Newspaper Page Text
r .. j
SHHPI
THE BANNER-HWPALD. ATHENS. GEORGIA.
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 2.1TO7
IRATES WIN NATIONAL LEAGUE FLAG; BEAT
WEI THI Ml! IS
m!S OVER CADETS;
E WAS HARO FOOGRT
K&I’tinl stand
through the first two periods, out-
tdayiug the Golden Tornado moil
of the time, the Cadet line was
near collapse when the gume end.
(d. It waa then that the constant
hammering of the Tornado backs,
which numbered twelve during the
game, told the story.
The threat of Ab Burnes. bril-
halfback. had the
lets worried throughout. He
paaaed unerringly in almost all of
his twelve or more tosses. He
kicked on a par with Parham,
Georgia Tech a toe ace and hb
itrried the ball more effectively
than any other player on the field
with the exception of Stumpy
Thomason. This youngster dax-
ctod the Cadets with his side-step,
ping and pivoting during the some
fifteen minutes he was In the
i;»27 Edition Of Woodruff
.Machine Shows Irresisti
ble Drive In Viet o r y
(Continu'd from pi(a cm)
BASEBALL
RESULTS
NATIONAL LEAGUE
New York 6; Brooklyn 1.
Pittsburgh 6; Cincinnati 6.
Philadelphia 9; Boston 14.
Philadelphia 6; Boston 8.
Chlcago-St. Louis (rain.)
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Washington 3; New York 4.
Boston 2; Philadelphia 10.
■Boston Philadelphia 3.
St. Louis 5; Chicago 8.
St Louis 3; Chicago 5 (called
ATLANTA, Ga.—(AP)—Virginia Military Insti
tute threw a 170 Pound stick of dynamite, labelled “'c^St. (mm.,
“Barnes on Grant Field here Saturday and the con
cussion rocked Georgia Tech considerably. The Tor
nado collected itself, however, enough to win, 7 to 0.
After making
Athens High School To
Meet Dublin High Here
Next Friday In Opening
Game For Local Eleven
FOOTBALL
RESULTS
Clarke Superior Court
To Convene Monday ch001 f ° oU >« u t *» m in sduth
BY VALCO LYLE
The Red and White grid warriors of Athens High
will pry the lid off the 1927 schedule here Friday
afternoon when they clash with the strong Dublin
High School team on Sanford Field.
Dublin i> reputed to have the
(Continued from gjgj —t)
Georgia this year. Last year
they rode to victory over the stlf-
.fest opposition in that section, in
side over the sessions of the Of. cIlld i ng in the(r ](,( of ictlp,
tober Term of court. Orand Juror. tMm( Cochnln A . , nd M-> #nd
CLEMON, S. C. —(UP)— Clem,
son College overcame a tradition
here Saturday by defeating the
Auburn eleven, 3 to 0 In a well
played game, it wae the first vie
lory for Ciemson over Auburn in
21 years.
Timmerman, Ciemson end, won
the game with a pleasant kick aft.
er Hair had Intercepted' sn Au
burn pass on the Plainsmen 20
yard line.
Georgia's punts averaged 40 yards.
The Bulldogs made 16 first downs
and lost but six and a half yards
from scrlmmag:. Georgia fom-
bled once but recovered. The
Woodruff boys wero penalised for
a total of 00 yards,
Virginia completed two pasaa
for a total of 20 yards and lost 20
yardd on two others. Seven were
incomplete while one was inter-
czptod by Georgia and turned into
a gain of S3 yards. The Old Do-
minion averaged 34 vanta
the team before the eeaaon ta
Roy Jacobson and dene
are jnst as good as over
It cornea to guarding and
teemed to be a little bettor
over Saturday.
Cavalierg worked hard hut
c<! a losing game durlnit the
sit period and were never ablo
Bske a showing against the punts. One of Cioao'e punts was
Thore Is no getting tiloekid by Gcno Smith but the
Virginia man recovered. Virginia
lost 20 yards from scrimmage.
The invaders fumbled once and
McCrary, Georgia fullback, recov
ered and ran 64 yards for a
touchdown.
That finishes up the summary
of the game, so far as dry facts
no getting
"'i the fai t that Hotter, Cava,
rollback, Is a wonderful ptay.
Ho made attempte many times
the game to get through
Bulldog lino and mode a
that attracted much at.
Close, n young Cavalier
e number thirteen on his
proved to he one of Vlr.
greatest gffenslve player-
a, who substituted for
last half, was Juat good ____ __ _
carry on the work that see the boy* come through—and'
have been drawn and traverse Ju
rors selected for two weeks of
court. Solicitor General H. H.
West Is 111 und Wolver M. Smith,
one of the leaders of the Athens
Bar will act us Solicitor General
during the session of the court.
The list of grand and traverse
Jurors drawn for the term follows:
Grand Jury
D. D. Bourse, Angus E. Bird,
C. F. Crymes, Dome Watson, Ben
C. Prather, Sol J. Boley, George
T. Buland, 'W. S. Eberabart, A.
M. Center, James White, Jr.
Otho Brown, Thos. J. Scott,
George M* Abney, K- W. Holman.
W. G. Tiller, C. Grady Henson,
E. U. Hodgson, Jr., B. J. Hancock,
Hoyt Robertson, William H. Lit
tle, John W. Jarrell, Jr.
A. G. Dudley, W. L. Hancock,
John E. Talmadge, Gasper Palrni-
sano, Sidney Boley, Joel A. Wjer,
W. B. Hodgson, John M. Fowler,
M. N. Tutwiler.
Traverse Jury for let Week
W. W. Puryear, Garland Hulmc,
P. W. Nunnally, W. A. Capps, W.
R. Boyd, C. W. Brandt, Robert
Iverson. W. M. Matthews. Ed
Purr, E. F. Porter, Robert Brad-
berry, J. O. donee, W. E. Johnson.
F. C. Birchmore, D. L- Hale, W.
A. Phillips, John V. Coffee. Chas.
Muse, George A. Brien. Albert
Wier, Roy C. Campbell, E. R. Co
hen, George M. Champion, M. J-
Abney, P, It, Thornton, Guo cuoi,
C. J. Kenney, C. D. Booth, L. N.
Roberts, A.-S. Parker.
S. W. Pinion, H. L. Cofer, P.
T. Betts. W. A. Kent, V. J. Moss,
E. L. Norris. George S. Crane,
T. A. C. McMahan, H. T. Culp,
W. P. Glover, George L- O’Kelley,
W- C. Hanogan.
Claud H, Cox. JohnL. Taylor,
started.. Symington
i best on the lino, play.
. guard.
early part dl the Initial
Bulldogs started on the
nd kept the good work
I the Hunt whistle blew,
a's first touchdown came
the latter part of the first
as .a mult ot u forward
i passed (in ball from
gin's 30 yard llue, who ran
touchdown. Johnson falling
i the goal utter the touch.
of the game, so far■ aa dry facts M M Arnold, Clifford Mct-eror.
go. Therefore It wljl mrt.be ra-, T T H . r!r „« E - S - S6i r. M.
Ch »*' Costa, Joe H.
facts cannot tall the glory thaMwilson, E j). Hancock, T. W.
Saturday "^Hp-nnock. M. G. Ntcholsan, J. F.
VL e ,h ^ d iu,^r* d r*a^r f *tb°rnnrii Pj .ndl Whitehead. J. Talmadge Allen,
see the boya come through—and, ^ w Nelson. Fred J. Orr, C.’B.
tLrtS SLatmaStee 'Hanlei, J. S. Garrison,
were ‘S^hoTublie Travers.. Jury for S«oud Week
i men and the will to
Crashes Throuoh
. .second quarter began with
ong defensive eland on the
if the Cavaliers. For a while
were able to liold the Bull-
dogs to nhort gains which caused
the hall to change hands twice , no 0 j, t nutn won that gam*. That
Saturday in tbs opening game.
Everything wag there. Smooth
ness of play, a terrible offensive,
a defense that brought unadulter
ated joy and warmed the hearts
xll ticorgia
Praise For All
In this story wo have.undoubt
edly failed to give somebody
credit who deireved U. There is
so much to write about and so
little apace. But to crown It off
just let's say that the 1927 edi-
tion of the Georgia Gridiron Bull
dogs, as vitwed Saturday, is the
strongest and best looking that
has trotted but on Sanford Field
R. 0. Curry, C. A. Rowland. Bil
lups Phlntsy, H. J. Davis, 4. H.
Rating. A. M. Powell. H. O. Lang,
ford. E. C. Nelson, A. A. Jordan,
A. E. Griffith, C. 8. Collins, W.
R. Phillips, W. A. Payne, 0. P.
Carter. L, B. Thurmond.
S. W. Ussery, C. L. Upchurch,
N. D- Nickerson, J. H. Stone.
Thos. H, Nickerson, Bernard
Doomblntt, C. W. Jones, F. L. Cen-
ter, ’. ,E. Jackson, Tonv Postern.
Harrv Stovall. C. V- Walker, W.
I, . Hancock, L. C. Trousdale, E.
P. Stone.
H, P. Lawrence, John T. Pittard.
J. C. Jester, James Cotta, C. D.
Campbell, J. S, Wages. Berko
Wages.
. tK - . .. Betts, C. T. Brooks. W. Roy Len-
foLlc (Kt, 1 (1^t d AI '**”• T - J ‘ K,rlin ' Alex Snv®. Jr-
longer than that. And nmeOhtf.ty E Brool;> . F |„ t ,La„| tr . W. P.
• • . _ .ns oh# man won that game. That ... w - FirHmn w E
. darla* last particular period. But wa> won by every man who SHtwa W ‘ K ' b rd 0 • w ’ E
s that particular period. But took a part In tt. They all played
1 seemed to be . moving toward
> Bulldogs territory. Toward-
i latter part of the period Frank
. dley got right down to work, he
made one gain right alter another
nnd„as u result llie trail wns car-
j rtrd down to. Vtrglnla'i 10 yard
ffne frum where McCrary went Nash ...
. through venfer (or a touchdown. I
1 The. first halt tame to a close ! Moms .
as Sloan of Virginia Inter. . ,
etl a pasa of Hooks and car. | J " :ob » on
the ball to his own 20 yard - rtol* nd
►If the third quarter the Cava. 1 g BUh
had the ball «nd it looked
iou(jh they were going to rally ste |[ in(
| do sumetning with it, hut just
their hearts out and the glory U
there. All honor to them.
The line-up and substitutions
follow:
The Une-Ui
i-Up
GEORGIA (32) VIRGINU
Lett End
McDavid.
A. L. Howland. C. C. Bridges,
James A. Gordon, Gforge E.
Story. Fisher Rkiford, A, A. John-
son, Ben T. Epps. J. L- Oldham.
Guy McL. Orr. William MacPher-
son, Frank Allgood, ^Mac New.
Luke
Right Guard
Karris
Byrd
Symington
Right Tackle
Bcnckcnstcin
—.———- , Bight Knd
time Benny Rothsti.n ap. SMv „ (Capt>) F u p pi n
or. the scene. Rothstein, Quarterback
a pooa from Sloan on Broadnax .. Clots
zs yard line and carried. Left Halfback
across for a touchdown. ' gate* Faulconer
the Ust quarter the m ,. ht Halfback
scored two touchdowns McTigue Pendleton
McCrary scoring Fullback
, while Hooks and MeC rary Hotter
ere responsible for the Score by periods;
last touchdown of the Georgia 6 « 7 13-32
one of ths most inter- Virginia 0 0 0 0—0
was brought about in. Touchdowns—McCrary 4, Roth-
. McCrary picked up a ,toj n . Points attar touchdown—
ball on hu 36 yard line Hooks, Johns,>n. Substitutions—
of 64 yards for Georgia: H. F. Johnson, Dudley.
Hooks, Rothstein, Cook, Paris,
Tennessee. Georgia. Maryland.
Georgia Tech, Vanderbilt. Tulane,
Mississippi A. A M. and Ciemson.
Conches' qpret will look Athens-
ward this next week for the Bull
dogs of Georgia beat a much
vaunted Virginia team 32 lo 6;
the backs otr the home town teem
circling ends and reeling off long
runa with amaalng apeed.
Tenneasee won orer North Car-
oiton. pounding' the Chapel Hill
varsity to a tt to 0 defeat. Oeor.
gla Tech found V. M. I. a stubborn
opponent and was lucky to grab a
to, 0 victory.
Vanderbilt took . little Ouchlta
Into camp and Maryland trounced
South Carolina 26 to 0.
Davidson won over Florida, 12
to 0, while Ciemson, for the first
time In 21 years, beat Auburn.
The caMDus was bright with bon
fires Saturday night
The lateral pass appeared on at.
most every southern gridiron.
Tulane won from Ole Mlastnlp-
coeg, w. A. semi, n. n- irosier., 1,1 “ nd *—*2*?^
Frank Hofmeister. H. N. Under-! •>"' of the stlffer Conferen-e elev.
wood, John C. Sorrells. J. It <*!. Washington and Lee fonght
Northcutt, E. C. Jackson, T. B.
Anderson, Abner Spratlin, C. S
Jackson. A. S. Johnson, E. M.
Epps, R. D. Barron. Jake B- Joel,
K. T. Aiken, I. T. Kilpatrick.
W. H. Burger, R, S. Marhut,
Ralph Wages, C. M. McWhorter,
Hoyt S. Bennett. H. T. Tuck, Bov
T. Holmes, H. C. Briscoe, J. G.
Paine, Jr.. H, H. Jackson, R. H.
Gloyd, J. L McLeroy, M. A. Les
ser, IV. A. Fowler, C. F. Snyder,
Jr., J. W. O'Kelley, Joe S. My
ers. J. W. Bernard, Jee P. Nun
nally, J. Audley Morton.
M. fi. Michael Selected
> As Athens Savines
Bank President
(ConVKuad From Pag* One)
gnh rt»«6e Pinna nii|wui i'iw> tv»"'
,bome, O, M. Caskey, Ross Creek
Turn#l “ Andy Seagraves, W. H. Kvtlc,
John W. Cleghorn, John D. Han-
rock, W. A. Sams, W. B. Dosier,
other prep schools. This year,
with practically the same team
hack they are shaking aside all
opposition, not a gamo having
been lost by thorn tbla seaaoo. The
fast Hawkinsville High outfit is
the last victim of the Dublinites,
bowing to them by the tune of 18
to 0 in a game played a few days
ago.
To start the season off with
such a strong foe as Dublin High
and come out of the conflict on
even terms is no easy task. A
glance aa the schedule, of the Ath
enians will reveal that there arc
“no eaay-Wrds in the cage” in
which to begin with. The schedule
. October 7—Dublin High in Ath.
ens.
October 14—Decatur High
Decatur.
officially put the pigskin into ac
tion.
The locals have been pointing
to this.game since the beginning
of practice about September 5th-
They have put in several weeks of
hard work, which, with the work
out of the coming week should put
them into the fray ready for ac;
tion against the stiffeat of oppo
sition.
The Maroons have shown
flashes of real football ability in
recent scrimmages and the outlook
is far from discouraging, Har-
lowe Jones and “BiU" Mcll have
been going good white the other
backs have been showing real
ability at times. *The prospects
in the line are brighter than a
few days ago. Several new faces
are learning tls art and are tear
ing [up the offensive work of the
opposing backs. The leading as
pirants -for line positions Bra:
Hilley and -L. Costa, center;
O'Farrsll, , Collin?, t.Moorehcnd,
Bishop, Marbut, Comcilson,
guards; Leathers, Lambert and
Moirehcad, tackles; Ed Hamilton,
in K. Hamilton and Barrett, ends.
According to information the
October 21—‘Hartwell High in Dublin team is nolnting to the
Athens. ' Athens game. In the last game
October 28—Fulton High in plsyed between the two schools,
Atlanta. some five or six years ngm the
November 4—Thomason High in Athenians defeated them andl they
Athens. still remember this and are bent
November 11—LaCrange in La on revenge. They raiixe that a
Grange. vitory ov-r Attecc High would
T November 25 (Thanksgiving)— carry ?b*a* • «t,.p closer to - the
Gainesville in.Gainesville. state championshi, which they are
Barring injuries i during (the working toward,
coming week Coach Brown should The probable line-up of the tw<
have his charges In the best of teams will likelv be available the
chcpc —b— *K« whistle blows to latter part of the week.
First Games See Many
Conference Teams Fall
By Wayside in Defeat
(By United Press.)
Under warm summer skies, Dixie’s gridiron war
riors clashed Saturday and as dusk came the follow
ing Conference elevens arose from the dust of con
flict, victors—
To Renew Search, As -
Last Hope, For Flyers
(Continued From Page One)
™ did ^^UiSTHUi^VlSl: 0 ^- 1 one of the leading trank.
well (
Sloan,
(captain), Taylor, Pinkerton,
flutter, Harris, Kamlner.
Green,. Hushion, Hoi-
McCoy.
, Unaton, ;
Read Banner-Herald
Want Ads. A
honsea ot the state.
O. A. Mell Is cashier of the bank
a position bo baa held for a long
time.
Members of the board ar« M.
G Michael. G. A. Mell. J. A. Hun.
alcutt, Sr.. J. A. Hunnlmit. Jr..
Dcuprcc Huimlcott. Sidney Boley
and Aaron Cohen.
Weat Virginia to a 6 to 6 lie.
MERCER BEARS 1
ill
CITADEL, GrO
a bright blue. The creek rum
through a golf course. The club
sought an injunction
niiral Eberlc, chief of naval oprr-
atluna.
It 1s understood that the dit-
r.uirh of a vessel to Johnson Is
land was on the request of the
San Francisco Examiner, wbleh
censored the Goidel^ Eag|«. TV-
plane, which waa one of those lay
off from the Oakland Airport on
Avguat 16, waa niioted by Jack
Frost with Gordon Scott a* navi
gator.
Another plane competing inthe
race never reached ita goai nth
its threa passengers, including
Miss Mildred Doran, a Michigan
schoolteacher, while the Dallas
Spirit, piloted by Captain William
Erwin, which eet out to look for
the two loet planes, flashed an
SOS call 600 milei from the
mainland and bus not been heard
from a'nce.
LAST HOPE
SAN FRANCISCO —</P)— Be
cause they wanted to exhaust tv-
—v chance of finding Jack Frost,
pilot, and Gordon Scott, naviga
tor, of the Golden Eagle plane,
loet in the Dole flight, members
of the Froit family obtained the
u^e of a naval vessel to search in
the vicinity of Johnson bland,
Gearge Hearst. publisher of the
San Francisco Examiner, who en
tend the plane In the race, de
clared Saturday.^
Six Months Coal Strike
Settled By Agreement
(Continued From Page One)
Washington and Jefferson 15;
Maryville 6.
Weat Virginia 6; Washington
and Led 6. , I
Wesleyan 0; Conn. Aggies 19.
Williams 20; Middleburg 18.
Yale 41; Bowdoin 0.
Princeton 14; Amhorat 0.
Uartmohtb 46; Hobart 0.
Navy 26; Davis-Etkins 0.
Notre Dame 28; Coe 7.
Brown 20; Albright 0.
Columbia 28; Union 0.
Fordham 13; Lebannon Valley
3. ‘
Johns Hopkins 2; Richmond 6.
Loyola 0; Villa Nova 20 (Balti-
Syracuse 18; William and Mary
0.
Harvard 21; Vermont 3.
Army 6; Detroit 0.
Cornell 19; Niagara 6.
.Mississippi A- and M. 27; Bir<
mlngham Southern O.
Georgia Tech 7; V- M. L 0.
Holy Cross 7; St. John’s 0.
Colgate 82; Otterbein 0.
, Kansas Univ. 19; Grinnell 0.
Missouri 13; Kansas Aggiea 6.
St. Xaver 29; Transylvania 0.
Westminster 41; Univ. of Buf
falo 3.
Kentucky 0; Indiana 21.-
Micbigan 33; Ohio Wesleyan 0-
Florida 0; Davidson 12.
Mercer 6; Citadel 0.
Ciemson 3; Auburn O.
Georgetown 57; Susquehanna 0.
Lafayette 38; Muhlenburg 7.
Lehigh 6; Urainus 0.
Maryland 26; South Carolina ft
Vanderbilt 39; Ouachita 10.
Loyola 0L Howard 0 (Blrming.
ham.) < '
0.
Tennessee 26; North Carolina
S nnessee 26; North Carolina 0.
lane 19; Ole Mfaa 7.
lahomn 13; Chicago 7.
Wisconsin 31; Cornell College
Tufts 40; Lowell 0.
Northwestern 47; -South Dako
ta 2.
Illinois 19; Bradley 0.
I St John’s 13; Lynchburg Col-
Bath's 7.: Mass. Aggies 0.
Bucknell 0; Geneva 0.
Renasalaer, 6; Norwich 0.
Rutgers 24; Msnhsttan 0.
Trinity b ; Ujraala n.
Dickinson 8; Juanita 0.
Maine 27; Rhode bland O.
Ohio State 31; Wlttenbnrg 0.
Springfield 0; Providence 0.
Pennsylvania 33; Swarthmore 6
Temple 110; Blue Ridge 0.
Catholic University 13; Ml. St.
Mary 0.
Carnegie ,Tech 40; Thiel 6.
Delaware 6; St Josenh 0.
^Franklin-Marshall 0; Hxvcrford
Dayton 6; Flhnlay 0.
Hiram 0: Akron 19.
- Baldwin-Wallaco 12; Case 7.
Muskingum 26; Dennieon 0.
Creighton 18; Wyoming 0.
Nebraska 0: Iowa State 0.
Knox 10; Augustan 6.
Colby 0; Naw Hampshire 0. ,
Marquette O; Lawrence 0- n
Minnesota 57; North Dakota 10.
Penn Statg 84,• Gettysburg 13.
Pittsburgh'33; Grove City 0.
Perdue 15; DePauw 0.
lldclmater IS; Alfred 0.
'Allegheny 0: St Bo,? (venture i.
N-W York Univ. 29; Wcet Vj,
W-slevan 13.
L. 8. U. 82; Southwestern 0.
Sewanee 0; Bryson 7.
V. P. Ie13; Himpden.Sidney y.
El; 9Til
REDLAND FIELD, CINCINNATI, Ohio._(UP)
—The Pittsburgh Pirates Saturday won the chant-
pionship of the National League and the right to
meet the New York Yankees in the world series by
trimming the Cincinnati Reds, 9 to 6.
Not untfl the next to the bat
game of the .season was the Pi
rate’s triumph assured, but Satur.
day’s victory enthroned the Pi.
rates after a pennant race ot dra.
GEORGIA TO PLAY J
YALE NEXT; TEAM
Yale is the next game on tho
Georgia schedule, the local Bull
dogs meeting the easterners by
the same name next Saturdfy In
the Yale Bowl.
According Jo plans how being
made the team will leave Athens
Thursday morning and Will travel
via the Southern railway, reaching
New Haven Friday at noon where
a workout will be held In the bowl
In the afternoon.
Returning tho team will leave
New Haven 8unday ifiorning, come
to New York and remain there
until about 4 o’clock and leave ou
Piedmont special, arriving
back home Monday afternoon
about 4 o’clock. About 30 players
Coaches Woodruff, Mehr* and'
Crowley, manager Jim Roberts,
Dr.'Sanford, who will attend an
cxecutlvo committee meeting of
the National Intercollegiate Asso
ciation Saturday, Chen. E. Mar
tin. Assistant to tho faculty
chairman and trainer Bill Dailey,
will make the trip.
SI.
FOR WIND VICTIMS
matte cloaefiest- throughout
seaaoo. ,
The clincher game had all the
thrills of a prise fight when the
contestants abandon- boxing and
stand toe.io toe and slug It out.
Such tactics marked the contest
Saturday. The deqperete Bucs and
the Battling Reds ponnded each
other’s hurlers without mercy.
LITTLE EXCITMENT
PITTSBURGH. —(JP)- Calmly
bnt with quiet satisfaction Plm.
bnrgh fans Saturday received the
news that the Pirates had von
their -second'National League pea.
nant In three years.
The wild scenes which followed
tho Corsalr’h triumph lit the IKS
race were consptenous by their
absence Saturday. , The Pirates'
victory two yoars ago. however,
came after iorut years of waiting
and hoping on tho part of the tans.
This year, 'faotwlttistpndlnc the
closeness of the race, a bulk ot
•he Pirate rooters had been con.
fldent from the4tsrt that their
favorites would come through on
loo.
With ths pennant clinched, si-
tentlon Was turned to the World
with the New York Yankee-
opening here next Wednesday
■tickets have been on solo licrt
for rontetip?? --a wnr “doubtlnn
Thomases” among the tank who
preferred to wait nntll the flan
was clinched beyond ~ths shadow
mathematical doubt before
purchasing their.apata for the an
nual fall tla«sl<y;mhy tliid It dlf-
uvuii to get
Annual Scenes Are
Re-Enacted As Old
Grads .Visit Their
Schooiday Haunts
(Continues From Fag# Ona)
SAVANNAH, Ga- -(UP)- The
.Mercer Bears defeated the Citadel
Cadets here Saturday 6 to 0.
■Phoney" Smith, ‘Mercer star,
pushed the ball across for the
Bears after the pigskin had been
brought crows to the goal by a
series of line buck.?.
COLOR IS*HAZARD
L'INCrNNATr — Operation of
the National Ultramarine Co. has
made the waters of s creek here t ], e factory, saying that the blue
most prolonged suspension of op
eration! In Illinois mines as a re
mit of wags dtsnetaa. The mines
eioaad six months ago Saturday.
The Illinois tdlnes, together with
alL unionized bituminous shafts,
closed on April 1.
water i> contrary to nature and
acta as a menial hazard to play-
n»t 1, r . ou the links.
wBmUumm
baft mad. Cavalier and Bulldog
colors’Were displayed In countless
store windows. But football Eras
not tho only attraction of tho da>
for every inan was enjoying him.
self to the utmost,' renewing old
friendships, end talking to com
rade! whom bo bad not seen since
his collage days. The exodus from
town has already begun, and the
old men will not return until next
year, whan the samp affairs will
take nlnce again.
Among the former Georgia men
who have recently gradeeted and
otbera.who have been In Athens
over the week-end are: Billy
Arenowttch. Willie Hatcher. Jim
Flint, Howell Hollis. Shaky Kaln,
Jimmy Spicer, .Herman Aderboid.
Hubert Owens. Pinckney Steiner,
i* re nets Glynn. Colquitt Carter,
Dick Courts. Jake Butler. Bill
Munday, 8am Worley. Dean Rat.
Ilfta. Sam Tupper, Barney -Man
ning. Frank FWey, J. D. Thoma.
son, Marion Smith, Harold Hlrach,
Orrin Roberta. Julian Robison,
JtmmjL.CaIboan. Oua King, Perrin
Nicholson, CharUe Blum.
Also back for the game were
Ofenn Dlskcreon. . CharUe Bloch.
BIU Turpin, Hillary Mpngum,
Rhesa Farmer, Dr. Mercer Blan
chard, Marvin Perry. Bob Hards.
Francs and declared they present-
ed no more desolate appearance
than the tornado torn section ’ of
SL Louisl Even in Saturday’s
rain, women and men lingered
about the heaps of ruined mason
ry and splintered wood.
They packed what goods they
could save on some of the 75 mov
ing vena provided through the Red
Cross and started away. Many
of them were headed out into Sb
Louis county to find new homes
or temnorary stopping
A relief fund of half a million
dollars is neded immediately,
it was announced by Alfred Fair
banks, vies chairman of the CItiu
sens Disaster Relief Committee.
Contributions late Saturday total
ed $165,000. Fairbanks said that
no appeal would be made for
funds from outside the city but til'
contributions would be welcomed
from whatever source.
Nineteen cities have telegraph
ed Mayor Victor J. Miller, offer-
in help.
Enlisted under the SL Loots
chapter of the Red Croef. 2,000
relief workers were Saturday
grappling effectively with tht .re
lief problem.
USE TROOPS. , ’
WASHINGTON ~C/P>— Use of
federal troops at St. Louis aa a
result of the tornado which
struck that city Thursds:
noon, apparently will be confined
to guarding exposed property un
til it can ba properly stored, Ma
jor General WBlbm Lassiter, re
ported Saturday to the War De
partment.
Central Christian
Church Moves
Into New Home
(Contributed)
The members of Central chri*i-
tan church hare moved Into nev
and prominent rinartera for ww-
ship They have been worship
ing temporarily at 228 Prince A«
but will now occupy their n«
home located In 725 Baxter 8b
southeast cornsr of t Buster ana
Bloomfield, one short block east
Cf Tho^nMV location ft situated Is
a thickly settled reildentlalI «*•
tion of tho city offering a chares
homo for the splrttdally homeless-
ST. LOUIS — UP) — Drenched
by rain which fell intermittedly,
hundreds of survivors of Thurs
day's tornado here, who remained
In their ruined homes, wero forced
Saturday to seek shelter else
where. The Red Cross estimateo
2,000 families, comprising 7,800
persons, wars affected in the de
vastated ares of approximately
210 city blocks. ■ . - j
Both in Its immediate physical
aspects and Its aftermath, ths
tornado was war like. Members
of the American Legion among
the 6,000 volunteer worke-s, re- ‘“‘,h“VMk"com(ort for the
called the battle-rained town, of ^LC.nTteo bre.d uf Ufa
and the waters of Ilfs Ior n11 *
hunger sad thirst for rlght«a°«
“we move Into qur new SpW; j
ust home end Into our new «»
munlty to Identity 0 “" e ‘Xt «
tho beat, highest 1 and noblest
terests of
radius of our Christian fello«
and Christian service. 0“ r
Rev. Frank L. AdamJ, will be
stent in season and out“f»e
la serving all who ctu ,
him for Spiritual Issuuctloti
“Come with us an“
Adverse Wcatfier Con-
tinues To Halt FI p 1
(Contlnusd From P«B«
“V»u. judge R. N. Hardeman, .
Dutch Sancken. George Barrett. GIVES $25 OOO
John Odom. Mutt Riddle. Buck | WASHINGTON —(/Pi— A «on r
Neville. Pond LIppitL Buck tributIon of j 2 5,000 towards the
Checves. Artie Pew. Dana Belsey. jjoO.OOO fund being raised in St
'Half Pint’ Manucy and many oth- j, ou |, f or 0 f j U tornado
„ Oetober but tho chanres £
against It and right no * *^, c a
nhertc conditions »re 80 ® d .
worse than the Tory worse e*P£
enced by any ot tho P** 1 ’ ’,!*).!
flyers that there *»
I don’t know what Miqa Eme
decide to do but I
tho weather map today that »
"r irs—
Aa Dr. Ktmb
report word <
Field that Mlsi
man were m
, Otr!” from
Thursday after- Roosevelt Field
“ ‘ which Lindbergh. - ,
and Byrd, took off for Eurojc^
They said tte*
and provisioning was to bem
mediately and that It tnej , ,
aidered conditions faVoram#
p. m.,* they would hop ou |
time.
’victims. wa< made Saturday
HKMmH
the American Red Cro«s. All
penditurea for relief wili oe
died by the Red Cross at t»
quest of !