The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 136, Ed. 1 Monday, June 12, 1939 Page: 4 of 6
six pages : ill. ; page 21 x 26 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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Queen Elizabeth Greets America’s Youth
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RECORD ADS FOR RESULTS
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A COMPLETE PRINTING
service. Hie Cuero Record is equip-
ped to give you the best for the
least.
Alternative Selections
- It’s well known that Harry L.
jBv__*_•___ — — . - ___ *
follow him.
an overly spendthrift’ record
- —____________-- was neces-
sary to build him up with buainess-
Do you KHonv
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Leah, instructing the girl in the proper use of the international grip. King George is stretching his neck
, to see what is going on.
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tai Cream
^ ^GOURAUO
’/ The Cream used by
' famous stage and screen
x stars. Your mirror will
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not much against Garner
pose Garner’s vounger for
years than Hull is.
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~&^LL~AS W>va\ ]
o<J JS—
This home is an excellent il-
lustration of how a moderate-
sized family can be housed at
minimum cost. Containing
three bedrooms upstairs, the
home was appraised at §4,650
by the Federal Housing Ad-
ministration. The first floor
plan includes a long living
room that extends the length
of the house, a dining room.
. and a kitchen. The living
room opens on a sun porch in
the rear of the house. This
home is located in Oregon. _
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j,Stewart Says—
t, p Garner Prospects
.Are None Too Rosy
Analysis Shows
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Hopkins was F. D.’s initial bet to
But Harry had made
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SSSHI SCOTT'S SCRAP BOOK
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‘Ju^AR CAN’T I
BE_S<^UEEXEP :
FROM
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By R. J. SCOTT
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BIR.P5 BELow)
;jte. Inc . World njhu reserved.
ih Lumps
b/Xhe KAfiVE-s of Wes-Tafr-icA
IN THE SAME MANNER-THAT NORTH
AMERICANS EATSUqAR. A$ <SAND/
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Queen Elizabeth inquires about a medal worn by Girl Scout Leah Burket, of Linden, Md. after the eirl
had presented Her Majesty with a bouquet in Washington. The Queen, also a Scout, shook hand* with
, to see what is going on.
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A FlHE RED-HAIRED
Do<q ( wi/h flowing Hair
beHihd l_E<q$ ahd below
'Tail — A qooo HunIer
commerce departmental secretary-
blip. Unluckily for him, he fell ill
that juncture and failed to
register for weeks and weeks.
Itaybe he can pick up yet, but 1
he’s belated.
' Politicians refer to James A. !
Farley as a middling good vice
presidential gamble, but as a small
White House likelihood.
Agriculture and Interior Secre- i
taries Henry A. Wallace and Har-
dd L. Ickes suit the president, but 1
apparently they haven’t greatly
sathused the masses, as political j
sharks assess them.
Senator Bennett Champ Clark
hasn’t a look-in if the White House
can help it.
Quite numerously I hear the i
suggestion. "If State Secretary ,
Hull were ten years younger, he’d
be nominated.” The White House I
would HAVE to like him—after
keeping him through two presiden-
tial terms as cabinet premier. He’s
sufficiently liberal to satisfy New
Dealers; moderate enough not to >
scare conservatives
Well, Secretary Hull’s three i
years younger than Vice President
Gamer, who is 70
_.Tet a&eis alleged against Hull; I
1 sup- i
his
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UuME if NoY-fHE
I ’•* ‘ MOM<H of BRIDES iN
' ANY COUN<Ry EXCEPT /
<he UN/'Ted SlAfES ahd
DECEMBER l$<HE
FAVoR-EI> MONTH FOR
* ' weddings in Australia , -L-
i NEW ZEALAND AND NORWAY, AND
) IS EQUALLY FAVORED WITH JUNE
in Finland - ThescoTcH prefer
UULY - GERMANS, OCTOBER ~THE_
SWISS, MAY- BULGARIANS
X<MD RUMANIANS PREFER FEBRUARY
doesn’t like
A great majority of politicians
eoncur in the judgment that he’s
right about this Or supposing,
some of them say. that the con-
tention does names a standard
bearer -of whom he disapproves—
then their dope is that, by expres-
sing his objection to the latter or
by simply keeping still, evidently
dissatisfied, he can foreclose that i
candidate’s last hope of victory in
November
According to such reasoning.
Garner’s final prospects are far
from rosy, if Roosevelt’s surely
tnough against him. That’s why
the Gamerites are so insistent that
their man’s persona grata at .the
White House—they need to think
•o. But there are plenty of skep-
tics.
J
By CHARLES P. STEWART
Central Press Columnist
^THE OUT-AND-OUT bnom !
launched in the last few days for j
John N Garner as the Democrats I
next presidential candidate has ;
developed an exceedingly tense sit- I
uution among the party’s politi-
cians in Wash-
ington. "Texas
Jack’’ isn’t ad-
vertised in so
many words as i
having inspired
his friends to
declare t h e m-
selves outspok-
ingly in his fa-
vor for the 1940 ■
nomination,, but |
nobody q u e s- j
tions that the I
ebullition had
his sanction. So
the campaign really is started, as
good as officially.
>• The Gamerites profess to believe
that President Roosevelt would be
well disposed toward the Texan as
the Jeffersonians’ choice to suc-
ceed him. New Dealers, however,
generally say that they know a lot
better, and I suspect that the Gar-
nerites themselves are aware that
their claim to F. D.’s support is
hooey.f
I There’s the most convincing tes-
timony to the effect that the pres-
ent White House tenant regards
his understudy as a very capable
politician, but as nothing like the
"man of wisdom” he would be will-
ing to turn the executive mansion
over to. In fact, even the Gamer- I
ites recommend John N. as the
sort of statesman who would make
“safe president"—pretty obvi-
% ously implying that they don’t -[
cIms him as a bit New Dealerish.
^Third Teran Possibilities
^7he Impression on Capitol Hill
is becoming quite prevalent that
today’s president definitely doesn’t
want a third nomination. There’s i
the precedent against it, for one
thing. Most commentators think
he could get it, but not without a
mean fight, and there’d be the
chance of his defeat on election
day. The guessing is that he’d be
unwilling to run the risk of a de-
bacle as his career’s wind-up.
Yet it’s agreed that he does in-
sist on the right to name his
party’s next presidential selection.
To be specific, in his last Jack-
StfP’Day speech he declared flat-
footedly that the New Deal has
get to go on under Gamer. The
WtxPely accepted interpretation
placed upon that Jackson Day
uric is to the purport that, while j
F' D semi-admits the possibility
of his inability tn make the Demo-
crats acquiesce in his first pick of
their 1940 nominee nevertheless
he’s confident that he can veto
any nomination that he downright
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Now is the Time
To Buy Vacation Needs
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Be Sure TO SHOP IN
CUERO F'lRS'T!
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tUl
Get ready NOW for the most won-
derful vqpation 7ou've ever had.
Wherever you go-whatever you do .
you can find most everything you
need in a Cuero store . . . and you'll
be sure of greater values, too!
As for styles, price ranges and
choice of different types of equip-
ment-you're sure of these important
points when you shop in Cuero.
Besides' more pleasant and more
profitable shopping from merchants
you know and trust, remember that
buying in Cuero will benefit Cuero
churches, charities, city improve-
ments and is an aid to relieve unem-
ployment.
—TL,i
For a Grand
Vacation!
GET READY
Be Thrifty—“SHOP CUERO FIRST"
i
s
THE CUERO, RECORD, CUERO, TEXAS
PAGE FOUR
MONDAY, JUNE 12,1»39
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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/m1/4/: accessed July 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cuero Public Library.