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'IS CENTS *A WEEK
DAILY AND SUNDAY.
PAY THE CARRIER
THE BANNER-HERALD
Daily and Sunday—IS Cent! a Week.
BrtaUIahed 1831
Daily and Sunday—IS Cento a Week.
ATHENS COTTQN:
MIDDLING 19 l-8«
PREVIOUS CLOSE 19*’
■THE WEATHEl
mb vv cn i m r,w
Fair Friday and Saturday. ' ’ ;
.Much colder.
VOL. 93. NO. 256
Aaaoeiated Preaa Service.
United Preaa Diapatehea.
ATHENS. GA...FRIDAY, NOVEMBER IS. 1925.
A. B. C. Paper.
single Copice 2 Cents Dally. 5 Cento Sunday. ;
Stage All Set For Clash Between Georgia And
Tech On Grant Field {Saturday; Record
TECH’S FIHST T
II il STABTTHE
GAME AGAINST RED
*1* *1* 1 HI* 1 •I* ’I* t *1* 1 ’I* "I* 1
’I 1 ’I! I * 1" ’I".
Athens Must Repent Of Sins Before
: It Can Find Jesus Christ, Says Smith
ATLANTA, fife.-(UP)
—A bright, warm sun,
following the heavy rain
of Wednesday night
promised a dry field for
the all-important football
game between Georgia
and Georgia Tech on pawns.-
Grant Field Saturday—L ^0“ 1. "28%
the first since 1916. Colonel 'sot cnit to prove his
The field is Still soggy
but with ideal weather.weather predictions for the avia-
ctew« p EVANGELIST SAID
Department
WASHINGTON.—(UP)—Colonel
William Mitchell continued his at
tack on the War Department attd
the army general staff Friday
with testimony designed ty show
few days by the local
forecaster, it was expect
ed the ground would be
dried out suffieiently to
permit a better game than
would have been possible
under wet conditions.
The sudden change in the wea
ther from wet to dry Is a distinct
advantage for the Georgia team,
enabling it to put Into play the
kind of forward passing and
sweeping end runs that defeated
Vanderbilt and Auburn. As the
seault Tech, in spite of its heavy
charging line, will not be such
a big favorite to' Win over the
Bulldogs
Arrive Saturday.
The Georgia football special
with its brass band and hordes
of enthusiastic f students arrives
Saturday morning. A brief pa
rade will be staged from the
Terminal Station through the
downtown atreets.
With ever:, man in uniform the
m Georgia Tech squad held its last
workout Thursday. All the in
jured have recovered and Tiny
Hearn, the giant tackle of the
aeccnd varalty. ‘‘Bo*’ Reed and
Ike Williams will be available for
the game.
Coach Alexander haa not de
cided whether to uae >be first
or second varsity in starting
against the Bulldogs. His first
varsity team has not shown up
so well, particularly in games
against Notre Dame and Vander
bilt and some experts . ttffnk his
second varsity Is the better team.
The largest crowd ever to wit
ness an athletic contest in the
South was expected,to be on hand
Saturday. Mere than 30,000 seats
have been sold wheih is the en
tire capacity of the concrete and
temporary wooden stands. Before
game time Saturday 1,000 stand
ing room tickets will bo placed
on salo and theso will be snapped
up in short.
REPENTANCE IS
FI
SOUL
Repentance is the funda
mental doctrine of the
New Testament, said
. , Gypsy Smith’ Thursday
to testify Ufytt aV service rec-: . 7 / . • . \
ommendations that observers bejWIJfnt III fUS 861*111011 flt
stationed in the Pennsylvania and (Woodruff Hall. If Athens
West Virginia mountains to keep|. 4 ru.! 0 *
the airdromes on both sides ad-ij® *0 receive JCSUS Christ
vised as to weather conditions,!it ItlUSt repent of its SillS.
were dl.pr.ved _to.be-war chief.. the evange Ij 8t declared.
| Gypsy Smith Friday night closes
j the second week of hit ministry
; here. The final week of sermons
(will commence Sunday night and
close next Friday night.
| Prayer services are being held
daily by the people of Athena as a
result of the series of services
I cqpducted by the evangelist. The
i men of the city nre holding prayer
'{uervlces each day at the City Hall
JaWlirSO'lftlock.- The women are
holding services by districts tn
[the residential sections. The pur
pose of the meetings is to pray
tfia^ the people of Athens may re.
late themselves to this meeting
and its benefits.
LOCAL ALUMNI
TURN OUT IN
FULL FOR
PROGRAM
MXLELLA1 WILL
DIE FOR MURDER
OF PfiOf. WRIGHT
ATLANTA. —(/P)— The death
sentence imposed upon T. L. Cog-
gcrshnll and F. W. McClelland in
tho Putnam superior court for the
murder of professor W. c. Wright,
aged superintendent of the Put
nam country schools, was affirmed
hefe Friday by the state supremo
court.
Tho court held that the law
of involuntary manslaughter was
not applicable to the facts In the
case and that jt was not an error
for Judge Park to refuse to charge
jury on involuntary man
slaughter, assault ,wi*h intent to
murder or assault and battery.
Testimony showed that Cogger-
shall, McClelland and- S. J. Scar
borough were picked up by
Wright as they walked along a
Putnam county road, and after
reaching a lonely . stretch, they
beat him to death with a blunt
instrument and robbed him of his
altinblea.
They were arrested a short
time later near Athens after aban
doning Wright’s car.
Must Repent.
Gypsy Smith spoke Tuesday and
Wednesday night on the “New
Birth.” Thursday night he de-
dared that a man cannot b« born
again unless he has repented.
He said the gospel of love has
been preached so much that people
a
V T
ATHENS AND CLARKE COUNTY ALUMNI OF THE
UNIVERSITY. OF GEORGIA GATHER THURSDAY
“Georgia” n:ght at Memorial
Hall Thursday night was one of
the most interesting and largely
attended meeting of this nature
ever held in Athens and one of
the largest crowds of Georgia
alumni to gather in the state was
present fer the local program.
Harry Hodgson, chairman of the t
local committee, presided and in- i
troduced the speakers. Willis A. |
Sutton, superintendent of the At
lanta public schools was one of
the principal speakers of tho eve-
ping and told of the great pos
sibilities of Georgia products. He
related of being in a northern city
and Inquiring the price of clajr
vase .that caught his eye. He said
it was marked 25 and he thought;
It was 25 cents and said he would
Government And State
Probes Into Wreck
Are Opened Fri.
TkENTON, N. J.—(UP)—Federal and state
investigations into Thursday’s wreck near Mon
mouth Junction, N- J., when the Pennsylvania
Railroad’s crack Mercantile Express, St. Louis and
Pittsburgh for New York, crashed into the rear of
i northbound overnight train from Washington,
got underway Friday.
The death list reached ten when the last body,
that of an unidentified man, clad in pajamas, was
taken from the twist of steel Thursday night. Five
pf the dead had been reached Thursday afternoon.
Sneiling Talks To
! Ga. Alumni All
Over Nation
By Radio
Under the leadership of Cheer
leaders “Shorty” Andrews and
Howard McCall, interspersed with
1 FORTY-ONE
ID
take' It. but happened then to In
quire the price and wah tn2JM$e<!
that It was $25.00/ The ornament/
he said, was made of Georgia
clap and - should have bean made
down here instead of in the north.
He delivered a most Interesting
speech and was followed by Abblt
Nix cf Athens who told of the
Cititens Educrftlonal /movement.
Mr. Nik was in turn followed by
H. J. Stegeman who spoke briefly
on athletics.
'A buffet supper wns enjoyed
and those present’ gathered in the
main lounge room of the building
havo the impression that God is a for tho radio message from the
“gteat \>ig benevolent grand-fath-
The father is stern with his
children. He Is responsible for
the child’s rearing. The grand
father, having no responsibility,
spoils the child, he said. God, ac.
cording to the general conception
of him, is a grand-father smiling
at the pranks of his children.
God did not forgive us out of his
love, he forgave because of his
holiness, Gypsy Smith said.
The evangelist said that many
thought fear was repentance. It
Is not. he declared. Many have
thought they were repentent when
they were merely afraid. When
the cause of the fear was
Chancellor Sneiling. who talked to
the alumni over the state from
Wi S. B„ the Atlanta Journal sta
tion. Chancellor Snelling’s speech
came in clear and distinct. Dr.
Hendren and Mr. carter of the
physics department had charge
of the receiving set. After
IILL
EXHIBIT PRODDGTS
RERE
Walker, of the clast of '97.
Speeches by Govsrnor Walker,
Chancellor Charles M. Sneiling,
-Athletic Director S. V. Sanford
and .Chief Justice Richard B- Bus-
l sell, president of the board of
Clarke county girls, members
of the Girls' Canning Club, will
exhibit their products at the
County court house Saturday,
from 9 until 2 o’clock, Mrs. Anno
\?ood Bryant, county home dem
onstration agent announces.
The exhibit will be in the dem
onstration room of the home dem-
ex-' onstration agent. After the ex-
tending . greetings "to the" alumni hibit closes the products will be
everywhere Chancellor Sneiling ! «°M- Prises will bf awarded .to
dealt with educational ficts in
the state, told of how Georgia
stood high up in other lines
on Industry and products but low
In education.
Chancellor Sneiling quoted
many figures showing that Geor
gia did not compare with almost
moved, they went back doing the Hill tho other commonwealths
wrong. Neither is conviction of .her support of tho university and
tin repentance.' He says he haa education generally. In 10 south-
known people who have been eon-1 ern states, said Chancellor Snell-
(Turn to Pats Five) 1 (Turn to pate five.)
the girls with the best records.
The public is Invited to attend
the exhibit.
KIWANI8 MEETS
Athens Kiwsnia met Thursday
,t Costa’s. Dr. H. M. Fullllove
D if ri i 'trustees, featured the -meeting.}will
Bradley Succeeds of c«h to«h™ Th
- „ ^ the neces^ty for a rentlssgpfee of 1I *f - « , , ,
Mr. GoetchlUS On ln °*7* ia „ for talked, argued, dreamed
University Board AtM? S
S3? SSJft SSSSSYSlrality. Past record, -fill
groups of oiumni! gladiators clad in the gold
of'columbiii' irho'«M~ s'member ,nnd’towns, celebrating "Univer-j 0 ^ Tech; nothing Will
of the bosrd many year,. sity Day" simultaneously snd I COUnt except that game.
of W ‘tto in «"' W oud h 'd.u“ , o r ?iThe earth may come to an
“Georgia” for their alma mater end after the game 13
belong’* th * 10 which thoy I over and nobody will kick,
just so it does not inter
fere with the game itself.
King Tut Was Only
Fifteen Years Old
When Death Struck
CAIRO, Egypt.—VP)-—Tbe mum
my of Tut-Ank-Hamon, with tbs
hands clasped on the breast and
a smal golden crown on the head,
has been disclosed at last, says a
message from Luxor FYiday.
The experts examination eatab*
» ld "!>.n b.
°^rh. attendance f hr ™* 1 wer * f0 « nd lw0 *«ld-
nee Meriilit ■» »»d atrapped to tbe
h/n^> D A?nod* ' 11 aides two gold adged swords and
was given by H. O. Arnold. two gold handled hnlvos.
Professor S. V. Sanford, direc
tor of athletics for the univsnity,
referred to tho hletoric fact that,
since the Olympic games were
fipt begun, 2,500 years ago, the
names of all winners had bcert
kept. This ia not true, he said,
of the names of the graduates of
any university, nor the names of
members of any church.
Professor Sanford then told of
the physical condition of the in-
(Turn to Pena Five)
The game’s the thing.
* Forty One.
, Forty-one ^players will he car
ried to Atlauta. and tbe squad
numbers the largest to make any
Invasion thlf year. The players
Include: Jake Butler, Walter
Forbes, and “Blachshear” Smith,
centers; “Jelly’* Rogers, Gene
_ Smith, “Red** Eubanks, Leffler,
jured men on the Georgia football pred Hand, Munn, •'Buck'* Weavor,
squad and said that all would be
Sheppard, Scarborough, and Franlc
(Turn to page eight.)
THESE BOYS WILL GIVE TECH SOMETHING TO THINK ABOUT
BY MAKCUS BRYANT
At two o’clock Saturday
afternoon on Grant Field,
thirty odd thousand foot
ball fans from all corners
of the country will raise a
mighty shout, a shout
that will make the con-
cretc stands tremble, as a
bright new football sails
through the air and set
tles into the arms of a
waiting player and the
gridiron classic of the
Howard McCall, interepersed wiin ° , - , QO - , j__
Jazzy college songs by the Bulldog SOUth for 1gets Under-
orcheztra, and interrupted from way w ffl| the Bulldogs 01
time to time with Irrepressible - J. ... /->„»
admonitions to “Boat Tech,” the Georgia i Cing the IzOl
Atlanta Alumni Asaodation of (j en Tornado of Georgia
Thursday V n*ght held .^banquet on Tech on the gridiron for
the occasion of “Univeraity Day,” the first time in nine long
which was designated by proem-
mation of Governor
bni years- ^ ,
When that football sails
through the air the dream
of both Georgia and Tech
alumni and supporters
trustees, featured the meeting.I w iH begin to COme true.
TL*. L-,ns«t. A f ft swell dnannti W*«! . , . ,, . . . .
thing that has -been
W. C. Brsdloy^promlnont vo- .
lumbus business man, haa accept- the college of agriculture, and be as nothing after that
ed appointment as a truatoo of culminating In a greater univer-i. minute when the
the Univeraity of Georgia, It la aity in fact aa well aa in name. Iiense minute When ute
annooncod. I Chancellor Sneiling gave his (eleven red ShlTted War-
Mr. Bradley was namsd a few speech over the radio, thua broad- f eleven other
days ago by Governor Walker to casting it over Georgia and other“Jjj
fill tho vacancy created by the cfates, where f '
death of Mr. Henry R. Oootchlus wore mooting