Borger Daily Herald (Borger, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 308, Ed. 1 Sunday, November 18, 1945 Page: 3 of 12
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Texas Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Hutchinson County Library, Borger Branch.
- Highlighting
- Highlighting On/Off
- Color:
- Adjust Image
- Rotate Left
- Rotate Right
- Brightness, Contrast, etc. (Experimental)
- Cropping Tool
- Download Sizes
- Preview all sizes/dimensions or...
- Download Thumbnail
- Download Small
- Download Medium
- Download Large
- High Resolution Files
- IIIF Image JSON
- IIIF Image URL
- Accessibility
- View Extracted Text
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
Clay Bids For M State
Honors Is Bulldogs Lose
To Undeleted Hamsters
Over 5,000 blanket-wrapped tans packed into
the local high school stadium here Friday night and
sow a gallant Borgcr Bulldog eleven go down in dt
feat at the hands of the undefeated Pan pa Ha:
vesters by a score of 33 to 0.
nioncherr. borrowed from Phi’,
lips did little toward .-rating tin-
huge crowd of spectators who .r .
possiblv one of the best school-
boy backs ever to trot on a Bur-
ger field in 170-poun : Band ,
Clay, the Harvester sparkplug
The pigskin hail hardly lime
to cool from lhe kickoff before
Clay had galloped 26 yards for
the initial Pampa tally and lhen
he kicked lhe ball squarely be-
lween the cross bars for lhe
extra point, all within two min-
utes of the game's start.
Putting in hi bid for all-Man
honors. Clay plowed over from
the five yard line in the third
quarter and kicked another extra
point. He aeeounted for anntt
touchdown in the final bracket
by stepi ing over from the two
yard line but his try for point
was blocked.
Barely shadowed by the bril-
liant playing of Clay, was Brown
a 162 pound back, who gained 45
yards in scrimmage for the Har-
vester! m the fourth quarter and
then plowed over from the two
yard line. •!. Wilson kicked the
extra point.
Pampa's other tally came in
the second quarter when Rus-
sell Neof spaded ihrough from
the one yard line, where Clay
had placid it on a preceding
gallop. J. Wison's kick was
blocked.
Bonier managed to get within
the visitor'. 20-.vnrd territory early
in the first bracket when Price
and Dunn i arned on four success-
are marked by friendly
consideration for every
family’s circumstances.
Blackburn-Shaw
Ousi&udb <2hA£cto'i'X.
fOfYIN CO-CWitH A* *
eORGtft PH 555 TEXAS
i\c plays and Price attempted a
i to McLaiunilin to gain to the
15 ; - i marker. When Price at
i tern--ted a pass Horn that posi-
tion. Clay intercepted and sprint-
ed till the way to the Burger 42
: before being nr:-,;ged down.
Red and white was o:i the move
tin in the second quartet when
Hr::-, returned the Pampa kick-
off fi m tin 15 to the 35 and b i
the next plays ivas passing to
(. to .in,: McLaughlin to ar-
i iPu to. tiie ball being on the
visitor's 21 yard line.
Price's next pass was inlar-
cepled by Speer, a substuie Har-
vester back, vrho was nailed on
i his own 10. On lhe next play.
Spec i fumbled and Price recov-
n . Pampa 5 for ihe
i Bulldogs and that is lhe closest
the locals ever came to lhe
j Pampa goal line as the half
period came right after that
! play-
l.ei Rnv Dunn, ailing with u bad
j kr, turncri in a superior per-
i ■ ky Ward'-
. n :.n<t accounted for a large
I port-on id punt yardage.
STARTING LINE-UP
BORGCR
WT.
P j»
v;t.
PAMPA
1 \vnrc
ibt>
172
I. K
107
L William •
r St. pp
l r
185
J Terrell
H, ffui•
17fj
L- G
ir»;{
V. Ftali
J Scott
ia;j
c
105
M. Lockhart
C’<j\ ti p ton
100
HO
102
J.
G Ware
260
H T
195
175
S Simpson
H Orman
145
h V.
-t Dunham
M Puce
100
•in
127
fi. Johnson
McLaughlin
155
t.M
157
H. Net t
D crow
14ft
IUi
170
H (’lay
I. Dunn
105
I B
156
\V ash ington
Substitutions: Borger—Fisher
for Dunn1 McKain for Coving-
ton; J. Ware for Self; Chapman
for Slepp.
P.aipa.....W. Vaughn for Clay;
W„ .hington for Brown; Speer
for Brown.
STATISTICS
! Firs.
t downs
7
15
1 Yd?
. gained from scrim.
239
383
j y, t
lo t serf mm.
12.
20
; i’ll-
sco attempted
12
5
i p':
><••' completed
5
1
1 Yj;
;;;tined passing
55
37
Opt
i. pusses intereptd.
0
5
| Fur
: t i; .
v : uinbles recovered
*)
1
1
1
! Fui
4
0
1 Av
Y '-. each punt
32
0
j Kb
kolfs
0
. 7
1
Vi is. per kickoff
0
42
A\
kickoff return yds
14
0
| Pm
allies
I
7
’ Yc!
■ lo t on penalties
15
55
t® _
t.oonvMR
Waiting for a NEW
Yes Sir, ho learned
about tires the hard
way. Like many
other motorists, he
experimented,
played-th#-field . . .
found nothing satis-
fied him like a Good-
year. That's why he's
even willing to wait,
if necessary, for a
new Goodyear ... a
tire you can always
count on for extra,
long, safe service.
See us as soon as
you ‘see" a certifi-
cate.
;
2
i
k —
a°U*
/»*
• U y
•*
. , V ..
No tot W
(.iiiiuAiu UV**
TUktS 6.00x16
V//V64 Q 'ikkVn
GUHH-HINtRMAN
ii n n i) v t. /»Tfl|l*TU9M' Hi ffHB I M)
Awgfillit FwiMfi
Southwest Race
Moves Toward
Three-Way Tie
By The Associated Press
The southwest conference foot-
i ball race moved toward a two or
three-way tie Saturday as Texas
shot Texas Christian down 20-0,
and It ice upset Texas A & M 6-0.
Texas now leads by virtue ol :
having played more games but ]
Rice has onlv one defeat—the
Same as Texas—and by winning
its m«sit two contests, against Tex-
Christian anc! Baylor, could,
| clinch at least a tie for the title.
Texas has only Texas A & M
left cn the schedule- Should A &
M defeat Texas and Rice lose one
? its games, there could bo a
three-way—or maybe four-way
I lie frr lhe leadership.
o-uther i Methodist kept flick-
, hopes alive of perhaps gain-
ing a share of the title by beating
Arkansas 21-0 Saturday. Baylor,
: placing outside the conference,
It. •!; a 26-7 trimming from Tulsa
University.
) A 26 yard pa - from Jes- Mason
tu Jack McBride brought Hite its
* victory over an A & M team that
outplayed the Owls most of the
way.
Texas puwerhoused to its win
over Texas Christian while South-
ern Methodist, led by Doate Walk-
er, wini made two touchdowns and
set up the other, found Arkansas
not difficult to handle.
The Conference Standing
Team
W
L
Pci.
Text:.-;
4
1
.800
Rire
3
1
.750
Texas A & M
3
2
.600
Texas Christian
2
2
.500
Southern Methodist
2
9
.500
Baylor
1
o
.333
Arkansas
1
5
.167
Football Jackets
Presented to '44
Borger Lettermen
Football letter jackets were pre-
i sented to the 1944 Bulldogs in
special high school, assembly pro-
| gram Friday morning by C. A.
j Cryer, superintendent.
Those lettermen present to re-
ceive the jackets included: Harold
Trent, U. S. Navy, here on fur-
: tough; Jerry Dockery; J. IX Cov-
| ington; Marvin McKain; Tom Self:
Billy McLaughlin; Gene Ware;
: Howard Hurt; Charles Stepp; Rex
j Orman; Roy Lee Dunn; Sammy
I Sargent: Jim Scott; Di-iroy Ma-
\ iheny; Milton Price and Earl Sum-
i mers, manager.
Other lettermen not present but
j who will receive the jackets by
' mail or through relatives includ-
ed: Bill Wheeler, now attending
.Vest Texas State Teachers College,
Canyon; Billy Holcomb, now in
■ the IT. S. Navy <jacket was re-
ceived by his brother, Kenneth
j , lolcomi,. Lynn Benson, a student
at Texas Acv-U.
Arlev Stafford, a student at
vVTSTC. Canyon; Charles Pirtle, !
U S Navy, (jacket was received
,y ins brother. Jack Pi. tie1: Don
j _ onnors and Charles Evu'ns, in
J. S. Navy; Jack Scott now in
ollege 'jacket received by his
i ,rother. Jim Scott'.
Mr. Puul Logsdon received the
aeket tor his son, the late Toby
mgseion. who died of illness last
unimer. Toby was a manager of i
he 1944 Borger Bulldogs and was i
I .ell known and beloved by all.
i .he entire student body rose in
.onor of the former gridiron man-
i iger us the jacket was presented
I ,o Mr. Logsdon.
i SX CHAMPION ON
i JOMEBACK TRAIL
CLEVELAND, Nov. 17—l/P)—j
' Former lightweight champion Lew |
| Jenkins, 21). discharged from the.
| Joast Guard two weeks . go, sign
! cd today to start his comeback j
i trail against Jimmy Doyle of Los i
S Angeles in a 10-round co-feature j
j bout of the Cleveland News unnu- j
j al Christmas fund show Dee. 3
NEGRO CONVICTED
: OF DALLAS MURDER
DALLAS, No\ 17 '.-Pj—A llle
I prison term was assessed against, j
j P. S. D. Fields, 25, negro, by a j
jury which convicted him of j
murder with malice m the pistol!
'slaying of J. P. Barber. 51, Sept. I
: 21.
Barber was shot to death in the I
j negro section of Dallas after he j
j had removed a negro woman, who J
'had allegedly created a distur-
i bance, from a Lemmon Avenue
i bus.
Fields had pleaded innocent to
j the murder indictment.
HHOUSTON. Nov. 17—i/P.i—The'
! strike of truck drivers in the
midwest has .tied up >15 percent of
freight handled by local freight
lines, freight officials said today.
Freight lines operating out of
Houston into the northern slate
announced tiny were not loading
shipment., beyond Oklahoma City.
Tulsa. 1 itth Rock, Memphis or
other border chic
The strike of 20.000 truck driv-
ers in H mid-western states be-
gan yesterday
Would King Cole Be Merry
With Stomach Ulcer Pains?
The legendary Old Kinj « might n
have been n merry old m>u! if he had
■
have to pay the p« nalt\ <M stomach m
ulc< r pain indi
heartburn. burning i n .* * i- • * ■ M<and
litti '
should ti y l •!/.- apd t
be in i i i v Get a b I iga ■ ■
leti» fioin >our rltu^gM Fust d«»s>
must eonvin« e 01 letui. b«*x to u* and
get UOi’BJ.K VO UK MOM V M A« K
Tech's Mighty Man Rolls On
Page S Sunday, November 18, 1945 Borger, Texai
Texas DAP.’s Approve
‘While On!> Policy
j FORT WORTH, Nov. 17—oP -
i State Board members < f the Tex.,.
] Society of the Daughters of the
American Revolution today ap-
i proved the nati ml b,gird's police
{ in reserving the DAR’s Constitu-
tional Hail in Washington for
I "white artists only."
Mrs. Fred B. Ingram. Dali.;
state regent, raid the approval
ymrnv.. The nat.on'd
board's policy was drawn:, after
Marin-. A: -ii-rsor. and Hazel Scott,
ii. .'trap us*! pianist, were
cr.'Cd t .j use of the hall for con-
ClTiS.
The Texa-. boant concluded t
two-dav session here today.
Dm in. the war the American
pc’ -oi-'iirn industry increased gts
. i.p.-H-nj for making gasoline from
: jcO.iii't) gallons daily to more
than 25,000,000.
You Are Always Welcome at Your
CONOCO SERVICE STATION
*J;' 4 *: *
(MBs
3?
4 *W -j
Nfh Motor Oi! by the Case or Quart
and remember we have that New Day Gasoline
NTANE
Walt Schhnlcman, Texas Tech's mighty man. has rolled up 729 yards
net carrying the ball against the toughest competition lhe Southwest
has to offer, to become one of fhe greatest backs in the nation this
season. He also has run kick-offs back 142 yards; intercepted five
passes for G3 yards, and returned three punis 19 yards for a total of
953 yards gained in operations against eight foes. Last week Schlink-
man personally led Tech to a 12-0 victory over Texas Christian of
lhe Southwest Conference by netting 137 of the 138 yards his team
made. He has played much of the season with an arm and shoul-
der injury.—(AP Photo).
When we wash your car we clean if inside and out.
—Just Try Our Service—
OPEN SUNDAYS
“JESSE” JAMES, Lessee
328 North Mein
, ' *3 * j# j >,
'4r,^M§
r ' . ft ,y CA'flpi ,
PLACE ORDERS NOW*
BUY
VICTORY
BONUS
rp ms, we reasoned, is no lime to offer folks a
X car that stops with artful face-lifting.
It nas been nearly four years since our last new
Buick was built—it wouldn't he shooting square
now to {five you less than our honor-bright best.
So we overhauled our whole factory to
advantage it with the latest in war-developed
machines and processes.
We scoured t lie country lor the stoutest metals
anyone can buy today;.
We set ourselves precisions that in some cases
exceed those of aircraft engine production.
And we eagle-eyed every one of this Buick s
12,000 parts to see it it could be bettered in any
way, or little.
The result is that through every stunning inch
of this bright new honey runs solid, dependable
Buick character, honest and uncompromised.
It's in swift clean lines. In seats that are three*
persons wide. In stout, time-defying frames and
underpinning. Above all — in the lift and life
of a Fireball straight-eight that's even livelier
than in 1042.
The cars your Buick dealer will hav e are big.
They’re beautiful. They’re Buicks.
In fact — the best Buicks yet!
Ch that clicks for Forty-
sett with •> '
Vt/hat Other car
GUDINGRtOE— "
nntl nlt-roil st‘<
tn y ■ tmlort i
COMFORI
nn'ttj
,l' It J"i
POWER—from '
ball valve
cnIjtrtt’ I
/ifyjjt
'return from /Vt'y
fuel•
high STYLE of ffl
AirftU Dndrri Vll
f ihilljt
wth luxuiy-typc
rear v
OIL SAVINGS—from
fin,j lr,ur,teeyl^
HASHING ACTION-
I
STEADINESS—,r '
CONTROL
•iihU (hut
FINGER MOTOR CO.
115 5 MAIN
fHONl Ml
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Phillips, J. C. Borger Daily Herald (Borger, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 308, Ed. 1 Sunday, November 18, 1945, newspaper, November 18, 1945; Borger, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth520524/m1/3/?q=%22Places+-+United+States+-+Texas+-+Hutchinson+County+-+Borger%22: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Hutchinson County Library, Borger Branch.