The Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, GA.) 1906-1907, October 15, 1906, Image 12

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

Baseball Now a Dead One EDITED BY PERCY H. WHITING PttoToj nr > rvamoKB f*. , UC0_ F/AJ1//UO ARE THREE OF THE MEN WHO HELPED THE WHITE IS5J9 J^|,|ASEB ALL C H A MP |0 NSHIP OF. THE WORLD. SHuVANAnS pI?CHE T R H ‘?D Y Oc"wmT T E CHER WALSH ’ CATCHER THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN, MONDAY OCTOBER. 15 Football Is the Big Game Tech Defeats Grant Team And Shows Improvement The Tech football tram made It* third formzl appearance Saturday afternoon ! and won Ita occond victory, defeating the i atrang Grant nnlvemity team of Clint fa- noofo by a aeore of IS to 0, Everything conaldered, the Terh ahowring , was a highly creditable one. nnd the lurk- era of the local team feel highly enrouraged. though there la no doubt but that they are worried over the prospect of tackling He* wanee next Saturday. The Tech team played to win Saturday —but that was all. No attempt was made to run up n high score. When Coach lug tho rushes I Helaman left for hla trip to Georgla-Da- * vldson game, he told Quarterback Hubert • . to pluy hla team no harder than was n**o- 1 eaaary to win. It was realised that Grant when it comes to handing out bouquets. He took Davies' place In the line-up. and filled It so well that the loss of the der. nud he Is going to make one of the other star was hardly felt. His running with the l»nfl was of the moat brilliant most valuable men ou the team this year. The other buck-field men—Hubert, Sweet, Hightower and Meaua-ft-yed brilliantly, and It Is a certainty that Tech is going to hare n strong team this year on the of tensive. The defensive work wna also good, and there was seldom any trouble In hold of the Grant backs. Illll. at end, played n first-Has* game nud Ids gissl nature and everlasting cheer fnines4 had n good effects on the team, as the man who fell on the ball THREE OF THE WORLD’S CHAMPIONS was not golug to be especially piissllng. j for the first touchdown after It had lieeu and. In consequence. It was not necessary carried over the goal line nnd then ftim .' to resort to anything but straight footballbled. He was In practically nil of the plays j to win the game. that strayed Into lilt territory, nud lu most Unebn^t and end runs were carried with of those which did uot. punts— and such punts. Brown wasn't his best, of course, but the way he got under the pigskin nnd biffed It down the field was Sensational. As a rule, his punts : were not especially loug. because be dbl , not try to make them long. Thirty four 1 yards was, perhaps, the average. Short, ; high ones were much more to the point. But ouce, in the Isat half of the game, • he let out and booted the ball. It was after the last touchdown was made, nnd , Grant kicked off toward the north goal. (The ball went, perhaps, 26 or 31 yards, nnd • then Brown grabbed It. He ran n step or : two to get o good swing, nnd then (Minted • the hall to within 10 yards of Grant's goal —a total distance of, at least, 75 yards. t Brown's work was the moat brilliant of the day, hut little Hightower Is right there The line-up; TECH— Position. GRANT Monroo .. ..eeuter William Bell.. .. right guard Conn McCarty right tackle Holtxclaw Smith.. left guard Burchfield .left tackle. . .Ketron-Kel*< Roliert.. , x Hweet right half.. Hightower left half.. Means ....fullback.. ..Morgan ... Prentiss ..Heupert .. ..Keith Wells Summary: . __ Hubert; goals from touehdown. Referee. O'Donnell, of Pennsylvania; pires, Beene, of Tennessee, and Hulllhen, of Grant; head linesiunn. Butler, of Teeli; linesmen. Cheatham, of Teeli, and Perkins, of Grant. Timers, Halit nud Smith, of Georgia Loses Opener, But Team Does Notable Work /Special to The Georgian. • University of Georgia, Oct. 15.-—In ‘ her first game of tho season, which I Georgia played here on Saturday with ; Davidson, fhe showed the probability ! of developing n strong eleven for the | season; and, although she was defeat- : ed by the score of 15 to 0, this does not j Indicate her true strength. The work of the "red and black" throughout was wholly consistent, find her men finished as fresh as when they started. The team work was charm’- . terixed by aggressiveness and a good • grasp of the new rules. This game was Georgia's maiden ef- , fort this year, while her opponents hail « been seasoned by two galies w‘th very t strong teams, and the men composing ; the visiting team were much older and • more mature than the Georgia men. • In fact, of the thirteen men In the ' game for Georgia not over three or : four are entitled to vote. While the score was 15 to 0, only : two touchdowns were acored by Da vidson, and those only after every foot . of the gridiron had been hotly contest- ‘ ed. The other points were secured on ! a lucky drop kick from the 80-yard line ; by Elliott, with fifty seconds to play } In the last half. It did not seem that either team ‘ was able to use the forward pass suc- ' coaafully. for in four instances, twice by each team. It was attempted, aid J In none of these cases proved to be a ■ ground gainer. , No man was on the field whose tnck- • ling could equal that of Thurman, ? Georgia's left end. Time after time he broke through the Davidson line . nnd downed the runner before he could ' get well started. Thurman Is In his r first year at the university, and while ; rather light, is as fast as lightning. A pluckier player hasn't been seen on the Georgia field In years. Fleming, at fullback, proved to be by far Georgia's best ground gainer, on one delayed pass he gained 20 yards, charging through the line near center, passing every man on the Da vidson team except one of their backs, who finally nabbed him. The first score was made after three minutes of piny, when Denny carried the ball over the line for a touchdown. In bringing the ball out for a try at goal It was touched to the ground, and, of course, queered the piny. In the second half McKay went over for n touchdown and Klllott kicked goal. With the ball on Georgia’s 30-yard line and less than one minute to play, Klllott placed a great drop kick be tween the goal posts. The line-up; Davidson. Georgia. Sadler 1. e Thurman Allen 1. t Deloplerre l,entx I. g Arrcndnle Rdgerton e 11. Ketron Spicer »\ g. MuKay-Harmnn Walker r. t Brown Huntington .. .. r. e Raoul Miller 1. h G. C\ Ketron Denny r. h. .Ransom-Smith McKay f. b Fleming Klllott q. b Hodgson Summary—Time of halves, 20 and 10 minutes, referee, Butler of Georgia and North Carolina; umpire, Sibley of Vanderbilt; head linesman, Hugh Gor don of Georgia, Horace Ketron. captalit of the 1903 team. Is hack at his old position nt center, and Is playing the same ter rific game he played hack In 1902 and 1903. Ketron will certainly prove a world of strength to the team. Another Sporting Sermon On the Idiocy of Betting As & general proposition, a man who , bets on a hors© race ought to have a * % keeper appointed to look after his money. • But a man who goes against this Piedmont park hand-book game ought to have a commission appointed to ex amine into his sanity, i It's awful to see men "crazy from the i heat" In this chilly weather, but there j Is no other way of accounting for ' financial doings of those who bet I against those hand-books at Piedmont 1 park last week. ; As a frenzied game. It ought to make Htandard Oil pink with perturbation. For all the horses "run for the book." and the lambs come in for a shearing, no matter how they finish. Talk about your "tight books"—well, those chaps make one that Is close to the limit. If the natural odds on a j horse would be 6 to 1, they give you 3 i to 1. The even money fuvorlte is let [ out In small blocks at 2 to 5 and 3 to I 5. but you can't have im^ rtf , did, the books might lose, i mote chance, but the books don't take chances. Safe nnd sure Is their motto. The way they do It Is to make from a 165 to a 195 per cent book. That Is. for every $100 they pay out to the men who win. they make a profit of from 865 to |95—no matter which horse wins. Here's how it works, taking the fourth race Friday as an example. Here are the horses, the odds and the "bookmakers’ |*ercentqgr*' (the book makers’ percentage, as shown below, enables the puncher to tell what his profit will be, provided he makes a "round book"—that Is. one In which he will pay out about the same amount i on each horse, no matter which one wins): Horse. Odds. Pcri'ont. Foxy Grandma 4 to l Laura Hunter 2 to 1, Ann Hill 2 tot Young Molo , .2 to 1 Kthel Barry 4 lot Italshot . .2 to 1 The Rain t«» l bettor puts , up (nnd hence the cash taken In by the book), and the right- hand columv the total, which Is tho amount he would pay back on each horse If It won—supposing he made a “round book" and stood to pay out about $100, DC won; • Foxy Grandma Laura Hunter. matter which horse $100 Ann Hill Young Molo Kthel Barry Halshnt .... The Ruin .. ,.$80 to$20 .. 66 to 33 .. 66 to 38 .. 66 to\ 33 .. 80 to 20 .. 66 to 33 .. 80 to 20 TECH SECOND TEAM BEATEN The Htolie Mountain team found the Teeli •wind team easy pickings nt Tech field Saturday afternoon mid won with ease by seore of 15 to 0. The Stone Moinitalii team showed very remarkable form for so ehrly In the season, anil they will give a run to any team of their weight In the South. The bright particular feature of gmnt* was the running of Woodrtff. This youngster hntidles himself like n com ing varsity wonder nml will make Ills mark In the football world. The line-up TECH SECOND, , , .center Mnlholt . right guard . right taekle .left guard . . left taekle .right end . . .left end . . . right half . ..left half . STONE MT. Ice Ituwllngs . • . Mnurk . . . . Barnwell . , . Bollard Halley. Frank . Baltey ....*. Bradshaw . . . Conk Hal lev. Fred . , Woodruff . . , , By “Straight Football Vanderbilt Makes Gains O0000O00000000000IWHWHWOOft FOOTBALL RE8ULTS. Local. O Tech 18. Grant University 0. O Htone Mountain 15, Tech Scrubs 0.0 O Southern. Davidson 15. Georgia 0. Virginia 8, Humpden-Hidney 6. Maryville 11, Tennessee 0. Vanderbilt 29. Mississippi ‘0. Auburn 15, Gordon 0. Memphis Universal School Fitzgerald School 0. Alabama 14, Howard 0. Bingham School 15, Asheville 5.' Northern, Harvard 21. Amherst Aggies 0. West Point 0, Colgate 0. Swarthmore 4, Pennsylvania 0« Yale 17, Holy Cross 0. Princeton 5, Annapolis 0. Total i*er cent 206.65 Looks fine that way! No favorite In the race! All long shots! The be nevolent bookmaker goes you node than you bet, no matter which horse wins! However, It looks a bit mote com mercial from the pencller’s viewpoint. In the first place. It makes 111 tie differ ence to him which horse wins, as he stands to pay out about the same amount on every horse. line is an other string of «lo|w on It. The left- hand column of figuies show,** the amount the bookmaker bet Total cash taken In .. ..$19: So It becomes evident that though some lucky bettors are due to take down lloo, the bookie Is going to pull down a fist-full. Here Is how the pen- cller stands: If*Foxy Grandma won he would pay out $loo, leaving a profit/of $92. If Laura Hunter won he would pay out $99, leaving a profit of $93. If Ann Hill won he would pay out $99, leaving a profit of $93. If Young Molo won he would pay out $99, leaving a profit of $93. If Kthel Hurry won he would pay out $Hm, leaving u profit of $92. If Balahot won he would pay out $99. leaving a profit of $93. If The Ram won he would pay out $100, leaving a profit of $92. As long as tho bookmakers are tak ing down $92 of every $192 of your money they handle, how long do you think you are going to last at the game? And those are no unusual figures for the Piedmont park game. In the first race Friday the total percentage was 174—or n profit of $74 out of every $174 on any one contest handled, lu the second race the percentage was 16S and In tho third 171. Now, it happens to be a fact that only one man who ever played the races and made money out of It was "Pittsburg Phil." And, "gentle reader," you have about as much chance of be ing a “Pittsburg Phil" as you Imve. of being a I'aesar, a Napoleon, a Shake speare or a Nnali. "Pittsburg Hill" made Ids money lK-t- tlug where Ihe odds were liberal and the bookmaket's percentage small. He had absolutely the best information ob tainable. lie made tlie racing game a life study. Incidentally It killed him, but ho made money Yale Freshmen 11, Phillips-And- O over 0. 0 Wisconsin f», Lawrence 0. O Cornell 24. Bucknell 6. 0 Amherst J2, Tufts 5. O O Dartsmouth 4, University of O O Maine «, O O Wesleyan 0, Rnwdoln 0. 0 O Williams 17, Mtddlebury 0. 0 O Haveford 5. Lehigh 0. O O Pennsylvania State 0, Gettys- O O burg i). 0 O Lafayette 34, Medicos 0. O O Harvard Second 4, Phillips-Kx- 0 O eter 0. is O Ohio State 30. Denison 0. O Cincinnati 0. Miami ». O Clemaon o, V. P. I. o. Special to The Georgian. Nashville, Tehn., Oct. 15.—Five touchdowns and four, goals kicked was what Vanderbilt did to the University of Mississippi on Dudley field Satur day afternoon, the score being 29 to 0. Not once did the visitors succeed in making the distance, required in three downs; In fact, they never made half of It during the entire game. The Vanderbilt line held like a stone wall and the two muchly-touted "All- Southern" celebrities, Elmer nnd Con ner, proved easy picking for Jo Pritch ard and Kd Neel. The two Vanderbilt tackles bounced them out of place re peatedly and did not seem at all wor ried In handling them. Finally Jo Pritchard was put out of the game for being "rough" with Elmer. The latter claimed Pritchard slugged him. Jo says he pushed him with his open hand and that Elmer Is "yellow" und a big baby, too. Neither Conner nor Elmer got Into many of the plays, and they did little tackling. The star work for Mississip pi was done by Wettlln, nn end on Se- wanee two years ago, but now playing quarter for Mississippi. The defense Vanderbilt has built up this year has been simply marvelous. Neither Kentucky State nor Mississip pi was able to budge tho line a yard. Innis Brown and Patterson are missing from It, but in their stead ate such stalwarts ms Ed Noel. Chorn. King, Sherrill and others, who are playing fast, aggressive football. Vanderbilt has developed two fast and heady quarterbacks In Costen and Hall. Both run with the ball well, call signals rapidly and display good judgment in running the team. Vanderbilt's gains Saturday were made mostly on straight football, and the big squad of Sewanee players down to "get n line" didn't see anything they had not known before. Craig and the Blakes (three of them) circled the ends for king runs time and again, and Owsley Manier, Craig and the Blakes bucked the Mississippi line for long distances. Vanderbilt tried the quarterback kick on one occasion and made a pretty gain with it, a Vanderbilt man speeding out on the end, down the field, and getting the ball. The Commodores were severely pen alized on several occasions, one time half the distance of the field being given Mississippi. No one was se riously hurt, A good-sized crowd was out. Tad Sees a Sunday Fight And Writes a Funny Story O 0 0 0O0O0OOOOOOOOOOO0O00O000OO LEWIS PROVES GOOD FIGHTER Philadelphia, Oct. 15.— 1 That Harry Lewis has always been held cheaply was proved In the wind-up nt the Na tional Athletic Club Saturday night, when. In the second round, Lewis got inside of Willie Fitzgerald's guard und sending down his right, hit Fitzger ald on the dangerous part. The punrh was delivered so quickly (hat even those in the Immediate vicin ity of the ringside scarcely knew what was c«»ndng off. Willie went down for the limit, and at fit si shooed no inclination to get up. When he did get up. Fitzgerald was visibly groggy, und wa«* mntpelled to Stall a lift. Lewis, however, seeing his advantage, was after him. As so,mi ns Fitzgerald assumed a standing | position. Leaf - *•-- * *— * ■- Again Fit*, this time l.ewl excitement, an* By TAD. New York, Oct. J5.—Jeff O'Connell, an English featherweight, fought Char lie Lucas, a New York lad, yesterday upon a West Sldo pier and battered him fearfully In a fifteen-round fight. It was at 3 o'clock that the bout was to take place. W# all met In a bum saloon over on Eighth uvenue, somewhere near Thir ty-seventh street, and waited for the mttt artists. There was h restaurant upstairs, man with Ved grogans was the chef, and he was as busy as a one-armed paper-hanger with the hives. The crowd Gmt waited was hungry and the red-whiskered gent kept tossing ham and eggs in the crowd so fast that you could not count the orders. * Over In the corner where the muddy tan bark hud accumulated as thick a* a mattress they had pitched the ring. Some of the crowd sat upon u little house built there; others had boxes, nnd some stood Inside the little ring. Jeff- O'Connell, with a bunch of re fined-looking gentlemen, entered first. Jeff has a little pug nose, and a pret ty shape. In a few minutes Lucas, who looks like a "Black Hand” man, entered with his Shitrkey-Hke build and sat In a big upholstered chair. They had no stools, so each man grabbed an arm chair. It was to be fifteen rounds, break clean, and the winner was to have Kid Murphy ns his next opponent. Kid. was introduced, said hello to some of the fellows, and beat It back to the crowd. Bang, crash, zing, went something, and the fight started. O’Connell, who wears a swell left, began to comb the features off Lucas and soon had hltn covered with blood. The latter was much shorter than the Britton, and tossed a loose right around as though ho didn’t care what it hit. Jeff fed him lefts and rights until his opponent's nose began to resemble tho beak worn by Clrnno de Bergerac and kept pelting. It went along this way until the sixth, .and then O'Con nell stung his man with a right In the pit of the stomach. Lucas folded up his fencer, but i»e held on. He was covered with blood, but stuck the round out by following the advice of belladona plasters and hanging on. Again jn the twelfth he made Joe Grim look like a sickly child. He took by actual count ten on the beezer, six on the-Jaw, four on the ear, seven In the front and twelve on the ribs. He was as hard'to dovyn as a big pill, and only fell once from weakness, not a punch. On with the fight. The lost three rounds were slaughter. Lucas reeled around tho ring, blood dripping from his mouth and nose, and he was tak ing the licking of Ids life. O’Connell did not rest u minute, hut belted him from side to side as though he was a bag. It Is doubtful whether Lucas could have gone three minutes more. He was a sight as he left the ring, but O'Connell had not a mark. G.M.A. PLAYS HIGH SCHOOL The Georgia Military ncadeiny football team and the Hoys' High school eleven will meet Monday afternoon at Piedmont puck. Both teams are strong and a good game seems certain. A goodly number of rooters from each side are expected. Tho game will lie cplled nt 3 o'clock. BUSY DAYS AT L0CUSTGR0VE FOOTBALL TEAM IS GETTING READY FOR HARD STRUGGLE AGAINST MERCER. Special to The Georgian. Locust Grove, Go.,- Oet 15.—The football team of Locunt Grove Institute baa se cured a game with Mercer university for October 20 at Macon. \ * The boys here are practicing dally atf|l overtime to get In shape for the game. The line-up will be strengthened by Wood ruff nud James—(wp husky fellows, who were out of the high school game on ac count of sickness. Drelier, who has been nt quarter since Gray's Illness, Is showing up In great shape. Ills drop-kicks are wonders. The backs aro getting faster, nod, in general, tho tsam Is stronger tbau It wav a week ago. Mercer may win the game, but the ■core should not be overwhelming," it tho verdict here. Locust Grove meets Gordon Institute Oc* tolier 29. nt Barnesvllle. It is said here that Tech's scrubs. Uni versity School for Boys. Georgia Military academy and Donald Fraser will not meet the Locust Grove boys, though open dates and terms have been offered. dj SOX CAPTURE FIRST HONORS WIN LAST TWO GAMES WITH CUBS AND ARE NOW THE WORLD'S CHAMPIONS. OO0OtJb00000000000<K Kl c>ooco« O HOW MONEY WAS SPLIT o O iTilcugo, Oct. 15.—Here are the n O attendance figures on the world', a 0 championship: Y 0 Total attendance, 89,845. Y Sunday'* attendance, I9,24'.t Y Total receipt* of the six game, a O 0 0 *105,540. , „ 0 Share of winning team, *-3. n winning 0 O 051.53. O Share of each man on 0 team. *1,192.93. , O Share of losing team, *18,350.17 0 t> Share of eacli man on kwintr o O teatfi, *439.47. h Y O Receipts of last year 1 * chain, o 0 plonship series, *68,505. n 000000000000000001300000OOC Chicago, Oct. 15.—The Chicago Ann League Imschall elub won Rstdrilny . Sunday's guinea In the eerie* for world's championship, and clinched their claim to the title. They won four S; ■■ to the National League club's two. The White Sox won Sunday hr •core of 8 to 3, driving the fsmoue Vi fingered Drown” to the dressing rue, the second Inning. After .the second wns over ntvl the A lean, had piled up .even runs, the result again In donl.t. Tho Nationals three ruue, but tlmt wua hardly 11 the bucket, nnd the rrowtl Just held off f„ r the Ann! celebration, which followed the last out. When the end of the game mine, 11 (•row'd went wild.' -Thera were cheers f, everybody on the winning ten 111 or coune. ed with It, and aome for the losers, 1 .„ Charley Murphy, tho game president of tt losing team, made n little speech, lu whl, he said thnt, the best team an there was a large and lofty celebration. The score of Sunday's game follow. AMKItIL'A.NS— flihu, rf. . , . •lout**, rf Iflbell. 2b Davis, ns Itobr, 3b Donohue, lb Dougherty, If. .. Sullivan, c White, p.... „ Totnls. . NATIO.YAI.S— AH. H. II. I’l r.. Huffman. Kheekiird, If., Hehulto, rf. . t'hitnrc. lb.. . Htelnfeldt, 3b. Tinker, ns.. .. Kvers, 2b.. ., Kllug. c Brown, p.. ,, Overall, p. „ •UeMler...... SOME SP0RTLETS RACE RESULTS. The renull* of Hulurday'x meet nt Died uiunt pnrk follow; FI rat Knee—Ktx furlougx: Timothy Wen, •ts iKteelei, won; l.nurn Hunter, tWat- *om, gerund; Kittle SS i Murphyt, third. Time 1 :IHH. Hern ml liner—Six furlong**: Dnvenport. K7 iMurphyi. won: Uhnrlen McKee. 96 iNtnlih*. *econd: McIVcelver, l«3 tVittoei, third. Time f;19. Til In! Bure—8lx nml ouobnlf furlongH: Mip. Anne. Ill- t8trphen*i. won: Vie Zelg- ler. !I»> (Virtue*, necoittl; t'.iinbenloue, l<»3 ititlm, third. Fourth IUip-Obp mile: Even D'e i Kteieii»». 3 to 5, won; Alberto!.* IDthd, ft* ]. wrnud: Stock wood iVittoei, 3 to l hit d. Time 1:4*». Fourth K.hi* I In 111.11*1*1 Hey. even, wo Pi, ten-don. I to 5. peeond; Meli\ r*. third. MURPHY GETS BUSY. New York, Oct. 15.—Tommy Murphy, It In said Jimmy Britt hax {topes of inducing: Battling Nelson to sign up for a fight In San Francisco In Decem ber. He thinks that a third contest between the Dane and himself would be a bigger drawing card than another Gans-Nelson match. Nutboy, the Boston trotter, won sev- •en races out of eJght starts on the Ed Geers heads the list of money earning drivers this season, as usual, having $27,785 to hfs credit. Totals ....33 3 7 24 10 0 •Batted for Overall in the ninth. Score by Inuinga; Americans 340 000 Ol*-S Nationals. .. . .. .100 010 ooi—3 .Summary; Left ou bases, Americam* Nationals 9; two-base hits, Schulte, Davl*. Donohue, Overall, Evers; hits off Brfcwn in 12-3 Innings, off Overall 6 In 61-3 In- nlngs, off White 7; sacrifice hits, Shock- nrd, Owens; stolen base, Rohe; double play, Davis to Donohue; struck out by Overall 3, by White 2; base on bnlls off Brown 1, off Overall 2, off White 4; hit by pitched ball, Oiisuce. Time, 1:55. Um pires, O'Loughllu and Johnstons. Saturday afternoon's game wns hard fought—a regular battle of the alujqrcr*. Both teams made a hunch of errors, some of which were pretty raw, and a dozen times the crowd went wild at the aeuna tional plays and the hired hits with men on bases. The Nationals used threo pltebcr*- lteiilbneh, I'fdster und Ovsrafi, all of whom tvero bit hard, and the Americans used lY.vish and White. fit range to say, yie Nationals made the least hits and the least errors. The White Box were credited with an even dozen hits nnd discredited with five errors. The score: NATIONAL!*— Hoffman, of Mhcckard, If.. .. Schulte, rf. . , Chance, lb.. .. Mtelnleldt. 3b... Tinker, sa.. .. Evers, 2b.. .. .. Kllug. c Keiilbnrb, p.. .. Pfelster, p. . overall, p •Moran ..i u u u Total* 33 « *7 27 •Batted for Evers In ninth Inning. AU. ICh: I'u AB. It. H. I'd. A a l •: Thin season wns the fifth for a Chl- eago team of the National Baseball 00 per cent In u BARNESVILLE BEATEN. Special t«» The Georgian. Auburn, Ala., Oct 13,-Tho fast,,, t plucky and aggressive team from i PHrl ,« »n g.» over Bartlesville met defeat at the hands;, * an . of Auburn here Saturday by a score 1 of 15 t*j o. The game was one of the moat brilliant and Interesting ever George Tebeau will have to sign new played here. Although the Gordon manager? for both hjg Kansas City cadets were lighter than Auburn, they t and Denver ball tenniM next season, showed good'training, good team work. and came very near scoring In the first three minutes. While Auburn seemed to be asleep at the start, the visitors made several yards gain. After that It was all Auburn's way. For Gordon, Prout, J. It. Smith, the 15-year-old quarter back, and Captain Williams deserve special mention. For Auburn, Lacey, liaison, Harris and Mi Lure ed up Line-up, of t AUBURN. Davis • Iain Tlmgard-Holly Feiiloo Picket Batson. atk*d Int lit to the tt as curried aw _ . han.es ..r .he svcrsKe bettor I lo Vhro* »s.Vr nnW? b$L*I j ^ «...'em' feather, will b* • hu.V likewise against the local hand- * getting himself, essayed t«* kick ■ *" r the next month. He has been j Hughes, book pi*»|H»sitlon 1* somewhere in the i through the ropes in tlic direction of (signed to meet Johnny Dwyer for six I Harrta-Sparkman region of I to i.oao.artrt. Erne's chons. This was entirely out, rounds before the National Athletic{Lacey nyh»dy can buck that game I of . rder. but before Fitx. still groggy, j t*1ub of Uhiladclpitta, and Im* aim* been 1 (’apt. WThitner.... keep **ttt of the lunatic] had .* chance to get up, the bout waAj matched to meet Matty * Baldwin ut j McLut GolHN iN. .. Wilkinson Prout .... Dunnell From a financial standpoint the sea son was the best In the history of the Canadian LaCrosse League. The fig ures for the season show receipt* amounting to $77,500. Dirk Hyland, who defeated Eddie Hanlon, has been placed on the list of desirable attractions by ult the fight promoters. tajloMli A uteri ('Sim... Lome, the middle column what the asylum U a mystery to the writer. stopped l»> the ofiidals. Chelsea fi»r fifteen fund* October 23.« Tlu* Washington and Jefferson eleven irprfyed the football critics by plaving ............ magnificent game ugHlnst Princeton FrankUn 11111,1 ,lo,tlln * the Tigers to the low score .... Metre.'," f 8 tu “' " 'iSrohv Th *‘ clrru,t " r show. In the i n nS. 1 Mtddts West begins this week with V.'f. b.HIM ' ,he Iin / U ' nl exhibition In Kansu* City. I. It.. .Williams. Capt • * " q. b J. H. Hmlth i Officiate—Hill and Stokes. NAT KAISER & CO Bargaine in unredeemed Dia monds. Confidential loans on w Music at St. Nicholas Rink, ju Decatur St. KimbaU Hon* ..soo «m 102 401 Kinuumry: Hit* off Heulbuch i" - 1 ililting*, Pfelster 3 lu t IttnlBg. Overall f I' 5 2-3 itinlnss; Wnlab, 6 In 71-3 I tin I us*. White 1 lu 2 2-3 inning*: left ou haw fimuil*- in. Americana H; two-lMtae lit; bell 4. Robe. Pavla 2, Donohue. » 1 Schulte, Htelnfeldt; anrtiOce hit*, ''•n'"- Sheckar*). Tinker, Retilbncb; ■tolen ••"-'V Dougherty. Davl*. Tinker. Evers: plays. Schulte to Ever* to Kllng; <**'I 1 . 1 ', 1. J Iteultimlt 1. Ii.v I’felsler 1.1 W' 1 ,' 1 ' ' by Overall 5; l«tse« on Italia off 2, off Pfelster 1. off Widal! 5, off • » v, i r ; lll .‘ off White 2; wild pitch. Overall!: hli.V? pitched bail. Chance, Donohue. Tim" Umpire*, o'I.ougiii(u nnd Johnston" CLEM80N TIES V. P. L Clemaon College, 8. C„ Oct. Clemaon and the Virginia Polyi" Institute played a 9 to 9 tic here urdnv. The game wan lilleti t*> brim with exciting Incident* atnl local players had to exert almo’* 1 perhutnan effort.* to keep the \ ,r * Ians from scoring. The game of punting. Captain Furtlck, of < non, played a brilliant game and the star of the afternoon's doing*- FELL IN h . His fall ltat ns soon a* n " s "'' cleaned and reshaped It. 28 I k hall HI.