Newspaper Page Text
t-AGE
JHgBAyyEK-Hb<tXr.b:Aiil^lfeqEOR^^
MONDAY. FEBBUA
|V. P.I. ... 1 4 121 150 200 ‘
1 5 ,183 214 .167,
.138 232 .167
195 278 .1437
0 0 .000
66 .J25 .000.
Auburn
C)pmaon .
Wash. & Lee 1
Sewanee .. 0
Tennessee
#*W& FIGHTS
SPREAD OF
DISEASE
our
DAY
Florida
0 3 05. 127 .000.
Sports Of All
Sorts
lEMoniomfiCcracETEis
In 8iX Series
' Babe Ruth of the Yankees has
been in aft world series, three
each with Boston'and New York.
1/ MICHIGAN CENTERS
11 In football, Michigan has si
ll ways been noted for turning out
( high-class centers. It seems to
be a habit.
In recent years two Michigan
Played Every Inning.
Clentr Wright of the Pirates
played every inning of every game
(luring bis 1924 debut season, a
rather unusual feat for a rookie.
Ilatt* ricx were scheduled Mon* NEW ORLEANS, La.—UPLi-
day afternoon to officially begin A Tarheel shadow from Chanel
work of the OeiAgla Bulldog nine. 'Kill has been thrown upon the
Coacli ‘-BUT White wns expected < approaching basketball tourna-
refurn to flie city Monday and ment of the southern conference
J»*ihe University of North Caro-
WTO, current title holder, main-
take over the reigns of the 1926
dfamouiK-m. ,
I’rarti.-e. if necessary fir tho
butterinr. will be held Indoors *fnd
the romander of the candidates
will begin'work within the next
few da vs. It is expected.
All lettar-msn cf last year have
returned with the excepton of J.
D. Thomason. An«*y Chambers, and
“Bill'' Musday. Thomason was
used in a utIMty role as pitcher
and first bam. man, while both
Chambers .and Monday worn twirl-
ers on last year’s team.
I.eitcr-n*en back this year In
clude: "Skcet” Johnson and
Georr.u Morton, catchers; Emmett
Tnlley. pitcher and first baaeman;
‘8c 1" Satlcf, second' baseman;
Harry MlddlehroOtrs, third base,
man; Captain-elect Nolen Richard
son. :;hort stop; "Scrappy" Moore.
“Bill!'*'* Arenowitch. "Mickey"
Krnln. and Ike Sherlock, outfield-
**rs. Tom Nelson, another letter-
man. it; IrRt this 'season, due to. a #
recent operation.
Thc c expected out Monday fo!-
*ow: Joh/ison. Merton, Kealiug,
M Tigtie. and Sieele, catchers;
Kh‘m. Waiter. Tqjlejr, Stewart, and
rroh«:»!y Nash and Dowls, pitchers.
tains a perfect record. North Car
olina has won five games without
suffering defeat. Kentucky shares
the top rung with five games won
oi four chances.
The University of Mississippi is
prepared to take advantage of
any slip by the leaders, "Ole 1
Miss" having righted herself after
getting off on the • wrong foot b
, Praise. For Kamm.
Bid Gleason, who formerly man
aged the White Sox. says no third
baseman In the history of
game playp a ball hit directly
third Imse as well as Willie Kamm.
Banks on Jamieson.
Tris Speaker of Cleveland looks
for Outfielder Charles Jamieson,
who stunned badly last season,
to regain old-tltne form for the
1926 campaign.
gening on on me-wrong foot b>
winning tight straight. Maryland,
too, ' continues to command re
spect with five games wan and
one lost. Georgia, starting slowly
but now up and coming has ;
percentage of .700, closely follow
ed by Virginia with .667, the Cav
aliers, being trailed by South Car
olina wth a .600 average.
Twelve conference teams have
established records of .500 or bet
ter and with less than two weeks
to go before the title deciding
tournament comes, seem safely
within tho charmed circle of the
first sixteen. Six of the 22 teams
will be onlookers under the rule
limiting participant- to sixteen.
The Standing
W. L. .Pts. p.p. Pet
mho
v. iil boost these positions j Kentucky
Is likely that other members ‘ Ole Miss’
N. Carolina. 5 0 213 89 1.000
Dugan’s Trick Knse.
Joe Dugan, who underwent an
operayon Jor his Trick knee this
fall, reports that member is as
strong as evgr. When Dugan is
right there Jsino better third-
sacker In the majors*
centers have b*en All-American
choice. *1 have reference to Jack
Blott and Ernie Vick.
Great players, they deserved all
the honors handed them, -yet 1
am convinced that a certain am-*
ount of luck goes with'even stf
-mythical an honftr as the' All-
American eleven.
Last'year in B6b Brown Mich
igan had a center whom I regard-,
ed as the equal if not the super-
for to Blott or Vick, yet; thrown-did
not attain the prestige that went
to the other two stars-
Some western critics gave Tim
Lowrey the preference over Brown
in Big Ten circles, while McMil-
len of Princeton was generally
rated higher in the All-Amdrican
selections. i
In addition to being a great
center,' Brown was the ideal fight
ing captain, who Inspired a newer-
say-die spirit' that did -much to
make the 1925 Michigan team an
utstanding ejeven.
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 15
If so, you ore born with the
traits of a genius. This does not
mean, however, that sledding Is
going to be easy for you.
You must develop those traits
BY DR. HUGH S. GUMMING
Surgecn General, U. 8. Public
Health Service.
Yellow fever is a disease which . .... .. . „ - - ---—
It ipi«d,by infected mosqultoc.! 0« IncIlMtlotU to .ben-
This species of 'mosquito, how j ,*3!®’ ore ,IL * completed,
ever,,is not much of n traveler in . ar ® born with a good tasto
so far as hie win*. -may carry [ cr Hteratura enil are lncllned to
him, but infected insects may be,' be .?“f t, “ l , a P d mu » lc * 1 -
and often have been, carried by f , “ w,, Jl ^av© man F personal
vesiels and trains across seat and * r,en ‘>» and * tew bitter enemies
oyer wide areas. Yellow fever, of .gj* to y°*M; atrong Ukea and,, dls-
ccurac, is also carried from place' “***•
to place by human beings. |
Typhus fever is transmitted
. bran!
Fashiorv
only- through vermin attached to
iothing of infected persons.
Bubonic plague is a disease that
• transmitted from one region
to another by plague-infected rats
carried as stowaway passengers
hidden in crated or boxed mer-j
chantiise or quartered in the ship’s!
h-.lds or storerooms. One infect-J , - ,
ed rat gaining access to a vessel pleated skirt is one of the favorite
ill an infects! port transmits thei*--omblnations of Paris now.
disease to otner rats on the ves- ■ ■ ■ .
e el by means of fleas, and evcn-| FANCY VE8T8 AGAIN
tually these rodents carry
disease into far distant ports
til stiff and dry. Turn into a J cuts the phlegm, relieves
buttered mold and bake 45 minutes, lion and stops choking. r
in a moderate oven.
Servo warm wifh or without a
sauce. Hard sauce 1s particularly
good with this pudding as the pud
ding is not overly rich.
BORROWED FROM 8PAIN
The bolero Jacket with the finely
Fails to Use Speed.
Karl Combs of the New York
Yankees, one of the fastest men
In the game. Is only an ordinary
base-runner becadse of his Inablli-
ty to get a lead coupled with being
poor slider.-
Coach Yott regards it ad
best team he evtr coached; quite
some compliment when you con
sider the many famous tbams he
has turned out.
5 0
of tho tram will begin work Mon
day afternoon, i
Ceorrla’a schedule Includes 24
game*, of which 18 will be played
i*» Athens. The season begins six
wr* ks from Monday, March 22,
whf h tho Bulldogs play a two game
Maryland .
Georgia . .
Virginia ...
S. Carolina.
N. C. Stale .
here wtih Ohio Stole Uni- > Alabama .. 5
orsJty. . (Miss. A. M. 3
182 114 1.000
1 346 227
1 180 133 .833
3 385 304 .700
2 171 175 .60'
2 159 146 .600
3 216 16“
3 166 185 .57)
7 4« 1 454 .66:
4 229 216 .556
3 166 156 .500
; K-i
GOLFING SURS
(W SPECIAL ARRANGEMENT VITH OOLfERS MAGAZINE)
JIM RARNES—DISTRUST CAUSED BY TIMING
‘I" M-crot of getting dlitence lie, in proper timing of tho
r rake; that », to h»ve the club-bend traveling at its highest
’ 08 *1 comes into the*ball. This speed is acquired by a
r[ pccelciation on the downswing, aided by a fqrward snap
‘, ,5 h . L ' v j ri;;ts P a ^ h thc hands aie traveling just before the
t.'ub-hoed meets the ball.
l j-.. may fipd a good tip jn what is frequently refer-
r. < to a* hitting through the ball, oy which fa meant an attempt
t » ntt.T.A she maximum speed with the club-hcad at a spot an
, h jr two in frdnt of whero tho ball lies. I believe the plaver
' , 4 ® h ‘ 4 the’bnl! very hard as.a rule instincitvely slacks
little too boon; by that I mean the player who is conscious
tell you, I suppose, that an average drive of 225
j.irda good on,. j
Pl.y.d on loll,Id.
-Whltoy" Will, who recently
•lynrd with Hrooklyn for next eon-
broke In ee n shortstop with
tho Athletics. Ho was later swltrh
od to the outlle!|l. where
since 1 perfortn.ed.: K y v
Pitching Find.
Manatter John McOraw of the
GI nuts regards Kent Greenfield ol
hU dub ns the pitching find of.the
year. Strangely enough.. Green-
Hem made Ills first stltt against
th- wortd champion Pirates and
beat 'em, 10*1.
Amazing Record.
Three times In the lent five
yearn. Utogere Horpaby. recently
voted the mo»I valuable player in
tho National League, baa batted
over .100. Hie average for the
lest five years has been .402,
moot amazing record.
Hard to Whill.
Joe Sewell, crack hitter 61 the
Cleveland Indians, hss twn.striko-
on him more often than a groat
majority of the big league players,
yet he Ik tip- hardest man In the Am-
orlcan*tatague to Strike out. He
has a great eye.
The Nut Cracker
By Joe C. Williams
The most $MoUo • problem facing
the British Empire at ihis m*»-
nient U whnt to CJo to ke»p Eddie
awny from horses and hospitals.
tlms-Vbiwplc-teUp the paper
t' days you read where Eddie
heen ItoUncef). for ceuple
furlongs and a pock of oats by
rknoy nag |»oaMC«siie.T n strong
dislike for royalty and work.
The situation hus i-eused- io b«
funny. It hus become monotonous
act is cntlWly too one-sided
never reud ,foC Instance, that
Eddie lia.i thrown a horse.
WRIGLEYlS
in the New Handy Pack
is the biggest value in
long.-lasting flavorful
enjoyment-that you*
can buy.
It is the best Peppermint
Chewing Sweet for any money.
Handy Pack fits hand, •»
pocket and purse.
fi k fc«rmiEYi5 RKHhndyRui
on youf Dealer’s Counter
x.. I in ■hum
n the horses uro VcginnhiK tc
ttimpLiln. It usetl to he a mark of
dlstlnVtlon'urn* ng.-horse* to Uaow
Eddie, Now this ts cangeO. A real
ly distinguished hor*4'*|n the
plre ,l« one tl;nt has not thrown
IMdlc. >
King Georgs' is In a* quandary.
“I raised that kid to l»e a first--
class monarch and he turns out to
i third-rate bare-hack rider/
George moans.
They say Eddie Is it i»ocd rider
bur he . selects horses much too
Mg for him. He o0ght to know bet.
ter than to attempt to apply the
principle of Oxford bags io dumb
animals.
Eduie differs somewhat from the
Xfcig.of olden days who wanted to
a kingdom for'a. horse . ,
ALL-AMERICAN BEL’fiCiTUN
Recently in discusaing. football
with Coach George Little’, who had
such a big first year at Wiscon
sin, I brought up the play, of: Bob
Brown.
Little, who formerly assisted
Yost in footba'l at Michigan, is
familiar with the play cf Vick
and Blott and helped develop Bob
Brown.
“Jo me Brown _ was the out
standing center of the Big Jon,
if not the entire country,” said
Little.
As a defensive player, against
the line attack and forward‘pass,
Brown had no equal in the coun
try. %
“Brown's play and fighting Spi
rit was the spark plug that made
Michigan a great team. If I had
been selecting an All-American
team in the guico of writer, Bob
Brown would have certainly >
placed at center.
“I rate him as the equal
Vick or Blott in all things and in
certain (points of. play theit »u-
—T(iat Brown wasn’t ;sc-
^tirfinimously for * All-Am-
^hoittrs wg^ a ^whjnVyjof
To prevent the ei.Lr;* of these
diseases,, quarantine authorities
d reet their efforts very largely
> the destruction of insects and
jodcnt.4 that transmit infection.
Vessels arriving at American
ports fiom infected countries are
’umigated throughout, in some
instances to destroy rats and
fleas, in others to destroy
quitoes-
Before ship fumigation became
a rather common practice, the
iarjmr trans-oceanic vessels were
heavily rat infested. It was no
unusual thing to find several
hundred rats on one of the ships,
but of recent years th ! s condition
has changed, due to the persist
ent fumigation of vessels by the
'American authoiities. The quar
antine officer at San Francisco,
for instance, reports that of foui j
val of wnlfltcoats and fancy vets.
ottUms; -'brother Jonathan,
breads irtHk, coffee.
Rr this dinner menu there la no
•“green'f-aalad. however, the menu
for the entire day makes up for
this deffctency. If necessary a
salad of spinach and.hard cooked
eggs is cxt-ellent with this particu
lar dinner.
Horhlny Pudding
One cup cooked hominy. 2 table,
apeons butter, 2 ups milk, 2 eggs,
1 lemou. J-2 c ' Maple syrup, 1-2
-•up sugar, f- B easpoon salt, 1-2
cup chopped dates.
Heat milk and hominy and beat
until smooth. Beat yolks of ergs
until thick and lemon colored and
odd to first mixture with sugar,
syrup, grated levnon rind, salt, but
ter and lemon Jitice. Beat mlxturh
well and add chopped dates, i
Fold In whites of ef;gn beaten
DcpcndaH
j^CMkto
&Crm
Mother! \VIu
child is choking^
croup or Wh
Cough, don*
alarmed. Just j
spoonful of dependable
Expectorant Almost Inlfc
TAFFETA TRIMMING
Taffeta forma some of the most
fascinating trimming of the seusoii
made into rosettei,. ruffles and
bandings.
RRU8HING INTO STRIPES
os-1 Stripes are very important this
spring, frequently they run up and
down in the skirt and horizontally
c:i the, blouse.
enus
tamil> 7
hundred and ninety vessels fumi-
gated, rodents were recovered
from only one humkvd. . } . .. .
1. The latest agent of ship fumi- scrambled eggs with rice, graham
l^ufon is a gas composed of hv-| muffum, milk, coffee,
dtocyanic gas and tear gas. This Luncheon—Oyster stew, oyster
product, which is called cyanogen crackers, celery and mayonnaise
chloride, is one of the deadliest sandwiches, hominy pudding, milk,
gases known, but posscses the tea.
URGE8 MEMBER8 TO HELP
IN GREATER VAUCfEVILLE
NEW YORK.—(JP)—Fifteen ui-
venturons years as a circus man,
traveling in every state, and many
more as a lender In tho progress
of vaudeville have been crowded 1
ltno the life of Edward F. .Albee,
a small, gray-haired man, who to
day sits in a Broadway office and
preaches to members of his pro
fession.
* As head of an Internationally
known vaudeville organisation, tb«
shrwman writes few letters that
do not contain some reference to
the Bible. As a result they have
become known as sermons and
more than one minister has used
them in pulpit deliverances.
“I reaUy think the world is get
ting better/' reads a typical ex
cerpt from one of his recent letters
to an artist. “Vaudeville is cer
tainly improving, due to the men
walking up to a realisation of their
obligations to each other, and if
nothing happens to disturb Its
present tfanqulltty, I look for con
ditions to exist which will be
lesson to all men.
Tha,
Don’t Let
Cold Turn Inti
“Flu” , ?
i h 4 ’
Nova Scotia produces about 2,.
000,000 barrels of apples annually.
A Washington, N. J., man recent
ly unearthed a century-old pot of
coins dated from 1732 to 1766.
Mar&rie Perlas of Manila died at
the ago of 152. He Is the only man j
in the Island known to have seen
That cold may turn
Grippe or, even worse/
unless you take care'of
Rub Musterole on. jhc
parts and see hows
brings relief.
Musterole, made from'-’
of mustard, camphor, mentl
other simnle ingredh
counter-irritant whcilr
circulation and helps fii
cold-
As effective! as the
mustard plaster; dobs
without blister.
Rub it on with your
You will feel a war* i
gases miuwii, uul ,
added advantage cf giving warn-! Dinner—Stuffed pork’tenderloin,
ing of its presence. Even in small baked sweet potatoes, creamed j the grandsons cf his grandsons,
quantities, ti is so irritating to' 1
the eyes, nose and throat that
careless or - ignorant, persons can-
nqt well netcr a compartment
ifhat' contains even a small quan
tity of
htc gas.
A great many coaches, do
look on the All-American teams
with favor but the reading pub*
lie likes them, so the critics will
go on picking ’em.
PITCHER ERNIE NEVERS
Major leaguer* are wondering
what success Ernie Nevers will
have aa pitcher for the St. Louis
Browns. Nevers was a big star
in baseball as well aa on the
gridiron.
That means something when
you take into consideration that
his coach, Glenn Warner, who
also developed Jim. Thorpe, pro^
nouncea Nevers tho greatest fobt 7
ball player of aU-tlmc.
If Nevers makes good in big
league circle* he will kill off a
jinx that has followed football-
baseball star? for years. Mighty
SAYS MANY DUNCES
OF TODAY WILL BE
GREAT IN FUTURE
LONDON—Charles Darwin and
Sir Isaac. Newton were backward
children: it is pointed oui ly Dr.
A. F. Trecigold, a specialist, who
contends that many school dunces
cf today will become great men.
“The dull boy who is '•nade'to
wear the fool’s cap in classes in
the future wi’J be able to beguile
the tedium of his penance by
fleeting that his stupidity may-
some day make him famous,” de
clared the physician, addressing
the Woman's Sanitary Inspectors
at Bedford College.
LOVERS OF ROBERT
BURNS IN ATLANTA
HAVE OWN COTTAGE
ATLANTA, Ga.—The memory
of Scotland's famous bard, Rob
ert Burns, is commemorated here
by a club formed of admirers and
lover* of the great Scotch poet.
An exact replica of tho cottage
at Ayr in which Burn* lived, was
built by the club where it holds
few*have deliT.'redVntb|(monthly llter«r>- mooting.. The
majors.
As a matter of fact, eollegj
players, even -those who didn’t
dabble in football, had a tough
season of it in tnq» American Lea
gue in 1925. (
Not one, with’the possible ex
ception of Pitcher Carroll, the
Holy Cross star, got very far and
he just about reached first.has*
Even Carroll,, whq had won 48
out of 60 games as a college pit*
cher, found the going much differ,
ent in the majors.
For beteril years college stare
have not been such howling sue*
lajora. In addition
they have come mirfity high, for
most of them are good business
men.
cottage walls ai-e covered with
ivy brought from Scotland. The
interior, plainly furnished to shew
how Bums lived, contains numer
ous relics, momentos and pic
tures.
The club first came into exist
ence in iqp6.
The Referee
What t6am won tbv national
schotaatic basketball iltle last
Eddie -b» agreeable. a similar 1 r * .
.transaction but he demands a horse I Wichita (Kane) High. , .
he* can stay on. v [ What was WIHle Jackuooli right
Mr. OOoofty things the queen
m solve the whole problem in
couple of minute* .nd at very
moderate expense to the Bucking,
ham houschi
Let
ouschold.
gears Mr. Otloofty. "Evet.’ If ...
can’t ride the godt he won’t have
Jar to full.”
Etfdlri has brentthruwn 15 times
tide. 1921.
tnly rival is Big
Lady in Kokomc, Ind. t «aw a rL
derleus horse galloping down th*
road and aat down on the curb to
wait for Eddie. , . , "Lika spring
he can t be far behind," slle mused.
Great Britain will "never er**
an equestrian statue of Bddio In
grants**. a4Mj*. /The . empire’s
sense of humor Un^ ihat exquisite
ngmaT—F. O. H.
Oscar Toblar.
When was Dave Bancroft ap
pointed manager of the Boatod
Braves?—O. H. T.
Start 1924 Staton.
Tbrwe Star Rookies i 1
Third * Baseman . -Traynor,
Shortstop Wright and Ougfielder
Cuyler, Pittsburg boasts three best
tooktpg youngsters In th» majors,
wheif* that. mall arrived andj
l&ouftht us news from home/ 1
BABY -KIDN'APED".
LONDON.—The entire force
the West End police station con
ducted a frantic two-hour search
for a baby reported kidnaped from
its perambulator while the nurse
was in‘a stbre making a pur
chase The babe was found at
homt, asleep. The mother had
been the “kidnaper.”
Christianity was not introduced i Many seaweeds extract iodine
Into Bohemia untU^ the ninth con-1 from the water In their life .pro-
lory.
ENGLISH GIRLS SPEND 3
YEARS TEACHING ESKIMOS
LONDON.— Iff) —Thirty little
Esquimos up at Mahkoviz, Lab-
rador, are mourning the departure
of the'r pretty English tea cher j
and straining their ears trying to
get news of London over their j
primitive wireless apparatus.
The teacher, Mary Rowe, 21
back in England after three years
of isolation near the Arctic Circle
and is happy to be eating turkey
instead of walrus.
Miss Rowe came back to Eng
land on the I'ttle ship Harmony,
which goes to Labrador once a
year and ie the only regular
steamship communication Mahke-
viz has with the outside world.
“There are only five houses ard
two' huts in Mahkovis, and the
huts are-no larger than a dining
io©m table and each shelters one
native family, 1 * said Miss Rowe
*’My thirty pupils came from an
a»M of several thousands of
square miles. We ware 300 miles
from our nearest white' neighbors,
the settlement run by Dr. Gren
fell.” .
Mail came- overland by dog-
sledge three tmes a year, and I
tell you it wfljir id exciting time
read
BANNER-HI
WANT
\ll
AMBULANCE
106-Phone-1025
DORSEY’S\
. Funeral Cbapel
Hancock and Colley*
Avenue*.
BIG REDUCTION
IN CLOSED CAR PRICES
Effective February, 11th
Hff-
-1 ,
Nevr Price*
Old Price
Reduction
Tudor
Coupe
Fordor
520-00
500-00
565-00
580-00
520-00
660-00
60-00
20-OQ
95-00
Demand for Ford Closed Car* rince the improved Types in colors were
introduced has been constantly increasing. With greater output
of these typea production costs have been lessened and it is the
policy of the company to give its customers the benefits of oil such’
reductions.
NEW OPEN CAR PRICES
Touring Car $310 00 Runabout $290 00
Starter and Demountable Rime S85 Extra
Tractor, Car and Truck Chassis prices remain unchanged
AUprieee F. O. B. Detroit
Detroit.Mich. <7^
El
C. A. TRUSSELL MOTOR COMPANY
C '• y ^^uihorized Ford Dealer
. h... Athens,' Ga. East Clay top 'Street j
Phone 1097
Clayton otre