Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, June 14, 1912, HOME, Page 14, Image 14

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14 OOKIAN STOW COW® * EIIPBEW EDITED ty W, 9 FARNSWORTH _.. L . * y. . . - . ... ... .AzMWv- -- • 'x*xz* y ._y y yyy y . '.y.. -y -- • y'.zy> . ... y .zyy*./- .. - -Zv'.-.. -_ yzxyyw\yy-^yyy*zwsz^y-yyy j. , - l_i - l_-> _ l - u - u>->-r^y-<rxj->-j-u---ur%j-u . .r i. ~. ---. ~~_ -. .- .yz-y-y -~ -r --~zy yyy yyyyz .yyy 'y-'SZsyy -u ' 4 Silk Hat Harry's Divorce Suit And He Did what His Honor Toid Him f o copyright, i 9 i 3 , N ews .wn. j?y Tad -■ —— - —— —— I if youft. HONOR. THIS I KNOWS WHO TWAT MSO7ERI OLES ( H< AA J KNOW about- \ SPEAK UP - f \ ortAK IV ire . I DOMAIN IS AND MH ALSO x ; tMCSH ’ „ 1. ~, j S72FMO&R APMER- \ . KNOSNS TXe AANS 7EV.OJ3 Z“ - . U % , j i ftuv Bcrr ( CAnr G-eT a ) ,- • Pisons ? X * ( earruU- \ Ncrto voug-Sec* y--"*-. / , < mhc? our of h/ao-mes \ ») . v — r sn T~ f \ ( HE- 1 -*- 0 i z“x ! A vEP.'V IMPORTAHT— I I 9_\ S| ■'•—X- . • . i : Yfc \ * ID / *~T — X. /f ( x/WfFNeSS HERE AnT) - ' > MUMBLE 7. \__ "*'* , *^ V ltWW r Mum Bee - ) \_ t'’ -/ jilt" x. mumble J \ mumble t v> ySß!ljSS»t| I '''■' tJktc* (A m C’hr-, ) ji'X ! I «< L,X-, ! ■ I iUSI 41a .I It KQ & Aml hh BH®e® ps£?i BMw 2? IBkwl M Mil QI AJrir' ® n W • <x Jm? ~'- ,2u Z / * / e' ‘ Local Fans Should Stick by Team Instead of Knocking ’Em Bv W. S. Farnsworth. UP East. Atlanta has the name of being the most loyal baseball village on the map. But. getting right down to cold facts, it doesn't seem as though the fans of this fair city are breaking their necks to give Charley Hemp hill any encouragement this year. True. Atlanta fandom has been forced to put up with some very putrid baseball of late years, and they can hardly be expected to sup port a loser as well as a winner. Rut. nevertheless, at. some of the recent games at Poncy park the fans have rooted hard for the vis itors and at times even jeered the local lads President Callaway 1s doing all he can to get a first division club, end so Is Manager Hemphill. They leaving no stone unturned to give Atlanta, a winner. And surely there are no two prisons who are more anxious to see the home ath letes right up near the top. it means money to the one and repu tation upheld to the other. Hemphill came to Atlanta and took hold of a cellar combination He started the season with the blackest outlook possible. He real ized that he would have to build up an entirety new team to get any -•esults. And in doing thia he has been forced to flutter around the bottom Rut slowly and surely hr Is welding a combination that will give a good account of Itself yet. Coleman’s Actions Hurt. He has been unfortunate In se curing men he wanted He had < 'pieman on the way here and an nounced that when the sorrel- Brilliant Blazers and Norfolks At Muse’s 1 here isn t anything more summery than a pair of white trousers--unless it’s when they are supplemented by the very dashing Blazers or Norfolks of brilliant hue. Stick to your colors-college or club wear a Norfolk of red and black, orange and blue or red and white--when boating, or battling at tennis—-or just bowling around “starting something.” They are startlingly stylish---and other colors are light blue and white, yellow and black, purple and white—all in stripes. Rlazer Style, $6.50. Norfolk Style, $7.50. White flannel trousers, $5. Worsted with stripe of blue, black or brown. $5 and $6.50. White Bedford cord with self stripe, $7.50. W urn with ;i liliw' Norfolk lor Summer smartness. Geo. Muse Clothing Co. topp'd infielder arrived he would let East go. Immediately East be gan to slow up In his work. I won't say he quit, but anybody In bis position would be unable tn play their best Brand. Brady and Russell, two pitchers that are almost sure to make good here, arrived with sore arms And, according to Hemphill, it will be fully a week before, either will be. able to strike their gait. The "breaks’" have not been with the team and no team can win un less Dame Fortune la with them. One year ago last spring the New York Highlanders were figured ns a sure one-two team by big league experts. Rut th<v never secured the "breaks’’ and finished hopeless ly in the second division. The fact; that Hemphill has been purchasing mon right and left proves that he ,s doing al! in his power to get a winner. And he Is Just the man who will accomplish what he is after, too. Hard Job For Hemphill. So. come on. you Atlanta fans, stick by the team, encourage them at every opportunity, and you will soon he rewarded Don't expect Hemphill to get a pennant winner the first year. It takes time to bring a club from last place to the head of the ladder Twenty years of good, solid base ball experiem e must have made Hemphill a better judge of ball players than some of the would be baseball experts -who were with the team when they were on top, but who are now panning the ever lasting daylights out of Hemphill and the local baseball association. And the next time you go out tn Poncy park root for the home boys and try to encourage them all you THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN zAND XTTVS. FRIDAY, JUNE 14. 1912. Neither Doyles Nor Pell Coming Here for Big Tennis Event SOUTHERNER SHOULD WIN 1912 TENNIS TITLE By Percy H. Whiting. rpHE coming Southern tennis championship at Atlanta gives promise of being a real "Southern event." Not a sin gle Northern player has announced his entry. Not a single one has planned to come to Atlanta for the big Southern event. The Doyle brothers, who have dome down from Washington two seasons In a row and who have both times taken back the two main cups, w ill positively not com pete this season. This is a big surprise. It was presumed that, because they had two legs on each trophy, they would take the trou ble to come down artd make it three. With this very point In view, the local club was making every effort to round up a couple of sharks who would be good enough to keep the silverware at home, or at least to string out the trouble of winning ft. And now H. E. Doyle says he will not come down this year. He is going to Maine with his family for his vacation and will pass up Atlanta, When this news is published there will be easier breathing in Atlanta, for it looked as though the doubles and singles cups would surely go to Washington for keeps, which meant that somebody had to "dig" to replace them. Theodore Roosevelt Pell was an other who had planned to play a return engagement in Atlanta. But at the last minute he was chosen on the supplementary list of the Olympic team, which meant that he could go if he would pay his own expenses. And as money is no especial object tn pell, he is go- ing. And Atlanta loses the Indoor King. However, the tennis committee of the Atlanta Athletic club will use every reasonable effort to get a few strong players. B. M. Grant and Carleton Smith are going to Pittsburg for the clay court cham pionship which begins June 22. While they are there they will at tempt- to round up a couple of stars. • • • 'THERE will be no dearth of en tries for the championship. The fact that no Northern or Eastern stars w'ill appear in the tourna ment will make it peculiarly at tractive to Southern players, who haven’t entered very freely of late, owing to the fact that there were always a few players with whom they had no chance. This year the tournament should be as open as a keg of beer, and there is bound to be a big entry from New Orleans. Knoxville, Nashville, Memphis and Birmingham. Also, of course, Atlanta players will enter more, freely than usual. Not very much is heard of club tennis tn Atlanta, but for all that 33|% Discount on Men’s Fine Clothing Our Annual Summer Clearance Sale of Men’s and Young Men’s Fine Clothing Is Now On Spring and Summer Suits in Cheviots, Cashmeres and Worsteds: in fancy patterns and all Blue and Black unfinished Worsted and Serges. (No wash suits or mohairs are included in this sale.) $15.00 Suits Reduced to SIO.OO $27.50 Suits Reduced to $18.35 $ 18.50 Suits Reduced to $ 12.35 $30.00 Suits Reduced to $20.00 $20.00 Suits Reduced to $13.35 $32.50 Suits Reduced to $21.65 $22.50 Suits Reduced to $15.00 $35.00 Suits Reduced to $23.35 $25.00 Suits Reduced to $16.65 $40.00 Suits Reduced to $26.65 This is a wonderful sale of splendid merchan dise, all this season’s goods, not a suit carried from a previous season. These suits won’t last long. An early call is to your advantage. Cash only. Essig Bros. Co. “Correct Dress for Men” 26 WHITEHALL STREET the courts are always busy ami the club now numbers more active ten nis members than ever before in history. ... |T will be a pleasing change if a Southerner cops. It has not hap pened since 1908, either in singles or in douftles. Here is a list of the prize win ners since the tournament was transferred from Washington to Atlanta: 1911—Singles, Conrad Doyle, of Washington; doubles, Doyle broth ers, Washington; woman’s, Miss Irving Murphy, of New Orleans. 1910—Singles, Conrad Doyle, of Washington; doubles, Doyle broth-, ers, Washington; woman's, Miss Turle, Brooklyn. 1909—Singles, T. R. Pell, New York; doubles, Pell and W. C. Grant, New York; woman's, Miss Turle, Brooklyn. z 1908—Singles, Hugh Whitehead, of Virginia; doubles. Whitehead and Winston. Virginia; woman's, Mrs. Blanc Monroe, New Orleans. 1907—Singles, Nat Thornton, of Atlanta: doubles, B. M. Grant and Thornton, Atlanta; woman’s, Miss May Logan. _ 1906—Singles, R. G. Hunt. Cali fornia; doubles. Grant and Thorn ton, Atlanta; woman's. Miss May Logan. ‘Sweeper 11/ Derby Favorite, Alleged to Have Been Doped Bv C. W. Williams. London, England, June u. —What promises to be the worst scandal of the British turf in ten .years became known when the sporting weekly, The Looking Glass, announced that Sweeper 11. the American colt which started favorite in the re cent derby, was doped before the race. A significant fact in connection with the dope story was that H. B. Duryea dismissed Danny Maher, who rode Sweeper 11. and en gaged Frankie O'Neill, another American boy. to pilot Sweeper II in the remainder of his stake en gagements. An investigation shows that, in the opinion of a large number of racing men Sweeper II was doped. Duryea's trainer is unable to ac count for the miserable showing of the colt. It is suspected that two or three bookmakers who stood to lose fortunes on a Sweeper II vic tory kndw more about the "doping" than they would care to say. It was certain that when Sweeper II left his stable for the big race he was never fitter. When he re turned to his stall after the derby the colt was listless and feeble. He was kept in the stable until Saturday, when he was taken out for an exercise canter. He moved very stiffly, and appeared to show the effects of some strong stimu lant. In the derby he ran like a doped horse, to the astonishment of his trainer, who considered Sweeper 11 a certainty. Sweeper Il's greatest asset is his speed, but he ran with out putting an ounce of energy in his work. Danny Maher said aft er the race that he could not un derstand the performance, for ir the Newmarket Sweeper II wa> pulling him out of the saddle, and then, released for the final dash shot out like an arrow to beat eas ily horses that defeated him in tbs derby. In the derby, Maher said that Sweeper II moved as if the exer tion of racing wert> hurting him. Maher said, “He fiever could go with his field.” At no point in the race did the American colt hold a winning chance.