The Cuero Daily Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 140, Ed. 1 Monday, June 14, 1909 Page: 3 of 4
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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I the Suifl
BIG
SAVING
In all our
Men's and
Young
Men’s
Suits
Schwab’s
Set Price
Clothing
at a 25
per cent.
Reduction
$10 suits $7.50
$15 suits $11.25
$20 suits $15.00
A try on
will convince
you that we
are offering
the greatest
value in the'
city.
g-1 IX, WARM WBATHBR GOODS=s
.
Don’t miss taking advantage of some of our June offers.
A wide range of up=“to==date goods to select from
Men’s Separate
New Lawns
and Batistes.
In dainty designs just received
Goods usually solcHu 12 Ifl-
and 15c, our price per yd.—.KM
HAOC rob US by
PetcRIJwoi;
Tronser Sale
Oar line of separate pants for
men is second to none in the
city. We carry the celebrated
Pitt Iron trousers. Daring this
week we will sell pants at a sav-
ing of 20 cents on the dollar.
$2.50 pants for----------$2.00
3.00 M “ - 2.40
3*50 44 * - 2.80
4.00 “ “ . 3.20
5.00 “ 4.00
Selz & Peters
1 * | 1. ! ■ ■' •• •* - !|
Shoes
Just Receiv’d
Embroideries.
New embroideries, insertions
and edgings just received—af a
redaction of 20 per cent.
Special.
Corset cover embroidery, full
16 to 18 inch width, a bummer
at 25c a yard, our price for |£ _
this week only,_____________HNf
We are showing some new low cuts „§t popular
prices: #8.00 and #8.550 nr.
Flaxen Linons
SSii
One of this season’s most
ular white goods novelties 4
at 15c and..........................
Shoe Co.
^ST LOUIS /
Nan tuck Cambric
A soft fiaisb cambric, lull 34
inch wide, sold aegularly* at
14 yards for $1, this week | (J.
at per yard___________________JJBl
Your money back if you
not satisfied and Want it.
New Dimities and Nain
sooks at 8}4, 10 and-----------
Green Saving Stamps Given With Every Cash Purchase
Pianos! Pianos!! Pianos!!!
A man in NewYcrk accidentally
opened a Bible thatchad been lying
aronnd for thirty-five years and
found it had nearly five thousand
dollars hid between its leaves. In-
credable as it may seem there are
people who would not take twice
that sum for what they have found
in Bibl.es they read every day.
A “millionaire tramp” has sailed
to Europe to organize the “unem-
ployed,” bat what good is that go-
lag to do? Better foster some plan
to pat them to work.
Who wants to buy a good sec
ond baud piano? Can furnish at
nominal figures either a Mattu-
checfc or an Emerson. Both are in
good repair aud for practice work
are just as good as a brand new
costly instrument. For particulars
see the Record.
HELENA
BUM OF TIE CITY BF CUERO
These yon msy Import IromEorope [ A Yot»tb of 75 summers
free of doty. Thus does congress winters, enamored of . dainty
work for the common people. J. malden 6,‘weDtf sPr!nfS- P" Up*
P. Morgan may noi bring fn his ,pt of “sh and Je"elr* toT <be
paintings from Europe free of duty. aforeaa,d “a,de°- w,th the nnder‘
—sas=s==^aaa£ standing that there was to be a
The beads irf a daily office yes- wedding to follow soon, and maybe
terday got mixed and an account did> bot the ardent y°uth tfore-
of a gathering of the Catholic dig- st*d was DOt a Party t0 and be
nataries at Rome was headed “A does Dot where the maiden
Carnival of Crime,” tshiletbe con- is- Alas, for the impulsive youths!
ditions in Galveston criminal, cir- busy boys, secure a few
cles bore the head . intended for subscribes to the Record and earn
this gathering. Mistakes are made a pair of splendid scissors for your
mama or sister.
Saw It in the Paper.
y I—a»ay I kies yon, dear?1’
Sridhe.
st, I want one thing made clear,”
Said she.
?e yon ever kissed maid before,.
Or triad?” >;
he answered she was sore
He lied.
a, with willing lips, she whispered
m #VWell, A *
A unique experiment was re
cently made by a New York thea-
tre totletermine what was the most
efficient advertising medium. The
manager sent out some 15,000 cir-
culars, as many more post cards
and employed a heavy contingent
of sandwich men. When the time
for responses came he had every
person id^his theatre answer the
question: “What kind of adver-
tising brought yon here?” This
question was pat to each individual
who came for a whole week. When
the answere were all tabulated it
was found that 75 per cent had
answered that they came through
the newspaper notices. As the
manager had also used an extra
snppiy of bill board space, the an-
swers were all the more, significant
of the drawing power of newspaper
advertising.—Beeville Picayune,
COES
DIRECT
WACO
YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK
CALIFORNIA and
CALIFORNIA and
THE A-Y-P expos/m
WHY DO/t'r YOU?
in big offices, too.
The agitation for artesian water
i* bringing results. We mast have
■robbed in this place. 1
j this dive, then, permitted
1 - d3
Officers That Kill,
In the hurly-burly ottbe reunion i °PeD way <
one of our city detectives shot and 1 D0W dead,*#
killed a bad negro. From the j *° rnD a dc
garbled reports we get, it is said | characters g»t
that the negro was advancing on» ** busine
the detective aDd reached in his eD*orce lbe
bosom for a knife. people, but bj
Whether the negro did have a cba*actei &
knife 00 his person is not estab- a^a °bt
llshed. On the general statement “J.0 C?*Tt ***
that he was a bad negro and bad Ph,c Lo®merc
been sentenced to serve 11 months) **rom wba
and 29 days In the work house and j Appeal says,
that he was a dive keeper, the!badly govern*
detective has been exonerated. indeed Aat a 1
Probably the community is better ah(m,d ^ ^
off that the negro is dead. But
detectives and police officers are Recc
not paid to kill people, even ^
negroes. The place for worthless
negroes Is on the rock pile. Dead
they take up too much cemetery tirilipi.
room. gi.oo
If this negTo Doyle kept a dive **3, uaXXJB <
and it was a lawless place, as C. A WARD,
recent reports state, why was this 880 B. Houston
dive permitted to be open? It ia
said that several people have been The Records
d flies and mosquitoes, but
h91 off some of both if you
Nearly all women suffer at timaa firm
- Some women suffer more acute
Of course its hot, and equally ot
COHia it’s the time of year for hot
ailments. Some women suffer more acutehrafla
more constantly than others. But whether yon have
little pain or whether you suffer intensely, yon,
should take Wine of Cardui and get relief.
Cardul is a safe, natural medicine, for women-
prepared scientifically from harmless vegetable H*
gradients. It acts easily on the female organs and
little pain or whether
cWitt county will likely have
u Sate to, it now seems. And
1 and hogs do well together, if
give corn the Inside.
Annual Meeting,
There will be a regular annual
meeting of the stockholders of the
Cuero Creamery Co. in the county
court room at 3 o’clock in the after-
noon of Wednesday, June 23, 1909,
for the purpose of electing directors
and transacting such other busi-
ness as may properly come before
the meeting; by order of the presi-
dent. Walter Rbiffkrt,
Secretary.
giveB strength and tons to the whole system.
Cuero * booklet is attracting at-
tention and requests are coming in
for it. It will help this section
much if you will help distribute it.
> San Antonio papers declare the
people are extremely law abiding
Up there, and the police "are es-
tablishing new sutions and putting
ia a stranger force to prove it
The Woman’s Tonic
i£m ftnma Wallaoa*of Sanavr, Tex., tried Oardui. She writ*
rdui has dona more for me than I can describe. Last spring ]
takes with female inflammation and consulted a doctor, hut h
Since that New York man found
a big lot of money in an old Bible,
a number of Bibles have bean open-
ed and examined that have been
hid for a long time.
Eighty to a hundred acre farm,
house, well, windmill, three miles
of Cuero, for sale at close figures
i See Record for further particulars.
3
r+ ^Li^wnHcrron Pf
VtLLOMfSTOllNR
.If# /
NAT park ¥
CMCYEdll^^ 1
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The Cuero Daily Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 140, Ed. 1 Monday, June 14, 1909, newspaper, June 14, 1909; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth846003/m1/3/?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.