The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 168, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 2, 1939 Page: 4 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 21 x 26 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:
THE CUERO RECORD, CUERO, TEXAS
—
BARCLAY ON BRIDGE
37 YEARS AGO
Pgesl Dornbluth
ISURANCE AGENCY
AUGUST 2, 1939
jeur fite anodern store.
Mrs. Willie Breeden .accompanied
...__President
Publisher jby Misses Nellie Hutchings and An-
-
valuable
Subscription Rates:
As A
Neighbor and
the cottage next to the Methodistacres of land. Henry Clarke League.
I
#
bought of Geo. Thomas.
TELEPHONE NO. L
Friend
।
Ml
BUCHEL NATIONAL BANK
gue. $1 and other considerations.
, d3l
Ben Farnsworth left on the 9:30
lease to
Trinity
saw
4:20 this evening.
ations.
t mizumitteztr j
i
Mrs. W. P. Dowe came up on the lease to Stapolind Oil and Gas Co erations.
5 5sy, demonstrated their hostility against Great Britain. !
Rabke et
S. P. this morning.
bhe
7
N
V
4
WRITTEN FOR AND
D BY
CENTRAL PRESS ASSOCIATION
I
$10 and other considerations.
B
Enemies
tit.
t
A NEW
*
Hens worst foes, in spite of present war perils, are prob-
4
)
does as
do Every
A;
abie flowers and shrubs. San Jose scale,
le, the chestnut blight, the Japanese beetle, the Hessian
ef
o
5
go upstream while he turn
k.
YORKT
Lorena was not dead, though badly shaken.
CUERO
I--
con-
1
self spurred again.
his
it makes untenable by man.
2
-
/erful weapons to use against sch foes, but when-
l
ment down to the level of the river
THANK YOU
t
Next In WPA
DIPPEL & STEFKA
}
«
for the contract for all elec-
tric work at your new store.
J
We weleome you to Cuero
and wish you success.
' > 1
M. E. Froelich
।
।
somewhere!
ELECTRIC CONTRACTOR
her clothing
was torn, and she was frightened
Welcome
n
TO OUR CITY
ent. Grievances may be voiced by petitions address-
an eerie glow over everything close
"Glory!
remedies
stances
r. j. Muenter
Plumbing and Gas Fitting
from
even smiled.
From some crner in her brain
needs ti normal industry and the creation
use only in extreme I |
(To Be Continued)
der
—&
!
$*1
9
n
(A
911’2
HMM
-
g,0ieves PRICKLY HEAT,SUNBURN:
^>skin Irritations
Miss Junior Roseborough of Vic-
toria passed through Cuero today
2-Hearts. hoping East would now
drop it. He did not, but called
2-No Trumps. West, feeling that
his hand contained a cotple of
ruffing tricks at hearts and was
worthless at No Trump, took it
CUERO. TEXAS
Member FDIC.
7
• 33
moving away in sudden elation.
She knew the strange men would
♦
♦
We were pleased to do the
plumbing work in your new
building.
$1 and other good and
considerations.
-i"
Ee against the government,” and the recognition of cer-
p labor leaders that the WPA strike was a bad mistake.
SOME HANDS DEADLY
ONCE IN a while we see a deal
which is deadly to the pair sitting
survey et al. $1 and other good an i
valuable considerations.
the trip, which Was taken
land.
K< y
led Japs
3
4 9 3
•K 4
•K 8 6 2
*
4 K 8 4
fAJ87654
• A 5 2
4 None
$
J
__________________ Editor
________ Sports Editor
4 K 10
V K Q 10 2
4 A K 5 2
♦ Q96
,1
un
-
P
kA
• - fHedemet <
rzrzzenrrstrsrrtet
into 3-H earts. He was really un-
happy about the whole thing, and i
the only thing East was happy
about was the fact that he did not
take it to 3-No Trumps or 4-
Hearts, since he was set plenty of
tricks anyway.
n "
4 J 9 5
4 K 2
4 9 7 6
4 A 9 5 4
a
4 A Q J 4
4 J 8
4 J 9 7
4 A 10 7 4
,1
1
f
4
i
i
tips in theatrical manner and cast I shuck!
COME IN AND GETF
an5 garden crops, our parks and forests. <
Fhehthere are the disease germs affecting man and his
Etieted animals and valuable wild life in general. There
t.
d in the post office it Cuero, Texas, as second class matter
* Under Act of Congress. March 3, 1897.
CHAPTER FIVE
"HOLA!" .
The big Mexican shouteu it He
=
chreks
MALARIA |
in 7 days and
relieves
• 2 ’
4 A 9 7 3
4 Q 10 6 4 3
4 J 8 3
FIRE INS-EAN
g eo..
ae 4 ws
. ET"
—2
i -Uw: redsently installed in
horseman approached main office at Yorktown and was
on the trail a few feet away.she ! highly cmplimented on the type of
wondered if he wouldn’t be attract- ----- — 1 K
21 Street, San Francisco, Calif.
arraneer fol
< mergency
l
Investigate our ‘‘Health Building Pr
gram.”’ Chiropractic removes the ca
of disease; your vitality heals.
F-M*
pes)h
Mrs. Brazee came to the door,
eyeing him intently.
"What do you mean—a woman ;
killed? Answer me. Midnight!” ,
Recent murders in the Phantom ,
country had unnerved this good
woman anyway. She grasped the t
lad and shook him, as if in disci- 1
pline.
"Yassum! Sho! It was—Mistuh i
Jerry, he done found her remains :
in a saddle pocket, and he lit a t
i
I
there. She shut her eyes tight— i ometry.
squeezed them lest they somehow the new
cause her to reveal herself. And i iowry
while the
~ 2'
L..
DR. W. R. TOWR’
I
• s ’) J
too. then waded into the stream it
wasn't knee deep anywhere, and
the coldness of it felt good.
travel there and she hadiwere required to br coveree. tc'
to neck, then she snuggled her facci
SCHIWETZ & SHEPPA
bedded in her skin. Also a consid-
erable quantity of it shook out of
her hair. Despite all that, she real-
ized she had been extremely lucky;
the tender green tree tops had
broken her fall just enough.
AR
\• ‘ ♦ s
■ 'TT? Standt A, crvet «OrEARs
"HEYER’
PRICKLY HEAT POWDr!
AT YQUR DRUG STORE
4
Dr. And Mrs. Towry
Back From Dallas
Chiropractic Meeting
fl
“My Lord. Midnight!” Mrs Bra-
WL ILAVE IT. COME IN AND GET IT
DeWitt County Implement Co.
"IHE JOHN DEERE MAN”
Cuero, Texas.
9,
48 -3
(Dealer: South. East-West vul-
nerable.)
What principle in the playing
value of cards does the North j
of land Chas Linn 1-3 league. $19 1 of their lack of knowledge and the
and other considerations. experts take a beating because of
J. D. Cable assignment of lease to, too much knowledge.
‘ B"Ee ,
theend of their
Anyone visiting my office now will find
latest equipment for making a thoro
and complete examination of the most si
pCongress or to the Administration. Wrongs may be ’
(by thinking through the situation and applying in-
Mexican was torn through a thorny
clump of shrubs and severely
scratched. These things had not
soothed his temper when he finally
did get through; he set out at once
upstream, muttering anew.
The leader knew that the other
two men would descend somewhere
up the canyon, then turn back to
meet him. Between them would be
E ed
-
Eie i $ fn t workable
' er
3
K said to have been one of the greatest . expressions
snst a foreign natlon. in the history of the country. There
e#e posters and, handbills with the slogans, “Punch the
Hfish Nose" and “Let's all knock down the British.”
Meanwhile similar outbreaks occurred throughout Ja-
K and, the participants were estimated at 15,000,000. The
j^rnmedt mnay well have had something to do with them,
IEihey seemed spontaneous.
They all galloped fast for a few
hundred yards, then paused to con-
fer again in shouts. The cliff
tinued to be steep. There was no
break in it, nc way down. The lead-
er motioned the others on, and him-
She deserved to be broken and
hurt, but she could rise, and stand,
and even walk Her knee pained and
her left cheek probably would be
numb forever after, judging from
the way it felt now. Blood was
oozing from several scratches And
a limb or something must have
struck the rit that ached. But she
•She has been operating
Pahtoclast which - Dr.
men steit fighting each other the insects and their al- sand, and even 0101 it was no easy
advantage of it and make new gain. . antherrsohi gim aanklssaadea
p -A --— . , onto a rock, drawing blood. The
(The following interesting
items we clipped from an is-
sue of The Record of the year
1902:
vou and eompi ments yeu
te Dutch elmblight, the recent eastern birch tree blight,
lay others, continuously and increasingly threaten our
zee unconsciously railed on Divin- ;
itv. too "Run! Run. I toll you. and
thrilled at the extraordinary beau- get Mr Brazee! Wait—what do 1
ty of it, now she was mainly grate- you mean, in a saddle pocket? Are i
ful for the help it gave.
at hand. Under other circum-
she would
t New Aputomobiies
E. C. Shinn. 1939 Ford Tudor . -orth and South, or to the pair
^purchased of Weber Motor Co sitting East and West. regardless
‘ *F* what general type of bridge is
Oil And Gas Leases 1 played. In a duplicate game, the
Joe Wofford et ux oil and gas relatively inexperienced players
lease to Zellner Eldridge, 79 acre* may "take it on the chin” because
close to a small rock and some I from Dallas, where she took an S-
dead leaves which were drifted 'day post graduate course in Path-
.. | There was more shouting and
ine pop eursing in Spanish, the big one
again taking command. Horses
could not plunge after the girl be-
cause the river cliff there was
straight up and several feet high.
The leader directed his two men to
performance on all farm jobs, the JOHN DEERE MODEL 1
11. is writing a new chapter in the history of power
farming in Texas. - " • 5
Introduced just a few months ago, this sensational I
(Dealer: East East-West vul-
Merable.)
A timid East started the bid-
ding on this deal at one table with
1-Diamond solely because he liked
* to see the big A-K at the top of
the suit. After everybody passed,
he was set only two tricks by a
rather fortuitous sequence of
events.
At another table sat two very
learned champions. One of these
"4
byORENARNOLn
3---2
y 3
N.
} w
S.
Established in 1894
Each Afternoon, Except Saturday, and Sunday Morning
by THE CUERO PUBLISHING CO.. Inc.
___to Ganado on a visit to friends.
-th ipsolent treatment of British and other foreigners , ____
I would not come off easily; some
grains of the river sand seemed im-
began the bidding with 1-Heart.
D. C. DeWitt assignment of Iease 1 West bid 1-Spade just to keep it
to Trinitv, Petroleum Co. 127.34 ! open and provide for the possi-
acres of land. Stephen Prather Lea- Copyright, 1939, King Features Syndicate. Ina.
She never saw the Mexicans any
more.
She watched and listened and
soon realized they had been
thwarted. She decided to work
cross-country to the Phantom
Ranch road again; it couldn’t be
far. But she had to climb a slip-
ing ridge and the walking hurt her
feet She rat down to contrive
make-shift moccasins of her dress,
—wrapping l.er pink feet in the
cloth strips she tore—and there ob-
served also that night was ap-
proaching.
The thought of darkness encour-
aged her to hurry so that within
half an hour she was back on the
trail. Somehow it was immensely
comforting. Wheel ruts and horses’
tracks were visible there; they
meant she was approaching friends,
that the Phantom ranch and its
people couldn't be so many miles
off. She estimated that she had
ridden at least six or seven of the
12 miles from Blanco when the
Mexicans had captured her. But—
here in the mountain canyons night
was deepening fast.
In a little while she was in an-
other* stream bed, evidently a
branch of the river, walking in its
soft sand because the ranch trail
was just a few feet away on higher
ground. The bed was dry now, but
she saw signs of flooding. Stacks
of driftwood and trash Water line
on reeks. Smcothly rounded stones
that had been tumbled maybe miles
down the slopes. The canyon soon
turned westward so as to admit a
last illuminating splash of day that
nie Bell Burns, went to the Breed-
en ranch this evening to spend a
few days.
82 5a"58 uuena-e by man. It was nearly a mile down strean
2Tis ‘is true of life throughout the world. Man has devel- before he was able to slide and
jump his horse from the embank-
have been
. almost out of her wits. But she
. may need revision managed to sit up and brush the
HEtees need correction, and that wages and hours and i dirt from her- face. Some of it
I Pers and waste and other pfblems are not yet settled.
I pWthings must now be tackled, honestly and promptly,
not b threats and strikes and violence, but by argument and
age
r
3 that came from Mexico, and likes Texas cotton much instantly disappeared. He and his >
ndleh damage every year as a great battle eompanions didn"t-even have ties*
, 6bw has lived in the country knows the; theuftcsrmnescrahhtnugst turopgd °Vee t
ge done by ills potato bug. It is the same with the most1 green tops of the trees. ;
new tractor is meeting the demands of small acreage
farmers everywhere for a tractor they can afford to
iedi 3
considerations
D. . DeWitt assignment of lease
to Trinitv. Petroleum Co., 601 acres
of land. Delores Aldrete Original
considerations.
I Mrs. Anna Sinast oil, gas and
j mineral lease to Stanolind Oil and
। Gas Co., 64 acres of land. F. W.1
, Gohike Survey. $10 and other con- i
i siderations. i
I Herbert Zengerle et ux royalty i
■ contract to E. H. Samuel, 90 acres
of land, Charles Lockhart League,1
j examination she is able to make
| with it by the four instructo whe
Miss Nora Fudge. who has been
attending the summer normal at
Yoakum, returned home on the Sap
this morning.
me hardly recognise Japan lately. What has happened
hat supposedly gentle, courteous nation, to make them; H. T. Chivers of stockdale pass-
ppyrate the cruel excesses of their armies in China, and ed through Cuero today en route
viouslyssqme thing quite unexpected has happened to
panese people. Where is it going to lead them, and what
do to British and other interests in the Far East, in-
g our own? Perhaps we Americans come next.
E‛g z2 k2. • t1
Robert A. Thurman. 553 acres of ;
land. John Wait 1280 Acres Survey. 1 .
own. a tractor that handles all their power jobs.
Powered with the same type ui two-cylinder, dis- gag
tillate-burimn ruirmne and oftermg the same practical 4,
advantages that have made the larger JOHN DEERE 5
GENERAL rI KroSE TKCrORS tamous, the new 48
MODEL fl hnni tvury ioh within its power range 8
faster, cas’or bntter and at new low costs. E
i
W
L49E
apa
the girl again. She was unmounted
i this time, and unarmed. But she
feel that this public rebuke to mistaken tactics is I might be dead, too, from the daring
____________ ’ hope and opportunity. Most Americans 1 leap she had made. , ,
.2.. ,1 , . A-a-i Lorena, however, was not dead.
85281 ” tne b331e need and justice of some kind of relief 1 She was assuring herself of that
2 forhe needy, and they are generally in agreement that the fact immediately after she struck
Z4MWbin-ton-o-Alicc.1 i* ' the sand. She needed the assurance.
Segpinaton of relief with self-respecting work -which is the ! for her body hurt,
erlying idea of WPA—is better than the dole.
EAmercans know, too, that methods
and do vn stream : even if her cap- came a recoHectin
¥*-
i terical and Mrs Brazee wasn't —~" 1 "
1 mvch less so. But she did. have e 4 A
presence of mini! novzh tn run E“E“ ■■
ihtough the vard to the smoke- Ea M M
1,160 and eral a 1 rope that was till II
ed on a nail there With Mid- i " % %
forthern China and the civilian demonstrations in Ja-
itself?
p ast,week a crowd of more than 50,000 Japanese, shout-
| ind gesticulating fiercely in front of the British
tors did try to follow, they wouldseazlore. of burying hersei
have hard going The canyon ocean sand. nstantiv. th
seemed to be growing deeper with i she lay down in a det reruic
o1 constructive every hundred yards, and there in the streom her an ; finn
veaitl should not be neglected for the temporary riches of' were many places to hide Nohorre over hersnlf. Hardly 1 W o 1
fevgrisi war prcparaticns I could ever travel there and she hadiwere rcquircd to be cove"
' ' a head start on the men.
■Be insects operating increasingly in the same manner,
jt mqequito alone might be debited with an annual human
erunning into billions. In direct damages and in the prop-
a22K(anci
Bsb1 . ‘
s i breathed at last.
not their own kind but the tiny and even invisible crea-,
sjhat destroy the means whereby men live. A current
of this front shows the insects and germs busier than '
w’their depredations. spurred his horsetowardth Amer-
Ehe boll weevil, for instance, a tiny worm half an inch lean girl, but to his Amazemant she
parsonage. which he recently । $1 and other good and valuable
D. C. DeWitt assignment
SYNOPSIS
LORENA HAMILTON, In the desert
country of Arizona, to visit her uncle,
meets
SHOT ROGERS, one of the Phantom
ranch cowboys at the railroad station.
JERRY DALE, college bred, is a new-
comer to Phantom ranch, who has
corresponded with Lorena.
D. C. DeWitt assignment of lease
to Trinity Petroleum Co.. 169 acres
-of land. Henr Clarke League. $1
and, other good and valuable con-
siderations
D. C. DeWitt assignment of
lease to Trinitv Petroleum Co.. 492
Tomorrow’s Problem
4 6 2
4Q 10
4 Q J 10 8 3
A Q J 10 7
4 AQ 10 7 it
gaisand leave a general economic disruption that is fa
• ta! o’presperity and a menace to civilization itself. The
J
29A
jr
1 i 62
A,
M. A. 3
L 2 A
8
j.
•e
forusa orders and see mere “big orders headed this wav" over her face and drank a litte
g9 Savb doubt this is fine, while it lasts. People are in a frame
of mind to welcome any sort of boom in anv Une But wc
n S6tuearn from the rise and fall of the last war boom that ter view Sh saw
eventual collapse may wipe out most of the precedino bed was rcugh and rocky, both up
I in soft
rnforo.
n the:
:r 1 snn 1
nnnn‘.
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 2,193
♦ *
* ♦ PUBLIC RECORDS *
+ 4. *
* ****** ****¥,
ed to her by the deafening noise 1
of her own heart.
• • • |
"The little black boy, Midnight,
saw Jerry Dale ride away from the
Phantom corral holding a woman’s
purse. Jerry had muttered some-
thing, but had offered no explna- !
tion. Midnight was left staring,
open mouthed.
"Bress de Lawd!" Midnight
prayed more to himself than to Di- i
vinity. looking first at the depart-
ing Jerry then at the riderless
horse that had trotted in.
All at once, then, he dropped the
horse’s reins and ran like a black j
deer to the main ranch residence, i
“Miss Sally, ma'am!” he yelled
to the mistress there when he came .
around to the kitehen. "It's a worn- j
an done been killed up in de hills |
fat eWar Wealth ;
8 Rearming Has Echo In U. 3. ’ reads the heaq-
line. Copper producers in this country have received
, Erance the bigee st foreign order for the metal since the was alivet Ana-si
Wo d Engiand has supplanted apan as chief rnn
eivof rteel scrop from the junk piles of America. Tool,
mechie and aircraft manufacturers are busy with incoming
' --------- rmai
■■ e' I - d • ”
SERVI4
PA workers themselves, however, should not be al-
ctrength that carriel them far up .
end down the canvon and out
noros3 the wide flat range—an ‛
larm which Gtorge Frazee had i
Mail or Carrier—Daily and Sunday, one year $5.00, six months enroute to San Antonio, where she
. • $2.50, three months $1.25. one month 50c. will join a paty bound for Mexico
|y Edition by mal only, one year $2.00; six months $1.00 in DeWitt on an extended pleasure trip.
ha adjoiring counties. Elsewher-, 1 year $225, 6 months $1.25. c L Darby moved yesterday into
Official Organ of the City of tJuero and DeWitt County.
Her progress enlcd abruptiy
when she caught an echo of hoofs
in an instant her nulse was
throbbing anew Had the Mekicanc
known a short cut ” Or Hie they
have henchmen in these wild.?
Frantic with new feo. Lorena
j
Welcome s
--p
N.
} t
48 1-2 acres of land. Cyrus K. Kel-
ux oil, sey Survey et al, $10 and other
i taught the technic class during tire
By Shepard Barclay Hatona1 Ctvention
bility of a very large hand by his FRUTESI
partner, who doesn't make two- 1 LONDON Aug 2 INBirRob-
bids except when he can lay them ert Craigie. Ei,tlh a , dor at
down for game without any help. ioko a, cepn „ ., ; t,
East then showed his second 0 0 ’ ,
suit at 2-Diamonds and West make a ‘further i8orou.putest
made a mere preference bid of to the Japanese ED2ineut
i J. C. HOWERTON____
C HOWERTON —-—,—-
AN —___
________________;______
likely pursue her. so she hastened I thought of fleeing up a mountain/,. ... a .0.. ... ......... ...... j __ _
to the river, dashed some waterslope She knew Jier feet wonlln’tihight watching, round-eyed. she ; ‘ COLICS
permit fast travel, though Thzre , 1510 the rope hard, again and j liquid Tablets symptoms first day
were rocks behind which she conl1i. is... m „
hide, but she would have to runinsinac X BONG BONG 8 ' ose Drops
nearly . nunere to ar; olESOCBoso:P" GBoF
In a moment tne henl notes were ।
Inncing beck from the nearby !
on the cliffa bouncing and gaining new
A sailing vessel vas once becalmed off * the East 5
Coast of South America. The supply of fresh water was.
exhausted. Another vessel came in sight and seeing theg $
distress cigual came within hailing distance and hearo a J
the cry. "We are dying of thirst, send us water.” The
answer came back, “Dip down and get it, you are at the
mouth ot th Amazon river.”
The new JOHN DEEKE MODEL H, shown above is
- - 8
making tractor history today.
In ii amazing economy;‘in its greater work output; I
in Us ability to replace animal power; in its all around
them now And the hoof beats
that the river were nearing!
106.44 acres of land J. J. Tumln- Raymond
•sRo.
Try “Rub-My Ti m” - a Wonder-
ful Liniment.
r tens a hearty weleome to
YESTERDAY: Shot Rogers’ horse,
without its rider, returns to the
ranch. Jerry finds a beaded purse
inside the saddle pocket.
for Dippel & Stefka Stocks arranged through this
long established Insurance Agency. Your new store is
’ de ’ -
a credit to Cuer and we welcome you t our city. A-
OUR____________
IE CUERO RECORD
ianti-British 2gitatien in llorth i
China, Prime Minister lleviile
Chamberlain announced in ths
House of Commons today.
born cases and also for restoring hea
A sick bodies.
you—oh. my goodness’"
"Yassum, me too! Whoo-weee!"
Little Midnight was almost hys- ;
--------------------------- I
Dr. W. R. Towry has returned ■
from Dallas, where he attended the I
, 44th Anniversary Contention and
: Scientific Symposium of the Nat-
Pom-2 U.- National Advertising Representatives:
K Daily Press League, Inc., 507 Mercantile Building, Dallas, Texas;
Leshhgton Avenue, New York City, 180 Michigan Avenue, Chicago,
1505 Star Building, St. Louis, Mo., 301 Interstate Building, Kansas
5 Mo.; *1015 New Orpheum Building, Los Angeles, Calif.; 105 San-
.PROTECTION
I ional Chiropractic Association.
| Affiliated councils meetiig at the
i same time were the National Coun-
cil of State Directors, National
Council of Chiropractic Roentgen- '
ologists. National Council of Women i
1 Chiropractors, National Council of i
i Hospitals and Sanitaria, National
' Council of Physiotherapy, National
! Council of Educational Institutions,
I and National Women’s Chiropractic
I Auxiliary.
More than 1000 delegates from all
over America attended the sessions,
which continued for a week, and
embraced many scientific and edu-
; cational lectures.
! Mrs. W. R. Towry has returned
hand of this deal illustrate?
-------------
of son League. $10 and other consider- gas and minerai lease to Stanolind i
___________________ ____ ... ____, .. Petroleum Co. ations. ■ Oil and Gas Co., 78 8-10 acres of
Sap this morning for Burns Station 394 5 acres of land. Delores Aldrete Otto C. Rabke et al oll and gas land, Guadalupe College Survey, $10
to spend the day, returning on the (survey et al, $1 and other consider- lease to Stanolind Oil and Gas Co., i and. consideration.
* - । . 173 acres of land. John T. Tinsley i Mrs. Anna Sinast oil and gas
A. W. Herring et ux oil and gas League et al. $10 and other consid- hease to Stanolind Oil and Gas Co.. 1
rhe WPA strike, except for a few scattered trouble
came to an end soon after the President upheld the
rtment of Justice with his statement, “You cannot
Mrs. E. C. Barnard and two sons; $1 and other good and
are back from a ten days delightful considerations
sojourn at Sutherland Springs. All Dc Dewitt assignment of lease' 498765
seem to have been beneftted by to. Trinitv Petroleum Co. 848 acres 1 3
over- J of land. D. Alderette League et ?’ 128
valuable! 4k52
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. 45, No. 168, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 2, 1939, newspaper, August 2, 1939; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1551476/m1/4/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cuero Public Library.