The Cuero Daily Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 69, No. 92, Ed. 1 Monday, October 15, 1928 Page: 3 of 4
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Sweet Seventeen No I
anauthority on Ibsen, Shakespeare
and the Greek drama. .
“The theatre of the future must
find a way to briny into it better
poetry and finer musfc,” Pole s*ld.
“Only then will there appear the
necessity for better actors and ac*
tresses. We are neglecting our oppor-
tunities when we exclude these from
the theatre.”
CUERO RECORD
Classified
Advertising Rates
MINIMUM CHAM*
TWENTY-FIVE CENTE
5c per Une daily insertion.
lOo per 1IB« weekly insertion.
12fte per line both insertion*.
10c per Une six consecutive
dally and one weekly insertion.
40c per line tour consecutive
insertions daily and weekly.
$1.00 per Une oonaecntlve in-
sertions one month daily-
weekly. ^
PI splay Rates
25c per column lock dally.
35c per column Inch weekly.
50c per column inch single In-
sertion daily and weekly.
$1.00 per column inch daily an*
weekly one week.
Ada accepted np to l:St p. m.
for publication same day.
TERMS:—Cash In advance ex-
cept to those having regular
charge account*.
la England; Girl* N
LONDON.—(INS) —Sweet seventeen
is no longer a popular age for brides
in England. Apparently the post-war
English male demands maturity and
experience in his mate, with the re-
sult that now the chief marrying age
of girls is between twenty-three end
iwenty-four.
This is one of the facta revealed by
the Registrar General of Birth*,
Deaths and Marriages in a report* for
1927. recently published.
Men however, according to the sta-
tistics. preferred to wait one more
year before taking the matrimonial
plunge. The age of twenty-four was
generally preferred among men. Meat
of twenty-four preferred to marry
girls of twenty-three, while meet
meq of twenty-three marrietf girls of
twenty-two.
A total of 30.555 brides between
twenty-three and twenty-four went
to the altar id the yeer under review,
the next highest number preferring
the age of 21.
Numerous boy and girl marriages
of the old school are chroalcled- The
youngest was bettweeu a bqy of six-
teen and a girl of 15. Thirty-four girls
of fifteen married, some of them wed-
ding boys of eighteen and one wed-
ding a man of forty-three. ”
married a man aged
Twenty marriage* too
men over seventy an!
thirty.
The statlstfc-a show
slowly mounting. OV1
were granted during
greatest number evei
the exception of the 1
many war-time part*
sever the marital kno
,h».V¥ lit/ HUBERT DAU.
OspyrtgM, mm, Wares* Brea Pictures, I no.
NO FOOli" Marring Al Jolson. la a Warner Bros. pkturlx*
V Won of thin novel.
Cuero Golfers Begin Elimina
tion Tournament to Decide
Team for big Tourney.
An elimination tournament which
will determine Cuero’s representa-
tives in the South Texas Golf Associa-
' tion tournament to be staged in this
| city on November 11th rs now under-
1 way, and the play promises to be very
I interesting this year.
Fourteen members of the local club
have entered the play off tourney.
..and four of these men will be selected
by their play to represent the Cuero
club in the annual tournament.
The elimination tourney consists
of twenty seven holes, and contest-
ants are required to report to mem-
bers of the tourney 'committee before
trying out for the team, and must be
accompanied by some other member
who Is also trying out for the team
when thVy play f^ieir qualifying
rounds.
The local course is in excellent con-
dition at the present time,-and some
unusual low scores are expected to
be turned in in the elimination tour-
nament
Direct Radium
Treatment is to
Be Cheaper
iryopsiB ■
», singing waiter at
them, his eyes straight ahead, a
look of stricken tragedy on his face.
They were too addle-headed to
see that look. Ab soon as he was
recognized they pushed about him,
clamoring for a song. A hand was
held up, tendering a glass of cham-
pagne, ,but Al gently pushed It
Mid*. A girl suddenly threw her
anus around his neck and kissed
him. As soon as he escaped a man
caught Mm by the arm, calling his
attention to his dancing partner
and beggedbAl to meet the “sweet-
est lir giyl In th’ Whole worlV' Al
did not smile or paosf; he stnply
moved through them with one con-
suming thought—to reach home
and Jlnd out about his boy. Then,
finalljr, some of the more sober rev-
elers realized that this popular mas-
tar of ceremonies, this man they
thought they knew, was like a grim-
faced stranger In their midst. And
they drew back quickly aud let him
pass.
Ha reached the lobby and went
out into the night bareheaded. The
sidewalks were impassably Jammed
—horns were blown raucously in
his can, a girl threw confetti in
his face, blinding him temporarily.
Somehow he reached the curb and
looked wildly ' about for a. taxi.
There was none in sight, so he
started to run. dodging through the
overflow crowd and among the mo-
tor cars. Some persons, seeing this
bareheaded man, with the hurt.
Intent eyes, running as if for his
life, stopped and stared, wondering
what had happened. He reached
the apartment house, breathless
and exhausted, dashed into the ele-
vator, ran through the hallways,
flung open the door of his home.
Celeste, the maid, confronted him,
an expression of intense pity in her
eyes.
Al dashed by her, standing la the
middle of the drawing room, look-
lag about wildly. The reom ap-
peared just the same, but there was
a strange silence in the apartment.
He was about to rush toward Mol-
ly’s room or the nursery-when hs
saw Celeste before him again, hold-
ing out n letter. He seised it and
the maid discreetly retired.
Al had a terrible dread of open-
ing it, bet he nerved himself to the
task and-ripped back the' envelope
flap. Then he read the fateful mes-
sage in Molly's distinctively ver-
tical handwriting: >
Toe's New,York night club,
ie as a composer of popn-
h. He merries Molly Win-
singer, aud makes her
too. MoOg and Al have a
By O. D. TOLISCHUS
(INS) Staff Correspondent
BERLIN.—An invention which
brings the modern miracle cures
through radium, heretaofore available
only to the richest patients, with the
purview of the poorest, was presented
to the Congress of Physicians and
Scientists at Hamburg by Dr. Max
Heiner, of Joachimsthal, Austria.
The invention, made by,Dr. Alois
Fischer, of Vienna, consists of a suc-
cessful combination of radium and
platinum into an alloy which makes
possible the construction of radium-
active instruments that, according to
Dr. Heiner are much cheaper than
the usual radium tubes and at the
same much more effective.
In the radium tube, Dr. Heiner ex-
plained, the radium rays *re absorb-
ed to a large extent by the glass or
the metal of the tube, so that a con-
siderable amount of radium is needed
to make it effective. That Is what
makes the tubes so Expensive.
Through the alloy, the radium raya
are freed of this obstacle and there-
fore can act much more directly, ac-
cording to Dr. Heiner. For that rea-
son, myoh less radium Is required to
produce a greater effdbt.
Constructed in the form of a needle,
this radlum-actfVe alloy can be intro-
duced directly into the diseased tis-
sues, and Dr. Heiner report* remark-
able cures In 30 cases of cancer, eight
cases of chronic tohdlitles^' and nu-
merous cases of maligant. growths of
various kinds. ,
Air Mail Sa
To Aid B.
Save* Pi
| CHICAGO —B
transport the Republl
what promised to be
$*5,000.
Senator Borah, of
scheduled to brodckst
K- m., front Thlsb, <
broadcast equipment ’
out of order on the no
CHAPTER XVI
s l tore Al seized the door of
hope booth and slammed it
-to: stay shut this time. Then
wed bock to the ’phone. He
tip decided that he must
thi sgs ap with Molly now—
ok cast all pride aside and
y beg her to do it
eetfceart,” he pleaded, “let’s
be new year right. If there’s
ng I’ve done, I’m sorry ». .
Two wood heaters. Ring 509W»
$5. delivers a good used piano to
your home. Piano Room, Normana
Theatre Bldg., Thos. Goggan & Bros..
of San Antonio.
Mail Plane Express
Packages Now Include
Orchids and Machines
Age and youth made a number of
alliances. One man’of ever 70 married
a girl: of 18. One woman of seventy
FOR 9ALE—One solid oak exten-
sion dining table. Seating capacity
from six to twenty also oak double
bed. All in good condition. Telephone
65 on 546 or apply to Mrs. R. P.
Breeden.
was a long silence, then
murmur of a feminine
CHICAGO, Oct. 13.—(WS)—Mail
planes, in addition to carrying 210
tons of mail, or a million and a quart-
er letters, monthly are transporting
1500 express shipments ranging from
orchids to 200-pound pieces of ma-
chinery, the American Air i Trans-
port Association announced today.
New York leads In number of ex-
press shipments, and other cities in
order of inbound and outbound air
express parcels are Chicago, Los An-
geles, San Francisco, Cleveland, Ok-
lahoma Ci*y, Fort Worth, Texas, Salt
Lake City. There are now 102 sche-
duled stops no the air mail’routes
and 44 cities used air express ser-
show the Associa-
»e words he didn’t under-
ctart of fear shot through
be persisted.
s you, Molly; you know
we yon. I gan’t bear to
WALTER REIFFBRT / W«L /ROBIES E.
H. RUNGE & CO., BANK
Established In 1$4«
(Unincorporated)
General Banking and Exchange. Interest on alt Time Dep
Deposit Boxes for rebt, la the safest An sad burglar
, In South Texas. We solicit your Banking Busins
CUERO, •ml4
FOR SALE—Strawberry plants
now ready for transplanting. A. S.
Reed, phone 25.
»u cold toward me!**
the voice at the other end
outer; he suddenly realised
FOR RENT—After Nov. 5, Potato
Warehouse on track near freight de-
pot. V. J. Grander, Phone 192.
U. S. Motorists Spend
$$,000,000,000 Yew
With Service Stations
vice last month
MOTHERS tion’s figures.
This is ■ pretty weather and a fine Banks, motfio^ /picture producers,
time to have the childrens pictures' insurance companies, manufacturing
made there will be lets of changes be- Jewelers, women’s ready-totwear
fore another fall rolls around a^d to wholesale houses, hnd advertising
have tt good likeness of them at this nancies are the largtst users of air
age we specially urge you to bring express, but th emonths shipments
them to The Flournoy Studio, Cuero, include products ranging from food
Texas, and see our new mqnntlngs in products to parts of electric bene-
allfr finish rators,
CHRISTMAS CAR
CHICAGO—(UK)—Motorlets of the
nation spend the staggered stun of
over five billion dollars annually with
service stations and repair shops, ac-
cording to Charles M. Hayes, presi-
dent of the Chicago Motor Club which
is affiliated with the American Auto-
mobile Association.
Hayes based his statement os figur-
es furnished by the Research De-
partment of the A. A. A. showing that
‘ in 1927 more than five and a quarter
' billion dollars was spqnt with service
> stations and repair shops bjTcar own-
ers.
» “This gigantic sum.” said Hayes,
i “was divided as follows; Pasts and
• service supplies $950,600,000; tires
t for replacement^ $925,000,000; fuels
t and lubrioants, $^300,000,000, and
; service labor $1,092,000,000. In 1919
i the total amount was $2,125,000,000-,
Don’t make the mistake of p!
“I’m leaving—don’t try to
persuade me to come back. I
doirft love you—I never did love
you. It * was hard enough to
hear before John* PervV came
into my life. Since thra It has
been impossible.” *
Al looked up from the letter with
a cry of rage and pain. For the
first time he saw the whole situa-
i tion la one blinding flash. Molly
not only failed to love him, but she
loved someone else. And that
•omeoae^was John Perry—suave,
immaculately dressed John—who,
Al had believed, was hi* best
Christmas Card order before you s
beautiful line x>f inexpensive cards.
. _ - * * •
We also carry a line of the more ex
ones for those who desire something
“better,*'
t- • *»*- * -Y * *■'■*» - «£ -v J* r* v*v ■ * ' S' ” . k
And we have a nice line pf very aj
ate business cards too, Mr. Merchant,
show you and be convinced.
currency, stocks, bonds, med-
icines and even fur coats.
tty's voice at all, bnt
Fie heard her quick,
>rds come traveling
like bullets,
is not here. She has
Bonded Public Warehouse,
8to rags tor Household Furniture,
Merchandise, etq. H. W. Nigel, Mm
PEOPLE having rooms sad apart-
ments to rant should list them with
the Dally Record. We have calls nearly
every dayv •
Its. Stone has packed
» and gcoe. She left
1 things! Left a let-
the receiver slipping
toed fingers. Why, it
true; it mustn’t be
gh the glao* window
» booth door he saw
him!
For a moment this sense of bit-
ter rage and contempt dominated
all other thoughts and emotions in
him. The sduse of being cheated,
not only once, but consistently for
while in 192$ it reached
F. D. Hambly, resident piano tuner.
Representative of Thos. Goggan &
Bros., of San Antonio. Normana Thea-
tre BMg. *•— -
daps, weeks, months, years, made
him long to turn on both Molly and
John Perry and blast them with
scorn.
He recalled the countless times
he had overlooked Molly's petulant
moods, selfish* caprices and savage
outbursts of anger, always believ-
ing that aj^e was loyal and fine un-
POSTED
Positively no hunting or trespass-
ing on Mr*. Irvin Wallis Farm.
derneath. -
Now, suddenly, his thoughts turn-
ed to Junior, and he read on:
“I waa going to leave the
baby, but he woke up as I was
leaving. He held out his arms ,
to me and, after all, he la more
mine Sun yours.
“MOLLY."
Al ran to the nursery. The dress-
er drawers had been pulled out and
there were evidences of hasty pack-
ing all about Borne of Junior's
toys lay scattered about the fioor,*
among them his favorite, a woolly
dog. His pillow had been thrown
POSTED
My place near the BucheJ School
house is posted and trespassers will
be prosecuted. Please keep out.
J. H. Blank.
Theatre of Future
Must Provide Better
Poetry and Music
until I come home. I’ll
at uncanny pause, and
y; Mrs. gume took Jun-
d himself for a last «f-
be right home. Then he
M receiver limply and
*p the ’phone booth door,
racing crowd had over
floor and was Jammed
row fioor space against
Their bodies held it
tod, as they swayed back
staging, crooning, danc-
kardtr moving in their
| gamed at the* helpleee-
as if these carefree rev-
Christmas Plane Club Open
Come In and let us tell you about
Joining. We deliver your piano on
Dec. 24th, and the payment plan is
so easy you won’t miss the mopfey.
Twelve world-standard makes to se-
lect from. Thos. Goggan A Bros., of
San Antonio. Normana Theatre Bldg.,
(adv)
LOS ANGEGLES—(!«>— The com-
mercial theatre cannot be depended
upon to bring about the cultural de-
velopment in the drama to which de-
votees of the art look forward, ac-
cording to Reginald Pole, actor and
dramatist, in address to several hun-
dred summer students in the Uni-
versity of Oadifornlaat Los Angeles
session.
Pole, who is now associated with
Lawrence Tibbets of the Metropoli-
tan opera in creating a new type of
dramatic production, is recognized as
tocJlSdJ <U*ed' *rlpplQ* foot-
Mollp taken hls'boy? ' ^
tvr a moment Al was possessed
hf th* Esfifl I nation to find Molly
and JucSor tonight—then he real-
ised that the plan waa futile, {a
this city of seven million persons
and countless skyscraper hotels
Molly and John Perry could have
difeultyttk>r’ hiding swap without
After thatmote Al did not doubt
that Barry Mas with MoUy. Per-
haps even now they were speeding
toward Boston in Many's Rolls-
Royce, or they might havo caught
tho might limited for Florida sev-
oral hours ago. Ho went quickly
to tho ’phone and called up the
timos a burned out 1mm* wws ami replaced hr vedi
cause then waan’t a spate and became **I Just coi
remember when ! was downtown." * % ‘
II you pie mot already using spare la sip* la
borne, today would be a good tiara to pet a cartes
Plano Room, Cuero.
OIL PRICES ADVANCE .
PITTSBURGH, Oct. 13,—(IBS}—
Prices of all Pennsylvania grades of
oil were marked up 10 cents per bar-
rel today, ie was announced by the
Joseph Seep agency purchasers for
the Standard Oil Company.
breakage. Bdiaeu Maxda laaipa arc packe
cartons—six lamps to the carton. And th<
frosted kuEps . . . frosted on the inside t<
light that |g so c*sy dh the eyes, sarapth
to make tke« aasily cleaned ... the ultima!
bent the door open with
move. Just as the lights,
been dimmed, went on,
isle stopped. The sirens
ire still proclaiming the
9d over on* another sad
i their hilarity. Bat ha
sard nothing. He moved
V tut quietly through
No matter what you may want in the Music line, we sup-
ply your wants with new Pianos, used Pianos, Victor
Vietrclas* Victor Orthophonics and Victor Portables with
stands. Violins, Guitars, Accordeons, Music Stands,
Music Rolls, and Satchels, Violin Cases. Latest Sheet
Music and Phonograph Records.
Ask for terms: on Pianos and Victrolaa.
tit our Special October Offer
Edison Mazda Lamps. T
Ask say of our employes
Central PowiR anB Light
Arthur Lange, Manager
Phone 230
■II )];; (J
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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/m1/3/: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cuero Public Library.