Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 8, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 23, 1933 Page: 3 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Denton Record-Chronicle and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Denton Public Library.
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I
DEMTON, TEXAS. urewD-EMRONIOLE, WEDNESMAV, AUGUST 23, 1923 .
rAGE TME»
OHair ande. H. Cadde and Rev. boro
AUBREY NEWS
J.C.PENNEYCO
MARATHON
the opet
kickof are Ray Spar-
r
FALL HATS
$1.98
t X
9
US.
VA
WE DO OUR PART
•I
American League
National League
BX0
o
A
GRAND LEADER COMPANY
u-
7 42
♦
A
$
■
4
X
n
-em
4.40x21 .... 5.55
4.50x20 .... 6.00
4.50x21 .... 6.30
4.75x19 .... 6.70
4.75x20 .... 7.00
5.00x19 .... 7.20
5.00x20 .... 7.45
30x31
5.15
ALL FULL OVERSIZE
he
£b
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S. I. Self Motor Co
s. I. Self Motor Co
Phone 2
201 So. Elm
A
2015. Elm
Phone 2
A 1
T
9)
mu
elephant wants to ride on top
IT’S ALi RIGHT WITH A CHEVROLET
7 CMEVDoLET
ALONE IS NOT ENOUGH
STEEL
frmnus
i
23
—-.e
HARDWOOD FRAME
STRONG, SAFE BODY BY FiSHER
SEL BODY
Buy A Late Model
USED CAR
Lifetime
Guarantee
r
We didn’t actually plan on
elephants when we chose the
FORTUNE
SHOES ®
I
Today the best buy for the least
money is the new Goodyear Path-
finder. For years “the quality tire
within the reach of all," the Path-
finder is now stepped up in mileage,
safety and good looks. It has FULL
CENTER TRACTION 20% thicker
non-skid tread—stouter body of
Supertwist Cord, the cord that gives
under road shocks, doesn’t heat up,
prevents blowouts, stands hard
knocks, runs out a full long life of
trouble-free miles.
Be sure your new tubes are qual-
ity Goodyears, too.
W
77
69
...... aa
£
72
72
67
60
57
55
L
43
53
54
53
53
L
53
57
66
66
71
78
78
83
Mrs Annie Johnson received a
painful wound Saturday by sticking
a nail almost through her foot.
bodies for the new Chevrolet. But we did choose
bodies rigid enough, and strong enough, to support
six tom of elephant or anything else you can name.
Fisher bodies . . steel bodies plus a hardwood
frame . • . exactly the same type of bodies used on
all 12 and 16-cylinder cars. Steel alone is not enough
to make you as safe and secure as we want you to
bein a Chevrolet. A steel body, welded into-a solid
wall of protection phis resilient hardwood rein-
Pct.
Ml
.590
522
.522
486
W
422
.399
Other Sises Priced
in
Pct
.613
.547
.542
539
539
429
409
379
L
39
46
60
Pct.
.664
.600
.508
.500
.491
462
.419
364
Team—
Houston
Galveston
—ANDyour dollar buys MORE right
now than it may ever buy again. ,
You can see that as well as we can.
I
s
Team—
New York
Boston
St Louis
Pittsburgh
Chicago
Philadelphia
Bronklyn
Cincinnati
5
Dallas
San Antonio
Beaumont
Fort Worth
Tulsa
Oklahoma City
STANDING
Texas League
W
III
II
in Pilot Point.
Mrs. Ola Price is visiting in Jacks-
r 35
F
The New
GOODYEAR
PATHFINDER
W
68
64
64
62
62
a
R
1931 Buick Sedan
V-8 Ford Coupe
V-8 Ford Tudor
1932 Plymouth Coupe
V-8 Ford Sedan
1932 Chevrolet Coach
1930 Buick Sedan
1931 Chevrolet Coupe
We Offer Terms
4
J
V
Inter sectuvud
Game to Open
Football Seasoty
SERVICE DRUG STORE
FREE DELIVERY
Phone 171 At Your Service
Altb rhnt. SawM equipment extre. Eow
derhecedprkoniandenv0.Ma.C.terma. AQenecalMfotor Value.
Boston Braves
May Repeat 1914
Pennant Upset
pat into effect, in all plant*,
tision suggested by
. ____ident’s voluntary
blanket code.
Ee‘
ia
334130610088
forcing to take
angng
Manufactured by
Richland Shae Company
A Division of
General Shoe Corporation
Team—
Washington
New York
Cleveland ,—
Detroit .. .....
Philadelphia
Chicago
Boston
St Louis
prevent the steel from following its natural tend-
ency to buckle under pressure makes the sturdiest
body of all—the kind used on the Chevrolet, and
on no other low-priced car. Remember that
when you bay a car. Be sure to get all you pay for
... the super safety of a steel-plus-wood Fisher body.
CHEVROLET MOTOR COMPANY, DETRorT, MICH.
Always
leading!
r *
• 1,600 shoe workers, are
members of NBA, and have
Oldest Chevrolet Dealer in North Texas
. "2 7.
hgwec gg,2
e‘ds
68 64
45 65
44 72
R.
MEMBER
60 60
57 59
54 63
49 68
44 77
If yo
letics. But 108 not thapossibte.
Their fourth straight triumph
over the Pittsburgh Pirates and
their 17th victory in 21 games yes-
terday sent the Braves flying into
second place, seven games be -
hind the New York Giants. Me-
Kechnie’s crew was in fifth place
when, their winning streak began
24 days ago.
Wally Berger’s 22nd homer in the
14th inning gave the Braves their
5-4 decis/q over the Pirates yes-
terday and ruined wbat other-
wise was an all but perfect job of
relief pitching by the veteran Waite
Hoyt. Going to the mound in the
fourth after Young Hal Smith had
given way to a pinch hitter. Hoyt
walked Al Spohrer first man to
face him. Then he set down 25
batsmen in order before Hal Lee
singled wtlh one down in the 12th.
Hoyt then got the next five men
in succession but Berger broke
up the ball game with none out
I
Sheets of copper one twenty-
i horrendth of an inch thick can
be manufactured
$445 to *565
Two First Place
Teams Lose Games
on the program were Mmes. p. J.
Henderson, K. H. Myers, V. M
Special to Record-Chronicle.
AUBREY. Aug. 23 The Metho-
dist W M. 8, met Monday afternoon
in the church with 11 members
present The meeting was opened
with a song. The devotional con-
sisted of Bible quotations given by
each one present and prayer was
offered b Mrs. G. A. Davis Mrs.
C. J. Amos was leader of the lesson
from “The American Indian." Dis-
missal prayer was offered by Mrs
W r. Davis.
A Missionary program was pre-
sented by the Baptist Missionary’
Society Monday afternoon. The
topic was "The Word of God in the
French Country." The opening
hymn was "Jesus Calls Us," and
prayer was offered by Mrs.J E.
Amos. A solo was sung by little
Clydene Simpson. Mrs. S. H. Craw-
ford sang “When They Ring Those
Golden Bells." Mrs. 8. C. Hender-
son was leader. Others assisting
Asraw materials — cotton And
rubber — go skyrocketing, tires are
bound to go higher, too. The best
advice is—“Don’t wait.’’ Weoflered
that advice months ago, when
Goodyear prices were scraping bot-
tom. Many people who took it have
thanked us; others say they will
never get caught again.
So we repeat! BU Y NOW- because
Goodyears are STILL priced very
low and they can’t stay at these
levels very long.
wsa, . .
uu ——
By HERBERT W. BARKER
Asociated Press Sports Writer
Lightning seldom strikes twice
in the same spot but National
League contenders, harking back to
1914, are casting an apprehensive
eye on the exploits of the Boston
Braves.
Thore's still a long hard strug-
gle ahead of Bill McKechnie's
hopefuls before they can rival the
feat of the Braves of 19 years ago
whp climbed from last place on
July 4 to win the pennant and
then the world series in successive
games from the Philadelphia Ath-
CHICAGO, Aug 23.—(—The
1933 football season will push off to-
morrow night at Soldier Field with
a battle between a great collection
of far Western stars, and a squad
of talent selected from the Middle-
west and East.
From the tentative lineups, the
contest will be a struzgle between
Southern’ Chfornta greats of the
past few seasops, and the beat Coach
Dick Hap’ey of Northwestern, has
been able' to round up from Michi-
gan, ninols, Ohiq, Wisconsin, Min-
nesot a and as far as West Point and
Tulane. Howard Jones of Southern
California, director of the Western
squad, plans to use at least seven
former Trojans in ids battieftont.
The Trojans slated the lineup for
iu the 14h. Fred Fankhbuse went
the route for the Braves and al- l
-
Sharing the headlines with th?
Braves were the Detroit Tigers who
snapped the 13-game winning
streak of the Washington Senators
with a thrilling 10-8 triumph.
A triple by Bill Dickey in the
ninth followed by a single by pinch
hitter Joe Sewell enabled the Yan-
kees to nose out the Indians, 4-3.
Vernon Gomez allowed only tour
hits and tanned 10.
Home runs by McNair. Hggirs
and Finny helped the Athletics
turn back the St. Louis Browns.
7 5 while the Chicago White Sox
took two games from Boston, 8-1
and 4-0. Ted Lyons allowed seven
hits in the opener and Joe Heving
only six in the shutout.
—t ,.
Results Yesterday
Texas League
Dallas 12, Ban Antonio 1, night
game.
Oklahoma City 3. Galveston 3.
night game
Fort Worth 3, Beaumont 1. night
game
Tulsa 7. Houston «, night game.
Ameriea League
Chicago 8-4, Boston 1-0.
New York 4. Cleveland 3.
PhITadelphia 7. St Louis 6,
Detroit 10. Washington 8.
National League
Boston 5. Pittsburgh 4. fourteen
innings.
Other games postponed, rain.
•1
By BILL MARKER,
Associated Press Sports Writer
Houston and Galveston, first and
second place aggregations in the
Texas League pennant race, could
do no better than come in sec-
ond best Tuesday night. The only
first division teem to win was the
Dallas Steers who clipped the San
Antonio Mtssions in celebration of
Zeke Bonura night .
Oklahoma City, far down in the
league cellar, fired a 3 to2btoad-
side at the Buccaneers. Vernon
Kenney, who probably has lots more
close games than any pitcher in
the league, limited Galveston to six
hits. The Buccaneers scored both
their runs in the first inning. The
Indians lied the count in the sev-
enth and put over the winning
run in the last of the ninth.
Hugh Willingham, third sacker,
cracked a home run with a run-
ner on to account for two of the
"three tallies. Hank Thormahlen,
league strikeout king, started for
Galveston but lasted only seven in-
nings. He failed to register a
strikeout.
The veteran Lefty Johns offered
an assortment of baffling south-
paw curves to the Houston bit-
ters. They, failed to connect time-
ly enough and were defeated, 7 to
3. Beckman and Fisher tried to
stem the tide of defeat but the
Oilers pounded them for 10 hits
to score in the first, fourth, nfth
and seventh innings.
Because he has been sold to the
Chicago White Sox and Because he.
is ranked as the most valuable
player on the team. Dallas cele-
brated a special Bcnura night with
a 13 to 1 victory over. San An-
tonio. Owner Sol Dreyfuss of the
Steers presented his big first sack
er with a gold wrist watch. Zeke
returned the compliment with n
single and triple that drove across
three runs. Bonura’s parents and
two uncles were up from New Orleans
to see the huge Italian honored.
Thanks to a home run by Dallas
Warren and a fine four-hit game
by Chambers, the Fort Worth Cats
defeated Beaumont. 3 to 1. The
Cats got seven hits off Alber* and
Sullivan. Both clubs played per-
fect bait- afield.
ling. end. Tay Brown, and Ernie
Smith, Jones’ famous tackle com-
bination; Johnny Baker, guard;
Stan Witamson, center, and Mor-
ley Drury and Gaius Shaver in the
backfield. His other probable start-
ing end is Dave Nisbet. Washington
Peter. Heiser of Stanford is listed
as the other guard, with Hank
Schaldach of California, and Max
Krause of Gonzaga, the remaining
members of the backfield.
Hanley plans to concentrate on
Big Ten and Notre Dame star in
last night's practice ne had Wesley
Fesler of Ohio State, and Frank
Baker of Northwestern, tackle*; um
Harris, Notre Dame, and Clarence
Munn. Minnesota, guards, and Law-
rence. Ely. Nebraska, at center.
Harry Newman, Michigan's all-
Americans star, will start at quar-
terback, with Pug Rentner of North -
western, and Don Zimmerman, Tu-
lane. another pair of all-Americans,
at the halves, and Roy Horstmann
of Purdue, at fullback
The contest is expected to at-
tract around 20 000 spectators, in-
cluding most of the major univer-
sity and college coaches.
LINDBERGHS LAND, MOOR AIR-
PLANE IN ICELAND
REYKJAVIK, Iceland, Aug. 33 —
•—Colonel Chares 2 Lndiergn
and his wife landed this, afternoon
at Eski Fjord, on th* East Coast
of Iceland, about 5 1-3 hours alter
they had taken off from Reykjavik
without announcing their destina-
tion.
They moored their plane there
and it was likely that they would
spend the night
up stress, absorb shocks and
mu ebul
V. M OHalr. Punch and cake
were served to 15 members and six 1
guests. ।
Mrs. R. D Harmon celebrated her
76th birthday with a dinner. Sun-
day. Aug. 13. Mrs Harmon enjoys
good health and lives alone on her
farm one mile north of Aubrey
She cooked her birthday dinner
which was served at noon to about
30 relatives. Mrs. Hannon was
born ui East Tennessee. In 1857 and
came to Texas in 1831. settling in
Denton County where she has lived
due*. Her husband died several
years ago.
_ - . Personals.
Mrs B: F MLis and sou of Dallas
and Mrs. Sophia Bethel of Bolivar
were guests of Mr. and Mrs. L E.
Madden. 1
Mrs. J. D. Robinson was returned
from visits in Okmulgee. OH,
Springdale. Ark . Kansas and Chilli-
cothe. Iowa. She also spent six
days at Chicago.
Mr J F. Amos visited Dr and
Mrs. H C. Amos in Denton.
Mr and Mrs. Euclet Davis and
daughter and Marshal Mordecar
visited in Chillicothe.
Mr and Mrs W C. Simpson and
children and Mrs. T. L. Simpson
visited Mr. and Mrs. Riley Taylor
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 8, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 23, 1933, newspaper, August 23, 1933; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1538908/m1/3/?q=%22%22~1: accessed June 28, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.