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PAGE SIX Carolina-State, Auburn-Duke Are Saturday’s Leaders Carolina-State Game In Ilaleigh Saturday <0 J One of North Carolina’s Old est Annual Gridiron Classics On Rid. dick Field LAST HOME GAME FOR STATE’S TEAM Five Senior Members Os Wolfpack Make Their Last Appearance For State In Their Clash With Tar Heels; Both Teams Are Troubled by Injuries Raleigh, Nov. 3. —Another notch in one of North Carolina’s oldest annua) football games will be cut tomorrow when the Wolves of State College am l the Tar Heels of Carolina meet on Riddick Fi«id at 2:»0 o’clock. The gam? will be played before a Homecoming and Dad’s Day crowd and old graduates began to arrive this afternoon. A twoday program has been planned for them, beginning to night and closing tomorrow evening with a dance. Following tomorrow s game, State : will have two remaining games with Duke and South Carolina, but both : will be played away, meaning that the j seniors on this year’s Wolfpack will pl'ay thfir last game on Riddick Field ; Injuries troubled both State and; Karelina the first of toe we:k. Coach, 'ollins. however, will have all cf his ' layers ready for service except Coi ns, a nephew. State will be wilnout te services cf two of its stars. AUBURN AIDURHAM FOR SATURDAY TILT Auburn, Ala., Nov. 3. —Selected as a low-ranking underdog for the fourth successive weak, 31 Auburn gridders. including four regulars ■who have only a very slim chance of being in phy sical condition to play Saturday, de parted from Auburn Thursday night for Durham, where Saturday the Tig ers 1932 co-champions cf the South ern Confer:nce, will clasih with the undefeated, untied Duke Blue Devils in one of the major grid battles in America this week. The Tigers will arriv? In Durham ! Friday afternoon and will be given a light workout there shortly afte r their' arrival upon the scene of the clash, Auburn’s opening inter-conference en counter of the year. Brace U. N. C. Attack ~ /W c The Carolina running attack is ex pected to draw extra strength for the game at Stete Saturday from two star backs who were laid up with injuries last week. They are Henry Burnett, feature broken field runner and south paw punter, who played a large part in the victory over State last year, and Jim McCachren, driving sophomore and another good punter. ! S v • i '.v AL. B. WESTER, Agent I INSURANCE ’ * RENTALS H I BONDS Iff I ■ 1 f *l HfNDfB'.ON u »fnq m YOUNG r ,r. RUPTURE Ease your mind; stop your suf fering; don’t grow old ahead of jroiup "time. Let us fit yon perfectly from our complete stock of the new patented, Excelsior NON - SKID Spot Pad Trusses! ThoPERFECT Rupture HOLDERSI They do the work so easily and ore so comfortable that you for get you are wearing a truss. We’ll gladly demonstrate their wonderful new features, and offer CONSULTATION and ADVICE “FREE OF CHARGE.’ 1 ' SEE OUR FITTER NOWt We have a SPECIAL TYPE tot YOUR Rupture! % Parker’s Drug Store The R«*xaU Store. He Directs ’Pack WJLSOAJ ~6JART£fI Here’s Don Wilson, State’s first string quarter who will direct his team against Carolina tomorrow afternoon cn Riddick Field, Raleigh. Wilson is a nexpert blocker, said to be one of the best in th's department and weigh about 180 pounds. Be is a member of a backfield that averages 194 pounds Veteran Tackle TATUM O TACKLE Jim Tatum 200 pound tackle a member of the Carolina team in 1932 that upset State in its only loss of the 1932 season will be in the game to morrow when the Tar Heels clash with the Wolfpack on Riddick Field, Ra leigh. Tatum is a vetarn and a star. Enforcement Big Issue Impending (Continued from Page One.) is going to eb repealed, regardless of whether North Carolina votes for it or not. So it really does not make any difference which way North Caro lina votes as far as national prohibi tion and the eighteenth amendment is concerned. But it is going to make a great deal of difference to North Carolina and every person in the State as to how •he election comes out it is agreed,' since if hte State votes for repeal the enactment of modern and effective li quor control laws that should make •he State much drier than it is now can be expected byte next General .if the antirfepeal for ces win, the enactment of any new re gulatory legislation will become; dif ficult, with the result that the State will . have to limp along under he ten years-old Turlington act, designed to enforce a national enforemeent act and amendment tat no longer exist, which in turn will mean that bootleg liquor will continue to be sold in vir tually every filling station, lunch stand, hotel and joint in the S'ate, just as it is at present. “The Turlington act Is i n effect now and has'heen theTaw since 1923 | Rockne Proteges Will Test Wits "cuppen '• Smith. - h£Ao c^T When State and Carolina meet in Raleigh Saturday afterno&n in their 26th meeting,, the man,, behind each club will be a product of the coach the late Knut « Rockne, John R. Clippor” Smith z State College’® DAILY" oiSFAiuri, HENdEksujn, (k; C.) FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1933 (CAROLINA BREWING ITS NEW ATTACK Chapel Hill, Nov. 3. —Strategy and phyoholcgy may assume a command ing role in the Big Five champion ship encounter and annually classic brotherly battle between the football warriors cf Carolina and State in Ra leigh Saturday afternoon at 2 o’clock. A deep air of secrecy has shrouded the Tar Heel camp all week. The men. hav.r gone behind barred gates to brew their attack. And there has been an endless line of coaches’ conferences, quarterback meetings, and strategy sessions. Th: program has been much the same as preceded last year’s game, and every follower of Big Five foot ball in 1932 recall? how Carolina pull ed the unbelievable and upset State 13-0 in the Wolfpack’s one defeat of the year. OXFORD BOY WINS U. N. C. TACKLE POST Chapel Hill, Nov. 3. Tom Evans cf Oxford is slated to join “Babe” Daniel as the second sophomore in line Carolina will throw across State’s path Saturday. Daniel, an All-South ern selection in high school, plays cen ter. Evins, a rugged 19u-pounder and one of the fastest linemen on the squad takes the place of the injured Bill Collins at tackle. but has it stopped the sale of liquor?” a State official asked here today. “It has not. Any one who knows anything about conditions knows that no one who wants to get liquor is no further from a place to buy it than his tele phone. A list of half a dozen tele phone numbers may be obtained from as many different sources in any city or town in the state, from which any amount of liquor from a pint to a five gallon keg may be ordered and de livery made within 30 minutes to an hour. Is that prohibition? Yet this s»“ems to be what the anti-repealists want to preserve and perpetuate. And they will probably succeed in doing it if the State votes against repeal at ithiq time.” But if a majority of the people in the State vote for repeal and a ma jority of repeal delegates are elected to the State convention, the way will be paved for the enactment by the next General Assembly of new and modern liquor control laws which should and can makei liquor much more difficult to obtain than it is at present, it is pointed out. But if this is no done and the old out-model Tur lington act is permitted to remain as the State’s only prohibition enforce ment law, the present bootleg system of handling liquor will continue to flourish, .except on a much larger scale than ever before, it is maintain ed, since North Carolina will be sur rounded by wet states In which the sale of liquor will be legal. As a re sut, much liquor from these states will be smuggled into the State in addition to the bootleg liquor manufactured here. Since this State would probably be the only theoretically dry one In the entire United States, it would un doubtedly become the mecca for boot leggecis, gangsters and racketers from ether states .repeal advocates point out. As a result, conditions would tend to become much worse than if the State should decide to permit the legal sale of liquor under strict regulation and control, they maintain. NEW Si HIGH Average of $16.73 Made Thursday on 274,070 Pounds, Report Shows Tc’iacco on the Henderson mar ket today averaged higher than' the record price of $16.73 per hun dred pounds registered yesterday for the day’s entire sale, R. ,W. McFarland, sales supervisor, an nounced this afternoon. The mar ket was stronger, he said. Thurs day’s sale was 274,070 pounds, with $45 867.50 paid out by the. buyers, the official statement said. Co&ct/ CtSo'C'* ColcsaSS • A I - . I coach, was All-American guard' at | Notre Dame when lie captain the Irish ) team in 1927. Charles “Chuck” Collins i Carolina’s coach, played end and . was j one of the “seven mules - ’ who cleared | the way for the famous “Four Horse * men” of Notre Dame. DUKEAND AUBURN TO TO BATTLE Speedy Plainsmen Favored To Hand Duke Its First Seback In 1933 Season WILL PLAY~GAME IN DUKE STADIUM Crowd Second Only To the Duke-Tentnessee Game In Early Season Expected To See Contest; Duke Made Poor Showing Against Kentucky, Auburn Whip ped Tulane Dunham. Nov. 3. —Auburn’s specta cular eleven, Southern conference co champions of 1932 and favored to hand Duke’s unbeaten Blue Devils their first defeat of the season in Duke stadium here tomorrow, arrived here today to set the stage for the battle. That a crowd second only to the throng hat witnessed the Duke-Ten nessee game earlier this season would file into Duke stadium before game time at 2 20 o’clock, was indicated, today by the advance sale of tickets at the Duke athletic office. Duke’s poor showing against Ken tucky last week, while Auburn was flashing brilliant form to down Tulane and the fact that Horse Hendrickson, quarterback, and Captain Carl Shock guard, may no* be in action tomorrow gives Duke the underdog role as they seek their sixth victory of the season. The Auburn eleven is probably the most dangerous in Dixie. A veritable bevy of speedy backs —rated the fast es in the country—and what many call the best passing attack in the south, gives them the offensive attack that last year carreied them to the eo chapionship of the Southern confer ence. It is regarded as the big test for the Blue Devils—to prove whether or not they are of championship cali bre. They will be meeting an inspired eleven—the same team that handed them their first defeat last year after they had chalked up two straight vic tories. Their meeting last week with Kentucky’s inspired team resulted in a pcor showing by the Blue Devils, although they were victorious. Duke is in bad shape by injuries. Galloping “Horse” Hendrickson, quar terback, will not likely be in the game and there is still doubt if Captain Carl .Shock, guard, will be able co start. Auburn’s early week injuries have re turned to >he lineup and they are rived here today in good condition. License Bureau Is To Start Selling (Continued from Page One.) help with the rush that always prevails during the sale of licenses. “We are going to be all ready to start selling licenses on December 1, both here and in more than 50 branch offices over the State,” Director Har ris said. ‘ We are going to have plenty of license plates and adequate help. And there will not be any extension after January 1, with the result that automobile owners must either buy their new license plates before that date or stop using their cars. Gov ernor Ehringhaus nas already issued orders that there will be no extension of time and he means business.” The principal reasons the date for the sale cf automobile licenses has been moved up this year from De cember 15 to December 1, is that Gov ernor Ehringhaus hopes to collect enough revenue from the saie of li censes before January 1 to enable the State to meet its obligations on that date without having to do any shor erm borrowing. Thus if from $2,000,- 000 to $3,000,000 can be collected from automobile licenses before January 1, this revenue can be used to pay off bond interest and maturities due Jan uary 1 and make it unnecessary for the State to borrow money for this purpose thus saving large interest charges. Under the old system of sell ing licenses, very little revenue was collected until after January 1, so that it could not be used in meeting Jan uary 1 indebtedness. Compare the Tobacco on the Warehouse Floor” F.6.ROYSTER GUANO COMPANY experts are constantly studying the plant food needs of tobacco —from the time |gsg|jjpp -r the plant beds are sown until the crop is * n t^ie arn * These research men spend t}ieir entire time locating, £ . J, ■■.•;'' refining materials, and aevelbpwijf'Tlil^*^?* MERE’S only one sure way to judges correct combination of these materials a tobacco fertilizer. And I’ll leave It to to produce the finest quality leaf. And you whether it is a fairway or not. Com- their continuous field tests prove that pare the quality on the warehouse floor, Royster Fertilizers bring real, practical when the tobacco is being sold. See for results. yourself the quality of tobacco ihade with W7 . o , o f r T , f ? when you use Royster Tobacco Fer. Royster Fertilizer. Then compare the >*. f 75 . u - price it brings with the prices paid for ** other tobaccos. You be the jutfee- De- § f “ cide for yourself which fertilizer is best. , P3y * ™ 3t “ b f* Uße for nearly litty years we have made only one I couldn t ask you to do this if I quality of tobacco fertilizer—-the best weren’t sure of the quality of Royster that can be made. And that is why there Tobacco Fertilizer. I know what has is more Royster Tobacco Fertilizer used been done to make Royster the best fer- in North Carolina and Virginia than any tilizer you can buy at any price. Royster other brand. 7 F. A 'ROYSTER GUANO COMPANY • NORFOLK, VIRGINIA %ster| : field tested fertilizers fSw| •‘ 4 • L, i . 'h Havana Bakery Is Bombed; One Dead; Grau May Resign Havana, Nov. 3 (AP)—A bomb exploded in a bakery at St Mi guel, and Gervasio streets today killing one person and wounding five. It was the ninth bomb explo sion of a day marked by the state ment iof Carlos "lend'rta, Na tionalist leader that he and his followers were asking the resig nation of President Ramon Grau San Martin. A short time after the bakery blast, another explosion in anoth er part of the capital injured one person. Mendieta, along with his re velation concerning the president virtually blasted the hopes of ad ministration supporters for a eoal tion government. Overdue Sale Tax Will Be Demanded (Continued from Page One.) days. The 56 field deputies in the state will be expected to call on each one of these delinquent merchants between now and November 30 to find out why they have not made their tax pay ments and to see that they do make tnem at< Commissioner Max well said. For while some 17,000 mer chants made sales tax returns in Oc tober, there were nearly 9.000 who are registered wno did not make any re turns . Collections from vhe three per cent NOTICE TO WATER CONSUMERS All delinquent, waiter bills musi be paid on or before Nov. 11 1933. Jt is necessary to colled all bills in order to meet bond and interest payments. HENDERSON WATER WORKS Nov. 1, 1933. general sales tax on retail ~ , •ng October amounted to dur ' is believed that when the 3 - It tors have checked np on .{! Colle<: merchants that did net m tc , 9 °°° turns last month, tnat trT ' re * run well over $600,00. ° UI *ii; “There are sill a good n, Hm chants who do not fully np.)' r ’ thle sales tax law, and who 's' and have not sent in their returns should,” Director Harry Mc'luH* h * y the Sales Tax Division, said A° f are also a good many merchant 616 are finding, who have be en 22"'* for thte deputy collectors t 0 Cm ltlne round before making a m return" a ' all. We have sent out letter.™ « times telling them tfte law m , ' al them to send their .ales tux culiejue? in every month, if they amount i„ 2 or more a month, regardless m era collector come by or not 2 there are some who either do not r the letters or pay no att-mt,/ f them.” Around Town License Is Issued -A marriage n cense was issued yesterday by th* u gister of deeds to W. R. Blair ana Fannie Elliott, white both of Oxford, Hear Mr. Farley.—Several w from here today t 0 Raleigh to h ar the address by Postmaster Genera: James A. Farley in the Raleigh Memorial Auditorium in urging repeal of the eighteenth amendm< nt Farley spoke at 11 a. m. One Case Tried.—James Mitchell cool red, charged with an assault wjtt a deadly weapon, was given to day on the roads in recorder's court to day, or the alternative of paying a $5 fine and costs and being <0 good be havior two years.