Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 31, Ed. 1 Friday, April 24, 1942 Page: 2 of 8
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ect
Indians Bounce Back With Five Straight Wins
0
Lufkin Closes
Vv.
4,} enderson Hail Nets
OFF
Successful
THE
i
CUFF SpringTraining
FRIDAY, APRIL 24, 1912
PAGE IWO----
Red Hot Red Bird
0 •
4
• s 2
lisle.
A
AMERICAN LEAGUE
NATIONAL LEAGUE
si
ampionship and Farmer
7
Harry Walker, and Estel Crabtr
lankv wing candidates, as a mate ■
2
"325
Thompson,
performers
ale
ec
WITH 18 WINS AGAINST FIVE LOSSES.
100, the
broad
Favorites
Fliers’ Track Meet
But they
of the fullback posts.
They are
In
THOUSANDS ARE SAVING THOUSANDS
some cases, they even are cutting
I
BUSY TO
ss
:3388
WRITE
i er.
e
AN AD
AUSTIN
5
Fort Worth
Training Station here.
(6,
N
‘ -S
*45
Dallas for a doublcheade r; Shreve-
postponed
or
and Tulsa at Oklahoma City.
The Leaders
।
Slaughter, St. L. 30
.364
.35’
.355
1
cut his leg in the barn and the Tabor, Bn . .
the mile and one-quarter in the
27
1
Stout gave him one touch of the
I
as bad as the others.
I
is laying
f
.2
I
Goods Co.
HendersonD
Southworth and
Durocher on Spot
GET CHERRY
VOUCHERS
William
"Jimmy
The week still has a couple of
days to run and already 10 games
clubs, Crim looms as a favorite in
the approaching Southwest tour- ।
Dame
program
Ensign Voights Is
Handled With Care
Slaughter and Hopp there aic Irv
Dusak, who also doubles at third
base, Terry Moore, Stan Musial,
and Burnette are assured of their
spots, with plenty of competition, |
Texas League
Halted by Rain
son’s performances.
ketball and football.
Gaston repeated
I
. Sr
Ensign Voigts is
charge of the brig
major tune-up props are a matter
of history and there is only one
left on the calendar, yet the men
who are supposed to know all the
answers don't even know one.
They say Alsab is burned out.
They claim Apache is a sprint-
.400
.364
0
Team—
j Tulsa .
Beaumont
i Oklahoma City
1 Houston
Dallas ..........
। San Antonio ....
Shreveport
smart runner, McKay is a passer j
with plenty on the ball.
4
A.
While You Spend
BE VOVK OVNi
• Delivery Boy
* Bill Collector
h• Credit Mgr. 4
■hr at PENNBSj
EEapw6#
l me
says
rW
3
Texas-TCU Baseball
Game Is Postponed
.444
.400
.375
.222
left-fielder is
PICKED TO BE
ROOKIE OF YEAR.
SLUGGING STAN
BATTED FOR
CARDINALS IN 12 GAMES
LAST SEASON
AFTER HITTING.379/
AT SPRINGFIELD 4
AND,326 7
AT ROCHESTER. 7/
w.
...... 7
...... 6
6
.... 6
....... 5
4
..... 3
2
BY VERNON DOWDY
News Sports Editor
MCWILLIAMS
Hardware & Furniture Co.
Eernandez,. Bn .
Sanders. St. L. .
Ott, N. Y. . . .
Moore, St. L. .
I..
2
3
3
5
6
6
6
8
Team—
New York . .
1 Boston ..............
I Cleveland .........
Detroit .............
St. Louis .....
Washington .....
Chicago
Philadelphia
. 44
. 33
. 28
. 31
terday.
If the teams play
pennant.
' Brooklyn expects the same thing
BY UNITED PRESS
The ball playcis of the Texas
League will collect no overtime pay
this week.
from Winchester to Louisville, the !
I hardboots in this dark and bloody I
LJ
I'
The broad jump pits three out- ।
standing champions, Bill Christo-
pher. Rice; Ralph Tate, Oklahoma
A. & M., and Lee Farmer, Iowa, I
against ach other.
“A GOOD STORE
IN A GOOD TOWN 4
Christopher captured the Texas ।
relays title. Tate took the Kansas
Bob Voigts, former Northwestern
football star and later coach at i 1 onferenee
“TOO
BY JACK GUENTHER
LEXINGTON, Ky. (UP)—Kentucky today is as blue as
and Tuesday, Fort Worth Wed- j
nesday an ' Thursday, in a six-day I distinction. Other bad field letter-
Pct.
.750
.700
.556
.545
.400
From the Following Finn*
West Street Grocery
Webb’s Sanitary Dairy
Smith’s Ladle* Shop
Rountree Cleaners
Cherokee Hardware Co.
Crawford Clothier*
Plunkett’s Magnolia Serv. Sta.
Allains Beauty Shop
McCarter’s Sanitary Gro.
& Mkt.
Haden & Boucher Drug Store
Bassett'* Sinclair Serv Sta.
Dr. Pepper, the Made-Kite Co.
White's Auto Supply Co.
MeW illiams
Hardware & Furniture Co.
Ray’s Spunkeye Service Station
1400 West St.
.800 won the event at the Big Ten in- ।
ann door meet. While all have jumped
---- better than 24 feet, none has 1
.556 threatened Jesse Owen’s meet rec- 1
League pitching for a healthy nv- , however, from the squadmen.
erage, and looks like a cinch to The line, outside of Hicks,
W.
6
..... 7
..... 5
....... 6
....... 4
....... 4
...... 4
2
I .
2
4
4
4
5
6
5
7
1 whip coming into the stretch, and
he responded like a shot out of a
$
TODAY”
See Premiums on Display al
million. is the world's largest pro-
son of Alcazar-Flying Song can go said no. not this one.
man at shortstop this year on a
permanent basis, after using him
at second last season.
army-bound, continued to bag
Southwest conference laurels yes- |
terday by winning two matches as
NEW
League I
to be on
5t5lAL
ST. LOUIS7 SOCKING
.667
.545
.455
.100
.333
.200
There probably won't ever be
anybody who can completely take
Bob Feller's place but Boudreau
double and triple.
Hal White. Detroit rookie from
Buffalo, pitched his second shut-
out as the Tigers trimmed the
I White Sox. 9-0. Ted Lyons went
the route although giving up 16
Billy Southworth is expected
guide the Cardinals to the
L.
2
3
4
5
6
- 6
poll at Beaumont, also for two
games; Houston at San Antonio,
CORPUS CHRISTI—An invita-
tion track meet will be held at
the Corpus Christi Nawl Air
Slation. June 12. Profits go to
Navy Relief.
a <
A62
Hnn4
in recent years more than 10
per cent of the total retail trade
in the U. S. has been generated in
connection with motor vacation
travel.
Maryland's Chesapeake, the first j
of three big preps. As you re-
, ■ ®
kh-. Pn 3 a",
22--/
n 1
3 t
i
{
। horses still in the running and
। every one looks just as good or
ord of 26 feet, 1 3-4 inches which
the Buckeye bullet established in
1935.
Minnesota’s Boh Fitch will try
fo a meet record in the discus
throw. Winner at both the Texas
and Kansas carnivals with throws
of nearly 160 feet, he may better
the Drake mark of 161.45 held by
I
I
4’
home stand
It has been 21 years since a
World Series pitcher won three
series games . . . Stan Covelskie
of Cleveland did the trick when
the Clevelands beat the Brooklyn
Dodgers . . . Joe Lafata, with the
1940 Henderson Oilers for a spell,
is the Minneapolis first baseman
this year, jumping all the way
from Class D into A A ball . . .
Toledo has installed Mark Christ-
Other events are the
The Dodgers ran off their fifth
traight yesterday and increased
their National League to two
games by defeating the Braves.
0 to 5. The Dodgers won 18 out
of 22 from Boston last year and
.400 1 .drendv have taken four in a row
.364 from ' them this season. Pete
.286 Reiser drove in three runs with
Pet. । performance this spring which
.778 was only three seconds shy of the
.667 I Drake record set by Rice in 1938.
I rocket.
“The race prove* he i» * super-
ior mud runner and a man reels
good with a mudlark on Derby
Day because rain and mud are fre-
quent."
From Frankfort to Paris and
have been postponed because of
Pct. relays
using Notre
duct rination
midshipmen
There are
football champion, with Leverett’s
Chapel second and Carlisle third.
Overton nosed out London for
fourth place.
Arp was the basketball cham-
l<>. Burnette.
Frank McKinney, fast and ver-
satile brain truster, will be the
center of the Panther backfield
at quarterback. He can pass, run
game will be played, but said if
it is played it likely will be at
Fort Worth.
the vveteran trainer of
Woodward's brown colt.
illinoisWeslyanand Yale, 'always j tween Texas and Texas Christian
gets a snappy salute from sailors ' niversity, scheduled to be played
.......I here today, was postponed because
I of weather conditions.
The two teams are scheduled to
two-day program but only eight
count toward the team title.
Three will be decided today, with
NYU hopes riding on successful^
defenses in the sprint and distance"*
medleys. In the other, Duke
University defends the quarter
mile relay. Special events include
the invitation 120-yard high hur-
dles, the 400-meter hurdles, two-
mile run, shot put and discus.
Five team title events Saturday
are the half mile relay, in which
North Texas State is the titlist;
one and two-mile relays, both won
last year by Indiana; the four-
mile relay, taken by NYU, and
the 480-yard shuttle hurdles,
which Tufts has left undefended.
events on the
hasn't the beef it has had in past
! years and will range between 150
and 173 pounds. But those line-1
j men will be able to get around.
' Of course, they are growing boys,
and may put on some weight over 1
| the summer.
j The remainder of the line will
probably see Buddy McKinney, a
of Leo Durocher.
Jimmy Wilson having disposed
of Cubs he didn't want. Chicago
looks for the north siders to im-
prove in the old catcher s second
season at the helm.
Wilson is closing out a two-
year contract.
Southworth and Durocher have
a month,
GOODBYE GEE-GEE — Mis. M.
E. (Liz) Whitney plants kiss on
muzzle of The Bear, one of her
hunt and show horses sold at
auction with stable of Dr. Lewis
M. Allen at Llangollen Farm,
Upperville, Va.
. ,________ field composed of Dick Smothers, '
has found a fellow who will do Oklahoma; Dave Griffith, Drake; [
until somebody else comes along Ken Gladding, Illinois, and Bob- ,
young Jim Bagby, son of the by Ginn, Nebraska, in defense of
----------------—-----| his two-mile crown today.
Hunter breezed through a 9:13
546
A#
Ke-—,
the officer in
deadly because of its timeliness.
I Fabian Gaffke won a 1-0 battle
with a ninth inning pinch-hit.
Jeff Heath and Ken Keltner have
heen especially timely with their
bit-. Rookie Oris Hockett, playing
right field, is leading the Indians
in batting with a .312 mark, and
has failed to hit safely in only
one panic.
in the rear, but his time was
shockingly slow. So the experts to
all turned up their red noses and '
fast and rough player, at the
pivot spot ; Shirley Anderson, who
has shown great ability in the !
whether today's
pring session, at the tackle post '
with Weickershiemer, and either I
Buddy Rutland or Ed Parrish, j
Al Blozis of Georgetown,
Oklahoma was after a clean 1 day with the finals on tomorrow's
sweep in the distance medley. The I card.
as the 24A
of the Drake relays today.
Five university finals. including .
three individual events. topped to-
Quartered at
Lou Boudreau Track Stars Open Attack on
Hsicpexsnd Drake Relay Records Today
1 ' LUFKIN (SpL>— The Panther
I ’ 1912 grid hopefuls completed
I spring training April 14, looking
schedule shows Fort
Larry MacPhail of the Dodgers
arees with the man who brought'
1 him up in baseball.
and kick—and do them all with
f ne. s . . s
tob,hzezagi
Conroe, here; Temple, there;
Bryan, here; Palestine, there;
l.ivingston, here; Marshall, there;
Nacogdoches, here; Jacksonville,
| there, and Henderson, here.
nament. He'll get a real test in
Weickersheimer, tackle, and Bur-
ni. - ... m. — । nette, end. Bolles and Hicks made
pion, beating out Troup and Car- , ,
- • - 1 a combination hard to beat at
hammer throw. javelin.
member, Colchis whipped both Al-
ah and Requested in that one and
Colchis isn't eligible for the Der-
by. Tom Piatt, the man who bred
Alsab, claims the horse didn't like j
the footing.
The second of the glamor ‘line-
ups. the Blue Grass Stakes, was
run here yesterday and it proved
nothing either. Devid Diver, the
hot advance favorite, was scratch-
ed an hour before the race. He
hits.
» esteraay s nero—tou novi-
Roff, the Cubs' mad Russian
who was the biggest flop of
the 1941 season. He hit a homer
off Max Lanier to beat the
Cards, 2-1.
the guard slots: Weickersheimer
this event and should he win he'll
be eligible for competition in the
National Intercollegiate tourney
in Chicago in the near future.
. dered by the WPB to discontinue.
| as of May 31, ude of such critical
1 materials as plastic and cork need-
ed for fancy gear. After June 1
hooks may be manufactured at the
rate of 50 per cent of 1941 output.
The partial hook exemption, it
was explained, is to take care of
the man who goes out “to catch
himself a mess of fish once in a
while."
' a five-hitter, bringing Baghy’s
turn up again yesterday. Feller
couldn't have done any better.
Sooners were first at Texas and
Kansas and needed only the Drake
crown to sco.e a “triple.” They j
were timed in 10:23.3 at Kansas,
far off the Drake record of 10:06.1
made by Wisconsin in 1938.
Bob Wright, Ohio State flyer,
will defend his 120 yard high hur-
dles title against such stars as
Whitey Hlad, Michigan Normal;
Joe Saunders, Miami, and Henry
Vollenwelder, Iowa.
All "ere conceded a chance of
clipping a tenth of a second from
Fred Wolcott's mark of 14.2. Pre-
liminaries were scheduled for to-
one-year parchments.
indi. „ >». , . , Branch Rickey of the Red Birds
Indi*, with a population of 389 doesn’t believe in giving man-
agers long-term contracts and
L‛
poned from carlier this week in ' .. . , .
rain For the last tWwo days I have
Officials had not decided when ’ talked to owners, trainers. Jockey.’
sport writers, experts and just
because of
jump, pole vault and high jump.
Indiana and Fordham are favor-
ed in the sprint and two-mile
events and Duke's outstanding
440 competition includes Missouri,
returning to the carnival for the
first time in 16 years; Army,
Navy and Pitt. Fordham is picked
in the 880 relay and Virginia
heads the hurdle field.
Mud Won’t Hurt
Apache in Derby
NEW YORK Sunny Jim Fitz-
simmons. trainer of Apache, which
won the six furlong Experimental
Handicap at Jamaica believes the
National League
Player, Club AB
plain touts. Not one offered to
select a horse capable of showing
j his black nostrils under the finish
' wire in first place. To a man, they
j centered their conversation on the i
fact that there is no thoroughbred
fast enough to head the clans.
The men were disappointed by !
YORK Three National,
managers are considered
i the spot this season.
On the offense the Panthers 1
, will not have the weight nod . _____ .__\ 1:.n.
' power tkey had io 1941 outside its grass andits blood lines.
Production of Rods
And Reels Suspended
WASHINGTON. (UP) Ama
teur fishing at least the kind
done with fancy rods and reels
fit the impact of the war today.
Tackle manufacturers were or-
As it appears now and this
opinion represents the combied
brainwork of almost every resi-
dent in this town--the Derby is
as wide open as Reno,Nev . Agus
Caliente, Mex., or Joe E. Browns
mouth. There are more than 20
ducer of tea sugar and jute, ac-
cording to the Department of
Commerce.
DES MOINES, la. (UP)—Track stars representing 93 • "
universities, colleges and high schools, open the 33rd renewal
Tracksters Go
After Records
PHILADELPHIA (UP) — In-
diana’s Hoosiers and New York
today the
Worth at
di mls 2-1.
Johnny Mize and Willard Mar-
shall continued their hard hitting
and the Giants downed the Phil;
lies 5 2. Mize singled and tripled
and Marshall hit two double’.
। The Yankees, taking advantage
| of six Philadelphia errors, beat j
'— the Athletics, 6-4. The A's robbed
i their pitcher Jack Knott of a
Pet. deserved triumph. Joe Gordon's
* 1 single with the bases loaded drove ,
in the two winning tallies.
Despite the fact that pitcher,
7 I Dutch Leonard 'napped a bone
- 1 in his ankle, sliding to first in
the second inning. Washington
went on to beat the Red Sox;
10 to 5, behind relicfman Bill
Zubre. Stan Spence hit a single,
the U. S. Naval
the Derby. They are arguing that .
I none of the 150 can win the Der-
by. It sounds silly, but there it
is.
PERSONAL NOTE to Bobby
Robinson, sports editor of the
Overton high school annual: F. L.
Singletary, route 1, Hendeison,
can give the information you need.
He has the records on all Inst sea-
Ena p.sht
msa6,,00
R H
4 17
6 17
5 It
6 14
fi 13
The Caids keep a handful of
outfielders around In addition to i
------------- a homer and single
There may be j Johnny Vander. Meer the Red’
| Pirates to five hits and the Keds
, came up with a five-run inning
Sunday two games were called to trim Pittsburgh, 5-3. Bert
off. None were played Monday. Hans doubled to start the ra il
,nd Eddie Joost singled with the
And all four were postponed yes- Iond
1 । bases full.
Lou Novikoff's homer and Bill
Ice's seven-hit pitching enabled
the Cubs to nose out the Car-
E. F. Crim, ’r., the Hender-
son Country Club slugger, who is
a student at Baylor university and
R H
fl 12
4 16
4 12
11 10
7 11
Although Cleveland’s hitting
hasn't been terrific, it’s been
triumphs, 1942‛s longest winning
streak in the American League,
and moved into a second place
tie with the Boston Red Sox, one
game behind the pace-setting
Yankees,
Fort Worth
cards. To date they haven't come
up with a favorite for the 68th
Kentucky Derby.
The Derby is barely eight days !
away and for the first time since j
Stagehand caught a cold on the
eve of the big show in 1938 there
is no big horse. Two of the three
for its in-
for 1000
BY GEORGE KIKKSEY
NEW YORK (UP)— Lou Bou-
dreau, the-youngest major league J day's program supported by sev-
manager in history, has the Cleve- eral college and high school di-
i . . . .a vision finals.
land Indians on the warpath— ,
. . , ,, .. Texas defends its university di-
not in the clubhouse or on the vision spring medley relay cham-
bench but on the ball field, pionship against five challengers.
Beaten in three of their first i The Texas quartet, which set a
four starts under the 24-year-old newworld record of 3:23.2 in
Boudreau, the Indians have bounc- winning the Drake title last year.
ed back with five straight ‘aptured the Texas spring medley
in 3:26.1 in its only start this year.
Captain “Hull” Hicks is sure of !
holding down one of the guard
positions.
Other lettered linemen return-
ing are Jesse Bolles, guard,
old surge of Cleveland pennant-
winning days nearly a quarter of
a century ago. Bagby became the
first major league pitcher to win
three games this year when he
hurled the Tribe to a 9-2 victory-
over the St. Louis Browns yester-
day.
.in 10 days Bagby has beaten
the Tiger-, 5-2, hot White Sox.
1-0, and the Browns 9-2, allowing
only 19 hits in 26 innings. He
went the route in each game ex-
cept the first in which he had to
have help from fireman Joe
Heving in the ninth.
Bagby's spectacular start has
helped straighten out the biggest
problem on the Cleveland club—
pitchink. Bagby started the five-
game streak with a four-hitter,
\I Smita followed with a six-
hitter, then Al Milnar tossed a
seven-hitter and Vernon Kennedy
.600
.556 |
hold on to •' e first base job for
the St. Louis Cards.
Since Enos Slaughter, the Cards'
cleanup hitter, has been reclassi-
fied 1-A in the lira ft, Sanders'
chance, are in1 ch improved. If
Slaughter goes into the army,
Johnny Hopp would take over
right field, in all j robability.
THE SHREVEPORT sports,
closest pro team to Henderson,
Be home tomorrow and Sunday,
in case anyone is interested. They
play Houston's Buffaloes. The
Sports entertain Dallas Monday
University — matching two of
America's greatest runners-were
favored for the team champion-
ship as 3,110(1 athletes moved into
Franklin Fiell today for a two-
day assault on world track and
field records in the 48th annual
Penn Relay carnival.
It's Campbell Kane, the Indiaia
iron-man, against Leslie Mac-
Mitchell, NYU’s mile king, in four
feature events—with the meet
crown as the prize. MacMitchell
won a similar duel last year when
he led Kane to the tape in three
out of five races, giving the New
Yorkers the title.
play a douhleheader here Satur-
day, of which one game was post-
seriousness of his condition hasn't
been determined.
With Devil Diver out, his sta-
blemate ran to an easy triumph.
I His man is Shut Out and to me
he appeared to be a pretty fait-
horse. He ran Col. E. R. Bradley's
Bless Me right out of the Derby
by leaving him some four lengths
Navy Utilizes Notre
Dame Parking Lots
NOTRE—DAME Those who
drive to Notre Dame football
games next fall are going to be
pleasantly surprised at the billiard
like smoothness of parking lots
east of the stadium. The navy,
the Baylor golf team was defeated
by North Texas Teachers' College.
A likely conference champion,
Crim, who is captain of the Baylor
fairway fenders, has won five in-
dividual i latches against the
toughest college competition in
the state in recent weeks. Mean-
while, his teammates have failed
to chalk up a victory outside his
triumphs.
Unless the army snatches his
Kentucky Derby May 2
“The Experimental showed
he is not an excuse horse." i
The Big Surplus STOCK LIQUIDATION SALE has
taken the whole community by storm—Amid a downpour
last night the house was packed. Same items advertised
in our big four-page broadside and in the daily newspaper
ads are on sale tomorrow and until sold out. We are so
busy it’s impossible to take time to write an ad. My, what a crowd of people
swarmed the street in front of the store all day today—they were all happy,
thriftly people—that is what we like to see! It’s a treat! Come tomorrow
when the crowd begins to congregate on the street—come early and avoid the
jam—if you failed to respond last night or today, or come but did not get
waited upon, by all means come tomorrow, you won’t be disappointed. Plenty
of 1.39 Dress Shirts at 89c; 5.00 Resistol Hats, 2.77; Sheer Summer Dresses
50c. Every department bulges out with powerful LIQUIDATION SALE BAR.
GAINS. You will find women’s 6.00 Plaid Suits at 3.99; women’s 3.50 Shoes
at 98c. Make your hard-earned dollars go farther by being here tomorrow,
Sure! Be an early bird and get here before the rush. Buy 2.00 Shirts at 97c;
Flock Dot Voile at 12c a yard. I am dictating this to a good loking stenog-
rapher ... Mr. Dudley of the News says, “hurry it up or you won’t get your
ad in.” So hurry down. 10c Fancy Buttons at 3c; 3.98 Summer Dresses at
1 00; and you haven’t heard the half of it. Will see you TOMORROW Sure!
Hurry!
both in has- 19 11 team will be on the firing
; line when the season open* I
They hint Devil Diver is doubt-
ful.
They insist With Regards has
no class.
From the first to the last of
the 150 babies who were nomi-
nated for Matt Winn's equine
epic, the natives of America's;
thoroughbred citadel are picking Iweather conditions. '
flaws. This year, they aren't
arguing as tn which horse will win more postponements.
to the fall grid wars with a bit
of misgiving. Eight lettermen
I return. ’
Mentor Abe Martin gives up
18 members of last year’s squad.
Only one first stringer from the !
GREAT LAKES, HI. Ensign
I will be fast and shifty—razzle-
dazzle can be a good substitute .
, " * I ground are bewildered,
for power. ■ . . . , ।
' . . grasping at straws, pulling petals
( onch Martin has been stressing j ofr daisies and flipping coins,
his passing attack and has de- , — -• — --
(UP) A Southwest
baseball game be-
Kreevich, Phila 36
in Derby
-----_---/ " ; -2.889 "
NaB8S ">
e"sge- 3s
12 ehe—-
2 MN-
"a 9
_ mmeta1-4
(ED FLORIDA STATE LEAGUE AS
NOUTHPAW HURLER IM 1940
Pct. 1
.486
.425
.379
.378
.361
American league
Player, Club AH
Gordon, N. Y. , 35
Campbell, Wash. 40
Dickey. N. Y. . . 29
Strong competition was expect-
ed from Notre Dame and Michi-
gan. Oklahoma, Nebraska and
Purdue also were rated as possi-
ble threats.
Oliver Hunter, III, Notre Dame's
successor to Greg Rice, faces a |
Thompson, some good bets to seel
plenty of action when the time 1 .
comes are Westmoreland and f T f / ... .N .. ■ . A
Nmlay,weetmorcapuanaiarhova JL^oss I hunder FOst
Another outstanding field was
lined up for the 100-yard dash
prelims today. Iowa’s Farmer
faces Gene Littler, Nebraska; Big
Six ace: Orv Mathews, Oklahoma
victor at both Texas and Kansas,
and Don Walters, Missouri. Fin-
als in the event will be held to-
morrow.
pitted against the team that held
them to a scoreless tie in 1941.
The remainder of the schedule is:
veloped a covey of good passers
and receivers. McKinney, Taylor.
Thompson and McKay are being
groomed for the passing assign-
ments, which promises to be good
when it comes.
The 1942 schedule opens at
Corpus Christi, with the Pack
------------- . u
.-.cl .
RAY SANDERS, cx-Kilgore
shigger, is making National i
Metteauer and Taylor.
The fullbrek post will see either I
Metteauer or Ren Merritt hold
it down. The halfback positions )
are wide open with plenty of
candidates all of them light and |
inexperienced. Besides Taylor and
Team— W.
Brooklyn . 8
Pittsburgh .................... 6
St. Louis .................... 5
New York .................... 5
Chicago ........... •..... 4
Boston ............ 4
Cincinnati ................... 3
Philadelphia . 2
out eight softball fields and six
volleyhall court’ on this site, and
may add baseball diamonds. There,
are 12 athletic instructors here. I
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Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 31, Ed. 1 Friday, April 24, 1942, newspaper, April 24, 1942; Henderson, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1497184/m1/2/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Rusk County Library.