Sweetwater Reporter (Sweetwater, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 288, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 2, 1948 Page: 6 of 16
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Most Men CM
All-SWC Football Team
Dec. 2, (UP)
liveraity of Texas,
i Southern Metho-
I the most men on the
United Press All-Southwest
team.
tilS WStiM ( OttOS
Howl hast tosw. placed only
es the mythical
-hones hy United
apart writers with the
aid of coaches and wont*.
Texas placed three, Baylor
and Texas Christian two
ehch and Arkansas, Texas
AAM and Rice one each.
There was little question about
four positions on the team, but
the voting was close on all other
with the conference boasting a
host of men of almost equal
ability at most positions.
Unanimous choice were SMU’s
Doak Walker, Arkansas' Clyde
Scott and TCU's Lindy Berry in
the backfield and Texas' Dick
Harris at center.
Harris won his fourth straight
all-conference position, Scott
and Walker their third lime.
Walker placed on the 1945 team,
hut was out of school in 1946.
The tram was a veteran
outfit of seniors from tackle
Bowl Games Near Complete
With 35 Meets Scheduled
NEW YORK, Dec. 2, (UP) —
The nation’s bowl lineups were
nearly complete today after
more than a month of negotia-
tions, with 35 of the post-season
games scheduled for between
now and New Year's Day.
Last Minute Entries
Arizona was the latest to join
the throng, agreeing to meet
Drake in the Salad Bowl at Pho-
enix, Ariz. At first the Arizona
players were reported holding
out for a cash cut of the gate,
hut they agreed lust night to
gate receipts go to charity. St.
Thomas College of St. Paul,
Minn., accepted an invitation
yesterday to face Missouri Val-
ley in the Cigar Bowl at Tampa,
Fla.
The mushrooming bowl busi-
ness lists 17 of its "classics”—in-
cluding most of the big ones—
for Jan. 1. Three of the games
are all-star affairs; The Shrine
East-West game at San Fran-
cisco New Year's Day, and the
Blue-Gray game at Montgomery,
... .Ala., and North-South game at
play the New \ear's game il the Miami, Fla. ,on Christmas day.
Because there are so many
I owl games, sometimes it doesn’t
lake a particularly impressive
season to receive an invitation.
For example,, 9 of the IS teams
playing in the nine major howl
games, only three are undefeat-
ed—North Carolina, which meets
Oklahoma in the Sugar Howl;
California, which plays North-
western in the Hose Bowl; and
Clem,son, which meets Missouri
in the Gator Bowl. And of that
trio, North Carolina lias been
tied.
Baylor Is In
Baylor, which is matched with
Wake Forest in the Birming-
ham, Ala., Dixie Bowl, has lost
four, won four anti tied two for
the poorest of the team records
in a major howl. Texas, which
plays Georgia in the Orange
Bowl, has lost three, won six
and tied one.
Most of the other teams suf-
fered only one defeat.
The first hatch of howl games
—excluding those which were
played Thanksgiving Day—
comes this week-end. The Pa-
poose Bowl at Oklahoma City
Friday pairs East Oklahoma
A&M against Mognolia, Ark,
A&M. Saturday there are five
bowl games: The Glass Bowl at
Toledo, O., The Fish Bowl at
Hampton, V'a., the Refrigeration
Bowl at Evansville, Ind., the
Orange Bowl at Miami and the
Salt Bowl at Hutchinson, Kan.
HSU Will Be Busy
1 he bowlingest team in the na-
tion is Harriin-Simmons. It al-
ready has agreed to play Oua-
chita in the Little Rock. Ark.,
TIL Does Not
Accept Rotan
Game Protest
The Interscholastic League
executive committee in a meet-
ing held Wednesday voted
against hearing a protest from
Rotan on the eligibility of Mona-
hans High School after they had
won l.'U) over Rotan in a Class
A Bi-District game in Sweetwa-
ter last week.
The compiaint had been filed
to the league after the game was
played last Friday night hy
school officials at Rotan.
The complaint charged that
Monahans had been given grid
instruction and equipment last
spring in a violation of a league
rule prohibiting spring training.
Monahans will continue in its
race for state Class A champion-
ship against Ballinger Friday
afternoon at Ballinger for the
quarter-finals.
Athletic Union To
Have Annual Meet
NEW YORK, Dec. 2, (UP)—
The 60th annual national ama-
teur athletic union convention | Shrine game Dec. 18 and College
opened today for four days of jot Pacific in the_Grape Bowl at
business affecting the immedi- Lodi. Cal. Dec. 2u. It also is coll-
ate future of 15 amateur sports sidering an invitation to play in
headed by track and field. i the Basin Bowl at Odessa, Tex.,
Mayor James A. Rhodes of' Jan 1. Miami U. of Ohio last
Columbus, ().. president of the night turned down a Basin bid
A. A. U., procedure for the ! to meet H-S.
awarding of championship sites
to tackle, with junior* at all
otkci- .pots except Nratt la
the bark field.
Texas’ Ray Borneman round-
ed out the first team backfield,
getting the nod over Dick Mc-
Kissack of SMU, Pete Stout of
TCU and Bobby Lantrip of Rice
oh his ground-gaining ability. In
conference games only, Borne-
man was far away the top rush-
ing star and he ranked second to
Berry over, the full season.
Plunking Harris was pint-
sized Bentley Jonrs of Bay-
lor at one guard and the
bruising Odell Htautzen-
berger of Texas A&M at the
other. Jones, at 175 pounds,
was the lightest man on the
team next to Walker, who
weighs 168 pounds.
The two heaviest men were
at the tackle spots— George Pet-
rovich of Texas at 216 and Bud-
dy Tinsley of Baylor at 225
pounds.
The ends were James Williams
of Rice and Morris Bailey of
TCU, the conference’ leading
pass receiver.
FIRST TEAM
James Williams, Rice, E, 197.
Morris Bailey, TCU. E, 188.
George Petrovich, Texas. T, 216.
R. P. Tinsley, Baylor, T, 225.
Bentley Jones, Baylor. G, 175.
Odell Stautzenberger, A&M. G,
215. Dick Harris, Texas. C, 201.
Doak Walker, SMU, II, 168.
Clyde Scott, Arkansas, B, 181.
Lindy Berry. TCU. B, 176. Ray
Borneman, Texas, B. 202.
SECOND TEAM
Ends — Bill Moorman, TCU,
ami Andy Hillhouse, Texas
A&M. Tackle — Jim Winkler,
Texas A&M and Joe Ethridge,
SMU. Guards — Bay Peters, Ar-
kansas, and Vic Vasicek, Texas.
Center — Joe Watson, Rice.
Ba<‘k — George Sims, Baylor;
Gil Johnson, SMB; Bobby Goff,
Texas A&M: Dick McKissack,
SMU.
HONORABLE MENTION
Ends— Folsom, SMU; Blake-
ly, SMU; Riley, Baylor; Holder,
Texas: Hix, Arkansas; Cope-
land, Texas A&M; Milam. SMU;
l lanagin, Baylor.
Tackles— Hamberger, SMU;
Murphy, Rico; Stand I, Arkansas;
Marahle, TCU; McCauley, TCU.
Guard — Robed. Arkansas;
Lewis, SMU: Stone, Baylor: Ro-
berts, Rice; Brown, TCI'; Hicks,
TCU; Mcl-adin, Texas.
Center — Huebner, Baylor;
Thomas, Arkansas.
Backs — Page, SMU; Rote.
SMU: Lantrip, Rice; Rote, Rice;
Lurk, Baylor; Campbell, Arkan-
sas; Pritchard, Arkansas; Goode
Texas A&M: Stout, TCU; Keen-
ey. Rice; Pyle, Texas: Clay, Tex-
as; Long, Arkansas.
mi-
A PO LOG IZE, A N V W A V
HOUSTON, Tex. (UP) — A
young hold-up man pocketed $110
from the cash register in a store.
Then tie ripped the telephone
receiver from the wall. "I hate
for 19-19, approval of new re-
cords, discussions on proposed
rule changes anti election of
officers.
Possibility of inaugurating an 1
annual Ur S.—Scandinavia Track , . u ; . , . . .
and Field meet also ma be dis- : to do this, he explained to the veen break in their two starts
cussed. ! clerk, "but I've got a sick wife.” | after losing their opener to the
j Phillips Oilers.
Baylor To Play
NYU In Madison
Garden Tonight
By United Press
The Baylor University Boars,
minus their Stella all-conference
pierformer Jackie Robinson,
open their basketball campaign
tonight in Madison Square Gar-
den aaginst New York Univer-
sity.
It’s the only game scheduled
among Southwest Conference
fives tonight.
The Arkansas Razorbacks
broke into the win column last
night, barely edging Oklahoma
City University 31-29 with Lanky
Bob Ambler, six foot, seven-inch
center, setting the pace with 15
points for Fayetteville.
It gave the Razorbacks an
Freckles And His Friends
By Blesser
■
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TR6 PROFITS WE .
HAVEN'T MADE YET.
YOO KNOW TMERES
ONE WllCH INTNIS
PACKAGE-CARRYING
BUSINESS /
caM
TwE
COMPETITION
IS TERIFF/
WHATTA TMEV GOT WE
HAVEN'T GOT? JUST A
TRUCK . IS AU. < ,
RABCCU
oeuvERy
’thanks! L don't
SUPPOSE Ybu COULD
SoRRV.LAv'Y. Bur ZITHER —
HUNTING AINT EXACTLY
IN MY ONE '
I
el-
new TYPEWRITERS, ADDING MACHINES
AND CASH REGISTERS NOW IN STOCK
Abo Good Used Machines. We Sell, Buy, Exchange and
Heat. Fall Time Experienced, Trained Mechanic
la Charge of Service Department
MeCAULLEY-COX TYPEWRITER COMPANY
Sweetwater’s Only Exclusive Office Machines Store
Front of Postoffice
SM E. Third Dial 2491
Outfielder Audrey Wagner of
the Kenosha Comets, batting
champion of the circuit, was
named the AH-American Girls
Baseball League’s Player-of-the-
Year. A pre-medical student at
Elmhurst, 111., College, she is
the fourth player to be named
for the highest individual award
by the managers.
■
M
4
WALKER WINS HEISMAN
TROPHY. —Doak, Southern
Methodist University’s All
American back, takes pains
with tape as he works on in-
jured ankle. Walker was
named to receive the Heis-
man Trophy as the nation’s
outstanding college football
player of the 1948 season.
Walker is the first Junior to
receive the award. (NEA
Photo).
Drake 65, Central 41.
Kansas State 60, Emporia
State 49.
Rutgers 77. Newark Ruters
51.
North Texas 66, Austin College
48.
St. Thomas 57, Augustana 12.
John Carroll 87, T-’enn 17.
Beloit 69, Valparaiso 60.
Niagara 71, Sampson 14.
Dartmouth 64, Vermont 42.
Paterson Teachers 62, Jersey
City Teachers 40.
West Virginia 71, Bethany -18.
Brooklyn College 75, Fairfield
17.
University of Chicago 56, Nor-
mal Illinois Optometry 30.
Wisconsin 66, Aipon 36.
Loyola (Chicago) 95, Elm-
hurst 45.
Iowa 04, Omaha II.
Baldwin Wallace 77, Atterhein
58
Iowa State 61, Cornell 30.
Wagner 65, Wagner Alumni 38.
William & Mary 80, Langley
Field 29.
Muhlenberg 08, Rider 49.
Technology 00, New Bedford
Tevtile 30.
Arkansas University 31, Okla-
homa City University 29.
Lowell Textile 61. Bryant Col-
lege 32.
Louis'Dle 75, Kentucky Wes-
leyan 46.
■isnipvtoo State College 66.
Whitworth 34.
han Francisco State 54, Na-
tional Guard 52.
U.S. Hockey Roundup
By United Press
The tail-end clubs in the
United States Hockey League’s
northern and southern divisions
felt better today—they failed to
lose last night.
The Dallas Texans could get
no better than a 4-4 tie with the
Kansas City Pla-Mors, front-run-
ning entry in the northern
bracket, but kept the Pla-Mors
behind most of the game.
The Omaha Knights did a lit-
tel better. They managed to eke
out a 3-2 win over the Minne-
apolis Millers.
The Texans and Knights have
won only five games each since
league plays started and tonight
hump into each other at Omaha
ine one of the three games on
the night’s card. Houston in-
vades Fort Worth and Kansas
City goes to St. Paul in the oth-
er two contests.
—
—
1
'
SfflfS
Bft-Mitrftrt jinii
The Wichita Falls Coyotes
have stopped over in Sweetwater
today ana tonight for a rest be-
fore going on to Midland tomor-
row night and then to Odessa
for the football game Saturday
afternoon at 2:30.
Wichita Fan's performed
a story book miracle to the
fiaal game of S-AA to win the
dbtrlct crown over their com
qMerer* from Childress.
Odessa, true to form, managed
to cop the District 3-AA after
a hard tussle with the Sweetwa-
ter Mustangs.
The Coyotes will work out In
the Mustang Bowl Thursday aft-
ernoon and spend the night in
the Blue Bonnet Hotel before re-
suming their trip Friday morn-
ing.
Despite the lock handed
them tbrongh working out in
the Mustang Bowl the Coy-
ote* should drop the game
by at least two touchdowns
and possibly three or four.
The only advice we can give
is watch out for Sonny Mobley
and the other ten Odessa men
on the field—they are danger-
ous.
* * *
In talking about “Sonny” Mob-
ley a fan commented that the
only thing that he can do “is
score touchdowns”.
All I ran say is that touch-
downs arc a pretty good
thing to be able to do as writ
as Mobley docs.
Surprise. Not one Odessa play-
er was mentioned on the United
Press All-American pick. Well,
there wasn’t.
* * *
Rumors Are Flying
Making the Army-Navy exes
game grapevine lias been the
rumor that the sponsors of the
organizations are going to have
some good help in an all out ef-
fort to bring a partial feeling of
"Bowl Fever” to the citizens of
this part of Texas.
Rumors—that it.
The spirit among the boys
waiting the final word is still at
a high pitch and seems to he in-
creasing with the nearing of the
crucial day.
•+ * ♦
Mighty Michigan Chosen Rest.
Michigan’s Wolverines were
chosen as the number one team
in the United States and tagged
"College football’s team of the
year”.
Final round-up:
1. Michigan.
2. Notre Dame.
3. North Carolina.
1. California.
5. Oklahoma .
6. Army.
7. Northwestern.
8. Georgia.
9. Oregon.
10. Southern Methodist.
* * *
. Coffeecup Commentary
Tommy Hart of Big Spring
has brought out the fact that
many California high school
teams are more famous for their
physical trim than their prowess
with the football.
In rest periods some of the
prep elevens out that way have
been known to do push-ups un-
til the “time in” sign was given.
Of course the fact that they
do that may explain why there
is a mite bit more speed and
color in this part of the country.
Baseball Park?
The bonds for the building or
remodeling of the old ball park
up to an amount of $25,000 has
been passed and made public for
some weeks.
Baseball season spring train-
ing and a decision by the Long-
horn League officials on the
Sweetwater franchise is in the
near future.
It would hr nice to have
a new park.
w
J-'*:
im
f -rn*} <r~ *
Finishing his college football career by helping to smack Princeton j
53-13 Dartmouth captain and end Dale Armstrong ran directly
from'Palmer Stadium to New York’s Little Church Around the
Corner There the Pittsburgh lad who earned the Bronze Star for
heroism in tin- ETO won the second half of a double-header by tax-
ing Gloria Stutter of Maspeth, N Y . as hi;, bride.
to-
For Majors ‘
Hotly contested matches were
the highlight of the Major
Bowling matches at the Bowling
Palace Wednesday night.
High games were garnered fay
General Whitaker with a strong
220 and total series was taken
by Phil McCanlles with a siz-
zling 565.
On tap for the bowling
leagues throughout the holidays
will be Blue Pin contest sponsor-
ed by the floodfellows.
George Sauer Of Navy Is
Picked As Coach Of Ifeek ^
Bowl New Yean Day
Canisius Wins S2-33
BUFFALO, N. Y. Dec. 2, (UP)
Canisius College’s basketball
team, tuning up for its weekend
game with Baylor’s Bears, drub-
bed Gannon College of Erie.
Pu. 82-33, last night.
Thirteen players hit the scor-
ing column for Canisius as the
Griffins turned in their second
straight triumph of the cam-
paign. Leading the onslaught
were Leroy Chollet and Mori
O’Sullivan, each of whom netted
11 points.
Busy Schoolboy Weekend On
Tap As Play Begins Friday
By United Press
Ten games tomorrow night
will open a busy week-end of
playoffs in the races for the
three schoolboy football cham-
pionships with favorites firmly
established in most of the class
AA and City Conference races.
The picking wasn't so easy,
howevei, in the class A where
little comparison of the paired-
off teams was available.
With the hope we can finish
the season witfi better than an
,800 percentage on picking the
winners, well make another
stab at it.
Last week, we had 24 winners,
two ties out of 28 games for an
.893 average, bringing our sea-
son total to .791 for 297 right,
seven ties out 380 picks.
Here’s how they look to us,
hy divisions:
City Conference
Dallas Woodrow Wilson over
Fort Worth Arlington Heights,
Houston Lamar over San An-
tonio Jefferson.
flu** A A
Odessa over Wichita Fulls,
Denison over El Paso Austin,
Breckenridge oYer Highland
Park, Waco over Palestine, Port
Arthur over Baytown and Aus-
tin over San Benito.
Class A
Phillips over Post, Monahans
over Ballinger; Bowie over Irv-
ing, New London over Dekalb,
Van over lnivega, New Braun-
fels over Cameron, El Campo
over Aldine and Falfurrias over
Carrizo Springs.
NEW YORK, Dec. 2 (UP) —
His football team didn't win a
game all season—in fact there
were only three other major
squads in the nation with rec-
ords as bad.
Eight straight times this
season, 12 times in a row
over the past two seasons,
his team had its colors
dipped into the dirt.
He’s the United Press coach
of the week, George Sauer,
whose navy midshipmen never
quit fighting, never gained a
victory, yet engineered one of
the big upsets of the year —
that astounding 21 to 21 tie with
Army’s all-conquering cadets.
No Hope
Everybody, it seemed, gave
up on those oft-mauled mid-
shipmen, and the Legions who
made the pilgrimage to Phila-
delphia’s Municipal stadium
told themselves the football
game didn’t much matter but
that it was worth the trip to
see the color, the pageantry,
and the celebrities.
What they forgot, but what
Sauer, the first civilian coach
at Navy since 1933, remember-
ed, was that in spite of the
team's poor record, it never once
quit on the field—never gave up
in disgust.
What folks also seemed to
forget was that in compiling
that UN-victorious record Navy
played the toughest schedule
of any team in the nation. Six
of its nine opponents were un-
beaten at the time they faced
Navy—California, Cornell, Duke,
Pennsylvania, Notre Dame, and
Army. Three of them. Califor-
nia, Notre Dame and Army still
are unbeaten—Cornell wound
up with only one defeat and as
champion of the Ivy League.
Sauer, a tall, congenial Ne-
braska all-America of 1933 vint-
Quijano Gains Nod
Oter Millich In
10 Round Battle
EL PASO, Dec. 2—(UP)—
Adolfo Quijano, Texas heavy-
weight and light-heavyweight
champion, still held his crown
today after out jabbing George
Millich of San Francisco before
some 3,000 fans hero last night
to win a unanimous decision.
Quijano, an El Paso boy,
weighed in at 176V4 as compar-
ed with Millieh's 181. The title-
holder won seven of the 10
rounds and split the oilier three
with his opponent, a clever box-
er who made the Texas cham-
pion look none too good in vic-
tory.
The El Pasoan, whoso reputa-
tion was built on knockouts, con-
nected solidly with Millich only
in the third round when he put
the Calfornian down for a count
of six with a right cross to the
jaw.
Most of the remainder of the
fight was a battle of left jabs,
with Quijano always on the of-
fensive and repeatedly missing
Millich with his devastating
right.
age, was totally unfamiliar with
the atmosphere of defeat in
which he found himself. For
two years he had led the Kan-
sas javhawkers to co-champion-
ship of the Big Seven and as a
smashing fullback tremendous
left-fooled punter at Nebras-
ka, he was key man as the
Cornhuskers rang tip three
straight conference champion-
ships.
Miracle Man
A man who literallv breathed
the lore of great gridiron feats,
he had hoped his first born
youngster would be a son so he
could train him to be a grid star
and so he could name him for
his old Nebraska coach. Dana X.
Bible. He has two children, a
daughter., Dana, 6. and the son,
George. Jr., 4, who has a great
football name to live up to even
if he wasn’t named for Bible.
Nothng that ever happened
to him in football stirred him
so much as Navv’s performance
against Army. In the dressing
room after the game, tears
streamed from his eyes and he
wasn’t the least bit ashamed of
them.
A Fighting Gang
As his players hoisted him to
their shoulders, he came to rest
atoo a uniform irunk and list-
ed his arms as if in a toast —
"to the fight ingest gang of
men I ever coached.”
But what was most signifi-
cant of all-—something that
bodes ill for Navy opponents
rext vear—was his conviction
that the Middies row are on the
long road hack.
Middies Rolling
Long weeks of hard work in
which he patiently installed his
new system, began to pay off.
Players began to handle both
offensive and defensive assign-
ments with precision ar.d fin
psse. Given last, week changes in
formation in which they mixed
their T with a single wing to
confuse the cadets, they came
through so nicelv they had con-
trol of the hall three-fourths of
j the time.
Sauer admitted though, that
I what he had overlooked as a
civilian coach was how tre-
mendously important the at my
game was to the boys.
‘‘I never before saw a team
rise so magnificently to the
occasion,” he said. “That was
the greatest part of it all for
me.”
For Bettor Laundry Try
OHLENBUSCH
FINISH
STEAM LAUNDRY
410 East Avenue A
Major I.cagur Standings
Team—
Won
tiOKt
Darnell’s .........
21
12
Rip’s Gulf Station
17
16
Nolan Hardware .
16
17
Roscoe Cosden .
16
17
Magnolia .........
...15
18
P&S ..........
... 15
18
Individual series
scores:
Darnell’s—Jesse
Owens
451, A
John Darnell 442, Phil McCan-
lies 565, Olsen 497, Bill Halhert
537.
Rip’s Gulf Station—D. D. Dixon
476, L. Hubbard 499, R. Ely 485,
C. Reeves 325, B. Rice 415.
Magnolia—Boh Massey 412,
Salty Barton 479, Vinct Cornoyer
•113, L. C. Kennamer 509, Bill
McGoftm 472.
Nolan Hardware—Bill Ponder
525, John Brookshire 477, Lamm
484, General Whitaker 538, Ben r
McCorkle and Walker (2-1) 374.
Roscoe Cosden — Haney 470,
Duncan 193, Ztezman 161, Blind
■105, Norris 469.
P&S—S. Henry 219, Dr. Bonner
230, R. O. Peters, Jr. 138, Hutch-
inson 210. Solithworth 485, ft. O.
Peters Sr. 503.
DALLAS, Dec. 2— (tTP) —If
all-conference football selections
can influence the betting. Ore-
gon's Wehfoots should he a 3
to 1 choice over Southern Meth-
odist’s Mustangs in the Cotton
Bowl .
Oregon placed three men on
the 1948 Pacific Coast Confer-
ence All-Star football team select-
ed hy tlie league’s coaches, where-
as SMU placed only one man on
the United Press's Ail-Southwest
( nnferonce eleven.
Quarterback Norm Van Brock-
1 in, Center Brad Ecklund and
End Dan Garza of Oregon were
named to their league’s first
team. Doak Walker was the only
SMU player to make the All-
Southwest. Conference team
chosen by United Press sports
writers with advice from
coaches and scouts.
Like Walker, Van Brocklin,
the PCC's top passer ,and Eck-
lund were unanimous choices.
PLAN REDBUD TRAIL
DENISON, Dec. 1 (UP)- The
first tree of the proposed red-
bud trail from the Denison dam
to Dallas was planted here with
Rep. Sam Rayburn heading the
list of speaker.
After the first tree was plant-
ed, a tour of the powerhouse at
the dam was made with the U.
S. Engineers as hosts.
Perry's New nod Used
Furniture Company
Pays Highest Prices for
Your Used Furniture
Phone 2386 313 Oak
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All brands'CIGARS 6c to 22e
Some 25 in Box
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CHIROFACTS:
Are you run-tlown, sick or mentally miserable? Get sunny-
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Baker, Allen. Sweetwater Reporter (Sweetwater, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 288, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 2, 1948, newspaper, December 2, 1948; Sweetwater, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth713994/m1/6/: accessed June 13, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sweetwater/Nolan County City-County Library.