Newspaper Page Text
WEDNESDAY, OCT. 7, 1931.
SPORTS NEWS AND .f.CATUKtS
Sport Slants
ALAN GOULD
STAY AT HOMES
c southern .. g S(]uaus , on ., KOclu
Most of Attentioil as
Teams Prepare For Satur=
day's Classics.
_
Atlanta, Ga„ Oct. 7. (JP )—Southern
teams that go out of their conference
seeking new worlds to conquer are
stealing the iootball picture from the
stay-at-homes this week-end.
The Florida-North Carolina
matches of the south but aside from
that there is little of a purely section¬
al nature to become very excited over
Saturday.
Georgia, which looms as a southern
conference title threat, leaves for New
Haven tonight to meet Yale this week¬
end, taking with it a large share of
the attention of southern football fans
and, incidentally. a distinguished
alumnus, Governor Richard B. Rus
sell, Jr., of Georgia.
The Georgia Bulldogs have been in¬
volved in close secret practice. They
are strong but Yale is ranked the fav¬
orite. They will have the same back
field, Downes, Dickens, Chandler and
Roberts, they have used against Yale
two previous years—very effectively.
Then there is the Vanderbilt-Ohio
State game at Columbus. The Com¬
modores’ Captain, Amos Leonard, will
be out With a broken wrist and Dixie
Roberts, 105 pound halfback, will do
most of Vanderbilt’s ball lugging.
v *‘*negie In Atlanta, Georgia Tech and Car
Tech, will match football abili¬
ties and the Georgia Technologists are
favorites. BuLthe Yellow Jackets are
expected to have their hands full and
are devoting much time to a study of
Carnegie’s plays.
Duke meets Villa Nova at Durham
in another intersectional game. Au¬
burn is polishing up on its kicking in
preparation for Wisconsin at Madison
Saturday. The Maryland-Navy game
Saturday likewise holds promise of
plenty of action.
Alabama and Tulane. the southern
c^iif ere nee’s working joint titfc out holders in of last
season, are prepara¬
tion for games that they do not antici¬
pate will he particularly hard for
them. Alabama meets Mississippi A.
and M. while Tulane engages Spring
Hill.
Tennesse, another strong conference
team, goes up against Mississippi. So
wanee meets Virginia. Kentucky and
Washington and Lee have work cut
out for them Saturday when the meet.
Powerful Skin
Remedy Discovered
DfieS Up Eczema. Pimples and
Unsightly Skin Eruptions
Results in 7 Days
or Money Back
This wonderful antiseptic, known
all over. America as Moone’s Emerald
Oil, is so efficient in the treatment
of skin troubles that the itching of
eczema often stops with one appli¬
cation.
A few applications and often the most
persistent cases of eczema are
healed never to return.
Moone’s Emei'ald Oil is safe and
pleasant to use and it. is so powerfully
antiseptic and penetrating that even its
Uj-rdd stubborn cases have yielded to
W,k fluence.
Moone’s Emerald Oil in the original
bottle is dispensed Druggist by always has
Andrews the
Moone’s Emerald Oil on hand—an 85
cent bottle lasts two weeks. (adv)
What about last year's football lie
roC!! ’ t ' lu brawny boys and the
youths whose feats commanded
umns of newspaper space and nation
' vv ' l * e attention in the flashing days of
j October and November, 1930?
I their replacement*?
! Rockne the Great is gone, but Notre
am,? llas one of his most sensational
.
! pupils. Marchie Schwartz,
ca halfback, to lead the new charge
! of the Fighting Irish.
| hZl .Toe Savoldi has turned
-
an assistant coach at Purdue and
Marty Brill has a similar
with Columbia.
Bobby Dodd, Tennessee’s
quarterback, is helping to tutor the
ball carriers at Georgia Tech this
fall, while his one-time running mate,
Gene McEver, attempts a
j after a year off the gridiron, due
injuries.
Alabama’s Freddy Sington,
(lira lineman, has gone to Duke to
assist his Conner mentor, William
Wallace Wade. Mel Hein of Wash
ington State and Johnny Kitzmiller
of Oi egon, who claimed the big
lines of the northwest last fall, will
have to be content this year with the
few paragraphs (hat go with their
professional gridiron performances.
Harvard has lost the mighty Ben
Tiekuor, now a non-salaried assistant
coach at his alma mater, but Barry
Wood will continue to heave passes
f °r the Crimson and attempt the
commui- 0 , again, of Yale’s colorful Al
hie Booth.
The All-America reception commit
tee has been waiting for Booth
since he matriculated with a Grade A
reputation at New Haven, but*' the
mighty atom has yet to break through,
Bart Viviano of Cornell and Or
ville Mohler, of Southern California
were two sophomore sensations of
EXCURSION ! !
To
ATLANTA
October 6th
and
October 9th, 1931
Account
SOUTHEASTERN
FAIR I
$6.50 Round Trip From
Brunswick
Tickets on sale for ail trains Octo¬
ber 6th; return trip must be commenc¬
ed before midnight October 9th.
Tickets likewise on sale for all
trains October 9th; return trip must
be commenced before midnight Octo¬
ber 11th.
In addition to above, rate of one
and one-half fares for the round trip
is authorized to Atlanta; tickets on
sale daily October 2nd to 8th; return
limit October 12th. 1931.
For further information consult
ticket agents
Southern Raiiway
System
LOCAL FOOTBALL
FANS TO ATTEND
TILT IN WAYCROSS
Many Brunswick football fans will !
go to Waycross Friday afternoon to
witness the annual clash between the
Bull Dogs of that city and the Red
Terrors of Glynn Academy, ancient ri¬
vals. who will meet on the gridiron in
their annual clash.
Completion of the new Wawcross
Brunswick highway makes it an easy
trip, whereas in former years it was
necessary to drive all over south Geor
gia in order to make the trip between
the two cities ’ Loeal fans can leave
here at 1 or 1:30 and arrive in ample
time for the game and can return in
time for dinner. The football team
will leave early, and from present indi¬
cations there will be plenty of local
rooters on hand for the game.
Those Painful Swollen
Rheumatic Joints Need
Week-end Treatment
Agony Gone in 48 Hours or Money
Back Says Andrews—And 85 Cents
Buys a T.arge 8-Ounce Bottle
Here’s the new swift way to drive
uric acid from your joints and mus
cles and free your body from rheu
matism, sciatica and neuritis many
call it the week-end treatment—and
it is particularly valuable to those who
cannot afford to Use lime through
the week.
Start to lake Allenru as directed on
Friday morning......Allenru acts with
double speed when the sufferer is re¬
laxed and resting.
Allenru is a powerful yet harmless
medicine—free from narcotics—you
can’t depend on mild medicines to ov¬
ercome stubborn rheumatic conditions
and handy relievers used only to stop
pain won’t get the uric acid out of
your joints.
Allenru is sold by Andrews the
Druggist and all modern druggists
America over—an 8-ounce bottle for
cents—and guaranteed to do as
advertised or money back. (adv)
MAN THIN AS RAIL
IRON ADDS 10 POUNDS
“I was tired, run-down and thin as
a vail. Since taking Vinol I sleep
well, feel better and have gained 10
pounds.”—R. A. Cromberg.
Thin, run-down, nervous men or
women need the help of iron, lime and
cod liver peptone as contained in Vin¬
ol. Even the first bottle brings new
pep, a good appetite and sound sleep.
Aids digestion and makes red blood.
Tastes delicious. Get a bottle of Vinol
today. The results will amaze you!
Cash Pharmacy. (adv)
; 666
LIQUID OR TABLETS
Relieves a Headache or Neuralgia in
30 minutes, checks a cold the
day and checks Malaria in three
S 6 6 Salve for Baby's Cold
1 1 IKK’ who will be watched closely from
the outset of the new
along widely separated fronts.
Northwestern lost two
| men in Frank Baker, end, and Wade
Woodworth, guard.
j Notre Dame’s “watch charm” guard,
Bert Metzger, has stepped but of
spotlight into business in
The All-America fullback of last
“Iron Legs" Mac a hi so of Colgate, fol
[lowed the example of Savoldi in turn
—
Ail VictOlTOUS I HO
Alabama, Notre Dame and
|vvere the only “major league” foot
ball teams to finish the 1930 season
j without the blemish of a single de¬
j i feat, although it wasn’t Washington* until the lirsl
day of 1931 that State,
Pacific coast champion, took it on the
I from Alabama in the Rose Bowl
classic
Wallace Wade, after sensational
successes at Alabama, begins the l,
lift of Duke's gridiron destinies
j | fall. His successor at ’Bama is
Thomas.
Ike Armstrong remains at the
of Utah’s gridiron craft, though | H ,
..................
oilers to ply his talents elsewhere
at a larger salary.
i
Defending ChfffflpS ^----
Here are the big conference grid
champions whose titles will be
at stake as as another romp begins on
all fronts:
Big Ten -Northwestern and Mich
Pacific Coast Washington State,
Rocky Mountain University of
Utah.
Southwest University of Texas,
Big Six -University of Kansas,
Southern—Alabama anrl Tulane.
SERIES PLAYERS
WORKING TO GET
BIG CASH PRIZE
Philadelphia, Oct. 7. (A’) -Each
winning player will receive $4,-
484.24 and each loser $2,989.49 as
his share of the 1931 world series
pool, if it split 30 ways.
The Cardinals have already de¬
cided to cut their series “melon”
on this basis but the Athletics
may have fewer slices, thereby
.making each player’s share larg¬
er.
The players’ pool, derived from
a big portion of gate receipts
from the first four games only,
amounts to $320,303.46. It. is the
smallest shic-e 1922. The series
rivals split, 70 percent of this on
a 60-10 basis. The other 30 per¬
cent goes to the clubs finishing
second, third and fourth in each
league.
SICK HEADACHE
From Constipation
HERE is a purely Spi
vegetable medicine
which has bene¬ 1
fited thousands of
men, women and y
children, and
which you should try when
troubled with constipation,
or biliousness. Mr. H. H.
Rogillio, of Lake Charles, La.,
writes: “When I let myself
get constipated, I feel dull
and sluggish and all out of
sorts, not equal to my work.
When one has this feeling it
is time to take something be¬
fore he .feels worse. I cer¬
tainly have found Black
Draught quick to relieve. I
used to have severe head¬
aches and suffer a great deal.
1 found this came from con¬
stipation, and that Black
Draught would correct it.
That is why I began using
Thedford’s •
Black
Draught
COUGHS Stopped almost instantly
tSe with one swallow of 80 *
THQXINE
THE BRUNSWICK NEWS
YALE AND GEORGIA
EVENLY MATCHED:
EXPECT DOG FIGHT’
New York. (h\. 7. td>) The
I Bulldogs of the south, Georgia,
and the Bulldogs of Hie north,
Vale, will elash in the Yule Bowl
this week in a “dog-tight” that
shouhl rival anything else the
j eastern football schedule has to
offer.
Y ale and Georgia have met an
Dually in football since lDli:5 and
although the Elis hold an edge of
live games to three the advantage
i-i recent years has bei'n all with
Georgia. The southerners, after
suffering four suceessve defeats,
conquered Y’ale in 1927, 14-10.
Y'ale came hack to take the 1928
encounter. 2l-(i, but was beaten
in 1929 in the only game of tin
series played at Athens, (ia„ 15-0.
Last year the southerners emerg¬
ed victors, IS-/ I, after one of tin
most sensational games of tIn
season.
The teams again appear even¬
ly matched. Y'ale loafed in its
1.9-0 triumph over Maine last
week while Georgia’s high-power¬
ed attack crushed Virginia Poly,
40-0.
’
WHIlfc CfkV bUX TAlgP lAKt
j CHICAGO SERIES
__
Chicago, Oct. ,. l/P) Donic Bush
and Ids hickless While Sox wlm were
|,ad their big day at last .today.
They were Chicago champions for
the first time in five yeais, their
pockets were lined with the big end
of the players’ purse, and they had a
big time joshing Cub followers by
^^,,11’^, Cericam’^UKh
had something more to he happy about
as it was generally believed he might
after all he re-hired as manager of
the team for 1932.
A noisy six run rally in the fourth
inning, hacked by AI Thomas’ four
bit pitching, gave the White Sox a 7
to 2 victory in the seventh and final
game of the long series at Wrigley
Field yesterday.
Throughout the seven inning., the
cellar occupants of the American lea¬
gue played by far the best baseball.
While the Cubs won their three games
by the margin of one run, the White
Sox captured their victories by mar¬
gins of 9 to 0, 1 to 3, 13 to 6, and 7 to
2 .
Wells drilled al. New Orleans have
encountered standing cypress stumps
in as many as three successive ho¬
rizons some as deep as 610 feet.
“STEP A LITTLE
CLOSER, FOLKS!”
YOU see him in the center of a craning crowd. His counter is an
upturned box. With nervous gestures, and one eye on the cop at
the corner, Ijie dispenses his wares. Perhaps on an impulse
...
. . . you buy.
Next week, when you return to get your money back—as he
so confidently promised—you find your sidewalk salesman has
moved to fresher fields.
Unlike the street-sharper, an advertised product must have
permanence. To become successful, it must gain the confidence
of thousands of people. To remain successful, that confidence
must never once be abused.
You will find many familiar names among the advertise¬
ments in this newspaper T heir messages carry no extravagant
claims. They tell you the truth about the products which they fea¬
ture. They are as dependable as an old friend.
I
Advertisements are guides to safe purchases. Minutes given to
reading them arc well spent.
GROOMED FOR DIXIE INVADERS
|
I
Associated Press Photo
Bring on those Georgia Bulldogs is the cry around New Haven, as
Yale musters its gridiron forces to furnish flic* invading Dixie team a
lively afternoon, October 10. Alble Booth, Yale’s "Little Boy Blue,” will
lead the Eli’s attempt to wipe out memory of ’ast year's 18-14 defeat.
Pat Crowley, hard driving back, will be on hand to clear the way for the
shifty back, as well as plunge the line for those "first downs.”
Fights Last Night
New York. Benny Leonard, Now
York, knocked out Pal Shivers,
Brownsville, N. J., 2.
Flint, Mich. Young Jack Thump
son, San Francisco, knocked out Tom¬
my Jones, Tampa, Fla., 3. Britt
man, Minneapolis, outpointed
Donnelly, St. Louis, 8.
Indianapolis.- Benny Touchstone,
| Delroit, outpointed Walter 1’ickerd,
] Indianapolis, I. Billy Rose, Cim iri
outpointed Peter Mike, Indian
japolis, 8. Andy Kellett, Terre Haute,
And., knocked out George Walsh, Uhi
I.
>
, , You Know a Tonic Is CiooJ
when it makes yen eat like a hungry
boy and brings back the color to yout
Cheeks. You can soon feel * the
Itrengtlienaig, Invigorating Effect of
iROVE’S TASTELESS CHILL TONIC
Mo
Pkat ftvl
! Two Service Teams Agree to
Meel ami Turn Receipts Over
to Relief Work For Jobless
! People.
Washington, Oct. 7. t/P) -The echo
|of ed clinking stirred dollars by the for charging the unemploy¬ football
teams of Annapolis ami West Point
!again will he heard this year.
The two service teams have agreed
Bp meet, probably December 12, with
all receipts going to alleviate distress
‘of the jobless. Either New York,
'Philadelphia or Chicago will get the
game.
Army and Navy officials, who were
usk’ed I in- the benefit performance
by the Salvation Army, Salvation agreed to it
yesterday. The Army
sponsored last year’s contest in New
York which netted .$100,000 for the
unemployed and a 6 to 0 victory for
A rmy.
That was the first meeting of the
two institutions on the gridiron since
they severed relations four years ago
alter differences over eligibility re
ipiii emcnl s. These difficulties will
again lie left unsettled as they march
on the field in December.
Officials of the Navy are understood
Bp favor Franklin Field, Philadelphia.
The Navy’s last game is to be there
December 5 against the University of
Pennsylvania.
The size of the Polo Grounds in
New York, however, was considered a
formidable factor.
There was word West Point looked
upon December 12 as the Only avail¬
able dale, since the Army has an¬
other game November 28
WORNOUT MEN NEED
OLD-TIME IRON TONIC
Men who are worn-out, run-down
and nervous need iron, lime and cod
liver peptone as combined in Vinol.
The very FIRST bottle brings new
strength, heller appetite and sound
sleep. Vinol aids digestion and in¬
creases the red blood. Gives you new
pep and ambition. Equally good for
tired, nervous women and underweight
children. Tastes delicious. Get a bot¬
tle today. The results will surprise
you! Gash Pharmacy. (adv)