The Edna Herald (Edna, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 10, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 5, 1961 Page: 7 of 12
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•\
f I IUMD A V, AH Y U,
Cowgirls
To Host
Tourney
The Edna High Cowgirls will
lioSt a Girls’ Baskefball Tourna.-
ment here Friday and Saturday.
Coaeh James Charlton r e por ts
eight teams, including the Edna A
\ and B clubs, hav.e entered the
competition Trophies will be
awarded for first,' second and con-
solation places
Play gets underway at 3 p. m.
Friday, and the finals are set ror
8:15 p. m, Saturday. The public is
invited to watch the games.
Here’s the pairing for the first
round!
Friday at 3, Edna B vs El Cap
p». .......
Friday at 4:30, Wharton vp. Ga-
nado. , -
Friday at 6:30, Sacred Heart vs
Sweeny.
Friday at 8, Edna A vs Tide
haven.
-o-
- -v
-V"'
X :
mv
riiF f.dna (TFXA.D nrnAi.D
f ••• f
Edna,Freshmen Win
B Loses to Louise t
Yoakum I* Next w ia. g% •
-.....•.......... Loses One in
Edna Wins One,
“y..
>
:7
V.
MIXED SCOTCH FOURSOME
Mustang Country Club will hold
a mixed Scotch Foursome on Sun-
day, Jan. 8. Tee off time is 1 p. m.
and the entry fee is $1.50. .
-—o---
Head The Herald Ads!
The Edna
pushed their season record to ^Ive
wins antf hirtosses Tuesday night,
in defeating the Louise Frosh 23
to 21 / ^
Dehny Bell led the ,local club
with 11 points, and Lonnie Franca
was second with 6 Other boys
seeing action were Mesa, fl e r g-
strom. Simons, Hartman, Whit-
low, Chance,, Heggem, GuittierieS,
Slone, Parker and Smith.
Coach Jim . Sappington reports
the next game for the freahmen
will be at Bay City on Jan. 12.
In Louise Tuesday, the Edna B
team lost to the B Louise club 29
to 22. Billy Riddle led Edna scor-
ing with 7 points! A
Next Monday night the B team
plays Yoakum here, just before the
varsity game.
—-o—:-
January 15 Deadline
In Mustang Tourney
Jerry Chain, golf prd"at Mus-
tang Country Club, stated that the
tournament committee has set
January 15 as the deadline for
completion of all matches of the
Men's Club Tournament. Matches
not played by " January 15 will be
cancelled and these players will
not be eligible for prizes.
The awarding of prizes to the
winners will be made the evening
of the Ladies . .Golf Association
dance on January 21. . -
Y &
Rockdale Play
?■ v
The Edna High Cowboys won
one and lost one at the big Hock
dale Tourney Dec - 29-31, and hove
one more practictTjjame on sche-
dule before, .-starting district play
at .Palacios on Jhn. 17. ’ > v
At Rockdale, in the first round
the Cowboys beat /Breriham 53 to
46. Ednas Pratka' led the game
with 24 points, and , Singleton was
second for the Cowboys „with 10
Luecek led the losers with 14
points. *T
In the next round Edna drew
Hutto, leading its cage ‘ district
with a 15-3 record before the tour-
ney, and lost 61 to 48. Mygrein and
Peterson of Hutto both made 16
points, leading the game; Pratka
again led Edna with 15, and Mata
was a close second with 14 points.
After this week's Tuesday night
game at Louise, the Cowboys next
will host Yoakum here on Jan. 9.
Coaches Ed Janac and Darrell
Hortness and the teams invite the
public to attend the games
---o-—-r
Fir plywood is sanded during
manufacture, and additional sand
ing may cut into the softwood,
creating an uneven surface. Sand
only after the sheets have been
primed.' Use 3-0 sandpaper, and
sand with the grain.
W:
* '
Bowling
Strikes
r\
GOOD HUNTING — Stephen Veckar, IS, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Lonnie Vackar of Edna, killed these two
bobcat# Christmas Eve while deer hunting on the B. G.
Henry place northwest of Edna. He shot one bobcat
with a shotgun, and the other with a .22 rifle.
THE EDNA HERALD
SPORTS
!if» *
MRS. TUCKER’S SALAD
NO? 2V? CAN RED BIRD
YAMS 23'
16 OZ. PKG. SUNSHINE
Snowdrift69‘ Flour
DUNCAN
CAKE MIXES
BOX
25 lb. $169
paper I
PRODUCE
GERBER’S STRAlNEp
BABY FOOD
12 OZ. CAN LINDY WHITE WHOLE KERNEL
CORN
v
v
STA-FLO LAUNDRY
STARCH
QUART BOTTLE
18 OZ. TUMBLER BAMA
RED PLUM JAM
CELLO PACKAGE
CARROTS
U. S. NO. 1 WHITE
ONIONS 2
GOLDEN RIPE
BANANAS > 2
LARGE HEAD
LETTUCE 2
Lbs
Lbs
For
23*
23'
Jl.
FRESH MEATS
NO. Vt CAN BREAST-O-CHICKEN CHUNK STYLE
VEAL SHOULDER
ROAST
ARMOUR’S BIG
BOLOGNA
VEAL RIB
STEW MEAT
49*
39*
39*
______•*!
PURE PORK
PAN SAUSAGE
NO. 300 CAN HUNT’S SOLID PACK
TOMATOES 2
i 2
7
14 OZ. BOTTLE SNIDER’S "
CATSUP 2
.. —
i 3
5‘
ARMOUR*^ VIENNA
SAUSAGE
d
9‘
BUD CRYSTAL WHITE
S Y R U P -. ■. * \qumt *
i 4
91
NO. 2Vi
CAN
HUNT’S
PEACHES
10 OZ. SUNSHINE MARSHMALLOW
PEANUTS
CHEER —
25*
29*
THURS., FRI., & SAl^r JANUARY 5, 6, & 7
. v$r ■>« '■ .
Woods Food Mkt
. ■* ■ —-. • .. . . • •. •
■ Double
ACE
Gift Stamps
Wednesday
With Purchase of |
$2.50 or More
-• . ?■
1*1 N BUSTERS LEAGUE
Lee Drug and Voyles Ford Soles
arc tied for first ptner at the end
of the second weeks' play in the
Pin Buster League with two wins
each and no losses.
High individual- game of the
week was by Junior Jones of
Woods Food Market, with a 223;
Jones also had , th^ high series
with a 562. Lee Drug with 2198
pins for a three-game series led
the pack. They also had the high
single game total, 763. ^
Standings
Won
Lost
Pet.
Lee Drug
2
0
1.000
Voyles Ford
2
0
1.000
Westhoff Mere.
1
1
.500
Clark’s Texaco
1
1
. .500
Edna Body Shop .
1
1
.500
Woods Food
X
1
.500
Fakes Drug
0 -
2
.000
Jackson Electric
0
2
.000
FIREBALL LEAGUE
High team series-Jn the Fireball
League is held-"!)]' McCord’s/ Hum-
ble with a 2307. Edna Restaurant
is second with '2270 and Hot Pins
is third with 2246.
High single game series are Hot
Pins 764, Edna Restaurant 737 and
McCord's 734.
High individual series are Henry
Zavadil 484, R. T. Baker 465 and
B. Cantrell 449.
High individual singles are B.
Cantrell 193, Rex Lewis 189, Henry
Zavadil 189, R. T. Baker 177 and
Edward Knopp 177.
— PIONEER LEAGUE
Teams and members of the Pio-
neer Bowling League posted some
| very fine scores this week!
j Lone Star had a 2982 for .the
high series game of tjie week.
High team single game hofiors
went to Lone-Star with a -978. The
Edna Herald was in "second place
with 971 and m third place was
Faistaff with 968.
Individual high three - garpe
series were posted by Sam Quarles
You II be surprised to Learn that In four-cycle engines the oil Jit
the most common cause of o u t-1 effectively confined to the crank
board motor trouble is lead poi
soning. It costs many outboorderS
considerable time, pleasure and
money. ... ,
To put it plainly, the trouble
stems from the use of gasoline
which contains lead compound.
For you, the simple answer is-to
demand ■'marine white gasoline for
your two-cycle outboard motor. It
costs less per gallon. It performs
better in the two-cycle engine
And it doesn’t injure your motor
like the more expensive, high oc-
tane fuels .do.
Both the regular and the pre-
mium grades of automotive gaso
line contain sufficient lead to cause
trouble when used in two-cycle out-
board motors.
Fuel requirements of the auto
mobile motor and the two-cycle
outboard differ greatly. The two-
cycle outboard engine has low oc-
tane requirements, unlike the high
compression four-cycle automobile
engine. * ;;'
In the two-cycle outboard,' oil
is mixed with the gas, therefore oil
enters the combustion chamber.
Lead-fouling of the spark plugs is
a natural result. Accumulated lead
deposits on the insulator tip, and
on the electrodes, eventually short
out the spark plugs, because the
lead deposits are electrical con-
ductors.
This, of course, prevents ignition
of'-Ihe fuel-air mixture,, which in
turn leads to Wet-fouling—due to
the accumulation of unburned fuel
on the electrodes.
Researchers with Kiekhaefer
Corporation have been studying
the -.problem for some timp. They
say that projecting spots or flakes
of deposited material sometimes
becomes incandescent and ignite
case and yery little leaks past the
piston rings into the combustion
chamber.
. In a* two-cycle engine the oil
must Ifc misled with the gasoline
and -so< practftiKUy all of these me-
tallic detergents and other additiv-
es enter the cylinders, above the
pistons, and form deposits when
theY come in contact -with the hot
surfaces df spark plugs, piston
crowns and combustion chambers.
These deposits cause pre-ignition
and detonation, which result in
piston crown burning, piston succ-
ing and cylinder wall scoring. Fre*
qently metallic deposits bridge a
spark plug gap so that it cannot
fire and this, in turn, results in
the spark plug fouling. ' .
According to Mercury engineers
the preferred outboard oil is refin-
ed from paraffin base crude ob-
tainable only from wells located in
specific geographic areas. The
base stock is blended with organic
detergents rather than with the in-
organic metallic detergents used
in automobile oils.
Such blends insure adequate lub-
rication under the special condi-
tions encountered in two-cycle en-
gine operation, while inhibiting for-
mation of varnish and carbon de-
posits and keeping piston r i n g~s
from sticking in their grooves. The
oil contains no automotive type
antidilution agents and, once thor-
roughly mixed, the gasoline .and
oil will not separate, even when
the fuel tank stands idle for inde-
finite periods. , 1
Any two-cycle outboard motor
gives best results with white ma-
rine gasoline. But in occasional
emergencies, it will perform well
when mixed with a good quality i
automobile gasoline of low lead]
content.
Since the need for high octane,
fuels anti special fuel additives isf
strictly a four-cycle engine pro-]
blem, and. there are few such out-
boards,' there is little reason why]
outboard owners should be plagu-1
ed with it.
Two-cycle outboard engines run]
the fuel-air charge before the
wi‘th 'Ja" 59l‘'I'lle7nahdez Ta“<Ta ! ,sParl* °Pcurs, causing pre-ignition.
589 and Jimmy Hessong a'583! 15 loss of Power and poss.-
Individual high single games fl'f°f engine damage. --
were rolled by Jim Trojcak with* a Another problem is obstruction
MO, Jimmy Hessong with a 225 and exhaust P°rts deposit
Andrew Erdelt with a 213. ! , ,
Team standings after three At this ppmt, faced with an ex-
weeks of matched play arc as fol- penslve ePSipe tear down to re- best, longest, and cleanest, on ma-
]ows. j move'-'deposiis, i many outboard j rine white gasdline. Its, octane rat-
Faistftff .833, Slavik's .583, Lone: owners make a second mistake in ing fs ample to accomodate most]
Star-.583, Edna Herald .500. Schie «« effort to correct the trouble1 outboard engine designs, currently
witz 250 and Mays Furniture ,250. | ca‘,SR‘i fe? leaded gas. They resort | in production for pleasure boat
The above scores -ire with ban to » detergent motor oil. Then the! Marine white gas can be readil;
dicaps added trouble really .starts. available if outboarders derma nd
Yoh are invited to go out to the Outbqard- motor manufacturers! it. It's the ,-oniy way outboard, own-
Jaco Lanes every Monday night at and' engine lubrication experts are ers can cure the outboard's most
0:15 and boost your favorite play- in solid agreement that modern | common malady—lead poisoning
i ers and team. -
Dr. Henry Hartman, Secy."
*■ ov—- -.5-
. »- »
Cobras Lose to
Three Rivers
At Rockport
VANDERBILT - T^e Industrial
Cobras lost to Three' Rivers, 54-48,
in a third place game in the Rock-
port Tournament Saturday night.
In advancing to the third place
game, the Cobras defeated Bloom-;
jngton, 46-44, in a double overtime empty,
aftd lost To Woodsboro, winner of
the tournament, 52.45. \ f
In the game r,with - R1 oojnington.
in solid
automobilevj*rfiT~are not suited to
outboard use In fact, the worst!
I oils for two-cyde outboard engines!
[are the higher priced "heavy du-
ty" or "premium grade" autoinoe
; bile oils.
Mercury’s engineers point out
that automobile engine oil con!
tains a dilution inhibitor which
makes- the oil extremely resistant!
! to mixing with gasoline, as reouir-1
ed for outboard motor fuel. SI
Gasoline oil soparatiun pufs a
j layer of oil 'at the bottom of the
! outboard tank, with gasoline at the j
top and various proportions of j
gasoline and oil between. Singe j
the fuel pickpup is located at the j
bottom of the tank, thp engine may .
get a high proportion of oil when]
the tank is full and almost,.straight
gasoline when the tank is nearly !
WHATS NEW
IN
% BOATING
fVMHVpf BOAtmO fOUMDAUOM
fiy RUDY EVIN9
With the vacation season in full
swing, now is the time to plan for that
family cruise so many have been talk-
ing shout.
To gain the full enjoyment of a
cruise on any of America’s hundreds
of waterways a skipper must plan
ahead. A large boat isn’t necessary for
such a trip. Thousands of families
each.year pack their gear aboard a
-i 14-foot runabout and stay water-
Therefore the engine may smoke V rilMwi for (jay, ,t a time without
excessively and foul plugs at first, f losing that “big-cruiser” comfort,
then overheat, and possibly-,sscore If you plan to take your tryj in the
the lead changed hands \several the pistoris because the remaining po#s**' waters of the Atlantic or
times and at the end of titc first fuel contains insufficient oil. Pacdfc or tbet
half it was 19-19 In the second Other additives in automobile the^'v'arude BoatingFoundationiug^
half the Cobras held a brief thfee engine oils'" are the “viscosity in gesu you writ* to the U. S. Coast and
point lead onfy to see the g’ameldex improvers” which minimize Geodetic Survey, Washington 45.D.C,
tied 40-40 at the end of regulation viscosity changes due to tempera-; for their free catalog of charts.
lure variations. ' A free catalog of charts
These are desirale in automobile
four-cycle lubrication' systems, t o
insure adequate oil flow and ■ dis-
play. In the first overtime both
dearns were only able to score two
(joints - and- the score was 42-42 at
tjhe encT'of the first overtime. Then
In the second overtime the Cobras ‘ tribution for cold weather starting
j Scored first hand led 44-42 and then and warming up; also to prevent
i made two tree throws to, lead- 46- excessive thinning of jhe oil at
! 42 with four seconds left. The Bob- normal operating temperatures.
However, .these additives are un-
necessary for two-cycle outboard
engine lubrication and only add to
the accumulation of harmful de-
posits.
- Furthermore, the advance of
high compression, high output au-
tomobile engines presented new
lubrication problems which necess-
itated the; addition of metaiic <fet-.
ergents to the Oil for the purpose
of inhibiting varnish formations
and'piston ring sticking. .
r* /"r .. /. '. ' .j.....
I [cats brought the ball down the
floor and the Cobras let them
score and won the game 46-44.
The leading scorer for the Co-
bras was John Alexander with 21
points followed by Kelly Frels and
Wayne Haynes with 10 points each
In the game with Woodsboro,
Woodsboro jumped off to a seven-
point lead at the end of the first
quarter and maintained the_J e a d
through the first half and led at the
j end of the half 24-17. In the second
half the Cobras phlled within two
| points several times only to see
| their hopes dwindle away and the j
final score was 52-45.
The leading scorer for the Co -!
j bras was John Alexander with zi
[points followed by Jimmy Fitz-;
! Patrick with 10 points,
t In the third place game "With
i Three Rivers the lead changed
! hands all through the first half .and
j the score was 25-25 at, the end of
| the half. Then in the second half
j Three Rivers jumped off to a -six-
! point lead and the Cobras were
! never able to overcome this lead
i and lost by a final score of 54-48.
! the leading scorer for- the Co - ]
bras was John, Alexander with 26
points followed by. Jimmy Fitz-
patrick vwith eight points „ . !
L --———o.- ■ . '
LIONS ROAR
r - * ♦ ’
1 The predicament of Texas coll-
eges. second rate principally be- ]
pause of the low pay scale among
professors, was related by David
j Seligman in a talk before the Lions
Glub at Tuesday's luncheon at;
Helen's Kitchen. ■ v • "
Seligman used ' some j^atisties -
put" out by Texas A&M College to
..show what i>j: taking place in ad-;
II vaticed educational institutions- i n
the state He also- pressed into use
charts pkhowmg-the pay scale of;
teachers and how. Texas is lagging^
in this department •
A free catalog of charts of the,
Lakes and connecting rivers,
Champlain, New York State
Lake of the Woods and Rainy
may be had from the U. S. Lake Sur-
vey. 630 Federal Building, Detroit *8,
Michigan.
The Mississippi River Commission, 1
Corps of Engineers, P. 0. Box 80, I
Vicksburg,.Mississippi publishes charts I
of the “great river” and tributaries^.!
„ the fpmi of booklets ranging in price
from Jb cents to |4. Several major oil ,
companies also publish excellent cruis- j
ing charts and guidea^-most of whidr
are yours for the asking. |
Before you leave on your trip it
might be a good idea to check with j
yotir local boat club. Its members ]
have probably "traveled around most of I
-the united States (tf it’s a Urge club) ]
and can help you in pUnning your]
cruise to that "place of, interest,”
Happy boating... and fishing, too. ]
Rudy J
FINAL CLEARANCE
ON FALL FABRICS
Reg. 2.98
Reg. 2.49_____
Reg. 2.29 to 1.98
Reg. 1.79 to 1.39 ____
Reg. 1.29 to 1.19
Reg. 98e
___ NOW 1.98
__1 NOW 1.69
NOW 1.39
NOW 1.19
NOW 79c
NOW 69c
•.*7 —
Quilted Materia! Reg. 2.98 NOW 1.98
547Jol6Q^Wooiens Reg. 2.98 NOW 1.98
72” Felt Reg. 2.98_______—, NOW 1.98
48” to 56” Acrilon Washable Jersey
Reg. 2,29 _ . _ __1 NOW 1.79
JUST ARRIVED
New Spring Prints, A11 Drip Dry Cottons
Values to 98clMow Only 2 yds for 1.00
THE FABRIC SHOP
* GANADQ " C
1-4- •
■ 7'
'K'
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Evans, Chester. The Edna Herald (Edna, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 10, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 5, 1961, newspaper, January 5, 1961; Edna, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth763699/m1/7/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Jackson County Memorial Library.