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I
i ANNEX southein
'tfc. 1. a. A. LAUXELS
r McClelland and Batchelor
through Orange and Cruuwt
p; f ht Hard bn* Co Down
By JIMMY JONES
.« thl . pliant Cadets of Georgia
’ 1 ' ct ,Hege are parked right
• •he G. A. A. Throne in this
f t h,. woods this Decemb
np while all the other football
around here -ire looking
ves of envy. The crimson clad
' Johnny Broadnax
- Rents, led by a* dashing trio
T “" OT - carrier.** McAr.hur,
Oilland and Batchelor, removed the
1 h«t.iclc from their pathway to
,i , n ship honors in this divi
-ting off the Lanier Poets, 13
yesterday after
virtue "f their well earned and
ictory, the Cadets at-
Jf< l undisputed right to ( meet
jj£ c i, Wallace Butts’ Madison Ag-
for the champiorshtp of the
I jpectJiealur
rholt- G. 1. A. A. works, lock, stock
land barrel. Madison bowled over
1 High, their leading northern
,lf rhal. 12 to 7, yesterday. When
)!. f. and Madison meet, it will
,, ca «o of teacher coming face to
irise pupil, for “Slap” Rentz
I napht Wallace Butts, Madison's
I his P's .and Q’s about foot-
*' " before Wallace
a star at end for
The largest crowd thati*ever saw
l prep fchool football game in Ma-
r!l> ; not in this section of t£c
Hat,. i\v the Cadets cufPthe Pofts
p t **.ir<iay. G. M. C.’s Victory • \£ak
v ut and the Millcd;£eyille- boys
I play-1 the hard fighting but lighter
• feet from start to finj-
I ah. The Cadets presented a decided;
J |r better brand of football than thi&
I they .!i<phycd at Milled»*ville when* 1
tied them lUSO after G.
I Jl. C. held a 19-7 lead lit thf. Half.
The hip Cadet line charged-* hard,
[ while the backs plungef^nnd tore
I their way ihrough the 2
| aeon da ry, McClelland//number 8)
: through gapinf wiles opened
I in the Lanier forward tgjril the
I ond half.
Grab Paatas >
G. M. C.’s secondary also was wide
| awake, the backs intercepting
[ al Poet passes to put a crimp
< drivers down the field at
wi5 too bad that Lanier
I yesterday from a local standpoint
I but Macon people had nothing but
I the highest of praise for G. M. C.*j
|fler!ing machine after that game,
tough on Capt. Jake Zellars.
Inimitable coach, who leave?
L Martin after this year to return to
| hb duties n» an army officer. Jake
L would have liked so much
amo yesterday but then
I Jike has turned in a wonderful
red by taking his game little i
I through a regular schedule of i
*>nu*. without a defeat. Jake had
nothing but praise for his hoys after
that game yesterday.
“If there was anything wrong
with Lanier it was my fault, and
r.ot that of the team.” he said.
“I have never coached a harder ,
fighting, more loyal squad of square
•hooters than that 1929 Lanier
team," Jake declared, , *{ husky note
f| f -adnrss creeping f'p his
Jgave G. M. C. flfedit for
having •, gr^ football team and
•aid that hi-; t/nm lost simply by be
ing outplayed yesterday. Jake is a
PiHant loser if there ever was one.
Spectators at the prep school das-
i •‘e yc-terday saw some really big
officiating us tlte officials for
* Tech-Georgia game at Athens to
da V handled the game. They were
Hutchins of Purdue; Gardner of Chi
ca 8«; Bhck of Davidson and Powell
*f Wisconsin. Hutchins was the
referee yesterday, Powell umpire,
Hlnrk head linesman r.ijd Gardner
f*wl<l judge.
The officials kept close tab <
hntli teams. G. M. C. drew quite
few penalties on its shift, which
*hat used by University of Georgia
®nd which is plenty fast Both
teinn were called frequently for
holding and roughing.
further proof of the fact that
C.’s victory was no fluke, the
Cadet received many more penal-
Gw than Lanier, drawing the ma-
J'-rity of them for crowding their
vhift.
The First Down
Statistics on the game shown that
*• C. plied up 14 first downs to
• C. piled up 14 first downs to
wi M came j,
flipping :
**+ -crier; TKfe
•Pceivt-r, were -not . a
ItUBl * !i wever, ye-terday
f " 11 ' Burnett’s heaves
pr i rirt < in the «lot and notV
fcfao-Mr. tb.
$ •**>* riybt *
™ f,r st half bat
alert end of the Poets, played
derful game as did “Lefty” Eubanks
at left tackle. But McClelland and
Qatchelor punched right through the
Poet forward/ for both touchdowns.
A costly penalty for roughing cost
Lanier d^§ on the second G. M.
I5*yard assessment
ball in scoring position
third Auarter from where Me
nd punched it across.
<T’As for LafUer’s offense, it was
Confined largely to the open field,
the ’Poets gifning fairly well on
passes ^.vntil the ball was pushed
into the scoring zone. Twice, how-
the heavier G. M. C. line,
boasting a couple of college-sized
tackles, held for downs to take the
ball from the Poets inside their 20-
yard line. Lanier narrowly missed
scoring in the first quarter when
Henry Burnett intercepted a pass
■and returned it 64 yards up the
field. Only one man stopped him,
being brought down from behind by
Bazanos, scrappy Cadet gunrd. It
tackle for Mr. Bazanos.
Holme?, a 200-pound tackle,
wrought hm«oc with Lanier plays.
There was no more scoring and
Lanier exhausted its last threat in
a passing attack that did not click
with its old deadliness simply for
the reason that G. M.
knocking them down ’and picking
them out of the ozone just when they
began to look menacing.
It was a great game any how!
The lineups:
mier (0) Pc. G. M. C. (13)
Slocum LE . Turbyville
Eubanks LT Holmes
Brzam
Poole (C) ..C. Robertson (C)
Williamson .... RG Chamblis;
Barker RT Townsenc
Black RE DuPree
Long QB Rich
Rhodenhisev RH Smith
Burnett LH... Batchelor
Peeler FB McClelland
Score by periods:
G. M. C.
.0 7
Lanier 0 0 0 0— 0
Scoring: Touchdowns, G. M. C.
Cadet* Score I Batchelor, McClelland. Extra point.
Both teams Battled throuah the' !,aPree . ,|iasil from ^Batchelor),
first quarter without any scoring
hut G. M. C. registered on the scorc-
tffakc reverse
jflay, plunged
board when Batchelor, the rangy
of the Cadet backfield, faked
s on third down and then
plunged through the Lanier line for
a t< uchdown midway the second
aeriod. Batchelor, a great passer,
.ofBed the ball to DuPree, little
Cadet end, for the extra point. G.
t the ball on Lanier's 40-
ynrd line just before the score.
Batchelor passed beautifully to Rich
for 10 yards and the Cadet field
general ran 34 more yards before
-;ein'? tackled, placing the ball on
Lanier'.- 14-yard line. Batchelor was
tiftown for a yard loss jn the first
IWfrjr hut on the next gained five on
and then on the next
dunged the remaining eight
touchdown. The half
| ended with the score 7-0.
1 In the third quarter several sensa
tional runs by McArthur, stock lit
tle halfback, had placed G. M. C. in
scoring distance, the Cadet.-, finally
had to kick and Burnett fumbleJ
the b.all on his 27-yard ,: ne on the
first play after receiving the punt.
G. M. C. recovered. McArthur and
Batchelor got three yards each and
then Lanier was penalized 15 yards
when Tony Long roughed a G. M.
C. man unnecessarily. That placed
the Wall on Lanier's five-yard line
and McClelland, the line smashing
fulback, took it over in two tries.
The extra point was missed.
The entire G. M. C. line and back-
field played a fine game from end
to end. Rich and Robinson ran the
team in great style, the latter reliev
ing Rich when he hurt his hip in
the second half. Robinson is no
slouch of a back himself. In fact.
G. M .C. has several backs that are
no slouches.
Substitutions: G. M. C., McArthur
for Smith; Robinson for Rich; Smith
for McClelland.
Substitutions, Lanier, Collin.-
Williamson; M. Ray for Barbre;
McCullough for Slocum; Clark for
Black, Cherry for Shi; Hnzlehurst
for Rhodenhiscr; Minton for Peeler;
Ferguson'for Burnett; A. Kelly f<
Hazlchurst; Burnett for Ferguson;
Peeler for Minton.
Official: Hutchins (Purdue) ref
eree; Powell (Wisconsin) umpire;
Gardner (Chicago) field judge; Black
(Davidson) head linesman.
NIGHT COUGHING
QUICKLY RELIEVED
Relief
Night coughs, or coughs caused
by a cold or by .an irritated throat
are usually due to cau-es which
cough syrups and patent medciincs
do not touch. But the very first
swallow of Thoxine is a doctor's
prcrcription, working on an entirely
different principle, it goes direct to
the internal cause.
Thoxine contains no harmful
drugs, is pleasant tasting -and safe
for the whole family. Sold on a
money back guarantee to give bet
ter and quicker relief for coughs or
sore throats than anything you have
ever tried. Ask for Thoxine, put up
ready for use in 35c., 60c., and *1.00
bottles. Sold by Fraley’s Pharmacy
and all other good Drug Stores.
(Advertisement)
THESE DIXIE BOYS SAY
Fill her up with Woco-Pep,
lake* her .tep” hot do*. For m
nly by
L. N. JORDAN
“AND THEY BORE PRECIOUS
GIFTS OF GOLD AND SILVER”
USED CARS FOR SALE
Wu have helped Mr. Chevrolet to
•ell one million three hundred and
fifty thousand new Chevrolet* Six’*
•ince January 1st, and we only have
ju*t a few «ttradt«ve bargain* in
car* left. Y»*u will do well and
money to look these over.
L. N. JORDAN
CITATION
GEORGIA, Baldwin County:
To Who*n It May Concern:
Wm. H. Ivey, having applied for
permanent letters of administration
ic estate of Miss Mary Ivey, de
ceased, this is to cite the creditors
and heirs-at-law of said dccased to
how cause before me, at the January
Term, iL*30, of the Court of Ordinary
of said County, why permanent let
ters of administration should no
granted, as prayed, to said Petition-
Witness my hand and official sig
nature this December 2, 1929.
J. C. COOPER,
Clerk Superior Court, Act
ing Ordinary, Baldwin
Ga.
NO “PEP,” SLUGGISH
Constipation Troubles Relieved
By Help of Thedford’s Black-
Draught, Says Tennessee
Coal miner.
Tracy City, Tenn.—"My> work
makes i: necessary for me to use
a medicine which will give quick re
lief from constipation and indiges
tion," says Mr. Lee Nunley, a well-
known coal miner of this place.
“For forty years or more.” he says,
*T have taken Black-Draught for
these trouble:;, and have always
found it reliable. At times. I suf
fer from bad spells of indigestion,
following constipation.
“Many years ago. a friend told mo
to try Black-Druught. os it was a
vegetable remedy and would not
harm my body, so that Is how I
came to use it. X make a tea of It,
and take a sip of it after meals. I
soon begin to feel better when I
start this treatment
“My work Is very confining, and
my color gets bad and I get slug
gish. I lose my ‘pep' and don’t feci
like going. After I take a course of
Black-Draught I feci fine again.”
and many people tell of having
taken It all their lives when tn need
Of a laxative or cathartic.
Refuse Imitations and substitutes.
Get the yellow package bearing the
name “Thedford's." NC-209
MY HOBBY BOX
$1.50 tht lb.
We don't say
so ... but the
candy does.
One box—and
you'll very soon
discover why
Hollingsworth s
won ti.e Grand Prix
at the Paris Interna
tionale Exposition.
I UNUSUAL^CANDIES t*"**
III CULVER & KIDD DRUG GO. Ill
BRICK That Like Steel
Are Made by the “Ik’.MILLAN” Procaa*
BURNT IN OUR CONTINUOUS KILNS
There is No Waste in Our Bricks.
Wa Maka Quick Ship
in Any Quantity.
RICH GI.0 FACE BRICK-FIRE BRICK-COMMON BRICK
▼
Milledgeviile BrickWorksCo ♦
MILLEDGEVILLE. GA. t
Established 1883 by J. W. McMillan. +
K. G. McMillan, President Belle McMillan, Vice-President i
SCHOOL SUPPLIES
VARIETY MERCHANDISE
NTEMBR1DGE & COMPANV
PHONE 352-J
J
2:30
P. M.
c
HRISTMAS!
A merry festival o
J:oy_ons Giving
Mora than nineteen hundred years old—and now o3^r a few
days away. ?' .*
WHAT WILL YOU GIVE^Perhaps, as did the wise/len of
Ljold—the bearers of "precious gifts of gold ruprLApp—with
Hitting gifts that survive the years. -~-wp
We invite you..£ordially^tojeall ml inspect our gifts of this sort
—gifts finely-wrought, truly precious, genuine expressions of
the Chrlstmirspfri:.
JL
& Ritchie
- A-? Ester
j EWELERS
MILLEDGEVILLE. GA.
FOOTBALL
Championship Of Georgia Prep
DECEMBER 13TI
G> M. C.
Champions Southern half G.I.A.A
- VS -
Madison Aggies
Champions Northern half G.I.A.A
Davenport Memorial Field
NHLLEDjGIpVTLLE, GEORGIA
The Best Prepf Game in the South
ADMISSION: -
Adults $1.00
Students 50c
Ml
,._U ... J%L . .