Newspaper Page Text
bl APRIL 6 1983, 7
URS A i
- - 1 a 8
’ |
ung Men’s Baseball
S~ |
League to Open Soon
. ekl |
weeks 1'»-m;|in;
£ : |
g date of the|
|
‘ Vien's Playground |
the. '¥. "N O
has heen posted !
A £
) and a few |
ready signed |
|
is one of the!
i vities of the “Y” |
i in total attend
| other features |
(_' yartment. It be- \
: first of May and |
k i t week in St-])-
followed by the |
) \ Series,” which is |
i o picked teams
" league. !
Make Your
State and County
Tax Returns Now
void the Penalties Prescribed
By Law.
Ww. M. BRYANT
Tax Receiver ’
ke County, the Court House
Time Is Limited
~ @ \ ‘\;Q é_,? // 5(;:\\)
- 3 S Wy
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T o ;:", ] ®sd
2R m :%;i‘; 2 @
"s“ 2
X :
u,}fa/f a men
lmf a M- '
LOOX at him! You might think he’d taken a corre
spondence course in “How to Add Inches to Your
Chest.” But no—he’s 'wearing a HANES Undershirt.
There’s something about a HANES Shirt—the way
it snaps and snuggles across your chest; that makes
you want to stick it out! You feel like a million
bucks. And does HANES wear? You're asking us.
It seems as though Wonderwear never wears out. °
Twenty-five cents for the combed-yarn number.
And what a number it is! All the length you need
to tuck inside your shorts, so there’ll be no bunching
at the belt. If you don’t know a HANES dealer, write
P. H. Hanes Knitting Company, Winston-Salem, N. C.
HANES Shirts — luxuri- % w :
ous Lisles, Durenes, and R
Rayons — are "
only 35¢ and 50c. 25(: ;
Combed-yarn ... u
HANES Shorts. Plenty of
leg and crotch room.
Guarantecd, fast colors. A
25¢ o 35¢ and 50c¢ b :
HANES Union Suits as TR :
low as 50c. The Sanfor- gy f—— e
ized (pre-shrunk) SAM- /‘,‘7}_-_-\ _::_'_:{‘lH
SONBAK, with the pat- ; ‘lf"l' =3O i!iill\'\
ented be » N L B
can’t rip or break, E LN 4| ""!'l | e
is only ll'!i!”l!ili»l.',
Ll T
PR O R iA R OY P T YA R OR T
FOR MEN AND BOYS L—" Bl | FOR EVERY SEASON
- N B
O € Insurin UDIIC:
# .
New Mandatory Ruling of stock fire insurance companies doing business in Georgia:
THE PREMIUM ON ALL INSURANCE POLICIES, BINDERS OR CERTIFICATES IS DUE AND PAYABLE ON THE DAY SUCH POLICIES, BINDERS OR CERTIFICATES
A GO INTO EFFECT. ,
Due to the above ‘Mandatory Ruling’ the undersigned A gents will be unable to extend credit as they have in the past. i
We, the undersigned agents respectfully ask the insurin g public to co-operate with us that we may be of the greatest service in protecting their property values.
Lipscomb-Dearing-Hutchins, Inc.
E. I. Smith & Sidney Boley
Thes. M. Tillman Agency
L P eet e TRO
| DEAN L. L. HENDREN
| PRAISES ATHENS ‘Y’
~ FOR ITS SERVICES
Dean L. L. Hendren of the
University of Georgia says he has
t;nlg(»\vc-ll “closely for 25 years the
i\\'m-k of the Athens Young Men's
!Cln‘isti:m association, and know
}Hmt it l\m} been a vital influence
{for clean living and right conduct
!in the lives of many men and
[boys.” A D .
Dean Hendren Savs further that
he notes with interest _that- the
Olty-%. M, Ct A s making a
'special effort to increase its mem
|hership in order to provide a
more " adequate financial support
and ‘to eéxtend its services and
]values to a larger group of Ath
ens men and boys.”
| “Personally,” says Dean Hen
[dren, “I feel very much indebted
{to-the” Y.~M. €. A. for the op
portunity- afforded me for fellow
ship with Athens men not con
nected with = the University and
Ifor the good I have obtained hy
[the:use of its fine facilities for
physical exercise, health work and
recreational activities, I believe
thas there are many men in Ath
/ens who, like myself, well beyond
i the stage where the word youth
ful would apply, avould receive
great benefit Dy taking advantage
of its health and recreational pro=
gram.” T
Chi it
cago White Sox
[ And Pirat
es Sued
.
By Sports Editor
AMARILLO, Texas.—(AP)—The
!wind in this West Texas city
}Wmlnesday afternoon was not cold
| enough to warrant cancellation of
in baseball game, in the opinion
iof Jerry Malin, sports editor of
ilhv Amairllo Globe and News.
| So Malin, promoter of an exhi
‘bition game between the Chicago
l\\'hite Sox and the Pittsburgh Pi
rates filed suit against both major
{league clubs * for $1,300, alleging
| “failure to fulfill ,contract without
|cause.”
' Club managers said the wind
lwas so cold they could not afford
|to take the risk of letting their
players perform, after having
trained in the mild climate of the
Pacific coast.
Equipmenft of the teams was at
tached after filing of the suit but
[team officials signed a replevin,
each club posted a $3,000 bond
and both left for Tulsa, Oklahoma,
30 minutes behind schedule, but
with al their regalia.
Malin said fans had come to
Amarillo from great distantes to
]witm‘ss the exhibition. He alleged
lin his petition that an attendance
.ot‘ €,OOO was in prospect when the
lgame was cancelled just before
it‘:.e scheduled hour of starting.
iMarble Tournament
i To Be Resumed Soon
| Although plans for the Y. M. C.
'A.-Banner-Herald marble tourna
‘ment have been upset for the past
two days, the managers of the
tourney will begin the interrupted
schedule at once.
Games slated for the Practice
school, Childs street, and College |
avenue will be postponed until
announcements are made within |
the schools. ‘
All boys are urged to practice
more than they have been, for
Athens must send a good repre
sentative to Atlanta. “Knuckling
down” seems (o bhe a serious
problem for most of the entrants,
and perhaps some suggestion as
how best to overcome this diffi
culty may be obtained by study
ing the pictures of marble cham
pions in Wednesday's Atlanta
Journal. l
GEORGIA-ALABAMA
GAME RAINED OUT
| ' TUSCALOOSA, Ala. — The
‘ Georgia - Alabama baseball
game here Wednesday after
noon was rained out. The
. teams met in the Bulldogs’
. opening game of the South
eastern conference Thursday
afternoon. The Georgia team
will remain here Friday for a
l second game with Alabama.
EXHIBITION GAMES
(By the Associated Press.)
WEDNESDAY'S RESULTS
Washington (A)7 ; Boston (N)
3.
l Philadelphia (A) 9; Philadelphia
(N) 3. ;
j Baltimore (I) 9; Brooklyn (N)
%
’ Knoxville (SA) 8; Cincinnati
[(N) 5.
‘ New York (N) 6; Chattanooga
(SA) 2. /
MASONIC NOTICE
—A called communication of
Mt. Vernon Lodge No. 22 F. &
A. M. will be held Thursday
night, April 16th at 8:00 p.m.
—The Degree of Master Mason
will be conferred. Visiting
brothérs cordially invited to at
tend. By order of
W..A. Capps, W. M,
W. C. Thornton, Sec.
Dußose & Dußose : e
W. D. Beacham
H. O. Epting & Co:
W. J. Peeples Ins. Agency
THE BANNER.HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
BRUSHING UP SPORTS
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| {ovis |
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RO New Vore DISTRICT L
(RIE., W N\ GOLER KAS ONNWS
N . RIGHT ARM-YET HE
ek - \ REGULARY SHOOB CoiF |
ij Y(N TRE SEVENTES v- |
'y \HE IS AN EXTREMELY LONG |
&/ DRVER AND HAS THE |
7AB , i PG AND FORM OF |
& .1 ATWo-HANDED GOLFER.
by & |
. . = 1 \\-S |
K\ S Wi BOWLED _(\\/ (7 |
Tt 2 PERFECT (N '
ey « eim f 7 GAMES IN |33
e ONE- SERES \ P
r G PIN SPOLED Tid! ()
% ATHRO- @) |
?gfi HE ROLLED 275 l / |
A Ee FuNpma [ |
e i
R e e | |
? : R \ USELESS INFO | |
W g T T PBoIY 1500 BULLS ARE |
A e N KILLED IN BULL FIGHTS
; : . IN SPAIN ENERY
~NEAR . |
THAT’S WHAT THEY GET 1
: FOR. HORNING IN,//
HORSE RACING, SPORT OF KINGS,
WINS “NATIONAL PASTIME” TITLE
Steals Stage From Base
ball as States Legalize
The Sport
By BILL BRAUCHER
NEA Service Sports Editor.
NEW YORK. — Horses, . ball
players and golfers are coming
back from the South this = year
with a different outlook. The
horses are ahead, and baseball's
'boast of being the “national pas
time” lingers' in the back-stretch.
Following hard upon hard times,
the horse has galloped into the
legislatures of 20 states. The peo
ple’s choices in many states have
heard his hoof beats — and have
moaved; swittly 4o attach part’ of
the §500,000,000 annual traffic the
thoroughbred has diverted.
Quick action to legalize wager
ing in northern states followed
the tidings that Florida, in little
imore ‘than a month, collected
$308,000 as the state’s share of
more than $8,000,000 that passed
through the pari-mutuel totaliza
tor at Miami’s Hialeah.
Bank holidays and all, the Hia
leah betting exceeded by $2,000,-
000 the handle of a like period in
1932. Ohio promptly jointed the
sisterhood of Maryland, Illinois,
Kentucky, Louisiana, Montana,
Nevada and Florida where the
betting was already legal. Staid
New Hampshire checked her New
England conscience outside and
joined the parade.
The fever for improvement of
the breed of thoroughbreds—and
state revenues. — spread to the
banks of the Wabash where Indi
ana went some of the others one
better by sanctioning wagers on
dog races, too. Missouri spurned
a law by a close vote but the eam
tpalgn was continued. Washing
jton, where horse racing has bhecn
]nlegal for 24 years, passed a pari
imutuel measure. New Mexico's
Governor Seligman signed a simi
lar measure. >
Alabama, Connecticut, Colora
do, Georgia, Idaho, Kansas, Mas
sachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota,
Nebrasa, Oklahoma, Rhode Island,
Tennessee, Texas, West Virginia,
Wisconsin, Wyoming and Utah—
in all these states, bills were be
| ing pressed. A
Legislative research unearthed
some amazing figures. In New
By Laufer|
‘ York, where a -decision of Judge
!Gaynor in 1913 placed horse wag
lering in the some class as a cigar
bet between friends at a golf
course, the amount bet on races
was estimated at $68,000,000 a
year. The state, with no income
from these ‘oral’” wagers made
with bookmakers at ‘the various
tracks, studied the profits other
states had clipped from the mu
tuel handles.
i The success of Arlington Park
was cited as an example of how
racing might flourish. under stat
utes that give both the track
stockholders and the state a- defi
| nite percentage of the money
wagered. In the year of 1931 Ar
lington ~ distributed $667,250 in
purses and stakes during the 30
days of racing. The total of purses
in Illinois that year, in 183 racing
idays, was $2,182,700.
! The Arlington management,
{headed by Samuel . Insull, Silas
iStmwn and John Hertz, paid off
(in two years its capital indebted
lm’ss on an investiment of $3,000,-
1000. Yet the New York tracks,
!with no cut from the betting, run
'in the red each year.
! Maryland, which has state and
| county laws assessing the sport
more than any other state, takes
upward of $3,000,000 a year in
taxes and license fees from its
I track at Havre, Bowie, Pimblico
and Havre de Grace. »
The 44-day meeting at Hialeah,
near Miami, where more than SB,-
000,000 was wagered this spring,
offers a striking comparison to
the popularity of baseball. Big
league baseball, in 16 cities,
grosses about $10,000,000, receipts
fover the playing season of 144
igames. |
Mechanical genius played a part
in the inerease of betting at Hia
leah, where a huge totalizator
|displayed the odds. After each bet
son a horse the odds would change
on every entry in the race, the
intricate and accurate machinery
figuring like lightning the ¢ffect
|ot‘ each $2 wager on the price of
jeach horse.
l These machines cost from SIOO,-
000 to $300,000 to install, but the
!"tote" at Miami was rented at 5
percent of the take. Since the
take was over $8,000,000, the rent
came to more than $400,000. i
It would almost pay the state
lto set up the “tote” itself. J
Barrett Phinizy
J. C. Jester’s Insurance Agency
Cohen & Freeman Ins. Agency
i C. G. Eckford Ins. Agency
Taxpayers League
.
Elects Officers;
’
To Seek Members
A membership’ campaign will be
launched iramediately by the
Clarke County Taxpayers League,
it was announced Thursday. The
board of directors of the league
met this week and elected officers:
W. H. Benson, chairman; Jake
Joel, vice-chairman; and George
W. Abney, secretary-treasurer.
By-laws and a constitution were
also adopted by the directors at
their meeting this week,
The object of the league, as set
forth in the by-laws is to “secure
relief from concerted action to
wards the encouragement and sup
port of local, state. and national
government, without waste or ex
travagance in the necessary func
tioning of their varied depart
ments.” No dues will be charged,
and anyone who pays taxes in
Clarke county' on property, real or
personal, is eligible to member-
ship. 4
The board of directors follows:
W. C. Flanigan, James W. Mor
ton, Dr. John A. Hunnicutt, J. M.
Fowler, H., P:. Lawrence, H. J.
Oldham, .Harry Elder,, W. D.
Beacham, Thomas J. Holbrook, R.
E. Johnson, J. R. Dawson, George
Deadwyler, Dean Amis, A. O.
Flanigan, L. L. Lester, Harold
Hulme, ‘H. H. Hinton, Harris
Thurmond, George Abney, B. P.
Joel.
W. H. Benson, Henry Patman,
Jake Joel; Dr, H. W. Birdsong,
H. L. Beagraves, T. W. Morton,
E. C. Jackson, M. M. Arnold, J.
1.. McLeßoy, DuPree Hunnicutt.
Need N : ?
ee ew : iresr |
the World’s Standard of Quality
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When you buy Goodyears here's B p \/A Sy % :;,;;1 7 \
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How about a hreakfast surprise to- 'l'-f—:—
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READ BANNER-HERALD WANT ADS
Charles Parrott Agency
Piedmeont Mort. & Security Co.
Hinton Securities Co.
PAGE FIVE
17/ 5B o R\
i A
R A
i Y 7 AR
G % {
D
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s A T RN
at these
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6.50-19 13.00