The Matagorda County Tribune (Bay City, Tex.), Vol. 80, No. 33, Ed. 1 Friday, November 27, 1925 Page: 1 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Matagorda County Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Matagorda County Museum & Bay City Public Library.
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«
he Hlatagorda Conn tn Tribune
VOLUME LXXX—NUMBE R33.
BAY CITY, TEXAS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1925.
EIVE CENTS THE COPY
M. P. TAKES OVER
He Didn’t!
DEVELOPMENT
insurance.
Rotarygrams.
•»
Shaw and Louis A. Blalock, present
of keeping
Mr. Crawford is building a scow on
‘This dredge
will be used in cutting a channel
feet long, and 30 feet wide on
bottom, to permit boats to come up by
r,
and
Mustang Island.
er.
sir.
Miss Callie Metzger and Mrs. Faye
tee for the dinner tendered the Rola-
nds,
For exercise he works
if I did some rich
the
Third
blocks from Av-
v,
e.
I
>n.
Island, the engineer said.
Ante Ferry on Way.
About 70,000
to
ferry boats to be used in connection
I more
The Mitzi is 56 feet long and 20
possible depends upon the condition
horsepower Fairbanks-Morsel
of the city’s finances when the matter
is
two
The ferry
boat has sleeping quarters on board,
The crew
Captain Frank La Roche of Point.
was humanly pos-
steadily all night Saturday night and
Goes Higher Up
that date it was 82.8 per cent.
‘S
b
before another bad spell sets in.
Thousands of dollars’ worth of rice
*
-mx
.nualmu
mah
de
f
6
4
9
Q
V
*
not
the
any
are
too,
Farmers to T
Much Rice.
>se,
ttle
1100
the
. It
rith
and
ttle
At a meeting of the City Council
last night, an order, granting help to-
the citizens interested, was passed au-
thorizing the laying of ten inches of
ust
lay
or
men
' the
s he
y; if
bo-
job.
am-
e of
for
ork
sed
vic-
bat
een
f it
all
ect
is
WORK IS PUSHED ON
GULF COAST DRIVE
Engineer Surveying the
Route and Planning
Causeways; New Ferry
to Point Isabel.
culty from a standpoint
local labor employed.
Material orders have
Diesel
and
th-
its
i he
ok-
at
I
Ben C. Stuart, 78, Editor
Of Texas Newspapers Half
Century Still Loves Game
months he worked on the staff of the
first Houston Post.
But a few months later Stuart re-
turned to Galveston as reporter on the
e-
ice
get
let
irs
in
iur
id.
so
-BO
ote
ng
ar-
North Carolina 238 and 1,065,080.
South Carolina 155 and 865,000.
Georgia 158 and 1,150,000.
Florida 172 and 41,000.
Missouri 235 and 235,000.
Tennessee 191 and 480,000.
Alabama 186 and 1,315,000.
Mississippi 264 and 1,870,000.
Louisiana 227 and 895,000.
Texas 117 and 4,050,000.
Oklahoma 150 and 1,500,000.
Arkansas 199 and 1,480,000.
New Mexico 289 and 61,000.
Arizona 286 and 94,000.
California 370 and 130,000.
All other States 246 and 19,000.
has a speed of eight miles per hour
in average weather, and can make the
trip from Point Isabel to Padre Is-
land in 40 minutes.
rangements for shell can be made and
the condition of the streets will per-
mit,
Mayor Pat Thompson Informed The
Tribune this morning that it is the
disposition of the Council to take on
stood up under the extreme weather
conditions.
so
fol-
d,—
the
i beach 50 miles north of Brazos Pass
in 1912.
Water fowl by the millions are in
the small lagunas, and sheltered bays
along Padre Island, it was revealed
and
ig-
.her
f
r
BY ALSON IL GILBERT,
In Palacios Beacon.
System to lie Up Five
Counties With High
Power Lines Is An-
nounced Under Way.
Waler Fowl by Millions.
Mr. Walker, with a corps of engi-
en-
inty
MUCH RICE
WAS SAVED
COTTON ESTIMATE
IS FALLING OFF
GOOD ROADS WILL
SOLVE PROBLEM
*
INFURIATED HOG
ATTACKS WOMAN
O—0------
If you wish to go in a special coach
to the Thanksgiving football game at
College Station, it will be necessary
Mrs. Hattie Combs of G
Pasture Lacerated by
Long Tusks of Mad
Animal.
----------------0—0--
A bird on the hat is worth
day’s work.
“h"
and a galley or cook house.
Will live on the boat.
safety appliances called
board of state inspectors.
Three Blocks From Ave-
nue G to Santa Fe Rail-
road Will Be Made
New.
die, institute officials said.
A Jolly Luncheon.
I Fresh water can be had anywhere
in the sand hills by digging two or
three feet.
The engineers on the work secure
projects like this and th it it
jwith this project, is scheduled to ar-
rive at Flour Bluff about November
Tuesday enabled the farmers to save
clear and cool and every farmer is
in the field with all the help possible
to obtain and busy threshing as long
as th: epresent weather continues, not
a mdAnt will be lost. Every human
No Comparison Between Few
— OO---
FI R SEASON OPENS.
The few days of good weather from: Ante Ferry on Way.
last Friday until the rain started : The Mitzi, first of the automobile
Henry Carrington, a former citizen
of Bay City, who has been in Tampico,
. Mexico, for the past several years, has
been made consulting engineer for
Compliments Us on
Story
* lived in Beaumont, making his home
in that of his sister, Mrs. F. D. Minor,
mayor of Dallas. And in another few
the side of the causeway in front of
the Red Arrow Inn.
E. M. Walker, assistant chief engi-
Point Isabel residents are feeling
-Crawford, construction engineer, rep-
resenting Sum Robertson in the ocean
drive project along Padre Island, has
arrived here with the necessary ma-
months he moved over to the News 1 chinery and equipment for starting
where he served as commercial edi- the construction work of the cause-
tor, city editor, news editor and night way to Padre Island, which will bo
editor. .These positions consumed 1 used temporarily as a landing pier
nearly fifteen years. In 1897 Stuart for the boats of the Brazos de Santi
ago Pass Ferry Company
will in all probability be done provil-
ed the citizens receive the Couneti’s,
-------------- ■ up your part of the state to sit up and
The fur season is now open and will take notice, and then get out and
her arrival at Point Isabel. This boat
0—o-
Evening Journal, owned
__________________ ing, but I bave seen many rmilear thetsinlair and ” now
ketpricetinscash. „.HBRITT iconstructedaround here in the '“ri Mr."Carringtonssnsen of Captain
Bay ctTex"o-o-20-21d-27-1" *0 M™’ J’ C Arrington, of this city.
_ .With1 shirt torn to shreds by the mistake being made, that is the roads take you a little longer you will be
morning papers, the News and Flake's neer of the Ocean Side Highway, has
t _ — Bulietin, and three afternoon issues, iimt aAm n1+ or +LA g--vAv ane ggne.
r growth of the tissue is so great, ers, compared with 11,162,235 bales to cratic ticket when it suited me but as the Civilian, Evening News and Eve- in rol Penet of miinz to he il.a
it doubles every 24 hours. Mo- that date last year and 8,369,498 in like as not I didn’t vote at all. I ning Bulletin. Naturally three of .... the causeway between Finn- Bluff
tion pictures showing this growth 1923, the Census Bureau Saturday an- never voted for republicans—can’t these went on the rocks. 10 mii.5 est M cowus cpat l
have been taken and are being studied nounced. stand ’em.” | Mr. Stuart also recalls when lhc -- - 1 '
by scientists. As long as the tissue! The forecast of production was Not Telling All. first double cylinder press came to that two draw bridges will be
is nurtured and irrigated it can not based on reports of condition, aban- Newspaper men have to lie them- Texas. That was in the plant of thesary through this causeway
a News in 1867. And tha - '
cluster of marigolds that graced the
center of the table, the salad, sand-
wiches and drinks that were served,
the humorous banter and conversa-
tion indulged in and especially the
presence of Dr. J. E. Simons and Mr.
Arthur Harris.
The time passed all too rapidly for
the guests who returned to the vari-
ous places of business cheered by the
association and the good-will of the
hour.
bales additional
2290 Calder. Pads and pencils are
still the chief furnishings of his room
and these he puts frequently into use
as the ideas of marketable material
occur to him.
THREE LINES
--------------- i )
Railroads Operated by, i
W. T. Eldridge In-
terests Pass to the Gulf
Coast Lines.
been placed
by Mr. Walker. The sea is occasion-
ally black with red snapper, off the
.Nicaragua wreck, and pompano, trout
and red fish, crabs and oysters abound
But for the timely arrival of her
daughter and faithful dogs, Mrs. Hat-
tie M. Combs, a farm woman living
eight miles east of Bay City, would
have perhaps met a tragic end last
Tuesday. Ab it was she escaped with
some ugly and painful gashes given
her when the hog attacked her.
Mrs. Combs was endeavoring to pen
the hog when he turned on her and
began the attack, sinking his tasks
deep into the flesh on legs, shoul-
der and arm.
The children hearing her screams
rushed to the scene with dogs and
succeeded in fighting away the mad
animal. Mr. W. O. MeDow, a neigh-
bor, was called and brought Mra.
Combs to physicians.
While the wounds are painful and1
ugly, the wounded woman is in no
danger from them.
took the office of city editor with the
Galveston Tribune and continued two
years until he again returned to the which to "erect “a dredge.
News to write occasional sketches. — . -- • 1 —
Mr. Stuart recalls vividly how Gal-
New York, Nov. 23.—Live tissue duction this year will probably total ions hot and frank, just like the old-
taken from the heart of a chicken in 15,298,000 equivalent 500 pound bales, time editors Mark Twain wrote
1913 by Dr. Alexandria Carli, is still 'the Department of Agriculture Satur- about. In answer to a question
growing under care of Rockefeller In- day announced. A fortnight ago 15,- about politics, for instance:
stitute experts. If it had not been 386,000 bales was forecast. Produc- “They don’t interest me. Politicians
veston, a town of not more than 16.000.
"boasted' ’five daily papers as early
as 1866 and 1867. Of course this num-
ber was too great. There were two
enue G to the Santa Fe railroad.
In this work the city stands half
the cost and the citizens along the
route half. The work will begin at
the A. H. Wadsworth-T. J. Poole cor-
ner and proceed east to the railroad
to the S. J. Styles-R. A. Kleska resi-
dences.
daily in his garden, brushing up
with frequent consultation in agricul-
all day Sunday.
Today (Monday) the weather
Monday .November 23.
The luncheon was served at the
,in the bays on the Laguna Madre side ,
of the island, he said. "Street on the three
pared down each day it would be “a tion last year was 13,627,936 bales. are liars and not to be trusted. They
colossal monster,” overspreading the Cotton of this year’s crop ginned say one thing today and when they
entire city of New York, they said to- prior to November 14, totaled 12,249,- see it in print tomorrow they want to
day. '935 running bales, and excluding lint- retract it. I used to vote the demo-
“by ........ ' ............................
tha ii
Mr. Walker reports
Washington, Nov. 21.—The New Or- ,
leans, Texas and Mexico Railway ob-
tained permission from the interstate
commerce commission today to pur-'
chase three short line railroads in
Texas, the Asherton and Gulf, Rio
Grande City, and Sugar Land Railway
Company.
The price will be $ 1,700,000 and the 1
new roads will add approximately 100
miles of line to the Gulf Coast Sys-
teny
Approval by the interstate com-
merce commission of the foregoing
railroad sales marks the concluding
chapter in a series of rail consolida-
tions of lines operated by W. T. Eld-
ridge or by Eldrjdge and associates.
Approval was given about two
weeks ago to the sale of the San An-
tonio, Uvalde and Gulf to the Gulf
Coast Lines. Mr. Eldridge owned 48
per cent of the stock of the Sausage.
He owns all of the stock of the Rio
Grande City, the Asherton and Gulf
and the Sugar Land Railways.
These sales leave Mr. Eldridge in
the railroad business only to the ex-
tent of ownership of the Rio Grande
Railroad which is in the news today
as being in the hands of a receiver.
------ _O o-----
Live Tissue From
Chicken Continues
Growing 12 Years
gone into thoroughly nad sifted
very cheerful over the prospects of
the opening up of the Ocean Side
Drive. It is reported that four dif-
ferent bus line companies have made
application to put on a bus line as
| noon as the drive is opened for busi-
ness through Corpus Christi. One
company proposes to guarantee to put
on a double dully bus service from
the beginning.
--o—0 - ■
THE RIO GRANDE VALLEY is at-
tracting Investors from Texas and
Oklahoma this year. Write for spe-
cial list of property In and near Mc-
Allen, The Palm City, D. W. Rowe,
Rich Bldg., McAllen, Texas.
w-dec 11
and active work will start us soon as
this material begins to arrive. The
construction of this extensive electri-
cal system is concrete evidence of the
faith of the power company in the
ultimate development of this entire
section and us has been proven in
other parts of the country the avail-
ability of the power supply such as
is planned for this district will be one.
of the big factors in the development
of the territory as a whole.
WILL SHELL
THIRD STREET
remurkable how well the rice has
Point Isabel, Texas, Nov. 24 W. 11
________ . continue until the 15th of February. I hustle for good roads.
effort will be put forth to get the pro- am in the market for .11 kinds of pelts I I am not authority on road build-
ceeds of a year’s labor in and sold for which I will pay the highest mar-
------** —« -t ket —* R E BRITT,
- -............o o ------
The nursery rhyme, "Jack and Jill
went up the hill to fetch a pall of
water," may have originated in the
"Down” country in Southern Eng-
land. there being many "dew ponds
on the tops of the hills in this sec-
tion.
Elwood, III.,
Stuart senior and Ben re-entered the
printing office.
It was in 1868 that Ben moved out
of the mechanical and Into the edi-
torial department. He "cubbed’ sev-
eral years and then in 1873 went with
the Galveston News with the imposing
title of marine editor. Continuing in
this position until 1880, Stuart moved
up to Houston, where for several
to have your check for your railroa1 ------ —
fare ready by Monday morning. i California arc being grown in Lower
Twenty-five reservations must be California, Old Mexico, your recent issues I noticed an article' .
made that day. The secretary of the I The next production report, to be about the Florida boom, so if you will । sexera thousand sacks of rice.
Cwmber of Commerce states that the issued December 8, will announce the allow me I would like to give you the' on the E. Turner plantation at 128
prospects for securing that number revised1 ated acreage and percen- opinion of one in the North as to the Chalmers there were 5000 sacks feet wide, and will carry 11 or 12 an
are fine. There will be something tage o. acreage abandoned, yield per effect this boom is going to have on threshed in those few days, according tomobiles, each trip. She has a 60 many
doing from the time the coach leaves acre uno total production, by States, the Gulf Coast of the great State of to Mr. Turner. Smaller farms did - ’ - - - - ' na
Bay City till it returns that night, and will be the last report until the Texas. I feel that this boom is noth- equally as well in proportion.
revision in June next after the final ing but a real estate bubble and some Practically all of the farmers are
ginning report. one is going to stick a pin in it some resorting to the use of header devices'
The tt"mniE xeport. day and it will bust, and at the same and will resume work in this man-
nThetotalsginnings. prior to Novem- time it will bust many a poor inves- ner as Boon as the Sholks dry off.
bernt4byitates. in.prunning bales, tor. For my part 1 do not see what The process is slower, but it gets the
counting lound as half bales and ex- there is in Florida except sand and rice.
follows • 1 inters were announced as sunshine to draw the people as it has ■ Not for many years has there been
AlSim. 01000 A. . = .. of late. I cannot see what. Is going such an unfavorable threrhing season Isabel will command the Mitzi, after
Arkansas 990 022 Arizona 57,182, to hold this bubble together. . (as we have had this year. The rice - -.....- '
pkans r’ r Calirorni147,794,1 As 1 see it there 18 no comparison farmer has been kept out of his field
. Florid a,38,956, Georgia.,,, Lou- between Florida and the Gulf Coast since about the 15th day of Septem-
Norther Hit Here Satur isiana Mississippi 1,411,680, ot Texas. In the Texas region you her except at brief intervals. Not as
1 ..11 i i m * Mis80 ,140,068, Mexico 41,342, have 11 very fertile 8011 and climate, much as a solid week of good weath-
day Night and is Dry- Nrt2 Ca > lin a,945,535, Oklahoma 1, but you lack the roads. Construct er has attended him in his efforts.
• N. . .1 E” 1J 007372, Carolina,,, Ten- good all-year-round passable roads For two months he has struggled and
ing Out the Fieldsnessee ,342,668, Texas ,,3,152,458, Vir- and you will get the kind of people has done all that
RAniel gin, 33,119 and all other States that will come 10 stay and build »P'Bible to do, only
-APIMY• 1,0b good homes and make contented citi-’enal nf wnniha- •
founder at Lexington in 1785, the
first newspaper of the state. Hamil-
ton Stuart founded the Galveston Civ-
ilian Gazette in 1838 and some years
later after the civil war, became the
original State Press editor of tin1 Gal-
veston News.
During War Times.
In 1861-62 Ben entered the game as
roller boy in the printing office of
the civilian. Then as the war broke
out the family moved to Chambers
County, where the youth enlisted witli :
Company L. Cook's Regiment. First
Texas Heavy Artillery. About a year
later the Civilian was revived by
shell sixteen feet wide on
man who with the exception of four
years in the civil war has followed
the fourth estate continuously, a rec-
ord of service bolstered by a lineage
of newspaper men before him and in-
cluding a great-grandfather who es-
tablished the first newspaper in Ken-
tucky.
Although retired from active service
twelve years, Mr. Stuart still writes
articles for the press, in addition to
scanning five papers daily with all
the care and attention of the proof-
reader. His “library" includes the
Beaumont Enterprise and the Journal,
the Galveston News, the Dallas News
and the New York Times.
For virtually his entire life Mr.
Stuart has been identified with Gal-
veston journalism, although employed
several months by the first Houston
Post. Since 1913, however, he has
Nov. 12. In one of
table, a jolly informal crowd who en-1 Virginia yield 242 pounds per acre, married—not within forty miles of it.” prise,
joyed every feature of the hour, the production 48,000 bales. j_________
vested last year, ers when he was city editor.
The indicated yield per acre and “I never had my picture taken and
The following letter has been
received:
New York, Nov. 17, 1925.
Mr. Carey Smith, Publisher,
Tribune Printing Co.,
Avenue G and Fifth St.,
Bay City, Texas.
Dear Mr. Smith:
We have been rending u copy
of The Dully Tribune of No.
vember «, mid surely want to
compliment you on the way in
which you handled the story of
your new linotype.
The featuring of that story
in your publication should at-
tract many new subscribers
and buyers of printing in gen-
eral, and should serve mate-
rially to strengthen the feeling
of good will already established
among your regular patrons.
From time to time we should
like to see other copies of
your paper.
Yours very truly,
Mergenthaler Linotype Co.,
John E. Allen,
Editor Lintoype News.
engine, Ih electrically lighted.
FARMERS AGAIN
IN THE FIELDS
Immediate steps will be taken for
the construction of an extensive
transmission syrtem which will Inter-
connect the plants of the Texas Cell
tral Power Company in what Ih known
as their "Rice Belt Distriet." Surveys
will be immediately started for the
lines which will Interconnect Bay City.
El Campo, Edna and Victoria; Engle
Luke. Sealy und Columbus.
With the completion of this system
all necessary safeguards for service
to these towns will have been provid-
ed and not only will the service be
improved, but power supply sufficient
for nil demands for industrial plants,
irrigation interests and other uses
will be made available in the entire
territory. By this move the power
company will fulfill its obligation to
tile public to encourage the industrial
and manufacturing development of
the country to keep pace witli its ag-
ricultural development.
The power lines will be constructed
of the most modern type, which lines
will ultimately become part of a high
power system which will traverse
practically till' entire state.
The company has planned to carry
out this work at a period of the year
when the enormous labor payrolls
will have the greatest effect on the
local business conditions since win-
ter months present the greatest diffi-
plans on a fifty-fifty basis. Just how
George Washington never
told a lie for the following ex-
cellent reasons:
He had no income-tax blanks
to fill out.
He was elected President
without making iiny campaign
speeches.
W hen Muri h n found a
strange hair on his shoulder,
she aiways figured it came
iron* his wig.
The Anti - Saloon League
never asked him where he
stood.
The tough breaks he suffered
thill winter at Valley Forge re-
quired no exaggeration.
He never applied for life In-
by W. A.
Days o
He Thinks Fust.
1 Mr. Stuart’s appearance still sug-
Probable Yield 86,000 gests the busy editor. He is small.
n 1 i t i active, quick and about as nervous
Hales Under Govern- as though he were getting out the
» • • last edition. His voice is high pitch-
ment S rormer rore- ed and somewhat weak but his re-
cast marks come rapidly and directly and
-"5- show the imprint of his journalistic
— training.
Washington, Nov 24.—Cotton pro- And he will let you have his opin-
is yet in the fields in shocks, it hav-
ingeen impossible to get to it for I __ _____________, _ .. ..._____
---
projects or when it. will ho
come to stay and build up ‘sible to do, only to receive one bad
IWY.ana i. . . good homes and make contented clti- ‘spell of weather after another it is
in the total ginnings were eenB Too many of those in Florida
The farmers of this county are jubi- 216.739 round bales, counted as half are there only a small part of the 1
lant over the arrival Saturday nightbales, compared with 265,675 for 1924 time.
of a strong dry norther which blew and. 213,494 for 1923. | when they move down to Texas
of cotton ginned prior they do not want to feel that every, R,T c;+., R«v
to) oyemb . . last year was 818 per time it rains they Fhut 1“ on ac- bay Clty Boy
is cent of. the totalcrop and in 1923 to count of impassable roads. The pres-
ent condition of your roads should
cause everyone interested in building
"There Is Nothing Too Good I’or Our Friends"
-uummmmaun
14--
carries two life boats anti all other , 4 . .
for by thedown to knowing what an be done
The farrv definitely.
Florida and Texas Gulf
Coast, Writes Sub-
scriber in Illinois.
Sandwich Shop. The party of sixteen the indicated total production by can’t start now.
gathered in one group at a special States follow: widow would get
C. 1 their supplies from Port Aransas, but
ood when deliveries are delayed they live
Weather Enabled Rice on fish and oysters. However, the
. [ "frijoles and bacon are appreciated,”
I r e 8 h the engineer said.
| It will require about one more
month to finish the survey of Padre
The claims of Hen C. Stuart, age 78,1 The veteran was born in Galveston,
to veteran journalism make others son of Hamilton Stuart and the great-
seem weak and paltry. Here is a grandson of the Kentucky Gazette’s
me. No I never tural bulletins. Beaumont Enter-
Work will begin as soon as ar-
neces-
‘donment, probable yields, ginnings, selves, occasionally, he says. As he Galveston News in 1867. ""And the'Chi? thro non this’ auseway, which
etc., to November 14, and upon the explains it: News also got the first web "perfect- - ‘ “ - - —E- ‘
assumption of average crop influence "Obituaries make a man lie. Every ed” press in the state in 1880 and the
______________________________remainder ot the harvest KI inromhineneriditsznsniadtninE yrat. stereotype machinery the is now working 'T? 'T
Hurley, the efficient program, commit-1 Indications point to a yield of 165.5 zens. I’ve written such obituaries I For long Interested in Texas his-camn is ahit 20 mnaz 8 Se 1118
tee for the dinner tendered the Rota- pounds of lint cotton per harvested myself. Maybe the man was the big- tory, Mr. Stuart writes his articles wrek or 1. Nicaragua the 0ia
riaus recently by the working girls, acre, compared with 166.4 pounds in- gest rascal in the community,” chiefly on this subject and circu- I"tamshin Which" wa Htrandad nn the
entertained those who took part indicated from November 1 conditions, Mr. Stuart is camera shy, a charac- lutes them in nawspapern of this and * * ' "
that evening's program at luncheon and 157.4 the final yield per acre har- teristic he must have disliked in oth- other states. —
TT ELECTRIC POWER
11 *
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Smith, Carey. The Matagorda County Tribune (Bay City, Tex.), Vol. 80, No. 33, Ed. 1 Friday, November 27, 1925, newspaper, November 27, 1925; Bay City, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1553412/m1/1/?q=%22%22~1: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Matagorda County Museum & Bay City Public Library.