Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, May 20, 1912, EXTRA, Image 8

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R A RAFI n Pt-RCY^H WHITING V , TAD, BasXWL SBFlOife «w ‘Big Ed’ Walsh Is in a Class By Himself as Mound Artist Ry W. J. Mcßeth. NEW YORK. May 2<t. —A man. no matter in «hat walk of lift, who can upset tradition al laws of nature is worthy at least of more than passing tegard <>ne who tan c> «>n doing it year after year, should be an object of universal wonder. As -nth ••! us introduce Ed Walsh, the mainstay of the <*hi> ago American league club s pitching''■•taff. Walsh is one of the most won derful pitchers that the game ha etc. dcvebqied Should he become permanently crippled tomorrow, so crippled that he could never ogatn wield the little whip sphere through which he gained his fame, this remarkable athlete would pass down through history as one of the great masters of his art His name would be linked w ith those of Chris ty Mathewson and Cy Young men who cheated time and conserved their cunning through twice the span of an ordinary pastfmer s day of major league usefulness. In point of years of .service. Ed Walsh has a long way to go to equal th< unprecedented recoil'of Ro'tnn's grand old man Compared even with Mathewson. tim White Sox marvel is still confronted with several years in which he must de liver his present puzzling brand. Yet the fellow seem- equal to the task Hi is "i try hit a- good at this writing as at any time in his brilliant career, and there are those who hailed him three seasons back i- Cue most effective and ca pable loss, i in the game. Worked in 9 of 18 Games, .lust look what this veteran is doing for Callahan's White Sox. Single-handed, he put Chicago's pennon out to the front from the seasons getaway. Os the first eighteen games played. Walsh worked in nine Ho didn't pitch the full time in each, but those lie didn't start wire the ones that really proved the hardest teats. Ho was called upon to save the day i when «ome stablemate w avert'd. Therein lies Walsh's great value Sime iiiii:, Walsh had pitched practically a third of all the White Sox gam, s Fifty games in a sea son is nothing for him He'll turn j off that many on his own hook and finish half as many more for less foimnati mates He won a ‘pennant and .< world's champion ship for the White Sox in 1906. Ho won a city series from the t’ubs List fall. No matter what sort of a club may be behind him. Walsh is always up among the leading I pitchers of the majen leagues. _ When his team finishes at all close to the leaders, it is safe betting that Walsh is the leading pitcher of his company, m mighty , lose to it. It takes a near approach to shut-out ball to stop this won derful tosser m his average game. Comiskey Big Walsh Booster. 1> it any wonder, then, that Charles A. Comiskey regards Ed Walsh as tile gieatest asset In . baseball.’ liming the league meet- 1/ “ Z \ suffered \Ss= I f from Catarrh pi 1?I over five years” B "Gradually crowing worse. I tried sev- ■ <* 41 *o-callcd nasal treatments winch gave ■ me only temporary relief", writes Mr ■ Alexander Jones of Corinth. Miss. « "A catarrh specialist treated me more ■ than a ye.r at an exorbitant figure \t ■ the end of this tune I was much worse ■ My head, nose and throat were deeply as- ■ fected. I was almost totally deaf, fen ■ tsrely save up hope of ever being cured, w / decided to mate one tvore effort I ■ bought one dozen hotties of your Botantc ■ Blood R/ilr* Shortly I began tn feel bet ■ ter. i continued to improve. W hen I had 9 taken the dozen bottles I cnuld feel no ■ mptoms of catarrh w hatever. It is now ■ fi months since I slopped taking it and I I ■ h- e no t atarrh a nee. . ■ * I am constrained by a sense nf deep *■ gra’itude tn wrte you of the wonderful I cure that jour remedy has perlormed”. ■ \\ hy v. aste money on worth- I less"! rcdiments" v, hen R.R.B. ■ will bring- you sure relief? I \ our druggist Mill supply ■ you with this wonder-working ■ remedy if you insist on it. Ac-, I cept no pretended substitute. HERySHEIM flUwoy.s I * ings in this city last December the Old Roman declared that he had just one player that he could not be induced to part with at any cost. "Walsh " said Comiskey. "has done too much for my club to become the subject of a trade. Os course, I couldn’t trade him if I wished. My city wouldn’t stand it. I might as well lock the gates as to part with him. But. senti ment aside there is not a player in the world for whom I would swap Walsh no. not even the wonderful Ty Cobb I consider Walsh today as great as Cobb He is a pitching staff in himself. I can not say that he is the great est player of history I can and do say that he is the greatest pitch er of history New York will dis agree with me on that score. I do not for a minute lose sight of Mathewson. But great as Matty IS. 1 believe Walsh greater.'' In many respects the eases of Mathewson and Walsh are quite similar. For years Matty upheld the pitching burdens of the Giants on his own broad shoulders. He not only did his share, his regular turn, but served as relief man in every important crisis, just as Walsh has done and is still doing. But never in the heyday of his ca reer was the illustrious Mathewson such an "iron man" as Ed Walsh. Every time Walsh wavers the least little bit. fandom prepares for his funeral, "He's gone at last," is w hispered "He could not possibly stand up under such a strain of overwork." But each time the mar vel comes back stronger than ever. Today he stands in a (lass all by himself. SOUTHERN LEAGUE. Game, Today. Montgomery in vtlanta Ponce DeLeon. Game called at 3:30 o'clock Nashville in Birmingham. Chattanooga in Mobile Memphis in New Orleans. Standing of th* Club*. W L. P C W L P C Blum. 21 15 583 Mgmy 16 18 .471 Cnooga 17 13 .567 Vtlanta ,1< 1.7 .453 Mobile 20 16 556 N< 1 I ns. 14 18 438 Mmphls 19 17 528 Nville 11 19 .367 Yesterday's Results. Montgomery 9, Atlanta 4 Mobile 2. Chattanooga 1 Memphis 6. New Orleans 0. SOUTH ATLANTIC. Games Today. Vlbanv in Columbia Columbus in lacksonvllle. Savannah In Macon. Standing of the Clubs. W. L. P C W L. P C. ■ I vllle. |8 8 .692 Col bus .H 14 440 Vlbanv . 16 8 .667 Macon . 917 346 S van'h 1 4 10 58.3 Columbia 7 18 280 Yesterdays Results. No games scheduled. AMERICAN LEAGUE. Games Today. Chicago in Boston St. Louis In Washington. Detroit in Philadelphia Cleveland In New York Standing of the Clubs. W L PC W L PC Chicago 23 6 793 Detroit. II 15 <8.3 Bosion 16 10 615 P'dlphia 11 13 458 Cl'land 12 12 500 N York 7 16 304 VV ion. 13 13 ,500 S. Louis 7 IS .280 Yesterday's Results. No games scheduled NATIONAL LEAGUE. Games Today. Boston in Pittsburg New York in Cincinnati Philadelphia in St. Louis. Brookly n in Chicago Standing of the Clubs. W. E. P C W L. P C C'nati. 22 s 786 St I. .12 18 400 N. York 19 6 760 Phila. 914 .391 Chicago 13 1.4 181 Boston . 10 17 370 P burg 10 13 <35 Brooklyn 9 16 360 Yesterday s Results. St Louis 3. Philadelphia 2 Brooklyn 6. t'hicago 2 Cincinnati I. New York 1. I AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. Games Today. Toledo in Columbus Indianapolis in Louisville. Minneapolis in Milwaukee st. Paul in Kansas City . Standing of the Clubs. W L P C W L. PC ("bus 22 1' 667 S’ Paul .16 19 457 M'nn'lis 20 13 606 M w kee 12 18 .400 Toledo v it 563 I. ville .11 18 379 K City 17 16 515 In'apoils 12 21 .364 Yesterosy's Results. Indianapolis 3. Louisville 6. Columbus 8. Toledo 5 Minneapolis 10, Milwaukee 1 Kansas City 9. St Paul 8 INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE. Games Today. Baltimore in Rochester Jersey City in Buffalo Standing of the Clubs W 1. P C W I. PC •uy 16 640 Toronto 12 12 455 ' h ter 14 1« 583 Newark 9 13 409 B more 12 s 571 M'treal 8 |3 381 Buffalo n '1 500 P dence 813 .381 Yesterday's Results. Newark .'• Montreal -. only <’i.e game scheduled THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS: MONDAY. MAY 20. 1912. HE GOES UP HIGH FOR A DIFFICULT SMASH By Ed W. Smith. /j // ~ ‘ /''CHICAGO. May 2«—lf Jim /A / 1 ) I Flynn is counting on I he I I '*»«■■. CFCY / ) , * l ’ n atmospiicre of New \ v TC e Mexico having its effect on Jack \ Johnson next Fourth of July, he is X. X. .. I f reckoning without his host. s. \ | / At least, this is what Johnson \ I I himself assures his next opponent —-Us 1 WL'' I ' n the r ' nR - Johnson is sure that 1 | \ w ind hasn't the kened any dui- . \ /A. v. A 'iX \ ing his two years of idleness. Sto- j 'x \ 1 "»*cBL, Ax ries have been printed to the es- \ I ~ OLYMPIC ATHLETES NOT I V\ " TO BE GIVEN OXYGEN GAS' \ \\ 'The US" f oxygen ga- ne \ ' n g.,m-' Sw.dis 1 . \ X* Olympic committee has announced tui- \ '\\ ing 'n that effect, tne question hav ng \ '4a\ \ hern ■aisci; lit British and Atnorjian \ newspapers \ y Notwithstanding certain tria s in \ which th" stimulating gas 'as used ' ' z '(WBIBWmIBw j. .’.J wrh apparent’v good effeci. «nc o s \ MEie X-tT if in ' I fooling that use of tn" gas = a ZSKeX t '"XW T ;K ’’ d ” ' ■ wi o ,-h of- x / ficla's' 'ding will occasion lltt'e rog-et J .11 -his 'ountry. • / iX - In the ast few vi ars oxygen gas fre- f quentiv has boon administered to ath- / f and n;.:n'"t.s have diffcod a- to / j l,i. t ii U’s deriv od from us" P t \ . iniii ihi-'I .unni's in mmd.e / / /» L s ■■ I / 1 *** \ ll|p ■ i ' l ' // B -am hr,is|i<-c trial It! fast" / / B 3k J lime tha.i o- usually lan and was less / i ■ n X ‘Tkf ■ii - i r i-ssed thp effort / 1 w. MMEKHy "f 'ii' fit«- instances th" use / / %Jg '.Io gas was. in the 19 -ound fig'n: / l I / between 10. Jeannette and Sam MV,.. I 11 ; in Paris on Vpril 17. 1909 'rite battle 11 \ X" \jx /—.. •me of the mosi gruelling ones evr 11 wk. I X 2 y foughi and both men were libetally ■! \ iw I supplied Ihe gas when they began \ \ to show signs of distress Jeannette |M\ N MjijtelißiaSc showed the better results fom its us< | \’BIBB *' ->ig N and finally knocked out McVey. \ 4 v ~ Soon after this a Chicago athlete tried \ B BRHRhK it In a 400-meter hurdle race and tan > ,4" * ' \ \ three seconds fastci fm the dlstui', \<e> \ ' hm in- ii.ul inn befoie \ A Xgin \ \ GEORGIA SEEKS COACH: \\ \\ X B \\ ANDERSON WILL RESIGN \\ \ ATHENS. GA.. - \\M3i UHiHiNiniiitaiii ■■ . \\ oi'ison will not coach the I niveralty of \ \ ■F ■ xt I i I ‘ \\ Georgia team next year. At least that \\ 1 -i. *, i . '“'W is the rumoi here now. Despite his \\ / • f X AX' 1 ~“* \ \ success this year. It is said that he has \ V 1 : --- i a ' ' , .A \ decided l" leave the team and that th' \ \y '1 ® '."*« athletic association is already looking \ 4 q c jg ' I aiound foi his su.iissor. \ ,x c • ’ « 1 At the first of th" season It appeared /\ \ V i ' ■ e I that Georgia had a cnampfonship (tub / /_>. _*X- ♦ ■ ' < “y'- Hitt its own good p inspects hurt it It / /*' \ Wl '"•'i y K i \ N. | was a train of sias. latltei lhan a star j / * M / / leant and clubs of that sort are seldom / / ' ' ' / /XHPB- \ / tremendously efficient. / / >' " / / ~ / / J \ XJ / V* • e f \ y s y jL | x / / A ✓vN y ■ - .-eco / f (V) / Zu.s>r; - - s -- s - i J ' vi ”e-/ / A s\ I 5 Ji \ / H •«- c’ • \ I r I i \\ ; . Il ESTON MANSFIELD The most improved tennis player of the Atlanta Athletic club is Eston Mansfield. He has been working steadily for the past Imo months, and is rapidly getting in trim. He was a win ner of the Gulf States championship a couple of years ago. and is likely to, lake some big events this year. He devotes more time to tennis than some of his local rivals, and is likely to run awav with them before the season is over. UNITED STATES LEAGUE. Games Today. Cleveland in Cincinnati. Chicago In Pittsburg Heading tn Washington. New York in Richmond Standing of the Club*. W. L. PC W L PC Reading in 3 .769 W’ngton * « 500 P'sburg X 5 615 Cnnati * 7 462 R’h m’d 8 5 .613 C'veland 5 8 385 Chicago 7 5 583 N York 1 9 100 Yesterday s Results. Cincinnati 8. Pittsburg 1 Pittsburg Cincinnati 2 Chicago 8. Cleveland 8 Cleveland 8. Chicago 5 TEXAS LEAGUE. Games Today. Galveston in Pallas Reaumont in Waco San Antonio in Fort Worth. Austin in Houston Standing of the Clubs W. 1.. PC W L P C I Hous’ n 22 14 81 t G’vest’n 15 18 4.1.1 : Vaco 21 14 800 Austin 15 20 429 B’um nt P> 14 57* : Pallas 14 20 412 S Anio 18 18 .514 F. AV th 1 4 21 400 Yesterday's Results. Vai " 6. Reaumont 5 Houston 6. Austin 4 Galveston 8. Pallas 7 San Antonio 7. For: Worth 3 SOUTHEASTERN LEAGUE. Games Today. . Rome in Selma Huntsville in Gadsden Bessemer in Anniston Standing of the Clubs W 1. PC V I. PC Cnist'n 1« t» 815 H sville 13 12 52" Selma 15 11 577 R semer 12 11 48’.’ ’ Rome 14 11 58y Gadsden 8 is .250; Yeste-day's Results. No games scheduled. ' - any business man and he •» 11 >el! you 1’• » Georgian "'an 1 Ad ■ olutrns res b more people ar.-l r.r'ng better restil’s . o-i 1 ' n.-> r>» h'amed in any othei medium In this section. j VIRGINIA LEAGUE. Games Today. L> nchburg in Norfolk Richmond in Portsmouth Newport News in Danville Petersburg in Roanoke. Standing of the Clubs. 1 W 1, P C. W L P C. 1 Psm th 10 7 .588 N Nws 12 12 500 , Norfolk 11 9 550 R’hm d 10 12 455 1 R'anoke 12 10 545 Danville 9 12 129 P’sburg 11 It 500 L’hburg !• 12 429 Yesterday's Results. No games scheduled. CAROLINA ASSOCIATION. Games Today. Winston-Salem in Anderson Greenville in Greensboro. Charlotte in Spartanburg Standing of the Clubs, were. w l pc C'rlotte 14 7 667 G nsboro 912 429 Sp burg 13 8 81.< G’nvflle 813 .316 j A dere n 12 8 800 W-S I m 615 28’3 Yesterday’s Results. No games scheduled APPALACHIAN LEAGUE. Games Today. Knoxville in Asheville Johnson City in Morristown Bristol in Cleveland Standing of the Clubs. W L P C. W L. P C Bristol 3 2 .600 M town 3 3 s'lo J. Citv 2 2 500 Asheville 2 2 .500 K xville 3 3 500 C'veland 2 3 400 Yesterday's Results. No games scheduled. MILE CHAMPION CHANGES MINO: WILL ENTER MEET ITHACA N Y., May 2".—John Paul ■ Jours. Cornell's star miler. Tell S Ber na and Captain Putnam, of the Cornell tra' k team have signed entry blanks for the (Olympic try-outs. This action, it is claimed disposes of the report ’ widely . i lula'ed that Jones would not j go to Stockholm if chosen. Champion Says Flynn Has No Advantage Anywhere JOHNSON IMMUNE TO EFFECTS OF ATMOSPHERE GEORGIA FOOTBALL TEAM WILL START WORK EARLY ATHENS. GA.. Maq 20.—The Univer sity of Georgia football team may be railed together earlier this fall than ever a Southern team was before. The athletic authorities are planning now to get the men together by the middle of August, if not earlier. It is hoped that they can be assembled at the summer home of Roh McWhorter. stat back of the team, tor a month of combined out ing and preliminary work before the real practice is taken up. If this is done Coach W. A. Cunningham will have a world of time for going over the rules, the plays and the possibilities of 1912 football and will be able to get through with most of the detail work that usually clutters up the early part of the season. Georgias football prospects have probably never beep better. But three members of last year's great team will bt graduated this spring And as there were more good substitutes last fall than ever Georgia had before it is cet tain that Coach Cunningham will have little trouble in filling the gaps. YESTERDAY’S GAME Atlanta ah. r. h. pn. a. e Railey. If 2 1 ft ft ft a GanSey. rs. ......... 11 ft 2 i ft Hemphill, rs 3 ft ft 3 0 ft Alperman. 3b 4 1 2 I 3 ft o’Dell. lb 5 ft ft 11 ft ft Hast. 2b 4 ft 11 1 i <‘ Brien. ss 4 ft I 4 I ft Graham, c 3 I ft 2 2 1 Paige, p. 4 0 1 ft 4 1 Totals 33 4 5 24 15 3 Montgomery ab r. h. po. a. e Srongie. rs 2 1 ft 4 ft 0 Wares. 2b 3 1 2 2 5 ft McElveen, ss I 3 11 2 0 Eiwert, 3b 3 0 2 1 ft ft Williams, rs 1 I 1 3 0 0 Danzig, lb .'..3 11 ft 2 1 Coles. If 4 ft 1 3 ft 1 Gribbens, c 3 11 2 0 1 Kellogg, p 2 1 2 11 0 Bills, p 2 0 ft 1 ft 0 Totals 30 ft 11 27 10 3 Score by innings. R Atlanta 11l 001 000- 4 Montgomery .320 200 20x —ft Sumwarj Twn-base hit Kellogg. Three-base hits Paige. Coles. Home run -McElveen Stolen bases—Williams Gribbens. Railey. Gank* 2 Sacrifice hit- Wares. Elwert, Danzig Sacrifice sh <’• Brien Double plays Ganley to O'Dell Rases on halls Off Paige 5. off Kellogg « off R ; il«? 1 Stiuck out —Paige J hx Kellogg l. b\- Rifi« 1 Hit by pitched ball By Bailey. Alperman: bx Bills I Graham Hits?- - nff Kellogg 4 in five and | f n <•-third." inning- off E’Hs 1 in three : and one-third innings. Passed ball liribbens Time of game 1.55 I’mpirer . —Fitzsimmons and Rudderham. fe. t that Elynn. being a moun taineer and thoroughly used to the thin air of Colorado, New Mexico and other Western states, will have» a distinct advantage over the ne gt o July 4 w hen they meet in the attenuated ozone of Las Vegas. Las Vegas 6,000 Feet High. The battleground, it should be re membered. is over 6.000 feet above sea level, considerably higher than was the arena at Reno, where John son gained a clear title to the championship nearly two years ago. This makes the air mighty thin and unless a man's lungs and heart are in excellent shape and thoroughly acclimated he is apt to have trouble in a long encounter. Johnson hasn't tried himself out here very severely, but thinks he has done enough to prove to him self that his wind will be all fight. "I'm one of those things what is is they call them? Oh. yes: I'm im mune to the effects of high alti tudes." Johnson said last night when I asked him what he thought would be the effect on him of the New Mexico air that surrounds the Curley arena in such a thin layer. Has a Wonderful Heart. "Remember out at Reno when the doctors and the other learned sharps were trying to figure it out which of us would be most af fected by the mountain air? Well. 1 came through flying and Jef fries' wind thickened up to such an extent that he couldn’t do himself justice, we re told. “Well, be that as it may, it was discovered then that the air does not affect me at all. You know that the physiologists that have had a crack at me have discovered that I have one of the strongest hearts ever shown by an athlete of high class. So it is with my lungs. "But at any rate, even if I wasn't NEWS FROM RINGSIDE Tommy Ryans middleweight novice, Howard Morrow, is a youth of fair prom ise. but the fellow who described him as a second Stanley Ketchel shot wide of the mark. He has much to learn. He is game ami he hits a stiff punch, but as a tighter he is in the formative stage. • • • Ketchel. on the other hand, was horn a fighter. It is doubtful if Ketchel ever im proved a whit from the time he made his name by defeating Joe Thomas. He looked better and lie punched better at the outset of his career than he did at anv subsequent time. • • • The difference between Ketchel and Morrow is the difference between a lad who is a fighter by Instinct and natural aptitude and one who will have to be taught the tricks of the trade. • • • Ray Temple and Joe Mandot will box eight rounds in Memphis tonight • * • Willie Ritchie is on his way to New York, where he has several bouts sched uled. • • • Jimmy Clabby has returned from Aus tralia. where he has been boxing for some lime, and will meet Mike Gibbons in New i York some time in the near future. i • ♦ ♦ ■ Soldier Willie" Elder is scheduled to meet Charley Miller, a San Francisco White Hope, in a ten-round bout Friday night in Lxis Angeles Eddie McGoorty has signed articles agreeing to meet any opponent selected for him at Gary. Ind. It Is likely that Cyclone Johnny Thompson will get the match. « « • Jack Johnson is boxing daily in Chi cago with Marty Cutler and Montana Jack Sullivan Lil Arthur boxes from three to eight rounds « « • Eddie McGoorty is in receipt of an offer to box Bob Moha ten rounds in New York about the first of June. McGoorty has not accepted the match yet. George Carpentier, the eighteen-year old French champion, is planning to in vade America shortly in quest of honors Mike Gibbons won all the wax in a bout with Paddy Lavin in Buffalo a few nights ago and the referee stopped the FREE TO CATARRH SUFFERERS A Remedy Teeted for Years —Cures Through the Blood—Stops Foul Breath. K'hawklng and Spitting. Hawking and spitting. Foul Breath, discharges of yellow matter, permanent ly cured by taking internally Smith's Blood and Liver Syrup. Thousands nf sufferers have tried Smith's Blood and Liver Syrup, where all else failed, and were cured to stay cured CATARRH IS NOT ONLY DANGER OUS. but ft causes ulcerations, death and decay of bones, kills ambition, often causes loss of appetite and reaches to general debility, idiocy and insanity mlth's Blood and Liver Syrup is a quick, radical, permanent cure, because it rids the system of the poison germs that cause catarrh At the same time it ’ purifies the blood, does away with every symptom of catarrh. Smith's Blood and Liver Syrup sends a tingling flood of warm, rieh. pure blood direct to the paralysed nerves and parts affected by catarrhal poison, giving warmth and strength just where it is needed, and in this way making a perfect lasting cure of catarrh in all its forms. Smith’s Blood and Liver Syrup is pleas ant and safe to take: composed of pure Botanic fnp-edlents. It purifies and en riches the blood It cures constipation. DRUGGISTS. $1 PER LARGE BOTTLE FREE CATARRH CURE COUPON. This coupon cut from Th* Atlanta Georgian is good for one sample of Smith’s Blood and Liver Syrup mailed in plain package Simply fll! in your name and address on dotted lines below and mail to SMITH’S BLOOD SYRUP CO., 34 Wall St., At lanta. Ga possessed of such great power and capacity of heart and lungs. I will be out there long enough to thor oughly overcome the effects of the air. You may be sure that I have figured out all of these things amt would not have accepted the inatih there if I thought there was ths ghost of a chance of my being seri ously affected.” May Have Morning Fight. The hint that perhaps the Rena fight wasn't a good test of Jack w lung and heart capacity, inasmuch as he scarcely breathed hard dur ing the entire fifteen rounds, brought out a hearty laugh front the big champion. If the present plans of Promoter Curley go through, this champion ship battle probably will be decided in the morning of the big national holiday . Curley has suggested such a scheme to the men of Las Y egas who are backing the big battle, ad vancing several good reasons for it, and the. chances are the idea will be adopted. For one reason. If. the men are called into the ring at 10 o’clock the heat will not be so great or so try. ing on them as it would be in the middle of the afternoon. In addi tion, it would give, the thousands of strangers that are expected to be in Las Y'egas on special trains a better chance to get out of town and on their way home before nightfall. Helps the Newspapers. Curley also has his eye out for the newspapers. He believes a morning fight would give the pa pers all over the country a chance to get out their fight extras and thus leave the afternoon clear for the handling of the Pacific coast battles and the ball games. Curley says that the papers have been so kind to him that he is anxious to do all he can to further their game. bout in the eighth round to save Lavin from farther punishment. Abe Attell Is training hard on Bill Nolans California ranch and gradually getting into condition. Attell left San Francisco with a stiff lip and a never again pennant flying, and is said to bo sticking by it ♦ • • Chicago boxing promoters are planning to test the boxing law now in effect there by staging a twenty-round contest be tween two fighters of recognized ability. , It is likely that the affair will end up in court. • • • Al Delmont, the boy who refused to box here a while back, because the attend- s— ante was too small, is considered a near champion up in Memphis, where he has been boxing since the night he refused to > appear at Harry Staten's club. Ask any business man and he will tell you The Georgian Want Ad columns reach more people and bring better results that could not he obtained In any other medium in this section. The working nan of the South ic a migheybig factor in the wonderful growth of our section. On all things hi* opinion is worth consideration He has gi en the st?mp of approval .o our li ic of “Work- in- Comfort” Shoes. They’re $3.50. This ShoL i" all that the name imphes; huilt of strong bu sof* chrome tanned leatherwi*h '.navy flexible sole. Made in three colors and several diff r *nt styles. Ask your dealer for “Work -in • Comfort ” Shoes made in Georgia. I I/ 0 / 1 J. K. Orr Shoe Co., Red Seal Factory, Atlanta ~ . 3 ° — 1 LU dp; C « LU i 3 e=> c _ ?= < =X* J 5° >— S te-'-i H S TplS! | SS -- s rs r 1 .ea 5 s “‘if I i « s