Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 106, Ed. 1 Monday, December 30, 1940 Page: 4 of 6
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4
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concerned. You could
S
on to say that all would
and Mrs. M. J. En-
see. Frank
I
j MONDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1940
PAGE FOUR
! ton. succeeding Neal Pickett.
By JOHN R. WARD
make a crack .someone
fact is to
doesn’t pa rticularly like. It’s then
to believe he’s another
he begins
Walter Winchell in the making.
Golf—Joe Moore, Jr., Texas Mil-
i
Orleans. The
ing 41-39 to Southern California
e
with the regulars and will start.
organization of the
Sun Bowl a year ago. This time
9c
four games. That’s the year's best
comeback
8c
S
■deluxe
CLEANERS AND HATTERS
Fordham, 53-42, and Santa Clara football.”
Nebraska May Be
T. C. U.
played outstanding ball.
the differ-
louf
Want ads ring the cash register. I
Phone 72
i
i
>
we doubt seriously, for Stanford’s
e
be widened to improve
someone
4
jury list several days.
store.
Ij
LOS ANGELES, Dec. 30 (AP).
I
AUTO
men a little more rest.
f
LOANS
!
. . Rice
eagers battle the unde-
I
I
NEW-
second-string quarter-
Fordham
He’ll probably not be
mustang.
thinks Nebraska has too
many
1
}
$
IK
8V
>
i
A
{
&
i
A&M Club Has No
Injuries as Day
Of Game Nears
British War Relief
Game Is Arranged
Cage Teams Face
Another Week of
Barnstorming
ed secretary of the Lumbermen's
Association of Texas, succeeding
Chicago Bears Win
Pro‘Bowl’Game -
Our cleaning of your clothes is
thoroughly painstaking and exact-
"We have just light-conditioned our
home! It was so easy, and cost so little
We did it ourselves with the new-
lighting modernizers...with the help
of the dealer at whose store we
purchased our lamps and supplies.**
Colorfully Bedecked
Crowd to Accord the
Clevelanders Welcome
Hopes of Several
Nation’s Top Teams
tant are
crossbar
up for any absence of quantity.
There are other standout attrac-
series now stands at two
favor of the boys above
be given free tickets in any ball
park, except Frank Tolbert of the
Star-Telegi am. who would have to
pay when we played in Dallas. You
until
land
to-, come so close to a
after dropping the first
$1.50 Wave .
$2.00 Wave ..
$2.50 Wave ..
$3.50 Wave —
$4.00 Wave ..
$5.00 Wave .
feated Long Island Blackbirds up
in Madison Square Garden tonight.
The. Long Island team is consid-
ered about the best in the busi-
silly. The
to one in
pear,to be
a scribe is
roses. But
A liberal
permit a
substitution rule would
coach to give his key
five of the players had to be put
to bed because of air sickness.
place them on any diamond and
they'd pour d out a few hgmers and
no more than an ordinary number
of foul balls. They can all play on
its ability
state title
Dick Booth and End Willis Waggle
handling the aerial assignment.
150-watt Mazda lamp. Priced
from .... $1.s0 to $2.00
Tell your merchant you saw his
advertisement in The Register.
ing. You will “notice
ence.”
At the left. . . Clamp-on
. shades will change your
old glaring ceiling fixture
into a modern lighting
unit. These clamp-on
shades are priced at from
only Me to 7Sc etch.
space to enumerate all of them
here, but probably the most impor-
NOW! LIGHT-CONDITION
YOUR HOME WITH THE
NEW LOW-COST LIGHTING
MODERNIZERS...
46,000 Persons to
See Southwest Champs
Play Fordham January 1
At the right.. .
a plastic adapter
diffuses and reflects
light, transforming
an old bridge lamp.
43
•T
night for the title in the Oklahoma
City cage tournament.. . All of the
many bowl teams have completed
rough work and are marking time,
with only light workouts scheduled
for today and Tuesday. ... A
Iowa State swinging back into ac-
tion against Drake.
e
.5z
my teams.’
He goes
the various regions.
For instance, Indiana's NCAA
champions will tangle with Ken-
a.
f 9o"
Similar adapters are effective
in modernizing floor and table
lamps. As Lou at 40c
g
G *
"mesenmen/o 1,
.... $1.00
.... $1.50
.... $2.00
A.. $3.00
.... $3.50
.... $4.00
I
E
1
f
Get All Your Accounts .
In One With Us.
At the left.. .
Glass enclosing
unit gives good
glareless light
for the kitchen
with 100- nr
I
»
The Chicago Bears failed to run
up any 73-0 score, but they proved
26m
Special for Tuesday, Dec. 31
Wheaties
THAT SANDSTORM from Ama-
. rillo we heard so much about late-
ly was nothing but a gentle breeze
in the first half of the Amarillo-
Temple game in Dallas Saturday,
but the storm blew up in all its
fury the last period and blasted
the Wildes its out of the state high
school football championship. At
that it took a pretty fair break late
in the final quarter to stave off a
Temple victory, a pass interception
by a Sandie end on his own 9-yard
stripe, when it seemed certain that
Temple was headed for a touch-
down. Bui he did make the inter-
ception and his team did win,
which gives Amarillo four state
S. M. U. Between ’em the two boys
might have passed the Yankees
the occasion with another ef those
gruelling, day and night holiday
grinds. Their work will start early
Tuesday and will end with the wee
r
■ 11
..
and Miss Ruth------— .
selected the winners from 14 en-
,
-
I mention to Mr.
j dres.
The out of
tions, too.
Tonight, unbeaten Temple, which
I The automobile was parked in
I front of a building next to the drug
Call 337 for appointment.
Annie Durham.- Pearl Brown
Siebman’s Beauty Shop
112 N. Commerce St.
Unclaimed money in national
banks now totals 132-million dol-
lars.
feature of a doubleheader at Madi- college stars who will play in the ! screaming tires,
son Square Garden tonight. The annual " " "in .
ness. - . .
Pittsburg
pect some 20 deaths this year.”
The Highway Patrol will observe
000,000 barrels, including a domes- l
tic demand of 1.311.000,000 and
an export demand of 128.000.
The lily was first cultivated in
1597.
prepared to welcome to the Cotton
Bowl city the host team to Ford-
ham University’s Rams in Wed-
nesday’s classic of the Southwest.
Coach Homer Norton, bald mas-
ter of the Texas team that has won
19 of its last 20 games, including
a triumph over Tulane’s Green
Wave in the Sugar Bowl just a
year ago, will bring his lads to
town this afternoon and get in two
quick drills before the kickoff.
Bowl Long Sold Out
Long sold out to its 46,000 ca-
pacity, the Cotton Bowl game will
bring together two of the nation’s
top once-defeated teams. Both lost
to traditional rivals this season —
Fordham to St. Mary’s Galloping
Gaels of California’s Moraga Hills,
6-9, and the Texas Aggies to Uni-
M
The estimated demand for
American oil in 1940 was 1.439,-1
Fullback Ripper Pitts have been bermen's Association, young and
’ ' ; most of the passing in old.
Officials say the solution may
be a descriptive broadcast from a
small dirigible, already chartered,
or from a soundproof booth.
Booths in the Rose Bowl are
soundproof and network represent-
ative? said rooting sections' yells
would be picked up but that micro-
£
team spirit when he declared:
“I’d be a h---of a quarter- police Sunday night that
back if I didn't think so, but I had entered his parked car and re-
catching eight consecutive passes
for 117 yards and hurling his six
feet, five inches into many de-
fensive maneuvers.
Meanwhiie, Coach Jim Crowley
of Fordham announced that his
regular starting lineup, will be
ready. Quarterback Jim Noble,
who missed the final game of the
season with New York University
after receiving a head injury in
the Arkansas game, was working
reserves for Stanford. This,
I
elude Jinx Tucker, Jerry Malin,
Collier Partis, Frank Tolbert, Lane
Goldsmith, and several others.
(Note — he never mentioned Bill
wen smpty
crew ia Ait
attrative new
eype
now available at
low
vassror Juxtin:
sere a Silvered
Bowl MAZDA
9 ,
443
Per pkg.........
Pork Sausage
Per lb...........
La
. J
UNCVE
UM!
Stores belonging to the Retail
Merchants association will close at
5:30 p. m. each day except Satur-
day beginning Thursday, January
2. and continuing through Febru-
ary 28, it was announced at the
Retail Merchants asBbition of-
fice.
Stores will also be closed all day
Wednesday in observance of New
town judges, Mrs.
1 George Pedigo, Mrs. Maxie Dill,
I and Miss Ruth Scott, all of St. Jo.
really think we can beat Stan- moved a plaid overcoat,
ford.” Petsch has been on the in- !
Made without delay. We can
also refinance present
notes, if any, and advance
additional cash, or make
smaller payments.
i -_L-
tional League All-Stars yesterday
in a charity game out in Los An-
geles, 28 to 14. Sammy Baugh, as
usual, turned in a neat passing
game for the all-stars, but it was
not enough to turn back the
mighty Bears. . . . Harold Ratliff,
Associated Press sports writer, al-
ready names Masonic Home as one
of the strong teams of 1941. We
thought they were tough each and
every year. . . . The Aggies are due
to arrive in Dallas this afternoon.
Let us hope John Kimbrough &
Company are fired up about this
bowl game. They’ll have to be to
win it. . . School starts up again
today. We should start having
some good basketball games now.
... Ed Dusek, Temple’s fine full-
back, is the only Wildcat to be
chosen on the All-District 10-AA
team. There were four Corsicana
boys on the mythical eleven. Won-
der why the Tigers didn’t do bet-
ter with four such boys on the
same squad? ... . The West team
has vowed it will stop Tommy
Harmon, the Nation’s No. 1 back,
in the annual East-West tilt. What
about Reagan? He’s practically as
good as Harmon . . . Right now
we’re more interested in seeing
someone stop the Axis powers, and
a gent said late night IT COULD
BE DONE.
Hoosiers won
But w like it, even if
tossed more bricks than
he has the satisfaction
start the game against the unde-
feated Indians, summarized the
---------
- -----ee
11
And Texas U. meets the
Kansas, Teachers to-
Austin’s drug store, reported to
Pace Bros.
Dodge and Plymouth Sales
and Service
Used Cars Bought and Sold
106 N. Chestnut — Phone 7
John R. Thurman, employe of
LIGHf-C0NDITI0NIN6\
OUR HOME COST SO MUCH LESS
THAN WE THOUGHT LT WOULDJ
More than double the daily aver- doing
| age number of traffic fatalities scrimmge, with Ends Sam An-
said Tommy Harmon, 1 will occur Dec. 31 and Jan. 1, De- drews and Bob Lackey on the re-
* hs -t--k partment of Public. Safety statist!- ceiving end.
would make his first appearance cians estimated today. ! Against this combination, the
on a Southern California football' "Eignven persons wele 122
field in the game. | these two days last year,” said
“It also," Glover said, “will be ( Col. Homer Garrison, Jr., director.
_ - the last appearance of Harmon in j "With fatalities increasing about
edged past Illinois 42-41 Saturday a’-football uniform. His college ; 10 per cent, it is reasonable to ex-
night. will battle Kansas, which ‘playing days are over and he does -- -
was toppled for the first time by not intend to play professional
Western Reserve
e Squad Is Due in
El Paso Today
Mr. Dionne is known to many
I el paso, Dec. 30 (AP). — The Gainesville citizens.
Red Cats of Western Reserve Uni-
they were the kingpins of the pro-
fessional football world.
Utilizing power and a devastat-
ing air attack when needed, the
champion Bears rolled over the
cream of the rest of the National
league in the third annual “pro
bowl” grid battle Sunday, 28 to 14.
The largest crowd in 15 years of
professional football in Los An-
geles, a throng that swelled to 21,-
000-some 3,000 over the inade-
quate facilities of Gilmore stadium
witnessed the game.
It was a great show’. The. Bears
were unable to roll up that 73-0
count they scored against the
Washington Redskins three weeks
before in the National league
championship' game, but they
dominated the contest from start
to finish.
1,
tries. The committee in charge of
the second annual event was com-
posed of Mrs. Rosa Driever, Mrs.
M. J. .Endres, and Miss Olivia
Woodside.) |
“This is an ultra all-star team,”
says Howard, "a bunch of boys
who keep batting out sports copy
the year 'round. They are in a
pretty fair league, the best as far
W -W onocondbonoce
they settle down to the slow’
process of parcelling out sectional
honors. ‘
Tell your merchant you saw his
advertisement in The Register.
START with the
old ceiling fx-
ture you already
have. No new
wiring, no fuss
or feather*!
Dallas Prepares Cowboy W elcome for Texas Aggies Arriving Today
4
g.,
said.
Quarterback Hurt
■ But Claude Pieculewicz, Ford-
ham second string quarterback,!
may not play— He was hospitalized
for observation after a horse bolted
as he rode in a wooded area yes-
terday. Dr. Glen Carson said two
of the quarterback’s ribs on his
right side were bruised severely.
“The trunk of a tree threw the
hardest block into me I ever re-
ceived and knocked me off the
horse and into another tree,” Pie-
culewicz said.
“He probably will not play,”
Crowley said.
No special ceremonies, other
than the parade through the down-
town canyons and the Cotton Bowl
i showers from the skyscrapers,
were planned for the Aggies.
“No fake train holdups, ten gal-
lon hats or boots for the Aggies,”
said one bowl official. “Most of
the Aggies wear boots anyway.
They know the ropes.”
Stores to Close
Half Hour Earlier
The Bulldogs arrived from
Window Peeper
Released on Bond
ference title. fought Catholic Uni- j ternity. and talking to lumber
versity to a scoreless tie in the meetings and conventions since
‘ 1907. He has probably addressed
course. doesn’t mean that the
changes will be made; they’re
be no music during broadcasts
either of the parade or the Rose
Bowl football game which follows.
Effective January 1, Ascap-con-
trolled music can no longer be
broadcast.. What worries the ex-
ecutives is the possibility that va-
graht notes from any of a dozen
. - first team is tough a-plenty . . .
the suggestions that the The Chicago Bears beat the Na- .
versity of Texas, 0-7.
The Aggies, a team that has
miraculously weathered two full
seasons with only one damaging
injury, barged in on the battle
scene intact. A slight influenza
epidemic claimed two or three Ca-
dets last week but the entire squad
moved into sunshiny weather with
the veteran team of nine seniors, a
junior and sophomore ready for
the start.
A surprise, last-mnute shift in
the Aggie lineup was expected to,
send Bill (Jitterbug) Henderson,
CLARK SCORES FOR AMARILLO—Amarillo’s C. Clark dives over from the five-yard line for Amarillo’s first
touchdown in the state high school championship game with Temple in Dallas. Amarillo won, 20 to 7. At left is Hill,
Temple halfback, at right, Speer, Temple quarterback. ._____________ I ■
Memn an
By FELIX R. McKNIGHT -
DALLAS, Tex., Dec. 30 (AP).—
Booted Texans with six-shooters on
loan from the sheriff’s office made
' ready for the other half of the
Cotton Bowl post-season football
clash today— the plundering Texas
Aggies of the native prairies.
Full of football fever, the of-
at Los Angeles Saturday night. On
Hedefinitely-is ready,” Crowley top of this the Indiana squad flew
to New Orleans and right away
find the Tempe outfit filling the i he resigned. He is publisher of The
air with passes along with their j Gulf Coast Lumberman. a lumber
steady ground game. Yesterday ' magazine published in Houston,
they brushed up on the timing of j which business he inaugurated in
some new plays. ! the early part of 1913. Mr. Dionne
Tempe twice winner of the con- ] has been writing to the lumber fra-
Printers Earn
Good Pay
Printers earn a good liv-
ing. The field is big; trained
men are in demand; and
wages are high. There are no
“seasons” in the industry,
and the work is interesting.
If you like machinery, or
like to work with your
hands, printing is one of the
finest trades you can follow.
The Southwest Vocational
School has turned out many
printers now holding respon-
sible position s—and they
studied only a short time.
Write for free catalogue. You
are in no way obligated, and
it may open the door to your
financial independence and a
high-paying job.
Southwest
VOCATIONAL SCHOOL
3800 .Clarendon Drive
Dallas, Texas
HAND COMPOSITION
LINOTYPE • MONOTYPE
PRESSWORK
year which closes Tuesday.
Deputy County Clerk Tom
Blount revealed that 384 marriage
licenses have been issued to cou-
ples in this county since Jnuary
1, 1940.
The total for the previous year
was only 300.
Fort y-seven couples obtained
marriage licenses during October,
to provide the record month of the
year. Registration day was on
October 16.
Other months with higher totals
than usual were September, with • .
44; August, 40. and June and Jul-
37 each. A noticeable decre
was in November, with only 30 c
pies applying for licenses.
ficial reception committee hauled
out its cowboy regalia again and
01®
38855
Rose Bowl Favoritesmall hours o Thursday
changes will be made; they’re Year’s Day. The public schools
merely recommended by the com- ' will also be closed Wednesday.
mittee. We don’t have time and ======================
a gigantic sophomore, into the
starting right end position.
Henderson Is Starter
The angular novice, who had
never played football until en-
rolled at A. & M., had been flirt-
ing with fame until the Rice In-
stitute game. He made permanent
connections that afternoon by
can claim victory over the Rebels,
the North All-Stars upsetting a
similar group from the South Sat-
urday in Montgomery, 14 to 12.
Once again we see the importance
of booting those extra points. The
Northerners too the lead in the
opening quarter and remained out
in- front. About the only consola-
tion we can find is that Goodnight
of Hardin-Simmons and Sherrod of
able to play in the game against
the Aggies. Coach Crowley had
better keep his athletes indoors
after the tussle. . . . Grant-
Rice
six 1
pendulum of schoolboy sports in one championship.
Texas swung back toward the big t Here is the year's summary:
’ ‘ ' Basketball—San Marcos.
Track and field—Highland Park
loves to take a pot-
shot at Dallas sports.
SEE THESE NEW LOW.COST LIGHTING
MODERNIZERS AT ELECTRICAL DEALERS
if you ask us. y
ONCE AGAIN THE Yankees
inmLsi - n. -
|, -m 4,—..1e. .1
f .----* -•do
Publishers and radio networks. ■ go out on the air.
As a result, there probably will
By HAROLD V. RATLIFF i El Paso, Corpus Christi, Cuero,
DALLAS, Dec. 30_( AP). — The San Marcos and Amarillo each won
113 e----ic-eu ---dJ* AEdIII- Lillo
‘Eighteen persons were killed on Red Cats are expected to produce ,
- ■ “ said some razzle dazzle with Halfback
as they're
$,s44.,t0~
Booms During 1940
Whether it was the war situa- *
tion or just the natural course of
events, the marriage business in
Cooke county boomed during the
“-g Stock
I SECRETARY of the Lum- ’----t
i bermen’s Association ofTex-Marriage Business
| as, is Jack C. Dionne of Hous- ® - - -
FODDER — It's not too late to
purchase a Cotton Bowl ticket. We
see where 300 more have been
turned beck by A. & M. College.
Betcha fans can go down on the
day of th ? game and buy a ticket.
versity arrive today for their New j • *
State, Border conference cham- Jack Dionne New
pions who are doing an encore in c a IAr
the Cactus country classic Becretary L.A.I.
A colorfully bedecked crowd •
Neal Pickett, who, in November
Tempe last week and have had last, was elected mayor of the city
daily scrimmage sessions against i of Houston.
"""-".228 uEanll
night in the Sugai Bowl at . ew won a title. . . , ... double Whak-v Camus Christi- Coach Dixie Howell has been a lumber journal editor, was elect-
--------- — San Antonio led the field with • ‘ ‘ • rP! IS Thomas i putting his team quietly through a 1 ed to succeed him, and he retained
straight games before finally fall- three major crowns - swimming- girlsingles,., batch of plays, which may the office until April, 1929, when
golf and girls tennis singles. Dal- Jerrerson (San Anton1ol: gms . - - - - . ... r ... . --
las was next with titles in track doubles. Erleen Wehman and Ad-
and field and baseball. die Bell Lucas, Cuero.
the Mason-Dixon line.
I - ♦ * *
THE NATIONAL FOOTBALL
coaches rules committee votd for
nine rule changes in footbah for
next year at the annual meeting
up in New York City. This, of
very disappointed if he doesn't
The 19-year-old Gainesville High '
school senior, who was arrested;
Friday night for window peeping. {
was released from the city jail
Sunday on bond.
The father of the youth appeared
at the city hall police headquar-
ters and paid an appearance bond.
The case has been entered on
corporation court docket.
SPECIAL PRICES
And Styles for Christmas:
Permanent Wave . . 75c
IT’S NICE TO KNOW we have
one admirer, even if he is a sports
scribe. Belting out a sports col-
umn day after day isn’t as easy as
Prescription
Filling is the most important
department of our business. Tc
date we have filled over
244,555
Just as tne Doctor Ordered
ext time you have one to be
filled, we will appreciate serving
you, and it will cost you no mnore.
Watts Bros.
Pharmacy
Home Owned -I- sine 1015
The Rebel management made a
mistake in not drafting Ray Mal-
Texas Interscholastic League. No
other high school can claim that
honor save Waco.‘made back in
the middle twenties. But a big
hand is due the Temple team for
other past, and a more liberal sub-
stitution rule. We like the last one
best, for it would tend’to cut down j
injuries, we figure, since a large
number of injuries "occur when
players are pretty well tired out.
titles since
one might imagine, and during
certain months of the year it’s a
wonder the daily ravin’s aren’t
even less interesting than they ap-
of knowir g every brick that’s
hurled comes from a reader. And
regardless of the quality of his lit-
erary efforts, he has readers. All
he has to do to be assured of that
game in Los Angeles Sunday D,pAmAn HA,
January 5, were completed early 1 A •UIVIIIEII 1 CoI
Long Island U., undefeated in today by Captain Norman Glover, N... A:I.4
seven games, will collide with the secretary of the British War Relief:IVIanY ACCIuenIS
Rice Institute Owls, Southwest association of Southern California. * __________ _ _
conference leaders and winners of; Glover announced he had ob- i AUSTIN, Dec. 30.—Texas will ' the Bulldogs are out to junk the more lumber conventions than any
seven out of eight games, in the tained services of virtually all the start the New Year to the echo of jinx that has kept a conference (other living man.
iale wap «... pioy ... screaming ures, the crash of champion the home team in the He is well known to the Snth-
Shrine East-West classic ' crumbling steel and shattering bowl- from winning a bowl game, (western lumber fraternity in gen-
other half of the bill matches un- here New Year’s Day and that' glass, cries of anguish from the in- Halfback Joe Hernandez and j eral, and to members of the Lum-
beaten St. John’s against Colo- both teams were complete with the , jured, and mourning for the dead.' i ---- "
rado, Big Seven champ and winner possibility that two or three play- -- - - .......
of a national invitation tourney at ers would be added later,
the Garden last- spring. j Glover s
Although the week’s program-University of Michigan halfback, I
isn’t heavy, games like these make “
back wap injured yesterday in
Dallas while trying to ride a Texas
Except for a slight letdown
Wednesday, this pace will be kept
up throughout the week.
• .wMMmas-a*n*SenMgTaMEBMTE8N88N
g-eicnnu
- . "" - -s
2. - r . -
“sesdh
field goal kicking, that fourth
down incompleted passes behind
will face once-beaten LaSalle in a
doubleheader at* Philadelphia. An-
other bargain bill at Columbus, O.,
will bring together Pitt and Ohio
State and Princeton and Michigan. KOSe DOWI I 2VOTIU8 Heaviest traffic concentration
Seton Hall wall defend its 30-game I will lead to and from the New
winning streak against Kansas; PASADENA Calif Dec 30 Year’s Day football game in Dal-
State and Minnesota clashes with; cApS•e‛vmiiersity-, Ne- las, said Capt. Hill Foreman. High-
George Washington.. .. braska’s footban nteam ma? wake way Patrol chief, and patrolmen
Unbeaten Creighton starts a up tomorrow, if not sooner, and I will concentrate especially upon (
four-game swing that calls for two find itself in the unenviable posi- major highways leading into Dal-
games with Michigan State to- tion of favorite to defeat Stan- las from hundreds of miles away
ni^-d tomorrow idght and then fords grid machine in the Rose in every direction.
with Ohio State and Xavier. | BowI New Year’s Day 1 * ‘ Patrolmen elsewhere in the state
Tomorrow night’s card also has Esers , ni, lookine ' will be assigned to strategic areas
Princeton and Wisconsin and Illi- Jne HusKers, 4 n f where accidents' most frequently
nois and Marquette matched in a rangy outfit With a woridofoPti- occur.
doubleheader at Milwaukee; Notre mism, created a most favorable . oc ur.__-----
Dame against Northwestern. Santa impression upon California critics A ry,n_
Clara at Duquesne, South Carolina following, their. prrivptsSunday Overcoat aken
at Georgia Teeh and unbeaten And a ad named Roy Hetscnitirst
string quarterback who will be From Parked Car
and Johnny Clement of
adcad’esistknesimavalt hi beeiaskes.
squad an old-time western wel-
pome. .
cr more bands in the parade might ; phones would be cut off when
find their way to a microphone. 1 bards start playing.
The widespread intersectional exas Swuzg ca.. .wa.. a..
skirmishing already has punctured cities during the year which closed,
the hopes of several of the nation s out Saturday when Amarillo cap- _
topnotch teams and some of theitured the state football champion- (Dallas).
spectacles on tap in the next few ship. Golf—Joe Moore. Jr., Texas Mil-
days ought to go further toward; of the ten major sport activities itary Institute (San Antonio),
showing up the real strength of the larger cities won five titles. | Baseball—Forest (Dallas).
Only two of the so-called Swimming —Brackenridge (San
“towns" came through with cham- Antonio).
' I Tennis — boys singles, Walter
Dashed in Recent Weeks : p.,.
By JUDSON BAILEY i Pendulum Swings Back to Big Cities
NEW YORK, Dec. 30 (AP).—> ° . .
barn-storming is ahead for the In High School Sports Competition
country’s collegiate leader’s before • "
SPORTS Fzgg
■ ■■■■■■■■■)
A SPORrs SCRIBE isn’t entirely
A without honor, save maybe, in
his own community. Howard
Brickey of the Wichita Falls
Times selects an all-star team of
sports writers, which “yours truly”
made, whether as batboy or third
string sub, he doesn’t say. Any-
way, a few of our teammates in-
SnovPag
Gainesville Daily Register \
h pe-mA,
F 8332888-838885
L f .
t * / . a
■ a ■ i
SAN FRANCISCO, Dec. 30
(AP)—Final arrangements for an
intercollegiate charity East-West
S*naen0n-
"o« s
Prizes Announced
In Light Contest
A
j ! MUENSTER, Dec. 30. — Prizes
were awarded Saturday in the
lighting contest for Muenster
homes sponsoied during the holi- %
’ day season by the Civic League
I and Garden club.
The first prize went to Mr. and
Mrs. Joe Luke; second. Dr. and
Mrs. T. S. Myrick: third, Mr. and
i Mrs. Nick Miller; and honorable
a3t
■
■ '
I
the goal line be treated like any
r k “dh
THRASHERS
GROCERY
Daily Special
98 313 E. California
Rose Bowl Headache Results From
Ascap’s Squabble With Networks
PASADENA, Calif.. Dec. 30, One network (NBC) has exclu-
i (AP).—There may be lots of head- |sive broadcast rights for both the
. i aches New Year's Day, but to of- । parade of rose-covered floats and
ficials of the colorful Tournament the game. But the Tournament
! of Roses the biggest is the cun-ent ' association has been informed that
squabble between the American it will be held jointly liable for
Society of Composers, Authors and any "forbidden" music that might
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Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 106, Ed. 1 Monday, December 30, 1940, newspaper, December 30, 1940; Gainesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1469905/m1/4/: accessed July 12, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Cooke County Library.