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TIIE ATHENS. GA.. HEHALB
TUESDAY. JANUARY 2, 1923.
RT NEWS
%
oALLEN M. WOODALL
GRID STAR MAY TURN WRESTLER
Jennings Will
Succeed McGraw
As Manager
NEW YORK. — if Charles
Stoneham, principal-owner. ql tbe..
New York. Giants, decides to quit
baseball ana John McGrow be
comes president of the club, it
means .that'Hughey Jennings will
act. as'manager. ’
It is said that McGrow’s signing
of Jennings as his assistant'was
merely a forerunner of- wfint be
had in store for th*» former De
troit man iger, the ultimate lead-
; dershio of the Giants.
Jennings and McGraw played tor
gc-ther on the old Baltimore Orioles
They are of the same^ school, the
real fighters. Jennings knows the
McGraw style better than* any
* other basebeall manager in the
i country. Serving as McG raw’s as
sistant for the pas'; few years has
merely served to polish Jennings
jup. v. _ -* *
Stoneham, it is said, intends to
retire from baseball to go back
into the racing game. &uch ac
tion on hia .part means McGrow
for the presidency of the club and
Jennings as manager.
-within a few:ip»huu_ _
coroner’s jury f Monday declared
Famous Pitcher
Has No Desire to
Be Manager
&-] Lewis. the heavyweight champion.
MAY; TURN,
WRESTLER
“Red’* Roberts of Centre coll
has for throo years, been bne of tl
fling, according to McMillen
ad much to do with his success on
* gridiron this j'ear. A year agof
was-good but not a great player.
At Gie close of the football sea-
last year McMillen took up
stlihs-jind developed into the
i 4 champion. The art of wres-
earned McMillen how to use
i, legs and body to their
advantage. < .
i fall McMillen brought wres-
; tactics into play on the grid-
. Jim bus’s he did everything
L-actually hold. He greapy nut-|
most'talked-about athletes in col
lege football. Last season * marked
the close of his football days?
During his career at Centre Rob
erts has boon showered with about
every honor that can.possibiy c .me
to an athlete. He has been in the
headlines of every paper in the
country. He has been an All-Amer
ica selection.
It is now the ambition of “Red”
Roberts, famous college football
player, to become a professional
wrestler.
HAS GOOD *
CHANCE " '
Lewis, who is a KentuckianV-
knows Roberts well, bas wrestled
in private with the Centre star, and
has this to say of'“Red’s” ambi
tion:
“Rotbrts might make a good man.
He hau tbe weight, speed and cour
age. 'In addition, he has a fair Idea
of the wrestling art.
. “A twisted bone in his left fore
arm might possibly handicap him.
The arm was broken playing /oot-
ball and apparently set improper-
WASHINGTON. D. C. — It is
said that Walter Johnson, star
pitcher of the Washington team,
uas considered for the managerial
lob of that club before Donle Bush
as selected.
While the management of th«
club was not offered to Jobin.
according to the, inside dope, he
was felt out on the proposition.
“When I am through pitching I
am done with . baseball." Is the
way Johnson answered- the ques
tion as to whether or not he had
any managerial ambitions.
. “A pitcher wor-les only part of
,the time, the manager all the
time," opines Waiter. “I have no
desire to be a big league manager.
When my pitching no longer pass
es muster I want to go back on
the farm.”
the killing of Paul Smith, yard
master at the S. A, L. railroad was
justified, Harvey H. Seagravcs,
who shot Smith, was confined in
Glurkc ,county .fall bn awarrant
charging murder.
. Seagraves a night watchman for
:tho S. A. L., admitted shooting
Smith Sunday night, claiming
self defense.
The warrant charging Seagraves
with murder emanated from the
court of Justice Milton Thomas at
the instance of Mr. Smith’s broth
er-in-law F. G. Strother. .
The preliminary hearing will he
held Thursday morning at
o’clock before Justice Thomas.
JURY
VERDICT
The verdict of the coroners jury
was as follows: >
“We the jury, empaneled and
sworn to investigate the deqth of
Paul Smith find that he came to
his death by a pistol shot in his
left breast at the hands of H. H.
Seagraves and that the same was
justifiable.
‘Roberts says the injury i*3esn’t
bother him, that the broken ana is
strong as the good one, so it
Long Rons Produce
Thrill; Here Are
Football’s B e s
was told" to sec HarcMHuImc for
3 1 at Be? tlia * not* ’know' aVou? Ihe
tatoes or any other crop, was
not worth: hearing.1 -
Mr. Hulme has now. stafgUn
Jagainst Mr. Smith that he stole a Smith was drinking at that time,"
I quantity of cigarettes -in iriterJt'ate said Mr: Ross: "Hi' told ’ hie' hs
‘shipment, and foiv which he-was'was Cclebratins and when I said
under indictment in federal court t was going to O. s. a
at the time pt his death. ! raid he would like .to 0..8. Hard
Tl}e case against .us was dU-1 Harvey." "O. S." is -.lie- abbre-
inissed when .he preliminary i viation for “repartins out
hearing w-as held liofire. linseed I . .
States Comissioner W. C. Co nett. I, , u , , . .
but thq.fedeial gW jury later ♦ m dc 1 lon l dan l t
returned an indictment. statemont at the l»egiuning of the.
ONLY. ONE nroner-s inquest sur‘-
WITNESS I repeated it NIonuay.
| John B. Gamble and Judge
Only one person, Fred Lewis a \ George C. Thomas represented
n$gro, witnessed the shooting ac- i SeaLi^vcs at. the hearing ^nd
cording to. testiony at the trial. I amar C. Rucker, Solieifor Gen-
py Jarrctt came ( out of ( the wait- j ,ral W. o.~Dcan..
Ing room gt the S. A.. .L. depot STARTED
about the time the sliot Was !ir£d | A T . .
ana saw the’wounded'tnan - reel Mr. Seagraves *es*ifiid that Mr.
and fall; he stated. $Ie Said thft j Sm hh met him Sunday night near < Ricos, smooth and beautiful po-
shooting occured about midway i the depot,, After -remarking that' tatoes, all about the same size*'iff
of the building. The negro do-1 he thought-Mr. Seagraves was fact, whqn *.he c^op is gathered the
cla red jjfut before the shooting dead add ;f be* wasn't ho ought to potatoes are sorted and if one Is
Mr. Smith told him he'was '■‘•rff-P'-Ci- Mr. jSmi^i started toward him, not exactly ripe or the least de
ter* Mr. Seagraves and intendedj stqted fhe .defendant. .“1 am g'ing | fected it is fed to the horses '*cfr
kiling him. The nejro claims he Sm ^h is said to j bogs. The result is ihat the 1 ola-
piilling his jtoes grown by Mr.
his: -two . ary. houses,„ some is^cep
or eight thousand bushels of ’ po
tatoes, aryl have marketed iv groat
marfy. These dry houses art* the
latest thing in that line, asf shown
coroner’s inquest Sunday night h jby the fact that you cannot find
a single decayed tuber, but all are
sound. The average temperaturs in
these houses is kept around 50 de
grees, and the potatoes .stqrodfTPi
crates; The buildings are thorouh-
ly aired and ventilated, rfh<r*th'e
crates arranged in ro w, efr rth:it
they can be kept, carefully' - in-
spec teds per. ted. They are the Porto
ran at the sound of the. explosion
. -have cried. “He was
F. I. COILE
IS FOREMAN
of the cartridge.
J. L. King, rb&cmnster of the S.
A. L.. COarlie Ross, telegraph dis
patcher for the S. ( A. L., J. P.
Curry, policeman, John Gleason,
R. C. Cum*, depot freight agent
for the some railroad and Fred
Fambrough all sworn that Smith
threatened to kill Seagraves in
their presence. Mr. Curry declar
ed Smith told him last spring that
Seagraves hod accused him un
justly of the cigarette theft and
he would hill him for it.
Policeman Curry testified that
Mr. Smith stopped him one night
when he was at the depot with
Mr. Seagraves. Mr. Curry said Mr
Smith cui sed Mr. Seagraves, who
walked on when Mr. 0 ilth ac-
liaml out; Of his overeat pocket ma «d the highest -w
aact I cried.'Paul atop." sam Mr. . vllPtl a person i.
Seagraves said and he fir d.
Mr. Smith
ferencc between one «of htn
he jury was composed of Mr.
Code, R. P. Weatherly, E. T.
Wood. J. M. Nelms, Claude Craft
and Henry Smith. Judge C. N.
Weatherly, coroner for Clarke
county, presided.
The inquiry consumed thp great
er part of two hours and the jury
was out about twenty-five minutes
aftef the testimony was given*.
It developed at the coroner’s
hearing that Mr. ■ Smith had
threatened to kill Mr. Seagraves
cn numerous occasions. The enmity
against Mr* Seagraves was said to
have grown out of charges made
,M r * Smith was employed for tocs> groVm from sel^Ud seed
‘, L L ’. !t " a * s and then cured in a dry kiln, r.s
ft Tt l. WOOd \. a , 1 “: lC, r“’' is.between a faulty apple at d a
stated, that he searched the body 1 '
A f tho llPnd TYlfln find fniin.l ....
ty apple
of the dead man and found n'q “‘-.Mr. Huiny is., scl'.mpr his
weapons. The ee".reh ^ to . t . he St0 . ,eS ° E Athen »
about thirty minutes after :
Seagraves telephoned tlie polire
Mr. Harold
.... the local demand takes r ..
| tire crop and he wants to' estab-
Jlish .a record for his tubes at home
{before- shipping.
J Mr. Hulnie tells me he beds GOO
__ J bushels, and his seed arc* ca refill-
Hulme S Farm se * ccte ^- ^ a potato is the least
1UUUV O a (U 111 /Infnntiufl it ig
costed his ccinpanion. Mr. Smith encouraging trips I ever took was
threatened to kill Seagravos at ’ last Saturday with Mr. Harold
lh ri. j 1 ”™ ac * !ord *? ff to ^ r - ^ ur 7 y * j Hulraejjto his beautiful and' mod-
Fred b ambrough claimed that e rn farm about six miles from
Mr. Smith tcld him one. one oc- j Athens, ' near Wiiiterville. My
Lurnbropgh ^cliief mission was to investigate
casion he wished
could get Mr, Seagraves .job. Th«
same threat ’was again made, ac
cording to Mr. Fambrough, win
said he told Mr. Seagraves t«
“keep his eyes open.”
defective it is thrown aside. And
.this inspection is kept up uiitll'the
(BY T. LARRY' GANTT) crop is gathcredi If a- slip or hill
One of the most_ interesting and l shows the sign of any disease pe
culiar to the potato, it is removed.
And another fact I learned from
Mr. Hulme. Every potato has. ,a
yellow and a white end. Before
Redding each potato is cut in half
and the white end feed
' Charlie Ron, dispatcher ?o the
S. A. L., stated he saw Mr. Smith
Sunday afternoon. “I think Air.
Will football ability make a great might not interfere with him on tbe
wrestler as,vwrestling has made
McMillen a great-football pfny^.
It is possible that upon bis grado
nation from college Roberts will be
taken in hand by Ed “Strangler’
mat *~
- * “I - hope Roberts’ definitely de
cides to take up the game. The ad
vent of tbe college athlete into tbe
8port is certain to elevate lL*
iRGIA BASKET TEAM IS WINNER _.
AGAIN; JACKSONVmi “Y” QUINTET
LOSES TO RED AND BLACK, 30 TO 27 v
■ ‘ JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — (Special to Banner^
$<]U)-Cdach Stegeman’s University of Georgia Dr s v Sanfora ^ teturned
ketball team nosed out the local Y. M. C. A. &ve Y o,k where he attena-
Monday night in the Closing minutes of one of the annual meeting ot the n,-
fastest ghmes which as elver been* staged before ImmSm t£w£*T1S-
■icksonville fans. jthe prominent officials taking
- The final score was 30 to 2T and victory only de-| pa £. Sanford wa# ^ w-
led upon the Ked and Black lh the last minute emsor of the Fourth district.
When “Chuck” Palmer.. North-
western halfback, picked up a
Minnesota fumble behind his own
go^I and sprinted 102 yards for a
touchdown in the recent game with
Minnesota, he. not only saved his
team from defeat but incidentally
made football history. The game
ended a 7 to 7 tfe.
For Palmer's dash ranks as the
lodgeat ever turned in on a rer
coyered fumble in. intercollegiate
play. It was also one of the long-
esfTcanters of any* kind yet made
during a college battle on -the
grldlrOn.
In fact, only four times.lias Pal
mer’s feat been surpassed- in the
history of the game. And one of
t^ese was hung up wheh the ac
tual playing field was HO yards
in length and the. ' lOi-yard . end
zones were not in vogue.
To McCaa of Lafayette goes the
honor of putting on the longest I
HUNDREDS ATTEND NEW YEAR’S
RECEPTION GIVEN LAST NIGHT
BY MEMBERS OF WOMAN’S CLUB
Several hundred Athenians at- E. Proctor; chairman house cpm-
tnndcd the big New YegrVrecep- “ *'**''" %r — * °
tion given at the Woman's Club
Monday night, invitations to mem-
bands and various civjy organiza-
Ivers of the club and their hus-
t&ns being tendered by the new
president, Mrs. . Lamar C. Rucker.
The spacious rooms of the club
i period >
half of the contest.
)l)ably tlie outstanding feature I
tko groat defense which the
‘ , Five presented to Georgia
first half of the game. The
ended with the count
in favor ot Jacksonville,
guards allowing the visi
on© field goaL
during this period re-
S to 3 for fully five
utes beloro either team could
di I ho net
D AND JAKE
ARE STARS . . I. r .
Kd Gurr and Butler scored ail ot
corgla’s points, the former cag-
ig seven field goals and a half
ozen fouls for .a total of twenty
Ints while Butler shot five goals
mi the field in the second half.
The entire “Y” team played a
erling caliber of ball. Jasper
es and Ted Reed at forwards
the majority of the goal shoot-
Charies Keeney at cen-
ed the floor liko a blank
Simpson and Ted Berg
sards proved tough prob-
the Georgia scoring ma-
solve.
the sweet • potato business, and and only the yellow, end (ip.lnnieii.
which ■ is a profitable new indus-1 By this means a yo’low and sweet-
try for our farmers. j er potato is produced. He out
The sweet potato is one of the the slips, for to grow prftatMs
cld standard food crops of the I from vines they deteriorate, :■ 4ml
South, grown in the old fashioned 1 Mr. Hulme takes the sunie care
way; and preserved in banks. The! and pains in improving his sweet
others after being dug were heap- potatoes as his seed corn and cot
ed up in some inclosed spot unit' ton. The result of all his citre is
the house, then first covered with' that the potatoes grown by Mr,
corn-stalks and u layer of dirt!Hulme, pronounced the finest on
banked up into a mound. Some- the market, sad dealers demand
times the potatoes kept allright,them. There is as much difference
and at others they rotted. No jin the sweet potato, as in anwotn-
care was given in selecting seed er .vegetable or fruit. If yomdoubt
but the little strings were kebt I this tell your grocer that you
for this purpose. * ‘want the Hulme potatoes and then
CHANGE TAKES it test for yourself.
PLACE MR. HULMES’
A, revolutionizing change has'^ARM . • ■ ,,to
taken place in the manner of se- Mr. Hulme, in tedding his potat
lectirig seed for bedding, the cul
tivation, diggilng, sorting jand
BE
VUAL EVENT
CAN YOU
BEAT THIS?
materialize.
is the second victory of tlio
. *asou for the Athens team. In
; their initial game against the
j yavailnali “Y” • Saturday’ niglit
‘tliev won handily.
«,EAVE FOR -
kLBANY TUESDAY
The squad will leave Tuesday
Corning for Albany where they
y the Y. M. C- A. team there
light. A herd gsmo is expected
j Stor' manites, it being ro-
ibonii that the Dougherty
outfits gained a recent de-
over the strong Mercer five
Macon team’s home floor.
bio that the Georgia]
can yp v u. beat this
The- typewriter agent was
talking.
“Well, sir, how do you like
your Remingwood?”
“It’s, wonderful” was the en
thusiastic, reply, „. ....
“Would you mind,” asked the.
agent, “giving me a llttlp tes-
timonlal to that effect7”
“Certalntly not” was the re
sponse* mf'dbvjt gladly.”
Seating himself at the ma
chine, he pounded out the fol
lowing:
Aafteb using, thee atype-
writer for thre month an d
Over. I unhessitatinly pro
noun ce it tebo al ad more
than the M anufacturers
claijn? for. it. Durinb the tim e
in myy possession i$ thre
moyths i t hass mor e th an
paid lor itse”f in th e Saving
off tim e anD-laborr.
ich embraces the south and in
addition to this honor he was plac
ed on the Executive committee | from scrimmage.
il als^ on the committee of five
to nominate the various rules
committees.
mittee, Mrs. A. S. Parker; chair
man program committee, Mrs.
Harrie Dews; chairman ways and; separating the. tubers and ther.
means, Mrs. Rufc Turner;, chair--curing in a regular dry house. Not
man publicity, Mrs. Milton Parni-'only was.Jthe ^quality of the po-
gan: chairman library, Mrs. ^ub-j^tQ improved, but they are
bard McIIatton; chairman child ] smoother,, free from any disease,
welfare, Mrs. Clinton Bryant;land preserved with all.of the
hpusevon Prince avenue were lav- j chairman music .committee, -j^rs. j sugoL. qpd.) other-..qualities, intact,
ishly decorated for the occasion I John Morris; * chairman fine arts,] If you will try m potato raised in
and refreshments were served. [Mrs. R. P. Stephens, parliamcn-'the old way with tubers properly
tarian, Mrs. Geaald Green;»chair-(produced and preserved by mod-
man finance committee, A. . S.jem methods you will see a differ-
Parker: chairmen of arraiigements,jence in quality and flavor. The
Mrs. Simon Michael, Mrs, J. H. j sweet potato is one of the most
Darwin; chairman grounds, Mrs. j nutricious. palatable and cheanest
K. K. Lumpkin; chairmen social'articles of food produced and they
committee, Mrs. Simon Michael’ *
and Mrs.' .J E. Talmadge: .
ELABORATE
EVENT
The event was- one of the most
elaborate end inspiring of the win
ter season and one in which many
joined to celebrate the New Year,
Adding to the interest and al
ready handsome adornments of
the home were many priceless
less heillooms of silver, glass and
brass, loaned by members and
friends of the club, these artistical
disposed . about the rooms.
OFFICERS
OF CLUB
_ . _ . Mrs. Frank Lipscomb and Mrs.
splint, for in 1009 he romped 110 j Stephen Upsjon presided over the
yards through the entire Swarth- Ilea table, arid Mrs. Frank Harde-
more eleven for a touchdown. Ob- jman were in charge of the coffee
For the first time in history the
south was given recognition on
thesq committees when Coach H.
J.; Stegeman of Georgia was put
on tbe important football rules
committee and Coach TT. A. Alex
ander of Tech was placed on the
swimming rules committee.
The comittee that Coach Stege-
jrian is. a member of will meet
again in New York the latter part
of. March and formulate rules for
the grid game next fall.
he made an annual event • Bantams Ready
of Coaches.Stegeman and 4 — •-
For Ten Rounds
INDIANAPOLIS.—Bud f«sWK
of Terre Haute, arid Bcr.n.v Vogel
Of Milwaukee, ^bantair.r.,
ccd,. themselves aj be*n * . .snlenr
did condition fqr thea- 10 *:ound
foxing contest here I.I nday nftcv-
noon. A victory4 mear.. i..ui \ior
Taylor as ho 'has bus*, promised a
match ’ with Pahcho , Villa, ‘ fly
weight champion* if he wins.
Two other 10 round Contests are
on the program.’
Dr. Sanford states that the next
meeting may come South,
was in favor of Atlanta but New
Orleans also bid for the meeting
and due to the fact that it is more
convenient to the west may he se
lected a the meeting place, that is
It New- York is abandoned this
year.
Coach Stegeman did not return
with Dr. Sanford but went to Jack
Bonville, Fla., to join the basket
ball team. r \
viously this gallop can never be urns, other members of the club
beaten. McCaa's run was all t.hb ‘acting pi hostesses and assisting
more unique in that it was. made in receiving.
With Mrs. Rucker in the receiv-
Suelling and Mrs. T. F, Green, past
ing line were Mrs. Charles M.
presidents and the executive
board:
Vice President, Mrs.
Ritchie; honorary vice president,
Mrs. John E. Talmadge, Jr.; treas
urer, Mrs- W. D. Beacham, secre
tary, Mrs. S. V. Sanford; corres
ponding secretary, # Mrs. R. P.
Brooks, chairman educational com-
Gray of Ober)in comes next, re- I
turning a Cornell punt 109 - yard s |
for a tally In 1908. In 1912 Erehart
of Indiana got past the whole Iowa
aggregation for 108 yards ? and a
touchdown, while m i904 Walter
Eckertiall, University or Chic&g
star, carried a Wisconsin kick^ofi
back 106 yards for a score. These'
are the best bits of ball toting in
the game’s history with ^Palmer’s
sensational dash ranking next in
line.
Back in 1&03 Charles Dillon of
the Carlisle Indians also made a
sprint of 105 yards in the gpme
with Harvard. However, it was on
a rather technical play, though
without a doubt it was the oddest
piece of work ever, pulled on a foot
ball field. The Redskin star grab
bed a Crimson kick-off and dash
ed down the sidelines, unmolested,
to the goal line. 105 yards away.
The ball had been secreted in. a
specially prepared “nest” in the
back of Dillon’s jersey, and the
funner was way past mid-.field ere
the ruse wras detected. Incidental
ly cbe trick won the game for
Carlisle.
There have been' many famous
runs up to and around 100 yards,
but those mentioned above stand
out a« tbe feature sprints thus
toes, puts down six inches ^of
ptable manure and on this about
an inch of soil. Then the potatoes
are placed in rows and lightly
covered with earth. He uses about
200 pounds of fertilizer to t the
acre. I asked Mr. Hulme about ^hc
yield of potatoes. He said his crop ^
averaged from 100 to 125 bushels
per* acre and he considered it’ the
most profitbale crop a farmer caij,
grow, for the potato requires less
work than anything else a farmer
can plant. He gathers his potato?*
Just before frost and says one
must be a judge as to when they
are ripe. -
In a future article I will wjiije
about Hulme’s farming operatioria,
and it will read like a fairy tale v
Mrs. Burnett Is ,;
Buried Monday
should be more generally con
sumed. As oi) old farmer with
large family of children once re- ;
marked to me. “I raise them young
’uns mostly on sweet potatoes.
Give a hungry youngster a baked
potato and it is both meat and
bread, and the most filling fast
reviving an old custom of meeting thing you can eat.” And this is un- Mrs. Susie Burn?tt, 45, died«*at
friends on this first day of the ‘ questionably true. \ her home in Oglethorpe ebrihty
year md expressing a wish for j In this sketch I shall only touch J near Berkley Saturday afternoon
their happiness, etc. It is a tradi-' on the sweet potato part of the at one o’clock following an illness
tion resurrected by the Athens | Huimes farm and in fnture articles j of a few days duration.
Woman’s Club which gave pleas- j tell about the most progressive) Funeral services were heldSlrii-
ure to many of the people of Ath- and finest farm I have ever visited! day from \ the New Franklin
ens. and an opportunity to visit I That little trip was surely a rev- Christian' church and interii|fent
in the handsome club quarters. | elation to me and will tje to any
Mrs. Rucker begins ber admin- j one who will visit 'this modern
istration under the brightest aus- and intensive farm of some '600
pices and the bringing together in acres. All in the highest state of
such a democratic way the memH cultivation and productiveness,
bers and . their friends on New i TALKS WITH
mittee, Mrs. ; E. R. Hodgson, Jr.;’Year’s Eve augers well for the HAROLD HULME
chairman thrift committee, Mrs. success of her first year as headj I have‘been several times ro-
O. W Davison chairmen household | 0 f the club which stands high asjquesteji to investigate and write
economics, Mrs. T. W. Reed, Miss a leader* and a community center, up the sweet potato business and
followed in the church cemetery.
Bernstein Brothers, funeral direc
tors, were in charge.
Mrs. Burnett, who was a native
of Franklin county, is survived by
her husband, J. W. Burnett, two
daughters, Mrs. Grace Crow, an|I
Mrs. Gladys Young; and thrdte
kons, Ralph’, Verner and Frank
Burnett.
Mrs. Bailey Laid
To Rest Sunday
ive Meets
Jacksonville
Red and Black quintet is
ng the Jacksonville “Y”
in Jacksonville Monday
Tuesday night and Albany
_n will be played and W^dnes-
y Camp Benning Is the oppon-
t in Columbus. .
Keeler, Veteran Ball
Player Who Is Dead,
Praised By Followers
Of Southern
G ridders
Down Easterners In Rose
vBowl Monday.
ROSE BOWL, Pasadena, Califor-
riia—The University of Southern
California football team defeated
the Pennsylvania, State eleven
here Monday afternoon, fourteen;to
_ - (,th£ee.
i NEW YORK — .Old time base- ' T h e Nittany Lions held the
.ball lovers declared Tuesday that. Western Trojans during the first
a fitting appreciation that jnight j.period, but duripg_lhe remainder
be chiseled Into the monument of j 0 f the contest, *he Californians
“We Willie” Keeler who died at- gained almost at will through the
his Brooklyn homa Monday, could Fenn S’tate line. . c -
far.
lie: **JIe hit ’<
Keller’s stam
one of the
l»al!. He
•‘choked” ant
slim body,
MILLINERY
FOR DERUTANTES
ow Taffeta Is a favorite ma-
danc-ing frocks, partic- batters' deadline,
is combined with ed only his head I
ibons. _ I «r.
. Funeral services' for Mrs. ■ Em
ma Bailey, age Co, who died at her
homo, on Cleveland avenue Satur
day afternoon, were held from the
residence Sunday afternoon:
Rbv. M. : S’. Williams^; ot the
Young Harris Memorial church,
officiated. and interment- follow
ed in tbe . Oconee cemetery.. Beru-
stein Brothers, funeral directors,
were in charge. .... ,
. The following men acted as pall
bearers; Ob<T Smith, M. H. Sprat-
ling, W. F. Whitehead, G. C. Mor
gan, W. JR. Boyd, and W. B.
Brown. . -. . * *^*
Mrs. Bailey,, who was an unusu
ally lovable lady,- is survivedI - by t
her husband, R. E. Bai]ey, and \
iMn?,-M. N-.Dapiel* of Bogart, Mrs.
T. G. Chandler, of SL Elmo, Tenn., j
I Mrs. M. R. Huff and Miss Salliql
j Bailey, of Athens f
hats are quite the rage ofj « »
moment: Usually they are I EMBROIDERED TAFFETA
in one color,, though we| Embroideretl taffeta is being
find them embroidered featured on many spring frocks. It
peasant eol-|is particularly effective on tiered
jtkirts, or tunic models. £$91 BDOBHIHHIH