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PAGE EIGHT
Athens and Gainesville To Play Thursday
CONTEST 10 BE OW
SINFORD FIELD TG
CARE FOR BIG CROWD
Gainesville Will Be the
Favorite in Game Here
Thanksgiving Day. |
it |
‘Sanford Stadium, home gridiron!
of Georgia’s Bulldogs, Thursday will |
be the scenc of a great Thanks-t
giving Dayv classic between two of’
the highest ranking high schonll
foothall powers in Georgia—Athens |
and Gainesville. l
Renewing activities after a yvear's|
fayoff, a two year contract wasi
‘signed between the schools last|
spring, with next season’s battle |
to be played in Gainesville. ]
Athens and Gainesville, proba.b-!
Iy the most bitter high school rivals!
in North Georgia, have both en
joyed succesful carnpaigns this year
and the opposing coaches will have |
their charges in fine condition for!
Thursday's battle. !
It will be a heavy eleven that|
will invade Athens for the game-—
and an eleven that has piled up a
great record in the G. I. A, A, con- |
ference 2o far this season. !
Headed by Ray Shaw, captain andi
right end, Gainé€sville will 'be fa
vored to take Athens by a close
margin, despite the fact that the
Red and White legions have not
dafeated or tied this season.
dn Captain Shaw, Jimmie Mauld- |
in, and Dean Evans, Gainesville has
thre of the outstanding high school
performers in this section. The In
vading school boasts a well rounded
representative, that will probably
held a rather large weight advane
taage over the Classic City gridders
This Maroon team shrdlpu cm
great possibilities, and should al
members play up 1o usual form,
Gainesville stands a great chance or!
finding the local edition more than!
it can handle. If Howell Hollis is|
able to key up the Athens eleven'
to the same power it was against
LaGrange, then Gainesville will
have to be even better than it is
rated to come out on-top.
If the breaks are about even, a
great game is certain. These two
high school aggregations will prob
ably stagc.g battle that will long
be remembered by all that gather
in Sanford Stadium to witness the
the imbroglio,
Gainesville’s probable starting
lineup has McJunkin and Shaw at
ends, Mauldin and Barrett atl
tackles, Greegs and Gajley ar|
guards, Reed at center, Hancock at |
quarterback, Scroggg and Cheek at]
halves, and Evans at fullback. f
The opening Maroon eleven 1s |
expected to have Kay and Steph-]
enson at ends, McDonald and Kim- |
brell at tackle, Daniels and Crane!
at guards, Wilkes at center, Hodg
#on. at quarterback, Paddock and
Guest at halfbacks, and Upchurch
at fullback. !
Ray Hapes Continues
To Pace Scorers In
Southeastern Group
- ATLANTA —(#)— Leadership in|
individual scoring of the South
‘eastern conference remained in
control of Mississippi’'s Ray Hapes
teday and there was little chance|
ambng other leaders. !
“Bf" Crass, Louisiana State,|
made the outstanding advance|
among the point producers lr st
Saturday by scoring 18 peints and !
leaping into fifth place, just back
of Alabama’s Rilay Smith, who|
was idle. !
~ Bob Davis, of Kentucky, also not|
in action, and Rab Rodgers, Mis-|
sissippi were left in second :mdl
third positions, respectively. i
. The leaders: |
s td, ep. fg. tp.|
B/ Hapes, Miss, HB, 11 2 0 68!
s Ky, HB. .... 1F 0 0 68
‘Rodgers, Miss, HE. .. 10 0 0 60/
N Aa, QB ...... 7 9 1 Bé
et , ST, HB. .. 6 8 0 44
Ki Auburn, FB. . 6 0 0 36|
‘Mintz, Tulape, H. ... 5 5 0 30
Bernard, Miss, FB. .. 5 1 0 81
Ageée, Vanderbilt ¥B. 5 0 0 30
‘@eny, Vanderbilt, Eaqa 5 0 0 20
‘McAnley, Florida, FB. 5 ¢ 0 30
"ffight. Miss State, HB, 5 0 0 3¢
&:Georgia, S 8 0 6.0 30
b RayZeh Clinches
Top Scoring Honors
In Foctball Race
:Wfii'r e 4- o 4 . st "—.!
NEW YORK—(#—High scoring|
Lionors for the 1935 football season ;
apparently rest with Ray Zeh,|
Western Reserve fullback who has|
amassed 112 points by 15 much-‘
cowns and 22 points after touch-)
wowns. !
Zeh has anothes chance to boost |
" his iotai when Western ileserve
piays Case this week. His near
- #st competitor, Eddie Stovley of |
. Willlams, hung up his n:c?e:kins‘
" a week ago Saturday aftec having|
registered 16 touchdowus for 96
‘_" Tords. }
S The sectional and conference |
aders remained in the same posi
@cr. they held a 2 week Aago The
¥nly change was in the Pacific
‘fonst standing where Cheshire of
ghe University of Calitwria aty
© Los Angeles into a tia with
i.of o e, each with
et e
B s
Most of Sectional Titles
To Be Settled This Week
'Hectic Football Season
.~ Will End This Week;
l 5 Teams Unbeaten.
' By HERBERT W. BARKER
, Associated Press Sports Writer.
NEW YORK.— () —A double
’(](YS(! of competition this week will
gettle most of the remaining sec
cional arguments stirred up by a
frenzied football campaign, bntl
the biggest dispute of all never
will be =ettled to everyone's satls-{
faction. ;
The list of national clmmpion-i
ship contenders -— just about as’
mythieal as the championship it-]
self-—consistg today of Minnesom.i
Princeton, Southern Methodist,
Texas Christian and New York]
Univergity, if it must be limited m"
teams neither beaten or tied. i
If not, such outfits as Louislunu,
State, Alabama, Holy Cross and
Stanford, ¢ for instance, can boi
tossed into the reckoning. '
Minnesota, unbeaten in 24 games
over three seasons, has wound up
compdtition for the year and thus
rests its championship case on its
1435 record. of eight successive]
triumphs. Princeton, apparently, is
certain té wind up with a ‘perfect[
record, and so too, it seems, will
either Texas Christian or Southern!
Miethodist, depending on Which '
wing their erucial duel this week.
N.-Y. U. is coneeded scarcel,'t
2 chance to get past Fordham, but
it the Vielets win, they will have
same part in any argument over!
national honors. . (
The Rose Bowl game at Pasa
dena New Year's Day may elimi
nate one of the remaining con
tenders, but there seems to be no
real hope that & generally accept
able ‘champion can be settled on.
For this week, last major pro
gram of the season, the prospects
appear about as follows:
. East
Princeton’s smashing 26-6 vic~
tory over Dartmouth left the Tig
ers in a spot where they will he
generally recognized as Eastern
champions if they get past Yale
on Saturday. Yale disposed of
Harvard 14-7, but the Elis do not
seem to have the strength to re
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HE.ETERFIELD A BLEND OF M‘ILD RIPE HOME-GROWN AND AROMATIC TURKISH TOgACCOS
. peat their sensational 1934 tri
umph over the Tigers.
| N. Y. U., with a 3 great aecrial
attack built around’' Ed Smith, one
of the country's finest passers,
meets Fordham in the Yankee
Stadium Thursday. Holy Cross,
vnbeaten but tied by Manhattan,
plevs its objective rival, Boston
College, on Saturday.
T"he Army-Navy tussle at Phila
delphia Saturday will bring to
gether tweo beaten teams. On
Thursday, Colgate, easy victor
over Rutgers, 27-0, plays Brown,
topped by Columbia, 18-0; Penn
and Cornell meet in their annual
tussle at Philadlphia; Pitt plays
Carnegie; and ‘Temple, surprising-
Iy upset by Villanova, 21-14, ends
upr against Bucknell, which over
turned Penn State, 2-0.
Southeastern Conference: Louls
igna State will clinch the title.out
right if the Tigers defeat Tulane
on Saturday. Both played “breath
ers” last week, L. 8. U. swamp
ing Southwestern - of Louislana
56-0, while Tulane was winning
from Louisiana Normal 13-0. Ala
bama and Vanderbiit, beaten only
cnee within the conference, play
on Thanksgiving Day, when Ken
tucky and Tennessee, out of the
running entirely, meet at Lexing
ton. On . Saturday, Auburn, 19-7
conqueror of Georgia, plays Flor=
ida, whipped by Qeorgia Tech
20-6, Georgia Tech and Georgia
gL together in théir annual clas-
| Bic at Atlanta the game day. Sol
| o Mississippi, victor over Cente- |
| nary, -0, and Mississippl State, |
}wmner over Sewanee, 25-0. |
Southern Conference: Duke, fol
] lowing its victory over North Car
i oina with a 7-0 conquest of North
| Carolina State, captured the con- |
| ference crown with five successive |
l’ triumphs. North Carolina, runner—i
{up, winds up against Virginia
{ Thursday, when Virginia Milltary‘
and Viriginia Poly also clash. i
| Clemson tackles Furman in anotherl
| Turkey Day feature. |
| Southwest: Texas Christian and !
| Southern Methodist, both un-!
| beaten and untied, battle at Fort |
l Worth on Saturday with the cham- |
' pionship and a pogsible bid to tl'me,t
| Rose Bowl at stake. Christian un®
| corked a furious offensive to wal
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
“Hammer and Tongs
Came |s Expected in
Atlanta Saturday.
ATLANTA, —AA)— An old sash-:
ioned “hammer and tongs’ collision
of the type dear to the hearts of
the old grads looms for Saturday
when Georgia Tech and Georgia |
tangle in & renewal of one of the
southland’s most venerable football
feuds.
It is axiomatic that the dope fre
quently flees the stadium at the
first kickoff when the Bulldogs and
the Yeilow Jackets meet but this
year there probably is less for the
experts to hang a perilous guess
on than there has been in many a
vear.
" Each.team has been on the the
short end of the Saturday mathe
matics several times, Tech dropping
five and Georgia three,
Not since the Engineers’ all con
quering year in 1928 has the Gold
and White flown over the Red and
Black. In 1932 the underdog Jackets
secured a tie but the other years
have seen them on the unpopular
end of the count.
Against their three common foes
Georgia holds the edge over two
and Teeh over one, on the basis of
comparative scores—and just ask
any bet-maker how reliable those
are.
Alabama beat Georgia 17 to 7 as
the Tide was starting rts comeback.
Later it rolled over Tech 38 to 7 but
supporters are quick to claim that
the Elephants had gained a lot of
steam they didn’t have at Athens.
Auburn swamped the Jackets 383
to 7 and beat the Bulidogs 19 to 7.
The only solace for the Atlantans
here is that the offensive showing
of the Jackets was a little better
since their touchdown was by .run
ning while @Georgia’s came on a
somewhat flukey punt touched by
a Plainsman. .
lop Rice, 1984 champion, 27-6, on
Saturday . Southern Methodist,
crippled, was hard pressed to win
from Baylor, 10-0, scoring all it
points in the final quarter.
e A P e R ——— e7S S——— S
Final Standings in
Western Conference
e e e o AIR T Y PSS STOAI
CHlCAGO.—~(#)—Final Western
Conference standings:
W, i T. TP, OF.
Minnesota .. UO7B G 0 0 186 88
Ohio Stafe .. 5 G M 10 ‘2B
Purdueé . .. i BTG 45 50
Indignl ¢l G 0 e d 43 41
Northwestern .. ‘2 3 1 82 92
Chicago’ ;. i;lv s §+ 8 33 16
Michigan 2. -:. A e 27 93
lowe .l su kP @ 37 31
Wisconsin: . v 1s 6. 0. 4% 98
linelo v sev rovwi sl =@o 12+ 42
i eg e R
DANKHEAD BOWLERS
HEAD COMMERGIAL
" By .DAN MAGILL, JR. ;
| At the emd .of six .weeks of.com
| petition the miracle Bankhead
| bowling. trio remained at the top of
| the Commeyreial Jeagye as a result
| of having .won 76 games and los
}ing only twice.
| The Doctors and _Anderson
| teams are tied for second place,
{as they have each won 10 and
|lost 8. Crawford is tn third place,
| as they have won 9 and lost 9.
i Ir the "City league, ‘the Gulfers
{ ave leading the other three mem
lhr"-.'s, Kavifs® cdaptured 17 and lost
| 10. PBroadway Market is second,
| having "won *l2° and lost 11.
| TFollowing ware - ‘the: complete
| standing of ‘teams in each league
i after six weeks -of action.
* - Commercial League
Teame~: . :: .- Wi I Pet.
| BankheßaA /i cv. ‘v oy -16 B 888
iDoatops 8. .. ..., ... "0 '8 556
}Anderson oluta DB RCRR (R B L
{Crawford. ... ... .. ;.9 8 Loo
IO PHGE o 8 s v, 3 AL -AEB
?Luck:: TR ¢ i i s R Y S
| Dr. Pepper .. ... ... 6 12 .33
lb‘anner-}{erald van et G R ARRE
i . City League
|| Team=— . WEa . Ros
[ Gulfies . . . o 1708 RS
[ HroRawWEY . .0 0183 ke
N W Tl A
1T G e MBI T e
!
i
|
!
} 1%
|
; e
Barney Ross, Freddie Mii
ler, and John H. Lewis
i Co Into Action.
i
; NEW YORK, — #) — Three
ichampions top this wek’s national
boxing program.
Berney Ross, welterweight King
meets Ceferino Garcia, of Los
Angeles, Friday in a ten round
bout at Chicago. On the same
program Freddie Miller, N. B. A.'s
featherweight titleholder, tackles
Jimmy Christy, of Chicago, in an
other ten rounder.
I John Henry Lewis, newly
crowned light heavyweight champ
ion, mingles with Maxie Rosen
hloom a former holder of the title,
over the ten round route at San
Franecisco riday. All are’ non-title
affairs.
! Monday — At Phidelphia, Primo
Carnera, Italy vs. Ford Smith,
Montana, heavyweights, 10; Jorge
!Bresci:l. South America vs. James
J. Merriott, Tulsa, 0k12., heavy
lwoights. 8; at Newark, N. J. Lou
| Ambers, Herkimer, N. Y. vs.
Georgie Levy, Trenton, N, J. light
weights, 10. At Holyyoke, Mass.,
Cocoa Kid New Haven, Conn, V.
Frankie Cingque, New TYork, wel
terweights, 10. At Albany, N. Y,
Tommy Romano, Watervliet, N. Y,
s, Saxon, Jersey city, Middle- |
weights, 10. At New York, Al Casim
ini, New vs, Phil Baker, Stamford,
Conn., lightweights, 8.
Tuesday - At Milwaukee, Oscar
Rankin, Los Angeles vs. Tait Litt
man, Cudahy, Wis., Midcdleweights,
10, At Jersey city Chartes Badami,
New York vs., Harry Carlton, light
weights, 10. At Los Angeles, Alfred
(Butch) Rogers, Honolulu vs. Hank
Bath, Fort Morgan, Colo, heav
weights, 10.
Wednesday —At Oakland, Calir,
Midget Wolgast, New York, vs.
Henry Armétrong LLos Angeles,
featherweights, 10. At New York,
Pete Martin, Puerto Rico, vs, Mickey
Serrian, - Scranton, Pa., Welter
weights, 8.
Thursday—None.
Friday—At Chicago, Barney Ross,
Chicago, vs. Cerferino Garcia, Los
Angeles, welterweights, 10, non
title; Freddie Miller Cincinnati vs.
Minnesota Gets 5
Places on All-Star
Team in Mid-West
CHICAGO, — (®) — Minnesota's
'mighty aray placed five men on
{ the Asociated Press Western Con
| ference all star football team select
|ed by ten coacheg for the season
[ straight year, but left a large share
in[’ the honors for Chicago’s John
Jacob (Jay) Berwanger. ‘
The Gopher representatives are
tackles Edwin Widseth and Richara
Smith, Charles Whlkinson, Guard;
| Quarterback Vemail tEube) Taver
iand Fullback Sheldon Belse, (
! Berwanger, one of the greatest
! backs in big ten gridiron hi‘storyi
{rated on the midway in the same
| bracket with the late Wiater Eck-i
Im‘shall. was the only unanimous
choice, a honor rarely accorded. |
Ohio State, gained two places|
each on the first team, the other
position went to lowa's star Negm'
Oze Simmons,
The Buckeye stars are captain
Gomer Jones at center, and Merle
Wendt, end. Northwestern's Hen
!ry W. Longfellow won the other
end position, and his teammate,
Paul Tangora, was paired up with
Wilkinson at guard.
Three members of the mythical
ecleven, Berwanger, Widseth and
Wendt, were honored for the se
2ond consecutive year. Jones, Ohi
'State‘s fine pivotman, was a 1934,
gecond team selection. ]
Jimmy Christy, Chicago, feather
welghts, 10, non-title. At San Fran
cisco, John Henry Lewis, Phoeni
Ariz.,, vs. Maxie Rosenbloom, New
York, light heavyweights, 10, non
title. At Hollywood, Calif., George
Hanford, Los Angeles vs. Frankie
Covelll, Chicago, featherweights, 10
At Buffalo, N. Y., Frankie Eagsan,
Niagara Falls, vs, Bad Boy Eman
uel, Syracuse, N. Y, welterweights,
10. At Syracuse N. Y., Babe Hunt,
Oklahoma vs. Bob Moody, syracuse,
heavyweights, 10; Tom Baxter, Buf
falo, N. Y., vs. Tom Williams, Chi
sey, Syracuse vs. Al Traino, Roches
cago, heavyweights, 6; ddie Demp*
ter, N. Y., lightweights, 6. At At
lantic city N. J. Bobby Dean Phila
delphia vg. Bobby Green Philadel
phia, lightweights, §. At New Yo’!’k,l
Jock McAVoy, England vs, Al Me. |
Coy, Boston, Mass., heavyweight, 10, ‘
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 25, ’935-|
__'_“\
‘Services Today For
|
' Infant Daughter of
| Ml’., Mrs. Thompso,‘
Services were held M. nday ae
| ernoon at 2:30 o'clock as e
[side in Morris cemetery, fop (.
{ lotte Thompson, infant gy '
|[of Mr. and Mrs. T. E, '1”‘,,;;:;,:;”
| who died at the home of hey o,
|ents in Hull Sunday night a; -
{ o'clock. McDorman-Briqecs -
|in charge of arrangements
! In addition so her parents 1.
| little girl is survived by her g ind.
| mother, Mrs. Lena Thompsoy and
, grandparents, Mr. and My I
i Melton.
[ T e
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E!RIAS“Y-TO-ROLL JOY SMOKE
© 1935, R. J. Reynolds Tob, Co,