Stephenville Daily Empire (Stephenville, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 50, Ed. 1 Sunday, November 12, 1950 Page: 2 of 12
twelve pages : ill. ; page 24 x 19 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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mm
^IND^Y. NOVEMBER 12, 1*50
DELEON BREAKS* DRY SPELL BY
DOWNING GORMAN, HAMILTON FALLS
t Grid Results *
By (?KITKD PRKSH
COLLEGE
Midwest
N4ruU WnSom 19. MUUnd II
IUsmu WenWyan II. Bothol 9
Wadikm 14. 8—Uiw—|»rw (Kami.) II
WarrmaAin State SI. Maryville StaU It
South
Mlaaii (FU.) IS. LmnhrilU IS
Southwest
He* t Horn MflMiil Fraeli 41. ArUmrt**
StaU t
S. ,F. Aaatla It. Baat T#»»« Htalr 13
West
San Jrnmr State IS. St. Mary's I
HIGH SCHOOL
('Ism AA
Plalariew IS. Barter IS
Kl Pan AaaUa 7. Kl Pane Be«U 7
(Aaetia wine an eenetratlana. J-l >
Kl Paaa J effort 34. Tnlarana. \ M 7
AMIene SI. Brew*weed 7
San Angela 14. Sweetwater 4
CWSiTii IS. Wealberfard 4
Sbevman 17. tialaearllle 4
Deni»«n 31. Greenville St
Park S3. HelpKer Sprint* §
Graod Prairie 19. Den tan •
Mrkinney IS, Delia* Je.uit 7
Texarkana 44. Gladewater •
s Marakall 37. Lane view 14
Tyler IS. Kilt ere 4
Palestine 29, HenSer*«n 14
Canree 31. Brfan 9
Part Artker Si. Beaumont South Park 4
(Alena Park 39. Texas City 19
liar town 34, Freeport 2
Pasadena 14. (.a I re* ten 3
Corsicana 44. Hillsboro 7
Ware 43. Ennis 29
Temple 39, Waxabecble 13
Kerrvilte 27. Hen*ten Mllby 9
Corpus Oirtetl May 27, Lard** 9
A a* tin 21. Corpn. Cbristl Miller 21
Victoria 39. Klatsville It
Alice 9. Falfmrrta* 9 (tie)
Hsrllnpen S3, San Benito 19
McAllen It. Edinburg 7
City Conference
Pert Worth Paschal 27. For! Worth
Poly 12
Da I to* Wilson 29. North Dallas 4
Houston Reagan 4. Houston l.amar 9
Kerrville 27. Haaslan Mllby 9
Han Antania Rrsrkenridge 42. Harlan
dale 29
Han Antania l^tier 12. Han Antonio
Tech 9
Clans A
Lev el land 29. Uttlefield 14
Cisco 14. Hamilton 7
Do Leon 14. (Arman 9
Dublin 19. Comanche 13
Newcastle 34. Jorksbor# 7
Killeen 49. Belton f
-.Maprsatown It, Taylor 9 ,4
Lampasas 21. San Sabo 14
Uana 29. (.eidthwalt# 9
lie I .eon 14, Gerati •
Gorman, Nov. 10. (8pl)—The
DeLeon Bearcats scored a hard-
fought 14-0 victory over the Gor-
man Panthers in a non-district
ITame here Friday night. Simp-
son accounted for both DeLedrt
scores on runs of 16 yards in the
first and fourth quarters.
Cisco 14, Hamilton 7
Cisco. Nov. 10. <Spl).— The
Cisco Lobos scored in the second
and third quarters hare Friday
night to win a District 8-A game
over the Hamilton Bulldogs, 14-7.
Robert Jackson set up the first
score when he intercepted a pass
in midfield and ran it back to
Hamilton’s one-yard tine, from
where Doug Johnson scored. Don
Watts, center, converted. The
Lobos made it 14-0 in the third
when Jimmy Webb blocked a punt
to set up another scoring oppor-
tunity. Irving Brunkenhoefer
drove a cross for the score and
Watts again converted. Late in
the third, Hamilton scored after
a 68-yard drive, with E. Barnet
going over from the three. C.
Bullard converted.
Upsets Chill Fans in Some
Schoolboyv Football Contests
.* .* *•. • • -•
*s unitbo *****
A glance at the Texas school-
boy football sco reboa id today was
apt to leave the reader as stun-
ned by what he saw as by the
bone-chilling weather that greet-
ed hir.i . >t»ida.
Upsets and close calls were a
‘drug on the market, but the moat
shocking news came in tho falls
of defending state champion Lit-
tlefield of Class A, Houston city
favorite Lamar and Slnton from
the undefeated untied ranks.
Littlefield's 86-14 defeat by Lev-
el land, Lamar’s 6-0 loss to Reagan
and Slnton’* 40-6 blasting by Class
B Taft were not the only eyebrow,
lifters, however.
Hirhly favored Phillips in t-A
was crushed by Hereford 35-9;
unbeaten but once-tied Shamrock
toppled before Wellington 1-14
in -A; Slaton rose up to tie Poat
26-26 in 4-A and win the game
on penetrations, and Cisco knock-
ed off amilton 14-7 in 6-A.
Cleburne Cop* Clot Call
Among the elose calls, Cleburne
had to score in the last minute
of play to turn a tie into a 18-6
win over Weatherford and remain
among the si* perfect record
tesms in Class AA.
Wharton had all kinds of trouble
staying unbeaten-hut tied, but man-
aged a 20-19 win over El Cam-
po.
Defeats of Shamrock and Sinton
did not alter their championship
status, however, as they already
had clinched the title* In 2-A and
20-A.
Reagan took over the favorite’s
role in the Houston district since it
hasn’t lost a game in conference
play.
Levelland became an odds-on
choice to represent 4-A in the play-
offs a* Post’s defeat by Slaton
knocked it out of the running and
left Levelland and Littlefield tied
for the lead.
Phillips’ upset left it tied with
Hereford and Dalhart for the X-A
lead with one game each to go.
Colorado City clinched a tie
for the 6-A crown by beating
Hamlin 14-7.
Hamilton, Ranger Tied
Hamilton’s defeat threw it into
a tie with Ranger for the 8-A
lead.
Arlington clinched a tie for the
12-A flag by beating Pleasant
Grove 22-0.
i Mineola won the 14-A playoff
spot with a 21-6 verdict over Can-
ton.
Huntsville got a sure tie in
18-A by whipping Crockett 38-7.
Mexia virtually assured itself
of another playoff berth with
I /-y ... « m jl a 47-0 win over Franklin in 19-A.
Over Weatnertordl Georgetown won the 21-A cham-
im
Valley Mills 45. Meredian 7
Valley Mills. Nov. 10 (Spl).—
Undefeated Valley Mills completed
it* play in District 21-B Friday
night by running up a 45-7 vic-
tory over Meredian. Don Mullins
ran five yards for one touchdown
and covered a kockoff in the end
zone for another forthe victors.
Jim Larkin slashed seven yards
for one, and ran a pass interception
back 30 yards for another. Ger-
ald Meyers scored on a 35-yard
pass from Jack Roberson, and
Bobby George Roberson and Fred
Buddy Brantley scored for Mere-
dian. The Waco Kitten play at
Valley Mills in next week’s game.
Last Ditch Aerial
Wins For Cleburne
STUBBING NEURITIS
PAIN EASED FAST!*
UmmvSURIN Oiolm*nt sod ooo wh*l ultra-
tot raUaf It (tM. from local wiparSrial pain,
at arthrttia. rtomaattam. aaurltla. buraitia. ari-
atlaa. Uaaibaoo* aa wall aa fatlxua and muaru-
lar achaa add pains of aimpla cold. BURIN fo
brand now — Monaimnal! It ia haacd upon
a naia appikatkr.i cf a priaci;-te. BURIN
cnotalna a pnwwttil aaadsrn rraaar.-h dr or
that dilataa aurfara Mood vaaarla when applied
wham local pain ta pant SHKIN work, I
wajra (I) by inrraaiin* local blood m M (- )
pata totsc action by SUR1N. aaiactod anal
fade and ralaain* aamu Whan yoo apply
BURIN Jon foot an eaainc warmth Than fol-
iowa joyful tatiaf laatinr 1 to 3 or non houra.
SlIRIN traota tba pain at tha pout! of pom.
It d.M abooluta, temporary raliaf foil.
BURIN ta eata. dependable. No internal dosiaf
-PM 1. Inanity. BURIN ia new! Unlike aid-
Ttt1-*-—* ointment, and linimenta! Kaa a new
creamy-white, oaeooth ointment boar. tSbaily
applied and weahed og. Dora not aUin waoh-
abfo fobrlca. Money bock at your druniet <*
not aaCMfod.
•BUMtN it ear intended a. a curt or treatment
of ekaat iiaaaita U u fo fo need only for trm-
yorory rotid of focal rape.Print pom.
6ET PAM BU.KFI-6CT SHIM I
LAWYERS
Weatherford, Nov. 10. (Spl).—
Cleburne's undefeated, untied rec-
ord tottered on the brink of des-
truction against a lighter but
hard-hitting Weatherford eleven
heie Friday night, but a 71-yard
pas* play in the last minute of
the game salvaged a 13-6 victory
for the Yellow Jackets.
The score was 6-6 when the big
play occurred.
The courageous Kangaroos, rat-
ed as two to three touchdown
underdogs, outfought the visitors
most of the way and had three
scoring bids fall short by four,
six and four yards.
Thus, Cleburne’s victory set
the stage for next week for their
game at Cleburne with the Brec-
kenridge Buckaroos — the other
perfect-record District 6-AA club,
and the championship will be rid-
ing on the outcome.
In the fourth quarter, Weath-
erford smacked and hacked at
the heavier Cleburne line an<l
punched 16 plays to the Yel-
low Jacket’s four yard line. Runs
by Pete Wilbanks and Herman
Stroud ate up most of the ground.
The series bogged down near the
double - stripe, however, and stra-
tegy called for a field goal at-
tempt. It backfired, however when
Mike McDaniel fumbled the pass-
back, Cleburne recovering on the
12-yeard line.
Then, with barely two minutes
to play left in the contest, the
Jackets began marching determine-
ly upfield. They attained their
own 29-ycard line in four plays
and then Quarterback Miller fi-
SOS
“Selling Office Supplies”
by STEPHENVILLE PRINTING CO.
. a
i you will excuse me for doing my washing here at the
. Curiee. 1 haven't any clothe* pins at home and thee*
Hoards we buy from STEPHENVILLE PRINTING
jnsKVghl
pkmship by blanking Taylor 19-0.
Llano dinche^ a tie for the
22-A crown by beating Grolth-
waitc 20-0.
Wharton virtually assured itself
of the 27-A spot by beating El
Campo.
Karnes City grabbed the 28-A
flag with a 19-13 win over Edna.
South San Antonio took the 31-
A championship on penetrations
after battling Devine to a 13-13
tie.
Pearsall captured the 32 - A
berth with a 27-7 win over Uvalde.
gured it was time to start calling
for passes. Jhe first oAe he
tried worked — a long, looping
beauty which sailed 31 yards to
Halfback Sammy Carney.
Carney had barely gotten be-
hind Defender Ernest Williams and
caught the ball over his shoulder
running at full speed. With Wil-
liams trailing him all the way,
Carney raced over for the winning
tally with only 66 seconds remain-
ing in the game. Miller then kick-
ed goal untouched. Miller’s kick
was no good.
And that was t$e scoring until
tha Jackets’ unleashed their last-
minute pass, causing Weatherford
to lose the hard way—having an
advantage in almost every statis-
tic except the score.
Moseley Pacing
Third Round Of
Laredo Tourney
Laredo, Nov. 11 Wl—Capt. Fred
Moseley of San Antonio paced an
80-man field into the third round
of the International Golf Cham-
pionship Tournament today with a
36-hole total of 155.
The Air Force golf champion
overcame north winds gauged at
25 miles per hour yesterday aa he
fired a T7 in his second trip around
tho new Casa Blanca Country Club
course.
Eighteen-hole rounds were sche-
duled today and tomorrow, followed
by International Cpp matches
Monday.
Armando Rivero of Mexico City
captured second place honors with
1(6—one stroke lees than Billy
Erfurth of San Antonio.
Contestants despaired of better-
lag regulation figures on tha par-
72 course until tha wind dies
down.
STEER GOES BERSERK
San Antonio, Nev. 11 m—A pain-
crated steer ripped a 75-pound
stael gate from its hinges at a
slaughter house today, then lad
police and workmen «* a two-mile
chase through the city's streets
before R was failed by a volley of
aietel bullets
URlrasMi
THREE
BMffi CM
COME FROM OEM
Three hundred Tarleton State
College students and Plowboy grid
fans stepped off a special train
in StephenviUc at 6:10 a. m. Sat-
urday, tired sleepy and minus a
victory.
The train had left Stephenville
Friday afternoon, arriving in San
Angelo at 6. The return trip]
began at 12:45 a. m. Saturday;
The special tripper* had braved
bitter cold weather to watch the I Jones.
TRIPPERS Ari
■HHBG
m": ,
At the half, the Plowboys were
■Ml 7 to 0. ('order had scored
on a line back to pat his team
In the lead.
After three minutce had el a peed
in the second half, the Rams had
scored twice. They scored again
a few minutes later, and addt4
two, touchdowns in the fourth
period while Tarleton was making
oh*, via the air root*, Corder to
Tarleton Plowboy* lose 33 to 14
to an inspired San Angelo Ram
team.
Kilgore of the Rame went across
the double stripe four time*.
FROG-STEER GAME FEATURES
T CU HOMECOMING PROGRAM
Fort Worth, Nov. 11. — “Wel-
come Exes—Beat Texas!”
This ia the them* for Texas
Christian University’s Homecom-
ing Day activities on Saturday,
Nov. 18, when the Horned Frogs
clash with the Texas Longhorns,
and open houses dot the homecom-
ing social calendar fpr both Nov.
17 and 18. ' -
The first student Homecoming
function will be the annual Home- “• sw
coming parade at 10 a. m. The homecoming activities.
be held in Wait* Hall from 9 to
11 a. w. Saturday morning.
Altar the homecoming fpotball
game in the TCU Stadhnn at 2
p, m„ memgsrs and ex-students
of Alpha Chi, honorary scholastic |j«rvice
society, have been invited to-at-
tend a coffee ia the new student
study lounge on the second floor
of the Administration Building.
Dick Raassey, Fort Worth, is the
TCU student In charge of all
f i
By NOMAN MILLER
(MM rtooo Baerte Vito
Jiew York, Nov. u OP—Armis-
tice D«y 19(0 finds American
athletes once again laaviag “the
field of friendly strife” to fight
for their country in battle.
At least on* renowned athlete
already ha* give* hia life in Korea
—Lt. Tom Lombardo, the West
Point quarterback who called the
•ignals that sent famed Glenn
Davis and Doc Blanchard to grid-
iron glory.
Some players now are in train-
ing camps, like pitcher Cart Sim-
mons of the Philadelphia Phils
with the 28th Division of the Na-
tional Guard, pitcher Art Houtte-
man of the Detroit Tigers, and
pitcher Whitey Ford of the Yanka.
The induction of others, like
Danny O'Connell of the Pirates and
Maurice McDermott of tke Red
Sox, was imminent and many, if
not moat, college athlete* seemed
headed for a tour of duty in tha
parade will be on University Drive
and West Berry Street this year
Instead of downtown. ‘ Several
motives prompted the TCU Stu-
dent Congress to change the site
of the parade. Downtown traffic
on Saturday makes it difficult
for students to attend and It was
decided that If the homecoming
activities were centered around
"The Hill,” more TCU ex-stu-
dents would be present.
At 11:30 a. i*. after the home-
coming parade, there will be a
barbecue in the TCU field house.
Exee to Meet Fridsy
Several exes’ organisations will
have reunions on Friday. The
TCU Exes Lettermen’s Associa-
tion gathering will be at 6 p.
m. Friday at the Texas Hotel.
At 8 p. m. Friday there will
be a student pep rally and bon-
fire on the Vampus behind the ad-
ministration building.
Membera of the graduating
classes of 19J0, 1925, 1930 and
1940 have been extended a special
invitation to attend all homecom-
ing activities, Noel L. Keith, spe-
cial assistant to President M. E.
Sadler, announced.
Mike Bit* May Hall, secretary
of the Ex-students Association,
ha* appointed chairmen to con-
tact members of the four classes.
Chairmen include Mrs. Charles
Mosely, 1920; Mr*. Thurman Mor-
gan, 1925; Mrs. Buck Barr, 1930;
and Miss Beth Lea, 1940.
The clas of ’26 celebrates its
silver anniversary this yqar.
The classes of ’20 and ’25 will
assemble in Jarvia Hall from J
to 10 a. m. Saturday morning.
The classes of *30 and ’40 will
have a reunion in Foster Hall at
the same hour.
A coffee for all women former
student*, sponsored by the TCU
Women’s Exes Association, will
Other officials appointed by the
Student Congress are Miss Dee
Porter, Vernon, float chairman;
Miss Let* Eubank, Dallas, ban-
quet; Larry J. Ferrara, Hamp-
stead, N. Y., advertising; Lei and
L. Coggan, Kirkwood, Mo., parade
chairman; and David E. Travena,
Corpus Christ!, decorations.
About 15,060 ex-students are
expected to visit the campus and
attend the Horned Frog-Long-
horn game Saturday, Keith an-
nounced.
i
Texas Jockey
Boots in New
Riding Record
Inglewood, Cal., Nov.
Jockey Willie 8hoemaker, new
holder of 'the modern American
riding record with 321 winners,
shifted his scene of operations to-
day from Hollywood Park to Bay
Meadows where he was scheduled
to ride eight mounts.
The little El Paso, Tex., hooter
broke Johnny Longden’s mard of
319 winners in a single season
here yesterday by captaring the
first race abroad Harbor Pilot.
For good measure, he scored a dou-
ble for the day, bringing home
Fair Regard* in tha seventh.
Although Shoemaker was the
first under the wire in a race to
break the modern mark for a
season, he hold a lead of but one
win over Joe Culmone when he
started the day’s work at Holly-
wood Park yesterday.
Culmone, riding at Pimlico, scor-
ed a triple with Conewago, Mere
Bone and Twinkley to give his
313 winners. The eastern jockey
might have broken Longden’s mark
first had he not taken himself off
his lkst taro mounts Thursday.
Both won.
Many Stars Lost Live*
Against this background of in-
ternational tension, the sports
world paused again to remember
the men who gave their lives in
other wars.
More than 800 professional and
amateur athletes made the su-
preme sacrifice in World War II.
They came from every sport in the
book—baseball, football, tennis,
polo, hockey, soccer, handball,
basketball, track, bobsledding.
There was Charley Paddock, the
famed sprinter who was the first
to be nicknamed “the world’s fast-
est human.” Paddock, a Marin*
captain, died in a plan* crash in
Alaska. Plane crashes also took
the lives of such men aa Tommy
Hitchcock, probably the top polo
player this nation has produced;
Nile Kinniek, the all-American
football back from Iowa; and Jo*
Hunt, the 1843 national tennis
singles champion.
No U. S. athlete ever dominated
his field more than did Torger
Tokle, an immigrant who hold 24
ski records at the time of hia death
as a ski trooper in the mountains
of Italy. *~
’Major of St. Lo’
One of sports’ greatest war he-
roes was Tommy Howie, former
star halfback from the Citadel. He
earned everlasting glory as the
“Major of St. Lo” when his vic-
torious troops carried his body into
St. Lo, the Normandy city he had
vowed to capture.
From the ranks of football star-
dom, too, came Capt. Waddy
Young, and from Oklahoma and
the Brooklyn football Dodgers Who
died in the first B-29 raid on Tok-
yo; Jack Chevigny, Notre Dame
quarterback who died on I wo Jipta;
and At Bloxis, star' tackle at
Georgetown, national indoor and
outdoor shot-put champion, and pro
football star with the New York
Ciante.
Five major league baseball play-
er* died. All of them were rookies
—pitcher Eugene Stack of the
White Sox, pitcher Forrest Brew-
er and Elmer Gedeon of Washing-
ton, catcher Ardys Keller of the
R & M CLOTHIERS
6668
• f ‘ , , , • . , f -vy ■ ‘t j •.i ii"
the 2>ne4A4etU Jlalutay Seadan
TWEEDS, GABARDINES
WORSTEDS, SHARKSKINS
New York, Nov. 11 1
Fraley’s fact* and figures: «
When A1 Lopez, new nnwaifrif1,
of the Cleveland Indians, flrtt re-
ported to the Brooklyn Dodger* a*
a catching candidate, manager
“Uncle Wilbert" Robinson took' on*
look at him and snorted:
"That guy will never m*kp a
catcher. He’e too small.”
It’s a tribute to the little seaor’s
iron arm, hair-trigger brain and
flaming spirit that in 19 yearn he
set a major league record by catch-
ing 1,862 games ... the arm i*
gone, but the other two attributes
will stand him in good stead at
Cleveland.
A drive is on to obtain the an-
nual Sullivan Award for Frank
(Muscles) Stranahan, the British
amateur king from Toledo. This
corner doesn’t see bow he can miss.
This year Frank won the British
Amateur for the second time, was
runnerup in the U. S. Amateur,
Captured the All-America Amataur
for the third straight year, took
the World’s Amateur at Tam
O'Shanter and the Dixie Amateur
and while competing against tha
pros was low amateur in the Mas-
ters, the North-South Open and
the Kansas City Open . . . What
does a guy have to do to win thnt
chunk of silverware? . . .
Miami and Maryland are rated
as two of the best in the Southern
College football picture—but coach
Bob Margarita of Georgetown
rates the Maryland eleven ns the
better of the two ... He should
know. He lost to both .;.
Happy Birthday: Sunday, Andy
Han son, 26; Don Johnson, 24, and
George RaHerman, 24; Monday,
Ted Wilks, 35, and Dr. Eddie An-
derson, (0; Tuesday, Gaorge Fasio,
88; Thursday, Mel Patton, 28, and
Bobby Cruickahank, 56; Friday,
Joe Hatton, 38; Ray Lamanno, 31,
and Bill Warwick, 26 . . .
Turk Broda, the man with the
hemstitched face who tends goal
for the Toronto Maple Leafs, fig-
ures that, excapt for Canadian
weather and the war, h* might
have been either a big league ball
player or n golf pro. The long
Manitoba winters took him awny
from baseball aad forced hhn Into
hockey. Then, just before the war,
he was considering turning golf
pro—but felt It was too late after
two years in service ....... He stil)
shot a sizzling 69 on a tough par
72 course last summer ...
The major leagues are expected
to agree to curtailment of their
radio broadcasts when the annual
Browns, and infielder Franklin
8ehulz of Cleveland. -
The name* of many others com*
readily to mind—bobslodder Billy
Fide, basketball Coach Ernie Hol-
brook of Southern California—and
n legion of others,
a legion of others,
them today in sadness and in
pride.
nr* held at ^
December.
minor league meetings are
St. Petersburg, Fla., in
International . League ^president
.Frank Shaughnessy was declared
if that broadcasts of major league
games in minor league territories
are “ruinous” to the farm club
gates. Bruce Dudley, American As-
sociation president, agreed . . . 4o,
finally, do the majors, realizing
that by hurting the minors they
hurt themselves , . .
Glenn Davis is going to find it
difficult to lire up to his “Mr. Out-
side” tag of West Point days when
his Lea Angds* Bams play the
New York Yanka Nov. 19. One of
the guys hell have to go around
‘ is end Barney Poole, who yelped
send “Mr. Outside” to the outside
when they were Army team-
mates . .
Loud Larry MaePhail, who al-
ways had something to say when
he was a baseball .magnate, must
now be considered a racing mogul.
After a couple of years as a Mary-
land breeder, MaePhail has start-
ed screaming again. He claims that
racing's biggest problem is the
“racketeers, gangsters and small-
time hoodlums who have muscled
in,’ mentioning Ohio, Illinois and
Florida as the leading culprits . . .
As Irv (Moon) Mondschein,
CCNY grid coach, moaned after
losing six straight games: “If, as
they say, the worm must turn—
our worm must be dead!”
ACC-HPC Clash
Tops Homecoming
State Thursday
Abilene, Nov. 11. — Abilene
Christian Christian College’s an-
nual ex-student homecoming will
be hold Wednesday and Thursday,
Nev. 22 and 23, Lee F, Powell,
F'aducah, Ky., Alumni Association
president, has announced.
Attendance is expected to set a
new record, said Powell. Home-
coming’s climax will be the football
game between the ACC Wildcats
aw) Howard Payne College at Abi-
lene’s Fair Park stadium Thursday
afternoon at 2 o’clock. ACC was
unbeatOen and untied through
eight garnet, Howard Payne will
be the last of 10 opponents.
Homecoming headquarters will
be opened in Bennett gymnasium
at 5 p.m. Wednesday.
Special reunions will be held by
the classes of 1920, 1926, 1930 and
1940.
Henry VIII became head of the
Church of England in 1584.
oe tbrosT. ehest Melt
**»* ia me nth. tool
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Stephenville Daily Empire (Stephenville, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 50, Ed. 1 Sunday, November 12, 1950, newspaper, November 12, 1950; Stephenville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1133472/m1/2/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 8, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Dublin Public Library.