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SECTION TWOHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiH THE JOURNAL Thursday, Nov. 21,1946
Redskins Begin BasketballPractice For Opener Nov. 26
Approximately 25 basketball players turned out for the opening practice of the Caldwell Redskins last week, as Coach Jerry Ramsey turns his attention from football to basketball in preparation for the season’s opener on November 26.
With few experienced men from last year, Ramsey is faced with somewhat of a rebuilding problem, having only five lettermen back and only two of these with much first string experience. Letterman are Don Ferguson, Tuffy Tilton, Don Seffens, Bill Murrey, and Tom Zimmerman.
Dana Reed, tall center of Cald- vrell’s championship team of 1944- 45, is expected to report for practice this week and if so will do much to bolster the Redskins chances this year. He attended Greenbriar last season.
Players already reporting for practice are Bill Murrey, Joe Bigley, Paul Keeton, Don Ferguson, Tom Zimmerman, Don Seffens, Don King, Charles Fogle, Virgil Tilton, Ben Craft, Jimmy Potts, Dwight Tilton, Luke Young, Jack Fowler, Harold Hupp, Bruce Gill, George Simonton, Jimmy Robinson, John Hickman, Durward Cecil, Bill Se- mon, Tuffy Tilton, Jack Frederickson, and Bill Baker.
Those expected to come out in addition to Reed are Carlos “Dutch” Connell, Bernard Riski, and Bernard Lori.
Head manager of the basketball team will be Charles Johns with ‘Sparky” McCauley as assistant. These two noys also served as football managers.
As the season gets under way, Marvin P. Wood will coach the reserve team, as games have been scheduled with all varsity opponents. There is also the possibility of a junior high team with Dwain Dyer as coach.
Caldwell has only three seniors this year, Reed, Seffens, and Zimmerman, so consequently the Redskins will have a good chance for building for next season. Not much is known concerning the other league teams, but all seem to be fairly tough, with Crooksville possibly rated as best in the league.
The bleachers used outdoors for the football games have been dismantled and set up again in the gym, and it is also understood that some painting will be dqne during Christmas vacation. A new electric scoreboard has been ordered, having been left as a memorial from the class of 1946, but so far it has not arrived. The floor has been scrubbed end cleaned, and incidentally so having the Redskins uniforms, making everything ready for the opening game. When material is available, new uniforms will be purchased for the team.
Nineteen games appear on the Caldwell schedule, 10 at home and nine away. Two games have been scheduled with all league teams making 14 league games in all. Last year the league title was shared by Philo, St. Thomas, and McConnelsville, with Caldwell finishing a poor seventh. St. Thomas is not participating in the league this year, leaving only eight teams as in football.
Complete schedule of Caldwell’s games is as follows:
Nov. 26—Dexter City, home.Dec. 3—Belle Valley, away
♦Dec. 6—Crooksville, away♦Dec. 10—Philo, away•Dec. 13—Glouster, home♦Dec. 17—Roseville, away♦Dec. 24—McConnelsville, home♦Jan. 7—New Concord, home •Jan 10—New Lexington, away •Jan. 14—Crooksville, home ♦Jan. 17—Philo, homeJan. 21—Belle Valley, home
•Jan. 24—Glouster, away•Jan. 31—Roseville, home•Feb. 7—McConnelsville, away •Feb. 4—New Concord, away •Feb. 11—New Lexington, homeFeb. 14—Byesville, awayFeb. 18—Belpre, home
•Denotes league games.
Soap Leads ParadeAs Prices Soar
The price of soap increased as much as 50 percent today to lead a long list of rising prices on articles ranging from scrap steel to bonded whisky.
Spokesmen for the soap industry said that despite the higher prices there would be only slight improvement in the supply of soap, which has been scarce for many months. Most six-ounce bars are now sell-
SHORTSBy LONG
“TUFFY” TILTON (pictured above after the New Concord game), was the Redskins leading offensive player this year, racking up 13 touchdowns and two extra points for a total of 80 points. This is just seven points short of the record of 87 set by “Lobby” Mazgay in 1939, when the Redskins won the league title. Tuffy, playing in all nine games, carried the ball 159 times, gained 786 yards and lost 53, for an average of better than 41Z2 yards each time he carried the ball. Average per game was 81 yards. In the passing department, he attempted 37 and completed 15 for a total of 255 yards, and an average of 17 yards per pass. Only three passes were intercepted. Tuffy is a junior and started in every game at the left halback spot.
— —FINAL CHECKUP for all games re-vealed the following statistics con-cerning the Caldwell backfield:
TCB G L AvgTilton _____ ___ 159 786 53 4.6Slovak ____ ____ 65 322 63 4.0Glen Potts ____ 65 251 5 3.8Frederickson ____ 25 87 4 3.3Riski _______ ____ 25 114 46 2.7Seffens_____ ____ 17 34 8 1.5Jimmy Potts ______1 0 3 -3Reed_______ _____ 1 0 6 -6
THE REDSKINS during the past season won five games, lost three i nd tied one. While not particularly an impressive record, it is interesting to note that this record has been surpassed only four times in the past 16 years—in 1939, 1935, 1933, and 1932. Season records for the past several years are as follows:
W L T1931 ______________________ 4 2 21932 ______________________ 7 1 01933 __ ___________________ 5 2 11934 ______________________ 2 6 01935 ______________________ 7 2 11936 ______________________ 3 4 11937 ______________________ 2 4 11938 ----------------------------------3 4 01939 ----------------------------------6 2 01940 ______________________ 2 4 11941 ______________________ 4 4 01942 ______________________ 2 5 11943 ______________________ 4 4 01944 ______________________ 4 3 11945 ----------------------------------3 5 11946 ----------------------------------5 3 1
LEADING SCORERS in football for the past 16 years are listed below:
TD Pt. Tot1932— Charles Murrey___ 8 3 511933— John Angelo______ 9 1 551934— Jim Robey _______ 2 2 141935— Stanley Mazgay___ 4 1 251936— Stanley Mazgay___ 9 2 561937— Leo Mazgay_________ 3 0 18
—Dick Muirey_____ 3 0 181938— Leo Mazgay_______ 6 0 361939— Leo Mazgay_____ 14 3 871940— Bob Estadt_________ 3 1 191941— Jum Clark_______ 12 1 731942— Jum Clark _______ 5 4 341943— Dave Fowler_______ 6 1 371944— Eck Clark_________ 7 2 441945— Lloyd King_________ 7 1 431946— Tuffy Tilton_____ 13 2 80
CALDWELL scored 113 points while holding their opponents to 73 and
permitting only two touchdowns in their first five games. Season scores v/ere as follows:
C Op.Marietta Reserves____ ____ 37 0Crooksville___________ _____ 7 0Philo ________________ ____ 12 7New Lexington______ _____ 0 0New Concord ________ _____ 7 6Parkersburg Reserves _ ____ 12 20Glouster______________ ____ 26 20Roseville _____________ _____ 6 7McConnelsville______ _____ 6 13
Total _____________ ___ 113 73
SEASON RECORDS of the league teams including both league and non-league games shows the following:
VV L TNew' Lexington __________ 8 0 1Roseville __________________ 6 2 0McConnelsville ____________ 6 3 0Caldwell___________________ 5 3 1Philo _____________________ 4 4 0Crooksville________________ 4 5 0New Concord _____________ 3 4 0Glouster__________________ 18 0
COMPOSITE BREAKDOWN of all nine games played by the Redskins i eveals the following statistics:
INDIVIDUAL SCORING for Caldwell was divided among five back-field men with Tilton leading the parade with 80 points:
TD Pts. TotTilton ____________ ___ 13 2 80Slovak __________ ------- 3 0 18Frederickson_____ _____1 0 6Piski_____________ _____1 0 6Ferguson ________ ____ 0 3 3
Total________ ___ 18 5 113
PASSING—^—
PA PC Yds IntTilton ______ 37 15 255 3Seffens_______ 4 2 12 1Fotts_________ 3 0 0 1
Totals___ 44 17 267 5
RECEIVING——
Passes YdsReed ____________ ___ 11 210F rederickson_____ ____ 2 47Slovak __________ ____ 4 40Riski _ ______ ___ 1 10Murrey__________ _____1 7
Cald. Op.First downs rushing______ 63 61First downs passing_______ 14 17rl otal first downs________ 77 78Yards gained rushing__ 1595 1257Yards gained passing____ 267 390Passes attempted________ 43 82Passes completed__________17 27Percent of passes________ 40 33Passes intercepted by___ 10 5Yards lost rushing______ 207 210Yards penalized __________ 50 160Fumbles recovered by___ 12 9
A FURTHER CHECK shows the Redskins were able to score most frequently in the first quarters of their games totaling 38 points in the Imst period. They scored 20 in the second, 30 in the third, and 25 in the last Defensively, they allowed 13 points in the first quarter, 13 in the second, none in the third, and 47 in the fourth.
PAID ATTENDANCE for the Armistice Day game was 1258 with 854 of this number being adults and 404 students. Gate receipts amounted to $528.00 but of this amount $105 went for federal tax.
FOR THE SEASON, the attendance v’as only 3,706 paid, with a breakdown as follows: Marietta Reserves 332, Philo 552, New Concord, 946, Roseville 618, and McConnelsville 1258. The average attendance for the two night games was 782, while for the three day games it was 714.
SECTIONAL TOURNEY for this county will be held in the Caldwell gym the w'eek of March 1, with Washington and Monroe counties also represented. At Zanesville, it will be Muskingum, Guernsey, Morgan and Coshocton counties.
DISTRICT TOURNEY will be held al Marietta the week of March 8 with the winners and runners-up from Caldwell and Zanesville competing. This is the most welcome news in years for Noble county fans, eliminating the long trip to Steubenville each year. It is understood that the district tounrey will alternate between Marietta and Zanesville, making it ideal for Caldwell.
EOB WATERFIELD of the Los Angeles Rams staged a one-man show recently to show why he is the National Football League’s most valuable player. In addition to being married to the beautiful movie actress Jane Russell, which is a job in itself, Waterfield can really handle the old pigskin. Defeating
ing for nine cents, an increase of three cents. It was also pointed that the 21-ounce boxes of soap chips and powder would increase from 12 to 14 cents to the consumer.
Many large manufacturers and wholesalers said they would try to hold the price line for the present but could not predict what would happen in the future.
Local buyers seem to be taking all this in their stride and there is very little if any grumbling.
Photo Developing—Gillespie’s
* DIVIDEND OF 2%per year is paid on all savings accounts here. Earnings are paid in cash on investment accounts; are added to savings accounts. Open an account here. We will help it to grow.
CURRENT DIVIDEND 2%All Accounts Federally Insured up to $5,000.00.
QUICK RELIEF FROM Symptoms of Distress Arising from
STOMACH ULCERS me to EXCESS ACID FroeBookTotfsofMsmeTrsatmonttliat Must Help or It Win Cost You NotWnX Over two million bottle* of the WI LL A RD TRKATMKNT have been eold for relief ofand OuMlenal Ulcer* due to Exceee Add—
One to beem AcW. Sold on^Sday?trial! Ask for “Wlllsrd’e which fullyexplains this treatment » t.
You will enjoy Mutual Federal Service.X-x.
JV < MUTUAL FEDERAL *.
«*VINM<uwLOAN ASSOCIATION [»
MUTUAL FEDERAL“Muskingum County’s Oldest”
Savings & Loan Assn.Mutual Federal Building
Brown Granite Front14 South Fifth Street ZANESVILLE, OHIO
GILLESPIE’S DRUG STORE Us
Under onio Skies/Is told by Conservation Division
Heep Both f eyes Open /
A W/NTER FEEDING PRO- GRAM^ CARRIED OUT BY INDIVIDUALS OR ORGAN IL- AT/ONS ->■ IS A TREMENDOUS AID IN HELPING BREEDING STOCK THROUGH THE MONTHS OF SNOW AND ICE-
SHOTGUN EXPERTS SAY THAT KEEPING BOTH EYES OPEN WHEN SHOOTING INCREASES YOUR EFFICIENCY-
Where You Shoot!IHEKE is no rabbit or
.•7*^ V pheasant worth crippling< LIVESTOCK TO OBTAIN-
INSTRUCTION /N FIREARMS SAFETY HAS DEDUCED THE ACCIDENTS AMONG YOUNG hunters- Untaught yovNG- \ STERS AND CARE- _ A z.ess old tin &s
CAUSE THE MOST
> ACCIDENTS
Detroit 41-20, he scored one touchdown himself, passed to each of the ends for two more, passed to one cf the backs for another, booted five straight points after touchdown, and kicked two field goals.
NOBLE COUNTY SCHOOLS will have a basketball league of seven teams this year according to county superintendent H. C. Secrest. Teams iepresented will be Belle Valley, Dexter City, Harriettsville, Forest Grove, Batesville, Summerfield and
Moore’s Duchess. In the St. Clairs- viile trials Moore’s Duchess won second, while in the Zanesville trials Leasure’s Dart took second.
FRANKIE BAUMHOLTZ, former Ohio University basketball star, is continuing his ability as a professional for the Cleveland Rebels. He has poured 44 points through the hoops in two games, including 19 field goals. In a 71-60 win over Toronto, Frankie caged 10 field goals and five free throws for 25 points.
Drugs team which was undefeated several years ago and may get up a game with a team led by John Rockne, son of the late famous Knute Rockne. Further details will he learned upon his return from Indiana.
L. E. POTTS has also received most of his motion pictures of the Redskins football games, and hardly a night passes without showing them to someone. Speaking of pictures, Jack Wilson has some fine Koda- chrome slides of Ohio State football games which really bring out the color.
ANNUAL DISTRICT fish hearing v\ ill be held at the Cambridge office cn Sunday, November 24 at 1:00 p. m. Many resolutions in the interest of better fishing in Southeastern Ohio will be discussed at this meeting which is open to anyone interested.
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Patrolmen CannotArrest In Corporation
Attorney General Hugh S. Jenkins, during the past week, advised Arch R. Hicks, Prosecuting Attor- new of Brown county, that the State highway patrol has no authority to make arrests for violations on state highways within municipalities. Attorney General Jenkins called attention to the fact that the law giving authority to the highway patrol leads: “to enforce, on all roads and highways outside of municipal corporations, the laws relating to the use and operation of vehicles on the highways”.
In the opinion Jenkins made this comment:
“With respect to laws relating to registration and licensing of motor vehicles, the legislature has not specified the territorial limits of the juirsdiction of the State highway
HAWKSHAW HAWKINS and his radio gang from WWVA will appear on the stage of the Noble theatre on Thursday, November 21, for a personal appearance. Shows will be at 7 and 9 with “Lightning Raiders” booked as
the screen attraction.
patrol. In asigning to the State highway patrol the duty to enforce the laws relating to the operation and use of vehicles on the highways, however, the legislature has specifically confined the State highway patrol to the roads and highways outside municipal corporations.”
MILK PRODUCTION DOWNDairymen produced 2.2 pounds of
milk a day for every person in the nation during September but that was a decrease from the September average in five previous years.
• 7- :k; *‘,3i
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IMS/IBw I.
Tilling with a Hundred Teams of SteelMore power on the farm means more food :;. more jobs.
If a farmer bad three teams of horses twenty-five years ago he was well equipped. Now, with over two million tractors and thousands of other power producers, most farmers command the equivalent of. ;.a HUNDRED TEAMS.
Wise use of their power, which can be packed into a few tons of steel, is enabling U.S. farmers to keep abreast of unprecedented food requirements. It is one of the secrets of national progress.
Steel horsepower does more than produce bigger crops with less labor. It has released, for production of human food, millions of acres once needed to feed horses and mules,
and has created thousands of new jobs for town and city people who process and sell the increased harvests.
The benefits of farming with steel are the result of teamwork between farmers and industry. The farmer knows what he needs; industry knows how to supply it at a price he can afford. This teamwork must continue if America is to remain a land of abundance.
Farmers need still more power. The country needs still more food. Uninterrupted industrial production will permit industry to catch up with the pent-up need for more farm power.
American Iron and Steel Institute, 350 Fifth Avenue, New York 1, N. Y.
The Institute has printed a booklet STEEL SERVES THE FARMER. JTrite for a copy and it trill sent gladly.
Sarahsville. At this time we wish to place ourselves squarely behind the eight ball by going out on a bmb and predicting Dexter City to cop the league title as well as the county tourney.
BELLE VALLEY, according to the grapevine, is putting down a new floor in the gymnasium. This will be welcome news to every team in Noble county and a distinct asset to the Belle Valley auditorium.
BEAGLE DOG OWNERS in Caldwell have been doing right well by themselves during the past few weeks with the following results: In the Seneca Lake trials, Nelson Leasure took first place in the 13- inch class with Leasure’s Dart, while in the 15-inch class Jack Oliver won second with Oliver’s Pandy, and Bill Moore copped third with
ROCCO DIBARI of New Lexington, and a high school football star of several years ago, is one of the main reasons why an Ohio college is staging a comeback in football, l ittle Rio Grande college is enjoying its best season in years with a record of five wins and two losses, due largely to the fleet-footed Rocky and his long runs.
MARVIN P. WOOD has now received ttye band annuals from the * First Chair of America” and they have been distributed to all those ordering copies. Pictured among the many honored bands of America is Caldwell’s swing band with pictures cf the group, director, majorettes, and all first chair players.
BOB McKEE, who is leaving for South Bend next week to see the Notre Dame-Southern California game, tells us that if details can be worked out on that end, an independent basketball game of interest may be scheduled for Caldwell daring the Christmas holidays. McKee is reorganizing the old Ralston
\ From where 1 sit...// Joe Marsh ....... . ......................... .....
Why Bert WonFirst Prize
Folks weren’t surprised when Bert Childers won first prize for his corn at the county fair.
Yet the judges admit it wasn’t just because Bert had the finest ears of corn. He knew how to display them: neatly arranged, with the husks cleanly trimmed, and the booth white and spotless.
“Trimmings” sure make a difference no matter what you’re offering—as Andy Botkin, keeper of the Garden Tavern, well knows. Andy doesn’t just sell good beer. He sells it in a place that’s clean and attractive ... in nice surroundings that
belong with the enjoyment of a wholesome beverage of moderation.
And Andy, of course, is a wholehearted supporter of “Self Regulation.” Thai’s the system by which the Brewers and tavern keepers themselves make sure that taverns selling beer are clean and orderly.
From where I sit, people like Andy also rate a “First prize ” Not just for the quality of the product —but for the “trimmings” too.
Copyright, 1946, United Stales Brewers Foundation