Newspapers / Carteret County News-Times (Morehead … / Aug. 19, 1958, edition 1 / Page 3
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/ Jaycees Begin Football Ticket Sales Rufus Butner, center, vice-president of Commercial National Bank, pays Louis Russell, right, for 50 student tickets for Morehead City's home football games. The bank bought the tickets and gave them to school principal Lenwood Lee for students who were unable to pay to see the games. Mr. Russell is co-chairman of the Morehead City Jaycee football committee. Looking on at the left is Jaycee president Jerry J. Willis. The Morehead City Jaycees have begun selling season tiekets for Kagle home football games. Price of a ticket good for four games is $3.50 for adults and $1.50 for stu dents. The home games are as follows: Swansboro, Sept. 19; Jones Cen tral, Sept. 26; Havclock. Oct. 3; and Beaufort, Oct. 31. Louis Russell, co-chairman of the Jaycecs football committee, says that 1,000 tickets have been printed and all Jaycees have sev jeral for sale. The tickets are also I on sale at Jerry J. Willis Insurance Agency and at Leary's. I The Eagles went undefeated last year as they swept into the state I championship. Coach Norman Clark lost most of his starting [players through graduation but the Eagles arc expected to comc I through with another strong team. 40 Eagle Gridders Report For First Practice Friday Forty boys reported for football' practice at Morehead City School at 6 a.m. Friday. Practices will continue daily, from 6 to 8:30 a.m. and 2:30 to 4:30 at Wade Brothers Park until the opening of school, Coach Norman Clark announces. Any high school youth who passed all his subjects last year is eligible to report for practice. "It's not too late," the coach em phasizes, "the more, the better." Clark is faced this season with rebuilding almost an entirely new team. Seven first string men grad Bated this spring ? six linemen and the quarterback. "Our boys look green, very green," Coach Clark said. They lack experience." With Hugh Gordon as assistant coach, Clark says things don't look as bleak as they could. "He's a tremendous help," he remarked. "Without him, I'd really have a rough time this season." Gordon is line coach. The prospective gridders are geing through limbering up exer cises and running field plays. Morehead City's first game is Fishermen Have Close Call When Skiff Sinks in Squall Duck Jacobs and Tommy O'Neal, Durham, had a close call Sunday morning during the thunder squall which occurred between 6:30 and 8. The men had rented a skiff from the B. J. White fishing camp and when the storm came, tried to take shelter under the railroad bridge which spans Newport River at Morehcad City. The waves poured over the boat, causing it to sink. The fishermen took refuge on a barge which had been tied to pilings by workmen on the highway bridge. Then they climbed up on the railroad bridge with New Bern Sept. 5 at New Bern. The second game is also away, at Cary, and the third game is the first home game, with Swansboro. and walked back to the fishing camp. The skiff, the outboard motor which belonged to the fishermen, their gear and everything else went right to the bottom, but the skiff didn't turn over. Divers from Raleigh who were gigging sheepshead, later retrieved everything. Ralph Gurley, H. H. Fish and Mr. White, owner of tfc skiff, put boats to work and towed the skiff home. It is estimated that everything salvaged was valued at about $500. The United States ranks first among nations which grant scholar ships to students from abroad, of fering about 20,000. France is sec ond with 13,000 scholarships avail able to foreign students. WE REBUILD ENGINES Automobile, Truck, Tractor, Industrial and Marine Any engine, laVge or small, it guaranteed to give new engine perform ance. All parts used in our motors are the best we can buy; our equip ment is the latest type factory rebuilding machinery. The men in our shop have been thoroughly trained to do the job right. ? Crankshaft Grinding ? Surface Cylinder Heads ? Recondition Connecting Rods ? Brake Drum Tuning ? Complete Valve Work ? Engine Bering ? Install Cylinder Sleeves ? In-the-Biock Crankshaft Grinding ? Piston Pin Fitting ? Piston Knurling These Service! tad Man; Others Are Available We keep a stock of popular engines built'up to give our customers service when they need it on rush order. YES!.. ? we buy motors and are always in the market for them. Let us know what you have to rebuild or to sell. Morehead Motor Parts 8th and Evans St. ? Morehead City Wholesale Distributors ? Engin* Rebuilders Pheoes PA 8-4780 and PA 6-4677 It L_ A ' Chuck, Linda Lewis to Put on Show At Golf Course Friday at 5:30 P.M. Two of golfdom's brightest per sonalities will be at the Morehead City Country Club Friday after noon at 5:30 p.m. They are Chuck and Linda Lew is. Chuck is a golf porfessional with one of the largest collections of trick clubs ever assembled and his daughter, 7-year-old, Linda, the world's youngest golf profes sional. Their Friday afternoon perform ance will be open to the public, according to Morehead City Jay cees who are sponsoring the show for the benefit of the Babe Za harias cancer fund. Tickets may be obtained from Jaycees and at Hill's store. More head City. Children under 10 will be admitted free. Among other things. Chuck will be hitting moving golf balls, hitting from a sitting and kneeling posi tion, the machine-gun trick, hitting three swing balls, hitting with a club in each hand, and with clubs with buggy-whips and garden hose for shafts. He'll also use a club seven feet long. Linda has been hitting golf balls since she was eight months old and played in her first tourna ment at 17 months. They have appeared on numer ous tv shows. You may have seen Linda hit the ball out of Andy Wil liam's mouth on Steve Allen's Show and out of Garry Moore's on I've (lot a Secret. As a finale she'll try and per suade some person in the gallery to hold a golf tee in their mouth and let her hit a golf ball off of it. C. C. McCuiston, golf pro, also announces that Friday will be open house at the golf course. Club members may invite any Carteret guests to golf and use the pool. fcnds Season The Morehead City Teen- Age League season ended Sunday when rain stopped a game between Morehead City and Camp More head. The score was tied at three all in the fifth when the game was called. Saturday afternoon a Morehead City all-star team beat Beaufort all-stars by a 20-2 score. Linda, 7, and her father, Chuck, will stage show to help raise money for Babe Zaharias cancer fund. Initial Seadog Grid Practice Brings Out 38 Beaufort Boys Friday Thirty - eight boys reported for football ..practice Friday morning ?t the Beaufort High School foot ball field. Coach V. M. Morrison put them through an hour and a half of cal csthenics and running plays. What do the prospects look like? Coach Morrison cautiously an swers, "Well, we'll field a team." He said there's a lot of building to do. Beaufort's first game will be Sept. 5 against Vanccboro at Vanceboro. Then the Seadogs re turn home the following week to meet Havelock. The Seadog coach says practice will be conducted at 10 a.m. and 6 p.m. daily? at least -for the rest of the week. The practice sessions will last for about an hour. State Distributes Intangible Tax Revenues Distributed rcccntly to local governing units were their share of the state intangibles tax. Carteret County received $11, 817.54, Morchcad City $4,107.70, Beaufort $1,388.07, and Newport $179.85. Atlantic Beach has not re ceived its share. The distribution was made by the State Board of Assessments which said the intangible tax collected during the past year was the big gest in state history. The number of horses in the world declined from 114 million in 1928 to 78 million in 1950. RESERVE .000 ? PINT $ 86 PROOF J ? Tar Heels Afloat Plan for Cruise From Washington Washington, N. C. ? Tar Heels Afloat, North Carolina boat own ers groups, plans to meet here on its semi annual cruise, Saturday, Aug. 30. All boats plan to rendezvous at the Washington Yacht and Country | club on Broad Creek where all fes tivities will be held. Highlighting the event will he a round trip cruise from Broad Creek to Washington on Sunday, Aug. 31, at 2 p.m. The organization is composed primarily of boat owners working together to promote with wider use of the inland waters of the state. J. Gilbert Smith of Robcrson ville is commodore of the organi zation. Bobcats Take Lead in League The Bobcats scored a 9 3 victory over the Athletics Friday after noon to take the lead in the Beau fort Church League. The Bobcats have now won three games while losing two. Chuck Hill was the winning pitcher as he limited the Athletics to five hits. The losers got to Hill for four hits and three runs iu the sixth inning. The Bobcats got to losing pitch er Pud Hasscll for three runs in the second and put the game on ice with one run in the third, four in the fourth and one in the sixth. William Cole led the winners at the plate with three hits. Ray (Ho ver and Chuck Hill got two hits each. Danny Monroe and Moses Teel hit safely once. Pud Hasscll got two hits to lead the Athletic attack. Walter House, Pat Smith and Sonny House got the other three Athletic hits The Cubs and Athletics will meet this afternoon with a game be tween the (..'ubs and Bobcats sche duled for Friday afternoon. Sammy Tyler Wins News-Times Junior Golf Tournament Sammy Tyler, 14, won the an nual Carteret County News-Time? junior golf tournament at the Morehead City Golf and Country Club last week. Sammy is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Horace Tyler of Havelock. Runner-up was Joe Bellamah, who won the tournament in 1955. Harry Gillikin Jr., champion for the past two years, did not defend his title. Sammy beat Joe by one Stroke, 103-104 in the final round. Other boys entered in the tour nament were Buster Tyler, Dick McClain and Wayne Thompson. Sammy, who has been playing golf for two years, says that this is his first championship. He was runner-up in last years tourney. The big trophy Sammy won will get the place of honor on the man. tie of the Tyler living room. There were less than half a bil lion people on earth when Magellan circumnavigated the globe 500 years ago. Today there are near ly 3 billion people. Fishermen Report Good Catches Despite Squalls By BUB SIMPSON Fishing inshore, offshore and from the ocean piers had its ups and downs over the weekend be cause of the heavy ground swell and some squally weather. Still, there were plenty of good catches, and no need to resort to fish stories. After a few weeks of no rec ord-breaking fish, Arthur Lewis' Bunny Too came in with a 10 pound bluefish. caught by Tony (avalle of Charleston, W. Va. Third sailfish in a week was the one caught aboard Felix Miller's Evelyn B, by Bill Saunders of High Point, measuring 6 feet 6'4 inches. Coaching the landing of the sail was Capt. LeRoy Gould, whose Mattie (I was fishing nearby. Eve lyn B is one of the private sports fishing boats based at G & M Boat Basin in Pelletier Creek. The ocean pier king mackerel count has gone well over 120, and th?* kings are still hitting daily. Pier operators report a general improvement in fishing. Big blues and hogfish, spots, flounder, sheepshead and an oc casional puppy drum. We refer pier fishermen to the 1958 Fishing and Vacation Guide and the article by Rod Amundson on tarpon fishing or how to catch tarpon in 10 easy lessons and re mind them that there is a $100 cash prize being presented by the four ocean piers for the largest tarpon caught from an ocean pier this season. Are you anglers going to let a mere 87-pounder take the prize? ne also want to call rabulous Fishermen's attention to the brass plaques in the window of Capt. OUis' market that record all the blue marlin caught this season by his boats: name of boat, skipper, angler, weight, date, all the vital statistics. These same brass plaques are available to any member at Early Jewelers for recording '56 and '57 trophy winners, and are a good way of letting your par lies know where the big fish were caught. The Legislative End Lander, Wyo. (AP)? State Rep. A. J. ilardendorf, Republican, said he is not going to run for re-elec tion this year. The reason, he said: "It's too much of a strain on my eyes to read the big atack of bills." Gu&r*iti*ed n?wsb!e LIFBTIMfc Hospitcr zatson Insurance S. A. Chaik Jr. FlrM-CWnns Kwik Phone PA rk 6-3103 Mortferad dry. V < Hwy-duty 1 00 Swim !and*m omd Fh*ttid? pickup. You get the right power... right down the line! From the moantaln-movin' Work ? muster V8 In tandems down to the quick-stepping Thrift master 6 In pick r, Chevrolet trucks offer precisely kind of power you need. Here are seven truck engines designed and built to work longer for less on your fob. woouuim v? Unfit tor top- tonnage hauls, this 3<8-cub(c inch V8 packs 230 kp, has Dew "Wed?e-Head" design. HIAVY-DUTY fUFft TASKMASTTR V? Thia 175-h.p. V8 is tough-built for tough jobs. Like the Workraaster. it baf 4-barrcl carburetor, dual exhaust HIAVY-DUTY TASKMASTIK Vi - Engi neered to put muscle in medium-duty job8,this283-cubic-inch V8 packs 160 hp. JOtMASTIK 4? Built for dollar-having durability, this 261 -cubic -inch 130-h.p. 6 hauls hefty loads with ease. TRADIMAlm Vt-Thte l?0-h.p. VI has stay-on-the-job stamina (or tight ached-, ulcs. t J to 1 compnaakn ratio. THRimHAim *? Top? far cutting eoaf corners, this 233-cubic-inch 6 has 145 h p, 8.25 to 1 compression ratio. THitrraurm ? (MCi?i-Runt?ffy Ml (or Forward Control duty, it i got toon "go" for Mop-aod-go hanlmg CHEVHMET WS TRUCKS ?j See your local authorized Chevrolet dealer SOUND CHEVROLET COMPANY, INC. 1306 Arendell Street MoreKead City Phoo? PA ?-<071 PV ?
Carteret County News-Times (Morehead City, N.C.)
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Aug. 19, 1958, edition 1
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