Friday, October 11, 1963 THE NEW BERN MIRROR, NEW BERN, N. C. Page Seven As Seen in The Mirror's SPORTS of Athletes and Events The value of good passing attack was displayed last Fri day night, when Goldsboro de feated the New Bern High school Bears here 33-12. On the ground, the Brunlns outgalned their 4-A opposition, but couldn’t offset the enemy aerials that plagued them. We’ll agree with Fred Shipp, who was honored prior For Personalized Laundry & Dry Cleaning Service, Just Call City Laundry & Cleaners "New Bern's Largest A Finest" 243 FLEET ST. ME 7-2991 WOODROW MOORE'S Supplying Comfort Indoor With Carrier Heating and Air Conditioning 2609 Trent Read BEAR Wheel Alignment Can Add 50% to Life of Tires Get Our Free "BEAR" Inspection Today PAUL'S KINSTON HIGHWAY Dial ME 7-4206 Floyd Paul, Sr. to the game as one of New Bern’s all-time sports greats. Taking not of the way the Quakes ignored pass defense and con centrated on bolstering the line, whenever the Bears had the ball, Fred said It was remarkable that the New Bern backs were able to get pretty good yardage. High school teams don’t come up with a capable passer as often as coaches would like, and Bill Klutz Is painfully aware of this fact. Unless a ball club Is a real powerhouse. It Is at a great disadvantage without aerials In its bag of tricks. Local fans will have little trouble recalling how Preacher Parker, who made All-State, capltalzed on his dangerous arm. Swinging wide, with his hand cocked for a possible toss down field, he was as un predictable as a prowling tom cat when the moon Is ftill. The Bears could use another Parker. As was the case In previous defeats, the Bears were better than the score indicated. Three or four plays made the big dif ference, and the key performer for Goldsboro was their star speedster, Eddie Wyatt. The Bruins were stunned at the out set when he took the opening kick 90 yards for a touchdown. Miracles can happen, but no one expects Jones Central to provide serious trouble for the Bears Friday night. The lads from our neighboring county have been badly overmatched in all of their contests here, and feeding them to the Bruins year after year puts one in mind of the early Christians being fed to the lions in Rome. Tonight it could be different, but don’t count on it. Children think not of what is past, nor what is to come, but enjoy the present time, which few of us do,--Jean de La Bruyere Call JOE ANDERSON DRUG STORE for Reliable Prescription Service ME 7-4201 REAL ESTATE - (Continued from page ^ I. W. Toler to I. W, Toler and Vera Whltford Toler. Prop erty in Craven County. Vera Whltford Toler to I, W. Toler and Vera Whltford Toler. Property In Craven County. I. Frank Holton and wife, Elsie J, Holton, to Linwood J. Ipock and wife, Ann W. Ipock. Property in No. 8 town ship. J. M. Thomas, Jr., and wife, Ella Lee Thomas, to Rufus H. Wall and wife, Doris A. Wall. Property in No. 8 town ship. PROTEST MARCH . . . Veiled Moslem women stage a silent but forceful protest march through the streets of Karachi, Pakistan. They were demonstrating against the alleged failure of the gov ernment to halt rising food prices. Generous Supplies of Food Feature Grapes, Rice, Cheese and Chickens Try Us First SWAIN'S ESSO SERVICE 'The Best Friend Your Car Ever H«d" ME 7-6100 Broad A Hancock Looking toward October—the harvest season holds plenty in store for menu planners. According to Miss Gaynelle Hogan, consumer marketing specialist for the Agricultural Extension Service at N. C. State, there will be generous supplies of grapes, rice, cheese, broil er-fryer chickens, cran berries, potatoes and apples. As a prelude or finale to fall meals, feature a platter of freshly washed grapes from this year’s record crop, and a large wedge of your favorite cheese. The pale green Thompson seedless and the flame Tokays will be the most prevalent of the grape family. In the cheese family, you’ll have your pick of many different types—Ched dar, Cottage, Cream, Rlccota, Blue, MozzArella, Parmesan, Provolone, Gammelost, Swiss, Edam, Gouda, Muenster, and Brick, to name a few. Shoppers can count on plenty of rice for buffet casseroles and easy family meals. And conveniently, there’s plenty of brloler-fryers at reasonable prices for those popular chicken and rice dishes. Try a change of pace--buy a whole broiler-, fryer chicken for roasting and use rice as the stuffln for an attractive main dish platter. Traditionally, the ideal accom paniment for a poultry meal is cranberries. Producers are looking forward to an excellent crop this year, the third lar gest on record. By October you’ll find plenty of new fall crop potatoes to use in casseroles, vegetable dishes and hot or cold potato salad. October is the big pota to harvest month. Cooks who take pride in their home-made apple pies will want to take advantage of the plentl- SAVE CASH THE WHOLESALE WAY PLUMBING ELECTRICAL HEATING BUILDING SUPPLIES General Wholesale Building Supply Co. ful apple supplies. Although the crop is slightly below average this year, there will be plenty of apples at harvest-time. Quality Shoe Repairing at Reasonable Prices IDEAL SHOE SHOP JOE HATEM, Prop. 903 Broad Street ME 7-5011 Evinrude Outboard Motors MFG and G & W Boats Long Trailers Boat Supplies Kimbrells Outboard Service 1305 Pembroke Road ME 7-3785 Where Quality and Experience Save You Hours of Boating Pleasure. SALES & SERVICE G. E. Appliances, Stereo and T.V. APPLIANCE CENTER 1402 Neuse Blvd. Tel. ME 7-6223 aoooooooooooooooooooooooeoooooooeooaooooooooi BATTte'** Look Over This Wheel-Could Save You A Big Repair Job or Your Life ECONOMY AUTO SUPPLY 309 Hencock St. ME 7-2472

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view