Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 213, Ed. 1 Monday, April 28, 1952 Page: 8 of 8
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£
Monday, April n, IVM
THE DENTON R E C O R D - C H R 0 N 1 C L E
Miss 1
BEARS POST SECOND WIN Pro-A
JiOUTTEMAN AND GRAY
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POWER GOLF
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By BIN HOGAN
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ONE ATTRACTIOH-
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Send Your
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SAVE REGULARLY
FINANCE
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BEE
SUPPLIES
LEWIS DADANT
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Pho«i« C-6737
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Shreveport
Tournament
Record-Smash in g
Patty Berg Holds
3-Stroke Margin
Tyler Jumps To
Big State Lead
Chickasha Keeps
Steady Hold On
Sooner State Loop
-Tg
I •
1
1
H with us W« take a personal interest In every
customer.
Cana
Goal j
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Tyler’s hot
■ CA
HEADLEE BLDG.
Buy your new car from your favorite dealer;
but for greatest convenience in making pay-
ments, or in the event of an emargency
Call C
6 to 7
and 8 to
ALL DALLAS NEEDS IS A
SECOND NEGRO PLAYER
1
By HAROLD V. RATLIFF
If Dallas had brought two Ne-
groes instead of one into the Tex
as league it might be on top today
instead of down in the fourth place
Dallas was the first club to take
the step and it has paid off not
only in victories but tn Jttcndanc-
Yesterday Dave Hoskins, the Ne-
gro pitcher, won his third straight
game as Dallas beat Houiton 9-2
He gave up 10 hits while Dallas
was blasting 19
And the crowd that turned out-
11.091. of which 5,954 were Ne-
6
8
8
11
7
7
7
7
day for everybody, probably above
$100,000 for each fighter. There is
no ring attraction in sight to match I
it. But Robinson doesn't need the
money and he was smart enough
to realize the dice were loaded.
Maxim, packing a 15 pound weight
advantage, might have been even
money to slip Sutfar the first knock-
out of his great career.
The man to pity is Doc Kearns,
who in the twilight of a colorful
career brought Maxim out of a
studied mediocrity, guided him to
the title and within reaching dis-
tance of a golden harvest. It would
have been a fair treat to watch
Jack Dempsey’s old pilot playing
with that kind of money again.
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The first leg of the coming TSCW
Invitational was unreeled Sunday
at the Tessie course with four
teams tying for first and second
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Ed Gar
and confit
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See R(
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GAY ROOFING
223 W. Oak C-7713
& SHEET METAL CO.
“I’ll be
business
months,’* i
Denton, “1
mighty fir
few days,
where I i
and redec
C. Penne]
I estimati
months.”
Penney C
work on ti
I
I 1
JACK HODGES
Back of Post Office
UNITED FINANCE CO
L J. HEADLEI WAYNE SWICK
BROOKS DRUG STORE
West Side Sq. - Ph. Central 2565
PRESCRIPTIONS
To
This win
the sun, a
me— Eccle
We ough
merit by '
by the use
Charron.
(
I
RYAN BROS.
Z22 t VcK/NNEYST DENTON TfO$\
GUARANTEED
ROOFING
Expert workmanship on all
roofing & sheet metal jobs.
Call for estimates.
dl|H|
E______
'yi IsTour bpted'—
11 ONE ATTRACTION*
TW AT AND PERFECT
d
I
rife
w.
7
8
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delphia
Sweetwater was nosed 1615 by
Odessa in one of those games
where everybody scores. Odessa
smashed eight runs across in the
ninth to win it.
FOR THREE YEAR OLDS
■■3—.
Derby Line-Up May
Come After ‘Miler’
Sixty p<
morning i
inaugurat
campaign
cer in th<
The m
Claude C
the Denti
American
breakfast
HaU on tl
College fi
The co
Castleber
this mon
vided intc
purpose
paign.
1 T
r',nton v
a few of T
day and S
Moore spe
College f<
Tournamer
best golfei
their entr
many of ti
will file
’ Nions. Son
Ay this Ti
the best I
in Denton
local playi
day and S
ing about
ers will te
ing at ab<
Sugar Ray Robinson Applies
Brain (.ells In Paris Jaunt
WASHING'
arranged to<
quiry into th
of the destre
aon with an
lives. It wi
peacetime d
naval histor;
Meanwhile
carrier Wai
Saturday ni|
the Hobson t
alowly horn
the minesw
some of the
Traveling •
knots, the ci
reach Brook
pairs on Fr
The origin
In the tragei
when two si
peared on il
had missed
—one man
the other ir
casualties ’
the Wasp.
There stil
over the exi
cause of a
two names.
Adm. Ly
mander-in-c
Fleet, anno
a formal c
•‘make a f
facts and c
ing the sin
A deman
probe came
of the miss
son had tol
/V
McMillan drove home Bob Borkow-
ski with the winning run in the
ninth inning on a fly ball.
Wilmer (Vinegar Bend) Mizell,
highly publicized Cardinal rookie,
held the Cubs to three hits in seven
innings but blew up in the eighth
and yielded four runs. Frank
Baumholtz, the league’s top batter,
climaxed the rally with a three
run double
•Tiger ‘Twins’
Boost Bengals
strokes
mark.
The pressure took toll on Reed
in the afternoon play when he
allowed Debardeleben to pick up
a stroke on the first hole and two
more on the second Reed’s shots
off the tee were long and straight
but his approach shots were veer-
ing off course or landing several
feet past the cup.
When the pair took the turn, De-
bardeleben was one under par,
while Reed continued to drop with
a 38 to fall six strokes off the
pace.
S
IS
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3
4
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Pct OB
418
.700
687
A00
.444
.444
.300
.138
Pct G B
.848
.643
.688
533
.467
.438
.357
.333
ab
4
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Jn Smotherman, 3b 0
3
XL:
DICKSON MOTOR CO.
Oldimobil. - Cadillac - GMC Tracks
505 N. Elm
:.-.4
ner’s share of the purse
Among the more highly rated
Derby candidates who are expected
to oppose the Calumet flash tomor-
row are the unpredictable Cousin
from the barns of Alfred Vander-
bilt and Sub Fleet of Charles T
Fisher’s Dixiana Farm.
Trainer Sylvester Veitch
may send out C V. Whitney’s Cold
Command, recent conqueror of Hill
Gail in a sevenfurlong test at
Keeneland, and W. J. Passmore
said yesterday he would enter Bay-
ard Sharp's Finnibal, an eastern
NEW YORK 'P — There never
was much doubt that Sugar Ray
Robinson did better than most
when they were handing out brains
to the prize fighters. Now it's
official.
The middleweight champ had his
choice of visiting Paris in the
spring or staying here and getting
himself cuffed around by Joey
Maxim, the ruffled ruler of the
cruiser-weights. He chose Paris.
It would have made a great pay-
Bi
__ w* invito you to open e check-
'WtRjri IMBIM oceeunt end enjoy the
i NHPJB- SLUB/jM edded convenience end sefety
| gr nRaam of P°y'nB Nils by check.
DENTON COUNTY NATIONAL BANK
Member F.D.I.C. Member Federal Reserve System
------ ....... ... ~ ,^1^
IF
IB
SHREVEPORT, La., WB - Bud
Debardeleben, a pre-tourney favor-
ite longshot, came roaring out of
obscurity here Sunday to swamp
Buster Reed, 7 and 6, in the finals
of the Shreveport Country Club In-
vitational Golf Tournament.
The lanky Debardeleben, a new
arrival on the Shreveport scene,
had little trouble with his North
Texas State College rival in either
of the two rounds of play.
In the morning round, Debardel-
eben rolled unhampered over the
hilly course in par 71 while Reed
was picking up a 76 to fall five
behind at the half-way
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Chickasha kept a firm grip on
the Sooner State league’s top posi
tion Sunday, downing Sherman. 9 7
The loss dumped the Texas cluh
deeper into the cellar.
At McAlester, the Pauls Valley
Raiders trounced the Rockets, 13 2
The Raiders moved into second
place, a game behind Chickasha.
An Ada Hereford error in the
10th inning in a game at 14wton
enabled the Reds to score the win-
ning run. Ada left fielder Howie Fa-
gan dropned a flv ball and Ray
Zaro raced home from second with
the winning tally. The score was
5-4.
Shawnee defeated Ardmore, 12-4.
The same teams meet Monday
night for the jecond of a two-game
aeries.
Warren Giles, the new president
of the National league, should have
been given a year’s cooling-out
period between handing in his res-
ignation as president of the Cin-
cinnati Reds and assuming his pres-
ent post.
Under the Talbot plan, the pop-
ular and extremely able executive
would have been required to sit
through a full schedule of games
with nothing to do for his salary
except munch peanuts and learn
to admire umpires for the truly
fine job they turn in under trying
conditions.
It would have been a tough
course for a man who had watched
the knights in blue rob his Reds
all those years, but a man of
Giles* caliber would have mastered
It, and would not, for example,
have announced that he had plas-
tered a heavy fine on umpire
Scotty Robb for shoving inoffen-
sive little Eddie Stanky.
III11
A nei
merely
known
Classify
suits I
No v
u»era c
tell us
plies th
The i
volved
thia fai
bo your
It seemed difficult the other day
to get Manager Bucky Harris of
Washington interested in talking
about his own ball club. He said
yea, abeeotly, that a couple of his
Cuban Ditchers were doing real
good. He confessed, after a brief
pause, that he had a pretty fair
first tesm. But his mind didn’t
seem to be in It, and he kept
staring out where the Yankees
were bolding infield drill.’ *
“Look st that Phil Rinuto,"
Bucky finally exploded. “Isa*t that
boy something?**
%
t
a'V
8
4)4
8
Pct. O.B
483
.667 3
4S8 3)4
.417 8
.417 8
.400 6
364 8)4
400 e
i j
and ye
same hi
your fr
GE
whipped Oklahoma City 12-1 as
Hugh Radcliffe, getting his first tri
umph of the campaign, set the In-
BROOKS PHARMACY NO. 2 W
Medico! Surgical Clinic 412 Normal Ph. Central 6912
Clovis Surprises
West Texas Loop
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Clovis, a club that never has cut
much ice in the West Texas-New
Mexico league, was on top of the
circuit Monday.
The Pioneera whipped l4mesa 10
2 Sunday to make the leap, pushing
past Abilene and Lubbock, with
whom they were tied for the top
Abilene took a 12-11 licking from
Borger while Lubbock was downed
by Albuquerque 9-8.
Joe Borrego pitched a six-hitter
while Clovis was slamming across
six runs in the eighth to beat La-
mesa.
Borger splurged for seven runs
in the seventh to come from be-
hind and down Abilene. Ten Bor
ger tallies were unearned.
Albuquerque built up a 9 2 lead
then staved off a Lubbock rally.
Pampa edged Amarillo 65 as
manager Jake Phillipa singled
*Al.lllll)t
g^TaiA-rn^l
I I J'
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Fwl
RICHMOND. Calif UP -
Record-smasher Patty Berg held
a three stroke lead today as the
country’s crack women golf pro-
fessionals teed off in the final
round of the $3,000 54-hole Rich-
mond Ladies PGA Open.
Miss Berg had a two day total
of 138. On her heels was Betty
Jameson of San Antonio with 141.
Next closest, at 148, were Babe
Didrikson J^aharias of Tampa and
Peggy Kirk of Ponta Verda, Flor-
ida
Miss Berg knocked ol’ man par
cockeyed to set a women’s world
record 64 in the first round
Betsy Rawls of Austin. Texas ,
was grouped at 149 with Betty
MacKinnon, Dallas; Beverly Han-
son. of Fargo, N. C., and the Bauer
sisters, Marlene and Alice. Saraso-
ta, Fla
/ MAI BIGHT
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Bosom buddies Art Houtteman
and Ted Gray have put the Detroit
Tigers back on the right track.
The Tigers still are on the fringe
of last place in the American
League today but the good folks
of Detroit don’t expect them to
hover in that vicinity long
Detroit’s resurgence began be-
hind closed doors in the visitor’s
dressing room at Chicago’s Comis-
key Park.
The Tigers, smarting from eight
straight defeats, were reported to
be at odds with Manager Red
Rolfe and on the verge of mutiny.
Fred Hutchinson, veteran pitcher
and player representative, called
the players together for a confer-
ence and chased Rolfe out of the
room. The result was a rousing
vote of confidence for Rolfe.
Houtteman and Gray have dem-
onstrated emphatically that the
Tigers meant what they said.
Hard luck Art launched the come-
back drive Saturday with a spec-
tacular U-0 one-hit victory over
the Cleveland Indians. Gray fol-
lowed his roommate’s gem with a
1-0 six-hit triumph over the tough
Tribe yesterday.
Cleveland's Harry Simpson was
tW~“villain’* and “goat” in Loth
games.
Simpson spoiled Houtteman’s bid
for fame at the 11th hour. The
Indian outfielder singled with two
oyt in the ninth inning to smash
the no-hit bid.
'Yesterday, a first inning error
by Simpson led to the lone run of
the game.
Pat Mullin singled with two out
in “iho first inning against Mike
GOfria Vic Wertz followed with a
I to center. Simpson tried to
it up on the bounce in order
Bt Mullin down at third but
hall slipped behind him and
IB scored.
ly’s fine effort enabled the
IB to vacate last place in favor
pg MBs Philadelphia Athletics by 75
dOMBtage points.
A*ain curtailed activity in both
lohkues In the American league
g dMbleheader between the Ath-
jgn^uand Boston Red Sox was
iMiBiii out and a single game be-
tv/oM J.'ew York and Washington.
National League a double
between Boston and Phila-
_____ was washed out and a
single game between Brooklyn and
New York.
In the only other action in the
American league, the Chicago
’“YjSo Sx tripped the St. Ixiuis
Browns, 7-6, in 14-innings. The Sox
led the Browns, 3-1, in the second
gc of ther doubleheader when
it was called after five innings be .
cause of darkness.
The opener went into overtime
when Ed Robinson homered with
one on in the ninth for Chicago.
Fiv inin later Minnie Minoso
singled home Nelson Fox for the |
winning run. Harry Dorish permit I
ted only one hit over the last five
innings and gained credit for his
first vi lory
The surprising Cincinnati Red*
snapped their s^-condplace tie with
Chicago in the National league by
beating Pittsburgh in a twin bill
82 and 10, while the Cubs won a
single game from the St. Ixiuis
Cardinals, 63
Ken Raffensberger breezed to
his third straight v> v in the
openrr for Cincinnati. The Reds
j ned on Btb Frienf for six runs
in the third inning to seal the
verdict.
Dutch Miller bested Howie Pollet
in the thrilling nightcap duel. Roy
30
301 000 011—3
000 033 00m-6
K— Dickey. Cotton RBI —Dickey 3.
McReynoldn.
— Bailey
Harris 3.
DP — Rlchardaon
McReynolds LOB—
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• .* u
fi
7
8
B
B
10
AMERICAN IF. AG re:
w.
•
7
8
a
6
8
7
NATIONAL LEAGVB
L I
1
3
a
TEXAS LEAGUE
W.
B
fi
to
6
7
7
6
6
1)4
15
4
Ji
Pct. G.B
478
.737
.700
.686
.600
338
433
3 11 .188
LEAGVE
W. L.
3
7
8
places in the pro amateur sweep-
stakes.
The pro am was scheduled by
Dr. L. H. Moore to push qualify-
ing scores along for the tourna-
ment scheduled to start medal
play Friday.
The medalist and long driving
champ will be declared Friday and
match play is slated to begin
Saturday and continue through
Sunday .
In the pro amateur Sunday, a
team of Robert Knight, Dr. Walter
Hanson, Mack Massey, L. T. Stub-
blefield and Bill Hutson won first
after a play-off.
This group tied with Don Dicker-
son, Cherry Gilmartin, Bob Castle-
berry and Bill McKinnon at 64’a.
Captain for the winners was Han-
son and for the runner-ups, Dicker-
son
The third and fourth place teams
also tied, each shpoting 67’s.
Winners of the third spot after
the playoff were Vansel Brooks,
Capt. Dick Hastings, Dulaney Nix,
Ray Wood and Dave Forney.
Fourth place winners were T. L.
Carter, Paul Young, C. M. Gra-
ham, capt., and Herb Trietach.
Qualifying will continue on ■
through this week and flight-pair-
ings will be drawn after 6 p.m.—
the deadline for qualifying scores—
Friday.
Championship flight entries will
have to qualify on the TSCW
course
O. H. (Stuffy) Bailey pinched-hit
a base-clearing double in the fifth
inning Sunday to set the spark for
the Denton Beara who went on «o
down Gunter 6 to 3 in a regularly
scheduled North Texas Amateui
League game in Bronco Park.
Bailey’a two-bagger to left-center
broke a Qenton bat alienee through
four inninga and paved the way for
three runs to come across in the
fifth to tie the score.
Right-hander Bobby Lawrence
gave up four singles and one borne
run as he went the route to notch
his first win of the year and the
Bears' second in as many starts.
The local semi-pro club is now
well-entrenched in the first hole
of the league with its two victories.
After the first inning when Gun-
ter’s third baseman, Jim Dickey,
poled a low pitch over the left field
wall to bring across two runs,
Lawrence was tough with the only
other Gunter run coming when
Jack Harris stole home in the third.
Manager Claude Linville takes
his crew to McKinney Wednesday
night for a go against the V.A.
Hospital in their third game. The
Vets captured a 4 3 win against
Gunter last week.
Gunter’s starter, Harrison Miller,
handcuffed the Bruins for four
innings and only gave up the double
to Bailey and a aingle to Charles
Stevens but both hits were timely,
driving in three runs.
Stevens cracked his hit in the
sixth frame driving in Doug San-
derson and first baseman Me- j
Reynolds. Sanderson had gotten on ■
via fielder’s choice and McReyn- i
olds had walked Stevens’ hit put I
the Bears ahead and they were
never in doubt from then on to the
finish.
Walt Richardson sent a grass-
cutter to short-stop in the big
fifth following Bailey’s double and
an error on the play allowed two
runs to score which tied the score.
3-3.
Jack Harris
LOUISVILLE, Ky 45—They are
FIRST RUN—Jimmy Smother- going to sift some chaff from the
man scampers across with the
Denton Bears’ first run against
Gunter Sunday. Smotherman
came in after pmch-hitter (). H
(Stuffy) Bailey had doubled
Gunter’s catcher, (No. 24) is
Gene Savage and Walt Richard-
son is the Bear coming up to the
plate at left. Denton won, 6 3.
(Staff photo by Ed Strange).
Team-
Fort Worth
Beaumont
Houeton
Dallas
Ban Antonio
Xhreveport
Tulsa
Oklahoma City
Team-
Boston
Bt. Louis
Cleveland
Washington
New York
Chicago
Detroit
Philadelphia
L’.'_
Team
Brooklyn
Cincinnati
Chicago
New fork.................6
Bt. Louis .......... 6
Philadelphia ..... 8
Boaton ....... 4
Pittsburgh .......,.
BIG STATE
Team— 1
Tyler .................10
Wichita Falls
Texarkana
Austin
Paris
Temple
Longview
Waco
1 ! downward. That ia necessary in
0 3 | order for you to get underspin, or
a7 13 | backspin, on the ball and thus con-
trol it Provided you get the proper
amount of backspin on the ball,
this shot will make the ball stop
soon after it lands on the green.
Watch the tournament golfers
play the pitch shot and you will
notice that they will rely on the
loft of the clubface to provide the
right amount of height to the ball.
They make no effort to scoop or
lift the ball into the air by means
of false hand action.
Miller. Lawrence 3 WP—Lawrence.
I LP -Miller U—Pooler-Anderson I (From POWER GOLF by Ben Hogan.
--CoDvrvht. 19481
Battar far from whara you are,
E To get a sooner start,
Or bast be lata —
“ Thon tempt your fate,
l. And from the world depart.
HKrTwinBZi' *-
• • - •
IMw aaeahiMy, you atffto taj«fe • cwtomef o» mtaa.
Lyle E Montgomery Co.
214 W, Oak ut ftdw FteM C-742J
As in all golf shots, the action
is unhurried at the beginning of the
downswing of the pitch. There is a
moderate amount of body move-
ment. The feature of this shot,
however, is the very definite
amount of hand action at impact.
o o | In fact, both the hands and arms
— ~ are very active in this shot.
I Starting the club down and
* ' through the ball, the swing is
| initiated by turning the left hip.
o Actually the swing is short, but
s brought down into the ball so that
0 R is hit hard. At impact the handa
® i continue to remain in front of the
o ! clubhead with the weight well for-
o ward on the left foot as shown
0 I above.
1 I On this shot the ball must be hit home the winning run in the last ,
IN
SUNDAY S RESULTS
TKXA8 LKAGlE
Fort Worth 3-3, Ban Antonio 3-3.
Dallas 8. Houston 3.
Tulsa 2. Shreveport 4
Oklahoma City 1, Beaumont 13.
NATIONAL LEAGlE
Chicago 6. Bt. Louis 3.
Pittsburgh 3-0. Cincinnati 8-1.
Brooklyn at New York. rain.
Philadelphia at Boston, rsln snd
cold.
AMERICAN I.EAGt«
St Louis 6-1, Chicago 7-8.
Cleveland 0, Detroit 1.
Boston at Philadelphia, rain.
New York at Washington, rain.
BIG STATE LEAGVE
Temple 6. Waco 1.
Austin 6, Tyler 11.
Longview 4. Wichita Falls 17.
Texarkana 8. Paris 18.
MONDAY'S SCHEDULE
TEXAS LEAGlE
Fort Worth at San Antonio.
Dallas nt Houston.
Oklahoma City at Beaumont.
Tulsa at Shreveport.
NATIONAL LEAGVE
Chicago at St. Louis (night).
Only game scheduled
AMERICAN LEAGl*
New York at Washington.
Only game scheduled
BIG STATE LEAGUE
Waco at Austin.
Tyler at Tsmpis.
wichlta Falla at Texarkana.
Parts at Longview.
k r i
B 4 J
groes—was the largest in the T< x
as League this season.
While Dallas was beating Hous
ton, Beaumont’s hustling Rough
necks were moving into a tie with | three.
Fort Worth for first The Roughies Derby
about at the Downs
Hill Gail, pride of the Calumet I
farm, heads the list Should ttie
dians down with six hits. Meanwhile fleet son of Bull Ix'a show to an
Beaumont was pounding 11 | advantage in the Trial, he’ll prob
Fort Worth split with San An 1 ahIy I*08’ in ,hp nrrby
tonio The Missions took the firat I th«* favorite to take down the win-
game 3-2 but the Cats salvaged the
nightcap 4-2. Omer Tolson homered
in the ninth to give San Antonio its
win. In the second Fort Worth
slammed four runs across the plate
in the first inning and that was
that. Joe Landrum allowed San An-
tonio only three hits
Shreveport licked Tulsa 4 2, ram-
ming three runs over in the sixth.
Kent Peterson held the Sports io a
single hi for four innings but they
broke loose in the fifth to take a
lead they never relinquished Dou-
bles George Brown and Jim
Eckeret sparked the drive.
nning streak had
the East Texans out front by two
games in the Big te league '
Monday
The East Texans have won 10 out
of 12, ha en’t yet lost a gam at [
home and Sunday took their seven
straight in beating Austin 11-5. 1
JMUK rial i io, vciitai
lieved Miller in the 7th and allowed
one hit to first baseman Tommy
Stone and no runs
GUNTER ab r
Harris, cf-p ♦
Dickey. 3b 3
Bnrnts. lb ..........
Miller, p-as
Hunter, rt
Reed, rt .........
Bacon. 2b
Savage, c ..........
Hundley. If
Thomaa .If
Cotton, aa .........
xCarpenter
Totals
probable entries include denton
rian llnm ITinatv Rrown Steven*. HS
| Rlchardaon. 2b
; Boyer, 3 b
Hensley, rf .........
Stone, rf
Hlbler If
Js Smotherman. cf 2
Sanderson, cf
McReynolds lb
Grisham, lb ....
Kills c
Bailey, c —
Lawrence, p
Totals
no two ways about it—they really gun ieR
. . rurwrcrN
wheat at Churchill Downs tomor
row and before nightfall the lineup
for the $)00,000 added Kentucky
Derby should be fairly well in
J hand.
The sifting will come in
Derby Trial, a mile prep for the
big mile and one quarter classic)
for 3 year olds on Saturday
for 3 year olds on Saturday
From a financial standpoint, the
Trial, with an added value of
$’0,000, is worth only peanxts in
comparison with the 78th run for
the roses, but it has a twofold
purpose.
For one, it furnishes some of
the top flight Derby hopefuls with
their final tightener. And for others
it will give them a chance to prove
! their right to run in America's
most famous horse race.
The Trial is expected to draw a
field of 10 or so. including at least
and possibly five, of the
candidates most
Bailey.
— Dickey
r S — Bailey
Steven* to
hope, but might not start him
Other 1
Arroz, Brian Boru, Kingly, Brown | Steven*. «•
Rambler, Turks Cap, Seven Sun
and Dry Summer—all strictly re
mote outsiders in pre Derby con-
j sideration.
the '
San Angelo Falls
In Big Bay. 124)
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
When San Angelo falls there's
tumble : denton
The Colts, leading the Ixynghorn
League race took a 12-0 lacing , “T™
from Artesia Sunday night. But it : hr — Dickey 8B
didn't damage San Angelo's stand- Boyer
ino nt the ton to Steven* to Mcneynoiu* lajd—
1I1„ at mt tup. Denton 5. Gunter 6 BB—off Lawrence
2. Miller 3 SO—by Miller 7. Harrl* 5.
Imwrence B HO—Miller, 2 for 6 run*
In 6 Inning* Harrl*. 1 for 0 run* In
2 Inning* HBP—Miller (Hlbler) B -
Miller. latwrence 2
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 213, Ed. 1 Monday, April 28, 1952, newspaper, April 28, 1952; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1317847/m1/8/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.