Bethel Playing Here In Twin Bill Tonight Williamston Girls, Jamesviiie s Boys Win Fridayififfhi Girl-' Store 37-lft. Boj7 Content V* iml- l p To 38 \t Jniiico ii'ie The Green Wave girls’ basket ball team of Wiliamston High put or. a fine exhibition of sharp shooting and gw guarding in the final quarter to run away from the Jamesviiie girls Friday night in Jamesviiie, 37 16. but the boys of Jamesviiie used their prowess at the free-throw line to win an easy 56-38 victory over the Green Wave boys The game vv .und up county play for Willian.stc.n fm a week as the Green Waves meet Bethel here tonight and move to Ahoskie for another sued at iht Indians on Friday evening Next Tuesday evening Oak City brings its tw. tdiims to Williamston for games that will end po tourney play The county tournament Tburs iay oi lext week ■ tails In th( ' Wes appa:; that the v though thf Ked to get quarter an. fi ught b;.c from bein ■ The Wi’i lead all t ville afte nei 1 in tn -ers ir a me si p cl os fie A'i Jamesviiie it ■ first quarter d the edge al 11 It* girls ral ■ m the third liamston buys ii!i lently to keep mpietely routed. is!< n girls held the vav against James lly Wynn hit on a lay-up 30 seconds after the open ing whistle but Jamesviiie pulled up to within a single point several times, including three in the first quarter and once in the third, but each time the Green Wave girls pulled away Williamston made 5 put of 12 free throw attempts and Jamesviiie 2 of I 1 During it, scoring streak in lie final quartei Williamso n made good on 'out out of 'our free 1hro\v at'empt including two hv substitute play ers Evelyn Kreb and cy'v,; Perry After Wynn scored In V.'.l liamston. Ann Stvons m tde a fou shot to put the count at 2-1, a 5.2 Wynn scored again and at 4 Pat Girvin hit for J: mesville fo a 4-3 count Wynn scored hi. third shot at 2.5. Noll Hardison hi at the 1 -minute mark and wit! 30 seconds to go Sarah Event dropped in a basket for an 8-. lead at the quarter After a minute and a half o the second quartei Danette Bailey scored and a minute and a ha! later, Wynn hit for a 12-5 lead At 4.4 Girvin got her second has i ket to make ,t 12-7 hut in tin- n,-x m^nuti and a h: I! Hailov made ; -il shot ; ' d W> u a basket fo u»lft:m<’ margin, dr the third tf c.v'rt r Nell Haiali son sroi i d .o thf end of MO sec finds but ;i• -v cai. r n 1:1 hat i to move the sciHe to 17-11 Then with 0.3 to go in the quarter h Jamesviiie girls; put on their lies COMING EVENTS Tuesday, February ‘"l5 '■ i (i l >’» . i i ■ • I ■ Farm illt'«- at Tarboro Jamesville at Bath. Thursday. February Bear Gi ass at Oak City. Friday, February 15 Williamston at Ahoskie Farm Life at Oak City Jamesville at Plvmouth Bear Grass Open 12 14 drive of the game. Peggy Gardner hit from the floor but missed free shot, Vivian Reason made a foul shot and Gardner added a I gt al to make it 17-14 and at the 1-minute mark Girvin hit for her third goal to move the count to 17-16. Bailey's goal with 30 sec onds to go put the score at 19-16. Holding James'wile scoreless, the Williamston girls moved away rapidly in the fourth quarter lor lone of their highest marks of the ! season for any one stanza. They ran up 13 points ori a foul shot ; and goal by Wynn, a set shot by * Sarah Everett, two goals by Bail er, another bv Everett, two more ; by Bailey and a free shot by Ev i ; ett with 1 3 to go. A host ol substitutions came in at this point l,,r both teams and Evelyn Roe buck made a foul shot with 35 se conds left. Sylvia Perry made her foul she t on the last play of the game. , Scoring for Williamston. were: Bailey 15, Wynn 13, Everett 7. Roebuck 1, Perry 1 Starting foi Williamston were Bailey, Wynn and Everett at forward and Pns ■<illa Roberson, Wanda Jones and I Jean Ward Mobley at guard Sub stitutes early in the garni wen Pat Wynn at guard for Mobley and Edna Mizelle foi Bailey a | Everett. Others getting into till game for Williamston were Betty ■ Helen Mobley, Ann Peele, Gera I line Ward. Sylvia Perry and Eve | In Roebuck | Scoring for Jumcsville were II r r\Jr a i ..v liar'trv ■ 1 Me! ; Hardison 4, Ann Styons 1 and Vi • vian Reason 1. Others getting in , to the game included Thelm; 1 1 Gr.iganus, Margaret Hinson, Bet 1 j ty Lou Griffin, Joyce Mizelle, Kr line Perry, Jo Ann Hardison, Bet ty Jones. Kay Nell Rogers, am Jean Ellis. In the boys' game Williamstoi managed to i lay with Jamesvill for two and a half minutes bu never got back into serious con tention after that James Col train scored first on two shot from the foul line after 40 second of play but Gene Williams made ; foul shot for Jamesville 10 sec mills later and Bobby Hardisoi tied the count at 2 all at the ti mdrute mark. Williamston di< not score again until Herbert Bar roll dropped in one with 3.5 to g< but Jamesville was piling it u on four goal.' and tim e foul shot bv Bobby Waters who thu> hit to 11 points in the first quarter. Tw ;-\.l shots by Bobby Hardison an another foul shot bv Williams an field goal by Ronnie Modlin l ight at the dose of the quarter gave Jamesville a 17-4 lead at the end of ti.e s.aniia. Jamesville never relinquished | the lead and the clnscst Wilhams ! ton was able to gt t again was in i the third period when the cut i'eto 125-18 an baskets by Billy Harris land Harrell Everett. ! Jamciv.ilie he ld n 1 d• 4 !< ad m yhe first minute of the second | at tile eiid of . in- minute of play | in that period. In the next seven | minutes Williamston moved up on a basket by John Rogers, two by Harris and another by Rogers as Jamosv'lle was adding a basket b'- Modlin a free throw by Bobby'! i Hardison and a free throw by Douglas Gardner to put the count at 25-14 at the half Williamston started the game | with Rogers, Watson McKoel, Herbert Harrell, James Coltrain and Harrell Everett and opened the second quarter with Harris, j Jacob Zemon, James Coltrain. Rogers and Jack Ross. In the third quarter the starting combi nation went back except that Harris remained in for Herbert Harrell. Jamcsville started with Modlin, y/citei s. Williams, Wayne Beatd i and Bobby Hardison and this combination played most of the game except for a substitution at various times until the late stages nf the contest when nurnemU; substitutes went in. The Jamesville boys opened the! widest mat sin early in the final quarter when they were out front 511-32 and 55-34, a 21-point edge. While Bobby Waters' sharp shoot I ing was a major factor in James I vilie’s early lead, that lead would have melted except for the stellar ;rebound work of Ronnie Modlin. | While Modlin did not score as high as Waters his ball handling land plav-making along with the j grabbing of rebounds under both ! baskets spoiled any chance Wil 1 Immston might have had to catch ! up. 1 Jamesville made good on 25 of 35 chances at the free throw line while making good on 15 field goal shots. Williamston hit on 17 field goal attempts but at the foul line made but 4 out of 15 free throw attempts They waived the foul shots in five instances and m. . me not included in the 15. Scoring ter Williamston were: Rogers 10, Harris 8, Everett 7, t Harrell 5, Zemon, Jimmy Page, Eddie Hardison and Jamys Col - train 2 each Others getting in the game were Jack Ross, and I Bobby Mobley Scoring lot Jamesville: Bobby i Waters 18, Modlin 14, Beard <>, ■ Bobby Hardison 0, Williams <>, t Bobby Rogers 2, Douglas Gard ner 3 and Marion Hardison 1 Get ting in were: Jerold Reason, Bob : by Clark and Horace Hardison, i Jamesville has lost but two tilts i this season, both to Aurora. 1 School Lunches Served tlniosf Id Million kid* I ! ‘ _ .,v i The Government will help serve i hi record billion and a half cut H rate but nourishing meals to 9, ,1 400,000 school children this- year i according t>. ‘!tc Agi'icultut.t! Dc , partment. The cost to the taxpay ers will be about $83,000,000 fot I the 1952-school lunch program. GREEK CASUALTY IN KOKtA / BEHIND THE IINES in Korea, an airman of Combat Cargo’s5 Royaj' H*£ lenic Air Force (Greek) gives a light to a wounded compatriot in fantryman at an evacuation point. Greek fliers have been working on the Korean airlift for more than a year and have made j a hauling cargo and carrying out the wounded. (International] Bear Grass Takes Two From Bethel —^— Th(: Hask' tba] 1 teams of Bear Garss H;s<h won a doubleheader over the teams of Bethel Friday night in the Bear Glass gym, the boys winning by a single point, 57 to 56, while the girls had a 9 point margin at 42-33. Coach Bill Harrison’s crew got off to a fast start and then were able to outlast the visitors with a strong fourth quarter. Bethel had its best chance in the third period but could not hold it as Bear Grass came back strong in the final stanza. The score by periods: Bethel 13 12 23 8—56 Bear Grass 17 14 15 11—57 Sammy Biggs paced the Beat Grass attack with 23 points and Ben Ward contributed 11. J. B. Kogerson and Jimmy Terry were defensive leaders ior Bear Grass. Booby Jean Manning, with his set and push shots paced Bethel and was the game’s high scorer with 24 points. Johnson and White top ped Bethel’s defenses. The Bear Grass girls, coming along strong in recent games, got an early lead and remained out front despite a rally by Bethel in the last half. Score by periods: Bethel 4 5 9 15—35 Bear Grass 12 9 7 14—45 Pat Bowen and Janie Cherry each scored 15 points for Beai Grass while Louise Moore anc Pauline Bullock were best defen sively. Top scorer in the game was Joe Wynn of Bethel, hittinf for 18 points. Ann Kiddick wa; defensive leader for the losers o Coach Walter Latham. Bear Gras: is coached by Bill Harrison. Thursday night Bear Grass wil play Oak City at Oak City in ; I game originally scheduled fo 1 Jan. 29. Race Is On For Atomic Strength The United States is now engag ed in a fantastic race to gain atomic weapons supremacy, which goal might well head off World W-r II. The Arm*', Navy and plan rung for widespread use of tonne bombs, artillery, and guided mis i him ■■»»» » —« '“"Senator MacMahdn, chairman of the Joint Atomic Energy Commit tee in Congress, says that the new U. S. atomic progiam will give the United States such revolu tionary power that no enemy will dare attack us. Pentagon officials say that the Unied States is al ready well ahead in the atomic weapons race and that the increas ed program, requested by the Ad ministration, will place us still further ahead of the Soviet Union in this field. The three services are working feverishly on such things as radio active dust which can be spread over an area to prevent occupa : tion of it by the enemy, pilotless ; aircraft, which are already being operated in strength, atom-power ed aircraft carriers, and atomic artillery. While no one can say al this stage of the game just wha' the effect of these fantastic weap ons will be on the world situation if U. S. experts arc correct in theii ■ analysis, these weapons may provt the major hope of the Unitec States to prevent another work , war. This is true because the field o I atomic use envisionetd bv the mil itary includes almost every phasi of warfare known to man. Thus if the United States takes a com manding lead in the developmen ■ )l this new atomic war machine i covering land, sea and air, th United States will win superior I ity in the armaments race, i If the atom is to outmode ill ■ conventional weapons of today a much as the automobile outmoc !cd the horse and buggy—us sorm*' of -ur experts say it will—then, | the U. S. lead in military weapons, if we are the first to attain an atomic military force, will be so commanding that an enemy would not dare attack this nation. That is the goal the atomic weapons planners are workin gtoward. Tiie new Mai .v land No. i breed i of. hog which, wn.s established in 1941 carries approximately 62 per ............... ... cent ostiurate and o« per cent Berkshire blood. Jamesville Girl Member Of Dormitory Council Wilson.—Margaret "brown of Jaine* ville has been elected a hall representative on the Atlantic Christian College Women’s Dor mitory Council, it was announced hv fhr college's dcdrs ci student4, Miss Sarah Bain Ward. The council, which is a compon ent part et the Cooperativ. Asso- ft esation of the college, is the orga w-ftirh ieprei-enus^..^w menstuclents living on the ACC , campus. Face The Future With Security J. Ifaul Simpson General Agent Security Life & Trust Company Dial 2 It l - I! illiuinxion, A'. C. Need a loan? Remember your car can act as collat eral. Just call us for prompt appraisal of your needs. Our specialists arc trained to help you. We Make Loans On New Gars Lowest Rates Available Here! Branch Banking & Trust Co. Wow! What a long, low boautyT^x - vail T«* Mat* isii'SM' ’look at ImI tap ooepwu "Aid Hut wider treodf The most powerful tlow-priced car ever buihl ItOiif high- compression Strato-Staf V‘$ Khkp hflMoapmtio* Mileage Maker Six Ike greatest low-prked car ever built! You won’t believe your e^es when you see the big, new ’52 ford, ror never before has a iow-priced ear offered such power, such fine car styling, such big-car comfort! You U see such built-for-keeps advance* as Ford’s new longer, stronger Coacheraft Bodies . . • its more powerful, high-compression V-8 and six engines . . . and the many other features described below. #■ * The cor fhat’s made greater strides forward for ’52 than any other in its class! Ford’s 110-h.p. Strato-Star V-8 ia the n»ost powerful engine—and the oniv V-8 offered in a low-nrieed oar. Ford's 101-h.p. Mileage Maker Six ia an all new low-friction Powerhouse with free-turning overhead valve* and shorter piston stroke. Both engines feat ure the Automatic Power Pilot which gives you high-coro tureaaion “go” with regular gas. WWt. aifcwol «at, » ntMubh. mar tamtam Dow* nt • Cft*t Fpi/tpa**#*, ***•* atm tmd In* a*m* to Um#t w*ml mtm. T.KA.T. i NMrU MUHf Cw*.j amo-*loto wljAliUMI . . . *•■ wide t»m wtmtaw ... windawt ail around givr' *•“ viability iHt<iiai**d." A ford •»«*»•<*• *• *>• *«,d tetosnosk Ms Control. New wider free* tread, lower cantor of gravity and di agonally mounted roar shock absorb ers help you got a smooth, level ride. Gone in, <*«& TfatEkfoeilfe ^ 7\S BUILT FOB KiiFSf Ferd CeecWreH te*es. Styled to stoy beoutifid <md designed to tloy you**. fwdMMlk Bnw- Fordo (•otic gives you torque converter leootfcsett plus the get-ep-ond *» oi outomolic "1 **■

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