Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 17, No. 296, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 27, 1926 Page: 2 of 14
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Amarillo Daily News and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Texas State Library and Archives Commission.
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PAGE TWO
AMARILLO DAILY NEWS
WEDNESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 17, 1926
SAND
REAL SPIRIT
, FOR LUBBOCK
TEAM AND FANS RADIATE CON-
FIDENCE IN FIRST CONFER-
ENCE GRID TILT
Confidence was expressed in the
ranks of the Golden Sandstorm football
squad yesterday afternoon.
The team took a snappy signal drill
and everything appeared to forecast a
real fight when the Sandies take the
field against the Lubbock Westerners st
Lubbock Friday.
News of efforts to secure a special
train for the game heartened the boys
and they went about their work with a
He’s a Student, Too!
KIRKWOOD PUTS
ON REAL TRICK
WORK AT GOLF
NOTED PRO COMING HERE SUN-
DAY GETS $25,000 FOR M
DAYS’ WORK
Line
O'
Sport
s,°
JOHN u
MeCARTa
--------- That mat brawl Friday night between
Dorset Carter, Panhandle open ehem- Mantell and Kopecky is attracting a
pion and an Amarillo boy, is a believer greet deal of attention.
in Joe Kirkwood, great trick shot golfer, Ringside seats to the number of 228
who gives an exhibition here Sunday were reserved for the match and more
in addition to playing in an eighteen- than half of them have been sold.
hole match, paird with Dorset, against
Promoter Elmer Guthrie declared lest
night that many patrons had called for
"I have seen Kirkwood give his ex- i tickets ever the telephone and that they
hibition and I would not miss It again had been reserved, but were not paid
for reel money,” said Carter. “He can for as yet.
do anything with a golf ball that any- “Tell the people to please come to
one else can do and then a thousand the City Drug store and t.t their tickets
things more. His timing and judgment they had reserved or it may be that we
of distance ia marvelous.”
NORMAN, OKLA, Oct 26. White Cosch Bennie Owen of University of Okla- One of Kirkwood’s best tricks, accord-
home may have many causes to worry over the scholastic ineligibility of his foot- ing to,Carter, is to place golf balls
Doug Herring and Keefe Carter.
zest that was interesting.
Carter Bassett who has been suffer-
ing from a leg injury was running sig-
nals in good form and his leg appeared
perfectly normal. num many ---- mn-n, ----- .. --.-, —--. .-. ---------- --------------- -- —---- 1 u
. Larsen, Reckwell and Nappe who have ball squad, the captain, P. A. “Polly” W allace, never has given him trouble along . ,** ieees MA. theedse
i been working under the stigma C
scholastic failure were in the line-Up| three years in college, and is headed straight for Phi Beta Kappa,
and as some of the substitutes de-----------------------------------------------
, they had reserved or it may be that we
will have to sell them to someone else,"
elared: "It sure looks good to have
them big bullies back in there.”
The Sandies worked on passing tactics
quite a bit yesterday evening and Bas-
1 sett’s passing seemed much improved.
: la past games he has seemed to be in
. a big hurry when teasing the pigskin. .
. It is likely that the Sandies will leave
' here about noon Thursday going to Lub
bock by auto and sleeping there Thurs-
- day night.
of this line. For Captain Polly is an “A" student, with no grades below 85 in his । MSinP in.the ndvenot therein
lick snd beginning at the edge of the
green starts walking toward the rup
swinging his golf club as fast as he
can. He drops all of the balls in the
cup while walking toward it.
Kirkwood drives a golf ball from a
valuable watch and doesn't hurt the
watch. He sinks a ball Into the ground
and take, a brassie to drive it out and
down the fairway for 200 yards.
“Kirkwood is so bored by the ordinary
golf tournament that he often loses
first place experimenting with freak
shots instead of playing par golf,” said
Carter. “You will notice by press re-
said Guthrie.
So folks go get your tickets and then
Friday night go early became they will
turn them away at that match.
INDSTORM
BOOSTER
ATTEND LUBBOCK M
TO
BY AUTO* 300. REDOES
DI RUIV9 JUU FLEUOLY
The Amarillo Golden Sandstorm will
have plenty of supporters for the Lub-
boek tilt Friday, but they will go to
Lubbock by automobile instead of by
special train.
That waa the decision reached by high
school students and faculty members
yesterday after means of transportation
had been secure* for more than one
hundred students.
Every student in high school who is
making a passing grads average may at-
tend the game, according to W. A. Me
Intosh, superintendent of schools. Y
The band, the Roughnecks, the Pep-
pers and the Pirates are pop squads that
will make the trip, and it is believed that
more than 300 fans will be backing the
team in Lubbock. 4-
“The Sandies will not lose the game
on account of a lack of pep in Lubbock,"
said George Tate, yell leader, last night.
“We will have a real crowd of backers
in Lubbock hen the game starts.”
Thegame Friday is the first conference
game of the year for Amarillo. .
BIG TEN TO HAVE
PLENTY OF ACTION
PENTATHLON HAS BEEN
MOST FAVORED EVENT
If thla Charley Grip is as tough as the
La Grippe most of the boys have had
for the past two weeks he is some tough
cookie. Charlie meets some pretty
tough boys Friday night and his idea of
guaranteeing to throw ten men in an
hour looks like bad headwork.
DURING THIS WEEK IN ATHLETIC HISTORY
(By The Associated Press)
CHICAGO, Oct. 26. Michigan's Wol-
verine wrecking crew of the Western
The Lubbock Westerners have a
flashy record this year against the ---------------------- --- ----
rather poor showing of the local grid- conference have paused in their do-
does; Included in the Lubbock list of molition of big ten title aspirations to
fatalities ie Plainview, the team doped fix up something fancy for the eastern
early in the season for the champion- 1 trade.
ship. | Yost and company will call on the
Alt about Metropolitan park yesterday Navy at Annapolis Saturday to show
afternoon that old pep and confidence the midshipmen some samples of what
was ia the air and it looks like "a vie- Minnesota, Illinois and other corn belt
* etry for Amarillo If the bugs can get it customers are wearing this season in
in their heads to board that proposed the way of football defeats. Last year
* special train for the game Friday. Friedman, Molenda, Oosterbaan and their
Special to The News.
AUSTIN, Oct. 26.—A history of the
pentathlon reveals that since the days
of the ancient Greeks, it has been of the ports though that he is always in the
FOR
FRIDAY
T LuM
GRIP WILL ALSO BE IN SPOT
LIGHT IN MATCH WITH LOCAL
AMATEUR STARS
Fana who attend the Dutch Mantell-
Joe Kopecky razzling match at the Arm-
ery Friday night may expect anything
from a session resembling the world
court to hostilities with all the ferocity
of the late unpleasant reaction to the
domination of the Kaiser in Centre
Europe.
Mantell, 46 year old veteren of the
ear-twisting game, haa just closed • deal
for several apartment cottage la San
Jacinto aad plans on making Amarille
his home. Joe Kopecky has likewise de 1
eided to stay here for a spell hoping to
avoid the memory of long rows of the
WHITE, STAR PLAYER
AT N. M. M. I. IN 1924,
IS W. AND J. LEADER
McQueen Being
Developed For
Claude Battle
. mates were fiffy-four points better than
the Navy and the Wolverines are con-
One bit of offensive strength was add-
, ed to the Amarillo semi-pro line-up
yesterday afternoon when Bob McQueen
punter and place kicker for the High
school several years ago, ternod in an
afternoon of practice which indicated
he would he a factor in the game
against Claude next Sunday.
Mequeen kicked with remarkable ae-
curacy and got some real distance into
bio boots. He plays guard.
The local team is going about develop-
ing an offense for the Claude game Sun-
day feeling that the defense built np
last week will take care of the Cow-
Moot of the squad is nursing bruised
spots as a result of the Childress game
Sunday. The game Sunday waa net spec-
tacular on the offensive but on the de-
fense both teams played to murder their
Haad Work la scheduled for the local
aggregation for the remainder of the
week.
LUBBOCK BOOSTERS
PREPARE FOR TECH
• Ui Ui
LUBBOCK, Oct. M-ln order that
Lubbock business men and ether citizens
who will accompany the special Matador
train to Fort Worth October 30, when
the Matadors play Texas Christian uni-
versity, may know the Tech yells and
songs aa well aa the students, C. A.
Deese, yell leader at the Tech is holding
a pep meeting each night next week
when everyone who will make the trip is
invited to attend.
DeeM ia expecting a large number of
Lubbock business men to attend the pep
meetings to learn the yells, in addition
te an the students. •
The special train will be one of the
biggest that has ever pulled out of Lub-
bock for aa athletic contest, it is be-
lieved.
Purdue to Meet
Harvard in 1927
, fident of a somewhat similar showing
I this year.
But the perrimistic Yost goaded his
players tonight through new defensive
1 combinations against navy plays, point-
f ing out that Illinois did not succumb
easily, and calling attention to the
Navy’s victory over Purdue and Drake.
Except for Michigan’s smashing victory
in 1925 the Navy has not lost a foot-
ball game since 1924.
Illinois, preparing with some trepi-
dation for Pennsylvania’s invasion Sat-
urday we as tactical victory when Fenn
promised Zuppke to paint black its brown
Jersey peds. The Illinois coach de-
manded that they do this so his charges
could distinguish between the pigshin
and an enemy elbow, and threatened
to point the ball white if the Jersey
leather stayed yellow.
Taking a page from Rockne’s leader.
Coach Thistlethwaite of North Western
ie grooming a complete second team to
start against Indiana Saturday. The
first string squad will rest for coming
tussels with Iowa. Chicago and Purdue,
and probably will werh but briefly
against the Hoosiers.
Wisconsin, grooming for Minnesota,
trotted out tonight some plays unussd
against Indiana and adapted them far
the Gopher game.
Marek’s broken hand ia the only thing
Ohio State baa to worry about and Wilee
gave his men only enough work to keep
them from growing etale. Chicago,
which entertains the Buckeyes Saturday,
hopes only te held the foe to a low
score.
Iowa and Purdue eased off in their
preparation for contests respectively
with Carroll college and Indiana Normal
and looked toward resumption of con-
ference play a week from Saturday.
PLAINVIEW C OFC.
TO URGE PASSAGE
OF RAILROAD DILL
Special So The News.
PLAINVIEW, Oct. 26.—A delegation
from the Plainview ChCamber of Com-
merce representing Plainview will at-
tend the statewide meeting to be held
in Waco on November 5, for the purpose
of formulating plans and sending a
committee from Texas te Washington te
appear before tbs Boess Committee of
Congress in interest sf ths Mayfield
Bill, number seven hundred and fifty,
which provides for railroads making ex-
tensions without securing certificates of
necessity and convenience from the In-
most favored of athletic events, relates
Roy B. Henderson, athletic dimeter of
the University of Texae Interscholastic
League. It ia from the Greeks that
there haa evolved the modern pentath-
lon, such as that which the League will
sponsor this year aa a special compe-
tition for one and two teacher rural
schools. Of the importance of the pen-
tathlon' in early times, Henderson says:
“The publicity and honors bestowed
upon eur star football players at the
present time fade into insignificance
when compared to the honors, gifts snd
entertainments accorded the pentathlon
champion through all Greece. He was
feted and dined. Hia homecoming was
sn occasion of public rejoicing. Songs
were composed by the greatest poets
of the time and sung by choirs of boys
and girls. His exploits were recorded
on pillars of stone and hla statue waa
set up in eomo public place aa an incen-
tive to posterity.
“In ancient Greece the pentathlon
was perhaps the meat important event
at the Olympic games. It is recorded
that Plato and Aristotle approved the
pentathlon because of the harmonious
and-round development displayed by the
pentathlete while they condemned in no
uncertain terms the specialized athlete
on account of his one-sided ugly phy-
sique.”
Mustangs Turn
Attention To
Texas Battle
money, usually finishing well up in the
first five.”
Kirkwood is pro for a New Yo k club
and receives $25,000 a year for only
90 days' work. He gets $250 a day
for his exhibition play.
It will cost you $1.50 to see Kirkwood
do his stuff Sundsy at the Hillcrest Golf
and Country club.
AMARILLO IS KENNEL
OF NOTED POLICE DOG
terstate Commerce Commission where
such extensions are wholly within a
state.
Call for the meeting was leaned by
____,_____._____wire to all interested chambers of corn-
will meet Harvard at football in 1927. merce ia Texas by Manager A. L. Bergs
of the Port Arthur Chamber of Com-
(By The Associated Press)
CAMBRIDGE, Mass., Oct. 26.—Purdue
The announcement that the second West-
ern conference game had been added
came today with the completion of the
hardest schedule which Harvard has ae-
cepted in years and perhaps in its his-
tory. Opening with the University of
Vermont, the schedule contains seven
more games, any of which might test
the mettle of the crimson.
COTTON PICKERS ARE
BIG NEED AT LUBBOCK
merce.
■ The people of the South Plains and
Plainview are becoming impatient with
the long delay of the interstate com-
merce commission in deciding whether
certificates of public convenience and
necessity shall be issued to the Fort
Worth and Denver, The Panhandle and
Santa Fe, and the Q. A. P. all of whom
would extend their lines into the South
Plains and Plainview, and It is the
Special to The News.
DALLAS, Oct. 26.—With a 9 to 7 vic-
tory over the Texes Aggies safely tacked
away in hia saddle bag, Cench Bay Mor-
risen ia driving the Southern Methodiet
university Mustangs for the game with
Texas at Austin this Saturday. Mor-
rison believes that his men must im-
prove and make a better showing against
the Longhorns or else taste their first
defest of the season.
The S. M. U. Uno is having a hard
week of it for It was the S. M. V. line
la the Aggie game that allowed the
Aggies to roll up twice as many first
downs, most of them in the middle of
the field, however, for the Mustang line
did fight when their backs were to the
goal. Texas is reported to have the
same slashing attach that tore the 8.
M. U. line to shred. Saturday.
Cortemeglia, the plunging Mustang
half, who has turned in such beautiful
games on the last two Saturdays is be-
ing counted on to repeat at Austin.
Cortemeglia is one of the best defensive
backs in the conference and can be ro-
lled open to carry the mail when the
mail needs carrying most. Morrison
will probably build his playa around him
for the Texas game as Morrison’s aerial
warfare has not been reaping the ex-
pected harvest.
Starring with Cortemeglia in the back-
field, and in direct contrast to the big,
burly Wop, wiU be little Gerald Mann,
crack quarter of the conference. With
a dry field, Mana will be extremely
dangerous, with hia reusing attack or
with hlA passes. His chunks are ac-
curate, to the man and not to the spot
where the man should be. The battle
cry of Stewart's Longhorns will have to
be “Stop Chris and Watch Mann,” if
they expect to get the big end of ths
soars.
NEW HOSPITAL FOR -
PAMPA IS ASSURED
George Hallman may send Rocky
Moore and Babe Ruth in for another
six-round fight Tuesday night. The
fans are assured of one thing and that
le a fight. Neither Moore nor Ruth
know anything about boxing, but they de
fight and that makes an interesting
show.
Let's everybody pull for the Sandies
to win Fridsy over Lubbock.
Confidence is rife in the High school
camp and it might be suggested that
little brains and fight will be valuable
assets for the team against the West-
erners.
■ Amarillo haa some really great foot-
ball teams coming up In the next few
years aa the result of play in the ward
schools, Junior high school and the big
' squad of freshmen out for this year’s
1 team.
A Lubbock sport writer recently made
One of the best bred German police a very brilliant crack about the pros-
dogs in the world Is an Amarillo dog, peects of Hal chase aad hie boys playing
Mi-Ki-Tin, whose blood lines are traced
back to the origin of the German shep-
herd dog, commonly called the police
dog, due to the work it haa been aa-
signed to throughout Germany.
Mi-Ki-Tin belong to Sergeant Ira Ba-
rend, 409 South Carolina street.
Mi-Ki-Tin has more champions and in-
ternational champions within hia pedi-
gree than the present international
champion, Iso ven Doernerheff, owned
by Mrs. Gerada Rockefeller Dodge. Mi-
Ki-Tin’s etrain le absolutely line bred on
the Uckermark-Starkenberg-Von Boll-
Horand aad Kriminalpolizie strains. The
following champions are recorded ia hia
pedigree:
Gunor v. Riedkemberg, mother to pres-
eat international champion.
| Hettel Uckermark, grand champion.
Grettel Uckermark, grand champion.
Guntar Uckermark, grand champion.
Roland V. Starkenberg, grand cham-
pion.
Flora Berkmeyer, the grand dame in-
ternational champion.
Folko v. Sharenstetten, champion.
Idelheid V. Sharenstetten, champion.
Young Tell V. Kriminalpolizie, grand
champion.
Tell v. Kriminalpolizie, graad cham-
plen.
Munko v. Boll, grand champion.
Borst v. Boll, grand champion.
Alaa v. Westphalenheim, international
champion.
Ajax v. Hohenstein, grand interna-
tional champion.
Appolo v. Hohenstein, grand Interna-
tional champion.
Minka v. Roll, grand champion.
There are M champions within his
pedigree, including 16 grand Interna-
tional champions, this coupled with hia
blood lines are considered the best that
possibly san be produced in the German
police dog. The pictures sf thsss tham-
plsns can be seen in the history of the
German Shepherd Dog in word and pic-
ture by Captain von, Stephenitz, the first
president of the German Kennel club,
which much credit ia attributed for the
international success of the German
dog.
Mi-Ki-Tin is ths proud sire of 1# pup-
pies, which can ba assn at Sergeant
Barend's kennel at 409 South Carolina
street.
Mi-Ki-Tin recently was shipped to Cal-
ifornia to be prepared to participate in
the annual fall dog show of California.
COLLEGES STRIVING TO
PREVENT VIOLATION
AMATEUR REGULATIONS
bell here next year mentioning what he
termed “sportsmanship” displayed here
during the West Texas Chamber of
commerce convention. If walking off the
field without finishing a game merely
because you do not agree with the um-
pire ia “sportsmanship" then Sled Allen
is an operatic star.
That is what the Lubbock team did
right here in Amarillo.
Don't worry Lubbock, Hal Chase and
hia stars will not be in Amarillo next
year and Amarillo is just wondering if
Lubbock will put onto the field as fast
a team emboding aa much sportsmanship
as Amarillo will muster. •
Amarillo supports her team with more
than loud yells from frenzied threats
and that la more than Lubbock haa been
consistent in doing.
Just because thia town haa developed
into a email city aa the result of the
help of big oil, gas and commercial
development program and haa swelled
her papulation by thousands is not oe-
casion for smaller places to feel like
they are being mistreated every time
they cease to town.
Amarillo's teams and athletes are just
as honest and have jest aa much sports-
manship aa those of any ether town In
this section and Lubbock, the Bob city.
Is included in that list.
Will Lubbock be able to match Ama-
rillo in baseball next year?
LUBBOCK, Oct. 26.—Lubboek and the
South Plains are still in need of cotton
-pickers to gather the fields that are
white with the open bells, Re 0: to
Employment Service of the United States
Department of labor. Roach visits all
the South Plains towns and keeps in di-
rect touch with beakers, chambers of
commerce, and other business won and
farmers in every section of the Plains.
He has spent much time on the various
highways leading into the Plains, stop-
ping cotton pickers on the road and di-
- em to the fields where they are
_____has reports from Fort Worth,
San Antenie and other, points that hun-
dreds of pickers are leaving each day
for the Plains but the number that has
concensus of opinion among members of
the committees that have been handling
these proposals of extensions that the
Mayfield bill would prevent such long
delays and would permit the companies
te extend as they desire.
. Applications for constructing the three
lines into and out of Plalaview were
made before the Interstate commerce
commission in April 1925 and the hear-
inge on the proposals before the exami-
ner was conducted in Plainview in July
1025. The examinier's report was not
filed until March 1926, and the oral
argument was delayed until ninety days
later. Since that time nothing has been
heard from the I C. C. on the various
proposals.
A. E. Boyd, a member of the railroad
committee of the Plainview Chamber of
Commerce, expressed what seems to be
the concensus of opinion of a patient
people ea the South Plaine who have
waited thirty and forty years for an
eastern connection railroad whoa he
AUSTIN, Oct. 26. — That the larger
educational institutions and athletic
conferences are striving with Increasing
success to reduce the proselyting of ath-
letes to a minimum Is the firm con-
viction of Dr. D. A. Penick of the Uni-
versity of Texas, who is president of
the Southwestern conference.
“With the help of public opinion and
the press this standard will gradually
PAMPA, Oct. 25.—A subscription list
has Just been completed by citizens of
Pampa for the purpose of erecting a - -----
modern new hospital to cost approxi- and purely take, hold upon ll our eol.
mately fifty thousand dollars.
Preliminary plans and organization
work have been under the direction of
Dr. M. Purviance, Dr. A. Cole, Dr. M. B.
Wild and M. Rozzell Finley.
Work on the new structure is due to
start Immediately and the plans call for
completion by January 1.
the dilatory method la which these pro-
posals are being handled, and very often
the future of a country can be material-
ly set back by just a few months delay
at s erucial period in its development.”
Funds with which to provide the right-
of-way through Plainview end Hole coun-
ty for the various extensions have been
subscribed end a good part of them paid
now for over eighteen months, accord-
leges,” Dr. Penick said. “One of the
greatest hindrances to the enforcement
of thia standard is the insistent sus-
piclon constantly heralded abroad by
the general public individually and
through the press. I will guarantee
to any person who can produce facts
to prove violation of Southwest con-
ference rules on proselyting the punish-
most of the guilty parties including the
school concerned. This is the sentiment
of our conference and of others.”
The constant reformation which is
being carried on In intercollegiate ath-
letics haa been due to the fact that were
and more faculties have taken a hand
in athletics and have attempted to im-
prove conditions, Dr. Panick says.
“The next great improvement in in-
tercollegiate athletics will come,” he
E. Horton White, who was a stellar
member of the 1924 New Mexico Mili-
tary Institute championships eleven is
playing wonderful football with the
Washington and Lee eleven in hia first
year of college competition.
Washington and Lee haa a powerful
team this year and is likely to hang up
one of the finest records ever made by
a Washington and Lee eleven. White is
playing quarter back and besides making
consistent gains is in a considerable
measure responsible for the ahowing of
the Generals, through hia generalship
in running the team.
The Generals have defeated Lynchburg
college and the University of Kentucky
besides holding the. powerful Princeton
team to a tie. According te ea article
ia the New York Times the Tigers nar-
rowly escaped defeat after having been
played to a standstill throughout the
game. The Generals obtained possession
of the ball by intercepting a forward
pass and carried it to the Tiger twenty
yard line only to have the game end.
' fleecy staple around Taylor, Texae, aad
the equally un-matlike exercise of tugg
ing a cotton sack down a row of cotter
ia the black tend belt.
Mantell is hard enough to dislodge
anywheres but when he sets his head on
locating at a place it is understood that
he intends staying there regardless of
the activities of the opposition.
Fans apparently are preparing for a
battle because the ringside ticket have
almost disappeared and scalping tactics
may be in vogue before time is called
Friday night. The tickets are on said
at the City Drug Store, a
Sharing the spotlight with Maticos and
Kopecky is Charley Grip, Columbus
Ohio grep pler who is scheduled'to meet
as many as ten local wrestlers beating
them all in one hours time. Grip ia said
Johnson Wins.
The Johnson ward school won ita
initial ward school game yaeterday af-
ternoon, 6 to 0, beating Buchanan.
Johnson won the championship last
year, ----------
High School Football.
At Liberty BiU: Bertram 6; Liberty
Hill 6. (Tie.)
At Holland: Lett •; Bolland 44.
te be the ugliest and most dangerou
wrestler in America today, according t
Al Haft, Columbus, Ohio promoter.
PAST RECORDS SHOW
UNIVERSITY ALWAYS
HAS WINNING TEAM
AUSTIN, Texas, Oct. 2.—Past record
show that the University of Texas has
always had a winning football team
having won n majority of her games eac!
year. Since 1893 the University of Texas
has played 267 games, winning 203, losing
56, and tying I. The total score for this
period of 33 years has been Texas 5,
366 to opponents 1,419. Seven of these
years, 1893, 1895, 1900, 1914, 1918, 1920
and 1923, the University of Texas ha!
undefeated teams. Only one of these
seasons, 1895, has the University of Tex
an had her opponents scoreless. The
University's score was 1M for that yeas
The University's highest score was it
1914 when she scored 859 to opponent]
21.
Lutherans Win. e
(By The Associated Prera) .
SEGUIN, Oct. 26.—The Lutheran eel-
lego Bulldogs defeated Wesleyan Insti-
tute here, 31 to •, Tuesday. The Luther-
ans scored almost at will. | l o'clock at the auditorium.
DERDEN'S BAND TO MEET.
Dave Derden band meets tonight at
Don't worry about Hal Chase and his •
crew of alleged “outlaws." They will
not play in Amarillo next season.
The fans do not want them to come
here and if they did they would not
want them to stay. Amarillo is for
clean sports and sport organization and
that lets sut Hai and hia craw.
It la true all of us would like to see
them play eno game or two games, but
that ends our interest.
Mr. Chais may ba a wonderful man
personally and likewise his team mam-
bars may ba great fellows but they can
never remove the blot that ia associated
with their names In organized baseball.
Amarillo may have outlaws nsxt sum-
msr, but they will not be seen on the
baseball diamond as shining examples
for Amarillo’s youth.
JUNIOR HIGH DRAWS
CANYON SECOND TEAM
Ths Junior high school, team spring-
ing some real Red Grange style of scor-
ing tied the Canyon High school second
team at Metropolitan perk yesterday
afternoon by a score of 13-13.
Harold Webster with a broken field
run of 95 yards and Johnnie Foster with
a 65-yard sprint through the line scored
the Amarillo touchdowns.
Junior high players taking part in the
game were Richard Scanlin, Bill Flar-
rity, T. J. Rosser, Fred Nicklaus, Lloyd
Hancock, Robert Seanlin, Gaston Dodd,
James Rlehsts, Haralds Webster, John-
nis Foster and Ban Johnson.
not be solved by prejudices but by care-
fully weighed facts. One of the chief
functions end prerogatives of faculty
men is to weigh facts without prejudice
and the friends of athletics are willing
to trust the development of athletics to
faculties if the faculties are willing to
take the time and trouble necessary to
examine the facte and to act without
bias."
Notice Veterans.
Meet with the organization committee
Thursday night at 222 Blackburn build-
ing, and help atari the new Post of
Veterans of Foreign Wars. All welcome,
and the hour is 8 o’clock.
DB. CLAUDE WOLCOTT,
KARL MeNALLEY.
Ing to Mr. Boyd, and many of the sub- ------------ -uuE» win come, ne
scribers are growing impatient. They continued, "with a thorough and Intel-
»L!5a»tlMnlMBii*W-'’221W®W^ ^^^^ =====
Every fall for 25 years, Jim Barh retir-
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Dutchman” gold mine in the vicinity of
Four Peaks in the Superstition moun-
It’s easy to see
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THIS
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THIS
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E. EPPSTEIN a COMPANY
Dallas, Texas
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Howe, Gene A. Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 17, No. 296, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 27, 1926, newspaper, October 27, 1926; Amarillo, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1663231/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Texas State Library and Archives Commission.