The Cuero Daily Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 151, Ed. 1 Sunday, June 27, 1909 Page: 4 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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more ye»»
(itm* an
the «tern,
bit higher
the steady
break clean
wt right so
Bf God, I
$&as day:
= ■i'S
**. h» was d«a<
fflSSTM
attrastsd by aa
CHAPTER
byiag)T«tore,
okeo by; *hlp
rBP^ISHRI
4 ' '
n
y sW'wb
S--
• v
e4
«
.•.3fci
llr&.
ssr
Kellogg’s Corn Flakes,
« ’ ■;*''■
Post Toasties,
Dr. Price’s Corn Flakes,
Indian Corn Flakes,
Or. Price’s Celeried Wheat
- Or. Price’s
Flakes, .
Shredded Wheat Biscuits,4^
Ralston’s Health Food,
Quaker Puffed Rice,
Cream of Wheat,
Grape Nuts,
Quaker and Royal Seal Oats.
1. W. NAUNHEIM
1
BREEDS) BROS.
For good things to eat. A
flBlcomptete line of , B9
FreshfStaple and* Fancy
Groceries
I Breeden?
BROTHERS
!L
NEW
R^sfcttVabu* WUrf, ^
A&
V >
Picnic; Lundies a Specialty
. "viz;.
Caviar Puree De Graa
Peanut Butter Lunch Tongue
Sliced Sausage Sliced Beef
Sardines Devil Ham
Pickles Mangoes
Bdam Cheese .Pine Apple Cheese
—Agents for—
C S. Coffee and! Teas
"a_
hacnudiu.
CHAPTER V.—They
tured the vessel suppM __
meralda, through strategy.
CHAPTER V
reotieas for th
CHAPTER 1
hi Sad discov _
and her maid.
CHAPTER Vm. —
learned the wrong vea
tured. Lord Darlington’s
the lord’s wife and maid
He explained the attuattea
«**•
CHAPTER IX,-The*
tie laid bare the plot.
Sea Queen had been
go to the Antarctic
SragTg
«iir” Ws
place,
sight,
blindin’
ELECTRICITY
is what we now use
when we grind your cof-
fee, while you wait with
onr
Ektric corns
When^you are io need
of good roasted coffee,
such as Peradell, Saa
Rio, Golden Santos,
Gold Metal and Cheek-
Neals, ring us, and if
you wish, we will either
graulate or pulverize it
for you cheerfully, free
of cost
I The Old Reliable
H. ROUGE & COMPANY.
Phone 4.
When we say “Beech-Nut Brand”
Sliced Beef is better than the old-
fashioned ‘‘dried” beef, we mean it;
juicy and tender,- delicious in flavor,
ready to use; packed in vacuum glass,
jars, without any preservative whatever
We know yon will like the “Beech-N*
Brand” Beef. Better order a sample jar
Otto Buchel & Co.
LET ifS TALK'
...... ■■■1 1 ■
Let us talk over your Electri-
cal work. I can make a price
that will make yon smile.
Overhauling a specialty.
Phone 232
W log
rvr11 WaOif
POt
...
m
m
m*. r- yt
the
* -
ly:
of
I
era,
most erf
«»a«
sort o’i
State**
***
in
a
*
. we was an
M) to Uke to
ig other sea
him this one.
ted, although
seafiurin'.
to
qnes
to do,
ac-
he
big.
rail
plain
o'
an
prin
. i
mSmt'
abel, Ship-rigged,
aster, built 1730.
Sailed
I
la Which I Hear ths Tale of
vof*«Sp
Tuttle required a
startsd, pulling aside h
eoat-tallB to sit down fad
then twiddling his
his gaze bent on the
that his intellectual
naturally slow, although he^
enough in all matters
seamanship. Anyhow,;
so long, his whole
and oily, that I lost
fling my feet on the deck. I
served to arouse him.
“Tt commenced som
two years ago sir," h
Ing each word wltli
earlier in the season t
I was master of tl
Betsy sailin’ * from
we were homeward
about is months' endsta’ inj!
Pacific , carryin* a fair cargo
whale trimmings** W
the Horn, being about
and 56 degrees smith
trouble began. I know
er a low latitude, but.
buckin' against head
sea for more'n aj
were short banded,' #1
bavin skipped out*t
where wo put ifresh
Anywav it was a!
storm hit us from out’thd:^,
guess it roust have been one
hurricane. I never seei&othin’
even in those seas. Thepe was
to do but turn tall an’ scud,
ar.d canvas being soJSiff
Well, we battened* down|^
chances, but for a IvMflj
revery wave was goin’ fa dofor
■ booker an send us all t<» fffify
I couldn't see five feqt
ar' T had to keep
my eyes to see at all.
the feel of a solid
Tuttle was leaning
elbows on the table,
countenance had lo#t;
and T also noticed >|he eager
Imprinted on the famof hi* t
rades. uBB
We was jest roundip’
he went on a* soofi as he
breath ' the Betsy
her deck was half awash, an
mor- ihan maybe. 100 yards
water to the noo4«\ *palSS
|lookiD headland the "
I fall away sudden ig|* n ipyt o*~cj<nrgL
which was piled high
! hummocks behind which th*
j rose up sheer
rocks. There
the edge of it, an
full view was- tho
vessel ever I saw .1
fartD’. So help me *Xk>d,
it with my own eyes, as
lookin’ at you! It waa
o’ 20 feet above thp
•Oft
froze fast
amidships dear to
remember them
sailed ln?HH
kind, only a h _
guessed her at 850
de-
re-
Id got
a mirage of fog and sun in
frozen seas. Over 3,000,000
locked wiUiin the eternal ice for 126
years! Over 3,000.000 pesos, guarded
[ by\ the dead for a century amid that
grim desolation of crested sea! God!
It was simply unthinkable, and I sven
ventured to smile at the credulity of
the men about me; yet I did it with
set Jaws and lips parched and dry.
What If It waa all true? I felt the
blood boiling up through my veins,
every extremity tingling with the
lever of it Over 3,000,000 pesos!
Merciful mother! it was the ransom of
® Wfif; ft wm tii6 fcsxupt&tiou of tom
I know not how I controlled my volte
•o as to question calmly, for, even
as I first spoke, I noticed how my
hands trembled where they rested on
the outspread map. *
“Is that slir x
Tuttle nodded his head, uplifting
his eyes questioningiy to mine.
“That’s the whole of it. sir. What
do you think?’
^That’s more than 1 know, Mr. Tut-
tle. Ferhap* you dreamed, perhaps
Francisco Wed. I should have liked to
see that book.”
I bent lower over the chart, staring
at the red cross
‘‘What was it you men wanted me
forr 1
"To operate the steamer, sir; the
rest of ns aboard only understand
sailin’ vessels.” T
"Tes, of course; but why did you
to choose a steamer for the
There were plenty of sailing
lying in the harbor easier to
steal tluui this yacht”
"Very true, but it happened to be
steam power we wanted. Here is
about how we figured it sir. First
, place, we had to get away quickly
" of those portions of the sea where
d ha most likely to hunt for us.
outlaws, an’ every ship sailin’
a flag is an enemy. Well, sir,
. chance would a sailin’ vessel
have' in such a chase ? We needed
somethin* that would show ’em a
, den pair o’ heels—somethin’ that
would give ’em a run for their money.
That’s what this yacht can do; she’s
pokin’ It now at sixteen ”
"Yes; you’ve got the advantage,” I
confessed, "so long as your coal lasts.
But you can’t put in anywhere for a
•apply—what then?”
He turned partially about, and
ed at De Nova; the fellow
back at him, bat burst in
Hfijn X * V J.- J ^ ;u i J'\ •
"Oh, we’re not quite so green as all
sat, Mobs. Stephens, an’ I t’ink we got
»• ting plan’ out jus’ ’bout right. We
steiun so till we get maybe far ’nough
south w’ere sey quit look for us. How
it be 110 degrees west an’ 40 degree*
south? Nobody t’ink we go sere—
non, non. We got coal plenty for
sat, an' sen have bunch left. I know;
I try it No more need push her sixer
after we leave se Ferdandez—we be
well ahead sen. Zen we rig up se
' schooner sdils, an’ make se next
founan’ mile wizont bum’ a poun’.
You see how it do? Ze danjaire was
not, for In sat ocean we meet nossing
but maybe se whale ship.”
“You - understand what he means,
six?” went on Tuttle, as the creole
paused for breath. /‘Once well ahead
we can fall back on canvas, and save
the coal. But we’ll need the steam
power down there to hold her off an’
en by tlie island while we do the job.
It’s a mighty nasty bit o’ water, an’ a
sailin' vessel ts apt to get pinched in
the ide. But with a steamer we can
hold her to it. however the wind
blows.’’
1 looked at the fellow with greater
respect. Evidently he had considered
as fagSs that rock they call Dong*
pesos, -j erty island—aa’ that’s only a run o*
maybe 500 miles—I’ll engage to make
The Teat
over this here Sea Queen so that
own captain wouldn’t know her
feet away. How? I’d strip the ett*
gines out o’ her, h’lst the stack over-
board, tear down the bridge an’ wheel-
house, rig her as a barkentine, change
then jrre^k
east Patag
Falkland s.
>otn
every line o’ paint fore an’ aft,
k her somewhere along the
onian coast, or maybe the
It would be nothin’ but a
bloomitl^whaler gone ashore,
afore an^jody fiiids out different, we’ll
be scattered to hell an' back.”
I ^w&s obliged to acknowledge
myself that it was not an impossible
plan. Eliminating the chance of ac-i
cident or some unusually bad luck,
success appeared not only possible,
but probable.
“Did you think all that out yourself,
V
Mr. Tuttle?” ,
“Well, Francisco suggested com>id-
ejpble, but we did it together.” |
“Where is he? on board?”
The mate laughed, his eyes ex-,
pressive of contempt
"Not much,; he hadn’t the rtdrve.!
He’s a schemer all right, but a blame’
coward.”
“But suppose he gets to talking
back there in Valparaiso?"
It was big Bill Anderson who an-
swered me, disgusted with our long
controversy.
“Oh, to hell wid Francisco!” he
broke in, gruffly. “It’s w’at you’re
goin’ to do we want to know. Fran-
eisco’ll hold his gaff well enough. He
expects a bit of the swag, an’, besides,
I let him know what was comin to
him if he let bis tongue wag. 1 had
him right, let • me tell ye. An’,
famine, Mt. Stephens,” the bully in
him breaking all bounds, “if it ain’t
cornin’ the same way to any other
duffer who goes back on us this trip.
That’s what talks!” He jerked his
sheath-knife from his belt, and. with
one fierce lunge, drove it half to the
hilt into the table, his brute eye*
scowling threateningly into mine.
(Continued Next Sunday)
There was considerable int
at the tent meeting
There were t an
for prayer and
Mr. Fitzgerald
“How Am I td JL_^___
Christian?”
He said that God does
any man to ioliow b
furnishes a guide
sufficient for any^i
whether he is on
The trouble, he said,
is that they will
evidence- He
nished two
be disputed,
tersal
internal
both inu
jury List
PaXlT
Fifth Were, June 28.
W B Hildebraudt H D Beaumont
P H Murray . F Nunez
Berthofd Afflerbach A Nobles (col.
ild that
emotions,
faith can
mujt take
stable than I
would
In the Holy SpWt.
He said that
God quit whining ad
joy the sendee of
make progress,
strongly with aota<
society.
There were
morning and last
moral ojf ter vice at i
day will be at the
vice tonight ipt
be at the Presby
ducted by one of
the service ior men
will be conducted by 1
aid. M
w*
■4&:
H C Lanmon
D H Jacobs
T E Bomba
B R HU1
Robt Gerhardt
C F Fox all
A Lader
K C Barnard
C Doerrman
Hy Atzenhofer
Perd Wild ’
Frits Menn
Hy Moff
Hy Kuester Jr.
Hy Poet ’
8 H Spied
David Alexander
Geo F Brand
D Huck|
John Neuaer
W A Fink
H Jutz
Will Brown
W B Meischen
I* Vakdergrift
B F Lewis
Robt Fiankc
HF Jaeger
EH Weller
Carl Hadamek
Herman Borchers
L F Buergener
W P Kennedy
John B Melting
Cleaning and Pressing.
I have now at my shop an expert
in cleaning and pressing clothes;
charges moderate and work strictly
guaranteed. Alfonso Rbybs.
Weekly Record. Si in advance.
The readers
ed to learn
preaded dia
able to cure in,
catarrh. Hall’s _
positive cure Am
fraternity. Cater
tional disease
treatment,
internally, acting
and mucous an
thereby destroying the;
disease, and giving
fay building np the
sisting nature in doing
proprietors have a* M
curative powers that they
fo* aeyc
for list of
AdSwMra- caxmk'
Sold by druggiata, 76c.
Hall*a family pllla are
Nice Plaat for
The Coffin old
renovated and n
and is for rent. Call
r intc
office for intormfttton
Beat in
what
letterin’ all
cut out
It read
Franciaco
Mid waa
irf hjflfcner
it open I
NcrruAnad
’ eagerly to
ived it along
* L.
was not
fa light.
um
eAsk
to take Cardui, for your female
troubles, because we are aura tt
wtfl help you. Remember that
this great female remedy—
CARDJJI
has brought relief to thousands of
other skx women, so why not to
you? For headache, backache,
periodical pains, female weak-
ness, many have said tt Is Abe
best medicine to take£^fty It I
' Sdd in TUsxSyjtn
MeCAU FA’
Celebrated
MTfttNS
rfffSSkFVtfL
Mes^?ul
rtonc-.;'
SCSk for
Subscribe toda\, or |
VONDEKFUL INDUCEMENTS
' ssss-
He Drove His Shesth Knife Half to
the Hilt Into the Table.
guessed her at 850 or faff ton, hut she
had the same sort a* build—a big high
•tern, with an after-cabin dear
it, the waist sank down in a c
the fo'caetie raised up like
with blunt bows, an' a
sprit forkin’ straight np
The whole outfit waa
Ice an’ glittered so in
seemed like a part
which had took that
fl*; mfiferewmim
s»‘ passenger* 17, including five
____ carried treawtrtf'in ^dw tn
‘iSlk-and . piec*-s of eighl. valued at
iH she wMbo pesos, conaigned ^y Canda-
qutstador, Sanchez,
1753, 30 degreca 20 min
146 degrees 15 mined**!
Lost at sea; no reppr
tt 1 * put down the
across at Tuttle:
his
tgle had
the
gOY-
Con-
and
all well.
d looked
onless,
he
and I
not deuBt that the man honestly
ed every word he had uttered.
too marvelous ever to
Impossible; too wildly
must have bean a jxallu-
cal illusion born from
s- i
V
v
thawin' an*
didn't think
didn't think it ^
far a minute—a
got a good look
•Uy aft right,
about In the 1
far
BBS
the
beokf
■L
M
every angle of the desperate game he
was playing. ‘ - ,.;i
"Year scheme certainly sounds rea-
sonable enough,” I admitted, almost
reluctantly. "And the chances are
ypu will get there all right. But sap-
pose you do; suppose you discover
this mysterious island; suppose you
find therpthe galleon as you say; sup-
pose you even succeed in getting
aboard, and into possession of the
treasure—what then? Don't you know
you're bound to be caught the minute
you come oat of the Antarctic into
any ocean patrolled by the fleets of
the world? You have committed pi-
racy—a dime against the nation*-**
and the civilised world will unite to
hunt you down.”
"That's another reason why wo had
to have a steamer,’* he
lit remarked
they’d he loofn’ for the 8ea QfliBH
oU, let 'am look;
* Mr, air. Oftoe wo
unde* hilflkM an* h^ck
WBHF' “
ianoCoot
Are you talking it over with your friends? #
friends saving:their coupons for yon? X
j- *f . ' ? ■ , > As i* «
It will be economy ter you to make your
otu* store.
Whether Prescription, Paint or Pencil—tt is
cheapest at our store. If we haven’t It today see
ft for yon next day—and yon get PIANO COUPONS
THE OUEBO DRUG CO.
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The Cuero Daily Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 151, Ed. 1 Sunday, June 27, 1909, newspaper, June 27, 1909; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth845971/m1/4/?q=%22~1~1%22~1: accessed July 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cuero Public Library.