THE CHARLOTTE NEWS, CHARLOTTE, N. C, SATURDAY AFTERNOON, DECEMBER 10, 1921. I " I AM. mil.. . TohM, Bought OH MuSH I tjomt oo SOMETHIWS, FEEL lRE JQHt4 For toOR FEET. I Boo6HT oo WHAT Xito ou WAS roiH& His Alocixx& REA&IN6 'Soy ME: socks w ' - ONE-YEAR RULE MUTT AND JEFF JEFF STRETCHES HIS IMAGINATION AT TIMES. By BUD FISHER PASSED BY S.LA.A. Smaller Colleges Launch Counter-Attack for a Mi gratory Rule. rc;-:-.incham, Ala.. Dec. 10. The last THAT "Re ADS GOOb- I'LL TRV IT! j 1 DVMt0H MN5VJ'. i'lc M6AT BUT iHe'S M ARe THee S 11! BfSlS UrA. I SAf! )-' ! question oeiore adjourn- i; l II i uimuui meeting ot tne Intercollegiate Athletic As- session nere, the 'migra tory rule, was being lought out on floor today, interest m tnis ques- Southern -riarion. in equalled the 'the one-year tight rule last was ttHl by a narrow margin. JO years the one-year rule had M:itcd question. The smaller .tV--nut up a hard battle, but The m ivi'' For lost. athletes from par- athletics during ? prevents i'.i.iMnu in varsity f. nrs: lOiiege j far. Wh.n the question was brought up, was taKen alter oriet discus Kvcry college which joined the v organized Southern Confer- , xci-pt Ciemsrn., refused to vote he result was a tie, 10 to 10. r in-. Henry Phillips, of Sewanee, Tit. had announced the rule a a tension settled and then the nroke out. Profesosr C. L. Hare, i;,;irn. s.-.id he would change his l-tainst the rule. A second vote 15 votes in favor, with 10 a vo f.on. y:A ' A ; ; cf A' vote eivwei o: for wh r- li'.i: IV;' T'' rh. 1 1 Hi itelv following the settlement ; ; .ne-ye;;r rule question, the small tM jj.w brought on a counter-attack r-.i.-age of the "migratory" rule, 1 1, would prevent an athlete from fs: miner more than nsr his athletic career . r' to tins anicnunvMit i ;K- effect that the i.uisre-i to read that a irula-iMC at one college could never p.,eiiT another college in athletics." T one college An a mend- was proposed phrasing be student "ma- discussion was waxing hot at 7' .'ni-'it. when a motion to adjourn V' !i.."'ped through. K-;m i s. r.tatives of some of the small , .'..lleg.-s openly expressed the view passage of the one-year rule r.vipht result in withdrawals from the association, but it was generally con cde1 jiai the opposing factions would 1. rr.ouMul before the meeting had eivli. A split was regarded by offi cers as highly unlikely. SIX TEAMS STILL TIED IN BIKE RACE j Xew York. Dec. 10. The annual six I day bicycle race at Madison Square Gar ni ;i entered its last day today with six it ,ir.s still tied for the leadership at i o'clock a. in. The long grind began to te'l on the riders and two teams Bil-'.nrd-Alavoine and Grenda-Nelloni drop ped out in the early morning hours. The leaders had traversed 2,206 miles a -id five laps. The record for the 128th !:our is 2.505 miles and four laps, made fy Cameron and Kaiser in 1914. ANNOUNCE DATES OF GOLF TOURNAMENTS New York, Dec. 10. Official dates for the national golf tournaments of 1922 wer announced last night by "W. D. Vart rpool, secretary of the United S:at Golf Association, as follows: National open at Skokie, July 11: rational amateur at Brookline. Septem ber 4. and the women's championship at White Sulphur Springs, the week cf September 25. JOE LYNCH GETS DECISION. New York, Dec. 10. Joe Lynch, a former bantamweight titleholder, was s.:ven a decision over Maxey William son la-t night after the latter 's see i mis tossed a sponge into the ring in the eighth round of a ten-round bout. Williamson appeared to be on the verse of a knockout when the bout ended. t4T J 1 tL.r.m wr- jAierx yii home, at the club, at the office yiih.ome, at the chh at the office i)me. at the cpg office &e. at the clxmme office at the office the ffice thonWMake club, all! ZT1 1 dub, at theNe Ithome, at the dub. at the office c club, aft J4 IT & t.. TBAOt MARK uanau Your Dealer e :e e :e e Ihome, atlhe Slub. at the office iz 's' Z's S'MATTER POP? NOW IF L TA'KE l&HT PIECES OF MEAT AlvJD COT wr )M HftLF, WHAT WILL I HAVf ? J j MORE THAN ONE WAY TO BE CORRECT! CUT EACH IN HU&VW By C. M. PAYNE 1 ICUT EACH h) HlF.WHm COT IN HALWHA also sva V ' JLJLA 1 Southern Football Elevens Lacked Field-Goal Kickers Fuzzy Woodruff Confines All-Southern Eleven to Six Colleges, Selecting Four Men from the Left Side of Georgia's Line McMillin Given Berth. Reynolds, Georgia Pew, Georgia . . . Vv'helchel, Georgia Day, Georgia . . Grisham, Auburn . . . Left End Left Tackle . Left Guard . . '. . Center Right Guard MeCollough, Vanderbilt Right Tackle Oilinger, Auburn . . .... Right End McMillin, Centre Quarterback Barron. Georgia Tech Left Halfback Hole, Miss. College . . Right Halfback Harlan, Georgia Tech"..' .. .. Fullback Written for the United Press. Atlanta, Ga., Dec. 9. Selection of an All-Southern team this year is made difficult only ty the wealth of material presented for consideration. The re markable progress of the collegiate game in tho South was never better exemplified than in the 1921 season and particularly is this true in reference to the advanced technical knowledge of the players. As far as 1 can see, the team select ed has no one weakness, save that it carries the name of no reliable field goal kicker J'nd this was the one weakness of Southern football this year. Throughout Dixie there was no player developed who carried any tre mendous threat when he dropped back for drop kick or goal from placement. It is hard to imagine a stronger pair j of ends than Captain Owen Keynolcts. of Georgia and Rodney Oilinger, of Auburn. Both men are fierce and ac curate tacklers. Both men cover ptints splendidly. They are excellent interferers and keen analyists of foot bail play. C'emens, of Alabama, Vor nell of Tennessee, David, of Ogle thorpe and Stephenson, of Virginia, are ends who suggest themselves for con sideration, but neither man packs the ferocity of Reynolds, while Oilinger is given the call on account of the fact that. he is probably the best punter de veloped in Dixie this season. There was an ample plentitude of tackles, but no tackles stood out in finer reief than Arthur Pew, the vet- backs and this is one of the years when those phenoms come to light, i "Goat" Hale, who -made the name of Mississippi College famous throughout the South, a one man team in himself, and Red Barron? the brilliant Georgia Tech performer, seem to me to have the call over all others. Fullback brings on another discus sion. Roberts, of Centre, Shirhnar, of the South and his superior as a line bucker has been rarely seen. NEAL WILL LEAD TRINITY ELEVEN Laurinburg Star is Elected Captain ; Smith Will Man age 1922 Team. Durham, Dec. 10. The Trinity Col lege football team will be captained next year by Tom Neal, son of Judge Neal, of Laurinbmg, with W. H. Smith, of Clover, S. C,. as manager. Neal was named to lead the Methodists in their third season of intercollegiate football at a banquet to the football players by Trinity alumni of Durham county last evening. This banquet by the Durham alumni will be made a. yearly feautre ii, connection with Auburn, and Harlan, of Tech, are men- the selection of a Trsnity captain, tioned. On this season's work I will has been playing brillian: foot- pick Harlan. He has developed into I ball with the Trinity team since the one of the finest defensive players in i Methodists Returned to the gridiron two years ago. ne nas seen service in the backfield, but his. regular ber th is end. His playing at this position has won commendation from veterans of the game. Neal was last year nomi nated for the captaincy, being only a member of the sophomore class at that time. v Trinity's football schedule for next year is as yet incomplete, Graduate Manager B. W. Bernard announced at th banquet but it will equal that of any institution in the State. Games will be played with Carolina and Da vidson, in addition to the Wake Forest and New York University series:. Announcement was made at the banquet of the awarding of an honor ary monogram to Pi-of. R. L. Flowers in recognition of hss work for ath letics at Trinity. A. coincidence in this award is the fact that the only previous award of its nature ever made went to the father of Professor Flow TRAINING SCHOOL FOR THEJVIAJORS May Be Established so That Stars Can Be Had at a Reasonable Price. AMERICAN HORSES GO TO MEXICAN RACES Mexico City, Dec. 10. (By the Asso ciated Press) Fifty horses which re cently completed the racing season at the Bowie track In Maryland, arrived here yesterday as the first consignment of United States -entries for the Mexico City racing season, which opens Jan uary 14, under the auspices of the In ternational Jockey Club of Mexico. More than 300 horses are to oe shipped from the United States, the next con signment coming from Xew Orleans, where the season has just closed. The meeting here, which will last one hundred days, will bring more than 500 horses to Mexico City, ac:jrding to club officials. Brick stables to accom modate 500 horses are being construct ed, an entirely new track has been Laid out and a errandstand seating 7.000 ! people is under way. New York, Dec. 10. (By the Asso ciated Press.) Training schools for "sand lot" baseball players, or the formation of a special circuit for the development of "future greats," may scon be among the possibilities of baseball. They have been suggested to major league magnates as means of solving the problem of escaping from the "frenzied finance" that has been coiling itself around the national g?.me. The recent purchase of Heinie Groh, Jimmy O'Connell, and other players at fancy prcies is alarming the ciub owners, who, faced with a non-dratfing agreement with the minors, cannot see a solution in this direction. The situation is certain to come up for considerable discussion at the an nual meetings' of tne National and American Leagues in this city next week. - While one or two clubs l.t ecch major league inay be able to pay fabulous sums rbr minor league stars, the average Mg circuit combina tion cannot follow suit. With this idea in mind, the magnates are seeking to devise methods to meet tho new conditions. John A. Heydler, president of the National League, said: "The major leagues cannot continue to pay exorbitant sums for minor league players for sooner or later the very rivalry among the clubs will mean financial disaster to organized baseball. "Under the agreement signed when Judge Landis was n-ade high commis sioner, we cannot secure a change in the drafting conditions without the cc em Col. W. W. Flowers, for years the ' operation of the minors. either can "patron saint" of athletics at Trinity, we continue to pay thousands of dol- NOTRE DAME CALLS OFF CENTRE SCRAP San Diego, Calif., Dec. 10. Express ing surprise at the telegraphic cancel lation last night of negotiations for the i proposed Notre Dame-Centre football j i i contest here December 26. the local pi-an Georeia linesman, and Tot Mc- j committee in charse of arrangements Collough, the mainstay of Dan McGug- f0r the game sent a telegram today ton gin's vanderbilt machine. Both were Notre Dame authorities at South Bend, ! j kUN ORIUM the muin cogs in tne aerensrve anu oi fensive operations of their great ma chines. Murray, of Sewanee, and Pierce, of Auburn, come in for serious consideration. There were five outstanding guards in the South. They were Davis, of Georgia Tech, Hunt, of Alabama, Sloan, of Tennessee, Whelchel, of Georgia, and Grisham of Auburn. Whelchel, I believe was easily the best of a fine lot. His trick of breaking through the line and blocking punts was so con sistently done that it became a factor in Georgia's offense. However, he did not turn the trick against Auburn, and in that game he was opposed by Grisham. This pair gets the call. I don't think that it is any reflection on any of the other Southern centers to declare that "Bum" Day, of Geor gia stands out over all competition. Day has been practically an unanimous All-Southern selection for three years. Once he was All-American, and he improves with age. And the same thing goes for the quarterback position. I think that it is silly to discuss, any quarter other than Bo McMillin, the famous Centre speed demon and passer. It is likely that he will be named All-American. When it conies to the halfbacks, that's another matter. There were world of good ones down in Dixie this season. Offhand I recall Bill Cough Ian of Sewanee, Jim Tom Reynolds, of Georgia, Oppleman, of the University, of Virginia, Legendre, of Tulane Shirey of Auburn, any one of whom would be good enough for the best football team that ever pulled on -lea ted shoes. - But occasionally we have super half- Ind., inquiring as to the reason for ! their action. A similar message also I was dispatched to officials of Centre College at Danville, Ky. j The telegrams pointed out that call-' ing off of the contest would mean a j considerable financial loss and would ' cause disappointment to many Western football enthusiasts. N. B. Gould, chairman of the com mittee, voiced the hope that the tangle would be straightened out. He said he j and his associates had regarded the I game as finally arranged. FACULTY CALLED IT OFF. South Bend, Ind., Dec. 10. Follow ing a meeting yesterday of the Notre Dame faculty board in control of ath letics, all negotiations for a post-season . football game with Centre College at on riepTi Ppfpmhpr 2fi.- were called i Off. AUD SPECIAL Tuesday Night, Dec. 13 "The white hope of Shakespeare of the present generation. His Hamlet is by far the best." X. Y. Times, Nov. 6, 1921. FIRST SOUTHERN APPEARANCES AND CAROLINA ASKED TO PLAY HARVARD TEAM Cambridge, Mass., Dec. 10. Two Southern colleges are being considered by Harvard athletic authorities for the November 4 date, now open on the schedule for next year's Crimson foot ball team. University of North Carolina has been invited to come to Cambridge on that day. They now are considering whether their schedule can be re-adjusted to make the trip possible. Alumni of the University of the South, at Sewanee, Tenn., have asked the Har vard schedule makers to consider their undergraduate cloven if North Carolina is unable to acceptthe invitation. Americas foremost ssiakespeareah actor If "MyLTMlL lars every time a new player is needed to strengthen a club. Either we must develop our own material or be able to purchase it at a reasonable price. "Assuming that the former course is necessary, it may mean the estab lishment of a training camp or school for young players of promise, who are not under contract to any minor league club or organization or the formation cf a new minor league primarily for the development of replacement base ball material. A training school under the management of several former big league stars could do wonders with a class of bright, ambitious candidates who were eager to play on the big circuits. The various clubs could se:ect their nominees, place them in such a camp for six or eight months of inten sive training under- the proper in structors and, at the close of the course, players would be -ivailabio, who. in most cases, would be as far ad vanced in the science of professional baseball as the average minor leaguer under the old drafting system." GOVERNMENT USES MUCH PRINT PAPER TEXAS AGGIES WILL MEET CENTRE TEAM Fort Worth, Texas, Dec. 10. Texas A and M College will play Centre Col lege's football team at Dallas on Janua ry 2, it was learned here yesterday. Joe Utay, representing the State Fair As sociation, accepted a game with thf "Praying Colonels" following T. C. U's cancellation of a game scheduled to be played here the day after New Year's. Washington, Dec. 10. If the paper used by the Government Printing Of fice during the year was laid flat at a thickness of one sheet it would cover approximately thirty-five square miles and if made into octavo books, plied one on the other, they would soar 500 miles into the air, Public Printer Car ter estimates in his annual report filed with Congress. For printing and binding BO.000,000 pounds of paper were used during the fiscal year ended last June 30. Not all the paper was needed for printing speeches of Senators and Representa tives in the Congressional Record, how ever, as the office gets out various Government publications, Congression al documents, stationary and the like. During the last fiscal year total ex penditures of the printing office amoun ted to $11,111,111. compared with ap proximately $13,000,000 the previous year. HERMAN KNOCKS OUT O'GATTY. New York, Deo. 10 Pete Herman, of New Orleans, former bantamweight champion, knocked out Packy O'Gatty, of New York, in the first round of a 15-round bout last night, O'Gatty was floored by a left heok to the jaw after two minutes and forty seconds of boxing. MISS HARRISON TO WED. New York, Deo 10. Former Gover nor Francis Burton Harrison, of the Philippines, who is now In Spain, cabled friends here today announcing the engagement of his daughter, Vir ginia Randolph Harrison, to Christian Gross, of Chicago. They will be mar ried at Algeciras, Spain, next year. CS9 mm. i "A-ANT METHOD. fleautU ar MtUa-wM For further artlrulnr addrm THE 4MHALAMT ME7H0O CO.. Suite 09 Unl.V Inn Kay No. Los Areola. Cal. T IN G3 A- M LL 65 consecutive itmes on Eroadeu. A nvodem record. Greatest lioin& Ha'irvlet" My posZ szoss. "Waller HampderCs pla.ee as- leading .tiaencatv xragemarv assured. - at hmsaio PRICES? 50T5L$2.00 Seats Now Selling at Beatty's Drug Store. MAIL ORDERS NOW to George E. Swink, Manager. What Shall I Give Him? A Hat W an order for one. Here are all of the good shapes and colors, Soft Hats Silk Hats, Derbies Golf and Motoring Caps Fur Caps. MELLON'S .2:"-'. The Home of Knox and Stetson Hats 4 ( "i

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