The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 38, No. 227, Ed. 1 Friday, September 23, 1932 Page: 2 of 6
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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FRIDAY,
THE CUERO, RECORD, CUERO, TEXAS
Breaks Silence—With a
Climber Scales Mt Cream
RANDOLPH. N. H. (UP*—4
Peck, 81, (f New York, who ga
lame back in 1808 by Malta
Peruvian knountain nearly
mies high, recently climbed to
3.380-foot summit of Mt. Cre#
Paris Cop’s Kiss Halts
Busy City Traffic
PARIS. Sept. 23— tU P A kiss
that paralyzed traffic In the heart
' cf the downtown section of Paris
, was administered by a petite Paris-
: ierrne to a very stern looking “cop'
; directing vehicle^ and pedestrians
in the square hi front of the opera
The charming lady, in a pretty
frock and a perky hat. started out
as If to jay-walk, beading direct-
ly for the minion of the law.
When she reached her destina-
i tion. she rose on tiptoe, smiled and
puckered her pink lips. Traffic halt-
THE NEW THATCHES* COLT DETECTIVE MYSTERY
\ by ANTHONY ABBOT
The price Is right for Ml
Minstrels, (tarn. lOc and 25c.
served seals.
CHAPTER THIRTY-NINE
body, chopped in seven pieces, had
bee* found la a baker’s wagon on
Tfetod Avenue. From this macabre
note, Colt turned to smile at the ac-.
~0Qfit of What happened to a young
tit# York university student while
ca t *adk through Central Park. A
m stopped by* in whieh three good-
looking girls were riding. They en-
ticed him into their car and drove
off with him. Hours later he was
lieeovefed stamfaftng along through
a deserted path that wound at last
nto the lights of Long Island’s
Ifarridk Road. Be had been crim-
inally assaulted by these amorous.
Aaarssaa. Up to a late hour no
traas of Ida captors had been found.
A asm of peawy-weighting of ex-
penai vo yawp Is was reported from
site 0i the waparteat fifth Avenue
pOthn, Johnny Silvers, the felon
who had escaped from Sing Sing
4WWl months before, had at last
baM loratad. Be had allowed bira-
tm to he as mated as a vagrant in
a Saadi Georgia town, and had thus
taftt toMr Ridden in a small
diagonally to the opposite curb
The hero of the episode blew a loud
blast on hfs traffic whistle, drew his
face into stem lines and yelled out
“Get a move on. there: hurry upr”
I am opening ' an
Studio, early part of
tober. Those desiring
stn rctlon tn Dm
Painting. Sketching,
see me.
State Employs 5.880 on Heads
Salem. Ore. <ETP>— Nearly 5 000
men are employed on Oregon
Baldock reported. Approximately
4.260 of them are working on state
jot*, and the remainder on federal
Tooting ms horn as iooc. as anyone else, former Governor J\ Ifrv<i E.
Smith, of New York, is shown a? he entered into the spir t o3' fie thing
at Coney Island’s Mardi Gras, it was Fireman's N:gi»t, whi-J:* accounts
for AJ’s chapeau. Though stifi silent on hi- intentions regarding* he com-
ing Presidential campaign, the “ilaopy Warrior” made plenty rot noise
ition of “Ma”
of the state,
jHtbtll totie m he had not written
a letter to his sweetheart in Brook-
tys. Tito pefiee Had never stopped
■lauiHwg httf Hay got the letter
first and Silvers had been in the
feto-qu Jfcat Morning. Apparently
fftoM was a fftsk epidemic of ho-
wl ttiffrea operating la Brooklyn
aid Colt atodc a special natation
•» gat PVan busy on that as soon
ttl the OOOfptoa murder eases were
I was grabbing hat and coat, ready to dash, when Cant .tin Israel Henry
laid a thick envelope on the Cot)mis*iiyaer'!i dash.
With this, my wife agrees.' in prin
dple.
Hastily Cotf spread Otrt the tele
typed sheets. The report was mode
entirely in English, and consistet
' <rf a personal message from W
Dupont, the Prefect of the Pan
sian Police, to Thatcher CoIL
“I have made a complete survej
<rf the history of Basil Boucher.'
cabled M. Dupont “It is certan
that the woman he loved was Lois
iCarewe. the woman whose murdet
you are investigating. I have made
exhaustive inquiries to establish
CMC fast ft la also certain that «r
to the time he met Lola Cz^ewe
who lived alone in the Rue Bonw
parte, this yomg aunt's was an ex
Smplary life. He lived with his par
ents hr the Rue do Temple, sot
from the Stqmasa.- Head was a tea*
clerk who was even able to savt
money out of hit meagre salary
1 in addition to providing for his
father sod mother. They wore **»
perfor people, and welj ..educated
hot they Mw come fiiei In the
world. Then the fattier died It war
Soon after this—possibly because
now he had more money to spend
that BaaM began te ptay ia Mt
life. In fact, the young gentleman
found himself for Che first time In
funds. Be was got a want vet. *
gambler, or anything like that. But
, he just went around having a good
time, modestly, and with gusto
i There were eavexal nymphes de Vo
r pave with whom he became rathe i
well acquainted. He feh that m
1 one of his friends or business aa
soeiates was aware Of these minis
, ture adventures. And he felt taiiv
! self something of a devil of a fa)
“Ye® must have hopes of clean-
teg the arartdem wp pretty soon,” I
remarked, as f and that penciled
Check and 1
Double-Check
ty-eigtrt hmrrs. What will the
charming Betty Canfield Abbot
think of me, if 1 keep you o» the
go like this? I stele you from her
New Year’s party last night and I
base kept you here over since. Call
her up now and tell her that yon
are coming home.”
The chief looked at bis watch.
“But you will have to be back
here by eight this evening,^ he
-c i '
sripuiarea.
t was grubbing hat and coat,
ready to dash, when Captors Israel
Henry, the faithful, the ettedf ~
and lard '» thick envelope on .the
Ivery bust of Homer that is always
“3 de,**fie taftnmsed me. “There
te only one thing needed to set us
on the right track and I believe we
shall have that in out hands in a
few hour* at tfte latest, f know
no# that this ia trot art original
crime, Tony.*
“1 have heard you say that you
So tat believe there is such a thing
mm slm ril
W.H,
Juhtriue 1 was right. Anyway, I
hate just miwwagjeml the Falk
eagff te W»nna* There us a swr-
fbom stewed a# the sleeve of a no-
I couldn’t leave then. I knew ho#
important the Pari* information
about Lola Carewe seemed to Colt
True, 1 could not see why. Thie waa
ft may be a ease of
taftariiy—like the
liana that duplicate
nauatly received is
r like the Evers case
Cteyrtftn i9>i.
irSuc of “Moose Magazine.” “It te
wonderful to be young today* he
Writes. “Shame on the person who
cays that opportunity is dead! The
world te celling for jtrat tech young
Americans as were graduated from
cur schools last June. In every
quarter of the globe you will find
cur young men and women concern-
ed With the progress of humanity,
whether it be in an industrial and
economic way, or for the betterment
of aodial conditions. Already the
world te weary of depression and is
beginning to discard old methods
and call for new. In this awaken-
ing there will come greater oppor-
tunity than ever before.”
Vm Battle With Bull
Another Texan Finds
| Health In Yeast, Iron
! And Copper Treatment
tend the lot.
'. Tfed grubbed a pitchfork, parried
With the bull, sidestepped and final-
ly chased it ant eg the lot. The next
day George WUkerson reported tc
thr water attorney that someone
hnd MM Ms bull. It was found
dond te Mi pasture
The new yeast vitamins, iron and
copper treatment, Thor’s Vitamin
Ccmoound, has become the talk erf
the drug trade throughout Texas;
benefits re-
Help yourself to a sample of Humble’s “double-
cbecked” service. And, if you care to comment
about it (either way), you’ll find a stamped post
card in the wash room—or any Humble man will
gladly £fve you one.
Here’s the way we built our service. First, we
made the products right Second, we made it con-
venient and pleasant for you to get them. Third,
we check our service constantly. Fourth, we
“double-checked” with the public to make sure
we were right... and we were right. Find out for
yourself. Gome in and give us the^double-check."
Co*, ]«S. TIM ffamMr On * Ktfir.in* Co
and the remarkable
csived from the new treatment have
, made It the biggest seller cf its kind
! everywhere it has been introduced.
| Illustrative of the astonishing re-
sults accomplished by the new
preparation is the statement of F
R. Doughtrey. well-known. Beau-
mont citizen residing at 2300 Avenue
D. who said:
“What the new treatment did for
me Is little short of marvelous end
| I'm glad to tell others about it. Mt
I condition wa’s so weak and rundown
that I didn’t seem able to digest
I even the lightest kind Of food
, Everything I ate would repeat as
: sour as vinegar. I had a terrible
i burning in my stomach and red
splotches would break out all over
my body. Sometimes I'd bloat so
bad I’d have to walk the floor to what it did for me. just write, or
get my breath. I could get but lit- drop around to see me "
tie sound sleep and felt so weak I Thor's Vitamin Compound of
could hardly pull myself out of bed yeast vitamins, iron and ccpper is
____________________ I “Other medicines didn't seem to sold by Reuse' Drug Store and all
M SEN. JAMES J. DAVIS have the desired effect in my case good druggists for only fifty esnts
if. -— - but thus yeast vitamins. iron and i on the positive guarantee that your
The tot-repeated cry that youtn copper treatment put me squarely money will be cheerfully refunded if
•f hd» f«w opportunities today Is back on my, feet in two weeks time.1 Y°u do not show a gratifying ian-
♦ scouted hy Senator James J. Davis I’ve never se^n anything Tike It. and | provement in one week. Thor Phar-
pf Penury!ratlin, witting In the July I if anybody wants to know personally macal Co., Dept. P-5, Atlanta, Qa.
of bays
HOUSTON:
/ always get bang up
MISSION:
Like the Attitude of yam
ployees. /. H. /*.
F. K. DOl’GHTKEY
SERVICE YOUR
CAR WITH
fl|pl
rir.tf.
M
■PP -
UPUK
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Howerton, J. C. The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 38, No. 227, Ed. 1 Friday, September 23, 1932, newspaper, September 23, 1932; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth999943/m1/2/?rotate=90: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cuero Public Library.