The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 69, No. 63, Ed. 1 Friday, March 15, 1957 Page: 4 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Texas Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Cuero Public Library.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
« Tin CUERO RECORD. Friday, March 15, 1957
Editorial
Double Standard
Secretary of State Dulles told newsmen In an inter-
riew that the United States would give “serious consider-
ation to applying economic sanctions against Israel If
the United Nations called for them.” Yet Israel says it is
not unwilling to withdraw from Gaza and the shores of
the Gulf of Aqaba if It receives a guarantee from Egypt
which would only permit Israel to enjoy what practically
every other member of the U.N. enjoys, the inviolability
of its frontiers and freedom to use its own ports and in-
ternational sea lanes for purposes of peaceful commerce.
Secretary Dulles declared that because Israel is dem-
ocratic it will bow to the will of the United Nations. Dulles
places a heavy burden on democracy. For if Israel com-
plies with the U.N. resolution, it declares it is at the mer-
cy of its enemies which have sworn to exterminate it.
Also, Dulles' statement may give a green light to Egypt
to refuse to give Israel any guarantees.
Senator Knowland declared that sanctions against
Israel would be “immoral,” considering the fact that the
UN. General Assembly had voted 10 resolutions against
Soviet aggression in Hungary but had taken no other
action. Russia and India can Ignore the U.N. he says with
Impunity. If Israel does, it will be destroyed; if Israel
democratically abides by the U N. decisions, it will be
ripened for destruction.
The actions being taken against Israel threaten that
nation’s destruction. Senator Knowland is right. The
double standard is now gaining as a moral attitude in the
U.N. Unless the U.N. quickly reverses Itself it may die,
and with even less glory than the League of Nations.
POLLIWOGS
By roixv HOWERTON
Stella Schorr** r’d'ng arot id In
a lieauiiful new ( urysler end
we'd any it's very "becoming.'’
A goodly crowd enjoying the
offering of the Victoria (!jvi<
Theatre, “The Man on a Stick'
the past two niteu. Gay Kokemot.
who is planning to major In dra-
matics, did a beautiful job as tlx
romantic young daughter In Ui*
play, and she was lovely to look
at. Rosemary, her mother, wa
beaming at all the praise beini
given her daughter.
Mrs. R. B. McMahon of
toria under the weather for
past week and confined to
apartment.
Fiances Van/.ura grieving ovci
(he loss of “Tippy Cat ", hci
pretty black cat which was r
member of the family and tlx
staff at the beauty shop. Somcon*
ran over the cat Wednesday
morning, and it has been buriei
in the yard.
Old Abe'
Golfers at Cuero Park Thur.s
day afternoon forced to shoot b
the “general direction"’ of tlx
greens as the dust storm almos
closed the course.
Brother was sworn to kill brother. Reason had been
abandoned and a people's sins were about to be bathed
away in blood. The experiment had been called “the last
best hope of mankind" seemed destined to fail. It was
in these troubled times that a gaunt prairie lawyer came
to the White House.
His face was already lined with care. Failure, disap-
pointment and sorrow were no atrangers to him, and they
were not likely to become strangera. He knew this as
eurely as he knew that the Union muit be preserved.
The fingers, gnarled from the years of grasping an
axe, held a pen. Every time he signed hie name, armies
moved and men died. He wrote words that gave voice to
the spirit of his times—words so cartfully chosen, so per-
fectly sculptured to the message he wanted to communi-
cate that they would be quoted as long as men could read.: eJaHy. * * * *e •0n w 1 ,,lp out 1
Men around him lost faith. The people sometimes --------
for victory
Jack Wallis busy preparing i
big ahtpment of Wallis Ranch tur
key eggs headed for Canada.
J. C. Penney Company Mc-
Pherson back from a company
convention and reporting a mo*i
interesting session.
Home Hint for Today— The
trick to a pretty gelatin dessert
ia in the unmolding. The new
Betty Crocker Cook Book has this
easy idea: just remember to cut
around tha edge of the mold first,
then let the air in at the side and
■hake gently to loosen. Next place
the serving plate on top, invert
mold . . . then lift off. it gelatin
sUcks, dop mold quickly into hot
DAILY CROSSWORD
4 Perfermad
5 Choicest
part
6 Wife of
a knight
1 Evening
(poet )
U Thighbones
» Quahogs
11 Hindu
garments
IS Tortures
1* Type of
plen*
It l»ng tooth
21 Wading bird
i Nile i
22. Carting
vehicle
S3 Omu
ptecee
25 Place
29 Goe-
the •
hero
27 Long
to
29 Puts
out
30 Relieves
32 Discovers
33 Prophet
34 Musical
composition
Ytsterdtr's $■•••
37 At one time
39 Narrow MH
40 -
Johnson,
explorer
1.1
8. Music
character
9 Species
of pepper
10. Storms
12. Marked
13. Dropey
14. Questions
13 Month
1« Biblical
city
1T Pronoun
13 Squeeze
1* Three
(prefix)
20 Splinter
23. Disarrange
24. Ware
26. Well. '
pleased
21 New
Englander
31 Donkey
32. Young fish
33. Yea (Ger )
34 Overhead
33. Little girl
36 Performs
36. Warning
signal
40 Unit of
weight
41 Attempted
42. Denomlna.
Uosi
42. Audiences
44. The sweet-
sop (P. I.)
DOWN
1. Tool
2. Part of
a chain
8 Malt
beverages
DAILY CRYFTOQUOTE — Here’s how to work »U,
AXYDLBAAXR
le L O N O r E L L O W
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Is used
for the three L's, X for the two Os. etc Single letters, epos,
traphes, the length and formation of the words are all hlnt%
Each day the code letters are different.
m
r*
a T
T
4*"
T“
te
T-1
V*
%
sr
It
0
T~
7“
ia
T~
“““
i
ir
2
sA
n
n
IT
Is
_
IS
10
*7
j*
n
p
W
•
vr
P
*
i*
it
arr
-*2
w
*sr
i
A Cryptogram Quotation
J1LTMJU
TMRDEDLM
IEMLTS
MJ RMWZ MX XS IN*
(V D X L 8 V Z X Y S L D I*
Z X aV- L-TTAETTMRR
VaeterdayVCryptoquotr? THERE S A SILVER UN IN (3
THROUGH THE DARK CLOUD SHINING—LENA FORD.
>lftrlhut*4 by Kin* Feature* Syndic*!*
seemed ready to concede defeat; the price
seemed so high. The tired man In the White House grew
lonelier, older. Yet he never wavered; the Union was worth
whatever price was asked.
And as the end of the struggle approached and It
became apparent that hls people would remain one peo-
ple, he turned hls thoughts to rebuilding—to binding up
the wounds, to healing the terrible scars. His critics be-
came more bitter; those who had wavered now were loud-
est In their demands for a vengeful triumph.
Only when he was dead did the love the people felt
for him become so apparent, even to the people. They had
called him “Old Abe" from the time he was 30. And now
“Old Abe ’ was dead, and the people bid him farewell as
they would a patriarch. He had come from the “dirt poor,”
and his life had been a reminder that clay was made
noble when It was Infused with the Divine breath.
Sjo You
KNOW TEXAS
By JAMES KARBr-
Q. "Go find an Indian of jour
own!’’ Who said Uial?
A. You could ntajbe guess Ihis
one, bul we have to tell it. It was
our 'edoublable old friend, Dig
Foot Wallas. He had a bran on an
escaping Indian. A brother Rang-
er wanted to get into the act.
Wallace gave him ihis classic
brushoff.
(C 1957 by Janies Earlier)
what ia HarriNiNo
Seeead Lieutenant Krnll sVhwe-
backer had had • year of dreary In-
action with lh« Cavalry at Fort Lara-
mie. Wyomlaf. He felt peat up under
Infallibly exacting, coldly
Question Of ladies
Might it not be more simple all around to Invite kings,
potentates and dignitaries from abroad to Fort Knox
rather than to New York and Washington?
Then they could be told to help themselves and take
what they need in the fight for freedom against commu-
nism, and so forth. This appears to be the most efficient
way to win friends through money.
Too Much I/not
MILWAUKEE, Wis. .Mar. L
(W - Axle Pavich, a collector
for a vending machine company,!
told police Wednescday someone
stole $2,000 in quarters he had
collected. The loot apparently
was too heavy for the thieves
because they also took P.n i«hV
truck.
Curh.in lines for the legitimate theater are written
to end episodes on a dramatic note. In television every
big scene must end »1th a graceful cue for the commer-
cial that i.s to follow.
(tern ftrrnrd
l.stahiKhrrt In ISHt
Published F.ach Xff-r*t*>*>n l.xccpl Salurilni and Sundai Morning
Bx tH« 1 I I ID PI RUSHING 4 0. Inc.
lis t: Main. 4 turn. Texas
Ln’ered .r the Pi.-; f' * i r ; i Cumo |'r\a* ce. rrd r’ii«« r'.a'tci
t rdi i \.
rt
Mm rli 3 IV*"
£oi|ili
V.ijthern NY
Member
<• Pir-'N 'J'-MH-ial i- n
t'\.*«- Pros* A'^'iei.Hif r
* :i ["-! PhM -b-' , \—...
.»'*>; H* n*. imoN
» • TETF HOWfp.TON
I *RPY C PITMAN
rv«~sid~r'
A " t Pul’ l: l et
• r'i Pllb,’Sh»
*.)-• Pi-n.idep*
A Ad'.l M<l
National Adxertbine l!>-prM.a]rih*es
Texas Dailj Press league ln< i* a* B.n-i fvili Dallas Ir*»*
V' E 42nd Si New York City. 3C-0 N M chigan Axe Chieaan 70>
t 'Stnui St.. Si Louis: 1330 Wilshlre Bixd I/>* Angc'***. Rial’o B'dc i | ji j
S r Francisco: 1763 Penobscot Bide Detroit: Ave Juarer 127 i 1404
^ '“^tco__ j I4H . 34*
*>uh**rrinib>* Kai'-x | fBOM coast to coast the shirt-
t*aii* a 'unda * : t|. ire delivered by carrier Oi* year $12.00 ai\ | ’"'*'** <>ror% takes frr> h„*nrs
n until*- St. - j 3 -i.'inMix $5 15 1 month 5’ lb mail in DfM.lt |"itu .-«7i nrv season. T! is half-
A ictoria GnLad Karnes. <,.>i:/a)cs Lax.na j,;.j Jackson (oiiM.es -i/e design jv>ire« no k.-t os in
One \ear SS.jU »i.x mon'hs $1 3(J c<*ie month 75 Hx mail elxev here Idling
*r Texas: One year JlOuO six months $3 50 I month il.M ‘^y| No. 1444 is in * cs 14
r.^ii. outside Texts One year $12.00 < months $4. 25 3 months $3 25 i|>,_ » 1 2. 22 1
the larainniy exacting. coldly re.
aervad, FI rat Lieutenant Tempi* Joce-
lyn. Brea tha thought of hla hence*.
Henrietta, wea not ronaollny for ahe
*•** back la Vermont, a painful mem-
fh* patrol whlrh took him to ftynd-
laa a ranch rbanaed hls career. A com-
pany of Infantry had been sent to re-
inforce Fort Ijiram’* Jocrlyn a troop
had been ordered to rendexvom* with
th* foot aoldlera at (he ranch and
escort them. A mile from Ryndlee’s.
th* cavalrymen aaw the Infantry posi-
tion ringed by attacking Indians.
Jocelyn aent Kmll with part of the
troop to flank th* Indiana while Jore-
lyn pushed through to the Infantry-
men'* aid. Whan th# two pronced as-
■anlt had forced the Indians to draw
back. Kmll and Jocelyn found th*
company of inlantry shattered and
Its eaptaln Nathan klnrnld In aconv
with a badly mangled arm. Fmll.
who had run away from a medical ca-
reer to th* Army, amputated the arm.
Then, la a renewed Indian attack,
Joeelvn wae wounded, and It was up
to Srhwabaaker to taka command and
try to aarw th* force. A* a trick, he
arranged what appeared a dlaorrterly
retreat to Fort l-aramle The Chey-
enne*. aeeing a email wagon tram
leave, boldly attacked. But concealed
troopers amhiirhed the Indians
Though Captain Kincaid died before
th* toi«e got back to Fort Laramie,
Jocelyn is raced from death by treat-
ment at the fort. Kmil is promoted to
first lieutenant and glcen regular
command of th# company for an ex-
pedition to Fort Kearny. It la In-
ac liable that Spotted Tall, seeking re-
ringe. wilt feme an opportunity to al-
ia: k him.
cloth was spread, Emil Sch. s-
backcr ate in silence, then s*
tied down for the night.
He was up before daybret
bad hls coffee and bacon and w >
taking his horse from Ute pick'
line when the bugler blew rc
veille. When the ringing echo i
of that ca-ll died. Schwabacx r
instructed the bugler to saddle-
bag hls horn until the command
reached Fort Kearny. He had no
immediate wish to call the hO'<
tiles down on him like Gabriel at
the walls of Jericho.
The march continued, a regu-
lation four miles an hour when rounu u
accompanying wagons From the j,ia
prairielike river
Flatte suddenly
through cliff s a
high. Schwabacker bunched hla
command to a closer interval un-
til this section was passed and
the land again became prairie.
Late In the afternoon a mist-
ing rain commenced, stayed with
them for an hour, then left, |
to worry. Each day he studied
ms troopers, cheeks reddened hy
in and dust, bloated by insect
bites. Their clothing was stiff
with ground-in dirt. He looked
at them and they looked hack
with dull stares. He was the
commander.
Finnegan was a rock tn this
sea of discomfort. Over the
evening meal. Schwabacker said,
“Sergeant. I can’t do anything
about the weather. Why don’t
they blame it on the Cheyennes’
medic ..." lie stopped talking
and sat that way, hla mouth a
round O, hls food dribbling off
BY MEL HFIMER
bottom
the
swung
left
hundred
feet
"What Is It. sor?" Finnegan’s
voice was concerned.
Schwabacker put his plate
aside. "Bugler!" he shouted, and
the youth came up on the run.
“Bugler, from now on 1 want all
garrison calls sounded properly
and on the minute.”
"All. sir?" He was Inclined to
T\]EW YORK—The night before, you
ll eompllshed the most remarkable
had ae<
leaving a chill and wet blankets, think his commander had gone
riRST
I ScInvabacKet s
CTIAITEK 12
LI KITTEN A NT KMII.
troop passed
j through the psL.saiie gates an j
I hour after dry hi cal* and was
Halting on the tints noi Lti of the1
post when the massive supply I
train of Deal and Hughes, sutlers,
Legan to t; chic into position.
,iu ao.ii Yn gn'.c (!<• band sig-
nal lo in, v* an,) tin- command
pn.cve.nd v,..si .it a slow walk.
T* e *ui \ v. ...s dull and low
cK.ids ni.>\id across the sky like
inl’.v ..,:ton while the threat of
i» n ling.ied on the perky wind.
: o'.i'-ab*» her had his scouts out.
i y n
t o " I ie
u o the routine
I’, stile Indians
Banking them to the north - ted
to make the night miserable.
Fires sputtered, half refusing to
burn. Finnegan was waiting
after the evening rounds, his face
concerned. “Them Cheyennes Is
studyin' us rII th' time. sor. I
don't like It.”
Schwabacker said, “I think
Spotted Tail wants to pick his
own ground. Sergeant. Maybe we
can beat him to it.’’
“Aye. sor. that s likely. But It
makes a man Jumpy neverthe-
less "
Overhead the clouds were
breaking and a sliver of moon-
light appeared. There was the
promise of fair weather in the
morning, for a strong wind was
coming up. dissipating the stonn.
One by one the squad Ores died
to iishes and the command rested.
The weather in the morning
held, and during the next five
days the sun and strong winds
up
be increased to
mad; hls expression said so any-
way.
“Yes." Schwabacker said, smil-
ing. “ Mesa call, "work call,
•fatigue’: the whole thing.”
“Yes, sir.” the bugler amid and
walked away to get his horn.
For a moment Sergeant Finne-
gan said nothing. Finally, “Sor,
if he toots that durn horn th’
Injuns will flock to it like Bible
readers to a meetin' house.’’
“More than likely,” Schwa-
backer said. He was no longer
worried: there was no trace of It
in his face or voice. “Sergeant,
we said Uiat Spotted Tail would
want to pick hie ground. Well, I
don't think i'll let him. I'm going
to pick it for him and make him
come ta me. f»ok at thla
weather. It dawns on
Spotted Tail's taking credit
bringing it on with h-.s medicine.
If that's so he must think the
time s right 'o light, but if we
stay here, nr I have to conie to
Jeb in the history of man. ‘The secret,” you
muttered as you went through dresser drawers
looking for the dacron shirt, “is to pack lightly.
Throw out everything unnecessary. Taka half a
toothbrush.” So you had, and three hours la$sr
you leaned back and said “there,” and got a beer
from the Icebox—as a man who had wrapped
up a job well done.
You were going to a place you never had be-
fore—the sands of the Sahara. Thoughts •t
veiled Arabian beauties, of meditative eamtla, of
the Foreign Legion thundering to tha rescue, of
bumoosea (or mongooses?) Ailed your hend.
Then when that part of the trip was done, yot$
would hightail It back to Rome and ait in Al-
fredo's in lonely splendor, toying with your gresn
ravioli while people gestured at tha deeply
tanned, enigmatic atranger In the corner sad
■aid, "Now there’s a man who has lived, a man who has aacn jay
and sorrow*. . . .” y - , .
The beer tasted line. The anticipation was even morn deXghtfvL
At his best, Walter Mitty never had dreamed such dreams.
a * * *
THE DAY DAWNED CRISP and clear and you noted fmCnInT
ally It was good flying weather. Ceiling and visibility wibmlttR
You would take her up to 22,000 feet, adjuat the trim-tab, set thff
automatic pilot and then carefully, daringly begin tha kmg safari
serosa the dark of the Atlantic at night, flying tha great etafl
route to Paris.
Mai Haimsr
Portrait of a
man not going
any\rhere.
?” thm
nkors in position, and be- firmed up the trail until the
command could settle 1 march rate could
of the march.1 a-.x miles an hour. Daily reports j us. We ll be r sdv for him.'
w ere reported assured Schwabacker that Spot-j The first u I blown was
Tail's warriors still clung to treat,” juxt be re dark.
“re-
By the
the outfnnges of the hills, wait- time the first bed tonea died, the
ing for a time dictated by Chej*- entire command ~ -----
Schwabacker kept tins bit o(
intelligence to hitm-eif but there-
after he maintained constant
commun:calion between his com-
mand position and the scouts, without stopping, the weather and just before the gray ahadee
There was little need, he behex'ed, turned freakish The sky became of night gave way to black, there
to alarm hia command now. 1 en inverted blue dome, startlingly was a rising smudge of smoke on
•vim *U*B m Med Ik. d. ..4 Ia AAlk ' . KI..M
were oa their
enne medicine. 'feet, trjmg to figure It out.
After they passed Fort Connor , Schwabacker watched ,lul wailed.
U'hen the first feathered warrior j clear, and the wind died to noth- ’ a distant bluff,
made hls ominous appearanre on [ tng. The heat began to mount! Finnegan eaw
some hill crest, then a soldier steaddy and alt day the sun saw it.
routd steady down and earn his stood molten Emil Schwabarker j Finnegan shifted
1C*4.
Beml Weekly Edition*:
(kie year $4 00. 6 months $2 2T. Usew here One vear $4.50
I months $2.50.
Office) Organ of the City of Cuero and County of DeWitt.
Bv mail In DeWilt and adjoining counties Jc.*' m *i *'arjV /, !'
the CIS l !^,h.™ .... eixn 11 '■ 4 1 4 >ard* ^ » inch.
It; every man
______ h’i weight
| had never seen such a sky. The, first on one f*v»t then the other.
“Sor, I surely hope you know
• lint jou're doin'.”
“Pont you know. Sergeant?”
a pale1 Finn-gan shook hie head. 1
rurpie and the suns color was take orders good, sor, but fa
brightly polished coppr. j poorly at makin' 'em up.”
The green sage and soap-, With a doable guard walking
weed turned to gray beneath the perimeter, Schwabacker
thin thick beat Temperatures rolled into his blankets and slept
hovered near a hundred in the well and in the morning was up
afternoon. Dust rose in choking before the sun. The bugler blew
quantities and the insects came reveille on time, “meaa caff”
in clouds Dust sifted tnto every- forty minutes later, the* foi-
thing—the food, the weave of lowed it with "inspection.”
flesh-eat- "work" aad "fatigue.” By tea
| o’clock the brass voice was piay-
monej.
Schwabacker '--odui *ed the days earn* in s burst of orange,
merch according the manual - spreading as though the edge of
haJt. rest, walk although tins the world were on fire The first
was difficult in the* rain - soft 1 blue of the day turned to a pale
ground- That evening he drew
th* command tnto bivouac on the
bank of a small creek. To thetr
rear, massive rocks loomed sky-
ward and a short mountain range
built up In jagged rises. He put
the sutler's wagons In the center,
cavalry squad fires burned in a
circle around them. As com-
:ean\i um
!
Send 33*- in coins for tliis pat-
tern to IRIS LANE, (care of The
Cuero Record t. 367 IV. Adams
i Street, Chicago fi, Illinois. I
mer.Jer. Sclm-abackcr found a
dozen pressing tasks to octmpy clothing— to become a
him. By tha tune he completed tng abrasive,
bis rounds, the cook fires bad; That Bight the scout reported
gone out and the wagons were medicine being made In the hills
silenL Sergeant Finnegan had Schwabacker felt the drat rat-
•aved him a meas kit full of ra- gnaw of suspicion, and when it
tions and hia waterproof ground would not crystallize, it turned1
C Oeejrtgfct. IMS. br Jtsu Ktes* Rrprtaied by pernuesiee of Reedan Hens*
You hauled the magnificently-packed bag to a cab i
died downtown to the airlines terminal. Around you, the poor, i
bound New Yorkers rode their subways, read their papers, haf
their coffbe-and-a-cigaret breakfasts. You looked at all flh
■ad little Manhattanites, and you thought, don't wony, kids; $f
1 live vicariously for all of you.
You checked th* bag at the terminal and dropped by the atfle^ll
th* salt mines The faces of the drones were forlorn. “Today?"!
! asked wistfully. “Five p. m..” you replied evenly. "You lucky i
they said. "Somebody haa to replace Richard Halliburton,"
answered simply.
I At th* desk, you cleaned up some odds and ends.
— ----, actors where you were going, acton making a movie In LfWa **
me that ; well. You can’t have everything. Just don t pey too much
redit tor uk! they might go away. Actresses, now—then was x*pkl9 \ mm.
She was there. "Mnekantr, mademoitttte,” you would say ssmR
bent to kin her hand, and what would there be left for her butte
ask you to go camel-riding in th* moonlight? W
• • • •
AT 2 F. M. the telephone rang. "I’ve Just been talking with «___
en the phone.” th* man said, "—and you know what’ LlbvekTI
banned all foreign correspondents. It seems a couple ***
newspapermen wrote something they didn’t like aad
foreign minister blew up aad said ‘Out—everybody out.
“You mean." jou said falteringty. “that the trip ia—”
“What's th* ue* of going ?" the man asked. "You'd fust Mt
Romo and you couldn't see them make the movie Mr*iv *r!^f*.
what j-ou wanted to see. wasn’t It?” Oh. sure, you "Tifed \ut
wen. maybe they could just send Miss Ursa back to RomeTor^
fbw days and you couM talk to her aad get some of the fleror m
the location and—” 01 *
“Nah” the man said “She’s working too hard ?h* could neve,
get away.” 'r
T.u said OK to the men and hung uP Tou looked out th*
at Tudor City and the Chrysler building end the eun rlinSVt?
the dirty Bast river, and New York being busy and bustlv So~
body with name place to go. eomethlng to do Evenrbofiv' but v7*
Later you wont down and retrieved the bag at th. t*™,£V ^
■till later }-oxi checked tn at th* poker game The tecL^,™L*n<*
t. surprise “We thought you-” on, face etarted te Zv
cut Mm off with a anarl. “Deal.” j-ou said. * ’ *ut 7**
hand? niBntJtimoN ioi pov — tlJp Avn
CUERO RECORD. Cuero Texas 1 KA,t
Please enter irv subscription t0 the C CUERO inn.
RECORD cr □ the SEMI-WEEKLY RECORD MaU oerw, .*!
iubscriptiao stetemeni to: wper ard
of Italian
•he Libyan
iag te more than Schwabacker ■
command
The bills begxr to bruU* with
mounted Cucyenne
I To Be Continued)
lee. (Kiss Features Sredseou]
Kama
Address - ----- - ,__
City ot Rta.------------------
□ I am not now a RECORD subscriber.
O This is a renewal carder.
$oo Rato Schedule below Editorial eoluma o<
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 69, No. 63, Ed. 1 Friday, March 15, 1957, newspaper, March 15, 1957; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth697489/m1/4/: accessed March 28, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Cuero Public Library.