iih'1 ell ^go |\ eh ocrwr-l /cars agol \ Jr., pa.'i- church in )nie pastor •list chun-h rr., Plonk jman, was Otks a Amorican SOiVA/. edged Sat- rst Baptis* ircia Leigli Mojntaiii Crajg, Jr. Osbaiii* »cmenl |>f a Jane, n, son lurton. /ERS Organi| >anel of ia‘ worn! veil as m| r. ThvrsJay, May KINOS MOUNTMN HBULD, KINGS. FOUNTAIN, tl. C Page y than G Grand P: id sox hk Iriving ab! drivers a; 11,” he 001 women u t than mi el of an 4 involved ts. . . r. Withe myth h( as Hen ig and M ing? /(iiH Deal OBLEM somewh apple p ae has ben n languag inoes we ■cation dil ise i* wal I make fofi o teach Eiil ildren. Thd financed hi n language.! language^ reign l-ang )eak a for )s they can s a foreign make them 1 and maybe, to improj^A conditlon^^ Daily News doctor bills a claim for care. How claim? never filed ould be a ?ial security h your first ir itemized are card. It the bills to m. t me many 3t get a di* us has re- •eceiving so- Since I am /as wonder- anything as /er been di- I his legV are eligible mthly bene-^'-* ity account, ch With the / office im- he specifics ■V "4 3 ri: \ HOME RUN HITTERS —» Seniors Mike Smith (left) and Wayne Mulltneoc each hit a home run in KM's eosy 13-3 victory over Buras Fridoy. Smith cracked a solo shot over the leftffeld fence ond Mullinox blasts a grandslaminer Over cente^ield.*Eacfh‘col lected two hits in the Mounties' 14-hit ottocic. Tie, Three For Title With a three-game lead in the .Southwestern Conference bn«e- baU race artd five playing dates remaining, Klng.s Mountain’s Mountaineers ndid two victories to clinch a tie fdr the champion ship and. three-wins to wrap up 'an outright title. The Friday afternoon, the Moun-' Last time around, the Moun- son, who was the winning pitch- most improved team in the con- The Mountaineers will not play talneers travel to East Ruther- taineers drop|>ed a 3-2 decision to or over KM earlier. ference. Since that loss to the before a home crowd again until ford where Coach Bob Hussey’s the Cavaliers. All throe F:ast runs Mountaineers, the Wolves had next Friday night w’hen Crest invades City Stadium. That game tight Mountaineer defense com- taineers travel uj LIncoInton and Their only loss was 2-1 to Alan is schwluled for 7:3t). mitted four errors in one inning, it will be Ethridge’s turn to pitch. Lindsay and the ('herryville He'll likely oppose righihandei- Ironmon. John Colvard, who dropped a 1-2 decision to Goforth an 1 the Since losing to the Mountain- Mouniies during first round play, eers, Colvard has pitched several Lincolnton, under veteran coach fine games, including a no-hit Perry Brown, is probably th(' victoiy over Belmont. '.to ^I pevepge for wTre uneaimed, as the usually Tuesday afternoon, the Moun- won five of their last six games. tJfelr^pnfy loss of the season. tight Mountaineer defense ♦♦ 'Hurley >plfns t^thpaw' Ro^y to -pitch ace Righthander Bobby Ethridge, Cfofortbr , who despite pitching a good game. \m ... .... Mountaineer^ presently \^M be gunning' for Ms lOth vie- was tagged with the loss, sport a 12*1 league mark while tqry thcj-yeetr. Goforth hasn’t Cherryville and Shelby are tied lost, aV and is the only unde-U The Mountaineers will likely for second place with 94 records, featod-iuirler In the conference, [face Cavalier ace Roger Wilker After the Chargers, KM closes out regular season play againsd Cherryville at home and Chase on tho road. Both of K'M’s re maining tivvo homo tilts are srlie- , diiled for 7:30. Dri^dl i^ei^s At Kiwanis Cage Banquet £AddBe SHik ihie-llit WRi lEanms .7 Ethridge Shines n noiilt Oil Canpan; Tidres Ttflie In iMen's Bowing league ftdi'M Plonk Oil Co. defeated Albert game to ^iVe him a two-game to- Brackett four games to three to tal of2G4. league championship Monday Brackett bowi- | cherry and reliefer, Sam Rum nfght at Mountain Lanes Bowl- "s topped ‘he ^00 mark m the ; ^It ae»nr\nrt rw-antAfit mg Cen*er. Junior righthander Bobby Eth- I rid jc fired a one-hitter and work- • ; ed hts first conipiete gamevf the . i season Tuesday night at City ' Stadium in hurling the Moun- ' taim\rsof Kings Mountain High, to a 50 Southwestern Conference; t victory over Belmont. j I Ethridge bested a pair of Red i Raider righthanders, ace Ricky, The series went the sevenigame limit, but no individual scores were available. Brackett’s team won a special rolloff for the sec*ond half title,* winning two s*ralght games in a best-oM'hrce series. That forced a seven-game set for the league championship. For the second half title, Brack- 100 nrark in the second contest. FoUowimg Brack ett’s 146 were Jerry Dover at 113, Wimp Bowen at 111 and Steve Rathbone at 106. High scorers for Pxonk were Ro'^rt Ramsey wi*h a 120 in the first game and captain Randy Blanton with a 119 in the second contest. Ethridge allowed only two base . ; runners. He hit a batter in the , , third inning and gave up a single I to Ronnie McGraw in the fifth. , Neither went further than first. : base and McGraw was erased on j a doubleplay when he tried to j steal second following a strike-1 j out. j '-yt y X 526 to 519> in the first game and copped the second by a whopping 40 pins <566 to 526b * * * I Ethridge struck out six, but Three blank Jobs were turned '"«re Jmi^rtant kept the I^^ders in l-uesdav msht in laxHes league!»« tLn ** • i and a sharp-breaking curve ball. record his to; colleeted ! The victory hiked Firs‘ place Oates Shell Servicej4-1. won four off Drewes Tax as Jen . \i/»mtain«»r Dwight Reeves paved the way ^r^th^lo^ert ^na‘^v^n I hit^aff ChW'«nd Rum-; in the opening game with a ^ L uL and 275Vri^ *»" bu‘ slipped to a 90 in the secOnd ^ ^ senes. | wayne Mullinax and 'Clarence, game. However, Brackett took Dori^j W-are rolled a 109 line Ashe and a booming double to; up the slack by rolling a 146, and Betty Wells added a 318 setUlte left • centerfield bank by which topped both teams for the to load Herman’s Phillips 66 to at Chuck Carpenter. *^*'‘®^* Amerl<»n L^ion.i Pat Herndon scored a 120323 fort Brtl—KM s Junior second m BIG iirnras — Soator cotcher Clarence Ashe has snapped out ^ |i hltUny'atttBip and htti wont on a hitting tear against South- WfftBrn 'COHfarwict pitchers.He hod o pair of hits in XM s 3-1 win R-8 Coatikl 'Uomdmf and ho cradeed a run-scoring triple in TU^adoVis S-*Q'ViclorY-a«or Belmont. Brackett had a 118 in the fit’s* the loo€»rs. 1 ' diaftspun Tddees Pofr Victories Gity softball league action is underway and five games have •already been played. Opening night, Monday, Cash Orocery dropped a 11-7 decision *0 the KM Merchants and Craft*; spurt Yarns nipped Fraley Chev rolet of Cherryville 4-2. baseman, led the plate attack with 2-*for-3, and he and senior Louise Dover rolled a 127 line shortstop Mike Smith made sev- and 309 set *o lead Patterson Au-|epal outstanding defensive plays, to Parts to a 4-0 win over PlonI< Brothers. Barbara Miller had a 114 line and 300 set for the los ers. Doug Rathbone’s the Merchants win Scruggs had 2 for*3 spun. 4-for4 led while Joe; for Craft-: SoiAall €ames To Benefit KBOlSSeito ! Smith, in fact, went to Bell's ! side of second base on three dif- ! ferent occasions to fo^ but Bel- ‘ mont hitters. I The Mountaineers went ahead I 2-0 in the third inning on a walk fihdlinax, llfilie Smitli Hit Ifloae Bob In 134 TictoiyFridag ,^ings Mountain’s Mountaineers on their biggest hitting splurge .6f . the season Friday atft«aaiopn at .BurpSj cracking out 14 hits in a 13-3 Southwestern home run of the season but Smith, the SWC’s leading hitter, earlier hit one against Crest. Righthander Bobby Ethridge picked up *he pitching victory, Goforih Whips R-S Central Second Tune Rocky Goforth posted his ninth straight victory Monday after noon as Kings Mountain High took a 3-1 Southwestern Confer ence victory over R-.S Central’s Hllltoppers. Goforth, in winning his 18th game in 19 decisions as a high schooler, gave up four hits, walk ed two and struck out 10 as the Mountaineers stre'ched their conference lead to three games over Shelby and Cherryville. The Mountaineers gave Goforth a 1-0 lead in the second inning as ' catcher Clarence Ashe singled, , went to second on a wild pitch, I took third on an infield out and , scoied on a wild pi‘oh. R-S Central tied it in the top of the fourth as Goforih gave up a tlvvo-w’alk and a tremendous triple to deep centerfield by Stacey Lail. Bu*. the Mounties came back in the bottom half of the fourth to score twice and end the scor \ng. Shortstop Mike Smith UmI off with a sharp single to center,, then scored on Ashe's second hit, a booming double to the road in left-center. Ashe then scorad on a single through the middle by sophomore outfielder Geeper How’ard. Ashe w'as ’he only Slountain- eer to get more than one hit off southpaw Larry Dalton of the Hllltoppers. Dalton gave up six hits and struck out eight. Ashe was 2-for-3 and Wajmo Mullinax joined him in the ex‘ra base department with a sixth in ning double. ^. i- TOP HITTERS — Junior second baseman Jack Bell had two hits to pace KM’s Mountaineers to a 5 • 0 Southwestern Conference victory over Belmont Tuesday night. The victory gives the Mountaineers o 12*1 league rec* ord and 14-1 overoU chart head ing into o road game Friday against Eost Rutherford. : to Bell, a triple past the center- Conference victory over the »ull-i year against one Karate Students Get Beret Here ! field scoreboard by Mullinax and ; -a single to left by Smith. They added another pair in the fifth on a walk to Sndth, Ashe’s triple and a sacrifice fly by I Geeper Howard, i The final Mountaineer tally ! came in the sixth as Ashe was ! hit by a pitched ball stole second ; and scored on Hc^Xrard’s single to Tuesday night, Craftspun made The summer recreation it rwo straight wi‘h a 9-2 win •S>'am is now m the plannmg pro-, ^ over Duplex as Terry Spencer '*** ^* I Chero’, favoring a Sdre arm, 3.for.4. was tagged with the loss, his sec of the lioss. However, he needed relief. Several students of the Adams A sfand-slam home run by help from ace lefthander Rocky Academy of Karate are now dik third baseman Wayne Mullinax. Goforth, who came on in the,ed in green berets. Each hat fca stop' Mike. Smith :highlighted a'tCtftfk; -Both shots went out the-park. j • pSar MulHnax, it was his first went ... , . 1 Fraley’s downed Cash Grocery swirrg m early May. decisions. Four 12-1 as Gary Hallman had 4 for-4 'phe men’s softball league open-jK^I runs were riialked and Dallas beat the K'M Mer- ^^1 on April 28 and the ladles Cherry, chanty 6-4 despite a 3for4 hit- opens on May 6. ting performance by George Pitt man of the Merchants. Little League baseball begins 55*T8S — MERCHANTS 'on Monday, May 5, and ttie tee There will be baseball aplenty league season opens on May 2. at CUy Stadium Saturday with! A men’s and ladies’ boftb^l two'lit*le league games, a tee loumament is scheduled for Ctty league clash and a semipro game'Park May 8-10 with all proceeds carded. j going toward a scholarship fund i base. At 4 p.m., It’s tee league action for a Kings Mountain Highjj^.jjTr^Qpt for boys ages seven through nine,; School senior. j Hoover, ss to be followed by a pair of littlej Any teams Interested in enter-j^mpbell, cf league til*s at 5 p.m. and 6 ixm.|mg are aekt^ to contact recrea-jifi Rumfelt. ph Then at 7, the Kings Mountain'tion director Elmer Ross no later.ig^ Rumfelt, If-p •^Merclwints, a semi-i^ro team, host 1 than May 5. He can 1*^ ^ up .to flsvaingSpealB pk Banquet of: ridge. self as a gentleman, hard worker and has to be dedicated to form Goforth was the leading bit*er among his fellow man,” for the Mountaineers with 3-for- g^yg David Adams, the head in- 4. Several players had two hits structor. apiece, including Mullinax, Smith, “This hat acts as a svmbol to Chuck Carpenter, and Geeper sttidents and it stands for Howard. ■ clean morals plus good charac- It was the second victory of added. ' the year for KM over *he Bull Kings Moun*ain ab r h rbi Bell. 3b 3 0 1 0 Mullinax. 3b 0 1 0 M. Smith, ss 3 1. 1 0 Ashe, c 3 2 2 1 G. Howard, cf 3 0 1 1 R. Goforth, p o 0 0 0 C. Carpenter, lb 2 0 0 0 D. Bolin, rf 2 0 0 0 P. Francis, If o 0 0 0 TOTALS 24 3 6 2 R-S Cent'-al ab r h : ibi Powell. 2b 2 0 0 0 Gre<*ne. ef 3 0 0 0 G. Dalton, ss 3 0 1 0 J. McDonald, c 2 1 1 0 Lail, If 3 0 1 0 L. Dalton, p 2 0 1 0 Lewis, rf 3 0 0 0 McCurry, lb 2 0 0 0 Gibbs, 3b 2 0 0 0 Arrowood 1 0 0 0 TOTALS INNINGS 23 1 4 0 R. S. Central 006 100 0 1 Kings Mtn. 010 200 X 3 Five Trophies To Be Awarded At Third Fete University of Maryland basket* hall coach Charles G. i Lefty > Dricsell will be guest si^eaker a*: the third annual Kings Moun'ain ' Kiwanis Club basketball banquet tonight at 7 p.m. at the Woman’s Club. Tne hanquo' annually honors the Kings .Mountain High has- k(‘lball players and coaches. Ill ^blighting the fete wii! be th(‘ presentation of five trophies. Valuable Player and bes* foui shooter awards will be pre sented in both boys and girls di vision and a fifth trophy goes to ••loader’ of the iioys team. Past winners of the awards are George Adams and Sharon Gold, wlio won ‘he most valuable play er awards for two years running, and .\elson Connor and Steve .Spencer. Connor won the “Leadership Award’ in 19G6t)7 and Si»enc^r won it for 1967 68. D]'iPS(‘!l h<*ing brought here through the efforts of Kiwanian Charles Xeisler. Diiesell came out of the high school coaching ranks tn^'urn Davidson College into a national power in only nine years. Drie- sell came to the Southern Con* ferenc.' school in 1960 and before he left at the cln.se of the 1968-69 season, he had turned ou* four nationally ranked cliib.s and two Eastern Regionals finalisis. Dricsell coached junior high basketball before taking over the reigns at Granby High in Nor folk. Va.. where his teams one streak of .M consecuttve vic tories. He then went to Davidson, where he coached three All-Amer icans, Fi'ed Hei;:el. Dick Snyder and Mike Maloy. At Maryland next season, he will coach another Hetzel, Fred’s bn/her Will. Driesell, a man who means every woid he says, plans to do with Maryland the same thing he di'/ with Davidson’s Wildcats. And that's to turn the ACC school in‘o a national power. ^ - ! dogs. The Mounties earlier won, The win was the second blank! poniNG SPRINGS Georgei^'^- behind Goforth in relief. jo|> of the season ^ the Moun- j (THe wlWl RavHiiifi one of the nAUc^’^'top' basketball The Mounties broke a score- ties over Belmont. Earlier, Ropl«>i "basi«ri^ri’’'"coaches|® Goforth tossed a 'ttvo-tlltter fn ^ and a ereat name in the field ofinning, then Smiths horn- 7.0 KM victon-. . ^ U?^;{he speaker at s^rk^^another t^'o-run rally In-wo games, the Raiders had college’s, Sports'" only three hits, four hade run 7 p g^turday, May ners and never got a man past tBroad River Brick. at any of the three following Several former Kings Mountain! numbers: 739-2257, 7394742 or High and Post 155 legion stand-’739-2563. out^ will be in *he lineup for the There will be no admittance 'Merchants. Included are Barry'charge to the gamej, bu* dona- Gibson, James Robbs, Tony Leigh ; tions will be accepted, and Gene Putnam. — Bed-Hot Patriels IMn Two Moio, Host St IRiehaels Ffidajr .Niglit Central'^ Junior High Patriots South Gastonia collected only dropped ‘.heir first game of the; three hits for *:he game. The win- season last week, but Coach Bar- ners scored their five sixth in- ry Gibson’s lads continue to run ning runs on a pair of hits and roughshod over area opponents.i six walks. The Patriots won two of three; Gus Hayefe led an eight-hit Pa games, hiking their record to 5-l.tfriot attack wtth 2-for'2. ^ The Pa-s host St. Michaels of, Mondky at home, the ^atriotSK^„,,j_.^ cmith A«he «1F. Gastonia Friday night at 7:36 at bombed I>aUas l3-2, behiiTd thej ,, ' t*™ City Stadium and there ia no ad-;hittirtg of 'Kei*h Parker, -whd mission charge. !was 3'for-4. Hayes was l-for-lj Wednesday aftemOon, the Pa- officially with thrre Walks and; triots whipped Dallas 74 as. four runs scored. j Wayne Bridges and Frankie ' David Carroll went the dls-l S‘okes cracked out two hits each, i Unce on the mound, giving ap Both of Bridges’ hits came in the seven hlU and striking out niife. fifth inning when the PatrlotB TJenttral 001 060 0—7-T2 rallied for six runs. )'t>ailik8 010 003 0 -4-7*0 On Friday afternoon, the Pats, ■McGraw, rf ^Qowen, lb 'Gibson, 3b 'Harris, 2b Qierrj’, p-Jf TOTALS Kings Mountain ^11, 2b Mullinax, 3b 'S^i‘h, 3b Ashe, c Hclward, cf Goforth, rf Carpenter, lb Francis, If Ethridge, p TOTAT S INNINGS Belmont Kings Mtn. r h rbi ^JFUivelmg is assistant to Coach 0 *0 0 Lefty Driesall at the Universi*y 0 0 0; of Maryland. Coach Driesall, for- 0 0 Otmeriy of Davidson College, made 0 0 'O RaveHng his first Assistant -0 0 Oi Coach appointment after taking 0 1 'O' the Maryland post recently. 0 0 0| ^Far from unfamiliar with G-W, 0 0 0 Haveling was a big help in the 0 0 0. rocruttjnent of Artis Gilmore, 7-2 Kings Mountain 0 0 01 tenter for the Bulldogs* He and.J. Bell, 2b 0 1 0! Coach Eddie Holbrook "are close; W. Mullinax, 3b r h Tbi; friends and Holbrook states that,|M. Smith, ss An average of less than 10 out of 60 students qualify for green beret. E RS Central (3>: Kings ^Rn., (2». DP KM aL LOB KM <2>: R.S. Central i3i. 2B Lail (It Mullinax (It Ashe dJ. \\T R. the Gofor*h, LP L. Dalton. HBP ■ Powell. in the fifth. MuUinax’s grand-slammer s*ak- ed the Mountaineers to an 8-0 lead in the top of the sixth, thenj the Bulldogs struck for three to! cut the KM lead ‘o five runs. ' Coach Bob Hussey’s charges' put the game away in the sev enth, sending five runs across the’ plate. Eight of the first nine, Mountaineer batters reached! base during *ho uprising. j Juniors To Play 22>Game Schedule Open Clinic In Karate Here On Sunday The X. C. Open Karate Clinic will be staged here this Sunday. David Adams, director, will 4>e as.sisted by Norman Barlsoot of Columbia. S. C., a 4th Dan Black Belt. The r.'any schools taking })art will leave the “Adams Academy of Kara'e’’ around 10 a.m. and go over to a sj ot on the moun tain. They are scheduled to re* turn around 6 p.m. ; Dry rice and bread will be served in tradition with the Jap anese customs and in respect 4 the art itself. “It will be a long, hard, am i vigorous test of each ^ ’ho taki ; part," said Adams. ^ . . 0; “George Raveling may be thejC. Ashe, c 1 best college recruiter in the na- G. Howaivi, lititm and his knowledge of the 1 game is tremendous cf ■R. Goforih, rf C. Carpenter, lb 2 'Kiiveling is a 1960 alumnus ofjP. Francis, If 0 Vilkinova where he had a fine | B. Ethridge, p The Otis D. Greene Pos‘ 155 gainst Belmont at City Stadium, i American Legion Juniors will Post 1.55 Athletic Officer Carl! I ! open a 22'game first round sche- Wilson, in releasing tlie schediuleij h rbi dule on Monday, May 26, at said tln^ local Juniors will begin 1 2H5ranite Falls. practice the day af’er the current; 2 5 Area Four this season will con- high school season ends. I 2 1 sist of 12 teams, with the top Wilson also announced that. 1 O! eight advancing to second round season tickets (for first round,J 2 0 olav ; games! are still on sale for S4 a 3 0 The second round will be a book. I he book will also admit. 2 3 best-of-three series, running from holders to any exhibition games. 0 0 Julv 7-10. The third round, or 1969 SCHEDULE 0, bask^ball career. As a junior he 3 0 0 U became the s*arting renter and 2 0 0 0 hriped lead the team to a respect- 27 5 '"O 'S.-aWe lS-7 rreord and an appear ance in tile NIT. ^ 000 000 0—0, Gaining the nickname, ‘The 03 021 X—5 Rave.” for his fantastic rebound Sub: Bolin TOTALS Burns M. Elmore, ss G. Upton, 3b C. Wilson, If A. Cook, 3b LOB Belmont 1. KIM S; 3B A«he, I Howard. HBP MoGraw. WP I Ethridge, LP — Cherr>'. IN HONOR GROUP dropped a close 6-5 decision to Central South Gastonia as the Qestonla'^S. Gastonia clifb scored five runs In the'. sixth and one In the eet^eAth iHRas grffer WnTt%1 h«6 Fed by fW). iOentren The Kings Mountain high school “Mountaineer”, stod^n'* nCTVspaper, was listed In tWe honor award group •Idr'n'lhiits- papers in Group HI. enrollment 1001 to 1200, competing for a- •ward^ at the 1969 annual con vention of the .Southern Inter- ->* I seholasfic Press Asaotiation a* 000 110 0—3*74' Washington and Lee University, 220 010 0-53*1 000 005 l--«3-l ing ability (6-6, 220L he was.R- Hoyle, lb elected captain df the 1960 squad.'J- Costner, cf As such, he led the team *.o a S. Kale, rf 20-6 season, 9th national ranking|T. Southards, c in the UPI poll and another NIT S. Willis, p bid. Sub: W. Brown Drafted third-by the Philadel- ph: Harrill, phfa Warriors, Raveling decided TOTALS ■on a sales oarrer after his Army INNINGS ■aervire. He also seived as Villa-j“Kings Mtn. nov^'s-laaaiktant basketball coach Bums In 1936, 1967 and 1968. concern-! DP -Kings Mtn 2 10 0 semi-finals, will be a bes* of-five DATE 3’EAM 1112 series and the championship May 32 13 14 13 round will be a best-of-s(ven. 26 Granite Falls ab r h rbi The championship round must 28 Mill Sprinos 2 0 0 0 be completed by July 26. 30 Cherryville 1 0 0 0 The Area Four clubs will meet Juno 3 0 10 each other twice, on a home-and- 2 Morganton 3 112 home basis. 4 Bessemer City 3 0 0 0 The league includes a |>air of 6 Hickory 3 0 11 new teams. -Bt'SM'mer City and 9 Forest Ci*y 3 0 10 Mill Sprinijs. Bessemer City re- 11 Gastonia 3 0 0 0 joins the league after a year’s 13 Shelby 3 0 0 0 absence. _ 14 Belmont 0 10 0 I'irst home game for Post 155 16 Henrietta 0 10 0 will l>e on Wednesday, May 2S, 18 Granite Falls 24 3 4 3 against Mill Springs. 20 Mill Springs Teams will play *hree times a 21 Cherryville 000 224 5—13 week—on Mondays, Wednesdays 23 Morganton 000 003 0 - 3'and Fridays- the first two weeks 25 Bessemer City (IL I-GB —KM of the season. The third week, 27 Hickory- Forest City Gastonia wu iiu Washington tnc iS0-3W'Ji- is*»i' Vk. ing himself chiefly in the areas! (7), Burns (3>. 2B - Carpenter they’ll begin playing four times 28 of recruiting. <!>. Cook (1). 3B Bell (1). HR per week, adding Saturdays to 30 I A bachelor. Raveling re(?en*ly Smith (1) Mullinax. grandslam. the schedule. Post 155 plays all July •hts (jovewd the New York dtyMD. WP—Ethridge. LP — Steve Saturday night games at homo. ; 2 Shelby i vWnily for thb Converst Rubber. Willis. HBP — Ashe. Kings Mountain’s firs* Satur- TWIiltiMy, I — i day night game is on June 14 a- Belmont Henrietta PLACE, Away Home I Away Home I Away i Home; I Away I Homeij Away I Home! Away Home Away' Home) Away Home, Away Home, Away Homo; Away Home PAIR HOMERS Formej: KMHS star Richard Gold cracked two home runs last week to lead Florida State to S-2 and 3*1 vic tories over Clemson's Tigers. A second boseman. Gold is sound ing out a brilliant career at the Florida school.

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