" FRIDAY OCTOBER ti IMS . CARTERET COUNT NEWS-TIMES, MOREffEAD CTTt AND BEAtFORT, N. C PAGE THREE ,., T , Channel Bass finally Shctw Up Hatteras Inlet MANTEO Channel bass, the game fish which attracts more non resident anglers to the Dare coast land than any other species, final ly showed up for their autumn run at Hatteras Inlet and in the pfirf southwest of the Cape. Later ' than usual, these game fishes did not make their appearance in any great numbers until the. full moon season of October, and they were still absent this week from the Oregon Inlet sector, the most fa mous channel bass fishing spot in the world. It has been several weeks since any of tHe species were taken at Onegon Inlet. This baffles old- time guides here who say it is the first time since they have been in the business that "drum"did not run at Oregon Inlet during the full moons of September and Oct ober. With news that the copper-colored beauties were being caught at Hatteras, local guides were hope ful that channel bass would be moving northwrrd to Oregon Inlet within a few days. One report, not verified, was that an unidenti fied surf caster had reeled in a 57-pounder at the southern point of Hatteras Inlet. Several good catches during the week were made at Hatteras. Hal las and Ernal Foster, well known guides, took parties out who BEAUFORT THEATRE Beaufort, N. C. SAT. DOUBLE FEATURE HOP-A-LONG CASSIDY' in "THE DEAD DON'T DREAM'' also PRESTON FOSTER WILLIAM BISHOP in "THUNDERHOOF" SUNDAY MONDAY HAINBOW MOOUCIIONS, INC rM.mi s; GARY COOPER! ANN SHERIDAN 1 in LEO McCAREY'S I I tkt HnlM nbliy k Ml snM mil (Mi RmM ifMH. M RMt I AustiiWIichols i . tC&kub Inc. I r M v. Retail , i RJ$M$3.1S "5S5r FMthi t f 86 Proof ' THt STRAIGHT VMKKIYS IN THIS MTOMCT AM 4 YiAM OR MORI 010. f STRAIGHT WHISKEY, i NEUTRAL tflHITk, MSTUUO 0 MOM ORAM. tmduui i tun una, ram, turn i-fP $2.10 i " ' V VPI VWINCETDr DAME-wr S V JkV'6INI.Mfe kM it. omi- NAW M to nip n fm dpim 2!lSSi2 holy CROSSms Columbia Jf W -M. mH- A 'iabeib JpSJMISSOURI & ; V? M-ks LEC IOWA yffMlCHIGAA. beat KANSAS 1 JORTH WE STE RpA SW,i!iA . ovar M. STATEvI to trim, J ( MICHIGAN STATE WTMtrm? .a vVt ovr OREGOM )FM'rTA WwUMM& GEORGIA 'fe MISSISSIPPI J MJORTH CADOHWa'- MARY I STATE over -Jf--My GEORGIA Y&gTTF&i 1 NTSS?L,NA(' I WAKE feMTECHfo ffilCE & troupe) VlfilSEE CALIFORNIA) JQ. ' fT ('JrZZT ''' '''''''' Vd RECORD: 75 caught channel bass each day. One of the better catches of the wick however was made by 'oe Masso letti, New York rcstauiantew. and party who were stopping at his lodge. Fishing in the Inlet aboard his private cruiser, the Coco, skip pered by Capt. Vernon Willis, the Massoletti party which included William Brown. Maloney, noted ra dio man, and A. S. A. Bodaws, a writer, of New York, Henry Everett Massoletti, the host's son, and William A. Wong, head of the Federal Bureau of Investigation's bureau of identification in the Hawaiian Islands, landed nine channel bass. The smallest weigh ed 15 pounds and the largest, land ed by Wong, scaled at 35 pounds. R0K4L THEATRE MOREHEAD CITY SATURDAY BUSTER CRABBE IICUIMIN' RAIDERS' GEO. RAFT - PAT O'BRIEN in "BROADWAY" SUNDAY MONDAY JOHN CARROLL VERA RALSTON ROBERT PAIGE in THE FLAME" DOUBLE FEATURE . SATURDAY ALLAN ROCKY LANE in "BANDITS OF DARK CANYON" o and o WILLIAM WRIGHT JANET MARTIN "KING or THE GAMBLERS'' plus COLOR CARTOON CITY SUNDAY MONDAY f fir 1 Red' o riot I both Right, 3 Wrong, two Ties, ITT: Cage Scrimmage Starts On Beaufort Hardwood Coach T. II. Megu.iid is making no predictions about the pci'lorm-' a nee of his Beaufort caucis. All the teams in the county re neck and neck, he says, and Inns will have to wait until the season starts to know the odds. The Beaufort hoys and firl -, will have a chance to show their stuff in a warm-up game at Atlantic next Thursday. Nov. 4. Another twin bill is scheduled with Alliance, there, Nov. 19. and the Beaufort boys will square off with lamp Lejiune, there, Dec. 7. With scrimmage ju-t begun. Coach McQiiaid is wnrminy up a 2-2-1 offense. He has no si.e at all, he says, and must depend on speed. With this in mind. .Iimmie l'iner and Charles Stewart, ace ball-handlers, have been moved up front for speed. Coach McQuaid believes in the gradual approach in conditioning his squad for the season's play. Physical conditioning began with calesthentics a month ago. and first scrimmage was held this week. A typical sequence of drills be gins with standing goal practice, then the fast-breaking offense to goal, the fast breaking offense with defense, half-court scrimmage and finally full-court scrimmage. Coach McQuaid says his boys are now in physical condition but have a ways to go before they demonstrate good playing form. Ten first-stringers are back from last season: Jimmie Piner, Charles Stuart, Howard Fodrie, Jimmie Fodrie, A. C. Blankenship, Alton Lewis, Charles Owens, Julian Aus tin, William Sammons and Cedric Beachem. The following returning letter men are out for girls' practice at Beaufort: Peggie Guthrie, Iris Da vis, Carol Ann Willis. Carolyn Gaskill, and Betsie Fulford, for wards; Rosalie Chadwick, Cora Belle Willis, Letitia Simpson and Peggie O'Neal, guards. BeauforU has a match scheduled with Newport Jan. 28, will arrange another before Chirstmas, and will probably play Smyrna twice before Christmas. HEAR The JUBALAIRES ON The C. D. Jones Go's. "PARADE OF DIXIE LAND FAVORITES" EVERY SUNDAY AT 5 P. M. OVER WMBL y CD. JONES GO. "Everything To Eat" BEAUFORT, N. C. Front St. Phone B3141 B3151 ff fJkfy Ft ' ' .(itfi Morehead Jaycee Bowling Begins The Morehead City Jaycees will begin their annual bowling series .Monday at Idle Hour amusement center. Si weeks of competition within the Jaycee organization will be held before Christmas, with an other six weeks of play in the New Year. Other clubs may enter the com petition after Christmas. This year, as in the past, an award will be given the winning team, with a nightly and a final prize to the highest individual bowler. Si ( Adams is in charge of the bowling tournament. The Jaycees will hold their regular dinner meeting at the recreation center Monday nights from 7 until 8 be lore going to the Idle Hour. Major League Stars Rout Tri-Counlians al New Bern A football-like score of 23 0 was the victory count for the Major League All-Stars over the Tri County All-Stars, which included Carteret countians, in an exhibi tion baseball game at Kafer park, New Bern, Saturday night. Hcrda. Gaskins and Price were the Tri-County batteries. Kirby Higbe of the Pittsburg Pirates, Byrnes of the New York Yankees hurled for the major league team. George Stillway o'f Cherry Point scored the one hit made by the tri-counlians, while the Major League All-Stars took 27 hits. Players from Carteret, Pamlico and Craven made up the Tri County All-Stars team. Score by innings: Majors - 313 341 08023 Tri-County 000 000 000 0 The peccary is a distant cousin of the domestic pig and the Euro pean wild boar, but seldom takes on fat. He is native to tho-American southwest and very difficult for hunters to stalk. CHOICE OF COLE BROS. CIRCUS Mange cues thought hopeless re sponded to new formula 64 Pene trating vegetable oils with IMPORT ED CLAY. DOGS: Heals any mange, moist or dry eczema and promotes hair growth or your money back. LIVESTOCK! Sore head on POUL TRY! HUMAN USE: Positive relief for dandruff, itchy scalp, dry falling hair. At drug and feed stores or write N.C 10 oz. $1.?Q, 24 ot. 3. Postpaid. knrMfooli V APPLC BAMrV ... $275 4. O, iVrt $F: Pint ' (0 PROOF . N tl Orphanage Shrine Bowl Game Begins At 8 Tonight Jn Stadium at Rtileigh Players' Release Recalls Their Days Of Glory By Frank Erk AP Newsfeatures Sports Editor NEW YORK Baseball's an nual fall housecleaning is in full swing. It's always interesting to see changes made in major league player personnel but when some of the game's outstanding stars pass over the hill it's a bit hard to take. Since the season closed a num ber of former standouts have been given their release as prayers. Among those who have passed from the scene one player stands out. He is Terry Moore, one of the greatest center fielders in National League history. Moore will be a coach with the St. Louis Cardinals next season. It seems like only yesterday that he was making glittering catches in a World Series against (he Yankees. In the 1942 Series he made. 15 putouts, ninny of them sensational grabs. In (he l!l4(i classic with the Red Sox he had 17 putouts. But the last two years Terry's 3fiycar-old legs lost their spry ness. He hit only .227 this year against a lifetjme average of .283. Moore realized he was at the end of the trail when he misjudged a fly ball in Brooklyn. It was his second such offense in 1,300 league games. The game loses a great competitor in Moore. Among other veterans who have been released as players are George McQuinn by the Yankees, Rudy York by the Athletics, Man ager Bucky Walters by the Reds, Babe Young by the Cards and Arky Vaughan by Brooklyn. McQuinn, an 11-year veteran in Ihe American League, hit only .248 this year. He batted .304 in 1947 but when he reached his 37th year he just didn't have it In the 1944 all St. Louis World Scries he hit .438 for the Browns York, who went from Detroit to the Bosox, to White Sox to Ath letics within the last three years, is another former World Scries star. The big Indian slugger from Alabama hit 280 homers. As a first baseman in the '46 Series against the Cards York accounted for two of the three Red Sox vie-, tories in a losing cause. He won the opening game with a 10th inning home run to beat Howie Pollet, 3-2. He also won the third game When he homered with two on in the first inning to beat Murry Dickson, 4-0. In York's gi cutest year 1940 tie hit 3'f homeors, batted .3I rand drove in 134 runs for the l'igtrs. Some team may yet use his big bat even though Rudy is past his peak at 35, Walters, one of the most po pular players to ever wear a Cin cinnati uniform, has called it quits as a pitcher. Bucky, of course, may change his mind. He needed only two twins at the start of the season to crash the elite 200 circle. He failed in his few starts this year. The former third baseman, a three-time 20-game winner with the Reds, reached his1 peak with a pair of victories over the Tigers WHERE QUALITY IS PERMANENT BELL'S DRUG STOBE BEAUFORT OF koi mm mm SATURDAY. OCTOBER 30 Highway 70 Al Beaufort City Limits Managed and Operated By MRS. ROT WILLIS MRS. CLADDIA SAVAGE Ticket Chairman Noble M. D. (Doug) Aycock, Director of Sudan's Wrecking Crew, Wilson, is general ticket chairman of the first annual Orphanage Shrine Bowl game. in the 1940 Series. After a great season in 1944 when he won 23 and lost only 8 he hurt his pitch ing arm in a 2 0 shutout against the Cardinals and his service was limited. Another grand competitor who has called I mis to his pitching career is I'rilz OstermuelltT. At 41 he won eight games for the Itrates to run his lifetime total to 114 against 115 setbacks. How ever, Manager Kill Meyer of tlie 1'irales thinks Fritz will be back. It's Years Old But who would know it! When we clean a garment it looks brand new. It gives you longer wear and better appearance. IDEAL DRY CLEANERS FRONT STREET Portable SEWING MACHINES 5 Day Delivery From Receipt Of Order We save you from 10 Pet. to 50 Pet. on almost any item you desire by buying it for you al wholesale and charging you only 10 Pet. of the retail price for our service. VC BUYERS SERVICE 920 ARENDELL ST. M ANNOUNCING THE FORMAL OPENING The First Annual Orphanage Shrine Bowl game at 8 o'clock to night at Riddick stadium, Raleigh, will be preceded by a grand en trance on the field of Shrine units, clubs, and bands. The Sudan Patrol will drill on the field followed by an exhibition by the drum and bugle corps. The potentate will be introduced at 7:45, followed by Gov. Ii. Gregg Cherry. Oxford Orphanage and Methodist Orphanage football teams will clash promptly at 8 o'clock with activities at the half in charge of' Noble George It. Khoades, Kansas City, Mo., world's champion drum major. At 4:30 in Raleigh there will be n parade, consisting of the follow ing units: color guard. Sudan Temple band, Miss Kennedy, queen of Sudan Temple, divan cars, drum and bugle corps, Sudan patrol. Su dan chanters, wrecking crew. Oriental band, provost guard, State College band, Oxford Orphanage football team. , Oxford students, Oxford high school band. Methodist Orphanage Football team, Methodist Orphan age students, Raleigh high school band. Henderson high school band and the Raleigh. Shrine club. BELL'S DRUG STORE BEAUFORT GIVES PROMPT ATTENTION TO MAIL ORDERS PHONE B 431 BEAUFORT REGULAR PRICE $169.75 OUR PRICE $149.75 5986 MOREHEAD CITY Opei -of- Ik Tlis Morning All Wool SUITS $17 1st Quality Sheer RAYON HOSE 50c pr. All Wool COATS $12 $15 - $20 100 Pel. Wool SWEATERS ..$2 Rayon Crepe, Cotton and Wool Jersey DRESSES $3 $5 Wool SKIRTS $2 And Many, Many, Other Unadvertised DON'T FAIL TO STOP IN AT SDOP; Located On Arendell SL, Next to the Morehead City Grocery BARGAINS The OffiKT ..IT KM iVV I,fl !.) dt i'Wj ill t 1 h-." )l)oiip MM IT I . .