Sweetwater Reporter (Sweetwater, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 216, Ed. 1 Monday, September 12, 1955 Page: 2 of 8
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; . ,
ankees Choke As AL
Race Enters Stretch
By ED WILKS
The Associated Press
Time was when the Cleveland
Indians took the rap for choking
up in the pennant drive. But no
more. Now it's the New York Yan-
kees, the club with a reputation
for winning the big ones, who find
it tough to stay loose.
The Indians, winning 11 of their
last 14, were held to just four hits
by southpaw Tommy Byrne in a
6-1 first-game defeat at New York
yesterday, but they rebounded to
SAND AND RAIN
Colts Open
With 12-0
Roscoe Win
ROSCOE — The Reagan Junior
High Colts came back strong in
the second half to score twice to
defeat the Roscoe B team, 12-0, in
the opening game for both teams
Saturday night in Roscoe.
The first half was played in a
high wind and sand storm, and
hard rain fell in the second half.
After the Plowboys had domi-
nated play in the first half, the
Colts drew blood in the third quar-
ter on a 33-yard scamper by half-
back Robert Parsons, to cap a
drive starting on the Colt 30-yard
line.
An intercepted pass accounted
for the second Colt score. A plow-
boy pass was nabbed by back Ru-
ben Argumanez at the midfield
stripe. Escorted by a host of
blockers, Argumanez sped the dis-
tance for the touchdown.
The try for the first extra point; _ „,,h„j v,,-„
i -i i i i rf '1 ia Evers pulled him out ot his only
was blunted by an offside penalty | 4o„, maL.j„0 Q
and the second attempt was short
come from behind and win 3-2 in
the pivotal nightcap.
A loss of the twinbill would have
dropped the Indians from first
place in the American League race.
Instead, they can sit back and rest
while the AL takes a day off to-
day, holding a lVfe-game lead with
11 to play. Second-place New York
has 12.
Wild Pitch Payoff
Bobby Avila, with eight hits in
his last 14 at bats, and reliefer Don
Mossi kept the Tribe alive in the
second game. But in the end, it
was a wild pitch by Whitey< Ford,
New York's ace, that let the clinch-
ing run score.
It was the second game in two
days the Yanks let slip away. Sat-
urday, they blew a 6-1 lead and
lost to Chicago 9-8 in 10 innings.
The victory gave Cleveland the
season series with the Yanks 13-9.
It's the first time since 1945 the
Tribe has whipped New York over
the year, although they split even
in the 22 games while snapping
the Yanks' five-year pennant reign
last season. It is also the first time
since Casey Stengel, who became
manager of the Yankees in 1949,
has lost a season series.
Tribe Holds Lead
The doubleheader split also left
Cleveland 3'i games up on third-
place Chicago, which divided a
pair at Boston. The White Sox won
the second 7-2. Boston, six games
back, took the opener 6-2.
Avila, hitting .272 after winning |
the '54 batting title, had four hits j
in the doubleheader and walloped !
his second homer of the day to tie
it at 2-all in the eighth inning of
the nightcap. Until then, Ford, 17-7,
had a three-hitter.
Hoot Evers followed with a dou-
ble, advanced on a walk and force-
out, then scored as Ford bounced
a pitch in front of the plate.
Catch Helps Mossi
Mossi, in relief of rookie Herb
Score, scattered three hits over the
last three innings for a 4-3 record
with the bases loaded in the ninth.
Kansas City and Baltimore also
split a pair. The A's won 4-3, then
lost 4-2.
Champs Drop Two
In the National, Cincinnati's
Johnny Klippstein one-hit Brook-
lyn's champs. Pee Wee Reese
blooped a single with one out in
the ninth for the spoiler as the
Redlegs won the first game of a
twinbill 9 0, then made it a sweep
with a 5-3 decision. Ted Kluszewski
hammered his 45th homer in the
opener.
Milwaukee padded its runner-up
spot, beating Philadelphia twice 5-4
and 9-1. Del Crandall homered with
three on in a five-run ninth to win
the first game. Rookie Humberto
Robertson pitched a six-hitter in
the second.
Chicago's Ernie Banks and New
York's Willie Mays each hit home
run No. 43 while the Cubs beat the
Giants 7-5 on Banks' two-run dou-
ble in the eighth. In another single
game, St. Louis edged Pittsburgh
6-5 on a single by Alex Grammas
in the eighth.
ALWAYS HITTING —Archie Moore gets in softball games be-
tween workouts at North Adams, Mass. The 38-year-old chal-
lenger' takes a swing at Rocky Marciano's heavyweight cham-
pionship at Yankee Stadium, Sept. 20.
PRESTIGE DROPS LOW
New, Stiff Regime Features
Texas Long horn Grid Picture
A drive for a third tally by the
Colts was halted by the final
whistle on the Plowboy 35 yard
line, where the Colts had driven
after a Plowboy punt had gone out
of bounds on the Colt 5-yard stripe.
In the first half. Roscoe domi-
nated offensive efforts, driving
once to the Colt 15 yard line and
again to the 25, to be turned back
by a stout Reagan line.
Parsons, Argumanez. Carroll
Feagen, Jimmy Watson and Earl
Collins carried the brunt of coach
Dalton Hill's split-T offense, while
Wayne Witt, Buefor Patterson, Al-
ton Lewis, Don Ely, Dale Sparks
and Roy Williams led the tight
Reagan defense.
The Colts play their first home
game here Thursday night against
the powerful Snyder Tiger Cubs.
possible jam, making a diving
catch of Elston Howard's liner for
the final out with the potential ty-
ing run on base.
(This is another in a series dis-Lansford,
cussing Southwest Conference foot-
ball prospects)
AUSTIN '/Pi—With less prestige
than at any time within the last
15 years, the University of Texas
heads into the football campaign
hopeful of being on the pleasant
end of the Saturday surprises for
which the Southwest is noted.
Texas was ranked fourth by the
experts this year, the lowest pre-
season rating since 1940, when the
Longhorns were tabbed for the
same spot.
Texas' lack of stature this sea-
Score, giving four hits and both I s°n may ,bc blamed on last year's
Yank runs, struck out six before disappointments. The 1954 team
giving way to a pinch hitter in
the seventh. That upped his strike-
out total to 226—one short of the
rookie mark set by Grover Cleve-
land Alexander in 1911.
Byrne was great as he won his
5th in the opener fanning five and |
walking only two. Yogi Berra
knocked in three runs and Joe Col-
lins swatted an inside-the-park
dipped below .500 in full season
and Southwest Conference play,
first Texas elecen since 1938 to
suffer that ignominy.
Less than half of last year's 32
lettermen—15 to be exact—return
to coach Ed Price. That is the
smallest number of experienced
j personnel he has had at his com-
I mand since taking over as head
San Angelo Wins
Carlsbad Series
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Roswell Rockets after three j
straight defeats, return to their j
home park tonight for the windup j
of the semi-finals in the Longhorn
League playoffs.
The Rockets, after taking two j
straight from Artesia at the start j
of the series, lost their third in 1
a row last night, 4-0. That gave
Artesia its first lead in the series, 1
3-2.
The winner of the best of seven
series will meet San Angelo for
the league crown. San Angelo fin-
ished up its series Saturday night, |
polishing off Carlsbad in five
games.
homer off loser Early Wynn. Avila j
had two of the hits off the 35-year- j
old lefty—a home run and a single.
15 Bosox Stranded
The White Sox hung on as Con-
nie Johnson and Millard (Dixie)
Howell, although'rapped for 11 hits,
tightened in the clutch and left 15
Bosox stranded. Frank Sullivan
won his 18th in the first game with
a five-hitter while Norm Zauchin
drove in three runs as Boston
racked up Bob Keegan.
Detroit split at Washington in a
pair of four-hitters. Billy Hoeft won
his 16th in the first game 8-0 and
Nat rookie Ted Abernathy picked
up the nightcap 1-0. Washington
had 14 hits in the second game,
but didn't score off rookie Frank
Lary until Mickey Vernon singled
coach in 1951
The shortage of seasoned man-
power is felt keenly at tackle and
fullback, both affected by gradua-
tion of 1954's two leading per-
formers.
All-conference performer, buck
left a big vacancy at
left tackle by his graduation. De-
parting with him was Billy Quinn,
the squad's leading ball-carrier.
Herbert Gray, one of the league's
top linemen, played the other
tackle last year, but this season
will operate from guard on offense
and end on defense.
Langsford Sneed. the No. 1 re-
serve tackle last year, will play
the other guard and function as
a linebacker on defense.
The only letterman candidate at
tackle is Vernon Person, a squad
junior who played guard last sea-
son. He is a candidate for Lans-
ford's shoes, with Charles Baker, a
soph, heading the cast that has
one squadman—Gerald Petersen—
and one other soph. Will Wyman,
at the right side.
Like Gray and Sneed. Johnny
Tatum appears to be a certain
starter against Texas Tech here
Sept. 17. The regular center since
midway of his sophomore season,
the Lubbock senior is supported by
three sophs Louis Del Homme
of Baytown, Skippy Lee of Tex-
arkana and Garland Kennon of
Center.
Texas' end play should be im-
proved. Ed Kelley, a former half-
back who missed the 1954 seasqn,
Pampa Near Berth
In Playoff Finals
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Pampa Oilers tonight will
be counting on Red Dial to hurl
them into the finals of the West
Texas-New Mexico League play-
offs.
The Oilers last night pulled out
to a 3-1 advantage in their best
of seven series with Albuquerque,
topping the Dukes 12-2. A win to-
night would put them in the finals.
The other playoff game last night,
Amarillo at Plainview. was' post-
poned because of rain.
FAMILY ACES
DALLAS. Texas >/P)—G. A. Pill-
iod, his two sons, and two grand-
sons stopped for some practice on
a putting green here. On the sec-
ond green they all made a hole-in-
one.
The REAL McCOYS
By Clayton Williams
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Clayton Williams
General Insurance
•lot Bonnet Hotel Bld'g.
M Kim Mom 4*11
Shreveport Nears
Playoff Victory
Against Missions
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Shreveport had San Antonio
backed to the wall Monday as the
two clubs journeyed back to San
Antonio to wind up their Texas
League playoff series.
Houston had Dallas one-down as
these two tried to get in another
game at Houston in' the face of
rainy conditions.
Shreveport captured a slugfest
over San Antonio two and if
Shreveport can whip the Missions
again Monday night, it will he in
the playoff finals.
Houston, holding a 2-1 edge over
Dallas, idled Sunday away when
rain caused postponement of the
fourth game. The Buffs will send
Bob Mabe, a 16-10 pitcher during
the season, to the mound to make
his first appearance in the play-
offs. Dallas will rely on John (Red)
Murff, its 27-game winner who lost
in his only appearance in the play-
offs.
Ev Joyner paced a 13-hit Shreve-
port assault as the Sports triumph-
ed in the Sunday game. He socked
a 3-run homer and Les Fleming
parked the ball with none on base
to give the Sports a 4-0 lead in
the first four innings. But San An-
tonio stormed back to tie the count
in the fifth with Dave Roberts' 3-
run homer as the big blow.
Shreveport came back in its half
of the fifth for four more runs to
take a lead it never relinquished.
Ray Knoblauch pitched 3-hit hall
for 3 1-3 innings in relief to halt
the Missions with one run. Joyner
had a homer, double and two sin-
gles to bat in five runs.
Monday night Shreveport will
use Billy Muffett, 10-4 during the
season and loser of his only ap-
pearance in the playoffs. San An-
tonio will work Don Ferrarese,
who had a 9-0 season, won one and
lost one in the playoffs. He took
the licking Saturday night by going
only 2-3 of an inning.
2 Sweetwater Reporter, Texas, Monday, September 12, 1955
Southwest Conference Teams
Pace Intersectional Toughies
By HAROLD V. RATLIFF
DALLAS, Sept. 10 (/PI—'The South-
west Conference opens the football
campaign next week and starts
playing the best in the country
the first crack out of the box.
If this league ever attained na-
tional prominence, this is the year
to do it.
Of the 10 top teams of the coun-
try picked in the pnnual pre-sea-
son poll, this conference's teams
play six of them.
The first is against No. 1 UCLA
and it's up to the Texas Aggies,
Fort Hood Wins
Baseball Tourney
FT. SILL, Okla. (/Pi—Ft. Hood,
j Tex. won its way to the Class A
Dicision here yesterday with an
8-4 victory over Camp Chaffee,
j Ark., in the finals of the 4th Army
1 Baseball Tournament.
I The victory meant Hood would
represent the 4th Army in the All-
: Army Baseball Tournament at Ft.
| Belvoir, Va., Sept. 19-24.
Hood overpowered Chaffee in the
second game of a doubleheader
yesterday after falling in the
opener 6-4. Hood batters collected
15 hits. Chaffee pushed across its
I four markers in the ninth inning.
shows much promise at left end.
The battle between lettermen Me-
nan Schriewer and Allen Ernst
should result in better play on the
right terminal.
Letterman strength is two-deep
only at right guard from tackle
to tackle. Bob Tucker, who has
played all other spots in the line,
will understudy Gray at right
guard, while Charley Burk, a
junior college transfer, appears to
be the chief replacement for Sneed.
The situation looks better in the
backfield. There are two proven
halfbacks on each side and a
quarterback rivalry that coul dpor-
cluce Texas' best generalship since
the T. Jones good year in 1952.
Charley Brewer, impressive as a
daring sophomore in 1953, looks
fit for his senior campaign and
eger to face the challenge of
Walter Fondren, the talented Hous-
Breckenridge Rated
With Top AA Teams
On Snyder Victory
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Phillips, Terrell, sulphur Springs,
Killeen, Weslaco, Nederland and
Breckenridge stand out in early
returns from the Class AA division
of Texas schoolboy football.
They'll get strong tests this week
to see if they are going to stand up.
Phillips, the defending champion,
ran over Southeast of Oklahoma
City 45-0 in its opening game. It
now takes on Childress, which
swiped Paducah, a Class A power,
33-13.
Terrell nosed a good Ennis team
7-6 and meets Athens Friday night.
Athens gave strong West a battle
before losing 33-19.
Sulphur Springs, which toppled
Greenville of Class AAA 20 - 14,
takes on Paris, another AAA out-
fit opening the season.
Killeen, generally regarded as
the power of the South, takes on
University of Waco. Killeen
cracked Gatesville 26-7 while Uni-
versity, an AAA team, was being
trimmed by AA Cameron 14-6.
Nederland was probably the most
impressive of all the outfits last
week. This team rushed past AAA
Port Neches 34-6 in an awesome
show of power. Nederland gets
Jasper, 47-0 victory over Class A
Newton.
Weslaco, which whipped AAA
McAllen 13-2 last week, tests Har-
lingen, another AAA outfit, Friday.
Breckenridge, which is con-
sidered the team to beat in the
north—and that includes Phil-
lips—lashed AAA Snyder 14-7.
Breckenridge has its work really
cut out for it this week. The Bueka-
roos play Wichita Fallas, the
Class AAAA powerhouse that open-
ed the season with a 28-6 conquest
of AAA Vernon.
There'll be one international
game—Iluntsville journeys to An-
chorage, Alaska, to play Saturday.
VERNON, LAMESA IDLE
Seven District 1-AAA
Teams To See Action
District 1-AAA teams, reeling
from three defeats and one tie in
five opening games last week, will
attempt a measure of revenge on
opponents this week, as seven of
the nine teams have games sched-
uled, with two clubs observing op-'
en dates.
Top game of the week will match
the Sweetwater Mustangs against
the Abilene Eagles, defending state
AAAA champions, who shellacked
Highland Park, 34-0 last week in
Dallas.
Other games will see three other
teams opening their schedule: Am-
arillo Palo Duro against class AA
Majority Of Texas
College Teams See
This Week
STANDINGS
MONDAY'S MAJOR LEAGUE
BASEBALL
By The Associated Press
AMERICAN LEAGUE
W
Cleveland 88
New York 86
Chicago 84
Boston 81
Detroit 72
Kansas City .... 59
Washington .... 50
Baltimore 45
SUNDAY'S RESULTS
Cleveland 1-3, New York 6-2.
, . . , ., i Chicago 2-7, Boston 6-2.
on soph who appears to have the i Baltimore 3.4, Kansas City 4-2.
knack for the climactic deed. Dick }
Miller, a squadman for two years, |
L
55
56
58
60
71
83
89
93
Pet.
.615
.608
.592
.574
.506
.415
.360
.326
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Twenty of Texas' 27 colleges
playing football have games this
week, 19 of them opening the sea-
son. The other—Texas A&I—start-
ed the campaign last weekend,
beating National University of
Mexico 13-6.
All of the six conferences in
which Texas has members have
games with four from the South-
west Conference holding the spot-
light. Texas A&M lifts the curtain
on the campaign against UCLA at
Los Angeles Friday night. Satur-
day night Baylor entertains Har-
din-Simmons. T e x a s Christian
plays Kansas and Texas is host
to Texas Tecih.
Rice and Southern Methodist,
the other Texas members of the
Southwest Conference, wait until
next week to open the season.
There is full action in the Texas
Conference where McMurry goes
to St. Paul to play Gustavus Adol-
phus and Howard Payne clashes
with Texas A&I at Brownwood.
Three of the four Border Con-
ference teams start the campaign.
West Texas State meets Corpus
Christi at Canyon in addition to
GB S Hardin-Simmons' joust with Bay<
lor and Texas Tech's battle
power Dumas, Plainview against
Lubbock High School, and Level-
land against Brownfield.
Lubbock Monterey, lone district
team to earn a victory last week,
will play Borger. Big Spring will
meet Ysleta and Snyder will play
Weatherford.
Sweetwater, Amarillo, Big Spring
and Plainview will have their work
cut out for them in trying to bring
prestige to the district. Abilene
showed great offensive strength in
blasting a good Highland Park
team, and will be favored to de-
feat the fast but light Mustang
team at Abilene Friday night.
Dumas, a mushrooming class AA
school, which will probably be in
AAA next year, trampled well-re-
garded Quanah, 58-7, and will prob-
! ablv give inexperienced Palo Duro,
with only one letterman from Ama-
rillo High School on its squad,
I more than it can handle.
I Big Spring was a great disap-
pointment in its opener, being held
to a 13-13 tie, and generally out-
played by light and inexperienced
Andrews. The Steers' opponent this
week, Ysleta, is stronger than in
the past years, and Big Spring will
be required to show much im-
provement to handle the Indians.
Plainview, also shy on experi-
enced material, annually gives Lub-
bock High School a peck of trouble.
The Westerners still not back to
their strength of several years ago,
still are rated in the first division
of district 1-AAA. while Plainview
isn't considered a title threat in its
own conference.
Snyder Lubbock Monterey and
Levelland all meet lesser-rated op-
ponents this week and will be gen-
eral favorites to boost the district's
win average.
Snyder, which could never get
unraveled against the ebullient
Buekaroos, should find pickings
somewhat easier against Weather-
ford, a AAA newcomer, but the
Kangaroos have a well-balanced
team that the Tigers can't afford
to lake too lightly.
Lubbock Monterey meets Borger,
perennial 1-AAAA doormat. There
doesn't seem to he much change
for the better at Borger this year,
with i where Phillips High School gets all
l'/2 Texas. Texas Western won't start
3'A I the season until next week.
6
16
28 ¥1
36
40 "2
TV HElrPS GRIDDERS
HOUSTON, Tex. (/PI—Dr. H. Burr
Roney, assistant professor of bi-
ology at the University of Houston
says televised education subjects
get many a football player over
the classrooms hurdle.
Dr. Roney said last year he pre- '
sented his subject matter in the
classroom, then repeated it over
the school's TV station. Houston j wait
a group of effervescent sopho-
mores. The Aggies meet UCLA at
Los Angeles next Friday night.
Coach Paul Bryant says he's glad
to play the best because his boys
can learn so much more that way.
Sooners, Longhorns Clash
Oklahoma, rated No. 2. is Texas'
meat. The Longhorns clash with
the Sooners in Dallas Oct. 8. Mary-
land, No. 5, meets Baylor at Waco
Oct. 1. Southern Methodist gets
No. 6 Notre Dame at South Bend
Sept. 24. Miami, No. 9, engages
Texas Christian at Miami Oct. 22.
Georgia Tech, No. 10. takes on
Southern Methodist at Atlanta
Oct. 1.
But next week's openers don't
involve any of the top-rated teams
other than UCLA.
Baylor starts the campaign
against Sam Baugh's Ilardin-Sim-
mons Cowboys at Waco in the first
night game to be played in Baylor
Stadium. Baugh, the famed passer
of Texas Christian and the Wash-
ington Redskins, is making his de-
but as a head coach.
First Night Game
Texas also plays its first night
game at home, taking on ambi-
tious and ominous Texas Tcch at
Austin. It is a well known fact that
Tech is "laying" for the Long-
horns. It would be quite a feather
in their red caps if the Red Raiders
could crack tradition—Texas never
has lost a home opener.
Texas Christian entertains the
Kansas Jayhawks at Fort Worth
in a night game. Arkansas plays I
I Tulsa at Fayetteville in the only
afternoon affair of the week. The
j Horned Frogs and Razorbacks
1 wouldn't appear in much danger
| of starting the campaign off dis-
appointingly.
Rice and Southern Methodist
a week before getting into
and Joe Clements, sharp-tossing
sophomore, furnish good depth. Brooklyn
Delano Womack, runner-up in j Milwaukee
Texas ball-carrying and pass-re- J New York
ceiving for two years, probably I Philadelphia
is just a step ahead of Chester j Cincinnati
Simcik at left halfback. A senior , Chicago
like Womack, Simcik has produced i st. Louis .
the squad's longest run and best j Pittsburgh
ball-carrying average for two sea-
sons. Curtis Reeves, a speedy soph
from Wichita Falls, supports him.
Senior Joe Youngblood and jun-
ior Ed Hawkins, who had occasions
of stardom last fall, should pro-
duce good play at right halfback
and as of now the feud is a tossup.
Don Maroney is the lone 1954
letterman operating at fullback,
but he is running behind Larry
Graham, who lettered as a sopho-
more halfback understudy to Gib
Dawson in 1952; Larry George and
Johnny Elam, sophomores, and
Tommy Albright, a 1954 squadman.
(Tomorrow: Hicel
Washington 0-1. Detroit 8-0.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W
93
80
73
72
72
69
60
. 55
L
49
64
69
73
75
76
81
87
Pet.
.£55
.556
.514
.497
.490
.4761
.426
.387
GB
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20
22 Ms
2312
25 "2
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38
SUNDAY'S RESULTS
Cincinnati 9-5, Brooklyn 0-3.
Milwaukee 5-9, Philadelphia 4-1.
Chicago 7, New York 5.
St. Louis 6, Pittsburgh 5.
ONE BIG HIT
ST. LOUIS, Mo. (/PI—'The St. Louis
Cardinals made the most of their
opportunities in a game against
the Chicago Cubs here. The Cards
scored four runs on only one hit
in the sixth inning and won the
game 4-2.
After a walk, a safe fielder's
choice and an error, Stan Musial
hit a grand slam homer.
Three of the Gulf Coast Confer-
ence members are in openers with
trinity and Abilene Christian play-
ing a conference game at Abilene
and Midwestern meeting South-
western Oklahoma at Wichita
Falls. North Texas State won't
open the season until Sept. 24,
Four of the seven Lone Star Con-
ference teams have games—A&l.
Lamar Tech against Southwestern j
Louisiana Institute at Beaumont, 5
Sam Houston State against Mc- :
Neese State at Lake Charles, La., j
and Southwest Texas State against
Texas Lutheran at Seguin. East
Texas, Stephen, F. Austin and !
Sul Ross open Sept. 24
Houston, member of the Mis-
souri Valley Conference takes on j
Montana at Houston Saturday
night.
There are three independents—
Austin College, Texas Lutheran I
and Corpus Christi. Austin College j
starts the season at Denison Sat- j
urday night against Southeastern
of Oklahoma.
the football players, and the Plains-
men will be favored to take their
second straight game.
Levelland, which made a sur-
prisingly slrong debut into AAA
last year, meets a AA toughie in
Brownfield, but the Loboes have
the guns to take the Cubs, if they
aren't looking past them to Lltt',■-
field.
This Week's Schedule
Sweetwater at Abilene.
Brownfield at Levelland.
Monterey Lubbock at Borger.
Dumas at Amarillo Palo Duro.
Plainview at Lubbock High
School.
Weatherford at Snyder.
Vernon and Lamesa, open dates.
Last Week's Results
Lubbock Monterey 27, El Paso 7.
Big Spring 13, Andrews 13 (tie).
Breckenridge 14, Snyder 7.
Wichita Falls 28, Vernon 6.
Midland 20. Lamesa 13.
NOTICE! We will be open Mon-
day, Tuesday, Thursday and
Saturday nights.
Winn's Miniature Golf
City Park
• Retirement
• Education
Business
• Mortgage
C. S.
Perkins, Jr.
Southwestern
Life Insurance
Company
206
Davis Bldg.
Phone 2020
You're
invited
to enjoy v\x \| I //
' J/
HUMBLE FOOTBALL
football coaches insisted squad i the swim. The Owls open against
members attend both. j Alabama at Houston Sept. 24, and
As a result. Dr. Honey said 1 011 the same date Southern Metho-
"more football players passed the j dist gets going against Notre
course than ever before." 1 Dame.
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Sweetwater Reporter (Sweetwater, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 216, Ed. 1 Monday, September 12, 1955, newspaper, September 12, 1955; Sweetwater, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth284539/m1/2/?q=music: accessed June 20, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sweetwater/Nolan County City-County Library.