The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 287, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 18, 1937 Page: 7 of 8
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r SOU LITTLE: DEN/IL*
DO HOu PBA.UH nNAWT
TO BE'vNITH OLD -W\ |
that sad? . h&r&-1
"^tralf-par&to
. HUB CrtNf y
Bill? WHAT IN J
TH6 NAhAfeOF***?
r OkIIH OKIE?
BAH. WHAT ARB
SOU TRHlMG TO
PULL. • WH&R&'S
TH& TICKET FOR
THE: KJD?
BADGER* SEC THE
LONG CLAW WVARK&
i running fro*a i—
THE TOES' r-^
CONE ON RANGERS' t TOONO
the ROU1S tne wolves U30R*
THtv headed west,' 5—mv-4
WEU. <TB NOT HARD
IF TOO STOCN 'ENi f
i that’s One thing
Au_ TOO RANGERS
L- must learn «
NO JOGhEAD- 1
CO* — WOLF
TRACKS ARE ,
UKE A C*G DOGS
WANTED TO BUY-Large clean,
cotton rags needed, Dally Sun.
I BUSINESS-SERVICES 1
Reid & Strickland
ATTORN KY 8-AT-LA W
Cltiscaa State Bank Bldg.
PHONY IM
fQ your parties to Miller's
Baaquetl large or email,
me 80, Morgan’e Point '
wtssl
FOR RENT
By Carl Anderson
HENRY
FOR RENT— Three-room fur-
nished apartment. Newly finish-
ed. Suitable for couple. D. T.
' Smith, Wooster. 285-3tp
THHEE-RbOM~~furnished garage
apartment. Adults only. 519
E. DeFee. 285-6tp.
FOR SALE—MficT
)R SALE— Large hydrangea
plants, 50c. Greer Florist, 12&
Wtst Gulf. Phone 312. 288-6tc
aovekt/z/V
JrA(Pt
tADY FURNITURE! CO., piano
tuning, repair, refinishlng. Used
Singer sewing machines. Teach-
sr of piano. Terms. 407 Texas
FOR RENT—Furnished bedroom
for two gentlemen, private en-
trance, next to bath, Phone Dov-
er J283. 228 Georgia. 284-6tr
iroB salej r Personal LOAM?
Used In Cancer ;
The electrical surgical knife has
had particular application Iq -can-
cer surgery. The cauterizing ef-
fect of the electric current made
It Indispensable to avoid propaga-
tion of bits of cancerous tisane
tot* thebloodstream.
Bet to insure complete cauter-
ization it was necessary to pro-
ceed relatively slovriy. As a resiflt
the surgeon’s incision was in maay
dues less perfect than that with
an ordinary surgical knife.
Marconini’s Mlltktelmja’-
lST BAYTOWN home for sale,
attractive oversited lot Cash
» ‘e™*. Phone liain 1280.
‘ / ami*.
Loans!
PERSONAL NOTE
; AUTOMOBILE
0>e* jf«s <y«4n«i.
BIG SISTER
•By Let Forer*v«
HOUSE, 5 rooms and bat
Jones street, Felly, S bloc!
of Baptist church.
I CAN POT TWtnwe f^hwiX W\U_
BfttClCM V4HBOC R B6 A BtG
vdO CAN REACH HELP.
‘sm. 'myra'' s J
TO OA.OTH WALL!
MAYBE I OUGHT
TO HELP YOU.
•R SALE—Five-room house
P«Hy Cheap for cash or terr
KDAN SERVICE
W. E. PAYTON
BaaS BMi. fected sc that it permits the sur-
Phone 244
geon to make ah incision far
more perfect than any he cin
make ordinarily and he can do
this as fast as be wishes, slnto
the cauterization process takes
plait'as quickly as the surgeon
cuts, 4 ‘ ; ' ’ ■
e now have 2 l-z to 5-ac«
with gal, water, light.
>d lnterrurban available. Eaay
am5s
building a home to fit your
J* and desires Investigate
offers before It Is too late
SdS* "*“* “»•
AWsStMS
ting. No assignment, or m-
it t—,
dorsers.
^ORATION, Highland Teatas. (
.l, „ 280.18tp.
S^«T-6oO East i
STATE
......
OH,N6AH.’wal
was scared
td death as g
JSSSISF
ydcEWH-OM g
THtSS OTHER I
SSiTWSrvI
aJ L/kATH fl
l. VPI4 AQgf|
ago with a tractor type machine.
j, capaWe_« developing.. l«0 __
pounds pressure. The old pump,
er can hurl water at the rate of
1,000 gallon* a minute.
SOVIET THEATER \
MOSCOW (Cl;)—The first Work-
ere’ Theater in Moscow ha* mark-
ed it, 10th anniversary. This is
___ > 1»-----*■ 4m<i«1 i_iv 4hAS _
~~and lots
>•••-
You need money, see 1h
Davis, He can always M
care” of your need*,
LT*’ Cedar Bayou, acreage
Htf ■ A"mo™w?a
;§H£afRer
""•wont oamp eitee.
LSSAttr
FLIPON THE 1
riASiHLKSHT I
A SECOND- d
•jteciftiacNESS
mocks
u/a*
A70U6H
SPOT—
<(Saw!N<S MB
THS JOTEC5/
Mike Katribe Bldg.
- Phone M -1S65
one of the largest traveling the*-
tere In all workers' clubs In Mos-
■■■
’“jv:
^ I
)Ay, MAY 18,
LVY CREW HEM i
ON BOAT BEA1
BY HUMBLE i
Baytown *rfT*irn¥(_.
light to Uncle Sam’, Uyj "
Regular refinery leegu,,
"ere postponed while the |
•finere entertained the |
kdm of the U. S. g. g^l
ort at Baytown.
I Pf*y«d a double bhd
NAvy boys won ell batt*]
»contests. I
I The Refiners won the
kuie, ' to 4, and the *»».:
b to «. .
The gobs got four run*hi
Irst inning of the first mm3
fter that they didn’t g*t|f
ul. Fred Clarke *UrU*S
at *he beginning of
,-J «u«l he ehoMj
kvy boys more speed udg
K than • cruiser crew M ,
| a century. He ptteb*dj
run ball the rest of tk»*
Vomen’s league game, 1
yed tonight. The Boo
l play the Barber. Hill j
Brownbllts will taetd* j
|osby team.
--- |
Houston Girit
Wallop BrowriJ
he strong Sam Houitoi,
: ball team defeated the
team yesterday, 10 to l,kj
d “ f ought game played m
|ly diamond,
te game was a nip and _
ir, and the rivalry betwwl
made the contest * I
he Pelly team will
Barbers Hill team at id
I Thursday on their boo>|
k
Just Opened...
Our new washing.,.
Lubrication, Simoniiiaf
epartment.—
We’ll Call For AM
Deliver Your Car Bid
In Record Time.
•
SMITH BROS.
1,in St. Mtl
’ollector With Portune In M
utographs Hunting
*0 a petition
WASHINGTON. May 18 (INS'
, gi nut world’s most valuable
cUon» of autograph* Is going
n riven away—while It* col-
or looks tor a Job to live on.
"rte fortunate recipient of the
' etion *il» be Angelo Hern-
the Georgia negro whoa,
detidn under an old "cerpet-
•• lew for inciting to ineur-
__ recently was set aside by
lupreme court., *
'"rue giver 1* Preston Blodgett
, .pent the last two years col
the autographs, but never
tiding them a* such. For Blod-
.1 was soliciting the signature: _
the world’s outstanding figure*
ployed l»d by Herndon
city hail on the day he was ar-
He had been orgunis-
of us, and the people
down in Georgia decided he’d bet-
| ter be gotten out of the way. So
hiking the United i they put him in Jail and eonvlcted
3tate» government to free*H*rn-1 him on en old slave insurrection
Ion, central figure of one of the I
OVER-WEIGHT,AT
50 HELD SERIOUS
OLD HOME TOWN
videet-publlclzed "causes celebref
n history.
A pathetic figure was Blodgett
-withal satisfied over Herndon’s
'ictory in the high court—as he
mealed that only a few maim
’ go he completed hie petition, and
uahed to Washington with it, to
irrtve on the day the old Georgia
tatutg fitted to h»ld whter with
he supreme court justices.
• Asked how he had come to un-
lertake formulation of the peti-
ion, Blodgett explained:
"I was in the crows of unem-
IT'S HIGH TIME FOR
Electric FANS
8-Inch ZIP KWIK-KOOL fan , . .
really gets the job done! Takes up
•mall space . easily moved
•round and Lack’s low price is...-
The most sensational fan value in
the Tri-Cities . , . a 10-inch Jack
Frost oscillating fan! Supply is
limited, so come early. Priced at—
Kicks i
9§ outo £i
PiSUPPLY^
■GOOSE CREEK ST. & TEXAS AVE.
GOOSE CREEK
(ossified
"By George, I know whet one
of those chain gangs are. I
work down that way once, charg-
ed with vagrancy and sentenced
1o 30 days on the chain gang,
never want to do 30 more."
How Plan Started
Blodgett continued that after
Herndon’, conviction he felt a de-
alre to help the negro lrt »dme
fashion, and finally hit upon the
scheme of having famous person-
ages throughout the wortd sign a
petition asking hi* freedom.
' "It seemed to me the beet way
of attracting International atten-
tion to his case, and there already
were many people working for
him In this country.”
Blodgett travelled through IT
countries In Europe and tour in
AsU working hi* way moat of the
time. He unrolled hi* petition
and pointed out the signatures of
Mahatma Ghandi, Premier Leon
Blum of France, George Bernard
Shaw, H. G. Wells, Mme. Cht&ng
Kai-Shek—" a couple of wolf
hounds almost tore me apart be-
fore I got that one”—Premier Van
Zeeland of Belgium, Maxim Gorki,
Madame Sun Yat Sen, President
Cardenas of Mexico and others.
Valuable Collection*
Of the 1,000 signatures he col
lected, Blodgett was proudest of
those of leaders of underground
movement# in Italy and Germany.
It took him months to obtain
these, he explained, due to the se-
crecy which surrounded the offi-
cial's names and locations.
It was . suggested^ that th* slg
natures, as autographs .were worth
a fortune.
"Oh, I couldn’t think of selling
them,’’ Blodgett protested. "I’m
going to find Herndon and make
him a present of the collection—
and then start hunting a Job."
SCO!
the
Ry Lee Stanley
WK4ULAW PILLS
notice
THE NEWEST-
MOST MODERN-
Will Open Soon
WANTED
WANTED—Two neat appearing
men with cars. Chance of ad-
vancement above average. Ap-
ply 316 East Defee, 6 to 9 p, m.
287-3tp.
MAN FOR coffee route. Up to
|45 first week. Automobile
given as bonus. ' Write Albert
Mills 1088 Monmouth, Cincin-
nati, O. Up.
GOLD, antiques, rings, den-
|tal gold and Jewelry bought for
#h. Jacobs Jewelry, Goose
I Creek. 283-26tc,
ENTION— Custon-built in-
Inerspring mattresses, easy terms,
■Mettresg renovating, stud.ip,
coucheA Cowey Furniture Co.
iPhone 447, Pelly, 282-26tc.
v/aNTED— Experienced beauty
operator for new shop. Inquire
Smith’s Barber Shop, Baytown.
285-3tp
NEW RAY DEVISED
TO FIGHT ENESS
ROME, May 18 (INS)—Con-
ceived and technically perfected
by Gugllelmo Marconi, a dual
functioning short-wave apparatus
has given medicine a new weapon
with which to combat obstinate
cases of sleeping sickness, and
hope of a possible efficacious treat-
ment for cancer.
Employing the principles of dia-
thermy, the apparatus has experi-
mentally proved It may be suc-
cessfully applied against steeping
slcknesb, most tropical diseases, as
well as sciatica and arthritis.
Experiments conducted on can-
cerous tissue appear to prove the
rays have the power to dissolve
cancer cells, medical authorities
state. -....... ..........
Special Tube
Advancing from the ordinary
electric spark emissions of the
"apparatus how In use, * Marconi
has designed a special ray-emitting
tube which he has called toe
theimo-ionlc tube."
The rays this tube emanate# pos-
sess the therapeutic qualities that
promise to cure cases of sleeping
sickness like that of Patricia Ma-
guire of Chicago, asleep for five
years.
Short waves—2, 5 to S meters
in Wave length—supply the ener-
gy for this diathermy unit which
forms only half the whole appa-
ratus. s,
In the other half, and run by a
separate Metrical circuit, Marconi
has attached his newly perfected
, NEW YORK May 18 (INS) -
Thirty pounds over-weight at the
Mf* of 50 reduces the chances of
reaching life expectancy by 50 per
cent, according to Dr. Benjamin
Ella soph, associate physician at
Mount Sinai Hospital.
Thirty pounds underweight has
no effect on health, he declared in
an address before the third an-
nuel Inetitute uf tfte WeWTdrS
Counties Registered Nurses Asso-
ciation.
“Obese people over 50 are actu-
ally suffering from a disease," Dr. [
Eliasoph said. “The most impor-
taht thing for these people is a
.proper diet under the direction of
a physician. But they should keep
away from charlatans, who pre-
sent all kinds of fad diets."
Food cranks," he warned, "are
dangerous.”
The ideal state at the age of
50 is to be underweight, accord-
ing to Dr. Eliasoph.
“You will Jive longer this way,’’
he concluded.
noah,Qukk«JV*
. ANoTKeR nicwulz veocmj
Of TMOi* UTTLZ RIP
CAN PIUS. THt VJIPOW
rittoevrs i* ailin*/
AND im ornr om nek
aas mi i < / / >
Doc pillsbucy mas Mik so »uOff m
His GARDEN lately he hasn’t kept
DP HIS STOCK OP MBpie/NSS
______ . . .. . tw> mm: i
OnZ fif <Hl Fiupf IMPon.'fAH'f
<H AMISICA A
of sailors rc% MtqMiA pay
DE-f-ftR WORKIHO COMDrfiOMS,
IN NEW YORK , IN IgOJ
-4&M. s _
Fimsuut Ml'
•4 «E FAStESTT
SWIMMER, of AU
BIRDS - Hi* paudlES,
WHICH WSAE ONCE WIHCS, aajli
His MEAM4 Of PRpeuLSlOM
-n> wh* <
280, OOO railroad
^ BRiOCCS m<4E ,
uMrfto 5iX4a
ANPCAHAbA
4k ^NSPEHitOM
om -ft»(S I
CAMSRtoea
MADk Of
DYNAMITE DUNN - - By Vic Forgythe
TRey'rf IM THE
RING, AND JOE IS
HOLDING BACK’ A
BIG LAUGH AS HE
WAITS TO SEE
This ambitious
MUG KNOCKED
UOOSE FROM HlS •
DESIRE ID BE A
RGHTCR H--------------
)-«
G lilt to tVMtei reutare IrMteel*. Ir*.
fat lea t E tU <M-A» riftoe rewreed
rLE'S GIT,
[GOIN’— I
WANNA
fightL
rN0w ocnT Blame
. ME IF tou GET A
l BAT in TH’SNOOT/
,You asked for,
JMIS - GO AN’y
vTake rr !L
M
p
"TIME ! ^
an' lookout for n
. CHUCK'S RIGHT
HAND HI
1 AIMED
OiDibu aim That
SwwG AT anything
OR D© ME GET
IN TH’ WAY
kOF IT H?L
JIM HARDY
By Dick Moore*
: -ABOARD THE ‘StfHSCRAPER
'’BOUND FOR HUS CTTH
moorss:
BRONCHO BILL - By Harry F. O’Neffl
GEE ' Wlftrtl
t ><.New '
f
TRACK'S
LIKE TOO' \
Lt/TIHh
I HBM2D SOHEONfi j
cau.no
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Pendergraft, W. L. The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 287, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 18, 1937, newspaper, May 18, 1937; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1096028/m1/7/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.