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About The Texas Aggie. (College Station, Tex.) 1921-current | View Entire Issue (April 15, 1937)
ng a 3 3 w 3 atl aiat YH bh AT i 3 = ™ * 2 ¥ bed 4 yo p- iH .. ( WA INE LF or, 4 ten Ry No SPORT FODDER 4 Hal Welch of the Aggies, Hugh- ston of Texas U., Tommy Fine of Baylor and Floyd Mechler of Rice look like three very fine sophomore ~ pitching prospects in the confer- ence this fall. Morley Jennings says Fine is the finest pitching prospect he has ever seen and that he is headed straight for the Big Lea- gues. He did not look quite that good even when they beat the Ag- gies at Kyle Field, but with nor- mal development and improvement he should go far. And the same is true of the other youngsters. The powerful track teams of both Texas and Rice have beaten the Aggie thinly-clads this spring, but “Dough” Rollins and his boys may make a better showing in the Con- ference meet than is generally ex- pected. They expect to hold most of the points they have been mak- ing in dual meets, and if they can do this they will be battling for the title when the big meet comes. Kyle Field and the Memorial Gymnasium went thru a new ex- perience last week when the Cadet Band sponsored a wrestling match "featuring “Whiskers” Savage and Goon Henry. These two “Boys” and several prelims were thoroughly .enjoyed by a big crowd. The Band is attempting to raise sufficient money to take all football trips next fall. “Dough” Rollins Aggie track team came within five yards of pulling a startling upset for the current cinder season. In a dual meet with the Texas U. Longhorns at Kyle Field last Tuesday a vic- tory for the Cadets in the final event, the mile relay, would have won the meet. The Longhorns, how- ever came thru to win the event and the meet by a five yard mar- gin in the relay. Herzik, Aggie hurdler, was high point man for the day. Texas and Rice boast this year a pair of the strongest track teams in the south. E. P. Braunig, ’30, is with the Bureau of Agricultural Economics and is located at 1104 South Wa- bash Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. B. R. Avent, ’17, .is a drafts- man with the Hughes Tool Com- pany, Houston. He has been with this company for the past nine years. His residence address is 2915 Broadway. John B. Jones, 26, who is with the Federal Land Bank, Houston, recently sent in Association dues. For the past 21 years, Richard T. “General” Beauregard, '09, has been with the Texas and New Or- leans Railroad, and at the present time is located in Houston. His home address is 2209 Dunston Road. Robert B. Carruthers, ’12, is a structural designer for the South- ern Pacific Railroad and is located at 916 S. P. Building, Houston. He and Mrs. Carruthers reside at 1849 Harold Street of that city. Isaac C. “Ike” Corns, ’32, is in the Crop Loan Division of the Federal Intermediate Credit Bank of Houston. Corns has been in this work for the past four years. His residence address is 412 West Polk, Houston. Chester R. “Cicero” Coward, 30, is living at 4622 Woodside Drive, Houston, where he is an account- ing clerk with the Reed Roller Bit Company of that city. Charles E. Craig, ’15, is local manager for the Strachan Ship- ping Company, 601 Cotton Ex- change Building, Houston. His home address is 1648 West Main Street. Craig has been with this ‘company for the past 13 years. Horace Holden Jr., ’31, is located in Huntsville, Texas, where he is with the Southwestern Bell Telephone Company. R. L. Sudheimer, ’36, is veteri- nary inspector for the Bureau of Animal Industry and is at the pre- sent time located at 4217 Polk Avenue, Houston, Texas. George P. Box, ’28, is warehouse cashier for the Cities Service Oil Company. Box is living at 1030 Milby Street, Houston. CONFERENCE STANDING Team— W..1. Pet. University of Texas........ 4 1 .800 Rice Institute........... 00 a Texas A&M... 0.00% St 1750 Baylor University............ 2. "9L.500 Texas Christian U........ 14 200 Southern Methodist U....0 4 .000 LAST WEEK’S RESULTS Texas Aggies 10, Southern Meth- odist 5; Rice 8, Texas Christian 6; Texas Aggies 9, Southern Metho- dist 5; Texas Christion 13, Rice 8; Texas 6, Baylor 1; Texas Aggies 12, Texas Christian 8; Baylor 10, Texas 1; Rice 5, Southern Metho- dist 2. T. C. U. (8) Ab H Po A OBrien 88 ae 4 NOR 2 Montgomery, If ........... gods BOT ly Baugh, Sh ira : J | Aer: RE Mayer, 2b s.r seins 5 2 '4 4 Wallas dof on. todas Lo 4 BALE Roach, 1B i cis 45090 Linne, pi laity Wa 4+ 950-2 Aldrich, ¢ nibs tise 30 1°90] Carswell, tf .....iiies 3-0 1.3 Dyess a 1-000 Totals L......onitiis 36 8 24 14 Aggies (12) Ab H Po A Manning, ‘ef ut ns 2:13:49 Morrow, 2b inn bes 4 Sisd 0 Landrum, 3b ................. Dowling, © ..ciuiaioteesnsennns 4 310 Smith, rf 5-2-5070 Williams, Ib .cccniiena 4: 2 "5:0 Flanggan, 88 ow oo iat Bell, If... oa 4:3%.2.0 Welch, DP ..citde.iis Si" 17.0 Pitner, D u.liionadint. 050°C. 0 Voellzel:/~........ his 1-070. 0 Totals i. con. 87.16 17 4 Dyes batted for Carswell in 9th. Voelkel batted for Welch in 8th. Score by innings: Frogs 000 102 203— 8 AGZRES iv. i iii sigan eid 010 210 08x—12 Runs, O’Brien, Montgomery, Baugh 3, Meyer 2, Roach, Manning, Morrow, Lan- drum, Dowling 2, Smith, Williams 2, Flanagan, Bell 2, Voelkel. Errors, Mont- gomery, Baugh, Landrum, Williams, Flanagan, Welch. Runs batted in, Baugh Meyer 2, Walls, Linne 2, Morrow 4, Lan- drum, Dowling 2, Smith, Flanagan 2, Bell, Welch. Two-base hits, Linne, Man- ning, Morrow, Landrum, Dowling, Wil- liams, Bell. Home runs, Meyer, Dowling. Sacrifice, Williams. Stolen bases, Manning, Dowling, Flanagan. Bases on balls, off Linne 7, Welch 5. Struck out, by Linne 1, Weleh 9, Pitner 1. Hits, off Welch 5 in 8, Pitner 3 in 1. Earned runs, off Linne 9, Welch 3. Passed balls, Aldrich, Dowling. Left on bases, Frogs 7, Aggies 9. Double plays, Baugh to Meyer to Roach, Manning to Morrow. Umpires, Jim Tongate and Pete Jones. Time, 2:16." Aggies (10) Ab H Po A Manningseli....cmiu iii ! 12°40 Morrow, in2bt.. 0. hel TY ea Landrum, 3b... 0. 3 0< 1S Devling, ic. 4 Eon sTui] Smith, vf la 00s 140 Williams; "1b :..L leit 4-2:14 °.0 Flanagan... 0.5 we. SE CO Bell Lif at 3..35'1."0 Pitner,p o.oo Joi 30 0 4 Totals init 35 14 27 16 South Method. (5) Ab H Po A Busaclr sek roe a0 8 1.53 nd Jackson, S 2h Su. iu 3.2.8.8 Churchill, Zell oh. 5 HG SH Norton, 1... 00 en 4-000 Stidger, vf... ini 4 1 0 0 ONL AD. oie ir. i SEE L002 Dougherty, pro. 1-0-0440 Bry, Ab iin inition 4114-90 Finley, e ........ lib 20 4 0 3 4 Bnley,r fbr. nv. br ts os 02 0R Pd Campbell i... 5... 1 at LE il Totals:....r.oawis 34 6 24 15 Campbell batted for Haley in ninth. Southern Methodist ....... 000 000 023— 5 AggiesiFal st Nt Ln, 220 001 50x—10 Runs, Busacker 2, Fry, Haley, Camp- bell, Manning 2, Morrow 2, Landrum, Smith, Williams 2, Flanagan, Bell. Er- rors, Busacker, Jackson 2, Fry, Landrum, Flanagan, Pitner. Runs batted in, Jack- son. W. Churchill, Stidger, Fry, Manning, Dowling 3, Williams 3, Flanagan. Two- base hits, Dowling, Williams. Three- base hit, Williams. Home run, Fry. Sac-. rifices, Landrum, Pitner. Stolen bases, Morrow 2. Bases on balls, off O’Neill 3, off Pitner 3. Struck out, by Pitner 3. Hits, off O’Neill 13 in 63% innings, off Doughtery 1 in 1 2-3. Earned runs, off O’Neill 9, off Pitner 5. Passed balls, Fin- ley, Dowling. Hit by pitcher Busacker by Pitner. Left on bases, Southern Methodist 8, Aggies 7. Wild pitches, O’Neill 2. Win- ning pitcher, Pitner. Losing pitcher, O’Neill. Umpires Alba Etie and Pete Jones. Time 2:05. Norman J. Lea, ’33, sends in his Association dues and asks that his mail be sent to 810 North Frank- lin Street, Marshall, Texas. A new member of the Associa- tion is L. Roy Prescott, ’25, who is with the Federal Land Bank, Houston, Texas. E. M. Longcope, Jr., ’19, resides at 2434 Pelham Drive, Houston, Texas. A famous basketball star in his school days, Eddie is in the insurance business and also is licensed to practice law. He and Mrs. Longcope will move into their new home in River Oaks soon. Andrew H. Peyton, ’30, is with the United Fruit Company in Cuba. Peyton likes his work fine and says he is going to manage to take a vacation next fall during football season, so that he can see a few games. Peyton gets his mail at Herrera, Oriente, Cuba. | pwr as. » ok jp ow ia S40 a 3 it 4 Front Row, left to right: Charley Kana, bat boy; Al Voelkel, Kyle Riddle, Woody Bell, Walter, Phythian, Bill Riddle, Tony Polanovich. Second Row, left to right: John Spreen, J. H. Jackson, D. D. Carden, Jack Cooper, Hal Welch, Rube Williams, Waylon Manning. Third Row, left to right: Coach Siki Sikes, Jess Landrum, Harry Cohn, David Timmerman, Herbert Knowles, Foster Smith, Chris Flanagan, D. B. Thrift, Bill Stages, Capt. Pete Dowling. J. V. Wheat, ’28, is with the Federal Land Bank, Houston. Wheat is a new member of the Association. Hal H. “Happy” Blair, ’27, is located at 916 Southern Pacific Building, Houston, where he is a draftsman for the Texas and New Orleans Railroad. Blair has been with this company nine years. As a cadet at A. & M., he was art editor of the Longhorn during his senior year and a distinguished student each year he was at A. & M. His home address is 6832 Ave- nue E, Houston. Marvin E. “Dime” Dealy, ’25, has been with the Missouri Pacific Lines for the past 10 years. “Dime” gets his mail at 3007 Morrison, Houston. As a student at A. & M., Dealy was a member of the Ross Volunteers, a T-man in basketball, business manager of the Battalion, and active in many other campus organizations. He is at the pre- sent time secretary of the Houston A. & M. Club. L. J. DeFriend, ’29, is with the Reed Roller Bit Company of Hous- ton and makes his home at 201 Adams Street of that city. Fred Eberspacher, ’06, is chief draftsman for the Texas and New Orleans Railway, 929 S. P. Build- ing, Houston. Eberspacher - has been with the railroad for the past 18 years. His home address in Houston is 423 E. 15th Street. Paul .C." Branke: Jr., 222 is vice president and general manager of Franke, Wilkerson and Schiwetz, Inc., advertizing firm of Houston. This office is located at 704 Cotton Bruno Hochmuth, ’35, lieutenant in the U. S. Marine Corps, has been transferred from the Texas Centennial at Dallas to Co. H, 6th Marine, M. C. B., San Diego, California. Lt. Podge M. Reed, ’32, has re- cently been transferred from March Field, California to Barksdale Field, Louisiana. Reed is with the U. S. Air Corps. Carlos J. Cardona, ’36, writes a very interesting letter regarding his werk at the Colegio de Agri- cultura Y Centro de Demostracion, which is the College of Agriculture and Center of Demonstration of the Republic of Venezuela in South America. He is living at Maracay at Hotel Jardin and has been on his present assignment since the first of the year. He reports run- ning across Harry Johnson, ’35, and sends - his best regard to all his other A. & M. friends. John O’Callaghan, ’24, who is seeing the world while engaged in the manufacture of Portland Ce- ment, is now located at Parana, Argentina, where his company is building a new cement plant. He is located about 250 miles north of Buenos Aires and moved there from Brazil. His complete address is: Cia. Argentina de Cemento Portland, Casilla de Correo 838, | Parana, Entre Rios, Argentina, South America. W.. L. “Bunt’ .Stangel,: ’15,%is back on the job as head of the Animal Husbandry Department of Texas Tech, Lubbock. He served last year as director of the Live- stock Show of the Texas Centennial celebration in Dallas. Jule R. “Bud” Smith, ’13, is chief clerk of the Production-Pro- ration Department of the Humble Oil and Refining Company, Hous- ton. His residence address is 3124 Jarrard. John M. Rollins, ’26, has chang- ed his address from San Antonio, Texas to P. O. Box 1085, Houston. Arthur H. Stenzel, ’36, is office manager of the Stenzel Pattern Works, 3536 Navigation Building, Houston. His home address is 4400 McKinney Avenue, Houston. J. D. Cunningham, ’34, recently moved to Paris, Texas, where he gets his mail at Box 285. He is rural supervisor of Lamar County for the Rural Resettlement Admin- istration. George H. “Shorty” Smith, 29, is a draftsman for the Mosher Steel Company, 3910 Washington, Hous- ton. His home address is 543 Heights Boulevard of that city. C. H. Rothe, ’21, has recently moved from Denver, Colorado to 202 K of P. Building, Albuquerque, New Mexico. Exchange Building. As a student, Paul was cadet colonel, captain of the Ross Volunteers, and edi- tor of the Battalion. 1 For the past nine years, George Hilger, ’28, has been with the Southwestern Bell Telephone Com- pany of Houston. He is repair su- pervisor at the present time. His home address is 1114 West Cot- tage Street. ’ J. F. Loper, ’85, has recently changed his address from Box 136, San Marcos, Texas, to Llano, Texas. Lieutenant Colonel R. H. Wooten, ’14, has been transferred from Langley Field, Virginia to the Army War College, Fort Hum- phreys, D. C. , Word B. Sherril, ’36, who has been in charge of a screw-worm demonstration project in Sutton County for the past nine months, recently assumed his new duties as assistant agricultural agent of Tom Green County. His headquar- ters will be San Angelo. James W. Humphreys, ’28, is in the Real Estate Department of the Federal Land Bank of Houston. His home address is 2012 Wichita Street. Jos. E. Box, ’39, who for the past several months has been in charge of the resettlement admini- stration office for Bryan and Bra- zos County, has been transferred to a similar position at Kaufman, Texas. Ben W. Nedbalek, who gradu- ated in mechanical engineering in 1930, is at present in Joliet, Illi- nois, where he is erecting a Busch Sulzer Diesel engine and some pumps for the Texas-Empire Pipe Line Company, with whom he is associated in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Robert Eberspacher, 01, has been with the Texas and New Orleans Railway for the past 30 years. He is located at 930 S. P. Building, Houston, and at the present time ‘| is office engineer. His home ad- dress is 1147 Allston Street of that city. C. S. Hillbolt, 27, is chief as- signment clerk for the Southwest- ern Bell Telephone Company, Hous- ton, He resides at 407 Knox Street of that city. Charles, O. Lee, ’17, is assistant production manager of the Reed Roller Bit Company, Houston, He lives at 3004 Houston Avenue. Thomas D. “T. D.” Myers, ’20, is with the Southern Pine Lumber Company, 1003 Shell Building, Houston. Myers has been with this same company for the past 14 years, where he is a salesman. His home address is 4824 Main. Harry W. Norris, ’32, is a ma- chinist apprentice with the Texas and New Orleans Railway, General Shops, Houston. He resides at 1212 Campbell Street. For the past 33 years, William N. “Queenie” Rust, ’01, has been with the Southern Pacific Railroad. He is located in Room 930 S. P. Building, Houston. He is an esti- mator and draftsman for the S. P. and his home address is 1410 Drew Avenue of that city. od LIL ZL 7S a A co LLL) a /1T II [VA / a] RIAL] & () I Co WI 77 4% / NAG /F/II7I/4 [1177 V4 [7 //, [ [1 - PERREERREYA NY 7 — LITA SSRN A BRAND-NEW CUSTOMER used the telephone today. Betty Sue called up the little girl around the corner. Every day, hundreds of Betty Sues speak their first sentences into the telephone. Just little folks, oo with casual, friendly greetings to each other. Yet their calls are han- dled as quickly and efficiently as if they concerned the most impor- tant affairs of Mother and Daddy. For there is no distinction in telephone service. Its benefits are some day There is BELL TELEPHONE SYSTEM telephone calls . . most telephone service, and the best, at the low- est possible cost. - SW NY EN aN ea —-\ \\ a Rh ee 1 Se | 7 = WE Vig = y py available to all — old and young, rich and poor alike. To Betty Sue, the telephone may become commonplace. But it is never that to the workers in the Bell System. constant, never-ending search for ways to improve the speed, clarity and efficiency of your . to provide the mii =]