The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, November 21, 1952, Image 5
PAGE SIX
THE NEWBERRY SUN
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1952
BULLDOGS HOLD FA VORED
LEXINGTON TEAM TO 7-7 TIE
2,000 Fans
See Thriller
(By KENNETH STOKES)
Approximately 2000 people saw
the Newberry Bulldogs upset the
Lexington Wildcats at the Lexing
ton High School stadium last Fri
day night, November 14. Although
the score was 7-7, the Bulldogs de
finitely handed the Wildcats an
upset. Lexington has won 4, lost 2,
and tied 3 (Newberry game includ
ed). They beat such teams as
Winnsboro 18-6, Batesburg-Lees-
ville 33-7, Charleston 19-13, Aiken
13-0. They lost to Bishopville 19-
14, Kershaw 20-6 and tied highly
rated Georgetown 19-19 along with
Walterboro 19-19. The entire bull
dog team played an excellent
game for 4 Quarters.
1st Quarter
On the opening kickoff, Jones
All in the Game:
T OWA'S 8-0 victory over Ohio
* State was the Hawkeyes' first
Big If victory since their 1950 de
feat of Minnesota . . . After pre
season training has ended, profes
sional football teams seldom en
gage in knock-’om-down scrimmage
sessions — the players generally
take their daily practice in dummy
scrimmages running through their
own and enemy formations . ^ . Al
though Emlen Tunnell of the New
Tort Giants pro footballers did
not play a single minute on offense
last year, ho was the fourth best
ground gainer in his league—he ran
back punts, kick-offs and pass in
terceptions for 790 yards .. . Amer
ica won the rugby championship of
the Olympic Games in 1920 and
1984 . . Bookmakers Imported
from England made their first ap
pearance in America about 1873 at
tiie race tracks . . . Lacrosse is the
national game of Canada by legis- |
latfve act . . The cost of training
a polo pony is huge and danger of
crippling the horse is big.
booted to Herndon who was hit
hard on the 15 yard line. The
Dogs were unable to move the
oval any further and Hollis Har
mon punted to the 30. On the 1st
play, Jones, a 167 lb. fullback pick
ed up 5 yards to tbe 25 yard line.
A 15 yard penalty moved the pig
skin back to the 30 making it 2nd
and ten. Jones on two consective
plays moved the oval to the 12
yard line and a 1st down. Har
mon smeared Sons for a two yard
loss on the second down. Quarter
back Redman broke loose down to
the Bulldogs 2 yard line inches
short of a 1st down. Norman Beck
stopped Redman on a Quarterback
sneak for no gain making it still
4th and inches to go. On the 4th
play, Lexington fumbled and the
Bulldogs recovered on their own
5. Lexington drew a 16 yard pen
alty on the 1st play from scrim
mage giving the ‘Dogs’ a 1st down
on the 20. The Wildcats held the
Dogs to a 4th down decesion and
they decided to punt. Hollis Har
mon punted to the 38. Jones car
ried foi' 9 yards just short of a
1st down to the 47. Kayzer on the
second play carried to the New
berry 46 for a 1st down. Fullback
Jones moved the oval 9 more
yards to the Wildcats 37. Redman
then traveled to the 30 for a Wild
cat 1st down. The 1st quarter end
ed here.
2nd Quarter
On the 1st play of the second
quarter, Jimmy Jones traveled 28
yards for a Wildcat tally. George
Harmon ran the extra point to
give the Wildcats a 7-0 lead.
Jones kicked to Bickley on the
10. He ranback 30 yards to the
40 yard line. On the 1st play
from scrimmage, Bickley tossed
a short aerial to Herndon for 5
yards. Two downs later, Hollis
Harmon punted to Redman who
tipped the ball with his fingers.
Wyman Shealy recovered for the
Bulldogs and 4 plays later Bennett
Shealy plowed over for the T.D.
He also converted the extra point
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which evened the score at 7-7.
Shealy kicked off to Jones on
the 35. He returned the oval to
the 40. Kyzer, on 2plays carried
to the midfield stripe for a 1st
down. Redman then peeled off 9
yards to the Newberry 41 before
he was hit by Bennett Shealy.
Kyzer carried still further to the
34 for a 1st down. On the next
play, Jimmy Jones busted for 9
more yards to the 25. Redman on
an attempted Quarterback sneak
was smeared by lineman Larry
Harmon making it 3rd. and 3.
Jones broke away again to the
Newberry 15. On the 2nd play,
Redman traveled down to the 5.
The Bulldogs put up a goal line
stance and took over 2 plays later.
The half ended with Newberry in
possession of the ball on their own
5 yard line.
3rd Quarter
Bennett Shealy kicked to. Sons
on the 21. On the 1st play, Wy
man Shealy hit Jones for no gain.
Bodie, Bickley, Beck and Harmon
hit Redman for 3 yards loss on the
3rd play. Redman punted to Har
mon on the 44. The Bulldogs
couldn’t make any headway either
so Hollis Harmon punted to Red
man on the 15. He ranback to the
25. After a 5 yard penalty moved
the.oval to the 20, Redman handed
off to Jones who picked up 10
yards to the 30 lacking 6 yards for
a 1st down. Jones again carried
and moved the ball still further
to the 35 yard line and a Wildcat
1st down. On the 1st play, Lex
ington fumbled but they recover
ed, but on the 2nd play, they fum
bled again and this time Newberry
recovered. The ‘Dogs’ took over
but on the 1st play, Herndons pass
was intercepted by George Har
mon. The Wildcats took over and
Redman tossed an aerial to Har
ry Harmon on the Newberry 45 for
a 1st down. Redman on an at
tempted pass couldn’t find a re
ceiver and picked up 15 yards to
the 30 and another 1st down. The
3rd quarter ended with a 5 yard
penalty against Newberry moving
the ball to the 25 yard line.
4th Quarter
On the third play, Redman on
an attempted pass was smothered
back on the 37 yard line by Wy
man Shealy and Norman Beck.
With 4th down and twenty three
yards to go, Redman punted to
Herndon on the Newberry 34. He
returned to the 40. On the 1st
play from scrimmage, Bennett
Shealy carried to the 46. On the
next play, Herndon on a lateral
from Bennett Shealy carried for
a Bulldog 1st down to the Lexing
ton 45 yard line. Bickley tossed
to Herndon which was good for
13 yards to the Lexington 32 for a
1st down. Bennett Shealy broke
away temporarily to the Wild
cats 10 yard line. Shealy again
carried to the 5 yard line. With
4 to go Frank Bickley carried to
the 2. The ‘Dogs’ failed to make
the T.D.' and the Wildcats took
over on their own 2. Redman fum
bled on the 1st play and Newber
ry recovered on the 12. The ‘Dogs'
missed into 2 passes and 2 run
ning plays to give the ball back to
Lexington.
The remaining part of the game
was fought around the Newberry
30 yard line with several passes to
Wildcat receivers almost being
completed. The score still stood
7-7.
PVT. MAYER WOUNDED
IN KOREA
The Department of Defense has
notified Mr. and Mrs. Arthur B.
Mayer, Route 2, Prosperity, that
their son, Private Johnny W. May
er, a member of the Army was re
cently wounded in action in the
Korean area.
fEASy
BY
HELEN HALE
HHhhE Y:
BETATRON . . . New 84 mil
lion electron volt betatron, de
signed for cancer treatment, la
demonstrated at New York’s
center for cancer. It is 18 times
stronger than X-ray equipment.
Sports Afield . . .
By TED KE8TING
Too many of us waste unlimted
hours hunting where game isn’t. A
tremendous number of sportsmen
in all parts of the country think
of woods or fields as a single vast
entity—game may be anywhere.
This is definitely untrue. The
country is an immensely complex
jig-saw of highly varied ‘individual
colonies of vegetation. Game has
very exact reasons for being in
any given spot . According to out
door expert Byron Dalrymple. It
is not just anywhere.
Whenever one type, of plant
colony ends and another begins,
or whenever one type ends and
barren land or rocks begin: a di
vision is formed which is termed
by wildlife biologists an “edge.”
The lives of almost every type of
animal in existence largely re
volve around and upon these
edges, are indeed welded to them
by necessity. What is this neces
sity? Food, shelter, safety — the
three basic requirements of every
living thing, man included.
I never cease to be amazed over
the fact that many who’ve hunted
for years, and perhaps even con
stantly in the same territory, are
so little aware of the importance
of edges. If somebody decides
the bucks are “in the, swamps”
the hunter goes clear into the mid
dle of the swamp—while the buck
he’s after sneaks away behind
him from the edge. If somebody
says that bad weather has sent
the grouse to the “thick stuff” the
hunter crashes way down deep
into the thick stuff, leaving the
birds chuckling to themselves just
inside the solid edge, where they
can duck out for a quick bite when
mealtime comes.
Nowhere else is nature so dil
igently at work filling vacuums as
along the edges. They are the
real living room and growing room
of almost all game species. And
they may be of immensely varied
kinds and sizes, down to a few
square feet only.
Why are so many deer killed or
“shot” with a camera in the open
but with a nearby forest back
ground? Edges again; food, safe
ty, shelter. Why do the lazy, meat-
hog hunters in cars make such
killings on partridge and phea
sants? Because the weed-grown
roadsides are man-induced edges.
Why has multiflora rose become
such a big thing? It is an ex
cellent man-made edge, combining
food, shelter and safety for game.
In speaking of basic require
ments of game, water is of course
lumped into the food category.
But water is so necessary, except
in a minority of highly specialized
instances, that game in choosing a
home undoubtedly first locates
water, then picks out the nearby
edge that offers the best in food,
shelter and safety.
Dalrymple long ago made it a
rule never to begin hunting a new
territory until he had first located
water. That way a gunner may
quickly choose, from among sev
eral otherwise excellent locations,
the one most ^ikely to pay off.
The shore of lakes and the
cover immediately surrounding
them, and the banks of streams
are perhaps the most important
natural edges of all. I am sure
that a hunter who stuck to these
covers whether after deer, part
ridge, woodcock, pheasant, bear
or whatever, would come up with
a better record over the years
than if he had hunted just here
and there.
FROM THE OLD BOOKS: Who
wrote this: “Why, sir, that may be
true in cases Vhere learning can
not possibly be of any use; for in
stance, this boy rows us as well
without learning, as if he could
sing the song of Orpheus to the
Argonauts, who were the first
sailors.’ He then called to the boy:
‘What would you give, my lad, to
know about the Argononauts?’
‘Sir, (said the boy), I would give
what I have.’ Johnson was well
pleased with his answer, and we
gave him a double fare. Dr. John
son then turning to me: ‘Sir (said
he), a desire of knowledge is the
natural feeling of mankind; and
every human being, whose mind
is not debauched, will be willing
to give all that he has to get
knowledge.’" — From Boswell’s
“Life of Samuel Johnson.”
COURT REFUSES
TO SAVE COUPLE
FROM CHAIR
WASHINGTON, Nov. 17 — The
Supreme Court today fired a dou
ble-barreled “no” at pleas by con
victed atomic spies Julius and
Ethel Rosenberg that the high
tribunal save them from the elec
tric chair.
By an 8-1 vote—Justice Black
dissenting—the court refused for
the second time in just over a
month to review their conviction
on charges of stealing A-bomb
secrets for Russia.
And Justice Frankfurter, in a
statement, declared the high court
did not have the power to reduce
their death sentence, as the couple
had asked. Congress, he said,
abolished such power in 1911.
This second turndown for the
New York couple—the first came
Oct. 13—came close to slamming
Sing Sing Prison's deathhouse door
on the couple. The Rosenbergs
have been imprisoned there during
the 19 months since they were
convicted.
Only the President can save the
Rosenberg’s by reducing their
death sentences to prison terms.
Today’s ruling clears the way for
York to ask the U. S. District
Court to set an execution date.
The tribunal today also refused
for the second time to hear an
appeal by Morton Sobell, radar ex
pert who was convicted of aiding
the Rosenbergs in their spying.
He is under a 30-year prison term.
ONE GREASE
for all
Lubrication lob
%
m.
S ' *
qs
IIppIIM ?
1
t lubricate |
chassis, wheel bearings, watei
ips, universal joints...
our car, truck or tractor
winter or summer.
Farmers find it dofs a better
job at each lubrication point
|l»
1UAJ
ly used.
FARM ADVANTAGES aM-glucK
1. A finer grease at every point.
2. Less danger of applying the wrong grease.
3. Quicker greasing operations.
4. Smaller grease stocks — one instead of 3 or 4.
5. Fewer grease guns.
6. Less waste.
W» dillvf direct to farms. Phono or writ* vs.
Strother C. Paysinger
Suppliers of Sindair Prod.
Newberry, S. C.
THOLIN
* II w LI IN
. jiA SOME SHARP, grated
American cheese with canned
leaked beans and pork. Heat and
serve over toast and you’ll have a
simply - prepared, hearty supper
dish.
Put hard-cooked eggs through a
sieve or chop with a pastry blend
er. Add these to mayonnaise with
chopped chives and you’ll have an
elegant dressing for a green salad.
Tiny baking powder biscuits are
good for a snack afternoon or eve
ning if they’re spread while still
warm with cream cheese mixed
with deviled ham.
Baked custard always makes a
good dessert. Unmold and spoon
over it butterscotch sauce and
whole pecan halves.
Baked fish for dinner? Bake it on
some strips of bacon over which
you have placed a few crushed bay
leaves. The flavor is wonderful.
Diced leftover ham can always
be used to extend welsh rarebit.
Ham and cheese are flavor team-
nates, so you’ll have a good com
bination
RECIPE OF THE WEEK
Sour Cream Waffles
2 cups sifted flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
1 teaspoon soda
H teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon sugar
3 eggs, separated
1 cup sour milk
6 tablespoons butter, melted
Mix and sift dry ingredients.
Combine well-beaten egg yolks,
sour milk and cream; add to
flour mixture and beat until
smooth. Stir in butter and fold
in stiffly beaten egg whites.
Bake in a hot waffle iron.
w-m
*ebM« ,ww '
■0,
Sponge cake gone a bit dry can
be a most luscious dessert when
topped with pineapple, cold cus
tard sauce and a sprinkling of
moist coconut.
This is the season for both cab
bage and apples. Shred the cab
bage fine, dice the apples with
their red skins and mold in cher
ry-flavored gelatin for a delicious
salad.
Dip some egg plant slices in egg
and crumbs and saute until golden.
Top with a fried tomato slice and
creamed mushrooms. It’s a meaty-
tasting main dish.
Try garnishing your tomato,
bean or pea soups with onion rings
fried until golden' brown, then
sprinkle with crisp, crumbled
bacon.
"hen was the last time you priced the
new cars?
When was the last time ypu matched feature
against feature, size against size, horsepower
against horsepower — and discovered for
yourself which car really tops the value
parade?
W^’ll tell you this -*
If you put any Buick—Special, Super or
Roadmaster—against other cars of compa
rable cost, you’ll find it the buy-word in the
automobile market today..
Not alone on room, and power, and ride —
and equipment included in the list price.
But also—and this is where your senses must
be judge—in the thrill per dollar you get in
a Buick.
There’s no other way to know the lift in
spirit you get when a great Fireball 8 Engine
is pouring out its high-mileage power, when
Dynaflow Drive* is at its silky work, when
a million dollars’ worth of ride engineering
is cradling your travel in ever-level comfort.
We ’ll tell you this too—
If you can afford any new car you can afford
a Buick. For Buick prices start way down
where the so-called "low-priced three”
really worry.
Drop in and let us show you the big-thrill
buy called Buick.
Equipment, accessories, trim and models are subject
to change without notice* ^Standard on Roadmaster,
optional at extra cost on other Series,
mrMT-MlW.ILL -I - - - -- ----- --- - — ———————————————————
Two great television events: The TV Football Game of the Week every Saturday and Buick Circus Hour every fourth Tuesday.
CASQUE BUICK COMPANY
1305 Friend Street Newberry, & C.