PAGE SIX Duke Looking For Hard Hattie With Davidson Durham. Nov. 6 There is no doub‘ that conch Wallace Wade and hit Blue Devils would like to turn all their attentions this week to gettinp ready for their big game with North Carolina, November 16, hut that clash will have to hid its time for Duke h laying all plans for their annual bit ter battle with Davidson which wil> be played at Davidson Saturday. There is also no doubt that the Blue Devils will need more than a week t<~ get ready for the game with Carolina. The apparently unstoppable Tar Heels don’t have to pay much mind to thei’ game this week with V. M. 1., and therefore, wi’l have two weeks to go* ready for Duke. And, too. it does not look like Caro lina will have much trouble with Vir ginia on Thrr Usgiving Dav, 10 day after their game with Duke hut th° Blue Devils have a touch battle with N. C. State a week after the Caro lina game. All talk in the state, regardless of games this week, is about the meeting of the Blue Devils and the Tar Heels And there are few to he found who are willing to give Duke much of a chance. The Tar Heels have a win ning complex, backed by a great foot ball team while Dulm has been play ing poorly at time- this season. So the fans can look to the Dulte- Carolina game and spot their points rastes like a Million l The American Distilling Co. PEKIN, ILLINOIS V'B economy. f *'l" "TT SJ Vt For your own pleasure and interests sr* -4 S\ and up, p. o. b. DETROIT ' rtf A value you can get in a ■ 936 car- arrange ff f I Standard accessory group iit- 0 f KS* y ®S Jr CX for a Ford V-8 demonstration today. Wr - LV/ 5322 SX SEE IT AT YOUR NEAREST FORD DEALER’S l YOUR FOR D DEALE| • . . •>'* . • v . w . i ' J N THE AIR —PORP SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA, SUNDAY EVENINGS 9 TO »• E - 3. T.-FREP WARING AND HIS PENNSYLVANIANS, TUESDAY EVENINGS 9;3u TO I0:i0 »• 8- T—COLUMBIA NETHOOKI • • ; ' : -r ■ ' : " T • ? 4,;;. . • * * • " : - i i hut the Blue Devils and their boss ust cannot, go that far ahead just tow. The Wildcats have been lav ig for the Blue Devils since last pring when they completed their ehedule and left an open date so they ould have two full weeks to get set or the game. They have a fine earn with Ireft in the line and danger n the baekfield. The Wildcats line vill probably outweigh the Blue Devils. STATE IS TESTING VA. POLY’S OFFENSE Third Stringers Use V. P. I. Plays Against Regulars in Scrimmage Drills College Station. Raleigh. Nov. 6 Virginia Poly’s offense will he given i thorough testing today bv North '"’aroMna State’s Wolfpack when '-’oach Hunk Anderson sends State’s Vrst and second teams against a •hird club using V P. T. plavs. State nd V. P. T. meet Sahirdav at Ports mouth in a Southern Conference T a mp. Coach Anderson h?X called for the 'erimmage in hopes of improving ttate’s pass defence which was at a ’ow ehh against Carolina last Satur day Up until the Carolina game -tate’s pass defense had clicked niee !y. Anderson souldn’t ask for much im provement in State’s defense against unning plays as Steve Sabol, Mac* Cara, Vince Farrar and the other State forwards, have chalked up a great record in holding six teams to an average of 70 yards a game on ground gains. Carolina's fine backs ”ou)d pick up but 53 yards on ground plays. The defense record State has piled up this fall is thought to be the best of any Southern Conference team. At the start of the season Anderson ex pected his line to give him lots of worry as he had to replace five reg ulars of the 1934 team. But with Steve Sahol, center; Captain Barnes Worth, guard; Fa’f*ab, tackle and Cara, end. on hand. Anderson has built one of the strongest lines in State’s football history. 1928- Herbert Hoover elected Pres ident by a landslide vote. FENDRRSQN. (N. C.) DAILY DISPATCH, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER o. 1935 Jackson In Action And In Repose • rr. | I Here are some typical action shots of galloping Don Jackson, North Carolina’s triple-threat baekfield ace, fvho consistently brilliant perform ances in every game this season have thrust him into the front rank of players being considered for All-Ame rican honors. The picture in the left-hand horner gives a close-up of Jackson as he looks' in repose. The other shots show him punting, passing and run ning with the ball. Sports writers call him “Action” Jackson, for he is action itself in a five-fold manner. Passing, running punting, blocking and defensive play Don is among the nation’s best in each department. His main forte is passing and he really fires away with both barrels. He has passed to five touchdowns this season, cught one pass for a score and tallied three other times himself by running. He has com pleted 27 of 53 tries at passing for a gain of 377 yards and an aver age of 13.9 yards per completion. %. As a runner he nas a 5.2 yard aver age per try from scrimmage with a total net gain of 339 yards from 65 tries. He has intercepted five enemy passes and has a nice punt return yardage. His 46 punts have averag ed 39.1 yards with most of them being out of bounds, dead balls or over the goal line. This senior from sunny Florida i-s a sure blocker and a vicious tackle. From his position as safety man he has dropped many a runner who seem ed to have an open field in front of him. HEELS MUST WATCH STAR CADET BACKS Roberson and Clark Are Both Triple-Threaters and Are Dangerous Men Chapel % jf-lill. Nov. 6 Carolina s Tar Heels, risking an undefeated rec ord and national rating, are warned by friends in the Old Dominion to watch out for a pair of brilliant triple threaters among the ranks of the Flying Squadron of V. M. I. The Tar »Heels and the Keydets tangle in Kenan Stadium here Saturday after noon at 2 o’clock in a Southern Con ference game. Two of the Keydets have really step ped out to make stars of themselves. This pair includes “Wild Bill” Rober son, the sophomore sensation, and Wavt Clark veteran star. Both are halfbacks. Both are triple threaters. Both are dangerous. Robersoh does most of the passing and punting for the Flying Squadron. His tossing gives the Keydets a flashy aerial attack, one which kept Colum bia back on their heels the second half of t l ,- r ; r game with V. M. I. “Wild Bill incidently was freshman base ball pitcher last spring. Now he flings the pigskin with the same accuracy as he did the horsehide. Clark is perhaps the best runner on the team. He is a fancy broken field performer. His feature gallop of the season is a 85-yard return of a kick off through the entire opposing team. Criticizes Mrs. F.D. R, J| ---------—l Mrs. F. D. Roosevelt was desig nated No. 1 Pacifist of U. S. by Mrs. 0. D. Oliphant (above) of Trenton, N. J., in critical address before American Legion auxiliary depart ment commanders. WILL EXPERIMENT^ Highway Commission to Try Out Scheme Early in the Coming Spring Onily Dlspnteh flm-enii, In the Sir Walter Hotel. HY J C. BASKEHVILLK Raleigh, Nov. 5. —Experiments with “cotton roads’’ are going to be con. ducted by the State Highway and Public Works Commission the spring just as soon as the weather moderates enough to make it possible to con struct tar or bituminous surfacing, W. Vance Raise, chief engineer of the highway department, said today. If these experiments proove successful, it is possible that the highway de partment may use hundreds of thous ands of yards of cotton material in constructing tar or bituminous sur face roads in the future and thus pro vide a new use for surplus cotton. But careful and thorough experimentation will precede any widespread use of cotton in the construction of roads. ‘‘Experimental use of cotton cloth as a binder in the construction of tar or bituminous surfaced roads in iSouth Carolina and Mississippi hav<? been sufficiently successful to war rant our constructing some experi mental roads of the same type.” Baise said. “Consequently we are now mak ing plans to build some of fhese roads in the spring as soon as the weather permits. For these roads cannot be built in cold weather. We have not decided, however, just where these ~oads will be built as yet.’’ In building these “cotton roads,” the dirt or clay surface of the road is first saturated with hot tar or as phalt, but preferably tar since it pene. trates more deeply into the base. This is called the “prime layer” of surfac ing. The cotton cloth is then put down over this "prime layer” while the tar or asphalt is still hot and liquid. An other layer of hot tar is then applied over the cotton cloth, after which al ternate layers of crushed stone and hot tar or bitumin are added. The advocates of this type of con struction maintain that the layers of cotton cloth, impregnated with tar or asphalt, forms a waterproof layer through which water cannot pene trate, thus preventing disintegration of the earth or clay base and making the surface last longer. 16 pet. dairy feed $1.55 24 pet. dairy feed $1.75 Beet pulp $2.05 Get Delicious Blue Belle Flour DICKSON & CO. Horner Street. Phone 1150 IINSURANCF I Rentals ke^ l I Al. B. Wester I Hion« isft j I ADMINISTRATOR* . Votice Having qualified as Trim . tor of the estate or j ‘? l3tr a- Rowland, deceased, late v & B County, North Carolina m ance notify all Persons havlnl rl iSto against the estate of ! ;laill ts ed to exhibit them to \b, deceas signed at Henderson n n Under ’ before the 17th dav * , ° h °r ed in tar of pei-aons indebted to S a a T Au will please make tanned ate'?" ment. dle bay. This 15th day of October CITIZENS BANK AND TPlnt. COMPANY 11 Administrator of Estate 0 f Mr . Ida B. Rowland, NOTICE of SALE of RF4, estate. Under and by virtue of order of the Superior Court of Vance Count, h 5 special Proceedings' I ’^,mm! Citizens Bank and Trust Com/ d Administrator, c. , a. of £"£ A. Buchan, vs. Henry S . BuchS Baura Buchan, Mae Buchan Mom! Henry T. Morris, George T Bop/ ’ Jr„ Ruth Buchan Gray. Gray, Mary Ann Buchan, Mrs N\f Henderson, P. H. Gill, Administrator of Mrs. Willie M. Gill, the same t ing No. 3G04 upon the Special p, ceeding Docket of said Court, the Un . designed Commissioner will on th" 18th day of November, 1935 at o’clock, Noon, at the Court Housj Door, in Henderson, N. C offer f or sale to the highest bidder for cash those certain tracts of land lying and being in Vance County, North Caro lina, more particularly described » follows: Lots On Charles Street. Those three houses and lots and one vacant lot situate on the North east side of Charles street at the point where it is intersected by Cherry Street, opposite the present baseball park. Said 4 lots fronting about 210 feet on Charles Street and extending back about 150 feet. Spring Valley Farms. At the same time and place four ad joining tracts of land neat Spring Valley Church will be offer ed for sale By recent survey of W. H Boyd these tracts are described a s follows: TRACT NO. 1. Begin at a stake in a plantation road, corner in Basxett’s line, and run along Baskett’s line S 3 3-4 W 165 feet to a stake, corner in Bas. kett’s line; thence N 8G 1-2 W 1926 eet to a stake, corner of tracts No. 1 and 2 and of J. M. Barnes in Tract No. 4, thence N 22 1-4 E 3037 feet to a stake in Public Road; thence along aid Public Road S 59 1-2 E 915 feet, 4 53 3-4 E 174 feet to a stake, cor ter of tracts 1 and 3 in A. A, Bunns ine; thence along Bunn’s line and vlrs. M. L. Harris’ line S 5 W 681 feet o a stake on a branch; thence down .aid Branch N 84 1-2 W GIG feet tea take, Baskett’s corner; thence 3 13 W G 26 feet to a stake, Baskett’s cor ler; thence S 56 1-4 E 833 feet along he general direction of a plantation oad to a stake in said road, the place beginning. Containing 76.7 acres acre o>’ less. TRACT NO. 2. Begin at a stake in the Public -load, corner of Tract 1 in the lined Tract 3, and run S 22 1-4 W 3037 felt to a stake on a branch corners of Tract 1 and of J. W. Barnes in Tract i; thence along the line of Tract 4, -7 34 1-2 W 767 feet to a stake; cor. ier of tract 2 and of Mrs. Ruby Haw kins in Tract 4; thence N 22 14 E 2706 ft. to a stake in Public Road, .orner of Tracts 2 and 3; thence along .aid road S 60 3-4 E 670 ft. to a stake, corner of tracts 1 and 2 in the line >f tract 3, being the place of begin ling. Containing 43.9 acres, more or ess. TRACT NO. 3. Begin at a stake in Public Road he Northwest corner of Tract 2, and run N 22 1-4 E 70 feet to a stake in ;ld road bed; thence along said old •cad bed S 65 1-2 E 152 feet, S 65 H 2 285 ft., S CO E 123 feet, S 45 E 244 ft., S 52 1-4 E 157 ft. S 59 E 200 ft J 63 1.2 E 183 ft. S 58 1-4 E 2G9 ft -3 44 1-2 E 183 ft., to a stake in P u ” ic Road, corner of tracts 1 and 3 in A. A. Bunn’s line; thence along t e line of Tract No. 1 in said fW Road N 53 3-4 W 174 ft., N 59 1-2 W 115 ft. to a stake, cornel of tracts and 2 in the line of Tract 3; thwK N 60 3-4 W 678 feet to the piaec 0 beginning. Containing 2.3 acres, moi or jess. TRACT NO. 4. Begin at a stake in a cedai stu :n J. W. Barnes’ line and run W 3-4 W 478 ft., N 46 3-4 W 561 feet, * 18 3-4 V/ 231 ft., N 86 3-4 W N 59 3-4 W' 165 ft., N 29 West boa stake in J. C. Kittrells m _ .hence N 15 1.4 E 651 ft- t 0 a b ’orner of J. C. Kittrell and Haigr thence along the Hargrove in jj ar . 15 1-4 E 775 ft. to a stake in grove line; thence N 46 R fr*. ivkins’ an iron stake in Ruby E a , and line on a lar|«, “."“j thence up said branch 8 I*> or . ft. S 36 1-4 E 211 ft. to a L ner of tract No. “ nd i9 E767 ft- Hawkins; thence S 34 1-- 0 f to a stake on said brant*. ' 0 Tracts 1 and 2 and of J " whence up said branch along Barnes line S 56 1-2 E 148 • E 162 ft. S 11 1-2 E 50 ft. ■' ~ Jjne: tt. to a stake in J- W. p plaC e thence S 3 1-4 W 1264 ft. t( ' aCrf; . of beginning. Containing more or less. the The above four tracts compo* two tracts of land inherit r f at her, Mary A. Buchan from net Henry Smith. c 0 and Tracts 1, 2 and 4 have toD cotton allotments. This 18th day of Octobw. R - G ' f the & b ° If interested in any 0 o rri 9, parcels of land, See HenU • W. H. Fleming or R. G.

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