The Tri-Cities Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 333, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 27, 1933 Page: 3 of 6
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,V;;-:;..u.!■'
hi# bn
Tomlinson, and other
a '■ Nfre.
ids. ’ ■ .’f'WJi i
„ ®*** Gaylord i__
Pffl* Wednesday ;S
Hwang-Ho, or the*Ye
which is oBe of the
July l 8tream* m China, j,
! r j known as “China's Sorrow!
med “Scourge of China " b^]
*'*' f«**aufnt devastating flo,
7^tSTl7X!^-,Vi, r?iv hi i
ATlONi
I®.. ?fr?f ’ AWiVersarv-* *
ssrtSr-asSSj
*V! V, 1
until June 28.
eauty SAL(
|DAVIS-BLDO
Jj** «W *» »• ,4;
n. - -;g-
*
al
ATHLETICS
WHITEM
Br United Prt«i
their eighth straight
inttinU 8 current«atets!; rzc-
l taking their fifteenth vic-
; jf their last 16 games,
on Senators yester-
hed their lead in the
league to two full I
J|Kr New York by winning I
Lftom Cleveland, 4 to 8:
ipme, which was aeveland^
dght loss, was won in \
i inning when a two run
Fjatficient to win the game,
Oral Hildebrand, Indian
L'te the showers. It was Al-
der’s eighth victory of
l( York was rained out at De-
lphi's won from Chicago
|| behind a 14-hit attack that
Itlow Wyatt in less than
j*. Jim Peterson, who re-
jTony Frietas in the second
i with the bases filed, re-
1 credit for the victory. It
i first of the year. The de-
Chicago’s seventh in
Upmes.
Bolton Red Sox defeated
. Louis Itrowns 13 to 5,
f three pitchers. McDonald,
Bro.vn hurlerj allowed
in the first inning on
1 hits ind three passes, and
J jinked in the second after
I »P two more hit*. Rhodes,
I fcurler, went the route and
«r times.
-------- mi g ’ \ F t
mgEfiJZr**
PHEEt:’"'‘ , mam
. 4*,m m > ® •; .
155*?*.
DUITlJy ^irrrr
SPLIT; BEAUMONT
ANDBUCS
Mv
-u-n-
Troke-
ShH|
KOUCBD tain
argi
j-»7~ ■■ tmjtmC •«*
sees sjscs t **• -* -** *
knees being rouged,
fte first woman
Bliffaloea kept apace theBucs and
held to their eight game lf*d by
dividing their win sets ion with
San Antonio at Houston before a
crowd of 11,000.
Fabian Kowalik had the Buffs
eating out of his pitching 'hand
in the first encounter, the Mis-
sions winning 6 to 2. George Pay-
ne turned the tables in the clos-
ing session, the Buffs winning 6
to 1. Brilliant "fielding by Pid
Purdy, San Antonio and Manag-
er Carey Selph, Houston, and Be-
jma’s h'omer in the first game
featured -the contests. * ;—
Elden Auken, Beaumont Export-
er, allowed the Buca but four hits
to win the first game from Gal-
veston 6 to 0. In the second game,
Beau. BeU’s home run with Gold-J “I decided then is no reason
fni ass 'Mim fert
to 1 CW* on the court«. she philoso-
phises.
to discard
stocking* on the courts, but who
hsa u yet resisted the hire of
8—P* hsa capaed bom
comment with her scarlet kn^es
than any other sensation of tlyt ijet
game.
She indulge* in a bit «f comic
.pbUoaophy aaent the practice. _
Since women aM bound to dis-
play their knees as they do their
faces, and since, they use cosmetics
to touch up their physiognomies,
hide the,.wrinkles, and bring out
any latent beauty, why not do
same for the knees, aha reasons.
"J decided then
V
■
v v‘ ^ r-v
AND REFIMli
TAN D $
SQU
j- til- fb,
Tulsa won from Fort Worth 9 j , .
to 4, With Lefty John, Oiler hurler, 1 , *>"■* think women play-
keeping the Cat hits ‘scattered, frt c5u,id,r th*ir k>oh8 sufficient:
while Alex Hooks was driving In 2* Kvc" a poet wouIdn’t rtiapoa-
four runs to cop bajting honors. “ Jf'",n1ine1 l*"®*' But we
Fort Worth used three pitchers. don * need freaks.”
Dallas defeated Oklahoma City 1 . irnvwpv
to. 5 in eleven inning*, with! « . *E.Y Bl^’
Fisher’s single through second LiT&.’SST, h“ f"n
scoring Jonnard, giving the Steers £1,J** m "“fjjnstencM,
the victory. The Indians got but ^
five hits compared to 16 for Dal-! U tl fr°m ^ndon. ^bere
ne l "d Thy C8me Whe".they were T«nn". when Johl’ "Scopes
aH^in* th ^ -h*re *r f*V6 hl*,,ed out> but to 8 Holyoke,
allI in the ninth when Sam Lang- Maas., doctor goes the nd-hot
ford singled to score an Indian doorknob for bringing it to golf,
who was on second. I W, indivi(lu^ J, Dr.
SPORTS PARADE
before fewer customers than they
(did last year when they were
Bowling
my
|tnt one that
i economy.
tor. These
r. f ; ; ,
those on
raryi ng
■ efficiency
most re-
* i #
.linstakinc
B® . i/; .,
fhe West'
*1... *'"d*
al re-
|jn% i-tV ■> '
HUMBLE LEAGUE
^ matches of the Humble
P( League^ rolled last night
Tri-Cities Alleys, the
won frdm the MiBtol
l bw games to one, and the
took three straight
[floundering at the bottom of the
pack . . .
Frankie Frisch of the Cards and
^elillo of the Browns, have but
one superstition . , . they must be Oi a / jk
the last phyers leave the club- .V/lflftln <$ Q
Mickey Cochran, aims for five h3u"se after a g^me ... the Grand t^Q
BY HSJNRY McLEMORE
U. P, Staff Correspondent
NEW YORK, June 27 UJ.ni—
Putting the sports shot here and
there:
• t" «*♦
. ' *. • , ■■
BEHIND IT
m *
.. • Jju~.
■ , i. • ’■ * ' l- r».'
■ .
'-J f ■ ■
Y:
t :.........
• •r.ffli
of Mistol, with 633,
b scorer of the first match
•r, of Flit, with 536, was
lfl>e othej.,
mmary:
MoLax
122 138 153 405
123 173 142 438
146 170 158 474
391 476 4150 1317
Mistol
130 119 116 365
. up m itt a«
167 188 168 533
416 478 394 1288
Flit
149 166 146 461
172 159 181 512
-Mfl 176 194 686
487 601 521 1409
Trirad
123 154 124 401
178 173 124 475
156 154 180 48V
_ A6« 481 428 1366
OWN BUSINESS MEN
ago Men’a Wear team
Economy Grocery
, ' •» the Main Alley*, Bay-
M* oirirt, two game* to cne,
Tb the Economy totalled the
^number of pint. Hairier,
i •** high scorer.
• namary:
Economy r*
132 128 163 428
116 169 144 429
123 128 128 M»
122 1C5 145 432
186 169 1*6 469
668 768 702 2092
Wife Wear
164 116. IP 418
111 90 128 329
100 188 166 394
160 160 140 480
m 188 188 414
668 642 7* 2086
W iTMFi,,,SteBF^=£S| Yi*ih*Ag'MFr
the biggest crowd in ye.rs ... W. L. Pet.
The Boston park department fur- Houston ......61 27
nishes equipment and umpires for Galveston_____43 35
26 uniformed baseball leagues, to- ®an Antonio „41 37
taling 15,030 register^ players, I Beaumont_____38 37
operating on the Hub’s 40 play- Tulsa__________37 37
grounds .. . f v1-"— — —
In the Harvard varsity crew
that lowed Yale last week were
Athletics and then wants a man-
agerial job . . . Hans Birki*, who
Hot a close decision to Camera
and is now sparring with Sharkey,
thinks 'he champion is a cinch to
whip the Italian . . . Bill Tild.n
is of the opinion that the ten lead-
ing professional tennis players
could win a series from the ten __ __
top amateurs . . . According to‘j Bill Bacon, son of the lt."go"ver-
Max Baer there is nothing he ! nor of Massachusetts, and Rob
bates so much as a fight or brawl | Saltonstall, nephew of the speaker
outside the ring, and that the only of the Mass, house . . . Their dads i/anas
one in which he participated oc- j pulled an oar for dear old Harvaid. innimrsl
CHPl’PlI :it fl I’lllifnrnio Kora rlonnn I too
Dallas .........36
Fort Worth ...31
Oklahoma City 31
.654
.651
.526
.507
.500
.474
.403
A88
Mullen, was playing in a fouraome.
One of his fairway shots hookad
f and the ball came to rest in the
, I crotch of a tree. His friend* in-
J | listed he play it from where it l*y.
•■■•So- lha doctor tomed stmiin.'
climbed the brae, took a firm grip
G.B. I and^ awkward stance, whammed
|aw»y and hia recovery with an
iron reached the green.
curred at a California bam dance ' too
steeplejack was his oppo-1 Camera, without a penny now,
nm| ... one blow was struck and j has earned more than *$300,0(H)
the steeplejack thought he’d fallen j since he started fighting
Tfrxb* Chrysler tower ; . 7------T«im6yt TBornp»riovM“Wlfli
Jumbo Moran, former oll-Sing- i family, hunting, fishing, and rais-
Sing fullback, is now trying h:s j ing flowers . . .' Jack Moran, one
hand at fighting . . . Babe ltuth of the “white hopes" of the Jack g“'TV.........
has an annuity fund that guaran- Johnson boxing era, now is an aD- i™ , '^-----. 83
tot-s him i2r>_ono a ir.ar .too I nanmtin n.m....... ..i.____t I Cincinnati----28.35
8
10 ,
11H ItEGULATED ATHLETICS
12 I Now that Germany has takan
14 backwater in it* fight on the Jew
1914 I10 the extent that member* of th*
.. ,___ 21 I'Senfftic rare* may partiripat* in
Monday's Results I the 19S6 Olympic games at Berlin,
San Antonio 6-1; Houston 2-6. |8t*P* being taken to organ!**
Beaumont 9i Fort Worth 4. country on an athletic baata
Dallas 6; Oklahoma City 6 (u that not only will allow Germany
to prev**t a formidable front, b|tf
which also is expected to aid
Adolph Hitler in building up the
men of the nation into military
superiority.
German cinder tracks, footbtll
grounds, and gymnasiums an to
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W. L. Pet G.B.
New York----39 22 .639 ....
St. Louis......37 26 .687 3
Pittsburgh----35 30 .688 6
Chicago ------88 84 .493 9
Boston........30 35 .462 11
.469 11
.453 lift
be the seminaries for th* ineatetr
' virtues.
..t*"*8 kim $25,000 a yar ... Joe | parently prosperous salesman for pWi, A , ..' „„
riiimofiries;'noted announcer, new j a wholesale clinical thermometer -*de pj^* ~~~^6 40 -*94
.tecovering from a stroke, smokes I and hypodermic needle house. ’ Molld83r 8 Re,ult*
three packs of cigarats a day . . . ...
Says it takes that many to keep ! NEPHEWS BORN SAME DAY
Humphries, j COLUMBIA, Mo. <UB)~Sons to
his voice in shape . . . numpnries, i COLUMBIA, Mo. <tr.Ri—Sons
b t the way, rates Stanley Ketchel! two brothars were born at m hos- -
ns the greatest fighter who ever! pal here within 24 hours recently. "** Yorlc ■
lived . . . and Joe has seen ’em j Warren Woods and Joseph Woods jPhil*delphia
all . . . The New York Giants, on I were the brothers. Both babies [Cleveland
top of the league now, are playing j weighed close to 10 pounds.
All games postponed, rain.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
W. L. Pet. G.B.
! 1/9
HALTS
'RIZE FIGHTS
■ boxing promoter, to-
mu having been
looar law |
hi* schedule*! ring
bwlght featuring Bd
uld
Age and Bench Catch Up With Ruth
NEW YORK, Jane 27JHB-
Babe Ruth, the all-time home run
king, haa beert benched apparent-
ly because of weakness at bat for
the firat time since he became a
big league itar.
After getting only two hit* in
17 tripe to the plate, the man who
bleated out 60 home run* in 1927
found himself warming the New
York Yankee* bench during the
aycond g»me of the double-header
with Detroit. Young Dixie Walk-
er placed him in elft field.
Expert# and fan* hoped it was
only a temporary measure to give
the Babe a chance to freshen, but
they ware forced to wonder If it
might b* a warning that the years
had caught up with Ruth and hi
might be playlnf hia l**t Mason.
Th# 39-year-old Ruth, now in hia
20th aeaaoiL and his 14th with tlw
Yjanks, haa not done well on the
Yanks’ recent disastrous road trip.
His recent alump came just when
the American League lead was'
taken over by Washington. With
the club slipping, Manager Joe
McCarthy could not let sentiment
interfere. However, McCarthy In-
sisted the Babe hed asked for a
rest because of the heat* ,
Ruth made six trip# to the plate
in Sunday's opening game without
hitting safely. He was bMfltil
for the second. He’s there yet
British Golfers Take Edge In
First Rounds of Ryder Cup Play
(UBI
SOUTHPORT, Eng., June 27
Thanhs largely to Bill
** rout Monday at th.
British golfers in the four*
of the Ryder cup competition.
„ The Americans captured one of
the fourtwo-b.il or -
lie*.
Abe Mitchell and- A
tchell and- Arthur Hav-
Washington
New York
■.S3
33
Chicago ______32
Detroit ......_82
Boston -______26
St. Louis____26
I---Monday’s Kt-Hulu
Philadelphia 8; Chicago 2.
Washington 4| Cleveland 8.
Boeton 13; St. Louis 6.
New York at Detroit, rain.
TODAY’S GAMES
Tm iMlMS- ~
Houston at Beaumont.
San Antonio at Galveston.
Tula* at Fort Worth
Oklahoma City at Dallas.
America* Leagw*
New York at Detroit.
Boston at 8t Louia. *- ~
Washington at Cleveland.
Philadelphia at Chicago.
Nations Leagu*
■ Pittsburgh at New York,
gamoa.
Cincinnati at Brooklyn.
Chicago at Philadelphia.
St. Louis at Boston.
•646 ....
.616 2
•582 7*4
.493 ,10
■486 1014
■486 1014
•888 17
•868 1814
Syd Kiktcrbrook
viea, Great Britain
and W. H. Da-
defeated Paul
1 UP,
YANKEE NETTERS
ADVANCE IN MEET
tion of military and civic
The Reich’s sport* commissar
has drafted the regulation* for the
reconstruction of German sport*
and the above is the keynote.
German sports are to be divided
pnto 16 associations—even the
sport* writer*. Each association
will have a national headquarters,
with the headquarter* to be in
iBerliro. ■ “ ' , >y. 'J
Through the centralisation, Hit-
ler expects to be able to oontrol
the entire athletic situation, and
to see to it that the schedule is
rigidly carried out, and that the
young men of the nation, In the-
three years left to them, will b*
sufficiently developed to make for
serious competition with the rest
of the world In 1986.
• * e _ ......
'BRIEF BKIRFB-.I
Charley Parsons, blond track
stir of th* University of Southern
California, Is ths son of a Star at
Southern California . . . Gene
Sarwsen is a* good with the woods
as the irons, and is th* best putter
of them til . . . Jack Crawford,
Australian who won the french
hard oourt singles titles was th*
firat invader to win th* Frtneh
it. .. Walter K*tak, who re-
cently scored 88 over the Pomonok
club of Flushing, L. I., won th*
Metropolitan P, G. A. fl |
ship when 18 . , . Manager Max
Carey of Brooklyn says»Chick
Cuccinello I. the beet In ths busi-
ness on double plays ., . . sad
Frank Croeettl Is oa* of th# Ha.
(ll lending our ltnqu«lifi«d endoriement to Humble
Motor Futl, we ere fully twere of the ropomibility _
----- — ----------------------—■*-i—~—. ■ -
we *t*ume. We ere wot wfany txijftrettd eivor-
thh$ claims. Thfi it simply a serious ftiteill«flt from
thli Company to the motoring public. • No menu-
T*rifr*r w isfegw Jive yos premium
- ~ ^ -«•« w
ble Motor Fuel is an improved motor fuel, selling at
. .,'.t J- 1 ---------
KiguMr price. It definately assures smoother perforfe
* *. a Ijt
of your car. • Modem eutomobpf engines
. tt^tded an improved motor fuel. Humble Motor
" . ^ * I „ i**T: ‘Zkt J'-'P fF
Furl w« developed with this problem in mind. M
result is « fuel designed to fit the engine of todfc
end .tomorrow. HumMg Motor Fuel it in edvance of
the times, basically superior to oil reguler priced
gasolines. O Try Hi Compare it, in your car, Will
. *. v • 1 *
the performance of any gasoline you have ever ustd.
Huoiblo Motor Fool wM tptak for Htelf. CmMm
• • “•* ■>— *
orange to pwtnt tubttHution. o At Humble
Iihr8«.i StotSowf you will find a wide variety of
J I 'r
services and products including Etso, the worlds
ItiAif premium fuel-more powerful than any gaso-
,lno~, and 997 motor oil, the finest oil obtainable,
combining all auperior quolitift of other oils. Hum-
ble service station mlesmen ere expert at their wodt
«»d give prompt, cheerful service. Humble Sfeviee
Stations arc clean and offer many conveniences Such
as rest rooms, ice water, road information and fir*.
aid. You will find H a pleasure to service your car,
at Humble stations.
:“-1
June U
■sro* L*»li#, firat hLw.
traded to Brooklyn by the GisnU,
" ok sfifflLt:“
.* */i
round of mro,’. the
•Xpert* to b*
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Pendergraft, W. L. The Tri-Cities Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 333, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 27, 1933, newspaper, June 27, 1933; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1020280/m1/3/: accessed June 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.