Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.),, Vol. 1, No. 192, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 27, 1931 Page: 4 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Rusk County Area Newspapers and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Rusk County Library.
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■
/
WV
FOUR
HENDERSON DAILY NEWS, HENDERSON, TEXAS
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1981
WOM
SPOETS PAGE
).
|. •
A
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o
I
•INTRODUCIN'
WEST POINT
ZION HILL
professional
It *<
STAR TO HAVE
I
&
h
V
z
4;
V-
4b.
&
CANNON-COOPER
k
CLEANERS
Phone 214
Palace Thurs & Fri.
HI
uifn
ED.
&
TUB PKODUCTION AND
ft
DELIVERY
OF ELECTRIC POWER
Copyright, 1931. by Central Press
CHAMPIONSHIP
HIGH SCHOOL
SQUADS PLAY
the
four
J
>
Or is the real cost the cost of the
£
r Av
Southwestern Gas and
Electric Company
Date Now!
11I
ARMSTRONG BROS
ETTA KETT
By PAUL ROBINSON
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F
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Phone 37
North Main Street
Charles A. Comiskey, Beloved
White Sox Owner, to Be
Buried Thursday
Feature Game for East Texas Is
Match Between Sulphur
Springs and Marshall
West
Wit
Noted
Da
probably
Roman’s” asso-
Ei
WE’LL FIX IT
AT LOW COST
r\
n '
II
2?
1
r
y
TOOTYSSPORTS
h
*
il.
WEBB’S
Sanitary
DAIRY
xrr.
'6
WANTA LAUGH?
SEE
|£V
ju V I
*■ •
$
H,
A1 '
®, /*
W jhB
V'vt
S
MILK
For The
BABY!
■---o-------------------
YALE COACH RETURNS
TO PROFESSIONAL JOB
♦
I
I
V
\
&
SHOULD WORRY!
CANNON COOPER
Will Fix It
R>';-
ge was A harvard
HALFHAcjc SMRTNG iN
I<DI6 — THREE VEARS
LATER. Me ENTERED
\ THE AALL OF fame,
j SCORING THE oILT
ToUcADoWM AGAiaJST
YALE. /A) THE
ip-ra CAMBRIDGE STAPiVM
By interconnecting the facilities in
many towns, whose demands occur at
different times, it has been possible to
keep the cost of delivering power down
to the point where electricity is the
cheapest thing you buy.
Football Player Will Be Buried
Beside the Nation’? Great
Military Leaders
So yoo
WANT To BE
A FULLBACK.
I
VMAr’s this? Ah-A Picture*
ViElL-ViELL— PARDON MS. VlWLt
WVMWHE
SAID ABOUT NOV GOING Tp
ANN SPECIAL AWkANG-E-
i \ thg-nts ? Tur-Tvr- donL
i I 3E SilLN • ________rr-^
Me was
FresmmaM goaoI w
For THREE VEARS \
AdD BACRFIELP
COACH FoR.Tu/0
VEARS AT AARi/ARD
Mead Football
coach at harvard,
SUCCEEDIAJ&
Arnold AorWEEa)
7.7
■p.
AH-A SPECIAL DrLNER't LETTER-
AHD ME - A PERFECT SLAVE TO
CURIOSiM — ITS FROM OUR. NEVI r'
FOOT SALL COACH — HE'LL ARRNE K
Tomorrow and he savs ’ please I
Dont /aake ant special. r—\Z
PREPARATIONS - WELL— I
TALK. AQOur ccncentRated k/7
---->. conceit— what Did /nCt
>--7 I He EKPtecr— A r-t-jJ X
PM5ADK ? ,---> IlfilLv/
COACH EDDIE CASEY
-------By JACK SORDS-------
F'-1
PECO
fort to J
ment prq
ity this M
ities hen
ly ‘‘roun
Beeves al
Idle nJ
county d
fore the]
tions the]
financial
ness to
finding •
er lines. 1
If theJ
hie to fl
I o lied nJ
to farmJ
who novi
pickers. I
*o questi|
erence. I
work, ha
1 he dol
rested fol
the coun
time corl
ter charfl
fused thd
ploymeni
refused I
li
power al the customer’s premises? That,
of course, is what makes the service of
Each sec-
have its
T/
Something wrong with your
ear? Don’t worry, for when
you bring it here you'll feel
certain that the job will be
done right ... at a low price
f VAELLO-? LAVENU3 BEAun
1 PARlOK ? TVH3 is miss <k.tt—
I I’D LITE TO MAKE AN .
1 ^ppomVMENT ToNICHV ft*? I
1 A FACIAL—y INGER. WA1E. —J
<N'enernthing? (Ui
Saturday 11:30 p in
It’s Gonna Be
Lots of 1’iiu
g <» a
2K
** I
Make a
B
ILEM, Or«., (UP)—The mar
school teacher has a cham
In Drf. Franci* D. Curtia, if
Univeraitv of Michigan edu-
making before 500 Oregon
Ml, Dr. Curtis said the
Heat Influence furnished pu-
©f adolescent age in public
©I* by the married teacher
they understand and sympa-
1 with their students’ prob-
TheI —
have SOME ncnels
OR MAGAZINES fcr
'“n Die accommodation
hl OF VISITORS
. IfflW'
B:
NEW YORK, Oct. 27 (UP) —
Benny Fri. dman, assistant Yale
football coach, returns to his for-
mer berth as quarterback of the
New York Giants professional
“I
H
, IWEETWATEk, Tex.. (UP)-
i? NPirly 10,000 unemployed legion-
nalr a in Texas face the wint"’-
without emn’oyment. according to
rvev mnde by V. Earl Earp,
atecommander.
gjYar veterans throughout the
’ atetT p^e being urged to co-oper
ata.in.Uniting jobs for their “bud
I; dloM.” Earp proposes the indi
tutlon of employment bureaus by
F all legion posts to meet what he
called an “unemployment crisis.’
. Professor Fa’^n-g
Married Teachers
rBw
WKSLACO, Tex., (UP)—Plans
for reduction of utility rates in
foe Lower Rio Grande Valley fail
)d to materialize at the October
neeting here recently of the Vai
•y League of Municipalities.
The utilities committee of the
League, expected to present it;
'ormal report on which it has been
vorklng for the past tlirce months,
lid not report.
Harvey W. Draper, of Houston,
lecretary of the Texas Leage of
Municipalities, with which the Val-
ley League is affiliated, told the
gathering of city officials how
the city of Amarillo attempted to
lower telephone rates. He also
noke of efforts made by other
Texas cities to reduce utility rates.
UAtff LEGIONNAIRES
ARE WITHOUT JOBS
TUE8I
It was such a play that caused
Sheridan’s injury. Unafraid of
anything that walked or flew, Ca-
det Sheridan threw his 148 pounds
into the face of the flying Yale
wedge, in an attempt to bring
down halfback Lassiter who was
running behind the almost solid
wall of itnerference.
Ry DIXON STEWART
United Press Staff Correspondent.
W.ld and
Wooly Weit at Garden.
The wild west comes back to
the metropolis today when the
World Series Rodeo opens in Mad-
ison Square Garden. And all of
the repressed clerks and Eugenie
capped stenographers, who have
heard the phantom yell of the
plains ring down the sacrosanct
canyons of lower Manhattan, will
be draped around ringside to
cheer Nowata Slim and his ‘ top
hand” competitors.
There are, we understand, the
usual sordid pecuniary details.
But we prefer to believe that 40
odd centaur’s are riding out of
the west like so many Lochinvars’
to settle the question of individual
supremacy raised in a dozen tour-
naments at milestones past the
Mississippi.
So before” the first bronc rider
“rides the jerker” down the chute
and the first “steer wrassler” slips
his steed for the comparative in-
security of weaving horns let us
look at a few of the boys who pro-
vide the thrills. It may be our
last chance.
Nowata Slim, of course, is fam-
ous in rodeo circles. His home
is in Nowata, Okla., and he is
one of those tall rangy western-
ers the romancers write about.
So he became Nowata Slim al-
though as a youngster he answer-
ed to the summons “Richardson.”
At Cheyeirrfe and Pendleton, Slim
was such a sensation he “jined”
up with a moving picture outfit
and is coming east to prove Holly-
wood hasn’t softened him.
Pete Knight
Defends Title.
Pete Knight of Calgary, Can.,
holds the championship title, but
he faces devastating opposition
in Nowata Slim, Bobby Askin of
ft’
DALLAS, Oct. 27 (UP)—Un-
defeated elevens of seven Texas
Interscholastic League Districts
will meet this week on gridirons
throughout the state,
tlon of the state will
Championship battle.
In Central Texas the main at-
traction will be at Cleburne, where
that city’s high school will meet.
Temple. All West Texas will
watch the Pampa-Lubbock strug
gle at Pampa while East Texas
will have the Sulphur Springs-Mar-
shall contest.
Large cities of the state also
will have crucial matches. High-
land Park and Woodrow Wilson
meet in Dallas; Austin invades
San Antonio for a clash with Mam
Avenue; Jeff Davis and John Rea-
gan meet at Houston and at Ft.
Worth it will be W. C. Stripling
vs. Central High.
Bescides the Pampa-Lubbock
game, District 1 will have a game
between Plainview and Amarillo
at Amarillo.
In District 2, Quanah, tied with
Vernon for first place, will enter-
tain Hollis, Ok. Vernon will meet
Altus, Ok. The third district
game will be betw en Electra and
Wichita Falls.
Breckenridge and Abilene of
District 3, will invade Brownwood
and Eastland, respectively, for Sat-
urday’s games.
Rig Spring, foremost contender
for the District 4 title, will take
on Colorado this week. San An-
gelo will tackle Midland while
McCamey invades Sweetwater.
An undisputed leader will be
established, barring- a tie, in Dis-
trict 5 Friday when 1'entral Hi"h
meets Stripling. 7“ey are th--
only undefeated and untied teams
in their district. In another con-
game Saturday Mineral
meets Northside in Fort
Is it the cost of the power in
power plant? If it were possible for cus-
tomers to call at the power plant for
their power, it could be sold even more
cheaply than it is now.
HECK I GIF PECKED
cur or class and
HAYE iO WAT HERE-
FOR THE DEAq —
MAN BE I can find
something hot bo
OF HICOUOHING •
— \Now-THATi f"
headache *1 ,
-/AZ"!
" Or /
I
■^z7
into an inverted V and, with the
ball-carried in the middle, rode
into the defensive outfit—-was
barred years ago. For its toll of
life and limb was terrific. Bat
under the present rules it still
is possible for such a wedjre to
form on the kickoff and almost
every team uses it every time it
receives the ball.
football team Sunday.
His salary is reported to be the
largest ever paid a
player.
For The
Palace — Hallowe’en
Take a Chance Show
SAN ANGELO, Tex., (UP)—
* plant at Texbn to remove sul-
injr from gas produced by the
or|d’» deepest wells in Reagan
mnty, (s planned by thq Texas
ubllc Service Company/
The proposed plant, to be built
; a coat of $100,000, would bo
Mnileted before co'd weather
ts Texas. Refined gas from tho
ant will be used to serve citizens
f Big Lake, who have applied
ir a charter for a $50,000 muni-
pal gaa company.
The titillty's gas line to San
Angelo extends within three miles
Of the town-.
VALLEY FAILSTO GET
LOWER UTILITY RATES
[■/' Louis Comiskey, the body of the
72 year old baseball magnate was
h-. taken to the family homestea-1-
Funeral and burial rites will be
held Thursday morning from the
Ismay, Mont.; Chick Hannan of
Caspar, Wyo , and the Canada Kid
of Susan-River, Okla. The “Kid”
drifted down to the Osage from
the border and the cattle country
concocted his “handle.” His real
name is hidden behind a taciturn
nature but the “Kid” typifies the
glory bound cow-puncher,
A couple of years ago the “Kid”
had the sight of one eye destroy-
ed by an enraged Brahma steer.
The bovine knocked the Kid down,
trampled him and gored him. Sur-
geons shook their heads and said
he had made his last ride. iut
after three weeks in bed this same
Canada Kid wound a bandag- over
his blind eye and entered the Ok-
lahoma City rodeo. What’s more
he won the broncho busting con-
test.
Paddy Ryan, temperamental
Irish war veteran, is a champion
bronc rider and will “fork broncs’’
with the rest of the experts. Ry-
an was critically injured in thwart-
ing a holdup near his Wyoming
home r cently but within a month
he was off to the riding wars
again. Big Walt Heacock, anoth-
er bronc riding fool, aided Ryan
in that battle and notched his gun
when the smoke cleared away.
---------c--------- --
Commerce Win» Game.
COMMERCE, Tex., Oct. 27
(UP)—Commerce High School’s
football team beat Sulphur Springs
here last night, 8 to 0.
We repair so thoroughly and
charge so little it pays to
have It done here.
SPEAKING
O F SPORTS
f rence
Wells
Worth.
Gainesville and McKinney will
battle Friilny'at Gainesville in the
onlv District 7 game.
Sulphur Springs and Marshall,
tied for leadership in District 8.
will fight it out at Marshall Fri
day. Texarkana and Paris will
play nt T<xarkann.
In District 9 interesting games
will be nrovided hv Corsicana
metcing Waco and Temple meet-
ing Cleburne.
Tyler High School. 1930 state
champions, will nvet Palestine in
an important District 10 game
Tyler is the onlv jyujefca^'l nn'I
untied team in the district.
Stole Smokes for Medical Aid.
MOBILE, Ala.. (UP)—Wi liam
Sanford, negro, suffering from n
slight ailment, decided the only
way to g( t treatment was to be
arrested, so he stole four nickel
was caught, admitted the
theft and tha”lred the iudge when
aentenced to 20 days in jail.
WlIAT is the real cost of producing
electric power?
WEST POINT, N Y., Oct. 27
(UP)—Cadet Richard B. Sheri-
dan whoSe death followed an
Army-Yale battle on the football
field, will be buried with all the
honors of a soldier fallen in war.
The military funeral on the
wind :wept bluffs overlooking the
Hudson will bo Wednesday at 4
m. Accompanied by the mnr-
t'al splendor of Dick Sheridan’s
fellow cadets in their army blue.
Mrs. Sheridan, who won a dra-
matic race with death to her in-
jured son’s bedside yesterday af-
ternoon, consented to the plans.
There will be a short service in
the chapel as she requested. Th n
the Cadet Corps will bury their
comrade’s body in the Academy
burial ground where it will rest
near that of General George Cus-
ter, Richard C. Anderson of Fort
Sumpter, General George Goethais,
and General Winfield Scott with
whom Grant served in Mexico.
Military escort was provided for
her son's body en route this morn-
ing from New Haven to West
Point.
Cadet Sheridan died from a
broken neck received Saturday
when Army fought Yale to a gru-
elling. 6-to-G ties in Yale Bowl,
but not until after he had fulfill-
ed one ambition—a touchdown
for Army.
The touchdown Sheridan want-
ed came the week previous in the
Harvard game. Members of his
family described his ambition, and
part of a letter he wrote last fall
when he wag a substitute.
V Know
jg/ That It’s
The Very
BEST!
We know our milk . . . know
that it's the best that can be
had. We do not buy milk
hero and there . . . we have
our own herds and know that
they are In perfect health at
all times. Too, we offer you
the two best grades of milk
. . . Grade “A” Raw and Pas-
teurized.
May we put your
name on our daily
delivery list—now?
Phone 419
By GEORGE KIRKSEY
United Pr. ss Staff Correspondent.
» ; CHICAGO, Oct. 27 (UP)—The
’ body of Charles A. Comiskey, who
SB’, died yesterday at his Sand Lake
MP. firm Estate at Eagle River, Wi;.,
today was brought back to the
£?' scene of his birth and his rise to
KL baseball fame and fortune as own-
er 0- the Chicago White Sox.
Accompanied by his only son, J.
By Mri. Henry Burd.
Mc^>Chester Deason and family
made a trip to Greenville today.
Chester wag called there on busi-
ness-
Miss Anita Brooks has return-
ed from the Dallas Fair.
Mr. M. C. Brooks of Mindtn
was visiting his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. J. F. Brooks.
Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Brooks were
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. J. H.
Powell of Good Hope today.
Mr. and Mrs I. L. Griffith were
visiting Mrs. Griffith’s parents,
Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Brooks Sun-
day.
law the use of a flying wedge of
interference for the play< r return-
ing the kickoff.
The flying wedge—that play in
which the offensive team formed
>•«. u. a. rm. oc, c«n»; rm *«•»
o o « O'
NATION PAYS
FTRIBMTE TO
“OLD ROMAN”
By HENRY McLEMORE
United Press Staff Correspondent.
NEW YORK, Oct. 27 (UP) —
Since the early days of collegiate
football, when hard scrimmage
and absence of open plays result-
ed in freuuent injury, and some-
times death, of players, there has
been a constant tendency to im-
prove the rules, with a view to
making the contest more under
standable to spectators and less
dangerous to players.
Out of the scores of Injuries
and deaths that have resulted have
come regulations designed to bet-
ter the game from every stand-
point. It is not too much to ex-
pect that out of the tragic inci-
dent in the Yale Bown last Sat-
urday, will come a regulation that
will eliminate such a formation as
result'd in the injury to Cadet
Dick Sheridan.
Tho intercollegiate football
rules committee undoubtedly will
make a thorough study of the play
in which the accident occurred,
and there is little doubt that a new
change in the rules will be the
result. This change, may be one
of two things. The rules commit-
tee may eliminate the kickoff as
a m ans of opening play, or out-
use to you, and to deliver the power
actually costs more than to make it.
11
HI “POLITICS” |!|
III
III
“The
tude of
prising hl
derstand
a routine
Mrs. Ihri
who will
derson N<
Ing the
at the
torium.
“If It
predate a
ty of dev
to this e
perspectit
thetic hu
band wh
notony of
to realize
of his w
sible. T
inInd tha
right to a
week fro
tion whet
or readin
three tin
week cou
bellion.
“The rr
grow dur
open mut
of shavin
year, and
no doubt
the next
can agalr
“Many
much haj
of provli
one even
such an <
revived—
best gart
early you
place at
orders fi
hardly a
United S
aval lable
places wl
reproach.
“Such
housewift
atlve valt
culinary :
ed cost It
her freed
her regal
this cour
ily whose
make it
“In the
do 1 rec<
dinners ii
napkins
called dr
The ent't
latcd by
such Inst;
nlarltfcs
By.
'Above
one of t
such rela
closely l>j
sure if )i
minded ;
husband
in jealou
Ing of IK
1 lomelj
su<1i us tl
warp am
values,
technica I
fabric of
ing I hem
The re
Mrs. Ihri
by contac
s;i nds of
fying ami
lod out <
come a n
Her anus
ly vtvilyi
dents dr.
ground o
an unpre
services.
The JJ
woman i
mate to L
rigs led
bookings
was only
I lie Jtaily
her si i \ u
Al rs. 11
ed to by I
have bei
News o f 11
s< ’liool.
lately fro
tares nil
2;30 eacl
ms alive <
The sooner this formation is
done away with the better.
Elimination of the kickoff
would stop it. Of course, thous-
ands of fans would howl to high
heaven is the kick-off was re-
moved. There is almost a chance
the ball carrier may be shaken
loose for a long run.
kt family home to the St. Thomas
the Apostle Roman Catholic
church. Burial will be in the Com-
iskey plot in Calvary Cemetery.
—’The active pall bearers will be
selected today, probably from
among the “Old
| ciatei in the baseball world.
Hundreds of messages of con-
dolences and tributes to the mem-
ory of Comiskey continued to
pour in today but none better des-
j cribed the late White Sox owner
than these few words from Joiin
Heydler, president of the National
League:
“If ever a man fought to pre-
serve the good name and honor of
our game of baseball, it was
Charles A. Comiskey.”
For 55 years Comiskey was con-
«ted with baseball. He started
it at 17 as a $60 ar month third
••man for Milwaukee. In his
rly twenties he was one of
apball’s greatest first basemen.
t 26 he was captain and man-
or of the old St. Louis Browns
the American Association
lick won the world tide from the
1 Chicago “White Stockings” of
, National League.*
At 36 he was captain, manager,
owner and first baseman of the
8t. Paul Club of the Western
League, which eventually became
the American League. At 40 he
was owner of the White Sox, which
wor. four pennants'and two world
championsnips under his banner.
FLANT WILL EXTRACT
SULPHUR FROM GAS
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Bowman, George. Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.),, Vol. 1, No. 192, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 27, 1931, newspaper, October 27, 1931; Henderson, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1330918/m1/4/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rusk County Library.