Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 86, Ed. 1 Monday, June 28, 1937 Page: 5 of 10
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TODAY'S
SPORTS
PARADE
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OF ALL PEOPLE’
Box Score
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TEXAS LEAGUE
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ATTENTION SPORTSMAN
FISH AT CADDO LAKE
Citizens National Bank
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JOHNSON BROS. RANCH
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Savages
Twice
Dallas Youngster New Trans-Miss
Champion After Beating Eddie Held
41
39
Lions'Kiwanis to
Clash Tues. Night
KARN ACK. TEXAS
Phone No. 01-F8
YOUNG DEMARET IS
NEW GOLF CHAMPION
Team—
Jacksonvills
Palestine
Longview
Henderson
Marshall .
Texarkana
East Texas
Softball
.. 39
. 35
. 35
I Pub*
surna-
next
4 2
4 1
5 0
Rare Collection of
Ventriloquism Relics
The
was
| the younger brother of Jimmy De-
maret. Brae Bum professional who
qualified recently in the National
Open meet.
Of Henderson
The Appreciative and Dependable Bank
Marshall--
Ater, 1b _______
Rezokto, 3b ..
Dalrymple, ss
San Antonio A
Galveston ........
Dallas _______________
Houston ..........
— 4
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... 46
STEERS BEAT
GALVESTON
TWICE
SHREVEPORT GIRL
WINNER NET TITLE
Hack, ef
Bohl, 8b
Simpson, if___
Bush, o
Foster, p ------
Nugent, p ......
We solicit the accounts of 'individuals, firms and
corporations, offering complete facilities for handl-
ing large and small accounts and extending credit
on approved collateral, financial statements or oth-
er sound banking principles, .
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do
The Oilers will attempt to get back into the win column
tonight when they play Marshall the final game of the home
series. Yesterday the Tigers trimmed the Oilers 8-7, the sec-
ond straight setback for the homelings after running up a
six-game win streak last week.
Either Mike Cess or Buddy Galvin will get the nod for
ed and drove two runs in. Later
on he made one of the errors that
coat as many runs as he batted
in. Mickey DeJonghe and Harvey
Sublette, the usually very reliable
keystone combination, committed
the other two mispiays.
DeJonghe, Cortinas and House
got two hits to lead the Hender-
son attack. One of Mickey’s was
a two-bagger. Gene Ater was the
only Tiger to get two blows, a
pall of singles.
tea
Cabins, Boats, Motors, Guides
Bait. Everything to make your
visit with us an enjoyable one.
Fish, Chicken, Steak Dinners at
/MYG98*
swimmwe
L NNST8UCTOR,
pacing the rave with a percent-
age of .600; the Cardinals second
with .593, and the Giants third
with .590. Only half a game sep-
arated the third-place New York-
ers from the top running Cubs.
sulci
Vanderbilt Cup race I don’t know
which car I’ll use. The Stevens-
Duryew has a back entrance,
which would be handy in case of
an accident, but the Wicker lunch
baskets it sports on wither side
spoil its sreamlining. The Flan:
A. aders handles easily but I’m afraid
di Kits two cylinders wouldn’t stand
- > Piat long aground. The Haynes
is out because I’ve misplaced the
lap robe that is such an essential
part of its well-being, and I think
the Steamers are ineligible.
So perhaps the Saxon will be
my choice. A sweet little car, that
Saxon. Mine’s a roadster with one
AB B FFO A
8 13 8 0
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half of the ninth ining. George
Susce hit a homer for Galveston
in the sixth.
Oklahoma City Increased its
league leadership to eight and a
half games by winning over Beau-
mont. 10 to 5. Ash Hillin, who re-
lieved Buxton on the mound for
Oklahoma City, got credit for the
victory, which was his tenth con-
secutive win and which put him
at the top of the league pitching
standings.
Fort Worth climbed to a sec-
ond place tie with Beaumont by
winning a double victory over
Houston, 8 to 6 and 8 to 7. Fort
Worth’s heavy hitters had a field-
day, with Jackson, Shelley and
Greenberg getting home runs in
14 0
0 6 0
tit
14 8
Oilers to Road Tuesday
.... 4 1 1 8 •
... 1 0 0 0 0
..... 3 0 0 0 1
HOUSTON, Tex., June 28. (UP)
Mildred Crowe of Shreveport, La.,
hardly tipping the five-foot mark,
held the championship trophy of
the Texas State Women’s Tennis
Tournament again today.
She successfuly defended her
title at Recreation Courts yester-
day by defeating Marjorie Murray
of Gaiverton in straight sets, 6-2,
6-0.
AUSTIN,. Tex., June 28 (UP)
—There should be no difficulty
about stopping operation of book-
makers under the new anti-bet-
ting act, Gov. James V. Allred
said today.
"The telephene company will
cut off service upon notification
that it is being used for book-
making,” Allred said. "If any
citizen knows of such operations
he need only notify the officers or
the telephone company.
Tyler -------
It was an historic event when
Burleigh Grimes’ Dodgers downed
Chicago twice in the Cubs’ home
park. Van Mungo breezed to an
8-8 decision in the first game,
and Luke Hamlin yielded only
three hits in the disconcerting
night cap victory, 6-3. The largest
Chicago crowd of the year, 36,-
393 fans, saw Van Mungo yield
10 hits. In the opener but kept
real rival was Jimmy Walkup of
Fort Worth, who was four under
par with a 72-hole total of 280.
Walkup was 10 strokes better
than the third-pace player, Kea-
ron Haley of Wichita Falls, who
took 290. Gordon Young of Dal-
las was fourth with 292; and
Iverson Martin of Fort Worth
fifth with 298. Gray Little of
Beaumont, medalist in the recent
State amateur matches, carded
204.
Red Lynn turned "iron-man"
yesterday in pitching the Jack-
sonville Jax to a double victory
over the Longview Cannibals. The
sorrell-topped fire-ball chunker
twirled seven hit ban in the open-
ing game as the Jax won 5-1 and
relieved Hurley in the afterpiece
to pitch his team out of trouble
86 36 .500
28 40 .412
22 49 .310
go to the fund for underprivileged,
children. The date for the other
two contests has no yet been de-
cided upon.
Rain halted their first game
here ten days ago in the third in-
ning with the score tied at 5-all.
It was quite a battle but Oakley
Childs and Earl Adams, captains
of the Lions and ‘twanis, respect-
ively, believe their teams will play
even greater ball sinc they have
had the feel of battle already.
Captain Adams says his team
will be stronger than in the first
game but is very secretive about
the addition he is making. Adams
says he has a whizz of a pitcher
to take the place of Doc Suehs
who may be out of this game due
to a sore arm.
78 in the face of the new cham-
pion’s courageous surge.
The final nine found Schu-
macher 2 down, but on the diffi-
cult back nine he won four holes
with birdies while Held held to
___________ 502 010 000-8
pires—Curtis and Howell.
LAVENDERWINS
“PUB” TITLE
h •. . ■
par.
Three birdies by Schumacher on
the last four holes overcame Held.
Schumacher evened the match
on the 33rd and 34th holes. On
the 115-yard 33rd hs rammed
home a 26-foot putt for a birdie
2 and continued his final depreda-
tion on Held’s lead with a birdie
3 on the 34th hole when he blast-
ed a 160-yard Iron shot out of the
muddy rough within eight feet of
the pin and canned the putt.
L Pct.
29 .638
37 .532
87 .532
37 .532
40 .494
48 .449
46 .432
Natl. League Scramble
Tightens as Brooklyn
Defeats Chicubs Twice
Errors — Sublette, DeJonghe,
Stock. Runs batted In—Peters 2,
Simpson, Cortln-a 2, Stock 2,
Curtwright 2, Bush 8, House. Two-
base hits—DeJonghe, Dalrymple.
Home runs—Curtwright, Bush,
Cortinas. Stolen bases — Hack,
Peters, Sacrifice hit—Rezoktai
Struck out—By Byram 5, Nugent
4. Bases on bails—Off Diets 0. off
Byram 8, off Nugent 1, off Fon
ter 8. Double play—Sublette to
DeJonghe to aBrtling. Earned I
runs—Henderson 7, Marshall 0.
the first game and Feel getting
one in the nightcap.
Tulsa scored the winning run in
the sixth inning to defeat San
Antonio, 6 to 4, in the only night
game.
Monday’s schedule: Galveston
at Dallas; Beaumont at Tulsa;
San Antonio at Oklahoma City;
Houston at, Fort Worth.
BUNNY AUSTIN
BEATS BITSY
shown when they refused to en-
ter the race until officials kick-
ed in with a pot of $10,000 for
the first, second, third, and
fourth Americano to finish. The
boys demanded consolation money
and got it.
The American machines are no
match for the foreign cars in any
department. On the flat they are
anywhere from 60 to 70 miles an
hour slower. They can’t take
turns as easily, and on the up-
pick they are hopelessly outclass-
ed.
The only hope the Americans
have is that the foreigners will
crac?up. But that isn’t likely, for
this is a road race, and the over-
seas boys are infinitely better
road racers than the Americans.
NE WORK, June 28 (UP).—The National League pen-
nant race was a three-cornered affair today after the lead-
ing Chicago Cubs’ surprise double-header defeat by Brook-
lyn, and Carl Hubbell’s brilliant return to form in pitching
the New York Giants to an easy victory over Dizzy Dean of
the second-place St. Louis Cardinals.
These results left the Cubs---------------
machines in the world. Seaman
and Delius will use a mercedes.
The American cars simply
can’t match these governmevt-
Lavender will be given an all-
expense trip to the National
Lie Links championship tol
ment at San Francisco
August.
and get credit for the victory.
Tyler trounced Palestine 10-5 as
Rufe Meadows chalked up his 14th
victory of the season. The Trojans
blasted Abe Miller and Lefty
Wagener for 14 potent bingles
while Meadows was allowing the
same number but keeping them
well spaced.
Marshall scored five runs in
the first inning on two hits and
went on to trim Henderson by
score of 8-7 in a hectic game.
Curtwright and Cortinas for Hen-
derson and Bush for Marshall con-
nected for four-ply waUops.
Texarkana defeated Kilgore -9-2
in a listless game. Umpire Stormy
Davis ejected Manager Tom Es-
tell and Catcher Barnett from the
game after a strenuous protest of
ball and strike decisions. Bill Win-
ford allowed but four hits in hurl-
ing the Liners to victory.
Tonight’s schedule: Marshall
at Henderson, Palestine at Tyler,
Jacksonville at Longview, Kil-
gore at Texarkana.
L Pct.
28 .648
30 .577
32 .549
35 .507
85 .500
subsidized European jobs.
Americans know this, as
FORT WORTH, Tex., June 28
(UF)—Dennis Lavender, 26, of
Dallas was back in the limelight
of Texas golfdom today with a
brilliant 277-stroke victory in the
Stats public links championship
at Meadowbrook Country Club..
Lavender, former State emta
teur titlist, dropped from active
competition three years ago be-
cause tournaments interfered
with business. He came to Fort
Worth Saturday to enter the pub-
lic links matches, end carried
away medalist honors on the first
86 holes with a three-under-par
140.
He was even better on the fin-
al 86 Sunday, shooting 70-68 to
wind up seven strokes under par
with 277, lower by nine strokes
than any prevjous championship
score on ths same course.
NEW HAVEN, Conn. (UPJ-1-
Ancestors of Charlie McCarthy,
best known of ventrilgquism
dummies, are spending their
days in this city. A collection of
such dolls is in ths home of
Harry Edward Parsons, musician,
whose grandfather, the late Lewis
Jay Parsons, performed to eh-
thusiostic audiences during ths
Civil War period.
The dolls were carved of wood
by Lewis Parsons, and hit wife,
Lydia Strseter Parsons, designed
their clothing. They are stored
their original traveling trunk,
which in itself is a relic of the
period.
■ । । -o—------------
Kidney Stew Favorite
GRAND BEACH, Mich., —
Jimmy Braddock’s favorite dish
on his training camp menu is
kidney stew, prepared by Egon
Bauer, his personal chef.
—■ - . .j । ----------
Humming birds are unable to
use their legs for walking pur-
poses.
...........«... 36
_______85
them discreetly separated.
Over at St. Louis, Hubbell per-
formed before an overflow
crowd of 88,719 fans and limited
the Cardinals to six scattered
hits, while his comrades clouted
Dizzy Dean as he seldom has been
cloutod before. They piled onto
the great Dis for 10 hits and six
runs and brought Ray Harrell
out of the bull pen in the seventh.
This onslaught on Dean was led
by Mel Ott’s 14th and 15th hom-
ers of the season. The score was
8-1.
Pittsburgh remained in fourth
place by beating the Phillies, 4-3,
assisted by home runs from Arky
Vaughan and Alhtodd. The Bos-
ton Bees showed discontent with
the cellar by downing the Cin-
cinnati Reds twice, 8-2 and 10-5.
In the American League, the
New York Yankees held a three-
game lead, while Chicago’s White
Sox replaced Detroit in second
place. The Yanks garnered 17
hits off three Detroit hurlers to
beat the Tigers, 9-5. Selkirk led
the attack with four hits in five
tries, including his 16th homer
which tied him with Hank
Greenberg for four-bagger hon-
ors.
Steady pitching by Ted Lyons
enabled the White Sox to down
Washington 5-3, while his mates
collected 15 safeties off three
Senator flingers.
The fourth place Boston Red
Sox took both ends of a double
header from St. Louis, 8-0, be-
hind Jack Wilson’s six-hit fling-
ing, and 11-7, in the second after
getting of to a 10-run lead in
the first four frames. Cleveland
and the Philadelphia Athletics
split a twin bill. The Athletics
won the opener, 10-0, behind
George Caster’s four-hit pitching,
but the Indians took the second
contest, 7-2, when Willis Hudlin
held the A’s to six hits.
Yesterday’s Hero—George Sel-
kirk, Yankee-He drove in four
runs against Detroit with four
hits in five tries, including kis
16th homer of the season.
Schumacher’s selectin will de-
pend on his play in the National ■
Amateur Golf Tournament.
The site of the 1988 trans-Mis-
sissippi tourney will be selected
by a special committee within the I
next few weeks. Among the sev-
eral bidders, Fort Worth, Texas,
appeared to have the edge. The
strongest golfing delegation in the
meet came from the Lone Star
State.
Schumacher, whose previous
golfing accomplishment consisted
of winning the Texas State cham-
pionship last year, was 4 down
to Hold, the 1023 and 1926 cham-
pion and competitor in the Na-
tional Amateur for 15 straight
years, at ths halfway point er ths
36-hole match. 1
The 34-year-old St. Louis vet-
eran shot a 1-under-par 71 and
his steady play permitted his
young rival a win on only ons
hold during the first 18 holes.
After the lunch period, Held
was In trouble constantly and
Scuhmacher returned to form with
a blistering stretch drive which
completely unnerved the veteran.
After losing the first hole of
the afternoon round, Schumacher
won 8 of the remaining 17 holes
while Held got only two and his
usually consistent game soared to
CHICAGO, June 28 (UP- —
Manager Joe McCarthy's all-star
player selections Indicated today
the American league once more
will bank on sheer power at bat
for its fourth victory in the an-
nual battle with representatives
of the National League at Wash-
ington, July 7.
The field boss of the world
champion New York Yankees
picked the first six men off the
list of batting averages and pro-
duced a squad of 23 players whose
batting averaged .316. The in-
fielders averaged. 325 and the out-
field, 335.
Luke Appling, white Sox short-
stop and American League batting
champion last year, was the only
notable hitter overlooked.
The squad and their teams:
New York: Vernon Gomes,
pitcher; Bill Dickey, catcher; Lou
Gehrig, first base; Robert (Red)
Rolfe, instead; Joe Di Maggio,
outfield.
Detroit: Tommy Bridges, pitch-
er; Charley Gohringer, infield;
Hang Greenberg, first base; Ger-
ald Walker, outfield.
Boston: Bob Grove, pitcher;
Joe Cronin, infielder; Rogers
Cramer. Outfield; Jimmy Foxx,
first base.
Washington:. - Wesley Ferrell,
pitcher; Richard Ferrell, Canton;
Charles (Buddy) Myer, infield.
Chicago, Monty Stratton,
pitcher; Lke" Eewell, catcher.
St. Louis: Harland Clift, in-
field; Beau Bel, outfield.
Cleveland: Mel Harder, pitcher;
Earl Averill. outfield,
Philadelphia: Wally Moses, out-
field.
of those "one-man” tops—you
know, the kind that’ll keep one
dry if he was on a stout raincoat.
Depenable, too. The last trip I
made in it was in 1919, and 1
remember how I made the entire
trip between Bradenton and
Sarasota, a distance of 14 miles,
without a single stop.
That is, a stop for mechanical
trouble. There were three blow-
outs, which I quickly repaired
with one of those kits containing
patches, glue, and a cocoanut
grater.
The Saxon won’t make more
than 26 miles an hour, even un-
der the whip, but I think it would
have just as much chance of
beating the foreign cars as any
of the other American machines.
You remember what happened in
the race last year, of course.
Tazio Nuvolari of Italy, driving
an Alfa Romeo, make a parade
of the thing, and the only time
the American drivers worried
him was when he was passing
them.
- This year the race is even
SOUTHPORT, Eng., June 28
(UP)— Official pairings were an-
nounced today for the Scotch
foursomes opening the sixth Ryder
Cup golf matches between the
United States and Great Britain
over the' Southport and Ainsdale
courses tomorrow:
The pairings:
Ed Dudley and Eyrof Nelson,
U. S., vs. Alfred Padgham and
Henry Cotton, England.
Ralph Guldahl and Tony Man-
ero, U. S., vs. Arthur Lacey and
William Cox, England.
Gene Sarazen and Denny Shute,
U. S. vs. Charles Whitcombe and
Dai Rees, England.
Henry Picard, and Johnny Re-
volta, U. S., vs. Percy Alls and
Richard Burton, England.
Walter Hagen, non-playing
captain of the American team, de-
cided to select Guldahl, U. S. open
champion, and Manero, 1936 U. S.
open titleholder, over Horton
Smith and Sam Snead, who will
be idle during the two-ball four-
somes.
The British were favored slight-
ly in the betting.
W I W -
- Ji__,
Left on bases—Henderson 8, Mar-
shall 8. Hits and runs—Off Diets
2 and 5 In 0 innings, off Foster
4 and 5 in 1 inning. Winning pitch-
er—Nugent. Losing pitcher-By-
ram. Time of game- 0:10. Um-
WIMBLEDON, England, June
28 (UP) — Bunny Austin, Eng-
land's No. 1 player and Davis cup
mainstay, gained the semi-final
round of the all-England tennis
championship today with a
straight-set victory over Bryan
Grant of Atlanta. Scores were
6-1, 7-5, 6-4.
Budge will meet his fellow
American and Davis Cup com-
rade, Frankie Parker, in the semi-
finals. Parker moved into the
round of four with a 6-3, 7-5, 4-6,
6-2 victory over Henner Henkel,
Germany's No. 2 Davis Cup play-
mound duty in tonight’s meleee,
while the Marshall hurler likely
will be either Foster or Perry.
Foster hurled but one inning yes-
terday before bombarded from ‘
the mound and may go back to-
night, Skipper Jimmy Dalrymple
of the Tigers announced.
Starting time for the game is
8:15 o'clock as usual.
Following tonight's concluding !
game of the Marshall series the
locals accompany the Tigers home
for a pair of gams at the Harri-
son county capital. They go from
there to Jacksonville and then to
Longview before returning to
Henderson July 5.
There's times when fielding er-
rors don't prove so costly but most
usually they come right at the
wrong time. Yesterday afternoon
the Ollers made three infield
"boots" that led to six Marshall
tallies and cost Henderson a ball
game With the exception of three
misplays the Ollers played a great
game of ball.
Reb Byram hurled stellar ball
after relieving Dutch Diets in the
first inning, With the exception
of occasional wildness that got
him in a hole or two and a home
run pitch he made to Catcher
Bush he was near perfect. He
gave up but six hits all told and
fanned five but walked six.
The Oilers garnered ten hits
off Foster and Nugent, two of
them homers by Cortinas and
Curtwright, but the early advan-
tage the Tigers had was too great
to overcome.
In the very first inning the
Tigers chased across five runs and
only one was earned. Two bingles,
two walks and as many errors
brought in the tallies.
Henderson got these back in two
innings, however, but another
boot that should have retired the
side in Marshall’s third inning was
followed by Bush’s home run wal-
lop and the Tigers were out in
front again. nsvsr to be headed.
Shorty Stock joined the Ollers
for a trial at third basn and was
both the hero and the goat In
the first inning he slapped out a
clean single with the bases load-
...... 32 fl) .895
NEW YORK, Juns 28 (UP)—
If my linen duster and motoring
cap bave escaped the moths, and
if the glass in my goggles still
is intact, I think I’ll roll one of
my ears out of the garage next
Saturday and have a go at the.
Vanderbilt Cup on Roosevelt
raceway.
When I say "roll” I mean just
that, because not one of my auto-
mobiles has sven so much as back-
fired in ftie last ten years. They
are, in the order in which they
are lined up in the shed, a
Stevens-Duryea, a Flanders, a
Saxon, a Haynes, an E. M. F., and
a pair of Steamers—White and
Stanley.
If I do enter the 800-mile
The Lions and Kiwanis will take secret workouts tonight
for their crucial tilt tomorrow night at Fair Park. Both
teams refuse to divulge where they will put on the finishing'
touches.
Tomorrow night’s game is the first of three games to
be played by the local service club teams with proceeds to
Henderson— AB R H PO A
Curtwright, cf ...... 4 1110
Bartling, 1b 8 0 0 4 1
DeJonghe, 2b 5 12 4 1
Hancock, if ........ 4 112 0
Sublette, ss ------ 4 10 0 5
Cortinas, rf ........— 8 2 2 5 0
Stock, 8b ............ 4 0 18 0
House, o --------- 4 0 2 8 1
Diets, p..............— 0 0 0 0 0
Byram, p ---------... 4 118 0
Totals________87 1 10 07 10
- , -----
DENVER, June 28 (UP).—The comback of 21-year-old
Don Schumacher of Dallas in winning the 1937 trans-Missis-
sippi golf champibnship here yesterday over the Cherry Hills
course with a 1-up victory over Eddie Held of St. Louis,
placed him in the front rank of the candidates for places on
the 1987 Walker Cup team.
HOUSTON, Tex., June 28. (UP)
Milton Demaret was crowned the
1987 municipal golf champion to-
day after winning the final match
of the Press-City Tournament at
the Hermann Park course.
RYDER CUP MATCHES mamergaretraftdndisnn F6
ll I --i •VI "in 1 --V hole match. The new champion is
NEW YORK, June 28 (UP) —
The 23 players who will compose
the National League squad which
will most the American League in
the All-Star baseball game at
Washington on Wednesday, July
7, were announced today by the
National League office.
The squad, hand-picked by Bill
Terry, Now York Giants' man-
ager who will pilot the all-star
outfit, includes six Giants, five
Cubs, four Cardinals, three Pir-
ates, two Reds and one each from
the Dadgers, Phillies and Bees.
The complete squad follows —
catchers (3), Babby Hartnett,
Cubs; Gus Mancuso, Giants; Er-
nie Lombardi, Reds; pitchers (8),
Dizzy Dean, Cardinals; Carl Hub-
bel. Giants; Van Mungo, Dodgers;
Cy Blanton, Pirates; Bucky Walt-
ers. Phillies; Lee Grissom, Reds.
Infielders (7), Johnny Mize, Car-
dinals; Rip Collins, Cubs; Billy
Herman, Cubs; Burgess White-
head, Giants; Dick Bartell, Giants;
Billy Jurges, Cubs; Arky Vaughn,
Pirates. Outfielders (7), Joe Med-
wick, Cardinals; Frank Demaree,
Cubs; Paul Waner, Pirates; Pep-
Psr Martin, Cardinals; Gene
Moore, Bees; Msl Ott, Giants; Joe
Moore, Giants.
Seven players are on the team
for the first time. Ths newcomers
include Grissom, Cincinnati South-
paw, Blanton, Bartell, Jurges,
Gsne Moore, Walters, and Mise.
Terry did not pick a third-base-
man, but named three shortstops,
instead, Jurges, Bartel and
Vaughan. It is believed that Terry
plans to play Vaughan at third
because of his hitting power.
Terry refused to • discuss his
probable lineup. Recently he said
he planned to start Van Mungo,
Brooklyn’s fireball pitcher, and
follow up with Hubbel or Dissy
Dean, according to the situation,
but he has not since amplified
that statement.
CARTHAGE, Tex., June 28 (Spl)
Martin (Doc) Hess, field manager
for the local softball loop, has an-
nounced that the remainaer of the
games will be played as scheduled
instead of being cancelled to start
the first half play-off this week
between the Lions and the Hark-
rider Cleaners, the two teams who
have definitely won the right to
participate in the play-off tor the
championship of the first half.
Six more games remain on the
schedule witn five to be played
this week and one next Monday de-
fore the play-off begins. Tonight
the loop-pacing Cleaners are uue
to tangie witn the fourth-place
Fire Department. To date the
Fireboys have given some credit-
table performances and can be ex-
pected to give the leaders some
urouble.
The schedule for the remainder
of the season is as follows:
June 28—Fire Department vs.
Harkrider Cleaners.
Jun# 20—Highway Department
vs. Oilers.
June 30—Lions vs. Harkrider
Cleaners.
July 1—Fire Department vs.
pliers. .
July 2—Lions vs. Highway De-
partment,
July 3—Fire Department vs.
Depaitment
Sails News Sports
OILERS PLAY MARSHALL AGAIN TONIG
— a, ......—■ ..............——-------- . . — .. — . — । —....... in I... ......... ii- ... ■■ ...... ■ a mi...... ■■ a .....- ' ■■ -—I ■ । ■
NATIONAL LEAGUE
TEAM— W L Pet.
Chicago ................. 36 24 .600
St. Louis .........a 35 24 .593
New York ............1... 36 25 .590
Pittsburgh ...„....... 32 27 .542
Brooklyn ................ 27 80 .474
Cincinnati _______________ 24 35 .407
Philadelphia ............ 24 36 .400
Boston _______ 23 36 .390
Kilgore -
1 -d
-----—
more at the mercy of the import-
ed drivers and cars, because in
"aBudition to Nuvolari there will
T9U 1 „P36 the three great German driv-
7 ‛ ers—Bernd Rosemeyer, Rudolf
Caracciola, and Ernst Delius—
the Norweigan star, Eugene
Bjornstad, and one of England's
crack pilots, Die Seaman.
All of these are vry hot num-
bers, especially the Germans Rose-
meyer and Caracciola. And what
cars they drive, my friends. They
will be behind the wheels of auto-
unions, the fastest road-racing
-
-. - re ium.
BY UNITED PRESS
The Dallas Steers, with a new
manager at the helm, did an about
face Sunday and won both ends of
a doubleheader with the Galves-
ton Buccaneers. The scores were
10 to 9 and 3 to 0.
Fred Marberry, who relieved
Alex Gaston as manager of the
Steers an Saturday and promptly
saw his team lose another game
Saturday night, pitched the shut*
out in ths second game. Sorelle,
Baker and Papish pitched the
first game for the Steers, who
scored the winning run in the last
Team- W
Oklahoma City ........ 51
Beaumont ...... 42
Fort Worth __________ 42
Tulsa ........... 42
Childs says he is sticking with
the same lineup since he figured
it much better than the Kiwanis
team that took the field in the
other contest. Supt. Pollard will
again do the hurling, Childs says.
Tickets for the big game are
already on sale and a capacity
crowd is hoped for by officials
in charge. Starting time is set for
8:15 o’clock.
CANHALTBOOKIES
EASILY, SAYS ALLRED
1 - - d-—-
■ — 1 ■■ ■ - X’.
. . AMERICAN LEAGUE
h /N d Team— W L Pct.
P ""new York ................ 37 21 .638
" Chicago ________________ 35 25 .588
Detroit _________________ 34 26 .567
Boston .................— 31 24 .564
A Cleveland ________ 28 29 .491
f Washington _____________ 26 33 .441
Philadelphia ........... 20 36 .557
St.. Louis ............... 20 37 .351
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Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 86, Ed. 1 Monday, June 28, 1937, newspaper, June 28, 1937; Henderson, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1559217/m1/5/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rusk County Library.