The Banner-herald. (Athens, Ga.) 1923-1933, September 05, 1923, Image 2
PAGGE TWO
THE BANNTSR-HElUp.. ATHENS. CEOHCtA^
i-,£ ■
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 5,
BASEBALL
RESULTS
Athens’ Fan and Expert
Makes Daily, Visits To
Camp and is More Im
pressed. 1 ~-
By BRAYAN LUMPKIN
ATLANTIC CITY-LuL Ansel
rAfc'Wn demon for routine The
ils follmv never vnrlen from hl«
’ Kt schedule, unless lowers over
whUh h« has ho control inter
wont through
”e J »mc ’prnKrnm ns he h “»
cho post ten cfnys. < "J 1 "
ulos Klvlne. over torope.-kr plnK
t few. more for fihn&of b^xInB.
then finishing up with elsth
toil rounds of actual epnrrtuB.
Friday mornina, h’irpo ™ "’'“I"
„,B a nice little hump on his tore
head. So was one of his sparirms
partners. Doth nf the men
elded to duck the some time
Thursday and their Vads rn»t with
n Ihutl that sounded like the lick,
the bis matt pours Into the sand
pur.t hlitB lute.
During «« the time thnt tve hurt
watched Flrpo, he hns only I oner
ehanged his expression. HIS
fighting fnee will be the same that
It hns been throughout hla train
ing. He is a very serloo* looking
young mnn Lnvetle. his eomrudo
c,a the other bond, is Just the op-
poslfe. Lavelle. a Utile <eMow
jumps around nnd shouts thingr
P 1 —■— . ...
«d suspiciously like
I the challenger, whea he
he smallest mistake.
—YOU GROW J
TO LIKE HIM /
The more one looks nt Flrpo. n
be prepares for Ills fight with
Dempsey, Ihe more favorable Im
pression he makes—up to a certnir
point. He looks capable
f giving
Dempsey’» good fight, but there II
ende. 'He has never given the lm-
nrefiloti t' us or the men whe
En mi Hell* writing sport,
of being able toVfn the tltle.AI
least, not In this coming fight
Possibly when H’irpo Ivv* been lr
this c'ouniry for ft year or two
longer, he may win the ch , nm P,J".
■ *r. though even that In doubtful
lie is a willing worker, but tH
hnrn't the experlrtnce or the brain
yet to whip Dcniiacdy. Flrpo need,
Ihe cxperlhce of . iluhHmc .Demp-
I gey. nnd he will either some out oi
thnt fight one trtap nearer «•
<?hamj»!oiuhlp, ev«. though ho y
Icentcn. * or else hr will probably
Do ruined for all drae a cham*
j.ionuhlp .possibility. •
i, ririHj cnn faktt the flanttglhR
l.I.iWH the clianaij wfM.bu r l at bim
then he will have profited In tha*
ho will have more confidence In
jfojnif M Bd will have, leal ned pome
thing of the. Dempsey style o!
If Jib can't.take ihe iftinlahmen*.
and’ stand the gaff* he wllf be i
gone r for the future, fof Dempsey
has a hnhlt of brentIng the spirit
of men who <jppo\*» him in the ring
Tommy Gibbons is the only mnn
Mho has faced him since he hn»
boon champion nnd who rendl?
f nros to met him ngoJn. and
Dempsey admittedly, did not flghl
hi < best f’ght ass Inst •Tommy
In hie f'.ght with Garpentier
Dempsey hammered the French-*
ggUi* Into Tjuslllstic oblivion. Car*
BBItjer, when he steoped ofit ol
ring 1 nt Jersey City was n
ruined fighter. He bad taken *«
much terrible punlHhmant fron
IJempsey that something, posslblj,
his spirit bV nldybe his nerve, wat
left In that ring. He 1ms nevei
boon the same since nnd will nevei
be th^srifne in the future.
Going further back Into ancient
history, remember one srfashfny.
day at Toledo when Dompsej^
knocked huge Jess Willard down
seven times In the first threr
won the title by a knockout. Wll
lard hns nevPr boon the rrm»
since. The damage done him die
not show up under the examlna
tlons of doctors for the danmgt
wns done to Jess* spirit ns well at
his body We have the greatest
respect for Willard and h!s nerve
for fighting Flrpo.
Luis does not seem to be nbovc
the average In Intellect but ho Im
presses ono ns a young toan with p
stadfas! purpose, never forgetting
it for one moment, and that pur
pose. St the preset t time Is to put
himself la the best of physlca’
Condition that be m.-y have th*
being the i^xi
eham
JOBES PITCHES 1
E; DEFEATS
PHILADELPHIA — Samuel
Jones, of New York Aemricons
pitched the first no hit, no run
ganre of the season in the major
league Tuesday, bl&nkinw the Phil
adelphla Athletics, 2 to 0.
Jones w«s in great form. Only
I twenty-nine men faced him, of
whom thref poached first base.
Galloway received ft base on balls
In the first inning. | i
In the olghth, Welch retried
first on Scott's fumble of ills
grounder and Dyke got oi» when,-he
forced Welchsl at second. Jopes
had no strike outs.
The Yankees gave him wonder*
ful support and many of the stops
nnd throws were of a spectacular
nanture. There wore nine outfield
two of the latter tolofcr fou.'a to
the catcher.
The real fielding feature was
mado by a member of the home
team when Weobel leaned
against the right field wall and
pulled down a drive from Ward's
bat In the ninth that looked like
a certain homo run.
There was much cheering among
tho fans when Pitcher Jones went
to the mound In the ninth. Many
In the crowd wanted to see him
get a no hit game. With two out
Galloway tried’ hard to reach first
on a bunt but was beaten by a step
by the ball.
Hasty pitched good enough ball
tor the Athletics to win any ordi
nary game. He allowed seven nits
and walked only one man.
To most’everybody
30 x 3/z means
usco V
//J
/]
t XJATURALLY USCO’S
Ax could hardly have de
livered such money's worth
tire after tire—without
making a clean sweep.
It’s been a pretty perform-
\ attec every time—no two
''..opinions about that.
And no twdbpinlons about
\ what tire to getngain after a
. V man has once used USCO.
V «
, United States Tires
are Good Tires
Whereto buy USJkes
Morris Yow, Athens, Ga.
C. .TV. Pittard, Wintervilie, Ga. _
STANDING OP CLUBS
SOUTHERN LEAGUE
CLI1HS— W. L. Pet
New Orleans 84 48 .036
Mobile 77 68 .670
Mlrmlngitam 67 62 .619
Nashville 69 67 .607
Memphis 66 66 .600
Atlanta 61 68 .493
Chattanooga 65 80 .44
Little Rock ........ 45 82 .370
TEAM FOR 1920,
I Ulu
[ unoft as likely to win a regular
[ypting, while Billy Neale, who got
[into most of last year's games;
I Eddie Bench, another valuable re-
1 serve player, afitd Hoxle4toas f the
basketball captain, are possibili-
‘‘coach Jones has iast received
Buick Makes Filin
Of 4-Wheel Brakes
ATLANTA, Ga.,—“I ought to Jie
a nervous wreck," declares W. H
Langmuld, service manager of the
Ition in using Century Milstcad at tackle " < ta« t J yc "r^ hai° decided’’not one day ^ w ”lJ 1 ^ an Tho^oo^
Team Which Bulldogs g ^ ^ n f Te fc£5? bSl%8S&9ttt*%t&SS. ' --
IT
y.s.
6100 MILE FLIGHT
Opor^ia Meets Win Be was tried at tackle last year aud j Yale’s initial line-up in Ui«
o nRoof ’’ —Although opening game October 6 with Uni-
One OI Country S .DCStj weighs nearly 225 pounds, he verslty. of North Carolina will do
not suffering from s*-ervou»
the "shock is the fact that I wns c*p
It Looks.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
CLUBS— W. L. Pet
New York 82 43 .656
NEW HAVEN, , Conn.—Head
Coach Tad Jones of the Yale foot
ball eleven will shift several vet
eran candidates in tho distribution
of the squad when they report fnr
their first practice. Sept. 17. He re
He is the last player about as follows:
who"will be transferred from an-' Ends, Holman ®n«l /De™*?
other college tQ Yale, because of tackles, Miller and Diller, guards,
the application of the new homte* Norris andl Blair; centre, LovbJoy;
rule agreoment between Harvard,' quarterback. Neidlinger, half
Princeton and Yale: Jones’ tackle backs, O’Hearn and Bench; fuli-
squad plans look toward using the back, Captain Mallory.
Veteran “Tex” Diller, a regular Yale’s schedule Includes th& fol-
CVtYfland
Detroit ■
fit. XJOUfB
Washington 60 66
rhicagOr 56 67
70 66 .556
64 58 .525
63 , 60 .512
rfricagO' 06 6• •*03
Philadelphia i ^52 76 .426
UoHtor.
48 73 .355
NATIONAL LEAGUE
CLUBS— W. L. Pet.
y York 82 50 .621
Cincinnati 76 51 .688
Pittsburg 74 63 .583
Chicago 71 69 .546
Louis 65 65 .500
Brooklyn 60 66 .430
Boston -A 43 84 :339
Philadelphia 42 84 .333
tion of the veteran guards, Phil
Cruikshank and Hary Cross, sub-
sittute Herb Herr and the centre,
Landis.
He has decided to start the prac
tice campaign with Ted Blair and
irrfs "
ably strong, with the veterans 9A ' iinr-
Tony Htilirian, Danny Deaver, Abe Maryland^ 17, Har
Lincoln, Ted Hart and Dick Lu- vard °? ,y
man assured. The only members wUt be pla>ed or^foreign soil,
of the fershmari team, which dc- nnr , t ,.. r , vnoTnATT,
feateci Harvard and Princeton last k0 ^55 1 ^^2mmib8TATE8
first-string guards. | yc ar, who .are eligible, because of COACHES FROM 20 SlAii^
*7~ T 1 -"*'-'- jg.,*thrr low scholarship or the fresh- !- N0TRE DAME.—Approxiniate-
r „. of the 1921 season, man riot, are r reu .. _ (1 __ np v p( . arp mrolled
when he was switched to end. He and Jim Bingham, end. * 100 - —
has taken oh considerable weight! The all round star, Charlev in the coaching school being con-
the past few months and will make 1 O'Hearn, will be retained at left d uc t e d at the University of Notre
ideal uard, it is believed. He halfback, where he^ was ^ used Dame by Knute K. Rockne, direc*
8ALLY LEAGUE
CLUBS— W. L. Pet
Charlotte 35 28 .566
Macon 33 27 .660
Spartanburg 32 29 .525
Augusta 30 29 .508
Oreenvllle 30 30 .500
Gastonia 20 39 .330
..G..BBB13c.. 6Y..7|W..o hycr
captained the freshman eleven
thre^ years ago, and has since
been reserve centre. Winslow
Lovijoy wil lagain start the sea
son at centre.
M1LSTEAD
TO TACKLE
again Harvard and Princeton and tor 0 f athletics.
Newell Neidlinger will again play, 0n j y f oot ball is being studied by
quarterback. the men under the direction of the
SOUTHERNER man who generally is accredited
ON TEAM [with having been the leader .in
J. C. Rlcheson of New Orleans, the dveelopment
who played brilliantly ^ on the pass. *"*
of the forward
The* class will be in session
Jones will make another innova- scrub squad last fall, ft looked throughout August.
fident at all times there would be
no accident."
Mr. Langmuld manipulated ihf
1924 Buick car which was used ‘n
a number of ihovio scenes so illus
trate right and wrong methods n1
driving, and to illustrate the ..erlols
o* Jay walking, etc. The tPlctures
It is understood, will bo included lr
film being produced undr e the
auspices aT the local fiifety Coun
cil.
“Tho neo** accident^, of
course
part of the plot," co>Uinue»'
Mr. Langm^id. "While it reemed
to onlookers that we were going tc
Injure someono or bo ! Injured our
selves, there was refflly not a qrent
deal of danger, because with *bc
Buick four-wheel brake I bad ab
solute control of my cai
times, and some T>f tho
dare-devil stunts
perfectly safe after all.”
MITCHELLFH3LD, N.,,Y.-Li; U -
tenant Victor K. Bertkwndla of San
Francisco, and Kenneth Garrett of
rihebluff Arkansas, ^ tramps of the
army air service hoppocl off for a
six thousand mile circuit of the
country. Bolllng'FJold near Wash
ington is the first, objective but
they hoped to reach Dayton, Ohio
Saturday afternoon.
FISH SUCCUMB TO HEAT WAVE
BUDAPEST—One hundred thou
sand fl.h have fallen victims to
the heat wave In Hungary at the
famous Szegedlfi breedirg pends
The water evaporated, leaving the
fish in the slime. The f ipdlatton
wnn called out to bury the fish
wj)|ch were poisoning the air foi
miles around
CUT THI$ OUTr-IT IS WORTH
MONEY
Send t^ili ad and ten cents to
Foley & Co., 2835 Sheffield Ave.
Chicago, III., writing your nara<
-called an( j address clearly. You will re-
staged were» ce jvo a ten cent bottle of FOLEY’S
HONEY AND TAR for Coughs
Colds, and Croup, also free sample
packages of' FOLEY •. KIDNEY
PILLS for Backache, Rheumatic
Pains, Kidney nnd Bladder trouble,
and FOLEY CATHAHTje. TAB
LETS for Constipation nnd BiU
ousness. These wonderful - reme
dies have helped millions of peo
ple. Try them. Sold everywhere.
-^Advertlsepient
TUESDAY’S RESULTS
SOUTHERN LEAGUE
Birmingham 2; Mobile 9.
Atlanta'<7-3: New Orleans J-l. ,
Memphis-Little Roclt. rain.
Only three games scheduled.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Washington 3; Boston 1.
New York 2; Philadelphia 0.
Chicago 2; Detroit 6.
St. Louis 2; Chicago 6.
national league
Cincinnati ?; Pittsburgh 1.
Boston 0; New York 2.
St. Louis 2; Chicago 3.
scheduled.
SOUTHERN
SYSTEM
Only three games sell
SALLY LEAGUE
Augnsta 8-1; Oastonln 4-4.
Spartanburg S; Macon 4 (10 In
nings.) "
Greenville 1-2; Charlotte 3-1.
WEDNESDAY'S GAGMES
SOUTHERN LEAGUE
Atlanta at New Orleans.
Little Rock dt.‘Memphis.
1 Blrmtngham at Mobtlo (two
game,.) '
Only thfree'game, scheduled.
AMERICAN LKAfiliE
New York nt Philadelphia.
Washington at Boston.
Only two-eahte sschedolcd.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
No games scheduled.
Captain Nicholson
Transferred From
Here to Dahlonega
Captain John W. Nicholson, who
has been stationed here for three
years as a military instructor at
the University of Georgia has
been transferred to the North
Georgia Agricultural Colleg, et
Dahlonega and will take up hla
there In n few diva.
' Hi* wife, who was Ml,, Uuise
Dorsey of Athena, end children
will remain here for a while
longer before* joining him at Dah'
10 Coptaln Nicholson waa selected
for this assignment mainly on
account of the splendid record he
has made at the University. Ho
»!1I be commandant there and his
host of friends wish him much
success. He i, an old Athens boy.
cce«». He la nn om Ainena uuy,
graduate of the University, and
ras onfi_of tho first from here to
to td France eftor graduating
rom the Leavenworth school.
Travelers Puzzled
By Strange Course
Of Florida Rivers
. (By AMoelattd Pr*«».)
TALLAHASSEE Fla.—The trav
«>Vr In West Florida, unfamiliar
with the ecenery ot that eectloni
should prepare hlmaelf for iom*
curious freak* of nature. Other
wise he may waste unneceanary
time groping for an explanation of
the strr .ige behavior <?f three of the
state'* river*. The old pea and
shell game expression, "Now you
see lt**nA horn you dont’," applies
to part*, of’all ot them.
A description 6f these stream*
has heeix #Htteh by W. A. McRae
coromlsslWier of ajtrictilture, Wl
young map whp has spei
1 -
quotes a young man wno nns "F* 111
his life on the banks of the water
ways. The substance of it tolf
The Wadsia rises In "Beautlfu’
Springs," near Thomas City, on the
Tallahassee-Southeastern Railroad
not far from the state capital, an<
flows 'due south to within three
mile* of the Aucilla river, where
It disappears underground and
then reappears in the Aucilla
Logmen have cut a small canal
from tho point of disappearance tc
the Aucilla.
The Aucilla rises In Georeia and
flows in a euuthwesteriy direction
forming the eastern boundary of
Jefferson county, Florida. About
Ijiree miles, south of where jthf.
Tallahassee-Southeastern form? n
junction with this river, the Aneil-
la sings and runs underground In
a winding wuy for possibly 12 inlb-a
rising about three miles north «>f
where the Waclssa comes into is
fxoui bvivv* iuv vtulu.
with the South
The first American lobomotive to entSf afcft&i BerVicd'ivhS
the “Best Friend” of 1830, Built in a New York foundry,
shipped by sea to Charleston, it hauled the first passenger
train on what is now the Southern Railway System.
Twenty-two hundred locomotives, some of them fifty
tfines as heavy as this famous pioneer engine, and 70,000
cars, operating on 8,300 miles of Southern Railway System
lines, are now doing the work that was begun by the
“Best Friend.”
From the Ohio and the Potomac to the Gulf, from the
Atlantic to the Mississippi, the far-flung rails of the’South
ern reach across twelve states with 40,000,000 inhabitants.
The Southern serves the South—from the northern gate
ways at Washington, Cincinnati and Louisville—and the
Western gateways fit St. Louis and Memphis—to- the
ocean ports of Norfolk, Charleston, Savannah, Bruriswick
and Jacksonville—and the Gulf ports of Mobile and New
Orleans. .
Operated by. men of the South, who have been bred in its
traditions to understand its problems and its needs; the
Southern keeps pace with the South. The investment in
its properties is now more than $710,000,000, of which
$285,000,000 has been expended in the past two decades.
With the continued cooperation of the people of the South,
we will be enabled to command the capital for the greater
transportation facilities that Southern development win
inevitably demand.
Southern Railway System
last year spent in the South
$20,000,000 more than it
received from the South.
e SOUTHERN SERVES THE SOUTH