Stephenville Daily Empire (Stephenville, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 55, Ed. 1 Sunday, November 19, 1950 Page: 3 of 14
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Weatherford's Kangaroos used a
line-ripping running attack on
Memorial Field Friday night to
win going away, 19 to 0, over the
StephenvUle Yellow Jackets.
The Jaeketa never got going.
Weatherford got breaks, a fum-
bled punt deep in Jacket territory
and two fumbles that halted
Jacket thrusts, but they used the
breaks to advantage to score onoe
in the first quarter, once in the
second and another in the third.
The Kangaroos scored within-a
minute of the opening kick-off,
taking a fumbled punt on the
Jacket 36. From there they pulled
five running plays and a pass to
score, with Stroud bucking over
from the 2.
The Jackets showed spark as
they took the kick-off, and for the
remainder of the quarter it looked
like a ball game. They started
from their own 82, sending Kaugh-
man through the middle to the
Weatherford 49 on a delayed buck.
Kaughman picked up 8 more, and
Boa* added oac. Kaughman m H
1 and Braeuar made 1, -*<•
man, throat for another jum.
Braener book-legged the ball and
wenj wide to the Weatherford 80.
Kaughman added 1 for a first
dow*, and Weatherford was pen-
alized 6 yards. Kaughman failed to
gain, but Braeuar hit for C.
Biaeoer passed a sharp one over
the line to Little on the 14, and
Kaughman rolled for 4 through the
line, but the Jackets were pen-
alized 15 yards. Braeuer tossed
two paaaoa which fell incomplete
and then can
went over,
A penalty had coat the Jackets
* score.
Weatherford scored mid-way in
* !“*■ J! the second. They had stopped a
Jacket rally In the second after
Jim Howell, who played himself a
great ball game, intercepted a
pass on the Weatherford 44. On
the first Jacket scrimmage play,
Weatherford recovered" a fumble
on their own 47.
McDaniel rambled to the Jacket
44, and then bulled to the 36.
Again McDaniel smacked the line,
and this time went a1] the way to
the 26. Caraway made 4 and
Stroud hit to the 16. Caraway-
made 6 and the Jackets were
penalized 5 yards. McDaniels was
stopped for no gain, but added 3
on his next thrust. Hudspeth bulled
over, and try for conversion was
wide and it was 12 to 0 at the half.
Third Kangaroo score came in
the third. Braeuer intercepted
McDaniel’s pass on his own 48 and
returned it to the Weatherford 46.
On the first running play, how-
ever, there was a fumble and the
Kangaroos recovered squarely on.
the 50.
Wilbanks made 4, added 6 rtlore
and circled wide to the l*ft and
• s* mu' bared back' on the 48.
*<* the left again
to the 42. On an end-arouirf, Grim-
menger, Kangaroo end, went to the
Jacket 26. McDaniel made 8 and
Stroud added 8 more. Stroud push-
ed to the 2 and McDaniel went
over. Puryear kicked goal and it
was 19 to 0, Weatherford.
Braeuer and Kaughman fashion-
ed p runping attack to carry to the
Weaetherford 26, and a pasa to
Howell was good to the 26. Kaugh-
man plunged to the 16, gut the'ball
went over on downs, following a
DELEON, DUBLIN
AND CISCO WIN
7
Cisco 20, Eastland 0
Eastland, Nov. 17. (Spl).—Cts-. ‘
co’s Lobos scored a touchdown in
each of the first three quarters
and added a safety on a blocked
punt in- the third quarter to taka
a 20-0 victory over Eastland in
a District 8-A game here Friday
night. It was the last game of
the season for both teams. The
first score came on a 26-yard pass
from Doug Johnson to I. Brunke-’
hoefer, in the second period L.
A. Sublet passed 12 yards to Rob-
ert Jackson, who added the third
Lobo touchdown on a two-yard
plunge. Eastland never was able
to muster a serious threat.
Dublin 19, Hamilton 6
Dublin, Noy. 17. (Spl).—In the
last game of the season for each
team, the Dublin Lions defeated
the Hamilton Bulldogs, 19-6, here
Friday night in a District 8-A
conference"^fair. First tally came
early in thtf\second quarter as
Hamilton End Simmy Brann made
an end-arfmnd Vin for 80 yarda
and a todchdoyfo. Dublin retal-
iated as Qultttfrbeck Marvin Sal-
yer passed to End Raymond Pitt-
man for 30 yards and a touchdown.
In the final period, Salyer passed
to End Lewis Graves for 26 yards
and a touchdown and then to
Pittman for 32 yards and the clos-
ing touchdown. Guard Darwin
Ellis converted. Hamilton scor-
ed 14 first downs to Dublin’s 12.
De Leon 31, Comanche 14
De Leon, Nov. 17. (Spl).—Her-
man Johnson scored four touch-
downs on short plunges to lead
be Leon’s Bearcats to a 31-14 vic-
tory over the Comanche Indians
in a District 8-A game here Fri-
day night. It was the Bearcats’
second triumph in two games and
their second since 1947. Comanche’s
Weldon Turner passed seven yards
to Don Robertson for the first
Indian touchdown and scored the
second himself on a three-yard
plunge. The longest play of the
game was a 76-yard kickoff re-
turn by Dale Broughton of De
Leon, It was the last game of the
season for both teams.
Jacket penalty that prevented a
10-yard gain.
That was ail.
Weatherford 32, and a pass to
Defensive play of Arlie Brown
and Jim Terrell for the Jackets
was good.
For the Jackets it was Kaugh-
man, Braeuer and Howell who
stood out, while Benninger, Stroud
and McDaniels sparked for the
visitors.
Kilgore Rangers
toPlay Dec. 9
In Jackson, Miss. t
Kilgore, Nov. 18.—-W——The Kil-
gore Junior College Rangers Will
play a post-season game Dae. 9
inv the 21,000 capacity Memorial
Bowl at Jackson, Miss.
The Rangers' opponent has not
been named, Kilgore spohemen said
today.
One-third of the net receipts of
the game sponsored by the Jack-
son Touchdown Club will be given
to the National Foundation for
Infantile Paralysis.
Tyler Considers
Bowl Bids
'ftrler, Nov. 18.—(lit—Tyler Jun-
ior College officials had several
bowl bids under consideration to-
day, the latest as host club in their
own home town’s Texas Rose Bowl
game Dec. 9.
The latest bid came after the
Apaches, one of the nation’s top
junior college teams for the past
several years, defeated arch-rival
Kilgore College 14-6 Thursday
night.
The Apaches also have “feeler
bids’’ from the Oleander Bowl at
Galveston Jan. 1, the Little Rose
Bowl in Pasadena, Calif., Dec. 9
and the Little Sugar Bowl in Mon-
roe, La., Dec. 8.
Texas Rose Bowl officials said
that if Tyler accepts the local
bid, a likely opponent would be
Coffeyville, Kan. Junior College.
The college board was schedul-
ed to meet Monday to decide on
post-season games, if any.
Horned Frog Will
Undergo Surgery
Fort Worth, Nov. 18.—lift—Half-
back Malvin Fowler of the Texas
Christian Horned Frogs will un-
dergo surgery next Friday for re-
moval of torn cartilage which has
sidelined him since the season
opener.
Fowler played only three min-
ute in TCU’s first game. Officials
will ask the Southwest Confer-
ence to remove those three min-
utes from the record books ■ to
give the 200-pound star from Van
another year of eligibility. He is
a sophomore.
TCU officials said they hoped the
operation would permit Fowler to
report for spring training.
Crater Lake in Crater Lake Na-
tional Park, Oregon, is the deep-
est lake on the North American
continent and the fifth deepest
lake in the world.
By OSCAR FRALEY, Vniletl Press Sport* Writer
New York, Nov. 18. W—Fearless
Fraley's facts and figures:
Acting like a spoiled child is
nothing new for Ted Williams but
friend* of the Bosox slugger argue
that his latest popoff—to the effect
that he’ll run his own spring train-
ing—was due to worry over his fu-
ture and a restless claustrophobia.
Williams’ arm, injured in the All-
Star game, still is stiff and may not
straighten perfectly despite doe-
tors’ assurances, they say. Then*
too, interviewers got to him when
Ted, a man with the restless energy
of a tiger, was bored and impatient
after a long plane rime.
Despite his remarks, Williams is
anxious about his baseball future.
He’ll give his winter hunting to
fish and exercise at Everglades
City and will start training six
weeks earlier than usual at a Flo-
rida baseball school . *. . lack of
tact is his whdle trouble. . . .
E .C. (Irish) Krieger of Colum-
bus, O., a member of the National
Football Rules Committee, charged
this week that radio sport^casters
“don’t know what’s going on.” He
may have sofriething there.
Our friend, Ted Husing, got off
a pty in the Army-New Mexico tilt
when he intoned that “the augury
of this game is all that matters.”
Proving, no doubt, that there was
a reason for the game. And Bill
Stern, the modern Aesop, tossed
another lateral by announcing that
.Ohio State was “repelled back-
wards.” . . . And can’t just see his
listeners panting with relief when
he added: “And here’s that station
break we promised you!” . . .
Happy birthday: Sunday, Roy
Campanella, 29; .Monday, Clark
Griffith, 81; Willie Pep, 28; Bobby
Locke, 33 (?), and Bud Degroot,
51; Tuesday, Stan Musial, 30; Paul
Richards, 42, and Sid Luckman,
34; Wednesday, Gardner Mulloy,
36, and Ralph Guldahl, 39; Thurs-
day, Hal Schumacher, 40, and
Beans Reardon, 63. . . .
Touchdowns and field goals: Vot-
ing is being conducted for the Heis-
man Memorial Trophy, presented
annually to the nation's outstand-
ing college football player, with
Vic Janowicz of Ohio State as a
probable shoo-in . . . Walter Dukes,
Seton Hall's six-foot, 11-inch bas-
ketball ace, shouldn’t get too tired
playing firehouse basketball. He’s
also a cfbss country runner and
naturally, with those legs, a good
one. ...
The next time you three-put a
green, don’t be too discouraged. J.
M. Heggarty, a Scottish profession-
al, four-putted from 10 inches in
the 1939 Scottish Pro Champion-
ship. The ball touched his shoe and
missed the cup, causing an addit-
ional two-stroke penalty under the
rules then in effect....
You won’t see the nanqp of Wyom-
ing’s Harry Geldien on any All-
America teams but you can take it
from Coach Dud Degroot of New
Mexico that the Weat Allis, Wis.,
back is just about as good as any
in the nation. . . . The elephant’s
trunk has more than 4,000 muscles.
(And that’s a lot of muscles, Mac.)
The Women’s P. G. A. is readying
for a busy 1951, in which they’ll
shoot for more than $50,000 in
prises. They open Jan. 6 at Ponte
Vedra, Fla.; to be followed by
Tampa and Orlando, Fla., Opens;
Augusta; the Eastern Open at Bos-
ton and the Weathcrvane Cross-
Country Open, a 144-hole relay test
with tentative sites at Pebble Beach
Calif.; Dallas, Texas: Indianapolis
and New York . . . Havana Ber-
muda also are seeking women’s
opens and at least six of the gals
are planning to compete in the first
British Women’s Open if it goes
through... .
A recent effort on the ni6kn»mes
fo college football players brings
an indignant protest from the Uni-
versity of Dayton on its ignored
LeRoy Peter Patrick Wailaahia
Ka-Ne. He is billed as “The Hy-
phen,” and Dayton will replace him
next year with Bobby Recker—to
be known, naturally, as “Ramblin’
Recker.” . . . Just call me “Fear-
ful!”
Cuban Pugilist
Beats Graham
New York, Nov. 18.—(IP—Cuban
Kid Gavilan probably will fight
a middleweight next month while
awaiting the welterweight title
shot he earned last night by beat-
ing Billy Graham in their return
bout at Madison Square Garden.
Culmone Crowding
Shoemaker in
Jockey Race
Baltimore, Md., Nov. 18.—(IP)—
Joe Culmone stood only one victory
behind Willie Shoemaker today in
their second record-smashing bat-
tle for the national jockey cham-
pionship.
Culmone narrowed the gap yes-
terday when he scored a pair of
victories aboard Nottin In in the
first race at Pimlico and Dot Be-
iltro in the last to run his total
of wins to 329 fo rthe year. At
Hollywood Park, Shoemaker was
blanked and remained at 330.
Use the Daily F.maire want ads
Everything: jn
Ladies’ Wearing
Apparel
sim-L.
Mineral Wells ‘11’
Trounces Graham
Steers, 19 to 6
Gam* at a Glance Cj
G r-aham M inera 1 'Well*
12 _________ First Downs __________ 11
124 Yards Gained Rushing 260
56 Yards Gained Passing 25
3 of 9 Passes Complete 1 of 5
3 Passes Intercepted by — 0
9 for 338 Punts, No., Ydge. 2 for 99
7 for 41 Penalties, N.. Ydge. 6 for 40
Mineral Wells, Nov. 17.(Spl).—
A pair of quiche touchdowns in the
third quarter gave the Mineral
Wells Mountaineers a 19-6 vic-
tory over the Graham Steers here
Friday night in a District 6-AA
contest.
The Mountaineers scored the
first two times they gained pos-
session of the bell in the third
quarter. Clarence Benton raced
56 yards for a touchdown, and
added the point from placement.
Ronald Bond climaxed an 89-yard
drive With a five-yard plunge for
another Mountaineer tally. A 45-
yard run by Benton was the big
gainer in the drive.
Mineral Wells scored its first
touchdown in the second period.
Bond smacked over from the one,
ending a drive of 28 yards. The
Steers counted in the fourth quar-
ter with a 58-yard payoff march.
Quarterback Harold Segars pass-
ed 15 yards to Kenneth Cunning-
ham for the touchdown.
The Mountaineers end their sea-
son next Thursday against Wea-
therford, while the Steers meet j
Stephenville in their final game.
1 Hope Abandoned
; For Early End to
Houston Strike
Houston, Nov. 18, <(P' — Weary i
| Houston residents abandoned all |
1 hope today for a quick settlement j
of the 14-day-old paralyzing bus
strike after the transit company I
declined’to pay drivers $1.46 per
hour as suggested by Mayor Oscar
Holcombe’s fact-finding board,
j Bus company officials rejected j
that part of the committee’s re-
port after a two-hour discussion,
I held after the hoard has been re-
You’ll step proudly from
fall into winter in a casual
by Printzess. Buttery sheen-
glo provides the palette for
its classic styling. Printzess
tailored w ith great precision.
Sizes 10 to 20:121/^to24J,-j-
$49.50
<3,wflte.:
l/V ST&RE
Mr. JneLUJUSHJSSi
TARZAN
. i
3517 Mad Dash
called to explain to them some
phases of its report.
The letter to the mayor, signed
by Carl Frazer, president of the
bus company, said the firm would
continue to negotiate and offer
the union a pay increase more in
line with increases in the cost of
living.
Use the Daily Empire want ads.
By Edgar Rice Burroughs
&6SON CONTINUED HIS TRASlC
TALE. *WH8N TH/S HUFF/AH
LEVELED A 60A/AT US, WE WERE
PUMBFOUNPEP/"
fagged engines
fagged fiomes
u fin
'"■I
K .Jt'M
... / saL
-dMjM *3^11
• HERE WAS W RESCUER, 5UT
A CROOK/ SNARL!N6
VtC/OUSLY, HE ORPEREP
US TO JUMP OVER/"
*BOTH THE THOU6HT OF PROMN/N6 AMP LEAVM6
THE PLAQUE INCENSED U6 BEYOH'P REASC\
SIMULTANEOUSLY me leapep at that madman/"
ELLA CINDERS^
PRESCRIPTIONS
Wildcat at Bay
1Mb
WE’I) APPRECIATE HAVING YOU TRADE AT
CROSS DRUG STORE
East Side Square
INK UNKS MBS AIM
• _ . ___— iiro AKShlSD
fagged frAs
All-welded cobs! Powerful
Valve-In-Heod engine*! Strong
roar axles and heavy-steel
channel-type framed Right
dewn the line, Chevrolet hack*
•re built for the rough-tough
jobs and the Mg payloads. All
pad*; aN units—lilt■ Chovro-
UF» positive Synchro-Meth
transmissions—are engineered
to withstand the shock* and
drain* of raaf war*. Engineered
to serve yeu beffer-and loegerf
That s why there are more
P Chevrolet truck* on the road
than any other make ... why
.yaw should com* In and see
the** groat trucks today)
ON THE NOTE auXOMPANVIN*
TWO DUELING PISTOLS. ^-ICE
NOW BELIEVE mbs. HOLIDAY TO
BE the PERSON RESPONSIBLE -OR
THE SHOOTING Of ZEKE WtPGIT AND
SA.RV HOLIDAY. HER STEPSON HO'
MR.* HOLIDAY IS A PROnNNGNT CU1
13.110 irtNlrlJAT «yn*an RCW I-MN3i
TlrXASlGOIH* OM Cl NIT 0*611VOL
non gHIVHBlTIIP TRl3IOIH»lll~llll?e|
3ARPIELD,
I out this ink, and
. WITHOUT THAT re-
CEIPT THEY’LL HAKE
NO EVIDENCE
AGAINST ME.'
Phones 34 and 36
By Charles Plumb and Fred For
3UT THEY SDU.
HAVE the R£-
CSPT MADAM:
STAFFORD MOTOR COMPANY
422 W. Washington
Sales • BUICK • Service
Phone 281
FERD’NAND
See Here! !
By Mft
/ CHEVROLET A
Advance-D«ign TWta
Phone 145
<*». l6.NWMS.lt I, US........
A*,
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Stephenville Daily Empire (Stephenville, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 55, Ed. 1 Sunday, November 19, 1950, newspaper, November 19, 1950; Stephenville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1133214/m1/3/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Dublin Public Library.