Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 272, Ed. 1 Friday, September 30, 1949 Page: 7 of 8
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Friday, September 30, 1949-CI EBURNE, TEXAS
'ackets Get
PROCS PALAVER
Chances for a
Yellow
Jacket
By Jack Proctor
*
। minutes of the
212 put. on ■ susti
1
hKP
"Let’s Go"
PROC PICKS...
Gray & Daniels
V
A ■
Top Drawer
JACKETS
After the Game We
nvite You to Visit the
$e
t
•crap:
field
ms TM
millioncire
ME
■
cobs (0) and Sawataki.
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no toll
lik» incihation to ,
Ims a
$1000
Phone 146
0
son
H
E STADIUM. N. Y.
DIRECT FROM THE YAN
TO A
•3
•MAT
FUTUEEE
9
4,
1
88
THAN ANY OTHER
PER DOLLAR
Get utarted todayi
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truck ft”* oygtjff
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,9
--a
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fOUR QDARANTKE or
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POPULAR-PRICDFLDORCOVERINGI take.
THE paraRNS: sMaRTEsT Yov’VE Evee
sEEn I TAKE the. ScRMieE: you a
SVrER WEAR-LAYER of HEAT-
TOUGMENED PAINT AND eAkED ENAMEL
96
28
76
35
12
170
victory over Stephenvilte here to-
night were dimmed when It was
MERIDIAN
CLEBUANE
Bring Your Ungraded Milk io
Foremost Dairies; Cleburne
WE PAY TOP PRICES
ith
84
00
46
57
74
71
27
03
We're All With You
100 Per Cent
w and
nnd on
KING OF STUNT MEN LEAPS HIS CAR UP AND OVER
A TRUCK AND FIVE CARS.
or Building Bodies Tt's
SNOWFLAKE
Milk Ice Cream
1
least a month. |
Miller received!
a broken thumb
on his right hand
in a locker room
tussle yesterday
afternoon aftei
OCTOBER 1st 3:00 P M. 8:00 P.M. |
HELL ON WHEELS
THRILL CIRCUS
FAMOU$ conMawroiwti YOV
MORa mu, moge PRKLG, MORS STAMINA
NOTICE TO UNGRADED
MILK PRODUCERS
Contact W. L Pou Jr.; Our Field Man; or
V. L. Pou in Care of Foremost Dairies;
Slebure.
a-.
Aggies to Play
Nevada in 1950
COLLEGE STATION. Tex., Sept.
20—(U.P)--Texas A & M will open
its 1950 football scason at Sacra-
manto. Cal it, Sept. 23 against Ne-
vada’s Wolfpack in the first at a
two-game series.
Aggie Athletic Director Barlow
Irvin said the two teams would
e,
-1,
ket football team.
alfback Ruddy Collins was the
i
M He.
TIGKETS
cgdrttky
KIDDIES
60e
80
R)
JK
90
no
50
40
BO
40
50
ISO
160
65 -
165
70 ‘
150 -
180
140
ISO
160
190
185
In the Corsicana school system
three grades are eligible to com-
pete as Junior High players a set
uy which gives Corsicana a heav.
ler and older team.
So outclassed was the Cleburne
eleven that it was able to register
only three first downs against the
winner’s 10. Cleburne failed to of.
T
0
7
CLEBURNE
RODEO FAI R GROUNDS
Se
OD DARE DEVIL STUNT MEN CRASHING MO-
THRU FLAMING WALLS.
CM dr vuil your
recnAtim offkt.
Pott Office Building
Business Phone 423
One of the quickest ways on
earth to start a promising
career is enlistment NOW
in the U. S. Army or U. S.
Air Force.
Leadership training, techni-
cal schooling, travel, educa-
tion and adventure . ., these
all clear the way for the
soldier and the airman.
The opportunity ia here.
Yout progress in a proud
profession depends only on
your ability to carry the ball.
722
in the World Serios, there is conference vlay the following week
: telling. The climactic event , against Godley.
AMERICA’S GREATEST THRILL SHOW
ROCKY BURKE
IN HIS
LEAP OF DEATH
- ting was puny. That must atij
be a sore spot with the proud
, brightest light for the Junior Jack-
f ets, as he seored the local’s only
touchdown in the third quarter. He
23,
jp
—neemen
’ - - - - ;
i
-ggoscme-
stand early in the first quarter
when an attempted fourth down
running play, where a punt waa
dearly needed gave Meridian the
ball on the Cleburne 14. Three run-
ning plays gained only three yards
and Collins knocked down a fourth
down pass, Cleburne taking over
on their 20
It was the first time this seas
the B team has been scored on and
it was their closest margin of vic-
tory. in three games.
Next opponent for the B’s will
--n- -o --
--g-2,
M m«NE5$ TO 8 COATS
onm
pAerAreb BY HAND. AND TNK
j Old Nemesis, LSU; Out For Win
Grandview Dumps
Lancaster, 49-6
The District 17-B Grandview Ze-
bras ran over the Laneaster Biteam
M Grandview last night as they
scored la every period to mnrk
upn 49-6 win,
Every member of Cpach A. S.
Weeks’ team got into the fray,
which nnw bneks, Darrell Holland
and Covert Reivers cross the Lan-
co* er goal line three timos each.
Gu Hill nnd Charles Johnson con-
trihuted touchdowns on running
plavs.
The Zebras started scoring early,
eounting their first touchdown on
the third running play of the game.
The Zebras started scoring ear-
18 3 4
. 0 0 0 0
...0 0 7 0
And you will look in vain for
records of batting pyrotechnics by
the great Hopus agner in,World.
Series history Christy Mathew-
son, whom many rate the great-
eat pitcher* the game has pro-
duced, won four and lost five in
the October aressure.
rates. Ty was his usually I
speedy self in the
the bases, hut his bat-
he leburne YellowrJac pahadenahay . . clay, even on the diamonaFAl-time mar.
B team had a close call Coach Cinude Everett had his , ‘ . . . .. . 200
Yellow Jacket Stadium Meridian eleven ready fot the de- vels who could not break through the
t night as it eked out a bume Tbe y*?0? tensions and challenging circumstances
win over a hustling, Ue opening qurter and piayea in of series play; bread-and-butter techni-
id-up Meridian Yellow Cleburne’s end of the field through- cians who rose to unlooked-for heights in
fulan. to trim Georgia toch-
Two touchdowns, maybe.
mhinola over Wiaconsin —Ilini
tough at home.
Army to beat Penn State—Qua-
ben not clicking. <
Wako Ferost to best Beaton
College — Got smart last week.
North Carolina to edge Georgia
—In the deep South.
Ohio State to vanquish Indiana
—Another Notre Dame scare.
Cobb on the other hand, made
no great showing in the 1007.
1008 and 1000 inter-league com-
petition, when the Tigers took
only four games in the three
saros with the Cuba and P-
If shere were a hat "BlutBook" you’d find the Dobbs
"Somerset" headi page one. Par of the reason is the
resilient construction that remind* you of spring steel. But,
most of all, because the "Somerset" reflects Dobbs styling
and craftemanship at it* finest.
VIINUTE
eburne’s Most Complete
Restaurant
i
Rie Train came to Washington la
1967. Aa earlv as 1010, he w
a 36-game winner. But the yedra
came and the seasons went, and
it was 1024 before the Big Swede
I finally made the big event. And
when he did arrive,-he was hard
j lv a sbectnenlar figure. The yeais
had bvonasgd him too long and
had failed to throw him Into the I
clsssie while he still had greater ।
speed than any other hurter has
yet shown.
Sevme
d. Uufcfou
Now you can enjoy even j
beauty of design... tM|
French Toes by srman-ha
"dlendtihesg ef frveh
in an all-time ranking of base-
ball’s greats, Cobb and Wagner
will draw as many votea as
George Herman Ruth. the Babe.
Ruth, of course, had a world se-
ries record without parallel. In
six classics, he rose to the occas-
ion for a batting average of6as3;
ho hit 15 series homers, piled up
a total of 96 bases and got * 54
extra bases on long hits.
. 0
NE
PTS
yesterday and probably will not
igoeie
«*■
with at least three men, and poa- ( ern Methodist's workout at Dallas
sibly six. on the sidelines. .........
«tinite4 Pmw»
A rough and ready Rice team
left for Raton Rouge and their
annual nerve wracker with Louisi-
ana State's Bayou Tgera.
The Owis, already dubbed the
Dark Ilene of the Southwest Con-
ference have never defeated the
Bayou Tigers since the two teams:
started their Interconference Ser-
ies in 1944
Whether the uninjured Owls will
break the live-year-old Saturday
jinx remains to be seen, but sta-
tistics favored the Houston team.
LSU has one of its poorest tonms
in years.
Conch Blalr Cherry's Texas Long-
horns prepared to face the Univer-
sity of Idaho in Austin tomorrow
play against Missouri In the Cot-
ton Bowl Saturday night.
Conch Matty Rell put the em-
I phnata oa lUcklng, remembering
Oiler? Smothex
Nashville, 13-2
To Lead Series
NASHVIL.L.E, Tenn., Sept. $0 (u.m
- Tulsa's Oilers, champfo of the
Texas Lengue, held th* lead today
in thelt battle with the Nashville
Vols for the 1949 Dixie Hartes title.
Tulsa humbled the Southern As-
social ion champs, 13 to 2, in the
series opener, hanging 13 hits off
the offerings of Ben Wade and
Tony Jacobs. Wade was the losing
pitcher.
Slim Jim Avren, who went the
route for the Oilers, sen tiered 10
hits, -
Nanhvilo Takes Lead .
Nashville took the lead with on*
run in the first inning, but Tulsa
shoved ovot three in the third nnd
Halfback Billy Pyle, Guard June
Davis aad Fullback Newell Kan*
definitely were out with ankle
and knee injuries. End Paul Wil-
liams was Ie it hospital today with
a cold, and Kid Ben Procter and
Halfback Bubba Shands were hob-
bling with knee injuries.
Guard Errol Fry nursed a hand
injury but Cherry believed he
backs: Carney and Graff.
Kickoff for tonight's game I*
fl o'clock.
EBURNE B'S EKE OUT 7 - 6 WIN OVER MERIDIAN
~Potent Rice Owls Get Set For MISS TONIGHTS CAM*
t.f count Ing their figat touchdown
abi the third running play, of th*. t
■r
. ' 4 2
7"
Voew
1syg,.
B ‘ 721
i^HjniaaEWsii-----------05
MILLER INJURED; WILL
-1 - - - —— — — — 1 ---
.out the first half. the white heat of championship com pet i - 52
Again it was Collins who kept tion; marvelous players who never got E
themouthuupuntcathomtimes’hn into the playoff, the goats of classic an-
the first half for a 46-yardaverage nals—of these we Bing. E
The visitors scored their touch- The master player who achieves the v
; down late in the third perlod from series and then turns in a shoddy per- m"
phe.inarcepagankinr"heergam formance isa pathetie figure. But how "
with fourth down and six to co about the diamond hero who fights on, Moc
Jim Hanna tossed ii yards to w year after year, without ever being with a pennant win-
D.Stanford. whoran the remain” ne , without ever gaining the chance to strut his stuff
on ten uv for extra oAnt on a belore the admiring, howling thousands of a World Se-
running ptay. Hanna wasstoppea rits turnout? Grandpa will tell you that Napoleon Lajoie
inches short of the goal line. never had his superior around second base, "Hornsby
b. c. williams, mammoth Meri- and Collins, great players—but only one man named La-
diantackie W the outstandiagjoie," he will insist—-and he will call him Lazhway. Larry
huge holes for the Meridian backs I had a dazzling career with the Cleveland club, but the
and was a tough defender through- series eluded him. Along came Tris Speaker in 1920 to
out. He was ably assisted by Cen- lead the Indians to a world’s crown.
I ter Don Roddy . - - - ■ .... f T
play again at Alamo Stadium in
San Antonlo Oct. 13, 1951. Earlier .
H WMannounced that Texas A 4 M fer.n.serious scoring threat through-
would open the 106! season against , out the game.
UCLA in Los Angeles.
In I860. The Raiders and Aggies will Musial, Slaughter
shift to the Cotton Bowl at Dallas I ■ s m nil
for their mi dash. Lead Player Poll
Last weawa aeca, a wlun... the blocked itielt that gave Wako
a ties, Mou. winners. oreat n touchd wn last Satur-
teuoror Arkansgs-W• oxpect 4 lo0ncned u„ tOd.y
Baylor to dump Mississippi land cut out atrenuous exereise.
Stat* — with comparative eas*.
Texes to wallop Idaho — An-
NEW YORK, Sept. 29—(U.R)—Stan
(The Man) Musial and Enos
(Country) Slaughter. those intre-
old outfielders who hsve kept the
St Louis Cardinals in the pennant
raco *U the wot, were the big
men. today dh the United Press
National League All-Star Team se-
lected by veteran beseball writer*
in the Major League citiea.
They were the only unanimous
choices on the team, although pitch-
er Howie Pollet of th* Cardinal*
missed by only one vote and first
baseman Gil Hodges of the Brook-
lyn Dodgers got all but two.
other setup.
Bic* to nip LSU — Their old ne-
mesia. ■ ’
Oklahoma to overwhelm Texas
AM-No match here.
•MU to cop another against
Missouri—Another upset unlike-
whe-
White on th* subject of
IBM He piled up victories,
strike-outa, o-hitteis and low-
hitters ia startling protuslon.
Bat Rapid Robert didn’t make
th* nerles until 1040. when he
had begun to skid. Basobai
saw th* strong* spectacle of
Cleveland gauung th* world
title without a Poller victory.
serve.
Coach Sadler had counted on
Miller to do some of the pupting
In tonight's game and with that
possibility out, Jim RoBser will
handle the kicking chorba, aawell
as sharing' the majority of the
ball-carrying duties with Sammy
Carney. Charles Graff will come
in for hla share of work in the
offensive setup.
Probable starting lineups:
Stephenville — Ends: Little and
Pilgrim. Tackles: Fallen and Lane.
Guards: Fincher and Young. Cen-
ter: Newman. Halfbacks: Boase
and Roberson. Fullback: Lackey,
Quarterbaek. Everett. CLEBURNE
—Ends: Hartman and SwatzelL
Tackles: Ritchle and Lawson.
Guards: Whites and Peterson.
Center: Logan. Fullback: Rosser.
Hanna, Bob Perry and Sanford
were the main offensive guns for
the visitors. Running from theldou-
ble wing Meridian was getting
the jump on the Junior Jackets,
the first time this season they
Two of the Grandview touch-
downs were made on passes
li rown by Guy Hill and J. H. Lyles.
Grandview has an open dato
hext week before swinging into
build up its Johnny Rawlings of
the 1001 Giants or George Roke
of the 1808 White Sox—and so
often play down Hs Cobh and
Wagner.
be Waxahachie next Thursday
night at Yellow Jacket Stadium.
Officials: Referee. Sadler; Um-
pire. Williams: Head Linesman,
Coco; Field Judge, Goulding.
Score by Periods:
adde? the extra point with a per
aai fect kick pincement It was Stories without number have been written about the I
a mheaeuntai theem fins' five heroes of the World Series. But for every hero in the his-
• mi-- ne the game when they tory of the nterleague imbroglio, there has been a goat. |
------------------- drive from their For almost every star who achieved the expected heights
s g8wnhiheneruenadan 17.: i in the classic, there " a great player .whose record of
failure in the series testifies to feet of
——
.,cg
n ■ IB
su
out on a practice field in Norman,
Okla., today. The underdog Aggies
spont the session tapering off for
their dash with rugged Oklahoma
tomorrow.
was never headed. The Oilers
turned it Into a fout with seven
runs in * big eighth-Inning rally
uprising.
Russ Burns slummed a homer for
the Oilers in the seventh. Tookle
Gilbert led the Nashville hitting
department with three hits, two
of them doubles. ,
They play again here tonight,
and then move to Tulsa ior the
next three,
Bear* by Inninas i
Tulsa (TL) 003 100 270—13 13 0
N'vle (BA) 100 000 100— 1 10 I
Avrea and Williams; Wad*, Ja-
ADULTS
GRAND 1 ag
STAND 1-3
Quarterback: Rew Miller. Half- -
speed, there's Bob Feller. The
INDIANAPOHIS WINS
Indianapolis won the right to re-
present the American Association
In the "Little World Berles" last
night by beating Milwaukee 0 to
5 to take the best out of seven
playoff finals.
The Indian will face the Mon-
treal Royals of the International
League in their "Berles" games.
meehins gun from Van Motet,
lewa, came to the Indians la
LXJ
In his glorious prime with
the Dodger. Daisy Vance eras
a mound immortal But not un-
til the twilight of his cureet.
A — m took a roll-out tool from Quarter-
A Close Call
36 yards ahd the scor. Collins then
Schoolboy Rowe
Given Release
PHILADELPHIA. Sept 29-(U.m
Lynwood (Schoolboy) Rowe, 37-
year-old hurler who won his great-
est fame with the Detroit Tigers,
was released unconditionally today
by the Philadelphia Phillies
The tall righthander won three
OSmSs and lost seven with the
Phillies this season, his fifth with the
local club which now is accenting
youth and speed.
on innin. Ed Delehanty, who
hit font homevs in a gama for
the Phil liest Hal Chase, whom
oldtimers still call the gratest
of all first sackers; George Sis-
ter. Whose terrific hitting, at
wall as matchless tielding, made
Him n most formidable conten-
der for the first base aceolade
of th» acen; Harev Hellmenin.
wh- hit 4409 for Detreit ia IBM:
Tdek Chesbte, soitbaler who
won 41 enmes for the 1064
Yenkeen-tjes. and a hundred
others fought in vain for thelr
chantes in the playott.
1 Ee,
peuegs!
announced, that
Q u arterb ack 11
Dick Ml 11 • r Adh
would be out of E..R
action f.o r al fk« 2
1328,
- ■
I practice. mni
Texas A A M's Aggies worked With MHlleE
definitely out ofz"Tak ' l
action, his spot"f-C !
In the man un- DICK MILLER
when he was hanging precar-
nave been outeharged., '
The tee... mad. one goal line pttn pur-tep-lotrisaomnmdn
Corsicana Bops
Juniors, 33 to 0
The Corsicana Junior High grid-1
ders mauled tn* Cleburne Juniors ।
at Corsicana last night 33-0.
Outweighed at every position,
the locals gave the home team a
good defensivo Show until the
fourth ^quarter.
der position will be taken by Rex
Miller or Julius Hinton, Coach
Jerry Sadler announced. Miller, a
left-handed passer, will likely be
Coach Sadler's choice to open the
game, with Hinton held in re-
rtHS teru
nm a«isi««
L Ne Yard. raS
Pa-e Autemptea
rame o>mmm
ra-e laereepted
m Fanume Average
ss - Feaitle.
Right Guard Walter Roberts
wrenched his knee during South-
Not until Walter Johnson was
well pnst his nitchine prime did
he tend in a World Series Th*
-a
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Proctor, Jack. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 272, Ed. 1 Friday, September 30, 1949, newspaper, September 30, 1949; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1562970/m1/7/: accessed July 11, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.