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FOUR
JEFF WAS PERFECTLY RIGHT AT THAT - - - BY “BUD” FISHER
r I r- , - - ~ - -
G'u/am You‘R.e
CB-ATCY, THH> <l> I ( WHO'S \
A W6UTR.AL
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GRIDIRON RESULTS
Army Defeat® Holy Croat.
W»it Point, N. V.—Th« Army defeat
rd Holy Cron* today, 14 lo 0. The visi
tor* showed unr-xpeifetl atrenKth on the
defer)»• end twice during the first half
the Army wae held on the visit ore’ one
yard mark.
Cornell 2M; Brown T.
New Vorkr—CVSrnell defeated Hr own
here today, 2* to 7. Cornell's line
plunging and end-running attack be
wildered Brown. In the final quarter
Brown mootchl m touchdown ty a skilful
\y mixed attack In which the forward
pees wu used repeatedly.
Syracuse 20; Michigan 6.
Syracuse, N. V.—Tti the first big In
tlonsl football game of the sen
eon. Syracuse defeated Michigan here
t'tday. 20 to B. Neither team uncover
ed a scarcity of opening plays. Ths first
half saw no acoring.
Michigan loet Its fighting spirit In
the second half. Not once did tfplawn,
whose footwork wss heralded here as
the only hope of tin* Westerners, get a
chance to try a field goal. Byracuse
tried twice but failed
North Carolina 10, Vantfy 9.
Nashville, Tenn. North Carolina's
eleven defeated Vanderbilt here today
In a closely fought game, 10 to 9.
In the third quarter, with Vantler-
I lit leading, 9 to S. the Commodores
attempted s kick The ball was block
ed by Hameey of North Carolina, and
foiled back of Vanderbilt's goal line,
"-fciere Ham any tell on it for a touch
wn. Vanderbilt's touch-down was
Nervous, Chronic and Catarrhal Dis
eases of Men and Women Cured
BY ==•-•=
Clifton R. Groover, Tvl.D.
The Nemo, Blood and Skin Disease Specialist
Mi Cures Create Confidence. I Never Disappoint My Patients.
Ife . i »
•y• ? f.iufc j*hk- v.i'
■r flßy w
B*jr fP 1
iijj * « "'■ • jf
i 6IVE 606 AND 914 BY THE NEW' METHOD WITH
ABSOLUTELY NO PAIN OR BAD AFTER EFFECTS
I Iww mad. * apect»! Study of
nervous and ohronlo do.p-s.niMl dls
-0.00. nnd >m oopoctnlly equipped to
Institute scientific treatment In thio
elaoo of diseases. lam a .per!nitst
by education and experience. My
prex-tlee ta conducted along the high
est professional lines and ts open
to Investigation# at all times. 1 do
not institute the so-called mall order
svat.m of treatment, but Insist upon
seeing my patients In person In or
der to gtve them a thtWough exami
nation Than 1 am In a position to
•tote Jutt what oan be accomplished
from my treatment, the probable
length of time required In .ffecttr.g
a cure and the coot of the treatment
which hi all events Is rensonaM* I
make no charge Aw ex* ruination,
oonauttetlon and advice. Some It cor
dially Uivlted and strictly oonfiden
tta and by calling you place yooree f
under no obtigatluu whatsoever to
take treatment I do not accept In.
curable cases 1 do not treat >ll dit
toes, but endeavor to cure three that
I do treat. I guarantee reeulie In
all curable diseases I accept for
treatment. Ido not scatter my fac
ulties. but concentrate them on my
Specialty. I do not allow any mis
leading statements to snier Into my
aneouncemsms My practice Is con
ducted on a straightforward, honest,
legitimate basis. 1 glre no glitter
made on a long run by quarterback
Ourroy, followed by n forward pass
and a abort lino plunge by Cn/man.
Both aide* dropped kicked ft goal Cap
lalnSykaa of Vanderbilt, wo* rruled el
igible today and played In the game.
The star for Vanderbilt was Currey.
Bor North Carolina Taloe played bril
liantly.
The game ended In darkness wl,th
tho ball In North Carolina'* possession
on Vanderbilt'* 22-yard line.
Navy 48, We«tern Reserve* 0.
Annapolis.—Showing form which
"as eadly larking In their last two
game* the Navy today overwhelmed
Western Reserve University of Cleve
land, 48 to 0. The visitor* were hope
lessly outclassed throughout.
Auburn 19, Mississippi 0.
Birmingham, Ala. Auburn defeated
Mississippi A, A M M., here today, 19
to 0. The game was slow and unln
leretdlng Bor Auburn, Hart was the
slur. The work of Kimball for A. &
M. also was a feature.
Pennsylvania 7. Carlisle 0.
Philadelphia. Two forward passes
helped Pennsylvania defeat the Car
lisle Indian football team here today,
7 to 0 The Kedmen outplayed the
Pennsylvania team In the first half,
carrying the boil to the latter's fi-yard
line In the fins, few minutes A quick
rally prevented a score. Later the In-
LYMPH
COMPOUND
for weak, ner
vous, run down
condition*
BLOOD POISON
and skin dlnense«
successfully
trented by th«
newest and latest
methods.
PILES
cured In a short
time No rutting
or detention fro®
business.
RHEUMATISM
Is permanently
cured by my sys
tem of treatment
ULCERS
1 care not of how
lons standing. j
usually cure then:
In * short time
ECZEMA
Pimples, Eryslp
•lag, or any erup
live disease n!
the skin prompt
ly relieved.
ing, Impossible guarantees' that I oan
not eland by. If you are In need
of scientific meritorious treatment
for nervous an chronic dlevasoa. l
Invito you to consult me free with
out obligation on your part. Com.
and have a friendly talk with m.
and I will hoaeatty and frankly ad
vise you the beet course to pureuo.
If your rose is incurable 1 will frank
ly and honestly tell you so and ad
vise you against the further useless
expenditure of money with mi ecru
pulous doctors
REFERENCE*
I here In my office scores of Set
ters from patients testifying to th*
success of my lepatment. L unde,
tto circumstances however, publish
any letter without permission from
the writer. My beet testimonials
ere my msny cured, ratten, d pati
ents, and my fees ere re-ieonebis and
no more than you are wiping to pay
for a complete cure,
Consultntlon and sdvlce A-ee amt
confidential. Office hours, 8 A hi.
to 7 P. M.. dally; Sundays, It to 2.
only.
Or. Groover, Specialist
604.7 Dyer o:<Jq. Augura, (U,
dians again threatened the Pennsyl
vania goal.
There was almost complete reversal
of form In the last two periods.
The single touchdown came In the
flhal quarter after two long forward
passes.
Bewaneo Defeats Florida.
Jacksonville, Fla.—Sewanee defeated
the University of Florida on the local
gridiron here today by the score of
26 to 0. The Tennessee boys seemed
to overwhelm the Gators In the first
half, but the Florida boys were strong
In the second session and only one
touchdown was scored against them in
that half. The Interference of Sewanee
was wonderful and whenever a rush
was made, tore down the Florida de
fence. An 86-yard run by Tolley after
Florida had punted, was the feature of
the game.
Charlotte 16, Citadel 0.
Charlotte, N. C.—Straight football
by Davidson and the good broken field
running of Fullback McKinnon, won
from the Citadel here today, 16 to 0.
Citadel resorted to line shifts and at
tempted forward pas only one of
which was succes Davidson's
dains resulted for the most part from
end runs.
Harvard-Penn State Tie Up.
Cambridgs, Mass. —Harvard narrow
ly escaped defeat today by the Penn
State College team, which played all
around the Crimson. The score was a
tie, 13 to 13 For 46 minutes Penn
State drove the Harvard 'varsity sub
stitutes about the field, scoring a
touchdown and a goal from the field In
the first twelve minutes of play, '"he
visitors lost a chance for victory
through two costly fumbles.
Princeton 16, Dartmouth 12.
Prinooton, N. J.—Princeton opened
the new Palmer stadium here today
with a 16 to 12 victory over Dartmouth.
The Dartmouth team had a powerful
attack but the Princeton line held.
Princeton’s attack was open, always
kicking In her own territory.
Tennessee 17, Alabama 7.
Knoxville, Tenn.—Tennessee de
feated the University of Alabama here
today, 17 to 7. Tennessee's scores re
sulted from two touchdowns In the
first period and a goal from the field
In the second.
Yale Defeated.
New Haven, Conn.—Washington *
Jefferson’s eleven furnished the first
real surprise of the season here by de
feating Yale today, 18 to 7. The vis
itors smothered the Yale attack after
the first period and kept the Rlue most
ly on the defcnslv for the remainder of
the game Washington and Jefferson’s
touchdowns were both due to well ex
ecuted forward passes Yale's touch
down In the first period was on a
double pass.
MINOR GAMES.
At Deland, Fla.—Southern IS; Stet
son, 0.
At Chattanooga—Chattanooga Uni
versity. 14; Howard, 0.
At Sioux Fulls—Notre Dame SS;
South Dakota. 0.
At Baton Bourne —Louisiana State,
14; Jefferson College, IS.
At Columbia—University of South
Carolina, IS; Newberry College, 18,
At Blacksburg. Va. —Roanoke Col
lege, 7; Virginia Polytechnic Institute,
T.
At Swathmore. Pa.—Swarthmore, 7;
Ursinus. 0.
At Pittsburg. Pa.—OreargatowW, 0;
Pittsburg, 21.
At Hamilton. N. T. —Colgate. 41;
Vermont, 0.
At Newark, N. J—Rutgers, 18;
Tufta 7.
At Mlddlestown. Conn—'Wesleyan, 0;
Amherst, it)
At Brunswick, Me.—Colby, 48; Bow
doln. 0.
At Fayetteville—Kollo, 40; Arkansas,
0.
At I'alia#-Texas. St; Oklahoma, 7.
At Bristol— King's College, 18; Car
son & Newman. 0.
At Richmond —Hampden-Sydney, 6;
Randolph Macon, 0,
At Islington. Va.—Washington A
Lee, 72; Wakeforest. 0.
At l/cxington, Ky.—Kentucky State.
81; Karl ham, 8.
At New Oorleans —Tulane, 82; Cen
tenlary, 0.
At Syracuse—Syracuse, 20; Michi
gan, 6.
At New York;—Cornell, 28; Brow'A
7. •
At West Point —Army, 14; Holy
Cross, 0.
At Columbus —Ohio State, (; Wis
consin. 7.
At Evanston —Illinois, 88; North
western, 0.
At Chicago—Chleag <, 21: Perdue, 0
At lowa City—Minnesota, 7; lowa, 0,
At Spartanburg. S. C —Wofford, 7;
Presbyterian. 0.
FOUR WORE UNDER u". R.'fLAO.
Washington, O. C.—The nanus of
four addition*! vessels, making a total
of seventy-eight which havs changed
from foreign to American registry tin
der the act of August 18th. were made
public tonight by the department f
commerce. They are the steamship
Greenbrier the schooner XV. H. ltaxiey,
the bark Ann* Marla d'Ahundo and the
bsrkentlne Stranger, all formerly under
the British nag*.
THE AUGUSTA HERALD, AUGUSTA. GA.
PRES'T CHEERED
IN RETURN TRIP
Forced to Speak Briefly From
Platform of His Oar---Glad
Congress Has Adjourned.
Cumberland, Md.—Returning from
Pittsburgh to Washington Saturday,
through Pennsylvania, West Virginia
and Maryland, President Wilson was
forced to give a campaign atmosphere
to the trip by crowds which gathered
at every stopping place and cheered
until he appeared on the platform of
his car. The president spoke brief.y
at McKeesport, Braddock, Pa., Con
nellsvllla, Pa., and other towns but
did not touch on politics. He express
ed pleasure at the news of the ad-
Journmi t of congress.
Mr. Wilson shook hands at every
stop until tile train pulled out. "How
f-e you In the gallery?" he called tj
men on top of a nearby freight car
In one town.
SUBIiEIF
GERMANS SUNK
London, 11:21 p. m.—A German sub
marine has ben rammed and sunk by
the British destroy ei Badger, Com
mander Charles F'reementle, off the
Dutch coast. The Badger's bow was
somewhat damaged.
This official announcement was
made tonight.
RAISE EMBARGO
ON FOODSTUFFS
London, S:4O p. nw—As a result of
representations by W. H. Page, the
American ambassador, the British gov
ernment consented to raising the em
bargo on foodstuffs to the extent of
nllow-tng ships to leave for Holland
with a quarter of a million dollars’
worth of food purchased by the Amer
ican committee for the relief of Bel
gians.
60th Anniversary
Balaklava Charge
London, S: 00 p. m.—Tomorrow Is ;
Balaklave Day, the sixtieth anniver
sary of the charge of the Light Bri
gade, and for the first time In many
years there will be no celebration In
London.
Thp two officers and eleven men left
of the 600 decided the annual reunion
and dinner should be abandoned and
the funds devoted to the men who kre
now fighting.
2.SOOJAPS ARE
KILLED, WOUNDED (
Amsterdam (via. London, 2:15 a. m.) ;
—According to a message reaching
here, the North German Ornette of|
Berlin sayg that all efforts to capture>
the Urrman positions at Taingtauj
hive failed.
The Japanese losses have reached
2.500 killed and wounded. The German
losses also are said to be heavy.
Condemn Britain's
Act, Contraband
London 11:50 p. m.—Reuter's Am
sterdam correspondent says the Ger
man gov rnmrnt has Issued a commu
nication to the neutral powers con- 1
demnlng Greet Britain's action with
regard to contraband of war and the i
selaure of Germans on neutral trier- i
chant vessels. The communication
argues that this vlelates the engage- 1
ments of the declaration of London. I
AUGUSTA HAsTyOUNQEST
LICENSED EMBALMER
Augusta has the youngest licensed !
emhalmer In the United Slates in the '
person of y oung Mr. Lester E UotL the (
17-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. R. B.
Elliott.
In 1912 young Elliott passed the Geor
gia State Board of Embalmers exami
nation, scoring the highest average of
the class, 98—over 35 of his classmates.
He recently went to Columbia, and also
passed the South Carolina board.
TORPEDO BOAT IS
FIRED ON, OSTEND
London, 10:30 p, m—“ While a French
torpedo boat was approaching the Os
tend pier at night recently, two shots
were fired at her by hidden German
guns, “ays an Exchange Telegraph
dispatch. The torpedo boats replied
with seven shots, killing a German
officer and wounding three others
Several hotels at the pier were dam
aged.
War or No War we all Must
wear Clothes-
But your dollar must buy more clothes value an^
better wear than ever.
One of many New Fall models-here’s a Suit for fall
NOT a $35 Suit but a full, honest 2,500 cents—full value
—made to wear—wear—WEAß—
—fabricked to satisfy the nattiest dresser—
—sold to make you come back to us for
more season after season.
$25.00.
OVERCOATS, TOO
(But we talk about them, later.)
A try-on PROVES our Suits—beyond
doubt.
About your other "dressing;”
Shirts, Undergarments, Headwear
We have them all in the largest varie
ties at prices that insure your money’s worth
NECKFIXINGS, 65c *
New Fall Cravats—Manhattan’s newest
ideas—called “dollars worth.” .<
COLLARS—aII the new shapes
you see advertised in the magazines—
\ sizes— 2 for 25c.
-and every other Dress need
for men and their sons.
—the seasons greetings to you .
AMERICAN MILLS.
"Practically as many spindles were
busy consuming cotton last month in
tills country as in the same months
last year. The trouble is with the cot
ton spindles in the area of war. But
Europe must have cotton goods, war
or no war. If the goods are not manu
factured there, sooner or later they will
have to be bought manufactured here.
What are the American mills doing in
anticipation of this demand? They
should be loading up with raw cotton
at prices far lower than will probably
he seen again in many years, but are
they?.” asks The New York World.
It strikes us that the cotton manu
facturers in America should have noth
ing to complain of unless it be a larger
opportunity to which a slight period
delay is added. Not only must Eu
rope have cotton goods, but Asia as
well.
What Is the planters distress Is real
ly tho manufacturers opportunity. If
this opportunity is Improved and
MS CREARY’S
4 ' •"
“Home of Good Clothes ”
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25.
stretched the benefits will fall on
planters and spinners alike. The cours*
from the East to the West Is open.
The naked millions of Asia need cotton
clothing as much as ever and are no
longer able to get it from English and
German agents. ,
It should be remembered too thalt
with the importations of linen an®
foreign goods of all sorts sharply eat
down American spinners have larger
opportunities than were ever afforded
by the protective tariff. It Is up to
them to hustle.
HIGHER HISTORY.
"I want a nice light book to read on
the train.”
“How would the ‘Last Days of Pom
peii' do?”
“Pompeii? Who was he? How did
he die?"
“I think It was some kind of an
eruption.”