Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / Feb. 21, 1955, edition 1 / Page 5
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Bering [lines IfTRTIS RUSS IrOO fans wll? pa'^ t0 Of the Haywood Kturdav night got the of the > l'ar. Both ? .n-r all the *M I,, , had a battle on kidge in Korea, and B, oeaville teams had Kk(.r on the Clyde I,. t.;,n remember, this km Coach C C. Poin l(T won a tournament ?Several vears.ago his I. point ahead, when It a goal just as the ljra was racked up liament finals ? it tournament same lam participated In ? Weatherby was not I flu bug fouled him I had to remain at ? were th<S last few Hie game between the ? lesville girls, that K, both teams were in , ?sfnanshtp displayed Kumament was rated ? ever shown at any Ipuid admissions were ? Tuesday night, the : ? ).,< same number for | Hht On Friday the Bent in "00 paid ad- ; I then Saturday night , H.the 800 mark Bpartments of the l| are somewhat rich I tournament having I in their gym. The ?thletir and Agricul Bments had the con ls. and grossed about ?sion business hit a score became a nip- 1 ir ? everyone was too [ or drink. tin Carver was ask considered the most ment as his Bethel ahead for vietory. a minute and said: , ring that last whistle \ TOURNAMENT QUEEN CANDIDATES Satur day night were (left to right) Judy Pressley of Clyde, Patsy Davis of Fines Creek, Willie Grant of Waynesville, Doris Presslev of Bethel, Theressa Deaton of Canton, and Polly Kay McElroy of Crabtree-Iron Duff. Miss McElroy was named queen and Judy Pressley runner-up. (Mountaineer Photo). as I looked at the score board." Most of the motorists crossing the Pigeon River over the bridge forgot to heed the sign that said "8 ton load limit." At several times Saturday night there were six and seven cars on-the bridge at one time. Some of the more cau tious drivers waited until some cars moved on before venturing" on, as they took the sign at its true meaning. The Mountaineer pulled the unusual in making pictures Sat urday. Instead of the usual pro cedure of making two pictures (just in case), this newspaper had two photographers with a camera each, and both men shot the same pictures, which meant less time and less posing on the j part of players getting trophies. The spectators found the gym ' comfortably "warm". The Clyde folk went to a lot of trouble of bringing in hundreds of extra i chairs. The temperature was too j high for the teams, as one player i said "Mid-court is like the inside i of a ginger mill in July." He was j prespiring like he knew whereof ; he spoke. Although most of Panama's peo ple live in Colon or Panama City, the country has some primitive tribes tb.it live much as they did before the first Spanish settlers 1 landed. Bethel, Waynesville Top All - Tournament Selections City Sponsors Tours i PHOENIX. Ariz. <AP> ? City officials believe Phoenix is the i \ only municipality in the United | i States sponsoring sightseeing and j historical tours. I Louis Messinjer of the Phoenix | Parks and Recreation Department j ! suggested formation of the Visitors Club a year and a half ago. lie | started }t as a hobby. Now it is a 1 regular organiztion sponsored by j the city. . Visitors are taken on weekly tours to points of interest. Mes singer goes along as guide and nar rator. Each tour is limited to 30 per- ! sons in a city bus. One of the fea tures of the tours is a picnic, with food and coffee supplied bv the Parks Department and prepared ' over a camp fire in the desert. Although most of those makine , the tours are visitors from other states, there is one Phoenix couple i who take nearly every trio. Mr. ! and Mrs. William Maine, who came here originallv from the East, and became acouainted on one of the first trios. They continued to take the trios. Last February they were married. The average Americans drink about 17 gallons'of beer a year. f -} Victorious Bethel dominated the all-tournament teams named at the conclusion of the Haywood Coun ty meet at Clyde Friday night. Bethel placed four girls and two , boys on the top two teams. Runner up Waynesville put two girls and 1 one boy on the all-staf squad. Complete results we^tj , GIRLS ( First Team ? Forwards; Peggy F.dwards. Bethel; Agnes Roberson, Waynesville; Shirley Poston, Beth el; Guards: Ella Mae Smith, Waynesville: Patsy Wilson. Bethel: , Doris Pressley, Bethel.t Second Team?Forwards: Joan Ferguson. Fines Creek; Betty J Smith. Waynesville: Jean Surrett. , Canton. Guards: Margaret Tran- | tham. Fines Creek; Gait Revis, j Bethel; Myrtle Fitzgerald. Waynes-! villo. BOYS First Team?Toby Capps, Beth- ' el; Worth Wells, Bethel; Joe Al dridee, Waynesville: Charles Jol ly, Clyde; Gene Messer, Fines i Creek. Second Team ? Ronnie Dot son, j Clyde: Johnny Crawford. CrabOwe Iron Duff: Tommy. Nichols. Waynes ville; Dean Reese. Bethel: Jimmy Harris. Waynesville. ivotn ouiti i-inan*iil|j; t incs 1 Crock eirls: Clvde boys. Individual Snortsmanship: Bet tv Smith, Waynesville: Steven Walker, Crahtree-Iron Duff. free Throw Chamoioos: Joan Fereuson. Fine Creek; Gene Mrs ser, Fines Creek. The Bear Facts LANSING, Mich. (,\Pi ? Few o- deer hut much more bear were killpd in Micbipsn's 1954 bie game season in the northern neninsnla i ?>hnve the Straits of Mackinac The ?teer kill was 9 999 eomnared to mnsi last year. Hunters happed *07 hear compared to 331 the pre vious year. Money Talks DETROIT 'API ? Marcel Bonln, fierv French forward'?! the De troit Red Wings, has difficulty with the English language, bat he sign ed his hockey contract In record time. "I no can understand the words." Bonin said. "But. ah! Those fig ures are easy to read.". Defies U.N. Order ROGER HOST! ts shown talking with reporters In Panmunjora, Korea, after he refused to re turn to the United Nations com mand at the Military Armistice Commission Secretariat meeting. Hoste was one of two Belgian soldiers under U.N command who were captured last summer when they strayed across the I truce line (Intrrnftionat) " *W' t I INDIVIDUAL SPORTSMANSHIP AWARDS were prrsrntfd to Steven Walker of Crabtree - Iron Duff by Superintendent of Schools Lawrence Leatherwood and Betty Smith of Waynesville by Fine* Creek Principal Perry Plemmons at the county tournament Saturday night. I (Mountaineer Photo). Farm Bureau To Sponsor Contest In Public Speaking To promote public speaking in 1 county high schools, an qratory contest is to be sponsored by the Haywood County Farm Bureau, it has been announced. The three announced subjects for the contest are: 1. "Value of Farmers' Organiza tions." 2. "Why Farmers Should Or ganize." - 3. "Farmers ? Their Future Through Organization." Talks, to be of seven-minutes duration, must be delivered orally from memory, and two typewritten copies of the talk must be submit ted to the Farm Bureau. Elimination contests will be held in each of the six county schools, with winners to compete in a coun ty-wide contest. Prizes will be awarded to school winners and the county winner and runner-up. A $25 U. S. Savings j Bond will be presented to the top boy and girl ia the contest. Dates for the contests and oth-1 er details will be announced lat-! er Gridiron In His Blood WACO, Tex. (A P> ? "Stout Steve" Owen, inventor of foot- ' ball's umbrella defense and form er coach and player with the New 1 York Giants, just can't stay away from the gridiron. He has been added to the staff of Baylor for | spring training. Head coach George Sauer said t)wen would assist with the players on the field and lecture on defense. Owen played with the Giants six vcars and coached them 23 years. His teams won nine Eastern and three world pro championships. Some ducks lose half a pound of weight on long flights. Tell It To The Smiths PITTSBURGH (API?The Pitts burgh Pirates listed three players named Hall last spring. This spring they will have three Smiths at the training camp at Fort Myers, Fla. Infielder Dick Smith hit .294 at Hollywood in the Pacific Coast League In 1954. Outfielder Paul Smith hit .321 with Havana in the International League and outfield er Earl Smith hit .387 with Phoenix in the Arizona-Texas League. They are not related. Fain Cleaned Bases CHICAGO (AP) ? While play ing for the White Sox last year, Ferris Fain smacked a unique base hit. He walloped the only bases-loaded, inside-the-park home run of the American League sea son. The incident occurred on June 16 against the Athletics. Outfield er Bill Wilson of the A's missed a shoe-string catch and the ball roll ed to the fence. Fain and three base runners scored on the blow. *********** ?* Ujj) ' I :'" '? -ki;- ?' ? ?j| ? CLINIC SCHEDULE ? ? * ? General * ? Haywood County Health * ? Department, courthouse base- ? ? ment, Mondays, 8:30 - 12; * ? 1:30 - 5, ?R ? X-Ray ? ? Health Department labora- ? ? tory, first floor courthouse, * ? Monday and Thursday, 8:30- * ? II; 12:30 - 5. ? ? Immunization, Blood Tests * ? Health Department, Wednes- ? ? day, 8:30 - 12; 1:30-5." ? , ? Well-Baby Cllnnic * ? Health Department, second ? ? Tuesday in each mouth, 1 ? * ? 3 p.m. ? ? Cancer Clinic ? ? Memorial Mission Hospital, ? ? Ashevllle, Wednesday, 8:30 4 ? ? 10:30 a.m.; C. J. Harris * ? Community Hospital, Sylva, ? ? Friday, 8:30 a m. - * ? Mental Hygiene * ? Asheviile City Hall, fourth * ? floor; (by appointment only * ? through Haywood County ? ? Health Department or Welfare * ' ? Department). * ? Orthopedic Clinic ? ? Orthopedic Hospital, Bllt- * ? more, second and fourth Sat- ? ? urday, 9 a.m. ? *********** Carries Much Weight CHAPEL HILL <AP> ? Paul Likens, center on the University of North Carolina basketball team, carries a lot of the weight in the classroom since he's president of the school's chapter of Phi Beta KaDpa. But he's also the heaviest play er on the basketball court. He weighs 210 pounds. Any Track Will Do MIAMI (AP) ? Any type of track is OK with Saratoga ? the ? " horse, not the race track. This colt, one Of the strong choices for Hialeah's $100,000 Flamingo, has run his 12 races on six different kinds of tracks. He has won all but one. Students believe that many chil dren's counting rhymes are sur [ vivals of formulas used by the ancient Druids for choosing human sacrifices. [RING ? - AND PLANTING TIME j IS JUST ' AROUND jjdL^ THE CORNER! - - - and NOW K Is The Time To A.S.C. ORDERS le new A. S. C. Program is already set up for thjs ' TJriUrt.6. i the practices under this program must be comp e .. ^ y should not delay in' 8""?* all Haywood farmers to ZT ?2T< as sl.V possible and make .rran.ren.enU for their irchase orders. LET US FILL* your ? * * and remember l.S.C. ORDERS save twice i We Have A Complete Line Of al -^our au types of Farmers Co-op ? field seeds I ? You Save On The I I ? - - Our Supply Is Ample And original purchase price We Guarantee Satisfaction! and you also get a patronagk fertilizer - lime ^iteftnn^^j Tobacco ? Grass ? Grain I I Orchard ' # Garden haywood county ARMERS CO-OP, Inc. IIP .. Depot Street M621 H. M. Dulin, Mgr- . I No gasoline-no, not a single one has higher octane than New1955 GULF NO-NQX I This lamp is burning the I "DIRTY-BURNING I TAIL-END" of gasoline I which GULF refines out I This lamp test shows what a differ ence Gulf super-refining makes. Gulf refines out the "dirty-burning tail end" of gasoline?at the refinery? to bring you new NO-NOX. | This lamp is burning I NEW SUPER-REFINED I GULF NO-NOX, the I clean-burning super-fuel I but octane alone is not enough... > *? That's why new Super-Refined Golf No-Nox is specially made to burn clean?to protect your en gine?to give you thousands of extra miles of fall engine power. Fill up with new NO-NOX and feel the difference in lasting power. You'll get: ? More complete protection than with so-called "miracle-additive" gasolines. ? Extra gas mileage in the short-trip, stop-and-go driving motorists do most. ? Stall-proof smoothness . . . instant starts . . . fast, fuel-saving warm-up. ? No knock, no pre-ignition?even in today's high-compression engines. Pi - . ? i This is GULF'S PLEDGE to the motoring public ? ? We at Gulf make this promise to and bo matter what others do or say we America's motorists. We will not per- will keep it the finest?in power, in per* mit a single competitor?no, not a single forma nee, in engine protection, one-to offer a gasoline superior to our , jy, is nol a bo.,,,, ^ , claiin. It ls own superb \o-Nox. a pledge to you, the motoring public?a I ? It is our sincere belief that No-Nox is pledge backed by the resources?and the the finest gasoline on the market today, integrity?of the Gulf Oil Corporation. I ^ New1955 GULF NONOX g* 1 j Its super refined...to burn cteen! iw ?? f? an ??*?*? ? ? I A*A , t .j. ? fci < a. j ENLOE and REED, DIAL GL 6-4309 , LAKE JUNALUMfiA L ; ?.? i i a? : v
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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Feb. 21, 1955, edition 1
5
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