Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 57, No. 237, Ed. 2 Friday, November 1, 1946 Page: 17 of 18
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Oklahoma City Times 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:
i
Ji
• < -
1946—THIRTY-THREE
FRIDAY,
1,
1
z
Ott Will Get
First Pick In
■ ♦.
5
- ■
■. *
1
r'
e
I
•
offered up in the
gAme : at
Due Good Quail Year
By VERNON B. SNELL
a month and would attend Georgetown
r leawne meet ins* in Los An- -- ■ —
------■---
r» •
begin the
result
the •
>>
r-Z
I
■
■
»
- f
. *
-
11
4
«
Greco-Pellone “Go
KTOK Tonight
—
-
on
*298
pA/f 7% tax
1/3 Down, tolane* 6 Mas.
i
rtf
Thr
PARKS APPAREL
' !
I
t
fl
*»>
■==
I
will
4
WORK
5
T
■ ■
I
■
! k
the
»
i
c*e i*m «>w o..*, *«*,•>«>
WarM t»n*r» Ikwne*
Oto
«?
Bap
J
L‘
)
;
tz
Oawpaa*
-
-!
1
I
1
i
r
*
1
>
J
E
■ ■■ nt**
■ #
■ < I
1 I
I
r
Ic?;
IM-THANKS...
’ 1
f -I
I A>«i
r4** >?
City Mat Show
Tonight to Re
- Twinbill Affair
900 N. WESTERN
PHONE 3-3454
Featured by
CUTCHALLS
J^choble
Wats
S. H. LYNCH & CO.
.S^Zr-J • fPdti&i • Seiucec
■ern snd defending champion Art I
• match
following
lost an inch in picking
Ct’tBl X 289 yards in the six
Sala*
Marti
GU 3
14 13
13 14
13 14
11 11
• II
• ’*
IS
However, the state biologists made
check following the May
from a quail
> state by two
will
Jan-
D
U
C
K
m
• i
F-;m»
<■* ♦
Wood *«***!•
Dodrlimmrr*
pKrhporkala
Y ;/J/
Tlmter Taeavra
Cm*
him
trip
P
A
L
0
0
K
A
A
L
r v
rules
elaborate
h
: I
!■
aoj-homi
ba
tn
down-
caae
IA6N
AT
NOVEMBER
iiw
is gam-
record
■T
1
\ A\dhi
) KT
/ WORK
i!
/
/.
Fin* Choice Gaea to Giants
Most farm systems circumvent this
by moving up their prise packages j
and keeping them in the rightful
u'.J
I
F
W|n
^2
x,'.
MEN
I
4 I
I I
1 II
1 11
For sixty years no
compromise with quality
4>>a wm^PiKB*
&£:.e ££
<3 r,^ ^r,-. tit
WJ M
wcoctwn ’
BJ R 4C*p
JS-ur*
r. 4*
v*r»ita I
MOMT II !
tot!
a
popularity
a highly -ci
■ach < ojner i I
gcored on the
[! Enters for
the marines. Veeck entered the Cleve- ;
——— --- - - - , , , land clinic last week with a recur-
outfielder who helped the St Louis of the infection,
ww_________ _fc_ Im m* 4 a e4 e*
aaa as v vaaw ^wnw*. «««•• >>>^ (
Pete was a holdout
plications
3wu»M/'
home Thursday.
------------------I---
* — - i ' ■1 ‘ ' _■ i— .•
; Dates Set For Survey Reveals State
W * a w I
la it ,
11 is i
u is
ii is
Linwood M B
CraatvooS Bapi
Zion Lutheran
age/' Gordon Hanson, director of the game division of the Okla-
homa fish and game commission, said Friday,
was basing hie- report on* ——--:-------——
rains in the northwest part of the
state did little if any damage to the
3.500 pheasants distributed in that
area by the fish and game commis-
sion. However, had
during the spring nesting season
would have been heavy damage
counter
, . . . . . Hne
36. former Japanese. Davis cup sparked by superlative end Burr Bald-
I
SAY, HCRe'5 SOMCTMIN' I PKXCO
UP. ROOeR XXI OROPPgO IT DOWN
TH8 TRAM. . FOUND IT ABOUT TWO
MILES SACK . OCT YOUR .•
NANC IN IT. , - r—7
M>(» anO Mi.m*
Strlkrn
Demon*
tuper Stoops
Bic Four
Mtns Pin*
j uary 1.
f % -
— ItI
J i;iL
h
i^ z . f
j •
.1
11 14 . Van*
11 1«
It 13
10 IT .
• II
■ u
S A
13 II
13 1»
10 13 ,
Printinc * G ;
11 13
13 14
13 II
10 IT
• it
313 Bar
8altr * Luray
Ro««»r* TsalCar
Irwin
Paramrust Pic
Plainer Plumb
Youth Cantar
Bdcamare Chnat
Flr»t Chrt«t
YMCA
with the winner probably needing
three touchdowns. The Bruins have
steamrollered five opponents. 161
points to -T9. The Gaels, winning four
and losing only to California, have
outscored the opposition. 158 to 54.
Last-minute quotations listed
Bruins 13-point favorites.
!: Former Irish Back
To Start for Yanks |
BOSTON. Nov. 1 .—(£»>— Boley Dan-
cewics of Lynn, last years quarter-
back at Notre Dame, will start at that
post for the Boston Yanks against the
F*i*M SO SORRY ^CQMK
ON NOW. w*ID eeiTER
MfAO DOWN.__
/?
u
MBM
_________—___ *
the office of Commissioner A. B.
IF I L
■ il
I Hogan might see action in KU’s. last |
two ball games.
Hogan suffered s
the Denver game.
I MH
i ' I
I I'W1
Harpman Meet
Next major event, on the local bowl-
ing caleyi^Ar is the fifth annua) Harp-
pnar. Round Robin singles tournament. !
Ian sffMr which has gained immense
because it is conducted on
competitive basis which retJ
24 qualifiers to engage
in individual matches
Peterson point system. ;
,, the meet, to be rolled
at Brantleys November 9-10 and 16-
ASOUT TWO CR TWRCe Mice*
8ACK ...THC WAYVOUCOMC
_ up, i s poee.
Giona Trip* Scanlon
PHILADELPHIA. Nov. L—uP»—Ed- ,
die Giosa. Philadelphia welterweight. .
took.a unanimous decision over Pat'
Scanlon. New York, in the eight-
round windup Thursday night;
the list by Toledo of the American —
sociation is Pete Gray, the one-armed
-
Attendants described Veeck s health
as good and were confident no com-
i would result from
amputation.
ESI
E -
A doubleheader main event high-
lights the Friday night professional
wrestling card In Stockyards coliseum
with two supporting bouts to supple-
ment the card.
Angelo Sa void!. Chicago, meets Le-
Roy McGulrk, Tulsa, and Danny Mc-
Shaln. Hollywood, squares off against
Billy Rabum. Atlanta, in the double
main event with each bout slated for
two-out-of-three falls
Dick Trout. Carbondale. Hl., faces
Jackie Nichols. Tacoma. Wash . in a
one-fall 45-minute preliminary, and
Roland Meeker. Shreveport, take* on
Frankie Hill Murdock. Waxahatchie, '
Texas, in a 30-minute curtatn-raieer. !■
99 ' !
ON A FAMOUS JAMES
' ' ; ‘
For quick, portonal tramportotion lo you* favorito football pamos . . in or
out of town .. rid* a Jamoi Lightwoight motorcyclol A champion runner
in rich maroon-and-blu* with smart, low linoil Elusiv* as o rabbit
traffic jams . . rides smooth as a top, gives 120-miles-per-gallae
and stops, surely and safely, with big, two-wheel, automobife
type brakesl Now with standard luggage carrier
and streamlined tool box
I'-.
s>
t to Texas, while Rice
steps out of league play to entertain
Texas Tech.
Powerful UCLA, unbeaten leader
of the Pacific Coast conference, also .
drops put of its title race momentar-
ily to meet St Mary's at Los Angeles
Friday night. But Saturday will find
Oregon at Southern California to bat-
tle for second place. Stanford at Ore-
gon state and Washington state at
I
III
11
Browns pack ’em in at the gate during
the war years. F™---- l ‘_ ’
at the beginning of last season, but
finally came to terms with Toledo In
mid-year.
Major league teams selected player*
must pay the waiver price of the vari-
ous league classifications: g 10.000 for
players from class AAA. 87,500 from
AA. 86.000 from A. 84.000 from B,
83.500 from C and 82,000 from D.
■ FHhtr Motor
•'Borno* Btavart
31 John A Brown
7B D Wolf*
>»er R»flmn«
nnie * ' Aorvle
5
,9
Oklahoma City has a couple of Frank Buck hunters for they bring ’em back alive. A. L. Liv-
indston. left, of .1381 NW 25. and Jack Pugh of 1313 Petroleum Bldg., give a local version—the
old|s*lt treatment—of how they caught a live pheasant on a recent hunt in South Dakota. Liv-
ingston and Pugh winged the bird and ran it down. It was still very lively when they arrived
in ’ South Dak,
WusiwJr | ||
I wh»« »f I Ml
T..« I (
M*K
Veeck to Have
j Leg Amputated
Oalne* Ptourtome IS 11 Mullin* Food Mkt 14 13
Mld-Wnt equip " --------- *— — ----
Kell** Kleaner*
Auto Sup
Jenlu
A tmpoefud
from
gMgload
The current quail census. Hanson
* ! pointed out. is a continuation of work
the rains come
i ftaere
i. “I’m
positive." Hanson said, "that the dam-
age wasn't appreciable.”
A consignment of 24,000 fish was
placed this week in Veterans lake at
Sulphur by the state department. The
fish came from the state hatchery at
■*\ i and consisted of bream,
crappie and channel cat. The Sulphur
lake has been one of the best fishing
spots in the state during the past two
or three years Sulphur sportsmen
asked that it be restocked.
Jess Brooks of 3616 NW 19 believes
that he should be awarded a medal of
some sort. . . . Brooks was fishing in
Lake Carl Blackwell for crappie with
a light cane pole. ... He got a bite
i which at first felt like a small fish.
___ w . . . Then came a lurch and he flg-
Thia good news is in spite of the ured he had a whale. . . . The battle
\ icious-punching .Tony Pellone of
New York faces the most important
assignment of his career when he takes
oh Canada's welterweight champion,
A high-scoring battle is expected. Johnny Greco (above), in a scheduled
ten-rounder at Madison Square Gar-
den tonight.
Joltin’ Johnny is a terrific slugger
and an outstanding box-office ace.
While he hasn't won all of his starts,
he has either kayoed or floored most
of his opponents.
Pellone is plenty fast—both afoot
and with his punches, which are able.
| His zipping left hook and damaging
right uppercut. plu$ speed, have car-
ried him to the front rank of the
welterweight class. To command con-
sideration as a title contender at this'
time, however, he must wrap up the
Canadian champ tonight.
Enjoy the excitement, blow-by-
blow, on Gillette’s Cavalcade of Sports
over American Broadcasting Co. and I
KTOK (1400 on your dial),at 9 p.'m.
And remember
men . . . LOOK
sharp! FEEL
sharp! BE sharp!
Vse Gillette Blue
Blades with the
sharpest edges
ever honed! |
0>*rrt**t. I***. *r O»U«***
iindh Nebraska, tied with
for the lead in the Big
who [ Six, collide at Lincoln.
Harvard [ state going to
land Cornell. Other Ivy league battles 1 ‘ '
.. ... . ..... _~Ji and
to Columbia, while Harvard entertains conference_dntea. the Sooner*
a Rutgers eleven that has been both
j hot and cold.
| Georgia pits its 5-0 reedrd against !
I an invading Alabama team. _
once in six starts, in the Southeastern shares the lead with Rice after the
conference, where Vanderbilt will be letter's upset over Texas These send
at Au*>urn An(l Mississippi at
Louisi- Arkansas to Texas A<VM and South-
ana State for other imjx>rtant title ern Methodist t~ "*---- —
tcaia. } , i
after its third
v!r,,ry «..n"
which has a win. a loss •
•-120 points to his credit
followed by Hugh Rogers 17 snd Jin>-^
my Wooten 16. This race ■ pays 8 .
points to each winner. ' ' . . .
---- ;
jc • I
Greco Is Favored f
To Defeat Pellone
, r I • •' • • - J '
NEW YORK. Nov. 1.— /P*—Boxing
returns to . Madikbn Square Garde*
’Friday n.ant- with Montreal’s Johnny
Greco a h^avy favorite to whip Nev 1
York’a Tony Pellone qver tlfe 10-roun4
ing Texas ChrtMian and the Jayhawks
entertaining Oklahoma A8cM.
I Two games are on tap in the South- j
beaten : west conference, where Texas AAM
<:
_ IS
Piumbtos -13 _ .
— ;i» 13* i
U4 13 Jehi
PCTUbLEVM LKACCB
L*. Tsaad:
•i RfCCinc
ri
13 14
ll 1«
h
i
14 14
• i»
I
: Il
u ■
I'&
4Unlv. P. Rocki
• lUnlv Fl Sky R
• Trinity Bapt
• • Capitol Pr**k*
Baseball Draft
• • . If
CINCINNATI. Nov. 1. — UP) —
Major league baseball's talent
experts assemble here Friday in : V
At-- X a. a » A
A ;
F-A .-sj
the meet, which offers
pn» snd championship
the winner,, already is so
the 9 30 p m qualifying
f.lird and positions in the
rounds are being requested
t a ra< which indicates a record
field wifi ;>artlcipate- Entry tees may
M paid'4 at Brantley s any time prior
to clow nippMneM Sunday night
Originated by Sol Harpman. one
St Oklahoma City • moet ardent
bowling NntbuMaM*. -the tournament
hk» been a favorite since >ta 1942 in-
BWrural br< Aii*e prises are scaled so
low finishers are in?)the money
and the hulk of the prise: fund la not
sarvnarked fdr the leader*
1ft . afldt'ton to Willett, former
ih»mpi<h« who will be qn hand are
. m Drisirtl! 1944 winner, and Rudy
1 Cesaenger of ei Reno, who copped
1 be 1943 d|rx*n Since the tournament
11-limits^-to Oklahoma City and KI
Reno krglrfk. the .first champipn.
WRq will not participate be-
|.n. close Not ember 3 and Earl Brid-
•irell tournament manager, announced
that qualifying round squad positions
will be asa^bed in the order in which
• the 87.5* entry fee la received.
At conclusion of the four-game
q -4lifying firing, at 5 30, 7.30 and
>30 p « Noveipber 9. the 23 high
f Willett will be bracketed for
frtwjnds. which begin the f*
; internal. iq
8 850 ea»i.
j trophy- t*
keen Lh|t 1
| aguaci i<
yreeedirA:
•< 1 2
85^000 to See
St. Mary^s-UCLA
Battle tonight
LOB ANGELES. Nov. 1—UP>—A
busy session for the scorekeeper looms
Friday night as undefeated, untied
UCLA and free-wheeling St. Mary’s
hook up before an expected 85.000 in
. Memorial coliseum in a grid battle
,n dominated by revenge and conflicting
all-American aspirations.
The Gaels, led by squirmin’ Herman
Wedemeysr. 1945 all-American, will
be out to avenge the 13-7 Bruin blotch
which snapped St Mary's win string
last year. The Bruins
>P>—Ryosuke Nu- with a stubborn 214-pound
opsiner. *
the country’s No. 3
1 record in an
Philadelphia Oklahoma
Tigers, who Six. cc’.’.i:
to
night. 1 j .
With Notre Dame plflying in the
east, the midwestern scene will
dominated by fpur Big Nine struggles,
any one of which could produce the
ultimate conference champion. North*
ker in the B" ratings Tenciotnta
go to the winnerj of this erefit each
. . 1 - .... I over Uw lead
in the "C". standings thia week with
He la clowtyi
d-OOOO k
> MCAVWN*...
WH8BI...
WHCRg /
DtO YOU J
Fiworrf \
Former Jap Net Star
Died in Burma in *45
TOKO, Nov. 1.
not. ,_______________ .
tennis star, died in Burma in July, win. and a versatile offense brewed
1945. it was reported Friday. He was i by quarterback Ernie Case,
a paymaster captain of the Japanese
army in the Burma campaign.
gauff* he »f>w resides in Amarillo.
Tulsa Reserve
17-Yard
Gain Each Try
TVLBA.. Nov. 1 — —Hurrying
Harold St4-Httnn. Tulsa 11 mi !•««*« '
reserve halfback, has had |
in two seasons with the Cards, and day or Saturday. sends Georgia Tech to Duke.
Andres and Tipton come under a base- i Veeck insisted he would be “on his
ball rule covering players who have I feet" in t. ‘.1. / .
6een shunted from the majors back to major league meetings in Los An-
the minors It stipulates such players geles in December. His foot and ankle 1
must be offered in the draft. were injured more than two years ago
i
“Happy” Chandler to select can-
didates from some 3,000 minor
league players subject to the na- : *
tional pastime s annual player-
draft.
And although that sounds like a
diamond scout's dream, there probably
won't be more than a doien selections
made.
Baseball's complicated rules and j
regulations and its elaborate farm
systems are responsible for that.
The farm figures explain it thusly:
Diamond laws are designed to pre-
vent outstanding talent from being
begun by the fish and game commis-
sion in 1939 but which was halted by
the war. * f '
Good Dmpite Drouth
‘ In taking these census." Hanson Durant
said, we try to check all refuges in
every county of the state which gives
us an idea of the trend in quail popu- ;
lation.
“Already we have gained enough in-
formation from the census being
taken by these biologists and reports
from our staff-of state game rangers,
who have given Us pre-season fore- .
casts bn quail conditions, tq predict
that the 1946 quail season in Okla- 1
homa will be better than average.
14 13
ll ts
• 1» '
UP)—Mel
13 13 ' " *
13 13
ll 13
W 14
!• 14
• i«
NEW YORK. Nov. 1.—UP'—Army and Notre Dame, looking
ahead to next week’s classic which brings the nation's two top
football powers face to face, warm up against teams with unim-
pressive records Saturday as other major elevens attempt to pro- tbeny H’l aqd Loyes Harrtir 503.
j mote a semblance of order in the various conference campaigns
I The first November weekend of 19464----;------------
finds only half a dozen major teams
still i^ the all-victorious class and
qot a single conference which can . Ma,e
point to any one outfit as making a
runaway of the title race.
Pennsylvania. Georgia. . UCLA and
Harvard, which with Army and Notre
Dkme make up the select circle of
unbeaten and untied teams, all face
opponents capable of sending them to
join ihe victims of last week's major
upsets—Tennessee1, Texas and North
category, but occasionally a prospect
or two slips through.
That's why such diamond students .
as Manager Mel Ott of the New York
Giants snd the heads of nearly every
farm system In the American and I
National leagues are on hand for Fri- .
day’s gathering. .
Ott. incidentally, will have first pick ■
of the 3,000 and some prospects be-
cause his club finished last in the'
senior loop last season. Next selection
falls to the American loops last-fin-
isher. Philadelphia, then the Nation-
al's seventh placers and the Ameri-
can's and so on up the ladder.
Among the prize packages expected
hidden in the minor leagues for pro- i
tracked periods and stipulate that'
players must be advanced according . g|
to experience or offered up in the ■
annual draft. ■
| J
I
It■*£
Oklahoma Qty-Taira i _____
ArmyJ Notre Dame Stagte
‘Breathers’—They Hope
All Unbeaten Elevens in Action
As Big Game Next Week Is Eyed
prolonged drouth of last summer For I
example Temple found eight coveys
of blrdg on one-quarter section of land :
in Adafr county. That's a record of [
some sort.
“In the northwest, especially
Woodward county our men have found
more quail than were present last
year. The census in those northwest-
ern ares* show that the section has
plenty of birds, an abundance of food
and excellent cover.”
Seven reunites Cheeked
Jones has completed a check of
birds in Oklahoma. Cleveland. Gar-
vin. McClain'. Love. Carter and Mur-
’ ray countie*. His report to Hanson
showed the count to be better than
average That adds up to good shoot-
ing come the opening of the season
The overall pidture in Oklahoma.
Hanson said, shows that there was a
good quail hatch last spring, well
above average. There was no serious
damage to the quail crop last spring
in any locality except the extreme
, eastern part of the state where the
university's raina in Mav did some damage.
________•— *—-i - ....
on the bail only 17 times * a
— 3 t-hR season—but hi^ pours and found that in every
7-yard average gstn pet the birds drowned but in their first
nesting attempts had re-nested.
Hannon said he felt that recent
John Rauch, star quarterback
for Georgia’s undefeated foot-
ball team, dons a specially de-
signed mask he will wear
against Alabama in Athens
Saturday to protect a frac-
tured cheek bone recently suf-
fered in scrimmage. (Wire-
photo.)
Hodges Nearing .ix
Tiny Car Crown
As the »eaaon wanes. Fumblin' Red*
Hodges snd Marcel St Cricq aro‘
pouring on tjhe coal to increase tb*W
respective legds in the two moat un-i
ports nt midget title battles at Taft
stadium xpeddway.
By virtue of winning his third
main-event of the season. Hodges has
now amassed a total of 917 point*
toward the 1946 Oklahoma champion-
ship Hodge<’ closest pursuers and
their respective points are Bud Cam- ..
den 640; St/ Cricq 589. Speedy Ma-
Meanwhile' St. Cncq has a good
lead in the helmet dash ratings With
I 21 pomii to his credit, th< Flying
Virginia at Richmond and Michigan Frenchman is safe unless some driver
state at Kentucky Saturday, with comes through with two or mory dash
Wake Forest at Chattanooga Friday vjetpries in the. final four weeks of
^night J the. year s tiny car campaign - 8«.
with Note* name nlavina in the (;rtcq'a closest; rivals are itfarns wtth
** 14 points and Hodges wjt^ 10. _■
However, the clask B ahd C strug-
gles are close Ernie Booth has a
narrow two-potftt lead over Ted Par-
Ten '
24 Hour Auto Scrvic*
8-4241
WRECKER SERVICE
All Typgt Body Work
Seat Covert—Upholstery
SHILLINGS
AUTO CLINIC—2641 N.W. 10
■ i.'......... ■■ i i
was on and Brooks won. ... . He
landed a 8-pound bass.
Il's Good—And Cosily
Oklahoma hunters are having good
success in the pheasant fields at
:ota. but they're finding that
the birds are quite expensive. Cart
Tlcer of Woodward kept an accurate
expense account of his trip and learned
: that each pheasant coat him 88.26.
It was even higher for George
Marks, city restaurant owner Marks
and two city policemen. Newt Bums
and Bob Ewing, have returned from a
trip to Mitchell. S D. Each got the
limit of 25 birds and Marks figured
that each pheasant cost him 810
"But,’’ he allowed, “the trip waa
worth R."
The high costa are due to exorbi-
tant living expenses in the state where
both room and board are definitely in
the inflation bracket. The out-of-state
license la the initial outlay and Its
820. Rooms coat a minimum of 85 per
night per person. Then there’s the
added coat of having the birds picked,
iced and shipped home.
On one huht Marks. Burna and
Ewing jumped an elk. Marks admit-
ted they were tempted, especially
with Bums a crack shot, but voted no
when it dawned that it was a closed
season on elk.
park.
In shaking up the backfield of the
Boston National football league club
Coach Herb Kopf also intends to start
Gary Famiglletti, erstiwhlle Boston
university star, at fullback, and Mike
Micka and Babe Dimancheff at the
halfback posts.
Hawkins Is Victor
HIGHLAND PARK. N. J.. Nov. !.—
Hawkins. 158. New York,
outpointed Juan Serrano. 167, Ha-
vana. in th* featured eight-round box-
in* bout st Masonic hall Thursday
night. *
Australian Net
Stars Suffer Defeats
BYDNEt. Australia. Nov i.—14*)-
Jack Bromwich. Geoff : Brown and
Adrian Qu;»t, three of Australia's top
tenni* ill were ben ten Thursday'
in an interstate match between Vic-
toris and South Wales.
Bromwich went down before Lionel
Brodie. 6-4... 1-6. 11-9 Brown tumbled
before Cdiin Long 6-3. 6-8 6-4. Quist
lost tojiy.nnv Pails. 6-1. 6-3.
in City Bowling
I ' VFTOW* LKAQD8 __
ll 13 | —-- “ * * -- --
I) 13
10 14
10 14
• IS
3 1?
T»»m: I_ 1 W
Fatterin Weld Co is
Acme Ldcv a Ct 14 10 Acme
1 Coot Supply Co 13 11, Fertile Pump Co 10 14
Fr*net»e« Bros “ * —
to attract the attention of the early
---------- ------ . idrafters are: Augie Bergamo, a left-
The 1946 quail season in Oklahoma “will be better than aver- t handed hitting outfielder from the
Columbus farm of the St. Louis Car-
dinals; Ernie Andres, a former In-
diana university satellite who started
out the past season with the Boston
Red Sox and ended up with Louisville,
and Eric Tipton. a hard-clouting out-
lie Ider from St. Paul who formerly
cavorted in the outfield for the Cin-
cinnati Reds.
Bergamo la Available
Standings
11(311*1 I.SAOI'K
j n T p • aucpi*
1 * Rr>nd fl** m*
.J * 0*1* Cltv Tim**
14 10 Fea
11 11 P»clfir Fin*iM»
13 13 Rcu.nddld *
CITY KAGTR
W L Team*
14 » 5
i IT 10 Lecite Ach i
14 11 AcMirlaiFa Sale*
14 ll Browniap Chip*
14 11 Dark* fund*
15 i: Morriw.* Ft:.. ;...
ROWtV • CITY LF4GCY
‘ t ' l* n Loarll* !ox
rd IT Strwu :
14 UDurt • Food*
, 14 13 Kerr-MrCte*
14113 Se» en-Vp
| COWMYRC IAI. LRAr.VC
3 Hr/ociatea
11 1 ORO
*’ 7 In’ Bute
4 ctue» Ser
WAX CRICK l EAGt'E
■*-' IB * Str. . her Metal 11 14
I» * Cato OU
17 10 Hotrue-Stpne
14 11 CXI Fll'er.
11 14 Rotten Optom
11 13 Okl* o«i Cont
(BICAh lEAGt'K
3B 7 Ff*rv • Tire
!• » Okl* F*per
14 H-WUmm) R Oo
14 ir erme P’umMnd
14 ll Libert* F1*n
• Ow 14 ll Skin in Mr-ai
Motor 14 IVCato OR
15 13 PhltHok • SB '
Tarheels io Tennessee
North Carolina, unbeaten but tied
, , once, goes to Tennessee, the south-
CLEVELAND. Nov. 1.— (UP)—Pres- eastern leader which was embarrassed
ident Bill Veeck of the Cleveland In- last week by another southern con-
— diana prepared to have his right leg fere nee club. Wake Forest. IA second
Bergamo, Who hit better than .300 amputated below the knee either Fri- i interconference struggle in the south
Elsewhere in the south it will be „
at' George Washington. California
western, with a season's record of four
wins and a lie; goes after its third
conference
Ohio state,
and:a tie in league play?
Action in the Soslhwmt
Illinois goes to loWa, with each
owning just one conference defeat, r
while Michigan! and Wisconsin, both
still in the running, visit Minnesota
and Purdue, respectively, Indiana will
entertain Pittsburgh in a nop-con-
ference go. / g
Missouri and ; Nebraska.
TC
Hanson
the information gained*.!
census being made in tne
biologists in his department, Lawrence
Temple and Glenn Jones.
The Oklahoma quail season
open November 20 and close
I 8 h
-5 ■
Hr » Jcnt-nted six
* sCcrej; }j»t about
be « had the oall
Stratton carried once against Wich-
itK uniy*tr6irv and once against Drake
Wd wdrYd hnth nines on 48 and 71-
ygrd tou^jiddwn jaunt* In the game
M»in>t;the Kansas Jayhawks he car-
ried ball five times and tallied
ttaree t6u< t n:•« n>
i He
UP a
»a •rai-.P!wb*r4 ii
' h i '•'
1 • ♦
. fr> !
E
touchdown*, fof
every third time
; Kansas Quarterback
To Return Next Week
LAWRENCE. Kan . Nov.' 1,— <UP)
—Bill Red " Hogan. }KU's fine quar-
terback and passer, was out of his
caw Friday and expected to return to :
I practice next week. It was believed
F ” I
fractured leg
must be offered in the draft. i ; ■;
Another top attraction placed on. while he served at Bougainville with
the list by Toledo of the American as- th* Cleve-
land clinic last week w'ith a recur-
Smrv
'lumti
13 11 SavmorOtlCo
YOVNC MKN'S CRURCW BOWUNG LEAGUR
14 4iUnl*. P RoekMs < • _
'! ! }? Chicago Cardinals Sunday at Fenway
___ ___ . p vrnmNV bmp* w —■—
CrMtofxl Bap Jr • •'CaiMtol Fr*»b» S 13
MXWU mt'RCH ROWLING LKAGVK
16
t»
13
13
* P*nn A»* Christ 10 71
4 Ct**t*oo4 Bap • 13
5 Univ Fl Ch*i»t 4 IS
• Tempi* Brctherhd I !•
BREAKFAST CLUB LEAGUE
14 11 Medley In* S«rv
14 11 Ladd4tBayR*m(
15 13 OrandPAPapCo.
IS 13 Glidewell rior
BARNEY UTIWABT LEAGUE
17 )0:Termlt**
1* ll'Bawduater*
. IS 13 Knotholm*
BBANTLEY'S MIXED LEAGUE
1* B Alter Oop*
IS • Sooner* (
14 10-Shoot I n« BMSS
13 11 Ea<laa
13 11------------
13 111
Carolina State
Penn Take* on Princeion
While Army tangles at West Point
with a West Virfglnia team that lost
to Pitt and Temple but won its other
four starts. Notre Dame will move Into
Baltimore to teat its guns against a
Navy crew that has suffered four
straight setbacks sinice squeezing past
Villanova in its onetner. *
I Pennsylvania. t'___ ‘
I team, risks it* perfect
Ivy league
I against the Princeton Tigers, who Si*- collide at Lincoln, with Iowa
I dropped close decisions to Harvard ' state going to KapsAs state to see
and Cornell. Other Ivy league battles which occupies the conference cellar
! send Dartmout h to Yale and Cornell Oklahoma and Kansas have non-
route.
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.
Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 57, No. 237, Ed. 2 Friday, November 1, 1946, newspaper, November 1, 1946; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1766045/m1/17/: accessed May 23, 2022), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.