Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 63, No. 174, Ed. 1 Friday, March 20, 1953 Page: 4 of 14
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4—Gainesville (Texas) Daily Register
Fri., March 20, 1953
Roberts Goes Eight Innings
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Leopards to Compete
In North Texas Relays
Sedgman-Kramer
Tour in Dallas
Circulation Department
THE DAILY REGISTER
F
f
The letter from the Windy City
didn’t sound too hopeful, but re-
gardless of whether or not the
Owls get help there, Shadid has
several other promises of aid.
F. E. SCHMITZ
MOTOR CO.
Superior
ALL-IN-ONE
grimly.
So, as matters stand, Leo
compelled to play Spencer
chicks. SUPERIOR ALL-IN-ONE is avail-
able in Mash or Krumbies—take
your choice! Feed SUPERIOR ALL-IN-
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of a back injury.
The Leopards will be up against
some pretty stiff competition
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with Leo. The dandy little
ager is fed up to his teeth.
The blowoff came here.
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final intra-squad tussle of the sea-
son tonight as the Whites and
Golds tangle. Gene Ross’ Whites
have taken two lickings, 26-7 and
30-20, from Les Cranfill’s Gold
team, but predicts a win for his
crew tonight, if his boys can hold
on to the ball. Fumbles have led
to three Gold tallies and put the
Whites in a hole in each game.
From what we have heard, Deni-
son’s search for line replacements
is coming along pretty good, and
the defending champs are going
to be tough as a boot again this
fall.
make their strongest
not in the relays, but
hurdles and the field (
showing
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events.
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took their fifth straight pre-sea-
son victory.
The Eagles, collecting 11 hits
in a free-swinging battle, beat
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each relay except the medley.
The Leopards are
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Saturday, but we look for sev-
eral of the Spotted Cat cinder-
men to qualify for the finals
slated for that same afternoon.
DALLAS, Mar. 20 (AP) — The
touring tennis pros, Frank Sedg-
man and Jack Kramer, open a
two-night stand here tonight at
Southern .Methodist university.
,, c.. Kramer, world champ, has a
the spring from Oklahoma City. 32-20 lead
over the former Aus-
Oilers opened their spring ex-
hibition schedule with a 6-4 de-
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No Raise
MERIDEN, Conn. (UP) —
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like a lot of money.”
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NATIONAL LABORATORIES, — LODI, CALIFORNIA
LANGLOIS MOVES IN—Pierre Langlois of France (right) throws a hard right uppercut
that glances off the shoulder of Bobby Dykes of San Antonio, Texas, in the 10th round of
their middleweight fight in Dallas. Langlois, fourth ranked middleweight, won on a unani-
mous decision. (AP Photo)
at second last year. He thinks
he can win if Dark, an estab-
lished .300 hitter but no fielder
of especial note, will move over
to second and permit Spencer
to exhibit his talents in the big
job at short.
Dark seems to feel that he
will lose in the long run if he
consents to the shift. He played
second a few games, then asked
Durocher to put him back in his
former spot.
“Is it possible,” Durocher was
asked, “that if you have to start
the season with Dark at short-
stop, that Spencer will succeed
him before very long?”
“There is a very good chance
that will happen,” he replied
seventh and added another run
in the eighth for the margin.
Each team used three pitch-
ers as the Sports collected seven
hits against nine for the win-
ners.
Fort Worth, idle Friday, took
a 9-5 decision over the Memphis
Chicks of the Southern associa-
tion in a game at Vero Beach,
Fla.
Runless stints by Rudy Pay-
i i
, 1
has_f.
the Houston Buffs, 9-7, after
taking their first four games of
hopes of qualifying several per-
formers in the preliminaries
which are slated to, be reeled
off at 10' a. m. The finals are to
be held the same afternoon at
2 p. m.
The locals 'entered the SW
Recreational in Ft. Worth two
weeks ago and failed to qualify
a man in the huge affair. De-
spite their failure to place, sev-
Whitesboro Cage
Star May Never
Play Game Again
WHITESBORO, March 20 (A)
—Whitesboro’s all-state girl for-
ward, Billie Earl, returned home
from, the hospital yesterday —
doubtful she’ll ever play basket-
ball again.
Billie had been in a Sherman
hospital, suffering from a skull
fracture she received in the
Texas finals at Austin last week
when Whitesboro was playing
New Deal.
The injury may keep her from
playing basketball anymore, her
doctors said.
1 Bo Reid, the Whitesboro coach,
said that Billie—who had a 25-
points-a-game average this sea-
son—was driving for a basket
when two opposing players inter-
cepted her and the injury oc-
curred. The back of her head
struck the floor.
Billie returned to the game
briefly after the injury, but had
to be relieved because her vision
was impaired. New Deal won the
game and the state girls cham-
pionship, 58-44.
is be staged.
Chuck Curtis, last year’s dis-
trict meet winner, will make a
strong bid to qualify in both
the high and low hurdles, with
his strongest opposition in the
high hurdles due to come from
Forest Avenue’s Weldon Glass-
cock who won in the Cowtown
meet.
and have
: *
32ddd
SW Recreational Meet because Monday. _ .
Denison is slated to stage their
Coach Campbell has entered
at least two and sometimes
tralian amateur king in the
100-match, nationwide tour.
due to
7
Coach Jim Campbell’s cinder
hopefuls get their second chance
to compete under fire Saturday
as they journey to Dallas to
enter the North Texas Relays.
The Spotted Cats have been
Letter from Cubs
Ernest Shadid received a return letter from the Chicago Cubs and
General Manager Wid Matthews wasn’t too optimistic about being
able to assist the Owls this season.
Many of the Cubs’ farm players have been drafted into the service
and Matthews feared that many more would follow before the start
of the season. Matthews pointed out that since the collapse of the
KOM loop that there may be a few extra players, but that he was
making no promises.
Spring training in the Cub camp is due to windup shortly after
the first of April and Matthews said that by then he should be able
to tell whether or not there would be any available talent. If there
should be, the Chicago General Manager promised to keep Gaines-
ville in mind. ---------------------------------—
second and permit Dark to play
short. It is an uncomfortable po-
sition for a manager of Leo’s
talents. Something will have to
give soon.
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Sisti flied out to end the rally.
Frank Carswell, the Interna-
tional league batting champion
last year, homered in the ninth
inning to give the Detroit Tigers
a 9-8 triumph over the Boston
Red Sox, their first victory of
the spring season against Amer-
ican league opposition.
The St.- Louis Browns split
their squads for two games
against Pacific Coast league clubs
and lost both of them. The “A”
team stumbled, 4-3, at San Diego,
and the “B” outfit was smoth-
ered 14-7, by Seattle.
Preacher Roe allowed one un-
earned run in six innings, his
longest stretch of the training
season, as Brooklyn whipped
Washington, 4-1, in a night game
at Miami. The veteran lefthand-
er gave up seven hits. Duke
Snider homered for the Dodgers
with one on in the first.
Jackie Brown and Ed Wolfe, a
pair of Pittsburgh rookies, shut
out the Cuban All-Stars on three
hits at Havana, 6-0.
Outfielder Ralph Kiner finally
arrived at the Havana base in
the middle of the fifth inning and
immediately huddled with Gen-
eral Manager Branch Rickey.
The Pirates said Kiner would
sign his contract today for about
$75,000 plus a gimmick to give
him an extra $5,000 if he is sold
or traded.
For Longest Tour of Duty
By BEN PHLEGAR
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nick and Pete Mondorff, who
hurled three innings each for
the Cats, helped the Fort Worth
cause along.
Dallas’ victory at Port Arthur
featured the stick work of
stocky little Bob Bundy, fancy-
fielding second baseman, who
paced the Eagles with three hits
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Dallas Eagles
Capture Fifth
Straight Win
By The Associated Press
Seven Texas league baseball
teams—all but the Fort Worth
Cats—take part in spring exhi-
bition games Friday.
Five of the Texas league out-
fits saw action Thursday as the
high-flying Eagles of Dallas
ants are to overtake Brooklyn, working hard getting in shape
He didn’t win with Dark at " " "
shortstop and Davey Williams
Baby Food Gerber's
COFFEE AllPopuiar
Argument Brewing
Between Durocher,
Team Captain Dark
By GAYLE TALBOT
SAN FRANCISCO, Mar. 20 (P)
—An argument is festering be-
tween Leo Durocher, who man-
ages the. New York Giants, and
Alvin Dark, his infielder and
team captain, which could lead
to something really spectacular.
Unless it is straightened out
soon, you could wake up some
morning to learn that Dark,
who recently signed a two-year
contract for more than $30,000
per season after a stubborn
holdout, no longer is a member
of the Giants. This is not fool-
ing.
Durocher, who is working on
a one-year contract himself,
wants Dark to shift from short-
stop to second base so Daryl
Spencer, a great fielding rookie
from Minneapolis, can be in-
stalled at short. Durocher said
all winter that was his master
plan. I
Dark at least had implied that
he would go along with it.
But up to this point in the
exhibition schedule, he h a s
shown no sign of co-operating
120-Yard High Hurdles —
Chuck Curtis and Danny Camp.
180-Yard Low Hurdles — Cur-
tis, Almon and Hocker.
Spring Relays—Almon, Hock-
er, Murphy and Herbie Locke.
Mile Relay — Richard Parten,
Lloyd Nichols, Almon and Mur-
phy.
Two-Mile Relay—Ray Barnes,
Neal Childers, Wilburn Long
and James Miller.
Pole Vault — Parten and
Barnes.
High Jump—Jimmy Hammer
and David West.
Broad Jump—Parten, Murphy
and Almon.
Shot Put — Hank Crowsey,
Talmadge Ward and Scott
Clark.
Discus — Lloyd King, Locke
and Crowsey.
Rockets Have Same Manager
McAlester, last year’s regular
season and playoff champs in the
Sooner State league, will have
। heir same manager back for the
’53 campaign. He is Bill Cope,
youthful pilot from Zanesville,
3 llmnois. Cope scored a first in
tne Sooner loop last summer by
{ uiding his team to both a first
place finish and a playoff flag.
1 lever before in the six-year old
eague had a team accomplished
both feats.
Over in Sherman Manager Al
McCarty, former Wichita Falls
: lugger, is getting ready to open
the Twins tryout camp. Right
now the Twins have enough play-
ers on the roster to field a com-
plete team, the only rub being
that only one pitcher is listed.
That lone hurler is an untried
rookie from Cuba, Luis Munoz,
and McCarty hopes to uncover
some pitching talent in the try-
outs. Wichita Falls has promised
to aid the Twins as has Lincoln.
Even with only one pitcher
listed the Twins are in better
shape than they were at the start
of last year’s season. Sherman
was pitifully weak at the open-
ing of the race and a good semi-
pro team could have murdered
them. They improved consider-
ablv before the end of the season
though, and ended only one game
out of the first division.
This and That
There is only one sign left to
be sold before work can be
started on painting the signs on
the fences at Locke park. Shadid
is anxious to sell the lone sign
and let the painters get to work
—A
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ision Aver.Shrevaport’s.Sports and Franci?coeg(Pan?L)Asigur^
hard - playing Ecuadoran, will
play singles matches both
nights.
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Longhorns Beat
Baylor in Opener
WACO, Mar. 20 (A) — Texas’
Longhorns, perennial Southwest
conference baseball champs, hit
in the pinches yesterday to beat
Baylor, 10-5. It was the season
opener for the Orange and
White and Baylor’s second loss
in five starts.
The two teams play another
non-conference game tomorrow
in Austin.
( -—-----------------------
and three RBI’s in four times at
bat.
Eddie Knoblauch, darling of
the Eagle fans, went hitless in
three official trips to the plate
but managed to score two runs.
Homers for the day were con-
tributed by Jim Baxes of Fort
Worth and Catcher Jim Martin
for Shreveport.
Friday’s games pit Beaumont
against Dallas at Port Arthur,
Houston against Oklahoma City
at Galveston, Shreveport against
Tulsa at Alexandria, La., and
San Antonio against Little Rock
at Lakeland, Fla.
Tennis Match
Mrs. Carolyn Cavazos’ tennis
team went down to defeat for the
second time this' season as they
lost to the Sherman net team,
4-2, in Sherman Wednesday after-
noon. ,
The locals made the strongest
showing in the boys singles as
Jimmy Thompson and William
Neely both scored wins. Thomp-
son won, 6-2, 3-6, 6-4, while Neely
won, 6-3, 7-5.
Dan Hays dropped a set in
another boys singles match, while
Johnny Brown and Neely lost in
doubles.
The girls fared even worse as
Suzanne Johnson lost in singles
and Nickie Aughtry and La Neta
Odom lost in doubles.
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able to make a strong showing
in the pole vault, as he failed
only by a few inches to be
among the five qualifiers in the
SW meet.
Jimmy Hammer has been im-
proving by leaps and bounds in
the high jump and if he is able
to reach 5’8” as he has made in
practice, should be a cinch to
earn points in that event.
Hank Crowsey and Talmadge
Ward have been consistently
chunking the shot put over the
40’ mark and are due to make
strong showings.
Here are the Leopard entries
for the meet:
100-Yard Dash — Don Hocker
Bratton Favored
In Fight Tonight
NEW YORK, Mar. 20 (AP) —
Johnny Bratton is a 3-to-l
choice to even his score with the
Jones boys tonight when he
faces Middleweight Bobby Jones
of Oakland, Calif., at Madison
Square Garden.
When Bratton has an incen-
tive he can fight like an all-
time great. When he doesn’t
have the urge, he’s just an ordi-
nary fighter.
If Jones can get Bratton mad,
the Garden and television fight
fans around the country are lia-
ble to see the better half of the
In-and-out Kid. The 9 p. m.
(CST) ten-rounder will be
broadcast (ABC) and telecast
(NBC).
3 For 25c
Associated Press Sports Writer
Any day now a major league
pitcher is going to work nine
innings against major league op-
position—then you’ll know open-
ing day of the baseball season is
near.
Robin Roberts of the Philadel-
phia Phillies went eight-ninths of
the way yesterday. Wilmer
“Vinegar Bend” Mizell of the St.
Louis Cardinals stopped after six,
although he had said he intended
to go the distance.
Roberts is generally regarded
as the best in the business but
yesterday wasn’t one of his bet-
ter days. Toiling against his
Philadelphia neighbors, the Ath-
letics, the righthander was cuffed
solidly for nine hits including
three home runs. He walked one
and struck out three. The Phils
eventually lost, 8-5, on a pinch
hit grand slam homer by Allie
Clark in the 10th inning.
Mizell, a sophomore left hand-
er, didn’t fare as well as Roberts.
The New York Yankees collected
six hits and two walks in the six
innings, good for three runs,
while Wilmer struck out two.
The Yankees won, 3-1.
So far only Johnny Lindell of
the Pittsburgh Pirates has pitched
a full nine innings this spring
but his came against grade B op-
position in the form of the Cuban
All-Stars. Lindell, turned into
an outfielder by the Yankees
back in 1943, is back in the big
time as a pitcher after a 24-9
season with Hollywood last year.
Another pinch hit home run,
this one by rookie outfielder Paul
Schramka, contributed to a one
sided triumph by the Cubs over
the White Sox in the all-Chicago
series at Pasadena, Calif. The
Cubs walloped Tommy Byrne for
nine runs in the first four inn-
ings and finally won, 11-3.
The Braves, starting their first
game under the Milwaukee ban-
ner, dropped a 4-3 decision to
their opening day opponents, the
Cincinnati Reds. The fans back
in Milwaukee can hope their new
club doesn’t go through many
ninth innings like yesterday’s.
Trailing 4-1 going into the ninth
the Braves scored twice and had
the tying and winning runs on
base when pinch hitter Sibby
He has delivered your paper faith-
fully—please cooperate by paying
him on his first call each Saturday.
He is a little merchant and should
provide you with THE DAILY
REGISTER receipt—be certain he
does. School and route duties
fully consume his time. He is a
busy boy ... a better boy.
If you miss your paper, g P.M.
please call by •
Adair to Help
In addition to promised help
from the Boston Braves, popular
Jimmy Adair, former Owl mana-
. ger and now pilot, of the Green-
ville Majors, members of the Big
State League once more, has of-
fered several players.
Shadid and Manager J. B.
Grigg are to go to Greenville
Monday and look over prospec-
tive diamond performers for the
Hooters.
The Feathered Flock has also
been promised help from a couple
of team in the Evangeline lea-
gue, probably the fastest Class C
loop in the United States.
Harry Strohm, a former Ft.
Worth Cat star, who is now the
owner and manager of the Alex-
ander, Louisiana, entry, reports
that he should have some players
to send to Gainesville, as does
Marty Loving, the owner of the
Crowley club in the same league.
With the many promises of
help from various clubs, Shadid
is not worried about being able
to field a strong contender in the
Sooner State league chase.
Track Meet
The Leopards get their second
chance to run under fire tomor-
row morning as they are entered
in the North Texas Relays in Dal-
las, along with over 20 other
high schools.
The North Texas Relays is
rightly named, for that is pri-
marily what the met consists of
—relays. There are the sprint
medley, mile and two-mile relays.
In addition all of the usual field
events and the hundred and the
high and low hurdles will be
reeled off.
Coach Jim Campbell will have
boys entered in every event ex-
cept the medley relay. In case
you are wondering what a med-
ley relay is, it consists of two
220’s, one 440, and is concluded
with the 880.
The two-mile relay, which is
not included in the district meet,
consists of four 880’s and the
Leopards are slated to have Ray
Barnes, Neal Childers, Wilburn
Long and James Miller running
in the gruelling race.
The mile relay team is due to
be strengthened considerably for
Saturday’s meet with the addi-
tion of Lloyd Nichols. Nichols,
who next to Marcus Almon is the
•te
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eral of the Leopards made
strong showings and may be
able to qualify tomorrow.
The North Texas Relays fea-
tures, as the name implies, re-
lays, as the sprint, medley, mile
and two-mile relays are to be
run. In addition the hundred,
the high and low hurdles and
all of the usual field events will
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rocher, who had been away two
days with the Giants’ second
team, was told that Dark, in a
losing game against the Cleve-
land Indians, continued to wave
at ground balls and had shown
no interest in cutting off throws
from the outfield.
“Very interesting,” Leo com-
mented acidly. “Maybe a little
fine here and there is what this
ball club needs.”
Leo was reminded that Dark
is his team captain, and was
asked if he would fine such a
personality.
“You can bet I’ll fine him if
I think he isn’t giving me all
he’s got,” Durocher said. “He
isn’t any different from any-
body else on this ball club. The
reason I appointed him team
captain was to give him a little
added incentive.”
Leo feels he has to make a
change in his infield if the Gi-
ON SPORTS JACK KING
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Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 63, No. 174, Ed. 1 Friday, March 20, 1953, newspaper, March 20, 1953; Gainesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1572134/m1/4/: accessed July 8, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cooke County Library.