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Jardner-Webb Coll
Box 836
e ^ e L i b r 3 r H
ins- Sprin
The Foothills View
3s? Nc 280.17
■4-'
Second Class Postage Paid In Boiling Sprii^s, N. C. 29017
THURS., OCTOBER 1, 1981
“JFe See It Your IFay”
$6.00 Per Year Single Copy 15 cents
H-S Reunions
IdR BEFEBENCE
o 6e laAe/i from i :k
l^ot to ba taken from I ‘h ^
((
Tent Going Up
We re Still Winners!
ff
For County Fair
The 1981 Cleveland County
Fair begins a nine-day run
Friday, October 2. Fair gates
wiil open at 3 p.m., the
midway will begin operation
at 4 p.m., and the official
opening ceremony will be held
at 5 p.m. Guest speaker at the
opening ceremony will be
George Clay, Jr., Mayor of
Shelby, and the invocation
wiil be given by Rev. Harry
Queen, Pastor of Beulah
United Methodist Church.
Special music will be provided
by Miss Elizabeth Williams of
Shelby. Miss Williams, a
senior at converse College,
was “Miss Spartanburg
1980.’’
favorites including Mini Hon
da Travel Bike, Race Cars,
Merry-Go-Round, and many
others.
Fall of Troy:
Crest by 49
BELOW:
Tim Twitty (No. 40)
raises his arms in a
famfliar sign for Crest
Friday night as the
Chargers score.
Top ‘Dogs by 11
Over Mars Hill
Persons interested in enter
ing an exhibit at the fair are
reminded to check the fair
catalog for the listing of the
many items that can be
exhibited, and also for the
entry deadline dates for the
various departments.
IHi
General admission tickets
during the fair are $2.50 for
adults, 50c for children 12 and
under, and parking is free.
(Advance ticket sales at
reduced prices will end Octo
ber 1.) Senior citizens, 60-74,
will be admitted to the
fairgrounds every day for
one-half price, and those 75
years of age and over will be
admitted free.
Fair Manager Joe Goforth
stated that Reithoffer’s King
Reid Show on the midway at
this year’s fair will feature 40
rides and shows. The Reith-
offers will be bringing back
the popular Sea Dragon - a 40
passenger family-type “Vik
ing Ship’’ ride with free fall
action from 56 feet high. Also
included will be the Super
Loops Coaster, the Flying
Bobs, the Zephr, plus all the
standard rides. And, for the
younger midway, fans, the
King Ried Show has many
Manager Goforth announced
another new free attraction
that has been schedij^d for
the grandstand. A skyldiving
show willib«ttpresentedi)y fim
Brewer ci Shp^ anp
Hames S F^th^forgtoni on
Saturday! Ocpb^ 3rd|at 1:30
p.m. Tfpy will#be ^mffing
from an|kltiti%#of 7,500 ^t,
descendng at a rate of 120
m.p.h., opening their chutes
at about 2,000 feet, and
landing in the new horse ring
in front of the grandstand.
Goforth stated that a $100.00
iM
v>
% ^ ^
bill wiil be placed on the
target for Tim to land on as a
special consideration to the
jumper. Both jumpers, who do
this as a hobby, are expert
parachutists and have accu
mulated over 1,200 free falls.
Pilot will be Bill Seeker, Ruth
Airport Manager, who has
been flying these jumpers for
over five years.
I -«
CREST 57
CHASE 8
First Downs
Yds Rushing
Yds. Passing
Passing
Punt
Fumbles Lost
Penalties
LEADING TACKLERS
CREST
Rayfield Smith
Chris clary
Dennis Lankford
GW 26 MARS HILL 15
SCORING
CREST-Tim Twitty 3 yd run
Randy Lovelace kick failed
CREST-Rayfield Smith 1 yd run
Robert Bonner run for conversion
CREST-Sam Hamrick 10 yd pass from R. Smith
Lovelace kick
CRESTh Kelvin Laiye 14 yd return of fumble
Lovelace ki^k
TEAM STATS
First downs
Yds. Rushing
Yds. Passing
Rushing Atts.
Passing Atts.
Pass Comp.
Passes Int. By
Total Off. Plays
Avg. Per Play
Fumbles Lost
Pen/Yards
CREST-Herbert Harbison 65 yd. run
Lovelace kick
CREST-Safety
CREST-Tim Twitty 50 yd. run-kick failed
CREST-Maurice Lee 3 yd. run
Lovelace kick
CREST-Tommy Pegran 1 yd. run
Lovelace kick
Did You Go To
Boiling Springs High?
The Alumni Tent at the fairgrounds will spread over a lot of
memories as four area high schools will hold reunions
beginning this Monday at the Cleveland County Fair.
Featured at this year’s fair will be the following schools:
Grover High School on Monday, October 5th; Boiling Springs
High School on Tuesday, October 6th; Douglas High School
on Wednesday, October 7th; and Waco High School on
Thursday, Ocotber 8th. (These high schools were among
those closed when high schools in the county school district
were consolidated in the fail of 1967.)
All former students of the high schools listed above are
invited to visit the Alumni Tent iocated in the center of the
fairgrounds on the day designated for their schooi. They wiii
be asked to sign a register, and name tags will be provided if
desired. They will have an opportunity to sit and visit with
former class mates and they can also check the register to see
if any of their friends have already been by and might still be
on the fairgrounds. Serving as hosts/hostesses at the Alumni
Tent will be some former students of the high school tliat is
being featured for the day.
Fair Manager Joe goforth announced that this will be an
annual event at the Cleveland County Fair, with a number of
different high schools being featured each year.
Anyone interested in obtaining more information concerning
the high school reunion days planned for the Cleveland county
Fair should contact Manager Goforth - 487-0651.
Area News
Market Bazaar At Crest
You can meet the Town’s two new doctors and their
wives Sunday, Oct. 4, at a reception given by the staffs
of Crawley Memorial Hospital and Bolling Springs Medical
Arts Clinic. Dr. Douglas Briggs and Dr. and Mrs.
Stephen Killian will meet with residents from 2 to 4
p.m. on the sunporch at Crawley. Refreshments will
be served.
Beaver Dam Baptist Church, Shelby, N.C. will have
a Craft Fair on Saturday, October 3, 1981, from 8:00
a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
There will be a Christmas Shop, Country Store,Ceramic
Shop, and Bake Shop. Donuts and coffee will be served
in the morning and hot dogs and drinks will be served
at lunch.
Everyone is invited to come and meet Joy Giliespie
from 19 til 12 noon and Nancy Welch from 1 - 3 p.m.
Proceeds will go to the church building fund.
A
The Inside VjEVW.
Billy Graham Page 8
Communities Page 2
Soybean Market Page 8
The second annual Crest Country Bazaar will be this Sgtarday,
Si^
October 3, at Crest Junior High from 8 until 3 p.m. There wip be a
wide variety of craft items for sale including ail types of pillows,
framed crosstitch, tin punch, wood working, handmade baskets, tole
painting, quOts, afghans, dolls, and baked items. This year there will
also be a country store.