Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / Feb. 13, 1948, edition 1 / Page 7
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rTSPAGE Of The Waynesville Mountaineer FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1948 PEAR HEADING'- SPORTS HV I'D SPFARS r i rM. , - J.,,.., i. J W'rlno X I i-mui every rriaay nignr is tignr nigm in New i om & Inactive As Schools Close , jH.;H has jiitt a damper on sports news this . - i, t-keihal! schedule into a jumbled eon ,, mi- .-date lias also put the hip four eol , ,. ,,i,i?, (r winter iuwtbull workouts. Bijj M.--i-J Ins entrance exam at Duke, we hear, ,.,it will) the Blue Devil .;ridders when . .,, lose a few of those 21a pounds he Wake Forest winter and spring drills Vacuus handle the T formalion. Peahead i i . i . . . r i Oil tn aoanoon ine sinaie win'.: n nis ickier T. Almost every Friday night it fight night in New York' Madison Square Garden. The fighters draw people from all walks of lite. Here the cameraman catches candid shcls of ex-champion Tunney and hit family, icn.tdian Berle, ex Postmaster General Hannegan of the SI Louis Cardinals, ttate boxing commissioner Eagan and Yankee ballplayers OiMaggio and Page. kating Champ In Action s. iT - S tvr.K.r ItlTI'It in (he Cherokee Sc out hints ir , ,n , muii up I anion lor a ::i id , i.l ;;ime mi - W,i 'ts ille Would Ik a nice iliili.lo; Niluditle. :Mnrl) a new their best seasons last ill. i.r; i4 !IC "I I ln'l C I ' II' Gene Tunney and Family 5 Milton Beile rev- ' 1 a i ! a t.'ier x in the- (.'haiapi' :, i M.ii nent s. Tiie li independent i ; " i -ibleifis as L'etttir.' !,, .1.1 T tit " h'l can't complain about "fttin ,. n,,,v.. io witnessed the llmi.K vn. Hoit.ai on lVlav , 10'JII. ISruokb'n tiaine. then Boston tied the score in 'i,h .ica'tloi k continued until the i.'6th inning and nie.i ... MCLuant of darkness after three hours and ci j.i iy . . . till tied at 1 and 1 . . ,10 earn the oi lent, t lie lun.tet game played in the major r,i,ikH len , eiie was the Philadelphia-Boston clash ..i.,cl. d.e Athletics won with a three-run rally ii a ii.e .'4th innmr. It actually lasted a Ion. re r I1'') lii'i.r. ' oin-. four hours and 47 minutes . . . !.. :?4-inmr.r Phihdelphia-Urtroit (AL) h . a 1 1 tie; and the Cincinnati-Brooklyn ,,tti r 14 ! tanzas on September 11, 1946. I ro'inblance to endurance contents on ....lid. :c'1 1,,i' w .f w4ir -fffj - J- tddie Ecjn Jce Page belt Henncaon n; ,i;il l 'I'llliOrCHI the air, willi Ihe greatest of Alihuiir.li 'li juiiipinK 's soiaethiiiK hp are more nl with ilimiiidi inovie newsieeb; lli.iu 1 lie ar- si.il m.n li- ut interest to huow lliat the worlds i a .:,iii.!Hi ioi soar bv me Austrian, .losepn wile in Yugoslavia during J93S. Torger Tokler'a an, t apinred the American jump crown with his le.ip :ii Iron Mountain, Mich., in 19J2. Buchanan's Take Win Over WCTC 'B' Basket Five Buchanan'? Sport Shop quintet nuns up a 41-28 win ovef the West ern Carolina Teachers College B" teim Tuerday night at Cul- lowhep. Joe Cline. center for the Waynes ville five, earned high,, point hon or with 16 during fhe game, and Jayne was a close EecpncJ with 13. The Catamount forward?, ipayis :uid Collins, paced the logers. . f'os. WCTC 'B' (28) BUfhajwn'3 (41) V Davis (8) PlOtK 3i K Collins (8) ; Hyde (7) C Ciregory 4) CHne (16) C Carter (1) Kanos G Fountain (1) Gardner (2) Subs: WCTC, Sexton, Under wood, Stewart 2, Tomfeorin 2, Pry or '2; Buchanan's, Jaynes 13, Wy alt, Case. Texas League Head Sees Holdover Clause Finish 4F f ST -' i :.- ' WaynesvillcSylva tudine Tonight Is Cancelled, As Were Tt lay Games in. n mIujuI tagers have been ln-a-nw iIun eck due to yeather. .( !,(l,:ion.s that closed all except I he 'anion sclu)ol. i'o;nh Weatlierby anounces that--Viiyni'svilli'".s scheduled double la adcr tonight with Sylva has been caiidlleri. and that the next game .oiimg in. will he on Tuesday a it; lit .it rules Creek. loiii .ln tlu Black Bears of Can i,,c a ,ii,J io invade Hender v. ,m a,.. , ,, nine Itidge Confer- i. c i .mi. I' i ' , ,i In randier on Mon i.i , , i.' , .iiii-ii nil. iis were , 1 inv . ( reck, and , , ' ; 1 i''i. i in i - do I'uofcday. ! . v i 'i, i i heiore the ! 1 i 1 , " c i .,,-! i-, ushvrt'd in , . , I 1 1 1, -i li and girls ' i ,l a ii.i' mi 1 1 if Cantou. 1 -1 .! 1. 1. ; Hum iiroiiniate- in .ill A iv expected ' 'i' t " i ii. which starts I I'. '.''! ."nil runs for six rft'XV I . - I.'' V,-.f "I- liunting 1947 IMINC; ACES. Tiie United States holds a monop- Ift world records in men's swimmitm events, with :-distance events captured by Japan. Fastest yard distance was marked up by Alan Ford 'me of 4P 7 seconds. R. R. Houyh holds the ' ! ,,'ki' feci ii i i iiiiR'nf 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 n ii-. m s -1 ci i ! i 'is mV- ."' I'ack stroke time for the ICO was hum; up ' " : i ( nnda. I an:..'.i and !1n!i ii 'a on. i n ' ', ' i nii. s. Ftistcst lime in I V.c v. am. en's i a,aik of a!).4 seconds I'm 100 aids, tuv. a I HOMER HITTERS FIND I RANGE IN ST. LOUIS NEW YORK. 'API More American League home runs dur ing 1947 were hit in Sportsrnan's Park than in any other junior circuit park. Sluggers hit 110 round trippers there Inst season. There were 109 four baggers in Detroit's Briggs Stadium. 1 03 al V.iiiKci' Stadium in Nw York, in;? ,ii llosion's Kcmvjiy Park, lot in Clcvel.iiul. 74 at Sialic Park. .50 al Chicago's Co nn ke Park and 30 al Griffith Stadium, Washing. Southern Loop Tourney Already Assured Bell Out Athlftie ofTi.iili: at Duke Uni versity rfport thut Heists for the Southern Coi.ftreiic? backet hall tournaitie c.l haw already been Sold out. The fale was or.lv one day old for the -'7th aiiiiui tour ney, but by Thursday oiders bad already nassed tiie .ticket sup ply. Play will be in Duke's indoor stadium on March 4, and U, with teams playiuc to a capacity crowd of 9.000. This is the hcc oud year the conference play has been a sell-out, and officials ask that no more orders for tickets be sent in and that no one call in regard to orders already in. BROOKLYN SHOW'S A HEART FOR BRFl'KFLF.N. HOLLAND NEW YORK i UP) The first post-war r.hipment of gifts has beer, delivered to BrenkHer.. Hol land, from Brooklyn . Y. whir'i Gardner Envisions Population Growth To Cause Southwest ern Major League By HAROLD V. RATI IFr AP Newsfeatures DALLAS President .1. Alvm Gardner of the Texas League 'it baseball on t lie aine plane a-: lln iiiolion picture industry in u.. ik.i loo distant future The light to resent- iooIi ut rights to hall plaer-. will lie nap ped, he declaica "Baseball will hava to opeiate along the same lines D.al I lit movie industry does now," lie says. tlnil i. if i d'l AYIN.'I th trace et effort that inahe'- ii e ini .-.oit. one of America's Olympic enti i'" . ,.a'. bain.- lor the cameraman. -katini; ic Now Making Comeback At 17 Paliioij Sinclair, Itt'i iioloor lircast' trol.e i Ii iniji, h is the unusual dic.tin.'t,on ui in.l'..iJ, coincbicli al 17. Sl.e - mil f u.nipelioii due to illi...-, ill. line l!47. wn naoicfi 1 1, uainiO XI,.. -vc,,. loiMiil.'d I'ic 0 i ,1, FISH ARE NOW IN SEASON IOMS FIND CAT'S LIFE . I'ltF.TT V SOI T GOING . tm-jiz&?i-,:- ... I'hiladelphia's it,-, ui., :, n r la kin up ell i. i Ilei-hl I. .ml. Al 1 hi n If n Inn' mil, i I tol hchlcn II m ' ! iicie 'O, tion o( III,'. and liil'dci lui '-luV - v NTVVHA1.L, t'al. 'Ci"--Life was lonesome tor a pet kitlen at the I1 S. Forestry Service statiop 1ierc, o he went out to find some friends and Pan, a a Iimi;: and came back with three wild ( At d t i!n Ii foxes. ' from us! AUeiw Now. District Dispatcher Earl watclini" Ha Kill Mud re y said, all fouj' of the ani- petted foi j ulu Dials romp around the station and around. Now n,, l are on the best of terms, with hint hand..." in A I'uii.iMmi Adopt 'Mil III. I W.J la I- Ihe i;.ii,i!.la ( I'lh ton ol 'hr I'.ri nki. , 111 . M. I llnlllh I',! iiiilj', tntr ' cp .'I'll t to i-icp .,n a lor c Infill c: ,-Hii;ti)n i ap "More t-.ei.ra,', iha.i ever before wet ii.ctaiK tlutms ltl- lan fi?cal eii s sovertimenl lepori said tor aa . ..A The rMi and wildlife service saad. . a t ual of l2.oetS.763 persons boilt. hunt ins licences dur.njt the J'ifaf, v.k:i.h ended Jane 30. 1947. Th.e- paid 28,558.447 far thfr' privilege, not counting the milUpHS"" the;, -pent on gun",, ammunition, , .',i. and other supplies. i'i.i- v.'ai more hunters, and more in. ac nt tor hunting, than evejv hefoie ,n l.i-toiy. Albert M. Dai, a. i . . i ui ol ti.e agency said. Ana it exceeded the previods eai - moid-breaking total by 12.4 .0 hunter ; and $S t.c '' Ha, .leitited shortened WOTK week.-i, K.iod wages, good roaJ, .ilmiid.iiil air travel facilities an new ho'li-port ci ed guica , 'Mainnoiiuig a su iply of gaipfc bird . .mil animals to withstand Has heavy dram is the chief PT&P lein (that confron'-s the tountrli. uilillifc ailiuiiiisi odors today," Dy eOl 1 1 1 1 il l 1 1 I'll The sale of Icderal migrat.ory bird hunting stamps duck stamps ahci broke all previous records. SportsiiM'ii purchased 2,016.819 Juek stamps at $1 each. Sales for Ihe piev.ous season totaled 1,728,- WEST COAST ADOPTING I ilMNI SI (1VSTEPS VMM I I II M1 . ., :!ned a" .!' aid. "hut after ; :a i led and Usee came t.il li i : 1 1 our Ham -Handed Harry Makes The Basket Swish Steady AP N u'.-sfeatures TACOllA. Wash. A highboy with hands like a bunch of ban anas, has roared out of the small college basketball scramble to take the Pacific Northwest scoring spot light away from the big guns of the big schools. He' Harry McLaughlin, six foot, three inch descendant of a South Dakota Indian agent after whom a town was named. Black-thatched Harry, whose ancesters were Scotch. French, Irish and Indian, i-, the idol of' the lair-haired Nor dics who make up a heavy percent age of the enrollment at Pacific Lutheran college. After a slow start High Harry began rolling points through the hoop like he was playing tiddeMy w inks. In one two-game series he cascaded 56 counters into the net and after 20 games his total was 3;t9 an average of nearly 17 a game. Oyposing coaches watch him shoot and say it's impossible. He potK his points with a peculiar backward flip of the hand, occa sionally without looking directly at the basket. Last year, as a Freshman, he tallied 494 points In 29 games and NOW IN SEASON Cutting through 14 took the Washington intercol- --- me Hudson River, off Bear Mountain, N. Y., fishe: nd i rmen are enjoying a field dav. At top, they insert their nets. Later they chop another hole Catch (rwlmi, TKn Ti-Viito Fed bass anH t ,L T...I j : oimgcuns. in ine oacngiounu i (International) Ft th, ary, legiate conference scoring record with 228 tallies in 12 tussles. With 163 In his first seven conference engagements this year- .McLaugh lin should crack the- maf again. Another thing they like about Harry is his two remaining year of eligibility Pacific. Lutheran. 7' ' ' s harry Mclaughlin Scores in Bunches the school that placed Don D'An Area on the football Little All America last fall thinks High Hprry will be something of a sen sation by the time he's a senior. more !on. -o ra' coal i j. 1 or five- i jr - lluy "d! ta li i o io ili , liiilhi mt Ihi'v all a.-e. He (liiis'i'l died, Hi. if union a auUoii 'i 1ii h la. to the lore m t- i-.c-b.ili Inst year with atteninls .aiu.c ulayei-s v. ill in lile for this change. f iardin i s oh i i .ilnni- an ,-ifti r Pi vi ar-- ;o oic nil nl Texas League. or rircuils. ' There v. ill he plcniy ot hig'n class talent to go around and im change wiil bring about salaries for the top tar- many time- th? amounts that have been paid to date," he says. 'The harvest- t. Babe Ruth. Hank C-reenberg. Bob Feller and orne of the other top salaried atliietes of the pit -era and past will be d'.vail'J tu small change by compar.-cii " Asked whether this -tern would not enable a itv i.rli ciui; to dominate the game by rang ing ti;e cream of ine talent an.i impose a severe hardship on poor teams, Gardner decUied "All ball fclub? will be ri.h With the tremendous growth in population and freat demand ior sports, everybody will do a ter rific business. There will be mi poor clubs. The uncertainty in baseball will be a saier.uai d ; against monopoly. "Many times in the past wo ve heard that certain great clubs would have to be dismantled to prevent destruction to the game. But other teams always have been edveloped to take their measure It always will be this way. No one can gauge accurately what young ster in what area will be the next Cobb, Speaker, Ruth, Hubbell or Feller. No organization can hope . to round up all of them." Advancement to come in avi ation will remove all obstacles i of distance, Gardner points out. I p. The Washing- ,i, di i ,.n I .1. ui of lishcrlcs io, nil ii nll experiment M, I - pi n Japanese nysler I in., niiiilo pones found ,,i ,i- ,'. , "I the same nanil". ,, m i hi. nl director left here hi u he will supervise ml : lapnu!.'; 00,000 cays dc ( uj t 1 O'.j!! Ot Pacific oyster. ", . i. 1 : f ill pearl v Oviec ol U a hiiiion state's la lii ui - .;if.r and i- reported ri:' llai'or. 1 ir 1 immm If- m& 'it tstmr.'! ..!; Players will he ,iBed lor; iW a, TWi n;:j&r raw " - lrJ i tl . Vv."V'x ;VrV v-r, ' -'A I:'. ,,, ,;:,, V'. W;me - . !.. - JSC X-- :' iSf , ,. ... ' - Casing j fHMglllIMaiJ one ,t Hit top 1, mi - i 1 T T Jf . Jti-i"- , ""'v I.'".' '"'"V '. T-iu .; 'J'.g .&&&sJS!l IAO.000.000 y " Prtogitoph , . ' iim MMfc tUMf i ii ii i ii ft i " w urinitTr - few BUNDLED hain't the cold, Greta Stf.n (fi-ian, II, and her sister Th . . !). ro rive In New York i,hc.c i the1 i, e-coatod Nieuio Am' stcn;'i a.. T: o imie girls are return ing i-.oioe to Cieat Neck, Long Is land, N. Y., from their school in Switzerland. (International) He wo Mf.ieo City. Dallas, Fort Uoiih. Ilousion and San An ti)!iiii as lay poinis i;i a South western major league. Je:n ll, the Mm. Sea. midway between an ami the Dead 0
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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Feb. 13, 1948, edition 1
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