The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 136, Ed. 1 Monday, June 12, 1939 Page: 2 of 6
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the janitor to send out to Di« H** '
nic grounds. And on top1 oBJtmt
Miss Sarah and Miss Anne |Mpf-
fet came to town. • J*»| J J
Miss Sarah was tall and a
and her face was ruggedQ]
“Something like Abranar
coin’s twin sister would
looked if he had had one,* Oor-
rinne once said. J
Miss Anne was big and bMwy
and her round eyes beamed in her
round face. They had been .the
best paying members in the church
for which Reverend Melton , va«
preaching at the time of his C
child’s birth. .
“Call her Sarah for me," flie
deep tones of Miss Sarah advised.
Anne for me'," her sister differed.
Ths child had been named Sarah
Anne. Mrs. Melton put her own
favorite names away in a inqiltal
drawer and hoped she wbalB nave
another daughter so she couldjum
one of them.
The two sisters had been
erous to a fault in sen<
for Christmas, birthdays and com-
mencements. Lovely fragile hose,
French perfume, gold lockets.
Things they loved and could never
wear. But the actual money»for .
college and camps, about w|jich^
Sarah Anne dared to dream during*
her growing-up years, never came
Just Miss'Sarah and Miss Ann^
for their yearly week at the Inr}
after the parsonage family move^
to a new town.
But now Sarah Anne did
mind entertaining them. She di
mind any tasks, for there ws
Jack, always somewhere in titf
outskirts of her mind, waiting •#
her. He was busy with the pMF
for his installation at the airpA
and the dinner which the Chai
ber of Commerce was tendering^
famous son. There were new*
per men and photographers cons*
every day from everywhere, is
would wave at Sarah AnneW
passing, run in to talk a mid*
before he hurried away. Life <s
as gay and bright as a merrjfb-
round with new horses. ■*
Sarah Anne had a new drestdr
the formal banquet—a lovely dd-
en color, in taffeta. She waned
the morning of the celebratioAnd
hurried to the window. It eq a
beautiful day. “A perfect day she
murmured.
At five o’clock the teiaipna
rang. It rang with a dreary, mo*
getic cadence. How she kne^that
the pattern of the Jaytiao
changed. Scrah Anne hadimali
idea. But when she said. >?"
she was not gay. expectantwait-
ing any longer.
(To Be Continued)
swellest girls I know.”
“Thanks.” How could she say,
“And you’re the swellest man I
know” ?
That had been the beginning, and
pretty soon Jack was saying, “How
did this happen, Judy? Where did
it begin? Why, I love Sarah Anne.
In the back of my mind I’ve always
intended to marry her. I can’t
think of life without her.
“But when I heard your voice on
the telephone that night—" That
voice that was deeper than most
girls’ voices, with music in its
depths. He remembered the wild
impulse to see the girl who pos-
sessed -it
“Maybe we are being sentimen-
tal,” Judy said, and tried to smile.
“After all, 24 hours ago you didn’t
know me!”
“But some things come quickly.
Sometimes one is sure . • ."He
broke off miserably. “Judy," he
cried fiercely, “believe me when I
say I love Sarah Anne!"
Looking into the anguish tn his
eyes, she nodded softly. “Of course
you do. And so do L Finish your
coffee and let’s go buy her a pres-
ent.” ’
Judy put her hand on a package
ori the seat beside her. It was the
choker and bracelet she had bought
for Sarah Anne. They were made
of a dozen strands of crisp, her
beads woven together and would
go with the sHly, adorable linen
frock which made the minister’s
daughter look as though she were
going to a party, and couldn’t ever
have been worn by Judith.
She was remembering how quiet
she and Jack had been on the
homeward flight, and how steady
and errave his eyes had been when
he helped her from the plane.
“If it helps any—though what
good a roving flyer’s opinion is. I
don’t know—I think you’re glori-
ous, Judy.”
His words were safe. But his
eyes and the touch of his hand on
her arm took them and made them
perilous.
Anyway, she must forget. How
could anything which had hap-
pened in the span of a clock re-
main always? Maybe she needed
some sleep.
But during the week that fol-
lowed Judith seldom we..t any
place where Sarah Anne was likely
to be. At first Sarah Anne thought
the other girl was busy. Then she
began to wonder. But she was too
occupied to think about it much.
School ended. She went often to
talk to Bob Kennedy.
The Sunday school picnic was
being held and she had to count
out glasses, plates and cups tor
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Fighting Smallpox
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“Maybe we are being sentimeatal," Judy said.
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tfa tilt
Mass vaccinations were ordered as Onondaga County battled an outivfeak
of smallpox in upstate New York. Here 9-year-old Dorothea Webstefr, of
the Onondaga Indian Reservation, smiles bravely as she is immuniatfl by
Dr. Charles D. Shields and Nurse T. F. Stone. Meanwhile authorities
pressed search in 22 states for 197 former inmates of Onondaga Peniten-
tiary, feared to be carrying the germs and endangering all personwwith
whom they come in contact. r
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Brightest Cadet
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Stanley W. Dziuban
Cadet Stanley W. Dziuban, of Yon-
kers, N. Y., leads the graduating
class of the U. S. Military Academy
at West Point, N. Y., in academic
standing. With 456 members re-
, ceiving diplomas and commissions
as second lieutenants, it is the larg-
est graduating class in the history
of the academv.
*
--
IT WAS Judith who had driven
past the hospital, and her wide
brown-gold eyes had seen the two
who came down the broad, white
steps together. She stepped on the
gas, let the speedometer mount to
70, 75, 80. She wanted to get away
from herself. Not in the sky to-
night. Jack was up there, would
be there always for her now.
So she raced down the night and
her thoughts would not stay be-
hind. So much had happened today,
and yet—nothing, nothing at all.
That was the irony of life. Why
couldn't a bugle blow or a curtain
fall when something ended or
something began? Why did events
suddenly take shape from the fog
or mist?
It had happened that morning,
when Jack came to meet her for
lunch. His face was jubilant and he
strode on his own clouds. Because
he must confide m someone he had
taken h?r hands and held them as
he said: “I’m to manage the air-
port! And we’re starting the
school!” He broke off ruefully. “It’s
every fellow’s dream, but I let my-
self go into a tailspin of double
whoopee. You’re a girl, you may
not see it—”
She interrupted, indignant, then.
*■ “I do see it! Don’t I fly? And now
—oh, now, you won’t be going
away!” She hadn’t meant to sound
so reverent, so grateful, so adoring.
Hadn’t realized that she had until
he looked at her quizzically.
“You’re glad?”'
“Moce glad than I have any right
to be!” That was meant to be said
with laughter, but the laughter
didn’t come. So the words stood
out, clear and distinct, as though
a sky-writer had inscribed them.
The tall young man looked at
her seriously, questioningly. Then
. his voice became coolly impersonal,
as though it did not know how to
respond. “Shall we hunt a place for
lunch?”
Lunch had been a quiet meal in
a large restaurant There were peo-
ple everywhere, but no one talked
much. Judy and Jack might have
been any two people at a table for
two. A boss and his secretary. A
brother and a sister. A husband
and a wife who couldn’t think of
anything to say, or couldn’t see the
need of saying anything. Certainly
there was nothing to make the
waiter think that the girl had told
the boy she cared for him more
than she should. At least, so Judy
thought, as her car leaped down
the miles.
Jack had been busy all after-
noon, .going over charts and maps
and contracts. She had idled the
time ^way at a movie, looking into
shop windows, wishing it was time
to lea\e. Then, when Jack met her,
he shook his head.
“One more matter to take up.
The conference is called for eight.
It’s a good night and the trip’s
short. Can’t we wait over?’L
In the afternoon’s excitement
she thought her admission had
faded from his mind. She was re-
lieved and began ft> talk and laugh
again. After all, couldn't he think
He had misunderstood?
So they bad gone to dinner, at a
small, dusky restaurant, this time
where blue candles burned low on
tables covered with yellow clothes,
and there were booths, discreetly
hidden from the other diners. Even
now Judy didn't know how the sub-
ject had come up. why it had been
necessary to mention Sarah Anne’s
nu me.
But after a while she couldn’t
misunderstand that battled, young,
hurt look in Jaeks eyes. Even his
words didn’t surprise her.
“Judy, you re one of the two
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Sr ”»n
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CHAPTER NINE
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WRITTEN FOR AND RELEASED BY
CENTRAL PRESS ASSOCIATION (
---- AX-:.-; -ION. ....
■i u. u >• is.' ;.d
Ji’Lh'H < r < I "ixu*:
i::al a chilflhtmi rolu&i.t e v. aii
JACK COURTXEV. v.h<> Bt’mns si:<!
den fame by dying the Eat ilic. T<>
Peityvilie Hi»s
BOB KENNEDY, close frienct of Jae\ s
receiving a broken legr in a Hash at
receiving a broken leg* in
the airport.
• • . •
YESTERDAY: Judy tells Sarah Anne
she is going away because she fell
in love "with the wrong aviator guy."
Later Sarah Anne and Jack visit the
hospital.
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OW YOU CAN GET
A NEW PERSONALITY
are
BARCLAY ON BRIDGE-
Tomorrow’s Probtem
2
When Do We Eat?
7 1
?3
Th s i
that are the staff oi life for her hungry family.
By Shepard Barclay
“Ths Authority on Authorities"
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
G. P.: “Is the use of injections for
the relief of varicose veins advis-
able? If so, can it be administered
from face-lifting, in which sagging by the ordinary practitioner or is
4 A K 9
* J 1093 2
♦ K
*K 8 7 4
ac
N.
ui
s.
4 J 10 6 4 2
W K Q 8 7 4
♦ Q 8
*5
A Q 8 7 5 3
V A 65
♦ J 10 9 3
A io
4 il J 3
V 7 2
♦ Q 9 8 5 2
A J 9 8
suit and
Trump
uncon-
It is the
’ on which the patient has
hung all inadequacies, all dissatis-
ali unpleasant duties of social life.
OI,
EDITOR’S NOTE: Dr. Clendening ha.
seven pamphlets which can be obtained by
readers. Each pamphlet sells for 10 cents.
For any one pamphlet desired, send 10
cents'in coin, and a self-addressed envelope
stamped with a three-cent stamp, to Dr.
Loean Clendenin", in care of this paper.
The pamphlets are: "Three Weeks’ Reduc-
ing Diet", "Indigestion and Constipation”,
•‘Reducing and Gaining”. "Infant Feed-
ing”, "Instructions for the Treatment of
Diabetes". "Feminine Hygiene” and "The
Care of the Hair and Skin.”
came the divergence In some
cases South now bid 2-No Trumps
and North 3-No Trumps In one
cas? North bid 2-Hearts, South
3-Hearts and North 4-Hearts.
Since all of the contracts were
made, the heart contract tri-
umphed As soon as North won
the opening trick with the spade
A he led a club to the K and
finessed the club 10 to the A. as
the deciding plays of the deal.
East returned his heart 5 to the
9 The club-5 was ruffed with the
heart A the diamond J brought
the Q. K and A. and the rest was
easy with the loss of just two
aces and one spade
.1.
A
4 None i.
♦ None
♦ A 7 6 5 4 2
A A Q J 9 6 3 2
(Dealer West. East-West vul-
nerable )
If East opens the bidding here
with 1-Heart and his side there-
after passes, how should North
kX.^*** x'~ —
l^^k. '
----n I ried t0 a ^ire to get a good job, in
By LOGAN CLENDENING, M. D. both of which cases the facial dis-
I HAVE been visiting a good tigurement was a handicap.
many clinics lately, mostly in the | One patient said she hated her*
easteYn part of the country, and feel I mother and sisters' because “they
that some of the things I have seen are so beautiful and do not realize
will be of interest to my readers, so what I go through.”
I will-describe them. I
One of the most astonishing was Regarded as Handicap
a clinic on plastic surgery for the I With many of these cases for
repair of disfigured noses J-
other facjal disfigurements.j saw nose“had been looked on as a han-
after the operation, and the change | and emotionafadjustment
was i
hooked noses of hideous appearance “hook”'
^..1 o 4 •••* i «r li i* fk I’oziL’ ' i
I factions, all procrastinations, and
all unpleasant duties of social life,
and he has come to depend on it not
only as a reasonable escape from
competition but as a protection from
, social responsibility.
In many cases, because of this at-
i titude of depefidency the operation
I does not lead to a complete mental
adjustment and plastic surgeons are
i beginning to utilize psychiatrists in
their work in order to complete re-
adjustment.
There is practically no form of
facial disfigurement, either as a re-
sult of scars or natural or heredi-
tary changes, which cannot be im-
proved by the modern facial sur-
SALUTE THE MAJOR
MANY ADDICTS of match
point duplicate kick away scores
by laying too much stress on the
value of No Trump contracts as
against major suit ones This is
all very well and good if the part-
ner of the suit bidder h'as an even
distribution, but if he possesses
a singleton his hand will nearly
always produce one more trick at
a fitting major suit than at No
Trump, and this is usually the
case also if he holds a doubleton
One ruffed trick can mean the
difference between the side scor-
ing 120 for tricks at the majors
an even 100 at No
4 Q 9 8 4
V J 8 5
4 A 3
A A 7 6 3
4 10 7 6 5
V A 10 3
4 J 10 7 6
A K 2
East Both sides vul-
(Dealer
nerabte 1
At most tables of a big tourna-
ment the same bidding occurred
for the first two rounds of this
deal, with North calling 1-Heart,
South 1-No Trump North 2-Clubs ..
and South 2-Diamonds. Then I and South bid ’
4 A 2
H K Q 9 6 4
4 K 4
A Q 10 5 4
1 1
the time of the year when scene* !’Te this are being erected wi’h
•h' tic regularity throughout the bint world. But owinir to the l<uig
.. the intervals between meals for the young robins shown here
u.x “e.'.ii/ loagt r, as mother finds it tough dmying to procure the worms
Answer: The injection treatment
One of the important features of : tory. jt can be administered by
ity that occurs in the patients. A
recent study of patients in the Grad-
uate Hospital of the University of
Pennsylvania showed that in almost
all cases those with faeial disfigure-
ment had an emotional handicap
that was directly dependent upon
the disfigurement. This is quite
natural, and reasons for facial re-
pair were very practical, ranging all
the way from a desire to get mar-
plastic surgery for the
andp yaaf^ie scar, harblip or misshapen
I saw 1
patients, some of them before and dicap. Its importance in the**soc7al
almost unbelievable. Laige,, sciously all embracing.
turned into straight Greek ■
noses. Large, hypertrophied noses ,
Dr. Clendening will answer
questions of general interest
only, and then only through
his column.
are made to conform to the proper ;
proportions and angles of the face.
Plastic surgeons have learned
that they must study their patients
carefully before operations. This
constitutes probably the greatest ,
single advance in their work. They j
have learned to set up a standard of I
facial proportions and make careful I
measurements before the operation i
to see that the final result will con-
form to these ideal measurements. |
In no braneb of surgery has more “
improvement been ntade by those
who specialize in it.
Face-Lifting
I also saw some amazing results ;
chins and flesh around the eyes were *he use of a specialist advisable?”
improved without leaving a single | — ...
visible scar J of varicose veins is very satisfac-
One of the important features of : tory. It can be administered by a
the work is the change in personal- general practitioner.
Morning
Pi
ti
ami
from
TELEPHONE NO. 1.
lean Greeters In Canada
■ al
Monday.
of the stops made
ci
,4
ftalistjc observers expected, by a big majority. And the
Slain by Trooper
1
Joan Stevens «
J
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-----------,YS AMERICA
OPPOSES PORE5GN V/AR
i^it it would be an act of appeasement.
(ferman Food Shortage
American sympathies go out to the German people as the
“TTtHE American Publid is still
g overwhelmingly opposed to
military participation in a foreign
•”
-Y- '
m
John Burns. Alfred Wright arc!
Joe Benjamin on the Sap train Dr.-
evening from Cclkge Station, where
they have been attending rchool.
£ The English people, whose language
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shipments H||
are t 11
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Hr;
Ana
I y if, if. if. it. if. if. Jf, if. q:'
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President I
Publisher ,
Editor [ 1
Sports Editor : cf (ia..s
cheering crowds. This is particularly true
neitr the border
t At Revelstoke, for
wonujn as “a wide spot in the road,” 500 American school
ci^gfen from Wenachee, Wash., crossed the border and lined 1
A
THE CUERO RECORD
Established in 1894
Published Each Afternoon, Except Saturday, and Sunday
by THE CUERO PUBLISHING CO., Inc.
I Y -fi *
Mrs. P. W. Wagner. Mr-. G. liar- j
-Iris and Miss Minnie Burroughs ■
(passed through Cuero*tuJi>.
. jRockport eniYiute to Victoria.
* Afi *
ifod situation there becomes known. A dispatch from Berlin
^res some rather surprising details. Housewives have to stand
ih line to buy meat two days a week, and are allowed only a
Ifttle at a time. It is hard for a family to get as many as half a
dozen eggs a week. The weekly butter allowance is one-third
oi a pound per person. Coffee is almost unobtainable. Apples
afcd oranges are rare luxuries, although recent
ffpm Spain have partially relieved this situation. There
ifcrious other privations.
The food shortage is not dangerous, officials explain. No
QUALITY* PRINTING IS
I not extravagant m P’.e Record of-
fice. prices i casnriar.ie
•X if.
head milliner f or
is conienipldtiiiR
ia visit to her home near Waco cim-
[ ir.g the summer.
-fi m Y-
Mi’s. F. L. Chapman ’.ver.t to Hou:-
j ton tins morning .on a few days’
. visit with 1. r son. K Iyar.
; 37 YEARS AGO
. Y M V. i. X y X i
'Tiie foR'".ing ir.ting
item ".<■ clipped l:oi i :.n r-
sue of The Record <>1 til tar
1902:
from embroilment in foreign diffi-
culties; unemploymeht and inse-
sion which wiped out jobs, assets
' ---- : kutu satiiiKO ua jumiuiia vx xaiiiiuvOf
W^y-'have always done. The younger generation, and others > the New Deaf and the future politi-
#ho think they have to adopt any current change to show
j----------.. ...... .... .:
4
* Second, war materials come first. German man-power r
engaged primarly in producing arms and military supplies,
ajid even a great deal of the food produced is stored for war
jmrposes.
•■There will doubtless be plenty of food whenever the Nazis
decme to return to normal production and distribution, for
normal purposes.
Y-
Miss Nixon.
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■ Wm. Pincham and wife of Yoa- ‘
I ... . . . ! kum and E. R. Moulc.in and wife
^Readers over here have been a little surprised to find, in !of Sweet Hon,e ; pent a davs
f Stories of the progress of the King and Queen across Can- last week as guests of Mr. and Mrs.
h that there are nearly always many Americans in the J R Mouldin "lui returned tome
t j . . .... * x j Monday.
! of the stops made * y
Misses Mollie and Adeline Nqlan i
example described by a newspaoer canie in 011 the train this ’ truing
American school
L UCUe.
Foreign Pronunciation
- Name-trouble is coming to be chronic in this country.
I Tijat is, the spelling and pronunciation of foreign names. We
have begun to discover that most place-names in Europe are
g not pronounced as we used to pronounce them, and many ot; SXionniS'chers X queX*
Us feel that we have to pronounce and spell them just as the I carefully selected cross section of
natives do. And that gets us into endless trouble. I vot?rs in,al! P.arts of the country
I eaca week, indicate that the three
-Millions of Americans must have been caught in a typical mam preoccupations of American
<&mma the other day when news came that the Yankee | ?hS”ttt5e„prSdnXt:tZ:,u0£
clipper had landed at Marseilles, France. Or maybe at “Mar- i States ought to do to protect itself
toe latter the ^nchl^™^^. s -
UfSFand the former the English Way. i curity, a hangover from the depres- 1
Old-lashloned Americans tend to call it -Mar-sails," as ’
cal course of this country.
There is a strong revival of inter-
i- people would like to see a Republi-
ran in 1Q1fi Thrno n-»an
„ - . - - .—------ ac- •
$al opposition, perhaps, was even more than the three-to-
&e ’
for political reasons voted against their own judgment.
4 Whether the Townsend movement is really stopped, how-1
#er, it is hard to say. It depends on what Congress does, from I
, BOW on, in the realm of economic security for elderly people;
Ad their dependents’. The social and political force generated
ft this movement has not spent itself, and much of its aim
may be realized in other ways.
Congressional leaders are already busy with legislation to ‘—
ifltertase the maximum pensions now provided under the So-
cial Security Act. The House ways and means committee pro-
j£se.s that the federal government increase its top contribu-
tion to state old-age assistance, now $15 a month per person.'
tg $20 a month. To Townsendites this is mere chicken-feed.
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Entered in the post office at Cuero. Texas, as second class matter
Under Act of Congress. March 3, 1897.
__
MRS. J. C. HOWERTON
JAOK HOWERTON
KRY C. PUTMAN
TE HOWERTON
•s-i
t.TUNF. 12. 1902J
uc.’t r rsiiD-e .
..io i : : we-.!: i
ooe is starving. But there is a surprising scarcity, for these ‘t.
rtasons: I
First, the government will not, or can not. pay cash to im-
port food supplies, and has to get along with such foreign
fyjdstuffs as can be obtained by barter t Joan Stevens frail j4.ypar.nW eirl
" of Mauch Chunk, was slain wh ’e
seated in rear seat of a slate police
car after, according to te-tunc’ y of
two troopers, she “threatened" them
with a toy cap pistol (shown be-
low). She was shot six times. Corp.
Benjamin Franklin was held. The
■troopers said they were trvtng to
obtain some information un re-
cent robberies m I’ennsyivuiiia.
Mrs. H. J. I'oiiii ’.
in F 11 A:.
_ ‘on besinesi.
National Advertising Representatives:
j - Texas Dally Press League. Inc., 50? Mercantile Building, Dallas. Texas; i
870 Lexington Avenue, New York City, 180 Michigan Avenue, Chicago,, H *i rnrii ••
Dl-i 505 Star Building. St. Louis, Mo., 801 Interstate Building, Kansas ’
Qty, Mo.; 1015 New Orpheum Building, Los Angeles, Calif.; 105 San-
•ome Street, San Francisco, Calif.
Subscription Rates:
Fv Mail or Carrier—Daily and Sunday, one year $5 00, six months
$250, three months $1.25. one month 50c.
Weekly Edition by mall only, one year $2.00; six Months $1.00 in DeWitt 1 daughter Mi > Daisy
and adjoining counties. Elsewhere 1 year $2.25, 6 months $1.25.
Official Organ of the City of <>uero and DeWitt County.
to show
ieir modernity, struggle to say “Mar-say,” with just a trace est in European affairs, Gallup goes
an “1" on the end or it, and have a terrible time about it. I
E To many Americans this strained effort to modernize our i of military participation, to Eng-
x c ; land and France. This reaction has
logical, but Wc rapidly gained ground with the
: progress of the Nazi regime in Ger-
| many. Americans regard the growth
; of Nazi and Fascist ideologies as a
! threat to all democratic nations.
They fear that if the Rome-Berlin
i axis should succeed in defeating
keep their Old 1 ®ritain and France, the United
„ I States would be the next object of
and ] invasion. A small per cent of the
li---voters interviewed said they would
; j.^e to food and armaments to
say i these nations for strictly economic
| reasons.
The most important trend in the
field of domestic politics is the rapid
I return to favor of the Republican
j party. A recent Institute report
I shows that fifty-one per cent of the
1 ______IJ i:i_ a .-i.i*
can president in 1940. Three men
named as most likely.candidates by
i Republican voters arq: Thomas E.
i -a- x - Dewey of New Y ork, Senator Arthur
vote indicated. Many Congressmen who had made pledg- | H. Vandenberg of Michigan and
. j Senator Robert H. Taft of Ohio.
I Dewey is the leading choice.
land and France. This reaction has
geographical speech seems silly. It may be
gin’t do it. There are thousands of foreign names we can’t
jronounce or spell in the native way. And why should we try,
{here the transition is difficult?
4, rne Engnsh people, whose language we use, should be
wetty good judges of English usage. They
Belongs and pronunciations unashamed—“Mar-sails’* 2
yer-sails” and the rest. And many good American authorit-
ies say it’s all right for us to do likewise, just as we i
Naples” when the Italians say “Napoli” and “Paris” when |
the French say “Paree.”
filler Townsend
The Townsend Plan was turned down by Congress.
other place it was an American high school band that
i the weleomihg music, including national anthems of
rountries.
he Canadians apparently are hot annoyed at this “horn-
on their party. And that is natural, too. There is al- GALLUP GA
much moving back and forth across the border all along C 77 2 2Z?
amous boundary line. Not only do vacationists from each
ry travel in the neighboring land, but in many places
is of each country hold jobs on the other side, going
back to their own homes in their own countries at the end of war,” Dr. George Gallup, Director
the day American Institute of Public
J'.TWe forget these things ordinarily. The widespread interest ] pPta:on’ in an art,cIe in th^
in the royal tour reminds us of them and emphasizes them a he telbwh/t^n^n^^are think-
’ing about. “It regards entrance into
the last World. War as a mistake and
84 per cent of the voters oppose i
sending an army or navy abroad. At
least 61 per cent favor a national >
referendum before any citizen can
be drafted to fi<jht overseas.”
Gallup’s findings, based on the
results of interviews by seven hun-
dred American Institue of Public
i Opinion researchers who question
i voters in all parts of the country
! qop'a xvxjnlr fa fhof- throa
from Inez, where the latter 1
! been teaching schorl the past r.es-
*sion. |
the railroad platform along with the loyal Canadians.
-j -
_____
l
THE CUERO RECORD, CUERO, TEXAS
PAGE TWO
MONDAY, JUNE IX1339
N
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Putman, Harry C. The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 136, Ed. 1 Monday, June 12, 1939, newspaper, June 12, 1939; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1357973/m1/2/: accessed July 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cuero Public Library.