Borger-News Herald (Borger, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 311, Ed. 1 Monday, November 25, 1946 Page: 4 of 4
four pages : ill. ; page 24 x 19 in.View a full description of this newspaper.
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icans Lose
Ins Pole
hloU.S.
Cubs Will Outwejsh
Bulldoss Forward Final Grid Games
P«0« «—tJorg r, N«w*-H«rald—Mond«y, Dev. 25, INS
SAM ANTONIO, Tex., Nov. tt
—Mexico's Grttcida brothers
Kctll] anp seeking a victory over
the United States in international
polo.
Jose. Grabiel, Alejandro and
Gulllermu Gracilis went down 7-0
here yesterday in the first of a
three-game serie to determine the
winner of tlfe Avila Cnniacho
trophy and that was the third
time in three starts the Mexican
riders had fallen to the veteran
U. S. players.
Last September they lo«t two
M.-u^es to the Americans at Meii-
dowbrook but they had come to
Sun Antunlo to appear in the first
big-time polo match ever een in
rejfci* confident they could turn
ih?*kle. They lost the two game*
at Meadowbrook by 11-4 and
10-7 counts
The U. S. veterans, however,
bflven't dropped a match in in-
ternational competition in mor.
•han 32 years and gave no indica-
tions by the thorough manner in
which they took care of the visi-
tor* yesterday that they aim to
allow any team to mar their rec-
ord now.
The Americans scored at leasl
once in each chukker and at the
amc time threw up an Unpene-
trable defense that kept the
yOunger and less - experienced
Mexicans out of «coring territory
CoCil Smith, Stewort Iulehart and
Stephen < Laddie' Sanford oner,
rammed in two goals.
For the first time thl season.
Buriier'* Bulldogs will meet a
heavier line when the Brownfield
Cubs invade Bulldog stadium at
2:30 p. m. Thursday for the dis-
trict 1-AA conference Pnalt.
Accordinu to weights released
bv Coach Trickev Ward of Bor-
der and Haiold Crites of Brown-
field, the Cubs* lino average* 175
pounds to 172 for Bulger, giving
the visitors a 3 pound per man
weight advantage in tbe forward
wall.
However, in the backfield, the
Bulldogs starter* are exported to
carry, a throe pound per man ad-
vantage. Figures ore compiled on
the starters used in last week's
antes but a change in the end
position for Border would give the
visitors an additional three
pounds in the line. Howard Culp.
170 pounder at left end, would
boost the Borcer line to the figure
dated above.
Old Man Weather has not been
-o kind to the Bulldogs, cither.
I'm going in
for forming
v
Rice-Tennessee
Named To Play
In Orange Bowl
BULLETIN!
I MIAMI. Fla., Nov. 2S—(A*)—
I Rice Institute of Houston, Tex.,
will play Tenne«*ee in the Or-
anqe Bowl New Yoar'i. Day, the
Orango Bowl committee an-
nounced today.
So far this year more than
12,000 telephones have gone
into service on farms in our
five-state territory. They
are the first in our program
to make good telephone
service available in every
ntrol area where we oper-
ate. Construction and in-
-' atallation work now in prog-
ress is adding daily to the
f growing number of farmy
. equipped with telephones.
This rural extension and
Improvement program is
■ one of the telephone com-
pany's big postwar under-
takings. We figure it will
take five years and 14 mil-
lion dollars to do the job in
700 communities and do it
right. Shortages of material
lui ve caused us to nut some-
what behind schedule, but
the future looks brighter
- and we expect to catch up
before too long.
Meanwhile, you can be
sure we'll be coming your
way as soon as we can with
new and better farm tele-
phone service.
SOUTHWESTERN BELL
TELEPHONE COMPANY
By HAROLD V. RATLIFF
DAL1JVS, Tex., Nov. 25—t/P)—
Rice Institute may announce to-
day that it has accepted an invito -
Uon to play in the Orange Bowl
provided the Southwest conference
grants permission.
That Rice ha* offered to with-
draw n* Cotton Bowl host 11
given the conierence'* blessing
to aopear in another bowl game
was verified la*t night by Dr.
Gayle Scott, president of the
conference although there was
no comment from Rice officials.
I Under conference rules, the
; championship team is automatical-
| ly extended an invitation to be the
j host team in the Cotton Bowl but
| if it declines can not play in any
! other bowl game. However, any
other member of the conference
can play in another bowl game
outside " Texas If given permis-
sion.
Arkansas has finished the con-
ference schedule with at least a
tie for the championship. If Rice
wins its remaining game from
Baylor next Saturday it will fin-
ish in a deadlock with Arkansas
for the title. Then the conferencc
would have to be polled as to
; which team it wanted to play in
Cotton Bowl.
Dr. ScoU said Rice had not yet
asked him to poll the conference
regarding permission to play in
| another bowl. "However, the
procedure in such a case in the
past has been that a bowl invi-
| tation be accepted contingent
upon the conference's approval,"
I he added. "When Rice asks for
i a poll I will take it by mail."
Texas, which claims to have
more bowl games than any other
state in the nation, has filled one
of them—the Optimist Howl at
Houston where North Texas State,
champion of the Lone Star con-
ference will meet College of the
Pacific Dec. 21.
Left to be filled are the Cotton
Bowl here, Oil Bowl at Houston
I and Sun Bowl at El Paso. Unde-
i feated, untied Hardin-Simmons
appears the most likely host team
at El Paso where the Border con-
ference champion always gets the
Invitation—even in view of the
fact that Texas Tech, the only
other team having a chance at the
Border conference title, has with-
drawn itself from bowl considera-
tion. Hardin-Simmons, however,
also is consiaerr.ig meeting Okla-
homa City university in a bowl
game at San Antonio. It was in-
dicated by Cotton Bowl officials
that an offer would be made this
week to Georgia to appear in the
j Cotton Bowl. Just what teams are
being considered for the OH Bowl
was not known but Tulsa and
Louisiana State were considered
1 likely prospects.
"C01P BU6"
GOT YOU ALL STUFFED UP ?
7*
this week a* only three day* of
practice can be had. There were
many mistake* the Bulldogs made
in their un*pectuculor 7 to 0 vic-
tory over Childress last Friday
afternoon—mistakes that Coaches
Ward and Manna must correct if
the canine* are to whip Brown-
field.
And that will not he an easy
task. While Brownfleld ha* not
tasted victory all Cason, It is
pointed out that the Terry c untv
eridders have not been exactly
pushed around this season. Their
powerful line has held Amarlll.)
to a mere 7 to 0 count, conceded
I Lubbock just (1 to 0 and Plain
view managed a 12 to 7 victory
ilirough it.
No one can safely predict a
score for the came. Phillips ben
Brownfleld in the season opener
6 to 0 and Amarillo blasted Bo>
ger 14 to 0. Yet no comparison
can be drawn from this because
Phillips fell 7 to 0 Quanah, a
team that Borger ripped 31 to rt.
See what we mean? On the other
hand, Pampa gave Brownfield its
worst whipping of the season wit a
.1 III to 0 shutout and Borger
• with Milton Price) defeated
Pampa 34 to 7.
Brownfield's offense has been
the major factor In the Cubs'
showing to date. They have man-
aged to score only twice this sen-
son, seven points against Plain-
view and seven points against Bi.j
Spring.
The Cubs' season record-
Brownfleld 0, Phillips 6.
Brown field 0. Midland 19
Brownfleld 0, Lamesa 6.
Brownfleld 0, l^evelland 7.
Brownfield 0, Amarillo 7.
Biownfield 7, Big Spring 14
Brownfield 0, Lubbock 6.
Brownfield 7. Plainview 12.
Brownfleld O, Pampa 19.
T'tal pts. 14, Opponents 96.
The Bulldog* season record:
Borger 19, Mangum 0
Borger 3;, Quanah 0
Borger 27, Mollis 0.
Borger 34, Pampu 7.
Borger 2", Lubbock Hi.
Borger 211, Plainview 7
Borger 0, Amarillo 14.
r'orger 26. Electra 7.
Borger 7. Childress 0.
Total pts. 192, Opponents 53.
Hardin-Simmons
Faces Raiders
In Final Game
Bv EDDIE LEE
Associated Press Sport* Writer
When they encounter the Hard-
in-Simmons Cowboys for the 1946
Border conference football cham-
pionship next Saturday, Texas
lech's Red Raiders come up
against the most effective attack
•n the conference.
Unbeaten and untied in nine
games this year live of them
within the conference, the Cow*
boy* have scored 281 points,
paced mainly by Rudy (Little
Doc) Mobley, only 97 yards
away from his national colleg-
iate rushing mark set in 1942.
In their conference engage-
ments, the Cowboys have regis-
tered 162 points and allowed only
28 points to be scored against,
them.
The Cowboys also have a strong
defense, with the best record in
the conference in the scored
against column. In their nine
games. 42 points have been score.!
by their opponents.
The Haiders, in throe confer-
ence victories, have scored 6;
points to 14 by their opponents
and in their eight wins and two
losses for the season have scored
142 1 o 95.
The Raiders blanked Axlsonu
16-0 In a conference game at
Tucson Saturday to knock the
Wildcats into fourth place in
the league standing behind New
Mexico university, 14-7 victors
over Kansas State in an inter-
sectional clash Saturday. Kan-
sas State goes to Arizona next
Saturday.
West Texas climbed ahead oi
Texas Mines into fifth place with
a 7 - 0 vk-tory over Arizona State
<tempo" but their visit may be only
a temporary one. The miners play
the cellar-dweling New Mexicj
Aggies next Saturday and a vic-
tory will move them into a tie
with Ariznoa.
The miners were edged 14-13
by Brigham Young university In
a non-conference game Saturday.
In the only other game involving
a conference team. Hardin-Sim-
mons shattered Howard Payne
33 0.
Tempc, sandwiched between
Arizona State at Flagstaff and the
Miners, plays at Wichita V. next
week. Now Mexico and Flagstaff
have finished their schedules.
The Flagstaff school, however,
may have another game. Discuss-
ion of last week's disputed 13-1.'5
tie with the newly named Sun |
Devils of Tempe has reached th°,
stage where a replay of the con- j
.est. with the proceeds going t i
charity, is probable.
By AUSTIN BEALMEAR
NEW YORK. Nov. 25—
With the Rose bowl filled and sev-
eral major conference race* set-
tled, the college football team*
which haven't quite had enough
will pick up the loose ends of the
1946 season this week as promo'. !
ers select the opponents for other j
post-season- games.
1 he final we«k o« the cam-
paign will divide it* grid fare
between Thanksgiving day and
Saturday with the Biq Four—
Army, Noire Dame, Georgia and
UCLA—risking their unbeaten
records on the week-end date.
Army, shooting for its third
straight season without defear,
plays Navy at Philadelphia. Th*
Cadets will be top-heavy favor-
ities to crush a Navy team that
hasn't won a game since its open-
er.
Georgia, which breezed past
Chattanooga, 48-27, to run its
perfect record to nine wins, w'll
be invaded by Georgia Tech, a
team that trampled Furman, 41-7,
for its eighth triumph since drop-
ping its opener to Tennessee.
The winner probably wiU go
to the Sugar bowl and Georgia
can clinch a tie for the South-
eastern conference championship.
Tennessee, which squeaked past j
Kentucky, 7-0, to match Georgia's j
conference record of four wins i
and no losses, will be at Vander- i
bllt.
A Tennessee loss and a Georgia j
triumph would Rive the Bulldogs!
the title, while both would share)
the championship by winning j
Tennessee already has accepted
a bid to the Orange bowl, witn
an opponent expected to come i
from the Southwest conference.
I
ton. im« cv wt* smvict. iwc t. m beg u. s. pat off.
"And as an added inducement, Mr. with this policy
we tell you the name of the person who suggested you us
ii i>ros[)fV't
SW Conference Ends
Reguar Season With
Weekend Contests
*
UCLA, which won the Padilc
Coast conference title won the '
right to be host team in the
Rose bowl by turning back
Southern California, 13-6, winds
up Its regular season against i
invading Nebraska.
I
Southern Cal, meanwhile, will
invade Notre Dame Saturdaj
whose unbeaten but once-tied
eleven swamped Tulane, 41-0.
It was all over but the shout- !
ing in the Big Nine, where Illinois i
won the title and qualified to'
represent the east in the Rose;
bowl by whipping Northwester';, j
20-0.
Other Big Nine finales last week
-sw Michigan slaughter Ohio
State, 58-6, Indiana defeat Pur-
due, 34-20, and Minnesota elin1
Wisconsin, 6-0.
North Carolina, winner of the j
Southern conference title with a 1
22-7 triumph over Duke, closes
out its season at Virginia Satui-
day and other teams in that loop.
argue over second place on Thurs-
day.
Saturday's schedule in thJ
Southeastern conference will find
Mississippi State, 20-0 winner
over Mississippi, at Alabama,
which dropped u 13-7 decision to
Boston college; Auburn, 21-1.1
victim of Clemson, at Florida, 37 • |
6 loser to North Carolina State; j
and Tulane at Louisiana State.
Rice, still trying to share the
Southwest conference title with
Arkansas after trouncing Texas
Christian, 13-0, entertains Bay* 1
lor Saturday with Texas Christ- I
ian playing at Southern Meth-
odist, which blanked Baylor, I
35-0.
Oklahoma, assured of no worse'
than a tie for Big Six honors after i
beating Nebraska, 27-6, winds up
at Oklahoma A. and M.
Other major games Saturday
will find Holy Cross at Bost mi i
college, Washington at Oregon j
State. Washington State at Mich-1
igan State, Kansas State at Ari- j
zona and Temple at Wichita.
Thursday's top game in the
east will send Cornell to pennsyl
vania with the Ivy league title |
depending on the outcome. Cor-
nell can win the championshio by >
upsetting the Quakers. Other- |
wise it will go to Yale, which I
grabbed the Big Three title last
week with a 27-14 triumph over
Harvard, unless league officials
decide to count the one tie on
the Ell record as a half-game
won and a half-game lost and fig-
ure the standings on a percentaps
i'lasis.
Such a decision, still pending,
would throw the title into a th rev-
way deadlock if Penn whips Cor-
nell as expected, with Yale, Har-
vard and Pennsylvania all own-
ing .750 records. Another Turkey
day clash in the east will find
Colgate at Brown.
Kansas w'll be at Missouri
Thursday to see which can
share the Big Six title with Ok-
lahoma. A tie would hand the
undisputed championship to the
Sooner*, who beat Missouri but
lost to Kansas.
Southern conference games jn (
Thursday have Furman at David-
son, William and Mary at Rich-!
tnond. South Carolina at Wake >
Forest and Virginia Tech at Vir-
ginia Military.
By MAX B. SKELTON
Associated Press Stall Writer
Although a conference cham- i
pionship is in the offing for Rice j
and results of the week's schedule I
will determine the host team ;n
the New Year's day Cotton bowl
classic, the Southwest conference's
final round of football will I
ieach its climax Thursday with
the traditional Thanksgiving day
battle between the Longhorns and !
the Texas Aggies.
Both Texas and Texas A. &
M. are out of the title running
but a victory for either would
go far in healing the disappoint-
ments that have plagued each
school during the H46 cam- !
paign. A crowd of 48.000 is ex-
pected to witness the fifty-
third meeting of the two teams.
Rice's owls can move into a
tie with Arkansas by downing
Baylor, conference cellar dwell-
ers, in n Saturday Houston strug-
gle that should be a breather tor
the feathered flock.
Arkansas, with a title tie al-
ready wrapped up and with Cot-
ton bowl fever running high, ha;
a tough hurdle in taking on Tul-
.'a's hurricane Thursday at Tulsa.
The Cotton bowl selection will
hinge on the outcome of the
games at Tulsa and Houston.
Should Arkansas down the hurri-
cane. new Missouri Valley cham-
pions, it is likely the Porkers
will receive the bowl game nod, in
view of their 7-0 victory over
Rice.
Should Arkansas lose and Rice
defeat Baylor, however, the Owls
might logically move into a
stronger position, despite tin-
Arkansas defeat. In such a case.
Rice would complete its regular
reason with only two defeats
while Arkansas would have threi.
In the only other game, Texas
Christian moves to Dallas Sat-
urday to tackle Southern Meth-
odist in a game that may prove
to be the closest of the holiday
week-end.
Both the Frogs and Mustangs
nave improved steadily in recent
weeks, the Frogs having been par-
ticularly impressive on defense
against Texas and Rice. S.M.U. <
smoldering offense broke loo.;e
Saturday in a 35-0 rout of Baylor,
one of the worst defeats jn the
history of the Waco school.
Rice maintained its drive for
a tie with Arkansas by trippitv;
the stubborn T.C.U. eleven, 13-0,
at Houston, but only after the
Frogs had thrown a few scares
at the 2!!.000 fans in attendance.
Texas, Texas A. & M. and Ar-
kansas were idle last week while
preparing for the Turkey day en-
gagements.
SPORTS
ROUNDUP
By HUGH FULLERTON. JR.
NEW YORK, Nov. 25—1^)—An
independent minor league baseball
club owner claims the big league
Moguls "are attempting and prac-
tically succeeding in ruling—and
ruining—the national association."
If that is true, the big leaguers
should find it very easy to take
full charge at next week's meet-
ing, .. All they'd have to do would
be to vote down the restoration
of the two percent ''tax" on player
sales, which was dropped as :>
war measure... That would leavo
the minor league governing body
with no income but membership
r.nd protection and with a rapidly
dwindling reserve fund... Without
cash, the association couldn't do
much and might just as well move
Us headquarters to Cincinnati and
become a satellite of the commis-
sioner's office.
Mineral Wells,
Pasadena Listed
For Grid Playoff
By HAROLD V. RATLIFF
Associated Press Sports Editor
Some new names are to be found
in the half-filled roster of teams
qualifying for the state play-
off starting next week in Texas
i schoolboy football.
Mineral Wells, which ousted
that perennial district champion,
; Breckenrldge. and Pasadena. !
playing its first season i.- Class I
i AA football, are strangers to !
championship contention.
These are among eight district
1 titlists certified to date lor the
i opening round of the state play- i
J off. Mineral Wells won the diss-:
trict 9 title and Pasadena eased
through in district 14. Other,
' champions waiting for the bi-dls-
trict to start are Amarillo. district
1; Odessa, district 3; Ysleta, dis-
1 trict 4; Adamson (Dallas', district
8; Conroe, district 12, and Thom-
| as Jefferson iSan Antonio), dis-
trict 15.
All of these teams except Ad-
amson and Conroe are recent dls- j
j trict champions. It has been 15
I years since Adamson (then Oak
Cliff) came through and it was
1937 when Conroe won its first and
only district title.
The eight other district cham-
pions in the state play-off will be
decided this week as follows:
District 2—Graham vs. Wichita
Falls, district 5—Sherman vs.
Denison, district 6—Highland Park
(Dallas) vs. McKlnney, district 7—
North Side (Fort Worth) vs. Pas-
chal (Fort Worth) District 10—
Waco vs. Temple, district 11—
Marshall vs. Tyler, district 13—
Milby iHouston) vs. Lamar (Hous-
ton) and district 16 where Edln-
burg has to beat McAllen to tie
Brownsville for the lead, thus win- j
nlng the title since Edinburg beat j
Brownsville when these teams |
met.
There are no new names
among the contenders for these
eight titles although some of
them haven't been in the state
S playoff in years. Ii has been I
more than two decades since
, Graham took a crown and it
was 10 years ago when McKin-
ney last copped a district cham-
pionship.
One district champion was de-
i cided unexpectedly last week.
! Thomas Jefferson, while top fa-
vorite for the district 16 title,
eased Into the throne room whe nj
Austin and Corpus Chrlsti pla>-
ed a 6-6 tie. Under the aggregate
net point plan this district de-
cide; champion? In triple ties tor
the lead by awarding the title to
the team scortaf the most point-
net against the other two team;
Thus, even though Brackenridfv
• Sail Antonio) defeated Jefferson
Thursday and threw Jefferson In-
to a tie with Austin and Corpu-?
Christi for the top, Jefferson still
would be champion. |
The 7-0 victory by Mineral
Wells over Breckenrldge in win-
ning the district 9 championship
was an upset. Mineral Wells had
lost to Brownwood by three
touchdowns and Brownwood had
been beaten by three touch-
downs by Breckenridge.
The state race hammers down
the stretch with eight teams still
boasting undefeated records but
prospects are good jfhat at least*
three of them will fall this week.
Undefeated, untied teams are
Graham, Odessa, Sherman and
North Side. Graham plays Wich-
ita Falls, Odessa meets Midland,
Sherman tackles Denison and
North Side engages Paschal. Gra-
ham and Sherman are in consid-
erable danger of being toppled.
Undefeated but tied are Pasa-
dena, Jefferson, Lamar and Mar-
shall. Pasadena has no game thi:
week, Jefferson meets Bracket!ft
ridge, Lamar takes on Milby and
Marshall plays Tyler. Lamar ap-
pears to have the toughest row.
SHIP INTERCEPTED
JERUSALEM, Nov. 25— (/V) —
Officials sources announced today
that a ship loaded with 3,370 Jew-
ish immigrants seeking to enter
Palestine illegally had been in-
tercepted at sea and was beiim
escorted to Haifa by two Ue^_
stroyers.
Real Radio and Refrig-
eration Service. H. E.
Hardeman. Phone 143.
We Now Have . ..
Horticultural and
Poultry Peat Moss
also
Garbage Cans — 32 and 24
gallon slse— Tie-out chains
and medicine cabinets.
"For Dependable Service"
Kearns Feed Store
722 S. Main Phone 26
Jl
H
ti
ii
ii
il
J
• il
1 !|
ft
HINTS, NOT GUARANTEED
Soon alter the football wolves
began to howl after Michigan j
I State's Charlie Hachman, back-1
I field Coach Johnnie Pingel flatly'
i turned down an offer from a
■ Lansing industrialist for i job . t
almost double Ills present pay.1
I Hut we also hear that Johnny j
| isn't too popular and that tne i
j Spartans really have their eyes
I on Arizona's Mike Casteel.
DOTS ALL. BROTHERS
' Did you know that Ty Cobb
held the record for votes in tha
hall of fame elections with the
exception °f the unanimous choice
(t' Lou Gehrig? All but four
of 226 baseball writers' ballots
v.ent to Ty... Dick Sehultz, tho
Cleveland pro basketballer, also
v.-ields a nifty paint brush and
turned out some hand-painted
"little brown jug" ties last sum-
mer in honor of the big horse race
in his home town of Delaware,
| Ohio. ..As a by-product of in-
| creasing the basketball seating
I capacity of the Indiana U. field-
i house, the runners will have to
! work on a seven-lap track this
; winter.
Interior temperature of the sun
S is said to be about 70,000,000 de-
I grees centigrade.
Old Hickory Smoked
Hams and Bacon
Country Cured
Borger Groc. tsr Mkt.
207 East 6th Phone 20
SPECIAL!
WHILE
THEY
LAST!
Reynolds "200" Pens
Regular $12.50 Value
Livestock Owner's Special!
Bran—100 lbs. $2.55
Millrun—100 lbs. $2.75
Shorts—100 lbs. . . $3.00
(Limit—5 Bags per Customer)
Cottonseed Meal Shipment Received
THE BIG FEED STORE
FRANK PIERRE
703 South Main
J. O. COOLBAUGH
'Cash and Carry" Phone 152
f Clcks with whatever you mix
bttause it's blended in Kentucky
by Glenmore
ggf
MENTH0UTUM
lilt ni ivm if vimi ft ItMitit cettti
Whwa thai niwty old Col.
nhpif VOMIT IHWiftiftthtfll H
inH 1®" bfealh <|ui< k, M1
inn! Juni c.|>H d iii nu#if
*it«itilv Itntarirt |o Immmi «oai
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<iau Ii i 1 11,,|< |
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lllOMI'SOlV
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I«I tut iiriii •*/•«
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WASHING MACHINE
TROUBLE?
Don't Wonder or Worry
Juat Call 971 — We'll Pick It Up
We Are Iquipped to Give You
Fait, Efficient, Guaranteed Service
On Your Wether—Regordlen ot Age.
We luy end fell Uied W««Her
MATHIEU APPLIANCE
704 N. Mem Veur Cretley Oiilir Fk§ti$ ft I
mm
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flfflBE sum? HOUSE
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iviimmim ei •* • eeeiei
•* •«•* real
MinmiM
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Phillips, J. C. Borger-News Herald (Borger, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 311, Ed. 1 Monday, November 25, 1946, newspaper, November 25, 1946; Borger, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth293464/m1/4/?q=Lamar+University: accessed May 29, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Hutchinson County Library, Borger Branch.