The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 161, Ed. 1 Friday, June 27, 1947 Page: 2 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Cuero Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Cuero Public Library.
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*>
2 '
THE CUEKO RECORD. CUERO. TEXAS
| cabs it is hard to believe
a
So each development
TELEPHONE NO. 1
the
Cuero
4^ 6
Legion playoff.
4K io 6 ft
securities should be an
carrv 50 tons of cargo of 400 troops, care is needed in selection of nilot5
V ’ ' |
71
She looked at it critically. Yea,
9
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et
Unit
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'You can’t
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BEING BUILT
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Al
C D N S I
M J K A
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VDF
O K
CZNK AP,
GJKZK
PNZKIG.
H E Z
MNGJ
EMPLOYMENT OFFICE
I
4 «
4*7
ZKCEBK
C H K - W A H M.S K X.
■Ml
FRIDAY, JUNE 27. 1947
i
PMS5
ASMCMXMN
Czechs Begin Work On City
Destroyed By Nazis
During War
ate $eal for a cause, and the fire-eating Indian editors
tak»T great deal of the credit for what is at least
towttd responsible local government for India.
Some peope's Idea of a wise foreign policy is that it does
not matter whal we do,, provided only that the Russians don’t
like It.
the
Lidice
crashes
errors
severe
the
Entered in the post office at Cuero, Texas, as second class matter
Under Act of Congress March 3, 1897.
land
once
ble, owing to vanity, preferring to
feel her way almost blindly some-
times, since she admitted to Henri-
etta that without them she was so
shove minimum for his 2-CIubs,
Distributed by King Features Syndicate, Inc,
North’s
3-No
tm
all
£
MEMBER 1947
TEXAS
1
1
I
I
Yesterday’s Cryptoquote: COMMAND OLD WORDS.
LONG HAVE SLEPT TO WAKE—POPE.
Distributed by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
as
so
*K8 4;
ft-K J 10 4
ft-9 8
10 7 2
P K D Z K I G
Tevterday’e Anewer-
• I
38. Gaass cured
for fodder
39. Epoch
40. Soak flax
42. Jewish
month
I
Li i
L T *
West
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pars
Pass
Pass
East
P^ss
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
mammal
3ft. Woody
perennials
35. Shore
recess
Cuero Veterinary Hospital
Livestock Vaccines and Supplies
Free Poultry Diagnosis
DR. C. R. TUBBS
Office Ph. 831 VETERINARIAN ■«, M
week-ondt. Both
in theaters and
DAILY
ACROSS
1. A flogging
mark
ft. Madam
North
24
4 NT
5 NT
24
4 NT
6 NT
■
MRS J. G. HOWERTON.
JACK HOWERTON
HARRY C. PUTMAN
C. C. “BOB” ALDRIDGE, Jr.
I ndrai Newspapers
Jtemlnlscent of our own early firebrand newspapers and
of pamphleteers like Thomas-Paine are the journals of India.
£o fays Phillips Talbot, writing from New Delhi, India.
* Run-down machinery and lack of money, Mr. Talbot says, i
f FiurPays
^’Community recreation made tremendous strides
Zb
than 8000 miles. The iuture promts- character, high skill and respons.-
will "go bility.
1
9
I PAGE TWO*
■ «-»■—»—-----—-
BARCLAY ON BRIDGE
. By Shepard Barclay
“The Authority od Authorities’’
ftVexed
1ft Pertaining
to the ear
12. Doctrines
13. Like winter
14. Public
notice
15. Bombast
16. Gram
(abbr.y
I 17. Digit
i 20. Falsehood
21, To waylay
23. Examines
carefully
. 24. Native
metal
25. Feline
26. Native of
Finland
28. Bird
31. Slippery
32. Also
33. Watch
secretly
34. Coin (Chin.)
35. Bird’s
stomach
36. Music note
37. Reverbera
39. Ireland
41. Bondsman
42. Sphere of
action
i 43 Buds, as
of potatoes
44. Poor grade
of cotton
batting
DOWN
1. Knowledge
2. Tree
By
HARRY C. PUTMAN
f K Q 10 7
6.
ft 10 6
4 8 2 '
ft K J 5
44Q J 9
(Dealer: South. Both sides vufc
nerable.)
How many tricks is it like
be worth to South if he let
heart K lead against his
Trumps hold the first one!
Dickie Lou -Sloma, son of Post*
master and Mrs. Lou Sl:ma of
Yorktown, released from a Cuero
hospital after receiving treatment
for a painful injury suffered during a
softball game in Yorktown earlier
in the week.
BBS'-;
mi
* President1
Vice-President and Publisher I
Ass’t. Publisher & Advt. Mgr.
Editor
i
THE CUERO RECORD
<r. Established in 1894
Published Each Afternoon Except Saturday. and Sunday Morning
. By THE CUERO PUBLISHING CO., Inc.
I
I
sink
<
' i
...
n r
-1 J '
ments taken for granted here. And the papers operate under i °f
further difficulties, for the new nationalist mGhcrlticc cti” ere e "n 0
v deem it necessary to impose restraints upon publishers by out- i
Bide rule. Yet injspite of all this, the newspapers have spread !
th^ Indian Nationalist movement into remote rural
L where illiterate peasants assemble at village shops
the news read aloud. Editorials, used as subjects for active de- 1
0ate, have an influence beyond those in more news-accus-
LOCATE IT FAVORABLY
MANY IS the time that a No
Trump contract of a particular
height can be made if one partner
is the declarer, whereas it would
be impossible if the other fellow
tries to play it. Which hand is the
favorable one to locate the de-
clarer is not always apparent, but
there are signposts that indicate
the desirable direction, consisting
mainly of aces and kings. If a
player has one or more suits
stopped only with guarded kingS.
king-jacks or queens, he should
favor No Trumps somewhat,
whereas one with aces as his sin*
strive to
sire to pass your water—but have only
scanty passages— yes. and hove backache
due to excess a idity in the urine, be glad
you're reading tins:
Three gen .rati .ns ego Dr. Kilmer, a
famous do<:o-, found hundreds of his
patients wit'i this trouble. Painstakingly
he made a medicine of 16 herbs, roots,
vegetables, balsams—Nature's own way to
relief. He called it “Swaiup Root” and
millions of graceful men am! women have
taken it —often with amazing-results.
Swamp-R ot goes right to work to
flush suit kidneys . nerrj .es the flow of
urine-, helping t orehc ve ex< ess acidity. - —
the irritated bladder gets a got - ..
! out. t«>. Many report getting a good
Ought’s sleep after the first few doses.
Caution: take as <iire<-*ed.
For free trial supply, send to Dept. S,
• Kilmer 3s Co., Inc., Box 1255, Stamford,
Conn. Or—get full-sized bottle uf Swamp- i
Root today at your drugstore.
CROSSWORD
XLVMewith
a foot
2&V.ehiola
2ft, Food
(s
283 Al
instruments
27. Pendant of
ice
2& Leaping-
amphibian
2ft To run at
top speed
Blackwooded, and when South
. showed all the aces. pu| his part-
ner into the small slam.
Wests hand was so woefully
weak, he decided to try to- hit
his partner’s suit by leading the
heart 9, and did it. Whether the
declarer put up dummyls. Q- or
not. he was licked how. He could
run only 10 tricks without- giving,
up the lead, since clubs did not;
divide evenly. He let the firsts
trick go to the 10 for safety, then
after a diamond return tried to
build up a squeeze, but failed.
If South, because of his aces,
had forced with 3-Diamonds on
hi* second turn, as in sequence
No. 2. North would have been the
declarer. If East led either major,
the suit wouM have been stopped
'twiee. If- ha. selected .either minor
to avoid leads from his kings.
, South would have had a tough
job. but still could have made it.
Figure it out. if you can.
* * * « t
Tomorrow’s Problem * 4*
ft K 9 3 ’
ft 8 4 2
ftA 8 7 4
47 5 4
n I J??
W E 4Q .9 3 I
s 4x110
of existing plants or expansions and additions were passed in
47 separate areas over the country.
Here is concrete evidence that America believes organized • If you get up nights—have frequent de-
rccreatlon is a valuable aid in combatting juvenile delin-
quency, in saving children from accidents due to street play.
In promoting healthy minds and bodies. Less tangible buh
probably even more important, is recreation’s contribution to
democratic habits through team play and group activity.
Above all, millions of young people and adults have had hours
of^joy and happiness
Cuero in 1947 has. taken the lead among small American
cities with its planned recreation program
Here, There and Everywhere:
Mike Young, a Rcccrd office
visiter to launch a new series of
Sinclair advertisements.—William
Kleinecke and assistants busy
with plans for the big Firemen's
barbecue slated for Monday.-—
A record crowd expected for Sun- '
day’s ball game here between
Cuero and El Campa.—Fritz
Schaefer t eporting no luck on a
fishing trip to the coast.
Suitable hesitations delicate
financial inquiry.
"Of course, I should insist on
your accepting the proper profes-
sional fee.”
And so here was Nausicaa, sit-
ting on the platform, enjoying the
idea of her attractions being im-
mortalized (though not liking very
much the examples of Henrietta s
work which she could see in the
studio) enjoying also the revela-
tion of her personality to a listen-
er whose- sympathy and attention
seemed to be so complete.
On the table beside the model
were her spectacles—the spectacles
accfliding to information in the recently published Yearbook
of the National Recreation Association. More than 2,000
Anjfifican cities, or nearly twice the pre-war record had play
laqtfUies under organized professional or volunteers leader-
ship These centers, outdoor and Indoor, Included children’s
playgrounds, athletic areas for baseball .tennis and ice skat-
; months ago. Now. a fleet
! taxicabs is being predicted.
Air On Big Scale
« AC
Fa d
!|E
see a yard in front of her.
Henrietta had nodded compre-
hendingly. She understood now the
physical reason for that blank and
lovely stare.
Time went on. Henrietta sud-
denly laid r’own her modeling tools
and stretci.ed her arms widely.
"All right." she said. "I've fin-
ished. I hope you re not too tired.”
”Oh, no, thank you, Miss Saver-
nake. Its been very interesting,
I'm sure. Do you mean it's really
done—so soon?”
Henn (’•a laughed.
"Oh, no, its not actually fin-
ished. I shall have to work on it
quite a bit. But it's finished as far
as you're concerned. I've got what
I wanted—built up the planes."
acuinv s» Th< &‘rl ca™e down from the
.od liusmr.,; platform. She nut on her spectacles
and at once the blind innocence
and vague confiding charm of the
face vanished. There remained now
an easy, cheap prettinees.
She came to stand by Henri-
etta and look at the clay model.
nioae
303
□H
Growing Air Business
Brings Health Problem
i
I
I
CRYPTOQUOTX—A cryptogram qnotatMa
H E Z
Name's Mcuthfui
FCRT WORTH. Tex. 1 UP)—Ma-
rino And.-rson of Quito. Ecuador,
jui ior history student at Texas
Christian University here, seldom
tries to sign his full name. It is
Ing; swimming pools, bathing beaches and archerv ranges. La- Oailcs Rogue Raul Jenaro Marino short-sighted that she could hardly
cal expenditures of over 50 million dollars were more than
doultfe those for 1941. And, as a sign of hope for the future, —
bond issues totalling nrore than 22 million for improvement KIDNEYS GETTING
YOU UP NIGHTS?
I lard, the monument donated by
in 1946, Americans, and other oublic build-
. Ings will get underway in 1948.
r
r
have’ the end of truly serving human
i war, on an immense scale. A new stemmed from errors in human health ard’ happiness. The time is
i trcop transport plane is nlanned to judgment. This means even greater approaching when certain airplane
carrv 50 tons of cargo of 400 troops, care is needed in selection of nilot® securities should be an attractive •
1 Without refueling, it will fly more For they must combine qualities of purchase.
“Oh,” she said doubtfully, dis-
appointment in aer voice, "it’s not | it was good, np doubt about that,
very like me, is it?” me best thing she had done for a
Henrietta smiled.
"Oh. no, it's not a portrait.”
There was. indeed, hardly a like-
ness at all. It was the setting of
the eyes—the - line of the cheek-
bone— thM Henrietta had seen as
the essentftl keynote of her con-
ception of Nausicaa. This was not
Doris Sanders; it was a blind girl
about whom a poem could be made.
The lips were parted as Doris'
were parted, but they were not
Doris’ lips. They were the lips that
would speak another language and
wou.ld utter thoughts that were
not Doris' thoughts—
None of the features were clear-
ly defined. It was Nausicaa re-
membered. not seeq,
“Well.” said Miss Sanders doubt-
fully, "I suppose it'll look better
when you’ve got on with it a bit.
. . . And you really don't want me
any more?”
“No. thank you,” said Henrietta.
(“And thank God I don’t!” said
her inner mind.) “You've been sim-
ply splendid. I’m grateful.”
She got rid of Doris expertly
and returned to make herself some
black coffee. She wa.: tired-—she
was horribly tired. . . . But happy
—happy and at peace.
“Thank goodness,” she thought,
“now I can be a human being
again.”
And at once her thoughts went
to John.
John, she thought. Warmth crept
into her cheeks, a sudden quick
lifting of the heart made her
spirits soar.
Tomorrow, she thought, I'm go-
ing to The Hollow. ... I shalhtiee
John.
She sat quite still, sprawled back
on the divan, drinking down the
hot strong liquid. She drank three
cups of it. . . . She felt vitality
surging back.
It was nice, she thought, to be
a humdn being again—and not
that other thing. Nice to have
stopped feeling restless and mis-
erable and driven. Nice to be able
to stop walking about the streets
unhappily, looking for something,
and feeling irritable and impatient
because, really, you didn't know
what you were looking for! Now.
thank goodness, there would be
only hard work—and who minded
ha rd work ?
She put down the empty cup
and got up and strolled back to
Nausicaa. She looked at the face
for some time, and slowly a little
frown crept between her brows.
It wasn't—it wasn't quite—
What was it that was wrong ?
Blind eyes ...
Blind eyes that were more beau-
tiful than any eves that could see.
that she put on as seldom as possi- . Blind eyes that tore at your
heart because they were blind. . . .
Had she got that or hadn't she?
She'd got it, yes—but she'd got
something else as welt. Something
ttfat she hadn’t meant or thought
about. . . . The structure was all
right—yes. surely. But where did
it come from—that faint insidious
suggestion?
The suggestion, somewhere, of a
common, spiteful mind.
She hadn't bem listening, not
really listening. Yet. somehow, in
through her ears and out at her
fingers, it had worked its way into
the clay.
And she wouldn’t, she knew she
wouldn't, be able to get it out
again.
Henrietta turned away, sharply.
Perhaps it was fapey. Yes. surely
4t was fancy. She would feel quite
differently about it in the morn-
’ing. She thought with dismay, how
Vulnerable one is.
She walked, frowning, up to the
end of the studio. She stopped in
front of her figure of The Wor-
shiper.
THAT was all right—a lovely
bit of pearwood, graining just
right. She’d saved it up for ages,
hoarding ---—
3% Roman
money
4. Low Dutch
(abbr.)
(shortened) 5. New Eng-
land state
6j One’s
father's
sister
7. Skill
8- Border
ft-A lariat
11. Musical
Instruments 3ft Carnivorous
13 Lave
15. Trick
Jft. Hard, black
wood
20. Flower
ft Q 6 5
4Q 5 2
ft-K Q
4b Q 5 4 3
V E
Ls_J
4^ 10 3
7 6
ft. / J 10 5 3
4^ 6 - a•
helicopter was started by one of emergency stops. General Electric'but problems cf human safety and' (Dealer: Sou h. East-West vul- io?
stores some puts out 3 recorder which automa:- health. In the small developments: nerable.)
of air icallv records a flight. This will! and ir^the million dollar researches ' South
1- 14
3 NT
5 NT
2. 1ft
3 4
5 NT
South wanted a game contract
as soon as he heard
2- Clubs, so hopped into
Trumps immediately. North, well
"Just Twenty Years Ago To-
day:’’— Rev. F. F. Eberhardt
wrote from New York that he
was meeting with great success
in rai'ing funds for the pur-
chase of tne Boothe hospital in
Cuero by the Texas Lutheran
Synod.—Ernest Wachtendorf
and family left for San Antonio
where they were to visit rela-
tives.—Commander Richard E.
Byrd, Bert Acosta and Lt. Oovelle
hopped off on an attempt to
span the Atlantic.—Mr. and Mrs.
- Hany Merritt ijeturned from
vacation trip to San Benito and
Matamoras, Mexico.
Congratulations to
[ Junior baseball team upon
1
I
i Anucr: on Ribadeneira von Kiessei
-r-rnues dr Trastamafa.
SYNOPSIS
Elderly IjmIj Luey Aa<k»teU die-
cukteU the prutheoa ot eoterUuBinf tUe
incompatible i;roup ot gseata- aba bad
, invited to Tbc Hollaw- tor tbe coming
week-ead with yoaag Midge Hardcaa-
tle, a diotaat relative. Outside ot at-
tractive Dr. John Chrutew and Gerda,
his incredibly dull wife, tbe others
were all menobern of- the Angksteli
ctaa: kindly Henrietta Savertmke, sue-
cesatu) aeulptresa; serious- minded
young David Angkatell, university stu-
dent; and quiet Edward Angkateli,
I whose unrequited love ot Henrietta
blinded him to tbe charrnu ot Midge,
who had adored him since childhood,
i Meanwhile, in ber London studio. Hen-
rietta was in the throes ot completing
her latest masterpiece—the blind Nil-
•lean. The search tor just the right
model Usd been long and arduous
^■CBt important ot all is the need for popular support, pa-,
tienyand leadership. Chief of these, they say, is an alert and
infcJEsed public opinion, world-wide and vigorously insistent
| on l&ce. With it, all of these desired goals can be attained.
Wltyjut it, dissension, chaos and war are the probable future.
FUM ----
FriatHy Travel
1 100,000 Canadians visited Russia annually and 100,000
Bins came to Canada, there would be no need for the j 1UI71U I-
pi Nations, says Col. G. A. Welsh, Ontario minister of ;Ijii H IjH/IVIj
ft If he means that were Russian antagonisms abolished,
itemational troubles would end, he is wrong. There would
1 ^ft. But he is right when he emphasizes the perma-
good effects cf peaceful travel on world friendship.
t National Advertising Representative*
Texas Daily Press League, Inc., Texas Bank Bldg., Dallas, Texas;
■0 E. 42nd Street, New York City; 360 N. Michigan Avenue, Chicago, I
ill., 915 Olive St., St. Louis, Me.; 448 So. Hill St., Los Angeles, Calif.; 6
I Third St., San Francisco, Calif., 1662 surick Bldg., Memphis, Tenn.; '
: T08-9 Bus Terminal Bldg., Denver, Cote
Subscription IbUea
By Mail or Carrier — Daily and Sunday, one year SftOA, stx months
88.00. three months |L50« ore month flte
Weekly edition by mail only, one year s&66; si* months 81.25 within the
State of Texas. Elsewhere 1 year 9&00; 6 months 81.5ft
Official Organ of the City of Cuero and DeWitt County.
m ’M k . 7 J
B /I t
Agobw Chritfik Moltcwwi Dhfributit by Kinf foulorot SymibWv,
Tou 'ye^verHai//fSb Good”
an important job nwnits yon in JMPMI
All Expenses Paid ami S90 ?er Mondi
‘ You’ve never had it so good,” tay» • erected over • dub>
house entrance by Regular Army men in Japan. It refers to tne
interesting life they enjoy while taking part in one of the most
successful occupation jobs in history.
Now that summer has come to Japan, famous resort hotels
beckon enlisted men on leave, to the scenic mountains or the
seashore. There, they find swimming pools, hot springs, horse-
back riding, skiing, bus tours. Various recreation dubs offer
well-stocked book shelves for leisure reading. American
ments often are available in evenings and on
American and Japanese entertainers appear
clubs. Movies are shown almost every night.
You can be part of this picture, if you measure up to Hie
Army's high standords. Good food, lodging, medical and dental
care, clothing, transportation and many other expenses are paid
by the Army. For further details, visit your Army Recruiihg
Station at
long time—it was for the Inter-
national Group. Yea, quite a
worthy exhibit.
She’d got it all right; the hu-
mility, the strength in the neck
muscles, the bowed shoulders, the
slightly upraised face—a feature-
less face, since worship drives out
personality.
Yes, submission, adoration—and
that final devotion that is beyond,
not this fide, idolatry.
Henrietta sighed. If only, she •
thought, John had not been so j —-
angry.
It had startled her, that anger.
It h^d told her something about
him that he did not, she thought,
know himself.
He had said flatly,
exhibit that!”
And she had said, as flatly, “I
shall.”
She went slowly back to Nau-
sicaa. There was nothing there,
she thought, that she couldn’t put
right. She sprayed it and wrapped
it up in the damn cloths. It would
have to stand over untjl Monday
or Tuesday. There was no hurry
now. The urgency had gone-—all
the essential planes were there. It
only needed patience.
< Ahead of her were three happy
lays with Lucy and Henry and
Midge—and John! ,
She yawned, stretched herself
like a cat stretches itself with rel- >
ish and abandon, pulling out each
muscle to its fullest extent. She
knew suddenly how very tired she
was.
She had a hot bath and went to
bed. She lay on her back staring
at a star or two through the sky-
light. Then from there her eyes |
went to the one light she always
left on, the small bulb that il-
luminated the glass mask that had
been one of her earliest bits of
work. Rather an obvious piece, she
thought now. Conventional in its
suggestion.
Lucky, thought Henrietta, that
one outgrew oneself.
And now, sleep! The strong
black coffee that she had drunk
did not bring wakefulness in its
train unless she wished it to do so.
Long ago she had taught herself
the essential rhythm that could
bring oblivion at call.
You took thoughts, choosing
them out of your store, and then,
not dwelling on them, you let them
slip through the fingers of your
mind, never clutching at them,
never dwelling on them, no con-
centration . . . just letting them j
drift gently past.
Outside in the Mews a car
was being revved up—somewhere
there was hoarse shouting and
laughing. She took the sounds into
the stream of her semi-conscious-
ness.
The car. she thought, was a tl- J
ger roaring . . . yellow and black
. . . striped like the striped leaves
—leaves and shadows—a hot jun- !
gle . . . and then down the river—
a wide tropical river ... to the
sea and the liner starting . , . and
hoarse voices calling goodby and -j
John beside her oh the deck . . . ;
she and John starting—blue sea
and down into the dining saloon !
—smiling at him across the table ,
—like dinner at the Maison Doree
—poor John, so angry! . . , out'i
into the night air—and the car, j
the feeling of sliding in the gears
—effortless, smooth, racing out of
London ... up over Shovel Down
. . . the trees . . . tree worship . , >
The HoHow . . . Lucy . . . John . , (
John . . . Ridgeway s disease , , » ]
dear John.
Passing Into unconsciousness
now, into a happy beatitude.
And then some sharp discom-
fort. some haunting sense of guilt
pulling her back. Something she
ought to have done. . . , Some-
thing that she had shirked,
Nausicaa? 4
(To Be Continued) ’
CHAPTER 1’HREB
THERE WAS a Blind look in
Henriettas own eyes as she
walked. She saw nothing of whal
was around her. She was strain-
ing—straining the whole time to
make that face come nearer. , , .
She felt sick, ill, miserable.
j And then, suddenly, her vision
' had cleared and with normal hu-
man eyes she had seen opposite
her in the bus which she had
boarded absent-mindedly 'find with
no interest in its destination—she
had seen—yes, Nausicaa!
A foreshortened childish face,
half parted lips .and eyes—lovely,
vacant, blind eyes.
I The girl rang the bell and got
out; Henrietta tollowed her.
| She was now quite calm and
businesslike. She had got what she
wanted — the agony of baffled
search was over.
"Excuse me tor speaking to you.
I’m a professional sculptor and,
to put it frankly, your need is just
what I have been looking for."
She was friendly, charming and
compelling, as she knew how to be
when she wanted something.
Doris Sanders had been doubt-
ful, alarmed, flattered.
"Well, I don't know, I'm sure.
If it's just the head. Of course.
I’ve never done that sort of
WE SEE IT”
PRAGUE, Czechoslovakia, June 16
(UP. —Today a willow-lined brtok
p prevent the use of photography, .cartoons and other refine- Iand handful of aiders are all that
ments taken for granted here. And the papers operate under i —
authorities still: stood*
I But the deserted land will begin
j to live again s:on. On June 8. tke
i foundation stone for the rew Lidice
areas, ; building was laid, on the fifth anni-
tO hear , versan of the tragedy.
I A score of dwellings for retum-
«... \ ” ' ed Lidice widows and children will thing!
^ate, have an influence beyond those in more news-accus- bui]t this year. Much cf the
tomed lands. ' ^erk will be done by volunteer labor
^Newspapers are at their best when inspired bv a passion- | ~‘ yo’Jth brigades” and - labor bri-
' from factories and mines
may wbere the workers have volunteered
a good Start ' t* give up their summer vacations to
i help rebuild Lidice.
I The Mining R .-search Institute
• j winch will grow from the "Lidice
Shall Live" fund collected in Eng-
I lard, the monument donated
uuu
HDnr.j *
fcj £E2ii3k:l Lmi
UB0 QTG 2^(41
nnoug iQatitzi
JJiQL j
□0GB SEEJ3 1
I experienced a real cliuckle
out of a story which I wrote in
The Record twenty years ago and
happened to ccme across again
today. The story was a report
on a colored divorce suit in dis-
trict court here. The eplaintiff, a
colored women, was awarded a
divorce after she presented as
evidence a love letter she had
found in her husband’s pocket,
written by another woman.
The letter read:
"My love for ycu would
thirty thousand battleships on
the Pacific Ocean and ring the
bells in Heaven. I am going to
tell the world I love ycu.”
That is what I call overwhelm-
ing devotion.
2E11U0 on
UtJU LIUDilj
P 0L3Ctj|
I convincing triumph in the district A suburban deUvery service by type propeller
I Legion playoff. The boys did a fine
j job, but Itave a tougher cne cut outj^°stons deP*rtment
i for them in San Antonio. Keep in
I there hustling, youngsters.
| .—---------
Seojily Report
jh(. Commission to Study the Organization of peace, I
[ heacfed by Dr. James T. Shotwell and former Unden Secretary
I of 3&te Sumner Welles, has submitted its report. And these
recommendations for United Nations action on security and-j
I disaRnament transcend in their importance, to every human
bein*. even labor and taxes. Briefly, the Commission is agreed
on tfcese points:
Jhe United Nations organization itself, while weaker than
coul^ be desired* has grown rapidly in stature. It has furnish -
ed wframework which has greatly eased international strains.
WiUkUit it, there might be no peace now. With it, strengthen-
ed to the point where its authority can outweigh that of any
singjgjroutjle-ixuiktog member, peace can be secure.
Wr that strength it needs first of all small permanent
polioorand air-police forces for emergency action. Second
the4Cmust be agreements for larger specified contributions ot
fordj^to be supplied at the demand of the Security Council-
oust also be agreements on military, naval and air bas-
an international regime for Antarctica. Regulation of
il arms can come only as the collective strength of the
Nations grows.
e Commission believes, also, that economic reconstruct
a long-range scale must be cne of the United Na-
cost important contributions to political and other se-
■ • • ‘ :~- r - \ I
.'and work each day in .another. ..
j The autcmcbile. now with us ov- The National Safety Council an- . traveled bt bus. Supposedly, he was j gle stoppers should
1 er half a century and still furnish- nouneed la May
ling speedv transportation on the not a single death occurred in 1946 as he came into the country.
country highways, has already be- during the scheduled passenger;-! .... .
j come slow and ineffective in many flights of sixteen U. S. air lines. 1
' ways. For example, to get from the
(heart of Boston to its Logan Air- safety records with radar devices as especially, strict in the future. For ftj 9 7 2
port is now such an uncertain pro- an aid to landing *and in preventing . men and women aix business or qp 9 8 3
the airport Tqpn a roof- at the Bos- ' to put his- new anti-collision safety be the carriers of infection.
I ton Bus Center. The time involved device at the disposal of other com- So each development in trens-
their ^as been t>etween one and two min- panies as well as his cmn. A new portation brings with it not only
—1— ---------....— ------permit fast ■ its technical problems of operation.1
General Electric! but problems cf human safety and I
This will! and ir^the million dollar researches
help to find out the cause of acci-. it becomes our responsibility to see
dent. It will reveal actions of the that scientific and commercial prog- 1
j We are appearing to develop air pilot and the plane. It is said that | less be directed more and more to
j transportation, useful in peace or most recent plane
Bv Roger W. Babson
BABSON PARK. Mass., June 27. es enormous planes which
—In these days of helicopter taxi- th'.ougji iiH-ny weather, flying high Health Regulations
! that 75 above the stoinis because of their > ^jr transportation develops new
years ago we could count on taking pressurize^ cabins. health problems. Our health regu-
j 12 to 15 minutes for going a mile by The fofir recent severe plane latkms can not be tto strict. Just
’ horse and buggy. Unless we could crashes have dimmed the safety one flea, louse, or mosquito can car-
I afford to spend four hours "coni- record of the airlines but remember i ry such diseases as yellow fever, or
j muting” each day we did net live 10, that as of December 1946. sever} ■ typhus. We have heard in the past |
| miles away from our work; 20 airlines in this country had a recoid of the traveler to China returning]
(miles was out of the question. To- of no deaths from accidents the: with a rare Oriental disease. Today
I day. with modern transportation, it past decade. Our airlines know that; we are all open to foreign plagues.-
i is not uncommon to live in one state their very existence depends on The Mexican importer who this .
constantly reducing risk of accident.^ Spring brought smallpox into N. Y. I
The i - .... -.. k . ....
.’ of this year that ’examined by-U. S-health-authorities» throw thg play acrqgg from him.
... -------- a s_ s — *- *U- —e e-
; Infections in the ven- early stages 1
1 are not easily recognized. Our health .
~ ‘ ‘ j They are' on the way to better regulations and inspections must be!
heart of Boston to its Logan Air- safety records with radar devices as <
«... ----- —1. ------___ — —1 7------~— — -----^1 business or
I cess by autemobile that a helicopter collisions. Recently. Howard Hugh- pleasure going from one count rv to; ft 7 6 4 2
; has keen making' flights direct to • es of Trans Warld Airlines, offered another by rapid air travel can well I 4.9 3
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Aldridge, C. C., Jr. The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 161, Ed. 1 Friday, June 27, 1947, newspaper, June 27, 1947; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1358294/m1/2/?q=Lamar+University: accessed July 1, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Cuero Public Library.