Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 61, No. 66, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 14, 1950 Page: 5 of 12
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All Lincoln cars equipped with improved HYDRA-MATIC transmission at extra cost
FRIGIDAIRE
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BOB BROWN MOTOR CO
8150
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Commerce at Broadway
Gainesville, Texas
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AN ADVENTURE IN FINE FOOD 4
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ELECTRIC *
^APPLIANCES
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; By J. G. TAYLOR SPINK 1
of THE SPORTING NEWS
Copr. '50 Gen’ Features
Corp. TM-Worid Rights Rsvd.
Major
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That gag has long
since been a wreck
But, if it works, well
. . What the heck!
rising taxes in most places, their
rates have been lowered during
the past two years.
cream puff. A coach lost his job
over the incident.
Wilkinson’s Formation Lacks
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Tittle spori
Chicks
Mosman, f________3
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Lions
Helm, f____'
King, f_____
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When You Retire
for the night, is your con-
science clear in the knowl-
edge that if you should not
awaken, your family’s fu-
ture has been made secure
with a Planned Program of
State Reserve Life Insur-
ance?
“See Me Before You Die”
Chas. J. Gandillon
Phone 303-J
yea
Ppih
Hard To Believe
CLEBURNE, Texas (U.R)—John-
son county folks are tax-happy.
Their rates are the lowest they’ve
been in 50 years. In the face of
Men Only in Texas
FORT WORTH (U.R) — R. K.
Zitney was called for jury duty
but was excused on sight. R. K.
Zitney is a woman, and women
can’t serve on Texas juries.
his teammates to a victory. Jack
King and Richard Helm paced
the losers in their frantic effort
for the triumph.
Sluder dumped in 14 points to
be the high man of the night for
both outfits. King tallied 12 and
Helm notched 8, while Bud How-
ard garnered six for the Lions.
Richard (Rudolph) Mosman
and Jim Stuckey chipped in to
aid the Chicks to the win.
__ —'.TU.. •. •
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TRAVEL BY BUS
CONTINENTAL
MOTOR COACHES
Corner Rusk and Elm Streets
Phone 22
“Dear, do you suppose we
could dine out tonight — I
broke the can opener!”
i m "
E==s
U
K
and wide, comfortable seats assure you
that you’re sitting in the very lap of
elegant luxury!
And when you drive, you’ll discover
fine-car performance at its ultimate best.
This year, the spirited "INVINCIBLE 8,12
high-compression engine is smoother
than ever. And with hydra-matic, you
get the alert, eager response worthy of
this mighty power plant.
With Lincoln’s improved springing,
you ride over rough roads as though they
were just paved. With Lincoln’s Fiber-
glas soundproofing, outside noises be-
come mere whispers. With Lincoln’s
automatic Weather Control,' soothing
GEORO=‘s
L/TTLE
Pink sheet
4 WINNERs YetrtnoAY
You will,
Si
2 35
BIERMAN READS RESIGNATION—Bernie Bierman, Univer-
sity of Minnesota football coach for 18 years, handed in his resig-
nation. Here the veteran tutor reads from his statement at a news
conference in Minneapolis, Minn. The resignation is effective at
the end of the current season. Minnesota still has two games to
play. (AP Wirephoto)
Stuckey, f___
Blount, f_____
Sluder, c____
King, g------
Hoover, g____
rIHIS year, Lincoln’s great and growing
J. reputation for the best of everything
in automobiles reaches new heights. And,
at your dealer’s showroom tomorrow,
you can see the 1951 Lincolns which
set new pinnacles of fine-car excellence.
Your first breath-taking view of the
magnificent Lincoln Cosmopolitan and
the glamorous Lincoln will reveal a new,
arresting conception of motor car design.
From bumper to bumper, Lincoln’s lines
are smooth-flowing, modern, tasteful.
Naturally, Lincoln’s new interiors
match this outer splendor. Gem-like
appointments . . . smart, tailored up-
holsteries in nylon and broadcloth ...
4,
2
0-
$5.00 DOWN
Balance of Down Payment in Easy Weekly Payments
Will Deliver This Refrigerator by Christmas.
fresh air blankets you at a finger’s flick.
Yet all this 1951 luxury costs far less
than you may imagine!
And today, your purchase of a 1951
Lincoln or Lincoln Cosmopolitan takes
on even greater significance. Like any
worthwhile investment, either of the
new 1951 Lincolns will reward you in
terms of longer life, higher resale value,
and, of course, more enjoyable motoring.
Yes, tvhen you invest in a fine motor
car today, make sure you make a
1951 purchase!
By all means see and drive the new
1951 Lincolns at your dealer’s tomorrow.
For no drive on earth can give you a
comparable feeling of luxuriousness.
GEO.-.
Carroll
co8 SON
mnfugniliiliii
and I’ll find you,” he said—and
Tommy hit the big end for a 75-
yard pass play to the 4-yard
line. The Birds went over on the
next, play for the winning touch-
down.
Art Rooney put the blame for
the overwhelming 45 to 7 defeat
of the Steelers by the Cleveland
Browns partially on the newspa-
pers of both cities.
“Two weeks before our game
with the Browns several of our
players got. mixed up with some
of the Browns,” said Rooney,
“and at the finish called ’em
cream puffs and crybabies. The
papers took it up—
“The Cleveland papers carried
the banners the day before the
game ‘Cream Puffs or Cham-
pions? "
The story reminded the writer
of the reception the University of
Pennsylvania team received “the
morning after” in the diner of the
train bringing them back from an
overwhelming defeat at the hands
of Michigan.
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Quarterback Club
To Hold Weekly
Meeting Tonight
The regular weekly meeting of
the Gainesville Quarterback club
will be held tonight in the local
high school according to organiza-
tion president Choice Swindle.
The gathering is due to meet at 8
p. m.
Swindle' announced that the
pictures of the Sherman-Gaines-
ville game of last week will be
shown, along with a scout’s re-
port about the Leopards’ oppon-
ent for this week.
Jesuit high school of Dallas will
invade Leeper stadium for a non-
conference tussle on Friday
night. Coach Horace McCain of
the junior high school Panthers
scouted the Big D team, when it
lost to McKinney 13 to 7 last
week and he is due to make a re-
port to the club.
Plans for the annual Leopard
football banquet, which will be
held in December, will also be
completed, according to the club
prexy.
The largest crowd of the season
attended last week’s meeting and
another, fine representation is
expected tonight.
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Chick Cagers
Edge College
Lions 36-35
The Bezner Chick basketball
quintet staved off a spirited last
quarter rally by the junior col-
lege Lions Monday night and
edged out with a 36 to 35 victory
in a pre-season practice cage tus-
sle. The tiff was played at the
local gymnasium.
David Sluaer was the main cog
for the Chicks, as he poured
points through the nets to lead
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pened at one of our small north-
In front of each man was a big ern schools this fall. A promising
JAwjuming once, again.
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at the University of Arkansas,
Tech lost its nineteenth in a row
before it was able to win. For the
entire season, the Dragons won
three, lost three and tied one.
So, Allen didn’t fall into a bed
of rose petals at Drexel Tech.
There were plenty of thorns in
that bush, too.
Unrehearsed Play Nets
75-Yard Gain
Professional football is not the
cut-and-dried, machine-like game
some of our football experts
would have us believe. Greasy
Neale, coach of the champion
Philadelphia Eagles, told this
story of the Birds’ winning touch-
down against the Pittsburgh
Steelers at Forbes Field a few
weeks ago.
The score was 10 to 10. Tommy
Thompson, the Eagles’ great pass-
er, said to Jack Ferrante, the
fleet end, “Run down and cut in.”
“Which way?” asked Ferrante.
“Oh, cut out,” snorted Thompson.
“Which way?” repeated Ferrante.
Thompson gritted his teeth.
“Oh hell, run dovzn the field
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Greasy Neale, coach of the
Philadelphia Eagles, credits Bud
Wilkinson, coach of the Univer-
sity of Oklahoma, with having a
fine offensive formation in the
split T for short smashes at the
center of the line . . . “But,” ob-
serves the Bird mentor, “he can’t
run the ends effectively and he
can’t pass. Where would he end
up in pro ranks?” . . . Red Blaik,
Army coach, called George Rat-
terman nothing but a second-
string quarterback at Notre Dame
in his magazine blast at the pros,
but he neglected to add that Rat-
terman was at the quarterback
spot for the Irish during 13 of
their final 16 touchdown marches
durng his time in school. And he
also failed to say that two of his
assistant coaches, one was Her-
man Hickman, called on Ratter-
man in an effort to get him to en-
roll at West Point . . . This hap-
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Looping the Loops
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REALIZING AT
all times
the tremendous
amount of responsi-
bility which every
service entails and
living up to the ex-
pectations of our
clients is another
reason for our
growth.
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5— Gainesville (Tex.) Daily Register Tues., Nov. 14, 1950
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According to the Solunar Ta-
bles, calibrated for this area, the
best times for hunting and fish-
ing for today and tomorrow will
as follows:
TODAY
young football player enrolled,
went to classes two days, then
was visited by a scout’from a
small southern college. The coach
of the northern school being a
realist, called the player and the
scout together and said, “Let’s
settle this once and for all. Put
your cards on the table.” The
scout offered $75 a month, three
plane rides home each semester,
full tuition and board. You said
it. The boy went South.
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THE GUY BEHIND DREXEL’S
GRIDIRON DRIVE
Philadelphia, Pa.
Eddie Allen, former Chicago Bear
fullback now coaching Drexel
Tech’s football team in Philadel-
phia, is a colorful figure who does
colorful things.
Eddie is a direct descendant of
Ethan Allen, hero of Fort Ti-
conderoga. As a youngster, he was
a parachute jumper at county
fairs. Once he dropped in a rose
bush. A woman ran out of the
house as he landed in the thorns.
Eddie expected help and sym-
paty. Instead he got hell—a lot of
it—for damaging her roses. Twice
Allen fell into a lake, once he
hung in a tree.
At the University of Pennsyl-
vania he was one of the Red and
Blue’s greatest athletes. He
played fullback in 1939—went to
war and achieved the highest
mark ever made in an Army phy-
sical efficiency test—695. He was
a member of the college team in
the All-Star game in 1945, re-
turned to Pennsylvania in ’46,
played on the Eastern All-Stars
that season and in the East-West
game on New Year’s day. At
Pennsylvania, he was given the
class of 1915 award for outstand-
ing work in sports and on the
campus.
Now Eddie is leading Tech to
its most successful season in his-
tory. Allen is doing it in a color-
ful way — having introduced a
number of slogans."
When the players arrived at
their lodge near West Chester,
Pa., to open fall training, they
found a sign over each bunk.
“Make Good or Make Room.”
At the bottom of each mirror
was the significant message, “Ask
the Fellow Looking at You What
He has Done to Make Himself a
Better Football Player and Drexel
a Better Team.”
Allen changed the ordinary
nomenclature of coaching. Real-
izing that the term “brush block”
has a lazy inference, he changed
the name to “driving body block.”
Urges Playing With Unre-
lenting Burning Desire’
Allen urged his men to play
with an “unrelenting burning de-
sire.” Believing that his defen- l
sive platoon might also become
strictly defensive-minded and
merely try to stop the opposition, |
he has instilled in them the I
thought that they are the “defen-
sive attack”—that every ball in
the air belongs to them, that ev-
ery run on the ground by the op-
position was just another oppor-
tunity to steal the ball.
At camp this fall he decided
that some of his men were not
giving out, so he organized a spe-
cial group and told each member
why he was on the squad. Then
he gave them all the tough as-
signments in camp. In two days
they hustled so much the squad
was disbanded.
As the season went along with
its successive victories, Allen
feared over-confidence. He had
some of his engineers build a
two-foot helmet. He called it his
overconfidence helmet. “Don’t let
this fit your head,” he inscribed.
Sounds screwy? But it pays off!
Before losing to Western Mary-
land, 26 to 25, November 4, Drex-
el had not been behind this sea-
son and only 13 points had been
scored against the Dragons in the
first four games. Last year under
the coaching of Otis Douglas, now
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Yes, you can see lots of proof • Full-width Super-Freezer
when you look outside, then Chest
inside. There’s new beauty in the ’ One-piece, acid-resisting
lustrous Ice-Blue interior trim, new porcelain food compartment
convenience and storage capac- * Eueslpsoof, cluminum
ity, new value and dependability . New Porcelain Hydrators
in Frigidaire’s sturdy cabinet . Sliding Basket-Drawer
construction. And here are some • New plastic Chill Drawer
of the features: • Powered by Meter-Miser
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TOMORROW
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Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 61, No. 66, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 14, 1950, newspaper, November 14, 1950; Gainesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1535158/m1/5/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cooke County Library.