Newspaper Page Text
PAGE EIGHT
BANNER - HERALD
SPORTS
808 OLIVER, SPORTS EDITOR
1 T Hel
Spivey, ‘Cats Help
KU Fans Forget *49
Seven-Foot Star Can Best Groza’s
Scoring Record With Fast Finish
BY STERLING SLAPPEY
Associated Press Sports Writer
Kentucky and seven-foot center Bill Spivey this week
can make Southeastern Conference basketball fans quit
talking about Kentucky of 1949 and All-America Center
Alex Groza.
If Xentucky whips Vanderbilt
in Lexington Saturday night the
Wildcats will win the Southeast
ern pre-tournament championship.
If Spivey can score 50 points
against Xavier in Lexington Wed
nesday and against Vandy he will
break Groza's SEC season scoring
record of 508 points.
The 1949 Kentucky team is ac
knowledged so be the greatest ever
put out im the Southeast and one
of the greatest in the country.
Groza is an All-Time Southeastern
Star and ranks about the same
nationally.
This .season’s follow up team
wasn’t supposed to be in the class
of the 1949 outfit. Coach Adolph
Rupp’s new boys were supposed to
be very good but not great—too
many ®ophomores. And finally
Spivey wasn't considered along
with Groza. |
Now that the 1950 season lacks
only & week of completion, this
new Kentucky team and sopho
more Spivey have climbed to a
seat #lmost as high as their de
parted elders.
Vandy leads Kentucky by half a
game in the standings but that will
be reversed if Kentucky whips the
Commodores. Should Kentucky
win, as it is picked to do, the
championship will be the Wild
cats’ tenth. If Vandy upsets Ken
tucky, the championship will be
Vandy’s first.
While the leaders decide which
is better, Auburn and Tulane will
be deciding who is third and fourth
best. Auburn needs to win two or
three games this week to clinch
third plaece. Tulane needs to win
its final game against L. S. U. in
New Orleans Friday and for Au
burn to lose a couple before Tulane
can clinch third place.
Auburn has added consolation
besides the possibility of ranking
third. Even if the Plainsmen lose
to Flerida In Gainesville tonight,
to Georgia Tech in Auburn Wed
nesday and to Georgia in Athens,
Ga., Saturday, the 1950 season will
be Auburn’s finest. |
The best Auburn ever managed
for a purpose
with a plan
SAVE
systematically
what you can
e
" On Your |
INSTRUCTIONS
We Maoke e
DEDUCTIONS
from Your é
CHECKING
ACCOUNT
small
OR LARGE '
We Moke '
NO CHARGE
Regardliess
OF AMOUNT
&
AAhe deductions we
make all go regulorly
inte your
SAVINGS ACCOUNT
&
Why net
instruet us
today?
The CITIZENS
& SOUTHERN
~ KATIONAL BANK
l Fadersl Wmm.krpflcflon
to do.was win nine Southeastern
games in 1942. Auburn has won
11 so far this season.
Only 12 games are scheduled for
the final week and two of them
involve SEC teams with outsiders.
Besides the Xavier-Kentucky game
Tampa will be in Gainesville
against Florida Wednesday.
Other headliner SEC games are:
Tennessee at L. S. U. tonight, Al
abama at Mississippi Wednesday,
and Mississippi at Tennessee Sat
urday. The remaining schedule is
Mississippi .State at Mississippi
Thursday and Tech at Florida Sat
urday. |
Kentucky made hash out of
three opponents last week. Ala
bama was first to fall 77-57. Miss
issippi followed 90-50 and finally
Tech lost 97-62. The Tech game
saw three SEC records fall and
two others tied.
Spivey’s 40 points replaced Gro
za’s old record. Kentucky’s 97
points broke the old mark of 95
in an SEC game (Georgia vs.
Kentucky last year), and the total
of 159 points by both teams broke
the old record of 153 (Tennessee
vs. I, S. U. last year). ‘
The 61 field goals dropped by
Tech and Kentucky and Spivey’s
16 field goals tied old records.
Auburn played two games last
week. The first was an upset loss
to L. S. U. 76-61 but the next one
went Auburn’s way 67-58 over
Alabama. Vandy won twice 85-50
from Mississippi State and 80-47
from Mississippi. Fourth ranked
Tulane whipped Mississippi State
73-53.
Other scores were: Stetson 57,
Florida 53; Georgia 73, Tech 72; L.
S. U. 68, Mississippi State 58;
Florida 66, Miami 46; Georgia 69,
Mercer 60, and Tennessee 62, Loy~
ola of New Orleans 39.
Southeastern Conference basket
ball standings:
LEAGUE
w 1 Pct. pf op
Vanderbilt ... 11 2 .846 761 599
Kentucky .... 10 2 .833 877 689
Auvburn ...... 1 4 ,733 930 891
Tulane ....eO.. 7 4 .636 706 649
Georgia ....... 6 6 .500 713 708
Alabama ...... 8 8 .500 857 816
1.8, U, .50 8.8 A 5 700 094
Ga,. Tech ...... 6 8§ 429 847 8%
Miss. State .... 6 9 .400 703 920
Tennessee .... 3 6 .333 518 562
Florida ....... 2 10 .167 584 734
Mississippi «. ... 2 12 .143 776 929
ALL GAMES
W L Pot
Yenderbilt ..., .. 18 8 937
Eentucky ...ivoo.lßo ¢ 833
RODUR oo D & 0D
TUINS i d 8 8 300
Georgin iisceee.-in 18 3 000
AIEDEME 1. iianivee B 10 41
B 1 S iinibeeis 3 B DO
B 0 TRI aviniads 11 B 8
M. Bate tiseicii B 9 40D
TONNERELS ..o vueseaa 10 10 500
IOLIRE i srvassaee B 18 810
Mississippl ...ic..... 8 15 286
.
Christman
.
Praises Play
Of Mal Cook
Pitching Paul Christman picks
Georgia’s Mal Cook as a T-quar~
terback with a great future in in
tercollegiate football,
“I'd take that big bruiser Cook
on my team any day, “Wally,” re
marked the famous sidearm passer
of the Chicago Cardinals to Wal
lace Butts in the coaches’ dressing
room late Saturday afternoon aft
er viewing the Bulldogs in a most
impressive scrimmage.
“He surely has fine wrists. A
‘real snap passer, that boy.”
~ “Yes, Mal is coming along all
right for a big growing boy,”
agreed Butts.
“And he looks like a dangerous
runner, too,” eontinued Christ
man, “He’s certainly big enough
to run over those he can’t run
around. Say, just how big is he?”
¢Mal’s about six-foot-three-and
205 pounds,” confessed Butts.
“But’s he’s just a good-natured
growing boy, you know.”
Blocking Terrific
“Wally,” resumed Christman,
“the thing that most impressed me
this afternoon was the downfield
blocking. It was terrific. I've al
ways heard your Georgia teams
play for keeps. They surely did
T A
§ Spotlight On Sporis
' With. ...
B 808 OLIVER and ED THILENIUS
1 WGCAU — MONDAY THROUGCH FRIDAY, 5:35%
&
# ; i g & x;v»* P s
e A e > 4’?
¢ A’fi ,%%féw Gy s (4R
% s 7 s i G oA
;A O R
o A L e R bt
L ’% o i
e R e W e s e i
‘:»A;'?.gf:ill?l":- o ,}’ s “f,) v R Q"/"’ '%’;fi v
"éfl%/ /” "/4/ 3ij {' s W B *,,
. NN e &
el AR o i
ol sRy Y P
VO e eYo i} ‘
oy ?%;%‘” vl 1
o e pa S
R i
g R e : iz d
67 . T
T, . : s o
sS% smg ,fwf p 7 }n' 4 %/&V"; f y
e eHL OSSR A
S T pL b 2 :
":\6fi > j’iv?z,‘ g ) ; : %
2 “ g w“‘ ¥ b g
¢i’ ¥ "
j«» . % / » o : 3 4 o 8
e e 5%, B 3 i harE
3 Gl - 25 {,_" i * ,‘:I ‘”’"_.;»33' ’ g 4 S |
V 7. @ R [
1 T g 5 B 'v__",‘ e. 4 % o : e X !
7 e R, R O e
s 4 Ret g S T i % SR >
¥ i . 4 :,1~ : p . .4 . A ”? K 7 A
CONGRATULATIONS, POP!
Red Coates, of Plainfield, N. J., winner of the Am
erican Motorcycle Association’s 100-mile amateur race
at Daytona Beach, Fla., Saturday, gets congratulaiory
pat from his daughter, Dora. Coates averaged 81.26
miles per hour to set a new record in winning the event.
— (AP Wirephoto.)
Unbeaten Crusaders
®
Have String Of 22
BY JOE FALLS .
NEW YORK, Feb. 20.—(AP)—Unbeaten Holy Cross,
the nation’s No. 1 college basketball power, is the first
team in more than 10 years to roll up 22 straight victories.
Not since 1939 has 4ny team gone
through its first 22 games with
out a setback. In that season, long
Island University recorded 24 con
secutive triumphs without a de
feat, a mark Holy Cross can tie
by downing Boston College tomor
row night and Brown next Satur
day.
The crusaders, top-ranking quin
tet in the Associated Press poll
also can be the first Major team
in six years to finish with a spot
less record. Army’s 1944 squad
(15-0) was the last to turn the
elusive trick, according to figures
of the National collegiate Athletic
bureau.
However, Boston college figures
to be tough for Holy Cross. The
Eagles, though sporting an unim
pressive 10-6 record, upset highly
regarded Villanova Saturday and
now are out to avenge an early
season 93-46 shellacking by Holy
Cross.
Three Road Games .
Other games on the Crusader
schedule include Valparaiso, New
York AC, Columbia and Yale. The
last three are road games.
Meanwhile, Several Confer
ence races across the country are
tightening to a busting point.
~ St. Louis and Bradley play a
return engagement at Peoria, 111,
‘tonight with the coveted Missouri
Valley title hanging in the balance.
‘Each club has an identical 7-1
‘league mark. Bradley, ranked se
‘cond Nationally, beat the Billikens,
'54-45, last month at St. Louis.
~ The Southeastenr title comes up
for grabs Saturday night at Lex
ington, Ky., where Kentucky,
shooting for a fourth straight
crown, entertains Vanderbilt.
Vandy ha an 11-2 league mark,
Kentucky 10-2.
Judging Opens
For Top Birddog
GRAND JUNCTION, Tenn., Feb.
20 — (AP) — The first brace of
cnampion quail hunters was called
up today to open the trial to pick
the Nation’s No. 1 bird dog.
The national championship, with
just about every topnotch pointer
in the country entered, will take
eight to ten days of judging.
Each dog takes the field on the
Ames Plantation near here to run
a three-hour-long hunt under the
critical eyes of three judges.
this afternoon.”
“Well, they were a little frisky
today. It was kind of cold out
there,” explained Butts.
“And your line play was mighty
rugged, I thought,” continued
Christman.
“Well, our line was strong last
'season,” cracked Butts. “In fact,
it was so strong that our own
backs couldn't get through it.”
Christman laughed snd turned
to Charley Trippi, his teammate
‘with the Chicago Cardinals the
last three years and whom he was
vigiting here over the weekend:
“Charley, I now know where
you learned to lower the boom
right here in Athens. All those
Georgia backs today were lower
ing the boom on would-be-tac
klers in the old Trippi fashion—
or rather I should say, the old
Georgia fashion.”
“T'll tell you,” winked Chunking
CLarley to Pitching Paul, ¢‘that
anybody who plays for the “Little
Round Man” will lower the boom
on you.”
“Huh! How’s that?” grunted the
Little Round Man, “Why, anybody
ought to be able to carry a foot
'ball. They aren’t very heavy.”
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
Farm Clubs
Are Strangled
By ML Owners
By HUGH FULLERTON
NEW YORK, Feb. 20—(AP)—
“Did you hear,” asks a correspon
dent, “that Minor League clubs
now are paying Major League
teams for working agreements?”
. . . We didn’t, but it isn’t too sur
prising the way things have been
developing. A lot of them already
have been paying through the nose
take these few yuotes from a Min
or League president: “The biggest
trouble in the minors is that we
have learned too much on the sup
posed help of the Major League
clubs, which really was not forth
coming. Sure, they were willing to
give a class C club $3,000 and have
the club pay the bills of operation
while the Major League club takes
all the assets—that is, the players
. . . on the other hand, they had
us tied up so badly with playing
material that an independent could
not operate in the same Minor
League, because every boy that
had a pair of long pants on was
either signed up or had an agree
ment with some Major League
club . . . . I predict that unless
there is some legislation to help
the Minor leagues, many more will
fold up.”
HAPPY DAYS
Student editor Jerry Healy com
pleted a long and dusty task of
digging up all the past sports re
cords of St. Michael’s college at
Winooski, Vermont . . . he made
the sad discovery that over near
ly 50 years, St. Michaels had lost
more games that it had won. . ..
“Well, better days are coming,”
signed Jerry . ... A curious List
ener asked why .. said Healy: “I'm
graduating in June.”
Kentucky
Top - Seeded
In SEC Play
BIRMINGHAM, Ala., Feb. 20—
(AP) — Kentucky, perennial fav
orite of the Southeastern Confer
ence, is again top-seeded team for
the annual basketball tournament
at Louisville, March 2-4.
Vanderbilt, Auburn and Ala
bama were placed in that order
behind the Wildeats yesterday by
the SEC basketball committee. All
the choice spots draw a first round
bye. :
Kentucky, winner of 10 con
ference games against two losses,
is now in second-place in unoffi
cial SEC standings. Vanderbilt,
with a 11-2 record, currently holds
the lead.
The two teams meet Saturday
night at Lexington and the winner
robably will take undisputed
Fead in the final results.
Auburn, a team that surprised
everyone, has an outside chance to
forge to the top. The Tigers play
three games this week and could
fatten their season’s 11-4 record.
‘Bama Over Tulane
Hot and cold Alabama, tied with
Georgia for fifth place, was picked
by the committee over fourth
place Tulane. Bama’s conference
record is eight wins and eight
losses; Tulane has seven victories
against four defeats. o
~ The tournament will be opened
by upper-bracket Florida and LSU
at 1:30 p. m. (CST), Thursday,
March 2. Tennessee and Georgia
Tech follow at 3:15 p. m. in an
other upper bracket game.
Thursday night, a lower bracket
contest between Mississippli and
Georgia will get underway at 7:30.
Mississippi State against Tulane
follows at 9:15 p. m.
Auburn will take on the winner
of the Florida-LSU game Friday
at 1:30 p. m. Vanderbilt will op
pose the victor of the Tennessee-
Tech scrap at 3:15 p. m.
Alabama meets the survivor of
the Mississippi-Georgia contest
Friday night at 7:30 p. m.. Ken~
Tenth Distriet
BoysOpenPlay
. gz Vi . :
Play At Four Sites Tonight; Region
Two-A Here, At Canton Wednesday
BY CURTIS DRISKELL
Banner-Herald Sports Writer
Tenth District boys’ basketball teams from Class “B”
and “C” schools set off a heavy week of tournament play
tonight, opening competition at four sites around the cir
cuit. Play begins at Greensboro, Bogart, Evans and Car
nesville tonight for 20 teams entered in the two tourna
ments, : . Mg
- At Greensboro, Union Point vs.
Tignall at 7:30 and Winterville vs.
Crawfordville at 8:30 make up the
“C” schedule, while Greensborol
takes on Oglethorpe County at
9:30 in the Class “B” feature.
Comer plays Watkinsville’s boys
at 8:30 in Bogart, preceded by a
7:30 meeting between Social Circle
and Logansville. The opener is
Class “C” and the Comer-Wat
kinsville go is Class “B”. |
Thomson plays Warrenton at
7:30 in “B” competition at Evans,
and Evans tries Dearing at 8:30
in a “C” contest. A three-game
slate at Carnesville sees La
vonia play Hartwell at 7:30 in a
“B” game, Nancy Hart plays Col
bert at 8:30 in “C” competition,
and Carnesville plays Royston at
9:30 in “B.”
The “B” and “C” units return to
the same locations Tuesday night
for quarter-final play, and the
District takes Wednesday night off
before semi-final play Thursday
and the finals here on Friday
night. Semi-final games will be
played in Warrenton and Hart
well, and the finals will be played
off in Woodruff Hall Friday start
ing at 8 o’clock with the “C” game.
The Class “A” teams in Re
gion 2-A wait until Wednesday
night before hitting the tourna
ment trail, and then swing into
action here and in Canton, Wed
nesday night in the Athens High
gymasium, Elberton plays Toc
- coa in the first tilt and host
~ Athens battles Eastanollee in the
~second feature.
~ Canton play features the host
team vs. Monroe in the opener,
while Gainesville tackles Ellijay in
Schloss Sends Avg.
To 15.1 Per Contest
BY DAN MAGILL, JR.
Bob (Slim) Schloss’ 17 points against Mercer in Macon
Satqrday night boosted the giant Georgia center’s aver
age back over the 15-point mark. The six-foot-eight-inch
junior from Jacksonville has scored 301 points in 20
games—an average of 15.1.
Captiin Fob Jiealae. e Bulls! —"ST T T
dogs’ top scorer the past three|
seasons, is second with 226 points |
—an 11.3 average. Earl Davis,%
junior forward, has a 10.3 aver-|
age on 206 points in 20 games,
Guards Joe Jordan and E. L.
Rainey have 9.4 and 8.1 averages,
respectively.
Average 60.6
The 69 points against Mercer
put Jim Whatley’s Bullogs over
the 60-point mark for team
scoring average—=so.6 to be exact.
Their foes have averaged 57.1. |
Georgia, now owning a 13-IT7
seasonal record, meets Auburn
here Saturday night in the last
game of the regular campaign, A
victory over the plainsmen would
avenge the 54-67 loss in Auburn
and give the Bulldogs’ a perfect
home slate of 10 triumphs.
Georgia’s individual scoring
tabulation: |
Player-Pos, Fg. Ft. Pf, Ptis.
Schloss, ¢. .. .. 118 65 61 301
Healey, f. .. .. 94 38 53 226
L ... e zos‘
Jordan, g. .. .. 71 38 45 180
Rainey, g. .. .. 83 35 70 161
Umbricht, g-c.. 18 21 40 57
Wiliaine, x. ... B 3 & 15
Phnstae .- .. ¥ 3 W 11
Bepit -t -7 M B
Dyßes. L ... % 8 N B
Thaosan b ...« & 3 9. B
s K .o A 8 B 2
Totals .. ... 459 294 412 1212/
The University of Georgia’s
baseball games with the Uni
versity of Kentucky, originally
scheduled for Athens May 17-18,
have been changed to April 3-4,
Bulldog Baseball Coach Jim
Whatley has announced.
Georgia’s annual G-Day foot
ball game, matching intra-squad
teams in the grand finale of
spring practice, will be played in
Sanford Stadium Saturday after
noon, March 11, starting at 2:30
o'clock. It was originally slated
for March 8 in order not to in
terfere with quarterly examina
tions, but the Bulldogs will not
practice March 9 and 10 in order
to devote time to their school
work. Dean of Faculties Alvin
Biscoe has approved the game for
March 11.
Georgia’s swimming team
will engage in two dual meets
this week: Emory University
here Tuesday at 4 p. m., and
Georgia Tech in Atlanta Satur
day at 8 p. m. Xt will be the
Bulldogs’ first elash with Em
ory. They beat Georgia Tech,
40-35, here several weeks ago.
tucky plays the winner of the
Mississippi State-Tulane tilt at
9:15 p. m.
Semi-finals are to be played Sat
urday morning, March 4, with the
championship game scheduled that
night at 8:30 p. m.
it e stk ittt
&l‘lck reliefl follows mild Resmo#
igd““'if and applieation o
soothing, gently medicated Resinol
RESINOL S
i AND S
Trojanettes Hosts
To Invitational
Towurnament Here
Plans progressed foday for a
brand - new girls’ basketball
tournament—the Athens Invita
tional Tournament for Girls,
which will open here on March
1
Dates and fjrst details of the
tournament were announced this
morning by Miss Marion Norris,
coach of the Athens High Tro
janettes basketball team. The
Athens sextet will be host team
for the first edition of the tour
nament, set for the Athens High
gymnasium.
Entries are expected to begin
arriving today from the seams
invited to the tournament, in
cluding the top girls’ teams from
this area.
The tournament will be played
on March 1,2, 3, and 4, if a
fourth day is needed to determ
ine the winner. Trophies to be
awarded winners will go on dis
play this week at Walter R.
Thomas.
the finale. Play at both Canton
and Athens is set to start at 7:30
Wednesday night.
Finalists move to Gainesville
on Saturday night to decide the
Region 2-A title after taking it
easy Friday night. However, the
two teams in the finals are
automatically qualified for the
State tournament.
ALL-AGE TRIALS
HERNANDO, Miss.,, Feb. 20 —
(AP)—The TUnited States Field
Trial Club’s Open All-Age Stake
has its championship climax today.
Just five more pointers of the
65-dog field remained to show be
fore judges retired to compare
scores on each dog’s overall style
and performance.
The eclub’s annual derby stake
for two-year-olds only was on tap
for the large mounted gallery
after the all-age completed its run.
Thirty-seven pointers were en
tered.
Observers figured several prize
quail hunters as all-stage title con~
tenders, including Sub Deb, owned
by Dan Gilchrist of Courtland,
Ala., and Piney Woodsman, owned
by B. McCall of Birmingham, Ala.
Phils Third — Sawyer
PHILADELPHIA, Feb. 20 —
(AP)—Manager Eddie Sawyer of
the Philadelphia Phillies says his
club should finish third in the
National League pennant race un
less “some of our young pitchers
don’t come through.”
Sawyer said today the Phillies
hoped during the winter months to
pick up some “extra punch” in the
form of two pitchers and an out
fielder.
No Other Rub Acts Faster In
to relieve coughs—aching muscles
Musterole not only brings fast relief
B
chial tubgs. Musterole ofler%TLL the
benefits of & mustard plaster without
the bother of mkiug one. Just rub
it on chest, throat and back.
®
MUSTEROLE
Sold in Athens At
CROW'’S DRUG STORE
Athens’ Most Complete
Drug Store.
OUR 50TH YEAR-EST. 1901
P rLYINGRR
y i P
N . MAY BE A -
: TERMITES
9 FOR FREE INSPECTION RS
W O Now NG
(W \. 'I
AR
Phone 1726
¥ = : %
b
: . | :
4 ! o o,
o : ‘ B o 3 /;’ 'l'
/ ’ k- T e k 1 o
i K g
'\s“a‘é‘ Gl T 4 e ¥
s b A
Pl g - ¥,
% e ¥ S ’ 5o
R . ; il
; A %, E R
i oo T &
x ¥y b & g k &
A
2 b 0 r i
Bl iy s p g
” S . - W B e s
? g o e M ik
o % o
; S e E :g S e < b s o
e .
3 : G g Sl
f e, B, o 40
Y il i R R 0 S AR )
Leon Hart, All-American Notre Dame end, kisses hi
wife Lois Newyahr, Turtle Creek, Pa., following thei,
wedding at St. Colman’s Catholic Church im Turtle
Creek, Pa.—(NEA Telephoto.)
Jack Burke Wins Rio Grande
HARLINGEN, Tex., Feb. 20 —
(AP)—Golf’s tourists rolled on to
Houston today for another SIO,OOO
open golf tournament with young
Jack Burke, jr., winner of the Rio
Grande Valley open, the little man
of the hour.
The boyish son of Houston’s
famed professional—the late Jack
Burke—moves into the city that
knows him best as second leading
money-winner of the year. He
laid down a six-under-par 65,
featured by two eagles, on the
6,095-yard - Harlingen Municipal
Course yesterday to finish with a
record-breaking 72-hole 264 and
grab first money of $2,000 in the
SIO,OOO valley open.
Burke, who registers from White
Plains, N. Y., ran his total money
winnings for the year to $4,940.
..Ahead of Burke in money-win
nings is only Sam Snead of White
Sulphur Springs, .W. .Va., .with
$7,558. Snead isn’t playing at
Houston. He decided to skip both
the Rio Grande Valley and Hous
ton Opens.
Jimmie Demaret of Ojai, Calif.,
Why “BC” Relieves Headache
‘and Neuralgia So Quickly
® Many people wonder what there
is about the “BC” formula that en
ables it to relieve simple headaches,
neuralgic pains and minor muscular
aches so quickly. The answer is sim
ple. In "BC” Headache Powders and
Tablets you get the full relief-giving
effectiveness of not just one, but ser
eral of the world’s most popular pain
relieving ingredients. In combina
tion these quick-dissolving, fast-act
ing 2nd medically tested "BC” ingre
dients are remarkably effective—far
more so than either would be alone.
HOLIDAY NOTICE
Wednesday, February 22nd.
GCEORGE WASHINGTON BIRTHDAY
A Legal Holiday will be observed by the Athens Clearing
House Association, Wednesday, February 22nd, 1950, and no
Banking business will be transacted on that date.
The National Bank of Athens
The Citizens and Southern National Bank
Hubert State Bank.
The City Assessors have completed the assessments of the
real estate of the City of Athens for the year 1950 and will
be at the City Hall beginning February Bth each week day
for ten days. Any changes or transfers of City properiy will
be reported to us. Our hours will be from 2:00 to & P. M.
We will handle enly real estate assessments,
JAME 1. AKINS, Chairman,
NEWMAN CORKER, Vice Chairmax.
J. W. FIROR.
W
el e R
oot ay,—
=S as - N ———
—— 3 = ——_“—' T .#Ej
=|IINS; ,fé ' FH || AN ==
— 1\ il & -12 == —_—
= IR74L B ENEHIE I
= UIEVSL NI =N EIIES Sl ——
> o Tanad loh dsee pood okl =
g %Mmiéwfii any ffiw -
& Phone first so your Money can be waiting for you. =
"Loans up to S2OOO .
5 K N "?:‘fc a »~ : -
Loan"&*lnvestment
CORPORATION
Rooms 102-104, Shackleford Bullding
L 215 College Avenue, Athens—Telephone 1371 -
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1932,
LEON HART WEDS
who was second money-winner
last week, won only $135.88 hcre
and fell to third place with a total
of $4,778.66. Demaret had 272 for
a tie for twelfth place.
Burke’s 264 was two strokes un
der the tournament record here,
set by Henry Picard in 1941,
It was another day of par-shat
tering performances. Forty-five of
the field of 67 cracked the 35-36—
71 regulation figures and Henry
Ransom of St. Andrews, 111., who
tied for third place 2t 267 with
Fred Haas, jr.,, of New Orleans,
equalled the competitive course
record with a 63, The rceord was
set in 1948 by Lloyd Mangrum and
tied last year by Dave Douglas,
Cary Middlecoff and Glenn Teal.,
B-C
Sold in Athens At
CROW’S DRUG STORE
Athens’ Most Complzia
Remember this imporeant fact the,
next time you have a headache. Also
remember that when taken as direct
ed, “BC” can be safely used. “BC"
has stood the test of time. It is a
preparation you can use with com
plete confidence. You'll find that
nothing is more comforting or re
lieves faster. And now you may have
“BC” in either tablet or powder form.
In both you get the same famous
“BC"” formula—the same fast relief.
Two “BC” Tablets equal one "BC"
Powder. Convenient 10c & 25csizes.
Drug Stor-=