Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 80, No. 41, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 31, 1993 Page: 2 of 26
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Sapulpa Herald and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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PAGE TWO-A—Sapulpa (Okla.) Herald, Sunday, October 31, 1993
Deaths
Fred Baker
Fred Baker, 71, Bristow, died
Thursd ly in Bristow.
Funeral services are scheduled for
2 p.rr. Monday at the Hutchins-
Maples Chapel in Bristow.
Burial is to follow at the Bristow
City Cemetery under the direction of
Hutchins-Maples Funeral Home.
Baker was bom Feb. 18, 1922, in
Drumright, and married Luceil
Favors Aug. 15,1949, in Bristow.
He was a member of the First
Grace Church of Glenpool and
attended Bristow Schools. He retired
in 1986 from his position as a heavy
equipment operator in a steel shop.
He was preceded in death by his
parents Richard and Dove Baker, one
son, one daughter, three brothers and
one sister.
Survivors include wife Luceil of
the home, son Donald of the home,
brothers Marvin of Washington,
Lloyd of California and Oscar of
Oklahoma City.
Iva Reed
Iva Reed, 80, 1014 E. Pfendler,
died Friday at Bartlett Memorial
Medical Center.
Funeul services are scheduled for
2 p.m. Tuesday in the Smith Funeral
Chapel with Gerald Rcndel and
Russell Casey officiating.
Burial is to follow at South Heights
Cemetery under the direction of
Smith Funeral Hone.
Reed was bom April 13, 1913 in
Enid. She was a Sapulpa resident all
of her life and was a member of the
First Christian Church. She was a
member of the Builders Sunday
school class of the Church and a
salesperson at Newberry’s Depart-
ment Store for 27 years.
She is survived by brother Wayne
Reed of Sapulpa, sisters Irma Knight
Shootout
and Hazel Hamilton, both of Sapulpa,
and many neices and nephews.
J B Watt
J B Watt, 75, Sapulpa, died Friday
at Bartlett Memorial Medical Center.
Funeral services arc scheduled for
10:30 a.m. Monday at Owen Chapel
with Rev. Glen Hood officiating.
Burial is set to follow at Kellyville
Cemetery’ in Kellyville under the
direction of Owen Funeral Home.
Watt was bom March 7, 1918, in
Walter, Okla., to Russell W. and
Lona Carpenter Watt. He was a
retired automotive and oil field
mechanic and was employed with
Phillips Oil Company. He was a
veteran of World War II, having
served in the U.S. Army Air Corps.
He was a life member of Disabled
American Veterans.
He was married on April 6, 1982 in
Arapaho, Okla. to Norma Lucas. He
was a member of the First Baptist
Church of Beaver, Okla. He was a
resident of Sapulpa for 11 years,
having come here from Weatherford.
He was preceded in death by his son
Ralph Watt in 1991 and his brother R
V Watt.
Survivors include wife Norma
Lucas Watt, sons Russell Watt of
Edmond and Kelly Watt of Wood-
ward; stepsons Gary Lucas, Robert
Lucas and Steve Lucas, all of Sapul-
pa; stepdaughters Glenda Stout of
Sapulpa and Kathryn Sperle of Clin-
ton, Okla.; brother L D Watt of
Bakersfield, Okla., Five grandchil-
dren, two great-grandchildren, eight
step-grandchildren and four step-
great-grandchildren.
Casket bearers are Roy Lee
Ashton, Jim Hill, Ira Stout, Rex
Stout, Hanry Sperle, Bryan Sperle,
Brian Baker Sperle and Steve
Shockley.
The family will headquarter at the
family home in the Blue Bell area.
Today in
History
By The Associated Press
Today is Sunday, Oct. 31, the 304th
day of 1993. There are 61 days left in
the year. This is Halloween. Daylight-
Saving Time ended at 2 a.m. locally;
clocks should have gone back one
hour.
Today’s Highlight in History:
On Oct. 31, 1517, Martin Luther
posted the 95 Theses on the door of the
Wittenberg Palace church, marking
the start of the Protestant Reformation
in Germany.
On this date:
In 1795, English poet John Keats
was bom in London.
In 1864, Nevada became the 36th
state.
In 1887, Nationalist Chinese leader
Chiang Kai-shek was bom in
Chekiang Province.
Records
POLICE REPORTS
Petit larceny—
Debbie Kay Dillon, 24, reported
unknown person(s) stealing a Halloween
decoration from her porch in the 2800
block of south Mounds between 11 p.m.,
Oct 29 and 6:30 a.m., Oct 30.
Second-degree burglary—
Mattie Smithbroom, 37, reported an air
conditioner stolen from a residence in the
200 block of N. Mann be twee 6 p.m., Oct
26 and 12:30 p.m., Oct 29. No suspects
were named.
Desti uctlon of private property—
JaT.lla Vanatta, 46, reported her car
being damaged in the 700 block of S. Main
between 5:15 and 5:35 p.m., Oct 29. No
suspects were named.
MUNICIPAL
COURT RECORDS
The following cases and their disposi-
tions appeared on Thursday’s Munici-
pal Court docket.
GUILTY
(All guilty verdicts carry a $22 court cost
unless otherwise stated.)
Shanna Rose Barber, 24, 406 Fairlane
Dr., improper backing, $20 fine.
(Continued on Page 3)
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(READ
Loaves
The Dutch had a sensible auction to
the reasonable contract of six hearts.
However, the declarer, sitting North,
misplayed the hand. He won the first
trick with the spade ace over West’s
king. Now be cashed the heart king
and led a heart to dummy’s ace. He
couldn’t recover. But if he had started
with the K-Q of hearts from hand, he
would have been all right. I must leave
the analysis to the reader.
When the Belgians were North-
South, the auction was bizarre — to
put it mildly. Opposite a passed part-
ner, East decided to psych one heart.
Then South made an unbelievable
five-diamond bid. Maybe he meant to
say two diamonds, but five slipped out.
West attacked with the heart jack,
of course. South won in hand and led
his diamond three.
To West, this was a very strange
play. Why didn’t South lead a high
trump? Or cross to the spade ace and
discard losers on the top hearts? Not
working out the answers to these ques-
tions, West went in with the diamond
10 and switched to a sneaky spade
eight.
Having little option, declarer fi-
nessed dummy’s queen, played a
trump to his ace and cashed the king.
When the queen and jack dropped, de-
clarer drew West’s final trump, the
six, with his eight and claimed 11
tricks: two spades, three hearts, three
diamonds and three clubs.
As declarer probably said,
*Incroyabk.’
Oh, how Willard improved. So
much so that he would most definitely
have the last laugh.
After his loss to Fink, Willard won
seven Oklahoma fights in 16 weeks.
He won four in Oklahoma City, and
one each in El Reno, Hammon and Elk
City.
On April 15, 1915, in Havana,
Cuba, Willard won the heavyweight
title when he knocked out Jack John-
son in the 26th round.
The fight still ranks as one of the
more infamous moments in boxing
history. As the referee counted to 10,
Johnson remained on the canvas and
shaded his eyes from the sun.
In his four years as champion,
Willard fought four times and
defended his belt just once.
On July 4, 1919, the immortal Jack
Dempsey needed only three rounds to
dispose of Willard.
ANOTHER BIG
PANCAKE
Sponsored By
Sapulpa Kiwanis Club
November 5, 1993
6:30 a.m. To 1:30 p.m.
At The
Sapulpa
Historical Museum
100 E Lee
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Opening lead: V J
A favorite Sayinn...
The best inheritance a father can leave
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-5 Edward D. Jones & Co. Jim Kirkpatrick 227-1202
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(Continued from Page 1)
Fink won the scheduled 15-round
bout in the tenth when referee At Venn
disqualified Willard for continuous
low blows.
McKeever attributed Fink’s win to,
not only his ability, but to Willard’s
akwardness.
“Willard probably did not mean to
foul but he was so ignorant of all ring
methods that he could not help it,” he
wrote. “On the other hand, Louis Fink,
the game boxer from this city, put up
an exhibition that for gameness and
pluck will always be remembered by
fans of this city.”
McKeever wrote that, despite
Willard’s height and weight advan-
tages, Fink defeated him “and in every
round but one had the big fellow
whipped by a mile.”
In fact, McKeever pitied Willard’s
debut to such an extent that he wrote,
“It is doubtful if Willard will ever
appear in the ring again, at least until
he can improve greatly over what he
showed to the fans last night.”
Bridge
Are six trumps
better than eight?
By Phillip Alder
Here is another deal from the 1963
European Championships in Baden-
Baden, West Germany. This time the
opposing forces were from Belgium
and the Netherlands.
STOCKS OF LOCAL INTEREST
FRIDAY CLOSINGS
Industrials
3677.24
Inti. Technology/TTX
354 -54
Volume
257,717.6*0
Kentucky Utila Co /KU
31 +54
Adv/Dec/Unch
1090/901/66*
McDonald! Corp/MCD
57)4 +54
New York Gold
S368.55-3369 05
OK Gu A Elecuic/OGE
35)4 +54
New York Silver
34.34 *4 3*
ONEOK Inc./OKE
2154 -54
NASDAQ
ORYX Energy Co/ORX
2354
O’Reilly Auromouve/ORLY
3034 -54
Occidental Petrol Corp./OXY
1*54 +54
BOK Finineiel Corp/BOKF
24'/. +54
Phillip! Pet /P
3254 +54
Lancaster Glasa/LANC
46'/. +54
Reading A Bitea/RB
9
Quaker Qionical/QCHM
17)4 -54
Rockwell Int'L/ROK
3554 +54
TBC Corp/TBCC
1154 +54
Sean/S
5754 -154
Food Lion/FDLNA
6S4 +54
Southwestern Bell/SBC
44'/. +54
WheeUey Tzt Corp/WTXT
12 +54
Sun Inc/SUN
3154 -54
Park Communication!/PARC
2354
Teuco bic/TX
67)4
NYSE
Tyson Foods/TYSNA
2354 -54
American Tel A Tel/T
5754 -54
Wal-Mart/WMT
26/.
Amoco/AN
56 -54
Wert Mass Binkihtrea/WMBS
1554 + 54
AMR Carp/AMR
7054 -54
Home Depot Inc /HD
39S +54
Arco/RCM
4354
Colonial Gaa Co./CGES
23/.
Chryelet/C
56 -154
Sants Fe Pacif. Pipelinc/SFL
3954 -14
Compaq Compuiet/CPQ
6754 +54
MUTUAL FUNDS
Wah Dianey Co/DIS
4254 +54
Income Fund of America
DuPont/DD
4754 +54
lnc/AMECX
14*6 15.77
Ford Motor/F
6154 -1
Lord Abhor Gov't Fund LAGVX
3.06 3.21
General Moton/GM
4754 -1)4
Putnam High Yteld/PHIGX
13.13 13.71
lull. But. Machi./IBM
46 +54
Waahingtoo Mutual/AWSHX
18.31 19.50
IMCO Recycling/1 MR1
14
Colonial Taa Exempt Fund/COLTX14.10 14.10
Information Furnished by Edward D. Jones & Co., Sapulpa, OK
Jim Kiikpairick, Mgr.
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Lake, Charles S. Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 80, No. 41, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 31, 1993, newspaper, October 31, 1993; Sapulpa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1499869/m1/2/?q=j+w+gardner: accessed July 5, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.