Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 136, Ed. 1 Monday, September 2, 1935 Page: 3 of 4
four pages : ill. ; page 22 x 16 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:
DOM
SCASATlCAI OF THE
-'WMoia v~
tmis penny
•\GuY?
(WHO -
STOP THE GREAT
BRlTlSHERS MARCH
ID ANOTHER. U-fi.
Si AISLES' C^V
TiTLE Js
. T« * ”» ■ <• -.
»• *
abopt
which
ocean
BRINHAM BANNUUNtfSS
Hyw----rT-n£y^y^"*-?r - - i
Ohio State Appears to Be Class
of Midwest
H /to Can Stop Perry?
“-----------By BURNLEY--—2------
aerate
to be the strongest
placed him in
he is now serv
1935 MET SEASON
fly
third
on
salesman,
to end
bills
had enough and was succcetder* ca- - TV’Tip shoot
r.ellent record.
Frank
Can-
to that the
Souths Grid Favorites
Held in Slaying
Facta about practical-
fact the
Alt of this information
r r&z'Z
clues they believe will com
within its borders it has Been named
Rangers
shot to
in recent
pieces " by
hamstrung
equipment
of
long
method
a good
exchange
More pet^ofeum |» produced in
the United Stales than in all the
1 The port of New York has
450 miles of water front, of
125 miles are available for
steamships.
2. A mild form of frostbite.
3. Minnesota.
4. The most famous of the great
estate developers’ method of selling
by taking customers in cars' to the
development, lunching them and lec-
turing them with "spielers,"
"Maps"—checks.
Budge
IS UAICCE
&AMS BEST
Berr-.
of Cardui an<
booklet, en
is being sen’
writes to the
"Iron”—auto
obsolete car.
"Cuffing" a
chase of a car
In 1910 the government set aside
an area of about 1500 square miles
in northwestern Montana as a nati-
onal park. It is a region of great
natural beauty, with towering peaks,
lovely valleys^jmd gem-like mountain
CCC BOY IS MADE
2ND LIEUTENANT
IN THE U. S. ARMY
By Howard C. Marshall
Austin, Sept. 2. A colored
PAN S SCHOOL OF
DANCING
While Justice of the Peace James
J. Westwood, of McKees Roeka,
Pa., above, and hia constable
friend. Tim Drexler, were held
Isolated in- the Allegheny county
jail Bt Pittsburgh, authorities
game in
Voelkel,
in suc-
Fraziet
Long
Brenham
Not a great while ago the
most
in New
theme.
room election day.
"Going to do something I nevei
did before,” he* remarked,
“What’s tliat??” someone queried.
“Ging to vote for repeal”
“How Come?”
"We pros run things so bad I
want to see what we wets can do."
6. Gliding.
7. No. He was Food- Administra-
tor during U. S, Participation in the
World War.
8. West coast .
9. Dartmouth College.
10. French historian.
A "boiler room"—office
phone salesmen who use
tance regardless of <s>st, settling
•slaily.
Laster Mays, young righthander,
let the slugging Thompson Gulf Oil-
ers down with three hit*, blanking
them 8 to 0 before 6000 fans. It was
a perfect pitching Inhibition, two
** ‘*-s hirvMM inlWAAIv-M «f
"Dynamiters”—high pressure stock
salesmen.
“Bird .dog"—the
tout what talks up stocks
quaintSAces.
A "coxy":—inexperienced
good for small sales.- ■
popular musical
York featured a
THE WORLD’S BIGGEST
INFORMATION BUREAU
IS AT WASHINGTON, D. C.
Northwestern has a new coach. Chicago boasts one
of the best backs in the country in Jay Berwanger
Iowa, with Dick Crayne fullbucking, ta going to be
tough Michigan still hasn’t the material to be
top-notch again. Notre Dame has a dynamite-
laden schedule but will be • strong club. Michigan
State, with Kurt Warmbein heading the 19 latter- *
men into camp; promises to be another midwest
giant. New coaches will greet three of the six
Missouri valley squads but Kansas State and
Nebraska will undoubtedly maintain top berths.
northern and eastern newspapers
evinced interest
The major steps in the process,
Interest in the modernization of
the Texas Rangers, nationally as
well as within the state, continues
unabated.
When a legislative crime investi-
gating committee proposed last fall
to overhaul the famous manhunters,
Tuesday, Sept. 3
5 to 7 p m Armory Halt
Class or. Private Lessons in
Ballroom Tango Ballet
Tap Rumba Acrobatic
Special Centennial Dances
world’s biggest informations
is at Washington, D. C.,
the .mound by Lefty Winfield.
Smokey Ftank met him with one
of hia famous money hits, singling
off hia glove, and knocking inSmith. 1
Long forced Keith at third. Angley ’
went all the way to second on Al-1
ford’s boot and overthrow,
scoring on the play.
Score by Innings
Brenham
Thompson
Batteries for Brenham: Mays and |
Hendrix and Angley For Thomp-
son, Harwood, Frazier, Winfield and
Harry.
i'hiladeljoia. Penn., was for a
short time the capital of our coun*
stories on the hard-riding, straight-
shooting Rangers. Good features,
illustrated with plenty of dashing
horses, wild-eyed steers and hurtl-
ing riatas, sell right along to news-
papers,
season’s
comedy
Ranger
Observers pick Ohio State
lootball team in the midwest this year and probubly
one of the best In the country. With many vet-
erans returning and a sensational type of offensv
the Buckeyes will stack up strong. Captain Gomer
Jones, Buaz Wetzel, John Kabealo and Stan Pin-
cur» are the aces up Coach Francis Schmidt’s
sleeve, Minnesota, with Glen Seidel carrying on
for Pug Lund, is expected to have another power-
house team. Purdue was hard hit by graduation
! and a tough schedule faces the Boilermakers.
^'7«^^7rdT^liT^eTy~de^^
partinent bill and the actual effee-1 5. 1 be west bank,
tiveness of the creative law were told ]
again and again by correspondents*
There has been no letup in the de-
mand.
Out-of-state interest, of course,, is
due to the glamor of the name, sec-
ond only, perhaps,
The problem of rebuilding perfect i»»« lootvan
• machines broken down by graduation and new
coaching regimes faces the southern college foot
ball elevens as the call for practice hurriri tbe
players out as early as Labor Day.- Alabama, Rose
Bowl winner and undefeated last year, with Rih >
1 Smith to replace the lost Dixie HowellI; Tenntoto*
1 with a new ecach, Maj. William Erittoa, and
LouMigna State, with Berate Moore taking hold
discharged
man's regular army service
us stay in. the the National
1,1. Mueller took army cor-
re pnndrnre courses, completing' all
.courses below the grade of captain.
21 years of age, it was
him to wait until he
.lock of cheap goods.
-Puff shoots" — magazines ths
wrvive by selltag copies to -a ma
■eritten up with extravagant praiz
"Mug books"—similar io abov<
ecept specializing in photoe.
“Charity rackets"— selling or so-
kiting schemes based on arousing
pity of the sucker-suppogedly for
»enefit of orphanages and such.
The "My." "mug, mooch,” “p«h-
-er"—synonyms to* ’he sacker.
Election day was the most
nlete holiday in the Capitol
Christmas. Everything was
tight except the Secretary of State s
A “smacico"—badly wrecked car
rebuilt for sale.
"Busl^tg* the customer—rsi^int
the contract price after the deaiei
has picked up the customer's receip
for the down payment of, say,
dealers name for al
‘"dynamiter's"
to his ac-
car—a dealer’s pur
by a small cash pay
ment and a series of notes he ha
.io intention of paying Aiao knowi
as “macing."
"Hearse chasers"—those who pre
on estates by presenting false claim
•t selling piographies, etc, at ver
high prices.
>tuiled flat the apartment of
dealer who pretends to -ell his pei
Kas-
man up singled
Voelkel got an infield hit
Smith
to left knocking in Kas-
Keith was hit by the
filling the aacks.
was also hit by Harwood,
IF past performances mean any-
thing, cocky Fred Perry al-
ready has the American singles
championship tucked away in his
travelling bag to take back with
him to that dear England.
True, the slick British court
artist still has to go through the
motions of eliminating our best ten-
nis players, but that should be a
mere formality. Perry has cleaned
house of all opposition this year,
-«r-«nd at that his moat formidable con-
tenders, Baron Gottfried .von
Cramm and Jack Crawford, are not
competing in the current nationals.
Von Cramm, said to hfve the
hardest ’drive and the most stylish
strokes of any player in the game,
may take Perry’s measure in a year
or two, though he failed to ruffle
The
years have been
political interference and
by lack of money, modern
and methods, hasn't meant a thing
to the avid reader of "thrill" fiction
and features.
To him the Rangers still are the
steel-muscled, flint-chinned officers
who always get their men.
hy 8 Being -uml
»to< k n. cesiary
for icached that age this last March be-
, , (.tH bu-L muI.nii?-loll ill
The entire*'' Br7nh Ik?in" turneif
in a swell performance, backing
pitcher Mays with errorless support
The keystone combination of Frank
and Voelkel pulled off one great
double play that helped to keep tin
Thompsons from scoring
Thompson used three pitchers in
a vain attempt to stem the strong
Brenham hitting tide. Red Smith,
Sun Oiler third sacker, led the at-
tack with three hits out of four trips
to the plate.
By beating Thompson, the Sun
Oilers advanced to the finals. They
are undefeated in five gam< s in the
Houston Post semi-pro baseball
tournament. The winner of the
tourney will be decided tonight at
8 p. m.
Bhenham started off the scoring
in their half of the fourth
prowicz, the first
to right,
down the third base line
singled
prowicz.
pitcher,
Frank
forcing in Voelkel witth a run Fred-
die Long singled sharply to left bat-
ting in Smith and Keith. Harwood
was pulled out and Frazier went in
to pi^-h for T|homp|>on. , Angley,
batting for Hendrix, hit a lotyj
to right, Frank going to
ter the catch.
Mays struckout. With
first and Frank on third,
pulled off a double steal, and Frank
slid ovFr- the plate with' the frftlw
run. Lowenstein struckout
the rally.
The Sun Oilers iced the
their half of the eighth.
Smith, and Keith singled
cession to score one run.
MAYS PITCHES SUN
OILERS TO SHUTOUT
OVER GULF OILERS
The
bureau
headed by the Superintendent of
Documents,
ly every subject on eadth have been
collected by the United States Gov-
ernment,
has been carefully classified by sub-
jects ranging from Agriculture to
Weather. Then it has been further
divided and printed in the form o'
pamphlets.
The Government furnishes the*
pamphlefo. al small costj to >lv
public on request You can get a
pamphlet containing information
about almost any subject that ma .
interest you.
Some of the subjects .".lAelj
to be of interest to our readers, ant
a brief description on those subject
are given in a new book publisher*
by the manufacturers
Black -'Draught. This
titled “Information,"
free to anyone who
Chattanooga Medicine Co.. Chatty
nooga, Tennessee, requesting a eop*
rebuild their conference ehampionship team of
1934. Howard Bryan, baek, is their chief asset.
Ray Morrison has taken held of the Vanderbilt
coaching reins and Maj. Ralph Sasse at Mlwinippi
State. Georgia Tech wax hard hH by graduntiem
In the Southern Conference.’Duke in outstanding;
In the Southwest < nnferwne*. Rite *o^» Mtmnf
corr>-
since
shut
the British ace’s patent leather hair
when they met on the grass courts
of Wimbledon this summer.
Fred already has three great na-
tional championships hanging from
hia belt—the Wimbledon title, most
famous of all net classics; the
French hard court championship,
and the American title, which he is
now defending.
Conceding the possibility, how-
ever faint, of an upset, the only
American players whp can bq fig-
ured to have Git .Wnotttt cAance
of surprising the peerless English
star are Donald Budge, red-headed
sensation from California, and Sid-
ney Wood, blond New York stylist
Budge, whose phenomenal prog-
ress this season already assures him
of the No. 1 ranking on next year’s
American tennis list, is improving
L:iM October Lt. Mueller enrolled
the local CCC ,can*P where he
Ss b en working with ifae educa-
indicting the financial ’it rial |>t<>,;rani, teaching school and
serving a» assistant educational ad-
visor and canteen clerk. Three
months ago, Capt Bollman, auditor j
......... ■ "■» u Ml ■’ « » ■ » l»-
Fricnds of Paul H. Mueller will be
clad to know that he. has hern rc.-
ccntly cnmniissibned a* second lieu-
i tenant in the cavalry branch of the
regular Army -Reserve of the U. S.
| Six years ago at the age of 14,
' Lt, Mueller enlisted in tlve national
Guariy cavalry branch located at
Brenham. He worked his way from
the ptivatr* to liyv* ’-aargyant when
-finahcfarpndrhcatiun j he was
boosting certain stocks. ’ enlisted
, , During
A reloader—salesman who cap
sell more stock to a Suck-r who has
made a small investment-.
by leaps and bounds, and might pos-
sibly surpass himself at Forest
Hills. If the torch-thatched Cali-
fornian, who is already being Com-
pared to the famous Maurice Mc-
Loughlin, should, hit a brilliant
streak of tennis, he will give Perry,
.or anybody else, a real argument.
Wood, Unde Sam’s other hope,
kis one of the enigmas of the net
game. Erratic and thoroughly un-
dependable, he was not given a
starting assignment in the recent..
Dayis Cup finals; but when blond
Sidney is at the top of his game no
one would be a top-heavy favorite
to beat him. Wood has a victory
over Perry to hig credit, and if he
played an inspired game, he might
conceivably repeat that triumph at*
Forest Hills.
CivrrUM. I tit. King raauirw SiiadteaU. 1st
"Selhand switch”.
“conveFter”—selling
fust, then advising
_ ______
000 500 030—8 9 0 *j'h^ "three B's"—Bett r ’BitsbteM t .hhi
000 000 000—0 3 I Bureaus. ■ I
"Front money"--advance -comtnis-1
sion to a salesman
"Tagging
racketeer.
"Squawks"—complaints that bring
the “three B's” into action.
office, -Which -allowed some pnf-of-
town tax experts to work, among its
franchise tax records.
for this sub-district,
the office <>l the local CCC camp as'
company clerk where
ing duty.
The commissioning of Lt. Muller
is the only citsy of its kind in the
8th Chirp Area, where an enrollee
was commissioned as an officer while
serving in- the Civilian Conservation
Corps and is to be highly compli-
mented for his achievements—Con-
roe Courier. ~ • -
Young Mueller, who is the son of
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Mueller of the
Berlin community, graduated from
the Brenham High Schoi at the age
of 17, and attended Blinn Junior Col-
enlist in the4"p«j?r where ire made an ex-
--------------—------ u 1
ANSWERS TO TEST QUESTION*
■ printed on paga 2
a •
1. It is a variety of cabbage. ,
adian
Northwest
Mounted.
Both
have
immortalized
in song
and
story.
* ’
The
“westerns”
regularly
carry
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.
Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 136, Ed. 1 Monday, September 2, 1935, newspaper, September 2, 1935; Brenham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1174266/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Nancy Carol Roberts Memorial Library.