The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 140, Ed. 1 Monday, June 13, 1938 Page: 2 of 4
four pages : ill. ; page 27 x 21 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
I TWO
THE CUERO RECORD. CUEFO TEXAS
CUERO RECORD
Established in 1894
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
UhtJfer Art of Congress. March 3, 1897.
President ,
Publisher !
Editor '■
J. C. HOWteRTON —............_..j........ ..................
HOWERTON ..........1....................................-...........................
C. PUTMAN .................:..........................................
HOWERTON ......................................................................... Sports Editor !
TILTON ...................................................................... Advertising Manager !
----- i
National Advertising Repre entatives:
Daily Press League. Inc., 5OT Mercantile Building. Dallas. Texas; |
Lexington Avenue, New York City, 180 Michigan Avenue. Chicago, I
. 506 Star Building, St. Louis, Mo.. 801 Interstate Building. Kansas
Mo.; 1015 New Orpheum Building. Los Angeles. Calif.; 105 San- '
Street, San PTandsoo Calif.
\
Subscription Rates:
Mail or Carrier—Daffy and Sunday, one year $5.00, six months
$2.50, three months $1.25, one month 50c.
Edition by mail only, one year $2.00; six months $1.00 in DcWitt I
adjoining counties. Elsewhere, 1 year $2.25, 6 months $1.25.
Official Organ of the City of Cuero and DeWitt County.
—
TELEPHONE NO. 1.
icao Armies
re should he universal interest in a bill introduced by
itkttvfe Rattiilton Fish of New York to prohibit “private
as any group of “five or more persons organized in a
club, company, society dr in any other fashion for the
b( dim or parade with firearms or other dangerous
or imitations, dr for the purpose of giving or ac-
tary training.*’
veterans and similar organizations would be exempt-
ties for violation would be as much as $500 and six
HUprMofcttnent
fere are obvious difficulties about such legislation. The
to bear arms, guaranteed by the Constitution, is involv-
the right to parade, which many Americans hold
_ „ even if.it fe not expressly pledged in our basic law. Pos-
too, camping and picnicking are sacread rights. The
and immunities here are somewhat confused. But
ly some of the Fascist shenannigans lately engaged in
ied groups under alien flags, and with alien shib-
are such as to give loyal Americans a violent stom-
arouse so much indignation that it may become
to forbid such proceedings for the offenders’ own
if for no more fundamental reason.
lainers
Swiss gentleman who visited this country recently
to an American friend expressing his wonder at the
and discontented spirit here. We complain that busi-
very bad, and we seem much distressed by it. Yet we
work in fine cars, are well dressed, live in excellent
JIL
I, and regard as necessaries the telephones, radios and
r modem things which are luxuries in other lands.
ty do not have our standard of living in Switzerland,
other European countries, he says, but they have what
is better—a feeling of contentment with simple
;st blessings, which they would not exchange for our
and the discontent that goes with it.
man, perhaps, like most foreign visitors, misjudges
ition somewhat. The wealth and luxury he has seen
really typical. He probably did not see or talk with
itite millions of unemployed living in want, or on
relief or WPA jobs. But his misconception is natural,
seem to have this strange situation—that the great
of people without jobs, or living on the edge of
End in real misery and fear, are not the ones who do
oomglaJning. It is those who, with all their hard luck, still
resources and even luxuries, who complain the loudest.
lary For Learninn
^ 1953 the New School for Social Research in New York
ibiished the University in Exile. The purpose was to
lolars who had been exiled from Germany,
si University has grown. Today it has a staff of twen-
lent teachers in the political and social sciences, men
opinions, sound learning and great ability. They
chiefly from Germany and Italy. Three Austrian
will Join the faculty next year.
The University in Exile is more than a philanthropical
tution for the benefit of persecuted Europeans. It has
^its students as well as its teachers. Since 1933, more
1,260 men and women have received in this country the
Itaed instruction for which they would have had to go
in earlier years, or which they might have missed en-
if the United States had not opened its doors so cor-
to the foreign scholars.
Commencement exercises for this institution were held
New York recently. The men and women present, wheth-
as •tudents, teachers or guests, were participating in an
sioh and a movement possible only in a free land such
ours. There must have been inspiration in knowledge of
it fact.
WM'S WHAT AT A GW
By CHARLES P. STEWART does not. But English statesmen
Central Press Columnist are used to such upsets. On this
WASHINGTON, June 00.—Pres- side of tlle Atlantic it was a shock.
rh?s speaks in ;e;t;-(kv
istration s support of New Deal Nevertheless President Roosevelt
candidates for the senate and house Is taking his chances.
in the current After attending the marriage of
, xx x x x x x. * x x ■¥
' 3 1 YEARS AGO' !
: x# >f. * * ¥ *
■ The following interesting
items we. clipped from an is-
sue of The Record of the year
1901:»
MONDAY, JVKf 13, 1938
by- OREN ARNOLD
m.FASED EY CFNTP.AL PRESS ASSOCIATION
• I
of representatives
year's campaign.
his son, John, to Anne Lindsay
If ever an executive chief made Clark at Nahant, Mass., June 18,
City gardeners, too, would like to get some of that AAA
A woman protests that “darling” is used too much now-
,jrs, and another woman says that’s O. K. because “it’s
a darling word.’’
Cabinet Certificate
y Certificate *nd five odierj ^11 dif-
ferently numbered, entitle bearer to One Packet
No» ®T TESTED RECIPES (20 cards) upon pay
tb ment of only 10c if presented at our offic.
(lie if fcy mail).
-IMPORTANT-
Check Number of Set You Want t« Get
Packet No. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
fAVAVAVAVAVAVAVAVAVAVAVAVAVAVAy^
a strcng'bid for legislative support
President Wilson did when he ap-
pealed to the voters to give him
the kind of congress he wanted to
enable him to put his post-World
war program through.
The voters did not do it in Wil-
son's case, to be sure.
Maybe they will not cast their
ballots as per "F. D.'s” request.
* * *
NOTHING NEW
Possibly (judging from Presi-
dent Wilson's experience) it is
questionable whether or not a
White House tenant is wise in elec-
tioneering for a majority of his
chocsing on Capitol Hill.
However, it certainly is no new
thing.
It is not necessarily dictatorial,
either.
and the anniversary of the Swedes’
first American landing at Wilming-
ton. Del., he will make two New
York speeches June 30. Will
they be political? They will.
July 3. Presidential speech on
the field of Gettysburg.
July 8. Presidential speech at
Marietta, O., celebrating the 150th
anniversary of the opening of the
Northwest Territory.
July 8. Presidential speech at
Covington, Ky. (afternoon of the
same day), undoubtedly to aid the
campaign of Senator Alban W.
Barkley, senate majority leader, in
fight for renomirration against Gov.
A. B. (Happy) Chandler.
July 8. Presidential speech at
Paducah, Ky., home town of Sena-
tor Barkley.
Stops at Memphis, Term., for a
TVA talk, and at Oklahoma City,
JUNE 13. 1901
Miss Elizabeth Brown of San An-
tonio arrived in the city today on a
visit to Miss Em a Buchel.
C
“1 RODE
telegram. ”
UTTER 31
t
I
He had to confer with his con-1 ing the cjoth and the Idrapery ma-
abgut final construction ' terial. The tears wdto a flow of
Will Harwood came up from Vic-
toria this morning on a short visit
to his parents. Mr. and Mrs. E Har-
wood .and returned this afternoon.
His sister. Miss Ada Harwood, ac-
companied him to Victoria and will
spend a few davs on a visit to him
in the City of Roses
J. W. Johnson came over from
the Breeden ranch near York town
today on a short visit to Cuero.
The Record is asked to announce
an ice supper lor Thursday night.
England is as democratic a coun- t0 speak, presumably, in behalf of
try as ever was, and its adminis-
trations regularly appeal to the
voters, over ‘parliament's head,
whenever the lawmakers turn ad-
ministratively balky. Sometimes
the administration wins and some-
times not.
In a way, It Is a system which
insures a speedier popular response
than oar own. concerning pending
national issues. We get otir ver-
dicts only at stated intervals. The
English have an election whenever
one is needed.
* • •
“GOING TO THE COUNTRY"
The ERgiish call it “going to the
country”.
It’s, a system which Woodrow
Wilson believed in, as primitively
democratic.
Adapting it as well as he could
(which unavoidably was clumsily)
to our constitution, he tried it here
—and got licked.
Americans were not accustomed
to “going to the country”.
And neither was President Wil-
son—e x c e p t theoretically. He
thought that “going to the coun-
try” meant an administrative vic-
tory. In England It frequently
Senator Thomas, who is haring
a hard renorm nation fight.
July ID. Presidential speech at
Grand River dam, near Tulsa,
Oktau
» » »
OTHER SPEECHES
Scattered through, but not yet
definitely dated, are presidential
speeches in the Muskingum Con-
servation District, near New Phil-
adelphia, O.; Ft. WTorth and Deni-
son, Tex., Puerto, Col., and in Ne-
vada and Utah, somewhere and
somewhen.
After that the president win
start on his west cc st South
American voyage.
On this voyage he will have to
visit Bogota, Colombia; Quito,
Equador; Lima, Peru, and Santi-
ago, Chile—not to mention Pana-
ma, coming back. All these capi-
tals are Inland, except Lima. This
will involve some “routing”.
Bolivia is pretty close to the
coast, too. It will feel slighted if
the president fails to make an in-
land trip to its capital—La Pas.
As a matter of fact, Bolivia has
twin capitals, but Sucre is too in-
ternal to be bothered with.
June 13 on the courthouse
given bv the ladies of the Methodist
church. Everybody is invited.
The Buchel Power and Irrigation
company, is connecting the cotton
mill with its current wires from the
dam This is the initial work looking >
to the elaborate illumination of the '
mill July 4.
You ant hereby earnestly request-
ed to meet at Yoakum at 3 ortock j
p. m. on the 29th day of June. 1901.
for the purpose of reorganizing
Hardeman Camp United Confeder-
ate Veterans. All Confederate veter-
ans are imlted to be present and !
participate in said reorganization. !
which will be beneficial for all part-
ies concerned. Papers in surround- !
cf what I might do m'self. We
don't want thet Montoya a courtin’
herj”
Buckshot took Ellen's heart af-
fairs as matters of personal in-
terest! Bill restrained a smile, but
was seriously concerned too.
“That's right, Dncle Buckshot,
we don't. But don't you go shoot-
ing anybody. After all, she's of
age, and her awn boss. And ours.”
“By damn she ain’t nuthin’ but
a little gal, \ tell you! She needs
a mamtny'n dladdy. Some slicker’ll
take ’advantage of her!”
“You heljj> watch her, then.
Matter of fact, that's what I hired
you for. That's your job when-
ever I’m gorje, Buckshot. Thanks
for wiring me. I came right home.
B t your telegram sounded as if
lawn they'd run Off to Egypt or some-
and sent you thet j tractor
wfis i ttwork. m _ ,.
he had to sign orders for more, scious of them, only o|{ the heaven-
Ellen needed his advice about her ly tightness in her thilpat.
hekshot Brown was i "*ork. The paint had run out, and | happiness, and she ^fas not con
explaining. “|ecause I was scared
where.
Buckshot took time to spit
copiously and adjust his thinking.
“Th’ Rivetos don’t like this Mon-
toya,” he explained, “no more’n
me. They £ot some low-down on
They figgered he’d
y to Sonora. Seems,
st took her to Tuc-
and a picture show,
He wants to get her
however.
him, I rec
took her a
though, he
son for
or such Hkei
down onto | his ranch,
You watch dut!”
"I know, ft was there with her.
A delightful place. You’d like the
old folk, his (parents. She—we owe
them a courtesy, as a matter of
fact. They i want us to visit the
ranch for a Ibig shindig.”
Buckshot glared at his boss,
waved his alrm for emphasis.
“Keep hep: outa there, I tell
you!” he ordered Bill. “Matter of
ing counties are kindly requested to tnck, vvhy’n the gosh-all-hell ain’t
publish this notice. you settin’ up to her yore own
F. M Tatum. Commander; ! self? You j step around her like
T. Y. Plume. Adjutant.
Are you
Hair Balls in Stomach j
Not Unusual—Clendening
By LOGAN CLENDENING, M. D.
THE NEWSPAPERS are carry-
ing the story of what is supposed
to be a unique case of a man who
had a ball of hair removed from
his stomach. It is not unique.
Foreign bodies in the stomach are
so curious that they always have
attracted attention. Technically
they are known as “phytobezoars”
and were described in the first
writings on medicine. In fact,
they were used during the Middle
Ages as luck pieces. They are
often found in the stomachs of
herbivorous animals, and were
Dr. Clendening will answer
questions of general interest
only, and then only through
his column.
thought to possess magical prop-
erties: Lucky was the huntsman
who found a hair ball in the stom-
ach of the deer which he had killed
in the forest.
Nowadays persimmons are the
most frequent nucleus for foreign
bodies of the stomach. If you
want one, the method seems to be
to take a liberal quantity of the
persimmons on an empty stomach.
The seeds constitute a nucleus.
They are almost insoluble and
when a mass of them glues to-
gether in the stomach it cannot be
moved out into the intestine.
AD Swallow Hairs
How hairs are swallowed seems
tp be mysterious but, as a matter
gf fact, we all swallow a few hairs
regularly. Women patients are in
the majority in these cases, prob-
ably because they hold their hair in
the mouth while combing it. Of
course this does not ajf^ly to the
modern bobbed-hair species.
Foreign bodies in the stomach
may be made up not only rt "hah
but of indigestible substance: «.* si.
kinds—string, grass, tcb'cc . ano
shellac. The latter is frequent In
painters, who use shellac as an in-
toxicant.
The symptoms of a foreigfi body
In the stomach are very indefinite,
usually vague digestive discomfort
such as belching and a feeling of a
mass in the stomach. Since the
X-ray is so much a part of jnodern
diagnostic equipment, tlie diagnosis
can be made with great ease, and
recoveries nowadays are frequent
with a combination of good X-ray
technique and modern surgery.
Incidentally in one animal, the
owl, hair balls are physiological.
The owl regurgitates skin and
bones of the animals which it de
stroys, such as mice.
TOWN TALK
(Continued from Page 1)
tions in which employment is
! available for everybody who
j is willing and able to work.
, and in which normal ctors
and a normal amount of other
farm products may be produc-
ed and marketed on a profit-
able basis. Wages and hours
legislation and Government
farm subsidies are no substi- i
lutes for such conditions. Re-
store such conditions and
wages and hours will take
care of themselves and Gov-
ernment farm subsidies will be
unnecessary. It is the restora- j
tion of such conditions that i
: i
i the administration should be
concerning itself about right
now-, and not the punishing of
its political enemies. And that
‘ is what the gentlemen of
she’s poison) sometimes,
blind? Or crazy?”
Buckshot was chewing tobacco,
and he cheWed It vigorously now
waiting for Bill to answer. The
younger njan’s expression was
serious, almost sad, touched too
with stubbornness.
*T guess maybe I am,” he ad-
mitted at last, speaking skrwly.
“It’s not (ui easy setup, Uncle
Buckshot. You said you come
from Texas. What do you sup-
pose my lather and the other
ranchers ba.ck there would think,
if they heard I was a kept man,
that I’d married a woman for her
money? You see? I haven’t any
money to speak of. A man can’t
go off and bury all his pride, with-
out burying his self-respect along
with it! . . i. Can he?”
Ephriam j Brown hadn’t thought
of that. iHe stood and chewed
several minutes, finally nodding
agreement. It was a new angle to
the whol* thing, he admitted.
Then he walked on away, declaring
he would have to give the situa-
tion “some! studyin’
Bill had a deal of checking and
planning to do this day. Work
had progressed faithfully in his
absence, but some of It was at a
standstill until he could return.
rock fireplace. A stream of de-
tails.
Two truck loads of furniture ar-
rived from Los Angeles on the
next day, and one load from
Phoenix.
“I didn’t know you’d been to’
Phoenix," Ellen said. .“What did
you get there?”
“Draperies. Table cloths. Nap-
kins. Aprons. And Navajo rugs.”
“Bill! Did you, really?” Ellen
was incredulous. “You think of
everything!”
“I should have made you get the
drapes. But you ordered me to
furnish the house. You can send
it all back for exchange, if you
like.”
Unpacking the Phoenix boxes
and crates had alig the zest of
Christmas morning. Bill had been
doing some thorough inquiring. A
young manager of a department
store in Phoenix, Bill had learned,
was gifted with a rich imagination
as well as a keen business sense.
In collaboration with & cattle
rancher and his wife, this mer-
chant had created an extraordi-
nary new set of fabrics, which
were just now on display,
“O-o-o-oh, Bill!" / *
Ellen’s rhapsody was Inspired
this time by a bolt of dusty-tan
material imprinted with a pattern
of dark brown cattle brands.
The M Bar V was there. And
the 7UP, the Quarter-Circle U, the
TT, the Lazy Y, the Oh Bar, the
101, the RM, the Arrow and Hat,
the Double Triangle, the Diamond
Dot, the Cross S, the 666. A hun-
dred or more half-size reproduc-
tions of famous cattle and horse
brands—representing the heraldry
of the range—had been stamped
into a thick piece of goods with
excellent design and color har-
mony.
“I got a bunch of old branding
irons I picked up in Tucson,” Bill
drawled. “My idea was to hang
them over the windows for cur-
tain rods, and you can hang this
stuff for the curtains.”
One solid piece of goods four
yards long and four feet wide war<
a bright orange-red, and all
around the edges was an appliqued
frieze of green cactus, eentary
plants, mesquite trees, Mexicans
with burros and carts, cowboys
throwing lassos at steers, Indians
and wigwams.
“For the dining room,” Bill ex-
plained. “I bought a table to fit
this cloth. Or vice versa. It’s
hand-made. And say Ellen—you
see all that big blank red space in
the middle. Well, when friends
dine with us—dine with you—on
this cloth, they are to write their
names on that space somewhere
with a pencil. Then you can cro-
chet over the writing, or have Otm
cepcion do it, and have you a
swell m^jnory cloth. See?"
Ellen nodded, looking up at him
with violet, tear-touched eyes
She was Sitting on the floor hold-
Even so she had taj smile' a bit,
and presently she ansjvered him.
“It’s darling, Bill. : Honestly it
is. It s the cleverest; thing .I’ve
ever seen, and the prettiest. Both
of them. And the guests names—
however did you think.of it?”
“It Just came to me i|n a moment
of super-brilliance,” jie bragged
good-naturedly. R
“But it isn’t crochejj you mean.
It’s an—outline stitqV, I think.
Anyhow W'e’ll surely 3 do It. Ill
leam to Sew It myself. j I wouldn’t
let any servant in the svorld touch
my memory cloth! Eyer!”
She hugged the faf>ric to her
and buried her face inr.lt lovingly.
Then she began spreading and fold-
ing and planning—mirij-sewing as
any other home loving girl would
do.
She got out the napkins, which
matched the cloth but which were
less ornate. She found more bolts
of window drapes, in a Afferent
color combination and a different
set of brands. And ship found the
most colorful peasant i»tyle Span-
ish aprons that couM possibly be
imagined—gay things with droll
cartoons of lazy, sleepirg Mexicans
embroidered on tfceip, or of Jack
rabbits with huge ears, and wear-
ing larger Mexican sombreros, or
of a senorita being
an extremely fat Mtxic
Bill left her With hi
things, went on about Uhe myriad
other details that confijfcttted him.
Ellen was happy all Upat day, so
supremely so that It
see her, although he
why.
Toward sundown
msxrer norse* uroire
to tkHr corral and
arouH the slope of the; mountain.
Bill, mounted himself f»t the mo-
ment, gave chase. They took torn
on quite a long run, ijnd it was
more than half an htUr later—
wHl into the darkness] when b*
headed them back home and saw
Pablo Rivera take thenrf in charge.
Finding himself in a Contempla-
tive mood, Bill then .turned Ms
horse up the slope of a hill and
climbed for several mln$jtes, event*
ually coming to Die crest. Some*
thing about heights always pleased
him, exalted him.
"Whoa, Chief," he murmured,
and sat resting there fc his sad-
dle, slumped comfortably to
side. * He could see
through the night. He
off to the westward,
ably turned his gaze
There a thousand
'« 1
io of His
pwh a gate
L-
v
one
miles
away
lnevit-
below lay the new
The:
ranch. There in that
toady lighted now in
daws—he knew Ellen
busy working, planning,
The lights and the
that distance were
jewels.
He stared down at them a long
while. A tremendous loneliness
had suffused him.
(To Be Continued)
or more
^Durango
Con^ro^s should bo conc6rncd Gillette hs.vc failed to ^ct us Arc wc doomed inexorably to
I about, rather than about the out of it. Neither the New continue a dance of economic
political campaigns. In the Dealers mjr the Republicans death to the fiddling of the
QUESTIONS raoM readtos^ . sixth year of the Roosevelt (haw any ,|racticable program politicians? It is high time to
hut nra itfroiH h»oo„c, t «... i administration and in the ' t^restore^|normal^cmiditions^ponde^
a diet, but ara afraid because I am
nureing a seven-month baby ninth year since the beginning
PleasS advise me through yo u- of the depression such condi-
tions have not been restored.
GET YOUR LIVER RIGHT.
Your liver is the key to your health,
keep it working. Buttery’s Stom-
ach and Liver Pills win neip quickly
and pleasantly. 25 cents a bottle, ad.
column.”
Answer: There is no reason wh>
a mother who is nursing a bahy
should not keep her weight do”—
as weH as-a normal person. Thp*’
is a tendency for the body to in-
crease weight at this period any-
way, and extra precautions have to
be observed.
On the contrary, their restor-
ation seems farther away than
I ever. And we are frank to say
EDITOR S NOTE: Seven pamphlets
by Dr. Clendening can now be ob-
tained by sending 10 cents In coin,
for each, and a self-addressed en-
velope stamped with a three-cent
stamp, to Dr. Logan Clendening, in
care of this paper. The pamphlets
are: “Three Weeks’ Reducing Diet",
“Indigestion and Constipation". Re-
ducing and Gaining", "Infant Reed-
ing", "Instructions for the Treatment
of Diabetes”. "Feminine Hvgicnc"
and "The Care of the Hair and Slin“.
BARCLAY ON BRIDGE
that we do not see how the
election of such men as form-
er Senator Dickinson, on the
one hand, or the reelection of
such men as Senator Gillette,
on the other, can have any ef-
fect in bringing it closer. -It
was people like former Sena-
tor Dickinson who got the
country in its present situa-
tion. and people like Senator
FOOLISH COVERING
"COVER AN honor with an
honor” is a useful rule for people
who cannot think. But if you can
figure out the probable location of
other honors and secondary cards
in the suit, as you often can, you
will sometimes see that covering
an honor is the worst possible
play, just exactly what the de-
clarer is trying to make you do,
A Q 10 5
f A 8
+ A 5 2
4 K J 10 8
♦ K 9 4
V 10 9 6 3
♦ Q 9 7
♦ A 5 3
/V.
ui
5.
4 8 7 3
fQJ42
♦ K 3
*Q 9 6 4
4 J 6 2
i»K75
, ♦ J 10 8 6 4
472
(Dealer: North. Neither ride
vulnerable.)
i When the heart 3 was led
against South’s 3-No Trumps con-
tract here, he realized that he and
his partner had been rather ambi-
tions in their bidding. North had
started with 1-Spade, South re-
sponded with 1-No Trump, North
called 2-Clubs, South 2-Dtamoads
and North 8-No Trumps,
Declarer won the first trick In
the dummy to preserve his only
possible entry" to his hand. Then
fia aa eji^eayas to £M.h 4 dia-
monds, he led the 2 from dummy,
which Eas£ captured with the K.
The return of the heart Q was
taken with the K and the diamond
J offered. West handed the con-
tract to declarer by covering this
with his Q. The diamond A won
and the small diamond enabled
South to get back to his hand to
run the remaining diamonds and
finesse the spades.
West should have been able to
figure that if he had allowed the
diamond J to hold, the next iround
would have had to be won with the
A and declarer would have been
locked in the dummy.
• * •
Tomorrow’s Problem
4 A K 9 5
*2
4 A 10 9 6 4 3
410 4
SuRE! Bee Brand Insect Spray costs
a little more. BUT—it really KILLS
— flies, mosquitoes and many other
flying insects. Get Bee Brand and
you get results. Ask (or it by name*
4 4 8 2
4 J 8 4
4K Q
4 A K Q 9
7
4Q 10
4 10 7 6 s
3
4 J 8 5 2
48 3
4 J 8 7 6
4 A K Q • •
47
4 J 6 5 2
(Dealer: West: East-West vul-
nerable.)
Having lost two club tricks and
an over-ruffed club, and a heart
then being led, how should North
plan the balance of his play at
4-Spades ?
i\
RENT-
IS HARDER
TO PAY AS
YOU GROW OLDER
Let Us Explain How You Can
Becpme A Home Owner by
Paying Rent to Yourself A*
. . f
You Enjoy The Comforts of l
A MODERN HOME!
Alamo Lumber Cq.
J. T. Newman, Mgr.
w
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Putman, Harry C. The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 140, Ed. 1 Monday, June 13, 1938, newspaper, June 13, 1938; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1090175/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cuero Public Library.