The Cuero Daily Record. (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 17, No. 14, Ed. 1 Sunday, July 20, 1902 Page: 2 of 4
four pages : ill. ; page 22 x 15 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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JO yarck best Standard Calico FREE with every $5 purchase, tickets for China ware also. Come to see us; get our prices, they will help you. We want your trade
H Ou# Goods Suit You iTell
Others^ If Not Tell Us..***
n ON-DAY
Rousing Prices For The
Last Two Weeks of July.*
Hodges Dry Goods Company Killing Prices *
Get what you want; get it at almost your own prices. Dimes speak like dollars in our Last Two Weeks of
----— July Clean Sweep Sale. ----:--———
DRESS., GOODS.
Evecy piece of our 5c grade
litres* Goods.
Ramage Sale Price.....
EveryNpiece of 3oc and 40c
grade Dress Goods.
Rumqge Sale Price.. v . .
Every piece of our 20c and
25c Dress Goods go iu
this Clean Sweep Sale at. .
Every piece of 15c and 20c
Lawns and Dimities
Clean Sweep Sale Price . .
Every piece of 15c Suiting
in alLcolors
Clean Swuep Sale Price. . .
10c Lawn* at only . .......5c
These are all leading Summer
Dress Goods,.......
Wash Skirts.
Anyting you want in a Wash Skirt,
all the new aud up-to-date styles
greatly reduoed.
_______
Shoes. Shoes
Greatly reduced. Everything is
marked in plaiu figures and you can
see that you are getting a rake-off.
White Goods; Table! Linens
Every piece of Cross Barred
INLuslin ' T'W
Clean Sweep Sale Price . . ' *2,
Every piece of 15c Lawns and
Dimities
Clean Sweep Sale Price ... ■
Every piece 20c & 25c Lawns f A
and AYash Organdies I
Clean Sweep Sale Price . '.
58 inch Bleached and Un-
bleached Table Damask
worth 40c, yards for . .
72 inch Bleached and half
bleached Table Damask
worth OOqj-fiale Price. .
59c
39c
Shirts.
1 lot of Men*« SOc Negligee
Shirts
Clean Sweep Sale Price . .;
Any 75c Negligee Shirt collar
attached or detached, good
fkst class colors. Sale Price .
1 lot Mews $1.00 Negligee
Shirts, attached collars Only
Clean Sweep Sale/Price . . .
Any $1 and $1.25 Negligee
Shirts, attached or detached
collars, Sale Price.....
25c
49c
m
89c
Ladies’ Shirt Waists.
49c
73c
1 lot White .Shirt . Waists
worth 75c, $1 aud $1.25
slightly soiled. Sale Price .
ft lot White Shirt Waists this
seasons gaods aotne open in
back, worth $1 and $1.25 at
J lot White and ^Colored Waists, all
new styles. Gibson, Princes -g | A
etc , worth $1.50 and $2 I III
Cleau'Sweep SalePr ce . . *
See our better waists, they are
dreams and we have made special
prices to cleau them out.
Remnants. Remnants.
For this week we have sifted every
department for remnants, odd lets
aud short lengthand have placed
them on our center counters at great
reductions A great many you get
less than half price A. F. C aud
Toil Du Nord Ginghams, Lawns. Or-
gandies. Swisses, Cotton Check-,
White Goods of all kinds, Crash
Ducks. Bed Ticking, Domestics, Pil-
low Casings, etc.; just the thing for
Ladle's Waists, Saques, Cliildi
Dresses, Skirts, etc. Everybody
get some of these good bargains.
Towels and White Spreads.
18x36 inch Bleached Cotton
Towel, worth 25c pair
Clean Sweep Sale Price, each
$2x45 inch Bleached Cotton - f |
Towel, full weigh, worth I i f*
Me pair, Sale Price, each .
Large Line of Hack Towels *
per dozen $1.50 or • .
Clean Sweep Sale Price,pair
Anything you want in Towels up
to 75c each.
3Lb W 4 White Couuterp* ne
worth 75c
Cleau Sweep Sale Price. .
41 h JO-4 White Spread
worth $1.00
Clean Sweep Sale Price . .
41b full 10-4 White Spread
worth $1.50
Cleau Sweep Sale Price . .
Very large White Fringed
Spread, worth $2 50
Clean Sweep Sale Price .
Notions, Hosiery^ Etc.
Childrens Lace Stripe Hose
black, blue and pink
Clean Swrep Sale Price . .
Ladies Silk Gloves .......49c
Ladies Silk Mitts, worth from f f
25c to 35c lr)£
Clean Sweep Sale Price
Pure Pearl Button wbrth 10c at . . 5c
Mettnen’s Boruted Talcum
Powder Ifl^
Clean Sweep Sale Price ... v
Allen’5 Talcum Powder.....5c
Three Sizes of Safety $ A
Pins |(|C
Clean Sweep Sale Pries. . . ww
Hooks and Eyes per dozen . . . .5c
Pear’s Soap, per cake......15c
Silk Luster Knitting Cottou,. 4c or
6 spools for ......... 25c
2 Spools Chad wick’s Thread. . .5c
(No. 8 to 36 only >
4 Spools Good Sewing Thread . . 10c
1 lot L%dies Belts, some worth | A
25c, 3oc aud 50c lll{*
Your choice for . .
Men’s and Boys’ Clothing.
120 pair Bows Knee Pants, PA
not one worth less than $1
Clean Swerp Sale p ice .
75 pair Boys Lnen Knee ^ a
Pants, worih 35 and 50c
Clean Sweep Sde Priqe . .
B:>ys Liuen Suits worth at
least $1
Clean Sweep Sale Price . .
Boys Linen Norfolk Suits
worth $2 50
Clean Sweep Sale Price
Auy $5 Youths Flannel or
Serge Suits
C'ean Sweep Sale Price . ..
Auy $7.50 Youth* Flannel or
Serge Suit
Clean Sweep Sale Price . .
Any $7.50 Mens Flannel or
Wool Suit
Clean Sweep Sale Price . .
Any $10 00 Mens Flannel or
Tweed Suit
Cleau Sweep Sale Price .' .
Men’s Underwear
Ai:y 35 cent Under.-birt or
Drawers
Clean Sweep Sale Price each
Aiiy 50c grade Balb iggan
SliirPs aud drawer a, three
garments for $1, or each. . .
50c quality Peppered Drill
Drawers, double seat
Clean Sweep Sale Price . . .
Seri ven a Elastic Seam
D a*er* '
Cleau Sweep Sale Price . . .
24c
35c
39c
44c
The Closest Buyers and the Closest Sellers of First-Class New Merchandise in South Texas.
i .14
Girls to Boycott Bod Young Men.
Fremont, Neb., June 30.—The
Rev. Mr. Williams then began an
oratorical crusade against the evil
ways of yonng men and the scheme
for reform resulted and the girls
have sworn that the boys must
abide by their rules or be barred
from their society. The organizers
have widened the movement, tak-
ing in all unmarried women, so
that now 200 are involved and
every young man in the town is
directly affected.
Miss Elazabetb Mackenzie, one
of the active promoters of the
scheme and the prospective presi-
dent of the union, $aid, in speak-
ing of the plans of the society:
“We will lay down rules insisting
on total abstinence from swearing,
lying, stealing, keeping late hours
or bad company, gambling, drink-
ing and smoking. From all these
things must these hoys and young
men refrain in order to be eligible
to our companionship. Commit-
tees will be appointed and assigned
to probe. the character of ‘shady’
men and will report back to the
union, which will then take action
as the circumstances warrant.
Every young man will have a rat-
ing, which will be bettered or low-
ered as reports of his actions justi-
fy. We will spare no effort to ter-
ret the ‘black sheep’ and will boy-
cott them completely.”
County Court.
Real Estate Transfers.
Both Successful.
Beats a Creamery.
PROBATE DOCKET. ‘ j Martha A. Wallis to \V. M. and
Banks M. Burrow'estate. Final j. w. Wallis, 248^ acres Cook
account examined and approved survey—-$10 and o. c> ’
and guardian ordered to pay J \y. W. Day to W. K. Beuuet,
ward’s estate over to guardian in . jg9 acres Daley survey—$10.
Missouri after payment of costs. Crockett J. Hilliard et al. to J
J. B. Palmer estate. Applica-
tion of sale granted, to be made
privately for cash.
* Pace and Bonner minors.. An-
nual account approved.
Herder minors. Final account
approved except one item of$i37-io
not allowed on a credit, leaving
$2498.29 chargeable to guardian.
A Big Fee.
Deafaess Cannot be Cured
by local applications, a.® they jeauuot
reach the diseased portion of the ear.
There is only one way to cure deafness,
and that is by constitutional remedies.
Deafness is caused by an iuflamed con-
dition of the mucous lining of the Eus-
tachian Tube. Wfaen this tube gets in-
flamed you have a rumbling toqujf or im-
perfect hearing, and when it is entirely
closed deafness is the result, aud unless
the inflammation can be taken*out and
this tube restored to its normal condition,
hearing will be destroyed forever; iiifle
cases out of ten are caused by catarrh,
which is nothing but an inflamed con-
dition of the mucous sut faces. _
A well-known New Hampshire \ A Yoakum lad is credited with
farmer of the old type has two saying that his father has a
grown-up sons. One is an excel- j very remarkable cow. He said
lent preacher of the gospel, while that the cow has a particujar fond-
the other is a liquor dealer. ness for apples, and that on one
A Newburyport man, in com- j occasion, after she bad gotten into
B. Milligan, two-ninths interest in j-pany with several other boaders at [a neighbor’s orchard and ate all
the old man’s home, was talking i the apples she wanted, his mother
with him about his family. At. milked her, churned the milk, and
last one of the company present | got three quarts of good apple but-
ter. Ou another occasion the cow
ate off the tail of an old rooster
160 acres Edgar and 50 acres Bel-
cher surveys—$600.
Ellen May and husband to C.
Mann, part lots j,8 and 9, block 1, j asked him what bis sons did for a
May’s add. to Yoakum—$75. j living.
Yoakum Cotton Seed Oil Co. to The answer of the old man was
A. C. Jones, trtjstee, blocks 84 and . characteristic and concise: “One
88, Yoakum—$15,000.
J. M. Bennett to A. C. Jones',
trustee, three-fourths blocks 84 and
88, Yoakum—$11,250.
P. W. Tom to Carl Peters, 115
acres Leal survey—$1210.
Wm. Green et al. to Frank j
Polocek et aL, 8 acres Hughes and
78 acres Sanders surveys—$2342. j
Aug. Alpheus et al. to Wm. ,
Goebel, 468 acres Lockhart survey !Burrow’s Preclnct where he has
_$6o2- been at work some time. Monday
-•••s- | he goes to Yoakum to work twt>
Charley Hunter, after spending i months in Neuman’s precinct.
is serving the Lord, the other the
devil, and both are doing well.”
Marriage Licease.
Hays Smith to Eua Wilson.
• Geo. Motley to Louise Wilson.
County convict guard John
Hollan is here from Commissioners
Mr. Morgan reeeived$io,ooo,ooo
for organizing the steel trust. The*
time occupied and labor expended
were limited, but it required finan-
cial ability of recognized merit
do the work; it requited tb
cial ability that had the cash back
of it; plenty of men fcave Mr.
Morgan’s financial sense who uever
let money stay close to them; such
men could not have touched tW
job with the longest po!e;it demand-
HE
that roosted in the stall with her ed a (nan who never lets
and the next morning in place of
giving milk she gave a gallon and
a half of the finest kind of cocktail.
A Birthday.
Little Manila Eichholz was four
years old yesterday aud the event
was worthily celebrated by a party.
The little girl’s mother, Mrs. Ferd
Eichholz, and her grandmother,
Mrs. Meissner, made-the day love-
ly for her. They brought together
a crowd of her friends and gave
them a merry afternoon with games
the night in Cuero, returned to After that he comes to Cuero pr<*- jand dancinS and a11 the jolly ways
escape his fist after hisfii
upon it. This $10,000,000 repre-
sents the labor of 20,000 men for
one year at $1.50 per day, inti’
time. Just think of it! It would
take all the men in DeWitt county
over 21 years four years at $1.50
per day to make this much iioney,
to say nothing of profit The
remedy for this trust question where /
millions seem as dollars is hard to
determine. Would it be better to
have more Morgams until compe-
tition among them reduced profits*
from millions to thousands, Or
. 1 HML “
Yorktown yesterday
We will give Oue Huudred Dollars for j he is t0 catch a horse bis force.
any case of deafness (caused by catarih)
that can not be cured by Hall’s Catarrh
Cure. Send for circulars, free.
F. J. Cheney & Co..’Toledo, O.
Sold by Druggets* 75c.
Hull’s Family Pills are the best.
“»■*«> 2£rsrij?2X.2=: •<«*— -
I distribution of wealth among
Hear the Simplex and the Jesse
French.
Mrs. C. F. Brown and children
returned to their home in Beeville
yesterday after a pleasant visit to
Joe Debose.
Dr.C.B.Phillips,chronic diseases
only. Office over Cuero Drug Co.
Mrs. H. Jenschke and children,
Lenor and Henry Davis, went to
Beeville yesterday on a visit to rel-
atives.
Get Hodges’ prices and save big
money. ‘
BrunO EhlerA, after a short busi-
ness trip to Cuero, returned to
Yorktown yesterday evening.
J. L. Sheppard was an incoming
passenger on the late S. P. yester-
day morning.
Cotton sacking 8 oz duck at 7>*'c
yard—Hodges Dry Goods Co.
Henry Edgar, Sr., went to Pettus
yesterday evening on a visit to his
daughter, Mrs. Wm. Guthrie.
Dr. A. E. DeViuey,'dentist; of-
fice over First National Bank.
Mrs. A. J. Parker, after a plea-
sant visit to Mrs. S. J. Lord, re-
turned to her home in Karnes City
yesterday evening.
Simplex, greatest and most per-
fect piano player.
Lamar Lee of Waco is. in the
city on a visit to his cousin, Miss
Mae Alexander.
S. W. P. is the best ready mix-
ed paint on market. For sale by
C. L. Stadtler.
Mrs. J. C. Burns left on the
12:55 Sap yesterday for a visit to
Edgar relatives.
H. A. Muegge aud wife return-
ed yesterday from a week’s pleas-
ure trip to Rockport.
Caesar Kleberg went to York-
towo yesterday morning to spend
thevday with relatives, leaving lor
the King ranch this evening.
J. F. McCrabband wife of Thom-
aston spent the day shopping in
Cuero yesterday. j.
120 pairs boys knee pants, noth-
ing worth less than $1, your choice & Co.
Why not buy a few pieces
of China and some Glassware
and have your , dining table
look right. Your meals will
be better enjoyed by a few ad-
ditions of our line of Glass-:
Seethe 6c plates and
ware
JOc ice tea tumblers at Keller
50c. Hodges Dry Goods Co.
Mrs. S. J. Friar went to Shiner
on the noon train yesterday to visit
relatives.
The taxable values of ■ the city
will approximate closely this year
the sum of $1,541,587, so Assessor
Grafton informs the Record. This
Louis Ryan passed through
Cuero yesterday going to Houston,
where he will work for the Wells
Fargo Express Co.
Go to Hpdges for anything you
want in the dry goods line; you’ll
find it 25 per cent cheaper ithan
elsewhere.
Miss Etta Agee, who has been
is about the same as last year.
Ben McDonald and T. R. I^e- j visiting relatures at Burns Statio
gett of Port Lavaca are conduct- returned to Cuero on the 10:55
ing, a successful Baptist campmeet-1 yesterday morning^
Chas. Schultz artIG Henry Diebel
of Arneckeville each sold a bale of
new cotton yesterday for $2.85.
selves. There was a basket draw
ing iu which all took part and of
course there was a treat in
way of good things to eat.
5:30 o’clock the children were
formed * in juarching order and
keeping time to the piano, march-
ed around th^room out to the lawn
where the table was decorated iu
their honor with flowers and fruits.
After the cream and “goodies”*
were enjoyed they returned to their
games. Mrs. Varga assisted Mrs.
Eichholz in making the evening a
jolly one for the little guests, who
were Stella, Alice, Walter and
Stuart Rohre, Emily, Blanche,
Nita and Henry Wagner, Clarence j
Wetherell, Alfred Deviney, Mar-1
would it be better not to hare any
A more eqnal
the
masses ran not be accomplished,
At
apparently,except by statutory reg-
ulation. This means dan not be
thought of at present; . - it is too
radical. Will it come or will con-
ditkms right themselves?
J. A. Graves informs us that J.
G. Ewell, owner of the building
occupied by the J. A. Graves Co.
at Yoakum, will enlarge and im-
prove- itonce. Brick ends will
be put in, the sides now being of
that material. He will make of it
a modern store building in every
, respect.
Until my return from the easi^v
guerite Dietze,Lebie Wass-rmann, \Mr- Var8a wil1 1 >'oa buggies,-*
Daisy Barnes, Lewis Kleinecke, |saddles, wagons, snrryes and har-
George Freund, Lucile Garnet,
ing at Edgar. Tfi%re have been
several additions to the church. .
The Aransas Pass will furnish
a car for the Cuero Rifles to make
the trip from Cuero. to Houston.
This is nice on the part of the Sap
and will be appreciated by the boys.
John Muti, Beatrice Marie, John
Clifton, Otto Zengerle, Johnnie
Mayne, Rosie Lee Kressman and
Annie Zedler. Mrs. Eichholz was
assisted by Mrs. W. C. Thompson,
Mrs. A. Webster, Mrs. Terry and
Misses Cahn ^nd Fuchs.
L. G. Covey arrived on the 8:20
Sap from Yoakum yesterday morn- j Mrs A. F. Palmie was an in-
ing to spend a couple of days with'coming passenger on the 4:20 S.P.
his family. [ yesterday evening.
ness at cost for cash.
Jno. Stratton.
Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Baugh re-
turned Friday frbm the old home-
in Fannin county. Sam Baugh, a
brother of J. T.’s, is here and*will
assist the firm in their cotton busi-
ness this fall. Mr. Baugh says-
only half a crop of corn but plenty
of feed has been made in Fannin
county.
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Wood, H. G. The Cuero Daily Record. (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 17, No. 14, Ed. 1 Sunday, July 20, 1902, newspaper, July 20, 1902; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth801889/m1/2/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Cuero Public Library.