The Abilene Reporter-News (Abilene, Tex.), Vol. 71, No. 135, Ed. 2 Saturday, November 3, 1951 Page: 2 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Abilene Reporter and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Abilene Public Library.
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3-A
H-SU, Cincinnati
Battle Opensat 8
By COLLIER PARRIS •.
Reporter-News Sports Editor
It’s the day of the big game”
tonight.
University of Cincinnati's vi-
brant, versatile and vexacious big
Bearcats are expected to show
major league stuff against Hardin-
Simmons University in the /Cow-
boys' first home stand of the ra-
pidly departing season.
Game time is 8 o’clock, at Fair
Park Stadium.
The handicappers, the pollsters. 1 due to stop with just seven straight,
the dope and the records all favor in the cool, cool, cool of this
Cincinnati lo rope the Cowboys evening on Fair Park gridiron,
with their own lariats and tie ’em however, and on their very first
with piggin’ strings from their own visit to this particularly landing,
saddles the Bearcat, may stumble into a
Well, it wouldn't be the first new kind of trap. Upsets are al.
time. Coach Sid Gillman's Bear- most as common this year as the
cats have done it twice before in a operations according to Hoyle
row, and they ought to know most Warren Woodson’s Cowboys just
of the angles on hogtieing a Cow-l could join the group of upsetters,
boy. They’ve been giving the busi- and make the dope peddlers look
ness to all the other opponents this: bad
season and. on paper, they're not th
WELL
TRAINED VISITORS
PROBABLE LINEUPS FOR TONIGHT
CINCINNATI
OFFENSE
67—Dick Jarvis, 185
82—Don Grammer, 190
PROBABLE STARTERS
LE
LT
LG
DEFENSE
88—Nate Harlan. 205
THE ABILENE REPORTER NEWS
Abilene, Texas, Saturday Evening, Nov. 3, 1951
2-A
Fans Put On
WooliesToday ACC, McM Play
Over Nation On Road Tonight
ball fans, who have watched most _
of their girdiron aport this fall in Abilene', Texas Conference rep.
balmy weather, donned woolies, resentatives, MeMurry College and
raincoats and other bad - weather ACC, are on the road today and
clothing today for a nation- tonight, with possible Conference
Wide card beaded by six intersec- honors hanging on one of C
aware of Mayhew's intense desire
to win this one and he figured
the Javalina coach would have his
HORTZO
1Depicte
marsup
7 It lives
of
the
29—Bill Shalosky, 195
64—Frank Middendorf, 215 C
22—Bob Marich, 195
85—Noel Guyot.
84—Jim Driscoll.
54—Bill McDonald, 180
200
215
80—Andy Matto. 190
38—Ralph Staub, 205
28—Gene Rossi, 182
21—Bob Stratton, 170
39—Jack Gordon, 178
13—Bob Dougherty, 202
RG
RT
RE
QB
LHB
RHB
FB
17—Jack Tracy. 195
20—Nick Shundich, 198
12—Paul Yelton,
9—John Mooth,
41—Don Fritz,
62—Dick Goist.
185
165
200
165
There's no denying that the Cin-
cinnati club is well armed, and
well trained in the use of their
arms. Especially that star righi-
| bander. Gene Rosai, who has flip
' ped many a touchdown forward in
his day, and whose day la not end-
ed. Last year, for instance, be
passed for a flat thousand yards
including 14 TDs. He has been just
ss accurate this year while quar-
terbacking and passing the Bear-
cats to seven wins, including four
shutouts.
Among the better '‘catchers” of
Rossi's hesves are Ends Dick Jar
vis and Ralph Staub, and he some-
times throws to his backfield mat-
es Bob Stratton and Jack Gordon
OFFENSE
89— Bill Cagle, 195
63—Bill Murry, 210
78—Ed Crow, 180
55—M. Waguespack, 195
60—Wade Musgrove, 200
75—Travis Kelley, 210
84—Chester Lyssy, 190
20—Bobby Hart, 180
15—Dunny Goode, 165
44—Riley Cross, 180
24—BU1 Davis, 200
13 Citrus
14 Intersti
15 Seine
16 Abstrac
: beings
18 Wicked
19 Feminir
appella
21 Impair
23 Decay
26 Deep h<
’ 27 Child’s
29 Italian
30 Compas
31 Pear Gy
1 mother
32 Window
23 Trial
35 Passage
brain
$6 Female
L(ab.)
87 Brython
of the s
38 Lift
44 Self est.
47 Papal a
48 Wine ve
51 Motive
S3 Barters
55 Hit
56 Strong
vegetabl
VERTI
1 Was vic
INsUve n
I Entangh
I Baron (
club pepped up.
McMurry's Indians, virtually out
of the conference race, take on
their toughest opponent of the Ma-
son when they met the Carswell
Air Force Bombers in Fort
Worth. The game, slated to start
at 2:30, is played at Farrington
Field.
Coach Wilford Moore’s Indians
delayed their trip to Fort Worth
until this morning, and they'll bus
home after the game — “if we
are able to come home,” Moore
said. He espects a beating, but is
hoping no more of his players
come down with injuries. It’s a
crippled outfit, anyway, that goes
against one of the strongest teams
of the Southwest-a team made up
entirely of college graduates who
made gridiron history for their
alma maters.
games.
Abilene Christian's Wildeats
clash with Coach Dewey May-
hew’s Texas A&I College Javelians
in Kingsville tonight in what could
be one of the more interesting and
important games of the Texas
Conference race. •
Coach Garvin Beauchamp and
his Wildcats, all of them to good
shape, arrived to Kingsville late
Friday to time for an early night
workout on the Javelina field. But
they didn't find the balmy weather
they expected to deep South Texas
Temperatures hovered in the mid-
dle thirties.
ACC to favored to win this one
tional contests.
The weatherman predicted most
of today’s games would be played
in poor weather, ranging from
chilly temperatures in usually
warm climates to rain and snow.
The snow forecast was not confin-
ed to the northern areas. It also
reached down into the southland.
The underdogs liked the weather
prospects. They figured poor play-
ing conditions would enhance their
chances of making the football sea-
son a title more topsy turvy than
it has been thia fall.
The most traditional of the in-
tersectional games, matching win-
less Navy and Notre Dame before
some 44,000 tana at Baltimore, fac-
ed prospects of a cold rain. That
was all right for Coach Eddie
Erdelatz of the Middles, who con-
sidered the rain as an equalizer.
This series has been going on for
more than two decades but only
four times have the Middles won.
ARMY FACES TROJANS
Army, not much better off than
their service brethern with only
one victory to show for five games,
faced the Rose Bowl - bound Tro-
jans of Southern California in New
York's Yankee Stadium, where an
all - night rain pelted the gridiron.
Although its usually the intersec-
tional games that take the spot-
light there was enough going on
within the various conference cir-
cles to furnish plenty of interest-
ing football.
No. 1 among the family squab-
bles was the game between unde-
feated Illinois and Michigan, the
Big Ten champion which hasn't
been beaten inside the circuit.
AFTER GRANGE'S RECORD
Some 71.000 fans were expected
at Champaign to see if the Wolver-
ines could stop the Illini's Johnny
Karras from equalling the immor-
tal Red Grange's record of 13
touchdowns in one season. Karras
needed three to do so. •
and continue its stride toward an-
other conference pennant, but
Coach Beauchamp was not un-
33 Unbeaten Schoolboy Teams
Left; Lubbock Heads Pack
Cincinnati is fundamentally a
passing team, but Stratton. Gordon
and Bob Dougherty are pretty
good gainers on the ground, too
Defensively, the club is tough
80—D. C. Andrews, 185 like a brick wall. It has held score-
19—Glenn Sample, 180
HARDIN-SIMMONS
LE
LT
LG
C
RG
RT
RE
QB
LH
RH
FB
DEFENSE
77—Jerry Cooper, 225 less Kansas State, University of
6E way Cam 185 Hawaii, University of Louisville,
65—„ ayne, Carter, and Western Reserve, while the of-
—Richard Ham, 200 fensive platoon has piled up touch-
68—Pat Tone,
73—Clint Holder.
87—Gene Offield,
205 downs galore against these teams "
220 and against Tulsa University,
190 VMI, and the Border Conference's
1431 own Texas Western. Last week in ...________________..
148 Cincinnati, the Bearcats allowed night is Box Stratton, above. Bearcat left halfback. The
Odessa Second Half
Rally Throws Eagles
22—Al Yanez, ............ .... ....... ........
43—Billy Houston.' 160 Texas' Western to make three
48—Harold Barrett, 165 touchdowns, while they were piling
36—Drennon Daves, 178 up 53 points, n
Men like Ends Nate Harlan and
Paul Yelton are prominent in this
tough defense. And there are nine
HOTFOOTED BEARCAT — Probably the leading rusher on
he Cincinnati team which meets Hardin-Simmons here to-
170-pounder is fast and powerful. He supplements Cincy's
great passing game with sprints and plunges aplenty.
By HAROLD V. RATLIFF
Associated Press Sports Editor
The undefeated list was down to
By FRED SANNER
Reporter-News Sports Writer
The flag of triumph waved from
the nest of the Abilene Esgles for
ert Baker kick waa good. Odessa
7, Abilene 0.
SECOND QUARTER
1. Billy Paul, kicking from Abi-
lene s. has kick blocked by Wel-
don Holley. Ball rolls out of end
more almost as hot.
COUNTING ON GOODE
Hardin-Simmons will mix some
passing with its fine ground at-
tack which features Frank Dun-
ny'' Goode, the hustling halfback
from Midland who is one of the
natino’s leaders in the ground-
gaining department.
Goode also catches passes, along
with Ends Bill Cagle and Chester
Lyssy and Gene Offield Passes
flipped by Bobby Hart the agile,
accurate quarterback from Level-
land.
SPORTS ROUNDUP
Carswell Being Eyec
For Gator Bowl Tilt
By HUGH FULLERTON, JR.
NEW YORK. Nov 3. UF—There's
a move under way to interest the
Gator Bowl promoters in matching
the Fort Jackson, S. C., and Cars-
one glorious half Friday night at
Fair Park Stadium, but the re-
surging Odessa Bronchos sent the
crowd of 7,500 home with sad 0
heartsas they snapped back to de- 2 Abilene drives from Odessa
feat the Eagles, 35-13. „ . 47. Boyd loses to 48. Boyd hits
Donnie King and Gene Boyd Beckham on 28. Moore to 26. Don-
crossed into pay dirt in the second nie King to TD on pitchout from
quarter to give the Eagles a 13-3 i Howle around left end. Boyd kick
Odessa scatback, quickly changed 8′3. with a minute left in the first
the complexion of the game when half, Boyd intercep's Schlemeyer
he ran back the second half kick | pass and gallops 58 yards to TD. i r t , .
off 100 yards for a touchdown. Boyd kick no good Abilene 13, game, of the season with a leg in-
Herbert Miller cut down Donnie Odessa 9 ur. _
King. THIrd QUArtER ‘ ~ Chenhehekmellea toyzam
per cent since it lost the first two
games Dick Maiocco. New York
ineligible for his senior year be-
cause he was over 19 Somehow
he turned up in a nearby Ohio
city, along with his kid brother
zone for safety. Odessa 9. Abilene
It is indicated, however, that
Woodson’s team will remain closer
to the ground than the high-flying
Bearcats, concentrate on the run-
ning of Goode, Bill Davis, maybe
Mitchell Malouf, Jamex Cox and
| Riley Cross. There's a slight
chance that the res! speedster.
Harold Taylor, will get in the
game, but be, like fullback Malouf,
has been sidelined since the first
who also is quite a player and the
folks who arranged the deal also
well Air Force Base (Texas) teams__,______s.. .... ucma _
for the service championship New found a job for his widowed moth-
Year’s day instead of trying to
book a pair of top college teams,
which may play hard to get Both
teams are heavily loaded with ex-
college stars and figure they can't
claim the all-service title unless
they meet The Refrigerator Bowl
at Evansville, Ind., also is inter-
ested and so is a Columbia, S. C.,
service club, which wants to stage
the match there Leo Johnson
who scouted Michigan for Illinois. |
the estimates that Bennie Oosterbaan’s
1 .-...ml has improved more than 25
1 Swain Adams takes opening go for touchdowns. It could be an
kickoff on own goal line and ram- , offensive thriller. It could be a full
bles 100 yards to touchdown. Baker evening of interesting football en-
theirusual vardase due to the kick good. Odessa 16, Abilene 13. tertainment.
there I nlav waldon Hollev 2. Odessa drives 51 yards in And if the fans respond to sta-
tip-top end candidate ’nine plays after Holley recovered dium-filling numbers, it could
Odessa’sMeara Abilene Boyd fumble on dessa 49. Har mean that more teams of Cincin-
, Holley, and dee ne ris and Freeman alternated car- nati’s calibre would be brought
linepactes: west dehE Friday rying ball, with 29-yard pass from here for more games of this type,
themselves on erense 504 Schlemeyer to John Held eating ------------------
Jack Freeman was most yardage Harris tallied on
Although Jack Freeman was quarterback sneak. Baker kick no
on yards on 19 cares. It was 2000.002 22 QUARTER
the quarterback sneaks of the FOURTH QUARTER
Bronchos which powered Odessa to 1 Odessa drove 70 yards in 12
needed first downs and accounted plays with 20 yards penalties
for two touchdowns. ′ - against Abilene helping drive. Har
Youngblood led the Abilene run- ris scored on quarterback sneak
ners. picking up 47 yards on 11 from the one A six-yard pass from
carries, with King second, getting Harris to Freeman was sand-
26 yards on his lone attempt wished sin between running at-
from scrimmage, tempts by Harris, Freeman, and
Tommy Harris, who scored two Gober Baker kick no good. Odes-
of the Broncho TD's on quarter sa 28, Abilene 13.
back sneaks, piled up 42 yards to 2 Odessa ‘drives 61 yards in 11
11 of the same underhanded man- plays with ten yards of penalties
euvers. aiding Brone ho cause Freeman
David Gober was third best was the biggest gainer netting 31
Broncho runner with 31 yards on yards on four tries. Hart is got 12
seven attempts, of the 61 and Gober added nine.
Charlie Ward, who entered the The touchdown came on a guard-
game as Odessa's leading ground around run of 8 yards by 209-
gainer, netted only 15 yards to 17 pound Walter Cooley Odessa
. tries Running into a similar-ate weightman. Baker kick go-
was Abilene’s Boyd. Boyd, No. 2 . ODESSA 35. ABILENE 13.
runner in the Eagle backfield,
wound up with a minus three yards
Broncho.
Abilene's end sweeps, with Joe
Youngblood carrying failed to gair
Wylie, Alban
Still Leaders
The Wylie Bulldogs and the Al-
bany Lions marched on as Class
A kingpins of West Central Texas
football after the week’s round of
play.
Wylie kept ita record unspotted
Thursday night with a 28-13 tri-
umph over the Clyde Bulldogs. The
victory was Wylie's eighth, and
fifth straight in 7-A competition
Only the Santa Anna Mountain-
eers stand between the Bulldogs
and the title
In District 8-A Albany’s Lions
, overpowered the Roby Lions. 38-
12, for the Lions’ fourth straight
district win against no defeats.
SCORE BY PERIODS Only blots on the Albany season
ODESSA 7 3 13 1336 record are losses to Anson and
Scoring:* Stamford, rugged AA competitors.
ODESSA Touehdowns—Ward Adams, Roscoe and Merkel kept within
ceiver, helped his record Friday Harris 2, Cooley. Safety: Holey blocked striking distance of the Lions. Ros. |
night with four catches for 51 Extra Points Baker 3. I coe, loser only to Merkel to dis-
yards. Jimmy Garner caught the ABILENE Don King. Boyd. Extra trict play, won its third 8-A tri-
other two completed by the Ea- orrieials Referee Charles Hawn: tm umph at the expense of the Mun-
gles for 15 yards pire Burns McKinney: Field Judge Joe day Moguls, 48-12. The r
John Held. Odessa end. snagged Holmes Head Linesman J W West
two for 43
JongHowle, subbing for Randle
Garki,sidelined with the mumps
completed five of the six Eagle
completions for 47 yards, while
Boyd hit Beckham for a 20-yarder.
The scoring was as follows: I
1 Boyd kicked out on Eagle 22
Eagles penalized to 17 Ward took
pitchout from Carl Schlemeyer
went around left end for TD. Rob-’
on 11 carries.
Bob Beckham, ace.’Eagle, re-
Midland, Breck
Take Loop Leads;
Mustangs Try Today
er.
Football
ACC
VS
TEXASA&1
8:00 P. M. Tonite
OVER
KWKC
1340. on Your Dial
Sponsored by R. A. Bible
Hdw. & Implement Co.
33 and Lubbock was projected as
the No. 1 team today as the Tex-
as schoolboy football campaign
plunged into its final month.
Lubbock last night whipped
Pampa 33-7 in the feature game
of the week and by so doing not
only remained undefeated and un-
tied but pushed to the undisputed
leadership of raucous District 1
in class AAAA
Pampa, Stephenville, Stamford,
Lockhart, Bay City and Hughes
Springs were added to the cas-
ualty list. Today there are only
26 undefeated, untied teams left
in the four divisions of schoolboy
football playing to state cham-
pionships Seven are undefeated
FOOTBALL SCORES
1-AAAA
Odessa 35, AbHene 13
Lubbock 33, Pampa 7
Amarille 41, San Angele T
Borger, open date.
OTHER AAAA
Port Arthur 48. Beaument •
Paschal (Fort Worth) 21, Poly (Fort
Worth) 20
Austin (Houston) 27. Milby (Houston) •
Harlingen 66, San Antonio Tech 0
. Jacksonville 26, Crozier Tech (Dallas)
meet. And that’s the only way;
U. quarter miler, has accepted an
invitation to run in the Sugar Bowl
NYU can get a bowl bid.
Report from upstate New York
that Port Washington High School
had scored a 52-yard point-after-
touchdown in a 40-0 victory over
Hudson N. Y., was investigated,
bringing to light these facts:
First kick successful but Port
Washington’ offside. From the sev-
en. P. W. pushed over but was
penalised for holding. Third try
completed pass from the 22; 15
yard penalty for clipping Fourth
attempt, completed pass from the
37 penalty for illegal use of hands
put ball back on the Port Wash-
ington 48 A pass from there fi-
nally wa» completed legally for
Sunset (Dallas) 33, North Dallas 7
Baytown 62, Ball (Galveston) •
El Paso M. Roswell, N. M. 4
Miller (Corpus Christi) 34, Laredo •
Ray (Corpus Christi) 26, Brackenridge
(San Antonie)6
Weedrow Wilson (Dallas) 12, Forest
(Dallas) 6 (Thursday).
Jeff Davis (Houston) 21, John Reagan
(Houston) 14 (Thursday).
Texarkana 33, Tyler 9
Wichita Falls 40, Sherman 27
Austin 13, Jefferson (San Antenie) 3
Ysleta 41. Austin (El Paso) 18
Waco 27, Denison 6
Harlingen 66 San Antonio Tech •
1-AAA
Midland 14, Vernon 18
Lamesa 34. Big Spring •
Sweetwater at Plainview, postponed
until Saturday. •
3-AAA-
the point.
Cliff (Fido) Purpur. former big
league hockey player, has installed
a “farm" system for his U of
North Dakota hockey team. With
15 Canadians and ten others on
his squad. Fido plana to keep the
top 15 on the varsity and let the
| others gain experience with the
I Grand Forks Amerks. which he
also coaches When Baylor ral-
lied to tie the Texas A. and M.
football team at tl-21 last Satur-
day several hundred Aggie Cadets
carried the Baylor player's off the
field on their shoulders The first
offspring of Stymie will get to the
races at Hialeah this winter. Won-
der if their names will reflect the
language that stymies (in golf)
: 4-020 College talent scouts
are giving Portsmouth Ta. hotels
plenty of business. They all want
Breekenridge 33, Stephenville 4
Weatherford 6. Brownweed •
Cleburne 2]. Graham 13
OTHER AAA
Port Nhes 21, South Park (Beau-
mont) 13
Marshall 37. Henderson 7
Gainesville 20, Irving 19
Corsicana 33, Lufkin 31
Burbank (San Antenie) 8, Lanier (San
Antente) 0
Kerrville 0, Harlandale (San Antonio) !
• (tie)
Conroe 14, Texas City 7
Palestone 14, Bryan 12
Brownsville 48, Alice 25
Kingsville 20. Pharr-Sam Juan-Alame •
San Benite 21, Edinburg 6
Grand Prairie 33, Denton •
Temple 68. Nacogdoches •
Paris 14 McKinney 6
Longview 33, Kilgore 6
Freeport 13. Galena Park 7
Alamo Heights (San Antonio) 12 New
Braunfels 7
Merkel produce:
Badgers, who have dropped one
| lone district tilt to Albany, won 1-----, , ...... . bis
their fourth 8-A victory, whipping to look over Jerry Mingis, 1.8
1 the Haskell Indians 27-7. 11 “ -----“’— • High
Roscoe and Albany tangle No-
vember 9 in the game that will
| probably give the title to Albany,
or throw the R-A race into a three-
way tie.
In other 7-A games, DeLeon’s
Bearcats trounced Santa Anna.
Midland vs Breckenridge in bi- 41-30, and Rising Stars’ Wildcats
| district play! clipped Bangs' Dragons, 46-13.
The Bulldog, and the Buckaroos Cross Plains, runner-up to Wylie,
Friday night virtually assured was idle, as was 8-A Throckmor-
themselves of Class AAA cham- ton.
tackle at Woodrow Wilson • High:
Jessel Curry, a great basketball
prospect and a good quarterback,
and Mickey Riggs, who can sprint
| with or without a football.
Oklahoma’s secondary defense
trio, two sophomores and a fresh-
man. has grabbed off seven enemy
passes in two games Best foot-
ball recruiting story heard this fall
doesn’t even concern a college
It has to do with a western Penn-
sylvania scholastic star who was
pionships in District 1 and 2 by .----— *
subduing their nearest rivals. Mid- o .nm ,
land nosed out Vernon 14-13 in muoial Tanmtawaey
District 1 while Breckenridge LTUCIdI 111 BOUTWEI
swamped previously undefeated, s cusses PET III 2**IRE VV en
untied Stephenville. 33-6, to take
znalspunted leadership in District Dike Raylor Against Tfll
One more game in District 1 is PllS DdYlUl AUdII ILU
yet to be played thia week. Sweet- ■ *
water’s
Mustangs meet Plain-
view's Bulldogs st Plainview |'
2:30 p m. Saturday. The game
was originally scheduled Friday
night but was postponed because
of the weather
DALLAS, Nov 2 '* - It’s a be fighting to keep Ita slender
at crucial day in Southwest Confer, hopes, alive. The Aggies, once de-
nel feated and once tied, have to win
AU other teams in Districts 1
and 2, except Midland and Breck-
• enridge, have suffered at least one
| defeat.
ence football. Chances see that the
championship field will be cut to
three teams. That would mean that
four teams were definitely out of
the race
The top game is scheduled st 1
Waco where the two leaders get
from Arkansas or be definitely
AREA AA
Anson 12, Stamford :
Coleman 22, Brady 13
Ballinger 52, Lake View •
Colerade City 1, Hamlim •
Ranger 33, Eastland •
Dublin 41, Comanche 27
Electra 3, Seymour •
Rotan at Snyder, postponed
Cisco, Winters, open dates.
AREA A
until Sat-
Rescee M. Munday 13
Merkel 21, Haskell 7
DeLeon 41, Santa Anma •
Albany 38, Roby 12
Rising Star 46. Bangs 13
Wylie 28, Clyde 18 (Thursday)
San Saba 7. Hamilton 1
Cross Plains, Threekmerton,
dates
open
The southwest again present- but have been tied.
ed an unpredictable lineup. Texas---------■-------------— — -
Christian, loser of three non-con-
ference tilts but unbeaten in the
circuit, took on once - tied Baylor. ITTOA
Texas and Southern Methodist MIIJVII VII UP
clashed in another counter while
== - Of AA Heap
The Anson Tigers remained the
lone undefeated Class AA football
in West Central Texas today
Llano 20. Marble Falls •
College-Academy 24, Benavides •
Robstown 26, Freer •
Agua Delee 31, Mirando City M
Woodsboro 52, Sundeen 3
Taft 45, Mathis 20
Prement 21, San Diego 7
Mt. Pleasant 27, Bonham 4
Mineral Wells 13, Jesuit (Dallas) 13
(tie)
Frisce •, Anna • (tie)
Hebbronville 46, St. Joseph’s (Laredo)
•
Gilmer 20, East Mountain •
Garland 46, Mesquite •
Duncanville 14, Keller 4
Farmersville 47. Cooper •
Kaufman 26. Richardson •'
Levelland 32, Morton 13
Brownfield U. Muleshoe 3
Abernathy 19, Lockney 7
Often 40, Springlake It
Sundown 7, O’Donnell 7 (Sundown
wins en penetrations, $-1).
Plains W. Repesville 13
Meadow 26, Wellman 14
Whitney 46, Granbury 6 •
Wills Point 26, Mineola 13
Hubbard 43, Mildred •
Mt. Vernon 7. Sulphur Springs • •
Jaeksbare 19, Bowie 13
Princeton 39, Ladonia 7
Daingerfield 35, Jefferson •
Canton 45, Lindale •
Sam Marces Academy 13. TMI •
Peacock 31, Texas School for Deaf 7
Schulenburg 7. Bastrop 6
Les Fresnes 13, Port Isabel 6
Cotulla 6, Dilley •
Mercedes 18. Mission 13
Ede ouch Elaa 7. Raymendville 7 (tie)
Jourdanton 25, Somerset •
Cuere 33. Beeville 6
Karnes City 58, Kenedy 24
Nixon 17 Runge 7
S mith rille 19, Luling 12
Poteet 27, East Central •
East Bernard 27. Dieksen 7
Giddings 38, Weimar 6
LaPorte 20, Alvin T
Arlington 27, Handley 12
Cedar Bayou 20, Liberty #
Bloomington 2, Hallettsville •
Center 16, Carthage 6
Livingston 33, Kirbyville 6
Caldwell 46, Allen Academy (Bryan)
The Tigers kept their record un-
blemished and took a long step to-
ward the 5-AA crown when they
whipped the hitherto unbeaten
Stamford Bulldogs, 12-7, in the
Bulldogs' own backyard Friday
night.
Meanwhile the title races in Dis-
tricts 9-AA and 10-AA narrowed to
Stephenville was slammed 33-7
by Breckenridge in the top game
of class AAA.
In class AA, Anson removed
Stamford 12-7. Lochart. undefeated
but tied was knocked out by Gon-
zales 13-12. Bay City, in the same
category, was tumbled by Lamar
of Rosenberg 13-7.
In class A Hughes Springs fell
from the unbeaten and untied be-
fore the power of Linden. 38-21.
Newcastle, the team with the
best record, rolled on unbeaten,
untied and unscored on. Newcas-
tle licked Chillicothe 24-0 and now
has scored 191 points to none in
eight games.
Undefeated and untied in class
AAAA are Lubbock, Ray (Corpus
Christi) and Lamar (Houston).
In class AAA. Grand Prairie and
Palestine remain with unblem-
ished records.
In class AA Anson, La Vega,
Lampasas, Lamarque, La Porte,
Cuero and Gonzales are unbeaten
and untied. Brownfield, Shamrock,
Pittsburg and Center are unde-
feated but have been tied.
i class A Canadian Dimmitt,
: Iraan, Abernathy, Wink, —Eden,
| Eldorado Wylie of Abilene, New-
castle. Giddings, Whitney, Farm-
ersville, Hawkins and Hondo have
perfect records Elkhart, Wilmer-
Hutchins and Taft are undefeated
but have been tied. Canadian plays
Clarendon tonight while Wink
meets Big Lake.
DO
KRBC, 1470
I 12
I Elkhart 39. Trinity a
1 Tulla it. Canyon e
Floy dada 19, Hereford •
Spur 38, Crosbyton •
Tahoka 24, Ralls 13
Pecos 14. Kermit IB
Amherst 14, Kress e
Whitharral 21, Idalou 7
Van Horn 40. Clint •
Alpine 30, Crane 11
Weslaco 48, Rie Grande City is
Gonzales 11 Loekhart 12
Seguin 13, Fredericksburg 13
Uvalde 20, South San Antenie 0
Linden 28, Hughes Springs 21
Atlanta 31 DeKalb 18
Cameron 38, Belton •
Georgetown 25, Rosebud •
Tayler-14. Killeen 12
Troy ti. Academy (Temple) •
Bartlett B Salado 6
Granger 13. Hearne 3
Fort Hood 33, Rogers 7
McCamey 40, Fort Steekton 6
Eden 38 Menard 19
Junction 40, Ozena 18
Seminole 40, Andrews 27
Italy 35, Frost 6
Round Rock 13, Thrall 7
two-team affairs.
Idle Winters and the Ballinger
Bearcats each now own twin sea-
son and district records of 6-2
and 22. Ballinger overwhelmed
the Lake View Chiefs, 52-6, to gain
a tie for the 9-AA lead with the
Winters Blizzards. The Bearcats
and Blizzards tangle November 16
at Winters in what should decide
the district champion.
In 10-AA the Ranger Bulldogs
rolled on, whitewashing the East-
land Mavericks, 33-0. for their sec-
ond strnight district victory. Their
lone rivnl for the district title, the
Dublin Lions, detested the Co-
manche Indians,. 42-27, for a 2-0
district record
However, over the full season
Ranger has won seven, losing only |
to the Stamford Bulldogs Dublin
has a 5-3 season slate. The two
clash November 9.
In other Class AA games Fri- |
day night. Coloradn City edged the ]
Hamlin Pled Pipers, 7-6. for Its
first 5-AA victory In three starts
and Coleman’s Bluecats trimmed
the Brady Bulldogs, 22-13. for its
first 9-AA win
Rotan at Snyder was postponed |
until Saturday night at 7:30 be-
cause of snow.
5-B and 9-B Races
Deadlocked; Baird
Falls lo South Taylor
Class B football to the Abilene
vicinity saw significant develop-
ments Friday night.
The 5-B race narrowed from a
three-team to a two-team chase,
when Robert Lee Steers' defeated
Ray kept its slate clean last
night by downing Brackenridge
(San Antonio) 26-6. Lamar does
not play this week
Grand Prairie rolled on with a
33-0 trouncing of Denton while
Palestine edged Bryan 1412.
Lockney could have won the first
district championship if the sea-
son had it beaten Abernathy but
fell 19-7. Abernathy thus virtually
sewed up the District 3 crown in
class A.
One of the most impressive :
showings was that of La Vega in
class AA. La Vega met a strong
West team that was expected to
give it trouble but won 33-7.
OIL ROYALTY
Fee sale 1% miles north of Eula.
Up to 800 acres minerals % of
$12.50 per acre. G M. -SMITH,
Clyde, Route 1. --
SEMic
LESTER HUMPHREY 2
Roaches, Silver Fish, Moths
LIGHTING FIXTURES
Largest Selection in West Texas
HOTPOINT Appliances
YORK AIR CONDITIONING
EASCO-YORK
Phone 4-4224
450 PINT
Dr. Raymond Wray
6:0
KRBC-Slim P
KWKC News 1
KRLD Johnny
WBAP-Proudh
6:1
KRBC-Bert Ar
KWKC-Elmwo
KRLD Johnny
WBAP-Proudl
43
KRBC Great A
KWKC-News
KRLD-Vaughn
WFAA-Bob Co
6:
KRBC Great A
KWKC-Sports
KRLD Vaughn
WFAA-New:,
KRBC-Jambor
KWKC Twenty
KRLD-Gene A
WFAA-Magn 1
1:1
KRBC Hit Pre
KWKCTwenty
KRLD Gene A
WFAA-Magn 1
7:3
KRBC-Big Sta
KWKC-Man M
KRLD-Hopalot
WFAA-Bob a
KRBOBL su
KWKC-Man N
KRLD-TBA
WFAA-Bob a
8.0
KRBC Big Sta
KWKC TBA
M
KRLD-Radio R
WBAP-Music f
81
KRLD-Radio R
WBAP-Music
•J
KRLD-Eplscop
WBAP Devotin
KRLD-Eplscop
WBAP-Devotio
14
KRBC-News S
KWKC Sunday
KRLD Church
WFAA-News
1:1
KRBC -Harmon
KWKC Sunday
K RLD Chur h
WFAA-Pre-RX
KRBC-Colored
K.WKC-Roadsi
KRLD-Sunday
WFAA-Presby
* 34
KRBC-Local N
K WKC-Christi
KRLD-Sunday
WFAA Organism
•4
KMBC Trinity
KWKC Console
KRLD-Sunday
WTAA-World I
m
KRBC-Frisco :
KWKC-News
KRLD-Marvin
WFAA-Freedo
IT:
KRBC Frisco 1
KWKC-News
KRLD News
WFAA-Voice
th:
KRBC-News-W
KWKC Sunday
KRLD-Wayne
WFAA-Col Al
the
KRBC Melody
K WKC Tips a
KRLD Wayne
WFAA News
14
KRBC -Kendri
KWKC Top T
KRLD-Portrail
WFAA-Catholi
In
KRBC-Kendri
KWKC-Reverl
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id
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WFAA-Americ
KWKC Abilene
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WFAA-Americ
CHIROPRACTOR
X-ray Spinal
Analysis
1435 N 4th. Phone 4-9556
the Coahoma Bulldogs, 25-12, to
drop the Bulldogs into a three-way
tie for third place with the win-
ners of the Hobbs-Trent and
Bronte-Ira games
Trent at Hobbs was postponed
1 until 2 30 Saturday afternoon at
Rotan, and the Bronte-Ira game
was not reported Friday
The Hermleigh Cardinal, held
on to their first-place deadlock
with Robert Lee by whipping the
Loraine Bulldogs, 13-6. Hermleigh
and Robert Lee each own 4-1 rec-
ords and each eleven must still
play Trent and Bronte.
South Taylor upset the Baird
Bears, 40-0 at Tuscola to sew up
a share of the title with Baird.
Each has won three and lost one
in 9-B play. The Moran Bulldogs,
who defeated Carbon, 39-0, Friday
night, could earn a piece of the
crown by defeating Strawn Nov 16.
South Taylor and Baird have com-
Elgin 26, Thorndale •
Itasca M Hico T .
Centerville n. Tela 7
Groesbeck 14, Kerens 3
Warachschie 21, Hillsboro 14
Franklin 43, Rockdale 14
Meridian 39, Tredell •
McGregor 13, Waco Tech •
Chilton 17, Riesel •'
Marlin 19, Clifton 4
Fairfield 31. Mart 2
Lampasas 6, Gatesville •
Valley Mils 52, Cranfile Gap •
LaVego 33, West 7
Lorema • Moody •
SIX-MAN
Sierra Blanca 41, Marathon is
Mertzon 35, Christoval • 13
Rankin 53, Water Valley 19
Forsan 20, Garden City w
COLLEGE
Boston College 91, Richmond 7
College of Pacific 39, Marquette 27
Southeastern Louisiana 71, Alabama
State (Trey) •
Northeastern (Okla.) State 44. Ouschlia
(Ark.) College •
Louisville M North Carolina State 2
NEW
WHITE SIDE TIRES
Regular Prices
AREA B
Robert Lee 25, Coshoma 11 ___-
Hermleigh 13, Loraine 6
Meran 39, Carbon 0
South Tayler 40, Baird •
Rochester 19, Valley View IS
Blanket 15, German 13
Trent at Hobbs, postponed until Sat-
Weedson at Aspermont, cancelled.
Rule 19, Lueders 4
OTHER AA. A AND D
Iraan 29. Marfa 7
St. Mark’s (Dallas) 12, Whitesbore •
Rusk 84, Alte •
Centerville 20, Tola 6
Louise 13, Crescent 6
Humble 19, Madisonville •
Groveton 20, Weedville 7
Edna 13, Port Lavaca 6
LaGrange 34. Navasota 21
Palscles 88, Yorktown 13
Jiguin 26,. Hemphill 0
Cold Spring 41, New Waverly II
Barbers BIN 25, Klein •
Columbus 25, Eagle Like 18
St. Jeseph’s (Vieteria) 18, Reekport 6
French (Beaument) 25, Silsbee •
Childress 46, Paducah 6
Neweastel 24, Chillicothe 0
Areher City 30, Henrietta 7
Wellington 41, Memphis 6
Nocona 0, Decatur 0 (Nocona wins
2 penetrations).
Quanah 34, Burkburnett e
Shamrock 39, Dalhart 3
Sam Houston 61, Sherts-Cibele 6
Eagle Pass 41, Edgewood 7
Sabinal 12, St. Gerard’s 7
Aransas Pass 25, Falfurrias 0
Columbus 25, Eagle Lake 18
Hende 33, Floresville 7
6.00x16x4p.
6.50x16x4p
6.70x16x4p.
7.00x15x4p
7.00x16x4p
7.60x16x4p
wsw
wsw
WSW
WSW
WSW
wsw
$24.60
$30.40
$27.20
$34.05
$34.90
$33.40
Plus tex
B. E. Needles & Son
So. 4th & Chestnut Ph. 4-4412
through. Arkansas already is out of
the race with two defeats
The only team that isn't worry-
ing is Rice, which plays an inter-
sectional game. The Owls take on
Pittsburgh at Houston.
Crowds totaling more than 160,-
000 are due for the four games
Brownwood, figured to give
Breckenridge its sharpest battle defeated In i____
for the District 2-AAA diadem, suf-takles Baylor, which I______
fered its second straight defeat once tied. The winner of this game
Friday night, dropping a 44 bat-I be the undisputed leader
Ue to Weatherford. Cleburne took ™ be the undisputed leader,__pected *° move into the Cotton
a 21-13 victory over Graham in .At Dall las. Texas and Southern Bowl
the other District 2 contest. Methodist will be seeking to elim- A&M is a seven - point favorite
Lamesa drubbed Big Spring, last inate each other. The loserof this over Arkansas, Baylor is 7%----
week's upset victory over Plain- game fall out. If it is a tie, both Texas Christian, Texas -6% over
view, 34-0 in the other 1-AAA game will be just barely hanging on. Southern Methodist and Rice
Friday night At Fayetteville, Texas A&M will over Pittsburgh.
together Texas
Christian, un-
conference play,
I has been
with the largest at Dallas where
between 70.000 and 75,000 are ex-
Southern Methodist and Rice
At Fayetteville, Texas A&M will over Pittsburgh.
over
14
pleted district play.
The Rochester Steers continued
on their merry way to an unde,
feated, untied season Friday night,
going out of the conference to
whip a strong Valley View team.
DALLAS Nov. 2. (—The South 19-13. Rochester leads 10-B with a
ern Methodist freshman team de- 3-0 mark, and has scored 293
feated the Texas freshmen, 28-13.
here yesterday to remain unde-
feated this season. It was the sec-
ond loss in three games for the
Texas frosh
SMU Frosh Beat Texas
The steel-deck bridge at Cleve-
land, Ky., is 20 feet above rivel
level.
J mark, and has scored 293
points to seven opponents' 25.
Rule's Bobcats own a 2-0. 10-B
record after whipping the Lueders
Pirates. 1M. Thursday night. Rule
must still play Woodson’s Cowboys
and tangle with Rochester Novem-
ber 16.
Woodson at Aspermont was can-
celed because of bad weather.
SALE
Tuesday and Thursday
Hog Sale 9:00 A. M.
Cattle 10:00 A. M.
ABILENE
LIVESTOCK AUCTION
COMMISSION
Where Buyer and Seller
Meet
Bob McDaniel ' Cramer
4-5441 Reynolds
on"2;
102 Elm
%
0
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The Abilene Reporter-News (Abilene, Tex.), Vol. 71, No. 135, Ed. 2 Saturday, November 3, 1951, newspaper, November 3, 1951; Abilene, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1648721/m1/2/?q=Lamar+University: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Abilene Public Library.