t -have vpry long
to .wait then,’ Until you’re as big
as she is.” _
“But I-want it now.”
Tm sorry, Monkey, I really am.
get “you one just as soon as I
nfc you’re old enough to* ridb it
^,.J take care of yourselff and
n6w, jfleaseTRt’s forgSFtt.*’** ”* ’*
“O——h!” Mary pushed back her
chair with a Sputter of indignation
and jet'ttie-rtlhfe. Rhftnrt 1
After her W&r£ shfdfi
*Whdi'ahe iris her id
thing,” he jAlhyd- “Apy more ctf-
you see there iap’f?”
Ann# nodded tHward^the empty
mlK. more-
“go you wouldn’t'* drink too
' He made a face, and Anae
smiled- “You’ll forget if ‘soonsr
thin Mary forgets he? bike.**
‘ “Thajt won’t ’— ”
Ann« Wf
"Whri md
“I 1
A long, deep sigh broke the -
short silence. Anne had not al- ■
lowed her' feelings to dampen
Mary's pleasure in her trip, any- 1 *==•=
way, he thought, glancing down at
the child with a questioning smile.
" “Will tomorrow ever come?” ‘
“It always has,” he assured her. .
. He stopped the car in front, of j.
the house where he was making
his first call, and got out. “I won’t
be here Ring,"” he said, “but you
and Micky might take a run
around the blocx.”
He stood still a moment and
watched -her racing down The
street with the flog. She was be-
ginning to shobt up lately; though
she would probably ‘never be as
tall as Sheila. He reached back in
pretty soon, please can't I have tbg car for his bag. Another twoj
days and they would be together.!
. . . The door of the house opened
and he went quickly up the walk.
“It’s sure quiet around here.”
Philip said, coming into the kitch-
en and sitting down in the break-
fast nook the second morning after
f*s departure.
00 quiet,” Anne said from the
stove where she was taking up his
egg.
"Oh, I don’t know. I can use a
little rest.'T bet Sheila’s hot get-
ting much,” he added with a
ch'UckIe.""And she’s supposed to be
taring a vacation.”
• *We should be hearing from
them, Anne said.’Sheilk had wired
them the day before that Maty
bad aryiyed intact with the excep-
tion of one front tooth.
** Philip jufnped up at sound of the
bell. “There’s the*postman now.” He
dupe bac^ immediately with a
handful* of lettera which he sorted
And tossed aside until he
crime lo one addressed In Sheila’s
AM* bearing an airmail
It was not from Sheila, how-
*to S'lM1
off
Mary Riide
- TbeTshi
* ;Aane held out her hand for the
murinared, “spelling and all.”
tAlked Sheila into getting her
bicycle the fi^st day, would
Anne. • — -x
“Yes, I’ve noticed that. But I
{bought *he’d giv^n it up.”
' “Oh, ybu did?”
“I rittould have gnown. Sheila
nevyg let go gnything she wanted
* "to atifftted at the amused in-
icg b^ ms voice. Sheila never
ine.""^# said to herself se-
yertiy, “yoii are undoubtedly the
/hopc
StiH, If that was the way he
thought'of Sheila, as & child who
ffiugt bpye what she wanted—I
fTe fie Confipnedl
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Aldridge, C. C., Jr. The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 11, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 14, 1947, newspaper, January 14, 1947; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1358153/m1/2/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Cuero Public Library.