Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 106, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 21, 1942 Page: 2 of 8
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iMag Hits Hard
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League Lead
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4,3222
*. .
*
llred Predicts He
The Leaders
Sold to A’s
AMERICAN LEAGE.
slumps of his career, has
San Antonio ....... 52
club’s
Lehman Sets
NATIONAL LEAGUE.
to
He began his
Tourney Pace
BATTING
P
&
PRINCE AMKT FOR GRADE A
AND NOW MUCH
MILDNESS
Dallas
Beaumont 000 100 101—3 15
d
0
Phils tonight.
Larry
A
L
McWilliams
Albert i
I
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107 N. Main
Henderson
THE NATIONAL JOY SMOKE
Man In Austin
Vote For
a
Pol, Adv.
Lets Get Behind
Lions Play Soldiers
NEW YORK
A game for
The Men Behind
The Guns!
E,
larger
to the man
TIONAL BANK
"I was
s
&
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-
fP)
mae
«e•p •
••1
we
Has Met Ball
Safely in 17
Games in Row
Exporter Win
Adds Game to
Buy a Bond Every Pay Day
Until This War Is Won.
Buddy Rosar
is Fined $250
Prep Grid Star
Weighs Pr oBid
TRUCKMAN STEERS STRAIGHT FOR MELLOW
NO-BITE "MAKIN’S" SMOKES!
O'Daniel
Winnsboro
Every person holding a War
Ration Book can get a special
allotment of not more than five
pound* of sugar a year for home
3
3
tors in Washington,” Allred
, this nation would have been
iared for total war and the
once
best
0
2
for
the
49
50
40
38
Player, Club
Gordon, N. Y.
Williams, Bos.
Doerr, Bos.
Pesky, Bos.
Spence, Wash.
Detroit ......
Chicago .....
Philadelphia
Pct.
.600
.560
.535
.520
.516
.490
.400
.384
2
38
44
47
48
46
52
60
61
1
J
WPB's order halting the produc-
tion of golf clubs will save 3,000,-
000 pounds of steel.
aA
2
Club—
Beaumont
Fort Worth
Shreveport .
Houston ...........
Tulsa ...............
Oklahoma City
Dallas ...............
Pct.
.685
.575
.560
.516
.495
.414
.385
.378
P
Bl
"emr
Walter A. Ferguson
FOR STATE SENATOR
5!
633-
8
?
Washington .......
National League.
Club—
Brooklyn ............
St. Louis ________
Cincinnati
New York .........
Chicago ...............
Pittsburgh ..........
Boston ...........
Philadelphia .......
AB. K. H. PCT.
302 39! 104 .344
297 75 100 .337
303 38 101 .333
338 55 11 .328
366 55 116 .317
St.
close
endensom Aail Rews
------------- TUESDAY? JULY 21, 1942
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ding the issues of the day,
the
the Pirates and Chicago resumes
at Boston.
70
fine roll-your-
own cigarettes
In every handy
pocket can of
Prince Albert
Ik J
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Mabry Favorite
UTICA, N. Y, July 21 —(UP)
— Clarence Mabry, Jr,, TAas
state junior champion, is one of
the favorites in the New York
....... ......P „ A :
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A PAIR OF PEPPE FLYING FISH—Mike Peppe, center, is very peppy indeed as he wel-
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i French, who won his 11th game
I against only one defeat by
pitching the Dodgers to a five-
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_ R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., Winston-Salem. N. C.
Prince
PRE-INVENTORY FURNITURE
CLEARANCE NOW CUING UN
at
comes Bill Smith, Jr., right, phenomenal 18-year-old Hawaiian swimmer, to Ohio State.
Kiyoshi Nakama, Buckeye sophomore and another island aquatic star, joins in the greet-
ing. Ohio State coach calls them “world’s two greatest free-style swimmers.”
Eric McNair
1.
********
i IN WAR
BONDS
********
1
L
*
HIS is Christie Colton modern as the streamlined plane she flies, yet feminine as
1 a crinolined belle—the real Miss Amenta of 1942. She’s loyal to the conntrv na
to the man she loves, but she finds shep ‘ serve her country unlU she hu Natehnd
i
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St. Louis; Harold Mathison, Chi-
cago and Wilford Wehrle, Racine,
Wis.
aX3
g. : fh
EA
000 011 000—2 6
F .E
-888
300 64 105 .350
197 22 68 .345
325 45 109 .335
246 53 80 .325
273 53 85 .312
K
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g
again become .the
slugger.
DiMaggio has now
Player, Club
Wakefield, B.
Evere, B.
Baker, SA
Ballinger, S
Tucker, FW
Lillard, FW
Rickert, T
louis begins a drive to
the gap
by meeting the
The Giants play
- *.m
EVmoKn
EENTNN4
AB, .H. BA.
362 128 .353
368 126 .342
176 60 .341
193 61 .316
357 119 .333
249 78 .313
406 127 .313
B .
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"38
DETROIT, July 21 — (UP)—
Eric McNair, veteran Ameircan
League infielder, has been sold to
the Philadelphia Athletics by the
Detroit Tigers in a straight cash
transaction, it was announced
today.
Wyatt, Gillespie and Riebe.
Tulsa 201 000 000 00—3 9
S. A. 001 000 200 01—4 15
dlationist.
F “Right down the line I have
supported every appropriation de-
aiged to push forward this great
war effore and every measure de-
bigned to expedite the whole war
Effort, and I have consistently
given the President my 100 per
cent support’ wherever a war
By NEA Service .
'PHILADELPHIA — Here is a
football player who may take
the big hop from high school to
professional ball.
Joe Geri, who graduated from
a Nigh school near this city, has
been offered a contract by the
Philadelphia Eagles.
Geri, a back, is weighing the
offer but may decide to enter
the University of Georgia in the
fall.
Reiser, Brk.
Lombardi, Bos.
Medwick, Brk.
Musial, St. L.
Fletcher, Pitts.
easier on *e tongue
A- &y~
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"Everybody knows
been as close as it was. Beaumont
rapped Gordon Maltzberger for
15 hits. Dallas collected only six
off Wyatt and Gillespie.
Jack Brillheart gave up nine
hits to Fort Worth batters but
he struck out 13 to win easily.
Three Cat pitchers took their
turns on the mound.
Tulsa dropped a pair of tough
ones to San “Antonio, losing 4-3
in the 11-inning opener and 3-2
in the seven-inning nightcap.
Henry Wyse went all the way
in the extra-inning affair, giving
up 15 hits but holding the Mis-
sions to a three-all tie until the
11th, when he allowed the win-
ning run to count.
Joe Berry turned in a four-hit
performance in the nightcap but
it was not good enough. The
Missions put those four hits to-
gether to score three times. Homer
Gibson held Tulsa to two runs
on seven hits.
The Oklahoma City at Houston
game was postponed.
The line-scores:
Ft. Worth 200 000 000—2 9 3
Shrevep’t 001 220 OOx—5 10 0
Horton, Winfield, Clark and
Rolandson; Brillheart and Cromp-
ton.
MELLOWER, SMOOTHER, AND TASTIER u
IT SMOKES. P.A.'S CRIMP CUT FOR
"6en
k "4 Ei
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emn,9
h 0
ELa-,2
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2.
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Keep A Rusk County
A,,’ __ — __ * _
P—-e- r
■ ‘
consecutive games
average to .291.
W. L
61 28
50 37
51 40
47 44
46 47
36 51
37 59
34 56
and Sulphur Springs.
Allred sounded as his keynote
last night the words of a San
Antonio sailor, Sam Logan, who
escaped from a Japanese atrocity
treatment:
" 'Sure, I’m ready to go back
any time’,” Allred quoted Logan.
'Im ha’l to kill’.”
Warning of the grave years
ahead, Allred said "this is the
greatest cause in which I have
ever been engaged. It means so
much to me, it so vitally affects
the welfare of my country, that
I resigned a life-time job as Fed-
eral Judge to fight for these prin-
ciples in the forum where they
stand most challenged, the Con-
gress of the United States."
Had the President's program
been followed, if he had not been
"blocked and vilified by certain
allowed only five hits.
Brooklyn appears headed
some trouble soon since
* —2
g l
Yesterday’s Star
that America must not trust the
ratification of that treaty to the
Wheelers, the Nyes, the Vanden-
bergs and those who voted with
them.”
Moody fired shots at both
O’Daniel and Allred last night.
He declared this is no time for
fiddling or political demagoguery.
"It has never been my purpose
—and it is not my purpose now—
to try to out promise my oppon-
hit in 17
boost his
W. l. ret.
..... 62 27 .697
_____ 54 32 .628
______ 47 41 .534
_____ 46 43 .517
...... 44 48 .478
...... 41 45 .477
..... 37 56 .398
----- 24 63 .276
» 4
NEW YORK, July 21. (UP) —
“As Joe DiMaggio goes, so go
the New York Yankees.” That
was one of baseball's corniest*
cliches at the start of the season,
but now the swarthy young out-
fielder has converted the saying
into one of the major leagues’
timeliest axioms.
The Yankees, 10 games ahead
of the runner-up Boston Red Sox,
open a 12-game invasion of the
west at Cleveland tonight and,
if DiMaggio keeps his bat thun
dering at its current rate, the
champions may make this third
junket the most successful of the
campaign.
Joe McCarthy’s club came close
to disaster on its last western
trip. The Yanks led by 9% games
their last time out, but when
they returned July 1 the ad-
vantage had been shaved to three
games. In the short space since,
they have increased their margin
to 10 games by winning 12 of
15 and Jolting Joe, who became
Jellyfish Joe to the stadium fans
when he fell into one of the worst
Wyse and Holm; Miller, Wine-
garner and Funderburk.
Tulsa ........ 002 000 0—2 7 1
S. Antonio 010 200 x—3 4 1
Berry and Deam; Gibson and
Mancuso.
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i canning or preserving fresh fruit*
— • and vegetables for homa con-
aumption. ,
duugnugieodamwsejs
Maltzberger and Hayworth;
e,
•e > t,
STILL SWINGING — Tris Speak-
er, baseball immortal and chair-
man of Cleveland Boxing Com-
mission, is reported out of dan- >
ger following major operation
for intestinal puncture to which
he submitted while suffering
from severe cold.
Japanese never would have at-
tacked Pearl Harbor.
He discussed the post-war peace
plan and reminded that only 33
isolationist-minded . enators can
block any peace won on the fight-
ing front.
"The only light we l ave is the
lamp of experience, and I submit
I
1
1
7,1
bF 1
versity golf team; Dale Morey of
Martinsville, Ind.; Jim Frisis,
. .. Taylorsville, Ill.; Darl Schoon-
hit 5-0 triumph over the Pirates. over, Topeka, Kans., Garth C.
Tyrrell, Jr., a 17-year-old Beau-
mont, Tex., boy; K. R. Heilman,
■ A
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Ai
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- c‛
measure was the issue,” he as-
serted. "Does that sound like
isolationism?”
Allred speaks tonight in Dallas.
Moody speaks during the day at
Galveston, by radio from Beau-
mont and at Port Arthur. He
will address a night rally at
American League.
Olub—
New York ............
Boston ..................
Cleveland .............
St. Louis .............
A.
Dreads Necktie Party
BOSTON.—Ted Williams dreads
but one thing when he joins the
naval air fore* this fall—the
necktie he will have to wear with
his uniform. The Red Sox slugger
is a sport shirt addict, dislikes
anything around his throat.
army could be mobilized by train-
ing men twelve months and then
holding them in reserve for in-
stant recall .o service than by
training them 30 months,” he
said.
"The plan was so impractical
that it passed by only one vote
and many of the old-time admin-
istration men voted against it.
In addition to being impractical.
It abrogated t solemn contract
between our government and the
soldier boys.
“I am proud of the feet that I
voted to keep faith with the boys
in uniform and those twin op-
ponents, who say they would have
voted to abrogate that solemn
contract are not very popular
with the mothers and fathers,
relatives and friend* of men in
the service.
pended,” McCarthy said.
Rosar has assured reporters,
however, that he would be on
hand.
Rosar has completed the police-
man’s test. He will serve on the
Buffalo force during the winter
and continue to play ball in the
summer if he passes, the catcher
said.
eiks.
g
P•
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Hu.. a ............. asss.d
WWW
ICK TO SCHOOL—John Pesky, foreground, and Ted Wil-
ms, right, of Red Sox, join other would-be Navy flyers in
fresher course at Boston high school.
BE <---------—--■--------------
hitting splurge in Boston on July
4 and since then has made 26
hits in 52 times at bat. The
Yanks have won 13 of their last
17 games and now boast a win-
ning streak of nine straight.
The Red Sox play the White
Sox in an attempt to hold their
one-game advantage over the
third-place Indians, while the
red-hot Browns play the A’s and
the Tigers go against Washington.
Brooklyn recovered enough
from its week-end drubbing at
the hands of the Cardinals to
blank the Pittsburgh Pirates last
night, 5-0, as I.arry French
recorded his 11th victory of the
year against only one defeat.
Augie Galan, who replaced the
ailing Pete Reiser in Centerfield,
drove home the first two Dodger
runs. Dolph Camilli hit his 14th
homer in the eighth. French
Mni‛o
K BY UNITED PRESS
EJames V. Allred last night told
Ik San Antonio rally crowd that
Epolls now indicate he will get
Edmore than 46 per cent of the vote
EIn the Democratic party primary
- Saturday Sen. W Lee O'Daniel,
Allred claimed, should get more
Wthan 81 per cent and Dan Moody
Enearly 22 per cent on the basis of
Nhis “representative polls.”
8" call your attention to the
Mfact that these polls show the
UKeaant senator has gained ap-
Hproximately one per cent over the
2vote he received at last year's
^Special election,” Allred said.
E"Moody spoke Inst night at
'..‘•Houston and charged O’Daniel
'with “moral treason” and de-
MElared he is a "peril to the na-
Mon ”
“The time has come for Texas
Eto make its war effort 100 per
Mcent effective by removing from
Tthe United States Senate a would
Mbe constructionist, who has de-
Mmonstrated by his speech and
Macta that he is incapable of un-
Annenberg Dies in
Rochester Hospital
ROCHESTER, Minn., July 21.
(UP)—M. L. Annenberg, 64-year-
old German immigrant, who built
a newspaper empire from his
modest earnings as a Chicago
newsboy, died last night at St.
Mary’s hospital, less than two
months after he was paroled from
federal prison.
Annenberg, who amazed the
newspaper world with the success
of his highly sensational Phila-
delphia Inquirer ir the conserva-
tive old Quaker city, also was
publisher of numerous other news-
papers and magazines and origi-
nated the sale of horse racing
news by direct wire from the
tracks.
He was released from federal
prison on June 3 after serving a
term for income tax evasion and
entered Mayo Clinic shortly there-
after.
He had an operation on July
14 but because of his aga and
poor physical condition, grew
steadily worse. He died at 9:45
last night.
state junior tennis championships
brought up to keep my which open tomorrow on the Yah-
not break a contract." nundasis golf elug courta
Army Relief has been added to
Columbia's football schedule. The
Lions will oppose a team rep-
resenting Fort Monmouth, N. J.,
at Baker Field, Sept. 28.
EASIER, FASTER MLUNL-EASIER
DRAWING. IN A PIPE,TOOl r
*' — . nsb.0).
Beginning Soon in This Paper
A
CHICAGO, July 21 — (UP)—
Johnny Lehman, Chicago insur-
ance salesman who spent the best
years of his golfing career chasing
stars like Bobby Jones, “Sandy”
Somerville, Francis Ouimet, and
Lawson Little, found himself in
the role of pace-setter today in
the All-America amateur tourna-
ment at the Tam O'Shanter
course.
As the bulky field of 210 com-
petitors went into the final half
of the 36-hole qualifying test for
this war-year succesor of the Na-
tional Amateur meet, Lehman
led with a sub-par round of 71.
The prematurely gray Chica-
goan was the only player in the
big field to crack par yesterday
in the opening round. Lehman
was out in one under par 35 and
back in regulation figures of 36.
Lehman has been a “week-end
golfer” for almost a decade.
On Lehman’s heels with even
par cards of 72 were five players.
They were Johny Goodman, the
former National Open and ama-
teur king of Omaha, Neb.; Billy
Gilbert of Cincinnati, O., former
Big Ten champion; Frankie
Stranahan of Toledo, O.; Bob
Cochran of St. Louis; and Henry
Bowbeer of Chicago.
Ten players were in a tie for
seventh place with 74’s. They
were Pvt. Pat Abbott of Denver,
Colo.; Eddie Fry of Alameda,
Calif.; Johnny Staitz, captain-
elect of the Northwestern uni-
—7
•00 4
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Beaumont tonight,
speaks at Mineola,
CLEVELAND, July 21 —(UP)
— The principals in baseball’s
latest feud-manager Joe McCar-
thy and Catcher Buddy Rosar of
the New York Yankees—wwe
scheduled to arrive today for the
opening of a series against the
Indians.
Rosar left the club on Satur-
day, returning to his home in
Buffalo to take a policeman’s
examination. McCarthy was also
in Buffalo yesterday and levied
a fine of $250 against the young
backstop for - taking leave with-
out permission.
“In the event Rosar fails to re-
port at Cleveland for the night
game, he will be indefinitely sus-
ents, two of the greatest prom-
isers Texas has ever had,” Moody
said.
"O’Daniel is still insisting that
the war is not an issue and Judge
Allred has been trying to con-
vince the old people that he was
a better friend of pensions than
was O’Daniel.
“Their talk about which is the
better friend of pensions is so
much wasted breath in this cam-
paign. The people of Texas have
200.000 and more sons in the army
and they are thinking seriously
about this war.
“They are not interested in who
has done the most for pensions.
They should be, and I believe
they are, interested in who is the
best qualified to be a United
States Senator and who can help
most in supporting our fighting
forces.”
O'Daniel cited the record of his
। votes against amendments to the
neutrality act and then defended
his vote against extension of the
time of draftees in the army.
-AM. J
"P,g
g, Ad
Wrist Injury Helped
Wright’s Batting
By NEA Service
NEW YORK — Taft Wright
attribute* his swatting prowess
to an accident.
“I was a pull hitter until I
broke my wrist one day in the
minor leagues,” explains the Chi-
cago White Sox outfielder. “When
I got back into the game, I
couldn’t bring my bat around like
I used to, and had to push the
ball into left field. Pretty soon
I got the hang of hitting to left,
and I guess it adds 50 points to
my batting average every year.
It was a lucky break for me.”
h'e ' 'I.- _
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BY UNITED PRESS
A single by Hoot Evers with
the bases loaded in the last of
the ninth gave Beaumont a 3-2
victory over last-place Dallas last
night and added a full game to
the Exporter margin in the close
Texas League race.
As Evers blasted out his hit—
one of the longest single* ever
hit in the park, for it bounced
off the wall—second-place Fort
Worth saw its pitching crumble
for the first time in a dozen
games and Shreveport marched
off with a 5-2 win.
A glance at the hit columns
in the Dallas-Beaumont tilt indi-
cated the game should not have
western circuit, sensing a chance
to cut the Dodgers’ 6% game
lead, open a 12-game inyasion
of Ebbets Field with the Cin-
cinnati Reds leading the parade.
To make things even more dif-
ficult for the Dodgers, relief
pitcher Hugh Casey, in addition
to Reiser, will be sidelined for
about 10 drys with a broken
finger. Reiser, leading hitter in
the league, is in a St. Louis
hospital with a concussion suffer-
cd when he crashed into a fence
Sunday.
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HU Lead in Votes
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88382,* *
• the need* of this houi
oat tragic to owr nation
ry," Moody said
O'Daniel was tn WEyist
gheHetq haredi
e charges ne has been K
than history..
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Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 106, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 21, 1942, newspaper, July 21, 1942; Henderson, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1497259/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Rusk County Library.