The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 68, No. 328, Ed. 1 Tuesday, December 11, 1962 Page: 4 of 6
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4 THE CUERO RECORD, Tuesday, Dee. 11. 1982 Timer Recalls
J. S. Prestige
From every quarter of the globe the report comes In
that U S. prestige has soared as a result of the firm!
stand taken by President John Kennedy in the Cuban
crisis. . ,
In Europe, even England, the all-time champion of
negotiation and pacification, is the scene of newspaper
Dollar Was Worth Dollar
In 'The Good Old Days'
HOW WELL HAVE WE LEARNED THE HARD LESSONS OF HISTORY?
I “TOO PPn/irs
Editor's Note — This article, be ground into meal. Next stop
voices and official pronouncements to the tune that the; "In the Good Old Days When; was H. Range * Co. Grocery
I the Dollar was Worth a Dollar, I Store unload our country pro
United States has turned the tide. ! was presented bv Arthur Hans dure. At that time O. F. Hart-
Many think the strong Cuban position has marked of Meversville. son of Ed Hans, ' man was a clerk for said store,
a genuine turning point in relations between East and "ho is one of DeWitt County's, He being papa's nephew, would
West They bc.,e\e the leader. 1 -- “Back about 1900 when 1 was lour eggs and figure up what
nuclear war is closer than they had assumed — that njn(, years of age. being the! papa had coming. Now we
the United States will fight, after all. if backed to the oldest child in our family, my would drive down to the camp
father. Ed Hans. said to. me • yard and feed our horses,
one day: "Then we would walk back
This could be important in the policy-making de- \Veil. ••Roy", 'as they called on Main St. and stop at J. A.
c. ior.s to be made in Moscow in the years to come. It is me when I w as small. ‘I'm go j Graves Dry Goods Store and
a ready important in the various capitals of the world,
a., far as, the mental image of the United States is con-
cerned.
There is a new respect for the determination, and
the military power, of the United States. There is new
hope among some who were close to despair. There is
new determination among our allies — all because Wash-
ington took the initiative and checked Communism in
an area where Communism was attempting to intimi
ing to Ciiero this weekend to
lay in a sup.pl> of groceries.
Now if you are good and mind,
you can go along.’
"Well, you can bet I tried to
be good for a few days.
'Weil, come Saturday morn-
ing. mama set the old alarm
clock for -1:30 a.m. When the
clock »eht off. I was the first
one up: did not have to call
me as usually. Mama had a
at home.
"Then, we would go over to
Mr. Wagner's fruit stand and
papa would buy apples, oranges
and candy for us kids.
Oh. yes, and then before we
started for home, we would go
back by the H. Runge & Co.
Bank to deposit the money papa
had feft. Mr. Berthold Sehiwetz
was cashier of this bank and a
fine old gentleman.
"Then before we started
home, hack by Buchel Milling
to
| papa would buy whatever dry Co. to get our cornmeal, and
goods we needed. I with all this supply, we had
| "Then on to the Record of-j. plenty to eat for at least 30
fice to talk to Mr. J. C. Hower-! days.
ton about the weather. Then on l “Now. on our way back home
to the I>mz ' Restaurant Mr • about 2:30 p.ni. while driving
HUPC
4
&
Chas. Lenz owned and operated.
He was a great old gentleman.
Well, he and papa would talk
awhile, and then we would eat
our dinner consisting of a bowf
of good hot soup, mashed pota-
datc the tree world, which it has so often done success- good steaming breakfast^ready j toes, roast beef. sauerkraut
' " ~ ~.......r J and some sort of good pudding
and all the coffee we could
drink, all for 25 cents, and Mr.
I>en7 would throw in a cigar.
"Then, we would go on to
fully in recent years.
Our Standard Rises
by 5 a.m. consisting of fried;
ham. sausage and fried eggs,
and. as we called it. cornmeal j
mush cooked out of cornmeal;!
so after we were through with
our meal, papa hitched old
Dirk and Nellie, two nice big
The Bureau Of Labor Statistics recently released
figures which show the American standard of living is'baj horses, to our family hack,
continuing to rise. This is very important to all of us. as
a matter of material gain, and also as a matter of com-
parison with other systems of governments.
The Bureau says that our standard of living is ris-
ing much faster than the cost, of living, that our stan-
dard has risen between 20 and 40 per cent in the last 10
to 12 years.
From the political standpoint, the report is compli-
mentary to the fiscal policies of the Eisenhower Admi-
nistration. The 10-12 year period also covers Democra-
tic years, but the eight Eisenhower years constitute the
greater part of the period in which the gain in our stan-
dard of living was registered.
The greatest obstacle to standard-of-living gains is
inflation and during the past decade inflation has been
cheeked to a considerable degree, at least after the
Korean War damage was done. And President John Ken-
nedy has put great emphasis on avoiding inflation since
he assumed the presidency two years ago — and pro-
git ss has continued in this direction. .
Our free economy has, therefore, demonstrated to
all the world that a rich people can further improve
tufir lot. The free enterprise system has shown doubters
that our progress continues unchecked, in spite of Com-
munist propaganda to the contrary.
shell corn for cornmeal at the
barn: then drove to our back
yard gate and loaded several
tx>xes of fresh eggs, several
slabs of country bacon, some
country sausage, some frying-
size chickens, fmama always
saw to it that when papa went
to town, we had plenty to sell
to pay for our groceries >
•'Well, so finally about day-
break. we started out for Cuo-
ro and arrived there about 10
am., our first stop at Buchel;
Milling Co. to leave our corn to
Breeden Bros. Grocery Store
and then cross Esplanade St. to
where the Fair Dry Goods Store
now stands: then up Esplanade
to Buchel Bank; then on to the
Hutchings and Bates Hdw.
Store. Reuben and Walter Le-
along. papa would talk about
all the good honest business-
men of Ciiero. telling me that
honesty was the best policy.
"Well along about dark, we
would make it back home and
unload our wares of the day.
unhitch our horses, feed them
and go in the house and mama
would have a good old-fashion-
ed steaming supper for us.
"After supper, papa and ma-
ma would talk about the day's
happenings and I would tell the
rest of my sisters and brothers
what I saw in Cuero.
"We are seven children alive
in our family and four dead.
"Mv dear mother passed on
1914
"WyAo*/
ie3e
S
ix;
'Galley managed this store and about 20 years ago.
they were both good talkers. 1 "My dear father is still alive j
"Then we would turn around a' ^ years of age and very
and go to Valentine Hardt's | active: stilt works around the
Saloon at a place now operated i pl^ce.
by Cuero Foodcraft. We would: "My parents have always at-j
drink coffee there for five cents tended church every Sunday ;
a clip. Then papa would say,! and have brought all of us chil-
Well. Boy, we better go and get dren up and learned us to wor-
started for home': "so we would ship God. and so you ran sec if
hitch up old Dick and Nellie; any of us go wrong, it is not'
and drive back to H. Runge & their fault.
Co. and papa would buy 100 lbs. ! "My parents have both work-j
of sugar, one barrel of flour.; ed hard and taught us all to!
one box of prunes, one sack of work for our dollars. God bless j
salt and many other things; both of them,
good to eat and then Otto Hart-; "That, was in the good old
man. the rlerk. would put up a! days when we had plenty to eat
large-sized pa;>er hag of old, and were always happy and
time ginger cakes for us kids never broke."
Vc
Cr
y
-;-
|| | Jack .LH^ar hark from a flv 1
03-
!l j ing trip to New York City on !
j) j business.
THE ALMANAC!
polliwTu
By POILI HOWERTON
By United Press International
Today is Tuesday. Dee. 11. the
‘Hath day of 1962 with 20 to fob
low'
The moon is full..
The morning .stars are Venus
Anri Maps'.
The evening stars are .tupper
— m WYCK MASONS Co/. North * fan tv re thriller
TROUBLE in BURM
Union Troubles
In New York labor unions have.dominant power in
many fields, and often they wield it without proper
CHAPTER 22 | "You mear you re going to
'J MUST apologize for being quit drinking or just Mickey* ?"
1 late,” Madame Bo Lintin the G-2 Colonel asked,
said to the others in the saloon, j Git's bloc«lshot eyes came up
"I stopped at Mister Acker- j to meet the G-2 man's, "You |
In spite of his hangover, Ack-
erson jutted his jaw and blared:
“You think maybe you :an get
me thrown offa this boat?”
"I'm pretty sure I can,” Hugh
son's cabin and called through don t believe I was really : nodded, his voice still soft. "Nu
the door to him to see it he i Mickey-ed, do you?” he asked. | doesn't like you very much, re-
needed anything hut he said no. 1 When North shrugged, the i member
he was feeling much better but , Texan scowled. "Well, not that. .-yah, y0ll ta]g piE but you
The latest example was a strike threatened j not quite well enough to eat it means a damn whether you ; fion,t rate gQ bl£. aboard this
believe me or not but that's
"How generous you hav* be-
come, General Nu."
Marianne Champeau reverted
to Americanese WAien she spoke
for the others. "Do us all a
favor, will you?” she asked.
"Drop dead."
restraint. — -
bv one union in behalf of its demand for a thirty-hour breakfast.
• u You mean you have your
Week' American lover aboard, too?”
The National Labor Relations Board already has To,a DUvaine asked smoothly
preponderant power in the field of labor and manage-
ment and management is up against a vastly unfair^
arrangement in many circumstances. But no one seems
too, excited about that in this election year-or in any^
election year.
As a nation we will decline and fall to some toug
and aggressive opponent when we reach the stage we
are so rotten that the mass of our working people seek
such luxuries as a thirty-hour week. This is what hap-
pened m France in the thirties and the nation was so
rotten and weak that Germany easily outproduced it
and defeated the French army in fifty days in 1940.
We are a rich nation. We got that way by working
and working hard. No one should be overworked and
ail of us believe in adequate pay for honest work.
Bu< unless excessive power and reckless use of it
bv labor unions-—is. curbed, this country may go the way
Nick Cameron getting rnistle-
; toe out of his tree, loaded with
j the small white berry,
"Mrhc" Thompson out of the
! hospital and back on the . job
! Monday afternoon for only a
. short while when she was ready
to en hack home.
1 RcuIm-'h , Wagner telling n -1
that he has lost four and a half;
: pounds, '.■during the past three
1 days He's getting ready for
! Christmas feasting, "'e ll bet.
Graham and Sue Hamilton
back from Houston where they
attended the formal opening of
j the new San Jacinto. Engraving;
! Company , 1207 Duniavy Street,
where son Buzzy works and A
a partner The new air-condt-
j tinned plant more than doubles
! the size of the former plant
j From the picture of the plant
on their four-color brochure and Saturn
it looks like a most impressive On this day in history
set-up in 1818. Indiana became the
~ —e P'th 'late to be admitted into
HOME HINT EOR TODAY the lawn.
Imperial Chicken This . >. in 1936. King Edward die
cipc is ideal for company din- eighth abdictatod the throne so
net's. Mix 1 cup fine bread he could marry an American
crumbs with '* cup parmesan divorcer. Wallis Warfield Sim-
cheese. 1/4 cup minced parsley,. sort
2 teaspoons salt and I S tea-, In nil Germany and Italy
■ |WKin pepper Brush: pic, c;. of dec-fared w ar on the United
chicken w ith melted Gutter, j States and Congress announced
coal w ith the rriimh mixture j a few hours later a state of war
and arrange in a shallow bsk exists between the Ended
: hooker, do you ? Looks like that
"No!” Captain Pokh cried, la
big lie!"
what happened, he growled, j Chink Colone.l calls the shots on
"Madame Bo Lintin says she! FrollfroUi don't it?”
found you in alley with some
bom pouring drinks all over
you,” Pil&nung Pokh put in. “Is
very lucky she find you in time! G wan, I was just tajktn to
to get you to the boat." ; MoUlein and she said the Chink
"Lucky is hardly the word," j brought Tola Duvaine aboard ' world during Decembe, midget
Hugh North said drily. "Out of made you all like it. " His ......~u *u” ' '
all R,angoon on a rainy four j bloodshot eyes met North:■>
! ayem, Madame Bo luckily hap- -squarely. And don t go thinkin
It was quite evident that Tola | r^ne(1 to atsp m an apgy whcre things, see’ I'm workin' for
Duvaine never had heard the somebodv was dousing you with Madame Bo so as soon as I
slang expression used to mean j ]iquor xhe onjy question is, «>uld navigate I’d rejiort in to
“Please be quiet; you displease , whv Waste the liquor?” : her, wouldn’t T? That’s when
me." The Eurasian lost her, "Whaddaya mean?" Acker- '!,h* told me about Tola.”
lazy invulnerability and spat: 1 ^ dema.n<jed I "What he says is quite true,
'You dare threaten me, red-; "You apparently were passed . Colonel North.” Moulein Bo Lin-
ing pan. Drizzlf' 1/1 cup n;,cit-
ed butter nver it and hake un-
. covered in oven, preheater! to.
Traffic pretty be.m v on Cue-! 330 degrees F until the hick
rn streets these day-With shop- Psf parts of the chi; ■ n arc
pers loaded -'with packages. tender Thus will take about an
hour.
Mary Beth McCurdy enjpvmg ; ——————--
her freedom from the business j
State.- Gcrmanv nrvl Italx
A thought for the da> -Am-
eri.can historian Ilenrv Brooks
Adams said Knowledge of
human nature- is the beginning
and end of imlitical education
ting ready to punch the clock
again in January.
DAILY CROSSWORD
Sis Gips helping out with;
! some typing in -the office of j
Freund Funeral Home and re-j
I minding us that her daughter i- |
a high school- -senior this year!
which is hard to realize
haired Yankee? 1 will tell you 1 0„t—and ‘ on brandy, by the 1 tin said from the doorway Where ] JO and 20 Years AgO
what may happen to those who wav: j didn't smell anv whiskey j she had been standing. She came
threaten Tola Duvaine ” j on yOU bur that’s admittedly/info the saloon, a delicate, eurve-
Colonel Yuan T sai broke in j nit-picking. But if you were ! some woman in her native dress,
with a sharp gabble of Mandarin j passed otit and if this mysteri-j “Friendly interest in another *
Chinese. Using ungentle 'words j ous Thakin who seems to have ; affairs can tie carried too far,
and phrases, the Red Colonel fled at sight of a single tiny | Colonel,” she went on, her voire
told Tola to stop talking and woman wanted you to miss the .as blank as her eyes.. “Mister
return to her cabin without an- boat, why did he try to gild the Ackerson and I will take care
other word. (hly by pouring more booze over of ourselves, thank you, with «p
Surprisingly tt worked The you, Git? And if this Mickey Teed of any h»!p from you.
■\ ‘ H work hard and who are ready to' woman left her vituperation Finn Job wasn't to make you Com*, Mister Ark»rson." _ , .
work, and work hard, ana her fork, miss the hxai, whv were vou She beckoned with her lovely ' hi* Mat,on ,n San Diego, ( aid
after a vi.sit here with Mr and
Mrs Rqleigh Blackwell
Of France in the thirties and become an easy target f°r
8 nation of people like the Russians or Ch_ln!!!J!^|
e:-:j>ect to
take all our
enterprise system) away from us.
From Record Files...
Dec It. ns?
AtiA nnette he rvirrr of f.a
nado ca- the gijet of hei par j
ent-. Mr and Air;- four- Srl-ior.
re Claude Blackwell, -.ea |
man in the 1 S Navy. left, for
et luxuries t our free ! hanging, dropped her fork, miss the boat, why were you
wealth, freedoms and luxur pushed ba«k ner chair, got up spiked? And do these murder- head and Git surged out of his
and naif ran from the saloon, ous Thakins suddenly draw the rhn>r and followed Madame Bo
ACROSS
43. Daniel, the
16 Over:
fejiSISi
1. Sacred
frontiers-
poet.
pro-
man
19. Sloth-
hibition
44. August
ful
w~, ■ ■
6. Split
flower"
20. Actress
■HP—
11. Ride for
45. Rolls of
—
12. Shout of
cloth
Tav!or
21 Sick
greeting:
DOWN
ZZ. Formal
var.
1. Armored
dance
■ :: ■
13. Sniffed
vehicles
24 Sk a
IF Beneath
2. Tn progress
between
\ ealrnlay'i *o»w«r
15. One of the
3. Bass voice
Aus-
31. One who
Dodecanese
4."---Miss”
tralia
does'
Islands
5. Ancient
and
wickerwork
16. Lak-1
6. Butter-
New
’2. Laud
freighter
maker
Guinea
33. Gay
cargo
7. Narrow,
25- Lively
34, Kings, as
17. Half em
I
’<
dances:
addf'-ssed
IS. Kind of
S Old fimes
Sp.
36. Instance
sweet
9. Swindled
26. Employ
39 Except
bread
10. Violent,
27. Court
40. Warp-yarn
21 "South
whirling
29 Lump
41. Game of
American.
wind
of coal
chancs
Established tn 1S94
Published Each Afternoon Exrepl SaturdaT and
Sunday Morning __
IJx THE CUERO PUBLISHING CO..
119 E. Main, Cuero. Texas
North watched her go and when 1 line at cutting your throat, if
he turned back to the others he they want to keep you from
saw that General Nu was seat- helping Madame Bo?”
ing Madame Bo, his face bliss- * * *
ful with relief at having sur-
vived this first crisis
"The rain,” said Madame Bo
quietly, “does not seem to have
let up at ah, does it?”
Thereby plunging the table
“THE FLIER was silent for a
F i
Lintin out on deck and aft.
“So," j»okh said, softly, “wo
1 have lost pretty Madame Bo as
friend, Colonel. Why is that,
hey?"
North's brow was clouded as
he shrugged. “Could be several
reasons, Pilo. She may resent
our . poking our collective nose
for Git
such a
Second class postage paid at Cuero Texas
TEXAS,
e>■
a / 96 3--
PRESS ASSOCIATION
X
Jr
South Texas Press Association
Southern Newspaper Publishers Association
JAi'f; HOWERTON .... —
C •urii" HOWERTON
MRS JACK HOWERTON
President and Publishei
........ Vice President
Secret ary - Treasurer
l<
National Adverllslng RepreM-ntadve*
Daily Piess League Inc... 960 Hartford Bldg.. Dallas
Subscription Hates
D-.a A Sunday: Home delivered by earner One Year $12 W
- moot i So 25 3 months $3 23 1 month $116 By mail in
I i\ it V.ctona. Goliad Karnes Gonzales Lavaca and Jackson
t , x one Year SS DO six monttis $4 50 one month 75c By
,1-cwl (r. m Texas fine Year $10 00 six months $5.50 1
n;, up $’. f;r pins Z’-» state sales tax By Mail outside Texas-
O- y. ir $12 00 b nii.mii*- $0 25 . 3 month3 $3 25 1 month $1 00. ;
Ni'iiii ttccl.lx UditK.nx: H> mail tn DeWitt and adjoining eoun
... > o,„. y.-.Tt S4 06. 6 months $2 25 Elsewhere: One Year
iff? 6'mnni-hs $2 50 pi us 2% state sales tax.
Official Or-nn of the City of Cuero and County of DeWitt
1
long moment before he said:
“Okay, so I was plastered. I
had to tell Mod lets somethin'
and well, she musts made up
the bit about the guy pouring mto her warm regard
with the exception of the stead- iikker on me to give you guys , Ackerson if she has
ily eating Colonel Yuan into an an excuse for not leavin' me, regard. She may have told Git
exhaustive discussion of the lay.” something she doesn t want him
weather, about which there was "Which means the. lady thinks , t-h spill, mouthy character that
plenty to remark. a lot more of you than you be is. Or perhaps its some-
At noon, Git Ackerson finally gave her credit for, eh, Git?” thing to do with—”
got his aching head off his pil- North asked.
low and tottered to the toward Again the flier hesitated, gaze, framed the word map Si-
saloon where Pilanung Pokh , "Yeah." he said finally. "It sure J»ntly and motioned to his little
was giving North a lesson in looks like it, don't it?” aide to keep his questions for
elementary Kachin That was Where’s the joy f the Colonel later. He had briefed the Thai
to say that Hugh had hoped he asked silently. Hangover too j about Yuan s bribe offer and
might pick up enough of the bad or is there another reason | explained what he meant to do
diaiect to communicate with the you’re so glum 1 Could rt be j to try to turn Yuan's gambit
scouts when they hit the jungle, that you were shanghaied aboard into what might prove a big
Gft fell into a chair and this vessel by the deltghtjul ' break for the home team,
groaned: “Mother told me Moulein, fJtf f , j Now, when he tossed Pokh
there’d be days like this but I "Where did you take on your this new thought to mull over
didn’t believe her." load?” Hugh asked aJotid. 1 he was trying to explain Mou-
“Pretty rough, eh?” Hugh "Why should 1 tel! you any- j lein Bo Lintin's icecap attitude
asked/sympathetically. thing?” the Texan cried with , by offering the possibility that
Froufrou, struck by a sud- sudden irritation. T asked you somehow she had heard of his ! In 1 ■'|,a
den cross-current surge, listed to fi: it so s I could come along apparent acreptanee of a deal -
sharply and then recovered. ! on this trip and you gave me
Ackerson s grayish tinge turned ; the brush-off. I don't have to
to green and back again and the answer your questions, North.” Snooping aronnd the lift!*
big flier uttered another groan. > "Not unless you want to go steamer, North makes a
"Never again, so help me," he farther than Kvangip, you 1 startling find. Continue the
said in a smothered voice. ; don t," the G-2 man said. ! story here tomorrow.
From the novel published by Doubleday A Or reprinted by arrangernrnt with Herald Mv*o”
Copyright C 1962 by Van Wye* Mason. Distributed1 by King Features Syndicate. '
Mr. and Mrs, Alton Ixrum of
Kenedy and Hairy Smith and.
family from Mission were
miosts of Mr. an'l Mr;.. Floyd
Smith The Cuero H.:h
ed by Edgar Miles, wax to prm ;
.r-nt a program in do'vntiwp ,
Sf lino: I A ('a pc It a Choir dn-pet
city pari .Mr and Mu' A. :
Kohler and children, of Hoir-ton
«ere guest-, nf Mr and Mrs K
T Summers. Jr
Dec. II, ■ It**?
Sugar ration stamp ”,"iild he
gooff the IMIi Jap i editor-'!
He broke off and met Fnkh s J cements landed at \'r\\ l unnea j
• City was planning a gar
bat-e collection project. NN Her •
liej-t Boebl elected head of I u
theran Brotherhood Pete
Rl'lpt/ec u ar rlto-erj hv Vr :
and Morris- Frank Ernanuel to-
Houston Post Eleven ltd 1
ford Sager and Cecil Newman’
had joined the Army Reserve!
Corps at A&M College Km I
est Regner was with the 103(11
School Squadron al Kelly Field
/ (Tifford Eck was stationetl
river
22. Person's
bearing
23. Extorted,
as money
24. Full of
activity
27. En orson's
middle
name
7R. Optimistic
29 nap
hfi ween
mountAin
pc aks
3h Malt
beverage
31 Refreshing
drinks
3' Tron: flyiTL
36. Taxi
3.7. Roman 12
38. Citified
40. Dace 0f
worship
42 Become
active
1
3
[ 4
b
i
y
/
s
O
IO
ll
y/
y/
1 i
y//<
* \
%
%
ifc» .
1 f
20
%
31
;4
y/y
u 2
•3'5
%
IX
%
2 3
2t>
27
^ 3
%
^'0
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%
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31
i 2
13
34
3 S'
31>
%
%
3 J
va1
33
%
4o
4-i
42
%
43
4-4-
y6.
^5
offered by the Ohinese Red.
BE \ QUICK PICKER of ap
j predated gifts . use the Gift
: S|iotter in the Classified section
tbcc if today.
duty CRYPTOQT OTE — Here’s how to wotk it*
AXYDLBAAXB
Is LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A la tise<J
for the three L's, X for the two O's. etc. Single letters, apos-
trophies, the length and formation of the vkords are all hint*.
Each day the code letters are different.
A Cryptogram Quotation
QUB'O WBVGQUBWJD Jp QUB
QURKO LPGBJAKOO JVPGOUBCO
QPGYB. — TGYBO
VcaterdaCs Crrptoqnote: MONEY IS LIKE AN ARM OR ▲
LEG—USE IT OR LOSE IT. HENRY FORD
<C 1962* King Fts4tuiM SyadiCAU? 1
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The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 68, No. 328, Ed. 1 Tuesday, December 11, 1962, newspaper, December 11, 1962; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth696692/m1/4/: accessed April 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Cuero Public Library.