Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 47, No. 145, Ed. 1 Monday, March 10, 1947 Page: 3 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Brownwood Bulletin and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Brownwood Public Library.
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CLINDANIEL ON FIRST 5
On All-Conference Teal
Coaches Pleased With Creditable
4 BROWNWOOD BULLETIN
Sports
BROWNWOOD BULLETIN, Monday, March 10, 1947
,3
in the United tates.
undersirable but
iy
Sayle* had this to say about
Today's
/
ar-
Grant
spot, "Clindaniel is the ‘money
1
few better sportsmen
in
pro-
t
02
fair play
and
rist.
a
in a crucial point of a vital
10—
eastern possibility.
entertained gamblers in his box
t
sonable conclusion. For the sake
"Nice going. fat boy,” kidded his
aren't coming
It's just that Jimmy is
see
KI
business and that he's a liar.”
we to us
Durocher wasn’t available for
WASHINGTON, March 10 (UP
X
Panama.
FREE
NTED
ago against Joe Marcantel.
OPA said that barring unfore-
completed until nearly midnight
150c
thrilled by a near dead heat in the
end.
March
national I
hrilliant speeds
*r. as Baylor
iter, Charley Park-
iylor’s Bill Hartenson
• N
W
Fai
Bui
Th
Free Estimates :
212 Fisk
Dial 2455
Sharpened
The Future
today and five of their alleged
pa-
Co.
treat-
Of Business
No Job Too
For Us
The futu
is on the
idual en-
terprise
ie
t
1
and your’s.
HIGHEST
PAID
C
JZE
IE M.
9
Cl
BROWNWOOD
Dial 8419
in E.
LEAVES UNION BUS STATION
Tel. 2456
eupu"wwk"
.A.
7#
W
BHS, HPC Tracksters Return
From Border Olympics Meet
VFW Heads-Tells Of
Communist Inroads
Waco Cagers Play In
Atlanta Meet Tonight
Texas Trackmen
May Be Pressed
ToKeepSW Title
7f business depei
nd wealth "f indi
State Heavyweight
Title Is At Stake
Enterprise must
flqme of business independence
10%
1:1
Howard Payne's freshman
Herman Moore vs mentions;
several sports scribes as being
of the outstanding freshman ir
910. Good
trim. Full
fronts for
you can,”
rt of the
or. H
trying
The century dash marked the
first defeat in 57 starts for Texas'
XLeatherel
Loupes a
i. \ Sent d
y is pro-
i among
WACO
5:30 AM
10:30 AM
2:45 P1
6:30
NEW YORK, March 10— (UP)—
Two teams remained today to be
named to the national invitation
basketball tournament and three
in the NCAA, but already the di-
4.15 AM
11:15 AM
2:30 PM
6:30 PM
10:50 PM
rr
h
p-
n-
MBS. LETBETTER AND SONS
LEAVE LOCAL HOSPITAL
Mrs. Elmo Letbetter and two
sons were discharged from Brown-
wood Memorial Hospital Satur-
day after treatment for influenza.
Mr. Letbetter is still in the hospi-
tal. The entire family was hospi-
talized last Tuesday on the oecas-
Sport Parade
By OSCAB FRALEY
Autol
Back to
plaid fiber,
sets $11.95
Mrs. $a
The Bank That Better Service Is Building
MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION
6:30 PM
10:00 PM
VENETIAN
BLINDS
LEA
USTIN
30 AM
ery can
McD
the winner to represent their area
in the NCAA.
Texas, Oregon State, Wyoming
and the midlands representative
will play off at Kansas City March
20, with the finals March 22. The
East-West finals will be played at
the Garden March 25.
The invitational starts March 15
and ends March 24. No announce-
Brownwood's Bob Gilbreath had
a little bad luck. He bad the best
qualifying times in the high hur-
dles and was favored to beat Lee
Miller. Burbank, defending state
champion. In the finals, Gilbreath
was leading the race when he hit a
hurdle and was slowed down so
much that he managed to finish
only in fifth place.
W. C. Burns, the Lions quarter-
AM
PM
»
<
throw. It was the first time the
event had been held for the col-
lege division. Ply won first in the
qualifying rounds and the mark
held up in the finals.
m TRUCK
•RK
came to the Demarets during that
time.
of progress in this discussion let’s
assume it is true.
than $3
of fires
the nat
An !■
fire toq.
John M
and Be
routed
Philade,
Ralph)
worker. C
plosions
booster ■
Cities 4
Blackwe
was cut’
in parts ■
Missour
home al
from oti"
The c ‛
not detea
nesses 92
PLUMBINGIT
.S%eet
115 <TR
HEALER MOTOR CO.
Approved
DeSoto— Plymouth
Sales & Service ‘
5--DIAL 2682
FOR AN APPOINTMENT
W. 1
di’
isy
ion of Mr. and Mrs. Letbetter’s
17th wedding anniversary.
during the weekend, joining de-
fending champion Kenucky (32-
comparatively slow track.
Parker and Martenson
superiority in the Southwest Con- i
ference track and field division I
’Live
By UN
a Four
damage
player' in the lot. He is a long
shot artist and his ability to hit
erowded him out of first place with
a dazzling 9.6 performance on a
ment in a Dallas hospital as the
result of a surprise raid by city
and county officers on an abortion
Tigers. We know of no finer man
in athletics than Paul Richards,
who was Bridges' battery mate in
an important game with Wash-
shining light that guides ath-
letics, athletes, and athletic fol-
close at the finish tape that spec-
tators called it a dead heat. but the
the American way
are important.
•PEAN
L 96.
I i
A •---"
Howard Payne":. _
ties, both by lath Coach
observers. He Fordoor
on the squac rId y
ly the most •oday
Instead of declining, the spirit
of fair play, the ideal of fair play,
MURRAY
MILNER'S
Pickup and Delivery
tig Brown Dial 8134
I surely I
is of a
F
AUSTIN TEACHER FOB
43 YEARS IS DEAD
AUSTIN, March 10 (UP)—Miss
Josephine Casis. 73. who taught
in Austin public schools for 43
years, died Sunday night at her
home here.
Miss Casis retired in 1943 but
during the teacher shortage re-
sumed her work. She is survived
by her sister, Miss Lilia Casis, pro-
fessor of romance languages in the
University of Texas.
Block from Courthouse
DIAL 9149
uil Ve
Kentucky Vs. Field In
National Cage Tourney
ness of that difference than ever
before.
Showings Made In Laredo Event
Brownwood’s two track coaches were back in their own
bailiwicks today, not boasting, but definitely not moaning
about their chances with the “big” boys two weeks from now
in the Southwestern Exposition Track and Field meet at
Fort Worth.
gKAP IRON
BATTERIES j
SCRAP MEJAL
RAGS /
(JUNK CO.
All Werk
Strictly Guaryhteed
MATSOw/EATON
MOTOR CO.
Lincoln-Mereun Dealer
NATL BANK
TEXAS
10 :
Forward—Bob Hamric, S,
• estern.
Forward—Dee Nutt, ACC. 1
Center—Don Loyd, MeMu‛
Center—Jim Wilson. Austir
Guard—Ted Nicksick, TWe
Guard—Chuck Youree. ACt
Guard—Ted Bare, South*
em.
Hetzel’s/
sell anpsw
Coming back he picked up at
Asheville and they were saying the
bubble had burst. So Jimmy step-
ped out and took the Masters.
But then the laughing boy be-
came attracted by the clubhouse
set. Popular, witty and charming,
Jimmy became a great favorite. He
was more interested in fun and
loud clothes—to which he still is
addicted-Athan he was in the ever-
lasting practice which is necessary
to remain in the front ranks of the
sharpshooting pros. So it wasn't
long before the singing Jimmy
found himself steadily among the
also-rans.
Then came the war. And Jimmy
served three and a half years in
the Navy.
He didn't lose that laugh or that
smile or that easy good nature. But
somewhere. while in navy blue.
Jimmy discovered the futility of
burning the candle at both ends.
It may have had something to do
with the little daughter which
V
i
can beat the boy next time by get-
ting a bigger lead early in the race.
Woods, former Buckners Orphans
Home trackster, was followed
closely by another Buckner young-
ster, H. A. Jolly, who finished
third. Woods and Jolly show great
promise in the mile run. They are
already being boomed for top spots
in the Texas Conference meet in
May.
Now at Lowest Prices evt
offered in Brownwood.
Custom Burtt to fit your
eep alive
On the Y
urday to emerge in front in the
university class of the Border
Olympics as a well-balanced Texas '
However. Pate could have pos-
sibly won the race or at least fin-
ished in second or third, except
for the fact that he got "boxed
in” end then it was too late to
overcome the lead of San An-
tonio’s Bernol. Pate ran ninth in
the first and most of the second
lap, but began to pull up midway
of the second, but had waited too
long to start and the leaders had
such an advantage that he could
net overcome it. Moot observers
felt that Pate could have won the
race, if he hadn't got “boxed" in
as he tried to go around the
curves, or if he had taken the
Good For 10 Pounds
pull every fraction of a point pos- Of Sugar On April 1
sible out of the prize bag last Sat-; me------- r. --
Arriving back in Brownwood from sunny Laredo and the
Border Olympics, both Brownwood high’s Gus Snodgrass and
Howard Payne's J. H. (Cap) Shelton saw performances by
their youngsters about which they ------
can talk with pride.
HE
Spotts Jront
By H. DON RODGERS
Belting Ben Johnson made his _ , \ „
heavyweight debut here two weeks See the nay/ Launderall auto-
matic waher at work. Deliv-
made now.
ALD-BARRETT
501 W. Broadway
Guarantee^
reasonably p
Sept. 30. It will cover both regular
home use and home canning needs.
OPA. however, may not be
around during all of this year. A
Senate-House conference has ap-
player since t!
“Slim” Warrer
who is now CoERBY
HgseconaSMPANY
ulated the votes 22 10.
Vene
made
blind
free.
Gainesville football star to
their treatment. The four had been
treated during the past few days.
Some were married women accom-
panied by their husbands.
Charged with abortion were Lil-
lian English Corbett, 63, and her
assistant, Lena Burt, 53.
District Attorney Will Wilson
said the hospital, patronized by pa-
tients from many sections of Texas
and surrounding states, was be-
lieved to have averaged a gross
income of more than $100,000 a
year.
Es a rea-
Herman advised
Snodgrass had every reason to
be proud of his aee high jumper.
Don Graves, who tied for first
place in the high school division
with a leap of 5 feet, 10% inches.
Te heighth was not alarming, but
it was early season and the fact
that Graves compared with the
best in the meet will give Snod-
grass some satisfaction.
Isaac Pate, the Lions' crack half-
miler, may receive a reprimand
from Snodgrass with a word of in-
struction for future races. Howev-
er. the reprimand might well be
followed with a good slap on the
back. Pate finished fourth in the
880-yard run despite the fact that
he had suffered an attack of "flu"
just a few days before the meet.
LAREDO, March 10 (UP)—The Cm-,A C+,.. 11 U
University of Texas may be hard|JDdre JTamD I I S
pressed to maintain its perennial ‛F w
! ers' faces." The box seat was di- ....
I vided by a stairway, with the ; seeded Rising Sun, Ind., 50 to 48.
■ gamblers on one side and Mac- and Fort Dix. N. J • scored a 60 to
HOUSTON, March 10 /UP)_ Phail on the other. 55 overtime victory over the high-
________ _____ . ! "If I even said hello’ to one of ly-resarded Hoosier Ambassadors
at stake in Houston tomorrow those guys," Durocher was quoted. of Lyons. Ind ' as top ranking teams
night when Champion Eddie Own- "I‛d be called before commissioner sutfered surprise defeats,
by meets Challenger Ben Johnson. j Chandler and probably barred." , The Atlant „ ports Arena team.
Ownby. former Randolph Field When queried by the United led by SliP Kerwalis 23 points,
halfback, was discovered by Tillie Press, MacPhail snorted, "in the ewamped Pine Prairie. La, 70 to
Herman when he Was boxing coach first place its none of Durocher's I in a second-round game._______
at Kelly Field during the war
OU want or
3-3c
Oklahoma. Big Six champ, and at yesterday's Yank-Dodger ex-
St. Louis U., Missouri valley tit- bibition.
list, planned a playoff game with : Durocher was quoted as saying
1 ■ -----------—--that two known gamblers occupied
Duran took the baton in the col-
lege mile relay in ninth place and
put on such a terrific finish that
he carried the Jackets to fourth
and was constantly gaining on the
third-place man. Duran is expected
to develop into another great
Jacket 440-yard dash man.
Joe Woods, the shortest man in
the college division mile run, nar-
rowly missed taking first place
when his'nearest opponent put on
a fast finish to nose bim out at the
finish line. Woods believes that he
Fair play is no more unani-
mously accepted and perfectly
practiced than are the precepts
laid down in the Sermon on the
Mont, but it isn't being kicked
around any more than it has
i been.
hospital which officers claimed had
been performing as many of 20 il-
legal operations weekly.
Climaxing several weeks of in-
vestigation, the officers raided the
hospital, housed in a residence in
the Oak Cliff section and found
one patient on the operating ta-
ble.
Four other patients arrived
while the officers were there and
all five women were moved to
obstetrics specialists took ever
Parkland Hospital where trained
HAVANA, Cuba. March
the former
answer to the wallop that has kept
Joe Louis world's heavyweight
champion for many years. _________ .U
Ownby cut a neat path in New rebuttal, having left by plane for
York where he battled seven fight-; Panama. \
er* without a loss. | --■■■ -----L—--
if Onen-
it
were so proved a deficiency appropriation
bill directing that OPA be ended
- iR‛s Furniture
S- A
old game
: pounds of sugar to housewives this
year.
Stamp No. 11 will be valid until
SANTA FE. N. M.
(UP)—Louis E. Starr.
morid. .e of
JK siGesi
vergent patterns of the two meets" 21-22. Holy Cross, Navy, the Big
was clear—it will be Kentucky vs. } Nine team and the other eastern £-gi __
the field in the invitational and in j team will play their first round the Howard Payne lone shot
the NCAA it's anybody’s title. ! at Madison Square Garden March | tist, named at the other guard
Bradley of Peoria <25 won and " ■ । - "" . * . . ..
5 lost) and North Carolina State
(25-4) accepted invitational bids
“It's just that these old guys
are coming unglued,'' Jimmy
chuckled yesterday as he and
little Benjy wrapded up the
Miami four-ball. “Youth is tak-
ing ever, son, youth i* taking
over.”
the bucket from far out on the . ...
court almost brought Howard I mentioned because of his ver
Payne victories over both TWC l ity in the ball-handling chore
and ACC.” the Jackets. /(
MIAMI, Fla., March 10 (UP)—
Smiling Jimmy Demaret is keeping
them laughing on the golf course
today but they don't like it
As the pros swing north, digging
divots in the land of the palms, the
personality kid with the clothes
which match all the gaudy color*
of this sunny landscape is heading
the money winners with some
$9,400 in the till. Ben Hogan. the
little mechanical man who set the
pace last year, is down in second
place with $6,750.
It's a sensational comeback for
the chubby fellow from Houston,
who almost followed the primrose
path off the fairway after a great
debut in 1940.
Yankee bench and that "MacPhail j
! was flaunting his company with -
known gamblers right in the play- seeded Kenova, W. V., 47 to 44.
----- Mo„ eliminated third-
‛D.Postaid, women were charged with abortion
- e today and five of their allegr- —
’ ’ tients were undergoing legal
vas brought to at-
days ago when a
ine, which makes . - - —---------- - -
ping a finger on the consciousness of fair play is,
>. devoted its edi- we believe, spreading and growing
tites. in the United tates.
increase
and former member of / f >
Democratic Executive 4ni
. Halsey died jn his sleedani
while on a fishing trig *•
Rio. He was the fathe/ SA
State Rep. Bop Halsey/^ ‘' K
miler, failed to qualify in Friday's
trials, but is expected to gain mo- pert little red-haired wife. Ideal-
mentum as the season progresses la. “Now we can buy baby a new
and may develop into one of the pair of shoes." 01 1U vur,-
top 440-yard dash men in this area But actually the "old guys." The state heavyweight title will be
Howard Payne s only first place many of them younger than the 33- ‘
came when Wesley Ply set a Bor- vear-old Jimmy. r—---—
der Olympics record of 134 feet "unglued." P - i"
6 inches in the college discus taping together that
..... which sent him rocketing to the top
so briefly seven years ago.
champion, appeared to be the
midwestern representative, al-
Three of the championship Texas Wesleyan Ramsd
keteers were placed on one of the unofficial Texas Col
ence basketball tems last week, while one player d
Abilene Christian, and Bob Clindaniel of Howard Pa
rounded out the first string club.
Another sports scribe in picking his all-Texas Confer
squad just picked the five TWC starters, and then on’
second string mentioned some also-rans froh the other
Schools. : J______
‛ Hal Sayles, Abilene sports writ-
lowers upward and onward.
It is paradoxical that we preach
about fair play, take pride in it and
still taught at certain examples of
evasion.
For example: There have been
Hand—Buy,
>, 611 Beav.
The national collegiate A. A.TI . A .
t253,/xady‛nelxde!?, 22 Throats Again
Oregon State (27-4>. and Wyom-
ing. Wisconsin (15-5), Big Nine
(Patronize your indepen
Bank, it will benefit yg
Open an account noy.
mercialism was
t home
The handsome. ever-smiling
Texan crashed into prominence
in 1939 by coming out of no-
where to capture the Los Angeles
Open by a comfortable margin of
five strokes. Then, one the 1940
winter tour, he won six out of
nine events. He copped the Oak-
land. San Francisco, Western
Open. New Orleans and St. Pet-
ersburg tournaments, before
dropping out briefly.
overs Abortion Charges
Face 2 Dallas Women
DALLAS, March 10 (UP)—Two
"”■1
9 Telephone
For Bicycle epairs.
Lawn Mowers
Anyhow, one* out of the Navy,
Jimmy went back to the practice
tee and soon his name started mov-
ing up in the lists of finishers. Last
year he was fourth among the guys
at the payoff window when the fi-
nal putt was holed and he barely
missed the National Open crown
by two strokes.
And this year he was started
with that old rush, capturing the
Tucson and St. Petersburg Opens;
finishing second at Richmond.
Calif ; and in the Texas Open,
winning the Miami four-ball with.
Hogan and finishing in the money
in all eight events on the winter
tour.
Yes, the laughing boy is really
back. But while he keeps them
smiling, you can't expect his rivels
to like it when he picks their pock-
ets with a nibllpir^
Gilbert Duran, El Faso fresh-
man, thrilled the hearts of How-
ard Payne fans when he ran a
dead heat with North Texas
State's quarter-miler Gilbert.
The officials ruled that Gilbert
won by a fraction of an inch.
Duran put on a great exhibition
to overcome a big lead held by
the North Texas sprinter.
ORSNOTE: The following article by Flem
"nWoth sports seribe, sums up Sports Fronts’
he field of sports as well as words can possibly
end todaywe pass it on to you. If you have
lore, you will enjoy it again, and if you failed
vwereprint it here in order that you might
“ranHafs discussion on fair play._____________
ion of big sports
gambling. Notre
!.) focused at-
ad for the taking
seen circumstances, it will be pos-
sible to make another 10 pound
t0-yard‛dash finals stayed to the stem ‘Opdonnrundslto allot 35
—The Office of Price Administra-
tion announced today that Spart
A. a M. team pushed the Long- SmePgood in Apionihori pounds
horns to the final event before of sugar,
conceding defeat. Stamp No. 33 now good for five
J1WW» pouna « w-
Saturday, but the spectators.
2), West Virginia (18-1), Duquesne mept has been made yet of a grand
(19-1), and Utah in the field. St. I championship game between NC
John’s of Brooklyn (15-6), winner AA and invitational champs.
of the invitational in 1943 and —------------------------——
1944. appears certain to get a bid N . .mI.
spdtwre oratl « Durocher, McPhail
(15-2), Long Island U. (17-4>. UCLA i» . r . A.I ,
(18-7) and Notre Dame 019-4. At cach Others
by July1. Some Congressmen
claimed that the reduction in funds
would end the agency in a few
weeks.
The Senate banking committee,
however, has approved a bill trans-
ferring sugar controls to the Agri-
culture Department.
SUU Guiding Light
unimportant develop- . The, truth is that the ideal of
sent a |_ The things that concerned fair, play is subjected to a great
f «ii editorial writer were the at- deal of stretching and tearing
vziceptof fair play.
loop. Big John Meeks vas
' business who I have in my box. In a
, the second place, if Durocher was Have vour ol
------- — ___correctly quoted he’s a liar. They " ‛
Jack Dempsey in New York after were not in my box. I had noth-
his Army service. Dempsey has al-' ing to do with their being there."
ways been on the lookout for a big ; "And," the Yankee president
fighter who can shape up as the added, "you can quote me as say-
ing that it's none of Durocher's I
• Ge nuine factor* engineered
D rts for all Onrysler cars.
- Nev Replacement Engine*
"Confidence Is Priceless"
Windows Correctly
Finest Quality Finish.
Material. Workmanship.
V/pod, Stqel or
(Aluminum
‘as Five-Day Service
idket Payment Plan, if
k • destfed.
| ington in '45 when the Tigers were
of a tight pennant race. Yet Rich-
ards tells a story of a bit of cheat-
ing by Bridges which never fails
to bring a big laugh from baseball
fans.
commander of the Veterans of For- 1
eign Wars, today lashed out at I
Communists whom he charged (
were "invading" America's govern-
ment and institutions. including
his own organization.
Starr, scheduled to address the ;
New Mexico House of Represents- |
tives today, said he had found one
VFW post in which 10 members !
“hold Communist cards." He I
claimed Communists also were
moving into American churches
and school*.
The VFW commander told a
state convention of his organiza-
tion here last night that more peo-
ple were living under dictator rule i
today than when the war started.
Starr aaid he feared the possi-
bility of a third world war unless
the United States continued to pour
money into Europe.
is simply
ence,T" th* Christian
otbes • •"
D<> “* *c c o m m o n
ideal.cs m y of them j -— ------ -F---a-a a pu-
Americanted: «ept it as fessional baseball than Pitcher
k io7 gran Tommy Bridges of the Detroit
Ln quaVot fair play ’
a matepract y all parts
Mown ista iorld
X un-Cany 1 ns of the
1good T“Nave 1 exposed
L.rwhich ■ a*
W-wncde ot a
game Pitcher Bridges used the
illegal spitball on two pitches,
speaking They struck out the batter, re-
theedameandmayrohaelpennynd lead early in the race.
Bridges would probably take
j a punch at anyone who called him
a cheater. We are sure he never
assu euar- (thinks of dealing off the bottom
in the . of deck when playing card*,
surel < but my some queer twisting of the
. -. sports code it is all right, if you
of fair can get by with it, to throw just
one or two spitballs in a tight spot.
It has always been that way
in baseball land a good many
other sports)—fair play frequently
falls before the desir* to win, but
that doesn’t mean fair play is dead,
or even dying. As long as the
I cheating is hidden and denied and
deplored we will at least be facing
> the right way. It is something to
know right from wrong and seems
to us that more people have re- 1
cently been showing keen aware-
Ow Fykyn Trained Mechanics
eyy Any Make OE Car
• Auus End Checked FrX.
• and Delivery. ;
• Hoqer Equipment.
swap Shop
fano rofinish. 2:
ed and newKories put on. SiNS5 wrarurnrure.er*
workmanship at BEpFERdit is Kood at
ices. | —2B. an BEAVER
MUSIC CO. r ror anything *f
I37UC
~ / 'I
er. polled the coaches and most of
the sports writers and came up
with a very representative :.squad
of 12 players, five on the first
team and seven on the second
team.
Clifton MeNeeley, TWC’s leading
scorer in the conference and the
nation, was the first choree at a
forward position. J. E. Smith.
ACC’s repeated T-C star, landed a
berth on the first string at the
other forward position.
Hardie Fortenberry, the towering
i TCW center, was chosen for the
'pivot position, while h hefty
"buddy,” E. F. (Easy) Parham,
was named at one of the guard
slots.
Clindaniel, one of the best set MARK HALSEY DIES
shot artists to perform on local i
courts this season has been de- LUBBOCK.March 1
clared the best in the history of Services w}re schduled
—---— 1 - - ---. Mark Halsey Lubbock
ANDM
ELS
Dan
Suri
As/Close As
FOR GO9DVIS[ON AND
COMPIFE OPTOMETRIC
SERVICE SEE
/ DRS.)
r6to Coach Mines
IG BROWNWOOD DAnL FOB
/ ABILENE
RADIO REPAIR
ExperGaaranteed Service
DENMAN MUSIC CO.
judges ruled the blond Baylor flash
th* winner by a fraction of an
inch.
Other conference schools fin-
ished well behind the leaders in
the university division.
Corpss Christi won the high
school ch vision
Three TWC Basketeeri
BL / Dial 2529
linds — Buy them
i Brownwood. Every
laranteed. Estimates
plete repair service.
2500, 96 y & .,919
ReUr'Y." 2-9e
Bring your license plates and
we will put them on
MS E
Kep Your Cor
7 Good Repair
• Estimate*
# ex-
Awnings made and repaired.
LETiEntR & SONS
(UP— Dodger manager Leo Duro- ~ATHANTA.Ga March (UP,, g. A.
B ? Fag Mt ymmm),
dentof.theNewYork Yankees. Basketbaii congress tournament estimateseesew blinds, ,
। enrertainer gamhlere in hie hnv I: • I • a 2 •
Birmingham, paced by former jtinishing/r BAKpairs.
Alabama star Wheeler Leeth, de- ... Dial 2619 -•
feated the Jacksonville, Florida. M
American Legion Post 148 ester- era—eAorne--
. first row box’in back of_the i dayeAant.whleeTupela downed 26 SEAT CoER .
Me. Carmel, m. defeated top- - icerrueteriausKelnction
w. Covered and Rebuilt
Ybistering Convertible Tops
fRI, * T. SHOP
: c, . aab Myrick
‛M E. LEE 2-29*
Anderson.
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Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 47, No. 145, Ed. 1 Monday, March 10, 1947, newspaper, March 10, 1947; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1487997/m1/3/?q=music: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Brownwood Public Library.