Donalsonville news. (Donalsonville, Ga.) 1916-current, October 29, 1964, Image 9

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

WITH BO WEN OUT— Green Wave rolls over Indians 20-0 to hand Seminoles their Sth defeat TERRELL COUNTY’S Green Wave of Dawson picked up its seventh win of the season against one loss here Friday night by defeating the Seminole Indians 20-0. It was the fifth loss for the Seminoles. Seminole’s main offense star, halfback Mike Bowen, was out of the game with an injury he sustained early Fri day afternoon when the mo torscooter he was driving was struck by an automobile. His injuries are not believed to be serious, but doctors advised the junior not to play against Dawson. Plenty of Punch Terrell had all the punch it needed in Billy Thaxton and Bob Jones. Thaxton picked up 111 yards in 18 carries, and Jones compiled 109 in 15 tries. The entire Seminole team did not gain but 52 yards rushing and 15 passing for 67 total yards. The only time the Indians could muster a drive was late in the game when they took a kickoff from their 15 to the Terrell’s 38 before stalling. A 15-yard penalty helped this along. Terrell moved into Indian land late in the first period on an exchange of punts and fine running by their backs Thax ton, Jons and James Rayburn. They were on the Indian 10 when the quarter ended. On the first play of the second period, Indian Herb Crosby knifed through and spilled Terrell’s Ronnie Bowen for a loss back to the 21. On the next play, though, Bowen made up for it by tossing a pass to Thomas Israel and the big end scored a touchdown. Jones kicked the point after. The remainder of the first half was highlighted by ball swapping. Paul Brimlow of the Seminoles covered a fum ble by Terrell shortly after a punt, and on the next play Terrell’s Bowen did the same. Indian Ralph Williams inter cepted a Bowen pass a few plays later on the Indian 20 yard line, and Thaxton inter cepted a Bruce Baker toss as the half ended. Terrell spent practically all the third period grinding out a drive toward the Indian goal. Seminole received the. kickoff to open the second half but could not move and punted from their 38. Terrell started a drive on their own 25 yard line, and Thaxton, Jones and Rayburn carried to the Tribe’s one foot line as the third period ended. Quarterback Bowen of Ter rell pushed over those last 12 inches on the first play of the final period, and after Jones kicked it through the up rights, the Wave was out front 14-0. Now came the Indian drive that failed. Taking the kick off on the 15 yard line, Brim low and Jack Ivey picked up a pair of successive first downs. King Clayton ran for nine yards, then a personal foul on the same play moved it on to the Dawson 38 yard line. A short punt here gave Dawson possession on its own 26 yard line, and in four plays the Wave moved to the Tribe 36 yard line. Here Thaxton broke through the left side and scampered on to the goal line. Jones third PAT kick was blocked and the scoring was over. Terrell dominated the yard stick, as well as the score board. They gained 320 yards to the 67 made by Seminole. . Terrell 0 7 0 13—20 Seminole 0 0 0 _0 —_0 Scoring TD’s, Terrell, Israel, 21 yards on pass from Bowen, Bowen on 1-ft. run, Thaxton, 36 yard run. PAT’s, Jones, 2, placement. Seminole The Yardstick Terrell 4 First downs .. 17 15 Yds passing 21 62 Yds rushing 299 67 Total yds 320 6-3 Passing 2-1 1 Pass int. by 1 1 Fumbles lost 1 20 Penalties 40 6-28.5 Punts & avg. 2-40 Your Choice of Either of These Flameless Electric • •‘•1 hi, DRYERS For Only a month I,~C~~■ — I * aaa * i ' • ,r - ~.n i nil - fegi/ ~ ' - - ■ : I : IF" — ■n I ifeOl 111 i i 018 11111 I \ \ ( IE II I W \ \ bi ft | \ ~ « I W ilf I ® I. ' < I ' GUARANTEED* L J \ FAD C VFADC X] Both dryers are guaran- . teed against any failure performance, - j those resulting from abuse or misuse. All ser- vice and repairs will be jgg Sbk westingnouse charge. MODEL DGD3O MODEL DlO2 It’s true! You can own either of these fine dryers for just $3.09 a month paid over a 5-year period. And during \ that time, it is fully guaranteed against mechanical fail ure. If anything goes wrong, we fix it—free! Think of it! Freedom from clothesline drudgery—fluffy, sweet smelling laundry at the push of a button—all for mere pennies a day. See your Georgia Power store and waltz through washday. GEORGIA POWER COMPANY PINEVIEW CLUB HEARS HOW TO BE BETTER The Pineview community club met Thursday night with a covered dish supper. Mrs. Clyde Vickers was hostess. Leroy Singletary, vice pres ident, presided in the absence of the president, Dewey King. He announced the directors will have a meeting to select committee chairmen soon. Miss Francesco Sianti, Miss Kathy Singletary and Miss Rose Dutton led the devotion al. Rev. Albert Payne, pastor of the First Church of the Nazarene, spoke to the club members on how they could be better members and better Christians by serving a risen Saviour. The club invites others to join in their fellowship. —reporter TELL THEM you read about it in The News! DONALSONVILLE (GA. 31745) NEWS THURSDAY, OCT. 29, 1964 Announcing the opening of QUICK LUNCH RESTAURANT IN THE DANIELS BUILDING ON US 84 Operated by Arthur and Patricia Alexander OPEN 24 HOURS A DAY SEVEN DAYS A WEEK Serving Regular Lunches, Short Orders Ala Carte Orders Steaks, Special Salads and Sea Foods Regular Lunches During Weekßßc Sunday Dinners ... SI.OO Barbecue Friday, Saturday and Sunday PLEASE COME TO SEE US!