PAGE TWO
Blue Devils Have Edge
Over Tar Heels In Line Play
Chapel Hill, Nov. 11 —Two big hus-
Ky lines will match brain, speed, and
brawn Saturday when Carolina and
Duke clash in a contest which likely
will settle State and Southern Con
ference honors.
i The Blue Devils forward wall will
average 194 pounds from end to end.
The probable starters for the Metho
dists and their respective weights are
Prank Lina (170) and Dick Taliaferro
186), ends; Joe Brunansky (209) and
Joe Cardwell (220), tackles; Woody
Lipscomb (207) and Tom Power (203)
guards; and Dan Hill (190) center.
Carolina’s line averages two pounds
per man less than Duke’s. It will
probably start Captain Dick Buck
(185) and Andy Bershak (185) ends;
John Trimpley (215) and Henry Bar
tos (210), tackles; Steve Maronic
(200) and Bruce Smith (195) guards,
and Bob Adams (180) center.
Most of the experts rate the Duke
Devil huskies superior to the Tar
Heels. Carolina is given a good edge
at the flank posts. The tackles are
considered about even. But Duke is
said to have the edge at the guard
and center berths.
Although not rated on the par with
ToSSu.
Cardinals Have Whipped
N. C. State in Past Two
Meetings of Elevens
College Station, Raleigh. Nov. 11-
Hunk Anderson’s North Carolina State
Wolfpack will run through a scrim
mage with the freshmen today as the
squad continues preparations for its
final out-of-state game Saturday with
Catholic University at Washington.
The Wolves have high hopes of tak
ing the Cardinals. A win will break
a two-game winning streak the Cath
olic team holds over State elevens.
The schools first met in 1931 and
State was beaten 12-7 in its own Rid
dick Stadium in a night game.
The second meeting was last year
and Catholic U won 8-0. The game
was played in a sea of mud in Gris-
Ifith 'Stadium at Washington. Ac
cording to Anderson it was one of the
muddiest games he ever witnessed.
A meeting of State and Catholic U
is a meeting of Notre Dame systems.
Arthur “Dutch” Bergman, coach of
the Cardinals, was a star back at
Notre Dame in 1918. He was a sen
ior when Hunk Anderson of State was
a freshman. Anderson played guard.
Bergman has the same team this
year with the exception of two men
that defeated State last fall and which
defeated Mississippi State in the
Orange Bcwl classic last New Year’s
day.
SECEDERS-DEACONS
WILL PLAY FRIDAY
Wake Forest, Nov. 11—The Demon
Deacons of Wake Forest will this
week be playing their fifth and final
home game of the season when they
clash with the Erskihe Seceders on
Gore Field Friday afternoon.
This week’s meeting with Erskine
will be the first between the Deacs
and the team from Due West, S. C.
since 1931. In that contest the Bap
tists emerged victorious 13-0
Erskine will present to Wake For
It’s A Pun t, By Gadd!
I Wt . . .\- • -r - * • 4 •.* ; ♦
Shown above just after he "had got
ten off Orie Os his lorfg punts Is Char
lie Gftdd, star quarterback of the N.
C State team which meets Catholic
University in Washington Saturday.
L. SENDEBSOiN, (h, 0.) LaiLi DISPATCH, WEDNESDAY, fJOXTMB EE H, 1936'
i Buck and Bershak, who are classed
among the Nation’s best wingmen,
Taliaferro and Liana nevertheless
form a dependable duet. Both are
pass-snagging aces; capable blockers,
end hard tacklers.
There’s lots of beef and brawn at
the tackle posts. Brunansky, Card
well, Bartos, and Trimpey are season
ed performers. They are hard and
rugged.
Lipscomb and Power, holding a
slight advantage over Maronic and
Smith of the Tar Heels, are mono
gram stars. Maronic is a sophomore
and Smith a reserve from the 1935
squad. The Carolina boys have come
along nicely this fall but are not a
match for the Duke boys in experi
ence and skill.
Both Dan Hill and Bob Adams are
playing their first varsity season.
Hill is considered one of the best
pivot men in the Southern Conference
this season. He is an able successor
to the brilliant Jack Hennemier,
stocky center of the 1935 aggrega
tion. Adams has shown rapid im
provement all fall and to date has
been given the nod over Pete Avery,
letter-man r ■' v -Vrstuc’y to capable
Babe Dan... iull.
SuSS
Bulldogs at Top Strength
for Clash With Norlina
Here at 3:30 P. M.
Henderson high school Bulldogs will
take on Norlina high school here
Thursday afternoon at 3:30 o’clock or?
the local athletic field, and will en
deavor to preserve its unblemished
record on the home field, not having
been defeated in several games on
the local lot.
Norlina always puts out a powerful
team, and will no doubt give the lo
cals plenty of trouble.
Henderson will be at top strength
for the contest with Ayscue back in
the :ackfield and Billy Vaughan at
his cld tackle post. The boys have
missed the past two games, crippling
the Bulldogs to no little end.
Butch Peace, brother of that pile
driving fullback, Mule Peace, who has
been at an end post, has been shifted
into tha center of the line, probably
being used tomorrow at a guard post
by Coach Miller.
The boys were given a stiff work
out yesterday, and a light drill this
afternoon will top off preparations
for the contest.
LAST DUKE-N. C. GAME
FOR 6 BLUE DEVILS
Durham, Nov. ),1 —The game at Cha
pel Hill Saturday be the last ap
pearance against Carolina of six mem
bers of the Duke university grid team.
Captain Ace Parker, John Johnston,
Joe Cardwell, Tom Power, Dick Tali
aferro and Frankie Liana will be fac
ing their neighboring rival for the
final time.
est a heavy line and a fast set of
backs. It is also reported that the
South Carolinians possess one of the
finest passing attacks of any team in
that section. Alex Gattys and Ers
kine Edwards, the two ends, are both
nifty receivers and have accounted
for several touchdowns this season
after snatching a pass out of the air.
Gadd’s kicking, pass receiving, and
35-yard field goal by dropklck weref
the features of State's game last
urday with Boston. The Charlotte boy
will be a marked player this week
end .
Some of U. N. C. Star Gridders
Pictured above is a group of Uni
versity of North Carolina gridiron
stars who will see action against
GARMENT WORKERS
ABSENT AT MEETING
Executive Board Decides Not To
Have Delegates at Tampa
Labor Convention
Washington, Nov. 11. —(A?’)— The
executive board of the International
Ladies Garment Union decided today
not to send delegates to the American
Federation of Labor convention at
Tampa, Fla., next week. It deferred
until after the convention a decision
on the Union’s future course fry the
controversy betwfeen the federation
and John L. Lewis’ committee f6r in
dustrial reorganization.
The board expressed “regret” that
conferences for the purpose of ex
hausting every opportunity for recon
ciling the existing differences between
the executive council of the A. F. of
L. and the unions affiliated with the
committee for industrial organization,
were not held.
$250,000 Os Jewels
Taken By 3 Robbers
(Continued from Page One.)
pistol point, he said, the others bound
and gagged him and two clerks.
They were forced to lie on the floor
for a half hour while two of the men
worked on the office safe and the
other stood guard. They emptied the
safe and disappeared from the build
ing.
Deisinger said the men took all the
jewelry on display in show cases as
well as that in the safe and also took
SIOO he had in his wallet.
Peace Pleas Are Voiced
For Armistice Programs
(Continued from Page One.)
held commemorative xt! echos for fal
len heroes of the combat.
Cathedrals, churches and syna
gogues drew millions to worship and
prayer. There, were parades with mar
tial music reminiscent of the war
days.
To President Roosevelt, wartime as
sistant secretary of the navy, and
General John J. Perishing, last sur
vivor of the Allieu high command,
fell the leadership of the United
States observance—a pilgrimage to
the great white tomb of the Unknown
So’dier in Arlington National Ceme
tery in Washington.
Two minutes were set aside at
eleven o’clock for a pause in the na
tion’s activity. In ' New York great
Times Square traffic was ordered stop
ped, and taps sounded to remind of
the day.
King Edward VIII stood at the
Cenataph, London’s war memorial to
pay tribute ao the first time as
sovereign.
The “popular front’’ government in
Fiance stationed guards in Paris to
preserve order.
Highway Diversion
Will Be Resisted
(Continued from Page One.)
made by the school forces and others
forces and others to continue the di
version of at least $1,000,000
from the highway fund into the gen
eral fund, to be used for school pur
poses, just as was done by the 1933
and 1935 general assemblies. But the
belief i s that the diversionists are go
ing to have harder sledding in the
forthcoming 1937 assembly than in
several years and that the highway
commission has a better chance to go
back to the old plan of highway re
venue for highway purposes only,
than ever before.
The move towards ending all di
version from the highway fund to
other purposes is expected to have
Duke University in Kenan Stadium
I Saturday in the hghlight game of the
1 Southern Conference Saturday. All of
I them will be graduated this year.
stronger backing this time than ever
before, since not only ig the highway
commission going to fight against any
diversion harder than ever, but it is
conceded that it will have strong sup
port from other sources. The North
Carolina Petroleum Industries Com
mittee, representing all of the l&rge
gasoline and oil companies as "well as
thousands of individual filling station
operators, has been fighting diversion;
for years and is already starting its
m-e-legislative campaign aiohg this
lino*
So the action of the highway de
partment in leaving'this itfeiih &tft or
its budget for the next, two years is
regarded as having already thrown
down the gauntlet to the diversion
ists.
Peace Plera Is Tit
tered At Raleigh
.i., . ..-I
(Continued from Page One.)
our shores.’’
Joining Pickens in tribute to the
war dead of America, Governor Kh
ringhaus said “a country like oUrs
never forgets, but recollection should
not stop with tribute to those who
have served. It should continue to the
formulation and insistence on enact
ment of every measure that promises
some protection from the bloody sa
crifice of war."
The adoption of a practical ideal
ism supported by strong forces, and
the national wealth , is “our best guar
antee against war,’’ General McClosky
said, as he traced “the failure of dis
armament plans and treaties to in
sure world peace.”
There used to be a tribe of notor
ious plunderers and bandit® in Afg-
V,o~?-*a n . hut amongst themselves so
truthful that if there arose a dispute
about a stray goat, and one said it
was his, and confirm his stateirierit
by stroking his beard, the other in
stantly gave it up without any sus
picion of fraud.
Succeeds Zioncheck
*s
Warren G. Magnuson
Warren G. Magnuson, yputhfi*
prosecutor at Seattle, succeeds to
the congressional wait which was
occupied by the late Marion mm
chec A. gradxttcfe 6t the tJhl*
yerslty of Washtegtonlaw school,
Magnuson, 31, has succeeded ip
winning seven poUtical victories
m a row since he entered polities,
•MOWERS AT HER FEETJS
By MARIE BLIZARD |M
- COPYRIGHT: RELEASED BY CENTRAL PRESS ASSOCIATION
CHAPTER 43
ALIX CAREY stood at the cor
ner of Fifth avenue and Thirty-
Sixth street at 6:30 in the evening.
She shivered in her fur coat and
hunched her thin shoulders against
the icy wind that swept up the
avenue.
She peered anxiously down the
thoroughfares hoping to sight a
bus, was jostled by the crowd and
felt angry, tired tears rise to her
eyes.
She blinked them back, blew her
nose into a crumbled handkerchief
and pushed her hair under her hat
when the bus approached.
She knew it would take more
than that to restore her to any
semblance of pleasant company
that night. And she had to be
pleasant company if it killed her.
Alix had invited Genevieve
Gleason to dine with her. She
could neither afford it nor did she
desire it. ' Her wages were sls
a week and what spare time she
had was time to be spent flat on
her back nursing the ache in her
legs, unaccustomed to standing all
day long and burning with the pain
of it. '
But Genevieve Gleason was the
receptionist at the Sayre-Coulton
Advertising agency. If there was
anything to know about the
agency, Genevieve would know it.
She had not been a friend of
Alix’s when Alix was a secretary
or later a minor executive in the
agency but in these last few weeks
Alix had gone about systematically
to make her one.
She had dropped into the agency
one day, stopping very casually at
the reception desk, “I thought I
might catch Mr. Kennelly in. I
wanted to ask him a question. Is
he, do you know?”
Genevieve said she’d see and
Alix waited,’ knowing very well
that she had seen him leave the
building 10 minutes before and so
timed her entrance.
“I’m sorry, Miss Carey, he
doesn’t seem to be in. Want to
leave a message?”
"No, thank you. I’ll stop by
again. By the way, do you mind
if I make a personal remark? I
loye that blouse you’re wearing.
Did you have it made?”
“This one?” Genevieve was
pleased. "No, I got it up in a
little shop on Madison avenue.”
"I never have any luck with lit
tle shops. I can’t ever find them
or something.”
"I’ll be glad to show It to you.
Perhaps I could have lunch with
you some day?”
Alix looked very pleased, “Would
you really? Then I’ll give you a
ring soon. Oh . . . what’s the news
about Mr. Sayre? How is he do
ing?”
“I can’t tell you really”—this
was a month after the accident—
"but Mr. Coulton sees him all the
time. He always just says that
Rebel Shells Rain on Madrid Suburbs
This spectacular photograph, radioed from London to New York, was made by a rebel airman during an
attack on the outskirts of Madrid by insurgent airmen. At the lower right the smoke from an exploded air
homb, which razed a half-dozen buildings, obscured the view. (Central Pres?)
/lomi Mhskuu.
DEAR NOAH=DID FEUDAL.
* VNISHTS LIVE IN A
TERRIBLE MANOR?
1 couns n*shv»uul,tk.nn.
I TSS3TNOAH «IF A LADY ~
! CRWCKED UP AN AIR
-5 plane. would the
&OS& KANfeEfe 7 >
fedftarHv HAua vs/aj*e6n,omiq..
DEAR NOAH “-COULD A
MOUSETRAP A CAT 7 j
V«*NG*2% FOLT6N AtceON/OMlOi
ne s getting along line. Says he*s
mending nicely. Isn’t it terrible?
—and he’s so attractive.”
“Yes, he was awfully nice,” Alix
said. “Well, I’ve got to be getting
along. I’ll give you a ring about
that luncheon.”
That was the way that she laid
her plans to find some way of
hearing about John Sayre.
Lunching with Genevieve was
impossible. Alix had too little
time and she didn’t want anyone
in the Sayre-Coulton agency to
know where she was working,
that she was a salesgirl at a glove
counter.
“Hello,” she said on the tele
phone a few days before Christ
mas, “this is Alix Carey. I’m ter
ribly sorry I haven’t had a chance
to lunch with you. I’ve been over
my head in work. I wonder if
you’d have time one of these nights
to have a bite of dinner with me.
I’d like to see you again and hear
about the agency, and I thought
you might point out that shop to
me.”
That was why she boarded a
Fifth avenue bus on a bitter cold
night in December. Usually she
walked the distance to the Y
building to save carfare. Tonight
she was too tired to walk to her
meeting place with Genevieve.
Nevertheless she was bright and
animated—at whatever cost —
while they ate their dinner and
lingered over their coffee. She
talked to the other girl about
Christmas gifts and clothes and all
manner of things while she held in
check the one subject she wanted
to know about.
At last she said, “You know Mr.
Sayre was awfully kind to me
when I was at the agency. I’ve
thought of him often and how sad
it is that he is still ill with the
holidays coming on.”
“He must be getting better,”
Genevieve said. “His secretary
sends his mail out every day and
his business is going on.”
“Oh, then he’s home?” Alix
was careful to keep her tone
casual.
"No, he isn’t. Nobody knows
where he is except Mr. Coulton.
That’s why, if you should ask me,
1 think there’s something peculiar
about it. But you know the one
I’m not so sorry for?”
“No,” Alix said, hoping Gene
vieve would go on talking about
John.
“That dame.”
“Dame?”
“La Cushing. I guess you never
saw her. . . .”
Never saw ner? Would to
heaven she never had! There was
nothing on Alix’s face but mild
interest.
**. . . Carola Cushing, her name
was. She was cracked up the
same time as Mr. Sayre. She was
kind of a cousin or something of
his. Anyway she used to come
around the office as if she were
Miss New York and was she a pain
! STOUC. A ip/000 /and 5TIal
“DIAMOND J
'A
in the neck! I. used to keen
waiting 20 minutes. r d J£ “ er
Sayre’s line was busy.” J r -
Ahx warmed to Genevieve
“Didn’t I read somewhere that
she was engaged to him’” A r
tried to be subtle. ' A,IJC
“Who? To Sayre?”
“I . . . maybe it was n
take . . .” Alix retreated ‘ S ‘
“I never saw anything u ke that
Listen, you can’t keep a thing £
that quiet around the agen rv
Everybody there knew every cX
he went with.” y ® lrl
“°? 1 > is so! ” Alix thought
and kept silent.
“I read in a movie magazine that
Cushing and this Spaniard who
was also cracked up, were JZ
to elope to Yuma.” S n&
“Yuma is a long way from here
It seems strange that they’d „„
to Yuma from Los Angeles by wav
of Albany,” Alix said drily. ~ ‘
1 gUess you ’ re r iht.”
“Were they all on a please.
trip?” Alix threw i n
question. 1
“I don’t know about all of them
but you know our agency has th*
Mutual Picture company’s trad*
advertising. It’s a big account
and Mr. Sayre had to go out to
the coast a couple of times a year
He usually flew out with this man
who owned the plane. And if y OU
ask me, that s how the Cushinp
gal got her picture job.” &
Alix didn’t want to ask her any.
thing else. She had learned
plenty. Her dinner companion had
earned the dinner she wouldn’t let
Alix pay for.
“Size six and one-half in white
doeskin? Yes, Madam. I’m sorry
but these are the only ones we
have without buttons. I can show
you the yellow doeskin. . .
Doeskin. Kid. Antelope.
Fabric. Hand-stitched. Ruffled
cuffs. Gauntlet models. From nine
to six you’d think Alix Carey
would have enough to do thinking
of them. And so she had while
another thing that was half glad
ness and half sorrow remained in
her mind. Gladness because John
sayre had had another reason for
going to California than to take
Carola Cushing there; sorrow, be
cause she knew that he w’as ill and
knew not where.
“I’m sure, Madam, that they will
wash. They’re guaranteed. Just
one minute, please . . . I’ll wait on
you,” Alix looked up from her book
to the woman who thrust a pair
of gloves near her.
The two girls—one behind the
counter, the other a customer
stared at each other for a second.
Then:
“Kathleen . . .”
“Alix . . ."
“Oh, but Kathleen . .
“Alix, we’ve got to talk! What
time are you through?”
“Six-fifteen. At the Thirty-
Seventh street employes’ en
trance.”
(To Be Continued)
1 /loah Numskuu.
DEAR. NOAH = DOES »T
MAKE A WHALE OF A
difference, who tells
A FISH STORY •?
0 M e POVJEJ-l B&WJU.IM& 6^C.E.N/Q
DEAR fSCAH=IF A MAN
TALKS THROUGH HIS
HAT, DOES HE HAVE.
TO REMOVE. HIS HAT
TO PERFORM THIS ,
OPERATION ?
ltod*MO.~LfcP»tft. 0,l j_
/AQ.IU NOAM 'YOUtTN6.W nC^j.