The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 198, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 16, 1952 Page: 4 of 6
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Bill
in
farm as
____Au’t. Publisher A Advt. Mgr
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TELEPHONE NO. L
-r
draw
/
K
■t
Breaker of the House of Representatives, attaining the ’of-
fice at 4. He held the post for 10 years, a record which stood
MRS. J. C. HOWERTON
JACK HOWERTON--
HARRY C. POTMAN —
Versailles, Kentucky, in
nei Co.
tele start* At s am.
Plenty to eat and drink.
K; -
A Sick President
II and 21 Years Ago
Fr« Record Files
3
•/sr;
r>-
K
A ■
pS>'
Er
L*
be HMtde for determining a president’s disability.
I’m
County terri-
on March the
£
17
»*te. is, im
Eyeud, Turkish Uni ver -
Columbia U. graduate,
of Cuero Rotarian*...
Homg Hint lor Today: Make
your favorite dish of chili con ear-
ns and combine with corn out
from the cob. Thi* main di*h can
be quickly made without using
the oven at all.
Subscription Rate*
Kame delivered by Carrier, Daily ,and Sunday: one year $10.00, six months
$5.50, three month* 12.75, one month SIXMk By mail in DeWitt, Lavaca,
Jadksaon, Victoria, Karnes and Goliad Counties. One year $7.50. rix
month* $4.00, one month .75. By Mall Elsewhere in Texas: One year
$8.00, six months $4.75, one month 45. By Mail Outside of Texas: One
year $10.00, six month* 85 50, one month $1-00.
Weekly Edition by Mail only in DeWitt, Lavaca. Jackson, Victoria, Gon*
sales, Karnes and Goliad Counties: One year $2.50, six month* $14$.
Elsewhere one year $3.00, six months $150.
Official Organ of The City of Cuero and County of DeWitt
coin's cabinet, were just beginning to attain national fame,
;* a and Lincoln himself was unknown outside of Illinois.
The Antarctic con vent ha* tl
highest average •teva.oa te any
toe werM's eoqtiay^,
Until surpassed by Sam Rayburn, the present Speaker. He WU Joined U. 8. Marines
t senator from Kentucky for many years, first elected while
Ender the constitutional age of 30. He ran three times for
president, and many hearts were broken when his third and
most nearly successful attempt came to nothing. The eompro-
x mises on slavery which he repeatedly put through prolonged
the uxfity of the nation until 1861, and gave the North enough
strength to win the war. Tew Americans have done so much
for their country.
Webster, from Massachusetts, was a surpassing lawyer
and orator, whose speeches were studied by every schoolboy.
He ranks with John Quincy Adams as our greatest secretary
of state.
Clay and Webster were alike in thia. Both longed for the
presidency and failed to attain it. Later generations have
wondered that so many mediocrities were preferred to these
two surpassing statesmen. Since then this preference of voters
for mediocrity over statesmanship has unfortunately been
repeated many times.
Sept- 11 1M«
Navy lost two carrier* in Mid-
way battle, 19fi00-ton Yorktown,
and 33,000-ton Lexington Mrs.
Ellen Jang Montgomery buried
here Shoe* not to be rationed,
but shoe designs frozen in 1943
under WPB Order .... Mayor New-
man urged apartment* in big
hones a* lumber not available for
new home construction .... Wind-
mill* promised DeWitt farmers,
Sen. Tern Connally and Gov. Coke
Stevenson wrote the Cuero C of C
.. .Helen Moore had received sec-
ond promotion at Kelly Field and
wa* transferred to QM Mi** Ann*
Louis* Boldt had enrolled at Tex-
as Lutheran at Seguin .... Royal
Brown asst. mgr. at Neighbor Hen-
sley’* Tower Inn, had left for
Austin to enter Texa* U .._ Irvin
Nelms, Vet of .World War L to re-
Cliy was a Kentuckian, the youngest American to become — NtB11 re<ch*1 out-
skirt* of Stalingrad ... Frank R.
Thieme succeed* Frit* Poetter a*
assessor-collector ............Brie Dubose
i ... George
Glauberg on job at Brayton can-
teen .... Was former right hand
man for Carl Wagner at Wagner *
NO. 1.
• National Advertising Representatives '
Ttxu Dally Press League, Inc., Texa* Bank Bldg., Dallas Texas;
400 E. 42nd Street, New York City; 3S0 N. Michigan Avenue, Chicago,
Hl.; Ill Olive St., St Louis, Mo,; 44$ 8o. Hill St. Los Angeles, Calif.;
Third St., San Francisco, Calif.; 1602 Bterick Bldg, Memphis, Tenn.;
700-9 Bus Terminal Bldg, Denver, Colo.
Djevad
slty and
was guest
Cuero Council in busy session _..
Passage of ehlcken ordinance, pav-
ing of Morgan Ave., prohibition of
stock feeding within city limits
and other matters of importance
brought up .„ Cuero Garden club
Was urging passage of chicken
ordinance, and City Atty. Patter-
son expressed opinion *uch ordi-
nance would be unconstitutional
and could not be enforced ... Wo-
men’* gay (weed and plaid coats,
fur trimmed, $445 to $10.44 ...
Dressy coats, 80 to 830 ... Chil-
dren’s coat*, m cents to 86 .. Owen
Sigmund and Mis* Ester Clark
married Sept. 1* and were honey-
mooning in Monterrey, Mex. ...
Sigmund was foreman at C
Motor Co. .... Capt and Mrs. r
W. Patterson in Cuero, Capt. t
temoon slated to be sent to
Benning, Ga..... Mr*. Ph.
planned an extensive trip to «
cage, Washington, and New ’
... Iris Coughlin arrived in C
to resume dancing lessons.
, ' President Copy of ,n old 8,le
Vice-President and Publisher Kentucky of 1049.
- - ^‘Having sold my
leavin’ for Oregon
tory by oxen team
first, 1849, I win sell all my per-
sonal property, except two oxen
teams, Buck And Berry, Lon and
Jerry, consisten of the following
■ _ two milk cows, one gray mare,
$ baby ybke, 3 ox carts, iron plow
with wood mould board, 1. 500 ten
foot rails, 800 feet of poplar
weather board. 1,000 feet of three
clapboards, 1 sixty gallon soap
kettle, 85 sugar trough* made of
white timber, 10 gallon of maple
syrup, 2 spinning wheels, io lbs.
of mutton tallow, I large loom
made by Perry Wilson, 300 poles.
100 split hoops, 100 empty barrels.
One hundred and 40 gallon John-
sons Miller whiskey, 7 yr*, old. 20 j
gallon apple br**dy, one hundred
and 10 gallon copper still, 4 side*
of oak tanned leather, one half
interest in tan yard, 1 thirty-two
caliber rifle. Bullet mold and
powder horn made by Ben Miller.
50 gallon* soft ham, bacon and
lard, 40 gallon sargum molasses,
0 head of fox hounds. All soft
mouth but one. 1 doaen pitch
forks, at the same time I will sell
0 negro slaves, 85 and 80 yr*, old
2 bey* 12 and -18 yrs. old, wenches,
30 and 00 years old, will sell to-
gether to the same party a* I will
not separate them.
TERMS OF SALE
Cash in hand, or not to
leas than 4 percent interest
Bob McConnell Security.
My home is two mile* south of
McCon-
Mediochify Preferred
g The year 1952 will find it hard to equal 1852 in one respect.
A century ago Americans looked up to two towering statesmen,
Henry Clay and Daniel Webster. Before the year was out both
h*d died. The political world seemed empty. No one in public
hfe seemed even to approach them. William H. Seward and
Salmon p. Chase, who 10 years later added distinction to Lln-
Tho parliament of Jordan has removed King Talal, whom
physicians have pronounced mentally ill without a likelihood
of cure, and proclaimed his son, the 17-year-old Russein, as
his successor.
This calls attention to a serious defect in our own gov-
" > ernmental structure. There la no provision for getting rid of a
gL president who may have collapsed mentally or is afflicted
j. with a lingering and Incurable Illness. Twice at least this sit-
uation has arisen without having found a solution.
| President Garfield was shot on July 2, 1881 and lingered
on until Sept. 19th. During this period the nation was without
» a head. Though the Constitution provides that in case of the
president’s inability to perform the powers and duties of his
( Office, these shall devolve upon the vice-president, still noth-
ing is said as to who is to determine this inability. In Gar-
field's case there was no doubt about it,, but as nothing press-
ing came up, thgjeountry was content to Wait until he either
> died or recovered?
President Wilson's case was more serious. While cam-
paigning in bhealf of the League of Nations, he suffered a
stroke on Sept 28, 1919, and never did recover. After a’while
he wt* able to hold cabinet meetings. For a long time, how-
ever' his wife and his doctor were the only persons to have
access to him, and there was grave doubt whether he Was
able to transact any public business whatever. Had we been at
war or on the verge Of it, the situation would have been intol-
erable. There was no legal way, apparently, ,to end it, and
matters continued until he recovered sufficiently to perform
the minimum duties of the office.
Before a third such case occurs, some provision should
Lookinq For The Ark
* Only the participants need be surprised that a French
expedition, headed by Juan de Riquer, has failed to find any
trace of Noah’s Ark on Mt. Ararat in Armenia. This disap-
pointment repeats the experience of a 1949 American expe-
dition, led by Dr. Aaron Smith of Greensboro, N. C. Assuming
that this is where the Ark landed, it is unlikely that any
remains could still be found thousands of years later. And
does not the Bible say that the Ark landed not on Ararat, but
the mountains of Ararat?” This opens up a large terri-
tory. much more extensive than a single mountain
i
For Sure Fire Results ’
Use A Record Want Ad
-... I
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7
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YOU'Rf TELLING
ME!
A
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A new gadget mechanically re-
cord* every move made during a
In ilew motion, of
I I f
The rabbit, says a soologist, ha*
more enemies than any other ani-
Grand-'mal. But he’* still here, isn’t he?—
rturdily. “I could have let color always felt safe withjier.
oiindneaa stop me from being an
MK JJMML AB0 Pm w* ffidedtMWL BteWte ««Pd bffimh
and the dinoeaur isn’t!
1 ! t
Mere man enjoy* a hearty luagh
at that- poodle hair-do tte. fins
are spertiAg. That to, until he
looks trto the mirror and gets a
real gander st that crew cut he
was m proud at.
I I l
A British beet -reveal* Btate
wa* arrested seven tteea, and
eeeaped eaeh ttoae. We dMtort rea-
lize he wae THAT Hiwj!
not only ta*dng Jereaay that hurts.
It’s losing him to ter. rm not par-
ticularly noble, but I think I could
stand It if I thought he’d be happy
with her. But the things you’ve
told me, and Libby—well, how oea i
he be happy with Eve?”
He said, “Let Jeaemy tgtit his
fight, Nanee. You fight yours."
She managed a ernlla “I expect
that’s the eensible thing to do.”
“You can’t be responsible for his
trials and errors, Nance.”
Not responsible, but you couldn’t
help being apprehensive When
you saw what Eve bad done to
Steve Raymond, how could you
not worry over what she d do to
Jeremy? Unlee* Eve really loved
him. Nanee was trying bard to
bahaaa that, te far, she aoaMWL
/Tt^fliaMeasfi
in the foyer. Rolph saw them la
the same instant, and lifting his
brow* at Nance for acquiescence,
he waved them ever.
“My lord," 8teve said, seating
Libby and pulling out a ehair next
to Nanee, "tea!” He ordered mar-
tini* for himself and Libby.
But Libby protested, "I think Fll
have tea, Steve. Tou should, too.
Unless you want to start th* Carl-
sons’ party with a hang-over. Tea,"
she said firmly to th* waiter, "for
both of us, please.”
Steve scowled, “Mama knew*
best."
Libby went red. “You ere drink-
ing too much, Steve.”
”AU right, all nght"
Nance felt impatient with both
of them. Especially Libby. Why,
with Steve so churlish, did she tag
along ?
She questioned Rolph about It,
on their way back to the office.
They’d left Steve and Libby at the
table, still bickering.
“Oh, Steve needs her, after a
fashion,” Rolph said. “He always
ha*, and Libby knows it. She ha*
more money than be. has, ao he’s
---- - .If Llb-
byd been en tend when Ev* an-
cover te loves Ubby.”
“Buppose te doesn’t r*
“Then Lfbby wffl net ta R tbere*a
Mt another Eva. It’s worth, trees
I ! I
Karl Marx, say* a noted states-
man, 1* outdated. In other word*,
"De* Kapital” 1* just a lot of old-
fashioned nonsenne.
II!
Woman’* hat* seem to be get-
ting amaller and smaller.
chea* game,
course.
pappy Jenkins, in an envious
mood, says he wishes he could say
the same amout that bald spot of
hi*.
to let this apofl my Bfe, either. I
have my work.”
He nodded. •
She continued, *Tm fortunate
H’s work I lika I can put all my-
self into it It’s ao much more con-
venient being a jilted artist than a
jilted stenographer, isn’t it? Nine
to five, with nothing but curhteee,
and all those empty hours to IB!
Artists are like authors—they lag to snap out ef thia and dto-
never really atop working. Even
in their aleep. I’ve often puahed
myself awake to catch a dream, to
get it on paper before I lost it.”
He nodded, than frowned. *That*a Ubby*a point of view, a few dints
fine, far now. But drive younelf
too hard and you'll go stale I’ve
seen it happen. Don’t shut out
your friends, Nanoe. Every con-
tact is a rtissulaat, cr a sedative.
You need both.* Be grinned sud-
denly. *Tm not quite auro which
category I'm tn."
“Both!” She added, •You’ve been
kind, Rolph.” *
. “Til be around tf you need me,
Nance.”
She knew what te meant Exact-
ly. She would, just now, have pro*
ferred not knowiag. Up to bow, la
her various encounters with Rolph
Hilliard, she had sensed vaguely
that be was on the verge of being
in love with her. He hadn’t put
-- - , £ad
been a barrier. Jeremy was no
longer a barrier, but she wasn’t
ready for another love, sad Rolph
knew it But he offered her his
strength to lean upon, and she was
grateful She said gently, "Thank
you, Rolph."
The tables around them were
Alling. Glandag up, Nanee saw
^aic i^raqilei^
boon a tattla royaL But Lftby !
was in Florida, and when ate got .
bate, H waa too late. Ubby’a a !
sample st Hope Ltveo BternaL”
“ft’s hard an Ubty.”
Rolph shrugged. “Funny what
people tn love will put up with."
“But what la It getting her?”
•Nothing, at tea mom st Sx-
capt one te these days Steve la go-
in her pride. She realty teres the
8W-’
Nance winced, although tee
know Reiph’s remark ted no per-
sonal aigniSeaace. 1 walked art
<m Jeremy, she thought My dan
pride! Otkty I couldn’t have mads
a door mat te myself, lb* Ubby.
And Jaremy isn’t Steve. He
wouldn’t have tet me, ar anyone
elee, pull strings. He wanted Eve,
he married her, and that’s that.
She said, as they walked along
the corridor te their tehee btfMtag,
• Rolph. 1 ditel MB you thia be-
fore. The giri Jeremy married is
Eve.”
Ho dkln’t get it at Srat Then
ha whistled. I>*n, abrutly, te
frowned. “Why?"
Nance knew arhat ha msaat Ho
hadn’t fran th* first, thought Ev*
had Just teppeaed to go-to Thurs-
toala. ■* area seeking, new, the
motive for the marriage. Eve’s
motive. Nance was heartened by
underatandipg.
Be said thoughtfully, "Eve dtotoft
need money, after what tee got
from Steve.”
“Jeremy haanT that sort te
money, anyway. No, it wasn’t
that X think I’ve figured E out
Partly, anyway. She batea Jere-
my's father and mother. She hates
ma. She bated mo long before ate
knew me, because X had everything
that ted been taken from ter. It’s
the Stary te a telld carrying a
grudge, and X teow it sounds far-
fetched.” She smiled wryly. “Yet
I know Fm right . . . Ralph, K’s
CELAPTER TWENTY
AUGUST was an unexpectedly
cold month. Vacationists shivered
en beaches, piled on extra sweaters
and wished for summer cottages
with central heating and thermo-
stats.
•'Nothing," Rolph Hilliard told
Nance, following a week end at bis
shore place, “is more depressing
than sand without sun. I huddled
three day* over a fireplace.”
Nance made a clucking sound te
commiseration. Her reaction* to
the weather, or anything else these
days, was halfhearted. She wa* in
New York permanently now, after
seeing Eleanor through her break-
down following Jeremy's marriage.
In a way, Eleanor’s illness bad
been a good thing for Nance. It
kept her mind and body occupied,
and when Eleanor at length was
able to be up and about again a*
usual—although she was notice-
ably thinner and subdued—Nance
found that tee herself had recov-
ered from the first shock. And
• tee decided at once that she would
not stay in Thuretonia, encounter-
ing the inevitable pity te her
friends, and forever running into
Eve and Jeremy.
Kit had insisted on Nance mak-
ing her home with her. anything in words. Jeremy
“Apartments are still scarce," ------ *--—
she’d reasoned. “BesidM, if you are
going to be in New York, Td like
you with me. So would Eleanor."
Nance agreed. Kit was kind, and
it really was not sensible to live
alone. Kit vigorously discouraged
brooding, and already, tn the pat-
tern te day* which at first had 1
been her grim routine te eating, Steve Raymond and Ubby Oliver
sleeping, working, Kit was weav-
ing her bright threads. And
Rolph. Rolph was surprisingly sen-
sitive te her moods. Perceptive and
responsive, without mollycoddling
her hurt pride.
Rolph was «' truly nice person,
Nsace thought, considering turn
across th* tabla. They often came
to this quiet place near the office,
for tea. Rolph was from a small
town in Kent, England. His voice
•till bad a trace of the broad a's
and full, round c’s, and bls habit
for te* at four came, he said, from
a long hn* of tea-drinking ances-
tors.
Rolph said, refilling her eup,
“I na having the office adjoining
mine made over a* a studio for
you, Nance. There are a couple te
new book* coming up. You’D get
lhe art contracts."
“There’s really no work space
’r me in Kit’s apartment, Rolph.
*.d I don’t want to make a nw*-
e te myself. Kit ba* her own
" ■ ■
And you your*. Don’t let this
ne»s throw you, Nanee."
•T don’t intend to,” she eaid
P0LL1WOGS
By POLLY HOWERTON
item
was
it
Bv THE CUERO PUBLISHING CO, be.
■ntered In the port office st Cuero, Texas, a* second elfin matter
Under Act of Congress March 3, 1807.
■
taken
(Mo.) Daily
us by Mrs.
too,
and
j The following
from the Springfield
News and was given
Bully Otto. We thought you,
might find it interesting
amusing:
Established in 1894
PwMtohed Eaeh Aftemooa Except Saturday, and fiaaday Mersing
Yeeteedaif*
¥
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4
1
4
14
17
51
37
44
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Yesterday’s Cryptequote: HE SHOWED ME HIS BILL OF
FARE TO TEMPT ME TO DINE WITH HIM—SWIFT.
CROSSWORD
1 An open' 25. Sign te
by Verdi
3. Run in drops
4. Reptile
5. Bodyte
salt water
6. Endure*
7. Exchange
premium
fi. Fun
9. Twice
(iaus.> ,
11. Half ems
15. Stitch
18. Humble
19. Damp
20. Mimic
21. Guided
the
xodiae
27. Annam
measure
29. Straightfor-
wardness
32. Strang*
34. Object to
AUPSTOQ
N I A P B C'U
G M J I U.
41. Dutch nanm
tertver ifiMMr
42. Upwari»
DAILY
ACROSS
1. Careases
(.Strike .
9. Child
(Boot)
10. Bird te prey
12. Country
(Asia)
It. Of Asia
14. Heaps
it. Plaything*
17. Ships .
(poetic)
19. Side of
a room
32. Warrant
fitter
(abbr.)
23. Goddess
f otteith
(Nteae)
2C renting
sword*
2S. Large sea
mamma)
>0. Spread
grass to dry
(LNsgaHIU*
4Jnffian
32. River
(U. S.)
84. Chief god
(Tbut
myth.)
MRavp
angrily
38. Idle fantie*
48. Sultan*
decree
48. Early
inhabitant
te Italy
44. Scope
4T. Wander
48. Look
- asfcanee
48. Potato buds
DOWN
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DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here’s how to wort Ito ”
AXYDLBAAXR
SLONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another. In this example A la used
for the three L's, X for the two O’s, etc. Single letters, apoe-
trophies, the length and formation te the words are aS hints.
Each day the cods letters are different
A Cryptogram Quotation
QONQ PSCUL N I O B M J ,
QONQ PSCUL N' A N 3—LXlt
35. Appearing
a* If eaten
38. Anypina-
ceous tree
37. River (Rut.)
38. Hairte
horse’s neck
23. Exclamation 40. Measure
24. High priest teland
By MH HEIMER
Mel Heimer
•ti
------------------- ■ ■
T AMBERTVILLE, N. J.—“Well," I had said,
I J with the great frankness and candor for which
I am famous, "the only way to give an honsrt
opinion about whether ,the music-circus idea is
any good is to go and see it. But X warn you—if
I think it’s & turkey, I will mince no words. I vriil
be harsh.”
This is the way in which all newspapermen
no
I worth their salt behave, currying favor froi
i man—so here I lay in the middle of Sinjin
I reU's swimming pool, once more negotiating my
| skillful dead man's float, and getting a good, oto-
I jective slant on the music-circus idea. “Why, it
I isn’t bad at all," I meditated aloud, as the sky fun 4
I of stars winked back at me gravely. '
Mr. Terrell, Chicago-born, given name St John,
is the producer of the original music-circus, situ-
ated here in New Jersey, halfway between Times Square and Market
street in PhiUy. His lovely little country house is a mile down th*
road from th* circus, and his swimming pool is in the back te his
lovely little country house, and I wa* in the swimming pool.
I wouldn’t exactly say I was getting a prejudiced approach tdBte ♦
viewing the music-circus candidly, but there was a dry martini for
me on the edge of the pool, a couple of flashy blonde* lolling around
in chairs, and dinner on the,fire. I guess you all know me well enough
to know that I wouldn’t let things like that influence my judgment.
• • * •
THE MUSIC-CIRCUS is almost but not quite what it sounds Ilk*.
It is held under a tent, just like a circus, and there are Mg red wag-
ons outside selling hot dogs, and the whole air is that te a drtua—
except that what they hold under the tent is a musical play.
This night, for example, they were doing Kiss Me Kate ant they
already were rehearsing Allegro, which was a magnificent flop on
Broadway but which O. Hammerstein reported was re-fashioning ^st
for Mr. Terrell and troupe.
Sixteen huhdred people, on a good night—and this summer they tel
have been good nights for the amiable, youthful Mr. Terrell—sit
around the tent, inside, and watch the musical comedy being played
on a round stage in the center. The idea is precisely'that te th*
theater-in-the-round, which Margo Jones ha* popularised in the hin-
terlands and which would seem to destroy theatrical iUusion but,
oddly, doesn’t.
One of the reassuring items about the Terrell enterprise hers is
that it was accomplished originally with winnings from Army crap
games. Many daring servicemen piled up nest eggs in that fahhiea
only to blow them on the first civilian tavern or blond* they
but Bbijin, a onetime Transport Command pilot, sank his into ths
music-circus.
THAT WAS 1949. The first season the circus played to 54.008
souls; last year that figure had tripled. This is spread over a 18-wssk
season—Sinjin play* through September and has a heating system for
the tent—after which he packs up and heads for Miami Bsach, to get
his Florida music-circus underway.
The people who come to this Mecca to make their theatrical obeis-
ance are, in Terrell's words, “the broadest audience Tv* ever seen'
anywhere. They range from country people to Broadway wise guys.
Th* tent reduce* the country people’s distrust of ut theater’s fite- '
bidding formalities. The wise guys enjoy the new twists w« give th*
•Id Standbys.”
Wei!, ultimately I climbed out te the pool, finished th* martini, <
dressed, ate and then rode with Sinjin to the circus, at about 188
mile* an hour. The 1,000 people were there, as advertised; Mias Kyi*
MaeDonnell was flaunting gracefully around the arena a* Kate; th*
right-man orchestra (has harp; wiH travel) wa* playing h**wtifttBy.
and the standees were standing.
1 thought it all pretty wonderful and I recommend it and you got
to understand that swimming in Terrell's pool and drinking hi* gin
had nothing to do with it Stop curling your Dp at nie!
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER Ttf, 1952
■ THE CUERO RECORD, CUERO, TEXA*
NEW MIRACLE DRUG?
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The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 198, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 16, 1952, newspaper, September 16, 1952; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1358515/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cuero Public Library.