1949 ilMBii4afliiti Hi, Black Bears Stay Unbeaten: hdge Forest CailtOn IS ! Captains and Coaches Guide 1949 WTHS Grid Fortunes IMoiUliahieerS Tie lip III HEADING FORa recoS r vms SjfUitl'd rAUK U The Waykicavllie intnuuiuJiicc? roiiiy Afieriiooii, September 19, find 0ps City, hi to .on r 1 8 ' C 1. V I. li !. i Siren B 1 i ' Mount.aiu i'i . The umU-i. Black H.-.m- i . victur nl Hit edgiiu' a w ." 14-12. al t . .. Flavin;' - their star r-i.. er. and 't.a -and Huh ! .. by llu ii n the HI..' k i;. - to u ih ft! I " K . : T.. 140-poui '1 -: ;iIk-. ,! u '. i i n;.u nun; if!.. I :., 1j. !..!.d ; Abbott, : Canton !!. -..fill' - i! 11- 'he a) :iiuv n. , ii'iwer--I..:.. li: ii.-t mill- 1'. put 11 If i 'a. nl .1 i i r. iii ; v. iTt iv.irs -.polled Gulden host to Friday defeat To! l.a the t . r.iiit The 1 aril- I;. mate hod. n: th,- nit Kil yards. r, In hi i' bc-!",- v- ere so !.t. Ku: i-i Ci li.ui , . tot 1 1 l mam ( null! halt a (1 o!T 1 .'. tlv b.i'id t 1 'h- time , ! !;o.-n c'ick- p 1 a ' i r - uni- 1 nit v. ith mud it aii almost iih i;tii ball l ,-a! ln-r. I In- i i If - III I'.Vl I'll nil lit mil an .1;, ill lul l; W "i and -nut i , 1 1 1 ii lb!, carriei - l)i pit,- t l!4'.l i,-n,- i lilt--.- Uu enthll- !.' t ii than e. o the stand il t : i, t n More .ill tilled ,1 pa 1 ii.d alio i I nl.,- Illlil'lled - li f.e lilUe i ..uni; . t -1 -. Wrll re- uf there lua trip from H Canton li wai dt (1. ;.They lirnmle'r'if,' "defeat For est C'ilv ailiiimir It-n-.J la t year and -a'.c th Black lif.n ond 11 tin Plmt' ,,i to 'In- i! t lean,- (.ft Toi'iiado, Bf-ai" had fad thw i. id, ,!k. turn, d I up th' th, ,. ai d as I!..- Iw,i (, !.!-.. Black lolll the . 1 1 . 11' ii 11 1 iiiitpla 1 th Hie 1,: ll 11 in (P.uiil II ntini- bt-r 01 Hi t ;.,iv. Tin--'- ii (oai I,, il !, I),, 1 la-7t ear and ( '. , In IIP. l.illi had been Pi I t Cit nt . n th. '-ear The : former V, .0., I ',,1 , felCIl V.. I- ! a-:-oi iatt Alter th, I--,' !.-i, alty of fifii-f 1 . gave hoi. 1 (','' 1 o fthe jjanie. An- 1 down-. A; tioid Na back, wont thiou: score. A runi.inv extra point ldi.td trailed. 7-C. Canton recww puijU-d. alter t ' t.a ot .1 voc-i-'..:i In former a ( lippin:; petv ."i-'aiif ' Canton tii I hr t down I in ee more first I I . Forest City center for the I'tfiiiDt for the j.'.J Forest Ci;v i" kick and atlcmnts to TlUftt- a fir-t down. Tin- punt run Jfiiik wa. retui rieil to Canton's twenty and CM... IPae-r went off AW if WfWmW Fas' f, V t"? ? x x , V Immediate cash should arise today you would arrange to meet It. You, with a regular Income, could go to the bank and borrow money; you could borrow on your life insurance; or you may have a little fund set aside for just that purpose. But suppose you were not here. Would your widow be able la meet such emergencies? She would if you arrange now for a Jefferson Standard Emergency Fund to be used for exDenset she doesn't expect. Without cost, we shall be glad to give you complete details today. S. E. CONNATSER District - Main Phone 705 EFFERS0II r-J LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY GREENSBORO, NORTH CAROLINA ifil p mat- - I It 30 SBV K ) L;J -t"4 il m 4 tetiWfel t Tin so nu n makf uu the top brass lor pi, inning V avnesvillc Hmli Sfiiool s looloall strategy for this season. Li-It to right arc: Head Couch Carlcton Wtathcrb.v, Co-C:u(ains Charhi' Woniack and Bill Chvcns. and Assi-iant Coaches Carl Katclitl'e and Marshall Tea.wo. .Mr. Tcague. ex-Western Carolina Teachers Coilea,- i-thlete from Brevard, is in his first season with tlu Mountaineer coaching staff. Photo by Ingram's Studio). 300 Canton Citizens Honor Softball Team ilMhl tackle lor rore.-t Cil's sec ond score. They passed for the ex tra point but it was incomplete, -itt possession of the ball again Canton made no ;aiiis on down.-, and was forced to kick again For est Cit fumbled 01. their third down and Amu of ("anion recov ered. Canton' lii-.t fir I down look them In the Fun-' I ( " 1 1 v thirl v -'even v.iid line. A ft 1 r .Moon'- line pliiiiii- Devlin p.. 1 Red a -e,nleeii 'j aid 11111 on a if. 11 1 Moore takinu. Hi.' hall aRain and with Pood illtelfel'elice crossed (lie line for the icond Caiilon cou- jComan cairii-d the hall over for thr extra point. Siiut..: Licked to l ore t City Toward the end of tile second qu.u' ter the '1 ,1, nailoe , v ei l- penal icd five yard, lor uth.idt. nla. Then they lo-1 yardage in an attempt to make first down and imnted. Can ton tiled two pa--.es. both incom plete, jusi as Hii. half ended. Third quarter Xe.stan, kickid ofi. Canton made no gains and kicked out. Butler cai ried th.. ball to Canton's ten yard line and was held Uh'IC for four downs. Canton kicked out. Forest City attempted a pass which was intercented hv Moore. Canton retained possession for If an emergency requiring Manager Street Waynesville STANDARDi Nearly 300 Canton citizens hon or, d their lir t .North Carolina oft ball champions Thursday night at a dinner in the Champion YMC'A tt mnaiiun. fc The v t ut. held byifhe Y's Men's Club of the YMCA, was to toast the Champion All-Stars who won llu ir lir t Mate crown last Augu-i. Since they entered Hie stale tournament at lialeigh in 193!( for theii liirt wack at a state crown, the All-Stars had been runnersup eu-ral lime-', hut never champion -until the final night of the tourna ment at Champion Park last month. I hen they did it the hard wu lirkini' two of the toughest team m Ih tournament on the ame night in I hi- , inilinals and final Tin", vw nt on to play in the 'outhca loin regional:' at St. Pet-el-bin". Fla.. and finished third. Third Baseman Floyd Deweese. Champion'-, hard-playing manager, summed up the tournament re sults this way, in his brief, good natured addiess: "I hope it doesn't take us 10 year- to catch up with Preacher Dudley and Ruck Miller as it did for us tfi catch Dc-berry." Miller. Chattanooga pitcher, and Dudley, Clearwater pitcher, con tributed heavily to Champion's 1 limination from the regionals. Debe! 1 y. Roanoke Kapids Ro-inaiii-os pitcher, accounted for much of Champion's troubles in the 1939 tali tournament. The Canton bo;, s whipped him in the semifinals la'-t mor'h. The All-Stars were presented two mementoes of their first state title. Henry Michael, president of the Y's Men's Club which sponsored the Mate tournament at Canton, presented each player a framed photo of the championship squad. then each received a warm-up .jacket bearing an emblem signify another first down. After an off side penalty of five yards Canton moved ahead steadily for two more first downs to the Forest City ten yard line. But Forest City took over the ball and kicked out. Canton made two line attempts and then the whistle ended the game. The line-up: Canton Center Amos, Beaver, and Clark. Guards Brookshire, Ingle, Hen son, Sutton, and Waldrop. Tackles Looper, Stiles, Dayton, Hall, and Mann. F.nds Scruggs, Phillips, Medlin, Chapman, and Hardin. Backs Abbott, Coman, Carter, Devlin, Moore, and Poindexter. Forest City Center Koney and Curley. Guards Watts, Flack, and Low rance. Tackles Hardin, Crawley, and B. Nanney. Ends Carlton, Newton, D. Nan ney, and Stanley. Backs Butler, Greene. Smith. A. Nanney, and Deal WCTC Starts With 20-7 Win Over High Point Wc tern Carolina Teachers' Cat amounts opened their bid for the 194!) North State Conference grid title la t Friday night by rolling over a battling pack of High Point Panthers, :U-7, at Asheville. On the same night, the race was left wide open when the Guilford 1 College Quakers upset the defend ing champion Appalachian State Mountaineers, 13-12. Four Waynesville gridders fig ured heavily in Western Carolina's mccesslul opening game of the ;eason. Center and Captain Hugh Con tance played a beautiful game as 1 line-backer, while the 245-pound blocking back, Big Jack Arrington, kept the paths cleared for the Catamounts' fleet set of backs. Among the standouts in the for ward wall were Tackles Bruce Jaynes and Jack "Pin-ball" Allison. Pee Wee Hamilton, 130-pound Catamount backfield candidate for the Kittle All-America, scored the first touchdown on a 24-yard dash. Joe Hunt plunged over for the second, and Tailback Tommy Selzer clinched the victory when he sprinted 47 yards on an end run. The Catamounts will face a re bounding Appalachian State team at Boone next Saturday for their next big obstacle in the way of a conference title. ing the state championship from YMCA Athletic Director Jack Jus tice. Before making the presentations, Mr. Justice told the audience: "Can ton is now a Southern soflball power." This fact, he added, is due to the combination of: the sponsor. The Champion Paper and Fibre Company; the promoter, the V's Men's Club, the enthusiastic loyal ty and sportsmanship of the fans of Canton; and the team. "As athletir director of the YMCA," he added, "1 want to ex press appreciation to all in Canton for supporting Softball. "All this," he said, referring to Champion's sports eminence, "was done by Canton people. "None of the other teams in the tournament in Florida could claim a squad composed entirely of local boys. "But every man on our squad is from Canton." When he asked the members of the audience whether they-would like to see the state tournament come bark to Canton next' year, a show of hands Indicated unanlm- "(See Chlmplen tate ) By BILL LINDAU ' Mountaineer Staff Writer A heavier, hard-charging Sylva line and the mud combined forces Friday night to give the Golden Hurricanes a 6-6 tie with Waynes ville's Mountaineers in their open ing game of the 1949 grid season at Sylva. For Sylva, it was the second deadlock in as many starts. Nearly 5,000 fans watched the battle between Coach Carleton Weatherby's deceptive double-wing formation and Jim Barnwell's sea soned T slug it out on the field made soggy by late afternoon rains. As usual, the Waynesville grid ders had plenty of moral support on foreign fields. More than 1,500 Haywood County fans made the trio to Sylva to help their boys get through the expect- edly rugged opener: The Mountaineers broke the scoreless duel 30 seconds before intermission with a lightning pass that covered 39 yards. Right Halfback Bob Davis, bear ing the punting duties for the in jured Bill Sutton, engineered the lone Waynesville touchdown with a soaring 52-yard boot that set the Sylva gridders back on their own three-yard stripe. Hurricane Halfback Charlie Cun ningham returned the hoot on the next play, sending it out of bounds on the Sylva 39. Then on the first play, Halfback Charlie Womack whipped a flat 10 yard pass to Davis who slipped through the Sylva defense and raced all the way. The slick field cancelled the at tempted conversion when the kick er slipped as he was attempting the placement. The Hurricanes' dangerous T started clicking right after half time, and kept the Mountaineers in hot water throughout the last two periods. Sylva capitalized on a break and a 15-yard penalty to set up the ty ing touchdown midway through the third quarter. . After accepting an offside pen alty on a booming punt, the Mount aineers used up a third down try ing to crack the middle of the tough Hurricane line. 'Then Davis, back for a punt, had I to run on the fourth down when the Mountaineers committed their only low pass from center in the game. Sylva took over on the Waynes ville 32, then advanced 15 yards on a roughing penalty. With Cunningham and Halfback Kent Hoyle alternating, the Hurri canes smashed down to the two. Then Cunningham plunged over standing up and the score stood the way it ended. Furman Dillard re lieved Fullback Ernest Bumgarner for the conversion try, but his placement attempt was short and wide. The Mountaineers' deceptive re verses drowned in the mud time after time as they were threaten ing to generate a touchdown, and they could not get a sustained drive going until the waning seconds of the game. Then time ran out as they crossed the mid-field stripe after grinding out an advance from their own 25. After intermission, the Hurri canes started a drive from their own 30, rolling up three straight first downs to the Waynesville 20. But then Center Tom Boyd pounced on a Sylva fumble, giving the Mountaineers the ball on their own 31. The Mountaineer defense stif fened after the tying touchdown and squelched the Sylva thrusts. A pass interception early in the final period gave Sylva the ball on the Mountaineer 30. . But Waynesville's line, backed by the secondary, held the Hurricane attack to seven yards .in four tries, and the Mountaineers took over on their own 23. Davis was one of the Mountain eers major defensi booting the slippery; soggy ball an average 43 yards on each of his four punts. ' In the line, one of the strongest defensive blocks for Waynesville was Joe Hipps, who went into the game at guard to relieve a starter Womack completed five of the nme passes he tried, but the alert Sylva defense limited the Mount aineers to 47 yards through the air The Mountaineers, operating mainly off their reverses, could gain only 92 yards rushing against the tough Sylva forward wall J1 ?'d "ot a s'ngle time during the entire game. Con sidering the normal flr.st-game Jit- !hVl? s,,pPerv rendition of the ball, they could have been ex cused for one bobble Barnwell's boys, relying prlnci-pally-on straight power plays oper aatlng. over their big he itar (See Waynesville Paje 8) Collefe Games Georgia 25, Furman 0. High School Games Asheville 14, Knoxville Stair Tech 6. Hickory 12, Marion G. Waynesville 6, Sylva 6. Morganton 12, oC'ncord 0. Bryson City 25, Hayesville 6. Marshall C, Het Springs 0. Candler 25, Walnut 0. Weaverville 12, Bakersville 6. Hendersonville 20, Kings Mtn Canton 14, Forest City 12. Monroe 6, Albemarle 0. College Games (Saturday) Western Carolina Teachers High Point 7. Appalachian 'B' 13, Lees-McRae 0 Wake Forest 22, Duquense 7. Quantico Marines 33, VP! 14. Clemson 69, Presbyterian 7. Guilford 13, Appalachian 12. Texas Christian 28, Kansas 0. California 21, Santa Clara 7. Maryville (Tenn.) 47, Hiwassee JC 6. Wofford 41, Milligan 0. Lenoir-Rhyne 7, Erskine 0. Newberry 13, Carson-Newman 7. Catawba 39, Atlantic Christian 0. William & Mary 14, Houston 13. High School Sand Hill 12, Brevard 7. Children's Home iWinston Salemi 14, Gray High (Winston Saleml 12. Mineral Springs 13, Leaksville 6. Trinity 25, Liberty 15. College East Carolina Teachers 24, Cher ry Point, N. C, Marines 0. Canton Coach Glad Bethel To Have. Grid Team Don Hipps, head football coach of Canton High School, expressed pleasure Friday morning- when he learned that Bethel High School would have a football team this season. "We're very glad they did and are happy to welcome them into the spoils family," said the former Canton, High School and Wake Forest football star. "And we are looking forward to the development of a long, friendly rivalry." FREE $50.00 AUCTI ALBERT HOWELL FAR Between Waynesville Thursday September This is one of the most convenient farms wc '"' . Close to everything and cvn' Having a nice 6 .A -1, T' . - t-,Tnn,,,,,,n " nvnes i3UOUITlUE.il Tobacco Allotment Easy Terms Lunch To Be Served Plenty Good Music Drive Out r runner Information Look the Property Over ... Be With I s on Day f sA Everybody Invited . . . Come . . . Brln Your Family &ti WesiaGossetl Landflcf umaee Jit V t .h. f"-- N r" M J CUSTOM I 21). " V'MPj!' r&e- IVi . wwmn c, n,f tt31tl ,JloAijii KbQ Mountaineer Assigns Special Sports Writer The Mountaineer ii.is ;i"ai:iini Dan Matthews of ('initial as a special spoils v. liln In help tin' paper offer complcd' ciivri.i"!' of Haywood County sports. Dan, whose first In lim il starv for this newspaper aii mil in the Thursday issue, will keep Mountaineer spoils fans up to date with detailed accounts uf Canton Hinh School's spoils. The season liciiiK what it is, of course, he's concent ratim- mi Canton's football Irani, which started the season with a smash ing 34-19 victory oxer S.unl Hill, and another victory Friday iiirlit over Forest Cilv. Dan will tallow the forluius of the Black Bears rlosi'ly. Iinlh in practice and in ranns. full ing the readcis iiiloiinul with up-to-the-minute, ac, in ale iow i age. The Mountaineer i)hntorJiilier Located PEVTHWN Lake Junalnska - 1 and ONSA 1 7 offer to n - room house barns ana "'" " ' . ,Mgl TRACTS wvrwr tT AV11 SMAI-I iniU IjV o '--' . . nr as little as " "" For further particulars sec Bnan I.'-.-t-V.Csy,.- ... . 1'. '. -v.?CS. ! . . . . .,ni in,. i see Mr. Bill AiKiii . g At: hbsyw"""'" - IT Msr a, I LtAGUS Mtb KA7I ii IHDlAHS MM 20, OM fieri spent mt tin: ileum I 'iv and thp- turfs will tWl!