The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 18, Ed. 1 Sunday, January 23, 1938 Page: 2 of 6
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PAGE TWO
■ r
TWE CU£BO RECORD. CUERO. TEXAS
THE CUERO RECORD
in 1894
Published Each Afternoon, Except Saturday and Sunday
by TH E CUERO PUBLISHING CO.. Inc.
Morning
Entered In the post office at Ouero, Texas, as second class matter
unde- Act of Congress. March 3. 1897.
J. C. HOWERTON
JACK HOWERTON
IY O. PUTMAN
HOWERTON
i TILTON ......
president
Publisher
.... Editori
* * * * * * * * * * *
* 37 YEARS AGO,*
¥ I v
* * * if if. if if if. % if. if. if.
mMaxkety
LOVE AN D HISSES
The following interesting it-4t.s
we clipped from an issue of The
Record of the vear 1901:
JANUARY 33, 1901
By almost an unanimous vote
Sports Editor j Hon. J. W. Bailey was chosen sen- i Mar.
Advertising Manager J atQr the state legislature. ' Six i May
_ *.„W, Ecpn^auti^.: _! ramsfhlT1 hOUS“Were '*S,!JUly
Texas Dolly Press League. Inc.. 507 MercanUle Building, Dallas, Texas; j g _ I \.
170 U
Market quotations furnished daily
by Lillie Pahr 212 Gonzales Street.
Phone 130.
SATURDAY'S CLOSE
j ■ N. Y. COTTON FUTURES
open High Low Close
8.42 8.43 8.40 8.43
8.51 8.51 8.47 8 50
8.54 .8.56 8.53 8.56
JK>;:
4
u
1) Lexington Avenue, New York Olty; 180 Michigan Avenue, Chicago,
500 star ]
jur. -
some Street, San Fraacisco. Calif.
Subscription Bates:
By Mall or Carrier—Daily and Sunday, one year 15.00, six months
ELM, three months 11-25, one month 50c.
Kdlttnp by nail only, one year $3.00; six months 51.00 in
and *djQiping oounties. Elsewhere. 1 year $2J&, 3 months $1.25
Official Organ of the City of cuero and DeWiti County.
~ telephone no, l
on the 2:30 Sap . this
both on brief visits.
afternoon.
Mrs. Otto Buchel and son,
Jr., are back from San Antonio,
where they went Monday to accopi-
pany her daughter and Miss HuWa
Relffert.
May
July
COTTON FUTURES
Open High Loty Close
8.54 8.58 8.54 8.58
8.63 8.65 8 63 8.65
8.67 » 8 69 8.65 8.68-69
i*£
Cotton Seed, per ton........ —1.$20.00| $4.00
_ 1 most
SUNDAY, JA> UARY 23, 1938
' ' ‘ ' ‘ 'S
, ________ _____ _____ Low cutter and cutter
mostly $3.00 to $4.00, few “a
SAN ANTONIO LIVESTOCK j kinds $2.75. Odd head of fat
(F-d.-State Market. News Service) j around $5.00. Bulls $400 to
SAN ANTONIO. Jan. 21— Hogs,( *** good sto*er calves $6.25
j receipts Uve,' oW
mostly steady with spets 15c lewer. j from Thursday $2.00 to $2.66.
i Tep $7.90 to local killers andipack-
I e:s stepping at $7.75 for most good
. to eljoice 175 to 250 lb. butchers,
j Light lights scarce, quotable down
I to $7 00. Packing sows mostly
j $6.25 down.
Cattle, receipts 20C, calv
j Supplies light and mostly
and lower grade offerings.
MEMPHIS MINISTER
HAS COUR
A. B. Thomas of Mississippi, uncle j
j of Mellie Hodge, was expected, to
I arrive from that state yesterday. ..He
j will in all likelihood make ,. his
i home with Dr. and Mrs. Hodge.
SPOT COTTON
i
New York
New Orleans
Houston
Galveston
CUERO
J
F.*
FHA PAYS TAXES ON
PROPERTY IT HOLDS *>
IK JO Jr’/
Local tax ink authorities are 4*- ,i|f
prived of no Revenues by the tram* atat
;, fer of a pre perty to the Fedtfiln?**
j. only fairly active on light clean-up j Housing Administration by ?*
. trade with most classes barely Proved mortgagee, for the AdnaMPRy
steady with Thursday. I i«tration payi taxes on lUl auofr**-
Steers scarce. Scattered truck real estate a; the same rate aiW® *
lots of plain yearlings $4 50 to time as private citixens. Incident® *
$5.50. Plain and medium calves ally, its taxes are paid promt
$4.75 to $6.25, few to $6-35, strictly j order to ta% advantage of
good calves scarce. Pew culls around allowable discounts.
Dean Israel Harding Noe of Memphis is not pnly a devout
man, but a very brave man. He has strong convictions and
the Courage of them. Believing that man can live by faith
alone, without food, he sets out to prove it.
Dean Noe is o ae of very few men in America who believe
this, and perhaps die only man of education and prominence
willing to try it Some of us have heard people say it could be
done, but they diqn’t try it. Dean Noe, having made up his
on his belief,' not for publicity, but for his
Recent reports have shown him thin and
pale,' but going a] lead with his regular duties.
Few or none of us believe he can succeed. There are no
entic record* orf any man ever succeeding. The odds
Dean Noe are, we might guess, at least a trillion to
Yet he starts: without fear and goes confidently ahead,
tyhat couldn’t be accomplished by a doaen men who,
Itving a normal lijfe, had that much faith in a practical
the benefit of mankind? In working out some of
our eugtBnt econo ode problems, for example.
G. A. Peavy, the merchant prince American Tel
and postmaster at Stratton, was in’
the city today and told us he was
doing well in his new home. He
‘said the Weekly Record was all
right in that box.
LEADING STOCKS
SATURDAYS CLOSE
American Can »............... 80 1-2
Anaconda Copper 32 3-4
& Tel.
WHi’SWHATATAG®Cfi
W ASH I N G T O N
mind, quietly acts
own tsatisfactkyi.
Judge Ed Koenig arrived in the
city this afternoon on the 3:30 S. P,
a nice
I W'
lb
POWER, NERVES,
VISIBILITY
Philip Nolan, who
position in Houston,
Cuero today on a visit to relatives.
A. A. Fuchs, the Golly Hollow
rustler, was a visitor in Cuero to-
day and, of course, called in to see
the Record.
Geo. Schleicher paid Yorktown
a short business visit today.
” i
Mrs. Kate Lord came down from
Cheapslde qn a brief visit to Cuero.
She expects to spend the night
with her son, S. J. Lord, and return
home tomorrow!
Bethlehem Steel
Dupont ...........
Chrysler Motors
Pennsylvania Ry.
General Electric
i General Foods
General Motors
Kennecott Copper
Montgomery Ward
Pure .Oil
Waller Winchell and Ben Bemie Rohr and Joan Davis add much to
resume their famous feud in "Love the fun in this gby romantic mu-
and Hisses,” which plays the Rialto steal: comedy.
Theatre Sunday ‘and Monday. Bert
ft
CUERO MARKETS Ducks »)er lb
POULTRY AND PRODUCE i Guineas, each
Courtesy of Cudahy Pocking Co No. 2 Eggs, per dozen ....
35 3-4 Hens, 4 1-2 lbs. and over 15c Eggs, Checks and Clicks
37 7-8 | Hens, 4 1-2 lbs and under .... 13c Eggs, white, infertile, doz
34 5-8 Springs, 1 1-2 to 2 1-4 lbs...... 18c Eggs. No. 1, per dozes
arrived in gocony Vacuum
Standard Oil, N. J.
Texas Co.....
12 9pring.':, 2 1-4 to 3 lbs. and
over 17c
Butter
Fat No. 1....
15 Staggs,, per lb.....................
...... 12c
Butter
Fat, No. 2....
49 3-4 Bakers, lb.......................
......... 15c
Sweet
Cream, lb.
Cocks, per lb.
United Aircraft .......- 24 7-8 Turkeys, No. 1. lb.
U. S. Steel ............................. 58 7-8 Turkeys, old
Vanadium ....... .............
Westlnghouse ................
Santa Fe Ry....................
hens, lb.
18 7-8 Turkeys, old. toms, lb.
101 3-4 Turkeys, No. 2, lb ........
37 1-2 Geese, per lb.............
... 6c
15c
13c
12c
10c
.. 5c
Green Hides .....j! ......
Price delivered at plant.
5c
15c
10c
. 5c
17c
16c
24c
22c
..31c
4C
COTTON SEED
. Quotation furnished by
potton Oil & Mfg. Co.
Cuero
T. J. Fitzgerald has Conductor
Chapman’s run between Cuero and
j Houston on the S. p. while Mr.
Chapman is visiting In Mexico. H.
I A. Garnett is holding Fitzgerald's
New York run on the Port Lavaca line
increase in
Dr. D. B. Blake arrived in Cuero
this afternoon from Nashville,
Tenn., where he now resides, for a
ten days’ or two weeks* visit. He
reports his family and Charley
Rick well when he left the Ten-
nessee capitol. The doctor is looking
Rays the commissioner of motor vehicles in
“It i* our firm conviction that the great
accidents has not been due to obsolete highways
g r icklessness, but rather to the ease with
high speedi are obtained and the exacting demands
are made oi the nervous system of the driver.”
He believes the “unnecessary reserve power” should be
taken out of the car, and then drivers should be made to
realise that it la auleM. to drive faster than the condition of j ££«£ “
any highway justifies. He can’t see the need of a motor cap-
aide; of 100 miles an hour when hardly a state in the Union
permits as much : is 70 miles.
only should the motor and. the human factor be con-
e argue i, but there Should be common-sense im-
i» car design, especially to give better visibility,
t of the other experts at a recent national meet-
ing adgftpated “a uparate driver’s seat fully adjustable both
vertical and hc rtaontally,” to give the driver better vision
and aptrol.
' “ car of today,” he says, “visibility has been sac-
an alarming degree. We have increased the speed
ty of t he modern car four times and have reduced
the useful vision of the driver 90 per cent/’
SAYS COLLEGE GRIDDERS
UNFORTUNATE HEROES
! 7. r ; ...
Football Is a great thing for the colleges, says President
Ralph & Hutchls m of Washington and Jefferson College, in
Pennsfdtania. It is th? student body’s “emotional center of
hitegnglpn.” Brnc tion is very important, and so is unity. So
the cohg$e owes i P big debt to Its football men.
• But*for the ] layers themselves he is sorry. They are the
victimaSf unself sh service. They become physically overde-
velopeCThey a« often seriously injured. They give their
strength and time freely for the college and are mentally
stunte(EJn the process. Though rated*as heroes, Dr. Hutchi-
son considers thorn the chief victims of college life.
The evil of football, he explains, is that the wrong fel-
lows ptagr it. The *am members don’t need it. It’s the spindle-
shankeet fiat-chc sted boys on the bleachers who ought to be
playin&and developing their bodies.
Wfigt can be done about it, nobody seems to know.
Rev. J. W. Stovall is back from
Shiner, where he went Saturday to
conduct services on Sunday.
W. F. Harris was a passenger for
Edna this morning, where he goes
on a couple days’ business visit.
The improvement being made on
Depot street between Mato and
Broadway, a distance of four blocks,
Will make that Street very inviting,
when completed.
The Kamann Manufacturing Co.,
is preparing the second story of the
Dickerson building on West Main
Street for occupancy by its neck-
wear factory. The company ex-
pects ttf be in operation inside two
weeks.
Mrs. E. Frieze is back from a visit
to relatives in Colorado county.
REAP THIS FIRST:
Mrs. Mary Thurston, middle-aged
wife of a retired English physician,, is
found murdered in bed during a week-
end party at the Thurston home near
London. Those ip the house when Mrs.
Thurston retired are her husband;
. Townsend, the author; Williams, the
family lawyer; Strickland, a sportsman,
and the servants. They And her a few
seconds after three - piercing screams
had penetrated the house. No one else
is found in the bedroom. The door was
bolted from the inside and the only
open window revealed a 20-foot drop to
the ground. Below the bedroom win-
dow, Townsend Ands the murder
weapon, a bloodstained Chinese knife,
taken from the Thurston hallway.
Shortly afterwards. Mr. Rider, the
vicar, a dinner guest that evening. * is
found praying beside Mrs. Thurston’s
Sow GO ON WITH THE STORY)
Tarleton Pushed
In 82nd Victory
STEPHENVILLE, Jan. 21. —John
Tarleton college won its eighty-
second consecutive b&ketball
vie- j
tory Friday night, defeating
De-
catur Baptist college 17
to 16.
• While the Plowboys maintained a
perfect record that has
not
been
broken for four years.
they
were
given a bad scare. Just before the
game wax over, a Decatur player
dropped a free throw through the
basket. A moan went up from the
Tarleton fans,
allowed the
but the referee dis-
THE &D HOME TOWN —~ By STANLEY
I f
point because the
thrower’s toe was over the line.
The Baptists held the lead dur-
ing most of the first half, but at
the intermission Tarleton was
ahead 10-8. Decatur also was In i
front during part of the second
half, until a final spurt gave the
Plowboys a one- point lead. j
RUPTURE
H. L. Hoffmann, Expert Minne-
apolis, Minn., will demonstrate
without charge his “Perfect Roten- considering each
Won Shields’* in CUERO, Tuesday.
January 3$, at the Muti Hotel
From 18 A. M to 4 P. M. Please
come early. Evenings by Ap-1
pointment.
Your physician will tell you about
this serious condition. Any rupture
allowed to protrude Is dangerous.
My "Retention Shields’’ will hold
your rupture under any condition
of exercise and work. They are san-
itary waterproof and practically in-
destructible.
‘ Do not wear trusses that will en-
large the opening and don’t neg-
lect the children. Many satisfied
ellente in this community. No mall
order.
I:
- '*■'** /Vu
HOME OFFICE:
Lincoln Bldg. Minneapolis
Minn.
CHAPTER 8
“WHAT I don’t understand,”
said Williams, *1* how Rider edme
to be beside Mary Thurston’s bed,
within half an hour of the murder.
He left to go homo long before 11,
and the Vicarage is only just
across the orchard.”
“Could anyone have telephoned
to him?” asked Strickland.
“Impossible. The telephone’s
out of order. Wires cut, probably.”
“Then he can never have gone
home,” I said.
Williams rang the belt “We’ll
ask Stall,” he said. “Rider told us
that he let him in.”
The butler came. But I felt
at once, looking at hiih, that he
was on his guard. He glanced
from one to another of us, as
though wondering whence the at-
tack would come.
“Oh, Stall,” said Williams, “did
you see Mr. Rider out?”
“On which occasion, sir? When
he first left the house, before Mrs.
Thurston had retired, I saw him
out.”
“I see. When efid he return
“It must have been 10 minutes
or a quarter of an hour after . . .
the discovery, sir.”
"For whom did he ask?”
“For Dr. Thurston, sir.”
“And did you show him into the
lounge ?” . . ’ i
“No, sir. It was just then that
the parlor-maid was took ’ysteri-
cal, sir. Very ’ysterical, she was.
And I was ’urrying back to the
kitchen. I left Mr. Rider to go
into the lounge himself. I did not
see him again, sir.”
“He said nothing to you beyond
asking for Dr. Thurston?”
“No, sir. Nothing. But he
seemed agitated, sir.”
I “I see. You go to his church,
don’t you, Stall?”
“Yes, sir. I sing in the choir.
Rj»— air.”
"Thank you, Stall. You’d better
get to bed now.”
When the door was closed we
exchanged glances, as though each
wanted to see what the others
thought of It
"Extraordinary—about Rider,” I
said after a moment. But no one
answered. So much was extraordi-
nary. And so very extraordinary.
Leaning back in my chair I be-
of the men
who were in that house separately,
as a possible murderer. It was not
a pleasant occupation,' for there
was not one of them to whom I
wished evil, or whom I had hither-
to really disliked. But as each one
presented himself to my doubt, I
was faced again and again by the
same blank wall. How had he got
out? Those two bolts—I had
pulled them back myself. Whoever
had done it, if natural laws ex-
isted still, had left that room dur-
ing the few moments it had taken
us to run upstairs and break down
the door. But how ? How ? I
felt as though the doubt would
lead me to madness. There was
no way out of that room.
last we decided ,to turn in.
At
But when yve were standing, wait-
ing for someone to lead the way
tpbt of the room, young Strickland,
handed me a cigar of superlative quality.
the sportsman, said a rather tact-
less thing to Alec Norris, the
novelist.
Well,” he said, “it seems that
already your theory about murder
has been proved to be wrong.”
I had forgotten all about that
conversation over the cocktails.
The recollection gave me a start.
But the effect of the remark on
Norris was quite unexpected. He
answered in a high-pitched voice,
shrill with hysteria.
“Yes,” he said*. "I must have
been w’rong!” Add he began to
utter a laugh, which was low at
first, grew louder and higher, until
Dr. Tate, who was standing beside
him, struck hirti across the mouth.
Norris stopped at once. ’’I’m
sorry,” he said.
"I’m sorry, too,” said Dr: Tate.
“But it’s the Only thing to do with
hysteria. Couldn't have you wak-
ing the household. It’s long past
midnight.”
Quite early the next morning
those indefatigably brilliant pri-
vate investigators, who seem to be
always handy when a murder has
been committed, began to arrive.
I had some knowledge erf their
habits, and guessed at once what
had happened to bring them there.
One had probably been staying in
the district, another was a friend
of Dr. Tate’s, while a third, per-
haps, had -already been asked to
stay with the Thurstons. At any
rate, it was not long before the
house seemed to be alive with
them, crawling about on floors, ap-
plying lenses to the paintwork,
and asking the servants the most
unexpected questions.
The first on the scene waj Lord
Simon Plimsoll. He stepped out
of the foremost of three Rolls-
Royces, the second of which con-
tained his man-servant, * whose
name I afterwards learned was
Butterfield, and the third, a quan-
tity of photographic apparatus. I
happened to be outside the front
door at the time, and heard him
address his man. I was at first a
little startled at his idiom, for it
reminded me of a dialogue I had
heard in a cabaret between two
entertainers whose name I believe
was Western, and it took me a
few moments to believe that this
was his natufal mode of speech.
He handed me a cigar of super-
of the incredible mystery which
confronted us, and the insoluble
problem of the murderer’s way of
escape. When I had finished, be
sighed.
“Another of these locked door
cases,” he said with palpable
ennui. "I was hopin’ it might be
something new, what?”
But he came into the lounge, and
glanced about him. “You say it
happened in tl*e room above ?his
one. No footprints outside, I sup-
pose ?”
i. “No,” I said, pl:ared that I had
shown enough professional acumen
to have looked for tl;«m last night.
Then 1 led him to the scene of my
search. He glanced cursorily at
the shattered light bulb, and
noted the place in which I had
found the knife, stepping back to
glance upward ak the window.
Then he stooped to examine the
flower bed, but without disarrang-
ing the crease .in his beautifully
cut trousers. Finally he stepped
back again and remained quite
motionless, staring up at the win-
dows above him.
As he did .so I examined this
young man. I had heard of him
first some 10 years ago, and was
surprised to find now that he ap-
peared no older. But perhaps
among other secrets he had dis-
covered that of changeless youth.
The length of his chin, like most
other things about him, was ex-
cessive. But I liked him, because
from the moment he arrived at
that house the somewhat macabre
atmosphere of the previous eve-
ning was dissipated. His cheerful
and inquisitive nature seemed to
discourage any morbid dwelling on
the horror of Mary Thurston’s
death, and to • induce everyone,
whether bereaved or guilty, into a
pleasant and eager state of curi-
osity. ]
I know, that for my part from
the tftne when I met Lord Simon
I ceased to remember the ghastly
moment when we had first looked
into that locked bedroom—I even
forgot more tharr a perfunctory
duty of nuiurning. I became
wholly absorbed in the fascinating
problem which confronted us. And
I have gathered that this is the
experience of ftiqst people inti-
mately connected with a murder
which a first-rate private detective
#y CHARLES /. STEWART
Central Press Columnist
WASHINGTON.D. G-CoL
Frank Knox, who ran vice preei-
dentially on the Republican Landon
ticket in 1936, is out with an anti-
monopolistic suggestion which
many congressional Democrats are
saying that their own party ought
to grab at and make the most of.
The colonel’s thesis is that ex-
cessive tariff protection, more than
any other one thing, has been re-
sponsible for America’s monopoly
evils..
Of course.
. Except for our protective system
American industry would have had
the competition of imported prod-
ucts to reckon with; therefore it
could not have sky-hooted domes-
tic prices unduly.
* * *
HIGH PRICES
Industry’s argument has been
that , its high prices have enabled
it to pay high wages,
i To be sure, counted in dollars and
cents, American wage* HAVE been
high, compared v|th old world
wages. However, they have not
b£en as high, relatively,
prices American wage <
had to pay for their "
country, like ours, where
not go as far as 50 cents in some
other country, the laugh is on the
$1 recipient; not on the 50-eent re-
cipient. I
Nevertheless, American labor
persistently has been “sold” on the
protective philosophy.
• » •
WHO BENEFITS?
Here are two-thirds of us, mulct*
ed by tariff protection:
Urban labor mulcted somewhat;
white collarites mulcted
bly.
Now the other one-third?—agri-
culture.
The average farmer cannot pos-
sibly be benefited by tariff protec-
tion, because mainly ha ia, an ex-
porter.
The American cotton planter?—
for example. He raises at much
cotton that he cannot possibly sell
more than about 40 per cent of Ids
crop in the U. 8. A. He needs for-
eign markets few the
per cent. An impart tax stakes
everything that he has to BUY cost
him more. It cannot imagixmfcly
increase prices he seeks as an ex-
porter. Q
Most American farmer* art In
the same fix. , J
« • ’•
“ROBBING PETER TO j 4—»*
America’s congressional repre
sentation has recognised all this
for a long time.
Its agricultural spokesmanship
has been for free trade, and
of its other spokesmanship
been equally Intelligent. But'
protection complex has been so
overpowering that common
has not sign! led. .
Import levies cannot help
must barm agriculture. That ia
vious.
Accordingly, the Scheldt’Bis
been, while protecting industry,
subsidise agriculture. i
That is to layr
To subeidim industry to agrl
ttire’s disadvantage, while subsi-
dising agriculture to Industry’s-di^.
advantage.
It has not
naturally.
3
worked ..atisfactorily^y
■ >-*33
re*
4* Mjij
You yrt Telling Me! ’
" r ■ "
Press Writer
WQRM has, at
Set only turned
rapped k
crouch,i
What has
art of “ “
ERdetatand.
that
ature has
*v
*t2id
again.
era ia tha
1 jfcft/y
.pi
5E
the dawn of a new
of writing. ;
* mmm
rp-sSs
of notables who <
tha ac
Though Separated Early
Twins Always Are Al
to
the gentle
* *•]
By LOGAN CUBNDKMINO, M. D. cert,
THE SUBJECT
interesting that
stories from Dr. I
recent book are v
They were
and had a
Dr. deadening
lative quality, ami invited me to
“spill the beans ’. This I did at or criminologist is investigating,
some length. I told him in detail! (To Be Continued 1
the article yes-
terday. I spoke
of twins who
had been sepa-
rated during
childhood being
brought to-
gether In ma-
ture life.
One of these
actual life
stories is that
of Gladys and
Helen. They had
been separated
in early tnfan^.
Helen knew
that she had a twin sister some-
where, but had no clue as to where
she might be. One of the strange
things about the story is that by
devious paths they gravitated to
the same city and were both well
established when they crossed each
other’s trails.
Helen was a grads School teach-
er in a large school. Among her
favorite pupils wss a Uttle girl
who was very fond of her teacher,
and one morning this pupll’dld not
smile and appeared to be down-
cast. On inquiry it
she thought she had
a concert in a distant
city. She had said “hello” and bad
smiled at her teacher but had re-
ceived not so much as a smile of
recognition. Helen denied that she
had been at the concert, but the
pupil insisted that the lady she saw
was exactly like Helen, and that
she could not have been mistaken.
Long-Loot Twin
Helen suspected that tha person
In question must be her long-lost
twin sister. She found a number
of people who had been at the con-
Dr. Qendening will answer
questions of general interest
only, and then only through
his column.
extreme separation ef
When they met, each had ■lx
Inga In her teeth, all in the amlaiv
reactions to Ufa,
seat was that of M4
and Fred, who lived ^without
knowledge of each other's
idea that he had a brother,
lived a thoumnd miles apart,
at the time they met both erthtft“
4i]
QUESTIONS
A. K,: “Can yon
formatiea <* the
:
I Trixie,
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Putman, Harry C. The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 18, Ed. 1 Sunday, January 23, 1938, newspaper, January 23, 1938; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1073742/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cuero Public Library.