Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 35, Ed. 1 Friday, September 23, 1927 Page: 4 of 8
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T<
SATURDAY
YORK
to
r
BASEBALL
Eagle
:<si
10;
FIGHT STATISTICS
WATCHING SCOREBOARD
q me wuriu uimiu
OMUiMIm! appeared
BASEBALL’S BIG FIVE
a
a X**
BRIEF ITEMS OF SPORT
vixru
Win. Penn—5 Cents— A Good Cigar
NEW FEED STORE
1
FILUHG STATION
■M
*
j'T h- j .U<wBI
OLBAN COTTOM BAUI
»r this orricB.
3
3*4
147
144
146
145
145
146
145
W
80
86
86
83
70
61
56
48
56
59
60
43
50
66
68
80
82
89
96
•:.*——
WWW ____ -
Deed barely ettody.
Gehrig
Hornsby
Cobb ..
Huth
Speaker
Pct
.614
.593
589
569
493
418
386
Pct
709
599
542
.534
.448
.435
390
.338
Stop^hy and let ua fill your
flr with everything it needs.
BL: , —
1-2, Dec 130,
Dec. »7 l-a,
Dec. 48 1-2.
1; fremh
>r Ib.;
. car-
trs
M
fj
w.
Pittsburgh 89
St. Louis 86
New York 86
Ray Kremer hurled
8-5
KJ
NSW YOBS COTTON
YORK. Sept 23.
“ ------ °Pe"
20 28
20.60
SO 30
20 78
20 00
20.30
Standing
SPOOL, Sept
quiet. 10 to ft
-*SHi
22
t'C
GAS, OIL, TIRES
6 TIRE REPAIR
~7~3 close
20 18 2032-87
---- 2137
......1--5
■ ateedy; middling 20.47c.
LIVERPOOL COTTON
SPOOL, Sept. 28 —Market
quiet. 10 to 18 Uwe. ,
barely steady, 23 to 28
w~,.........1032
t 1095
...... 1100
1031
1078
10.84
lower: market
1 lower.
close
10.7C
10.79
10.83
10.77
10 85
1070
Loads of Fun! -
TAriZTi, laughi.
minute on
Sept. 23—Statistics
as
H. PcL
212
194
175
174
169
56
59
60
63
72
85
89
95 <336
W
, 148 105
88
78
78
65
63
57
49
HEWS EAGLES START
GRID SEASON
CHICAGO,
of the championship flight are
follows:
Estimated attendance 145.000.
Estimated receipts >2.800,000.
Tunney's purse $900,000.
“Dempsey's purse $450,000
Federal tax $280,000.*
State tax $252,000.
Rent for Stadium. $100,000,
Incidental expenses $100,000.
.ProQt,,lpr..Mafllaon Square <
den Corporation and Tex Riel
$718,000.
The Kimbell Milling Co.
of Fort Worth has opened
a new feed store in the Crad-
dock Wagon Yard on Mui
berry Street, just south of
the square.
We handle the famous
K-B Line of scientifically
prepared feeds for chickens,
cows and hogs. Let us fig-
ure on your feed require-
ments.
'. “It’s economy to feed the
best.”------
f
on Dm Tin
*ct. Hr.
.38(P 45
.363 26
359 &
.350 56
.31? 2
WORLD SERIES TO
OPEN OCT. 5 WITH
NATIONAL WINNER
CHICAGO, Sent. 23—The first
game of the world series will be
played on Oct. 5 in the city wl|ose
club wins the National League
baseball pennant, it was decided
here today.
Fw!
SAN FRANC
non-professions
plays a •’dub''
pils in the re,
t< umament at 1
is WUUamjtfL
■
•4
•Ill
andaraifo.
..a new one every
the Midway.
Famous Morris &. Castle
Shows, headed by the renown-
ed Singer’s Midget Jazz Band.
Thrilling rides....all the new
“Screamers"..Amusement for
the whole femily...See it dim
’ ■ ttuw nothoy, ., qmH
NEW YORK—on Gehrig broke one
of Babe Ruth's records- rmw driven
In—when he tripled Thursday. It
was the 172d run credited to Gearig
this season The best previous mark
was 170. set by Ruth In 1921. .'
NEW YORK - Crystal • Pennant,
Pineland stable's 3-yearjold. came In
ahead in the Stonybrook claiming
lUtaf dff WI 03-.TT1 Tbr lf» WW--
era in one of the racing upsets of
the season. Atwater was the falgklU
and was beaten bv a scant hesH as
the winner rushed up in the closing
strides
L CAIN’S
Grocery and Market
hone 78 We Deliver
, Fran—5 Cents—A Good Cigar
J90NT FORGET
hat you can order good ten-
ter Meat along with your
Groceries at
i before she went east to win her,
first national junior title and did
the same for Helen Jacobs prior to
her annexing the national junior
title a few years later.
Fuller uses class instruction on
the beginners until one or more of
h'.s pupils shows unusual merit.
Then he selects these prospects for
Individual instruction. First they
must learn the orthodox strokes. A
great amount of time is spent hav-
ing the prospect learn the advan-
tage of proper footwork and the
timing of the ball.
This non-professional producer
of tennis champions cannot exe-
cute the orthodox tennis strokes
himself, but he knows how they
Should be made and he has pa-
tience enough to work with, th®
juniors until they masterthe
strokes as they should be.
HFEEDW
i.—Market
01DM
20.73-78
20.98-00
2130-24 .„ r ...
*n<l«4Ja’out of f°ur a< tempts.
Hornsby crashed out his twenty-
fifth and twenty-sixth home runs
of the season and two singles out
of eight times up.
Tris Speaker failed to hit safe-
ly In a pinch hitter's role.
Cobb was idle.
AB
560
535
..........487
497
518
The world champion St. Louis
I today to He* a
real menace to the pennant aspira-
tion of the Pittsburgh Pirates as a
tesult of Thursday s gamek.
St. Louis displaced New York as
runner-up to Pittsburgh, three
gnmes behind the leaders by de-
flating the second division Boston
Braves, 6 to 5, while the Pirates
and the Giants were splitting
double-header at Pittsburgh.
The standings:
2038-39
„ , , , 20.73-75
eteady: middling 2090c.
y ' NEW ORLEANS COTTON
S aonr ORLEANS. Sept 23—Market
NMM ateady open *'—
ffinrrw -..........
■Eft 20 45
■a.-.............. 20 08
2138 .—
October 20 00 -MI.A-82
Kstanber 20 25 2177-84
NATIONAL LEAGIV;
Thursday'* RV«ults
Pittsburgh 6-1, N< “ *-
Cincinnati 2-4. Bi
Chicago 8. r
St. Lou la 6. Boston 6.
rt_ “
Club— Behind
Pittaburgh
St. Louis '
New York
Chicago
Cincinnati
Brooklyn
Boston
Philadelphia .
AMERICAN LKAGVE
Thuraday** RVsults
Boston 2. Chicago 1.
New York 8. Detroit 7.
Philadelphia 4-5, Cleveland 3-2
Washington 10. St Louie 7.
Club-
New York
Philadelphia
Washington
Detroit
Chicago
Cleveland
St. Louis
Boston
Babe Ruths fifty-sixth home run
was his only hit in five times at
bat, but it won the game from the
Tigers.
Gehrig hit a triple and a single
Pct.
.614
.596
.589
the Pirates
to an impressive 5 to 2 victory over
the Giants in the first game. Fitz-
simmons did the same thing for
the Giants in the second, defeating
Pittsburgh 7 to 1.
The Glants-Pirates double-
header was featured by iRogers
Hornsby's 26th and 27th homers of
the season, one in each game.
The Cardinals defeated the
Braves by a two run ninth inning
rally. Haines and Sherdci held the
Braves to
' Hack Wilsoq'g-tiompr contributed
fo the Cubs' 8 to 4 Victory over the
Phillies.
The Cinciniigfaf Reds took two
games from tjie-Brooklyn Robins.
2 to 1 and 4 fa 3.' The first game
twelve lontngipgs and.w$8 a
pitchers duel Mftwsen Petty and
Xuque. The latter held the RobirA
to five hits. '*.tt
Today's schedule in the National
League Brings together the same
opponents.
Iri the American League, the
Yankees tied the high game recorn
for a single season by winning
their 106th came. They defeated
Detroit 8-7. Balw Ruth's 56th hom-
er of the year, was the deciding
factor
The Athletics virtually flinched
second place bv taking a double-
header from Cleveland. 4-3 and
5-2.
tyi
Hm
liar P u p i 1 •
Sept. Me-A
M tennis coach who
game had four pu-
cent national tennis
Forest Hills. L. I. He
„^<Pop) Fuller of the
_ I Berkeley Jennte dub and his girls
were - Helsa Wills, Helen Jacobs,
FIRST GAME TO BE PLAY- ^Phine Crookshank and Edith
Kn MFRF WITH DFCA- I Tht two latter ones were
ED HEKE Wlln ULLA , iiminated in the first round but
TUR BAPTIST COLLEGE i ihey were good enough to be to-
OCT 7 eluded in the M chosen to com-
I Fuller, a retired druggist from
, Rhode Island, sought a way to OC-
| < upy his time bnd became a menv
X—mber _____ _____
Bpota barely Rteady. 22 lower: de-
Mmd batter; recelpta 4000. American
1300: sale* 5000. American 3400;
BMtHlng U SOd
r Among some Eskimo tribes bad
ts considered a giyn of be?,
tag’powiessed by a devil, lying is
crime punished by death, and
■■Triage is compulsory
' . POULTRY
13c lb ITe par lb.; fryer* 15e
NT oM rooster* to per lb;
W ito per, lb-; duck* ioc
WWW® pk tail in-
■p too to 80c par dos.; table
too to 40c per lb packing
. .. ,, tutor iga per ib.
- pBopucg
. Retail
• Ito to 20c per bead
S jo*r lb.; cabbage to pei
I If 1-to to Ito per Tb.;
par bunch; green peppei
per Ib.; hot pepper* 12 l-2c
Squaob 10c per Ib.; beeta 10c
Bb: turnips to per lb. Iriah
to to 6c per lb ; sweet po-
s per Ib.; celery 16c to 20c
ch; cucumbers 15c per ib ;
■ass 2 l-2c each; okra 10c
black eyed peas 7c per lb.;
rte dosen: orange* 86c to 80c
4 iMhons 85c to 60c per doe.
REVIEW
I. to—Brokerage
. , ,. »er .increase left
i but so did reserve ratios of
ths local Federal! Raeerve and
Ito M a whole Although col-
Mrowings are at record lev-
lit rauourcea continue
■ .demonstrated bv. the fact
' York institution's percent-
WBh'le note liabilities are
1 |wr cent against 77 8 per
reek ago. deenita 434 499,000
loans at this Y?enter during
is ' period Loan figures did
ilmulate continuance of
|Ts eeillng movement in ear-
igs" *nd the main body of
|to developed a better tone
IlW YORK. Sept 23.—Foreign ex-
age ooened irregular. Demand
dlrtg $4,86 1-4. francs .0392. lire
M 8-4, Belga* .1392, marks
II 1-2. >
local ;c3n60? ‘4 p
» bales were received 'here
-y. To Friday noon a total of
> bad been ginned In Den-
Pricee were: middling basis
bale 22,50; square bale 21.75;
MMsW- i ,s
PriM* _ :
seed cotton- S.ys; cotton seed $40.
FORT W ITH LfVENTOCK
irr-FORT WORTH.' Sept. 23— Heavy
L oslvee were 25c lower again Friday
I but the cattle market held to a
kMmvnp*-
Bteer receipts were too entail to
make a market.
F- Rhisop receipts consisted of a few
to at yearlings, these remaining
old throughout the morning
another Stow hog market was seen
■TtoMS Ram placed. They were
is to steady.
Ettle: beevee 6 to 1075; cow* 5
fi calvee 6 to 11.75; stockere 630
935; cannera 3 75 to 4; yearling*
9 1175; bulla 430 to 6.
logs: medium 11.70 to lltorllght
to H 26; packing sow* 9 50 to
mixed 10.75 to 11: common 930
pig* 9 50 to 1025.
>: Iamb* 11 to 12; yearling* 6
w;' Stocker* 5 to 6; feeder lamb*
V1B; wether* 730 to 8; goats 2
■ CHICAGO GRAIN
HICAQO. Sept 23.—Firm wheat
weak corn price* prevailed at
MT'S seaalon on the board of trade.
(Ung to all pttsjwaa quiet.
n**at opened 8-» to 7-to higher
to unexpectedly strong Litor-
I cables and grains held about
idy late in the eeeelon, clqsing
to 1 l-4c up.
OTn oussssd 1-2 to 1c lower, on
ore of general frost td ntaWrtaT-
to the belt overnight and closed
to 7-to tower.
'rading in oata was quiet and
sea were nervous most of the day.
ring l-4c higher at l-8c lower.
Yovlatone went higher. "
Coach John Reid will take
between 35 and 40 of his _
football squad to Dallas I ber of the Berkeley club. He on-
Saturday.to open the Teach- tired ais interest in the juniors,
ers College( gridiron .season ! bcKa1.1 Helen Wills a yaar
in the game tp be played
with the Southern Methodist
Uniyprsity Mustangs.
The local team will not enter the
contest expActffeg to will but they
wtll hope to hold the scqre to u re-
'kpSctable figure even thb they will
be facing the Bouthweatern Confer-
ence champions tot 1926. .
No announcement haa been made
by Reid as to the men who will com-
pose the starting' llue-up The prac-
tice team which carries the largest
number of letter men and which has
been showing considerable "stun"
during the training period usually
has been compoeed of the following
McClure and Williams, ends:
Crawford and Atwell, tackles; Smart
and Woods, guards; Bishop, center,
with Crabtree or Gambill at quarter
and Tampke. Malone. Collins and
Cowley running a* backs
The squad which will be taken to
Dallas is the largest ever taken to
an out of town game by the Teach-
ers College coach and It is probable
that nearly all of the men who go
to 8. M. U. will get in the play
The first home game on the Eagle
schedule will be with Decatur Bap-
tist College Oct. 7.
lew York 2-7.
2-4. Brooklyn 1-3
Philadelphia 4.
Standing
'■ J P.
... 146
146
146
146
142
146
145
143
in e18
D
Notice
TO MY FRIENDS AND THE PUBLIC
Wm. Penn—S Cento—A Good Cigar
y
V
■A
i
L
‘.-■SV
F-
1
'/
Nbwn
•i
I an
■,
SWH-IUto
cueL
SYSTEMS OF PLA Y SHIFTED IN (
SOUTHWESTERN CONFERENCE
.. S’*. I
ILL
BUICK>I928
M'tftMMic Not cewTtaoa
J < NOKt •vyvon
MMtrtK
iHiHwru
IL C. TRAVELSTEAD
215 East Hickory St. Phone 1057
the Oklahoma A. A M
Valto
rice you will find that
1 are asking from $100
rars not as nne in finish,
ide in performance.
< uwa iv fviiu waiuvi, inibki
lereare ahirred door pockets.
of your fl
f...
- "* -f**«eiiv( cams
Who Won the
Fight?
I I I wavs* natuMta SMMS
ten *****
.owewnvtaw* w»««i *»v»i* veea
even before the Sex ftuto KTOMw
go. losing eight while winning-the
same number, while on foreign
fields he had won U and lost only
two. both defeats coming at Dunn
Field in Cleveland, by the soorw of
3-2 and 1*0. He has yet to taste do*
feat tn six American League parks
this season.
■whltatb — -
very unsuccessful In
Lyons has won eight v
suffered no defeat* in the games ho
has pitched in that section.'.
“In scoring 21 wins while, losing
only 10 games, six of them by one
run. Lyons, with a .577 percentage,
boasts a mark practically 200 points
better than the record of his club.**
118 8. Lot
r
^^2
- AiO
1 am now located in the building formerly oc-
cupied by the Hufflnes Motor Co., at 215 East Hick-
ory Street, where I will buy and sell good used cars.
Will have a line of Tires and Tubes and wil also
carry a stock of Auto Accessories. I gm going to
sell them for cask an fl aruU^e the price.
I the White Sox have bean,
ictories^and
Serve.'
AJ , I
FRESH OYSTERS
Daily.
DALLAS, Sept. 23 —Seven South-
west Conference football squads are
training at their respective institu-
tions for the most strenuous sea-
son in the history of the circuit
The first tinge of fall found -the
1927 season promising the highest
class football ever seen in the epp-
ferrnce Last year a low raidnng ____
team, Texas Christen University | years track coach at the university,
defeated the Oklahoma A. As M. I will revamp
eleven, mythical Missouri Valiev ----
conference champions., ’
Announcements »of•• dtfforesit* sys-
tems of play, numerous changes in
players and other innovations have
come from ..the Southwestern
schools, several changes in coach-
ing staffs were partly responsible
for thia but the development of
the game scientifically In the
Southwest was the principal reason.
Southern Methodist University's
Mustangs, under ths direction of
Coach Ray Morrteon, plan to es-
tablish a precedent by winning two
Hicceasive championsshipe despite
the loss of Christ Corfomeglia Lo-
gan Ford and Howard Wade, bul-
wark* on defense and projectiles on
defense tn 1926 when the team was
undefeated.
Gerald Maim, third all American
quarter back in 1926, and co-cap-
tain Robert Tatum, sturdy guard,
with “Dog" Dawson, all-contercnce
end and 12 other letter men returti-
* the depleted squad
with new material and with the
assistance of Marty Karow. new
•g™.coach' from 'GKYq State 'Vntelt
versity, he expects to lay TOe foun-
ratlon for the championship in
1928. "Ox" Higgins, giant llbemu.
and co-captain of the Longhorns 1
witl) Rufus King, halfback, is one
of tiie chief factors in the Long-
horn defense. Nine lettermen re-
ported at the initial practice, but
Littlefield Is still short oi> depend-
able puunters, place-kickers ana
passers.
From Rice Institute at Houston
comes the report that Coach John
W. Heisman will use unusual for-
mations and plays. His new line
coach. Claud Rothgeb. is to devel-
op an unbalanced line, using Cap-
tain Mere Comstock and Big Ed
Herting, two big men. as ends. With
five other last year lettermen and
seven fleet graduates of the 1926
Freshman squad, an attempt will
be made to develop a swift back-
Record for Season
rpHE other day la my mail' came
a contribution from a Chicago
fan who signs his letter **Arcol,“
containing some mighty interesting
data on the work of Lyons for this
year, which I have every reason to
believe Is authentic. He says:*
"Noting that you have often
spoken in the highest terms of Ted
Lyons, whom I regard as the great-
eat pitcher in the game. I am tak-
ing the liberty of sending you so*e
unusual and unique records that
will help bear out my contention as
to the ability of Lyons.
“Up to the games of September 8,
Lyons had been able to break only
In connection with the ~ 19 to*
featt Differed bv Lvont, 1 noted
that four of them were handed Mm*
bv Cleveland, a clsb that ‘JtaF*
ways been eaty for him up to thie
veQr- . .*•'
Nats Defeat Him
rpHEN, just fo Bhow the uncen*
talnty of baseball, the day
after I received the above deserved
boost for Lyons from his Chicago
admirer, he loet his 11th game of
the year and. in so doing, his spell
over the east was broken.
In a game at Washington, sent in
to relieve Faber In the ninth with
two on the bases, every break pos-
sible went against Lyons in his role
as rescuer. At the time Chicago
was leading. 5-1.
First an easy bounding ball to
the infield that would have resulted
in a double play, retiring the side
and saving the game, took a freak
bound over Second Baseman Ward’s
head, as be was all set for the play.
Later a throw to the plate that
would have cut off the tying run
miscarried at the last moment in
such a way that the catcher missed
his man. Four runs were made,
evening the count, Lyons finally
being beaten in the 12th session in
one of the toughest games a pitcher
ever loet.
Performance Feature
YetaNewLowPrict
EXAMINl-DUdVE-COMPABE THIS GREAT
NASH SEDAffi-AND ITS EASY TO SEE WHY
THE COUHTKYHAS GONE NASH !
This new Nash Special Six Four-Door Sedan
calls your attention very forcibly to Nash
value.
Lyons Perfect Stylist X*'
TJITCHER TED LYONS et. the
Chicago White Box. la, to me,
the greatest stylist tn the game.
.Not only Is Lyons the perfect
stylist but he ts as effective a
twirler as there Is’in* the major*.
Lyons leaves nothin* to be de-
sired tn perfect rhythm, unusual
grace and a world of Stuff. Hg i*
just about the last word In the art
Of, pitching.
A* Bobby Jones goto about Ms
coif in a workmanlikemanher
that makes his brilliant perform-
ance seem almost automatic, so
perfect are hi* precision and style,
so doe* Ted Lyons go through the
pitching motions. * Jut.;,j
The career of Ted Lyons In base-
ball reads like a fiction plot for a
baseball thriller Back in 1923 Ray
Schalk. during the sprin* training
trip of the Chicago Whits Sox in
Texas, saw Lyons picthlng.for Bay-
lor University He was impressed,
so much so that In. street clothes
he donned a catcher’s glove and
worked out with Lyons for about
10 minutes. That evening Lyons
waa signed to a Chicago contract.
• • •
Coming direct to the majors
from college, he won two garnet and
lost one during the fag end of the
192S season. Since then he has
been a consistent winner. -
>T
NewBrice II.
SfeeiwIJtr M
♦ISM
*k*. **rre*T *
O.rQ ■iiMJUrJWm
**«ONA*>**r <*■
Exceptional NewdLuxuries ant
. ’J’*
low f
EARL 6.
D*
glance
tells the story
In Buick for 1928, everything you want to know
about your car’s performance—every indicator and
dial—is before you, indirectly lighted under glass.
Buick today offers greater beauty* luxury* and com-
fort than ever before—greater speed and power with
quicker getaway. See the car that surpasses all others
in popularity—and in vaMpr*-\ I
WHEN BBTTBR AUTOMOBILBS. Ata BUILT,BUICK WILL BUILD TRIM
Sedans HIM to M995 * # Tv Coopto •JW to •l«50
- - Sport Models Hl>5 to ,1525 ,
49 trim 4e.b. Km. tfidA. smeswsmmt W
Jl. ;
I w.
At its new
other msnuf
fo 1150 mol
•ad not nearly
Here is one mtH^bmartest looking, smart-
est acting cars of the pew season—built as
only Nash builds raotof cars, performing
Vanity case and smoking
set. New type, form-fitting
cushions,upholstered in rich
mohair ana baitton-tufted in
the custom ‘manner. Lstxssry
wherever you look!
And luxury in every mile and minute
you drive it. It is quick on the go, al-
ways out in front st a traffic start, effortless
on hills. There is increased power in its big
7-bearing Valve-in-Head motor. Yet that
motor is even more quiet, even smoother.
Iqfqpw/hsflMMf of Nash operating parts has
accomplished an astounding improvement
in already fine jnotor performance.
And it is the easiest steering, easiest
aged car you ever handled. It turns a corner
at a mere bint from its steering wheel. *
Finally, here is sn easier riding motor car.
--sreaMrecsM alley-steel springs, just 1B-
ted by Nash, achieve supreme travel
ft. Drive this car before you buy your
no. Mr and save f lOOtO |1JO .
f good money.
’ w
field. iMcause moet of the candi-
dates are light.
—With the exception of Gerald
Mann of 8. M. U., last year. Tex t
A. 4- M College had the iiiost out-
standing player in the conferenc
in Joel Hunt, captain, |iunt was a
sensational off-tackle ground gain- |
er and a spectacular broken field
runner Coach Dana X. Bible wild
have Hunt back again, with Bur-T
gess and Colgin, to form the nu-
cleus of hia backfield,- Lack ol i
heavy men and experienced mate- ■
rial in the line will be the Agg . ■ I
problem that Chart#* 8. Basset
new line coach from the Univer
sity of Michigan wil) have to solve
He will be assisted by R. fl Hig- I
ginbotham of old A. St M gridiron '
I
p to‘the
ir, ’tne
•mb
■ ■■■•: ■- .;'i.J
WICHITA FALLS. Sept.
New Orleans, champions of the
Southern Association. *nd Wichita
Falls, champions of ths Texas Lea-
gue, left here today far New Or-
leans to r?new the Dials Series to-
morrow. ” s
Wichita Falls took the first two
games on the home diamond, win-
ning the opener, 2 to 0. and taking
the second yesterday 11 fa 1. Tbs
local aggregation outfaaypd the
Southern champions in every de-
partment of the game yesterday
The Pelicans garnered 10 hits off
Estcll but clever fielding prevented
them from scoring. r
The Texas ciianjpions got
fame, who recently-
. New Men at 1
AlUitMigh runnto-ap tojfhe con
ference race last year, me Baylor
University Bears at Waco will tx
compelled to depend large!/ on new
material. Coach Morley Jenkin.-,
must fill five berths that were oc- ;
cupied by an all-conference men.
Abe Kelly an all-conference man. i
and Bob Halley, a star, were kilted
with sight other Baylor students in
an automobile wreck.
Coach Mattie Bell at Texas 1
Christian University, Fort Worth,
also must seek new material, his
stars having been gradtiated this
spring. r > ■»>
Arkansas University, only nut-of-
staie conference member, has only
three conference game* scheduled
The most important intersection-
al games this year included Texas
U. and Vanderbilt U. at Dallas,
October 15; Texas U. and the Kan-
sas Aggies at Austin. November 11:
3. M. U and Missouri U. at Dal-
las, October 22, and Texas Aggie?,
and Sewanee U. at Dalias, October
ed to the Mustang corral this fall.
Some promising material, yet un-
tried, also is available.
To Ke vamp Texas
Coach Clyde Littlefield, who suc-
ceeded E. J. (Doleful Doc) Stewart
at Hie University of Texas this
summer, has appealed for “spirit
and support,” Littlefield, many
DRUGS KODAKS CIQARS CANDY
* ' * « ' 4 ,
1 ■ ■ »
. \ a y
r" Seriita-’;
to
THE DENTON CAFE
223 W. Oak St.
^NASH^1
j—A r\ \tlAO5 THS woatp IN MOTOR CAR VALUI /
•St acting cars of the
t----7 i/unua (uvivl w«ie, |^iiviuimw
M only a N.sh performs.
The body is a full two inches lower in the
fashionable vogue.Window and door ledges,
the instrument board and its crown ledge,
are all finished in walnut.
The steeringNMUl is solid walnut, inlaid
and crested. There are shirred door pockets.
co.
m!
• *.
: S'~«**-.-nirv-r--w4«nWr**
'Ten Million
Dollar Slale
o/ (he
STATE EA1R
OF TEXAS
fel r,
I
, li-B . , ...... if.
r
*•°* _______,
tif.™ P“«’:
attracted ujofi fans.
Tha Fellcans will start Karr to-
morrow and Wichita Falls expects
to UN their aes. Milt Payne.
Boston defeated Chicago 2 to 1,
in ten innings and Washington de-
feated the Browns 10 to 7. -
Satiifactlon n*r*nt«ta 1
WuESM*. i 4
VAHIIOY JEWELS CO. .
J.
—
1 *. J
ft
I
Frcr
-
Thia you may know always;
“You can always find what you
want at the lowest price at Cur-
tia’ two Rexall Drug Storea.”
Thia bejpg written yeaterday,
we did not know who the winner
would be. Today we know.
— JJM.IWI ■1*111* II
.....
11 " ■■■■ntotoMKRMar..* r...■qjfo —
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Edwards, James L. & McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 35, Ed. 1 Friday, September 23, 1927, newspaper, September 23, 1927; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1369866/m1/4/: accessed June 24, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.