i II m jEji vy By THOMAS J. SHAW, JR. Wolf Lives To Contract Ray Wolf, popular coach at U. N. C., decided to live up to his contract at that institution. Wolf is a good man and a good coach and supporters of Carolina are delighted that he will be there for some time to come. Tom Bost comments on the situation in the following manner: ‘To be sure, losing money, say SIO,OO to $15,000, is tough for a man whose days on the football field are number ed. To keep the greatest tyrants in the world, college alumni, placated, there must be victories, a whole mess of victories. To get victories coaches must have material and luck. Mr. Wolf has had his share of chance, good and bad. But there isn’t 1 a man in the country who has lost fewer games on the' coach's account. No lesser team th°n his has trimmed him in lour years. You don’t beat that, no matter who does your tutoring. j “But Mr. Wolf is more than football technician. He is a superlative sport. He had bargained with the Chapel Hill, people, had taken their offer and he was going to live by it. They probably will do better by him. Not for his own advan tage would he walk out on his associates. Nothing finer than this comes from sports. “And what is all the more creditable to him, he knew that the Tar Heels would have released him from his contract on request. He knew, too, that the going is to be tough, that! his winnings may wane as Duke, Wake Forest, State, Virgi nia, Pennsylvania and Texas Christian grow stronger. "It is character. Wolf would not put George Radman, his most necessapr man, in the Duke game because new hurts to ah old one might have made a permanent cripple of the boy. There is damage of lasting character done to a coach when he fashions his future solely upon his own personal profit. Again, thoroughbreads don’t cry. They live up to the highest truth they know and to the clearest duty they perceive.” o What-No Boards? Now they are talking about doing away with basket ball backboards. Authorities say that it will prevent many wild shots and prevent the tall boys from having such an advantage by being able to take the ball on the rebound from the board. In other words a player will have to be a good shot and not trust to Juck that the ball will bounce from the board in to the basket. o Glamack Doing O. K George Glamack shot 27 points in the basketball game against Appalachian Wednesday night. It now looks like he is the best player that Carolina has and all opponents might do well to start planning a defense against this individual. There’s one thing we noticed in the Wednesday night game. Glamack’s opponent, Stuart of Appalachian, shot 21 points. fcHELtf Change To SHELL STOP AT YOUR SHELL STATION FOR r ECONOMICAL SERVICE Humphries Oil Co I Plant Bed I FERTILIZER I See us about your PLANT I BED FERTILIZER. We I have the analysis I that you want. I Start This Year With I International I S. B. WINSTEAD I Winstead Warehouse PERSON SPORTS (SLANTS WHY Suffer from Colds? For quick re- 4R| M* lief from cold “■ symptoms take QQQ Liquid • Tablets - Salve . Nose Drops VWW^WVWWWVWWA ;j BUCK JONES ! j; FOB ij Public Hauling j • ; or ![Transfer Service: SPORTS OF THE TIMES PERSON COUNTV TIMES ROXBORO. N. C. Princeton’s Grid Hero Goes Home Ik Dm Herrin*, yonn* PrlnceWn football her* who last Mi* left Je* m the result of u injury In the Harvard feme this fall, is shown in n Princeton, N. J„ hospital Jast before *otn* homo to his family. Cheerfa! as always, Dm sees a food fatare ahead for a man with one let ‘Who can take It.” The le* was amputated several weeks a*o after doctors f eaght a losing battle to save it. Tweet, Tweet—-And the Angels Sing SBFX W iSßßg&ri' • i» m *H|| vw mmm: m i | \ 4K .Jr WHO \ X*. wm NBHBpjt .j-1 , v V VKjL v;; ~‘ ‘ *" ’ ” * The cares ol the day are erased for Chester Rlcasl, municipal play ground heavyweight fighter, who reposes in sweet slumber on the canvas after colliding with one of Edward Heinzinger’s rights in the diamond belt tournament in New York. Clean-U p Campaign Os Beer Industry Gets Fine Results RALEIGH—North Carolina news papers and public officials were praised today for their part in the campaign to rid the state of ob jectionable beer outlets. Xdgar H. Bain of Goldsboro, state director of the Brewers and North Carolina Brer Din trlbutors commit- ” operation enabled the committee to M k & secure the revoca tlon of 35 retan ? j Kmgg&f beer licenses for the four - month period ended De- . tg>■; M Colonel Bain., three-times mem- BAIN her of the state senate and decorated for- bravery while serving with the 30th division In the World War. su pervises the beer Industry’s "clean up or close up” campaign in North Carolina. He was a captain during the war and is now a colonel In the reserve, commanding the 321st in fantry of the 81st division. "Our clean up or close up cam paign in North Carolina is directed FINISH SKI TROOPS TAKE TIME TO GET THE RUSSIANS i. 1 ■ With the Finnish forces near Lake Kianta, Jan. 3 —Swift and silent Finnish ski troops struck in the border snows today to pick off, one by one, the handful of survivors of Russia’s defeated army in this frozen north country while their comrades in the south stood their ground against massed Soviet thrusts. Victors in the greatest single battle of the war, the hardy Fin nish lumberjacks had easy pick ings off the 2,000 wandering, half-starved remants of the 17,- Up*o‘*he*Minute Sport News Solicited against those beer outlets who dis regard the law and public decen cy.” Colonel Bain said. "A great majority of dealers conduct repu table places of business, but there are scattered outlets over the state which our committee seeks to elimi nate. “During the paat four months, special investigators for our com mittee have visited more than a third of North Carolina’s 100 coun ties. They have inspected hundreds of outlets. Our committee hes warned more than a score of places to clean up before we take more drastic action. "We have Instituted action against 50 dealers. Thirty-five of these deal ers have lost their licenses to sen beer, and the boards of commis sioners of eight counties are yet to act on our petitions to revoke the licenses of 18 dealers. One dealer In Iredell was placed on probation. We lost one case and withdrew action In another. “The success of our campaign de pends upon a vigorous press, and the cooperation of local officials. Our committee believes 1940 will bring about the elimination of most of these objectionable beer outlets.** 000-man Red Russian division which tried to sever Finland’s wasp-like waistline and failed. INJURED SPANIEL TROTS ALONE TO VETERINARIAN Landsdown, Pa.—“Haile Selas sie,” a large black half-Spaniel, trotted unaccompanied a mile and a half to a veterinarian after he cut his foot. The dog’s owner was away. The veterinarian, hearing a scratching at his door, found “Haile” holding up his injured paw, begging for aid. “Haile” had been treated by the veterinarian before and appar ently remembered the route. GALENTO-BAER BOUT TO HEAD HELPFORHNNS New York Headed by a heavyweight fight between Tony Galento and Max Baer, a nation wide sports program, to include virtually every form of athletic competition, was mapped out to day by the sports committee of the Finnish relief fund. The program was outlined at an informal get-together of offi cials of the fund and sports writ ers, at which ex-President Her bert Hoover, head of the organi zation, keynoted the proposals as a “great sporting stunt, because what is more sporting than an army of 350,000 fighting a great fight against three or four mil lion?” Promoter Mike Jacobs, who has been considering the Galento- Baer bout as a headliner on his winter boxing program, suggest ed the fight for the Finnish fund. He would stage the affair some time in March in Madison Square Garden. Jacobs plans to give bis entire profit on the fight to the Finnish fund. Also on the program, it was an nounced, was a plan to bring Paavo Nurmi, great Finnish dis tance runner of the ’2os, back to this country along with Finland’s current two outstanding runners, Taisto Maki and Kauko Pecuri, to compete in a series of meets this summer. The meets would be held over the same itinerary Nurmo took during his Amercan invasion in 1925 which was a large financial success. Jimmy Bronson, New York fight promoter and head of the A. E. F. boxing program during the World war, now acting as chairman of the fund’s boxing committee in smaller clubs, an nounced that “some 15 to 20 pro moters already agreeing to put on boxing shows” in various cit ies. Several track and field meets, a collegiate basketball double header, hockey and pqjo are also on the program, as well as an open tennis tournament. The com mittee announced that the open tennis “can be held,” despite pre vious opposition to a tournament between amateur and profession al players. Officials of the United States Lawn Tennis association have been contacted, it was ex plained, and are agreeable if the International Federation’s sanc tion can be obtained. o First American Revolt Revealed The first armed rebellion on American soil—a historical fact virtually forgotten in modem text books—serves as the basis of RKO Radio’s “Allegheny Up rising,” starring Clarie Trevor and John Wayne, which opens Monday at the Palace Theatre. The spectacular melodrama deals with the original uprising of the Pennsylvania colonists against the British soldiery sta tioned in Fort Loudon. This sig nal event, and subsequent dissen tions between the two forces, laid the groundwork for the me morable Revolutionary War more than 15 years later. The Pennsylvania revolt arose when settlers were driven to des paration by traders selling wea pons to the Indians under army protection only to have them used against the small settle ments. John Wayne is cast as James Smith, firebrand chieftain of the “rebels,” while Claire Trevor is seen as a wild, temestuous dau ghter of the tavern keeper in love with the courageous leader. Football Rules Committee Moves To Aid Short Passes Sky Beauty Mona Frledlander, beautiful 25- year-old London girl, was selected among the eight British women pi lots who will ferry new army planes from factories to airdrome:. Sutherland Offered Position By Rooney To Coach Pro Team Pittsburgh, Jan. 4 Art Rooney, boss of the Pittsburgh professional football Pirates, said tonight he was “confident and hopeful” of signing Jock Suther land to coach the Pirates. Rooney said he had made the former Pitt mentor a proposition of “somewhat less than $15,000 a year” and felt that he had a good chance of getting him to take the place of Walter Kiesling, who finished last season as the Pir ates’ coach after Johnny Blood resigned. Rooney added, however, that he understood Sutherland would meet representatives of the Brooklyn Dodgers next week to discuss an offer to coach the New York team. o Jane Learns Ropes From Star Twirler Sam Garrett, seven times ac claimed world’s champion rope twirler, was engaged to teach Jane Withens the art of lasso spinning for her new 20th Cen tury-Fox starring picture, “High School,” which opens at the D«L ly Madison Theatre Monday. Garrett, a Mulhall, Oklahoma cowboy, started doing rope tricks as a youngster when he accom panied Will Rogers to England during a stage tour in 1907, Jane, who first learned to twirl a rope in “Wild and Wooly,” learned such fancy tricks as the “butterfly,” “roll-overs,” ocean waves,” “skipping the smoke” and juggles” under Garrett’s ex pert tutelage. These tricks will be incorporated into scenes in which Jane, a Texas cowgirl, de serts the ranch for the halls of higher learning. Featured in Jane’s supporting cast are Joe Brown, Jr., Lloyd Corrigan, Claire Du Brey, Lynne Roberts, Paul Harvey, Cliff Ed wards, Lillian Porter and John Kellogg. A R. A. WHITFIELD Distributor Roxboro, N. C. SUNDAY,. JAN. 7, 1940 Palm Springs, Calif. _ One major change, involving passes touching ineligible receivers, was written into the rule book today as the National Collegiate Ath letic association rules committee wound up its annual meeting. “The change in rules was to re duce further the penalty when a forward pass touches or is touch ed by an ineligible receiver who is on or behind the line of scrim mage,” said the committee’s re port. “In the future, this penalty will be merely the loss of the down. “This change is made to en courage a more liberal point of short forward passes behind the line of scrimmage. However, if the passer, after he has faded back and been trapped, intention ally throws the ball into an ineli gible player who is on or behind the line of scrimmage in order to save yardage, the penalty will be the same as for an intention ally grounded pass; namely, 15 yards and loss of the down. “This same penalty will still obtain when an ineligible player beyond his scrimmage line touch es or is touched by a forward pass.” SIZE OF CLEATS WILL BE REDUCED BY REQUEST The committee adopted the A merican football coaches’ recom mendation sepcifying that cleats be reduced from one-half-inch to three-eights of an inch in diame ter, with the point parallel with with the base. No change was ordered in the type of composi tion used. In order to speed up play, it was voted to cut the time allow ed in putting the ball in play from 30 seconds to 25 seconds. Other changes: “In case of a free ball kicked or kicked at, the responsibility for determining whether the kicking was intentional was again placed on the officials. “The penalty for roughing the passer will in the future be en forced from the spot of the pre vious down. In the past, in the case of completed or intercepted passes, the penalty was enforced from the spot of the foul, which often made it necessary for the offended team to refuse the pen alty. “It was made clear that on kicks from behind the line of scrimmage, protection is given the kicker only when it is reason ably obvious that he is going to kick. This applies especially to quick kicks made from close to the line of scrimmage.” The committee, with Walter Okeson, of Lehigh, as chairman and with seven of its eight dis trict members present, adjourned. - o SELL YOUR TOBACCO IN ROXBORO. For Home Sites of Distinct ion see— “SUNSET HILLS” And For Real Estate Os Any Kind See—• THOS. B. WOODY WE BUILD FOR Roxboro and Person County WUh all Work Guaranteed. No Job Too Largo aad None Too Small GEORGE W. KANE Roxboro. N. a