Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 265, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 2, 1936 Page: 4 of 6
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FAGEFOVR
- I
Baseball I
GAINESVI
E2RA‘S
BY ALL-STARS
THIS WEEKEND
3
a
or
SOMEWHAT TARNISHED
Special
rat
s
E
LES
for this weekend at the Cooke mer -stadium track at Princeton
d arze
Classified
pat
track
events are scheduled for Friday
Washington 13-14, Philadelphia
S'
foremost
in the
New York 5, Boston 0.
8<
‘figures at
1
post- various events have increased each
going now, it’s highly doubtful if poned. rain.
3
10—1
one-
A
I * F<
two in the current pennant chase, i
half-mile, the mile am
the
a
$
the rodeos. These tiekets are fur-
RENT
1/OR
12- Rei
rOR BENT
win.
; two
trend of the day for the leagu
ished.
Second Coming of Christ
of
made by the evangelist were that.
.333
.329
9
1
Pi- .
15a
ruin after
mach plensure.
17 -
SAI.
FOR
X
Orville Lce
Torrential downpours resulted in
telegram
a
Just what is
4
and
asking federal
unless it’s a little of every
- 2-- S
Crop damage
there was heavy.
roads,
ALL KINI
S of
what
803
Want Ads ring the cash register, bridge.
better than .300.
SEE W D
Fy
for
I
>
they
the league Jaddeu when the
Co. 410%
Bos-
compelition in the new Red
years
’ 31—Hou
Hi
f rom
wife .
i
onstrate!)
I
3
41
PATMFINDER
* Retist ered
tsEtswav
c
• »
REBELS END FIGHT
E <’i
L
.the
inter-city
second
with
ALL-WEATHER?
widespread”
Sale
*
+
1 Give* you 43% more
The little hand, long active in
Standard on the
new can. World’s most
7
H
-1 ’
Homer Yarbr
Q
T
oday
s sur-
the last of
• 5
chic
tains.
ood
re ;
m
l
%
r »»mr
$5-50
*
Un hr rl.
-
55 u:
I
management, is
. »
CASH PAID
io
I
F
Brown
Mol
$4.95
N
A
game
wben
of the
GAINESVILLE
1933
NATI
NAL BANK
deal
g
f
“A Good Bank To Be With”
nigf
200 N. Commerce
Phone 431
i
l
L
06
f
cOME
GO
yOU NEED
Km--
sr
E
«97
’ I'
That “Sure” Feeling
Confidence. among its patrons, in this Bank's character and
Our Prices
Start at
Dodgers, winning 10-3, after los-
ing the opener 6-1 to Van Mun-
Senators, who went into a tie
the Red Sox for third place.
City schoolboy who found himself
ineligible for the American Olym-
pic team after cracking a world
record for the 200 meters at Cam-
with
teed
were shoved deeper into the
ond division when the Bees
•1
n, to
game
Texas, shot -mnkers accounted for
Six of these whichbrought the. to-
tal for the year to seventy three ,
"The great migrations of his-
tory to some extent were caused
by soil depletion, to some extent
by changes of climate," he said.
100 meters, a feature of the Na-
tional Senior A. A. U. track and
field championships Saturday. Un-
der favorable conditions, the listed
A R POR
palring.
Pct
.686
.536
.535
.535
.522
.463
.358
.344
Pct.
.623
.621
.557
34
38
45
47
47
i
l
ane the voung sorrel-ten plnsed
nn exeellent brand ef rolf. fnii-
he will have
eateh up with
town
arren-
and
No doubt the project would give
Coach W hard a chance to round
.hisgharges into top form for their
split-
the
IGH'T I W M
. liver. H eri
fair
He
i
1
home.
Col.
I a
Na-
• mt moog •
: UNCLE (3
i
L
I Pittsburgh ...
Cincinnati ...
New York ...
Boston ......
Philadelphia .
Brooklyn____
this week for the first time.
The Ohio State negro ace will
toe the marks with some of his
Our Prices,
Start at
DOUBE
ARWWEEL•
7. One b ock
«AUTC>‘ Lo Al
L.
22
32
33
33
33
36
43
42
L.
26
25
31
30
32
38
46
47
Morris Sheppard,
aid.
pected to compete for the cash
prizes which are being paid to
‘winners.
Out-of-state Centennial visitors
1
i
I
’ pl
r-F y
C Mi
LT Ja”
d
iwg h«
hr hurt
Jimm y
HOW THEY STAND
Texas League .
I
fight against the governme
day.
ra, 13.00
h. . Addir
Les ve c
NEW Ab D RF
$3.00 down,
bong, cai bon a
Office aid sc
sist of bronc riding, calf roping,
senior and junior steer riding, and
exhibitions of steer bulldogging.
The number of entrants in the
bevi
phi
W.
... 43
... 41
• • • 39
... 30
...37
... 33
... 23
...23
adv el
infor
Pct.
.617
.560
.554
.553
.531
.392
.390
.390
J
7
Push Water
(Continuea Frum rage One)
. popular tire at any price. Look it over!
It's our biggest seller.
National League
Brooklyn 6-3. Philadelphia 1-0.
Boston 8. New York 6.
Pittsburgh 9. St. Louis 4.
Why Gulf is the Gas
for the Fourth
*
,3
Death Toll
{Contmuea mrona rage One;
# "--—
Mexican army, drowned at Pie-
dras Negras, across the Rio Grande
from Eagle Pass, after a cloud-
satisfied with th number of base-
. ball fans who attend their affair—
By ALAN GOULD
Associated Press Sports Editor
46—
WILL TF
tractor
for 4 disc
youth and nnobher by a bewhisk- . San Antonio entry,
rred gent seventy summers young
WEDNESDAY'S RESULTS
Texas League
cAl Night Games)
Dallas 2, Fort Worth 0.
Wefll show youwhyithey'reithe 1936
.cows Wit
O. McCain
All built to deliver LOWEST'COST kr mile
service by world’s largest rubber com-
pany—maker of the most tires by millions
about other sports
Steers’ visit in their
"Unprecedented
i stroyed lives, r
UBLE RODEO Jesse Owens, Ohio Negro Ace, To Try WEATHER FAILS
BILL SET FOR His Luck On Princeton Track This Week INTERFERE WITH
horses and received safe conduct
Leader) Francisco cipitation was more
period in the hills, according to
it the Paris News.
need of pre-
{SPORT
Olympic campaign.
Bonthron Trails -
Bonthron hasn't had much luk
in his big races at Princeton dur-
ing the past few years. He ran
his fastest mile there in 1933, when
the watches caught him in 4:08.7
but ran second to Jack Lovelock’s
world record of 4:07.6. The follow-
ing year Cunningham cut the rec-
I ord to 4:06.7, with Bonthron trail-
C3 ALL-
UWEATR
The heroes of the best perform-
ances in each of these events, Ben
Eastman, Glenn Cunningham, and
Don Lash, will be 'back on their
favorite foot-racing grounds Sat-
urday for the national champion-
ships.
Eastman, close to his best again
after a year's layoff, will encoun-
ter the strongest field of 800-me-
ter runners this country ever has
“AINESVILIEDATLY.REGIBTERGAINESVHAa.TEKASJ.
V,Mh,,3
55
GROWN-UPS SHOULD CELE-
• RATE the Fourth too! Drive
somewhere. Do things. But to
get maximum mileage use a
gasoline that’s made specially
for July weather conditions in
this district. If you don’t, pan
of your fuel will blow out the
exhaust unburned, wasted. That
Good Gulf Gas is “Kept in
Step with the Calendar”—its
chemical formula is suited to
the season. That’s why allofit
) goes to work, none of it goes to
P watte. Tq^ ouitkfull
our own
g, **.
.g
2
in onr ovinion.
3383
36223204899293592850295: 3 78538382883
5665535 222 20 2 3 2228
world mark of 10.3 seconds as well
as Owens' recently achieved figure
of 10.2 may take a beating. Jesse
can put on the pressure in the cen-
tury because the only other event
in which he is competing during
the afternoon is the broad jump.
This is only half his usual com-
petitive qtota. 7
May Achieve Record <
GE THOSE N"‛
ODYEARS
'Vg
“when Jesus comes to Gainesville | .
there will be a great separation q.
with every Christian caught out
itances, the
id two-mile.
47
I X .
DENTON
fects," the plea read. "Too late to
replant crops.”
sec- j
came
t gentleman. 32
and two children, swept to their
deaths as they clung to the wreck-
age of their flood-pounded home i
near Hardy's Bluf;
Walter Wiley Teague. 10, Fort
Worth, and an unidentified Mexi- }
can, killed in the wreck;
FOR SALS
Broadwa y
!. <
River Belt , realizing that the Wild,
rht s‛ schednle will be much
the number three
Ruffing’s twirling ’
_ Cooler weather followed precip-
1934 and 1936 and the “freakish itations in Dixie but temperatures
and Saturday nights.
The program will begin each quette’s Raiph Metcalfe,
night at 8 o’clock, and will con- - - 1 -
Frederico Vazquez. also would like
to quit.
ALL PRICES
Look Our stock Over
Before You ■
Buy!
PACE
BROTHERS
1M N. Chestnut Street
Phone No. 7
LnlIIII!
" I
[
Where They Play Thursday
Texas League .
(All nighj)
Dallas at Fort Worth.- [ J
Oklahoma City at Tulsa.
San Antonio at (Houston.
Beaumont at Galveston.
American League
Detroit at Chicago.
Philadelphia at Brooklyn.
St. Louis at Pittsburgh.
Chicago at Cincinnati.
•• The hurling brigade had
slightly better time in the :
.A Life-Saver for Pocketbooks!
PATHFINDER
Many of our customers say it'a the biggest
money’s worth in town! World’s first-choice
economy tire —over 22 million sold to date.
Real Goodyear quality. Prize value for suret
.especially since the Steers
lead mg the league and are al
the classist outfit to hit
to meet Christ in the air and
gloriously changed in a moment
. without death; that all the uncon.
nto one-half
pieased with hin
rivals, including Mar-
Al F
plow
plow
at three classic disi
body was found on a farm near
Buda.
Private Benjamin A. Castro,
Abstract Records In
Charge of Marie Timmis
The Cooke County Abstract
Company, formerly located
over Segraves Grocery,
southeast corner square. has
moved records to 40114 East
California Street and placed
under management of Maria
Timmis, who invites your ab-
stract work. Phone 214.
MARIE TIMMIS
E. California Street
Office phone 214
After fi p. m C
2 Khti - '
SALT LAK
1 The flri; ig sq
by water ero-
9 more "seri-
Present plans call for the Paris
High school : gridders to invade
Oklahoma for.a ten days training
States really tis changing, it is es- $1,000,000. _______
sential that we study it as a great W. Ellison, Gonzales county, said
national problem. the damage would easilv run to
in eontnet with
E Stack I
1143
classified ch K
in wordint > >
in person at »f
aren’t working any wonders.
with ohly three regulars batting
‛ l ’ *
All are BLOWOUT* PROTECTED HR EVERY PLY
by patented SUPER TWIST Gord — extra
. springy, longer lasting (ask us to dem-
next three
are given free courtesy tickets to on a farm a mile east of Kyle;
the damage would easily run to
500.000.000 acres ' that figure-.
day. Hob
Chamber of Commerce here, im-
mediately dispatched
to Senators Tom Connally
the United . was
The list of dead included:
Clarence Warndtte, his
•1 3
E 333863*83392383 398
♦ ag , i
, Cleveland Indians
wben thev took a. double bill from I
the Athletics as the. Indians were
low with
• I
the backbone of this institution's assets. We
. Chicago at Cincinnati,
Boston R Sox Owner Finds Money Will Not Buy League Pennant
STRAIGHT
6 DROPPED
cents at Chicago and almost five
cents Minneapolis. Corn, oats and
barley moved up to new seasonal
peaks here, *
Gauging Damage
Official summaries gauged the
damage of heat, aridity, hail, in-
sects and stem rust. Winter and
spring grains in South Dakota
were termed beyond help except in
the southeastern section. Grass-
hopper invasions were reported
there and in Nebraska. North Da-
kota's feed situation grew more
acute as crops continued to de-
cline.
Showers doused scattered sec-
tions of the Midwest an South.
USED
CAR
thank you for what you have done . -
for us."
Evangelist Rice preached on
"What Will Happen In Gainesville
When Jesus Conies.” from the i
scriptures in Matthew 25: 1-13; I
Corinthians 15: 13, 52 and I Thes-
salonians 4: 13-18,
Visitors present were Mrs. Eliz- ■
abeth Ridgway, ’business manager |
of The Sword of the Lord and of
The Sword Book Room and Miss I
Lola Mae Bradshaw, secretary. [
both of Dallas, and Rev. Wade 1
Hill, evangelist.
Exactly sevent y-four aces were
ecconnted for last week in the As-
so iated Prees Hole-in-On Club.
Meiuding one bv a twelve-year-old
can obtain for their first
:• ‛!
-
■
I
I
11
want to be saved. I
coaches agree that if and when
Owens perfects his starting tech-
nique the Buckeye bullet will come
closer than any other present-day
performer to achieving the 100
yards in 9 seconds flat or the 100
meters in 10 seconds.
Within the past three years,
Princeton's track has, furnished
the setting for world record races
whs too much for the Boston club.';
The Tigers moved into place num- i
ber 2 when thev blasted but 25 safe j
knocks for a -total of 21 tallien •
to humdiate the Whte Hose The 1
ro in
Phe n
" Ice, 106%
k TRY Tu
service
American League
Detroit 21, Chicago 6.
. ! t — ..............— t— i St. Louis 16-5, Cleveland 12-5 ... . . ..
der, young man by the time this.) (second game tie; called end ninth, county fair grounds, and cowboy
American league race has run its darkness. I -----‘—3--- *— E-de-
course. — 1 .
WILL SE
ilot in 80
for lat mc
South Fort
Foit Wort)
Values That Are
Hard To
Beat
• They’re Dependable
• They’re Good! .1
ALL MODELS
lesa he threw into building up the
glittering array of Red Sox w on't I
buy the American league pennant.
In fact, from the way things are 1
«{
‘the at present slightly-tarnished
gold plated lineup will finish
Rob (ooke, former sportn
*rribe for the Register and now
eonneetra with Sweetwater Re-
porter in the mame raparity,
dropped in to pny his respeeta tn
him old htamping grounds and
former fellow sufferers yester-
hrizht future in thia svort and
with n little trniniz from mome
ef the biu «hnta we believe hr
"III art somewhere in the zoir-
•"a woria.
of acres of rich farmland, reveal-
' ing bent, leveled erops. Farmers
ruefully surveyed Cotton and corn
creek; 1 .
Mrs. Jesus Garza and two
daughters, drowned in Plum creek
Senators climbed
months of toil. • •
Red Cross Aid Aasked ling.. Both Americans took a Nick-
GONZALES, Texas, July 2 , ing from Lovelock in 1935 in the
(AP).—D. H. Kenton, county Red second Princeton invitation meet
Cross chairman, estimated today and this year Bonth:
and the
that, murde
die at dawu
" lar hovs mtn
positiom Red
writ no bin ~rhol-giri eompler-
inn. Hr and hin better hair are en
joying ■ twe-we
during whjek tine
nw oppottunity lb <
(AP) Rebel
1 GOLD-PLATED UNEUP HAS Beaumont 4, Galveston 3 (14 in-
LOST SECOND PLACE; “
in Plum
DURANGO, Mexico,
388 3356333303
Lcl-
P . 1
• ... 1
W: 0 •
E i•
-
dio repairin
4reighton &
the almost as wild-hitting right- Chicago
cap, 5-5, called in the ninth be-
cause of darkness. Meantime, the
BLUE RIBBON VALUES
N Prize QualityjatEvery Price
2 All give you the Goodyear MMRGIN of
i I SAFETY — Center "Traction for quicker
g stopping (letusishow you!)
No advertisem
’ 3*
Tulsa Beaumont and
offer financial service and cooperation such as a business re-
quires of its Bank — such as an individual appreciates in the de-
pository he selects. May we serve you? _
vorttes
Alberto Bellon Santana,
I
hia exe utio
World's Greatest Money-Saver!
SPEEDWAY
our way if you want the finest, safest,
1 * longest- milenge tire a small price buy* today
1 - with all the Goodyear Blue Ribbon feature*.
I - । Here'* the top* at
Texas circuit in several years. Or-
dinarily the best baseball town in
Texas, Dallas isn’t enjoying a full
house at the park by any means,
and the officials blame the Cen-
tennial This mammoth show is
bringing the crowds to the 'city
but the hoys from Cedar Falls and
Kahamazoo are treading off to the
Centennial grounds to see the big
show rather than the Steer Sta-
dium to observe the work of Alex
Gaston-and company. This is just
the reverse to what Steer officials
had hoped for Guess they will
have to put on, a follies number
between jnnihgs if they hope to
compete w th the showboys out at
the Exposition, grounds.
everythng. Pl
1
। ton BeCs staged a belated rally to
I eke nut an 8 to 6 v ctory. This was
Concerning the second coming
Christ the principal points
Five aver4ge
Lines o
will cost the
AND SATURDAY NIGHTS AT world records at sprinting, low
COUNTY FAIR GROUNDS hurdling and broad jumping dur-
,, ‘ \ , . ing a meteoric career, will be
A double rodeo bill has been set turned loose on the celebrated Pal-
America’s foremost
*8888
ad
“e8
33
■ 3323
333833
— - • •
........... ...
tional league, although th ni
- rates belted three St. Louis pitch-
ers for 15 hits and a 9-4 w
’ cut the Cards’ lead to half a
। over the Cubs, who were rained
but at Cincinnati. The Giants
By SID FEDER
Mr. Tom Yawkey from all indi-
cations, will be a wiser, If not sad-
.% ounE
hin fimhing and renew acquaint-
mneen with hia many friends in
I woke epunty. He atlll pecks
owt his “Sedend Guesm," a moat
interenting column that we fol-
, 15--For
FoRSAL
Centenni
gskets —
goo o
e.e
- <
I* -
■ 8:
P
I m
» fk
Ten worde
5 4 ent
IS nings). '
Houston 6-6. San Antonio 4-4.
Tulsa 11, Oklahoma City 4.
than during the same 1934 period.
Grain trader’s concern took the
form of a buying rush yesterday.
They studied reports that Cana-
545 da's wheat area was also menaced,
*536, that 1116 world wheat surplus the
4651 smallest in nine years, that the
*05 I domestic carryover was the tiniest
since 1928. Wheat advanced 31
Hpderw
Denton, Vise
tiea, Al—
FOR SAL-1
•team d
spudder a
hole tool ec
mast with
54. fet elf
ing capacit
4ently retu
iA qperatio
E Main
Gonzales county were
and homeless.
Lynn Smith, president of the
Sluggers On Spree
The Detroits expressed
figured conservatively at
County Judge Willis
INCE the revAral of the Fort
• Worth Cats the attendance
Cowtovn have grown
< ivie i eague were
n ~imilar gexture
. • He estimated
d.the had been destroyed 1
" OW, sion and 150,000,000
J ously damaged” by
1 and Flem Hall are bsy talking carelessness." u
during the Wallace, heading for St. Paul
* city and Duluth, Minn.. On his tour, as-
uston serted rainfall the
were the other winners, the, latter weeks would determine whether
taking a double header from the the drought would equal the de-
structive siege of 1934.
Havoc Termed Worse 1 Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Haynes and
Hopkins opined the havoc wasiBaby Haynes, drowned in Plum ;
than two years ago icreek:
" -- ... ----- Antonio Gozales, his wife Mon- j ____
and his baby. Eulalio, 1 L ---
drowned in Plum creek;. ' "" ,
Ignacio Hernandez and Zabinp •a ' *
Durango state., entered the
of Canatlany yesterday, s
dered guns. ammunition
The big ivory hunter from 'Sos-! 5-4.
ton is finding out almost daily I
that the million dollars, more or
rGhpAr MntxKoms.mxi, 1999
---- . NEW YORK, July 2 (AP).—
; COWBOY EVENTS FRIDAY Jesse Owens, who has cracked ten
. Twenty-one dead
and 14 missing were listed as
with a q Mle)
""T--d-n tha
e2mmd
vag
gos three hit pitching. lace pointed to the possible'loss of
Boaton Red Sox "srtapparenthgsprttnomairapiinKragersanalsiTexaslfloods. .
, - b .. l. . . hing- seared prairies of the Midwest at ; streams swelled,
oming campaign It is usually a IThe pitching is fair, but neither suburban Evanston yesterday, he "
Lefty Grove nor Webley Ferrell cited the protracted dry spells of
are going as well as they should, t— ..... .....- • • -
The Sox hitting, too, rs payable, weather of the past seven years at many points reached or ap-
But, outside .of Jimmy. Fox, the as threatening indications of a proached the 100-degree mark,
belting beauties from the hub city shift in climate. _______________
week, reaching a new high last
Friday night, and this week a still rHernandez, drowned
greater number of cowboys are ex- creek;
Monico Valdez, drowned in Plum
h
Voe -( N
6°v
Indianapolis held c...
lead w th thirty wile Fort Worth
ani Hallais ranked second rih
An unidentified child, drowned
rished by the Fair Association and in Plum creek;
may be obtained from drug stores, i An unidentified Mexican, whose
cafes, filling stations and tourist
camps in Gainesville.
• From 50 to 100 of these visitors
have been attending the rodeos
each Friday night, and are intro-
duced to the audience during the
show.
Many of these visitors have wit-
nessed rodeos for the first time
here, and their comments on the
shows have been very interesting.
a00avdlt
sezs2me
1232343
i 1
ugher this season than in the | theGiant’sf our!thstra ig htloms.,
pa . He opines Sherman, Denison The Dallas Steers
ane caines ville are going to offer claws of the Kitties from ( ‘
....... stifr competition for his fa- toyn, this time blank.,)g them in
’ a 2 to 0 p tcher s duel . Ed
produced. Cunningham meets his Tonight the evangelist prom- .
burst in that section perennialnrvalssBilBontorontand ises to give what the Eible says
Fears " dimin- wnwsefrsossexnane.
ished. The Guadalupe, treacher- i 000 meters run* scheduled Friday - and about whipping children. The j
ous stream given to quick rises, evening- as a final American Olym- ' sermon subiect will be "Rebellious
was out of its banks south of Gon- pic tryout. , wrsn ind Slncker Husbands- or ,
rales but gave evidence of reced- , Bonthron, spurred by his come- | “A Bible Kind of Home and How
,.1 back at Cambridge, where he to Have It." Friday night the sub- •
For miles rich farming lands of [ turned the tables on Venzke, will ject will be "Be Sure Your Sin
the section were covered with • be particularly anxious to win this Will Find You Out.”
water. Gonzales itself was threat-j Saturday. It may be his farewell
ened for a while water standing । to foot-racing at his Alma Mater,
several feet deep; in streets. The, for he plans to retire after the
Guadalupe at this point was about *
two miles wide.
. Near the confluence of the San
Gabriel river and the Little River
waters retreated from thousands
‛FOR REN T
mn. 9D3 :
jon/idonce
sa
stayed out of the cellar by
ting a doubleheader with
plants reduced 1.6
W.
48
a tremendous 21-6 scoring Detroit ............ 37
spree against the White Sox. Boston ..............
| Washington ........38
the ■ Cleveland ......... , 36
-----------------... .cugue, as Chicago ........... 31
pitchers came at a dime-a-dozen 1 Philadelphia ....... 24
against slugging bats on all aides, j St. Louis ...... 22
The lowly St. Louis Browns blasted * National League
the Indians 16-12 in the first game Team—)
of a doubleheader and deadlocked | St. Louis ...
rane, took over the runner-up po- j Team—)
sition with their fifth straight New' York
SEBAPENy a»
“Let George Do It”
“If the weather of
consistently, which is quite nat-
ural. However, the officals of the
Dallas Steers aren’t particularly
‛ 1•
How abouti,
who arranged Garcia
render, received word
the Durango rebel
day national track and field pro- ;
gram at Princeton. Competition .
begins at 2 p. m. (Eastern stand- j
jard time) with the first track
events run off an hour later.
Among the sprint contenders will
much easier task to condition a ■
group of athletes if they have '
nothing in think of but the bust- !
ness on hand They have plenty to
eat,:a change of scenery that in-
vites sound siren and an opportu-
nity to think football, for that
period of time at east. Lee is of
the ^opinion that the Paris hovs
will need all the conditioning that
I flood has de-
crops, livestock, be Bob Rodenkirchen, the Jersey
homes, and personal ef- —“
drooring me and tieing another'
with the lowly Browns.
With Dizzy Dean taking a much
needed rest on the bench, the i
Carde dropped a 9 to 4 count to I
the Pittsburgh Pirates, the latter 1
rh.h stecine a 15-hit attack on '
three Cardinal hurlers. And the
Giants continued their slide down
FIRE, TORNADO
And AU Kinds nt
INSU RANOE
The name of George Grice on
your Insurance Policy to
like Sterling on silver.,
Geo. M. Grice
116% South Dixon Street
Telephone 73
nineteen each And still we read
no casualties as a result of
the se thrilling experiences How
twelve fans can die of heart fail-
ure merely listening to a prize-’
finht while srvent & four golfers
"survive a hole-inbne shot in a
• trifle puzzling to.11* H
N fioek of loralkolf fnnn RTF
goine info hudele to dixeuss the
o prohnbi lit • . po~~i bi ll t y nne fenn-
ability of sending voung Hu- *
t hert Fvan~ to the :nvitntien
If/ tournnmevt th hr held lit
4 Ieborne riut. 11. I n-t venr the
accounts nust
couht wU i 1
haye a telei
tn their own n
Phon e » «
1 • V
Our compet
Yanks Win Third Team— W. L.
The Sox sank out of seqond- Dallas ....... 50 31
place yesterday, dropping their Beaumont .... b. 42 33
sixth straight game as the Yanks Tulsa . ...... 46 37
made it three in a row over* the Houston ........... 42
Bostons with a 5-0 victory, to Oklahoma City.....43
stretch their league lead to 101, San Antonio 29
games. The Tigers, who seem to' Fort Worth ........36
have recovered somewhat from Galveston ...... • • 30
the loss of Manager Mickey Coch- American League
. . "much worse” 1*
AGAINST MEXICO although not so wide in scope. ,
The weather bureau at Wash- suejo,
July 2 ington decided the
non-skid milenge. $
thrpugh 8-6, and the Phillies
Little but loud the Want Ads.
Acain the Vanks took a fall
from the Red Sox, blanking them I
5 to 0 and shoving the million dol- t
" "9" ‛n‛ “54“7 * -J•
hin oniv romplaint being thikt
the hiuh wind ofttimes plnys
havoe with hin equllibrium as
it
Pl
FIR
t — -
h
kg
Garcia, and his 23 menelosed their
nt to-'
mobile
. , iron trailed far
between 300 and 400 families in back as*Venzke nosed out Cun-
destitute ningham.
The Junior A. A. U. title meet !
tomorrow inaugurates the two- 1
—* 1 ।
Ten word 1 »
ce nt:
off against Connie Mack's pitch-
ing youngsters “with a total of 32
hits, for a twin bill win, 13-$ and
14-4.
K? T
WE
■ - F ■
REVIVAL HERE) yertea win be tert ehina to — ,
. ' through the great tribulation, ar .
• ___unparalleled time of bloodshed and ’
NUMBER OF VISITORS ARE trouble; that many who expect to ■ »
PRESENT WEDNESDAY AT wil be lert behind like ‘
JOHN R. RICE MEETING gins who had their lamps but no ; 4 •
1 ' , oil, church members but not born -
1 Threatening weather diminished again Christians; that all the
"the crowd slightly at the John R. ; Christian dead will be raised at
Rice revival on the market square ; the same time with glorifiea ,
Wednesday night, but there were bodies and we will meet them iq I -
several conversions. One young Ithe air; that this coming of Christ I
.woman was converted whose sis- । for all His saints may come at 1 -
ter profesed faith in Christ the any moment!"
night before. The sister said to | ' i Icgj,, i
the minister, ’T got her to come.Re G . Stroh.led the en-
to church. I told her i she would ithusiastic singing of the choir
hear you preach once she would icongregation and sang "The Oldi
----- -mcertainly Fashiohed Meeting.” I
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Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 265, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 2, 1936, newspaper, July 2, 1936; Gainesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1437762/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cooke County Library.