Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TWO
Georgia and Mercer Battle Tonight
Athens andiHartwell Teams Play Here Tonight, Starting At 7:30
N COURT FEATURE
4 i
‘Bulldogs May Upset Dope
Bucket in Clash at Eight
- O'Clock Tonight
. After a week of unimpressive
practice performances, the Univer
-Bity of CQeorgia basketball team
‘will battle Mercer's Bear quintet
‘tonight on the Woodruff hall court
. Tonight's game will start at 8
Ww'elock, with admission 50 centg for
‘adults. Tt will be the only meeting
0f the week-end between the Bears
‘and Bullpups, although a return
game is scheduled later in the sea
‘gon in Macon,
_ Coach Reéx Enright, who has been
experimenting with sophomores for
the past several weeks, is expected
to start a lineup composed entirely
of veterans, all of whom made. let
ters last season,
Jaeck Farren, the lanky ex-Lanier
‘High star, will be at the center
position, wikh Captain Charlie Har
hold and Lee Richards, the Decutur!
passer delux, at the forward posi
,gons. Harry Harman and Olin
Thompson will be the guards.
Both Harman and Richards were
in reporting and (:Onsequentlyf
7 just now rounding into the |
best of shape. Harman, although|
Jacking on offense, ss a valuable
defensive performer, and is a valu-|
dble man under the basket due to|
N 8 gize and weight, Richards could
@also show improvement on point
getting, but is one of the smoothest
pagsers and floormen ever to don
| Red and Black uniform. Tt was
his pasgsing to Frank Johnson that
greatly alded Johnson’y great scor
ing ability last scason.
- The fact that Mercer lot to the
famous Celties last night by the
Small margin of 56-47 sounds good
for the Bears, but really means
nothing, The professionals are
‘noted for the way they toy with
jate teams, and could have
defeated Mercer, or any other col
ége team in this section, by any
they pleased. 7
_« The Bulldogs ana Bears should
v f’ ed or about even terms, with
the home court slightly in favor
of the Georgia quintet,
~ Following tonight's contest, the
_Bulldog quintet will invade Clem
“son Saturday night to face the
“Clemson team that Tech compietely
~outclassed recently. The Bulldogs
will be favored over the Tigers,
“PLAN “FIELD DAY"
. CLEMSON, 8. C. — (#) — Geor
‘gia’s Bulldogs and Clemson's Tig
* ers put on an “indoor field day”
.in athleticg here tomorrow night.
'~ The basketball teams clash in
“the field house and the game will
<be followed by a woxing show be
~ tween the two schools. The fresh
_ man basketball teamg perform in
a curtain-raiser attraction,
.An intense basketball and boxing
“rivalry between Georgia and Clem
son has made the meetings of these
‘téams an outstanding winter sports
sevent of this section.
. The varsity basketball game
“ Btacks up ag a possible thriller. On
the basis of early season records
the two squads rate practically on
{_ v‘ terms, ‘
* Georgia nosed out Florida 31-30
and then succumbed in a second
game 36-18. Clemson lost to the
Gators 52-36 and turned around to
beat Florida 31-30, l
. In the boxing meet, Clemson will
‘present four fighters who are ex-\
pected to be potent threats in the
Southern Conference tournamentl
' Bill Gordron, bantamweight; Rip
gil Miuurray, featherweight; Bobl
Jones, sensational welterweight, and
“ Captain Tom McConnell, H:h”
heavyweight, have had much ex-.
M ence in the ring and are among
~the better boxers of this, section.
. Clemson officialg are preparing
~ for an audience of upwards of 3,000
for the program.
Survey of All Countries in
- World, Shows Soccer 1s
- Played Everywhere
£ ’ %
: BY BILL GRAHAM
& WIASHINGTON— (#) —ln Am
‘erica the national sport i base
fball; the world over ijt's soccer
football. \
& The game is played in ‘almost
ery nation. Countries may have
“other sportg peculiar to their own
lation, but virtually all' have soc-
Wccer is played in the United
mates, too, but has been edged
; 0 the background by American
football. The American style game
‘4B played in only a few other na
itiong and hasn’t the popular gen
eral appeal of soccer,
.~ Some nations have college, club
@nd county teams and many also
have professional soccer clubs
fhere are regional and national
‘ehampionship in the warious coun-
Italy won the soccer cham-
Good Hope Coach Picks Social
Circle To Capture “C" Crown
|Fsat Team From Northern
? Part of District |s Plenty
! Cood, He Says
{ GOOD HOPE. Ga.-— (Special) —
Tenth District “C” teams who
have their eyes glued on the
championship this year will have
a log of competition from a team
that hasn’'t had much said about
it, heretofore, according to Good
Hope’s coach, J. G. “Whitey”
‘Bryant.
That team is Social Circle, who
,'Coach Bryant believes can whip
lanything in the “C” division at
Ipresent, including the defendlpg
}champlons. Bogart,
Social Circle has won 15 con
’secutive games, “and they have
not picked any teams” Coach Bry
lant says. “The team is not large,
but fast, and consists of some real
]sharp shooters.”
i Bogart will have a e¢hance to
‘meet Social Circle in the tourna
iment, Coach Bryant believes, but
Ithe champs will have to improve
{a great deal if they expect to takel
the “C" division erown again this
year,
Coach Brßyant points out that
Good Hope, Colbert, Winterville,
Jersey and Logansville are consid
ered easy teams for Bogart, but
recalls the close gamg Social Cir
cle played last year’s Bogartteam
iln the tournament,
Coach Bryant, in an interview,
calleq attention to the good rec
ord made so far this season by
the Good Hope girls team, The
lagsies have won nine and lostone
game, and tied another. The de
feat was by a margin of one
point.
Burgess is the star offensive
leader of the Good Hope team, and
g 0 far has run up a total of 136
points, Lorg and Annie Malcom
have greatly assisted the high
point girl.
R.. P. Meadows is the Good
Hope's coach and is doing a fine
job, Bryant says, :
SPORTS ROUND - UP
A By EDDIE BRIETZ
’ NEW YORK.—(#)—Dana Zeno
(phon Bible has worked a lot of
| football miracles in his day, but
'[never one to equal this week's
triumph in Texas . . . he told
the University of Texas regents he
wouldn't consider coaching their
|football team for less than five
|vears ~ . . they offereq him a 10-
year contract, and then he made
them wai;y for an answer . . .
{as a diplomat he makes Anthony
| Bden look like Strangler Lew!s.‘
|As a worker he's hard to touch.
He posts signs all aroung his of
‘zflce: “Run, don't trot.” . ... "The
{team that wins is the team with
{the finish» . . ', He's &lways
I pointing these out to his men . . «
| This recent move suggests g new
|sign for coaches: “Never accepl
a five year contract if you can
gey one for 10", '
O ———————————
1 Newest sport round here I 8
mouse fancying . . . great stuff
too . . . addicts have organized
the Ameriean mouse fanciers as
gociation, with the Rev. Reginald
!W. Ferrier as head man. . . . Leo
lDiege‘x says his trlgndship with
'the Duke of Windsor was respon
gible for the English letting the
golf pros use the front door . . .
he says he walked up to the front
door at St. Andrews ang was stop
lped . « % .then, says I.eo, he pro
[tésted violently, and so did the
prince . . . firally he was allow
\'od to go in . . . the English press
| took up the incident and it did
much to break down the discrimi
nation,
i‘ And speaking of discrimination,
Ralph Henry Barbour, the author,
writes colleague Sid Feder from
Tampa that the South is waving
the Davis eup flag for Bitsy Grant
again . . . and may secede if he
isn't pickeg for the team.
A NEW STYLE
TERMINILLO, Italy. — #) —
Premier Mussolini set a new
style today for Italian skiers when
he doffed his pullover sweater and
"sped over the crisp snow nude to
the waist.
pionship in the 1936 Olympic games.|
In most other countries, the ad
mission price to guch games is much
smaller than is charged to Ameri
‘can college contests, The attend
ance ranges from 10,000 to 26,000
{for mafior county gameg to 100,000
and more for national and interna
tional championship competitions.
The import dutiem on equipmgnt
for other branches of sport is so
high .in many nations the average
youngstér can't arferd to parti
cipate; Tln soccer, however, little|
lequipment is needed and open fields
lare plentiful, so anyone interested
can pldy.
There are club and professional
soccer ' teamg in Germany and the
big games in Berlin draw huge
lcrovdl. Throughout that ecountry
rand most of the others, kids play
soccer on vacant lands just likel
Amerfean boys bat their baseballs
around, = ' Lo B e i
|
i i
! i
|
| s
!
| s
'Came Last Night With
% North Georgia College
' Postponed Until Later
{ After having their game against
| North Georgia College of Dahlon
| ega yesterday postponed, the Uni
l versity of Georgla freshinan bas
| keteers went through a light prac
!tir-“ session thig afternoon at ¢
lo'clock in Woodruff hall prior to
| invading Clemson on Saturday.
| Tre Bullpups will make their
jm-(-rmd start Saturday afternoon
;wnh the Clemson Baby Tigerg
| furnishing the opposition. The
ivm'sit.y basketball and boxing teams
|of the two schools will face each
|other that night, alsg in Clemson.
‘ Yesterday’s trip to Dahlonega
|wag postponed due to the bad wea
'thvr condition, but the two schools
will meet at a later date which
has not yet been decided upon,
. Coach Vernon Smith is planning
’to carry ten playerg and Student
Manager George Yundt to Clem
gon tomorrow. Those making the
trip will not be announced until
late thig afternoon, wut Cecil Kel
ley, Robert Horne, Alex McCas
kill, Knox Eldredge, and Billy
| Mimms, who are expected to com
| pose the starting frosh quintet, are
certain of going.
Two games are definitely slated
for the Bullpups next week, both
to be played on the local floor.
Tuesday will see Armstrong Junior
College, of Savannah, invade Ath
ens, while Saturday Georgia Mili
tary College will (be played. It
may be that another game will also
be arranged for next week,
| X . .
. Dr. Naismith Says
l .
| He Recalls First
' Game of Basketball
;_____.__._._——-—--. ~—
| LAWRENCE, Kas. <&}~ The
’young instructor, a soccer ball in
lhand, addressed the group of
lightly-clad youngsters whose gaze
wandered questioningly toward two
! peach baskets, one nailed to the
tbalcony railing at each end of the
| gymndsium,
] ‘“The idea,'J he explained, “is for
one side to get the ball in a bas
‘ket without running with the ball,
striking it with the first, or hold
ling, tripping, pushing or shoulder
ling an opponent. Let’s see, there
{are 18 here. That will make nine
‘on a side’”.
That scene, enacted at the
| Springfield, Mass, Y. M. C. A.
college back in 1891, marked the
origin of basketball. The origina
tor, now sturdy, erect, 75-year-old
Dr. James A. Naismith of the
University of Kansas physical ed
ucatjon department, expressed
keen interest today in plans for |
lthe re-enactment in Madison Square
{Garden, New York, Jan. 27 of that
| first game. , ‘
D reeall very clearly the boys’
lreavtion when ‘they entered the]
[ gymnasium that day and saw the
| baskets,” <huckled Dr. Naismith.l
l"l‘hey said: ‘Oh, oh, just another
|game, but, full of vigor and vl~|
;tality, they welcomed any changei
{from the 1-2-3-4 routine of dumb
lhons and Indian clubs.
| = “Yes, that first game was pretty
«}wild affair, but the boys soon |
{ caught on.” %
i Oddly enough, Dr. Naismith |
never played the game, except =
ift-\\' times on. faculty teams. |
“T had some good workouts as
l.’!n official, though,” he said, ]
’ ]
BIBLEGETSLONG
i TEXAS CONTRACT
1
i |
' Nebraska Coach Is Said toi
| Have Signed 10-Year!
i Pact at $15,000 Yearly ;
———— s
{ AUSTIN, Texas — (#) — Danal
’X. Bible, abdieating monarch of
Big Six football, faced a new chal-'
"lenge today—rebuilding the crum-|
bled gridiron glory of the Unlver-l
sity of Texas,
A 10-year contract with the vet
eran mentor, whose Nebraska teams
’have been almost perennial cham- |
| pions, was approved by the Long- |
ihorn board of regents after a twol
{day conference, Hig salary, though
| unannounced, unofttetally was said
{to be $15,000—57,500 more than the!
{ university president gets. |
Bible boarded a train to return,
to Lincoln after declaring he would|
| presént his formae resignation to
lUniversity of Nebraska officiais—
probably Saturday-—before signing
a Texas contract. |
Bible refused to wame his assist
|ants although rumors persited Blaif
ICherr,v, coach of the Amarillo state
high school championg, and Ted
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
HARTWELL REPORTED
TO HAVE S
. TRONGEST
i |
TEAMS N DISTRICT
i e 1
‘ : |
Maroon Boys Seeking Re
| venge for Tournament
. Beating in 1936 |
{ S ]
| Both Athens High’s sextet and|
| quintet will face their strongest
lfuo to date, Hartwell High, here|
lFriday night. The Hartwell-Ath
ens girls game will begin at 7:30
‘()'(-Iurk. being followed by the boys!
encounter, |
° Saturday night here the Marnon;
{five takes on Carnesville High in
la return tilt. Athens wopn the
I previous contest, 26-21 There will|
!hp two other games on Saturday |
[night’s card here Athens High's!
{“B" team plays Washington High's |
| Varsity quintet and the sextets of
,Athons and Washington entangle. |
i The first game on Saturday’s pro-%
fzmm will get underway at 71
{ o'clock.
{ Admission for both Friday and
i?aturday will be fifteen cents for
children and twenty-five cents for
adults. A large attendance is ex
pected to turn out both nights;
especially Friday, for Hartwell’s
two representatives are hailed as
the bhest in the Tenth Adistrict,
Coach Martha Nicholson’s outfit
}wm be greatly handicapped this
week-end as three of her lassies
ares defintiely out of the Hartwell
affair. They are Dorothy Philpot
and Betty Rinearson, forwards
and Dixie Jay Nicholson, guard.
The girls’ team. however, was
strengthéned no little when Mary
Darden, star forward, returned to
practice Thursday after a two-day
absence due to a cold. The sex
tet’s. probable line-un against the
| Naney Harts wilt find Captain
Florence T.ee Callahan, T.onise
Tucker and Mary Darden, at for
wards; REvelyn Gregorv, Mildred
MeConnell and Anne Lee Sheriff
at guards.
Herschel Franklin, center or
guard, and Pope Holliday, junior
gnard, nare on Coach Sam Gard
ner’'s injured list. TFranklin has
heen nursing a spraineq ankle and
Holliday didn’t practice Thursday
due to a cold. Franklin and Hol
liday, nevertheless, will more than
likely se, service in both games
this week-end.
Captain Jimmi, Hudson @ and
John Woods will probably be
Coach Gardrjer's choices at the
forward posts. Jack McDonald
and Harold Chandler, at guards;
and Lee Secrest, at center, will
presumably round-out the remain
ing berths of the opening line-up.
|
i Speaker Comments
“ e
| On Baseball; Says
| Umpires Were Good
] Se—— :
| CLEVELAND —(#)— What did
[;th:e old timers of baseball have
| that present-day players don’'t
'have?
| “Umpires,” Tris Speaker, named
[to baseball’s hall of fame this week
lin 5 poll of major leagug writers,
i said today.
, “Fellows like Cobb and Hornsby
and myself were called colorful be
’muse we'd put on a show,” said
the former outfielder whose like
lness will appear with other base
{ball greats in g memorial at
|Cooperstown, N. Y., where the
inationnl pasttime originateq 98
| years ago.
“T could come racing in from
lce‘nter field, purple with rage,
| push the umpire in the chest and
{tell him what I thought of him.
g “When 1 was all througha fel
‘low like Tom Connolly, Jack Sher
|idan or Billy Evans would say.
‘Okay Tris. That's your story. You
know mine—ang I’m running this
game, Get back out there and play
ball’.”
Speaker leaned back in his of
fice chair at the liquor wholesal
ing firm he heads, flicked the ash
{ from his cigaret, and listed the
{lively ball among his disappoint
! ments. In 18 years bf major lea
‘;:uo competition, only once did he
fail to bat over '.BOO. That was
lin 1919 when he hit a mere .2%96.
] “I always was prouq of finding
my name week after week along
lthe six or seven .300 hitters in
the league,” Speaker asserted.
I“Nowadays you can find the 300
hitters faster by reading up from
lthe bottom of averages. The live
ly ball did that.
“But in my day when you hit
.300 you were stepping along with
fellows like Cobb and Sisler and
Hornsby, ang I won't deny there
was a thrill in it
i Twomey, line coach, might become
meémbers of his staff. Others,
however, thought he would bring
part of hig Nebraska staff with
!.hl'm and reorganize the Texas set
up completely.
I Employment of Bible caused re
joicing among the student-body
and alumni of the university by
whom he is regarded highly.
President H. Y. Benedict of the
university, who had stated he op
|posed paying coaches salaries in
!exeess of professor, said “Assuredly
id shall give him my fullest coop
eration,”
- SIDELIGHTS &3
\
i m v\“m
. ; o
@ _K‘J_u,_} I_l‘ o
[ BY KENNETH GREGORY
t ATLANTA — (&) — Georgia law
' requires all hunters to report a
Qro('ord of the deer killed during
i this season , ~ the state game and
Efish department hag sent out an
{appeal to hunters to make re
'pm'ts . . . the department hopes
| soon to announce the figure for
ithe state, and says early reports
| indicate the best season in 10
| years.
: Editor Bill Avera calls attention
|to the fine record of the Moultrie
*’Packereues, last year's feminine
icage champs of the second dis
}trict . . . the girls have won their
‘first seven games by overwhelm
jing scores, scoring 301 points for an
faverage bf 43 per contést . . . oppon
)ents have garnered but 130 . , on
ithe team is a pair of point-a-min
fute forwards, Lorene Weeks and
lAlice Davidson,
‘Weeks has scored 104 points, an|
average of 15 and Davidosn 94 for‘
an average of 13 a game | , . Weeks!
scored 33 points in a single game |
with Albany and Davidson count-|
ed 21 in a half game against Tif-|
ton , . . and speaking of winning‘
streaks, had you heard that the
Morgan High boys have won 47i
consecutive games? ~ . . Hartwell|
looms as the favorite in the 10thg
distriect tourney . . ~ Athens has;
developed fast and may surprise. |
Failure to agree on dates kepti
Athens High and Boys High of At-!
lanta from clashing on the gridiron!
next season . . . announcement thati
Bill Schroeder may help with th(!
freshman footballers at fleorgiai
left the impression Frank Johnson |
would not be back . . the husky-'
ex-Bulldog gridder will be retain-|
ed to help with the frosh if hisi
business connections with an Ath-i
ens theater permit , . . Julian Fos-l
ter, a Madison, Ga., boy who star-|
red in football, basketball and base‘
}ba.ll at Vanderbilt, is expected to
‘play first base for the Louisvillel
(Ky.) Colonels under Bert Niehoff,
who managed tne C(Crackers fx‘omi
1924-28. . ... Emory U. has droppedl
track and tennis for freshmen. !
| The Moultrie Packers of thei
Georgia-Florida league has gigned|
a, working agreement with the Bos- |
ton Red Sox for '37, pens Bill Avera.[
Grant QGillis retains his job as;
manager . . . Herb Pennock, the]|
veteran hurler, paid fine tribute to!
Gillis in a letter to Moultrie di-!
rectors geveral days ago. I
‘On the 65,000 acre Sea Island
‘hunting preserve, native wild tur-.!
‘key have furnished hunters with|
;plenty of action , . . more of these
game birds have been sighted this
year than in any previoug season.
Golfers of Valdostw are engaged in|
a ringers tournament . . . Valdosta'
fishgrmen report speckled perch, |
or crappie, have started biting in|
lakes in that section. ]
,: Fm" : | |
&1‘ i |
|
'Coach Garner Announces
Six New Games for Bo
gart Teams
By HINTON BRADBURY
BOGART—Bogart boys and girls
will get back on the court here
again tomororw night when they
meet Loganville High teams in a!
'double bill. The games are sched-l
{uled to dbegin at 7 o'clock. 1
~ Other games to be played soon
are Lexington here for two games!
on January 26; Statham girls only|
here February 3; Bogart boys and
girls 'in Loganville on February 5;
girls only at Piedmont college,
Demorest, Ga., February 6; Jer
sey Loys ang girls here February
16, This. is g . majority of the
!g’ames that will be played prior to
‘the annual district “C” cass tour
'nament which will be played at
%‘\Vinterville with the local boys
risking their crown.
i The Loganville teams will bring
‘gm}d players here for the game
Saturday night and a large crowd
is expected as this is the first
igame here in almost 10 days. Lo
ganville girls won second place in
ithe upper half of the ‘“C” class
tournament at Monroe last year
}and again are reported to have a
good sextet,
’ The local girls lost again at
| Jesey this week but will come
iback stronger thanp ever in the
' Loganville tilt and attempt to
whip that highly touted outfit.
Again the forwards for the Bogart
girls can not be named but out
of Ada Ruth Dean, Vonceil Huff,
Ireng Whitehead and Geneva Huff
you can just pick three and do
as well as we can. The guards
will probably be Helen Watson,
IGertrude Southerland and Sarah
ißradhury.
| Coach W. B. Garner announced
this morning the boys list Stat
ihum. Winder, Watkinsville, Colbert,
[],(\xingum_. Good Hope, Jersey and
Union Point among the teams they
}ha\'a defeated. The girls have
‘been victorious against a large
lnumber also. 5
} ——e e
| SEWANEE VS TECH
. SEWANEE, Tenn. — (#) — Loser
in all six of their games, the Se
wanee Tigers resumed practice to
day for a contest here Saturday
with Georgia Tech's formidable
quintet.
~ That will be the Tigers’ final
game wuntil after scholastie exami
nations are completeéd next week.
Agriculture Club Holds -
. g it
Meeting Thursday Night;
Debate to Be Held Soon
BY JERRY COLLINS
The Agriculture club held itg re
gular weekly meeting in the audi
torium of Conner hall on Ag cam
pus Thursday night. Carl Daugh
try, president, presided.
Instead of a regular program, the
club held open forum, in which
several of the members earned their
speaking credit.
The club discussed plans for in
creasing attendance and helping
with the carnival January 29 to
raise money for 4-H club scholar
ships.
At the next meeting a debate
will be given by several negroes.
The subject will be, ‘“Resolved:
'That it is all right for negroes to
'steal chickens.” Members are ask
‘ed to bring dates.
J. F. Basham Installed
New Head of 0. U. A. M.;
Hold Meeting Last Night
At the last meeting of the local
chapter Junior Order of United
American Mechanics, J. F. Bas
ham was installed councilor, and
J. G. Bagby was installed vice
councilor.
Others taking office were J. F.
Carr, recording secretary; J. C.
Parham, financizl secretary; C. M.
Basham, treasurer; H. B. Duna
way, conductor; H. W. Long, jr.,
warden; R. L. Turner, 'inside
sentinel; J. A. Dunaway, outside
gentinel; L. W. Cooper, chaplain;
W. A. Dunaway, degree . team
cupta‘n; Grover C. Moon, W.:- W.
Clary and L. W. Cooper, trus
tees.
This organization meets every
Friday evening at 8 o'clock at their
hall over Durden Music company.
All members are urged to be
present for the session tonight
and to help make this a banner
year.,
.
Last Night Scores
Se g ZEOI THIE e
e et
By The Associated Press
Tennessee Wesleyan 41; Sewa
nee 33.
Union University 87; Ole Miss
22.
La. State University 35; La,
Poly Institute 34.
Frskine «46; Newberry 32.
Emory ang Henry 45; Wofford
33, % @Y
North Carolina 31; Wake Forest
30.
. MUNGO GEYS RAISE
NEW YORK — (#) — T h e
Brooklyn Dodger apparently have
seen by the papers that their ace
pitcher, Van Mungo, mgists on a
pay increase this year. At any
rate, the club announced today the
big right-hander’s 1937 contract
will call for a salary higher than
he received a year ago.
Whether the terms have been!
boosted to meet the $1,500 or $2,-!
500 increase Mungo was reportedl
seeking is not known. The Dod-}
gers said only that “many players,
received increases” in the club’s,
contracts, mailed out today, and
Mungo was one of them,
The temperamental fireballer
wag supposed to have received|
$12,500 in 1936. }
WINS FIRST PLACE ' |
ALMEDA, S. C.—(#—Woodside
Lightwood, a white and orange
‘pointers owned by W. W. Cas
well, of New York, won first
‘place in the finals of the planta
tion owners field trials here yes
terday.
High Island Racketeer, a white
and orange setter owneq by Fred
erick Ewing, of Greenwich, Conn.
was second, and Bob, a setter own
ed by Franklin B, Lord, of New
York, was third.
The trials were held on two ad-|
joining plantations, Alemeda, own
ed by George D. Widener, and
Huggin Oak, owned by Harry
Payne Whitney.
TREASURY DEPARTMENT, In-‘
ternal Revenue Service, Alcoho!]|
Tax Unit, 408 Ten Forsyth St.
Building, Atlanta, Georgia. Notice
is. hereby given that on January‘
12, 1937, one 1930 Marquette Se-|
dan, Motor No. 226233-4, was
seized near Ila, Madison County,|
Georgia, for violation of Section|
3450, United States Revised Stat-|
utes; any person claiming said au
tomobile must file claim with my |
office on or before February 23.}
1937, as provided in Section 3460,
United States Revised Statutes.
W. D. Hearington, Acting Dis
triet Supervisor. ‘
Jan. 22-27-Feb. 5. '
TREASURY DEPARTMENT, xn-l
ternal Revenue Service, Alcohoi
Tax Unit, 408 Ten Forsyth St.:
Building, Atlanta, Ga.. Notice Is!
hereby given that on November 20, |
1936, one 1926 Ford Touring Car,)
Motor No., 12373330, was seized!;
about 12 miles north of Carnesville, }
in Franklin County, Georgia, for|
violation or Section 3450, United
States Revised Statutes; any per
son claiming said automoible must
file claim with my office on or be
fore February 15, 1937, as provided
in Section 3460, United States Re
vised Statutes. W. D, Hearington,
Acting District * Supervisor. |
jls-22-29
. }
Emory Deputation |
To Hold Forum in ;
Athens January 28
3
L ey J
A deputation from Emory uni
versity will be the guests of the{‘
Y.W.C.A. of the University of Geor
gia, January 28, at 7:15 p. W, at!
which time they will hold a forum‘
at the Alpha Delta Pi house, :
Preceding ,the discussion, they
will conduct a program at the Y.l
W. C. A, meeting on the campusi
of the Coordinate college. Jack!
MceMichae!, Quitman, is in charge
of the deputation, which is coming
over as an exchange program for
a group from Georgia who will re
turn the visit later in the winterl
quarter.
UNEMPLOYMENT INCREASE ’
' VALDOSTA, Ga, — (#) — J. P.
Kelly, directar of the Valdosta
bureau of the National Employ- -
LUCAS & JENKINS’®
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HER ONE CONSUMING PASSION
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A O , “ACE DRUMMOND”
& S ORISR SR e e
FRIDAY, JANUARY 22, 1933,
3 2 S
ment service, said Thursda,
employment in this section, ge.
creased 69 per cent during the agt
12 months.
| Kelly’s records showed that
January 1, 1936, there were mope
than 10,000 listed as unemployeq
' There are now slightly more thap
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’
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