The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 303, Ed. 1 Saturday, June 5, 1937 Page: 8 of 8
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Boston ........
Brooklyn ....
Philadelphia
Cincinnati
BE SURE TO ATTEND THE
Friday's Rroult*
Boston 9; Pittsburgh 1.
St. Louis 14; Brooklyn 4.
Chicago 6*2; New York 5*2.
First (fame 11 innings).
Cincinnati 9; Philadelphia 8.
Big-Time” RODEO
(" • >' . '■« .
Saturday—Sunday
AMERICAN LEAGUE
New York .................-94 14
Cleveland ................21 15.
■ Chicago .....1^
I Detroit ........ -22 19
. Boston ........ 17 17 "
Philadelphia ........... 16 19
Washington ..............18 22
St. Louis ....................21 28
Friday's Reaalts ;
Detroit-10; Washington 8.
Cleveland 5; New York 8.
> Boston-Chlcago, rain.
!
Seven Events Daily With Hundreds
’ Of Performers of the Southwest
mm
■ It takes expert workmanship
I snd equipment to keep linen suits
l we C s u a rail t ;ee*yo u a^pertert job.’
L -•-
] It Pay* To Look Neat
"iSs"
Drive Out Cooee Creek Street
•to'roMSrottfM.felttrt’.H.
—
SUNDAY: AdaHit—II, Children 15c
heM'!; .Ai
TEXAS
•" y ' * *
I
THE DAILY SlIN—0008E CREEK. TEXAS ------
Baytown To Entertain Powermen HereSunda
c. ^ : - 1 ■ - iii '*" *** V -r— Jisll "l
GUSHERSTO PLAY
Flashes
Rv FRED HARTMAN
predicted several
■asm wweks cf dry weather,
the front p«f« boy. had no
right t« make tun
| Revs rnieed football
te rse. prtro n*hf'' *“* •***
matches much mere thsa
that
AND BESIDES, it's all right to !
hive fun made of you on the1
sports page, but when it happens
on page one am I burned up!
THIS R/UNT »p II may
hart fishing for the hwl-
mil. and K name right after
J. W. Wright came In thr
office- oat of breath the otb.
rr afternoon to say that thr
rants la Trinity bay werr pay
tog off for the first time
But there'll be other day*,
aad fishing' alii lie :-otter than
the beat .
JACK HEARD is certainly
proud of his appetite, but bis op-
timism likely will get him in a*n-
ous trouble it he Isn’t more care-
ful in what he says.
He wants to challenge this col-
umn in a fish eating contest. Now
that * *11 right for Jack to do that.
Any one may think be esn eat
more flab than I can. It Is all
right for them to believe that un-
til they are convinced otherwise.
But the Insulting lose talk of
14-. Heard that may get him in
gtrlous trouble is that he will chil-
lenge me to a fish eating contest
and spot me two pounds of fish
1 see through his plan right
away.
He would eat two pounds be-
fore I started. He knows full
well, after seeing me eit, that no
person or group of perron* could
possibly cook as much fish as we
can eat He figures that If he
starts out first and gets two
pounds before I start, he will still
be two pounds ahead of me when
we clean up the platter The
championship will not hive been
decided, but Ee will have his appe-
tite more clearly satisfied than
mine
But if he thinks I will f»U for
such a ruse as that be has anoth-
er thought coming.
And besides we will never have
flatting la the t'alled Mtatro-
ArotraJD Dari* oup tie had
geal effect •.. Oaly oar feat
faait was call d during the
eat Ire tta, .. The Mcsy Deae-
Feid Frick eaaalna Thauediy
attracted one of the la grot
turn.u s if baseball writers
ever to attesai an ite ..tl»e
erosion . . • Thirty r. po t rs
and a d.tcn oaoM-rumra were
In on the show.
Ihry’ie tfie.lng Harry
Co per nt 101,’ 4-1. 2 1 ani
men money for first, second,
tiiLd , or fourth In the Na*
tknal op a . . . There’s s liel
I'd like—stout a liwcU on rat h
n leh ... Frbe money of 1*0,-
000 lor I* d.ys^taring ha<
tieen effered f r the grand
clnuit shim at Lid Orchard
Bench. Me.. July IP-SI.
Max Schmeling. vnloriou*
In two heavyweight II.Ir
fights, never wore an u:idj»-
pu.ed crown . .. Wbe.i he wi n
it Um- tlrsf time from Jack
Sha key he took It on a f ul
ani tbit dei'lson was di •
pitted . . . Vrotcrdsy b wo.i
tl:.- title technically spiaklng
01 ecu: sc—liecausc Krsdd t k
failed lo show up for » “wh el-
uted llllc- dc eiise.
Hill Terry think, the ( ubs
have Improved over last
year . . Hid Chocolnte I*
gradually coming back.
Jersey City fsns In the In-
ternational league throw
lighted clgsrettes In the sn-
nounccr’s mrgapbone when
they don't like the way brings
are going . . . Don Budge and
Bryan Grant, American Davis
Cup stars, arc taking scalp
treatments to protect Ihelr
hair from the sun . . . Haul
Plnrone. Cleveland heavy-
weight, spends his spare time
helping out as a fireman In
Garfield Heights.
Wall Streeters already are
homing a I9S9 Kentucky
Derby winner — one Helen
Gleason . . . The oldest race
bone in the l . S. Is the Trav.
ers at Saratoga, startei in
1*64 . . . Hack Wilson, former
Dodger, Cub, etc., star Is now
a radio announcer . . . Base-
balls used in Hie majors are
made six month, It advance
of distribution to the clu's *•
they can age property ... Too
baj altout that 14 foot, 11
pile vault record which BUI
Hefton an] Earle Meadows
made last week . . . They
might have gone higher hut
that’s the “celling” for the
standards . . . Now they’ll
have to build new ones all
around.
SHELL; INGLES1DE
ON SLATE TODAY
At noon t day the rauaage-
ment of the Baytown ai d ln-
glcsiie baseball t. ants had
agree I to play a double head-
er tiday.
■ i
After being rained out in their I
opener yesterday, the Ingleaide a.vl j
Baytown baseball teams were to j
play at 3:30 p.nt. todap in their 1
final contest of the now abbrevia-
ted league. >,
Tommy Evans, former coach at
Cedar Bayod high school ami now
an employe at the refinery a
Ingle,ide, is managing the invad
ers. They arrived in town shortly
after noon Friday and spent th<
remainder of the day looking a
the clouds.
Karii may make some changes in
the strategy of the Baytown team
With only two games to be play
eil today and tomorrow Manage
(ieorgij Shanks may send Joh
I'hardrescher to the hill today am! j
Lefty Bass against the Houston j
Lighting and Power company team
tomorrow.
The Gushers ahto have a fine
tilt on their card for tomorrow.
They entertain the/Sttell Oilers iii
a contest to be played at Eagle
stadium. The Baytown nine holds
an early season win over the Shell
team.
The Gushers are anxiously
awaiting the return to the lineup
of Pete McCIanahan, slugging out-
fielder. At this stage of the sea-
son in 1936 Pete was hitting about
a .450 clip and driving in almost
half the tgam's tuna. His big bat
has been sorely missed this sum-
mer.
Also Gene Alford should be rea-
dy to play within a few days, and
Shorty France, last year’s short-
stop, is expected to make his ap-
pearance at any time.
With the return of these play-
ers the Gushers will be set for
the season and set for defense of
their Houston Post tourney title
of a year ago,
Baytown meantime continues to
search for a catcher. A backstop
to aid Harry is the crying need at
this time.
Dizzy Defies Ford Fr
Without “Signing Nuthi
By G10RGE KIRKSEY . , M.y 6, i„Ue of SDofU,
NEW YORK, June 6 (U.H)-Jer- {in which appeared the^
I ome Herman (Dizzy) Dean, St. i "Among other <■* ^
' were i
Mo, April 27,
were
I &09SC
[ iktSooO Aprs*.
Au. /
4eKo*l£i6*f
ftxtoerftoiT
DKf ICAR 3irf
rf ux*5 As
TAoUWfT
wu.ee Twace
frtAfAMW**
7MU 1EAR.
/it,. HMimn I'RFSSl lome neniun tui»w iros, ov. i "Among other ,nm_
d tfttzsni
LLMros s... ** ^
j urday after a Friday program that ( Althoujfh For.l Frick, president < ^
was curtailed because of rain. - 0f the National league, lifted; __ al<
j Fort Worth nipped Oklahoma Dean’s three-day suspension that lhe t*rdlnal* »ere tn
City after the Indians made three cost him $487.20 in pay, he warn- ! £om ^ston to New Yo*
1 runs in. the ninth inning, and the ed manager Frankie Frisch: , J”’ ™«y Dean read the ■
i Cats won, 8 to 6. “Keep that b.g guy quiet or j «" «IW »‘Wy Dean, and
I Greer pitched the entire game 1 we'll have to go through this "If to Kay; Gillespie, of L
I for Fort Worth, despite the fact, thing all over again.’’
! ,hat he allowed the Indians 14 hits.. And in a statement hnck said: lhe first thing I „
Fort Worth took the lead with a , "So far as what has gone before, j «> when you get to New n
run in the first inning and kept1 the case is closed. So far as what | t0 K<> to hord Frick’s office
it throughout the game. . I may occur in the future, time j Pun«> him in the no*, |(
i Dallas dropped back to eighth alone can tell. Certainly this of- | don t, you re yellow/’
! p|aCe in the standings by losing fice does not propose to have the
to Tulsa, 6 to 2. Lahti pitched name of the National league, its
for Tulsa ami allowed !• hits but officials or employes dragged
through the newspapers in uncom-
[a
pe-fCtorT (VfirMER vJrTM
•fAe Mtfif
At MAT Sb
UltP IA« AE
iJUf COOtRAOe
/leAxiiutAiM
6o
—— COmiCHT. 1937. KING ftATUMS SYNOtCATfSK.!-
lWfio«d&Tb
<f»Af«Uf
(UUmtoA
lot* TRAlAJ
RiPft/
was never pressed except in the
seventh inning, when Dallas scor-
ed both of its runs. Tulsa batters
got 13 hits off Moore and Wolff
and pushed across three runs in
the third inning and three more in
the seventh.
WRESTLING
Houston—Lew Plummer. Indi-
ana, threw Chief Little Beaver,
North Carolina; Chief Saunooke,
South Carolina, threw Rulaml
Kirchmeyer, Oklahoma; Killer Shi-
kuma, Hawaii, threw Dan O’Con-
nor, Maasachusetts; Gorilla Ma-
cias, Mexico, threw George Zaha-
rias, Chicago.
plimentary manner hereafter."
There was evidence of a widen-
ing breach between Dean and
Frick. ‘ During the last wrangle
it was evident that the Cardinals
have little control over Dizzy. Sam
Brea don, owner of the club, ad-
vised him to sign the statement
prepared by Frick, but he refused.^
' Frisch could do little with the*
truculent Dean. Clarence Lloyd,
secretary, was so exasperated with
Dizzy he lost his temper.
| The difference between Frick
and Dean goes back farther than
the now-famous balk Dizzy made
in the Giant’s game at St. Louis
| and his Belleville, III. remarks.
' They go back to an item in the
Dean and the St. Loaii,
laughed. Mrs. Dean turj
Gillespie who quoted her u
ing to him:
tory.
“1 ■
won my point,” he sail |
didn’t sign nothing.”
Read the Daily Sun Wut j
INJURY JINX IS
THREAT TO YANK
PENNANT DRIVE
NEW YORK, June 5 O)—The
injury jinx which plagues Cham-
pion baseball teams camped on
the trail of the New York Yan-
kees today.
It was the same jinx that
caught up with the Detroit Tigers
'* l'me' „ last year and as soon as the Ben-
The infield seems pretty we 1 se were dethrc)ned the old man
with Cholcher at third, Schuble at
short, Williamson at second and
Kehoe at first. In the outfield
Costa is slated for the left field
post. Buck Bonds the center field
job and either Cal Hartrick or
Orval Watkins the right garden
responsibility.
that competition anyway, eapec- < - ' f
tally if we have to wait for Jack With Feeling* Hurt,
to catch the flab! I am told the a* • C M Toniffht
only thing be ever got on a flah- MaXie OailS 1 Onigni
teg trip wa. aun burn! , ^ YOpK june \ lCj»-Wr.
j mer Heavyweight Champion Max
M’LEMOREIHMH:
Tto wanting against
The
Really'
Nice
Drive In....
By The Big Oak Tree Texas Are
Schmeling sails for Germany to-
night with the offer of a Septem-
ber title match against the winner
of the Jim Braddock-Joe Louis
fight to salve his injured feel-
ing*.
The offer was made by Pro-
moter Mike Jacobs who hag both
Schmeling and Louis under con-
tract. But the astute* Teuton
did not accept the proffered bout,
and will await the outcome of
Madison Square garden’s court
fight to outlaw the Braddock-
Louia affair in Chicago, June 22,
befoie committing himself.
Standings
TEXAS LEAGUE
W. L.
Oklahoma City 33 21
Beaumont ..................SS* 23
San Antonio ............28 26
Fort Worth ..............27 27“
Tulsa .........................26 27
Galveaton ............... 25 26
Houston ......................22 33
Dallas ................-.....21 32
grig were dethroned the old mm
of bandages and liniment moved
right in with the Yanks.
Thursday, Outfielder George
i Twlnkletoes) Selkirk pulled; a
leg muscle which probably will
keep him out of the lineup for the
endurance of the road trip. Lat-
est loss was Spurgeon Chan ler,
rookie pitcher taking Pearson’s
regular turn on the mound. He
twisted a shoulder muscle yester-
day and went down to defeat, 5-3,
befitfe the Cleveland Indians. The
loss TOt the Yanks’ American lea-
gue lead down to two games. ■
The Detroit Tigers put oh a
seven-run splurge in the seventh
to defeat the Washington Sena-
tors, 10-3, hiehind Tommy Bridges
six-hit pitching. The St. Louis
Friday’s Results
Fort Worth 8; Oklahoma City 6
Tulsa 6; Dallas 2.
Other games rained out.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Pittsburgh ................24 14
New York ..................25 17
Chicago .................- 24 17
8t. Louis....................19 19
-7 20
ton Bees scorgd their second
straight win over the leading
Pittsburgh Pirates, 9-1, to trim
the Bucs’ margin to two games
over the New York Giants who
split a twin bill with the Chicago
Cubs. Bill Herman’s fouith hit,
a'.single in the 11th, drove in a
run that gave the Cubs their
eighth straight victory in the
opener, 6-5, but Slick Castleman
bested Bill Lee in a nightcap duel,
the Giants winning, 4-2.
The Cincinnati Reds crushed, a
ninth inning rally after two runs
were in for their second straight
triumph over Philadelphia, 9-8.
The St. Loius Cardinals con-
nected for 18 hits and smothered
the Brooklyn Dodgers, 14-4.
Soft Ball
Notes
Games in the Friday night
league last night at Baytown were
washed away by the rain which
fell throughout the afternoon. They
will be played at a later date.
No contests are scheduled for
this evening at the park. The
field will be dark for the first
week day night in weeks. 1
six-hit pitching. The St. Louis p • Dlav- HaVOC
Browns and Philadelphia Athletics | K®1" * l*J* , ^*4
staged a pair of lO-tnning thrill- j With W0IU6II 8 IVlCCt
The Brownies won the open-'
er when Manager Rogers Horns-
by singled, was sacrificed to sec
COUNTRY CLUB, San Antonio,
June 5 <U.R>—‘The Women’s Trans-
ond and w«s singled home by' Mississippi golf tournament, run-
Huffman in the 10th for a 7-6 de- ning againt insurmountable weath-
cision. Jack Knott lost his own er hazards, doubled its schedule
game when he walked three men j today to mud through quarter-
ifter Rothrock had double! in the , final and semi-final matches.
10tb to force home the winning ; Drowned out twice by rains
counter in the Athletics’ 4-3 night- ; the eight stars In quarter-final
-ap j play resolved to continue today
In the National league the Bos- regardless of the weather.
Your
LET A SPECIALIST
PROPERLY CLEAN
Linen
Enjoy Your Vacation
Vjhis SummerSd
Know Your Valuables Are
Properly Protected
IN OUR MODERN
SAFE DEPOSIT
A Few Boxes
Now Available
In Small And
Large Sizes.
VAULT
| I'.MK ll
“Dont you laugh, I mem i
Gillespie afterward* »pok«
Dizzy about the incident;,
quoted Diz as saying:
“I’m a peaceful guy,
hits me and l don’t hit nobwhl
After yesterday's 3-hour, i*
20-minute, session, in which'j
almost talked himself hadk
suspension after the ban
ted, the loquacious pitcher I
feeling that he had scored 11
overnor
love to |
jBan on
|Be Met
fAUSTIN. Ju
V. Allro
special sesi
kiilature to
|it’ all sorts
inlarly h" spi
racing, boo|
Jarble machines
ping notice
|v bill that rd
! bill passed
• track pariml
|Hf plans to si
Jth cameras cl
jteen" senator^
padbury, A hi lei
El, surround hi|
Small
[Eighteen sena
Lai passage of|
lint ('. Small,
lugbt a reeonsitl
j be included m|
[The message
jal topic of gai|
lature at this s
pered person a 11
ige asking repi
iellaw. It was
I senate in ty[|
| addressed “to
145th legislate]
Would Gra
|To tighten the
ist operation
bmmended con
pzed on showing|
without pre
tally was run.|
the legislatu
ision of race
ning liets or-v.1
[unction to stop
lonfiscation of|
[gaming was roe
1st effective
Ith.lhem. Licen
s called, a “srai|
fetect those tha
lent of chance.
| that any such
Jnfiscation and i
fculd be issuable
jtive in any pa:
Bred said, when t
F alleges that lo
■led or refused t(
in working out
[Rested, the leg
ince of Lloydy
tomey before thi
P appeals.
feport Thai
Has Stro
AMSTERDAM,
Teds published
' former Kaiaei
(are untrue, the
Pee at House Doo
round
I1" the Tri-Oth
poaning a coup!
Ws in a new shir
“three insts
Mrs. Shannon
fe » quick trip
’*!••< Bryan
setting a j
■ epeed record
i partner practic
' '“-inch sting-ray
; Emmett Shur
he didn’t
j the
•wanting to fi:
iff*
I, outboard mot
[■“U Porte: A
1 operitox dire
Furl, new E
_coach, to
« he could
i in Go0g^ j
;C.M. Agee’, ret
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Pendergraft, W. L. The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 303, Ed. 1 Saturday, June 5, 1937, newspaper, June 5, 1937; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1095455/m1/8/: accessed July 1, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.