The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 96, Ed. 1 Monday, October 16, 1939 Page: 6 of 6
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HORACE MANN TO
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..............—■■•
By Frank Owen
4}
| «un«j and todto to let. ito Ar-
m war, ail ttotr gimmes
After *U. tto Mtor bov? rea-
I toDKi, Wr ferny to m a war toforr
I'lcaifr, tod w« nay want tto old
' Aratt to toh> u$ «at Tto. tost
4satR *+• ran dr » to tot tton>
; torn Qwft lots mw, or ttoy may
I ®» touk--to nttotot.
■ Evitonth tto. SM^toftut toys ] ttotui ■
; took ViUtmm-s m on their plans > Most of tto
too. Tto Pit ill) team let tto Aps
{tout ttows 5B to J Hoturdbiy. It
\ mm tto first Vllianova loss sin«
, tm, .. ’
Flay-
ing as ttoy did Friday nipat,'
tto Ganders would have won from
noth Pasadena and Kilby.
Now we can go to work on 1
some offense, Coach Malone said!
this morning. Evidently, to igl
satisfied with the team’s defense,!
its spirit and with the. combine- j
tion that he used against the;
r -s
fc
VZLlM
HFPF
nihi
gaiToV
Matty Bell Should Teach Hi* Daughter
To ICick Extra Points From Placement
mar mm mm. texan
taps- Tto> toat te «h- of (kc
fraaUiu ieaas- m in* tailed
Statu, totanto), tat 'ttoy .had
enaaarh w* give tto Sooner* town
When .yam -ran wore
ttaee agwos! an ootfn like US
totoats a-tthou: ever pterrm* tto
to-yani toripc. pa* are danger-'
■ Taaas 'lias week will entertain
tto Parties* from Arkansas Las;
pear' tie Barter* handed' tto
Longhorn* a 12 to S drutonne in
PogMtevOk. Hat aae to far
tto Most kaaeiiiatmg defeat of
tiw yaar for tto Teaaaa. They
will to oat to avenge that toss
to Attain: l tehevr they trill
ahaost do it, tat to the end it
Inaha as if the Hog* will win a
thrilling engagement ht a very
narrw* margin.
T. C. I. returns home to play,
j Ttaaa, A. and M. % the time the
IS player* who
were used against the Lions were
badly bruised and beaten to a
pulp after the game, but none ot
them, were hurt seriously. Most
of the youngsters were back on
the field Saturday morning play-
ing touch football while the B
squad wag engaging the Ball high
B team in its.: skirmish,
“Bui 1 BID tell the boss lamp chops went up three cents a pound!
I still don’t get a raise!”
Tennessee And Alabama
May Settle Bid To Bowl
L-
By Harry Fergitam
NEW YORK, Oct. 16. (EE) —
The, lucky unlucky l6 will take; There’s a sweet smell of roses
it easy today, and tomorrow they j floating across the* great Smoky
will start getting ready for the mountains today, for only five
second district game of the sea-1 sun(Jowns av,-ay is the football
Aggie* pel. through with the Fort j son. The Ganders travel to South J game of [he maybe of
) against North Carolina, Duke
takes on Syracuse, Georgia Tech
meets Vanderbilt, — • <
The week-end saw four out-
standing teams go marching on. . - - ......... ......
through tough opposition. NdWe ’Crii'iby game. The line failed to
; Worth Stattotieisns. there tyon’t
be fwiuph tefi of the Purple for
; it to fmish out their schedule. We
i actually believe the Frogs will ean-
•cel their remaining games after
they get what the Aggies have in
store for them, fiemembering that
humihaiiyr, of 1P38 when the dou
hie shuffle was Double shuffled al-
: Park FYiday night for a game j yje er,tire year—Alabama vs. Ten
jwith the Gieentes. * |nessee at Knoxville. ' .fit- i ^
| The locals have not won a game, xae winner of batttoof rbe
sand the only difference between. Saturday afternoop is as
them and the Greenies Is that the go^p a as anybody to go to
‘South Park eleven ha* not lost a the Rose Bowl. Both teams are
The boys from Beaumont may
not have the best team in the
district, but ttoy certainly have
. , . . _ the luckiest. They opened the sea-
b*ck ™l° ^ hT&™ nver' {son with a win, over Huntsville.
7 to 6. The Hornets outplayed
them in every department of the
game - except the scoring,
I
Wool
rdinc
fmt ftato totttwp enMs.
toOow* puctots, shirred
toet Cotas arv grey. ton.
JHMto. tort blue, green.
Sir"'
Cbttofi Cart riiae
Lwg Slceies
tor sure
■rtrtU * unrl
colkr and
t, blue and
Small, mod-
IJCStiS r!>?
i?
... ...
UMNER
>E*K
the Ag* in Fort Worth Saturday
will unleash more power than the
(tiinrad* River Authority can gen-
erate. And it .will, be about as
bard to harness as an S. M. U.
Mustang in a Notre Dame game.
AND WHY MOT speak of S.
M. C. for a few minute*. There
is a ball club, li is understood
that Coach Matty Bell will use
hi* 12-> ear-old daughter to place
kkk trie*'for point for tto rest
of the season. Bell operates on
the theory that any change will
to an improvement. With a great
ehattee to tie a great team, the
PMuet can’t find a fcieker. Where
in the world will yon go to find
an equal to that embarrassing
situation * The f'ome* re-tum to
Dallas Saturday to entertain
. Maruaette. the leam that of late
has failed to make Milwaukee
very famou*. The Mustangs will
graze on fancy hsy for the re-
maining days of Ibis week and
then proceed to give Marquette
a real spanking. Right now, the
team with the beat chance to
atop Texas A. and M. is S. M. E.
If it had not been for the deal . . ...
made earlier in tto season to *• % «‘i«ht h»v« ***** **
let the Aggie* wig the title, ,S- I *i*SSL-2—J———, -
—__............F- ST Another reason why
they ip want A. and M. to win
the title is that If the Aggi-s
don’t, loach Norton win get tto
sir. If to stays, there is a
chatoe he may revive tto double
shuffle. That Wan the greatest
offensive formation ever eon-
gltal-*- fhf
gave the oppoaUion three touch-
downs in advaiwe by 1'* yard
penalties.
But enough is enough, f*
will win tto prevtam Saturday.
ADVISED ON CRICKETS
RENO, Nev (RH-gtat to tto
Nevada motorist, who is unaccus-
tomsd to Mormon crickets on die
highway: Don’t pay any attention
to the crickets when you run over
them and ttoy squeal; just rtow
and watch the road.
well rested and ready to go all
out. Alabama had a breather
against Mercer Saturday and
Tennessee had one against Chat-
tanooga. Neither has been beaten
this year! although Alabama had
a close call in winning from Ford-
ham, 7 to 6. ' < ops'*
Last year Tennessee beat Ala-
Th^- came tack ^and defeated, pa^. n ^ 0> „„ tben wcnt to
"" " ^ ’ .......... the Orange Bowl and murdered a
strong, resourceful Oklahoma
team; The Tennessee-Alabama
game dominates the coining week-
end, but all sections of the coun-
try offer top-flight attractions.
In the mid-west, Minnesota and
Ohio State collide in a game that
will have a vital effect on tto
Big Ten race. Notre Dame, still
winning games by hair-line mar-
gins, takes on Navy, and Baylor
goeg north to try its luck against
a poupTul Nebraska eleven.
Down south. Tulane goes
ARCADIA
; NOW SHOWING 1
The Mat fife story *f HaOy.
wood from tto Kevstote Keps
cSms
ITM
mi
Nftir KEITH
i ■-ALSO" ■■■■"■■
Popeye Cartoon
Tod FioriU’* Orcho^n
Latest World News
a Catholic school in Beaumont and
French high before tackling the
Ball high eleven last Friday
night
The Ball game was a replica
of the Huntsville. South Park was
buffeted from pillar to post but
cams out on top.
It is remembered that the
South Park team was badly hand
led by the Ganders last year, only
to come out of the tilt with a
scoreless tie after the locals had
fumbled the bail four times Inside
the five-yard line.
Scout Dam Stallworth says
South Park is two touchdowns
better than Pasadena and every
bit a« good, if not better, than
Milby. He has seen them pray
twice, and Coach Malone nmueif
has stfen tto Greenies in actk'i
ones. Certainly, this tin* we
won't suffer from lack of acout-
tar.,':r- , 'Vx> :VW
GENERALS OF NEW
DIVISIONS NAMED
WASHINGTON, Oct. 16. <UEl-
Tto war department announced
toilay t|e commanding general*
for its five new “streamlined” In-
fantry divisions Which have beta
ordered into unprecedented, year*
round, pe*ee-ttae training name#
vers in the smith and west.
Brig. Gen. Walter C. Short, 61,
a native of Fillmore, HI., will
command the First dlvtsidn at
Fort Bennings, Ga, He is attach-
ed to Fort Wadsworth,ai, ¥,'-X-
Major General Walter Krueger,
PORI
lte -2Sc Always
Open 6 tto p.m.
-LAST TIMES TODAY —
■MM!*
— TUESDAY ONLY -
- ADDED
FYwttoll engagements to the
TTi-Ctttea will to begun here
Tkurrttoy and tto week-end will
to full er contests
At 1:60 p,m. Thursday tto Hor-
ace Mann eleven will meet tto
Stephen P. Austin Junior high of
Galveston to a game on Elms
field;'
At 6 p.tu. that day the Cedar
JBayoc Begrs, -will entertain the
Gander B squad in a game on U
frey field.
The Baytown Juniors will mak*
their first trip of the season
Thursday when they journey tc
Barbers Hill. It will not be e
league game.
The Willi* team will come to
La Porte Friday for an afternoon
game starting at 3:30 p.m. Friday
night while the Robert E. Lee
Ganders ate in Beaumont meeting
South Park, the Barbers Hill Ea-
gles will be at Saratoga,
Cios'o/’bas pit open date this
week, but by the time their next
game date rolls around, officials
at the Buff institution hope to
have their lights installed.
The Bruin-Gander B game has
taken on big proportions. The Lee
high school band will be Invited
to the tilt as well as the Maroon
Brigadiers. Coach Malone pro-
mises to have a fine team ready
to meet the Beal's in the con-
test.
Cedar Bayojt lost its first two
games. but has rallied to win two
traight district 29-B engage-
ments. Coach Ernie Laurence to-
day was critical of the team’s
disappointing ^ showing in' the
V.V.N.fi
By CHESTERFIELD PENN
Dame squeaked out a 20 to 18
victory over Southern Methodist,
Pittsburgh turned back Duke, 14
to”13 (it wag a great day for the
point after touchdown), Tulane
beat Fordham, 7 to 0, and Okla-
homa defeated Texas, 24 to 12,
Skipping back across the chalk
lines, here are some of the fea
turesj of the week-end: * *
Outstanding player—Tom Har-
mon of Michigan who scored every
point for his team in its Z7-to-27
victory over Iowa. •• • - * -
Tough luck guy of the season—
Coach Dutch Meyer of Texas
Christian, National champions
last year, who lost his third
straight game by a narrow score
when Temple beat him, 13 to 11
EarUer T.C.U. lost to U.C.L.A„;6
to 2, and was defeated by Ark-
ansas, 14 to 13. »
Worst licking—Chicago’s 6L-tb-
0 defeat by Harvard. . i
Most disappointing team—Vil
lanova, rated*among the nation’s
tost until it took a 33-to-7 shel-
lacking from Texas A. and M.
Upset of the week—Stanford’s
game, uphill fight to get a 14-to-
14 tie with a powerful U.CJLA
team.
Parish, La, now at ForA-taelling,
Minn., will
■’"***(
command th*!% new
Fifth division at Fort McClellan,
Ala.
Brig. Gen. Clement A. Trott,
52, now commanding the 16th in-
fantry brigade, Fort George G.
Meade, Md„ tan head tto sixth
division basing at Camp Jackgon,
8. C. He is a native of Milwau-
kee, ■ „ “ '
Premit
On Fat Stock ShoW
■
HOUSTON, Texas, Oct. 16. U
Tto premium ligt for the 1046
Houston Fat Stock Show and
Livestock Exposition is ready for
distribution. Copies are being
West Prussia »&ned to stockmen throughout
but moved to tto United States
when only, eight yepr* rid, will
continue to head tto Second di-
vision based at Fort Sam Hous-
ton, Texas!
Hodges, M, s native of Bossier, into eleven departments under tto piss and washing them down with
Texas, as weU as in adjoining
States, according to W. O. Cok,
exposition secretary. The booklet
contain* 64 page* and may be had
Without cost or obligation. I* #
Major General Campbell B. The stock show tall to divided
supervision of Julian .A.
Here Is Quarterbacks
Club Problem For You
COLLEGE STATION, Oce. 16
(Sp..—When the Texas Aggie
Quarterback club met last Thurs-
day night to see the pictures of
ths Aggie-Santa Clara game and
to argue inside football or offici-
ating problems, one of the 200 or
so quarterbacks present popped
a question which stopped two
Southwestern Football Association 77*
member*. They went borne to go “
into a huddle with their rule
books but while they ponder and
for next
their answer
night it was voted •ta enough- to
crack at the
give John
question.
Here is it—"The' stare is 7-6
ill favor of the defending team Send
- - - -.....
“The quarterback knowing he
has no time to try anything but
a long run calls his own signal
and starts down the field. He
passes everyone but the safety
who ig known to to very fast
and a deadly tackier. He
that he can not make, the touch-
he stops in the center
of the field on the 15-yard line
where he proceeds to drop kick
field goal for three points and
Now—does the field goal count
and if so where is the rule in
the book that says it ia good!"
your answers to Jocko
chief quarterback, Tex-
as Agricultural Experiment sta
click on defense, pnd pass after
pass from Ellis Smith was incom-
plete because he had to hurry
hig tosses.
“If we don’t show more im-
provement, I am afraid that Sa-
ratoga and Anahuac will defeat us
when we play them," Laurence
said. “They played a tough game
Saturday which Saratoga won, 7
to 0, and that indicates that both
teams are good. Saratoga has one
of the best Class B teams In tm*
section, apd was a favorite to
knock over Anabuac by a large
Score.”
NORGE REPORTS
BUSINESS GAINS
DETROIT, Mich., Oct. 16. (UP)
—Heavy consumer buying of
home apliances is now forcing re-
tail appliance merchants to lay in
fall stocks in a volume that is
most encouraging, M. G. O’Harra,
vice-president ih charge of sales
for Norge division, Borg-Warner
corporation, said today.
O’Harra coupled thls statement
with announcement that 878 new
dealers have been . added to the
list of Norge retail outlets, secur-
ed as the result of a ninety-day
drive conducted among Norge
wholesalesmen. Retail dealers to
qualify as bona-fide outlets are
obliged, said O’Harra, to stock
a minimum of three pieces of
Norge merchanidse.
I- “Tto e&Utioa of these- new
retail outlets tp. our list reflects
the definite rsvtvxTat
at this tijine," O’Harra
“In line, with this increas-
ed business activity, Norge sates
and merchandising plana for
1846 have been geared up for new
business demands by a, merchan-
dlslng program that coordinates
Dm effectiveness of all sales ex-
There were more fishermen
than fish caught Sunday, but
they were really out there trying,
all the way from way up the San
Jacinto River, all the way out to
the tripod and five mile beacon,
Floyd Bums and Ed Shepherd
breezed out. to the five mile bea-
con, and stopped for a while at
the mouth of the bayou, but they
found the water too rough and
too muddy to do any good.
Alddis Shepherd, and Jack
Chance hitched their two motors
onto their one boat and checked
over every fishing spot in the
bay. They went first to Sterling,
continued on to Fisher’s, and the
Tripod, came back across the bay
to the channel, and went back to
the Tripod, didn't find any fish,
and finally picked up a few specs
and sands on Fisher’s.
Lloyd Shepherd, and Lawrence
Strauss caught a few reds and
trout near the Lime Kiln, not far
from the mouth of the bayou.
. Eddie Barton caught about 70
specs and sand trout fishing down
on the bank of the ship channel
near the five mile beacon.
Mark Carter and a party went
down on Chocolate Bayou, south
of TUvin, and caught about 35
nice specs,
There was a regular flotilla of
boats put out from Lynchburg, go-
ing to Crystal, and Scott's bay,
and to all points on the San Ja-
tto Rlver and Buffalo Bayou:
Most of the fishermen failed to
catch any, but one party, includ-
ing two men, went farther up tne
iGGIE-TCU
headlines'
FOR BIG
ftill
rise, "where match / Wie"" powerful
the boat motors couldn’t frighten
the fish, and they brought back
a nice string of about 40 specs
apiece. My informant, not a, fish-
ing camp operator, saw the fish
but couldn’t give me the names
of the fishermen.
tion were on the
day, bugling a wan,in."
Ponents that they J '
win thrir first 2£jP
ence football title si^TJm
ZJa
osiyp
M., and Santa Clara, 0w 1
a highly - advertise
eleven last Satunlay at
Rose. Festival, S3-?, ^
the tavorttes spot/
Fifty-five hundred' w,
Aggie Cadets will lwatffi
C. U. and Forth Worth^l
urday, eager for reveal
team that has won over* uJ
times, tied it three times i
only once since 1924. ’ ,m
In losing to Temple 13-iJ
Saturday afternoon at j
phia, TCU for the third t
year “out-statisticked” it. i
cat but lost the game.
The No. 2 team on the *
west horizon is Baylor, \
counts the splendid perfM
defeat by Southern M
Dam8 2°'ly 1058 l° mighh 1
Coming along slowly, as l
Baylor shredded Arkamaf1
hopes at Waco with a 19.? j
made possibK by a stoutL.
and a passing-running attaclJ
ered by Sophomore Jack'
and Jimmy Witt, halfback,
Bears will'meet a major iiitij
tional foe this week in Net
at Lincoln,
Arkansas will play its thin
ference game in three 1
urday against Texas at
The Longhorns were 5
GIRL WHO KILLED
TEXAN IS JAILED
ST. LOUIS, Oct. 16 (U.EI—Coun-
ty Attorney O. E. Gerron and
Sheriff Reader Webb arrived to-
day from Odessa, Texas, with ex-
tradition papers for the return of
Isabelle Messmer, 22, to face
charges of killing of a semi-pro
baseball player, Buford Arm-
strong, near Odessa, last April 1.
Miss Messmer, who claims to be
a native of Elwood, Ind., was ar-
rested here Oct. 5, on a charge
of carrying concealed weapons.
She is-.held at the observation
ward at the city hospital after she
dived from an upper deck bunk
at police headquarters 'a Week
ago.
Authorities here said - Miss
Messmer will be released to the
Texans If the circuit attorney’s
office will waive the concealed
weapons charge here. • ?<
Shortly after her arrest the
girl told detectives she escaped
last January from a reformatory
at Clinton, N. J
ecutlves and assures distributors
and retail dealers of close cooper-
ation from the factory.
-----
SQUASH PIE; STOMACH PUMP
BOSTON (U.E)—Newsboy Arthur
Gill set a yecord by eating three
three quarts of milk. The ensuing
cramps and necessary use of a
stomach pump took the enjoyment
out of his experience. 1
Now
Showing
:texan:
^8
EXTRA! _
Cartoon “THE BOOK WGRM”
M-G.M MINIATURE
Latest NEWS of EUROPE
Even if they really do find the
Bremen none of us will believe
R. ,
Sooner* last week at Dal®!
lost 24-12. ■ Jack Crains
twice as his team absorWl
first defeat of the season. ™
Southern Methodist gave )
Dame; heralded as a potential^
tional champion, a nerve-n
afternoon before losing oqt|
single point, 20 to 19.
Because of its fine showing!
tying; Oklahoma, beating ‘
Texas Teachers, and scaring!!
Dame. SMU will be counted!
to beat Marquette this Sat!
in Dallas.
- Rice took another rough !
defeat. 7-0, at the hands of I
iana State’s fine team and)
bles reduced the total score. I
will meet Sam Houston
Teachers college Saturday nig!
Houston.
DELUXE
I
10c-15c 'ta j
10c-20c Ml
now'shTwing -
%l
r//& /
* s
•//
:
Ea t
One of the few 'building* J
true Gothic architecture fd(
North America is the Church |
San Jose, Puerto Rico,
believed to have been started J
1532, 40 years after the
of Columbus. It w$s..ejected;]
Dominicans.
. v-—
Try Daily Sun Classified J
CAN YOU STOP IN TIME?
i
:us^
’oriel
Canva3»eri
[Final Inatruj
At Banqi
k annual campaign!
. Welfare Uaguel
.t-Teacher Thnftl
d today with a qu1
• the goal.
.drive was officii
■tag a dinner of L
Iguke the campail
1 m Methodist cl
with Leon Tj
al chairman as hi
$4 Workers Prd
roximately 50 md
yom all sections)
py‘were at the ditL
■purpose and the pll
were expJ
_ n, J. A. And
Jfe secretary of
and Mrs.
1 of the Thrift L
e yrtsent were the|
, their co-workers
5d in welfare wl
iers of the coun
j present were C. |
Suit chairman; I-
[finance chairman,
. in charge of dl
tation.
$10,000 Neede
> team captains v
.l and they in turn
itassistants,
enckmann, in expb
| purpose of the camp|
quota of $7600 to
Ithe League and $25
iilt Exchange. ,
fe need more now tha
s," he said. I
iefson spoke on th|
(Welfare Leagues \
irTtospi
II CHAMBER
For Instal
Id New OffiJ
Are Mappec
L A. (Popj Mabry,
^Humble Oil and Ref
5 kill be the prinelp
| it the Goos e Creek
nerce on the nigh]
I When the new state |
p wlll be formally instl
i. T Busch, a memtol
planning the f
I Mabry and rece
*, Chairman J.
' members of
t are John H. McI
|Krtley. ’ ‘ ,
i (toner wUl be
®t of Grace
k-Pytesatai-""-
tors to be install
[^*in, president;
vice president
I, secretary and
mnd'Tol
[some
,.J in thi
I * takes a
8 tiluation ai
jit limb... .;
Whg so
1 a covere
i fish .
Yoorbrakesareth*most important safety factor
path, a traffic light changes unexpectedly. The BEST brakes are
too good!
I^t os help you keep them in shape, by making I
Weaver Brake Teeter. A teat takes only one minute, and 1 * ^
meeauree your brakes separately during an actaOlttop ® Lj
you merely drive mi and atop, read the gauge, end drive o ^
We ere proud of our brake service {department, beeau***1"
tively small cost It is sending out cars with brakes in ,
^^ency, as twll as stand up to the thousands of oroBW
Drive your car in today for inspection. ,
Williams’ Auto Servi<
E. A. “Si” WILLIAMS, Prop.
gam,
1 taunt
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Pendergraft, W. L. The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 96, Ed. 1 Monday, October 16, 1939, newspaper, October 16, 1939; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1099818/m1/6/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.