The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 198, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 16, 1952 Page: 2 of 6
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1
PAGE TWO
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16,1952
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FLATBUSH FAVORITE -
MARKETS
WANTED BY THE FBI
TEAM TO PLAY
■A-, -
A*
*
BROOKE WINS
THIRD TITLE
Local Grain Market
are -Wednesday
&
Baseball
DESCRIPTION
Calendar
twi-
FRE8ENT
te.
rain.
LiflSj
iV
TCU-KANSAS TO
BE TELEVISED
the murder of Adolph Bonner, tei
Amarillo
rain.
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EISENHOWER
INMINNESOTA
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Slightly Soiled
But
from
GOOD BARGAINS
¥2 Price
Studebaker!
THE CUERO RECORD
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Wuitroted: State Comnaadar V-8 Stariinar. '
White adevaD Uroa and chroma whaal diaaa optional at axtta ooac.
Get a jet-streamed Studebaker
and cut your driving costs!
HOLLYWOOD
FILM SHOP
f 6*T~BAT$ A GA MB
Ml6/17 DO
the best from the Southern Asso-
ciation.
Manager Tommy Tatum said he
would work Ernie Groth for Okla-
homa City in the first game.
Shreveport Manager Mickey Liv-
ingston counted on Fred Baczewski
who worked a five-hitter in the op-
ening game with Fort Worth to get
the Sports off to good start.
A possible opponent in the Dixie
Series has been narrowed to three
teams. Memphis won its half of
the Southern Association first round
playoffs. It waits only to meet the
winner of a Mobile-Atlanta series
to pick a champion.
Mobile currently leads in the ser-
ies with Atlanta, two victories to
one. A game scheduled for Mon-
day night at Mobile was rained out.
tfL J
MARKETS AT A GLANCE
By United Press
Stocks firm in quiet trading.
Bond lower.
U. S. government bonds higher
in moderately activing trading.
Curb stocks irregular.
Midwest stocks mixed.
Cotton futures barely steady.
Grains in Chicago: Wheat, corn,
oats and soy bean futures steady.
COTTON MARKET
By United Press
Noon cotton prices:
New York: Oct. 3922; Dec. 39.18.
New Orleans: Oct 39.26; Dec. 39.18.
Yellow ear corn
Hegarl
Milo
(Quotation courtesy
bUt Mills.)
-**’*W*^.z ■ -y
Wont Ads Do
Strange Tasks
DO YOU CARRY ENOUGH INSURANCE?
Most of us Don’t, But Now is The Time
To Increase Yours!
FREUND FUNERAL INSURANCE CO.
/
A
is eight or ten days. ‘If it were not th® Mascoma Mill, he left his two
required to work during that period, | sons at the looms to carry on the
it probably could last longer. family tradition..
SYDNEY GORDON MARTIN,
with aliases; WILLIAM JESSE BISHOP, SID MARTIN, WILLIAM GORDON MAIT1M.
• "s '
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GAY IMPLEMENT and MOTOR COMPANY
701 S. Esplanade ■“ CUERO, TEXAS Phone 71
Cyclists Too Reckless
BAY CITY, Mich. (UP) — The
police department is being flooded
with reports of reckless driving on
city streets. The' culprits are not
motorists. They are bicycle riders.
The complainants are automobUe1 n*^ n
drivers.
JUknONtRMOL fl/1
WO Q l9n M*
Under usual desert working con- {
ditionss, the maximum
"Mess In Washington” Is
Theme Of First Day
Addresses
I B
t
I
Coast To Coast Hook-Up
On Intro-Conference
Game
UNLAWFUL FLIGHT TO AVOID PROSECUTION
(ASSAULT WITH A DANGEROUS WEAPON)
CUERO MARKETS
Eggs — — — per doz, 37c
Hens per lb. 38 cents
Fryers
Cream - Sweet
^\O. 1
No. 2
Harlingen,
leads
<
head with a rock. Martin placed
the prostrate form on the tractor
and drove it into the barn. He
then stole $440 from the farmhouse
and fled in the farmer’s truck,
which he abandoned later that
evening. The farmer, though badly
wounded, recovered. On June 18
Martin was apprehended and in-
carcerated in the county jail jt
Northampton, Mass. He escapV
on September 4, 1950, by scaling a
high barbed wire fence.
Kenedy Lion "B" Squad
Booked Here Thurs-
day Night
Coach Langdon Smith will send
his Cuero High Gobbler “B” team
into action for the first time this
season on Thursday night in Gob-
bler Stadium with the Kenedy Lion'
“B” team providing the opposition.
Game time is 7:30. Admission will
be 50 cents for adults with all school
children admitted free of charge.
There will be no reserved seats.
The “B” team is made up prin-
cipally of Frosh and Sophomore
players and fans are invited to come
out and see the future Gobbler stars
in action.
ing only eight hits.
He gave up eight bases on balls,
however, and they proved disas-
trous.
Walks coupled with four singiles
in the fifth inning accounted for
a 4 to 0 lead which was never
threatened. Sill’s only run was scor-
ed by Jim Baumer, Chicago White
Sox bonus property, who singled,
advanced on a safety by Nick
Krsnisk, and scored on a throwing
error by Brooke Shortstop Owen
Friend.
Mickens fanned 11 8111 batters to
take the victory.
ge, 30, born June 18, 1922, at
Longmeadow, Mass.; height, 5' 6”
to 5' 8"; weight, 145 pounds;
build, medium; hair, dark brown,
curly; eyes, blue; complexion, me-
dium; race, white; nationality,
American; occupations, laborer,
farmer, cook, dishwasher, pantry-
man; scars and marks, burn scar
on left cheek, 3” scar on palm of
left hand; remarks, has nervous
habit of running hands through
hair, walks with head bowed.
per. lb. 34 cents » 4.
61c ,
57c
-------------------54c
WOMB LOANS
By John L. Cutter
ABOARD EISENHOWER
w
\ w
You’ll Hkt ths
•dvsnUgesolour
financing plan.
Lat us hell you
about it soon.
K te fcte mUk W a* Mr amta* Otee-
*“* rat m mhH. Baaard
---ns. ■aai«r7k
Beats Fl. Sill 5 Io 1
Monday Night Al
Fl. Hood
HEHA5 BEEHA Hat/o/ML
L EA GUE B\ce setter
Ar THE PLATE BUT
w/ll Hot Have
EHOUGHAT 0ATS TO
QUALIFY POR THE r/7LE'
1 H/S
| TH/RD SHOT
AT THE
1 MAJORS '
GEORGE HAS
SCORED
A BULLSEYE,
G/WHG THE
BROOKS THAT
SORELY HEEDED
LEPT-HAHDED
H/rr/HG
On June 1, 1950, Martin walked
into a farmyard near Belchertown,
Mass., and asked for help in mov-
ing his stalled car. The farmer
Size Improv-d mounted his tractor, but Martin
drew a pistol and demanded money.
When his benefactor moved to get Division of the Federal Bureau 8F
off. the tractor Martin shot him Investigation listed on the first page
twice and then beat him on the of the local telephone directory.
CAUTION
Subject is armed and should be considered extremely dangerous. He has Oocmpted
to commit suicide in the post. »
RM" 4
v1
er
Any person having informatioa
which may assist in locating thia
individual is requested to immedi-
ately notify the Director of the
Federal Bureau of Investigation,
United States Department of Jus-
tice, Washington 25, D. O, or the
Special Agent in Charge of t^
Investigation listed on the first page
CUERO FEDERAL SAVINGS
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION
' CUKRa TEXAS
FORT HOC®, Tex., Sept 18—UP
—Brooke Army Medical Center
took its third consecutive Fourth
Army baseball title back to Ban
Antonio Tuesday, after climaxing
an all-out uphill fight with a 5 to
1 victory Monday night over Fort
Sill, Okla.
A playoff between the two teams
was required when Brooke, that
had lost to Fort Bern Tuesday,
beat Ft. Sill In an afternoon con-
test Monday. The tournament was
a double-eliminating affair, and un-
til the afternoon game with Brooke
Ft. Sill had not been beaten.
Glenn Mickens set 8111 batters
down on four hits in the night
game after his teammate, Hy
Cohen, defeated them in the after-
noon play on flvp. Billy Muffett pit-
ched well in the finale as the loser,
Sons Carry On
LEBANON, N. H„ (UP)—When
time be- Thcmas Day, 74, retired after
tween drinks for the average camel’ working 61 years as a weaver at
IV-.|U
TEXAS POULTRY
AUSTIN, Sept. 16.(UP)—SDA —
South Texas—Market steady. Offer-
ings adequate for a fair to slow
dressing plant demand, short for
good truck demand.
Ing but heavier weights continue
short. Prices at the farm, broilers
or fryers all weights 2.50-3.15 pounds,
34 cents.
East Texas—Market steady to
steady. Offerings are generally ad-
equate for fair to good demand.
Prices at the farm, broilers or fry-
ers all weights 2.50-3.00 pounds SO-
32 cents, mostly 32.
Waco and Corsicana area— Mar-
ket steady, offerings adequate for a
fair to good demand. Prices at the
farm, broilers or fryers all weights
2.50-3.15 pounds, 32 cents.
’Y
Shreveport Okla. City
Square Off For Opener
SHREVEPORT, La., Sept. 18 —
UP —Shreveport and Oklahoma
City have jockeyed all season to
meet Tuesday night in the final
round of the Texas League Shaugh-
nessy Playoffs.
They open at Shreveport for the
first two games and then move to
Oklahoma City for three. The clubs
will compete for the best four
games out of seven.
Shreveport arrived in the finals
by defeating Fort Worth four
straight in first-round playoffs. Ok-
lahoma City eliminated Dallas.
Now Shreveport, which ended the
regular season in third place, and
Oklahoma City, which finished
fourth, will struggle for the honor
by representing their league in the
Dixie Series. The winner will meet
DeWitt Medical*
Society To Meet Al
Yorktown Wednesday
The DeWitt County Medical So-
ciety which suspended meetings
during July and August, will hold
its first fall meeting Wednesday
evening at the Yorktown Memorial
Hospital beginning at 8:30 o’clock.
Dr. William J. Block of San An-
tonio will be the. principal speaker,
and it is hoped that a good turnout
will be in attendance, according to
officials of the organization.
"Magic Humber" Is
Exactly The Same
For Yanks-Dodgers
NEW YORK, Sept. 18—UP—The
‘‘magic number” was exactly the
same Tuesday for the Yankees and
the Dodgers — ninf.
That means any combination of
Yankee victories and Indian de-
feats adding to nine will give the
Yankees the American League
pennant And any combination of
Dodger victories and Giant defeats
adding to nine will give the Dodg-
ers the Natioal League pennant.
1952 STUDEBAKER
COMMANDER V-8 OR CHAMPION
Spend less for gas—less for upkeep—with a
Get more for your money all the way—with a Studebaker!,
Check delivered prices and you’ll
drive home a Studebaker!
AH model* offer Studebaker Automatic Drive or Overdrive—and glare-reducing tinted gla»—at extra COlL
jp ,Fi-'
r Russen said after
Monday's drill, *T think the most
noticeable thing about the practice
was Jerry .Norton's punting.
wS*
Texas A&M was without
. > services of quarterback
FORT WORTH LIVESTOCK
FORT WORTH, Sept. 16.—(UP) —
Cattle 3,500. Market fully steady.
Good and choice beef steers and
yearlings 24-30; truck lot club year-
lings 33.50; utility and commercial
15-23.50; beef-cows 15-1850; canners
and cutters 10-15; bulls 13-20; Stock-
er steer yearlings 15-28.
Calves 1,900. Market fully steady.
Good and choice slaughter calves
22-27; utility and commercial 15-20;
culls 12-15; stokcer calves 16-2750.
Hogs 1,100. Mostly steady with
Monday's averages; few early sales
25c higher; a few late deals 25c
lower; sows steady; choice 180-270
lbs. burrows and gilts 1950-20,
mostly 19.75; sows 15-186.50; one
load on shipper account 17.
Sheep 3,300. Fully steady. Util-
ity and good slaughter spring lambs
20-24; tew head yearlings 15-18;
low cull lambs and yearlings 8-10;
cull and utility ewes 6850-7; feeder
lambs 10-1650, two loads 17.50.
THE CUERO RECORD, CUERO, TEXAS
. - By Alan Mover COBBLER ‘B’
an obscure German imirii-
grant artist, at Edgewood, P
N. Y A Personal ad placed in 2
a German language paps
brought identity of the victim, L
&
Bp"”
Er' MR
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■NSV’ ■'
By Charles Nethaway
LAWRENCE, Kans., Sept.
Some fancy running and typical
Southwest Conference passing are
1 in prospect when Kansas meets
Texas' Christian here Saturday.
i The largest crowd ever to aee a
football game may watch. Kansas’
stadium will seat only 38,000, but
the game will be televised on the
expanded coast-to-coast network.
Since 1948, Kansas and TCU
have slashed in the opening game.
This year** edition — tenth in
the overall series — packs more
i than ordinary appeal. Kansas,
spearheaded by the brilliant run-
[ ning halfback, Charlie Hoag, ranks
> as one of the chief threats to
Oklahoma’s defending champions
j to the tough. Big Seven Conf er- Eisenhower
ence. TCU, coached by L. R. Dutch Washington”
Meyer, is heralded to be **at least
as strong** as the 1951 team which
ron th*. Southwest Conference
chappionship.
Kansas, winner of eight of 10
games last season, including a
27-13 decision over TCU, boasts 31
lettermen who packs potent punch
to the backfield and represent all
except three regulars from the
1951 defensive unit.
At the same time, Texas Chris-
tian has 28 veterans on its 70-man
squad, plenty of experience at
key positions, greater speed and a
defense that Coach Meyer believes
will be better against passes.
t h e
Graves Tuesday. Graves sprained
his wrist Saturday. Coach Ray
George said he did not plan any
hard scrimmage sessions before
the opening game Saturday again-
at the University of Houston.
.Graves was expected back to the
< Wednesday, , i3
By United Press
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Monday’s Results
Detroit 5, Washington 4.
Chicago 4, Boston 2.
Only games scheduled.
Tuesday’s Schedule
New York at Detroit.
Washington at Cleveland, night.
Boston at St. Louis, night
Philadelphia at Chicago, 1
night
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Monday’s Results
Brooklyn 11, Cincinnati 5.
New York 12, St. Louis 1.
Only games scheduled.
Tuesday’s Schedule
Chicago at New York.
Pittsburgh at Brooklyn, night.
Cincinnati at Philadelphia, night
St. Louis at Boston, twi-nght
TEXAS LEAGUE
Final Round Playoffs
Oklahoma City opens at Shreve-
port Tuesday night.
BIG STATE LEAGUE
First Round Playoffs
Temple at Austin, ppd.,
Austin leads series, 3-1.
GULF COAST LEAGUE
First Round Playoffs
Galveston 5, Port Arthur 4, Gal-
veston leads series 2-1.
Corpus Christi at
ppd. rata. Corpuk Chrttti
series 2-1.
LONGHORN LEAGUE
t Final Round Playoffs
Odessa 4, Midland 2. Odessa
leads series, 1-0.
WEST TEXAS-NEW MEXICO
First Round Playoffs
Albuquerque 6, Borger 4. Albu-
querque leads 2-1.
Amarillo 6, Clovis 5.
leads 2-1.
SOUTHERN ASSOCIATION
First Round Playoffs
Atlanta at Mobile, ppd.,
Mobile leads series 2-1.
Be
Bt A
tel
By CHARLES M. DENTON
United Press Staff Correspondent
HOLLYWOOD. —(UP) —It’s be-
ing rumored around the film city
that Steve Cochran has found a new
love—but she isn’t a Hollywood
glamour queen.
Cochran has discovered flying!
The dark-haired leading man took
his first flying lesson recently ahd
now everything takes a back seat to
airplanes.
He’s even neglecting his sail boat,
the Blackie Daw, in favor of zoom-
ing through the clouds with a fly-
ing instructor.
"There’s nothing like it,” says
Cochran, who is currently starring
in Warner Brothers’ ‘ Back to
Broadway.”
‘‘When I was a kid, I thought
there was nothing finer than bicy-
cling. When I got my first automo-
bile, I thought I was really begin-
ning to live. Then I became a sail-
boat enthusiast.”
Will Buy Plane
But flying, he says, is the “su-
preme thrill.”
As soon as he can fly well enough
and learns navigation and air reg-
ulations, he plans to buy his own
plane and “fly- all over the West”
between pictures.
“Commercial aviation has always
bored me so I’d generally just drive
somewhere or go sailing in the
Blackie Daw,” he said. “But this
is going to be a lot more exciting.”
Cochran said he plans to keep the
! Blackie Daw, but he admits it may
I be some time before he gets around
• to scraping the barnacles off her.
“I guess Cachran is a fly boy
from now on,” he added.
18—i
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fl
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nl
■
- , .—,—,— ---He
got off some long ones and was
getting his foot into the ban
WASHINGTON COURT
HOUSE, O.—(UP)— Joseph Owens
was worried because he couldn’t
leave his hospital bed here to at-
tend Sunday School at the New
Holland, O., Methodist church and
keep his eoight-year perfect attend,
ance record intact So the other
15 members drove over from New
Holland to hold the class at his bed-
SPE-
CIAL, Sept. 16 (UP)—Dwight D.
turned his ’’mess in
campaign Tuesday
on Minnesota’s 11 electoral votes,
which haven’t gone to a loser in a
presidential election since 1916.
Associates said the Republican
presidential candidate would con-
tinue, in five Minnesota appear-
ances, to pound the theme that
marked his first day of whistle-
stop campaigning—jokes and wise-
cracks will never restore honesty,
integrity and decency in Wash-
ington.
Tuesday’s scheduled included
train stops at Albert Lea, Owa-
tonna, Faribault and Northfield,
Minn., and a talk from the capi-
I tol steps at St. Paul before flying
back to New York where he ad-
dresses the American Federation
of Labor convention Wednesday.
From New York he flies back
to Moline, Ill., Wednesday evening
for a motorcade to his train and
a tour through Iowa, Nebraska,
Missouri, Kentucky, Ohio, West
Virginia, Marvland, North C?ro-
lina and Virginia, winding up ten
days later.
BIG SALE ON
Yellow shelled corn 1.80 per bu.
1.60 per bu
3.00 per 100 lbs.
3.00 per 100 lbs.
of Farm-
B Want Ad$ Aid to
B Famed Pinkertons j
F In Solving Crimes!
41 N
Among the earliest oases 'J
% solved by Allan Pinkerton and j
his famous detective agency^
was “the baffling case of A. >
THE
OUTP/ELDER iVHo'G
BEEH H/TT/HG WWeH
ptcouhts /host
as hlell as /Host
OFTHEJT/AIE^
t Training Reaches Serious
I Stage In S. W. Conference
By UNIFIED PRESS
Training reached the serious
■ stage Tuesday for Southwest Con-
Terence teams opening their sea-
sons Saturday, with one camp
K barring visitors while new plays
were worked out.
Coach Ed Price refused admit-
tance to outsiders at the Texas
Longhorn camp in Austin. The
IP ‘Longhorns open their season
!- against Louisiana State University
at Baton Rouge Saturday night.
Price also scheduled two night
workouts to get the Texas used
jbo playing under' the lights. The
gk-L workouts are -Wednesday and
■ | Thursday. •
HhB, The game Saturday will be the
fl" Longhorns’ first nocturnal en-
counter since 1937, when the D5U
Tigers defeated the Longhorns, 9
to 0. ’
Another team preparing for a
.Saturday opener was Texas Chris-
tian. Coach Dutch Meyer sent the
Frogs through a long running drill
I Monday and more of the same
e wai due Tuesday. x
4 .- Top back Gil Bartosh, who in-
jured his right knee about 10 days
F ago. was net expected to sec ac-
tion In the Frogs’ opener against
Kansas at Lawrence.
At Waco, preparations were in
y full swing Tuesday for Saturday’s
game with Wake Forest Coach
George Sauer said all assignments striking out 10 medics and allow-
were subject to review.
Sauer said Francis Cotton Dav-
idson would do much of the punt-
ing against Wake Forest, adding
'that right now he considered Dav-
idsen’s punttag superior to that of
Don Carpenter and L. G. Dupre.
'V ' / In Dallas, Southern Methodist
/ was due. for more work on pass
offense and defense. The Mustangs’
season does not start until a week
< from Friday.
Coach Rusty
____
subsequently led to trapping
. of his slayer.
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The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 198, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 16, 1952, newspaper, September 16, 1952; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1358515/m1/2/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cuero Public Library.