The Banner-herald. (Athens, Ga.) 1923-1933, October 08, 1923, Image 6

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THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA CUNNING LI’L ANGELS Iiv Huggins’ Bad Boys Have All Reformed and That’s Why the Experts Think They Will Win i On tip Clrat toucbdo; ! patrlck and Fletcher juitC Btltler 'carried the ball from Oglethorpe's [ forty yard line aoroaa the goal and Butler carried' the ball only once during that drive. Here la a pre diction. Martin (Buater) Kilpatrick will make the All-Southern 'earn In a walk before he leavet college. The Oglethorpe team won a place In our heart. Thoee boya played football. They put up a bet ter game than Mercer and It la eaay to eee why they gave Tech euch a battle. They ecored thel~ touchdown by playing footbal Maurer, the flaah waa stopped, but the team showed a drive ■ that should keep them on the Georgia schedule for years to come, and Oglethorpe, Ilka good wine,: will get better with age. ,ipf The letter was written from Kobe Ing cases under our care. One, (l. to *■ *— *" ” - — The "Cuddie-Up’ Compaey at tended the game In a body. Twc of tbe young ladies Joined In the Georgia spirit and went Into the Georgia tooting section, thud en dearing themselves In the. hearts of many red-capped Freshman. SPORT NEWS SIDELINE SHORTS' (predicted In n column headed “In the Bulldogs’ Backyards" that Young Htrlhllng would some day champion of tbe world In the Thersduy'lMi/Mklltha ring at the Driving park-.nt Columbus tbs an (aoaff Mike 'I tin October 10 the New York Black andjlack"gloonrto'tbe 19: -aarThn task—two- years- tins Giants ami the ypnks have, been the principals Jfl,,tlio each year tho SfCGra’ "clnerged the ylct: It seems - tlifflH^^li^ harder tlmd winning than ever bo- ■-fere. TCafoipISnslTe array orajimoml- ” function after having lain dor- V(Vaunt for two yean. , This year the tables aro a bit '"reversed. Last season tbe Giants breezed Into the National League pennant with a world to spare ""while tho highest priced team In phaaeball hart nil tboy could do to slip by tho wire a winner In their league. This season the Yanks came In like Man'o War tunning, against n plow horse while the „(Giants had one,of tho,nicest little •fe you irarMwoscM tb« . Th'n Van^wffi ! edtsr the series favorites this year land they should. They were favorites Kat years got — season thc.fftOook Is not so bright for McOrnw. In tho flnt plate thira la tho "Tfneiilon of pltchon. Huggins has all the best of it over. McGrow In this line. It Is a matter of record that two good pitchers can win a world series. Huggins has the two good pHchers and then ho hes some more. McGraw must look mighty hard to find two dependa ble Purlers. * 1S Then there is the question of -Ttutb. Last year be was the Joke •w tha aaitw. He didn't .even earn - cigarette money by his urund o’ • playing In tbe series. This year a different Ruth will enter the aeriei He will be a thorn In the aide ol 5 Ss Ginn: barter?. Leri »«»? it waa a battle between McGraw and Ruth and McOraw won hand down. . Tide year the battle will be be tween the same two hat McGraw will have a harder time beating . Ruth. He was easy to outgoes; a* last year but Ruth will he a pusxle Hall to the Chief. By tho "Chief 1 wo mean John Fletcher, the best fullback In the world or even taking on more ter ritory, the whole universe. T.'gue. light heavyweight champion fcore three tpuchdowna, bring of the world and for ten round*I *.*>. *»»df Ue Red tame young man* faceff 1 buf Shipped' Wm. Even the moat fir.fhr?s|astle sap: irter of McTIgue could not give than portei * h at worthy 1 more than three h _ v round*. VhHo Strlbllng clearly woir i vmu r ■** oi them, and at least played the title holder. That's enough oh, yet Strlbllng la not Oglethorpe PelrnU add- their sup*, porters. ; ' The first half ended 8 to O.Juzt a few minutes after the start of tbe setond half, the Petrels, aided and abetted by a beautiful pass, in which oaa could, see the handi work, of JInt Robertson, scored a touchdown am} then missed the goal, tlelng up the score. That flaht turned ..... ..... , ■ . ■ - - ..., - , - , Just a bit further on the Bull ng, ., __ , _— .. doge advsnestf the ball to thi Wgheit priced or tffeVUM'MAda. Then it !■ ■aid’ *wtnty yard lino, enter tho here. B. cms at loot to have begun to thnt he chanBed hlg dfC |«lon and,’John Fletcher dashed on the field awarded the fight to Strlbllng. j and on the flrof play covered the Turtle denies this and later camt naMMaiy twenty yards for tho out in a written statement that he l touchdown. On the way he shoved was forced, with hi* life as forfeit, three would-be tackier* out of ths to go back In the ring and make hit second statement, > McTIgue announced after the fight that he was forced at the point of n pistol to fight Strib- ling. Joe Jacobs, his manager, stated that he was threatened with hanging if his man did not go through, with the fight. McTIgue snyrf tfiat.be will fight Strlbllng again within ninety days, but somehow we don’t believe that fond bettor defensively, since Ogl play gnd deposited ths ball aafely behind ths goal posts. on J I uhdei the ball under bis arm and simply walked through tbe entire Ogle thorpe team practically for tbo third touchdown. That ended the scoring foe. Georgia but even then it showed, ~ paretlve score Speaking qf the “Cuddle*Up’’ Company, we heard a good one at the game. A young lady sitting one row in front of ua, turned and epoke thus to a young man sit ting by ue: “Are you going U ’Cuddle-Up’ tonight.” And the young man made answer thusty: ”1 don’t know, what are you goinf to do tonight?" Figure that out In this column space Ik * limited and while we would like to sin? the praises of every mad ort the, Bulldog team, it Is Impossible. One more word. Captain Joe Behnett did his usual stunt except that hr blocked two kicks instead of his usual one. Jim Taylor also caught our eye and we Include htip ip the list of the Immortals. Listen now, you unfortunate* who read this Tale Is supposed to beat. Georgia, and we ere not So optimistic as to believe that they won't but- - the same hunch that -made us believe thnt Dempsey would knock out Firpo early Id the fight and that Young Strlbllng would whip/ Me. Tlgue (which he really did, refe ree's decision to the contrary), leads us to think fhat the south ern Bulldogs will eoore at least once against the northern Bull dogs and possibly twice. —B. C. L. RELATIVE OF ATHENIANS TELLS Auto License OF GREAT JAPANESE DISASTER Receipts Show MONDAY, OCTOHF.R 8, 1923. Graphic descriptions of the tragic suffering that followed the terri ble earthquake disaster in Japan and particularly In the Yokohama district 1. riven In a letter Juat received from Mrs. BrP. Richard son, formerly Miss Agnes Rowland, of Augusta and the niece of Mrs. Charles A. Rowland qf our city. These Japanese amahs are won derfully taltlJful. There are a dozen of them on board with their mis tresses babies. October 1. there .were 12S.S55 pas. I senger machlnes~«na~l#,Mj truck. 1 registered with- the seer.tary , Big Increase '-cTm, Atjanta po- uniberi' a CAUGHTvWHILE SHOPPING-. We have had so many interest- M. Row- j Mrs. Smith, wife of h naval office! !a Connecticut woman, was down ion sailed town shopping. In three seconds 1 aVncouver, August 23, on | skyscrapers tell, street car tracks S. 8. Empress of Canada and j worn, torn up and twisted Iptd huge bed Yokohama on September' corkscrews and whirled Into the (By Associated Press.) ATLANTA—Fees obtained by the state treasury from the kale of automobile license tags during the fiscal year IMS up to October 1 amounted • to $2,108,626.06,' an In crease of $309,520.66 over the same period In' 1922, according ^to an announcement today by Charles Cook, of Lecretary of state depart ment. ire being op. eraled by parties 111,gaily becam, ivk” - - the llcensp. have! but ben trann- frrred to them by the oriainai owner. ' , i “In not transferring his number when he sells the car, the original owner make himself, liable for nil nets of the now owner. It also |J a violation of the motor vehlcld law to transfer, a Jtcsnse from on, car to another.' 'There I, only on, On'October 1, 1923, 147,449 It- I"** 1 way to transfer an automo. reached Yokohama on September j corkscrews and whirled* into the 3, and Shanghai on the 8th. They! air, tbe ground opened up, great (censes had been issued for pas* bl, .e license and.that is to iransfei It when you fell yap* cor to the owner. Da pot transfer it to are now in Nanking. The Empress-sof Canada was 36 hours out from Yokohama at the time of the earthquake, however, there was at first some apprehen sion as to the safety of those aboard her it-being feared that the was in port at Yokohama at tbe time of the disaster. Mr. and Mrs. Ricbordson are to take up Missionary work in China. senger cars and 21,000 for trucks Of this number, approximately 20,- Parts of tbe letter which relate Joe Bennett’s Picture Shown in Sport Magazine "Outdoor* South," the (porting mngulne published In Atlanta by Homer O*Wi >*nd . B, Keeler la) Bit the I iprezz-fArOt tob4r and carrie* a review of the football aeaaon In tha aonth, eapectally aa regard, tbe leading team*. ' . JERSEY, England—"Priority to tenants with . the ihrgMt'famlil*.." This alan hma been put up on the lOjtcre housing e.tate of, , Big Jew. Boot here, who la building a model village of worker* dwellings ng tho holocaust follow: In Port at Kobe, Wednesday Morn, Sept. S, 1923. Dear Family: Our mlnda and hearta are full of wbat we have aeen and heard for the laat forty-eight hours, oh It Is sad, It Is terrible—these pathe tic remains of the Yokohama earthquake tha greatest disaster the world has ever known. They say the San Franclaco one was mere child'* play compared to this! And I can believe It when I hear of the tragedies told from those who experienced It knd. saw the remits of the havoc wrought. ..We first beard of the news by wireless Sunday morning that Yokohama was deatrojed by earth quake .And fire,, • ,< ; fissures swallowing houses, peo ple, all, the huge bluff tell Into a landslide, buildings that were earthquake proof collapsed. Stand', ard OH tank* burst, and the oli biased forth and the fire blazed everywhere. Mrs. Smith ran to the canal, jumped In, Stnd hid between two rocks for hours .dodging the falling sheet* Ot Iron, the tire that was sweeping the riot and chaos. She finally swam over to a Jap anese flat boat where she stayed all night with Japanese coolies. Next morning she walked over n burning trestle to the broken pier, 000 passenger , automobile. and your n *w cnr * Do"not borrow 5000 truck, ore In the city of At* i dcal-r'. tag: this. Is a violation nl lanta, It was stated. 1st ft yean-^n j th ^_ taW when -used , .on private WHOEYS - ""— uuiiiiiib iicguo to mo urunou pier, to the Suffering and' pathos follow- and climbed' down.lt, and with gopc no tho holocaust follow: pulled through water tc- We were thlrty-alx hours out from Yokohama at thb time of tha earthquake, and oh, and bow many prayers of gratitude we have sent up that this was the case, tor had S ’e been there Saturday we would ave been numbered with the rest —for we had planned to spend a day light-seeing In Japan! We are ante. ■I Thoso who were wealthy with scorched rags on—all they possess now—families* Separated, babies This .hip baa certainly been full I ->«>»*• ‘ h ! I boat, and then awam out to the ‘‘Australia.'' PITIFUL V CASE88 Two of tbe most pitiful cases are our Frenchwomen, Mrs. Zahn and Mrs. Waggoner. When Mrs. Zahn waa brought on board she had gone craiy. She was fighting, uni It took four men to hold her. Pete received scratches from her clutches. All day she was dellrloua, crying out In French, "The fire, my mother, my husband!”—for sho knew they were load After Injec tions of morphine she slept. Her friend was In a sad plight. 1 brought her In my cabin, and found clothes from someone else to tit her; and listened to her, sob and tell her story. Oh, It la sad. Her description of the fire—with French gesticulations was gra phic. She concluded, “Ah, Yoko hama! Ah—It la finished, It Is fin ished!” And this Is well said. There la absolutely no Yokohama and probably It Is lost forever. We wore In Yokohama twenty- four hours—all the time taking on refugees, then all day Tuesday we we were sailing for Kobe. Now this morning a great many are getting off here to try to find relatives, to decide what to do. Some are go- lng on to . Shanghai, tor they wypl to leave Japan fcrevar you may* be aural iring through the ltns a. mm are alio shown. days doing relief. work. All .dky .1.-1. mi tfUnillv rnfiiwnat' Wn — _ .,i. All Monday We received refugee*.' Wa brought In a man, wife, baby and Its athah fate our cabin to help them. This mother was lost froln her baby—the father spent all day Eymlay looking for it, and found It In the amah’s arms In the pitrk where she had sought refuge, Amateur Interior Decorating Is Not Beyond the Ambitious By an Interior Decorator If he do** it la mor* than likelfl Thorpe jicordd'only 000 touchdown* that a -naw -klng will b# crowneC » Now on the other hand, white McCraw la not as strone as th*' Yonks In pitching and-bitting, he has the best infield that ever Jrot* ted out on a diamond In our opin ion and we are not excepting the old Cub machine, with It’s Tinker *4p Evers to chance combination or th# world beaters that Connie Ma k had when the Athletics had tliefr head above water. It teems to us that tbe series will ho one of the hardest fought of any during the past four or ffv<> years. Huggins has a tearr that on paper Is worth conildera bio more than one million dollars and McGraw has an InBeld that is worth more than half of that and then McGraw !ia« somethin*: else 149** there ft * nertr-slghted re. feree fit the ring* who loses his pftaance of mindiunder th. atraln of excitement. , T McTIgue spy. that h. Is signed to'fight'George Carpentler for the title. We for one hope that he media HtrUiUiig ogaln before fight ing Carpentler, for George will whip the everleeting daylights out of tbe Irishman. In spits of the present day vogue of Interior decorating aa practiced by experts some persons hesitate if*you* canbeilove com- Flhalvl^rafdtheSjataralSSSiSfc :ore that Georgia la at thelr hemei. Th*Y apparenUy eon. - - elder ths dlfflcnltles for amateurs on a plans with those ot Black Magic or cf writing "movie" sce narios. Their mistake is evident'when •pedflo examples and the choice of furnishings they require are con- ildered. Among theie ths Colonial The Fairway ATLANTA—Arrangements ■ for the Southern Women’s Gcdf tour nament, which opens here>Monday and continues through Saturday: havo been completed, according tr an announcement by officials. A number of the beat known women golfers in tfbe south haa entereu the matches. Brookhaven course will bo tho scene ot the events. It has been put In excellent condition and is ready for the,opening Right of the qualify ing round Monday. On Tuesday, tho first round of match play, all flights, and tbe approach ing and 1 putting contest and driving event aro scheduled. Wednesday .wilt mark the second round of handball 'brain that Is worth five million dollars and If you don’t bo* Ifeye it, Jusf gfanco back over the records. 1 More than a year ago the writer match play and the first round of the consolations. The semi finals all flights and consolations, will be played Thursday. Friday morning will witness tbe finals, all flights except the first tn tho afternoon the finals of the first flight will be played. The following trophies have been offered Mow qualifying score, w’nner, runnerrup and consola tion In each flight, driving 1 con test (best average for distanco and direction), approaching and put* ting contest, handicap mixed that can not* b»* bought—ho has a.J Scotch foursome, prize for both — arranged for Sat- V-'i ‘ L Wii n ■ x- a* ■m At tha windows th* overdrap- tries, which an ot silk or heavily mercerized .fabric, are plain It figured walls are chosen. It tha walls are plain overdraperies in a figure material frequently give the heat result. The window curtains are ot straight hanging filet net or simple point d'osprlt lace. Informal or cottage Colonial ap peals to many, on the other hand, becauis ot Its greater air of ease. Small braided ruga an substituted bank could-bp pet Hi. Two Isdlhs and two children are In there. Then I went In* with Franca*, and both nights- our husbands slept up on'deck with pillow and steam* er rugs. Everyone Is helping to aid and relieve. The nursery has been jurndd Into,f,hospital, and now I must go find see It 1 am not needed on duty there for awhile. * . STILL CUMINS HOME* ' LONDON—Thq war Isn’t over yet here. Two regiments Juat re turning from tha Near Eaat er- mjnded the people at home ot the troubles In Europe, and they gave the soldiers a rouelng welcome. After Every Mea Sura Cslontal Hadep home ae shown, with Its option of formal or Informal treatment. Is encountered frequently. - An almost severe simplicity characterize* it Is harmony with tho early days ot the Rcpubllo Is whose troublous times It waa evolved. This la strictly adhered to In dec orating according to the formal mode. Floors are covered to within ! 8 short dlztance of tho baseboard with plain carpet-llks ruga. The walla are either painted In an un- obtruatv# ton* and panelled by woodta molding or covered with waR paper In which appear block figures. Tba'woodsrork of the walla and doors la whits enamel. It may be varied hy baring th* doors of mahogany. Tha fnrnltnre la a com bination of simple frame mahogany with a few upholstered chairs or dlvana arranged in harmony with the walls of the room. Character istic furniture of the period may be seen at any well equipped furniture store. * Dutch Colonial House tor the carpat-Uka hue. Heavy up holstered furniture disappears In favor of rush bottomed chairs. The walla may be of rough plaster, with low wainscoting. At tha windows chintz overhanglnga replace silk and the formality of the straight huag filet net le relieved by a rallied curtain, tied back. In both modes, as In any' other style of decoration, careful heed Is given to color. A dominant color tnqno room Is carried through all its furnishings find la brought Into harmony with those In adjoining rooms on the same floor. .Walls and floora era neutral, serving aa a background. Other exception la noted only In the case of the win dow curtains, which ara in the best ot taste only In white, Ivory or natural tints. YOU can FIND them in the WANT COLUMNS ymi) 5 you are seeking a maid, a cook, a chauffeur, a bookkeeper, or any other experienced help. , ' \ " Into many homes will your advertisement go—and when ^ou see the number and high character of the replies—you will real ize the advantages of advertising in , BANNER-HERALD Phone 75 — - V — 4