Sapulpa Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 28, No. 271, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 20, 1943 Page: 4 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.
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TO M m y
HITCHCOCkT,
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GREATEST/'
PL AVER 7
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BUY WAR BONDS/ W
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|T J PAYDAY for the Bating te the Sokano* Ularia, who work u
r> . - B Go* Aleaaal. winwirig the Amc-rieaa ftgfcting men from
U**- Ei ot the r*tlT« receive five shi.iir.g* a week for
( > .. rjt, rt-5 ^ a C. S Mirtae Coxpa photo. (Iateraatioaal)
Croaetc lake she )ot> . tV_*i had twm
i-bpgt g*«o* r Ti+
a .m
dice oct
ar^i hsjd*
bcmfc'iteroughoui a vic-
torious wcrie «eri»‘ as the* : *wcorner
“har^ifrf the spk Uif mi second* gqd
third- ' .
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SAKme^ oatAWQW*
Oklahoma Ntwt
Brink
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nrA.wf-Ti* r.rr of.
’Jai-s act V | a
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Last y*«r was a rrpruuoo Frankie —- ■>
,<k used ■ otily spar.rjr.T Etc- •; for . By United Press
ci.e eaaje he sat heip.u - a: -------- C?KHMAH : ja i- u.e'
... ed cr. tbl beach m the jma( 8t- .ratfish wntra a > griped pair of I
Lcuis Carr.naL' romped -: team*''' ai.d • zai.:.-. he -a ■ .Id j
to wte the world championship contact E. L Jeidv larmer-H>orls-
Thu rear the Tank? were reraUrd a"*41* Jeter si-rffed hi* uncerrlcthes ’
u a ounch of guys nam'd Joe Mot -r- er.d cf a hoiiow *o. a. *:i ef-
af the stars had gone into the sen ice -o trap r fiA The fUh .urged;
.nc.aclng Ittri*o tut trill the kW •riroug' the clothe* and for al.
from Frt'oo—a rrter_r. noa—was held Jft r know is JtiU vearng coo.
in the dtaremt as other yoengrter* re* Anyhow, the aru.les are mifsuif
eived thetr chance Somehow the —---
hub Pepped tn front in the Amer- OKLAHOMA CITY —A statewide
I lean league race onl> tc fine .t« aa- ^r*ve ods yto cr’.ect old
j vintage slashed te a game and a half Phonograph • norc? tat men In *err-
cc Ju)y 3 ice. The Am- near L:-gior. Is sponsor- 1
It -u then that CMU was cfiE. ** * **
led back to shortstop ar.o h» per- %± *** cc.,..TJh*jwcordh
i forma nee since then has rev:v,-d
nemcr.e* of the be - with e -au r AHADAWXO — Tins ce-m • -rywir.f
i eyes who becam» part of s lc*end in county will .er.d Its help to farmers
'f32 *mce r.« came back the dub by starting school August 2 then
'ha.- won 13 of If rsmey tnc.udlre turrmf ~ut men the picking
; the last sever, tr. a row to occ« its rrlr-s At let.” hal‘ of the ccur.ty s
-e»d to fire i.nd one-half gttni indepencent crools will open in two
Only Crosrtt: and Dtckev resr.air of weeke.
those ywashbijctur z Yamcees of old _
- hose harc-h”tn:e happ--«c-lucky ELK CITY -The Ek Cite officer*
guy* from murderer row They mav chib »U1 op*r here Frida- night rhe
- *- ------- -'M-h 1'rsr b«' as chib a located at the lori.er EU Cite
the kid from Fnacc otpUitv Well Golf anc Oc-mtn club north, cf the
trv io g?Te them somrthhig tc re-, c.ty All officers stationed at thei
m«mtxt u» by .naval base r.ear here are eligible foe
.And romehow roc know they will membership
’s.w* ;V. altr^wt 'against tj-.e dike
o*- i »•» eci to'divan-this Waah-
ua tlYer and procaci the oil field
>; fft m irfundauon by the- Red liver
’ m reservoir. Tha wall haa baaa
u«-aF-wtie (ha % 1 Ig-')wf**.
rnkh kTFjrTA—» nifct 3«f and kfrw
August Veraer amda » t®p '-o Bar*
UervUh. the* ibok a-one half a dJaen-
ccmer pigeons at-ach(d notes to' th*
pigaens’ U*. azsS zeflasad them 13ie>
ar?nw(
m&m
YANKS »OUT OUT INSMY SN1KKS ON SICILY
. .. *
MOVING fOkWAtO THtOUOH kNK-HWM 0«ASS. Aicencan irAntrymen
off ir. --r* i.-r.pedmg Ui*.r advance. An artillery unit protect* the h.trr unties I >
•bfectivn. Is thad^tanca a shea burst* on a hilL U. S. Signal Corps radiophoto. Jinter.rtlfnaO
DODGERS APPEAR TOO SLOW GEARED
TO OVERTAKE ST. LOUIS CARDS NOW
B» FibI VKffi*
Vr.red Pr s dta* Correapondant
NEW YORK Jul; 30 iR—The
Frookh-n Doiagtrs appear mucr. too
old sudd rtoi* to be geared to a fan
h in the Hatfonal league stretch
to c/VJ-f.et tne 5t Loc-s Cardmala
cox texh the outlook ^eaed br.ght-
er for the F-stbusneTi that. « ..aj it.
weeks
Tbc jruriCT “rerbi-tior.' among the
Dcdge: persor.ncl rfvera davs ag>J
•Ktss to have polled the team to-
aether «uffkuer.*.ly enough tc br^ig
abc-rf a tenera ccmpni’ive jp-
<wing afeitk combined with acme re-
cent har : lurk r*d by the Car-
ijta.; ha. r-u: Brooklyr. in a ;wr-
ncula-Iv nxd ‘pot to pick up lor:
emne Th. DcCrerv ar"- 34 games
behu-d the Rec Bird*
The Osrfinalj struck a sudden tar-
tar in R.-.*;tr-rg.-. end dropped four
cf five game' a slump that helped
boo* B- oklvn morale Beside* S’
lams ahf-sdv -tdcicv bv the craft
got an additicnal ycH when *outhpaw
pitcher H me Poilet left The club
w*Il *» definr^y hurt it Wthander
Harry Brecbeen i- s-mnnoned. fer
Ernie White is suffering front bur-
Today's Sport
Parade
■ Reg U S Pat Off.
By Ovar Fraley
United Pr * S:a.T Correwpmder.t
NEW YORK jule * \P>—H‘ was
a little I* .sr. bey from San' Frar.-
ciato, a aid with eye* as big as w»-
orrs who *a; awed by murderer's
row wher. they brought hnr. up to
the New York Yank**-- in 1992
The mer. of murderers row even
then were rasetali Wend'—R Ah.
Gehrig Lacr r. Dickey. Pipgra*. Fen-
rtock O "'i Ruff mg Hoag Coombs
and Seae’j. And the kid from the
cof ” Fra-t Peter Joseph Pr^*e»ti.
trembled at the thought of his own
audgcity te. even attempti-^ to play
with them
Bat the tic c he ted He didn’t «wln«
the heavy bat that made most erf
those YarJtees famo»is but he wag a
tepperv w With a knack for place
hltBnc and a smooth fielder who
mMEDr recaine on- of -h • m1-
portsm efenave cogs in the Yankee
mach-tr With Croseta at shortstop
.’a at.J atli oe on Urf shelf kr seme
- ::n-.e
G-i. eocugh Arty Vaughan the
6r-.t r. thira tisetr-ia ana erne of
. • -te....:.
has ^een the ipurkplug of the Doc-
»er-- resurgerce
Vaughan now holes a 12-game hit*
n.-.g tr.r.g kngen r.-etch compiled
• a Brcotiyr performer this season
H- "-vec one of the best offensive
periormanc** m hh lenrthy cs.*eec
c inr.. the senes y:*t concluded at
Beet on where the Doiecri tone two
cs.t of -hree from the Braves belting
eight hit* m 17 trip*
Art-, has ftaled 107 hits to lead
t* amir ate B. .4 Herman by one end
fight Star. Musial of the Cterdinals
fir the league lead He na* scored
70 rims ar/1 stolen 12 bases
Th? rudder, pickup in the mayors
wa r. t '.irrjted to th* Dodgers for
the \-v \ork Yankees pulled a«sy
to i Vi game martin lr the Amer-
ican league or. -he rest &( an eigr.t-
-irr. wtr-.mr -treak—theh* iongest
cf tlie year—and the unusually tight
race in 'he rur-.ior circuit seems to
• ■.-» r rr-w'd :owr. to a battle for
. the remaining first divtsiem berths
thfct machine became a juggeroa.t.
■rfie double-vlay ccmbmation of
Cr -ett: Larren and Gehrig pac'd
the Br nx Bombers to toe first of
s*ven pennanta which the laughing
I'adan *s< to hate ’he Yankees
atp He played 116 games m hi* first
tear and was ir. -he thick of it as tne
Y-ir.k- wx® ti r -tralght to ttke the
1132 world serves
Tr.er. fc.'.osrtd -hree bleak years as
the club came apart at the seams but
when it hi: its ftnde again Crosetu
way still at thort Tnere were new
name th'tv—DiMaggvo Selkirk and
P .:e—«.nc or fc r rtraieht years
thty «wept all before them. During
. this period the kid freen Frisco wras
at his peak He set a record for
her. tops' dcubl- play in 1938—the
year Lvrzer. fell by th* wayside—and
was the leading shortfiekier in the
league fn 193*—when 'he beloved
Qe.'tnc • -4t him*elf out of the lineup’
a fer plavir.g more ccmsective games
than sny mm tn baseball hirtory.
Frankie an elder and w:*er Crose’ti
r-» alayed lAr- gatrea in 1940. when!
The Yankees. But j
H41 was a d ffererT yto—- a-'®* -1
R-r-
rutc had come -r.to the Yar.kee fold
and Crcweni watched thi* youngster
with the fire and dash of the old
U. I. Ttih’j nii-
Why buffer wont
melt in Africa.
• As EVERYBODY^KNOWS, butter will melt
/ unless )*ou keep it cooL And the African desert
> isn’t cooL s’ ^
f Nevertheless, the Americans who are fighting
" there carry buner—and it uoesn’t melt.
^ It doesn’t melt because it’s fortified with a fat
, which has a high melting point* The result is
>V butter which can be packed in a can, like beans
tor beef, won’t melt, and will keep indefinitely.
^ You might think our soldiers could get along
/without butter. They could. But—they don’t
have to! Butter is good for them— and Uncle
Sam is seeing to it that American soldiers are the
best-fed, best-equipped, best-carcd-for soldiers in
i. the world!1
i
f Of courserh takes money to do that. So much
: i#
money that, to help pay the bill, every one of os
must loan every dollar we can to Uncle Sam'
* through War Bonds. ^
\
War Bonds are a swell investment They pay
you back $4 for every $3. Save part of every
paycheck with U. S. War Bonds!
- BOOST YOUR BOM BUYIM
rmm m nmn mm turn*
This advertisement Is & contribution to America’s all-out vtf by •
SAPVLPA HERALD
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Young, John W. Sapulpa Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 28, No. 271, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 20, 1943, newspaper, July 20, 1943; Sapulpa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1528296/m1/4/: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.