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Warhorse XC District 27-4A Runner-Up

Warhorse Cross Country is Regional Bound! Photo by M Riou.

Warhorses Dixon 3rd, Lane, Botello, Lowe, Cisneros, Riou, & Guerra on to Regionals!

Jerel Beaty
Staff writer
Donovan Dixon led the Warhorse Cross Country team at District 27-4A Meet in Floresville last Wednesday as he finished third overall in the individual standings.
Devine scored 62 points to finish as the runner-up team and earned a trip to Corpus Christi for the upcoming Regional Meet. Floresville was the team champion as they scored 32 points.
Dixon is joined on the Regional Qualifier letterman patch list with Brody Lane, Ryan Botello, Shawn Lowe, Jesus Cisneros, Jake Riou, and Zach Guerra.
Dixon was one of only three runners in the field of 39 that posted a sub-18 time. He ran his 5K in 17:33.6 to place behind the top two runners from the host Tigers.
Lane was just outside a top-10 nod as he came in 11th overall with a time of 18:25.3. His finish was a neck-and-neck battle came up 0:00.3 short as Lane was edged at the finish line by a runner from Floresville
Botello also made the top 15 as he placed 13th with a time of 18:36.8.
Lowe placed 17th with a time of 19:05.3.
Cisneros was 18th with a time of 19:11.8.
Riou placed 20th with a time of 19:23.3.
Guerra was 22nd with a time of 19:30.9.
Congratulations to…

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Question: What Does Romans 5:12 mean?

Answer: The Bible says in Romans 5:12, “Wherefore, as by one man sin entered into the world, and death by sin; and so death passed upon all men, for that all have sinned.” This verse tells us that death started when sin entered the picture of mankind. The Bible tells us that sin originated with Adam and Eve after God had created them and put them in the garden of Eden, and they disobeyed God. Genesis 3:1-7. Sin is anything that breaks God’s laws or disobeys His Word. Sin started in the garden of Eden and by consequence, death started there too. If you think about it, death comes for everyone, the rich, the poor, those with a PhD and those with a GED, those in Africa and those in North America, why? Because death is universal, it affects everyone. That’s what Romans 5:12 is speaking of. Sin entered the scene by or through one man, Adam, and because Adam and Eve were the parents of all mankind, they passed down their sin nature to all their descendants. Including you and me. We all have sinned, whether by telling a lie, stealing something, thinking a bad thought or saying a bad word, none of us can say we’re perfect and haven’t done anything wrong. Romans 3:10, Romans 3:23, 1 John 1:10.

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Michael Jay Morse

Michael Jay Morse, 65, died on Monday, October 7 in San Antonio. He was born November 20, 1958 to Charles Morse Sr. and Beatrice (Bea) Galindo.
He is preceded in death by his father, grandparents Cresencio and Lilly Ortiz and Marie Mae and Vernon Edwin Morse.
Mike is survived by his wife Cayce Morse, daughter Holli Williams (Andrew), son Cole Morse, mother Bea Morse, brother Charles Morse Jr., sister Maureen Ekrut (Kerry), brother and sister-in-law Joe and Sherri Cowan, sisters-in-law Teresa Frank and Sarah Horton and grandchildren Emmeline, Benjamin, Kahlia and Corabelle Williams. He is also survived by two aunts, Elia (Lela) Ortiz and Dorothy Kenny, and two uncles, O.B. Henderson and Roger Morse along with nieces/nephews Logan, Olivia and Sophie Morse, Abby, Savannah and Ethan Ekrut, and Maci Cowan.
Mike attended Lampasas High School where he played football, along with baseball where he was a catcher. After high school he worked in a machine shop with his father. He then became a police officer and worked for the Lampasas Police Department.
In 1993 Mike graduated from the game warden academy and was stationed in Rio Grande City, Starr County, where he worked until transferring to Frio County. Then in 2011, Mike reached the rank of game warden captain where he oversaw Region 5, District 1 before retiring in the fall of 2019. In 2020, Mike ran and won the office of Frio County Sheriff where he worked until he passed.
Memorial donations, in lieu of flowers, may be made to the Texas Parks and Wildlife Foundation at tpwf.org in Mike’s memory.
Funeral arrangements were under the direction of Primrose Funeral Services, Pearsall.

Winnie Bloomquist Mason

January 30, 1927 – September 25, 2024-  Ruby Winifred (Winnie) Bloomquist Mason was born on January 30, 1927, in Hobart, Indiana to Robert and Myrtle (Danielson) Bloomquist.  She died September 25, 2024, in Houston, Texas.  Shortly after her birth the family moved to Texas.  Her father was a Methodist minister, so the family moved whenever he was appointed to a new church.  Winnie graduated from Karnes City High School and then attended Southwest Texas Teachers College where she received her bachelors and masters degrees.  She began teaching English and taught in Victoria and Brownsville before moving to Corpus Christi to be closer to family.  While there she met Troy Mason in a Sunday School class at First United Methodist Church.  They married on August 13, 1960.  Troy was transferred to San Antonio where Winnie continued to teach and while there, she received her masters in library science from Our Lady of the Lake University.  In 1969 Troy was transferred to Beaumont and at the time Winnie was pregnant.  She decided to stop teaching and begin her new job as a stay-at-home mom to Teri who was born in October.  Troy was transferred again and after a year and a half in Tulsa, Oklahoma they returned to Texas and bought a house in Houston in 1973.  Troy and Winnie soon joined CypressUnited Methodist Church and became involved in various activities.  Winnie was an avid reader and was interested in having a church library.  That became a major focus for her over the years and she helped create a library and served as a volunteer librarian.  In 2002 she had the honor of having the church library named after her.  Winnie was also involved in the Wesley Sunday School class, Truthseekers, United Women in Faith, Emmaus, Fifty Plus, and she started a book club.  

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Lucille Marie Watson

It is with great sadness that we announce the passing of Lucille Marie Watson, of Devine, Texas. She was born in Albion, IL on October 30, 1937, and passed at home surrounded by her loved ones at the age of 86 on October 9, 2024.
She is preceded in death by her parents Roy and Frances Briggs, her husband John H. Watson, Jr., brother Doyle, and her son Warren.
Lucille is survived by her sons, Herb (Kim), Wesley (Sharon), Clint (Shelly), siblings; Esther, Nolan (Connie), grandchildren; Hayden, Shelby (Cheyne), Paul (Monica), Ashton (Matt), Jacob, Meagan (Nathan), Riley, Ryan, Joslynn, and Sydney, great-grandchildren; Rylee, Crozier, Maiev, Hudson, Parker, Maverick and Vincent. She also leaves behind numerous nieces and nephews.
She spent her formidable school years in a one room school with children of all ages. By the time she entered high school, her family had moved to Edinburgh, TX, where she graduated before going on to Texas A&I, Kingsville, where she earned her Bachelor’s in Home Economics in May of 1958. During her summer breaks she worked as a waitress where she met her future husband, John H. Watson, Jr. who was working in the oilfield on his summer break from Texas A&M. They married on May 9, 1958, and raised 4 boys, Herb, Warren, Wesley, and Clint.
Lucille started her career at Somerset ISD teaching Home Economics. She later went to Devine ISD and taught for several years until going to work with John managing Loggins & Lilly until it’s closing in 1971. At that time, she remained home to raise the boys and help John start his new business, Watson Cattle Service, and continued raising Brahman cattle until the mid 80’s. Lucille found her way back into education at Devine ISD teaching Homemaking and Special Education until her retirement in May 2003.

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Doyle Dewayne Eads

Doyle Dewayne Eads was born on September 29th, 1949, in Vernon, Texas, to parents Donald Leon Eads and Vera Frances Arrington. Doyle later served in the United States Army and then served 19 years with the Devine Police Department, where he retired as Chief of Police in 1999. He then spent his remaining years in Devine, Texas, before passing away on September 26th, 2024, in San Antonio.
Doyle is survived by his six children and two grandchildren of varying ages. His last final act of service was donating his body to the University of Texas Health Science Center, where his eyes and tissue were collected, and medical students could have the opportunity to study medicine and disease prevention with his remains. He will eventually be cremated shortly after doing his part for the education and advancement of the practice of medical science. 

Maria Elena Savala

September 20, 1946 — October 10, 2024
A visitation will be held on Wednesday, October 16, 2024, at Hondo Funeral Home from 5:00 p.m. to 6:30 p.m., followed by Recitation of the Rosary at 6:30 p.m. Funeral Mass will be held at St. Joseph’s Catholic Church on Thursday, October 17, 2024, beginning at 10:00 a.m., followed by interment at Evergreen Cemetery.
Full Obituary Pending
Services under the direction of Hondo Funeral Home

Warhorse tidbits, stats, & scoring summary

Jerel Beaty
Staff writer
One for the ages, cont.
I have personally only been associated with Warhorse football for the past 27 seasons, which is chump-change for many of you who are reading this edition of “Tidbits.”
My memory is fading and useless stuff clouds what is left of my mind most of the time, but I cannot for the life of me remember either being a part of or being in the stands for a more enjoyable and memorable regular season ballgame than the one Devine and Marble Falls played last Friday night at Warhorse Stadium.
It had a little bit of everything and including, most importantly, the happiest of all endings that saw Devine put together their best offensive drive of the season that culminated in a winning touchdown with only 15 seconds left on the functioning scoreboard in the north end zone.
That Enoch Hall touchdown (who is a freshman, by the way) followed by the post-score extra-point combination of snapper EJ Gonzales getting the ball to holder Jacob Sollock to place it on the ground nicely for kicker Teotimo Stafford was sandwiched between a monumental defensive stop that resulted in only three points instead of seven (yes, holding Mable Falls to a field goal instead of a potential two-possession lead that would have been the case had they gotten into the end zone is 100% considered a stop at that point of the game) and a game-ending sack of the Mustang quarterback by Riley Gutierrez as the clock ticked dry put all of Warhorse Nation that was in attendance in an ultimate state of euphoria that more than likely it had not experienced since Devine pulled victory from the jaws of defeat against Hondo in 2002 when Kyle Pilaczynski blocked an Owl punt that Angel Gonzalez scooped and scored for the winning touchdown in the waning moments of that exciting ballgame.
Runner-up
The only other possible regular season game to even mention over the last quarter-century is the 2015 50-49 win Warhorse win at Barry Field in Hondo. Devine led comfortably at halftime 35-14 at halftime…or at least it seemed comfortable as the Owls found a little magic to take a 49-42 lead with 0:59 left.
The Horses got the last say that particular night as receiver Beau Cardenas hauled in a Dillon Ricord 30-yard pass with only :32 ticks left.
Not wanting to hear that dad burned victory bell ring after the game, then Head Coach Chad Quisenberry relied on the…

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JV1 Horses bid for perfect season falls short

JV Warhorses take on Marble Falls. Photo by Brigid Howard.

District begins Thursday with 5pm kickoff

Jerel Beaty
Staff writer
Dag Burn It! The JV1 Horses had a perfect 5-0 record going into their road game in Marble Falls last Thursday but came out 5-1 after the Mustangs escaped with a 28-20 win.
Devine was down but definitely not out even facing a 22-8 deficit at the break. The Horses closed to within a two-point conversion at 22-20 but could not tie it up nor take the lead before the final horn sounded.
“We kept battling all game long, even after Marble Falls had three first half touchdown passes” said Coach Lon Cozby. “We had a few injuries set us back a little, but we still had a chance late in the game and that is all I could ask for.”
Late game magic was possible, but it would have taken more than a good share of it as starting running back Ryan Weinkam exited the contest in the second quarter, and other Warhorses also were unable to continue as Devine finished the game with only seven healthy players standing on the sideline.
Marble Falls connected on their first of three first half touchdown passes to take a 6-0 lead. Weinkam intercepted their two-point attempt near the goal line and returned it 99 yards the other direction to make the score 6-2.
“Ryan was able to show off…

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Natalia suffers tough Homecoming set-back

2024 Royal Couple King Carlo Alonso and Queen Kira Jimenez

Eric Smith
The Natalia Mustangs(1-4, 0-2) suffered a tough Homecoming loss last Friday night at the hands of the Karnes City Badgers (4-1, 1-1). Three Natalia turnovers combined with missed tackles, injuries and an explosive KC offense resulted in a 50-14 Badger victory. In the end, this continues to be a work in progress for a group of youthful, hard working young men and a 1st year staff in Natalia.
“We did not make enough plays on offense early in the game to keep us in it,” Natalia Head Coach Jason Reynolds said. “We have to do a better job of playing complimentary football against good teams like KC.”
The Badgers may have been picked dead-last by Dave Campbell Texas Football, but they came out playing like a top-3 district teams last Friday in Natalia. They showcased a beefy line with a lot of talent in the back-field and a stringy defense that did not make a lot of mistakes.
Natalia struggled to establish their line of scrimmage offensively as starting QB Leo Cortinas came back from injury. Unfortunately, he went back down with a tweak to his injury resulting in back-up QB Mason Giera coming in. 
Giera had a number of bright spots with success thru the air…

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