Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 17, No. 292, Ed. 1 Friday, October 22, 1926 Page: 3 of 16
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OCT
PGGE THRE
PED
EAN
ORANGE TEAM OFF
TO 00 HATTIE WITH
RICE OWLS TODAY
VANDERBILT LOOKS LIKE WIN-
NER OVER GEORGIA; OTHER
SELECTIONS MADE
Wear Hand-Tailored Clothes
THEY DENOTE REFINEMENT AND GIVE
- BETTER SERVICE IN EVERY WAY
More style, more wear, more satisfaction in every
way.
Our stock of full bolt domestic and imported wool-
ens is one of the largest in the state. Materials are the
finest and patterns the most distinctive. Every suit
is made right here in Amarillo by expert tailors. Sat- .
isfaction is guaranteed and the cost is no more.
MEN’S O’COATS
A beautiful line of men’s O’Coats already made
up. Smart, stylish models the good dresser will
appreciate. ■ .
$30$60
LORS & HABER
. 611 Polk Street.
SALES LADIES—SALES MEN
By giving part of your time to the sale of Mary-Mere lots and
garden tracts you can make better than salary and you will ba doing
your friends and acquaintances whom you mU n real favor because
Mary-Mere, should become a community aantor af importance, and lots
will advance In price from time to time aa development to carried on.
Call at Mary-Mere office, SU East Third street—Palo Duro betel build-
ing, between 8:30 o’clock in the morning and neon.
W. A. (Billy) GAMBLE, Owner
REALTOR
212 East Third Street
(By COLLYERS NEWS BUREAU.)
VAITH upset after upset resulting from
last week’s games, Southern grid.
iron fans are rather skeptical this
week in making their selections for win-
ners in the outstanding games for Sat-
urday’s schedule. Sewanee and Ala-
bama meet in one of the big games of
the day and the IMS conference champs
are the favorites although Sewanee has
shown a powerful, attach and defense.
Vanderbilt end Georgia are scheduled
for outetanding game and inasmuch as
the Crackers hit a anag in their game
with Farman last week, the Tennessee
eleven haa the odda. Southern Meth-
odiet, which held Missouri to a 7 to 7
tie at Columbia, Mo., last week meets
the Texas Aggies ia another big game.
The Preachers are the favorites.
Today’s games together with the
probable winners in capital letters fol-
lows
Alva and EDMOND.
ARKANSAS and Centenary,
BAYLOR and How-Payne.
Canyon and SIMONS. .
• CAR.-NEW. and E. Tenn. Tch.
Chattanooga and BIRM-80.
Clemson and 80. CAROLINA.
FLORIDA and Kentucky.
FURMAN and Presbyterian,
GEORGETOWN and Ky. Wes.
LA. COLL, and L. Nor.
Lynchburg and EMORY-HT.
MARYVILLE and Lin. Mem.
Mercer and HOWARD.
Milligan end KING.
Newberry and LENOIR.
Okla, and KANS. AGGIES.
Rico and TEXAS.
8. HOUSTON and McMurray.
Sewanee and ALABAMA.
SO. METH, and Texan Aggies.
8. W. LA. and SOUTH PARK.
TENNESSEE and Centra.
TEXAS CHRIS, and Okla. Aggies,
TULSA and Phillips.
TUSKEGEE and Morehouse.
VANDERBILT and Georgia.
VA. M. L and No. Care. State.
VA. M. I. and Ne. Cere. State.
V. P. L and VIRGINIA. .
. Vn. Sem. and GREENSBORO.
WAKE FOREST and Davidson.
WILEY and Texas Coll. .
Wofford aad THE CITADEL.
LANGSTON and Prairie View.
SO. CAB. and The Citadel.
WOFFORD aad Clemson.
Paul Quinn and BISHOP.
A. & M. PINS HOPES
ON ‘ELLY WOODMAN
- IN S. M. U. GAME
(By The Associated Press)
AUSTIN, Oct. 21.The orange team-
29 of them—will leave Anitin tonight
for Houston where they will do battle
with the Mice Owls Saturday.
The team is reported in poor shane
physically. ■
A large rally the only one to be stag-
ed this week was held tonight to eend
the longhorns off.
The men that are making the trip are:
Captain Mack Saxon, Ox Higgins. Ed
Olle, Rufus King, Joe Xing, Mack Bur-
nett. Tiny Gooch, Murray Moore, Red
Wray, Tig Tignar, Cotton Mobley, J. W.
Nixon, Rocky Rundell, Pottie McCull-
ough. Jack Cowley, Ed Beular, Dick Fen-
der, Jimmie Boyles, Harry Phillips, Tom-
mii Hughes, Dusty Rhoades, Johnny Es-
tea, Rosy Stallter, L. H. McCutcheon, Bill
Ford, John Terrell and Potsy Allan. Ac-
companying the team ia manager Con-
nell Ellis, coach Dee Stewart, line coach
Bill Jame sand L. T. Bellmont, director
of athletics.
EIGHT EASTERN
TEAMS TO MEET
ON GRID TODAY
SQUADS WILL CONTINUE PUT
WITH ONE BURDEN
REMOVED
P
A
G
N
See Amarillo
From The Air
In a Brand New Airplane With Complete Safety .
The Morris Flyers are here with two new five-passs
enger Lincoln Standard Airplanes piloted by two over-
seas World War pilots, Wm. Atwell and Ed Moore.
, Will be here for about two weeks enroute to Cali-
. fornia. Come out to the field near Fair Grounds and
take your family or sweetheart for * "pin OVER the
A HIGH $9
LONG RIDE OU
STUNT $E nn
RIDE 00
Go Up Any Time From 10 a. m. Until Dark
Long Distance Trips Arranged By Appointment
BIG TEN JUMPS
INTO REAL GR
(By The Associated Press)
NEW YORK, Oct. SI.—Right eastern
foot ball teams continue play Saturday
with one burden removed. They will not
have to defend an uncrossed goal line.
Only Boston college haa escaped. Dev-
elopment in the latest grid iron skir-
mishes marred previously perfect de.
fensive performances for Tale, Brown,
Colgate, Dartmouth, Columbia, Cornell,
Syracuse aad Carnegie Tech.
Yale, Brown and Cornell won but they
had to give as well aa take before gett-
ing the victory. The others met defeat.
Boston College, with the only unscarr-
ed goal line, places ita title in jeopardy
Saturday with a game against St. Louie
University at St. Louis. Outstanding
contests in the east send Dartmouth
against Harvard at Cambridge and pit
Brown against Yale at New Haven. The
big green team goes to Harvard the fav.
orite but the crimson, up and coming at.
ter a slow start, cannot be counted out.
Yale, at the moment the moot impres-
sive of the big three combination is fav-
ored to turn Brown back.
New York foot ball fane have a menu
of variety with three games to choose
from. Columbia is an odds on choice
against Duke, Nee Trinity of Durham,
North Carolina.
New York University and Rutgers
bare a M year old rivalry at issue.
Fordham has a hard afternoon’s assign-
meat in attempting to beat back the
drive of a Washington and Jefferson
outfit which has net yet tooted defect.
Princeton should dispose of Lehigh
end Pennsylvania to believed equipped to
stop Williams, but the Navy may have a
hard contest with Colgate.
A family affair of consequence brings
the University of West Virginia and
West Virginia Weslayn together.
KING COLLEGE HAS
108 STUDENTS BUT
NASTS REAL TEAM
CARDT
MICHIGAN, PURDUE, NOTRE DAME
AND OHIO STATE PICKED
TOWIN
Sixth annual meeting of the Simmons
University and West Texas State Taarh.
ers. In tka five previous games played
Simmons kaa won three, tka Buffaloes
two. Will the Buffs even the count thla
year? Come and aee. Buffalo Park, Can-
yon, Oct. 23, at 3 p. m. Admission, $1.
BRISTOL, Va.-Tenn., Oct. 21—Nestling
between tha quaint hills of southwest
Virginia and east Tennessee, and near
the border line of two states, there is a
college ia thla ally with 108 students en-
rolled. It is King College. —:
The Presbyterian church lends Ita .up-
pert to King College. Young men are
fitted for the ministry.
Bat thla college alee turns out a foot-
ball team; a rather remarkable football
team for a school with but 108 students.
And since 1921, when King College de-
cided it would resume football, some un-
usual things have happened.
First, the team area all bet two of Ita
games in 1921. la 1922 it scored 408
points to its opponent' 23. One game
was loot in 1928 the King College team
was dabbed the "Mountain Tornado.”
That season 507 points were scored.
The “Tornado” was the pride of thla
. entire section and the envy of other col-
Ventriloquism, or the practice of mak- leges, of which there are several in this
ing the volee appear to some. rom. ^ ~ enT# mac .name
distant point is believed to have played ed , relapse. Quantico Marines, George-
an important part in magic and ceremon- town University and Tennessee Medical
lal ritea af many peoples. College defeated the King eleven. .
FOR TEN DAYS ONLY WE OFFER
COLL EGE STATION, O H—A. a
M. College will pin its hopes in the
game with Southern Methodist univer-
sity at Dallas, Saturday largely on
“Jelly” Woodman, of Austin, its star
full back. Woodman kaa achieved one
of the best offensive records of a south-
west conference played in recent years
ia the four games kia team kaa played
thus far thla year.
Twelve touchdowns have been scored
by Woodman and ha kaa kicked six field
goals, far a total of 78 points, or al-
most aa average of 20 a game. Ha
made three touchdowns in the Trinity
game, two la tka ana with southwestern
and seven la tka Naw Mexico game.
McucAN
mF
Riotous
Romatt,
Fun—Romance—Thrills
Fables—News—Organ—Orchestra
RAW
IN TOWN TODAY
Extraordinary
Added Attraction
THE
SUNFLOWER
GIRL
FROM STATION WBAP
Brunswick Recording Artist
Headlined Interstate Vaudeville
Appearances:
3:15, 7:30, 9:30 p. m.
“The Blue Eagle"
A Super-Feature .
Staged by John Ford
Who Made That Great
Feature Production
"THE IRON HORSE"
Comedy and Pathe News
Adults 50e
Children 10e
(BY COLLYERS NEWC BUREAU) ..
Michigan, Purdue, Notre Dame, Ohio
State, Wisconsin and Minnesota appear
winners on the western gridiron card for
this week in the greatest exhibition of
football offered fans thia season. The
Wolverines, 1925 Big Ten champions,
seem to be off on another trip to Penn-
antville despite the fact that the Yost
gang is running up against Bob Zuppke
and the Illinois squad thia week. The 20
to 0 victory over Minnesota last week
showed the Wolverines to be as powerful
if not more powerful as last season. The
Illini displayed remarkable scoring abili-
ty against the giant Iowa team but the
odda are on Michigan.
Chicago meets Purdue end the Boiler-
makers will come through with suffi-
cient line thrusts to offset the “har-
mony" rendered by the grand open
stars, providing they play the same style
of game they showed against Wisconsin
last week.
Northwestern and Notre Dame meet
in another big game with the odds go-
ing to the Irish. The Purple found Indi-
ana a tough nut to erack last week going
scoreless for three quarters of the fray
until tho bruising back were down the
defense of the much lighter Hoosiers.
Rockne’s generalship should offset any-
thing Thistlewaite has to offer.
Ohio State meets Iowa and the Buck-
eyes will come through easily. Nick
Kutsch being the only threat the Hawk-
eyes have to offer this season. Wiscon-
sin is billed with Indiana and a cleee
game to la prospect with the Badgers a
slight favorite.
Two intersectional games are on the
mid-western bill, St. Louis U. meeting
Boston College and Drake tackling Mis-
sissippi. Boston and Drake are picked
for the larger scores.
The following are picked with winners
In caps:
ABERDEEN and Spearfish.
Akron and MT. UNION.
Albion and KALAMAZOO.
ASHLAND and Kent.
Bethel and BETHANY.
BOWLING GREEN and Findlay.
BUENA VISTA and Western Union.
BUTLER and DePauw.
CARBONDALE and Jonesboro.
CABLETON and St. Olaf.
CASE and Denison.
CHADRON and Hastings.
Charleston and SHURTLEFF.
Chicago and PURDUE.
COE and Parsons.
COLUMBIA and No. III. Tehrs.
DAYTON and Wilmington.
Doo Moines and MORNINGSIDE
DETROIT and John Carroll.
DRAKE and Mississippi. .
EAU CLAIRE and Superior,
ELLSWORTH end Central.
Evansville aad FRANKLIN.
Graceland aad TABOR.
GRAND ISLAND and Omaha.
GRINNELL and Washington.
Gust. Adel and MACALESTER.
Hastings and HASKELL.
Heidelberg and DENISON.
Heron and DAKOTA WESLEYAN.
ILL. WES. and Carthage.
Iowa State aad MISSOURI. *
J. MILIKIN and St. Viator.
Jamestown and MOORHEAD.
KAL. NOR. and Chicago Y. Coll.
Kansas and NEBRASKA.
KANS. WES. and Washburn.
LaCrosse and MIL. NOR.
Lincoln aad McKENDREE.
Lombard and BRADLEY.
Lather, Jr. and MANKOTA.
Macomb and AUGUSTANA.
MARQUETTE and St. Mary’s,
MICHIGAN and Illinois. .
MICHIGAN ST. and Wabash.
MINNESOTA and Washburn.
MONMOUTH and Illinois Coll..
ML Pleasant and YPSILANTI. -
Mt. Union and AKRON.
MUSKINGUM and Heidelberg.
N. W. Coll (Watt) and CARROLL
N. W. Coll (Nap.) and EUREKA.
Northwestern and NOTRE DAME.
Norwich and ST. STEPHENS.
Nhlo Northern and-QHIO WES.
OHIO STATE and Iowa.
OHIO U. and Cincinnati.
Peru and MIDLAND.
River Falls and WINONA TCHRS.
SL Louis U. and BOSTON COLU
St. Vincent and SLIPPERY ROCK.
ST. XAVIER and Kenyon.
80. DAK. and Neb. Wee.
Be. St Tehrs. and AUGUSTANA.
TERRE HTE NOR. and Oakland City.
TOLEDO and Bluffton.
Upper Iowa and LUTHER.
WISCONSIN and Indiana.
WHITTENBERG and Marietta.
Wooster and WESTERN RESERVE.
• YANKTON aad Columbus.
MOORHEAD and Mayville Tehra.
- Juniors Play Vega.
The Junior high school eleven will play
Vega at the City park this afternoon at
3:45 o’clock. Junior high to undefeated
and has one win over Vega to her credit.
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Howe, Gene A. Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 17, No. 292, Ed. 1 Friday, October 22, 1926, newspaper, October 22, 1926; Amarillo, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1663227/m1/3/: accessed July 13, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Texas State Library and Archives Commission.