The Cuero Daily Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 70, No. 38, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 14, 1929 Page: 5 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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THE CUERO RECORD
HURSDAY, FEBRUARY 1<
Impatient Griselda
NEV
“I
noticed
years
like you ?
asked
Rood,
OU can save lots of
says
the
Fish and Oysters. Otts Lunch
Room
A SERIOUS CHANGE
::mtnfflmnwiwTtmnniiiaa
ULBRA
CO
going
1929.
jatn»niiiiiin:t:«»;iiiiir::n»tiiiiiiiiixuA!tiiuiH
WALTER REIFFERT
Wm. FROBE8E
B. 8CHIWETZ
Moved To New
100
TEXAS
GE FIVE
the search. Wireless calls swept the
a jentire Atlantic.-but went unanswered.
lifeboat
letters
territory
pastime.
play
field
i* cry.
part
They
some-
.-I
Yale, who
foot prints
suburbs of
of sea
double
were
no
recent-
in a
New
Deposit Boxes for rent, in the safest fire and burglar vault
in South Texas. We solicit your Banking BuslneM
crowd for the first night game
Chicago, is expected.
Bradley college of Peoria, Ill.,
scheduled two night games. St.
paying cash. Prepare
* I I
caving a little each month.
Cap ■
ham i
In
(To Be Continued.)
t. 1927, Harpfir A Bros., by amn
itb Kwc Featurws SyndlcatK Inc.
On
com
man
It if
terr
several
months after Fraser made his report
failed to disclose the wreckage, but
naval men said it was possible it had
bt^en from the Cyclops and had wash-
ed away again in another storm.
NEW HAVEN. Conn.-^JNS)— Poo- J
pie usually think of prehistoric ani-
mals as tremendous jn proportion bjit
' DEPARTMENT
FATE OF COLLIER NOW
SETTLED
I have moved my business to new location.j Now <
pying building across from Mohawk Club^
Modem Whale As Big
As Prehistoric Animals
Fullspud ahead
—'but no smoke
. from Hie slack. /
Bradley eleven on the same
following week.
EMARKABLE .
conversion ol
liners to the use of elec-
tric power. One of the iaaay
virtues of electricity is
there u no dirt, no watte, no uucue noise.
The Central Power and Light Company hat as its privilege
and duty the responsibility of furnishing you with abundant
etectoaty. Use more of it! Lt’s your cheapest servant.
Farmers State Bank & Trust Co
Service that pleases
broke college of Davenport, la., will
clash with‘Bradley at Peoria October
18 and St. Viator college will
the
the
Kentucky Lady Wai Seriood/
111 for Months Bat Was
Finally ReKeved By
Cardo.
tered close to his head, and brown
cynical eyes, Mr. Whittemore;
then Mr. Chester, tall and slim,
wiry muscled like a runner ready
to spring into a race, yet with the
relaxed, easy lauguor of one who
didn’t care for violent exercise.
Mr. Chester took Lilith in to
dinner. She liked his looks bet-
ter than any of the others. It
terrible, not knowing who and
wnat these strangers were. She
sat beside Mr. Winuirop, and she
thrilled at this chance to talk with
her host
The dinner was a shimmering
delight, with its table softly gay
Majestic Ra
R. C. A. RADIOLA 60-SUPER HETROD
ORTHOPHONIC V1CTROLAS, VICTOR
GULBRAUSEN BABY GRAND,
STUDIO PIANOS, GULBRAUSEN PLA
VIOLINS, GUITARS, UKULELES,
CONN TRUMPET, CONN SAXAPHON
SIC, PHONOGRAPH RECORDS,
VIOLIN CASES, STRINGS, ETC
only
• to
sev-
irrangcd
CHICAGO.—(IMS)— Night foot! all
will be given a rather thorough tryout j
in the middle west in
While Notre Dame
large university in this
go in for the nocturnal
eral smaller schools have
one or two games to be played at I
night, under the glare of powerful-
lights.
Notre Dame plays Drake of lewa at J
Soldier Field here November 9. The
field accommodate more than
000 persons and a record bre.kihg
in actually our modern whale is as big
I as anything that ever existed, accord-
hasj ing to Professor Malcolm R. Thorpe,
Am- curator of vertebrate paleontology at
Cy-
the
of the Atlantic, with 306 persons
her sweet-
Sheba used to sing it
" _'_j was in the
dumps. The mah speaks first:
“ 'Look down, look down that
lonesome road.
Hang down yo’ head an’
The best of friends must
some time,
An’ why not you an’ I?’
“Now the woman answers:
“ 'True love, true love, what .
have I done
That you should treat me so?
You caused me. to walk an’ talk
with you
Like I never done befo’ P ”
“I think we should all chip In
on this Sheba fund,” said Mr.
Chester. “Pleasure money for .
Sheba, on account of her folk
songs.”
“i’ll send my offering to Tina,"
said Miss Bennett, with a slanting
glance from her gray-green eyes.
Lilith thrilled with secret delight
to 'see that Rita Bennett disliked
her, was jealous of the glances of
admiration that the men gave this
little nobody from a Texas parson-
age. Mr. Winthrop openly liked
her, and so she was prettily atten-
tive to him rather than to the
young men. And so the evening
passed, its moments like golden
bells chiming in her heart, like
flowers opening softly on their
stems, like wavelets ruffling a
white beach, then stealing back-
ward to the sea.
New York, the city fathers were
there are only 3C6 residents for
policeman, while in Chicago
officer has to watch out for 593
[on board a ship,” according to
■ — ,j, written protest to the Navy Depart- |
Indiana CxOlf Gaddies ment signed by Lieut.-Commander I
[Geo. W. Worley, the collier captain.
bigger i On March 9. 1918. the S. S. Amalco
younger crop oof golf caddies. passed the Cyclops off the Virginia
i terrific
caddies are available under the Even the Imperial Germap
lent 14 years minimum, it
necessary to import boys from
y distant cities to man the golf
ing
,Kn?pper said that because only
few
pre: ii
bee i
mat
links in his home county. Kosciusko,
where numerous summer resorts are
located. ' „
Eamon De Valera was going
to Belfast to open a;bazaar but*
Ulster held to the order bar-i
zing him from Northern Ire-/
land and arrested him at;
Newry when he attempted to.
cross The border.
(Intarcitlanal N«wir««I)
Peabody Museum,
ly found dinosaur
tunnel dug in the
Haven.
The Connecticut dinosaurs,
Professor Thorpe, were twenty-eight
to thirty feel long, with a six-foot
stride, and a foot print from eighteen
to twenty-two inches long,
made a great three toed track
thing like a big bird.
i 1
each 100,000 population
crime generally. |n 1928. population
considered. New York had one murd-
er to Chicago's two.
in 1928 New York had a record of
368 murders.- while there were 339 in
Chicago. In 1928 New York's police-
men, totaling 17,150 men, made a to-
tal of 466.670 arrests. In the same
I period officers in Chicago, totaling
only 5.570. made 275,282.
rout? from Rio de-Janerio to Balti-' Whom naval officers credited
men ■
T1 e collier, on its fatal
as not directly operating
f Mrs. .Winthrop. “She had made /a
little investigation into the legends
of Lilith among the foreigners on
Hester St. She said the old Jew-
ish women hate the thought of her.
Won’t utter her name. Draw their
shawls closer about them, with
black looks, at mention of her.”
“I bet the men don’t hate her*
said Bill Chester.
“No, the old men speak of her
affectionately. Tell legends of her
beauty and charm and enchant-
ments. Even the aged rabbis’ eyex
light up at her name. It seems
every man loves the Lilith and
every woman fears her.”
“I must go down to Hester St.,”
said Lilith. ...
After dinner, in the music room,
Vivien urged Lilith to sing some
of her darky folk songs .to them,
and so she gave them “Shortnin*
Bread,” “Raccoon Totes de Bushy
Hair,” and some of the other rol-
licky ones that Sheba had yodled
in the kitchen as she slapped the
iron on the ironing hoard or scrub-
bed the floor.
Lilith had caught the real negro
intonation, with its gay humor, its
poignant pathos, its nostalgia for
it knew not what, and so as her
yellow head bobbed over the piano
keys, she sang of dark griefs and
problems she had never felt, but
in a way that made them seem im-
mediate and actual.
When the group applauded, she
smiled and said, “That wasn’t me
singing. . That was Sheba, our col-
ored maid-of-all-work, who sings
them all the time.”
“Then we’re greatly in her
debt,” said Mr. Chester.
“So am I,” flashed Lilith,
mean to send Sheba a present, be-
cause her folk songs got me asked
here tonight.”
She gave her smile of delicate,
deliberate naivete.
“You must come often,” said
Mr. Winthrop.
“Then I’ll support Sheba in her
old age.” She fluttered her dark
eyelashes at him, and laughed a
laugh as low and musical as the
trill with which a mocking bird
sometimes starts his song.
"Won’t you give us another
song?” asked Mr. Winthrop.
“Well, here’s one called ‘The
Lonesome Road,' the plaint of a
woman deserted by
heart. f~
moumfully when she
dumps.
Lawrenceburg, Ky—“At * ttafi to
my Ufe, when my health was under-
going a serious change,” says Mrs.
J. C. Raj, who lives near hare, “I
found Cardui to be of the greatest
benefit to me. I was sertously ffl
for about two months, and for sev-
eral months I was not well. My
nerves were all unstrung I couM
not bear the least noise around me,
I could not sleep.
“My head ached until It seemed
as If It would bunt. My feet and
limbs swelled dreadfully. I felt
tired all the time. When I wm up,
I dragged around the house, but
most of the time I spent on the bed.
“I got Cardui and began taking it
regularly. Very soon I could see
that it was helping me. I began to
sleep better and eat more. The
awful nervousness got better.
“When I had finished the first
bottle, I was much better than I
had been for many weeks. I was
so encouraged that I kept right on.
Before very long I was doing all
my housework and was feeling quite
welL”
Thousands of other women have
been helped by Cardui after long
suffering from weakness and ner-
vousness.
i^n is Working in Harmony*
c n Always in Tune.
“Are they
Mr. Chester.
"Oh. no! They are all good,
while I’m considered more or less
of a lost soul.”
“Didn’t Tina demand any of this
pleasure money?”
"I didn’t give her a chance.
Ross, my brothea says I’m a grab-
ber. Don’t brothers tell ghastly
truths? . But I <fry to make Tina
see that if she’ll only wait till I’m
married or otherwise disposed of,
she can have all that’s left.”
“Is she satisfied?” asked Rita
Bennett.
“Not a bit of it. When she was
a little girl she yelped because she
had to wear made-over clothes and
study out of my hand-me-down
school books. She was right bitter
over it. and made violent outcry
once. T remember. She said, 'I
guess when I’m grown I’ll have to
take Lilith’s second-hand husband,
too!”
The men chuckled at Tina’s far-
off grief.
“Tina could sympathize with
Eve,” said Rita Bennett. “Adam’s
first wife was named Lilith. She
was a sorceress.”
“I was talking with a settlement
street worker the other day,” said
CHICAGO.—(INS)— An addition
almost 5,010 policemen within
next few months is planned by Chi-
cago in its fight against crime.
Experts have told the City'-, coun-
cilmen that part of Chicago’s crime
record is due to the fact that the
police force is undermanned.
In
told,
each
each
inhabitants! •
The result, the experts said, was
that New York has fewer murders to
i and less
RNHV AD IDfT C»*W
‘‘Courteous Service QAI ways "?
naval service, but had been .
ed ly the United States &
Stea nshin Company
mam
oyer'
dead
ttimined. Its starboard engine was out [of a ship about 2.000 yards off the
of cemmission. At the time of its lastjkey. A navdl investigation
Football At Night
In Coming Season
CHICAGO TO HAVE i Ir>sh Leader Arrested
5,000 NEW COPS
mirfo
ings. .,
lew like a boy in her evening
gown, a rose - colored taffeta,
greeted Lilith with unaffected
pleasure; the mother, a rather for-
mal person in a black dinner gown,
her hair just turning gray, and the
father, an an^iable bored giant of
a man, like a black bear in evening
clothes, welcomed her.
Lilith looked at the father, at
his ehock of iron-gray hair, his
keen, humorous gray eyes, his
stern jaw, and liked him.
“He wouldn’t be one to care for
fluff,” she decided.
There were two other girls, Rita
Bennett, a vampish, made-up per-
son in a green gown, with osten-
tatious earrings, and Laura Dex-
ter, a nervous girl in white, with
languishing dark eyes-and a dis-
contented line about her small red
mouth.
“She’ll be a shrew In a few
yea>-3. Heaven pity the victim she
marries,” thought Lilith.
Four young men were presented
to her—a tall blond, with merry
blue eyes, who was Mr. Wallace;
a stocky, sunburned youth about
whose original coloring it would
be hard to say, since he had ap-
• parently lived all of his life in the
sun, that was Mr. Cutting; a bored
WHAT HAS HAPPENED SO FAR.
▼ RENE ROBELINE was secretly in love with Guinn Holden,
handsome young Texas minister. But Guinn married Lilith, a
beautiful, gay and coquettish blonde, who died a year later when
the second Lilith was born. Irene then marries Guinn, turning
down Will Lundy, who was in love with her. For eighteen years
she struggled valiantly as the wife of Holden to win his heart, but
always she knew that he was really in love with the “white and
gold” ghost of the dead Lilith. It was the grown-up Lilith, now
cat of college, beautiful as her mother had been, but selfish and
cold, who succeeded to her mother’s place in her father’s heart.
Tina, Ross, Lundy and Patricia, Irene’s own children by Holden,
were all secondary to the proud Lilith in everything in the parson’s
household. Tina wore her cast-off clothes at college and worked
at home, while Lilith visited. When Lilith became engaged to
Roger Devereaux, son of wealthy parents, Irene was happy. Tina,
the Cinderalla girl, would then have her chance. But when a
parishioner dies leaving $2,000 to her father Lilith prevails upon
him to let her postpone the wedding to have a year of vocal study
in New York. Her letters told of her dreams come true—freedom,
broadened horizons, the .exhilaration of the great city that
fascinated her. Then she met Vivien Winthrop, a beautiful rich
society girl, with “horse sense,” at her music teacher's.
NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY.
CHAPTER XXXIII. Tperson with sleek, brown hair plas-
AS Liiith walked up the steps “■ —J ’—J —J 1-----
of the Winthrop home on
the appointed evening, she
felt the tense exhilaration, the
fearful uncertainty, of one about
to be presented at court. Were
her clothes right? Was her hair
just u it should be? Would she
make a favorable impression on
these Winthrops, who were in a
position to wave a wand of en-
chantment for her if they chose?
The footman in wine-colored
livery who opened the door for
her, the butler io evening dress
hovering near by, the tapestried . , o
hall, the wide, curving stairway, I with flowers and candles and sil-
the exquisitely: appointed bedroom [ yer, the easy talk ‘in which she
in which a maid, smart in her gray joined as deftly as the others, the
taffeta dress and crisp4 white; laughter light as soap bubbles,
apron, assisted her with her primp- -5s jn a background, past these
ing, all awed her with their per- I liveried footmen, I ilith saw the
fection. Surely she would send'suPPer table at the parsonage,
Sheba a present, a grand present, 1 Wltn Sheba in her sloppy dress and
indeed. (rundown heels, slamming the
A glance In the mirror gave her dishes on the table and leaving-
confidence, for who could fail to the family to wait on themselves,
be pleased with eyes like starry; -yheba didn t mind cooking, but
bluots, cheeks pink * as peach abommated waiting on the
blooms, hair like powdery gold, | ’ ,
and lips that were a laughing, Winthrop drew her cut, and
scarlet challenge? Her dress was «Waenly she found herself tell-
delphinium blue, with a scarf of 1xn,f.h.im,cf P-r-onage, of Miss
gold-colored chiffon like a wisp of */“ v,na 3 W1 ' pleasure
sunset cloud floating^ round her on- The
shoulders, and she wore gay little °Y1®3Z,-?ost€ned and l»us:Hed at her
gold slippers on her feet that;""
wanted to dance from delight.
The drawing room was perfect, j
too. with its distances, its tall gold [ k-’f "brntbpr^
-•---jtr<Jfflrbld rugs, its paint- next
/ ivien Winthrop, looking y’unt2r o
, “Are you the only child?” Mr.
1 Winthrop asked her.
' “Mercy, no! I have assorted
and sisters.
to me. is two
| Many rumors as to the fate of the
all collier reached the naval intelligence
fcrce. The one
sailii g there were 4,000 tons
wate ■ mostly in the collier’s
bettem. The Cyclop’s crew
hiain y inexperienced, “with
knowledge of working a ship or lite
Established in 1846
(Unincorporated)
General Banking and Exchange. Interest on all Time Deposits. Safety
trace of the collier
March, 1918, the Cyclops was en came from Donald Fraser of Chicago.
_ —.-------- --------1 1 with
with a cargo of manganese ore. | being responsible. Fraser said in
voyage, : February, 1929, while cruising off the
in the Bahamas he was iorced to take refuge
charter- ton Gun Key because of a storm. He
Brazil-said he fouhd w-reckage of a lifeboat
to transport ion which was stenciled the
ijanese. The naval vessel was|'‘U. S. Cyclo—” ,
■ oaded in excess of its maximum [ Also:, Eraser reported he
I weight. The cargo wae not well i what happened to be the sunken hull
has i then at war with the United States,
was requested, for news of the collier.
Wireless messages passing between
German naval headquarters and Ger
man submarines were intercepted
and decoded, but all U-boat command-
ers denied having seen the Cyclops.
THINKS ^ne hundred days later the Cyclops
was officially marked “lost” and all
on board “dead.”
Was Heavily Overloaded
The maximum dead weight of the
Cyclops was 14,500 tons. Its cargo
capacity was listed at 8 000 tons of
BUCHEL NATIONAL BANK
Always Your Friend
GOOD WILL
Good Will is acquired from Good Service.
Good Service is obtained through Co-operation.
Co-operat|
This Bank
E even years after the U. S. S.
clops, naval collier, dropped from
lace
bn board, a solution to its disappear- coal. With the 10,t»00 tons cf man-
anc< has been found in confidential ganese on board, the 4,000 tons of
Bavi I records of yorld war days. water and in addition coal anti pro-
t of the maze of letters, wireless visions, the collier was heavily over-
tnunications and intercepted Ger- loaded. When it left the Barbados the
messages one solution appeared.; water line was above its Plitnsoll line,
that the eOllier was caught in a jor safety mark,
fic storm south of the Virginia j
•s, capsized and sank with lZ
iS.
INDINAPOLIS.—(INS) —A
and j
That is the slogan of Represents- Capes and on March 10 a
tivc Forrest Knepper of the Indiana storm came up which all but sank
Legislature who will introduce a bill!the Amalco. On Mart-h 23 the collier
to ower the minimum age at which was recorded as missing, i Squadrons
boys can take up the trade of caddy- Of naval vessels were dispatched^ on
" j from 14 to 10 years.
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The Cuero Daily Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 70, No. 38, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 14, 1929, newspaper, February 14, 1929; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1195740/m1/5/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cuero Public Library.