Borger Daily Herald (Borger, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 292, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 28, 1942 Page: 4 of 6
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BlackhawksPrepare
For District Tilts; Face
Panhandle Friday
SPORTS
ROUNDUP
Sports In Industry
* * *
Alsob Takes Honors
* * *
Superstition
The games that count be-
gin popping up before the
Phillips Blackhawks as they
travel to Panhandle this
Friday for their first con-
ference game.
Yesterday the Blackhawks. who
have won 29 straight names, went
through a long routine drill After
working on the fundamentals of
blocking and tackle the squad
split into two groups—the ends
and backs working on pass offense
and defense while the linemen
went through a series of wind
sprints
Three of .
were takuif things easy as a re-
st t of tl rv n pounding of the
F) yc’a:'.c V n. 1\ nds last week-
end, Harold Ti n son had a slight
knee injury. Cezel Foster was
nurs ? an injured shoulder and
Clan e He" till had a cast on
his bi e 1 ■ 1. It is expected
th t ah it tl.es.- regulars will be
m*shape lor the Panhandle tilt.
However, if Tennyson is not in
shape. Coach Chesty Walker plans
to shift Wingback Louie Bam up
to the line. Bain has been piay-
ing defensive end when Tennyson
drops back
SPORTS
Borger. Texas
Wednesday. October 28, 1942
Page 4
Freshman Leads Wesl Texas Eleven
As Team Prepares To Meet Cowboys
CANYON. Texas. Ort 2k. —
yesterday’s regulars i Reeves. West Texas
' ' — : State's freshman -of-the-year,
continued to lead the Buffaloes
in effectiveness as the locals
clung to their Border conference
* rung just below the undefeated
: elevens.
Reeves made touchdown sprints
i of 50 and 30 yards and threw a
1 a 40-yard touchdown pass as the
; Bufts defeated Arizona State of
! Flagstaff last week, 27 to 7. It
| was the fourth straight win for
Coach Gus Miller's men Reeves,
definitely the best passer on the
,o wnen i»»f». d wag jojned in this depart-
drops back to bolster the pass ment bv p,,,v]e Ford, sophomore
defense from a halfback position ha; hc€'n out aU season re-
Fcllowing the Panhandle game,
the orange and black squad of
Phillips tackles three more con-
ference foes on successive week-
ends— facing Perryton, White
Deer and Canadian The White
! who has been out all season re-
i covering from a leg operation
i Ford hurled a scoring pass at
j F'agstafl' in his first return to the
j game.
The Buffaloes came through the
Lw*er ana L.diit»uidn.
Deer game is the only home bat- f conference game without injur-
lie of the three, being scheduled ies and will go to Las C ruces this
for Not-. 13, on Blackhawk Field, week to seek another circuit vic-
tory at the expense of the hap-
less New Mexico Aggies How to
keep his travel-weary team from
getting over-confident will be
Ccach Miller's chief job this
week
Assistant Coach W. W. Nick-
laus came back looking more
grim than usual after seeing the
Hardin-Simmons Cowboys maul
Texas Mines, at Abilene. The
Cowboys will be opponents of the
Buffaloes here on Homecoming
Da\, November 7. in the Panhan-
dles best game of the season.
Game time will be 2:3(1 p.m
West Texas State's only loss
was her first game, when Texas
Tech met a Buff squad far from
ready to open the reason N* v.
greatly improved, the locals will
enter the Homecoming tussle
well aware of what a decision
over the powerful Cowboys would
mean.
By HUGH FULLERTON Jr.
NEW YORK Oct 8.— /!’>—No
| matter what may happen to
sports in the next year or so
| and >oti can be sure something
| will happen when the army takes
in a few more botches ot athlete-
— the big aircraft companies will
I keep on with competitive athlet-
es . They're sold on "the ef-
I feet of championship principle
I upon morale." Paul S Gil
! bert, who handles the huge spoils
I program that has grown up in the
j Grumami aircraft plants, claims
that the men get rivalries start-
ed m softball or bowling and then
work just as hard to outdo one
another on the production line
And do the employees like it"
Well, they'll stretch a softball
game over two or three days by
playing a few innings each lunch
hour: they'll work 56 hours a
week and try to train for boxing
in their spare time and the-, II
Start bowling matches at 8 a m
when they come off the night
shitt
Buy U. S. Delons* Bonds toa*r
From Other College Grid Teams —
Army Recruits New Winning Eleven
By HAROLD CLAASSEN
NEW YORK. Oct. 28—</Pt—
If you have been wondering h oc
the U. S. Military Academy could
lose 34 of the 44 members on its
football squad of a year ago and
still approach the coming No-
vember with fir. unbeaten eleven,
perhaps this will help you
Bud Troxell the Cadet fullba. k.
played for Dartmouth last sea-
son . . . Substitute halfback Bob
Woods was a first stringer at
Navy last fall before flunking
out and winning a West Point ap-
pointment . . . And Francis Mer-
ritt. sophomore tackle, was a svii-
sation as a Fordham frosh in
1940 . . .
Badger-Buckeye
Game Sellout
Here’s Reasons Why
Team Didn't Show Up
Crucial Tilt Pocks
Box Office Punch
Perhaps even Connie Mack has
forgotten that he coached the
the champion pro football team of
the state of Pennsylvania n 1902
When the Philadelphia National
league baseball club sponsored a
pro eleven in 1901. the Athletics
retaliated the next season with a
club and Mack as coach
The Mackmtn walloped the
Phils and then went to Pitts-
burgh for the state title game.
It ended in a tie but on the fob
lowing Sunday the Athletic*
won, 12 to 6.
Connie had his gridders warm
up for the Pittsburgh scrap by
playing at Elmira on Friday , an-
other game on Saturday They
cooled off with a fourth game in
four days at Will umstown on
Monday.
It was when the Monday gate
promised to be mu that Mu -k
sent his star baseball pitcher.
Kube Waddell, to tiara e the
town wearing a placa:-. Wa idel
Visited the high school uui;r,j..
the noon hour and approximate-
ly a thousand students missed
school that afternoon
MADISON, Wis.. Oct. 28.—</Pi
—There is no old oaken bucket
I or little brown jug at stake in
I Wisconsin's homecoming battle
with Ohio State here Saturday
but the contest between the un-
1 defeated elevens packs plenty of
I box office punch in other way's.
Those who have been lucky
' enough to get pasteboards— the
ticket office expects a near sell-
out — may see in action the
new Western conference title-
holder or even the next mythical
national champion.
Ohio State unbeaten and un-
tied in five games this season, has
been parked in the number one-
spot on the Associated Press' na-
tion's honor grid list for the past
three week- while Wisconsin with
j five victories and a tie with No-
tre Dame, is in sixth place.
The game, which the super-
I charged Buckeyes are favored to
I win, has a two-for-the-priee of
■ one attraction foi a thrifty grid
; fan.
1 In action on the field at the
' same time v. ill be Ohio States
: Gene Fekete. fullback, and Badg-
! er halfback Elroy Hirsch. two of
I the foiemo— im.-m men in
CHICAGO, Oct. 28. —(/?.»—
There were .-'vvrul reason* why
the St. L< ■ 1 ' foot-
ball tea mu,dll t keep its engage-
ment with the St. Joseph Acad-
emy eleven of suburban La
Grange.
The captain’s mother was to
take some of the players in her
car. but the starter got stuck and
; the machine wouldn't start: then-
coach was called out Of the city:
j the right tackle's lather's cur was
' hi a garage for repairs: none ol j
| any mileage to their tires, and I
any mileage to then tirese. and
the kid- didn't have enough bikes
to go around.
Today's Guest Star
John J. Pen. Stockton, Cal-
if.' Record: "Those who pre-
dicted that 80-year old Amos
Alonzo Stago would coach un-
til ho reached 109 may have
been prophesying better than
they knew. Coach Stagg's last
game of the current season will
be his 100th with the College
cf the Pacific. If football is
suspended next year, as mat./
stem to expect, the game . ill
be the 'grand old man's’ final,
at least for the duration."
Famed Passing
Stars Continue
To Set Records
ARNOLD DERLITZKI
"AGO. Oct. 28.—(i-P-—Only-
One -Minute Sports Page
MORE OF TUI LOWIX)
Ben Wnhsman of the R 1 hn
New - Lc.nici w : ' that 1
w;,v play aptly if -< t bed
G—Wa In: at- i-W ill
Mary game !a-> S:.M ■•;*
“GeiiiWa-himdun a ;a -
When T< x Hugh-', m th<
Sux ■ • ' -h-d - '■
in hi-- h- : at KvV. 1
other e L* h> i < ! " :
been har\ < -tii.g c-ii: a I
was ten tired ty mao ■>
— til,, he d talk b.e- ball ■ ;
. . Alt 11* utb Lr Mm Mb i.
he navy New- Yo-k l
k mi ler this
Frank Dixon.
W N
in
| have a it
Fre-hman
Skip Paining, head coach at
Creighton university wour-i up
his skull prar -• quarterback
with the ever present question
“It is third down and one t g<
v-bat would you do
Ten minutes after the session,
paii ang went m h* n - ■ • 1 '
found his third flat tire within
a trio of days Just then the
quarterback contingent
by.
"OK. coach." said one signal
caller. ‘ that s your third down.
Now tell us what you are go-
ing to do."
backlield men in
Fekete so fai has
touchdowns and 12
foi a total of 68.
Tied five timer and
coring aerial. For
■ there are Badger
Harder, leading Big
and ground gainer
t! Buckeye halfback
Paul Sarnnghaus, who skipped
through the Northwe-tern M :
rat:-: toi two markers last Satur-
day-.
the country
piled up e f
extra point
Hirw h ha
pitched eta
mea
ek Pi
Te-i scoter
last ye
a ceiling on record breaking m
| broke
M
the national football league ap-
1 winni
rig
parently can -top Green Bay s
famed foiward passing mmbina-
filling
tion of Cecil Isbell and Dor. Hut-
son
j had."
Isbell, star passer with Purdue
: time
Ab
six years ago, and Hut-'-n, ex-
| one c
ja,
Alabama end playing his eighth
. bury.
season with Green Bay. account-
: Alsab
i, a
ih Emil V:
I ft
points each Three of the oppon-
ents- were blanked, 26 to 0. and
the fourth b*-.t. 32 to 6
A year ago Russ C'oates was
so outstanding his University of
Miami. Fla . mates elected
h:m
1942 club
Now h*- i- pi
: behind the b
I junior triple
: faculty father
Before the Geneva college elev-
en wa- topp ed
the unbeaten ’ ■ * - Kenu by
Youngstown, th* Pent yiva-.-ai
liad won four
diew (mm the
Pioneers' gamt
ring second string
half ni Sundi:
lliant Ai Kasuhn,
IX-tr* it arid
threater . . The
touchduwr.. a!
of the Big Seven
last year's pa
t* decided that ai
jof his 1941 re
university witn-
I rent totals
scored, 95 «5
ioop last year, tin*
•s with conXerence
■ 7 v touchdou
t-d for 10 records between them
fast vear This season they will
better all those marks and others
as well if they maintain their
present pace.
League ngun - released today-
showed Isbell has thrown nine
touchdown passes in five game*
and has collected a total ot 811
yards. At this rate in his next
six games he can boost his rocutd
of 15 touchdowns in a season to
19 and ho yardage from 1.4<9 to
more than 1,700 He s already
assured of one new mark in that
- he has pitched at least one touch-
down pass in each of 17 consecu-
j tive games.
Hutson, although playing but a
game against
held without a
t•.-«ik thn
Win. Lose or Tie
Fur .seven years when L-
Blaik went to B<-t*-n wir'n Dai
mouth Uam- he ai.vay.- -■>1
red tie, and during that tin,- t
Indian:- neve, k,M to Haiv.ird
I A y e a 1 .1 a - * i *
Coast Guard Plays Duty-First Football
nr*. vs “T^r-Y"......f *
»**
■ -N
a jn v
S' &
&
V . ‘ -.4 fe
rTJP a ; a;
jw’
gP
l vJ ”
By BURTON BENJAMIN
NEA Service Staff Correspondent
ut needy c‘1 t*i
example, if a man
F.
-.it-
ho
1*
* izei s of th-
S. Lett, vvh*
hold
Ml-Amer
ire taekli
Delayed Buck
That suggction *d re-hill 11 ng
the majoi league ball club- into
eastern and western loops to cut
down on travel was an idea this
Dept, had been eonsidering and
saving to use *-u some *iull day - .
We planned to - Icirttn-r
Rud Rennie's anonymous execu-
tive and suggest that games
should be played only on Satur-
days and Sundays, and maybe
Friday nights, so that ball play
ers yvould have a chance to hold
down useful jobs during the week
. We still don’t think the very-
conservative major leaguers will
consider it seriously except as a
last resort . . AH th:.- !‘*v
proves what you hear every day:
"If you want to .-.cue s mething.
buy war bonds."
is branch ol the service that has
what "duty -first" football means vwj-sidw'^"n ' 7 ^- Wehn, p.
t0ti means perfortning the myr- C aehed l.y Knsign Gar Onf- him
i ui | ,sks that make up the mili- fitly, fmme, player and coach at One ol th.
y ia am to Ohio .Suite, the team was organ- team was Ek
“S pm ,£ «o /nearby ized Sept. 10. walloped Brooklyn played at Co
ield in open trucks and practlc- ^ K
'nVmv'..;‘a'piav,ng only station 3L0: surprised by repelling Vil-
complement - lmpertaliohs for “a. 20-13: and led Fort Mon-
. j j i pu-c - • «ii otr.-c-.-ti. ni-uth, N ■ •
S means let-- mg Ni w York .m H- --.ietly an extra-iurricuhn-
Friday mght b-i a Saturday night I’"'PomIicii
^‘mc ,n Toledo, playing that There are no mee.al l>m: |), ke nvm
o' me and catching a »:33 u.m. for plavers. he men play Ymignau.
^44‘ . hall bccaiiM* they want 1»> aiid in
ren 'Vi'X,7 ‘ 7 squall Which dome, so perform :, worthwhile
lll'm lB 1U ;{‘ "t-rrim a morale point of view,
“‘'these are just a few of the fea- the team L doing u superb job.
tures **l the prate of the Cog: > Aith* ugh lb* ■ an . nee ol a play -
Duai'd - Manhattan Beach Sta- ing Mel*, nriKe home c..nte> .
, ,, - which is undefeated in impossible, the men at he sta
: ‘ tic-n have b« imdlc^s un*)ei^i *.ui-
COAST GUARD FOOTBALL ' ,
IS EXTRA-CURRICULAR 1 ' ' .
■ ■ ' I -, a ■1 ■ -
H is the only repn-i nm-.vi ___
i hami
down a taekle b*
A- ..still*, t * i
a -tellu- end r- 1-
kimn. tile Cilia*
i, a Othet -Air
Mike Karma.-io ■
in
tl ei
n;< 1.-
I
Fri in the all star colleri ite
lanks come Jim Walker, lo'va
Negro taekle- la/. A-troth. Ill: -
I,,,,., bark, and T*.mtny K:o i.
\\ i, e, a n: (iiiarleri-ack.
DEMPSEY DOES EVERYTHING
BUT CARRY WATER TO TEAM
and Harvard beat Arm' . - --a.-t
week when tlie Cadefr tear. --.*
for another Harvard game, i-.m 1
wasn't taking any chance He
donned the red tie betoro he lei*
West Point
eni:
Service Dept.
From the P.R.< >. at th-- S*-uth
Plums Army FI. mg S. h>--l at
Lubbock. Tex
■Along about
the gridiron a
Army Flying f
to prairie, so
Three Tie For
Leadership Of
Southwest Loop
lorn
h; 11 K
Harv.
.f<
A
50-
ni stri
ih Pl-i
men at
T<\
T? in,
Conference Standings -
W L T Pet.
\ ■ 2 0 0 1.000
2 () 0 1.000
2 0 0 1 000
v 0 10 .000
y 0 2 o .000
Pvlt Alee, Oh it ■ Stale : Kulai e
cock, the .ot at Olympic >\>
and bi-oad-.jumper cU’ Tempi*.
Kristens Sams. Tu-knce.
Joe Ha-er- of M "'liman ai
.It tm
Pea-
•inter
Kd
. . • : TKM‘<t calomel take
(• •, *, i; j j it ovr - * calomel
. 7d '' y ; tint make cnlo-
. 7. .. , *-it, sm'ar-’oatfd,
, . t.r i.mipt inset rfTfrttve,
. lo a. ■ wall fca.u
or ii.
i ■ -.- as dire, ted on label.
practlc
kc
ek
Wnbde
the
Season's Standings
I 5 0 1
. , . Yo v c a n
spot it every time
JT [\K! S " k n * - - - ' ■! ; !1’-1 i"b";;ht-
Sale 01 Ticket
Fc-r Borger Gan"'r*
Chang^k S’.igH’y
X I he in ikt i- .1 v .k.iA v 1.* h. ' 'V'
ciali'.fJ in knowing lum i > prvnhuo
rtfresUmcnt.
.Coin is i quality chink rare- J
v m.i.1 A bni-hed an in n- d
(
fell
ktl
,fh
'.VerJi'-i Scores
*>pr
A. .V
i -C J v!,» ;m cm r atched t-,sU
.,i >\ h 11 an uiunistakahlt
..... H,isc yf refreshment. A
hir-vd t-l ‘-P'li.d t—• nv w‘- ad.H
e* tin g.-u bn -- "U- " A* 1 . m
that every-
ixtr
hod>
J
Th
(With
eek's Gamer.
Year's Score
Coca
f hat ,
,-r-_'Y. t OUT
mes ulien
ct with a C
:"
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IL..... A
'•nm,
m - jaw
f'si - ^ i A"
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aft 1
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Leading
Flayer, Team
T ■-
onfercnce Scorers -
TD PAT TP
■ *'
“Whi
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*% *
•wf
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/
Borge
iPAl
1
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FOR
room
from
Wi i«l
Plant
li.‘
Bedri
I, , SpotovielH of Pdts
up veteran ends, W ilbur
b tnt-i AAU wrestling
n at Iowa, and Harry
11: are guards At
i. i ten living Joe Aleskus,
, h, pound center of
>hto Stale.
i , 22 men on the squad
t j- *n complement ot
, -m. , ,o-.- ehpibh- candidates
, an-l' stationed *»t
.vlaiihat (an Heaeh.
\ j, ;:11 -, t< :ter i- Kieut .Tack
j ,t . •- lake-- time out
. . n, p |.i\y -it a 1 training pr<>-
atn t*» do •••. (m ything but carry
k water
: . . p\,v-i (i •*an d caits itself the
. i..... i ,: i. > inti ’ .it t i \ e arm 1 *1
the services.
I* !,, i ■ i i.i'.l team is operating
,to thaf tradition
*
lie X »
w. c
1.
t
I
LOW AVERAGE
ms§
Thr best
always the better buy!
AMARILLO COCACO
, ? TH£ C CA CC.* COMPANY BY
A HO. T L ING COMPANY
OUR BOARDING HOUSE with MAJOR HCOPLE
OUT OUR WAY
By WILLIAMS
CTE
EiAO ’.t W5.TU Cy1 T-o - ,
•PIV -THE: PORCH , 8U7 'i JC-s -N w C';
PROJECT caL-E) F-CP a bn.' 7LRX V Dr
OP CPkR.OEfSTEP.^/-^ “‘u'-SE.O- y
FEB-TiLE. MiNiO \N*S—_
PLfNNiTO RAISE- TAEr ' pJ;
Funds! i
X NOT t /
7N\i
LE-T TtAt'i
iB V^tOE CPE?
. BETWEEN n'C
ip TrA/XT POt
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/
Hen
pa>
Beware Coughs
from coirmon colds
That Hang On
LSU Gridders Take
Ten Day Junket
\.T WSLErD
- - >S~ -T-' » V Ol
Y?
wiuWon relieves pr<
‘t gorfr right to in* *
» to help \oom t
uden pldeirm end
Jif und he»l re*
broorhiel m u c o
Tell your druggie'
• of rreornuUa>r. *
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Phillips, J. C. Borger Daily Herald (Borger, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 292, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 28, 1942, newspaper, October 28, 1942; Borger, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth737372/m1/4/: accessed April 28, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Hutchinson County Library, Borger Branch.