PAGE TWO
FOREST CITY i
DEFEATED AT
HENDERSONVILLE
' !
Teams Battle on Almost Even
Terms With Forest City
Best in First Half.
(Hendersonville Times-News)
The Hendersonville Bearcats
won their fourth straight game
on Friday afternoon by defeating
the Forest City high team 20 to
0, before a large crowd of en
thusiastic fans.
The two te&ms battled on al
most even terms, with Forest City
having a little the best of the
argument in the first half. The
visitors made three first downs in
the first two periods to none for
the Bearcats and almost scored a
touchdown just before the half
ended.
A fumble gave Forest City the
ball on Hendersonville's 20-yard
jine and a nicely executed for
ward pass put the ball on the
two-foot line. Here the Cats
braced and held the visitors with
in an inch for three downs and
the whistle sounded to end the
irst half.
Hendersonville . tallied shortly
after the second half got under
way. Forest City kicked off to
Cantrell who was downed on his
30-yard line. Two plays failed to
gain 10 yards and Rick Orr got
off a long punt to Calton, who
was downed on his 20-yard line.
The visitors were unable to
gain and kicked a long punt to
Rick Orr who raced 65 yards for
a touchdown. The run was the
feature of the contest and
brought the spectators to their
feet. Orr took the kick on the
west side of the field, skirted a
group of Forest City players, cut
tack toward midfield, and again
reversed his field to outdistance
the last of the visitors blocking his
path. He was aided by splendid in
terference in his dash. Elliott hit the
line for the extra point.
The Cats' second touchdown came
after a Forest City pass was inter
cepted on the 25-yard 'line. Two
plays gained five yards and Elliott
made a first down on the five-yard
line with an ofß tackle buck. Wilkins
got two, and Elliott went over his
left tackle for the touchdown. El
liott again hit the line for the ex
tra point.
Two touchdowns behind Forest
City received and took to the air.
with the result that a few minutes
later Wilkins pulled down a pass and
ran 33 yards behind good interfc
ence for the third score of the gam \
A pass from Orr to Edney was drop
ped and the extra point failed.
An unusual feature of the gan;«j
t\as the fact that Hendersonville
made only two first, downs during
the game, while Forest City made a 1
total of seven.
The visitors started a drive in •
the last quarter which gained 25
yards, but the Cats braced and took
HAS THE LAXATIVE IN
YOUR HOME A
j DOCTOR'S APPROVAL? j
Some things people do to help tHe
bowels whenever any bad breath',
feverishness, biliousness, or a lack of
appetite warn of constipation, really
weaken these Only a doctor
knows what will cleanse the system
without harm. That is why the laxa
tive in your home should have the
approval of a family doctor, j
The wonderful product, known to
millions as Dr. Caldwell's Syrup
Pepsin is a family doctor's prescrip
tion for sluggish bowels. It never
varies from the original prescription
which Dr. Caldwell wrote thousands
of times in many years of practice,
and proved safe and reliable for men,
women and children. It is made from
herbs and other pure ingredients, so
it is pleasant-tasting, and can form no
habit. You can buy this popular laxa
tive from all drugstores^
the ball one minute before the game
ended.
The Hendersonville line played
football and in stopping
the Forest City offense for three
downs on the two-foot line, showed
much ability. The work of Greet and
McCarson at tackle that they have
plenty of fight was outstanding, but
Big Cantrell at guard was outstand-
I ing in the line. He had a habit of
j breaking through and stopping plays
they were hardly started.
Brady was especially good at
end for the Cats, while Edney on
the
able game. The Cat backfield
had a little difficulty in getting
together and several fumbles were
chalked against them.
The defensive play of Ford, the
visiting fullback was a high light of
the game, while Matheny at tackle
played a smashing game.
The line-ups:
Hendersonville Forest City
Edney Padgett j
Left End
Greet Matheney
Left Tackle
Todd R- Hamrick
Left Guard
Arnett C. Blanton
Center
Cantrell Hollifield
Right Guard
McCarson McKinney .
Left Tackle
Brady W. Whitlock
Right Guard
Hill Calton
Quarter
Orr R. Whitlock
Left Half
Flanagan P. Hamrick j
Right Half
Wilkins Fiord
Full Back
Score by periods:
Hendersonville 0 0 7 13—20
Forest City 0 0 0 0 0
Scoring touchdowns: Orr, El
liott, Wilkins.
Officials: Ward (Carolina), ref
eree; Taylor (Wake Forest), um
pire; Jackson (Hendersonville),
| headlinesman; Fain and Owen,
'field judges.
REPLACING OLD
DAIRY STOCK
GOOD BUSINESS
Pays Farmer To Give Care To
Producing Calves.
The cheapest improvement in a
dairy herd is made by replacing
old or poor cows with heifers bred
from the best cows of the herd, us
ing a purebred bull from a high-pro
ducing dam. This reasoning is logi- |
cal, yet many farmers pay little at- j
tention to which calves are saved for |
future milk cows.
Often when the best calves are f
i ,
retained to make up the future herd ,
the calves are stunted in their early
growth by poor feed. With proper
supplements heifers do just as well
on skim milk as on whole milk, after
' i
two or thre.e weeks of age, and they i,
can be raised with very little skim j
milk if the whole milk is desired for
other purposes.
The old standard feeds for calves j
are ground corn, ground oats,
wheat bran, and linseed meal. An
excellent grain mixture for calves
can be made of 200 pounds of
ground corn, hominy, or barley;
200 pounds of ground oats, 200
i pounds of wheat bran, and\ 100
pounds of linseed ineal f This
should be fed with skim milk or
with a gruel made up of 100
pounds of hominy meal, 100 pounds
of Red Dog flour, 100 pounds of
soluble blood flour, and 100 pounds
of linseed meal.
If whey is fed the protein con
centrate should be increased, and
the grain mixture should be 300
pounds of ground corn, 300 pounds
of wheat middlings, and 400
pounds of linseed meal.
Calves should be given all the
good hay they will eat, preferably
alfalfa or clover, after the second
week; they may be fed small quan
tities of silage after two months of
age, if carefully watched. All
changes in feeding should be made
slowly, taking abjout 10 days to
change from whole milk to skim
milk or whey at about three weeks
of age.
Success with calves, when theyj
are taken away from the cows, de
pends largely on replacing the!
protein which is lost from the ra
tion when the milk is dropped.
THE FOREST CITY rraiMER. FOREST CITY, N. C.
Registration
Books Close
Saturday
Registration books will close
Saturday night. All Democratic
voters, who have not previously
registered to vote in the primary
or general election are urged to
register in order that they may
vote November 4. This will be
the last chance. If you register
ed to vote in the primary, and
have not removed from the pre
cinct or township it will not be
necessary to register again. If
any member of your family has
not registered, please see to it
that they register at once, and
vote.
COUNTY CLUB
MEETS FRIDAY
/— 1
Farm Progress AVill be Featu
red at October Meeting
In Rutherfordton.
Rutherfordton, Oct. 20. —The Oc
tober meeting of the Rutherford
County Club will be held here Friday
at one o'clock in Sander's Cafe ad
joining the Union Trust Co.
Discussion will center around the
trip made to the Coker farms, at
Hartsville, S. C., last Thursday, when
a number of Rutherford county
farmers made a trip there, and spent
jsome time studying the methods of
[ farming employed on the Coker
[ farms.
Five minute talks will be made by
A. B. Bushong, teacher of vocation
al agriculture in the Ellenboro
school; D. H. Sutton, teacher of vo
cational agriculture in the Cool
Springs high school; R. M. Morris,
teacher of vocational agriculture in
the Central high school, Rutherford
ton; H. W. Bingham, teacher of vo
cational agriculture in the Harris
school; Prof. Clyde A. Erwin and
county farm agent F. E.
These six speakers, who accompan
ied the motorcade, will speak five
minutes each, giving their impression
of the farming methods used on the
the Coker farms, and will make cer
tain recommendations as to methods
that should be adopted in this coun
ty.
The County Club is not. an ex
clusive organization, but welcomes
into its membership anyone desiring
to co-operate and further the com
mercial, social, agricultural, civic
and moral welfare of the county. An
invitation is especially extended to
every farmer of the county to at
tend the meeting next Friday.
COUNTY MERGERS
ARE DISCUSSED
i
Consolidation Plan Suggested
—Plan Calls for Merger of
Rutherford and Polk.
Raleigh, Oct. 20.—Sentiment to
ward consolidating several North
Carolina counties, two small, a
large and small, or three small
counties, for a reduction to 70 or
175 counties in the state, has come
to the point that some of the state
officials have been asked to work
out suggested combinations, as suit
able according to kinds and inter
ests of people, lack of natural bar
riers such as mountain ranges or
sounds and rivers, locations of
county seats and other factors.
Excellent roads and automobiles,
except in isolated cases, have
brought the people closer together,
so even with suggested combinations
'no citizen would be more than two
'hours from his county seat. One of
ficial, not wishing his name an
nounced, because of objection to the
plan from counties or seats that
will or might lose their identity, has
worked out a set of combinations
and given probable county seats,
along with populations, property
valuations and school populations of
the proposed combinations . His
plan follows:
Mountain area: Cherokee and
Ckfy, Murphy as county seat; Macon
and Jackson, Sylva as seat; Graham
and Swain, Bryson as seat; Hen
derson and Transylvania, Hender
son ville as seat; Rutherford and
Polk, Rutherfordton as seat; Mit
chell and Yancey, Burnsville as seat;
Alleghany and Ashe, Jefferson as
seat.
Piedmont section: Iredell and
Alexander, Statesville as seat; Sur-
ry and Yadkin, Dobson as seat;
Forsyth and Stokes Winston-Salem
as seat; Orange and Alamance,
Burlington as seat; Casw«H and
Person-, Roxboro as seat.
Central section: Scotland and
Hoke, Laurinburg as seat; Moore
and Lee, Carthage as seat; Wilson
and Green, Wilson as seat; Nash
and Edgecombe, Rocky Mount as
seat; Vance and Warren, Hender
son as seat; Halifax and Northamp
ton, Weldon as seat.
Coastal area: Currituck, Camden
and Pasquotank, Elizabeth City as
seat; Gates, Perquimans and Cho
wan, Edenton as seat; Hertford and
Bertie, Ahoskie, or Aulander as
seat; Martin and Pitt, Greenville as
seat; Washington and Tyrrell, Ply
mouth as seat.; Craven and Pamli
co, New Bern as seat; Lenoir and
Jones, Kinston as seat; New Han
over and Brunswick, Wilmington as
seat.
This plan would leave 72 coun
ties for the state, 46 of the present
counties remaining undisturbed, and
54 combined with one or more oth
ers to form 26 new counties.
Any such plan would be expected
to meet with strenuous opposition
from the citizens of the counties to
be absorbed.
NANNEY ELECTED HEAD
OF RUTHERFORD CLUB
Rutherfordton, Oct- 20. W. W.
Nanney, assistant cashier of the Un
ion Trust, Company, of this place and
chairman of the Rutherford County
Board of Education Thursday was
elected president of the Rutherford
ton Kiwanis Club. Owen Stamey was
elected vice-president and Clyde A.
Erwin district trustee. Directors in
addition to the officers elected are:
J. T. McGregor, K. E. Simpson, O.
J. Holler, J. L. Taylor, Dr. F. W. H.
Logan, G. A. Williams, A. L. Morris
and R. M. Frew.
A modern butcher shop, recently
opened in New York, N. Y., has car
pet on the floor and comfortable
chairs. All meats are wrapped in
transparent paper, graded* weighed
and displayed in showy cases.
Have You Selected
Your Trustees?
>
WE are of the sincere opinion that your estate can
not be administered so carefully, so efficiently, or so
dependably by a private individual as by the trust de
partment of a stable bank.
LET US DESCRIBE OUR TRUST PLAN
UNION TRUST CO.
"IN UNION THERE IS STRENGTH"
CRIMINAL COURT
CONVENES NOV. 5
Judge W. F. Harding Will
Preside— Heavy Docket
Faces This Court.
Rutherfordton, Oct. 20. —Judge
W. F. Harding of Charlotte, will
hold the criminal term of the Su
perior Court of Rutherford county
beginning Wednesday, November sth
and running through two weeks. A
heavy docket will face this court.
One or two murder trials, several
robbery and theft cases, many whis
key and other cases are due to come
up. It is expected that the bank
cases will come up at this court.
The trial of Clifford and James
Herring, for the alleged killing of
Harvey M. Propes on September 30
will be held. There are about one
hundred cases on the docket at
present.
Due to the election on November
4th, there will be no court until
November sth.
Following are the jurors for each
week with the townships in which
they live.
First week: J. C. Hudson, R. R.
James, T. B. Harrill, T. E. Keeter,
J. L. Dobbins, J. C. Buff and W. B.
Green, Rutherfordton Township; W.
W. Camp, Union; C. L. Tate, John
Reed and E. E. Sherrill, Sulphur
Springs; L. B. Robbins, C. M. De
brule, H. P. Wall, E. B. Hughes and
L. B. Hines, High Shoals; W. H.
Wiggins, F. F. Cook and W. R. Phil
beck, Colfax; J. M. Hampton, Jack
Michalove, T. J. Cole, B. H. Allen,
G. S. Hemphill, B. R. Hicks and C.
M. Biggerstaff, Cool Springs; J. M.
Brackett and J. A. Gurley, Golden
Valley; J. W. Covenay, Camp
Creek; D. S. Stott, Morgan; B. F.
McDaniel, C. V. Freeman, W. P.
Searcy and W. C. Dalton, Chimney
Rock; Z. B. Flack and Gordon Law
-1 ing, Gilkey.
!
i Second Week: B. F. Collins and
JR. E. Price, Rutherfordton; J. J.
I Splawn, Sulphur Springs; Herbert
October 23. i,».
Walker , W. H tT'
K;^^Hrdall an * w. c \
C#*x s irV. Bridges, J. k
G: C. Mcßrayer, S. H Holl J
M. HolKfield and C. J. Hic^ nd ' J -
Springs; R. W. Campbell r! C ° o1
Creek; R. E. Yelto„
Washburn, Logan Store and r '
Cardell, Gilkey. ' ' T
ELLENBORO SCHOOL
reopened mon Day
Ellenboro, Oct. 20.— T;- ( , £l ,
boro school re-opened Momlav
u • u J aiter
having been in a recess for fi v , v . \
for cotton picking.
The enrollment in the school f;
year is the largest in the hi-
and the average number of
per teacher .is large which
greater efficiency for the
spent in teachers salaries. l n
high school the enrollment i
pecially noticed to be greater tha"
last year.
MT. PLEASANT
W. M. U. MEETS
Forest City, R-l, Oct. 20.-Th e
Mt. Pleasant W. M. U. met l as .
Thursday afternoon at the home of
Miss Dorothy McDaniel. Mrs. F. c
Vassey, president, had charge of'the
program. The topic being "State
Missions." A large number of the
members were present and several
visitors. After the program, refresh
ments were served consisting of iced
tea, sandwiches and cakes.
§
ilka