The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 117, Ed. 1 Friday, May 14, 1937 Page: 5 of 6
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THURSDAY, MAY 14, MI
THE CTERO, RECORD, CUERO, TEXAS
By LES FORGRA
BIG SISTER
DAD VJU-LWAMT \T RIGHT OP l^EKT TO
„ THE WALL UHE.
HE HAD rr THE
\ OTHER DA/.
SWOCXTH.
-fHAT'TH
NOWAY
TO HELP
rr VOUr,
YES, I KNOWS YOU WANT
TO HELP ME, BOT YOU CAM DO
DAT BEST BY JEST GO\N'
OYER DERE IN DE SHADE
ANO SETTIN’DOWN. -y^irt
r HUH! THAT
thtakh \THH'T
\MTHE RIGHT
PLACe!
3-No Trumps by South. She rea-
socwd that South must have exact-
ly two little spades; if only a sin-
gleton. he would not have jumped
into 3-No Trumps; If as many as
three, or two to the Q or Ace, he
would have forced in some way to
see whether North wanted to rebid
his spades. So she eschewed her
natural lead of hearts and offered
the spade K. The declarer, reck-
AQIflt
*83
* 10 5
4 J 10 3 4
>y,\ v1; ,
1937. KING fEATURfS SYNDICATE. Int.
4»3
f Q1 108
4 A K Q 0
#AKQ
North. East-West
Tomorrow’s Problem
A A 6 5
f AKI94 ;
49 6 3 4
484
497 * N. \ 4*3*
*QJS >• ui *103
4 K 10 74 * ■ 4J8S
JKQj* S. 4109633
AKQ 1084
*978
4AQ8
4A 7 '
(Dealer: North. North-Sooth vul-
nerable-)
How should South play for 4-
Spades after the lead of the
dub KT
By PAUL ROBINSON
ETTA KETT
pHll ISNT MUCH fORGAMES.
7 UNLESS irs POSTOFFICE.*
TURN OFF WO.
PLASH LIGHT*
HElLNLVEfcRND
USGAC1CN am
HePE ■ mb
I'VE GOT AN IDE A:.
WE ALL HAVE OU12,
flashlights WITH
US - LETS PLAN
Hide And seek:
IN THE-CAVE .u r—9
iilili
SWELL. 1
You’re ir-
i phil 5 r
SUPE/
I KNEW
THEDE
WAS A
CATCH
SOME-
, PLACE.
tyATCH.NbUfc
STEP/THESE
ROCKS' AGE
n SLIPPER."/«
PMUM6
r LISTEN .*
SOUNDS
UN?
THUNOre,
Studies Made to Discover
If Hay Fever Is Inherited
Kv LOAAJf CLENDKNTN& M. A laxta, which la the opposite ol
IPtCATE ,W.I
SYNI
DAN DUNN • SeertrOptr •tfv5v4&
EVERYTHING IS
UNDERSTOOD/^
THEN
Bam With Sensitivity
TlawsTtr. It ta now known that
an initial attack la not necessary;
that the body cells seem to be
born with a certain sensitivity to
these various substances.
IUb hereditary nature of the
eaaditioa has been denied by some
people. The study of identical
twins would seem to be a good field
to prove or disprove it. Several
TOMORROW, WHEN
VOU HAVE YOUR
EXERCISE HOUR
VOU WILL----
TlME'«> UP.
CL^AR
THE
ROOM f B
AH. YES / AN
EXCELLENT
PLAN —I *S>HALL.
j BE READY / nd
I VsOULD LIKE
TO SEE MR.
WU FANG ! r-r
VE5. AND
WHAT
IS IT *?
--^PERFECTLY
CLEAR. MV
FRIBND / OF
ALL RIGHT
GO IN THE
VISITING
\ ROOM, k
AH, WU FANG
I HAVE GOOD
WORD FOR
YOU. ffi
population.
“ '^1 ! The pollen
, H I grains are
fKgkW I from plants
[ with tncon-
spicuous flow-
er3< wh>cb are
light and float
hHLSI for a long time
endeniag in the wind.
The disease
led "roee fever" because
is a'conspicuous Sower at
r, but the rose had a dicky
have be»n made on this subject In
a study of 71 twins with different !
forms of allergy, It was found j
that in similar instances both j
twins were sensitive to the same
substance.
I have before me the study of a
number of families, including fam-
ilies with Identical twins. This is j
a paper read before the Association j
for the Study of Allergy. It shows j
that when a person with hay fever
or ■imha* condition was found in I
a family, that a study of the rest
at the family showed to higher !
percentage of hay fever than in the
pWMral population. But in the <hs- ;
cussion of that paper, four identi-
cal sets of twins were reported, f
and hay fever or asthma was
By Charles McManus
DOROTHY DARNIT
HERfcS ME!
GET REACT
TO PLAY
that****
»M COMttf
OUT P«t
vvhats The
\ DEAR!'
LLO CENTRAL TURN
a FIRE ALARM. THIS (
3oSE iS ON FIRE J
TOULL NOT QLT OUT L-
of your Room to-day
So make UP your mind
TO STAY IN.I WILL MOT
UN LOCK THE Door.
found in both twins.
Ify own experience leaves me no
doubt aa to the hereditary nature .
of theae coa&tlona. I have in mind
half a dates eases in which 1 have
lormsrty had aa patients, tethers
and sons, or mothers and children,
both having the same type of hay
fever. Sometimes it doee not de-
velop tn children at the same age.
1 know one pair of slaters in Whom
the fall type of hay fever devel-
oped in the elder at about the age
of 13. The younger sister was
entirely free until she was 25,
when she developed the spring type
at hay fever.
DAILY CROSS WORD PUZZLE i
By STANLEY '5;
THE'OLD HOMETOWN
By R. J. SCOTT
SCOTT'S SCRAP BOOK
/\FTt7t> DOHT CHANGE
A YO0» Ml FTC*. VoDC> %
//(BETTER MCNEOVEfcj
’ BOTH
\ “TEATAS ARB
gg V COMING f.
DOW N • rjfm *
islands hydro-
13—Expression aeroplane
of surprise 81—A paid pub-
16—The fruit- lie notice
bearing part 88—A pereua-
at a cereal. Won drill
head 3d—Hand
18—Corroded (Scotch)
21—Plural of oa 38—13th letter .
23— Before— of the Eng-
prefix lish alphabet
24— Discharge 39—Two—
27—Aloft prefix 4
29—Short tor
Answer to previous puzzle:
Licorice is a desert k
PLANT" <$R.OWlHC< WILD IH IRAQ-
FLAVORING EaTRAcT" »$ MADE FROM
RoerP? WHICH ARE- PULLED IN <HE
FALL oF T"HE VEAR AND DRIED IN
c;rea< $t"acks for a vear
| BEFORE. BEINq PROCESSED
/"CPyRlCHT 1937 -Klf-C FEATURES Sv NO I CATE Ine
/ JJ^ *-'5
br General
' ROBERT E.LEE
Founded' -fHE FlRSt"
courses m Journalism,
WHEN HE WAS PRESIDENT
oF WASHlNCToN COLLEGE£
/VOW WASHINGTON KNP
LEE UNIVERSKV.
, LEXINQTON, VA: ,
mark
88—A Burmese
measure of
length
87—Wash
39— The outer
coat of
wheat
40— Resignation
DOWN
-Observe 8—Live
-Befriends 7—Clear
-kbrai at the 8—Incorporeal
verb "to be" Id—A kind of
-Very steep coach dog
Negative 11—Capital at
at Crate
.11 —Small bags
2' —Short-
napped
21 -Short for
Vivian
D -Particle
X —Neuter
^ The dahlia is thrall
Sa am eric an" flower- it was
J fiRST FOUND IN OLD MEAIOO
y By a Soldier of corTei,amd
-tAken To Sweden rf
\yAS CULTURED By PROF, DAKL
THAT UMPIRE FROM HOOTSTOWAI
WAS FORCED TO TAKE TO THE
ABANDONED CISTERN BACK
OF SECOND BASE WHEN THE
SCORE WAS TIED IN THE QTH
'The masonic tIemple at
Tegucigalpa is pictured
ohT"Hi$ one cent, iqsF ,
postage of Honduras
aussiS lluinsw
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Putman, Harry C. The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 117, Ed. 1 Friday, May 14, 1937, newspaper, May 14, 1937; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth994838/m1/5/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cuero Public Library.