Indians Tame Hampden - Sydney Tigers 13 to 0
Tribe Scores Both Markers
In Second Half Drive
_ 4___
Maggiolo Intercepts Pass
And Scampers for
Touchdown
(From The Pioneer)
The Catawba Indians invaded
Virginia last week-end, and took
the Hampden-Sydney Tigers over,
15-0. This was the second Indian
invasion into foreign territory and
their first win.
The Tigers kicked off, and the(
ball was taken by Sammy Pritchard
on his own five and he returned it
:o the thirty-five before being
downed. Both teams failed to gain
much territory on plays, so they
took to punting.
In the second quarter Catawba
threatened the Tiger goal, but the
gun which ended the half came tog
their rescue. The Indians had the]
ball on Ffampden-Sydney’s one'
yard line with four downs in which’
to put it over, but the gun barked!
before the first piay could be start-;
ed.
Catawba scored seven points in
the third quarter. After the kick
off, the Tigers took possession of
the ball on the Indians’ thirty.1
After three plays failed, they punt-i
ed out of bounds on Catawba’s
eleven. From this point the Indian
drive started and it did not cease'
until our warriors marched eightv
nine yards for a touchdown
Charley Clark and Sammy Pritch
ard were the principle ball toters
of the drive. Enoch Goodman
made good the try for the extra
puilll.
In the final quarter Tony Mag
giolo intercepted a Tiger pass, and
galloped forty five yards for a
touchdown. This was the final
score of the game.
Catawba completed six passes
out of eighteen for a distance of
156 yards, and they made twelve
X'-.^ J_
CAMPUS DAY PROGRAM
10:30—Parade leaves the music
building.
11:00—Presentation of the
Campus Day songs on West
Campus.
12:30—Barbecue luncheon on
the back campus.
2:00—Dedication of the
stadium.
2:30—Football game, Guil
ford vs. Catawba.
8:00—Presentation of the class
skits in the auditorium.
Each class will be allowed
fifteen minutes for presentation
of skits and ten minutes will
be allowed each skit for the
next class to set the state.
Paper Held To
Be Last Will Of
Rowan Woman
A paper writing purporting to
the last will of the late Mrs. Joan
Rothrock, well known Rowan
woman, was found by a superior
court jury here Tuesday to have
been the last will after the cav
eators, Sam Rothrock and Helen
R. Rufty, had declined to prose
cute the caveat any further. The
will, which left her possessions to
a daughter, Mrs. Josie H. Pirie,
had been previously contested by
some other children.
Shenberger Leads
Adelphian Group In
Opening Meeting
Modern Problems to
Feature Discussions
(From The Pioneer)
Albert Shenberger, president of
the Adelphians, led the club in its
first meeting of this year. The
group met in Dr. Faust’s home
in the new duplex faculty apart
ment. This year, as suggested by
Mr. Shenberger, the members of the
organization who are seniors will
each lead a meeting. It was pro
posed and approved that each lead
er should give a short sermon or
"sermonette”, as jt is sometimes
called, at his meeting. The entire
• • 1 i *11 1 • •
giuup, it 13 piauucu, win tiicn eiiti
cize the sermon. By this means
these prospective ministers hope to
improve their delivery, and thus be
come the leading ministers of the
coming age.
Dr. Faust presented to the group
i plan for using the most modern
topics for their discussions. He
?ave a list of subjects that are now
n use on many other campuses,
rhe Adelphians agreed that these
aroblems would be used in ther fu
:ure discussions.
In the meeting, Mr. Shenberger
ntroduced the freshmen members
:o the older Adelphians and inform
ed the new group about the club’s
leputation work. At that time two
}f the members were appointed to
fill vacated teachers positions for
the Sunday schools of Salisbury
churches.
Later this week arrangements
we re made with the officials at the
prison camp permitting the group
to conduct meetings at the camp
two Sundays every month. The
*1_I.— c_na.
shenberger, Mr. Noss and other
Adelphians attended.
SMUGGLER FINED FIVE
MILLION
Berlin.—A Hamburg business
man has been fined 12,100,000
marks (about five million dollars)
ind sentenced to eight years’ penal
servitude for violation of Ger
many’s foreign currency laws.
Four other business men, who
were charged with being accom
plices, have been fined about two
million, 500 thousand dollars be
tween them, and sentenced to
prison terms ranging from five
i/ears, four years, two years, and
nine months, respectively.
A special court, sitting in Ham
nurg, found that the five accused
nad succeeded in transferring to a
1.1
foreign cuuiiLiy amiust me cume
property of their principal.
• Buy In "Greater Salisbury”.
The lineup:
Catawbe Position IH.-S.
Nash L.E. Buchinskv
Reid L.T. Steed
Newman L.G. “ Chambers
Rector C. McCann
Briggs R.G. Harshbarger
B. Guy R.T. Graft
D^vis R.E. Miller
Meehan Q.B. White
Pritchard H.B. Bernier
Clark H.B. Richardson
Maggiolo F.B. McCallion
Score by periods:
Catawba _,_ 0 0 7 6—13
H.-Sydney _ 0 0 0 0— 0
Prospective Tenant: "Have you
got hard water here?”
Landlord: "Yes, indeed! Why
mister, it’s so hard you have to
pick your teeth after you take a
drink.”
niUAI
SATTJHDAY 1
jBf On The Stage \
8 FRED KIRBY \
H CLIFF CARLISLE \
WBT Radio Stars I
■:L On The Screen /
::ak/'ISLE OF FURY’1'A
\ \ OT^^Flash Gordon^^E
MONDAY \
TUESDAY \
WILL ROGERS \
in his greatest role J
In "STATE FAIR” J
with J
Janet Gaynor /
Lew Ayres
m. THURSDAY /
P* HUMAN CARGO’ /
:: LATEST NEWS (1
20c 20c
144JBF WEDNESDAY ^
STERCHI’S \
Amateur Night \
9 P~ m~ /
Big Gun In Tiger Defeat
Charley Clark
WATCHMAN BREVITIES
!
A number of members of Salis-'
bury Grove No. 125 of the Wood
rpen Circle plan to go to Charlotte
Friday evening, October 16, to
take part in a district convention
of the society. Mrs. Effie Rogers,
state manager, Raleigh, and Mrs.
Cora Mabrey, state president,
Charlotte, are in charge of plans
for the meeting.
Prominent women on the prog
ram will be Mrs. Mabrey, who
will preside over the meeting, andj
Mrs. Clara Shuping, state reporter,
Charlotte, Mrs. Susan C. Rogers,
state secretary, Pineville, Mrs. Bes
sie Holder, state treasurer, Hick
ory, Mrs. Eugenia Fisher, state at
tendant, Concord, Mrs. Daisy Pat
terson, national representative, of
Kannapolis, and Mrs. Lena Mauld
in, Albemarle, state auditor.
Dinner will be served at 6:30.
The convention will open at 8 o’
clock. A short reception will fol
low the business session. The
program will include initiation of
a class of candidates, demonstration
of the adult and junior ritualistic
work, graduation of a number of
juniors into the adult society, and
tallks by national and state offic
ers.
Mrs. Rogers will tell about the,
progress of a nation-wide member
ship campaign, in which the local j
members are participating, and(
will tell about plans being made
for the national institute which the
society expects to hold in Omaha,
neb., next summer.
A good attendance is expected
as members will be present from
Concord, Kannapolis, Rockingham,
Lilesville, Salisbury, Albemarle,
Thomasville, Pineville, Harrisburg,
Monroe, and Lincolnton.
The annual meetine of the West-i
ern North Carolina Methodist con-j
nx'11 Fircf
church in this city next Thursday,
morning and will continue through,
the following Monday morning.l
This body is composed of 386
ministers and about 200 lay mem-|
bers who come as delegates and as
members of various boards which!
conduct necessary work of the
conference. It is the second larg
est conference in the Southern
Methodist church. This is the sec
ond consecutive year the body has
met in Salisbury and in this respect
is setting a precedent for this or
ganization. Only once beforej
have the Methodists of North Caro-j
lina met twice in succession in the
same town and that was 150 years
ago when the old state-wide con
ference met twice in Salisbury.
Those attending are cared for in
tiv homes of the community for
lodging and breakfast while the
conference pays for their dinners
and suppers at designated places in
the city. A committee headed by
Mrs. P. N. Peacock and Mrs. D.
A. Beaver is securing the necessary
homes.
Business sessions of the confer
ence are held each morning with
one feature being a sermon by
Bishop Paul B. Kern. Special de
partments and committees meet
each afternoon, and in the evening
there will be public services. Bishop
Lee, of the northern Methodist
church will be the guest speaker
and will be heard several times.
The Needlework guild held their
annual garment in-gathering last
Wednesday afternoon with a most
gratifying number of garments on
display.
kjrs. Julian Robertson was in
charge, assisted by Mrs. Hayden
Clement, Mrs. Fletcher Smith,
Mrs. Horace rayne, and Mrs.
George Wright. A meeting of the
directors was held at 3:30 followed
by a public tea and exhibit at
4:30.
Twenty-four hundred garments
were contributed, and according
to the custom of past years they
were distributed proportionately
among the city schools, then to
the churches for their underpriv
ileged, the Nazarath Home, and
to Mrs. Linton to be given out in
Rowan county as the welfare
workers see the need.
In addition to the garments,
there was a special shoe fund a
mounting to more than $50.00
which was contributed in cash do
nations by the various civic clubs
of the city.
Zartman, Home Ec.
Join Governments i
At House Meeting
(From The Pioneer)
The girls of Zartman Hall and
the Home Economics Building were
joined under one house government
at a meeting recently. The of
ficers elected for the first semester
are:
House Chairman, Betty Lou
Kline.; Ass’t. House Chairman, ;
Jean Shilling; Secretary-treasurer,
Amanda Myers; Social Chairman,
Dorothy Isenberg; Ass’t. Social
Chairman, Anne Sims.
More power than was before has •
been invested in the house commit
tee this year with the aim of a
strong self-government. The com- '
mittee has the power to hold trials 1
for and campus persons breaking i
these rules:
(1) Girls must not go riding
with young men without special 1
permission from the Dean of Wo- 1
men.
(2) Girls must sign out when
leaving the building.
(3 ) Freshman girls are allowed to
date Saturday evenings. ,
(4) Sophomore girls are allowed' i
to date Saturday and Sunday even- j
ings. (
(5) Girls must receive special i
permission from the Dean of Wo- <
men to spend a day or night away I
from the college. j
Crop Yields Show Gains
Stands Helped!
By Late Rains
>1,000,000 Bushels Added
to Corn Estimate—
10,000,000 to Irish Po-j
tatoes.
Washington.—Improvement of
rearly two per cent in the prospec
:ive 1936 harvest—averaged for all
trops—was said by the Federal
crop reporting board to have re
iulted in September as widespread
rains healed drought scars
The estimated yield of this year’s
torn crop was pushed up 51,000,
300 bushels above the September
1 (oact" Tiro ArAn An
October 1 was 1,509,362,000
bushels, which would lift the 1936
yield out of its threatened rank as
the shortest crop in more than half
i century.
The new corn forecast placed
this year’s crop above that of the
drought year of 1934 when it was
1,478,027,000 bushels. But the
total still was far below the 193 5
torn crop of 2,291,629,000 bush
;ls, and the five-year average of 2,
5 5 3,424,000 bushels in the 1928
32 period.
Another big gain for September
was a 10,000,000 bushel increase
in the forecast for Irish potatoes
an important food item. (However,
the indicated cr&p of 322,263,000
bushels was about 50,000,000
bushels below the five-year aver
age of 372,115,000 bushels.
Pasture conditions—important
to millions of head of livestock for
food—was said to have "made one
of the most remarkable recoveries
on record in any one month” as
rains refreshed seared acres.
Other gaijas were reported for
oats, rice, tobacco, grain, sorghums
and buckwheat.
Total wheat production this year
was revised downward to 627,
233.000 bushels compared with
630.241.000 a month earlier. The
193 5 wheat yield was 623,444,000,
while the five year average was
863.564.000 bushels.
Most of the wheat shortage this
year is in durum and other spring
wheats. The new durum estimate
of 7,962,000 bushels compared
with Jast year’s short crop of 8,
640.000 bushels and a five year
average yield of 54,020,000.
Other spring wheat production
was indicated at 100,17b,000
bushels as against 102,504,000 last
year and the five-year average of
187.292.000 bushels.
Other crops in which estimated
yield this year was reducgd includ
ed barley, flaxseed, apples, and
sweet potatoes.
—:-. . . . i
Classified Ads
WANT AD RATES
This type, 10 point—5 cents
per line—5 words to the line.
For the convenience of cus
tomers we will accept want ads
over the telephone from anyone
listed in the telephone directory.
PHONE 133
VlEN WANTED for nearby Raw
leigh Routes of 800 families.
Write Rawleigh’s, Dept. NCJ
197-5B, Richmond, Va.
Oct. 2—30.
'DEVIL’S ISLAND’ TO GO!
Revelations of "Devil’s Island”
:olony may result in abolition of
listoric prison. Read the interest
ng story of unusual disclosures in
he October 25 th issue of the
\merican Weekly, the big mag
izine which comes regularly with
he BALTIMORE SUNDAY
\MERICAN. On sale at all news
tands.
SNAKE CHARMERS
Interesting scinetific study of
nakes and their charmers reveals
nany interesting facts. Read this
llustrated story of science in the
Dctober 25th issue of the Ameri
:an Weekly, the magazine which
omes regularly with the Baltimore
iunday American. On sale by all
lewsstands. j
Even, Glareless Light Essential
For Reading Without Strain
Glareless, abundant light for reading is provided by the new scientifically
approved lamps having a translucent bowl beneath the shade, and placed
just beyond the elbow.
By Jean Prentice
—
AN easy chair and comfortable
lighting are always an invitation
to open some of the books you’ve
been wanting to read.
Those new books, for example,
that everyone’s discussing. And
some of the old ones that you once
read “because you had to” . . . and
that you’d like to read again be
cause you’d really appreciate their
richness now.
Scientists who have carefully
studied our lighting needs for read
ing, make the following suggestions:
Before you settle down to those
hours of pleasure, see that the
lighting is good for your eyes.
Lighting that is adequate, even and
glareless, conserves normal eye
sight. It provides .added benefits
for defective eyesight.1
Alertness (which we need for
some of the heavier torpes!) is stimu
lated by good lighting.
Light Magnifies
Many persons do not know that
light is a magnifier of small details.
A dot must be twice as large to be
seen with the same ease under one
footcandle (or measure) of light as
it would need to be under one hun
dred footcandles of light.
That’s one of the reasons why
abundant light makes it easier for
us to read.
---
INSUFFICIENT
Someday, my dear, I hope to meet
the one,
Who stands way high above all
other men,
Handsome, and strong, and kind,
and full of fun,
Like all those heroes, drawn by
author’s pen.
Oh yes, of course, someday, I’m
sure to meet him,
And yet, you need not frown and
look so blue,
Because, my dear, you have one
consolation—
’Till then I shall be satisfied with
you.—Caroline Lauchman.
A GOOD COOK
Housewife (to tramp): "I know
you. You are one of the tramps
that I gave a pie to last summer.”
Tramp: "You are right madam.
You gave it to three of us. I am
the sole survivor.”
Be sure that youi reading lamp
is properly placed. Just beyond the
elbow is the correct location for a
floor lamp beside an easy chair. If
you read at a desk, the lamp should
be placed in front at the left, if you
are right-handed. Or at the right
if you are left-handed.
Don’t forget to sit up straight
when you read. Some adults carry
over from childhood bad posture
habits which were probably ac
quired because the light they used,
then was weak or glaring.
Safeguard Your Eyesight
Also, before you lose yourself in
the trials and tribulations of some
beautiful-eyed heroine of the latest
novel, there’s one more point to
consider for the sake of your own
eyes—
And that’s quality of light.
You can have lots of light... and
still not be protecting your eye
sight, if it glares. Good light for
reading is abundant light, without
glare and without sharp contrasts.
Glare is avoided with the new
type of scientifically-approved lamps
which are made by many manufac-,
turers. A translucent bowl beneath
the shade is an aid to eye comfort
since it softly and evenly distri
butes light both up and down.
Always remember, too, that for
really comfortable reading there
should be some general lighting
throughout the room as well as lo
calized lighting at your chair.
OH, MERCY!
I loved that man with all my
heart,
Gave him my whole affection;
My uncle, aunt^ my Mom, and Pop
Approved of my selection.
And then into our romance came
Stark tragedy—oh mercy!
I gave the dear boy up because
I found his name was Percy.
Oh, let me me climb a lovely hill
in Autumn
I should regret to lose a single
part
Of all the happiness, the singing
gladness ,
Filling vrith ecstasy my empty
heart.—Caroline Lauchman.
In 1927 Loyola of New Orleans
played both of the otfter Loyolas,
of Chicago and Baltimore, defeat
ing both.
"CAMELS MAKE EATING a real
pleasure,” says Hank Siemer
{below}, deep-sea diver. Camels
speed up the flow of digestive
fluids — increase alkalinity.
1 ' ..WWW
NOTED GLIDER CHAMPION
{above}. Mrs. Russell Holder
man says: "Tired and tense as
I may get, a few Camels at meal
time and after seem to bring
my digestion right back.”
SJlMdiS COSTLIER TOBACCOS