Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 49, Ed. 1 Saturday, October 10, 1936 Page: 3 of 8
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t See Us For Good Will Used Cars
We Can Save You Money!
WALDRIP MOTOR CO.
Studebaker Dealers
Following the ball with eagle eyes, the official in the striped jersey at the
Louisiana
10;
Half Or More
Lone Star Conference game.
Louis Wins Again
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Morgan Sets 9:51
for Two Miles but
Sooner Team Wins
Seek Sources of
Ship Distress Call
For YOUR BUILDING,
REPAIRING,
in, time of peace. Trade that old car in and get one
of our OK used cars, so you won’t have trouble this
winter when the weather gets bad.
Glacier Bay National monument,
Alaska, contains 1820 square miles of
glaciers and ice-covered peaks.
A breeding frog on a farm ner
Santa Rosa, Calif., measures 30 in-
ches and is 11 1-2 inches across the
hips.
CLEBURNE, Oct. 10.—(AP)—The
Howard Payne College Yellow Jack-
ets lateral passed their way to a
21 to 0 triumph ewer Texas Wesley-
an here last night.
GRACE-BARROW CHEVROLET CO.
311 W. Oak Wrecker Service Phone 99
T
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MOTOR CO.
Phone 268
'CHEVROLET.
you find our materials
and service helpful.
iRHSSml
Phone 57
Beginning Monday, Oct. 12
we will CLEAN and TEST
your spark plugs without
charge with each WASHING
and LUBRICATION Job.
Phone 130—For Ice
Of the tires removed from
front wheels are unduly
worn because of faulty wheel
alignment. If your tires are
wearing too fast see us and
save.
NEW YORK, Oct. 10.—(AP)—Joe
Louis today motioned for his pin
boy, Promoter Mike Jacobs, to set
’em up in another alley.
Tile Brown Bomber scored the
third straight “strike’ of his come-
back campaign at the inaugural
show of Promoter Jacobs’ Hippo-
drome indoor season last night by
knocking out Jorge Brescia, giant
Argentine, in the third round or
a scheduled 10 rounder.
i
<Jf©’
crowd recorded at a gridiron battle
here in some time, saw Coach Jack
Sisco’s Eagles unlimber a fairly
smooth overhead attack to take vis-
iting Abilene Christian College Wild-
cats into camp by an 18 to 0 score.
Though it was'their first victory in
three starts, the game did not ap-
pear to seriously exert the Eagles
and from first to last their goal line
was never in great danger.
The long jaunts unreeled by John-
ny Shoemaker, recently a reserve
end but last week shifted to a half-
back post by Sisco, gave surprised
Eagle fans their chief thrill of the
game. An unknown to the specta-
tors, Shoemaker trotted in to handle
the difficult assignment of filling
injured Co-Captain Johnny Sto-
vall’s place. Through the first two
quarters the Eagle attack was based
largely on his fleet dashes over
tackle and around ends, and he con-
sistently melted through the Abilene
primary defense for long yardage.
Versatile Backs Attack '
Hester, Wilson, Reeves and Richey
Oj
Blackburn
OIL AND TIRE CO.
Phone 16 1211 W. Hickory
Lanky Henry Morgan, captain of
the 1936 Eagle harriers, ran to a
first plaice and a new all-time Teach-
ers College two-mile record FHday
night but in team points his Eagles
bowed to the Oklahoma Sooners.
The squads clashed between halves
of the,Eagle-A. C. C. grid game,
opening the cross-country season
here with a two-mile jaunt around
the track.
Rideouts Lead Field
The Rideout twins, Wayne and
Blaine, erstwhile Illinois high school
aces but now from Dallas, who en-
tered the local college as freshmen
this fall, ran for exhibition and led
the pack home by some 7.5 yards.
They stepped the eight laps around
the oval in 9 minutes, 44 seconds.
The Oklahomans compiled 34
points, North Texas 21. Morgan’s
time of 9:51 beat the previous time
of 9:57.
In the order they finished came:
H. Morgan, Howell of Oklahoma,
Seago of Oklahoma, Moody of Okla-
homa, Boyd of Oklahoma, Frank
Morgan, Callen of Oklahoma, Con-
way, McDade, Pigg.
Next week the Eagles meet Steph-
en Austin here if a harrier squad ac-
companies the football eleven Oct.
The Downtown Bible Class, meet-
ing each Sunday at 9:45 a. m. in
the Palace Theater, is holding
a contest for new members, and
expects 100 present Sunday. Rev.
J. D. Grey will teach the lesson,
and special music v/ill be given.
Judge R. L. Kendrick of Pensa-
cola, Fla., was the defendant—not
the presiding jurist—in a traffic law
violation trial. He faced a minor
charge resulting from a collision in
which the machine he was driving
figured.
NEW YORK, Oct. 10.—(TP)—King
Football rules the sports world to-
day with upwards of a half million
henchmen expected to pay him
tribute from the spectators’ seats
at a half dozen or so of the biggest
games.
The Pittsburg-Ohio State battle
at Columbus, O., where 75,000 fans
are due to watch two outstanding-
teams settle their rival national
championship aspiratihons, tops the
headline contests in all sections.
Starting in New York where the
Fordham-Southern Methodist and
Army-Columbia encounters are ex-
pected to draw around 50,000 spec-
tators each, the list includes Min-
nesota-Nebraska, Illinois-Southern
California, Michigan-Indiana, Pur-
due-Wisconsin Notre Dame-
Washington University (St. Louis)
in the Midwest.
Swinging toward the Southwest,
the top games are Missouri-Kansas
State and Kansas-Iowa State in the
Big Six, Baylor-Arkansas and Texas
A. & M.-Rice in the Southwest Con-
ference; the inter-group Texas-Ok-
lahoma game and the Texas Chris-
tian-Tulsa encounter.
The Utah-tyestern State, Colo-
rado College-Montana State and
Utah State-Wyoming games keep
the pot boiling in the Rocky Moun-
tain Conference while Pacific coast
fans have their choice among Wash-
ington-U. C. L. A., Oregon-Stanford
and California-Oregon State.
Southern Contests
The South, in addition to send-
ing Virginia and Washington and
Lee into the eastern sector to meet
Navy and West Virginia, respective-
ly, has an almost complete slate of
big games. The schedule includes
Tennessee - Auburn, Georgia -Louisi -
ana State, Georgia Tech-Kentucky,
Mississippi State-Alabama, Tulane-
Centenary.
The East’s “Old Guard” steps in-
to the thick of things with such
major clashes as Yale-Pennsylvania,
Dartmouth-Holy Cross, Princeton
Rutgers, Harvard-Brown.
The East-South rivalry furnished
most of the excitement last night
with the honors even. Manhattan’s
Jaspers conquered the North Caro-
lina State Wolfpack 13-6; Missis-
sippi and George Washingon played
a scoreless tie on a wet field.
The Detroit Titans, rallying from
last week’s defeat by Villanova, wal-
loped Oklahoma A. & M., 46 to 12
in the Midwest’s big game, marked
by spectacular Detroit passing. Tex-
as Tech was turned back by Wichita
6-0.
By JOHN SELBY
Some years ago we read Gilbert
Seldes’ “The Seven Lively Arts,” and
were grateful for it because although
it took one or two of the “lively arts”
rather seriously, it did introduce a .
fresh critical angle, and one that has
sharpened* critical writing ever since.
One suspects that Mr. Seldes is try-
ing to do much the same thing for
the social and political side of our
life in “Mainland” (Scribners). In
any case, he does. Mr. Seldes has
written a book about almost every-
thing in American life, a very scat-
tered, sometimes scatterbrained, book.
Just the same, it catches the reader
first by its evident sincerity, and
then it goes a long way toward con-
vincing him that with proper adjust-
ment, the so-called “American sys- ;
tern” can be made to suffice for
America.
Mr. Seldes believes that America is
different from the rest of the world.
He believes that both fascism and
communism are foreign systems ill-
adapted to our use. lie thinks the
stupid cultural inferiority complex
we suffer from is not only stupid but
critically unsound. He does not be-
lieve that we are ideally suited under
our present capitalistic set-up, but
he does believe that the essentially I
American features of the set-up
should be preserved.
Perhaps the neatest job in the book
is with that curious literature whose I
purpose seems to have been to sell I
America short—the “betrayal” which |
began in 1914 and collapsed so far as I
influence went in 1929. He takes the
Menckens and the Dreisers for a
bumpy ride and makes everybody like
it with the possible exception of the
Menckens and the Dreisers. I
Not that the book is flawless. Mr, j
Seldes occasionally trips over his own I
tongue, as in his sweeping rejection {
of internationalism. But no book is |
perfect, fortunately.
Thumbnail Reviews
“The Rock Pool,” by Cyril Con- I
nolly (Scribners): what the Riviera I
life did to a young Englishman who I
wasn’t fitted for it; this book is just 1
too, too “devastating.”
“But Beauty Vanishes,” by Richard |
Blaker (Bobbs-Merrill); some of the i
characters in “Here Lies a Most Beau- I
tiful Lady” are projected into*a new |
setting; the novel is pretty “Eng- I
lish,” pretty “family,” and pretty I
good, |
CONTEST HELD BY DOWN-
TOWN BIBLE CLASS
f oilowing tne ball with eagle eyes, the official in the striped jersey at the left of the picture declared Wil-
liams touchdown official as the U. C. L. A. ball carrier, left, plunged over the line to score in'the 26-0 vic-
tory over Pomona in Los Angeles. But what about that guy, N. 34, Mr. Referee? Isn’t that illegal use of the
hands by the Pomona pugilist? Or is it just a good right cross? But then, a referee can’t see everything in
the excitement of a touchdown. •
STOP
That Excesssive Oil
Consumption
with
Ramco or Perfect
Circle X9O
Piston Rings
MULLINS MOTOR
PARTS
‘‘Automotive Parts
of Quality”
“Gold Is Where You Find It,” by
Clements Ripley (Appleton-Century);
rather interesting novel about post-
gold rush California, in the days
when great wheat farms were being
replaced by fruit ranches and mining
projects; Col. Virginius Ferris is a
wheat man, his daughter is inter-
ested in fruit growing, her admirer
is a mining engineer. Q.E.O.
Another Discovery
“To My Father,” by Charles Wer-
tenbaker (Farrar & Rinehart): third
selection of “The Discoverers”; this
new book club started out to exploit
first hovels, and now it plans to in-
clude “departures” by known writers;
a Virginian, born in a university
town, tries to find himself.
. “Handwriting Tells,” by Nadya
Olyanova (Covici - Friede): what
handwriting reveals, illustrated from
a large number of samples; better
use a typewriter.
“Under the Sun,” by Grace Flan-
drau (Scribners): nine first rate short
stories of white men and women in
the Congo; the approach is psycho-
logical, but Miss Flandrau’s charac-
ters are no stalking horses for Freud.
NACOGDOCHES, Oct. 10.—(AP)
—Stephen F. Austin College Teach-
ers combined running and passing
attacks last night to defeat the
Southwest Teachers, 14 to 7, in
HONOLULU, Oct. 10.—(A5)—Three
I forces
here today to seek the source of
distress calls which sent two Coast
Guard cutters far out on the Picific
on a fruitless errand of mercy. ’
Army, Navy, and Federal com-
munications officers investigated the
possibility that the plea for aid by
the supposedly-disabled yacht Mar-
garet Payne was a hoax to lure the
cutters Itasca and Tiger to sea
while narcotic smugglers landed
th£ir contraband in Hawaii. They
also considered the possibility the
messages might have been sent by
a prankster. /
After a three-day search in an
area 500 miles south of here, the
Itasca and Tiger were turned back
toward their Hawaiian bases.
Doubt was expressed here that
yacht by the name of Margaret.
Payne existed.
However, Coast Guard officials in
San Francisco said a yacht by that
name left Alcantara, Brazil, Aug. 16.
Louisiano Normal 13;
College 0.
Northeast Center, L. S. U.
College of Marshall (Tex.) 0.
East
Miama (Fla.) 6; Bucknell 0.
Duquesne 33; Geneva 0.
Mississippi 0; George Washington
0 (tie).
St. Vincent 6; West Virginia Wes-
leyan 0.
colleFOlts
BROWNWOOD, Oct. %.—(AP)—
The Daniel Baker Hill Billies hand-
ed the Austin College Kangaroos, de-
fending Texas Conference cham-
pions, their second successive defeat
of the season last night, 15 to 0.
A packed stadium, the biggest , of the Eagle backfield all participat-
ed in a tossing and running attack
that bore back the Abilenians
steadily, with the Eagle line per-
forming stoutly as interference. The
locals annexed nine first downs, the
Wildcats four. North Texas scored
one time in the second quarter,
twice in the third. With three touch-
downs registered, Sisco replaced his
shock troops with second and third
string reserves and they played all
but minutes of the remaining time.
Abilene displayed two men of star
caliber—Quarterback Connell, who
could run, pass and punt, and was
by far the most dangerous defense
obstacle the Eagles faced, and a
right end named McCook, who pe-
riodically burst through the Eagles
to wreak havoc on an attempted
forward march. Except for Con-
nell’s sprints, the Wildcats showed
little offensive strength and much
of their game consisted of keeping
the play punted back toward mid-
field.
First Score on Lateral
The Eagles’ first tally came on a
lateral that tossed, bounced and ran
the ball from the Abilene 40 the en-
tire distance to the double-stripe.
Richey, who had skirted left _end to
give a first down on the 40-yard
line, on the next play passed to Boaz
and the lanky end lateralled it to
Wilson a second before he went
down. Wilson took the ball and
raced the touchdown across.
In the closing minutes of the quar-
ter, Tailant’s interception gave a
scoring chance but Abilene evened
things a second later when Fouts’
i pass for North Texas was intercept-
ed by Shelansky of Abilene and the
tide turned back toward midfield.
Pass for Two More
In the third period an exchange
of punts between Connell and Shoe-
maker gave North Texas decidedly
the best of it and the Eagles took
the ball on the Abilene 29 to start
another touchdown drive. Hester
spiralled a long pass to Wilson who
ran some nine yards to score.
A few plays later Shoemaker re-
turned an Abilene punt to the Wild-
cat 33, Wilson picked up 18 yards on
a reverse, Hester and Shoemaker
got another first down on the Abi-
lene 7. Within feet of the goal,
North Texas drew two penalties,
for the backfield being in motion
and for clipping, that shoved them
back 20 yards. Then Shoemaker
went back to the Abilene 15, and
Hester from there passed over the
goal line to Reeves.
Boaz Stands Out
The Eagle defensive play was
featured by the smashing tackles
of Boaz, rangy left end, and the ... , x ... m
‘work of P. B. Stovall, Co-CaptainL6, date with Texas U. has
Shepard and Collins. ! m°VeA Oc5? 31 between
Starting line-ups: | halves of the Longhorn-S. M. U.
Eagles—Boaz and Turner, ends;\ game-
Stovall and Holbert, tackles; Shep-
ard and Edwards, guards; Killian,
center; Hester, quarterback; Wil-
son and Shoemaker, halfbacks; Kel-
say, fullback.
Abilene Christian — Stone and
Parker, ends; Alsobrook and Carter,
tackles; W. Cox and Coleman,
guards; Carruthers, center; Connell,
quarterback; Bennett and S. Cox,
halfbacks; Owens, fullback.
The Normandie and Queen Mary
are too long to enter the lock cham -
bers of the Panama canal.
college.”
A kindergarten-primary major at
the college, the student is enthusias-
tic about her desire to teach in the
kindergarten-primary grades of pub-
lic schools somewhere in Texas, af-
ter she gets her degree from S. C.
W. next year. But matrimony is
definitely included in her plans, and
she wants to marry not more than
three years after graduation. xx^^viou, uui. w.-yrr
She doesn’t dance, but likes sports i government agencies joined
from the spectator angle very nfweh; '
in fact they are her chief extra-
curricular interest.
The student interview is Miss
Gladys McAdams, and her hqme is
in Denton.
(By the Associated Press)
Midwest
Detroit 46; Oklahoma A. & M., 12.
Wichita 6; Texas Tech O.
Ohio Northern 0; Denison 0 (tie).
Hope 6, Albion 0.
North Dakota 19;
Teachers 0.
Emporia Teachers 14; Washburn
7.
Bethany 6; Haskell
(tie).
Drake *44; Central (la.) 14.
Fort Hays State 25; Southwestern
(Kas.) 0.
Chadron (Neb.)
Wayne Teachers 0.
Southwest
Arkansas Tech 27; Hendrix 6.
Arkansas State Teachers 26; Mon-
ticello A. & M., 0.
Chilocoo Indians 6; Murray Ag-
gies 0.
Northeast (Ok.)
Southeast (Ok.) 7.
East Central (Ok.) 9; Southwest
(Ok.) 0.
John Tarleton 33; Decatur 0.
North Texas Teachers 18; Abi-
lene Christian 0.
Daniel Baker 15; Austin O.
New Mexico State 41; Flagstaff
(Ariz.) Teachers 0.
Rocky Mountain
Denver 14; Colorado State 7.
Brigham Young 33; Greeley State
0.
Far West
Linfield 21; Pacific University 6.
South
Howard 14; Loyola (New Orleans)
6.
Tennessee Junior 34;
State 0.
IP
S1.39
Tax Paid
In Bulk, Gallon .... 65c
Western Auto
Associate Store
C. L. Edxvards & Son
A lifetime of school-teaching holds
no appeal for the 22-year-old S. C.
W. junior who ^nevertheless thinks
a teaching career several years in
duration is what she wants “after
in Comeback Drive
I
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Denton County Fair
OCT. 13th to 17th
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OFFICIAL EYES FOR TOUCHDOWN 'ONLY
WITH FAIR EASE HERE, 18-0
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GAMES TODAY 10
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FRYAR MOTOR CO.
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What College
Students Plan
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DILLON SMITH
motor co. ‘ i
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CARNIVAL OPENS MONDAY NIGHT
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CLIP THIS VALUABLE COUPON!
STATE FAIR SHOWS
SPECIAL COURTESY TICKET
This Coupon when presented with 10c in the Carnival Grounds
wil be exchanged for 3 ride tickets that will
Admit One
person to three different rides. Ticket issued will be good for
either adults or children, day or night, Monday, Tuesday and
Wednesday, Oct. 12, 13 and 14. This ticket given through the
courtesy of the Denton County Fair. Additional coupons can
be obtained from Denton stores.
AN(7 CET A' QOOP CA£? OH
EA^y Terms t----
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Dept. Store
PAGE THREE
A Record-Chronicle want-ad will
rent that room or house
Oilers Hope to
End Series Tonight
TULSA, Ok., Oct. 10.—@—Marty
McManus, manager off the Tulsa
Oilers of the Texas League, chose
Southpaw Max Thomas to pitch
against the Birmingham Barons of
the Southern Association tonight
I in an effort to make it four straight
and cop the Dixie Series before
winter sets in.
Southpay Clyde Shoun will work
for the Barons in a frantic effort
to stop the rampaging Offers, who
came from behind last night to wm
5 ot 2.
A
*
miL eeJIB .-
m/ilue V/|L0|
TER TAIN L
ELEVEN TO 19-0
Rank under-dogs as they entered
the lists against an undefeated elev-
en, Denton High’s Broncos Friday
night saw the Denison Yellowjack-
ets chalk up another victory but
fought the heavier squad to a 19
to 0 score. It was an improved
showing for the Bronco team that
was smeared 33-0 last week at Ver-
non.
Denton’s offensives had little ef-
fect against the powerful and beefy
Jacket forward wall and the Bron-
cos registered only three first downs
the entire game, played under the
lights at Denison. The Yollow-
jackets accounted for 15 first downs,
scored twice in the first period and
once in the third.
Conatser Leads Offensives
In the opening quarter Conatser
took the Bronco kick-off and led an
uninterrupted march the length of
the field to carry the first tally.
Minutes later Conatser passed to
Taylor for a 14-yard advance and
the second touchdown.
A fumbled punt gave the Jackets
opportunity for their final seven
points. McCorkle recovered on Den-
ton’s 25 and Conatser drove over
left tackle to score. Taylor con-
verted the extra point.
It was the last non-conference
game for the Brones before they
join the District 6 scramble by go-
ing to Highland Park next Friday.
Ab is the fifth month of the
Jewish ecclesiastical year and the
eleventh of the civil year, corres-
ponding to part of July and August.
DENTON, TEXAS, RECORD-CHRONICLE, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1936
/T’
SEE OUR FLOWER SEED AND BULBS
Blue Bonnet, Pansy seeds. Tulips and other bulbs a.
other flower seeds.
TALIAFERRO AND SON
Phone 125 ’
mm
iW,
Phone 669
The LUSK Printing Co.
.ESTABLISHED IN 1881
Quality Printing for 55 Years
NEW FALL PRINTS I
36 inches wide _______________________________..10c I
GRAND LEADER COMPANY I
LET ROY and MAC
Tune up yourr ear’s motor. Cooler weather will soon
be here and'it’ll need many adjustments.
DICKSON-HAMILTON MOTOR CO.
Telephone 248
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 49, Ed. 1 Saturday, October 10, 1936, newspaper, October 10, 1936; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1313751/m1/3/: accessed June 24, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.