The Cuero Daily Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 69, No. 97, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 21, 1928 Page: 4 of 8
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tie throat ami fringed at-the «®ds.\ ~
be worn
-white georgette. There are also gowns
in the new soft woolen striped mater-
ialsfc made with pleats from, neck to
hem, with tiny brass buttons and
belts of suede or gold leathar.
German feather bed.
A new coat weight Kasha makes
the twenty-eighth variety for one of
the large fabric-makers and there are
lovely new patterns of gold in kasha
weaves and new prints on the feath-
erweight kashas.
Lace jerseys are a feature of one
of the houses, used for charming lit-
tle jackets and bodices. Kashalyse
has a long napped broadcloth finish
and there are diagonals alternating
light tones with white. Duveteen, zib-
eline and broadcloth will be favorites
with velvet for the winter ensemble.
A most useful coat-frock to
without the coat comes in broadcloth
with the bodifee of crepe sktin and
narrow vest and tight undersleeves of
CUfiRO PUBLISHING CO.
cord,” established 1894. "The Star/* established
lie News,’* formerly Rundschau, established 1891.
(Consolidated, April, 1919.)
lecord, $2.00 a year.
cord, 50 cents per month, $5.00 per year in advance
In the Cuero Postoffice as ae—J ----“----
Congress of March 8, 1879.
Organ of the City of Cuero
Cars in Detroit and Vicinity
Indicate Good Roads Stim-
ulate Car Buying.
Normana Theatre
TODAY AND MONDAY
similar pqp^lation center.
Wayne county, Michigan, in which
Detroit 4s located, has the equivalent
of 756 miles of rigid, rural pavements,
18 feet wide, or better still the equiva-
lent of 345 miles of 40-foot pavement,
according to the annual Wayne coun-
ty road report. Just what effect
these good roads have had on autd-
mobUe purchases may be judged by
MARY feSTOR
Comedy “Just Dandy”
id of DeWitt County
Oil Famine Seen
3000 Years Away
By U. S. Scientist
k every Cuero visitor to the Little World’s Fair was
tew questions about the Turkey Trot, to be held here
mber 16. Yorktown. people are evidently planning
adk some of our friendly calls made over there on
Tuesday and Wednesd
’’Brotherly Love’
theDOCKSop
NEW YORK*
LONDON.—(IMS)—Not for 3,000
years will the world be faced with an
oil famine.
This is the optimistic prophecy of
Dr. Gustav Egloff, United States del-
egate to the Wprkt-Psvrer Conference
in London.
He believes'that the new process of
“cra’cking” by which crude and heavy
oils are transformed into motdr-fUel,
has solved the oil-shortage problem.
Taking In account the vast
the registration figures which st^>w]
that Detroit and Wayne County to-
gether have 421,000 cars, or one car
for every four persons.
New York City has one car for
every -3 persons, Chicago one for
each 9.4 persons, and Philadelphia
one automobile for every 9.’ residents.
Highway authorities declare, des-
pitR-’the varying masses of poor popu-
lations and industrial 'conditions,
that the amount of good roads has
the greatest direct bearing upon the
buying of c«rs. It is pointed out that
where good roads are prevalent, and
the country is easily accessible from
the city, the demand for automobiles
is greater.- | I
Herein are circumstances that are
frequently overlooked. In pvery large
city there are .thousands capable of
purchaslng’Sutdmobiles who have not
done so because of traffic congestion
both within the city and on nearby
country roads. Taking the 'country as
a tHuRfe, there is one car for every
5.2 -perdons. It is evident, therefore,
that where the automobile registra-
tion ration is above that figure there
usual fail custom of posting pastures and inviting
era to stay out, is in vogue, with the warning that
ps don’t even count in the matter of enforcing the
'hen about the safest way out is for the hunters to
d of the warnings and stay out.
WITH
BETTY COHKO#
BACLANOVA
d Qxramount Qictwt
Comedy “The Death Trap”
Pathe News and Novelty Real
e impression seems to be taking hold now that the
slop is going to be a whole lot shorter than it has been
ed by the Government as well as private parties. It
kp the man who has a few bales of high grade cotton
r to get a real good price for it before so very long.
TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY
“Dancing Daughters”
with JOAN CRAWFORD
SUPPORTED BY A CAST OF MODERNS
Comedy “CLEOPATRA” .
AESOP’S FABLES AND PATHE REVIEW
The Pri
illion and a' half dollar deal in oil took place at
iring the past week, involving the new field, which
f raises the question as to what pays the best, an oil
Void mine. They are leasing town lots for develop-
re now, and the biggest boom of all seems to be just
nder .way over there. - -
Thursday and Friday
u and poultry is taking the price of beef and pork
tig hotels* we are'being told, but we are quite sure
pendulum swings in that direction it will surely
again, as even a big turkey dinner can’t alto-
the place of a juicy beef steak or a well prepared
t. We don’t believe we ever paid any dearer
in we are paying right now,*'when we have the
re are still a good many drivers on the roads these
[> seem to have a sort of prejudice against giving as
half the road: It isn’t quite fair, but. about the
to get along with them is to give,them a little over
road arid * let them get Whatever satisfaction they
if the matter until that unhappy day comes when two
one kind will meet and pay the penalty with suffer-
« and wrecked care.
/ ojHh
iMdrqPhilbin
LionelJiamfmom
{DonJUcrarado
Quiltj Marshall
William Jlustia
«
Also Comedy
and Pathe Review
Meets Ever;
Visiting Knl
Leslie Clerk,
C. C.
iALice langelier
H Staff Correspondent
!jy-The fckat dress has CQSpe
i-,j*ear ifk street wear , in
eam» adf»umn and,'; is
fthe iMekgfccosturae for the
Bois or al&g
luhdfmS'^istrict. It, coijfes
,^repfell&#r6ps and other dfew
tWBoliU*
5 United States according to official count. Consid-
f*ct that the old car is traded in for a new one ev-
years, and the difference is usually-paid on the
nstallment plan, it goes to show ^how the country
’ in debt to itself, even though tile'National ; debt is
Inam A a the onoro era fn* a A.*? 1 „
is sho’
“rotepanteau” |j
op&Bfig oyer a s
cRwe; de < Chine aj
silver' and Vlue
down., '.As the average for the
d at’ large is
_____ db’ile is rated
fey*’.the conclusion is that we Americans .Idin’t d£ny
the things we" want, ■ ‘ * <
—t--
cohitol is regarded as a highly desirable accom-
i, but market cdiHfel homes under the head of tlilat
Ih proclaimed that he who steals my purse steals trash
who have/ by the sweat of their brows, produced the
eotton crops, have certainly been beaten out of a
ible per eentage of any profits by the manipulation
larkets. We note that two seats on the New York
p sold for nearly a million dollars the past week,
LOWBpthat they are willing to pay for the privilege of
farmers. A seat in the cotton patch "would be free
*. Curving
f used around*
lower part’of
the. fiecr* am
■ « r
the slefeves.r ;
j Black, broadcl
coat, left loose at'1 one side and faced
with ermine belt of black patent leath-
er. It has an interesting scarf of the
fur knotted loosely around the neck
and narrow bands of the same about
the wrists.
Another black broadcloth has
groups of pleats at the side bf the
skirt, a diagonal row of buttons fas-
tening the skirt at one side and nar-
row scarf of white fur tied about the
nepk.
Bechoff Is featuring strictly tailor-
ed frocks In the new tweeds and Eng-
lish ehecks or small plaids for street
Bhaded
Style* For Winter
tdy, Texas, has stolen some of our publicity in regard
ag Turkey Trots, and they do raise lots of turkeys in
iion of the state* However, w*e can’t blame the
feople near as much as we can blame ourselves for the
4 we let them do it. Cuero had a monopoly on the
|Trot and some of the people here at home pulled
if it with such effect that it was doubly hard* to keep
las it should be kept up, and for that matter some of
fen now are saying that all of the new has worn off
won’t be anything to the celebration this year
id the same thing about the first one, which is be-
ll have brought thirty thousand visitors to Cuero for
■it crowd ever to gather in a town of like size. Even
fee trial in Tennessee failed to bring as many people
fJNi the original Cuero Turke^ Trot collected. '
wear. One of the latter in
gray is very* trig and smart with the
bodice fastened with a diagonal row
of black buttons, square patch pock-
ets and scarf attached to one side of
COMING
OCTOBER
3031
WANTiADS
STORY BY JCANiC MACPU EPSON
Made the World
KING RICHARD I
j^LEANORA'S LOT WAS BY NO WEARS A HAPPY ONE. SINCE
BLE0^HER4^U^0’S%^0MlN<^«lmT^S*
MAINTAINING A LOVE AFfAIR WtTH A BEAUTIFUL YOUNG
WOMAN KNOWN IN HISTORY AS THE FAIR RCSAMONO. BUT
ELEAN0RA HAD LITTLE RIGHT TO COMPLAIN. AS NCR MM
CONDUCT HAD NOT BEEN ABOVE REPROACH. AND ALLYING
iTWAtBORN INT157, IN THE PALI
FMBT IMPORTANT EVENT OF RieW>
MS MARINA GE. THIS OCCURRED
OUR YEARS «U> AND HIS 6RI0E
SHE WAS A DAUGHTER OF LOUIS.
ALICE. TIGS STRANGE MARRIAGE
i KING HENRY HAD AGAINST KING
•npHE REALMS OF KING HENRY HAD BECOME VERY EXTENSIVE. HE HAD INHERITED NORMANDY, AS WE HAVE SEEN,
1 EVEN BEF0RTHE BECAME KING OF ENGLAND. WHEN HE MARRIED ELEAN0RA, A LARGE ADDITION WAS MADE
TO HIS TERRITORY, AND FINALLY, «Y THE MARRIAGE OF HIS SONS HE RECEIVE0 OTHER PROVINCES, ALTHOUGH THESE
HE HELD MERELY AS GUARDIAN FOR HIS CHILDREN. AS WE HAVE STATED EARLIER, THE BOYS REBELLED AGAINST
ISSXCB|UBCtt£yy]Ul|^fl||^mjBHEN HE WAS ONLY SEVENTEEN. BUIMENRY'S TROOPS WERE SUPERIOR
TU AND HE usually won theSTBattles. c.
a LONG YEARS.
€eor£e
Bancroft
Vti 1»
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The Cuero Daily Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 69, No. 97, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 21, 1928, newspaper, October 21, 1928; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth999666/m1/4/: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cuero Public Library.