The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 70, No. 237, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 6, 1964 Page: 3 of 4
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/
Injuries Worry World
Series Team Managers
Abilene "Pecan Bowl'
Organized By NCAA
ABIIJ1NE, Tex. (LTI) -The
NCAA Midwest College Division
has named its championship
bowl in Abilene Dec. 12 the
"Pecan Bowl." Two teams from j
By STEVE SNIDER
UPI Sports Writer
ST. LOUIS (UPI) — The St. Louis Cardinals and a
number of dazed fans prepared Tuesday to give their
native son Yogi Berra and his New York Yankees a royal Pecan Bowl, one of four region
welcome — followed by a royal boot. |«i championships to be staged
Berra, who left The Hill section of this city nearly
20 years ago to make his fortune with the Yankees, is
expected to get a good-natured Last Minute Decision
reception when he flies in with Berra probably will make the
the American league champ- decision on Kubek after a light
ions about noon. workout at Busch Stadium when j ramento. Calif., for the Pacific
After the formalities, hem- be must decide whether to take fUlo
ever, Yogi will be wished noth- Tony off the World Series ros- Texas teams in serious con-
ing but bad luck in
Series starting Wednesday — Hegan. Abilene Christian, Lamar Tech,
including the sidelining of reg- "I know I’m out of the first an(j prajrjP view A AM;
ular shortstop Tony Kubek game," said Kubek
and. of course, some improve- been nursing the
Sports Comments
(Etc.)
i
Gustafson
In T oumey
Pairiijgs and starting time*
THE CUERO RECORD, Tuesday, Oct. 6, 1994 3
DAILY CROSSWORD
14 Midwest states will be invit-
ed by the NCAA/ to play in the
for the first time this year.
Other regional title games
will be the Tangerine Bowl in
Orlando, Fla,, for /he Atlantic
Coast region; the Mideast cham-
pionship in Murfreesboro, Tenn.,
and the Camellia Bowl in Sac-
By PETE HOWERTON
Record Staff Writer
1 for the Texas PC,A pro-ama-
Yours truly is riding for a fall | Was one among many at the, teur RoU tournarrwnt starting
on account of my favorite ath- j Wednesday at Pecan Valley
lebc teams all cant continue , njght ^ liked wha, j faw but ciolf Club in San Antonio were
winning. At least one of them, th(. ]ast n,.0 quarters or p)aj, ap_ r«.ieas€(i Tuesday by tourney
must fall one cd these days. j pealed to me more than the officials
Refer to the Cuero Gobblers,: first two rounds. j CWs pm ?olf,r c a r ,
the New York Yankees and the j If took no one very long to Gustafson Jr,, wilf head one
Texas Longhorns all of whom | , tJiat Car]e^s camP j foursome in the matches. Gus-
are either winners of or riding i C^itJLto maneuver that they | tafson’s group was scheduled
high in their respective leagues. i, concllls,on reached af- t0 1ee 0ff from tee No. 8 at 1
Of course, the Yanks will be the j,er interesting tilt was over p m Rounding out this four-
only group that will profit ma-j^fs t‘]at had Army's top eleven some u as Rob Treece, Col. Er-
terially since they salted away ,, M P*15’*'ca"y a^le to go nest Mauck and Joe Carmack,!
their fifth consecutive American a* speed the entire game addresses unannounced.
the World ter and add firs,-baseman Mike UniTf^ Pecan Bmvl bids arc League title on Saturday The Tl^We^^ S ! . In P>a-V receding the
- - other two clubs play only for mu(n closer' 1 np west Pont tournament start a foursome
honor and prestige. ‘ r,uh ,has som<> outstanding boss io*i by Pro Bobby Westfall and
All of these teams are jubilant f,lho’ ™oM of them are Yan- Texas A AM golf coach Henry
t the moment of course, a nat- kees- named Billy Sims is , Ransom, Jack Farrar and
men, in the condition' of Card!- week. It’s up to Yogi about the without the ba, of 33-yearoM ural reaction for any set of ath- £ : Frank JaM made up the sen-
na! third baseman Ken Boyer’s scries. ” Ken who led the majors with letes belonging to a team on £ ^ Texas Nederland*, so; >or pari of the wmnmg squad,
ailing left leg Cards Have Problem 119 runs batted in this season top, The American Loop champ* 'V j Vu •. , j which finished with L0 points
Kubek lawk* Doubtful Although the loss of Kubek and spiced his .295 batting av-1 can pretty well figure !? **** * fou^meled by
the smooth func- Crace with 24 home runs. \ their individual ’take’ will be. P‘<* the game st standouts, the Pete Barker which rallied 319
A Mild Tear but this is determined by the kst would read thusly: Armv points.
-whose brother, Clete, number of persons voted a barks Carl Stichweh. Don Par-1 ______—
for *cut’ of tiw world’s series plum, arK* rrank Cosen fine: and
m veteran World Series per- er be hobbled by his leg in- the Yankees — suffered a mild since they participate only in ^on Bjhtlerfield and
former - probably will be jury. tear in the hamstring muscle the gate a, the first four games | ™arK Hamilton Texas --; Backs
sidelined with a sprained wrist. National Leaguers point out 0f his left leg Sunday in the of such series regardless of how 1^", •’ Marxin KnstymK.
In the event he is unable to that Boyer has been shading Cardinals’ pennant - clinching many games are necessary to Hams and Harold Phillip,
niay, he is expected to be re- fai to his left to compensate victory. (determine the world champions. anfl linemen Tobby Noh 1 s, Pete
placed bv Phil Linz, the care- for shortstop Dick Groat's "po- "Boyer's injury is getting a; A body cannot help but tip the Lammons and Olen L nderwood
lree voung infielder who incur- sit ion play" and that a serious-. tittle better," said Cardinalj fedora to the injury-riddled ^ Austin mend asked the new YORK —4UPD— The T'n-
red Berra's wrath with his Is ailing Boyer could moan a physician Dr. I. C. Middleman New Yorkers for coming throu-1 witer after said game who the press International football
famous harmonica solo follow- gapinfljj||iolc in the left side of who is supervising treatments gh as tbev did, regadless of his'°th*r nw boys on the 1964 All- ratings with the first place
ST L " " ~ ' 1 .....' * u“'.......
w ho has
injury for a. tack would be seriously
The word from New York, might upset the smooth func- ciage with 24 home runs,
pending the Yankees' arrival, firming Yankee infield to Some j
is that Kubek regarded as degree, the Cardinals face a, Boyer-
one of the better shortstops an<l more seriouS loss should Boy- will be playing third base
Texas Tops
In Nation
ing an important
feat.
Yankee tie- the SfJ Louis infield. being given
In addition, the Cardinals' at- Bowman.
by trainer Bob
team preference. It was a tre- j America will be besides Koy and | votes and won-lost rec ords;
(Curro Swflri
Established In 1894
Published Each Afternoon Except Saturday and
Sunday Morning _
mendous effort and one aecom- ... ,
It's really not good as of now plished by the entire group. al-! Th<‘ ^Torn' ”av'’ another Po-
land it could get worse." *aid i though one must give a great hut more nr less colorless, j
I Bowman. "He'll play but run- dea] 0f the credit to Pitcher's bail club this year but the hill)
ning the bases could be a prob- Stottlemeyer and-Ramos. Catch- must climb to repeat as]
By THE (XEKO PUBLISHING CXI.
119 E. Main Cuero, Texas
Second class postage paid at Cuero. Texas
lem.
Cardinal second baseman Ju-
lian Javier, a dangerous left-
I field-line hugging hitter against
left - handed- pitching, also is
ailing with a bruised hip that
'may slow him down on the
bases.
TE
1964
RESS ASSOCIATION |
South Iexas Press Association
Southern Newspaper Publishers Association
JACK HOWERTON _ ......
.1 C. “PETE’' HOWERTON
MRS JACK HOWERTON ...
ERNEST H. JENNES............
President and Publisnt’
............ Vice Presidem
1_ Secretary-Treasurei
............... Managing Editor
National Advertising Representative*
lexas Daily Press League Lnc., 960 Hartford Bldg.
Dallas
Subscription Rates
Daily & Sundav: Home delivered by carrier: One Year J12.U0.
six months $6.25. i months $3.25. 1 month $1.10. By mail in
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Counties, one year $8.50, six months $4.50, one month 75c. By
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Official Organ ol the City ot Cuero and County of DeWitt
er Howard. Outfielders Mantle national or even conference
and Marls and a squat little guy champs is right steep,
named Yogi Berra.
Regardless of their physical
condition, don't suppose you
could ever find a fellow who
was too surprised at
how tire AL race finished. It is
an old Yankee custom for the
Men of Gotham to close the sea-
son on top.
Mexico Olympics Team
Emplanes For Tokyo
Team
3. Texas
2. Illinois
3. Alabama
4. Michigan
5. Notre Dante
6. Ohio State
7. Kentucky
8. Nebraska
9. U. C. L. A.
10 Syracuse
Second 3 0
27
2
3
1
P,s
3-0 332:
ACROSS
1. Rollers
6. Above
11. Walt for
12. Of the cheek
13. A selling
again
15. An opera
singer
16. Likeness
18. Ger. title
16. Make
choice
21.Deters
23. Horse’s
foot
25. T1U# of a
knight
26. Sweet,
thick
liquid
28. Partly
dark
82. Epoch *
34. Unadorned
35. Small
villages
39. Uncooked
40. Sleeveless
garment:
Arab.
41. Pushed,
as a boat
43. A prison
45. Sprites
48. Lands
50. Mottled
horse
61. Forays
52. Rob
DOWN
1. A dreaded
conflict
2. Presidential
nickname
8. Caller
4. Kind of
cheese
5. Word of
vague
meaning:
Bib.
6. Part of
“to be’’
7. Youth
S. A
garnish
fora
sandwich
9. Show
partiality
10. Across:
prefix
14. Shield;
var.
17. Oklahoma
city
19.--and
ahs, of
delight
20 . Ha-
w el lan
food
22. Thrash
24. Material
for fire
27. Boy's
school
29. Kind of
fish |
30. Liberian 1
tribe*
31. Evergreen
tree
33. On top
35. Biblical
name
38. Manila
hemp
37. Native
of New
Zealand
T«K«rd>ir‘i
33. Under.
garments
42. Egress
44. Guided
46 Greek
letter
47. The sun
49 Steamship:
abbr.
1
i
s
4
5
% |7
I8
» [10
1 i
Wl,A
II
%
%.
17 ^
i*
&
%
ll
n
2$
ii
%
it
%
it
24
SO
Si
u
H
W
is
u
i*
Fs ^
46
%
41
42
%
%
4J
44
A
4*
3?
4i
49
%
w
,
SI
Si
2-0
3-0
2-0
2-0
3 2-0
1 3-0
3-0
3-0
2-1
11. L. S. U.
259
258 1
210
181'
167
157
48
33 1
31;
_ 112. i.tie' Michigan State and
North Carolina State 24; 14. Mis-
MEXIOO CITY ' UPT'
Mexican delegation to the Tokyo! sjssjpj 21; 15. Southern Califor-
' Olympic games left Mexico City' nia 20; 16. Georgia Tech 18; 17.
--- Monday night in a special chart- Arkansas 14: 18. Wyoming 13;
As for the Gobblers, too much : ered plane christened “Tenoch- I®- Oregon U: 20. 'tie) Florida,
praise c annot be heaped upon ; titlan" -- the name of the Az-1 Arizona State and Iowa,
them. Thev have performed ad-1 tec capital built where Mexico, teaJT*', receiving '°tes 1
mirably this season and desen- City now stands. , Army Duke. Navy. North
ed every one of their four vie- The group included 110 ^. Carolina, Florida . tate, Rice,
tories to date. The writer feels lores, who will compete in 14
however, that without the mis- events. Already in Tokyo were
takes committed they could the equestrian squad, the has-
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE — Here’s how to work Hi
AXTDLBAAXR
fs LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Is used
for the three L’s, X for the two O’s, etc. Single letters, epos*
trophies, the length and formation of the word* axe all hints.
Each day the code letters are different
A Cryptogram Quotation
CE’F IJOE O UNAAKI EJCBTF
JN TBKIF EJOE JTXEF JCW.-.
TCB JTHHOXZ
Yesterday’* Cryptoqoote: LIBERTY MEANS RESPONSI-
BILITY. THAT IS WHY MOST MEN DREAD IT.—SHAW
(C 4984, Klee Features Syndicate. Inc.)
4%
Arizona.
INTEREST PAID ON SAVINGS
ACCOUNTS LEFT FOR ONE YEAR.
TELEPHON E CR 5 3131
I
“thy
KING
EDWARD’
Amtnet't Largtst Stlling Cigar
FULL SET SALE
Total Porformanco 1965
Ford Galaxio 500 LTD 4 Door Hardtop
New Goodyear Nylons
with Tufsyn Rubber
In the 11earl and Imdy of this new All
Weather "42". there are luo materials
that add thousands of miles to a lire's
life .1 T Nylon cord gives this tire greater
strength than other economy-line tires
And Tufavn. < inodj car's super mileage
rubber is the toughest auto tire rubber
Goodyear has ever used
* price plus fox o"d recoppoble tiro for each tire purchased, |f ony
trade-in tire is not recoppable, add $2 per tire to price.'
NO MONEY DOWN WITH RECAPPABLE TRADE-INS—FREE M0UNTIN6I
GOODYEAR NATION WIDE “NO LIMIT"
GUARANTEE-AII New Goodyear Auto Tires
are Guaranteed against defects in workman-
hip and materials and normal road hazards,
except repairable punctures.
It a Goodyear Tire Fails Under this Guarantee
any of more than 80,000 Goodyear dealers in
the United States'and Canada will make al-
lowance on a new tire based on original tread
depth remaining and current "Goodyear Price".
I
GOOO>^t/|R
i> COPPEDGE TIRE SERVICE
Cuero 1 Most ( uinplr-te Tire 8tui k
Vulcanizing and Recapping
PHONE ( R 5 SMS
have won a couple of their ketball team, and the yachting}
games by a greater margin—a team. 1
more comfortable one, shah one -
say. I
The fact remains though, that | •
the Green and White laddies are
undefeated whether they won
all of their games by one point
or twenty-five. Sort of like the
fellow who gets a single and
anotlier who gets a homer—the
batting averages are identical.
Coach Bill Ford's men will try
to improve tlieir 4-0 record
here Friday night when they
' I tangle with the Beevilie Trojans.
' who have not been too impres-
sive this season. A glance a,
the Trojan record reveals that
| they are 1-3 on the season and ,
0-2 in league play. This eom-1
1 pares with Cuero's 4-0 for the |
! year and 2-0 in the conference. ;
Such records set the stage for j
the not-toostrong Trojans to
slap a defeat on the red-hot ,
Gobblers and spoil their home-;
coming weekend, hut this per-
son cannot bring himself around
to believing such a thing will
j occur.
TV last statement bears out
vour conclusion then, that the
writer has leaned once more
toward Gobbler win number
five this Friday night and y®u'd
be rGht as a fox if vou did so.
• n wnH *>0 /\f»»
inim Record Files...
10 YRS AGO
Oet. «. 1954
Miss Elinor Dion who had ,
been visiting her sister, Mrs. 1
Bud Javery. left for her home
in Worcester. Mass......Mr. j
and Mrs. Lawrence Keseling.
Mrs. He.rtha Ferguson and
Mrs. Julia Keseling left for Wa-
terloo, Iowa Mrs. Carrie
Shterie left for Laurel. Miss, to
visit Mr. and Mrs. Jinmn Carl-
ton and family Lt. i. g. T.
O. Ruche! \'ns bore visiting hi-
.parents He was stationed
al San Pedro. Calif. Mrs.
Lula Daniel was visiting in
Nixon Harold Menke of
Harlingen was here visiting bis
mother. Mrs. M. G. Menke who
was recovering from an illness
20 YRS- AGO
Oct. 6, m»
Mrs. Lee Fischer of Reeville
Was visiting Mrs. Jack Hower-
ton . Mrs. J. B. Johnston
left for a trip to Washington. D
C. Mrs. H. A. Bible of Cis-
co was \;siting her daughter.
Nan Bible . . Bertha Marquis
left for Seguin to enter Texas
I Lutheran College ...... Parker
! Ell/.ey left for Bowman Field,
Ky. his new station ......... S.. J.
!\\a!hs was elected president of
the newly-organized Cuero Tur-
key Assn. ... Bennie Prause
opened a Music Conservatory
For Sure Fire Results
Use s Record Classified
Wan, At
Snmr Slat* Sank
WesOMff. Texas Member F D T CL
SpRCiou* interior of
ntw ultr* luxurious Ford LTD
Nt« back" instrument
pan*l provides more room. Opt'onai
Safety Conv«nitnct controls prev.
ously BvailRble only on Thund«rbird
Most luggage spact
•vtr m M Ford
Only in Fo'd < sgors
d j«! fRC'.cg - ear seats
mete**
ur-
Only 17 cars
(and they're all Fords)
offer all these
exciting
new features
for 1965!
You have 17 big Fords to choose from
for '65—including luxurious LTD's and
sporty XL's-the widest selection in
the popular pi iced field—with feature*
vou won't find on other cars at any price!
New body-frame-suspension rvstem
Result: The strongest, smoothest Fords
ever built. And the ijthefejt—their all
nr« frame, bodv and suspensions
v irtualh seal out noise and road shock
New—automatic transmissions »re all
3-«peed -Smoother, more e'-onomical
than the 2 Speed automatics offered
on some competing cars
New 2*0-<u in. Big Six-Gives you low
gas bills, high performance. Bigger 6 csd-
indrr engine than in any competing car.
New 5afetv-Conveaience control
Has automatic door locks and light.*
v hich warn vou when fuel's low, doors
are ajar, and remind you that seat
belts are unfastened.
New aud bigger trunk—Generous
room for various sizes and kinds of
luggage .is illustrated ... or room for
four big 2 suiters upright.
New dual facing rear seats in Ford
wagons - A lord exclusive, ideal tor
t.iinilirs up to 10. Seats told down
lor a lockable extia space below deck.
New reversible key—Works no matter
v hich side is up.
New interior spaciousness—Lower
transmission tunnel, new "swept-bark"
dash, and other interior change* make
rhe>e the most comfortable Fords ever
New array of courtesy lights—Illumi-
nated doorways, ash tray, and interior.
A real convenience tor night driving
Take a test drive— The list of new
features could go on and on. The total
result i« something vou simply have
to «et. feel, touch. Come in soon
Unique reversible key
* cue* either side up
Test drive Total ftrfornmce 65...BESTYEAR YET TO GO FORD
SCStAXi - HLC0S ■ U IU'I • 1010 ■ THCSMSSIS
here
Mr. and Mrs. Herb-
ert Domblutli had reiurned
from the if honeymoon in Cor-
nu- Christi Hubert Barber1
had returned home afei mo.
years in«Eng land. |
WEBER MOTOR COMPANY
115-121 N. GONZALES ST. CUERO, TEXAS
Rl[i[ a AL 7 ri'NfV.'v MAGIC Suva At a, ThI.fAW MOIob roMTAM $ AONCE* I0TUNH*, MW V08K1 WOOD'S EAll
4s
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Jennes, Ernest H. The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 70, No. 237, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 6, 1964, newspaper, October 6, 1964; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth695546/m1/3/?q=%22%22~1: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cuero Public Library.