PAGE SIX COACH IS BOOKED j«E HpP|r7 Ip9r HEAD COACH of the U.C.L.A. football team, Henry R. (Red) Sanders, it seen at right as he was booked at a West Los Angeles, Cal., police station after being arrested by police who say he drove his car errat ically through town. He faces drunk driving charge. ( International) Angier Wallops Clayton 52-0 In Game Played In The Rain Angler High’s six-man football team seems to be getting stronger each week. Beginning the six-man style of play this season; the An -BWK, boys took two straight losses before getting the hang of the new to-them six-man game. But An gler team is really rolling now and eager for more victories. Coach Mike Kozakewich, who came to Angier from Altamahaw- Oaipce where eleven-man ball was played, and the Angier squad, which ha’s been playing elevenman ball, got together for the first time this season and the two got together with six-man ball for the first time. After a confused beginning, the Angler High combination is clicking smoothly now. The first two games were re versals for Angier as Golds ton and Pittsboro took almost identical wins over the Harnett team as the defense failed and the single-bar relled attack was sabotaged. The Angier defense allowed Golds ton and Plttsboror 37 and 38 points and the only potent offense, the run ning of sensational Jimmy Mat thews, was stemmed when Mat thews was injured early In the Dunn Mnn (Continued From Page One) Mavast nr elves a rerwt on a new air raid kit perfected by the com pel. J Bavs News W«*>k: "The John lsitih Coro.. Buffalo New Vork. is I'-oducinv a kit which contains 1* all jnn»m»d hv the Civil pefense Commission, to TV*nv|de re l<»f foe two nermlo in the p—nt of homhlne ernloaton or other dis aster. Besides first-aid m»t.er<sls the Vlt contains water nnrifloation tablets, soon and alcohol for dis- ] tnfeetlr" «h'n areas." v’g’nhenson reported here that the Vlt Is now fr» rr> <*•*'' WCdl’Ctlon and oredlcted if will seen become a best-seller ( 1n d-oo- SWfas and on d“nertm*nt store thronvhont the nst'nn —The rn>nn man nlaved an imnor a*nt part In develonment of *■*>« eondiwted conferences w*t*> C?firt"'s of the Ame-lrsn Association sod Othen ne-liwit' men in -dietoe and civil defense. ainvivn way n» P’lnn etarfo/? pf f>« I frnttor w ish tV*M onnsnorvr a" ona rs* scorwi of salesmen and work <fTVlls wsv "n. r ,fl n T*ne l"st been tipH « d ha*- the breaks.” declared Mr. PSewheP'sori todav. But the oresl dyr of the cofnnanv will ten von |3j Wat he earned the nromofop tkaoneh hard wo-V • and h>im*ni» B IB—midr’vht oil and ontsepirij} the ®SfF£a*ent- of the conrytsv. ;f , wSgirtarv-trea surer of The John Bunn 'Cornoratlon hanpens to be M»nlv Fleishman, one of the top hyttdals ol the Office of Defense Mr. Btephenson was bom In Dnnn smT Attended the local schools. La tH 1 . he st"died commercial work Bod business administration. .Like' other soccessfid business nhm, meet of his education came J&rpEgh the hard school of actual # After leaving Dunn. Mr. Stephen - jte tdOk a position with the New Jersey Electric Neon Clock Co. as a salesman and held this post fbr two and a half years. He then soent est months on the road as a sales man for Johnson and Johnson of New Brunswick, New Jersey and three veers with the Denonh Rub ber. Company, of New Jersey. •■■AH of these jobs gave him ex gtS* with The John Bunn Cor- I Daring World War XL Mr. Step aShEJTt^chOd&n 1 opening game—but even then An r gier scored 25 points in both games. 1 ITS A NEW ANGIER TEAM - It is a different story now. The! s Angier defense has become quite - rugged, as Lillington. Benson, and - Clayton found out; and the offense f has become more diversified. Clayton was the last foe to seal J the force of the sextet at Angier. • The newly formed Clayton team 5 fell before the' Harnett team’s i whirlwind assault by a 52 to 0 Score , on hte Angier field last Friday af i ternoon. r Angier ran up a 30-0 score in I the rain during the first half of . play against Clayton as Jimmy Mat i thews’ running and Max Matthews’ passing spearhead the onslaught. Jimmy Matthews Intercepted two l Clayton passes and ran 55 and 65 I yards with them for scores. He ' also plunged across from the two ■ yard line for a score and ran 18 ! yards for another. He added five •conversion kicks to the scoring. 1 Max Matthews came into the spotlight with some fine passing as he hurled three touchdown pas ■ ses. Matthews tossed to ance Over i b»,,far a 35 yard aerial and an other to Overby for 40 yards. The other air score was on a flip to Jimmy Howard that was good for 30 yards. Jommy Howard and Jimmy Mat thews were outstanding on defense, and Howard charged through the line to throw Clayton backs for fre quent losses. Dan Knotts and Bat Robertson were the best boys for Clayton In the futile battle in the mud. Boone Trail invades Angler’s home field this week in the big fight for the hampionship of Har nett County. Boone Trail surges into Angier with an undefeated I record and a strong desire to win the final game of the season for an all-win honor for ’sl. Court Cleric (Continued From Page One) of elecrical wiring and Bishon said he would resivn if he had to fill in state Tnort.s for the same amount of money. The commissioners felt that while a fee of *3.00 did not seem suffic ient to cover inspectors exnenses on lonor trips, but that the citizens were entitled to the service and no citizen should be penalized for liv ir>«r in a remote section of the CO”nty. When advised by County At torney W A. Johnson that con formity with the state code was voluntary the commissioners de cided to delay action on the matter, meanwhile leaving the $3.00 fee in effect. PATT) TOO MUCH Clayton Stewart, Coats pool room operator, brought to the board the unusual story that in his haste to 1 oav his taxes he had paid the . county SIOO to which the county ; was not entitled. Stewart state that when he was 1 running his pool room on the out- ; skirts of Coats he was liable to -a county tax of *SO per table How- ] ever, in 1949. he moved the pool room to Chats. On receiving the usual tax notice, [ he paid the SSO a year for two • years before he found out that he ; was only required to buy a city Bcense. “The Tax Collector is not sup- 1 nosed to know when you move your 1 business,” said County Attorney Johnson. “It’s you business to in- 1 form the Tax Collector that you 1 have moved.” However, the commissioners ruled ’ that Stewart should get a refund if it could be legally refunded. They asked the county attorney to see what could be done about it A request came from J. C. Croome. Lillington businessman, the fact that Croome will sot use til to make liquor.” The oommla- STto flS B mft!dd tll *' a * tn wreek ' . -■ ■ - . . ; - . • • , ' ; - Olds Pros Retain Ryder Cup With Ease In Big Match At Pinehurst Snead Thinks Old Pros Play As Well As Youths BY STAN OPOTOWSKY (CP Sports Writer) PINEHURST, N. C. (W—A youth movement In pro golf? ‘‘Forget it,” said Sammy Snead with a laugh today after his an cient attackers gave Uncle Sam the Ryder Cup for the fifth straight year, and the seventh in nine tries. "A man can play real good golf until he’s 40 or 45, and besides kids don’t mature any more like they used to,” Snead said". He was playing captain of the U. S. team which completed a 9H to VA rout of the-British yester day'bv winning six of the eight Individual matches and splitting a seventh. They lost only one after taking a 3-1 yead Friday. And there was little youth around as the Yanks triumphed. Here’s how it went yesterday: Snead, 37 year old, showed some great iron shots in beating British Open champion Max Faulkner 4 and 3. Ben Hogan, 39, fought from be hind to beat Charley Ward 3 and 2. Skip Alexander, 33, rolled up a Dado Marino Keeps • Liahtweight Crown HONOLULU (IP —Dado Marino, Hawaii’s “little brown doll,” out boxed challanger Terry Allen of England last night to retain his world flyweight championship be fore 3,313 fight fans. The Englishman forced the fight . all the way, but Marino stood back, | holding his fire before Allen's wind ;! mill attack, and drove off the chal > lenger every time he got too close. I However, he never quite succeed ■ ed in getting Allen into a corner for the kill, although he had the l Englishman woozy in the 14th . round when Marino turned loose his. [ only concentrated attack, i The 35-year-old Marino spotted . Allen seven years in age but his boxing ability more than made up for the difference. i Grantham Rites To Be Tuesday Euriah Grantham, 64, of Dunn, died Sunday morning at 11:20 o’- clock in the Dunn Hospital. He had been ill for the past seven weeks. Funeral services will be held Tuesday afternoon at 8 o’clock at the Calvary Tabernacle Free Will Baptist Church, near Plney Organ i in Sampson County. The body will lie in state one hour prior to the service. The Rev. Pearl Jackson, the Rev. Alton J. Sessoms and the Rev. R. M. Brown will officiate. Burial will be in the church cemetery. , SAMPSON NATIVE Mr. Grantham was a native of Sampson County, son of the lfte Needham and Nancy Cannady Grantham. He had been employed by Erwin Mills, Inc. for the past 25 years. Surviving are his wife, Mrs. An nie Mae Grantham; one son, Haley Grantham of Godwin, Route 1; four daughters, Mrs. Leonard Barrbw of Greensboro, Mrs. Marley ®. Stephens of Erwin, Mrs. Carlton Jackson of Roseboro, Route 2, Mrs. Dan Everette of the home; three brothers, Almond Grantham of Roseboro, Route 2; Ruff Grantham of Salemburg, Route 1, Harvey Grantham of Autryvllle, Route 1; Mrs. Romittie Butler of Roseboro, Route 2, Mrs. P. J. Worley of Sal emburg, Route 1; also 15 grand children. Funeral Monday For Jonesboro Man William Levy Thomas, 68, of Jonesboro Heights, died at his home Saturday after a long ill ness. ; , -j Mr. Thomas was bom In Moore County, son of the, late Laura Jane and James Lee Thomas. He was married to Edna Susan Campbell, who died June 2V1951. Mr. Thomas la survived by seven sons, J. Campbell Thomas, William Levy Thomas, Jr., Joe H. Thomas, Henderson O. Thomas, Lawrence Thomas, and Graden Thomas, all of Route 7. Jonesboro Heights, Sgt. ljc Edward W. Thomas, Fort Bliss; Texas; two daughters; Mrs, Claude Angell. Broadway, Mr. W. T. Barbour of ROute *, Fayetteville; two toothers, H. Lee Thomas of Carthage and Hal S. Thomas of Broadway; four sisters, Mrs. L. O. Marks of Clarksville, Va., Mrs. Ira Weldon of Route 5, Loulsburg, Mrs. Lawrence Parrish of Benson, and Mrs. Pauline Thomas Bell of Wash ington, D. C.; 14 grandchildren. Funeral services were held at Broadway Methodist Church Mon day at 2 p. m. conducted by the Rev. R. B. Rock. Burial was in the Thomas family cemetery. ~ BROAD WELL DIES Wayion R. Bntfvd, 58, es Angier, widely-known 'magis trate, fanner deputy sheriff, died Ssnday afteraeon. Fnn? eral services wffi to haid'Tnsn day afternoon at S o'clock at iks Angler Bnpflst Church. VISIT SILER CITY Mrs^ Isxke^Campbell ' ' THE DAILY RECORD. DUNN. N. CL 6-up lead in the morning 18 and crushed John Panton 8 and 7 in one of the Ryder Cup’s worst routs, Jim Demaret, 41, battled Dal Rees down to the wire and beat him 2 up. i Lloyd Mangrum, 37, licked Harry Weetman 6 and 5. | YOUNGEST MEMBER AT 29 | [ And the "baby” of the U. S. team, ; 29-year-old Jack Burke, Jr., de feated stout Jimmy Adams 4 and 3. ; The only- U. S. loss in the in dividual matches was suffered by ; Ed Oliver, 37, to Art Lees, 2 and 1. Clayton Heafner, 37, split with , Fred Daly. The U. S. team averaged a little ■ ov;r 3C years of age, and the Brit ; ish were even a year olderfl Yet ■ the golf was good, Snead thought. "After all,” Snead said, “golf is ■ not a game of strength, so it's not right to talk about these youth ; _ movements. “We’re glad to have the kids playing, but as long as the eyes and nerves hold you can play top golf.” Snead himself certainly played top golf. He shot five birdies and ' not a bogey fqr a 67 in the morn- ; 1 ing round of yesterday’s first 18. | ' Then, carrying a 4-up lead into I • the second 18, he played a steady ' I game that crushed Faulkner. i Maryland, V. M. 1., Duke In Sou. Conference Lead : By LARY DALE * (UP Sports Writer) RALEIGH. (W The victory tom toms of William and Mary’s Indians and the chest beating of Duke’s Blue Devils provided the rhythm to go with the wails and groans of Wake Forest and North Carolina in a Southern Conference voodoo chant today. But Maryland's snug Terrapins retreated unhearing into their solid shell of six victories and visions of sungar bowls danced in their heads. The loop’s only undefeated and untied team crushed Missouri 35 to 0 Saturday on a soupy home field at College Park, Md., some what overdoing what forecasters expected of them. William and Mary scored an overwhelming upset over Pennsyl vania at- Philadelphia with a 20 to 12 victory backed by even more impressive statistics showing a rushing total of 289 yards to 73. Duke’s 14 to 14 tie came as al mqst as much of a shock to the experts as It did to Tech which went into the game with six straight victories to Its credit and confidence further bolstered by Virginia's startling 30 ot 7 win over the Blue Devils only a week be fore. BIG CONFERENCE UPSET Clemson scored the other upset of the weekend at the expense of another member of the conference Complete Results (By United Press) SOUTH Duke 14, Georgia Tech 14. Tennessee 17, North Carolina 0. Alabama 16, Georgia 14. Clemson 21, Wake Forest 6. Virginia 39. The Citadel 0. Geo. Wash. 20, South Carolina 14. Vanderbilt 19, Chattanooga 14. Auburn 49, Louisiana College 0. Kentucky 32, Miami, Fla., 0. Miss. State 10. Tulane 7. Wash. & Lee 60, VPI 0. N. C. College 33, J. C. Smith 0. Morris Brown 54, S. S. State 6. Tenn. “B” 38, Notre Dame “B” 6. VMI 35, Davidson 13. Camp Lejeune 20, Quantico 13. Winston-Salem 6, St. Augustine 0. Wofford 14, Furman 6. Louisville 28. N. C. State 2. Boston College 21, Richmond 7. Presbyterian 20, Catawba 7. Mississippi 6. LSU 6. EAST Prince 12, Brown 0. Dartmouth 14, Yale 10; William and Mary 20, Penn 12. Hoi; Cross 34. Colgate 6. Boston U 52, NYU 6. Rutgers Is. Fordham 7. Notre Dame 19, Navy 0. Southern Cal. 28, Army 8. Columbia 21, Cornell 20. Maryland 38, Missouri 0. West Va. 35, Western Reserve 7. MIDWEST Purdue 28, Penn State 0. lowa 20, Minnesota 20. Illinois 7, Michigan 0. Ohio State S, North Western 0. Wisconsin 6, Indiana 0. Oklahoma 33, Kansas Btate 0. Kansas 27, Nebraska 7. Detroit 7. Bradley 6. Toledo 13, Ohio U. 8. 80UTHWE8T Arkansas 33, Texas A&M 31. Texas Christian 20, Baylor 7. Rice 21. Pittsburgh 13. Texas 30, BMU 13. Tulsa 30. Oklahoma A&M 7. Wichita 10, Houston 14. Cincinnati IS, Hardin-Simmons 13. Artaona 33, New Mexico 30. a. Grand, , ■ \ -vv TSAY PRO PIAY HAS~BEEN CIEAN IPM • jr Lrrf: „ A W- | h|" MThI sHmL ■M CHARGED with accepting bribes to shave the point spread of a 1949 collegiate cage game, Alex Groza (left) and Ralph Beard, former Ken tucky U. All-Americans, asserted that their play as members of the Indianapolis Olyfnpians professional team the last two seasons has been “strictly dean.” The two, stockholders in the pro dub, have been suspended from National Basketball association. f j family. Tailback Billy Hair led the' Tigers in the 21 to 6 victory over I the Wake Forest team that led thg I conference in four of seven classi-1 fications. George Washington also did the unexpected with » 20 to 14 win over South Carolina. The University of North Carolina suffered about as expected in los ing to Tennessee 27 to 0. ' At the opposite end of the scale, Virginia Tech outdid itself in losing ot Washington and Lee 60 to 0, their severest licking in at least] two years. Two other contenders i for last place lost non-conference games—N. C. State to Louisville 25 to 2 and Richmond to Boston College 21 to 7. ; In other games Virginia walloped; The Citadel 39 to 0, VMI trounced Hauls prattically anything -*• hauls everything practically! m Inter nettowel 12-foot grain body, 164-inch whadbaaa, GVW 16,000 lbs. Has a bumper crop of apodal features to help you handla' a wide variety of loads. Specifics tione subject to change without notice. Iff you wont a truck that does more kinds of general plus the comto-vhion cab, "roomiest on the road.**' purpose hauling more efficiently, you want a new That adds up to longer truck life, lower operating and medium-duty International Truck. maintenance costs.... along with such .driver benefits 0 These Internationale give you a practical combine- ■» “ore roominess, greater visibility, more positive \ . tkm of engine pep, power and economy-becauae the Peering control, greater maneuverability, new Silver Diamond valve-in-head engine is designed Come in and find out for yourself how the Inter- '< throughout for better all ’round performance. national Trucks we have—tom H ton on up—can \ These Internationale give you a practical oombina- make your hauling more flexible, mare versatile, more / tion of stamina and comfort—because you get tradi- practical The sooner you do that, the sooner you can tional International Truck toughness in every part, put your hauling on a more profitable basis. MeLamb Machinery Company 0 Incorporated Benson Hwy. Dunn, N. C. INTERNATIONAL db£k> TRUCKS IN IEICNMIIVNHI IKUM9 Davidson 35 to 13, Wofford nicked Furman 14 to 12, and West Virginia defeated Western Reserve 35 to 7. Maryland will play Navy at Bal , timore and Duke will take on Wak? Forest in the top games this week end. . The standings, conference games only: W L T Pet | Maryland 3 0 0 1.000 VMI 3 0 0 1.000 Duke 3 0 0 1.000 W&L 4 1 0 .800 W&M 3 1 0 .750 * Wake Forest 4 2 0 .667 ,W. Virginia ...2 1 0 .667 Clemson 2 1 0 .667 S. Carolina 3 3 0 .500 . | Geo. Wash 2 2 1 .500 ;i N. Carolina 2 2 0 .500 Citadel 1 2 0 .333 Furman 1 3 1 .300 Richmond ...’.l 4 0 J2OO t Davidson 1 4 0 .200 ;N. C. State 15 0 J 67 1 Va. Tech 0 5 0 .000 MONDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBEK 3, I*3l Duke-Tech Tie Drops Perfect Records To Eight Big-Tuners By CARL LUNDQUIST (UP Sports Writer) NEW YORK. (IP) Just 27 college football teams were left with unbeaten, untied records to day in the latest breakdown of the weekly shakedown. Eight were major powers led by Tennessee, the nation’s top-ranked outfit in the weekly ratings of the United Press board of coaches, victories among the major teams The Cincinnati Bearcats, led in with eight straight this year while Stanford and San Francisco had seven apiece and Princeton, Mary land, Tennessee, Michigan State, and Illinois had six each. The only big-wig team which dropped out over the weekend was Georgia Tech and it hardly was disgraced, .suffering the mild hu miliation of a 14 to 14 tie with Duke. Princeton which rolled to its 19th straight victory over an extended period to tie the school’s all-time winning streak, had the best lon time victory record of the major schools, but followers of valiant : Valparaiso's Crusaders from Indi ana thought their 19-game winning streak in little giant competition < was just as impressive. ABOUT FACE! Also of significance among the so-called little schools on the list, the team proudest of its perfect record was the Trenton, N. J., Teachers, who have won five In a row. That Isn’t particularly spec tacular except that those same Trenton Teachers from 1938 until the last game in 1949 went through 45 games without a victqry. They tied four times during that stretch but also set the longest all-time Lcollege losing streak of 28 games so they’re feeling pretty chipper about their perfect record. Three teams dropped off the list in clashes involving perfect record | teams. Unbeaten, untied Coast Guard of Connecticut and North easter nos Boston knocked each other out with a 1 3to 13 tie while Morris Brown’s Brown Bombers, a | kayoed South Carolina A&M 54 to Negro powerhouse from Georgia, 6. Morris Brown came up with the 134 points in seven victories, for an best offensive record on the list, average ot 48.7 points per game. The New Haven, Conn., Teachers, who have had only one touchdown scored against them In four 1 straight victories, were the best de-„ tensive team, hut they also we» a bunch of softies. They decide® not to play Montclair, N. J, Teachers Saturday in the enow and cold weather that hit their area, and the game will be run off Tues* day Instead. The Midwest had li perfect rec- < ord teams, the East had eight, the South five, the Pacific coast two, and the Rookies one. The unbeaten list: , * -EIGHT VICTORIES Cincinnati. a SEVEN VICTORIES * Morris Brown Qa„ BuckneU Pa., Valparaiso Ind., Eastern New Mexi co, San Francisco, Stanford, South Dakota Mines, Illinois Wesleyan, Rochester. SIX VICTORIES Princeton, Maryland, Tennessee, Bloomsburg Pa. Teachers. Black Hills Teachers S. D., College of Emporia Kan., Michigan State, Norther nllllnols State, Illinois, Western Maryland, DePauw. m FIVE VICTORIES V Trenton N. J. Teachers, Law rence Wls., St. Michaels’ Vt. FOUR VICTORIES New Haven Conn. Teachers, Sus quehanna Pa., Centre Ky. WHEN TEETH OESIN * ID CUCK AND CHATTER, YOU NEED OUR OIL, fTafpfppaa! I ' rj m 11»11 K1 I l [l m*II .J i Ph. 2183 Night 4*73

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