The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 68, No. 137, Ed. 1 Monday, April 30, 1962 Page: 2 of 6
six pages : ill. ; page 24 x 18 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:
mc",«; % -AMrsiEl
?. THE CUERO RECORD, Mon,, April SO, 1982
7:;.w,
^Trotters Blank Charco
9-0 Behind Albrecht,
Aitkens Here Sunday
: jf
i
Kirby Albrecht and Leonard
Aitkens shared honors in the
Tui-key Trotters 9-0 victory ov-
er Charco Sunday in Cuero
l\rk Stadium. Albrecht pitch-
- ed a one-hit game and Aitkens
bailed in four runs and scored
» one in the third when he stole
' fjoxjie.
The Trotters were in control
of the game all the way. Only
one Charco batter, the lead-off
man, reached second base. He
made it there twice.
In addition to holding the vis-
itors to a single hit, Albrecht
added to his credit by striking
out 10 batters and allowing no
walks.
^ The game was scoreless un-
til the bottom of the third,
when the Trotters broke away
three rans.
„ Jimmy Crain singled and
Doug Taylor got on base on an
batted in two more runners on
a single.
Cuero wound up ils scoring
with a foutrun surge in the
eighth inning.
Cuero batters tapped two
Charco pitchers for nine hits.
The Trotters made only one er-
ror. /
The Trotters will play Edna
there May 6. In an earlier
game, Edna beat Cuero 8-2.
The Trotters, now carrying a
3-1 record, will play the Cuero
Old Timers May 19 in Cuero
Park Stadium at 8 p. m. Pro-
ceeds of toe game will be do-
nated to the Daule School band
uniforms fund.
J. C. Mathis will manage the
Trotters and Joe Albert Ma-
this and O. D. (Big Boy)
Green will manage the Old Ti-
i mers.
i Score by innings: R H E
. . SPORTS
! COMMENTS
saaivswafv^vm'
Writer
Every candidate running for
office, whether in this state or
not, of course has the privilege
of spending his dough on any
type of entertainment that he
feels the public of the area will
like, when and while he cam-
paigns.
In the better than half of a
century we've been on this ear-
th however, we’ve never seen
an off ice seeker bring by Band-
men Jan Garber or Guy Lom- ed
fflr&A2?S!i*2 ZJH? I Sr
uel Hopkins advanced the run-
ners to second and third.
r; Aitkens scored Crain and;
Taylor on a line drive, and la-1
ter. stole home base to give j
Cuero its third tally.
Texas College
Sports Schedule
bardo and that’s the type of mu-
sic we like, personally.
Don’t suppose though, that
any fellow running for any of-
fice available in Texas, would
take our comments to heart and
(Tommy) Wade to
and maybe (Jim) Hudson and
(Marvin) Kristynik If they
along. Carlisle and Genung can
get out from the center faster
than Cotten, but Mike had
Rational year, I was pleased
with the spring Kristynik and
Hudson (soph QB’s) had,"
On Sophomores — “(Ernie)
Koy’s receiving has been sensa-
tional. So has the punting of Er-
nie and Gary Crain. We got
great sophomore play last year
and we don’t have that kind of
sophs around now. Our soph
linemen will be weaker than
last year." |
On Speed — "We gain speed
at quarterback but we k»e
speed elsewhere.”
1062 Intra-Squad Game
A fine 2-point-conversion pass
catch by End Ben House provid-
Bthe winning points as Pat|
or s Race—V
Wilson In Running
Feud With Daniel
Culpepper’s Change team shad-
ed Perry McWilliams’ Whites,
15-14, in the March 24 spring
game watched in terrible wea-
ther by an estimated 6,000 fans.
, , The winning score came with
or,e ! 3 :’20 left in the game. Culpepper
had scored the touchdown on a
those above-mentioned
Meanwhile, we wish all candi-
dates ‘a-runnin’ success — all
those, that is, except those
are not voting for.
we
In the fifth inning. Aitkens
K
1
rrrrtrrrm
VOTE FOR
aggress/z,e
leodersA//>
ELECT
The schedule of athletic events
for the week involving South-
west Conference and Texas col-
lege teams:
MONDAY
GOLF — Rice at Texas Tech. 1
TENNIS—Texas A&M at SMT'I
Rice at TCU, Texas at T
Tech. Southwest Texas a’
Edwards.
TUESDAY
BASEBALL — Texas Lutheran j
at University of Houston, Arkan-
sas at Tulsa 2. Southwest Texas
at Trinity.
TENNIS —Rice at SMU, Pan
American at Texas Tech, Texas
A&M at TCU, Baylor at North
Texas.
WEDNESDAY
BASEBALL—SMU at Rice 2,
Texas at TCU. Baylor at Texas
A&M, St. Edwards at Texas Lu-
theran.
THURSDAY
BASEBALL— Texas at TCU
Baylor at Texas A&M. Rice at
Gonna swipe again today, it
being Monday and all. This
time around we re stealing from
Coach Royal Darrell and the
University of Texas Longhorns.
Folkwing are some of the ob-
servations Texas Head Coach
Darrell Royal made during and
immediately after the 1962
spring training period.
On Injuries - "We had a 13_vard nlnK
one-yard plunge. Soph QB Jim
Hudson then went for die two
points. He passed deep in the
end zone, and House made an
outstanding catch just inches
from the end zone boundary to
decide things.
A stiff wind and dust storm
hampered both teams for a
while. It was 0-0 at the half.
Culpepper ran 5 yards for the
other Orange TD. Scoring for
the White were .Soph FB Joe Ed !
Lynn (a three-yard run) and |
Soph TB Charles Buckalew (a |
Editors Note— (The fol-
lowing Is nnother la s so-
les of biographical por-
traits of each of the six
Democratic and two Re-
publloM candidates for
governor of Texas.)
AUSTIN (UPI)- A gradu-
ate geologist, he turned to a
legal-political career when
there were no oil industry Jobs
available during the depres
Yellows usually inhabit slug-
gish water.
Channel cats prefer moving
water, rapids, etc., and the big
blues are found in big lakes and
large rivers.
All are caught on trotlines,
droplines, throwlines, or rods
and reels, when baited with
stink bait, crayfish, chicken
guts, or any other concoction
dreamed up by a vivid imagina-
tion.
There are few thrills more ex-
citing than feeling the tug of a
big cat on the other end of the
line.
sion.
As a young assistant attorney
general in 1940, he first eyed
the governor’s chair.
Today, 20 years later, Atty.
Gen. Will Wilson is in the scrap
for governor, and says his
fourth-place finish in last
year’s special U. S. Senate el-
ection didn’t hurt him a bit
“I don’t agree with the so-
called political experts,” Wil-
son said. “Nobody can predict
this race with any accuracy.”
The 49-year-old Wilson de-
scribes himself as a moderate
conservative with appeal to the
middle-class of salaried and
self-employed workers.
A Presbyterian, Wilson said
his philosophy is such that “If
I fight a good hard battle and
fate is with me, I will win."
He is from a pioneer family
in Dallas. Wilson attended
high school and law school at
Southern Methodist. Before en-
tering SMU, he received a geol-
ogy degree from Oklahoma Un-
iversity in 1934.
Vtlaon’s legal career was
interrupted by World War II
where he saw service as an ar-
tilleryman in the South Pacific.
When he returned home he
found Dallas a wide open town
allowing gambling and prosti-
tution. Wilson was elected dis-
trict attorney and gained na-
tional attention as a crime bus-
ter during two terms. He was
then elected as associate jus-
tice of the State Supreme Court
where he served six years.
Wilson was elected attorney
general in 1956, and re-elect-
ed in 1958 and 1960. One of his
biggest battles as state's at-
torney was his victorious fight
in the U. S. Supreme Court to
let Texas keep its oil-rich tide-
lands.
He considered running for
governor in 1960 against Gov.
Price Daniel, then changed his
mind. Last year he started an
open feud with the governor
over taxation and abandoned
property legislation.
"The dominant issue in this
campaign is whether Daniel
should be allowed a fourth two-
year term,” Wilson said. "I
advocate one four-year term
for governor.”
Wilson said Daniel was irre-
sponsible in not being for a
sales tax while spending the
state into a deficit.”
He favors lowering the 2 per
cent sales tax to 1 per cent and
taxing all items without exemp-
tions. He contends there ar«
“too many exemptions, inequi-
ties and loopholes” inithe pres-
ent tax.
Wilson said he was - disap-
pointed hy his showing in the
special election last year. He
pitched his campaign on the
urgency or the Cuban situation,
and said he was she months
too early.
He and Mrs. Wilson have a
daughter ,Lou, 18, and a son,
Will Jr., 12. He said the family
is used to political campaign-
ing, although, "it is a rugged
sort of life.”
To Attend Wedding
LONDON (UPI) - Admiral of
the Fleet Earl Moutbatten will
visit Cyprus May 10 and then
proceed to Athens to attend the
wedding of Princess Sophie, it
was announced.
SMITH
1958 CHEV. 2 dr. tedan
V-t» Pow.rfllld*
$750
DUCKETT
spring training of injuries. And
we weren’t doing anything dif-
ferent this spring. We played
six games last fall without a
'’aver missing one minute for
n juries.”
On '61 Season — "We had ev-
erything going our way last
year. We caught everybody just
right. Oklahoma, Arkansas,
Rice and Baylor all had bad!
things happen to them, both in-
jury-wise before the game and
breaks during the game. We got
a lot of cheap touchdowns in
those games. I was surprised
every week over the results. Un-
til the TCU game our first team
never played in the fourth quar-
ter. And ii took five games for
Saxton to letter."
On Players — "We have some
fine football players coming
The White was the statistical I
victor, 15-8 in first downs, 149-
125 in rushing yards and 91-51
in passing yards. Culpepper (13 j
for 57) was the top Orange rush-1
er, while Gary Crain (13 for 50)
paced the White. Crain and Er-1
nie Kov of the Orange did some j
outstanding punting.
More thieving —
When you pull in your catfish,
do you know what sort of critter !|
you have on your line?
There are three principal spe-:
cies in Texas — the yellow cat!
(a big, flat-headed critter), the j
channel cat (gamiest and tast-
iest. of the three), and the blue j
cat (largest of the three).
! Sam Houston, St. Mary’s at Sou- j back- but we sure lost same,
I thwest Texas You can’t possibly have as good
TENNIS—Lamar Tech at Uni-! a team 35 ^ *ad wit* ,f,olks
! versity of Houston. such as Saxton, Cotten. Collins,
j TRACK - Texas Tech, SMU Moses and hoys like them
find TCU at Baylor quadrangu-
KCFH-CUERO
1600 On The Dial - 500 Watts
MONDAY THRU FRIDAY
MATTHEW
DeWstt
ii
Rfe
f.
County Judge
lar: Texas A&M and Rice at
Texas triangular; Texas college
meet at Abilene.
FRIDAY
BASEBALL—Wayland
Ross.
GOLF - SMU at Rice, Okla-
homa at Arkansas, Texas at
TCU. Abilene Intercollegiate
; moni.
j TENNIS—TCU at Hardin-Sim-
J mons.
I TRACK—Arkansas and Tulsa
at Pittsburg Kan. State triangu-
lar.
SATURDAY
BASEBALL—Texas Lutheran
We
lost some outstanding football
players, both in ability and lead-
ership. Our loss is great in qual-
ity, not numbers.”
On Defen.se — “Our defense
at Sul i will be sligkitly down from last
year because of replacements
at tackle. Our linebackers will
lie back, plus newcomers (Clay-
ton i Lack & (Timmy) Doerr,
I've never had a better pair
than (Pat) Culpepper and (Jo-
hnny) Treadwell. About the on-
ly difference in Pat & Johnny
is Pat can catch the ball but
Johnny can't catch his breath.
He swats at interceptions like
he's swatting flies.'
Democratic
May 5.
Primary
1962
at Southwest Texas, Wavland at ’ On Offense — "Offensively,
Sul Ross, Texas at SMU tenta-1 we've still got (Tommy) Ford,
tive.
GOLF
Political Advertisement
Paid For By Pete Matthew
Baylor at Arkansas.
TENNIS—TCU at Texas Tech.
Trinity at Pan American, Bay-
or at Texas A&M,
TRACK—Eastern New Mexico,
McMurry and Highlands a t
j (Jerry) Cook, (Ray) Poage and
some folks — but we won't have
that skinny guy going 78, 80, 66
and 56 yards for us like last
year."
On Quarterbacking — "Our
quarterbacking will be (Johnny)
5:59
Sign On
6:00
Mateo Perez
7:00
Musical Clock
7:30
Top of the News
8:00
Coffee Time
9:05
■Polka Parade
10:05
Tops in Pops
12:00
World News
12:05
Texas Today
12:15
Local News
12:30
Trading Post
12:40
Farm Report
12:45
Spins & Needles
1:05
Musical Showcase
2:05
Tops in Pops
5:30
Sports
5:35
Tops in Pops
5:59
Sign Off
SATURDAYS:
1:30
Polka Parade
1:05
Swinging Eye
SUNDAYS;
7:30
Sunday Serenade
10:05
Sacred Heart Program
11:00
Presbyterian Church
1:00
Hour of the Crucified
1:30
Swinging Eye
5:45
Rosary
• k
Are You
t-
Getting
the MOST out
of the
-f. £
Dollars
You Spend?
West Texas State quadrangular.! Genung, (Duke) Carlisle and
"News of the Hour” on the Horn
“Headlines” on the Half-Hour
The answer to this question depends
WHERE you do your spending. Money spent out of
town is gone forever, as far as you are concerned.
On the other hand, much of the money that you
spend at home STAYS at home, where it can help
build a better community for you and your family.
Nubilt Aluminum
SCREENS
From our local business concerns comes a large
part of the taxes and contributions that maintain
our schools, streets, playgrounds, hospitals and
other important community facilities and services.
Part of every dollar you spend at home goes
into these constructive channels, where it keeps on
working for YOU. This is the part that makes a big
difference in YOUR favor!
NO PAINTING
NO RUST
You get an “extra bonus’’ of benefits for every
dollar, when you
24 in. x 50 in. .
24 in. x 58 in. .
28 in. x 62 in. .
30 in. x 50 in. .
32 in. x 54 in.
34 in. x 54 in.
SHOP AT HOME
FREE ESTIMATES
CALL CR 5-3414
Farmer’s Stale Bank
& Trust Co.
Member FDIC ,
V .•■■■. •■'■." ' •■■■■■■ - ' ' ' . , .
WOODWORTH &
DENT
Every Form e< las. A Beads
KOEHLER
DRV GOODS COMPANY
Cuero’* Store ol Quality Since 18M
, . ' i.'1'' ', "e? 1 «
THE CUERO RECORD
DAILY WEEKLY SUNDAY
A Newspaper Reflects Its
Oommimlty.
Chamber of Commerce
& Agriculture
Helping Ye Build the Caere Arps
’m tl' t v ' ' :• .
STOWERS
FURNITURE CO.
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
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.
The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 68, No. 137, Ed. 1 Monday, April 30, 1962, newspaper, April 30, 1962; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth696822/m1/2/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cuero Public Library.