Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 144, Ed. 1 Wednesday, January 29, 1930 Page: 4 of 8
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DENTON. TEXAS, RKCOBP-OI
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course,
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from Knox.
fairer than that?
CAGE RESULTS I
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WOV°
BA*-**
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' LA
Minnesota. If you care tor flcures.
of failure.
4.U’
if
O'-
Xi. Coach
McAlister
-
M. U. and the players will
1
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CHICAGO. Jan. 29—George But-
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put them over the top
OVERNIGHT
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EDITORIAL FROM FORT WORTH
STAR-TELEGRAM
TzT*
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I aMrt it amwtruvteuy over Vta rote* w&to
* Fort Worth’s gas company to to ba Permitted to
ctarce its consumers t: this city, 't to net improper
to call attention to the feet that the gas company
performed with great efficiency a Priceless pubbo
and humane service during the recent uapreoodentad
cold. And the pratee duo on this account to not
diminished by recognition of the fact that what the
company did was no mara than to implied In its
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At Corvallis:
Washington 17.
At Stanford: Batnford 34; Olym-
•
-
past of baseball players is contrib-
uted by Bert Lowry- Writing from
his present observation poet on the
Stockton (Oal.) Record. Lowry enyb:
"Back in the days when I was
sports editor of the Oakland Trib-
une these was «
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Decisum Eleven
Days After Fight
The Art and Gift Shop
great shape in the four-round game pointed one iqLwtar
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IPLTOR1AL
FROM
DALLAS
NEWS
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I ’ Sth RO AT -EASE
Friday
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Fight Results
sM
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Thd Window Washer
IJACK in 1912 Doc Spears
■A-^ WfishinP the uin<lnwa zaF
’.*•
Al
frtaK 3 >1
Mk I - J
! euwtraet with the people. No. to ft diminished by
I the necessity for sharing it with an those on onset ed
one proved to be, test eat MM is the taOtoy eervtea
* • *^5 —a— m. —I,S- 1*
T7? 1
1228 Oakland. Phone 717-JL
Miaa Elisabeth Hendlejr.
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Fla.—Tony
Harry
Dr. Spears (he has studied medi-
cine) has won 66 games as a coach. -
lost eight and tied seven. Which is
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GAME TONIGHT
IS POSTPONED
The Denton Hlgh-8. M U fresh-
man beskrtbai! game sefwdutod to
be placed at the Harris* Gymnasium __________ ________
.-MrWataek tonight, has-been peet4T-At Wa»enport. la-i St -Ambrose
poned. Coach Dan McAlister an- 31; Augusiana 28
.pway
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It
11:
I’t wait until your throat begins to bother
, change to OLD GOLD now. Your throat
give you the reasons for OLD GOLD’S
To T*
hie P®*'
tto» T*'
broegbt es safely through S gentae unergtory wish
.ampis fuel supply deserve to be ranked tat little be.
‘low'the plane of ths heroic.
the necessity tor sharing it with an those connected
'With todnstrtai gas service and tienrnimptiea who
aDewod 'tbs turning of tbahr supplies tot > the service
eg domestic cansumem.
*Mfe service ea the gas eompany rendered, when
M the face of near-aero temperatures tor nearly two
-weeks it provided an unfailing supply of fuel to
meet the multiplied demand, to tbo result of long
planning and constant building up « supply ead
faculties. Neither Fort Worth nor any other of the
hundreds Of communities ssrved by the vast system
Of the Lone Star One Company has any reason for
holding anything but gratitude and admlratloo for
the engineering excellence which has marked that
company's acquisition and Unking up of sentoeo e<
supply adequate to all neoda Nor to there room
tor anything but praise for the devotloL and energy
of the army of men charged with tbo duty of keep-
ing the gas coming whatever bandtonpo the weather
may send. This supply system and the mon who
maintain it received the euprwna test during the
two weeks just passed, and they stood up
s» Of oourea the* p*;bhc has a right to expect from
its utjUtiea that in return for the special privileges
psseeded them by the franchises tbo pubUo grants
they will function efficiently in the pubUo sei vice
in times of emergency as well ^s unde- ordinary oon-
dltiena. " Nevertheless, it would . mvo been possible
for tbo gas company to have rendered much toes
perfect service and etui fulfilled a reasonable inter-
pretation of its duty. Many gas companies .count
their service well performed If it tolls down tat.,
once or twice during the Winter. 1
The Lon# Star, and Its local distributing com- '
pany, are entitled to make the proud boast that their . I
Service to weather-proof. /
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Of considerable Interest are the
reflections of Schubert Dyche, coach
of the Montana State Bobcats, fol-
lowing the Eastern tour in which
his Rocky Mountain basketball
champions won four out of seven
from some of the best teams in the
country.
‘ Hyatt (°t Pittsburgh) is a mar-
vel.’' writes Dyche "He to more Ef-
fective than Cat Thompson (Mon-
tana ace> and that is hard to ad*
It seems that Art Shires' first
fight, quite natun0iy« was in his
CHICAGO, Jan 29 —The “eleven-
day decision" has joined the now
famous “fourteen count” as Chi-
eago’s contributors to oddities of
the prize ring.
Last night, eleven days after Leo
Lomski. "Aberdeen Assassin,” had |
-
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to.. A -.J
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tis»
OLD
GOLD
TOBACCOS ... , rnakt the difference
.......not 1 coufh in • cartegs" |
exchanged round house rights and
lefts for 10 rounds with James J
Braddock, liftht-henvywelght from
Jersey City, the Illinois state ath-
letic commission revealed that an
error had been made by the ref- ■
eree and that Lomski was_ entitled
to the decision instead of a draw. |
The ruling was made official, and
the many fans, who wagered heav-
ily on the outcome of the match,
found themselves receiving or pay-
ing out as the unexpected ruling
dictated
Undue excitement and podr ar-
ithmetic on the partjof the referee, |
Davey Miller, was blamed for the ]
mix-up. At the conclusion of the
fight, one judge voted for Lomski.
“ ““ " • Braddock, while
Miller called the match a draw with I
his deciding vote. The decision was t
booed by thousands of fans, most 1 __________
of whom believed Lomski to be the[ L. A. (University of California, Loa
winner by a wide margin.
The next day. Secretary
Gorge of the commission examined
the score sheets of the Judges and
referee, the commission's explana-
tion said, and discovered that while
the judges had totaled their points
correctly Referee Miller had made a
mistake, his tally sheet showing four
A
ftoaraDy ■ Execut iwa who go through with it,
oat a tahtre of accommcdation to the public, « _
once aa extawttoa of mfatd and frame pot Mike the
otter weariness of those who tattle with the ate-
manto In tbo physical .dtraggto. The gaa wM deta-
ered, preasnro was mebiUined and DallM grMtod the
returning sunshine .shivering, tart gratofpL Mayta
few customers will think to thank the company ar,
, Its men. But the thanks have been earned by fidel-
ity under trial.
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They Delivered the Gas
It to probable that the strata throw* MM *e
mftstenence and operation force of the gaa ccmpeny
and allied companies supplying Dallas during the re-
cent severe weather waa the greeteet to their history.
And h is tart fair to note in their behalf that they
served the people of Dallas admiraMy IhriUghSSP
The ordinary user of gas does not IgMsr the ten-
sion that aeises upon those thus reepottabto fy
very lives of thousands in a time such as wp have
just passed through. But in order that DbBm may
have teat when the thermometer goes down. down,
down, many men have to labor in places of expOMre
and tmder circumstencea of bittar bodily dtoeotafort.
To The Men Who
"Delivered-T^hcTjak’!
tetter
..^tee «**•
..___________ * • 1 ■ I
TN ADDITION to expressing our thandcs directly to those
1 who enabled us to fulfill our service responsibility to users of
gas, we desire to pay public tribute to these men in recognition
of the large part they have taken in this service.
;ing success in the first ’package you
sQBokc. BETTER TOBACCOS. Cleaner, riper...
bfney-emoothness ... an exquisite flavor. Why
the risk of throat irritation? Your throat
Nft OLD GOLDS, Now. Tomorrow. Always.
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Meet To Start I
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By ASSOCIATED PRESS
fights last night: x.
NEw YORK—Victor Ferrand,
pain, outpointed Freddy Lattanzio,
It
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mBEStemil 1 ! 1—m—»
bounty Cage
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CUSS BCLUBS “
* ***
iaLL
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33
tnc lancy goatee and flowing mus-
tache who won ths.jjU.JwUcllpei___Sk
1 championship more Than a decade'
J’dSP. is attempting a comeback He ■ |
' tache. -tooris he wants to appear"
j’ounger than hjs 60-odd years. "You ■
1 must look younger these days if you .
I expect to get work or billiard op-"
[ponenta." he explained "It used to
be, you had to look old.” Sutton has
entered the national balkline tour-
nament to be held next month, in
St. Louis.
..t v "**
r fo
f £
■Ol____________—
havw.to devote their time to study.
k^Atoter said the game would be
i 4.' plawd later but that the date for
E Um content had not been fixed.
L.T C)n Friday and Saturday nights
the-Bronco eagers will meet the
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-------- .j 1
Simpson 31; |
I
St. Cloud , Pic Clubs 30.
At Reno: De Paul (Chicago) 25’;
Nevada 24.
At Oakland": Santa-Clara 33; Cal-
ur*nch> Aa»; mvrrtirha 'jenne/s A
At Topeka. Kas.: Emporiar
Teachers 25; Washburn 1®,.
At Wichita, Kas.:- Pittsburgh
Teachers 55; Wichita, U. 46.
At Wichita. Has.: Wichita Hen-
ry's 50; Haskell Indians 26
GIN TOURNEY
RLY FRIDAY
g « —. ■
UNGS FOR CLASS C
™ AMS TO BE FIXED
AT DRAWINGS SATUR-
Rumination of candidates
the Denton County bas-
ball championship will
t here Friday morning
wnen the county Interscho-
League cage tourr.a-
K’ ■" inant gets under way at the
boys* gymnasium, Teachers
Collage.
TUe first round of play in the
*" “1 division will ba staged Fri-
l|A Class C teams will go
tlon Saturday,
on and Ponder will clash
----_Frk»Ay morning in the first
Clam B engagement. At 10:30 Krum er ™tTLf°S
and Donald will play Banger and
Pilot Point, in what is expected to
be the feature game of the first
round of play. will meet at 1:30 '
Friday .afternoon and an hour later
Aubref and Lewisvine will play. At
3 30. Roanoke and Justin will meet
in th* final game of the day.
- All Class C team^ are to meet
in the gymnasium at 9 o'clock Sat-
urdAy morning to draw for place
and games win be started immedt-
Play in the two divisions will con-
tinue each . week-end until the
championships of the two divisions
are decided The winners then will
clash and the Victor in the bl-dl-
vteton game will meet Denton High
___________ for Vte county chaiqpionship and
We right td enter the district meet
- next month
I
JLoneSw Gats C
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Supplying Gas Wholesale to
MUNICIPAL GAS COMPANY
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DID YOU KNOW THAT—
JTEINIE WAGNER, new
x manager of the Boston
Red Sox la reticent when ft
comes to public oratory, but
he's a wonder at riding a
team from bls own bench.
... In the old day* Wag-
ner was one of the Rough
Riders.*’ ... He and Bill
Carrigan used to tear Ty
Cobb to pieces on the dia-
mond. . . . But when he's
called upon for a speech,
Heinie always said, "Let
Bill do R.” . . . Joa
Humphries, the Madison
Square Garden announcer,
, can t^ll you the name of
every second who ever sat in
a boxer’s corner. . . .
' Broadway has eent a nutn-, . ■
her of her most talented; r-ERBk
sons to Florida to spin the
wheel and deal the bank for
the visiting gamtioliers-
. . . Bill Tilden made such
, a startling success as r.
night club entertainer that
he is going back to tennis.
New York, (i|).
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — Young
ed Harry Wallach, Brooklyn, tlO).
WH KI SBARRE, Pa. — Johnny
ar, Cleveland .outpointed Steve
aMki Bridgeport, Conn., (10).
EMH RGIT—Battling Criss. De-
4a knocked out Bill Browne, Pen-
ig, Mich.,'(I).
UO6 ANGELES—Fidel LaBar ba,
F "Angeiar, knocked out Johnny
fas Los Angeles, (10).
•T. PETERSBURG,
Leto, Tampa .outpointed
Fortes Chicago, (10).
'3/ ————
ST. 1.OUIS, Jan. 29.—Primo Car-
Mta, Italian giant, will display his
size and boxing ability tn a St.
Louis ring Feb 11 against an un-
named opponent. The bout was ar-
- Jtanged last night at a conference
of Miq re Malloy, Chicago promoter,
M. J. 1‘lcltering, manager of the 8t.
arena, Senaca Taylor, state
commissioner, and Camera's
cr, Billy Duffy.
'
oa» Co**®7
10
B'SffiW
bi] William Braucher^
_____ - - _»D •
Additional light on the pugiltotlc home town of Italy, Texaa. And, as
Hoff in toe St. Paul Dispatch ro-
tates 1U • . . \ .
Art and hto friends were storming
down the street amusing ttemaelvut
by shooting Roman candles at pas-
sersby One big tough egg from a
semester examinations arg on At La
rado 34.
- At Golden. Denver 45; Colorado
Miners (4.
At Colorado Springs: Colorado
College 38; Colorado Teachers 17
Oregon State 19;
' here (before he got 10-round fights)
1 and who fought several of the test
boys in his class. He was Eddie
Mensor, who played several seasons
In the Pacific Coast League and
then went up to the Pittsburgh Pir-
ates. Your archives may give a lit-
tle dope on MensoW*- — ■ -Mk.-J-*-
Boxer-ballplaytk Mensor was good
enough to stick with the Pirates for
Hiree seasons. 1912 to 1914, but his
record indicates he may have been
a harder hitter in the ring than on
the diamond.
His best mark was 283 tor 39
games in 1912, a fairly respectable
average in those days, before the
advent of the lively ball. Mensor
was released to Columbus of the
American Aaeoctation in 1915 but
the trail from there is lost. 3 t
y’
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thereto
phy of Purdue to unsteady and this
makes Purdue an in-and-out team.
Butler is a groat team but Loyola
Tiy* ■*«"
a coldly sctanti|M>) Via mp»
fessional type of baskotMU Pitt
Ins Hyatt. Butter has the msn and
the mechanics and. at course, we
miss Brick Breeden* , ,
was a guard on three
champtonship Montana
State teams, one ot Uxe greatest
defense men ever developed fa
Rocky Mountain basketball.
The Bobcats, advtoss the expwrt
Mr. F. H. Frawley from hto ob-
servatten post for the Associated —-
Frees in Denver, would like to take
on the Eastern or Middle Western
basketball champions in a post-sea-
son series. This to on the assump-
tion Montana State repeati) in tbs
Rockies, where Brigham Young,
coached by "Ott" Romney, and “
Utah Aggies may offer formidi
opposition.
* By ASSOCIATED PRESS
L«st night's basketball:
At Greenville: Wesley College 27;
Lon Morris Junolr College 24.
At Lubbock: Texas Tech 35; Abi-
lene Christian College 26.
At Huntsville: Bam Houston State
Teachers 30; Daniel Baker 29
At Dayton: Cincinnati 24; Day-
ton 20
At Wahpeton, N D.: Wahpeton
Science 39; Dickinson Teachers 19.
At Indtanota. la.:
Western Union 14.
At SL -Qtatad, Minn
Teachers 35; Minnesota Aggies 21.
31; Augustana 28.
At JMjrtteiito*. Central 30; Cen-
e: Wyoming 35;’ coio-
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IJ
was
■*-* washing the windows of the
chapel at Knox College, Galesburg,
Ill. He received a room iu the
chapel in return for keeping the
building spotless. He didn't stay
long, however, and the next thing
you heard ot him, his name bobbed
up as one ot Walter Camp's All-
America selections, from Dart-
mouth. He coached at Dartmouth ______________
and West Virginia before going to I he has always been afraid. Afraid
........-
tav gattlhg by in neighboring town announced pub-
of those things at him would be
knocked silly.
"Of course,” said Art, “I've never
been a guy to go out of my way for
a fight but I could always take care
of myaelf, aee—so I goes up to this
mug and fires the candle right at
him. Well, the next day when we ap-
peared before the mayor to answer
charges, that guy looked like a
freight train had hit him.”
Co West, Young Coach
TIMMY PHELAN and Doe Spears I
A "are the latest of the football
mentors to join the growing group
of eastern coaches along the Pacific
shore line.%Coast writers call their
region "the big league of football"
and say that when coaches achieve
proficiency In their art In the minor
leagues of the east, they come to
the "big show." And, looking bark
at the season's record, we are not
one to say they are al! wrong.
Howard Jones, whose Southern
California team made the Pitt Pan-
ther meow like a house cat when
j Its tail is stepped on. is a younx
1 man from Yale who stopped off at
| Iowa on his journey ove£ thq
| I'.reeley trail. Pop Warner, alum-
| nus of Cornell, taught Indians at
I Carlisle and then coached at Pitts-
i burgh on his way to the Dolden
' U^e. Bill Spanning^ -who was at
Minnesota before Spears, and whose
alma mater is Wabash, no less, has
been producing good teams at U. C.
1 Angeles). Slip Madigan wus gradu-
Walter tted by the fathers of Notre Dame
and by Knute Rockne, after which
he went to St. Mary's and produced
tome rlp-snortlng football teams.
Paul Schissler of the Oregon Aggies
Is an old Nebraska and Lombard
man. .
*____t____________ The coast sella its baseball play-
rounds for Lomski. two for Brad- tra to ’be east, and tt}6 east^sentfs
dock and four even. quite a few of Its Grade A coaches
------------------- j to the far west. What could be
I Phelan’s Fear
1MMY PHELAN could not learn
Latin. That Is why he scored an
I average of only 96.4 in his first year. '
He couldn't make the Columbia Uni-
versity prep school team, but ho ■ !
did. He couldn't run a fishing crew
on the Columbia river, either, but
he needed the money, so he did.
Now he has tackled a job that prob-
ably will prove to be thu biggest
test he ever had.
Phelan says the reason bo has
been able to get things done Is that
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 144, Ed. 1 Wednesday, January 29, 1930, newspaper, January 29, 1930; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1369955/m1/4/: accessed June 21, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.