The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 100, Ed. 1 Monday, October 29, 1928 Page: 4 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Orange Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Lamar State College – Orange.
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;.........
—
BOXWO MiO
81
SpoRIS
of Past
GOLF : AND 1 BASKBAL
4
Ahead
4
1
4
(
‘ $
—oecupy columns of newspaper space
"e this week. it is the first chance
■ £
555
t
u
*
We inquired through letter of a
ahu
si wM
"a
+2a
Vi
TELLING THE
Ponies Ofensive
1
I was thrown out three
*
the Long-
lack
vital spark, even in winning.
and
stuffed. thousands of Literary Digest
s-e
me swinging
FN
F ■
bruisng.
steady assault on the somewhat fiex-
Unless RufUS
the Harvard signals all
r rank
over again.
1
and
oI uina and
U. norned Frogs
Wil-
Texans
Ilir
Lue Christians goal line for
not counting extra dividends.
a Jewelry, clothing and cash.
bprin irom midaeid.
ODD NEWS
SIORK VOTES
SOUTHAMPTON,
Y. -- Mrs.
r
t
Ostermann
a year.
HEAR YE! HEAR YE!
Phone 606
(By EDSON R. WAITS,
7:004M 11:00AM
THEATER ROBBED
lory tonight when
he tangles with
WEEkLY SONGS
c
su-
Qi
amnha
%
--m,
FOE
oil I
1:10PM
4:25PM
4155PM
5:15PM
5130PM
5:50PM
5:55PM
12 :30PM
12:40PM
12:66PM
1:10PM
1:80PM
1:00PM
0:00PM
2:30PM
1:40PM
2:65PM
l:lvPM
1:10PM
4:00PM
1:00PM
•pi
Ph
FC
ro
in
that
They
FC
bet
Cy
1:00 AM
8:2541
8:45AM
0:00AM
0:10 AM
9:80AM
WAS
■han
Fret
Box
FO
roe
Fit
7:10AM
7:40AM
7:11AM
1:10AM
1:10AM
0:10 AM
10:00 AM
1:10PM
0:40PM
6:55PM
7:10PM
7:10PM
1:00PM
1:11PM
where they
practice.: I
1:90PM
2:00PM
2:25PM
2:45PM
8:00/M
3:00PM
8:40PM
odist University in Saturday’s con-
terence classic at Memorial stadium.
Littleleld'a chances of success will
PIAN
sible
in go
taker
FO
far
Cy
FC
901
to
the
9:90PM
7:00PM
7:10PM
7:45PM
1:00PM
8:10PM
1:10PM
WAN
keepe
Sabin
season.
There was nothing to do but learn
sent
mail.
10:10AM
10:40AM
10:88AM
11:10AM
11:10AM
11:00 N
1:00PM
wee a
Where
Bald-
other
beat
ture with convincing realism and a
suavity whieh stafps her as one of
the screen's finished artists.
R
Whi
lets.
Phot
Wes
H
STC
whe
boa
Rea
st re
feBe-t oven
fes KUHER nhcc
WOR-P • U-eu=-
wgiousmeBALe!
i moves
this pic-
FC
ap
ba
$3
12:00 N
12:2604
12:45PM
1:00PM
1:20PM
l.MPg
C
1
H
Griffiths After
Fifteenth Scalp
in Lightheavies
L. CHARLES
WESTLAKE
SULPHUR
KDGERLY
VINTON
OMANUK
Ar. Besumont
Leave
BEAUMONT
ORANGE
VINTON
EDGKRLT
SULPHUR
WESTLAKE
Ar. L. Charien
3rd and Green
1
h
h. J
P.
A
FO
roc
leu
Fo
Job
)
T
H
T
0
THIEVES RAID
BRECKENRIDGE
FIGHTING PARSON
NEW YORK — The Rev.
JANNINGS’ PICTURE
FEATURES SUSPENSE
CAR COLLISION
FATAL TO PAIR
from the crossbar, but seeing 1 was
stuffed with straw votes, he thought
I was a tackling dummy.
champion, in the principal lu-rouni
mateh at.Wte City.
Did You Ever
Stop to Think
A Fow®uE 19 A> nU(A A VART
PF FOOVALL A9A50KD.Rr —
L<
4
an
1osme • 65
ATMl=
WHO MoeK
CAW* ToR "
GNA MAIG9
TWAn B~ une -
CwAKsain
eiRe /
@om _2
FooxBAur*
BY OUN EFFU OCTOBER Npas
AuAUmomdAk. BnS DIVISION E
saw something drastic must be done.
That fall Taft was running against
Bryan for president, and the Liter-
ary Digest had beaten the govern-
ment to it in holding the election.
;,23
The ruse worked perfectly. a
learned all the Harvard signals and
A somenve AnoohFfEsnetuma: |;
Baylor Grid Star
Escapes Fire With I
Brokenfield Dash
WHAT PRICE THE FUMBLE!
t
Va
against all opposition,
horns have appeared to
through the sequence of
can Legion in 1925, died at his hofe
here late last night. He was 62
l
duction as a background for an
crossed i
lne arst
. PATIENT SUICIES
NEW ORLEANS, Oct. B.
Perkins, 58, prominent merchant of
Brookhaves, Miss., haniged himsele
in Touro Infirmary her* todas with
« bel cora. A nurse dscoyered hie
body: Perkins was adgmitted to the
howpital Oct. 8,
E -oseR ALWIAN- cA13
4.‘0-RP. (A-$ "-ucK-"
SFWE 1o46R Mese- One
Ve"unaugK**
E FAcT 4 Heke
They took, among other things, a
diamond lavalier worth 855000 from
a room in the W. H. Bennett home,
where Mr. and Mrs. Bennett slept.
In both instances, they threw cloth-
ing into piles after they had search-
ed the pockets.
____
theiaumnsesenn,,
PR MAEERrt COAcKES. —
1
I Up the tackling
as it was rather
Beaumont was rated at least even
with the Jackets early in the sea-
son, and despite the Royal Purple
tie with Houston Central two weeks
ag owe still believe Beaumont has
not reached the power it will show
before this football year closes.
Guiveston sport scribe
They arrived in time for us
setting forth that she expects to be
in a hospital election day, but her
request was denied.
November is the month of classics
for football. In the southwestern
conference we have the famous 8.
M. U.-Texas, T. C. U.-8. M. U. and
T. C. U.-Texas battles which prom-
ise more this year than in many sea-
sons past.
THE INSIDE OF FOOTBALI
By J. HERMAN SEIDLIT
Other experts say it Is on account
ox., stimulated interest or inereased
publieity,. Put by conducting lc«.
with a bicycle pump. I have found
the growth of football 1, due to In-
nation.
night I sneaked into the stadium,
Genuine Ford Rubber Cnne
BATTERIES
One Year Guarantee
58.50
ORANGE MOTOR 00.
rope from my neck and swung from
a crossbar till daylight.
That afternoon the Harvard team
came in for more secret practice.
lain W aiker
CHICAGO, Oct. 29.—Jerry •Fuf-
e" urttaths, Sioux City, Iowa, light
heavyweight sensation, will go gun-
ning tor his 16th consecutive vic-
CHEAP HEALTH
PEKING — The ancient cntense
custom of paying a doctor for
keeping one well appeals to foreign-
era. . The .German hosnita emsass to
keep ' Americans, Bensh, German.
Fipch ' ad Italian* A at for 14 a
month.
to the Vanderbilt
time this season with
gage Louisiana state:
WASHINGTON, Oct. 89—A rob-
ber today walked into the box of-
flee of the Earle theater in down-
town Washington, held up the man-
ager and s asistant manager । and
walked but' into the crowded street
with 3 $4,000. X ; «
gagements in this section. Darby
I meets Blly .Murray, Alexandria box-
Millicent Rogers Halm Ramos has
been hoping to exercise he right of
a citizen notwithstanding the stork.
She applied for an absentee ballot." yw* °id and had been ill
1 decided to pass
dummy scheme, i
reached their peak thus far in« their
ALLAS, Tex., Oct. 7,-Eyes of
tbai fandom will be focussed this
k on the training camp of the
as Longhorns at Austin, where
eh Clyde LAttleteld is trying to
relate un array of superb fooi-
material into a smooth work-
projectile capable of halting the
ping Ponies of Southern Meth- i
dec of the 111th Engineer,. 37th
divilon, during the world war, and
national commasder of the Amen-
—---, pastor of Grace
Presbytertan church, Milwaukee, is
proving, as he expresses it, that
ministers "have as much guts as
the next man." He and Glen Fish-
l«r. a member of his congregation,
left home with only enough money
to get them to New York. They
got jobs as longshoremen at 49
cents an hour. Then the minister
became a bouncer at the Salvation
pty hoteh Ho nasn’t hit a man
Young Darby, the popular light-
lightweight boxer whose home is in
the Sabine district, came back from
Mississippi yesterday to fill three en-
ballots inside. Then
a sazdfibgpr"rk."comszcusonthuraHtb"VaaMoustmaa“t
-
2:002400;18400 .nag: Beaumort At 2:00; »;M; 10:30; 12:00;
4looPuses Leave Oranse for Port Arthur at 9:00AM IWOC, ana
I shall neve forget in 1908 I
52^—
any distance. Then 1 comcelved Ehe
^“kO.. ivins the oleomargarine
fhLr m and putung lumps in
their mashed potatoes. They imme-
diately started kicking louder and
longer, and that year we outpunted
Harvard 16 1-2 to 6 t-8.
4 8 -
HRECKEN RIDGE, Tex., Oct. 2 9.
—Carefully stacking loot they could
not carry away in heaps, burglars
robbed two homes here last night,
escaping with about 88000 worth of
The coach looked at
and thereby attaches the habit of
trading away from home.
THE MERCHANT BY STICKING
TO HIS HOME TOWN, NOT ONLY
SETS A GOOD EXAMPLE TO HI8
er, in the main event of a show to
be held by Feaumont promoters in
the American theater tonight. On
Thursday, Darby has an engage-
ment with John Hegnandez in the
Liberty theater arena. Darby is
signed for a bout hereabouts for No-
vember 12, but his opponent has
nqt yet been named.
one-point loss
Commodores.
The Mustangs
scneauied at Shreveport,
YIoqHADNAYA, North Cacau-
ERE- AnUnFAR ""96658
TNENC 'follow af A
. fome= A9An"unLKYEREA«"
GEN. MeKUIGG
CLEVELAND, Oct. 27.—Brigadier
General John R. MeQuigg, com man-
today refused a review by the
ATTRACTS preme court.
2;45FM.50 -e“e Port Authur for Orang at 6:45AM, 10:45AM, and
CHI Xoua- Stptiomstor Aqaieomal Informaatlon
are expected
HOME FOLKS BUT
Orange Tigers yet have their two
hardest games’ of the 1928 season
before them. The Tigers journey to
-ake Charles November 10 and en-
gage the Jackets in Port Arthur two
weeks later.
to beat the Crimson in hockey that
5 ineir way through the Austin eleven
will have to turn to the air, where
it probably woull be at a disadvan
tage against Uie Mustang overheaa
- experts. Ihe onies looked like the
berries in tneir 60 to i victory over
‘axinity Lnversity Salurday.
If 4 were not tor the conflict at
Austin, too tilt betwees the Day lor
place much of their faith in
former Canadian
AVIATRIX PENALIZED
NEW YORK. — Elinor Smith, 17,
high and low ru«r, must stay on the
ground two weeks. She has been
dlaciplined by th. dapartm.nl ot
commerce for flying under th. East
Eiver bridges. Thia stunt was don.
shortly atter ah. broke an aittud.
record.
— SEAL LIQLOR
NEW YORK. — Liquor on steam-
ship, of the French line Is to be
zheathedn steel to prevent then.
Cuztoms Smicials have found many
bottle, hidden in various part, of
boats, and *0 the line is making it,
storerooms extra strong.
the araansas
twnkiling legs of Redman Hume,
Kg the "galloping gazelle," and the bul-
let passes of Sammy Reed. When
Reed isn’t passing Hume wi be
c tossing the leather. Morrison has
equipped his team with a dozen new
plays to spring on the Steers. \ 1
Texas Husky J f
Texas, on the other hand, is ex-
pected to employ the power in its
==d o Neal O’Hara ^**2.
anes ■- -po"Ea " Qommpany (N» Fork Worta) in
(At a great cost and no little ex-
penve: we have secured a football
expert to explain the 1928 gridiron
game to our reader,. Thl, expert
« none other than J. Herman seld-
Itz, who for year,, ha, been con-
nected with the game as player,
coach and ticket scalper, . Mr. seld-
Ills needs no introduction to the
rootball public. Hie Strategy I, fa-
mow wherever rumble, are made
As a player he was the first quarter-
back to use Babson’s statistics for
signals. While a halfback at ottu-
mawa university, he introduced the
custom of padding hl. shoulders ana
hips. Graduating from ottumawa
by request, J. Herman Selalitz be
came a backfield coach. He was he
(or him) who taught the Carlisle
Indian, hip weaving. Previously
Ihe Indiana were only familiar with
basket weaving. After throe year,
experience at Earlisle, Mr. selalitz
coached the loomer Qirl. unti
they adopted step-Ins. Then he re.
urd on account of railing eyesight.
A 4 I *» this great expert who I
imvliries football for our readers,
beginning today). (
stripped to my union suit
JAMES P. HOLLAND, PUBLISHER
OF THE WATERTOWN (WI8.)
TIMES, SA¥S:
THAT wise merchants in any city
do their trading at home and there-
by set a good example for the com-
munity in which they live and do
business. In some towns merchants
have the bad habit of doing their
own trading in larger cities, thereby
creating distrust among their pa-
torns, who will be inclined to follow
the example set by the dealer, and
this in urtn destroys the harmony
which should exist in every) com-
mhunity. ' •
The buyer concludes that if the
goods sold by the merchant are not
good enough for the merchant they
are not good enough for himself
line and bacKield in
This was not quite what I desired,
but by topping all other bidders, I
finally rented a dozen knotholes.
Then assemblying them all together,
I had one big knothole just Urge
enough for me to squeeze through.
I then went up to the stadium and
took notes on the Harvard signals,
j A manager quickly came up to me
. . ’ and Said, "I beg your pardon. but , , ------
mj strategy aren’t you a New Haven coach?" I llam Irvine Flair,
said, "No, l.am an Erie dining car." " *
That seemed to satisfy him, and
to the
tK A3 yA
2886507 GWy Cm
I—IW
rough on my neck. Another kind
of strategy was required. So that
artrnovi, while the Crimson was
holding more secret practice, I went
down there again and rented a
knothole in the stadium from an ur-
chin.
Port Arthurs Yellowjackets show-
ed enough form on their home field
Saturday in winning from San Ja-
cinto, of Houston, to stamp our
neighbors as real contenders for the
title in district 7 this season. The
Jackets played a real game, and
had to give everything, to win 11 to
8 from the Houston Invader that for
two years was the only team to de-
feat Orange.
than anything
"Scaramouche."
the Countess
I attached
- ChuAMOMh $9
I se $25
, 1 $wm*m 0%
I | A Foo AL 8
m Mi . %6
Aanp»-TGer <
fte re"- 38
ewcw wmrA 38
fnek" V aS
woem
AND VILLAGES WHICH CANNOT
Afford to CARRY large
STOCKS, AS THEIR COMMUNI-
TIES ARE SMALL.
them to New Haven by air
’ While neither the Mustangs nor
Longhorns have yet encountered, a
setback in their lealings with other
members of the circuit, comparative
scoring in recent contests accord the
Methodists an edge in their meet-
ing. As a sharp example, the
* Steers had a tough time licking the
Rice Owls Saturday at Houston, 13
. to 7, whereas a week previous Coach
Morrison’s flashy team smothered
the owls 53 to 18.
Where the Mustangs have played
: smart, championship football from
their first game, displaying a bewild-
ering offense and a fairish defense
Ible 8. M. U. line.
I king, Dexter Snelley,
Arkansus Next
A third colerence tiit for the
were holding secret
Suspense—like that of a great de-
tective story, marks the unfolding of
Emil Jannings’ latest starring pic-
ture. "The Patriot," which Ernst
: Lubitsch directed for Paramount.
Plotting against an emperor who
boasted that every man in his king-
dom was under h direct surveil-
lance of the police is the dangerous
and exciting work which falls to the
lot of Lewis Stone, who, with Flor-
onto Vidor, plays opposite Jannings
in this pciture.
From the opening shot, plot,
counter-plot, intrigute and near dis-
covery keep the audience in sympa-
thetic terror at the Strand theater
today.
Laid Jn the court of the Czar
Paul the First of Russia. "The Pa-
triot" brings a gorgeousness of pro-
Porkers eh-
w nie the
~uisianaana are not in toe south-
west conierence, their annual game
with the x’orners is aliowe- to count
in toe sianung Oi me Sen mid tine n.
Ine kazorvacns increased their con-
tesence iaciig to two victors and
one lose •y uvwning the Texas Ag-
E40s, a • lo 4*, bacurday at Payette-
Ville. ine ias apparently smears
the last nope of the iurmers to re-
peat lor me conterence llag.
ween Coach Eisie s team
mieets the norn 4 lexas Teachers
krom Deuton at College Station and
should not be pushed to win. The
nice •wls, who rurxiea their feath-
eis anu gave the Longnorns such a
hi, encounter me Southwestern
Uuiversity A nates at Houston.
2 win, Eddie Beuiar and the
C Longhoru ball tuggers can
KABUL, Afghanistan. -- King
Amanullah believes in seeing a good
example. When he decreed that
women should unveil he stood with
his queen before the national as-
sembly and uncovered her face him-
self.
thralling story, which has rarely
been viewed on a local screen. De-
spite the fact that the audience is
always conscious of an enormou
palace, great numbers of soldiers,
peasantry and the plains of Russia,
attention is never once detracted
from the handful of people used-to
tell an engrossing and fascinating
story. Emil Jannings as Czar Paul
gives a characterization which de-
serves to be placed beside that of
his “Peter the Groat," and other
portrayals which already made him
one of the greatest pantomimists of
all time.
As "The Patriot," Lewis Stone
presents a character which is finer
he has done since
Florence Vidor as
Harri Dillon,
DALLAS, Tex., Oct. 29.—Joe Bay.
less, 44. was killed almost instantly
and Jsss Tyler, 11, both of Waxa-
hachie, was fatally injured whan
their automobile collided with an-
other 11 miles from Greenville yes-
terday. Tyler died a few minutes
after reaching a hospital here.
! ability of John Hernandez, the Han
Antonio lightweight who melts
Young Darby in the main event Fof
Thursday night’s show at Liberty
theater here. The scribe answered
’.Give his boring in tactics full
credit I would describe Hernandez
as a replica of Battling Nelson. He
lacks Nelson's science, but he has
the same style as the old master
and he is as tuugh as any light-
weight to ever perform here.” Her-
nandez recently came from Mexico
City, and since his location in San
Antonio has met such well known
lightweights as Bill Podraza, Chico
Cisneros and Kid Kober.
DUMMY MUMMY
HACKENSACK, N. J. — An
“Egyptian Princess" long has at-
tracted throngs to a museum in the
public library: The "mummy " was
sent from Egypt by a Hackensack
citizen 28 years ago. The curator
recently opened the box and remov-
ed the glass. The mummy was a
dummy stuffed with rags.
That wax the year r-- -l—* —
brought victory to Yale. I was
Horned by the head coach to go to
Imedidety“nanqcout Harvard I that year we beat Haryard"S"‘to"o,
--- _ J—y^ni-to^lhe stadium, not counting extra dividends
times, which ended that inning. I
That gave me my chance. That
at fort worth wousu susice to get
toe bugs excied. as a result of
tneir 46 to 4 win over t. Edwards
University Sainis duturday the Gold-
en Bears Cviniana renewea respect.
They are given an extezent chance
of kicking me unueieated rrogs
uwn the adder. A lie if roga chaik-
ed up ihear mam sraignt over tne
aexas lecn matauors, 2s to 8. Cap-
K' — it's a 50-mile ride on a
fsht train to a bath from this
Don. Some 159 railroad workers
8 ofCictals make the trip to Geor-
vok once a week. They come
ms diugin.
Orange dubs ran a poor last In the
inter-city tournament, the last flight
of which was checked off in Pert
Arthur yesterday. Team mores
Sunday were Port Arthur 81, Beau-
mont 45, Lake Charles 41 and Or-
ange 30. The totals for all four
fighters, and the final net scores,
were Lake Charles 243, Port Arthur
219, Beaumont 213 and Orange 127.
Point makers on the Orange team
were Colburn 1, Bancroft 4. Dancy
9, Pruter 3, Lea 5, Odom 1, Col-
burn 3, Roach 0, Russell 0, Roach
1, Cloud 0 and Howell 3.
e this year the experts have had read-
g illy to get steamed up about a con-
Merence clash. It might very well
80 he the last.
Barring the unforseen, the winner
of Saturday's battle at Austin
. should romp on through to the
league title. There still are the Bay-
Dlor Bears and Texas Christian Horn-
ed Frogs to be reckoned with, but
critics scarcely are inclined to rate
either team on a par with the
mighty elevens that tie up at Aus-
y tin.
IN the day of old one of the
duties of the Town Cryer was
to locate lost articles—or even
to announce articles for dis-
posal -and he would circle
me town for days—often weeks
shouting: Hear Ye! Hear Yet
there has been lost a wallet
containing 3 pounds sterling
together with a talispiece— ' or
"ear Ye! Hear 3e! there is
oxtered for disposal by the
Honorable Archibald Doo-
little—"
TODAY’ the loser or finder
of articles—or tnose who have
sometnng to seil or wish to
buy nave a better and more
rapid means at their com-
mana—one that is almost cer-
tain of obtaining results—
tried and tested—the Classi lied
Columns ol the daily news-
paper where lor a few cents
me needs of a community finds
an outlet.
Those who have used the
Classirid Columns of The
Leader know what quick, re-
sults it will obtain.
LEBEOUF CASE
WASHINGTON, Oct. 1».—Dr. T.
E. Dtcher and Mrs, Ada Bonner Le-
BoueL. under sentence to be hanged
for The murder ot Jame* J. LeBouer
in St, Mar/, varish, Loulsiana, were
WACo, Tex., Oct. 29.—Jak, wn-
•on. whese speed in a broken field
makes him an outstanding quarter-
back on Baylor University's football
euad, probably was saved from
deat in-a-e-heretoday by the
same fleetness of foot he exhibits
on the gridiron.
The athlete, who works as a fre-
man to defray his expenses through
the University, and Wilbur Thomas,
another fire nghter. were pinned
near a wall by falling timbers and
rescuers worked 15 minutes liber-
ating them. Firemen were extin-
guishing minor blazes in the Ex-
change hotel, which was razed by
an early morning fire at an esti-
mated loss of $100,000 when the sec-
ond floor of the structure collapsed.
Warned by the crackling of timbers,
Wilson, directly under the falling
embers, dashed for safety.
He received severe bruises and a
scalp injury. Thomas was more
severely hurt. |
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The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 100, Ed. 1 Monday, October 29, 1928, newspaper, October 29, 1928; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1530090/m1/4/?q=%22~1%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.