The Cuero Record. (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 31, Ed. 1 Friday, February 5, 1937 Page: 2 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Cuero Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Cuero Public Library.
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PAGE TWO
THE CUERO, RECORD. CUERO. TEXAS
FRIDAY. FERREARY 5, 1907.
THE CUERO RECORD
Established in 1894
Published Each Afternoon. Except Saturday, and Sunday Morning by
' THE CUERO PUBLISHING CO.. Inc.
« _
Entered in the post office at Cuero. Texas, as second class matter
under Act of Congress, March 3. 1897.
MRS. J C. HOWERTON
JACK HOWERTON ........
HARRY O. PUTMAN
PETE HOWERTON----
TODD TILTON ...................
£
President
Publisher
............. Editor
Sports Editor
Advertising Manager
*++++++++++♦♦+♦
♦ 37 YEARS AGO «
♦ + + + +*; + ♦ + ♦
The following interesting items
1 were clipped from an issue of The
Record of the vear 1900: .- 1
j __
<FEBRUARY 5. 1900.>
We are told that in the Buche!
lane between cuero and the Hell
Gate bridge there are two or three
almost impassable places in the j
public road (one right at the up- :
per wind mill) ancj they should not j
be. Such places when, they are |
made in the road by the rain or |
$1,000 WORK OF ART
LAUNCHED'MELLON'S
BIG COLLECTION
By RAYMOND iYILCOVE
International New* Service
Staff Correspondent
PITTSBURGH--Andrew W. M-
.tier ib said to surpass the Mellon
collection, and that is in the 14
panels painted by Fragonard for
Madame Du Barry. Frick paid
-- . National Advertising Representatives: -
Texas Daily Press League, Inc., 507 Mercantile Building, Dallas, Texas;
S70 Imffngton Avenue, New York City; 180 Michigan Avenue, Chicago,
— *‘“d~ 1 !«— - * he ls - 1S £
. .. , an<Lth* COS\ I ton museum tc be built by him. ^v: Mellon himself ajid Direc-
can‘t be estimated. That road
question is a serious one.
len when a yaurg man a in a red and SI.500.000 tor U'e panels,
shocked hi'- Phisburgh essocin’es. u Tne Mellon collection is of special;
Is reported, bv the price hr paid :c: significance because it contains l.»;
an a* t pairrtjng, his initial ' buy. I Pointings frem the Hermitage Mur -,
cost him $1,000, cum in Leningrad, five of which are
Today tile foiiner Secretary of the ' cgaided as among the world’s I
Treasury has cfTered Live nation greatest masterpieces.
rt treasurer. all an They are now stored in a room at
Subscription Rates:
By Mall or Carrier—Dally and Sunday, one year $5.00, six months
$2.50, three months $1.25, one month 50c.
Wednesday Edition by mail only, one year $2.00; six months $1.00 in
DeWltt and adjoining counties. Elsewhere, 1 year $2.00, 6 months $1.25
Official Organ of the City of Cuero and DeWitt County.
- ii— ■ -----—
TELEPHONE NO. L
j to the town forver, ' j ton museum tc be built by him
‘zr j- Mellon’s interest in an is said to tor C. Powell Minnegrode.
e i date back 50 vea-s to his assoc: v- * “e C'1 al:lv w'hich makes the Mcl- i
road mentioned is by no means the j . jron,.,- <nav Frick pi"c. len collection uniaue is the fact that
oifiy one complained of; it is only ! ^^ ^ steel magnate. WhCS, it contains only very fine example,'
one of the mpny leading to our j $25 0% 000 art coliecticn today is cm of each Painter’s werk. It is no: too
tow-n, and the sooner the bull is j public exnibicion at tbe nick Man- difficult to compile a representative'
taken by the horns the better i°r jc;jonin New York art collection But it is another mat-
the town. The Record usually gets > prir.k wbcse start in busin«= ter to compile a selective collection,
what it asks for, possibly because it j daTed back t0 a 530.000 loan he ob- That Mellon has done,
is not unreasonable and we prom- j lained flom judge Thomas Mellon. Today, fifty years of art patron- ;
ise the public now that ^we are^ not j fa-ber Andrew Mellon. acccmpan- a^e rave flowered into the famous
ied Mellon on what was. for both cl Mellon collection which, it is now
hoped, will provide the ha sis upon J
which the nation's capital will be 1
going to let up asking for at least
passable roads until we get them.
j and if there are any overseers who
are not doing their duty, they had
better be stirring their stumps or
their toes will get trampled on. Now
listen!
BAB CASE OF JITTERS
Efcom all indications. Madam Secretary Perkins has a bad
case of jitters. Her anxiety results from the turn things have
taken qp the strike torn industrial front.
Right or wrong, a 6teady stream of complairits are pour-
ing in upon Washington charging that the Madam doesn’t
want, to see strikes settled speedily. Caustically, these critics
cite pointless shadow-boxing of the Labor Department in
dealiflpfcwttti the 100 day old maritime strike.
Wow it’s the General Motors Strike that is 8 severed his connection with
trouble. * j firm today to take the place travel- j Flemish paintings came to
When John L. Lewis’ strike began, General Motors’ offi-
cials dashed to Washington, but left in disgust, saying
woulffreturn only at the invitation of the President. | Record wishes for Jack every suc-
Thereupon the Madam resurrected an old statute which i cess in hls new place-
authorities said gave her the power to require the presence of
company officials. She set the hour, but no General Motors
representative showed up.
General Motors’ President Alfred P. Sloan sent his regrets.
“We cannot see our way clear to accept the invitation to nego-
tiate as long as the union representatives continue to hold our
plants.” , |
And we can't blame Sloan even a little bit. Our sympathy
them. their first visit to Europe
1882.
Frick was interested in art. and in built into cne of the world’s great
his company Mellon paid daiiy;an centers- j
visits to Europe’s mast famous art
galleries. From that time cn Me!-1 WHY COUGH*
Jon’s interest in fine paintings wav and jar every muscle in your body
After a service of thirteen years insatiable. till TOU. are sore ail over? Your
with F. A. Taylor in the dry goods j The two collections grew simul-, body was not built for coughing
{business Jack Van Hoogenhuyze ! taneously. quietly and uncsteniious- and of course nature rebels. And
Causing thC; spvprpri his mnnprtinn with the j ly- Many famous English. Dutch and t it is not necessary. A bottle of
Pit .s- RELIEF Cough Syrup will give ease
ing for Mensing Bros. & Co. of Gal- ! burgh, tc be augmented later by 1 quickly and certain. You can buy i
, veston in South Texas, recently va- j paintings from the Italian school. a big liberal bottle for fifty cents at
they i cated by his brother, William. The 1 In one respect the Frick cellec-• BUTTERY’S DRUG STORE.
for the sit down strikers could be put in a thimble along with
a big red apple.
Cotton shipments from this sta-
tion to date are 6017 bales. Not
over 200 bales more will be ship-
ped until the new crop comes in.—
Karnes County News.
S WHAT AT A G
,The advertising being done by
the Beach & Bowers Minstrels and
Hennessy Lee Royle is. in itself, a
sufficient guaranty that these
G
W A S H I N
Central Press
Washington Bureau
602 Times-Herald Bldg.
By CHARLES P. STEW ART
Central Press Columnist
WASHINGTON, D. C— Just
, as feist a the water runs off, flood
shows are worth going to. This is; _ ,__. , .. ^
, .. , . , ® , . . sufferers alongside the Mississippi
a rule that is almost always safe to! Md its tributaries will hasten to
go by in judging of theatrical com- • move back int0 the erstwhile in-
TON - WORLD
i impatient with dty folk, who put
jun big buildings and plants tn
what everyone knows to be, at
times of high water, river beds.
They will be flooded, of course*
periodically.
If they MUST be so built (engi-
neers query), why aren’t they built
in contemplation of systematic
overflows, like Venice?
Meanwhile Madam Perkins has accomplished little. For, panics. Poor shows do poor ad-j undated areas,
somt days now. sitters in General Motors' premises have j "'’oZ'm.S. “TpSl'bSSS j
caused workers to lose $832,000 a day in pay checks. . Radical man does not advertise. i of all relief agencies, from their
- I field representatives.
theorists on Capitol Hill profess to see in the “sitting” plan a
weapon which can be used eventually to paralyze industry
throughout the country.
The action of the government in protecting plant owners, there was a sh00ting scrape near
ia protecting the men who want to work and who are not in i mention made elsewhere.
sympathy with the strike but must be bound because of labor j----
affiliations, win determine the future status of these disgust- ( TOWN TALK
ia£ “sit down” strikes. I (Continued from Page 1)
Attorneys Schleicher and Lackey j Nowhere does there seem to be
went to Thomaston this morninvj the slightest inclination to abandon
to attend justice court. We hear : domiciles so hazardously situated.
To the contrary, force has had to
be employed in many instances to
evacuate homes with^ disaster
actually sweeping down upon them.
* • *
TWO SIDES
The Viewpoint of farmers in
, . . obviously dangerous valleys is
j MarCOS, the solicitor making understandable. After all, they
One-Minute Teat | to escort her anywhere, he should
[ 1. What is the meaning of “table go to the door to announce his ar-
i d’hote”? __ rival and wait for her. He should
j 2. Name the most importaHf^ver sit’in his car and blow the
{ malignant tumor ? horn to attract her attention.
j 3. What name is given the dwell- j -
. to* of an Eskimo? . Tods,', Horoscope
- J If your birthday is today, you
Hnte an Etiquette I may have much natural intelli-
W*hen a man call£ for a woman j gence and keen foresight. You
may get angry and say n&rsh 4-
things, but you regret it afterward.
Words of Wisdom ^
Mercy to him that show's it t»
the rule.—Cowper.
One-Minute Test Answers 3
1. "Table of the host**, 1
2. Cancer. *
3. Igloo- r
’r
- »•<
Congress may pass ail tbe neutrality laws it cares to but; a clean get-away with approx-
wheit foe critical time comes this country is going to do wh2t
the situation demands. It is easy to prescribe plans when
there te no danger of war and quite another thing to live up to
them when war breaks loose.
The condition of affairs in Europe and the fate of unpre-
pared Ethiopia has resulted in one of the largest prepared-
ness programs during peace time that this country has ever
witnessed. It is unfortunate indeed that vast sums of money
must thus be spent annually in those things that produce no
good, hut it sterns to be the only answer to world conditions
ms they now are.
The reason for the failure of the sons of many well to do
parents is the fact that the father never permitted his son to
have the same advantages in the school of hard knocks that
he had.
imately $50.00 contributed by
kind hearted business men. j
The organization of a Vig- j
ilance Committee in the city j
of Cuero will protect local |
I
merchants against such
schemes. To operate success-
fully, the committee must be
extremely cautious and per-
haps go so far as to be a little
“cold blooded.” Merchants
are flood-swept only two or three
seasons in a decade. Otherwise
their land is very productive.
A flood, to one of these, is no
worse than a drouth to. an upland
yeoman.
Except— . . .
That a flood may wash away a "ith a kerosene lamp or even a
NEVER A“LAST”
To be sure, the theory Is that
each flood is the last one—the next
one will be prevented by reservoirs
upstream or a new kind of levees
down the river.
But it never IS prevented.
This year’s repeatedly has been
described as the "worst national
disaster since the World war".
It is worse than the World war,
in a way, insofar as the United
States Is concerned; it has censed
more homelessness and distress
more immediately.
• • •
III DflYTMT I FORGET
fiT The rose leasts of December, the frosts of June shall frC; | ^
\\ Tbe dty that you remember, the day that I forget—Sninburm I I
COPYRIGHT—RELEASED BY CENTRAL PRESS ASSOCIATION
READ THIS FIRST:
Janet Paynter, newly married to a
second-rate actor, Joel Paynter, whose
show has just closed, obtains a card
from an old friend, Harry Devanter. a
am scout, requesting a screen test for
1 • "the Oearor". Because of ius pride.
| Joel first refuses to permit Janet to
I continue working and then conceals the
(act ho has been playing the role of
- eigoto at a cocktail bar because he can
find n
A «T9TV n non" i find nothing else. Joel is elated when
A ; Janet tells him of nis chance for a
This has been a meaner flood screen teat Janet proves to be Joel’s
than **<*!<• | fSSST
it has struck. 1 studio. Joel receives word of a six
A ffirmer if not aetuallv rhs-iMf ntenths contract in Hollywood. Janet
A tarrU€r' ____TtrfTr and Joel. $° Fest and Stop_at a luxuri-
from home, can do, for example,
farmer's house and barn, drown his
livestock and destroy his capital,
as well as his current crop, whereas
a drouth is but a seasonal disaster.
What fome experts advocate is
that farmers in flood territory
should pile up, each for himself, a
mound to serve as his refuge; then
sod and plant it to a few trees to j
candle. He is not so dependent
upon toilet facilities—which are
inelegant to speak of but vital to
city dwellers.
This has been, so to speak, a
city flood.
• • •
MOVE?—NEVER!
Nevertheless, one does not hear
havp bppn rallpd iinon tn eive hold il solidly-then let water | the city folk talk any more for
naV6 DcCn. caned upon UJ give . sw}sh around such islands instead ovapimtuin nf th*
The only thing that I have ever seen that looks as bad as
a pencil sharpened by a woman with the butcher knife is a
button hole made by a man.
until it hurts, and they
should be protected. A cause
should be of highest worth
before solicitors are granted
j a permit to tax merchants for
another “donation.”\,
* %■ *
swish around such islands instead
of pouring over levees and engulf-
ing everything.
• • * 1
BUT CITIES—
Engineers are somewhat more
evacuation of the cities than evac-
uation of tbe rural district* ever
was argued for.
City 'bottoms” have aa many
defenders as flooded ruralitiec.
Where would they go otherwise T
The strike of the automobile workers reminds us of the
old nursery story of the dog tn the manger.
After all, if you want to get good advice, or learn the
1 rue of the best place to get them is from the per-
i on who has met difficulty and conquered it, who has met
temptation and felt its powerful pull, and has conquered it,
S«ch a one can give you more real facts, more good, sound
fiete of a life than a dozen others who have lived a sheltered
existence, who have never had to struggle for the things they
wanted and needed and who have never tasted the bitter
sting of defeat.
Balance Is Necessary
In Any Reducing Diet
Merchants in this section {
are again warned to be on the
lookout for bogus bills. Sever- l By LOGAN CLENDEMNG, m. d. Vitamin C, which he can get in any
al counterfeit twenty dollar
bills were discovered in Vic-
toria and Cuero a short time
ago. Bogus ten dollar bills
have now appeared in Vic-
toria. Merchants cannot be
too careful. When changing
bills of this denomination for
strangers make sure that the
bills are genuine. If you are
not sure take them to the »
nearest bank. Only through
the cooperation of merchants
A REDUCING diet is not a
faddy diet, and should be so ar-
ranged as to maintain a balance
and include all the necessary ele-
ments of food,
just as any
diet shgnki.
The *m\y way
in \yhich it is
different from
an o r d i n ary
diet is in the
total number
Every town has in it one or two individuals who stay awake i Can the counterfeiters be ap-
t TinWng of schemes for the good of the community but busy I prehen<led-
men to put over. 1 _ -----
__ f Question About CAROL!
A gentleman is a fellow who. when he pays his bill, is as
pieMant about it as he was when he bought the merchandise
and had it charged.
position.—Abraham Lincoln.
in this it does
not really dif-
f e r, because
we are presup-
posing that it
is arranged.for
Dr. Clendeninc people who do
not exert
themselves as much as they did
when they were young.
The elements* of a balanced diet,
aside from the’* total caloric value,
are:
-An adult weigh-1
HOW IT HELPS WOMEN
“Who takes Oardui?"
Women who are run-down weak-
ened. nervous, from not getting suf-
ficient strength from the food they
Snobbery Is the pride Of those Who are not sure of their If®1 ~ Thousands and thousands basic requirement: most of us eat
have, found that Caxdui increased • more. An average glass of milk
their appetite, improved their di- contains about one-fourth of an
of the fruits, such as oranges,
lemons, grapefruit, or such vege-
tables as tomatoes and potatoes.
For the other vitamins, for in-
stance, an egg contains all of them
but “C”; so does milk; so do car-
rots; so does liver; so do oysters.
It is pretty hard to miss out on the
vitamins, and the adult require-
ment is small.
Calekim Principal Miser al
3. MINERALS—For the adult,
much the same thing can be said
of calories, and about the minerals as about the
vitamins. The only one that he
should attempt deliberately to add
to the diet is calcium, and plenty
of this will be found in a glass of
milk. Milk, eggs, spinach, liver,
carrots, vegetables and fruits all
contain the necessary minerals—
calcium, phosphorus and iron.
But because a reducing diet is
likely to be planned with reduction
alone in mind, special attention
must be paid to these three things
—sufficient protein, sufficient vita-
mins and sufficient minerals. And
ous hotel in Los Angeles. Three weeks
later, when told to report for work.
Joel brings Janet a mink coat. Janet
rents a house for them and buys a
second-hand car.
NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY:
CHAPTER 13
* THE SURFACE of Mrs. Joel
1 Paynter’s desk was covered with
• papers commanding her attention.
! There wss a Utter of bills, a stack
| of unanswered mail, a number of
newspaper clippings that she
meant to glean and make notes
about in the business-like gray
book she kept locked up in the
desk: Her cook book lay at hand
J waiting for her to arrange menus
for the week. Her engagement
book played no small part in the
demands before her.
But she sat hunched over the
desk, still in her pink satin pa-
jamas and gazed dreamily through
the soft curtains at the pure azure
of the sky above. It was March
but already it was like summer,
j It was very different from the day
1 exactly a year ago when Janet and
Joel had been married.
hex the news about Joel and she
always knew what was going on.
Oh, there was no doubt but what
the studio would pick up their op-
tion on Joel, but would it be a
worth while pick-up? What prom-
ises of a future would they give
him? What were his chances of
getting more,money?
Three hundred dollars a week
was still a great deal of money
to Janet Paynter but somehow it
didn’t do what you expected it was
going to when you had to pay
Hollywood rates for servants, a
cook and a combination gardener
and furnace man, especially when
you had to have extra servants for
the parties you gave every week.
Of course, you had to have food
and drinks for these parties and. If
you joined a tennis dub and played
bridge with other wives, you not
only had to pay dues, but you had
little expenses because sometimes
you stayed to lunch or had guests
for matches. And, of course, you
couldn’t always win at bridge.
Also, you had to have smart little
sports things since you had learned
how important it is to be chic.
Unless you happened to be an im-
ported and fabulously paid stkr;
then you could wear overalls under
your pink coat!
Since Janet was neither, she
wore the trick little tailored things
that became her so well and g»'«
her a kind of distinction, also \
kind of heartache when she saw
the bills. But Joel just laughed at <
her and said, "Spend it, hooey.1
sam hh“e’ "
&loua. , «• •
“Did you call, Miz Paynter?”
Janet's maid-of-ed!-work interrupt-
So, Janet had also bought a little
car for herself. To be sure it was
not an expensive one but the ga-
eonsidered. But she did have to
have it because Joel took their first
one to the studio and Janet had
TT.ttir nnw 1 ra£e bills were another item to be
No, I didn t, Hattie, but now ___^ Dlt. =v_ ^ ho„p trt
that you’re here we’d better go
over these menus because it is
after nine and I’ve a busy day eettine around,
ahead. Now, let me see. We won’t.no *ay or £eumS arouna
be home for dinner tonight but to- She did a great deal of getting
morrow ” j around. Tbe engagement book
“Ain't 'you gonna be home to- w°uld have told you the story,
night?” Hattie asked wide-eyed. Janet never went to a party that
bond between «the girls who were
trying to take a pound of
and the girls staving off
chin; not that either
threatened Janet.
It was through Lisa Carey,
of the western cowboy actor,
Carey, that Janet Joined the
Tennis club. •• —•
Lisa might have entered’ * the——
higher social circles in Hollywood
since her own social position bo-
fore she married Bert was one that
hardly recognized film personalOae
and also Bert h. d made a fortune
with controlling stock in h|s •own*
picture company. But Lisa
happen to care for It. She
the ostentatious spending,
g&ntuan parties were ridl
She liked the things that
liked and she was independent
enough to say so and to choose her
friends as she pleased. •>
She put Janet up for mi
at the Bath Tennis club,
exclusive little club pai
a few film executives and o
ful of better known, quieter stare
who did not come In the glamor
class. *—
At first Janet had demurred at
Lisa’s suggestion. The duef were _
rather high and Janet knew dbe__
would be expected to do some en-
tertaining. But then she had
learned that Vernon Chesterfwas m
member. Vernon Chester waa a
director with Federal who waa
slated to produce “The DanMe Waa *•>
Long”, a sensational beet-selling _
novel of the year. Janet practiced __
up on her backstroke and faadlar-
ized herself with the contests of
"The Dance Was Long”. She soon
had her interpretation of the role
of Jan Grayson, not the lead char-
acter, but the second lead, a nice
role and one that might be given
to an unknown actor If be had ah
unusual slant on the part that
might engage the interest of a
director. Janet read the beak bo
Joel and soon Joel had hex; inter-
pretation.
Meanwhile Janet had joined the
tennis dub and her little roadster
X
She’d seen the box containing the she didn't meet and cultivate some u„ t0 the door promptly
corsage that Joel had placed be- ntw person. All her fnends were
side Janet’s place. She hadn’t seen P«>P>e. wives of writers, wives
the tiny white velvet box contain-! °5 a(Vt°rs. agents, press people.
None of them were the wives of
every afternoon at five o'dock.
The dock on her mantel struck jr
ten and Janet put down her pendL-
L PROTElSf-
lng 150 pounds needs about two i these have been considered in ths
ounces of protein a day. This is a' Paia passu diet.
Saturday
He Is happiest, be he king or peasant, who finds peace in
his home—Goethe.
When you deal with an honest man you seldom need a
lawyer and when you deal with a crook, often even a good
lawyer can’t save you.
Mae West received the second largest salary paid in this
country last year. Mae’s figure was $480,000. The fellow who
said Mae looked like a million dollars didn’t miss it much.
gestion, thereby promoting better
nourishment and the consequent
strengthening of fhe whole sy.-ten.
And women who have suffered
xrom functional pains cf mi us rua-
tion have found that by taking Car-
dui just before and during the peri-
ods. this purely vegeiaf-l^ sedative
and antispasmodic seemed to save
them much discomfort. This action
of Cardul is highly esteemed be-
cause the relief credited to ii comes
in an entirely beneficial way. Car-
dui is purely vegetal*:.- nothing in
it to be afraid of.
BREAKFAST — Three prunes;
oatmeal, ordinary helping with
ounce, and an egg contains about milk and sugar; coffee, half lump
one-fourth of an ounce. An aver- of sugar and eye dropper of cream,
age serving of meat or fish con- LUNCH—Grapefruit juice; vege-
tains about an ounce or an ounce i table salad with lemon dressing;
and a half. Bread also contains I one-inch cube of cheese; one slice
protein, as do practically all vege- of bread with enough butter; glass
ing the circlet of diamonds that ______ _ _
had been her anniversary present, important producers, actors or ace i nera for a And, hereafter,
"Poor baby,” Joel had said, “wear- unters. Hollywood society did j j you to leave a pitcher of
ing that two-dollar wedding ring not permit tJt^. The levels were , orange juice upstairs at night Mr.
for a whole year. Well. lady, next clearly distinguished and the Payn- paynber ^ not getting any vft»-
year well have a square-cut em- ters- ^fore fame had touched Joel, min3 frorn sunlight these dans and
erald to keep It company.” j vvere <* a *econdary level.
Janet had learned not to say Nevertheless, Janet worked hard
what she felt The.mink coat had at her little social campaign. She
scarcely been paid for and now he talked about clothes, and other
was in debt for her ring. His con- women’s hushands professional per-
tract had but another month to formances. She sympathized with
run but there was little doubt that servant problems and with the
his option would be picked up. j sweetest, mcst.enrant and engag-ln^y nic«. You know how anxious
He had done an excellent job in ing smile, permitted herself to be j gjy, g^ y,at trick tauckstrote
the Jarrett picture and the very bored hour after hour all because of yours ... at eleven ?’* At elcvoi
day that It was finished, he had she was waiting for the little word Janet had an appointment at her
been rushed to another set to do that fell occasionally into these hair-dressers. At twelve sdw was
only a bit, to be sure, but one that conversations about what was hap- due at a iuncheon. She said. "No,
pening in the picture business. Lit- * ■
he's got to get ’em some other
way."
The telephone rang and Janet
took the instrument from its
cradle.
"Hello . . . ob, hello! Yea, Mr.
Chester. I think it would be ter-
11 hadn’t a thing to do and I think
as milk, eggs, meat or fish. I DINNER—One serving of steak
2. VITAMINS—There is prob- with all the fat cut off; one small
ably too much talk about the \ita- portion peas; half a small baked
mins for aduj^T"although some-: potato; one slice bread with enough
times vitamin concentrates do a butter; tapioca dessert; coffee or
great deal of good. The only vita- tea. half a lump of sugar and eye
min that the adult should be sure ( dropper of cream,
lo add deliberately to his diet Is I Total 3,400 calories.
had started on his third picture and took out when she get home and i delightful . . . aU right, Mr.
Sandra Cook of Screen View maga- studied and arranged in relation to ter . . . what? All right, if yon
zine, said she'd seen the rushes and Joel Paynter. I say go _ >n,e cjub eleven."
she thought that Joel had a flair She med r gym class because, When she put down the ♦«*«-
for rather wistful comedy. ’here was no better place to meet phene, two bright fever spots M
Janet made a mental note to the women she wanted to meet nervous anticipation burned,In her
send to New York for a duplicate uhless it was the beauty parlor, cheeks. She was going to
of her batik scarf. Sandra bad But the gym was really better be-! alone with Vernon Chester!
said she liked it. Sandra had given | cause there was always a kind of| (To Be Continued)
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Putman, Harry C. The Cuero Record. (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 31, Ed. 1 Friday, February 5, 1937, newspaper, February 5, 1937; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth995369/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Cuero Public Library.