I loiH, SUltlS rAlilS UI The VVayiiesviiie rtlOUiliaiiic7 Monday Atteriioun, September 12, 1949 1 Mountaineers In Second Week Of Drills For m MM M 4,000 See Bears Win, 34-19, With Potent Running, Passing Assault A biianl ill' Iniii In!ii .i!-. opened the 19-1!) Iiii.ili.il! -ia,ni in Hay wood .innl m.I...- 1. 1. hi as a highly inn :.i-. .1 i'- i.:.ii He-di Waynesville High School Football Players Prepare For Fall Campaign r, ' ' V. . I $ ' fc. ... rl.' - School 1 I- eii .1 in. r S.mtl Hill. 34-1!) Four limn and i Canton Hi: ii I crisp. i'U ii' ' Mr Black lir r i i ami I!, ,!!'. ''r. coach. Hi.: i !'i comiir1 mi Kulibait .1 . !-'i Una rum'!!! - thai !.' '" 1 1 ' ' ' llv I.:i!l sal- fl t !' ' .' ' K ". ' t! . !::' ., , : , till l h.'.r- ,r . ,. li all TO :! (i ' i ! ' i.ii'i'Vi'il lilt s' I'! 1 1' 111 ill : :k- rc'ul i' IP .1. -'iiiad'' "i i.s. a bril i on w ith ar I! lh' Mr I rm: - .vi fit'y d ip V.r.r . a' i..: I', fur C i III, . .V .' th. .1.1 .,. U ill - i . l I'.'! llini anil Ion'; ' '. (' p;i--i ns ! ! ut l ' i n! sorirrj. r ;, ',-.1 i i"li'. of the IP , ! M ',,!'! hem eoiir' 'ii'-t ) !.-;ii'hil'vn. "" .'' . n :Tt-,-' i i-ly or !,,... k l'."..i '- sirulo - - ' no line- of the t inicl ui. r vi'h In- -liai'p thrusts His ;,'(- ;,r, ii,,-h v.-t mi Canton's second ti'iii '',!, ui f n liiel) came sliurt h after th,- m i unil period oik m il and out the Mark lieai' ahead tn -la.' . rul! :;: k toll, hi!,,-.. Ii- Devlin'. -!:u Ma. k It, ;,-' Mm ii - i Sll.t' , (I I he , lil'llkell Ii, Id aeri.d I'.'.iiie tlw The fame Ii t h Sam Co man's line i h- vciired tu n C;:nton aid H.dfieiik flenc '- rnipided mil the it iiiinini1, fame uierd have il h Itln iner' :. nee . if hi e. :i -o eflec ;i t I lir I ti illl lllloU 1' ,11.11') s oil.! Han Ta-. Im .IT to lihvro- Sat.d Hill Haiti .'irk kn k sent the opt i.iik er After Rhymer raced it hack 1.5 yard--, the Bl o k Be o- marched 6?, jaril- for Jlie s ore. ' Rh-Ri.T'rni, I off I o kle for nine ards, then Deslin took a hand off and raced an, mid end for nine more and a fit-1 doun after the Black Bear- had been a I bark on an of id, peii.iliv. Coman hulled llnoiirh the mid dle f.n another fir-1 down then Moore wlii) had i pl.iied llhymer sailed around end en a lia yard splint. He nuilv r'nt a.',.,v before he nailed I nan hi hind on the Sand 1 1 ! 1 i no..- - ,i d ti ,pe. Tin n Conian h iiuh d to Devlin or a i, -v. i , tl.:,t nut the Rear:; two yai d 1 una Hi- in fn I Rh'. tiiei' ii.iiiii ,! ,,:) dm n ri fit end and ( a, over to p.-y rliit Kh-.rr.er' ,!.-eeirer Sand Hni ram i capitali.in" on an n l-niehilov. n. around hi-' :iar. lammed tie w.t- low mi ins back. ! break, pped another Afler a fninhi, Canton threat ,,n I'le Sand Hill 30, Center Carl Civaoi v recovered a Sand Hill punt on th(. Canton 20 after it had been touched by a Canton man The Black Bears tossed the Sand Hill back for a 10-. u'd loss, but then Taylor took a handoff and Don't Neglect Them I Nature designed the kidneys to do t marvelous ib. Their task is to keep the flowing blood stream free of an excfi of toxic impurities. The act of living lift iteelf is constantly producing waste matter the kidneys must remove from the htood if good heath is to endure. Wh-n the kidnr-yi fail to function as Nature intend), hre is retention of wate that may cause body-wide dis tress. One may suffer nagging backache, persistent headache, attacks of dizziness, getting up nignts, spelling, purtine umier the eyes feel tired, nervous, ill worn out. Frequent- scanty or burning passages are sometir.KC further evidence of kid ney or bladder disturbance. The rco.nized and prope." treatment is a dturettc medicine to help the kidneya get rid of exe's po:ucv- body waste. Lae Own' I'dU. They have nan more than forty years of public approval. Are endorsed the country over. Insist on tV . Sold at all drug stores. TLS i. I aVJBifl SMM ANT fOKO PWJUMg tO M Hi! SAHTY CHiCK Va nesville High School's ijiid ders work out the summer kinks during early drills for the fall campaign. -1' a back tries a dry slipped through for Hi yards. Car roll Brown lit around end for seven more. and. afler being slopped for no gain at the line. Taylor made il i first down on Ihe Canton I hive. Kisselburg slammed over for the inj', touchdown, and then pul s'aritl Hill ahead. 7-li, when he ran Hound end for the extra point ibout two minute , hi lore the hi I vriod elided. But while the Sand Hill .cheers veie still echoing through the night. Ithviner twisted through aekle and twisted 53 yard- before he was nailed lioio behind on Ihe Sand Hill 16 . Aftm' iin offsides penally put the Bears on the 1), C'ouian handed the ball to Devlin who went all the j way on a reverse. Rhymer scored the extra point on an end run. and the Bears were ahead to sla . Less than three minutes later. the Bears scored again on a quick 62-yard, drive. Coman, Devlin, and Rhymer rip ped the Sand Hill line consistently for steady gains, with the aid of Moore's second pass of the evening. I Devlin .slipped through If, Yards i to the Sand Hill Rh: rner made ! even around end. and a Coman- to-Devhn revei", put the Bears on j the one. Coman slammed over for ; the third touchdown four minute;; before lntermis-ion. I Sand Hill came back in th,- ball ! game, driving Co yards for a touch-1 . uu.ui in,' ill , .ifaiin, iiiui ii.ii.n- down behind the miming ol l ayl-.r . ( and Charlie McCullougl.. ;" j,',;.,,,,,., .,...,, otT with a 10- Tay or ripped of I Ti yards around ',, . Moor( went ,3. end then took a vard pass from ' H)VK.,. s(,pl),.d ofT 40 yards in Taylor on the Canton one-yard (h.(.e s,raiK,( tal.ries lhe Moo,.e ''!e' ,. , 'swept 18 vard.i for the touchdown. K.sselburg slammed over but the Hl,vmer s perfect placement end try for the Point failed lvtng 110 s,.lM jn2 Sand I trailing. 20-13. , Af 1( ,. , pam(, Coach Hipps Sand Hill came back again hut , . , . . ? , espressed (Ulet pleasure over his was stopped on the Canton 30 when i , u . i ci p i i t; iioviinii hnv opening performance, but 1 ."V-V Jv''u'i&3 IlliJVLlllI '2.- ' i 'I I"' ' tajBeaw advanced to the Sand vf-Beaw'a'dvsitlc'ea to 'the Sand no I .f.. i, , . .. mn -J ueiore iniernussion cauglit ssion therh; Moore passed to Hardin for 18' yards, then raced 20 more through tackle for the last play of the'first half. The Black Bears found the go ing rougher after the third period j opened, but after Mopping a Sand Hill scoring threat they ground 75 ; yards for another touchdown sparkled by Moore's beautiful aeri al exhibition. After Rhymer gained eight in two tries, Moore wer.t in and whip- ATIILETKS 1'OOT GERM AMAZING RESULTS IN ONE HOIK RV neinp TI -III fiTmivr nt.. in fungicide, yu ran reach imbed - ti"?i'l.u...,:.,il. 'i'?1,!!- hold INSTANTLY. NOW, you mimt be pleased or your 35c back from any drugrtiL Today at BMITH'i Drugstore. Un for F&'$ Car-Saffoty Contest run on a reverse. ( 2 The fresh men run through a play during the workout. (3) Head Coach Carleton Weatherby demons- ped four perfect passes to Devlin, Phillips, and Hardin to help the Hears cover the remaining 67 yards In the end zone. He connected with a fifth early in Ihe drive but it was nullified by an ol,-ide penalty. A Mo.u v to-Hardin pass covered (he reniaiiiin;: 19 yards to pay dirt, and Khyniir went in to boot a pel feel placement. Earlier in the period, Rhymer had t hin t through the line, weav : ed Ihiough a covey of ladders, and then sprinted a.vay on a beautiful 67-yard dash to the f-nd zone. But a holding penalty against Canton on the play cancelled it. Sand Hill s final score came eai )v in tho foul.tn when Kisselburg, the big, fast fullback, snatched one of the only two Moore passes that went astray, picked up his inter feience. and went 70 yards for the score on a twisting run behind pelted blocking. The battling Sand Hill gridders, operating behind their dangerous T foi ination. made another threat I Kilt 1 v afler the kickoff driving ,,., Ih,.u. ovvn 27 to Canton's 34. Bu u .Uiali.s' long, desperate v , . ,intrhp(1 hv Moore on ,,,,, (...,lton lf). alul Moore brought i( bnr. vjrds fo set UD the Hlj(.k B,:ir... final touchdown drive, Flom Uh, ,he Rlafk Bpar, , r ... ,,, :,,),, nr, i,,f, ,.,,,,,;;, beautifully, sailed ,, ,,. , ., , f . ..ri.i ii ,. "We've lols of work to do .. ... c. ... .. mi oeieic-e. In reference to the linemen, he complimented Guards Roy Ingle and Joe Brookshire for their ex cellent performances, and describ ed Tackle Don Sides as having been particularly fine on defense. Asked about the game, he grin ned; "It's always good to get by your opener." For little, 140-pound Sophomore Back .Jimmy Abbott the game was a highly successful introduction to scholastic football. The first time he carried the ball in a high school game, he took a Sand Hill punt and swivel-hipped his way 21 yards. He was pulled : down only after he'd gotten the hall I to Canton's 43, well out of the danger zone. I' The second time he handled the ball, he ripped the line for a 20- AMD tNIKT BLANK 0f i?C trates the proper technique for eliminating a defensive lineman. Quarterback Charlie Womack is the victim. (4) A backfield can Canton 34, Sand Hill 6. Asheville 38, Hendersonville 0. Mar-hall 13, Walnut 0. Hayesville 0, Sylva 0. Greensboro 19, Raleigh 0. Gray i Winston - Salem) 14, Reynolds (Winston-Salem) 12. Children's Horno-tW-S) 38, Hard ing 7. Lenoir 3f, Charlotte Tech 6. Belmont 14, Gastonia 6. Mooresville 13, Newton-Conover 0. Robbinsville 14, Hot Springs 6. Marion 21, Olympia 7. Hillsboro 13, Dunn 6. Wilmington 34, North Wilkes boro 0. Durham 35, Durham County 6. yard gain. The opener proved that Canton are hard to stop once they shake loose. They'll get a sterner test next Friday night when they meet Coach Hipps' former colleagues. Forest City High, at- Forest City. Hipps coached the Forest City eleven last season. Among Ihe most interested ob servers al the stadium Friday night was Head Coach Carleton Weather by. whose Waynesville Mountain eers have two engagements with Hipps' boys this season. Weatherby, who is characteristic ally economical with expressions of admiration, observed: "They're much belter than they were last year." CANTON (34) F.nds Scruggs, Medlin, Hardin, Slumps, Chapman. Tackles Pies:;, I.ooper, Mann, Day ton, Styles, Hall, Cabe. Guards Brookshire, Ingle, Sut ton. Henson. Centers Amos. Beaver. Clark. Quarterbacks Carter, Poindexter. Left Halfbacks Rhymer, Moore. Right Halfbacks Devlin, Abbott Ducket t. Fullbacks Coman, Poindexter SAND HILL (19) Ends Reece, Chambers. Allison. Tackles Lence, Rector, McKinncy. Guards Dillingham, Conner, Case F.lliott. Centers Gregory, Williams. Quarterbacks Williams, McCul lough. Left Halfbacks Taylor, Ray. -Right Halfback Brown. Fullbacks Kisselburg, Ray. Score by Periods Canton 6 14 7 734 Sand Hill ... 7 6 0 619 Canton scoring: Touchdowns Coman (one-yard buck), Devlin (11 yards, handnff from Devlin), Coman (one-yard plunge), Hardin (pass from Moore, 19-yeard play), Moore (15-yard run). Points after TD: Rhymer 4 (three placement, one run). Sand Hill scoring: Touchdowns Kisselburg (3-yard buck), Kisselburg (2-yard run), Kisselburg (70-yard run with inter cepted pass). Points after TD: Brown (run). Referee Arbogast (W & L), Umpire Lewis (UNO, Head Linesman Griffin, Georgetown. Game Captains Taylor, Sand Hill; Amos, Canton. Kickoff: 8 p.m. didate geis ready to flip a pass to a friend. It was good. (5 Fullback James Deweese ilefti practices place-kicking points after touch Sylva Tackle Declared Ineligible Sylva's right tackle, Zollie Fin cannon, has been ruled ineligible by tlie Smoky Mountains Confer ence to play in any more confer ence football games. The loop's executive committee made the decision last Thursday in a meeting at Bryson Cily after a former Sylva coach testified that Fincannon had played in 1945 against Hayesville. Under the circumstances, the tackle's eligibility ended after last season. In reply to a question. Coach Carletoti Weatherby of Waynes ville High said he did not believe Fincannon would face his boys next Friday night in the Moun taineer's opener with Sylva at Sylva, though it will be a non conference game. Though the two teams are in different circuits, Weatherby point ed out, both conferences operate under the same rules. The Smoky Mountains officials' ruling came on the eve of Sylva's opener with Hayesville at Hayes ville. The game ended in a score opener with Hayesville at Hayes less tie. The executive committee gave ? clean bill of health to all other Sylva players who came up for eligibility review. Here's What WTHS Foes Did Last Weekend The Waynesville Mountaineers' 1949 opponents won two, lost one and tied one in the week-end's opening football games. Canton celebrated the coming of Don Hipps as the Black Rears' coach by handing Sand Hill a 34-19 lacing at Canton Stadium. Marion, the Mountaineers' Taper Rowl opponent last year, whipped Olympia of Columbia, 21-7, at Marion. Hendersonville. however, was smothered. 38-0, by Asheville High, and Sylva's Golden Hurricane bat tled Hayesville to a scoreless tie. Dan McCall's running was the individual highlight in Marion's victory. He set up the first touch down with a 40-yard punt return, put Marion into scoring position for the second with a pass to the five, and set up the third with another 40-yard punt return. Hayesville and Sylva, the Moun taineers' first opponent of the sea son, slugged it out at midfield most of the way. End Harold Parris. Guard Wesley Warren, and Tackle Tom Henry were Sylva's line standouts. Kent Hughes was the big gun in the Sylva backfield. Canton comes in for considerable discussion elsewhere on the sports page. Hendersonville sports a squad of big boys. But Asheville, a Class AA school, got the jump on them and kept it from the opening gun. The Mountaineers can't afford to take the size of the score too seri ously as a measure of Henderson ville strength. WaynesviUc's first home game of the season will come September 23 with Tryon providing the next test' down. Left halfback Jim Mouse is the man who was holding the ball. The players at right get more familiar with ball handling. Keglers To Swing Into Action Tomorrow Night At least eight bowling teams are expected to swing into action to morrow night at 7:30 o'clock at the Waynesville Bowling Center. Teams will be matched against each other, with prizes to go to the individual bowlers rolling ihe highest singles games and series that night. League Secretary A. P. Veith and the management revealed that league schedules and games will be arranged tomorrow night also, 3 Auction Sa Wednesday, September 21 10 A.M. THE J. B. (BRACK) PROXIMATELY 500 about 13 miU from Snnnftc Rnrrrl 1ST P School. Follow the in Haywood County. Good y room nause m-j ences and three tenant houses. Good barns acres tobacco allotment, 60 head of line can sheep, 5 good horses and numerous farming. equipment. Plenty subdivided into smaller farms, tasy 4 P.M. Two good homes located on corner of N. Ma"1 Streets. One ten-room house and two baths, house and one bath. 5 P.M. j. u. rraay J-room modern dhck . c, ftuourn noad and Ziid house on oi dential sectior.. Also two desirable du tlVC Iftrme FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT L. N. PAVS f " J Easy Terms - Cash Prizes - If You Have Properly To WALTEB & C0SLEY SELLING AGEtfTS - Charlotte, N. " '! mis The tempo of drills increased, culminating in a 4.) - minute scrimmage thai rounded out Hi, first week's practice si s-j,inv and regular league games will slail a week from loinorrow. All teams and how lers u i-hiii play in the Leai;iii- I his -rasmi an requested to he pia-tnt ,i ,;, organization of team, may he r ph led .a I that lime. Climax to a week of - imi I -. ewnl including boaimg, boxim', tuini , basketball and Hark will lie the 16th Sugar Bow l fool ball statue un Jan. 2. 'Mia BIG FARM SALE H JAMES FARM CONSBID ACRES located on daw WAYNESVILLE. Drive oi 709 and turn off al H signs. This is one of the M of good springs, win-" 9 I tab, "w tun,: ' '" bra t; 1,1 ' i)"'.'wmjj 111 it. 3 "' '1'ii'S is i " M todJ 1 ', 1 -J-'-ir.g aiU ' l'h Carta,, '"ifi-sobiti,, l5' "lU'il.ui. I;t' fM mast J hi 11 gJ I lir bad (J ur-iiiliTaa, vt'!V .;!(. sell; :'lli,'-(J". ;hC, Tlii' three : "rirfjv riH. .' -''.ui m ''' Mouniainwl ioii-Hindersol M wkir.g In '"it, uliirii Mil SylJ mi in j srort! Mi' W.-alhcrJ '"ii Wit- persof In lasl ett Mountaineers lllliml' athts am juries during uw I In- i.'k, Ihei ill lull ,irragi j t'lurhWeith j v. i ii i Id linid one .',1 im-hl lo HI 'ii,,ll 10 1 1 ii! hior IIIIILEvq i I'Oill'ffi IH'UlltM ,1 a ,u ikti .km, ;!hiih9 tli.it hull bM

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