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LITTLE BEATS EMERY 4 AND 2 TO RETAIN U. S. GOLF TITLE » Champion Ends Fast, Sensational Match With Eagle on 34th BY ALAN GOULD THE COUNTRY CLUB, Cleveland, Sept. 14. —(JF)— The big “Little Man’* with the “paralyzing punch’* scored Saturday his thirty-first consecutive knockout in national championship competition and stands supreme for the second consecutive year as the world’e greatest amateur golfer. William Lawson Little, Jr., withstood Walter Emery to eapiure on second airaigni Amer-) loan amateur title. He won by 4 and 3 with a finish that had Old Man Par reeling on the ropes. The champion lost the first three holes to his surprisingly cool and calculating opponent, a freshman in U. B. amateur title play. He was hard pressed to finish all even at the end of the first 18 holes. He was unable throughout moat of the second round to shake off a youthful challenger, who simply re fused to admit he could be licked, until the champion landed the final “crusher." An Eagle te Win The climax to perhaps the great est sub par scoring streak ever witnessed in a national amateur championship came at the 513 yard 16th hole—the 34th and last of the match. The end was in sight, as Little had won two straight holes after having his margin cut to one hole, with five to go. With two tremendous wood wal lops, Little reached the green, 12 feet from the cup. and sang his putt for an eagle three. In completing his second straight "little slam" triumphant this year and last in the amateur champion ships of both Great Britain and the United States—Little also establish ed a scoring record that ranks with the most remarkable in golfing an nals. The Californian was five under par against Emery Saturday for 34 holes. For eight successive victories during the match, in his dynamic inarch through the biggest field ever gathered for the American cham pionship. he was exactly 16 shots under par. The champion met his severest lasts over the 36 hole route, against Johnny Goodman in Friday’s semi finals and in Saturday s final match. Emery la Praised Little's own courage under fire undoubtedly won their appreciation, but the bold challenge of the one tc-five shot Lem Oklahoma gained the sentimental backing of those who always are eager to be on the ground floor if a champion and fa vorite is to be knocked off. To young Emery s everlasting cre dit. it can be set forth that he gave everything he had. that he did not “crack” under pressure, and that he kept the match from being any thing like a soft touch for the champion at any stage. Unabashed, the Oklahoman traded shot for shot with Little, frequently . holding his own In length and power He fought back repeatedly, after having his early lead wiped out. but he couldn’t keep It up in definitely. When he yielded, final ly, he needed to have no regrets. He was beaten by unbeatable golf. ..... San Benito Pep Squad Organizes SAN BENITO, Sept. 14. - When the 1935 San Benito Greyhounds go out on the gridiron to battle for old San Benito high they will be back jj ad by an up and coming pep squad which has already gotten organised for the football wars. The girls got together this week and elected Lucille Mansur as lead ed Blanche Taylor and Robbie Raye Breedlove were elected assistants. Miss Winston Cocke is the faculty sponsor and a mascot is to be chosen. Twenty-three new members were elected as follows: Nell Jean Tar water. Lorraine Thacker. Carol Lou Tlpptt. Florence Spears, Anne Merrl wether. Georgia Mae Miller, Dorothy McIntosh. Mary Catherine Ogden. Dora Lucille Kendrick. Virginia Glidewell. Jean Agar. Betty Atkins. Barbara Blahs, Thors Lou Breed love, Jane Clark. Katie Louise Cow art. Sally Crowe. Aline East. Ruth Etch Ison, Virginia Castleberry, Lan de Harris, Johnnie Helen Francis, and Helen Hlnkly. Old members who are back In the fold include Doris Schreiber. Iris Klents. Eleanor 8ulllvan. Billie Marie Brady. Mildred Hancg. Anna ‘ Vivian Maley. Lois Loveless. Laura Brandon. Viola Brcaseale. Marion Crowe. Ethel Woolam. Margaret Brown. Cleo Belle Mangrum. Beulah Neiderjohn. Winnie Belle Finley. La Feria Juniors In Grid Practice LA FERIA. Sept. 14. — Nineteen junior high boys have been work ing out under Coach Msngus Bol ander for the past week in prep aration for a schedule of junior high school games during the fall term. Although Coach Bolander is faced with the problem of teaching foot ball to most of the boys reporting for practice, a few were members of the team last year. The following boys have reported during the weak and will likely see service during the season Thomas Betts, Frank Perry, Jimmy Noblett, Buddy McLeod. Bill lfensfield Billy Earl Traylor. John Manley Stoddard. Henry Alderman. Donald Bailey. Kenneth Avery. Jim DeCJoche. Eugene Patton. Juan Gar cia, Peppy Cuellar, Carl Faust. Sam Quillian. Levino Gonzales, Ernesto Castaneda James. E. Swann principal of the junior high la also working with about 25 boys and tfiching them * football through his physical edu cation program. Although these boys do not expect to play full schedule, they will be prepared for junior high competition next year. SOUTHERN ASSOCIATION Chattanooga 4; Atlanta 0. Knoxtllle 1* Nashville 10. Ifew Orleans 1; Memphis *. % The Sports Spade I OUTCOME of the double torrid National League race, featured by Chicago taking first Saturday when the third-place Giant* eased the leading Cards down Into second, like ly will be determined by the New York-Chlcago series opening Mon day and the Chicago-St. Louis series closing out the season Sept. 26-29. St. Louis has the inside track as all of her remaining games are at her home park and are liberally in terlarded with open dates, partic ularly just before the “end-all and be-all” aeries with Chicago. Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday the Cardinals wlli be hosts to the Brooklyn Dodgers, then the Red Birds get an open date Friday before a two-game series with Cin cinnati. Then come three cpen dates and the four-game series with Chi cago. That's what ull decide the championship of thi league. * Monday, Tuesday. Wednesday and Thursday the New Yorkers play on the Cubs home lot. Friday is an open date for both club*; and then Chicago takes on Pittaburrrh in a pair while the New Yorkers are hosts to the Brooklyr Dodgers. Chi cago then has two open dates, plays one game with Cincinnati and forth with launches Into the four-game series with St. Louis to close out the year. Meanwhue. New York takes on Boston twice. Brooklyn twice and winds up the year with a three-game series at Boston. It is very easily seen that the New York-Chicago and Chicago-St. Louis series will bring things to a head. The Cardinals should ease out in front while the Giants and Cards cut throats, but Chicago will get her revenge In the closing four-fumes with St. Louis. Although they are in second place, it is apparent that the schedule fa vors the Cardinals Chicago is the club which has a tougii row to hoe for the Cubs have to play etp’ht games with the powerful Giants and Cards. • • • ART DANA fires in a communica tion from Houston announcing that he will match Chief Parris, the Cherokee who beat Kid Azteca in Houston, against Bobby Garcia. Houston flash, in the ten round main event to be stared Thursday night in the Harlingen arena. "I’ve been after the Indian for a week now," Dana writes, "but only after I offered him a bigger guaran tee than I gave Azte~a was I able to get his name on the dotted line Since Parris beat Azteca he’s had offers from all over the country and has already accepted a bout on the coast with Peter Jackson right after his Harlingen fight.” Parris, a tireless windmill of a fighter who punches from bell to bell, has made a great record dur ing the past year. He has fought 22 times without a loss while taking on such scrappers as Kid Azteca, Tony Herrera, Eddie Murdock, Duke Trammel. Lou Massey. Wildcat Monte. Mickey O’Shea, Jimmy Wakefield. Cyclone Frakes. Tommy Jones, etc. In a space of less than a month he beat three of the out standing welterweights in the coun try—Massey, Herrera and Azteca. Garcia, a slugger who rates high in central Texas, would like nothing ty^ter than to ruin Parris’ record with a defeat at Harlingen. The Houstonian is somewhat irked by the "Chief's” victories over Herrera and Azteca, maintaining that he can turn the tide against the In dian. THE FOOTBALL season will open Friday night with the rejuvenated Brownsville high school Screaming Eagles taking on the Mercedes high Tigers under the new floodlights on Tucker field. You might as well can* cell all other arrangements for this will be a "must" event on your cal* endar of entertainment. The Eagles, who have 14 letter men back, are nearing the pink of condition and they are rapidly de veloping Into a clicking unit. They will be smartly turned out and will give you plenty of action for your money. work on the light plant is near ing completion and this big system will be a snow in itself. It is the best south of San Antonio, accord ing the lighting experts. THE EAGLES are going to get plenty of support from the pep • squad this season. The girls met re cently and elected Haxel Ross De jputy president, and that insures the | boys of sideline pep and ginger. Ap proximately 130 girls turned out for the Initial session at which Eltse Hannon was selected sponsor. The girls are going after the boys not cn the football squad to Join in the cheering section FOOTBALL material for the com ing years is being built on the Ju nior squad here which is being drill ed by Bob Celaya. the ex-Browns ville high athlete who used to heave the shot and discus out of the lot. His records in these events still are the best ever made in the Valley. Youngsters working out under his watchful eye include: Arthur Pat rick. J White, A. McBride. Baird Elf rink. Walter Mullins. D. w. Do naho, Craig McNair, Wm. Fricks, rlton Parkins, Roberto Hinojosa, • • • Tigers Hold Ground by Splitting With Yanks DETROIT m GAMES AHEAD Red Sox and White Sox Are Other Winners In American NEW YORK. Sept 14. OP)— The Tigers maintained their game lead over the Yankees Saturday by splitting a double header. The Yanks won the first game 2-1 on Johnny Broaca’s three hit pitching but the Tigers knocked Walter Brown out with a four run blast in the second inning and took the nightcap 5 to 1. First: RHE Detroit. 000 010 000—1 3 0 New York . 011 000 OOx—2 6 2 Crowder and Cochrane Broaca and Dickey. Second: RHE | Detroit . 040 000 001—5 9 0 New York . 100 000 000—1 9 0 Lawson and Cochrane; Brown, Deshong, Murphy and Dickey. Solons 5. Cleveland 1 WASHINGTON. Sept 14. (AV The Washington Senators made it three straight over Cleveland here Saturday, defeating the Indians 5 to 1. RHE Cleveland. 000 000 100—1 10 2 Washington .. 030 100 lOx—5 12 1 L. Brown. Wtnegamer and Phll i Ups; Newsom and Bolton. Red Sox 5. Browns 2 BOSTON, Sept. 14 «/P— The Red Sox beat St. Louts 5-2 Saturday with Stewart Bowers. 19 year old mounds man from Gettysburg college, turn ing in the victory. RHE St Louis . 000001100—2 8 1 Boston . 201 000 20x—5 7 0 Caldwell. Walkup. Knott. Thomas and Hemsley; Bowers. Wilson nd Berg. White Sox Win Pair PHILADELPHIA. Sept 14 f*>.— Th Chicago White Sox punched a run across in the tenth inning lor a 2 to 1 win over the Athletics in the nightcap of Saturday’s double header. after taking tl«e first game 4 to 2. First: RHE Chicago . 000100 002—4 9 1 Philadelphia .... 001 001 000—2 9 2 Lyons and Sewell; Upchurch and Berry-. Second: RHE Chicago . 000 000 100 1—2 7 0 Philadelphia .. 000 100 000 0—1 5 0 Whitehead and Shea; Doyle, Diet. rich and Richards. PICKERS WIN OPENING TILT Refugio Goes Down 38-0 In Initial Game of Year At Robatown <Special to The Herald) ROBSTOWN, Sept. 14.—The Robstown high school Cotton Pick ers. who play in the “A” district tak ing in the Valley. Jumped the gun on the football season here Friday night by defeating the Refugio High Tig ers 38 to 0. Lynn Dugger, playing in his first game of high school football, made a touchdown in the first five min utes of play. Robstown made four first downs in the first quarter, and after that the game was largely a punters’ duel. Refugio made two first downs. Robstown drew ten penalties and Refugio three. The Cotton Pickers attempted five passes, completing two. The Bobcats tried five and com pleted one. Both sides fumbled a good deal, probably owing to the new lights, which neither eleven was accustom ed to. Other teams In the “A" confer ence will begin their grid season this Friday. Brownsville high will be hosts of the “B” Mercedes Tigers, Harlingen will take on the "B” La Feria Lions at the Hubcity. and the Edinburg high Bobcats will attempt to claw up the “B” Mission Eagles under the lights at the Hidalgo coun ty seat The powerful Corpus Christ] high Bucs. slated to wrin the district bunting in a walk will open Friday night at Corpus by taktne on the Harlandale high school Mules of San Antonio. Longhorns Get Dow/i To Hard Practices AUSTIN. Sept. 14. (JPt—Scrimmage replaced drills in fundamentals at the University of Texas Saturday as Coach Jack Cheviamy sought play er* to block gaping holes left by graduation and scholastic ineligi bility. The chief quest was for linemen and numerous combinations were tried. Chevigny also gave his crack back field material a chance to demon strate their running, passing and punting ability. Frogs Go Through Rough Scrimmage PORT WORTH. Sept 14. (AV-The T. C. U. Progs closed their first week of football training Saturday] afternoon with a game-like scrim mage that raged through two full hours. The final sccre was 13-0 in favor of no one ip particular due to the fact that Coaches Meyer and{ Wolf shifted their players from one side to the other. Originally the. White was composed of the reg-j ulars. and men wearing that color ! scored the touchdowns Dan Villarreal, Martin Redo, Sam my Hernandez, L. Flores and others. These boys will scrimmage the Eagles under the lights Tuesday night if the light plant la ready for use by that time. AT HIS PEAK By Jack Sords Ab R '*J fafc MAJORS MAS Ujoe*£0 AARoea. rofl Mrs TfcAM 1JU4 MO066O' VoRk! GiaAT SoJTAPaW, VwAo IS P'TcAi»J& TAe tJEsT 0AU, OF Mis career . CACLWAAJfS fo j \A<fO W ov/es 1 Tiji* 'iiAR A(0D Bd ri& rtiSfoTAl foa foe u-sr Taste veARs To fa6viiCf0H .es MW. v Donna, San Benito, Weslaco Pre-Season Favorites in Valley ‘B1 Gridiron Race (Special to The Herald) . MtALLEN. Sept. 14—The Lower Rio Grande Valiev's Clash B high school football race will get under way Fndav with 11 teams assured and possibly another which will en ter Claas B competition during the coming week. At the present time, without hav ing seen any of the teams in action, it appears that last year's champs of both Vahey wnd district, the Don na High School Redskins, will be well up m the running but most pre season dope seems to favtc Coach Griville ' Mule * Brown s San Ben ito Greyhounds At Weslaco. Harry Johnson's Weslaco High School Panthers, Valley, district and bi district champions of 1933. are re ported to be on the comeback trail OtheT* possibilities are the McAllen Bulldogs, the Mission Eagles and possibly the Pharr-San Juan-Alamo Bears or the La Feria Lions. Most Valley schools suffered se verely from graduation last May. San Benito saving four for use this season. Donna eight or nine but not including the flashy Barnard or the steady ground-gaining Stanley Reed. Weslaco reports a half-dozen vet erans. La Fer'a counts eight return ing lettermen and McAllen has sev en players from last year’s Bull dogs. San Benito's four lettermen In clude Howard Kennedy, halfback; Arnold Hoefling at fullback. Edwin Willett at guard and Anselmo Can tu at end. Pacing plenty of punch, however, are the graduates from the ranks of the Grevhound Pups. In cluding Morgan. Broer. Brady. Clif ford. Ballenger and George, plus Captain Lester Parker, back. Wyatt Carter at tackle. George Ayoub at center. Ray Hill at guard along with James Alsobrook Reed Is Gone The quiet surrounding the Indian wigwams at Dona was broken slight ly during the past few days with the wail that Stanley Reed, probably the outstanding high school performer scheduled for appearance on Class B grids in the Valley this season has not re-entered school. Coach George Vest will miss this line-busting vet eran of district and bi-district cham pions of 1934. Also to be missed is the flashy Barnard, one of the sec tion's outstanding fullbacks last year and one of its best finds of recent years, who is not eligible this year. Coach Harry Johnson's Weslaco Panthers are counting the return of a doaen veterans but has a few holes to plug with reserves. The Pan thers breezed through the district until mid-season last year, well on their way to a duplication of Valley, district, bi-district and regional honors in 1933. but the mighty Don na Indians stopped them short. Jim Miller and Gilbert Swanzey. both steady players, are due for end posi tions this year, Captain Lamar Smith is expected to get his old Job at center, guards will be selected from Tom Port. Grady Aldridge. Kenneth Barth, another veteran, and Cecil Peck, while tackles probably will come from among Art Beck with. a veteran, E. E Poinbeouf. Robert Roeder, John Tate and Elmo Ferguson. In the backfield will be the vet erans. Melvin Wilson. Charles Fer guson and Woodrow I sham, in all probability, teamed with Kirk Leo nard. Lloyd Duke. Ralph Finchal, a recent arrival from Oklahoma, and Rav Cassidv. At McAlien. Coach Bob •‘Fog horn'' Knight reported seven letter men but a sad lack of reserve ma terial. The veterans include Capt.| Billy Overstreet, and Tony Trad, ends; Jack Rucker, center; Johnnyi Harrod and Clyde Smith, b .cks; Claude Bedinghaus, tackle; and Les ter Kolberg. guard. The Bulldogs, ended up second in the Class B Val-1 ley nind under Knight last sea-1 son, his first year as bead ooach. He I Hot Dogs Keep Daffy Off Mound ST. LOUIS. Sept. 14. /P— An attack of indigestion caused by mixing hot dogs with soda pop during an exciting boxing show Friday night k*t Paul Dean. St Louis Cardinal hurling ace. too ill to appear Saturday against the New York Giants. Big Ed Heitascr took his place on the mound. The younger Dean did not suit ud but remained in his hotel room recuperating. Club otiici als said his condition was not venous. has a squad of about 30 players this year. Mission About Dim The Mi.-o.on Eagies may be ex pected to stage a comeback ere long. Coach Clauae Dailey, former Donna Indian chiel, has weeued out his quad in an off-year last season and will build his club around eight grizzled veterans: Capt. Walter Wal lace, Don Tripsin. Arthur Gebhardt and BUI Fine, all backs; Joaquin Castro. Juan Rivera. Lupe Guerra and John Tnpson, linemen. A squad of energetic reserves makes the Eagle threat somewhat more for midable. although nothing startling is anticipated this year. Coach Fred Sigler of the Pharr San Juan-Alamo Bears probably will lay claim to a glebe-trotting record for his team this year. Only one game thus far has been scheduled at Pharr for the Bears with about seven or eight contests away from home. Sigler boasts the return ot four lettermen, headed by Asa ‘Red” Ricks, All-Valley guard for two sea sons, and including Granville Smith and Ernest Smith, tackles, and Buddy Greene, back. Two sub lettermen also will assist: Leo Den bo at guard and Lee Poole in the backfield. Pharr boasts a squad of two dozen youngsters this year. Coach C. E “Toady” Vail’s La Feria High School Lions lot* pretty good thus far with a sound of 20 men reporting for duty. Eight lettermen and a hot-locking reserve squad serve as warnings to othtr ambitious Class B outfits that the Lions will slip up on somebody before the sea son ends. The Lien backfield—Mach ner. McMinn. Moreno and Hensley —with plenty of experience and playing brains Is expected to do some fancy cavorting up and down the Valley within the next few weeks. Hamner and Smith at the two ends and Hatchett and Graham at tackles seem to have their berths cinched, while Finley. C. Smith Wilson. Gra ham. Frncannon. Perry. Patterson. Trsugett. Gouldlng. Reed Noblett and Anderson wil fill the gaps. La Jojra In Hanks Only five lettermsn at Mercedes, headed by Capt. Larrimore Benner at end, are returning but Coa/h H L. Schmalzreld in his darkey hour has never failed to turn out a club that did not Rive Valley Class B leaders trouble. Other veterans in clude Benner. Dr:*we. Pylant Barnes and Ragland and the club as a whole may be classed as light and inex perienced Invariably, the Tigers dump some ambitious club or play inspired football at a high point of the season. La Joyn High School, west of Mission will enter Class B ranks for the first time this season and Its new coach. A B Martin, has start ed football training. Five Covotes from last year’s team are return ing. including R cl and Bourgeois. Dewev Carrie. Willard Thotrnson Rodolfo Gomes and Arturo Villar real. About 30 squadsmen are out for the team, however, and the f- club opens its schedule cn Sept. 27 with the Pharr-San Juan-Aiamo Bears. Three other schools in the Valley Class 3 district have not reported football conditions as yet. They are Coach E. B. Mtrses Santa Rosa Wildcats. Mentor Jack Freshours Rio Hondo Bobcats and Coach Bob Porter's Raymondville Bearcats. The Rio H nda showing in 1933 drooped ! somewhat last season with the ground-gainers taken out by grad uation. The other two clubs are un known quantities in the Clas.' B race this year. Members of the Valley Class B district at the present time are La Jova. Mission. McAllen. Pharr-San Juin-Alamo. Donna. Weslaco, Mer cedes. La Fern. San Benito. Rio Hondo, Santa Rosa and Raymond I ville. Hitchcock Shines NEW YORK. Sept. 14 OP— The Tommy Hitchcock of ten goal days has come back to ride again. Riding as he did in the old days, Hitchcock led the Grcentree play ers to a 15-9 victory’ over Long Is land in the first round of the open championships at Cochran field Fri day. He turned in a startling exhi bition of stickwork. strategy, horse manship and ball following as he personally accounted for nine goals. I Golf Lessons LCARMIM6 CORRECT SW/MG-LIKE eOlWP/MG CHARACTER _m Number 694 ALEX MORRISON sap: In many wap learning the cor rect golf swing is like building a fine character. The time required for both is about the same. So are the patience, strict adherence to fundamentals and concentre* tion on high ideals. The comparison may seem fai fetched to most golfers simply because it never has occurred to them. But their golf would im prove steadily if they’d use the common sense they employ in other things No man would expect to be con sistently successful m business un less he knew what he was doing. Very often the same person is indignant because he can’t score well even though he knows little of what he does with a club. Of course he thinks he knows what he does during his swing but the results don't support this belief. Good golf, like strength of character, doesn’t come before you know the truth about your self. ’PORTERS BEAT PIRATES4T01 Galveston Still Holds 2-1 Lead On Beaumont In Texas Playoff BEAUMONT. Sept. 14. Uh- Clar ence Lemuel "Red” Phillips, ace of the Besumont pitching staff halted the charge of the Galveston Buc caneers here Saturday and the Ex porters von 4 to 1. Cullenbine and Bates hit homers for the Shippers. The Bucs held a 2-1 edge In the se ries despite Saturday's setback. Galveston Governor, cf Pausett. 3b . English. 2b . McGhee, lb Prerost, If . Ward, rf ... Linton, c ... McLeod, ss . White, p ... Jakucki. p . x Yarter ... Cole, p . Ab R H O A 4 12 4 0 4 0 12 3 4 0 112 4 0 2 9 1 4 0 0 1 0 4 0 10 0 3 0 0 4 1 4 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 Totals . 34 1 7 24 9 x—Batted for Jakucki In 8th. Beaumont Bates, cf .... Cullenbine. rf Jones, if .... York, lb .... Vincent. 2b .. Ross. 3b .... Pfleger, ss .. Tebbetts. c .. Phillips, p .. Ab R H O A 4 2 2 5 0 4 113 0 4 12 2 0 3 0 2 15 1 4 0 10 2 4 0 2 0 4 4 0 0 1 5 4 0 10 0 3 0 0 1 1 Totals . 34 4 11 27 13 Galveston . 100 000 000—1 7 0 Beaumont .... 200 010 lOx—4 11 1 Errors — Cullenbine. Runs bat ted — McGhee. Cullenbine. Vincent. Bates. Jones Two base hits—York. English. Three base hits — Mc Ghee. Home runs — Cullenbine. Bates Stolen base — Bates Pitchers' statistics — hits and runs off White. 3 and 2 in 1-3 inning fearnedoff Jakucki. 7 and 2 in 6 2-3 inning. Losing pitcher — White Struck out by Jakucki 2 Bases on balls — off Phillips 1. off Jakucki 1. Earned runs — Beau mont 4. Galveston 1. Left on base —Galveston. Beaumont 7. Time 1 45 Umpires — Palmer, Davis Basil and Pate. Indians, Oilers To Play Sunday OKLAHOMA CITY, Sept 14 <*> Oklahoma City’s Indians and the Tulsa Oilers enjoyed a breathing spell Saturday before the crucial Shaughnessy series playoff game here Sunday which may decide the qualifier for the finals Oklahoma City has won two games and Tulsa one of the sched uled three-out-of-flve series A vic tory 8unday for the Indians would give them the right to meet th» win ner of the Galvp«ton-Beaumont se ries in the finals. Either John Nlggellng or Charley Moncrief may be the pitcher for Oklahoma City and Art Jones, right hander, was expected to be Tulsa's choice -_ Mustangs Chief Is Pleased With Squad DALLAS. Sept. 14. JP)—Tha Mus tangs of Southern Methodist Uni versity galloped through their first .scrimmage of the seascn Saturday and coaches expressed satisfaction over the progress of their charges to date. Matty Bell, head coach, said his plans called for starting the best lineup available in every game “and that goes for the first game next Saturday against North Texas Teachers from Denton here." There was plenty of rough con tact work in the first scrimmage but no attempt at a regular game. Bell and his whistle stopped any thing that suited out like a long run. Ivan Stapp a sophomore from Breckenridge. and Bill Fry. a trans fer frcm Paris Junior College, per formed in a fashion that left Bell hoping he had uncovered reserve tal ent to back up his probable regular ends. Maco Stewart and Bill Tip ton. Baylor Bruins Get Rough Scrimmage WACO. Sept. 14 -<*»>— Coach Morley Jennings sent his Baylor University Bears through their most strenuous drill of the week's prac tice sessions Saturday. It was a short scrimmage follow ed by a period of signal drill on new plays. Hal Pinley. Bob Masters and Bubba Oernand have been doing most of the work in what is known as the first-string backfield. The Bears finished the week In fine physical condition. Carl Bra zell. fierce blocking sophomore back, received a slightly bruised hip in practice, but all other members of the squad survived the week of r-ac‘.lce without injury. Jax, Judges Play 5th Game Sunday JACKSONVILLE Tex . Sept 14. —The Jacksonville Jax and the Pine Bluff Judges rested Saturday for their fifth game in the Little Dixie series Sunday. The contest was made necessary when Joe Martina pulled down a fly that was headed over the fence with th’ bases loaded and enabled the Judges to beat the Jax. 4-3. Priday. Jacksonville, pennant winner in the West Dixie loop, previously had won three straight games from the east Dixie champions. Herman Pranks hit the long fly after the Jax had scored once and then loaded the bases in the seventh. Martina yanked it down in what ooked like an impossible catch. The Judges collected their scores m the fifth and sixth innings, and the Jax added two counters in the eighth. \ MANYCOPSTO GUARD BATTLE Possibility of Rioting At Baer-Louia Fight fs To Be Checked NEW YORK. Sept. 14. (JF>— Elab orate police precautions, with 1,300 men on duty, will seek to guarantee peace everywhere except In the ring for the Max Baer-Joe Louis heavy weight match In the Yankee Sta dium a week from Tuesday night. Patrolmen will carry no night sticks. the police department an nounced Saturday, but there will be 649 of them inside the park alone, bolstered by another hundred nio-v tor cycle men and 76 officers. HunJ| dreds more will patrol Harlem. the streets outside the ball park, and several hundred will be In reserve at the Bronx county court house nearby The same precautions prevailed at the Louis-Camera fight here ear lier this summer, and all the police men enjoyed the match, there being nothing else for them to do. Mike Jacobs, promoter of the match, predicted Saturday that the gate receipts will run well over 11. 000.000. first match to do that here since Jack Dempsey knocked out Jack Sharkev in 1927. Jacobs said he had S500.000 already in the strong box. McAllen Liong Beat Rotes In Golf Met*| Mr ALLEN Sept. 14 — Mr A Lions dub golfers stroked their way to a fast victory over their peren nial links opponents, the McAllen Rotary club. Thursday at Public Golf Course. The Lions turned in a gross score of 486 for medal play over 18 holes as compared with tha Rotary total of 528. The Lions victory was the first they had recorded in the long his tory of civic club golfing here. Scores po ted by the Liens te *m was as lol.ows: Ed Keener, who paced the winning outfit, 87: Pres ton MrMahan. 91; Lee Har;. 94; C J Pits. 97; and Dick Harris. 117. The Rotary scores were: P. D. Moore. 90; R E Horn. 98' Bill Yoder. 100: Dr F E Osborn, 113; and Ernest Potein, 127. Mexican Independence Day! At the New MATAMOROS BULL RING Gallardo Presents Two of Mexico** Most Celebrated Matadors JULIAN PASTOR —and— ANTONIO RANGEL Fighting Large, Powerful Sturdy Bulls From the Well Known Stock Farm of Espiritu Santo! San Luis Polos! State The Famous Picador ‘Berrinches’ Will Take Part in This Fight COME!