Pawhuska Daily Journal-Capital (Pawhuska, Okla.), Vol. 56, No. 245, Ed. 1 Friday, December 10, 1965 Page: 4 of 8
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Page 4, Pawhuska Daily Journal-Capital, Friday, December 10, 1965
Huskies will host Alva
Goldbugs Sat. night
Pawhuska’s Huskies host the
Alva Goldbugs here Saturday
night in their second game of
the basketball season with two
players on the injured list.
Kent Sutton, on of last year’s
stars, is still out with an in-
fected hand and George Mc-
Koy, 6-2, who turned an ankle
in the Cleveland game is still
on the doubtful list.
The Huskies took their open-
er with Cleveland 53-39 and
the “B” team also won, whip-
ping the Tiger “B” string 42-
28. Coach Harold Owens was
pleased with the Thursday work-
out and said the players showed
more enthusiasm than in pre-
vious practice sessions.
Little is known about the
Goldbugs or their potential but
they have two victories notched
up at this time. They opened
against the Blackwell Maroons
and won 40-25 then went on
to defeat Campus High School
of Wichita 55-47 in their second
game.
The Goldbugs have good he-
ight and all of their starters are
football players. Some of thier
players are reported to be tr-
ack men and are able to move
well Top scorers appear to be
Ron Johnson (6-1) who had 16
points in their last game and
Bill Baker (6-1) Others making
up the Alva starting lineup in-
clude Randy Kendrick (6-0), De-
nnis Savere (6-2) and a starter
from last year's team, and
Pat Parker (5-10).
The Goldbug reserves are
perhaps a little taller than some
of the starters with two or three
6-2 and 6-3 players. Ross
Branch Rickey
Huskie wrestlers tip
B’ville Central 25-22
33 £ NOR 0
TA G
AFIELD
ON GUARD-John Manning (35) goes up in a desperate effort to guard a Cleveland player in
Tuesday’s "B" game which the Huskies won 42-28 after trailing 11-9 in the first quarter. The
Cleveland player doesn t own all those legs Some of them belong to a Huskie player who lias
just completed a drop-kick and the others to a Tiger player. Larry Sellers (32) in the back-
ground, led the scoring for Pawhuska with 16 points while Manning was next with nine
(J-C Photo)
Junior Huskies lose two games
against Claremore on Thursday
Pawhuska's Junior High bas-
ketball teams were both de-
feated in theirnatches Thursday
night at Claremore with the
Zebras whipping the Huskie Ei-
ghth Graders 24-18 and the Ninth
graders going down 42-22.
Coach Merl Powers said the
eighth grade teams were fairly
well matched in size and the
Huskies played the Zebras on
almost even terms during the
first quarter. At half-time the
Claremore team led 13-10 and
their lead was still only three
quarters
However, the Huskies fell
behind badly in the final quarter
and the Zebras edged them by
six points.
High point man for Pawhuska
was Albert Coble and with nine
while Adams led Claremore
with 10. Powers had eight for
the Zebras and the other Hus-
kies scoring were Jonathna Ir-
vin 4, Mark Daugherty 3, and
Rothie Cockran 2.
In the Ninth Grade game the
Huskies were somewhat shorter
and were frequently caught off
balance by the quick, agile Ze-
bras who were excellent jum-
pers and dominated the back-
boards consistently.
The Huskies trailed 7-9 at the
end of the first quarter, 17-11
at the half, and 25-19 at the end
of the tree periods. The bottom
fell out for the Huskies in the
final period and Claremore out-
scored them 17-3.
Roy Lee Gaines led the Hus-
kies scoring with nine points
Pat Carter had seven, LeRoy
Jones got four and Gaylan Br-
own had two.
The Huskies will host No-
wata here on December 16 with
the first game to start at 6:30
pm. _
I undergoes Surgery
MINNEAPOLIS (UPI) —
Halfback Tommy Mason of the
Minnesota Vikings, injured last
Sunday in a National Football
League game with the Green
Bay Packers and out for the
rest of the season, will be
operated upon this week to
remove torn cartilage from his
right knee.
Boyer Recalled
TORONTO (UPI) —The Tor-
onto Maple Leafs of the
National Hockey League re-
called center Wally Boyer from
Rochester of the American
Hockey League Wednesday and
sent left wing Larry Jeffrey to
the same club.
Smith is coach ofthe Alva team.
Pawhuska will be depending
on Thornton York and Sonny
Malone for speed and fast br-
eaks while Gary Burd, James
Jones and Tim Sutton wil be
relied on to keep the back-
boards cleaned for the Hus-
kies John Reynolds, a fast,
hustling player with a good
jump shot is slated to start
as is Mike Carter, a cool-
headed player who shows pr-
omise of developing into a fl-
oorman, something the Hus-
kies have needed badly for the
past two years.
Other top reserves include
Anthony Gilkey, Ronnie Reed
and Larry Sellers The “B"
game will start at 6 30 p.m
with the “A" game to follow.
Coach Harold Owens said ar-
rangements had made to film
part of the games this year
and a “crow’s nest" had been
erected over the scorer’s by
the Pawhuska Quarterback
Club. The game is a non-con-
ference game and the Huskies
will open conference action next
Tuesday at Claremore.
Branch Rickey
Dies Thursday
ST. LOUIS (UPI) —Branch
Rickey, master builder, innova-
tor, pioneer and one of the
more powerful hands in the
growth of baseball, is dead.
Left behind as a permanent
memorial to the Grand Mahat-
ma are the stature of the
Negro in baseball, the modern
farm system, still flourishing
empires at St. Louis and Los
Angeles, major league expan-
sion and a volume full of
cherished treasures of Richeys
tabled dealings with the world
he loved.
Rickey died in Boone County
Mo., 11 p.m., EST, Thursday
night. He had remained uncon-
scious since collapsing with a
heart attack while being
inducted into the Missouri
Sports Hall of Fame the night
of Nov. 13. He was 83.
Rickey’s body was brought
here by train early this
morning accompanied by his
widow and a daughter, Mrs.
Steven Adams. Funeral ar-
rangements had not yet been
completed.
Rickey slumped over the dais
while making an acceptance
speech at the banquet in
Columbia last month. Just
before collapsing, he said, “I
don’t believe I’m going to be
able to speak any longer.”
The cigar-chomping Richey
was connected with baseball for
60 years and in that time he
developed a reputation as the
game’s shrewdest trader and
one of its sharpest minds. He
never lost a youthful zest for
sport, or for life, and when he
was asked at the age of 77
what his greatest thrill in
baseball had been, he replied:
"I don't think I’ve come to it
yet.”
By Ted Kesting
Proper fit and choke are the
essential factors in choosing
your duek-hunting gun.
A gun should fit so that when
you bring it up quickly to your
shoulder, dressed in a]] the
clothing you'll be wearing on an
actual hunt, you don't have to
■‘train to reach the trigger, and
the barrel lines up in front of
your -hooting eye automatically
so that the muzzle is covering
the target. That means a short
er stock than you'd need if you
were shooting in your shirt
sleeves at a clay target in July.
And it means a straighter stock.
With less drop at the heel (butt
end of the comb) than you'd
need without all the heavy cloth-
ing on. This is especially true
for short-necked hunters.
As for choke, that depends on
the kind of duck hunting you
plan to do- pass shooting or
decoy shooting from a blind. On
the pass, where range- will be
near the limit of effective shot
patterns, you'll need a full-chok
ed 30-inch barrel to keep that
pattern tight enough to bring
down a duck. But at the 20- and
30-yard ranges of decoy shoot-
ing, a modified choke in 28-inch
barrel length i- better.
The longer barrel i. called ;
in pass shooting because it puts
more weight at the end of y 01
barrel, thus permitting ,, bette
follow-through on those far-out.
fast-flying birds. “In decoy
shooting, the shorter barrel and
more open choke permit a quick
er swing onto the bird aid a
good spread in pattern .it the
closer ranges," point - out Jimmy
Robinson, Trap and Skeet Ed
for of Sports Afield Magazine
If you re shooting a double
side-by-side or over-and-ander-
the problem is simple. Have one
barrel bored modified choke, 30
inches long. If you shoot a
pump oi auto, get one barrel
tailed full choke and 30 inches
long, then buy a second barrel
in modified choke and 28 inches
long.
The cost of the extra barrel
will lie about half the cost of
the gun, but in reality you will
then have two guns. An alterna-
tive is to buy one of the many
muzzle attachments available,
so that you can change the choke
of youi gun by twisting a dial
oi installing a short extra tube
Pawhuska’s Junior High
wrestling team invaded Bar-
tlesville Central Thursday af-
ternoon and come out with an-
other 25-22 victory-the same
score they gathered in beat-
ing Sapulpa last week in their
opener.
Gaining pins, whichare worth
five points each, for the Huskie
team were Larry Carman in
the 137-pound division, Jim Br-
Redskin Tom
WASHINGTON (UPI) —Ohio
State fullback Tom Barrington
has signed to play with the
Washington R e d s k i n s, who
picked him as their third draft
choice. Barrington was also the
15th selection of the Kansas
City Chiefs of the rival
American Football League,
First indoor football game
was played in 1902, in the old
Madison Square Garden, with
Syracuse defeating the Phila-
delphia Nationals, 6-0
eece in the 92-pound class,
Gary Breece in the 79-pound
class, and David Breece in
the 72-pound bracket
Roger Ikenberry, 98-poundcl-
ass, defeated his opponent Kirk
Montindale and heavyweight
Duke Atterberry drew with his
opponent, Donnie Tallent.
Results in the other weights
were Leslie Carman lost to
Jack Jensen in the 86-pound
class; Joe Schooling lost to
Dean Lowe in the 105-pound
weight; Dodgie Pangburn was
pinned by Greg Thomas in the
112-pound class; Don Shelton
lost to Mike Norwood in the
121-pound division, Freddie Ma-
rtin was defeated in the 129-
pound class by Cris Daigle and
Darrell Pool, 145-pound class,
lost to Kent Martindale.
The Huskies go to Bartles-
ville December 21 to meet
the tough Madison team which
defeated Central 30-10 last week
and won over Sapulpa yesterday
evening.
TERMITES
R OT
ECAY
before they start
with DIERKS
Pressure-Treated Lumber
Here’s the answer to the problem of termites, rot
and decay—use Dierks Pressure treated Lumbert
This is fine Southern Pine, treated under high
temperature and high pressure to force the nationally
advertised wood preservative Penta (Pentachloro-
phenol) deeply into the fibers of the wood.
Look for tne aluminum
trade-mark tag — reading
"Dierks Pressure-Treated” —
your assurance oi long-lasting
lumber.
I
me pane)
"EVERYTHING TO BUILD ANYTHING
IEN5DN LUMBER [.
1 1020 If UN Ave
Pewhuske Okie
Phom AV 7-3788
Hot Sun
Scientists calculate that
the core of the sun is so hot
— 16 million degrees Centi-
grade—that a pinhead of its
material emits enough heat
to kill a man 100 miles away.
Out door Oklahoma
Junior mish
Dec 16......Nowata (there)
Jan 6........Dewey (there)
Jan 10......Vinita (here)
Jan. 18......at B’villeCent
Jan. 20..., .....at Nowata
OKLAHOMA CITY - Thirty-
years ago, almost any farm
boy could show you the best
way to bait a possum trap.
He could tell a muskrat track
from a racoon's, and he knew
which size trap to use for red
fox.
Few of today’s school teach-
ers have ever sent a boy home
because his clothes reeked of
skunk “perfume” from an early
morning trapline incident. And
if you want a trapping tip no-
wdays, you’ve usually got to
find an old timer-or look for
a book at the library.
Trapping season has opened
in Oklahoma, but until the end
of January, only a handful of
rural school boys and those few
outdoorsmen who trap for the
sport of it will match wits with
wildlife in search ot the state’s
15 legal furbearers.
The decline in trappers isn’t
due to a lack of game Wild-
life biologists tell us there’s
more furbearers now than in
grandpa's day. Soon after state-
hood, you could almost count
on a family for every 160 ho-
mestead-allotted acres With
that sort of coverage, there was
little wilderness left for the
wildlife to hide. Today, with
the urban migration and 70
per cent of the population now
in the cities, vast stretches of
woodland and trail go untouch-
ed except for Mother Nature’s
furbearers.
Last year, all fur dealers in
Oklahoma bought 26,318 pelts
for slightly more than $31,000
Dick Williamson, assistant
game chief with the wildlife
department, says he remem-
bers when his father, aproducer
dealer in a small southeastern
state town, paid out more fur
money than that on almost any
Saturday during season. Fur
buyers can still be found in
most small towns, but not like
in the old days.
Wildlike department figures
compiled from dealer reports
last year show a continuing drop
in both the number of animals
trapped and market value of this
historically important natural
resource. There was a 12 per
cent decline in the number of
pelts taken, and a 24 per cent
drop in value from 1963
Mink pelts, which last year
numbered 1,102 for an average
price of $7.96, were down
$1 47. Beaver and raccoon also
dropped, but muskrat, opossum,
civet cat and skunk moved up
a few cents per pelt. Raccoon
was the highest seller last year.
Most of the 9,942 ringtail furs
probably went into ladies’ coat
collars. Opossum was second
with 8,087 skins, then muskrat
with 4,916, followed by skunk,
mink, beaver, gray fox, coyote,
civet cat, red fox and bobcat.
All these, along with badger,
rabbits and wolves, are legal
this season Detailed regula-
tions are outlined in a pamp-
hlet available from the wild-
life department or your local
ranger.
Jan. 27.
Feb. 3..
at Vinita
...at Dewey
Feb. 10.....B’ville Centra
Feb. 17
(here)
OPEN
Feb 24.........Claremore
March 3.
here)
.OPEN
PHS Cage
Schedule
Dec. 11, Alva ( here)
Dec. 14, at Claremore +
Dec. 17, at Dewey+
Dec. 21, Cleveland (here)
Jan. 7, at Blackwell
Jan. 13-15, Miami Tourney
Jan. 18, Nowata (here) +
Jan. 21, at Vinita+
Jan. 27, Edmond Tourney
Feb. 5, Drumright (here)
Feb. 8, Claremore (here)+
Feb. 11, Dewey (here)+
Feb. 18, at Nowata+
Feb. 22, Caney (here)
Feb. 25, Vinita (here)+
March 1, at Drumright
March 4, Blackwell (here)
(+ Conference games)
State Cage
Scores
By United Press International
College
Oklahoma State 61 Arizona
State 49
Northeastern A&M 82 Connors
73
73
Eastern 96 Okmulgee Tech 78
High School
Tulsa McLain 47 Tulsa Kelley
46
Tulsa Central 54 Tulsa Cascia
Hall 33
Sand Springs 49 McAlester 37
Duncan 38 Bartlesville 32
Wagoner 61 Okay 47
Sallisaw 40 Tahlequah 31
Porter 52 Fort Gibson 48
Tulsa Webster B 53 Hulbert 52
Tulsa East Central 73 Dewey 61
Chelsea 70 Oologah 53
Copan 49 Alluwe 48
Ames 52 Freedom 28
Goltry 37 Lambert 17
Eureka 56 Byron-Drift wood 39
Leedey 65 Reed 43
Aline 57 Gate 35
Salman 52 Tacoma 42
Gotebo 51 Fargo 49
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Reg. $368
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Spencer, Frank. Pawhuska Daily Journal-Capital (Pawhuska, Okla.), Vol. 56, No. 245, Ed. 1 Friday, December 10, 1965, newspaper, December 10, 1965; Pawhuska, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2281214/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.