Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 10, No. 134, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 22, 1940 Page: 2 of 10
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Henderson Hail Nets
THURSDAY, AUGUST 22, 1940
PAGE TWO
In American
U. S. AMATEUR
I .
■•■■■■""
GOLF TOURNEY
NATIONAL LEAGUE
OPENS SEPT. 9
HOUSTON 6-5
azn —
.1
1
Box Scores
Ob
1
gore lefthander, will be Manager Coletta, 3b ...
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Dierrenbach, ct ...... 8
TEXAS LEAGUE
7
Marshall .
022 030 007 | R
Totals ...
x-Batted for Hoff in 9th.
is
AB R H PO A
..4
1
Ist Game
victory
0 It
to a 3-0 triumph over Hie Browns,
Henderson 000 000 10x— I
Erautt,
7
straight halls to Rill Dickey,
Totals
top.
See MAJORS on Page 8
0 .1
Dieffenbach, ct .. 8
0
Fuchs & Parsons; Cohen & Hill.
1
K
In.
nil l
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A
t
A
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Lisenbee A Andrews; Fisher A
A
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Hegan.
Totals
<,
Score by innings:
Classic Ballad Dies
AM
Mason
(Spl).
4%
V
/
Only three
ADX
! • ®
"G-3" All-Wtathir
FINAL
- 2
> 1
"FIRST-AND-ONLY"
I,
OF MEN’S
Tenn., today his wife. Katie, re-
SUMMER
Keeping Tab on the Oilers
be opened at 3 o'clock on August
2
2B SB HR RBI SH SB AV
derson home games.
105
stadium. he stated,
Mrs. Jenkins said that Lew told
her-he was steeprim the Dack sea foe Erautt ...
10.00
Galo Smith
10W COIT. .7
..HIGH VALVE
PAUL ROGERS TIRE STORE
to sleep
PITCHING RECORDS
CRAWFORD
I
Phone 527
Jay Me-
CLOTHIERS
FL.
Dutch Gravenmier 8
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THIS IS IMPORTANT
a
CD,
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W. L. Taylor, One Of Nation's
Best Jockeys, To Visit Here
TYLER TWICE,
7-1 AND 16-4
DALLAS REBS
TRIM LEADING
Mootr
MUllins
... 89
. 115
Miller A Engle;. Winters A Wil-
lett.
tire) for "G-r' AU- PRICED IN PROPORTION
-Wodthor or Rib Trood White sidewalls slightly higher
Henderson IJon football stadium
and field, now being constructed
in the Sunset Addition, on Thurs-
0
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0 0 0
27
25
22
21
12
0
11
four
cur-
Jimmy
Harry
318
443
370
25
423
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75
148
152
120
Bob Crow .....
Hugh Sparks
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Hal Hirshon .......
John Johnson .....
G
19
12
15
18
35
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5
9
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Henderson Swimmers
Invited to Kilgore
' Selkirk
Then
4
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2
HENDERSON—
Hirshon, ct .......
42
70
49
2
60
1
0
5
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PLAYER-
Jim Steger ..
9
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118
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Three-Game Series With Cleveland Will
Determine If N. Y. Threat Is Serious_______
Pollard announced today.
Pollard said that the bids will
LUFKIN.
Mayne, former
3
m
>
2
Team—
Tyler ......
Henderson .....
Longview .....
♦
I
Team—
Houston ..........
San Antonio ...
Beaumont .......
Oklahoma City
Dallas ...............
Shreveport .......
Tulsa ................
Fort Worth ...
Hale, 1b .............
Dalrymple, ss ...
Randolph, 2b ...
E
K
I
29 and the contract will be let
to the lowest bidder.
Work b» progressing stowtyon
the field, but Supt. Pollard believes
that It will he ready for opening
on Oct. 15. Several of the Hen-
CGOODfYEARI r
ShhTIRESs ,
....... 4
...... 4
4
...... 2
..... 1
.523
.518
.505
.500
.393
.355
Team—
Cleveland ......
Detroit .................
Boston ..................
New York ...........
Chicago .............
Washington ........
St. Louis ...........
Philadelphia ........
Pct.
,625
ported.
Mrs. Jenkins said that her hus-
W.
. 95
.. 80
. 74
.. 72
.. 69
.. 63
. 60
. 49
Nafle, if .....
Joyce, c .....
Helms, rf ...
Hoff, p ......
xScott .......
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51
47
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1 st Game
Tvler . . . 000 109 000— I
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110 North Main Street
The Friendliest Credit in Town
1
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23
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35
41
49
47
Author of Baseball
Pet.
.607
.559
.538
.531
.522
.435 |
.407
2
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Pct.
.689
.614
.533 !
.431 |
.355
.347
Dutch Leonard hung up his 13th .
........... Kilgore , . 000 000 000— 0
1
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10
2
1
1
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0
0
1
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2
1
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band had telephoned her that he
had suffered a wrenched back and
3 •
I
Dalrymple's selection for pitching
duties, ip all likelihood.
Tomorrow night the Oilers head
for .Texarkana where they play a
twin bill, then return to the local
0
1
0
0
9
2
4
1
4
2
2
0
0
medley, 100-yard backstroke, 100-
yard free-style, diving (low and
high), 150-yard medley relay and
the underwater swim.
The meet will be- divided into
the junior division, all up to 15
years of age, and seniors, all over
W.
.. 71
... 66
... 63
.... 60
... 59
... 50
.... 48
45
0
0
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W
11
16
2
14
9
10
•
Todd, 3 and 2. Todd was the de-
fending champion.
Joining Acker, Commerce, who
is Henderson Country Club cham-
pion, in the quart or-final round
were Joe Moore, Jr,, of San An-
tonio; Robert Riegel of Houston, I
paid jockeys in the nation.
He is the son of Mrs. Gifford
Hubbard of Houston, and three
years ago was a student in the
Henderson school system. Young
Taylor is a nephew of Mrs. O. E.
Flanagan of Henderson.
1 |
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8
6
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A
IT’S SASY ro BUY ON OUR
EASY-PAY TERMS
I.
46
52
54
53
54
IB
70
68
-------o---
Acker Upsets Todd in
Lake wood Tourney
2
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0
6
2
I
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91
K
F FT
11
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88
78
S
Hays Clothing
Store
Henderson's Exclusive
Man's Store
80
98
*
1
I
I
“WIND-UP”
LX
S3
#he 6.00-16
“ SIZE
I Frit* (with your od
S' t '
SANTA BARBARA, California.
(UP).—Ernest Lawrence Thayer,
author of baseball's famous bal-
lad, "Casey at the Bat,” died of
a cerebral hemorrhage yesterday.
He was 77.___ .
Thayer's classic was first pub-
lished in the San Francisco Ex-
aminer in 1888.
— -
Pitcher Ed Selway
Released by Atlanta
ins.
To Receive Bids for
Grid Field Fence
Yankees Again TIGERS DUMP
Menace Race
more than
The jockey has the distinction
of riding five winners in a siggle
day on two occasions. He rides
for the Wise Stables in Houston,
where he received his early train-
ing "around the old Epsom Downs
Ex-Lion Star
H-SU Fullback
29 1 6 27 12
DALLAS. (UP)—Lew Jenkins,
lightweight boxing champion, and
r
I
...... 8
...... 1
....... 2
* 8
3
...... 3
...... 2
...... 8
.... 38 0 6 24 10 (
-732 140 50 185 57 62
.696 202 ill 140 155 200
Houston . 910 10
Dallas .A0003
Wilks/Pollet x
Overman A Cronii
M. \
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62"
0 0 1
0 0 0
- -
77
1 K“ X
BY UNITED PRESS.
Marshall ended Tyler's streak
tof-mme consecutive victories last
Competition will be held in the
following events:
one event.
0 1
0 0
Erickson, Bertram A Steiner.
Shreveport 000 020 000— 2 10
Okla. City 400 000 OOx— 4 9
have been
swimmers are
fighter, probably went
while driving.
Doran was said to
i seriously injured.
-----o
Serious Business
SOUTH BEND. —
Ft. Worth 010 080 000— 4 7
100 201— 5 18 2
030 012— 6 13 3
; Narron; Uhle,
24 14
83 116
—
i
e
yer
Kilgore .................. 010 000 0— 1.
Henderson ............ 102 010 x— 4
Errors: Tucker, Hale, Joyce;
Runs batted In: McClaren, Nafie,
Smith 2, Tucker; Two base hits:
Tucker; Home runs: Nafle; Struck
out by: Crow 6, By Scott 1; Bases
on balls; off Crow 6, off Scott 4;
Wild pitch: Scott; Double plays:
Dalrymple to Randolph to Hale;
Earned runs: Henderson 1, Kil-
gore 1; Left on bases: Henderson
5, Kilgore 8; Time of game: 1:35;
Umpires: Estell and Newman. •
2nd Game
-Tyler . . . . 100 1103 0— 46 4
Marshall . . . 170 03 x—16 12 2
Dobby A Engle; Bronkhurst A
Jordan.
• C-.V All-Woathrr
Whito Sidtwall
LOW PRICES
on othdr guaranteod
Goodyear Tiret — as low as
6 WZ I S* a.75-19 or
? #9 ■ Zb 5.00-19 SIZE
mM Caih priet with
V• your old tiro
WRITTEN
LIFETIME GUARANTEE
They make good or We do!
. _ a companion were hurt, in an au-
dax: August 29, School Supt. C. O. tomobile accident near Sparta.
and Jack Tinnin, O'Hara Watts, 15
EeynnldsmsheeteFprhnSte"pntaitowed from each team to enter
by pitching Washington
Score by innings:
Kilgore ................ 000 000 000— 0
Henderson ........ 000 000 lOx— 1
Errors; Erautt, Hoff, Peters,
Hale, Coletta, Tucker; Two base
hits: Randolph 2; Stolen bases:
Dalrymple; Sacrifice hits: Hoff;
Struck out by: Masters 13, by
Hoff 8; Bases on balls: off Mas-
ters 4, off Hoff 2; Balk: Hoff;
Wild pitch: Hoff; Double plays:
Tucker to Peters to Smith; Left
on bases: Henderson 6, Kilgore d
11; Time of game: 1:50; Umpires: *
Newman and Estell.
night with 7-1 and 16-4 triumphs
in a doubleheader. Al Winters
took the first game with seven-
hit pitching while Marshall wasa
EAST TEXAS LEAGUE
■ Marshall
•575 Kilgore
Texarkana
.346
.340 ,
.299
.298
.293
.277
.260
.259
.240 I
.239
captain of the
NEW YORK. (UP)—The Yankees are making menac-
ing gestures again. They've won 10 out of their last 12
games and open a 3-game series with the Indians today which
may determine whether they are going to be a vital factor
in the American League stretch drive.
There’s little doubt that they " '
the score in the fifth and eighth
innings. Earl Overman relieved
Bob Uhle in the ninth to take
credit for the game.
Oklahoma City beat Shreveport,
— 4-2. Bus Hegan homered in the
first inning with the bases load-
ed to win the ball game. Al Fisher
, scattered 10 hits to hold Shreve-
‘ port, to two fifth-innings count-
ers.
Tulsa walloped Ed Cole, Les
Yanks are playing the best ball i
in the league right now. They Tei
6 4
6 2
-a
W '
Bob Gillesie ........" 28
Guy Davis ........ 9
Frank Masters 30
last half of the ninth after coming
from behind twice before to knot orchard on Sunday for a double-
-header-against the leading Tyler-
PCT IF R H BB SO WP HB
Tietje and Harold Burch for 16
safe hits to beat San Antonio, 9-3,
and even its series with the Mis-
sions. Clare Bertram relieved
Paul Erickson as San Antonio
tied, the score in the fifth. Bert-
ram held the Missions while Tulsa
went one up in the last half of
the fifth, scored twice in the
seventh and three times in the
eighth.
Catcher Dixie Parsons won a
ball game for Beaumont, 5-4,
over Fort Worth. Parsons homer-
ed in the fifth inning for the first
Beaumont run, and drove in the
winning counter with a double in
the eighth. Charley Fuchs pitched
7-hit ball.
Today’s schedule: Beaumont at
Dallas, San Antonio at Oklahoma
City, Shreveport at Tulsa and
Houston at Fort Worth.
Wednesday’s results:
Beaumont 000 010 220— 5 10 1
Qillespie To Hurl
Final Tilt Against
Dalrymples Tonight
Frank Masters and Bob Crow Tosa Oiler* to
.Double Victory a* Trojans Lose to Tigers
The Oilers clipped two full games off Tyler’s East Texas
League, lead last night* by virtue of .a double victory over the
Kilgore Roomers while the Trojans dropped a pair at Mar-
shall, and are primed to add another tonight, should the Tro-
jans falter again, as they play host’to Jimmy Dalrymple’s
crew ir the final of the series at Fair Park tonight.
Henderson has been invited to
send a swimming team to the
East Texas swimming meet to he
held in Kilgore Aug. 28 at the
"municipal pool.________________
F. L. Wagstaff, manager of
the Kilgore pool and promoter
of the meet, was in Henderson
yesterday contacting possible en-
trants from this city. The affair
will feature competition among
teams from East Texas towns. A
trophy will be awarded to the
winning team and medals to in-
dividual winners.
Swimmers of this city who are
interested in the affair may send
their entries to Wagstaff at the
Kilgore pool not later than Aug.
0 10
0 0 10
DALLAS, Texas. (UP).—Two
rounds of match play was slated
today for the sixth annual Lake-
wood Country Club invitational
golf tournament now moving near
its climax with the 36-hole finals
scheduled to get under way to-
morrow.
Upsets continued to character-
ize the tourney with the top up-
set yesterday being Will Hill
•
L. Pct.
46 .674
63 .559
64 .536
72 .500
70 .496
77 .450
78 .435
92 .348
kkOiO FAAHiE
Fagan (Moom) Mullins,
Lee Taylor, 20-year-old Laneville
boy, a top-notch jockey, will
arrive here from Rhode Island,
where he has been racing this
summer. '
As Trim Kilgore
Cann. .Notre Dame guard can-
didate. holds patents on a con-
trolling device for torpedoes and
an aerial bomb which have been
accepted by the War Department.
A 'Renton threw
former Hendersn grid star, is
the leading candidate for the
fullback post at Hardin-Sim-
mans U. He is a two-year let-
terman and one of the Cowboys’
best blockers hi history. Mul-
lins' alternate at fullback will be
Lloyd Flahie, Cross Plains jun-
ior letterman, shown below.
f If
A
Li J
LANEVILLE. (Spl). — Walter gin Laneville. He will come toetrack. He is one of the highest
Texas by plane, relatives here • ■ 1
were informed today.
Bids will be received on the
steel fence to encircle the new
... 24 1 3 18 11
■ AB R H PO A
W. L.
70 42
.... 65 48
..... 57 52
.... 57 58
... 56 55
. . 58 58
44 68
38 69
Taylor will .visit his grand-
father, J. D. W. Riddle, and other
Rusk County relatives and friends
BY UNITED PRESS
The Dallas Rebels meet Beau-
mont in a doubleheader tonight
with a chance of wiping out the
half-game margin - separating
them from fourth-place Okla-
homa City.
Dallas beat Houston, 6-5. last
night, scoring two runs in the
0 2 0 0
0 111
Cincinnati .
Brooklyn .........
New York ......
St. Louis........
Pittsburgh .....
Chicago ........
Boston
Philadelphia
» ARROIV «
SHIRTS
SUITS
A few all-wool suits left to
select from. Were $16.50
■•values: ----•—•
2nd Game
KILGORE— ABRH PO A
Coletta, 8b .....______ 2
Hale, 1b .................. 4
Dalrymple, ss .... 4
Randolph, 2b ........ 8
2nd Game
Kilgore . . . 010 00 0— 1 8 1
Henderson . 102 010 x— 4 7 1
Scot | & Joyce; Crow & Erautt.
Longview . oil 000 001— 6 8 4
Texarkana 010 000 101— 8 12 3
Demoran A Ganns; Coleman &
Kopp.
Hill Beckman, recently pro-
moted to a starting job, out-
pitched John Rigney to give the
Athletics their 3-0 shutout over
the White Sox. He allowed only
five hits in winning his sixth game
against one loss. «
Acker's victories over
Goldman, 2 and 1, and
1 2
1 1
1 1
0 6
2 8
1 0
1 2
0 1
0 0
41 6
46 7
75 1
40 11
-+—2
34 6
48 20
43 9
5 1
44 13
FLAYER— G
J. ‘P. Wood ....... 53
Ford Mullen .......... 104
Bill McClaren _____ 120
ATLANTA, Ga. (UP)—Ed Sel-
way, former Texas League pitch-
er, was released today by the At-
lanta Crackers.
Selway, signed as A free agent,
was with the Crackers for a
month.
of the automobile when the crash
.occurred. She quoted her husband
an saying his companion Danny
Doran, Canadian welterweight
NEW YORK. (UP) — The en-
try list for the national amateur
golf sectinal qualifying rounds
was issued today and showed that,
although the odds are at least a
million to one against- it, your
1940 champion conceivably can
turn out to be a Hollywood movie
star, the nation’s No. 1 crooner or
a former world tennis champion.
The tournament will be played
Sept. 9-14 at the Winged Foot
Country Club near Mamaroneck,
N. Y., and next Tuesday the ma-
jority of the field of 10 starters
will be determined when 748 play-
ers go out in 36-hole rounds in
28 cities of the country to shoot
for 140 places in the championship
proper. The other ten starters
will be former champions who are
exempt from qualifying.
The .places available in the va-
rious sections were allocated by
the U. S. Golf Association on the
basis of number of entries and
quality of the respective fields.
They range from 25 places avail-
able to 143 golfers in New York
area to one for which there men
will battle in the Seattle district.
Sprinkled through the list are
the names of some of the coun-
try’s top amateur players and a
host of persons who are more
famed in other walks of life.
Among them are Randolph Scott,
movie star, and Bing Croshy who
will try to qualify at Los Angeles
along with Pat Abbott, 1938 fin-
alist against Willie Turnesa; Dan
Topping, owner of the Brooklyn
Dodgers professional football
team; tennis player Ellsworth
Vines and bridge expert P. Hal
Sims, all of whom will try to
qualify at New York; and W. Ver-
Boomers Twice*
Henny, 8b ......._...„ 4
McClaren, rf „________
Wood, If .......... 4
Erautt, c ................ 2
Smith, 1b ..... 2
Tucker, ss ..._......... 8
Peters, 2b .............. 8
Masters, p .............. 3
Fifty-yard 'free-style, 75-yard
<> 11
Investigator Ryan
LYNN, Mass. Blondy Ryan,
shortstop whose inspirational wire
while out with "a broken leg spur-
n'd the Glants on to a pennant a
few years ago, is an investigator
for the Treasury Department.
Totals ............
HENDERSON-
Hirshon, cf ....
Henny, 8b ......
McClaren, If ...,
Erautt, c ........
Smith, 1b ........
Tucker, ss ........
Peters, 2b .......
Johnson, rf ......
Crow, p ............
Reduced to —and
nationally advertised
all year at—the amaz-
ingly low price oi
un n 6.00-16
$ EGA SIZE
tIW1 With your
ME X old tire
BUT NOW—FOR THE
FIRST AND ONLY
TIME THIS YEAR
we offer you the
great Goodyear All-
Weather at this spe-
cial pre-Labor Day
Sale price,
1st Game
KILGORE— AB R H PO A
dreau's single pushed over the
other one.
rently hitting .231, forcing in the
winning run. It was the Tigers'
10th defeat in their last 12 games
and dropped them 5′4 games from
the top.
Three double plays by Bou-
dreau, Muck and Troskv helped
the Indians defeat the Red Sox.
4-2, despite the fact that Joe
Cronin’s club made 14 hits to the
Tribe's seven. Ray Mack's homer
with a mate on accounted for
two runs, Ostermueller’s wild
throw sent in another, and Bou-
losing streak.
The Giants clipped the leading
Reds, 5-4, but the Reds field their
5’ game National League lead
as the runner-up Dortgers lost
their third straight to the Cardi-
nals, 7-5. Mel Ott scored tile
winning run in the ninth inning
for the Giants on Nick Witek’a
single while six runs in the fifth
inning gave the Cards enough to
win over Brooklyn.
Pittsburgh took o9; fifth
place by beating the fires, 3-2,
while the Phillies knocked off the
cuts on the head when the auto-
mobile in which he was en route
to Philadelphia struck a tree.
I The champion was motgring to
: : _ Philadelphia to begin training for
likely will be played at Fair Park , a bout
with Bob Montgomery.
.667 26 26 28
.609 187 84 156
.600 132 58 112
.856 195 74 176
AM 6 14 16
28 4 7 21 8
S. Antonio 000 210 000— 8 9 4
Tulsa... 021 010 23x— 6 16 1
Cole, Tietje, Burck & Huffman;
ni
riv
.398 ' hit before stopping the Liners.
'__I W ednesdav’ results:
was purposely passed.
i •
1
AB R
217 38
429 82
509 72
488 71
Oilers Gain Two Games On Tyler'
non Tietjen, baseball writer for
the St. Louis Star-Times, who
plays in St. Louis.
Dallas, where 21 players seek
six places, should produce some
close fighting because four good
men play there—Jack Munger,
Reynolds Smith, Don Schumacher
----and Royal Hogan, brother of Ben
Hogan, the leading money win-
ner of 1940 among the profession-
als.
Ites.
Frankie Musters and Bob Crow
turned in stellar pitching per-
formances last night to subdue the
Boomers twice, 1-0 and 4-1. Mas-
ters twirled shutout ball all the
way in the opener allowing but
six well spaced blows, while the
Handyman tossed a three-hitter
at the Dalrymples to gain the
velict in the afterpiece.
The first game was a pitching
masterpiece. Russ Hoff was on
the mound for Kilgore and match-
ed Masters brilliant tossing pitch-
for-pitoh until he balked the
seventh to send in the lone run
of the game.
The Boomers threatened numer-
ous times but the skinny Florida
snake-hunter was tougher'n a boot
in the clutch. Kilgore made their
strongest bid in the eighth, after
the Oilers had scored, but Bill Mc-
Claren’s perfect peg home on Dief-
fenbach’s single, nabbed Randolph
at the plate. In the sixth the
Boomers got two men on base
with but one out, Masters whiff-
ed the next two men to end the
uprising.
Both hurlers allowed six hits
each, while Masters had his strike-
out bail working to perfection and
set 13 mendown after a third cut,
In the final tilt Bob Crow was
a bit on the wild side, passing six
men, but slipped through in great
style as his mates blasted. South-
paw Chauncey Scott for seven
timely blows that brought home
four tallies.
Crow gave up but three hits,
one a home run over the left field
wall by Chick Nafie, the Boomers'
only tally of the night. However,
the fireman was. in trouble often
as a result of his wildness, but
in the pinches he was as good as
Bob Feller. • --s
The Oilers touched Scott for
three hits and a run in the first
round, added two more on two
walks and a pair of bingles in the
third, and got their final score in
the fifth on a base on balls, a wild
pitch and Gale Smith's single.
Hirshon's two blows led the hit-
ting in the first tilt while Smitty
had a pair of one-basers and two
rbi's in the afterpiece to cop indi-
vidual honors.
-----o—--
Mason Mayne Resigns
As Lufkin Assistant
13 3
23 5
31 10
20 4
T.C.U. grid team and assistant
football coach at Lufkin High
School for the past two years,
has tendered his resignation to
Lufkin High School officials,
Head Coach Abe Martin has re-
vealed. ■
The former Horned Frog star
resigned to accept a full-time
position with Lord's Optical Co.
in Fort Worth and to tal up
study of optometry.
Coach Martin announced the
promotion of Jack Spivey, coach
of last year's R squad, to Mayne's
vacated position. Spivey is the
grid product of Howard Payne
College. From 1935 to 1937 he
coached Hemphill High School
football teams.
SALE PRICES'
SIZE
5.25 or 5.50-17 $9.25
6.25 or 6.50-16 12.25
4.75 or 5.00-19 7.55
5.25 or 5.50-18 8.45
Coth prltot with your old tire
OTHER SIZES
Entry blanks may he obtained
at the Daily News office.
-----0 - ...--
Lew Jenkins is Hurt
In Automobile Crash
HOME OF UNE CLOTHES
Public Square Henderson
_
Nafle, If .
Joyce, c.
Helms, rf
Scott, p ..
Bullet Bob Gillespie, leading •
Henderson winner, will be Skip-
per Jake Atz‘ mound choice to-
night. The gangling young fire-
bailer has had his troubles in his
last two starts but is determined
to get back in the win cohumn to-
night. Ado Severi, classy Kil-
snapping the Senators' five-game Hnfr& Joyce; Masters
nicking Miller for 18 hits. Al
Bronkhurst pitched six-hit hull
in the nightcap and Marshall
took 12 hit- from Dobby.
. Kilgore dropped into a tie with
Texarkana for the cellar position
by losing a doublehender in Hen-
tier, on, 1-0 mid 4-1. Masters
pitehed a rix-hitter to take the
opener and Crow took the night-
cap. with three-hit hurling.
Lonrrview ' beat 'Texarkana,- 6-3
with Joe Demoran giving un 12
could keep on doing that from
now until the last day of the
season and still not win. ’Time is
working against them. Nine games
behind the league-leading In-
dians, the Yanks have a Hercu-
lean task ahead of them to over-
haul Oscar Vitt’s "team of
mutiny.”
If the Indians win 19 and lose
18 of their remaining 37 games,
the Tanks would have to win 31
out of their remaininig .41 games
to finish ahead of Cleveland. In
other words the Indians aren’t
likely to be in any danger unless
they should go into a serious
slump such as dropping three
straight to the Yanks in the : eric
opening today. But that might
happen. It did on the Indians'
last trip to Yankee Stadium.
The Yanks regained possession
of fourth place yesterday by
scoring a ninth-inning victory
over -the Tiger-,—€-5,—whHe—+he-
White Sox were tripped bl' the
Athletics, 8-0. The Yanks blew
a 5-0 lead, and let the Tigers knot
the score with two runs in the
ninth, but put over the winning
tally in their half of the ninth.
Rolfe and Henrich singled and
Bob Hennv ....... 106
Clarence Peters ..... 8
Wayne Tucker ...... 120
P-mspmoft gonaral THIS YEAR
T 1
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Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 10, No. 134, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 22, 1940, newspaper, August 22, 1940; Henderson, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1469557/m1/2/: accessed July 2, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rusk County Library.