The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 70, No. 116, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 16, 1929 Page: 2 of 8
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THURSDAY,
THE CUERO RECORD, CUERO, TEXAS
Michigan Student
Passes Glilor Tests
ANN ARPOR,. Mich—(INS>—Mil-
ton F. Stoughton of Portland, Me.,
a senior in the engineering college
a blessing in disguise. If th$ Gann-
Longworth feud keeps a few of our
solons at home of an evening, per-
haps they will be able to t get some
constructive work done at Wash-
ington. That is what their constitu-
ents send them there fore. The sen-
ate of the. United States has a hab-
it of meeting at noon of a work-
day. "Why? Because most? of
members have been dining out the
evening before and probably have
eaten too much.
This social war of the roses will
probably go merrily on through the
years of the present administration
and inipel President-Hoover, in the
inmost recesses of the White House
to testily exclaim: “A plague o'
both yourjiouses.” But those dear,
delightful women who set the
Look Out Mister Moon
m (except Saturday) and Sunday morning by
CUf*Q PUBLISHING CO.
as second class matter
h 3. 1887.
of the University of Michigan, was
the first student pilot in the coun-
its i try to pass the go vermnent.'* glider
tests.
Stoughton is a member erf tlvg
University Aeronautical soctirfy,
glider division, and took an aettve
part in trial glider flights ' Ust
____Editmc-Publisber
____________ City Editor
....... Associate Editor
Advertising Manager
LAS* HAY
JEANNE EAGLES
;p, Philadelphia
Winter. He obtained his license’a
few days before a grrptp of students
at the University of California met
the government requirements, r
! year 15.00, six months
nmntti 50c.
Roy Leavitt Will Sc^k
New Airplane Record
OMAHA, Neb.—(IN$)—An attefipt
to break the world’s record for sus-
tained flight • without refueling Will
be made soon in Omaha, according
to Roy Leavitt of Council Bluffs.
Dan Hunter, operator of the
Chamber of Commerce airport of
Cedar Rapids, la., and Leavitt Will
be the . pilots to attempt to break
thep resent record of 64,hours held
by Captain George HaldepufB %nd
Eddie Stinson- .' ,
Michigan hfan May
Lose Leg Doesn’t Mind
obil|e dealer who ^‘stands behind
old not have ltfueh luck selling n
IONIA, Mich.—<MS>—A little
thing like having a leg cut off is
not enough to greatly worry Poster
Baker. 35. an Icnia mail truck driv-
er. FJteen minutes after he had
been run ever and his leg amputat-
ed when he attempted to crank his
car while it was m gear. Foster was
able to go to bis borne nursing
~kin Abrasions rather than his am-
putated leg. The lag was artificial
ARCH
> a'cfi y ttlfcjr keep the doctor away, but
interested inmost oqw is a car load of to-
% to ttSke the £Aym*St£r keep calling with
e numbfcr of incident* in which}
their wives’ rooms, we may reas-
the world is probably safe for
j*. s^Ul. foie* daftgfft for husbands
Government figures sficrv the gain pf Lhekv
greater than the combined increase, of 4u otfa
The pnbfic will be served and this is proofc
H GterawRpopi?
Germany could pay her
ar wit to think up that
} but’gater they#would
regardless of price, yoii actually get more in
than any other cigarette can offer. Its perfect trad
tobaccos giye» piffp smoking delight. Ifs exclgaiy
testing prpcew guarantees the toljarros free from
and impurities and, in the opinion of 20,679* ph
^ i v a n. 1 • .t* _■» J d
been % bit iloF apd dra*py
ieb induced some of the real
& drop- in cattle prices is
fellows wftti the real judgment
ahd jb §ltpad buying the cattle
By DOBOTHY HERZOG
Copyright, 1920, Premier Syndicate
HOLLYWOOD.—In a-small stu- ,
dio cn Sunset Blvd. a lad named :
Jimmy Cruze is getting set" for big
doings. j'!
Jimmy has his own flick outfitj
and it looks the T. N. T. Next week' ]
(SIGNED)
trivial beginnings. As
on the subject of give
it, but if we had this
ie would prefer to be
sees him begin grinding ’The Great
Garbo,” with Erich Von Stroheim
the big shot. Von is pepped over the
part. When it was read to him he
commented simply: “That’s Von
Stroheim.”
f * *' A
So he returns tor the grease paint.
It wouldn't be surprising if he re-
turned to direction under the Cruze
banner, or in collaboration with an-
other meganphoner. That may list-
en -absurd, particularly in view of
“Queen Kelly," his current $750,000
effort being on the Patbe shelf. But
it isn’t.
HI offer two to one odds as high
as a five dollar bet that Charlie
Chaplin becomes affiliated with the
independent Cruze group. Charlie
$ras enthusiastic over the role Von
Stroheim is going to play in “The
Great Garbo.” And not only be-,
cause he was offered a million dol-
lars to portray it. He turned it
down for two reasons. His own of-
fering. "City Lights." will be all
silent. It will not be released before
Cruzes cinema. It will approximate
an expenditure. If he had made a
taBcy It might have jeopardized his
comedy and its financial invest-
ment. Furthermore, by the time he
paid his income tax on a minion
dollar salary he'd have enough left
—with a of luck—to purchase
an ice cream soc^a at bargain rates.
Chaplin has been heard to say he
is disinterested in the prospective
“Those Dear. Delightful Ladies"
They are at it again in Washing-
ton, the feminine members of opr
Ajneriean aristocracy. War has
broken forth anew and is raging on
all fronts, and most of the mere
males within range will no doubt
soon be diving hastily into shell-
proof dugouts. The great, the burn-
ing. issue of tho hour seems to be
just where Mrs. Edward Everett
Gann is supposed to sit when offi-
cial Washington eats.4>
Complications, yes. indeed. Sec-
retary of State Stimson. no doubt
chuckled to himself when he
smartly passed the buck to the dip-
lomatic corps at Washington. At
Senor Davilla's dinner Mrs. Gann
sat proudly on his right. A brief
and passing glory, say her enepiies,
now headed by Alice Roosevelt
Longwoftb. Dinner engagements
are being refused now in our capi-
tal because the wives of supreme
court justices ant} senators and
lesser lights do npt favor Mrs.
Gann’s position of perilous emi-
nence at the right hand of her
host.
Now thi3 sort of thing may prove
«u on delinquent tax-
d a have tha average of de-
it taxes <m personal
fait cpqiitjr will have to
<f#P»al property jrift be put of the
Mrik' delinquent taxes on real estate
srxU some day bare to meet the tax
the hart taxes, and in addition
* *#**?&•• te ffet it doesn't
f U> P*r»it Ms taxis to heroine de-
mMMr borrow the money to pay
*e» par cent to »»ke the
*rt tho* php keep down* their de-
No throat Irritation
Ho Court . .
CHARLIE CHAPLIN
merging of United Artists with
Warner Bros. That when this trans-
pires he will consider himself a free
agent What more logical man to
“independenize” wit® Jimmy
Cruze? '
Cruze. in his way, is a lone wolf.
Hfe works best when he Isn't inter-
fered with. Months ago he headed
his own outfit. It failed because of
an involved mechanism known as
organization. Cruse benefited by
rtMHNfr :•* c<m?*y 70*4 db-
og fad tKte bonded indebtedness is
Ifea’MWK eui down its
Ah -origfnsi. amount votp*l to $113,-
ijgLf has paid off m«00, or teh
now owes $270,000,
of its $sb,-
♦Jlba aaly $86,{HKi. As the bonds
9 available to pay them off and it
1 oa thp qV system by which money
c bank While the maturity days
tfee principal amounts gradually
tax rata Will automatically come
To maintain a
slpndpr %pre,
no one can
- * * *•.
deny the truth
of the adyice:
"REACH FOR A
LUCKY INSTEAD
OF A SWEET.”
SENIOR H.S. AUDITORIUM
be pretty g4*4 news for $he taxpayers
TUESDAY
NIGHT
MAY
THE SMALL LEAKS
The small Stuns that somehow or other are spent so heed-
lessly aggregate a very considerable amount in the course of a year.
A small Speeia| Account added to occasionally runs into
real money in a very short time.
WHO WON
THE WAR?1
A 3 Act Drama
showing life on the front
with the A. E. F,
Farmers State Bank & Trust Co
“Service That Please#”
- Presented by
DINTER POST NO. 3
AMERICAN LEGION
FUNERAL DIRECTOR
AND MORTICIAN
E. J FREUND
SEATS ON SALE
Saturday at Buttery’s
Admission 50c
Reserved Seats 25c Extra.
>. -UkAy
—1^.
HE NNEKE’S CAFE
Special Sunday Plate Lunch 50c
Every Wednesday Cowboy Stew
’ Every Saturday Real Barbecue
! -%♦ ~v« r»- ’ av
:
.0,
pGecfcwiyc
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Howerton, J. C. The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 70, No. 116, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 16, 1929, newspaper, May 16, 1929; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth999736/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cuero Public Library.