Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 95, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 3, 1942 Page: 4 of 10
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85 per cent
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But the question of whether a
amians.’’
was still
unanswered—re-
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3—(/P>—Rev poetry, second
Pilgrim Holiness Church
4
river
in-
I'
k
Make Our
and Luther Scarborough, T. W. C
GROCERY & MARKET
J
clash.
Associated
f
late
of
HELPY-SELFY
FREE
FREE
DELIVERY!
DELIVERY!
Phones
Phones
Frank
1133
1133
1153
1153
r
2
15c
LETTUCE
Heads
t
20c
CRANBERRIES
Lb.
29c
ORANGES
2
Doz.
16c
SOUSE MEAT
65c
APPLES
19
BEEF ROAST
t
gasoline “but
Lbs.
19c
27c
22c
PICKLES
PORK CHOPS
35c
■M
31c
10
POTATOES
PORK ROAST
Lhs.
GRAPEFRUIT
29c
Jt ■
SYRUP
21c
a*
FISH
35c
23c
PINTO BEANS
3
3
Lbs. ...
4
Ta
OYSTERS
ENGLISH PEAS
19c
45c
3
27c
MILK
21c
NO
18<
✓
,• 'Mr-
19c
8c
SARDINES
15c
CORN
2
23c
10c
SPAGHETTI
I.
Comet Rice, 2 jbg. ..
24c
Mother’s Oat*, large pkg
30c
31c
L
Better Say Kotex—Better for
you
Welch
e
ti
GRAPEJUICE
<■
46c
I
.. 25e
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ft
1
4
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WMll
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Testimony Heard
In District Court
SARDINES
CLOTHES PINS
Nazis Rushed to
Africa Quickly.
Formed Units
< oniv
hi T.
Three Stand Out
As Yard Gainers
For Grid Season
T. C, Debaters
Win Sweepstakes
Cooking, Rome
Beauty
Premier
Tenderloin, Can
Medium.
Pint
Granulated Soap
Large
Pkg.
White
Swan
California
Iceburg
Texax
Juicy
No. 1
Red McClure
Concho Brand, Sour
Or Dill, Quart
Texan Seedlenn
Dozen
Tomato Sauce
Oval Can
Crystal White,
Cream of Cotton, 26 Oz.
Per
Lb.
Per
Lb.
Per
Lb.
30 In
Package
Do your trading wltn Demon in
stltuttOM
Tall
Cans
Per
Lb.
Per
Lb.
Pet
Lb.
NO. 2
CANS
Enriched
With
Dextrose
3
3
2
0
0
4
0
4
2
0
2
0
0
0
4
«
4
8
0
e
c
3
8
2
0
BE
TQ
Per
Lb.
Nu Crest
NO. 2}
CAN
all i.iakea of typewriters.
Full line of Office
Supplies
DENTON
TYPEWRITER
EXCHANGE
South Side of Square
WE RENT
and REPAIR
W liming five out of eight troplUe,.
and piling up 122 points to win
’I \i
\ ’ I
Per
Lb.
Per
Lb.
Per
Lb.
L . .
3-Minute Oats, 1g I
I KLEENEX
HOG LARD
Bring Your Pail,
Lb.
FT
■t..
I
Premier Long
Lb. Pkg
FRANCIS M. CRADDOCK i
GROCERY & MARKET
Phone 71-212
-y-
X
/W1
your headquarters for
HNE FOODS
BRANDED BEEF STEAK
£ ..........................................39c
? .....8 .......to1 ' Vil —aieaji. w
• Vf* *
Del Monte, Early
Garden, No. 2 Can
Soft, absorbent fecial
tissues in white, peach,
(rose or orchid.
? I
UPkga.
m tlmtew. J5c
Nu Crest
I
55c
PURE PORK SAUSAGE
Decker lowana, Aftfe u
Pure Pork VmC
3 BOW TO T. V. C. RAMS
t LEADING FAST GAME FOR
£ QUARTERS; SCORE 44-38
six potato an the Denton side,
i at the T. W- Q . high scorer
wan
it TV
1 10
1
4
2
3
3
1
By KENNETH L. DIXON
WASHINGTON, Dec. 3. —(JP>~
Salary stablHxation experts of the
Treasury’s Bureau of Internal Rev-
enue scattered to the storm cellars
today—Just ope Jump aiyad of an
army of white collar workers shout-
ing “H*y. what about me?”
Voluminous but somewhat vague
details of a program planned to
prevent most raises and hold all
salaries to 825.000 net a year, or a
BEEF SHORT RIBS
21c
WISCONSIN CHEESE
35c
GR
GREE1
Robert B
treated
Mr. al
and datJ
Messrs a
and Irvi
Messrs
pin. Ray
ii nd JohJ
Mr and
Mr in
Fort Wd
W A H
Mr an
moved tri
11
CMSPQ$AIL€ TISSUES,^-
2®
Today’s guest star:
Romney Wheeler.
Press: "If Bill Terry takes over the
Phils, the government s travel cur-
tailment won’t bother him at all
The Phils weren’t going any-
where, anyway."
About him were shell-
la, roofless houses and
an occasional charred German ve-
hicle. providing a quiet contrast to
the scene 20 miles down the road
where a new battle was raging
A French couple struggled over
the repaired bridge with some bur-
den between them, apparently re-
turned to the home they had aban-
doned hurriedly when the Germans
decided to make a batUefield of this
town
Slightly to the north of this area
American light tanks and British
tanks clashed with German arm-
ored units on the road between
Beja and Mateur. Nineteen Ger-
man tanks were destroyed, includ-
ing seven of the Mark IV models,
while Allied losses were five Amer-
ican and two British tanks
each | whan live foe held tiw point against
I the Allied advance
, A lone Arab sat disconsolately in
it a doorway flicking at flies with a
open-minded" on light stick. ZJ
such matters as charitable con tri- pocked walls.
■#/ "
GRACE-BARROW CHEVROLET
COMPANY
snnouncM its appointment
Denton Headquarters
of the
I VICTORY SERVICE LEAGUE
regulate all salaries over 35.000 net
a year, plus those under that fig-
ure when paid to non-farm unor-
ganized administrative, executive
and professional workers.
Last night, the bureau announced
the details, outlining definitions
and broad terms of the program
In a 21-page, single-spaced type-
written report
Questions Unanswered
But as Joe searched it vainly for
the solution to his specific problem,
a Treasury spokesman admitted
“There are thousands of questions
which remain unanswered ”
While the new regulations indi-
cated that there are many ways by
which salary increases may be giv-
en, the bureau stressed that most
of them must be approved by the
internal revenue commissioner—
through one of the regional stabili-
zation offices—or both employer
and employe may risk a 81000 fine
or a year's imprisonment
Raises may be given without the
commissioner’s approval
Individual promotion or reclassifi-
cation, individual merit increases,
length of service (under an estab-
lished plan), operation of a trainee
system, or "such other reasons or
Free throws missed: T. W a—
Fortenberry 2, Parham 4. Cotton 2,
Barber. McFathen 2. North Texas
—Lane 2. Collins. Beggs
By ARNOLD DERLIT7K1
CHICAGO. Dec. 3.—0P>—Tlve 1942
collegiate football season's most
proficient Individuals when it came
to making a football produce yard-
• age were Frankie Sirikwich of Geor-
iHa Rnrtnlnh fT.ittl* Flnr I Mnhl^v
GOVERNMENT USE
I’:
A new national organi-
sation of American car
< and truck owners who
are united to “save
the wheels that serve "
America.” ’ ’
buttons, insurance premiums and
fixed obligations, giving each
individual treatment.
TRAVEL TO 1
RESTRICTED
BOWL CONTESTS
V.....' -
BRING YOVR
FAMILY LAUNDRY
to your
Steam Waahateria
Save time and money.
Free parking. Phone 31.
Eaat Side Cleanera
. AND BRING
NERVATION IN-
-~r.........-- -— -■
■7X7^. y;.
CURED HAM
End Slices
Lb.
offered an odd sight from the dis-
tance but It enabled even the heav-
iest equipment to roll through the
town on the heels of the Germans
Within the town today only a few
British and French soldiers went
about their duties amid the rubble
caused by the concentrated shell-
The De
U W m
a program
national
posed of
Jenison.
Patchell
i Ray of
Teachers
Stra.**glc
Fronts ’
i'wo 11
bers gavl
cent meel
Jessie H
coinmlttel
the meed
New Yorl
while thil
the Newl
which wl
indudingl
Kaiser, al
gressworrl
Claire bI
M l .ss Fl
ternatlonl
which sll
Ington. I
were Mrl
CharlottJ
Hever ail
meeting I
Hall. I
VEAL CUTLETS
Armour’s Star
Lb
i th. VSL
ar. off wring
y®« join
. . . m order to help you help your country.
^OME IN TODAY FOR YOUR FREE MEMBER-
IP CARD AND CAR EMBLE
)UR CAR IN FOR A FREECQ1
More Confusion
As Regulations
Issued on Salaries
Full-O-Pep Feed
Comtete line of Poultry
and Stock Feed, Poultry
Sulies, Garden Tools,
Fertilizers. New Nortex
' Seed, Oat* and other
, Field and Garden Seeds.
Phone 62
The Seed House
Cor. Bell & E. McKinney
_ If it’s any consolation, cutting
followers must be discouraged” be- Joe’s salary appeared to be Just as
-------- ------■ -i.-j „ big a question and due for identical
I treatment.
, Under terms of the anti-inflation
program outlined by President
___ i Roosevelt and Economic Director
it customarily drew 102,000 specta- i James F Byrnes, the bureaujnust
tors, to the Navy’s field and played
before 10,700 residents of Annapolis.
Earl B. Smyth of the Cotton
Bowl Association, James K Ing-
ham of the Tourney of Roses. Dr.
R. B Homan. Jr., of the Sun Bowl,
and Joseph David, president of the
Sugar Bowl group, all responded in
words similar to those of Dooly.
“The Sugar Bowl people have
done no out-Of-town ticket selling’
or advertising." declared David.
"Reservations indicate our Cotton
Bowl crowd will come from with-
in a 100-mlle radius of Dallas." re-
plied Smyth
Although Eastman did not define
the term "long distance travel" nei-
ther did he indicate that the ODT
wanted ticket sales restricted to the
residents of the cities in which the
games would be played, as was
done in last Saturday's Army-Navy
By WUXI AM B. KING
MEDJEZ-EL-BAB, With Allied
Forces On The Tunisian Battle-
front, Nov 27—(Delayed)——Al-
lied officers reported today that
papers taken from captured Ger-
mans indicated that much of the
force thrown into Tunisia had been
drawn from supply troops, the Pio-
neer Corjis and other miscellaneous
categories quickly formed into in-
fantry units.
This neat white village, which
dates from the days of Hannibal,
lay in deserted ruins as the force
of the Allied drive against the Axis
swept closer to Tunis,
Infantrymen of the British First
Army supported by United States
forces pressed into this keypoint
last night to find that the Ger-
mans had fled
Our forces pressed on in pursuit,
making contact with the foe again
at Tebourba <20 miles west of Tu-
nis and 35 miles south of Bizerte)
where the drive toward the sea was
held up momentarily by a counter- j
attack Into the town by a small
group of German tanks.
The Germans fleeing from Med-
jez-El-Bab blew a gaping hole in I
the ancient Romaic bridge spanning
Oued Medjerda <a river) in an ef- |
fort to slow the advance of the i
only for British infantry — but engineers1
made repairs in a single night with i
steel and timber
Bridge Repaired
The modern patch between the I
graceful arches of the stone bridge |
America’* car* and
trucks must be cons^f-V-
•A if America is to b.
WMarwd. You cm hdlp your country by joining this
I , national alliance of motorists who ar. ptaiging
conservation for Victory.” Evmy motorist is
•Uglbl. and b cordially invited to join
Tiwr. is no charge, of course And ty. ai
'13.
1
By I
Miss Na
w«s presei
at the Ten
evening
< oininendf
grain and
additiitial
made cone
Hee of sin
nage. for
eVer a si
song H
languages
Miss Lu
self an al
out the p
The pre
famous ci
Purcell’s ‘
was follmi
' OIIOH.MI I,
herds " J
century It
by Sorro’
book ol A
the first
<l’:olol ;u VI
ojH-ratic r
Hie se<
four song
turv song
were "/
Mausfall
gcnhelf'.
War's, in
iu-:ir enou
< nil lire
The thl
■ oi.sisteil <
from Tse
Maid of (
e<i bv i
Non, Imt
:<m<. I om
The las
assorted |
first was
of the lea
Randall
was by t
ixio-r. (Ii
< '' lest lai
mimbei s
K i ii ka ,u
oiik- H.i
Mis- I.li
■ in < i .tilt
I ol t-s ( i
flolll the
IO »s S
i untie
Quart ....
cause of the war and cited the re- j big a question and due for identical
cent Army-Navy game as an exam-
ple
The service school clash was
shifted from Philadelphia, where
Page Mr Webster:
In case you’ve been curious about
balata since this talk has come up
about using it for the cores of base-
balls. researches show it’s a gum de-
rived from the milky Juice of the
bully tree imimusops globosa) which
grows in Central America and the
West Indies. The Encyclopedia
Brittanlca says ik's "really an In-
ferior form of gutta percha . .
Last we heard of it, someone had
___ ... Just discovered it could be used for
Officials: Doc Hays. North Texas padding airplane ooqkpits and it
_j . ...k— k nr w r> Thad been put on the priority list. .
It ought to fill the bill, though, as
National League Prexy Ford Frick
explains: "We don't want a Jack-
rabbit ball because we may have
many old men on the field and we
don’t want them to look silly ”
A. uhde
Denton
...... ............... NW""
KOTEX 12’s
i ,-r •' * »-
Regular • Junior • Super
Kotex is msde ia
... sp comfortable
you scarcely know
yow’ra waertag it.
2PACKAGES
AUSTIN. Doc. 3—op>—Secretary
of State William J. Lawson today
suggested to Rubber Administrator
William M Jeffers that the Potter
County rattonin* board's refusal
to give supplemental gasoline to
1 government workers might spread
, over the west "unlees the severity
in regulations is immediately mod-
I ified.”
In a telegram Lawson. Charimai
( of the State Government Transpor-
1 tatton Committee, said he apprecia-
ted Jeffers' statement that travel-
ing salesmen will receive additional
gasoline “but they already are re-
ceiving B books you mention.”
"This covers but one point in
■ the situation here." said Lawson.
| “the average Citiaen, supporting a
family, paying taxes and purchaa-
: Ing war bonds being the principal
JI victim.
2 11
3 13
4
3
3
2
0
fg ft pl tp
4 *
5
1
2
.... 2
2
0
North Texas
[S with Fort Worth Ums of
_______
o'clock Friday and Saturday even- to tread
Ings.
Ml
Ms •• ■< • - - ~
Sb&ffvw !■ ......■"■■■ 1.1 !'.<(<
circumstances as may be prescribed
In rulings or regulations promulgat-
ed by the conunlMtoner from time
to time.”
And. even in those cases, tire
possibility of varying definitions of
the terms Involved made observers
question whether many employers
would risk un-approved raises un-
til specific rulings clarified c.;" ’
case.
Concerning the 825,000-net limi-
tation. the bureau Indicated i* '
would remain
STORAGE
OF ALL KINDS
HAULING
Dwton Transfer ft
21<
FRESH PORK LIVER
21<
SUMMER SAUSAGE
J -23<
SWIFT BRICK CHILI
Branded,
I*- -......... .........4-----U-gaC
APRICOTS
WASHRTH
Bex 8 sere
North Texas Eagles.
Player fg ft ft tp
Menefee 14 18
Collins 3
Eason ---------------------- 2
Lane 3
Hopkins 0
Beggs 3
Carley —♦... 1
J^rlce 0
- • ._£■» ' gi'' -AJ ’’TIT"-** '*’
• . j. '•
i i nu,.1 ii ijiir-*—~
[ATTERON
ORTSAND
SPORTSMEN
Um
I of tbs T. W. Q-. high 1
„ „J Tuesday night tussle,
dismissed in the last minute t
third quarter after accumulating
four fouls.
Next on the Eagle menu is the
Horned Frog five from Fort Worth
Against the Texas Christian feds,
the Eagles will have _• chance to
even things
teams. The I
at Harriss gym
Testimony by the state's wit-
nesses w as continuing in District
Court Thursday afternoon in the
I case of Thaxton T Prigmore.charg-
! ed with rape.
tear* bad one player to 1 'The testimony late Thursday
I game on fouls J B Lane ! morning, after members of the
Eagles was dlwnlsssd early , Jury had been selected from a
outth quarter after playing I special venire. Jury selection began
bang-up defensive game and tai- shortly before noon Wednesday.
. ■ ■ . i The defendant pleaded not guilty.
Jurors selected were Dewey Herd.
i W M Fincher. E. E Hart, Leroy
I Jones. W. C Underwood, Lucius
Cox. Clarence Slater, Roy Spinks.
I Paul Cluck. Charlie Cole.
Stockard and J O. Holley
may’deny
GASOLINE FOR
OFFICIALS RENAMED
HOLINESS CMVKCH
HILLSBORO. Dec 1
T. C. Ingram of Plainview was re-
named superintendent and Rev.
John Abla, secretary, at the con-
cluding session here of the annual
meeting of the Texas -district of the
gia, Rudolph (Little Doc) Mobley
of Hardin-Simmons, and Ray Ev-
ans of Kansas
Slnkwich. in accounting for 2,187
yards, became the first player in
modern history to paas the 2.000
mark in total offense (passing and
rushing) Mobley's 1.281 yards by
rushing alone was another modern
record, while Evans became the sec-
ond man ever to complete more
than 100 forward passes Evans fin-
ished with 101, which is 13 short I
of the record established last year
by Bud Schwenk of Washington |
University. 8t Louis.
The Nation’s No 1 punter among i
those kicking 30 or more times was
Bobby Cifers of Tennessee with a 1
4289 yard average. Closely behind I
came North Carolina State's Art
Faircloth with 42.2.
A pass receiving champion re- I
malned to be settled between Cul-
len Rogen of Texas A. and M. and |
Fred Salem of Texas Mines Each
had caught 98, Rogers gaining 417
yards and Salem 401 However, one
of Texas Mines games had not been
reported and Rogers still lias one
game to play, the American Foot-
ball Statistical Bureau commented
in releasing today’s tabulations
New Marks. Others Tied
In addition to the new marks by
Slnkwich (who bettered the 1528
total by Schwenk in 1941) and
Mobley (who topped Colorado
Whiner White's 1,121 tote! in 1937).
two other records were tied
P*!l Dutton of Pittsburgh equalled
the 200 ball carrying attempts Sink-
wich set last year in winning rush-
ing honors. However. Bob Kennedy
of Washington State needs to carry
the ball,only seven times against
the Itatas Aggies this week-to boost
his tetal to 310 and a new record. "
.The other figure tied was that
of 18 touchdown passes by Colum-
bia’s Paul Oovemali. Davey CBriefi
ot Texas Christian completed the
same number in 1937
Among the statistical oddities was
the fact that Tulsa, while carrying
off team punting honors, failed to
'pfece a man among the Individual
leaders. The statistical bureau
pointed out that this was because
none of Tulsa’s kickers punted the
neceeeary 30 times. However. Glenn
Dohte. with M of his team's M
punts, had the extremely high av-
erage of 48.3 yards.
—-
r
Texas Wesleyan. . .
Flayer (
Parham ------------~..x....
Fortenberry «...-----
Cotton ....
Barber
McFathers -----------------
Phillips
Aiken
Half time score:
17. T. W C. 16
33<
MIXED SAUSAGE
!2i<
FISH
HUGH FULLERTON JR.
' YORK. Dec 3.-<*•)-Since
r— w— the end of the baseball season, a
minute of the tot of sports writers—including this
one—have - been tossing off ideas
about how the major leagues might
operate in 1943 . The answer from
the magnates meeting tn Chicago
seems tar be: **We ain’t having any.
thanks.” . . . Whether they're vic-
tims of Ingrained disinclination to
their ways or merely hesl-
to rush in where angels fear
1 is more than we can say
right now, but appaidfftiy there’s
no intention of trying out any new
plans until all the old ones have
failed. Latest suggestions we've
seen in the press were to cut down
travel to two long trips by holding
six-game series and for the club
owners U> pool tiielr interests and
players to form one ten-club league,
with the profits, if any, being shar-
ed equally. . . Which Just gives you
an idea Why those guys spend so
much time talking and then don't
do anything
AMONG SICK
Calvin Lynch, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Bdwin Lynch. 808 Anna
Sareet, has been returned from a
Dallas hospital where he underwent
medical treatment and observation
and to rooting well at his home
where he to able to receive visitors
ltrs. Hennr Caddell 833 Avenue
nt minor surgery at the
ipital Thursday.
ftoma a si a iigte.eiLW h" *
33c
BOILING BACON
22«^B|
43c^
By HAROLD CLAASSEN .
NEW YORK, Dec. 3.—0P>—The
Office of Defense Transportation
in Washington asked the sponsors
of Ute various N?w Year’s Day
football bowl games to restrict
travel to the contests—and found
the grid officials already practicing
the suggestion.
"We have planned all along to
dispose of all our tickets in Flor-
ida," declared Oscar E Dooly Jr.
of the Orange Bowl group. “Ap- , ..
proximately 85 per cent of the basic gross of t67,300. were issued
tickets already sold went to Ml-1 after weeks of waiting
amians.” I C"-* **"-
In his telegrams to the partici- lot of citizens named Joe will get
pa.tlng schools and the sponsors of raises was still unanswered—re-
the Jan 1 games. Joseph B. East- malnihg up to the bureau’s regional
man of the ODT said that "long offices to settle, case by case
distance travel of fans and ’ team U it’s any consolation, cutting
The Orange, largest
South Africa, has a length of 1,300
miles, almost traversing the con-
tinet.
lllvlr ANY
JARTWU OF THE NATIONAL
SERVICE LEAGUE
W1*1'* ....................
SCRAP late tM Scrap!
uy viir cunurmi ricu msvs#- - — J., MnHh w
Ing by Allied guns during the hours, sweepstakes trophy North Tex-
- .—->as State debaters carried off first
place at the debate tournament tn
Ada. Ok., Friday and Saturday
N T. S. T. C. debate teams scor-
ing first were mixed team division
James Prothro, Plaguemine La .
and Miss Betty Jo Blakemore. Den-
ison, senior women's division
Misses Kuth Nell Whitaker, Tuba,
Ok and Mary Frances Harris.
Wichita Falls; Junior womens divi-
sion; Misses Hilda Haynes, Athens,
and Elizabeth Scull. Sherman
Second places were given the ju-
nior women’s team, Misses Mary
Ann Duggan, Dallas, Anita Cole.
Waxahachie; and the senior mens
team. Henry Amlin, Denton, and
W. A Duggan "Dallas; while an-
other junior womens team, Misses
Vi Marie Buster. Denton, and Jo -
Turney. Kaufman, won third t
Individual winners were Mis)
Scull, first in women's radio, sec-
ond in after dinner speaking; Miss
Haynes,/ first in women's poetry^
third in women's oratory; Miss)
Blakemore, first in women’s extern-,
pore, second in women's oratory,I
Miss Buster, second in women'll
1 in women's radio!
speaking. Miss Harris, second ini
women's extempore; Miss Turneyj
third in women's poetry; Misa
Whitaker, third in women s radio J
Henry Amlin, third in man extern]
pore, and James Prothro, first ii
men's oratory, first in after dinne
speaking, second in men's poetry.
WOMAN SHOT IN EFFORT TO
STOP AUTOMOBILE
SWEETWATER. Dec. 3—(IP)—
Mrs Rose Trislar is in a serious
condition frem a bullet wound suf-
fered wnar. a traffic policeman
sought to halt her automobile,
Police Chief J A. Bland said.
m of Texas Wesleyan to---
■ (tectoton in the second meet*
Of the two cage fives.
(tar tte Mgthodtota from Fort
rtb had (feensd the scoring for
defensive I
iter to lead H points
Jnst the Fort Warth aqusd’s 18.
through the third quarter Eagle
wards scored almost at will and
) locals ware leading 31 to 23 at
the beginning of the final quarter.
Bans an Rampage
Then a volley of fire from the
Meme during the last quarter scor-
ed the Eagles and the towering
Port Worth feds passed up the
■ogles with only, five minutes to
play. Eacle ecoring was stopped
when the Ram quintet began
guarding their opponents all over
the court The fast break of the
■ Baglea woe locked up for the night
and the taller, more experleiced
■ano edged ahead.
Fight from the Eagles was carried
until the last second, and they
stlU routed lor points. Ross Col- i
“— fast Eagle forward, counted
4 points and Other Hquadmen
tered 3 more points, but the
tagans scored twice in the dos- I
minutes to take 4 points and
r second victory over the Eagles.
Bpectacuter Ptaying
Worries gym witnessed one of its
most spirited ball games in the
Wednesday tilt, which was high-
lighted by spectacular playing..
Bhining tor the Eagles was Ros-s
OoUim, who last year won recog- |
nttton in Lone Star Conference
.play. Last night Collins broke
through to score 10 pointe and lead
Eagle scoring. High point man
fcr the evening was Hardy Forten-
berry of T. W. C., who totaled 13
pointe while his team mate Parham
pounded the backboard to count 11
points. -------
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Edwards, Robert J. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 95, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 3, 1942, newspaper, December 3, 1942; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1312858/m1/4/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Denton Public Library.