Sapulpa Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 28, No. 7, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 9, 1942 Page: 4 of 6
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PAGE FOUR
SAPULPA HERALD, SAPULPA, OKLAHOMA -
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1942.
Today’s Sport
Parade
(Bet a a eat Ott.1
ISEVEN STATES
PICK NOMINEES IN
PRIMARY BALLOT
Oklahoma News
Briefs
NET QUEEN WITH VANQUISHED RIVAL
THREE IN('l) MliCNT HKNATORH
! \SI> MOHl CONGHEflBlMEN \Kl -
VICTORS IN VOTE YESTERDAY I By United Pits*
- OKLAHOMA CITY — Acting Oov.
"nin e Incumbent senutom and most James E. Berry plans to attend demo-
By .Link Cuddy
United Press Stkff Correspondent
NEW YQRK, Sept. 9 0?>-The, __■■■__,
gf litleiufsi In the war department! '°*'lfea*men whose saata were at (etauc d.strtct meetings this week In-
havi given the Breen light to one t|nkf> ln Tue.-.daya wve.i stale pri- kludln«, a session at Vtmta today.
la.‘t heavyweight title fight In the martcs ttt)n renomlnatlcn, incomplete Muskogee and Atoka tomorrow and
U. 8 A. for the combined benefit of!r*tUm* ,ndirated today I*"™1,1 Oov. Leon Phillips is
home morale mid army emergency j A 1<'ur,h '^nAU,r' B Rus-jln Colorado on a short vacation
relief—u return bout between Cham- *rl1 flve 1 epnaseotatlves and Oov. L~
pion Joe Louis and rhall. nger BilK , f:<UPr*‘ Tal,nad*'' far* contests In to-1 OUTHRIE - A new oil pool was op-
Conn But regardless of the . Inner ciay" Oe0,vm democratic primary «*>ed at the west edge of the city of
the next heavyweight ti-lr light will I Huy ill was opposed by William O Outlnte today when the Sunray Oil
he Staged in’ northern Ireland In Upshaw, former congressman and « Hi No. 1 Welch flowed ah average
Fram e or even in Ge rmany —' f0r l>r°hi ."Ivi leader, and Talinadge by 01 M ban-rls an hour Interest has
the benefit of our oveisea. army Attorney General Ellis Arnall. &**•) high in the wildcat well since
When the war department an-1 8Pn*Ur 1 who survived yesterday s! di 'lllne was started some months ago
nounred that Corporal Jo. lout*1 fttamy test* Included Allen J El- Production waa found ln the second
would defend his laurel*- against Pri-. ^ntl, r ^a‘- Ld win C. Johnson, D, 1 if"* sand at 5,815 feet,
vale Billy Conn at Yankee stadium r °*° • and J«*Pb H Bal. R., Minn. '
on ih. afternoon of Columbus dav In Minerotn. Ball and hfc running PORT COBB The family of Pvt
October 12 promoter Mike Jacobs mn,e °°v Harold E Siassen. seek- Vernon McKelvy of Port Cobb has
’ Mne renmobiation. held substantial 1 ^1* advlaed of his death in a two-
"They have selected me to put
over this fight f I nine it's sticcess-
ful. becati!#1 in mid-October 1 join
leads over their opponent.' Both were' Pla,,r rra'h near Roswell. N M. The
pre-war .*mp;>orters ol administration accident occurred yesterday. Six men
I reign pohev. I«rt their Hv«.
Pall, who was appointed to the sen- | --
at seat of the late Sen Ernest Lun- | ALVA—O. W Rush, on leave of
Jern, was leaning by a vote of near- absence a* clean of men at North
the war department as n civilian
consultant and will fly to mother
front to stage the next heavy Jtle
brut."
Uoes this mean that Uncle Mike
will give up his fistic promotions ln
New York?
"No," Jacobs said, “my organiza-
tion in New York will continue to
stage bouts as long ax It can get
lighten., but I may br on any of >,at*w,d«' co,Ue*t* «hc democraUc * ** entertainment features at the
the 12 fronts that President Roose-, ^ru”ary JUK !, lfh °pe’“l U>nior'
vi-lt uas mentioned Therefore I111 Thw ol Minnesota s Incumbent re- nm an<1 continues through Saturday
ly two to one over his closest chal- western State college, has been pro-
lenger Wiilter K Mlckelson. a pub- meted to a captain at Port Francis
Usher and protege ol Minnesota s sen- 1 Warren, Wyoming, where he Is
lor senator, Henrik Shlpstead Firmer ,b* head of the field operations sec-
Oov Elmer Benson led Lundeen s (Hon of the officers candidate school,
widow for the farmer labor party - ■ /
wi.at.irial nomination There were no! ARNETT — Horse and dog racing
confident that the first heavyweight
title bout- with either Louis or Conn
as the defe idlng champion —will be
staged In northern Ireland"
Jacobs, with the great, st promo-
tional triumph of his career tossed
into his lap by the army, Is point-
ing toward northern Ireland He
estimates that tne Louis-Conn return
■natch at Yankee stadium will gross
around $1,200,000 with 77.000 fans
attending. But he Is not too en-
thusiastic about this engagement a.
he contemplates hit overseas future
Uncle Mike says the amp placed
the Louls-Conn bout at Yankee
stadium in the hands of a commit-
tee ol sports editors of New York
newspapers. That committee asked
him to assist In staging tne return
brawl, ln whirh no one will make
money except the army emergency
relief Naturally, hell help the ports
editor, committee to run the show,
and he'll try to put It over so that
It may go down in history as his
greatest promotion.
The war department's sanction of
tills bout will probably give about
$ IOOjOCXi to army emergency rcliel
and not' a cent to either Louis. Con 1
or Jacobs. Uncle Mike la exultant
because no many persons "In the
knew * told him that It never could
be staged.
Jacobs explains;
"What happens to me after this
bcut, J don’t care I realized that here
was one of the greatest chances for
building up a quick relief fund in our
whole scheme of living Certainly I
wanted to have a hand in Its promo-
tion but If the committee of editors
hadn't picked me. J would have wlth-
druv.Ti to my home in Red Bunk. N
J —completely heartbroken. It would
have been the worst kick in the teeth
I ever got. end I*ve got plenty. But.
fortunately, the newspapermen picked
me to put It over. And I'm very'
tharklul.'
Jacob<\ ar.hounced immediately that
prices for the afternoon buttle would
range between $3 and S40-tlie first
tunc that tickets have been scaled to
$40 since the second Louis-Schmeltng
bout In '38. Too, It will be the ftrst
time that a heavyweight title tilt has
been staged tn live afternoon since
Jack Dcmp«ey retained Ills title
aga’nst Tommy Gibbons at Shelby.
Mont., July 4 1923
piihlieun cotiggressinen, allackekd as
ST. LOUIS CARDS 3 GAMES BACK OF
DODGERS CARRY DRIVE EASTWARD
NEW YORK 3ept 9 cu.P)—1The pen- have been the only pitchers lo come
nant-hungry St. Louis Cardinals, now through with full-time Jobs ln the
three games behind the pace-setting last six games
Brooklyn Dodger*, carried their drive As for the schedule, the Dodgers are
lot the National league flag Into the Idle today, have a single game with
east today the Cubs tomorrow, two with the Cards
Each club has 17 games to play in ^"^ay and Saturday and a Sunday
this ding-dong renewal of last year's double-header with the Reds. Tuesday
bitter atretch battle for the senior clr- and Wednesday jof next week it will
cult flag. Leo Durocher's hotly-pur- be Pittsburgh again and then a week-
sued Dodgers have 18 games booked for *nd Cftrd of four K*naes with the Phib,
Ebbets Field while the never-say-dle *n lbe season's last week, there is $ne
Cardinals have nine contests to play wlt*1 tbe CBants, two with Boston, one
in hostile territory. with the Phils at Ebbets Field ana a
While such a string of home games
gives the Dodgers an apparent edge In d®1 Ith the Qilants to-
the battle—they have won 48 and day. skil» over «« Brooklyn for two and
dropped only 15 at Ebbets field this -hen takes on the PhiU ,or *°ur at
year—the Cards' better .physical condi-
tion nullifies that slight advantage
Philadelphia Then the Red Birds
Journey to Boston, Chicago. Pittsburgh
, and Cincinnati, playing two games ln
nSt^' a more youthful aggrega- each city The Cubs Journey to St.
tion and thus better able to absorb the i Louis for the season's windup The
pleasure J*08 n*days add1' I schedule appears tough for the west-
tion. the cards have been getting first erners. But '.heir record ol 26 wins in
rtf* ^^ lhelr last 31 kames and 29 victories in
~b°r Day double' S6 contests Indicates the Cards may
M^nJhiu Hh Plral*s not be bothered too much
Meanwhile, the quintet of starters Head gave a surprisingly good per-
Durocher has been rotating Buck New- formance by turning back the Ptrutes
Dwvia and^bv^HiA!^ ^!®ton* Cur^ with four hits yeaterday lo register a
the It ^ f-0 triumph anti Increase the Dodgers'
the going pretty rough Macon and
Ed Head, a surprise starter yesterday,
lead over the Idle Cards by half a game
It was the rookie mounchsman’s first
full-time winning performance since
lng staffs But they don't all have the May .
fentje-rattling power of BeaumontV Hi the American league, the Browns
batting twins, Dick Wakefield and the Ti8ers. $*1. In their last meet-
. Hoot Evers Wakefield led the league lng ot the Reason Only 720 spectators
Red-haired Pauline Betz ol Lee right, of Beverly Hills, Calif., In the with .345 and Ever* was third with 322 smallest crowd at Detroit in several
Anggelef lurtds the victor's cup after women's national tennis champion- Beaumont has Charlie Fuchs Earl sea-sons~ watched Steve Sundra limit
upsetting favored Louise Brough, 1 ship at New York
:.ri«>nlsi> L ion- Pearl Harbor ap- HOLDENVILLE — Hughes county Texas I rvrvn Plavnff
of renonunatlon They rom nl;-mncis have appointed George ^
i *aied assured of renonunatlon They roni.nissioncr* have appointed George
were Reps. Melvin Maas. August An- s "Lunier as county attorney to fill I
dnsen and H Curl Anderson. Reps, i l,J*' unexpired term of Harvey Powell I
O'cur Younghahl and Harold Kniit- has entered military service. (
son. who also were pre-war isoia- 1'urnpr is the democratic nominee
tionlst.v were facing stiff opposition | *or Hje office,
R'p.v Joerph P O'Hara and William -- ■
Pettinger, reputllcans. were unop- \ ESSI.I KIRNs AT SEA
posdi. |
The vote tabulation ln Colorado „.^ASHINGTON' # (U.B-The
Series Starts Today
Cook, Stub Overmlre and Clarence
Gann readv for mound duties. Besides
Oana and Cadwell, the Cats will call
placers, in the other game, opening on Claude Horton, Otis Clark, Joe Wln-
four-out-of-seven series j field and Marcus Beddlngfleld.
Fort Worth must be reckoned with ! 840 Antonio has that veteran of the
. in the play-offs. Its Earl Caldwell was hig top, John Whitehead, as well as W ~ postponed.
i fi,rieowr'uxs?5Sv'!?.r:'r
The Texas league Shaughnessy play- lan performer a 16 and 5 pitcher, ready -sPln lhe bal1 playward I Red Sox’ 15-11 Washington wal-
the Tigers to four hits.
Roy Poat, rookie righthander mak-
ing his first start, blanked the White
Sox with seven hits as the Indians
scored a 10-0 triumph The second
game of their scheduled doubleheader
offs ooen today with Beaumont, league for the call tonight,
leader since the early days of spring,
the big target—and the favorite to cop
the play-offs and head into the Dixie
srjra'r £ ra r; S MajSssr*
Gov Ralph E. Carr, republican «na- The Wakefield was under the corn-
tonal candidate whose nomination mand of Comdr Harold Gardner Brad-
*«•' not contested, will oppose John- bury, U. S coast guard, and was en
son in the November election route to an east coast port of the Unit-
Diere were no contests In Colorado ed States,
congress’onal races. Ftre of undetermined origin broke
Ellender won an easy victory in out on one of the deck levels and
the Louisiana primary. Incomplete despite prompt efforts to subdue it,
returns showed him leigllng E. A. ,be flames spread rapidly throughout
Stephens oy a margin ol mere than lbe ship.
two to one Reps F Edward Herbert | Flames enveloped the vessel and It
and James Domengeuux apparently was necesRary to remove the passen-
won Mnomination, but other nuuin large number ol whom were
bents trailed or faced run off con- c _ .
teste. Democratic nominations are ,Twol} ft wa^'sbl** moved directly
equivalent to election In Louisiana alongside the Wakefield despite the
r„ ............ heat and flames and removed more
In W ashinj’toii. four democratic than lj000 pafc8engeni.
ccngressmen Warren O Magnuaon. A cruiser maneuvered its bow along-
, ^ w ' KaUle 111141 side the stern of the big vessel. us«i
John M. Coflee—were assured renom
Shreveport will call on Doyle Lade 1°Ped four Pllchers Ior 15 hU* while
„ . , Ralph Hammer Gordon Maltabenrer the 8031 *l“™med a pair of mo undame n
-Die Cats, a brand of ordinary men L^ty BrtUhSrt Ftovd Soe“ and Vern fur » Wow* Gom DIMaggio and
wara ssisijtk sssrs.rs js skkj
szr,^s£pttuSc',u^“Lr‘“ *sl jst™- m' c“-’ *u‘
Connors Ls the league's leading home I craf” 8*« “^iKstoysTofthTcSS
New York at Philadelphia ln the
National league was postponed
Yesterday’s star—Rookie Ed Head
WHkp' lourth'p’lipe Initijwr and F'.ri ' an cloutnr. “........“ ' | crwiy awven O’Neil's boys for the Cata j who turned back the Plfatee adth
Worth tangle, with Shreveport, .econd- All Ion, te.™, n.»e competent pltth- KuStom 5X VlSuirShS'1’| ST J£iX ^ *
1 — J_ _ * “
lratlon. Rep Martin F. Smith, a
democrat, led Cecil Calltsor in Incom-
plete returns by a margin too narrow
to assure him victory.
Hep. Charles A Plumley 'won th-'
republican nomination for Vermont's
lone seat In the lower house by a
for transporting troops abroad, and a
destroyer placed itself along the Wake-
field's side. t
MORE SHOWERS FOR STATE
(By United Pressi
The Oklahoma City weather bureau
•mirym ol ’wo to one over Samuel H today forecast little change ln tem-
Ocdeii The republican nomination is peratures for the state and scattered
tantumuont to election. showers and thundershowers ln the
In Arizona, Rep John R Murdock east and southeast portions,
led 17 oilier candidates tor the states Rainfall yesterday ranged from a
two congressmen-at-large .-.eats. Rich- tenth 0f an Inch In Tulsa to 1 33 inches
am F Maries- county attorney at ;l’ ,lle Oklahoma City airport. Mc-
Phoenix. was second DemocraUc Aleater rruorted 66 of an inch of rain-
tlon Is eq I to elect On 1,i‘* ;llld Oklahoma City had 76 of an
tr Atlrona. which elects two congress- *nc.h j
metk this year for the llrst time. Oov Ard™>re' n tbe soulbern seclion’
Pldney P Oslx’m was renominated ln
tne gubernatorial primary.
Maryland renominated Reps. Thom-
as D'Ale. ’lndro and Lansdnle O. Bass-
eer, both democrats. Rep. John A.
Mever democrat, appeared to have
been defeated by John M Wyatt. Gov.
reported a maximum temperature of |,
89 degrees yesterday afternoon for the
state* high. Ouymon. with 81 de-
grees, had today'* early hour low.
Held On Abandonment Count
Emery Kelley, arrested ln Russell.
Katvs, on a charge of abandonment of
wife and minor child, was brought to
CAR REPORTED STOLEN
It was reported to county officials t Herbert R O'Connor was renominated
IhLs morning that a 1931 model Bun k I »n th* A inorratlr primary and Theo- _____________ .
coupe belonging to Fred Dyer. 2Q2 dore Roceevelt BlcKeldln, Baltimore sapulpa yesterday by Sheriff Ernest |
South Linden, wtus stolen from a serv- attorney, was nominated by Ute re- Miller and deputy Charley Bullock, and
in tation Monday night. ' publ i.ms for the governorship Ls being held In the county Jail here
llicv'll Carry the Ball for Great Lakes
****•'v-
i m m
I
hin?
Among outstanding collegiate football players who will wear the grid uniforms of the Great Lakes.
111 . Naval Training Station team this fall are the four pictured above. From the left are Bruce Smith,
All-American at Minnesota last year; Bob Sweiger, a star Minnesota back in 1941. Pete Kmetovlc,
whu did his ball carrying for Stanford, and John Popov, who played with the University of Cincinnati,
-i-—* jlic boys are shown working out at Great *
i
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Young, John W. Sapulpa Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 28, No. 7, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 9, 1942, newspaper, September 9, 1942; Sapulpa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1524256/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.