Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TWELVE
AMERICUS HIGH
PLAYS6-6TIEON
CUTHBERT FIELD
The Americus High School football
ieam returned home Saturday morn
ing from Cuthbert, where they play
ed a town team Friday afternoon to
* 6-6 tie. Americus High was to
have met the Cuthbert High school
team, but a misunderstanding in the
preliminary arrangements was dis
covered after they arrived there, and
as a consequpence they faced a team
composed of men of various ages and
football experience.
Americus scored a touchdown in
the first quarter and Cuthbert in the
third. Neither side kicked goal. The
first and third periods were of 12
minutes each and the second and
fourth 10 minutes each. The con- '
test was featured by a number of
spectacular long runs, and numerous !
attempts at forward passing, in '
which Cuthbert had slightly the bet- j
ter of it. Cuthbert High school will I,
play here Nov. 14.
Following is the Hne-up, followed!
by a summary of the detail:
A. H. S. CUTHBERT
Bivins, c Sharkey, c
Dudley, rg Martin, rg
Cobb, lg Floyd, Ig
Easterlin, rt Atkins, rt
Giddings, It Sentell, P
Clark, le Standford, le
Barton, re Lanier, D., re
Bind, Ih Larbrough, Ih
Johnson, qb Bigham, qb
Gardner, fb Dunn, fb
Hines, sub Sealey, sub
Hammond, sub Hightower, sub
Referee, Woodruff; Umpire, Tay
lor; Time Keepers, Sharley and
Baugh.
f First Quarter.
Americus won the toss and chose
to defend the west goal. Cuthbert
kicked off to Americus’ 30-yd line.
Cobb received and carired the ball to
the 50-yd line. Gardner plunged
through the line for 6 yds. Gard
ner made an end run for 20 yds.
Gardner fumbled, losing 10 yds.
Americus fumbled /gain, losing 4
yds. On an incompleted forward
pass the ball went over on downs.
Cuthbert gained 1 yd. on a line
back, then another the same way.’
< j ' : l *nH 1 |||h ■ WB3SBW® Y
:U!i J 2 ; ■' liujif^HLUlwJllftJii
i, and Save the
I Retailer’s Profit S
A trial will convince you. If you are not Z.'Z
a^re convinced that our suits and overcoats ?ig
gffi are absolutely the best values in town, all we j||
H? ask or invite you to do is give us a trial or pay us a .’ ? |
visit at one of our stores, |||
for we feel sure an in- ,%a
||| T-lu/ \ spection of our immense
SfflvVK ' stocks will convince you
that, because we are man - »|g
J\ I ' l, f ac^urers > we save you
/'/Ik. at ’east $lO on every suit ||g
Hl w|| or overcoat -
| Men’s&Young |
ISS IjF Men’s New 1
Iwf Fa " SUiTS I
fl Snappy Suits & O’coats I
While merchants throughout the country are complain- am
ing that they have not got enough clothes to sell and are Sg|
MSI co r,, >ur siorks are bigger and our «S|
values greater than ever before.
I $22 $25.530 $35 I
I can?s $3.95, $4.95, $5.95 1
|||| Open Evenings Until 8 o’clock. Saturdays Until 11 o’clock ||||
K H
|H Americus, Georgia.
m
Cotton Avenue and Forsyth St ||
L
When Your Clothes Need To Be Pressed or Cleaned Just Phone 749. The O. K. Pressing Shoo. Charlie Pavne. Mot.
Cuthbert lost 6 yds on end run. An
attempted forward pass failed and
the ball went over on downs.
Americus failed to complete for
ward pass. Gardner gained 15 yds.
lon an end run. Bond made no gam
i on end run. Johnson caught a for
ward pass and ran 25 yds. for a
touchdown. Americus lost her
chance for goal by allowing the ball
| to touch ground before being kick
ed out.
Ameficus kicked off to Cuthbert’s
ten-yd. line and Cuthbert returned
the ball to the 30-yd. line. Cuthbert
made a line buck for no gain, tried
another buck for no gain, then gained
10 yds. on a forward pass. A line
buck netted no gain. Another for
ward pass netted 15 yds. End of
j first quarter.
Second Quarter.
Cuthbert’s ball. A line buck gains
. 4 yds. An attempt at a forward
pass failed. A line buck gained 3
. yds. Cuthbert lost the ball on a
. line buck.
Americus’ ball on her 20-yd. line,
i Clark lost 3 yards on an end run.
jincomplete forward pass. Gardner
made 15 yards around right end. An-!
other forward pass fails. Gardner
fumbled and lost 3 yds, then gained
8 yds. Gardner punted.
Cuthbert’s ball on her 40-yd line.
Cuthbert gained 5 yds on a line i
, j buck. A fumble cost 2 yards, an
i end run resulted in no gain. The
ball went over as the second quarter
> ended.
Third Quarter.
Americus kicked off and Clark i
downed the runner. Cuthbert’s end j
1 run made 5 yds. Another made no i
1 gain. Clark made a good tackle. A ;
i forward pass netted 10 yds. Ameri-■
1 cus was penalized 15 yds. for hold
-1 ing. Anther attempt at forward
pass failed. Cuthbert gained 9 yds. j
on an end run, putting the ball on I
Americus’ 5-yd. line. Cuthbert made
i touchdown around right end, but
| missed goal.
Cuthbert kicked off to Bond, who 1
returned the ball 15 yds. Bolton’s
j end run made 2 yds. A forward pass j
ifailed. Americus fumbled, but John-!
son recovered. Gardner gained 6;
I yds. Bolton gained 3 yds. Gardner j
gained 3 yds. Bond gained 6 yds.
Fourth Quarter.
Americus’ ball. Gardner gained 4
yds. on an end run. ‘ Americus was
penalized 5 yds. for off-side. An in
complete forward pass was followed
by Gardner’s punt.
1 ‘ Cuthbert’s ball on 50-yd. line. Cuth-
GEORGIA DRYS
OPEN INTENSIVE
DRIVE MONDAY
ATLANTA, Nov. 2.—An intensive :
campaign for the enforcement of
prohibition laws in Georgia will be
begun tomorrow by the Anti-Saloon
League of America. Recent deaths
from the sale of wood alcohol bj
bootleggers in Atlanta and other
parts of the state have decided the.
prohibitionist that immediate action
is imperative.
Chief Justice Nash R. Broyles of,
the Court of Appeals, will be state
chairman for the Georgia campaign;
Asa G. Candler, campaign secretary ;
bert gained 5 yds. on an end run, but ■
lost 2 yds. on another. No gain fol- ’
lowed a line buck. Cuthbert gained
2 yds. on an end run. The ball went
over on down.
Gardner gained 4 yds. on an end
run. Bond made a fake play and
made a 35-yd. run. Fourth quarter
ended here.
The Americus team will play the
Albany high school eleven at Albany
next Friday, Nov. 7.
After you’ve bought
That’s where the most important part of clothes
service comes in. You can t always tell when
you buy things whether they re going to be right
later on. You can here; we make things right,
always. Your satisfaction guaranteed.
t
Men who know value appre
ciate Hart Schaffner &
Marx clothes.
Part of our service is to have for you the best
clothes values we can get. We find the best in
Hart Schaffner & Marx clothes. Men who are
good judges of style, quality, fine fabrics and
tailoring, know that we’re right about it. If
you’re looking for the finest clothes to be had,
see these at S6O, SSO, $45, S4O.
Blue serges-always good
A blue serge suit is always good on all occasions;
but all blue serges are not good in quality. Un
less they’re fast in color and all-wool, better not
have one.
Hart Schaffner
& Marx
blue serges are right: guaranteed to be that way;
you can t go wrong when you get yours here;
extra values right now.
What About Shirts? Your Fall Hat
Better have plenty of them, Here are the best makes and
and you ought to have good . ,
ones. We have them; all the best st y ,es in soft hat 3
fabrics and all colors; silks and derbies; caps, too.
cords, silk and linens, crepes,
madras shirts—and excep- They’re worth more than
tional values. • , .
we re asking.
W. D. Bailey Co.
Fhe Home of Hart Schaffner & Marx Clothes.
AMERICUS TIMES-RECORDER.
W. S. Witham, state treasurer, ant
Dr. Chari O. Jones, superinten
dent.
Organization of the campaign in
every community in the state will be
begun Monday. Headquarters will
be on the fourth floor of the Flat
iron building, from which organizers
and workers will be sent to every :
county.
The movement in Georgia is par 4 "
of a nation-wide campaign the cli
max of which will come during the
week including January If, when
the national prohibition amend lent
goes into effect. Durir • the week
the Anti-Saloon League of America
aims to raise $25,000,01'; $15,000,-
000 of which will be spent for law
enforcement and $10,060,000 in the
international, effort to make the
world bone dry. ’
Georgia is the first state in the
South to begin the campaign, prohi
bitionists here declaring that condi
tions make it necessary. Not only are
wood alcohol and the baser grades
of moonshine being sold on a large
scale, but numerouus thefts of al-!
eohol from anatomical laboratories I
have been reported.
Colonel W. McDonald Lee, of
Richmond, Va., will be campaign di
rector for the eleven southeastern I
states. Leading men in business in- j
dustry are co-operating with him in I
all these states.
Mrs. B. M. Boykin, vice-president I
of the Atlanta Woman's Club, will
be campaign director of the wom
an’s division, in the Southeast.
‘The whiskey and beer interests
have mobilized all their resources fo
their greatest fight," said Dr. Jones
yesterday, “to bring back booze or at
least weaken, state and national tem
perance laws.
“They have secured as chief coun
cel one of the most astute lawyers .<
of America (Elihu Root). He ad- i
vises that it will be nigh impossible i!
to repeal the laws, but that they can Ii
be made ‘inoperative.’ This '
done by electing governors, legisla-1
tors, judges and magistrates who will •
wink at violations'of law, make law
obnoxious and protect in every pos
sible way the alcoholic traffic. '
“The National Association Against |
Prohibition has been organized 1 in!
twenty-one or more states. Qties-1
tionnaires have been sent to eand’i-;
dates for office with the threat that
unlelss they bow to the whiskey and
beer mandate, opposing candidates
will be backed by all the influence
and money possible.
“One of the things to be done is
to go before the people and explain
to them the provisions of the Eight
eenth Amendment of the enforce
ment act.
“The liquor men say that prohibi-'
tion was ‘put over’ while men in mili- j
tary service were overseas. There
were 50 per cent more peopie living
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Copyright 1915, Hart Schaffner *k Marx
in dry .territory than in licensed ter
ritory before a state of.wa; existe.: 1 -
ed between the United tSates and
Germany.
Although we have made the na
tion legally dry our hardest fight is
before us—to make it'dry in fact and
keen it so ”
-
i Mere Mention
f , /-loom i own g
WEDDING GIFTS—Nice selec
tion—BELL, the Jeweler.
Another shipment of Olds just ar- i
rived and go on sele Monday. .Amer
ica s best finished .:?.r at a popular
price. Our usual easy terms or cash ;
as you prefer. GEORGIA MOTOR
CO., Inc.—2-lt
BULBS.—Paper White Narcissus,
jonquils, tulips and crocus. Phone
150. Americus Seed Supply Co.
2-lt
New 1920 DQRT CARS have
reached Americus. A wonderful
value. Cash o r easy I-ms on DORTS
as usurl o cll t- -e them. GEOR
GIA MOTOR CO., Inc—2-lt.
G C. Morgan. >f '•Vterbu Va..
i is visiting his mothw, Mrs. El'-. Mc?-
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 191 9 .
gau, on Church street, and will }, e
m Americus during some time.
Judge Z. A. Littlejohn and J C
Mebane, court reporter, will g 0 to
Leesburg Monday for the opening o f
a week of Superior Court. The fid
lowmg Monday they will go to Ogie'
thoipe for a session of the Mai.
county Superior Court, and wife
return to Americus, where the No
vember term of the Sumter Superior
Court will convene November 24
Americus Bakery, for delicinn,
HOT ROLLS, BUNS and BREAD
just out of the oven at 4-30 n
Also BARBECUE. 214 North Jack
sun St—2-lt
Winter Lawn Grass Seed. Phone
150. Americus Seed & Supply Co.
2-lt
A party of five teachers of the
Dawson city school accompanied
Miss Chap Saville on an auto out
ing to Americus Saturday. In the
party besides Miss Saville were
Miss Evaline Smith, Miss Caroline
Remsen, Miss Pye, Henry O. Reed
an# C. J. Cheves. The party took
lunch at the Tea Room.
Fire Chief Brosnan, of Albany, was
an Americus visitor Saturday after
■ on, making the trip here in his de
•artment auto.
PAYNE PRESSING & CLEANING CO.,
PROPRIETORS.