THE SPORTS PAGE Of The Waynesviiie Mountaineer Tinn-sdayA Barnes Wins Southern Amateur ire K v -fb f . ,vwr SVvLwV f ' III iti? , in ' K! J V I I itaineer mursaay niluw"' Haywood Meets Two Foesjnleire This I1 Commission. Sets Dates For Hunting, Trapping won ine Soulhrm Aiiid- ntr nf Atlanta. a.. teur Golf championship in the finals at Asheville. Sunday. At un ,5 the runner-up. Albert Neal of Marion. He lost to Barnes 7 and 6. right is James Tupper. president of the Southern Colt Asso ciation. In background is the George W. Adair Memorial Trophy tor the winner 'AP Photo1. Sports, Fireworks To Feature Independence Day At Lake Junaluska Dales and bag limits for the 1949 and 1950 hunting and trap ping season were established re cently at a meeting of the North Carolina Wildlife Resources Com mission in Raleigh. The rules pertaining to Hay wood County and vicinity, are as follows, as announced by the Commissions executive director, Clyde Patton. The bear season will run from October 15 through January 2, ex cept for six days in the part of Henderson County west of High- l wav 2.1 and Havwood County south of Highways 19-23. The closed I dates for these areas will be No- j vember 14. 15. and 16. and Decern- , ber 5. 6. and 7. ! i Bag limits are two a day, two i in possession, and no season limit. The season for white-tailed male deer with visible antlers will be November 14 through Deeembei- 5 except in the part of Haywood I I County north of Highways 19-23. In . this section there will be no open I ! season. i Industrial League Schedule S.G.A. Medalist RELIEF HELP FOR A'S Boeay By Alan Maver A and swimming meet, boat races. , fireworks will . feature the c.,i-rh if Jute observance at l ake Junaluska. Directing the day-long series ol events will be Cuthbert Ishee. High Point coach who is the Assembly's recreational director. Entry blanks iur swimming and boat events will be furnished on request by Mr. Ishee at the Assembly office or Potts' Service Station. The morning events, start ins; ft 10 o'clock: 50-yard free style. 50-vard. live style iboys 14 and under'. 100-yard back stroke; 50-yard tree style (glrlsi. 100-yard, free ulylo. low hoard divine, and 200-vard relav The afternoon activities will be boat racinil. start im: at l'M5 p.m.. .'I- follows; Canoe race 'two i" a canoe', row boat race 'one man in a boat', ca noe whistle race ial the sound of a whistle the two men change posi tions in the canoe. canoe race 'boys undei 14'. canoe tilting 'pre liminaries' motor boats warm-up. Vliorse power and under. 10-horse j WESTERN nowcr and under. 22-lmrse power1 and under, unlimited. Kin works from foot of the Cross ' on Missionary Point at It) p.m. will dose the program. June 25 Beacon at Hazelwood Ecusta at Martel Clearwater at Canton Enka at Berkeley. I of BASEBALL'S N ("STIX JN pabb fturn, pitching SfJy J Xi" J' KiecreP By thUMP A TUA hJTT nr THE A 'S. '"'...'.-TZ-'Z., OA-TB UITU VI AY U"G "' rui' I'M AT Lorts wsr of mmortal isftss ' cohhie Mack ha coms up mth Aor iorte A&o Come eturFLfD BOBPy OP? TO BUFFALO. THgH PECIPBP M . . w uijkA AA'P A FW PAYS tATR COISECUTW AO-fin, ZiNlNGS AS PITCHER Face Beacon In u vatnrnav ivl .n Steelers Sunday Af Billy Joe Patton (above t of Mor ganton, took medalist honors in the 43rd annual amateur tourna ment of the Southern Golf As sociation at Asheville. The form er Wake Forest College student won the medal with n score of 138. iAP Photo'. League Standings Major and Minor league stand ings 'including Wednesday's re sults unless otherwise indicated): CAROLINA LEAGUE W New ton-Conover 33 l.incolnlon 30 Champion Softballers Hit Road This Week For Georgia, Tenn., Games Lenoir Morg'nt'n liutlierford Marion lleiidersonville Shelby ' Champion YMCAs crack soft ball aggregation, boasting' 12 vic tories fn 13 starts, go on an ex tended road trip this week lor sanies in Georgia and Tennessee. Coach Jack Justice said his boys would meet Knoxvllle. Tennessee. Friday, follow with an engagement with Pearless Mills in Chattanooga and play two games in Oak Ridge Sunday. On Sunday afternoon, the Can ton players will meet Oak Ridge 'Combine, and that night will tan gle with Roane Anderson. The following week, they'll go into, their toughest battles of the season at their home park At 8 p.m. July 2. Champion will j meer Postal Accounts of Ashe-' ville, and the following Saturday Will play a return engagement start ing at the same hour against Knox ViUe, ..... . A doubieheader with Clearwater. Fla.. paced by Preacher Dudley, considered one of the finest hurlers in, -the i nation) wilj feature the Juiy 13 card. Oil July 16, Champion will tar gfe with Roane Anderson in an other return engagement. The Canton softballers wilt face more torrid pitching when they meet Bailey Supreme Collee of At lanta on July 23. Sambo Elliott, the Atlanta club's pitching ace who beat Champion last year with a 2-0 no-hitter, will be on the mound. On July 30. they'll face another i.i ,.n,i,.i in Leon Jones 41 Capital Homes of Atlanta. Jones defeated Elliott twice this season. Champion will Pla' Pearless Mills of Chattanooga on August 6. two days before the opening of the district tournament at Champion field. The district eliminations will continue through August 13, and then Champion will take part in the State tournament opening Aug ust lfi on the home field The title will be decided in the game on August 25. After that." said Coach Justice. ' softball will be over." 211 25 22 20 18 14 I. 13 19 20 23 27 25 30 33 TIME ON HIS HANDS INDIANAPOLIS 'UP) The Judge said the defendant deserved plnty of time for stealing the alarm clock. So he sentenced iviucnen Linder to 120 days on the state farm and threw in a $25 fine. ftti SREATEST HO-HiTTEBS I WAS PITCH m jg, Relief rue -1 i? f. BABE KUTfl, ril-ninj orn cnx WASi "1 ejected ey rts'urtP Batter -SRNI5 STEALING AHO MOT OHE Of THE HEtT 26 BATTERS REACHED 1 Buchanans Beat Fullams, 6-4, In Canton Loop Buchanans clipped Fullams, fi-4 vlonday night in a Canton Cu Softball League game, assaulting vVindy Sams for nine safeties The contest was the night cap of twin bill that closed the first lialf of the league season. The VFW Vets clinched the top posi tion by whipping the sei-und-place Triangles, 3-2, in the opener Johnny Philips, it) -year -old freshman in organized softball. handcuffed the losers effectivelv except in the bottom of the sixth when they scored all their runs. Otherwise, he had things his own way as he gave up only six hits His mound opponent and First Baseman Albert Cline got four of them, each batting .500 for tin- evening. Third Baseman Buddy IvesUr and First Sacker Frank Hyde led the winners' offensive, each col lecting two hits in four plate ap pearances. R H E Buchanans 0 1 4 0 0 1 06 9 1 Fullams 0 0 0 0 0 4 04 6 2 Batteries: Phillips and Woody. Sams and Poindexter. ALL IN ONE WEEK SANDOWN, N. H. 'UPi- was the commencemem Pet. .717 612 .583 .521 .449 .444 .375 .298 Bill Holland's First Chance To Drive For $5 Put Him In Big Race By FRANK F.CK NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pet. Brooklyn 30 24 .600 St. Louis 34 24 .586 Philadelphia 35 28 .556 Boston - 34 28 .548 New York 30 28 517 Cincinnati 25 34 .424 Pittsburgh 24 36 .400 Chicago 22 38 .367 AMERICAN LEAGUE L New York ; Philadelphia 1 Detroit 1 Boston . I Cleveland ' Washington Chicago I St. Louis W 38 34 34 31 29 29 24 18 22 26 26 28 27 29 37 42 Pel. .633 .567 .567 .525 .518 .500 .393 .300 Tar Heels Edge South Carolina The North Carolina All-Stars took the latest game in the six-year-old baseball series with a South Carolina squad in Charlotte yesterday, whipping the Palmetto boys. 2-1. in a pitching, duel.' The South Carolinians were limited to two safeties, while the winners could get only one more. New Champ Eight five-acre cotton mechaniza tion demonstrations will be con ducted in North Carolina during 1349. They will be located in Wil son. Wayne. Johnston. Nash. Frank lin. Warren, Sampson, and North ampton Counties. tax xi , 21 r Executive Training for HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATES! For the young man who can make the grade, the U. S. Army effers great new technical and administrative training oppor tunities! Through the Army's training program yew get off to fast start advance itcadily in leadership and experience! See your recruiting oicer jor full details about tB the ; advantages of an Army career riicftumil7 AMERICA'S FINEST MEN CHOOSE U.5. ARMT WvKCtKSl Local Recruiting Office Post Office Building Asheville, N. C. i i -y tte fill J W The NBA recognizes Ezzard Charles. 27-year-old Cincinnati Negro, as the new heavyweight champion through his victory over Joe Walcott last night. Charles was crowned when the judges gave him a unanimous decision after the 15-round bout in Chicago. Eward pounded Walcott. groggy in three differ ent rounds, but couldn't quite put the 35-year-old battler away for keeps. Walcott had fought Joe Louis, the retired champion, twice, in Ills previous unsuccess ful bids for the crown. Louk. congratulated Charles after his victory in the same ring where the Brown Bomber had taken the title from Jimmy Braddock 12 years ago. 1 iinliickv IN BROOKLYN PITTSBURGH AP) Johnny Hopp couldn't buy a hit as a Brook lyn Dodger. After the Pirates dealt him to Brooklyn for Marvin Rack ley, Hopp played eight games and went hitless in 15 trips to the plate. When the teams switched players, Hopp blasted out four hits, includ ing three doubles, in his first 10 at bau upon returning to the Pirates. AP Newsfeatuies Sports Editor NEW YORK Bill Holland has always been a bug for speed. He has been in automobile racing for 14 years and to followers of dirt track racing his victory in the 500 mile Indianapolis Speedway clas sic came as only a mild surprise. The 41 -year-old pilot from Read ing, Pa., worked at various jobs from fixing beer pqmps to adjust ing wheels on toller skates and then became proprietor ot nis own rinks in Reading and Bridgeport. Conn. It was while working for $18 a week as a Philadelphia rink doorman that a friend told him he could make from $5 to $15 a Sunday driving a racing car. In the 500 he won $51,000. about 35 ni nt which he retained. "I still recall my first race," says ! Willard Holland. "It was outside Philadelphia, just a field without a fence or seats for the spectators. I I finished third in the consolation heat." ! Before that he was interested in ; eneert on skates, both roller and ice. i and in bikes. As a kid of 13 he won a Philadelphia schoolboy cham pionship roller race. In 1931 he was the first Philadelphian to finish in a sectional bicycle trial for the 1932 Olympics. He finished ninth. During six years in Bridgeport he developed several roller and ice skating stars. He helped his son. Willard. Jr.. 17. win the na tional junior roller speed skating crown in 1947. The boy also plays basketball and competes in track at Ontalaunee High, Leesport. Pa. To look at the pleasant fea tures of the black-haired Hol land one would never believe this roarinc knight of the road had been in three serious auto accidents. In his second year as a driver he fractured a hip at Lancaster. Pa. In a crash at Trenton, N. J., he fractured a vertebra and crushed a shoulder. Three years ago he sustained a concussion during the Rutland. Vt., fair. The scar re quired 22 stitches on his forehead yet is hardly noticeable. "It happened when a car ahead of mc kicked up a big rock." says Bill. "It was so big that the hel met failed to protect mc. It was a ragged wound but the doctors did a wonderful job on it." Holland has a number of dirt track races lined up lor this sum mer and fall. However, the next race in which he plans to pilot Lou Moore's $32,000 winning Blue Crown Special is the 100-niile championship test at Springfield, 111., on Aug. 20. "I may quit the dirt tracks after this year," says Holland. "That depends on what hap pens. I may become a representa tive in the auto parts business. At any rate I'll be bach In the 508 next Memorial Dav." Thmich HnilAnrl st a nw In dianapolis record of 121.327 miles per hour he feels certain that he could have gone "one to one and a half miles an hour faster" but for engine trouble. "I stopped as a safety measure. It seems the carburetor wasn't get ting enough sas. I think mavb it was the fuel pump. During the stop Vets Take First Half Of Canton League Play; Edge Triangles, 3-2 II Ha 'toilers nl wynvilie a'"e that .- fits -n,d i riiin? a inehesi Sinit tuck hi the liic two lea i.etly Kill .1 tn tin-,.,, hits two ilri-worJ t-r team, mil Amnions i0 i-lniif again The defenJ t'lltlllliUPS tM and with tlie: Manager Eld 'in another The slroni Maryville. Tl opposition 1 the Sundav Way nesv ille- game is srhei at 3 p.m The local! ville earlier before the s two seme Lanky Jim leated t he Sunday whil va PlouomsJ -This week schedule for the busy Bassetl family: Sundav Charles was graduated f mm New Hampshire University Monday Donald ana wenueii hu. lhe ,,,, were graduated from Sanborn Sem- Cunningham inary. ; Eliabeihton Friday Richard and Kenneth : lel(l.t, ht r(( were graduated from Clark School. o,u, th, ; season i Wake County farmers are buying .which uill more cotton planting seed this year semi-pro pll ihor, th,.v did n 194H Kinners re- , nessee nere port. tk,b men. The VFW Vets won the first half .. .. t lm Pnntfin C 1 Softball " League Monday , The Vets wound up the first lap niflht hv edging the Triangles, 3-2, of the split season with a record Willie waiuu l Eah ( four teams Wl p,ay Each hurler gave up only three 2 eg in tne finai round, hits But two of the Vets' three ; ... Sngle. were doubles by Catcher Otherwise, the championship will Rhvrner and Stevenson that drove be decided in a playoff between fn M their runs in the fifth. .the Vets and the second-half win- The winning splurge wiped out rs wnen u,e ,eBu.a. the Triangles' two-run advantage t Jul ZH- they had accumulated by scoring both their tallies in the top of Triangles 002 0 0 0 02 3 1 the third. VFW 0 0 0 0 3 0 x 3 3 2 Miller, in his thriftiness with safeties, fanned 13 Triangle bats- Batteries: Waldroop and Mease; Miller and Rhymer. Inpedendent Campaign Started To Get City Recreation Area Sams Pitches No-Hitter hi As Canton League Opens Windy Sams of the Fullams nine, pitched no-hit ball Tuesday night as he and his mates pinned a 4-0 shutout on the VFW Vets in tne opening game of the Canton City Softball League's second half play. The Vets had captured the first half honors the previous night. Sams fanned 11 VFW batters in turning in his perfect performance on the mound. Nazi Miller pitched a three-lnl-.. thu incurs lint his mound lei ii i"- .wj...., i .,rform.ineu was offset by four st rat ion. M oc in ihi field He struck cast direct ia knit ore unH 0avi no basses, (lay s work Johnny Phillips turned in a two- ot adjoimna L-i.... : .1 !hf,.a,, aa lie helncd vnled tm P lllliej in mi- i"fi"lv'e . . n n ...iirv- nvel tne Bucnanans i" a j - . rr: Th. inches put their in the niua onlv hits off the 18-year-old ace inning m All Invi How lo ! ltll'I.F.Y ha hieii in Jack-on iiiJ 15. to we j shire a fanj a single dayj Soil cuiis machinery some I ate i" ll'f Even in Sunny Climate Skiing Is Possible Three young Waynesviiie citi I zens started an independent drive i this week to do something about the town's recreation facilities. SAN DIEGO l'P Skiing in And w s GaddVi 2S,year-old sun-drenched San Diego is now leader of tnt, trio. says they've al- for about 10 days ot tne rf,ady received the assurances of j more man ouu waynesviiie cuiicus that they would contribute their labor to developing the Shingle Coves park into a recreation area. possible- year. A local group of skiing enthusi asts have organized a ski club to j get in their 10 days of snow at the Cuyamaca slope about 60 miles east of here. The only difficulty is the weath er. The sun is always shining and is more suitable for swimming than skiing. But occasionally it snows in the mountainous back country and the 50 members of the San Diego ski club are then in their element. CASTOFF INFIF.l.T) PITTSBURGH i AP) The Pittsburgh Pirates have six infield ers who have played with other ma jor league clubs. Danny Murtaugh has been with the Phillies and Braves. Stan Rojck with Brooklyn. Joe Bockman with the Yankees. Los Fleming with the Indians. Etl Stevens with Brooklyn and Bobby Rhawn with the Giants. Monty Bas gall. who plays sonic second base, once was the property of the Dodg ers. NEW RABBIT PROGRAM WHEELING. W. Va ' AP) learning after considerable ex periment I tig that rabbits imported from western states for stocking can not be acclimated. West Vir ginia will launch a project next month to restore the populations of the native rabbits. Thp 1932 UCLA tennis 4eam wnn the first Pacific Coast Conference championship in a major sport ever gained by the school. we changed two tires after all I was going all out on the turns refilled the gas tank although that wasn't necessary, wiped my face, goggles and windshield." You lost a lot of time then? "Yea," agrees BUI. "Forty-six seeondf. Besides these, Mr. Gaddy added, after 24 hours of canvassing, Mayor J. H. Wav Jr.. and aldermen have given their blessing to the plan. The originator of the plan and his 17-year-old assistants are Frank Gillland and Tom Gilliland, Jr., If this project goes through, the park would get a baseball field, tennis, volley ball, and shuffle board courts, playground equip ment for children, and a 40-by-60 foot swimming pool. "We're hoping to finance it." Mr. Gaddy said, "through contributions on the part of individual citizens." So far, he added, there appears . to be solid public support for his idea. He and his companions .plan ! to contact Waynesville's civic clubs 1 in an effort to get their support. I "We've been talking about it for a long time," he said, "then Monday evening, we decided to do I something about it." ! After makino a rnuoh clrotfih tt the plans, he and his companions set nut to sound nut Vavn:viH citizens. They've been talking to peopie ever since. In reference to the financial de tails. Mr. Gaddy said he wants to have one of the civic organizations handle whatever donations are made. Later, Lester Burgin, Jr., presi dent of the Waynesviiie Junior vnaniDer ot commerce, which is working on a recreation project, said the boys approached him with the idea and that he told them he would submit it to the Jaycee members at their Monday night meeting. Telephone Servjj Keeps o" BIG BARG o.,..:. nav for telep'""1' j '"C . .i.I nui of nio' 0 cou,pamonxou.. offllp low m comparison . - onlv a few pennies a dav l friends and relatives X and please. circle of 1"' I -n v. larer,andter" cau - -.j Yes, telephone service bigger day by day.' SOUTH! MU