The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 231, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 5, 1935 Page: 4 of 6
six pages : ill. ; page 18 x 13 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
TUESDAY, MARCH 5,
8PAY, MARCH S, 4935
im DAILY SUN
By Jack Sord*
B UT GOOD
CURL
Latest “Zep”
SUN SLANTS! s"
(<f\ bmgest rnpi<
Printing Company, 126 WestlB
Printing Company, 125 West Pearce
-ATtuH
[Httraer
READ TUI3 FIRST: , , - *
ConsiiCto, a beautiful gypsy Ml
who longs to donee with all the
world at her feet, is loved by the
Dummy, a deaf mute, and Marcu.
**■ - **— '-'eo, o#t
Marcu
Itiiiipia vw««wu -v-*- ■, -,—je
moud and she agrees to marry
Just as C„ —
ttrrg, mkUmehe left* Mat the
stgien, the sheriff appears. Be pro■
ceeds to haul the gypsies Into court
hut Consucto is no longer wearmc
the ring. When the fudge’s wile
and another woman search her, Com
suelo fights them savagely. Mean-
time Marcu comes Into the court-
ings|onjHidcompany, New York engineering
firm,'to construct a tunnef under the ship
:hannel which would open a more direct
route between Houston and the Tri-Cities
| jvercoraes tnany of the .objects to the
original plan.
However, there remains one serious
drawback. The company proposes to col-
; iectytolls for 26 y«wjK The titHhel WdpH
provide the ideal route for the proposed
state highway from Houston to Port Arthur
1 through this section, but it is doubtful
, whether the state highway department
would consent to route it through a tunnel
„„ tell. ArtlWtfVl /
fIMAM* JUHO «
Consuclo, a beautiful gypsy m
who longs to dance with all the
:bt matherne
deal mute, and Marcu.
„____mm *«r mother. A«4m |gj
is tond of her father, Qirtza.
, Enters « second class matter at the Goose
Creek, Texas, postoffice under the act of Congress
n Rates By Carrier: "7~
SUc Mnnth, Payable in Advatwe
W' ____.. .. j him.
Girtza" notices Con suelo’s
i UMasaaio-
i Ai1WH.fo Aii
Ctteotr — asa«
dom'd mi
6 By Mail: $5*00 Tear;
Week 10c; Month 40c
Feek 10c;Month 40c; Six Months $2.25; Year $£25
United Press Wire Service
Syndicate and Central Press Service
Pallas, Texas
on which tolls are collect^!. ■ .
The new proposal does not ask that fer-
ries be discontinued across the channel. The
Eesrries would provide alternate routes for
the highway and might satisfy the stall de-
partment.
The tunnel would bring many advantages
to this section, not the least of which is em-
ployment of 1000 men for two years.
The tunnel will tie the Tri-Cities more
directly to the port at Houston and doubt-
less would hasten development of the water-
way in this vicinity.
The offer of the New York firm to con-
struct the tunnel* merits careful considera-
tion 6f the commissioners court and of the
people. * , ,
* * * '
THE TEXAS LEGISLATURE is expect-
ed to give consideration this week to a state
CHAPTER 9
MARCH drew a slip of paper from
The judge looked it over and then
Again t-..— --- *
" ,rge demonstrated ny
thumb nail and the
his shirt and handed it to the judge.
asked the sheriff how big the
stone Wad. Geot
the sk’.e of his
judge nodded,
suelo. „
"Voung lady, wo must have the
ring to prove that it is the same as
tins man bought.” He quieted her
look of suspicion. "You may have It
back as soon as this man proves It'
to be tile samo he bought," he said
craftily, „ -
wide with question.
“Did you actually buy the
I SidCPHW'
AeAAsMN
,W GAMES
usr
,m fog)
WUOiS,
r-Vvr .
SC lotltS CARPPJAt, g
■ABZ.MtAo MU-dZ
lAtr frte RED BigpSjoA. f
' <tc
CONTRACT ffRIDGE
uelo turned to Marcu, her eyes
_____________ ..... ring?"
slie asked in the language of the
gypsies.
“Yes. for you,” he answered In the
name.
Site was still puzzled.
“f can have it back?" she naked
t ha judge. ,
die nodded.
The frown deepened on her face.
Somehow it didn't neem, rigjj!, but If
Marcu was lying he'd have to be
clever enough to carry it through
,*ust for alt instant a thrill raced
iteesgh her; How grand and big
bo looked standing there like a king
and telling the Judge what.to .do.
Trust film. Trust him, He was her
man. * ’
Site reached up under the wide
wedding skirt *nnd. utterly uncon-
scious of the nocks that craned for-
ward,'untied the string that held her
bktemcns In place and slipped the
diamond from It. for a moment she
held the cherished ring In her hand
and all the fire of her soul crept out
in response' to the beauty of It.,
‘•Hand it to me. girl" the judge
broke in upon her thoughts.
Consuelo looked up. the ring
clasped between her tends.
“Holiest, you'll give It back?”
The judge nodded, a smirk on his
red face. With a sigh the girl hand-
ed him the ring. Eagerly the man
examined it. .XhMtote waa.wpnh g.
couple of thousand dollars If a dime!
"You say you bought this ring?"
he asked again.
"Yes. didn't I show you I paid for
it r* Marcu was becoming Impatient.
WRITTEN FOR CENTRAL PRESS
By l, V. SHEPARD
FAMOUS BRIDGE TEACHER
She tare at his Face, his hair, hi* throat ~ 1
Dak la nodded. “Well then the gyW
shows me a receipt for twelve tf
lars and sixty cents—'*
"Yep, that’s right" 1
"Are you In your right mind, H
Dak Is r « I
The grin broadened on (he fid
man’s face. He gave the ring id
the dark, handcuffed hand* gl Vsj
cu. He turned to the judge, • , *
“You sea. judge, the orpey ha con
to rob me, but I don’t want to mg
such a nice fellow la jail wheel
got money In bis pocket maybe. ti|
clever, I am. I think to mys«y|
make *0010 easy money, ee I dm
him pay for the ring I couldn't a|
for so long and that Was clutteitj
up my showcase soruot'lng awful fl
ered with the 9 and J. ",
Dummy’s Q of clubs was led. East
had to play the Ace. I ruffed. For-
tunately West held the 2. Had be
ruffed It would not have defeated us.,'
l ied my Q of “diamonds through’
West His K fell to dummy’s Ate. ‘
Dummy had left 2 good trumps, 5,
good clubs and a single heart of !
which I held the Ace. The cards;
FREAK DEALS
FREAK DEALS liven the game by
yielding unexpected results, as was
the case with the hand shown below,
which appeared last evening. East
and West had won a game and they
were 60 on rubber game,
\"*1R!' .
♦ None ~ , i
t«
. ♦ A J •4 2"'--
+QJ98753
♦ K Q 7 4 ■ ♦ A 10 65
3 *• . 2 r
f K 7 5 * ^ RP J 10 9 4
♦ None
+AJ6J4
stole this ring from Abraham
Dakisr
"Go get him and see if I did,” was
the terse reply.
■The clerk rushed from the room.
The excitement grew tense. The
court room was a babble of wild con-
jectures, •
Through the noise Consuelo’s voice
reached him, .
"I do not understand all thin But
now is the time I must tell you I
sury building in Washington, near his own
office. Sheppard had been hired by Mellon
from the treasury department. , . .
v The government attorneys ohid accused
Mellon of “wash" sales and of getting per-
sonal checks to escape federal income taxes.
National Puzzler’s League holds its con-
,#ention in New York. Not even a seasoned
puzzle solver cares to risk Washington.
INE OF THE MIRACLES
make any difference a hundred
years from now any wjjy. ,
SEVERAL-DAYS AGO if
was predicted in this column
that,-baseball would stage a
comeback in Baytown this sum-
mer, and >t seems that the pre-
diction is working itself out in
good shape.
March 18 lias been set for
opening date for the inler-de
port mental league. and a 43-
game schedule has been mapped
out. Under the capable guid-
ance of Ernie Hunt, athletic
secretary for the Humble Chib,
a banner year is in prospect.
TRI-CITIES TENNIS jd'.yers
had better start getting Vn” to the
game. The tournament days are
getting closer. April 7 to 14 har
this ultra-modern world pe-
ered in Huntsville last Sat-
lay, and this department
|de mention of il K-l. rdm
concerned the failure of
|png Buamey, beraided as the
mkat achoolbpy basketbdl
Iyer in the history of Hous-
i high school athletics.
DRTS WRITERS of "thii
cams this morning from Miami, Fia-
. 4 Now
r T A J 9 7 5 4
’♦876532
♦ A K J 9
8 5 4
M None
♦ None
♦ A 10 8
DRTS WRITERS of'this sec-
have dealt at length on Bus-
complete downfall He acor-
' Bftfif, « AQ 8 3 2 1
! ♦ Q 10 7 6 3 ^ j
.1 $None
Miss Keech, sitting East, made an
opening bid of 1-Spade, after 3
passes. Bidding continued: South,
2-Hearts; Joseph Kennedy, sitting
West, 3-Spades; it I. Pardf, North,
4-Clubs; East, 4-Bpadeo., Sitting
South,-1 ieIt that I had to showlmy
second suit and I bid S-PjaiQtRds;
West naturally felt he had^me
trapped and doubled; North redou-
bled; East cannlly bid ff-Sfkdes;
North, 6-Diamonds, which Weat dou-
bled. That ended the bidding,' al-
though It would have paid opponents
to go 6-Spades, as things turned out
The opening lead was the 10 of
club*. Dummy’s J and East’s K cov-
ered. I ruffed. Almost certainly
West held the two red K*s, or he
never would have doubled. Th* .1.0
iy seven points as San Jacinto
school fell before Huntsville
♦ Q 10 7 6
3 2
. 9 None
5 ^ ♦ A Q
........S. *Q 9 7 6
6 None
fKQ 10 8632
♦ K J 10 9 4 ,
rent: BarkduH (South),
z-«earw; vV. Vaden Darks (West),-
O-Spades’; McDonald (North), 7*
Hearts; Green (East). 7-Spades.
in the regional tourney.
AND HERE IS the local an-
L which every good news
Ry mum hue.
Today’s Yesterdays
pHjf _PP_ImW JRUUntT*......
Hhe lad who guarded Young
Issey answers to the name of
liUy Hollis, and he formerly
Md in Hie Tri-Cities. He once
Ld Dead-Eye Dick stories be-
nd a geography book and
pyed basketball at Horace
him junior high school. That
Is several years ago. He
kved to Huntsville, and con-
ned playing basketball. He
proved each season and now
[is oneoCthe classiest guards
[the state. And if you don't
lieve it, ask Coach, Walter
bdgrs of San Jacinto. He saw
lirely too much of this for-
■r Tri-Cities resident last
jority of it« members favor repeal of the
pari-mutuel betting law. The latest such
demonstration was elimination qf a two and
ik. Tuesday, March 5
■it 1806—Elizabeth Barrett Browning was
born. Her poetry made her beloved by two
generations. Now she is best known be-
cause of “The Barretts of Wimpole Street.”
1871—President Grant issued a pro-
clamation against Ku Klux Klan activities.
T: 1872—George Westinghouse received his
first patent on the airbrake. .
| 1904—French Court of Cassation order-
ed a revision of the case of Capt. Alfred
ei905—John V Sullivan swore off drink-
l !nK1916—500 were drowned when the Span-
ish steamer Principe de. Asturias hit a rock
uld sank off Sao Sebastio, Brazil.
,A. 1926—Countess Cathcart was admitted
M\ U. S. «a federal judge hands down deci-
Tri-Citie* can enter,and there ia no
entry fee. Fred Treadway, ia di-
OIIH J *vt» 4 ,tbU * , ■W **■ 1
rccting the tournament, and he will
be glad to receive your entry.
OF ALL THE YOUNG T«*-
aa League graduate playing in
major league trai^M CMpfP
this spring, none look better
than the fiery trie of Lone Star
irfwider* now attempting to
break into Connie Mack'a PW1-
adelphia Athletic lineup.
They ear Buck Fanaett and
Charlie Eaglish, third baseman
and second ancker. respective-
ly. last year at Galveston, and
Skeetcr Newsome, the Beau-
mont ahort4l«|, ;'>., \
In a six inning practice game
' Mperday at Fort Myma, JfU,
this fast stepping bunch 0.
baseball ability - aided bv a
first baoeman, Lou Fiacey.
pulled off five double kilFnga.
five douhit plays la six innings
ie great bate ball whether it
ha peas in n World Series
game or in some oaad let tilt
ia n cow pasture.
The opening lead was North’s lone
J of clubs. The Q and K covered.
Declarer's Ace won. When West
»v M»nu ww** miwMniwg. MPR
were yelling. - Ag”
kicking and ehrieklng, Otai
was dragged from Karen and
arms pinioned behind her. Her
fury subsided as quickly as It
sprung up. She turned Hindi)
her father. Sobs choked the w
she might have said to him. Ae I
released teLiM flung herself
hie a ripe aw burled her face aga
Dak is grinned..
“Let me see that ring.'* He took
have been closed—according to the news-
papers. If they have been put out. of busi-
ness good has been accomplished, r* -' w
But the reason for closing the places
which take poor men’s bets is at least ques-
tionable.
The bookmakers were permitted to oper-
ate almogt unmolested so long as there was
no meet in progress at Epsom Downs. When in,
the meet opened At the. track near Houston
crowds were pitifully small and the operat-
ors immediately blamed their troubles upon
the bookies. ' ' - - ^ . *
The betting places were closed ahd
crowds picked up at Epsom Downs, if that
KANSAS SAYS IT want! a
aff, but Rice and SM M. U.
Rice Bays it wants a play-
>ut S, M. U. and Arkansas
S. M. U. lays its wants a
iff but Rice and Arkansas
drink
cumuli
county
Iona 0
It, briefly, is the status of the
|tb-.!l situation in the South-
conference after th# season
1 Saturday night with the three
l in a deadlock for first place.
Die truth is known, neither
Rose, Jimmy St. Clair or Jim-
through a wound currency bated on EMPLOYMENT BETTER ‘ 8U
an honest dollar. | AUSTIN, Match 5. <1* - Em- GREK
2. To maintain, ag the bisis ef pl0yment in Texas during February
on’t Quote Me
back
Campt
run yi
Wm
Fors<
doesn’t
ter ths
I life be
death.
influence by th? sfreamlins age.
Marian Martin’s new frqck wfth
the softened waistline, the ruffled1
collar and short, puff sloeves --
notice that they are cut in one
, with the bodice — exemplifies the
, trend to perfection. It, A* so simpli-
fied and adaptable that it is at liome
risk the ti-
WASHlNGTON, March | (UP).—Otha
The ban was lifted bj
council recently. How
play-off. Ut
RT PARADE
THIMBLE THEATER
to file fqr place No, 8.
One thing about Der Fuehrer, he is good
at blocking the opposition.
Pattern 9315 may be ordered
only in aises 12, 14, 16, 18, 20, 30*
32, 34, 36, 38 and 4ft. Sire 16 re-
quires 3 8-8. yardif. 89 inch fabric
and 6-8 yards contrasting. -J,. >
Send FIFTEEN CENTS ia coin!
Grab Bag
What useful purposes. do log
tables seyve ?
Who was England’s youngegt pri
Ww? _
Who U the author of 'Th* Iro
___
Wu h? saying
t R. Reynolds, D., N. C., who
compromise on the fight over
wage amendment to the work
ould have it known that his
not a ‘‘straddle.*’
jot going. to straddle any
d. “I hate a straddler. I hate
dicate substantive comp
should be in the objectr
Live in such a way as
die, you will wished to
Gcllert. v
1 '» l^t,« ‘No I
ke 0
7
Yi*
L
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Pendergraft, W. L. The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 231, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 5, 1935, newspaper, March 5, 1935; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1023360/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.