Of Tilt' VViiyrieSvilie MoUlliuirH'Ci' Thursday Afternoon. May 2(i, 1949 RACE CAR OWNER PLAYS HUNCH '.' j.for Named Director nx Effective 1949-50 DonHipps lo r U f H-f II .on At a nH Track Teams " W. L. Barkby To Handle Baseball And Basketball r J M Uck Bears on Southpa Jim in li)- h!0 hang "I' ; Kuyken- ...i irnn lfW games an" run "rr "" V t rei-eni (; c Poindexter, genial head .cadi of the Canton High Black Bears, will assume the position ol athele'tic director for the school at the start of the 1949-50 school ,ear, according to announcement by Superintendent A. J. Hutchins ilu-- week. Dun Hipps. former Canton high Jlaj Wake Forest star, will take uv. i as head football coach and W. I Barkby. who has been on the start ioi the past three years will handle Die basketball and baseball -ijuatl -:. In making the announcement, ihe chuol board impressed the fact I fl (Ut ii was not unmindful of the POl ! ,jemiit work that Mr. Poindexter lia- accomplished since his arrival it ('anion from Western Carolina Teachers College in 1936. In his new role, Mr. Poindexter will not have any specific coaching duties but will supervise all athletic at-iiiK mikI lint t he nhvvir.nl I in 3 .tvu I . nmprjon of the schools L Murray let un a much larger and mprovd don with two ;" " ii: u . , ,..,,, l,-,ir, I 1V1I . litis JUUl LUIIipiflCU Ilia even dozen. - in I . . City and during that tirst year he returned to Canton with his team AF' Newbfeatuiesi itn passes. 1 victory in 10 , Won Ihools baseoaii king yt-h-rday : U the miners three of the i extra bases , k Tuck Tucker. Mh. superior hit- perlormances. I line took advan- j 1 errors in win- j K 100 0-1 2 4 3 200 x-6 5 0 jfildroup; Mur- and Rirkman. and handed his former teacher one uf their defeats last season. Industrial League Schedule May 28 llaelwood at Canton L'nka al Beacon Martel at Berkeley Clearwater at Ecusta sDad At His Command P T;ill., above) uf Mi m . .1 . (,,, , "eaaaiii oueyea ine 'an,, to, , """ rai,,. , "" n"'u "is wire, j lie slain "1 SCUM .l,il,l, fl... ,. ... 'albert (irf aw a,m inln'rt Had rt fired seven rifle hnllefc i,,. i.i r...- ........ nas,irc, , i "" "lie s uouy, ""gainst Ins ,mil ..I.,.., . . , . , Theihiia. n uiu.-ieu nine, uoyie .'hrt.,A,,Wil -"ve-year- ..JSH NKW YtJltK SuDerstilious auto race drivers preparing for the .'iOO-iiitle liiiiiaiiapulis May 30 race are eyeing the strange combina tio.i of numbers offered by Milt Mai ion, racing car owner from Jericho, N. y. For the 33rd running of the race, Marion is entering car number 33 It is the fourth straight time that number has been assigned to his racing entry. And this year Marlon also has drawn pit number 33, in the famed "gasoline alley". To race driven, many of whom never race without a conglomer ation of horseshoes, rabbit's feet and assorted luck charms dang ling from the dashboard, this combination could speed Marion's car a long way toward a "500" win. But Marion is not relying on lucky numbers alone in his fourth try for a win in the top auto race He is entering a $22,000 Kurlis Kraft racer, capable of hitting 160 miles-an-hour on the Indianapolis straightaways. And to drive the powenui racer, known as the Machine Tool Special, Marion has engaged Walt Brown, 38, a Long Island resident from Massapenua. Brown move for Marion In the 1947 i ace in a red Alfa-Romeo and finished seventh in a fast field in liis fii-l try for the huee iiuor trophy. Tlr.' miUI-inanni red driver stars as the also drovj his way into the "100-mile-an-houi club" in his fresh-' man effort on the big wheel. Brown, in strict training for the rugged grind, is a veteran of the sport of auto racing. He has won many fea'ure races in big-time competition during his 15 years of driving on American Automobile Association tracks. The driver lias wheeled his car across the finish line ahead of such racing 1 w wmwwmi,1, - t Walt Brown, driver, Milt Marion .owner, anil Chief Mechanic Jack Cobb, left to right, look over the puwerlul i nt'uu ui linn Indian apolis entry. late Ted Horn. Bill Holland, Tony Bettenliausen, Paul Russo, Mark Light. Ken Fowler, Joe Chitwood, Lee Wallard and Rex Mays in various races. Owner Marion himself com peted several times at Indian apolis and drove racing cars for 17 years, averaging 25 races a year during that period. In ad dition to the car he is entering in the "500," Marion has several other racers which he enters in dill (rack, stock car and midget races throughout tin- east. Bl ow II drives Marion's entries ill many of these i:ices. ,'ind has had the kurtis-Kialt racer out .several times this spring lo tunc it up over dirt tracks. After every race anil Irial spin the motor is taken down and re assembled. On Memorial Day Mar ion and Brown may learn whether all their clluits have been worth w bile. shiner? P.i-.:i .. kto.lemt0- Spotless F011 Any Laundry... ALL 205 - I if SV1 Hp I -nnJM.. uuuilUl V PHONE 205 Hearings To Be Held On Proposed Hunting Rules The North Carolina Wildlife He f.ources Commission will hold a series of public hearings soon to find oul how sportsmen feel about the tentative regulations for the 1949-50 hunting season. The District Nine hearing will be held at the Court House in Syl va next Tuesday. Final regulations for the 1949 f)0 season will be set at a meeting of the Commission in Raleigh on June 13. MORE ABOUT Haywood Day (Continued from page one) W. A. Bradley and William Os borne. Tlie chairmen of the individual communities in the county-wide Community Development Program will be -;eated on the stage with the speakers in the Methodist As sembly auditorium. Haywood County Day will open at 12:30 p.m. with dinner on the grounds. Conceits will follow by the Can ton High School Band under Ed win Troutman's direction, and the Wavnesville High School Chorus, directed by Charles Isley. The Rev. L. G. Elliott, pastor ol Ihe First Baptist Church of Waynesville, will deliver the in vocation, which will be followed by Scripture reading by .the Rev. D. D. Gross, pastor of the Clyde Bap tist Church. Following Mr. Landess' address. Dr. C. N. Clark, Waynesville Meth odist district superintendent, will discuss community improvement. Then Mr. Isley will lead the singing of "Blest Be the Tie that Binds," and the Rev. M. H. Wil liamson, pastor of the Waynesville Presbyterian Church, will give the benediction which will close the program. Barring bad weather, people from every community in the coun ty are expected to attend the event at the lake. The Rev. Clay Madison, former Methodist Church pastor, will preach at Ihe regular 11 a.m. serv ice at the Lake, and the dinner will follow. When fat in the pan gets on fire, smothur it with wet towels, Never pour water on it because it makes the fat spatter and may spread the blaze. ' fQ DEAR WHEW A MEATEXtCSSEie VOISKS ovris-riMEr, ooe-s mis KNIFE- LOSE ITS r-ASc A! OAMW4 S PUPPY 5pllPlTl-645WMErJ HI Oi-O WOMAH FOUND Hljiaerrn-if'T CHKSTW 8A"Ra HASHSlli-avTKAAI Now He Writes About It 1948 Series Decisions Still Irk Boudreau ALBERT SCHWEITZER, the man of many legends. By FRANK ECK AP Newsi'eatures Sports Kditor NEW YORK Lou Boudreaus new book "Player-Manager" makes interesting reading, especially those pages lie devotes to Un pire Bill Stewart's decisions on several close plays in last Octo ber's World Series. Boudreau, Cleveland's shortstop-manager, still insists the Na tional League umpire made two bad calls against the American Lea?le champions in their series with the Boston Braves. On one of the decisions, Louie is writing through his hat. The particular item with which I find fault concerns a play in the fourth game before a Saturday crowd of 81,897 in Cleveland. In the last half of the first inning, Dale Mitchell led off with a single through the box and advanced to second as Larry Doby grounded out. Boudreau then lined a bit along the right held foul line, scoring Mitchell. Well here are Lous exact winds in the book. "Unforturiaieiy, i tiled to stretch my hit to a triple and Umpire Hill .-stewart called me out on a close i ba-e. while I was play at third. 1 thought I had slid j M'asi nn the aim under the tag i Bob Elliot made ' only explanation , I Ihe tag) and I exchanged a tew hot words wilh Stewart, but as always, the unipiie has the last word. 1 was: still out." The hi t time I talked to Bou- I .Oil BOl'DP.E AU An Author Now instead of on the leg because he dove bail; lo the bag instead of sliding, and I regard it as most likely that Slewait'. head was down, looting tor Ihe tag at the l,u y tagging 'II. al is the i.iii think of to account tin I lie wide difference of opinion between Bill Stewart and me. I didn't even think the play was close; Hill ruled exactly the opposile." rireau while he was wearing his i The hook, in which Boudreau is baseball uniform was in his; dress ing room in Cleveland. He had this lo say: "As 1 ran towards second base I looked up and saw the ball hit ting the right field fence and that Tommy Holmes was afler it. After passing second 1 looked at Bill An average yield of 2!i() bushel? j mill McKechnie. third base coach per acre is estimated for the 1949 and he had his hands up. i This 'spring beet crop in North Caro was a signal to hold up at second Iina. assisted by Kd Kitgcrald, covers a lot of tenilory Lou's 10 years with the Indians. Odd things about the $2 7f) tome is that it was pub lished by Little, Brown and Com pany, a Boston publisher. base, i But it was too late to do anything about it." This, if anything, was an ad mission by Louie that he was out. His quotes got a good play and it's surprising that Lou failed to mention them in his book. And they weren't uttered while he was cooling off. Boudreau also goes into detail on the widely-discussed pick-off play and refuses to give an inch. It happened in the first game in Boston in the eighth inning while Bob Feller of the Indians and Johnny Sain of the Braves were pitching ineir Hearts out in a scoreless duel. "There wasn't then, and there cannot be now, any question but that pick-off attempt on Masi Phil Masi, Boston catcher, who was on second) was the key play of the game," writes Boudreau. "All of us on the Cleveland club who were in a position to sec the play felt that a mistake was made. Many persons who saw the game agree with us and so, of course, do mil lions of people who have studied the still photos of the ply. I would point out, however, that photo graphs are notoriously unreliable in judging close baseball plays. The angle from which the photogra pher works can have a tremendous effect on the picture, I would also like to point out that I am not be littling Umpire Stewart s Judgment. He was in a position to call the play and he called it quickly and vith foreefulness. This much I do thifcJc t ttfid Masi on tut arm LENNOX t T"""1jiijisB,xrrT .. ami fa ; i W MEAN QUALITY in HOME HEfATING FHA NO DOW fERMS PAYMW, SEE US TODAY 111 TP' Hf HTINC COIDPHNT Phone 1357 58 Brtwa AihiTllle, N. C. Hazelwood-A-B Bulldogs Tilt Cancelled The baseball game between llai elwood and the Asheville-Biltniore Bulldogs scheduled fur the Waynes ville High diamond last Wednes day was cancelled by Bulldog Coach Herb Conian due to the fact that the team was in the mid dle of their final exams and it would be Impossible to get time off for the trip here. In a previous meeting of the two teams this season, the local nine won a 13 to 0 whitewash game. Jack Amnions hurled a neat three hitter and rapped out four for five to lead the locals. VFW, Fullam's Win Canton League Games The VFW and Ihe Fullam's nines came through with Canton City Softball League victories in games at Champion Park Tuesday night. The Vets whipped the Triangles 4-2 in an eight-inning battle, on Dee Stevenson's four-master in the extra frame. The Fullam's whipped the Buch anans 6-1 in the nightcap behind Windy Sams' two-hu pitching and a three-ruh uprising in the fourth that blasted the losers' Johnny Phillips off the mound. Hazelwood Meets Pigeons In Tvinbill At Canton Buddy Oates To Defend Ping Pong Title At Brevard A large number of Western North Carolina's outstanding ping pong players have entered the sec ond annual table tennis tourna ment to be held at Camp Sap phire, Ecusta's recreational area, on Sunday, June 5 Robert "Buddy" Oates, who won the tourney here lat year, will de fend his singles title, and doubles champions. Edgar Loftis and Bob Anders, of 1948, will also defend their crow n. In addition to Oates, other out standing Asheville ping pong play ers entered in the event, are: Jim Dillard, Dick Kaplan, Pete Little, Vernon Grimsley, and John Shaver. Ecusta ping pong players who have already sent in entry blanks, are: Walter Straus, Eil Loitis. Bob Andirs, Sam Matthew--, John Gold berger, N. L. Ponder. Pete Eberle. Ed Garrett and Harvey Soul her. According lo J.uk Alexander, athletic director al Ecu-la. addi tional ping pong play l i s are ex pected to enter before the dead line for entries on June 2. In terested persons are asked to con- ! tact Bob Anders, Ecusta Paper Coi- You can clear up thut brown de- pr;ition. Pisgali Forest, posit which accumulates in the vln- I egar cruet by using h little am monia or borax in water. Mountaineer Want Ads Pnvs The Haelwood nine will Journey to Canton Saturday afternoon to play a scheduled Industrial League doubleheader with Manager C. C. Poindexter's Canton Pigeons on the Canton High School diamond. The first game is scheduled to get un derway at 2 o'clock. The Pigeons have been experi encing the same luck as the local nine during the early part of the season. The Pigeons are still seek ing their first win of the year while the Haielwood team notched their first win last Saturday when they topped the Berkeley Mills nine in the second game of the twinbill played here. Manager Elmer Dudley will send Little Jack Amnions and Southpaw Bill Tomlinson to the mound against the Pigeons in an effort to notch twin victories. The locals' hitting attack has. improved greatly In recent games and those long distance hits have been rattling off on a regular clip. Manager Dudley slated that they are a welcome -ight after the first three or four games of few hits. The probable starting lineup is: Dudley, lb, Wyatt or Richie, 2b, Bishop, ss, Ti out man. 3b. Pitts, Case, Bracked or Youn' in the outfield. Jack Smith will he behind the plate. Prunes have exiia good flavor if they are cooked with an orange that has been quartered or cut into eighths. Serve the orange wedges with the prunes. 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