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THURSDAY, APRIL 14, 1938,
Bulidog "9”Plays Clemson, Oglethorpe
(LEMSON HERE
GATURDAY 2 P,
G
Clemson Met Today,
.
Oglethorpe Friday,
saturday in Baseball
BY DAN MAGILL, JR.
The (Eulldog nine was bhooked to
pattle Clemson College on Sanford
sielq this afternoon, starting at
»;‘-*u Jim Davis was scheduled to
nen on the slab for Coach Sikes'
men, who to date have lost two to
Michigan State while beating Ohia
University.
Georgia opens a two-game series
here Friday with Coach Frank
Anderson’s Stormy Petrels of Ogle-!
thorpe University. The Petrels, al
ways boasting a formidable club,
will face the speed balls of Whllace
willer, Macon righthander, Friday,
and Saturday, starting at 3:45,
Lester Norris, sophomore right
hander, will chunk the apple for
the Bulldogs.
Coach Weems Baskin's strong
track team, undefeated in dual
meet competition for the past two
vears and winner of the South
eastern Conference championship
st vear at Birmingham, encounter
4 wood Clemson College outfit here
saturday, beginning at: 2 ' o’clock.
The track meet will be over in
plenty of time to see the opening
of the baseball game, which doesn’t
tart until 3:45.
Two star Bulldogs will be on
g :
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‘ . 1
'Chicago Welcomes
ts Favorite 1
£ . (
‘Son Home Friday -
| R |
| CHICAGO —() -+ This town‘
;wel(-mnes home tomorrow its favo~‘
|rite baseball son, Charles Leo]
| (Gahby) Hartnett. 1
| The Chicago Cubs and White
%Snx will clash in the first of a
ithroe-gan‘xe city series duel as a
| final warmup for the opening of
?their major league races, and old
iGiibby will be at his usual stand
[!l)ehind the plate, contrary reports
{ notwithstanding.
). They've been trying to count
%flahby out of the active player
I picture for six years and each sea
‘ison he bounces back—to the de-
L[!ight of thousand of admirers. He's
.istarting hig 17th season in the ma
’ijm's, all with the Cubs, and is
Iready to begin his self-appointed
|task of another season's work of
Eloo or more games as the Cubs’
i\'egular catcher,
‘;the sidelines for the third straight
E‘yl'xleot, Big Jack Farren, who placed
{in the conference meet 120 yard
‘Ehigh hurdles in 1936, and Jack
)El{uhinson, who placeg in the con
‘| ference 100 and 220 yard dashes
| last year, are still suffering from
.{bulled muscles. Farren sustained
| his injury several days before the
| opening meet with Presbyterial§y
:!(‘olleg;e and Robinson pulled his
| muscle in the 100 yarq dash in the
P, C, event.
Georgia Loses To Michigan;
Covington Named Captain
Byron Bower Scores
Brilliant 70 Over
Country Club Course
By F. M. WILLIAMS
Georgia’s golf team ran into one
of the best eight-man college
| squads ever to play the Athens
Country Club course yesterday af
ternoon and came out on the short
end of a 22 1-2 to 13 1-2 score in
'its match with the University ot
{ Michigan.
Immediately after the match, the
team voted Dean Covington, of
Rome, its captain for 1938. Cov
ington is a law school student and
has been a member of the team for
three years. He is very popular
on the campug and should be a
fine leader,
Byron Bower, playing the num
{ber one position for the Bulldogs
!yesterday, turned in the best score
|of the day and one of the besi of
the season, cracking par by three
strokes. He won two points and
lost one in his match with Bill
{ Barkley who had a 75.
| Bower's score was all the more
remarkable because he played his
sub-par golf on the back side, by
|far the toughest holeg on the
course, He was out ip 37, one over
par, and cameb ack home with a
| sizzling 38, four under regulation
figures. TFine putting and several
great approaches enzbled the
Georgian to score so well. ;
Although the local course, over
which collegiate golfers from all
over the South and several from
the east will compete in the an
nual Interdollegiate Invitation
tournament next week, was ‘a
strange one t, the Michigan boys,
two of them managed to beat par
by a stroke, Lynn Reisg and Tom
Tusslng both scoring 725.
Foliowing ig the summary: :
: First Foursome
Byron Bower, Georgia, won 2 and
lost 1 tg }3l]! Barkley.
De¢an Covington, Georgia, lost 3
roints to Al Karpingki.
Barkley and Karpinski lost 2
and won 1 to Bower and Coving
ton.
Second Foursome
Lynn Riess, Michigan, won 2 1-2
and lost 1-2 to Mercer Blanchard.
Bill Yearnd, Michigan, won 2 1-2
and lost 1-2 to Bill Little,
Yearnd and Riess won 8 points
in the foursome,
Third Foursome
Tom Kennedy, GCeorgia, won 2
and lost 1 to Bill Warren
Cal Bowen, Georgia, wop 1-2 and
lost 2 1-2 to Tom Tussing.
Bowen and Kennedy won 2 1-2
and lost 1-2 in the foursome-
Fourth Foursome -
Billy Smith, Georgia, won 3
pointg from Fred Schwarze,
Joe Arnold, Georgia, won 1-2 and
lost 2 1-2 to Jim Loar.
Smith and Arnold won 2 1-2 and
lost 1-2 in the foursome,
Hall, Cuninggim
Favored In
North and South
PINEHURST, N. C. —{#— J.
Gilbert Hall of New York and
Merrimon Cuninggim of the Duke
University faculty were doublés
favorites today in the North and
South Amateur tennis tournament
Three-Cornered Weightlifting
Meet To Be Held Saturday
Athens, Atlanta And
Anderson Compete In
Meet At YMCA Here
By CHARLES RICE
Saturday night, April 16, at 7:30
o'clock:in the Y. M. C. A. big
gymnasium, there wlil be a tri
angular weightlifting meet be
tween the Athens “Y” weightlift
ing team, the Atlanta Weightlifting
club, and the Anderson, S. C.,
Weightlifting club. There will be
no admission fee and the ladies
and gentlemen of the city are in
vited to come down and see just
'‘what kind of a team the locals
have.
This meet will pit the best lift
ers of each team together. KEach
will have four men, their best
lifters, and the team with the
highest total points will win the
meet. The three Olympic lifts
will be contested, the two-hand
military press, the two-hand snatch
and the two-hand clean and jerk.
There is expected to be close
contesting all the way through
for all the teams are very strong.
Athens placed second in the South
eastern meet, the Anderson team
placed in the South Carolina-
| T
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THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GA.
Two Club Race Is
Predicted In -
National League
(Thig is the first of two
stories giving the results of
thg Associated Press annual
major league pennant poll | . .
tomorrow: American League
forecast.) :
By ALAN GOULD
NEW YORK—(#)—Major league
baseball writers, scanning the
prospects and portents of spring
time, today forecast ga two-club
race for the 1938 National League
pennant, with the champion New
York Giants pacing the Chicagp
Cubs to. the wire.
A scant majority, 81 out of 760
experts, picks the well-balanced
club managed by Bill Terry to
make it three in a row. Of the re
mainder voting in the 12th annual
Associated Press poll, 22 name the
C'ubs to finish on top, while only
four .favor the St. Louis Cardi
nals and three are willing to take
a chance on the Pittshurgh Pirates
to win.
Last year the Giantg were sec
ond choice. The Cardinals, by ac+
quiring Lonnie Warneke, ‘were gen
erally rated to have command of
the situation, but the Gashouse
gang stumbleq home in fourth
place, This season the St. Loui®
club, although the consensug choice
to finish no bettér than third, lis
nevertheless equipped to upset the
dope again,
The poll’s chief surprise is the
preference shown for Cincinnat!
cellar club in 1987. The Redg are
the consensus selection over Bos
ton, by a narrow margin, for fifth
‘place. Thig seems largely to he a
personal vote of confidence for the
managerial abhility of Bill McKech
nle, who was the master mind for
the Bostons last year. Not a single
critic expects the Reds to finish
last thig vear. 4
. The Dodgers are picked to wind
up just where their pilot; Burleigh
Grimes, predicts—seventh.
Towns Trails Horse
In Race Last
Night At Augusta
AUGUSTA, QGa. =—(#)— Forrest
(Spec) Towns, champion Olympie
hurdler, failed twice yesterday in
an attempt to outrun a jumping
horse over a 120-yard track with
four hurdles.
’ He accomplished the feat against
|a military horse and rider at Fort
\()mpthorne abhout & year ago, @
Yesterday officials. declared th‘
first attempt unfair The race was
repeated, but the result was the
same — 11 second flat with Spec
finishing two Ilengths behind the
{ horse, ridden by Jameg Minnick.
here,
Hall, defending singles titlist, and
Cuninggim defeated Carléton Rood
and Henry Kulik, both of the Uni
versity of North Carolina, yester
day, 6-1, 6-0.
Frank Tarrell, ranking sixth on
the U. N. C. team, upset the smooth
course of eliminations yesterday
when he scored an upset victory
over George Dunn of Philadelphia,
6-3, 2-6, 6-2. Dunn is champion
o fhis home district anq is credited
with being the number one player
of the Middle Atlantic States.
North Carolina meet, and enough
is known about the Atlanta team
to make it a close contestant in
any meet.
For the Athens team there will
be Willie Curry, Southeastern
champion in the 181-pound divis
ion; Rick Bjorson, in the 148-
pound class; Ralph Bradley in the
181-pound class, and Larry Gold
smidt, in the heavyweight divis
ion. This heavyweight division
wll be one of the closest contested
in all the meet, for the Athens
man, Goldsmidt, defeated the At
lanta heayweight man, Elliott,
who is, incidentally, a motorcycle
policeman, in Atlanta before by
only five pounds, and Elliot is
sure to put up a hard fight for
the Ilifts Saturday. Alse for At
lanta will be Bob Cheery, 126-
pounder, a Southeastern champion.
The meet in Atlanta was closely
contested all the way through
and it is expected to be more soo
this time. TUndoubtedly no one
will know the winner of the meet
until all the lifts have been rpar
ticipated in. But there will be
good lifting on each side and the
public is cordially invited to come
down to the “Y” on Saturday and
pull for the locals.
Southern Loop Te
Open Today;
4 Games Scheduled
BY KENNETH GREGORY
ATLANTA —i(#)— The South
ern Association, starting its 38th
sampaign of modern baseball but
actually a circuit whose history
dates back to 1885, opened the
ig::lvs to its parks today for a sea
‘snn heralded as unpredictable,
| In general, a 8 the eight teams
lined up at the barrier for the 1938
}l}mj: chase, the pace was considered
one of the most “wide open” in
vears, due chiefly to the general
shakeups nindergone by all of the
clubs since the curtain fell upon
proceedings last fal.
Opening day found Major Tram
mell Scott, the league’s new presi
dent, in Little Rock to watch the
champion Travelers inaugurate de
fense of their pennant against New
Orleans’ Pelicans.
Other games arranged for ‘“get
away” day seng Knoxville against
Atianta, Nashville against Chatta.
nooga and Birmingham against
‘Memphis.
Parades, pre-game festivities by
ranking state and city officials,
tossing of the firsy pitch by at
tractive feminine hurlers, among
them actress Dixie Dunbar who
wiit handle that chore at Atlanta,
and general ballyhoo such as Joe
Tingel's “wild elephant hunt” were
exrected to generate enough in
terest to attract some 60,000 cus
tomers,
As the fielg goes to the post,
pitching and punch are the crying
needß emanating from the offices
of the eclubs’ skippers. Most teams
in the eight-club circuit are not
without a want gnd the “openers”
arrfved with the situation some
what uncertain. ‘
Helen Wills Moody
Sails April 20
For English Meet
~ SAN TFRANCISCO —#P)— Mrs.
Helen Wills Moody, who made
tennis history in 1985 with a come
‘back for her seventh Wimbledon
3tit]e, packeq her favorite rackets
today to hattle for an eighth Eng
lish championship. She sails from|
New York April 20,
~ Mrs, Moody at 31 is playing what
‘eoaches declare is her best game.
. The lure of the Wimbledon
iehampionship, virtually symbolic
‘of the world title, proved irresis
tible for Mrs. Moody, who in 1936
announced she was retiring to de
ign fashion. o
%ward Kinsey, California tennis
elnh coach and former Davis Cup
doubles star, predicted another title
for Mrs. Moody. 3 -
~ LUCAS & JENKINS
i LAST DAY
GEORGIA IDS
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| AKIM u'mnosr 1 THIS MAN HOI'DS A .
taoman e s gel WHOLE CITY IN HIS
Generol Died ot Dawn 1™ 5,- EV'I. GR'P | BE“U SE
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W .' An ol star cost with GAIL PATRICK - AKiM TAMIROFF
" ANNA MAY WONO - LLOYD NOLAN - A Forameunt Flavie
————ADDED—
LATEST ISSUE—MARCH OF TIME
COLOR CARTOON—NEWS EVENTS
2 DAYS — Friday and Saturday — 2 DAYS
¢ EVER A §TORY AND STAR WERE MEANT
FOR EACHOTHER .o THIS IS THE TIME! ;
The git! who has just bee” voted sl
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SATURDAY MORNING FROM 11:00
AM. to 1:00 P. M,
Georgia-Florida
Loop Opens
With Clear Skies
By The Associated Press ‘
The Georgia - Florida J.eague
opened its baseball season today
In Albany, Moultrie and Tallahas
see after getting off {0 a greia
start in perfect weather yesterda)
at Thomasville, Americus and Cor
dele.
Switching cities, Thomasvill,
plays at Tallahassee, Cordelg a\
Moultrie and Americus at Albany.
Playing before ap overflow crowd
of nearly 3,000, including Gover
nors E,_ D, Rivers of Georgia and
Fred P. Cone of Florida, Thomas
ville defeated Tallahassee, 8 to 4
in the opener.
Governor Rivers fanneq Gover
nor Cone ip the preliminaries.
About 1,200 fans saw the Albany
Travelers trounce the Americus
Cardinals, b to 2. Cordele whipped
Moultrie, 9 tg 5.
' A parade preceded the game al
Thomasville. Business h o uges
closed, Before the game the Geor
‘gia. and Florida governors and
other distinguished visitors were
introduced to the ecrowd Both
chief executives spoke briefly.
The Orioles bunched nine hits
off Mickey Heafner, Tallahassee
southpaw, and took advantage of
three of the visitors' errors to win
' Tallahassee got to Roy Bruner
for 12 hits, but he kept them well
scattered. A fetaure of the game
wag a double play by Manager Cy
Morgan, He caught Summ's long
fly in centerfield and threw Heaf
ner, Tallahassee pitcher, out at the
plate when he attempted to score.
Mayor T. L. Bell tossed out the
first ball at Americus and Man
agers Alex McColl of Americusand
Johnny Keana of Albany were In
troduced to the fans.
Albany collected nine htig off
Miller and Adalr, while Steve
Vargo held the Cardinals to seven
scattered hits.
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—ADDED—
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Latest News
Events
-
Oconee Heights Club ‘1
To Meet Today |
e ‘1
There will be a wmeeting of the |
Oconee Heights Misstonary Society |
this afternoon at 3 o'clock at the
home of Mrs. Raymond Brown on
the Jefferson road. |
The society has been recently
W
_ A LUCAS & JENKINS THEAT~i:_i._E___-___’-
3DAYS STARTS TODAY
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LUGAS & JENIKINS Return LAST DAY
STRAND showine TODAY
DARRYL F. ZANUCK’'S GREAT NEW MUSICAL!
Bt WALTER BEN
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2 DAYS — Friday and Saturday — 2 DAYS
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“FLASH GORDON’'S TRIP TO MARS”
PAGE SEVEN
| g AT e
organized and has already a large
rat{efid'alfi'c'é"%uf there are a number
of ladiés in the district that are
ot members. - ,f
Alll ladies who are interested in
partieipating’ in the activ _
this group are urged tovl'a:t §” ¢
nieeting this afternoon and aid in
|advancing the gpiritual Hf‘flf*
community. ’ i “9%