Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 224, Ed. 1 Sunday, December 10, 1933 Page: 4 of 16
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W1"
N
SUNDAY MORNING, DEC. 10, 1933
HENDERSON DAILY NEWS, HENDERSON, TEXAS
PAGE FOUR
I
Sports
Page
Doi l ii $ew0
GALLOPING GAELS DEFEAT MUSTANGS, SCORE 18 TO 6
W ATTFNC
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F’FLD TO SCORE
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W1
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And
i
Of Gridiron Season
Young Lady
For That Certain
*
4
MULES and SLIPPERS
ft
W'
HKHU.ND park
players.
HORNED FROGS
Mules
... $3.45
no
/,
BRIDGE SETS
malt
$2.50, $2.95, $4.95
named
GLOVES
left
(Texas i
Left
I
left
then.
Rucker (Arkansas) ri^ht
quar
59c, 75c to $1.00
(Centenary i
b ft
I '
lace
f,>.
anil omc .in the final.
By
'■ast
Humming Bird
WARNING
Sheer Chiffons
TO HUNTERS
the
extra
Reed’s Department Store
’ R. T. Ballinger
The CorMcana Tigers, high
I
I
1
4
Tl
k-
I
■
tv
\
\
Some are outing,
some of Balbrig-
and, Rayon and
All Silk. Good se-
lection and priced
to please you.
These are Italian Hemstitch-
ed Bridge Sets with napkins
to match.
/
Center
CHUCK BERNARD
(Michigan)
Guard
BILL CORBU3
(Stanford)
End
TED PETOSKEY
(Michigan)
Tackle
CHARLES CEPP1
(Princeton)
Halfback
JACK BUCKLER
(Army)
Fullback
FRANCIS LUND
(Minnesota)
Guard
TOM HUPKE
(Alabama)
Tackle
FRED CRAWFORD
(Duke)
j
K'/
3e-
ex-
I
2^'
ufi
S M.U.
down
com-
/.
Ij
Ab Hen-
“P«rd.»
ppi
C‘. ■ ■
PlGICT suggestions
PANTIES
Tailored and lace trimmed
$1.45 to $3.95
One and two-piece patterns
|
I’ll Tell You Why
Bg JOHNNIE BOWMAN
• i
Football Captains
Name Star Eleven
House Slippers _____ $1.65 up
White
ten in
Princeton
of f er.
one loin
1933 - AS PICKED BY PLAYERS3
Halfback
BEATTIE FEATHERS
(Tennessee)
End
JOE SKLADANY
(Pittsburgh)
Quarterback
IRVINE WARBURTON
(Southern California)
Negligees J
Pastel shades, lace trimmed ‘
negligees, Gowns, Gown Set.
Pajamas, more dainty styles
to select from. We invite you
to see them.
A
I
I
rrespor den t
9 (UP I
track and i <
aht 33,-
toda",
attend
‘J
Jr
ft
SLEEPY PAJAMAS
Very dainty for gifts and al-
wawys pleasing All shades
$1.00, $1.25, $1.35
$1.45
$1.69 to $3.95
Ip
1
r
I;
Listen while
good customers,
in my e\
scribbled,
here and v •'
grown folks,
hnve got to have it.
of you
13
■^*sg
i
11
Iwwl
‘ALL - OPPONENT
TEAM PICKED BY
/
won th® sector Honora
proverbial hair. It
does malt* this
to
SF .»i
'La 1
... by Hansen
\
Soft, Kid, Black and Brown,
plain and fancy stitched, with
the new cuffs. We also have
fabric gloves with fancy
cuffs.
It is true that there wai
major team undefeated
cept Princeton and they
jActed the offer. Columbia
hag only one loss to blemish
VANITY FAIR
Is HER Underwear!
Also
Louisie Ann
Mandalay
Carter’s
M
UH
school champions of the state
last season, met defeat to the
tune of 49 to 0 Friday In a
hi district gama with Brack-
enridge lliiyli of San Antonio.
Wonder if Mr. Johnny Piarca,
Bengal mentor, won’t attempt
to find an ineligible man
somewhere. He was very in-
strumental in the ruling
that threw Temple out of the
district race, after which his
team
h y the
certainly does make
scribbler very unhappy
hear such news as Corsicana
losing a game. Incidentally,
the score was 31 to 0 at the
Se« 1 11 Tell Ym Why on page 6
House Slippers of
black kid in narrow
widths. And the
[White Satin Mules
that we tint any
color to match your
negligee at no extra
cost.
three
have
interest in all
high peak nil season. There
is any number of good play-
ers availbio here and more
would be glad to liffbt in
these parts if there wns any-
thing to offer. Major inde-
pendent quints from nil parts
of the stat® would come here
for only a small guarantee.
Arithmomania is a st ran co mal
ady. The sufferer is j
with an uncontrollable d< ^ire I"
count thing*.
The fans of Henderson
could be seeing good basket-
ball if there was a place to
play. Most every town the
size of Henderson has two or
gyms. Most of them
city leagues that keeps
sections at a
season.
By TED H. MALOY,
United Press Staff Coi
HOUSTON, T' X., Dec
— Lure of the
parimutuel betting bioi
000 peoiile to Up om 1 low
the largi-'t crowd <”■<)• to
a sporting eve in ,
Traffic was jammed for mile ,
bringing Texans who have push-
ed an average of $100,000 daily
through the pari-mutuel windows
for their education in the days ct
tan hark paddocks and the clip-
ping hooves of thoroughbreds.
There is nothing timid about
the way residents here and from
over the state are receiving their
introduction to the new sport, le-
galized last summer by the Toxas
See Epsom Downs on Page 5
Can you imagine Columbia,
an eleven practically unheard
of all season, being selected
to play in the annual Rosa
Bowl classic against a bruis-
ing Stanford team?
ry McLemore »ays,
it’s unbelievable.”
Texarkana J. College
To Play at Marshall
MARSHALL, Tex., Dec. 9 <(
—Championship of the North .....
Texas Junior Collage Conference
will be decided when the '1 r 1 ,i||
College Tigers meet Texarkana
Junior College here Friiiav ])ec
15.
The conference champions will
meet the winner of the LaMar
Junior Co lege of Beaem.er \,n-
arillo Junior College p * tn !v.
played the same day to <1. < ,,|e
state junior college confeience
championship.
U SMITH RUNS ALL-AMERICANS FOR
TO-THIRDS OF
tW 1
FORT WORTH. Dec. 9 Two
players each from Centenary,
Texas, S. M. IT., Baylor, and Ar-
kansas, and one from Slmmo**
were placed on the “all-opponent”
football t *ini picked by the 1933
Horned Frogs of Texas Christian
University.
The s“|pctions wero made on the
basis of the showing these players
made in their games against T*.
C IT., with some consideration of
their quality of play throughout
the season.
Billy Stamps of S. M. U. was
voted tho “best liked opposing
player.”
The all-opponent team
by the Frogs is as follows:
Paul Geisler ((’entenary)
end.
Charlie Coates
tackle.
Billy Stamps
guard.
Bill Smith (Texas) center.
Rod (Tlem (Baylor) right guard.
Clarence Weatherbee (Baylor)
right tackle.
Paul
end.
Tom Murphy (Arkansas)
Harold Oalin
half.
Robert Wilaon < S. M U ) right
half.
Carl Pee (Simmons) fullback
I’op Warner, veteran coach and
former Stanford mentor, even
goes so far as to say that Stan-
ford picked a set-up. Them’s
Um sentiments of yours truly, Doc-
tor. Howeyer, if Stanford wants
to play an all-star aggregation
composed of Amos n’ Andy, Col.
Stoupna.Jc and Bud, Rudy Vallee,
Dorothy Dix and any number of
Others of such caliber, its oke by
me and we will let the
drop for the time being.
S. M. U. Aerial Circus
Bested by Western
Players as Passes
Are Knocked Down
PAMPA DEFEATS
AR« ENE EAC’ FS
PAMPA, Tpx., Dec 9 (UP)
The Abilene Hagies record of no played
defeats for the season was broken
today when 'bev m< t Panhandle in
i iudn.it:.<>n contest
.'>, >()() fans I’amna
IP
Beautiful I-ace Trimmed
DANCE SETS
$1.95 to $2.25
bio ^ners
Bloomers, plain and
trimmed. Medium, long and
regtilar lengths
59c to $1.95
PURE THREAD
SILK HOSE
Ixing Wear
All Shades
79c
their so-called record, but
several other good teams also
were only defeated one time.
It was a farce when Georgia
Tech won from Duke 6 to 0
and it was also a farce when
Notre Dame beat the Army
13 to 12. But such wasn’t
the case when Princeton ran
rough-shod over Columbia
20 to 0. Either Duke or
Army are rated much better
than Columbia.
Traffic Blocked fo-
Miles as L r r <?e « t
C'owd Is I? -awn to
Epsom Down.';
proportion to
power,
Positively no hunting al
lowi d on my farm 5 miles
east of Henderson
Well then, in
the surrounding drawing
how big would the crowd bo for
a basketball g inie of uch caliber
in the city of Henderson
(wer<' th< re a nice, > pneious gym
here). To !l:«' cittain knowledge
of your taithf I coi re pond nt,
around .’>() of t >o e attending the
Humble e an< r- i e inside the
city limits of Henderson, Rusk
county, Texas and drove the 1!>
miles ju t I'-cnii.o (hey like to
eo good b i ketball. It is one of
die lasRdt games played today,
TECHNICAL HIGH
BEATS CENTRAL
DALLAS, Tex., Dec. 9 (UP) —
Technical High school of Dallas
scored late in the last period here
today to defeat Central High of
Ft. Worth 7 to 6 in a bi-district
game attended by 10,000 persons.
Tech trailed the visiting team
for more than three quarters, un-
til Fred Coston, Tech center,
blocked a Central kick on the hit-
ter’s 23 yard line. This paved
the way for the winning tally la
ter in the game.
As the fourth period opened
Ewing sent a long pass to Squires
two yard mark. Bailey hit the
giving Tech tho ball on Central's
center of the line for the touch-
down. Squires made the extra
point.
Fielding made the touchdown t
for Central in the second period.
Ho circled his own right end for j
I the winning tally.
BFATS WICHITA
WICHITA FALLS, Tex., Dee. 9
'(UP)—Highland Park defeated
Wichita Falls 6 to 0 in a hard
fought game here today. Six
thousand persons saw the game.
Cornelius scored the touchdown
early in the fourth period on a
12-yard slash off tackle. Place
kick for point was die.
Wichita Falls was <>n the defen-
sive throughout the entire game
except on one occasion, when
the HUIanders stopped the local
team on the 12-yard line. Wichita
Falls kicked from near the side-
line on the fourth down mid miss-
ed goal. Most of the game wns
played in Wichita Falls territory.
Hard driving Scot backs repeat-
ed long gains behind perfect inter-
ference.
you read, my
I've got tears
a- this story is being
We want a gymnasium
want it like full-
We need it and we
Now some
good Samaritans try to
weep a little with me about the
proposition. Write me a letter,
write the president n letter, ap
peal to the Rod Cross, ask the
cop on the corner, or do anything
you like but just keep thinking
and talking about how had we
need a recreational center here,
and maybe Santa Claus wjill pu'
one in our sox, or sumpin’.
a bl-dlatriet
witnessed bv
won 27 to 7.
Pampa scored one tone .I'.wn in
Die first period, two in the third
'I tie Eagles
made their only touchdown in the
Second.
The Ilai waters displayed a line
Which held the Eagles to seven
first downs and 97 yards in line
plays while Pampa backs w-re
Hashing for 24 first downs and 356
yards In ground play.
By HERBERT LUNDY,
Unltad Press Staff Correspondent
SAN FRANCISCO, Dec. 9 (UP)
—St. Mary’s College of Moraga
dosed a spotted season today by
defeating Southern Methodist
University, 18 to 6, in an intersec-
tions! contest before 17,000 fans.
The game was filled with long
guns, deceptive passe.-, beautiful
kicks and long returns of punts
in which each team shared.
Pass interception and fumbles
Were numerous.
St. Mary’s bested the
aerial circus by knocking
or intercepting passes and
pleting long air shots of their own
A wildly played first quarter
went scoreless as St. Mary’s pene-
trated deeply into SMU’s terri-
tory. J. R. Smith, left half back,
le the Dallas, Texas, team in of-
fense and defense, intercepting a
pass to stave off the attack.
The first play of the secoutf
quarter brought St. Mary's a
touchdown. Herb Schrieber faked
a thrust at the line, lateralled to
George Canrinus, end, who gal
loped around left end 30 yarns ■
to cross the last stripe without ]
hindrance. It was a play Oregon '
used to beat St Mary’s Thanks- i
giving Day. Carl Jorgensen fade I
to kick the extra point when the
pass from center was delayed.
Southern Alethodist came right,
back in the same quarter to even
the score. J. R. Smith broke
loose and ran 65 yards behind fine
interference. He was away to
See S. M. U. Game on Page 5
On. night Inst week about
500 fans paid two-bits admis-
sion to witness n bnsketbnll
game between the Humble
Oilers and Lon Morris Junior
College. , The game was play-
ed at the London high school
gymnasium located out in the
w ide open spacog between
New London and Old London.
I? < \ s
I
(S. M. I'. I
Because of a brilliant record,
the Tournament of Roses officials
awarded the honor of playing the
New Year's day game to Stan
ford and gave them the right to
pick the best team the East had
to offer. And then, out of a
clear blue sky, without malice or
forethought (it seems) they call
on a team that has no more of a
record than Diddy Wall-Diddy.
including hockey, and is becom-
ing more popular in the southwest
every year. In tho mid-west, 10,
OIK) is a small crowd for a gnne.
Only last year Babe Didriekson,
the Dallas wonder-girl, was paid
$1,000 berries to play one game
in Boston. (I think that’s right).
Michigan Only Squad to Land Two Men on
Team; South, East, Midwest Each
Have Three
By WILLIAM RITT
(Central Press Sports Editor)
Hero is the All-American foot-
ball team for 1933, as picked by
the players themselves!
Believing that the
themselves, are best fitted to judge
the caliber of the teammates and
opponents The Daily News through
the Central Press Association, has
polled the captains of all major
elevens to determine their choice
for an all-star football lineup.
Since It is manifestly impossible
to acquire the vote of every var-
sity player only the captains were
| requested to send in their choices.
In several im lances where a ma-
jor team has no captain the coach
was asked to substitute his choice.
Each captain was asked to name
the players with which he played
against or with whom, in his opin-
ion, merited All-American men-
tion.
3 he result is an All-American
aggregation which compares fa-
vorably With any that could be
lei ted by any staff of football
ports, coaches or officials.
At end the captains have chosen
the two wingmen who were out-
standing throughout the season—
Skladany of Pittsburgh and Pe-
toskey of Michigan. The brilliant
performances in each game of
these two men aided greatly in
their team's splendid achievements
and fine records.
At tackle we have the power-
See All American on page 5
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Bowman, George. Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 224, Ed. 1 Sunday, December 10, 1933, newspaper, December 10, 1933; Henderson, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1314761/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rusk County Library.