The Brownsville Herald (Brownsville, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 33, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 11, 1932 Page: 5 of 8
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The BROWNSVILLE HERALD SPORTS SECTION
AMERICAN STAR HALTS JAPANESE SWIMMING INVASION
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• Gtlkttc La* developed a secret de-
aicar tU datfumd'y mnaaiiyiia the sharp-
mam al a «La%'mf edge This ingenious
I ml m<«i» s'llaitra taste* paajvdy paits that
iW GUrtto BLUE SUPER-BLADE
i§ tia ■iiaijul »c Law eves produced.
Yanks Pile Up Honors
On August Road Tours
<B\ the Auodk'ed Press >
The early August road tours In
:fce major 1 fues hart ended wrtth
■ifjs honors lor the New York
Yankees loo Jars of the American
GENE BEATEN ~~
IN PRO MEET
“Ossa of the Boys” Sarazen
Not in Croup To
Qualify
NSW YORK Aug 11—P-
Brrauar h* chose to be "one of
the b©>«." Oene Saracen's chances
of aoorusg a grand flam tn golf
are wry alia.
alter uiapiag flat Brmah and
{' ...ted State* open titles. Saracen !
a as offered .he opportunity of
competing a the professional Oolf _
lam f tfcH to ; nament at St
Paul /fig JO^-n* 3 Without
playing » the qualifying round*.
He refuted say inf he ranted to
t*A* fei* chance Jutft lUie the other
Yetfgaday 14 metropolitan pro*
•mlified and Saracen was not
•me of the group He finis 1 in
a arma-ray tie for the butt three
places but lost out on the first
estop hole when a par four wq*
not good enough to beat a trio of
bustle fa i
league and lew u any for Pitts-
burgh at * e head of the National.
The Yanks came through their
tnp to the middle west with oruy
a naif game missing from the mar-
gin they started with. The Bucs.
on the other hand finished with a
record of even victories and 12 de-
feats and today faced Chicago In a
“crucial'' series with a margin o:
only three percentage points.
While Chicago was kept Idle by
ram yesterday. Pittsburgh broke its
ten-game loam* streak with a 5 to
2 victory over Boston In the first
half of a double .leader. They fol-
lowed It by losing a “heart break-
er." 3 2. when iwo runs gave the
Braves the decision.
Brooklyn took two games from
Cincinnati ® to 1 and 10 to 9 In 13
innings. St. Louis completed the
downfall of the Phillies with an 11-
inning onslaught that brought six
runs and 1 to 5 victory.
Philadelphia captured second
place In the \merican league by de-
feating Chicago. 6 to 3. while rain
held Washington and Cleveland
Idle.
The Yankees meanwhile main-
tained a nine game margin over the
As by slamming out 17 hits and
taking a 7 to 6 decision from St.
Louis.
Young Tommy Bridges who
pitched a one-hit game his last time
out. stopped Boston with three hits
and hurled Tetrolt to a 6 to 2 vic-
tory
FIGHTS LAST NIGHT
iBv the Associated Press*
BOSTON—Ad ZactMW Diver. N.
H. knocked < 4t Leo Larivee. Water-
bury. f' -n.. «2'.
CINCINNATI _ Kid Chocolate.
Cuba outpointed Johnny Farr.
Cleveland. (10).
GRIFFON
Tropical Worsted
SUITS
S1250
With 2 Pants
r
Thirty suits are included in this
112.50 group.
These numbers are regular $35
suits—new colors new fabrics new
styles.
By Griffon these summer tropical
worsteds are fully guaranteed.
Last chance gentlemen!
v* J
•PORTERS
STEERS TIED
I
Longview Beats Dallas As
Beaumont Shuts Out
Houston
♦ By The Associated Press*
The see-saw battle for the sec-
ond half Texas league pennant is
buzzing right along and the In
and cut Dallas Steers and Beau-
mont Exporters are In another
deadlock for the league pinnacle.
Dallas’ one-game lead was erased
yesterday when Longview whipped
the Steers 6 to 2 while Beaumont (
defeated Houston. 5 to 0.
George King Murray who leads
the league with 19 victories went
to the mound for Dallas but fa-led
to last four innings. The Cannibals
drove him to the showers with
five hits and three runs in three
innings. Whitehead relieved King
and pitched steady tfU \ ’
males who collected ten hits off
Pressneli. could not hit him with
runners on.
After losing two straight to
Houston. Beaumont about faced
yesterday to whitewash the Buf- j
faloes. Izzy Goldstein recently
relumed to the Ex" 'ters by De-
troit gave a three- / demonstra-
tion of what he learned while
with the Tigers. Greenberg giant
Beaumont first baseman hit his
twenty-ninth homer.
Galveston scored %ften to take
a 7 and 6 game from San Antonio.
The Buccaneers got eleven hits
against twelve for the Indians.
Port Worth under the new
management of Art v»helan and
Clarence Kraft won from Tyler.
3 to 1 Terry went the route for
Fort Worth and pitched one of
his best games of the season.
YESTERDAY'S STARS
(By a Associated Press)
Frank ODoul. Dodgers—Hit 'wo
home unr to win first game and
scored winning run in nightcap in
double victory over Reds
George W ’kins. Cards—Diove n
five runs with three hits in victory
over Phillies.
Walter Berger. Wesley Schulmer-
ich. Braves—Hit home runs tn
3 to 2 victorv over Pirates in sec-
ond game.
TEXAS LEAGUE
Wednesday's Result*
Beaumont 5 Houston 0.
Longview 8 Dallas 2-
Port Worth 3. Tyler L
Galveston 7. San Antonio 8.
Standing of Teams
Teams— P. W. L Ptc.
Dallas . 43 28 15 .651
Beaumont ........ 43 28 15 .65!
Houston . 44 24 20 345
Tyler . 44 21 23 .472
Longview . 43 20 23 .465
Galveston . 43 19 24 .436
port Worth. 43 17 26 396
San Antonio .... 41 15 26 364
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Wednesday’s Results
New York 7; St. Louis 6.
Philadelphia 6; Chicago 3.
Detroit 8; Boston 2.
Washington-Cleveland; rain.
Thursday's Schedule
St. Louis at Chicago.
Detroit at Cleveland.
Only games scheduled.
Standing of Teams
Team— P. W. L. Pet.
New York . 110 75 35 682
Philadelphia .... 110 66 44 .600
Cleveland . 109 64 45 387
Washington .... 110 81 49 355
Detroit . 106 57 49 338
St. Louis . 108 48 60 .444
Chicago . 105 36 69 343
Boston . 108 26 82 341
NATIONAL L AGUE
Wednesday's Result*
Pittsburgh 5-2 Boston 2-3.
Braok-yn 6-10 Cincinnati 1-9.
St. Louis 11. Philadelphia 5 (11
innings*.
Ch.cago-New York rain.
Thursday's Schedule
Cincinnati at Brooklyn
Bos;on at Ph.ladelp. 2a.
Chicago at Pittsburgh.
Only games scheduled.
Standing of Teams
Team— P. W. L. Pet.
Pittsburgh . 109 60 49 350
Chicago . 106 58 48 347
| Boston . Ill 58 53 323
I Brooklyn . Ill 57 54 314
Philadelphia .... 114 56 58 491
St. Louis . 109 53 56 486
New York . 106 50 56 .472
Cincinnati . 115 48 67 .417
HOUSTON WILL
BRING IN CLUB
Player* Well Known To
Valley Fans Will
Come Here
When the Southern Pacific nine
of Houston city champs there
swing into action here Bundav
against the Brownsville Tiger*.
Valiev baseball fan.' will have ar
opportunity of seeing many of
the ball players who were :n the ;
famous 1926 loop in the Valley.
That league probably had more
promising young players in It than
any semi-pro league on record. A
half dozen or more of them got
major league tryouts and some
are atm there.
Jubilo Clement* who started
on the road to fame wlnle he was
on the Brownsville team will be
seen In action as part of the
Houston team. Clear nts was given
a trial In the big show and prom-
ised to make good but an arm
Injury stopped his stride.
Leity Boies and Ed Karnes are
two others from Houston who
were tn the 1926 league tn the
Valley and who will be seen in
action here Sundav.
Valley fans will also have a
chanoe to see Ttnk Revere of
Texas League fame Tete Tolar
tnfielder for Houston and man-
ager of the team and Dodv Bush
who was with Edinburg tn 1926.
and who previously was with the
Boston Red Sox.
Against the visitors there will
be some players on the Tiger
nine who were also members of
the 1926 league. Bill K^stick. Nick
Yoder and Lupe Rodrigue* will
do mound duty with Robert
Champion as a reserve. Chamoion
will not be used unless necessary
because of a slight illness result-
ing from a bad tooth.
Ramos will catch for the Ti?ers
The teams will play two games
INSURANCE
BONDS
W. B. CLINT
Phone €
according to Rubber Campbell
local manager one starting at 10
o clock Sunday morning the other
one at 3:30 Sunday afternoon.-""
FRIENDS NOW
PRAGUE—The erection of 0
joint war memorial to those Czechs
and Germans who fell during the
world war has done more to renew
the friendship of those two nation*
allties In the town of Libechov. tn
Bohemia than all the diplomatla
maneuvers of the past 13 yean.
Both nationalities fought against
each other during the war. but tha
erec’ion of the monument has aS
last brought about a renewal of pre-
war friendship.
“IN OUR
ALLEY”
There s D O Richardson on*
of the big boys out at the Pan*
American Airways at the airport.
He knows all about all the
towns along the Pan-American
route In Mexico. In Central
America and in South America.
He even pronounces the names
correctly.
Can tea you Just how many
kilometers it is from one to the
other
“Rich” doesn't know how
much he weighs in pounds. He
weighs in “kilos.”
But he sure knows s good suit
when he sees one like the fin*
stock tt The Fashion.
Don't forget those depression
prices which are still In effect
even though the depression la
over.
STALE GAS SHORT CHANGES YOU
ONLY fresh GAS
GIVES YOU ALL THE PUWEO YOU PAY FOR
How mnch power’s in a dollar’s worth of gas? Maybe a
dollar's worth. Maybe 80 cents worth. Maybe less. It all
depends upon the FRESHNESS of the gasoline.
For as gas gets staler it gets weaker. It loses volatile
“easy starting” elements. And—due to a chemical change
in gasoline—the staler it gets—the less power it gives! It
gets stickier too—and more apt to knock. >
Gulf after long study of gas deterioration has now
perfected a system that assures yon of getting FRESH gas
— packed with all the power you pay for. How?
By refining out of its fine gasoline certain complex
elements that cause premature deterioration.
And by making sure that you get this FRESH-MADE
gas in a hurry!
Gulf has geared its distribution system to high speed—
has placed ita huge refineries in many sections of the
country so that every Gulf station is dose to a source of
FRESH gas. A huge fleet of speedy trucks rushes FRESH-
MADE gas to Gulf pomps every day.
Get all the power you pay for Get FRESH gas-
delivered FRESH —get Gulf. Use nothing else. And have
a faster cleaner quieter motor.
■I* #•
PUB
get THAT GOOD
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The Brownsville Herald (Brownsville, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 33, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 11, 1932, newspaper, August 11, 1932; Brownsville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1394207/m1/5/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .