Tri-Cities Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 50, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 29, 1931 Page: 3 of 6
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oor neighbor,!
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at !$ 13.08.
ates having |
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roperty
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w ~—■, . ............ .. •»—
SDAY, JULY 29, 1931
TRI-CITIES SUN
l-CITIES AREA REGATTA PLANNED IN AUGUST
—
FAVOR
PING RACES
AT EVERGREEN
first regatta ever held in
Cities amt may be at-
j late this summer.
August holds no promise
C regattas of exceptional in*
.motorboat enthusiasts here
iuch an event cjtn be staged
fully.
Idea Liked
idea, first broached among
has aroused great inter-
plans are being pushed
. ah outboard motorboat
[before the end of August,
the nnjet is staged, drivers ^
| all sections of the coast coun-
cil be asked to participate,
j Jtfrey, who' is keen about the
[Wednesday said much qnthus-
| has been shown in the pro-
! boat meeting.
krjth the proper support I’m
[tiff the Tri-Cities can stage
Wtta this year and it should
[ one of the largest crowds of
meet in Texas,” Ilfrey f|xid.
DID YOU KNOW? - ■ - By R. J. Scott
Copyright,.J#3I. b. Aw ft* Auociation.Ic. ' "f '1 ' J *--
3$*
‘e.. July 29 j
avede^i
^trusted,
time before j
a*'
ail as a
” frequent .j
e.d and t«
cli^in with i
\ND
OOSE CUE!
ENC1
'hone 32
O.
>s
Sonsei
incoa
33,000-Mile Globe
Tour Made by Youth*
PORT WAYNE,' Ind., July 29
drJh—A 33,000 mile gioge encircl-
teg jaunt ha* been completed at a
cost upder $700 by Harold Greinert,
Fort Wayne, and Paul Neipp,
Cleveland. The youths, both of
whom were graduated from Cart
HOUSTON VICTOR
AS STEERS BEAT
SHIPPERS. 11-3
Southern division
Ro better than bre,
cordia College here, began their "“them group
long trip a year ago this month
Arrtong the methods of earning
transportation engaged in by the
youths was peeling potatoes on an
ocean liner. In Spain they traveled
more than 759 miles on bicycles.
Standing Today
bs could do!
even with the I
the first'day of |
their invsaion.
Houston jnn
A ^UMMIFI&O HAND
'waicti ^ROBS WHEN
W HOLD 1T —
owned ey <LR-fTiura.
ADAMS Op VlCrfStelA
STREET, LONDON, EN«,
have been made, according
ey, but it has been tentative
by those interested that
bite will be either Tri-City
of Evergreen.
Evergreen Site
ergrqen, I believe, Will be
. spot to hold the races,”
f said, “as it is ideal for hand-
spectators and the condi-1
[of the water (tin be depended j
iore than at Tri-City Beach.”:
purvey of the Tri-CHties is to’
Attitude of the mer-j
i and business men will be a
Ctor in definitely deciding
Ijsnd when to hold the races.
VOLCANIC DIRT', 34MILES
DUE SOUTH OP DODGE CrtV,
NAN., ASSAYED 20<f» COPPER.
AND 20 7* ZINC . ■SPREADING
over. CLARK, mead, Kiowa,
TORO And COMANCHE COUNTIES'
If IS S^ID fWE EAftrfri CONTAINS
QDU> IN UNHEARD OF RUANfkfES
vptxcy MC fARLANO
op- 6PRiNqFiElX>(0., AA£
35 HAS HAD A BONE
FRACTURED EVERV
YEAR. DURING HIS LlPfe**-
EACH FRACTURE.
- o?*MiLIN A O'FFERENf
PJ-ACE.
&t&k w
MLPBCSWEi
s' PRl NOF iLtD,
OHIO
HALTMAR GIVEN
PRAISE FOR WORK
WITH PLANT BAND
Anthony Haltmar, Baytown Hum
ble band director. Who has been
j directing musical-notes for the past
30 years
_ Without a relative, as far as his
m zjzt* zv tzisz
the Houston! developed his talent for music at
an early age. - 1 ■ '
He picked out the biggest in-
strument in a band for his first
Jrtibik
years old at that time and played
SPEAKING OF
SPORTS
DEAN ALL YEAR
■ fear that Jerome "Dizzy” j
lied by
r Cards 'before
finished the current pen-
i was dispelled Tuesday by
[dispatches from St., Louis.
Mfe itat^nterfained
rCard's management
following the regular championship
rounds, he didn’t lose a pound. His
physical condition was marvelous
He is hard as nails. /■
Walter Hagen has lunched light-
ly for years. Ha. Is a wise Void
Seldom do you hear any more of' ^ Ge"e Sual'iz«n
•—— ,, „„V use(l to be a heavy eater but he
Little "notes, big notes, high-ones, i ® 1 p, >er eatl, % hl elf ^ learntxi that even if a man gets
of the big leagues,’ or ft star golf, p|enty of ^.gft u .g ba(,
branches have "* nY k“P “■
TEXAS LEAGUE
W. L. Pet,
Houston .—___21 7 .750
Dallas ----—.18 12 .600
Beaumont _____15
Fort Worth____15
Wichita Falls ..14
San Antonio___12 /If
Shreveport-----12' 17 A
Galveston ao .3
Tuesday’s Kesults
Houston 0, Shreveport 0.
San Antonio 9, Wichita Falla l
Dallas 11, Beaumont 3. . *
Foj# Worth 9, Galveston 2. y>.
/AMERICAN LEAGUE
W. L. Pet GB
Philadelphia . 73
Washington _____60
New York_____55
Cleveland ...___45
St. Louis ________42
Boston ___37
Chicago (-------36
Detroit ......___35
Cards are five and one,
ahead'oftKeres
and five pitchers are
l iable work at regular duty,”
“We really don’t need
[now and, so far as we know,
Hous-
through indulgence of his appetite.
Athletes in all
learned hewA to eat, or
should say hot to eat.
Most bill players today, in con-j
trast to the rugged" typep whb1
ROUTE OUTLINED
.787. ...
.625 11
.585 15
.469 26
.452 27 W
.394 33
.379 34W
.361 36 W
1 Breadon, president of the a base horn in a Bell county band,
[.slid Bean would remain with A short time later he joined the
Barnum circus band and spent
three years with" the organization,
that time he vijited all ■
Creek, Td
aul
qoutan
LUOd*
I 003 -’
RAILROAD
TIESj\RE LAID
ESS, July 29 <09—
rtion of the 12Q-mile route
^Port Worth and Denver
lilway from Childress
wiii begin Aug. 1, of*
of the railroad have
parts of the nation.
Studied In Austin
Mr. Haltmar returned to Austin
where he lived for several, years.
eat conservatively. They Jjjive -to!
in order to make the gra^e for it j
takes spqed as well as brawn toj
stay up there in the rfij'.jors. The
clubs
usually find out on the spring
gour-
FOR FANS GOING
TOHARVABfiGAME
training trips,;4ho are the gour-' The route to ^ Allowed by grid
mats anu when they-see a man *®na t*lis when they treh on
I|Vying top much attention to food, October 24 to the Tbxas-Harvard
they rejfhrd him with a suspicious game jat Cambridge, Mass., was'
V tuesday’s Results
Boston 8, Detroit 1.
Washington $, Cleveland 1.
^Chicagp
Philadelphia 6, St. Louis 3.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W. L. Pet.
St. Louis —-k._62 36 .639
Chicago -------.52 42 .553
New York .—_50 41 .549
£ “ Brooklyn
Boston ........45 47 .489 14 V4
Pittsburgh ____42 49 .462 17
Philadelphia ...38 57 .400 23
Cincinnati ^ „%.,376, 25.W
............ Tuesday’s Results......
San Antonio took
the meaxupe of Shwweport and
Wichita Fffis after those two clubs
had a dk'y of grace in which to
get re/dy. However, the Fort
Wortbf (jit* and Dallas Steer* got
y tamlngAhe Galveston Bucs
Beaumont Exporters.
Dallas, by virtue of her U to 3
drubbing of the Exporters, left no
doubt as to which dub belonged
in second place. Murray of the
Steers spotted Beaumont three
runs In the first inning before his
t^imraates felt the urge to punch
the pellet soundly in the fourth,
fifth and eighth innings to garner
11 counters to offset the handicap
Dick |4cCabe of Fort Worth gave
the cellar boys from Galveston an
other plastering by a 9 to 2 score,
whilq San Antonio scored the win
ning hun of a hard fought battle
with the Spunders in the eleventh
frame. The score was 9-8.
ipistol Pete Fowler, facing
Thornton Lee, pitcher who bnat
<■ Houston in a 14-inning seige the
Ijat time Shreveport splayed in the
Bayou city, let the Sports down
with a 6 to 0 duttvntr"
V/
50,000 CHINESE
TO MOVE HOMES
PEIPING, July 28 «'.Ei-More
than 50,000 Chinese settlers, moat]
provinces, have arrived, or
their way to take up virgin lanu in
■North Manchuria, according to re-
GB ports. ' _ -, -
immigration from China proper
is less this year than during the
past three years, but k still, con-
« .681 Hmf lMeraMe. Before thi. summer is j
over H is estimated that 75,000
Chinese farmers will have been!
added to the growing population
of this region.
eyey
Hobby Jones and Johnny Farrell
Ibng since learned that they could
not play their beat golf if they ate
a heavy niid-dpy meal. They both
------; , — - — -—™ — ninp sparingly Between rounds.
state capital which D^yed at Although Jones eats lightly he has
the inauguration of several gover-l a iendency to take on wtVRht easi.
nors. He recalls particularly the;ly_ Farr/n ig the opposite. Even
inauguration of Governor Sears in though he used to a hs|ivy eater
bunirteinh Houston by railroad of-
ficials late Tuesday.
Bill Hitzelberger of Dallas, pro-
moter of the all-expense tour, says
he expects
/:/ "rat
way contracts have been
* Childress, Wellington,
and Pampa. The Denver
.* branch of the Fort
«« Denver, City railroad,
? ab!'ut, mil** of ay*-
®* in. Gray-co according'
fcbians.
.of the rail traffic
-Jii the heart of west
11 exPected to take about
a!though the Une will
» open to Wellington
wmter and to Sham-
many Tri-Citians. had made in-
quiry relative to costs, route of
travel, and other phases of the
journey.
. he' retained his slim, supple form. The special train will leave
He moved to Chicago, Ilk *J«wj However, when carbuncles began Houston over the Southern JPadfk
OmAm Md ftomqiat*
years later and became a member cropping out on his neck Johnny
of the famous Red Path concertkealized somethin„ was wrong.
band organization. He worked out He cut out the heavy food and the
will go to St. Louis over the Mis-
HPiHBHI ■ HH. JUMP Ml __■ The' ' New
for several years,. I result was his game improved end York Central route uUI be followed
Haltmar returned to the
. -Cone Star state anu brought his
band talent to. Houston. He was
connected with the Houston Con-
servatory of Music and played nu-
merous band engagements for two
years with the organization,
the eruptions on his n'eck disap-
peared.. ,
I noticed out at the Inverness
to Boston,
The return trip will be made
er the New York Central or
country club at Toledo wherq the Pennsylvania lines to St. Louis
Sin/} mm* +Ln
Cincinnati 5, Brjojtlyn 4.,
New York 6, Pittsburgh 2.
Chicago 6, Philadelphia 3....
St. Louis 1, Boston 0.
TODAY’S GAMES *
Texas League
i
Across the chasm of misun-
derstanding these,two, Natalie
Dudli^ knd Alyn Brady, fac-
ed each Other conscious of a
great love which they thrust
aside.
4 r
C?n love b
iey overcome an almost
hopeless chain of reverses run-
ning through this enthralling
and exciting love story?
Former Homer King
! Serves As Justice
LAGUNA BEACH, Cal., July
'27 (t’P)—Gavvy Cravath, former!
major league baseball players, y |
justice of the peace of this sea-)
side town, and the justice he |
Houston at Shreveport,
7,21 SI"^ wSu'Ealls. -i“ out is just, if not according
roUftds.jran^ tp_make tlie Cnp: He said! B^unwflt at Dallas. .....
American League
Chicago at New York,
St. Louis at Philadelphia.
Detroit at Boston.
Cleveland at Washington,;
.......... National League
Boston at St Louis. ’
Brooklyn at Cincinnati,
Philadelphia at Chicago.
New York at Pittsburgh. ’
lithe
spring.
^b“r will be employed in
Paction, officials declar-
, ' :ux of employes to this
jwnKruction, headquarters,
1 “is month.
In the fall of 1924 he came to
Baytown and took over the direc
t'idri of the Humble band.
Band Honored
Under his direction, the band
won second place in a contest at
the South Texas State Fair at
Beaumont in 1927. In 192(1 it was
first in a Harris county band con
test, and ranked second in another
contest in Harris county.
Mr. Haltmar owns one of the
most complete band composition
collections in South Texas. More
than 4000 selections are found in
his music cases at the Baytown
community house band storeroom,
national open championship
stagfyl thj.it the players reiaifed
iher than ate between their
morning and afternoon, rounds.
Adjoining the locker rooms is a
restaurant and ja lounging room,
Most of the golf stars spent their
time in thq lounging room rather
than the cafe during tft^ in-be-
tween-rounds period. They play-
was and over the Missouri Pacific to
Houston.
-------—.....MUt -m
obtained from any railway agent,
Texas Caves Yield
Olden Days Relics
DEL RIO, July 29 d’.Pi—Explor-
Mexico Is Termed
Jazz Music Cradle
ed bridge, poker and chess or sim- ffo” caves a,K* bluffs of the
ply chatted
.......July 29 (INS)—
0Z e can ^ Mexico may have! been the vriuile
of "jazz” music according to Jgs.
J. Sullivan, a Boston mining en-
gineer, who stopped here enroute
to China by way of San Francisco.
“Archaeologist# have uncovered in-
struments in the interior of Mexi-
co which were capable of produc-
The selections range from fun- M 8Ucjl a repast it would take
Racking plant
JO, July 29 d’P)-Plans ^
plant ^ pieceg. Music for every occasion j
[Hers, by 1/naCr°^f th* I?VBr can be obtained from his collection.!
|lv« been *** (‘,ty caP*t^"l Mr. Haltmar has been addinsr to'
era! dirges to wedding marches,
from marches to army “at rest”
Music for
Mr. Haltmar has been adding to
the entire
period he has been engaged in
band work.
W 4t ®s'!his musical library over
a the >®p°>W0 pesos period he has been ,ei
4 Torre/ dlStrict- Prob. j band work. Many valuable pieces
Seougjy. PJom'*6<l si- were destroyed when the Commun-
Mhny of tha golfers did not eat
at all, merely sipping a glass of
milk or lemonade. Those who did
eat confined their gastronomic ac-
tivities to the consumption 'of a
sandwich. No full meal of roast
beef, mashed potatoes, salad, cof-
fee, pie and ice cream for them
rugged Pecos and Devil’s river!ing music Hke we hear today,”
country is being made in search of Sullivan. The instruments re-
In/Hnn L.’_______L* 1 . .. ' aomhlod In n
Two men; who had l>een fight-
ing were brought before Judge
Gawy recently.
“Who won?” he asked the pris-
oners. ' /;
"I iM,” nuanbied one.
“All right, it will cost you $6.
Your companion is puwtshed
enough,’ replied the judge.
0n. occHWion 1mw~
! yers were srguing an intricate le-
;gal problem before him. Gavvy
looked perplexed and finally he
rose, took his hat, and sauntered
from the courtroom with the
mark: '
“You two fellows argue It
amorig yourselves. This is too deep
for me. Anything you agree upon
is O.K. with me.”
READ
...... ‘ 7‘
BROADlDJllj
BRIDE
■ 'Mj'-. ■
By ETHELDA BEDFORD
Author of “Dear Diary”
Beginning Tuesday, August 4th
in the
Hotel Hires Gigolos
For Lonely Guests
LOS ANGELES, July 29 <GB~j|
Lad^-tmests who register at the
A.* ?T. ZS, a»LX hom i,
The expedition is headed by Miss exPlained- the modmi clarinet ........
Emma Gu*zietz, principal of Mark 9ax<>Phone. “They were played by
them five or six hol^s to “get go-
ing” in the afternoon round.
Many'of the golfers have learn-
ed what nqr'to eat by bitter ex-
perience*. Leo Diegel, it is sai(T,
had to leant how to cut dciwn his
food. He is now very careful of
his diet when in a championship
match#* ThaTmay explain Diegei’g
waf Arts showing in the national open
1929, although some of them have ^ he finilhed just Ba,y
Tyain high school and director of
the Witte Memorial museum, San
Antonio. J*— - J
Accompanying her are Miss
Vivian Careen and “Uncle” Tom
Miller, veteran ranchman of the
bonder country, who is acting as
guide, '
Floors of caves which, have been
the prehistoric men who roamed
the North American continent cen.
turies ago,” he said.
Belgium To Cover
A)1 War Dugouts
■rougiy m. . ' _ —— wt;ru wncii me vshrob
Prove a bon ’S expect"! itp house was partially burned
too*. 10 “mculturalf 1829. nlthonrh some of them hi
WANTED!
J* *0Tam...........
F Tri-eittes
^Knie, Beautiful
been replaced through purchases
from band muisc houses.
The Baytown band is one of the
premier band organizations
South Texas. It in all between rounds He never in-
Burke and George Von Elm.
Burke, the new champion, ate
very lightTy. Sevei^tl days during
the championship he» did not eat at
of flint and other implements. Near
Langtry a flat stretch of rock
nearly 152 feet long was found
covered with carvings:
Baylor Grid Squad
WACO, July 29 <CB—Baylor
many occasions of
Last Friday it l«>d the motorcade
to mark inauguration and dedica-
tion of the Spencer highway at La
FT tenders weekly public con-1 Pa* in front of the community
as part of the: house. In the winter mont s it
dtrfged in eelu -drinks, never ate
meat. Yet, in spite of the gruel-
ling 72-hold play-off.with Von Elm
BURSSELS, July 29 (INS)
; up revealed strange collections' todu^ut“nB*1
, of skuils, bones, primitive knives vis|to„ who wou]d Iike to m
some traces of the Great War,
will be obliged to hurry, for ex-
cavations are now being carried
out by the Government to fill up
all underground passages, dugouts
and tunnels which lie beneath Men-
Loses Hefty Frosh iin ^ YPres- • lar8«
■ ' jOrity of them having been made
by the Brftiah in 1915,
One of the. biggest of these is.
promising lineman from the l:
freshman squad,
Will Hogg Greathouse, who
weigs 200 pounds, is at
•t Decatur now, pnd
km
j the future will not have to suffer
the nmnotony of lonely afternoons
under a plan put into effect by
Mrs. Erma Hubbell, social execu-
tive of the hostelry.
- The plan call* for employment
of a staff of eight-Latin-Ameriean
gigolos.
Mr*. Hubbell explained that
Many of the thousands of tour-
.ia&Lvbft. visit Smtikm Catifatif,
are lonely and are not acquainted.
"In order to chink* this condi-
tion among our guests,” Mr*. Hub-
bell said, “we have arranged
series of tango teas for those who
enjoy dancing,. And just to. be
sure that lonely women will find
a partner who can dance the tango
we always have from, eix to eight
gigolos—trained professional danc-
ers—on hand to serve as part-
..............-4
Tri-Cities Sun
Remember, thd comics start
Sunday, August 2nd, phone in
your subscription now! . _ .J
r and Birr Crossroads,
l hundred yards
! ami dozens of
sas—-
mm
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IONT.J
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Matherne, Robert. Tri-Cities Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 50, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 29, 1931, newspaper, July 29, 1931; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1020900/m1/3/: accessed June 12, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.