The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 216, Ed. 1 Sunday, September 11, 1938 Page: 2 of 6
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i.
PAGE TWO
int CifcRO RiaGRD. Cli.RG, i lX.\5
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER ivia38
THE CUERO RECORD
-V 1
Established in 1894
Published Each Afternoon, Except .Saturday, and Sunday
by THE CUERO PUBLISHING CO., Ine.
Morning
!i
Stc’.vart Says - —
Current Camp-i-i^ns
A "3 n?marl:al>la
for Ugly \Void»
BARCLAY ON BRIDGE
Ml
Entered in the post offlre at Cuero, Texas, as second
Under Act of Congress. March 3, 1897.
class matter
MRS J C HOWERTON ...........
........... President
JACK HOWERTON
............ Publisher
BARRY C. PUTMAN ................
.................. Editor
PUTPF HOWERTON
Sports Editor
TCDD TILTON .................................................................. Advertising Manager
By CHARI.RS I*. STKWART
Central Press Columnist
WASHINGTON. Sept. 00.—The
its hedness but because it is so per-
j In particularly hard-fought cam-
nr:ens in the past candidates for
• Ifatlsnal Advertising Repre'entatlves: 'public office occasionally have re-
Tczas Dally Press League. Inc., 507 Mercantile Building, Dallas. Texas; jferred to their rivals as the nomi-
87# Lexington Avenue, New York City, 180 Michigan Avenue, Chicago, i necs of highly objectionable inter-
pr- 506 Star Building, St. Louis. Mo., 801 Interstate Building, Kansas e=ts—in a general way they have
City, Mo.; 1815 New Orpheum Building, Los Angeled, Calif.; 105 San- denounced their various opposition
gome Street, SAn Francisco, Calif. I rarties as perfectly awful.
------:- | Put it hasn’t been customary for a
Subscription Rates: j per-lidate to call his opponent by
name, add describe him as a “trai-
tor." a “betiayer”—as a crook, io
effect.
THE COUNTER- ATTACK
GOOD DEFENSE against a No'
Trump game usually has to take
the form of a counter-attack, re-
peated and repeated each time it is
repulsed by one of the declarer's
stoppers. You ran seldom beat {
such a contract except hv setting
up the small cards of some long j
suit, and you can seldom do that
except by keeping at the suit each j
chance you get.
♦ 96
¥ 7 4 3 2
♦ A 7
*Q 9 7 6 2 *•
--j 4 10 8754
. ¥ A 10
td! 4 6 2
S. I A A S 5 3
♦ A Q 2
¥ 9 8 5
♦ Q J 9 8
4 3
♦ 10
By Mall or Carrier—Dally and Sunday, one year 85.00, six months
$2A0, three months $1.25, one month 50c.
Weekly Edition by mail only, one year $2.00; six months $1.00 in DeWitt
and adjoining counties. Elsewhere, 1 year $2.26, 6 months $1.25.
*r Official Otgan of the City of Cuero and DeWitt County.
TELEPHONE NO. 1.
No Great Excitement
• • •
1 NO INCIDENT NOW
There may have been instances of
this sort of concentrated vitupera- '
l t’cn before my time — perhaps io
j early post-Civil war days. When
feelings were intensely bitter. -
And, now t^nd then, there were [
' Isolated cases of it in the still more I
• All sorts of crises loomed throughout the world as Labor! distant past. But, in that eta, luch
U.y approached, but the holiday came and went as such days j
come and go, with plenty of news and lots of good times but duel or the canihg administered by |
without any world-shattering upheavals. i Preston S. Brooks to Charles Sum- ;
: The President went to Maryland and said mildly over the that epoch| when a politician
radio that people Ought to be what they say they are, and that was called a “liar” it was an “inci- i
Divid J. Lewis, father of the parcel post and employers’ liabil-; not* o? ‘much* cons^uenS ;
ity would be, in his opinion, a good man to send to the Senate, either, if any other important new*
Roscoe Turner won the Thompson Trophy air race with i .»* stirring. ^ 0 m
as incredible number of miles per hour, setting a new record, when they WIN
The Davis cup was won by America over Australia, v j Yet my impression is that a candi-
Many hundred people were killed as the result of acci-| complfm^Ury ^namTs! * will j
dent, which is always distressing to contemplate. But in j forget it. ‘
many sections ot the country fewer were killed this yearj hl,If r^^”e"S “Sr.'bSE'S
than last, which is hopeful. j he wins or, being beaten, wins later, I
. France called out her reserves to man the Maginot 1 wou,d «u??s tnat he’ll become a
line, and Germany holds soldiers along her fronts. Hitler ^^""quite^a^ew of such candi-
doesn’t know whether to follow the advisers who urge im- I dates are bound to win in th* cur- ;
mediate strong action of those of more military experience i reThey*nte?cJntin^gfore ito°be j
who urge him to gaslow. He has, at last, wished on himself reckoned with,
that ring of foes he talked about so long. And the foes most; N0T BET^-EpjN*PA*RT|F(,
dreaded are those of his own household. So far he is holding! * This campaign is not very ugly, ;
off, hesitating, playing for time, and the tension eases every- ; as between Democrats atid Republi- j
u * | cans.
wneie‘ Indeed, on personal grounds, it’s
The next worrying point will be September fifteenth. ’ ** —
Meanwhile, there seem to be more jobs, a little spurt of new
business. Life is just one crisis after another. Americans
might as well drop anxiety between them.
♦ K J 3
¥ K Q J 6
♦ K 10 5
*KJ4
(Dealer: South. East-West vul-
nerable.)
This deal arose In a duplicate
tournament and at one table the
North-South players made a game
at No Trump which they did not
deserve. South opened with 1-
Heart, and instead of raising
hearts, North went to 2-Clubs,
South to 2-No Trumps and North
to 3-No Trumps.
At other tables the contract was
played at either 3-Hearts or 4-
Hearts. Perfect defense set the 4-
Heart contracts.
Where the No Trump was played
V^histling Car
been gentlemanly. The Republicans i
have said that the Democrats, indi- j
vidually, are all right—EXCEPT j
THE NEW DEAL DEMOCRATS.
They haven’t even charged that in-
, dividual New Deal Democrats are
1 personal cannibals.
And the New Deal Democrats j
j haven’t applied dirty epithets to the !
i Republicans. They’re said that the 1
| G. O. P. is reactionary, but not that i
j specific Republicans are treasonable
—only that they are mistaken “en j
masse.”
As for the Old Deal Democrats,
they’re half Republicanistic — not
that they’re Republican, but that
» Captain George Eyes to h, the British motor bullet, says
hit racing car ‘‘Thunderbolt” whistles when it is going over
tge Utah salt flats at 34*7 miles an hour. That is, it produces
a'whiAtling sound-effect as it rips through the air.
* JShere are some Interesting facts connected with that
phenomenon, when you start figuring it out. If it went faster, ^aierisTic^ 80,t>ian they ar# New
would doubtless produce a louder whistle. But if it went
twiolt as fast, maybe nobody would hear that whistle except
tfle driver. *
* At 360 miles an hour it would he doing six miles a min-
ute, one mile in 10 seconds, about half the speed of sound.
Double that speed, and the car would be going so fast that it
would Just about travel even with its own noise. If it blew a
horn, it would not be heard ahead—the sound and the car
would arrive at a given point forward about the same time, j } '‘ey’re the ones who exchange re-
Just an instantaneous shriek as the car passed, and then si-1 change them partisanly. They swap
lence. Would the sound waves travel backward? Or would
tlffcy be left hangihg in the air, so to speak, behind the fleet-
ly car, as smoke is by a fast locomotive when there is no
wind?
• * *
ITS HARD ON FRIENDS
Republicans and Old Deal Demo-
crats, then, can be polite to one an-
other. They’re friendly enemies.
Republicans are not friendly to
New Deal Democrats, but they’re
not violent.
Old and New Deal Democrats are
the folk who hate one another like |
poison.
words like “liar,” “traitor,” “black-
guard" — arid they specify whom
they mean—Secretary Icfces, Sena- j
tor Tyditigs, Senator Glass, Repre- *
sentative Lewis, the president him- t
_ j self.
Everyone has noticed how the whistle of a fast-moving i.iar, traitor, betrayor. et cetera, i
This is intra-party stuff.
Never have I heard poetical Ian- ;
guage so crassly expressed.
I can’t see how rivals, who have i
that phenomenon to the limit, where to the listener the ; *ve tear^be fri?ndTa*a?n.V 1 ru 1 *ntly’ •
sound presumably would almost disappear. A bystander might j -
o|Uy hear an instaneous noise from the whistle—also from the!? * * * * * * * * * * *
i *
'increasing pace, j *
for sure one of *
afltombile or locomotive rises in pitch as it approaches, and
tljen descends in pitch as it moves away from the listener.
The car moving with the speed of sound would be carrying
cRr—as the car flashed by.
* If Eyeston and his kind can stand the
awd metal and rubber hold out, we’ll know
ttfcjCtimes.
sr r»
37 YEARS AGO
# * ***** * * *
Cardinal Hayes
In the death of Cardinal Hayes of New York the nation,
wjth its people of a myriad faiths, may well feel a deep
sense of loss. For Patrick Joseph Hayes was more than a
dignitary of his own church. He was a fine example of the
American who has risen from humble beginnings to high place
without ever losing his sense of proportion.
. Cardinal Hayes served the Church he loved with earnest-
• (The following interesting
Items we clipped from an is-
sue of The Record of the year
1901:)
SEPTEMBER 11. 1901
S. J. McKinney has returned from
Floresville with his family and will
again make Cuero his home.
Miss Jessie McDonald of Cuero
accompanied by ner niece. Lucile
. . ... _ . , Smith, visited Mrs. A. Lowe Sun-
new; intelligence and devouon. He served his country with the L„v comln|, down an(1 murnlng on
same powers. He wa* a friend to high and low. Restrained In 1th, excursion .rain. -Victoria
utterance, friendly in' manner, he was loved by his own people j Times
and respected by all others who came into any sort of contact
with him or with his words or deeds.
May young America produce other great
the places which need their service!
souls to take
If we keep on producing and importing
have gold plated automobiles.
gold, we’ll yet
A G. and C. Mvrnitz of Mission
Valley were in Cuero yesterday on
According to that report of the National Emergency
Council, the South Is in bad shape every way but politically, j business"’’^^‘‘^^"l^r shorHv
It still has most of the key positions in Washington. for Louisville Kv where he wilt
‘take the medical course in th» uni-
versity of Louisville
From present indications, what survives of our civilization
will probably live in underground burrows to avoid air bombs.
The following bulletin was is-
, ......- ». • i sued at 3:30 p. m. by the president s
,, ™'y thf‘ “ “er*?„an“ther,.**neral Wa’ln Eur0P«-!Ph?S‘p^idcn1 conlinucc ,« e.„„
it will come next month. Hitler has the secret under his hat. The wounds arc becoming healthy
•---- -- The nourishment taken info the
The way Uncle Sam is snuggling up to our northern Ist0,nach gradu. liy n.-
Wcst led the diamond Q, which
was won with dummy's A. The
rltih 2 was led and taken with the
K. This was followed by the J,
which East also refused to win.
Then came the heart Q. which East
won with the A. Then, instead of
continuing: with his partner's origi-
nal opening, East switched to a
spade. South played low and the
Q was forced to win the trick. As'
West could not afford to lead a
diamond, he tried the heart 9,
which South captured with the J.
A club to the Q was taken by East,
who now played a diamond. South'
went right in with the king, cashed'
the heart Q and the 6 to the 7 in’
dummy made it possible to cash
two more cluba. A
Monday’s Problem
ANOTHER "TRIPLE THREAT" MAN
bJrtV. ITS ONLY
THE SHANK OV
(_ THE EVENING' j
[ vJHY DON'T
YOU
BEAT VT?
.11/.-
/a
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f Q 9 6 4
>43
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♦ 6 4
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♦ Q J 9 6.
4 A K 7 4r2
♦ J 10 9 7}
2 4
¥K 2 1
♦ A 10 l %
DEN
iHOPtTgkV
o
♦ K 8 3
¥ A 10 8 7 5
♦ K 8 2
*Q3
(Dealer: South, East-Wett Vul-:
nerable.) ■
With the club 5 led againtt
South’s 3-No Trump contract, how.
should he play to make his game ?.
Dr. Clendening Praises .
‘Horse and Buggy Doctor *
4
By LOGAN CLENDENING, M. D.
I AM DELIGHTED, as is every-
one else who knows him, in the
success of Dr. Arthur E. Hertz-
ler’i book, “The Horse and Buggy
Doctor”. It was made the Book-
of-the-Montii club selection for
August, and the reviews I have
read have an been enthusiastically
commendatory. Mr. Clifton Fadi-
man, one of the most discrimi-
nating, says that it is a far more
honest and real book than the
much touted “San Michele” and
the over-praised “The Citadel”.
Ot Course It Is, Mr. Fadiman.
but those of us who have known
Dr. Hertzler knew he could write
aething so affected as that silly
Dr. Clendening will answer
Questions of general interest
only, and then only through
bis column.
able story In an laii^tabls Why*
I am not going to spoil th# boMt
for you by quoting ot abstra84
ing it
He performed surgical
I at Mi
m
jrj
4 m
- I
I
.v' J
“Ban Michele” which always had
an air •< unreality over it for me.
And as for ‘The Citadel”, all 1
ban say is that Dr, Hertzler is a
REAL doctor.
‘The Horse and Buggy Doctor”
is the autobiography of a man
who with a good education in
medicine, elected to practice medi-
cine ia the little town of Halstead.
Kas. In the course ot time he
built a hospital there. He has
written a number of books on
medical subjects. Hs has mad^
many valuable original contribu-f
tions to medical knowledge. He
has practically revolutionized, for
ations during moat at bta etrfy
life, not in a Aoe operating room
in a hospital, but In th# kitflMn of
a farm bouse. The Mtehes table
was the operating room, the wash
boiler was the sterilizer, the
family doctor was the aaefertanh
I have done the same thing my-
self. For from a handicap We go#
some of the best results ever ob-
tained in surgery. Dr. Hectsler’s
book records a typical period ia
the medical life of oar western
states. It was a wholeaasne period
for the medical profession. There
was not the affectation and side
that doctors put en nowadays.
Incidentally, tt was easp on tha
patient’s pockotbook. I neve#
heard of a patient who protested
one of Dr. Hertzler’s Mm Per-
haps because they were “reason-
able”. Maybe that is whp people
had more confidence in doctors
then than now.
Only those at us who Xnow Dr.
Hertzler, though, know how really
good he is. In this book he likes
to give the impression that he ia
just a sort of homely, eonmsn-
sensa philosopher who has picked
up a little experience from a
country practice. He is, ae a mat*
ter of fact, the finest surgical
pathologist in the United State*
And ene of the deftest operator
I ever saw. Anybody who ifiads
this book must come away ¥&h
>> x -
] "•• ••. • * '
ir-. V W-M
biiSa
*
m
im *
m
One-Minute Test
1. Who la prime minister of Can-
ada?
2. What are the largest trees In
the world?
3. In what opera is the famous
•Toreador Song” sung?
Hints on Etiquette
The keynote of all good corre-
spondence Is simplicity. FtoWety
language and handwriting flour-
ishes should be avoided.
Words of Wisdom
Every man is a volume If fdu
know .how to read him.—Charming.
Today's Hoi scoops
Most persona whose birthday oc-
curs today ato sympathety.
and kovinr. Of friendly ~
tey usually are in good
1. W. L. Mackenzie Kins lib-
eral.
t. The giant Sequoias of i
Ida. »
3. “Carmen”. j
RECORD WANT ADS FOR RESULTS
instance, the use of loc i! nr.**lhe- .
sla in surgery. To ilus smaWH0101* TC99*ci for hum«
town have cams so many patients
that he has had to enlarge his
hospital several times. He treats
many hundred patients a day. He
is more respected for his knowl-
edge and skill than any other
surgeon in that district, and 1
know because that is the district
in which I live.
Dr. Hertzler tells this remark-
MARRY
ASSOCIATION 1
H
■DIT'OR'S NOTE: Seven pamphlet#
■y Dr. Clendening can now b« ob-
tained by sending 10 cents in coin,
for eoch, and a self-addressed en-
velope stamped with a three-cent
■tamp, to Dr. Logan Clendening, in
care of this paper. The pamphlets
are: "Three Weeks' Reducing Diet",
"Indigestion and Constipation". "Re-
ducing and Gaining". "Intant Feed-
ing" Instructions for the Treatment
of Diabetes". "Feminine Hygiene**
and "The Care of the Hair and Skin**.
DAILY CROSS WORD PUZZLE
J. M Delonev tells us he will i
hare the same school he taught lust !
year located seven miles from
Cuero. Mcversville and Mission Val- '
ley This will be hL fifth year j
teaching there, which shows he
must fill the bill.
ACROSS
9—A man who
leaves of
l—A young sow
vulsively
deals in rags
corolla
5—A kind of
24—Vim
13—Apprehend
29—A perch 1
child's dress
teolloq.)
15—One who in-
fowl
10—Region
25—Sea eagle
herits
32—Comer
11—A tune
26—Color of a
18—Before
33—Listen to
12—Rings of a
mole's coat
20—A ghost
34—Merit
chain
28—Conjunction
21—Resolute
37—Grow old
14—Man s nick-
30—Serf
22—A hop kiln
39—Plural
name
31—Pacifv
23—A kind of
(abbr.)
15—Hectogram
35—Near to
roll
40—Editor
labbr )
36—Symbol for
27—One of the
_ (abbr.)
18—Admire
tantalum
•
READ THIS FIRST:
Judy Rogers, New York heiress, ob-
tains a job as a model shortly after
her father loses his fortune in a
financial crash. The same day she
learns that Craig Denby, the man she
loves, has married another girl. Afraid
of marriage, Judy had put him off
once too often. Her father goes west,
with her stepmother, her own mother,
remarried, is abroad and Judy moves
to a small hotel. She finds solace in
the company of Ronald Birrell. bril-
liant young attorney from Tennessee
who has just joined the Arm of her
father’s lawyers. When Judy calls her
best friend, Marjorie Barton, Craig
answers the phone. Judy submits some
dress designs to the wholesale house
where she is modeling. When another
employe steals them, she appeals to
Ronald for advice. Judy wonders if
she is becoming interested in Ronald.
She tries to go it alone, even avoiding
Ronald, but he locates her and ar-
ranges to take her out for the evening.
Judy learns from Marjorie'that" Craig
and his bride of a few weeks have
separated.
NOW GO ON WITH THE STORT:
Judy forgtjt th#
t in the
For a little while___„
brass bed that waited fof-------
hotel downtown. She didn’t think
of the window that stuck, and the
hot water that often Was a trickle.
1
39
neighbor must make Mexico feel lonesome.
j creased. Puls* 120, temperature 100 2.'
Signed by all attending physicians.
17—Suppose
19— Note of the
scale (old
form i
20— Ancient
country in
Asia at east
end of Medi-
terranean
sea •
21— Weep con-
DOWN
1— A strong
wind 6
2— Rainbo*.
3— Furnished 7
4— Grasps
5— Symbol for S
The old
name of
modern
Chosen
One side of a
leaf of a
book
41 — Withered
42— Shouted
43— A kind of
gull-like bird
radium
Metallic
rock
A midship-
man
Papa
Answer to previous puzzle
EM
A
P
T
i
~R
IT
c
A
Me
193S. King Feature* Syndic*- In-.
CHAPTER 13
“WHOEVER thought that Mary
would leave Craig so soon?”
The words that Marjorie had just
said stayed in the air, waiting for
Judy to lake them down, to accept
them.
Before she could do so, Marjorie
hurried on.
"I forgot, Judy darling. You
don't know anything about it.
Craig sort of turned the town up-
side down hunting for you, and
Mary read the signs wrong. She
couldn't grasp that he was doing
what anyone of us would do for
someone special. So she walked
out.”
“But she mustn’t do that! Craig
married her,” Judy said thought-
fully.
“Of course he did, and even with
our background, Judy, we usually
give a marriage months.”
“Marjorie, I'll never marry.
Never! It doesn’t work.” She said
it with vrhenunce.
* You've always said t h a t,”
Marjorie told her. "Maybe you are
vise.”
“No. she isn’t,” Ronald’s voice in-
lerrupted as he returned from his
ambulations on the terrace.
"There's a moon hanging up in the
: ky tonight that. is calculated to
make any girl change her mind.”
“That's the trouble,” Judy said
quickly. "Moons give people mad
moments. Their temperature speeds
up. their he.arts jump hoops—and
suddenly it's daylight. No, mar-
riage is about as solid as cello-
phane or tis3U° paper. It's not on
mv sell?dale.”
"It’s because you haven’t been
proposed to by the right man,'
suggested Ronald. . “I know a
m.ghty pleasing proposal—”
“Save it for a more appreciative
audience.” 7.'-rjo:ie volunteered,
laugliing. “How about some mugs
of hot chocolate? I collected the
mugs in Holland and I take every
opportunity to use them. We’ll
have toasted cheese sandwiches,
too, and toast with honey butter.”
It was intimate and warm and
friendly by the open wood fire in
the dsn at the Bartons’ apartment.
world that she had entered. <
Judy mentioned that atss htoft
heard Mary singing the nigflt be-
fore. *
—------------“Did you like It?” the girl tasked
She almost believed that she would, quickly. ,
be going up town two Mocks to her^ «very You made me want
to cry.”
T’m sorry. But people Vka to
cry, dbn’t they? Or may## th#J
can’t help It.” j
It was Mary herself who *
Craig'S name into the conv
“Yod’re an old friend of 1—„ —_
Rogers. You know how special hs
is. t never have known anyone
quite so flee.”
“He’s a dear,” Marjorie supplied,
“tie and Judy and I have 2*tad
and swum and danced togetHa# tot-
years." tfi'isg
Not one word was said 4bout the
fact that Mary had left Craig.
Gradually Judy realized thi# Mar-
jorie had received the new* from
Craig, not Mary. She was saying
nothing, waiting tor him t# Met.
When they hswl dropped Mary at
ive them, Jody
own father’s pehtbolise, Slipping
into bed between slllrth sheets, With
the cool -wind blowing the white
ruffled curtains at the long win-
dows.
For a little while Ronald Was
just any attractive young man
whom she had met, liked, accepted
as a member of her circle,
It was he who brought the eve-
ning to a close. “Come on, Judy.
You must hunt for a job tomor-
row.”
“Of course. But maybe I won’t
hunt. Maybe I’ll give up. I doh’t
like poverty.” She said It sloWiy,
eyes on the blue-red flames.
“I didn’t like it, either, but it
can be overcome,” the red-headed
attorney told her solemnly. “W#’re
ofT. Judy.”
“I’m picking you up for tea. about
five tomorrow,” MarjufiS an-
nounced. “I want you t® meet
Mary Banner. You are the only
one who can help her.”
“How?” Judy would have said
she was the last one who could help
the girl.
“By letting her see that you and
Craig aren’t sending out silent S.
O. S.’s. She has a notion you are;
What if we are. Marjorie ? Judy
asked silently. What cpn I do about
it? I loved him long before she
met him. He loved me, too. But
I was so blind. L/>ve doesn’t last.
Maybe it’s-better for Mary to find
it out quickly.
Aloud she said: “Of course td
like to meet Mary. I winted to
wait awhile, until I’m prosperous,
but tomorrow is as good as any
day.**
Meeting Mary would help her to
understand Craig’s change of heart
much better, she thought.
So, the next afternoon when MMr-
jorie came for her, she was ready.
She had put on a gr#bn frock
whose lines breathed allure and ex-
pense, and a scrap of green felt
made a hat for her bright brown
hair. Her jacket, gloves, slippers
and bag were brown.
She grimaced at herself in the
mwror as she waited for the eleva-
tor. She still looked like something
with a Park Avenue addrem. She
had clothes, clothes, clothes. Noth-
ing else. >
“We are meeting Mary at an out
of the way place,” Marjorie ex-
plained. “if a columnist got wind
of the trio we are making, hs
would use it to inform the public.
You’ll like her. She’s qttiet Mnd
sweet and appealing.”
Judy did like Mary Banner Dau-
by. She was slim, not very tall,
and her eyes and hair wera almost
black. Her smile was wide aifd
eager and a little baffled, as though
she was half frightened of this new
the address she ga
spoke slowly: “She
didn’t
3
JB connive
to make Craig propose, tost* toe
adores him. What happened, Mar-
>» I*’
t-joria was a straight forward
She came to the ppMtf at
“It’s you, my Innocent lamb. If
you will let Craig behold you, ao
Mary will know you aren't a dis-
turbing ghost in his life, and Craig
can see that you are getting
right amount of vitamins#--
drinking plenty at orange juice and
milk, he won t worry abrtit yob.
Then Mary will understand that
She made a good-sized ir fb»Mtoflr
a sand pile.” ___
Judy did not want to see O#if.
She desperately wanted - bito On
make a go of Ms marriage. She
herself was entirely out of Mi# Ufa.
She might catch her breath, ot^he
sight of broad shoulders in aeioou
that held a reminiscent swing, Mr
the low laugh of a man on a sub-
way train. But they were remind-
ers of something that was quite,
quite gone. She 0bul4 cry a little,
now and then, but not he or j
else would ever know it.
“1 don’t want to see
answered, “but suppose 11
to him. Where is ne st
“At his club. HOw at
Mm drop in tonight?
until morning, won’t you!
“Marjorie, you’re a di *
hot water at the hotel
off at noon because a
1 was dreading an icy
course I’ll stay."
But she refused to see
could grapple with i
could defeat ghosts. Mtit___
Instead she telephoned to Mis. L
•Judjri Where are
there was no healing for the crafts
in her heart, she whispered, as Qfl
voice came singing over the wire*? '
(To Bo Continued) -
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Putman, Harry C. The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 216, Ed. 1 Sunday, September 11, 1938, newspaper, September 11, 1938; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1091010/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cuero Public Library.