Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 120, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 6, 1942 Page: 2 of 12
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6
1
Lee Pitches Initial
the Cuff
Victory Over Tigers
r
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Matt
White Sox
MacMitchell Reports
Ensign Leslie
EVANSTON
It is no speech for those who
PAGE TWO
SEARS
Men’s Work Uniforms
again and is moving fast.
up
forced out of action. Then.
suffered
I
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F
Work Socks
N)N?
Fort Worth ............ 64
av.
3
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Oklahoma City ........ 59
77.....4
41
Dallas
Men's Shirts; Briefs
K mH H
run
struggle with the A's.
C
bunt. He
can-
E=5
e women. Save
mon-
-..3
(
98
of
Maltzberger made his
7198457
Leather*
Sanc.R.uaadC
Dilution Separators
Plenty of
Mohawk Rackets
1 O-Ga lion Capacity!
Hot Weather
7498
Thousand* in use all over the coun-
The Leaders
Ahead--
Closet Tank Float
Save more of Sears!
Winfield, Caldwell and Roland-
Leather Bundles
Separator Oil
8
222 003 x—9 12
Quart Size
C
tv""
8
=
up
101 426 64 140 329 1
the Pirates scored three runs.
97 371 47 121 .326 stone & Doyle.
1 Ac 4-Qt. Churns
I «J Easy to Operate!
8
JAR FOUNTAINS
Medwick, Bn 100 388 54 127 .327 |
Faucet Washers
MEN’S SUITS
2,5
Tropicals and Worsteds
59
&
NO RESTRICTION ON THE SALE OF
2
House Paint
Bowl Cleaner
a
3.fmtr
3..
Sheer Pajamas
05
.618
NO RESTRICTIONS ON THE SALE OF THIS ITEM!
GAL
.307
STRAW HATS
■ Ml
A
the progress
0
In Your Container
CRAWFORD
5
By Gloria Kaye
Hi' 8*
121 No. Marshall
Henderson, Texas
Phone 616
ITS TOMOREOW,
h
v
CATALOG ORD^R DEPT.
#
L
F
ANY
LUCKY PENNY
O R
R €
4mm
0r
LEAGUE
87 341 71 117 .343 |
55c
60c
Buy Cool Summer Clothes
at Crawford’s Big Clear-
ance Sale and Save.
29.95 NOW . .
27.50 NOW . .
24.50 NOW . .
22.50 NOW . .
19.50 NOW . .
16.50 NOW . .
amel holder, opal
glass shade. Save!
Kitchen
Stools
Non-rusting metal chick fount-
ain. Popular star shaped. Screws
to Mason jar (jar not included).
. 5.00
. 3.35
. 2.34
. 1.98
. 1.65
. 1.35
ligament in
batting and
ette seats. Enamel-
ed legs. Save now!
7.50 NOW . .
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i
0
porting on
Yankees'
Maltzberger & Crompton; Wine-
gamer & Mancuso.
his
was
he
W.
66
Gordon
debut as
hurling a
DuPont Nylon
strings. 8-ply lami-
noted ash frames.
ton flannel with
double knit wrists
Sizes for men and
6
9
Assorted leather
strips to repair
harness. Strong
and pliable. Get
a supply now at
Sears savings.
Cleans, deodorizes
. . . no scrubbing.
Makes bowls shine!
Sizes for all types
of faucets. Save at
Sean low prices!
0
2
Refuses Bequest
BUTTE, Mont. (UP)
Tulsa -
Clark,
Horton,
1 %-Qt.
Sizes
2-Quart
Si zes
f
A
P
5
scorelessly with Sewell until the
F """
y
L
21
d <
P
ed cotton shirts. AD
around elastic.
waist Vee - Line
briefs. Bargain
■
Famous
"‘Sero-Cote"
Strong drill pants, jean cloth
shirts. Boatsail dirll pockets.
-j
o
— Re-
nt the
NO RESTRICTIONS ON
THE SALE OF THESE ITEMS!
SAVE N.ONEY ON 100 OOO ITEMS N SEARS CATALOG USE OUR CATALOG ORDER SERVICE
SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO.
ECONOMI
SERARATOROIL
i not defend the title.
Despite his overwhelming choice
as favorite, Hogan, the year's top
igures: included
iward, secretary
Pct.
.673
.561 |
.552
.500
.472
.450
.408
.387
Club—
Beaumont
8-0z. Canvas Gloves
Eam-we Knit Wrists!
g,
8-
F
t
Canada Open
Begins Today
i
L
.514
.470
.449
CHOOSE FROM
100,000
_JTEMS a
L •
l-Qt. Round
Casseroles
40
’1
Modern!
. 19.95
. 18.34
. 16.34
. 15.00
. 13.00
. 11.00
15
Inside nappad
U
L.
44
52
53
53
55
60
60
74
"m"
. ..
endenson Aail Rews
-----THURSDAY, AUG. 6, 1942
U. S. War Stamps
and Bonds For Sale
at Sears!
TEXAS LEAGUE LEADERS
BY UNITED PRESS
BATTING
(In Lota)
A good law priced house
saint. Fine hiding quality.
Priced low for real sav-
ings at Sears. Hurry!
► PURCHASE :
• TOTALING 4
► 10 08 MORE 4
, CAN BE MADE :
.ONSeazs 1
"W
the
I
t
V•
Meet Jim Vickers, fighting edi-
tor of the Kirktown paper.
You'll be rooting for him and
his partner, Penny Kirk, in
their fight against gamblers
and crooked mill-town politi-
! cians in this new serial.
\‘ F/
\./
Wally Moses beat out a
Stor-Aid
Chests
$2 59
3-ply Kraft fiber-
board reinforced.
Cedar treated!
--
g
1
2.
e
i *
39
Universal type rub-
ber balls. Save
more at Sears!
P t. xzX"
"' W no washing of troublesome parts.
Bathroom
Brackets
98‘
*
I
First, he pulled a
i - %e .3 nes
took the title from lightweight
champion Sammy Angott on a
disputed decision in May, risks
his chances of a return title bout
with Angott on Oct. 2.
Stolz is a 9-5 favorite because
of his great bout with Angott and
because he will have the advant-
age of weight and youth. He is
expected to weigh 133 pounds to
Wright's 129.
25c
! t
l i
a
(
66 226 36 76 .336 ! Okla. City 003 010 OOx—4
Moisture is kept
out by the rubber
coulk welt mould-
ed to the thick
comre soles! Triple
stitched. Rubber
heels. Sizes 6-12.
' y,a
Double Tanned Split Leather Uppers
Nam
Aft
ret,
.712 |
••
■
, 9 ay at Sears!
Wearmaster' Work Shoes
The American PGA king recent-
.534 ly enlisted in the navy and could
71588
nsider wars as a
. „ ,, . son; Adams, Chambers and Holm
AB. H. BA.
,..3
Leokproof tank
floats that lost in-
definitely! Save!
Closet Tank Balls
419 154 .368
242 82 .339
427 144 .337
423 139 .329
441 139 .315
29e
^2
"ms
Sears Price—
29s
E ere ....
of stat; GidtOh Welles, secre-
tary of the navy; Edwin M Stan
I ton, secretary of war. and Jona-
than Harrington, last survivor
of the original Minute Men.
ture, something in
Of Sir Galahads engage.
+ * *
: C.-- i
-mm
Ft. Worth .. 020 020 0—4
I Slaughter, SL 100 390 64 129 .321
1 Novikoff, C 90 342 33 108 .316
far, and intend try do in
Dre.
MacMitchell, New York Univer-
sity’s great miler, is due to re-
port at Northwestern University
for the Navy’s training course.
Nick, sole beneficiary under the
will of Konrad Kusold, a Yugo-
slav, refused to accept the $650
left him and petitioned the court
to invest the money in war bonds
and hold it in trust for Kusold's
two children. Nick believes the
latter still are alive in Hitler-
dominated Yugo-Slavia and be-
lieves they will be found eventual-
4
#
9
throat infection
he blew
3-0, behind six-hit pitching by !
Rip Sewell. Ies Fleming duelled
4
\ ■
PO|
names
urea i
L d b *
•hip. I
yards.
The
Yankee Phenom
Learns to Field
By NEA Service
AMSTERDAM, N. Y.
their futures. Stolz, who almost ly.
Liberty Ships
Historic Figures
ANR Ore. (UP)—Nine
State and national fig-
latory have been approv-
dumaritime commission
tdations abukiberty
2.001
S
seventh when
shoulder while
Cambed cot-g •
ton, reinforc- E Ha C
ed heels and l . J
toes. Save! " “
97 359 55 123 .342 | Dallas - . 000 100 900—1
Change oil now
for easier turn-
i n g, longer
wear! A n o n -
gumming lubri-
cant for all light
machines.
55«RO£%
SERD-ETE
one
Kitchen
Light Shades
59c
Shade only. Plain
opal glass. 4-in.
sixes. Holder extra.
a
sl
fee
3
1
KNIT’S A TOUGH, two-fisted.
fighting speech, made by a 24-
‘year-old girl who went through
five months of constant bombing,
artillery attacks, and all the
lattendant horrors of war.
TIt is a sad account of “too
little"—and faith in the help that
j his inactivity were in the clear
great adven- i today and from behind the scene
' came one of the most remarkable
which millions I stories of quiet courage in sports
Lee won 22 games last ycai
I compiling an earned run aver::,
of 2.32. He might have dou
a Shreveport Sport by . Complete with en.
better this year if a discouraging
series of misfortunes had not
laid him low—almost too low to
come back—but he’s hit the trail
!
l . %
L .
July 25,
jKl
Fr
E
Handy
Step-On-Cans
98c
White with red
trim! 12-qt. gal-
vanized insets.
Doubles by Lou Boudreau anu
Ray Mack featured a six-run
fourth inning that gave Cleveland
an 8-5 triumph over the Browns.
Stolz Fights
Chalky Wright
NEW YORK, Aug. 6 — (UP) —
Right in the middle of Madison
Square Garden's ring, “X” marks
the spot where two determined
warriors risk their future hopes
tonight—young Allie Stolz of Ne-
wark, N. J., outstanding light-
weight contender, and ancient
Chalky Wright of Los Angeles,
recognized in New York and affil-
iated states as featherweight
champion of the world.
Wright’s title claims are not
at stake in this over-the-weight
10-rounder, but bothare gambling
Wyse, Berry and Gillespie.
Shrevep’t 103 000 101 — 6 12
S. Antonio 000 400 001—5 9
reached third when Myril Hoag
hit into a double play and then (
slid safely home with Luke
Appling at bat. Detroit’s catcher.
Dixie Parsons, was ejected for
arguing about the play.
Tex Hughson shut out Phila-
delphia with three hits, pitching
the Red Sox to a 7-0 triumph.
I It was his second shutout and
13th victory. He fanned seven,
getting slugger Bob Johnson three
times, and walked only two. The
Sox dkd off on Roger Wolff for |
P
; ■■ Y • V
19-year-old Carl De-
। The ailment is believed an after-
effect of the accident Reiser suf-
Linseed Oil
$119.
Im You Container
SPORT SHIRTS
1.50 NOW . . . 1.25
1.25 NOW . . . 1.00
1.00 NOW ... . 89c
in a
Modernize your
kitchen with these
6 to 5 win over San
Gliatto & Hayworth; Touch-
Winfield, Beddingficld.
Caldwell and Decarlo:
» W
126
■J
52861
-28
’ 28
1
w.fourGrsgin the fourth. Wolff
TP- 'Md "eatep Boston three times
previously.
:
Y
E--"TTTT0TT
9
B asaio, „ - -s- ge (. 4 • gan--
ter a hard battle with Dick Jack-
son of Austin,
Charles Simmons, Dallas, won
the final heavyweight bout from
> Elwood Wright of Lubbock.
Other results: Hubert Gray,
Wichita Falls, decisioned Jesse
Valdez of San Antonio in the
featherweight division; Leonard
Zuniga, San Antonio, won. the
flyweight title by decision over
Weldon Wyatt, Wichita Falls;
George Ingram, Fort McIntosh,
got the welterweight decision over
Elbert Yoes, San Angelo, and Deno
Tufares, Wichita Falls, decision-
ed Arturo Torres, Austin bantam-
weight.
Lefty Back
In Qood Form
NEW YORK, Aug. 6. (UP)—
Thornton Lee and the riddle of1
a streptococcus
and from the
2.50 NOW . . . 1.85
2.00 NOW . . .1.65
Pct.
.600
.552
.539
.535
.530 '
.496
.398
.357 |
W. L.
70 34
.... 60 47
... 58 47
.... 54 54
.... 51 57
..... 45 55
. 42 61
43 68
Exports Down
In Two Games
S31
stranded. Lee dropped his in ... aroug.
augural comeback effort by one ,3 pouEi
* ■ ■ -- j . . acnes for low back-hand in final
" j round of Middle State Woman’s
Chicago scored in the sixth when i Lawn Tennis, Championships in
Don Klloway stole home. He , Philadelphia. Young Beverly Hills,
singled and took second when | Calif., miss beat Margaret Os-
borne, 6-4, 10-8 for title.
’ • ( Ui
Reiser III,
Out of Qame
NEW YORK, Aug. 6 (UPI
Despite their robust National
League lend, the Brooklyn Dod-
gers faced a serious problem to-
day when it was learned that Out-
fielder Pete Reiser, the circuit's
leading batter, would be out of ac-
tion for sevefal days.
Reiser, main gun in the heavy
Dodger attack, is suffering from
an upset stomach and headaches
and if his condition fails toim-
prove he will be sent to Johns
Hopkins hospital in Baltimore
fered when he ran into a con-
crete wall at Sportsman's park
in St. Louis July 19. Dr. Robert
Hyland, who treated Reiser for
concussion said Pete would suf-
fer headaches for a considerable
period.
Pittsburgh blanked the Cubs.
K
N
•8
A5k
Four blade maple
dashers with wide
mouth jars. Heavy
tinplate tops.
Handle and
crank ara enam-
eled. Save!
Champs Hold
On to Crowns
AUSTIN, Tex., Aug. 6.—(UP)
—Most Texas Amateur Athletic
Federation titlists kept their
crowns in last night’s finals of the
Federation boxing tournament
here.
Tom Attra, Austin’s national
Golden Gloves titlist, successfully
defended his TAAF light heavy-
weight title against George Wil-
kinson, a game Fort McIntosh sol-
dier from Karedo.
Arlo Roye of San Angelo kept
the lightweight title by decision
over Manuel Dizon, San Antonio.
Simon Luna of San Antonio re-
gained his middleweight title af-
L Buffs Smack
Lee, White Sox southpaw, who
won his first victory of the
year; holding the Tigers to seven
kill for a 1-0 win.
Player, Club
Wakefield, B
Baker, SA
Evers, B
Tucker. FW
j Knoblough, H
(B
• unii and Jean Cloths (8M
P\
Neatness, strength and service %0k
combined in one trim outfit! i,h-,
Quart Size asug 1-Pound
39 < 39
K never came.
I had read, as you have read,
the stories of magnificent heroism
on Bataan and Corregidor. Bro
ther, you ain’t heard nothing yet'
r leave it to Lt. Wilson to
tell you why EVERY man and
£Woman of the U. S. and Filipino
fighting forces was a hero; of
badly-wounded U. S. soldiers who
to be released from hos-
pita] beds for just one more crack
at the Japs; of the undying faith
.that the United States would not
let them down.
• * *
IF HER SPEECH does not
point clearly the path for every
person, then nothing will.
The story is told simply, and
I briefly. Only the most important
parts of her experiences, from
Dec. 8 through the time when
F she and other nurses were sent
g from Corregidor to Australia, are
recited.
She is not coming here as a
paid speaker, to challenge the
shortcomings of the people at
home—not in the least. She does
come here with a plea from the
fighting front, for the folks at
£ home to realize what all of us
are up against, and do something
about it.
Henderson has had no speaker
. With as significant a message in
r many years.
TORONTO, Aug. 6. -(UP) —
American and Canadian golfers
start the three-day medal grind
in the Canadian Open today and,
almost without exception, they
chose Ben Hogan, golf’s leading
money winner as the man to beat. ।
Hogan heads a field of 112, in-
cluding 32 professionals from the
United States, seeking the cham-
pionship abdicated by Sam Snead.
BY UNITED PRESS
The Houston Buffs slapped a
double defeat on Beaumont last
night moved themselves out of
i the second division and tightened
■ up the Texas League race all along
the line.
As the Shippers ran into shoal
water and well-aimed Houston
torpedoes, Fort Worth split a
double header with Tulsa and
$4.49 1
25
T
two ailments, developed a chron-
ically weak and sore throat. He
could not pitch at all. He went
to Philadelphia for treatments bv
a machine that contracted and
expanded the muscles in his
shoulder.
The treatments were long and
tiresome, especially when the
White Sox were floundering in
one of their worst losing spells
in years. Lee hung on grimly and
took his biggest stride back
yesterday when he limited the
Tigers to seven hits giving the
White Sox a 1-0 victory.
All the clever pitching tha'
made Lee one of the most re
spected pitchers in the busines
was back at the old stand. H
fanned six batters, walked onl
three and left nine runnel
American League.
Club—
j New York .
Cleveland .............
Boston ..............
St. Louis .............
Detroit .................
Chicago ................
Washington .......
Philadelphia .....
National League,
duh—
Brooklyn .............
St. Louis .............
Cincinnati ............
New York ............
Pittsburgh ............
I Chicago ..............
Boston .................
Phildelphia
Nw Panel ribbed comb-
! AMERICAN LEAGUE
Player, Club G. Ab. K. H. Pct.
Williams, B 103 361 91 124 .343 1
I Gordon, NY
, , Wright, C
and j Spence, W
Tommy Hughes won his eighth I NAroNAr .
game of the year and third in R i Bn
row when he set back the Braves1, e , ' , 0 910 92 72 331 :
with five hws giving the Phils a — — 1
W. L.
74 30
63 39
55 48
54 51
47 53
48 59
43 65
31 70
arrowed the gap between first
nd second places. San Antonio,
losing to Shreveport, dropped into
Jie second division.
George Kleine hurled five-hit
ball to give Houston a 6 to 0
victory in the opener. The Buffs
pasted three Exporter pitchers for
13 blows. Paul Dean edged Spud
Overmire in a pitchers’ duel in
the finale, winning 3 to 2. The
game went eight innings instead
of the scheduled seven.
Fort Worth splurged with a
four-run rally in the sixth to win
the first game from Tulsa by a
6 to 2 score. The Oilers returned
to the battle with 12 hits to take
a 9 to 4 win in the nightcap.
With one in and the bases loaded,
Boudreau doubled across two a id for a check-up.
Mack sent home two more and ;
driving Denny Galehouse from
Antonio. Maltzberger, purchased
from Dallas last week, was hit
freely but held the Missions score-
less in all but two innings. Jerrv
White poled a homer for San
Antonio in the ninth.
Dallas’ prolonged losing streak
stretched to an even dozen as
Oklahoma City won 4 to 1. Clay
Touchstone, the Indians’ new
manager, allowed the weak Rebels
six hits. Sal Gliatto worked for
Dallas.
The line-scores:
Beaumont 000 000 000—0 5 1
Houston .. 000 101 31x—6 13 1
Fuchs, Gillespie, Wyatt , and
Riebe; Kleine and Easterwood.
Beaumont ' 010 010 00—2 9 0
Houston .... 002 000 01—3 6 0
Overmire and Riebe; Dean and
Wieczorek.
Ft. Worth 000 024 000—6 10 1
Tulsa . .. 100 001 000—2 6 3
.398 ; gold-grabber with $12,143, will
have plenty of competition in his
first crack at the Canadian title
and its $1,000 first prize money.
Four former titlists are entered,
including George Cumming, the
1905 winner; Joe Kirkwood, 1933
champion; Gene Kunes, the 1935
1 champ, and Jug McSpaden, 1939
winner ousted by Snead in 1940.
Also rated high in the group
of invading professionals from
the United States are Craig Wood,
Tony Manero. Lloyd Mangrum,
Paul Runyan. Phil Turnesa, Ralph '
i Guldahl, Cloyton Heafner and
Herman Kaiser. They comprise
the largest and strongest invad-
1 ing American squad in years.
Wood. the big blond from Ma-
maroneck, N. Y., who is the Unit-
ed States Open champion for the
duration, turned in one of the
best practice rounds with a two-
i under-par 70.
Pulling out of line is involved
' Mm l« per cent of motor fatalities
with a three-run burst in the
third.
the mound.
Southpaw Max Macon, newest
addition to the Dodgers' staff,
pitched a two-hit shutout last
night and Brooklyn beat the
Giants, 4-0. A double by Mickey
Witek in the sixth and Dick
Bartell’s single in the ninth were
the only hits he allowed. It was
Macon's third triumph since join-
ing the Dodgers a month ago.
Only 29 Giants went to the plate.
I The Dodgers grouped eight hits
effectively.
Johnny Beazley authored his
12th victory when he pitched the
Cards to a 6-0 triumph over the
Reds last night. The Reds, who
got only three hits off the young
St. Louis star, made four errors.
'The Cards kayoed Bucky Walters
BY VERNON DOWDY
rD LIKE TO tell you some of |
the 'things Lt. Lucy Iris Wilson j
Said last night at Kilgore—but [
I think you will get more out j
lof those words if you are on j
jUmi Friday night, when she,
speaks in Henderson.
It is no speech for those who
gyp trying to forget about this I
war. It is no speech for self-
designated patriots who are satis ।
tied with what they have done!
5 / A
12 47 /g '
/a
■ 2
5-2 triumph.
Yesterday's Star — Thornton
s -
0
J
7
W
$)98
Price A SUIT
Turpentine
$1-00 «...
Rose, Tom Kain says the six-foot
three-inch, 220-pound Californian
fielded as though he had two left
feet when he reported to the
Amsterdam club of the Canadian-
American League in May. The
Rug - Makers have a working
agreement with the New Y ork
club.
“De Rose Is no paragon of
grace yet," explains Manager
Kain, “but he is learning, and he
really has a fast ball.”
De Rose fanned 17 in one game.
The Yonkees gave DeRose $20,-
000 for sigrng-
t - - > (P
2,"“ V
Bhf "P
r -
CRUSADER
A
• rangettes! Under-
n a t e v e cabinets.
A A - Oden front models.
__—eeRU 2 Copper bearing
N ■ t e e l innertubes.
Asbestos poper
J kindlers.
u—-a -- " S,oNia Reg.
mp Oil Rangettes
MModern Enclosed Cabinets!
8a
235
m-aN
Shreveport ................ 62
% i Houston .................. 61
*- San Antonio ............ 62
mme ulsa ..................... 59
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Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 120, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 6, 1942, newspaper, August 6, 1942; Henderson, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1497273/m1/2/: accessed June 21, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rusk County Library.