The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 61, No. 219, Ed. 1 Friday, September 16, 1955 Page: 4 of 6
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4 THE Cn*0 RECORD. Friday. September 1*. 1»58
l
(torn Swnri
bteMM la UN
Cuk UImmw Kinm kttrto,
pr»UMO?f(
By THE CTERO
Tift E. Mila.
dad laa4ay
G CO.. lac.
CNN, Tax**
Lntered in the Poet Office it Cuaro, Trail, as
Under Act of Corner*it March 1.
inert
ViS*
lofTi
clan mittir
Texas Press Association
South Texas Press Aktociiion
Southern Newspaper Publishers Association
POLLIWOGS
By ruul atmfcmron
MRS. J. C. HOWERTON
JACK HOWERTON ..
HARRY C. PUTMAN-------
R. KENNETH TOWER Y ______
______President
Vie*-Pr*»Ment and Publisher
Ass t Publisher A Advt. Mgr
___________Managing Editor
Advertising Represeitatlret
Texas Daily Press League, Inc.. Texas Bank Bldg., Dallas. Texas. !rT'r_'
-- - - - w uL.ki... 7J* Thomas resvy
Lillian Rlsckwell searching
for a pair of misplaced pres-
cription sunglasses, blue frame
with gold trim.
60 E 42nd St.. New York City; 360 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago; 706
Chestnut St.. St. Louis; 1330 Wilshire Blvd.. Lot Angeles; Rialto Bldg.,
San FTancisoo: 1763 Penobscot Bldg., Detroit; Ave. Juarei ITT, Mexico
Mrs. Tom Pesvv in the office
renewing the subscription for
in San Antonio.
Home Delivered by carried. Daily and Sunday: On# year $10.00 six
months $5.50, three months 2.75, one month 31-00. By mail In De-
Witt, Lavaca, Jackson, Victoria, Kames and Goliad Counties. One
year $7.50, six months $4.00, one month .75, By mail elsewhere in
Texas: One year 39.00, aix months 34.75, one month .85. By mail
outside of Texas: One year 310.00, six months 35*50, one month $1.00.
Semi-Weekly Edition by Mall only In DeWltt, Lavaca, Jkcksoh. Vic-
toria. Gonzales. Kames and Goliad Counties: One year $3JO, six
months 32.00. Elsewhere one year 34.00, aix months $2.50.
Official Organs of the City of CuerO and County of DeWift.
TELEPHONE 6 8131
Good Hews
We visited the newly opened
Texas State Bank in Victoria
Thursday and it is reslly a
beaut}-. The outside is modem
and of two kinds of brick. In-
side use hSs been made of a
variety of materials, pecky
cypress, stone and much glass.
There are a recreation room and
kitchen on the second floor.
Mildred Martin giving sway
5 collies in quick order after
taking advantage of one of our
free ads.
Crickets tre certainly plague-
ing the business section of team,
with buckets of them having to
be swept out daily.
Roaches also seem
the loose about town.
to be on
Prof. Neville F. Mott has told the 117th annual meet-
ing of the British Association for the Advancement of
Science, and Incidentally assured the rest of us, that nu-
clear scientists are not going to blow up the world. ‘The
chances of an uncontrolled reaction are eero . . If there
was to have been guch a catastrophe, it was more likely concert
to hate arisen when the first A-bomb test was made. We series in our neighbor city, Vic-
kr.ow very much more about the reaction now." twllL
TOO CLOSE FOR COMFORT
i f
v#'“
m&t,
We understand Victor Aless-
andro and his San Antonio
will be
These comforting words, and similar assurances from
other scholars, came In answer to Sir Robert Robinson who
asked whether the scientists were 100 percent sure that
the atmosphere could not be set afire by an uncontrollable
nuclear reaction.
Their “spectacular triumphs", he said, show the ex-
perts have been operating on the "right theoretical lines
He hoped they would "continue to do so
not 99 9 percent". In this area, we art for perfection too!
Mrs F.E. Parks a business
visitor in town Thursday.
Mrs. Janie Guzman ordering
The Record mailed to her son.
EUJio, at Amarillo AFB.
HOME HINT for TODAY-
Use pondered sugar on the
pastry board and rolling pin
100 percent and wh9n melting rolled cookie
dough. This way, the cookies
won't be toughened by the ab-
solution of too much flour.
We ll Need It More - Not Less
Id and 20 Yean Ago
Froa Record Files..
daps. ia, teas
Pvt. Calvin Schmidt of Ft
Bragg. N.C. had arrived for s
visit with his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Albert Schmidt Gen.
Elsenhower was expected to be
chief of staff Doris Octer-
loh was elected president of
the senior class at Cu*ro High
Cpl. Henry Mugge was to
be discharged from the Army
Air Force Sept. 18 after sewn
months overseas He served in
Iceland Sept. 17 was felt hat
day at Koehlet'*......Charles
Marquis, Jr.. USN, R.O.T.C, at
Texas University, was here for
the weekend . . . I-either shoe*
were released from rationing.
— o —
kept. t«. re is
Kewte'h Thigpen. Frill Koeh-
ler, Jimmy Pridgen. Edgar
Davidson. Jr. and Bill North
snd Wayne Hartman, left for
Tei McLarty, Marvin
issues that now threaten the peace, as proof that therO E T Summers. Jr.
is substance behind the “new look". and'Willi*'™”'r^Tex!??™.
The Russians, who object to our requirement of finger
prints on applications for visas to the UR, say they are'
anxious for large scale tourist exchange with us, and are j
ready to permit “tens of thousands" of their cltlsens toi
travel to this country.
Secretary of State Dulles says he will talk about finger
prints at Geneva when the foreign ministers meet, and
may recommend that Congress make some changes In our
laws . if finger printing remains a travel barrier.
If we are facing the influx of hordes of Communist
visitors — some of whom might get lost In our great coun-
try — positive identification would seem to become both
more difficult and more desirable. And. if it would soothe
the Russian sensibilities, why not change our laws to re-
quire that travellers from the US be fingerprinted too?
Y o
COMES
r e
T e I I i
IT COMES out that 'John
Foster Dulles has a license to
carry a gun. It may be a cold
war, but you don t catch the
secretary of State off guard
Secretary Dulles has had Ins
pistol for 38 years. It must
be a diplomatic exhibit to
prove shooting is obsolete
• » •
You can't blame Dulles for
wanting protection. After all.
be worked In Washington a long
time when It was full of Demo-
crat*.
The annual fingerprinting for
a gun license doesn't bother the
seeretary at all He probably
feels a lot better knowing there's
a way to keep track of him.
T'ulles says he's never used
the gun. So don't frame him
foi any diplomatic holdups
• II
One Soviet newspaper blames
the. agriculture situation on “un- •
n g M
newspaper blames.
i ■ t >'•»««
■ tm
RAE FOLEY
CHAPTER ONE
ROGER BRINDI.E \yas dead
From New York to California p< j-
ple read the story with the same
l.t: v < !,1 if.es^ p,r«t
VS oi l ,rd nix. .1 some-
least. his s>-i.ond m,.mage woiked sewi'.ru
out " mom s.
' Poor gdl. But Carol is good thing "
looking and only thirty. Fifteen -odd in slut
! unbelief, the same sense of loss.;years younger than Roger. She'd Sonlethinf in carols volte, a
I Unbelief that anyone so trimming marry again. It* the people ne flaiU(.a mue maot lile „WVer
with life could die. A sense of loss helped who are more to he plied , „„ , ,pw!ulallVe H#
becauie Roger had established a Take the Mb bees. Roger and At- ‘ Qt de'res810n. Just ,
ruriously personal relationship with tert Kibbce have been friends since tolU me nt never managed
to do icings right, no matter now
Small Gains First
In the light of recent history, it is probably well t« be
wary of the “new look'1 in the Soviet Unions relations!
with the West. It is on the side of wisdom to demand con-
crete action toward settlement of some of the ouatanding A4M;
to Rogers daily chatt«\- about h.s1
friends snd neighbors, thp. found
a black-bordered portrait and un
d*r it the words, "Died in his
sleep," wr.d to most of them it
seemed something warm and vital
had gone out of their lives.
the readers of his syndicated col- they were kids. Roper supported
umn TA* Way / Heard It. I Albert most of hisSJc. And Al-
When they opened their papers b:rt'* , K\r f"*1 ,hflr <on
that Monday evening and turned through col'gc
1 "1 never knew the Kibtves had
a boy."
"That was Roger (or you. Not
a word about what he was doing
for people. The way he wrote them
up in his column, you'd think the
Kibbees and the rest of th-m were
the ones who did things tor in.
lUdto commentators gave br.sk Thal-g Mrs K!fcbec )n thf «e<)Mn ,
accounts, hastily culled trom the
Must be her son
morgue, of his phenomenal success h’aa' bein 'kept "under wraps since 'ntver Deen
a* A KilS-Af* v niv-r. O rva, ec
as a writer for big-city newspapers he came here
about small-town people and their ,.Why doesn't Kibbee go out and
affaira On a memonai program ,
a half-dozen speakers paid tr.bute .Hes a m:n;Eter of or.e cf U. sc
Yt it is well not to overlook some actualities that have varsity; Herman Vibrock and
resulted from the Soviet show of friendUnesa. The Weat Flemming. San Marco#
BUiuSeu rywieep WilnigD le
can be grateful that the Iron Curtain haa been lifted, how- to Baylor" yernt Mah^r"
ever slightly, and that there la now aome Interchange ol OA at King,wile; Beulah Mar- to him as a human being and told obs";r; Mcui 'HcYget" a Wwk
peoples between the two great political systems of the ??r*LB*IlnW to ^^Povt, Miss; i-Kntw-Him-When stor.ea of the
rb- , Chertes Bames and Bill Young «g
to John Tarieton at Stephen- **• P*opl* o* = •
There is no doubt that people comparing the two aya-! villt; Rollie Brantley, I-ulu l4?e neighbors. Unlike most
tema will t»e impressed with the West Whatever their rank
end ideology, visitors from behind the Iron Curtain might
be favorably disposed toward the freedom and abundance
of any democratic nation, whether in Western Europe or
the United States, especially when compared with the re-
s' nctions and scarcities of their native lands.
There is reason to be grateful, too, for the Kremlin's----
slight relaxation of its controls over satellite states. As a Th* 'P*nish Am*nran M ».
, .... , *aw 381.060 men >n srr\i,<
result the .satellite* appear to be in flux, not ajuite sure w>rH v t * *j,* v.orid
what fhr future he>!d* Meanwhile they sre establishing tfa* U lc vo/on_
f-*"er re'j *|e>n« with the West
These may not be vast aec**mpli5hments. but they db
m*an *e>rr*thirg Slew progress 1s bett-er than none Re-
rsi;<* relations oetwee- Ra't and W*«t are so tangled. spe*d
1 impossible Tb»re is reason to be grateful for prorress
made and to be patient not expecting boo much too fast, County 'Hun'tsvillei honor
In expectations for th* future. * rnefl b>’ ^ ,,,r,o nsme*
he tried, ui course, he always ex-
pected the impossible ot tumseif.
B t st 11 ana ne saia s queer
th ing He -aid. ' Max, it * nd,eu-
lo is fur me to make a w„l. as
tr.-ugh i could leave anything.
Didn't voi.Ri to me se uvOjgn n»
'meant property but as though ne
thought he would vanish without
leaving a trace " Griswold* hands
made a neipicss gesture, "I can't
explain it. As though-Roger had
with her. he .Ur* , ------ Morow* anyhow."
“No:" Caroi a voice did not lose
its softness out there was no mis-
tait.r.g ner tierce reject on of hi*
imp., at.on. "No Max' He wasnt
l.ke- that a' all R-.gei was nappy,
.he r,up{..c-f n.an I ever knew
"V-ell," Griswold suggested,
"perhaps ne had a subconaclOw?
Ksfilich. Fsye I^ipp, and Melba
Richards back to Cucro High t„
take a jjost graduate c-ouise
Mrs. Add;e .Sauer \i..iied
Petri RiJlgen *l Thum-'!>,n
Miss .Murphree and Mr-
Bill Milligan were in riiaiye <».'
Thomaston School.
You
KNOW TEXAS
nr ikme* rARnr.R
0 Doe* The name of Valker
two
caiJ or whatever it is. and a vcai
modest, kindly man who had ,aler ht d l0M n s rhurch I
ion ms bought he was an un.mptessive
success jltlje nint bl,t don t let my wife awareness tnai ne was seriously
stories, those about Roger Bnndle b#ar u,a( Roger said he was a ill. Uouhl l>e something like that.
were records of friendships. suint. so he's a saint" V ieer, 1 never knt he had a he.irt
Whde the slow r uiege moved "More th..n anyone rould say ioi.dil,on
along l:.e g.<<n hi Slov.evilie and al-iut Joe llstlery " I "He just d ed in Ins steep,"
out of i;.e v .l ge m 'I - « eruetely. J ' • i'I.ai -. Huger a-aih Taking In G.uul s.t.d
a city ie|K,i.et m lu.nli of lnr.il an e\-eonv«t and giving hint a "Wt-il, n,v dt-ui gnl," Giiswuid
color joined * g.o .p »•! men w Ho se* ond (ham e. He lei the Hautiys said rmue oi-m.IV, well have to
stood o e.de me hardware stoie, have one ot (hose little cottages figuie out something lor you. The
watching and n*nl ke working aio.nd the blunt truth, nd ihi.es no wav of
"Any of you know Bnndli'" pla1 e so s to nave an eye!on him soften.ng it is mat Roger didn t
"We e I knew rum I saw h.nt and t*f he went stia ghl. He made leave more l in five thousand col-
on!;,' a week ego m f’a s f-abber- Mrs. Hattrry h.s secretary. Way la-s. Unless ^ nt sell the house—"
PI# iivii rij k i no - ft i -n<-d n it he w rote shout n-r in h,s i°!umn, f "I II never 90' the house: ft w a*
present to me: I
The first time i
saw it f wanted to live here."
th s Purer*) is bring 'tut whet tr» you going to do?"
snop
; ou w o
a s'-k
fi»m» -
“HA ••'1*
:'in t t» -* thought re we -o-d Dink he was th* fortunate Rogers w-eo '
msn he called rr.e hj one eon hi*, so- re 'a -y did hslf hie love this pise
Miv a1 * *
work "
* "Vt Ml, sir.
Been tr e up.e. 1 ou d s-e him com
mg along, tr*eri-g above every
ore cn lit* E’r»e» -
'How tall was he‘“
mg out even the gnoshi—E*lt»ve he expostulated. 1 know Reger
It or not, that s Shendy Stowe in a as too generous for hi* own good
the rnnvertlble." 'but ne ehould have thought of
! "Stowe! I thought h* d died or you"
moved away '
“Nope. The war messed him up
__ _ A. No, and It never did. simul-
taneously. However, there were
An a’Unrr.htlc fi»hing real that brings In fish by it- two Waibert in the picture Th#
***1f hi>* been invented by L. J. Boshoff. a South African flr»i- Robert j , pre* Polk ,
r eteorcinn't Tht* msVe* pnsslble a new ercusa for the trr‘*urr cto*f. the firstt
* nsmetakr honored because hr
bit 0"'f gctUng sw?y Now it can be lamed on tht reel, introduced the resolution m the
jU.8 to admit .Texas. Texan*
' Ms; be six-four Homrly as sin
but you couldn't ask for a nicer
expression." some and he sold his bouse to
“No one to lake his place." j Bnndle and moved into a little
“Not by a long shot. Funny cottage. Luke a nermll
how, even rt you didn't know him ; "First Stowe etnee there w as a
Roger s young widow turned e*i
the old man with a fierceness that
startled him.
"He did think of me! i was first
with turn always"
"Of course," he attempted to
ronpbjlcan state chairmen went to “campaien school”
1n Washington this week for a three-day femlnar in prac-
t cal politic* look* p* though they intend to be the cham-
pion eye-headers of-1956
A Deck nf prospective pickle* picked by t picker from
» Tirone position i> praised by a farmer who hitched a
platform to hi* tractor B lying down on the Job, cucum-
are jg,** dervated r- r un to 5 acres are picked a day.
making a piker nut of peter Fipar
were wild with Jfiy, named their
county for him. But in lkfcl, it
was discovered hi* politics were,
uh. very un-.V<othem indeed
Name of Sam W, great I'.^ngci
was substituted.
(U IfidS ke Jan»es tsrler)
BABY1 SITTERS — See the spec-
ial advertising rale offered on
the classified page to list you,
neme go th«> all prn.pectr r
/eustnfnbr* ewn che'k «vb yr**i
4 ft# a
felt like he was a friend Stoweville not to take an interest soothe her "Well, 1 won t keep
in the town. What does he do with you now and we'll figure something
ail his money?" |OuL Don’t worry. And when you
“Pity Roger Brindle didn't have need me—"
part of it. 1 wonder what h s w.fe He let himself out of the bouse
will do now." ar.d got into tna car. Dunking of
• • • the flame that had ignited behind
That was what Carol Brindk Carol Bnnulc s eyea Roger a aec-
fg, was wondering. She had returned ond wife had always reminded him
eiNfrb.m the funeral, abutting the door j of a long-haired cat, lovely to look
wall, you ------------—.............—,
of youra" — **— *---- "— "* ”"v
“Hey! See that'’"
“What ?"
"V.oman in the green car
right in front of you —"
"Vv'hat about her?"
"1 guess are was before your
time Roger Brindi* s first wife
that's ail. Only time she s been'
here aince the divorce. Ten years firmly against everyone who want- (at, soft to to ich, with only a hint
if It's a day. Hh< s changed some ed lo see. her, except for Max of hldd-r, claws.-with lawny hair
a bit heavier and a liille gray in Gnawuid who had lien Roger a and eye so pale a brown they
her hair. Bui there's rx> uouht - attorney and general man of bust-1 seemed to lie yellow. Ijke a cat,
that s Jane Bi .ndleness. He insisted on Ulking lo Garol loved comfort; she w as lazy
"Kind of queer for both wives her without a delay. and content and decorative and, k*
to be here isn t it?” j "There is almost no money," he had assumed, with something of
"I never couid figure out why told her bluntly. "I don t under- the untouchable nature of ’He I’er-
Jane left him" stand it. Roger was--" he went 'sian feline.
co-ijiJ ir-cni »,-» At on with caution— aometiwe* hr, r7o A* Csafan’D
Cepyngk’- lksk. B* gltaece Deaaistoa. Owr.-ibu'ed Br Lias Pathurm Syadicata -
DAILY CROSSWORD
ctiiuu i*k*iraw
barsiou
yi.F'.VB HMUabii
•if.-iir- tfi trifiViUi
’ll h 'ifl'M
«• 'UK'TI' MINES'!
i ■!».« ! nnaai
uiiii- 'timaasi
M'd'HiH UH
xxu'MXidM yar-
”! •' nrifi'.'
IHJI fU Mnflldll
tf'1!*li ' I4»i:iri
18. F«reh
33. Oame
aft
chkfifa
13. A croas
34. broft*
23- Stage
In
insect
fla-
velop*
mbnt
38 Century
plants
27 River
bottom
28 Willow*
29 Flock
31. To let again 31. Olrl'i namt
TiMlrtlf, Aatwee
32. Black bird,
34. Baseball
team
37. Small
explosive
noise
Soviet newspapers are ranting
ngkin. about agricultural fail-
ure'. For instance, the fodder
Mop isn't worth s'lUrk*.
The f N rtisarmanient coni-
nil*«lnn hax been looking for a
place to start. Now If knows.
i i i
The best highway route front
ACROSS DOWN
I A tissue 1. A ship.
isnat.) w-nrm *
8 PIMM. M a >. Correct
eorlttraian* 3 Mrt aft
ft Arabian the
chieftain Mouth
18 River fit.» 4. Part eft
11. A crinkled. "lobe"
fabric 8. Burdened
12. Circular «. Melody
throwing T. In lieu „
plates 8. A college
14. Female fowl lecturer
15. Warmed It. Fellow
16 Englleh 13. March date
essayist 15. Jumft v
1ft. East-north- IT. Measure of
east fsbbr.) distance
2ft. River (It.)
2t. A sip
22. Oily
substances
33. DivistMt
of a play
24. Owned
25. Footway
27. Prickly
envelope
of a fruit
28. Excla-
mation
30 Exclama-
tion nft
disgust
31 Repentant
regret
33 Put into
"hock"
39. Ventilate
36 Benefit
37. Covered
with asphalt
39 Sea Sagl*
40 River (Oer I
41 Let it stand
(Print )
42 Kettles
DAILY CfcYrtOQllOTB—Hftrtft hvm to work It:
axydlraaxr
it LONOmiOW
On* letter simply stands for another. In this example A la ua
for the three L's. X for the tw-o O's. etc. Single letter#, ape
trophies, the length and formation of the words ara all hia
Each fifty the code letter* are differsnt.
A Cryptogram QaeUtteb
DXEE D8K ( X LX X* © M X R ft
RLYbK. EJJC AK «JL TUN
NDTLNwCKLK
A X D 8 CSX
H J D
X H D S K
C X H N 8 X r
O X t> 5
Teeferdav a Cevpiaftnete: MY BUSINESS R'aS GREAT
AND IN SUCH A CAfcE A MAN MAY STRAIN C0URT*»1
—SHAKESPEARE
justified prof iastinfition.'' There New York Gily to .San Francisco
may be other kinds of prociasti- is 3,062 miles long, according to
nation, but that's the kind the the American Automobile Assn.
#sat^WASHIN|T0!
MARCH OF EVENTS
Criticism* aft fstsUsn* •* 1
leomtronft, Dsfwss ftsar | irinfSlfuWU-* ff
special (• C’eafral Preas |
TvrASHINOTON — Democratic strategists are reported diamaj
W at unfavorable public reaction to ex-Preeldent Herry 8. Tmma
blest at President Eieenhowtr. Trumen. In his address st French Un
Ind, accused Ike of “demagoguery” and "mistf
mentation.”
Party sources report that many rank-end I
Democrat* teemed almost as liked aa th# heput
cans were at Tinman'* onslaught, and that as
conaequtnc* th* 18.16 battle plans alrtady are bci
overhauled.
t The policy-makers ai# pictured aa refognin
m* c' that Mr. E.senhower's psisonal popularity is
solid that any attack on him. on whatever sco
is likely to boomerang. Therefore, for the li
being, at leas*, Ik* Is likely to be removed fr
the hit of Democratic target*.
Th# perty's oreters will b* instructed, tnsts
| to concentrate on administration iguras of lo*
stature and to portray tha President ax hev
bCIM’“victimised” by certain individuals.
Nrasldeat
llieahswtr
• GOP pollOW— Chaneea ere that President Eisenhwer’a me
mg with Republican leader* from ell 48 etetes in Denver will h*v,
strong bearing on whether he eeeks re-election next year but do
lock for him to announce his intentions yet.
Just about every politician takes it for granted that Mr. Ei sen how
will run again and th* campaign strategy will be mapped at 1
Denver conference on that basis. •
The meeting gives Ik* a rara opportunity to solidify—lf that
necessary—his laadtrshlp #f tha party and to make It dear un«
what conditions ha wauld be willing to accept ranominatlon.
However, politics being what they are. ths President will keep m
about hi* decision until th* opportun* moment arrive*. And that,
cording to th* beat guesees, will be sometime next year.
• * * •
• NEW DEMOCRATIC MOTE—Democratic strategist* art convtm
meanwhile, that they have a new potential political alar rising
Gov Abraham Rtbicoff oft Connecticut who will bolster thalr atren
in the East. . . ,
When tha recent floods ravaged th* northeastern aUtea, Kibi
vent mto action promptly and vigorously. Hi* performance in
fine of th* disaster won wide popular approval. -
KibH.,Cr. a former House member, could prove a highly powe
liKiiie at the 1»3« Democratic convention einc# hi* state IS consul,
a pivotal on# by both parties.
Along with three other eastern Democratic governors, Avtrell I
rirrsn nf New York, George Leader of Pennsylvania ami Robert h
net of New Jersey, he gives th* party solid strength at th* atai* 1*
for n»xt year's political battling.
* • • •
• IIOI SINQ ISqt'IRY—A big housing invastlgaticn will he 1* inc
hv <'cngr»ssl«n»l Democfat* in October with hearings to be heM
Various Isrga ctuss around th* country.
r>p Albert R*ms 1D1 Alebame, who will heed tfi*
inquiry, seya the object Is t* find Out "why slum clear- Prebe
see snd urban refiS-val program* haven t gottefi oft f u
tu*: ground"
The greup firet will visit New York CVy on Get 5 Delay
where thre* dtya ef hssringa will be h#H Then, th#
investigator* plan tfi go (ft Newark and Philadelphia, followed
aubsequ*nt trips to the Midwest, West Coast and th* South.
The subcommittee also expect* to look Into th* Federal Housl
authority's multi-family housing prog urn. the availability oft mo
gage credit and th# SffKts of the gc .'mmrnt's recent tightening
home loans.
; (kntl/wte?
SELL IT THRU THE
WANTADS
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Towery, R. Kenneth. The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 61, No. 219, Ed. 1 Friday, September 16, 1955, newspaper, September 16, 1955; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth695991/m1/4/: accessed July 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cuero Public Library.