The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 175, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 14, 1946 Page: 4 of 8
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THE CUERO RECORD, CUERO, TEXAS
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST
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E CUERO RECORD BABIES SAY
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operation for
the protection of cats and dogs.
recently given out by the Quebec Chronicle-
which helps to neutralize odors.
' ♦ A K 10 9 6 4 3
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marital troubles, always tried to
every
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after
* Distributed by King Features 8«
stairs, dressed for the street, before
■I ! ■ ■
--"o
DAILY CROSSWORD
back. • • .‘Drift. . . . Let Doug
resO-
2
S. Affirmative
i
want lower insurance rates, it is up to them as
-
sloth
15. Poker
16. From
the wheel of a car, the accident rate would soon drop
T
5
r
7
p
•an
1
government is responsible for the
ll
dmnru
W
i
(the only veteran in this race), po.
IS
3
r
run-
29
off opponent by approximately 100, j
000 votes in Texas.
32
1
888“
41
e.
7
49
1
ei
¥
aAe
K
Dog And Caf Hospital
Now Uses Violet Rays
West
Pass
Tyler County, where he spent
youth. Senator Shivers led his
hideot
young
told, the fed
g of only the
ss of Iced
ght you’d
ness of the big house and her alone-
ness in IL She was tempted to cross
to the telephone on the desk, call
someone, just anyone, Alida,
Charie, Neil — though Neil would
ty will probably simplify the terms of the Bikini
ts to the Big Cloud and the Big Splash.
i
i
1.Miss
(Dim.)
6. Outside
of bread
That idea had come to her this
afternoon when they were a few
miles outside of Stanton.
moon
13. Chest
4
g
tion then disclosed to South
North had the one missing
and one of the two missing
he made the correct bid of
Trumps. If North, in answ
the b-No Tramps question i
kings, had indicated a 1m
1o5
1
vith no dire results. Now it becomes plain that
p. Their life cycle is longer than that of wheat
it la aleyele, and its greater length requires a
_ been before she had gone away with
Neil Winslow — and she did not
want it so!
Anna had put her mail in a neat
pile on her desk. She turned it over
—announcements of summer sales,
some bills, two formal-looking in-
vitations. ... At the bottom an
air-mail letter addressed to her in
reply
6. Steep,
face “
IELEPHONE NO. 1
018752
^9753
Survey By Professor Re-
veals Dads More
Popular
Cole Giddings!
It would be so much easier to slip
4 J 10 7 4
6 10 6 3 2
<983
485 -
-
Allan Shivers is
People's Favorite
11. Silk scarf
(Eecl.)
12. Per. to the
lutions born of that last evening at
Bide - Awhile. But she stiffened,
sprang to her feet with such ab-
ruptness that her drink, spilled
down over her. “Face it! If you’re
ever going to face things, begin
now!”
She stood, frowning nto the
room. “Go and see Madame Tegler
"4s
___President
Vice-President and Publisher
Asst. Publisher 8s Advt. Mgr.
Editor
and be a harbinger of the day when through trains
traveler from New York to Cape Horn.
. "in’ i
u —
LET HIM DECIDE IT
AFTER YOU have told your
partner all about your hand, by
means of your bids, and he then
makes a call which you know he
intends as the contract, you must
trust his decision. Panic, because
you think your hand is of value
only in your own suit, should not
lead -you to take it out into a
FANCY TAIL-LIGHTS
. DENVER.— (UP)—Attorney Gen-
eral H. Lawrence Hinkley of Colo-
2’ ’ ItaMim tai 18M
Each Afternooh Ezeept Saturday, and Sunday Morning
By THE CUERO PUBLISHING CO, Ine.
it up and tore it open.
My dear,
We arrived here in Rio yester-
day. It was a comfortable flight
like it, after your hot drive.”
Flo turned from the desk. “It will
taste good. Thank Stella." She took
the glass without looking at Anna.
“Will you want anything more,
Mrs. Cooley?”
'“Nothing, Anna. Good night."
. n
"3
was paid for by taxes. The difference, or $209,000,000,000
largest part of the national debt.
ithin the memory of many now living, Congress hor-
people by spending $1,000000,000 in a single year, in
Kw the expenditure of many times that amount causes
eral revulsion. While, of course, the country is far richer
n 1890, the spending habit can easily grow. It is not so
our present debt which should alarm us, as the possib-
hat the spending habit may become fixed.
In the post office at Cueru, Texas, as second class matter
Under Act of Congress March 3. 1897.
2;
i are surprising.
e average consumption of the forest, it says the
EM9rC1EnFE,e .aS. w , f _
1 47.Insect I
48. Crowd \
it all! .
Anna came with a gl
fruit jujce. "Stella tho
the first step in her new way shi
wss going to take. What the next
must be, she did net know, but she
would. . . . One at a timae
She reflected that it wasn’t un-
like her old school tests, this test
of herself she was meeting. She
had the same grim, tight feeling
that she always had before she sat
down to an examination.
It was a faint reassurance to re-
call that she had always gone
through those school examinations
with flying colors! She remembered
the pride with which she had taken
her report card home, left it in a
conspicuous place for her mother to
find. She never had run to hex
mother with it, as Charie always
had!
------------A----------------
Natonal Advertising Representatives
Ally Press League, Inc., Texas Bank Bldg. Dallas, Texas;
nd Street, New York City; 360 N. Michigan Avenue. Chicago,
oive St., St. Louis, Mo.; 448 So. Hill St., Los Angeles, Calif.; 5
L, Ban Francisco, Calif.; 1603 Bterick Bldg, Memphis, Tenn.;
533
(Russ.
Turk.)
28.
fabric
30. Fish
1
*
i
of I
his
1
, in
his
It down and went about the room,
unpacking her bag and putting her
things away, her hands moving
stiffly. When that was done she
took off her clothes, bathed and
wrapped a cool negligee about her.
Now there was no further excuse
what
ark the
st leads t
Kt Of Insurance ; i . ( -
i good that come of gasoline rationing was lower ins-
rates. At that time thy reached an all-time low. After
ath, however, people who renew their automobile in-
will pay about 40 per cent more than they have been
This is actually only a 17 per cent increase over the
: rates, owing to the fact that rates were dropped
1 per cent in 1942, with the advent of gas rationing.
’ rise is due to the increase of accidents and the high
repairs. A large number of accidents can be blamed
age and condition of cars, poor tires, and post-war
ar
"xe,m N
■ nj
"BUSINESS ’ AS USUAL"
expression h
32. In bed
33. Greek letter
Cope 1946. Kmt FctIww Syndgite. Inc. World ry»t» rwwwj.
■ n(
i ed
a
-i
is.
an mit i
♦ ? »1 ; ;
: (Dealer: East. East-West vul-
nrable South West North
Pass 2 •
h"
-A 3
The weapon is a germicidal lamp
made by the General Electric Co. It
;5 eAn E
• South heard both of North’s
first two chib bide—the one as a
positive first responsive to the
slightly overbold two-bid and the
other as a rebid to show strength
after South disclosed his ‘dia-
monds. He knew he could hot
count on North probably for any-
thing except in clubs, and North
Bhould have realized that South
knew this.
When the Blackwood conven-
L C. HOWERTON --
BOWERTON__
r c. PUTMAN----
BOB” ALDRIDGE, Jr.
kr
—• 8
a®ss.
g<S
Doug’s big, even hand. 1
She held it a moment, then-put do the deciding. Forget those
higher level. That kind of action
is justified only if there is some
salient fact about your hand
which you have not yet told him,
and which he could not logically
be expected to guess.
46 3
0IE Q J 5
24 K Q 7
/d
H
■
g
—
fl
- #
* id
(/ Dauqk
. (. as 3. Eu- © (8 JANE ABBOTT
Distribuled by King ftaturtt Syedcete
4 3; Condiment 23. Open
H! .4. Driving
$
ety campaigns may help, but in the I
ty for accidnts its with the drivers I
ividual realized this every moment
BARCLAY ON BRIDC
, By Shepard Barclay
e “The Authority on Authorittes"
SALLY'S SALLIES
Registered U. S Patept Office
Jr 22.7 per cent, or less than a fourth.
I for foal wood, 5,6 per cent for fuel
ilpwood exports and 40.8 per cent
Insects Knd ahda ter.
Neil had said, with a little laugh,
"Well, we’re back to the crowds,
b‘ Then, in a soberer tone, "And
everything upone which, her eyesfel She sat down on the chaise
drew her back to that self she had longue, suddenly afraid of the still-
KJ92
• 4 ,i.
long flying. We will go on in two
days but I am promising myself to
come back for a longer stay when
we have finished in Lima. . .».
Her eyes skimmed over more
about Rio, given in the detail that
was characteristic of Doug. The
heat of the day, the up-to-dateness
of his hotel, a concert to which he
had gone the evening before. Then
she found IL . . . <
.... There was much I wanted
to say to you before I left but, the
few times you were with me, it was
too difficult for me to put it into
words. It is difficult now to write
it but I feel that I must. As I told
you that night, I have known for
some time that you are not happy
in our marriage. That knowledge
strongly influenced my decision to
come with this commission, as I
considered my absence would give
you an opport u n it y to decide
whether you want our present re-
lations to go on, or to divorce me.
I beg you not to make this de-
cision hastily, for it is a very seri-
ous step to take. I’ll be gone, per-
haps, two months, and that will
give you time for careful consid-
eration of every angle and to search
your heart. When you can tell
me . . .
There were a few more lines
about the schedule for the remain-
der of their flight but Flo scarcely
glanced at them. She folded the let-
ter, put it into a pigeon-hole of the
desk.
She was conscious of shock run-
ning up from her fingers to her
heart. She answered it . . . you
knew it was coming! You didn’t
expect he’d go on, taking it . . .
A part of her shock was in Doug
offering her a divorce—Doug who,
evhen clients came to hiu with
lied approximately 75 per cent
the votes in Jefferson County, 1
present home, and was a 25 to
favorite ever his runoff opponent
quantita-s
tive meter
! (Pros.)
He flew into an air pocket; there most have been a Hole if
-----------------——
think she W26 craz), when they had .
parted or an hour or so ag 1 The Hext morning she was down-
•TF [t -d.n- .. ■
—
EA horsehoe table has been made especially for the United
■M meeting in Sepsember. Theory is that it will be a
Hien arrangement for the delegates to face each other than
Mure at the audience. If the curve of a table will help
emnational relations, maybe what we need is more furniture
I Bus Terminal Bldg, Denver. Colo.
--------------------------------------------------
2 K Subseripton Batea
Man ar Carrier — Daily and Sunday, one year $6.00, Mx months
83.00, three months $150, one month 60c.
Esedition by mail only, one year $2.50; six months $1.25 within the
EState of Texas. Elsewhere 1 year 83.00. 6 months $1.50
Mdlallorgan of te Oty of Cuero and DeWitt County.
2 oPass
Pass
Pass
I have to decide what I’m going to
do with’that story I’m working on!”
It had struck Flo that it was the
first time Neil had spoken of the
story since they had left Midland.
But the decision waiting for her to
make claimed her thought over any
surprise or curiosity.
“I’ve got to deci.de . . ." She
had paused, flushed, then finished a
little awkwardly, “I have to find a
job.”
Neil had thrown her a quick, side-
wise glance. “Seems to me you
have one! Thinking of quitting it?"
“It isn’t very honest to go on
with it”
Neil had said dryly, her eyes on
the road ahead, “Going in for a
career? Or will you open a dress
shop ? That’s what most women do
—live on what they make, plus ali-
mony, and feel grandly independ-
ent . .
"I will not take a penny of ull-
mony,” Flo had retorted. “I’ve stung
Doug enough as it is!” She had
fallen Into silence then, letting Neil
surmise all she had not saidThen
suddenly she had exclaimed, “You
have given me an idea, Neil. There’s
one thing I do know and that’s
clothes! I’m going to Madame Teg-
ler and ask her for a job! Now
laugh!”
Neil had not laughed. She had
said, regretfully, “That’s the crime
—that the thing most women know
most about is clothes! Well — you
wear them beautifully—you’ll make
a good model!”
It had not been approval, and
Neil’s expression had suggested
that she was leaving much unsaid,
but Flo had tucked her idea away
in & corner of her mind, to bring
out later.
Considering it now, she saw it as
to delay reading the ietteriahe
crossed to the desk, and, with;a
little lift of her shoulders, $>MxH4tomorrow!
CLEVELAND.— (UP) — One of
man’s latest weapons in the war
"RICH
RECORD WANT ADS BRING RESULTS!
of rock ,
4 7. Alcoholic
sounds liquor.
14. Likeness ’ 8.Two-toed
, 5
A Ix bock, but it’s far from the same OPA. Emphasis
fted from control to decontrol, and cellings are be-
so flexible that the term celling no longer fits,
usands of products have had their ceilings raised or
1. More will be free of price regulations in 60 days,
owever, are dinniely fixed at the June 30 rates.
i Dew bill will lead to a long series of adjustments and
ins but that is the plan. It is a stop-gap measure to
e brakes on prices until production can catch up. In
ids of production the need for control will end sooner
others. Ultimately the need for any OPA will be over,
it as the object of it all. ' . ,.;
sh2c-egsi.i1
iLn 1
down and most interesting to me
as it was my first experienceeimpai!
18. A pulled fi
candy 2 16. Often
21. Fuss <: (poet)
24. Neuter W; 19. Help
pronoun ‘ ■ 20. Sweet
25. Related J potato
29. Quick 2 ■ 21. Constella-
31. A facial c*. “on
“THE PLUMBER fixed that leak find some ground for reconciliation!
#h the ltyhe’ie 4%44849742 at Proved his desire to be free
Anna’s ne no more approyte
of her unannoarieed return than it
s - nuung DI me, w
er Of th trees used p,vwlldtDe the rainbow-fike
s but ne-ezxthe of the whdle.mi
._____ 7$
CHAPTER THIRTY-SEVEN
W E VA987
• 10 5 4
[fling sum Of $365,000,000,000, part of he was reared to manhood. Shivers. I
a World War II combat war veteran
en of the lamps now have bew’in-
-ggg ----- , sailed in the dog and cat hospital
[cut accounts for 73.4 per cent. Devastation by here and they have been used expe-
t and disease cut the other 26.6 per cent— more rimentally mn schools.
uarter of the year’s using-up.
thommercial cut, in turn, as 100 per cent, pulp
E; Testerder*
34. Abyss
35. Fencing —
swords f
38. A disease
of sheep
41. King of
Bashan
(Bib.)
42. Luck
(Anglo.
Irish)
46. Near (poet.)
48. Wall
painting
49. Coin (Fr.L
50. A shade f
of greet
61. Forygr
52. Tolled
blood .
DOWN
1. Unit of
.Li—B.’- jl: — Senator Allen Shivers, in thank-
B of forethought in orded to get the best possi- tag the voters of Texas for the
heavy lead they gave him in the
W July primary to make him the fa-
rado has ruled that color scheme in
___ automobile tail-lights can - be as
id 40.8 pf cent for bizarre as the owner wishes—so long
as they aren’t glaring. The state
motor vehicle (department asked a
rullhg on the tail-lights in view of
"3 displays" n’the
nears of many cars.___________'
i shortage of newsprint has made American readers against germs is in
is of the importance of forest use in its relation to * n C
tting news and interesting features in their favorite
ers. The housing shortage has made all Americans produces invisible rays in the ultra
out forests in terms of lumber for building purposes.
ding Billions
early a trillion dollars was spent in the United States
• six years of World War I. But before blaming the
fulness of Uncle Sam, listen to Treasury Department
sts, who say that nearly 60 per cent of that figure was
by state and local governments.
{ gLM
3
_ unuI 2-2*,-
stake 9. Droops in .31. Prosecute ; 39.Nesbot
From the middle judicially 3 boxes {
17. Custom $ 10. Woody 33. Girt’s (Jap.)
perennial nickname sic '40. Costly
- 36. Veranda 4 43. America
.37. Oar , 4 Indian J
- used ' ' 44. Keep /'
. at stern •’ 45. Snow
(naut.) . vehicle
38. Barbed
spear
rth American regarded forests as
to be used or abused in any waste-
‘PAPA’ FIRST
Hhrough railroad service from New York to Mexico City
asipegun. This should bring the two countries closer to-
vorite candidate for lieutenant
governor, also warned citizens’ that
attempts will be made by “schem-
ing minority pressure groups” to
defeat him in the August 24 run-
off.
The Jefferson County legislator,'
lawyer and farmer, pointed with
pride to the overwhelming support
which he received, in his present ho-
me county and in the county where
nine o’clock. “Just bring me some
orange juice and coffee, Anna.” Her
eyes looked through Anna as she
said it.
“Something’s afoot,” said Anna
to Stella, in the kitchen, “to get
her down at this hour!” *
“It’s none of your business," said
Stella cheerfully. i
To this Anna tossed her head.
“Maybe ’tis. ... I work for the
mister!”
And a little after half-past nine
Flo was going into Madame Teg-
ler’s shop.
She would lose no time in getting
this over with and she knew that
Madame Tegler, with the French-
woman’s instint to keep her eye
on even her most trusted employes,
opened her shop herself, and closed
it when the day was over.
Flo found her arranging chairs
and ash trays in the big mirrored
salon. She greeted Flo effusively,
lifting her hands, beaming, "La, lai
Some little bird has told you my
beautiful fall models have come!”
“No, I didn’t know. I came . .
Flo paused to steady her voice
aginst a sudden churning in her
stomach, and finished a little blunt-
ly, “to ask you for a job.”
Madame Tegler’s beam faded; a
swift calculation puckered her’face.
She had been thinking about taking
a debutante into her shop — other
shops were doing ft, paying them
next to nothing. A model at cost
price, perhaps. Mrs. Cooley would
be better than a debutante. She
would draw from the younger mar-
ried set She had more chic and
sophistication than most, her age.
Madame Tegler licked her underlip.
“That little bird again! Only yes-
terday, Mrs. Cooley, I was thinking
I would invite some young lady of
your class to come into my family
here. A hostess, perhaps—is that
what it is called? Receive my
patrons—wearing my latest mod-
el!” Her enthusiasm grew. “We will
serve tea as the English shops do—
with, oh, a little, little rum in it!
You will know how it should be
done!” Madame Tegler put her
plump, beringed hands together,
palms cupped, as if they held this
beautiful plum that had fallen into
them — without her so much as
shaking a tree! "We'will send out !
special invitations—you will know I
better than I to whom they should •
go! Ah, it will be a great pleasure
to give you what you call a job!”
(To Be Continued <
had started'the Rlackwo
the only one of the two 1
in position to know whet
aces or kings were out 1
the side He knew all at
defenders holding one, i
making a very sound
when he called the 6-No ’
North should have let th.
sion stand, instead of ta
out to the unmakabl /
which got set by the |
lead. 5078
ACROBS 2. Persia
3 4 Paste
4 NT Rass
5 NT ass
Pass 6 NT Pass
22.Peck G. :
---5 (poet) J
rain and ice 26. Undressed
“I am deeply grateful for the con- '
fidence the people cf Texas have sh-1
own in me and the progressive pro-'
gram for Texas which I advocate.”;
Shivers said “I shall strive even ha-
rder to work for the welfare of Tex- ■
as.”
“Because I represent the masses |
of the veople, there will be these in
the runeff campaign who will con- !
spire to "defeat me.” Shivers pred- j
ected. “I will not be swayed by these ]
radical minority groups—the C I O.'
noisemakers in particular. My oppo- !
nent is welcome to the support;
which they are giving him. I will
continue to fight for the right and
welfare and progress of our people 1
who make up the backbone of j
Texas.
(Political Adv. Paid for by Friends)
•*2
Tomorrow’s Prblere
• A 7 * A “ qoh
2 * a*
2A2g,
-$ A 10 8 6 4
-- |
Chicago—(UP. )— The professor
has spoken. Mama, read and wheep:
“Babies,” he said today, “usually
say ’papa’ before they say ‘mama’."
The proffesor is Werner F. Leo-|
pold, who teaches German at North-}
western University. He also is a pa-,
pa. He also could be prejudiced
Mrs. Leopold hasn’t been heard fr-
om yet.
“It is natural,” he said, “that
fond mothers, waiting for the trad-
itional word, joyfully interpret it
as a reference to themselves.
“At first these babbling syllables
have no meaning at all, but are me-
remuscle exercise. In the cash I stud
ied, ‘papa’ was uttered before ‘ma-
ma’, and was said with meaning
two and a half months earlier."
His study is based on day-to-day
notes on his speech development of
his two daughters, Hildegrad, now 16
years old, and Karla, 10. The univer-
sity says it is the most complete
stedy of supeech development by a
linguist in the world.
From their birth the professor
spoke to his children only in Ger-
man while their mother conversed
with them in English, he said, be-
cause as they grew older they heard
more persons speking English than
Gesman. .
His observations are being pub-
lished in three volumes.
CRYPTOQUOTE—A cryptogram quotation
O KKOBP KXFK BVCLXK OH N
F K X V C L X K FBT O 2 E F D V v A
KXOBPOBL — YIFMT.
Yesterday’s Cryptoquote: THE COMMON GROWTH og
MOTHER EARTH SUFFICES ME-WORDSWORT.
*283208,.2 •
- 13
(Dealer: South. North-South
vulnerable.)
If North raises South’s 3-Heart
had been of her sudden going away,
followed Flo up the stairs.
“And Mr. Giddings has called
every day.”
Flo ran up the last few steps.
Every word ‘ Anna had said and
many air-borne germs.
The lamps also produce ozone,
? Wac
,2
49
79ae
“Mam:
(E/z
» to earn them.
rim the respons
- ’ - I
selves. If every
them with 6-Clubs, South was go,
ing to leave the contract there4
and make Nerth try to catch the
club K in a finesse, which was A,
50-50 chance in view of South’s
holding.
The more important factor,
however, was that South, who.
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Aldridge, C. C., Jr. The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 175, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 14, 1946, newspaper, August 14, 1946; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1551586/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cuero Public Library.