The Levelland Daily Sun News (Levelland, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 227, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 17, 1957 Page: 6 of 6
six pages : ill. ; page 25 x 21 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
■ ' r , ' ' * 1 . • - ; ........- ' ’ , I
»A4« tlK
▼MB LBVBLLAND OAILV BUN NKWC, L*v«IUnJ, Tuu, WMnMn, July 17. «•/
w
fc
POLES RED SOX TO Wl N OVER A'S
ft
Williams Belts 26th Homer
*
Passes Mickey Mantle's 25
TH~ ASSOCIATED PRESS
You ht»«e to figure thumpin'
Ted Williams as the biggest boon
to the aged since Bernarr Mac-
Fadden celebrated his 84th birth-
day with a parachute jump.
in 90-degree heat—the stuff that’s feat by Milwaukee as Brooklyn
supposed to wilt old guys—at Kan-1 beat second place St. Louis 7-5.
sas City to trigger a three-run; Cincinnati lost 6-1 at New York,
ninth that beat the A s 4-3. with Redleg slugger Frank Rob-
Mantle, complaining of feeling' inson suffering a concussion when
tired, was 0-for-3, but walked and' beaned by Ruben Gomez.
The Boston Red Sox slugger will scored the winning run in a 10-4, | Pittsburgh’s Pirates took two
Cats Rally, Nip
JC Owls, 14-13;
Bears Rip Steers
ATHLETICS LENGTHEN LEAD
The
Piggly Wiggly Cats over-
came a big Jaycee Owls lead ini
the top of the sixth frame by I
As Shut Out Tigers;
Harvesters Win, 13-2
scoring 11 runs to take a 14-13 j strengthened their hold on first
victory. In other mipor league j p,af.e in the Babe Ruth Leagup
standings on William Fortner’s
By BILL BILLINGSLEY ed a one hitter out of the bag, I vesters’ scoring output in the first
* threw it at the First Methodist I two innings and at the end of
.Senators, and gave the Commer-|two innings the score was knpt-
Co. Harvesters
The Exchange Club Athletics
be 39 next month, an old man in
baseball, but the old gaffer is
giving the kids a fit in the Ameri-
can League, wresting the home
run lead from Mickey Mantle and
closing within one point of the
Micjc in the batting battle.
Williams has hit 26 home runs
and is batting .360. Mantle, the
25-jfear-old New York Yankee
fielder who last year be-
si$e the first triple crown winner
since Williams did it in 1947
has
batting
hit 24 home runs and is
.361.
The thumper was at it again
last night, belting his 26th homer
10-inning victory at Detroit that from Chicago, winning 5-4 on
padded the Yankees’ lead to four Frank Thomas’ home run in the
games over Chicago. The White j completion of a June 16 suspended
Sox were beaten 3-1 by Baltimore. | game, and then taking a regula-
Cleveland made it five in a row, tion game 5-3 as Thomas rapped
with a 9-3 job on Washington. | a two-run double in a three-run
In the National, Philadelphia, seventh after Bob Rush had one-
held first place despite a 6-2 de- hit them ’til then.
But Opponents Don't Think He'll Use It
Hitters Have Field
Day in TL Action
Sam Snead Has New
Driver for PGA Meet
action, the Morris Motor Bears
drumped the Rotary Club Steers
17-12.
Cats vs. Owls
The Cats trailed the Owls by
eight runs going into the top of
the sixth, but sent 16 men to bat
during the inning and scored 11
runs to go ahead to stay. The
Cats tallied all their runs after
two outs had been made.
The Owls came back with two
runs in the bottom of the sixth,
but their rally fell short.
James Hanson collected three
hits to lead the Cats at the plate.
Robert Cummins collected two
safeties, and Bill Parker and Don
Patton each picked up one hit.
Buddy Kelsey, Johnnie Greene,
Richard Matthews, and Mickey
Bouknight all picked up two hits
apiece to lead the Owls batters.
four hit, 19-0 shut out of the Reid
Chevrolet-Stacy Masdn Tigers in
Ut of
sdn 1
Ruth league play Tuesday night.
In other action, Roger Brown pull-
DAYTON, Ohio (AT—Sam Snead field who has a chance to join Stewart Davk collected one hit.
PRESS
has a brand new driver for the Walter Hagen as a four-time PGA;
PGA championship starting today. | winner. His chances are rated
The result would make the other about even with Doug Ford, the
127 players in the field shudder — | 1955 champion, and a bit ahead
if they really believed Sam would of defending champion Jackie
use it. j Burke. Jackie convinced himself
For some 20 years Sam has an injured arm was OK by shoot-
Bill Parker was the winning hurl-
er. Stewart Davis, the second of
three Owl chunkers was the los-
ing pitcher. Richard Matthews
started on the mound for the Owls
and Johnnie Greene finished the
game.
Bears vs. Steers
The Bears brought in 10 mark-
ers in the first inning to take a
lead they never relinquished. Bill
Melton belted a two-run homer
during the first frame to help
spark the Bears to victory.
Bobby McCabe was the winning
pitcher. He was relieved in the
fourth frame by Roger Terrill.
They combined their pitching ef-
forts and, limited the Steers to
just four hits.
cial Equipment Co. Harvesters a
13-2 victory.
Athletics vs. Tigers
The Athletics made all the noise
as they jumped on Tiger starter
Max Jennings for two runs in the
opening frame, and then picked
up eight more markers in the
second off Jennings and his re-
lief pitcher. Abell Pompa. The
Tiger hurlers’ wildness and bob-
bles In the field accounted for
the biggest part of the Athletics’
runs in the second inning.
The A s kept pounding away at
the Tiger pitching staff and added
three more runs in the third and
six markers in the fourth to round
out their 19 run total. The game
was called after five innings of
play because the Athletics had
more than the necessary 10 run
lead.
Robert Chadwick, Gary Don
Woodley, and William Fortner pac-
ed the Athletics’ 9 hit offensive
with two safeties each. Freddy
ted at 2-2. Then the roof caved
in on the Methodists as the Har-
vesters pushed three runs across
Hobbs Displaces
Carlsbad in 2nd
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Riding a streak of six victories
in seven games, Hobbs slipped
into second in the Southwestern
League Tuesday.
The Sports displaced Carlsbad
and were within 8Vs games of
leading Ballinger.
Hobbs rolled up 12 runs in the
first six innings and coasted in to
whip Carlsbad 13-3. Will Ernst wa«-„ -
Potashers,
in the third stanza and then add-1 tough for the Potashers. pitching
ed to their lead during the re- three innings without a runn get-
mainder of the contest. ting on base and not allowing a
Doug Reed paced his mates at hit until the fourth. Carlsbad man-
the plate with two safeties. Tom-
my Shirley, Roger Brown, Jim
Allen Haney went the distance' Woodley’ Doug Norman, and Roy
Sage each added one hit to the
Bv THE ASSOCIATED
The batters got in an evening | been wedded to a battered, old ing a two-under-par 69 in a prac-
in the Texas League Tuesday and j fashioned driver he obtained from tice round yesterday,
mighty Dallas fell. j Henry Picard. Joe Wolfe, whoj Snead has been troubled by bur-
Second place Houston opened a I does the repair work, claims the sitis in his left elbow; former
series with the Eagles by taking | only resemblance to the original. Open champion Ed Furgol still
a 6-2 decision and outslugging j ciub is in Sam’s mind. | has bruises from a fall, and ex-
them. It pulled Houston within But Snead has won three PGA j champion Chick Harbert says he’s
eight games. [championships with it. The play-1 still feeling the after-effects of
Austin strengthened its hold onj ers feel sure that he’ll go right whooping cough,
fourth by trimming Oklahoma ! back to it when they start playing
City 13-3 and Fort Worth moved, f0r keeps.
into fifth by beating Shreveport j The new driver is a modem
6-5 in 12 innings. Tulsa fell to sixth j streamlined' model with a stiffer
when it split a double-header with! shaft and greater loft. In pi-ac-
on the hill for the Steers and was
the losing pitcher. i attack.
McDonald collected three hits to j Max Jennings, Mannie Smith,
Steers’ attack. Wolff Abell Pompa, and Arterio Deleon
collected the Tigers’ four hits.
lead the
picked up their other hit.
The Bears’ attack was led by
Bill Melton who had two sinles
aged eight hits. - —
Dick Hogan and Irv Sharp fea-
Reed, and Stanley Kruljac each i tured the Sport 15-hit attack w ith
collected one hit to round out the two-run homers.
Harvester attack. Ballinger clipped Midland 7-1 on
Robert Simpson collected the Bob Leach’s 4-hitter. The only way
Senators’ only safety. Simpson was j Midland could score was when
the first man to face Harvester j Leach issued a bases loaded walk
hurler Roger Brown, and led off j in the sixth. Walt O'Neil and Ed
the game with a double. Brown McKay slugged homers for the
silenced the Senator batters j Westerners, who clouted 13 hits,
throughput the remainder of the j San Angelo moved from sixth
7 inning contest.
Brown went the distance for the
Harvesters and was the winning
hurler. .Sam Neal suffered the de-
feat. ’
and a home run. Bobby McCabe ing hurler.
Fortner was the winning pitcher!
and Jennings was named the los-
PLANES SINK CONTAINER
NEW YORK (PI — Machine-gun
fire from Navy planes sank a
drifting container of radioactive
waste yesterday. The big steel
cylinder had menaced shipping in
the Atlantic 185 miles southeast of
here.
tice with it,
a fairway.
Snead hasn’t missed
third place San Antonio.
Don Anderson yielded only three
hits in bringing Tulsa a 4-1 victory
in the first game with San Antonio.
But in the nightcap the two clubs
knocked the bad all over the lot
aHd San Antdhio knocked it the
hardest to win 8-4. ui ,,,,
The Missions slammed five luns Thursday and Friday, then
across in the ninth with C.iuck semifinals and final will be
OeVtel. who had four hits in five
Play was scheduled to start at
8 a m. EST today with 64 first
round matches to be run off over
the 6,773-yard, par 36-35—71 Mi-
ami Valley course. Double rounds
of 18-hole matches are scheduled j kemo
~the i wald.
Burke started off against Gene
Marchi, in today’s first round of
the all-match play tournament.
He’s in a rugged quarter on the
draw with Open champion
Mayer, Ted Kroll, runner-up last j waukee.
year and ex-champions Chandler
Wednesday'* Major league I.eaderN
By Th*» \Nnorlalfd Pr*»**
WTIONAI. I.KACiCK
waukpe. 348; Musial. St. Louts, .34.3;
Kondy. Pittsburgh, .329; Groat. Pitts-
burgh. .325; .Wavs, New York. .317.
RUNS BATTED IN-Aaron. Milwaukee.
77; Musial. St. Louis. 70; Crowe. Cincin-
nati. 58; Hoak. Cincinnati. 55: Mays. New
York. Thomas. Pittsburgh and Ennis. St.
Louis. 5.3.
HOME Rl’NS—Aaron, Milwaukee. 29;
, Musial. St. Louis. 21: Snider. Brooklyn.
| 20; Crowe. Cincinnati and Mathews. Mil- |
18
IMKKN %\ LKlttl'V*
BAITING <200 at bats*-Mantle. New
picked up
Terrill.
one hit as did Roger
Harvesters vs. Senators
The Senators matched the Har- Scotland.
The last three days of March
are called “borrowing days’’ in
to fifth by whipping El Paso 12-8.
The Colts now are only two per*
centage points back of El Paso.
San Angelo got 16 hits, including
homers by Juan Izaguirre, Bob
Flores and Dale Risinger. Richard
Jack won the pitching decision al-
though issuing 13 bases on balls.
He scattered nine hits but was
relieved in the eighth by Bob
Martinez.
The league takes out Wednesday ,
for the all-star game at Midland...
Some units of Texas National
Guard can trace their beginnings
back to the defenders of the Ala-
mo.
Harper. Denny Shufe and Jimmy j York, ^i; Stow-
Turnesa. I i„n,i :t«i k<>\. Chicago. xn
includes Har-1 RUNS BAITED IN - Skowron. New
Snead's quarter
bert, the 1954 champion; Felice
Torza, runner-up to Walter Bur-
in 1953, and Dow Finster-
over i
York. 64: Wertz, Cleveland and Slevers.
wwashington. HI; Mantle. New York. 60;
Jensen Boston and Minoso. Chicago. 58
HOME Rl NS Williams. Boston. 26;
Mantle. New York. 24; Sievers. Wash-
ington 2o. Maxwell. Detroit. 18; Cola-.,
vito. Cleveland. 17.
attempts, driving in the decisive
tallies.
Houston hopped on Murray
Wall, the league's leading pitcher,;
for 11 hits and all its runs in seven !
innings, finally driving the 15-j
game winner from the hill. Billy |
Muffett gave up nine hits but fin-
ished strong to post his 13th tri-
umph. A three-run homer by
Keith Little was Houston’s big
srhash.
Austin hammered 15 hits to
swamp Oklahoma City. Terry Fox
was rocked for 11 by the Indians
but Dick Sinovic drove in five runs
wi,v' two doubles and a triple for
Austin.
Don Russell walked and Eddie
Haas and Tom Nerad singled to
the 36-hole route.
The winner- will get 38.000, a
new high for this tournament, and
the runner-up $5,000.
Snead is the only player in the
Mrs. Glick Threat
To Barbara Romack
In Western Tourney
Veteran Mrs. Mau-
OMAHA tm
rice Click of Baltimore, tpjseti a
challenge today at‘medalist Bar-
bara Romack Porter in the second
round ’ of fhe Women’s Western
West Meets East
InSW All-star
Contest Tonight
WKDNKSDAY’S BVSKHU.I,
B> The .\HM»rlated Pn*m
\ >1 KKI( %.N I.K.Ui I E
TIINIHYN HKSII.TS
N 'a York lit. Detroit 4. 10 innincs. nljht
Boston 4. Kansas City -T night
Amateur Golf Tournament.
Mrs. Glick, six tidies the Mary-
land champion and a former
bring Fort Worth its victory over | holder of the Cuban title, was
Shreveport. Both clubs scored in .rated a dangerous foe for the little
the tenth Fort Worth oh Frank; Sacramento. Calif., blonde who
Ernaga’s homer.
MIDLAND, Tex. W — The West
featuring home run sluggers Dick
Hogan of Hobbs and Ray Patter-
son Carlsbad, qj^ts lite East,
whiptr rellea er Mdiqant ■ Jtiperior
pitching, w'TTy e southwestern
League All-Star ' game ' tonight,
j jogarv, who has ectuted 24 horn
ers aitf. pjrtfefcfffl has 21,
Head j the retnlifed from
Hobbs. Carlsbad and El Paso and
managed by Jodie Phipps of Carls-
bad.
The East is skippered by Tony
York, manager of league-leading
Ballinger, and is made up of play-
ers from Midland, San Angelo and
Ballinger.
The East squad may be weak-
ened by loss of catcher A1 De-
Phillips and outfielder Felix Guz-|s*n Angelo i-’.
man of San Angelo, who were in-
jured last night at El Paso. De-
Phillips lost several teeth when
Shawnee Overruns
Muskogee by 3 to 1
Philadelphia
St. Louis
Milwaukee
Brook I > n .
Cincinnati
New York
Pittsburgh
Chicago
never has gone beyond the second
round in the Western.
Barbara, a 1956 member of the
j Curtis CUfS team, has defeated the
^eastern contender three times in
| tournament play. “But it was
Bv THE ASSOCIATED PRESS close each time,” she said. “Mrs.
Shawnee’s Sooner State League j- Glick is a real good player.”
express roared info third place J Barbara, a veteran at 24. slac-k-
TuesdaV bv running over second- [ ened off from her three, under par
place Muskogee 3-1. . j 70 qualifying round in a 4 and 3 jurecj last night at El Paso. De-j Hobbs
It was the Hawks' ninth victory; victory over Betty Kerby of Akron,! Phillips lost several teeth when ! eJpITw, :« tv .m
in a rou Qhio. She was one under for the J hit in the mouth while warming j san Ang.'io c tt m
Ardmore climbed to a 6,;> game i 4,5 holes. [ up San Angelo pitcher Richard j Mldu"‘ w kiivkmIays c.amks
lead by boating Paris for tlrt third Andrea Cohn, the 17-year-old; Jack. Guzman injured his leg in! Aii-s.*r gam, rK
time 13-5 Green vile blanked Junlor star from Waterloo. Iowa. a collision with El Paso catcher1
Seminole 3-0 and Ponca City and Mari°rie Lindsay of Decatur. | Dick Hutzler.
tripped Lawton 5-3 | 111., who won the title in 1951, were ( York has nominated Gene Lip-
Ardmore’; Jim Bradley and Jim Paire(i at the toP of the lower [ pold of Ballinger to start for the
McKnight each slammed threo bracket. ; East while Phipps will use Jim
hits and <mt three runs to lead •VIlss Cohn afiv(mced with a 1 up Waldrip, who has won 11 and lost
a 16-hit barrage ov&r Paris W n.- victoryover Greta Leone of Chi-[5 for Hobbs. Lippold is 10-5.
ning pitcher Tom Fassler struck c;.,go- -VIiss Lindsay stopped Jann There will be a meeting of the
u _ Country Club ( league directors this afternoon for
Baltimore .1 Chicago 1. night
Cleveland 9 Washington .3. night
YV«»n P< t. Behind
New York 55 2H .6*4 —
Boston *3 4») .529 11
Cleveland 14 4<» .524 11*6
Detroit 42 42 .500 ll'-j
I .all i more 40 4.3 .482 15
Kansas City 31 52 . 373 24
Washington 28 59 322 29
WKHNEAW AYS «A>*K8
Baltimore at Chicago. 1:30 pm.
Washington at Cleveland. 7 p. m.
New York at Detroit. 8:15 pm.
Boston at Kansas City. 9 p.mi
NATIONAL I.KAtil K
n'MDAVN RK8UL1H
Brooklyn 7 St. I>»uis 5. night
Milwaukee 6. Philadelphia 2. night
New York 6. Cincinnati 1. night
Pittsburgh 5-5. Chcago 4-3. 1st
ganr
suspended game
$
completion
June IS.
Won 1.0*1 Pet. Behlid
4k tk .S7K —
47 .5kfi <0
4k 47 .VkS \.
4k UK ,5kl 1
4k UK . V41 2’;
40 44 . 47k 8
.42 54 .472 17
27 52 . .442 18';
HI.IINKSIUVS 4.AWKK
Cincinnati at .New York. 12:40 p.m.
SI Duns at Brooklyn. 7 - p.m.
Chicago at Pittsburgh. i:15 p.m.
Milwaukee at Philadelphia. 7 p.m.
MI4 TIIV4 4.STKKN I K \<il K
Tl liSIIW’S KKStl.TS
Hobbs 14. Carlsbad .4
Ballinger 7. Midland 1
El Paso k
Vton Lost
Balling* r 49 29
Pet. Behind
.62*..,
TffcSDAY’S KKStl.TS
! Ponca City 5 Lawton 3
| Greenville 3. Seminole 0
1 Ardmore 1* Paris 5
1 Shawnee 3. Muskogee 1
Won Lost
out 11.
Solo homers by Bruce S.vpiuo
and Tom Go't combined with an-
other tally off -t double by sh >rt-
stop Jerry Palmer"enabled Green-
ville to blank Seminole.
Walker., Omaha
champion, 3 and 2.
g ~
of Ur#/ f rirrtomn-fni -
WALLACE
^^TH£ArPE,lTi,st
TODAY
THURSDAY
ViViAN"
5ICELTON'
~ ••--JXt'J'ET RLMK c'
TE CHNidoLCR.’ V
SPADE
LAST TIMES
TODAY
PAT
ClhJEryiAScOP^ 1 >lO* hr OllUZf
Score Says Vision
Is Not as Good As
He'd Like It to Be
discussion of conditions of
circuit.
the
Ardmore
Muskogee
Shawnee
Paris
Greenville
Lawton
Puma City
Seminole
Pet. Behind
.671 —
CLEVELAND t.P)
says the vision in
right eye “isn't as
would like it,” but
Herb Score
his injured
good as I
he plans a
Gonzales, Segura
Topple Rosewall,
Trabert in Meet
2'.
comeback in mid-August
Cleveland Indians pitcher.
His doctor yesterday okayed
workouts starting tomorrow, and
said the 24-year-old southpaw
should be able to pitch
to six weeks.“
Dr. Charles I. Thomas said he
found “great improvement" in
Score's eye. hit by a linh drive in
a game with the New York Yan-
kees last May .7,
Score said he is ignoring advice
to stay out of action the rest of
the season, because he
want to spend the off season won
WH1\K.S|1\VS 4. \MKS
I Aril mere at Musknger
; Ponca City at Iui"ton
Srmino'i* at Paris
; Shawnee at Greenville
Ht(. STATE 1.LAGIL
TIKSDAY'S KKSILTS
! Temple k. Beaumont .4
| Victoria 8. Corpus Chnsli 4
Won Lost Pet. Behind
Victoria : I < -77R
i Corpus Christi lb 4 ,kk7
Beaumont k > .->45
Abilene . -4 lb -b
Temple 4 , 12
HKIIMMUY'S 4. AM Kb
Abilene at Beaumont
Corpus Christ! at Temple
ThXAS I.KV.ll;
tic in Ir I Tl ksiuvs KIXUTS
liumv | Tulsa 4 4. San Antonio 18
_ | Houston k. Dallas 2
Big Paprho. who has temporari-: :
FOREST HILLS, N. Y. CP -"I’ve
always said the pros could beat
the best amateurs in the world”,!
said professional tennis champion
Pancho Gonzales today, “but a lot,
of people laughed at me. I
we are proving it this week
' 12 innings
“in four j ly put aside his money feud w ith
! promoter Jack Kramer, was re-
ferring to the going over he gave
Ken Rosewall and Pancho Se-
gura’s victory over Tony Trabert
irv yesterday's matches in
Tournament of Cham- j Shreveport
Kramer's
pions.
A couple of years ago, Trabert
doesn't was regarded as perhaps the. top
amateur in the world. Then he
dering
back.
His bridi
if he can make
Austin 13,
Y\ on
67
59 36 .621
45 47 .489
41 19 .473
1 \ .VI . 46X
42 18 .467
35 55 .389
36 59 379
uLPNLsnwN g \yir.*s
Austin a* Oklahoma City i'J-l
San Antonin at Tulsa <2>
San Antonio at Tulsa <2»
Houston at Dallas
Shreveport at Kurt VS’^rth
I* \< ltl< i O \*T IL \<il E
Pallas
Houston
San Antmiio
Austin
Fort Worth
Tulsa
Oklahoma City
ret. Behind
.705
Seattle
| Los Angeles
Portland
, Sat ramenio
Lost Pet. Behind
38 .604
41 .564 4
41 .564 4
42 .558 1
48 .515 8 .
47 189 11
60 .355 2.3 ’
62 317 24’
come- j joined .the pros and Gonzales
slaughtered him in their world i„s«n Kram isn)
of a week, the former tour, sarTTimku
i Nancy' McNamara, accompanied | Last w inter, it was Rosewall , HuiiywuuU
| Score to the doctor’s office for the'who turned pro right after the
i examination. They plan to live in Davis Cup matches and he be-
an apartment here while Score came Gonzales' sacrificial lamb,
j works out at Lakefront Stadium. ! And yesterday, just to make it
I The doctor has adv ised him not to! emphatic, Gonzales whipped Rose-
j travel with the team. wall. 6-0 8-6, 6-4, while Segura
“The doctor doesn't want me outlasted Trabert 6-4, 75, 911, 46,
out there on the field w ith a lot- 75.
of baseballs flying around until I “The pros go onto the court with: tell you this. Rosewall doesn't
j get used to things again,” Score j more confidence,” said Gonzales, j have the power and Trabert is not
-said. “T gQess iTs good advice,! who joined the pay-for-play troupe fast enough,
too. I’m seeing better but it still in 1949”. If you have one big fault} “That's all they need — one
pro circuit.
“Look at Rosewall and Trabert.
It remains to be seen if they ever
will become real top pros. But I’I
isn't us good as I would like it.” 1 in your game, you'll lose on the < flaw.'
CLEARANCE
THURSDAY. IULY18
ONE OF HAMEED'S TWO GREAT SALES A YEAR -
NATIdNALLY ADVERTISED STOCK —THIS IS
REGULAR STOCK - NO Sf?|QIA^,; SALE ITEMS
'P OF
Regular
! • i \ ! 1
tWSE S
V •
10.95
12.95
14.95
16.95 & 17.95
21.95
25.00
29.95
35.00
39.95
45.00
7.95
8.95
10.95
12.95
14.95
16.95
19.95
22.95
26.95
34.95
j f r > ' RegkHar Price from 5.95 to 21.95
From
price reduction
MILLINERY
Less than
Price
SKIRTS
GROUP OF BRAS
AND FOUNDATION
GARMENTS
SPECIAL PRICE
21.95
ALL OF OUR
COSTUME JEWELRY
Greatly Reduced
33’/3
DISCOUNT
ALL SALES FINAL - NO EXCHANGES - NO REFUNDS - EXTRA
CHARGE FOR ALTERATIONS
HAMEED'S
804 AUSTIN
y-'t
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.
Brewer, Orlin. The Levelland Daily Sun News (Levelland, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 227, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 17, 1957, newspaper, July 17, 1957; Levelland, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1129775/m1/6/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting South Plains College.