Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 223, Ed. 1 Saturday, April 30, 1932 Page: 3 of 8
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1
DENTON, TEXAS, RECORD-CITOXICLE. SATUIIDAY, APRIL 30, 1932
PAGE run
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Up to Friday night. 265 athletes
A
taneously with the Class A division
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had etered for the events of the
second
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here will start
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Friday afternoon.
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be filed aturday, it was indicated.
entry list would be swelled close to
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113. .361; Traynor, Pitts-
laded the bases in the fifth and
Ladies’ Coat or Man’s Overcoat
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THREE BRAND
DAILY SERVICE
NEW TRUCKS
with ICE
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Walker Leading
American Batters
Let Us Clean Your Winter Overcoats, Suita, Sweaters
Before you put them away for the summer. It will save
the fabric.
CHICAGO. April 30- -(P—Pace-
maker lor the surprising Detroit
People's
neck race, and a hotly-contested
meet is looked for this year.
For your convenience we will gladly
call in your orders to Dallas for mer-
chandise, free of charge.
Damate estimated at $500,000,000
was caused by the Yangtze river
flood, according to formal report on
the final survey. .
three.
-Babe Ruth, the strong man of
the Yankees, led in heme runs with
five and had batted in the most
runs. 17, and the Yankee speed-
ster, Ben Chapman, who last year
led the league in stolen bases, had
forged into tab lead in that de-
partment. with five thefts.
4
S. 1. Seif Motor Co.
t. 201 South Elm St. '
s
Batting Power of
Dallas Steers Is
Finally Showing Up
FIREPROOF WAREHOUSE
Our storage plant is amply large to take care of any
need, having- 7,000 square feet storage space, con-
crete floors and brick walls. You’ll find our storage
rates very reasonable on ether small or large lota.
2
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• Babe Ruth, the old maestro, is shown above looking over his sugging playmates on the New York Yankees. The boys in early fames
averaged better than two homers a contest.
t , .
uiu
Poor Brakes Put Folks in the
Poor House
8
1
How about yopr brakes?
Will they hold in sudden
emergency? Can you afford
to take the risk? Better drive
in have ua examine your
brakes now and then, and
you’ll be better off.
Let Us
Wash, grease and pol-
uh your automobile.
Xou’ll agree it has
the appearance of a
new paint job.
Laney & Craven
Lakey Court.
Telephone 67.
High junip: McDonald of Dvutou!
Vaughn and Knight, both ot Den-
ton. tie Height: 5 feet, four inches.
Shot put: Moore of Denton: Pat-
terson of Denton; Travis of Com-
mercepistanczi4llet, three inch-
e*. -
Javelin: Bryant of Denton; Trau-
ber of Commerce; Vaughn of Den-
ton. Di stance: 163 feet, four inches.
- - I
i
J. D. Moore Hits Stride to Take Individual Hon-
ors; College Freshmen Have Easy Win
Over Sanger, Aubrey, Denton High.
Rhyne of Boston in triples with Phone 24.
—==---=-=--==========-=====
champion Athtetics, thestim right-
hander from Baltimore promises to
eclipse te record set lest season
by Lefty Gomez, who won 21 and
lost only 9 for the Yankees.
The Senator's sensaticn benced
the veteran George Earnshaw, 2 to
1. yesterday In addition to holding
the A’s to five hits and stopping
them dead in the pinches, he scored
the winning run in the fifth in-
ning when he singled and was driv-
en in by Joe Cronin.
The win failed to regain the Sen-
ators their place at the top of the
standing, however, as the Yankees
were clubbing out an 8 to 7 victory
B3
Ice Company •4
j Telephone 130..
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Located south of King Grocer Co. (‘
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2-( COMBS. 0^1^
ton; Williams of-.Commerce; Bishop
of Commerce and W Mullins of
Denton, tie. Timer 2:064:------------
120-yard high hurdles: Moore of
nenteuLCulpepperoLDenton_Ma-
lone of Denton. Time: 1M.
100-yard dash: Elder of Denton:
Stevens of Commerce: Gardner of
Commerce. Time: 10 fizt.
440-yurd dash: Hayes of Denton:
Cleaned and Pressed and packed in moth-proof bag—75c
EAST SIDE TAILORS
Phone 31.
Coach Choc Sportsman’s Eagle thinly clads struck a
.fast pace in the second night track and field meet here
Friday night to roll up a 60-point margin and down an in-
vading Commerce squad, easily with a 951-2 to 35 1-2
W/X , 1
2g I
"B“
,FFag 2
$a
of Commerce.- Distance: 122 feet,
five inches.
Mile run: B. Wilson of Denton:
Dean of Commerce; Kuntz of Com-
merce Time: 4 44.8
Relay: Denton, by fofteit.
Broad jump: Gardner of Com-
merce; Herring of Denton; Faublon
DON’T FORGET
We are bonded and insured, and have
taken every precaution for the safe
handling of your goods. ’ ■
•. f
--35a
EAGLES TRAMPLE COMMERCE
• IN NIGHT DUAL MEET FRIDAY
TOWIN BY GO-POINT MARGIN
cinnati, Frank Frisch of the Car-
dinals and Lloyd Waner of Pitts-
burgh.
Terry held third place on the list
of leaders with a-380.average, only
three points behind Whitney. Trail-
ing nun were Suhr. Pittsburgh, 375;
Lindstrom, New York, 364; Mallon.
zet
g.4 ,
batsmen at' tA end of the second
week el the 1932 -season_____________
Critz held first place among the
"regular" players'up through last
Weamemmps-gamaes . average
of .418. leading Pinkey Whuney or
the Phillies, second place man, by
35 points. Critz also had collected
more base hits than any other
Fried chicken dinner Sunday.
Little Palace Cafe.
College athletic field Friday and
Saturday, May 8 and 7.
The cutries represented 60 schools
of Texas, Athletic Director T. J.
Fouts reported Saturday morning
Several more entries were due to
ball to the fsr reaches of the park
The Yanks last seson performed
the somewhat astounding feat of
scoring 1,067 runs and not winning
the pennant. Grove. Earnshaw and
Walberg, great hurling trio of the
Philadelphia Athletics, furnished
the reason. The trio had better be
good again this year, because the
current Yanks appear a cinch to
collect more than 1,000 runs. —
burgh, 360; Herman. Cincinnati
-*8. sbiphentnn Ch rago .355; and
Collins St Louis. 253.
The big giant first baseman also
had given A great exhigitton of all-
around clouting. Terry held two first
places with six home runs and 16
runs batt<4 Th. Jim Collins of the
Cards was credited witrfour hom-
ers for second place while Heyman
had driven home 13 tallies. CoBins
held two more seconds with 12 runs
and six doubles. The leaders were
Gus Suhr of Pittsburgh arid Freddy
Lindstrom of New York, with 13
runs and the Waner brothers. 'Paul
and Lloyd, of Pittsburgh and John-
nyFredenckofBreckLyn-whohad
hit seven doubles apiece.
Suhr and Herman were tied for
the lead in three-base hitting with
three triples each while Paul Waner
lea in stolen bases with four, one
more than his teammate. Pie Tray-
nor. —
As a club. the Giants led in hit-
ting with a 311 mark while the Bos-
ton Eraves displayed the best feld-
log average, 980.
,#-2- Ke
en,
3607
player. He had .23 while the next
------------- best total was in by Bill Terry of
Discus: Moore of Denton; Travis I the Giants, Babe Herman of Cin-
making ponsiblethat the complete grabbed the victory by a small mar-
.....gin and at the close of a neck-and-
Between Dalian and Fort Worth, Den-
ton, Gainesville and Nocona. Tele-
phone 18 for any trucking need.
' -e
Trucking
Hauling
Pickett of Commerce; Wilson of
Denton. Time: 61 flat
Critz Sets Pace in
National League
•F
—-2e,
Yanks have started swinging from
| their heels, and it is beginning to
> look like they are going to have
j a lot of Ametican League teams
’ running to cover before the season
1 is over.
In .their first six games of the
season the Ruppert Rifles collect-
ed 16 home runs and there appears
’ no sign that the bombardment will
' slacken to any great degree as the
' campaign settles down.
4
/" J
' E
,9 42
beating the White Sox. 7 to 8. St.
Louis and Detroit were remained
out.
The Boston Braves, out to prove
their early pace was no flash in
the pan. trimmed the Giants. 8 to
3. behind Huck Bett’s steady curv-
ing. The win planted Boston only
a half-game behind the leading
Chicago Cubs, who were held up by.
rain.
Eppa Rixey gave 13 hits but had
only one bad inning as Cincinnati
made it a pair from Pittsburgh. 6
to 4 _ _ --- -
Chuck Klein, brilliant Phillie out-
fielder, gave the dmvV best solo
performance in helping submerge
the Brooklyn, Dodgers. 13 to 6. His
homerun with the bases loaded. •
double and two single drove in six
runs.
of Denton. Distance: 21 feet, two Phi
and one-half inches.
League State Class B track and J Fh preliminaries
field meet. to beheld st Teachers at 1o o’clock Fri
Fouts has announced. Finals will'
begin Saturday morning at 9 o'clock
Present Indications are that sev-
eral new records may be put on the
official list when the second an-
nual meet gets under way. Jewett,
winner of the first annual meet.
Monte Weaver
MakingMar k
as Rookie Hurler
Tigers. Gerald Walker has hoisted
himself into the American~Ee«JUB’
batting leadership.
Unofficial avetrages including
Wednesday's games gave the Tig-
er outfielder the sturdy mark of
.473, 33 points better jthan Lou
Gehrig, Yankee first sacker. An-
other Tiger outfielder, Roy John-
son. held two Individual leaderships
and shared in another, and Foxx
held one and divided another John-
son led ui runs with 15 and hits with
23 and tied with Tom Oliver of
Boston and Goose Goslin, St. Louis
cutfieldep in doubles, at six, while
Foxx had 38 for the best total base
collection and was tied with Hal
Since the first of the year in order to more
efficiently and economically handle your
’ trucking needs. You will find that we can
handle your hauling quickly, with no
breakage or damage, and you will also find
our prices right on long or short hauls.
NEW YORK, April 30—(TP)—
Hugh Melville Critz, little second
baseman of the New York Giants
who has hit better then .300 in only
one of h‘s eight seasons in the Na-
tional League, ontinued to set a
blistering pace for the league's best
1
--32%A
t=n#2A
..-4
300. a
The Class B meet is held simul-
—nL
GEHRIG, IB
-—--------- Ann
sherstop Schare unloaded them
with a triple. These three runs and
and another in the eighth spoiled
Galveston's ambition for victory.
Galveston's tallies were home runs
by Larry Cox and Gene Rye.
The Hciston and Shreveport
game was postponed because of rain.
OVER 288 EHTEREO AS EVHHS
GF CLASS B STATE MEH NE AR
, --- ____. : t "1 -2.
By GAYLE TALBOT.
Associated Press Spoils Writer
If Monte Weaver of the Wash- i
nig ton Senators maintains anything
like his present pace, the experts I
will have practically no dimculty i
deciding on the American League's
outstanding rookie pitcher for th
year.
With four consecutive victories.
Including three over the league
collected 46 homers aplece last sea:
on, naturally were to the thick
of ine firing, but the lung driving
of Sam Byrd proved a surprise.
Byrd started the season at cen-
ter field and immediately pounded
out three homers, which equalled
bis entire-output for last year. Sam-
my explained that he had secur-
ed a lighter bludgeon and was tak-
ing a longer cut at the ball.
Earle Combs, ousted from center
- events held at Austin. Similar tro-
schotastic-piesare awarded both divslon
by Byrd, also started swinging a another who has been ciriving th
It looks as if the advertised bat-
tmg power of the Dallas Steers
has finally torn loose from its
—-moorine Pre-season dope hadi _
that the Steers were to be the bom-
barding aggregation of the Texas
League race. After a wild start
against Fort Worth opening day.
Steers and their batting attack re-
treated so far that fandom has been
wondering what the trouble was.
After getting drubbed, 18 to 1 four
days ago at Wichita Falls. the
Steers uncovered their bets and
went to work. They beat Wichita
Falls, 13 to 8 for a starter Yester- I
— day against Beaumont, they bann-
ed nine hits against and over the
fence for » 7 to I victory. Zeke
Bonura, giant first sacker. opened
the second with a Une drive into
the leftfield bleachers Georg LOPP,
centerfielder. plastered one over
the fence in the third with the bases
loaded, and while the Steers were
hitting, George Murray toyed with,
the Exporters. stopping them with
four hits and one run— that ho-
mer by Greenberg In the ninth.
What the rest of the league I*
dbing doesn’t seem to be worrying
Fort Worth. Yesterday the Cats ex-
--tended thetr wtnning strenk to five -
consecutive games by taking San
Antonio. 3 to 2 Dick Whitworth had
hl* troubles but managed to stay on
the mound and save the game for
the Cats.
- Wichita Falls remained In a tie
with Dallas for third place by
landing a -2 punch on the Galves-
ton Buocaneers. carroll, Galves-
Boston. Cleveland made it six
straight over westem nvats ter
"home inn" bat when inserted in
the lineupin the place of the Babe,
temporarily out of action with a
cold. Combs, a line hitter, elevated
his sights and drove two out of
the park in his first two games.
Tony Lazzen celebrated his re-
turn to seccnd base after it had
begun to look as though he had lost
his job to Jack Saltzgaver by pat-
terning a powerful home run that
gave the Yanks a victqry over
Boston. Bill Dickey, big catcher, is
ennust- Int
mroimchcgrgm
h "3"
%2d.
LBDa - 6
Ice is the only safe nd sure re f r i gerant. Nothing pre-
serves the flavor of your food so much as pure ice, es-
pecially PEOPLES ICE. It is pure, convenient and eco-
nomical—If you haven’t started your delivery. call 130.
. ’ If we did not furnish your ice last year, we’d like a trial,
anyway, for the coming season. We have an idea that
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Rain or shine, year in and year out, we always make our
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Remember us, we’re very anxious for you to TRY OUR
SERVICE.
WEBSTER
NEW YORK April <48—The,—Babe Ruth and tou Gehrig who
ITade”
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SN 16
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Phone 18.
score.
In junior events, held between
events of the vanity meet, the
TeachersCollege freshmen grabbed
- an ewy victory from contestants
from ’DenToh Bangei awl- -Aubrey.
high schools
The fieshmen piled up 40 1-2
points; Sanger 15 points; Denton
five points and Aubrey four and
one-half points
Moore Four Firsts
J. D. Moore, Eagle track and
weights man who has been turning
steadily improving performances,
got off to a fast stride Friday night
to chalk up 26 points and take in-
dividual scoring honors by a com-
fortable margin. Moore placed first
in shot put and discus end took
the low and high hurdles for his
four firsts.
Denton High's lone first was tak-
- an by H*m Harmon who to—d.ihe
shot 43 /geet, three inches. to take
that juidor event. Harmon had in-
tended v‛ enter the discus thro*,
but was prevented by th?1 fact that
the two events were held at the
same U me
The Summary
Summary of varsity events, giv-
ing first, second and third place
winners in order listed and giving
winner’s mark. Was:
Pole vault: Wright ol Denton;
Herring of Danton; E Wuson and
Faybioh, both of Denton, tie
Height: 11 feet, kix inches.
220-yard low hurdles: Moore of
Denton; Malone of Denton; Taylor
of Commerce. Time 25.3.
Two-mile run: Seay of Denton;
Davis of Denton; Johnson of Com-
merce. Time: 10:26.2,
220-yard dash- Elder of Denton;
Stevens of Commerce; Pickett of
Commerce. Time: 22 5.
880-yard run. Lumpkin of Den-
? ’ 1 ------------------ -------------------------------------------------------------
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 223, Ed. 1 Saturday, April 30, 1932, newspaper, April 30, 1932; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1538775/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Denton Public Library.