The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 71, Ed. 1 Monday, August 27, 1934 Page: 2 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Baytown Sun and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Sterling Municipal Library.
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>NDAY, AUGUST 2
■ »> •* i
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i
—
Y. AUGUSTJ^I
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—i
-
-—r
IK PH) EITHER!
BEE BEE
IWN NINE IN
SLANTS
-
1
I
t day afteronott, by
inc Company. 125 Went
. Goo** Cr**k, Texas. R*«i*-
13 015 — Daily hiewspapet
ft
t
VESTON PILO1
TAX RRDt’CTION is more than talk in1
district. I
the La Porte Independent schoo.
^laving accumulated a. surplus of Til j
ana tfwa«myf irtambeh of the board -last;
•eek voted to reduce the rate eight cents on j
the SHK) valuation. . ,
E V. Niemeytr, president of the ward
of trustees, pointed out that the reduction in
4he rate and the consequent saving to pro-
fsetty owners in the district, was made p«-
| «ada through economy of operation during
I the past term. .. '
fh*t is thr.only way m which, tax tefluc-. —•
I tioO can be secured, by economical manage-
A set of public officials who are will jC
ggftLu jauSiKW5:i-i,
i R<’lal1 l;rite* ,,f ml,k were advanced for 3 taxpayers. IP the official* | /
HUp* quart Sunday ity Hams county anf1 Tcon^irf^r only their own political welfare ihel /,
r like increase will go into effect jo*1 j taxpayers are going to pay and pay and.pay. j|
Tf’Btfcer; ........7-V--—**?♦■' v.,—.4- Members of the L* Forte school boardLL
e misoh for the increase is tJre W-fwf to be congratulated for thfir successful|J
, * 11* i tii/fu uhirh tun naif t*rru»nt Of tb# affairs of thi* district!
torn-..,• <tMfa, ", Z"w th, arm tin,., at th, ta*!W«?t4§
» dairymen must buy. Most of the »*-jf)aht * irv
bae gws to the producers of milk. 1HMI
foThmwT!u«a expHnafldn^f W-‘ FrCS PRESERVED at-ttre Hightends
ess written by M. E. Foster .tpd' p^nt „f Tyrrell and C.arth are being dlstri-
Kllbiiafcn •J>TW Of »aturd«yt:^ut^,ttriy'yTOrtny» large part of the Unit
(The Houston Pressl ; ed States and even into Canada. ~
Harris County milk product* are he- ; As a result the firm is looking for'vaV'1
en the devil and the df« p blue sea. I to one of its most successful seasons sine
have obtained higher prices for; the canning plant was built,
air ni'j|t m wholesale, but they have no as* a few years back figs were looked upon
Kt the resultant holler mail -#s being pfa*4y one of-the-^dHig-ajm--
|c*a will not reduce consumption. cultural products' of this section of I’cxiu .
The formers, after two aild a half-year Mjpy growers expected To. grow wealth*
price warring, will get $2.d0 per lOfi from the-«Ue of their fig.crop. The furs
»—•—*— just 20 cents mPU’ grow iihright but-it was impossible to find a
l* r 100 tfim they tffrh; getting in February, profitable market for the production. Yield
19.T2, when milk ran in the gutters of Hou4- ran far ahead of sales. Many fij^rchams
tin,b*rkihg the beginning of the price ww, were permitted to die. =
will cell -Now more and more ^people apparently
.«:> !)0 per 10« under the price schedule set mi are learning Jo eat preserved figs and year
by the Harris County Milk Industries board. By year there is a better market. Although
p? Feed prices, which have increased about' delayed, it again appears that fig growing
36 per cent, necessitated higher prices for the may become a major industry in the Texas
'f,timers. There i* no question about that. Toast country—with a jtrofit for the
Iffibe farmers had to have higher prices to
pbVe off eeoit«>mie rbm. Their position al-
ready had been made perilous by the loner!
BfipMof price warring when milk dropped
to aa low as $1 per 100—the lowest price they
#»er received for their product.
^••Tfiefore the depression act in the farmer
received from $3.40 to $.160 per 100 pound-,
and jlhe milk >«»ld at retail for 15 .cents a WSc!™-
quart Mi nibc of a large family of poor parent-
TThirty days from now the retail prises- age, as a boy “Jimmie Allred” shined shoes
will .be 15 cento, for milk in stores and 13 in a barber Shop, bottled soda water, sold
*Hnt* delivered. new.- pape: s and in fact did anything he could
* Conkurecfi are not as able today to pay find to do in order to earn a few pennies to
^jgU^hgH^gm^help his mail carrier father provide food and] -— , 7 5 4 *
■■PI cent*. ■ .. . • clothing for his brothers and aiders.
W The farmers and those interested in their I He joined the navy during the world war.
Harare have a job on their hands if they After armistice-was signed he came home
expect consumption to hold up under the and re;ul law in a law office until he was ad-
Hw^ prlcec. : mitted to the bar. Hequicklygaihedarc-
the eonsitmtdibn d<>es not hold up, .h 'put; t,i«r
EM of’tbi! price increase w ill 1,e lost. Fa™ . Defeated in his first race f^attS
•. Tills must not lie the case. This h on* ney general, he came back two years later
time when most of the wholesale prig* in ; and won. He was elected to the same office
perease go*-s I" the producer.' Of th<- t,; h second time in the face of determined ->p-
mrt retail increase, the farmer is to get 3* pr dtion.
' ‘ And now he is to realise a boyhood dream
The producers, the distributors, the —he is to be governor of Texas.
Chamber of Commerce agricultural c tmm4......Any Texas boy who imagines he has no
ia and the South Texas Producers AtisiKtir - chance to accomplish worthwhile things
tun must unite on some plan of action that should find encouragement in‘the story of
P insure a continuance of this New De?l James V. Allred’s rise to the governorshippf
or thi farmer. v Texas.
RE.il) HH/S FIRST:_____
Don aid /fwifl, vo**0 (H$tntct6
itioC to death in /e*
m/iui ol Center CHv
TvtsteuAujT %
op Queer onEI, r
But mewIR ANfwtaa
Quite ll*ct
’A
Hlackcat N
//M
Editor am! Publmhrt
■ tioMMM Rsnsaci
fi found
on tin <
Baytown
the Galveston, Pilot*
oonaeculive time Sunt
A
tw %
uni
vertity. intpecior Ijft flfrtt'M fll ^
"im I nene of the tragedy with hit Ire-
I y Made
itUr At the (foot*
the act ol Cong rent
%
JWg
/
(juent co-worker, •
newtpaper reportfr, and diten\
tin fjnn that KOI heAtde the In
Et'* found bit tho ffnitor, hat ditap/tea
Intve.ClQT l*e meeft froiettot
toa, head of the Enolhh ileitaifment.J
and Mi teccetary. Ruth Turner:, at‘
veil at Wit r.duardt, another uuat-
ber ol the department, and Jamieson,
nn tnnleaelvr who -thatid the dead
man’t office. On the third floor ol
the Entlrih buitUinp the police find
attic room that ehaait tlpnt of
tnknbitance. UUt Eduards tells Ue
ot a recent Quarrel between the dead
man on* Vomtrton. mode, the re-
porter, announcet to tree that he hat
;u<t railed on Wrt. RWt'W.'
(SOW ao ON WITH THE STORY J
r-
Ly piled up a 12-4 le.d.
|nm« was featured by t
Irlinif of Chit-1, Dlackc
j. ..... 1 ■' 1
I.visitors to fouj scatter
gif battimr -honors went
[a with four safeties in fj
[the plate, with Oscar, i
teammate, trailing .him
[margin with three safeti
live trips*
toy -scrjre:
.WATS _
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UnlteiLPre** Wir* Sanie#
«S SyMicstc sad Onrtrwl
/
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Iff lilt
Subscripti»n Rates By fanner:
7 »^h 45c; ffrrWohlh. W&' TM P--
; ys.no Yean Me Monta. l‘*jf»We in Adv»
Texas Dally Preaa L*a*ue, I
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CHAPTER T
LEE STOPPED halfway down the
‘porch step* and stared at Btada.
Prlends though they were. Lee never
permitted the younger man to usurp
his authority on a case. Words be-
fan rtjmbling In pis throat but the
reporter Ignored them.' e” "•
"V«l can have her, Inspector—I
don’t get. her.” ho confessed, an sir
r-tjf-bewHdertnwrt-ohout him that con*,
tranted oddly with his usual decisive*,
ness. :
"If you've ruined this case, boy.”
Lee said darkly. "It's your neck.
Wluvt do you mean by-*
1 "Hold it, Inspector. Everything’s
i o k; no kiddmir.” v------
"So?" remarked the other skep-
tically. “Suppose you come along
with me anil toll me ahout lt” lug all these question*. I had to toll syllable at her. but he couliSn’tMM
> r-n’n., ,,VS.'.I will-.____ _, _ , . .«■» . ... .. .. ... I They walked out to the detective's j„.r. I , ouldn t keep on (lue.slioiVifig Ue her.'cOOMlTt'Creak 'her Mtatsal
GOOD VERSUS BAD CARD rmre n grand glam to defeating hast car. As It moved away, he turned attr WWHPWH' didn't *h none. , It was I control.
READ|MG —t--------------onh u If Irk or Itttt, taiil ifellhititL t® wade.eWeltr like 4n«tming. hwV!...
THE KOI.I.OtVINd deni,well Ulus. ‘'d'miR^cunwact.Ing. “I hung around upstairs after you The tnsiiector looked at him In sur-
Irales tie difference betweini the ' 1 "1<a, f “ wen{ down but I couldn't get any- prise.. "Rut you just said you
■..Mod -npi n- i.itpa of North and ip» *■ the dwlar- tWhg out of tho doc. When I came thought she knew. How do you
poor rani rcsdtitjr of l-kist. There f f s C °r Xl» *. TlnaiJig. ,|OWn, you were behind closed doors know she dldn’tj Maybe she did it
b« only one of-twn reammtCV-l.y ^L-k-MSSM... iflg»-i**» ,no with those wliBesseSjand Brown was herself." _ _
trumps. A i.lamoiul was led. Norths very much on guard. I stuck around "It was Just at first I Though! sB?
lh won on a dp (I uu llnesse. dropping ,fot tt wt,n0 hutvI wasn't getting arty- knew. What she knew, you see, was
the lone X hepi by East. where and I had an edition, to make, that he’ll gone away. She thinks it's
Dummy's J of. club* overtook the s<> I went around back and found suicide. 'So that'* what he meant.'
declarer^?. The last diamond was pan, lie told me about-Reeves'wife *he told the. 'When -he said he Ava*
led front dummy.* The q won- the and where she lived. I went up.” going away. I didn't understand.’ *
trick. The Ace .won tho next dip- ' jie fell silent "I tried to tell her It was murder
moml trick. Dummy used its last "Do I have to dig this story out hut she paid no attention. She just
tnimn toruff th^dastdianumd miit0f you?»ldemanded Lee.-- ----kept repeal mg, 'Stathatwaslt.'—-
-l wish I could give it to you. la- “When I a
spector." Blade began again slowly, gating away, her eye* flickered for a
moment spd oho jmld-Jw HloiiRhi It
was for the best . 1 came away—
matter of fact, I returned to get you.
She knows something more than
shea' telling, of course. But she’s
uncanny. There's something screwy
about the whole business."
:AS Blade flnlslied. they reached the
address and climbed out Lee didn't
question him. He had "got it", Mt
least a ifttie „( ,t. hut he wasn't ret-
ting It bother him. -
Mrs. Itqrves-rijlcned the Moor for
them, looking much as Blade had de-
scribed her. a.There was an'air of
compTcteness''jmdw<wrt*nlloes* about
her that even" the hard-boiled Lee
got.. A woman Rsr“whpm a man
jnight do anprobablp things.1 ______
“I am Inspector Lee." he began.
"You must know why I am here,
rest of us VVe ne,ed your assistance.” - She
stood aside for them to enter.
"It was stitelde, - inspector* ■ aba
“I thought when l saw her that .said In a low. vibrant voice, She
she already knew. And I didn't know sounded as if she were explaining to
what to say.. She asked me to
in and we sat down In the
room. I couldo't tell hyr the truth
at, once. ElnaTIy' T aidteai her If she
knew where her^Jmshand was.1 -
“He's gone away.” she said with-
out hesitation and a little hopelessly. Harding Davis cub.
“Right you are, lady. I thought. .1 “Why do ytju say that, 'Mra
didn't know but what perhaps, she Reeves," questioned the Inspector,
was batty. Then I asked her hqw “But I explained to tfiis geritlemrtn
she knew And she told me he’d said
last night he was goTiig^ away arid
wouldn't be hack:
"That floored me for a minute.
Rut I went ahead feeling my way
•He must have given some reason "Why did he tell you he was golnp
for aolng.'.l vpiggested
"Th*n she showed the first sign or “He thought It vas. tor the heel,
curiosity about me. She wanted to Inspector."
know who I »a« an,1 why I was ask-
5 2
6 0
4 0
ill
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4 J>.
. 3 l
- 5 I
STOH PILOTS AB H .
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• •
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5 J
in
4
.
—
CONTRACT BRIDGE
5 1
5 0
1
[b
5 "0
j-.i
WRIITIN FOR CENTRAL PRfSS
2
wii
By E. V. SHEPARD »
I4B4L—.
fi 0
:ih •
‘‘Mr*. Reevet think* it’s suicide."
L*
FAMOUS BRIDGE TEACHER
4 0.
If
5 6
p-*s
-
[Nussleiji Wins
itional Net Honor
*
"Wtal wo* his- affair, gAfftemea* ^
The Inspector was c*ast>erate<tin |
spoke sharjtly. "But, my dear »om. ]
an. you were" his wife. Surely m J
must know whul It was. It wairosf .l
affair, too, wasn’t it?"______________”3
Her *ep15r''wart1ed him. "No," th «
declared definitely, "it was no alter |
ot mine." ' s cj
"I’athaps your husband did l»t«* 1
to go away. Mrs. Reeves.* The is- |
spec-tor admitted her point conefl-1
iutingly. “But when lie told ;« 1
that, he didn't mean suicide.
■AGO, Aug. 27 dTPi—Han
L, sturdy C* rman wigld’.
lonal titleholder, Sumla;
the natiomtl pro champi n
I ids collection wlr.n 14
l(in. outst .nding victory it
lls over a a’ jH-rsonai rival
[ K reluh, Czechosltivakiat
i,
can
a capable bidder makes a late open,
tng bid minor suit:1 he either Is
ho atroni: >fen*tvely that'he expects
to defeat any adverse game contract,
or he is strong offensively that lie
Is able aitd Willing to outbid any
attempt to core-a game against him.
When Kom found that Ihe latter rca-
eon win why N’orlli opcncl the nuc-
lion on minor suits, he should not
have pushed North Into bidding a
slam. .......c—H
Rrowern.
o
*
rfr^rDft,~T-6r :
of West’s liand. This was thf seventh
trick. The declarer ruffed a heart.
The next two leads were tnirngn hr.
liausllng all clubs. The declarer took
Ids two good diamonds. The |hlr-
teeuth triclt etas won with dummy'*
Ace of spades, giving North fulflll-
nu-nt of Ids doubled grand slam.
Worth Looking at
OPPORTUNITY FOR determined and
ambiUou* younjr mext.U) work their way to
the top of the ladder of attainment still ex-
this land. Consider the career of ont>
James V. Allred, chosen Saturday by tfaepeo-l
nlr of Texas to be their governor in 1935 and
,-r
tfeating- Kpzeluh, NusM^ir
I the .decision of two years
en the spry little Czech
ied him on the' same scene
whelming scores.
Barnes, St. Louis, Mo.,
nett Pare, Memphis, Tenn.,
doubles -title when they
the Filsworth Vines-P ul
comtmation in ' straight
, fi-4, 7-5. The 1033 title
i by Vinnie Richards and
Wixid whom Vines and
lad eliminated in the semi-
dered. The gun with which be rat 1
killed Is missing. .And a sulci* ii
ctnrr get rtff of the TOMsssHMa
must see that." he urged,. |
She-looked surprised but said noth. |
Ing. - : J
"Can't you see It was munferf l
the inspector demanded.
“O; course. I can-t explain how tit
gun could be gone; bu- 1 feel sunt j
am right." she replied pleasantly but j
stubbornly.
The Inspector tried , a M*
proach. “When did he tell yen h '3
was going away?" he asked. M
"Last evening when he came tnM i
-for (toner.-"- .........'-------A—tHS -
••Wli.it tune did he leave after ft. f
Tier?" ---
"About half past seven.* slu'ty,
plied. “He said he was gohff tHB
English House but that after*irdt
he was going away and wouldat b
back."......;
"—make you get it as I did,"
"It’s an apartment house, an old
one with large, comfortable rooms.
Mr^ Reeve* Is a tail woman, long-
]imbed, well-formed, Norte of this
skinny childishness about her. She'
had on a crisp, lavender dress, the
kind women weqr around the house .
It didn't have any >leeves and her
arms were smooth and round. She’s
got dark hair and she wears It
" brushed straight back. She's the
kind of n woman a man woiild do a
hell of a lot for. If she loved him."
“And so they were married," In-
terrupted the Inspector. "Yoii telltng
this to me or writing it for your
newspaper?"
. . “Her-face was white and con-
trolled." continued Blade unperturbed,
‘■but she bad a look abortt her as If
she knew something the
crfuldn't know. Her eyes were large
♦ 8
V None
♦ A Q 10 7 4 2
*A Q 10 9 7 6
♦ 0ft-:
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♦ KJ9f. V kj fAKQC
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....... — ♦None......
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J b 7°4 1 ’M’ 1 4M
♦3 8 5 % Q #K663
Iakq'%. $'»•«
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♦ K Q J 10 fj
♦ A3 2
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‘ Bidding went: North, I "Diamond,
with neitlisr side vulnerable; East,
2-Heani;^South. i-Spaiies; North,
t^lbS; East,’ 6-Hearts, when he
should -have .allowed tho contract to
die at a minor suit game; South, 6-
Clubs: Hast. g-HehrtS; Soul h, dou-
l,M: fi'®#* ?;Cliibs...satisfied that
hi* pariner .held the Aee of spades
end i'referring an tven chance to
--v—■ --1- -iji. yjs-........ '
SURE
unit
"Who was he’going to nwg at II*
English Houser questioned the U-
spector.
“He didn't tell
With
Some time ago 1 played the above
han£ at 4-Spades doubled:: The op-
ening lead was tho K of clubs fol-
lowed hy the Q and J. BeforeTdon-
day think over the best method of
trying to futfltl the game contract
me." < 5|
“And you didn't see him afttf k
left, at seven-thirty?"’ , J
"No." (irmly and definitely.
"What did you do after lie kit? |
Where diS you go?" ; ‘ 2^
"1 was at home all evening,*
answered.
Le-i shrugged his shnuldera “VWj
well. Mrs. Reeves^Jm; there It ««* j
eft her thing 1 must know. Whit 1»|
tr.-.tihllng vour liui la-v? no mnehtM
lie was "vitllng to go away owl cot |
comeback?" ‘JiJM
Mrs. Reeves looked <lralsh|
inspector her gage nsvc i»|
vernd. "That I imi tsi: yew i»-1
y.:;,.! Ufote. tM9
oite" --
a child something quite’ obvious.
Blade noted-ruefully that since his
visit she had managed to adopt a
fnanner'whlch she was apparently by
no means unused to. Served Mm
right for interfering like any Richard
“Reliability"
come
nvirg
’
Crosswoi
Marian
Pattern
here. Myjiushand told me last night
that he wng goli
away an
wouldn-’t he back. ' I olldn’t under-
stand then, but this, of course, is
what hi meapt."
at he
z
3
4-
.4 MARIAN MARTIN SLIP :
THAT.JjJ ADJIIS.TABLK
~ C ompietc.- Biagrammed ';j
Marian Martin Sew ( hart
Included ;
- PATTERN 9679
Tfijn' slip has many nice things
»W rfc It fito.perf.wt4y. It is.
shadow proof and it* permit* th<C
ffffr 'iucTTon of a dainty "modesty
piece" in tiie.front. Two other r
points will endear it to the worn n
- who Hdcta it for lier fail ward*.
robe. One of these i* that it is a
wrap-iinwmj and therefore adjust*1
able :.nd most figures change just
a bit in transit from one season to
ter reason ig that
fioniiiip'wti,jD..:
qutckiyfmishetl—the moral of the
little tile toeii|j~-get you.-some'
frepe de chine or'cambric and use
this pattern! .
Pattern il070 may be ordered
only in sizes 32, 34 . 3ft, 38, 40, 42.
44 and 46. Size 36 require* 3 5-8
y irdg 39 inch fabric and 1-4 yard
t * . *
FOR SEVERAL weeks James Boze baa
Ireeb promiainjf people in the dWhity of
Waxahachie to break the drouth by bomfe-
Inir rain out of the clouds.
Saturday, • with Belajtet}
♦ ,
6
9
away?”
lif:!
'A
‘.peeler A*> I ex'
wior no affair o!
. 4T<K III O'‘.VI tsvr.Df
■ '
1
13
Why?" fie growled the immn-
lefmiswion of the
.. he firad OM.....
is bombs into a lloud' from^ the ground.
Tm minutes later it. was raining.! Now Boxe
and hia companion plan to go above the
clouds in an airplane and drop 600 pounds
of bombs into them _______
Th* first nun may have j>een a'coinci-
dence--Ftozerpay have timed hi» bomb pro-
perly to |et the bhefit of Natural condifions.
But if it rains after the bombs are dropped
,txWM
[ think of those .[tri.-** duys-ahtdi
WAMfrXi/m'N-. A
feral td Speaker of
-Baificy. Pri ddent-Roosevelt ordere 1 ail Bags
-«a gove« nniH),t buildiuga here at half mast.
: Came the1-funeral and ^ every staff in
llaidiington carried a flag. at half. mast. -
♦eve the one on the white house itself. Th*
White House mast didn't have a flag at all.
Inquiry revealed that the White House
displays the stars and stripe*, only when the
KMtdHiil k at home, Mr
ihe Rainey funeral, so the White Hou-e flag
M dot fly. .
Mpi'- . *■ ............ r,
Louis McHenry Howe, the well-known re- The tetwt ffend ja toward colorful fumi-
frigt ration expert and presidential secretary, turie gU| that's nothing new to-mothers
Is the man responsible for the comfortable .whose children have men playing with cray-
air-cooled trip president roosevelt recently j ons a„(j water colors. T
t ro»» the sunpacked.weftt. • ' . r "
: The president’s traip was refrigerated
mechanical)y all the way from Portland to
Washington, but the news' becomes know
now that the machinery stopped working
-.•very how and theu and then the train b*»-
ytmc hot. That’s where Howe came in.
He spent most Of his time in the train
jphlle his chief was out inspecting dams and
Making »im:cb*-. -
When the thermometer would go up jn-
iide the train, Howe would tell the crew: i
"‘‘Better get that air cooling dingus going
tefore the president gets back.”
The crew did. It sweated over the re- "Miss,” like Mr., Mrs. Messrs., when used
(dge^jting apparatus all .the way from the as a title must always be followed by a name.
- !! V T-
//A
e*
m*':
n
ia
3
of him.
Lanny Ross, as y-t. ha?- »t r«l-:
• •• ~ ized his life’s -ambition! ' jj
You should be content at the AH^DlA^-ivXIe’filand” with Although he is
current 1 Ikies.Jtecause “Treasure Wallace. Heery ami Jackie celebrated radio tenors. 9»o : j
Island" at the Arcadia, “You're Cooper. under-a lort)> term contract *“|
Telling Me" at the Texan, “Beg-1 -LUXE: ‘Mfeggar’s Holiday” Paramount, he is not sAisfiw- J
with Salty (t'NTnt and "HardiPj' jjp wants to' go oii ;Tconcert t^|
TEXAN: "You’re Telling Me” with an‘^ *'-s now niakmvr !»•««
W. C. Fields, "Buster” Crabbe “P a-suitably repertoire
and Joan Marsh. sentition in the larger
NU GULF: “Melody in Spring”! The radio star, . featured j
with i.anny Ross and Ann Soth- “Melody in' Spring", at ^ *
Gulf theater, has made a study*
. . , * French, Italian, German andjt'*
is in the clubhouse trying to mrtke ^ that he might include *n*»J
the hoys around the bol/tle believe, the’se languages-
Uob- .the. caddy is in the c .ddy-house al- j In “Melody in Spring . * .&
ways belittlin’. Finally, one day,1 debut, he is featured «-'1 ^
w r w m . * , . the lone golfers gets intp^ those i RufR^** Nary
• W. Fields, who has the lead- . * j Sothern.
ing role in “You're Telling Me” at trees out on the ru^8ed 8eventh- j * .
51 tho Tex in---nd it is good for many As he’s about ta blast one from'
a hearty bugh—enacted such a
funny scene an the -golf links that
it probably inspired him to give a club -and. commits mayhem on the T ua8g
..few hints to golfers. And there ,, , a . , , HAVERHILL, Mass,
they are: caddy. The body is found two days [ ,iam Takolfsky knew
The only other import'nt thing !ater' That’8 why you should re-|b]aek hDrse in the barn- »* _
t a golf game is to retain a tain a good_ lawyer before you I before,, but when he re l*1 -|
lawyer before you start, start; 'the morning a white horse -
to a garden frock. It shows you TIN PATTERN BOOK AND IT Many a good golf player tody ' " I its place-a miracle he tho a
the latest fabrics, and talks wisely COSTS FIFTEEN CE,NTS. TRE jrues the day he began to play the . .. . ■ j The wonder of it f
about be'.uty. In shr-rt.,. .it’s a BOOK AND PATTERN TOGETH- i without the services of « 1, prising climax greets y(,u|when he di#cover61 that ^J
, I treasure. It’* the-SUMMER EDI- ER ARE TWENTY’-FIVE CENTS j lawyer, the minute a m-n:m “Npri Holiday”, at the Dcj^j ha(1 heen painted by
' ' • Riyi . "rHr---:-- - }shoots hi* first 195' for nine holes, - Luxe, with Hurdle Albright i 'jester. ^
P« om bom Mthk Ito**m intuitive j Rabbit Drive Delayed ’riiyi afuJiS} s" eSJSSt^it! •
.for wfctcb they received 2(4 cents tire of.listening, he suits plaVing | girl from drowning herself, tod-f
fl!J>)-Rabhii:,*r P,,ir °f ParS bef,re ,h° tv,Unty rr(,und al°np—with only a caddy, i then treats her to two weeks of
l!,nn fund wu exhausted. Invariably the lone golfer feels | thrills before he is sentenced. Of I
^^d posting of i ........r|<M|ji| |l ***** la“^* at hin> be-, course, they fall in love—and then |
v ihhhii ien nun, mno ms kick, wnue tne golfer somethmg happens as he logins to I
................
im
Features, Fun, and Entertainment
20
MX,
24
^1
26
27
m
///
%
!3I
-‘ifier.
-1
Wttj-ffi.
di tnke m»tk*4*. The* memt kkef)ti«»l
to admit there may be «>me merit
in hia theory after all. ^
4
IS
- JJ.cLuxiv.jmsl
“Melody m Spring"-it the NuGuIf
are well worth your time demand-
ed to see them.
Especially "Treasure Iahnd”,
which includes in its cast WalLce
Beery, Jackie Cooper, Lewis
Stone aned Lionel Barrymore.
It's a grand picture, with some
excellent photographic scenes, uni
■ . .
,, --—
- -
36
\///
for
H
j-
40
3^
ern.
-y
i
.
10
ACROSS
across a water count* 11
wplement for rowing
-
inch
Send
ir
4&m
i.
is
-Sun
x Dcjiirtmeui*
isih St., New York, N. Y.
Send FIFTEEN CENTS in coin*
r Tamps* (coins preferred I for
EACH MARIAN MARTIN pat-
tern . Be rare to write plainly
your NAME, ADDRESS, the
STYLE NUMBER and SIZE of
each pattern.
How would you like a book of
fashions designed fer sutt-dri>nehed
days and starlit nights? It tells
you about, and has -pictures of
everything from a wedding -dress j TION OF THE MARIAN MAR-
Ing
ert I.onis Stevenson.
f
10
»-is
“winters a
erflows
lck rtunmy substance
1 ot rtlatress at sea
Mrtte of y*» (plural)
;i»
Can a pengqin fly?
Which j» the higher; Top-gallant sail or
royal?
Compare a knot with a mile in length.
L /
21
22
Black Horn Turn* ,
Into White in
27
behind the tree stump, be heirs the
caddy snickering. He picks up his
2»
A-i
A*
Mft
t
31
•csoes* statesman s
wt*r tender pronoun
rttainlng to vision
“•-national language t
32
(ftBrrW
he Put ^
//J
34
U
Correctly .Speaking
38
t*i*
9070
-abou
gbod
?<
/
*m»
Words of Wisdom
Down at the interstate commerce eommis-1. The soul hits this proof of its divinity:
magnificent new home, vialtora are That divine things delight it.—Seneca.
tig oat with the cracked head*. H
le building isn’t quite finished yet. The
or operators, consequently, don’t tell
riders to watch their step when they
f Hie cars. Instead they say:
ttt
T
* Prtndpi* — §L i
Rohoior
™rtauon V
-DOWN
*»H? clear
Entered;
m
INSU » ^
ARMETi
to
le
rers to Foregoing Questions
T
citizens, they look up
A
♦ who act* for another,# E"
"°unt (abbr.) --- —
burden,
ONTARIO, Ore.
and run
l
"ItelisMlitf”
ifm
it
m
V. ;
km
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Pendergraft, W. L. The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 71, Ed. 1 Monday, August 27, 1934, newspaper, August 27, 1934; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1145080/m1/2/?q=food+rule+for+unt+students: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.