Newspaper Page Text
PAGE EIGHT
War Admiral R
g ir uns
Today in Handicap
‘BAURAL, Md. — (AP)— _War
Admiral, the three-year-old cham
pion, got a chance today to show
whether or not he could pick up his
vigtory streak Trom the point
where an injured hoof forced him
i;rom competition nearly five
nmionths ago. Y
- Glen Riddle Farm's speedy lit
tle brown son of Man O'War was
entered against ten other cam
‘paigners in the $1,200 Churchill
handicap, fifth and feature event
on the day's rrogram here.
It was the first time the winner
of the Kentucy Derby, the preak
ness and the Belmont Stakes had
been entered in a race since the
Admiral injured a hoof in the Bel
mout last June 5. |
He has grown a new hoof, work
ed out satisfactorily, if not sen
gationally, and been pronounced |
fit. Charley Kurtsinger was us-‘
signed to ride the Admiral in to
day’s mile and a sixteenth test for
three-year-olds and upwards.
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=0 -~ COUNTRY ROADS
Ordinary treads on” tires are made for
pavement riding. ¢ But, off the pave
ment—what then? The tire that
drives—and stops—a car on the main
highway may spin and stall in sand
and mud.”
But not the Atlas Lug-Grip with its lugs
of deep, tough rubber which solve the
problem. The Atlas self-cleaning, lug
grip design is unsurpassed. It “digs
in”—gives traction, and you keep going.
=(e ~_..".”?fl =
Nt 5‘
weg h oy ~,v.«'\“ |
B
N
C. E. Berryman
Corner Washington and
Thomas Streets
Telpehone 9110
Eddie I. Hale
Corner Pulaski and
Dougherty Streets
Telephone 9226
{Alahama and Vanderhilt Rated
[o-Contenders For SEC Crown
Two Teams GCiven Best
Chance, Although Au
burn Is Strong.
| e
- (By The Associated Press)
None disputed rating Vandervbilt
and Alabama as co-contenders for
ltho Southeastern conference foot
ball throne today, but Auburn
lstoud in good position to bounce
into the big chair if these teams
falter. |
- Alabama must dust off Kentucky,
lTulane and Georgia Tech in that
-order if it is to move unbeaten in
!w the Thanksgiving showdown
with Vanderbilt. The Commodores
must sink Georgia Tech, Sewanee
and Tennessee to reach Turkey
day in the same immaculate con
dition, .
Auburn gets Tennessee, L. 8.
U., Ceorgia and Florida in that
order after winding wup outside
activities against Rice next Sat-‘
urday.
Should the Plainsmen plow un
der that assotment, no one could
deny them at least a shae in the
laurels in the event Alabama and
Vanderbilt both are tied or beat
en. |
] The Tigers have a scoreless tie
| with Tulane marked against them
}in the confercnce ratings but wal
i loped Mississippi State 33-7. and
Georgia Tech 21-0, on successive
Saturdays, showing more precis
ion and power than any other
league outfits with the possible
exception of the unbeaten and un
tied Duo. !
Post-game _check-ups around
the circuit:
Alabama—Lewis Bostwick, regu
lar guard, reported definitely out
of Kentucky game with ankle in-
Jjury. :
Georgia—Bulldogs conserve half
back supply aafter broken = leg
puts “Coot’” Vandiver permanent
ly on shelf along with Harry
Stevens. .
Mississippi State—Halfback Jack
Nix, keystone of Maroon attack
knocked out by injury but Coach
Ralrh Sasse observes stoically
“well that's football. We'll start all
over,”
Tulane—Broken toe puts War
ren Brunner out of halfbacking
job for Mississippi game.
Georgia Tech seserve fullback
Anderson shifted to guard while
Yellow Jackets strive to bolster
line in secret practice for Vandy.
Auburn—halfback Hitchcock and
Fullback Sitz expected back in
action against Rice. No major in
juries suffered in victory over
Tech.
Vanderbilt—Ray Robinson tries
to develop reserve line to displace
battered varsity forwards against
CGeorgia Tech.
Mississippi—Rebels retire be<
hind locked gates to prepare sos
Tulane. Entire squad reported in
good physical shape.
Tennessee injured bazs: Don
War rogs while Vols stdrt work
for Georgia.
L. 8. U.—“ Forget Vandy and
Atlas batteries, 100, have every desirable quality built
in—at reasonable price. Life-tested.
High-rating. Super-power.
George Head, Jr.
Corner Lumpkin Street
and Miledge Avenua
Telephone 9131
M. J. Maynard
Near Miliedge
749 Prince Avenue
~ Telephone 9108
ANATEUR UNION 13
MEETING THIS WEEK
Discussion of Interna
tional Union’s Action Is
Feature Business. |
NEW YORK — (AP) — While
such matters as the elimination of
meters in favor of yards and miles
‘in track events, the establishing of
‘rogional championships, and resi
‘dont rules are the big questions
i now listed for the annual conven
tion of the Amateur Athletic Union
at Boston November 13-15, a new
question has bobbed up Wwhich
(may cause considerable distur
"bance among the delegates.
~ That is what answer is to be
made to a communication from
the International Ameteur Ath
letic Federation asking why the A.
A. U., had refused to send its
touring athletes to Germany last
summer.
While officials both here and in
Europe vehemently denied yester
day that he I. A. A. F. contem
plated any punitive action against
the A. A, U., one A. A, U., of
ficial disclosed there had been cor
respondence on the subject and in
dicated that no official reply had
yet been made.
The official said he doubted if
anything could be done before the
annual meeting although' the 1. A.
A. F., in its communication ask
ing for both an explanation and a
chance of attiture, had requested
a reply before October 18.
In Europe Bo Ekelund of Swe
den, secretary of the I. A. A, F.,
and CGeneral Giorgio Vaccaro, sec
retary of the Italian Olympic com
mittee, vigorously denied they had
suggested a ban against the A. A.
U. The fact that the question ap
parently hasn’'t been closed, how
ever, may lead to fireworks ap
proaching those of the 1935 con
vention, when a movement to pre
vent American participation in the
Berlin Olympics barely met de
feat.
VANCOUVER, B. €. -— Lester
Thurstad landed his first job in
weeks and immediately wag up to
his neck in work,
On his first shift as a mucker
on a bridge project, Thurstad and
a companion were caught in a mud
and gravel cavein which covered
all but Thurstad's head.
Fellow workerg freed them.
admonition to bruised Tigers as
win the rest,” is Bernie Moore’s
work starts for Loyola.
Florida—Right End Ramsey, in
jured two weeks ago, counted on
for Maryland game but Tackle
Krejcier still out with infected
leg.
When™ you" doY reach the “improved
road,” you’ll be surprised at the
smooth, easy riding qualities of Atlas
Lug-Grip tires. They’re made for
“tough going”’—but the engineers didn’t
forget your comfort on pavements.
TERMS—If you need Lug-Grip tires, it
isn’t necessary to wait until you have
the cash in hand. Easy terms are
offered. Come in. See the Atlas Lug-
Grip. It’s easy to buy—hard to beat.
H. B. Franklin
Normal Town
1297 Prince Avenue
Telephone 9127
McLeroy & Logan
Corner Hancock Avenue
and Hull Street
Telephone 1336
GOOD MUDDER
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
CASEY STENGEL 19
GIVEN BEES POST
Bob Quinn Hires Man He
Gave Job As Manager of
Dodgers Few Years Ago.
BOSTON —(AP) — Bob Quinn,
president of the Boston Bees,
picked up a telephone in his of
fice, called Omaha, Texas, and
Presto! Casey Stengel was back
in the major leagues.
“Listen, Case, want to come
with us next vear?’ Bellowed
Quinn yesterday as a roomfull of
newspapermen listened in.
“Certainly, I'd be delighted,
thank you very muech,” came the
reply—and Stengel who received
$15,000 last year for mot managing
the Brooklyn Dodgers ‘while Bur
leigh Grimes got only $7,5600 for
piloting them, again was a big
league manager.
It was the second time Quinn
lined up Casey as manager. The
first was 1934 when Quinn was
with the Dodgers and was instru
mental in obtaining Stengel to
replace Max Carey.
One of the astonishing things
about the talk was that Quinn
never mentioned money or wheth
er the job was for one year or
five.
“We'll have no trouble with
Casey about contracts,” Quinn
laughed. “He'll be up here after
the first of next month to meet
all of you, and we'll straighten out
several matters then, including the
coaches.” : :
Quinn indicated 'Stengel would
decide the fate of Hank Gowdy
and Bob Smith, coaches under
manager Bill M¢Kechnie, whe re
signed shortly after the world se
ries to accept a better paying job
with the Cincinnati Reds. -
HARTWELL-LAVONIA
GAME BILLED TODAY
Came Postponed From
Friday Due to Rain and
Wet Grounds.
By DAN MAGILL, JR.
Hartwell and Lavonia were
booked to play this afternoon at
Hartwell in a delayed Tenth dis
trict football game, originally slat
ed for last Friday, but postponed
due to too much rain. 5
The winner will get second place
in the conference standings, At
present Hartwell is in third place.
Coach McKay's Franklin county
club occupiegs second place and
Elberton is at the top. .
Results last week gaw Elberton’s
Blue Devils hold Athens High to a
13-13 tie in a non-conference' en
counter. ‘Washington spanked
Madison High 18-0, for Coach
Cooper’s boys’ fourth consecutive
setback. .
. Wiarrenton and Greensboro . bat
tled to & 0-0 deadlock at Warren
‘ton in a downpour of rain.
i The conference standings to
date:
‘Team W L T Pet
GElberton: y..5e.....+ 3 0 0 1.000
jLavonia sauseecese 20 1 1,000
Hartwell .......... 2 1 0...667
Wiashington e...... 2 1 2 667
TapoltoN ... 0h 101 0 e
! Greensboro ¢.....», 1 1 2 .500
Thomson ~.....:». 1 2 0 333
“Wiarrenton ~....5.. 0 2 2 .000
REVOION s vivss 0 2.2 008
MadiSon sissi...éso 0 2 0 .000
Sports Round-Up
By EDDIE BRIETZ
NEW' YORK, Oct. 26 —i(&)—
Don’'t look now, but a gouthern and
a ndid-western college are flirting
with Doug Dashiell, hustling young
head coach of the U. of Nevada..
Each offers a three-year contract
yep, Doug is a-listening
Sports scribes in the deep south
are beating loud tom-toms to land
Frank (Bruiser) Kinard, U. of
Mississ'opi taciile; Walter May
herry, Florida ha''back and Quine
ton Lumpkin, Georgia center, on
the AP All-America......Rival
coaczhes are lending a hand too, so
the ladg must be pretty near tops
....This week's feed box svecial
is Yale over Dartmouth....take it
or leave it ¢
Baby Stribling, 'who once show
ed promise as a figi e, now .is a
high pressure auto salesman at
Hattiesburg, Miss. i
Florida fans wish Josh Cody
would trot out a ball of fire named
Hanna who is being kept under
blankets {or next year..,.They are
running a contest down there tg
get the most appropriate nick
name ,for the kid....Y2: Gougld,
who piloted Jimmy Braddock (o
the heavyweight tiile, has taken
Tom Beaupre, Dallas heavyweight,
under hig wing and is on the mar
ket for a leading southerp light
weight. ... Just three years ago to
day, John A, Heydler, resigned af
ter 15 years of distinguished ser
vice as president of the National
League,
I That new \Pitt athletic policy
.was kept secret since July becau
| Pitt felt it would only be *iauifix
at for trying to reform its foot
ball.... Two Smeky - City scrioes,
Jess Carver and Chet Smith, found
out Panther players really were
pushing brooms, etec.. and informe
ed athletic director James Hagan
they were going to print what they
knew about his nmew dea1....50 he
decided to spring it himself ..one
and all say Hagan is a grand fel-
Jow and 100 per cent sincere in:
},Rm ‘he i 8 trying to do. )
California Ranked No. 1 Team
[n America By Newspaper Men
Pittsburgh Is Second and
Alabama Third; Vandy
Rated Seventh.
By ALLAN GOULD
NEW YORK —(AP) — Califor
nia’s Golden Bears, by a landslide
vote of endorsement among the
country’s newspaper exrerts, re
main the nation’s No. 1 college
football team for the second suc
cessive week.
Following their smashing victo
ry over Southern California, the
Bears were accorded top place in
48 of the 57 “first ten™ selections
contributed to this week's Asso
ciated Press national ranking
roundup and tabulated today. Last
week only 24 rated California at
the head of the class, but the
feeling now is pronounced that the
Bears are moving rapidly toward
Pacific Coast honors, inciuding
the Rose Bowl nomination.
This week’s poll was marked by
a big shake-up in the lower
brackets, but the “top five” re
mained the same, except for Pitts
burgh’s displacement of Alabama
in the No. 2 spot. Here’s the tab
ulation, scoring each list on a 10,
9,8 76,5 4,3, 2 1 bass and
with first place votes indicated in
brackets:
First Ten Points
1. Calltornia (48) .. ilyieis 568
2. Pitiebursl @) s iicaa. - 408
. AlRDamB . s i 83T
4. Minnesota (2) ............ 321
5.-Yale (2)im. miivwiiems.y 321
G- Baviof A 1) .ol iaidics v 226
7 “xranderhlit O e oue 188
8. ORI BRS¢ v vscainie 90
0 Dartmaouth v i b Ciersinek v RSO
10 FOPBaI (i, i Sleiveaney A2B
Second ten: 11. Nebraska, 121;
12. Auburn, 85; 13. Duke, 84;
14. Santa Clara, 33; 15. North Car
olina, 16; 15. Villanova, 13; 17.
Louisiana State, 12; 10. Holy
Cross and Detroit, tied at 9 each;
20, Arkansas, 8. (Colorado and
Army ceceived three votes each,
Texas Christian and Northwestern
two votes each.)
DOUBLE TROUBLE
SAN FRANCISCO — Martin J.|
Reimer, 21, finally relieved sus-‘
pense at ‘the marriage bureau.
He first appeared with Mar
jorie Young, 18, and notified of
intention to wed. Two days later
he came back with Elbert May
Jones, 21, and signed a sinfilal"
notice. ;
After the required time he andl
Miss Jones appeared for their |
license. '”
R R !
THiIS IS A HONEY i
CHARLOTTE, N. C.—J. L. Perry |
reported to police that of all things“
somebody came into his yard and
stole two swarms of beeg in their
hives. il
IT’——'-:J]
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CITIZENS & SOUTHERN
NATIONAL BANK
N 4
New Medical Attack
On Cancer Revealed
By Penn. Scientists
By HOWARD W, BLAKESLEE
Asociated Press Science Editor
CHICAGO—{P)—A. new- attack
on cancer by refrigeration, on the
principle that wild growth of this
disease may be cured the same
as the growth of plants and some
animals is stunteq by cold, was
'announced to the American Col
lege of Surgeons here today.
~ On experiments on human be
ings, one case of “Hibernation” of
a cancer was produced. Under re
frigeration this particular ecancer
ras disappeaed although the pa
tient had beep Pronounceqg “hope
less.”
, The refrigeraticf technique was
announced as a mnew point of
view” by Temple Fuy, .M D. pro
fessor and head of the department
of Neurology and Neuro-surgery
and George C. Henny, M. D, di
rector of the Department of Phy
]sics, Temple University School of
Medicine, at Philadelphia.
The type of cancer refrigerated
is metastasizing earcinoma. It is
the kind which gpreads from one
part of the bedy to another, one
of the most dangerous.
The clue to the refrigeration idea
came from noting that this kind
of cancer was mostly confined to
the warmer “segments” of the hu
rman body. The breast, for example,
lis warmer than the lower legg and
la.lso has more of this cancer.
Dr. Henny, the physicist, devised
linstruments which could be plac
-led on the human body to lower
I’ M the ‘ %flm
g -
SUPER ol
SALESMAN ==/
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Listen y g "z-.——:.z-gé
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+ 99 : ' 8
This
PEOPLE INVITE ME INTO THEIR HOMES
. . . a standing invitation in every Athens home
. . . the old man chats with me, the children laugh
with me, the Missus shops with me,
1 DON'T HAVE TO RING DOORBELLS
- + . MO sir, as soon as | am heard in the yard or onthe
porch people run out and grab me . . . they liter
ally carry me into the house!
THEY LISTEN TO WHAT I HAVE TO SAY
. . . 1 don’t have to beg and go ’round in circles
looking for an audience . . . Athens listens to me
- . . they’re anxious to hear what I've got to say!
THEY BELIEVE WHAT I TELL THEM
. . . because they know from past experience that
I've never deccived or steered ’em wrong. They be
licve me 'cause they know I’'m a straight guy!
THEY BUY WHAT | HAVE TO SELL
. . . from dog biscuits to yachts . . . after they
. see me they're interested customers . . . | anwer
“what, where and how much!” about everything
that’s new in Athens! :
’ ' ’
PLL Work for YOU and ’LL
Guarantee Results . . .
PETE TARPLEY FIGHTS JOE SPANGgp
AT RICHMOND NOVEMBER § |\
MAIN ATTRACTION
By DAN MAGILL, JR.
Pete Tarpley, Athens’ lone con
tribution to the professional pugi
listic ranks, returned home yester
day. .
- All during the past year Pete
has been fighting up east and has
vet to lose a bout He has won
twenty-seven engagements, all of
them maip events. He starteg off
as a lightweight and now has
grown into a miiddleweight at 163
pounds,
T'he writer has seen clippings of
Eastern papers discussing the
fights in which Pete, former Ath
ens "High football, basketball and
track star, won. 'They regard him
as quite a capable boxer and
fighter and Pete has gefeated some
of the best men in the New Eng
land states.
Pete’'s next battlegis billed for
ROUGH PLAYMATES
ELMCREEK, Neb.—Joan Steph
ens, age 4, complained to her moth
er- about a ‘“cross old dog that
was going to bite me.”
“It kept coming near me look
ing tough,” she said.
So Mrs. Stephens went out to
the yard to investigate and found
two big coyoteg nosing around the
house.
temrerature in specific regions.
This temperature drop occurred on
the skin and extended also some
little distance into the body.
In some cases the refrigerating
devices were in contact with the
cancerous growth. In others they
were close.. They were used only
on cases pronounced hopeless by
known method of treatment.
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1937,
——— S N
Richmond, Va., on Novembe, 8. It
will be the main event anq g,
Spangler, nationglly Known \m.\,‘
an Italian middleweight, iy, ;. ;,‘-".
obponent. Should Pete contin h.
his victory string by whipping )
Spangler, his stock wiy soaroveri
likely enable him tg get 5 erack g
some of the even bigge, shutsat
a yearning which he Craveg ‘.e:
much, indeed. ¥
ol possible that Fete may fight
once hefore Nov. 8, g either A¢.
lanta or Miami. He has quite 3
reputation in Miami, to, having
fought there several times,
(GOOD-TASTING
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