Newspapers / Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, … / Oct. 1, 1938, edition 1 / Page 3
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F uquayWolver ines Overpower Build Numerous Fumbles With Gridiron Very Soggy Wolverines Heavier Than Bulldogs And Outplayed Locals From Opening Gun; Good Blocking Dis played By Fuquay Fuquay Springs Wolverines out weighed, outplayed and overpowered a Henderson high school Bulldog eleven here yesterday afternoon on the school athletic field by a score of 18-0. Fumbles were plenty, as the teams battled on a rain soaked gridiron, pools of water were much in evidence. The visitors used the first, third and fourth quarters to run up their points, capitalizing on Henderson fumbles to get the ball deep in Bulldog terri tory. Fish, right end, Shelton, right guard and Tilley, quarterback, were the luminaries of the Wolverines. The entire Wolverine eleven showed plenty of stuff for a high school team, its blocking being some of the best seen in high school circles hereabouts. Captain Lonnie Harris stood out in the Bulldog line, with Hunt, end, Teis er, Renn, and Blake coming in for a share of the honors. Rideout and Calloway were the defensive stars in the backfield, with Hunk Coghill, who played center on the offense and half back on the defense, coming in for a share of the honors. Stewart and Calloway got off for nice gains at times, but usually a fumble would nullify any efforts of the Bulldogs. Henderson opened things, kicking to the Wolverine 25. Two plays netted a first down for Fuquay Springs on the 41. In short order, the Wolverines ran up another first down to Hen derson 45. The Bulldogs held, with Fuquay’s kick being short, just to the 40. Coghill kicked to Fuquay’s 30, and the Wolverines returned the kick when they failed to gain, Candler dropped the ball, the visitors getting it on the 35. Two Fuquay fumbles put the ball on their own 45, a loss of 20 yards. They kicked to Henderson’s 18. Calloway plowed through for a nice gain, fumbling the ball, the visi tors recovering on Henderson's 37. Tilley, on a reverse, moved the ball to'the two yard line, after a couple of plays had advanced the ball several yards. Two plays later the Wolver ines scored. Henderson took the kickoff deep in their own territory, and were kept down there until Coghill got off a long punt to Faquay’s 20. The Wol verines fumbled the ball on a line smash, Henderson recovering on the 29, the nearest the Bulldogs got dur ing the entire afternoon. A bad snap from centor on the fourth down gave the Wolverines the ball on the 43 as the half ended. Henderson took the third quarter kickoff and worked up to midfield before a pass interception halted the drive. In an exchange of punts, the Wolverines brought one back to the SATURDAY GRID SCHEDULE Home 1937 Team Score Big Three (No games scheduled.) Other Games Albright-Geneva 20-0 Allegheny-Otterbein DNP Amherst-Springfield DNP Army-V. P. 1................ DNP Bates-New Hampshire 12-21 Bloomsburg Tr.-Millersvl. Tr. 20-C Boston Coll.-Northeastern ... .35-2 Bowdoin-Mass. State ....... 'l2-0 Bucknell-Gettysburg DNP California Tr.-Edinboro Tr, .. 0-0 Carnegie Tech-Davis-Elkins DNP Catholic U.-American ....... DNP City Coll N. Y.-Buffalo DNP Colby-Tufts 7-20 Conn. State-Wesleyan ....... 6-17 Comell-Colgate 40-7 Dartmouth-St. Lawrence ... E>NP Delaware-Ursinus 6-11 Dickinson-Muhlenberg 19-12 Dickinson J. C.-Mans’fld. Tr. DNP E. Strdsbg. Tr.-W. Ches. Tr. DNP Fordham-Upsala .DNP Frank.-Marsh-Lebanon Val. DNP Grove City-Clarion Tr 7-6 Harvard-Brown 34-7 Haverford-Susquehanna 6-6 Hobart-Norwich ..DNP Holy Cross-Rhode Island • • DNP Indiana Tr.-Lock Haven Tr 7-26 Kutztown Tr.-Shippensbg. Tr. 12-6 Lehigh-Boston 6-33 Lowell Textile-Panzer 0-19 Manhattan-Niagara .. * 13-7 Midolebury-Hartwick ....... 26-0 Montclair Tr.-Arnold DNP Moravian-Ithaca DNP Navy-V. M. I DNP New Britain Tr.-Trenton Tr DNP N. Y. Agri.-Bergen J. C 14-0 New York U.-Maine ........DNP Penn State-Maryland .......21-14 Penn-Lafayette ............ «DNP Princeton-Williams * • DNP Rensselaer-Hamilton ....•••• DNP Rochester-Oberlin ••P’f Rutgers-Vermont DNP Temple-Pittsburgh DNP Trinity-Union ..... .♦•••••••DNP Viilanova-Am. DNP Washington Coll.-Juniata •*••• 0-6 Wash. Jefferson-Marietta •... * *6-0 Waynesburg-Slippery Rock.. .21-0 W. Maryland-Cortland Tr .. DNP Westminster-Bethany, W. Va 0-22 W. Va.-W. Va. Wesleyan ... 14-0 W. Liberty Tr.-Potomac 5t...6-15 Wooster-Coast Gd. Academy.-6-7 Yale-Columbia Abbreviations: tr.-An. ■♦g.^.Teaciwfcgga.y 12 yard line, and then made it a first down on the twP, Tyndall smashed through with the ball. The try for t p °* nt ’ ff°, m PHoement, failed a s did the initial attempt. The Bulldogs elected to receive again, taking the ball on the 25. Cal loway made a first down on the 37 Stewart fumbled after picking up three yards, the Wolverines recover mg. Tilley, on a reverse went 29 yards for a touchdown, slipping through the arms of three Hender son tacklers just as the fourth quarter began. Henderson showed a stubborn de fense in the fourth when the visitors threatened, keeping the Bulldogs with their backs to the goal mpst of the final period. A vain passing attempt in the fourth netted little, short com pletions being made from Candler to Rideout. Pos- • Faquay Springs Henderson L.E. Honeycutt C. Faulkner r 3.’ Harris (C) L.G. Brooks Teiser C. Mann ' coghill R-G. Shelton Blake R.T. Jackson j. Grissom R.E. Fish Hunt Tllle y Rideout R.H.B. Jones Candler L.H.B. Tingen Stewart F.B. Ryndall Calloway Score by periods: Fuquay Springs 6 0 6 6—IS Henderson o 0 0 0— 0 Scoring touchdowns: Tilley 2, Tyn dall. Substitutions: Fuquay, Hoff ner, Byrd, Jones, Burchett; Hender son, Keller. Huffman, Renn, Davis. Jackson, Tarry, Sanders, J. Faulkner. Tbda^ffinKjs AMERICAN LEAGUE New York at Boston. St. Louis at Chicago. Detroit at Cleveland. Only games scheduled. NATIONAL LEAGUE Pittsburgh at Cincinnati. Philadelphia at New York. Chicago at St. Louis. Boston at New York. AMERICAN I.EA<iUK St. Louis 5-3; Cleveland 3-3, (2nd game called Bth, darkness). Only games scheduled. NATIONAL LEAGUE Pittsburgh 1-4; Cincinnati 7-2. Chicago 7; St. Louis 7; (9 innings, darkness. Only games played. OCTOBER 1, 1988 WEST Home 1937 Team Score Western Conference Ohio State-Indiana • . o*lo Big Six Conference (No games scheduled) Missouri Valley Conference Washington (St. L.)-Drake 2-32 Other Games Adrian-Kalamazoo . • DNP Augustana (S. D.)-Hastings 20-13 Baldwin Wallace-Hiram DNP Butler-Purdue .. ... 7-33 Capital-Valparaiso ..... . • DNP Carroll-North Central 14-0 Case-Findlay .. DNP Cedar Falls Tr.-Grinnell 20-20 Chicago-Bradley . . .... DNP Cincinnati-111. Wesleyan DNP Cornell Coll.-Colpmbia la DNP Creighton-South Dakota DNP Danville Tr.-Ball Tr. 0-26 Dekalb Tr.-Charleston Tr 24-6 DePauw-Evansville ....... 13-0 Detroit Tech-Deflance .. . 0-8 Duluth Tr.-Eau Claire Tr 12-7 Emporia Tr.-Edmond Tr . .20-20 Heidelberg-Kent State .... 13-7 niinols-Depaul 0-0 lowa State-Luther ... DNP Lake Forest-Augustana (111.) DNP Lawrence-Coe .... . DNP Macomb Tr.-lowa Wesleyan 0-6 Manchester-Earlham • .. DNP Marshall-Qhio Wesleyan . 21-6 McKendree-Eureka -. „ 14-0 Michigan-Michigan State .. 14-19 Mich. Min. Tech-St. Norbert 0-33 Milton-Milw. Ext. Div . . 13-0 Minnesota-Nebraska ~jr.. 9-14 Monmouth-Carthage 7-0 Mount Union-Miami (O.) DNP No’west Coll.-Mission House 20-0 Northwestern-Kansas State DNP Notre Dame-Kansas . . DNP Ohio Northern-Wittenberg DNP Olivet-Hillsdale . . * 12-6 Parsons-Illinois College ... 6-0 Principia-Millikin DNP Ripon-Knox .... •. .. DNP St. Benedict-Ft. Hays Tr 7-7 St. John (Minn.)-St. Mary DNP St. Joseph (Ind.)-Rose Poly. 13-7 St. Olaf-Macalester ... 0-6 S. Dakota State-Omaha 20-0 Spearfish Tr.-Huron .19-18 Springfield Tr.-Dak. Weslyn DNP Stevens Pt. Tr.-Stout .. 7-0 Terre Haute Tr.-Franklin . 7-13 Toledo-St. Viator', DNP Upper lowa-William Penn 9-0 Wabash-Hanover ..»....•• 12-14 Wayne-Akron 19-13 Wheaton-Elmhurst 7-6 Whitewater Tr.-Miss. House DNP Wichita-Southwestern. •••• .4 26-0 Wisconsin-Marquette 1 ....... 12-0 Wooster-Ashland ...^.DNP S (OahOhio Youngstowi-West. Reacryfi.».DNPt. HENDERSON, (N. C.) DAILY DISPATCH SATURDAY, OCTOBER 1,, 1938 AMERICAN LEAGUE Club W. L. Pet New York 98 52 .653 Boston 37 60 .592 Cleveland 85 65 ,567 Detroit 82 69 .543 Washington 74 75 .497 Chicago 62 81 .434 St. Louis 54 94 .365 Philadelphia 52 98 .347 NATIONAL LEAGUE Club w. L. Pet, Chicago 88 61 .591 Pittsburgh 86 62 .582 New York 81 67 .547 Cincinnati 80 68 .541 Boston 77 73 .513 St. Louis 67 79 .466 Brooklyn 67 80 .456 Philadelphia .’ 45 103 .304 Grits and Gravel ♦ . ♦ ♦ By T. MOSES JONES For the sake of all those over here in Granville who know me and my way, I wish to tell you something. You know how I walk very quietly up behind folks and hit them back of their knees; and how I slap them on the back almost hard enough to hurt; ■and how I dig my fingers down in their elbew and reach their funny bone —well, I got paid back today for lots of those mean tricks I have many times played on other folks. Some one knocked me right in the chest with their fist and almost knocked me clean down on the hard side-walk. Os course they were only playing and quickly acknowledged they did not mean to hit me quite so hard. Then in a little while another fel low walked up behind me and pinch ed me under the arm. It is so very sore tonight that even my sleeve rub rubbing against it hurts it, and I have just gotten Mrs. Jones to burn it up with iodine, 2 take the soreness out. So now at least a part of my mean ness to others has been revenged. You know I told you about playing on that Hammond electric organ in Charlotte when we went up to the mountains; well, tonight I have had another dream come true. A fellow had a real accordion with a piano keyboard, and with forty-eight bass keys, and he let me try to play on it. I really did make a fairly good at tempt at playing a tune, and want to get me one just as soon as I can. But it won’t hardly be soon. •Saw a lady today wearing a dress about as imaginarily like the color of the Biblical Joseph's coat as any thing I have ever seen, and I mean the colors were really pretty. Bob Barker was using a walking cane today he brought back from Canada. It was made of a tboacco stalk that originally had thirty-two leaves on it, so Bob said. Os course, the top part had been cut off. Some more of the boys have return ed from Canada, in fact a whole car load of them —W. H. Loftis, Maury —— V SOUTHWEST , Home 1937 Team Score Southwestern Conference Texas Christian-Arkansas ....7-7 Other Games Abilene Chr.-Sul. Ross DNP .Baylor-Oklahoma A. & M. . DNP El Paso Mines-New Mex. Mil . 19-3 Hardin Simmons-Centenary DNP Rice-Oklahoma 0-6 St. Mary (Tex.)-Dan’l. Baker DNP San Marcos Tr.-St. Edward 14-13 Southwestern-Denton Tr....... 7-6 Texas-Louisiana 0-9 Texas A. & M.-Tulsa ........DNP , SOUTH Southeastern Conference Mississippi St.-Florida ......14-13 Tulane-AUbum ....0-0 Southern Conference Duke-Davidson .............34*6 North Car. St.-N. Carolina ...0-20 Virginia-Washington & Lee,..6-13 Other Games Alabama-Howard ....41-0 Centre-Chattanooga 0-0 Georgetown-Hamp. Sydney ..DNP Georgia Tech-Mercer 28-0 Kentucky-Oglethorpe DNP _ Milligan-Mars Hill .25-0 Mississippi-La. Tech 13-0 Morehead Tr.-Lawrence Tech DNP Richmond-Rand. Macon 6-0 Roanoke-Catawba 19-32 South Carolina-Georgia * 7-13 Tenn. Wesleyan-Tenn. J. C,..DNP Tennessee-Clemson DNP Union-Carson-Newman 0-12 Vanderbilt-Bowl. Gr. Tr.....DNP Wofford-Guilf ord DNP ROCKY MOUNTAINS A v Rocky Mountain Conference v ' Colorado Coll.-West St. Tr 3-7 Flagstaff Tr.-Nevada DNP Utah-Montana State 19-7 Wyoming-Colorado State 7-0 Other Games Albion Tr.-Boise J. C. DNP Utah State-Coil. Idaho DNP PACIFIC COAST .j Pacific Coast Conference Oregon-U. C. L- A ...*.13-26 South. Cal.-Oregon State.'...l2-1& Wash. State-Califomia .......0-27 * Other Games Calif. Agri.-San Fran. Tr 13-6 Cal. Poly-Chico State DNP Central J. C.-Phoemx J. C .. .DNP Coll. Puget Sound-Pacific U 12-20 Fresno St.-U. S. Marines ....DNP Humboldt Tr.-Ashland Tr 34-0 Linfield-Cheney Tr. .... .7-13 Pomona-Redlands ...........6-20 San Diego St.-Occidental 3-6 Stanford-Santa Clara ........7-13 Washington-Idaho ...........21-7 INTERSECTIONAL _ £ Missouri-Colorado ...........6-14 So, Methodiit-AriaOTAiiiii, .DNi? Loftis, Graham Yancey, Norman Cal lahan, and Collie Brogdon. Maury did not drop me a card this time, but he did a couple of summers ago when they went down to Florida. I did no know for a good while who wrote it as I at first read the name as Mary Loftis. Hammet Hayes, from Grassy Creek, was to town today. Hammett said he had been reading the pieces in this column about papa, and said that ha knew only one man in all the world who prayed very much like papa. You could not make but one guess, and that guess would have to be Mr. Dick Blackwell. / J. W. Horner also said he had read those pieces, and also Fred Cottrell and Mrs. Jennie Breedlove, from Cokesbury, and one or two more. So I am glad that I used them in this column, i Speaking of Hammett Hayes, I mean, to tell you something terrifi cal on him some of these days when he least expects it. Mrs. E. H. Eastwood and Mrs. J. B. Elliott, of Virginia, were over to our town this morning. Had not seen them since last spring, so suppose they went the other way this sum mer, as they live near the State line. You know some of the folks eat in one state and sleep in another. Some have their co w stable in Virginia and pig pen in North Carolina. So there you are, or rather, there they am. Ben and Henry, the Adcock twins (whose pictures and a poem about them were in this column some time ago) were to town seyeral days ago. They live up towards Roughy-mount They still look alike, not as alike as two black peas, but as alike as looking G-t the same pea twice. And now I will cut this short, in fact, I am going to rapidly abbrevi ate U and close. Hope to see you again—won’t say just when. T. MOSES JONES. First Meeting Os Official Year At Hut Monday Evening At 7*30 Ally B. Young, post commander of the local post of the American Le gion, has announced his appointments in the various committees to function during the ensuing year. Commander Young has expressed hope that each member of the various committees will do his best work, making this one of the best years of the Legion. A meeting of the local vost will be held Monday evening at 7:30 o’clock, this session being the first in the of ficial year, and will be held at the Legion Hut. The committees are as follows: Membership— S. C. Floyd chairman, Philip Harris, G. W. Furqueran, S. N. Powell, E. L. Brantley, C. B. Baskett, Henry Hamm, H. E. White. Finance—H. P. Young, chairman; Roy O. Rodwell, J. C. Gardner. Americanism—H. A. Newell, chair man; B. H. Perry, J. Y. Jenkins, D. T. Dickie, E. F. Smith, R. C. Young J. L. Wester. Executive—A. B. Young, Roy O. Rodwell, J. W. Jenkins, H. A. Ne well. G. W. Furqueron, J. C. Cooper, H. E. White, J. S. Evans. House—J. S. Evans, chairman; H. E. White, J. C. Cooper, J. W. Jenk ins. Publicity—D. p. McDuffee* chair man; M. L. Finch, E A. Latta, C. O. Seifert. Athletics—>S. E. Jennette, chairman- J. M. Baity, H. L. Keller, Henry’ Mangum. Legal—D. p. McDuffee, chairman; A. A. Bunn, B. H. Perry. Service—N. L. Parham, chairman; J. D. Cranford, H. E. White. Visiting— J. D. Cranford, chairman; R. E. VqnDyke, W. T. Hughes, W. M. Haithcock. Historian—Alex S. Watkins. • ; State Takes Nol Pros As To Three; Jury Liberates Others With Verdict Six defendants faced court charges in county court yesterday before Re corder R. E. Clements, three of them being tried before a jury, and all six left the court house free. The state took a nol pros in three of the cases. They were as follows* Franklin Gill, route 5, Oxford, drunk en driving, nol pros. Howard Cutts, possession non-tax paid whisky, nol pros. Franklin Gill, transporting whisky, nol pros. Thre'e jury trials were as follows: Grady G. Pully, unlawful possession of whisky, not guilty. Garland Johnson, possession of whisky for sale, not guilty. J. C. Hart, drunken driving, not guilty. JIMMYCOOPER IS MADE CHEERLEADER Davidson, Oct. 1. —Four junior cheer leaders were elected by the student body at Davidson for the 1938-39 sports season. They are Charles Luth er, Beaufort, S. C.; Lock Hunter, Alex ander City, Ala.; Charlie Smith, Greenville, S. C.; and Jimmie Coop er, Henderson. Six ballots were necessary before the final group were selected. Luther and Hunter assisted head cheerleader Dick Taylor at the Davidson-State game. From these four juniors will be elected the head cheerleader for 1939- 40, next spring. Accepts Position With NYA In Western North Caro lina; Office At Marion George Suggs, who has been con nected with the local office of the North Carolina Employment office as supervisor almost since it was estab lished here on a wider scale, has re signed his post, and accepted a dis trict supervisors position with the NYA, his headquarters to be in Ma rion. In his new capacity, Mr. Suggs will have supervision over 34 Western North Carolina counties. The name of Mr. Suggs’ successor has not been made public. Mr. Suggs left Henderson today to visit his home, reporting to his new post Oct. 10. v M M f as ■ J 9&. he? £S WITH EVERY ?i' BOWL I f|m f| ;( : Os LAMP lmc™ll i| • SWIRL PLEATED i " ?(}| K) ) 111 VARIED COLORED ' M// LIGHT I I iMoMl* \ Creature' ■: **«**»»•» TUI,E very own. r RmfciWw" u _ WITH Positively astounding! With the purchase of every one of HANDY I those marvelous FLOOR LAMPS ... DURING THIS / ,< s§§t crrp SALE • we vrtll present you with a LUXURIOUSLY eu . lTr , u IVi-TEO DEEP PILE CHENILLE BEDSPREAD. AT NO SWITCH MONDAY TUESDAY—WEDNESDAY ONLY ogs By 18-0 Score FOUR CASES TRIED BEFORE THE MAYOR Mayor Henry T. Powell presided over four cases in city court today. Gaston Champion pleaded guilty to being drunk, and was fined $1 and costs. William Bailey was not guilty of operating a gambling place. Sol Brame was convicted of as saulting William Bailey, and prayer for judgment was continued upon payment of the costs. Prayer for judgment was continued as to William Hayes, guilty of as saulting William Bailey, upon pay ment of the costs of the action. KITTRELL JUNIORS TO MEET MONDAY The Kittrell council of the Junior Order will hold an important meet ing Monday evening at 8 o’clock, it was announced today. There will be entertainment, and birthdays of members for the past two months will be recognized. PAGE THREE forwSnie Snappy Outfit F'rom Hen derson High Entertains Fans At Grid Contest Henderson high school band turned in a fine performance prior to tljfe Fuquay Springs-Henderson football game, and during the intermission pe riod yesterday at the athletic field, many of the fans commenting on tl»e great improvement shown in the local organization. The bandsmen were all in uniform, and led by their drum major, Miss Frances Petty. v The band did not parade on the field, since the gridiron was far too soggy from heavy rains just prior ,to game time.
Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.)
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Oct. 1, 1938, edition 1
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