The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 66, No. 297, Ed. 1 Tuesday, December 13, 1960 Page: 4 of 6
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. -' •■ 1 •* <■ V. - w» »i --■-"'*__±-___
« THE CTERO RECORD Tuesday. Dec. 13. Jt%0
Editorial-
mi Is Kidding Whom?
’ REPORT FROM I
WASHINGTON
NECK A
WASHINGTON. D.C. The
| appointment of Governor Abra-
ham Ribicoff of Connecticut to
Our service men abroad — and especially their 484.- ^ (hf, t of secretary of Health.
000 wives and children — arc pretty shook up over the Education anti welfare was one
jolting order from the Augusta National Golf Club that:0f the biggest suupri*ea of the
dependents are to start coming home at the rate of 15,-j%n^ff 'TSnw'TJZi&t-
000 a month, come I«ew Year’s Day. ^ to ge1 a hjKh post in the
This, as explained by President Eisenhower at a administration of his friend and
preas confera>« In the golfing White Home Is a put °<.
the seven-point program by which the Administration odds xvpre ,m the selection of
hopes to cut a billion dollars a year from our overseas the Connecticut Governor to be
spending. Such reform, the President said, was urgently ^S. ^°^'lsG^,also on
needed to preserve the gold and dollar resources of the the appointment of Michigan’s
•jg . outgoing Governor. G. Mennen
Half of the saving would come from the cutback in ^"s^retT^'TWalth'^Eduia0-!
------- — —-----«, of Secretary of Health. Educa-
Defense spending. S330 million, more from buying Am- ,lon am, welfare - a post ini
erican rather than foreign goods for foreign aid. and which Williams had often ex-|
$270 million from paring overseas operations of other P7n^adn'\S^’s vvas assign-
agencies, it was announced. od to a relatively minor role inj
If as inferred, however, the WTTite House action is the Department of State As-:
intended to counteract the growingly unfavorable bal- ^nt Sen<Mar> 0 A ncan *
ance in our foreign trade — which reached the $4.3 bil- p jS highly unlikely that Wil-
,i„„ annual leva! In the third quarter of 1M0 -
home the kith and kin of our overseas troops is hardly a le* Pregjdent-elect Kennedy as-
Eolution * Nor would cancellation of the entire economic SUred that it was only temper-
foreign aid program-much lees the cheeae-paring
ordered — restore our once commanding position in chief execl,tjve
world trade. The most interesting report
We have no quarrel with Government economy, and' ™
| ton now. and perhaps the near-
are all for the present crackdown, belated as it is. But factual, is that the
we tliink that a basic overhauling of our international -nnntntment of hoth Ribicoff and
trade policies is far more urgent and vital. If we have 'tongas''i^that Ribmrff will
come to the end of tlie GATT road, let s face it. If we serve a$ Secretary of HEW on-
have priced ourselves out of foreign markets, and throu- | ly until such time as a vacan-
gh GATT priced our own manufacturers out of their ^ M which „me Rihiroff
warn *" 1 ^
‘ myaew y°r
■■ '■■*4
BY MEL HE1MFR
jyEW YOR—Miss Jo Vtfh Elect, a tall, soft
Je Van fleet
Shirley of
tomorrow t
van jjiv-w- we,......------------- t onrt. at wnicn time rt'oicoti . --
home markets, even a drastic cut in Washington’s ex- uil] named to fill that vac- g0 you
travagance overseas is far too little and much too late, janev^ wmjams w.iH ,
Changing Electoral College
Senator George Smathers. Florida Democrat, and
one of the more popular U. S. senators, has said he will
introduce a constitutional amendment which would
Then. Soapy Williams will he TCY AC
recal'»*d from the office of Afri-. IV IN V# Tv I CAM J
can Affairs, and tapped to *ue-' Q Who was Dr. James H. C.
reed Ribicoff as Secretary of Miller?
| The Peace Party people believed Gurion has been told by Presi-1
| a workable treaty could^be ma- j ,ient-Elect John F. Kennedy!
de with Santa Anna. The War that ,here ..will continue t0 ^
Partv didn t Thev happened to!
be right, but a lot of wrongs mUch common «rou,ul m ls‘
were committed in the name of raeli and American foreign
|Health. Education and Welfare a. Miller, unfortunately for right. (policies. The message was con-
the post he originally wanted, himself, belonged to the Peace — — ----—- | tained in
-- (Party in Texas prior to the P.e- MUCH COMMON GROUND
Graft and corruption in the volution. This brought him con- JERUSALEM, Israel.
1 - - - _ 1 — A —... * I .»-- ,, t A t » A IT f. f ] Aglttl J t. 1 . . . i . , .A .. M —J ... ,3 1 , 1 M
a cable from Ken-
j nedy acknowledging Ben-Gu-
iptton in tne volution. This brought him con- JERUSALEM, Israel. -- rion’s congratulations on Ken-.
umuuuvt m ---------------- administration of the Federal siderable ahii.se and ridicule. (UPI> —Premier David Ben- i nedy’* winning the election.
change the voting procedure of the Electoral College. (Highway Construction program ———— -------------—-----———————-
^ .... _ r _ -**i-*« fVto in riorifl# which mnv involve-
Instead of giving all ol a state's electoral vote to the in Florida, which may involve
candidate who wins the highest number of popular vot- ju being a"iid in j
es (thus disfranchising those who voted for the loser)v Washington bv ihe House Public'
the change would allow for each state’s electoral vote to Work* Committees Subcommitte
be split fairly according to the percentage of the popu- of the charRe(t ]eVeiled
lar vote received. "gainst Florida state highway
rrn change, if adopted, would do much to Improve
the presidential election machinery. It would eliminate of Tallaha)iSee governmental
the possibility of a President being elected over an op- corner of the Sunshine State
pouent who received more votes than he did. And ‘his JgJg*
has happened in the United States.
spoken, eaay-movlng blonde who wear
her hair piled on top of her head, is in sheet
stark peril. If Miss Jo doesn’t watch out
she’s going to be the Shirley Booth of to
morrow.
Miss Booth, of course, is supreme amo*y
Broadway’s older actresses, as Mis» Kin
Stanley is among the comparatively ybmigei
ones. But In recent years, Miss Booth hai
been in some turkeys, as plays go—althougt
all the while, she has received the greatest
notice# from the drama critics. "The play/
they write, "ian’t much, but Miss Booth ii
magnificent."
The aomewhat younger Miss Van Fleet
hasn’t as many of those notices as Miss Booth but she’s got a
drawer full. Only the other day she opened off-Broadwav (the
York, in the East 60s) in the twin bill, "Rosemary" and "The
Alligators," and one reviewer said her performance had "match-
less subtlety and depth."
Is Miss Van Fleet worried? Does she think that over tha
years she may become the queen of the turkeys?
"Listen.” the handsome Jo said today as we discussed her
perils of Pauline, "all I want to do is act. Let somebody else
worry over whether the show fails or succeeds. Good part*, tho
kind I like to do, don't come along too often."
# ♦ * •
THERE HAVE BEEN a slew of them for her. though, since
she blew Into town in ’42 on & College of the Pacific scholarship
to the Neighborhood Playhouse. She won the New York Critics
award for her job as Eliza Gant In "Look Homeward, Angel,•*
got an Oscar for her first screen role—"Kate" In "East of Eden”
—and received the Donaldson and Tony awards for her work ia
"Tha Trip to Bountiful."
So "queen of the turkeys” doesn’t befit Jo at all—but queen
of mothers does. There is an outside chance she has licked Lha
type-casting at this time, but for a while there if they wanted
a grim, tight-lipped or querulous mother, the whistle went up
for Miss Van Fleet. "I got so I cotildn t stomach mother* any
more," she told me. "And I say that as a wife and mother
myself. I especially didn't like that prize-winning role of mtna
in ‘Angel.’ It was such an unhappy role—and even If I don t
Live My Roles offstage, I couldn't help feeling depressed even
when the curtain fell."
It may startie her fans, who have waded with her through
the dankness of Wolfe. Steinbeck, Tennessee Williams and n
little morbid Shakespeare, to know that her personal leaning i*
toward comedy. In fact. George Abbott once was interested in
her for the musical comedy, "The Pajama Game." He caught
her twice in "Bountiful.” In which she played a nutty, immap.ua
Southern woman—“It was a wonderful part; I got to sing tha
beginnings of about 10 songs from the 20s"—and coaxed her
to read for "Pajama," but after she did, she backed out. Just
didn’t think she could do it. So the part went to a girl getting
her first Broadway break. Name of Carol Haney.
• • * •
Y/f*
BY FRANCES V. RUMMELL
......................... ***■ ■■ ....... ~ —. _____
In' Pti1 Pl)a »n<t Her Baity Blue Chips." published by I
‘1L fnc- O I9*0 by France* V. RunimeH. distributed by King features f
&r»»!
WHAT ha* HAPPKXKH iplunt«p.»^ for Pan Retry. "He s i tm; first tune Jane seriously
™*roms0t'r.*m,at * straight shooter. 1; questioned the power of know-
uxaber widow turning fifty whose don't like the smell of Wally’s j ledge over the market place.
Mraetf^w*1 to i^e^s | *pecial situation’. 1 just hope . Even so, she couldn’t help view-
OL. 1.uaIma kxe : Via d/vAnn’t ♦ k w/siit imu n Ik*>a ** 1 inn rV\Mt ’ f nl Intlinvc IX11 Vs i/isi/iltf
tion company testified freely th- J
The change would also make it possible for the nt each week they maded out
UC vBI UVU now IV UH-II V •
lirtns Shr wit a teacher before her
marrtai* But now. 'Tm too old to
«et a regular lob teaching" l« the
new* all* ha* for her sympathetic
me cneuigc wuuiu awu .. r-"—------- ---- ...... —..........- t.elehbor* Eleanor Korbe* and Ro*e-
. . Ji - .k. ernallor W5 checks to a selected list of marie and A! Boneltl.
country s outstanding men. who come from the smaller 0ffieials connected with1 .W
slates, to be nominated for the country's highest office. ^
Nowadays, the politicians always look to the big states rrwnt.
for presidential timber - so that the nominee can bag. waEv^”Jen’theu^e ,Vh^e'
a'l the electoral votes in one of the big electoral-vote ,upervision federal highway*
6tat83 were being constrocted. alleg-
The change would encourage people to vote in aU ^''V ^lway31 idghi-of-w^s,
the states — for all votes would actually count. Even presumably in exchange for fa-
though citizens in some states knew their state was go- vor* granted^t^contracwr*
ing one way. they would be encouraged to vote anyhow. wt^^{g Walter May of
because the lesser vote would still add up to electoral the House Subcommittee, say*
the Florida highway scandal will
voies' . make other such exposes pale
The change would end the disproportionate influen- by comparison.
ce of the few big states, because their huge vote would be As the nation attentively wat-
split, perhaps 14-13 or 23-22. The net eltect would, then, g*
be no greater than the effect of a small state, voting 5-4. j,ran(jed the Sunshine State, a fa-
The change would be a move In the direction of the vorite tourist meoca of the na-
democratic principle of majority rule. There is little, *». with * vfry bl*ck ty*'
reason to maintain a system In being which allows for
he doesn't throw you a lure.
"Now don't.” begged Jane,
"do anything to prejudice the
child against Wally.”
Once home. Jane decided to
•*bHe official* connected with wai un or Eeanor and rirTally
the state’s road-huilding depart- fej «Eou*.b6. dollar, alte, ,he wa., ® m>r kn„rkpyd
help
ing Dow's followers with kindly
pity. Dow wasn't the only Great
Man to leave a scholarly hassle
behind nun. Look at the meas
Freud left behind.
Her own conclusion about the
IN THE LAST YEAR OR SO, Miss Van Fleet hasn’t been on
Broadway; she's been home tending house for her hu.sbr.nd
(William Bales, dance teacher at Bennington) and her son M'ke.
She likes It—but she likes to work, too. “I have talent and I'm
lucky to have found a way and place to use It,” she said. *‘EU-
cept no good Broadway role has turned up lately.”
We reminisced for one minute. About Clark Gable, whom T
had met just once, two months ago, and with whom Jo a. ‘"4.
in "A King and Four Queens." She grinned. "Kay used to make
Clark lunch to take to the set with him. when we were on loca-
tion In St, George, Utah," she said. "He complained there af»
too much—he was trying to stay slim—so one day she fixed
him up a bare T-bone between two slices of bread and a ha. d»
boiled egg . . . that ahe didii’t hardboil. With egg dripping all
over him, he went and ate in the commissary luncheon that -'ay
—and didn’t complain about too much food In his lunch box
•gain."
few thousand dollar* aftei *ht wa* j ~ | Her own conciusjon aooui me
induced to invest S3.000 in a ttock. (At one o’cioCK. Eleanor knocked theory she thought worth
Tli* choice was rt ade at • fortunate. aoftiv at her door Standing in * proposing as • graduate dia- j
'ucuiar/ tur airui uu uirm v/ eu*
rolling In an investment course. This
produced an acquaintanceship with
the only male member ol the clas*.
Wally Governs, an investment man
who joins such classes to scout new
clients for himself The desire to oe
t matchmaker stir* Jane to fancy
UmeCand*th*Svalue* of "he ^hates (*’ftly #t ner door Standing m , F,
rose to ot er *8.000. givm* Jane wild the half-light of the doorway, eertation to the Harvard School IN A I I Y f'Q O ^ S \A/ URiJ
m*nu?Tch^irre^on3hU.em( py her tmce WM n”shed with ex' | of Business, for what was wrong UM,L 1 V.RUOJHUIMJ
---------- ---------------citement. 'became pertectiy clear to her.
“We went dancing at the! All it needed was modernizing.
Palace Corner!' she exclaimed.. The great man nad tAought ma
“It was divine Saturday night,” -— -*------- *----------
she went on, making no effort
Wally a good match for unmarried
Eleanor. Wally is ebseat the night
fane bring* Eleanor to Class to meet
Wally.'and Eleanor is ehsrmed in-
stead by the instructor Phil Petry.
CHAPTER S
FANE disapproved of Mr.
J Fetry's lecture tht evening iona* research.
went on,
to sound casual. “Phil wants
to take me to North Beach.”
Jane couldn’t resist smiling.
“AU this sounds like two young
teachers doing lively profess-
she brought Eleanor to clasa.
His aublect. “Buying for In-
come,” dealt with the stable
dividend blue chips, which ne
called "the widow’s blessing.”
J&ne deliberately let ner mind
With more frequency. Jane
turned her attention In her
spare evenings to a question
that had nagged her ever since
she had taken up her study of
wander to the two heretics who’tits market Specifically, she
had delighted her soul by dem* i wanted to learn what Mr.
reason to maintain a system in tone wnicn auows tor Swwpin*. space-age change* ! 52* iSTto mind when
the less popular candidate, the candidate who wins the in th? seriou,J companies concentrating on he invented ms mysterious
vote of fewer citizens than does his opponent, to become j* recommendations 0f Sen.1 growth had consistently made throiy.
vote vi iewer uj«u ukw ’ v” jy the recommendations of Sen.
President. It is time that provision is made so that every ^art Symington, who has pre- more money
. ...__4.._____n.. r.on.ri a «wcisl renort for him
citizen’s vote counts equally.
* ♦ *
History repeats itself, as everybody knows. But why
does it have to do it so fast? — Minneapolis Star.
* * *
Suitor Speaks to Father; “I’ve come ____
your daughter's hand, the two front rooms and use of ■ in^.
the kitchen.” — Funch.
pared a special report for him
on the military, and if Congress
okays the shakeup recommend-
ed by the Missouri legislator.
A report prepared by a six-
man committee headed by Sym-
j ington would make the Defense
to ask for I Secretary “the boss of the build-
I Aimed at ending what Symin-
gton called "this arbitrary and
t (taro ftrrord
growth had consistently made
for their stock-
holders than the stable nign-
yield securities. What would
Philip O. Petry say to that?
Whatever he would say, this
marked a milestone In Jane's
research. With her pencil she
had calculated how an invest-
ment in 100 shares ot • New
Frontier Rocket Riders, pur-
chased at *15 • share in 1054
Bad now grows to 550 shares
worth 515,000—and well, that
was the kind of thing that kept
Jane at her books.
Established is 1504
Published Each Afternoon Except Saturday and
Minds v Morning
By THE CTERO PUBIlhHlNG CO.,
.11* E, Main Ctaeru, Texas
giUfl UUK.U »**•’ .........o'
ridiculous division between land,
sea and air,’’ It would wipe out
22 service secretaries, although
it would retain the separate ser-
viCf* .. said good-by and walked off m
It would, according Sym-j direction. Janr walked tn
ington give »*eJ^rotary of^De- Mr p Md offertd
fense “the capacity for instan- t TaJ1#
deep thoughts tn an era of gas-
light. slow freight and long bet-
fore the days ot piggyback—not
to mention swift technological
change. What somebody ought
to do. stie thought, was to get
the whole up-to-date story on
the way goods are shipped to-
day. Everybody knew the truck-
ing industry waa wrecking the
rails. Why shouldn't trucking
figure in ?, Charmed with her
contribution, Jane's mind raced
to include air freight and river
barges, which the Dow theorist*
also too often Ignored. Then for
good measure she rosaed tn her
imaginings about the magic of
technology—which made dry
clouds rain, salt water fresh,
and night turn into day. And
ahe Idly guessed that such phe-
nomena. in the market place,
were not likely to be confined
by anybody’s theory-
For several days Jane couldn’t
bring neraelf to eay anything
to A) about the Dow Theory,
but one evening A1 banged oj
the kitchen wall, and the
imagined the time hat* come.
Going next door to the Bon-
elli’s, she found Rosemarie do-
Entered in the Post Office at Cuero Texas as second class
matter Under Act of Congress. March 3. 1575
Member
Texas Press Association
South Texas Press Association
Southern Newspaper Publishers Association
lACK HOWERTON
J C ’PETE" HOWERTON
MILTON BINZ
president and Publisher
Vice President
............. Advertieine Manager
taneous response” in an era
when we have to react in 18 mi-
nutes instead of 18 months if
we are to survive surprise at-
tack.
National Advertising Representatives
Texas Daily Press League. Inc.. Texas Bank Bldg.. Dallas.
60 E. 42nd. St.. New York City; 360 N Michigan Ave.,
706 Chestnut St., St. Louis; 1330 WUshire BJvd Los
Rialto Bldg.. San Francisco; 1763 Penobscot Bldg..
t: Ave. Juarez 127. Mexico D.F
: Home delivered by carrier: One Year 512-60,
5; 3 months. S3 25; 1 month, $1.10. By mall In
a. GoUrd Karnes. Gonzales. Lavaca and Jackson
Year. $8 50: six months $4.50: one month. 75c. By
Senator Henry Jackson of Wa-
shington has resigned aa Chair-
man of the Democratic Nation-
al Committee and the Commit
tee will meet this month or ear-
ly In January to nome a succes-
sor.
Washington pundits predict
that the new Democratic Chair-
man will he one of the three
men — Neil Staebler of Michi-
gan, John Bailey of Connecti-
cut, or Leonard Reinsch, of At-
lanta, Georgia.
Gift Shopping*
rear, ss au; six mown* »4.au: one inomn, i.ic. iay NEW YORK —(UPI) —Christ-
in Texas: One Year {1006; six months $5 50. 11mas shopping for the person who
- **“' Year 512 00 6 months hiu eve.^ing? ^snorted: "You women! For cue a sure signal
l »«' •i»y ««*"•> **e L”***
theory
Dow waa to the market as
Einstein was to physics — and
hadn't Einstein unlocked forces
of unimaginable power? Maybe
an understanding of the Dow
Theory waa all that waa hold-
ing her back.
At her card table In the even-
ings. Jane began another siege
of study—this time for A! too.
He had amazed her by saying
be wanted to know al! about
Dow.
At first Jane considered it a : -
corking Idea that Mr. Dow, j ln8 her nails and Al gathering
After class Mr ~ Petry sought; even as long ago as 1897. had j “P’ off>ceiT®rJJJ? .*!*£" d®'
out Eleanor, and while the two I tied the kite of the rail stocks mg on the kitchen table. He
to the price averages of certain
industrial stocks Nodding ner
approval, she thought this
showed remarkable insight
After all.' if the economy ie to
prosper, goods have to be ship-
ped. That waa the first thing.
But it waa the nomt thing that
captivated her.
Now fhw was gonius: It was
ths way these two overages sang
together that gave the Dow
theorists their clarion cue to
the market’s immediate future.
Singly, neither one meant any-
thing; but together they out-
did Nostradamue tn their power
to foretell
Jane waa oo set up about aU
this that she should have let
well enough alone and never
opened her eecond book. For
therein, some authority showed
that the only trouble with the
Dow Theory was that practic-
ally none pf its followers agreed
with one another on what the
averagea were saying. One
authority would call a certain
for a bear
, to drive ner nome, but lane
; said she needed exercise.
She also needed to thtnk. She
could just see Al’e and Rose-
marie’s faces when she told
them how crustrated and vexed
the was.
By the time she had reached
her friends' door, however, the
bad undergone a change of
heart, for now she could see the
miscarriage of her plan as teem-
ing with promise for the future,
to say the least, when she
would succeed in introducing
Wally Goo gin* to Eleanor So.
swearing Al and Rosemarie to
secrecy, she wound up telling
them everything. AJ threw back
his head and roared, “You are
a no-good busybody!”
Rosemarie started choosing
up sides. “I'm for Wally," ahe
announced flatly, having, met
neither young man. "I want it
to be Wally,
iv. w nai Burnu w.uw
DeWtH and adjoining coun- Treffllch’s Bird and Animal Co. j
t" 14k. a. Uswr. ■ f Im a BF aoS f . _ W * . Ir . W8* - *S A. .a f
125
TELEPHOVE iJR
they haven’t even! market, but another would see
*2™*"! incline.. * oiu.i.a. v«. j ,aid on each other( and ; the same cue a rallying call for
Elsewhere; One Year in New York? For that amount.}^youW tuning up for the wed-'the nulls.
. _ ... you gel one pair of Bengal tig- Anf,r r I It was enough to give rise to *>usy day, "Update Dow.
and ,Countv of er8t two years old, unrelated. Hii wrm ^ b*fm» cruelest disillusionment, and tor I (To Be Conttnwetl Tomorrow)
They re perfect more or less. wrote u>« eovci "Auat J*n* McPhipp* •*« H*r User •**« esux," published by presuee-Maii, lae.
j Each has one broken tooth. 1 oiwu Eraaces V. Ruswmil tnemoatM by Kjs* Testurt* Syzsieata
get up and poured her a cup ot
coffee. Then he said. "All right,
Aunt Jane. What's with Dow?
Give,”
“Oh. I’ve heard of Dow!"
Rosemarie volunteered brightly.
“Mr. rigbee, our floorwalker,
watches something he calls
•Dow’ all the time. You kind of
keep score with It, or some-
thing. Don't you?”
Jane replied thoughtfully.
“ ’Keeping score’ ie close enough,
really. Only it doesn't tell you
what's going to happen until
after it's happened. And then
nobody agrees tm whet actually
did happen." To her own amaze-
ment, she realised she waa not
exaggerating.
Rosemarie looked puzzled and
Al looked disappointed. Finally
he asked, "No good to you?”
“No good," said Jane. She
took a sip of coffee. “But I
must say," she added cheerfully
"that the Dow is a marvelous
example of the lengths groat
men will go to keep themselves
occupied.”
Finally, back home, Jane took
a sharp pencil and wrote a re-
minder In her notebook for a
ACROSS
1. Excuse
5. Equal
portion
*. Outer
garment
10. Celebes
oxen
12. Asian
country
13. Trick
14. India
(poet.)
16. Greek
letter
17. Mother
(colloq.)
18. Belonging
to me
1*. Cavern
20. Tin
21. The Mikados
22. -the Red
23. Union
workers
26. Absent
27. G. L beds
38. Chart
29. Headland
30. Music note
32. Sign es
Correct
38. Luck
(Anglo-Ir.)
34. Repeat
(mus.)
35. Aslan goat
antelope
IT. People of
Dublin
38. Make
Into law
40. Betimee
4L Mineral
spring*
42. Goon
horseback
DOWN
1. Fake
(slang)
2. Animal fat
3. Female
sheep
4. Southern
state
5. Celerity
6. Species
of pier
7. Mr. Costello
8. Star s
popularity
yardstick
8. Remove,
a* scum
1L Golfer’s
position
16. Displays
19. Like a
molded
mass
20. Malay
dagger
(var.)
21. A
summit
22. Lizards
23. Branch-
ed
24. Arouses
front
sleep
25. Detailed
report
29. Sala-
manders
Sa Kind of
thread
Itte
IP
mi
of
Yesterday** Ab»w*oT
31. Deadly i»U*
33. Source ot
cocaine
34. Cardinal,
for one
36. Knock
38. Slam are%
measures 4
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One letter simply stands for Another. In this sample A is use*
for tha three L’s, X for the two O’s, etc. Single letters, apos«,
trophies, ths length end formation of the words are all hints.
Each day the cods letters she different
A Cryptogram Quotation
PDX ENHFX MV PDX JEXCTMXA.
KG PDX QKMNX MV QMF~OKCA\-;
Yesterday's Cryptoquotet HAPPY THEY WHOSE WALLS
ALREADY RISE—VIRGIL.
(C 1940, Xing Feature* Syndicate, Inc.)
HANDY SUBSCRIPTION COUPON - CUP AND MAIL
CUERO RECORD, Cuero. Texas
Plea»e enter my subscription to the □ CUERO DAILY
RECORD or □ the SEMI-WEEKLY RECORD Mail paper and
j subscription statement to:
Name ...........
Cm or Rte.
Address________
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►
O I am not now a RECORD suoscrlbsr.
O This Is a renewal order.
id* Rale Schedule below Editorial column of
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The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 66, No. 297, Ed. 1 Tuesday, December 13, 1960, newspaper, December 13, 1960; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth695387/m1/4/: accessed April 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Cuero Public Library.