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PAGGE TWO
nvpion;-hip Decision
-tiame Played in Atlanta,
jOae'xf the Wildest of the
Season.
• -ATLANTA, Ga. Extremely ent winner of tkn 1:
E “tltl end very woollv was the set- cd South Georgia
patent of the North Georgia;for the Buford nb
IMscball cahmpioRship yesterday precisely one-third
It ponet* do Leon park when Bu- The “Goat” wfls r '
lord defonteii the Cartersvilie and his mntes add<
Sitm 11 to 11 in the bloodiest dia- bles by erring at cr
Settle, ef. ..
Craven, lb. .
Davenport, 2b.
Pound, If. ...
Richardson, ss.
Johnson, e. ..
Cochran, p. -..
Chambers, p.
Atlanta and West Point Railroad Company
The Western Railway of Alabama
The Georgia Railroad
Smith,
The Summer Tourist season Is now oif and vacations art
In order. You will bo glad to know that conditions surround
ing Summer Tourist travel are more liberal this season l^n
In almost any previous year. Reduced rate* are in effect la
practically every state In the Union as well as to some points
In Canada, thu various tours Including delightful trip* on
the Atlantic and Pacific oceans, the Great l^akes. Iff? Law-
ronce River, Hudson River, through the Vellowstotit* and
Other National Parks, to the Grand Canyon, etc. Styn.ov*rs
may bo made at any point on elthor going or return trip,
within final limit of ticket, which Is. In ease*. Octo
ber 31, 1923.
Let os help you arrange your vacation. We aru nere to
servo and any information desired will be gDdly furnished
by ticket agtnt-ln your town or by the undersigned.
Totals ,. .. 15 14 20 27 13 4
P'-mmary: Two-base bits, Par
rish, Bryant, Cannon; three-base
‘hits. Ricnnrdso i, Freeman, Daven
port, Barron; home run, Parrish;
i'Steien bases, Barron, Pound; sae-
irifices, Barrotin. Pound! double
]plays, Crowe (unassisted), Daven-
jpoit to Richardson to Craven; left
ion banes, Bufcrd 15, CarVersvilk?
|3; Wises cn. bd'Is, off Stevens 3,
'off Sale 1. eff Wulir 3, off Smith
12, off Cochran 1, off Ghambergvl;
Htiurk out, bv Chambers 2, by
\ Willis 2, by Steven:; 2, by Sale' 2;
:hlU, off Stevens 7 in 3 1-3 in-
Inlngr,. off Sal? 11 in 1 2-3 ta
nnings, off Cichrnn 2 in 1-3 inning,
of Chambers 7 in 5 2-3 innings;
hit bv pitcher, by Cochrkn (Wat-
Json); winning -pitcher, Chambers;
losing pitcher, Stevens. Umpires, 1
Hawking urd Shea. Time of game, I
J. P. BILLUPS,
General Passenger Agent,
Atlanta, Ga.
l^YUP- I WWT YOH TO / CE«-fmSuS- BUT 1 N
' I P inn fPiSFS OP- ui. fl.T«... JrliKiT e.cr I.IUOT vinil
UP 100 CFtiES OP-
DECftHilEto ftttrf FfttMl
RT Pi BPiRtWH ToOM i
CPiHT SEE. VOHW H
VJWTTO CWe, FOR
MOO DOMT OWN Pi
STO'rtE- y—
5HI? 10 CR5W OOTTO
CV1 HOUSE. RIGHT .
Rowtwi
HOvJc.
^ VOV, RND WEU StU-'tt'l
to tmt. v\mx
FROM f*V FBCTOfW PlT ♦»S .
FREIGHT ON BORRO £
k Pi CPSE-
*Ai®’"WHIf.E we still have the
hi’!! tVoevll with iis. a wonderful
improvement has taken place In
tho \oltoh crop since* the rains
held tip. On every field yon see
-£>PH MOU-MPl Y
REFTEFTBtR S
UEEK 1 BOUGHT FffoM
MOVl 10 CHSES OP .
DECRNTERS PiT*IS /
ft Ofttfc. F.OE>.?/\
V0EU_„ V ^
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DOtVY THftT nERM
FOUL Of BOOZE?
\ GOT 'CHEftTED e
ME«iR-
*15 ft
Cft*E.
F.O.B.
r TvOC
\\m
R»rt
irt’
iiwfa
HOURS
51)1
routes i
ftND
bum
iweR
CTy
ot the best farming counties In
Georgia or the Sojjth, and it Is
settled by o fine class of white
citizens. So far back as wo can
•emnmbor they adopted progres
sive methods In farming and Im
proved fhelr stock. The Marshalls
were thi first farmers in this sec
tion to Introduce Poland Chioe
hngs, ac:I the Ttranches to raise
Mended stock. Ift our drtve we eaw
floe fields of alfalfa and young
nench orchards recently yet out.
Oconee leads the contest in pure
bred fowls. It Is now branching
out Into the dairying, business and
will have a cheese factory. And
parties who have recently travel
ler! through other sections of
OcVee tell us that you find every
where you go the same fine crops
and agricultural advances.
\V. 1. ABNEY has a fine farm In
Oconeei lust over,the Clarke line,
and he tolls us that he has a line
oroo and some of his cotton will
make a bale per acre. Mr. Abney
save some farmers complain ol
holla shedding but all of his stick.
He uoe.tr sulphate of nmmonla. and
If farmers will apply this fertil
izer they will have no complaint
about the fruit shedding. Mr. Ab
ney apye by sowing our fields In
rtnr Sen In a few years this wilt
be the (richest farming country on
the orth American continent, and
wo can easily rafte fifty bnshelf
of corn per acre and all other crops
In proportion. Mr. Abney took one
ol the poorest and worst washed
tnrms In the county and In only
two years has brought It op to
erodace exceptionally fine crops
THE OLD HOME TOWN
Py Stanley
I 5 Mo K IMG~
HABIT
jCqjgp jn
'lessons
NF-WT I
SHES ,
'AREAHINl
itc is a matter
finer quality
brought to murid.
ABECHWNERS OLD <5FAY HORSE, WHILE- EATMQ APPLES
IN FRONT OF HEXTERS STORE, SLIPPED AND FELL
INTO THE BASEMENT LATE TODAY—
(cr tastv) than in
any other ciga
rette at the price.
Liggett & Myci
READ
BANNER-HERALD
WANT ADS
sang*
THE BANNEIMIKR W.n. ATHENS. GEORGIA
ADVENTURES OF THE TWINS
By Olive Roberts Barton
• \ . - : -
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4. 1923.
mom! encounter that has be -n
staged in Atlanta this Eu*n.- :i.
What gave jn&xiiae of being *
brilliantly fought, low-sec re af
fair was quirk. turned into
swntfest and pkcr»*rs beat a tm ? l
from the bench it .0 l.wUnd end
right back again.’
Exactly six chunkers uaw serv
ice, oacii •J c- ir , r’ "P three ?n*i reming
them .void4 have i>ccn more in- v'Rhin
trodurert had others been avhila- verdict,
blc. The pitching staffs of both THE BOX
outfit.- were trotted forth and bat- FIGURES
ting averages went higher tfian a Cartersvilie
kite. The finest crowd taht has Dutta, If ..
seen a semi-professional game this Watson, ss. .
season was in attendance, the un- Pprrish, rf.
official estimate placing the figure Freeman, -lb.
at 41^00. . Barron, cf.
Before Andy Chamber}*, University
cf Georgia star, could be rushed .to
*(,oat’s” rescue, the Cartersvilie
lads had lallied four times.
Then Andy" proceeded to pitch
•;r' rb ball for 'letter , thpn fi .e
' 'n'- gv. before he gave way to
‘ Brown Mule” Smith, who stt g-
t- r ifc:l through the closing chap-
mainly by virtu? of a huge
R*ud the Shoemakers—as these 1
Buf r rd boy
BASEBALL
RESULTS
STANDING OI» CLUBS
SOUTHE n N LEAGV**!
CLUBS— W. L. Pet.
New Orleans 83 47 .639
Mobile #.,...76 58 .567
called—had piled] I’irminglwm .»•••• ..67 61 .523
nee they secured the range. | Nashville 69 67 *.507
But in the late innings Chambers Memphis 66 66 .500
ami Smit hwere easy, Cartersvilie Atlanta 65 67 .493
ccmlng from hopelessly behind to] Chattanooga 55 80 .440
Diking distance of the Little JtocK 45 82 ,C97
AMERICAN LEAGUE
CLUBS— W. U
Xcw^Vork .......... -.91 43
(Cleveland .
Detroit ...
r. Louis
^ Washington
I Chicago ...
| Philadelphia
1 Boston
69 56 ^52
63 58 .521
63 59 .516
.59 66 .472
56 66, .459
52 69 .429
48 72 .3P8
Totals
Buford
Cannon, rf.
Cincinnati ..
Pittsburg ..
Chicago ..
st. Louis ...
Brooklyn ...
Boston ...
Philadelphia
SALLY LEAGUE
CLUBS— W. L.
Charlotte 33 27
•Macon 32 27
Spartanburg 32 28
Augusta .. ..... t.... 29 28
Greenville 29 2.8
Gastonia .. : -..19 38 .333
MONDAY’S RESULTS
. 80UTHERN LEAGUE
' (Morning Games.)
Atlanta 1; Mobile 2.
Birmingham 9; New Orleans 1.
Little Rock 0; Memphis f>.
Nashville 6; Chattanooga 7.
(Afternoon nGmes.)
Atlanta 3; Mobile 4.
Birmingham-New Orleans, rain
Little Rock 4; Memphis 2.
Chattanooga 2; Nashville 0.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
• (Morning Games.)
New York 2; Phlladelphit 1. .
Chicago 4; Detroit 14:
WashlngloB 4; Ilo?ton 5.
(Afternoon Gages.)
New York 4; Philadelphia 4.
Chicago 5; Detroit 6. '
Cf Didn , t I tell you?
It’s the best
cigarette
I ever tasted!”
St. Louis 2; .Cleveland 5.
* Washington *7;'Boston~2.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
(Morning Gaines.)
Cincinnati 2; Pittsburgh 7.
, PiMindt iphiu 4; Brooklyn 2. •
New York 3; Boston 2. ^
St. Louis 1; Chicago 0.
(Afternoon Games.)
Cincinnatl-Pittsburg; rain.
Philadelphia 4; Brooklyn 5.
New York 1; Boston 8. 0
St. Louis 4; Chicago 5.
SALUY LEAGUE
Greenville 7; Charlotte 5.
Macon 5-4; Spar-Miiimi* 4-3.
Gastonia 2-1; Augusta 4-1. •
TUESDAY'S GAMES
SOUTHERN LEAGUE
Atlanta at New Orleans.
Little Rock at Memphis.
Birmingham at Mobile.
Only three games scheduled.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Chicago at Detroit
New York nt Philadelphia. —
Washington at Boston. v
St. Louis at Cleveland.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
St. Louis at Chicago.
■Cincinnati at Pittsburg.
Boston at New 'York.
Onl ytbree games scheduled.
T&idew&we^
PARIS
CARTERS
No metal can touch you
“Th»t’« Penny Trairie Dog,” answered Mister Gallop.
One day Nancy and Nick and tllng noise almost uncles their feet
and in less time than it would
Around Athens
%
j With Col. T. tarry Gintt i
THE SUREST pointer to pros
nerlty. plenty and content among
farmers is neighborhood barbecue*
When crops are promising farm
ers delight to get together and
feast. We never knew so many
barbecues as we are row ’/TVlng
WE TOLp about the fine crops
d saw list week when we at
tended Tom Erwin’s ’cue In Ogle
thorpe, and last Saturday the ►-me
scene ot_,agrlcultural prosperity
was notloeable In Oconee, when
vent to Jim Price’s barbecue
at Farmington. It sure feasts the
eye and Cheers one’s neart to
note the abundant harvest vouch
safed the tiller of the soil. With
the exception of a few small fields
of prr.* corn betweHi Athens and
WatkiuHvilie, wo n*. or saw finer
1 than are now ripening. Fod
der Is being pulled on early corn,
and even that crop Is so much bet
ter tlnn expected. Bui later plant
ed corn is DiktlM fln< * ‘hM he ,and
ctvp produce*--And it Is'the ‘same
with all other foed crot»». P»a» pea
nuts. potatoes and tP* different
forage platR*. Providen. «* has’cer-
talnly amiUA upon the husband
man this year, and next fall he will
Wave' full and overflowing gor-
Mister Gallop, the cowboy fairy,
were ridlnj? across the prairie just
to see what they could see.
Suddenly they ’ heard A M Chk!
Chk! Chk!” half-way between a
bark and a squeak.
“Oh, look!” cried Nahcy, almost
falling off Snow in her excite
ment “What’s that?”
'That's Penny Prairie Dog,”
answered Mister Gallop, looking
dowq at the funny little creature
sitting straight up like a kanga
roo r on iis hind legs. Every time
he banced he jerked hia tail which
made him look like a wound-up
toy. “He’s keeping watch outside
his house,” went on Mister Gal
lop. “When he makes that noise
he's telling his family that strang
ers are coming and to rook out.”
••Well, we won’t hurt him,” said
Nick. “Look, there arc a lot of
orairje-dog houses and each one
has a prairie-dog on top. They’ve
come out to
ter.”
“Yes, and be careful that your
pony doesn’t step inta one of the
big holes they use 1 for front
doors,” warned Mister Gallop.
“Let Jackie and Snow go slowly
or they’ll trip and throw you off.”
Suddenly there was a queer rat-
tm wp. amcj w iie and
what is the mat-(bit scared.
take a star to .'all—the three po
nies started off as though they
had been shot out of a gun.
“Whoa!” shouted Nick, pulling
hard on his reins.
“Stop!” yelled Nancy, tugging
with nil her strength.
'And Mister Gh)Ion, the cowboy
fairy, tried so hard * to stop his
pony that he stood straight up in
his stirrups.
But not one of the three stop
ped until Jhey were half a mile
away.
“Wh—what was wrong?” panted
Nancy.
“That was Rip Rattler,” said
Mister Gallop. “He was after
Penny Prairie Dog. We’d better
go. back and see if we can helR
him—Penny, I mean.”
Pretty soon whom should they
meet but penny himself and his
wife and children, not looking a
“How did you get away?” psked
Nick.
“We have a secret back door,”
squealed Penny with a shake^of
His tail. “When Mister Rattler
came in the front door he went
out the back way.”
•35c ;
and up |
These garters are made of
114 inch peppy, long stretch
elastic. They fit your legs ,
smoothly and are extremely'
comfortable. Long wear in
every pair. Ask for them by
name—Wideweave PARIS.
“3000 Hours of .
Solid Comfort “ i
ASTEIN & COMRflNY j
CHICAGO •. NZWYCX t ‘ I
SALESMAN $AM
Too Far a Walk
"bv S
*y Swan