Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 142, Ed. 1 Monday, February 10, 1941 Page: 4 of 6
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Basketball Reaches Mid-Season With All Games Crucial Contests
L I ] ft I ♦ s-
•4
2W,wevgeset
Gain
1941.
PAGE FOUR
f
has been going on pretty steadily
ii
2 .
| when
23
1
t
E
golf fans had littered the place
tri-
schools, with each team having
its
own coaching staff and schedule.
el
All of which nheans the boys
tai of 273, Cor
are
I ment
saw Lawson Little,
a retired colonel's son, play great
down in
k
by the weather.
ni
see
laments free of
charge ?
into baseball-k
Weekend Sports in Brief
South
Little, a master shot maker
The other clubs, already definite- !
or face lacerations were re-
fin-
The field left here for New Or-
I-
Axis Countries
ver fi-
Led 194
flux
ida (5-1).
includes engagements with Louisi-
Of Immigrants
Sam Houston State. The Owls open
For Germany, 5,302
In From
ta ly
By allen1
C. DIBBLE
United Press
6
Columbia (2-1) are the
i
the 70,756 immi-
the United
year ended June
BOSTON—Fred Wolcott ran 45-yard hurdles in 5.6 sec
Ids. and
the 50- and 60-yard hurdles.
es
on and Natural-
reported to
has
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla.—Jack Kramer toppled Hal
lurface.
rec-
Italy entered
th; country during
(12-0),
the period which
was marked by
g
Long Island (15-2), Georgetown
k
U.
(9-2.)
New York
on the
Villanova.
standout
The
IRON MOUNTAIN, Mich.—Alf Engen, National Class A s
i jump
champion of Salt Lake City, leaped 267 feet in one of two jumps, but
as their last
place of permanent
ner
lege. We know little about
the
bobsled
Figure Lower Than in 1939
i
week when Oklahoma
The service
worth the price of admission.
TEXAS
ACCORDING TO
by the fact that the
there’ll be 106 football teams
T
E.mk.
3888 - 3 xa08888
school
ule gives
re port to congress
There will also be 302 clubs com-
quota immigration
a
for 1940 was tut
51.997, a drop of
more than 16 ] ber cent from 62 402
- «0
countryside he often paints.
standing
declared the
Simply economy.
the
2-3
home
from
a
pair of games against member of the school board, who
J
a
proposed a $1,400 cut to bring
cases, this
such
turned down tempting bl
As physical director, Broderick
I
% :
told friends he enjoys “moulding”
. mailed to 37 Fort Worth Cats
■ ag
Texas baseball league.
the East
put the
the United
e
Saturday up in New Jersey
i added:
in the number of
wanner
le
a
Robertson, noted track coach
h
plies clear evidence that
sesa-
to the effect
tional reports
floods of alien visitors are
admitted to this
country on any
off honors in the Texas Open. Lit-
sort of excuse are not based on
pionship.
the accurate rec-
His job was to “beat Beverly"
—traditional nearby rival,
some-
the quota and Jie 70.756 immit
admitted to the
grants actual! y
I
sion of certain
husbands who mar-
sad..
ried citizen wive prior to July 1,
cials say
children of citizens.
gone on jaunts to Florida
1932, and the
better
immigrants from
While 21,520
I
A
<L
Only Four Teams
In Nation Have
Perfect Records
SPVRTS"
SZZLES
an Athletic’ Boosters club, i
posed of business men, whose
countries
the nature
the
the
Arlington and Friday night they
play hosts to Clifton Junior Col-
day. which means baseball train-
ing will get under way before we
realize it. . , Lew Jenkins, Texas
The Immigrat
ization Service
visitors, transier ts, and resident
aliens returning from abroad sup-
is to support all athletics in
Bonham schools. Bob Cantrell.
have been so outstanding that
has stolen the show wherever
has performed. Truly, he’s
to lick Clifton to break even over
the week’s play, which is another
between the 51,-
provided for by
ach game to make sure
’t wind up among the
grants, such as
States citizens
umph in the
ment with an
the immigrants
racially as Ger-
-I out-
ths at
Sitting aroun
out the clubhbu:
1933 the repo
“This decre:
head a rapidly-shifting
Wisconsin plays North-
Class AA rank to compete for the
state title in 1941, two more than
competed last year. Colorado City,
Soldiers Mak
“Why not
break? Why
North
Carolina,
$10,000
enth in
Arkansas Has Won
Six Victories in
Southwest Conference
Bv HUGH S. FULLERTON. JR.
NEW YORK, Feb. 10 (AP). —
This season’s basketball business
i
j
I
Manager Casey Stengel were organizing syndicate to take
nancial control of club.
fielder-
•-coach.
:11 3-5
Robert
leans and the start of the $5,000
tournament there Thursday.
na
players.
He has done much to
receives $4,000 a year and as foot-
ball coach $2,700. -
His $4,000 salary alone, Mr. Min-
ton' said, was equal to that of the
mavor of this mill city of 40,000;
$1,400 more than is paid any other
high school department head, and
within $700 of the school superin-
tendent’s pay.
The coach’s combined salary far
•‘9
-
Service,” the
said.
“Even while
I' 1
BROOKLYN—Shortstop Harold (Peewee) Reese and Third Base-
man Harry (Cookie) Lavagetto signed contracts with Dodgers] leaving
nine players still out of the fold.
DETROIT—Tigers released Earl Averill, 37-year-old Outfielder,.
C_
3298 313
I
By JAMES F. KING
SALEM, Mass. Feb. 10 (AP).—
Bill Broderick, who often has been
called the nation’s highest paid
schoolboy football coach, faces a
..
F / di
*3233
exceeds that of any other
official.
win by three s’
Ben Hogan of W
At present, only four teams are
in that class out of ten major
leave the high school gam
college coaching position I
FOR REST BEFORE RESCUE—a Nazi refuge-buoy,
used as a floating haven for German airmen shot down in the
channel, reached British shores, by mistake, after being torn
from its moorings. Inside are four bunks for downed airmen.
groups. North Carolina has won
ten straight and South Carolina
six in the Southern conference;
Arkansas has taken six in the
Southwest conference, and Dart-
mouth has won four in the East’s
“Ivy” league.
Sectional Situations
Starting with the South, first
to finish, here’s the situation in
the Tyler field won t be ready for
service when the Indians need it.
ionth doesn’t per-
tending on sport-
Only 3,556 of
were designated
tie is at present the national open
” Texas
haven’t won a conference game
yet, if we remember correctly.
certain schools in that conference
because they had been approached
by representatives of certain
schools with offers. Their loss, of
course, is Dana Bible’s gain, and
maybe a valuable one, for Johnny
is considered a great grid pros-
pect.
Germany entered the United
States, only 1,978 persons left this
country to enter Germany. Forty-
tournament at Raleigh, N. C., Feb.
28-March 1, are sure to be among
the eight top teams for tourna-
ment play, no matter what hap-
pens in five remaining games for
each. Richmond and Washington
and Lee (each 6-1) and William
and Mary (6-2) look pretty safe.
Wake Forest, Duke and V. M. I.
need to break even in their re-
aliens. were ad mi tted to the United
States during the year ended June
30, 1940, as cm pared to 185,333
in 1939, a decrease of 25 per cent.
“The condition; i existing in Cen-
tral Europe have imposed an add-
ed burden upon the United States
Immigration and Naturalization
BALTIMORE—Maryland Jockey club disclosed plan to make win-
ners of 12 leading three-year-old stakes and 12 most important events
15. The season’s second for older horses automatically eligible for Pimlico Special.
hey aren’t worried. They
ttle that argument be-
a
* :
144
1
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/
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n
a
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i
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u
IB-. -
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oo-
Them
a
that
being
, 2*g,.
se
e" gei.s
1
each section:
Southern Conference:
rw
I
I
0*^
; here.
1 San
‘ I / • • <
DRUM STICKS ‘IN THE RAW ’—With turkey days near, vigilant watch for coyotes is
kept by herder and his dog at Forrest Benson's huge turkey ranch near Loveland, Col.
com- 1 , t.. - .- 1
■ him 1 since early December, but it’s just
Pointing out
non-immigrants
ir
I R.N0
while they swept
after some 8,000
congress that
from Germany
HE GETS ALONG SWIMMINGLY—Testing Britain's new Salvus diving equipment fot
working at a depth of 30 feet for almost an hour, a diver crawls along in a swimming pool.
naratns is for use in entering flooded or smoked-out parts of a ship. Valves attached to aweigbted
belt help regulate the air released in bag. Diver's mates watch—just in case.
Mississippi tonight and Tennessee
Saturday.
Three Leaders in East
East: Dartmouth (4-0), Cornell
kes over Silen;
ite Plains, N. Y.,
Tadd
sereeBeoo"
3
21,520 immigrants
and 5,302 from
UNC\EAC
EZwsE
manag er of the Nat: onal
climes.
Twenty years ago his Haverhill
High school eleven went to Jack-
sonville, Fla., and defeated Duval
High 27-0 in what was advertised
as the national high school cham-
By FELIX
SAN ANTN
(AP).—Soldiqrl
and regulars i
bracket, need 1
: tion's sporting
1 Corcoran, the
against the Teachers on the night
of October 4.
tened two days
the point where all games are
“clutch” games.
The Southern and the South-
eastern conferences have only two
weeks to wind up their regular
season affairs and get into cham-
pionship tournaments. Most of the
ether major leagues finish the first
or second weekend in March.
Speaking of generalities — the
only safe way to speak at this
stage—this means that out of the
dozen games which make up the
average conference or league sea-
son for etch team, six still are to
be played in three or four weeks.
So even those leaders whose rec-
ords to date are perfect must bear
BURNS UP SOGGY COURSE — The course was soggy
from snow and rain at San Antonio Saturday, but it didn’t
down W. Lawson Little, the national open champion, who
burned up the links in the Texas Open with a nine-un der-par
62, tying the P. G. A. 18-hole tournament competitive record.
With him on the bridge in the swing around the course was
Ed (Porky) Oliver, who shot a 71.
one persons were deported to Ger-
many during the year, as com-
pared with 172 during the previous
year.
in uniform
Carolina and
which don’t
P.G.A., mused :
“Today we :
world’s greatest track and fjeld
star during these so-called modern
times.
reported that 138, I
032 non-immigrants, including visi-
tors. transi er ts, and resident
collide before the
on the right track. A similar $et-
up produced a district champion-
ship for Paris last season.
-
across the continent for a game
with Urban Military academy in
Los Angeles.
gi
Southwest: Arkansas (6-0) Rev. Chester G. Minton, rector of
bed of football, in 1923 for a re-
ported $7,500.
fore spring training. One of those
late spells materially effected the
great Yankee outfielder one sea-
son, we remember.
81
agency.”
The difference
997 immigrants
50
(5-1) and _
only teams really in the running
for the Eastern league title, al-
Antonio Country club with a
- .2
| .
aaamn2mn2 2
- - . I. Big Six; Kansas (3-1) took the
way of saying we figure the Aggies lead last v..... Cill. -
will be a bit too tough to handle. (4-2) dropped into a tie with Ne-
d 283 2 : 31 ~33a
mid-season in most of the big con-
ferences-and getting around to
front seat
includes engagements with Louisi- without p aying a conference game
ana State, Tulane, Centenary and : since January II, winds up tonight
Sam Houston State. The OWls open and tomorrow against “upsetter”
Kentucky (4-1), Ten-
4 ppicnn
n. .
i,-
"nce.-
if -
-
3388850030885 ax. . ’ * s
fight over his $6,700 salary—but
I originators of the move to cut his
the Southland and in
BUSTING THREE world marks
in one week is no mean accomp-
lishment, if you ask us. Yet that
is exactly what blonde Free die
Wolcott of Rice has done. Satur-
day night up in Boston this amaz-
ing hurdler from Texas cut .1 of a
its duty thorough-
e for a ; ly and conscien tiously, in strict'
the requirements
Rice (3-2), tied with Southern
Methodist for second. The Razor-
backs knocked Baylor out of the
picture last week.
Big Seven: It’s Utah and Wyo-
ming, tied (5-1), now as a result
of Wyoming’s 35-33 victory last
Saturday. They meet again at
Salt Lake City Friday. Colorado
(4-3), defending champion, appears
to have only an outside chance of
catching up in the second half.
Pacific Coast: Stanford (5-1)
seems to be “in” for the southern
division title at the halfway mark.
The Indians have lost only two of
18 games all season. Washington
State (7-2) has a good lead over
Washington and Oregon State
(4-4) in the northern section, but
the setup may be changed this
week with the first two Washing-
ton State-Washington meetings.
larger number of drivers fit to berth. Tell your merchant you saw his
stay on the road longer. | Club owners instructed J. W. advertisement in The Register.
..
ieg ,
"*e
ven-under-par to-
oran, the toi rna-
maining games.
Southeastern Conference: Flor,
which has held the lead
break on the na-
vents and Fred
nan of a million
heats.
HANOVER, N. H.—U. of New Hampshire upset Dartmouth to .win
ski title at 31st annual Dartmouth winter carnival; Doug Mann of
McGill won Slalom and Roger Simpter of Dartmouth, the jumping.
1 hat only 138,032
were admitted to •
ites i in the 1940 fiscal
ws 21,520
in 1939, it wa increasingly necest
His ability as an artist, in years sary to check with utmost care
ne hv has hronsht him as mch 1 +roxel Inenmente of aliens whose
residence, whil • a n additional 7,882
came from other European coun-
tries.
Georgia. ---- .
nessee (542), Tulane and Louisiana
State (each 4-2) are other candi-
dates for the top. Kentucky plays
------j— -------- transferring farm activities from
A standard driver’s license law ' Longview to Tyler.
j ideas, thinks golf should take the
I lead. . f
at Atlanta, Texas, this spring
stead of at Tyler, due to the fact
■
7
k 1-,
icrifices
re these boys a
let any non-com-
feated Lloyd Brown, Phillies pitcher, 2 and 1, for championship in
baseball players’ golf tourney.
BOSTON—Bob Quinn, Bees’ president, confirmed reports he and
time of 5 hours, 3 minutes, 5 seconds for 26-mile ocean course]
LAKE PLACID, N. Y.—Tuffield Latour and Paul Dupree, Saranac
SAN ANTONIO—Law-son Lstte,atd STpen golf champion, 2
ished with four-under par 67 to win $5,000 Texas Open with 273, three
strokes better than Ben Hogan.
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.—Merv Shea, Detroit Tigers’ coach, de-
mans and 5,512 a j Italians, accord-
ing to figure ; compiled by the
service.
mit too much s
ing events.”
my father was stationed
he recalled. “I played the
Why not carry the idea
.ball and other
- ri-
to meet again next month. SoOse
came up off the canvas to beat — —
Vigh in their last battle. . . . The champion. Benny Ho8an
for 1
the beginning of 1 he European con
Nearly 20,00) of the immigrants
arriving from Germany were Jews,
the report showed. Approximately
700 Jews entered the country from
| Italy.
The number of Jews in the year’s
immigration totaled 39.945. Ap-
proximately 4,000 gave England
Lake, N. Y., defeated ten teams for North American two-man ______
title with elasped time of 4 minutes, 56.57 seconds for four cne-mile
» Report Sho
Vigh scrap was so closely cOn-, s.,
tested the two have been signed j Sunday with a
wm • " -"bi 1, pe; (4-2) aroppea into a tie wiIn we-i
Both games, however, wil be well braska by losing to Iowa State.)
" ihe 2 f ndmiscinn- Tonight Kansas is at home to Ne-
a game made doubly
™ I V
e < if
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eda . < w
Laqge Er
808 33 88888
country is exp ail led by the admis-
non-quota immit
th e wives of United
Morris, league president, to con-
tact representatives of Longview
and Paris to pick the sixth mem-
Oklahoma City Indians will train toy- came inigecond, threesstrokes
in- behind the leader. . . . Nortn Texa
certainly isn't so hot on the boards
this season. The Eagle eagers
*-mm T
■ ' #2
K , 1
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2 —38
• rem
888888888888.. ■ 339882
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2’.
d-e-
.....! 1" II'
jia
- . uze g... Drake a chance to over-
Ennis and Livingston have been take Creighton and offers welcome
i raised to the highest rank, with relief (after a week which saw
| Harlandale dropping to Class A. Washington University advance to
11 "The---at lee 1 ono elhe eem- I _ tie for first place and drop back
to fourth. It's Drake against St. .
Louis tonight, with the current pay insist it .has .nothing todo
standing Creighton (5-2), Drake with de-emphasizins the sport.
I (4-2), Oklahoma A. and M. (3-2).
ly in, were Marshall. Texarkana, j ceived by Mrs. B. W. William*,
Henderson, Tyler, and Sherma. a 515 Carnes street, when car*
new club. Kilgore, a member last ! driven by August Eugster, 507
year, will not enter a team. Carnes, and Dr. C. J. Paclik, who
George and Julius S c h e p p s, resides north of Gainesville, ollid-
owners of the Dallas, Texas league ed at 8 a. m. Monday at the inter-
club, announced at a meeting of section of North Commerce and
PHILADELPHIA—Chuck Klein signed contract as ou
coach of Phillies; Syl Johnson was released outright at pitch e
MIAMI—Warren Wright’s Whirlaway ran six furlongs in
in Cocoanut Grove purse at Hialeah to win first 1941 start;
Collins’ Sweet Willow captured $5,000 Black Helen handicap.
LOS ANGELES—W. B. Simpson’s General Manager, 12-t
sider, triumphed in $10,000 San Carlos handicap by four led
Santa Anita as heavily-favored Mioland ran fourth.
OAKLAND, Calif.—Mrs. N. D. Parson's Exploded took
New York handicap at Golden Gate by stepping mile and sixt
2:00 3-5 in mud.
Favorite's sports editor, was hon-
ored by being chosen as vice presi-
dent of the organization. Meetings ■
will be held on the first Tuesday
East Texas league club owners
here yesterday that they were
- ggon
f.
..2 3.32
f a
,22
< W A
a 7- e -8
Open championi won the Texas
event. Byron Nelson pulled down
first money last year. ,
Hogan Also Ran
Hogan had an errant putter tof
blame for his failure to catch the
fleeing Little. Through the final1
36 holes he three-putted seven)
greens to eventually wind up at!
276.
But Little just about broke
Hogan’s spirit on the final round
with a brilliant 67 which included r I
a.three- putt green,two missed East lexas League
putts of five feet and a penalty । •
shsm Snead, Hot Springs, Va., Has Six Clubs
finished third with 279; Clayton
Heafner, Linville, N. C., fourth
putter. I don’t know what I shot.
But it gave me a tremendous
thrill to come back here and win
this Texas Open.”
Little was infallible after the
opening round played in cold
weather. His 62 in the snow and
slush Saturday was one of golf's
greatest competitive rounds. It
tied the P.G.A. 18-hole record.
. Just as last year, a National
ie rather unusual for a Pete
X. s
again walloped the Bears. . . . Sev- iole °Q” 1
eral good games will be reeled off
in the Southwest conference this
week, highlighted by a Rice-Ar-
kansas tussle up in the hill coun-
try. . . . There are several big-
sports? They are making saci
fies, and $30 a
Thousands were in the • galldries.
. It was the ar my, the soldier boys,
who came out by the hundreds, to
*
se i
g
*, -"-3
schoolboy sport on a bigger scale.
Long before college “bowl’ games
Were so numerous, his teams par-
ticipated in post-season cor tests in
start down the home stretch thisj (10-2),
season, with but four conference' W. and J. gets into this list
games remaining on their sched- ' strength..of its victory over big-
ule. Two of these will be reeled j time . ,
off here on the Gainesville court j game on a full schedule, topping a
this week. Tuesday night Coach Madison Square Garden double-
Shaw’s Lions entertain the power-, header Friday pits N. Y. U. _ .
ful North Texas Aggie sauad from against Notre Dame (13-3), win- finished second to Walter Bietila, Madison, Wis., in points.
- - — - - ..... ner of its last nine and perhaps: MIAMI—Belisarius, 54-foot yawl skippered by E. S. Bradford, Jr.,
I the strongest of the midwestern Springfield, Mass., won Sir Thomas Lipton challenge cup with handicap
! independei it teams.
Big Ten: Wisconsin (5-1), In-
Broderick, a high school coach for
more than a quarter of a century,
was not available for Comment to-
day. Weekends— summer and win-
ter—he goes to his camp in nearby
Boxford and there in the quiet
I 239 “3
1 —9
2
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emt-peAi
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thing Salem seldom accomplished
in those years.
Beverly failed to defeat;! Brod-
erick-eleven for the next 16 years.
'Hie spell was broken last fall,
however, when Beverly wen 3-0.
His Salem “Witches” have twice
well administered, takes some) Longview, which failed to pl
drivers off the road but inst re-:a requested $4,500 cash guarante Poi ce officials estimated dam-
drivers off the road but just re continuanee as a farm club, ages to each car at about $25.
member that it makes a much had until midweek to bid for a
celebrating 1 Lawson Little’s
Texas Open tourna-
second off the world record in the — — I , ,
45-yard hurdles. Only a few days I though the season doesn t end un
previous he had set new marks in 1 til March 15. The season s second
- I His j Cornell-Dartmouth game may set-1
nerformances to datp this season , tie the whole matter Saturday, al-. Earle Meadows pole vaulted 14 feet 67 inches for indoor reords in
p he though risks of an upset still exist. Boston A. A. track meet; Les MacMitchell beat Walter Meiji in mile
hei Ranking the East's major “in- run.
the' dependents" strictly off their " ” " ‘ .17 ’ “ ' , ,
ords: Seten Hall (14-0), Baltimore 6-4, 6-2, and Bobby Riggs defeated Wayne Sabin, 7-5, 2-6, 6-2, to reach
4
Hl
year as compared to 185,333 in
L McKNIGHT i played his first round of gcffhere
O, Texas, Feb. 10 in San Antonio.
ys, the inductees | “It was back in 1919 or 1920
the $30-a-month j a
gone by, has brought him as much j travel document
fame as his football teams. His j departure — _ _____
paintings have been exhibited has been practically in
throughout the country. ) of an expulsion. I
Miami
and Jacksonville—and once went
a
Clifton quintet dt.the Aggies.are diana (4-1), Purdue and Minnesota
the toughest outfit to show here . _ each ’- .....--
this season. From this corner it sledune
looks like Shaw’s team will have western ahd Illindis, while Indiana
faces low* and Minnesota.
15
missioned man
these open tbui
RICE INSTITUTE announces
the completion of its 1941 football
schedule. Ten games will be played
as usual, six conference battles and
four non-conference affairs, which
Which means Zeke Atkins will
have extra duties to perform as a
Why Not Give Soldiers a Break? Let
Them See Sports Events Complimentary
fighter, suffered minor injuries sports scribe. .They’re oneshe
Saturday up in New Jersey when should enjoy, 8 2• -•,Motre
the car in which he was riding Dame will announce the selection
skidded into a bridge. . . . Lawson of a new coachsoon., The.fa
at want one that will give them
Pennsylvania, has been named new offense The oldone.is anti-
referee of the Texas Relays. April quated, they say. Lookslike they
5. it is announced. ... The Soose- | have been doing well enough from
— - here. . . . Lawson Little came in
—-L n 273-total to grab
More than once Broderick has! .“In handling
pned deu temntine - ffers to service has done
e f for a ly and consciel
blit he's' conformity with
of the law." I
Answer to Critics
Stiff Correspondent
WASHINGTON (UP). — More
than a third of "
grants who entered
States during th J—_________
30. 1940, were from Germany and
Italy.
AN INTERESTING bit of nws
out of Austin is the mnnouncement they won’
the Longhorns will meet North-1 also-rans,
western University on the gridiron ** nee
in 1942. The game will be played
in Evanston, and will mark (the
first meeting of the two schopls.
Incidentally, this young fellow,
Johnny Petrovich, who entered
Texas this semester, will be eligi-
ble that year and should help the
Texans considerably in the Wild-
I cat game. In case you’ve forgot-
I ten, Petrovich was a victim of the
I Pacific coast grid purge, whereby
• he and ten other high school ath-
I letes were barred from attending
, TYLER. Texas, Feb, 10 (APTAmen Hoeavag
with 281 and Jimmy Demaret of ) The East Texas league lined up to- ’• V-e- ---LV• I
Houston and Byron Nelson tied day as a six-club circuit with onew., (,,4 in Wt-nnL
for fifth with 282’s, Demaret of these entries to be picked from dC UUlS 1H VYICCK
the three days (he battled snow’ sniPpdngainmsledtpmtirorennthet either Longview or Paris...... |
high wintry winds, rain and un- and a couple of bogies,
shine to card 74-62-70-67—273 to" et-a —— el
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ille, (Texas) Daily Register
•mmecomo
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night of each month except in foot-
ball season, when the club will
meet weekly. Coach Wiley Grin-
•nell, Cantrell reports, plans an
A and B footbail squad in high
school and teams from two ward
W.9
are
RONHAM’S NEW DEAL
• football took form last Friday
• night with the organization of
"0
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petig in Class A and 267 in Class
B. Then, too, there'll be a large
number of clubs playing the 6-man
- game under league supervision.
Counting 30 players to the squad,i ______ ,
that means around 20,000 boys in winds up Its long home stand this , St. Peter’s Episcopal church and
Texas will be playing football next week with
year. Gosh, that’s a young army! =
No wonder Texas colleges are name coaches after the Baylor job, Broderick’s salary “in line with
blessed with ample, experienced but Jack Sisco over at North Tex- other school department heads.” ,
grid stars. as Teachers is still favored to land ‘" -h i ’ ' ’
FODDER — Contracts were the job. • • - Shermarrhas definitely
s t — to- decided to become a member of
ACCORDING to TEXAS In-ibraskin
terscholastic League headquarters. Jayhawk scoring ace, Howard En-
o t gleman, Was hurt in practice. Ne-
braska plays Missouri Saturday.
Missouri Valley: A light sched-
golf to wii
He came to Salem, alwaysa hot I cold facts nor on----------
ords of a responsible government
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Cummings.
Mrs. Williams was riding on the
back seat of the car driven b Mr.
i Eugster. Mrs. Eugster was rid-
this tournament.
police these galleries and play an
important part in the success of a
tournament thri
Highest Paid Schoolboy Coach Faces
Fight Over His $6,700 Annual Salary
•ese u
; MONDAY, FEBRUARY 10,
Rhode Island (13-1), finals of South Florida tennis tourney; Pauline Betz crushed Dorothy
Washington and Jefferson (10-1), t Bundy, 6-4, 6-1, for women’s title.
Long Island (15-2), Georgetown. NEW’ YORK—U. S. Lawn Tennis Association ruled players in fu-
THE LOCAL COT J.EGE eagers (13-2), Villanova (12-2), Duquesne ture may not receive expenses for more than eight tournaments, ex-
’ " " " ‘ cept national and five sectional championships, and that housing in
private homes no longer will be exemption from these restrictions.
LEAVENWORTH,. Wash.— Torger Tokie of New York bettered
American competitive ski jumping record with a leap of 273 feci to win
winter sports carnival competition.
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Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 142, Ed. 1 Monday, February 10, 1941, newspaper, February 10, 1941; Gainesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1469947/m1/4/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cooke County Library.