Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 5, No. 16, Ed. 1 Sunday, April 7, 1935 Page: 7 of 26
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’/J L
Fails to Comeback
Innings; Teams Play Today
ning yesterday in an exhibition game against the local Dixie
BOX SCORE
«■
AB R H PO A K
0
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Bobby Jonei
KJ
won the game, 25 to
..„ 110 000 B'
Finals
HENDERSON’S EXCLUSIVE MAN’S STORE
Comfort
Style
a
Sox Release Fenner
> Value
s
Gabardine and crash materials!
day.
nnd
Arkie
Let Us Suit You Now
limited
to
r
Leads Augusta
Craig Wood Clips Par .
Four Strokes To Cop Lead
In Augusta Natl Tourney
©
HOME RUN BY JACKS
GIVES T, C. U, WIN
GEORGE DUNLAP,
JOHNSTON TIED
North - South
Flalted by Rain
CHICUBS DOWN SENS
ON HARTNETT'S HIT
Oilers
again
Solti with 2 I’antH
For Only . . .
The Shirred Back,
Phis Expert Tailoring
Designed for Texas
Spring by ,1. CAPPS.
By J. J. B.
The Tulsa Oilers woke up to themselves in the fifth in-
league nine, and started hammering the offerings of three ’
Henderson hurlers to all corners of Fair Park ball yard to
win a slugfest, 2(Ho-8.
Going into the fifth Tulsa found themselves trailing by
. i
! 0
and
and
I
t
J^
$2950
■o %
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course
seem easy on his first two trips,
Tulsa Comes From Behind, Rout Local Oilers, 20
-- -
SOPHS STAR AS Texas Leaguers Hit Hard
CHEVIGNY PUTS After Trailing For Four
ON SPRING TILT - ■
Burke, Russell,
" French,
Hartnett.
I ■■'
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s
FORT WORTH, April 6 (UP)
— The Chicago White Sox today
returned Catcher Bob Fenner to
the St. Paul club, which the Sox
drafted him last fall. His release
cut the Sox squad to 29 men.
LOS ANGELES,—The Univer-
sity of California at Loh Artg'eles
has scheduled a football game
with the University of Hawaii late
next fall.
5-2 score but sdon emerged to the front when they s!
the hitting rampage that carried^,
them to an over-whelming v!c- 1
tory.
Fl
2 5
.... 3 12
Stewart
Henshaw i
Totals
Henderson
DeJonghe, 8b .... 4
Flaskamper, 3b.. 8
Stein, ss ..
Bray, cf ..
McGee, cf
Cox, if ....
Slmek, rf
Shelton, lb ------- 3
McGothlln, ss-2b 4
Tomlinson, c ..... 5
Maxwell, p -----~ 2
Rock, p
xRlthman ..
Theisen, p .
xxCallahan
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Men’s Wear That Wears .
crp, ii i ' : "id.
('■ ■ port ■ Ide.
Un.’ two seasons Callahan was
i i Nebraska State league and
hit vo'l over .300. He will prob-
ably get into today’s melee if he
.hows up in time.
He
the
tenth to lose a stroke and was out
in 35, one under par.
Picard, who made the
TWO YOUNG P L A Y E R S,
Pitcher Jim Smith and Infielder
Ben Catchings, turned loose by
Skipper Griggs of the Tulsa club,
were signed by Fred Nicholson,
Shreveport Dixie league manager
The Henderson club got Joe
S? i.:, promising young infielder,
from the Texas league Oilers.
?,’er. Flaskamper likes the Califor-
nia youngster and believes he is a
c cr.; in a baseball, star. He is a
good li id: :-, has. a fine arm and
take:; a good cut at the ball.
1
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2 3 0 0 1
1110'
2 4 11 0 0
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3 1
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8 8
1 1
8 0
1 3
0 0
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Johnny Wight, Carlisle High
conch writes this bureau in regard
to his strong baseball team. He
;:l: o vv.lt; games with other nines
of t’.ii.. section and may be reach
cd at. the Carlisle school. The let-
ter follows:
I leer Johnny:
An Oil Belt High School league
ha: been formed and games are
played every Tuesday and Friday.
Sec And Why Page 8
Pacing Boom-. Breeding
LOS ANGELES.—The first
year of legalized racing in Cali-
fornia has brought about the re-
gistering of more than 100 breed-
ing farms by the Jockey Club.
OKLAHOMA SOONERS
COP TRACK HONORS! m
____ | Bolton;
NORMAN, Okla., April « (UP)
Three meet records were broken
and one was tied today as the
University of Oklahoma piled up
a one-sided point margin over
other teams in the third annua’
Oklahoma Amateur track and
field meet.
Glen Dawson, running under the
Totals XI • • 37 U • ‘
Score by innings:
Tuisa 110 060 670—30
Henderson 208 001 200— 8
Runs batted In, Cox 2, Berger,
Slmek 2, Holman, Hubbell, Patch-
ett 2, Connatser 4, Rock, Omiah 3
Fisher, Crawford, Grigsby 2, Shoap,
McGlothlin, Tomlinson; 2-baaa trtie,
Flaskamper, Berger, DeJoogha,
Sheerin, Patchett, Conantaer; •» J
base hit, Slmek; home run, O grain t
stolen base, DeJonghe; sacrifice
hit, Connatser; struck out, by Hub*
bell 8, Rock 1, Johnson 1, Tomlin-
son 1; base on balls, off Maxwell ■
4, Posedel 1, Rock 4, Hubbell B,
Theisen 6; hit by pitcher,
d’si (Bray); double plays,
tc Crawford to Shoap; left
Henderson 9, Tulsa 14; hits an*
runs, off Posedel, 5 and 6 in 8 •IM*/,
nlnge, Maxwell, 9 and 7 in 41-8 in-
nings; Rock, 4 and 6 In 2 2-8 in-
nings, Hubbell, 2 and 8 in 8 2-8 in-
nings;; winning pitcher, Hubbell;
losing pitcher, Maxwell; time 2:40;
umpires, Ballafant and King.
J. KELLEY CALLAHAN, husky
young outli' Ider, will probably
join the Henderson club today.
h::; been in training with the
Antonio Missions ail spring
: ,d has been hitting at a terrific
He hits ’ent from
2 4 7 8?
1110
0 0 10
12 0 0
1 2 0 0 1
1 1 0 0(1
16 0 0
0 9 1 «
12 13
18 0 0
0 0 11
0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0
[ T-
DOWN FORT WORTH jx, “ s S’" srx XI
--- in a speciid event. His time was
[ four minutes, twenty-two and a
half seconds. Harold Manning of
j the Wichita Athletic club, a fre-
i quent opponent, paced him closely.
i ll r ■
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Lfg
AUGUSTA, Ga„ Aprli 6 (UP)—Craig Wood of Deal, N.
J., today clipped four strokes from par to score a 68 and,
capture the lead in the Augusta National Golf championship.
Wood’s brilliant round gave him an aggregate of 209,
Angeles, who holds the National Open title. It took the
play away from Henry Picard of Hershey, Pa., sensation of
the first two rounds, who had an aggregate of 211.
— Picard had a sour time today.
k " Where he was able to score a 67
on Thursday and a 68 on Friday,
today he had a 76.
Definitely out was Bobby Jones.
Bobby made another brave effort
but the man who used to be great-
est of them all was bothered by
the gale-like winds which accom-
panied a blustering thunder
storm, and took a 73 for a total of
219, an even ten strokes back of
Wood.
Gene Sarazen, one of the great-
est money winners golf has ever
known and who entered the joust
the betting favorite, appeared to
many observers as the most dan-
gerous man in the field.
Wood was frequently in trou-
ble today, but recovered nobly. He
was well home in two to birdie
the long second. He was in the
woods on the third and just miss-
ed sinking a putt for a par. He
ran home a 20-foot putt for ..
birdie 3 at the seventh and just
missed a 15-footer for an eagle
three on the 500-yard eighth,
missed a four-foot par on
Suffers Broken Leg
COLUMBIA. Mo.. April 6 (UP)
—Clair (Butch) Houston, of St.
Louis, two-letter University
Missouri fullback, suffered
I broken leg in spring football prac-
| tice today. The injury resulted
I from a hard tackle the first time
Houston carried the ball in scrim-
mage.
CHICAGO, April 6 (UP)-—-
Gabby Hartnett’s single with the
bases loaded in the 11th inning
gave the Cubs a 3-2 exhibition
victory over Washington in the
first Chicago game of the season.
Lefty Stewart, who entered the
game in the eleventh, was the vic-
tim. Lindstrom singled, Cuvier
bunted and Lindstrom beat Bol-
ton’s throw to second. Cavaretta’s
bunt was good for a single, and
Hartnett came through with the
winning blow.
Score by innings:
Washington (A. L.)
WACO, April 6 (UP) Jim-
my Jacks’ home run in the ninth
inning with the bases loaded gave
the Toxas Christian University
Frog.; an 1 1 to 7 victory over the
Baylor Bears today.
Lester, Baught and Meyer of
the Frogs and Hightower of the
Bears, each smashed out four bag-
gers.
Darrell Lester, who relieved
Harston on the mound in the third
inning, hurled a good game allow
ing Baylor only five hits and four
I runs during the time he pitched.
MGR. ART GRIGGS’ TULSA
Oilers go to bat today with the
Ray Flaskamper’s Henderson Dix-
ie league Oilers today at Fair
Park. Starting time is 8 o’clock.
Today’s melee will bring Tulsa’s
training period that has been in
session here for the past thirty
days, to a close. Skipper Griggis
found Henderson climate to his
liking here and the Tulsa training
season was one of the finest they
ever had. They have played many
exhibition games, and although
they have not set the league afire
drawing crowds, the money taken
in is about as much as expected
during spring training. Griggs
has not expressed himself as to
whether or not the Oilers will
train in Henderson again next
year, however.
PINEHURST, N. C., April 6
(UP)—A cloudburst stopped the
36-hole finals in the 1935 amateur
North-South Golf tournament late
today on the 31st green. George
T. Dunlap, Jr., defending cham-
pion, was all even with his oppon-
ent, Johnny Johnston, Lumber-
ton. N. C.
The remaining five holes will be
played Monday.
| Johnston, two up on Dunlap In
the morning round, lost his ad-
vantage during the 13 afternoon
holes because of water-covered
greens.
Throughout the day, Dunlap
j hooked and sliced from the trees,
rescuing himself with accurate ap-
I proach shots. Johnston depended
„ 1 on his putter for victory.
hurdles, and second in the javc- ’
lin throw and a second place tie 1
in pole vault; Altenberg, eight
points with first in broad jump
and second in 100-yard dash; and
Proper, 6 an 1-4 points with a
fiist in 880-yard run and a place
on the relay team.
Seven Henderson participants !
qualified for the regional meet that j
is to be held in the near future j
at Jacksonville.
PIRATES AND HOSE
had reams of trouble. He was two
over par at each of two holes,
taking a six on the third by driv-
ing a trap and dubbing his out,
and getting a five on the short
16th by splashing his tee shot into
the water.
Dutra, who played with Jones,
started off in the face of a fresh
thunder shower, but managed a
par 36 outward, and came home in
34. two under par.
Closest in pursuit of the four
leaders, Wood, Dutra, Picard and
Sarazen, were Denny Shute, for-
mer British open chapion, and
Walter Hagan, who has played
consistently well. Shute today had
a 70 for 214 to be tied with
Hagen who equalled par of 72.
Lawson Little of San Francisco,
American and British amateur
champion, came in with a 70 to
be next in line with 216. He was
the leading amateur.
ROUGH-HOUSE JACK
NELSON,PATTERSON
HEADLINE MAT CARD
=
4
Today’s tilt may or may not
be a rare disii of baseball, bix the
local fans should go out ail'd hie
ths Sooner Staters a lond fare-
well. They have furnished* lot:
of early season baseball for the
fane hero and have dropped quite
a wad of change around the city
dining the past thirty days. A
hcfly gate today would probably
mc.ke Art feci swell and might
help him decide to bring the Oil
era back to Hnnderson in 1936
The Sox, led by Bud Hafey, who
singled four times, nnd Rip Rad-
of cliffe. who homered and singled, j
a got 13 hits off George Milstead In |
the final game. John Rigney and
Ray Phelps shut out the locals un-
til the seventh.
Both games were
■even Innings.
ACCORDING TO ONE of the
i.mviii-' reporters Chet Fowler,
ll-’;;l!er.;on lirrt-.-iickci' in 1933,
x ill umpire in the We. r Dixie loop
t1'!.' year. This corner recalls that
i'ov.ler was just a shade tough
on the “men in blue” during his
ba. .ball career and may be the
target for no little punishment
v. -lrm he dons the mask April 24.
It is believed that there will
l:e many new faces in the umpire’s
staff for the West Dixie this sea-
son, Complaints to President
Gardner's office last year were
nur.ieroits, it is understood and he
comtempiates making a few
i henges. Joe Bratcher, the best
.•’rbilci- in the loop last season,
however, will be retained, accord-
in;; to the rumor.
Play Today
The two teams battle here again
today, the tilt starting promptly
at 3 o'clock. Tulsa will conclude
their training season with today’s
game and break camp tomorrow
and head for Oklahoma. They open
the Texas league season at home
Wednesday playing Oklahoma
City.
Skipper Ray Flaskamper will
send Lefty Wilson Hunt to the
hillock for the local Ollers at the
start with Joe Roxbury to Berger,
the latter part or the game. For —
the Tulsa mound, Harry Matuzak
and Ed Selway will probably be
the choice of Mgr. Art Griggs.
The Henderson nine rapped B~
Bosedel, ace Tulsa hurler, harft
during the first three innings of
the ball game to pile up the short
lead, but Tulsa’s sluggers went to
work In the fifth at the expense
cf Ineffective pitching by Hender-
son moundsmen, to turn the local
ball orchard into a race track.
Ograln Clouts Homer
All told they connected for 17
solid safeties, one of which was a
home run over the left field wall
by Cliff Ograln. The four-ply
smash, Ograln'a fifth homer this
week, came in the eighth with the
bags loaded. Bruce Connatser
continued his heavy hitting, with
four bingles in six trips to drive
four scores across the pay line.
Lefty Hubbell took over the
hurling duties in the fourth and
fared exceedingly well until the
seventh when two tingles and a
trio of walks cost a pair of runs
and he went to the showers. Dan
Johnson followed and had little
trouble in the final two stanzas.
Red Maxwell, a husky right
hander, started for Henderson and
got through the first four Innings
in great style but was given an
abundance of trouble In the fifth.
After allowing three hits and two
walks for five runs in that frame,
he was relieved by Lefty Pete
Rock. The latter was greeted bj
successive doubles to drive in two
runs before retiring the side. He
got through the sixth okay but In
the seventh gave four base or
balls that came coupled with two
bits for five more runs for Tulsa.
Len Theisen followed and his con-
trol was also bad to cost him seven
runs off four hits and as many
See Slugfest Page 8
AUSTIN, April 6 (UP) —Ten-
nis-loving Austin citizens shucked
their coats, bought peanuts and
iced sodapop and went to a foot-
ball game today, to see 40-odd
University of Texas players lose
an estimated 250 pounds of weight
struggling in broiling, near 90-de-
gree sunshine.
It was the annual spring train-
ing game of Coach Jack Chev-
ingy’s team and more than 4,000
students, ox-students and home
coming visitors wondered why
they came. The contest was worth
more to pop vendors and visiting
Southwest conference coaches
than to any others.
Texas fans did see, however,
half-a-dozen sophomores who may
rebuild the wrecked 1934 eleven.
Ed Strout of El Paso, speedy half-
back broke through for several
brilliant runs for his “round-up”
team. Other "Round-up” clubbers
who showed well include John
Mittermaycr and PJohn Morrow,
both backs and both from El Paso,
Harris Van Zandt, Fort Worth
end, and Charles Johnson, quar-
terbackrrtim Kerrville, who re-
turns to Texas after a year’s ab-
sence.
Captain Joe Smart of Austin,
Woodrow Weir of Georgetown,
and Walton Launey of Dallas, all
linemen, stood out for the “Tex-
as” team, with Bill Pitzer of
Breckenridge, Jay Arnold of
Greenville, and Ney Sheridan of
Sweetwater, backs, adding the
scoring punch.
“Texas” won the game, 25 to
18.
Sidelights of the off-season con-
test proved more interesting than
the play, with Announcer-Coach
Chevigny hogging the stage. Inso-
far as it is possible for one man to
play a football game, Chevigny
played himself a nice game. He
was a combination coach, master-
of-ceremonies, host, referee and
quarterback via a public address
system.
At one time he interrupted his
account to pay tribute to Bill
James, ousted from the Texas
staff last week and named assist-
ant to Homer Norton at Texas A.
& M. today, with: .“I am happy to
know Bill James decided to go to
A. &M.”
4,000 Fans Withstand
90-Degree Heat as
Longhorns Win
2
i
... 46 20 17 27 13
AB R H PO A
1
1
-20
*.*. 1 1
.. 4 2
... 4 1
0
1
0
0
0
6 0 0
2 8 XI
2 0 0
0 2 0
13 1
3 1
3 0 0
0 0 0
0 3
0 0 0
Henderson High Tracksters
Win District Meet Saturday
--- — ' ■ ■ • .
The Henderson High track and I
field team breezed through all op-
position Saturday at Nacogdoches
to easily win the District meet.
Two other Rusk county schools, I
Gaston High and Leverett's Chapel 1
also placed, Gaston taking off I
third place honors while L. C. was |
sixth.
The Henderson thinly clad ag-
gregation stacked up 41 1-2 points
for the overwhelming victory. The
closest opponent was Lufkin who
made 22 points for second place.
Other scores were Gaston 20
points, Nacogdoches 18, Jackson-
ville Leverett's Chapel 9,
Timpson 5, Wooden 5, and Hemp-
hill 4.
Robert Duncan of Henderson
placed first in three events and
fourth in another to win high
points honors with 12 and 1-4. He
was first in the shot put, tossing
the ball 44 feet and 1-2 inches,
first in discus, 104 feet, 10 1-2
inches, ran the anchor lap on
Henderson's winning relay team
and finished fourth In the 440-
yard race.
Other high Henderson point-
makers were Jimmerson, 10 and
1-2, winning first place in low
Tulsa
Patchett, cf 3
Shoap, rf-lb — 1
Connatser, lb .... 6
Mueller, rf ... 0
Grigsby, If ------- 5
Sheerin, as ------ 7
Ograln, rf-cf — 7
Holman, 3b 3
Crawford, 2b .... 3
, c >t-4
Fisher, c —— 2
Posedel, p 2
Hubbell, p —....... 1
Johnson, p ------- 1
FORT WORTH, Tex., April
(UP) Pittsburgh defeated Fort
V1-1 (J1 Worth 2 to 0 an.I the Chicago
.Shreveport. Buddy uses the same | White Sox beat the Cats 7 to 1
UCtVLIV.-l 111.1 UHU1V, "IIO !.-> I
known far and near as the tough- | t'on Kame here today,
est ringstcr in the profession to- the opening game
■ u«..t „u..» .u_ p’ort
Rough-house Jack Nelson, Ca-
nadian tinear who was disquali-
fied on last week’s mat program
here for roughing in a match with
Dick Lever, returns Thursday
night, meeting Jake Patterson,
Syracuse Thunderbolt, also a
roughster. In that both of these
matmen are exponents of the
rough-shod type of grappling, the
match is expected to prove a
thriller.
Patterson beat Roy Graham last
week in two straight falls after
resorting to rough tactics. Both
' he and Nelson are tougher than
the well-known boot and there is
little doubt but the the match
| will result in nothing short of
small war.
George Jonesz the Tyler villain,
is pitted in a return match against
Bill Hartsell of Marshall on the
semi-windup. They met hero two
weeks ago and wrestled thirty
minutes to a draw with Jones
using the wild, rough-and-tumble
methods that has stamped him as
a tough hombre in these parts.
Buddy Edwards, jjophew of the
famous Wild-man Hilly Edwards,
returns this week to match grunts
and groans with Red Rodgers of
tactics ns does his uncle, who is Ito(lay in 11 double header cxhibl- I —
known far and near as the tough- | 8ame here today ; I
■ ■ ■- I” the opening game Waite
Hoyt shut out the (•ort Worth
team with three hits and a walk
while Paul Waner and Arkie
Vaughn homered, off Claude Jon- !
nard to supply the only scoring.
By J. J. li.^aaaa
PAGE SI
SUNDAY MORNING, APRIL 7, 1985
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PAR, the Shirt that’s tailored
ARROW’S exact methodi of custom tailor*
ing have developed the PAR, the Mitoga
model of Arrow’s Trump. It drapes at the
waist and the sleeves arc tapered toward
the wrists. *
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No need 1
ARROW
$10.00 REWARD
For return of Male Fox Terrier Dog
White with black apota. bob tail, anawera to name of
"SKINNEY.” Left home Monday, March 25th. If any-
one knowa anything about hia whereabouta notify
The Daily News or Mrs. R. K. McClure, 900 West St.
If anyone knowa whether or not thia dog haa been killed
thia information will be appreciated.
to buy shirts that fit like a tent.
j »ix.w x Sanforizing and deft tailoring
offers you this shirt that fits perfectly at the
start and stays that way; fn white and colors. j
$1.95
Hays Clothing Store
MBN*8 WEAR
. ,r,'
East Texas
4’
Daily News Sports
J. JOHNNY BOWMAN . -
- - EDITOR
-
G
The Daily News Gives Its Readers the Widest Variety of Sports Coverage to be Found in Any Paper in
you’re Celling mei
Babe Ruth collected 2046 walks duriag ’
career in the American League ... Bill Tilden
believes England will retain the Davia Cup.«
Dorothy Traung, who finished second to
Virginia Van Wie in the national women’s J
golf championship last year, carries 16 clubs
. . . Lou Gehrig recently received a bat sign*
ed by 1504 New York sandlot players.
0
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Bowman, George. Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 5, No. 16, Ed. 1 Sunday, April 7, 1935, newspaper, April 7, 1935; Henderson, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1315001/m1/7/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rusk County Library.