V. *
V . - 5
^ Friday. July 16.1948
TOURNEY BOXES MONDAY
GAMES JULY 5
Hendersonvi))e AB R H PO A
Bud Stepp, If 4 2 3 1 0
Link Drab, ss 3 1 0 0*0
Clyde Peek, lb .,.. 4 1 1 3 0
Tom Seltzer, 3b ....' 5 2 12 2
Clarence Stansell, c 2 2 1 4 0
G, Bricklemyer, rf ,c 2 0 (f 7- 0
' Harold Abbott, 2b ... 4 0 0 1 2
Dewey Hunnicutt, cf 3 3 1 0 0
Ed Hunnlcutii p ... 4 1 11 3
Hal Gamble, if, p .. .4 0 2 1 0
Bert Rhodes, rf 1 0 0 2 0
TOTALS 36 42' 10 29 7
Monroe AB R H PO A
Carl Monroe, .... 4 0 0 2 2
Oscar Billihgsley,
3b, p, cf ...... 4 0 1 1 2
Frank Simpson, lb . . 3 3 0 11 - 0
Porky Rose, If .... 4 0 2 1-0
Bill Helms, 2b ..... 5 0 0 3 1
Jim Marrone, rf .... 3 0 0 0 0
Deck Elliott, cf, 3b ..4 1 1 2 1
Louie Brantley, c .1.3 0 0 3 0
Duck Brantley, p .. 0 0 Q. 3 5
Jake Elliott, cf 1 0 0 0 0
Leroy Drawdy, rf ... 0 0 0 0 0
^ Cecil English, p ... 0 0 0 0 0
R Le<^ ,i rd Simpson, p 0 0 0 0 0
TOTALS 31 1 4 26 11
Hendersonville 231 000 213 12
Monroe *' 000 000 100 l"
Errors: Abbott, Bilhngsley 2, F.
Simpson, Helms. Puns batted in:
Stepp, Seltzer 2, Peek 2, Stansell 2,
D. Hunnicutt, E. Hunnicutt. . Twobase
hits: Seltzer, Stansell. Threebase
hits: Billingsley. Stolen bases:
D. Hunnicuut 2, Seltzer 2. Sacrifices:
D. Brantley, Drab 2, Bricklemyer 2,
Abbott. Left on bases: Hendersonvjlle
11, Monroe 13. Bases on balls:
off D. Brantley 5, Billingsley 1, English
3, E. Hunnicutt. 6, Gamble 2.
Strike-outs: D. Brantley 2,* Billingsley
1, English 1, E. Hunnicutt 10,
Gamble 1. Hits off: D. Brantley 2
for 6 runs in 3 1-3 innings; E. Hunnicutt
3 for 1 run in 8 innings; Billingsley
5 for 3 runs in 4 2-3 innings;
Gamble 1 for 0 runs irr 1 inning;
English 1 for 3 runs in 2-3 innings;
L. Simpson 0 for 0 runs 1-3
Inning. Hit by pitcher, by: E. Hunnicutt
(Drawdy). Wild pitches: Billingsley.
Passed balls: L. Brantley
2, D. Hunnicutt 1. Winning pitcher:
E. Hunnicutt; Losing pitqher: D.
Brantley. Umpires: Shaney, Cline,
Guyton. Scorer: Warlick. Time 2:31.
LinTille AH R H PO A
S. B. Lacy, cf ...... 4 0 12 0
Fioyd Green, lb .... 4 0 1 11 1
Balson Daniels, 2b .. 3 0 1 2 3
Julian Greene, c 4 0 1 3 3
Rufus Henley, rf ... 4 0 2 4 G
John Greene, If 4 0 1 1 1
Guy Burleson, 3b ... 4 0 0 1 3
Sher. Warren, p, s? 4 0 13 3
A Bernard Green, p 2 0 0 0 2
Mills Forbes, ss ... 1 0 0 0 1
x-Blll Gentry, 2b .... 1 0 0 0 1
TOTALS ........ 35 0 8 27 18
Carolina Mills AB R H PO A
Shuford Campbell, c 7 3 2 5 3
Jim Caldwell, ss .... 8 0 1 1 6
J. D. Michaels, lb ... 8 4 4 16 0
H. Laney, 3b ...... 8 5 5 1 2
Pete Crowe, rf 6 4 3 0 0
. L. White, cf 5 4.500
Rogers, If ........ 4 4 3 1 1
Bumgardner, 2b .. 5 2 1 2 4
Lawing, p ........ 4 2 3 0 2
Forner, p ..........2 2 2 0 2
Dettc, If 3 10 10
z-Patterson, cf . . 3 3 3 0 0
zz-H. Hovie, if ..... 1 1 0 0 0
' TOTALS ..... (v! 35 32 27 20
x- Gentry grounded for Daniels.
z-Singled for White in 8th.
zz-uot on error lor Orowe in 9th.
C. Mills ' 022 057 463 35
iLinville 000 000 000 0
Errors: Burleson 2. Bumgardner 1,
Warren, John Green 2, Julian
Greene 1, Lacj^l, Laney 2, Gentry 1.
F. Greene 2, Henley 1. Runs batted
MHEADACHE
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BILL HOLLAND
Holland. Horn
To Race Sunday
..
/">lt A T>T rvm^n r*> , ??.
uinrwut. ? ieo Horn, cnampion
of the nation's face drivers,
will be among the zooming stars entered
for Charlotte's second big program
of professional AAA auto races
this year Sunday afternoon at
the Southern States Fair Grounds.
The initial bill on June 13 attracted
an overflow crowd of 19,000..
Sam Nunis, race director, has another
nerve chilling card of seven
events listed, the feature and final
race being a 30-lap gririd, or five
laps more than thi main event of
June 13. Qualifying tfme trials begin
promptly at 1:30 and the opening
race starts at 3 o'clock.
With Horn and several other stars
added to the great field that previously
raced here, Sunday's starters
will comprise the greatest collection
of Indianapolis "500" and dirt
track drivers ever to race on a halfmile
track in the South,
j Other well know entrants include
Bill Holland second at Indianapolis
two years straight; Lee Wallard,
seventh in the 500 this year, Tommy
Hinnershitz, ninth this year; Walt
Brown, Tommy Mattson, Fred Carpenter,
Hank Rogers, Len Koenig,
Dutch Culp, Speed Morelock, Carl
Ott, A1 Fleming and Mark Light,
; winner of the previous feature race
, here.
) Three 10-lap qualifying heat rac- ]
es, a 10-lap consolation event and a j
special three-car match race will be
run between the time trials and fea- j
ture race Sunday afternoon. The big
turnout at the earlier meet has
prompted the management to arrange
for the accommodation of
several thousand more fans in the
lake infield and outside the backstretch.
Over 4,000'individual seats
are available in the covered grandstand.
. '
in: Rogers 1, Lawing 5, White 4,
Crowe 5, Campbell 3, Michaels 3, La
ney 7, Patterson 3, Detter, Forner 2.
Caldwell 1. Two-base hits: White 3,
John Greene 1, Crowe 2, Laney 3,
Fomer 2, Patterson, Mochaels 2,
Caldwell 1. Three-base hits: Warren
1. Home runs: Crowe 1, Lawing
1, Michaels 1. Stolen bases: Jul.
Greene, Bumgardner, Patterson 2.
Sacrifices: Rogers BumgardneT,
Lawing, Campbell. Double plays:
Daniels-Warren-F. Greene, BumI
gardner-Michaels. Left on bases:
!Car. Mills 8, Linville 8. Bases on
| balls: off Warren 1. Strike-outs:
Greene 1, Lawing 4, Warren 1. Hits
I off: Greene 9 for 11 runs in 5 inn!
ings; Lawing 6 hits for 0 runs in 7
i innings; Warren 23 for 24 runs in 4
i innincro* Fnrhoo 9 hitc fnr ft nmc in
j2 Innings. Hit by pitcher, by: Warren
(Bumgardner). Wild pitches:
Warren 2. Passed balls: J.V. Greene
Winning pitcher: Lawing, losing
pitcher: B. Greene. Umpires: Cline,
Guyton, Shaney. Scorer: Warlick.
Time: 2:20.
The Leading Cotton. State
The state of Texas leads all the
other states in the Union in the production
of cotton. If also holds, first
place in output of grain sorghum,
onions, pecans and produces large
quantities of many other agricultural
products.
An exhibition softball game played
by crew members of. the Navy
ships USS Johnston, USS.Rush and
USS.Fresno on their recent goodwill
visit to 'Dullin, Ireland, raised 1,091
pounds (about $4,364) for Irish
charity.
For Sale
ir Bags
Heads
Sets
Hags
i Dusters
AFT MILLS
Phone 3734
??L4afi?3/ .iA'-'. vi'
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THE KINGS MOONTAIN HERSmall
Grain
[Contest Plans
Almost Complete '
Plans are almost complete for the
I big small grain contest to be held ,
I this fall for North Carolina farmers,1,
[according to Dr.' E. R. Collins, in ;
I charge of Agronomy for the State
[College Extension Service.
| In this latest contest, farmers will
; compete not for cash prizes but for *
[the chance to spend some of their
own cash, says Dr. Collins: Town- 1
ship winners in both the oats and
! wheat contest will have first chance
to buy six bushels of two new varieties
of wheat being released to the
^public in the fall of 1949.
NC 5450 and NC 5466, varieties es
pecially adapted to the Coastal
Plain and Piedmont, are the prizes
at stake. Farmers who saw the small
grain demonstration this past
spring at Mt. Gilead, Forsyth countV
Farm ' I
..nr uiairjvmc .orancn
Experiment Station will recall these
two as the leading varieties. NO
5450 is especially noted for its stiff
straw which. keeps it erect long af;
ter other varieties, have broken or
lodged.
W. T. Moss, of Youngsville, president
of the North Carolina 100-Bush
el Corn Club, has announced that
his group wil aid in forming a 50bushel
Wheat Club and a 100-Bushel
Oat Club after the harvest next
year. Mr. Moss will preside over
corn and soybean discussions at
Farm and Home Week this August.
At that time, the wheat and oat !
contests will officially open. j
In addition to their chance tt> buy j
seed of the new varieties, township
and county winners in the small
grain contest will be awarded lapel
buttons and certificates. State cham
pions will be crowned and the certicates
awarded at Farm and Home
Week next year.
JOB PRINTING?Phones 167 & 283
mntQms
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Only Chevrolet brings
of BIG CAR QUALI1
prices now decidedly
car that even remol
ftsTf You'll have w> n
with the genuine
N *?attiujive to C
with Ch
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aive to
V ^jP^HQPrefr tasteful luxury.
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CHEVROL
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ALD, KINGS MOUNTAIN. N. C.
r
The Warm Springs Foundation
The Georgia Warm Springs Found j
ation. established to aid persons j
crippled with infantile paralysis,
was estabJis-hed by Franklin D. !
Roosevelt, himself a victim of the j
dreaded disease in 19127.
A Narrow Margin
In 1884,'when Grover Cleveland
was elected President, the Democratic
National plurality was but
23,005 of a total Vote of 10,052,706.
' ' . ' ' *'*!"" '
A bright, colorful kitchen, arranged
to save steps and stoops, can
save both the time and enejgy of
the homemaher.
I SHELBY I
FARMERS I
Home Schedule
July 16
Newton-Conover
July 19
All-Star Game at
Lincolnton
July 20
Hendei sonville
July 21
Forest City
? V
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FOLLOW THE I
FARMERS! I ~
WMW
i/ow mote
1
[RST IN
LST IN ]
you all these major advarita
rY AT LOWEST PRICES .
lower than those of any ot
:ely approaches it in cpiality !
iv(h more riding smoothness
Unitized Knee-Action Ride
Chevrolet and higher-priced
njoy mors thrill) and more tooingt I
evrolet'a world's champion Valveengine.
Valve-m-Uead, too. ia etcloChevrolet
and higher-priced can.
at your Chevrolet leads in
for it has the world-famous
-available only on Chevrolet
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Itavf the triple to let g ml Fuher ff)
Body Construction, the Knee- f
Vde and Positive-Action Hydrasshc
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CHEERWINE!
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With
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DEMAND
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ges The plain truth is that this j are-setting Chevrolet offerr
major quality advantage afKr major quality advantage
not available in other cars i.? its field: and, in addition.
Chevrolet prices are now obviously and outstandinglylower
than those of any c liter car that even remotely-,
approaches it in quality. * j
Thus, Chevrolet and on'y Chevrolet offers the Big-Cart
comfort of the original and outstanding Unitized Knees ???..
Action Ride... the Big-Car performance and dependability-.
of a world's champion Vtive-u.-l icad engine . . . the Big'
Car beauty nnd luxury bv Fisber . . . the Big-C?rr
safety of Bd?t I.JmtU .) ? - fir MtircsV 1. weeAction
Rjjr ?itd P?s?? .Mtsvi iits.br ihsk'ts . . . aB
at lowest prices?prices ixi . w.. ? > . iwrs-nr*
even more thrifty, when compared with the prices of.
other automobiles in its field.
jj, Yes, indeed, Chevrolet is first in dollar value by tha~
'"C widest margin in all Chevrolet history; and, of course, it ?*
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