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THE ATHENS DAILY HERALD.
TUESDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 10, 1914.
latest dope on college sports
.New York, February D.—With the
spring track and field schedules com
peted and large squads of athletes
training at all the eastern universi
ty, it is possible to secure a general
ire the activities and prospects
of the various teams for the season of
;14. While all the leading colleges
report many veteran and novice cinder
* i turf performers in training there
appears to be little indication at this
time of unusual advantage at any one
particular institution with the possible
tx, option of Pennsylvania. Accord
. l' to general report there is a notice
lack of sensational novice mate
,ia! for the varsity teams and trainers
ilfV , as a rule, counting upon the vet-
, t ai,s of the past two seasons for the
which may be reasonably ap
portioned among the colleges so early
in the season.
L’sing the Intercollegiate champion
fh.p meet of last year as a basis upon
which to work it is seen that Pennsyl-
which won the 1913 title with a
M -orc of 24 points, is again favored
with athletic meterial of considerable
strength. <The Red and Blue appears
to have the best balanced team in
sight, being strong in every position
except hurdling. Lippincott and Pat
terson, winners of the 100 and 220,
and McCurdy, two mile champion, are
in training. Young Meredith, world’s
record holder for the one-half mile,
will he eligible this spring. Kelly
is an excedllent performer at both the
140 and the broad jump. In Lane
Pennsylvania has a high jumper capa
ble of clearing six feet consistently. In
the weights and pole vault the Qua
kers are weli supplied with high class
performers.
The outlook at Harvard, which fin
ished second with 21% points, is not
so satisfactory, and Coaches Powers
and Donovan will have to develop a
number of new men if the Crimson
team is to repeat its record of last*
reason. The Cambridge squad prom
ises to be strong in the middle and
long distance runs and the weight
events. Many point winners were lost
by graduation last June and the fresh
man material of 1913 is not particu
larly promising when compared to that
of the other colleges of the east.
At Cornell Trainer Jack Moakley
has 140 athletes in training. The
Ithaca team finisherd fourth with 17%
points in 1913 being defeated for
third place by Michigan. Moakley has
stated that he faces an unusually hard
problem this year since he must devel
np virtually a new team. Of the point
winners of last season but Roller and
Van Kennan remain This pair won
3 1 : points of the Cornell score,
offset this heavy loss by graduation
:he team will be strengthened by a
lumber of promising recruits from
ast year’s freshman team and several
ithletes ineligible in 1913. Two of the
atter are David Caldwell, formerly of
Massachusetts Agricultural College, a
'lalf-miler and Morrison, a high
jumper from Leland Stanford. Judg-
ng from the material in sight Cornell
•hould be strong in field events and
middle distance runs but weak in
‘Prints and hurdlea.
Dartmouth, which won fifth place
>t the I. A. A. A. A. meet with 14%
■Mints, is not optimistic regarding the
rack team. Coach Harry Hillman
nates, that like Cornell, graduation
•’ut theavily into the point winners.
The present sophomore class contains
few athletes above the ordinary stand-
*rd. Of the twenty-two athletes who
wor. their letters in 1913 but eight re
main and of these Whitney, the Inter
collegiate shot-put champion, is the
'"by sure point winner. Fair material
,s in sight for the one-half and mile
run . the hurdles and the pole vault.
^ale is at present weak in distance
runners but in both sprints and field
’ontests has veteran and novice com
petitors who should win places in both
'iual and championship meets. The
Blue has Captain Brown, who won the
Intercollegiate half-mile and Potter,
*e< ond in the 220 hurdle3, as a nucleus.
1913 freshman team captain, is
fxpected to win a place in the high
jump and Talbott to do as well in fche
hammer throw. If Trainer Mack can
develop several high class sprinters
In, l dis tance runners the Elis will
prove formidable.
f respects at Princeton are not as
satisfactory as at New Haven for the
}'**** ,0J »t fourteen of the 1913 team
' graduation. To offset this the 1916
furnish a number of ath-
e ‘' u .h° did well in freshman track
j^mpetition. One or two athletes ineli-
' K(t pring will also be able to
rompete. These taker, together with
i0 Eleven veterans available should
],° 1,e a . team numerically strong but
aim r Keene Fitzpatrick will have
Sultan, the Army representative,
states:
“We are now negotiating with the
Navy in regard to the place for next
year’s Army-Navy game, but have
reached no agreement as yet. So far
as the Army is concerned the Yale
field would be entirely satisfactory,
but I am afraid that the distance from
Annapolis to New Haven is so great
that th© authorities at the Naval
Academy would not agree to play the
game in the Yale Bowl.”
T. DeWitt Cuyler, chairman of the
committees of Twenty-One in charge
of the building of the Bowl, says:
“In regard to the possibility of the
Yale Bowl being used for the Army-
Navy football game when completed,
I should be very strongly in favor of
such a plan if it could be brought
about. It would undoubtedly give the
Army and Navy facilities they have
never enjoyed, but I am fearful that
the Navy would object on the ground
of the distance.”
The former Carlisle Indian School
football center Wheelock, who until
recently was a student at the Univer
sity of Idaho, has abandoned the idea
of further college education and re
turned to his tepee. Football coach
Griffith is bemoaning the loss of the
famous redman whose sudden depart
ure he is unable to explain.
GREAT POWER
Dad” Moulton, recent trainer at
the Stanford University, is authority
for the statement that the Palo Alto
University has a future world’s record
sprinter in your.g Dick Grant of Port
land, Ore. Grant has a record of
10 1-5 seconds for the hundred yards
as a scholastic runner and is expected
to run inside of ten seconds' .this?
spring.
Walter Camp in a recent address to
the Yale alumni of Rhode Island on
the Yale athletic situation and the
prospects for the future, spoke in an
optimistic vein as follows:
“It is perfectly true that in the last
two or three years we haven't pro
gressed as we used to progress,
have said it was not easy to win but
it was simple. We did it by not mak
ing a mistake twice. When we found
out a mistake one year we did not
make that mistake the next year. We
are not looking for 'easy fruit.* If
we are down, we have made some
start all along the line. Now, we are
going on in the same way with base
ball as last year, playing it from the
bottom, and we have a first class
coach in Quinby, who knows the game
and can handle men. .. i r
“The crew situation is In the hands
of a committee. They have a hard
task. The idea is not to have three
different systems, and an inoffensive
set of eight men to stand for it, but
to get men in charge who will develop
continuous policy. Armstrong will
be in charge and we have Guy Nick
alls, who is probably the master Eng
lish oar, both in performance and
coach work. We can’t hope to have
Nickalls and keep him there for more
than a year or two, and we want some
one who will stay on, who will carry
the same system. Mr. Eugene Gi-
annini will work with Armstrong and
Mr. Nickalls. He has not had experi
ence in coaching four-mile college
crews, but the committee hopes that
the arrangement will work out. In
football we have one of the old school
—Frank Hinkey—who, in addition to
being one of the old «rhool players,
has always been a man who is willing
to try a new play. He Is ready to
move, and I should think we can pro
gress in good fashion there and take
up the work from where we left it last
year.**
Mr. Keller, Endowed by Wonderful
Psychological Instinct, Has Devel
oped His Powers to Won
derful Degree.
So positive am I of my power to tell
the past, present and future and ex
actly what you want to know, that
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I give reliable and important advice
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fact take an important step, don’t fail
to consult me.
Mr. Keller takes no money in ad
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any fee if you are not entirely satis
fied. All business strictly confidential.
Ladies and gentlemen can visit Mr.
Keller without fear of having their
confidence betrayed as he considers
his business as a sacred trust. Mr.
Keller can be consulted at private res
idence, 635 College avenue, corner of
Strong street (name on window).
Hours 9 a. m. to 5:30 p. m. daily.
Readings, .$1.00. No more, no less.
Mrs. Keller receives all callers. (Adv.)
SEVERE PUNISHMENT
Of Mrs. CUpptll, of Fire Tun’
Standing, Relieved by Cardui.
Mt. Air;
pell of :
fiv
n. c,,—mre. sarin M. Chap-
town, *ay«: "I suffered for
ive year* with womanly trouble., also
stomach troubles, and my punishment
was more than any one could tell.
I tried most every kind ol medicine
but none did me any good.
I read one day about Cardui, the wo
man's tonic, and I decided to try it |
had not taken but about six bottles until
1 was almost cured. It did me more
g ood Man all the other medicines I had
ied, put together.
My friends began asking me why I
looked so well, and I told them about
Cardui. Several are now taking it."
Do you, lady reader, suffer from any
of the ailments due to womanly trouble
such as headache, backache, sideache
sleeplessness, and that everlastingly tired
feeling?
If so t let ui urge you to give Cardui a
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p*i*
SENATE PROTECTS
TOM PARADES
Passes Bill to Prevent Disorders
Such as Happened to Wash
ington Procession.
. i.: * U *K C i wu iu give v^araui a
! r,al - we feel confident it will help you,
hrther i ust as it has a million other women in
the past half century.
Begin taking Cardui to-day. You
won’t regret it. AU druggists.
KV,y, «.■' Chauueesa Median. Cr. Udi.i-
Advisory D#Dt. ChatUnoeM. Tann.. far StttUl
Initruttitni onrour cast and 64-paga book. "Hama
Treatment for Woman,” in plain wrapper N.C. 1*4
JUDGE SPEED'S REPLY
TO DE DEJOY NEXT WEEK
GIRLS! GIRLS! TRY IT,
BEAUTIFY YOUR HAIR
Make it thick, glossy, wavy, luxuriant
and remove dandruff—Real
surprise for yon.
Your hair becomes light, wavy
fluffy, abundant and appears as soft,
lustrous and beautiful as a young
J irl’s after a “Danderine hair cleanse.
ust try this—moisten a cloth with a
little Danderine and carefully draw it
through your hair, taking one small
strand at a time. This will cleanse
the hair of dust, dirt and excessive oil
and in just a few moments you have
doubled the beauty of your hair.
Besides beautifying the hair at once
Danderino dissolves every particle of
dandruff; cleanses, purefies and invig
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ut what will please you most will
be after a few week’s use when you
will actually see new hair—fine and
downy at first—yes—but really new
hair growing all over the scalp. If
you care for pretty, soft hair and lots
of it surely get a 25 cent bottle of
Knowlton’s Danderine from any drug
gist or toilet counter, and just try It.
(Ad.)
able for varsity and freshman athletic
teams. Cornell is second and Colum
bia third. The enrollment of athletic
material, if it may be termed as such,
as follows: Michigan, 5,193; Cor
nell, 4,500; Pennsylvania, 3,700; Co
lumbia. 3,517; Harvard 3,253; Wiscon
sin, 2,730; Yale, 2,500; Illinois, 2,400;
Minnesota, 1,638; Princeton, 1,325, and
Dartmouth, 1,297.
(Special to The Herald)
Atlanta, February 10.—Judge An
drew J. Cobb, of Athens, who is acting
as counsel for United States Judge
Emory Speer, was in Atlanta this
morning. Judge Cobb stated to news
paper men that Judge Speer and oth
ers of his counsel are busily engaged
at Macon in preparing Judge Speer’s
reply to the many serious charges
made by witnesses who testified
against him before the congressional
sub-committee at Macon and Savan
nah.
Judge Cobb says the reply will
probably be completed, in his opinion,
about Thursday or Friday of next
week. “*
Turkey has given English capital
ists contracts to reorganize its naval
arsenals and dockyards with all the
latest appliances known to naval con
struction.
To prevent a repetition in the fu
ture of such disorders as marked the
woman's suffrage parade in Washing
ton, March 3 last, the senate last
week passed the bill introduced by
Senator Jones of Washington, de
signed to regulate street traffic in
Washington during parades, says The
Woman’s Journal.
Senator Jones was chairman of the
sub-committee which made an ex
haustive investigation into the cause
of the disorders which occurred during i
the suffrage parade.
The bill would empower the dis
trict commissioners to slop all street
cars, vehicles and pedestrians in the
streets for which parade permits are
granted. The right of pedestrians,
however, to use the sidewalks during
• parade would nut be interfered with
under the measure.
Why doesn’t some Federal League
manager sign up the Ahkoond of
Swat ?-—Ex.
AMERICAN STATE BANK
Broad Street, Athens, Ga.
Farmers and those who will desire advances
next Spring should have accounts with the Bank
during the fall and winter.
Loans will be made in proportion to balances
and responsibility.
DEPOSIT NOW.
R. W. Sixer, Cashier. H. C. Erwin, V. P. Jno. J. Wilkin*, Pres.
Bright Bargains in Wants
Trade in Athens.
The Joy Of
Ceiaing Mofherheod
A Wonderful Remedy That U a Natural
Aid and Relieves the Tension.
Mother’! Friend ia the onlj remedy
known that ta able to reach all the different
parts involved. It is
a penetrating external
application after the
formula of a noted
family doctor, and lu
bricates every muscle,
nerve, tissue or ten
don involved.
By it£ daily use
there will be no pain,
no diatress. no nausea,
no danger of laceration or other accident,
and the period will be one of supreme com
fort and joyful anticipation.
Mother's Friend ia one of the greatest
of all helpful influences, for it robs child
birth of all its agonies and dangers, dispels
nil the doubt and dread, all sense of fenr,
and thus enables the mind and body to
nwait the greatest event ia a woman’s life
with uatrammrlad gladness.
You will, find it on sals at all drug stores
at $1.00 a bottle, or the druggist will gladly
let It for you. Mother’s Friend Is prepared
only by the Brmdfield Regulator Co., 237
Lamar Bids., Atlanta, Ga., who will mail
an inatructive book to expectant mothers.
Write for it to-dav.
STARES FOB RENT
STORES NUMBERS 264 AND 288
Lumpkin Street
"For Rent: Possession Immedi
ately. Rents reasonable to good
tenants.
APPLY
E. W. Carroll, Bus. Mgr,
Athens Herald
According to statistics recently
compiled by the Princeton University
Faculty Athletic Committee, Michigan
leads in the number of students avail-
Graduate Athletic Manager War-
•n Bovard. of the University of
Southern California, has received
word from the Oxford University
Rugby Football Association that the
English varsity teams will he glad to
play a series of matches with the
Southern Californian team next win
ter. In order to make the trip to
England at least a month’s absence
from college would be necessary. If
the series is arranged the invasion
will be undertaken during the Christ
mas holiday period.
reuse the standard of perform-
f - , lf , th <? Orange and Black is to
. . better than ninth place which
t r,nc eton’s mark as a result of the
[’" mu collected »t Cambridge in
intcrcollegiates last May.
' |u c s tion of the scene of the
-eadv'V my ' N * Vy foot *»»H Same j, »1-
t; v ,.y , ‘"It discussed by representa-
the ,wo academies.' The pro-
-t*H " P ' ay the same •“ the Yale
ta , m ' wh ‘ch will hold 60,000 spec-
ls rec eiving favorable conaid-
JJ ** " e,t Point but it ia said
iA , e N *vy will not agree upon the
* tri * ** Haven. Lieut. D. P.
VALUE RECEIVED
CORRECT DEFINITION
INVESTMENT IN MAXWELL CARS
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$725.00
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$1060.00
$1975.00
4 4
THE MYSTERY
OF THE
BOULE CABINET”
The Herald’s New Serial Story
Appears on Page Six
T
FULL
O D A Y
OF THRILLS
Ill fact a literary miner would say of “The Boule Cabinet”
that “It pans out a big percentage of thrills.” The hand of
fate deals strange cards in a game in which the poison of the
Medici and the seventeenth century cabinet of Mme. deMon-
tespan play a tragic part in twentieth century New York.
Read the opening chapters
.... In Today’s Herald
•I