The Abilene Reporter-News (Abilene, Tex.), Vol. 66, No. 74, Ed. 2 Friday, August 30, 1946 Page: 4 of 14
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THE ABILENE, TEXAS, REPORTER-NEWS
Page 4 Friday Evening, August 38, 1546
50 Gridders
ards Exploding
Berres Quits Post
Sox in Last Home
Stand, Seek Record
Due at HSU July 4th Theory
Head Coach Warren Woodson at
Hardin-Simmons announced today
that he expects a squad of 50 foot-
ballers to report for Monday’s1
By JOE REICHLER
Hot on the train of 100 victories for one season—an amaz-
Ing record for a 140 game schedule — the red-hot Abilene
Blue Sox return to their home bailiwick tonight at 8 o’clock
for their last home stand of the season. They face the Clovis
Pioneers in the first of a three-game series, after which will
come Pampa’s pestiferous Oilers. , .
The Blue Hose last night at Lubbock came within one
victory of the league record for total wins in one season by
victory oi g__________slapping a double defeat on
the Lubbock Hubbers. The
Norwood, Parsons
Get First 'Hits'
In Flag Fund Push
Wiley Norwood and Ceilan
Parsons were the first to “kick
in” for the Blue Sox pennant
fund. Each wrote a check for
$50.
Parsons and Pete Starnes,
another avid booster of the
league leaders, assumed com-
mand of the drive to get the
Blue Sox a “little extra’’ for
their play during the regular
season and their expected per-
formance in the playoffs.
All contributions to the pen-
nant fund will be distributed
equally among the players.
Parsons and Starnes hope to
see many of the fans person-
ally. They’re asking the others
who would like to express
their appreciation to The Sox
for the brand of play offered
at the stadium all summer, to
drop a check in the mail to
—the Blue Sox Pennant Fund,
care Sports Desk, Abilene Re-
porter-News All contributions
will be acknowledged in the
public prints and turned over
to Starnes and Parsons for dis-
tribution among the players.
National association rules
prohibit the Sox from receiv-
ing bonuses from the club not
written into their contracts or
to share in the gate receipts
of any regularly scheduled
game.
Upon the suggestion of the
Abilene club, a proposal is be-
fore the league to eward the
players of the Shaughnessy
playoff winner a share of the
proceeds from the final series.
scores were 6-4 and 7-3.
Rapid Richard Tross or Joe
Tysko will get the starting call
against the troublesome Pioneers,
who’ve been traveling at their best
pace of the season in recent weeks.
The Big Spring Bombers of 1941
hold the present victory record,
having scored 91 wins against 46
set backs.___
Borger’s Gassers snapped out of
losing ways last night by turning
on Albuquerque, 9-1. Ted Clawit-
ter’s sluggers lead the fifth place
Hubbers by two full games, but
tonight begin a seven-game series
with the strong Amarillo Gold Sox.
John Hall scored his 19th pitch-
ing victory and first home run in
twirling the afterpiece against
Lubbock. He led off in the sixth
by powering s home run off the
scoreboard in left-center.
Ken Quevreaux smashed one
against the scoreboard with the
bases loaded in the first game.
Jack Immell, who relieved Bill
Werbowski, was credited with the
win. _
On their present road trip the
Blue Sox won five of six games.
Abilene’s double win last night
didn’t put them sny further ahead
in the league race. Second place
Pampa whipped Clovis twice. 12-6
and 11-4, while third place Amaril-
lo downed Lamesa two times, 11-4
and 7-1.
First game: .
Abilene ab h • alLubbock *.“,"„•?
Spitre ss 3 0 2 0 Stone , $ 191
Most of the candidates for the
Cowboy squad were on hand yes-
terday for an organization meet-
ing in the afternoon and for physi-
cal examinations last night.
Woodson and his assistants. Wes-
ley Bradshaw and Murray Evans,
will be in charge of issuing of
equipment today and Saturday in
preparation for the twice daily
drills starting next week.
At least one veteran of the 1942
team Woodson had counted on
this fall will not be available.
Gene Starkey, who divided time
grid play and not waikinig in his eats-eitrusinedsmitiamneenr.
INDIANS’ COACHING STAFF-McMurry is resuming in-
tercollegiate football this fall with an entirely new slate of
coaches. Pictured left to right are Wilford Moore, Head
Coach Vernon Hilliard and Jerome Vannoy. Vannoy is sup-'
posed to be explaining a o------, „ - - „ ed to pass up rootDall because or >
sleep as some may suspect. The Indians started tall Prac' recurring fever he contracted
tice last Monday and open their season with the Hardin-Sim- .... *
mons Cowboys on Sept. 21 at Fair Park stadium. (News pho-
to by Don Hutcheson).
Associated Press Sports Writer |
Racing down the stretch, the
„_..... „ -** -St. Louis Cardinals are trying to
opening workout at the Border con- explode the theory that the team
ference school, in first place on juiy fourth usual-
ly wins the pennant.
On that day the Cards were
trailing the National league lead-
ing Brooklyn Dodgers by seven and
a half games and appeared hope-
lessly out of the race. Today they
are 2 1-2 games in front of the
flock.
The Cards gained a full game
yesterday when they shut out the
New York Giants 4-0 as the Chi-
cago Cubs were beating the Dod-
gers 3-2.
Howie Pollet, the Cards’ ace,
hurled the shutout over the Giants,
limiting the New Yorkers to five
hits in registering his 17th tri-
umph. Dave Koslo lost his 15th
nine-hit pitching of Randy Gum-
bert.
The Boston Braves’ hopes to
overtake the third place Cubs re-
mained alive when they defeated
the Reds in Cincinnati 4-1 behind
the six-hit pitching of Ed Wright.
RICHMOND, Va—(PP)—] Ray Ber-
res, former New York Giant catch-
er has stepped down from his first
managerial post, that of skipper
of the Piedmont League Richmond
Colts. Unable to pull the injury e
riddled Mustags out of the losing
ways, Berres resigned, and First
Baseman Mike Schemer, also a
former Giant, took over.
The season’s record low of 1,124
say the Philadelphia Phillies shove
the Pirates deeper into the Na-
tional league cellar with a 5-2
victory in Pittsburgh.
The scheduled Chicago White
Sox-Washington games was post- [
poned by rain while the Philadel-
phia Athletics and St. Louis
Browns were idle.
GRAND “
Kirby Grant
“Trail To Vengeance"
Dick Powell—Claire Trevor
"MURDER MY SWEET"
AD A NIA MIDNITE
GRAND RAMBLE
MMWBW THE
Shift of Grant
To End Slot Seen
while in the service in the Pacific.
Starkey will remain in school
but he will not compete in athle-
tics.
The Cowboys also lost two pro-
mising freshmen from Brecken-
ridge to the service. John Ford and
Gene Offield, highly regarded
backs, have received draft notices
and will not enter school.
Abilene Christian’s head football
coach, Tonto Coleman, faced these
major problems today:
(1) Finding two capable starting
wingmen;
(2) Cutting a record squad to
working size.
and wants a crack at an end as-
signment
Australian Tag
Match Set Tonight
Because of the recent rains,
which Coleman like all West Tex- ...______________.-----.
ans was happy to see, football work a couple of guys who prefer to do
has been limited mostly to indoor ■ ■----412— ■— --‘—tifin man
Don Carver and Young Sandow,
drills.
. T . u , “I really haven’t had a chance to
The first problem appeared to test a lot of the material we have
"---------------Coleman * at hand,” Coleman said, “but I’m
certainly not complaining about the
weather. We’ll have plenty of time
to look them over when the skies
clear.”
be the most serious in Coleman s
estimation.
The Wildcats do not have a
single experienced end in the 60-
odd candidates for the team.
their wrestling’ in a scientific man-
ner but are fully capable of get-
ting rough if the occasion calls
for it, may have to turn to the lat-
ter tactics tonight in an Australian
tag match at the Supper club
game.
Phil Cavarretta’s seventh Inning
single broke a 2-2 tie for Hank
Borowy’s ninth victory in the
Cube-Dodger tilt.
The victory moved Chicego only
six games behind the Dodgers.
Detroit, which hadn’t won a
game at Fenway park until Wed-
nesday, made it two straight over
the Boston Red Sox, 9-8, in 14
innings. The winning run result-
ed on George Kell’s walk, a single
by Roger Cramer and a force play
by Hank Greenberg. Dizzy Trout,
in relief, won his 11th game while
Dave (Boo) Ferriss. trying for his
12th straight, was driven from the
box in the sixth. ...
The Yankees clinched the sea-
son series with Cleveland on a 9.1
victory in New York behind the
“%=
EAST
SIDE
KIDS
Ray Milland—Loretta Young
THE DR. TAKES A WIFE"
JAL
TODAY-SAT.
BUCK JONES
TIM McCOY
TODAY—SAT.
Shadows
C ON THE ,
RANGE
CHAPTER NO. 1
HOP HARRIGAN
COLOR CARTOON
Former
New Co
Fifteen years
uation from Ab
lege Glenn L. V
begin his work
College Church
ping in Sewell
college campus.
Wallace and
arrived Tuesday
Mo., where for
"been minister
• tional Avenue c
After compl
ACC in 1931 M
congregation ii
seven years. H
the Central chu
as, four years
church, Los Al
years before g
Mrs. Wallace
Duckworth, a d
@Mrs. Lee Ducky
She also is an A
"WEST oi LAW"
COLOR CARTOON
SECRET AGENT X-9 ’
•STARTS
SUNDAY!
SEE WHO STALLIONS WAR TO THE
—The ACC mentor indicated that------------------------
he would shift Marion Grant. All- L .
District 3AA guard at Abilene high KatlltT, Ingram OH
school in 1942 and one of the top Grid Writers' Board
linemen in the state that season, uro wIIEST Quora
to one of the terminals.
Ratliff, Ingram on
arena.
Carver, a Roswell light heavy,
and Sandow. who hails from To-
tedo, drew as their foes Gusand
Abie Edd. the boisterous brothers
out of Beaumont.
The tag setto is for the best two
of three falls.
Lined up in a preliminary one
fall number are Benny Trudell of
Texas and Bob Windsor. Canada, and Tuffy Me
Hunters To Find
Doves Plentiful
PARAMOL
Heinz p 3 0 0 2
Total* 29 921 5
CHICAGO. Aug 30—(P)—Harold
Grant, who worked out with the V. Ratliff, sports editor of the As-
Cats in spring training last year af- sociated Press in T-----—7
ter his release from the Navy, may Ingram, sports editor of the El | Mullen of Abilene.
be the answer for one of the spots | Paso Herald-Post, have been nam-
The Abilenian is fast and rangy
ed to the board of directors of the
Football Writers Association of
Dons Play Firemen
Oil Bowlers Meet
WICHITA FALLS, Aug 30—(P)
—A glittering offensive battle be-
tween the burliest teams ever to
meet in the Oil Bowl football game
was forecast for tonight as the
Oklahoma schoolboy all-stars seek
vengeance for a 13-0 lacing hand-
ed them last year by Texas.
Totals 27 821 10 ...___.
Abilene..................040 0002-5
CeRA Z spauatoie • or. putetene
Matthews, Quevreaux. Immell. Rooney,
Cola, Sullivan, McAlexander. Errors
—Greer. Runs batted in - Quevreaux
4 Kuykendall 2. Sullivan, Hodge Hodge,
Ozark Two base hits — Distefano, Kuy-
kendall Home run — Quevreaux Sac-
rifice* — Spatafore, Ozark. Left on
bases — Abilene • Lubbock 4. Bases
on balls — Heinz 3. Struck out — Wer-
bowski 1. Heinz 6. Hit by pitcher -
Greer (by Heinz). Passed ball —Quey-
| reaux. Winning pitcher — Immell. Um-
Dir — Norman Rabe and Sigler Time
The Standings
TIME TO RE-TIRE
Reg. U.S. Pat. off.—
SECOND GAME: Lubbock ab
Abilene ab h • a Stone. > 4
Sptfre. • S 1 3 2 Rooney, r 4
Thomas, 3 4 1 2 0 Cola. C 2
Yesterday’s Results
WEST TEXAS-NEW MEXICO LEAGUE
"ABILENE 6-7, Lubbock +3.
Amarillo 11-7, Lamesa 4-1
Pampa 12-11. Clovis 6-4.,
Border PCEXO"E2XaUE
Fort Worth 4-2. Oklahoma City 2-1..
Shreveport at Beaumont, wet grounds.
San Antonio at Houston, rain.
Dallas 8-2. Tulsa 0-11
AMERICAN LEAGUE
New York 9, Cleveland 1. .
Chicago at Washington, rain.
America.
Ratliff will represent the South-
west Conference and Ingram the
Border Conference in this organ-
isation which has a membership of
500 sports writers of the nation.
WICHITA. Kas., Aug. 30.—(P)-
The Waco, Tex., Dons and the
Carmichael, Calif . Firemen will
clash here tonight in the unde-
i feated bracket of the National
1 Semi-Pro baseball tournament.
Da
ratals x su r
. - Detroit 9. Boston 8..
, T (Only games scheduled).
3 61 NATIONAL LEAGUE
< o Chicago J. Brooklyn 2
1 a St. Louis 4. New York 0.
0 o Philadelphia 3 Pittsburgh X
A 0 Boston 4. Cincinnati I. , 2
(Totals 28 9 21 s
X—Batted for Gray in 6th. __
Abilene.................000. 232 07
Lubbock ...............002 001 0-3
Runs — Spatafore, Thomas 2 Ander-
son, Ozark, Distefano, Hall, Stone 1.
Miller Bergerson Errors — Thomas
Quevreaux, McAlexander, Sullivan. Runs
betted in — Sullivan, Matthews 2, An-
derson 3, Hall Kuykendall Two base
hits — Quevreaux, Matthews Thomas.
Anderson, Kuykendall. Three base hit.
Anderson Home run — Hall Double
plays - Sullivan to Kuykendall, Sulli-
van to Stone to Kuykendall Struck out
— Hall 6. Bergerson 1, Gray 3. Tumel-
son 2. Losing pitcher — Bergerson. Um:
pfres — Rabe. Sigler and Norman. Time
— 1:55.
The Standings
1316 % ABILENE :.................90:
a.... = E
63888 ========== -
Last nitkzemEe xetteort
rt Worth .................95.
"“Antonio :...........8
mo - 2
leton
'aMIBSCAM LtACl
gton .
Polished floors should be dusted | Phila
with an unoiled mop every day.
Edges should be waxed twice a
year. ___
Grudge Bout Aired
on KRBC Tonight
St Louis
Brooklyn
Chicago .
Don’t ran a risk
with your tires. Just
as soon as the non-
skid is worn smooth.
bring them to us and
get the best recapping
job in town.
HEADQUARTERS FOR
FISKE
TIRES ft
FISK TIRE
SALES
WHOLESALE - RETAIL
Oak and South 2nd
Phone 7614 — Abilene
IT'S LIKE THIS
Sox Drive for 100 Wins
Is Gaining Momentum
By HOWARD GREEN
714 Barring an almost complete
tea collapse on their home
grounds, the Blue Sox will
establish a new league record
for number of wins in one sea-
son during the present stand.
394
344
242
E
NATIONAL itadte ’4 F
Cincinnati ..................55 69 -121
Philadelphia ...............52 69 430
New York ...................52 71 423
Pittsburgh........: 47 71 308
Games Today
WEST TEXAS- NEW MEXICO LEAGUE
Clovis at ABILENE
Albuquerque st Lubbock.
Pampa at Lamesa
Borger at Amarillo
TEXAS LEAGUE
Tulsa at Oklahoma City.
Fort Worth at Dallas
San Antonio at Beaumont
Houston at Shreveport
> AMERICAN LEAGUE
Philadelphia at Boston (2) Marchildon
(11-12 and Harris (3-11) vs Hughson
(14-101 and Bagby (5-5).
Only game scheduled
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Philadelphia at New York tight,
Hoerst (1-6) or Stanceu (2-3) ▼*- Bud-
n’dlg game scheduled.
| Two top-flight welterweights, Tony
Pellone and Billy Graham (above)
of New York, whose dislike for each
other amounts to a feud, clash in a
ten-round return bout at Madison
Square Garden tonight.
Graham is still burned up because
he dropped a decision to Tony lart
fall, thereby suffering the only loss in |
his professional career. Since then he
has taken a leaf from Graziano’s
book. He has abandoned his flashy
boxing style and turned slugger with
crowd-pleasing success.
Pellone is no slouch in the slugging
department either. A rough-and-
ready performer, he’s fast on his feet
I and fast with the punches His most
potent weapons are a smashing right
uppercut and a sipping left hook
Enjoy the excitement, blow-by-
blow,on Gillette’s Cav alcade of Sports
over American Broadcasting Co and
KRBC (1450 on your dial) at 8 p. m.
And remember
men ... LOOK
sharp! FEEL
sharp! BE sharp!
Use Gillette Blue
Blades with the
a sharpest edges
1ever honed!
E-eet. 10 or gmette ttetr
MIRACOTE
★ DEEPE
YOUR
* MORE DURABLE
CAR
★ PROTECTS FINISH
$1250 ALL CARS
WASH&LUBE INCLUDED
Firestone STORE
3rd & Cedar Phone 8581
Abilene, Texas
If they can knock, over the
rejuvenated Clovis Pioneers
tonight, the mark set by Big
Spring in 1941 will be tied.
By winning a second straight
tomorrow night, a new record
would be made.
The Blue Hose still have a
chance to win 100 games de-
spite two postponements. They
have 12 games remaining, six
at home and six abroad. Lo-
cally they meet the Clovis Pio-
neers and Pampa Oilers. On
' the road they play the Pio-
neers and Albuquerque Dukes.
The season ends out in Al-
buquerque on Sunday Sept. 8.
The Hose will have to make
the long haul back home to
open the playoff here On
either Sept. 10 or 11 against
Borger or Lubbock.
During the present home-
stand the Blue Sox are due to
clinch a first place finish. It
seems that Hayden Greer and
his men have done all right by
their town. After that double
defeat last night, Lubbock cer-
tainly knows that Abilene is in
the league and in no uncertain
terms.
For a Una on future West
Texas golf books, it might ba
wise to follow closely the city
junior golf tournament, slated
at the-country club Sept. 3-8.
Bill Maxwell, who this sea-
son has raptured the Willow
Crest Junior and the Lubbock
invitation, will .gun for his
fourth straight championship.
Maxwell will meet stern
competition from his twin bro-
ther, Bob, and Gervis McGraw
not to mention Dan Winters.
Pro-Manager Morgan Hamp
I ton reports that Bob’s game is
vastly improved and that he
may soon be able to show Bill
who’s the real golfer in the
Maxwell family
McGraw is the city cham-
pion. having upset the favored
Doug Jones. Winters is a 13-
year-old comer who practically
lives on the country club lay-
out.
Qualifying will be Tuesday
with match play the next three
days.
Hampton will also have a
flight for sub-juniors. 12 and
under Among the awards will
be two handsome trophies.
• • •
Abilene developed several
top notchers in the thirties—
Rusty Crownover, Carnes Wil-
son. Bill Horton, et sl. but
hasn’t made many new contri-
butions in recent years. Hamp-
ton opines that a number are
on their way.
Winston Tucker and D A.
(Rodeo) Parker are helping
coach the ATC grid eleven at
Memphis, Tenn. Both were
regulars on the undefeated,
untied Hardin-Simmons outfit
of 1940.
There should be consider-
able local interest in the im-
pending foot race between
Jesse Owens and George Case.
Owens, the Olympic champion
appeared in an exhibition in
Abilene May 6, circling the
bases at Blue Sox stadium dur-
ing a baseball game between
his own Portland Roses and
Seattle.
Owens and Case will race in
Cleveland Sept. 8. The negro
sprinter will don a full base-
ball uniform.
Case topped Washington’s
Gil Coan for the mythical
American league speed cham-
pionship last week, dashing
100 yards in ten seconds, only
.6 second above the world
record wark of 94 shared by
Owens and several other track
stars.
The race was arranged by
the energetic new president of
the Cleveland Indians, Bill
Veeck, and will take place
between games of the Cleve-
land St. Louis double header.
POLIO
-------By JOHN FRASCA-----
United Press Staff Correspondent
The wholesale shooting war on
Texas game birds and animals will
begin one half hour before sun-
rise Sunday, Sept. 1. when sports-
men commence taking shots at
popular, numerous mourning doves
in the northern zone. Texas guns
have been silent this summer ex-
cept for occasional bursts at squir-
rels. The opening of the dove sea-
son Sunday in the northern zone
officially ushers in the fall hunt-
ing season. _ .
Officials of the Texas Game,
Fish and Oyster commission re-
port that mourning doves can be
found all over the state in great
numbers. While other birds-lons
with game animals—suffered from
the drouth, the mourning dove, in
fact, increased in population.
Reason for the increase is the
fact that the mourning dove nests
anywhere, and when feed playssout |
in one area he packs his beiors,
ings and moves on. He doesn’t ask
any one’s permission, and doesn’t ===
wire in advance for reservations. P
He just takes off without kissing
anyone goodbye.
Most Valuable
TULSA. Okla., Aug. 30-7
n pepperpot third- baseman,
& SCHENZ: top hitter of the
league end sparkplug for the
fourth-place Oilers, today was vt
ed the most valuable player in the
Texas league for 1946.__
Narrow strips of fly paper wrap
ped around the legs of kitchen
furniture prevent ants from becom
ing a nuisance.
DANCE
At V. F. W. Pavillion
2250 North 1st St.
SATURDAY NIGHT
D. B. COMBO
AND HIS BAND
For V. F. W. Members
and Their Guests
Modern Dance Music
Admission $1.00 per Couple
INFANTILE
PARALYSIS
THE MOST DREADED AND FEARED
DISEASE OF MANKIND
REQUIRES COSTLY, SPECIALIZED TREATMENT, POLICY
PROVIDES BENEFITS UP TO
93000.00
PAYS
• DOCTOR BILLS • GRADUATE NURSES
• HOSPITAL BILLS • AMBULANCE • IRON LUNG
FOR A TOTAL COST OF ONLY $5 PER YEAR
- -....... - - - -
IF INTERESTED FILL OUT AND MAIL IMMEDIATELY
GREAT AMERICAN ACCIDENT INSURANCE CO.
Milam Building, Son Antonio, Texas.
NAME ....... -.........•
ADDRESS ..............-.............................
AGE ............NUMBER OF CHLDREN .............
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For Individuals and Family Groups
FOR ALL TYPES OF PERSONAL INSURANCE, SEE-
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CONNALLT, AGENT Phone 8716
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Selected Shorts
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Come at 10 ■. m. and stay to see
our regular double feature show.
Ml. RON ROGERS 4
WXYSTGGEL—
I My PAL
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UJALHER
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The Abilene Reporter-News (Abilene, Tex.), Vol. 66, No. 74, Ed. 2 Friday, August 30, 1946, newspaper, August 30, 1946; Abilene, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1644866/m1/4/?q=Lamar+University: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Abilene Public Library.