Sweetwater Reporter (Sweetwater, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 218, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 14, 1955 Page: 2 of 10
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Mustangs Finish Heavy Work
For Eagle Game Friday Nighi
The stress was still on defense
as the Sweetwater Mustangs com-
pleted heavy workouts for their
grid opener Friday night against
the Abilene Eagles.
Coach Ehvood Turner indicated
that Wednesday and Thursday will
be spent on timing, bail-handling
and conditioning drills.
"This is one of the best-condition-
ed squads I have ever seen," Turn-
er declared Tuesday. "We have
gone through three weeks of tough
work, including two game-type
scrimmages without a serious in-
jury."
The Mustangs will be outweighed
and outmanned by the Abilene
team, which pulverized Highland
Park of Dallas 34-0 in the opener
for both teams last week.
The Eagles, not as bulky as in
previous years are dependent on
more finesse and speed this year,
Indians Take Two From Sens
To Swell Lead To Two Games
The Associated Press
Manager A1 Lopez gave it to his
Cleveland Indians straight today-
it's overconfidence, not the New
York Yankees, they have to watch
in their bid for a second straight
American League pennant.
The tribe junked its jinx last
night, sweeping a twi-night pair
from the pesky Washington Sena-
tors 3-1 and 8-2 and moving out to
a two-game lead over the Yan-
kees. But instead of whoopin' it up,
Lopez warned that "We've still
got a long way to go."
You might say Al's laughin' on
the inside, crying on the outside.
Just 24 hours before, Lopez had
said "We'll be in an excellent po-
sition to win the pennant" if the
Indians beat the Senators. Now
you get the idea Lopez knows
Cleveland has won it—the big wor-
ry is not to lose it.
Bulge is Biggest
The two-game lead is the biggest
bulge any of the contenders has
had since the Tribe led by two
on Aug. 13. And the Yanks, who
flattened Detroit 6-0 yesterday,
still are a game shy on the losing
Larry Doby batted in four runs
and the Senators, who had whipped
Cleveland in 12 of 19 games this
year, kicked in three errors as
Lemon hung up his 18th victory in
the nightcap. Lemon, without a
complete game since May 30, tired
after eight innings and Ray Nar-
leski pitched the ninth—striking out
two of three men he faced.
Four in Fourth
The Yankees used an error by
Fred Hatfield, a walk, two singles
with fine runners in Henry Col-
well, Jimmy Carpenter and Glenn
Gregory, plus a dangerous passing
game featuring quarterback Jim-
my Bourland.
The Mustangs will retaliate with
their own fast-striking split-T of-
fense, featuring three of the fastest
backs in the district, Harroll
Hobbs, James Harvey and Bobby
Hartgraves.
Don Aiken, senior quarterback,
will do most of the throwing, with
halfbacks Hobbs and Harvey occa-
sionally joining in on the haliback
pass-or-run option.
The Mustangs have worked for
10 days in an attempt to gird up
defensive weaknesses, and have
worked this week on ways to stop
the T formation as presented by
Eagle coach Chuck Moser, used
with flankers to both sides.
A Mustang defensive unit has
shaped up with Jimmy Feagan
and Larry Summers at ends, Bob-
by Weems and Sammy Glass at
tackles, Patrick Gerald and Clyde
Jones at guards, Bobby Hartgraves
and Adolph Olvera at linebackers,
Bubba Meyer and Ricrard Ferrell
at halfbacks and James Harvey at
safety.
A complete sellout of the 1,000
adult tickets allotted to Sweetwat-
er was expected by noon Wednes-
CANCER FUND—Mrs. Babe Zaharias presents charter of the
Babe Didrikson Zaharias Cancer Fund, Inc., to Dr. Logan Wilson,
president of the University of Texas. Establishment of the nation-
wide fund to fight cancer was announced by the famed woman
athlete on eve of her discharge from a Galveston hospital follow-
ing her second bout with cancer. (NEA Telephoto)
Sweetwater Reporter, Texas, Wednesday, September 14, 1955
TWO OF WEST TEXAS' BEST
and Elston Howard's two-run tri-
ple to chase young Bob Miller and | day, the ticket deadline. Practical-
beat the Tigers with four runs in
the fourth. Hank Bauer made his
18th homer, a two-run shot off
reliefer Steve Gromek.
Bob Turley won his 16th, and
third straight, for the Yanks. He
ly all tihe reserved section had been J
sold out Tuesday afternoon, with j
some tickets in the student section
still remaining.
A downtown parade and pep ral-
ly will be held at 5 p. m. Thursday,
Stamford-Andrews Tilt
Highlights AA Action
HALFBACKS QUESTIONABLE
Note Of Cautious Optimism
Pervades Favored Rice Camp
side with 11 games left. Cleveland j man in the first.
gave five hits—only one in the ! and another pep rally will be held
last five frames—for his second in the Newman High School gym-
straight shutout and sixth of the nasium at 11:30 a. m. Friday.
year. j
Trhee walks, two singles, a sac- _
rifice fly, a wild pitch and Bob D.L. 7_Lar!_- DlaitC
Nieman's triple fashioned Chica- DQUC LQiiClllwJ r IQilJ
go's six-run ninth. The last place I
Orioles had led on Jim Dyck's 1 Ta flaa am Pf3|f!jfA
grand-slam homer off Jack Harsh-
has nine to play.
Chicago and Boston practically
fell by the wayside yesterday. The
third place White Sox had to rally
for six runs in the ninth to salvage
a split at Baltimore, winning 9-6
after a 2-0 defeat. They're 4'/2 back
now with 10 games left.
In the first game, Ray Moore
blanked the Sox on six hits, while
the Orioles made the most of four
walks and six hits to beat Virgil
Trucks.
Power Ruins Boston
Vic Power singled home the win-
| ning run in the 12th off Ellis Kind-
Boston, losing a 12-inning opener er in the first game at Boston.
to Kansas City 6-5, rallied to win
the nightcap 7-6. That left the Red
Sox seven games back—and 11 to
play.
Pair of Sixes
Kinder, Boston's relief ace, lost
his third straight. Jimmy Piersall
and Faye Throneberry each swat-
ted two-run homers to pull the
Bosox from behind in the night-
The Indians, winning 13 of the I cap,
last 16, thumped the Senators on j St. Louis handed Brooklyn's Na-
a pair of six-hitters by Mike Gar-1 tional League champs a third
cia and Bob Lemon. Garcia, the j straight defeat, 8-2. The Cards
big bear, won his 11th in the open- j clouted 11 hits off Karl Spponer
er, snapping Washington's five- j and four reliefers.
game streak against the Tribe. : Johnny Antonelli won his 13th
Gene Woodling, the ex-Yank, tri-1 and drove home four runs with two
pled home two runs and scored j singles, a double and a home run
the third on Bobby Avila's sacri- i as the New York Giants peppered
fice fly in' ft big third inning j Milwaukee 9-1.
against loser Chuck Stobbs.
For tha N#wa«t Dry Claanlng
Process Used and the Most
Efficient Service lit'* . . .
CHAD WELL
Dry Claanars
407 Oak
Phone 4551
Philadelphia smacked Chicago
| for 15 hits, beating the Cubs 10-0,
and Pittsburgh knocked off Cincin-
nati 5-2.
Roswell, Colts
Play For Title
After three losses in five games
last week, district 4-AA members
will face continued rough competi-
tion this week, with the Stamford-
Andrews clash being one of the
headliners in West Texas.
Stamford's Bulldogs, being tout-
| ed as one of West Texas' AA teams,
: subdued a class A toughie, HaskeH,
I 21-7, last week, with three second
j half touchdowns.
The Bulldogs will meet one of
the surprise teams of last week in
! Andrews, which held class AAA
GALVESTON, Tex. UP) — Babe ! Big Springt to a 13-13 tie in a
Zaharias today heads for her home j startling upset.
in Tampa, Fla., where she hopes i The Mustang-Bulldog game will
to begin golf practice by Jan. 1 j be played Friday night at Stam-
for the National Women's Open, j lord, and the winner will become
Trying for her second successful j one of the standout AA teams in
comeback in her fight against can-! West Texas.
For Women's Open
eer, the famous woman athlete
hopes to be ready for her first
1956 tournament play when the
$5,000 Tampa Women's Open is
staged the latter part of January.
"I'm eyeing the National Wom-
en's Open where I didn't get a
chance to defend my title this
year," she said.
Defending district champion Col-
Injured Bonus
Baby Sent Home
BALTIMORE Wl—Baltimore Ori-
ole bonus beauty Jim Pyburn is
(This is another in a series of
Southwest Conference football pros-
pects l
HOUSTON (#1—Pre-season polls
and predictions have named the
Rice Owls as narrow favorites
for the Southwest Conference foot-
ball championship. No doubt Coach
Jess Neely would be very happy
if his team lived up to the fore-
casts.
But you can look at the Owls
from two directions on paper and
get a couple of completely dif-
ferent views.
On the cautious—if not pessimis-
tic—side, only one of the seven
teams in the conference returns
with fewer lettermen than Rice's
16. There are 9 seniors on the
squad and 1 isn't even a letter-
man. As a whole, the halfback
crop is inexperienced and while
there are some promising runners,
there isn't a proven "all-the-way"
threat to replace the graduated
All-America, Dicky Moegle.
Although there was emphasis
on the offense in the spring, the
61-31 score of the intrasquad game
signalled a need for much more
work on defense. The loss of bril-
liant blocker and defender Kenny
Paul at guard will be sorely felt,
not only for his ability but his
leadership.
The owls face their annual
schedule problem—if they get to a
peak too soon, they might i u:i out
of gas in the November stretcn; it
orado City, stripped of most of its I they come along too slowly, they
starters, edged San Angelo Lake might not be ready for stern early-
View, 9-0 last week, and will need ! league tests with highly respective
all the firepower available against i Southern Methodist and Texas,
the Ballinger Bearcats, one of the i There must be reasons, however,
favorites in district 7-AA. I for this outfit to be picked for
Ballinger topped Sonora, one of j first by a number of the so-called
the state's strongest class A teams, ! experts, narrow as the margin
13-3 last week. I might be. For one thing, they have
Anson will tackle Winters, a
team which dumppd another 4-AA I i'" *'
team, Hamlin, last week, 27-13. An-1 IotXLS
son took it on the chin, 26-0, from
coaching of the highest quality.
The veteran head man of the Owl
is beginning his twenty-
fifth year as head coach of a
Coleman, and needs to find an of-1 college team.^ ^
| strategy with experience in the
tensive spark.
Hamlin performed creditably in
spots against Winters, and will
tackle the tough Haskell Indians,
who battled Stamford, to a stand-
still for three quarters, Friday at
Haskell.
Rotan. which has fallen upon lean i J"
years, is on the road back, but
found it rather rocky last week and
were upended by a good class A
game and in working together as
a unit at Rice for many years in
Joe Davis, Cecil Grigg. Dell Mor-
gan!, Red Bale and Charlie Moore.
There is a sharp young newcomer
to the staff in Bill flcall. who came
assistant's post at Ar-
kansas State, to help tutor the
backs.
At two of the backfield posts,
The Babe and her husband, ; back home in Birmingham, Ala.
Goerge Zaharias. were to leave j today awaiting a decision on wheth-
by plane today for Tampa where : er his ailing back will require sur-
they own a home. i gery.
Before leaving the Galveston The former Auburn football end, 1
for !
Retirement
a Education
a Business
« Mortgaga
C. S.
Parkins, Jr.
Southwestern
Lifa Insurance
Company
206
Davis Bldg.
Phone 2020
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LINCOLN-MERCURY DEALER
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Roswell Rockets meet the
San Angelo Colts tonight, begin-
ning the best-of-seven series, to
decide the champion of the Long-
horn League. Roswell earned the j 0f the cancer
right for the final playoff with an !
8-2 victory last night over Artesia. —
Both Roswell and Artesia turned
out to be home-town crowd pleas- [
ers in the seven-game series, ;
which went the distance. Roswell
won the first two in its own sta-
dium and lost the next three at
Artesia. The final two victories
made the difference—both games
played at Roswell.
San Angelo won the first round
of its playoff 4-1 over Carlsbad in
the best-of-seven series.
Roswell had no trouble last night
whipping the Numexers as Hoot
Gibson went the route for the vic-
tory, hurling a seven-hitter. Eddie
Locke suffered the loss for Artesia.
hammers will be favored to dump
neighboring Roby, a class A team
defeated by class B Ilermleigh
last week.
This Week's Schedule
Roby at Rotan; Hamlin at Hask-
ell; Andrews at Stamford; Anson
at Winters; Colorado City at Bal
linger.
Last Week's Results
, ,, , , , , ... .. _ . . . , Stamford 21, Haskell 7.
Hospital she announced the estab-i who signed with the Orioles tor! Colorado City 9
lishment of a fund for cancer de- j $48,000, injured his back on June j jja^e view 0 '
tection and contributed 81,000 to 11 and was inactive until Sept. 1. j J Coieman 26 Anson 0
help get it launched. j He has only pinch hit since then j Mundav 12 Rotan 6
Mrs. Zaharias is recovering from | and the back, he reports, is not! winters 27 Hamlin 13
a second cancer that was discov- j right. j ' ^
ered when she underwent an oper- j Pyburn played in 39 games and
ation for a spinal disc. She was ! hit .194. Manager Paul Richards
first stricken in 1953 but returned { said a decision on Pyburn will be
to golf four months later to win ! made in the next few weeks.
several championships. | The Orioles also announced that
For the past three-and-a-half they were bringing up Charles
months she has been in the hospi- Locke, 2!. right-handed pitcher,
tal here for correction of the disc from their San Antonio, Tex., farm.
trouble and for X-ray treatments Locke had a 17-12 record in the
I Texas League.
team, Munday 12-6. The Yellow- the 0wls have been the talk of the
Dallas And Houston
Clash In Deciding
Game 0! Playoffs
I®
TOP TWO Willa McGuire and Alfredo Mcndoza congratulate
; one another the way they know best at Cypress Gardens, Fla
Mendoza successfully defended the world water skiing eham-
; pionship at Beirut, Lebanon. Miss McGuire regained the crown
I she lost two years ago. They win trophies cooling off.
leading lights
Pampa Advances
To Series Finals
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Pampa Oilers sat back and
j relaxed today, awaiting the out-
! come of the Amarillo-Plainview
| series after knocking out Albuquer-
que handily last night 9-2 and win-
ning the best-of-seven first-round
West Texas-New Mexico League
series 4-2.
Amarillo, meanwhile, moved to
a 3-2 lead in the series with Plain-
view with an 8-5 victory at Plain-
; view. Plainview plays at Amarillo
I tonight.
NOTICE! We will be open Mon-
day, Tuesday, Thursday and
Saturday nights.
Winn s Miniature Golf
City Park
Flown-in Fresh To The ....
(Not Frozen)
Blue Bonnet-Hotel Coffee Shop
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picture
Southwest in the olf season. The
prospects are very bright at quar-
terback and fullback. Success of
Neely's version of the straight T
is keyed to the man under. Head-
ing an impressive group at quar-
terback is senior 2-letterman Pinky
Nisbet, who led the league in pass-
ing percentage last fall with .597.
But he's being closely pressed by
'A,1' , - two -exceptionally well qualified
an Angelo ; SOphomores in 6-2, 208-pound King
Hill and 6-2, 180-pound Frank
Ryan. Both are,fine passers. An-
other stellar hand at quarter is
Phil Harris, the freshman sensa-1
tion of 1953 who saw brief duty
last fall. And squadman Terry
Stuart is much improved.
Fullback is in capable hands
with big, hard-running junior let-
termen Jerry Hall and Jack
! Throckmorton. David Kelley did
I well with the frosh last fall, and
\ can play either full or right half.
The halfback situation isn't dis-
! c ouraging, even if a proven spark
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Moegle type isn't known
Charlie I owler of Dallas and now There are several lads eager
Houston's Ralph Beard decorate to show they can do the job. At
the mounds Wednesday night as ; loft halfback, senior letterman
j the two teams go back to Dallas Page Rogers has the most experi-
; to finish their Texas league semi- j encc, whi!e junjor paul Zipperlen
j final playoffs with the Buffs hold-1 saw a little gamo duty in 1954.
ing a lead. j stocky Virgil Mutschink was most
It will be do-oi -die Wednesday ; impressive as the freshman team's
i night for the Eagles, regular sea- ieac)ing ground gainer. And junior
son winners, after their defense coiit,g(. transfers Lanny Fife and
! collapsed Tuesday night and the | Bobby Williams come with high
Buffs slammed out an 81 victory. credentials. At right half. Bryant
Pete Burnside was the victim. stono junior letterman, is ticketed
He blanked Houston in the second (o take ovcr thc regular post held
game of the series, but went wild , older brother Morris Stone. |
I Tuesday night.
! With two out in the seventh, he
I walked the bases full. Reliefer Pat j
| Patrick came in but the fire blazed ]
merrily 011 as Fred McAlister hit!
j a single, Gil Daley got a triple
and Whitey Ries banged out a j
single. The inning was worth five j
runs to the Buffs and put the game
well out of reach.
Dallas scored first in the second |
: inning when Bill White tripled and
! Wiley Moore brought him home
with a sacrifice lly.
I The Buffs tied it up in the third, j
went ahead in the sixth and stayed j
! that way.
Barney Schultz went the distance |
; for the Buffs.
Kelly and a couple of trackmen,
Dick Bowen and Gene Johnson,
furnish speed.
The first string line will be one
of Rice's biggest in some time.
With giant Orville Trask at 235
paired with proven star and strong
All-America candidate. Eddie Ray-
burn, 225, at the tackles, the Owls
won't suffer from lack of size.
Belter yet, both can move. There-
are two big reserves in 220-pound
Jean Barras and 230-pound Don
Phillips, and two soph subs on the
smallish side in Charles Thompson
and Larry Whitmire, both under
200. but able.
Jay Riviere, a tackle regular
last. fall, has switched to guard
and will team with Lew Harpold,
another senior. Lettermen R. E.
Wortham and Tom Siragusa, and
two sophomores, Matt Goes and
Jerry Fleming, are chief replace-
ments. Don Wilson starts his linal
year at center and the 215-pound
husky wiii 'be pustied by junior
college transfers Don Giliis, 220-
pounder, and returnees Albert
Johnson and Jerry Strickland Har-
ris.
Rice has had outstanding end
for many years, and there's no
reason for a change. At right end,
Marshall Crawford is rated one of
the nation's finest and he serves
as co-captain with Rayburn. He is
backed by Bob Woolbright. a let-
terman, and two good squadmen,
Ricky Field and James Briggs. At
left end there's a wide-open battle
for thc starting job among Donald
Gee, James Peters and John Held.
Gee rales a slight edge, if any,
but all three should play a lot.
WT-NM League
Shows increase
ABILENE, Tex. W—The Class
B West Texas-New Mexico League
drew 659,817 in paid attendance
for the 1955 season, an increase of
206,286 over last year, league Pres-
ident Hal Sayles announced today.
It was the second highest attend-
ance mark for the circuit in its
16-year history, being topped only
by the 674,465 figure in 1949, Sayles
said.
Both Amarillo and Abilene bet-
tered the club attendance record.
Amarillo drew 132,128 and Abilene
packed in 125,714 for the season.
The old club record was establish-
ed by Lubbock at 117,621 in 1947.
Abilene also set the individual
game attendance record of 7,128
at an August Davy Crockett night.
Here are the comparative fig-
ures;
Abilene
Albuquerque
Amarillo
Clovis
El Paso
Lubbock
Pampa
Plainview
Borger
1955
1954
125,711
77,668
78.432
83,446
132.128
51,800
64,017
51,927
71.771
58.555
75,515
C5.931
34,594
63,269
56,071
11,111
22,500
SHAFFER'S
WEDNESDAY'S BASEBALL
By The Associated Press
AMERICAN LEAGUE
W L Pet
GB
(Toweling)
Covers
Assorted Color*
201 East Arizona
Phone 2803
...but W/TW
COLORADO
OFFBRlNG-
IN DISPUTE
tackle SAf 1
5AIEMQ
$20,000 Taken
From Fort Bliss
EL PASO lilt—An estimated $20,-
000 in paper money was taken from
the Ft. Bliss Branch of the State
National Bank sometime before
dawn yesterday.
The branch bank was temporari-
ly located in a building without a
vault or automatic alarm system
while its regular office is being
remodeled.
Numerous bags of silver were
left untouched and another branch
bank in thc same building was not
entered.
Cleveland 99 55 .621 —
Nenv York 87 56 .608 2
Chicago 85 59 .590 4 Vb
Boston 82 61 .573 7
| Detroit 72 72 .500 17'i
Kansas City .... 60 84 .417 29 Vu I
Washington .... 50 91 .355 38
Baltimore ... 46 94 .329 Ill's |
TUESDAY'S RESULTS
New York 6. Detroit 0.
Kansas City 6-6, Boston 5-7.
Cleveland 3-8, Washington 1-2.
Baltimore 2-6. Chicago 0-9.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W L Pet. GB
Brooklyn 93 50 .650 —
Milwaukee .... 80 65 .552 14
New York 74 69 .517 19
Philadelphia ...73 73 .500 211 i
Cincinnati 72 76 .486 23's
Chicago 69 77 .473 25la j
St. Louis 61 82 .427 32
Pittsburgh 57 87 .396 36M: |
WEDNESDAY'S SCHEDULE
New York at Milwaukee, 9 p. j
m. — McCall 6-5 or Ilearn 14-15 vs. I
Spahn 14-14.
Brooklyn at St. Louis. 8 p. m.-
Newcombe 20-5 vs. Poholsky 8-10. |
Only games scheduled.
TUESDAY'S RESULTS
Philadelphia 10. Chicago 0.
St. Louis 8, Brooklyn 2.
Pittsburgh 5, Cincinnati 2.
New York 9, Milwaukee 1.
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Sweetwater Reporter (Sweetwater, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 218, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 14, 1955, newspaper, September 14, 1955; Sweetwater, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth284541/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sweetwater/Nolan County City-County Library.