The Cuero Daily Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 62, No. 85, Ed. 1 Friday, April 10, 1925 Page: 1 of 8
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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8?. NO
WILY CROW TO
Admiral Dewey’s Body Moved
BE SOUGHT BY
THURSDAY FETE
USE OF
OFFICERS
CLUBS
Scot
are
an
Several farmer*
Buried Friday
asks
afternoon
in this
Misses
Additional appointments made
WEATHER
tonight
and
He staged a startling recovery of
It is thought that his collapse yes-
heavy breakfast including fried po-
Ruth hopes to be in the opening
and
Mtth
to gen
Masons
Thursday
Thursday
from ?
and Iivine
Sonth°rr
a few
r con
the family from all sec-
county gathered Friday
pay last tribute to the
officiating
Hebron
dips to relieve We
laden ditches at stn
are being installed
was
didn't
And
were
Reiffert
finance
Otto Moeller, fire ,<1
Luncheon club have is-
winner take
Unless holders have
Four trillion
EXHIBITFROM
DE WITT SOUGHT
Mernitz
Emil Freund
R. A. Nagel, building
Friends From AU Sections
County Gather to Pay
Tribute to Pioneer. •
Billions of marks were
Assignments Made by
Reorganized Council
years.
w»s reversed by the
appeals. The sec-
in a mistrial and
Probe Baby Mart.
In Los Angeles
April JOL-—No violation of the Open
April
Asa
Keyes has started a probe of an
alleged “baby mart” where in-
fant* are sold for from $50 to
$500 each. The probe will cen-
ter around the birth of a babe
to '’a 14-year-old local girl in the
“baby home” alleged to be op-
erated by Mrs. Hazel Sims.
The 14-year-old
sold for $178,
The baby market is said to be
a highly organized business.
Tonight
fair.
Light
Mark Holders Rush Paper to Government
, WASHINGTON, D. C., April 10
pouring into the department of commerce today from all over
the United States from mark holders who misunderstood the
ott'er of Germany to redeem all marks held in this country.
Herbert Hoover declared citizens of this country understood
the government would cash the marks
four trillion marks it is useless to send them in
marks are worth $1.
choose their .own umpire,
provided ; the
5y International News Servic
LOS ANGELES. Calif.
10.—District Attorney
By International News Service.
FORT WORTH. Texas. April 10.—|
After slugging S. G. Hays. ticket1
agents, robbers today escaped with!
$8,000 from the Terminal station of
the North Texas Railway Company I
They overlooked $400 in currency
may con
baby
it is reported.
• n iv iunher uucuuEttffe th
The suggestion that tara
ateel traps oh top otplAcy ’
crows and hawks
was madef by a niembefvf g
.. posaibie method of flteytnj
the birds,
their intention of putting out,
iraps. under this plan.
New officers of the Luncheon
elected at a recent meeting <M
club were inaugurated at Thu
night's meeting. ■''S #
Will McCurdy took the chair a
new president and the folk
board of directors were induct^
office for the coming year:
Nagel. A Kohutek, Ed Dietxe
E. Brown. ,
The program being made up
recently organised Turkey 'Ml
Association was outlined to Hat-
ers by Ed Diets*, president el
new formed association. 49c
letters explaining the purpoeq*
plans of the association and tai
turkey raisers to Joi® the aeeeei
have been sent out to about M4
key raisers in every section <d
State, the president explained. «n
organization is expected to sug
considerable membership fhrou<|
present campaign.
oves in Hospital.
Babe Ruth, king of swat, was
slowly improving in St. Vincent hospital this morning and his
physicians were hopeful,
strength during the night,
terday was brought on by a
tato'es he had on the train
game Tuesday.
Southern Pacific to Have Texas
Exhibit at Southern States
Exposition in N. Y.
convicted of murder in con-
with the death of John Ross,
County planter., ih Austin.
1922. and .sentenced to fifteen
imprisonment, filed an! appeal
Court of Criminal
The killing occurred at the
Concrete
and gravel
tersections
; the direction of the city strt
I The first work of this kind
done on Gonzales street at tl
section of Coart House and I
streets antk Live Oak and 1
streets. The city plans to
several other structures ofti
act er at other tater**qtloM
working those projects in J
pnvtaff program M
OTTO NAMI CASE
SUBMITTED TO
APPEALS COURT
In a. new drive against cf**0
hawks that are ravaging D
county crapes farmers of this e
wRl set traps on top of pole* 4
dead trees in an effort to tortkl
movement to .stamp out the*
structlye pesto, if a suggestion
at the meeting of the DeWitt C
Farmers* Luncheon Club in fol:
out.
The Farmers Luncheon Club i*
ly inaugurated a system of j>
bounties on crows and hawks
in the county. The original pteri
vided for prize s totaling $141 J
^warded October 1 for the lii
number of crows and hawks
during the period. This plan
abandoned, however, in favor ol
of paying bounties on all M
killed, thus helping to further «
age the drive against the bird*.
The committee appointed to
the funds with which the bM
will be paid has not yet madnj
vass for the money. A numb
the pests have b?en slain sine
bounty plan was adopted, it
pointed out Thursday night am
something
we’d probably
Supreme Court Denies Shepherd Bail.1 ■■
j, SPRINGFIELD, Ill., April 10.—The State Supreme Court
today denied bail to William D. Shepherd, charged with the
and murder of his wealthy foster sori, William Nelson McClintock.
i It was the last hope of his attorneys who have been seeking bail
for him for several days in various Chicago and state courts.,
Farmers Challenge Winners Of
Rolatv-Kiwtinis Tilt Any Terms
At the request of Mrs. George D*wey. wife of AdnUrr.l Dewey, of
Spanish-American War fame, th* casket contatoihg his body was taken
from the mausoleum in ArlingtO* National Cemetery, Virginia, where*
it had laid since 1917, and re-interred tn the National Cathedral tn
Washington. The coffin containing the remains of one of America’s
greatest warriors was carried through Washington’s streets on a
caisson, and laid to rest in the Bethlehem chapel of the Cathedral,
where the body of ex-President Woodrow Wilson also rests.
I More than thirty Cuero
! gathered at the City Hall
' evening for the Maundy
There was a! »erviees and banquet. Visiting Mas-
surrounding
DeWitt County Shrine a
Scottish Rite Clubs Reor
ganixed for Year.
More Than Thirty Members of
Local
tion gives promise of renewed
ity during the coming year.
Following the banquet, the
Witt county Shrine Club and
tish Rite club held their respective
meetings and annual election of of-
ficers.
Dr. J. C. Dobbs was elected presi-
dent of the Scottish Rite club for the
coming year. Emil Reiffert was nam
ed vice-president and Dan C. Peavy
was elected secretary.
In the Shrine club. Dr. J. R. Fro-
frese was elected president and T. O
Buchel was named secretary-treas-
urer. ’
The following Masons were presen:
at the Maundy Thursday banquet :
32nd Degree
E. C. Barnard. T. N. Barton. H C.
Bohn^ S. P. BoOthe. H. S. Browqell.
T. O. Buchel, John W. Burns. J. C.
Dobbs, G. M. Duckworth. C. B Fal
US. J. R. Frobese. J. W. Haak. Le
Roy Hamilton. F- W. Jaeggli. Fritz
Koehler. E. O. Kunitz, Sam C. Lack
ey, Fnmk Lackey, Joe F. Lackey. H.
E. LMMerdt. Dan Peavy. S. S. Pnr-
AelTWtl Reiffert,; S. G. Tarkington
Jr., J. H. BqekunHg. Jiffhn T. WjgBord
18th feffree
Carl J. Bohne. Chas. Cook^ W. C.
Schwarz. L. A. Walker. Westhoff. P.
F. Tarkington.
Cuero and vicinity-
Saturday. generally
change in temperature,
tie variable ffinds;
East and West Texas Fair
and Saturday, warmer Saturday
TOWN TALK
By PANCHO.
Cuero Youth Given 15-Yeai*
Sentence for Murder Car-
rie* Case to High Court
W A. Neely eff Smiley. Mrs
Open Door Policy Not Violated by Treaty
WASHINGTON
Door policy has resulted in the treaty between Japan and Soviet
Russia it was announced by officials at the State Department to-
day. The treaty by which the Japs are to be allowed to ex-
ploit Russian oil fields has been examined and found in com-
pliance with the Open Door policy by President Coolidge.
From irev II ( Poblmann.
popular pabtor of the Lutl
church at Meyeraville we tear*
the Easter cantata by the choir
the church will be "ghrep ou Su
evening beginning at 7:30 o'ctoul
Several from here attend«gM
cantata gives by this choir tadf
and were imore ttaa
prised at the talent 1 it>
choir is personally ffttoetid
Poehlmann and is a splendid
in' ganfzation.
T the re-organization of the city conn --------—
cil at its meeting Wednesday after-
noon were made Friday. The various
officers arid committee heads
named as follows: Walter
mayor pro tern, chairman.
. light and telephone, and street end
i paving co|nmlttee; Robert
j street and sanitation
1 sewer system
! sidewalks and parks: Rudolph Evers
; waterworks
partment and police, and cemetery
committee; E. Harwood. engineer
waterworks plant; Bryon Richards,
assistant; John Adams, night mat
al; Dr. E. H. Putman, city health
fteer; Gus Markowsky,
rower commissioner.
Cuero and DeWitt county have
been asked to prepare an agricultur-
al exhibit to be placed in the Texas
exhibit of the Southern Pacific lines
at the Southern States Exposition to
be held at Grand Central Palace. New
York. May 11 to 23.
In a letter td J. C. Carrington, sec
retary of the Chamber of Commerce
J. I. McGregor, agricultural agent of
the Southern Pacific says that hit
road wishes the exhibit to be repre-
sentative of all sections along the
company's lines in Texas. He
the chamber's co-operation in
curing any choice agricultural
eral manufactured products
dueed in this section
placed in an exhibit of this
“You are probably familiar
what thi
is but 1
wntds."
tinned “
ern States to show the money inter
?sts of the North what the possibilir-
ection of the country
and we naturally want to. make Texas
compete very favorable
standpoint of investment
conditions with otjier
states.” .
AUSTIN. Tex., April 10. -Otto G.
Nami of Cuero, University of Texas
student
nection
Travis
Feb. 4.
years' i
Thursday id the
Appeals
Ross home where Nami bor rded. Ross'
‘ < •
wife also was indicted in connection
with the tragedy.
Na mi's case was sent to Hays ;
county on a change of venue where he
was convicted and given 18
This judgment
Court of Criminal
ond trial resulted
the case was transferred to- Fayette
County where the second convl^j^n,
from which Nami is now appealing,
was had.
Cu«r© Man Weds Yorktown Girl
i H. D. Show, employed at Nagel'S*
Hardware Store, and Miss Zoa Elm»
Woods of Yorktown were married
Wednesday shortly before noon at the
Presbyterian manse., the Rev W. A-
McLeod, pastor, officiating The
I couple will make their home bMge.
to aafi a perfectly fornW pi-
per ajrptoae out over the heads
tittar atev-
savors of
aomethipg fqnny.
* And we personally wouldn t
have a kid who’d sit up and
fold his hands and never even
glance at some freckled faced
sack of mischief to the right or
left, who would throw up his
hands in holy horror at the
thought offending a pea whiz-
sing through a blow pipe, or a
paper wad from a rubber band.
Of course, we’d raise Cain with
him if he did these things, but
we’d think something
wrong with him if he
even want to do them.
we’d think he wasn’t altogeth-
er Mright” if he didn’t boil over
with titters at every caper that
might be stretched by a fertile
imagination into
funny
shake him if he became boister-
ous and proved a nuisance in
public.
The point is that it is pos-
sible for aUx>y to be polite and
conduct himself with proprie-
ty without being a “sissy.” In
other words, a parent does not
have to see to it that the lad
folds his hands and does not
unsold them until he is outside
the theatre, or tent or wherev-
er else he might be.- But he
can be taught just how far he
may go in enjoying himself
and made to realize just where ■ Robbers Slug Agent,
the line is which if overstepped j
makes him a public nuisance.
Children for the most part!
do not misbehave in church.
They have been repeatedly
drilled at home that miscon^i
duct at church is not to be tol-
erated, that children who do
misbehave in church are worse s’lver
than rebels or any other term
M lecturing parent
WATER RENTS DUE
(’Ity water rent for the second quart-
er was due and payable at my office
before April 10th. Delinquents pleas*
r himself in the estimatfon ,“ke R CoMw-tor.
■ Jris comrades and of people - ■ ---
general wheli he behaves in duct at the theatre and every
g at other place wfrere crowds of
ecto-'people gather.
Friends of
tions ®f the
afternoon to
memory of Mrs. S. E. Thigpen, a res-
ident of thia auction for 25 yeaar. who
died at the home of her daughter.
Mrs. G. D. Brantley, .early Wednes
day morning.
Funeral services were held from
the Brantley home on.. East Morgan
avenue at 1:30 FridaY'
with the Rev. T.pastor of
the Methodist cktttc
Services at the grave
cemetery were held at 3 o’clock, H
S. Hnbbard. funeral director being in
charge of the funeral.
Mrs. Thigpen was 54 years old
She is survived by seven daughters
Mrs
Robert Schorre. Mrs Guy Smothers
D-, Brantley, and
Bernice. Gladys and Irene Thigpen of;
Cuero three sons. J. W. and Bert on i
Thigpen of Houston, and S. E. Thig !
pen. Jr., of Cuero, and one sister <
Mrs. C. P. Harris of Spur. Texas.
mtn
pro-
suitable to be
kind.
with
s Southern States Exposition
will explain in just
Mr McGregors let!
It is an attempt of the Soutl
Members of the DeWitt county
Farmers
sued a challenge
alii catch-as-catch-can and no holds
barred, to the winners of the Ki-
wanis-Rotary set-to scheduled as
a dust riser at Frobese Park San
Jacinto Day.
The challenge to take on the '
krinnqr was issued by a vote of
the membership at the luncheon
of the club Thursday night at the
City Hotel.
The farmer baseball enthusi-
asts have a chip on their should
ers and they are aching fo: ’
Somebody to knock it of*. The>
have surveyed their (orees and *
are confident that they haw
LATE WIRE FLASHES
BY INTERNATIONAL NEWSSERVICE.
Responding to the Record’s
invitation to its readers to sug-;
gest what project for the bet-
terment of the city should be
next undertaken, one Cuero
woman has come forward i
witha suggestion that some
method be adopted to improve?
the conduct of children at the
movies and other public gath-j
erings.
Misconduct of children prob-
ably was more apparent at the;
recent Chautauqua than at
any other public gathering in
many mon
run on the drug stores and no-
tion for small rub- •' towns and from the enthusiasm dis-
ber bands that, together with ‘
a' pin, a piece of wire or a roll-
ed bit of paper forms a danger-
ous weapon in the hands of a
mischevious boy, during the
Chautauqua engagement here
end the audience there paid
dearly for the amusement of
the youngsters.
Of course, it would an ex-
alted flight of imagination to
picture a Chautauqua or any
other sort of public gathering,
especially where the young-
vers ^parked on a high
roost,” at the back,
test same yougsters
itensely interested in
CUERO DAILY RECORD
CUERO STAR and CUERO NEWS ',
We have no right to Succeed Umeaa We can Render Real Service to our Community. *
championship material.
At any rate the farmers
willing for their opponents
make thei rown terms as to
date for the game, the place and
the rules for the duel. They may
even
the farmers say provided' the
tanner fPSth 1^ aTIdWPd’ to ha?£
its score keeper on the bench.
The Kiwanis-Rotary tilt a week
from next Tuesday gives promise
of being a lively affair. 7*he rival
clubs have already assigned com-
mittees and managers to whip
teh teams into shape for the bat-
tle. The -proceeds of the game
will go into the coffers of the
two dubs for charity work/
J DE Win MASONS
- HOLD MAUNDY
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The Cuero Daily Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 62, No. 85, Ed. 1 Friday, April 10, 1925, newspaper, April 10, 1925; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1207139/m1/1/: accessed April 24, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Cuero Public Library.