The Sapulpa Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 52, No. 198, Ed. 1 Monday, April 24, 1967 Page: 4 of 8
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PAGl FOUR — Sopulpa (Okla.) Herald, Monday, April 24, 1967 —
Kellyville Edged
In District Playoff
Kellyville High school’* base-
ball team got off to a good
■tart in the district playoff dur-
ing the weekend by defeating
Berryhill 1-0, but lost the next
two games and a chance to play
in the state tournament.
Berryhill won the second ha’.f
of a doubleheader at Kellyville,
4-0 Friday, then won the clinch-
ing game at Berryhill Saturday,
6-1.
Gary Staiger hurler a two-hit-
ter for Kellyville* opening
game win. Berryhill’s- Gabby
Hummingbird pitched a no-hit-
ter but lost anyway on a squeeze
bunt in the seventh inning.
Doug Hellard was safe on an
error to start the winning rally.
He took second on a passed
ball, was sacrificed to third by
Tom Cummings, and scored on
Gdry Staiger’s squeeze bunt.
In the second game, Berryhill
scored single runs in the third,
fiffi), sixth and seventh innings
to even the series. Charles Nan-
ce was the winner and Dan Jon-
res the loser.
At Berryhill Saturday, the
game was tied going into the
final inning when the host team
wrapped it up with a grand-slam
homerun by Steve Pate.
With the score tied 1-1, Nan-
ce was safe on an error and
scored on consecutive singles
by Hummingbird and Blaylock.
Sadler then walked to load the
bases and set the stage for
Pate's homer.
Fairly Fuels
Dodgers Past
Cards, 9-3
Lewis Resigns
Kellyville Post
Paul Lewis, Kellyville High
[ school baseball and boys’ bask-
etball coach the past four years,
announced today he is resign-
ing at the end of the present
school term.
Lewis will join the Sinclair Oil
Co. computing department staff
in Tulsa.
Kellyville teams compiled an
outstanding record during Lew-
is’ tenure, with his basketball
Ryun Named
Top Athlete
At K(J Relays
LAWRENCE, Kan. (UPI)-
Sleek Jim Ryun, voted the most
outstanding performer at the
42nd annual Kansas Relays over
the weekend, will bypass the
mile run at the upcoming Drake
Relays and concentrate only on
team events.
The University of Kansas
sophomore uncorked a blazing
:5fl closing quarter Saturday
to win the Glenn Cunningham
mile in 3:54.7.
Spurred on by an electrified
record crowd of 23,700, Ryun’s
showing, although considerably
short of his world record 3:51.3,
highlighted the tree-day track
and field carnival.
Ryun’s performance wiped
out the old collegiate mile mark
of 3.56.4, set by UCLA's Bob
Day in 1965, and erased the
meet standard of 3:55 8 which
he set here a year ago as a
freshman.
The 19 - year - old Sullivan
Award winner, who turns 20
next Saturday, was paced
through the first 880 yards by
former teammate John Lawson,
sprinted into the lead on the
third lap and won going away—
70 yards ahead of runnerup
Richard Romo, the ex-Texas
star, who clocked in at 4:02 6
teams winning 71 games and
losing 41 and his baseball teams
showing a composite 128-30-3
mark.
A 1962 graduate of Northeast-
ern State College at Tahlequah,
Lewis coached one year at Mil-
fay before going to Kellyville.
He and his wife Dolly and
their three children, Pamela,
David, 8, and Marty, 5, are now
living in Sapulpa.
HERALD
SPORTS
NEW YORK (UP1)—Chuck
Hiller lives by the code.
He can be dying, but nobody'll
ever know about it. Not from
him, anyway.
“He never even said a word
to me about it,” remarked Wes
Westrum, the manager of the
Mets, who really wasn’t sur-
prised at all because that's the
way Hiller is, always has been
and probably always will be.
True to the code, Hiller said
nothing and went about his
business as usual when he
reported for work at Shea
Stadium Saturday.
He didn’t tell anyone he'd
been up more than half the
night trying to reach his family
in McHenry, HI., which, he
direct path of the tornado. Nor
worried, could have been in the
None Too Big—
i None Too Small.,
? WE FIX 'EM ALL!
•ring Ywr Flgt Tir«
John <PHIlllPS> Service
did he tell anyone he couldn't
reach them.
Hiller went out and played
second base the best he could
that day.
Error Counts
He made an error in the first
inning that helped the Phillies
to two runs and they eventually
won the game, 4-3.
Subsequently, he heard his
family was unharmed.
Later, when the cause of his
concern was learned, Hiller
pleaded that no publicity be
given it.
“People will just think I’m
trying to alibi because I had
bad day.” he said.
But Hiller was dead wrong on
two counts.
People who know anything at
all about him know that he
always tries but never alibis.
And he didn't have that bad a
day on Saturday.
“What the devil, he's hu-
man,” said Westrum. He can
make an error like anyone else
And under the circumstances,
it’s rather remarkable he didn't
do much worse. Don't ever
worry about Chuck Hiller,
though.
Plenty of Desire
“He gives you everything he
has in him. Maybe he doesn't
have all the ability in the world,
but show me someone with
more desire ”
Hiller, 31, originally broke In
with the Giants in 1961 while
Westrum was coaching for them
and it was Westrum who
recommended his purchase
from San Francisco when Ron
Hunt suffered a shoulder
separation and the Mets needed
another infielder in a hurry
early in 1965.
As the club’s No. 1 pinch
hitter and purt-time second
baseman, Hiller batted .300
overall and a nifty .344 in the
pinch last year.
“Wes has given me back roy
belief in myself,” he says
Even though I’m not a
regular. I still feel I have a Job
and I frv doing it to the best of
my ability.”
By JOB CARNICELLI
UPI Sports Writer
Los Angeles’ Ron Fairly,
Dodger for 10 years, has
learned the value of keeping the
boss happy.
The copper-haired first base-
man went into Manager Walter
Alston’s doghouse Saturday
night when be boooed a bunt by
St. Louis pitcher Bob Gibson to
open the gates for a game
winning two-run rally.
Prior to Sunday’s game the
usually mild-mannered Alston
unleashed a bitter tirade
against his lethargic Dodger
team, which had won only two
its eight games, and Fairly
more than took the hint.
He ripped a double and a
home run, the Dodgers’ first oi
the season, to drive in five runs
Sunday as the National League
champions snapped out of their
doldrums to hammer out a 9-3
victory over the first place
Cardinals.
Fairly knocked in his first two
with a double in the third inning
to ignite a four-run rally and
then followed singles by Ron
Hunt and Lou Johnson with a
three-run homer to right in the
fourth.
Fairly Is off to one of fils best
starts as a Dodger, hitting
safely in all nine games and
ranking sixth in the league in
hitting with a .378 average.
“I believe in playing hard,
said Farily. “If you have to get
down in the dirt to win, well,
that’s the place to be. That’s
the game as I know it.”
In other games. Philadelphia
swept a doubleheader from New
York 10-6 and 3-1, Chicago
defeated Pittsburgh 7-3. Cincin-
nati downed Houston 5-3 and the
scheduled doubleheader between
Atlanta and San Francisco was
rained out.
In American League action,
California took a pair from
Cleveland 96 and 2-1. Minnesota
beat Detroit 4-2, New York
edged Boston 7-5 and Washing-
ton downed Detroit 5-1. Balti-
more and Kansas City split
their doubleheader, the Orioles
taking the first game 52 and
the A s rebounding to win the
[Oklahoma City Open May
Be Make-Or-Break Yea;
OKLAHOMA CITY (UPI)— a tough No. 17, which two years Sanders, Billy Casper a..u C ry
ltlcal. accnrdino In tko rfin._____________i ______, ...
LUCIUS JACKSON of the Philadelphia 74ars, eastern division
champs of the NBA, does the grabbing here during playoff
game with San Francisco Warriors in Philadelphia.
Coach Expected
Warriors, Rally
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)—I spread with 1:12 remaining, and
Apparently, San Francisco Philadelphia never made anoth-
Coach Bill Sharman was the ~~ " 1
only person in Convention Hall
Sunday who wasn't surprised
when his Warriors overcame
13-point deficit in the final
quarter to beat the Philadelphia
76ers 117-109.
“This is a team which has
had to meet the challenge all
season long.” Sharman said
“Earlier in the season we came
from fourth place to go into the
lead.”
The Warriors, “meeting the
challenge,” thus kept their
hopes alive for the National
Basketball Association cham-
pionship.
The teams clash in the Cow
er serious threat.
“The defense won it for us,
especially the defense in the
second half,” Sharman said
"The defense in the second half
was the best all year.”
Shanman said Nate Thur-
mond's defensive play against
76er ace Wilt Chamberlain was
key factor in the victory.
Thurmond tallied 17 points and
held Chamberlain to 20, while
snaring 28 rebounds to Cham-
berlain's 24.
The 76ers opened the fourth
quarter with a 96-84 lead and
raised their margin to 13 points
at 97-84. Philadelphia then lost
the scoring touch and the
Warriors reeled off 10 straight
holding a 3-2 edge in the best-of-
seven game series.
San Francisco went ahead to
stay at 106-105 Sunday on a free
throw by Rick Barry, who
converted a technical foul called
on Philadelphia's Hal Greer.
The Warriors opened a 112-106
Critical, according to the dic-
tionary, Is dangerous or risky,
causing anxiety. No other word
more accurately pictures qthis
year’s Oklahoma City Open,
more accurately pictures this
year’s big Oklahoma golf at-
traction offers $66,000 for grabs
to the nation's best. However,
most other tournaments on the
national Professional Golfer’s
Association tour offer more than
$100,000.
There are Indications that
this year's tournament — just
a month away — will make or
break the Oklahoma City spon-
sors. If enough interest can be
found to bolster the 1968 prize
money into the six-figure col-
umn, the PGA is almost certain
to return. Without it, the tour
may by pass Oklahoma for
[other cities with guarantees of
more money.
Seek Recognition
“We want to impress on ev-
eryone this is a major stop on
the PGA tour,” a spokesman
for the host Quail Creek Coun-
try Club says. “If we can con-
tinue to grow and conduct the
tournament in an orderly fash
ion, it could lead to the PGA
championship being held here
within the next three or four
| years.
Perhaps Oklahoma City’s
quick climb upward will help
those taking a look at the
Open’s future. In a decade the
golf tournament has climbed
from a $15,000 purse underwrit
ten by six Oklahoma City busi-
nessmen to this year’s $66,00
pot.
And this year’s money is sub-
stantially better than the $57,00
offered a year ago.
Our future isn't dark by any
means.” the spokesman said
wti XU OlXCSlgllll--------1 ---- ■
Palace tonight with Philadelphia points to slice the 76er lead to “But, this is going to be a cri-
hnlH mrr O 7.0 aririn in tKn kn.-l nf ixv a a uL. a a> i *■ I itI A ____A II
97-94 with 9 01 left.
The winners finally caught tip
on a basket by Barry that
produced a 102-102 tie with 3:22
remaining. There were then ties
at 103 and 105 before Barrv,
who notched 36 points, sent San
Francisco in front to stay.
Standings
By United Press Intemat'onel
American League
second 87.
Richie Allen’s home run and a
California
W.
7
L.
5
Pet.
.583
GB
two-run double by Phil Linz
New York
5
4
.556
Vi
highlighted a three-run eighth
Detroit
6
5
.545
»i
inning rally as the Phils took
Chicago
6
5
.54 5
4
the first game from the Mets
Baltimore
6
5
.545
Vi
The Mets had taken a 5-2 lead
Kansas City
5
6
.455
14
with a five-run outburst in the
Boston
4
5
.444
l'-i
fifth inning but Philadelphia
Washington
4
5
.444
14
pulled the game out with two in
Minnesota
4
5
.444
14
the seventh and three run
Geveland
4
6
400
2
bursts in both the eighth and
ninth innings.
Allen powered his fourth
homer of the year in the second
game to insure a Phillie sweep.
Deron Johnson and Tony
Perez accounted for four runs
between them as the Reds
stopped Houston for their fourth
straight victory. Johnson
knocked in a pair of runs in the
Reds' four-run first inning and
scored another on a single by
Perez Perea doubled and
scored the Reds' final run in the
sixth.
Hi-Ten
Bowling Score!
NALES LANES
Women
Opal Lucas 205-520-545
508-518
Sunday’s Result*
Washington 5 Chicago 1
Minnesota 4 Detroit 2
'Calif. 9 Clev. 6. 1st. 12 inns.
California 2 Cleveland 1, 2nd
Baltimore 5 Kansas City 2, 1st
Kansas City 8 Baltimore 7, 2nd
New York 7 Boston 5
Tuesday's Games
Chicago at New York
Kansas City at Detroit, night
Minnesota at Cleveland, night
Boston at Washington, night
California at Baltimore, night
National League
STFPP /(JJ STATION
C or n» r T ♦ \ M f»i
•A 4 4 78
USE HERALD WANT AD*
Irene Watkins
Gladys Bryant
Jean Watkins
Lois Johnson
Pam Magee
Mary Pacaud
Louise Driscoll
Dorothy Wise
Lorene Pinkston
Man
Dale Keifer
Rocky Rockhold
Lowell Watkins
Bill Thomas
Tom Hughes
Cal Hutson
Charles Nicholson
Jerry Tiffi
238-516
506
594
503
236-501
501
495
490
222-620
228—604
211-596
215-593
213-585
215-582
211-578
200-577
Majors
Leaders
By United Press International
National League
G. AB. R. H. Pet.
Brock, StL 9 45 10
20 .444
Phillips, Chi 9 28 7
12 .429
Davis, NY 10 31 1
13 .419
Mzerski, Pitt 8 32 5
13 .406
Willms, Chi 9 34 5
13 382
Fairly, LA 9 37 7
14 .378
Cepeda, StL 9 37 6
14 .378
Maris. StL 9 37 8
14 .378
Wills, Pitt 8 35 3
13 .371
Allen, Phila 10 38 9
14 .368
American League
G. *B. R. H. Pet
Yszmski, Bos 9 37 6
15 .405
Berry, Chi 11 43 7
17 .395
Kaline, Det 11 43 10
17 .395
Freehn, Det 11 36 7
14 389
Ptroclli, Bos 9 36 3
14 .349
Repoz, KC 11 28 6
10 .315
FRbsn, Ba! 11 40 12
15 .375
Casanva, Was 7 25 4
9 360
Minchr, Cal 12 42 9
15 .357
Hinton, Cle 10 42 7
15 .357
St. Louis
W.
7
L
2
Pet.
.778
GB
Cincinnati
9
3
.750
Philadelphia
7
3
.700
Vi
Atlanta
5
4
.556
2
Chicago
5
4
.556
2
Pittsburgh
3
8
.375
3 Vi
New York
4
7
.364
34
Los Angeles
3
6
333
4
San Francisco
3
7
.300
‘4
Houston
3
8 .271
i
t. ...
on.. raws
•— «£*** MO sAC
TENNIS CHAMP
HOUSTON f UPI)—John New
combe upset Tony Roche
Sunday to win the 33rd annual
Rfvtr Oaks Invitational Tour-
nament in straight seta.
Heme Rune
National League: Brock,
Cards 6; Johnson, Reds, Allen,
Phils and McCovey, Giants 4;
13 tied with 2.
American League: F. Robin
son, Orioles 5; Frcehan and
Kaline, Tigers 4; 6 tied with I
Runs Batted In
Notional League: Brock,
Cards 14; Johnson, Reds 1|;
Phillips, Cubs and Cepeda.
Cards 10; Gonzalez, Phils and
McCarver, Cards 9.
American League: Freehan,
Sunday's Results
Phila. 10 New York 6, 1st
Phila. 3 New York 1, 2nd
Chicago 7 Pittsburgh 3
Cincinnati 5 Houston 3
Loj Angeles 9 St. Louis 3
Atl. at San Fran., 2, ppd, rain
Tuesday's Games
Phila. at Pittsburgh, night
New York at Chicago
St. Louis at Houston, night
Atlanta at Los Angeles, night
Cincinnati at San Fran., night
BREAKS RECORDS
BERLIN (UPI) — Roland
Matthes, s 16year-old East
German, broke the European
100 and 200 meter backstroke
records during a dual swim
meet with the Soviet Union
Sunday, it was reported by the
East German newe agency
ADN.
Matthes first clocked 2:112
for the 200 meters and then
swimming the first leg of the
400 meter medley relay, was
timed in 59 8 for his 100 meters
Tigers 13; F. Robinson, Orioles
12; 7 tied with 8.
Pitching
National League: Gibson,
Cards 34); Jenkins, Cubs,
Queen, Reds. L. Jackson, Phil*,
Veale, Pirates, and Jester,
Cards 24).
American League; Barber,
Orioles, Rohr, Red Sox, Horten,
White Sox. Aker end Hunter.
Athletics, Downing, Yanks, and
Coleman, Senators 24).
tical tournament.
Modest financial success
boosted the purse a year ago.
and for the second straight
year the PGA is adding a $7,000
slice of national television mon-
ey to raise the total money. The
purse is raised through the sale
of sponsorships, a share of con-
cessions, program sale and ad
vertiing, and amateur entry
fees for the pro-amateur which
precedes the tournament
Sponsorships brought
$87 495 for the tourney last
spring, concessions added
$8,500, the programs $4 667 and
pro-am fees $11 275 for a total
income of $111,737.
The PGA threw in its $7,000
television check to swell in-
come to $188,737. It cost a total
of $108,769 to stage the tourna-
ment, leaving a surplus of
$9,968 Much of this was added
to beef up the 1967 purse
During the 11 years since the
Open was first held in 1956. Ok-
lahoma City has hosted the
touring circuit eight years
Each time the prize money has
climbed, taking its biggest jump
in 1959 when Arnold Palmer be
came the first “big name”
golfer to enter.
Fred Hawkins won the event
in 1956 when the purse was
$15,000. Palmer claimed the
next championship in 1959 aft-
er the money climbed to
25.00. Gene Littler won the
1960 crown with a purse of
$30.00. The first three Opens
were held at Twin Hills.
In 1962 Oklahoma City again
hosted the national circuit tour,
with the Open moving to Quail
Creek and offering $35,00
Doug Sanders won the title.
Purses Increase
Don Fairfield won the 1963
Open when the purse was
$35 000; Palmer repeated as
1964 champion when the purse
was $40,; Bob Rule was 1965
champion and the purse was
$45.00, and the late Tony
Lema claimed the $57,000 purse
championship last year.
One of the proud parts of the
Oklahoma City Open is the pro-
junior clinic held in conjunction
with the major tournament.
During the one-day clinic, 3
or the state's most promising
teenage golfers divide Into
three-man teams and are Join-
ed by a blg-nam« professional.
This year’s pro - junior clin-
ic. a nine-hole affair. Is sched-
uled May 23. and will be fol-
lowed by the pro-am with ISO
amateurs and 50 top-flight pros
meeting In an 18-hole tourna-
ment.
The Ouall Creek course Is
36 36-71 nar, and includes a
$ $3S-vard front nine end a 3.-
636-yard back nine. It features
ago was named as one of the
best 18 holes in America by
Sports Illustrated.
Course Mads Tougher
This year’s course will be a
litfie tougher than previous
years due to the planting qf
trees. However, no traps have
been relocated.
Quail Creek professional Er-
nie Vossler, himself once a
touring pro, Is lining up top
names to compete for this
year’s title.
Although still too early to
announce just who will play
this year’s Open, early invita-
tion acceptors Include Doug
Player,
Vossler is attending the Dal-
las Open this weekend, and
plans to make the Houston
Champions, Texas Open and
Fort Worth Colonial, recruiting
the top names of golf.
“There is no obligation for a
player to participate in any
tournament until he signs a
commitment sheet, and this he
doesn’t have to do until a week
or two before our Open," Voss-
ler says.
But a month from today the
Oklahoma City Open will begin
its most critical year — with a
bright outlook.
California Nabs
League Top Spot
By GREG GALLO
UPI Sports Writer
Since when does a lifetime
238 hitter not worry about his
batting average?
Since Bobby Knoop realized
that performing in the clutch
Sweep Gives
OSU Tighter
Hold On First
By United Press International
Oklahoma State takes an
eight-game winning streak and
a game and a half lead to Ok-
lahoma this weekend in a cru-
cial Big Eight baseball series
pitting the top two teams.
The Cowboys got superb
pitching over the weekend to
sweep a three-game set from
Nebraska and pull to 8-1 in the
conference, compared to Okla-
homa's 6-2 mark.
Kansas State, which had
shared the lead with OSU at
5-1 entering the weekend, fell
two games off the pace at Col-
orado by winning only one of
three games.
K - State, hoping to benefit
from the OSU-OU series, enter-
tains last place Iowa State this
weekend. Elsewhere, Missouri
travels to Nebraska and Colo-
rado plays at Kansas. Double-
headers are scheduled at all
sites Friday with single games
slated Saturday.
Oklahoma State hurlers al-
lowed Nebraska only two runs
in three games, winning the
series by scores of 3-1, 4-1 and
34). Oklahoma took two of
three from Iowa State and Mis-
souri took two of three from
Kansas to move into a fourth
place tie with Colorado at 4-5
Oklahoma Stale blanked Ne-
braska Saturday on the com
bined three-hit hurler of Rich-
ard Frank and Larry Bur-
chart. The Pokes managed only
five hits off three Nebraska
hurlers but made the most of
five Cornhusker errors.
The Standings:
Conference
Okla State
W L Pet.
8 1 .849
GB
Oklahoma
6 2 .750
14
K-Slate
6 3 667
2
Missouri
4 5 444
4
Colorado
4 5 .444
4
Nebraska
3 6 333
S
Kansas
2 6 250
54
Iowa St.
2 7 222
8
Next Weekend's Schedule
Friday—Iowa State at Kan-
sas State (3); Oklahoma State
at Oklahoma (2); Colorado at
Kansas (2); Missouri at Ne-
braska 42).
Saturday—Iowa State at Kan-
sas State; Oklahoma State at
Oklahoma; Colorado at Kan-to Tony Oliva and an Intentional
sas; Missouri at Nehraska walk to Harmon Killebrew
was more important than
hitting .300, that’s when.
Knoop, the slick-fielding Cali-
fornia second baseman, feels
that he can be just as valuable
as a .300 hitter as long as he
can come up with the key hits.
Knoop did just that Sunday
when he singled in the tie-
breaking run in the 12th innig
of the first game ad added two
hits in the nightcap as the
Angels took over first place in
the American league with 9-6
and 2-1 victories over the
Cleveland Indians.
“You can hit 300 and not be
as valuable as a .250-hitter who
wins games with his hits,” says
the 28-year-old aecond-sacker,
who was hitting just .139 before
he exploded for four hits in nine
trips to the plate in the
doubleheader.
In other American League
games, Washington beat Chica-
go 5-1, New York topped Boston
7-5, Minnesota handled Detroit
4-2 and Baltimore beat Kansas
City 5-2 in the first game of a
doubleheader before the Athle-
tics came back to to take the
second 8-7.
In National League action,
Philadelphia beat New York
twice 10-6 and 3-1, Chicago
downed Pittsburgh 7-3, Cincin-
nati won over Houston 5-3, Los
Angeles bombed St. Louis 93
and a doubleheader between
Atlanta and San Francisco was
postponed because of rain.
Knoop's game-winning hit
came off reliever Dick Radatz
with two out in the 12th. The
Angels had tied the game in the
seventh on singles by Jay
Johnstone, Don Minchcr and
Jimmie Hall
The Angels completed their
sweep of the four-game series
when Max Alvis' throwing error
in the ninth inning of the second
game allowed Marcelino I,opez
to score from third with the
winning run.
Young Barry Moore pitched a
seven-hitter and drove in a run
with a sacrifice fly to lead the
Senators to their triumph over
Chicago. Moore lost his shutout
in the ninth when Wayne
Causey lined a pinch-hit double
to score Tommie Agee from
second.
Elston Howard slammed a
two-run pinch double, the first
Yankee extTa base hit in 68
innings, in the fifth innig to
spark a five-ru rally that
enabled the Yankees to defeat
the Red Sox A1 Downing picked
up the victory after he hurled
six innings of one-hit relief Carl
Yastrzemski hit his third home
of the season before he was
ejected from the game in the
fifth.
Shortstop Zollo Versalles
smashed a two-run triple in the
ninth inning to carry Minnesota
nast Detroit The blow came off
loser Earl Wilson after the
Detroit pitcher yielded a double
X JU
W
‘ g ‘TIN!
For All
your Insurance
Needs
Herbert P. Johnson Agency
8 E Dewey
0a 4 31 13
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Livermore, Edward K. The Sapulpa Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 52, No. 198, Ed. 1 Monday, April 24, 1967, newspaper, April 24, 1967; Sapulpa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1488274/m1/4/?q=%22%22~1&rotate=270: accessed July 16, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.