The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 69, No. 177, Ed. 1 Sunday, July 28, 1957 Page: 2 of 10
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> m cunto RECORD, Sxnday, July 28, 1BST
Trotters To
Meet Aces At
Cuero Park
6ame This Afternoon Ex-
pected To Prove
Real Battle
I Trotters enter today's affair with
a record of ten wins and seven I
losses, and Skipper Zimmerman
plans to go 'all out' to take this
one and square the year's record
, with the visitors,
home game In action Markowsky be-
the Cuero Turkey hind the plate. Cuero will prob-
ably use Crain at first, Mason
at second, Friedel at third. Ger-
hold at shortstop, and Gay, Jan-
ocek and Papacek in the outer
In the next to last
«f the year,
Trotters take on the El Campo
Aces this afternoon at Park Sta-
dium, the contest slated to get
underway at 3 p.m.
It will be the fourth meeting
Of the summer between the
clubs, with the Aces having two
wins and the Trotters one vic-
tory’. The Aces took 4-3 and 6-1
counts over the Flock, while
Cuero defeated the Aces 7-6 in
their first meeting.
Manager Zimmerman may,
start any one of three hurlers on
garden.
After only mediocre hitting
earlier in the season, several of
the Trotters are finally begin-
ning to pound the ball pretty
well. They registered fifteen
bingles in the Fentress game
July 23 and chalked up eight a-
gajnst Seguin here Thursday
Gus Mason is especially on a
the mound today, with Moon current hitting spree having
Mullins, John Schmidt and Lefty j seven hits in his last ten appear-
Pryble all ready for duty. The ances at the plate,
first-named pair divided hurl- Concentrated efforts are being
ing chores against Seguin here made by Cuero club officials to
Thursday night, so both should get good crowds out for the final
be in condition to toil this after- j pajr 0f home games this after-
noon. Babe Markowsky will prob- noon and next Saturday night
ably be behind the plate for the w hen they close the season
Cuero crew. j gainst the Foster Field Jets
El Campo will doubtless give Victoria.
Elmer Rod the starting pitching; Next Thursday night the Trot-
assignment, but the Aces are j ters go to Gonzales for a final
«aid to have four first-line twirl-| game w|th the Indians.
ers and could go with one of the___
others. ! The moon has a temperature
Full season record of the Aces below its surface of about 100 de-
fa not available here, but the grees below zero centigrade.
Capt. M. A. Candal of LaUag. Fourth Army
advisor, presents the 36th Division baseball
championship trophy to Sp-S Hussy Dietse,
t Company M team player-manager, as the lo-
cal unit grouped In company formation to re-
ceive Ihe award.
To Ihe rear of Dietse are Kfc. Babe Mar-
kowsky, gp-3 David Peres, Sgt. Sonny Beau,
Sp-1 RoTiert Lee, Kp s Monroe Relger aad Pfc.
Barry (openha\ er, members of the trophy
winning team.
Standing to the extreme right Is Company
Commander 1st U. LeRoy Cobb.
(Record Photo)
Stop
You
i Says
Mantle And
Stop Yankees
Chicago Boss
NEW YORK, July 27
and figures:
APES TAKE
LITHE LOOP
UTHELOOP
All STARS TO
Y TUESDAY
CUaro's Little League All-
team will enter a six-team
in Port Lavaca Tues-
day. when the local squad, coach-
ed by Martin Hearne, takes on
one of four Victoria teams enter-
ed in the tourney.
Game time is 6:00 p. m. A
second game at 8 p. m. will sec
Port Lavaca meet one of the four
Victoria teams.
Winners of Tucaday's double
header win meat at t p. m. Wed-
nesday in Pert Lavaca.
Probable starting lineup for
wo fa Have Tbompeon, catch*
Tommy Natbo, pitcher, Jerry
bn »n. 1st baas, William
lfromgoole, 2hd base. Sporty
Calhoun, 3rd base, Mike Frers,
short stop, Larry Pullin, left field,
John Wheeler, center field, and
Henry Wood or Roy Kueker,
right field.
Others expected to see action
are Carlos Gottschalt, Nor by
Buchhom, Edward Whiteside and
Jim Stone.
All Little Leaguers not on the
All-Star team were requested
Saturday by Hearne to turn in
their uniforms at the Little Lea-
gue field Monday or Tuesday.
Suita not turned in then will have
to be taken to the high school
principal's office at later dates.
Major League
Standings
By UNITED PRESS
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Player A Club g mb r b pet.
Aaron MU. 92 383 72 133 .347
Musial St. L. 92 362 57 122 .337
Groat Pgh. <9 281 32 94 .335
Pondy Pgh. 82 330 41 107 .324
Schndnst Mil. 92 398 52 125 .314
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Williams Bos. 87 291 67 106 .364
Mantle N. Y. 93 309 89 111 .359
Boyd Bal. 91 302 52 99 .328
Foot Chi. 94 365 57 119 .326
Skowron N. Y. 81 301 45 98 .326
NATIONAL LEAGUE - Aaron,
Braves 30; Snider, Dodgers 24;
Crowe, lUdlegs 9; MusUl,
Cards 21; Banks. Ctts 2d.
AMERICAN LEAGUE—Man.
liams. Red Sox 27; Manila,
Yanks 27; Steven, Senators 23;
Maxwell, Tigers 19; Colavito,
Indians 17; Zeroial, Athletics 17.
NATIONAL LEAGUE - Man-
j tie, Yanks 70; SievCrs. Senators
i 69; Skowron. Yanks II; Wertz,
Indians 62; Jensen, RM Sox 62.
NATIONAL LEAGUE - A-
aron. Braves 79; Mutial, CaiJj
74; Crow, edlegs 19; Ennis,
Cards 65; Hoak, ReSlega 51.
PITCHING
Schmidt. Cards 9-1; SaAtard,
Phils 134; Burning. Tigers 13-
3; Donovan, White Son 10-3;
Donovan. While Sax 104; Shams,
Yanks 94.
The Cuero Little League Apes
climbed to the top of the ladder
and walked off with the 1957 Lit-
tle Loop championship here Fri-
By OSCAR FRALEY
United Press Sport Writer
(OP)- Fearless Fraley, fart. "Jy „ lhty b|uM , ^
fighting Red team by a score of
If you have any doubts but what Mickey Mantle is 10-4.
the lead sparkplug of the New York Yankees take the1 Charle* Gohmert and William
word of Chicago manager A. Lope. - he la. jSS JSTJSSSi
“Stop Mantle and you stop the Yankees," A1 says em-ship while the losers paraded
STOP
DAMAGE
with %
phatically, “particularly in view of the fact that
Berra isn’t having an exceptionally good year.”
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The White Sox en masse hold
that while stopping Mantle may
not completely halt the Yankee
Juggernaut, it puts a dent in
those New York wheels. And,
concentrating on Mantle, the Sox
are only two games back of the
Yanks on the season series, 9-7.
Water Skiers Meet—
One of the toughest tourna-
ments of the year will be staged
at San Diego Aug. 23-25 when
dare-devil water skiers compete
in the 15th annual national cham-
pionships.
They'll shoot for the record set
by A1 Rosenberg in 1955, when
he leaped 125 feet off the six-
foot ramp at 35 miles per hour.
They might break the mark, too,
with a new crack-the-whip tech-
nique which sends them up the
ramp at an angle at speeds up
to 50 miles an hour. Anyone for
tennis?
Basketball men don't think
much of the pro basketball
chance of 5-foot, 9-inch Chet
Forte, the Columbia All-America
who has signed with the Cincin-
nati Royals. Height is Just too
important.
Newsmen "Favoring” Williams'
This may be the reason why
Boston scribes keep "on” Ted
Williams. The Boston Red Sox
slugger admits lhat "I seem to
do better at the plate when I'm
mad because it seems to sharp-
en my reflexes.” So they're do-
ing him a favor.
Lionel Hebert, the new PGA
champion, entered his first tour-
nament at the age of nine. It was
a caddy tournament and the first
prize, which he won by chipping
in from off the green, was—two
bottles of whiskey.
He never won another tourna-
ment until he took the PGA
crown last week—20 years after
his first tournament triumph.
Tommy Natho. Donald Gohmert
and John Wheeler to no avail.
All were stars as the youngsters
battled it out.
Both clubs had a 11-4 record
until they went into the final
game.
Winner of the Friday night tilt
received the Sarah Naml trophy
and silver baseballs with presen-
tation being by Bill Naml in
memory of his mother.
GOUVERNEUR, N. Y
A postcard received recently by
Nelaon B. Winter*, Secretary of
the Gouvemeur Chamber of
Commerce, was mailed 43 yean
ago by a Leo Price of Ithaca
who requested Information on
veterinarians here. The card
was postmarked March 15, 1914.
Winters’ reply to Price was re-
turned. marked "person and ad-
dress unknown.”
’Yankee” comes from Die
Dutch word "yanku" meaning
to snarl.
riMEDoe.ii Heal
ALL WOUNDS
//f- rl
c«pr I fmmqtta. ifjy
N«r does time core all Ills. A mother who shrugs off "grow-
ing pains” as someth log her child will outgrow Is luvMug
trouble. So-called "growing pains” are syraptaua that stay
Indicate a heart condition, rheumatism, er sense other
serious aliment that must have the Immediate attehMea sf a
physician. In fact, time usually aggravates any esUdlBed
that to left un diagnosed and un treated. la all matters per-
taining to health, the sensible thing to do Is te get the
competent advice of a physician at the first sign sf trouble.
r? SUTTERTprcl
' Hr i v h i f r i ft k
Sports Briefs
MILLIONS OF DOLLAR.*-
LOST EACH YEAR
3y people over 40 years being half
ick. Victims of —|ur Last op-
xrtunities thru lack of energy. All
.ho result of lack of appetite, bus ol
Jeep and Just plain run-down con-
dluon. Ail of this Is nnnormurj. It
U the result of Improper diet. Bup-
piy the vitamins and minerals you
Mted with ALKA-B. step up the pro-
lix Uon at hanaooes in your fcLwxl
itream with AUCA-B, and get
Jack the feeling of youth, ALKA*B
* wki by an druggists. Small star
'1 39 Rronomv else tSM.
I- L. BUTTERY, Ph. G.
QUOTES FROM
THE NEWS
Reg. U- 8. Pat. Off.
jBy United Press
CONCORD, N.C. Kitty Butler,
10, speaking for the first time I
when her father asked her where j
she would like to vacation with
the pony she had won by her 30-
day silence:
“Windy Hill.”
LOUISVILLE, Ky. -Mrs. Irene
Nickerson, mother of Col. John
C. Nickerson Jr., on the court
martial conviction of her son:
"I don’t think the court mar-
tial decision was entirely fair—
but it could have been worse.”
WASHINGTON - Former Al-
aska Gov. Ernest Gruening a-
greeing to take Speaker Sam
BALTIMORE, July 27. -8b-
Thtrd-baseman Billy Goodman
of the Baltimore Orioles la ex-
pected to be sidelined about two
weeks with a broken left index
finger. Goodman suffered the
injury when struck by a pitch,
by Detroit's Lou Sleater last j
Thursday.
DETROIT, July 27, —(It—Don |
Lee, 23-year-old son of ex-big
league pitcher Thornton Lee,
was optioned by the Detroit |
Tigers today to their triple-A I
farm club at Charleston, W. Va.!
Lee pitched in 38 2-3 innings this
season and had a 1-3 won-lost
record.
LOS ANGELES. July 27. —«,
— Former Assistant Secretary of '
Commerce Harold C. McClellan ;
has been chosen by the city and ;
county of Los Angeles to repre-
sent them in negotiations to.
transfer the Brooklyn Dodgers,
to Los Angeles.
HELSINKI. July 27, -di-
American hammer thrower Bob |
HOW TO SOLVE
FIX-UP PROBLEMS
(A True Experience)
Rayburn s advice and forgo un- Backu, and 24-year-old Finnish
SEE IT FIRST IN CUERO! BRAND NEW!
ELVIS
MODERN MUSICAL TREAT.
IXCfTINO STORY I
til next year a drive for a House
vote on statehood for Alaska leg-
islation :
“We feel there will be a much
better atmosphere for the bill's
consideration then, and I'm sure
chances of its passage will be
much Improved.”
LONDON — Prime Minister
Harold Macmillan endorsing a
U.S. proposal for a solid system j
of international law to rule all
nations:
"That no doubt is the great I
test before us all.”
MOSCOW — Soviet Communist
Party Leader Nikita S. Khru-
sehev when asked whether It
was true that Russian Jews are
|j not permitted to leave the coun-
try:
“It is true to some extent. We
issue passports only to those we
consider useful. Recently we
gave passports to Polish Jews genroth, BUI Fly and
for repatriation to Poland but we j Summers, high school
know they went on to Israel and tatives, and Carolyn <
we know that Israel is pursuing Gene Mangum and Marilyn Pto-
an aggressive policy.” per. Junior School pupils.
Javelin thrower Elsa Torikka
were married Friday in the cha-
pel of the Helsinki "Suurkirkko” j
Church. The two athletic stars
met last year when Backus
visited Finland with an Ameri-
can track and field group.
SMesh Will
Meed Work-Shop
Representatives of Senior
High and Junior School students |
councils will attend a five-day
work shop at Trinity University i
in San Antonio this week.
While at the university, the
group, accompanied by Princi-
pal C. H. Mangum, will be hous-
ed in school dormitories. They !
wUl leave today and return Pri-!
day.
Students to attend are Errol;
Dietze, Nix Bodden, Rose Mar- j
Lou
Taylor,
CHICAGO — Teamster Vice
President James Hoffa comment-
ing on a report that AFLdO
President George Meany would-
n’t accept him if he were elected
MORE STUDENTS
MADISON. Wis. —(UP)— The
University of Wisconsin announ-
ced an increase of 3,585 students
during the second semester of
TODAY!
thru TUESDAY!
HlUftg
Box Office Opens ll:ts
Come Early: Free Pbole*
Of Eh Is While They Last
president of the Teamsters Un-1 this year, raising the total num-
ion: I her of students to 20,873. L. J.
“Meany is not a member of Lins, director of student person-,
the Teamsters Union and has no ncl statistics studies, said the
vote in our convention.” I figure was the third highest reg- i
■ -- ! istration in history.) surpassed
A female fly ran lay its first only the early postwar years
batch of eggs less than a week 1 cj 1946-48 with the enrollment ol
after its birth. i v eterans. j
The man’s daughter was to be married. The
reception was to be at home, but painting had
to be done.
“Ill save me some money,” said the man, '*and
do H myself.”
Paint got splattered from ceiling to cellar.
A gallon of green was kicked over. The Little
Lady got mighty miserable.
Time marched on. Three weeks. Still in the
kitchen. The mess was epic.
In the end the man did what he now sees he
should have done in the beginning. He looked
under "Business Services” in the Want Ads and
hired himself a capable painter. Then every-
thing smooooooothed right out
"If you have ambitions, Mister,” the man adrlaea,
"give ’em up. Do in the beginning what I did
in the end, and go on out to the ball game.”
AT FIX-UP TIME TURN TO
"BUSINESS SERVICE"
IN THE WANT ADS.
i
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The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 69, No. 177, Ed. 1 Sunday, July 28, 1957, newspaper, July 28, 1957; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth697840/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cuero Public Library.