The Cuero Daily Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 69, No. 92, Ed. 1 Monday, October 15, 1928 Page: 2 of 4
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established 1894. "The Star,” established
vs,” formerly Rundschau, established 1891.
(Consolidated, April, 1919.)
$2.00 a year..
i cents per month, $8.00 per year in Advance
luero Postoffice as second-class matter under
» of March 8, 1879. T ?
A the City of Caere end of DeWitt County
By COPELAND C. BURG
(INS)Staff Correspondent
misfit collection of players.
Last season Stagg unrolled on oc-
casion an aerial game that was a de-
light to the eyea, most, deceptive and
almost, defense proof. He may decide
to confine his team's style In the
tough games get to be played to the
air, belie^lpg this hts. sole change
against beaver, more-balanced and
better:developed elevens.
CHICAGO.—A. A. Stagg, the grand
old man of football, is always doing
something new.
So he hung up a record by Parting
the 1928 season* at the University of
Chicago, his , 37tb consecutive year
as coach of the Maroons, by losing a
double-header bill. Both South Caro-
lina and Rlpon of Wisconsin won in
the same afternoon from the Stagg-
men.
Bnt don’t be fooled. Even with that
wretched start, it is the writer’s opin-
ion Chicago will pull several surpria-,
es during the season and if Stagg has
any hick in developing his 1928 edi-
tion of the Maroons they will rank as
one of the most spectacular events of
the Big Ten conference.
they wear today.—Swiped.
Bare Legs of Girls
Win Over Proprieties
on Ground of Health
*t afraid of a mouse is
VIENNA.—(IBS)—Bare legs of young
girls won a victory against the pro-
prieties of old-fashioned professors,
when the Superintendent of Viennese
schools decided that “while It cannot
be proved that bare legs are immoral,
it eannot be disproved that this fash-
ion Is a most healthy one.”
The bare-legs-fhahion, which came
into vogue this summer reached its
climax during the last hot days of
the season, which were at the same
time the first school days of the com-
ing season.
Many high school girls, appearing
in school without their stockings met
with severe disapproval of their pro-
fessors, especially of the women pro-
fessors.
The matter came before the super-
intendent, who decided in favor of
bare legs. The judgment was received
with much satisfaction by the Vien-
nese youth, but it has also caused
severe affliction among nolsery manu-
facturers.
the young woman who is considered a bit wild
lough to eat out of her husband’s purse.
reason given for so many divorces among the movie
tat they don’t know how to carry *on their loving
laving their director on hand to prompt them.
Roger Q. Williams (inset at left), American monoplane “Columbia.” P$$(
pilot, and Pietro Bonelli, navigator, who, after mous plane on runway it 1
a split-up with Cesare Sabelli, decided to fly L. I., just prior to the take off.
Splendid Backfield
Chicago this fail has a splendid
back Held and plugging up the weak
spots in the Una should make the
backs among the most consistent
ground gathers in the midwest
Mendenhall is a great player who
will certainly be heard from before
this season is rolled Into the ar-
chives. He is a good punter and his
efforts in the early games of the sea-
son have not done him full credit.
He should hit hie stride with the im-
portant contests scheduled for late
October and November.
On October 20 the maroons will
face the rough and ready Minnesota
eleven.They pldy Purdue on October
27, Pennsylvania November 3, Wis-
consin November 10 and Illinois No-
vember 17.
Coach Stagg has not been dismay-
ed unduly by his record-breaking
season-opener of two defeats In an af-
ternoon and ke believes the unsatis
factory start of the season will wipe
out that usual foeljng of over-confi-
dence which characterises the coun-
try's leading elevens, following their
opening-season victories over minor
teams. Barring accidents to his back-
field stars. Stagg is confident he will
develop a team at least the superior
of his iquad.
r - * 4'. * ' f 1
* , .
Sura rise 9aekiM
% Right bow It id a difficult Blatter to
pick a single eleven remaining on
the Maroons’ schedule, which the
Staggmen equal.ta offensive power or
defensive strength. But Stagg is one
of the most resourceful coaches in
the country and he probably will suc-
ceed in working out a surprise pack-
age of plays, beat suited t ohis rather
est reducing exercj&e we are told is a shake of the
asked to have b second helping of the foods offer-
bodies have never been recovered.
Strong undercurrents due to springs
are named as the reason. The lake
is considered in its most dangerous
mood when it seems most* peaceful.
It is always on clAm nights its victims
have gonetrwfthal, the lake gets its
thousands of summer visitors who
□ever think of the sinister side until
a new tragedy is reported.
issued here recently by
report
ert Tollman, chief probation officer of
the Denver Juvenile court, who de-
clared that the most common charge
brought against boys who “go wrong”
is'that of theft.
Among the girls sex offenses are
the most common, and, according to
Jennie Barton, superintendent of the^
Woman's Home and Hospital , of the
local Salvation Array, a majority of
these offenses occur3 after the girls
are past the so-called "flapper” age.
In his report to the Juvenile oourt,
Tallman said that just » word of en-
couragement, a friendly handshake or
a smite often la sufficient to put
“first offense” boy delinquents bafck
on the right path. Of thp 1,277 cases’
brought before the Juvenile court in
ATTENTION LEG
|8pecia! called me
night, Get If, for no
fleer* for the ensuing
important business,
will be had after the
(AdWri: * Waite
rt calculators hare figured out that if you put one
mg aviators into oae of our fastest machines and let
good start with full speed ahead, and-then shoot
$th a winchester to scare him up a bit the airplane
1 faster than the bullet and the bullet will not be
pch up. What we have to say is that this is travel-
to fly off and leave a bullet that maty be fired at
Delinquency Among
Boys Traced Mostly
To Home Li
T DENVER.- — (IMS) — Delinquency
among Denver boys is near^ always
traceable to friction add misunder-
standing in the home, according to a
Lake Quassapaug is
Living to Reputation
For Annual “Victims
\ after the two original - fields in Caldwell and
Counties were discovered there was a great boom
0 the extent that rents, board and other essentials
gh Iti price., Then the big companies got hold of
Dpped the excitement, cflt down expenses and
igs somewhat near back to normal. Several
a new field Was brought in (just north of town
wells were found to be fair producers of high
there was no gr^at excitement and a good
1 worried'why. Some even went so far as to say
ad gotten over that 'soi^ of foolishness. They
a little when Elder ’B: Davis gave
liars for a foundation farm, and put
are into circulation through a distribu-
ployes, a large part of this munificence
WATERBURY, Conn.,—(IMS)—Spoo-
ky Lake Quassapaug has been acting
up again. Every suraer sees some-
thing of the sort happen. Frederick
Krieger, former missionary in Africa
and noted hunter of big game, went
to the late for a night's firfhing and
perishedv No one knows how. His
empty boat was foqnd en the lake
tbd next morning. For four days af>
terward gangs of men toiled trying
tp find the body. After they had
spent a night under searchlights the
party pulled up to go ashore . The
body of Krieger came floating by the
boats.
Quassapaug generally smiles of a
summer day. At the spme time the
Normana Theatre
TODAY
| -i . L-. - '!
JOSEPH M.SCHENCK presents ** • -
HERBERT BRENONS
million
H’BWARNER
ANNA Q NILSSON
ALICE JOYCE
NILE ASTHER
CARMEL MYERS
lake ha| a long list of victims. Many
h their paid agents, to get a finger into tbe pie
All of the old excitement has showed up
jpi that could not have keen disposed of at five
lie, for Ifeases ten dlys ago, are worth five hun-
ueend dollars, or even higher. They can’t help
ed when things do that way in a town. Over-
at flock of so-called lease hoqnclsTias returned
med with a great flock of maps showing all aorta
n the new field, and there is a seething, hustling,
f people running in and out of down town offices
eet to hotel from early morning until rather late
gs. They remind ohe somewhat of a colony of
»es change hands every fe* hours, and wire*
, as the leasing crew locates new acreages and]
nation on to moneyed interests in* the larsrrf
The most powerful human'document ever pro-,
duced for tbe screen a father’s love for his son;
UNmOABTim WCTURt
Comedy, “Caught in the Kitchen"
Pathe News. *
Admission 10c and 35c
eld is still on the job with the electrically driven
PUBLIX BROAD-CLOTH BRAND
Plain and Fancy Made From Standard,
Fast Color Broadcloth.
SPECIAL 9Se Each
With every $10 parches# a piece of China ware Free
DRY GOODS DEPT.
«r day. There are mighty few localities that
Sy oil strikes as the Luling section, which now
thole territory, north, south, east and west ia
with oil, and that great wealth lies beneath
R developed into wealth for the operators and
Mty, One of the most active drilling comr
iinpted in a new field is anticipated as the
* begin a struggle for a share into* the valu-
TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY
mhtwmuMim
Comedy, “Their Purple Moment,
Aesop’s Fables and Pathe News
GEORGE WASHINGTON
0. THE IDEA SACK OF CIMISASCS WAS THAT THE
[ UIDERTAJUMS, SET THE FAIRS OF HEAVEN AMD
I COMMITTED. NOW LOUIS. ELfUKMU’S HUSSAMO,
t THIS PLAS FITTED ELEAMORA’S I0EAS EXACTLY
. TNI DUEEN WAS NOTH SY A LOVE OF ADVERTl»R
THAT IKE WOOLS MAKE HERSELF A RESOW MED N
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The Cuero Daily Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 69, No. 92, Ed. 1 Monday, October 15, 1928, newspaper, October 15, 1928; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth999695/m1/2/: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cuero Public Library.