Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 45, No. 237, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 7, 1960 Page: 3 of 6
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Bolt Wins
Tourney
MEMPHIS, Tcnn (UPP-Tom-
ny Boll, propping for next week s
National Open by winning the
Writer Calls For OU To
Withdraw From Big 8
Memphis Open Rolf tournament F^K, A1I!)M' C,TY .
n a playoff round, paid tribute fd,t,°kr ' ?,,n f tod*y
. , n .. , , for the University of Oklahoma to
£ 0„ ■J, Cun\ sever its affiliation with the Big
•ti it'* ° r° k Eight Conference and become an
That Hogan is tough commc JT , .
lown the stretch." said Bolt, who ndependent athlc,lt
■ocketed $4,.100 to $2,500 each for ' 10,1
compe-
fogan and Gene Littler
The 41-year-old Bolt, of Crystal
liver, Fla., whose last tourna-
nent victory was in the 1958 open,
'.ained the win though playing
vith the knowledge that his wife,
.lary Uni, was hospitalized after
•uigery here Sunday.
He used smoking-hot long iron
Cronley, in his daily column,
said the recent denial by the Big
Eight faculty representatives of
Oklahoma's request to play a
lost-season football game with
Hawaii was 'merely one more
Orioles Are
Beginning To
Impress Loop
United Press International
Pennants can't lie bought
Kn'rTfd M w*onrl-d«M m*ll matter. Srpt J 1914 at the Pr»t Oftl-e
In Sapulpa. Oklahoma, midrr an act of March J. IMTJ
Sapulpa (Oklo ) Herald, Tuesdoy, June 7, I960—Page 3
Tiger PitcFies Pepsi To
10-0 Win Over Booker T.
Fire-hailing Cecil Tiger hurled. lenks toppled Coca Cola, 10-6 iCaig 1-arry Carter hurled (or tin
for blanks at Booker T. Washington|Winnin pitcher was Mike Har-|Elks. Coy's Barber Sliop defeated
minor irritation" in a
anti-Oklahoma moves
money hut it took a super sales- Monday night to give Pepsi Cola •’er H,s fatoher was Wesley Allen Free Will Baptist, 6-4. .lot
man like Paul Richards to sell
. . his Baltimore Orioles the idea
For years OU has displayed ,hov ^ wjn one Wlth pitchlng
the patience of Job while turning ; , .,
i,. ci. l it'd hustle
i the other cheek to one obvious
dig after another,” he wrote. Richards delivered his sales
’alk on the ojiening day of spring was Larry ( oggms.
Irv Noren Signed
By L. A. Dodgers . m h( ^ ^ „ v01( „ ^
LOS ANGEI.ES (UPI) — Left- ^nial of the game 'does point out ,a'"lnS'
handed batting lrv Noren. who hit the fact that the envious Big ‘ , White Sov won last year
311 last season with the St Louis I Eight has the hatchet out for OU. I™1 ,7 on l'lU llin” a,ul hustle
... o....,n...s-.lui iwnc mm Cardinals and Chicago Cubs, is a '|n one way or another it is'nlc.?,.' -it * ^*01
ilav to post a two-under-par 68 member of the Los Angeles Dodg-1 nut |0 ‘gef the Sooners, the gen- " ' ‘ Klk Ml
j r j rr ii . , . , . i , .6 . . , _y , rnv reason in file world why you
ind fend off Hogan s closing rush ers today. oral aim being to reduce Okla- ,. , , , l*
Hogan missed a five-foot put! i Noren, who performed for the I |)0ma to the level of the seven oth-
or a birdie on the 18th and fin- Senators. Yankees and Athletics er |ess successful schools " . An< ,flat s exactly the manner
shed with a 69 Littler, steady'in the American league before, Cronley severely criticized m " 1 nch the . irst-place Orioles
an easy 10-0 win ui Prep league
play.
Tiger’s hurling highlighted the
Prep League action. His catcher
In the other Prep league tilt.
Legion To Open
Home Seoson At
7:30 Tonight
Butts Gary Carter and Sam
Cooper hurled for the losers, with
Dave Sinor catching
In the Pee Wee American
League. Giacomo dumped Allen,
16 2 Ronnie Pavis was the win-
ner His catcher was Frank
Smith Pon Frazier threw forlpjtched for First Christian
| Allen, with Frank Turner catch-| _
City Pnig beat Ray’s Food
Tuttle pitched for Coy's; Jin
Harper threw for the losers.
In the only other tilt, Pain
Queen and First Christian player'
to a 5-5 lie Monte Keigley hurled
for Dairy Queen and his catcher
was Sam Echols Mike Wataslw
Tulsa Splits In
Battle Wilh Top
Texas League Club
ing.
rom tee to green but putting coming to the National, was re-
rraticaly, wound up with a 71 ! leased recently by the Cubs. The
Bolt turned the front nine in 33. Dodgers signed him Monday night
lolding a three-stroke bulge over
.ittler and four over Hogan.
But Hogan, from Fort Worth.
Oklahoma State and Iowa State
have won 28 of their last 40
Field," Cronley said of Iowa
State “This mind you. is the
team that pleaded for and was
for use as a pinch hitter, club
officials said.
Rookie right-handed hurler Ed
'ex . gained strokes on the loth Rakow was optioned to Spokane
vith a birdie, the 13th with an af the PCI. to make room for
agle and the 14th, which bolt Noren Rakow has a 0 - 1 record
■ogled. He evened the match with J this year, working in 12 innings granted permission to play two
birdie on 16 after chipping out and allowing 23 hits,
f the rough to within two feet--
f the hole Test’s Being Made
Bolt applied the clincher on the] p .
ar 3 17th. Choking up his two-, bpikC Dtiggs
•on. he slammed the ball four'
for voting against the Oklahoma- ?ames rhe> ead lhe American
Hawaii proposal. tLea®* "ow 2, *aJ"f f‘d
“Until last fall the Cyclones eve" A1 Lo^1 °» uthe *hUc
were a weak sister who survived |ls ^Ruinim; «> show some re-
on the large crowds at Owen S'K 1
RENN1NGTON, Vt. <UPP -The
Pas1 Kth‘'. fla« a"d ramm^ results of medical tests
own the birdie putt Hogan could
nly get his par. Littler. 29. from
inging Hills. Calif, took himself
ut of it with a par
games in a row at Norman rath
er than follow the usual alternat-
ing pattern in Ames.
’As for the Cowboys, it was a
I.opz 'Impressed"
'It's still a little bit early, but
I'm definitely-impressed," l-opez
said following Baltimore's 6-1 vic-
tory over Washington last night.
The White Sox manager, how-
ever, was no less impressed by
his own team's 3-2 triumph over
case of voting against the school 'b'* Yankees in the only other AL
which for years labored to smooth game scheduled. Only one game
Walter t*le'r Pa,h t0 conference member-
•BJECTIONS NOT OVKRRULF.I)
f)rnmSPakC cerebral telSage.l. Crnnl*‘y Said 0klaj'oma would
were to be ar.alvzed bv physicians have "0'llin« ,0 losp b-v bwominfi
t(Kjav ' an independent except an ’auto-
matic schedule at which many
The tests were made Sunday
' night about 24 hours after the 48-
ST. LOUIS. Mo. (UPI)—Circuit jvear-old former owner of the De-
udge Franklin Ferriss installed troit Tigers was stricken at Wil-
suggestion hox in his court jliamstown. Mass,
nont so attorneys can tell him Physicians did not disclose the
ow they think his enurt should exact nature of the examinations
e run. | but it was indicated the tests
’A judge, like everyone else," I might enable a more accurate
’erriss said, ’can profit from prediction on Briggs' chances of
ood advice." I survival.
was played in the National
league where the St Louis Cardi-
nals defeated the Philadelphia
Phillies. 5-2.
Rookie Chuck Estrada. 22-year-
old member of Baltimore's ’Kid
liersons have poked fun as being die Korps," struck out seven and
on the patsy side '
Tardiness Fines
Slapped On Phils
You con be sure of
immediate help when
you call us.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Coble
Q^rrxson ffunerol
me
i
If 80. OAK - PHONE If
8APULPA. OKLAHOMA
24-HOUR OXYGEN EQUIPPED AMBULANCE
SERVICE
PHILADELPHIA <UPP -Tight
ening up the purse strings may
be manager Gene Mauch's way of
tightening the defense of the Phil-
adelphia Phillies.
The Philips revealed Monday
that Mauch had fined eight play-
ers $25 each for reporting to the
park late for batting and fielding
practice before Sunday's double-
header. The Phils swept the twin
bill with the Pirates.
Mauch didn't quibble about the
finings. I didn't fine them," he
said. “They fined themselves
They knew the rule." Mauch re-
ferred to the tardiness rule he put
into effect in San Francisco last
month.
Penney’s
Al WAYS- FIRST OU AUT Y *
PROTEST COURT RULING
MOBILE. Ala (UPIt-The state
of Alabama will ask the U.S. Su-
preme Court for a rehearing of
the case in which the court ruled
Alabama's offshore oil righs ex
tend only 3.5 statute miles into
the Gulf of Mexico, Gov. John
Patterson said Monday.
The iiigh court ruled Tuesday
that a congressional law passed
in 1953 gave Texas and Florida
rights extending 10.5 statute miles
into the Gulf, but limited Ala-
bama, Louisiana and Mississippi
o 3.5 miles.
yielded only six hits in beating
Washington. Estrada, who is put-
ting in only his fourth season in
pro hall, did not allow a single
extra-base blow in running his
record to 6-1
Orioles Strike Early
Baltimore clinched the game
early by raking Jim Kaat for five
runs on six hits in 3 2-3 innings.
Jim Gentile, a Dodger castoff,
supplied the muscle by driving in
three runs with a two-run double
in the third inning and his sev-
enth homer of the season in the
seventh.
Two errors by third baseman
Gil McDougald in the ninth in-
ning enabled the White Sox to
win their fourth straight and re-
main three games off the pace.
Lee Eller Ford, Sapulpa's
entry in the American legion
Junior baseball program, will
open its home season at 7:30
p.m. tonight at cJty park when
they take on Tillman Storage
of Tulsa.
Allen Wallace. Sapnlpa
manager, said Eddie Stockard,
who pitched a n»-httter for the
Sapulpa eluh Friday night, or
lefthander L. D. Lawson will
get the <Larting assignment
for Sapulpa.
Sapulpa is 1-0 In the league,
and 1-2 for the year. Tillman
is 3-1 in thr league. Sapulpa's
home schedule was delayed
while lights which were Mown
away by the May 5 tornado
were Installed.
The Legion contest will be
preceeded at 5:30 p.m. by
Prep League game between
First Baptitrt church and
Fraternal Order of Police.
Roth clubs are undefeated,
with the Baptists having been
tied.
|Store. 8-6 Terry Schultz. Mike
iBerryhill and Pale Watts threw
|for City Drug: David Wadley
[pitched for the losers
Standard Chevrolet rapped Sa
pulpa Well. 12-3 behind the pitch-
ing of Gary Craig. Larry Fergu-|
son pitched for Sapulpa Well
I James Patty hurled the American jwj(h exwptjon of a (ew areas jn
National Rank and Trust Co. past!
Pickett Loan. 12-0.
In the Midget League, Beggs
[droppt'd the l.ions Club, 5-2 Den-
nis Cullum was the winner. Rich-
Oklahoma
Outdoors
OKLAHOMA CITY H’PP
ird Watashc threw for the losers.
Tastee Free?, smashed Whitten
western Oklahoma, quail hunting
was better last fall than in a very
good 1958 season.
That was established in a sum-
mary of the 1969 hunter survey
completed by the federal aid and
Olds, 15-5 behind the pitching of game division of the state Depart
Johnny Kiefer Freddy Kaiser
caught for (he winners. George
Pennington pitched for the losers
His catcher was Tim Tucker
liberty Glass handed the Elks
club its first setback, 6-3. Mike
Barnes pitched for the winners
and his catcher was Mike Me-
Mutuel Clerks At
Track On Strike
Spring Sensation
Sent To Minors
CLEVELAND. Ohio (UPP-
Spring - time sensation Walter
Bond was hack in the minors to-
day and outfielder Chuck Tanner
took his place on the Cleveland
Indians' roster.
Bond, whose long-hall slugging
during the spring training season
was one of the reasons the Indians
were willing to let Rocky Colavito
go to the Tigers, was sent to To-
ronto of the International Lague
a half game behind the second- Monday after his batting average
olace Indians.
Luis Aparicio's single with the
bases full in the ninth drove in
the wining run after the White
Sox loaded the bases on Sherm
Lollar's single and the two errors
by McDougald on balls hit by
Gene Freese and Al Smith.
I.arry Jackson registered his
sixth straight victory and seventh
of the season for the Cardinals
by holding the Phillies to seven
hits.
HURRY-UP RESULT':
NEW YORK (UPP—Paul Wil-
dipped below the 200 level.
Tanner previously played for
the Milwaukee Braves and Chi-
cago Cubs Purchased from Min-
neapolis of the American Assn, by
the Indians late last esason. he
missed spring training because of
a heel injury and was placed on
the disabled list.
CHICAGO (UPI i—Washington
Park's striking mutuel clerks will
vote today on a new management
offer amid bright prospects of
ending the one-day walkout
A spokesman for the Balmoral
Jockey Club which runs Us meet-
ing at the Washington Park oval
said the atmosphere was favor-
able for a settlement."
The clerks, members of the
AFL - CIO International Brother-
hood of Electrical Workers Local
134, refused to open shop Monday
They set up picket lines which
members of other unions refused
to cross, resulting in the cancel-
lation of Monday’s racing card
Union and Jockey Club officials
met for three hours Monday. A
management representative said
the union agreed to vote on a new
offer.
meat of Wildlife Conservation.
Summarizing the reports oh
lained by the department from
hunters who participated. Pick
Wlliamson. assistant supervisor
in charge of the department's up-
land game program, said the av
erage hunter killed 24 quail last
fall, or two more than the aver
age taken in 1958.
Increasing interest after lean
years of the drought period and
a build-up in quail population,
particularly in eastern Oklahoma,
accounted for a hountilul quail
season, the report indicated.
There were 10 per cent more
squirrels killed in Oklahoma last
year than in 1958, and 7'i per cent
of the squirrel hunting ocurred
in eastern Oklahoma, but a cyclic
decline in rabbit population re
suited in hunters taking more
than a million fewer rabbits than
they did in the preceding season
By United Press International
Tulsa's home run hitters almost
toppled Valiev twice in the Texas
League Monday night.
The Oilers won the opener, 4 2.
but lost the second game, 4-3. in.
10 innings. In oilier action, Vic-
oria and Austin split a pair, the'
Senators winning the first game.
V2. and the Rosebuds taking thr
nightcap. 4-2, while San Antonio
-allied to heat Amarillo, 5-4
Julio Gotay lielted a three-nm
homer in the second inning for
Tulsa and Jim Reauchamp fol-
'owed with a solo blast that ac-
counted for all of the Oiler's runs
in the opening game and guve
Clint Stark a five-hit victory.
In the second tussle, Gotav
swatted a home run in the sixth
o tie the Giants. 2-2. and Jim
Schaffer poled a solo blast in the
op of the ninth to knot it again,
3-3, and send the game into over
time Jim llemric, who came on
in the ninth, was tagged with the
loss.
The split allowed San Antonin
to move to within 4'i games of
league leading Valley. The Mis-
sions rapped four Gold Sox
hurlers with a 12-hit attack, and
gave up eight
Amarillo bunched three runs in
the eighth to take a 4-2 lead, hut
San Antonio came hack with one
in the same frame, and scored
two more in the hist of the ninth
Pave Gerard got eredit and John
Romanosky was the loser
Austin's Cecil Butler won the
opener giving up four hits over
the distance. The Senators scored
three in the first ami two in the
second to win.
in the second game, Austin
broke loose for a pair in the
fourth, but gave up four runs in
the seventh to send Hank Hem-
merly to the showers charged
with the loss, and give (he win
to Rosebud right hander Jim
Procter.
The same teams play another
round of single games tonight
with Tulsa at Valley, Victoria at
Austin and Amarillo at San An-
tonio.
USE HERALD WANT ADS!
E
^ ' ¥
7
REELECT
LYNN
ROEBUCK
Democrat for
COUNTY
COMMISSIONER
District No. 1
HE DEVOTES HIS
FULL TIME
TO THE JOB
Honest—Capable—
Experienced
Bobo Olson Dumps
African Champion
JOHANNESBURG. South Africa
(UPP _ The fistic comeback of
Carl (Bobo) Olson took on a more
serious aspect today as a result
Sugar Ray Looks
In Good Condition
BOSTON (UPI) - Sugar Ray
Robinson takes on a hard hitting
punching bag again today to shar
pen up for his middleweight title
rematch with champion Paul Pen-
der at Boston Garden Friday
night.
The bag. suspended from ceiling
to floor by chains, won the first
round Monday when it bounced
hack after a vicious Robinson jab
A 38 per cent decrease in duck
kills reflected a declining water-
fowl population, and dove hunting
decreased. Chilling tarly fail rains[
started a southward migration of
the birds earlier than normal
Williamson said pheasant hunt-
ing in northwestern Oklahoma re-
mained static, although fewer
hunters took an average of one
more bird per hunter. The first
prairie chicken season in eight
years in northern and northeast-
ern areas saw 2,764 huters kill
4,643 chickens.
Send Us Your
Spring Cleaning
EXCLUSIVE STA-NU FINISHING
Store Winter Clothes
We dry clean them now, press them next foil.
Pay when you take them out
There is no authentic record
of the origin of the office of
poet laureate of England.
kinson, 24 a ref.igcrator repair] ( hjs ^ over Mikp „olt/thp and flopped the former champ on
man. accidentaly locked himself L ,, ... 7 .. . ... his trunks. Ray didnt appear at
in a walk-in beer refrigerator in Sfulh Afncan Lghl llCaVyWCI*ht
an East Side bar.
champion.
He summoned help by shutting
off the valves supplying the suds
to patrons upstairs.
Jr-— w • • T
NEW LOW PRICE!
on Remaining Stock of Penney's
Power Mowers
3-PIECE
CHAIR - TABLE
Bobo, whose ring fortunes have
risen and fallen may times dur-
ing a 15-year pro career, won an
upset 10-round decision over the
28-vear-old Holt Monday night at
Rand Stadium Olson entered the
ring a 2 • to 1 underdog. He
weighed 176’« pounds compared to
Holt’s 175.
The 32-year-old Olson, who held
SET
J
all flustered.
He picked himself up and im-
mediately launched a bit of rope
jumping magic that had 50 train-
ing camp onlookers dazzled He
looked trim and fit.
Robinson earlier had attended a
press conference and refused to
make any knockout predictions
I'll just be trying to win.” he
said
Stories of bear in Oklahoma are
not necessarily fiction, Claude
Coin, chief of the state Wildlife
Conservation Department s en-
forcement division, said
He referred to the appearance
of a black bear in Pontotoc coun-
ty and its subsequent capture and
removal to the Oklahoma City
zoo and to reports of a much larg-
er black boar in the Tenkiller
State Park area
The bears evidently have stray-
ed from areas in northwestern Ar-
kansas, where they were released
several years ago.
.fysAr*. .-. lAi.y.-Ay/.'BJftfcJpWflW • •'
the world middleweight title back
in 1953-55 and lost a bout with M0RE BATHYSCAPH DIVES
Archie Moore for the light heavy
crown in 1955, showed a lot of his
old ring craftsmanship in beating
Holt.
• 1'1 hornpowtr, 4-cyctt
lrif|i*SlraHOR •agin#'
• fi#wI improvo4f rib-raia-
forcod Haovy ttaal dockl
• nylon whoa! boertngt
naod fio lubrication!
• air-lift typo itoal blodof
Alto o Complete Laundry Service ^
Sunshine Laundry & Cleaners, Inc.
IN CORPO RATE D
2 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS
Main Plant 1101-09 S. Main — Phone 3400
Drive-In Station 9 S. Elm, Phone 837
SENTENCE FARMER TO DIE
PRETORIA, South Africa <UPP
—A court Monday convicted Hen-
drik J. Graham, a 23-year-old would average about 6,000 feet, or
SAN DIEGO. Calif. (UPP- The
Navy bathyscaph Trieste, which
dived a rererd 35.800 feet in the
Pacific last January, will make
seven more dives off Guam with-
in the next three months. The
Navy said Monday the new dives
'
e*»»*CIAL x
I Verified Valne l
V AUMCHAM j*
____—*
IIMITED
QUANTITIES
white farmer, on charges of fa-
tally beating his 40-year-old Ne-
gro maid and sentenced him to
die on the gallows.
$
There are sixty small glaciers
in Glacier National park of
Montana.
dightly over one mile. Lt Don
Walsh, who made the record dive
with Swiss scientist Jacques Pic-
card. will make the new dives
with Navy Lt. Lawrence A Shu-
maker.
USE HERALD WANT ADS!
Official used car reports prove The Lark has:
HIGHEST
RESALE VALUE*7
Tough, hard to-convinre used car
salesmen from state after state re-
port (Red Book Region A): The
l.ark definitely holds its value
belter than any other lou -priced,
6-passenger, U. S. car, including the
regular Rambler, Ford, Chevrolet
and Plymouth — and as much as
1/3 better. This new estimate of
\alue is additional assurance that
the smart buy or the Best Buy '
as CARS magazine puts it—is The
lark by Studebaker. Check these
facts at your Studebaker Dealer s.
OUR SUMMER SENSATION
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W. i. MILLER RETIREMENT
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Don't pass up this chance to SAVE DOLLARS on
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If you we»e no* waited an properly
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Livermore, Edward K. Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 45, No. 237, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 7, 1960, newspaper, June 7, 1960; Sapulpa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1487343/m1/3/: accessed April 27, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.