Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / Sept. 1, 1949, edition 1 / Page 7
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GE Of The Waynesville Mountaineer Thursday Afternoon. September 1, 1949 fp mi& olf c llnTg 1 ! r i hi at..- W&N iIv5H4V lift wiia Beacon Loses One In National Semi-Pro Event Beacon Mills' baseball players i from Swantianoa took their first loss In the National Semi-Pi o i Tournament at Wichita, Kansas Tuesday night, fcowing 6-0, to Coor Brew of Golden, Colo. The Golden boys, runnerup in the JB47 tournament and one of the favorites to take the current event, clinched the contest in the third Inning when First Baseman Bruno Knqpa slammed a homer with the sacks full. Two errors and a walk had filled tlii' b.'.sis v ilh CYors litizcns to set up Knopa's giand dam he Konh Carolina delegates rul have a tliaiui t i winr.ing the title, though one r.io.o lot--, will knock Hi. ni mil 1 lu v tangle to morrow inf lit with tin' loser of the Millie between litTlmgluiiu, WasIL, uml l int Wayne, ind. General view of Mike Kuwirat Kiddie Coif cUnie ct Candlewood Lake, Brookfield, Conn. Hem oil Cool Anftei o.S. unit 0(1(1 (MM) 11(10 0 ! 4 0it! Oil OOx (i 8 U Shdci; Ski en and Hazelwood Closes Season With Games At Sylva .And Canton This Week -End Berkeley Defeats Enka In Finals Of LoopPlay-Off fay tin- j Vv 4f W ffl ' Kill it 111 , - Kf 4r '.I ivimJ4 I m i tiff iffff 1 -am nfir ' 'titi r r Special Grouse, Squirrel Hunt To Be Held Next Month In National Forests leys an-! laces ln : learns in ltd bowl- i Yeith.j lely. All! like to i ir at the , Jtly open nd final , Jul now. I surfaced I I top eon-; fg llieir! I le alleys i le will he: sessions leain (ami' set Iven one rancis Cove Compete In &nts Saturday Afternoon Kundrat goes ovX'r the grip ot .lav Coles. 8. of White Plains. N. y., Mary Ann Happ, 12, of Harts- ilale, N. Y . lines up a putt. Play as one of his younger pupils. Nancy Yos. 7. ol Brooklyn, seeks to on)y (wo ycavs S,K heads emulate Jay's stance and grip. lier class. Perliaps He Smiled But No One's Sure CHICAGO (UP i - - All the chil dren at the party insisted Paul Sowa smiled a little when he look ed at his birthday cakes with it 11 candles. But thev weren't really sure. You can't be sure of what a per son with sleeping sickness can si e or feel or hear. Paul, who has lived in a daze since January of 1945. sal propped up in his bed with the sideboards. All the neighborhood kids clustered around him. They fussed about how well he looked. He staled til them as though he heard but no one could be sure. They sang "Happy Birthday" as the cake was brought in. A muscle in his solemn, childish face twitched. Maybe it was a smile. Maybe some day he'll he able to smile and see and feel like the youngsters at his birthday party. The doctors aren't too hopeful, though. i'lan has : been completed for ,i -r.rcud t-M oue and u. i I hunt In he held m Pv.ilional Forest areas, in ( nrilmt! 1" Clyde P Palton, ex ecutive director nf the North l .uo- VVili Grid Drills Slated For Labor Day Labor Day means a holiday to everybody else. But for the Waynesville lligli football squad it will mean work as usual, weather pennittinK. Coach Carleton Weathcrhy said ! today the 65 candidates for the 1949 Mountaineer squad will ' continue their grid lessons Mon- day, if conditions arc favorable Mountaineer didders Start Heavy Drills (he ath-j 'day dur- n Aliens litis Cove s Creek is Creek l-Won by Won by Cove. I-Woii bv ft0" by o n bv fcis Cove. by Carl f-Won bv l-Won reek. bv Softball Throw (men) Won by Kugene Craig, Aliens Creek. Nail Driving (women) Won bv Aliens Creek: Mrs. Elmer Uendrix and I la Fanner. Nail Driving (men) Won by Aliens Creek: Ernest Medford and Moody Farmer. King Pitching (women) Won by Francis Covet Mrs. Vinson McF.lroy and Mrs. Georgia Mitchell. Threading Needles (women) Won by 11a Farmer, Aliens (.'reek. Peeling Potatoes (women) Won by Mrs. Georgia Mitchell, Francis Cove. Cracker Eating (women) Won by Mrs. Bill Hollingsworth, Fran cis Cove. Cracker Eating (men) -Won by Joe Boone, Francis Cove. Tug O' War (men) Won by Aliens Cteek: Ernest Medford. Moody Farmer, Delmar Caldwell. H.n-.ilH Mills Rerlin Estes, Scott Heavy work started this week for Hie (if candidates for Waynesville High's HMD loolhall team. And, though the lieat and the long summer layolf have been re Ihcted in the opening workouts, Coach (. in lelon We.itherhy said to- iclay. I lie boy;, ale progressing pret ty iii t ami tin h spirits are good. "They should show up, much bet ter in Hie iiexi len days." he add ed. "The practice sessions have hem pii l ly roie'li for the lirst of the year, and lloy've been some what slow and sluggish, but we ought lo he moving rit'.lii along in lla in xl ten days." The Mountaineers have Hi more day. to i-'i t in shape for their iipeia r wiili Sylva al Sylva. The niacins are depending on l.rt yeai ' jayvees to fill up the holes hy the giiidualion of si regular. Iioin the powerful l!H!i .quad. And ') far, tliey'vi up well in )ii.ictice. Tin e. including :i... in-ir'neelive end Owen , I ! In; 11 1 i American railroads, in shipping perishables, use approximately one third of all ice made in the country. Juneau, Alaska, has an annual average snowfall of 10!i.7 inches. I, il. : ion. (ire.ii' e and he le al t : inn l.i in PisL'iih serve, and Hie lie uni ces I'uiiiiuis ! TIip Reikelev Sninners out the nnisliing touches to a champion ship season Monday afternoon when they defeated the Enka Ray iinites B to 2 to capture the 1949 ' play-on crown. j Lefty Clint Morris went the liniile for the Spinners and limited Hie Kayonites to seven scattered hits The only damaging blow was a home run by lUghtfichler Tom i Tw eed. iqeirrel hunt in" will ' o.tohci- :; through ; ,iil iomil (la ihc I're Slu i wood. Stiindiii'.' Indians., Fires Ov k. and Sa:i!e.'t- lilh Wildlile MiOliig.elllelit ilieiis. Ha:: limits for the hunts' are six squirrel -'.'.nil two griiiee per linnt- pi r day. There will be no limit placed on the number of hunters allowed to participate in the hunts, hut hunt ers must he at least Hi years of age, possess a valid State hunting license, and procure a one-dollar special hunting permit. Hunters must cheek in and out of the areas and only recognized breeds of bird dogs will be al lowed in the hunting areas. Hunt ers are advised lo inform them selves of special regulations in the areas open to these hunts. ST. PATRICK NEEDED roTOSI, Wis .UP. - What the village "f Potosi needs is a modern St. Patrick. Thousands of rid lie snakes, driven from llieir hilly honies by a Hood cunt ml have invaded t he low n. Tommy Seizor sparked the win ners at the plate by rapping out a pcil. ct three for three and scored three runs. He also batted in three tallies. Tweed topped the lliiyonite slug gers with three biugles in four trips. The Spinners advanced lo the limits on a forfeit when Hie Beacon Mills nine went lo the National NBC tournament at Wichita, Kas. The Bayonltes had advanced by defeating the Ecusta team Satur day. The victory by the Berkeley team gave them a complete sweep of the loop this year. They had pre viously won the championship with a record of 18 wins and three losses. The line score: Enka 000 000 101-2 7 4 Berkeley 230 300 OOx 8 11 2 Trull, Cooper, Wililams to Price; Morris to Stancell. The Hazelwood Industrial nine is scheduled to close out the 194B schedule with a pair of tilts this week-end. On Sunday afternoon the locals will journey to Sylva where they will tangle with the Plowboys in what shapes up as another top notch tilt between the two teams. The teams have met three times this season with the locals holding a two to one edge as a result of '.heir hard earned seven to six vic tory here last Saturday which saw the Hazelwood battels break loose in the eigbth to rally for four runs to win the game. Monday afternoon the team will play the Canton Pigeons at Canton In the annual Labor Day game which Is part of the week long celebration staged at Canton each year. These two Industrial loop teams have staged several thrillers this year and a repeat performance is expected Monday. The game is scheduled to get under way at 3 P in. Skipper Elmer Dudley would not name a slnrting hinder for either game bul Tom "Hud" Blalock will hurl one of the tills. Lefty Jim Kuykendall. who has been hurling for the locals, suffered a broken collar bone in football pracitce and will not see action in the final games. pi eject, About SO bulls now are being used for the test-tube breeding of some 150.000 cows in Illinois, ac cording lo the University of Illi nois college of agriculture. RATS GET IN THEIR BITES CHICAGO i UP) Dr. Herman N. Bundesen, president of the board of health, said rats bit 125 persons, mostly babies and children, in Chi cago during the first six months of 1940. NO. 2 GOOD HUNCH BET SEATTLE (UP) On the 22nd day of racing al Longacres, horse number 2 won the first race and horse number 2 won the seeon 1 race. The daily double payoff wa I $22. ft Aliens Cunningham, -Elbert Mills. How ard Moody, Elmer Uendrix, i and I Charles Frady. Group Singing won by Francis Cove. Quarl.tte won by Aliens Creek. I Winner by number of points: Aliens Creek 283; i Francis Cove 110. lie Fereu Reagan. Duekett. Aliens Plph Fer- Fis Muse. Millard hy Aliens d Ralph I LONG MAY THEY WAVE Fomeni I DAVIS Calif. (UP) Bee special- Georgia 1 ists at the agricultural college here fcers. are producing red, white and hlue- imeni j eyed bee colonies to facilitate their Harold j breeding program in a search for a better, busier and gentler noney bee. pm-Won Aliens been showing five regulars, s Yaiborougli. .hint s. Molrall. Francis ami tackles Seizor, Atkinson. Nichols, Terrell, and Mills; guards MiCi .k s. n. Mehall'i'V. Messer, Hipps. Innnm and Powers; centers Tom Uoyd. Jerome Boyd, and Evans: quarterbacks Womack. Jar icU, Fuealo. and Carol Swanger; Hall hacks Davis. Sutton, Moss, Jack Milncr brother of Bill of the Chicago Bears and formerly Duke); Jaynes. and Jim Kuykendall; and fullbacks Deweese, Whisenhunt. :,.ul Terrv Swanger. Kuykendall, the Hazelwood and Champion Y Juniors pitcher this summer, is temporarily sidelined with an injury from one of the early practice sessions. But he is expected to rejoin the squad in a tew weeks. Carl Hat c I in e and Marshall 1 Teauge. the new assistant coach from Brevard. are helping the hoys gel rid of their summer kinks. Tc'aguc is also handling the freshmen. Want Ads Brine Quick Results A GOOD PILOT "Keeps his feet on the ground' FT wlitn fti the war f Phnt for liking tight fOPice iht j"kcd on I " must bf f'" ' time f ""w not. f "tidmi. , JS ol Id. dying. J ktcauK I ("Ottlinw J tngine tying. Mint'i one business whtre you jost can't let things slide." Actually, there's no business where you n let things slide and still stay right up there. Thai's why the beer industry in this state, like Buck spends a lot of time checking up swing to it that beer is sold strictly under the regulations set up by the Malt Beverage Division of the North Carolina ABC Board. Tavern owners rl. .ki ,hrn vou "let things slide" you're due for n "unhappy landing.' NORTH CAROLINA DIVISION UNITED STATES BREWERS FOUNDATION, INC. Insurance Building, Raleigh, N. C Little United Nations i On University Roll j PULLMAN. Wash, i UP) The of fice of foreign students reported thai 12 students have been accept ed for the fall semester at Wash ington State College. Thev include Choon Shik Hong, j police" science graduate, and Wei i Yip Huang, research assistant in Idairv husbandry, both of Korea; ! Inghnar Sweinsson. Iceland; Adeeb i vh.i.irv teaching assistant in chemistry and chemical engineer ing. Palestine; Eva Lenzova, Prague. Czechoslovakia, and Chiuk Tang. Hangrhow, China. Others are Bjorn Andreson, Oslo, Norwav; George Dieppa, San Juan. Puerto Rico; Chang Hsin-Pao, Tai wan. China; Maria Angelus Fres nido Leyte, Philippine Islands; Jan Fronen, Holland, and Mari anne Westerberg, Stockholm, Sweden. Champion Y Drops Out Of Regional Champion YMCA was knocked out of I he southeastern regional soflhall tournament Tuesday night. The North Carolina representa tives dropped a 1-0 decision to Peerless Woolens of Chatlanooga. Tenn., in the semi-finals of the event 'at St. Pelersburg, Fla. The only run of the game came in the loinlli when Wendell Iiuni gan heal mil a scratch single, then wi nl lo second on a sacrifice and to thud on an infield out, coming home on a single lo center by catch er Johnny Cay e. Buck Miller. Chattanooga ace, pitched a one-hitter and fanned 18 of the Canton boys who faced him. The only salety the Tennesseean yielded was a single into right field 1 iiv catcher Hobby Joe Miase. It was one of the only two Miller of ferings that went out of the in field during the tournament up the finals. Nazi Miller, Champion's ace hurler. gave up seven hits, but ex cept for the two Chattanooga con centrated in the fourth for their winning tally, he kept thern well scattered. ' For Champion, it was the fourth defeat of the season suffered at the hands of the Woolens, who had beaten the Tar Heels in three reg ular season contests. Chattanooga 000 100 0-1 7 0 Champion 000 000 0-0 1 1 Buck Miller and Cayec; Nazi Mil ler and Mease. 1 Florida's Clearwater Bombers ! capitalized on the breaks Monday lo hand the Champion YMCA soft- : bailers a 2-0 licking in the South eastern Tournament at St. Peters I burg. Fla. ! Nazi Miller. Champion pitcher I kent six hits scattered, but both ! Clearwater runs cime in on hits to him. I The Florida state champions broke up a scoreless tie in the top of the third. Pitcher Herb Dudley came in from second when the Tar Heel first baseman hobbled Millers throw after Miller had fielded a grounder to the mound. Catcher Harry Hancock came home with the clincher in the i,.,,itii Hp went to first when he was hit by a pitch, advanced to second on a single, then went an the wav to the plate on Miller's throw to first. r..in.. hoirt trie Tar Heel bat ters to two safeties and struck out a. nvpn dozen. The Line Score: R H Cleawrater 001 100 0-2 6 r.iminn :. ooo ooo oo 2 Dudley and Hancock; Miller and Mease. Because they were adopting the western method for computing ages every Japanese man, woman and child will become one to two years younger tb nd of this year. ation dressing table wash basin with clay tile top for waterproofing is a new idaa in bath room flUBKhUlfS. 1 mSLITuKS poo OUR FIRST V ANNIVERSARY ON THE OCCASION OF OUR 1st Anniversary Wc wish to thank our many friends and custom ers for the patronage we have enjoyed during our first year of business in our new home. Busi ness has been better than we had expected . . . increasing steadily throughout the year . . . set ting new records every day. We are grateful for all this . . . thankful that our services have been received so well. In return . . . we dedicate our efforts to better, more efficient services in the years that follow. CHARLIE Drive-In & Texaco Service Charlie and Claude Woodard, Owners 24 HOUR SERVICE Asheville Road
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 1, 1949, edition 1
7
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