Sweetwater Daily Reporter (Sweetwater, Tex.), Vol. 10, No. 77, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 1, 1930 Page: 4 of 6
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THURSDAY EVENING,'MAY 1
—*-—-- i ii _
"1 Man Among M<
By Laufcr
Smathes Through
' In Mighty Style
ff-
mSM Ill
another halt
the 'rtxas lea-
when the Sports
i Waco, 4 to 6, while Beau-
, In second place, played to a
ill tie with Dallas that was
l at the end ot the twelfth in-
because ot darkness,
timely hltlng by Holman awl
" uarte, Shreveport inflelders, aid-
the Sports In defeating Waro
pulton, who went to the moutnd
relieve Owens, was credited with
SK the victory.
' Qrady Adkins, new Dallas pitch-
er, and Tom “Muleshoe” Vaughn,
Beaumont veteran, engaged in a
pitching duel for 12 innnings be-
fore the game was called. Neither
pitcher showed signs of weakening.
Vaughn struck out six batters, Ad-
kins two.
Scoring In the early innings, Ft.
Worth defeated San Antonio, 9 to
4. 'ilatgrave, Indian pitcher, was
rotfted in the fourth inning when
the Cats scored four runs.
■iield to thro hits by the master-
ful pitching of Allan Stout, Houston
hurler, Wichita Falls lost to the
Buffs, 12 to 4. Stout struck out 11
batters.
Games today: Ileaumont at Dal-
las, San Antonio at Fort Worth,
Houston at Wichita Fals, Waco at
Shreveport.
The Detroit Tigers and Philadel-
phia Athletics and the Pittsburgh
Pirates and Boston Braves today
will inaugurate the Major League's
opening intersections! competition
at Philadelphia and Pittsburgh.
The first series of sectional games
was completed yesterday and to-
morrow all clubs will engage in
East-West competition.
Heavy hitting had pratially abat-
'd but the thirty pitchers allowed
a total of 152 hits for 77 runs. Nine
pitchers went the route.
Manttsh of the Browns; English
and Wilson of the Cubs; Herman of
the Robins; Klein of the Phillies
and Crawford of the Giants’ were
the day’s home, run hitters.
George Pipgras of tin; Yankees
turned in the feature pitching per-
formance to end the Washington
Senators' eight game winning
streak. Pipgrass allowed only 5
hits and whitewashed the league;
leaders, 9 to 0.
Pat Malone, Cubs stiike out
king, let the Pittsburgh Pirates
down with 0 hits and drove in two
of the runs in the Cubs’ 5 to 2 vic-
tory.
The Brooklyn Robins won their
third straight game from the New
York Giants, 9 to 4.
Joey Sewell, Cleveland infielder,
kept, his 1102 consecutive game re-
cord unbroken by starting against
the St. Louis Browns despite an
attack of influenza, lie remained
in the game only long enough to
knock, aUkCrifif:it{'Uio*'imlidWg"lf“L,.'J
3 victory.
The Philadelphia Athletics drop-
ped a 7 to 3 decision to the Bouton
Red Sox and the Boston Braves
slugged out a 9 to 3 win over the
Phillies.
Meusel’s single and Stripp’s tri-
ple in the ninth gave the Cincinna-
ti Reds a 4 to 3 win over the St.
Louis Cardinals.
The Chicago White Sox made 13
hits off Chief Hogsett, Detroit’s
full blood Indian rookie pitcher,
but were unable to bunch their
blows and lost the decision, li to 4.
MINERAL MS
io play in
Mountaineers Are Schedul-
ed to Meet Sweetwater
On Oct. 25
With two new coaches to guide
them, the Mineral Wells Mountain-
eers are to play eight and possibly
nine games in their 1930 football
campaign, according to the sched-
ule that was only recently an-
nounced at a district committee
meeting in Abilene.
The Mountaineers have not yet
made sal isfactory arrangements
for their game with the Cisco Lo-
boes but it is expected that this
will be done before the 1930 sea-
son starts.
Mineral Wells and Big Spring
open the 1930 season with a game
at Mineral Wells. This is the first
game of tile 1930 race for any of
the ten teams in the Oil Belt dis-
trict.
On Oct. 25, the Sweetwater Mus-
tangs go to Mineral Wells for a
contest with the Mountaineers.
The Mustangs scored eight points
to a goose-egg in tiie first, quarter
but were unable to lvold1 the lead.
The Mountaineers have four
games at homo and four on foreign
soil, hut have a fifth game to bo
determined.
The complete card for next fall
is as follows:
Sept. 19, Big Spring at Mineral
Wells,
Oe.l. 3, Breckonridge at" Rrecken-
ridge.
Oct. 10, Brownv.ood at Brown-
wood .
Oct. IS, San Angelo at San An-
gelo.
Oct. 25, Sweetwater at Mineral
Wells.
0--t. 31, Ranger at Ranger.
m .
WM.\£. IVi
emsiTiObis
AfcWNbT
«-TlME “
He HAS TALKED
300,000 MILK
IM COMPETITION
'■AND eXHl3ltioMS" ]
AT 91,
PLAVS toJrBJVN
-pay-
except on special
OCCASIONS, he
UmiTsw&.pahy
Round to
•"•8 HOLES"1
R6 BEST score ik\
a .-V-l FOP-THE ,,
^ RA.-19ZB
\------------
George Bancroft, the ihighty
thrill-man, is coming to the Palace
Theatre again. This time the bur-
ly Bancroft, who has become* a
man among men in serdendom, will
be seen and heard as Joe Forziati,
the steel worker who fights his
way to success as a building con-
struction contractor.
The picture, “Ladies Love
Brutes.” is based on the original
play, “Pardon My Glove” by Zoe
Akins. It was adapted 'or the
screen by Waldemar Young and
Herman J. Mankiewicz.
According to the fascinating
plot, Bancroft, having attained a
moderate amount of wealth, de-
cides that lie now needs social pos-
ition. He makes a play for Mary
Astor, young society matron. But
now comes the villiany, purveyed
by Stanley Fields, a recketeering
labor agitator, and the critical mo-
ment finds Bancroft with a big de-
cision to make. He must choose
death for his own little boy or for
I hr' child of the Woman he loves.
It doesn’t take the m i g h ty
George long to decide that momen-
tous crisises are best overcome by
the fisticuff method, and he
plunges into the battle with Fields
and his toadies with stirring and
telling effect.
Tiie climax is not what you im-
agine—Bancroft does not win-the
girl. .
•' Ail in all it is a great picture,
rwith a great cast. Stanley Fields
played ‘“Dorgun,” the Detroit gam-
bler, in “Street of Chance-” Mary
Astor is the society girl. She was
seen in “The Rough Riders.” Fred-
rie March, who played opposite
Mary Brian in “The Marriage
Playground” and opposite Ruth
Cliatterton in “Sarah and Son,” is
County Health Unit Com-
miltee is to Meet In
Sweetwater Saturday
MrB. A. A. Chapman, vico:chair-
woman of the County Health Unit
Committee, is to preside at the re-
gular monthly sesion of the com-
mittee Saturday afternoon at 3
o’clock when special emphasis is to
placed on the annual summer-round
up campaign for students of pre-
schoolage.
Mrs. Roy Thompson, chairwo-
man Is to be out of the city.
C all for the meeting was issued
this morning from the office of the
unit at the courthouse. Every mem-
ber ot the committee t surged to
be present as other important
work il also to be discussed at this
time. .
Members of I he committee are
Mrs. Wesley Edwards, Maryneal,
Mrs. Roy Campbell, Hylton, Mrs.
W. C. Cleckler, Wastella, Mrs. L.
B. Statser, White Flat, Mrs. R. L.
Howe, Uoscoe, Mrs. J. W. King,
Hoseoo, Mrs. Rose, Uoscoe, Mrs.
Harve Artedge, Blackwell, Mrs. Ed
Evans, Ada and Mrs. Sy Dennis,
Divide,__
Charles Paddock
Faces Suit For
Breach Promise
Nov. 23, Abilene at Mineral
Wells,
No. 27, Eastland at Mineral
Wells.
The Mountaineers have twenty-
two days in November without a
scheduled grid clash hut it is prob-1
able that the Mineral Wells-Cisco
game will he played during that
time.
SALARIES SET
FOR TEACHERS;
Stale Department Fixes
Wage of Rural School
Teachers in Texas
IN SWEETWATER
Stale Superintendent
i Public Instruction
Asks Re-election
Salaries for rural school teach-
ers, which are fixed by tho state
department of Instruction, have
been announced hv the department
and forwarded to tho various sup-
erintendents of Texas counties.
Each year before new contracts
are signed the stato department
makes out a schedule for salaries
of the instructors of the various
rural schools. Miss Helen Davis,
assistant county superintendent,
anounced Thursday, the follow!!’
scheduled for tlie 1930-31 term:
Or.e-teacher school, $95.
Two-teacher, principal, $105; as-)
slstants, $35. !
Three-teacher, principal, $12u; 1
I assistants, $85 each,
e Four-teacher, principal, $130; pri i
’’ 1 mary teacher, $95; others, $85.
Five-teacher, principal, $140; pri-j
mary, $105; others, $90.
;as gains
m ass
Increase' of 250 Per Coni
Is Shown; Total Count
Shows 4,669 Persons
An increase of 250 per cent is
shown in tiie population of Color-1
ado, county scat of Mitchell coun-
ty ,according to census returns
icing the city 1.009 inhabitants. In
920 it h: (1 1 840.
rtii.niirfrt*tt n • —----- ..
chamber of common-" place 1,000|
other persons within a few blocks
of tiie corporate limits.
Loraine, second largest city ot |
Mitchell county, is given a popula-
tion of 750, an increase of 140 over
1920 when i, had 610.
Rates Wise Derby Money
.NEW YORK, May l.flj.B-Char-
les Paddock, famous sprinter, has
been served with papers in a $100,-
omucerion in .,.11.111 aim 00.,, .- ,)rom|s,. suit filed on
seen and heard here m the role of »»nl( <)f Mlfm MluU,lille Lubetty,
a young society blood.
Others in splendid character
parts are Freddie Burke Frederick
and David Durand as the two
hoys; Claud AlBster, one of the
stars of “Three Live Ghosts’’ as a
society tailor, Ferike Boros, a vet-
eran of tho legit, as Bancroft’s
mother, and Lawford Davidson,
who played Tristan in “The Vaga-
bond King.”
“Ladies Love Brutos” comes to
the I’alaco Theatre tomorrow.
------- —♦— -
Federal Reserve
Rate Is Slashed
WAPITiNOTON» May l.(U.R)— A
reduction to llireo per cent in the
rediscount rate of the federal re-
serve bank of New York is called
for by the current credit sil'.union
in the opinion of high povciinnent
officials, it was learned today.
Reduced in France
PARIS, May 1. (U.R)—1Tho Hank
of France reduced its discount, rate
today from 2 per cent to 2 1-2 per
cent.
who claims the former Olympic
star failed to mhrry her after pub-
licly announcing tludr engagement
in Cleveland. Miss Lubetty charges
that tho marraige was set for late
October, 1929.
Visiting Mother Here
Mrs. John A. Ward, Jr., and son
of Sonora and Mrs. N. J. Waters of
Michigan are in Sweetwater visit-
ing in tiie homo ot their mother,
Mrs. Lige Cutbirth. They are to
spend several days in Sweetwater.
"IT. s. Gets World’s Largest
Crystal.” Headline. Prohibitionists
| of course, will ho peeved to learn it
comes in quartz.
How does John Barrymore know,
when his new baby starts howling,
that it is not expressing its genius
lor tho talkies?
Mae 1. (U.R)
■is -inick liy
aMWSMEwiui
Katy train near-here late yesterday
and almost Instantly killed.
My, ujst look how Jackie Coogan
is growing up! This picture shows
the former baby star of the m,iv-
ies instructing his younger brother,
Robert, in the fine points of golf
at Del Monte, Calif. Note how
much Robert looks like Jackie used
to.
Thursday’s 5 Best Radlp Featu^js
(Copyright 1930 by United Press)
-WEAF, NBC network, 6:00 p. m.
C3T—Fleischmaiin-VaUoe hour.
WEAF, NI1C network, 7:30 p. m.
CAT—Jack Front Melody Moments.
WABC, CUB network, 8:00 p. m.
CST Kodak n.id-week program.
W.I7„ NBC network, 8:00 p. m.
CST—Atwater Kent program.
WEAF, NBC network, 8:00 p. m.
CST —RCA Hour—Tito Sehipa.
—-------- --- " ♦ ...... ........—
Here for Treatment
Mrs. August Bredemeier of Was-
tella was brought to tiie Sweetwa-
ter sanitarium Wednesday by tho
Wilhite ambulance.
____________ i’>, ..
HERCULES OVERALLS
And Hercules Jackcto
$1.69
Latin Students
rn re o
lobiverronram;
Britain’s New
Envoy to U. S.
ft. M. N. Marrs, stato school stip-
erintendent, probably will visit in
Swetwnter sometime this month
and deliver, an address to the rural
and city school trustees at a conn
ty-wide tiustee meeting, it was , .
learned Thursday nmrning from salaries paid, witiim
Members of the Latin depart-
ments of senior and junior high
-u ; ools, under tiie direction of i
K. V. Ciass, instructor at sen-1
ior !d',b. and Miss Ruth Lawlis, in- i
structgr of junior h!?b, are to pre-
the pn ;ram at chapel ex i-
(.fesk^Fridfiy livviiin;; at senior nic!>
school.
A cha; ;. illustrating the “Itela-I
tion of Lr.lin to Every Life,” which
the students of senior high have
, , . . , _ , , , .prepared is to be presented and ex-1
Six-,toucher, Principal. $14.,: high ,t, ,, . r..;„;l|1K)l,r u,:.
school assistants, $95; primary.;
vld.>, others $.15. a dtcrl pageant, “Mother Du 1
Schools above six-teacher, prin- , , ,
, clpal, $155; primary, $115; others, j ,',,'re is to be »rese,,frul at
11 ijijg that program.
Many of the win roll ••
Spinach, a clio; tout colt \v
entri';? from the .-table of
Martin-Sweet Thyme.
SPINACH
- i,f t: c Derby are said to be riding with i
i!: good blood lines. S> -ii.-ieh is one of two I
William Ziegler, Jr. His parent., are Sir
[j!
□mil
i imiP
urn
CORPUS CHRISTI. May 1. (U.R)
-W. L. Welior of Tatum was m-
Mr. Marrs lias been invited to at-}'
tend this meeting by tho county:’
elation in the final
slon of tiie
Trustees aro lo determine the
the schedule
Miss Helen Davis, assistant county jSPt b-v **10 'h’j’aj tment. Any tenciiei I nnininuBly electr il president, of tin
snpei-iiitemlent, re-employed In the same position to T Cottonseed Crushers’ A so-
| teach m schools receiving stato
cwuiit aid, will receive $2 monthly in ad-1
board and it is expected that"he (,i,ion to t,u-’ Balary sP0C“led-
wiil accept tiie invitation. Makes Win to Slayer
SANTA ANA. Cal., May 1. (U.R) ]
—The pencilled will of Mrs. Doris |
Murray Palmer, on file for probate
here today, left a share of the beau-
tiful artist's estat, to Mrs. Guy
Bates Post, whom authorities de-
cided committc 1 suicide after slay-
ing Mrs. Palmer.
Pori Would i-.p Intevjnrtl-
iale Landing Finltl on
Trau.-tcoiilhu'u-ti! Roulo
Efforts to secure an airport with-
The annual county-wide trustee
meeting is t.o he hr'I within the
next two weeks, Ml Davis de-
clared.
It is expected that several other
prominent men in school affairs of
the stale will b« heer for the meet
lug
.VIr. Marrs lias visited in Sweet-
water on other occasions and is
well known in this section of
West Texas to school authorities
. and citizens.
Mr. Marrs and the county trus-
tees arc to lie guests nf Sweet-
water club at u special luncheon.
in a short distance of Merkel are : be
Sfth annual convention here today. - being made by the Lions club thcr j o' tho city.
as a result of ^ survey made re-
ently by United States Depart-
! ment of Commerce representatives j
recommending its establishment,
i The port would be one of the in-
. termediate landing fields between
|Fort Worth and El Paso, designed
r specially for plan, s becoming dis-
abled between Abilene and Sweet-
I water.
I A letter has been written to the
department of commerce stating
that Merkel is ready to do its part
in establishing tho field if it will
placed within a short distance
Editor Is Advanced
FORT WORTH, May 1. (U.R)—
John II. Sorrells, for throe years
editor of till: Fort Worth Press, bus
been named executive editor of ,hc
| Scripps-IIoward newspapers.
Happy Ionian Tells Mow She
Lost 19 Pounds oi Fal in 27 Days
During October a woman in Mon-] the system,
tana wrote "My first bottle of) At the on mo time the stomach, |
Krimt hon Salts lasted almost -1 j liver, kidneys and bowels aro toneil
weeks and during that titnc I lo::: | up and tlu- pure, fresh Wood con-
Big Shots and Big Shot Man at Drake
Here’s an overall combim
tion that laughs at wear an<
tear, ?,Iac!e of double-servic-
denim—twice pro-shrunk
Guaranteed—a new pair i
they rip. Indestructible pock
its. Iiig all over. Rustproo
Stay-on buttons. Choice o
High Back apron or Detach
able Suspender Style over-
alls. Hercules Jacket has in-
side breastpocket. Compare
these with any others made
—you’ll realize then theiv
splendid worth! Sizes—Over-
ali: ■ 50 to -14 waist; Jackets,
vi to 46 chest.
SEARS/
Tiics Mounted
and Batteries
’.TiaYa.'.Vi k'CAfi. i
AH I
KVi AIL
10EBUCK
Co
STORE
Store Hours;
n to o
Saturday 8 to 9
206-08 Pecan St.
Sweetwater, Texas
Britain’s new ambassador to the j
United States, who recently pre-
sented his letters of credence to!
President Hoover at the White!
House. He is 53 years old and si:;
feet four inches tall.
Your boy—soon to be in
school—then college, and a
man almost before you know
it. And then how you will
treasure those pictures made
today. Photographs of the
child: ! :i never grow up.
Have your children photographed now
WILLIS STUDIO
19 pounds of fat—Kruschen is all
you claim for it 1 feel bettor than
I have for years.”
Here's the recipe that banishes
fat. and brings Into blossom all the
natural attractiveness that every
woman possesses.
Every morning take one half tea-
spoonful of Kruschen Salto in a
glass of hot water before breakfast.
Be sure to do this every morn-
ing for “It’s the little dally dose
It lint, taken off the fat."—Don't miss
a morning. The Kruschen habit
means that every particle of poi-
sonous waste mutter nml harmful | sattsfled
tainlng Naturc’n lx life-giving
calls are cart led to evm-y .organ,
gland, nervo nml fibre of the body
and tlds Is followed by "tint Krus-
rlif-n feeling" of oncrgetic health
and activity thn; is reflected In
bright eyes, clear skin, cheerful j
vivacity and charming figure.
If you want to loso fat with |
speed get an 85c bottle of Krns-
(lion Kalis from Bowen's Drug]
Store or any live druggist nny-
understnndlng
with
that yon- t
results or
acids and gases are expelled from! back. udv.
:i".iin Michigan’s dark-skinned sprinter
in the 100-yard dash of the Drake relays.
............ _ Claude Bracey of Rico Institute. The lime for the century was
jy.li .seconds. Big Jim Rausch, right, of Kansas, esta ’.dished a m w shot nut mark at the Drake games by
f wtnfifng th> event *(? 4!) feet I 1-4 Inches. It was Rausch's fuuilh triumph in major relay contests (his
1 season. . . .... .i_.
I Tiie smile on Eddie Tolan’s fac" isn’t one of victory, for one
where in America with the distinct tnlik,(| (.y |je|an(j ,,f Texas Christian University to the tape
he | Iceland aiso won from his arcli-rival
SAN ANGELO-SWEETWATER
Schedule—Concho Coaches, Inc.
Effective Feb. tt, 10,‘tO
LEM IIEUIUN, l'l-csldcnt
SOUTH HOUND
NORTH HOUND
AM
I’M
I’M
Town
AM
PM
PM
]/V. .
.. . 7:!tO
1.15
5! 00
.Sweet water
Lv...
...7:00
1:00
5:30
Lv,, .
2:15
(1:00
Blackwell
Lv...
...8:05
1:35
0:05
Lv.. .
...0:00
2:45
0:30
Bronte
Lv...
...8:20
1:50
0:20
Lv...
...0:25
3:15
0:55
Tennyson
Lv...
.. .8:45
2:15
(1:45
Lv...
5: SO
7:10
Orient
Lv...
.. .0:15
2:40
7:15
Ar...
4:00
7.45
Snn Angelo
Ar...
. .10:15
8:30
8:10
WE HANDLE EXl’rrESB
J,*U
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Sweetwater Daily Reporter (Sweetwater, Tex.), Vol. 10, No. 77, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 1, 1930, newspaper, May 1, 1930; Sweetwater, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth561293/m1/4/?q=music: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sweetwater/Nolan County City-County Library.