The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 58, Ed. 1 Wednesday, March 10, 1943 Page: 4 of 12
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FOUR
THE CUERO RECORD, CUERO, TEXAS
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 10,1943
r
m
THE CUERO RECORD
fflteblWbed IB UN
■Mb Afternoon, Except Satin day, and Sunday Morning
by THE (TURBO PUBLISHING 00„ Iae.
In foe poet office at Cuero, Tex «a, as second class matter
Under Aet of Coogrees, March 3, 1897.
5 POLLIWOGS ij
¥ By POLLY *
* *
SALLY'S SALLIES
Regietrred U. 5. Patent Otf _
Lieutenants Bob Brown and Jo?
Yates, who were formerly stationed |
at BFS. in a telephone conversation
to Cuero asked to be remembered:
to all their Cuero friends. They are
located in the San Antonio Aviation j
center.
J. O. HOWERTON
HOWERTON _
C. PUTMAN -
_ President
----Publisher
_ Editor
Corporal John Bunjes. who is sta-
tioned in Alabama is to receive the i
Record for another six months, his'
mother having dropped into our of- j
flee to renew for him. J
National Advertising Representatives
Catty Paaaa League, Inc., 507 Merca/Uile Building, Dallas, Texas;
4find Street, New York City, 180 Michigan Avenue. Chicago, j now somewhere in the Pacific. Wad-1
;Btar Building, St. Louis, Mo.; 801 Interstate Building, Kansas!dell Toenjes is located in Massa-
Third Class Seaman Dewitt!
Toenjes, former Gobbler star, is >
l; IMA Beer Orpheum Building, to* Angeles, Calif., 106 San-
Francisco, Calif.
Matt at Carrier—Daily and Sunday, one year $6U0, six months
so throe months $1-86, on* month 50c.
•dttJon by mall only, one year $&0U; six months $1.00 in DeWltt
adjoining counties. Bbewher* 1 y ar $2.26, 6 months $1.25.
Official Organ of the City of Cuero and DeW»M County.
chusetts and is taking
course in the Marines.
a radio
Verda Barnes Osterloh delighted
at receiving a letter from Robert
Osterloh. better known as “Osti?.”
This Is the first news from him
since he landed in North Africa sev-
eral months ago. The letter was
dated Feb. 11.
TELEPHONE NO 1.
Years Of War
D;
Americans are willing to do Without sugar, coffee, gas,
and whatever it’s necessary to do without, if they be-
really convinced that the deprivations are necessary to
the war, and are not merely the result of bad manage-
at Washington.
Granted that no war management can be perfect or even
so, people being human and war being an abnormal
r granted also that there is a lot of sloppiness and
paper work at Washington, a few practical
are swell to remember:
The sugar is backed up ip warehouses in Cuba and
Rico, simply because the Nazis sink our ships. As soon
ship problem is solved, there will be plenty of sugar,
is backed up in Brazil and other places for the same
Some of the other food shortages are caused by lack
power on the farms. That has to be corrected, and
. The rubber shortage was caused by the Japs, but is
corrected. Synthetics will begin to come by 1944.
It comes to this: Can we stand inconveniences for three
? If we can, and will do what we can to shorten the war,
[three years ndt only can the war be over but inside
time some of the shortages can disappear. If we are go-
to make trouble over every little thing, we can lengthen
war indefinitely and turn the inconveniences into real
How about assuming that there will be three years of
and buckling down to the job? Then anything else will
R velvet.
Oscar Anders doing a little finag-
ling to get a salesman to promise to
■send him some light globes, which*
apparently are scarce.
r:-
A. L. Means getting over a
cold.
bad
] WOUPER. IT yoU'LL
. , , 10VE. ME vMem My"
' Hair, rt/ts Yurkep
WHY NoT 7 :
tVE LOVED
You every
-Time ybuvi
American Soldiers
~ To hear American
| Radio Programs
Jeep Takes To Water
And is Perfectly At
Home Observers Say
i _
REYKJVTK. Iceland. Mar. 10 - DETROIT. Mar. 10.—(UP)—Uncle
j <UP'-American soldiers m Iceland : Sam's jeep has taken to the water,
soon vrjll be.able to hear their fav-i The Ford Motor company an-,
onto radio programs over ihe is- ncunces with the permission of the1
! land's radio. .war department that it has started]
{ * The office of war information and [volume production of a quarter-ton,;
; Iceland broadcasting authorities j four-wheel drive, sea-going jeep.
^Viave agreed to start daily tour-hoii; j The sea-jeep already is in use in |
re-bro dcr. ts of American programs, the war zone.-,. It carries five men;
: using recordings. * _ and can ford a river, navigate a lake
j Soldiers in Iceland often are un- or operate in surf. It can perform
able to hear American short-wave every task of the jeep on land,
programs because of atmospheric, A winch in the prow of its boat
conditions and time differences. jbody gives the sea-jeep the ability!
to haul itself up steep banks.
—Remember Pearl Harbor—
Two Convicts Flee
Texas Penitentiary
AUSTIN, Mar. 10.—(UP)—State
police have announced that two
convict, tinder sentence of life im-
prisonment. escaped last night from
Wayne prison near Huntsville.
The prisoners are Edward Frances
Sutton of Houston, sentenced from
Harris and Galveston Counties on
charges of murder, burglary and
felony theft; and Anasticio Rodri-j
quez from El Paso cotfnty. Police do
not know the nature of charges
against Rodriquez.
—Remember Pearl Harbor—
SCOTT'S SCRAP BOOK
By R. J. SCOTT
Mrs. Extun working up a program!
for the Pilots (?iub wives for Fri-}
day.
Dick Burt in the Navy and sta-
tioned at San Diego, reports that he
BARCLAY ON BRIDGE
By Shepard Barclay
“The Authority on Authority*-
daily. Girls
^ees Tyrone Power
please note.
—Remember Pearl Harbor—
♦
* «/i i knew nw *j-
* *
4444444444*4**«
37 YEARS AGO
TTte following Items are re-
printed from The Daily Record
at the date printed below:
MARCH 10. 1906
Mrs. Louis Seeligson, who has ;
been visiting relatives for several
days, returned to her home in Go-
liad yesterday. {
Mrs. A. G.. Crain and daughter
after a sojourn of three months at
Charleston. S. C., are expected home
within the week.
’ MAKE HIM WASTE IT
AFTER YOUR first two leads
©f the tops in a suit make it clear
• that both your partner and the
! declarer are now Void of it and
! can ruff the next round, you do
» J not desire ordinarily to make your
, j partner the victim of an over-ruff.
Hence, you usually switch to an-
other suit. But suppose those two
leads of yours set up a third-round
winner in the dummy. That card
is likely to be valuable to the de-
clarer as a means of discarding
some loser from his own hand.
But you make him waste it if you
lead a third round at once, forcing
declarer to over-ruff your part-
ner and hence preventing use of
the honor for discarding purposes
later.
4 J 8 7 6
4 J 9 8
♦ Q J 5
*K95
4KS
Delusions
Col. Willard Chevalier, publisher of Business Week mag-
told an audience of advertising men recently that
labored under four delusions before the war, and still
great extent entertained the same ones.
we belittled Ihe economic resources of the enemy.
Germans war-weary and bankrupt, Japan too in-
to worry about.”
we thought we could not bfe attacked in our own
But every time we go to the garage for our car, a
little Jap is there to tell us how far we can drive. In
oil-burning basement sits a Nazi storm-trooper warning
much fuel we can bum. We’ve been attacked in our
It might be added that a Nazi submarine captain tells us
sugar and coffee we must do without—not to men-
bananas.
“Third, and this false notion most of us still hold, we be-
that our high standard of living must be maintained. I
extravagance must be curtailed if we are to keep this
try, which our fighting boys and girls have left in our
j» a* they want to find it when they return”
“Fourth, we thought we could improvise a military ma-
We could drum up an army of trained fighters in short
we boasted. Well, we’ve been at it two and a half years
armed forces are Just beginning to square off for ac-
It a evident that Americans must cast off delusions and
down to facts.
Manager Welch of'the opera
house tells u»» Buster Brown Is billed j
to appear in Cuero Friday night. I
March 23, and it is a crackerjack
attraction having held the boards I
for 200 consecutive nights in New j
York cit*.
Farmer's Danger
sounds
The farm bloc, trying to get farm prices raised,
too much like labor leaders trying to get labor wages
The words are different, but the tune Is the same. And
t happens if they get their way? The farmers lose, the
s lose, and the general public, which includes farmers,
workers and a lot of folks in other professions and services,
I will lose, too.
If wages rise to meet farm prices, and farm prices rise to
meet labor costs, there is no end to it, and there is no gain to
kuyon®- There is, on the other hand, serious loss for everyone,
ffr H takes a flve-dollar bill to buy last year’s dollar’s worth of
^jgroeeriea, where Is the advantage in having this year’s five
.{mther than last year’s one? No advantage, and the great dis-
advantage that there is no end to the inflation until there
eomes total collapse.
--“Buying power,” says W. T. Chevalier of Business Week,
“is an economic; thermostat. It does no good to turn the ther-
mostat up if there’s a fuel shortage in the basement. Having
j plenty of money is of no avail If there are no goods to spend it
answer is to sit tight where we are, gird the loins for
a three years war, and get along the best we can till it’s over.
If we win, we have freedom to reorganize our internal affairs
p with some sense. If we lose, nobody has anything.
j&RD ADS tRING RESULTS!
Miss Katie Lee Swift and her
cousin, Russell Vanderveer are to
arrive during the week for a visit
with homefolks.
Mrs. J. C. Wilson entertained the
Junior Epworth league Thursday
evening with a tacky party. Bettie
Lee Thornhill was awarded the
prize for the “tackiest dress.
Dr. J. H. Reuss who spent a
couple of days very pleasantly
among his old Cuero friends return-
ed to Dallas Friday.
A Q 9 4 3 2
f A K T 5 N V 10 6
43 WE ♦3
4 A 4 2 o 4 J 10 4 3
4,$ I L-£-J 2/ v
♦ A 10 ^
4 Q
♦ K 10 9’8 7 6
. A A Q 6
South. East-West vul-
nerable.)
South West North East
1$ 1« S3 2 4
$4 2 4 9 -4 . Pass
Fas* 3 4 Pa^a Pass
4 4 DW
A par*, score by Z*3t and Weal,
which mad* 3-Heart* i gam# bid.
an uulue-ra on that auction. > leads the heart Qf
Uc.itriautab V Xiaj Fttferva laa.
South reckoned he was probably
sacrificing, and West thought so,
too. He saw his partner’s high-
low on the K and A of hearts, but
also knew South was cleared of
the suit after that, and so
switched, selecting the club 8. The
A won, a small diamond was led
and the contract was safely home,
as the heart J later furnished a
discard of the spade 10.
If West, noting that his two
heart leads had set up the dum-
my’s J, had repeated the suit.
East's lowly diamond 3 would
have put the blocks to the de-
clarer. He would have been obliged
to ruff that trick himself then, and
so could not have used the heart
J later on to trash the spade 10.
The loss of the spade trick would
have made a total of four for the
defense, just enough to score a
set. ; .-
• • •
Tomorrow’s Problem -yJF
|_
yjH MIDWAY ISLAM9S 1 4
BUILDS HO NESf ( Biff
LAYS HS SINGLE.
»H CROTCH Of
BRANCHES OH A LIMB
Of bARK
AMD FIBER*
BtfEKfW
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HAIR.
SERVES
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Helmet
for
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'JWARRJOR. ?
ROOF 1$ A
cool rooF-
ALumimum FajnT
OHA SHeeT-IRON
ROOF MAKES tf
AS COOL. AS
WOODEN SMlNCLE*
ARE GOH-tfilNEP »H
DRIED PRUNES?
VI<AM»N A , AMD
VrfXMlH B COMPLEX
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wipTtwroaawpxBaASPSTCMrnui.wtmaMOcuViow
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OAK f
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(Dealer: South. Xorth-South
vulnerable) |
What Is South s best try for
No Trumps on this deal sfUrWesfe
Sedimentation Rate of Blood
May Prove Useful to Doctors
A dance complimentary to Miss|
Lou Martin of Galveston, who is vis-
iting her sister, Mrs. John Schwartz,
was a delightful diversion Friday
night for the happy throng that j
took part. It was given at the “Mor- •
gantown dance hall,” so Richard j
Kunitz, one of the leaders, tells us
and it was a truly enjoyable occa-
sion. There were a dozen or more
couples present and all seemed to
be in the dancing humor. They trip-
ped the light fantastic toe to the ■
strains of elegant dance music, fur-
nished by a San Antonio string
band, from 8:30 until nearly 2
o’clock.
Those present to aid in compli-
menting Miss Martin were: MLr.«s
Maud Martin. Pearl Schwartz,
Georgie and Daisy Wasserman. Se-
lina Abel, Helena Miller, Ida Schu-
By LOGAN CLENDENING, M. D.
A CORRESPONDENT writes
to ask what value the laboratory
test called the blood sedimentation
rate has.
If I had a gift for fiction, I
would write a short story to be
called “The Man Who Ruined
Hadleyrille.” In this story a doc-
Dr. Clendeniag will answer
questions of general interest
only, and then only through
his column.
tor invents an instrument called
the eathesiometer, which meas-
ures pain. He goes around his
little village sticking it under peo-
ple’s tongues and finds that the
li/e-long whiner hasn’t any pain
at all, while the poor-widow who
has been supporting her children
by taking in washings registers
100 per cent pain all the time. The
revelations of the esthesiometer
n e Kunitz. Annie Funck of \ ic- probably it is just as well that no
toria, Rosa Holzheuser. and Messrs, j auCh instrument is invented.
Henry Miller. Gus and Will Holz- j The physician, however, would
heuzer, Richard and Ed Kunitz. | liki a reliable means of separat-
Aug., Robert and Chris Kleinecke,: ing patients who are simply func-
Will Barnes, Lawrence Simon. Er- ! tionally sick and those who have
nest Rogern. Louis Bauer. Aug. and<, tissue destruction or infection.
Otto Moeller. Julius Gohmert. Fes- The thermometer, the pulse rate
rAitert
Kunitz. The party was chaperonyd valuable addition ia the blood sedi-
b\ Mr. and Mrs. Ed Dietze. mentation rate.
How Teet Is Made
The test is very simply per-
formed : a small amount of blood
is put in a sodium citrate solution
and left in a tube, upright, at
room temjwrature for an hour.
The blood cells settle to the bottom
at a certain rate which can be
charted. Apparently in condition*
where there is tissue destruction
or infection, the blood cells are
heavier and they fall to the bot-
tom of the tube at a more rapid
rate. ;, ,
By and large it is a very reli-
able and valuable test. It doea not
make a diagnosis of any specific
condition, but simply separates
the sheep from the goats — the
people who are really sick and the
ones who are just complaining.
Thus in over 80 per cent of cases
of cancer the sedimentation rate
was high; in cases of dyspepsia
due to actual anatomical disease,
such as ulcer of the stomach or
gallstones, It is high or border-
HELPS PREVENT
pni HQ From Developing
^ ... At the first sneeze,
sniffle or sign of nasal irritation, put a
few drops of Vicks Va-tro-nol up each
nostril. *lts quick action
aids nature’s defenses 4
against colds. Follow '"“V
directions in folder. VA'TRO-NOl
Night of
January 16th
USE A
WANT AD
LENTEN REDUCING DIET
By Dr. Ciendening
TksrMsy-MO ea levies
SREAKFAST
8 stewed prunes (no extra sug-
**)—75 calories; 2 slices whole-
wheat toast—100 calories; 1 tea-
spoon butter—50 calories; 1 cup
coffee (no sugar or cream).
LUNCH
% cup steamed rice with Span-
ish tomato sauce—150 calories;
hi head lettuce (French dressing
or mayonnaise made of mineral
oil)—60 calories; 1 cup tea (no
sugar or cream).
DINNER
1 cup cheese souffle—200 calo-
ries; % cup shrimp —100 calo-
ries; 1 eup carrots—75 calories;
M grapefruit baked—100 calories.
The border-line readings occur
in the milder forms of the condi-
tion. In dyspepsia, however, anx-
iety reactions, irritable colon or
dropped stomach, the sedimenta-
tion rate is normal in practically
every case. Of course, a number
of people who have dropped stom-
ach never complain at all, and the
assumption is that people who do
complain are of a hypersensitive
character.
With the doctor shortage loom-
ing and the necessity of doctors
only for those who are really sick,
it looks as if the blood sedimenta-
tion rate might be very usefuL
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
A. N. S.:—Is a blood pressure
of 140 in a woman of 3S years of
age ever called normal? Does a
person at that age ever suffer
from a stroke?
Answer: I would consider a
blood pressure of 140 normal at
any age. People at the age of 33
sometime* have strokes whether
or not tht blood pressure is up.
i ’'V_^-***?w«* '
CHAPTER FORTY-ONE
“YOU’RE LOOKING fit, Mrs.
Kerr,*' the doctor said. “Your so-
journ in the country must be doing
you good.”
1 “I’ve been feeling extremely
well,” she said. “Until lately that
is. But for the last month or so
I’ve felt nauseated most of the
. time. I’ve been under a rather se-
vere nervous strain, and I think
, that’s probably the cause. Since I
was in town, I thought I might as
well have you check me over.”
i She felt silly now that she was
here. The way she worried about
Jake, it was a lucky thing the
worst symptom was nausea.
“Nausea, you say?” he raised his
■ eyebrows. “Let’s look you over and
j see if you’re as well as you look.”
The examination took about 15
minutes, The nurse helped Kay
dress. F,
f “Dr. Smith is waiting ror you in
his office,” she told Kay. Kay
walked in, sat down in the straight
j chair facing the doctor’s desk. .
“One can never be certain until
1 you have had a Friedman test or
actually felt life,” he stated. “But
everything seems to indicate that
you are going to have a baby, Mrs.
j Kerr.”
| “Baby!" Kay could hear her*voice
i rise almost to a shriek. She felt as
though she were miles away from
herself. "That can’t be true.”
| “As I say, one can’t be absolute-
ly sure. But the chanoes are about
fifty to one.* ,
1 “It can’t be true, It can’t be
: true,” kept ringing through her
mind. She shook her head in be-
i wildelment.
“Is this such a shock to you?”
; the doctor asked kindly. “You will
i find a baby a great comfort, a gr#at
joy.” The words didn’t sound nae-
i chanical. “But before you try to
accustom yourself to the idea, we’ll
have the test made. You’ll know
I. definitely in two or three days/*
1 Kay left the office in a daze. But
as she walked, as her mind slowly
i calmed, she knew the idea wasn’t
j preposterous at all. It was probably
She had an early dinner in her
room and then dressed. Her hands
were trembling, her body shivering.
She felt nervous, bewildered,
head so tightly bound with that old
iron band it made bar feel dizzy.
She found herself longing far the
country, for the peace, the stillness.
She felt that if she could only lie
down in front of the fire, maybe
she could think this out straight.
But she couldn’t. She had a big
evening ahead of her, perhaps the
most important one in her life. Ease
dressed with care. The gown was a
success and looked well with her
silver fox evening coat. The coat
itself felt soft and comforting. She
ran her bands over the shining fur.
She was glad she had a chance to
wear it. She had taken it out of
storage just for tonight After all,
she had no occasion to use it in the
country.
Kay got to the concert hall ahead
of time. So did Het
“How’s Jake?" were Kay’s first
“A "bit on the jittery aide
but he’s back there warming up
and I don’t think any of it is goteg
to bother him after the first few
seconds.”
They made their way through
the lobby, which was small and al-
ready becoming crowded. There
were several huge billboards an-
nouncing the concert—with Jake’s
name in big black letters, the pro-
gram bated and, at the top, a pic-
ture of him, a good one that caught
his cheek line and the attractive
tilt of his blond head. Kay’s heart
tightened when she saw it.
Their progress was slow 1
they saw so many people they
knew. Kay answered their ques-
tions rapidly, in bare outline, rather
than in detail.
“Yes, we’ve been In toe country
all winter. . . « Thank you, I feel
fine. . . . He’s been working so
hard we haven’t seen anyone. . . .
For a few days, probably, but I
can’t make any dates for Jake....
That’s uncertain, next fall, per-
haps." She smiled an^ hewed and
waved and shook hands. It seemed
true. It just hadn’t occurred to her. [forever until they finally got to
She had sometimes thought I their seats,
about having a child, wished she “How does it feel to be toe Wife
would. But the one time she and of a celebrity?” Het asked.
Jake had talked It over he had | “I suppose Til get used to it in
been so adamant that she had given time. That is, if Jake does turn out
J
EDITOR'S NOTE: Dr. C!md#niof hM
m*«b pamphlet* which c»n be obt*i?i*<i by'
reader*. Each pamphlet sell* for IV cent*. '
For any on# pamphlet desired, send 18
cent* in coin, and a *eU-addres»ed emek p*
stamped with a three-vent etan-.p, tsi Dr,
Logan Clandening, in care of thx paper.
The pamphlet* are: "Three Weeks’ Reduc-
ing Diet", ’Indigeatioo and goiutipatioa ",
Reducing and Gaining ”. ' infant Feed-
tag". ' Instruction* for the Treatment of
Diabetes", "Feminine Hygiene" and The
V.MS
.K’4»
the idea up then and there. Provi-
dence seemed to be playing her a
host of tough tricks now\ Things
were hard enough without having
this to face?.
She'd be lucky If she got Jake
back at all; this might easily be
the last straw. And if Jake didn’t
come back to her, she was going
back to McClures. She just couldn't
pine away alone in the country for-
ever.
She went to a beauty salon, had
her hair shampooed, her nails man-
- loured for the-first time since June,
a facial massage. Site wasn't very
conscious of any of the various
things they were doing to her, she
was so busy trying to adjust her-
self to the fact that she was going
W/V \\\% \\ -i
to be a celebrity and I’m still his
wife.”
“It’s going to work both ways,"
Het said reassuringly. “Downing
says Jake can’t miss, and I know
you can't.”
Jake had picked their position
well. They were on the side, Just
far enough back so that Kay would
have & full view of his face. “He
wouldn’t have put me here if he
didn’t want to see me,” she
thought. She fingered her program
with cold, wet hands. She could
hardly believe that any minute out
would walk Jake, and this long-
anticipated moment would be here.
“The music critics are her a.’’
Het pointed out several at them.
Kay looked in the
/
^ *
whole attention was focused tm.
side of toe stage where Jake'
come out.
After what seemed an
the house fights finally
mer, the babble of voices died
to a hushed whisper, and
walked out an the stage.
There was a hurst of appla—i
he walked over to the plana
he reached it, he stood still a
meat, then he looked straight
to where Kay was sitting
smiled. The tears were
down her face as she smiled book;
and she almost suffocated with j*y.
Then Jake faced the
bowed and sat down.
"Ton’d think he’d been
concerts for years,” Het
to Kay. “He hasn’t turned a
Kay nodded her head. She
worried any more. Every
movement of Jake’s mowed
was completely composed,
born for this,” she told
“Now he feels as though he’s where
ho belongs."
He sat there quietly waiting fb
few late comers to be seated/Bs'd
turn his head occasionally tofewd
the mudisnea with too bored* *4*
tient look that seasoned plsnidb al-
ways assume while they wait. Kay
and Het looked at each other
laughed. “He’s got the role doom
pat already,” Het said softly.
The house was settled,
coughed, and then it w
Jake threw back his
raised his hands simply and
concert had begun.
Kay was more conscious of J
than she was of the music. She
hoard toe music many times. I
passage, each note waa
as a member of the family,
was a special beauty in his tone to-
night, an added unoerstandlag. She
could see what Het had meant. Bdh
it was just being able to see Mm
that filled her with an almost to-
ms happiness.
The tumultuous applause at On
end of the first half of the concert
didn’t surprise Kay.
"Do you want to have to talk to
everyone?" Het asked Kay wUk
the audience was still clapping and
stamping.
“I certainly don’t"
“Let's skip out the side exit here
then. Jake’s not going to play any
encores until the end, so we won’t
miss anything. And I’m such a
I couldn’t be civil, so I should ima-
gine you must feel about a hundred
tones worse.”
Kay threw her wrap over
shoulders and got up. Het followed
her, and when they were in tl
back alley they both Ut dgarets.
“Don’t you think you ought to gm
gee it Jake wants you for
thing?” Kay asked.
“He’s through needing me," Hstf
said. “Jake was reborn tonight It’s
the biggest thrill I’ve ever Mad to
my life.”
The question that 4
Kay was whether Jake
needing her. Would
to see her after the
qtSMUnt he?
■4-1M
m,
• t
«
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Putman, Harry C. The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 58, Ed. 1 Wednesday, March 10, 1943, newspaper, March 10, 1943; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1090030/m1/4/: accessed July 11, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cuero Public Library.