Nine Golfers Advance in Golf Club's Championship Event Trainer GcU Pair of Offspring Oceanport, N. J. (AP) ? Train er Tommy Heard Jr., always will remember March 25. On that day bis wife gave birth to a daughter. At the same time on* of his brood aures gave birth to a small foal weighing 13 pounds and standing only 24 Inches high. Jrt&SwtS QUIET YES! JOHNSON HAS DEVELOPED THE WORLD'S FIRST 1EALLY QUIET/ OUTBOARD MOTOR!) THIS MOTOR* OBSOLETE! WHY ( outioard PMVIOUSIY ENTIRELY NEW I ENTIRELY DIFFERENT! Thta n?w motor la so qulst that conversation btconM a pari s4 j outboard boating. It watu th* ?T0ntual revolution o 4 all outboard manufacture. It's th? motor you'ro always wanted! Bo on* of ths first to run and oxporioncs outboard motoring's newest sensation! Com* In and see ft fdaylf Barbour Marine Supply Co. Phone 2-3311 216 Front St. Beaufort, N. C. ' The third round of the Morehtikd Ctty Golf and Country Club's championship tourney will start Monday. Second ronnd play will be concluded SwMfoy. In play through Wednesday nine persons survived and will swing into the third round. In the championship flight (-i rover M linden, Mac Sullivan, and' Warren Beck pulled through with eaay victories. Mr. Munden topped Dr. Al Cheat nut 3 and 2, Mr. SalHvan downed George Lewie by the aame margin, and Mr. Beck, tourney medalist, defeated Charlea Haaaell 7 and 5 Three Get Wins In the second [light Ray Hassell, Bernard Lear;, and Dr. Milton Morey kept in the thick of the race with close victories over their op ponents. Mr. Hassell topped Robert Sea mon 6 and 5, Mr. Leary decisioned Gray Hassell 1 up, and Dr. Morey bested Harold Kettertr X up. Only one match has been played in the fourth and fifth flight. Dr. W. M. Brady topped Grady Rich 3 and 2 and Vic Bellamah squeezed out a 1 up victory over S. A. Chalk. Mrs. Eure Wins In the ladies division Mrs. Dar (len Eure topped Mrs. George Wal lace 5 and 4. Mrs. Virgil Jenkins defeated Mrs. Margaret Davies 3 and 2. The Farmville - Morehead City golf match scheduled for Wednes day was again called off by Farm I ville. LejeuneSkeet Team Tops Navy Camp Lejeune ? Lejeune's Na tional Champion Skeet team won their seventh consecutive match of the season by topping the first annual Azalea Open Match at the Norfolk Naval Air Station last Fri day. The Lejeune team scored a 492X500, topping their nearest ri vals, the Waltonian Gun Club, who scored 489X500. Considered one of the best gun clubs in the country the two-hun dred year old Waltonian Gun Club has had few setbacks in their his tory. Naval Air Station entered three teams in the meet: one team man aged to plac?. Urtrtl <Hth W7X500. The W?ll>liil r V ? Rebels of Washington* Bl C. placed fourth and the Richmond Virginia Gun Club was fifth. Increase Your Spread Save Your Time Four rows at a time with the Allis-Chalmeri front mounted cultivator for WD and WD-45 Tractor* slashes your coat of weed control sharply. More acres are cov ered ? your entire crop is cultivated quickly when it counts moat For quick hitching, front gangs are hinged lSe a gate. Simply drive in. TTiis, together with Power-Shift wheels, saves valuable get-ready time. Big, sturdy bearings hold gangs true so therefr no weed dodging. Parallel linkage assure* better penetra tion yet permits each gang to float freely, even ever rough ground. For clean crops hi leas time ? the Allis-Chaknsn 4-row cultivator. Tun ? In (^US-OiflLMIRS^ i*n* wi winn y NEWPORT Tractor & Equipment Co. C. T. CANNON, OWNER SALES ? SERVICE WHty? Can ? Tructo ? Allis-Chatmsrs Tractors Fertilizer*, SmMt-Oougfcn-V-C Tobacco Curare, -Any Malio newpott, n. c. GOOD USED CARS Ph** 237-7 HORSES AND MULES Morehead City Tests Beaufort Nine Sunday Smyrna-Harlcers Island Travels to Atlantic For Crucial Twin Bill Morehead City. and Beaufort will again meet in an athletic contest. This time it will be baseball. More head City will attempt to better its standing in the County Baseball League Sunday when it travels to Beaufort for a doubleheader start ing at 1:30 p.m. Beaufort is tied with Salter Path for second place with a 3 2 record. Morebead City and Smyrna-Har kers Island are tied for third with 33. Lloyd Culpepper will probably start the first game for Morehead City with Bobby Bass on tap for second game mound duty. * Beaufort has Hitting Edge Beaufort will probably counter with Cal Hodges and Clyde Owens, each top pitchers in the league. Beaufort will have the edge in hit ting power in the form of Jimmie Parkin. Ottis Jefferson, and Carl Sadler. Morehead City's new pilot, Bob Butler, will be expected to counter with a tight defense and some smart ball playing. Down east Smyrna ? Barkers Island will be at Atlantic in a cru cial test for the Atlantic league leaders. A sweep for the Atlantic crew puts them well in front. A split gives them first place by a hair, but a double loss means Smyrna-Harkers Island will take over the lead, providing every one else splits. Davis Plans Strategy Atlantic is well known for its power at the plate, but Wilson Davis is planning * defensive strategy that he hopes will off set this hitting power. He says he has the rangiest outfield in the league. Hurlers for this doubleheader are as yet undecided: Both teams have several to choose from. At lantic has Julian Willis, Don Willis, Gary Morris, and Jack Rose. Smyr na - Harkers Island has Wilson Davis? Red Davis, and Norris Hill Newport, league cellar dwellers, will go to Salter Path for a double header. Newport broke its four .game losing streak last week by thumping first place Atlantic in the first- game. Salter Path Seeks Wis Having a taste of victory, New port could make trouble for Salter Path, which hopes to break its tie with Beaufort for second place at Newport's expense. Probable hurlers for Newport are Milton Gould and Jerry Gar ner. Salter Path will probably send Walt Thomas and Harold Deibert to the mound. Receives Letter Billy Widgeon, Newport, is among the 10 Atlantic Christian College students who have received letters for participation in inter collegiate basketball and baseball. ; ?y ?Ciiwwmfiwr Trio Loses Shrimp Trawl, Etc. (Takiag Jerry Schumacher's piare today aa columnist is Lack wood Phillips. Don't ask us why. ?The Editor.) In the hands a ( someone who knows what to do. a shrimp boat is something that brings good re sults. In the hands of Walter Telch, Mac McCuiston and Charlie Cal lahan, a shrimp boat has to make out like it's a golf ball. Walter, who married one of the beauteous Adam's Creek Paul girls bar name's liyra borrowed a shrimp net trawl and boat from his in-laws aver near the Neuse River and gallantly invited the golf pre and the assistant golf pro to help him scoop up the crustaceans in bushel lots. Just the mrrr praapert of the trip made McCuiston's salivary glands work overtime. He drool ed all over the galf course In an ticipation af the lurlous shrimp he was going to eat. , Well, a-shrimping they went. In no time at all fhey barked the boat into the net and whirled it round and round on the pro peller until the $250 net thought it was getting the spin-dry technique without the dry. Gallant Teich stripped to his shorts and went overboard into what the trio allege was 18 feet of water. He submerged and gracefully swam under the stern' like a frogman When hubbies began to break on the surface Callahan, who's a stout Marine sergeant in his off hours from golf, dove to the res cue. Callahan need not have bother ad because Teiek rose to the sur face like a porpoise only red faced. Of all things, he waa minus hla akorta. The force of his dive took off the shorts and the gentle tide floated them away. , So there the trio was ? In a shrimp boat that wouldn't handle like a golf ball, with an expensive trawl net wound around the propel ler and Teich without his shorts. They got rescued by a good Adam's Creek Samaritan. Your regular columnist has been felling about the gal who was be fore the judge and said that the man who promised to marry her married another and she asked the judge please to get her $10, 000 from the nasty man and the judge said he would and did. Then right after her case came the case of the gat who got three of her ribs busted in an auto ac cident and asked for $10,000 and the judge said he could get her just $275. Goes to show it's cheaper to kick 'em in the ribs than break their hearts. Memorial Day Speed Race Gets Underway Tomorrow Raleigh? North Carolina's major* stock car race of the 1954 season, the annual 250-mile Memorial Day speed classic, will be run over the high banked half million dollar Raleigh Speedway tomorrow night, with the starting field limited to 50 late model American made au tomobiles. Time trials are scheduled for to night to determine starting posi tions for the major speed classic over the nation's only lighted mile asphalt track. Tomorrow's race is scheduled to get underway prompt ly at 8 o'clock. Thomas Heads List Heading the list of favorites for the 250-mile grind are Herb Thom as of Olivia, the North Carolina veteran who won the national championship for 1951 an 1953, driving a 1954 Hudson Hornet; Buck Baker of Charlotte, winner of the "Southern 500" at Darling \mr & C. UMt Labor Day, driving WWH;Wk 88; Lee P*Qy of*Ban d1Ar?*n,.' Winner of the (Mytona Beach February race and present leader in the national |K>int stand ings for 1954, driving either a 1954 Chrysler of a 1954 Dodge, and Dick Rathman of Daytona Beach and formerly of California, driving a 1954 Hudson Hornet. Advance ticket sales indicate a crowd of 20,000 for the nation's first major stock car race which will be personally directed by Bill Prance, president of the National Association for Stock Car Auto Ra cing, Inc. Top ranking drivers from all sec tions of the country are expected to compete with North Carolina providing a major share of the top ranking stars. Other Tar Heels The Tar Heel parade in addition to Thomas, Baker Ktid Petty will include Jim Paschal, High Point, with a 1954 Olds 88; Donald Thomas, Olivia, with a 1954 Hud son; Bill Blair, High Point, 1954 Hudson; Jimmie Lewalleo, Arch dale, with a 1951. Olds, and a num ber of others. Included among other entries are A1 Keller, Greenacres City, Fla.; Gober Sosebee, Atlanta; Ralph Li gouri, Bronx, N. Y.; Elton Hild Farmer Calls Deer War Truce Manistee, Mich. (AP)-Farmcr Frank Tomaszewski has called a truce in his oneman war against 300 deer who treat his fields ol grain and truck crops like a free lunch counter. The harassed truck gardener kill ed only 12 of the free-loading deer before puttilng his rifle away and setting aside his special State Conservation shooting permit. His friends say Tomaszewski doesn't like to kill deer although he estimated that the herd cost him $1,000 yearly in damaged erops. Tomaszewski said be first tried to set his dogs on Hie h*|d, but the "deer and the dogs are now friends." As a last resort he ob tained the permit. But the firing hain't frightened the deer much, he says. So, he is giving up. at least for the time being, apparently hoping someone will suggest an alternate plan to the oneman slaughter. Joseph T. Johnson, golf pro at the Glenmere Country Club. Ches ter, N. Y? was a track star at Brown University. reth, Bridgeton, N. J.; Curtis Tur ner, Roanoke, Va.; Fred Dove and Clyde Minter, Martinsville, Va.; Joe Eubanks, Spartanburg, S. C? and a scattering of stars from the midwest and east. - ~ ~ ? ? ^ Beaufort Hardware Co., Inc. ONLY $112.50 ? Equipped with Jacobaen'e ex clusive Suction-Lift Rotor that doublei hutting frequency > Equipped with freat aafety ruarda I Euy-roUlnf, aeml-pneumatie Una ? Inatant atartlnf , reliable Ja cobeea enaine > Ciita weeda aad heavy growth quickly and eaally Newport Tractor & Equipment Co. Phm? 237-7 NEWPORT, N. C. Wi cm 0 tempi tHHHm W Ifbtn mtwirt. Com 0 in mmd 01k mkout 00$y ^0y^00Wt t ? Georgia Solves Bass Mystery By DION HENDERSON Atlanta. Ga. (AP) ? In aports. world champions usually are easy to find if they have held a title lor any leagth of time. But Georgia has for years sought George Ferry, who on June 2, 1932, pulled from Montgomery Lake a largemouth black bass weighing 22 pounds 4 ounces still recognized as the world record. Georgia couldn't even find Mont gomery Lake. But now Joe Stearns, editor of the state's game and fish magazine, comes up with a fabu lous finish to the Search. Stearns sat down on a dock at Brunswick one day to talk fishing with a boat captain The talk got around to big ones. Stearns men tioned the record bass and the fruitless search for the man who caught it, then said he was about ready to call the whole thing a hoax. "Wouldn't do that," the boat cap tain said. "I'm Perry and I caught the bass." , Perry said he made his catch as I | a farm boy living near McRae and he caught it with a new casting rod and a single lure. The day was stormy and he went finshing only to try out the new rod. Twice, Perry and a friend. ! J. E. Page, almost quit. The big fellow struck on Perry's last cast. Perry said he took the fish into town and had its vital statistics re corded before a notary. He didn't consider mounting it. Instead, the Perry family ate black bass for three days. Oh yes? Stearns discovered that Montgomery hake was a local name for a portion of the Ocmulgee Riv er near Jacksonville. Antelope Hunters Have Gala Time in Nebraska LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) -After 132 antelope hunters were successful in Nebraska's short season, State Game Commission official hloyd Vance wrote the other 18 permit holders to find out what happened to them. He learned: Two were successful but forgot to check in. Eight didn't hunt for various reasons. Eight just didn't get an ante lope. This group included three wo men *ho frankly admitted "we conldn't get close enough for a shot!" Baseball Schedule 1 Murrtind City at Beaufort. J Smyrna-Barkers Island at At lantic. Newport at Salter Path. Mrs. Blanche Lambe Catches Big Drum Mrs. Blanche Lambe. 71, of Dur ham. vacationing at Atlantic Beach, caught two nice fish surf -casting west of the Atlantic Beach Hotel this week. | Tuesday Mrs. Lambe caught a four pound pompano. Wednesday she landed a nine-pound Jrum. In landing this big follow she called on her cousin. Miss Mary Fleming of Burlington, also 71, for help. Mrs. Lambe was using shrimp for bait and caught her big fish on a 25-pound test line. The drum was sent to Dr. R. E. Nichols of Durham. Mrs. Lambe's son-in-law. to prove that the big ones can be caught here as well as in Currituck where Dr. Nichols fishes. Rookie Rudy Regalado of the Cleveland Indians won a combat infantry badge during the Korean conflict. Before entering the mili tary service he was a student at the University of Southern Cali fornia. Quail Srun Cat Jefferson City. Mo. (AP) ? The Missouri Conservation ConnaMm lias cut the bobwhite quail season [rum its usual 52 days te SB and rhe daily and possession limit to ?U birds Two years of draught caused a decrease in the number of quail. In 1US1, hunters ware illowed a daily bag of 10. tse *? IM Aimh tnary Mtmtf THE TACKLE SHOP FISHING TACKLE Phone 6-3411 502 Evana St. Morehead City, N. C. YOU... The civic-minded citizens of Carteret County join in with us, go to the polls tomorrow and VOTE for Ray Highsmith. Political Ad Paid for by Friends of Ray Highsmith PLYMOUTH PROVED AMERICA'S BEST-BUY LOW-PRICE CAR IN ACTUAL FART-BY-PART COMPARISON! Now, for the first time, you can see the results of part-by-part comparison between Plymouth and the other two bett-known cars in the lowest-price field. Now you can actually see dozens of the many reasons why Plymouth is your best buy! ? In Detroit recently a 1954 Plymouth and stock models of the "other two" were taken apart completely. The parts were placed side by side and examined. Comparison proved conclusively that Plymouth ia America's best-buy low-price car. You can see this proof in an 8-page illustrated book? a FREE copy is waiting for you now at our showroom. Read it today, then drive a new Plymouth. You'll agree: Plymouth is the best buy in the Iswest-price field I FRII I CM till* M It is your buying fuidt to rMl BEST-BUY value! Rwd II Mora you buy ANY ar.

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