The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 71, No. 158, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 6, 1965 Page: 4 of 6
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The National Window
By LYLE WItBON
United Press International
Some smart GI In Viet Nam
probably could get himself a
quick ticket home right now by
demanding equal treatment for
Pfc. and officer alike.
A U.S. Army court martial
last week found guilty a West
Pointer lieutenant, who refused
to pbey an order to move from
Saigon to a remote village out-
post in South Viet Nam. Some
GI Joe might do likewise. The
lieutenant said he disapproved
stra-iglvt
4 THE CUERO RECOUP, Tuc«„ July a, *966
Editorial
Truth About China
It Is well that the American people are told the
truth about Red China. We are often told the bad part—
that the people are dominated by a Communist form
of government, taught to oppose the United States, etc.
The good part about Red China we seldom hear.
But we should face the facts. And some of them are as
follows:
Under the Communists, the people of Red China
have raised their standard of living considerably. They
are no longer — for the most part — exploited by crook-
ed war lords, taxed beyond their ability to pay well into
the future, and left at the mercy of wars between ban-
dit chiefs — as was the case, too often, under Chiang
Kai Shek.
The people are working and enthusiastic and the
country Is gradually being industrialized. Every writer
from a neutral country, visiting Red China, reports such
facts. Thus one cannot say that It is Incredible that the
majority supports the Communist regime.
It seems that the Chinese people, while under a
Communists dictatorship, are better off under the pre-
sent regime, as far as their standard of living and in-
ternal stability are concerned, than they were under
Chiang Kai Shek.
The same can be said about Vietnam. There are
many Indications that the majority of people in South j
Vietnam support the Vletcong, and that the govern- alj:. , , . ,. o .
i Up have tried to be like a la-
ment we presently support is not popular. Certainly itjlhor t0 you wherein have we
is true that many of the governments of South Vietnam failed? Have we been too good
In the last twenty years have been rotten and have Ito 'ou or not 8<*Hi onoUL’h
exploited
democracy.
And there Is a good question whether the people of
South Vietnam understand democracy, or would be cap-
able of sustaining a genuine, democratic government.
This is not to say that we must suddenly surrender,
or to argue that Communism Is good enough for the
peoples of Asia, because it kills Individual freedom. But
we should face these facts, if we are to understand
what we are up against in this part of the world, where
American boys are dying each day, for American policy
and interests.
Reporter Condemns Wrist Slapping
Lieutenant Who Declined To Fight
HEADSMAN
WITH
FRIENDS LIKE THAT:..
By Tom Anderson
Dear World, Moon. Mars and
, We don’t like to brag, but we
the people, and offered them no genuine j have-bllilt a debt seVcral times
greater than the comb ined
debts of all the nations of the
world. Our total public debt, in-
cluding all commitments, is now
more than one
How much is a trillion dollars,
of U.S. policy in Southeast Aula
and that the war was not worth
a single American life. A great
many Americans here at home
would agree with the lieuten-
ant. A great many more would
disagree.
The point of this essay, how-
ever, is that the Army brass
and the Johnson administration
seem to have some doubts of
their own. Their doubt seems to
he whether there is enough
home front -upport of southeast
Asia policies to permit bare
knuckled prosecution of the war
there.
Slap On Wrist
Incredible or not, the dispatch
describing the court martial re-
lated that the mutinous West
Pointer merely was relieved of
his commission, deprived of
pay and allowances and re-
stored to civilian life. This slap
on the wrists was somewhat
less than crippling.
What is now to prevent some
smart GI from telling his pla-
toon cor mander what he can
do with his war. The smart GI
could anticipate being relieved
of his enlisted status in the U.'S.
Army and of being deprived of
his pay. and allowances. .So.
home he would go by the next
transport,, maybe latch onto a
job with plenty of overtime
Swim With Care
INDUSTRIES OFFER
FREE GUIDED TOURS
WASHINGTON (UPI). Free
tours for the public are offered
-■trillion dollars. I J’?' h/jndrcds oftl
trillion dollars. P‘ant*“c™s th,p United Sta-
_. . . j i tes, the National Geograj hie
End to end. a trill.on dollar] Soc^y reports ^ ,ours are
as diverse as American indus-
I try— from trout raising and
. .. ... ,, . /paper making to the production
Age. We dont blame the fart of catsup cameras and cabjn
cruisers. Several firms even
bills would reach around the j
middle of the earth 4.000 times, j
But after all. this is the Space '
We don’t blame the
that we're bankrupt entirely on
you. W> confess that we have
amassed twice as much ■ debt
spending for our own selfish
interests as we have on the rest
of the world.
I haven't read the papers to- j
provide free baby-sitting serv- t
ice while parents tour the prem-
ises.
and, as the saying goes, cry all
the way to the bank.
Why not* If a West Pointer
gets by with a penalty not
much worse than “naughty,
naughty” for plain mutiny, by
what standard could a dog sol-
dier be wholly condemned for
slirir.g into that kind of pie?
A field Army or a political
admir' ‘ ation boldly confident
of home front support would
never brush under the rug mu-
tinous conduct of any kind,
least of all by a young officer
who had been educated by his
counti ■ to serve it at all times.
The GI oes of this and other
wars do not have quite that ob-
ligation to duty.
The dispatches about last
week’s case were brief. There
may have been forgiving cir-
cumstances in the refusal of
the young lieutenant to do his
duty as ordered. But in the ab-
sence o' such evidence, it must
l>e assumed that the Army
brass and perhaps the Johnson
administration feared the home
front would not support a se-
vere penalty; say some time at
hard laljor. It would not be nec-
essary to execute a single mu-
tineer. If mutiny became epi-
demic, however, the means to
suppress it would need to be
severe Indeed. !
The incident of the mutinous
lieutenant spotlights what
seems to be wrong with this
war. The home front is not at
war. At t’ White House and in
Congress, it is politics and polls
as usual. Old timers will recall
that day in FDR’s press con-
ference when the United States
had begun to go all-out against
Hitler. FDR opened the confer-
ence by saying he just had
turned in his suit as Dr. New
Deal and had been issued a uni-
form in which he would play
the role of Dr. Win-The-War.
This rubbery statement al-
most concealed FDR’s steely |
purpose to pursue war at the:
expense of social reform. Many j
New Dealers and pampered
eggheads bellowed in protest.
But FDR proceeded on the war
path confident that he had
home front support. LBJ and
Co., have their war in South-
east Asia and their Great So-
ciety reforms at home; keep-
ing, you might say, everybody
unhappy.
day. but day before yesterday
there were 125 recognized gov-
ernments. so-called, and I’m as-
With vacation time in full swing, we offer a word
of caution to the swimmer. Judging from the experience
of other years, approximately 3.500 lives will have been \hamod to h,avp tQ that 'vp,
f srivT to oniv 99 of them. Hut
lost by accidental drowning these next few months. This I what U.P h/Vt, ^.ivon to you !
represents only about half of the total number of people j over there, plus the interest we
have had to pav on the money i
| now totals about S136 bill i o n j
' and is 39 percent of our bonded I
federal debt. PleaSe bear in1
mind that we must save’ some j
W.R. Burnett's Stirring Novel
drown each year, but they are crowded Into the three
summer months.
The annual death toll in the United States from
drowning grows larger each year. More than one-half
of those dying In this manner are young persons under
»«*» Meredith Literary Agency. Copyngot
c 1965 by Bantam Booka, Inc. Distributed by King Feature! Syndicate.
The
Family
Lawyer
'TILL
CHAPTER 14
lying in bed
twenty-four years of age, the largest single age group of
youths between fifteen and nineteen years.
Every vacationist should be careful this summer. A
period of rest and relaxation from work is fine, and
necessary, but carelessness should not rob it of Its plea-
sure. To venture too far in the surf, or to take chances
In swift current, means running the risk of drowning.
Swimmers should be extremely careful.
money and things for the moon.
[ It may be a terribly disadvant-
Dlsclpline Is something for every child to learn but
the lesson requires a wise teacher.
* * *
It’s Just as easy to fill your mind with something; Socialism,
worthwhile as with rancid humor.
* * *
The best way to get ahead in life Is to stop talking
about it and do something about it.
¥ ¥ ¥
Sports aren't everything but they provide good com-
petitive training for boys and girls.
¥ ¥ ¥
aged area. We’ have arranged
for Russia to get there first
with a man. But we are deter-
mined to get there first \vith
foreign aid.
Our best friend, Great Brit-
ain. used to rule the waves. She :
now waives the piles, and the !
expenses. Britain has received 1
only $9 billion from us. Her gra-'
titude is so great, she sells bus-
ses and things to our neighbor j
artd friend. Dr. Castro. Hritain
j has cut her armed forces in
I half to provide tax cuts and ex-
! pansion for her welfare state
while postpon i n g
| payments on her debts to us ag-
i ain and again. Britain, once
free - enterprising, is now free-
loading.
In 1964 some 200 ships flying
‘free-world” flags carried cup-
plies into North Vietnam. Forty1
■ oereent of these --hips were Bri-
| *ish. Bri*ai/i i® like an old pros,
i titute: she’ll do business with.
' anybody who’ll pay the price-
The best way to get along with people Is to epillc,! cash ow nations selling to,
be friendly, and seldom say what you think’ hjr North Vietnamese enemy]
+ if. q. ! (where we fight alone' are Ja-’
'pan, Greece. Norway. Lebanon. *
About half of the Ills that afflict the human body' Italy, West Germany and, Pan- j
originate in a pampered, Idle mind.
* ¥ ¥
One trouble with the so-called human race
It has too many would-be leaders.
(ftupro Srrnrlb
Established la ISM
Published Each Afternoon Except (Saturday and
Monday Morning
THE CUERO PUBIJMHING CO
US e. Main Cuero. Texas
Second c! ®s postage paid at Cuero, Texas
TEX
South lexat Press Association
Southern Newspaper Publishers Association
MCK HOWERTON — -
j C PETE* HOWERTON
MRS JACK HOWERTON
SAM GERALD ...........- -......-
Editor
lexaa Dsilv
Advertising
Press League Inc
4r Sunday: Hone
«ik months St).25. 3
jama. We hope that American
! mothers w ho lose their sons in
! Vietnam may get some solace
Is that from the thought that our
j friends helped kill them We've,
i given' the above friends $30 hi!-
j lion If they spit on us as they ,
! accept our gifts, as Nasser. Ru-
j karoo. Tito and others have j
! done, we mtr* remember to'
| live, up m our friend Khnixh-[
! chev’s inspiring tribute "When .
• you spit r,n Americans .they'
think it is dew."
|. At least one American cargo'
'ship '(re-named "Kolkhonik”> ’
[which we lend-leased to Russia]
]in 1943 is now home-based at]
j Havana. So, at least she’s only j
[99 miles away v Small world’ j
Our House of Representative'
i voted to cut down our rifts- to
| Egypt’s Nasser who thumbed
* his nose at us with bo»h hands |
| Then the House restored the cut. ;
land now Nasser takes our'aid*
j with one hand and thumbs hi®,
President and Publuaw nose at us with the other s.
------ ----- Vice Presiden-1 we re mak-ng progress.
Secretary-Treasure! J yet some of our selfish, short
and Asst Gen. Mgr sighted and poorly iofor m e d
| taxpayers object that Senator;
I Woridbright is now attempting
j to create new names for these [
I programs so they won’t be ebar-
to ‘'foreign aid.” He and j
US to 1
ready awake, Mira be lie May-
berry listened and watched tn
amusement as her maid, Amy.
came in with the tray, light-
heartedly humming a waltz
tune.
She put the tray on a table.
] did a lew dance steps on her
way across the room to draw
the curtains, and then stood
as the blinding sunlight flooded
in, looking off across the es-
tate toward the stables, still
humming. In a moment the
humming stopped and Mirabelle
could hear Amy chuckling to
herself.
"Well,” called Mirabelle, “you
are certainly cheerful this
morning, Amy.”
Amy turned, startled, and put
her hand over her mouth. “Oh.
I’m sorry, Miss. I thought you
were still asleep.”
She hurried over with Mira-
belle’s bed jacket, then she ar-
ranged the breakfast tray
across Mirabelle'a knees.
"You must have enjoyed your
day off, Amy," said Mirabelle.
beginning to eat.
“The evening of it, certainly.”
said Amy. struggling not to
laugh.
“Something special?"
“Oh, quite special. Miss Mira.
There was a dance at the Me-
chanics’ Hall."
"Is that unusual?" Mirabelle
had never seen Amy quite like
!l didn’t realize what a big fei-
but al- ] low be was—and then wearing
that lovely Scotch plaid vest!
Strong! Wait till I tell you.
Miss. That is, if I’m not boring
you.”
“Not at all, Amy,” murmur-
ed Mirabelle.
“Well, Kelly asked Grace
Leonard to waltz with him.
She’s a town girL Nothing out
of the ordinary. Tm sure I don’t
know why he selected her. Miss
Anyway, he did. The other men
all grumbled about the waltz.
But you should have seen Kel-
ly! He docs a sort of wild hop-
ping European waltz Oh, it was
grand. Miss Mira. Grade Just
sailed along with him. And then
all the girls wanted Kelly to
teach them the hopping waltz
Oh, it was a carnage! Well,
there is this Inez Hamon. Am I
boring you. Miss?”
“No, no, Amy. Go right a-
head.”
The men are quite silly
about her, though 1 don't know
why. Lafe Spriggs is mad about
her—you know, Mias: Spriggs,
the horsedealer. Well, Inez came
over to Kelly, bold as you
please, and said to him: Teach
me!’ Just like that, MU*—and
held her arms out to him. So
Kelly, grinning with ths Irish
face, galloped off with her. And
it was pretty to see. even if
Inez is a little too plump, be-
cause she is a fine dancer. Well,
I think Lafe Spriggs tried to
this before and she was rather j break up the waltz but Kelly
curious. Besides, she liked to j wouldn't let him, though he was
talk with Amy over breakfast; : very polite about It- Do you
it was ’a kind of vicarious in-! want to hear the rest. Miss —
ing for her Amy, though only j I Just run on and on.”
Just barely sixteen, the same “Yes.'’, said Mirabelle, “tell
age as Mirabelle herself, seem-' me the reet ”
ed to live a very full life. j * • •
"Unusual?” Amy echoed ' VV/EIJ-*. Miss, it got very ug-
“Not the dance at the Mechan- j W iy w
tvs’ Halt They hold it quite! and all. particularly as Inez
frequent. It was just the one; turned her back on him and
dance. I was so tired I almost ] wouldi't have anything more to
didn’t go. Oh. taw! I ® glad I [ do with him. When the dance
did, Miss Mira ” [ was over a great crowd was
"Oh ?” Mirabelle shammed a ! out In front to see what would
took him home. Oh, what a
night, Miss! I’ve never seen so
much excitement before."
After a pause, Mirabelle ask-
ed: "What happened after
that?"
“Oh. nothing that 1 know of.
Miss. Oh, law! look what time
it is, and you seem a little pale
Miss Mira. I bet I’ve worn you
out with ail this gabbing. Ex-
cuse me, please.”
“You may take the tray,
Amy."
Amy took the tray and start-
ed off with it.
"These things are hard for
me to understand,” said Mira-
belle, with great effort. "Did
the . . . the bold girl . . .
was she left there all alone at
night, her escort being taken
home?”
“Oh, she doesn't need to wor-
ry about being alone, Miss. It
wouldn't be for long. And if
she had her way, you can bet
she corral ed Kelly. She's a bold
one. Is that all. Miss?”
"Tea Amy,” said Mirabelle,
but Just as Amy was going
through the door MirabeDe ask-
ed as If It were a matter of no
consequence: “This girl ... is
she In sendee like yourself,
Amy?”
“Oh, no, Miss. Shs works for
Mrs. Stafford in Boyce. The
dressmaker, you know."
When Mirabelle came down-
stairs that morning she found
the General pacing impatiently
tn the huge entrance hall.
"Mira,” he called, abruptly,
"I’ve got to drive into Cincin-
nati today. Knew you'd like to
go along ao I waited We’ll be
back for dinner.”
"! don't think Ml go today.
Father,” said Mirabelle., •
“Laughing Heirs”
The letter bore grim titling* :
old Uncle Harvey had passed
away. Bui as George read it.
not a flicker of sorrow crossed
his countenance. On the contr-
ary, his only reaction was • a
whoop of delight at the nows that
he was the sole heir to $20,000.
George was not heartless. But
the fact of the matter was that
he and Uncle Harvey — actually,
just a distant relative - had al-
ways disliked each other inten-
sely. They had not even been on
speaking terms for years.
The only reason the $20,000
was coming to George was that
he was technically, the next of
kin. Since Uncle Harvey had
never bothered to make a will,
the law automatically gave his
money to the next of kin.
Are such ironies common? So
common, alas, that lawyers
have a special phrase to des-
cribe people like George: “lau-
ghing heirs.”
Each year, property worth bil-
lions of dollars must necessarily
change hands hecause of death.
When there is no will, this
wealth is transferred according
to the rigid formulas of inheri-
tance.
Although these formulas do
try to be fair, all they can do
as a practical matter is to fol-
low the lines of kinship. What
may have mattered most to the
decreased—the ties of friend-
ship, a sense of gratitude, the
promptings of charity - cannot
be weighed by a court after he
is gone.
An added mockery is that the
more remote the kinship, the
more costly it may be to track
down the heir and. settle his
rights.
Some states have tried to foil
the laughing heir by cutting off
all claims beyond a certain de-
gree of kinship. That may help
in a particular case, but then
again it may not. For even a re-
lative who is close in terms of
kinship may be undeserving in
every other way.
The real answer is for the in-
dividual to express his wishes
and his wisdom before he dies
If you don't like the thought of
some ungrateful heir clucking
over your demise, you can pre-
vent it simply by exercising
your will power—your power to
make a will.
(A public service feature of
the American Bar Association
and the State Bar of Texas.
Written by Will Bernard.>
DAILY CROSSWORD
/965-—
RESS ASSOCIATION
The General glanced at her
with Lafe threatening tn surprise. She atwaye wanted
to go—to no matter what des-
tination.
"I thought Ld go and ace
Mrs. Denning this morning,“
said Mirabelle, after a brtef
pause, ,
mild interest. “Something, out J happen, and sure enough, Mtss. I The General studied his
of the ordinary happen?” jLafe tried to fight with Kelly.)daughter narrov.lv she seldom
you see, Mias Mira, But Kelly would not fight' with j went calling and never, to hia
him and tried to make him sec
reason, but Lafe wouldn't lis-
ten. So Kelly Just held him by
the arms and he couldn't move-
Oh, it was pathetic, Miss. I
even felt sort of sorry for poor
Lafe, who Isn’t a bad sort. Kel-
960 Hartford Bldg Dallas
Rales
delivered by earner: One Year $12 Jt , .
,JA ____ __$3-25 j month $1.10 By mail J ' _ .
U*r*iM Victoria Goliad Karnes. Gonzales Lavaca and Jackacn Henry Sabot lodge want
Well.
the men all like the square
dances — and hate the waltz
While the women—at least the
young ones — all prefer the
waltz. But the men will seldom
dance it because they think it's
sort of . . . well, sisey. And
most of them can't, anyway, j ly would let him go, then he
and they step on your feet]tried to fight again, and Kelly
something awful Well. Kelly,! would hold him. Lafe called
he's a great waltzer ] Kelly some very bad names.
There was a faint jangle of and . . "
china and silverware | “You mean you girls watched
"Kelly?” asked Mirabelle In all this?” asked Mirabelle
a cold voice, as if she'd never j
heard the name before.
month
On untie*, um rear $TS0. six months $450. on*
DtaJ> elsewhere in Texas One Year $10.00 six
month $1 00 By Mail outside Texas, One Year $12.00
» 25 3 months $3-25. I month $1.10. Semi BseeJy Be
mart ur< DeWin and adjoining counties. One Year $4 00.
$t4S> Elsewhere One Year $4 JO. 6 months $2.50
Ofhnat Organ o( ths Gh> at Caere and County at
75c. By
$5JW >
6 months
H*
6 months
DeWW
channel sll our foreign a id thru
the U.N., O.A.S. or whatever.
Then the receiver, a* well a®
the American peopl®, has no id-
'Yes, Miss. 1 know It isn’t
proper and we shouldn't have.
Amy looked at her in amaze- i But it was exciting. Pretty
merit. “Why, you know. Miss | soon Gale got a big clasp knife
Mira. The black stallion * out of his pocket and . . .”
groom.”
There
knowledge, had she gone to the
Dennings unaccompanied. Mrs.
Denning was a rather boring
fat woman of his own age. Of
coarse the Dennings practical-
ly ran the county, or thought
they did, but that was a mat-
ter of small consequence to
Mirabelle. "Anything special?”
asked the General.
“Yes,” said Mirabelle. “She
and the Colonel are managing
the Charity Horse Show at'Cin-
cinnati and I want ,to talk to
her about It ”
“I sec.” said the General,
though he didn't. “All right,
Mira. See you at dinner.”
ACROSS
1. Ammuni-
tion:
slang
5. Meal
11. Portuguese
navigator
12. Show
clearly
1.3. Questions
14. Irony
15. Rip
17. Gunny
cloth
IS. N. Z.
fort
19. Tomb
inscription
23. Famous
musical
comedy
26. Annoy
27. Musical
instrument
31. Character-
istic at a
forebear
S3. Having a
peak
■34. Small
fish
37. Not
strict.
86 Arabian
chieftain'
41. Awn
45. Smell
47. Hand-to-
hand fights
48. C. Amer
sash
49 Dresses,
’ up
,50 Cut
DOWN
1. Girl s
nmn*
2. Error
3. Manu-
facture
4. Greek
mountain
6. Matter,
law
6— Le
Galitenna
7 Abvsa
8.--
Loos
9 Frag-
ment
10. Fangs
14. Make
hot
again
18. Kettle
20. Italian
river
21. Obstruct
22. Thin
tin
plate
24. Creole
state:
abbr.
25. Vipers
28. Close
1 to
29. Capital
of
Kenya
80 Of
great
M«
32 Music
note
33 Fastener
34. More
infrequent
33. Banish
I-1UIIUH
Ail'JHii
(B(dldl*l3
won IIU1I4 (-1141:1
fflix amSiaw ara
wiifdin aramr*
Hainan Huirawn
auEira meumi
uui i-monn ma
(•Ian EMM Hiqffl
>jhini4tf unman
aMJElffl Mfuasin
HinnuH u iujiiu
Mne»ri tanw
39. Witty
sayings
40. Heathen
image
42 Observe
*3. Denary
44 Simpleton
46. Soak
flax
1
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r-
“
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r
10
17“
12.
75“
14-
ib
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16
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19
20
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silence.
was s brtef, blank
Mirabelle stirred un-
ea who gave what. Would we be [ easily and pretended to eat
less hated if we did that?
Devotedly,
Your Uncle Sam
-A knife?” cried Mirabelle.
“Yes But don't worry, alias
Kelly juat held him as before,
and suddenly Lafe gave up In
disgust and some of the boys
Published by srranfement with ScoU Meredith laterary Aceaey. Copyright C MS by Beats® Books, tee.
Distributed by Kiag Features Bred Irate
“Oh. yes." cried Amy, “Kelly!
Mtrmhelle’e eurtoeitr shoot
Inez Hamon baa been aroused
perhaps too much for her own
good. Continue the story
DAILY rRVPTOQUOTE — Here * how to work tit
AXYDLBAAXB
le LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another, tn this sample A la used
for the throe L’s, X for the two O’s, etc. Single letter*, apoe-
t rophies. the length and formation of the words are all hintA.
Each day the code letters are different.
A Cryptogram Qootattna
X DWWQ UPOKTXTPM, B KST.
TWKP. BK X UXJBWU JXFCBUD
JW BJKPFN. — XMJZ8M TBFFPM
1 esterday’s (ryptoquote: POETRY IK THE IMPISH AT.
TEMPT TO PAINT THE COLOR OF THE WIND—MAX-
WELL BODENHEIM
40 BRXW!
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Gerald, Sam. The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 71, No. 158, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 6, 1965, newspaper, July 6, 1965; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth698298/m1/4/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cuero Public Library.