Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 10, No. 190, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 27, 1940 Page: 7 of 18
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Rusk County Area Newspapers and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Rusk County Library.
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THE HENDERSON DAILY NEWS, SUNDAY, OCT. 17, 1940
PAGE
7
d
HHS Moves Back
La Babe Yearns To
i
Into 12* A A Race
0
MINNESOTA
i2
00 WALLOPS
$
rries
IOWA STATE
crowd of 62,922.
all over the place as the Hender-
son running game showed distinct
AMES,
m-
E
defeated Jowa State Col-
the crippled Wildcats
' superior feam, but
after maneuver-
into position time after time.
Babe Didrikson Zaharias
Hooker as he went up for another
than
team triumph rather
for the tacklers
McCarter's
, effort to field the twisting ball on
the 3-yard stripe.
Tulane Triumphs
CHAPEL HILL, N C. (UP) —
SUITS FOR
exchange of punts in which Me- officials set the Lions back
carter had all the advantage over
Palestine's Clyde Lokey, the Lions-again, to take the ball back to
ther determined drive.
€
Those were the highlights of
the Lion 40.
The Cats got the ball on their ball game which about 2,000 fans
MEN ON THE
made seven, then Howard got the before they surrendered the ball.
BARGAINS
WAY UP
o
wn
9
IN MEN’S
Results
22
wu
NEW and USED
*293
Ej
♦
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y
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2.95 up
J a
$19.75
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COMPLETE YOUR OUTFIT
*
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t
Both are famous and far ahead in the field in HATWEAR
3.85 - 5.00 - 7.50
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$1 $2 $3
Henderson
ARROW and ENRO SHIRTS
WANT TO BUY
. . 1.95 op
0
Men’s Suits and Overcoats
Open a Charge Account
0
HENDERSON’S EXCLUSIVE MAN’S STORE
South Street
Henderson
1
i -
\
4
1
4
Rice 13, Texas 0.
Tulsa 7, TCU 0.
dearly the
missed their
First Downs
Passes Tried
versity
team <
earn,
great
what
stop-
Kim-
the
their
%L
F
aliano,
ay by
Com-
his in-
ec for
e that
ree to
infrac-
taken
during
stlers.
aylor,
satis-
n’t a
Bears
ckled
rican
dozen
3 but
f by
the
15
The most popular with the
well dressed man! ... .
exas
uch •
the
team
the
and
f 14
ed up the ball on the 35 and ran
for a touchdown.
James Thibaut kicked Tulane’s
na
if you’re the typical progressive American man
and you’re planning on really going places in the
next year or so . . . then you'll want to complete
the picture by wearing style-right clothes for
every and all occasions. Hays Clothing Store has
' a selection of suits that w ill help you achieve
your ambitions . . . and the most remarkable
thing is the fact that these sujts are priced well
within your budget.
; An-
left
ikler,
tack-
quar-
back;
full-
New Mexico Teachers 13, Pan-
handle A. &M. 6.
N. M A*M 13. Arizona State 0.
San Diego St. 0, Fresno St. 0.
.s
Dartmouth 7. Harvard 6.
Syracuse 3, Columbia 0.
Michigan 14, Pennsylvania 0.
Tulane 14. North Carolina >
Michigan State 0. Santa Cl
Brown 9. Holy Cross 6. .
Princeton 28, Rutgers 13.
Cornell 21, Ohio State 7.
Navy 21, Yale 0
the
nake
run-
the
liter,
yard
atser
alter
riod.
kars
only
rter
■iting
()— 7
0—14
Hen-
touch-
son.
I M.:
onder-
eseon,
Kahn,
‘acks: /
bster.
End
Luens,
riffin,
Willis,
[lacks:
iclson.
improvement over recent perfol
ances. >
Palestine fought gallantl.
end;
bnett,
enter;
right
end;
left
half-
k.
St. Mary's 9, Fordham 6.
Bates 7, Maine 6.
Washington 7, California 6.
Colorado State 7. New Mexico 6.
Utah 25. Denver 14.
Colorado 62. Wyoming 0.
Texas Mines 0, Tempe 0.
Montana 13, Gonzaga 10.
Washington State 6, Oregon 6.
Idaho 0. Utah State 0.
Texas College 9, Langston T.
Northwestern 20, Indiana 7.
Wisconsin 14. Purdue 13.
Auburn 16. Georgia Tech 7.
Texas Tech 20, Marquette 13.
Notre Dame 26, Illinois 0.
Oklahoma 20, Iowa State 7.
S. Dak. 26, S. Dak. State 9.
Morningside 10, Omaha 7.
Idaho 0, Utah State 0.
Citadel 25, Oglethorpe 0.
Kansas State 20, Kansas 0.
Minnesota 34, Iowa 6.
Nebraska 20, Missouri 7.
Nevada «, Portales JC 0.
N. Dak. 24, N. Dak State 0.
Georgetown 26. NYU 0.
Lafayette 19. Army 0.
Carnegie Tech 14, Case 0.
Penn State 18, Temple 0.
VPI 21, Washington & Lee 0.
<•
I
game,..........
tisfied.
Ray ’
on his
e pass
of it.
;ook it
touch-
ackler
touch
extra
anford
ne less
ictory.
in the
second
team,
domi-
, driv-
period
s pass
e-
1 Z
t
7
zertam-t
Ken Hallmark Scores in Last Minute to
Break Deadlock for Bulldogs’ 14-7 Win
BY UNITED PRESS
married,” said Babe, whose hus-
band is a wll-known heavyweight
wrestler. "It's no longer necessary
for me to follow the professional
game. That's the reason I’m seek-
ing amateur status again.
“ . . . and I'll be at the top, too.
when my time is up.”
Mrs. Zaharias is adding sup-
porters almost every day to her
belief that she some day will be
the greatest woman golfer in the
country. In 1932 and 1936, she won
almost every Olympic track event
and then, with Adams passing to
! Walker, marched to the Lion 40
83 yards rushing and 90 from
passes compared with 68 rushing
04V
IL *
8
13
5
86
68
18
35
8
32
4
4
10
12
6
90
83
11 .
90
8
38
2
4
------—0-------
Auburn Battles to
Win Over Ga. Tech
winning point blighting North Car-
olina's homecoming day before
19,000 fans.
r
——
Passes Completed
Yds. Gained Passing
Yds. Gained Rushing
Yds, Lost Rushing
Yards Penalties
Punts
Yds. Avg. Punts
Fumbles
Fumbles Recovered
“ Justus
Palestine
appen- ,
left at of Pacific 0.
51.00 up
ALittle Money WifGoa
Long Way If You Buy Here!
Rountree Cleaners
CLEANERS - HATTERS - DYERS
Lions five. Then officials ruled more strenuous sports which she
that the Cats had interfered with
--«Caa
gam: —
3
4
S J
> i
own 14 went only to the 33. Me- On the golf course, however, I
Carter passed to Ed Hooker for 17 I Babe remains imperturbable, and '
yards. An offside penalty cost the ' determined, just as she was in
' Nv
cl
1,‘
4-
‘g/
Kilgore Upset Victory Over '
- Longview Echoes Over State
------♦ .. ..1. .
five-yard assessments; then
By Easy Victory
McCarter’s Kicking Sets Up First
Tally; Howard Gets Two Touchdowns
BY \ ERNON DOWDY
Daily News Staff
' Henderson's on-and-off Lions were on Friday night as
they plastered a 21 to 6 defeat on the Palestine Wildcats,
manufacturing their own breaks to win the ball game. Mag-
nificent kicking by (’apt. Bill McCarter, a 50-yard runback of
a punt by little Monk Green, and McCarter’s passing set up
91 • the three Lion scores.
Four substitute linemen rosee—------------------------
out of obscurity to join with a trio first down on the Wildcat 10. Me-
of veterans in outchargins their carter made seven, and Howard
heavier toes time and again. Lion carried the ball over in two thrusts
The Eagles were
the most promising youngsters in
the nation. She had out-played
Babe through 25 holes, where Babe
was four down. Then Mrs. Zahar-
ias began putting on the pressure,
and her superior strnegth and
stamina — a vital factor in long
Baker, gave Palestine trouble all
night long. Earl Boyd, the finest
guard to show here this year, was
at his best last night, but only a
scant step ahead ot the other line-
men,
Henderson made 10 first downs I
to eight for the Wildcats; gained
dicitis attack and was
home.
Starting lineups:
Carter passed to Hugh Green for own 17 after McCarter kicked out.
13 yards. Boundin’ Buddy Howard
picked up two at the line. Green
saw and liked. It was wide-open
Don't throw away your old suits or overcoat*. Bring them
to us. We PAY CASH for them.
were up
lighted by McCarter's kicking. He Stopped on their 35 after the open 8011 championship at Colon-
got off boots of 44. 55. 48 and 40 kickoff. the Cats kicked to Green, ial Club here. "I play a lot better
yards from scrimmage, and was 1 who took the ball on his own 25 "'hen I'm not in a tournament."
floating them down high enough and sprinted back to the Cat 25 Her performance in the Texas
for the tacklers to nail Palestine- for the longest run of the night, open seemed good enough to most
runners with a minimum of ground Howard: made four and Hooker people. She shot a six-under-par
gained. McCarter's best kick of picked up one on an end-around. 69 in practice, eliminated her first
the night was a 55-yard effort that McCarter passed to Dennard, who two opponents, by 9 and. 8 and women's matches—had its effect.
Thomas, the Palestine safety maniwas stopped on the Cat one-yard her third.by..8 and 7: She beat By the final hole, Babe was
hunted over the sidelines in an | line. Howard took two whacks at Helen Dettweiler, M ashington pro- । eyen She smacked her 36th
the line and scored. Bill McMur- ~ drive 250 yards down the fairway,
ray split the crossboards with a McCarter's kick was short and the 1 whistled a 150-yard approach shot
McCarter hit his receivers six perfect placement kick—the first runback gave the Cats the ball on
Do you need a hat? Here is your chance to buy
one for almost nothing. Many of them are new.
The others have been thoroughly renovated and re-
blocked.
found themselves in possession of
the ball on the Wildcat 33. Me-
ga me
y- A
from
riably
laylor
r the
mmy
was
pans
of a
Witt
i the
Bay,
and
ssing
blockers spilled Wildcat tacklers at a stubborn Wildcat line. Green
-n " the "im .... th. Hande"- scored the extra point on a lateral
fa? more than did the Palestine
threats. There were four rulings
of pass interceptions which played
a part in the scoring for both
teams. The Lions’ chief penalties
—----— — onto the green and took the hole
one made by a Lion in a game their 45. A pass interference and championship with a par four,
this year, ruling after a short gain took the Babe previously had won the
A pass interception by Hooker ball to the Lion 34. Adams made Western Women's crown at Mil- l
Furman 40. Davidson 7.
2*-*, Res-
Wii1 di! km
William & Mary 13, Virginia 6.
DOWNS IOWA
general first passed 18 yards to
Jack MeGuffin and then kicked
goal to tie the count. Then, with
but seconds left, he took a lateral
just over the line of scrimmage
and battered and squirmed his
way for 30 yards to score the win-
ning touchdown. Again he con-
verted the extra point.
Thus Long-view the team the
sports writers had ranked with
Amarillo and Sherman in Texas’
“big three,” fell by the wayside
and a new power stepped into the
limelight. Kilgore has been tied
but not beaten. The Bulldogs still
must get by a tough Tyler eleven.
Another upset of shocking im-
port came about at Waxahachie.
There Logan Stollenwerck’s spun-
ky Waxahachie Indians, once the
doormat of District 10-AA, beat
Bryan 2 to 0 and pushed from the
ranks of the undefeated the team
favored to win in the blackland
belt. It was a blocked punt in the
third period which gave the In-
dians their winning two points.
Elsewhere in the state the re-
suits of the Friday night encoun-
ters were pretty much as expected,
with a few form reversals.
Midland, which had been looked
Denton Teachers 7, Sam Hous-
' ton Teachers 6.
Southwest La. Inst. 6, Louisiana
College 0.
Washington (St L) 27 Butler 19
Weatherford College 27, N. T.
A. C. 7.
TENAHA TIES
TATUM 6 TO 6
•i l —
TATUM. (Spl).—Coming from
■ behind in the third quarter, the
g Tenaha Tigers struck paydirt on
J a long touchdown pass to earn a
9 6-6 tie with Tatum's Eagles.
I Riding their six-point lead, the •
i Eagles had moved down into the ]
I Tenaha end of the field when
their third-quarter drive bogged
down. The Tigers took over and
drove for the distance. The cli-
max to the -Ters’ march was
the old hideout pass play. Tenaha
failed in the conversion attempt
that could have won the game,
Tatum having missed point in
day night. Although individuals .
stood out in the game, it was a pass, and it meant a 15-yard gain
The thunder of an East Texas football giant falling in
the upset of the week echoed across the state today.
Longview’s Loboes were beaten, 14 to 7, Friday night by
a Kilgore team that gave up a touchdown. then spit on its
hands, grabbed hold of the ball game and wrested it
away from its favored opponents.
It was a spunky youngstere---------------------------------
George Franck led the Minna- 5
sota attack with four touch*
downs, but as the Gopher line
split the lighter Iowa forward
wall during the second half all 5
Minnesota ball carriers gained at
will.
In the first period Iowa stall-
ed the Minnesota running attack,
but two long touchdown passes
from Halfback Bruce Smith to
the speedy Franck took the
starch out of the Hawkeyes' staff
defense. Those two passes erased
the lead Iowa had taken in the
first period and from then on
Minnesota backs raced through
and around the faltering Iowans.
Minnesota made 12 first downs
to Iowa's nine and gained 868
yards to Iowa's 110. •
A fumble on his own 34 by
Bobby Paffrath, Minnesota half-
back, was the break that gave
Iowa its first scoring opportunity.
After a successful pass Bill
Green, Iowa fullback, swept
through a big hole in the right
side of the Minnesota line and
raced 27 yards along the side-
lines for a touchdown. Gilleard’s
attempted placement was wide.
Minnesota's running attack got
under way soon after the start
of the second half as Franck
cracked the Iowa line repeatedly
and finally plunged over right
guard for a score. Paschke place-
kicked the point.
Joe Mernik, Sweiger, Joe
Jamnik, and Franck pounded the
Iowa line at the start of the
final period and Franck went
over from the one-y rd Hne.
Big Ed Steinbauer ripped
through to score Minnesota’s
fifth touchdown after a drive
that started on the Gophers' own.
36. Steinbauer kicked the extra
point.
gave up because competition was fessional,.3 and2,in thessemi-
scarce. She hits the ball welr over Hicks or Pasadena, Cal., in the
200 yards off the tee, and few , finals
men can out-drive her consistently. ' ‘match showed what
I haven t played enough.tour- may be expected of Babe by the
0 rh ’ she said after win- time her amateur status is re-
ning the recent Texas women’s stored. Elizabeth Hicks is one of
Stopped on their 35 after the open golf championship at Colon-
handy points to shatter Wildcat
drives.
The light Henderson Hne, fea- HoAAWA1I
turing a quartet of new hands, in I A UUlUwUV
the forward wall, Hooker, George
Pool, A. N. Thompson and Willie '
Santa Barbara 6, San Jose
State 33.
Oklahoma Baptist U. 13. North-
eastern State 0.
George Washington 19, West
Virginia 0.
Duquesne 10, Manhattan 6.
Chatttanooga 20, Sewanee 6.
Louisiana Normal 7, Centenary 0
Howard Payne 10, s-Westem 2.
La. Tech 20. III. Wesleyan 14.
Cameron Aggies 20, Connors 0.
Kentucky 7, Georgia 7.
St. Louis 21, Drake 0.
W-Tex Col. 40, St. Benedict 14.
Wichita 14 Washburn 6.
Durant Thrs 7, Okla City 3.
Ouachita 13, E-tex Thra 3.
We now have on hand a big line of new and used
suits lor men. Many of these suits are well known,
attverttsed-hrans of -tirerftmest makes: come ifi and
see them. If we have your size you can buy a suit
at give-away prices.
VaNafien. Werwm
L. ... a -a
the for the Lions. McCarter went over
work of anyone' or two men which from the nine, on a slash through
made it possible. j tackle. Tjiia time, Green passed to naments yet,’
Henderson's triumph was high- Dennard for the extra point. I ning the ree
To show how close the game
actually was, Iowa States and ।
Oklahoma each made 12 first
upon as the best in District 3-AA, downs, each completed six
Be Golf Champ
FORT WORTH, Tex. (UP) — a
She's no longer the tom-boy who ’ "
cond
y as
n a
orced
his
quar-
failed
play
aylor
who
econd
ireer.
second period set up a second
counter. Capt. Dick McGowen
kicked a 20-yard field goal in
the third period.
End Jim Lenoir, Auburn ren-
ter, recovered a fumble hv Bob
Ison of Tech on the opening
kickoff at Tech’s 10-yard line
Big Rufur Deal bucked the ball
across on a series of plunges.
lost 0-6 to Big Spring, leaving that
district in a tangle,
Sherman's mighty Bearcats beat
Denison 20 to 7 but the state's
high scoring team was heid to a
closer score than had been antici-
pated.
Many of the leading teams were
impressive, Lubbock, the 1939
state champion, thrashed Borger
51 to 0 in the Westerners’ first dis-
trict game. Port Arthur walloped
Orange 5.5 to 0. Lufkin defeated
Livingston 33 to 7. Corpus Christi
won a non-district affair with Fort
passes for gains of 66 and 64
yards respectively, and came
within 43 yards of equalling each
other in the number of yards
gained by rushing.
Worth Tech 26 to 0. Wichita FnHs
helped its District 2 standing by
beating Childress 6 to 0. Woodrow
Wilson stayed ahead in District 8
with a 6 to 0 victory over Dallas
Adamson.
Hapless Ranger, the goat of Dis-
trict 9, lost fo Breckenridge 0 to
58. In six games the Bulldogs
still haven’t scored.
MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (UP).
—Minnesota defeated Iowa Sat-
urday, 34 to 6, in an amazing
display of speed and power.
Straight, old-fashioned foot-
ball was all Minnesota needed to
rout the Hawkeyes and remain
undefeated. The game wae play-
ed before a home-coming day
As 58 the first quarter.
■l...................
M1 M payoff punches
0—-E Ing into positioi
5888 |S. Taylor and K Pari h, diminu-
H5208 dMam. tive vuards for th'- b:iel< < were
•2p standouts in the Tat1m line all
afternoon, breaking through for
tackle after tackle. Fitzgerald,
Eagle end. also looked good. Cen-
ter Young, captain of the Eagles,
backed up the line with booming
tackles, while Chamness and
Wheeler supplied the fireworks
in the Tatum backfield.
Tatum has yielded only 18
points this season, and Coach
Jack Garrett is prepping his
charges for Spring Hill this Fri-
day with championship hopes in
in the back of his wind. The
Spring Hill game Nov. 1 winds
up the home schedule for the
undefeated Eagles.
Starting lineups for the Tenaha
game were:
Tenaha: Hooper and Samford,
ends; Walker and Bowden,
tackles; Hurst and Erwin, guards;
Corley, center; Robertson, quar-
terback; Foley and* Harrison,
halfbacks; and’ Parker, fullback.
Tatum: M. Hunt and Fitz-
gerald, ends; E. Hunt and Red-
mon, tackles; Taylor and Parish,
guards; Young, center; Wheeler,
quarterback: Chamness and Ad-
ams, halfbacks; and Drake, full-
back.
of 12 times for a total of 90 yards
gained by passes—just seven more
than the running game was able
to produce.
Coasting with a comfortable
lead most of the way, the Lions
used MeCarter’s kicks as their
most potent defensive weapon. .
The Lions made their first score
in the opening qua i ter. After an
•. — -8
gg-S
— T
w2°mak3
3 amezd2
made Olympics records in 1932 and
1936, but Mrs. George Zaharias
(Babe Didrikson) still is shooting
for the moon in athletics.
This time her ambition is to
become the outstanding woman
golfer o fthe world, to win the na-
tional women's championship.
Right now, Babe is having a three-
year wait to restore her amateur
standing. It began eight months
ago, and in the spring of 1943 she
will become eligible to participate
in the national women's tourna-
ment.
“I'm getting older, and I’m
la. (UP).—The Uni-
of Oklahoma football
from McCarter.
As the first hall ended, Palestine
recovered Green's fumble on the
Lion 36 and, aided by a pass inter-
. . ference ruling, got down to the 25.
against an aroused ball ch b that the last pay of the period, Del-
.struck hard, when the breaks pre- , w. 0N Li0h - - -
sentted themselves ana refused to bert Adams floated a long, high in which women competed. She
v , t hem , r i .. pass down to Walker, who had gal- aiso was the star or a national
he denied. The Lions capitalized on Ia .i1 + .. 41. nd ,, a1o Was Ine siar 01 a .nauonat
three of four scoring chances Pal- loped right over the end zone. Al- championship basketball team
three of tout scoi mg chances. 1 a though he caught the pass, he was 1 from Dalias
estine crossed the midfield stripe . Neb1 . Mn.. " m Danas.
onil twice ilst as the first half out of bounds and the score was Babe then didn’t go much for
only twice just as the first na. nullified as the whistle sounded for I feminine effects and her hair was
ended, and on then scoring drive itumii. emne exrecus, ana ner nair was
as the game was nearing the close. ’ cut short like a man a so it would-
Penalties a 90-yard total of 1 The locals struck twice in the n't fly in her face during her
them ' kept the Lions in hot water third quarter, scoring when the races. But now, she has a most
period was only about three min- feminine hair-do, with soft brown
utes gone.- Lokey’s punt from his curls.
Scoring: Touchdowns, Howard
2, McCarter, Walker. Points after
touchdown: Green, Dennard (pass
from Green), McMurray (place-1
ment.)
Officials: Hadlock (Texas), ref-
eree; Bolton (Sam Houston), um-
pire: Street (Stephen F. Austin), i
, head linesman.
named Ken "Country" Hallmark.
■another of a family of boys which
has made Kilgore football history,
who did most to slap Longview
from the ranks of the unbeaten
and untied.
The Bulldog’s 160-pound field i
Henderson — Hoker and Me- ,
Murray, ends; Baker and Thomp-
son, tackles; Boyd and G. Pool, j
guards; Flanagan, center;. Mc-
Carter. quarterback; Green and
Dennard. halfbacks; and Howard,
fullback. Substitutes who saw
action included Cox, tackle; Tay-
lor, center; Lewis Allen Pool, tac-
kle; Wellborn, back.
Palestine starters were Walker
and Nivens, ends; Kimbrell and
Calcote, tackles; Atwood and
Henderson, guards; Kane, center;
Lambright, quarterback; Collier
and Lokey, halfbacks, and Tho-
mas, fullback. Substitutes were
Cooley and Adams, backs, Hast-
minzmmendaSsarbarqugh.end.Mix-.
ensshffted-to-center-when-Kanet
lege, 20 to 7, Saturday in an
offensive battle that nearly tore
the turf off Clyde Williams
Field.
Fourteen thousand homecom-
ing fans watched an inspired
Iowa State team play the heavily
favored Sooners on even terms
through most of the game—and
through all the game so far as
statistics were concerned.
But it wasn’t Iowa State's
day. The Cyclones couldn't metch
Ihc power of Oklahoma’s slip-
pery Indian halfhack, Jack Ja-
cobs, and power loaded Fullback
John Martin.
Iowa State lost a touchdown
after its fleet fulback, Hank
Wilder, had caught- a pass and
had run 48 yards over the goal.
The play was called back when
a ‘Cvelone player dipped. Then
in the final period, Iowa State
came within two yards of cross-
ing the Sooner goal, only to lose
the ball on downs.
t ' , 92
Lions Have Good Night, Down Paletine 21 to
and buils-eye passes to Howard 14 through the Lions, after being waukee, Wis., and she went from In Final Minute
and McMurray brought the Lions unable to get off a pass and start- | Fort Worth to California to par- ■ 1
to the Palestine 18 as the quar- ing a wild run. Collier made four,! ticipate in local winter tourna-
ter ended. then Adams passed to Walker 1 ments. Her home now is in Los ao0, , at
Then the backward march behind the double stripe. His at- l Angeles. Tulane took advantage of a last-
started.. First it was « pair or tempted pass to Lokey tor th. She does no boasting, but If. minutnsbrealt,Soturday.tcnrofent
Th. point, ws nogood.. L,o„ easy to is looking th’tovnnsatgame that "ended like
yards at one clip, and. 15-xards on the Palestine 34. launching an- -tional tournament, wherever it Aimingthe in ing point just be-
may be. Shre can participate now I fore the timekeeper blew his whis-
• in any woman’s tournament ex- ' tle
cept this biggest one, and some j Carolina apparenty had won the
football, not consistent in ground- whn8aw open believe she may game 13-7 late in the fourth
gaining, but spectacular. Both Wo a s.o stack or trophies by j period. With a minute and 56 sec-
teams were gunning for all they l hay An °h. i8 eligible for the onds left to play, Harry Dunkle
■ i could get. Long passes time and the tmme g punted for Carolina from his own
again were broken up by the Kr Siav a ot better when I get 44. Tom Glass dashed in, blocked
। Lions by a combination of good ” I the kick and Albert Bodney scoop-
' luck and good ball hawking. ! she said.
Their interceptions came at
were for clipping.
The Lions played as a team Fri-
ATLANTA, Ga. (UP).—Au-
. ournhad its eyes open for fum-
bles and wayward passes Satur-
Texas A. & M. 14, Baylor 7. day and defeated Georgia Tech
Arkansas 21. Mississippi 20, 1. “ Fiebafore 25,000 fans at
Stanford 21. So. California 7. The loss was Techs first in the
and 86 passing for the Wildcats. | Montana State College 7, ree- Southeastern Conference and
—The Wldeats-were without the t-ley- State 0.------------------—--------—- --marked— Auhuru’a second loop,
services of Williams, quarterback I Oregon State 7, UCLA 0. victory. Both teams had been de-
and blocker, who had an appen- Loyola (Los Angeles) 20, College rented out ide the conference.
, "-iei n A Tech fumble on the opening
■ kickoff led to one Auburn touch-'’
'down, and another miscue in the
HAYS CLOTHING STORE
ATea
8- 7A5s
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Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 10, No. 190, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 27, 1940, newspaper, October 27, 1940; Henderson, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1469612/m1/7/?q=%22%22~1&rotate=90: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rusk County Library.