Tar Heels, Blue D
CAROLINA PREPARE!)
rm TORNADO CUSH
Homecoming Day Classic
Saturday One of Big
Games of Season
C-!-,?. Hi! Oct 18 After a light
„ >t( erday as a reward for a
' ; Georgia. the Caro
*', t w.v. in good » h *P« today
.e: becin intensive practice
, - <.• , d i> s Homecoming Day ctas
-4 . w h Georgia Tech, which is
, s on." of the toughed teams
t >- "n 'he Ta; Hoe! schedule.
- - ~st to At.burn s mighty Plains
n .* wet field 6-0 Saturday, but
n Ore/m scouts saw enough of
T ,.„ r .»port back that the 1932
- . 1 . look- d more like Tech’s na
. 1 imp onship 'earn of 1928 than
„ v her -ccent model. A statement
.v-v. enough to set to
4 , -,*»,< when It comes
/-vr.- voii'i ;ke Coaches Bob etzer
j. tR ; Cern < *y, who are not given
CAROLINA POINTING
FOR GHA TECH
Made Fine Showing Tieing
Georgia Team That Scor
ed on Tulane
C\ ■ H Oct. 18. Home from its
Gr - i :rvi-ion and ready to settle
j ,-j. • . » week s hard drilling for
--- • c H rnecoming Day game with
G- - i T> * h here Saturday, the Car
r i 5. bail at my is receiving the
v. praise and plaudits of n
h college town.
I .at:,.factory as tie games gen
s tie -o victory-hungry suppor
>. l'i;;\ersity students, faculty and
■:>i. n :s thought Carolina played
i • ianie to play a 6-6 tie with the
t-'.i.a brigade that had scored 21
p. . ,>r. Tiila.-ie the week-end before
A.i they didn t fail to express
t tma-- Moie than a thousanc
pi-,r; Memorial Hall for the grid
g:v. ia'.uriiay. They went wild whet
Ba: y- i::d Rurnett recovered sum
f•• in Georgia territory and
* A«r.r. blocked and recovered a
•Jt TV v >' ‘ r -’ and they almost llfteo
■he • p otf tne house when Lassitei
came n anti made the long run with
Phipps pa-# for the tieing touch
<io»::.
NOTICE
Pi’iiJT.: :o authority contained in
1 • i i :. judgment of the Superior
. ' •: i..ve County for sale of land
• .v-e:-. Entitled, E. T. Rus
- A tin.:. of D. S. Owen. vs.
Ms- ■ t’ Russell Owen, widow; e>
• ~ .:;t;r.g he undersigned com
- " • tor the purpose, we will sel.
•'i i ty, 'he 19th day of Novem
at 12 o’clock noon, in front
"f. House Door in Vance
' N C . to highest blddei for
i* public auction the following
: :1 property in Henderson,
‘ ' ''".inty. N. C . belonging to
•4 . ~f jy g Owen, viz:
N" 1 The fee subject to the
> * -14. • dower interest of Mrs. Vio
• Owen, she now being 31 years
j*. :n ail of that cer'iam lot or
f land fronting 48 1-2 feet on
• Avenue, tunning back between
!;nes about 121 feet and bc
♦*. 1-2 fe-t from the intersection of
1 Avenue with Chestnut Street.
'**’ I*‘ r i of record. Book 93 at Page
Vince Registiy.
• ‘ N" 2 The complete title to the
on the north side of
R~ynn corner, and run thence
■ -i i N. 34 degrees 15
" ■ !"3 feet to the intersec-
H i'"grove Street; thence along
■. Street N. 53 degrees E.
Ge 'o H s-y»ke; thence S. 73
r. 122 feet to a stake Bryan
nemo** S. 52 degrees 30 min
feet to the point of the
n 4 per survey thereof made
Jennettp. in Rook 131 at
: _•<,_< Vance Registry.
he m-h day of October. 1932.
D P McDUFFEE.
J M. PEACE,
Commissioners.
1932 City Taxes
NOW DUE
1 %—DISCOUNT— 1 %
IF PAID IN OCTOBER
Street assessments are also due but no
discount allowed.
s. B. BURWELL, City Clerk
Phone 203.
Pat Page May Succeed A. A. Stagg
11,
E
Slated for retirement at the con
clusion of this school year because
of his age, 70 years, Coach Amos
Alonso Stagg, right, may be sue
Rumor Os Trades Os Big
League Players Is Denied
Boston. Oct. 18 (AP>—Published re- .
ports of an impending baseball deal !
involving four National league clubs ;
and seven players valued at approxi
mately J 500.000 today brought denial , j
from Charles F. Adame, vice-president i
of the Boston Braves, and William j
L. Veeck, president of the Chciago '
Cubs.
The Evening American said a trade, j
understood to have been started by I
NOTRE DAME PLAYS
WILL BE IN FORM
Gator Coach And State's
Mentors Are Graduates
of Old* School
Raleigh, Oct. 18.—A clash of Notre
Dame football systems will be made
in Tampa, Florida this Saturday when
N. C. State's Wolfpack and the Florida
.Gators meet in a Southern Conference
football game.
Coach Charlie Bachman of Florida
and Clipper Smith and Frank Reese
>f State are graduates of Notre Dame.
Bachman is considered one of the best
students of the Rockne system ever
to be graduated from South Bend. He
has been coaching for about' fifteen
years.- Smith, who cacording to The
Ole Timer of the Atlanta Journal,, will
become one of the silent figures “in
American football, started coaching
in 1928. Reese began tutoring in 1924.
Last fall Bachman’s more experi
enced and smoothly working Gator
machine smothered Smith's first Wolf
pack 34-0 on Riddick Field. This fall's
Pack is considered a great improve
ment over the 1931 edition, and the
Gators are thought to be of about the
*ame strength.
CHISLER PRAISES
STAGG; FOOTBALL
Princeton. N. J-. Oct. 18 (AP)
Herbert Orrin <Fritz) Crisler sat down
to lunch yesterday with a lot of his
sports writing friends to muse him
over his few weeks as Princeton's
head coach, praise his former teacher
at Chicago, Amos Alonzo Slagg, and
. hew over Wv» football situation In gen
eral.
Annually in the Tiger field house,
one of the oldest legend-laden foot
ball stroughold in the East. Prince.on
football coaches do that. And this
marked the first occasion it has fallen
to a lot of a man n°t Princeton born
and bred, to talk from the head of
the table as the guiding director of a
Tiger eleven.
HfthDEHSON, (N.C.J DAILY DESPATCH TUESDAY, OCTOBER 18, Ifßs
:
evils And Dea
ceeded as mentor of University of
Chicago football teams by Pat
Page, left, his present assistant,
Stagg has coached for 41 years.
Bill Terry, manager of the Giants,
would send Freddy Lindstrom and
Frank Hogan to the National League
pennant winners in exchange for Kii:i
Cuyler, Gabby Hartett and Pat Ua
kdie.
The Braves, in turn, would, the
paper said, turn Wally Berger over
to the Giants for Cuyter and Hartnett
while Cincinnati would become the
fourth club involved by giving up
Babe Herman for Pat Malone.
Women Voters This Year
Show Great Interest In
Current Economic Issues
(Oo"tinued from Page one.)
by reflection.
"For example, they want to know
now all about the benefits of the
tariff—why it is what it is anw how
it works. Illustratively—how does It
work to the advantage of the farm
er’s wife, who gets her pin money
from the sale of eggs.
"They want to understand -federal
farm loans.
"They want to understand how the
government is aiding small home
owners.”
"Women are not perhaps more In
terested in these problems than men,
but it is a fact that they are newer
to women than to men, and for this
reason, probably, there Is no doubt
that they are delving into them more
energetically.
"As a result, it may be a fair con
clusion that they are coming, on an
average, to a fuller comprehension of
them.
“It is not as true as some folk
think, that women are inexperienced
in politics. They certainly have gone
in. during many years, for club ac
tivities, and club work is nothing, in
reality, but politics—now being con
sdered, however, in its application to
— INTRODUCING
DR, CLARENCE SPEARS
-' /j j
' i*wawn »
WL ‘V* - WtSCOU&AI FOOTSAOe '
V,- _ • •
FIERCE BATTLE AI i
DUKEJSFDRECAST
Wake 4 * Great Defensive
Record of Season May
Be Continued
Durham, Oct. 18—Will Wake For
est's giant-killing Deacons continue
•gmlnst the Blue Devils of Duke the
great defensive record they have made
this season? That la the question be
ing asked among North Carolina grid
fans this week as Coaches Wallace
Wade and Pat Miller prepare the two
teams for their expectedly fierce en
counter In Duke stadium Friday.
In most quartrs the Blue Devils are
favored to win. However, that has
been the case with every team the
Deacons have mot this fall and no
team has beat them yet. The staunch
defense that Wake Forest has put up
against Its foes this season ts prob
ably the most talked about feature of
North Carolina football.
affairs.
"Mechanical devices, too, have re
lieved femininity of a great share of
their former household duties.
“Thus, already equipped with a
basis of experience in political tech
nique and the persistent efforts at
training the new half of the electorate
which have been In progress ever
since the nineteenth amendment’s
adoption, there is every prospect that
the women’s vote November 8 will be
decidedly larger than ever before.”
Is there also a prospect that, with
increasing Interest, women also will
presently begin to manifest an ip
creasing thirst for office?—a develop
ment which men politicians may re
gard considerably askance, one would
Imagine.
"I doubt," said Mrs. Yost, "whether
the increased demand will be in pro
portion to the number of women in
the total voting population.
"After all, women, generally speak
ing, are primarily concerned In main
tenance of the nation’s homes, and po
litics certainly is a distraction from
home life. Woman can be. spared to
vote, but if she is to be spared for
public office. It cannot but interfere
with domesticity.
“It is a reasonable conclusion that
women, who have shown special quali
fications afor particular offices, will
be more urgently sought to fill them.
Presumably the consequence will be
some Increase in the number of them
in political service.
“But it is not my prediction that
anything like a demand for a 80-50 di
vision in offices, between women and
men, will follow.”
Relief Fund Checks Go
Into Mails For Counties
(Continued from Page One.)
winners," Miller said. “Os course. If
there is a family consisting of a
widow and several children, all too
young to work, provision will be made
to take care of these families with
direct relief, consisting of the neces
sary food, clothing and fuel. But in
families where there are adults cap
able of working, they will be required
to exchange their labor for whatever
relief they need."
This labor may be done in improv
ing and beautifying school grounds,
in repairing streets, putting down
water or sewer lines, wth the local
communty fumshng the materals and
the relief agencies the wages in the
ibrm of food and clothing. Miller
pointed out.
cons Drill For Week-End
' ! INTRODUCING ,
; CRISLER
HIGHWAYS DAMAGED
BY FLOOD WATERS
{Continued from Page One.)
Chief Engineer Ueslle Ames. Many
rivers and creeks are out of their
banks and making it necessary to
close a number of highways, mes
sages received by Ames indicate.
The heaviest rains are reported
from Transylvania, Polk and Macon
counties, and from Marlon, in Mc-
Dowell county, by Division Highway
Engineer J. C. Walker, of Asheville.
He advised the commission here that
Route 28 had been closed by high
water, also Route 284. in Transylvania
county, from Brevard to Woodrow, in
Haywood county. Several steel county
bridges were reported washed out In
McDowell county, where a heavy rain
Watkins Motor Co.
Montgomery Street —Opposite Big Warehouse
I Distributors for Austin Automobiles
I Vance, Granville, Franklin Warren
I and Person Counties
FORMAL OPENING
Wednesday, October 19
Featuring a display of the latest models in Austin Automobiles.
I Come and see these new cats that ojferate at a cost of-1-2 cent per
mile. They are comfortable, speedy and dependable. :
H. L. CANDLER, Manager
I t w
felt Sunday and where the Catawba
river was out of its banks Monday.
Traffic between Marion and Asheville
over Route 10 is being permitted only
at the risk of the drivers who are
willing to take the chances.
Until the present high water recedes
it will not be possible to determine
what the damage is. but it is expected
to be quite heavy in some localities.
Ames said.
In Division B. with headquarters at
Statesville, a number of highways
have been closed due to high water.
Among these are Route- 275 from
Wadesboro to Mount Gilead, where the
ferry has been forced to close because
of high water in the Pee Dee river!
Route 275 is closed between Dallas*
and Stanly, while Route 268, from
Elkin to North was closed
Monday by the heavy rains and high
water.
PAGE THREE
WOLEPACK TO MEET
FLORIDA AT TAMPA
Slate Eleven In Good Shapa
For Far South Game
This Week End
Raleigh, Oct. 18—The State College
Wolf pack went through & peppy
workout yesterday on Riddick Field
aa it started preparing for its second
outftiern Os inference game Saturday
in Tampa. Fla., with the University
otf Florida.
Al’hough disappointed In its fail
ure to score on Wake Forest Uat
Friday, the ’Pack opened its training
grind for the Gators in good spirits.
Work yeeterday was devoted chiefly
to fundamentals with stun eattenllou
paid to passing. A dummy signal
drill completed the day’s activities for
♦h* regulars.
VANDERBILT HOLOS
BALANCE OF POWER
0
Commodores Slated To
- Volk In Nashville,
November 12
Atlanta, Ga., Oct. 18 (AP)-*Van
derblll's Commodores, although at least
temporarily out of the race, apparent
ly hold the key to the out hern con
ference lx*!(ball championship puz
zle. f
Auburn, Kentucky, Louisiana State
and others must be heard from beloro
final standings are tabulated but fiom
this distance it appears that cham
pionship will be decided when Vnn
derbillt plays Tennessee in Nashville
November 12.
GEHRIG IS NOT TO
SPEAK FOR HOOVER
New York, Oct. 18 (AP)—The Sun
says Lou Gehrig, slugging first base
man of the New York Yankees, has
no |nken|:on of ' making political
speeches for President Hoover.
"I have all I can do to play first
base and hit the ball without plunging
into a game of which I know nothing"
said the basebadl star.
The Republican national commit- ee
had announced Gehrig would make
a radio address this week In the Pres
ident's behalf.