The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 38, No. 227, Ed. 1 Friday, September 23, 1932 Page: 3 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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I
THE CUERO, RECORD, CUERO, TEXAS
FRIDAY,
SIMPLE LIFE
HARD WORK IS
RUTH’S RECIPE
turning material, the Steen*
well h fcve all they can handle'#:
least two quarters. With the
oftens ve system still a bit *1
and ragged around the edgn,
Longhorns are not expected to
on ai$r spectacular exhibition
urday and will depend man
man-power to wear down the
RECORD SPORTS
Simplicity Rules Her Life
Former Follies Beauty, Movie
Queen and Star ef Chester-
field Radio Programs Shuns
Cocktail Parties and
Late Hours
Sport Lights Of California
--- By HARDIN BURNLEY -
■gbros spoilt stars
, funior College
i Gets Underway
• Tonight
aria Junior college Pl-
ot tie strongest junior
[ ‘aggregations assembled
ion Of the state m many
toad r this afternoon for
Dg tt t of the season with
rtUlery eleven frofh San
Jfield’s first-string be
a question mark. Hi
d and Ernie Koy, |
men. are settled Ini
nr posts, with Hank
an edge in the quart
rer Ronald Pagan'
r Bankhead. Osborn t
ind sophomore back, i%
best form of any of tin
while running tn Kcij
fullback, and he mi{
to right half. He is a
FOXX SOCKS TWO
Two home runs, number 55 and
number 56, by Jimmy Foxx. Ath-
letic slugger deluxe, one which
found the bags groggy and a sec-
ond with one man aboard, were not
enough to win for the Philadelphia
Athletics over the American League
champion Yankees, New York com-
ing from behind to win 8 to 7.
Foxx’s two homers gave him a tie
with Hack Wilson for second place
among the major league home run
hitters of ail times and .advanced
him to within four homers of Babe
Ruth’s great record of 60 homers in
1927.
Lefty Gomez, Yankee ace, was
driven from the mound in the fifth
frame.
| is still
| Staffoj
! ferencj
I the it
; holdini
1 race c
I CharU
1200 po
> ing thi
comen
sition.
Former “Follies Beauty", screen
favorite and nationally famous star
of Chesterfield's Music That Satis-
, fies Hour. Miss Ruth Etting. leads
i a comparatively retired life. Cock-
tail parties and late hours have no
With her hus-
SUMAiy CAUFOC2MlA'W&
attraction for her
band, known along Broadway as
"Colonel” Snyder, who also is her
manager, she seems perfectly con-
tent with week-end trips to seme
quiet resort, or answering her large
fan mail, or selecting the songs for
Chesterfield radio programs.
Miss Etting selects her songs with
the greatest thought and care. With
her it is not just a question of what
songs she likes, but which ones are
best suited for her voice and es-
pecially for the mood of the pro-
i gram. Of course she attends all re-
! hearisals at the studio, but she re-
hearses daily in her apartment with
her accompanist. No actress or sing-
er ever took her work more serious-
ly than Miss Etting from the place-
ment of the microphone to her six
hours of private rehearsal a week
for her two fifteen minute Chester-
field broadcasts.
But to get back to Mis£ Etting's
mode of life. She usually retires
early, whoopee parties do not play
any part in her life; she enjoys the
theatre and likes to entertain her
friends on motor trips, dinner part-
ies and frequently at “first nights'
at the theater.
She has two hobbies—one read-
ing and answering fan mail and the her duty
other collecting the curios and other thetically
gifts that her admirer's send her point out
This latter interest has turned her ; the stage
apartment into a miniature museum tist.
where every gift, from ornately em-' For a f
broidered silk pajamas to some Etting’s S
simple cooking utensil, has its own generally
special place for display and each With her
one is carefully numbered and coupled a
dated, with its history attached to living am
i Hilliard, the highly-
ick.from Schreiner Ii
t in the best of healt
orted and conseqael
l bit slow rounding
Steer coaches are not
owever, for the Ord
ready flashed enough
know he will be read
tth, the powerful
Vte eleven will in -
camp far another
pe is also . to be
and should draw a
Cuero fans.
1st, the Seguin Lu-
ilege eleven, will be
i go at the Pirates,
aas also to be a fast
m&mm
* *r ^
PIRATES BLANK CUBS
The Pittsburgh Pirates made it
three in a row over the Rational
League champions, the Chicago
Cubs, Thursday by handing the
Cubs a 7 to 0 defeat. Hal Smith,
youngster purchased from Kansas
City, allowed the Cubs but six hits.
His teammates pounded Grimes
hard to score 5 runs in the third,
one in the fifth and (me in the
sixth. /} v.*
Paul Waner, Pittsburgh center
fielder, blasted his fifty ninth two
bagger for the year in the sixth,
thus tying Chuck Klein's National
league record. Wtoer added a t»*r
of singles to the Pittsburgh attack.
Jimmie Burr, punter-dd>
the Steer outfit, is still in 1
and regardless of whether
a starting berth he will b<
plenty when a dependable j
needed
Iv.v.v
GteEAT
GOLFERS
FIZOM
SANTA
rAOAJICA,
WHO UJOAJ
THE RS A-
title: in
BRILLIANT
style:/ M
her fans, who are legion, and she Chesterfield^ Music
DISTRESS i
Relieved By
California, land of ’sunshine and
super-athletes, can count this year
of 1932 a banner one insofar as its
athletic prestige is concerned
There was the Olympics in August i
in which its stalwart sons and
daughters performed brilliantly, and
right now its “big three" of the
gridiron, Southern California
Stanford and California, are on the
way to new laurels on the football
field. But today we are going to
talk about three Californians who
have performed exceptionally in
three different lines of sports en-
deavor.
There’s that towering senor ctf
Santa Monica, Otar Dutiit, who
wears the crown of professional
goifdom. Dutra rushed along a par-
busting trail which began at his-
toric Lido, in New York, to win the
Metropolitan, the North Shore, Chi-
cago, and the P. G. A. champion-
ships. In three weeks the hand-
some senor played exactly 304 holes
in 31 shots under parj There’s a rec-
ord for you golfers to shoot at.
in the P. G. A. at St. Paul he
held his sub-par form for six con-
secutive days, fishing 196 holes of.
competitive play against the:
world’s best 'shot makers in nineteen j
strokes under perfect figures. It was
one of the most remarkable records
oi consistent play in the „ game’s
long history. In addition C^in had
a shining light in the annual trek
of the pro golfers this winter.
Then there’s pretty Alice Marble,
of San Francisco, who won such
•plendid recognition for her bril-
liant tennis in the recent Women’s
Championship at Forest Hills. She
has a sound game, good strokes and
needs only experience to shine
along with those other brilliant
California stars of the court, Mrs.
Helen Wills Moody and .Helen
Jacobs, this year’s champion.
Last but not least of this great
Livermore,
WHO'LL IT BE
Opinion is varied regarding the
outcome of the 1932 World Series
hilt at the present time the New
York Yankees seem to have the
slight edge. ' •
Lack of a good southpaw hurler
is worrying the Chicago Cubs. Root,
Malone. BuCsh. Warnecke. Grimes,
all right handers, must bear the
Cub hurling burden this year. Its
unusual that there are no out-
standing left handers on the Cub
■toe.
Mew York has its Lefty Gomez
slightly erratic at times, but yet a
great hurler. Gomez has won twenty
i four games this year against seven
I defeats. Seven of hts wins were
chalked up against the slugging
Philadelphia Athletics. HeiT> Pen-
nock, another left hander, will be
on tiie mound for the Yanks this
i year. Pennock has won games in five
trio is Maxie Baer, or
who has crashed the very heifbMj
of pugilism. Maxie has been uuu|
for a few years turning In sensa*
tional battles and also some others
which were not so much. But right
now Baer is ranked Number 2 man
among the heavyweight contenders
for Jack Sharkeys title. And it is
all due to his great victory over
Ernie Schaaff ha Chicago recently.
Max, undoubtedly at the peak of his
form knocked the sturdy Schaff
colder thaa the bathroom, flow, as
“Bugs” Baer would say. But it
happened Just two seconds befdre
the final bell and Max was robbed
of a knockout victory. Anyway, it
was a glorious win for Baer 'and
immediately pushed hm into posi-
tion where he will have to be con-
sidered when Sharkey starts looking
around for an opponent to co-star
with his in a championship boi£.
world series for the Yanks.
^ to Warnecke however, the Cubs
have a hurler who can match wits
and skin with any fltager on the
Yankee team. Warnecke, brilliant
young hurler, has won twenty two
games'and lost six. He - win be
matched wjth Johnny Allen, sen-
sational young Yankee right hand-
er who has wan 17 and last 3.
Hurling will have a great deal to
do with the 1932 series. The club
gating the breaks ie going to be
lucky.
Relieve Constipation, Indigestior
Sour Stomach. Colds and Bilious
nets. For safe by your DreggisL
Newman’s Cleaning SPECIAL.
This week combination: One Dress
and one suit. 75c. two suits, 75c,
two dresses 75c, single sqit, 50c.
single dress 50c. Above prices for
cash only. All work guaranteed
Called for and delivered. Ph. 462.
FOR RENT—5-ROOM HOUSE
on Morgan Ave. opposite Kuester's
store. Recently renovated inside
and out. Cheap rent.
T. J. Kennedy, Phone 267.
YOUNG FOLKS. LET’S GET
TOGETHER!
We have a $75.00
Scholarship to
j the Byrne Commercial College. It is
' V ro r\ P f Vn 1 A n n jJ ■ ■ ■ t IS _ _ _ 1 J
transferable and will be accepted
as a credit on any course offered. It
can be bought at a SPECIAL CASH
PRICE or.part down and balance
easy term’s.
We have the Scholarship and need
the money. You need the Education
Let us help you get it. See the
Editor or write any one of the five
Byrne Colleges—Dallas— Houston—
Ft. Worth—Oklahoma City—San
Antonio.
FOR RENT—TOURIST COT-
tage, all modern conveniences. Tele-
phone 189.
Value
Williams
Mean* A Lot
To You
REWARD! For every 50 bread
wrappers from Pliskal's Bread we
will give onel bright steel bread
knife free. Pliskal’s Home Bakery
409 W. Main St., Phone 288—advt.
Wk lianas Paints
ecuuse they look
stand up better
try paints. Sold
teed by us for
Mos t well appearing
men have their clotlws
made to measure.
QKADt*s«
W4NTAD5
The “M” System Store will re-
main closed Saturday Sept 24
during the hour of the Nelson
Scheffler funeral.
Over 600 patterns to
choose from priced for
V7"OU would be astonished too, if you
■*- could see this machine that turns
out 730 Chesterfields h minute... and
every one as near perfect as cigarettes
can be made.
But please bear this in mind. It is
what happens before the tobacco goes
into this machine that matters most.
Rolling and packaging are important,
but not nearly as important as the
selection, blending and treatment of
the tobacco.
That’s why we keep telling yon about
the tobaccos used in Chesterfields.
They’re fine, mild, and pure tobaecoa.
We tell you about ageing and curing
the tobaccos ... about blending and
cross-blending them... because they
are things that count.
Chesterfields are milder. Hwy taste
better. Prove it for yourself...Just
TO RENDER A SERVICE CONSISTENT WITH SOUND
BANKING PRINCIPLES IS OUR DESIRE AT ALL TIMES
WE IN’MTE YOU TO CALL ON US
Farmers State Bank & Trust Co
"SERVICE THAT PLEASES"
Men’s Style Shop
Cleaners, Phone 310
THEY’RE MILDER
THEY TASTE BETTER
NOTICES
NOTICES
/ % , kT?$WV>'/Vv-/V. tv ,:Y. i\- iV. vY
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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/m1/3/?rotate=90: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cuero Public Library.