Sapulpa Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 34, No. 42, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 20, 1948 Page: 3 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Sapulpa Herald and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
-PAGE THREE
SAPULPA HERALD, SAPULPA, OKLAHOMA
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1948
conference teams, they are almost CRIME ami
a cinch for the loop title WAUKESHA. Wls. (U.PJ — The
Muskogee Is currently leading the 1#w of average.s finally caught up
pack with three straight wins but Melvin Jones. He was arrested
they face Rogers Friday In one of atler hls car had crashed Into an-
“Saved my Lill"
A <Ud-..«4 f« GAS-HEART URN*
ISCST**7T..I.V. a !!-»•,» fcrto*. i .
liar or mm bu«rtal»aaM4 mr*?> b‘Jj j
BELL-ANS for Acid Indigestion 25*
gravel
SAN&
limes tone for Driveways
Rental Mixer* by the Hoar
Rll I. and LEWIS
SIDIIOTTOM
Phone 9514F13
this year, game after game, mm**
went ‘ wrong - inexplicably
All year the Indians have playeo
championship boll In every g«»»e “
but for Just one quarter. Tliat s how
they had to beat little San Jose
State In their opener by coming
from behind an 0-20 deficit to win
26 to 20 . It was the same story
in defeats against Washington, Ore-
gon and Santa Clara.
Saturday, when It looked as if
they were due for another shellack-
ing the tide turned Instead of be-
the crucial games In the 6A con-
ference.
In the meantime, the Chiefs are
working hard and biding their time, license.
Kellyville Aggie
Hurls Challenge
At T.U. Pep Leader
N<HiCdf-KcUf SUopfX
INFANTS' ond CHILDREN'S WEAR
7 East Dewey PhoM 1M
TODAY'S
SPORT PARADF
ington. (MLi in lML '
He also Is closing in on O Bnen s
11-year-old mark of 234 attempts
and the record of 133 completions
set by Charley Conerly of Mississip-
pi last year.
Bobby Thomason of Virginia
Military was runner-up In the pass-
ing column t..— — -----.
588 yards. Then came Jim
of West Virginia with 42 comple
O. U. Gridders To
Drill Under Lights
Prepping for T. C. U.
, runner-up u. — .--- NORMAN. Oct 20. IU.R>-The Uni-
with 45 completions for versity of Oklahoma gridders will
Walthall begin practice under the arcs to-
night In preparation for their night
\ilsa and battle with Texas Christian univer-
i and Lee stty at Fort Worth Saturday.
The Sooners have not played a
Undy Berry of Texas Christian night game since the first game of
regained second place in the total last season, when they edged De-
offense statistics with 710 yards, trott .4 to 20. ...
300 vards behind Health. George Brewer, backfield ace. will
Ted Wendt of Tex“ Mines was not play in the TCU game because
next with 655 yards, amassing 628 a small bone in Ids foot has no
yaSnsnbaU SK.* ^ lhC ^r^riroX
1'charlie iChoo-Choo' Justice, ace injured list is still undetermined
hark fielder with North Carolina's However, two others who hau
unbeaten Wolfpack. held fourth been on the sidelines-^FuUback
in total offense with 648 yards. Myrle Greathouse and Center Peu
Eng a margin of 15 yards over TUlman-wlU be ready to go.
Andy Davis of George Washington. --
Styles /or the Young Set
If You're o Young Deb, Like Smort
Clothe*, Choose from Our Whittle-Stopper
Fall Coats and Suits
By OSCAR FRALEY
United Press Stall Correspondent
NEW YORK. Oet. 20 <U P> They
go around and around in an end-
less circle and fatigue puts a cur-
tain of blankness over their eyes
as sleep beckons almost irresistibly.
They are the six-day bike riders
currently pedaling past the mid-
STILLWATER. Oct 20 <U P
silly season, football variety
arrived.
Oklahoma A and M collei
an official press release, sai
day that an Aggie student. Cl
L. Bums of Kellyville has
wav mark in a barnlike armory in
the Bronx. You watch them and
you wonder how tough can it get
to make a buck.
It is listed as a sport, this cure
for insomnia. But you watch them . _
fall off their fragile steel wheels haid against
and crumple onto cheerless little C—
tyes of the crowd, and it brings ped."
back miserable memories 61 those
foot clogging walkathon automat-
ons of the Jazz age pep leaders
Two men compromise a team, and -for not u.
while one is resting, the other push-
es his way around that whirling
wooden saucer Each day they are
I supposed to get an interrupted three
hours of sleep while their partner
carries on. But often that is when
some other team will try to steal a
lap and the sleeping partner is
summoned hurridly from his prec-
ious bit of slumber.
I It happened early in this race
1 and has everyBhdy feuding and on
I edge
M.-T.U. football game Nov. 6
Bums, who holds the title "Ex-
alted Hi” of the Ag-He-Ruf-Nex
pep club here, proposed to risk his
1 * the Tulsa pep presi-
___B ________ ______ dent's with The score of the game
unconscious of the prying to determine who “should be clip-
' Binns said that in case of a tie
he believed both he and the Tulsa
;.3 should lose their hair
cheering enough to make
a winning team.”
“If you are bald." he wrote the
Tulsan, “all bets are off.”
exclusive tosh.ons for teen-agers who have an
ugged wear and reasonable price
- TEEN MODE COATS
l//. , just mode for teensters who wear
iTyii^ to 15 Superb quality lOO'w finest-w
in autumn's best colors, smartest
Chiefs Working
Hard Despite Open
Date This Friday
Aggies Looking For MarChy bCllWariZ
Trouble When Owls . . . ■->»
Invade Stillwater Named 8S Ur S
7ije. The Tulians"started it and ._o^neiits for Sat- Qo3Ch ()f Week
the 30 riders left in the race are unJay haven l established a partic-
r.plit in tight little camps The ulariv enviable record this year, the iimdoUEST
Frenchmen Belgians and Luxem- oltlabonlH A and M footballers are By CARL •
bourgers are on the outs with the rxRectin„ trouble when the Temple NEW YORK. Oct. 20 'U nis
Hollanders and Danes and every- Q^s come ^ town football learn lost every game asi
body hates the Italians The scouting report today from reason but he got a raise i i i . *£• i^’h plenty of contact work this I
So a “Jam" comes up quite of- Adam Esslinger indicates the Phil- anyway. ' . thlv ,..ld k stressing the defensive I
ten. which means the whole pack ad“, hla crew i,as a rugged line Things didn't look any better this week and is stressing I
starts sprinting around the tiny ,hal will be hard to push around, year but still the students and alum ga" . ,, chleftain.s have not I
track at dose to 50 miles per hour. EssUn,rr Sieves the team has m remained loyal ^ere reward- TTius tar, team. I
One misjudgment by tired, smoke- played ln hard iuck " this year and td ailer he sprang the upset of the met a truly w ' « P0pponents all I
stung eyes or the slip of a hand |Pat it*g reC0rd of three losses and season on the Pacific coast. bu • d accuracy I
and bodies and $100 bikes are a u , not inc|lcatlve of the teams He's the United Press coa^b of toabtplentjor I
tangled mass at the bottom. real .strength. the week. Marchmont Schwartz of in this department I
Steel spokes puncture the silk At hamllne Saturday the Aggie ,he oft-losing Stanford Indiaiis who The runmng ^ llya^d I
tires and the air confined at 90 cri(sf,_counlry track team wUl meet bowled over U. C. L A 34 io H pans has teen cjlckliiig y I
pounds pressure whistles out, as the h UnjVersity of Oklahoma Soon- Saturday with a fair touchdown has made two touchdowns per gam
fallen riders are carried to their surge in the final half. against every opponent they have
bunks and patched up. If they are --- Nol smce the final game of the faced so far this year, except Nor-
readv again when their partner 1946 season had Stanford won a man tn the first tilt,
need's help well and good .. I I Mn..L • major game Yet SchwarU. the The passing department however
Except for that early morning Mpi/lHa C Mpgfh C handsome former all-America halt- has falled to produce the result
sleeping period when they try to ITGVUUU J iivmvii iw back from Notre Dame, was so pop- hoped for and so the passers. John |
catch three hours of shuteye, the . • t.lar on the campus that there was jimmy Kendall. BUI Long
teams alternate on the track every L A..II Aw/av/ I Jilt’ Ifl never one word of dissentlon, no and the olhers have been having
five or ten minutes. Late in the af- «Jllll rAYYUJ VUL grumbling about the weakly beat- pjenty 0j chance to heave the ball
ternoon there usually is a lull when . ings. t as well as brush up on defending
they barely creep around the track, p • _ L)aCC | nfl That's an unusual •sit“aU“I* a against aerials.
reading maU and eating as they f | 11L III I uJjlllU ... -chool which used to thrive on particularly outstanding In the
I ride . . gridiron glory. The golden years ^ has been the work of BUI
Three big meals are snatched at mokiakTY when Stanford was the scourge 01 yo at Uckje and Edward GU-
trackside with about 20 snacks ®> T«M MOB1* the Pacific Conference, when it took at center. These boys have
around the clock. Coffee Ls a steady ^ UPJ^Un over m the Rose Bowl game almost ban lhU season and are
must and rarely do you catch a NEW YORK. Oct ^O annually, are just a memory now. ^ay a , ln contact work
resting rider when he isn t sucking Heath of the University of Nevaaa thp fans yearn for the good tanning
a rav egg or eating an apple, an Wolfpack has been no great >l'akccs d , But thPy Vant to go to Chieftains face the toughest
orange or some dried prunes as a ball carrler-and the records ^ ; ^iwl with Schwaru-not the
"But you'll still gain about four prove It but he still possessed the ^h(JUt him> par of their schedu e
or five pounds in a week if you neatest pitching arm in the col- How doe;, a coach manage to open date thbwericet _
are in shape when you start." wear- legiaU- ranks today. aUnd so solidly in these days of In succession they ta g
ilv explaitied Oeorge Metz, one of slingin' Stan, has tossed 106 || h presSure commercialized foot- the ^gers Ropers Brislo'vhP fr k;
the American riders. aerials in four games and complet- b^1? stanford, sticking strictly Muskogee Roughers and the final
"If" you're ln shape Most of ed 63 0{ them for a total gain of wllhin the principles of the N. C- with Tulsa central,
them try to ride themselves into , 031 yards. This kept him far (Ait A A purity code. is trying as hard If ^and its a mighty Dig 1 —
top condition and this third day is {ront m the latest passing sta- M any 0,her school to field a top- the Chieftains can down the tnree
the one they fear the most. tlstics released by the national col- flight football team. ______
Teen-Mode end Broemor
FALL SUITS
Just os smart as a whip suits
the young lody's whims and fancies. Come
,n_see them—select from a grand as-
sortment. Sizes 9 to 15.
COATS and SETS
For Children
Coats alone and coats with
leggings Many with match-
ing cap and hats. . ... ,
Sixes 1 to 14
$14.95 to $22.50
*26-5° to 535°°
Sweaters for Tots to Teen-Agers
Go Goy for Foil! Girl*'
WOOL SKIRTS
Choose a skirt wardrobe from ourJorge
fall numbers. Pretty
Nevada’s Heath is
Still Away Out in
Front in Passing
selection of new
plaids, all colors.
2 to 6
$2.9843.98
7 to 14
$3.9846.95
Designed Just
tor Teen-Agers
PURSES
Plastic leathers and
patents in fall's best
colors! Low priced,
too!
$2.25
Purses for the tiny
tots in shiny plastic
patents at
$1.25
ter for every child from
overs, solid color's, new
• '
Prices plus
federal tax
10V/ HOW IT POPS
A -cene tinocd
MO MUHS
-W* TWY IT/
Young and
Casual
ELIZABETH
giocus
•VII7WWIM
TAYLOR
Tff» A*r
Original
HATS
all boys and girls.
$1.19
smart 1
Are You
Bright Color
Cotton Pantio*
Cotton knit panties—
aright red, yellow, blue.
Elostic west and leg
bands. Sizes 6 to 12.
59c
Merrichild Pajamas
By Hanes
MORE POWER! INSTANT STARTS!
B. F. Goodrich
BATTERY
Don't wait till your battery goes
dead one of these cold mornings
Come in now—get a new one
and know your car will start in a
sPllf sccor|d when you step on
the
Sizes for All Cars and Trucks
MARGARET O'BRIEN HATS
and STOCKING CAPS
orable felt hols, brand new knitted cops
d those long, worm stocking cops. Colors
lo"' $1.98 to $2.98
BOYS' CORDUROY CAPS
so knitted cops—for little boys. Choose
ur favorite color and style.
> The ONLY tires mode in Oklahoma!
B. F. Goodrich SiNertownt »re the only tire* made in oar
state! That makes them solid citizens . . . they provide em-
ployment. »hare in paying uxex, *hart in paying for (choolx
hospital* and highway*. Next time you buy tire* . .. b*y B.F.
Goodrich MADF IN OKLAHOMA!
Lot* and Lots of
BLANKETS
Baby blonkets for every purpose,
priced for every purse. From
nice cottons to oil fine wools,
priced
Handsome little suits thot make handsome little fellows!
Styled os only Mickey Boy can style them. Tailored of
fine gabardines and corduroys in all colors—pretty
pastels ond rich dork colors. You'll find the little
boys' Mickey Boys at Nancy Kay—priced, per suit af
Come in ond Get Your
FREE FOOTBALL GUIDE
with 1948 Schedule* and 1947 Scores
Phone 271
9 North Mnin
B.F.Goodrich
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Sapulpa Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 34, No. 42, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 20, 1948, newspaper, October 20, 1948; Sapulpa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1526574/m1/3/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.