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TUB BANNBR-HBRALD, ATHENS. CBOBCM.
SUNDAY. NOVEMBER 15. 1828-.
GRD WORLD HANDED BIG SURPRISES SAT.
iBAi DEFEATS
FLORIDA EASILY
MONTGOMERY, Ate.—(UP)—
Alabama Crimson Tide, lut
^•/Southern Conference chnm-
1, held its 1.000 percenteRe
lore Saturday when it
the Florida 'Gators 34-0.
/game was a walkaway tor
la, who began her scoring
first quarter and kept it
up, making two touchdowns in the
fourth, quarter.
YALE DRUBBING
NEW HAVEN.—(UP)-A fero
doiu - claw-sharpened Tiger, filled
with'"the blood lust of last week’s
victory over Harvard, battled his
way to the championship of foot
l»ll’« "Big Three Saturday, set-
ting' back Yale 26-12 before
eighty thousand fans in the Eli
BoWl.
Win Three Varsity Letters
Carr and Hanson of Syracuse Aside From Being
Grid Stars Shine in Baseball and Basketball.
TOS BROWN
BROWN’S STADIUM, PROVI
DENCE.—(UP)— Harvard's foot-
boll toam won a hollow victory
from Brown here Saturday after
noon by the narrow margin of a
■ hold goal after the Crimson st
ack Had Icon repolied time and
ue again within the shadow of
goal post. Chauncey
field goal from the
Seen yard line.
FOOTBALL
RESULTS
, North Carolina 13; Davison 0.
I Furman 2; Univ. of S. C. 0.
Qunntico Marine 14; Univ. of
iTcnn. Doctors 0.
% Maryland 3; Washington & Leo
j Bowdoln 14; Tufts 7.
Vermont 7; Mlddlebury 6.
West Virginia 14; Penn State
0.
Amherst 18; Williams 7.
I Indiana 32; Rhode* 7.
Perdue 9; Northwestern 13.
‘ Notre Dame 28; Carnegie 0.
Tulanc 13; Swanee 0.
Term. 14; Miss. A. A M. 9.
Alabama Poly 10; Vanderbilt 9.
SSlilinoia 21; Wabash 9.
t Wisconsin 21; Michigan Statu
Missouri 18; Oklahoma 14.
' "Creighton 20; North Dakota 7.
Cornell College 20; Bcuna Vista
Caftoll 27; Riton 0.
■ Weet Virglna Wesleysnn 7; An-
ston College 7.
. .Harvard 3; Brown 0.
Johns Ilopklns 7.; St. Johns 7.
Colgate 19; Syracuse 8.
I * Princeton 2o; Yele 12.
Mulne 0; New Hampshire 0.
Washington A Jefferson 7. De
troit
Holy Cross 8; Rutgers 0.
Pittsburg 14; Pennsylvania Ot
'.Boston Univ. 14; Providence 6.
Pordham 76; City College of N.
Y. 0.
Hobart 12; Buffalo 0.
St, Stephens,31; Norwicvb 6;
.. Columbia 21; Army 7.
Franklin A Marshal! 20; Ural-
nus 0.
Ohio Werleyan 26: Dennison 0.
Michigan -0; Ohio State 0. .
llaverford 18; Delewarc 0.
Cornell 33; CanlsusO .
LaFnyctte 47; Suaquehanna 0.
Virginia 10; Virginia Poly 0.
Minn. 33; Iowa 0.
Kansas Aggies 0; Nebraska 0.
Colorado Aggies 18; Colorado,
Univ. 0.
Utah 3: Colorado College 0.
Beloit 13; FloreneeO ■
BOSTON RED BOX MAY
TRADE PITCHING ACE
In all probability the Boston
Hod Sox will try to put over a
deal .this winter that will mark
the possing of Howanr Ek’i.Ve is
as Id to bo dissatisfied with ton-
Is at Boston and the owners
he club are known to bo
nt hia poor showing test
He should pro*e good
material.
! DANE STAR
mm DELIVERS AS COACH
lurry Stuhldrehir, former star
quarterback at Notre Dame, is
doing very well in his first year
a* h coach at Villa Nova. His
worst setback so far has been a
defeat by the strong Dickin
son town. Villa Nova beat Rut-
utri 20-0.
oolv time tome men think they
.huge;, no kick coming la when It
comes time to kick In with some
a&u
ABOVE VIC HANSON; BELOW, HARLAN CARR
Few athletes win their letter in three major sports during their
sophomore year at college. Harlan Carr and Vic Hanson of Syracuse
are two football stars who enjoy such a distinction. Asido from the
grid Fame, both Hanson and Carr have made the varsity in basket-
bail and baseball. Hanson is an en d on the football team, a forward in
basketball and second baseman of the baseball nine. Curr is an out
fielder and has played both forward and guard in basketball, in addi
tion to hi* football duties.
The Nut Cracker
By Jot C. William,
STATE AND COUNTY
TAXES NOW DUE
A. M. BURCH, T. C.
MR. DE WOLF HOPPER
Headline says, "De Wolf Hop
per. 69 marries again." . . . And
we are still trying to figure out
whether this ig his age or his golf
score.
Reading further we learn this
is "Mr. Hoppers sixth plunge into
the sea of matrimony.'* . . . The
old tray must be. getting ready to
awlm the English Channel.
Well, come what may, De Wolf
can always boast he has met more
justices of the peace than any
other actor known to the stage.
One of the prior Mrs. Hoppers,
age 62. comments it is one thing
to land De Wolf, but quite an
other to hold him. . . . We have
heard similar remarks by football
tackier* commenting ou the elu
sive Mr. Orange.
This may, or may not indicate
Mr. Roppsr hat had earlier experi
ence on jths gridiron. . . . Never,
the lest, he teems to possess ex
traordinary talent as a broken
field runner.
One of the standing fsautres of
the hysterical Sunday sections
used to be, "Should an actor
marry r* . . .It will now he chang
ed to, "How oftsn should an
tor marry?" 1
We truht however, the time will
never come when Mr. Hopper will
permanently discard "Casey at
the bat" for "The Merry Wives
of Winsor," or anything else, in
cluding a seventh wife.
In or out of matrimony, leading
thereto or departing .therefrom,
Mr. Hopper will always remain
one of our constant enthusiasms,
We will clutch a boyhood mem
ory of him in "Pinafore" that ic as
endurable as the granite hills of
Vermont.
And since this column Is devoted
to patter, cracks, bonmots and
other primitive forms of boredom,
dealing exclusively with sports,
the writer wishes to remark that,
in his own untutored estimate.
Messrs. Gilbert and Sullivan were
a couple of melody makers who
certainly knew their onions.
the marrying in this country and
it might as well bo De Wolf.
We don’t believe anybody aver
really fights for the Jove of the
game unless it is a belligerent
married couple.
Gene Tunny is accused or avoid
ing George Godfrey, the negro
heavyweight Maybe this
is what they mean when they say
Tunny is unusually intelligent.
Princeton used to have a slo
gan. **£. team that can’t be beat
en won’t be beaten,” ... It was
a good slogan when Princeton
had a good team.
Any coach will, trade a hat full
of snappy clogsns for one smaah
ing halfback who can stop out
and get five yards when the team
needs ’em most.
BIRMINGHAM, Ala.—(UP)—i
Auburn upset the dope here Sat-
uroay afternoon by winning from
Vanderbilt 10-9. A placement kick
by Williams following a touch
down gave the Alabama Plains
men the margin of victory in
iee-saw contest.
ELEYEN
INDIANAPOLIS. — (UP) —By
scoring a touchdown In the fourth
quarter the Navy eleven came
from behind Saturday afternoon
to win from Bucknell, 13-7. It was
the firs ttime this season the field
here had not been a sea of mud.
WINS
FROM CHICAGO
STAGG FIELD, CHICAGO.—
(UP)—Dartmouth’s Big Green
team defeated Chicago 33-7 here
Saturday afternoon and claimed
the national championship-
Chicago’s Maroon was smother
ed by a flashing forward passing
uttack.
Cong. Brand Will Favor
Federal Judge For Ga.;
Opposes Third District
(Continusd From Paat One)
They Call Him “Shrimp”
Jim Foley, Syracuse Football Captain, Is Small of
Stature, But Powerful in Achievement.
m
Only Few Teams Able
To Emerge From Games
With Record Unsullied
1 , BY PAUL W. WHITE
j NEW YORK.—In a day of startling upsets only a
few football teams emerged with unsullied records
while many a highly touted team went down to hu
miliating defeatby teams considered far inferior.
James "Shrimp" Foley, captain of the 1925 Syracuse University
football team, fa the smallest Orange grid leader of many years, al
though he has demonstrated that size has no relation to ach'evement.
He stands barely five feet, eight inches, and weighs 150 pounds. His
elusiveness is his greatest asset on the gridiron. Foley hails from
Hartford, Conn., coming to Syracuse after graduation from Suffleld
Preparatory School, where he was a running mate on the school foot-
bjill team of Tyron, captain of the 1925 Colgate team-
The big three this years seems
to be rr/ide up of Yale, Od ami
the Bulldogs.
It probably would help matter*
some if the Big Three paid lass
attention to "tradition, sentiment
and historic backgrounds" and
more to football.
Five Harvard football player*
ate oysters and were poisoned. . .
Coach Fisher might have said—as
Irvin Cobb did say—."Well, I hope
it’s nothing trival."
. It takes an expert to tell the
difference between what used to
be the St. Vitus dance and what
is now accepted as the Charleston
We are wondering—having lit
tle else to wotder about—what
Paavo Nurmi is doing for that
run-down feeling these days.
While It may be true the first
100 years are always the hardest.
Mr. Grange seems to final the first
100 yards the easiest.
Mr. Jack Kearns doesn't mind
how many "rousing receptions’*
the Mexicans give Dempsey. . *,
You can’t interest a banker in a
rousing reception.
Ty Cobb denies he intends to
trade Harry lieilmann. . . It is
now clearly up to John MeCor.
mack to deny he plans to ask
waivers on hia vocal chords.
gla district, which would afford
practically so relief to Judge Sib
ley.
‘T am convinced that the only
fair solution of this question and
the proper thing to do is to con
stitute the whole state aa or in
one district and give us a new
Judge. We will then have one^
district with three Judges instead
of three district wit ha Judge for
each.
Havq Precedent.
"Such legislation has been en
acted for two or three states of
the United States.
"The legislation carrying Into
effect this plan should authorize
and direct the three judges of
the United States district courts
of the state to apportion the work
of the courts satisfactorily to them
selves, particularly havlug In view
however, the convenience of all
suitors before the courts, includ- f
ing lawyers, jurors, defendants on ,
the criminal side of the courts,
and witnesses.
"I shall vigorously oppose any
change of tho district court! of
Georgia which would take Athens
out of tho Northern district or
place Athens in a district which
will make it inconvenient and un
reasonably expensive fdr pepole
In thia section of the state to at
tend court."
The Rev. Hawkins and
The Rev. Owens Bring
Complicated Case Into,
Court Here; Latter Winsj
(Continued from Pago One)
hard that year, and my
people told me that I was
making my food go entirely
too far."
Back To Issue.
Confronted with this evi
dence, Rev. Owens conceded
that perhaps lie was slightly
mistaken and that it may not
have been a turkey dinner, but
that he had been so hungry
that it had tasted like turkey*
Then he returned again to*
his chief grievance, the money
due him from Hawkins.
The assertions of both con
testants provod so conflicting
that Mr, Crawford compro-
mined by ordering Hawkins to
pay Owens, $20, which was
entirely satisfactory to both
parties. As Hawkins' fer
vently declared afterwards,
"If that gentleman (Mr. Craw
ford) had beeu inspired by
, the Judgment of God, ho could
not have come nearer getting
it right.” And then admitted
that he really owed Owens
for ten days work.
Lone Score Comes in
Third Quarter By Field
Goal Tech Man Boots
From 35-Yard Line
(Continued from Page One)
ed a fifteen yard penalty but
a’" tea," by Prin«ton “n Z
°? , thB second of the "Big; Three" games,
f o’S , a The Big Blue team entered th;
,LfTJ n '>*' B“ lld °£» conte.t.o h “'y favorite over tho
Z a in f, f,?, d i' he Ttger as a result of its decisive
victory over the Army last urtek.
‘b reB s - d run ', 'Y lth ,he ^all But Princeton refused even to be
on Georgias eleven yard line. awed by BUch „ record and hura .
Tech lost the oval on downs In | bIed th ' Blue by a 2 6-12 score,
the last minute of play, the stands i Harvard managed to live up to
were given an additional thrill j predictions by a 3 to 0 victory
when van Olesen received a forty. ! over Brown while Penn did nnich
five yard pass from Moore, Juggled bolter than expected in winning
the ba l for a moment and then from pj ttabrgh by 14.0.
drpppe" It At the final whistle, xho denr old ,f opt wa5 moro
Tech had the ballon Georgia's j p , ntly handled In the west where
forty.yard line. the *‘ B j K Xen " teams were bat*
r for *
The Ltne-up and Summary.
Georgia (0) Po. Tech (3)
Left End
tling for * supremacy, although
Minnesota surprised- oven her
most ardent supporters by admin-
fatering a 33-0 beating to Iowa.
1 Minnpsntn nnu? enfurq tkn li«t
, Minnesota now enters the last
Tharnu stages'of tho season as the most
IsUCttle ‘ ‘ ‘ Qu' ar( }' • ' ' T “ arp0 nwnftahlA «,!«,,***. th- 1W»
Smith Goodwin
Center
Forbes Poolo
gave Tech the ball on downs.
Following the Tornado punt Wy-
toff intercepted a Georgia pass
in mid field. Tech here launched
a dangerous drive which narrowed
the distance to the upright and
pavetl the way for Williams to
kick his field goal.
Georgia opened the final quarter
with a determined march down
the field on a series of passes,
which gave her two first down.
The first of these, Moore to Estes
netted twenty yards/ Tech suffer-
Right Guard
Regers Forrester
Right Tackle
Huff : Fair
Right Eftd
Thompson, C ...Marshal
Quarter Back
Hollis Williams
Left Halfback
Estes Barron
Right Halfback
Morton .. Wycoff C.
F ackul.. uaywwwr
Full Back
Kain 9. Murray
Score by period:
Tech 0 0 3 0—3
Georgia . .0 0 0 0—0
Georgia Tech: Field Goal. Wil
liams.
Officials: Referee Gardner.
(Cornell;: Umpire, Streit (Au
burn).
Head Linesman. Springer
(Penn). Field Judge Powell.
(Wisconsin.)
Use
Banner-Herald
Classified
Cards.
prooable winner of tho "Big Ten"
championship as result of Michi
gan's defeat by Northwestern last
week.
Dartmouth performed as expect
ed in defeating Chicago 33-7.
ATLANTA—VPy — School Su
perintendents of the various
counties of Georgia gathered here
Saturday at the call of Fort E.
Land, state superintendent of ed.
ucation, for a two days’ confer
ence, The meetings are being held
in the office of the state superin
tendent in the capital.
Among the topics which were
up for discussion during tho con
ference were the annual reports,
general school statistics and pro*
ecdure necessary to put in opera*
tion the recently enacted law re
quiring county superintendents to
submit annual budgets to the
state department of education.
i* Watches are handy. You can
| look at one and . claim ' you are
Returning to Mr. Hopper (which ilate even when you are early,
seems to be the current feminine |
specialiy) matrimony to him simp- • The hard thing about most
ly aeems to be "six of one and a things la to keep on doing them,
half doxen of another.” j
; The too smallest place in the
"Meet the wife, she's mor£ than , world is a boys stomach on
a pat** ... In the caae of Sir. »Thanksgiving.
Hopper the proposition soon —
threatens to become a convention. Smoking a pipe doesn’t injure
I your health half so much as
Ob, well! Some one’s got to do worrying about your trouble* does.
two brought their troubles
before the law, and it waa all
threshed out in court. Max
Michael, attorney for the de
fense, and Ablt Nix, who rep
resented the plantiff, agreed
that neither would take part
in the case, but would let the
contestants argue their cases
themselves. Elmer J. Craw
ford, clerk of the court, waa
appointed referee, both aides
bxpkcsd!ng thpmaelves aa
satisfied to abide by his de
cision. Each spoke for five
minutes, Owens having a two
minute opening address and
a three minute conclusion.
Case Begins.
The case began. Rev.
Owens eloquently told of his
building the house for Haw
kins, of Hawkins, great amt-
isfaction. which expressed it
self by means of a sumpt
uous turkey dinner In honor
of Owensand of Hawkins’
refusal to pay him for bis
complete services. An hour
waa consumed in examination
of witnesses.
Then Rev. Hawkins arose
to argue his side. "Honorable
gentlemen and elegant audi
ence." he announced with
solemn dignity," Rev. Owens
has lied!" and he proceeded
to prove conclusively that he
had never tendered the Rev.
Owens a turkey dinner. Soon
the question at issue waa no
longer the sum owned by)
Hawkins' to Owena, but the
probability of the turkey din
ner. Deacon Joe Maddox,
witness for Hawkins, said
that he was really surprised
st Owens ‘.that tn the year
1922 only two turkey dtuners
had been.given by the colored
population of Athens, and that
he had. given both. "I espec
ially remember this." he de
clared, "because timet were
A Panorama of Shop Windows In Your*Home
Daily Through Banner-Herald Advertising
Daily and right in your own home, you have the finest shop-windows in town linei
up for your inspection.
While lounging in your easy chair, without the least bit of effort, you have before
you the newest styles, the best prices, and the most helpful buying suggestions.
Such charming hats, my aren’t they new—what clever furniture, just what you’ve
wanted—such snappy styles for hubby—all this and more is presented before you
every day. , >iJK
Read the advertisements every day—each ad carries a bit of buying news to you, a
daily chronicle of the world’s progress in style, beauty and, practical things for your
profit. Every day these shop windows line up for your inspection in the newspaper.
The Athens Banner-Herald