Beaufort Hosts Pamlico Tonight Sea Dogs Seek Second Seashore League Decision Beaufort will be after their fourth win of the season to night when they take on Pamlico on the Beaufort football field. Kickoff time for the Seashore conference same has been set at 8 o'clock. The Sea Dogs, holding a 1-2 conference mark, will need a win tonight to get above the .600 mark in the conference. Villanova Boasts All-Star Coaches Philadelphia (AP) ? Villanova University boasts a star-studded coaching staff for its football team. Head coach Frank Reagan was an All-America halfback at Penn and then played pro ball with the New York Giants and Philadelphia Eagles. End coach Ken Kavanaugh was an AH America end while at LSU and was later named to three All National Football League teams while playing with the Chicago Bears. Backfield coach Bob Snyder was a quarterback with the Bears and then became head coach of the Los Angeles Rams. Line coach Otis Douglas was a mainstay of Eagles' championship teams and was head coach at the University of Arkansas. The Cuban winter league base ball season opens Oct. 7 and closes Feb. 8. ' 1 11CII IUI1C VUUlt iv?vv mil naa a 25-6 count over Camp Lejeune while they loat loop scraps to More head City and Jones Central. Beaufort will probably throw some new plays at Pamlico tonight. The Sea Dogs have been working on plays from the wing T forma tion and will go into the new for mation at times tonight. The Sea Dogs are ready for the tilt, physically, as Alex Copeland, tackle, is expected to be back in the lineup. Copeland saw only lim ited action against Jones Central last week because of a split lip. Beaufort will be out to snap a two-game losing spree that has plagued them after winning their first three outings. The Sea Dogs rolled over New Bern's JV, Camp Lejeune, and Richlands before dropping a 7-0 contest to Morehead City and . then lost out to Jones Central, 33-20, last week. Beaufort's lineup will probably include Jim Owens and Ghermann Holland at ends, Ed Willis and Alex Copeland at tackles, Charles Pake and Ivan Goodwin at guards, and Henry Safrit at center. The back field will have Hub Mason at quar terback, "Monk" Pittman and Harold Willis at the halfbacks and Jerry Willis will be at fullback. Evans Say s Hunters Can Do Much to Preserve Game ? ii every nunier wno goes aiieia this year will give some serious thought to next season's game sup ply and then take some action in an effort to enhance it, the prob lem of future hunting would be well on its way to solution." This statement by Gail Evans, assistant director of sales, Reming ton Arms Company, Inc., contains a lot of verbal meat and his ad vice to "take some action" is par ticularly timely. Many sportsmen would sincerely like to follow through in doing something about the future game supply, but all too fe* know just what steps they can, as individuals, take in approaching this goal. Here, however, are a few simple, easy-to-do suggestions which Evans offers as examples of constructive individual effort in game restora tion: "Don't shoot a covey down to the last bird. "Don't set the limit as a MUST every time you go hunting. "Stop when you've had a fair amount of sport. "Don't return time and again to the same area just because you had good shooting there 'yesterday.' "Wild game," says Evans, "is a natural, renewable crop. All crops, whether they come from the soil or are hatched from eggs, have to be planted and cultivated if the harvest is to be successful. Leav ing some game birds as next sea son's seed is one way to insure good sport for the future. This is one way of planting next year's crop. Protecting it through the closed season from both human and other predators and seeing that plenty of natural food is pro vided are two important forms of cultivating the game crop you have planted. "Game management is not such a complicated science that it can not be practiced by the individual sportsman. Interpreted in simple terms, it is merely the provision of ideal habitat and adequate pro tection. Any sincere sportsman can make substantial contributions to both factors. Perhaps it is im practical for some of us to do any considerable amount of work in the field, but by banding together, we can accomplish much as a group. "Don't live for this season alone. Give some thought to the game supply of tomorrow and the years to come. r Beaufort to Play Tilt With Shallotte Nov. 8 Beaufort will play their hurri cane-canceled game with Shal lotte on the night of Nov. S at Beaufort. Game time U S p.m. The game was originally sched uled for Oct. 15 but that was the night Hazel checked in. The playoff of the game will give Beaufort three home games to end their aeaaon. Iliey play Shallotte No*, 1 aMl then take #a Avden Npv. 12 aad close the-, Masrifc with Wilmington's JVs Big Ones Bite Despite Storm Ocracoke ? In spite of theories that the late Hurricane Hazel might affect the sportsfishing at Ocracoke. good catches both surf casting and in boats have been made since then. In fact one sports fisherman was back out on the beach the day after the storm and Captain Gaskill was out with a party in the inlet, bring in 13 good sized drum. Veteran guide, Walter C. O'Neal and Mrs. O'Neal spend a good time surfcasting and on Friday and Saturday between them brought in 51 channel bass. A party from New Jersy, fishing in the "South Wind" with Capt. Thurston Gaskill on three trips last week brought in a total of 30 channel bass, weight 30 to 42 pounds. On Monday a Delaware sportsfisher man caught five large ones on the beach. Now that the bridge between Beaufort and Atlantic over the North River has been rebuilt, mo torists will have no trouble getting to the mailboat in Atlantic. Traffic down the Hatteras Highway was not seriously disrupted by the storm, and some jeeps and triicks are now making it down from Hat teras alon^ the beach to Ocracoke. There were 8,911 certified bowl ing establishments in operation during the 1853-54 season which ended July 31, according to the American Bowling Congress. This is a record says the ABC. COAL IS STILL THE CHEAPEST AND SAFES1 FUEL TO BURNI WE CARRY ONLY DEEP MINE, PREMIUM COALS, recognised brand* that are nationally known for their t fine burning qualities and Tory low. ash content. PRICES ARE LOWER THAN LAST YEAR Order your coal from us now. Wo deliver to all parts of Carteret County, and Have lock. See the latest models of "Warm Morning" stores in our display rooms. Carteret Ice & Coal Co. "Slacs inr 6th tt Evans St. Morehead City Phone 6-3800 1 I Keeping Score with RIP WILDER John Motley Morehead has evened his score with Wake Forest. Mr. Morehead played in the first Wake Forest-UNC game back in 1888. He played for the Tar Heels and they lost. 6-4, in the game which was played in Raleigh on Thursday of Fair Week. In those days when a team scored a goal, a game was over. Then they started from scratch and went after each other again. North Carolina scored the first goal, Wake Forest the next two, so the Demon Deacons picked up the marbles and are credited with the victory. Mr. Morehead, whose father first developed Morehead City and had the town named for him, is now head of the board of directors of Union Carbide Company in New York. But he never lost interest in the University of North Carolina. He gave the university the fabulous Morehead Building and was creator of the Morehead Foundation. It was his Morehead Foundation that squared his score with the boys from Baptist Hollow. His foundation hands out scholarships to boys who have good scholastic backgrounds and who participate in extra-curricular activ ities. Two years ago one of his scholarships went to a boy from Cullowhee who wanted to be a doctor. The boy was smart and his extra-curricular activities were centered around football. Saturday Ed Sutton, the boy with the scholarship, ran the ball four times for UNC and scored two touchdowns and had another one called back. In the first quarter he scored on a 25-yard run, in the second he ran 64 yards for another, and in the third he got off a 77-yard touch down jaunt. The score in the second quarter was called back because of a clipping penalty. He also ran the ball again in the fourth quarter and gained only four yards but it was like watching Dusty Rhodes strike out in the World Serise after he had hit safely so many times. Everybody knew he couldn't do it again. Sutton displayed the finest traits of sportsmanship that go with being a great football player. He was the only Carolina played not to engage in the free-for-all that came at the end of the game. The Moreheads have picked two winners. Morehead City and Ed Sutton. Morehead City's Eagles may be running up against a future college star next Friday when they journey to Wallace. Ray Carlton has been burning the fields up for the last two years in that area and started out strong this year. Carlton, a 180-pound tailback, made the All-East Central Conference team last year and is headed toward the honors again this year. In one game this season, Carlton scored six touchdowns. He's big, fast, shifty and is loaded with football know-how. This writer first saw the tall, powerfully-built boy on the Duke sidelines during the Duke-Army encounter. It's obvious that several colleges would like to get their hooks on this boy. While attending a collegiate game this past weekend, I was greeted with a college boy waving a program yelling, "Get your program. It gives the names, weights and salaries." CAREFUL! CROSS THAT fSNU SAfflY KlfP HUNTING A SAFE SPORT Chapel Hill ?.North Carolina halfback Connie Gravitte was the Tar Heels' best pass defender last season, swiping three enemy aer ials for a return of 34 yards. He is slated for starting duty this sea son. Five-Year-Older Learns How to Fish Hard Way Columbia, S. C. (AP) ? Alva Lumpkin, 5, went fishing with his father. While the elder Lumpkin was busy instructing his son in the art of trolling, a six-pound bass jump ed into the boat and hit the boy on the back of the head. Ellison Smith III, 12, was along. Ellison pounced on the frolicking fish and captured it. Indiana Golfer Shoots Birdie He Doesn't Want Brazil, Ind. (AP) ? This was one birdie Everett Goss didn't want. Playing on the Brazil municipal course, Goss fired a nice shot to the eighth green. One of three crows flying about grabbed the ball in its claws and flew away. Twelve professional basketball double headers and 15 single games are listed for Madison Square Gar den this winter. i 01*dJord^i| | KENTUCKY STRAIGHT 1 BOURBON WHISKEY [U sosi OlD FASMIOHtO $035 A I MKT N s C*4? M?. 141 \ *3!? I IU Jfttlil BISTILLIftV ? NHSON COUNTY Ducks, Geese Are A! Mattamuskeet Ducks and geese by the tens of thousands are arriving at Lake Mattamuskeet, near North Caro lina's coast. By full moon (Oct. 12), the migration was in full swing, as the wildfowl followed their sea sonal schedule. Mattamuskeet, winter feeding ground for nearly a quarter million ducks and geese last year, expects a greater influx of winged visitors this season, and even better hunt ing for the sportsman. The prediction of a "somewhat greater" gamefowl population at Mattamuskeet ir the '54-55 hunting season was made by Willie G. Ca hoon, U. S. Fish and Wildlife Ser vice representative in charge of the Mattamuskeet Wildlife Refuge. Mr. Cahoon is a top authority on gameiowl, with 20 years of back ground and observation at Matta muskeet. "We have more Three-Square around the lake than last year, which usually means more geese, and we have a good crop of duck millet," he said. Explaining, he said that Three Square is the common term for Scirpus Americanus, a bullrush type of plant which averages about three feet in height, and which geese consider quite a delicacy Duck millet, echinochloa crusgalli, is tops on the duck's winter menu in North Carolina. A variety of other plants favored by wildfowl abound in the 50,000 acre refuge area, giving the visitors a well-rounded diet and making 30,000-acre Lake Mattamuskeet a favorite wintering spot along the Atlantic Flyway. And a favorite it is. Last year, at least 239,000 ducks and geese were accounted for in the Matta muskeet bill-count. Of this num ber. Canada geese totaled about 70,000, pintails were slightly ahead with 75,000, and the 16 other spe cies of ducks accounted for a total of 92,000. From 24 blinds operated with governmental supervision along the southern shore of the lake, a total of 3,429 geese were killed last sea son, along with 2,257 pintails, and 2,215 other ducks. In 1877 there were 15 players on a football team ? nine linemen, one quarterback, two halfbacks, one three-quarterback and twofirtl-^ backs. Morehead City Has Open Date With an open date on their han^s this weekend, Morehead City's Eagles will spend this week and next getting ready for their encounter with Wallace Nov. 5. The Eagles, who dropped a 3-0 contest to Washington Friday afternoon, will be facing another rough tilt* in the journey to Wal lace. Wallace, along with Washing ton, spoiled Morehead City's record last year. They were the only two teams to drop th^ Eagles. ? The Eagle line threw up a rock ribbed defense against the Wash ington team and held them to minus 29 yards rushing. Washing ton is undefeated in the class A A Northeastern conference. Morehead City will be stepping back into their own class A di vision when they scrap Wallace. Wallace, holding a 3-2 record, lost their second game of .the season Friday against Smithfield, 14 7. i The Eagles, on top of the Sea shore conference, have a season's record of 5 wins and 2 losses. Both losses came at the hands of AA schools. After the Wallace trip, Morehead City will have two more games on their slate in Pamlico, Nov. 12, and a home game against Hertford, Nov. 19, to close the season. The Eagles have a chance to bet ter their 7-2 record of last year if they take the remaining games on their schedule. If they can win the rest they'll wind up the season with an 8-2 record. Golf Tourney Winners Receive Trophies, Awards Trophies and awards were presented to the winners and runners-up in THE NEWS-TIMES Match Play Golf Handi cap Tournament Wednesday night at a barbecue chicken supper at the Morehead Golf and Country Club. Marion Mills, the winner of the men's championship flight, received a trophy along with 10-year-old Bay Hassell, winner of the junior dM vision and Mrs. Darden Eure. women's division winner Mrs. Eure was not present and the tro phy was accepted for her by her husband. Dr. Eure. Lockwood Phillips, publisher of THE NEWS-TIMES, presented the trophies. Golf balls were presented to the runners-up in each of the divisions and men's flights. Dick McClain was presented a dozen balls as run ner-up in the championship flight. Dr. Al Chestnut, winner of the first flight runner-up. received golf balls. Also receiving balls were Frank Cheek and Theodore Salter. Cheek won the second flight and Salter was the runner-up. Mrs. Skinner Chalk was runner up in the ladies' division and Harry Gillikin placed second in the junior division. Both were given golf balls. Ray Garrett and Bill Skarren won the scotch foursome play Wed nesday and Frank Cheek and Irene Slater came in second. Bill Uhler and Walter Teich won the boobie prize. Harry Gillikin, Mrs. Theodore Salter and Mrs. C. C. McCuiston won the pitch and putt contest. Gillikin won the 100-yard distance while Mrs. Salter won at 50 yards and Mrs. McCuiston won at 75 yards. Dick McClain and Milt Morey won the putting contest. Mrs. Theodore Salter, chairman of the entertainment committee, was in charge of the supper. Mem bers of her committee who helped with the supper and entertainment were Mrs. Harry Gillikin, Mrs. Milt Morey, Ted Garner, Holden Ballou, Mrs. Bill Carlton, and Mrs. Clyde Carr. Lloyd Waner of the Pittsburgh Pirates made 223 hits his first season in the big leagues (1927). This is a record for first-year play ers. 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