The Cuero Daily Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 60, No. 79, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 1, 1924 Page: 3 of 6
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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NING,
not a
sure
Sack
Our quality is rig]
square serv
us
I was licked
Nervousness
ON MAIN
•Nicely rumiihed apart
New Graves Building
Fruit Jars Cheap.
LEMMM' AkHUOOVtM OKI
rorroom Apartment
Apply Hotel Me
-Shasta Disies plants
Mrs. Wm. Drawe .
E—Tomato and Cabbage
Sherrod, West Broadway.
pleasure,
flowery lanes
Good nice pigs feet pickled. Amm
Mafrige. (adw>
•—Jersey Cows. See J. 0
e 808.
BALE—Good Tennessee jack
ed in every particular. In
Record office.
)*—or will tra^e for Cuero
first class farm. John H.
or Trade—A big bone
male hog. Phone 524W.
Railway Mail, 18-35. Esan..
5 mo. Experience unneces-
free particulars, write R
tier Civil Service examiner)
liter Bldg. Washington, D
thousand
KjES Top cane seed. Will
a money. Phone Ed B. Dietze.
»U*E JERSEY MILK and
B call Murphree Dairy, Phone
specialize on family
MAUAOUS UV4E TVKEM Wx MOTVUU''.
FfcEM©* DOME RxGMT %EIX\U' 'tW fcOOfc.
1ST LKtM GERJAMJS GO Tb WRK AW' RMS
TVC MCMSM X* P*H DegxS," LAFE Wt
,E—Tomato plants. Wil
AB alleged plot to force SdMl Ford, son of Henry Font, to pay
fl,50fi,8M under threat to blind hie throe children was uncovered by the
arrest in Detroit of a man and a woman after the man had picked up a
box full of stage money. William H. Anderson, former head of the
Anti-Saloon League of New York and a national figure in the prohibi-
tion movement, has been sent to State's prison at Ossining (Sing Sing),
N. Y^ to serve a. sentence of from one to two yean after conviction of
forgery. Dorothy Gordon, member of an exclusive Boston family and
heiress to an estate of >500,000, has obtained her release from the
McLean Asylum at Waverly, where she had been held three years. She
had been the centre of a legal battle involving her guardian and rela-
tives. It was chargod she was “railroaded” to the asylum in order that
her fortune might be placed in other hands. Fred W Upham, treasurer
of the Republican National Committee, summoned to Washington In the
oil lease investigation, wired the Senate Committee he could not reach
there at the time ho was directed to appear and that he did not know
;when he would go.
Special Sunday
Dinner
er line weekly insertion,
per line both editions.
ph' ’ line six consecutive
agd one weekly insertion,
pfe line fotfr consecutive
rtioM daily and weekly.
per line consecutive inser-
one month daily-weekly.
^ Display Rates.
►er column inch daily.
>ef column inch weekly.
per column inch single in-
>n daily and weekly.
per column inch daiily and
k!y one week.
accepted up to 1:30 p. m.
publication same day.
MS:—Cash in advance, ex-
r to those having regular
•go accounts.
kAAU WAS COMS FIR
LAFE UURRHO VAOAE AU*
YDAM 6EEM ALL OMER ToW 'XttMlU' X* RAISE t*T, AU' Ur Ufc 0OUT
GoeeEEO, HE NKAM Aeew TW POGROM \U 'fVX' GREEK RmMJRAkW
gKTHXM' D\SHE9 FER A FEU) DAMS. LAFE A1UK BCEkl KAttD DMhmOMlM1
WOlO FWJAMML LAXE04 \
EVERS BROS
“of Cuero”
(Unincorporated)
BANKERS
ESTABLISHED IN 1845
General Banking and Exchange
Interest on all Time Deposits.
Safety Deposit Baxes for rent in
the safest fire and burglar proof
vault in South Texas.
Drafts drawn on al! parts of
the world. We- solicit your
Banking Business.
CUERO TEXAS
BASS BROS. CO
There is a reason for it.
our prices are right.
FREE TRUCK SERVICE.
Otjr stock it complete.
INDEPENDENT LUMBER CO
Not a Lino ward.
Pliskal's
\ '-’HOMEMADE
L./i BREAD
toad
road that
some circumstances-is quite
satisfactory. With standards rising
time it is well to em-
for phasize that a road ’ is not worthy <jf
STRAIGHT SALARY $25.00 per
week and expenses to man or woman
with rig to introduce POULTRY
MIXTURE. Eureka Mfg. Co., East St.
Louis, 111.
Walter Relffert Wm. Frobeae
Telephone 4 or 340 ,
H. RUNGE & CO.
L • I
Quality Grocers
1 The Best That The Land Affords
Expert Auto
Repairing
AU Makes of Cars
Graves & Porter
West Main St.
PAT STOCK OF yFRUIT
I Peach, Plum, Pear, New
bring varieties. Magnolia and
Igs,. Grapes, Berries, Grafted
Shade frees, * Evergreens,
ag Shrubs Jike Crape Myrtles,
Antigonon or Queen’s Crown,
1 best sorts of climate-pfoef
C SHRUBS of West Texas.
UGUSTRUMS. Let us make
Me Granada beautiful forever.
>ea We pay express.
SB JUSTIN NURSERY,
kgssey ft Sbn, Austin, Texas.
Plumbing You Need
KESEUNG -
$ Your Chance Demand is Heavy
from those beautiful Rhode la-
led* tbut carried off the silver
two IBdb and grand champion
jfeglS^dpocials for best' pen to
ifiiwMbr poultry show at Cuero.
Md |l-50 for 15 delivered.
4 Raley, 505 Main St., Cuero.
“Stop That Itching.”
Use Blue Star Remedy for Eczoma
HfiK Tottori er Cracked HaafLe Rin
Worm, Ch0ped Hands and. Fao
Scalp Disease C Id Sorce, and, 8or
on Children, also for Feet trouble
GUARANTEED BY L. L. BUTTERY
I ask for no unearned
No pathway through
I offer a full, fair measure
Of effort tor all my gains;
I’ll try, though the pace be grilling,
.Nor whine if I’m tripped or tricked
As long as my soul's unwilling
To let me believe t ant licked.—Fur
niture Index.
WHAT IS A GOOD ROAD.
A good road, in the strictly modern
sense, is one over which all legitimate
classes of- modern highway traffic can
run rapidly without interruption, and
in safety, in any kind of weather, in
any season of the year, and at any
hour of the day or night.
Many roads are called good ,by the
motorist, if they are good part of the
time and under certain favorable con-
ditions. T$ese same roads at other
times may be very far from satisfac-
tory. A road that is excellent today
IRON 18 DANGEROUS
0UND YOUR HOME
/une more chance to clean
My highest prevailinx prices
tad of old iron delivered to
ob Terrell Street., rear of
a. Blacksmith Shop. Tel. 58.
* FOARD JUNK CO.
If you need shoes er if you don’t
need shoes just new you will later, M
price them at Z, A. Mafrige ft Sms
while the big cut is ou. (afiafr
B—Big Bone w:
eggs. E. *W. Krei
men paWe? AwiN tu arguiw1
me$ M GOOGLTRf AMO H\f WORD J
YMDOIA MMX KM9SBP COUW>IRA^LN
NEVER LICKED.
1 have failed in a thousand cases,
But still have the heart to try;
1 am scarred in a hundred places,
No darling of Luck am I!
In many a crucial hour
I have hoped and been scorned and
kicked;
But never has Fate had powef^
To convince me that
Self-Rising Hour
needs no soda or baking powder. Costs only a
few cents* more. Jn 12 pound, 24 pound ami 48.
pound sacks.
Ward No. 1.
Ward No. 2.
Ward No. 3.
LeRoy Hamilton, Mayor
Not just X/Cuero,”
But “of Cuero.
There’ s a difference.
We’ve been “of Cue-
ro’’ for a long time;
we like to think we
have helped make it
a better town to live
it is h well known MtcK that the
of maintaining a fair road te x
greater than the ccfot bf nrolBtal
a good one—IndfkaW Htatoreys
Motors.
One of the hardest things in the world to define or understa
having a CAUSE the same as other affections. It responds
to CHIROPRACTIC adjustments because the Chiropractor^
detailed study of the nerves and is preeminently qualified to
and remove the CAUSE of this trouble.
rolks know they can
trust us, depend on
ELECTION NOTICE.
Notice is hereby given of an elec-
tion to be held on the first day of
April. 192fc at the..Court-Hu^sa, Citjb
iHall and Kennedy Paint Shop, for the
election of
A Mayor..
A City Attorney-
One Aiderman
One Alderman
One Aiderman
MKACC OF THE KING** and bad a jweek from now is
Historically correct in every detail, good road.
was the watchword of Emmett Flynn, in the public mind the “good
and,.the Goldwyn studios, in “In The is somewhat improved, or a
Palace Of The King” the coining at- under
traction at the Queen theatre
A research staff consisting of more higher all the
than a dozen • persons worked
weeks compiling data upon every the name “good” unless it functions
possible phase of life in Spain during properly at all times. The difference in
the sixteenth and seventeenth cen- first cost between such a road and
turies. | one that js satisfactory only part of
Photographs of Spanish buildings the time is pot great especially when
and palaces, reproductions of old maintenance costs are considered, for
paintings and book illustrations and,
works of historical authorities were i
called upon during preparation for
“In The Palace Of The King,” which
was taken from F. Marion Crawford's
novel of that name.
Scores of photographs were, made
from the Album Historique hy Alfred
Parmentier, showing drawings of
castles, courtiers and kings. The
Photographs were used in designing
scenes and costumes.
Research work on the picture, con-
ducted by Ernest Lavisse, was carried
»to art museums aud royal ait collec-
kion^-jn Madrid,'Airis’ Florence and
Vienfia.
A large amount of the data was
taken from the Escorial, or memorial
palace built by King Phillip II, around
whom “In The Palace Of The King”
centers. ■ . .
ice.
Phone 3 I 0
32 CARS OF LUMBER .
In Six Months
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The Cuero Daily Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 60, No. 79, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 1, 1924, newspaper, April 1, 1924; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1183429/m1/3/: accessed June 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cuero Public Library.