Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 47, No. 269, Ed. 1 Saturday, October 9, 1937 Page: 4 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Gainesville Register and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Cooke County Library.
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GAINESVILLE DAILY REGISTER, GAINESVILLE, TEXAS.
SATURDAY’ AFTERNOON, OCTOBER 9, 1987.
SATURDAY AFTERNC
Gainesville Leopards Win Easy Victory Over Denton Brones Friday Night, 27-0
BUNTS
UNCLE 11
GAINESVILLE REGI
a qual 1
DADDY. ME .SAS ‘THE WORLD
With
ent
a
s
he will, spend the fall and winter ■
Reserve Life has a plan to m.
both teams lateraled all over the
field
4
Valley View Eagles lost a foot-
patron
School Leopards scampered to
an
• regula • accou
Quite an exhibition of razzle-daz-
&
Phone 525-
■ /
pted a - pass and ran 80 yards,
Our
4
/
class if ed clerk
will
ads"b
ffi
ners repeat the following year?
name
Female Hei
- 6
McCuistion
losing. They had
little
trouble
-
JIMMIE TROUTT
I Looms for R
10
a
Second Touchdown
1.
South Giand. Phone 2
*
DAILY SPECIAL
* ROOM a
id board. 1003
MONDAY, OCT. 11
12
Apartments
I -
Spiced Green
\
P
press box, which caught a couple
n +nne zxP 4,04A, Ae An.... :e :4
I
brick
s I •
Garag
e: ment. #ee W. A. Hens
* FOR re: NT
Furnish
incom-
/
FOR RET
?
. 13
Hi Rises For R
AGAIN-OLDSMOBILF
House
STEPS OUT AHEAD!
A
4
17
Livestock
FOR SALE Pony. Phon
Highland Park
Baby Chicks
1
*aevgen.
1 h
" OFFICIAL
g
Dixie Chicks.
<
"S
gg record
5
W
**
DIXIE
Common Aims
/
32
Far-ns, Ranch
4
■■ . :
3 8 - ’
47
T ypewriters
Credit
Credit .
E
=
Pa
• T
calls at Reg
At the Bank
1-
fice.
55
I Sed Cars
{
il
Coal Miners Go on
am-
7. One block
west courthoi
56
< lewelers '
JOHNSON
MOTOR LIN
cal • and 1c ng distanc
579.
The entire Lehigh Navigation
itors’ funds.
4
Hearin
' $
operating
- Beer E ection
plants, shut down.
I
)
2,U
for credit.
GAINESVILLE
were
Motor Co
ir
■ (
Y/
Alvord Defeats
Valley View by
Score of 19-7
When we, as a bank, ex-
tend credit to business
Scoring Parade
Begins Early in
First Period
A. R. PORT ER, JEWEL
104 Truck Lines, Ha
Paris Rallies to
Defeat Wildcats
SPORTS
SIZZLES
Leopards
Broncos 1
—Let's turn the dial on the radio
and listen in on some touchdowns
plete, but on the next play, Mc-
Collum took the ball on a reverse
around the right side of his for-
ward wall for a touchdown. Mur-
phy added the extra point from
placement to give the Leopards a
FOR RENT—Bedroom
• man. 903 S. Denton,
fans will remember that last sea-
son they held the championship
slippery in the rain. The Tigers
should give the Leopards a close
fight, having all their last year’s
stars, with the exception of two
had been one of those closed af-
fair, we wouldn't have received a
Friday night bath. . . . Take note
of the manner in which the Waco
Tigers are disposing of all oppo
nents. Waco and Paschal of Fort
guarantee his education. Rep-
• resented in Cooke county by
Chas. J. Gandillon
See Me Before You Die
The Ardmore Tigers, our next
opponents, dropped an 18 to 0 af-
iff
232 to 309
males,- at
Sympathy Strike
LANSFORD, Pa., Oct. 9 (AP).
Seventy-five hundred coal miners
in the Panther Creek valley stop-
ped work Friday in sympathy with
39 sit-down strikers huddled deep
in the Coaldale Colliery, in protest
caught a pass behind the goal line
for the extra point, making the
score 13-7 for Alvord.
Alvord took possession of a free
ball on the four yard- line and
plunged for a touchdown in the
WANTED
that will
Johnson.
and
prod
only two players were on the reg-
ular team last year.
%
or
scored after a kick-off.
Valley View scored without los-
o"
o,
Officials: Dobbs (Texas), ref-
eree; Boles (Army), umpire; Bon-
durant (DePaul) head linesman.
Sherman Loses to
J
(■
9 t j
for used ca
s. Pace Br
#
cents.
per w
Eagles Greatly Outweighed
But Gain More Yardage,
Lead in First Downs .
Herons stand habitually on one
foot.
Spe cial rat
Five i verage
Jed up well, especially on the of-
i fense and the defensive work of
FOR RENT — Fumis
went. Utilities paid.
Shand. P ione 986.
FOR RE NT — 3-room
*
With Two New Style Leaders for 1938
BOTH SIX AND EIGHT QFFERING
the Automatic Safety Transmission !
FOR WINTER DRIVING— 1
1 SEIBERLING MUD AND SNOWTIRE!
R • Here is the one mud and snow tire
8 which has excellent traction forward
E and backward — is self-cleansing—
V gives long economical.wear — is
B thumpless and runs quieter.
■ • See us today for demonstration;
■ We make liberal trade-in allowances
| on your old tires.
J. W. Schad Tire & Battery Shop
Corner Commerce and Broadway
Phone 318
1
I
per w
by th
roreis
I
Phone 213 oi
__I
IT 2-room. aa
I Will Pay $50 Reward
For information leading to the arrest and con-
viction of the parties who stole one of my cig-
arette vending machines.
to be an interesting one.
In the third quarter by line
plays and. passes; Alvord again (
PAGE FOUR
omm-ww-
in Peiping, China, 18 months ago.
TOMATO PICKLE
Look, folks!
7-oz. Jar 5c
WELLS
Ct Judg
inction ,
—
-8
Eeer, 9:
e-
Usually one of them does. But
there are few modem instances of
both teams retaining a flag. The
Giants and Yankees clashed in
three successive World Series:
1921-23. The Philadelphia Ath-
Won’t you try a loaf of Mitchell’s Own Bread?
only 5c!-
he little STORE J
ON THE SQUARE 9
Leaders - Always ♦ e
suited in two touchdowns and knot-
ted the count. Griffin’s six-yard
pass to Love in the period gave the
Paris team the first win over Sul-
phur Springs in Sulphur Springs
in thirteen years of competition.
Want Ads ring the casn register.
Worth are the two Roughest grid
units in this section of the state,
if we know our football. ... A
reach.the.goa1 line. MeKinney’s ing the ball in the third quarter
with Wallace Godwin making a
With five minutes to play the - ----...
perior to any. other performance
this season. Arid we liked the way
the line hustled on the defense,.
CASH PAU
mobile loa n
18a
Classif led
chars* a
the line was the best
%N
, *N
/w
strength of the Denison, Sherman
and Gainesville teams, we're more
puzzled than ever. Your guess is
as good as ours.
coal company’s workings in this
Denton fumble and had four of
their own recovered by the Denton
team. The Leopards punted 13
OLDSMOBILE today presents the new
Style Leaders for 1938... a dashing new -
Six ... a dynamic new Eight! Here are
cars designed to set America’s pace in
distinctive streamline styling ... to set
a new high in fine-car performance...
to outvalue anything else within hun-
dreds of dollars of their moderate price.
Both of these great new cars for 1938
feature all the latest improvements and
refinements, such as the new Safety
Instrument Unit and Safety Dash, the
new Safety Interiors and many others.
Both offer the new driving sensation of
L the year, Oldsmobile’s Automatic Safety
I Transmission. Come in today and
I see the cars tht set both the styles
J and the performance pace for 1938!
Built fn at the factory at extra cost.
A GENERAL MOTORS VALVE
latter city in thirteen years. Lo-
gan Stollenwerck’s boys staged a
fourth period rally to overcome a
Dallas lead, thhI
concerns, we are inter-
»7
RECORD BI.
There was no score until the
• for ge neral hot
Cleaners
in wor iing your a<
in pen on at’our «
here Cribley and Giles worked the
ball to the 6-yard stripe on five
running plays, and Giles swept
around right end for the counter.
■Fwjw
Sy-,
C.
EZRA’S]
U i
a little interest in high school
football in that city.
section involving five
tended for Cribley was
stitutes, evidently thinking he had
the game in a sack. But mybe
we aren’t giving the Jackets due
credit. Perhaps they had the bet-
ter club. We (are glad that Paris
knocked over the Sulphur club.
They need some wins to work, up
Matthews in the line were the
mainstays on both the offense and
defense.
The entire Leopard team show-
/iiWW
MV
was seen here last night, and we
advise the Leopards not to be
overconfident if they don’t want
to get kicked over.
Yanks. They couldn’t have done
any worse. — We hear that the
Denton Teacher football officials
tare sweet on both J. D. Mitchell
and Harry Herrmann. J. D. got
in three quarters of the freshman
game this week, and Harry would
have been on the starting lineup
had he not suffered an ankle in-
jury. Both boys are due to make
real hands on the Eagle squad be-
fore drawing down their sheep-
skins.—If anyone is skeptical
about whether Carey Shell is pro-
ducing results or not, let him com-
pare the music as tooted by the
"*: 88888888
this season. Cribley, McCollum, K.
■ Purcell and Giles made long gains
I in the ball carrying department,
with W. Purcell turning in some
neat blocking. ..
Practically the entire reserve
game, played on the Highland
Park High school field, was seen
by an overflow crowd of nearly
8,000 fans.
Sherman led the locals, 7 to 6,
going into the fourth period, when
exhibited, the Scots went on a rampage to
ney. Dallas came right; back to
score on a 30-yard pass, Austin to
Mims, who ran seventy yards,
shaking off tackle after tackle to
— 6-room I
iter Stanifo
ested in: First, making
profitable use of our
loanable funds to help
borrowers; and Second,
safeguarding our depos-
FODDER — The Leopard pep-
squad and band are due a lot of
credit for carrying on last night
in spite of the riain. They had
more spirit than the writer, who
was huddled up with the majority
of the west stands crowded in the
Gainesville, "°
Texas
4 FOR RENT
; entran e.
home and the two teams experi-
encing great difficulty in making
headway with a slippery ball.
The only serious Denton threat
came in the third quarter when a
Leopard fumble gave them the
ball deep in Leopard territory.
Four plays netted the Broncos six
yards to the Leopard 10 where the
locals took the ball on downs.
The final score for the Gaines-
ville representatives came in the
fourth period when Mitchell and
Brightwell blocked a Denton punt
to give their mates the hoghide on
the Denton 17. On five hard
drives through the line the stocky
K. Purcell pushed over the count-
er. Murphy made good on his kick
for the extra point to bring the
final score of the game to 27 to 0
for the Leopards.
The rest of the last period found
the Gainesville second and third
stringers holding their own with
the Denton eleven.
For the Broncos Bryant, Steph-
iks to a bonehead J today to witness the two big
on the part of the Bulldog coach J games there. This rain is likely to
who had inserted a flock of sub- slow both battles down consider-
ably. . . . The Paris Wildcats have
already had a successful season,
beating the Sulphur Springs
eleven. When’ they do that, the
Parisites call the season a huge
success. We could never quite
figure just why, but that's the
case.—The Giants should have let
the Fort Worth Cats take on the
The second touchdown came
shortly after when Giles took a
short Denton punt and returned
it to the Bronco 29. W. Purcell
whipped a 17-yard pass to O'Neal,
who made a nice catch on the
play. Here Giles picked up six J
more yards off tackle and in three
plunges through the forward wall,
K. Purcell crashed over for the
20. A pass from K. Purcell in-
or three linesmen, back. Local
at the beginning of the fourth i
quarter. The affair must have
been an/ interesting one, since
The petitio
tion was ille
contending t
ing the electie
andthe ballo
prepared.
The county
to show caus
should not be
being chalked up oh gridirons all units, the stripping and storage
oyer the nation. / plants, shut down.
large number of Gainesville grid
fans are in Dallas and Fort Worth
The outstanding stars on the of-
fense were Willard White, God-
win, Dan Flint, Jr., and McCuis-
tion, and on the defense were E.
Moss, Dickeson. Sherman Clifton,
Jo Wilson, Jr., ahd White.
The Eagle ling averages 15
pounds and 126 pounds for the
13 7 0 7—27
0 0 0 0—0
young Gainesville band with that
of visiting teams, some of whom . against wage scales,
have had bands for several yelars. The tine Tehis]
20 to 0 lead for the first half’s
Play.
Cold Rain Falls
The second half was played in
a slow, cold rain, more than half
the spectators departing for
team, they amassed a total of 23
first downs to 4 for the Bearcats, Second Half Played in
although they were trailing 7 to 6 , Slow, Cold Rain; Many
-Spectators Leaving
, .1, g. easy victory over their traditional
zle football, wed say. So instead rivals
of being able to judge the true
entire Bulldog team was changed
and Denison began a drive on the
halfway-mark, carrying the ball
| to the nine-yard line when a pass,
Jackson to Taylor, scored again
and Taylor’s kick was . good for
Denton, Wise and Montag
ties. Leave
alog Free
touchdown^ CL
_____.___. ___ _____ _______ The Leopards scoring parade
working the ball into enemy ter- began early in the first period
ritory but failed to cash in on ac- when Gainesville took the ball on
count of fumbles, the ball being its 27-yard line and Giles broke letics and St. Louis Cardinals did
‘ ~ “ off tackle on the first play for 36 ft twice: 1930-31.
yards to the Denton 37. From ====================
apartment. .
Couple only. Phone 884
DALLAS, Oct. 9.—Highland
Park's Golden Avalanche kept its
grid record unblemished Friday
g Set o
ter er
numbe •
name.
FARMS, ex 218, Bre
as.
circuit .tion that
Classi led adve
infor
DENTON ' Rypewriter E
_ Underwoo 1 agents for
than half of their attempts to ad-
vance the pigskin. Cribley still
showed lots of drive at his half-
back post, Giles flashed his old
time form and Red Purcell had
lots of legdrive, knifing through
holes as a plunger should. Our
kicking still appears a little un-
der par and the pass defense could
stand strengthening, but taken 'as
a whole the team is corning along
nicely and will give their district
rivals lots of trouble before the
conclusion of the season.
extra point.
North Dallas had made its sec-
ond touchdown td take the lead
when Barter recovered a fumble
by Jackson on a bad pass back
from center on the Denison 16-
SERIES AIN’T ALWANS
BETWEEN TH' YANKS
AN1 th' SIANTS-HE ‛
SAVS BROOKLYN WAS
" IN rr ONCE />
CHICAGO, Oct. 9 (AP).—Prep- ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■
' arations were completed today for ■ AGAINST w HAT ODDS H
the removal of Frederick B. Snite.;J„ RJ
Jr., infantile paralysis victim. I m m
next week to Miami? Fla., where ■ BOY TO FIGHT? . . . State ■
listed in
22
rent. $100
deker, 37, c
1 ■
i ■
The Sherman Bearcats ran into-
a snag at Highland Park and can
no longer boast that Un opponent
has not crossed their goal stripe.
Despite Red Hume’s week-old-
groans and moans about his Scot
sut
/8Ee
E/r $ 5,000
. KSfr MAXIMUM 1
5 INSURANCE
2 Rl, FOREACN
gaW{? DEPOSITOR
- completely smother the visitors
from Grayson county/ who pre-
viously were unscored upon. The
Highlanders amassed a total of
1 23 first downs to the Bearcats' .4
I and turned on a razzle-dazzle
aerial bombardment in which they
completed fourteen of their twen-
ty-five passes. Sherman also
showed an effective overhead
game, completing seven of fifteen
tosses.
night, rolling over Sherman High
ens and Lowe in the backfield and i School’s Bearcats 25 to 7. The
r aone Your Want
to Number 9s
c impotent and
,-1 - cents
। Ten w ords or
5 cent
fourth quarter, making the final
:score 19-7.
Coach Jones is encouraged with
the progress -the Eagles are mak-
l ing this early in the season as
in his new mechanical “lung.”
The new artificial respirator,
constructed Of aluminum and
rubber, permits greater"freedom
of his legs and arms. It supplanted
a heavy iron one in which young
Snipe had been enclosed from the
neck down since he was stricken
-7
ale-pr
f efir
North Dallas Is
Beaten by Denison
—/— I
DENISON, Texas, Oct. 9—Deni-
son High School Yellow Jackets
defeated North Dallas High, 13 to
12. Friday night in one of the pret-
tiest football battles ever unreeled
here, scoring their last touchdown
with a minute to play against -an
entire new string of Bulldogs. (
rushed in to relieve those drenched
by rain that began falling at the
close of the half.
Square Tom C. Cheaney
furnished, bills paid. 6
Exhibiting a strong running at-
throughout the contest. The tack that reached its height in the
Sherman eleven scored on a play first period, the Gainesville High
that included three laterals. —• •
%— 77
H4er u //
b-dbA
yard line in the second quarter.
Mims was stopped with a yard on I Valley View made twelve first
one try and banged center for the downs and Alvord six. Yards
touchdown on another effort. Me-j gained from scrimmage: Valley
Kinney's kick for point was wide. View 143, and Alvord 80.
John.P. Si
quesne, was
Dame, graduz
coached at "
and North C
151-vote maje ority.
BW \
■ so MUCM 1
. 1
soD‛ »inatroment I
nash with . — • Unisteel 1
i safety PSdtevy interionstop.steel l
l Unit-STuetion• Turventitation 1
I BodyCons.NoDrofyentseat 1
1 Body . Adjustob)
1 sefety IC ELArURES
1 CHASSIS . super-Hy
■ Aon Wheels ".control
■ Knee-A “aks • cen stbinizers ■
1 dravlie. pual Ride sabitzed \
■ steerngp,essure Tiresi",nlamps 1
1 Big,lw.SSireamlinede"
1 .c FEMURtS
1 ENGINE FEp. no -Horse-
1 -Hosepower kcoolea Bet,
1 Eight • Aluminum P".
■ Wardened A "ecingRods
1 EtectrorleESprnea
1 -7.19386257
icials
why the
ment, qoupfe only. 41
Phone 163.
We find two rotten apples in
our bucket of predictions, the
Denison Yellow Jackets upsetting
the North Dallas Bulldogs and the
Paris Wildcats actually winning a
Class A bll game from Sulphur
Springs, their first victory in the
I « —
A . •
Fresh cow
freshen soon
SULPHUR SPRINGS, Oct. 9 —
A fourth-quarter touchdown gave
the Paris Wildcats a 20-to-14 vic- ibackfield, and Alvord averaged
tory over the Sulphur Springs 1150 pounds.
Wildcats in a thrill-packed battle j • . _
there Friday night. The Paris J Navy’s Plebe football team is
eleven scored touchdowns in the playing six games this year, with
first, second and fourth periods. । George Washington freshmen.
While the Sulphur Springs team, Massanutten, Kiskiminetas, Bor-
underdogs of the melee, thrilled the dentown, Staunton and Penn State
500 spectators with two quick freshmen
thrusts in the third quarter that re- ! ‘ _________
1ocals coud
l declarec
gal on til
mi the p
— Eedroon
Private b a
VALLEY VIEW, Oct. 9.-The
ing n
tot i
arge
low prices. Sexed
2
NATIONAL BANK
"A Gooa Rank To wu»
he ---o neasm-. —nn, as
cash. A..1
r Turner hote
In Business
When you, as a business
man, extend credit to
one of your customers,
you are interested in:
First, making profitable
use of your capital; and
Second, collecting the
account when due.
FOR re NT
Phone 9 97,
‘ FOR REN T
house. I coos
FOR RE NT
‘ 4 Palo F
2 when
legalizec
_ _ . Murphy converted to place the lo-
breaking through to throw the-eppard.club scoreless during the cals out in front 7 to 0, with the
ball carriers for losses on better last half. It s a cinch they 11 put game but four minutes old.
Da earners ror losses on Dser up much stronger opposition than
™ ll
.k
X
rirsrrquartet, 'taZ intartea he ball game Friday afternoon to Al-
drive on the visitors’ 40 With sue- , vord, 19 to 7, at Alvord.
। cessive line plays carrying the _ . : . .1.
ball to Dallas: 20 Phillips went secrndauarterwhen-Alverdinter-
around left end for a score. Tay- i cePted a Pass., and ran. 8° yards
ilor's kick was blocked by McKin- (although the first quarter proved
WANTED White
/KyWN..
, / W
JUST lik new, five roer
garage, oily $1600. Tt
MINERAL
(AP)- Distr
sell, has set f
ing on an inj
ty commissio
suits of th
election Oct
voted against
the Denton High school *X
Broncos, here last night, running H
up a score of 27 to 0. P
Although showing a willingness _
to mix it, the Denton aggregation | MN
was no match for a stronger —TAT,. .
Gainesville team, and it was evi- D° MAJOR league pennant win-
detn after the first few minutes ners reneat the following vear?
organizations continuing their
work in, the face of a drenching
rain. '
Starting lineups:
Leopards: O’Neal and E. Rich-
ardson. ends; Mitchell and Mor-
gan. tackles; McLaughlin and
Murphy, guards; Brightwell, cen-
ter; W. Purcell, quarter; Giles and I
Cribley, halves; K. Purcell, full-
back.
Broncos: Crouch and Walters,
ends; Matthews and Fuller,
tackles; Miller and Brooks,
guards; Steagall, center; Bryant,
quarter; Lowe and Clark, halves;
Stephens, fullback.
Score by .periods:
Harold Hansen, Navy’s biggest
back, was injured in the annual
practice game before the start of
the season and may be lost for
the year.
EVIDENTLY the Denton
La Broncos were affected with
this epidemic of blind staggers
that is making the rounds now.
judging from their exhibition of
play last night. They were a nice
bunch of boys, willing and anxious
to show up well in their battle
with the Leopards, but they were.
■ as reported, pretty green and in-
experienced, especially in the line
where glaring weaknesses cropped
out all evening. The backs had
practically no interference and the
ball carriers showed hesitancy in
smashing into the Leopard de-
fense. Although the opposition
was weak, the Leopards showed
improvement in their • running
game, their blocking being su-
New Iron Lung for ’^fXa" X
(Paralysis Victim will graduate next June.
No advertisem
Ten v ords or
ment. Phone 1077 •
for REI rr Unf urnist
East Calif ornia.
FOR RE? T 5-room un
house. 5 [ary Ellen Ke
, t 720. -
N~--- mi -I--.
' 16. W mted to Bu
-
Borrowers who can meet our requirements for sound
loans will find us always willing to meet their needs
l ines of White Sp
will cpst the regular rd
insertion. I
Charge Account.
WANTED White gir f
house vork. German
2 ferred. Phone 564.
N__•
squad saw action, many of whom
showed real promise.
Statistics On Game
Statistics on the game reveal
that the Leopards chalked 17
first downs while holding the
Brones to 5, gained 261 yards
from scrimamge to 85 for the
Dentonites, and completed one
pass out of nine attempts good for
17 yards, while the Brones con-
nected on four occasi'ons good for
54 yards out _ of 22 attempts
through the ozone.
Gainesville had one pass inter-
cepted and in turn snatched two
aerial shots from the Denton
second counter. Murphy’s try for passer. The locals recovered one
the extra point was wide.- '
of tons of water. Of “course, if* it .The second quarter had hardly
- - - started when the Leopards scored c
again. E. Richardson recovered a times, for a 27-yard average and
Denton fumble on the latter's 44. i the Brones booted 17 tunes for a
On three running plays by K. Pur- j 26-yard average. Gainesville was
cell, Cribley and McCollum, thepenalized six times for a total of
ball was advanced to the Denton i 30 yards, while the Brones drew
one penalty for 15 yards. *
A crowd of approximately 2,000
witnessed the opening kickoff,
but a goodly portion left at the
half when the rain began to des-
cend.
Both bands and pepsquads were
much in evidence, the Gainesville
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Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 47, No. 269, Ed. 1 Saturday, October 9, 1937, newspaper, October 9, 1937; Gainesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1458960/m1/4/?rotate=180: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cooke County Library.