The Seminole Sentinel (Seminole, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 33, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 17, 1952 Page: 3 of 20
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11
in
VOLUME 45
SEMINOLE, GAINES COUNTY, TEXAS,
THURSDAY, JULY 17, 1982
Section
Two
NUMBER 83
DCHS Edges Into Tie for Third
ftilh 7-2 Win Over Stanolind
f A foul pop fly which came
down near the screen down the
third base line figured in a 7-2
win marked up by DCHS over
Stanolind here Tuesday night.
The disputed play came In
the top half of the second inning
when Stanolind had runners on
first and second with two out.
Ed Kliene was the batter. Clar-
ence Reed grabbed the ball
against the screen, and plate
ump Ike Moore ruled him out.
Stanolind players and man-
ager Robert Bufkin objected, as
did a good many fans, claiming
that tho ball bounced off the
fence f.rst. Bufkin protested the
game at that spot, but the pro-
test Is no good because it came
on a judgment play. The ump's
decision cannot be questioned,
but his interpretation of the
rules can be. Since his ruling
was that the ball didn't touch
the screen the play stands.
Although Stanolind might
have gone on to score some runs
that inning if Kleine had stayed
alive, DCHS still won the game
by a good margin.
Hitting star for the winners
was Coach Emmler, a very cap-
able backstop, who got three hits
in as many trips to the plate, in-
cluding a double.
Stanolind AB R H PO A E
Anderson 4 10 0 10
Kleine. 2 3 1 0 3 4 3
J. Carruth, c 3 0 0 4 0 0
Heath, 1 3 0 2 5 0 1
Carpenter, cf 3 0 2 1 0 1
Nix, rf 2 0 0 1 0 0
Moreland, rf 10 0 10 0
Burk, If 2 0 0 0 0 0
Bufkin, if 1 0 0 0 0 0
Karr, ss 3 0 13 13
F. Carruth. p 3 0 0 0 1 1
TOTALS 28 2 5 18 7 9
DCHS AB R H PO A E
Ward, 2 4 0 0 3 1 0
Reed, 3 4 2 2 1 2 1
Paxton, ss 3 0 0 1 1 1
Emmler, c 3 2 3 9 1 0
Roberts, rf-1 1 0 0 0 0 0
Moore, cf 3 0 1 0 0 0
Allison, 1 3 1 0 3 0 0
B. Motley, rf 0 0 0 0 0 0
N. Motley. If 3 0 0 2 0 0
Lambert, p 3 1 2 0 0 0
Trice, rf 2 0 0 1 0 0
Scott, c 0 10 110
TOTALS 29 7 8 21 6 2
Stanolind 200 000 0 2 5 9
DCCHS 022 003 x 7 8 2
D - Reed, Emmler, RBI—Reed
2, Emmler, Moore, Lambert. LOB
Stanolind 5, DCHS 6. ER--
Stanolind 1, DCHS 2. SO — by
Lambert 9, by Carruth 3. EB--
off Carruth 1, off Lambert 1.
DP- Kleine to Karr. PB—J. Car-
ruth 2, Emmler 1. WP—F. Car-
ruth 1. U—Moore & Wilson. Att
—160. T—:59.
SHS Clips T&P
6-3 Friday Night
T&P continued its descent to
the lower regions of the local
softball league by chipping in
with five errors to stake SHS to
a 6-3, three-hit victory Friday
night.
Willis Black, pitching for the
losers, gave up only three hits,
but defensive miscues hurt his
cause. Jones Daugherty, who
started and won his first game
for SHS, gave up only five hits,
and left seven enemy base run-
ners stranded.
The first inning made a big
difference in the game, with the
winners counting three times
off three errors, a fielders' choice
and a lone hit. Three more add-
ed in the fifth on two hits, two
errors and one fielders' choice.
The losers counted single tal-
lies In the first, third and fourth
Innings, and got a hit in each of
the first five innings. In the
two frames Daugherty retired
the side in order.
Some controversy developed in
the late innings when Black
started using an unusual deliv-
ery, whchi opposing players
claimed was illegla. The game
was already decided, however,
and it made no difference. .
TAP AB R H PO A E
Bullington 3 10 7 10
Black p 3 0 1 2 3 0
Teague 2 3 0 2 0 0 1
Stansifer 2 1 0 0 0 0 1
Henson ss 3 1 0 0 0 2
Howard if 3 0 0 0 0 0
Fox 1 3 0 16 0 0
Wesley cf 3 0 0 1 0 0
Reef rf 2 10 10 0
Bennett 3 3 0 1 1 1 1
Totol .... 27 S 5 18 8 5
SHS AB R H PO A E
Karr c 2 0 0 0 0 1
Crow If 8 112 0 0
Has sell 3 3 1 1 2 4 0
LaFollette 1 3 1 0 .11 0 0
Harrell cf 3 1 0 3 0 0
Chancellor rf-2 3 0 0 0 1 0
' Bowen ss 3 0 0 1 3 1
Jackson 2 2 1 0 2 2 0
Murphy rf 0 0 0 0 0 0
Daugherty p 3 110 3 0
Totals 28 6 3 21 IS 2
T&P 101 100 0 3 5 5
SHS 300 030 x 6 3 2
RBI-Teague, Fox, Crow, LaFollet-
et. LOB-SHS 3, T&P7. ER-T&P
1, SHS 0. SO-by Black 6. BB-off
Black 1, offDaugherty 4. U-Karr
& Moore. Att. 150. T:l:05.
I?1"
JACK OAKIE has another of
tils famous comedy roll* In
"Northwest Stampede," Eagle
Lion's Clneoolor spectacle, co-
starring him with Joan Leslie
anil James Craig and opening
Saturday at the. Chief Theatre.
Elbow Chip Will
K««p LaFollette
Off Pitchers Mound
{ ) Metz LaFollette, manager and
pitcher-first baseman for the
Seminole High school nine, Is
nursing a sore right elbow, which
will keep him from seeing any
pitching duty In remaining
games.
The big, popular All-Star team
member first detected sornees
In the elbow after pitching In
the SHS-DCHS game July 8. An
x-ray examination revealed a
bone chip in the elbow from an
old Injury had become Inflamed.
A bump milled up on the
elbow and this week LaFollette
had the arm tightly bandaged,
Phillips District Nine
Wins Three, Loses 2
In Bortlesville Play
The Phillips 66 district soft-
hall team returned from Bartles-
vlllc, Okla. late Monday where
I hey won three games and lost
two in the annual Phillips tour-
nament.
The team included seven play-
ers who have been competing
In the local softball league.
These were M. L. Andrews, T. C.
Young, L. B. Jones, Morris Ivy
and A. D. Sides, who have play-
ed for Phillips; and Gene Brown
and Ray Pierce, who have been
playing for Amerada.
Benny Maher, manager of the
Phillips team, was manager for
the team. The crew won their
first three games, and had ad-
vanced to the semifinal round of
the double elimination tourna-
ment before being defeated.
Pierce suffered a cracked rib
during play In the tournament,
and probably can see only out-
field duty In remaining games
In league play here.
FIRST PHOTO OF INGRID'S TWINS—Ingrld and Isabella,
twin daughters of actress Ingrld Bergman and director Rober-
to Itosselllnl, pose with parents for their first picture after
christening at home near Rome, Italy. Roberto Jr. looks on.
Lambert Gets Third Shut-Out in First Game
DCHS Whitewashes Legion 8-0,
Phillips Pulls Away With 6-1 Win
Dall Lambert pitched his third
shut-out in his last four starts
In the first game of a twin bill
in softball play Tuesday njght
to give DCHS an 8-0 victory over
American Legion.
In the nightcap, which was
witnessed by the largest and
most vocal crowd of the season,
Phillips virtually cinched first
place by disposing the nearest
challenger, Amerada. Final
score was 6-1, with the usually-
potent Amerada hitters unable
to get more than one or two sol-
Id licks off the pitching of Sher-
rill Ivy.
DCHS now poses a threat to
Amerada for third place, as the
Denver City schoolboys now
have won six and lost four, and
will pick up another win when
a protested game with Atlantic
is finished, which must be fin-
ished again from late innings
with DCHS leading 13-3, Ame-
rada's record Is 8-3.
The moundsmen were very
much in control of the situation
in the first game until the top
of the fourth, when DCHS
counted its initial and winning
tally. Prior to that time, how-
ever, Legion chunker Jimmy
Hirtl) had shown signs of lack
of control which eventually was
to put the game beyond redemp-
tion.
In the fourth Coach Emmler
was hit by a pitched ball, went
to second and then took third
also on the same passed ball as
W. C. Garvin was slow in re-
trieving the ball. He came
home on another passed ball.
When Emmler went into third
Baldy Boyer attempted to put
the tag on him, but Emmler pul-
led away with a fine fadeaway
Five Local Students
To Attend McMurry
Band School Classes
When the fourth annual Mc-i
Murry College Vacation Band
School gets underway Sunday,
five Seminole students will be
among the 215 enrolled for the
two weeks' training under the
direction of Raymond T. Bynum,
McMurry Band Director and
dean of the school.
Daily classes, Including special
study In Individual instruments,
will be on schedule for the band-
sters. To climax work at the
end of the school, a concert,
with the entire enrollment par-
ticipating will im given.
The 219 student* registered
are from 46 different Texas
cities.
The students from Seminole
and the instrument each will
JACK BUKTEL and MALA
POWERS are co-starred In
"Rose of Cimarron," a Natural
Color western drama at the
Tower Theatre Saturday. Pro-
duced by Edward L. Alperwon
and releaaed by Twentieth Cen-
tury-Fox, "Rose of Cimarron"
allows Buetol and Miss Powers
to again come forth with the
acting ability they showed re-
spectively in "The Outlaw" and
"Cyrano de Bergerac."
slide to evade the tag. Legion
players objected strenously to
the decision. 1
In the entire contest AL never
got a player as far as third
base except for the final inning,
and only in that inning got as
many as two runners on base at
one time.
The final out in the seventh
was hotly disputed. With run-
ners on second and third and
two out Will Hill hit a pop fly
In front of the plate, as Garvin
streaked down the line from
third. He collided with Emmler,
knocking him back, so that the
ball fell safely.
Plate Ump Vy Wilson called
Garvin out for interfering with
a fielder, ruling that he deliber-
ately ran out of the base lirte In
order to collide with Emmler.
Irate Legion players gathered
around Wilson to protest the de-
cision, but the ruling stood.
Several times earlier in the
game Legion players had vio-
lently objected to decisions, and
once Wilson walked over to the
Legion bench to call down a
heckler.
On an earlier play In the sev-
enth when Tommy Roberts had
been forced at second by a good
margin on a ground ball hit to
the short stop the elongated
second sacked stuck his hands
up in the air and .collapsed on
top of DCHS second baseman
Charles Ward as the latter at-
tempted to get his throw off to
first base to complete the dou-
ble play.
DCHS made seven runs in the
sixth off one hit (the first to
that point), two walks, two hit
batsman, a fielders choice and
three errors. Hirth had begun
to trie obviously in the fifth,
which he weathered safely, and
had a rocky time In the seventh,
but was allowed to finish the
game. Norman Motley made a
fine catch in the second on a
foul ball against a field down
the third base line. He grabbed
the wall and fell.
For a brief moment in the sec-
ond game it looked like a re-
play of the earlier match be-
tween Amerada and Phillips,
when the former had used the
bunt liberally to win. Gene
Brown and H. Jones, the first
two batters in the top of the
first, reached first on bunt sing-
les; Then Bot}by Hurst, attempt-
ing to bunt, fouled out to the
catcher, and the skein was brok-
en. The side was retired easily.
Amerada put runners on base
every inning, but got only two
runners as far as third. In the
second Curly Williams tripled to
right center, and came home on
an outfield fly. In the third
Jones singled with one out, and
Lee Dublin followed with anoth-
er single after two were out, ad-
vancing Jones to third; but Gil-
mer lined out to shortstop M. L.
Andrews.
Phillips got in the scoring col-
umn in the second with two runs
—and that could have been the
ball game right there. With one
out Don Greenlee walked, and
advanced to third when Dublin
threw to Brown rather than the
base at second trying for a force
play on Andrews' grounder. Son-
ny Williams grounded out, scor-
ing Greenlee, and Sherrlll Ivy
singled to score Andrews.
Phillips got two more in the
fourth, when Dublin threw wide
at first on W. O. Wiley's ground
er. After a ground-out Andrews
doubled and Williams and S. Ivy
followed with singles to score
two runs. Two more were added
in the fifth, when O. F. Hurst
came in to relieve starter Bill
Worley.
Bobby Hurst made a fine catch
on Morris Ivy's looping liner be-
hind shortstop in the third. He
made a final hinge for the bsll
as he retreated, then rolled over
on the ground, holding on to the
ball.
DCHS AB R H PO A E
Ward, 2 4 1* 0 4 1 0
Reed, 3 3 10 14 0
Paxton, ss 4 1 0 0 3 0
Emmler, c 2 2 1 4 0 1
Lambert, p 3 0 0 0 2 0
Allison, 1 4 0 1 5 0 0
Moore, rf 3 10 10 0
Motley, If 2 1 0 4 0 0
Roberts, cf 2 10 10 0
TOTALS 27 8 2 29x10 1
xGarvin out In seventh for in-
terfering with fielder.
Legion
Fitzgerald, cf
Sims, rf
Dearlng, If
Roberts, 2
Garvin, c
Wetzel, ss
Shlvley, 1
Hill, 1
Boyer, 3
Hirth, p
TOTALS
DCHS
Legion
AB R H PO A E
1
2
3
3
3
3
1
2
2
2
22
8 21 9
000 107 0 8 2 1
000 000 0 0 5 5
D —Em mler, Wetzel. RBI-
Emmler 2. LOB—DCHS 8, Legion
4. ER--DCHS 2. DP—Paxton to
Ward to Allison. BB—off Lam-
bert 2, off Hirth 6. SO—by Lam-
bert 4. by Hirth 3. HB—Emmler,
Lambert, Motley by Hirth. PB—
Garvin 7. SC—Sims, Fitzgerald.
U—Wilson & Karr. Att—215. T—
1:12.
AB R H PO A E
3 0 111
Le«lon vs Phillips tonight
SHS vs Stanolind tonight
Atlantic vs TAP Friday
Legion vs SHS Monday
Amerada vs DCHS Tuesday
We'd rather serve a lot of
people than have a lot of serv-
ants.
ttibution made to
•denes wssn't the ale
Daisy is so dumb she de—
know the difference betwe
West Pointer and an Iri*h
ter. -
Amerada
Brown, 2
Jones, cf
B. Hurst, ss
Dublin, 3
Gilmer, If
Williams, 1
Sledge, rf
Doscher, c
Worley, p
O. Hurst, p
TOTALS
Phillips
0 2
0 0
0 1
0 0
1 1
0 0
0 1
0 0 0
4
4
3
3
2
3
2
2
1
28 1 6 18 9 3
AB R H PO A E
0 0 0 0 0
Hungerford, rf 4 0
) 0 0
Ellis, 3 4 12 0 10
M. Ivy, 1 3 0 0 9 1 1
Wiley, cf 3 2 110 0
Greenlee. If 2 1110 1
Andrews, ss 3 2 1 3 0 0
Williams, c 3 0 1 3 0 0
S. Ivy, p 2 0 2 1 4 0
Day, 2 3 0 0 3 2 0
TOTALS 27 6 8 21 8 2
Amerada 010 000 0 1 6 3
Phillips 020 220 x 6 8 2
D—Andrews. T—C. Williams.
RBI—Sledge, S. Williams, S. Ivy
2, Andrews, Greenlee, LOB—
Amerada 8, Phillips 6. ER—Ame-
rada 1, Phillips 5. DP—Ellis to
Day to M. Ivy. SC—Doscher. SO
—by Worley 2, by Hurst 3, by
Ivy 2. BB-off Worley 2, off
Hurst 1, off Ivy 1. H&R—off
Worley 8 & 6 In 4 1/3, off Hurst
0 & 0 in 1 2/3. LP—Worley. U—
Karr & Wilson. Att—235. T—
1:17.
SCORES
SHS 5, T&P 3
DCHS 7, Stanolind 3
DCHS 8, Legion 0
Phillips 6, Amerada 1
1 fc-s
ELECT
A MAN OF
PROVEN BUSINESS ABILITY
ELECT
A MAN WHO
MERITS YOUR CONFIDENCE
AND TRUST
ELECT
T. D. Walker
YOUR
COUNTY
TREASURER
study are Joyce Bishop, Clsrlnet;
Juanell Wood, clarinet and
twirling; Eugenia McMurry,
clarnlet; Sammie Pittman, oboe;
Johnna Sparks, tenor saxaphone.
Mrs. Vers C. Bone and family
from rhoenix, Arizona visited
her mother, Mrs. Willi* E.
Crapps last week.
PROVEN ABILITY — T. D.
SINGLETON'S
LADIES' DRESSES
Tissue Chambray, Pique, Nylon, Salyna, Linen
Lace, Marquisette. Sizes 10 to 44, Junior Sizes,
Also 12V4 to 24V,.
Reg. 7.95 Dresses, Now 4.90
Reg. 9.95 Dresses, Now 5.90
Reg. 10.95 Dresses, Now 6.90
Reg. 12.95 Dresses, Now 7.90
Reg. 14.95 Dresses, Now 8.90
Reg. 17.95 Dresses, Now 11.90
Reg. 19.95 Dresses, Now 12.90
Reg. 22.95 to 24.95, Now 14.90
MEN'S SHOES
Edgerton, Reg. 12.95
Now 10.90
Nunn-Bush, Reg. 17.95
Now 14.90
MEN'S STRAWS
All Straws Va OFF
CHILDREN'S DRESSES
This group includes Piques, Dotted Swiss,
Organdies, Ginghams, Broadcloth and other
cottons.
Reg. 5.95 and 6.95, Now 3.90
Reg. 3.95 and 4.95, Now 2.90
Reg. 2.29 and 2.95, Now 1.90
LADIES' SHOES
Reg. 3.98, Now 2.90
Reg. 4.98 and 5.98, Now 3.90
Reg. 6.98 and 7.98, Now - 4.90
Reg. 9.98 and 10.98, Now 5.90
In Linens, Patents, Kid, Assorted Colors in-'
eluding High Shades;.
SWIM TRUNKS
Boxo- Style. Rayon, Awtate and Lkton.
R.g. 1.98, Now 1.29
LINGERIE
Gowns, Slips, Half Slips, Famous Brands,
Nylons, Rayon Crepe and Cotton. All Colors.
Reg. 2.95, Now 1.90
Reg. 3.95, Now 2.90
Reg. 4.95 and 5.95, Now -- 3.90
Reg. 6.95 and 7.95, Now 4.90
Reg. 8.95 and 9.95, Now - 5.90
T-SHIRTS & SPORT SHIRTS
Terry Cloth, Seersucker, Novelty Weaves,
Rayon.
Reg. 1.00, Now 69
Reg. 1.69,1.98 and 2.29
Now, ...» 1.46
Reg. 2.49 and 2.98, Now 1.99
Reg. 3.95, Now ,. 2.99
4 Pair
■0S8 WALLOPEB
GLOVES
(Limit 4 to a
SINGLETON'S DEPARTMENT STi
Ifjlp t.
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Steakley, Melvin. The Seminole Sentinel (Seminole, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 33, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 17, 1952, newspaper, July 17, 1952; Seminole, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth412387/m1/3/?q=music: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Gaines County Library.