The Cuero Daily Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 61, No. 69, Ed. 1 Friday, September 19, 1924 Page: 4 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 20 x 13 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
<
? _
<
t
r.
/
and when it doesn’t drop theyp^A' or sjxty cents
... . ‘ FTiirar»4-ir_ai v nnnta c
I
o
And
new homes and the
many
*
a
Blouses
!
be
a
sup-
•T
■ 4 i
pi
V
I
*
k
• a
ie
1
9
$1JTU
.SO
V
.? • <
;?.■
I
'■
*
Red Goose School Shoes ,
DIETZE
r T ■TOk -• • ■ i.'
Boys’ School Needs.
can
mple and whose forethought has enabled them to choose correctly such
•’7 »
in
the
hus-
lacios for interment.
will take place Sunday afternoon.
.’we are
your needs
V|
■
ft!
e times don’t as
ren in th&. Nolte
Antonio, .where
often make allowances for
to do so anyway.
----o——--
Ci
¥
&
6------
With the close in residence
streets of Cuero rapidly build?
DON’T
fail to see the strongest line of boys suits shown
in Cuero for many years at Popular Prices.
■aw’A,-
- o
I
re-
Boys’ School Trousers.
A full sizes of styles and prices await your visit
Wool Pants from .....$1.50 to
Khaki Pants from ...1. ..... .... f '
•-» ' ■' .La-
stock of boys and g
tions both pleasant
l» I
&
(
I
’.75
a
a March », MTS. I
•SBcemeats taken tor Daily
r^aeetey. t
Organ of the City of
or a drag depending upon the preparation you have made to supply your children’s school needs It
store whose facilities are a
; I
*
i . X • 2s
1“ -*?**■
r5|‘. y-'J
i' ' -I
»
The advertis-
in regard to
Trades Day is worth the cost
and trouble of the whole pro-
ceeding.
tai college, and one sister, Miss Eliza-
beth, and many other relatives and
Duncan
step-mother,
Donald
When the shadows are swiftly ap-
proaching,
And silence has followed the fray,
While the field lies bare,
In the crimson glare.
At the close of a sunlit day.
0.1
■■ ■ ws
Xtf'.
to 50c
Velvet
Record 50 cent* per month, or
r year in advance.
|y Record |l.t>0 a year in Do-;
d adjoining countiea.
gwr elsewhere.
n
ta
I •
hi
DIETZE’S BIG CORNER STORE IS READY WITH SCHOOL TOGS
_
go
&5> v. ' ■
K?’
Sawyer”
is guaran-
They are tub proof,
and are
JE
Union Suits at...
Ribbed Hose at
Belts for
Ties for ....
Hats and Caps
Caero and of DeWitt County.
. ---------------------------------------- '* —
he
SWIShA
L1 Ci* .... ... .......___________
SvWhen a woman will, she will
if she can, but when her son-
i in-law wills that she won’t she
has been
case
for
being at least the
fheems.to have a tempor-
idvantage over the court
.and his mother-in-law.
----O--—-
fall business stand, we
know now of any loca-
te could prefer over West
treet. The trade may
altogether as high class
/which patronizes East
tin street and Esplanade j to be time fora select
sei*but it buys and pays and Idence addition to be opened?
emu.. - x
rh’ School Dresses
both gingham and
ol. Stylishly trim-
d and' substantially
de. Price from 50c
I
i
SIM* >>*»q
j/lcfD^bawyer
O1XMLY RECORD ed
PwbllsMS hy
Pf&teUSfcMe COMPANY
Bort” Established 1894
jteUbliahed 1873
irs" formerly Rundschau 1891
•nsolidated in April 1919.
n
P
-
ees^s^sK-sE-sssnsssM
; I THS
When the game W«
iBhed, .
And the echoes of cheering have died;.
When the stands are ail silent and
empty,
Where the thousands have kidded and
| guyed:
*
■ x-'jK’” *
■
Tiese middies
®ngly sewed
fy desirable
taol wear.
-U ’
My Hose for Girls
bool days call for a
1 supply of hose.
Topsy hose you
everything that
d be desired in
k>1 hosiery.
edfrbm2£
s Eelf and
jol hats for .$1.50
OK ' nMi
something ought to zbe
about that Tades Day propo-
sition to fall somewhere in be-
tween the cirAus and the open-
ing of the'Christmas shopping!
rush. Cuero can’t afford t0|facturing plant,
sit quiet, and let the rest of the !
world go by in a business way. |
We (don’t want it to go by us,
in fact, but want to offer it in-
ducements-to come here for its
requirements,
ing proposition
‘
xAp overly supply of fall pep
|M|hN|ly serves to force home
jMfegteininder that the weath-
* ’carries a summer kick
Wt part of ', thf sfate ’here.that
ri^ht>way, as the cotton fields ,:1’“ *---
neeS them. Naturally, we
don’t suppose Fort Worth ex-
pected all fifty thousand of
them to report the same day,
•very day "except Satur- as picking is still pretty good
down in South Texas.
------o------
Corn prices broke six and a
fourth cents in Chicago Wed-
nesday and we didn’t
the Cuero Poftofflce as anything about or care
Tom Sawyer School
Shirts and Blouses.
Boys need lots of shirts and
blouses for school wear.
Having just opened a big
shipment of ‘‘Tom Sawyer”
Shirts and Blouses
ready to supply
in these lines.
ria’ School Middies
olid blue and velvet
t with red and
trimming and
i, priced at $1.00
are
and
for
Ti
r »;■*
‘ /A
i’..'., ■>_ ■ •• At,'..-
.... -
“The Big Corner Store”
The score doesn’t so much matter.
Though the loser be sorely flayed;
There are other affairs to consider.
Than the count that the victor mad
Did you play with a zeal and ooaragi
Did you strive with a cool head, lad?
Did you show then?, too,
That you’re game clear through—
Did you give them the best you had?
' ' 1 ’
If you did, then rest on your laurels, ”
And know that with you tis well;
Though you may not play like a ‘
master.
Nor fight like a fiend of heU;
And naught will ge set against you
In the great and final score,
When the game is won.
And the > fight is done,
And'we rest for ever more.
l*R • —
Red Goose School Shoes.
The reputation of ‘‘Red Goose” Shoes need not be stress-
ed to the parents of Cuero children. There are no better
shoe»<or the mon^y sold anywhere. They are built of solid
leather and styled to fit children’s growing feet. Our large
Pulitzer Prizes tn Journalism.
The Jury of Award for the Pulitzer
Prize in Journalism is glad to have
brought to its attention any material '
appropriate for consideration in con. \
nection with the following prizes;
The most diatintereated and merit-
orious public service rendered by any ;
American newspaper during the year.
Prize: Gold medal costing 3690.
The best editorial article written
'during the year. Prize $500.
The best example of a reporter’s .’f ;
work during the yehr. Prize $1090,
The best cartoon published in any a
American newspaper during the year. S ’
Prize $500.
To insyre consideration, material * I
must be submitted before’ February It-- ,
Address: Secretary of Columbia
University, New York City..
enced a price reduction that
was not justified by actual con-
dition, and will probably be
adjusted later in the season
; about the time most of the
O—---- building traces slack up any farmers have sold their crops.
| Worth has jested no- and we might as well keep the,
Ilk cotton pickers that fif- new homes building, because
. mgand of them are want- we have
Every “Tom
Shirt and blouse
teed
color won’t fade,
built of best materials nec-
essary to stand hard usage
and frequent washing.
Shirts priced from
$1.00 to $1.25.
Trousers priced from
$1.00 to $1.25.
the remains would be taken to Pa- j
The funeral !
'friends to r?ourn her untimely demise.
’ }
Miss Ruthven, a niece!of Mrs. Wm. j '
Mangold of qur city was a teacher j
I in the Cuero public schools last year, somewhat of a night hawk,
a business college of San
equipping herself.to enter the
i mercial world.
i
of I
Palacios, which occurred very sudden- ?
I ly in San Antonio at 3 o’clock that)
I and liked very much. As the time of
; her death she was taking a course In
Antonio,
com-
For loser is of^en a winner,
If he knows how to lose and laugh.
And a winner is often a loser,
If the facts were but known by half;
the ?/
r'
V ’
5 tT
Alcvo: REAR ATMIRAL HUGH RODMAN i, MRS. RICHARD NORTON
belCM -. DR.L.T. WkJ ^nd. TOKICHI 'TAblAKA
Tokichi Taneka, former Vice Minister of Foreign Affairs in ite
Japanese Government, is being mentioned as a possible successor to
Hamihara as Japanese Anjbassador to Washington. Dr. L. T. Wu
physician extraordinary’ to the President of China, is in the Uniu»:
States to confer with Chinese diplomats. A retired officer of the N»v
Rear Admiral Hugh Rodman. veteran of fifty years’ service, rushed to
the aid of the fleets with a declaration that appropriations are below t’.e
danger point. The Prince of Wales’s favorite dancing partner in In-
land, Mrs. Richard Nbrton, was a guest of Mr. and Mrs. Josliua S.
Cosden during the heir's visit for the polo matches,
-w- .
fc SCHOOL DAY NECESSITIES FOR BOYS AND GIRLS
Hj? j- -j- ■ I -------------< _—. ■ —-—-J---— 1----1 ■ VS .— ■" _
L This week will either be a pleasure
made more pleasant by shopping at
k. plies as the children will need.
L —
Boys’ School Clothes.
The necessity of durable suits need not be
stressed for school wear. Every mother and
father knows that the little one’s school romp-
ings demands clothes of unusual wearing quali-
ties. With this idea in mind we have selected a
line of boys suite which we know will give com-
plete satisfaction. Space does not permit de-
tailed description- But our buyer emphasized
the unusual values and low prices. So you may
be assured of looking at the best line of boys
suits in town. This is a pretty strong statement
But we are here to back it up with the goods
and all we ask is the opportunity to convince
you.
All wool suits with one pair of trousers
>from $7.50 to $12.50
All wool suits with two pairs of trousers
K from ...i $11.50 to $18.00
The Prince of "Wales- seems to be
, or it
Our ready-made dresses will stand fShe boarded with Mrs. Henry Dinter may be that America looks better to
comparison. Pearl Hilburn Style , and was a room-mate of Miss Lucile ; him by lamp light.—Tulsa, Okla.,
advantages shop. (Advt.) Nolan.
_____________4 ___________________i___________________
would have cost us as much as fi#ure Pre^ near right,
it. did on Tuesday before the
break occurred. But with
cotton that is something differ-
ent again, and everybody
knows it when the price drops, |
irh '’Red Goose”
unprofitable.
A, \ .. .
r ‘'-Ipl
/gk'fr'' 4X-
.. 50c to 76c
15c to 66c
25c to 50c
..25c to 76c
50c wp
Died in San Antonio.
A telephone message to Mrs. Claud ;
B. Fallis of our city from ,
the mother. of deceased Thursday ;
evening conveyed the *ad news of the !
i ; '
death of Miss Francis Ruthven
Style j and was a room_mate of Miss Lucile , him by lamp light.—Tulsa,
She was well known here World.
-------
^pttkoOgh much praise as singer
E-«' has earned
E* > And he holds listeners in thrall
£-te tor as managing his home’s con
j®.5
HP
v.'
■ CHIEF FIGURES IN NEWS EVENTS OF THE
DAY.
s
She leaves her father,
i Ruthven, of Palacios.
I two brothers, Hugh and
morning and it was-announced that Ruthve°’ students at a Houston den-
T-’’ • ♦ o 1 r»r»llocrO onrl oietar XT5oc> Plioa.
In the game, in the fight, in
striving,
In sport,’ or in life, my lad,
Though you’re worn and spent.
You ma’y rest content,
If you gave them the best you had.
—Allen Johnson.
1 ’MULilkl
1KI Cl
know
any-
f .^er *** °C t thing about, it around Cuero. If
we had gone out to buy a
| bushel of corn Thursday it
ife
is he has no voice at all.
—Nathan M. Levy. ,
gRORecowD.FmoAY
; o(^si<jlet^$pple would
like to come and avail them-
selves of, if we just had suit-
able homes for them to secure.
------O------
George B. Terrell, commis-
sioner of agriculture for the
State of Texas, has issued a
statement to the effect that
the cost of producing a bale of
cotton in this state will aver-
age 26 cents a pound. At first
glance this seems high, but if
you make allowance for farm
labor on a basis with other la-
bor it can be figured that the
", In
fact if all other work in con-
nection with cotton picking
were plaped as high as the
picking, the production cost
I would run somewhere around
i a pound,
it [ Twenty-six cents a pound av-
erage would make this entire
| part of the state very prosper-
We are still of the opinion !ous> but we are entitled to such
done prosperity. The farmer would
have no better home and sur-
roundings at that figure than
the man with a similar invest-
ment in merchandise or manrt-
and he is en-
titled to luxuries the same as
I
!men in other lines. If the
1 farmer could reailze the cost
of his product plus a reason-
able profit, he could then give
attention to soil conservation,
instead of robbing his ground
as he usually does from year to
year by taking everything
from it and giving nothing
-back to it. The farmer really
deserves a better deal than he
actually gets. Commissioner
ing up, under the demand for Terrell also expressed the °pin
new homes and the financial ion'that the government has
aid of the Cuero Building andlover estimated the production;
Loan Association, it is ru cotton and thus has rnflu-:
Esplanade j to be time fora select resi-
about the end of the ar- or else for the pushing of those
t over a business coun- additions already opened. We
don’t want to let the home
building traces slack up any
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 Daily Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 61, No. 69, Ed. 1 Friday, September 19, 1924, newspaper, September 19, 1924; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1284221/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Cuero Public Library.