Mt. Pleasant Times (Mount Pleasant, Tex.), Vol. 46, No. 150, Ed. 1 Friday, October 1, 1965 Page: 6 of 6
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65 LEADS PGA — •
ton 19-8 while Minnesota edg-
American League contest.
VOL. NC
In
6
4
Moore ran the extras. That
and Koufax 25-8
son of a golf pro.
mERcuny
considered the one
l!'l
NOW-MOSTPOWERFUL DUIBCARDNEW NERC IDEL ID HP
1 14
There
av tie at
don
and
NUW-ALL NNENEW MERIURYS 11 TT Z9 HP) ARE QUIET
1966 CHEVROLET
OCT. 7
Bob Sandlin Motors
and put the leaders in this po-
sition:
If the Dodgers, with Claude
BASEBALL
CALENDAR
10
12
12
Jurors Disi
In District
Petit jurors w
In 76th District
day after sever
civil docket we
tinued until the
settled
Sitting on th
District Judge
of Texarkana
Ralston ha
benches with Ji
ter disqualifying
cause as an
once had repre
the litigants in
for Monday
AMERICAN LEAGUE
8 --- W L Prt. Behind
Pitching Power Brings
Dodgers Close to KO
x Minnesota
Baltimore
Chicago
Detroit
Cleveland
New York ..
California
Washingtr n
Boston
Lad & Lassie
Team-
Sad Sacks
Rolling Stones
Cooper Tire
Scramblers
Four Aces
Jokers
Pussy Cats
Pin Dodgers
3‘ who defeated Cincinnati 5-3,
414
Before this season, Navy
and Syracuse had met twice
in football with the latter
winning both times, 32-8 in
1959 and 34 6 in 1962
said he never felt stronger.
He also suggested that train-
ers Wayne Anderson and Bill
Buhler should receive much
of the credit for the pitching
streak.
“They’re the best in base-
ball. and they’ve kept us in
great shape," he explained
The shape Koufax and Drys-
dale have been in has been
phenominal. Together they’ve
recorded 48 of the Dodgers’
from the millions of test miles that went :
before Result: Mercury ‘66—finest out-
boards ever built — with the widest range of
horsepower ever offered in the outboard field:
3.9, 6, 9.8, 20, 35, 50, 65, 95, and 110 hp. * *
See your Mercury dealer! Kiekhaefer on.
poration. Fond du L ac, Wisconsin, and Tor.
onto. Subsidiary of Brunswick Corporation.
to miu you
bring or mail
us here at TP
or maybe you
on the street
are in town oi
_in any event
UP is in progr
Esays himself. 1
"he going in hi
tacts friends
ers
110-hp Merc 1100! What’s it like to ride
herd on 110 horses’ Point the how at the
farthest point on the lake, crack the throttle
—and that lake's suddenly smaller! The Mere
1100 is the great new successor to the Mere
1000- holder of more international perfor-
mance and endurance records than any other
outboard ever built!
From the sleek new Mere 1100—and the ex-
citing new 95-hp Mere 950—all the way down
the line to the trim 3.9-hp Mere 39, these new
Mercurys are quiet—quietest outboards you
can buy!
Also new for 66: now you can safely use a
50:1 gasoline-oil ratio with our new Formula '
50 Super Outboard Motor Oil. Polar-Gap
spark plugs developed by Kiekhaefer during
World War II for costly military engines,
now refined and produced exclusively for
both six-cylinder Mercurys. Polar-Gap plugs
cut fuel consumption, last more than twice
as long as ordinary plugs, even on highly
leaded fuel. Two new powerheads, three other
models redesigned from top to prop —and
much, much more.
hunting areas
Antelope season opens Sat-
nrdaywest of the Pecos and
in the Possum Kingdom and
Panhandle areas Uzzell said
each hunter will be limited
to one antelope because herds
have been reduced by poor
grazing
The Thrill Of The Year”
The left-handed Koufax has
a 2.06 earned run average
and eight shutouts while the
right-handed' Drysdale has a
2.78 ERA and seven shut-
outs. *
In the only other N game
St. Louis annihilated Hous
Burglary R
To Sheriff’
Burglary of M
pair Shop on W
Road was rep
Titus County She
ment Monday n
A go kart was
missing was a
. pare parts
Someone enter
ing by breaking i
at the rear an
the door, officer
Touring progolfer Johnny
95 victories—Drysdale is 23-12 Pott, formerly of LSU, is the
It
He
Football-loving fans are expected to fan out in
- several different directions tonight to view gridiron
battles.
The" home town. Tigers are open this week,
along with six other District 6-AAA teams. They
are preparing for the opening of conference play on
Oct «
Sulphur Springs is the lone 6-AAA team slated
for a game The Wildcats will be host to Terrell
Jefferson invades Talco for a battle with River-
crest High. The local Tiger Stadium is to see a game
between the Booker T. Washington Lions and Dain-
gerfield Rhoades High.
Other games to be attracting sports fans in-
clude
DeKalb at Hughes Springs, Atlanta at Hooks,
Linden at New Boston, Pewitt at Gilmer, Pittsburg
at Daingerfield, Liberty-Eylau at Winnsboro and
Texarkana, Tex B at James Bowie (Sims).
• Nr ettors in this inter-
hianal 72 hole tourney that
d. Sunday
Mt. Pleasant
1
Is
5PP al/the AUIETneW 56 Mercurs-at your Mercury dealer/
From the pioneer in high-horsepower out-
boards comes a new champion —the new
Your
Hue
MERCURY
MOTOR
DEALER
Nicklaus Down
But Still Rated
MADRID Spain n — Jack
Virklaus of Columbus, Ohio
By Associated Press
— - Getting stronger as the sea-
son grows shorter, the Los
hits marking the second time
in the last six days that the
prodigious pair has pitched
consecutive shutouts.
Against St. Louis last Sat-
urday and Sunday, Koufax
pitched a five-hit, 2-0 victory
and Drysdale hurled a five-
hit, 1-0 triumph.
"This is the best stretch of
pitching a team of mine has
ever enjoyed," said Manager
Walter Alston, who has watch-
ed his staff allow only two
runs in the last 60 innings
"I’ve also never had a team
that finished a season as
strong as this one."
Drysdale, who threw an av-
erage of only 10 pitches an
inning against the Braves,
Pleasant drive when a de-
ender ran back a pass inter
ception 65 yards for the go-
ahead score, 28-24. And be
ere the final whistle sounded,
a defensive back swiped an-
other pass and took it back
for the final score.
The remaining five games
games for freshmen will be
played at home and the MPHS
gridders are eagerly await-
ng foes on their home soil
after absorbing four lickings
on the road
Next Thursday night the
freshmen are hosts to vesting
Gladewater frosh at 7:30 p.m.
11 Tiger Stadium
By The Associated Press
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Teams — W L Pet. Behind
*: BE.
Coach Johnny (rawfordis
squad, boosted by the addition
of several new faces and in
jured players returning now :
looks ahead to another tough 5"
foe
ft- .7 . - T ..- ----- -v 1A
Next Thursday, the* jusot ...
varsity hosts Longview in a
Sympath
their son,
MER III,
MR. and
LATIMER
received 1
the facult
the UNIVI
AS SCHOO
at GALVE
the text:
“On beh,
and studen
ity of Texa
cine, we we
to you our
on the tra
son Dan v
man and a
dent
"Although
others can $
like this,
know we wi
have had y
dent in the
»cine and w
by’ss. On I
waragedy we
, at the Med 1
flown at hal
be flown in
til after Da
would appre
us know II
in this regar
have been ci
“Yours si
J McGanity
the Faculty
G Blocker,
ecutive Dire
Warren G
ant Director
Student Affa
The many
NY - and
he was best
as well as th
of his parent
ing of great
loss of this f
cal student
afford the lo:
viously talen
in the field o
Well, it s ti
. nual FALL
MT PLEASA
scribers, and
who live on
to MT PLEA
pect a call an
DAD SIMS i
subscript
new ones, wi
gave the freshmen what
seemed to be a comfortable
24-8 lead at halftime
Following a scoreless third
Ieriod, the Parisians unleash
cd the passing bomb They
passed for two touchdowns
Liat closed the gap to 24-22.
Then in the last three min-
ites Paris killed a Mount
70 he’veen George Knudson
t Canada Kei Nagle of Aus.
tr Gary Plaver of South
Air ■ c “guel Sala of Co
"‘mhia Ramon Sota of Spain
and Robert de Vivenzo of Ar-
renfina Then came Nicklaus
with a 34 37 71
Angeles Dodgers' one-two
punch of Sandy Koufax and
Don Drysdale has dripped the
San Francisco Giants peril-
ously close to the canvas for
a 10-count.
In fact, the way the pair
has been pitching, the Dodg-
ers may not even need them
to deliver the knockout blow
That climactic punch con
ceivably could come tonight
following Drysdale’s three-hit,
4-0 victory over Milwaukee
Thursday night.
The triumph, their 13th
straight, kept the National
League-leading Dodgers two
games in front of the Giants,
The friendly
ple at the
BOND STATE
row. You’ll be
BAYTOWN, Tex @e - A
seven-under par 65 gave
Jackson- Bradley, the Fiver
Oaks Country Club pro, a six-
stroke lead Thursday after
the first round of the Texas
PGA championship Bradley
toured Goose Creek Country
ed Baltimore 7-6 in the only Club here with five birdies
- ' - . an eagle and 12 pars. -
Results—Pin Dodgers tied
Four Aces 2-2. Pussy Cats
tied Scramblers 2-2, Rolling
Stones def Cooper 3-1, Sad
Sacks def Jokers 4-0
High Games—W. Wilhite
220, men: G. Milam 193, wo-
men
High Series—T Owsley 598,
men: S. Crooks, women, 524
Whitey Ford won 10 straight
games in Yankee Stadium
before he suffered his first
loss at home in 1965 The
Baltimore Orioles snapped
his string, 21.
4 o’clock game at Tiger Sta
dium
In Thursdays tussle. 31 li
ture Tigers got into the head
knocking This included he
newcomers, Odis Barrett
Phil Williams, Bill Whitaker.
Mack Coker and Johnny II n
ton. In addition Alan Carter
and Jeff Ellis returned " 1
the squad. Roth were knock-
ed out of play by injuries early
in the season
Donald Suaelens of Bel
urn and Chen Ching po of
COMPLETE SELLOUT
AUSTIN- Texa in — A
complete sellout of tickets to
the Texas - Rice football
game here Oct. 23 was an-
nounced yesterday by Univer-
sity of Texas officials
League
Won Lost
14 2
12 4
Two intercepted passes in
he final quarter by Paris
Travis ninth graders resulted
n a 36-24 defeat for Mount
Pleasant High freshmen
Thursday afternoon in Paris
The Paris squad put to-
gether an almost unbelievable
fourth quarter show that
‘n beat for the-individual title
even though he was two
frokes down at the start of
‘he second round play in the
CAnAdi Cup golf matches to
Texarkana
Rolls, 19-0
They grow ’em mean and
big over on the Arkansas
side of Texarkana
The undefeated Texarkana
Ark. High B team Razorhacks
kept their winning ways go
ing here Thursday night to de
feat Mount Pleasant’s junior
varsity, 19-0. .
The big yet speedy Porkers
rang up touchdoyns in the sec-
and, third and fourth quar
ters and put up a tight do
tense that kept the MPHS
gridders from penetrating the
20-yard line
A pass play for about seven
yards netted the first touch
down and it was 7-0 at half,
lime
in the third quarter, a rapid
Texarkana citizen took a punt
return and hauled the pigskin
untouched down the east side
lines of Tiger Stadium for a
tally
Mount Pleasant defense
forced the visters to drive in
for the final TD and it came 1
• on a three -yard dive play in '
the fourth quarter
China, tied at
under par, were
Kansas City 59 100
x-elinched pennant
Thursday’s Results
Minnesota 7, Baltimore 6
Only KAT achedile
Baltimore at Cleveland,
Detroit at Washington
Kansas City at Chicago
Only games acheduled
MT. PLEASANT TIMESFriday. Oct. 1,1965
TIGERS OPEN; AREA Pass Swipes
GAMES ON SCHEDULE Fell Frosh
It’s Worth Waiting For...
Mic himan State, played its
1 football game in 1896,
ating I ansing Hifh School,
MANLEY-
MOORE ?
=
Marine and -
Service Sta.
Hwy. 67 W. PA 4-3429
1-Seleute**1*06—
Pittsburgh:------87 72 .547
Milwaukee--85 74 .535
Philadelphia 82 76 519
St. Louis ------78 80 -.494
Chicago 72 87 453
Houston - - 64 95 .403
New York • 50 109 .314
Thursday’s Resits
San Francisco 5 Cincinnati 3
Los Angeles 4, Milwaukee U
St. Louis 19, Houston 8
Only games scheduled
Today’s Games
Milwaukee at Los Angeles
Cincinnati at San Francisco
St. Louis at Houston
Chicago at Pittsburgh
Philadelphia at New York.
Saturday’s Games
Philadelphia at New York
Chicago at Pittsburgh
St. Louis at Houston
Milwaukee at Lo Angeles
Cincinnati at San Francisco
Mercurys are designed by the industry’s top Cm
engincers . . . then boat-tested under "cus- m he
tomer environment” conditions around the =======
clock and around the calendar at Mercury’s rexr • asana saw
Lake x—the world’s finest marine proving I LEAN AND RUGGED 2
grounds. The resu 11 of this unique progra m g, — , , , w " .
is cumulative: each year’s Mercurys benefit TEWTEEA Y 66
Osteen pitching, beat the
Braves again tonight and the
Reds and 21 game winner
Sammy Ellis down the Giants.
Los Angeles will have its
third pennant in the last sev-
en years.
Drysdale's masterpiece
came just 24 hours after Kou-
fax shut out Cincinnati on two
saw them score four touch-
downs and break down a 24-8
MPHS lead
Paris got the initial touch-
down in the game in the first
quarter and led briefly, 8-0
Then the Tiger frosh took over
completely in the second
quarter to mix up three touch-
downs all on long drives.
Bow Arrow Deer I Quarterback Glenn Moore
weer ind end Don Pilgrim teamed
Season Now Open I o make TD news first. Moore
AUSTIN1 .peared Pilgrim wtih a pass
AUSTIN * Texas deer in the en(j zone from about 20
hunting season opened today yards away. Running back
—for bow-and arrow hunters Tim Lowry tied up the game
The regular gun season op- at 8-8 with a conversion run
ens Nov 13 in most counties The freshmen drove about
under control of the Parks 60 yards again to score with
and Wildlife Commission and Moore passing about 20 yards
Nov 16 in counties covered o slotback Tom Cody on the
by separate legaslative acts payoff. Lowry again ran the
The archery season applies bonus points.
only to certain counties P B Another ofefnsive drive net
Uxell, coordinate for wild Pd the frosh a third tally
bleu rgcd bowmen to con- when Ricky Craig, romped
tart their game wardens if five yards for the TD and
they are uncertain about Moore ran the extras ot
Alley
Fare
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Mt. Pleasant Times (Mount Pleasant, Tex.), Vol. 46, No. 150, Ed. 1 Friday, October 1, 1965, newspaper, October 1, 1965; Mount Pleasant, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1619489/m1/6/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Mount Pleasant Public Library.