The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, October 17, 1952, Image 6
PAGE SIX
THE NEWBERRY SUN
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1952
Laurens Overpowers Newberry In
First Half; Bickley Goes Once
Allen, Bolt,
Dixon Score
For Laurens
Laurens three touchdowns came
in the first half as Bobby Allen on
a 40-yd.-run; Bolt on a pass; and
Dixon on an intercepted pass rack
ed up the tallys. The Bulldogs out
played Laurens the second-half as
the only T.D. came when Frank
Bickley plowed over from the 15.
1st Quarter
Herndon kicked to Jackson on
the 35 yard line. He received and
was smothered on the spot. On
the first play, Martin made it to
the line of scrimmage. On the
third down, Bobby Allen traveled
65 yards for the Laurens tally.
Billy Bone converted on a drop-
kick and Laurens led after about
a minute of play by a score of
7-0.
Mac George kicked to Pat Hern
don on the 10 yard line. Herndon
returned the oval to the 40. After
a loss of 5 yards on the 1st play,
a 15 yard penalty was tossed
against Laurens giving the ‘Dogs’
the pigskin on the mid-field stripe.
Bickley picked up 5 yards and
a first down. The Laurens line
put up a stonewall and the ‘Bull
dogs’ were forced to kick. Herdon
booted to King Dixon on the 10.
He traveled back 15 yards to the
25.. The Newberry forward wall
stopped the Laurens eleven cold
in their tracks and forced them
to kick. The ‘Dogs’ rushed fast
and blocked the kick. The oval
rolled out on the 40 yard line.
Alter a series of plays sparked
by Frank Bickley, the ‘Dogs’
marched down to the 5 yard line.
On the next play King Dixon in
tercepted a ‘Dog’ pass on the goal
line and darted in and out of
Newberry persuers to the 36 yard
line where he was brought down.
This ended the “Bulldog” threat
as Laurens took over on their own
36 yard line. Dixon again carried
for a long spectacular run down
to the ‘Dogs’ 30 yard line. Bobby
Allen, on the next play, received
and tossed to Right End Jack-
son who was waiting on the 15
yard line.
2nd Quarter
After 2 incompleted passes,
Bobby Allen hit Bobby Bolt, who
was in the end zone, with a 15
yard pass for the 2nd Laurens
tally. Billy Bone again converted
the extra point, putting Laurens
out in front by 14 points.
Mac George kicked to Bennett
Shealy on the 30 yard line. He
ranback to the 42. On the 1st
play, Herndon tossed a pass to
Bickley who scampered down to
the 10. It was here that a fumble
proved costly as Laurens recover
ed and ended the Newberry
NEW PAIN KILLER . . . Duke U. doctors use this mask containing
pain killing vapor for many minor surgical treatments as patient
remains conscious. Pain killer lasts four to five hours.
threat. Laurens took over on the
10 and Dixon picked up 9 yards to
the 19. Allen carried to the 24
for a first down. A short pass from
Allen to Jackson put the pigskin
on the 30 yard line. Two plays
later, Allen and Dixon on two con
secutive plays carried the oval to
the ‘Dogs’ 47 yd. line. The ‘Dogs’
stopped the Laurens eleven and
took over on the 45 yard line. On
the Bulldogs 1st play, Herndon’s
pass was intercepted by King Dix
on who went all the way for the
third Laurens T.D. The conver
sion was no good but still the
Laurens eleven were out in front
by 3 T.D.’s, and 2 extra points,
20-0.
Mac George kicked to Bennett
Shealy on the 25. He tracked
back with the oval to the 30
Herndon tossed a pass to Wyman
Shealy on the 47 which was good
for a ‘Dog’ 1st down. The last
few plays of the first half ended
with the pigskin on the 40 yd. line
as neither team was able to gain
or lose very much.
3rd Quarter
Mac George kicked to Bennett
Shealy on the 15. Bennett traveled
back 23 yards to the 38 yard line.
On the first play, Newberry fumbl
ed and Donald Stover pounced
on the rolling ball to make it 1st
and 10 for Laurens on the ‘Dogs’
36 yard line. Three 15 yard pen
alties, and 20 yards loss made it
4th down and 65 yards to go for
a 1st down. Mac George booted
to the 50 yard line. The ‘Dogs’
received and fumbled. Laurens
took over on the mid-field stripe.
Bobby Allen picked up 6 yards
to the 45. Dixon tossed to Jackson
for a 1st down on the 40 yard
line. The Bulldogs held the Laur
ens eleven to 4 downs and took
over on the 33. The dogs were un
able to make any headway with
the ball and also were forced to
kick. On the 1st play King Dix
on traveled around Right End for
a 1st down putting the pigskin on
the 40 yd. line. The 3rd quarter
ended here.
4th Quarter
After 3 plays. King Dixon boot
ed to Bennett Shealy on the 15
yard line. He carried back to
the 30. The ‘Dogs’ got into trouble
and were forced to kick. Pat Hern
don booted to James Martin on the
40. Wyman Shealy came down
fast and had him in his tracks.
Allen, on the 1st play picked up
9 yards. On the 2nd play, Allen’s
pass was intercepted by Hern
don on the 30. He ranback 4
yards to the 34. Bickley picked
up 6 yards to the 40. Herndon
tossed to Bickley who received
on the mid-field stripe. From there
he galloped down to the 15 yard
line where he was hauled down.
Again Bickley carried and this
time he scored. The extra point
was no good making the score 20-
6 in favor of Laurens. The last
few plays of the game were fought
around the 30 yard line.
Nby. Lau.
Yards gained passing 43 41
Passes attempted 10 8
Passes completed 4 4
Passes intercepted 1 2r
1st downs 7 10
Times punted 3 4
Yds. avg. punts 35.6 26.0
Yds. penalized 25 86
Fumbles 2 1
fumbles recovered 0 2
Newberry 0 0 0 6—6
Laurens 7 13 0 0—20
get a load of
enjoy
EXTRA COMFORT
THIS WINTER
PATSY k mined in the famous Big Sandy
District of East Kentucky—a premium
coal at its absolute best!
♦You eliminate most of the furnace work
when you burn Patsy Coal. Patsy is
cleansed of all the impurities that make
work for you by scientific processing at
the mine. Patsy is water-washed—
screened to exacting requirements
—treated for dustless delivery to your
basement. When you buy Patsy, you get
pure coal and nothing else! Enjoy the ulti
mate in heating comfort this winter by
insisting on genuine Patsy when you
order coal.
Insist on
PATSY!
ITS SPECIALLY TREATED
FOR DUSTLESS
DELIVERY
JjOok for the Patsy seal on
yow Delivery Ticket.
Farmers Ice &• Fuel Co.
Phone 155
Newberry
RECEIVES COMBAT
INFANTRYMAN BADGE
PFC Odell Caldwell, son of
James E. Caldwell, 2330 Hollo
way street, was recently award
ed the Combat Infantryman Badge
for excellent performance of duty
under enemy fire in Korea.
He is a member of the 2nd In
fantry Division, which gained
fame in two of the hardest fought
battles of the Korean War. It
captured “Heartbreak Ridge” in
October 1951 and took “Old Baldy
Hill” this summer.
Pfc. Caldwell, a rifleman, en
tered the Army in July 1951 and
joined the 2nd Division last
April.
MEMBER OF HEWELL CREW
Henry W. Merchant, commis-
saryman first class, USN, son of
Mrs. Alberta A. Merchant of 1603
Hiller street, is serving aboard
the light cargo ship USS Howell
in Korean waters.
Merchant, who serves with the
Supply Department, reported from
the aircraft carrier USS Interpid.
Before enlisting in the Navy
Jan. 30, 1942 ,Merchant attended
Newberry High School.
The Hewell supplies ships of
the United Nations Blockading
and Escort Force.
By TED KE8TING
No sedentary worker is fit for
a strenuous two or three-week
hunting trip without training for
it. Each year sportsmen die be
cause they failed to keep fit. Al
though free from disease, death
claimed them because they lived
so close to the limit of their en
durance that a sudden overload
broke them.
The advice outlined here by
Dr. A. M. Libasci is slanted for
the man who wishes to toughen
up for a hunting of fishing trip,
but it can be used to go^ d ad
vantage by anyone who wishes
to attain a better than average
degree of fitness.
The first step is to undergo a
comprehensive physical examina
tion. Make sure it includes X-
rays of your chest, testing of blood
and urine, and an electro-cardio
gram of your heart, especially if
you over 40. If this exam reveals
conditions that need correction by
surgery, by all means get it over
with before your trip. Don’t risk
two or three weeks in the wilds
if you have a hernia, or recur
rent appendicitis, or large hemor
rhoids, or any chronic condition
that may suddenly flare up.
After you have a clean bill of
health from your doctor, your next
problem is to start hardening up.
How much you will have to do
depends on your present condi
tion. In any program of exercis
es for older men (i.e., after col
lege years), the key word should
be moderation. Don't try to cor
rect a condition due to years of
neglect by a few days of frenzied
exercises. You are risking serious
injury if you do.
There can be no adequate fit
ness if you are greatly over
weight. If you. are much too heavy,
you may need a six-month to a
year reducing program before you
are ready to undertake a tough
hunting trip.
Assuming now that you are
trimmed down to a normal weight,
your next problem is to start a
series of graded and progressive
exercises to harden you. If you
live in a big city and have the
time, your best bet is to enroll
in a conditioning class at the
YMCA. Otherwise, follow a syste
matic set of exercises at home,
done preferably just before bed
time, Dr.'Libasci recommends the
freehand setting-up type for the
first half of your conditioning pro
gram and progressive weight
lifting for the second half.
Such an exercise schedule, sup-
-plemented by many long walks
and weight control will be all
the average man needs, to prepare
himself for a hunting trip. Walk
ing will be one of his greatest
conditioners. Increase daily walks
until you are doing at least three
or four miles daily in one hour.
Remember, start easily- and pro
ceed gradually.
• - ■ x .
Valley Dairy Cow
Sets Milk Record
C. T. Smith, owner of Valley
Dairy Farm, Route 1, Kinards, is
the owner of a registered Jersey
cow that has recently completed
a Herd Improvement Registry
production record of 9,474 lbs.
milk containing 537 lbs butter-
fat at the age of 4 years and 8
months.
The official record was made by
Observer Triumph Treva and her
tests were supervised by Clem-
son Agriculture College for The
American Jersey Cattle Club, Jer
sey breed registry organization
located at Columbus, Ohio. In
terms of a production record made
at a mature age on a twice-daily-
milking, 305-day basis, this record
is equivalent to 9,758 lbs. milk
containing 553 lbs. butterfat.
SMELLOPHONE
A farmer wanted to telephone
but found the line busy. “I just
put on some beans for dinner,
he heard a woman say to her
neighbor,
A few minutes later he tried
again. The same two womep were
still talking.
“Say, lady, I smell your beans
burning,” he broke in.
There was a scream, two re
ceivers went up and the line was
open.
HEAVYWEIGHT KING'. . .
The heavyweight boxing crown
has been moved from New Jer
sey to Massachusetts. Here's
Rocky Marciano, Brockton,
Mass., the man who whipped
Jersey Joe Walcott, flashing
his victory smile after the Phil
adelphia bout in which he
kayoed Joe in the 13th round.
Sponsors Drive For
Hospital Chapel
The Dames of th6 Court of
Honor, South Carolina Society, are
sponsoring a drive to raise $20,-
000 toward the construction of a
chapel at the South Carolina State
Hospital at Columbia, and funds
are already being received accord
ing to Mrs. Lula Bess Whitney
Wilson, local chairman of the
drive, and Mrs. R. E. Lipscomb of
Mullins, society chairman.
“In 1947' the General Assembly
appropriated $30,000 for the chapel
with the fund to be available when
the amount was matched by dona
tions. The Assembly funds and
donations now total $60,356.30,
stated Mrs. Wilson, but that due to
the cost of construction having in-
All m the Game:
Y ANKEE HURLER AIUc Reyn
olds, for It years the standby
of his team, became a
winner the first time this
. . . Rocky Marciano's real name
is Rocco Marchegiano He lacks
the cunning of Tunney, the speed
and power of Dempsey and the
swift fists of Joe Louis—yet he re
cuperates quickly from punishment
and can knock his opponent cold
with just one blow . The Savan
nah, Ga. baseball team has signed
a Negro player for the 1953
—A1 Israel from Harrisburg, Pa.
Babe Ruth hit Jtt or better la
World Series Ralpl
eight home runs la four games la
1947 is a major league record
James • Corbett, who reigned
from 1892 to 1897, was the first
heavyweight champion under Mar
quis of Queeasbury rules . John
L Sullivan held his heavyweigL.
title under London Prise ring (bar*,
knuckle) rates Gene Tunney
and Joe Louis are the only two
heavyweight champions is abandon
their titles.
creased, present estimates are
that $100,000 will be needed to
build a chapel seating 600 persons.
The Dames of the Court of
or are trying to raise $20,000,
ing that the General
would match any amount
group raised, for the const
of the non-denominational
Mrs. Wilson stated that
uals or groups wishing to '
donations to the chapel
make checks payable to Dr.
P. Beckman and marked
ing Fund for State
Chapel.!* The checks
sent -to Dr. Beckman at the
hospital, to Mrs. R. E. Lij
in Mullins, or to Mrs. Wilson
1616 Martin St., Newberry.
Time tells on a man—esi
a good time.
ANSWERS TO
Intelligence Test
1—Bowling. 2—Femur. 3—Minnesota. 4—Theodore Roosevelt.
Trichinosis. 6—Joseph Conrad. 7—(A) Argentina, (B) Yug<
(C) France, (D) Germany.
MEMORIES
I found them in a book last
night, these withered violets; a
token of that early love that no
man e’er forgets. Pressed careful
ly between the leaves, they keep
their color still; I cannot look at
them today without an old-time
thrill.
Ah me, what tricks does mem
ory play!' The passing years have
fled, and hopes that lived in vigor
once, alas! have long been dead.
And this is all that I can say,
when all is said and done; those
flowers remind me of some girl—I
wish I knew which one!
Ki;-;.
Adding Machine Paper
Mimeograph Paper
THE SUN OFFICE
AUCTION SALE—SCHOOL
BUILDINGS AND LOTS
The Newberry County Board of
Education hereby advertises for
sale, at public auction, before the
Newberry County Court House at
11 o’clock A.M. on Monday, Octo
ber 27, 1952, the folowing describ
ed property.
All those tracts of land together
with the buildings thereon: In the
former Mayblnton school district,
the Seekwell School Property of
4.0A. and the Trinity School
property of 1.2A.
In the former Cromer School
Dist. the Cromer (Bishop Hill)
School property of 4.52 A.
In the former Stony Hill School
Dist. the Lever Chapel School
property of 4.0 A.
In the former Central School
Dist. the Central School property
of 3.53 A.
In the former Kinards School
Dist. the Kinards School property
of 2.0 A.
In the former Bush River School
Dist. the Dominick School lot of
2.0 A.
And in the former Beth Eden
School Dist. the Rose Spring
School building (Bldg, to be mov
ed within 60 days.)
Terms of sale 10% cash and
balance within ten days. The
purchaser to pay for preparation
of deeds and stamps. For any
particulars other than listed above
contact the County Supt. of Edu
cation.
Newbery County Board of
Education. 12-3tc
Local & Long
Distance Moving
All Furniture Insured A
Carefully Wrapped
Office Phone 1002
Residence Phone: 402-J
Lollis Truck Line
Clinton, 8. C.
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David Dows shown above with Republican Vice Presi
dential Candidate Senator Richard Nixon at Republican
Headquarters in Washington, D. C.
Republican Candidate for Congress
IN THIRD CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT
3-v:
• * - »:
Born in Irvington, N. Y.
Owned a home in Aiken since 1S25.
Resided in Greenwood County since 1942.
Owner of “Green Pastures” Cattle Ranch in
Greenwood County — which has been devel
oped and now has herd of over 300 Angus
cattle.
A' Elected Sheriff of Nassau County, N. Y., in
1932.
Purchasing Agent for Nassau County for
seven years.
^ Member of N. Y. Racing Commission for five
years.
^ Treasurer of Nassau County Republican
Party for ten years.
LIFE-LONG REPUBLICAN
/Endorse The Principles Of General Eisenhower
(Paid Political Ad By David Dows)