The Tri-Cities Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 245, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 16, 1933 Page: 4 of 4
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10 (UPl-
driving finish,
<rf the Univer-
the clasai*
mile Wednesday night,
Ma noted rival, Geoc|
ot the University of
vsnia, decieively , Venxk *
on the lent lap and finished
aa Cunningham broke th-
in 4 minute*, 12 second,,
fastest time of the indoor season.
, - I
E. Brown
Jakes Hash
Of Apple
KANSAS CITY, March 16 *U»
—Joe K. Hrown, massive-mouthed
movie comedian, had a hilarious
| visit here Wednesday in his new
role of part owner of the Kansas
City Blues of the American Assu-
HMMii , %'* x,' t
| "Where it this hall park!" said
Brown as he emerged from a train
with Tom MU, cowboy star. “I
own an interest and I want to in-
Cus(hin|rham,a victory topped off'apart my property.
a program marked otherwise by
a wwld indoor record pole vault
of M fart 1 1-4 inches by Keith
Yale sophomore, and Ern-
T°ppIno’s comeback .te n Un, though Br^w assured him mjUk>B bttd^ The auneater
jb tofnnph over Ralph Met- there would be no horses. . "l .vT "*•**•*
of Marquette, the nation11
champion in the 80 yard dub.
widely bnllyhooed ‘spin
a hollow victory for Bamoy Bar
Hnger, formay univanity of Bonn-
Lee Keytar, new president of
the Bluea, and Brown's old friend,
Tria Speaker, new manager of the
Blues, obliged. Mix went along,
Brown, once a professional, In-
sisted he was s good ball player
and with Mix took a ‘ftvorhout" at
aB-aroundtart, - resulted in the park in the spring suniWhe
MU did some citching an I
pitching, while Brown demonstrate
sUr, over Jim Banach. ed wlth s broken hrt how hs'"aaii
B*es City, the Olympic docath
Jen 'fad world record holdcr.l
fleuath.
, aggravating an old foot
knee injury by failing over
withdrew after going
lip M Hi ..........11
IMI—« won tha ftnt twit,
the shot put, by a narrow margin,
but trailed Beriingar in the next
four .contests and was far behind
in the point score when he drop-
ped out Barney continued ip n
*ii» iattompt to fc*#r the boat
prevUoa mark for this special test
ef spaed, skill end brawn.
IIABE AND HIS SALARY
The 2000 members of the Gold
Dust Lodge, New York sanctum
of the Salvation Army in New
York, can't gei together on the
amount of salary
should bn paid to Babe Ruth fill*
yatr.
According to the United Press,
answers would give Ruth a mil-
lion bucks, fifty cents an hour,
a thousand a homer, er nothing.
* One answer, probably from a
Boston Red Sox pitcher, wroth
“give him nothing and put him in
jail.” Tie other extreme WM the
Winning oil three games, the
Process team of the Baytown Rt
finery Howling League last nighi
defeated the Cracking Coils at the*
Tri-Cities Bowling Alleys, and the
Main Office quintet won from th.
Gaugers, two games to one. ^ . j
The scorn:
, PROCESS
Anderson 118 106
(Continued from Page One)
Beasley
Watkins
Tanner
Devine
Totals
187 149
182 129
184 161
798 706 8688 2284
COILS
166
186
187
114
163
c* mpanied hi. reason with the ar-
gument that it would be Jidte
Ruppert'a mliitss, emit like inn I AINUflT
idiuity mlUiona already, and owns *f«*®*'
Painter 146 174 144 464
I'cll) 127 111 110 849
Lowe 161 126 113 400
Caaey . 167 106 273
Cartoon 103 168 146 411
Williams 184 134
Totals 704 67$ 647 2040
MAIN OFFICE
HI M 178 4911 Tommy
SP0R15 PARADE
BY HENRY McLEMORK
NEW YORK, Mircb 16 <W»4 |
Putting the sports shot here and
there: Charley Gehringer*, a right|
good second basem Ji in any man's tive officer of the Security State
u M ■ Bank said today. *'Evr
league, dkinH. cost trank Navi.)
a penny when he came to D.troit
. . . Gehringer was found plu>imc
stmi-pro ball around Michigan,
his home state and the Tigers
signed him . . . shaking of Michi-
g n, tile University may have un-
other negro »tar to carry on the
tri.ditions of Dehart Hubbard and
Eddie Tolan ... He is Willia
Ward, who will lx* a regular end
on the v.rsity football team next
BANK DEPOSITS
THRICE AS BIG
AS WITHDRAWALSjftIZHT*M OT'
approximately 850 in seed -
been purchased. It was voted that
suggestions be made to tbc Wel-
fare League that applicants for
food and clothing, if they‘are phy-
the cbm-
Bank aaid today. "Evrything
went along fine and everyone was
happy. Our depohints more than
tripled the withdrawals.”
PASSAGE OF BEER
BUI IS ASSURED
(Continued from Page One)
and took options on additional
space. Hotels set aside lounges
""r’c!®" *•*»
Smith
those ha possesses no*. “It won’t ______
___he long," that Wrtk^lw^cpfm^liitaia
crown that old apple". H7^3% T^»T~'«r^i JiSFfer
one up against Ihe right ftoM f ^ *
fence, hit two again* ths score- Al^ at * nickel * gtosa—Whoois!’’
board and knocked the glove from T“c ®ver*K* price from amom?
beginning to dose their "hich H W**! cents less
181-188 269
162 143
186 120
126 133 182
172 477
161 407
best high-jumpers in the Midwest.
.'Paul De Give, goalie on tin
Harvard hockey team which wbn
the unofficial' intercoll-giate title
comes from Atlsnta, Ga., where
the only ice is cracked, fee ■
Connolly, American
League umpire-in-chief, has a
brother umpiring in the American
Association and a son, Francis.
enlarged the cooling compartments
of soda fountains. Salesmen of
all sort plagued brewers/
»< tta »«•;»«
„da (he decision to have Latham
appoint a sub-committoe from the
central committee to contact local
charitable organisations for .the
purpose of explaining that, if
these bodies ere requiring
expecting R> F. C. aaaistance, they
must be willing to accept sugges-
tions and Inatructiona from the
central committee concerning the
carrying out of the program, their
accounting methods and general
0tl%Ma°e»8ential, Snyder said,
because of the responsibilities
which rest upon the central com-
mittee concerning the distribution
ing of accurate recordrfor ultimate
ing of accurate records for ltwwtc
submission to the . county commit-
tee.
Under the refinancing
there were approxi mutely i
warrants due in March
of which was delayed ’
new plan.
Whiddon add today Mgjl
devised by the inveatmfl
puny, has been approved bv ,1
attorney, and that ail ,
the plan have been
Exchange of the ffo
can be made, and app
commission probably Will i
[tonight . . ' ■■]
The new series of Warrtabl
been printed, and probably Jr
•submitted to the coUpi--'
night to be passed on. I
Whiddon said that as far,
no other business j,.
R.F.C. FUNDS ARE ^ _
GIVEN TO CHARITY i-IS'&fer
Snvder reported there »-891
left fropi the original $2500 appli-
cation for January and February.
Present were H. T. Latham, J.
D. Giddings, T. L. J^MPper, J.
were C.
lmbwi,
to come before the meeting
(Otinued From Pafe One)
De Witt 97 183 141 371
Langham 162 184 161 469
Farrar 134 Hi 161 43:t
S iMSi
, Mr, Gopinath Dadoba Mintri of
Bombay, • India, holds the world’s
record for floor dipping . . . Mr.
of ^^oFkmen’s wStfwciir-Ha «aid
were beginning
cameras, this concluded the work-
out’ ■' ' ■" .....' • "
WEINGARTEN TO
MEET BAPTISTS
WORLD CAGE
TOURNEY SET|
__, Mmttt 16 ttTgr.
A keeketbell “world series” wi,l |
begin hue March 30 between the1
Tulsa Diamond Oitors, National
titltete, and the Wimu-
peg Toilers , Canadian amateur
campion*. W. H. (Little BHIl
Millar, Oiler manager announced
gftodkwday.
Tin first two games of a flvfi-
MHftgariaa will be played in
March 30 and 31. Subse-
s games necessary to estab-
artpertority ot the toco teems,
be played at Winnipeg, MU-
The Baytown Bmtist Sunday
school quintet, champions of the
Tri-Cities tonight at Robert E.
than Jake has offered Babe.’
-« WILL YOU? _
/Well, are you gclng to, or are
fou not? ....... ‘ '
That's the question bothering
Percy Wilburn, Fred Clark and
company anent the dance they aw
sponsoring for Tri-City Beach to
be held next Wednesday night.
They want to know if you, and
v ■■■■ .. .-rrjT?
KURZROKBEATS
BERKELEY BELL
5)EW YORK, March 16 (UP)—A
chunky, left handed physician, Dr.
Lawrence W. Kurxrok, took tiin-
off from his hospital duties Wed-
ncuday to trounee R, Berkeley Bell,
seeded No. 6, anti provide the n -
— you, are going to buy a ticket ij.tional indoor singles tennis cham- . .
Lae auditorium vrill megt^ the thc tUandar Waddie—as- H ir af-TTrionithin with the ftm upset. tbwl-|ager
fectionately known—so the 23
members of the 1932 football
team who got letters can hayo
sweaters,
The school board, you- know,
cannot buy the sweaters. And ____... _..._______, _ .
the lads and their parents, for -th* I fended in the quarter finals to be
each other. The first game will moat park are a* hard up as the,played today. , .
start at 7:30 p. m. rest of us. Mote so, perhapt,; Mangin mowed down, Albert
A charge of 10 and 20 cents from having to keep their boys Law Jr., New York, 6-2, 6-3, and
will be made to pay the expenses amj gjr)a [n school, and they can’t McCauliff won from George R
. .. a(ford jt ' Preston, New York, 3-6, 6-1, 6-1.
score was 6-3, 6-3.
Seven other seeded stars, rang-
ing all the way from Gregory S.
Mangin, defending title holder,
down through Dr. Eugene Mc-
Cauiiff, Yonkers, seeded eighth,
base for the Red Sox this year,
law Fonseca, White Sox boss,
rates squash as the best winter
conditioner, but Eddie Morgan of
ngarten aggregation of Hous-
ton, winner* of the lndustrin!
League.
A curtain rtiser will find the
Lube plant and Lab teams of tins,
inter-departmental league of th?
Baytown refinery pitted against
. v ■
Houston Trapshooter, One of Richest
of the Sunday school league. Any
money left over will lie turned
over to the Boy Scouts of tin
Tri-Cities.
Bill Ny.e will referee
Men in States Keeps Fact From News
HOUSTON, March 16 light, fie is one of the few rich
* ml' ><a * • <41 n.nn uihn its ni.Vitf UiOh
Mrny colorful stork* are told
about JS. F. Woodward, the Hoiui-
ton trapshooter now breaking into
sports page* on hi»> annual tour
of the Middle Wool gun club cir-
men who is never seen "heading
a movement".
Aside from a small group /of
arsociate* in the oil business, his
chief crony is C. W. Lin«M:»y. his
gunsmith. Woodward is often
: 'Approach!
Wmm#'
/ "hing hi*. 54th birtlulay,
,, ..is something of a mys*
man* On the range he ia|
given to rat-toil stogies and hum-
ble dress, Few persons k»<>» Is-
owns one of the largest fortunes
in H
htos*.« ,» genial and gemdww
* — ' ‘ detest* the spot-i
discussing the mysteries of gun-
powder. With Lindsay he invent-
ed the widely used , "ovcr-an l-
under” rifle.
When he isn't out blaring aw y
a? clay targets—and setting many
Ktw records—his dearest diversion
Sidney B. Wood, former Wim
b'ciion champion, tronneed Sidney
Scligson, New York, 6-2, 6-2, and
J, Gilbert Hall, Orange, HfMi,
New
And it doesn't seem hardly fair,
that the Ganders, who worked a--
bard a* any high school. in the
state, should be forced to go
without sweaters, .dfh'en the buy11 eliminated Ernest Koslan,
in the rest of the state have had! York, 6-3, 6-4.
theirs for months—just bocAw-'
there are so many of us who
might be termed tightwad)).
Cojae on, and buy the tickets.
Tj*y just cost a buck,
* •• * ■
AN ASSURED SUCCESS
The Houston Invitation tenniv
tournament to be held at swank-*
River 04b April 3 to 9, alreadv
SEEK GRID CONTEST
SAN ANTONIO, March 16 <U»
The University of T^xas-Ccnfen-
’"ary College football game will be
played here Oct. 21, if the ath-
letic councils of the two institu-
gunsmnn. ra msn - — • - --*.-
found in Lindsay's small shop > a,sured nf success.; mainly
lion* agree to temporary arrange-
ments made by representatives.
through the list of international j stopped.
others—and the l'irates can’t be
stsrs who have signed for partici-
pation.
George Lott, who last year
teamed with Ellsworth Vines Ir-
win the Houston double title:
Frankie Parker, the sensation *!
___^ _ _________________t ____ from New Orleans, and Wi!- And-so, he will have to gamble on
fnl of-intimutr friends, who know He is reputed to control mar? mer Allison, Davis cup star, have 4he abilities of Hal Smith and
In Houston ha has only a hand-' is hunting on hi* many preserves.
than lOO^lOO acres of wild coun-
tyy, ■ ——-
————
TRINITIES
1 BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL
DIRECTORY
-—----—
r ■
Cash Store
Cherry at Mala Stmt
.
Dr. W.E. Swanson
the Indiaa, tMriui tonms is . . • ^
* Every membv:«Mhe y,le b8S' 1
ketball team is a waiter in* the
school dining hall . . . which prob-
ably accounts for their fine reach
. . . Booby Walthour, Jr., is now
a part-time policeman at Arling-
ton, N. J., . v. , John Salveston,,
New York Gipnts recruit pitcher,
can run backwards faster than any
of the other members of the
squad can' run forward . . . The
Well, he’s good any- , first baseball club to leave its
home grounds for* spring training
was the Washington Senators who
were taken into Virginia by Man-
Mantri, -not so long ago, accofu-
plished 5,131 Indian dandas . or
floor dips,, in four tour* and
thirteen minutes. Don’t tell me
you don’t know what an Indian
dunda is!
Shanty Hogan, former Giant-
catcher, now wilh the Braves, Is
expert at’billiarito and bridge . . .
and Pete Jablonowski, rookie Yan-
kee pitcher, it angther ^ Pader-
ewski . •
way . . . Eddie (Collins Jhinks
Marty McManus too young to
manage a bail club from the
NUGULF 15c
LAST DAY! HURRY!
LsisiLLAUm-JillierjA]
*t. * —Jn—......
“Pack Up Your
Troubles”
Also Andy Clyde COMEDY
dor to gain speed on the bases,
Ty Cobb used to put lead in his
shoes in practice . , . and then
take it out for games.
DE-LUXE
KIDDIES ADULTS,
Independent 4,Aa
t)Cs Home Owned JKlgmw
1 P. M. to It P. M.
Last Times Today
Monte Blue
—In—
“Officer 13”
with MICKEY MctUHRE, JACKIE
SEALE i
__u __ ..-—Also— __......... „------
“TIIE HURRICANE EXPRESS”
Mickey Mouse Comedy
Always A Good Show
— ,—n—«—«■«» 1
George
ARL1SS
In
‘The King’s
Vacation’
Thirty
years o n;
the same
throne ,
and - then
the king
got sore!
Arcadia
Fltr. - SAT.
“SAILOR
BE GOOD”
with JACK
OAK IE-Vi vienne
- OSBORNE
FRIDAY - SATURDAY
70,000 People saw a man
killed, but none saw who did
ft, See this thriller.
Your guess is as good as
theirs.
PHILIP HOI,MBS
__ . -rrln—).......
”70,000 WITNESSES”
NOTICE
Beds, $1—springs,
Felly.
"ffirgAor
FOR SALE—Farms, hornet,]
age cheap for cash. **:
JONES & ATKINS -
; too? Mitfaftt Str
231-tfc.
FOR RENT
'for RENT. — Fouf-P
furnished apartments,
and convenient, $17.50, j|
paid, Martin addition.,
Herring Gulf camp,
FOR RENT.—3 room fe
ap irtment, private both.
. 404 Humble.
F OR RENT—Three room i
apartment . Water fan
707 N. Jones. Apply‘f
Texas, Tom Cr uiford.
T-E-X-A-N
2 Days Sti
FRIDAY)
Leopards! Lions! I’antb
Scores of Ferocious Anin
“NAGANi
■ty Ait hi
stock
house
ordance |
velt’s brie
ut delay
•7,-1
i be recor
senate '
i witf oMl
i drinking|
of April.
|for itself
I within ttsl
1*«.
:le Sam i
‘■Prince
[-vilely in
Uncle
bearWi
What our [
L” have not
[umble, but
nr to ex
(ill be very
|er cent alcohil
thankfully I
tired of
brew”
[h 1000 mor
ie, not tliat i
fence to us.
banks
I brandies,
land perhaps, t
[news. A
corks
andy
fmm
is started,
hear it to I
can countries|
[ failed, and 1
. while more
[ failed in the
hat Without al
ton. - |
Jtutjto Leak
ubbed by Ja
around”
surprise, probfti
States will sit
Gibson is a, fortunate map.
Just think of it, one worry. Ki<*
mer and Sewtonic, both formld- j
ibli fiiirtwn jn ihc pxt> wen; ttffir
much good to the club last year
and less ip expected this year,
that Vines will be irnluf ed to J make a comeback. Gibson topes.
enter the tourrrment again thi* > hr will,
year despite the fact that on hi.) < Other hurlers are Larry Freud,
return recntly from a tour of Au.s-: Leon Chagnon, Heinie Meine, Bid
tr lin, he expressed'the desire to Harris and Bill Swift.’
rest for several months. Ail ten* i y©*, it’s certainly fine thai
nised out, he said hewas* ‘Gibson has no other worry tha.i
DENTIST
Work Sunday by Appointment
•ZZ
than ebewkrtw, p « , j, . * t__j
- —_ K«a « Mnckland
IP* Grocery
& Market i l
A Red ft White Store '
BUT ONE WORRY
Skipper Georg? Gibson Of. t o
Pittsburgh Pirates, ha* but o,m
worry-^pitching, Given the break?-
there, he says—and so do many
■ Milas............
that Kremer’s and Swetonic’x
arms return to form, or that Smitn
and Birkofer live up to expects*
tionsror that Hoyt can make P.
back to what he used to be.
IS heVffl fixed?
Open Tepees of Indians Expected
To Be Big Help to Fort Worth Cats
L* %
FORT WOUt|L March jBjli*: Catchers Include Oscar Seimer,
—BtaebaU troops ,*M*te<l by Fort
ATTORNKYS-AT-LAW 1 Worth'club T*na^rt for th -. WashiniH/m
iBiw-uwi—*-, r l0”r‘" !«rr*
msm mu wum * piign began preliminary mane-
vers here March 14.
PHONE 848 COOSK CRKEI Battcrymen reported for train-
ing three days earlier, under th -
---------«f Walter Helke, tall.
u M PA..*___ blond, 206-pound field general made 43 runs, 11 j hlU and 173
W1- m, l\0t>ert80n Vho has promised Fort Worth a bases. Holke is anxious is sc?
REAL ESTATE—RENTALS “hustling ball club".
Holke has recruited men from
See My List Before You Buy the 1932 rosters of the Fort Worth
•Mart., and Tyler duba, and from the Ii-
Phone 167 197 So. Aahba) * ,’i*n*Poli* Indians. IndianapoF-y
Kerr Insurance
Agency
- BOND!
tepees were ope# to Holke through
- sale of ap interest in the Fore
Worth Cat franchise to Norman
Perry, genial millionaire owner of
the. Indians. , ,*
Among the pitchers at practice
are C. O. (Preacher) Thurman,
Dick Whitworth, Abe Miller, Har-
ry White, George Hcllerson, E. W.
Chambers and
East Texas farm youth who last
summer showed Tyler he could
hit a ball, also is in training. With-
out “hardly any training a-tsll”,
Washington went to b;t 323 times,
what ho can do with training.
FieWmen who are at practice in-
clude Alex Hooks, Harvey Ballew,
j opi M»r AM# for the infield. Art
McHenry, I, 0. Gilbert, Georg*
Loepp, J. R. Phelps, Rmsell
Sc rritt, Wallace Moses and Hart
Sullivan will be available for out-
field poets.
The Cats launch into a schedule
oj exhibition games after two
ks of^ trainMg at Mineral
Wells. The first game is slated
with the Dally. Steers here
Bigg,. March 26. » J . \
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Pendergraft, W. L. The Tri-Cities Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 245, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 16, 1933, newspaper, March 16, 1933; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1019259/m1/4/: accessed July 12, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.