Newspaper Page Text
l'HE ATLANTA GEORGIAN, MONDAY. NOVEMBER 12. IDOfi.
Smith Signs Long-Looked-For Southpaw
-Edited By PERCY H. WHITING..
FANCY WORK
OVER TRAPS
POOR HANDLING OF PUNTS
COST GEORGIA THE GAME 1 ,
WINCHESTER TEAM AND POWDER
COMPANY REPRESENTATIVES
DO GOOD SHOOTING.
Undoubtedly the mo*t remarkable rifle, re
volver and shotgun shooting ever aeon In
Atlanta ws* don- Saturday afternoon nt
Lakewood during the exhibition riven by
the Winchester team.
Tbe fancy rifle and revolver shooting of
Nr. ond Mrs. Topperweln ws* n revelation
even to men who bad been shooting nil
their Uvea. The ease with which they tow
ed email marbles Into the air. broke them
with rifle balls and then shattered the
# pieces before they hit the ground was r*»
* markable. With nil apparent eaae they
would eject a cartridge front their rifles and
then hit It with « bullet before It reached
the ground, reins* enioll cartridges ‘and
other diminutive articles thrown Into the
air were easy marks for thla wonderful
Their work over the traps waa wonder
fully good, and so was that of the repre
sentatives of various (Murder companies
who at.oi shot. Croeby and Hatcher both
made srr out of It**. Hawkins nod Huff made
96, Taylor and Money made 96. t'roaby
mad- hh last !iu without a mla«. Mrs.
Topperwefn broke Do out of ion.
Freeman. the ex Atlanta poUeeinsn. shot
with the dub team. of which he la a mem-
I ber, and scored a St and two 24's.
The scores follow:
WinchtaUr Squad.
—-Targets.
KnnicM.
Tarns
X,
~w
TWT
Hawkins
« rtmb.v
Mrs. Topperwcln. .
!k>u
Tsylor
-4
r 1
34
33
22
36
33
34
24
21
26
24
24
24
M
R7
90
93
96
Powder R,pr,,,ntatlvaa.
Tarxcts.-
Nsms*.
I A
25
35
a. iTotiii
Jlntch'r
Huff
Ward
Money
Wortn«*n
;|m
. 72
. 24
.! 3>
34
•j:.
I!
22
24
24
33
24
24
24
23
23
23
»
97
M
96
IW
Club Shootara.
I Names.
fsn*r
i p
Freeman
Armstead *
Kverett
Wat more
Hnnnlcutt
i.'amden
latter
rant**
Yale can no longer boast that of tbe
i big college elevens she la the only one
that has not lm*n scored on.
Hammy Morse la out of place at full
| back. Ho cannot get moving as fast
1 us when he was playing half back.
THE GAME, REDUCED TO FIGURES
Made ten yard* In three consecutive down* (unaided by penalties)—
Tech three time*, Georgia once.
Distance gained by straight play, exclualve of the distance the hall
was run back after kicks—by Tech 76 yard* (71 yards In first half):
Georgia, 27 yards (20 yard* In first half). , . ..
Average gain per down—By Tech 1.7 yards: by Georgia, 1.8 yards.
Time taken out on account of Injuries—By Tech twice.
Penalties assessed—Against Tech 25 yards: against Georgia, 5 yard*.
Brown - * punt* averaged 82 yards.
Graves* punts averaged 34 yards.
Tech s kick-off* averaged 43 yard*.
Georgia’s kick-offs averaged 48 yarts.
Neither team lost the ball on fumbles In a scrimmage.
Georgia men fumbled punta 7 times and lost the ball each time.
Held for down*—Tech twice: Georgia, once.
Ban the ball back after kicks. Tech *8 yards In ten chances, an aver
age of 8.8 yards; Georgia, 20 yards In 8 chances, an average of 21-3
5<ir< Tech was forced to kick 11 times. Georgia 5 times.
The ball changed hand* 27 times during the progress of the game.
SMITH GETS
A SOUTHPAW
GRANT SCHOPP. LAST YEAR WITH
OTTUMWA IN IOWA LEAGUE
ACCEPT8 TERMS.
An Inability to handle punt*, either long
or •hort, coat Georgia bar annonl football
game with Tech. The score was 17 to 0,
with one point'proteated.
rnahta to make ten yard* In the required
three downs, afraid to try forward paaeea,
and up against a defense almost aa good aa
her own, the Tech team waa forced Into a
kicking game. Eleven tlmea waa Quarter
back Rol**rt required to call on the ner
vine* of the nimble toe* of Brown, from
PuntNvIlle.
of these eleven punta seven were fumbled
by the Georgia back* and Tach men were
able to get down and fall on the ball or
else pick It up on the bound and go on
toward their opponent’s goal.
The first touchdown came aa a result
of two fallurea to handle klcka. Tech,
when unable to gain by any other method,
booted the ball, the Georgia backa Joggled
It and*Toch men fell on It near the Georgia
goal. A couple of bucks put It over.
The next touchdown wae a "dead rlghter"
for the first and the third waa like the
eerond.
If the Georgia men bad been able to han
dle pnnta and there had been no freaka
of fate, the score would very- probably
have been 0 to 0.
Roth lines held like a rock wall. On
straight football the teams were evenly
balanced.
Hut when It came to handling punta
Tech wae a star performer and Georgia waa
to the bad.
Tbe game waa well played and Intereat-
Ing. Both tcania fought hard and the con
tent was spectacular. In spite of Its one-
sldeduene.
Thu hall was In the air much of the time
and the team* were on the more all the
time. *
The Athena men played a plucky up-hill
game aud died game.
Tbe game waa almolutely devoid of unto
ward luddenta and passed off with unex
pected smoothness.
The crowd waa the most brilliant of the
After Vanderbilt Waked Up
Rose “Poly” Proved Easy
special to The Georgian
Nashville, Ten u., Nov. 11—Vanderbilt
struck a soag Haturday afternoon In the
team from Rose Polytechnic Institute, of
Terre Haote, Ind. * It had been Impossi
ble to get any klud of line oil the Indian
ans. No one could learn of auy game they
had played, and nothing was to be ascer
tained regarding the weight of the team.
But they brought n team to Nashville all
tight; a big, hunky team, averaging about
175 pounds to Hie iiian. Vanderbilt had
been looking for uu easy thing, aud It was
propos-d to start lh- regulars lit first;
then, if things went all right, to put lu subs
and sir- tin* look field for next Saturday’s
gam- with Teel*. The «'ounmriuro* planned
to take It rather easy; In fact. It wits
thought the gum* might prove u practice
affair. The weather wus hot, mid It might
hurt the rtisncc* Iii the Tech game to run
any risks.
Rose receive?! I lie ball lu tile o|H'lllllg half
and marched straight ilowu the field to Van-
derbUt'a 6-yard line. They smashed through
the line snd erors-huokca over tackle at n
lively clip. Then Vanderbilt reallsod they
ware up against a team that could play
some. They took u brace, hurled the visit
ors hack, got the ball on downs, aud then
made a touchdown. The gold apd black goal
was never lu dauger again, onva once wheu
llose attempted n place kick, which Cap
tain Han Blake broke through aud block
ed. t'ostou falling on the ball. ^
Owsley Manler, Vanderbilt'* stalwart
full tiack, was the bright particular star
of the game. lie made nil five of tho
touchdowns, smashing through Koto's line
at will for loug gat us. Bob Bloke kicked
four goals, mid mad?? n goat also from n
place kick Just before time was called In
the last half. The ttmil score was Van
derbilt XI. Hose 0.
Tho team tbut Hose brought to Nash
ville was really a wonder wheu It Is re
membered that the school only has about
5iw pupils. From the ronnuor In which
tho visitors would consult about plays be
fori? making them, some of the spectators
optued there might have been a few "ring
ers" oil the visitors' eleven who did not
know tho slguais. However that may bo,
the gaum was clean all the way through.
Loft Tackle Bachman, Right Tackle
Btrecker and Left Half Whitlock played
star hnll for Rose.
00000000000000000000000003
0 FOOTBALL 8ATURDAY. O
O . — 0
o Local.
Tech 17, Georgia 0. O
Tech Scrubs 28, Donald Fraser 5.0
Southern. 0
Charleston 10. Msrccr 0. O
t'lamson 6, Auburn 4.
Kentucky State 21. Tennessee #• °
Buckncll 10. V. P. I. u. O
Richmond 29, Roanoke 0. O
Virginia 12. Georgetown 0. O
Western Pennsylvania 17, West O
O Virginia 0.
O Rollins 5, Florida 0.
O Sewanee 85. Tulane 0.
O Missouri 11. Arkansas 0.
O Eastern.
O Pennsylvania ti. Lafayette u.
O Harvard 5. Carlisle u.
0 Princeton 8, West Point 0.
O Yale 6. Swarthmore 4.
0 Cornell 18, Holy Cross fi,
a Leblgli 27. New York 11.
a Williams IS, Wesleyan 11.
‘ Dartmouth 4, Amherst 0.
Andover 6, Exeter 0.
a „
a Tufts 28. Massachusetts Agrt- O
a cultural 0.
a Johns Hopkins 0. Haverford 23. O
a Franklin and Marshall 11, Bus- O
a quebanna University 0. O
a S Western. 0
a Indiana 12, N'otre Dame 0. 0
a Minnesota 4, Chicago 2. 0
a Ohio State 8. Kenyon 0. O
a Gettysburg D8. Urslnus O
O Wisconsin 18, Illlnola s O
aoaooaooaooaoaaaaaaaaooaao
For the llrst time In the history of
the Princcton-Yale football the Tigers
will offer odds on their team, claiming
It as the best eleven In the eountry.
NAT KAISER & CO.
Bargains in unredeemed Dia
mondi. Confidential loan* on val
uables.
15 Decatur St Kimball House.
FOOTBALL AT
COLLEGE PARK
A great football .-oldest Is promised st
College Perk Monday afternoon, when the
Oeorgta Military Academy and Dvuat
Grove teems meet. The game will he played
on the O. M. A. grounds and will begin nt
1:30 p. m. ,
Ooooooooooaooooaooooooooao
a a
a ON GRIDIR0N8 TODAY. O
University of Mississippi va. 0
O Sewanee at Memphis. 6
a Haskell Indians vs. Texas A. Ai O
a M. at College Station. Texas. 0
a University of Virginia vs. O
a George Washington University at a
0 Washington, D. C. O
a a
aaaooaaaooooaaooaoaoooaeoa
year. All the stands were well tilled, the
automobile and carriage space was doing a
"standing room only" business snd the
Held presented • brilliant sight, with the
bright roetumes and multitudinous banner*
and streamers of gold snd white snd red
and black.
After the game the Tech students eeie.
brated with * “night shirt parade," as Is
customary, and amused the Xatunlny night
crowds with their antics.
Llne-np:
TECH. GEORGIA.
Brown, I. e Hatcher. I. e.
Monroe, I. t. .,....G. Ketron, I. t.
Lock, c Ketron, r.
flnyder-Bell, r. g Ilnrmon, r. g.
McCarty, r. t DeLaperrlere. r. t.
Sweet, r. e Grsres Hcatt, r. e.
Hebert, q. b Farris*Grove*, u, b.
Darles-Emerson, I. b..Ranaon-Iindgeon. I h.
Hightower, r. h K. Smith, r. h.
Adamson, f. b Kaonl, f. h.
Summary— 1 Touchdowns. McCarty i2i,
Sweet (1). Goal from touchdowns, Ilrown
(21/ Halves a to 28 minntes. Butler of
North Carolina, Patterson of Vanderbilt and
Brown of Mercer, referees: head linesman,
Bernle McCay; linesmen, Dtineau of Tech
and Hudson of Georgia; timers. E. >1,
Drury of Athens snd Wright of Tech. ’’
According to tbe ruling of Referee Butler,
the score was 18 to 0. After the acennd
touchdown the hall wns kicked out. 'The
man who caught It did not signal that he
was going to make a fair catch and ut hist
Mr. Butler refused to allow an attempt to
kick the goal. Coach Kclsman contended
that tha rules committee had decided that
a signal of Intention to make n fair catch
waa not needed when the tiall was kicked
ont after a touchdown. Mr. Butler ad-
mltted that this might bo true, but stated
that no official notification hud been sent
ont to that affect, anil that ho must decide
on the rules aa they stood. As n compro
mise Tech was allowed tho kick nml tho
point waa proteated. Aa Tech did not need
the extra point, the Yellow Jackets will
probably lie willing to let the score stand
18 to 0.
The long search Is over—Billy Smith
ha* landed a left-handed pitcher..
The new man Is Grant Schopp. pitch,
er last year for Ottumwa, In the Iowa
Stata League.
Schopp waa recommended to Smith
by S. C. Williams, a man who hoi been
landed by the St. Paul team, of the
American Association, and a man
Smith was after. As soon as Smith
learned about 8chopp he began a
search for him and finally landed the
player, whom he found In East Las
Vegas, N. M.
Here la what Williams says about
Schopp:
"Schopp Is a small man, about 5
feet 10 Inches, and weigh* about 165-
180. Has fair speed and a good curve,
with a dandy alow ball. Depends on
control and headwork, .both of which
he has to the queen's taste.
"As to his games this year, I cannot
say; only don’t Judge the man by It,
as the Ottumwa teaqi of this year was
mighty poor—only had eight men part
of the time, and at no time of the
season was It In any condition at all
“As to hla ability for the Southern
League I cannot say, aa I know nothing
of your league. He la plenty good for
the Western League, at least better
than several who did welt In that
league.
"Schopp Is about 80 years of age
and takes good care of himself.”
0OO0000000OO00OOO000OO00OO
0 ATLANTA'S PITCHERS
O ALL LOOK VERY GOOD. 0
0 0
0 Billy Smith took a few minutes 0
O off Monday morning and did a O
O little figuring over the last lea- 0
O son's rscords of his pitchers. 0
O When ho was through with It he O
0 smiled a large, face-involving, O
O satisfied sort of a smile. 0
0 Here Is what the figures showed 0
0 of the work done by his men last O
O year:
0 Zeller won 24, lost 14.
0 Spade won 18, lost 7.
0 Ford won 22. lost 0.
0 Sparks won 10, lost 10.
0 Schopp won 18, .lost 12.
0 Childs won 0, lost 4.
0 Harley won 10, lost II.
$000000000000000000000000$
There |* a plan for a paid staff of
football officials being talked of, as
colleges wish to avoid empldyment of
Incompetent men.
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mad
Three Georgia Golfers Ranked Among First Ten
*••••••••••••§••••••••4
With the ranking of tho Southern golfers
off hla vuluU, the writer draw* a long
breath. It was a task tU« completion of
which caused him no regrets.
Aud* he It said at thla point, ond before
friends nru loot, that the writer—In fact,
no one man—lo responolhlo, Thla making
la the cou*enaua of opinion of tho beat In
formed golf era In the flout h. Including Lolgh
Carroll of Now Orleans, F. G. Bjrrd ami W.
i\ Hill of Atlanta, Robert Baugh of Birm
ingham, J. P. Kdrlngton, b. D. Hauuder*
and Horry Kewlnud of Memphis nud Au
drew Mnuaou of Darlcu. to nil of whom the
writer la deeply Indebted.
No two of the men who expreaaed their
opinions agreed on u ranking, even no far
aa tho first and second poult Iona. Only
oue iunu. At .drew Mnnaon, appeared In all
the rankings.
After golni, carefully over the rfuklng*
contributed by the seven ox pert a. studying
closely the qualifying scorefc and match
round* of tho Houthern champion ship and
the Xavhvillo, Birmingham and Memphis
Invitation tournament*, tho writer sees no
renaon to change the consensus of opinion
Presumably tt cornea nearer to representing
the true standing of Southern players than
any one man's opinion possibly, could.
Leigh Carroll la arbitrarily rauked first.
It Is the custom to give this honor to the
winner of the amateur champlouahlp and
that even wns taken by Mr. Carroll after
some brilliant play. Tho champion himself
modestly ascribes bla victory to luck, but
there la no denying that he was playing
phenomenally good gulf when the tourna
ment began and that he stayed on his
game to the end and won on Ida merits.
Since that time Mr. Carroll haa practically
dropped out of golf, but ho will lw» In At
lanta to defend his title uext spring, aud
will la? a man to reckon with.
The plaelug of Andre*' Man sou second
would have caused the writer ittlo thought.
Thla Kcotchmau is beyond the shadow of
n doubl the greatest golfer the South ha*
•er known. Ilaulcnpped by his also und
me too stalwart physique, he haa twice
been Southern cbsmpiou aud twice winner
of the inedal for low acore at a champion
ship. Hla form la utarly blent ami he has
Ranking of 8oufthom Golfers.
!<oluh
Andr*
I/Oluh Carroll, of New Orleans.
Andrew Mnnson, Darien, pa.
Nelson Whitney, New Orient)*.
Albert F. Schwarts. Now Orleans.
Lawrence Kustls, New Orleans.
Noble A. Hardee, Savannah, Ga. %
.1. P. Kdrlngton, Memphis, Tenn.
George C. Oliver, Birmingham, Ala.
F. G. Byrd, Atlanta.
It. 11. Baugh, Birmingham, Ala.
the Indomltnble pluck which Is necessary
to carry him through n hard fought match.
Nelson Whitney, of New Orleau*,
g' is'ih ti uuiirj, ui .sun uiiL-aux, is
ranked third, nud that this ranking Is Just,
‘-*»bodjr mjm ~ - - -
In action can doubt. In the last <
chuiuploushlp.
Alliert F. Kebwartl waa voted Into fourth
place. Whether ho could go onto a. course
today nud defeud n position *o high on mi
nil Southern golf team la doubtful. Mr.
Ki'hwarts is not In practice and has not
' thla year. In spire of that, he quail
ith comparative uano nml lost to Huatls by
a narrow tuarglq. Hla club-mate. Mr. Car-
roll, gives ll n* hla opinion that with n
month of practice, Mr. Hchwnrta could
beet any player In the HoutU. aud verj
probably be could. So, taking bln la??k of
condition ou oue hand aud the poiulbllttlcs
of hla it.imo on the other, fourth I* probe,
bly an equitable ranking for the «Southeru
proval of several of tbs ranking expert*
That he is n wonder ut medal play Is
quite evident from tha fact that he hak
twice lu Niiccesaioii been tho low-score man
In Poutheru eliamplonshlps. That be la not
aa strong at match play as at medal piny
was shown by the fact that he lasted-ouly
to the seml-flua!* thla year, and that he
did not get that far the previous year.
Noble A. llunlee has been given sixth
Ince largely, no doubt, owing to the fact
*■ M wus the runner-up lu 1905 t
nitbly he In a stout golfer.
Getting beyond sixth place In the rauk ;
Ing In a matter of guesswork, personal ....
•pinion and then some more gue«swork. Mr.
I ... ,8._, ,..,|»| I* Is RM.ILI. ,.. * ...... I
f ond that point, tho "rankers" disappear
nto a base, from which they emerge bear
ing three more names, which they tuck
-undecidedly onto the end of their Hat.
However, Jack Edrlngton, of Memphis,
seemed to have, nt least, n plurality. It
1s hard for anybody who has played with
Mr. Kdrlngton on his own cotirse—who has
seen him acore right around bogey day
after day and week after week, and who
bent playera In tbe rtouth, _ .
best In the country, to believe that
could not defend a position better thau
seventh; However, bla showing In tourna
ments thla year baa not been good. Ilo did
not reach the finals In the Invitation nf-
fnlr over hi* homo course, and was lieatcn
by George Oliver. In Nashville.
Mr. Oliver, undoubtedly, has every right
to eighth place, at least. Though he qua!
he proved the winner ut Xashv.
he showed thnt he U still In form by
plnyfng tbe best round In the qualifying
event In the recent Birmingham tourna
tnont. Mr. Oliver plays a cureful. atemdy
gome, aud I* likely to be heard from lu
Future championships.
Another point where the writer feel*
thnt he Is not nulte in touch with the
other men who submitted ranking* Is lo
the placing of F. G. Byrd ninth. While
this was undoubtedly only Just, lu view
of tha fact that the Atlanta star has loot
the year, there Is little
oir n ueutral course with nuy man in tho
South and given nil otlier condltlou*. but
playing nbllUy equal, Mr. Byrd could hold
Ids own with any of them.
eru Golf Association, n I moat from If* start,
1* given the tenth place. Mr. Baugh. I«
one of the oldest aud steadiest players
In the 8outh, as he Is one of the inoat pop
ular. In tho Inst championship he quali
fied twolfth and wa* then defeated by Mr.
.-if.
|ook??d.
more or lees exaei
five player* lit the
rinklii.v can bent blur regularly on n neu
tral coarse It would be u Hiirpriee to the
xrrlter und to all Atlanta player*. Only
Mr. Hilt's III health during part of the
forts xeoaoii can account for the fact thnt hi*
Passing be-1 name does not appear amoog tbe first teu.
AS EUROPEAN SEASON WANES 1
WALTH0UR TURNS HOMEWARD
After n sojourn of months In foreign land*, Bobby Walthour will aoon
sail away for Atlanta, determined to make good his promise^ to eat on
Atlanta born-amt-bred turkey on Thanksgiving day.
Bobby will he home In about two week*. He* will be accompanied by '
his wife, who was with him In Europe all the summer. He write* that he
was never In better form, and from his recent race* In Paris and Berlin,,?
one must Judge that this.Is true.
Bobby had a sunstroke while riding In Paris several weeks ugo. He 1
fell unconscious at the,foot‘Of the track. He was tuken to his hotel
apartments and It wa* several day* befaro lie was anything like his for
mer self. With characteristic pluck, ho challenged his opponent to an-'
n)hf»r men Tho I’hn 1 Inntra wnii raooantail On.1 Doki.t. .......
other race. Tho challenge was accepted, and Bobby won.
Hlnce then lie has added a whole string of scalps to hi* bell. The
best rider* of Germany. Franco and England have been forced to ac
knowledge hi* superiority.
It Is understood that Bobby’s first race on American soil will be at the,
Stadium, In Atlanta, on December 2. He will again enter the six-day
race at Madison Square Garden.
MEN WHO HELPED TECH WIN
Yule waa beaten by the Army In
1904, but nevertheless won from
Princeton und Harvard. It was "Jim"
Hogan’i* amn'egatlon, too.
TECH 8CRUB8 WIN.
The Ttvli s* rubs defeated iNinuld Fraser
Snturthty afterniMMi ou Tech field In n game
playtHl between the Itnlvc* aud tafotv tk?*
big gain?*. The soon? wu* > lo j.
The line-up:
flcitr*.
Malbott. c
lf?‘iider*ou.
Amo
ell.
I. g..
|H).\AI.1» VUASKIl.
Goofc. ?\
Kim moil*, r. g.
I. t.
Derrick. I. v
Smith, q
Jones, r. h
McClure, I. b
Vaughn, f- •*
Powell, f. b.
Kllng lilt Is* low I he .240
yrar ha lastatisl his figure
murk, but lids
Manager McGruw says turn Ames’ ouly
fault In lack »f control. A pitcher can
buvo 110 greater weakness.
"I think I eouhl win tbe IWT lu u walk
f I could pull off a couple ??C dim!* I
louhl like to *eo go through." suys UJole.
Bergen, of Brooklyn, has tho record of
being tbe poorest hitter In the Xatloual
League, lie played lu 103 games for the
meanly average of .161. There are others
l»elow Bergen, but they played lu fewer
game*.
Magee wan easily the best I bride limb
of the I'hllltcM ls»t uea*oii. HU Imltlug
and base ruuuhig k?i»l the I'lilllich In the
first division.
The Beds will have tw?» good M»ulhpaw*
uext season lu Weluier uu?I llltt. The lat
ter ha* In*«*ii iNiught from the Kin Tran
ll has been learned that President llerr*
utimt, of lh?' Clndaajl Notional*, lus on
OOOOQOOOOOOOOOQOOOOOOOOOOO
o o
a O’BRIEN AND MOIR O
O FOR CHAMPIONSHIP (?) O
o o
O London. Nov. 13.—The London 0
O National Sporting <*!ub will of- O
O fer a purse for n match between O
O O’Brien ami .Molt* for the world’ll 0
O I'hampionuhtp. The match lu re- 0
O garded ii-« aasureol. The club 0
0 wishes the fight to taki' plan? 0
0 fairly early next year. 0
OO 1
OO0OO0O000000O000000O000
COAKLEY NOW !
BACK IN FORM;
Washington. D. t\, Nov. 12.—Andrew
«’oakley la now* under, the egre of Mike
Murphy, the. famous trainer of the
I’nlveralty of Pennsylvania athletes.
Murphy In putting the pitcher under
a Hpectal courae of training, which haa
greatly benefited him. It waa thought
that i ’oakley was on the decline In At
Mummer, but Andy’s appearance at
preaent would not give one this imprest.
sion.
If < ’oakley cornea around all right, he
will not be released by the Athletes.
Waa the asking for waivers on
Schr?»ck. Croaa and <’oakley a trick on
the purt of Mack to get them back In
to old form? It looks that way, as all
three are very likely to remain on the
club’s pay roll next year.
FROM LEFT TO RIGHT THE MEN ARE: SWEET. M’CARTY, BRO'
AND ASSISTANT COACH BEENE. *
McCarty made two of the touchdowns, Sweet made the third
Brown kicked two goals and did some sensational punting. It-** M
Brown * meat punting and the ability of the Tech men to get down urn
the klckex which heat Georgia. '
Thl* snapshot wa* taken the day before the game. BroW'n did not i
into practice that day or any of the previous days of lust week.
00O0OO0O0000000000000O0OO0
O WASHINGTON TRAINS O
O IN GALVESTON, TEXAS. O
0
0 Washington. Nov. 12. — The O
O Washington lame hall club will O
O train at Galveston, Texas, next 0
0 spring, according to word re- O
C reived from Manager I'antllllon 0
O yesterday. This will enable the 0
O Nationals’ new chief to have a O
O full month’* time In selecting hi* 0
0 regular team. q
O00OOOO000O000CO0OOOOO0O0O
Mt.’ Pleasant waa the only lndl>»
who did not come out of the CyrsGP'
game without injury. His, however, i
not serious, and he will be *ure to be *’
prominent a* last year’when the In
dians strike the Stadium.
FOOTBALL PLAYERS
Take your old felt bat* to '
to be cleaned and reshaped,
Whitehall Street
'
a
HMnan
afii