Newspaper Page Text
TUESDAY. OCTOBER So, lan
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS. GEORGIA
PAGE TWO
Mass Meeting in j |
Georgia Chapel !
Wednesday P.M.
SPORT NEWS
IW MIJI .
Two special trains will run from,
(Athens Saturday and return the]
same day.
Numbers of followers will make
.the trip a la .auto, foot, of freight
(trains. These means of transpor
tation include the Georgia boys.
I A record attendance is expected
I this year and every detail is being
‘arranged, for the flood of visitors
jto invade Columbia.
“Send the band to Columbus
day will be observed Thursday. |
Literary Societies Call
Off Meetings in Order
That Students May At
tend Pep Session.
Council to Act
On Bond Issue
For City Schools
A mass meeting of th» students
of the University of Georgia Is to
Le he’d in the chapel of the uni*
Vfftlty Wednerday nig.: pin |»ural
tc:y to the Ueorgfh-Au.nifi gai/.f
\vai«-h b to be played la Co.’uiub’is
Saturday.
In order that the students tint
It nmy attend this mass
Georgia versus Auburn at Co-
Tusibus next Saturday.
These few words picturing - the
SouthV most -**
EljLwut-' —b « —-
L4fepic of discuss ion in every nook
and, etmes of ' '* **“
City council will'decide Tuesday
night whftheg to call an election
for the purpoae .of .approving a
118,000 bond Issue for the Athens
public schools^
A committee representing the
... football
cl; -sic^next Saturday, and, ia ‘th>:
the surrounding
i VAStv a week, with no varsity
scheduled, the Georgia Bull
dogs began their final swing for
tja-fiy, Monday,. on Sanf jrJ
Jftcld., Secnet practice will again
be in vogue for Georgia football-
men thi* week.
-Tpm Windham*
belong . .
meeting, the Phi Kappa lltornry t-o-
clety has declared Us meeting of
Wednesday night off, and it- was
sn'don the campus Tuesday that ‘t
1.» thought that the Demostheninn
literary socle'y will also abandon
Jtt meeting Wedneaddy iiijpt for
i:,*. same r#a* » i.
The inass meeting In the chapel
will take the shape of
Board of Education will appear be
fore council and request that body
to call the election for school bondi
on the name day' the election for th«
150.008 bond issue for Broad u.rc\
Improvements Is to be held, De
cember 5.
. pep meet
ing and studnets, faculty members,
J participation in
game with Dahlonega lost
rday was costly, indeed, as he
ivid an injury to his knee that
keep him out several weeks,
id” Frier also was the recip-
and the Georgia band will be there.
DEVOTES LIFE TO HELPING
MEN FREED FROM JAIL
CLEVELAND—The movemen\
which i emitted In the Incorporation
several months ago of the 8am 8
Williams Voucher Club, a national
organisation of friendly interest to
ward men leaving prison, has ex
tended to Include other large cltler
and its organisers expect a nation-
wide representation within a shorl
time, ft Is a non-profit order.
Booth Turned Over
To County Officers
Charlie Booth, arrested Monday
with six pints of whiskey by Po
liceman -ifugh Moore was tufhed
over to the county charged with
violation of the prohibition law. His
bond was fixed at $200.
EVfiRETT TRUE
By Condo
'flfc.TRue, X'M A CANDIDATE, AND I'M
GOINS TO GIVE VOU A BUNCH OP My OACx»S
AND ASK JOU TO "DISTRIBUTE. r—
THEM AMONG? V0UR FRlENIDS .
%Sssrii
other
c h« n 8 lDl ( _: za rette» to
CiiMteth^’^eta do “P*
Belief thot»^ al tobacco
pre cl«te
Your picture
Yes—Tee-Hee— it mak
Me look pretty suck,
doesn't it I
on these Oards
MUST
HAVE
QsCn taken
SOME YEARS
A«.0. V
[A fellow that RESORTS TO T>EC?£PT|on
JO GET INTO OFFICE fcfON'T BS ANY TOO
Particular after hb gets in i t~
; Yea, i'll distribute i—-77- 1
Your Car pa jjl I ,
inf the season. O'Hearn suffered a broken leg in the game with
RJuckncII.
E . A jinx ha* pursued O'Henrn during, his career at Yale. He is a
Mtior. In football ho was Injured in his sophomore yesr at the open-
iK of the season and only returned to the lineup in time to play
irainst I'rim rton and Harvard in' the final games of ths season. His
kcnsatloaal run in the Princeton game enabled Yale to win.
Last year he was again injured early in the season.' Ho man
ured to get into the final game against Harvard but was in poor
tone] it ion.
' Dig things ware expected of him in hia senior year it he could
hrots' off tho hoodoo that has relentlessly pursued him, After show
X a brilliant game in the early starts, he suffered a broken leg in
* BuclateU game that ends hia football eareer at Yale.
* O’Heurn is captain of the hock ey and baseball teams aa Yale and
NON-STOP GRIDIRON FLIGHTS
Turning Kickoffs Into Touchdown a Notre Dame Specialty
IN IA2I-CHCT V0VHN6 -I&CX
The opening kkk So
YARDS TOR A CCMflfeR
| PROL CASTnER TbOK Tfie
FIRST ROT roe 02 YARDS
Snaky Hips Maho? «N*eTWie
■toe The opening kck of .
AND RAN TkHDUGH KALAMAZOO
_<JO SftROS (OR A tUCHTOWN
Maher narrowly missed another ing game, Don Miller’s ion
record* After his sensational run against St. Louis, Cerney’a against
he grabbed the next kickoff and Depauw and Maher against But-
returned 46 yards to midfield ler completed the list. Snaky-hips
where he was stopped by the sate- clipped through the Butler outfit
ty man. for 88 yards.
Notre Dame excels in returning With speed merchants Ilk* Crowi
kickoffs for touchdowns. The ley, Miller, Layden and Stuhldre-
•tunt was pulled just 14 times last her in the backfield, the Irish rec-
year and the' Irish did it five ord of five perfect returns last
times—Castner*s two in the open- year may be'Challenged again.
IN iQZ* AND RtPLAlfeD
iFOR <*> WATO5 IN THE
bAMfc GAME
feturned Monday, but only can da
- lift)* work. Ed Bass is still out
with a bad' ankle and his return,
date is not known.
No work of a hard nature was
the order for Monday, f but Tues
day and W’ednesday will see the
most intensive work of the sea*
son; it is reported.
The “Plainsmen*' easily defeated
Benning last Saturday and, as the
Bulldogs are their ancient and
honorable rivals wUl present a
strong combination, for the com
ing affair Saturday.
With defeat still staring the
Bulldags in face, us the result ,of
last year’s game, the Bulldogs arc*
determined that the Red and Black
standards shall wave i.» triumph.
^ ^ Georgia’s squad will leave Ath
ig Kim to report for practice Lens, either Friday morning, or
ijday. Charlie Weihrs who has [afternoon. The number making
SflNX CAMPS ON TRAIL
OF O’HEARN, YALE STAR
The ■STUNT WAS PULLED 14
TIMES LAST YEAR —
AND Tie IRISH
It DID it 3
I named him Chester^ieId ,
after the fastest-stepping
cigarette in the country.”
CIGARETTES
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Wlam “Snaky-hipa” blather took In 1921 Chat Wynn*, Irish fiill-
* opening kickoff of the pres, back, took the opening kick and
I acsaon and ran ’through the ISS?*,, 8 ® * #r ? c#UI * u *: l?
. W22 Paul Caatner, also a fullback,
ilarnoxoo team B0 yards for a r «turned the first boot 93 yards
j. b.1 .» ha hung up a record, for a counter and later In the
wja the third consecutive sea- same game repeated the offense
» 'bat a Xotre Daino back ran for 00 yards. He almost repeated
KtKli a Kalamazoo team in the ngainct the Army, but the safety
tamir game of the year for o man caught him after a .".0-yard
KhdOWDe *
Blind Man’s Buff
Even in this age of enlightenment some folks spend their
money blindly. They grope in th'e dark as truly as if their djies
were bandaged.
And all the time a powerful light is being thrown on the very
things they need and want.
Advertising is a beacon to guide you in buying. It shows you
what to buy—where to buy—and when to buy. At the same
time, it protects you against fraud and inferiority.
. Merchants and manufacturers who advertise deliberately
focus thousands of eyes upon their wares. Their values must
be honest and their prices right, or they could not advertise
successfully. # .
f
Don’t play blind man’s buff with the elusive dollar. Spend a
few minutes each day running through the advertisements in
this paper. Then buy the products that have proved up in the
light of advertising. '
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