The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 38, No. 178, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 28, 1932 Page: 2 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Cuero Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Cuero Public Library.
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DAY, JULY 28, 19
THE CUERO RECORD, CUERO, TEXAS
♦ Lrnvicw C. Houston 4
S:.l. Antonio 5 Fi-ii W.
CUERO RECORD
SPORTS
♦ Baseball Results 4
■k, Except Saturday, and Sunday Morning by
CTERG FINISHING C O.
AMF1IK \N i.f: vc’.rr.
inis nni momenal leap Ihst October
in the Japanese track and field*
championships at Tokio. And he ha*.i
his heat t set on winning the inter* J
national title at Los Angeles.
It is certainty that Nembirt >
mark wi 11 be accepted by the Inter- '
national Amateur Athletic Feder- ,
atiCn as a world's record. The jump
was ma le by Nambu under ideal .
conditions and there has never beetJ- i
; even a suggestion of objectiem.
Another member of the Japan#*® J
team wio has a great chance
winning!an Olympic title is Ya6W»* j
ka. national champion of Japan at -
100 me tors Ycshioka has a mark of :
10.7 seconds for the distance, which |
has beerj surpassed by only one ath- ”,
lete. tha talented Frank Wvkqff 1
American ace in this event.
YoshiAa fs a real threat in tine
100 meters 4f he can hold hn^leeB11
it will npt be surprising if he cosn^i
down the stretch a winner.
Japan* chance of victory is not
; limited to the broad jump and 106 i
meters. In Chibata Japan boaetn 43
j hop-sterj and jump exponent on ff|
par with any one in the worst In
the javelin throw she will be r«|^i
resented! by a capable perfornpE i
Sumpiosni In*the discus thravjfaafl
ItabashiJ and in the high juRaptHti
Kimura Both are well equipped, and ,
New York , 05. 12
Cleveland Vi 20
Philadolplii'a . 59 _ 41
Washington " 54* 42
Detroit 50 44
St. Louis 42 52
Chicago 21 62
Boston . 24 70
Yesterday’s Results
Cleveland 2-12. New York 1-10
Philadelphia 13-4. Detroit 8-0
Boston 15. Chicago 5.
Washington 9. St Louis 3.
th< ♦ post office at Cuero, Texas, as second cla^s matter
irider Act of Congress. Marchj 3. 1897.
New York in the American l
| League lost both ends of a double- I
| header Wednesday by scores of 21
to 1 and 10 to 12. Hildebran. . I
| Cleveland hurler. allowed the I
Advertising Manager Yanks only four hits in the first!
I game, while the Indians collected;
. six bingles off MacFayden. Al-
! ibotigh New Yont so* iwenty-onej
i hits in the second game, twelve
; more than the Indians got. they J
were unable to make them count
Vosmik and Morgan hit homers.
♦ ♦ +
Philadelphia was on the long end
DeWitt of both scores m a double heaae"
S1.25. between Detroit and the Athletics
■ ■ ■ 1 Wednesday, the serves being 13 to,
• j 8’and 4 to 9. M lL-r. Athlefte out-
___! fiGder. fattened his batting :.ve; -
I agf:* with three i:t five trips in
| the opener and three for three ifi
0,000,-! the second Pox\ its hi^
fo.-ry-first ho:p?’\ Simmou- t.s
tv.*'j»iv-fL.~.t. v’ aii his eipltv*
and Wyatt and Miller their first tc
•I'-:? first a. This .dc-■ .if
wir. pieced live Athletics evdr, Vi >•
Cleveland, only 7 1-2 games behind
the league leading Yanks.
¥ * *
Three hit pitching by Weaver
-seating the Orient
Bv HARDIN BURNLEY -
f ©LYMPiC
' HOPES OP.
japan/
■ PERHAPS WE BEST
FT To WlA) HlS EVEAjT
IS JApAM'c
y/YX GREAT
Jk3 JUTES;
YTy chuhei-
£s/ WHO HOLDS THE”
worlds bj^oad*
JUMP
National Advertising Representatives
M r. CLARK QCk. Ine.. New York, Chicago. Philadelphia.
CLARIS. PINCUS & WALKER. Inc., Dallas. Texas.
NATIONAL LF\QI*E
.W. L.
Pittsburgh 56 38
Chicago 51 43
Boston 49 47
Philadelphia ' 50 49
St. Louis 45 48
Brooklyn - 46 50
New York 43 51
Cincinnati 42 58.
Yesterdays Results
Pittsburgh 9-4. New York 8-2.
Boston 2-1. Chicago 1-4.
Cincinnati 4. Philadelphia 3.
Brooklyn 5, St. Louis 4.
TEXAS LEACJl*E
Dallas 22 7
Beaumont ,19 11
Houston 15 14
Fort Worth 14 14
Longview 13 16
Tytor..... 13 17
San Antonia . 9 17
Chilveaten 9 18
Y«tt«rtiAy s Results
Beaumont », Tyler 0.
RECORD OF
ZGFT. 2.y& 1A4CHES.
politicians of both parties are telling how much
1 take to care for the needy people this winter, it
1 • jonomte crime, to raise $10,W0,000 to be spent
mu ties largely in blackguarding opposing candi-
ithi parties, if they are sincere in their advertised
dp the needy, donate their millions Of campaigns
Af work this winter. And let the people vote in a
Dei for their political choioe, free from the high
aei m of a 110,000,000 slush fond,
seems like a whole lot to “pay” for a President
jffi that in selecting one man the supporters of
» gptag to bo displeased. We say again, ten mil-
la k lot oi moaty and an the present President
take a mighty good man to prove a 100
m. jn#e vpt##s hate experienced enough cam-
lef Dot leave it with them without addition*** cost.
Hi Million dollars to settle the. question of wheth-
fefeliftftftU will be a Democrat or a Republican?
TODAY’S GAMES
Texas League
Longviev; at Houston.
Tyler at Beaumont. .
Ft. Worth at San Antonio.
Dallas at Galveston.
American League
Philadelphia at Detroit.
Boston at Chicago.
New York at Cleveland.
Washington at St. Louis.
National League
St. Louis at Brooklyn.
Pittsburgh at New York.
Chicago at Boston.
Cincinnati at Philadelphia.
Ml ereebt for the win.
* ♦ ♦
Kid McCoy, once the welter-
weight champion of the world, j
etwf a mtthonaire sportman, is in
Dfftfatt ready to "start all ever
MNktB” after Ms release on parole '
turn Ram Qhantm prison. Calif.,
•here he served eight yems of a
30*year term ter slaying bis
Nait. 8* » now cmpJoyod by the
fOrd Honor Co. as physical in-
straotor.
0 4 0
The W»h &teobri$ht lawn tennis j
iWRoMon *Q»Wi»ment reached tiy:-j
OWtUr Dnai mod Tuesday wnhj
tlw iWOkw s£in hi running tor
tfm women’s and man s titles. Sid-!
my Waad. Jr.. New York, Qvegwy j
idMmin. Rowanrk, n. J„ and John |
Boro. Ragman. N. Y, fovrtm1
mamnot thlo-hoMer led the ad*
wumo hi the men's dtvfeaon. Mk
Remo Jfoeohs. recently defeated by
Relam WBIs Moody at Wimhiedai:,
ie Dae ehetoe among the womou
r-' Japa.m also
HAS UKELY WiAJAJEES
IM THE MAeATHoAl
and Mop step
AWD JUMP
EVENTS * t m'TJgP
wnW'
is Cr,?n ! Although Japan may not loom as
KIMBALL Neb—(UP)— Wes.-ia stnous threat f0r team hon0rs m
cm Nebraska counties are broom-jthe Olympic games, she has sent
mg the marriage headquarters fo,v!several athletes who iaave e^ellent
hundreds of eowjxles from Colora-' chances of wmmnfe Lheir res‘ject,ve
do and Wyoming where thret | events-
and ftvo day marmge notice laws! It is-only in reqenr years that
have been pwfcc^i. Duriixg the Japan has tn.^en whol^-hear tod Vy
first half of 19CW, Kimball county j to athletics. Taking this info con-
issued more marriage license >j aider a ti on, one must grant that the
have done exceptionally well. There
are 129 members of the Japanese
Olympic team at Los Angeles and
numbered among them are athletes
who have equalled or surpassed ex-
isting world’s records.
In Chuhel Nambu Japan has a
potential winner of the broad jump
event. Nambu now holds the wortd's
i-ccord for this event, hid mark be-
ing 26 feet 2 1-8 inched. He made
Rt the city of Washington, are fighting, a
shottk* tvtara home. What sentiment was
L They hove gone at the matter from the
Jr the United States where Democracy
grasp of men strong enough to “demand"
H*b. Surely an unerganiaed, surly group of
te aocomplfeh the payment of the bonus,
ua who do not believe that the ex-service
SB* bests money Every ea-servj.ee man is
Met sum which ha* been aet aside for hRn,
eeive it. The spirit of the American Legion
- ||w Army. The spirit off those Urate
to their death in Franc# and Germany is
than the entire 12 months of 1989. j little brown-skinned men of Japaja_
a straw, but they have taken the wron(
MU# ta k#& They should return hdoje
Phils to lour Mis iRf t»« *»# **
inning.-*»lier4 they agetfed twe iWK
and had the tying counter oa sec-
ond base but eould Mi #•**. Hor-
man and PRortwr M Oie Red at*
taek. each geftiac a double and f
homo n#.
Jack Quinn pitched only one tel’
Wednesday, but received eredR for
defeating the Ccrdhwls wDoi!
Mickey Finn singled to am*!
O’Doul in the rtlntb with the i#n
that gave Che Dodgers their third
successive triumph over the W«<-
champions Tbs
96 everyho^r is usually the man everybody
a who is ready at all times to eoopera*#,
&$ Kd«N, cooperation is that ability to
m«? work with you.
I SAW THEM MOWED DOWN at Shanihat. Plenty
stuff. War at its u-orst. But the greatest shock came when I got
bock. Pound how many had been killed here. In peaceful America!
t local League
score was 9 to 4.
That car held its path like it was tied to
it—running on rails. That’s SAFETY I •
With thousands injured in skidding
accidents every year, I want to say that
Goodrich has done something BIG-
SENSATIONAL.
They told me out there in Akron that
57% of the cars pow on the road have at
least one tire that invites disaster.
Yet their new Safety Silvertown can be
bought for a price that astonished me. It
doetn’t ccst one cent more than any
standard tire.
Peace negotiations stopped-the killing in
Shanghai. Goodrich engineers have at last
put something into a tire that will reduce
the highway slaughter.
IVa the price of safety on the road.
I’m for stopping the HIGHWAY
SLAUGHTER. I’m for Safety Srlvertcwna
--‘tlw tires which have scooted the scare
i nit of thr skid I*
HERE AND THROB
Disputes raise# by opponents of
Raavo Norm! noted Fbiwbdi run-
ner, are to be settled Thursday by
mentors of the I. A. A. F. oooneH
and the eleventh eengress of ttv
argaideation. Norm* fc * ebtawti
amoe# Ute growing list of stars
who parade thranglT the CHympte
village hospital dime but his
physical troubles— namely a strain-
ed Achilles tendon—have faffed to
attract thl werhHwide feBtorest
manifested over his amateur
status On the floor of the execu- j
live council the vote stands 3 to 2
I T E L L O EVE RY BO DYS I Th«y th* *««*»*. transmit the
n Floyd Gibbons spcolunf. Tbey do lhe brakin- They do the
four months, from Manchurian mad- tima!
D68S to Shanghai slaughter. You 9end a car weighing maybe 2 tons
They kiHed six thousand over there. along at 50 miles an hour, and a feic square
That’s the liest’estimate I can give. They inches of rubber are your sole connection
wounded twenty thousand more. Men. with the world—and safety. That’s worth
Women and children: Mowed them down. thinking about.
Frightful. . I certainly thought about it, when they
But wait. What did I find out when I got showed me what they’d done at Goodrich.
Lack? Right thousand had been killed. A They’ve got a new tire. They worked three
f sorter of a million injured. Right hen* in years to develop it. They call it the SAFK-
Americu. During the months I *;ts gone. TY Silvertown. They aay il’a the safest tire
In totkrmottie eceidentr! ever built. They convinced me.
Ttii» happened to my own kind. Mea. I can't go into the details of their mar-
women and children. No.screaming head- velous test machines—their manufacturing
Haea, Ne war eerrespondeuts. Jsat death. processes — their -Silver Fleet liiat lias
Marming. SuFering. covered SO million miles testing tires. But
\lust too common to be news. ^ ^ £ive y°u climax.
This burned me up. Seeing women and . ^ sa,,•’ drive a cxr on Safety Silver-
children killed in China made me realize towns arouiiil a sharp, we<igo-shape«l«'brner.
the awfulnesa of it here. The pavement wm asphalt, and wet.
I stopped in Akron There I found a tire n,e tar ^e,lt around’ that corner at J~
msnufaeturer doing something about .il. miles an hour.
Goodrich. Goodrich was crusading for safe- It leaned so, I thought it was going ova.’,
ty. Goodrich was developing more saieiy I saw puffs of steam come out from under
in tires. *» those Safety Silvertowns as they cjutciie-:
You know, your tires- are ft sort of end- t*'“l wet- glassy pavement.
Uw* Iwlt Iwtwoen ymir cur and the road. | TtT Ti4t;Y DiUN’T 2KH> AN iNrii. -
FUNERAL HOM
PHONE 48#—#28—448
t Building Material# for More
Than Fifty Year#
$12.00
a *'v*l Allowed for th« Old Tires on four
car on purchase of four
NEW GOODRICH
SAFETY SILVERTOWNS
Te I'-.-Ip < nr Jo«it ttie toll of airUlents—to Set the
• iU. I- liri-.s ’ off the highways—we offer sensa-
si >•!.:' »■?. - "i -llimtiim for your ok!, unsafe tires
«>.: .u!! Suf-.-i \ H., rto« ns.
Daal to AR; Our Motto
Modern Vulcanizing Works
When You Have Tire Trouble Phone 102 j
120 E. Church St. N^xt Door to Post Office
Two outstanding performances m
the major leagues Wednesday were
those of Bill Harris,
(ft A gftftYKfc CONSISTENT WITH SOUND
PRINCIPLES IS OUR DESIRE AT ALL TIMES.
Wfe UPHTE YOU TO CALL ON US
Pittsburgh
hurler. and Jack Quinn. Brooklyn
pitching ace. Harris relieved j
Kremer in the first game of u;
double header between Pittsburgh
and New York, winning the game
In the second encounter he rt -
lieved Swift to win that game also.
Quinn was the third of three |
pitchers for Brooklyn and aPho (
he hurled only one ball, lie reoelv-
Goodrich c5d
State Bank & Trod C
i U '% f -4. AtMI/ft < I 4
9^
J
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Howerton, J. C. The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 38, No. 178, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 28, 1932, newspaper, July 28, 1932; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth999476/m1/2/?rotate=90: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cuero Public Library.