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CARTERET COUNTY NfWS-TIlWESt BIAVT8OT AN MOREHEAD CITY. .
PAGB TORES
::dat, may h. mi
'iatifort Cuts Down Morehead City 7-4
or First Win In Tidewater League Play
I Icfctosh Smacks Ilcncr and Double;
IL k Takes Saturday's Conies!, 8-0
Beaufort knocked Morehead
City's baseball team out . of the
ranks of the undefeated Sunday,
.7-4 with a vicious 11 hit attack in
cluding a double and a home-run
by Mcintosh, and a pay-off triple
by . Pasquale. The latter, one of
the four new men signed by Beau
fort and appearing for the first
time Supday, proved that the shot-in-the-arm
was worth it by bounc-
, ing a two-run three bagger off the
gym roof, and by doing a credit
able Job catching George Brooks,
, tht winning pitcher.
; Morehead City remained tied for
tht lead however, shutting out
Beaufort at the school field Satur
day, behind the three-hit pitching
of ? James Webb, winning easily
8-0, while Marshallberg stopped
Swansboro 3 2.
Pasquate's drive came after a
long double by Mcintosh iri the
eighth inaing, breaking a 3-3 tie.
Mcintosh, who hit Morehead City
pitcher Finer like he owned him,
also clouted a homer his time up
before and a single his first time
up. The capacity crowd at Wade
field responded to the circuit blow
by dropping $28 in bills, silver,
-copper, and bus transfers into the
passed hat.
Other new faces in the line up
Sunday were Verbanic, at short,
Brooks, on the mound, and Dobbs,
at first 'base. Brooks gave up but
two less hits for Beaufort, but
kept them far enough apart to
make them ineffective. He struck
out 10, while Finer fanned five.
Beaufort got off to a good start
by counting two in the first. They
were tied briefly in the seventh,
but sewed it up with two runs in
each of the last two innings. Stoy
and Gardner eollelted half of
Morehead's hits off Brooks. Gardner-also
turned in the fielding
gem of the day with a brilliant
. backhanded nab of Brooks', line
drive after a hard run in deep left
center. Two men were on.
v . Webb --was invincible in goose
egging Beaufort Saturday, striking
out ten. Langdale was the only
Beaufort man to reach second,
'stealing safely after he had been
hit by a pitched ball. Webb gave
out ao free passes.
Morehead City batted Taylor for
17 hits, with Sadler leading the
parade with four or five. Stoy and
Davis also gat three apiece for
the wianers. Taylor walked two
mea for Beaufort.
First Game: HHE
Morehead .102 030 0028 17 1
Beaufort4.... 000 000 000-0 3 4
Secead Game: RHE
Beaufort .... 200 001 022-7 11 3
Morehead .. 001 001 1104 9 6
TCUOD rex 10
G. C Kester, spectator at
Wade Memorial Field Sunday la
the game between MoVehead
City and Beaufort, dropped
tea spot in the kitty when the
hat passed, asking grounds funds.
PLAY BY PLAV
First Inning
Plner pitching for Morehead
City. Verbanic grounded out, see
ond to first R. Hassell was saft
on an error by Stillway. T. Hoop
er Uttgled into center, sending
Hassell to second. Piner balked,
Hassell going to third and T. Hoop
er to second. Mcintosh singled In
to center scoring Hassell and Hoop
er, and was out trying for second. I
Pasquale walked. Pasquale stole
second. Dobbs fouled out. to cen
ter. Two runs, two hits, one left.
Brooks pitching for Beaufort.
Stillway bounced out, pitcher to
first. Stoy slapped a high double
into right field. Davis made first
on a fielder's choice, Stoy being
run down between second and
third. Gardner grounded out,
.,. pitcher to first Mo runs, on hit,
; one left' .
Secoad Inning
Gillikin grounded out short to
first Jefferson walked. Brooks
forced Jefferson at second. Ver
banic popped up to short No runs,
no hits, one left
Beane fouled out to third. Sad'
' let grounded out, short to first
Tenner looked at a third strike.
Na runs, no hits, nobody left
. Thirdlnaiac
R. Hassell struck out, Cagle
drooDinf the ball but heaving him
out at first T. Hooper lined out
to Gardner in deep center. Mc
intosh looked at a third strike. No
runs, na hits, nobody left
"fthiOaJked. Cagle stole see
. . or Mri watched a third strike,
who br thltrfed through second,
sited everfe. Stoy cot and mias-
ioked at a thira strike,
left '
Hooper grounded out, third to
first. Mcintosh exploded a $28
home run over the right center
field wall, Mason passing the hat.
Pasquale struck out. One run, one
hit, none left.
Stoy smashed a hit into right.
Davis grounded out to the first
baseman unassisted. Gardner sing
led into left. Beane forced Gard
ner. Sadler wa safe on an error
by Verbanic, Story scoring. Ten
ney grounded out, seeood to first.
One run, two hits, two left.
Seventh biatag
Dobbs singled past third. Gilli
kin sacrificed. Jefferson cut and
missed. Brooks hit a deep drive to
left center, Gardner going back
and making a back handed one
handed stab to snag the ball. No
runs, one hit, one left.
Catfle doubled down the third
base line. Piner went down swing
ing. Stoy singled into right field,
scoring Cagle to tie up the ball
game and being called out at third
after a belly slide.
Eighth Inning
Verbanic singled into center.
Verbanic went out trying to steal.
R. Hassell was safe on an error by
first. Hooper lined out to short.
Mcintosh doubled off the right
side of the gym roof, Hassell hold
inn third. Pasquale tripled off the
left side of the gym roof, scoring
Hassell and Mcintosh. Dobbs lut
a nd missed. Two runs, three hits,
one left.
Davis grounded out, second to
first. Gardner slid safely into sec
ond with a double. Beane was safe
on an infield pop-up, nobody tak
ing it. Sadler forced Gardner at
third. Palazzo, pinch-hitting for
Tenney, dribbled the ball down the
first base line. Brooks, tnrowing
wild into right field, scoring Beane
and Saddler. Rhubarb followed,
Sadler being sent back to third, on
a grounds ruling. Cagle looked at
a third strike. One run, one hit,
two left.
linth Inning
Styron at first for Morehead
City. Gillikin dropped a single in
to short left. Jefferson singled in
to left, Gillikin holding up at sec
ond. Freeman relieved Piner for
Morehead City. Brooks popped up
to first. Verbanic singled cleanly
into- center, scoring Gillikin, and
eoine to second when center field
er errored. R. Hassell was safe
on an error, scoring Jefferson,
aa&miie nut trving foi Borne. T.
Ioopifrounded out shtfrfto
lirst -Tw runs, three hits, one
left
Freeman was hit by pitcher. Pas
quale took Stillway's foul near the
stands. Stoy 'cut and missed.
Freeman stole second., Freeman
stole third. Davis grounded out,
short to first No runs, no hits, one
left.
TUB
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II C. High Triwaplu! Over
Camp Lejeino in 7 Innings
Morehead high school team
with a 10 and 4 record for the
season beat out Camp-LeJuene 6-5
in their last game last week.
Winning pitcher was . Tarver
MacKnight, who gave up 7 hits and
who struck out 7. Barringer fan
ned 10 for Camp Lejuene and al
lowed 8 blows.'
Score by Innings:
H R E
Morehead City 040 011 0 8 0 7
Camp LeJuene 301 100 0 7 5 2
395 Citizens Register
In Morehead, Beaufort
More than 250 new voters in
Morehead City and more than 145
in Beaufort, making a total of 39R,
have registered with their precinct
registrars to cast ballots in the
Primary elections May 2ft and the
General elections in the fall, it was
learned today from Fred R. Seelcy,
chairman of the county board of
elections.
Registrations have been cDtruja
ratively light in other precincts, he
added. There aic 27 predicts iu
Carteret county and voting on Muy
20 will take place at the polL in
each precinct.
Expect 11 Crews '
POUGHKEEPSHS, N. Y. (AP)
Eleven college crews are expect
ed to row on the Hudson June 22
in the 46th annual Poughkeepsie
Regatta., Columbia, Cornell, Navy,
Penn, Syracuse, California, M.I.T.
Princeton, - Rutgers, Washington
and Wisconsin are expected to be
in the race. Navy won the'Varsity
three-mile test last year, with
Washington capturing the fresh
man race and the jayvee honors
going to California's crew.
A night club owner reports that
a fool and his money are some
party. I
Lewis Collects 5 for 5
As Jaycces Dawn DelXslay
Luther Lewis of the Morehead : V
Jaycees had a perfect day at the
plate, getting 5 for 5 against the
DeMolay Wednesday, as the Jay
cees rode roughsnod, 12 3. 1
Sam Guthrie pitched and Quincy
Stimson caught for the victors.
Bill Flowers played firs:.
J. G. Bonnet, Jr., an! yobby Mat
thews were the battery for the DeMolay.
Doctors have so much business
nowadays that every ounce in a
while they tell a patient there's
absolutely nothing wrong with
him.
at ass
Auio Racing Isn't Vorlh The Risk,
Says Big Money Winner Pete De Paolo
:: Standings ::
Standings W
Morehead City 5
Swansboro . 8
Bavelock
Jacksonville 3
Newport
HX-Straits - 2
Marshallberg 8
Beaufort - 1
ft ntt,
Murth lantag
whiffed at a third
1 Jm popped up to first
the BEAUTO out to center; No
b. nobody left
grounded out, third to
til making a nice stop,
funded eut, first to the
vho covered the bag. SadV
;': iei through first Tenney
A at a third strike. No runs,
1 hit,-one left
Fifth Inning
' 'ferson flied out' to right
s singled through short Vcr.
t struck out Brooks was
t trying to steal No ran,
l it none, left -.
'e popped np behind second.
rrounded out, third to first
f smck out, No trans, ne
ARLINGTON, Tex Peter De
Paolo, onetime kingpin of auto
mobile racing, wonders if tlje sport
today is worth the risk.
De Paolo, first driver to Rvcrage
more than 100 jnilcs per hour for
the 500-mile Indianapolis Speed
way classic, is happy because his
active days behind the wheel came
when they did.
, De Paolo, graying tit '50 and
tiuftVUistinguished looking, watch
ed the racers roar around Arling
ton Downs track from the press
box where he was filing a story
to a Los Angeles paper as a spe
cial favor.
"Auto racing is the one sport in
which there isn't the money to be
made by the competitor that was
his for success two or three de
cades ago," says De Paolo. "When
I won at Indianapolis in 1925 I
carried off $52,000. Last year
Mauri Rose got around $33,000. I
grossed $162,000 in 1925. A sub
stantial party of my reward in the
500-miler was won in lap prizes.
I just about swept the boards.
."But drivers today can't ap
proach my figure for the year.
Even if they could, they wouldn't
have anywhere near as much as
I had to take home. Income taxes
were relatively small then."
There were other years when
De Paolo had a big income. The
biggest purses, he points out, were
in F.uropean road races he- won
in Germany, France and Italy.
"That was the real sugar," he
chuckles. "Those were the greatest
races on earth from the purse
standpoint.
"The boys can't make any big
money in these dirt-track races.
When I was racing we had eight
board, tracks in the United States.
The promoters put on some great
meets. They attracted tremendous
crowds and the purses were big.
A good man in a good machine
could mop up then. Some of the
tracks staged several races a year.
Others had only one or two big
ones, like Altoona, Pa., and Atlan
tic City, N. C.
"It took a lot of money to buiid
and maintain those board tracks.
Somehow, they all faded out. To
day there isn't a single one in the
United States. The bottom really
fell out of racing in the late twen
ties The game hasn't been built
back up. Facilities aren't available.
That's why the present drivers
can't make the kind of money wc
used to rake in."
COASTAL PLAIN LEAGUE
Rocky Mount 14 9
Kinston . . 13 10
New Bern .. 13 10
Goldsboro 12 10
Wilson - 10 12
Bo. Rapids 7 16
Greenville . 6 16
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Eighth Grader Julian Willis
Wins Marble Championship
Julian Willis, eighth gradei
from Atlantic school was crowned
marble champion recently and won
a bat and ball for his winning ef
forts over 50 contestants. Thomas
Salter, fifth grade was runner-up.
Winners from each school
grade were presented with thea
tre tickets.
New National Prexv
NEW YORK (AP) Roy D.
Simmons, boxing and lacrosse
coach as well as assistant football
coach at Syracuse University, re
cently was elected president of the
College Boxing Coaches Associa
tion of the nation.
Philadelphia
Cleveland -New
York
Boston .
Detroit
St Louie
Washington
Chicago
16
13
13
11 11
11 14
- 8 11
9 13
...4 18
NATIONAL LEAGUE
St Louis
New York
Boston i .-
Pittsburgh .
Philadelphia .
Brooklyn .-. .
Chicago
Cincinnati -..
13 7
12 8
11 10
12 11
12 11
11 M
. 8 13
.8 17
Opponents Find Hank Saner
Mighty Hard Man to Stop
Hank Sauer, Cincinnati's slug
ging left fielder, apparently is
making a habit of breaking up ball
games and opponents' fingers.
His first two big league home
runs this season beat the Pitts
burgh Pirates. In the first week of
the young National League season
Sauer, who hit 50 homers for Syra
cuse last year, put two infielders
out of commission.
Frankie Gustine, Pirate third
baseman, tried to stop a vicious
smash to his left and sustained a
dislocated finger. In St. Louis,
Red Schoendienst, Cardinal second
baseman, also got in the way of
a Sauer smash and wound up with
t busted digit. -
Half from Long Island
SYRACUSE, ' N. Y. (AP)
Half of Syracuse University's start
ing lacrosse ten hail from New
York's Long Island. Bill Fuller,
George Cody and Dick Lightfine
are from Garden City, Warren
Erbe from Valley Stream and Lew
Jones from Forest Hills.
You don't
nights to be
awake days.
have to lay awake
a success. Just stay
City Theatre
TUESDAY WEDNESDAY
JOAN CAULFIELD
VERONICA LAKE
BARRY FITZGERALD
in
'The Sainted Sisters"
0 0 0 0 0
THURSDAY - FRIDAY
'
DENNIS MORGAN
VIVICA LINDFORS
in
, 'To The Victor"
Borer Pitcher Hcrls Nt-Lut
Cast Over Eeacfart School
Wade, of Dover high achooll ast
week pitched a no-hit no-run game
ever Beaufort at Dover. Charles
Stuart gave up three hits and three
runs for Beaufort.
Beaufort beat Dover 11-7 In a
game played earlier in the season
at the school field.-.
, '
Snakes gahetitate for Cats
PENANG, Malaya (AP)
Cats are being replaced as rat
catchers here by pythons. A rice
mill owners' association announced
tests had shown the giant snakes,
up to 25 feet in length, kill two to
three times as many (rats as cats.
Now that there are no ceilings
there's nothing the customer can
hit when he bears the price.
noyal Thaire
LAST TIMES TODAY
KIRBY GRANT
in
'Trail Cf Vengeance"
plus
Bob Hope Dbrothy Lamour
in
"My Favorite Brunette"
,00000.
WEDNESDAY - THURSDAY
WILLIAM HENRY
VIRGINIA CHRISTINE
Tc.ca la Tho 1":"
Sporting Goods and Tire Values!
")
CHAI7I3S
Calhoard Motors
4.8 and 7.9
Horsepower
CCLC1AN
LANTZZS
2 mai&!3 39.35
TODAY you con get our
ALL-C'JT ALL017A1.CE.
FOR YOUR OLD TIRES .
Put B.F. Goodrich SiWertowns "First"
on your list for (1) bttttr man pre-.
waf mileage, i) iHHr man prewar
nfety, (3) bttttr than prewar value.
With all mete "extras," we're adding
a real allowance for your present urea.
$15.25 '
fcoo-teaa
1.50 DOWN -1.25 PER WEEK
' Pat a Stow 40-H InWtawa
m Yawr Car
UMIUniGOT TEE CO.
t i I
i
n
imimwwm
hp! Mk.r'
I . V I !
1h It
ifci-' i : It
' Jif I
To The Voters
Of The 7th
Senatorial
District
I hereby announce my
candidacy for the North
Carolina State Senate
from the 7th Senatorial
District subject to the
Democratic Primary on
Saturday. Nay 29lh.
Carteret County has not
furnished a representa
tive in the Stale Senate
since 1921. Your vote
anrj support will be appreciated.
El wood R.Willis
mm
I I i flfCA
mm en vr
A MONTH FOR FUEL
SOGcUIoKVafcr
First I!cur!
FROM "20.6Atl.0ir COLEMAN Oil
WATER HEATER. Alt the hot water you
want, when you want it. Burnt low-cost
fuel oil. No electricity or gat needed.
And it gives you hot water 24 hours a
day... with no fire-building, no atbes.
Coleman is a "must" for automatic
laundries. You can depend on it
always for the big supply of really hot
water automatic equipment demands.
Available in 20, 30, 45-gallon sizes.
EASYTERHS:5aT
7
AUTOMATIC Oil WATER HEATER
i ir i r r nrf '
IdP.. D'"nTh,,5, , Vmchalumi- 1,
I W k ,.oDing dnrer- na VrfaT Heatel 1
CLYDE JOIIES GAS &
APPLIANCE CO:
PhoM H5827
2iUi & AtendeU
MOREHEAD CITY
Announcing
COASTAL
SKYWAYS
tort
Morehead
CitvAin
1 a
EOUTE 70
Back Under the tlanagement
EARL TAYLOR
j
o
EASTEItll CAROLIIIA FLYIIIG SjHQOL
Approved For Training Under the 6. L Ql
I " . - --- ?S
si
13
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I
3
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PLANE RENTALS - CHARTER FlIGHTS
Pride Hying Lessons
4
VI'
U3TIL pz:lt is installed at akp
PII0I1E BEAUFORT 4
IXEE FLA1.T EZS EVE2Y SUHDAY FC3
tictt n:ixzns
46
LOCET
So they are Installing a tame.jijc J
(pni
t) center. I.
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tnon in eacn rice mu i