Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 271, Ed. 1 Tuesday, February 14, 1928 Page: 3 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Brenham Weekly Banner and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Nancy Carol Roberts Memorial Library.
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with
ArkSTTsks
.taocy
No. 19024
mish Tn the cellar.
No Throat Irritation-No Cough
lagging
&B0S8K
MINUTE MOVIES
PHY
The amateur rules in the trapshoot-
ing fraternity causes less friction and
12 con
12. Th-
throat or wind,
celebrated star
to cry
Gallo-
OU.HTEO.'WW MEXICAN.
MANVEL, FROM WHOM .
,mdu Me iff ve I
IpNE. WHO SWOT VOU V
that it u I
age
vrs
vrs
vrs
atna-
what
welcome
rkeepW.
nd qtuht
"odes'
•ysr iTiff
Nowlne
ALL RIGHT, PATOC
WHOA .BO/ 'r ,—-
If Penner can return
Joes and flash the form
in Wi-
comes
A SERIES’
OF LOUD
EARkS*
WfeRRUF^S*
THE PAINFUL
TASK
a curve-Ui
■ anything!
when he i
jnders with
js not haw
star in otjt
lie contissal
reat a atnn
s through l
will be pitching for
he could not make
the Gards, after a
Fred Framehouse
you can i
our order.
imp
comecutive year by humbling the S.
M, U. Mustangs two games in a row.
LNGBI
me variety
ture of plaintiff's demand being in
substance as follows:
Suit for the title and possession of
a tract of land out of the Thos. H.
LITTLE GAL , I GOT SOME TWIN' © Ifeu. V&J
1 CONT JU S' kNOLU HOW t&y—------
be«iN - but- rnG&r ' &
—. CP- J AH
Oklahoma has now played
ference games and has won
Sooners ought to play Arkansas. The)
could find real confpetition there.
have the most logical
amateur rule oi any
HUTCHESON, Yi Yi
Heinie Odom, Joe Klein,
Williams and ♦ Charles
all live in Texas.
The game vv'th Missouri was th<
second on the. trip for.lhe Sooners.
They defeated Washington University
Friday night, 37 to 17. after
behind at the half.
<Utvrb»M« tMw IM aNMteue eglg th
any other sport. There ta « reason.’ The
.rap shooters
and the besi
sport.
{OjNCE MORE
’PATCHES AdF?
AS ELEVAlbR.
AMD BRINGS “
OP 3 ALL*/ -
C>ARNES TO
The iuaiTinG-
ARMff OF THE
SOUNG RANGER
close he suffered ijith a‘sore arm and
was of no value to the team. Perhaps
the ailment is gone now, and perhaps
Texas has a chance to. finish in »
ie for second place, bufonly an out-
dde chance. There is hardly a chance
if th^Ponies losing any other game
save possibly the one to Texas, and
Texas is due to drop one of the two
•o T. C. U.
Charlie Root has signed his
contract .with the Chicago Cubs.
“Chicagos” had some trouble in sign-
uprofessional trapshooter can
an amateur by resigning his
with the ammunition or gun
and by “staying out" a cer-
DEAR, BAIT ME SAO DADD/ MIAS
A RUSTLER. AMD W VOU WERE
uo arrest HIM - S? t
I 1>IWT fcEL,CVE ,r /
STSeHOW i
-to JAV ANYIWINC rTST
AFTER
eo W'HEELfiN'S
NEW ' UIESTERH*
RAIDERS
OF THE
RAMG-E
EPISODE w
writ 'rtw nun ■
istrict Court of
. .. - , ------Texas, to be
holden at the court house thereof in
Brenham on the first Monday in
March the saute being the 5th day
of March, 1928,- then and there to
answer a petition filed in said court
?"'he 30th d,y of Jan»«ry, A. D.
1928, in a suit' numbered on the
docket of said court No. 19024 where-
in Christian Premier is plaintiff and
the unknown heirs of Thos. H.* Bor-
Golf is the most difficult game for r
champion to repeat in. but in the win
ter series of meets each year, it doer
seem that one star always becomcr
the dominating figure. This year it is
McDonald Smith, although Wild Bill.
Mehlhorn did take the Texas Open.
Last year it was Bobby Cruickshank.
WACO HAS enough players liv-
ing far away, but tlie mileage docs
not compare with that of Beaumont.
Oscar Tuero has removed frofh'Cuba
to Waco, and that certainly is quite
a saving, but Felix Vigare winters in
California, Art Shires, Del Pratt and
Wayne Windle, however, are all close
at hand. Wolgamot comes from up
in Kansas, while Edgar and Elliott
will travel to Waco from far-away
Michigan, but then the Cubs get a
break in George Blackerby, wlio lives
in Wichita Falls. Caldwell, Freeze,
and several others are also Texans,
although Freeze may be somewhere
in Arkansas when time for training
season rolls around.
Of course, the above does appear
quite ridiculous, but it is not. An ama-
teur can be an amateur and still re-
ceive pay. Amateur irapshooters are
paid well for high scores. The profes-
sional trapshooters are, as a rule, paid
nothing for their high scores. A pro-
fessional trapsbooter is one who is paid
by the cartridge company he repre-
sents. An amateur trapshooter, is
one who shoots for the sport of it, but
4
who makes his living doing something
else. A
become
position
dealers,
tain length of time.
said court, at office in Brenham,
[Texas, this the 30th day of January
A. D. 1928.
A. J. Wendt, Clerk,
•District Court, Washington Co.‘ Tex.
Andrew wally lives
L Minn.; Ad Holzhauser
b Portland, Mo.; Elmer Hanson
from Los Angeles, and William
jmas, the pitcher, calls Charleroi,
i his home. J. J. Tising, another
her, lives in Denver. S. J. Toner,
Itcher, winters in Philadelphia,
liam Ford lives in Baltimore; the
k of Fred Dorman is Jersey City;
A. Yeargin hails from Greer, S.
[Frosty Davis lives in Leesville,
r is near Beaumont, but Jim
y s carfare must be paid from
piurgh; Jim Bryan comes from
The Temple high basketball train
led Austin by four points at the em1
of the third quarter last Thursdv.)
night, but Austin rallied in the fina
period and won the game by an 8
point margin. That was the thh
game the season between the tw<
teams, Austin winning two of them.
tome close to bankrupting the
Miry of the Beaumont club in
ng the railroad fare of its'athletes
training camp. The Exporters
iin.’y do have a tough financial
k there. Listen to this, and you
t have to be a Scotchman
ympathy with James Cato
as league will be faster in 1928 than
it was in 1927, but that is very doubt-
ful. The Texas league was one of
the fastest in the minors- last year.
The pennant-winning Wichita Falls
team could likely have won a series
from any minor pennant winner in
the land.
Brenham road,
hundred eight vara*; Z begin-
contaimng 201.47 acres; to
defendants are asserting some
of title, which plaintiff claims
fee simpte, that he and those
whom Tie hohls have had
and adverse possession,
using and enjoying same
In ..._________1T_
.............. ■
NUMB MHUSTKK
■ SPORTS
[Continued Croat page throe-
The University of Oklahoma bask-
ffoal! team,"Tfiidefeated hi the Mis'"
sotiri Valley Conference, 'was given
quite a rub by Missouri Saturday
night. The Oklahomans won in the
last minute by a score of . 34 to 33,
thereby cinching the title. Missouri it
in second place in the Valley Confer-
. , .... ... . ence standing,
topple over, but the chances are th$t •
neither miracle will come to pass.
WILLIS HUDLIN is almdst a
holdout. Hudlin wants $10,000 to
pitch for Cleveland this year. As base
ball star's salaries go, Hudlin is
I worth that much, and ought to get it.
i He was sold for about $40,000 by
Waco, and even the Indians will pd-
mit that they got a bargain. He won
16 or 17 games with a very "sick”
major league outfit last year. With a
first-division team he would have won
20 games, and last year was his first
year. He did not get nearly as much
as he was worth. Now Cleveland
knows what tie can do, and Hudlin
wants $10,000 for his services. To
date Cleveland's only answer has
been the well known “Try and Get
ys Sir Harry Lauder,
“It takes a Scotchman to truly
^onderful toasted fla^
Mka. Vve smoked Luddes fo, ywrs att
taw time I ve been active in my work which
emands a clear voice for singing and good
A--And to I «« to Sandy
JOE
Chead'e,
I Clarence
I Schroyer
Sr NOT India"
corner of 42 1-2 acre tract, thence
with its boundaries N 63 1-2 E 231
vrs. to rock, thence N 2 1-2 W 220
vrs. to rock, thence- N 18-10 W 315
"" to stake thence N 75 1-2 E 107
to stake,-thence N 5 1.-2 E 25 M
to stake, thence N'18-10 W 138
vrs to rock, thence N 43 E 441
thence with ,ea«ue ,ine N
W 440 vrs. north cor. of 79 acre
tract, thence S 43 W in road 595 vrs.
to branch, thence down branch to
junction with East prong Indian
Creek, thence down center thereof to
beginning, containing 126 3-4 acres;
to which defendants assert claim of
itle, phmtiff claiming in fee simple,
inM ‘ k°*’ tn 1 those under whom he
holds have had peaceable and adverse
possession, cultivating, using and en-
joying same for more than 10 years
preceding suit; that they have been
using and enjoying same tinder deeds
duly recorded constituting -esrular
chain of title for more than 25 ye*rs
Preceding suit, title having passed
out of the State, in peaceable and ad-
verse possession; that he and those
under whom he holds have hold
peaceable and adverse possession of
same, cultivating, using and enjoy-
ing and paying all taxes claiming
same under deeds duly registered for
more than 5 years preceding this suit,
wherefore he prays judgment for title
and possession of said lands, costs,
etc.
Herein Fail Not, but have you be-
fore said court on the said first day
of next term thereof this writ with
your return thereon, showing how
you have executed the same.
Given under my hand and seal of
said court, at office in Brenham, Tex-
iooah * the day °* JaBuary A. D.
I ”40.
A. J. Wendt, Clerk,
District Court, Washington Co. Tex.
Those who eat Rye Bread regularly
gain in health, strength, and vigor.
And it tastes so good. too. Best Rye
Bread made by Wittbecker'a Bakery
and sold by leading grocers.—adv269
ror judgment tor title and possession
of. said lands, writ of possession,
costs, etc. _
tore said court on the said first day
of .next term tliereof this writ with
your return thereon* showing how
you have executed the same. „*
----.:rtf*f .niijreuj - ’
THE STATE OF TEXAS
To the Sheriff or any Constable
of Washington County. Greeting:
\ou Are Hereby Commanded, the
unknown heirs of James Stephens,
vVm. Kessee, John D. Harvey, Jethro
\tkinson, Mary B. Atkinson, Thos.
Moore, R.B. Brumfield, Dickie Chap-
>ell, H. Thompson. J. W. Thompson
.nd L. A. Thompson, Deceased, their
wis and- legal represeutaoacs, l<y
naking publication of this citation it
Mime newspaper jiulilished in -Wash-
HgfOiT CbufTTy ;~TTFxs"
lewspaper published therein, but if
tot, then in the nearest county where
i newspaiicr is published, once in
•ach week for four consecutive weeks
irevious to the return day hereof, to
ippear at the next regular term ol
the District Court of Washington
County, Texas, to be holden at the
ourt hduie thereof in Brenham on
he first Monday in March, the Mme
>eing the 5th day of March, 1928,
hen and there to answer a petition
iled in said court on the 30th day of
January A.D. 1928, in a suit number-
id on the docket of said ' court No.
19023 wherein John Kopycinski is
daintiff and the unknown heirs of
lames Stephens. Wm. Kessee, John
□. Harvey, Jethro Atkinson, Mary
J. Atkinson, Thos. Moore, R. B.
♦rumfield, Dickie Chappell, H.
i hotnpson, J. W. Thompson and E.
k. rhompsqjv deceased, their heirs
.nd legal representatives, defendants,
he nature of plaintiffs demand being
n substance as follows:
Suit for the title and possession of
t tract of land out of the James
iiephens League in Washington
County, Texas, begins South • side
Central Railroad at crossing of Bren-
lain road, NE corner of Cegiclski
>00 acres South sixty East with rail-
oad forty varas, thence South ten
■,ast with Cegielski line one thousand
jfty varas to Chadwick line, thence
>outh eighty-seven East with Chad-
vick line seven hundred forty varas
o Sempronius road, theme North
wenty-seven East three hundred
ighty varas, with road, thence North
ughty East one hundred thirty varas
° SOa.lH ‘J,cnce Nor,h ten West with
oad 936.4 varas to Brenham road,
hence with road South eighty West
’ |^ -1 —■ — -S 2 . . e « — •
‘ing.
vhich
aim
aider
inder
eaceable
uitivating,
or more than 10 years preceding fil-
'•g °f auit; and using and enjoying
aine under deeds recorded constitu-
ing regular chain of title for more
han 25 years preceding to Jan. 1,
928, title having passed out of the
State, under peaceable and adverse
mssession; that plaintiff and those
mder whom he holds have held
leaceabte and adverse possession of
aid lands cultivating, using and en-
joying same and paying all taxes
claim the same under deeds duly reg-
Dickson, Tenn.; Robert Petrie climbs
aboard at Bromley, Ky.; Bill Herring
comes from Altus, Okla.; Buss Phil-
lips comes from Newtdn, S. C.,-while
George Kent checks in at San Diego,
Cal.; Sylvester Simon, a promising
third baseman, lives in Evansville,
Ind.; A. L. Riley, a second baseman
is a New Y'orker, and another second
baseman named John Cimpi will come
from Auburn, N. Y. Danny Harris
hails from Gloucester, Mass. He is a
first baseman.
Holly Brock hardly seemed to b>
the class of the Texas University has
ketball team in Waco. Brock was clev
er, but is small. Big Un Rose is larg<
and clever. Hc appeared to be a fa«
more valuable player than Brock. Ii
fact, Rose is going to coine very dos<
to making the All Conference team.
W. O. McGeehan, in-the -New York
Herald-Tribune, asks the following
pertinent question: “Numbers of ski
jumpers have written the A. A. U. to
know if it will be all right for them to
receive a little pay and at the same
time preserve their amateur standing.
They add tliat if this cannot be done
.they will form an association of their
own where amateurs still can be
teurs and at the same time get
they feel is coming to them.
“That ought to be an easy one for
the Al A. U, to settle. What is a rea-
sonable compensation for an amateur**?
The A, /». U. could settle the ski
jumjxtrs' argument to the satisfaction
of ail concc.rud u# .«.,uug them work
under the ania;ci.r n le w hkh governs
the trapshcoicis, aqu ti.c same ama-
teur rule co..ld be applied to golf, ten-
nis, baseball and all other sports
much success.
AND IT IS our prediction if
Hudlin keeps on trying, he will get
it. Cleveland needs Hudlin much
worse than Hudlin needs Cleveland.
Cleveland has more money invested
in Hudlin than Hudlin has invested
in Cleveland. Cleveland might get
sore and sell him to New York, and
DOAK ROBERTS says the Tex- then the Amicable building might
the Tobacco Crop”
for Lucky Strikes,
•ays tobacco loose-leaf warehouseman
*1 buy Tobacco—I sell Tobacco—I Fox-hunt
for my occasional pleasure. In my business,
I have noticed that in this Southland where
tobacco grows, The American Tobacco
- » eunipany buys *The Cream of the Crop*
• a LUCKY STRIKE Cigarettes. I
am glad to testify as to their quality; their,
growth is no surprise to me, because I
9 know what *7
goes Into their cl,
** manufacture,”
tfon. Looks like S. M. U. has second !
dace cinched, and z\exas has.an iron
<rlp on third place. T. 6. U» is apt to
rawl up to fourth place, with Bay-
'or and Bice battling for fifth place,
giteA*gi« kSduiTcdtaifi
Waahlngton
right-hander was a great pitcher for
Houston last year. W.^.4.
Frankhouse. Herman Bell has been
sent to Houston by the Cards, but
there is a difference between Bell and
Frankhouse. Bell
Houston because
the grade ^yith
great opporunity.
he had not been give na chance in the
mpjors. Frankhouse was a major lea-
gue pitcher last year, but just hap>-
Bell was a minor league pitcher, but
pened to be with a minor league club,
happened to be with a major league
club.
W ITW iwe.
—1 HELP CT
U13 KNOWING
NORSE ,FREO
MAHLEy IS
RESCUED HJCM
TME ROCK
IN WD-
SflREAM
Billed ww
LOVE AND
GRATITUDE,
SALLY
MAHE^
A CON-
FESSION
to the BUffa-
he knew last
year,, tfo penqaftt ^opes of the Hpus-
ton team will, be greatly enhanced. Al
the uresent time, whowever. Houstoty
“ «P«rwncea with i£ how much
hWinm«* did
EZ.’P the Cardui
L N. 'Mayfield, Louisa Mayfield, A.
C. Delaplain and Marcy. J. Delaplain,
deceased, their heirs and legal repre-
sentatives, by making publication of
this citation in some newspaper pub-
lished in Washington County, Texas,
if there be a newspaper published
therein, but if not, then in the nearest
county where a newspaper is pub-
lished, once in each week for four
cfWJaitbx. Wfifika^i
regular term of -the
^T* £“a-~wp<w y*".”
Edd Burton, of this plooo,
’““red as bad aa • woman can
« and still keep going.**
good for nothing, wm Ma-
it Nntv1®* Unab1^
«• Nothing agreed with me. At
" 1 had such bad paina in my
would hX£Z
id “d
1 Mood on my foot
■ngth of time. My narvao would
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Robertson, Ruby. Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 271, Ed. 1 Tuesday, February 14, 1928, newspaper, February 14, 1928; Brenham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1181585/m1/3/?q=wichita+falls: accessed June 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Nancy Carol Roberts Memorial Library.