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The News and Observer from Raleigh, North Carolina • 7

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Raleigh, North Carolina
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7
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C. a a a a a a a THE NEWS AND OBSERVER, RALEIGH, N. C. SATURDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 30, 1943. Carolina, State Meet at Hill; Duke Regulars to Play Today TAR HEELS CLASH WITH STATE CLUB Many Varsity Men to Miss Annual Game Between Brother Institutions Carolina and State meet in Chapel Hill this afternoon at 3 o'clock, and the contest between the brotherly rivals may be closer than was expected earlier in the week.

The Tar Heels will be playing without the services of many of their leading players, who either have left for another Naval base or who have not returned from furloughs. Yesterday, there were only 26 members of the varsity squad on hand for the final practice session. Twenty-two Marines and seamen have left for other stations, and several players have wired that they would not return from their furloughs until Monday. Missing. Three Ole Miss transfers-Oliver Poole, Barney Poole, and Henry Hardy--have not been heard from as yet and may not be on hand to face the Wolfpack.

Fullback Rodgers informed Coach Tom Hosea. wouldn't be back until Monday. the three transfers who tice former State have been, on hand for stars back Eddie Teague and End Fred Miller. Most of the squad at the present is made up of holdover Carolina players and freshmen. State, meanwhile, still is the decided underdog, but Coach Doc Newhopes his youngsters will come up with their best performance of the season in an effort to make a battle with the Tar Heels.

State holds two successive victories over Carolina, but the Wolfpack is operating this season without a single: man from last year's varsity freshman squads. Coach Tom Young of the Tar Heels said these varsity players definitely would not be available for tomorrow's game: Clark, Turner, Poole, and Hussey, ends; Aland, Erickson, Maskas, and Hamilton, tackles; Karres, Arfman, Staples, and Johnson, guards; Jordan and Harris, centers; Cox, Rohling, Croom, Owen, McLaugherty, Palmer, and Bryant, backs. probable lineups: POS. STATE N. C.

Novick Hoey McLeod LG Thompson Strayhorn Edwards Jones RG. Ivey Spurlin RT. Johnson Lane RE. Gibson Miller QB. Pizzurro Kosinski Turner Teague or Grimes RH.

Hayes Thomason Sutton Arbes SOUTH CAROLINA WINS TILT WITH COAST GUARD Orangeburg, S. Oct. sluggish flock of South Carolina Gamecocks showed three flashes of brilliant play here today and scored three touchdowns in overcoming a stubborn crew of Charleston Coast Guard Sailors, 20-0, before a county fair crowd of 5,000. Only through the air was either team consistently effective as a rugged South Carolina line and the slashing, alert Sailor forwards bog. ged ground attacks.

The Gamecocks squeezed two scores into the second period after the teams had see-sawed behind the fine punting of Carolina's Ernest Lawhorne and the Sailors' Jack Tag. gart, star whose play dominated individual performances Lawrence first tossed 21 yards to Flankman Pat Thrash, then dashed 20 yards through the center of the line to score untouched. A minute later, Phil Cantore intercepted a Coast Guard pass and ran to the Sailors' 28 from midfield. Buck Williams tossed one to J. Walker for eight yards, then hit End Joe Faress in the end-zone with 15-yard heave.

Brick Bradford a made good the kick, and Carolina went into the intermission with comfortable 13-0 lead. Taggart's great punting finally gave out at the end of the period when Thrash broke through to block the Sailors' boot on the Coast Guard 20, where Guard Julian Long recovered. Jack Jones passed to Thrash for nine yards, and two plays later broke over to score from the 3. Bradford's placement was good. ALABAMA WILL HAVE.

INFORMAL GRID TEAM Tuscaloosa, Oct. (AP) The University of Alabama, peacetime perrenial gridiron bowl tender, will resume football next week with an "informal" student team of 17-year-olds. Announcing a game with Howard College of Birmingham, Coach Frank Thomas explained that the youthful group was a volunteer team coached by three members of last season's varsity squad Mitchell Olenski, Red Gresham, and Al Alois. Thomas said the university was not sponsoring formal football, which suspended for the duration last September. Alabama's experiment with "informal" football follows by three weeks the return of another Southeastern Conference school to intercollegiate football competition.

Vanderbilt, which suspended the sport when it lost most of its coaches and a majority of its cholarship players, resumed activity Oct. 16 with a student team coached by Herc Alley, peacetime aide to Head Coach Red Sanders. CHERRY POINT MARINES PLAY COAST GUARD CLUB Cherry Point. Oct. Cherry Point Marines will play their second game of the season when they meet the Coast Guard Station of Wilmington here Leathernecks will play the Army Finance School of Wake For.

est on Nov. 7 here and will meet Camp Butner at Durham, Nov. 21. There are open dates on Nov. 14 and 27.

Teams seeking games are to contact Lt. E. W. Hopp, the Cherry Point coach C'MON LET ME GET MY I'LL PAY FOR PAPER! WHAT'S THE HOLD-UP? THAT FAT JANE'S YOU'D THINK THIS WAS THE SHE'D BUTTER-COUNTER! ONLY GET OUT Lol I HAVE THE OF THE THE ONLY TIME RIGHT CHANGE IF I'M LATE IT EVER LEAVES HERE SOME- FOR WORK ONCE ON SCHEDULE WHERE DID MORE I'LL BE IS WHEN I'M SELLING PAPERS, LATE! BOARD! YOU SAY 3 CENTS JUST ONE MORE BOTTLENECK FOR THE POOR COMMUTERS TO GET AROUND-THEY'LL DO IT EVERY TIMEThank to 1940. King Features Syndicate, Inc.

World rights MANY CONTRIBUTORS Wake Forest Is Favored In Battle with Clemson Deacons Expected to Have too Much Experience for Howard's Eleven FB Perry Rogers CAMP LEJEUNE PLAYS CAMP DAVIS SOLDIERS Clemson, S. Oct. 29. Wake Forest and Clemson meet here tomorrow afternoon in the feature attraction of Homecoming Day for the local college. Coach Walker's Demon Deacs are favored to Frank Howard's inexperienced Bengals, but the history of the series is full of instances when the favorite came out on the short end.

Wake Forest will have all but one of its squad members ready for duty, and the return to action of Fullback Russ Perry is expected to bolster the Deacon attack which rolled up 75 points in the last two games. Upset Possible. The North Carolinians have the edge weight and experience, but the Clemson team has put up spirited battle in each of its appearances SO far, and the Tigers will be out to make up for last week's loss to South Carolina. the services of Tailback Butch Clemson will be playing without ler, who has been the leading man in the Tigers' attack all season. Butler entered the Army several weeks ago but played against South Carolina while he was on furlough.

The Wake Forest squad arrived this afternoon and took a brief here workout. The probable starters: POS. WAKE FOREST CLEMSON Russell LE D. Harris L'T Garrison Gainer LG Hobbs Simpson Starford Jenkins RG Ratterree Salisbury LT D. Hobbs Traynham RE Doyle Chappell QB.

Barbour Rutledge LH Sacrinty Trumpore RH Brogden Whitmire Camp Lejeune, Oct. redhot rivalry and good football weather in view, the Camp Lejeune gridiron sizzled today in anticipation of the Camp Davis game here Saturday. The kickoff will be at 2 o'clock. Camp Davis is favored over the Leathernecks, who will be making their first bid for the unofcial State service title. While Quarterback King Cotton rejoined his teammates yesterday, the Camp Lejeune lineup is still missing Center Joe Sabasteanski, Halfbacks End Charlie Behan, Ray Terrell and Bus Bergman.

One thousand seats have been reserved for Camp Davis soldiers, who are expected to follow their team here in a motor convoy, Capt. Nelson, Camp Lejeune Recreation Offcer, said. The probable lineups: POS. CAMP DAVIS CAMP LEJEUNE Nessing Fitch Thornton Primavera Drulis RG Fay Vannoy Erickson Greer RT. Mellus Sullivan Baranoski Glass Cotton LH Stoeckel Dubenetzky RH Provenzano FB Standlee Kiesecker MARYLAND WILL PLAY ARMY AIR BASE TEAM Greenville, S.

Oct. University of Maryland test its strength against the Greenville Army Air Base Jaybirds in football here tomorrow. The Maryland squad of 30, mostfreshmen, worked out lightly this afternoon to shake out the kinks developed in a bus ride from College Park. Lt. Jim Thomason, former Texas Aggie star coaching the Jaybirds, said he would be able to muster a fairly heavy team from tackle to tackle, with light ends and backfield.

Several of his best men, he said, are out with injuries. A card of five fights, featuring some of the leading battlers at Fort Bragg, will be presented Thursday night at Memorial Auditorium under the promotion of Carl D. Willis of Fayetteville. ten -rounder between Heavyweights Jack Halsey and Enzo Avon features the card. The eight-round semi-final sends Lee Kaufman against Kid Clark, welterweights.

Mark Lear, 148, and Erving Hink, 145, fight in a six rounder. Four-round bouts bring together Joe Balduc, 130, and Kirby Watson, 133, and Mark Vail, 175, and Roy White, 175. Earl Cady of Lansing, will be the referee. Boxing ARMY STAR READY TO MEET QUAKERS Doug Kenna Will Play for Cadets in Big Contest with Penn Eleven Philadelphia, Oct. and Penn, two of the nation's topranking football teams, collide tomorrow afternoon before a sellout crowd of some 72,000, with Army, already a heavy favorite, bolstered today by the probability that Halfback Doug Kenna will see action for the first time.

this year. Kenna, a great star last year, has been on the sidelines during Army's first five victories because of injuries. Lt. Earl Blaik, the det's coach, reported that "Kenna is in shape to play" as the husky halfback ran through signal drill with the rest of the squad on soggy Franklin Field. On the Penn side, it was reported that Bob Odell, captain for the game, has recovered from slight cold which bothered him through the Grover Jones, 165-pound Navy that, trainee from Grindstone, would start at fullback replacing George Velding, transferred by the Navy.

Pre-game odds, at 9 to 5 in favor of Army early in the week, had leaped to 2 1-2 to one today despite week-long rains that left the staaium turf soft in spots. Blaik was not happy about the condition of the field. "Our scouts say this Penn team has more power than the team beat us 19-0 last year. Our forte is speed," he remarked. Each team has won five games this season, with Penn's 7-6 victory over Dartmouth the only close score.

Army, ranked second in the current Associated Press poll, has piled up 211 points against seven, while Penn, ranked sixth, has scored 202 against 28. University officials reported today that virtually all of the 71,615 seats in the stadium will be filled when the teams meet in the fifth of a series that began in 1901. has won three of the four games date. YELLOW JACKETS BEAT EDENTON TEAM, 47-6 Edenton, Oct. City's Yellow Jackets scored points in the first half and then coasted to 47-6 decision over Edenton here today.

The visitors' attack was sparked by husky John Copley, former Catholic Orphanage boy, who scored almost at will. Edenton's only score came when Sammy Ross passed to Clary on the Edenton 20. Clary, aided by perfect interference, raced 180 yards after making the catch. Midshipmen Intend to Win Cleveland, Oct. pro-, fessional bettors established Notre Dame tonight as a two-touchdown favorite over Navy in the undefeated elevens' clash before a sellout crowd of 80,000 in neutral Cleveland Stadium, tomorrow, but the Middies' John Whelchel, declared didn't come up here The just for weatherman the ride." promised temperatures in the sixties and rain.

Hotels were jammed. The game was such a sellout that one scalper's price for a pair seats jumped overnight to $15 from the previous $12. A special police squad was detailed to prevent such activities, but as one customer remarked, "You can't stop scalping unless there are complaints, and buyers aren't complaining." Midshipmen worked out this afternoon on the stadium sod, LEADERS TANGLE IN MAJOR GAMES Undefeated List to Receive Big Cut Today--Purdue Should Roll Along New York, Oct. shrinkage in the ranks of the country's 16 untied, unbeaten football teams will be terrific this weekend with four clubs--all with clean records-tangling in a pair of games. Notre Dame, the country's No.

1 team by virtue of five lop-sided triumphs, opposes Navy, likewise winner of five straight, in Cleveland before an expected throng of 80,000. Philadelphia will be host to 70,000 for the Penn-Army contest involving undefeated outfits. Purdue, which has won six in a row, should have little difficulty Wisconsin, but the Iowa Seahawks, though their officerplayers will see action, probably will have a difficult afternoon with Fort Riley, a 13 to 13 equal of Camp Grant last week. Return Game. Southern California, not only unbeaten but unscored upon as well, has a return engagement with California, a team it defeated, 7-0, earlier in the year.

Tulsa, which got better in each of its four winning appearances, is booked against Southwestern of Texas, one of the country's better clubs until its starting lineup was all but wiped out by naval graduations. Colorado College is idle as is Franklin and Marshall, while Randolph Field, Texas, goes international meeting the University of Mexico San Antonio. Washingby, ton again meets a service club, this time the Second Air Force Flyers. All those contests have at least one unbeaten participant, but there will be other top-flight games as well. Duke invades Georgia Tech, with the lineup in each case a mystery because of Navy transfers; North Carolina mixes with North Carolina State; Michigan turns Bill Daley loose for the last time, against Illinois and Minnesota opposes Northwestern.

Civilian Battle. What likely is the year's best -civilian duel is on the docket at Columbus, Ohio, with Hunchy Hoernschemeyer and his Indiana (mates remainder tackling Ernie Parks and the of Buckeyes. The eastern menu includes Brown vs. Princeton. Colgate VS.

Holy Cross, Columbia at Cornell and Dartmouth at Yale. Rochester, which opened its season on Sept. 11. closes it Saturday against Case. Midwestern fans also have Denver at Marquette, Iowa State at Oklahoma in an important Big Six fray and Pittsburgh VS.

Carnegie Tech in an intra-city affair. Texas Tech resumes action against Rice and the Texas Aggies are heavy over Arkansas in Southwestern games, while March Field UCLA takes on St. for Mary's Preand a over San Diego Naval. Texas mixes a The weak but South also stubborn has SMU Wake VS. Clemson, Virginia and VMI.

Camp Davis vs. Camp Lejeune and Greenville Air Base playing Mary- land. ROCKINGHAM BATTLES HAMLET CLUB TO TIE Rockingham, Oct. and Hamlet battled to tie here this afternoon in the second meeting of the season between the two rivals. Hamlet won the previous contest, 13-0.

Neither team presented a scoring threat today, with play confined for the most part to midfield. Hamlet made 11 first-downs to four for the locals. Rockingham plays Laurinburg here Friday. 10-30 Cope. 1945, Disney World the A and 1943, The Tribune Register, 10-30 A LAST DESPERATE EFFORT TRAP STUN MY DEAR INTO MISS FLORA PROPOSAL, -YoU MUST FLORA BE MORE THREW DISCREETHER ARMS AROUND HIM, BUT- YOU'RE SWEET GIRLOTHERS NOT Caps Score 60-0 Against Oxford No.

7 for Caps Pos. Earnhardt Oxford Raleigh Benson LT Newsome Whitley LG C. Thomas L. Martin Moss Cherry RG Langston Poole RT Barber S. Martin RE Childress Kellogg QB R.

Thomas Jones LH Long Jordan RH Gibbs Hawkins FB Forrest Ferrell Score by periods: Oxford 0 0 0 0- 0 Raleigh 20 7 20 13--60 Scoring for Raleigh: TouchdownsJordan 3, Ferrell 2, Ellington, Jones, Hawkins, Bason. Points after 2 (placement), Bason'3 (pass). (placement). Oxford substitutions: End. T.

Tucker: ner; tackle, center, Holliday; M. Barber; guards, backs, Howard, Stuart. GarB. Tucker, Leagon, Winfield. Raleigh substitutions: End Bowles; tackles, Gordon, Stone, Woods; Newcomer, Bratton, James, Williams; center.

Baise; backs, Cornick, Ellington, Bason, Grow. Referee: Dandelake (WCTC). Umpire: Lawrence (State). Headlinesman: ter (Elon). Field Judge: Bledsoe (Campbell).

METHODISTS PLAY AT DEVEREUX GRID Orphanage Eleven Meets Cap Reserve in Halloween Festival Battle Methodist Orphanage, undefeated in four games, meets its toughest opposition of the season tonight when it plays second and third Raleigh high school teams at Deverux Meadow. The game is one of the features of Halloween festival sponsored by the Young Men's Business Club. No admission will be charged, and the kickoff is scheduled for 8:30. Coach Duma Bledsoe's Methodists have scored victories over Roxboro, Oxford, and Henderson a scoreless tie at Hillsboro. All four games were played away from home, and tonight's engagement will mark the first home appearance of the locals.

The Raleigh high school reserves have shown rapid improvement with each week practice and probably will be favored to stop the winning streak of the Methodists. The Orphanage eleven has a rugged defense which has permitted only Henderson to score on it this season. The Methodists have gained valuable experience this season by staging weekly scrimmage sessions with the high-scoring Caps. KINSTON GETS REVENGE OVER GOLDSBORO, 20-0 Kinston, Oct. gained revenge for a defeat earlier in the season defeating Goldsboro tonight, 20-0.

The Grainger eleven scored in the first period when Jones plunged over from the 2 after a pass interception set up the tally. In the second period, a 30-yard pass from Jones to Keith Kilpatrick brought touchdown. With one minute left in the game, the same combinations third worked tally. on a William 33-yard Shackelford kicked two of three tries. extra Goldsboro won the first game, 13-12.

This is Bucky 'Harris' twentieth season as a big league manager, and marks the first time he ever received a present. Philadelphia labor men gave him a wrist watch. A few days later Owner Bill Cox gave him a can, that also being his first. HIGH SCHOOL SCORES Raleigh 60. Oxford Orphanage 0.

Rocky Mount 19. Durham 13. Fayetteville 2 24, Wilson 19. Rockingham 0. Hamlet 0.

Elizabeth City 47, Edenton 6. Whiteville 12, Wadesboro 0. Barium Springs 20, Davidson 19. Ahoskie 67, Williamston Kinston 20, Goldsboro 0. OKAY- THAT DIDN'T WORKI'LL GIVE FLASH THE SIGNAL WHAT'S I HOPE SO! I'M I'M THE GIRL WHO WRONG, MIXED UP IN THE ONCE WANTED TO KICK MISS.

PARNDEST A FELLOW NAMED RANNY CAIN 7 SITUATION SIMS, WHEN HE WAS CAN I EVER KNOWN. DOWN! HELP Triumph Orphanage Win Seventh Straight Victory--Stone Uses His Entire Squad By FRED DIXON. ond half. GEORGIA WINS. Raleigh's Caps rolled along at a point a minute clip last night, scoring their seventh win of the season as they turned back the Oxford Orphanage, 60-0, before 3,500 fans in Devereux Meadow.

It was the most one-sided score by the Caps this year. Tops until last night was last week's 39-0 victory over Wilmington. Coach Lee Stone used every man on the Raleigh bench, and it didn't seem to matter, the relief men looking about as good as the regulars. There were plenty of long runs last night--the longest a 94-yard sprint by Walton Ferrell in the fourth quarter with an intercepted pass. Ferrell's interception stopped Oxford's best offensive show that started from Raleigh's 41 and carried to the Caps' 14.

Ferrell stepped in and took the pass on fourth down and sped straight down the field. Long Run. down Joe Jordan to Then was an 84-yard touchthere, the second half. Oxford kicked to Raleigh to start the half, and Jordan took the kick on on a dead run and didn't stop running until he had crossed the visitors' goal. Jordan scored three touchdowns, kicked two placements, and passed to Bill Jones for another touchdown.

He also passed to Rex Benson for another point after touchdown. Raleigh's first touchdown came on the seventh play of the game, and it Jordan who scored on a fine 55-yard dash through his left tackle and then a cutback to his right. Rex Benson blocked out the last man in his way on the 21 yard line. Ferrell Travels. Six plays later, Ferrell went Jordan one yard better, running 56 yards on a straight line, play for a touchdown.

The not yet three minutes old and Raleigh led. 13-0, Jordan having made good on one of his two attempted placements. Jordan's other touchdown came in the second quarter on a five-yard end run to end a Raleigh drive of 74 yards. Raleigh's other touchdowns were scored by Paul Ellington on a fiveyard run ending a 51 yard drive: Bill Jones on a five-yard from Jordan, ending a drive of pass, nine yards; George Cherry, center, having recovered an Oxford fumble for Raleigh on the visitors' Bobby Hawkins on a seven-yard end run after he had put the ball on the 7 with a 32-yard return of an intercepted pass, and George Bason on pass from Ellington that netted 29 yards. This score ended a 43 yard march.

Oxford was completely outweighed every position, but the visitors fought hard and drove into Raleigh territory three times. In fact the visitors had a net of 115 yards from scrimmage and 23 more from passes. Raleigh gained 355 yards from rushing and 52 from passes for 407 yards. The Caps made 16 first-downs, and Oxford 7. Raleigh didn't punt the first half.

It scored four touchdowns the first four times it had the ball and was driving for another on the fifth possession when the half ended. The Caps punted only once in the sec- Athens, Oct. Georgia had both manpower and grid power tonight, and the combination spelled a 39-0 defeat for a plucky but out-distanced Howard College football team. Playing to a sparse crowd of 3,500, Georgia pushed over touchdowns in every period, culminating with a 19-point avalanche in the final quarter. OH, MY ANKLE- I CAN'T AFRAID WALKSPRAINED AND NOW ONLY WANT WHAT TO REACH OUT ARE YOU MY HAND TO TALKING HELP HIM UP.

ABOUT Copr. 1943 by United Festare Tm. Res. U. 8.

PaL reserved BLUE DEVILS HAVE USUAL STARTERS Players Due to Leave Will Depart Monday Capacity Crowd Expected FIVE COLTS ENTER PIMLICO'S SPECIAL Shut Out Is Big Favorite in $25,000 Classic at Maryland Track Baltimore, Oct. 29. -(AP)- The which dangled a cloud of uncertainty over the Pimlico Special all week, finally cleared today a few hours before five colts were named to compete in the $25,000 classic, and it appeared that and possibly four would go to the post tomorrow. A heavy favorite in the early odds was Greentree Stable's Shut Out, 10th largest winner of all time and the leading three-year-old of last season. Shut Out had been regarded as a doubtful starter all week, because of the condition of the track.

Named overnight to run against Mrs. Payne Whitney's son of Equipoise in the mile and three-sixteenths, weight-for-age special were W. E. Boeing's Slide Rule, runner-up to Count Fleet for three-year-old honors this year; Hal Price Headley's Anticlimax, Fairy Manhurst, from the Foxcatcher Farm stables of William du Pont, and Eurasian, in the colors of Frank and Joe Rabinovich's Havahome Stable. Shut Out and Anticlimax, both four-year-olds, will carry 126 pounds, and the other three 120.

George Wolf, who today was assigned the mount on Slide Rule, and Out, both have previous victories in Eddie Arcaro, who will ride Shut the Special to their credit. Wolf has ridden three of the six Special winners and Arcardo one. The Greentree star was quoted in the overnight odds at 6-5, with choice at 5-2 starts. Anticlimax then probable second Eurasian was held at 4-1, Slide Rule at 6-1 and Fairy Manhurst at 8-1. Trainer Augustus (Sarge) Swenke chose tomorrow's card to start Alsab on another comeback attempt, naming Mrs.

Albert Sabath's bargain colt to go to the post in tomorrow's $3,500 Tom Ochiltree Handicap. TECH HAWKS WILL PLAY ARMY FINANCE SCHOOL hard-hitting Greensboro, Oct. Tech Hawks of the AAF's Basic Training Center No. 10 went through a final tuneup today, prepared to back up their second straight football victory of the season against a strengthened Wake Forest Army Finance School here Sunday afternoon. The team of veteran former college and professional stars builds its offense around Charley Trippi, who sparkled in last year's Rose Bowl game for the University of Georgia.

Pfc. Gene Meeks, wingback, also generates power in the Tech Hawks' attack. Meeks registered eight touchdowns in his first last season for the University, of Kentucky and was the Southeastern Conference in scoring when an injury in the game against Alabama silenced his guns for the rest of the campaign. LITTLE BLUES DEFEAT ROCKY MOUNT ELEVEN Booker T. Washington of Rocky Mount presented a stubborn defense against the Little Blues of Washington High yesterday at Chavis Park, but two touchdown passes and a safety gave the locals a 14-0 victory.

The Blues scored late in the second period when Lorenzo Haywood passed to Payne Peterson. In the third period, Sussie Haywood passed to Peterson for the second touchdown. Once, the Blues lost the ball on a fumble on the Rocky Mount 4, but Dickens' punt was blocked for a safety. The best Rocky Mount threat was stopped on the 4 when Knobby Flagg intercepted a pass. The Blues made 16 first-downs, to four for the losers.

Battle and Worsley, ends, played outstanding ball for the losers. Other Rocky Mount stars were Blackmon, Dickens, and Harrison. Leading the Blues were Ussie Haywood, Peterson, and Flagg. AHOSKIE TEAM ROMPS AGAINST WILLIAMSTON Ahoskie, Oct. 29.

Ahoskie High School won its first football game of the season here this afternoon by overpowering Williamston High, 67-0. Halfback Dempsey was high scorer for the locals, with 19 points. Other scorers were John Pappas, 13; Pudding Copeland, 13; Donald Eearly, Thomas Humphries, Andy Fuller, and Jim White, 1. Williamston crossed the 50-yard line one time and that on a 15-yard penalty against Ahoskie for clipping. Atlanta, Oct.

Navy and Marines may have them day, but tomorrow Duke's highpowered football stars still will be playing for Eddie and that's the lineup tonight on the eve of a spectacular Duke vs. Georgia Tech game. A sellout crowd is expected to jam Grant Field for the kickoff at 3 p.m. (CWT) to see Cameron's mighty Blue Devils engage a depleted but nonetheless potent team of Tech Yellow Jackets. Eight reserves and two starting players were lost to Tech during the week, including Left Gene Hill and Left Tackle Bill Harper on Navy transfers.

Three other regulars are duto to go, but will play a final game against Duke. They are stellar George (Mutt) Manning, captain and center; Bill Smith, right tackle; Wilbur Stein, blocking back. Duke, barring last-minute orders, expects to go into the game with only one regular lost transfer. He is Bob Nanni, a tackle, who has alternated as a starter with Bulldog Williams. transfer from Georgia's Rose Bowl team.

Tomorrow's game is expected to develop into an offensive battle between Tech's Eddie Prokop, fifth ranking yard-gainer of the nation, and Duke's three-star combination of Tailback Buddy Luper, Wingback Lloyd Lamar Blount, and Fullback Tom Davis. The entire right side of the powerful Blue Devil line will be lost when Jim Myers, Bulldog Williams and Jim Copley pack their bags the Pat who has been a bulfirst Prestoext week. Left Tackle wark of strength in the forward wall all fall, is also among those who will be playing for the last time as well as Herman Smith, end, and Joe Lipkowski, guard. In the first string backfield, Tailback Buddy Luper will be the sole survivor. Fullback Tom Davis, Quarterback Leo Long and Wingback Loyd Blount along with Reserves Johnny Perry, Red Rainer, Lob McDougal, Jim Wolfe and Billy Murphy will all be making their last appearances in tomorrow after.

noon's bout with the Golden Tornado. Among the furloughing varsity gridders who did not return and were not taken to Atlanta were Tailback Bob Rute. Tackles Bob Nanni and K. P. Davis, Guard Charlie Hood, Quarterback Bill Moates were also included the list of Fullback Herb chin Strickland who those that were ordered to depart, on probable Monday.

lineups: POS. DUKE GEORGIA TECH LE Cittadino Tinsley LT Preston Chambers LG Milner Steber C. Wall Manning RG Myers Beall RT. Williams Smith RE Copley Daniel QB Long Stein LH Luper Prokop RH Blount Proyles FB T. Davis Schwarfswerdt Hi Bithorn.

Cub pitcher, manages club in Puerto Rico in the winter, but he does no pitching. He plays Arst. Eastern Carolina's Most Complete Stock 01 SPORTING GOODS Toys Bicycle Supplies Games NERS A SPORTSMEN'S HEADQUARTERS ROCKY MOUNT, N. C. TRACK MEET TODAY I Diaributed by Ring Features YoU POOR CHILD LET HELP YOU- JUST IMPULSIVE BUT MIGHT Notre Dame received official confirmation that Angelo Bertelli, threeseason quarterback, and four other South Bend athletes enrolled in the Marine Corps Reserve had been ordered to report Nov.

1 for training at Parris Island, S. making this their last game for Notre Dame. "The loss of Bertelli is like losing the heart out of a man," commented Notre Dame's coach, Frank Leahy, who arrived tonight with his squad. Bertelli has pitched eight touchdown passes from the this season, but still only one more than thrown by Navy's aerial ace, Tailback Hal Hamberg. Both teams have beaten their five rivals, but in the only meeting with a common foe, Notre Dame rolled up a 55-13 win over Georgia Tech, while the Middies were pressed to take 8 28-14 decision last week.

READ THIS OLD NEWSPAPER CLIPPING AND THEN GIVE ME SHOULDER TO CRY ON, WILL YOU, SOLDIER.

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