The J-TAC (Stephenville, Tex.), Vol. 6, No. 26, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 25, 1926 Page: 2 of 4
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......... TAR^ETON
MEMORY/ B0O$S
FOR SALE HERE
Entered ad second class mail matter- at the postoffice in Stephenville,
Texas,, wwfojttfe Act,oiLC^&i^^^ March 3; 1879. \
r i-- •i'.tfST. ■ *«• «
EDlWltAL STAFF
Editor-in-Chief. .
Wester Heilhecker
. William Dbvis
Business Manager....^.... : ..'
Associate Editor..... 1— , Nealy 'falbdtt
■■ V >, ■ . ■ .. ' l" ' „0,
Sport Editor..........,: 1....... <..;....Pat E. Ilodge
Exchange Editor ......^ Dace Mybis
Assistant Editor. —..... : .Waldo Wilcox
♦ 1
Assistant Business Manager:....,... Jirii Bridges
SERVICE I)R(JG> STORE
PHONE 49
FOURTH GAME- ' ! ,
i The second game was featured'by
joose playing .by.; both- clubs. The,
gamb:!waB;- a long, drawn' oUt bfr
fair, the Plowboys winning by 11
to 7.
!' ■ Garrett ;third baseiban' for the
Plowboys, was the heavy hitter for
the-: days.-:'He . cashed; • two i doubles
and a single out of five times up.
In the third inning the Plowboys
got to Witherspoon and batted
around before their three men were
out." .,■< ■ ■■
Coach Hudspeth had a chance
to see all'his pitching staff in ac-
tion in this game. Dutton started
in this game, but was relieved by
Maddox' in the fourth i'nhing. Hodge
replaced Maddox in the eight who
lasted one third' of the ining. James
finished the games • i
BEST PRICES
TO
STUDENTS
r^in|mber our
advertisers AM patronize
arehelping
iljtlfer.
W
ish
iii>k>.WSsU\
H
SAYS THE SCIENTI
Daniel Baker
Witherspoon, j
Smith, lb ......
Up-to the baseball seasou all athletic contests played at
home by the Varsity learn have been well attended.
The-.;. Varsity Baseball, te^p Ms played four ,, games
i*nd frpQ. uiLprese^^indic^tifin^ they haye what might fob
developed into another championship team. For some
reason or othfer, the ..stu^esnt bbdy is riot, su^prting the
baseball team as,,,iti should. So. fa&^oiyft onfe hundred
students have attended each game. Students, db you think
fQu are taking tbe |))r'o|)er attitude? The banjd has been
out twice, and they have, been the only pep squad that has
given a yell for the team so far. Where are you, yell
leaders? Po they think that their work is fini^d? .tftyr
l.qng lias it beep, since a yell' was given in chapel? from
all outward appearances, our pep has diedv
5 O-
, .Tomorrow we play. Meridian, the first conference game of
tb& sj^fQii. would it be asking too mi^ch
• tp\?i$;.^dut'to %ija.el^ut;aiid lead a yell? ; it .is, true that
there might not be many to yell, but the team will appre
ciate that loyal support.
Week before lggt tbere 'yras. rmjch' f^yarable comment
on the JtTac. . Jlost of the -material used in that issue was
furnished i>y;Miss■ Atjfihs^ti's Junior,English Classes,
the staff, wish to tha^k $!ti^s' Atkinson and tlie students who
contributed to that isisue.
PLOWBIIlfS take
fflfiEE
(Continued from first pagb)- ■
The Plowboya collected only four
hits .during the game;whieh-netted
them one run; >w,hil§ tlie .ivieHw,
with , ^our hits and three Walks col-
lected fivej runa^ u> . ,, , ■ • ;:.
'' Stolen bases; Massey, : Nix aiid
Jobesv , |i :| ■ > ; >! ■ 1J..
Two base ..Cook- Stolen
tb.ases; . Ma sey, Nijc, Jobes and Nun;
'ally. S:Sacri|ice Hits; Grav^g. - Struck
outf by. MpCorkle, 2;;, by.t, James, 4,
Bufeher .fa. ' tfri
balls;, MjjGqirklc 2; i3;
Butcher, 2; Allison. 2. Double play
jlart to, Phifeii. lipft oii base Plow-
boys 9; Mowaird Payne 12. Hits
offtMicCorkle 4;itt & inhingsi,,, i>""
James no hits and .2 runs in <1
innings. Off of Butcher . iji- 5. in-
nings ,2 hits and no runs; .Atli-
son ...2 hits and J rrun. Winning
pitcher, McCorkle. Johnson (A &
M) Umpire. ) .
this year's team. '' : ■'
Errors were made with both clubs.
One made in 'the niheth inning ac-
counting for D. B.'s one run.
t : ./ .)■-•! ■■■■■ II ' li
H
Daniel; Baker AB
Witherspoon, ss 4.
Smith,' ib : 4,
Pakeijj If 4
Stringer, of 4
Woods, 3b 4
Vilila, 2b : 3
Patterson; rf 3;
Broad, ef 3
Whiter p .'. 3
Totals.......^.32.
\ THIRD-, GAME;
Monday, and Tuesday the Plow-
boys hung up. two victories against
the Hill Billies of Daniel' Baker.,
Devall, \vee pitcher fiorn Mt.
Vernon, allowing 'the visitors three
hits .and . one, run .while his. team
mates collected sii hits ' and two,
runs, v • . \, ,v.. ; :.
SDfeyaU itf. the
Box- afld looks ilk1#'^vgp^d(''mpi ,fcir
Plowboys AB
Qone, If 2
(?4rrett, 3b ........ 3.
Massey, cf 3
Johnson, ss 2
Il.oughtalling, ss 2
Robert?, It ........ 3.
Williaxns, c a,
Hart, 2b ............ 3
Curry, lb 4
Devall, p 3
Totals
.28
0
0
r
l
0
1
o
o
o
H
1
1
0-
0
1
0
0
1
1
1.
6
K
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
1'
it
0
0
0
d
0
1
0
0:
0
1
a
0
0
4
X
2
0,
0
1
d
d
Woo,dp, 3b .
McMilliii, c
Broad, If
White, ss ...
Jones, p .....
Totals ;
Plowboys
Cone, rf .■
Graves, rf 2
Garrett, 3b ........ 5
Massey,, cf %
Heilhecker, cf .. 2
Johnson, ss
Nix, 2b ;
Roberts, If
Williairis, c
Curry, lb ..
Dutton, p
Maddox, p
Hodge, p 0
James, p. 0
Ml. 1* 1 M tl'.'uj . ^
AB
H
R
E
4
1
' 1
2
.. 1
0
. o
0
. 4
i
1
0
5
I
2
,0
.. 4
i
2
0
. 5
2
1
' 1
. 5
5
0
•0
.. 3
1
1
0
1
0
0
0
.3
G
1 •
I
.35
7
9
1
3
2
...... 3
: 2
4,
: 2
2
ii
i
6
3
0
d
0
■ o
01
0
r
1
o
o
o
t
2
I.
0
1
I 0
1
i
0
2
2
1
0
0
0 •
E
1
0
1
0
0
1
0
Q
2
0
0
0
0
0
Totals,...
D. B..
Plowboys
....30 ;
11 5
1 0 0 2 0 0 0 6 0:
1 0 7 0 0, 1 0 2 x
Plowboys ....001 001 000-
D. Baker ....000 000 001-
:2 i 4
EJiE
-2 "6,4
-1 3 1
. 3, base hits, ¥ilil.a .
■' 2 babe hits^ Houghtailling . %.
, Stolen bases, Coney, Garrett;
Hart^ ,■>,. ■ , •'' '■•••*•■
Sacrifice hits,(; ftfasseyj Williani's.
' ^se: bo'/ft&tis,,. ,tVh|tei.;"4*
'Umpire;' Strattori, . (^GrpenviUei).'
Batteries for Tarleton.— 1 >
Dutton- Maddbx, Hbdges, JaiheS
and' Williams. ■;: ■ , j . / '
D.;. B. Witherspoon, Jones and
McMullen'.' •
3 base , hits-; Cone. ' 1 ^
2 base hits; Garrett 2, CUriy,
Dutton. • , . '
Sacrifice hits; Massey, Nix.
Struck out by Maddox 3; James2;
WitherapooU, 4; joijes , 4 .
Hit by pitcher Jones (Cone);
odge, (Brood); . > -
Stolen bases,Gone, ^M'^seya lohh-
soq, Nix^ 2?; Wiliiaias'. 2,, Stringer^
' iHit's off Diitton 5- in 4i innings;
Maddox 2 in 4"innings; Jame3 none
in one inning.
•..Pfrgt-of-Ahcien^jt
, &ones; ; jjiujl jf&ijit iipemiiM
■tephanttz has eatab}lslie<J the foctj
•aya Natui-e Jlaguzlne, that tha" Ger-
'HH stt^ph'erd dog 'existed In
#lljr Kll pesetit foi'tii in (5TO0 1). Q.—
wearly 8,000 years ago t .
Or the End of the Human
Race h Atsured.
U the prophecies of/scietitlstiiva^i
fulfilled, then In a thousand aid eighty
years the human race will have
changed Into a type of animal much
Inferior to the highest order' of apes,
and JUfii a trifle superior to the lowest
type of ;sayai;e,< •?. > « • •'
ihe ; process • of degeneration has
been stiadliy proceeding for the last
thousand yearn Bach generation has
h'ad- less''hair thai !the ^e'ne^atlbii prd-
Sedlhii ltf!S'aa^,' todays is- if ' evident,
toldness jimong men Is the rule, Oncer
jt wja|5 a phen^enai CTC^ptlbni, With
,lj| t)iei next 806 yieara the human race
ibay be; hilriesaj . ; ' ■ ! "• ;
^eeiW ;^re' golhg raptSiy. ' ^hd' c^fldt
pfebpitttbiji1 of th'oSe5 with artificial pio-
lars Is unknown; but It mtiift be very
h>gb. : Wtefloni teeth how fall to come
tit all lb, m«ay cases, , aild when they
do appear they are vfjry late.
'r Ouir jawa jife much smaller, and
'yrti&'li, ati ls' tiie case, our skulls are
lar^ger. that holds iio coihfort. 'targe
heads do bot Indicate better bralnsi. :
Our eye# arb golngi'going; and in
jtlmb will be gone.; Seventy per cent
of the population, so It has been esti-
mated, wear glasses. '
! Otiif'e'ars, how'bVer, are'bll rlfehtj and
hto^lh^ Is One 'of thb ^6hsesiw,liich has
not' -deteriorated; But that Is not a
good sign. 4j'. ,aniinals; tiaye_ a Very
filghly dev'elop'ed eaH^" pbwer 1 "
. Stature h'as noticeably decreased. If
there' shbuld be another iwar; therja.
fl?6uld: have' ttf be 'another; revision, ■
downward, of'the minimum helglit for
recruit#. •.1 ■■ *
So" the end' of the human race, as
huinaub, Is assured unless—well, the
only" salvation for the race, so scien-
tists say, Is to dease eating. cooked
foods I •
f So; even If the matter Is not per-
S^naij^ prgent, all wh0 yylsh1 to pro\1de
their (iUota tb'the saying rof hujbanlty
know now what to dot—Detroit Free
tress.
Appropriate Liitrip Shades :
v^oliowtrtg a siinple prb^ortioii tsucll
as one to two lu plannStis: u lamfi
shade and ba«e ' wlif -imiijt*''!*
decide^j.v lititi'er ' iiiOKlilg tirtHih* when
complete t''o'H in«tiiiV<;eV. if tlif stji^ii
'oii foot1 Highl it fbllmVyritlUn"'tliiS.t|,
the shade wtil" ht>" n fiiiit High and tw.ti
vf<pet in clrp.iitnfeiJfiwe.-...
; Cosmopolitan Netit York
1 There was a curbstone Crowd op
Thirty-third street ^ near:1 Itrbatfway.;
"What's so (-•urious?"" u8ked a newcom-
er. !''A- man speajting Rnglisli,'' said
some°n&" leaving. - ■■ ■
■Syniptejfnjt ,.£*•■
The smail boy wjis 'son,i {t v, his
ft to see,•; .."rJ'i'!' ->!v litpv
^ab,'" said tlie jiU-H!
do you feel?" .■/f'ii-",; fhi:- . il'-o .
tor." was ihfi ,>v'n'" "V"!
know, how ,vou i !W 1 w'n !; ■ i il\>n';
know.how .vou'^t'eel \V«-H. v'uir's hois
I feel."
.'/ii-, "fn i.'v/si i'j't,,"
Moral/Ctiitrage
r^hej^varArf^, ".v^ry.^lew,.
ii^n, themgejTes. in a ^fafake.^Swiit uped' prbper -,signals.
"r.-r v ' . V, '' '
: Goncefnirig Lithography
'^Pribtib'l';ir'6'iH: Jprei>£kred l'dtones:' Has
bfeeii' knbWn' ■ slnc$ l7?6,i ^heb j thb' Art
wasVinvebted'by S'enefelde*.' -The Stobe
einblo^ed is fealled 'a lithograph; stone,
and .10 ; flue-grained stone of a very
porbU's nature.
• Be%§ th^ ; w% aiil'iith-
OJrraphic' st'onb^^njy'frdnS Bavaria, 'as
the variety quarried th^r'#: W dirthb
i best quality and of the njbst practical
color—a light gray. : ^ • •
These Jlnjestobes absorb grease bnd
water rapidly ; therefore, if a line Is
draWn on ra prepared' s tone with an ink
containing grease, this line can be
; tafceh a^ay by rembVibfe thfr sur-
r fac® ,tb th^dbpth tp wblfh th^ 2ptaut$
has penetrated. if water is^now^ placM
bn tho' stobe, lit; tviit relnain only on
'tSjWtf bar^'bbrcb^ed it&sk
Wlien:a roller eairryln^ ,a gSrealy'in#'Is
passed over 'the stone the ink will
cover only the greased portions,' arid
•tjiie parts, that a're .wbt will ;bot take bp
jthe Jiifi.,, of papbr
pffes^bd bpo'fr.the ^ton$ wJU re^eiyb ab.
Impression lri'infr from t.hb'ii'b.&s
obly; i1 O#! ttieW pptnclples' ' dbpebd
, litho#aphy,:;;;the' p ocys '!;Beib^ ■ bi-
treinely visible in the printer's ait.
<<>'
_ Havoc by Sea Disaster' ' *
The explosion .and conflagration at
Halifai, : Nova,. Scotia. Dec^inber 6.
t9lf, cbhsfed Mb^ thb coliision of
fwb ShlpS!'■ cine cari?yl'bg a l'da^b bf
war1 ibubltiobfei * Thb t'bliai dest'rU'dtitin
covered 1V£ square- iniies.- ThW Catds- *
trophe was . fallowed. By a iilizzard,
' greatly hampering the; work of rescue.
One" thousand );.one hundred «ahd:
eight dea(?';bb^bSl?v^i'e recovferedi i$Q0
■Wbre'* ieriobsty injbred, -SOiOOO ren-
dered ■ hom'elessi aUd the prbgifirty i8ss
; wasi ^stimateti■ .„-at :• $5&,000,000.r Th'b
•k steamship Mt.\ fllanc* carrying
,,piunitibns( collided 'with; the • Belgikij
relief ship 'Imo. The Frebcii cbptalh
.was, Qapt'ain tembdic, the Belgian
eaBtbiU'Hatrisbn;- ' Th'b" F^buch''
j Steabier^ was- accused ;bf' bot :ttf#ng
used: brOper-'Mgnals. ■!::',•-
,4 VQCkTK'NAl CilB;'
A V0CATlWAt BACK f
A certain professor, wh<* la a rft-
markably well-built man, yha-staying
St a Village not lbutt a®>. One bay he
happened to pass iwo men carting
flour.1' -'j' ' v';' ' ' ■ • :
"Say, BUI, who's 'thatV' hb <riw-
heard •bhe'asklbg th& othe'K '*?
"That's the professor wliat'B staying
here," was Bill's reply. "They say as
how he's very learned.
* f'What' a 'spbllt man," Jejoliibd -£he
other. "I never in my life see'd such
a back for a sack of flour."
■ Dignified *
j Jaokeroo—Why- don't you -put on
your boot, Mookl?
Mooki—Can't get 'em on, boss—too
little. ■' .
■ Jackertio^Theh why don't you leave
therii'af hbrftiSf ' ' ' '■ <\ •'
• Mooki—Fellow: looks sbch a fool
goin' to a show Without boots.
A Sporting Proposition
First Insur&nce Mari—Weil,'' t
wrote $5,000 on Olesport today.
1 Second Ditto—Wliat! / I've been after
that! old fellow1 for a year. ■ ''
First—Xou didn't know ho\y to
tackle him. I offered to bet: him ?5,00d
against the amount of the first pay-
ment that he Would live another year.
This Advanced Age
"Different ■ timSs!" • *
"Are the times realjy any different?"
"At' any rate my son can get a kick
out of life X never could. Yesterday he
Was' tbken into custody ift>r flirting with,
a pbiiebwomari:'* -
Convinced
"Are you getting anything out of
that course In salesmanship 7^- '
"Not much. I'm afraid I'll never be
one-tenth as good a salesman as the
man who sbid' hi'e the course."—Amer-
ican Legion Weekly.
Expensive Fish ">
"There are other flah In thi sett," they
.■ ; , sa{<?, - ji', t„1'
When rejected he cursed his fate.
''UTnoi + ■ fyvitTTtkl'A^ '441M A
'What jjflbi,'
' nie V
ho grumbled,. "Is that to
When the last took «Ui my bait J5'
Proof Enough' ■
Beatrice—And db ypu think he la
really'bedded;id'lite
Millicent—Why, he mUist be by the
language he subjects it to, my dear.
fihe'dhe::F$ai? '■:
.. '^here ,1s1 only: bbe: tbiing i;caii^ot.
tolelate ln; vfiy husband!"
, "Whjajf Is'thatr
, "That he is riiy husbantf;"
UNCERTAIN
■ ""Mbtherj (S^o'rge paints a wonderful
future for'-Us/':v'v"-' f ■ '.
:staBd' those futu^iatio patntihgs,"s!,;T7
,C'i
i \
UA -
' C '
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The J-TAC (Stephenville, Tex.), Vol. 6, No. 26, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 25, 1926, newspaper, March 25, 1926; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth139951/m1/2/: accessed April 28, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Tarleton State University.