The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 68, No. 220, Ed. 1 Friday, August 3, 1962 Page: 4 of 6
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'liiii CJSrtu RECGHu. pm.. Auk. ".
i 'm2
Editorial—
Sidling The Peaks
CHUCKLES IN
THE NEWS
biepi of teaching children hw
to perform correctly a funda-
ment il ■•Aim stroke.’
.SCim tnvfnietor Raymond R->e.
employed the services of "lady"
?n aqua-ranine to demonstrate
the dog-paddle.
/
Each summer a number of mountain climbers bite thh. teaches swimming ,
the dust and the sharp end of jagged rocks, trying to t -\KE RONKONKOMA N v
•cale some difficult peak. There must be some point to iM^/^ommuSy’nfo!!ndi
It all, but sometimes it Is hard to see it. j the perfert solution to the—pro-
Prominent doctors, lawyers, professional men and
others put aside all their business and responsibilities
for weeks on end in these expeditions and travel thou-
sands of miles to attempt to scale some high peak
Just as the female flaps her eyes and likes to be
noticed, especially when dressed for the kill almost in-
stinctively, the male likes adventure. And that s why
men try to climb dangerous mountains.
In the twentieth century, however, climbing danger-
ous mountains 1s one of our least brilliant forms of ex-
pression of the spirit of adventure. The astronauts have
the right Job. The scientists who seek to keep our coun-
try In front of the world in their vital area, the leaders
of business and government, who are challenged by Com-
munism, they have the right adventure to pursue.
It all bolls down to what the accomplishment will
mean to mankind. Scaling a mountain peak helps no |iAKAy Jfld rpj M()_
one, and means nothing to mankind, or very little at. f(||.|sl Ju|m Arvm-S ,..ir hjf.
best. If one can channel the spirit of adventure into- an • lot; times by a tr ain but tie’
activity that will bring benefit to the human race, which blfM w;,s *<•*:
will uplift the level of life and human understanding fhf, fjr„, impact by the Mon-
just a little, or preserve freedom, this is the field for
real reward and inner satisfaction.
m
■ ;iY\ -AW
-|i«i v,:n.
tim
HEAR YE! HEAR YE!
f
V
PUT UP OR
SHUT UP-
TBL
m
V4 t rt.lt ( At SKD FIRE
U.L.VrhkVILLE, Iowa CPI
A minor; blaze art farmer . Karl
Far;ley's house Wednesday had
’its origin it) -a bottle of water.
Farley filled an empty inset -
ti.-ifle bottle withWater and .set
it in a .Window box. Firemen
said the sun's rays, passim;
throb.:h the bottle focused or.
his.-hoti.se,. setting it afire.
\
•G A-^%
7
WORLD COURT
T/.-'
H IX,K S I’.IOH CKUFLFST
New British Jet
on Railroad freight train left
the auto at such tin angle to in ■ I
Ira- k that 105 cars of the pa--- ■
irig train oi.fi hit it
An. in was fined Sin and costs.-;
for- a traffic violation.
•e
FRUSTRATES CHAIRMAN
WATERFORD, Conn CPI
•T- Morgan Miner. Jr., chairman 1
of the recreation and parks
commission here is frustrated, i:
Miner, in charge of keeping.]
up Waterford Reach Park, said j
Wednesday night he hasn't had
no douit airlines
REJOIN FI) CM H
. RKMIDJI. Mint;
CPI. V.eter-
The new Vickers VC 10 recently was flown succcess-
fully In England. The big four-jet craft is the answer]
of the British aircraft industry to the Boeings and
Douglases of the U.S.A., and to Russian jet transports.
The big airliner will carry 151 passengers across the
Atlantic or more on shorter flights. British Overseas
Airways Corporation has ordered 42 of the huge airlin
?rs and if they are successful
will begin to order them. ,he time
All of which brings to mind the R-70 bomber, which
is a 2,000-mile-an-hour plane. The present-day jets, in
use over the oceans, travel about 600 miles an hour So . ;m (|pft,ns|V(i pn#| Jltn ,_(.(| u(io
does the VC10. As competition between various- jet pro- jrft tho Minnesota Vikings' pro
duclng nations and companies builds up, Miere will be a
great advantage awaiting the company and the nation
which produces the first sound, safe and reasonably-
priced supersonic airliner.
U. S. Air Force acquisition of the R-70 or the RR-70
as it is now called, as quickly as possible, would pave the
way for the conversion of this craft to civilian airliner
use, It might enable United States companies to be first
c-t the market with supersonic jet airliners.
Any craft which can travel to Russia. from I he U.S..
in -.o hours will not be obsolete for some time to come,
C.••••pne the space-age fever in which we are. presently
.; pec*.
vA
C\PbT%'
^ PWHBEt
O^ptfONS
Yfw pWMBEg
U.N.
FINANCIAL
CglSlS
the New Suspense Classic/^
in(Tintimnriunnr?rn nn nitin j
By LESLEY EGAN
- • . . jJJ ‘ ■ ■-
fohfhall ramp last week, with-
out warning, is rejoining the
,('a-rn after obtaining permis-
sion from coach . Norm "Van
lit' - kun
fV-m ih# tt'nnl p>: Kirti'd I
■ H*rp*r A RrtXh*r» fopjrrtir^.t C l
CHAPTER 14 | "The string saver,” said Va-
AERGEANT (diaries O’Connor J rallci to himself. "Yes. How
and Vic Varallo went to the , very efficient and businesslike/
10 and 20 Years Ago
from Record Files.
a to la w.
S' .- 'it 11y
Benefits already promised, and rn irted
vnh require a 48 per cent inert i ■ m f" -,
payroll taxes between now and 1968. I he currmit maxi-
mum of $150 a year will rise to $222, the 1968 rale for
the self-employed will bp $231 Costs of the proposed
measure which would provide medical bn ud its in every-
one drawing SS benefits wmilct b-ave to.,be uide:' to
these. Tlmse costs are c-tinuYted -in he -it if-a.-s $1.1 m1-
lion for tfte first year, iticn-a; tuu *o about $d -b.iUion- an-
nually within 10 years
10 4 rs. \ go
Mir. I0.Y?
Mi and Mm. P, U Ki-kuo-i
-on- Roger,-and -Butler, had
'.'■turned fty-rn a v.t>;! m r>Mtt<r-
ana anti Alabama r»r atvl
Att s J. ( I V ,f,tir had come back
to Ole go alter ViHflrtg-.thcit., !aii
ghtec m I >en\ er. ( V>io Alt
"c l Mr I . |-| .1, ,nc . ,,f -V,,...,, , ,
Mop-.guest.-, of Mr and Mr-
B-e I t < iM'k. Si \T| and M; -
'"I < ’< tpftedre a tv I 1 amity, a<
•■’’J' ui:<- i by tvjs nother, M, ,
(,av. rencc f'o;i|)e.|ge left for [-a
i 'ii to vp11 reiatlv.es Hijei o
Bd'le I.eagners playecl the Virt
''-ria 1, 111 V l.eague'in Victoiia,
hut
lank and looked at Melt no .Dun- They made a list, thanked the
an's financial' record. vice-president. "I want.," said
It was, in a way, interesting. O'Connor, "to .see that aunt—
She made four-forty a nriiith ! only other relative. Also John
it. the Inn, take-home. Other- j Broderick. And—”
wise, her monthly income added "I want,” said Varallo, "to
’<) a nice round sum. She, had j see Duncan..again: Should have
videntlv -started . out,- three naked him .last night, damn it.
c-ara ago, using r.uincan' all- II he knew about Broderick,
tony as investment capital, and ' What she nvght have skid about
tie had built it up. hurt. If he knew Ixx.k, ,t'3 a
She was paying a substantial j quarter of twelve. See Duncan,
lont.hly installment on a six- have a' quirk lunch at that res-
- rn -unit apart r»e'nt out on, \">-r- taurant down the street,, and go
. lugp bond, and another on. n 1 Aver to I, A. tor the aunt and
1 wont Y-.umi piac* in Pa -adetia j Broderick. O.K ?” Unconscious-
I'he gi:n,-s' riiru'ittilv t it," on !-• he had assumed leadership
hit-le two add’d |,, nearly three i here.
hotisand. She had recently
"O K ,” said O’Connor.
I'oug'ht six lot s in l. i ('rc-a-ent.a. ■! They .parked In the restau-
"Slte ngarilcd that," said the t tit's -lot .and walked down to
. ice president who ve 1: 11 mg j Duncan's office. On the way
-!
to \ rv,
'HR. t.
\ro
I'll •
;uem in, on alt tip ", ;m m-jthey p i»«e«f Mrs. Starr, heading
Vestment, l-.xn.up: ,n, \ , i know j for the restaurant on her lunch
lot - id new l»ill V- . up there hour. Stic gave them a quick
She told me ..stic a vj„ , tvd to.| sidewisi’ -glance, recognizing
driiibh- her. --money on this A' Vartllo though he wasn’t in
head-.- Mrs-,
d-d regret-
very .shrewd butane
I nine-in 'had ' I i-- In ,
When any phase of life occupif-s yonr ci ne ;lioi.iglit
you are unbalanced whether in' .a n $ or iiot.
-Y- -Y- -Y
When men sHk »o wind-retpirrlh
they can easily forget the principle ,
fwi
a! W.ll it ti
t lit pi.,
u t
•Y -Y-
An intelligent patient, who exp-
not try to tell the doctor how to Inuit
■tr
ht-
;;ef T. cl I
i i imet it
vv.i! 1
Y-
The modern p’i7xle is how the old (nil;
raise their children without
nn lit'
a book on chilli cut
:{. x.
I -Vi, I
v.-",ii --the.-
! ,(--i-f;n hi
-.infun
rcrl IP |-'ew-ncr
1 \ \ ■ •’! Y
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f ill '
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i:iit on
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' r»*n.t»' 1
f < * r i
htinrih"!
. rn i-
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mind ,
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me 'it
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In fr
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The
IA »n f
U VC)
r.m , . - ;
< <nj? t
; h:;*
fu
rn"
ll • X
unitorni.
They went into the office,
thi'-vin was hunched at his
desk over some papers, -but. his
pet wasn't moving: he was just
MtJiivg there He looked up
, lowly "< >!i lielln," he said.
can s .
; ■/"
"dust, a couple of things
,,.l ' Varallo. -Did you know i'doh’t utirpTst ■ Ves. I'm a
,. -I he, : rnarne I before ? Who ; friend of Mr. Dimcan's. Ross,
p, v, y I what do you mean? I—it said
ltd- I'll
then- p
U PVT
hk-
- (n t • i i
- ! J tin hi itiid-. V.t
, , a - S,,\- ,r-t ■ fort -
, bv tile ||-. . c. iv ■ 1
'r,i(tni\ ilre-'-ed -n
c , r a-| nt- >v u ; t h’ ii
t pill k at t lie pne in'.
i-tng ,x*rung!If.
pc uses,' ft. ,a:dl 1 ji, ,:a
extravagan'p - ■«"
h'-r- income
There u , a
The United States has lone • ' -crl to he a tepp ,-p
it is how rul 'd by c-oriibjiit-iUon ,of
that have scama !.he. .Politicians tift
'i* •¥' '**•
When people act the idea-that th'"-' can make -"uu
,-,oney out of you they are unusually attentive. , .
tative republic
ninority groups
I THEALMANAC
r> f r, •
vrn
t Ml- ! . in-l. f-
- *; • » •' • w ; j ,
t.i"11 If i r
an
U a i hr-.ki".
- a- < mint. . j
:ul six the
ur,a mj . eight
-1v ti a- *
1 vrs
1
.ninet;, -thr.
■,r o ' ■ j
Kn l h
(j (
' 'iirvur . ,ni'l
Varalu.. ,
i. •,.;.( •
j , .14.
iii(- u-'in-a
tr:'. n.m.-Jy. ; ]
"1
wt ifi<
! ' sm,l
*rcoH'ii> j
"wild
K '
it Kut
fan v ■ •;• ]
I,.i-; m looked surprised. ! in the paper last night—she was
ft, - ' be "said- "-Yes. I did,' killed, by a burglar or 'some-'
fold me she'd been mar- j thing like - What is it?”
• , -i D. than a year - he turned | "Maybe,” .said O'Connor, also
hut to lie a bum, drapk. and beat sounding resigned, "you
and
pn si1 lent knev! t ;• :U,-
(ttupro SJerur?
Established In 1894
Published Each Afternoon Fscepl Saturday and
Sunday Morning _____________
THE U F.liO PI BUSHING CO.,
119 E. Main, ( uero, Texas
Inc.
Second class postage, paid at Otero
Texas
Member
Texas Press Association
South Texas Press Association
Southern Newspaper Publishers Association
I piled Press Interna I ionnl
T , i .v i- V -,.I iv, \-c- v t h p
'I at 1$ i lav of tOk,’ v j - n 17! t,> f o-
], „, -
Iti'- n o. tp|(coa, htilR it.-
first quarter -
P e nprapng .t if- ire
1 lp-.t'-f an-1: Sa turn
The p\:ening si ni-. are, .hipifer,.
s,it urn and Venn-
On tie-. ■! , n...ir to- \
111 i if-’ ‘ '’a -t-apl'c - ( ' ■ t (U'lit.il •
.- ai led I p -'-i P.aiiis spa'tii tor
the '-N-;'a \Vi.ri'!.,.!, with a; ■< ou\oy
of three- Vi-- -pi - tile.
rja. th)* N na -ml the Paita and
will. 1!
to. .
■ha
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pn 'fill bly
ftS
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r w’a
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it' would-
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Mi Calif'irfiia,
D'nt
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will ic
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thing she
I'.!-,
:■ ■ ■ ’» -
rJ. to h
M.4-
I- i' r up, sti,- -whs only eighteen
II- ,, n. I didn't know what
his n Wait a minute, sure I
d-4. P'!-account of the marriage
,She'd gone back to us-
:: .- h r maiden name, Britton,
hi,' l- gallv sli>- still had his, she
p it . it down on the license, .it
is Broderick, something like
!-!
I’J.
ACK HOWERTON .— -
j c “PETE” HOWERTON
MRS JACK HOWERTON
President and Publisher
___.....______ Vice President
.. . Secretary-Treasurer
National Advertlstne Representatives
Texas Daily Press League Inc., 960 Hartford Bide..
i- P.
■I
\\ ;i ri'pp
hr l 'n«-
Dallas
Subscription Kates
Daily A Sunday: Home delivered by carrier: One Year $12 00,
six months $6.25. 3 months $3.25. 1 month $1.10. By mail in
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^iaal Q’Tf*" ^ ^*tv ot c~uero qnf1 Bounty of DeWitt
' TELEPHONE CK 6 1181
iim t ('
dge x u -d :■ ,pi’i„ i' , f
in Plyu'-'-if' 1 f '-„>>• the
of • l( f I I
llardm •
, ted S*at -
In IMS. Whb' ,ker <i'h.i’ubei--
an actm:"»! ®\l - ! ' ,m .ur n.gn-
1 c»l Alger th--. former State De-
partment off:, ;-il, a- ..a onetpne
key member of the ('u>nirtuni-'t
| uhdergr un i in Washing! n
i III 105], Sfd.ndai !->>• ked the I'.
ter. but tied tip ir. a trust ■ < I
adminisfen. d by th<-'. bark . the
i),-, us to i im pnjptf i y .she ‘uwn •
ed: her birth ecrtbicate; sa rtifi-
iSates of rriititnin stocks: a h - ; - ■
•a ilin't gt i i-t ■' ’• m -fjtpli'll- r
two inaiti gr < »*11 o ill's. I -;-
official deatli _c ’ ’: <af b -r
patents, John \1. ahrt Marian L.
Baumgartnet aud n jitmif-1-: ot
statement s-ot - -.--p ■; -r trom a
conservative brotterage ;n
Angeles.
"Wrong on several counUs,”
said Varaljo. "Her maiden name
v,- i- Ba'.tTigartner. Stic married
; th ,'leriek when she was twen--
t-t \y(>, ■ a -; -.rdi’ng- to her sister,
and lived with him a couple of
’.years. Apparently .she got ab-
sent minded when she filled out
the form for your marriage li-
re:., Site put herself down as j
t:.v» nty-sgvf n w hen -she . was a.c-;,
t -: -!; v t l.i ir! y-otie." - -'
7 :Pie told me Oh, !
v.e|i I'm not surprised," said]
I t.iru art we Italy. 'I didn't know •
ill that. no. Why?”
•The door -opened behind them. |
A rid U ion e a n ' s expression -
ch-mgr 1 to st. "k fear, to'some-
•thing like despair.
A woni-ui's. voice said eagerly,
"Bos.-- my darling—" and then,1
se, ittg the others, "Oh, excuse
me, I drin t—"
Varallo sw ung around. She I
Miss Morgan had planned.-or
hoped to be married, Mr. Dun-
can?"
"Ross, who are these—I don’t
iinderst "
"1 never saw the girl in my
life,” said Diintan loudly. “Get
out of here, you—you crazy fe-
male!, She's just a nut-—"
"Not that,, easy," said Varal-
lo. "Sit down, Miss Morgan.
We’d like you to answer some
questions!”
"No!" said Duncan. "No-"
"Take it easy, Duncan, The
cat's out of the bag now. What.
1 said still goes, you know—if
you're innocent, we’ll find it
put.”
The girl took two steps t.o a
chair and sat down. Duncan
said harshly. "She's got nothing
to do with this. We've neither
ol us anything to do with it..
For heaven's sake, believe me,
she's— She couldn't—"
"Ross, darling, what vt it?'
she said. "What's -the trouble,
Ross 7”
I loss Duncan has reason to
ask bitterly, "Would it expe-
dite matters If 1 wrote out a
confession now?" Continue
the story here tomorrow.
Fr'-rn thi) no
1- A 1
! to Harp) r A Brothers. Copyright f? 1962 by Elisabeth Linmglon.
Pist-ribqfed tiy King Features Syndicate.
S Military
Point N
A( a ll at Wo-t
wjvon auth<>i it;os
J
my now york
BY MEL, HEIMER
m
(■:
Susannah York
| ONflON—It seems uicredible that an in*
| ; tellige'nt man, an aging man, a man who
uses a thinking man's filters could fall, in
love in England. But it is true. Here I am,
old Heart-on-the-Sleeve, madly impassioned
again.
And T haven’t even seen the girl.
Tor.tstant Winders of this department are
aware by' now that London is not exactly my
favorite city,, but once again a great sileer
bird, after payment of wampum, has deposit-
ed me here and r am making the best of it.
Last night I went to see a good play—“Thai
Affair,” ,\uth Alec Chmcs-and when I got
hack to my digs fas we say), the phone rang
and there was Miss Susannah York.
Miss York was three hours away in Dorset, where she Is mak-
ing "Tom Jones" with the talented Albert Finney for United
Artists release, "I had been told she was a paJe, slender, delicate
blonde, which is absolute Heimer-type, but circumstances pre-
vented going to Dorset .I the horses were running at Ascot t, so
we made small talk over the blower.
"Hello?" Miss York said-and I knew, immediately, that the
scientists were right. The two sexiest items about a woman
ARE her hair and voice. After that opening, dulcet., Dresden-
China "Hello," Miss York and I talked for a half-hour, but I
am not sure what about. I was a gone goose.
77(15117 seen
her, but —
TT DEVELOPED THAT SUSANNAH had visited my beloved
New York once, for 10 days, a couple of seasons ago—and was
not overwhelmed. She came m summer, which is the climatic
nadir of our town, and she got what she described politely as
an "unfair view"
"There’s such a terrible rush there, isn’t there?" she mused.
"People don’t neem to have time for other people. Oh, I’m not
speaking about the show-business persons I was dealing with;
they couldn’t have been nicer. But just plain old ordinary peo-
ple—taxi drivers and waitresses, for example. They re so cold
and impersonal. I realize, of course, its because they just don t
have time-—but to a lost soul from England, they give one a
depressed feeling "
1 listened to Miss York's, golden tones in a haze. I remember
Paying something about route to Manhattan, honey, and you 11
wear pearl, and she moved on to other items about N. Y.
"The stores, naturally, are marvelous, and so’s the theater
and the Museum of Modem Art and lots of other places, she
paid. "And, I suppose, most of the people are, too. I'lLjust have
to come back another time when I’m not working, and I can
kind of melt into the city and soak up its flavor."
I told Susannah 1 was just the old soak to help her out.
stood there, hand on the open
door, looking' uncertain. A pret-
ty girl, an unusual type. Dark
hair, white skin, thick straight
brows. A plain . tailored blue
sheath dress, nice figure. About
twenty-five. She looked quickly
from Duncan tn Varallo to O’-
Connor.
"Ross—" she said again, and
shut the door behind her. “I saw
it in the paper last night, 1
came as soon as I could—my
lunch hour—"
"I’m sorry, what w it you
want, miss?" said Duncan. ’The
office is closed."
"You're a friend of Mr. Dun-
”” asked Varallo. "Miss
WHEN SHE WAS HERE, she stayed at the St. Regis, which
Is one of our fancier flophouses—and she wished she hadn't "It
was terribly posh and all that,” she explained in pear-shaped
tones, "but you know, when I travel around Europe or elsewhere,
1 rather like to stay at scruffy little hotels. They may not have
silk sheets and hot water, but they seem to reflect the nature
of the country better and you get an idea of what, say, Mexico
or Munich or Berlin are all' about.’
I had to keep her talking: I asked how she liked making
"Freud" with Monty Clift in Vienna and she said she had mixed
reactions about it, and was interested in seeing what kind of
picture John Huston had made of it, after the cutting. Then I
asked any number of inane questions after that and finally X
ran out of them; Miss York had an 8 a. m. call today and had
to hang up.
I sat staring out my window at the smoke and damp rooftops
of London for a long time, in love again—and in London, of ail
places. C cst impossible!
DAILY CROSSWORD
Hhf moistened her lips. "Mor-
gan. Susan Morgan. Ross
Duncan stood up, violent on
movement “No," he said. "She
must he a nut—or a reporter
—claiming to be—I don’t know
her, never saw her bof—”
"Miss Morgan,” said Varallo
resignedly. So here—by Dun-
can's manner — was the rein-
forcement to motive, and Lieu-
tenant King was going to like
it very much indeed. “Have you
known Miss Morgan long, Dun-
can?”
] "1 don't - I just snui
| The girl backed away sudden •
j )y. She looked at Duncan. "I
ACROSS
1. Food:
slang
6. Moves, as
a cork,
on water
10. Capital of
North
Vlet-Nam
11. To help
12. Anger:
colloq.
13. Ceremony
14. Persuade
15. Knock-
out:
abbr.
17. Hebrew
letter
18. Biblical
character
19. Speak
22. Father:
affec-
tionately
23. Attacks
25. Friendship
26. Peter
Rabbit’s
garden
dlnne.r
29. Signed:
abbr.
32. Cf bee3
33. Beige
34. Preposition
35. Green-light
signal:
37. Church cross
ua. First king
of Israel
41. Utah
Indian
43. River to
North Sea
44. Watchful
45. Cut
4G. Cowboy's
rope
DOWN
1. Magna -
2. Suspended
3. Beneath
4. Sheep
disease
21. Music
note
23. Sur-
rounded
by
24. Perch
25. Con-
stella-
tion
5. Scot, church 26. Reasons
6. Crosspiece 27. To
O
i i
V L
A
ijTm'
»
E
i
p
i
NJ
A
a
5
X
E|T
SI
7. Japanese
f-ash
8. Seaman’s
church
9. Guides
12. Pair
16. Ejects
20. Scottish
river
dis-
may
28. New
Eng-
land
state:
abbr.
29. Scrubs
30. A cave
Yt»t»rd»y'i Aaiwar
3’. 'n
Gnsti ’-rer:'
West slang
33. lroquoiana
36. Gem
39. White yam
40. Permit
42. A wing
%
1
1
3
4
5
%
U>
i
9
9
1
iO
%
u
1 L
%
u
14-
%
IS
lk>
%
%
17
10
%
%
IO
2Q
21
IX
IS
24
%
%
%
%
%
%
lie
2J
28
%
2^
3 o
31
3?
%
'4
33
1A
V/A
YA
/A A
YA
VA
^ i.
b9
30
4-0
%
41
42
rs
%
44
%
45
%
4<a
%
DAILY CRYPTOQl OTE — Here’s how to work Its
AXYDLBAAXR
Is L O N G F E LLOW
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A U used
for the three L’s, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apos-
trophics, the length and formation of the words are all hint*
Each day the code letters are different.
A Cryptogram Quotation
UHLFILUWTE KM JT MIKLTJTR
8 V III JLIYVHLTE YKMF KVHETSTB*
mfk ikmhlvye u m q y v e
Yesterday’s Cryptoquote: THE REPENTANCE OF A
HYPOCRITE IS ITSELF HYPOCRISY.—HAZUTT
© 1362, Kin* Fulnoi S* ndicftte, Im.
CLIP AND MAIL
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lismi->e(fcadets for cheating.
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\ thought for I lie day Wusih
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thor. said "A woman’s '«hole,
life Is a history of the a flections.
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The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 68, No. 220, Ed. 1 Friday, August 3, 1962, newspaper, August 3, 1962; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth696565/m1/4/: accessed July 12, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cuero Public Library.