Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 17, No. 367, Ed. 1 Friday, December 17, 1926 Page: 3 of 20
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FRIDAY MORNING. DECEMBER 17. 1926.
AMARILLO DAILY NEWS
PAGE THREE
n
Old Tack Positively
Will Be Referee For
Mat Bout Next Week
sans HonorRo
. EASTERN
Drowas 1
Thayer, I
* cues Hardwick, Navyi J
....2.£
owns Grubs, Lafayette.
Dance music that is brim-
ming over with life, mel-
ody and rhythm! You’ll
want these new records.
Hear them now!
Lay Me Down to Sleep in
Carolina
Fox Trot With Vocal Refrain
NAT SHILKRET AND
THE Victor ORCHESTRA
It Made You Happy When
You Made Me Cry
—Fox Trot With Vocal Refrain
WARING’s PENNSYLVANIANS
No. 20315, 10-inch, 75e
Don’t Sing Aloha When I Go
She’s Still My Baby
Four ARISTOCRATS
No. 20314, 10-inch, Tie
Sadie Green, Vamp of New
Orleans—Fox Trot
Coney Island Washboard
Fox Trot Five HARMANIACS
No. 20293, 10-inch, 75e
Oli Come, All Ye Faithful
(Adeste Fideles) (Portugal)
Grand Organ
Silent Night (Gruber)
Grand Organ MARK ANDREWS
No. 20298, 10-inch, 7Se
There Ain’t Ne Maybe in My
Baby’s Eyes With Piano
Ne One But Yeti Knows How
to Love With Piano
(The Whispering Baritone)
JACK SMITH
No. 20312, 10-inch, 75e
While Shepherds Watched
It Came Upon the Midnight
Clear
(Sears-Willis) TaIITY Crow
No. 35787, 12-inch, $1.25
Gesu Bambino (The Infant
Jesus) (Martens-Yon)
Hosanna (Granier) In English
Giovanni MARTINELLI
No. 6602, 12-inch, $2.00
These are but a few of the new
Victor Record# your dealer
will be glad to play for you.
New Orthophonic
Victor
. Records
. VICron TALKING MACHINE Co.
Camden, New Jersey, U. S. A.
ON Tack positively to going to ref-
eree the big double match benefit wrest-
ling program to be staged at the audi-
torium next Thursday night.
That to what the pop-eyed newspaper
man said last night after reading a
statement in The Globe from Cal Farley
that the erstwhile humorous one weald
not be allowed to cut some of hie cap-
ers in the ring.
“I’m going to referee, Farley and hie
gang of thugs notwithstanding, ete,”
bawled Tack M he towered over an inno-
cent and unsuspecting fellow worker.
“What has thio fellow Farley and his
friends got to say in this matter?” he
demanded. “Who ie boss of this mat
show? Who ie promiting it and who
has the final word?"
There wee a reported break ia the
wrestlers’ ranks when it waa announced
last night that Dutch Mantell and Chor-
ley Grip were both strong for Tack aa
a referee. Perley's supporters, how-
ever contended that both Mantell and
Grip were out for murder and did not
want a referee. Old Tack had suggested
a handaxe for the two and this sugges-
tion seems to strike both men as amus-
ing and aa expedient way of nettling
their differences.
Just what new developments may be
expected from the Tack-Parley break is
not known but it hae boon hinted that
Farley is allying himself with city of-
ficials, the lowbrow element and other
factions which have recently been the
victims of scathing attacks by T ho
Glebe’s columnist. On the other hand
Old Tuck and his followers are standing
by their guns as the saying goes, confi-
dent of victory.
Farley wrestles Yaqui Joe, Sonora In-
dian, who eate liver, whole gobs of cab-
bage, carrots, chicken liver and other
tough particles of food in the raw with-
out even using salt. Farley le wrost-
ling la his first match in a year, having
suffered a broken leg in a match here
against Thor Jensen. 1
It has been intimated that Farley
than the result of the match and is
therefore unwilling to take any chances
with a referee each as he intimates Old
Tack would make.
And Old Task says there is no argue
ment to it. He is going to be the third
man on the mat at the Auditorium whoa
the bone-crushers and neck twisters
swing into action, next Thursday.
And that’s that.
KILLEFER GIVEN
TWOOFFERS FOR
HORNSBY’S JOB
INDICATIONS ARE THAT ROGERS
AND BREADON CANNOT
REACH AGREEMENT
Tackles— !.
Pittsburgh Zeden,
Navy:
New Yorks Sprague, army: 1
arneglo Toom, Cothran, Latay
Colgate: MB7. Navy.
0. Connaughton, Georgetown, Stun
Guards hahe, Valos Carey, Cornell; Gib
son. Grove City; Farber, Brown, Davis, Princes
ton; Schmidt, Army Canes. Columbia
=====
Qunebod-Fe ==
Halfbacks— mWa "I""
Donohue, Carnegie Tech; Wilson, Army; Kirldenk
Lateyetio; Weston, Boston Colleges Car. Spraeuse
Brown, Murrell, Ann. _
. You'll want to
be well dress-
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You still have time to wear
a fine Meyer & Meyer—
HAND . TAILORED
MADE - TO - MEASURE
SUIT
Meyer & Meyer Hand Tail-
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more than the ordinary
hand-me-downs, and the fact
that Meyer & Meyer Suite
are made right here in Ama-
rillo by experts enables us to
render you quick service.
Hundreds of full-bolt sam-
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imported and domestic wool-
ens. Distinctive Patterns.
PLACE YOUR ORDER
TODAY
Don’t miss
the new
Ortho-
phonic
VTe(
NKXDX
AMARILLO MUSIC CO.,
702 POLE STREET
Prize Winners
IN THE
BLUEBIRD
PEARL
CONTEST
1ST Prize—$50.00 Bluebird Pearl
* Necklace, w. r. MATTHEWS,
3504 Harrison St.
2ND Prise—mee Bluebird Pearl
4 Necklace. A I. MeCLURKIN,
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ORD Prize—$10.00 Bluebird Pearl
J Necklace. w. K. BENTLEY,
709 Tennessee.
This contest has proved beyond
question that very few can dis-
tingulsh Bluebird Pearls from
natural pearls. Bluebird Pearls
Do match the exquisiteness of the
deep-sea gem. Yet Bluebird Peari,
for all their incomparable lovell.
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see eer display—priced at $5.00
per strand and upward.
NTV
WATCHES
DixMonns Jewsin
Pearl Headquarters
(By The Associated Press)
CHICAGO, Dec. 16.—Bill Killifer, as-
sistant to Rogers Hornsby ia the man-
agement of the St. Louie Cardinals,
twice has been offered the management
of the team, the last offer coming la the
last 14 hours.
This was accepted today as Indicating
that Sam Broaden, president of the
Cardinals, has decided that he would be
unable to come to terms with Hornsby,
who is demandlag a salary of $50,000 a
year under a throe-year contract.
Broaden arrived today from New
York and it was thought he might have
e conference with Wade Killefer, brother
of Bill.
William Veeck, president of the Chi-
cago Cubs, spiked a report that the
Cobs were negotiating for the purchase
of Hornsby. It also bad been reported
the New York Giants were interested.
Veeck said, “I canont speak for the
Giants, but so far as the Cube are con-
cerned. we have not given Hornsby any
consideration.”
T.L. A A. WILL ENFORCE
FRESHMAN RULE IN 1928
Special to The News._____
CANTON, Dec. 16.— Registrar D. A.
Shirley of the West Texas State Teach-
ers’ College has just returned from the
meeting of the Texas Intercollegiate
association which was held last Thurs-
day at Dallas. Mr. Shirley was re-elect-
ed president of the association for 1927.
It was the sense of the committee that,
beginning with 1928, the freshman rule
shall be enforced by the T. I. A. A. This
means that after this date that no frosh-
man may play on teams which represent
their colleges. This is a ruling Insisted
upon by the Southern association of col-
leges and secondary schools.
This generarily is believed that fresh-
ment should not have their class work
interrupted as it will be If they are ab-
sent from their coltogee while playing
on athletic teams.
BILL DOAK TIRES OF REAL
ESTATE: BACK TO BROOKLYN
-___(By The Associated Press)
NEW YORK, Dec. 16.—Bill Doak,
veteran right handed pitcher, who gave
up baseball for the Florida real estate
business in the spring of 1925, has gone
back to the major league fold.
The Brooklyn club announced today
that Commissioner Landis had granted
Doak’s application for reinstatement
and that he would be on the Bobin ros-
tor next spring.
Doak played with the St. Louis Cardi-
nals from 1913 t 01924, when he was
traded to Brooklyn.
Many Hindes in India ore breaking
away from the restrictions of heredi-
tory belief and observance, although ad-
hering to the idea of not mixing with
nonbelievers in their faih.
Regalia
10c
Bright Prospects Loom For
Vacancies on W. T. Cage Team
Special to The News
CANYON, Dec. 16.—Were you to walk
into Buffalo gymnasium at the West
Texas Stoto Teachers’ college •■ any af-
ternoon you would find Coach S. D. Bur-
ton giving his squad of basketball hus-
kies a stiff workout. Burton has a
large squad working this year—some-
thing ilk. forty men—all of them with
marked basketball ability. Some of th.
best men, of th. high schools of last
year are trying for places on the Buf-
falo team. __—
Right now th. big bon. .f contention
is th. guard positions that were left
vacant by the lore of Herm and Hill.
Both of those men were all-conference
guarded and will be hard to replace.
Now, Burton har something like ten men
who are: aspirants for those positions
but as yet he has not found a man who
can play the floor like Herm end one who
can play the stationary position like
Hill.
la the scrimmages that are held daily.
Ward .f Tulia high school has been do-
ing some good work as has Gerald of
Canyon high school. Brown, the diminu-
tire Canyon high school all-star guard
last year, shows great possibilities as
be to fast, heady, and n fair shot. These
new men are being hotly contested by
the rangy Ben Pearson, who looks like
the boot bet to toko the place of Hill.
Pearson won his letter last year at een+
tor and nt guard. Milton Sanders, also
of Canyon high school, la making bet-
ter progress this season than last, when
he played good basketball throughout
the entire season but woe unable to
make his letter. Gamel of Perrytoe
high school, who played at guard during
the season of‘20 has shown some Im-
provement but not enough to warrant
his approaching the stellar playing of
some of the new men.
Burton will have quite n lark of pick-
leg hie beet men at center as he has
five men of recognized ability to pick
from. Lowee, center during the sear
son of 1926, is playing up to end improve
log over his form of the ‘26 season when I
be war named by come of the coaches
M all-conference material. Fuller, a
tall, rangy youngster from the wide open
spaces of th. North Panhandle, who
played center for th. Buffalo five dur-
Ing th. season of 1925, has returned to
school after a year’s absence and is do-
ing himself justice playing at guard and
tenter.
Forwards, Burton baa in abundance,
but none .f them have equaled the bril-
liant floor work and the accurate goal-
shooting of Captain Hale and his run-
ning mate, Crump. This pair would be
a delight to the eyes of any coach in
the country. They play like one man
—never hesitating, never In doubt——they
are a wonderful pair of forwards. Of
course, there are rough spots that must
he erased but time and Coach Burton
will do the job and whoa the team makes
their sally late the southland early la
January they are very likely te bring
back some of the Meet interesting bas-
ketball scalps that the brilliant teams
of Coach Burton have ever brought
home. But to return to the worwards.
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w
Lovers ofgoodcigars-try Loveral
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The famous five
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Elites 10
Regalia 106
Sublimes 2 for 25e
Coronas, 194
Vanderbilt 3 for 50c
611
POLK
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there le Jones of Canyon high. Reeves
of Hedley, who lettered last year at
forward: Keith of Ralls, who plays cen-
tor and forward with equal effective-
ness. Bandy, a youngster who captain-
ed the college Calves, a team that con-
quered some of the best high schools in
the Panhandle without losing a game,
has been doing some good work and to
showing rapid improvement.
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Howe, Gene A. Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 17, No. 367, Ed. 1 Friday, December 17, 1926, newspaper, December 17, 1926; Amarillo, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1663275/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.