pep Parade Thursday Night
preliminary To Friday Game
-yhoi>I Student
,;!S Bii: Dem
bod> 1 1 i
'or inaugu
Nis>ht Foot
I s vios in Hender
b'1*"
:-on
pen narade. !
•Viifit as a
•' >!.v \* Hender
n Friday
w-terdav al
v ;»'Id in the
The pep
•ivd. will be
. . ./id will sur
■ . tion which
lis same
, :>> have been
-tvn in this
sd Secretary
Henderson
'..ere special
yesterday
that the
»■ n the high
::d.:i-i readv
.. athletes m
S. M. Cr.wder.
itins. p:e
■ ::. ,c.\. Jul.a
i . : iey. iV.'b llar
W. ;). Payne.
... . .oi :y on var
game.
• ; i prizes tj .
- contest and
. i :. the last pep
• I plans tor the
as made at the
. 't the cheer
' : , :.e:t lassie^
.".d executed
de< and have
■ e contests.
• ;.>odv show
. »rts of the
r .. y night game
a.<e it one of the
"::e entire foot
0 :self will ye
..p. amplifying
- • , v..pac;ty of the
ncveased to about
: >: additional
la:- side of the
4: school band
e part in prelimi
.rui will be joined
i b igle corps, the
. ..nd. and other
v. 11 parade be
: : half-t. ne. Ap
■ :sical mits at •
is ?a:ne was one •
: the contest, and '
"he Friday nisjht
-• - t en greater in- '
;d gametime Fr:
1 -Indents will
'n all sections of '
Offense And Defense Are
Stressed For Bulldogs
i:(! defensive plays
: y's work-out «>t"
-i.: •>■>! Uulldogs
• !i i<>r the game
ith Enfieid ;:r ici
: . fl described
• • on are really
h an idea of achiev
ti »n >•> possible.
;ed good on offen
>ive and defensive plays, and Ned
A(:.ams and Pre.-ton Powers were im
pressive on the defense. Davada
I i.ughlin was out today and John
Stewart ran at iiis place at right
guard.
A mammoth pep parade is planned
i'oi Thursday evening. Many new
.surprises are promised, and it is ex
pected to be a gala occasion, accord
ing to those who know.
IRISH SPARKPLUG .... By Jack Sords
\AMff"f/L. >
iGeroor
AMr>
5f4ou)
' ^
•f- f h\e eesr t\AiF8Ac<s
1-A//B- (4A.G MAP
r*it years
Sports Events Top State's
November Activity Calendar
Daily Dispatch Bureau,
in iht Mr Waller Hold.
By m:\Kv avkkill.
Kaietgh. Nov. G.—Just because the
election is over Tar lleels are not
going to I'md themselves without
anything to do tor the rest of the
Months oi November except "second
gtie.-s' the results.
< >u tile contrary the state's calen
dar ot events trom^now to the first
of December is about as lull and
varied as could be wished. The
At\ . istiee Day and Thanksgiving
holidays. naturally. are probably the
luvt-knoun and will be most wide
ly-observed events; but there will
be plenty ot lootball games in col
lege and high school cities: polo and
l«:\ hunting at smie ol' the resorts;
golf almost everywhere there are
folk- to swing clubs; .outstanding
musical events here and there; and
as something of a climax the opon
n;; of the hunting season foi ."laaii,
turkey, ruffed grouse and rabbit on
I'ta.nks^iving Day.
Take the November football slate:
On November D there will be Duke
Davidson at Darham: the "C'iiam
pionship of Wake County" orawl
here between Wake F'orot and N.
C. State: and trie University s in
\a.-i ol Virginia to play Richmond
Univvr-ity m the Old Dominion's
capital. That's only tiie "Big Five
Elsewhere there will be college
and school games by the scores.
C >me November ll> and there's the
game in North Carolina—Duke
against trie Tar Heels at Chapel
Hill. D... :dson will entertain Hamp
der-S.dnev. oat Wake and State go
visiting.
Cm the 23rd there's Duke-State
at I?-.leigh. and Carolina-Virginia at
C; . lottesville.
Wake-South Carolina at Charlotte
• • i'fianksgiving Day and Davidson
C • ale! at Wilmington and Duke
I'.: at Durham on November 30 wind
up the grid slate for the month.
St dgefleld. near Greensboro, has
e fox hunts slated for the month
n \ >vember 9- 13. 2t». 23 and 30.
Special golfing events include:
Putting contest for women. Pine
• t. November 9: Nineteenth an
nual Mid-South Pro tourney at
Pi: ehurst. 12th to 15th; 18-hole
K - ker handicap tourney at South
err; Pines on the 16th: 2oth annual
the city, since this game is the first
night football contest of the season.
This game U t » be followed on No
vember 15 by another night game,
*.v:?h Warrenton, which will be the
fftuil appearance of the Bulldogs on
tht home gridiron. The annual Ox
fn:d-Henderson football classic will
be played at Oxford on November
OO
Carolina tourney lor women, nieclal
play, at Pinehurst on the 2Uth;
! fhanksgivmg Day medal play tour
ney at Southern Pines.
Pinehurst ha.; polo games schedul
ed lor the 10th. 17th. 24th. 2(>th and
2Uth.
Hikers in the western sections are
planning: All-day hike to Cold
Mountain on the 10th; another to
Spivey Gap and Unaka Springs on
the 17th: and a third (mystery trip)
on the 24th. These events are spon
sored by the Carolina Mountain
Club of Asheville.
Other miscellaneous events for the
balance of this month include:
7 ~ti—Hoy a I Ice Classics, Raleigh.
8—North Central district of N. C.
K. A. meeting (19 counties) at Dur
ham.
o—Convention of N. C. Associa
tion of Mutual Insurance Agents,
Durham.
14-15—N. C. Independent Tele
phone association at Sedgefield.
15—Moravian Candle Tea at Mo
ravian Church Home, Winston.
20.—Carolina Playmakers present
Paul Green's "The House of Connel
ly" at Asheville.
21-21—Southern Furniture Manu
facturers Association convention at
Sedgefield.
23—Exio Pinza concert at Winston
Salem.
Carolina
Grooms For
Spiders
Chapel Hill. Nov. 6.—Johnny Pe
cora. Dave Barksdale. Joe Austin,
Bill Sigler. Mike Cooke and several
other rookie backfield comers are
being groomed for much service as
North Carolina polishes its strong
running game and air auxiliary for
Saturday's stiff conference test at
Richmond.
Jim (Sweet) Lalanne. who ranks
eighth among the nation's ball car
riers. is resting an injured foot for
a few days on the team ohvsician's
orders, so lie will be sure to be ready
to le;<rt the T;ir Heels' colorful and
versatile attack agian Saturday.
Carolina's scouts, Johnny Morris
and Hank Bartos, rank Richmond as
the "best team in Virginia now" and
think the Spiders are just "as strong
and well-balanced as N. C. State,
which Carolina barely nosed out 13
7. The Virginians' overhead game
and triple-threat offense, built
around Art Jones .arc seen as par
ticularly dangerous, and the Tar
Heel* are laboring to get back in top
'hano and form.
Carolina's gruelling stretch of bat
tles with Fordham. Tulane.. Stat<>
and TC-^T h?.-* caused Coach Ray Wolf
to lighten temporarily the work of
Paul Severin. All-America end;
Harry Dunkle. blocking nee and 1939
national punting leader. Sid Sadoff,
the line-ripper, and other veto an
workhorses.
All of the students are expected to
be in sha»r» and ready again for the
dangroous Spiders, but in the mean
time. the coaches are paying particu
lar attention to the leading rookies
in this week's heavy polishing, and
those who meet the bill may get
plenty of chances Saturday.
True civilization makes for peace, j
I Deacs Have Slight Edge
Over State In Scoring
i
RECORDS TO DATE
Wake Forest
I?!) Win. Jewell 0
112 N. Carolina U
11 u Furman 0
0 Clemson 3!)
31 Marshall 19
0 Duke 23
! 18 (J. Washington 0
: 159 Totals HI
N. C. State
jib' W. & M. 0
134 Davidson 0
7 Clemson 20
7 N- Carolina 13
| ID Miss. State 26
j G Furman 20
180 Totals 85
Raleigh. Nov. C.—Comparative
[football scores don't mean a lot in
'■ determining the relative strength of
|teams especially if they happen to
ibe the two contenders for the Wake
i county championship—North Caro
lina State and Wake Forest, which
j meet here Saturday afternoon at 2
j o'clock.
But one can't get away from the
I fact that tins year's favorite, the
I Demon Deacons from Wake, have
amassed an average of 23 points in
seven games (159) for one of the
best offensive records in the busi
ness. Meanwhile, State has garner
ed but an average of 13 points in
six games (80). Defensively, too,
| Wake lias a better record than State
Duke Starts
Final Drive
For '40 Title
Durham, Nov. 6—Duke's Blue Dev
ils start down the stretch drive of
their campaign for a third straight
Southern conference crown when
they go against Davidson in Duke
I stadium Saturday.
] The Blue Devils, winners ol' the
title outright in 1938 and co-champ
ions with Clemson last season, face
three conference loes in a row start
ing with the Wildcats Saturday. The
following week they meet North
Carolina in one of the nation's foot
ball classics and then face N. C.
j State. The Carolina game vvill be
I played at Chapel Hill, the State
game in Duke stadium as will the li
I nal contest of the year with Pitt.
November 30.
I Duke has even more things at
j stake in these three games. The
Blue Devils have not been beaten
in loop competition since Carolina
last pulled the stunt in 1937. That
is their only loop loss since 1934
when again it was Carolina that beat
them. Duke has won or shared in
conference crowns for four of tlr.
I past five years and will at least gel
a share of this year's spoils if they
.are able to conic through these 1 nee
(uattles.
Davidson has not beaten the Blue
! Devils since 1929 but the Wildcats
] did battle Wallace Wade's first
| team to a scoreless tie in 1931. Since
| then Duke has been superior but the
games have always been terrifically
j fought.
The Wildcats are not whipped
until that final whistle is blown and
they showed that again Saturday
| against Center. Trailing, 0-12 going
j into the final period, the Wildcats
went out there and scored four touch
downs to win 27-12. This is a typi
I cal Davidson finish and Duke's
■ heavily favored Blue Devils will
| have to watch them all the way Sat
Iurday.
j Little Davie Spencer, 140 pounds
J of dynamite, paces the Wildcats this
season and he has been performing
brilliantly in every game. He was
the spark that set off that four
touchdown burst against Center and
his passes likley will be the Wild- ,
cats' main weapon against Duke.
Greensboro Meets
Salisbury Friday
Chapel Hill. Nov. C.—The West's
'"lass A football representative in
the state finals at Chapel Hill may be
decided this week when Greensboro
inrl Salisbury, both undefeated, elnsh
:n the Rowan stronghold Friday aft
ernoon.
Salisbury will be concluding its
•i-nferenco rrhedule 'his week and a I
••irlory wnild ftive the Rowan boys
undisputed nos^^'ion of th» West
ern championship. On the other
"nd. r> Grnmsboro triumph would
assure the Gate City boys of at least
■l lie for the t:fl" regardless of the
•uitrome of the lin;il game with High
Point.
"Tories in both of these contests >
"ild give Greensboro the title.
T<"o of)-ior Cln^s A »*n«T»ps rr°!
"I'erii'led this week. Wilson and
"1""' **t W'lmi«»t'm F<*i_
'• V rnd Gn toni;i invrirlns High Point
pn mpngement with the Furni
ture City team on the spme cftcr
■>oon.
FINAI RITFS TODAY
FOR MRS. WINBORNE
(]—' Ap\—Mrs. .T. |
vifp r>f A^STiatel
'.I Wi'ibnvpe. of tv<r» North Cnro
CnnrxiTin ordii't died nl •> hos
here Monday. She was 52 years
old
Mrs. Winborne suffered a stroke
of apoplexy.
Funeral service will be held at 2|
o'clock Wednesdnv afternoon in |
Marion. Burial will be in the Oak I
Grove cemetery there.
giving up only 12 points per g;inie
, (total til), while Statu has given
up 14 per game (85).
Two of the teams that Wake lick- j
■ed—North Carolina (12-0) and Fur- j
man (19-n) licked State Carolina I
1(13-7) and Furman (20-6). A third i
team the two clubs have both laced, j
; the mighty Clemson Tigers, tupped |
State (2(i*7) and Wake Forest (30- i
0).
This would indicate that Wake j
Forest is .01 points better than State i
from the standpoint of the Carolina
jand Furman games but in figuring J
| in the Clemson game this margin is j
'cut to 20 points.
The one bright spot from this j
! comparison is that Stale was able to j
rscore on Clemson, a feat that Wake
Forest was unable to accomplish. In
fact, State has scored on every op- :
ponent this season, and now the big |
question is:
j Will the Country Boy Wolfpack be |
able to score on Wake?
) Drilling behind closed doors this ■
week, Coach Williams (Doc) New- j
ton hopes to cook up enough magic j
to cross the Deacon goal line in some i
| form or fashion in order to keep t
, up a scoring string that is unequal- t
I led in 23 years of State College foot
Iball. II State is able to break into ,
the points scored column this week
and next against The Citadel in
! Charleston, S. C., the record of scor
ing in eight consecutive games set
by the 1917 team will be tied.
I Tar Babies
Meet Virginia
Chapel Hill, Nov. 6.—The Univer
sity of North Carolina Freshmen,
I who dropped their last contest but
played some of their best ball of the
j year in holding the powerful and
(favored Wake Forest yearlings to 19
! 13. meet the little Cavaliers trom
I Virginia here Friday at 2:3U in their
last home game.
Ijo Tar Babies' finale will be
! the annual Carolina-Duke Freshman
| classic, which is scheduled this year
•for Charlotte on Friday. November
15.
j The rejuvenated yearling attack
j features the passing of Leo LaRIanc,
broken field running of Hugh Cox,
plunging of John Sadlik, blocking of
[Emil Serdieh, and pass receiving of
Jack Emack and Jack Hir-'sey.
iFathers of State
Team Are Honored
Raleigh, Nov. 6.6—Dads of Nor'h
Carolina State College's varstiy foot
ball players will be honored Satin
day in a Fathers Day program spon
sored by the Monogram club, headed
. by Tom Rowland of Charlotte.
The entertainment will begin with !
'the State-Wake Forest game in the j
afternoon and end with a dance in
Frank Thompson gymnasium from 9
o'clock to midnight. Wake Forest |
players and their fathers also will
be guests of the Monogram Club at
the dance, for which Dan Gregory's
orchestra will play. Former Wolf
pack players are especially invited !
to visit Iho campus and attend the |
dance, which will be informal. The I
gymnasium will be decorated in red I
and white festooning, carrying out I
a motif in the college colors. !
Fathers of the Slate players will
report to the gymnasium between 1
and 2 o'clock Satuiday afternoon.
They will receive numbers corre
sponding to the numbers on Iheir
sons' perseys, and will enter Riddick
stadium, thruogh the players' en
trance. The fathers will be given
sideline seats, with their -numbers
arranged on the backs of the chairs.
Refreshments will be served to them
during the game.
After the game, a dinner for all
the players and their fathers will be
staged in the College Y. M. C. A.
dining room.
Hofmanri Hunters' !
Total Ba;f Is 48:
I
Jacksonville. Nov. G.—(A^)—Hun-,
ters bagged 48 deer in the three day,
supervised hunt which clo>;cd at Hof
msnn forest Saturday, Supervisor G.
E. Jackson reported today. There
were 170 hunters.
The kill brought to 160 the total
deer slain in the three supervised
hunts, over a span of 11 days. Last
year 165 deer were killed in 27 hunt
ing days.
The next hunt will be held No
vember 28 to 30.
An estimated yield of 670,000
holes of cotton for North Carolim in
dicates an adequate supply of cot
tonseed meal at reasonable prices for
feeding cattle this winter, rays T. II.
Hostetler of State College.
A scene from "Sky Murder," with I
Walter Pidgeon and Karen Verne,
playing at the Stevenson Thursday |
only- ^ MmmM
Wake Forest. W.\ ti.—Tiii> •;ri.i
iron tussel between N. ('. State and
Wake Forest s Deacon. . ehedtiled lor
Raleigh Saturday alk ruiiuri will i>e
something more than just an ordi
nary football game.
The football seric.; between Stale,
jnd Wake is one of long standing,
(t dates back ti» I'.inT. and although
N. C. State holds a wide margin of
victories, tile battle- of rcvuit year.
have been nothing but ding-dong al
fairs with one or tin- otln . shooting
lor "home runs", rather than wail
ing lor breaks. They try to make
the breaks, and that is just one of
Ihe reasons this meeting is looked
forward to each year.
Back in l'Ju2 and 11)33, the Deacons
and State's Wollpaek played two
scoreless ties, but since then there
has been plenty to talk about.
Wake fans like to recall Wall m
Kitchin's passing exploits of the '34
tiff, won by the Dears 13-12. Kitchin
tossed a pass to end Uei t Shore for
his team's last touchdown seconds
before the final gun and Tex Edens
placekicked the winning point.
Apparently revengeful for thai
heartbreaking los. Cowboy Robin
son and Eddie Berlinski turned on
the heat in the *35 meeting for the
Wollpaek and won 21 -(j. The Cow
boy ran 45 yard for one score an!
Berlinski cashed in a long trek for
another.
But it was Ihe Deacs' turn in '36
and again it was Kitchin. then a
.enior, vim provided tne winning
luiiciidov.il. 11. tru.-iy i igiil arm
paid uli willi a tnu<.'lid>>\\ii .«nd lie
booted a field goal I• »r the clinching
points ill tin- !)-n triiiiiipii.
l lien came lw»> convincing vic
tories lor State-, hi :<T it IJ^riin
ski again with the assistance ot Art
ilooney who did the damage .is the
Techs won UO-l). but Hootiev ga\L*
the greatc. l perfoi mance oi his en
tire career when lie engineered his
club to a 111-7 win m !!>:>!!.
Wake Forest to..k over last year
and with Tony Gallo\;eh. Jolting
John I'olanski and lied Mayberry
carrying the mail, grounded .iiit a
o2-n \ ictory in one of the biggest
surprises of the year.
1 Now Ilooney is gone. but in lh>
place is a lairhaireu sou by (he name
of Dick Watts, along with 1 'at Fen
! ley. Jack Huckabee. Doug Dickersoti,
Jim Barber, and other scintillating
backfield performers. And here at
Wake Forest lialiovicii. I'olanski.
Mayberry are back, plus J. I'ruitt,
Captain Jim Ilinggold. Fred Welch,
Marshall Kdwards and olliers.
i To members of the two .quads,
Saturday's game i the "champion
ship game". To the coaches, it's
mighty important and you can wager
Saturday's la uidrv money that C >acii
Doc Newton and I'eahcad Walk.v
will give their quarterbacks the full
'speed ahead signals with orders to
'shoot the works and hold nothing
back.
Do You V/ani To Fly?
#
By LOGAN CLENDEXING, M. D.
r I "'HE medical examination of
any candidate for the United
States Army is severe—for of
ficers more severe than for pri
vates. And the mo. I severe of all
is for military pilots of airplanes.
Besides the ordinary examinations
the pilot lias to pass certain spe
cial tests. The eyes and ears are
given most careful scrutiny—the
ability of the ears to keep clear
in changing atmospheres, and the
Dr. Clendtning will answer
questions of general interest
only, and then only through
his column.
function of the ears t'> maintain
equilibrium are apparently indi
vidual traits and they must be
tested.
The special stresses for the nil
itary pilot, according to Fortune
Magazine, are (1) air neurosis,
whit'h is a breakdown of coordina
tion, caused by flying in danger
ous and exciting circumstances;
(2) lack of oxygen at high alti
tudes, and; ('■>) the "blackout,"
sudden blindness caused by effect
of centrifugal force on the blood
stream during the turn out from
a high dive.
Oxygen Vests
Oxygen lack in high altitudes
causes an attack on the judgment
of the pilot. It can be imitated ex
perimentally and it is remarkable
to see candidates tested under con
ditions of low oxygen pressure.
They are asked questions to which
they either reply in writing or by
the spoken voice, and they are
given tests with instruments.
When the oxygen pressure gets
low they think they are replying
perfectly sensibly, but what they
say makes no sense.
Oxygen starvation in high alti
tudes has been studied for many
years. In high altitudes, the pres
sure of the oxygen falls, although
the percentage of oxygen is the
same. The force for "pushing the
oxygen into the blood" decreases.
If it were a simple matter of
rarefied atmosphere we could
make up for it by taking more
breaths, but the pressure must be
increased also. The problem is,
rof course, solved by the use of
oxygen masks—more or less per
fectly. The masks and apparatus
are constantly being improved.
Blackout Bugaboo
The blackout is by no means so
easily controlled, although Com
mander John R. Pafi'en, of the
Navy, is confident that he and his
associates are on the track of a
imiivnni
itiriAK boots
].... BUiLT TO TAKE IT I
Made to meet the most
exacting requirements of
men who want to cover
rough ground in comfort
and who demand quality in
leather and workmanship.
. All sizes!
k
Try on a pair . . .
They're Bargains
at this price!
KINNEY/
solution. Both the Briti.'h nr.d
the Germans have used a pneu
matie belt for pilots. Uy contract
ing the belt during dives, it tends
to forestall the acciimulation of
bloo-l in the lower parts of the
body, and keeps the blood supply
to the brain more nearly normal.
A crouching position during the
dive also help;* to maintain cir
culation in the brain by pressing
the brain nearer the heart. The
pilots are not allowed to eat beans
or other food which causes gas. If
the blackout prubl m is solved, it
will be as important as the dis
covery of tiie bomb sight. The
sfr» ngtli of American planes al
lows them to div. at great speeds.
No examination, or psychomct
rie test, has yd been devised,
whi?h is able to distinguish
whither a pilot *s nerves will
stand tlic galf of air lighting or
not.
QUESTION'S AND AN'SWTKS
J. \V. S.: — "From the stand
point of X ;' lire's ileal hi!!" power,
which is the lictti r t ason for a
ma.'nr operation spring or l'ali?"
Answer I do not be e v« any
study has been made of this, but
from general observation I should
say no difference. Nature's bene
ficence in healing is continuous
and evenly distributed.
D. II. J.:—"Which is more heal
ing as a douche in the nose, boric
acid or salt solution?"
Answer—Both dissolve mucus
and are cleansing, but boric acid is
more so and also has an antiseptic
action.
Mrs. K.:—"Does colitis mean a
break in the membrane?"
Answer—Not necessarily. Most
capes of colitis belong to the class
of inflammations known as pro
ductive, in which the thickness of
the mucus membrane is in
creased. There are cases of ul
cerative colitis where the mem
brane is broken, however.
J. W. H., Lincoln. Ncbr.—"Is
there any way to build up the se
cretion of hydrochloric acid in the
stomach?"
Answer—No way to stimulate
the glands to secretion. The hy
drochloric acid can be replaced by
taking hydrochloric acid by mouth.
EDITOR'S NOTE: Dr. OndeniiiK has
seven pamphlets which c:»n !>•• obtained by
readers. Ka**h pamphlet -»#•!! for 10 cents.
For any one pamphlet. »' • .:* «l. semi 10
cents in coin. an«l a self-niM'c «• I envelops
Mtarnpcl with a Ihrei-oi'nt tlan-p, to Dr.
('U*n«ienintf, in ••an* of I>ii paper.
The pamphlets re: "Thre** W"«! * Uwli.r
in« Diet". "Indigestion and fop ipai!• n".
"Kedueincr anil (•uiniiiK**, ' Infant Feed
ing", "Instructions f«»r t};• T 'v.'rrc.T.l cf
Diabetes", "Feminine If:.. »• • V cf.rf "T1-'
Care of the Hair ano ii'-.