Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TWO
Bulldogs To Play Ole- - -
Miss In Final Tuesday
Start Preparations For
Tech Series on Week-
End Following Games
Today and Tuecday.
Reserve tickets for the Geor
gia-Georgia Tech baseball
games here Friday and Satur
day will continue to be sold at
(osta's despite the fact the
store is closed on acgount of
repairs, Charles E. Martin, as
sistant to the faculty chairman
of athletics at the University,
‘stated today. The tickets are
seliing for SI.OO each.
By VALCO LYLE
The final game for Coach W.
P. White's Georgia Bulldogs be
fore the Tech series will be play
ed here Tuesday afternoon
against the University of Mis
sissippi diamond artists.
Ole Miss began her fight here
this afternoon when its baseball
ers took up battle against the
Bulldogs in the first of a two
eamn series. It will be remem-
Leved that the Mississippians
gplit even wtih Georgia last year.
With the final Ole Miss battle
over Tuesday afternoon. the Bull
door Wednesday start work with
rothintg else in mind thanp to win
four oames from Georeia Tech.
The first two games will be play
¢ here Fridav and Saturday.
Tickets were placed on sale last
wael.end at Costa’s ard are sell
in = hriskly, at $1 for reserve
goate,
Ceorh White is etill experi
yontine with hig outfielders. Sat
n day Vernon Smith avas out back
ia centerfield. Ed Hamilton.
Athens. plaved centerfield and
nightfisld Friday and Saturdav
and Austin Downes got himself
eligible and vlaved in leftfield.
Atlanta Loses To
New Orleans; Bth
- Inning Rally Wins
ATLANTA.—(®)—Doc Prothro
and his cohquering Memphis
iChicks piled up their sixteenth
victory of the season jesterday
by beating Chattanooga 7 to 3.
The Chicks, leaders of the South
ern Association, have lost only
four games to date.
. Birmingham won the final
game of the series, 8 to 5, pound
ing four Mobile pitchers for 13
hits. Pickering, Birmingham third
baseman, hit' for the cireuit with
two on base. Plue got a home:
for the Barons, and Aussell retal.
‘jated with a home run for the
‘Bears.
Tittle Rock defeated Nashville
in both games of the double head
er 3 to 1, and 5 to 2.
Heayy slugeing in the eighth
inning gave New Orleans 6 runs
to defeat Atlanta, 6 to 0. The
game was a pitche-s battle be
tween Bean 'and Meadows until
the eighth inning.
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"ONE L
ONE STEP CLOSER AND 1 JUMD!
CRIED the LAST of the DUBERVILLES
“B-but Tess, I'm asking 'you to be my wife,”” stammered Sir Sidney
Sissingham.
“What,” cried the fiery fraulein, “you’d call me ‘wife’ in rasping tones
like those. Never! Before you dare presume, sir, learn what wonders,
upon frayed vocal cords, are worked by honey-smooth, queen-leaf
tobacco. Relieve my tortured ears and your tortured throat with
OLD GOLDS. Mellow your speaking voice, calm that cackling cough
and soothe that squawk. OLD GOLD yourself, Sir Sidney. “There’s
not a bark in a billion.”
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'Robins, Cardinals -
| And Indians Give
. Fans Money’s Worth
By HUGH S. FULLERTON, JR.
Associated Press Sports Writer.
Three clubs which have been
thrilling the fans by scoring their
rulls in Lig bunches and at the
last possible moment in the
games have been accomplishing
surprising feats in the major
leagues during the past few days.
These three are the Brooklyn
Robins, St. Louis Cardinals and
Cleveland Indians.
On Saturday St. Louis tied the
score in the ninlh igning and
barely missed again in the tenth
when Brooklyn scored five runs
and St Lecuis feur. Yesterday,
Pay Phelps, Robin Rookie, out
pitched Bill Hallanan to win the
first game, 2 t¢ 1, without any
Cardiral rallies but in the second
the Cards repeated their act of
getting four runs in the nitnh and
carried the battle. to 13 “innings
before the Robins scored three
runs to win, 11 to 10,
Three times in succession,
Cleveland put on lata ypallisg
against the Boston Red Sox and
won three games by doing it
They came from far behind yes
terday, scoring five runs in the
ninth innine and one in the tentn
for an 8 to 7 vietory. This sixth
successive triumph put the Indi
ang in first place in the American
League as the St. Louis Browns
won their second game in suc
cession from Washington by an
8 to 6 score. The Browns bunch
ed their hits off Thomas effee
tively in the second inning for
seven of their runs.
The New York Yankees
brought another chance in the
American League standing, mov.
ing into sixth place ahead of Bos
ton by beating the Chicago White
Sox, 7 to 4. Babe Ruth’s third
homeé run of the —-~- helted t*
Yanks considerably. It came in
the eighth inning, just as Chi
cago was threateqing.
In the fourth American League
game, Bill Shores of the Athletics
and George Uhle of Detroit
staged a battle that remained a
1-1 tie for six innings, then the
Philadelphia sluggers got started
and they pounded out six runs
and a 7 to 1 victory in the last
three frames.
The Cincinnati Reds altered the
National League standing consid.
erably by downing the New
York Giants, 8 to 4, behind the
good pitching of Jakie Mav, The
Giants dropned into second place
behind the idle Pittsburgh Pirates
through the defeat while the Reds
jumped from.'last plade to sixth,
~_The Chicago Cubs won another
close game from Philadelphia 8
to 7 when Lou Koupal made a
costly wild pitch in the ninth in
ning and let Dan Taylor cross the
vlate with the’ deciding wun. The
Phillies had just completed an un
hill struggle to tie the score with
two runs in the first half of the
ninth. d iy
+ WHAT HAPPENED |
" IN'SPORTS DURING
| THE WEEK-END ‘
fa e e
‘ By The Associated Press
Track Teams:
COLUMBUS, o.—Twenty - two
meet records are bettered in Ohio
Relays: Simpson beats Tolan in
100 in 9 5-10.
SAN FRANCISCO. — Rothert
tosses 16 pound shot 52 feet 1 5-8
inches to better listed world’s rec
ord. i
Tennis: -
MILAN, — Tilden wirs Italian
singles title, beating De Morpur
go i strZight sets, 6-1, 6-1, '6-2,
PHILADELPHIA — Hall wins
Pennsylvania indoor champion
ship, beating Mercur; 6-3, 68,
6-4;, womel’s title goes to Mrs,
Marion Zinderstein Jessup who
wing from Anne Townsend, 4-6,
8.2, B 8 g
ANTWERP. — SBpain defeats
Belgium, 8 to 1, in first round
Davis cup trials,
BUDAPEST, Hungary.—Japan
eliminates Hungary, 4.0, in Davis
Cup play.
ZURICH, Switzerland — Swiss
Davis Cup squad bows to Austra
lia, 5-0,
BELGRADE—Jugoslavia scores
clean sweep over Sweden in Davis
Cup competition.
General:
NEW YORK. — Schmeling ar
rives from Germany to start
t-aining for Sharkey bout.
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — Sam
Perry, University of Alabama,
scores birdies on three of last
four holes to beat Bill Duckwall,
Florida, ote up, and win South
ern Conference pols title.
BASEBALL |
RESULTS |
YESTERDAYS RESULTS
American League
St. Louis 8, Washington 6.
Philadelphia 7, Detroit 1.
New York 7, Chicago 4.
Cleveland 8, Boston 7, (10 inn
ings.)
National League
B:rooklyn 2-11; St. Louis, 1-10,
(final game 13 innings.)
Cincinnati 8, New York 4.
Chicago 8, Philadelphia 7.
(Only games scheduled.)
Southern League
New Orleans 6, Atlanta 0.
Birmingham 8, Mobile 5.
Memphis 7, Chattanooga 3.
Little Roek 38-5, Nashville 1.2,
ONE HUNDRED HURT
IN OIL EXPLOSION
LIVERPOOL, England.—(AP)
An explosion in an oil cake mill
on Great Howard street this fore
noon was believed to have caused
at least 100 casualties. Three
upper floors of the building were
enveloped in a sheet of flame af
ter the blast, which occurred at
11:80° 0 18,
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
ATHENS THEATER GUILD’S PLAY
IN AUGUSTA HIGHLY PRAISED BY
WRITER IN AUGUSTA CHRONICLE
By ELLA A. BAXTER
The coming to Augusta. of the
Athens Theater Guild ;Sat‘urdé.y
night was a notable event, bhoth
from the dramati¢c and social
standpoint, and the Athens play
ers made a lasting impression up
on the enthusiastic audience that
enjoyed their fine art in the pres
entation of “The Children- of the
Moon,” and upon ‘all whé met
them socially, P
Athens having long been a cen.
ter of culture and art, much was
expected of any dramatic club
coming from there, and it is only
the truth to say that the splendid
cast that presented the play here
not only lived up to.all expecta
tions, but surpassed them.
The audience was not as large
as it should have been, but this
was owing to the fact that it was
a week-end holiday and many Au
gustans were out of town, and
also that it was the opening night
of Chautauqua, where a play was
presented for which many people
had already purchased tickets.
But the audience made up in ap
preciation what it lacked in size,
and after every act there were
prolonged curtain calls for all of
the performers, and spontaneous
applause throughout the entire
play. i g R |
“The Children of the Moon” is
a psychological drama by Martin
avin that required a fine cast to
properly interpret it, it has an un
usual and sombre theme, with a
plot that was_especially interest.
ing because it was so bizarre and
unusual, s
Family Suffered
The Atherton family had suffer
ed, from an inherited curse—a
madness that affected them un
der certain aspects of the moon.
Judge Atherton—wierd in appear
ance and uncanny in his utterance
—strikes the keynote of the play,
for all through the acts he con
stantly gazes through his tele
scope at the moon swearing that
he alone can see what other hu
ma neyes can net. The Judge’s
gson had met a violent death on
the might of a full moon. The
mother determines that her daugh
ter Jane shall escape the taint il
possible, so she is guarded with
jealous care, but a turn of fate
brings her as a lover, Major Ban
nister, who was a friend of her
prother and who knew of the
strange inheritance. The mother
in desperation tells her daughter
what she fears and the power of
suggestion is so strong th?t Jane,
also gazing up at the full moon,
becomes demented, and screams
out that she is a child of the 1001
and should be there. Her lover be
comes affected with the same
hysteria and carries her to his
aeroplané and they fly off into
gpace. The playwright does not
offer a solution and the audience
must draw its own congclusions.
Rather a macabre plot, but ex
tremely interesting.
As to the almost flawless cast
that presented this strange study
in abnormal psycholdgy so bril
liantly, the chief honors fall to
MaNita Bullock, as the mother.
Georgia Glee Club
To Give Show Here
At Colonial Friday
Returning to Atnens after a
trinmphant tour of the state on
which it was hailed by the press
as the best exhibition ever given
by a Georgia Glee Club, the Bull
dog gleemen give their Athens
performance at the Colonial thea
tre Friday night.
Starting in Augusta, the ' Glee
Club showed in Waynesboro,
Statesboro, Savannah, Valdosta,
Fitzgerald, Moultrie, Albany, Co
lumbus, LaGrange and Newnan
and in every instance the “1930
Varieties” were received with ac
claim.
Professor Hugh Hodgson, famed
Southern pianist and director of
the 1930 club, proved to be one of
the main attractions in each of the
towns visited and playing on a
Concert grand piano which was
taken with the club especially for
him, he was given a hearty recep
tion by audiences in every town.
The Savannah Morning News, in
their report of the Georgia Glee
Club stated that the work of the
c¢lub and the work of Professor
Hodgson denoted “perfect harmo
ny between director and me(x.”
The whole club showed the ‘effect
of his teaching and coaching and
he is largely responsible for -the
well-rounded performance “that is
being offered by the club this year.
In addition to the musical num
bers offered by the Glee Club and
by the Instrumental Club there are
a number of novelty acts which
lend variety to the program and
which have proved among the most
popular features of entertainment.
“The Great Nebbo,” Lindsey
Hopkins, Jr., presents an act of
sleight-of-hand and magic, and
«pri and Dooit,” Cree Stelling and
Freddie Hodgson, give an exhibi
tion of tumbling.
These are two of the acts which
atersperse the musical numbers,
and the comics of the end-men,
“Smut” Bush and Whit Morris
are among the high-lights of light
entertainment of the club.
Tickets for the performance g 0
on sdle tomorrow at Costa’s and
at Hammett's Pharmacy.
MAX SCHMELLING IN
AMERICA TO FIGHT
. NEW YORR.—(AP)—The well
dressed young man from Germ
anv. Herr Max Schmeling, is back
in America today, in happy quest
of fistiana’s richest prize, -the
heavyw.eight championship.
Looking more than ever like
She has a charming speaking
voice, .perfect enunciation and
displayed genuine dramatic art in
her emotional scenes.
Miss Vera Paul as Madame Ath
erton displayed a smoothness and
professiondl touch about her work
that was apparent throughout the
play.
Too much cannot be said in
praise of charming Elizabeth Ali
good (as the daughter), who is not
only a elever actress, but whose
personal charm and grace added
much to her fine work. She. was
very natural and convincing in
her love scenes with the major,
and excellent in her portrayal of
emotion and of the hysteria that
befell her when she came under
the influence of the inherited
“moon madness.” Furthermore, she
knew how to subordinate her
heavier work to that of Miss Bul
lock when it was necessary to the
effect of the scene.
Charles Farrar, as the family
physician, had an excellent carry
ing voice and a praiseworthy free
dom and ease in his characteriza
tion, 5
Dr. Timm’s Role
The weird role of the father
was well portrayed by Dr. Albert
Timm, His makeup was convine
ing and the intonation of his voice
suggested that he was a resident
of a sphere remote from the
earth. He was a strong member
of the cast. .
John Galloway as the lover
proved himseif a real artist, in his
tinished and subtle interpretation
of his role.
Dean Raer and John Green as
Walter Higgs and Thomas had
only minor parts, but they han
dled them with ability and ease.
Much credit should go to Mrs.
Elise Graham, who directed the
play so perfectly.
The stage settings were excep
tionally good. Isabel Healy and
Agnes Brewer had an artistic set
ting arranged, and the Athens
p.ayers hung their own scenic
drop in the background beyond the
casement window. Allen Deas was
responsible for the fine electrical
and lighting effects that added so
much to the play. The sound of
the breaking of the waves, the
fog horn in the distance, the noise
of the aeroplane, were most clev
erly done, and the entire produe
tion from the technical and dra
matic standpoint ‘was supeglative
ly good.
After the play the Athens visi
tors were entertained by the Lit
tle.- Theater League with a delight
ful buiffet supper at the Blue
Moon. Mrs. Joseph 'S. Watkins,
who is herself a member of the
Augusta League, had displayed her
usual beautiful taste in the artis
tic decorations at the Inn, and in
the arrangement of the charming
tables, ~where delicions refresh
ments were enjoyed., '
The Athens Guild may rest as
sured that their next appearance
in Augusta will be awaited with
pleasure and enthusiasm.—Augus
ta Chronicle. ‘
the Jack Dempsey of ten years
ago, the smiling young Teuton
bowed his way into the United
States yesterday, through lanes
of shouting countrymen, solid
German citizens and thei:r fraus,
who gathered 4,000 strong on the
pier of the liner New York. The
air was filled with gutteral
“Hoch’s” and the German youth
was vastly pleased and considex
ably mauled before he could get
away. ;
R —— e
SHOWS INCRCZASE
ROME, GA., —(#)— An increase
of 134 per cent in the pobulation
of Rockmont, in Polk county, is
gshown in prliminary census figures
released here today. The pobpulation
in 1930 was 3274 as compared to
1400 in 1920. There were 24 farms
in the Rockmart district. The popu
lation of Paulding was given as
12,325, as compared to 14,025 in 1920,
There were 2252 farms in the dis.
triet-. /
LADY SEEMED TO
HURT ALL OVER
Had Constant Headaches, Pains
In Back and Side, Restless,
Couldn’t S'eep.
Jacksonville, Fla.—ln telling re
cently haow she was benefited by
taking Cardui, Mrs. W. M. Jack
son, of 245 Main' Street, this city,
wrote:
“Six years ago, my health was
not a bit good. 1 had constant
headaches, pains in my back and
side. I was restless and could not
sleep at night.
“At times, I suffered from weak
ness. It seemed like my body hurt
all over. :
“My mother had used Cardui and
thought it would be good for me
to take. She had taken it and it
had helped her, so she told me to
get a bottle and start taking it.
“I found Cardui a great help. I
improved so much after I began
taking it. I took five bottles. 1
soon got all right, and I didn’'t have
any more aches or pains,
“I gladly recommend Cardui to
women whe are run-down and
weak, for it is a very good medy
cine. I found myself in much bet
ter health after I had taken it.)”
Try Cardui for your troubles.
[CARDUI]
USED BY WOMEN
FOR OVER 50 YEARS
Take = Thedford’s Black-Draught
for - <Constipation, Indigestion,
Bilioussness, 25 cents & package.
P -!Advestisexueu(.)
Jasper County Had
Census Decrease <7
Of Fifty Percent
MACON, Ga. — (#) — Jasper
coulity, completé, shows a loss in
population of 7,676, or nearly -50
per cent during the iast ten yea:-s
according to figures released here
today by George L. Blossom, Su
pervisor of the Census for the
Eighth Census District,
The vopulation on April 1 of
this year totalled 8,686, the re
port shows, while in 1920 there
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STRAND-- 0705
| ~~ Tomorrow
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.~ IRENE RICH
o G ;
P asy and
o S WARNER
By - Y BAXTER
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LT/ &W WSy
B e== om® - 6,,55 ff‘g .
A WILLIAWM C.de MILLE PRODUCTION B _“ /
MURDER! a 8
® : :w" |
" When the police questioned her regard- “ ' \\
ing the whereabouts of her husband on "‘ fl) W
a certain night when murder was done, | r"!,r Ty /
she deliberately lied to screen herself | EXL@G«Q ‘}; Py
more than him—yet: he loved her. ;;®,q~_
were »%3_6__2_‘ pe:sons in }Ehat coun.
iy. . The report also shows 1,147
TaRE TN canty,
“Thé ‘only itlcreases in popula
tion “id . ‘figures released today
were 'inl fidldwin county,” whe e
the ' Georgia Reformatory for
Boys showed an increase of 83
and Allen’s Invalid Home an in
crease: of 1108,
“DAIRY ROLLS”
—ls making joy at meal
time in many homes.
-BENSON'’S, INC.
MONDAY, MAY 5, 1930,
(VH"‘\“?-' :'H?'( y
CHICAGO E
large ladic
made it b
Cub mangp,
l')nli\'} e 11 B¢
admit won ¢
but they mys |
9 o’clock v 5
when 20 .00\ i
out—two t 2
sired. The 1 I
cluding hox
for the ladies’ 2 !
e £