Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 59, No. 224, Ed. 3 Saturday, October 16, 1948 Page: 4 of 4
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.
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THE NAME CHET tWQH C«0«
I
OU Meets K-State
Cowboys on Coaat
Classen
Chiefs to Risk Perfect
Aggies Picked
In Frisco Tilt
I
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L
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i
O'
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V
Pntm
John Smethers rolled a *44 eerie*
r
F. left
r
IB
GET OUT!
PlaaiT.
I
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■ I
145
Mr
>
«
*
; *iS
r «'"
....1
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tn th* national
sating Texas 2Q
the ball under
r share of the
I .
Record at Taft Tonight ToBeatDons
Four Prep Elevens
Still in Running
T44€ STADIUM
VMS 3AMMEP
WITH FANS
T
Youngstown Expected
To Toss a Few Aerials
Midgets Expect
Fast Field Here
t
TEAMS
KAVtP
SWILL
SAME
COMB TO
FAFA
Horn Is Buried
PATKR8ON. M. J, Oct. IS—UP)—
Ted Horn, three times national auto
312 NW Rto - Mmm >44*1
Areas* *• rerore sss* af Ota Crews ISsres
THE CLASSED
KIPS LIT UP
LIKE PfM-SALL
MACHINE*
AFTER TM»
GAME
t
a
PUT I WAS
, 9UM«P OVT
WUT« 12
TOPl^LX
I
•
I
INTERSECTIONAL SANE!
$m th* UndafMtad
0. c. u.
CHIEFS
PeL
.73*
.007
.007
.000
??*-.Ml
r * 3
nay. Cal Arant and Pappy Steele.
Alonso Roop turned in the top
score in the Civic league at Jenks
•71 aeries on throe games of IM.
Cameron Makes It
Four Straight Wins
LAWTON. Oct. 10 UP) ■omenne
finally crowed the Cameron Aggtes*
goal Uno-hut to didn’t do any good.
McNeeee Junior college of Lake
Charts*. La, Beared 13 potato an the
Aggtes here Friday night, but Cam-
eron woo 33-13.
Unbeaten and untied. Cameron had
piled up 05 potato to nothing tn throe
prsvtoua games with Southwestern
Tech. Connors A&M and IQuethwii
Oklahoma JC.
Mixes Up
Grid Race
The Lineups For
OCU, Youngstown
YOVNOSTOWN
is—Tbsreiia. LMtaeei
A 45 YARD eu»l SV
SREMCBR ON CLAS6EN
CAVg TH® FAMS A THRILL
CO-OTTAIAI SILL SMKEL OF CIMtEAL ran
MMBMOB AROUND LUCE A FANTV
EWJOTgja ROOSTER watkhihs OUT
m mis soys
IM A LOT OF PLAYS. HE'S WITH
CLASSEN AHO MCS SOOP
I
1 I
EIGHT—SATURDAY, OCTOBP It IMS OKLAHOMA QTY TIMES _ — . .j n i
Cartoon Highlights of Classen’s Stunning 13 to 9 Upset of Central at Taft Stadium Here Friday Night .... By KenColgcm
■ |l| ■ || Nil MBL- ~ ra X. ~ fiCT. tovMd? |:
Out jof
Financial
Difficulty
Co, tn the Jenks Industrial loop.
Thurman Medley holds top spot with
Gmethers included a couple of 137
games in his series, while Frank Man-
ley. bowling for Kings Van. notched a
each ^^eTM2n2n«?Utani«Mmd right tackle, an
Thurman Medley scored a 221.
Falstaff. which is in eighth place.
Babe Didrikson Zahariaa grabbed the highest team count with
, - 1
Rogers, Galbraith
To Tangle Sunday
Fourth round of the Inter-Club golf
tournament will be held Sunday at the
Oklahoma City Golf and Country
club. Play will begin at 11:30 a. m.
iww
IClUCS OF BOTH SCHOOLS PUT ON A SWELL -hV
SHOW SCTWEffAl HALVES,FURMM4O A> CONST,
[a CAROIHAL AMP A PIPE of psacs Rtf**
Yow Team First
In Progressive
Winning three straight from Andyl^f
Anderson. Yow Brakes stayed in flratf
at Jenks. The Yows now own a four-
game lead over the second place
Thurman Medley quintet.
Florence Coleman, a member of the
Medley five, captured aeries laurels
when she leveled a IM, on games of
IM, IM and IM.
Ivy Robinson picked up the 3-1-10
Bowling in a match game at Brant-
imv'ji John Snctiisrs tura^d in on® of
the top aeries to be recorded on total
lanes this year when he leveled 733
Plta»ethers notched his salty series on
games of 230. 297 and 2M. He was
bowling with Bd Jenkins. Ralph Gib-
son. Dick Stevens and Reale Boyd.
league play at
_______n State, RgureA
a stout'contender in pre-season rate
Ings.
The wide open Southwest race Rett
interesting with Southern Methodistn
till 1st* playing at Rice and Texas eN-
tertainlng Arkansas at Austin.
University of Oklahoma begins de-
fense of Ito Big Seven co-cham pion-
ship against Arkansas State at Mor-
man The kickoff win be at 2:30 p. m.
Oklahoma moved t
ratings last week by
to 14 and to a strong favorite. Kansag
State snapped a M-game toeing streaM
with a 37 to 0 win over Arkansas State
last week.
Youngstown's pass-mindodness has been eoi
far to the Ohio team, intercepted peaces accott
[ two of Muhlenberg's scores in ths 10-0 game,
both of John Carroll's talHse aa Youngstown t_
’ dectoton last week.
Chiefs Will Have MraS Practice
Coach Orville Tuttle of OCU was to bold a skull prac-
tice Saturday afternoon, and coach Dike Beebe of Youngs-
town indicated that be would send bis squad through a
Midget racing promoters Saturday
premised speedway fans the "beet be-
tween-moato Sunday afternoon racing
in history hero,” m they lined up an
all-star cast for the 2:20 p. NR. mN-
neo card of eight events.
Promoters O. D. and Ray Lavely
said the room would bo over by 4.M
p. sL allowing ths tana to reach home
in plenty of time ter dinner. Oatse
wiU open at 1 p m. Time trials are
scheduled at 1:11 p. Admission
to II to |3A0.
Hearty 30 drivers will be here for
the AAA program. capped by a 23-
lap October sweepstakes open to the
12 fastest cars.
Three fast racing teams are entered.
Bum Barton and Jud Larson tn the
John Zink Offys of Tutoa: Cecil Sent
end J. D. Parks in the Mm Bynum
CLASSEN DREW FIRST
®LOOO WITH A FASS
INTO EMO ZONE Il4
THE FIRST HALF
den and Guy McHenry in the Paul
Gibson Offy stable of Wichita. Cecil
Oreen win drive the rapid Walter No.
10 but no driver has been announced
for the Oklahoma City Brothen
No 11. . . _ ,___
Green wen the last night feature
Ttoseday. after Larson and Tex West
had been in front on earlier laps.
Again, the field to expected to te an
aO-Offy affair, with Barton. Parte
and Camden aU struggling for city
■nA state ebamptonkbipB which will be
decided In the waning weeks of the
against Youngstown at Taft ttadium.
Potter is from Oklahoma Citg.
,ar 131H. scered a flse-eesmd
SSStt Friday nlgM «to
■smns, 132%. Tijuana. Mstane
! Northwestern,
Michigan Top
Grid Program j
NEW YORK. Oct. IB—(*>-<
This is “or else** day for ehaxnZ
pions and would-be champion®
of the major collete foe""'
conferences.
The big bays tn pracUeany
1 league run up against buUtsc
own sias. To keep title hopes
m' the
except Norman and Shawnee,
still must play Classen.
Capitol Hill and Shawnee
Captol HiU still must plaj
and Norman. Classen has
Enid, and Shawnee in the offing.
Prospects for a two or three-way
tie are bright. Any one of the four
lender* that captures its remaining
ssmea will share in the loop lead. If
three teams tie. the winner will be de- limbering-up drill,
tarmtaed by lot ugder rules of the Ok-
labmns Highschool Athletic associa-
tion. In event of a two-way tie, the
team that beat the other leader when
the two met gets the crown.
Central missed six of seven scoring
chances Friday night to drop from
the top spot in 3A. This waa no acci-
dent. ’
Coach Jim Conger sent a six-man
line defense against the Cardinal T
formation. That sounds simple enough
b<)t it wasn't. Conger had hta Comet
forward wall looping first one way and
then the other. Central blocking as-
signments were confused and frequent-
ly Classen linemen stopped Central
baeks before they could pase the line
of scrimmage. That was the deciding
factor in the game.
' Guards Chet Bynum aM Joha
gfeawver were the drfnwtve terms
fer. the wii
•wen was
tinned a* a wingbaok spot last season as a sophomore, has
» ceiensrve ncrv_ been shifted to wingback for the gaase, and will alternate
End Charles Mag- with Ed Dooley from^Ctamen in the posttton.^to abeence of
g standout.
Failure of the Central attack to
knock down the flanks of Classen's
overshifted six-man line kept the
ranging runs of Coleman "Buck" Mc-
Phail. Central fullback, bottled up.
Forced to run inside. Central jurt
couldn't move Bynum and Bhawver.
White Classen waa upeetttaf Cen-
tral. El Reno trimmed the Putnam
City Pirates. 24-0.
3e-«; Lawton humbled Bhawnee. 32-4.
Holdenvilte outlasted Dunean. 34-20;
Wewoka wiacked Ada. 24-20; Bominote
stopped Henryetta. 31-7; Tulsa Web-
Star and Tulsa Central played a seore-
Irea tie; Bartlesville tied Sapulpa.
13-13. Band Springs downed
ka. 14-0: Cushing mt down Rmca
City, 13-0. and Perry edged Pairview.
Florida Angler Wins
Striped Bass Derby
MARTHA'S VINBTARD. Mass,
OsL 14-^-Urwrmoe Ztetary of SL
Petersburg Wa rated aa ttw winner -
Batin rtay of the annual Martha's and waa “through with basebaB for
Vineyard striped base derby.
A 37-pound. 10-ounce fish won him
the honor and a SUM trailer from
2.B4B competing angler* rgprsemttng
31 states and three foreign countries.
HOLLYWOOD. Oct IB—<XP>—Santa
Clara won a football game from U>y-
stadium Friday night but policemen
broke out Just before the game ended.
Off K All the players on both squads be-
came involved at some time tn the
five-minute brawl. It started when
Loyola's Frank Flynn and Banta
Clara's Gene Yore got tote a arrest-
ling match directly in front of the
Santa Clara bench.
-< Ben Moran and Jim Buckley ran
out. apparently intending to separate
the first two. but Loyola's Jim Helf-
rich evidently thought they had other
Ideas so he ran to Flynn's aid. Then
the shindig was really on.
Players from both teams on the
field and from both benches mixed It
up. The crowd of 10,000 could count
at least 1# separate fights going on
at once.
Ths police came running, however,
and broke it up quickly. Banta Clara
then ran one more play and the game
enoea.
I 4 *UV NAMBP
EOMWUKE ANPA SCO
fOUMDBR MAMED MILLER
COuLPifT TRlfrHTEN THE
CLASSEN SOYS
Victory, It’s wsndgrfsl! And ns ane should know at irNl as thte
weir of Classen Comets who scored the touchdown* that upaet
* the top-rated Central Cardinals. 13-9. at Taft stadium Friday
night. Charles Magnuson, (left) caught a 24-yard psm* from
Tommy Murphy for the first Comet tally and Don Wright,
(right), sprinted 13 yards for the clincher in the thi~d frame.
Police Eni.FUk
Between Loyola
And Santa Clara
Coaching aid Ralph Schilling, who saw Youngstown
outscore Canlsius. 33-21. reported that. '.This la Ihs tag*
hustling club I've seen all season, TheyYe fast and ag-
gressive. and run off a tricky punt formation with a wing-
back—a very versatile attack.** The Chiefs found that
out last season as the Penguins, down 7-4 for MVi min-
utes. came alive to score two quick tallies.
Big John Novitsky, senior star from Klisabeth. N. J,
who wiU be an Oklahoma City rteident upon graduation,
has been named game captain for the Chiefs. The 343-
pound tackle might respond with ons of hl* finest games.
The Chiefs are looking for their seventh consecutive
victory, having lost last to Youngstown last year in the
Ohio city, and on the friendly turf of Taft stadium have
test only one home game in three years.
: Fans Win Be Watching Wada
Youngstown has a light hne that belies its ereight tn
bruising strength with down-the-middte plays and the
aerial attack to break up the defense.
Jack Anderson, nimble-footed tailback who was sta-
tioned at a wingback spot test season as a sophomore, has
been shifted to wingback for the game, and wiU alternate
two hurt”wing*. Dick Noble and Lwroy Neber. "
Ths fellow most eyes wiU be on will be versatile Jim
Wade, who has counted four touchdowns this season.
Admission is 41.50 general admission. *3 and *230 for
reserved seats, and 71 cents lor highschool students.
By LAYMONO CBUMF
Youngstown’s aggressive Penguins, flown in
from Ohio, will try to snap Oklahoma City Uni-
versity's perfect football record at 8:15 p. m. Sat-
urday before an expected 12,000 fans at Taft
«tadh>m
The Chief*, beaten only once at home in three seasons,
are after their fourth straight win of the 1MI campaign,
having humbled North Dakota, North Texas State and
Hardin white Youngstown roitege was besting Canlsius
and bowing to Muhlenberg and John CarrolL
Glbeen WM De the Poesing
An aerial onslaught 1* promised by the Penguins, with
Bobby Olboon doing th* pitching. Gibson completed only
one toss in 13 tries against the Chiefs at Youngstown las*
autumn, but that was on* too many—resulting in a 11-18
victory for the Penguins on the 21-yard touchdown throw
tn the final period. .
Jim Wade and Bd Towheed" Backry wiU do the
passing for ths Chiefs, who to date have been hesitant to
risk the baU in the air. Only 31 times have psssss been
throem, with eight completed.
costly thus
Minting for
, and for
toot a 13-4
or the 1M7 e——k
Phoenix Rider Wins _ ____
MEW YORK, ogt W-tAV-Mm «ctag chwnMon, WM burtod VMiy
Hurerk Phoenix. Aria, “ --
S? egTvHoeo^s at the
A. Brown Co., quintet, two g^mas Jf
-
for second place by winning three
straight from Amerado Petroleum Co.
Charlie Byrd, bowling tor Ledbet-
tar Insurance, notched a *03 series, to
More the only 600 series of the match
.Barney Stewart took a one-game
nmrgin in the American teagM at
jenks. * dropping Griffith Theatres.
2-L Capitol Steel, winning only ene
gtune from Peery's Tires, dropped to
jfeend place.
At Capitol Hill, the General Office
five hold* a three-game lead Is the six-memth campaign.
OpAK A loop, with 14 wins and few
defeats. But Ives tamed tn the top
sBigte game tally & the teat round
with A 321. T
Sala Wins Bout But
Fails to Floor Jones
NTW YORK. Oct. 1* (F> ■ l^ee Sate
MuiDtod through hl* partially dosed
2ft «ye Saturday and teund htertrtag
^L^rSTSs ’kSo^imtaitau waa
.Wehtly tarnished
The young Drews. Fa, puncher was
.*±0 B bad Ume teat night kg Reuben
Jone* «<
LZZt u the BL Nlchotas arena. Bate
ttwough en tap. tart B was
* WM » fiBbto W tamckmita.
He treo Ooor
vs.
YOUNGSTOWN COLLEGE
of OAm>
A Rst«m Cswtsst. YoNitpfow" Bsst Q"
Thn Cbtofc Ust Yesr. KICK-OFF st
CImncs mmd mbH $2swd U50. Ce^Ad*. VM.
Highiehool rtwdswt* 75c At VsssMf Drag, 135 W.
Main usdil 5 p-m. w •» s*M 6:30 F-m.
LITTLE CHIEFS FREE! Boy. of 10 or younger who
CM pm> through th* •L.ttieOwf Cate'' without *»J*V*'
miffed FREE Com* on bojrt, see th* Big Chwh in setton.
TAFT STADIUM
N.W. 24H» assd May Av*wss*
‘ H game from Loy-
o* Assisted Prom poll, has an after-
4 D^for^l fUht which
Rogers sr. of the host club with Win-
ston Galbraith ot Lincoln park. CSf
his Inter-Club record Galbraith la Lin-
coln** top band.
The pairings
UJ* a w.-a a. ceaaw
H11U vs. Guitar Morrow. Woodvon pert.
ll:«4—Ralph Polmar, Meridian ve. Jim Hoeh.
Capitol nni: Wlnaton Oetosita TWrelu pert
ro X J. Utetn ar. Country eta*.
UJ1 Sar murotaw Weedaeo part vv
JMk Martin. Capitol XM: ,-hrtaa Beta.
Meridian vs. *riden Fant. Lineota part.
Roews U-. Oeuntry eluk vs. Don
TwinTuto; JiesvJMf. M«Wm vs.
■■ arrow Prttor, Counter etab vs.
ter. Capita* HiU; OUs Dunean.
re. Manry
eta part
'kaoaeUi
____OlanMorviilo sr, Ooun-
Oetan. Country «lub re. Oire
art- AMrJBan. Ospiiaa Mlli
Rita
SS’eXrtKer^tortMrKS
iffaTO country club.
batkanberry, Ltnaein pert _vs. S<
By OTIS WILK
BAN FRANCISCO, Calif., Oct.
I IB—The game of Cowpoke* and
I Caballero* between Oklahoma
I AAcM college and San Francisco
university is scheduled for a 3:30
I kickoff (Oklahoma time) Batur-
I day afternoon In yawning Kezar
* stadium.
I It finds the Pokes uniformly favored
J over the Don* of 8FU, the guesees of
1 th* «xp*rta running from 4 to 30
1 point*, a factor worrying AAM coach
■ Jim Lcokabaugb considerably.
■ Th* favoritism te based, of course.
I on Ban Francisco's unhappy experience
■ of late with Nevada and Detroit foot-
| bad teams. But the two team* mn-
■ I tinned ar* suspect* ta grid ctrctea.
II That is to say. Nevada and Detroit
| are suspected of having more than
I their share of footballteh individuals
I on their respective campuses.
The Deere May Arrive, Te*
The Dons can still be a pretty good '
■ football outfit and aa on* writer hero
I on th* bay suggested. “Ban Francisco
and Portola may both arrive at Kexar
I Saturday afternoon.**
■ Portola (Don Gaspar, that la) teg-
■ endary discoverer of the bay and
quite a boy in his day. arrives at the
stadium at,2 p. m. (Oklahoma time),
> to set of f the ringing cheers of Ban
Francisco cittoenry. When the boys
| say 8FU may arrive Saturday, they
■ mean tn a football way.
■ Oklahomans hereabouts hep* Ges-
■ par arrives with nothing more than
■ hl* retinue of queens and celebrants
■ and that SFU delays its arrival until
W it* next game. (The pageantry of the
; Mg festival continues through the first
R hour cd Saturday's program.)
Some figure the pageant will entice
I a good segment of the cltisens to
Kesar, but the best crowd estimates
| of the initiated promoter* hereabouts
■ say the festival game may now draw
I more than 12,000. "The downtown
I parade," they tell you, “wiU draw some
I 200,000 people, of which 50.000 will
| thereupon rush across the Oakland
I bridge and on to Berkeley to yell for
■ Pappy WaldorTs California Bean
| against Oregon State. Only Portola's
| descendants and transplanted Okla-
I homans in northern California will
| be at Kesar Saturday "
The Aggies Have the Cash
■ — --------------- Since the Aggies have the *25.000
Jerry Potter, Oklahoma City University fullback, guarantee banked already, the Ag^es
MU be moved to tailback tor Saturday aigM’t
game against Youngstown at Taft stadium. at
'' ___________ least draw the stae of the nut the
tasttval committee te going to have to re^t^rea
smuts; Sfees s
ing Interest to fans back on th* prai- jiwtsf.
”rh. vm ondoubudl, will an tro Vajat"
.•? srTLa.'sraiJTs: ^"2
■7---1 lowers feel that th* Aggies can come i - - ----
place " .^LTlhome free if they can protect them-
■a jMifra vow* now own a four Iran th* aiy Saturday. ‘
For the protection, the Aggies aro
geing to have to ‘ —
their anna th* i
afternoon.
Ltaeap Changes Made
A&M's offense needs to sat up long
chunks of the rye-gross Kesar field and
the Aggies aro figured to be able to
do it beet with their running game. If
, Grimes. Roof. Ledbetter. Melnert.
for the sixth place Wetberbee Klectric Spavttal. Alridge and others of the Jim
AAM should have high scoring power
Saturday—high enough to corner th*
Dons and unseat them.
Don Tan Pool, left end: Gene Rom.
right guard, and Duteh ^Ga^ Irft
„ ? thro* men shifted
from the starting "defensive*' team
this week to th* starting “offensive"
team.
With Van Pool. Rom and Gay win
be Charles Shaw, left tackle: Wayne
Burrow, left guard: Clay Davis, center,
and Alex Loyd, right end.
Weather predtottosre wvro eeeeonsMy
reassuring after a sunny Friday. The
temperature is brisk, topcoat weather.
*T7re lineups:
oKLaaoua a*M
T —r rrei. Ores
Lt *>■*. ore. cojciM*-.
u —rrea. tre. wretav.
C-Owrta. Dreta. lyre.
BO—MMsealMitaW. Res*. (MM
gfr Bew. CSwrt. Vs*it
RC—Lre*. Orw. Ixmtam
Th* day's top test is at Ann Attar
where Michigan, th* Western uenter^
ence champion, is boat to higb-roaro<
Northwestern. Both aro unbeaten and
united. Something has to give.
The victor to regarded aa a cinch to
wrap up the conference crown andB
if it's Northwestern, the attracUv*
Roas bowl bid as wett. Ths Wolverines
are ineligible to play at Paaadonto,
again this year under the rule that
limit* a team's appoaranoe to oner
every throe years.
Pena Meets Ltens
A crowd of mor* than *5,000 to ex*
peeled to turn out for the Ann Arbor
wrangle of midwestern gtanta. There ia
no distinct tavorit*.
Michigan to Just on* of several ixw
ference champion* on th* griddle.
Pennsylvania. Ivy league titleholder
and unbeaten since 104*. fags* Lou
Little's always dangerous Columbia
jamboleer*. Penn to favored.
In the Southeastern conference
Mtostosippi. with throe league victories
on its unspoiled record. Invades New
Orleans to tackle a Tulane team that
bumped Alabama ahd 8o«th CarolldL
North Carolina, th* nation's taB
ranked eleven according to the teteak
noon's work cut out for it at Chap<
Hfll where it faces North Caroling
State, a family rival that to traditions
ally troublesome.
Bears Play Beavers
California, unblemished Pacifte
Coast favorite. <
Berkeley against
a 1.01*. Member* of the crew are
L
1
1
1
1
3
B
As matters stood Saturday any team
league could win th* title
------
Central ha*
ahead.
>y Central
> Norman.
re. metard
!» »*—tre
Smethers Cards
; 733 Pin Series
By WALLY WALLIS
The district 3A highschool
football races was a* mixed up
Saturday aa the stuff they put
in mincemeat pie.
The Classen Comets completed the
weekend scrambling by upsetting the
Central Cardinals hero Friday night
- 13-B. The Enid Plainsmen started
the mixup Thursday night by trim-
ming previously unbeaten Capitol HIU.
gf-C
Here's the wsy the standings looked
Saturday:
Team
Enid
Capitol HiU
Central ....
Ctoessn ....
Nerasan ....
Shawnee ...
a »<_
Iff ir. WcoGboh park
part; Duffy Martin.
MerMtan re. Dee
etab: TWta
Ralph Folwar Meridian re -UM Moe*.
Julian
re. X. J. a'ssws ar. Country eta*.
Jsrt~*Martta._ 1
■dvard "Star* aehretaer. Wooisan part.
U SS P. SS.- .
Kersut Nasoar. v
Sg-.g1,. - -
Cafe Keglers Take
Over First Spot In
Uptown Pin League
Cattlemen's Cate dropped the John
to take the lead in th* Uptown Offy* of Tahlequah, and^Bud Cam
Fi *r. VaSSae.
Beotai, M. Wa*a.
SfeSiSSTaK
bS* (OCOh tesfmaswas
Zaharias, Riley Reach
" Finals of Texas Open
FORT WORTH. Texas. Oct. 14
^S^d^'tSV^^
the women'* Texas open golf tourna-
^Mrs Zahariaa. now a resident of __
Denver, ousted Helen Dettweiter of ^th a 234, while Charlie Byrd was
Dallas. 2 and 1. Friday and Mis* Ritey ^eond with a 233. Boy Deal shot a
ehminatad Mary Agnea Wall of Men- — ----— —
omtnss. Mich, 4 and 2.
Mrs. Zahariaa is a professireisl, Mtes
lUtey and amateur^
McQinnn Is Through
With Baseball for Good
NBW YORK. Oct 18-«J5-<Morg*
MeOninn. famed tor hie fancy fielding
XdtaSretaoal comeback with th*
N*w T*rk Yanka** tert year, pocketed
hie MM—ffitli—i nta—
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 59, No. 224, Ed. 3 Saturday, October 16, 1948, newspaper, October 16, 1948; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1768765/m1/4/?q=War+of+the+Rebellion.: accessed June 15, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.