Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. [28], No. 120, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 1, 1929 Page: 4 of 8
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W'T
Dprrox, tbxab,
-fOS
SOL-
g-;e
it Bobby
ft.aorkL.iait. I
Ml
>7.
* .
few
A
12
I
Here’s Min Marlon
*7
-♦y
,
=
I
JW
J. R.
J
-I
W-
u>
-;■
f» dUfor-l.-A' more •
but ft
competition
y
D*i
* K
17,-
Heaters! Heaters!
BRIEF ITEMS OF SPORT
EVANSTON 111, Jan L-Korth-
when
Jan. Al.—
M
light crop.
I
1. '
=
J ’
1
the same time.
’St*:'
... ■
r./aj
a
‘4
I
NT
M
I
3E
■*<•1
^•yn=|
imW
At a price never before of-
fered in Degton.
“ ~ ~F"
the phone.
* J
Yarbrough Bros.
Furniturt/
Phone 1201.
231 VV. Hickory.
wants1 done,
•n be tad i
rises are au-
1 to have ex-
trend In 1927-
v.oinq
E<|
_____________ i TurpiY) wom-
en's southern champion, who will
direct the. gecpnd annual Pan-
to f.‘ ht far thiee weeks h.s train-
ers announced
nn>
Sr
died It
to Ml
keting pro
•me. nt.I
1 this year for the dairy in-
The consumption of dairy
FlTI.
OI
Jr
ng to win
r
• “i
&
4
igs-ana It was
peering alertly
nurse the Utah
i
- -■ ' -......-
VED!
—
•jjra
i
' > iof l. 'S •
eoswv \
CEIVTAU4UV ]
HA5 My I
/ /
Very best wishes to all.
JOHN ORR
Verna Tobin.
JOHNORR
Wishes Everybody
Happiness* Health and Success
for 1929
-*** i
*/, . X,~^
training lot their no d^cKon bout
tills afternoon wtlh 1‘ght dtork-
cuts.
Railroads spent a total of 8130-
472.791 in Florida in 1926 in better-
ing their facilities
, A. , -- -
Hockey Men Aren’t Dumb
rpilE two New York clubs its the
•*■ National Hockey League liava
been built Into such a stredgtb-
NMyWH
nier.t Then he inquired, with dab-
’ “'ate politeness- ,
“By the way. which s'de arc you
playing on?”
crushed by Ua America
Chicago. 11 points to 1.
rance of Scotland was th
NEW YEAR’S GREETING
> - To Our-friends and patrons.
.....~"-n......
May the New Year hnld many good things for
important fluctuations . — b/"^
| play, on lop ef which he was .nak-
in.: a dismal 6 at No. 10. 1 was
’ k
_<ee/ers fl
Something New for Golf
♦—---------------4.
enod position that they ato almost
aa powerful in their class as the
New York baseltall clubs arc in
theirs.
But it is not likely that the
had promised Rochester the I*IckJowners ef the other elwbs will Uy
to break them up. Instead of be-
ing a detriment to the business of
professional Ifbckoy, the New York
clubs have made the league finan-
cially successful.
Hockey is now the most popu-
lar winter sport In New York. Tho
champion Rangers and the Ameri-
cans have been drawing crowds of
Yrffm IC,000 to jfi.fibO customers
and the visiting clubs, of course,
share handsomely in the Cut of
the profits.
It took a lot of building, money
and co-operation to get the
strength away from the Canadian
clifbs but the New York clubs suc-
ceeded and there doesn’t seem to
he any serious complaint from the
other club owners about the
I domination of the big town In
their league.
and- Listen!
e-half gallon of OIL.
000,000 gross income of 1919-20
when the post-war bcom reached
Its peak.
Income Fluctuations
In the last two years the gross
of any player on his team with
the exception Husta. Rochester
called for Hickey and Rosenblum
was ordered to turn him over.
But Hickey didn’t go to Roches-
ter. He was shipped right tp Chi-
cago, where a winning team means
more to the business of the league
than a winning team In Rochss-
FA^,
eessive amateur ctatq
iW tecord for golf. Ji
won four such titles in
Henry L. Farren
lion
from the west thta the
up I VS I bwJ
of the dlafoter-
Bvans. Jones beat Pertrins, 13 1
12.
Once more, therefore, Atlan
Bobby proved he Is without a j
on the tanks. His victory a* I
you and yours. •. '■
p W« appreciktk the patronage of those for whom
r we have drilled wells—and we Congratulate the
[ people of this county who, for a small sum, can drill
a well to one of the three underground syateius of
Impure artesian water.
stock industry, in which all of its
branches shared, was the mast out-
standing development in the 1928
agricultural situation.
The outlook for cattle is consider-
ed extremely favorable. Demand for
agriculture
most farming enU
thoritatively deelar
pcrisnoed an wwar
a- ’ -T-V
Secretary Jardine says Uw situa-
tion was perhaps less difficult than
in any year since 1920.
The current marketing season is
still has some months to run and
what the gross income of agricul-
ture as a whole will be is under-
termined.
However, trataj/ne best available,
evidence, produekloa r—*-
it 1 '
//
ed the h:
Witht
9W
'am
(
r ?
F-
Ik
Mah appears
y cn hi» side.
artesian water.
Let us$nt| your well, any »i»e, M& depth, any-
where, any time.
. Wa have the machinery and experience.
:'r ":^r'
. J. L MYERS « SON
Stop, Look
,t i I*
Er ■
K
■
■
Part'Oein
New Year’s Fete
—
iBoard, mi -a- a_ utah.
Miss Wynn and Wm.
A. Miles Marry
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wflir. of |
A’« xa.idria. La., nave annovnred
the maiTiage of their dr.nphter,
Bertie Le , to William A. Miles of
Dent<>n. on Dec. 23. 1928 TbcV
w.ll make their home bt 70? Belt
Aver.tie. The biidc made her home
in Hinton for a number of y.ars
when her father wa« division sup-
erintendent ot the T. Ar 1*. Rail-
way here and attend'd Denton
Hiph School and Colleso bl Indus-
tt'nl Arts. Miles is the sun, cl Mr
nhd Mrs. A. L.. Milev.
Rte •
ir . KxhMsrtlng Ctartty
W tta Charity Association. Just
Ms morning I aent twelve bottles
■ my Christmas bath salts to tta
MTVtag Armenians.".
----------
ONE-HALF GALLON of I his remarkable product will be given
crankcaae draining to dem on .stratus its wonderful and lasting qualities.
.........?■' . t, ,
candy..cigars, sandwiched,! ham-
EStS" J®
11-TBe
of the
■■U-.J K __the
relief bill ocuntry and was tdfvided among 1
' cotton, spring wheat, potatoes and ‘
attar leading crops- '
Cotton was planted on about 49.-
" acres, an increase of "
tent over the acreage l ____
tta yyxt before. Weather condi-
tions were unfavorable and the
boll weevil was the heaviest since
the few yean after the pest spread
through the cotton belt.
• Cotton Production Cut
In consequence the crop in Octo-
|s increasing. The high degree of
prosperity which the fJieep indus-
try has enjoyed since 1922 contin-
ues. Generally favornbl? conditions
prevailed
dustrt 1
products increases annually
Poultry Industry Improves
The poultry industry has done
• of ; ‘xju-fuoAiuv aaAfc
^[2 i +Ka/rv twu|X^od
»it>e arm ‘
puavino a
it did in 1927
The fruit and vegetable industry
continues to progress in specializa-
tion, In the technique and efficien-
cy of production, in the standard-
ization, quality and pack of its pro-
I ducts, and in the breadth of its mar-
.JZ *”r
’■ I
■ ’'r 1^^!
j a
- w
I
1' ’-TX T
J
American tournament 'kt Biloxi,
1.. .uU lamiorv Mn n v nt *
Tuna,, 11* m - wr- .jjcmnu w wm w*c abiiwoii v>acii viw
tho inoet noted women ainateut | gusty links at Sandwich and
Walters’’ collapse during the
special match in which Archie M
Compston defeated him 18 up and
17 to play.
! Gorton Pressed Jones
The narrow margin by which Bob
Jones failed to win tta open title
at Chicago had no counterpart in
amateur golf during 1928. At Brae
Burn, he was invincible among the
simon pure*, after a start which
staggered his admirers. Ray Gorton,
home-bred amateur, earned the At-
lantan to an extra hole in the first
round, but after that Bobby was
quite as devastating as he had been
at Minnikahda the previous year.
On successive days, Jones defeat-
ed John Beck of Great Britain. 14
and 13. Phillips Finlay,, hard hit-
ting Harvard sophomore. 13 and 12
and T. Philip Perkins Of Great Bri-
tain, 10 and 9 Perktns had previous-
ly won the British amateur crown
from Dr Twoddel!
The British Walker Cup team was
Hagen Dethrottsd '
Tta past year saw Walter Ha
dethrotuM as professional ctaaai
and more recently nosed out tor
Catalina championship by Hor
Smith of Joplin, Mo.
who has been threaten
major title for a tons
through at Baltimore
“The Haig.” It was In
-final round that Hag
Diegel. who later drfl
pinoza In the final matelf
The national open at
Fields found Jones and FW
for first place at the end o< ths ra
ulatlon 72 holes They went out d
a rainy Sunday to fight it out, at
the match went to tta 38th grsb
Ttare Fairdl "played briWanU
sinking an g-foot uphill putt '
clinch the titM Farrell to_no
launched on a easnpi ‘
da's links, tuning up
the British open chaeo
summer. ‘
Jones played less golf ttam C
during 1928 but some of Wirrc
were sensational
his career.
In addition to Bobby, the on
national champion to defend h
crown successful/ was Cfofl Kau
man, public links..tBlist. „ .
The national champWU W,It
—Open-Johnny Barrell. Mow B
■chelle. --—-OS
Amateur-— Bobby ones, Atlants-
P. G A.—Leo Diegel, at
RlaiRs
Public links—Cart Kaufmaar
Women’s Glenna Collett.
HAMILTON JB.1MK8' .
AUSTIN ;,..4 .
AUSTIN, Jan. 1.—J.
Jr.; assistant county attor
Travis County and xn .at
Judge Hamilton,
affr AUbtnilUus
last week.
may have been somewhat smaller.
This, togetfier with prospect s that
the gross income will be larger,
| leads the r-cretary to believe there
may be at least a proportionate in-
creas- in net income.
Latest comprehensive figures re-
:.„...| late.-to ..tta crop year 1927-28. in|UlI it
that year tfte gram income of
American p«rriculture from el) "-r>-
ducts amounted to 812.713.033.G90
comp-red with <13127.000 000 for the
‘ <W°P vear Wd-31- It -twas lower
over stood on the r.dge silaxt- than thfc fj25.M mcome of $12,670,-
ita Shia'. Mils methridicsl’v » 000 °°°. *’5. . flrUr<* fcr that vear
’ *T!L> b*1** “nce the
Rfiktoh offleors, i
sad along the oourse
“THappy New Year ~~' ~.-
I Tbsw ate turned and want down
Ito tedder.
Ita Utah at noon today, wm ap-
Ktarimately 800 miles east of Ouade-
|M|M Island Her position wm M
MM) lattode; »1:» West lon^ude.
R* vessel s due at Hampton Etoads
p Jan. gy~:—-
Much Corn Grown
The coin crop is estimated at
about 2,900.000.000 bushels, the
lirifest crop since 1923 In propor- lightweight champion, mll-hed o f
tlcn to the number of livestock on
the fams the output is 'fairly large
and is expected to stimulate live-
the next harvest stock production
e bifl la enacUd '
tta present aeesion. ’
tta revived movemert to push
bill through at this session is
dined th tta senate tide of the
ritoL There softe of the Repub*
uu leaders ary woffled about ti;e
Mi an extra session might do to
HMM th-y say. On the other
nd Senator Borah of Idaho has
fcrtakca40.conduct a personal
r-paign tf ftmt n hnr bit
Dg passed at this sesricn no an
ra si riMon will have to be called
tc
CHICAGO. HU Jan. l.--Vcs
Marr;n r. Chicago heavyweight
boxer, fractured his hard in spar-
SMITH HAMILTON MOTOR CO
Now occupies the W. S. Long Building, North-
west corner of the square.
Prepared now to
Grease your car and change the oil
Put alcohol and glycerine in the radiator
To recharge your old battery, new ma- t .
chinery just installed
Sell you good oils
1 Repair any make of car
New Buicks and Parts Now Ready for
Delivery ,
Punctures fixed— just call us over
A few good used cars
Let us wash your cat, and grease and oil it at"
1' ’ - - > 4 th® same time.
—
Smith-Hamilton Motor Co.
Phone 268 -
1 "A y. ‘......■ • '■
[ . v •- * : <■/;, 7v.p. - -v-
There was a terrible roar from
the Cleveland customers and it
the Rosenblums don’t win th«
pennant the professional game
may ba killed in what was being
developed into a pretty good
basketball spot.
T.T1IL--—M
,.L -I-- -* ■ -V-’.....'• - • •'WJ'SiS
BATEMAN, Mapugsr*
Practice was resumed Monday
n'yht by the Teachers College bas-
ketball sound UDd?r the rupcr.is
Ion of Coach John B. Reid in pre-
paration for the games with Sim-
mon* Universitj' hire Friday and
Saturday n’/jhts. Reid's Kayles.
which jot off to- n good start this
season by defeating Southern
Methodist Univerrfly twice. Baylor
twice and by dropping only -_ene
game— that to .T. C. U. -erc lock-
ing good and fata nye promised an
evening of real (.ntertatnmert it
the S’mmuns eager- live up to re-
ports.
Simnions has prohaWv the best
team in the Texas C'-nferenc . but
Rtiu’s products may have a slight
advantage ever thtm in th? wealth
| cf reserve material The frames w’ll
be called at 7 o’clock in Harris
rymtaslum both nights
1 JEUetv ~ drafting”
’ COMpLKTWN ;
WASHOKITON. Jan.
drafting sub-eswnmittee
committee on arbitration treaties
of the Pan-American conterer.ee on
srrhiiratk’n and eonriliniicn com-
pleted its work today ai\d anr.oun-
c ci tort ft won Id be randy to re-
pent a mnlti-laternl arbitration
treaty, either tomorrow or next
day.
amorous take-offs of cabinet
ibers, W. C. T- U. emissaries,
astadors. and, government offi-
were In the pagent ot the mock
ption. The affair was staged by
Ain Train, of the Utah, with
aaslstanoe of the Utah’s officers
M «?b«rd $u£ het“ .larcer. “»0
ig We night that would indicate
>e pamage ot 1938 Captain Train
M ordered that there should be
pne. . 7 „ , . . •. ”
■towwverr MW/Hbover, fresh and
teUing. made her way along th"
- *”5^ -
W* wA> ImM? IHJTUllWtea U, Util HUI .Vvl
flight, lay the dipper, its twin
Maters fixed on the Pole star
IM wm the Southern Crops
Mttle, JM .. _____________
have teken place in ite ditsribution.
Ih 1938-27 the income from
grains, cotton, fruits and vegeta-
bles was materially below that of
1938-38. In 1927-28, grain and cot- '
ton growers made considerably bet-
ter earnings, but returns from hogs,
fruits, vegetables and poultry were
relatively low. Increased returns
from livestock Industries will be ma-
tertally offset by reduced returns
from certain eld crops, though the
gross income of agriculture as a
Whole promises to be larger than
last year.
Last year was a season of in-
• CTWmM ‘idrogf " and production,
sometimes piling up embarrassing
surpluses, despite previous warnings
: to minimise dn certain commodities
—notably pote^’M.
Expansion, however is taken as a
mark of condence in the future of
agriculture. The increase was pretty
well distributed throughout
A scarcity of com and other feed
stuffs in Europe has been a factor
In maintaining relatively good prices
for corn through the past season iln;; ycyterd?;’ Ho will not bc able
and is expected to be a factor In the ' 9/V 1 . I- 4 F eaw ♦ Ex » e Ex t « »•/* i tx
situation for the coming season
Bb^jnates for buckwheat, rice and
b ah (hops show a production less
than last year, although sufficient
for current needs. Fruit porducllon
nk heavier than Iasi year but less
than in 1926. Potato production
made a record Possibly 15 per cent
of the, supply will b? utilized as feed
for lives lock.pj; wasted
1 Sweet potatoes were a
Other vegetables were grown oh an
Increased acreage but gave rather
light yields
Tobacco, planted on an increased
acreage. wa« harvested in rather low
yields, so that the crop in weight
is not above normol requirements.
General Improvement in the Uve-
L DID YOU KNOW THAT—
ACE HUDKIN8 says the
minute rest between
rounds should be canned out
Of the rules . . . And that
the boys should fight until
one of ’em dropa .
Sharkey didn't like It when
Rickard said he was a bum
fighter . . . And he said
Rickard owned Hanwtn.
.Fauliuo and Dempsey . . .
And would have owned
hive kal4'hta<»w »,.»
- waat EN&lkuer, one of the
New Yorks’ left-headers .
And the New Yorks want
Luque. one of the Cincin-
nutls' right-handers . . .
And the Chicago Cubs want
to own Jumping Joe Pugan
. And Jumping Joe
wants to be owned by the
Chkagos . . . And Jumping
' ’ Joe wasn't iiameA that be-
cause of his activity at third
base . . . But because he
Jumped the Athletics every
time he got ills temperament
working . - . Nurmi trains
now pn a no Java and little
i meat diet . . .He inhaled a
veal pot pie before one of
his races with Rifola a
coupla winters ago' . . .
And nearly croaked
the pains arrived.
ds to Muddle
bog products of the United States: jy
Manufactured Competif
. TYUR1NG the period whaj
: ” was something of a 1
clamor
J Yankees be broken up for the-good
mmmv of baseball, some c*
conyfderaWv better this year than f c.tYd people objected that it
In’t work.
„ .,\a 11 zation of playjax
ctrength. they maintained. -Would
promole competition but "If
wouldn't do the business of base-
ball any good to show the cw»-
totners that teams were b«M9 .
' ” « BWWW
The AiWertcaw professiodfiffk
basketball tea;
lar elpertnknt now Compete ioa
In the league was almost stifled by
the contidpefl domination of the
New York Celtics. ,
Before the season opened this
year the officials of the league, In
some manner, succeeded in* hav-
ing the Ceillcs disbanded only to
run tmo another distressing situa-
tion. A
977,000 bales in 1926
T, Wheat production exceeded 900.-
000.000 bushels for the first time
since 1919. The Increase was most-
ly-to hard'winter and durum whe-»t
Despite the increase, greater demand
abroad is expected to keep prices
more or less favorable. America's
—— —rr —’ —— — * I —... v_nr R-V.H.V w™ —Of
i direct statement They will try wheat, unlike cotton, does not give
left eventually with a putt tM one !
yard to save one joint fcr Ote side [ orate pclilenm .
and natmallv 1 mew the Wt- I
{Bfbby wo» spe cliless for nui '
-basket ball ,ame. Five thru- (Hickey and Hunts, the Rosed*
-• ' blums started tearing through the
league. They won ten games In
a row, went into first place and
ruined the. hopes of the othdr*
clubs in the league.
Rosenblum was then notified'
that he had to transfer -Hickey,
the best forward In the league. It
■was said that In dickering for tta
three former Celtics Rosenblum
snennm MM did not^mata
"*• J? 9E*J oM !*“■ *4
I M# MW ta. but tta ’ real of
M on boaAi the battleship staged
SjTto <3?tay%r. Hoover
Stad With amusement a mock
ABY 1, 1339
Direct* Mie
I
L
EKi
Jipst a few more flays to get this F REE <>ne*fealf gallon of OIL. Every
DentOh motorigt should take advantage of our FREE offer on HIGH FIRE MO-
TOR OILS. --------------- ----■'
on
Drive in today qfid let us service your B ar.
You will also And plenty of cold drinks,
burgers and fancy groceries. yt-,
We^irot only fill your fear, but fwd you.
We havo plenty of the BEST TIRES bn tKB inarjftt, Bpd will fit you up,
. SERY-U STATON
811 So. Locuat«t. .J 'Z1! M
-JEMV"
By O. B. XEEXE1
it fkney has tt tlL-
does a higher paronnage
les in pbr than anybody else
& - - •—- — - w w vx^^k/x8 w%/xvws s
>cy Is not far out of flu w
But wcmic year* ago i’ was' ptavlnu
ria a.»___
against his lather
goiter of ccr.sitarn
natrn escapes me,
artotindcd witness of the moat pe-
culiar un-par-ltke string of which
Hie amateur champion has been
guilty since early childao-xl. We
were playing nt' Druid Hills and
to make an even match, Bobby
bebig so expert ,Wpd I »c tefflble.
it was one of those. bcst-haH and
waist ball alTatr«“in which each
ecsts havfthot ^nrirer counted a point
And that morning Bobby led c.'T
Wlrtm ccnseenttve tates without
one in par- ,
This astonishing performance is
not precisely explained by toe
mete statement that Mr. Jones
through the eleventh hole was ex-
actly level with par of the course
i« Ihla. ftby-1 e ..shot six
holes in birdies nnu five helis in
tniivuics. one cf them being two ;
strokes worse than pgr. —
JlltlS’
Far tout --------- 444 344 4’5- 35
Bobby . Tir.:. ^.... 533 453 344-31,
Par (In) ...... 41
Bobby . „... . 61
Th n be’J»rtm hitting i».- and
finbhf d the pound still even with
the old pacc-mak'.T
I fergot how the match crime out
ns a mat(h. But I shall never for
Z M agri^ture^hasTh^^ whX
hiif Cl.h'.l. H. WAS RlreadV SPITl '(iiat
duciien or to prevent the recurrent
glutting of markets. !
Exports of agricultural prothicts
in the 1927-28 seasons declined as
compared with those of the preced- 1
tag year
' In value, exports were 4* per cent'
less than those cf the proceeding
year and were the lowest in the las'
five years. The proportion of agricul- J
I tural Averts to the total exports of [
all Commodities amounted to only
38 per cent, the lowest figure Pn
record with the exception of 1916
and 1917.
They Got Too Good, Too -»i,
I VW HEN the Celtics were dl»-
’’ banded, Max ’Rosenblum;
f owner of the Cleveland club, got
* busy and signed three of ths
1 Celtics, laipchlk. Dehnert and
.... 1 Barry, for his club. With two
western d.fCated Penn State 41 -IT leftovers from last year's team,
in a basket ball ,ame. Five thru- I Hickey and Husta, the R„„—
I sand saw the game.
MILW AUKEE Wi» . Jan. M.—
Joey itangcr, Milwaukee feather,,
weight, nnd Tod Morgan, Junior
. iouiccb mm
Little tat flXed ju?t to get their cash.
Jt* "K2 nl 1 —*^5 Th. Clhd,.,’.,,.
hppUcftted situation tas grown up
■MM tta farm relief probletn in
Doftcreaa since authentic wurd.wa*
recatvud that President-elect Hoo-
Mr intends to keep hands off the
glriMr ct whether tta 1 * .....
ptauld be passed nt this session
_JBoorar mm/ated toona congres-
■taoal autboriQLttft. United Press _____
................ejWR
_ ,___ _. to taft
Mr- CboUdge's Oongreaf what to do,
tetter openly ar privately
The Ornate Naders seeking to
force the/revised McNary-Haugen
MB tfroujMte the earliest poasi-
Ne moment and to avoid an extra bar wee estimated at less than 14.-
Naston of Congress, had hoped Hoo- OOO.OOO bales, compared with
rsr would come out and say he------
wanted ft farm bin now. They know
Nr. OooUdge does ahd they accept
BtoWa indirect statement .as mean
te dpea. But, to succeed in their
mterpriae ttef must over come muc
rWWTMWntal opposition and the
"~ly way they can ree in which to
erthrow th|s opposition is to gat share in the world's output
■ft Hoover coma to Washington ‘ this country a determining influence
xt week. on the price of the crop. It de-
■fee ’WiMta Seaatoo pends on the total world produc-
Republican farm bioc members,; tlon.
t of whom supported Hoover in 1
camupaign. ftre for an extra
Ion. In the absence of the pub-
itatement from Hoover they are
kc upon hM campaign stata-
it that he would call a special
Ion at his Congress to enact
iMMbeforoF
■MV" -■ y ■MWteW'IW
... T' „ " ...^
<■1^ . *u. . *
■itaflr ?' • ■ ■. *
— _
Agricultural Year
Brighter Than Any
Since 1920 Period ■
I * ft- ~Y ~
By FEANK L WELLER
f Awtctatad Press Pana Miter) ;
-WASEn^DQM. Jan. i.-D«Bfte. J
1 uneven sptep rarely eacaped to an v.
“ Mrg* nn<i varied as the though three Is no way to prove
— ? of the United States, Buptcme vear* wo I was ntavl
in a. match with Vcung Robert
and anather
Me skill whose
and I wjis the
r B SPORTSMATTER
■■.. W OBOBGa ftJBMEY, Uated Pimm
An eight foot putt which John-
ny Farrell sank on the home green
ftt Olympia Fields, thereby win- .
ning the play-off for open chiun- tor to win a match, di
from Bobby'Jones, provid- “■ ’ * ‘ ““
«h spot of golf in 1928
he pawing of the open U-
he smiling young profea-
am Quaker Ridge, a great
cheer went up through the Chita- Bum was Ma
go jrtal, lor while the crowd loves
Bobby, ft also loves to see him beat-
en, an event which proves the At-
lantan is human, after alt
The year witnessed three ma-
t jor American goli titles change
- hands, but no upsets, in the accept-
ed sense of the woyd Johnny Far-
rell, the new open champion, pas for
l a long time been playing brilliantly.
> His record during 1927 was even
more remarkable although the clos-
est he came to winning, the open
was a check in recognition that he
was the “best dressed golfer" in the
championship. Leo Dlegel of White
Plains, who ended Walter Hagen's
reign as P. O. A. champ, has been
knocking at the door of golfing
greatness for many seasons, ham-
pered only by a strangely morbid
disposition. The women's open went
to CUgnta CoUrt of Providence, but
she had won the title twice pre-
viously
Golf in Great Britain provided
more sensation than tn this country
---------- — what with Hagen's great drive from
Miss., in mid.January. Many of behind to win the British open over
golfers in the country arc catered
*n the meet,
T. C. Cagers in
Practice for
Games This Week
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. [28], No. 120, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 1, 1929, newspaper, January 1, 1929; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1335589/m1/4/: accessed July 2, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Denton Public Library.