E:erence Teams Reach Into Football
; Of Tricks For Turkey Day Games
ei
-„n Va Nov 19.—OF)—
^Sference football team*
-5* "the bottom of their bag
1 dav m search of the
K- might make Thanksgiv
Vs‘ more palatable.
J^HunK Anderson shifted hi*
restate Unoup in an effort to
, combination to match the
i Wallace Wade's BUte Dev*
Jfouice bowl next Thursday.
fe/J, was trying Nick Tayden
rfhalf in P'«ne of Eddie Ber
i mho i- stiff' ring from a slight
and Helms at left tackle in
/.(Mason Buggs. the Wade
ront'ented themselves with a
„ dr.ll on signals and forma
ttmt found every man in trim
i Harwood -Silver" Smith.
*; pjpectrd to be bnck in shape
JL the season's finale,
prisons hardy Wildcats dis
* g new assortment of plays
thev will try against Wake
,t Davidson. Their holiday
loosed Hobo Daniels. Por
ELpard and Walt Kitchtn for
%m? m an offensive drill
-muj the Wake Forest freshmen.
El Carolina prepared to re
rndiron relations with South
—Una after * seven-year lapse
[overhauling both offense and
lase in a long drill at Chapel
1 while the Clemson Tigers work
| out under the floodlights as
i) Jess Neely polished his
,d's running and passing at
. (0r the Firman tilt.
Eiryland. upset last week by V.
I toiled to get in shape for
jorretown Saturday.
Ifishineton and Lee. the Old
Vo’ lav foe of the season, re
Bf(l work after a' two-day rest
, the Thanksgiving day clash,
annual battle between V. M.
y p I at Roanoke on Thanks
• summoned both squads to
"practice field yesterday after
offs.
Ifflcarson. out. with an injury,
^ as one of the conference’s
it hooters.
Iflie University of Richmond and
Hiam and Mary close their sea
i in the annual setto in Rich
rippled Team
To Meet Lenoir
At Cee Cee Park
| Deven men and five substitutes |
face Lenoir one of the most
terful teams in the western con
nce, this afternoon at 3:30 at
1 Cloth Mill park.
Injuries, low grades and age m
gtbiuty has cut the Shelby foot
I team to the very bone.
[ Hwever, the line-up which is
it all set to give the Lenoir
a reminder of what former
Wby teams have done, and the
men have been chosen as
Parker, center and act
eaptain; Eaker and McMurry.
s; Brown and Sanders, tackles;
and Parris, ends.
Hie backficld suffered most
Wily and finds no regulars left.
*ith Grady Mauney, Wilbur
hardt. Robert Hullck and Joe
imtn as ball carriers.
[George Roppe, John Mull and
!ene Sherrill, regulars, who have
injured, Harmon and Dorsey
moat likely be used as subs.
%ht Today For
All - Age Prizes
JIOCKY MOUNT, Nov. 19.—(A*)—
‘ ill-age competition in the i7th
flelci trials of the North
»na Pox Hunters association
here today, and will continue
igh Saturday.
®<*r, a small white hound owned
L\s- Bunn of Rocky Mount,
nigh scores to win first place
•the derby class, which ended
Sai' Trouble, owned by
Weldon of Oxford, was sec
plac# was awardei
entere, by t. Ross
of Statesville, and foui
SSJST Whit*'s entry
^aham Plan”
May Be Harder
tJlObserver said today that
^ nt F ank P. Graham of the
£™ty of North Carolina had
X -he ,T^ting °‘ lh« presidents
«hooi t Southern conference
% the • n Ule purp0se ot tighten
tUb,te t,Ils’r*ham P’an-” which pro
tubadizing of athletes.
* ,JTr said ite Information
te n', * reliable «ource and that
Skid iv? Would be held ta Rich
Ehe^Cember 3‘ annual
•eheduied fo°nf!!en“ mestinfs is
Dr r °r De«mber 11.
H n].^18?' the Paper contin
et otm\ ^ 10 introduc« a new
fc prtJ** a"d Provisions to make
plan more stringent.
8pbNCEft
" oman Hart
Nov. 19.—<#)—A hit
•ad nm A - —vri—a mi
■Cot vJT StrUCk Mis* Ruby
Hone a M ,ad"'m while she walked
H lnj^WaV *nd ** was seri
S. C. Will Move To Change
Conference Football Rule
By Giving Scholarships
COLUMBIA, S. C., Nov, 19,—(VP)—
William Harth, athletic director at
the University of South Carolina,
has served formal notice of a move
to amend Southern Conference
rules by substitution of an athletic
scholarship provision for the much
debated "Graham plan."
Harth wrote William Couper of
Lexington, Va„ secretary of the
conference, outlining a plan simi
lar to that used by the Southeast
ern conference in permitting foot
ball players to obtain aid. The pre
sent rule bars special scholarships
or assistance for athletes.
• The university director said his
aim was to 'eliminate rule thirteen,”
embodying the Graham plan, at a
conference session at Richmond
December 11. The conference has
been split over the question since
a strong minority including South
Carolina objected to adoption of
the progra am year ago. Six mem
bers have joined the conference
since.
The proposed new rule* would
recognize athletic ability "in the
assignment of scholarships, loans
and opportunities for remunerative
work, with the understanding that
such assistance shall never be
granted primarily as a reward for;
athletic services.”
Aid would “not exceed in amount!
the legitimate expense of attending
the institution as represented by
tuition fees, books, board and lodg
ing.” It would be granted by a fa
culty committee and recorded in
books subject to inspection by con-!
ference officials.
Athletes would be required to
meet scholastic standards estab
lished by their colleges for academic
scholarships, and all funds for
their aid would have to be placed
in the hands of college officials
administering the system.
I
INTERSECTIONAL
GAMES. TO PERK
DYING SEASON
Numbers Of Highest
Rating; Teams To
Meet
By SID FEDER
NEW YORK, Nov. 19.—<>P)—Al
though the renewal of regional ri
valries dating back to football's
dark ages makes up the largest
part of this Saturday's gridiron
card, the important scenes are laid
in a pair of intersectional strug
gles and one old midwestern meet
ing.
Albania's Rose Bowl hopefuls sit
back while their two chief rivals for
post season honors, Fordham and
Marquette, and the standout con
tender for the mythical national
crown, Northwestern, take what
may be the final tough' hurdle of
the dying campaign.
Fordham tangles with Georgia's
Bulldogs and Marquette meets Du
quesne.
Northwestern takes Non Notre
Dame for the 16th time since 1888.
Yale and Harvard meet for the
55th time since they first threw
their guards back at each other In
1875.
Next in point of years is the an
nual meeting of La Fayette and Le
high, which began back in 1884.
In addition there are the battles
of Purdue and Indiana, Stanford
and California, Syracuse-Colgate,
Chicago . Illinois, Minnesota-Wis
consin and Michigan. Ohio State,
all dating back before the turn of
the century, and Oklahoma vs. the
Oklahoma Aggies, a relic of 1904.
The east also offers Princeton- j
Dartmouth. and Hobart-Army, ■
Kansas State and Nebraska tan
gle with the Big Six crown dang
ling before them, and Texas Chris
tian has a chance to draw up to
the southwest leadership in its
clash with Rice.
Bonnie Stone Is
Fox Hunt Leader
ROCKY MOUNT, Nov, 18.—(-‘P’l—
Bonnie Stone, owned by Mrs. L. B.
Combs of Lexington. Ky„ was fav
jred today to take the derby class,
initial event on the North Carolina
Pox Hunters association’s field
trial* here.
The Kentucky entry took 100
points in the first cast yesterday
to lead Rocket, owned by T. Ross
Alexander of Statesville, who got
». The final cast of the event was
to be made today, and the first cast
n the all-age event tomorrow.
AUTOMOBILES
BOUGHT — SOLD
AND
FINANCED BY
- Rogers Motors -
Boar Hunters Are i,
To Be Busy Today,
JELLICO PLAINS. Tenn., ! i
Nov. 19—(A5)—Hunters who paid «i
hve dollars to risk their necks I,
gathered here to make final i
preparations for a wild boar ji
hunt beginning today in moun- i
tainous Cherokee National Fo- i]
rest. *(
The hunt will continue 1
through Saturday, November 28.
The state game department
received applications from more
than 50 men and two women.
Football Clashes
To Decide Champs ,
CHAPEL HILL, Nov. 14.—Eastern |
and Western Class A titles will be
at stake Saturday when Raleigh I
and Rocky Mount clash at Wake 1
Forest and Charlotte and Winston- <
Salem tangle at Charlotte, ac
cording to statistics just released
by E. R. Rankin, Secretary of the
North Carolina High School Ath
letic Association.
Raleigh and Rocky Mount, both
undefeated in five Conference tests
headline the week's program. Win
ston-Salem has already been de
feated, but the Queen City con
tingent must register a victory over
the Tobacconists to cinch honors in
the west. Salisbury and Oreensboro
have mathematical chances to win.
Coach Likes Bath
When Team Wins
BALDWIN, N. Y.— (/P) —George
Craig, Baldwin high football coach, 1
paid a bill to his tailor with a I
smile. <
The charge was for revamping 1
his "lucky football suit." After his t
alert eleven licked Hempstead, the i
boys celebrated by shoving the j 1
coach, fully dressed, under a cold 1
shower. i
Craig avowed that if his team 1
beats Mexico Poly Saturday, he
will wear an overcoat for the ex
pected bath.
Ambulance Driver Is Really
A “Dark Horse”At Pineharst
By DILLON GRAHAM
PINEHURST. Nov. 19—(AV-An
ix-ambulance driver accustomed to1
letting the right-of-way sounded j
tls siren down the fairways today,
i very black dark horse in pursuit
>f the nation's best professional
olfers.
Leo “Tise Walloper'' Walper, a
Iriving range operator now. met;
me of the hottest of the youu*
iros. Harold (Jug) MeSpaden of
Vinchester, Mass., in one of today's;
light 36-hole third round matches;
n the Professional Golfer* cham- j
>ionship here.
Walper isn't driving an ambul- j
mce any more. He's got himself a >
hree-room trailer, hitched on to;
lls car, and the rolling chauteau |
:an be turned into an ambulance— I
for his victims—on a minute's no
tice.
To some the old adage that prac
tice makes perfect may be Just a
story to tell the kids, but Walper
swears by it. Two years ago he was
an 80-shooter. He went into a hud
dle with himself and pointed out the
errors of his ways. Since then he
has strictly followed a three-hour*
a-day practice schedule, and chop
ped 10 shots off his game.
The Bethesda, Md.. husky, ruddy
faced and black haired, with a
sprinkling of grey that speaks for
31 years, thinks he has a good
chance.
"Tve got some new irons and I’m
hitting them well," he said. "I’ve
got confidence In my game and If
I get any breaks I may surprise
'em”
SPORTS ROUNDUP
by EDDIE BR1ETZ
NEW YORK, Nov. 19.—</P)—'This
lomer's nomination for hard luck
champion Is Walter Neusel, Oerman
leavywelght ... He has beaten a
3rittsh heavyweight king three
imes, still can’t win the title . . .
teason: He's a foreigner, and they
lon’t count with the British powers
Tom Yawkey has refunded
the $1,000 Joe Cronin fined Ww
Ferrell last season and has de
cided not to trade Wes ....
Craig Wood tried out a new set
of clubs at Pinehurst and the
first round they were used he
came up with an eagle and sev
eral birdies .... The $300,000
Jimmy Braddock Is being of
fered to fight in Atlantic City
is the moat money guaranteed
any other heavyweight except
Jack Dempsey and Gene Tun
ney . . . Scouts say Alabama is
showing the real old Notre
Dame power.
Babe Ruth Is back on Broadway
rom a hunting trip on which he
agged 68 pheasants . . . Southern
orrespondents say Marvin (Moose)
Itewart, L. 8. U.’s crack cen
er, Is being overlooked by All Amer
ca pickers . . . Johnny Van Der
deer, who whiffed 296—count 'em—
«tters for Durham In the Pied
mont league last season, will be
ooked over by the Reds next spring.
Frankie Frisch and Doc Wea
ver. Cardinal trainer, have
Ukrn off for Florid* in a cabin
cruiser . . . They’ll stop along
the route to fish .... Texans
are booming Blair Cherry,
coach at Amarillo high, for Jack
Chevigny's poet at Texas U . . .
Jimmy Johnston reports most
of the famous British fighters
of bygone days now are running
pubs . . .
Even the blase Mike Jacobs, who
thinks nothing of carrying five or
ten grand around In his kick, blink
ed when Herman Taylor nonchal
antly dumped those hundred G's
on the tabic the other day ... All
little Joe Gould could do was gasp
“Ol, ol." (And he didn’t mean may
be) .. . Herman Taylor laughed
at Joe Levy’s suggestion that the
Braddock-Louis exhibition (tee heel
be transferred to Los Angeles.
GEORGIA HAS CHANCE
AT FORDHAM SAYS COACH
ATHENB, Ga„ Nov 19 —(^"Geor
gia has a chance.”
That was the word left behind
by Head Coach Harry Mehre today
while he and his Bulldogs rode north
to tackle mighty Fordham In one
of Saturday's outstanding Inter
sectional football arguments.
Despite their rally of the last
two weeks, the Southerners will be
no better than outside choice when
they square off against the un
beaten Rams in a Polo Grounds
pageant before some 40,000 custom
ers.
Extra Coat Values
AT NASH’S
We are frankly admitting that our stock is
entirely too heavy on Coats. Our first
mark-down starts tomorrow. Come and
take your choice of all $16.50 to $32.50 sell
ers at $15.00 and $25.00.
These Coats were all carefully selected,
smartest styles, good materials and guar
anteed linings. A full range of sizes from
14 to 44.
15-00 to 25-00
NEW LOT
SPORT COATS
Just Unpacked
lO-oo
You can buy Coats all over town at $10.00,
but not like these. We are giving you
wonderful values and they are right up-to
the-minute in styles. The linings are guar
anteed. Sizes are from 14 to 20.
TWIN SWEATERS
2*95 to 3*95
* Two tone blues, whites, rust and green
browns. Neat styles and nice materials.
NEW TURBANS
J.95
Ribbon hats that go so well with that win
ter coat. All colors.
NASH
FOOTBALL ROAD
TO ROSE BOWL
(
i
| ATLANTA. Nov. 19—WV-Tht
football highway to Pasadena's tour
nament of Roses found two South
ern team* ready today to travel at
the bidding of tire coast.
On all aides there was hope that
one of the southland's only major
| unbeaten elevens—Alabama and
Louisiana State—would receive the
post-season Invitation to represent
the east In tile New Year'* classic.
Louisiana State, undefeated In the
Southeastern conference for two
years, never has played In the Rose
Bowl. Alabama has been the east
ern delegate four times, winning
; three and tying one.
Unbeaten In eight games, only
Alabama's scoreless decision with
Tennessee and Louisiana's fl to fi
dead lock with Texas mar their
records.
The two teams do not meet. Ala
. bams faces Vanderbilt and Louis
' iana State engages Tulane In their
j final games next week.
In comparison, Alabama appears
weaker than Louisiana State be
cause of a lack of reserve*. The
Tigers can substitute In the line and
In the backfleld without apparent
ly lessening their power and ver
satility.
, Louisiana State uses very little
i deception In Its attack.'it Is based
ion fine running, blocking and sheer
| power. Alabama counts heavily on
| blocking and a fair amount ot de
j ceptlvenes* on off-tackle and end
i plays. The aerial game of the two
clubs la orthodox but deadly accur
| ate.
Both camps figure Fordham a*
, 1 he most dangerous northern rival
I for the bid so they are pulling
strongly for Georgia to tumble the
I Rams in an upset this week.
Kicks Goal In Last Game
NORMAN, Okla—Old Nosey an
aging polo pony. was wheezing
along In the last chukker of pos
sibly his last game for the Univer
sity of Oklahoma, against Missouri.
The score was tied. 5-5. It was
about over, and his rider's last shot,
went wild. Heading straight to the
ball, old Nosey kicked it neatly
between the goal posts for the
winning score.
BITTF-R wind* turn to sweet breezes v'sT\
when you pul on Hants! Gentle- v®,
men, here’s a union-suit with a wealth YV—
of warm, downy nap . . . soft, curling \ f
comfortable fluff that hugs your ribs > —■
and knees , . . and kill* the goose-flesh that lay*
golden eggs — for the "doc.” Get into Hants
Underwear this Winter and *ee if you can’t duck
colds and save money!
Hants gives you comfort in more ways than
one. Here’s the protective warmth you need, to
be sure! But the Heavyweight Champion is kmt
and cut to true, honest measure — to match your
chest and trunk. You can bend, twist, and reach
— yet Hants won't tighten across your shoulders,
or cut at the crotch! See your Hants
HANES Union-Soil* *• lltualrolcd (Urc*
hfur*), U up . . Shirt* anil Drnw*r» tram
7Sn . . . Boy*’ Unlon-Sult*. TS* . . . M*rri
child Wal*l-3ult*, 7Sc. P. H. Mane* Knlttlnt
Co., Win* I on -Sal* m, N. C.
Dealer today.
• •
THE ANTIFREEZE UNDERWEAR
ron Mrs and bovs
HANES
WINTER SETS
Niw and PractUI
The kind of under
wear many man
have al way* wanted.
The ehlrte ere **
aetly lll» HANES
Summer Shirt*, but
with extra weight
and warmth. The
Short* are afaaffc
hnlt, full-cut. Can’t
cramp the crotch.
50* to 5*
tamat
GET YOUR
HANES UNDERWEAR
From
EFIRD’S
• •
i
Equip your car with strong, safe Fires toue
Tires on the Firestone Budget I’lun. Your
credit is good. Don’t wait for pay day, play
safe—buy now and pay later. Your account
opened in just a few minutes
with three months to pay. No
embarrassment —no delay, just
select the merchandise and
arrange your terms to suit.
Listen to the Voice of Fire*tone, Monday Evenings, over N. B. C.—WEAF Network
Tillman's Service Stations
N. LaF&yette St. Belvedere
Phone 804 Phone 805
i