Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 60, Ed. 1 Monday, May 28, 1934 Page: 4 of 12
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HENDERSON DAILY NEWS, HENDERSON, TEXAS
MONDAY AFTERNOON, MAY 28,1934
Oilers Play Governors in Tyler Tonight
Here’s How!
CHALLENGER
LEAD FROM N, Y.
r
of
Chicago,
bin-
♦
4
i
I
the
4
'J
<s>
3
Hr
BARNEY ROSS
n-
ENGLISH SPORTSWRITERS AGREE
TODAY’S SPORT PAR/ DE
I
&
DA PREEM WILL LICK MAXIE BAER
Tomlin, lb ..
Pari.
2 10 24 10
WHERE THEY FLAY TODAY
Pal.
4
Ago Today
and
Read News Want Ads and save.
To Wear That
Tire Down ....
<$>
of the series.
**
I
2
1
STILE! PITCHES ~
STEERS TO TOP
Tom Estell Allows Only 3 Hits;
Lang Gives 5
J’Ville Wins Opener But Pals
Put on Rally to Take Last
HUMBLE WINS FROM
SHELL IN SLUGFEST
Defeat Lowly Paris Nine by
Count 13-4 and 4-3
The "G-3" offers you the greatest tire
today at no increased price.
BASEBALL WITH
BOXCAR FIGURES
Henderson Loses Sec-
ond of Series Sun.;
Last Tilt Tonight
1
4
2
0
2
3
1
2
0
0
0
1
0
0
2
0
3
2
1
T oday
record 71
2
2
2
0
1
0
0
1
3
1
1
9
1
1
3
2
0
6
9
0
0
0
0
1
3
0
0
0
0
0
3
1
Team—
Pittsburgh
St. Louis
Chicago
New York
Boston
Brooklyn
Philadelphia
Cincinnati
May 28
his
8
9
C
2
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
6
5
0
0
2
2
5
SS .... 4
5
4
4
3
3
4
1
2
2
2
0
0
0
0
2
1
1
3
1
2
2
3
1
6
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
over thg. Queen’s, Valley links, at
Kfcw -Gardens LLl.
0
0
1
2
1
3 2
1
1
0
1
0
0
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
In the National league, the Car-
dinals replaced the Cubs at second
position by whipping the Phillies,
5 to 2, in 10 Innings. Dizzy Dean
limited the Phils to eight scattered
hits.
, 1 HANDS IN
BODY R>R
PileW.
i
0
0
0
1
0
0
3
0
3
4
1
0
1
7
0
1
6
1
1
2
0
2
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
1
2
3
1
1
1
1
1
0
0
4
0
2
0
3
0
0
0
1
Baseball . . . .
CALENDAR
Pct
.568
.561
.548
.524
.488
.447
.439
.429
Team—
Jacksonville
Henderson .
Tyler
Longview
Palestine
Paris
Major League
HEROES
o
i
o1
0
0
1
0
0
0
1
PAUL ROGERS TIRE STORE
Call 527 HON. Main
Pct
600
.588
.529
.528
.500
.441
.441
.375
3
3
4
3
0
2
3
5
4
Pct
.645
.618
.595
.571
.500
.455
.355
.226
L
12
14
15
IS
19
21
Pct
.636
.588
.531
.455
4 2.4
.364
L
16
18
19
20
21
21
23
24
ser and Summers.
EXPORTERRS TAME
GALVESTON 6 TO 5
CANNIBALS CAPTURE
DOUBLE BILL SUNDAY
____
AB K II PO A E
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
AB R II PO A E
1
3
3
2
1
i,... ft 1 1
28 (UP) —
>rs, calculated
/ Jua^-----,—
* Expected gate—$285,
n. Division of receipt®
FELINES DEFEATED
BY INDIANS, 6-1
INDIANS WRE ST H.L. HUNT WINS HARD
TILT FROM SINCLAIR
By United Press
Dizzy Dean, Cardinals—Limited
Phils to eight hits and drove out
winning run with homer in 10th.
ii '..
2 10
2
3
2
0
2
1
1
2
< en’s L&%^JalUkUbaucer.
one < ‘
boxing history.
into t
Max Schmeling.
Bruce Campbell, Browns — A
homer with bases loaded.
in
and
j , row
ft
Walter Johnson’s Fast-
Steppers Down A s
Sunday, 7 to 6
o
1
2
1
2 10
0
9
1
0
0
Shell
Humble 100 301 82x—15
Runs batted In—Wilson 4,
rymple 2, Orr, Cole, Moore
Totals .... 41 15 20 27
103 000 600—10
9
6
Olsen;
000 000 000—0
000 001 Otx——5
Second Game
P«l» 001 C|0 03—4
Jex -100 000 00—1
Batteries: Byram
Williams and Rabe.
Washington downed the White
Sox, 9 to 6, pounding Jones and
Tietje for 14 hits, some of which
were clustered for three runs in the
third and four in the sixth.
Judge#—To
de by New York
Totals .... 35
TYLER
Farrell, lb ft
Rios, 2b _.. 4
Gilbert, rf 3
Bell, If 5
Sanguinet, cf .... 2
L. Bassett, 3b .... 5
Vaughn, ss ft
Carter, c 5
Tuero, p 5
Totals .. . 27
SINCLAIR
Bounds, 2b 4
Higgins, ss 3
Stafford, cf 3
Harris, cf 1
Davis, rf 3
Grant, lb 3
Hurler, If 3
Woods, 3b 3
Turk, c 3
Lang, p 3
round*.or less bep
60,000 fans in Madts
Chicago was blanked, 5 to 0, by
the Braves. Huck Betts allowed
eight scattered safeties, while his
mates garnered nine off Bush and
Malone.
These were the orders. They had to ba
followed out. They were looking for a weak-
n^uJHVthe GOODYEAR “G-3” . . . but try as
1W1M as they could, the test drivers couldn't
find a weakness.
TOMM’PHAUL
SLATED TO HURL
8 1
Ona Year Ago Today
Jack Dempsey sparred a round
with Max Baer as the latter went
training for his bout with
tennis varsity is < .' ’ ”
Davey Jones of New York.
JAX AND PALS SPLIT
DOUBLE HEADER SUN.
Age
Height
Weight
Reach
Chest
Chest Expanded
Waist
Thigh
Calf
Ankle
Biceps
Forearm
Wrist
Fist
Leading Pittsburgh trounced the
Giants, 7 to 3, behind Red Lucas’s
five-hit pitching.
Brooklyn blanked Cincinnati, 5
to 0, Van Mungo limiting the Red
Sox to six hits.
is
It”
- > .
IW .•
ws
ww
Boston remained tn a tie with
the A’s for sixth place: when the
Red Sox lost to Detroit, 9 to 2.
The Tigers collected 12 hits off
Rhodes and Pennock.
“Find Some Way
hits in seven trips each!
Score by innings:
First Game
Lon'w ...031 400 140—13 18
r_ri» ... 000 010 300— 4 10 <
Batteries: Harris and Warren;
NEW YORK, May 28 (UP)—Here’s how McLarnin
and Ross stack up physically:
McLARNIN
26 1-2 years
5 ft. 6 in.
145 pounds
68 in.
36 in.
40 in.
31 in.
19 in.
14 1-2 in.
9 in.
13 1-2 in.
10 1-2 ip.
7 in. T
12 in.
GALVESTON, May 28 — The
hustling Beaumont Exporters con-
tinued their winning ways here
Sunday defeating the Galveston
Pirates by count of 6 to 5.
Score by innings:
Mm’nt 001 003 020—6 10 1
Gal ... 000 013 001—6 13 C
Batteries-’ Sullivan, McLaughlin
and Lorbecr; Newman, Hubbell,
Gumbert and McAdams, Linton.
GOLF
By Art Kranz
0
0
1
1
0
0 _ __
1 SUX^U.”’16,' New York 7.
0
0
0
ROSS
24 1-2 years
5 ft. 6 1-2 in.
137 pounds
67 in.
36 1-2 in.
38 3-1 in.
29 1-2 in.
18 in.
13 1-2 in.
9 in.
12 in.
11 in.
6 3-4 in.
11 in.
1 3 24 10
010 000 000—1
1
AB R H PO A E
1
1
0
0
0
4
1
0
1
Dai-
Bed-
ford 2, Mustalkls, Hart 9, Tate 1,
Calvard, Payne 4, Lyter, Wight 2.
Two base hits—Tomlin, Stock-
man, Orr, Dalrymple. Three Base
Hit#—Payne, Dalrymple. Home
run—Wilson. Stolen bases- Tate,
Wight, Frey. Sacrifice Hits Moore
Cole. Struck out—By Mustaikis 7,
Lyter 8, Hart 3, Wilder 1. Hit by
pitcher—By Hart (Riley). Winning
■pRchcr — Hart. Losing pitcher—
Lyter. Timo of Game -2 hours 15
minutes. Umpires: Wells and Tom-
lin.
Totals .... 29
Sinclair
Hunt 001 001 OOx—2
Summary: Stolen Bases —
Branch 1. Sacrifice Hits—Sands 1,
Higgins 1. Struck out—By Estell 2,
Lang 4. Base on Balls—Off Lang
2. Left on Bases Hunt 7, Sin-
clair 2.
PARIS, May 28—The Longview
Cannibals swept both ends of a
twin bill here Sunday with the
Paris Pirates, 13 to 4 and 4 to 3.
Warren and McElreath of the Can-
nibals lead the hitting with five
or America wins the Davis cup . . .
There are a dozen greyhound
tracks within ten miles of London
and they each draw five figure
crowds night after night . .. Cyril
Tolley, one of the longest bitten
in golf, uses a driver that weighs
less than the ones used by most
gal golfers . . . Golf balls with a
honey center are gaining popular-
ity here . . . Oxford track and
field athletes are limited to two
quarts of ale a day . . , a nephew
of John Massiefield, poet laureate,
is a candidate for the Oxford ten-
nis team . . . and the Cambridge
is captained by
Washington fl, Chicago 6.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Brooklyn 5, Cincinnati 0.
Boston 5, Chicago 0.
Pittsburgh 7, New York 3.
St. Louis 5, Philadelphia 2 (ten
innings).
WEST DIXIE LEAGUE
Jacksonville 9-1, Palestine 5-4.
Tyler 11, Henderson 2.
Longview 13-4, Paris 4-3.
STANDINGS
AB R H PO A E
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
TEXAS LEAGUE
Dallas 4, Tulsa 1.
Oklahoma City 6, Fort Worth 1.
Houston 5, San Antonio 0.
Beaumont 6, Galveston 5.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Cleveland 7, Philadelphia 6.
Detroit 9, Boston 2.
Totals .... 42 10 12 24
HUMBLE
Frey, cf 6
Wilson, 2b 4
Dalrymple, ss .... ft
Orr, rf ft
Tomlin, lb ...... ft
Cole, 3b 4
Moore, c 4
Bedford, If 4
Mustalkls. p 3
Mart, p 2
L
11
13
15
15
16
18
20
24
WEST DIXIE LEAGUE
W
21
. 20
. 17
. 15
. 14
. 12
12
14
16
17
16
19
10
20
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W
20
21
22
20
16
15
. 11
7
ATTFNTmM .7 i Washington
1 1 I 1V1S -■ got ■«-stilt, bnritusc he was unn
Sport Fishermen—Como to
Johnson Bros. Ranch
on Caddo lake. .,
Reason Is Now Open
‘■•■ on Game Fish
Crappie and Baes are lifting
good.
Record catches are brought
la every day. Furnished cab-
las. twats, motors ,fuf|e^
minnows Good dining room.
For Reservations, Write or -
Phone
JKHUtoON BROS. RANCH
Phone 61-F8—Kamack, Tex.
TEXAS LEAGUE
Team— W
Tulsa ... ...................... 21
Dallas 23
San Antonio 23
Galveston 22
Beaumont 20
Okla. City 17 :
Houston .18 I
Fort Worth 18 I
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Team— W
Cleveland 18
New York ................ 20
Detroit 18
Washington .... 19
St. Louis 16
Boston 15
Philadelphia 15
Chicago 12
Tate, ss
Wight, 2b
Colvard, c
Payne, 3b
Riley, If .......I.t 2- O- 0 -• 0
Fuller, lb .’ ft
Lyter, p — 4
Horton, p 0
Wilder, p 1
one of-which was a homer.
'The box scorer
SHELL
■Dlloreto, rf 6
fftoCfttnail, cf 6
.... 4
... 4
6
Five Yaere Ago
Bobby Jones set a
DALLAS, May 28 — Southpaw
Fred Stiley turned in a great ex-
hibition of hurling in which he al-
lowed the league leading Tulsa
Oliers only four hits here Sunday,
while his Dallas mates chalked up
a 4 to 1 victory:
Score by innings:
Tulsa 000 000 100--1
Dallas .002 200 OOx—4
Batteries: Davis, Brown
Berger; Stiley and Funk.
ft
sjzl
DON’T REACH—IT’LL CAUSE
YOU TO MISS BALL
Before leaving t\e mashie-nib-
shots J waht to warn golfers
shots, I want to arn wgolfers
against reaching for the ball in
this stroke.
Reaching for the ball will pro-
duce a fiat swing. This must he
avoided when playing a short iron.
Reaching also will throw one off
balance, causing the player to fall
into the shot. This results in heel
ing the shot, hitting the ground be-
fore thft'ball, or missing the ball
entirely.
Keep hands close to the body,
Bobby Jones’ hands are so close
that at times they brush his
trousers In the downswing.
, ...4 •» ....
Barney Ross and Jimmy McLarnin Meet for Welter Title
HUSH CHAMP TO'
DEFENDCROWN
Odds, 7. to 5 for Me
Larnin; Expect 70,-
000 Crowd in Bowl
HOUSTON, May 1
Two capable outfielde:
to put the Houston Buffs in the
thick c." the pennant winning
fight, wi'.l ’-in the Buffs some-
time this k, President Fred
Ankenman an 'need here yes-
terday.
The two new cxots, whose
Hames will be annou::-?d later,
will replace “Coo Coo" Christen-
Ben, outfielder, who volmtarily
named himself on the retired list
because of injuries, and Jim
Moore, veteran outfielder, who has
a sprained ankle.
—------o------— •
The highway traveler for 1033
paid approximately 11 per cent of
all taxes from all sources in the
United States.
Helen Jacobs Wins
From Mary Hardwick
AUTEUIL, Farnce, May 28 —
(UP)—Helen Jacobs of California
American national champion, en-
tered the quarter finals of the
French hard court tennis cham-
pionships today by defeating Mary
Hardwick of Australia, 6-0, 6-1.
M----j---O--— ---
Do You A(Q,
’ PAGE FOUR
for the battle.
Grady Bassett is due to get
the slab call from Wray Querry,
Tyler skipper.
After the Tyler setto, Moulton
will spend a three-day visit in
Longview to be entertained by
I Ray Flashkamper's Dallas-own-
[ ed Cannibals, returning home on
I Friday.
----
stiles for the last of the serie?.
Mi.:e Tuero, veteran pitcher,
was on the slab for Tyler Sunday
and kept the Oilers at bay most
of the way, while his mates hit
two Henderson hurlers, Riley Cle-
ments and Manager Pat Moulton,
hard to score their big win. Al-
though the Oilers made ten hits
off Tuero’s slants they couldn’t
connect in the pinch while the
Govs stacked up six runs in the
first three innings to bag the
game.
Clements started for Henderson
and was hammered hard for four
innings before he went to the
showers in favor of the “Skipper”
<g,--------------------------------------------------------------
GEORGE BROWN SIGNS
George Brown, leading hitter
in the Dixie League last season
while patroling the outfield for
the Longview team has joined
the Henderson club and Will
make his debut tonight in Tyler.
Brown came to the Ollers as a
I free agent.
----
All told the Smith countyites gar-
nered 15 bingles off the two Oiler
hurlers.
Charley Gilbert, fleet-footed
Gov outfielder who set the Dixie
league afire last season while with
Baton Rouge’s championship nine,
was the batting hero of the day
with two circuit clouts and a two-
base blow in three trips to the
pan.
The box scor#:
HENDERSON ‘ “
Waldrip, cf . ..
Schleicher,
Jones, If
Bilgere, 2b
Powers, c ..........
Phelps, 3b
Miller, lb
Parker, rf
Clements, p
Moulton, p
HOUSTON, May 28- Veteran
*VlZ>^/iMW4V , V IJV.,--X uuiunii piv •
specU nt th<* University of Wiscon- George I ayne got his pitching
,..hnn; stride for the first time this year
here Sunday as Houston defeatoil
of “heart and aVke'd'for'a iuit.“'fhe' San Antonio 6 to 0 in the first
246-pound Irishman turned in hislK"™ s«r>es
11 Al it a gvinft no reason [ first game won by the Buffs in
for his withdrawal from the team. < six s<art<' .
He was readily reinstated by Codch Score by innings:
• Spears*
— .....<♦ «—;--r—
New York is the world's great,
. Mt port. 4 1,
I®
w
I'-
8 3
AB R II PO A E
1
3
4
2
1
2
1 10
1
0
0
victory.
Score by innings:
Firt Game
.000 000 032—5 10
032 030 lOx—fl 12
Batteries: McDonald Wood
Traweek and Olsen; Watkim ar.
Rabe.
4 0
7 1
and
> .. Tan . Year a., Ago Today
Babe'Rhth,"hfter enlisting as a
^private in the New York National
1 " *|*Guard, had to visit the quarter-
1 to
, . ... unable
i to get one big enough in New
York.
.' ALL’TWELL AT WISCONSIN
MAPLSON, Wix., Football pro-
JACKSONVILLE, May 28—The
Jacksonville Jax and the Palestine
Pals split a double header here
Sunday. The Jax won the first
tilt by slugging three Pal pitch-
ers hard, 9 to 5, while the visi-
tors scored three runs in the extra
eighth inning to tally up a 9 to 6
ARP, May 28 (Spl)—Veteran
Tom Estell had his spitballs cutting
capers here yesterday afternoon as
he bested Lefty Lang, former
Texas League hurler, In a pitch-
er’s due! with H. L. Hunt winning
a hard-fought battle from the Sin-
clalr-Pralrie nine in an Oil Belt
league tilt.
The Hunt hurler-manger had
plenty on his slants and allowed
the slugging Sinclair tribe only
three bingles, while his mates were
able to gaohir ' L--
Hargrove of F
TEXAS LEAGUE
Tulsa at Dallas, night game.
; Oklahoma City at Fort Worth.
.Boaumqnt at Galveston.
; San Antonio at Houston.
NATIONAL LEAGUS
Cincinnati at Brooklyn
Chlca^jQ at Boston.
■ Pittsburgh, at New York.
St. Louis at Philadelphia,
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Philadelphia at Cleveland.
„Ho»U^JrtrDet rol t.
USaW-X&'JCkt St. Louis.
at Chicago.
Aunrarmixif league
~3waYtnimt Jacksonville.
” Henderson at Tyler.
Longview at Parts.
EAST DIXIE LEAGUE
Pine Bluff at Greenville.
Shreveport at Jackson.
Baton Rouge at El Dorado.
HOUSTON BLANKS
MISSIONS SUNDAY
victories
home
against
The Yanks, staggering
through the west with blowsy hurl-
ing and lowered morale, lost eight
out of 11.
The Indians took the lead yes-
terday by nosing out the Athletics.
7 to 6, coming from behind after
the A’s clicked off five runs in the
first. Cleveland won the fifth when
Hale's homer provided the tying
run anil Trosky tripled and scored
the marginal tally on Pytak’s fly
I St. Louis crushed the Yanks. 16
to 7, after hammering Ruffing,
I Deshong and Smythe for 15 hits.
Campbell’s homer with the bases
| loaded featured the Brown’s eight-
run rally in the fourth.
! Ring at 7 to ft.
11 *
: JuJvltlrihM eight’po
• u. ■■ .<>—---
Houston Buffs to
Get Two Outfielders
Gus Suhr, Pirates—drove
four runs with two homers
single.
only five off Lhng.
fnt was the leading
slugger with three of their
glcs.
HUNT
Roberts, 2b 4
Fagan, ss 3
Surratt, rf 3
Wells, 3b 3
Estell, p 4
Branch, c 2
Dobbs, cf 3
Hargrove, lb .... 3
Sanos, If 2
By HENRY McLEMORE
LONDON, May 8 (UP)—Put-
ting the sports shot here and
there:
I haven’t found an English
sportswriter yet who doesn’t think
Primo Camera will lick Max Baer
when they meet in June . . . The
tip-off on the state of boxing here
is that Don McCorkingdale can
elevate himself to the top flight of
heavyweights by licking such an
article as Otto van Porat ... You
could lick Otto every night in the
week in New York and still not get
even a drink on the house . . .
The Daily Express has created a
sensation by its announcement that
in the future it will not distin-
guish between amateurs and pro-
fessionals in cricket lineups . .
and that it will lead a fight to
abolish the custom whereby pro-
fessionals or “players” are not al-
lowed to enter and leave the field
through the same gates as ama-
teurs or “gentlemen.”
Seventeen-year-old Pam Bar-
ton’s feat of reaching the finals
of the British women’s open cham-
pionship is hailed as the greatest
women's golfing feat since May
Hezlett won the title in 1899 when,
she too, was 17 ... Sir Malcom
Campbell, is rated as a very ordi-
nary racing driver in the spark-
pluggish set over here, and is not
at all popular with the general
public ... I understand he puts
a bit too much emphasis on the
Sir . . . Jack Hobbs, the Babe
Ruth of cricket, runs a sports good
shop on Fleet street, and is the
idol of English boys . . . John de
Forest, who wone the 1932 British
amateur golf championship, now is
master of ceremonies of a night
club off Piccadills Circus . . . and
the golfing Hartleys, Rex and Lis-
ter, are millionaire jam manufac-
turers . . . Windsor Lad is a good
tip for the derby . . . five dollars
►will bring you fifteen if Australia
San An
Houston
Batteries: Caldwell and Severid;
, “nd
TYLER, May 28 (Spl)—The
third and last game of th^, series
between the Henderson Oilers and
the Tyler Governors will be play-,
ed at Fair Park here tonight. In
a day game Sunday the Govs
emerged from a slugging bee the
winner over the Oilers by count
of 11 to 2.
Tonight's tilt gets underway at
8:15 o’clock and the steady flow
of customers that have been on
hand here since night ball started
is again expected to pass the turn-
McPHAUL TollURL t
Making a valiant attempt to
take tonight’s game in Tyler
with the Govs to redeem the
two already lost, Manager Pat
Moulton will start Tom Mc-
Phaul, ace of the Henderson
pitching staff.
The game is slated to start
at 8:15 o’clock and it is prob-
able that many Henderson fans
will journey to Smith county
KNOXVILLH. Tenn. — The
Good Fellowship Midgets and
the West KnoxviHe Merchants
went through nine innings of
lights nip-and-tuck ball game
here, and when the game was
over the Midget* "were winners
The score was 64-19!
Sterling. Biddle of the Mid-
gets got four home runs and
three singles.
Ur-”—i—rr—♦
Oilers Make 20 Hits to Get I 5-
12 Decision in Oil Belt Loop
OVERTON. May 28 (Spl)—The
Humble Oilers won a slugfest from
the Shell aggregation here yester-
day 15 to 10 in a scheduled Oil Belt
league gams:* ■ x
The Ollera friaile 20 hits off three
Shell pitcheH,:' LJ'ter, Horton and
Wilder, while the visitors collected
^ off MuStalklS and Hart, Humble
* ’ modflairtrtn. ’’Jimmy Dalrymple,
Onttr shOrtStOpper, was the leading
hitter tWth a'trtple, double and two
• singles in flve appearances. Wilson
al««r“oP Humble made three hits,
Kamp, Hardy and Summers.
Second Game
Lon’w 010 110 1—4
Pari. 100 100 1—3
Batteries: Cox and Warren; Un-
FORT WORTH, May 28 —Ver-
non Kennedy allowed the Fort
Worth Cats only five hits here
Sunday as the Oklahoma City In-
dians won, 6 to 1. The Redskin
hurler was wild and passed six
but controlled himself in the
pinch.
Score by innings:
Ok. City 001 002 102—6 12 2
Ft. W. 000 001 000—1 5 2
Batteries: Kennedy and Horton;
White, Robb and Broskie.
----------a---
U. S. Davis Cuppers
Tackle Mexico Wed.
WILMINGTON, D’el., May 28—
(UP)—The United States Davis
cup team, heartened by a five-
match sweep over Canada, tackles
Mexico in an American zone final
at Baltimore Wednesday.
■ — '■■in* o ...... —
As a means of testing a suit de-
signed to keep him warm on a
plane trip into the stratosphere, a
Ma'sachusCts aviator remained for
a half an hour in a tank filled with
carbonated ice at a temperture of
1 10 degrees below zero.
Totals .. . 39 11 15 27
010 001 000— 2
Tyler 105 120 20x—11
Runs batted in—L. Bassett 4,
Farrell 2, Phelps, Sanguinet. Two-
base hits—Bell Powers, Gilbtert,
Tuero, Schleicher. Home runs—
Gilbert 2, L. Bassett. Stolen bases
—Phelps. L. Bassett. Sacrifice hit
— Rios. Struck out—By Clements
3, Tuero 4, Moulton 6. Bases on
See Oilers Lose on Page ft
NEW YORK, May 28 (UP) —
VHh’Tlrry' - McLarnin, trusting
tapIUiUy In an explosive right
/flsL’mrfavience and an eight-pound
«•* wsigtit aflvautage, Stakes his wel-
ymefght championship tonight
w 'agalnir the youth, speed and stam-
■* -4n* of JeOdSh.Barney Ross, king of
the ligWWfclghts.
The fchampions will battle 15
' for* more than
lison Square Gar-
k NEW YORK, May 28 |
—Ti* boiled facts on tonight’s ;
big title bout:
Principals—Jinpny McLarnin
of Oakland, Ca., welter champ,
and Barney Ross of Chicago,
lightweight champ.
yiUe at stake—World’s wol-
tgtweight championship.
^Length—15 rounds.
Weight—By private agree-
ment both must be under 145
I #t noon today, although official
i, class l|mit la 147. McLarnin ex-
1 pectrf to crawl through'ropes at
146*1-2; Ross 137 I-XT
I Site—Long Island bowl.
'J Weather—Fair and Warmer.
•omoters—New YOrk Milk
tpecUd attendancy—-70,000
M________ . -1® Pjr
dent for milk .fund and taxes off
top-’ McLartltn 40 per cent of
gross and Ross 25. 1
a Referei and Judge#—To be
j named at ringside by
Oommlsskm.
' - Probable vingUme -betting
L odds—7 to 6 favoring McLat-
■ nin.
Main bout starts—Probably „ j
10 p. ____________ ■ J;1
__------- . It Is
"of the greatest “naturals" In
neat ** r
The” huge crowd, a virtual who’s
f 1 Who of society, business, entertajn-
I , Will witness the third attempt of a
lightweight champien - ta. capture
tS H7-po inibonnet since’the wel-
ter afvlsion was bom In 1792.
If aleek, raven-haired Ross
knock# tile crown from Jimmy’s
brown locks he will be the first to
bold both titles. And if McLarnin,
« the Dublin dynamiter, trims Bar-
ney, he will have broken the welter
•1’ “ title Jinx. Before Jimmy came
along, eight welter champs in a
row lost the crown in their first
• defense. The Oakland, Cal., soap
j, manufacturer Is making his first
defense tonight.
» Thie. bout has so many attrac-
tive angles that the advance sale
last night had exceeded $160,000.
Representatives df the milk fund,
and promoters, said this indicated
• sell out of about $285,000.
It brings together one of the
greatest Vdsh battlers In ring his-
tory, and-a brilliant Jewish boxer
regarded as the greatest light-
weight since Benny Leonard. The
,racial angle atone In New York,
. .. . • —— largest
isfl pftpiilfttlons of
, any metropolis In the world, made
It a “natural^. -Wartirnlarly be*
cause McLarnlCJMls beetb^joison”
I
Eg.
i^2.
2 5 27 7
AB R H PO A E
4
2
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
2
9 3
;.,yW
sin took on a brighter hue when i
Walt Windecker suffered a change|
246-ppund freshman turned in hislgBr"e
Wi:
[ ________
I .Which probably
Irish and J8W1S
i » “J* metrnnolig b_____ _____
it a “natural^. JBartlcularJy
to Jewish figjxtro AMjahettpi
graveyard lists tfld Kaplan, Sid
Terris, Ruby Goldstein, Joo Glick,
$ Joey Sapgpr, Al Singe/ and the
• (tadlng Benny Leonard. Barney
• sBiay be the avengor of these fight-
■ ing fQiis of Israel.
; It also is one of the biggest bet-
I . In yw: „¥or». Ui&d
• i gtJ008H)&‘ Is estimated to nave' been
; iwagered already, McLarnit) was
; Ifluoted 6 to 6 favorite tn the ovety
> Right betting, and may enter ih’e
• *4^^ .A *7 4* K
• McLamin expects to enter the
ns « n jgouH
eight'pounds Sdvan-
NEW YORK
May 28 (UP) —
Ba Walter Johnson's
Mg fast stepping In-
dlans have wrest-
EH ed the American
Ug league lead from
the floundering
SI Yankees
r ) Improved pitch-
ing and excel-
' ,1 lent all - round
x / | play meant sevei
.■ 1. victories in 10
’---- starts
eastern
Walter Johnson
invaders.
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Bowman, George. Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 60, Ed. 1 Monday, May 28, 1934, newspaper, May 28, 1934; Henderson, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1314905/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Rusk County Library.