Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 292, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 20, 1932 Page: 4 of 8
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DENTON, TEXAS, BBC^jp-CaXONlCLK* WEDNESDAY JULY MSB
me
SPORTS HORN
1
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2-6,
Television
for Dallas, and
ace ught-hander
the
American Leazue
WE OFFER
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National Leazue
1
0 0
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eis. for seven runs in the eighth
1
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and ninth innings to win, 10 to 3.
7
4
24
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9 1.2
6
Chicego
inches. Before
going to
Prudenti
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Name
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City
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if You Need
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We have them and we have
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A
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you do any repairing. •
4
COLLEGE TAILORS
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A
. TIRE BUYERS
Today YOU
HAVE IT ALL YOUR OWN WAY!
1
A DEMOCRAT ALL THE TIME!
v
ALWAYS ON THE JOB!
MATURE
RESPONSIBLE
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TRIED
PROVEN
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A PERSONAL WORD TO THE VOTERS OF DENTON COUNTY:
Taka
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Tuba
Taba
$1.55
$5.94 $5.76 *1 09
$5.38 $5.24 $1.15
eave $1.05
11.62
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HEAVY DUTY TRUCK & BUS TIRES
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up
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TRADE IN
G"A
I
I
Sandwichers Win
Playoff Of First
Half From Firemen
Hornsby Through
As Active Player,
Fails in Comeback
Mercantile Bldg. .
Dallas, Texas.
tach
Pairs
Each
inPairs
Price
EAch
la
Pairs
5.00
1 0
0 0
when Babe is that way. she is in
reality a one-wuman track team.
11 0 0
2 0 2
0 0
2 0
0
0
0
0
a
2
men follows:
Piremen-
Dooley, 2-c .
Pct.
773
636
.545
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439
.431
354
—,360
0 1
0 0
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0 2
0 2 1
12 2.
0
0
2
3
0
Price
of Rach
___3
-.3
Kindly send me detailed information on
Baird Television without cost or obliga-
tion.
Miss Winters Takes
First Place In C.I.A.
Ping-Pong Contest
The eaerhiest recot ds on miner-
alogy are lists of minerals with de-
ecriptions that were compiled by
Theophrastus four centurles-B C.
Price
of tach
0
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0
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7
Ml
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Lowest Prices of Any
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Full
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competed in so many events she
had little chance to rest and regain
stamina.
When she takes her lane in the
Olympic 80-meter hurdles, it will
not be surprising if she covets the
Isuit hart, 1 ..
Miller, 2b
Irtck 1b---
Addison. r -L.
Gaston, 3---
1-31
1.53
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Steers Now In
Three-Game Lead
For Texas Title
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Price
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Price
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6.03
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7-1*
7.49
>•»
553
5-99
W
61
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48
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30
31
2
2
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1
1
2
0
1.00
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Eddie Carrol limited Tyler to
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2:85
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HATS HALF PRICE
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Philadelphia
Cleve land
Detroit
Washington
St. Louis ...
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vors that are unmerited.
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Foxworth-Galbraith
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223 W. Oak
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.583
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2:32
great things. Where she was daz-
zling in a lew events Saturday, she
let down in others. This can be ex-
Caln’s Sandwich Shop won the
playoff contest for the first half of
the Twiligth League, defeating the
Firemen 11 to 5.
Each
in Pam
16
EACH
INPAIRS
4.50-20.....
4.50-21 .
4.75-19___
5.00-19____
5.00-20. -
17.21
UK
4»H
to 3. with Lefty Gomez hanging up
his 16th victory. Washington cele-
brated "sAm Rice Day” by dropping
tncir third in a row to Detroit. 3
to 2 Wes Ferrell yielded only four
scattered hits as Cleveland blanked
Bhston, 7 to 0. Philadelphia slugged
out two decisions over St. Louis, 9
to 8 and 16 to 6.
Drive around and check up on this fact. And
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choice costs no more?
Resurrection Of Minor Leagues Is /
Greatest Problem Facing Baseball In
Opinion of John McGraw, Vet Leader
distance in 11 1-2. When she re-
presents the United States in the
high jump, it will not be unexpect-
ed if she clears the bar at five feet.
5 inches. When she picks up the
javelin, she will be throwing for a
new world’s record, and when Babe
goes after a record she usually gets
it.
In the Olympics she will not be
rushed frem one event to another,
but will have time to rest and re-
gain strength for the next event.
*49
-72
ie
*•*4
Fun
Orersize
_________
________
___________:
...............
8.25-20
l;
15
i (
Team—-
Dallas _____________
Beaumont ......
Houston
Longview ,...
Fort Worth
San Antonio
Tyler ........
Galveston .. ..
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6.00-181. D
tonal League
St Louis 5. Brooklyn 3.
Chicago 5, New York 4.
Boston 2. Cincinnati 0.
Pittsburgh 5-5. Philadelphia
second game eleven innings.
STANDINGS
Texas League
Team—
Pittsburgh
Chicago .... ‘
Boston
Philadelphia
St Louis
Brooklyn
New York .....
Cincinnati
Performance proves that Texas
queen of track and field can-do
INSKILL
Ful
<>■«•!■•
5.W-I9______
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5767
. qud»V IN PAIRS
3013% Reg. Cl.
Tube 94c
S3.76 Each, Singly
6
geime-in---•
1-2 inches. Her
sepsational youngster who was a
powwerful factor in Beaumont win-
nipg the first half pennant. start-
ed what was. advertised as a mound
duel. Dallas got to Rowe in the first
• inping for six runs. Sullivan finish-
ed the game. Murray stuck to his
guns and pitched a commendable
twt-hit game. Newsome and Hqlley
got the pair of bingles. Beaumont
did not get en earned run.
Houston slipped again at Long-
view. the Cannibals winning 4 to 2.
I have given you honest, efficient and econamical-service. I thank you forthesplen- -
did support you have given me in the past. Your continued support will be greatly ap-
preciated. Keep HOME MEN in office. 1 —
previous world record of 133 feet,
5 1-2 inches.
Babe, in practice, has run the 80-
meter hurdles in a fraction less
than 12.0 flat. She has cleared the
bar in the high ump at 5 feet, 5
. 38 46
40 S3
IN
Good Used Tires I . t t
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201 SOUTH ELM ’ .** ? PHONE 2
A summer term of court has been in session the past six weeks and I have no dep-
uty in the office, hence I have not been able to make a'campaign and see the voters per-
sonally. I am asking to be re-elected District Clerk of Denton County. I am making -
this request solely on the record I have'made in the fourteen years I have served you in
that office. You know what I can do. My official record has never been criticised.
I came from Mississippi to Texas to make it my home in 1888. I had been here
more than-thirty years before I asked the people of Texas to honor me with a public of-
fice. My youthful opponent from a Northern State, Glenn Edwards, has been in Texas
only long enough to pay TWO POLL TAX EIS. We all sympathize with youth and
youthful ambitions, but sometimes YOUTH IS PRESUMPTUOUS and asks for fa-
(Political Advertisement)
——
By GAYLE TALBOT,
Associated Press Sports Writer
Having nade what many predict
was his valedictory as an active
player, Rogers Hornsby, one of the
greatest Infielders of all time, has
•*.** »*T1
•■•• 8.78
Dam Makes River Cold
BAGNELL. Mo—Swimmers who
used to disport themselves in the
Osage river fear the hugh dam
creating the Lake of the Ozarks
has spoiled their sport. The water,
now released from the bottom at
the vast reservoir, is too cold.
___—-I_____
Record classified ads bring results.
ECONOMIZE
1 by sending US your last summer suit dresses to be
• DRY CLEANED. Phone 24
place to go for dbvelopment.
."There’s something about base-
bell. for a young fellow, that get
in his blood, keeps him going on.
overcoming bed beginnings and if
the opportunity is there for him,
struggling up finally to make the -
grade. That makes a man of him." —
135
tional League flag over to his
I
..i. - .
-gi.
MnEP. PEIOE E°15 •V ---8° ------. . —
she was tossing the avelin 141 feet, plained, perhaps, in that it was a
‘ one day meet, and the Texas girl
She won the baseball throw with
272 feet, 2 inches. Her southern and
American recora was far superior,
being 296 feet. 3 inches.
She was victorious infhe broad
jump with a leap of 17 feet, 6 5-8
incites. Her southern record was
better, being 18 feet, 7 1-2 inches.
As brilliant as Babe was at Chi-
cago. she will probably be superior
at Los Angeles. Consider her track
and field records.
At Chicago in the 80-meter
hurdles, she won with a time of
12.1. Her southern A. A. U. record
for this event is 12.0 fat.
‘In Saturday’s high ump, she tied
when she ceared tha bar at 5 feet,
3 1-2 inches. That leap beat her
southern record of 5 feet. 1 inch.
. bonabarded wi pitch- „Inettejahenthrr shasoa -e
1 circuit, saw the birth of the rival
0! American League in 1900 and he
helped Ban Johnson in the junior
southern record was 37 feet, 1 inch. She will be at the pinnacle to com-
pete agalpst the world’s best, and
practice may blossom into a reality
at the Olympics.
• • • •
Where Babe surprised her Teaxs
friends was her failure in the dis-
cuss event. She failed to qualify for
this Olympic try-out. finishing
fourth. Ruth Osborn won with a
toss of 133-feet, 3-4 inches for a
new worlds record. Babe held no
discus record, but in practice here
has often tossed it 135-feet. The
discuss was one event her coach.
Colonel McCombs, believed she
would win.
Babe won three A. A. U. events,
which, however, will not be listed
in the Olympics. She tossed the
What she has accomplished in
R. L. [Bob] WEST
For DISTRICT CLERK of Denton County
GOODYEARa
TUBES 0RC
uMm 77-
Yesterday's Games
Texas League
Longview 4, Houston 2.
Dallas 9, Beaumont 2. night game
Galvesten 10, Tyler 3. night tamo.
Ban Antonio at Fort' Worth, postpon-
ed, rain.
American League
New York 6, Chicago 3
Detroit 3. Washington 2
Philadelphia 9-16, St. Louis 0-6.
Cleveland.7, Boston 0.
, Games of the second half played
turned the job of winning the Na- repuiltedeA8s,powsino 1; tetterles
Destroys inseets of all kizds.
One of the most satisfactory
preparations on the market
wf-prager;
69c
Miss Kitty Winters won first place
in the ping-pong contest held at C.
—I A recently, with * score of 84
Miss Bernice Bayless placed sec-
end. her score totaling 81. while
Mis Mary Redman made second
" place with a second place with a
score of 80.
Twelve entered the contest, with
10 remaining in the game until the
’ finish. Other entrants and their
scores kwere as follows Miss Virginia
Winthrop. 77; Miss Julia BeU. 81;
Miss Isabel Stoval,. Mias Claudia
Beach, 51; Miss Allene Goode, 50;
Miss Dorothy Ferrell, 60, and Miss
Kathryn Adkins, 37.
The ping-pong tournament will
continue throughout the summer
session, with all games to be chal-
lenge ones, according to Miss Maxie
Barrett, sudent manager of this
sport. The final game is to be play-
ed near the end of the first sum-
mer term.
Miss Bonnie Cotteral, a member
of the physical education depart-
ment. is sponsoring the tourna-
ment
league’s struggles for existence, left
him after a falling out to build the
New York Giants into a-multimil-
lionair outfit the past 30 years.
“Baseball is the National game
more so now than ever before," he
pisisited. "There are millions c
dollars invested in the sport. All
that means interest on the part of
the sports public in baseball, an in-
terest that never dies".
The job now, as McGraw sees it.
is to revive the Class C and D
leagues that have been falling away
steadily the past two or three
years so the youngstrs who come
into the game may have their op-
portunities to develop gradually.
"There used to be 60 or so keagues
of that clas." he said, "and now
there are left only eigt or ten
That’s bad for young fellows. It
takes away their incentive to play
the game as a career. They have no
By EDWABD J. NEIL
Associated Press Sports Writer
NEW YORK, July 20--The
greatest problem facing baseball.
In the opinion of John McGraw,
is the resurrection of ‘Jee small
minor leagues.
"Back in 1890,” the retired manz
ager of the Giants remembered.
"The country was swept with hard
times and the small minor leagues
fell away Wy the dozen But they
came back. They’ll do it again."
When you’ve gone as far with
baseball as the calm, silver haired
Igendleman who sits now tn the
business office of the Giants, the
troubles of the game today fade. He
joined the National League in
1892 when the Baltimore Orioles
became members of the twelve-dub
By BILL PARKER,
(Assoclatea Press Sparta Writer.)
Mildred Babe Didrickson of Dal-
las. In headlines today aa the
world’s greatest woman athlete,
promises to reach greater heights at
Los Angels from August 1 to 7 in
her Olympic track and field efforts.
When this 19-year-old won the
girl’s national A. A. U. meet at
Chicago Saturday, she astonished
eastern critics but not her Texas
friends for they knew what she
could do.
Her achievement in winning two
Olympic events, tying one, and
finishing fourth in another, in ad-
dition to winning three national A.
A U. events, was the evpectation of
her Texas admirers
311111
.....3 110 0 0
Brownbilt Shoe Store
Totals ...............26 11 11 15 7 1
Summary—Two-base hits, Mere-
dith, Addison; 3-base.hits, Atkins;
bone runs. Gay, Hundley; struck
out, by Meredith 5; by Bryant 1,
Sealey 1; double play, Lewis to
Dooley to Gay.
The Curtis Stores
South Prompt North
Side Delivery Side
Phone Phone
. 52--------------11.444. .
youngsters.
The' Rajah, dissatisfied with
1 Stanley Hack's play at third after
Bill Jurges was laid up with gun-
shot wounds, stepped in to plug
the hole. but after listening to the
Chicago fans five days decided to
return to the- dugout. In the last
four games he played, the once
peerless batsman collected only two
hits. and his fielding was a thing
i of the past.
With the youthful Hack back in
’ the lineup yesterday and the bat-
ting order juggled, the Cubs took a
close one from the Giants, 5 to 4.
and gained a half-game on the
leading Pittsburgh Pirates, who
i were splitting even with the Phil-
I lies.
' Bill Swift pitched the Pirates to
! a 5 to2 victory in the opener but
। Me eastern delegates came back to
take the nightcap, 6 to 5. in 11 in-
nigs.
Ed Brondt was in top form and
Boston knocked Cincinnati a little
' deeper into the celler, 2 to 0. St.
’ Louis, after being held to one hit
। for five innings, drove Dizzy Vance
1 from the box in the seventh sad de-
! feated Brooklyn 5 to 3.
। The Yankees took their fourth
straight from the Chicago Sox, 6
as low a price as you’ll find
in Denton. See us before
suit •
Liwood "Schoolboy" Rowe.
Totals .......y...-.
Sandwich Shop—
Spaulding. cf -
Eirod, c ...... ..
Atkins, s -g---
Meredith, p.,
IMg
B )-k
By BILL PARKER.
Associated Press Sports Writer
Manager Happ Morse of the Dal-
las Steers is really happy these days
of the second half of the Texas
* ‘ Lengue pennant chase. His players
checked in with their eighth con-
secutive victory last night by beat-
ing Beaumont, 9 to 3. It gave the
Steers a three-game lead over the
’ Exporters.
Last night saw two leading pitch-
ers as opponents. George Murray.
Lewis, 3b ----- 3
Seale y I-p ------------3
Hundley. T ............8
Walker, s ............. 3
Gay lb .:.....--$.2
Bryant. p-1 —3
Rutherford, C .....— 1
Thompson, 2b .......0
Hammer, cf ......_...3
Firemen. Bryant and Rutherford;
Postomce, Puryear and Sharpe.
King Grocers 2, Pennell Truck
Line 1. batteries: King, J. Long and
Browning; Pennell, Jennings and
Stewart.
Cain Sandwich Shop 5. Smith
Motor Co. 15; baterles; Cain, F.
Meredith, Elrod and Gasum;
Smith, Groves and Sprague.
Box Score
The box score of the playoff be-
tween the Caln Shop and the Pire-
gro '
■
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 292, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 20, 1932, newspaper, July 20, 1932; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1538845/m1/4/: accessed July 8, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.