Green Wave Travels To Ahoskie For Big Game Tomorrow at 8 Indians Must Win To Remain Champions Williamston Has f Won Jnsi Once In } Period Oi Years —«— Reduced Squad Practicing 1 Big Gunie On ’ * The Indians' Field & The1 football teem and band of /ilLjamston High School are sche duled to travel to Ahoskie tomor Jrow’night where the team will en gage the Ahoskie^ Indians in a St more than passing im poftanee and the band will be the •guests of the Ahoskie band and put on a show at the half-time. The gijme will be an important one fof^hjoth Williamston and the Indiant^eeause it offers the In dians a chance to clinch a tie for COMING UP J Williamston at Ahoskie. Plymouth at Robersonville. Jamesville at Vanceboro. Manteo at Columbia Edenton at Golasboro Hertford at Pamlico Central. the championship of the Albe marle Conference and the Green Wave could use a victory to bols ter a poor conference record. The Indians, on paper and by the book, are favored by at least three touchdowns although spirit and ; determination could make the i Green Wave tough and a victory j for them, as many so-called ex perts have come to understand, is not an impossibility. Had the Green Wave not lost so many by injuries they could be counted as close to Ahoskie and last week’s game with Scotland Neck indi cated that there is power left in the Williamston squad. Most of the teams who have faced Ahoskie, report they were able to run through the Indian line. The Ahoskie boys will be up for this one and their play may be more dogged. The Williamston line has almost a season of ex perience behind it now and should be improving. Two youngsters of proven ability who have come up fast are Larry Chesson and Gerald Griffin. George Harris now has a toll game of ball carrying experi ence behind him and is a hard runner. Dickie Clayton, Harris, Ralph Parker, Foggy Gurkin and Don Christopher appear ready to carry the burden of the attack and Jacob Zemon and James Perry ace likely to continue operating at the Quarterback slot where Zemon has been known to make some nice runs on fakes and he and Perry have both shown passing ability. Coach Roger Thrift and assist ants, Fred, Sherman and Lynn Parker are working to get their *00 moor hour* , SOUTHLRN COMFORT CORP ST. LOUIS 3, MISSOURI WAREHOUSE r Now Open nr Williamston To Receive k*?j‘ M: • < Governme M Wo 4ave Govemmeni Grader ■■d All Other Personae] Ti Give Yon Prompi Service. CAROLINA WAREHOUSE WILLIAMSTON < Jamesville Terror Eleven Wins Over South Edgecombe —•—. Travel To Vaneeboro For Game This Friday Oil Vanreboro Field By Clayton Overton The Red Terrors of Jamesville finally had their chance to prove what they have last Monday eve ing and defeated the South Edge combe eleven at Jamesville, 19-0. The Terrors should have racked up at least 40 points. Penalties proved costly, they amounting to about 85 yards. The Terrors received the kick off and had high hopes of starting a downfield campaign but the small* South Edgecombe players were hitting hard and held the Terrors ground attack in check. Taking to the air, Ronnie Modlin scored first for the Terrors with a ten-yard pass, but the extra point was not made good. In the second quarter the visit ors were unable to stop the Ter ror air-ground attack as they had earlier and the Terrors marched on every play. Penalties continu ed to upset the attack and equalize the strength of the teams. Late in the second quarter, “'Red” Hardi son, on a quarterback sneak, ran five yards for the second score of the game. William Hardison made the extra point good to put the Terrors out front 13 to 0. In the third quarter Garland Hardison ran six yards for an other touchdown. As the game wore on, the Terrors tired and began to look sloppy while the Edgecombe players, beaten, con tinued to fight on even though they were unable to score. Defensive leaders for Jamesville were Ronnie Modlin, Red Hardi son, and Williarh Hardison. * This was Jamesville’s seventh game of the season with two wins, one tie, and four losses. This game ended the South Edgecombe season with six losses. Jamesville plays Vanceboro this coming Friday at Vanceboro. The Vanceboro team defeated Rober sonville this season and will be a 12-point favorite over the Terrors. team in top shape for the trip tu, Ahoskie. No starting lineup will be available until game time but it apears certain that Griffin and Tnmy Harris will start at the end positions, Jimmie Carraway and Jack Rawls at tackles, Ward Per ry und Larry Chesson at guard, David Davis at center, Zemon or Perry at quarterback, Christopher and Clayton fat halfback with G. Harris at fullback. Ralph Parker and Foggy Gurkin are good bets to get into the action early. In Dickie Newsome, Ahoskie has one of the best quarterbacks in many years. He not only is a slick ball handler but a powerful runner who can also pass. He is the sparkplug of the Indian attack and defense. Other backfield run ners of experience with Ahoskie include A1 Pierce, Bill Dunn and Tommy Mitchell. Pierce and Newsome are the heaviest runners in the Ahoskie attack. Most of the pass plays are to ends Odom or Leary although 'some are to backfield men. Williamston has won over Ahos kie only once in recent years al though all games have been close except for last year’s contest when the Indians ran roughshod over a Green Wave team that had gone to pieces both from injuries and mental attitude. — There are 40,000 kinds of fish known to science. Skeptical of Reds IBCKVTAIY M ST ATI John Foater Dulles, leaving the White House after a conference with President Eisenhower, tells newsmen that the Communist attitude toward the Korean parley caused him to fear that the Reds are unwilling to dismiss world pesos. His state mentfollowed a meeting also at Ch arias E. Wilson. (International) One Never Too Old To Learn Dr. Edward J. Stieglitz says j there is nothing to the old saying | | that, "You can’t teach an old dog i new tricks." In a recent medical meeting in Washington. Dr. Stie glitz flatly challenged this as sumption, and offered a complete ly different viewpoint. Dr. Stieglitz •fcelives an indi vidual's ability to learn is as good at the ripe old age of eighty as it is at the young age of twelve. Of course, learning varies with the individual, but, on the average, older men and women are able to learn new things as accurately, and dften as rapidly, as youngs ters. When older persons take longer to remember things, as they some times do, Dr. Stieglitz says they probably learn them and retain them more accurately than the young whizz-bang. Th*> doctor says that many older people con clude that their learning ability has suffered when they fail to remember new faces and tele phone numbers, as Ihey once did However, the probable cause is that the older people are not as impressed, or not as interested, as they once were in learning new faces and new numbers. Often th£re is nothing wrong at all in such cases, and the worry is -use less. This is encouraging news to most of the country’s population, wh|jfh is at an age level referred to by many as the time in life when learning becomes more dif ficult. Some are inclined to be lic^e that the problem with old dogs is not one of an incapacity to learn new tricks, but perhaps a tendency to learn new tricks. All Blind Principals In Unusual Adaption Case -- Newark, N. J.—1Three persons, promiently interested in the adop tion of an 11-year-old-girl were blind. When Louis Wallace Giant, blind World War II, veteran, up peared in court to adopt Letitia Bantum, the 11 -year-old daugh ter of his blind wife, he was pre sented by a Mind attorney. Tulsa, Okla.—1'uffy, a pet bull i-M _'— Rich Cat Will Not Suffer When It Crows Too Old —<*>— Farmer City, III.—Mrs. Lena Maude Rankin, 70-year-old wi dow, who was found dead in her home on August 31, stipulated in her will that $2,000 of her $190, 000 estate go to her pet cat. What r INSISTS HE'S AN ARTIST AT CRIME ALVIN KIIOLIK, former Marine, demonstrates in a Chicago police sta tion how he used a paint brush to disguise his features and those of an __ alleged accomplice, F.ugone Cosco (left), during his life of ci inie Krolik, who said he was an artist wiisoe paintings brought from $oi) tc $150, gave himself up to the ofTlcinls and calmly announced he had been involved in ten Chicago holdups. lie said further that he was a writer and had typed an autobiographical account of his crimes. In center, an officer watches his “art" technique. f” >" «•* ti; > thirvice. Ct r:'.c r. ever is left over when the cut dies is to be divided equally between the American Cancer Society and the Illinois Heart Association. Mrs. Rankin had no near relatives. r ~----- : ... Garden Time In Eastern Carolina Besides the usual spring flower ing bulbs there are a number of spring flowers that are best plant ed in late fall- particularly in Eastern North Carolina. 1 have in mind such flowers as pansies, sweet peas, annual phlox, annual latkstipr and conflower or ragged robin 1 have always had very good luck with fall-planted pansises. Usually they bloom ear lier and make much stronger plants. Good plants may be ob- , tamed from any of the plant nurs- | eries or seed stores. Success will fall planted sweet peas vv^ll de pend on the severity of the wint ' er. Thev will come through a mild 1 or normal winter without much j damage especially if they are I given some protection. However, a very severe winter or a mild winter with heavy freezes in i-«pung is aid to cause severe dam 1 age or even kill them out. •Fancy leaved caladiums are | very tendersand must be taken in before freezing weather. If they are growing in a bed the bulbs should be taken up and stored in dry peat until time to plant them in spring. Hybrid amaryllis should also be d placed where ihey will not free?*? and allowed to dry up until ready tor bloom -About six weeks be fore bloom is desired the bulbs can be repotted and watered and started in growth again. It is best to plant, shallow—at least one third of the bulb showing above the soil level in the pot. Poinsettias growing in pots out of doors should be brought in at once. They are very sensitive to cool temperatures. They should not be placed in the living room where lights are kept on late in the evening but should be plac ed in some room where they will get 12 hours or less of light per day and where the temperature is constant about 70 to 72 degrees. The poinsettia is a short day plant and will not bloom if exposed to longer periods of light then twelve hours per day. --- His Real Name B «s Never Fail And He Never Had , ^ Norman, Okla.—Officials of the University of Oklahoma suspect ed aprank when they found among the freshmen one named 9 Bullet* Stuck In Gun touring Target Practice Chula Vista, Cal—Leon Mtr lison, 37, was out target practic ing with his 38-caliber revolve/ when he realized that the bulletin were not hitting the target. He didn’t know what the trouble was until the pearl handle of the re \olver broke off in his hand and he saw that the bullets were jam ming. Taking it to police for ex amination, thfy found nine bul lets stuck in the barrel of the gun. Never Fail A check, however, proved he was a real live fresh man, who had never failed in high school. The youth is the son of Mrs Frances Fail, Oklahoma City, and Never M. 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