Beaufort Sea Dogs Handed
10-Game Football Schedule
The Beaufort Sea Dogs have 1(M
games slated for the *51 season.
Five games will be fought on the
" home field, and the other five at
? _sueh varying points as Elizabeth
J City, Warsaw, Camp Lejeune and
Ayden.
Season tickets for all home
games will go on sale next Mon
day. They may be purchased at
Guthrie-Jones Drug store, the
Beaufort News Stand, or from any
Beaufort Jaycee.
"* The Sea Dog schedule follows:
.. Sept. 14 ? Vanceboro ? home.
Sept. 21 ? Camp Lejeune ? away,
j Sept. 28 ? Beulahvllle ? home.
Oct. 5 ? Richlands ? away.
Oct. 12 ? Morehead City? home.
Oct. 19 ? Swansboro ? home.
Oct. 26 ? ( Pending ) ? away.
Nov. 2 ? Warsaw ? home.
Nov. ft ? Ayden ? away.
p Nov. 16 ? Elizabeth City ? away.
Nov. 22 ? Morehead City ? away.
All games this year will be play
ed at night.
Tar Heels Sail
For Washington
Group Will Visii N. C. Town
On Labor Day Cruise;
Enieriainmenl Planned
The local Tar Heels Afloat gang
is all set for a Labor Day week
1 end cruise to the Washington
^ Yacht and Country club. The re
sort is on Broad Creek, on the
north side oi Pamlico River.
Rendezvous at the club will be
at 5 p.m. Saturday, at which time
Edmund Harding, chairman of the
. welcome committee, will extend
?greetings. Then there will follow
a fish fry and later a midnight
dance.
' Sunday the Tar Heels plan a boat
parade to Washington Park and
back to the club, a distance of 10
miles. For those who would rather
play golf, the links will be open
all day. Sunday evening will be
topped off with a banquet and
dancc. Monday the Tar Heels will
sail homeward.
Local residents who will be up
there having fun are Mr. and Mrs.
*T. T. Potter, Mr. and Mrs. Gray
Hassell. and Mr. and Mrs. George
Eastman.
> OBITUARIES
MRS. CASCIE B. KINSEY
Funeral services for Mrs. Cassie
B. Kinsey, 68. who died Monday
morning at her home at Swansboro
were held Wednesday morning at
10 o'clock in the Swansboro Meth
odist church with fche Rev. Benton
^officiating. Burial was in Piney
Grove cemetery.
Surviving Mrs. Kinsey are two
daughters, Mrs. H. A. Cross of Mid
- way Park, Mrs. Myron Norris of
Swansboro, one brother, Fate Bar
bour of Pollocksville, one sister,
Mrs. Oscar Conway, of Beaufort
and three grandchildren.
WILLIAM D. PERRY
William D. Perry of Wanchese,
father of E. F. Perry, Beaufort
RFD, died Thursday morning at
J the home of his daughter, Mrs. W.
R. Etheridge. He was 77 years
old.
Burial was in Wanchese, Friday,
Aug. 24, following services in the
?Methodist church.
Mr. Perry was a native of Col
lington and for 40 years sailed
alone the Atlantic coast.
Besides Mrs. Etheridge, he is
survived by another daughter, Mrs.
W. B. Alcox of Norfolk, Va., and
by two sons: W. L. Perry of Day
tona Beach, Fla., and E. F. Perry
of Beaufort RFD.
Are You Wrapped Up
In Your Possessions?
AtU Marry Hazard
Too many people forget
?heir personal belongings and
ignore the various ways in
which they may be destroyed
when planning their insur
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Be smart, advises Harry
Hazard, famous danger de
tector, by having complete
and adequate coverage
planned and serviced by;
- John L Cramp
brauM ? Bail Estate
Nmm 6-4000
,823 Arendell St.
MorobMd City, N. C. .
Jaycee Believes Beaufort
Team One of Best Equipped
This year Coach John Evans' Sea*
Dogs will be one of the best
equipped football outfits in North
Carolina high school competition.
At least that's what Albert Chapell,
Beaufort Jaycees football commit
teeman, thinks.
In addition to 33 green and white
nylon game jerseys and pants, the
Beaufort gridironers will be sport
ing new plastic helmets.
"These helmets are the same as
are being used by major college
and pro teams of the nation," said
Chapell. "The total equipment out
lay will be well over $1,000 this
year, but the Jaycees feel that good
equipment is the best insurance
that can be bought to guard against
injuries.
"In addition it is a potent morale
factor for the. players."
Besides buying the uniforms, the !
Jaycees have been having a
bleacher bee out in Beaufort Can
nery. The new seats are just about
finished and are the brain work
of Bobby Stephens.
Gene Smith estimates that the
new bleachers will give Beaufort I
Park an additional 500 seats. This,
he stressed, will bring the total
capacity to about 1,000.
Jaycee Wiley H. Taylor, jr., said
that the club wants to provide a
seat for every spectator who en
ters the park. But with the inter
est being shown in the '51 edition
of the Sea Dogs, he doubts whether
1,000 seats will do the job.
Evangeline Innocence
Pittsburgh ? (AP) ? - General
Manager Branch Rickey of the }
Pittsburgh Pirates once asked a j
rookie pitcher where he played the i
season before.
"In the Evangeline League, sir,"
replied the youngster.
"How did you go?" asked Rickey.
"By bus, most of the time," ans
wered the boy, innocently.
A Weighty Proposition
Singapore. ? (AP) ? The Singa
pore Amateur Weightlifting fed
eration received an invitation from
Italy to participate in the world's
championships at Milan. But it
looks like the bid isn't going to be
accepted. B. L. Dunsford, presi
dent of the federation, said he
didn't think that Singapore pres
ently had any lifters of world
class, although this British colony
did make an impressive showing at
the Asian games.
Queen St. Team
Shows Promise
Queen Street high school's coach
S. H. Barrow sees a lot of promise
in quarterbacks Richard Tootle and
William Jordan. Floyd Hill, a
junior this year, also '"looks good."
Barrow has been having warm
up practice for the past two weeks.
The training squad numbers 23.
Second baseman Bobby Adams of
the Cincinatti Reds hit .341 the
last half of the 1950 campaign. He
finished with a .282 mark.
Sailboats Will *
Race at 1:30 PH. !
On Labor Day
Starting Point is Foot of 8th 1
Street; Course Will
Skirt Island ]
Carteret eountians who love the -
sight of billowy white sails against
blue sky will want to be at the
foot of 8th street in Morehead City
come 1:30 p.m. Monday, Labor Day.
At that point and time, the Labor
Day handicap is set to push off.
Any sailboat, any size can enter
the race, says Don Robinson of Bur
lington, who has his 16-footer ready
to go.
"If you're a last-minute contest
ant," Don advises, -,you can still
get in if you're there by 1 p.m.
There's no fee for participating."
The racers will sail around the
small island between Morehead and
Bogue Banks. The winner, Don
states, will be the boat which makes
the trip in the fastest time.
The man to beat in the event ?
HEAR "CALL TO POST"
WN8L - 4:30
MON. THROUGH SAT.
mec
POST
TIME
7:30 avt)
10 RACK NIGHTLY
EXCEPT SUNDAY
RAIN or CLKAR
SPECIAL!'
LABOR DAY
MATINEE -Post Time 2 P.M.
(IN ADDITION TO REGULAR NIGHT PROGRAM)
10 Thrilling Day-light rac? Daily Double 1st and 2nd Races;
Quinelat 2nd to 10th Rac? Admission 25c, incL lax, no child
ran admitted. Free parking.
ON U.S. 70 - JUST 5 MILES FROM
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340 Morehead Youths Enjoyed
City's Summer Play Program
coicn unaries ne?ter reported to
he recreation commission Tuesday
light that a total of 340 Morehead
nil be Morehead's Charles Nelson
vho will be piloting his 20-foot
:hampion. Eugene Davis of Mar
ihallberg, expects, however, to give
Nelson stiff competition as do three
ither Morehead sailors.
City youths participated in the
town'* summer play program.
Hester said that this figure rep
resented 25S boys and 83 girls.
July, he said, was the busiest
month. In late August, he added,
there was an influx of new, tem
porary members, but this stemmed
from the fact that the first few
days of football practice were held
at the USO.
DIRECT
AND
F H A
LOANS
Tomorrow Will Come
Tomorrow as a day may never come because It's
always Just a day away . . . but tomorrow as a
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the seasons. Plan for your tomorrow with a life
Insurance policy. It will mean financial security
during your retirement years. Life Insurance Is
the best assurance for a happy tomorrow!
FAMILY GROUP HOSPITALIZATION
BRUCE L. GOODWIN
BOX 592 PHONE 6-3078 MOREHEAD CITY
Pilot Life Insurance Company, Greensboro, North Carolina
Out-State Anglers
Reap Big Catches
Two father andson teams from
West Virginia and three couples
from Virginia hooked a lot of fish
Monday.
Dr. C. C. Jackson and son, Carl,
jr., of East Rainelle. W. Va., and
A. L. Jicksan and son Cbariea of
Charleston, W. V?., hauled in 25
dolphin, one red anapper, one am
berjack. two bonito, and 30 lb(. of
black fish. They sailed in Capt.
Purifoy's Sea Raven.
The Dolphin, piloted by Capt.
Georgq Bedsworth, had aboard Mr.
and Mrs. Harold Saunders'and Mr.
and Mrs. Edgar Hightower from
Chase City, Va., and Mr. and Mrs.
John Gee of Blackstone, Va. They
caught one amberjack, 30 dolphin,
10 trigger fish.
I . ?
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