Newspaper Page Text
6
rGICftGM BOW * EXXHT
Frank Made a Boob Move When He Let ‘Cal’ Go
4*4 4*4 4*4 4*4 4*4 4*4
Crackers Showed Up Lookouts in Painful Style
By Percy H. Whiting.
ryxHE Crackers Just naturally
1 “had it on" the Lookout* yes
terday afternoon That's
about as good an explanation as
anybody could offer. When a team
ig an in-and-out runner (largely
out) as the Crackers have been this
season their work defies explana
tion. When they are going right
they win easily. When they aren’t
they couldn't win from the tail-end
team of the Sunday School league.
And there you have it.
Yesterday was one of the Crack
ers’ days. They took the unoffend
ing curves of the once dreaded
“Farmer" Allen and hammered
them with rare vigor and enthu
siasm. They took the game In hand
early and they held It all the way.
The Lookouts gave Dessau a tol
erably busy afternoon, but so long
as the local woodsmen were at
work with the timber there was
small cause for fear.
Yesterday was one of those days
when the Crackers looked good.
Their errors did no harm. Their
batting was timely. The pitching
was plenty good enough to get by.
It was an occasion when every
body left the park wondering why
the Crackers hadn't been one-two
three all the season instead of slx
ssven-eight most of the time.
• • •
TT takes a real baseball optic to
1 pull a trade within the league
and not get all the worst of it. And
th.e stunt is particularly difficult
for Manager Hemphill for he was
not born and brought up In the
Southern league, as a lot of the
managers were. But when "Hemp"
grabbed Callahan and McElveen he
didn’t make any boob deal. The
men are both proving out.
Since Callahan came to Atlanta
he has been hitting the ball right
on the periphery, as ft were, field
ing faultlessly and running bases
like a steam engine. McElveen has
also come to life and his work has
been matt-rfaljy benefited by the
change.
Callahan has hit like a sledge
swinger since he has been in At
lanta, but yesterday his work with
the maul was particularly deadly.
He made two singles and a three
bagger and scored twice.
The reason of Callahan's tremen
dous hitting was that he got his
bat ‘'right," absolutely and entire
ly "right.” He spent all the morn
ing and some of the afternoon
scratching away at the handle un-
BOXING
Late News and Views
Although th* Getting favors Ad Wolgnst
to defeat Joe Rivers Tn Los Angeles July
4. experts say one would not miss It far
to pick either fighter to win
• • •
Rivers and Wolgast, who are both tn
grand shape, will wind up their training
about two days before the day set for
the big doings and take a day or so of
much needed rest.
• • •
Promoters all over the country are try
ing to bring Mike Gibbons and foddle Me-
Goorty together for a ten-round bout. Me-
Gpcrty has won most of his starts, while
Gibbons has a dear record.
• • •
The latest victim to fall before Mike's
blows was Joe Stein Gibbons gave him a
terrific lacing and had him all but out
when the gong sounded.
• • •
George K O. Brown, the Chicago
Greek, has received an offer from Aus
tralia which guarantees him 13.000 for a
bout on that side. If Brown is defeated
by Eddie McGoorty at Benton Harbor on
the Fourth the offer doesn’t hold good.
• • •
Fans will probably never see Tommy
Kllbane in action in a padded ring again
While Kllbane has not announced his re
tirement It is said he made such a poor
showing against Phil Brock the other
night that his announcement will only be
a matter of a short time.
• « •
Two years ago Kllbane was hailed as a
coming champion. However, he took too
much punishment during his tender years
and will more than likely have to retire
at the age of 21 years
• • •
. Willie Chandler, a Boys club boxer of
of New York, haa put up such good bouts
lila few times out that If he continues to
show class in his next few fights he will
be given a chance at Johnny Kllbane for
the featherweight title.
• • •
Freddie Beckler and Young Denny have
been matched to go eight rounds In New
Orleans on the Fourth. Both boys are j
promising heavyweights.
Reports say Joe Mandot and Pal Moore
have been re-matched to fight it: Memphis
July 4
• • •
Gunboat Smith, of California s sched
uled to meet Hugh McGann in New York
tonight
O'DELL IS RELEASED TO
MOBILE; JOINS MONDAY
Al O'Dell, the Cracker who has placed
In almost every role on the team since
he became a member, has been claimed by
Mobile over the waiver rout.
Manager Hemphill tried evert means
known to keep O'Dell on the salary list,
hut found it impossible, owing to the low
salary limit in force in the league
O’Dell, while r.ot a wonderful plus er in
one position is one of the best utility
men ever seen In this league He lias
played every position from outfield to
pitcher His fielding has Peen good and
his heat., slugging has helped Atlanta to
win many games
ju As Mobile arrives for a sort* with the
k<-r> Monday. O'Dell will probably
1.-re until the arrival of the team.
■UO tl.-n Join .Mike Finn's Gulls In this
I toil Cailawav announced this
morning that he was th,. 1.„,a., u t f,,r
sum, young Infield* r who would take
u Dell place as utility Itifleldei on the j
A
til he reduced it to exactly the right
size. After the Cracker batting
practice yesterday he handed it a
few more scratches, borrowed a
chew of tobacco from the Official
Purveyor of Chewing Material to
Ball Players, Dr. Mitchell, treated
the handle to a top dressing of to
bacco juice and was ready for the
fray. What he did with that glass
and-tobacco treated bat Is already
part of league history'.
If Callahan keeps hitting at his
present stride, or anywhere near
it, the deal that brought Dave to
Atlanta will be the biggest sucker
performance that Charley Frank
has been guilty of since he has been
in the league.
McElveen's batting yas right in
the Callahan class. He ripped off
three singles, scored two runners
and was In turn scored with a base
on balls when Allen ran wild in the
eighth.
• • •
TJILL SMITH seems to have ac
qulred a tolerably useful young
citizen In this "Mark" Hannah, his
altftudlnous young catcher. "Mark”
Is no mighty wlelder of the maul, but
he has all the rest of the stuff.
"I’m not kicking at all on my
catchers," said Bill 'Smith, yester
day. "They'll do all right." And
they’ve surely looked it since the
Lookouts have been here. Han
nah's work in throwing to bases
yesterday was tremendous. Some
body must have given the Crack
ers a bum steer about Hannah, for
about every time a man got safe to
first he tried to steal. And though
many e man got to first not one
of them has stolen yet. Those who
perished trying were D. Callahan.
"Dromedary" McElveen. "Bug"
Harbison and "Kid” Graham. The
only reason the others weren’t on
Hannah’s list of victims was because
they didn't try to steal.
ttERE we are, bark at the old
** stalhd and predicting again
that, if the netv pitchers show’ us
anything at all, the Crackers will
yet get into the pennant hunt. Ev
ery time the Crackers play a punk
game it Is so utterly and hopelessly
pung that there seems no chance
that they will ever finish anywhere
else than last. When they get go
ing in their winning stride you can’t
see what holds them out of the pen
nant hunt.
It has been seldom indeed In
Southern league history when a
team that was hitting that was
made up of intelligent and lively
players and that was managed by
BASEBALL
Diamond News and Gossip
Elmer Brown, of the Browns, was hit
In the head the other day by a ball
thrown from third toward first and was
unconscious an hour.
• • •
Times have changed when a pitcher
right fresh from college can get a $6,000
contract. That is what the Yanks gave
Davis, the Williams college wonder.
• • •
Outfielder Charles Fox, of the Kewanee
team, has just fallen heir to 110,000 He
will continue to play ball, just as If noth
ing had happened
The O. and P, league is nothing if not
rough. It has just kicked Hugh A. Shan
non, owner of the Salem, Ohio, league,
out of the league. The claim was that
he was trying to dispose of the best play
ers of the team.
• • •
The Reds and the Naps will not play
the Ohio championship this fall The Reds
will do a little barnstorming after the
season ends.
• » «
Hite Donlin is retyyverlng and
Mike will tie helping along the Pirates
again after a bit
• * •
O. F Weaver has been turned down by
the national commission He wanted
salary from the Braves tor the time of
hls suspension, claiming unjust treatment,
but didn't make his charges stick
• • •
The benefit game for the V. S league
derelicts of Richmond netted each man a
trifle under sls each. Tvpfcal lovalty,
that.
e • •
George Clark, southpaw, has been sold
by Rochester to Wtlkesbarre Clark hasn't
lasted a full game this season.
The national commission has ruled that
when a player Is passed on from one team
in a league to another in the same or
ganization lie must get as much salarv
or his unconditional release
• • •
Horace Fogel has announced that the
1 billies are in the market for men and
will pay as high as *IO,OOO per each for
the right kind of players Doubtless!
Walter Regh, grabbed by the Pirates
from the Red Sox, has been turned over
to St Paul, with a string attached
• • •
Gandil and Milan are the only Washing
i ton regulars batting over 300
• « *
Wagner, of the Red Sox, threw an awful
grouch the other day when Umpire Evans,
made him throw away the but he was
. using Evans said it was square.
When somebody asked Jack Martin, of
i the Yanks, who lie thought would win at
Poughkeepsie he said. “Johnson. The
i fireman has no punch.”
Eddie Collins is slowing up, so the
critics say.
• • •
Nap Rucker's present record Is six
straight wins, ami no runs scored against
him In the last 3H Innings When he
, meets Rube Mamuard 1
• • •
McMillan is back at his old job with
Rochester, no worse for the smashed Jaw
Nashville has a couple of corking pitch
ers farmed Up In the Apjialachtan league
WllhamS and Walker are the ginks and
the latter la rated the best hurler in tHe
league
Jersey City has (sought Pitcher Barry
from the Athletics
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS, SATLKDA Y, JUNE 29, 1912.
a leader of brains and enterprise,
couldn’t cut a wide swath. But
Atlanta has had one such excep
tional team this year. It has lost'
a lot of games on errors. It has
lost a lot more op poor pitching.
But It has lost more both ways
than it ever should. And it is
about due to come to life.
If the Crackers can get away
with the struggle today they will
have shown a lot of spirit and a
lot of baseball. They are crippled
by having only three pitchers in
running order. They are down in
the depths where despair is catch
ing. But they are playing real
baseball and don't you doubt it.
iWgafe.:.
HITTING BETTER,
WGLffl
By Bill Bailey.
MICH.. June 29.—Funny
I) What a difference a few hits
make.
When the Sox started for Detroit to
tackle the Tigers they had all the con
fidence that was theirs when they re
turned from that triumphant journey
through the East.
Why? Because they got a lot of base
hits off the Browns in the last game
between those two teams. They won,
all right. The score was 7 to 0 in
favor of the white-hosed lads. But it
wasn’t that so much as it was the fact
that they started a batting rally in the
eighth Inning of that contest and hit
like they did when they were mowing
down the teams in the East at the rate
of one a day.
In yesterday's game here the big bat
ting continued and 14 safe ones were
piled up. Yes, the Sox lost. But they
will not lose many if they keep up that
slugging.
The Sox figure that their batting
slump is at an end and that they are
coming into their own. Maybe that's
true. Maybe it isn’t. May be a false
alarm. But you can’t make the Sox
believe that is a fact. The Sox figure
they are right buck to their winning
form and that they will be heard from
in the future.
It certainly is remarkable what an
effect a few base hits have on a ball
' club. You take a fellow who's in the
habit of hitting and who isn’t clouting
and he’s a bad ball player. Doesn't
make any difference who the fellow is
and it’s of no great consequence as
■ to whether he Is a star or a dub. If
he isn’t hitting he doesn't look good.
And he doesn't feel right. And the re-
’ suit Is he doesn't play much baseball,
, either at the plate or in the field.
It’s All in the Eye.
But you let him get back his bat
, ting eye and he Immediately becomes a
different ball player.
A man in the habit of hitting will
! pull off stunts when he is clouting that
' he wouldn't dream of attempting if he
were in a slump. It's a fact which any
ball player in the business will verify.
■ And there's nothing in the world to
bolster a player’s courage like a few
good solid smashes. That is the mental
condition of the Sox now. Callahan
i slammed out a long three-bagger. Im
mediately the bleaeherites wanted to
be friends with the manager. He felt
better al! through the game. Ping
Bodie, who has been going badly, but
who recently gave indications that he
was coming back to his batting form,
slammed out a couple and felt like a
; whale alt during the contest.
Not until July 4 will the south side
, fans have an opportunity of seeing the
. Sox in action again. After finishing
with the Tigers the crew of Callahan
will..journey to St. Louis for a series
with the Browns.
I
'' COOMBS WILL PROBABLY
BE SIGNED BY HEMPHILL
Manager Hemphill Is still worrying over
the question of securing more' pitchers.
He is giving < oombs. the Spartanburg
i pitcher, a try-out at Poncy park every
morning in hopes of finding out what he
has Spartanburg has offered to let
Hemphill have Coombs cheap if he makes
J good. The Atlanta club has not signed
him yet, as it does not want to have to
release anv plawr to make room for him
However, Hemimlll likes his work.
It is likely that the trouble over Mayer
will be settled In a few days Portsmouth
has been ordered to pay the Atlanta club
for players secured at the flrat of the
seaaun. and as they haven't the nionev
to do it, it is likely Mayer will be turned
over to the local club in order to quiet
thing"
TWO ST A R PLAYERS IN
DRIVING CLUB EVENT
At the top is Winship Nun
nally, one of Atlanta’s best ten- V
nis players, at the finish of a
hard stroke at the net. Below,
>s Jesse Draper, one of the Driv
ing club cracks, at the finish of a
speedy serve. These two men
have done good work in the
Piedmont Driving club tourna- »
ment, and will doubtless be heard
from in the Southern champion
ship that opens Monday on the
East Lake courts of the Atlanta /
Athletic chib. / /
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— ——A
DRIVING CLUB I ENNIS
TOURNEY NEARING END
The tennis tournament at the Pled
, mont Driving club will probably end
today. The finals in the men's sin
gles and doubles and in the mixed
doubles are scheduled for this after
noon. The ladies’ singles may go over
until next week.
The winners Friday were:
Ladies’ Singles.
Miss E. Smith defeated Miss Marie
Traylor. Miss L. Muse defeated Miss
Calhoun. Miss C. Muse defeated Miss
W. Muse. Miss E. Muse defeated Miss
Margaret Traylor. Mrs. John Hill de
feated Mrs. A. D. Jones. Miss C Muse
defeated Miss M. A. Phelan. Miss Ma
rie Traylor defeated Miss C. King.
Men's Singles.
Hopkins defeated Hodgson. Dorsey
defeated Fitzsimmons. Dorsey defeat
ed Clay. Hoyt defeated A. Smith.
Men’s Doubles.
Smith ami Ashe defeated Clay and
Hall. Dorsey and Thornton defeated
Douglas and Morris Hoyt and Fitz
simmons defeated Martin and Nunal
ly.
Mixed Doubles.
Mis- Phelan and Mr. Draper defeated
Mrs. Hill and Mr. Ashe. Miss Muse
and Mr. McCloskey defeated Miss Jones
and Mr. Dußose.
PLAY FOR CUNNINGHAM
TROPHY STARTS TODAY
The golf tournament for the W. W i
Cunningham trophj will be started nt .
Hast Lake this afternoon when the golfer i
■piny the qualifying round The contest - |
ants will qualify from scratch ami the j
club handicaps will apply In the match |
play
The first and second round of the mat. It J
pis' will be finished by Julv (lie third]
round by July 6 and the finals by July 7 i
In the first flight oniv the finals will b, I
at 36 holes
j;
Crackers* Batting
Averages, Including
Yesterday’s Game
Thesa averages include yesterday's
game wltli the Lookouts:
PLAYERS— G. AB. R. H. Av.
Dessau, p 14 42 9 14 .333
Hemphill, efG2 243 27 7K .313
Harbison, ss 13 45 4 14 .31 1
Bailey, rfR6 240 43 73 .304
O'Dell, lb6o 206 32 54 .262
Callahan, 1f24 105 13 27 .257
O'Brien, ss. .52 172 19 42 .241
Alpenr.an, ss. 66 251 34 61 .243
McElveen. 3l> .72 262 34 62 .237
Graham, c. 23 68 7 16 .235
Sitton, p 13 32 17 .219
Atkins, p 12 32 3 7 .219
Donahue, c 22 67 7 14 .209
Brady, p 7 21 0 2 .095
Agler. lb 3 10 0 0 .000
CHAMP AND CHALLENGER
DOWN TO BEST WEIGHTS
EAST LAS VEGAS. N M., June 29.
Wtth the fight but six days away Las
Vegas is rapidly becoming crowded with
the advance guard of the army of fight
fans. Trains were crowded to their ca
pacity today and from now on every reg
ular and special train coming into the city
will be tilled with the followers of 1 the
game.
Owing to the fact that Johnson’s train
ing partners are In bad cbndition, due to
tlie heavy work that Hiey tiave been
forced to undergo the last week, Jack
confined himself to roadwork today.
The big black, accompanied by one of
Ids trainers, started out on the highways
early today and covered close to twelve
miles before returning to camp.
The champion is being groomed to en
ter the ring at 212 pounds and is near that
at present.
Johnson's camp is expected to be the
Mecca of fans tomorrow, as the champion
has announced he will pay 200 iron men
to any boxer who will last two rounds
with him.
Although Flynn failed to do any boxing
yesterday, he resumed his gymnasium
and sparring work today. After spend
ing three-quarters of an hour in the gym
nasium he went through a stiff boxing
program. Tile Pueblo fireman will not
attempt to take off any more weight, as
he is at the mark at which he expects to
enter the ring on July 4. He is now hov
ering around the 194 mark, and expects to
stay there.
F Hessheim Ogai?
Goodj3rr|pke
Johnson Ready and Fit for
Title Struggle With Flynn
By Ed W. Smith.
V
(The Georgian’s fight expert, who
has been selected to referee the
Johnson-Flynn battle.)
EAST LAS VEGAS, N. M.. June
29. —Jim Flynn won’t be fac
ing any shell of a man, de
void of’a resistive interior forma
tion. next week, a man like Jack
Johnson faced in Reno two years
ago next Fourth of July.
We have. Tom Flanagan’s word
for the statement and Tqm’n word
goes for a whole lot, at least out
•in Old Town, wherq Jack Johnson
is training. In other words Jack
Johnson today is all man and not
merely a man upon the surface
and something else underneath.
Several of the leading critics of
the country have been casting
doubt upon the colored man’s con
dition, continually referring to the
possibility of the champion's fol
lowing in the footsteps of Jim Jef
fries after his layoff before the
Johnson battle.
The otiter day I saw Flanagan
Scanning a story to this effect and I
asked him what he thought about
it. The "Merry Mick” tore off one
of his big smiles and looked
thoughtful for a moment or two
and then said: "The whole thing
about the situation is that these
critics are figuring that Jack John
son ip just like all of the others in
the past who has gone into decay
through idleness. It is not so.
Flanagan Praises Johnson.
"And to begin with, champions of
the past—or rather I should say my
old champoins who have aspired to
come back—have in the main been
men of indolent habits. Most of
them anything but harminaphys
business and anybody who knows
anything knows what that means.
Others have gone into business
equally confining and of similarly
wasting character and as a re
sult the idleness has never done
them anything but harm in a phy
ical sense.
"How has it been with Johnson?
How has he spent his idle time
during the Iqst years?
"Well, just review those two
years a little bit. He has done
enough stage work to .keep himself
in reasonably good physical con
dition and for a long period in
England and France he trained
steadily for the proposed battle tn
England with Bombardier Wells.
And when he wasn’t training he
was out in either his racing or his
touring car, getting his lungs full .
of the finest of fresh air.
"Jack never spent much of his
time at any confining- amusement.
He isn’t a drinking man in the
sense of sitting or standing around
for hours. That isn’t his idea of
drinking at all. He drinks beer
and wine, but never to excess. His
, chief fun is driving one of his
’ cars, and the way Jack goes at
these .sports keeps a man in fairly
good physical condition.
"I can tell from his present work
out that Johnson is in the finest
| of condition for his battle. The
way he has gone at his training
I indicates that he realizes he Ig up
J against a tough man and that he
> intends to be prepared for any and
I every thing that is liable to han
i pen.
Work Is a Revelation.
• “His work today should have
[ been a revelation to those who
know him best. I've never seen
him show so much aggressiveness
and force as he did against “his
sparring mates. The old fighting
instinct seems to be aroused in him
right now and I think he will dis
i play greater skill and astonishing
i speed in this contest than he ever
s did before.
“I doubt if Flynn has to wait for
him very much. And I doubt also
, whether Flynn's great strength ana
his rough tactics will do much to
batter down the wonderful defeh
' •• sive tactics that the colored star
1 always has shown. I've tried my
bestito figure Flynn as having bet
■ ter than an eighteen-round chance
i with Jack, but can not do so."
There was some hurried confer
, ring yesterday and the Johnson
party, with Watson Burns, train
ing head of the camp, camt into
i the city to settle the question of
the ring. It was Burns who in
sisted to Johnson that he accept
nothing smaller that a twenty-foot
ring and to discard the promoter's
first construction, an arena that
measured just seventeen feet and
six inches inside of the ropes.
, The Jo hnson party won the ar
gument. The ring in which the
men will contest will measure ex
actly nineteen feet ten inches in
side of the ropes. Johnson ex
plained to Curley that he didn’t
care so much what the size of the
ring is so long as it afforded rea
sonably safe footing. But he said
that Burns, who is In charge of
the camp, had asked him to hold on
the point of a bigger ring and
therefore he would insist upon it.
To Reconstruct Ring.
The change involved a consider
able amount of work and the pres
ent main points of the ring will
have to be sawed off flush with
the floor of the ring and new ones
erected farther out and a new. board
run around the entire platform as
a safeguard against one of the box
ers stepping off the ring under or
through the ropes.
The ring is a decidedly solid af
fair, with a hefivy plank flooring,
but will be well padded from edge
to edge, but the footing will not
be of a depth to be tiresome to the
men. It will be resilient enough to
be what isj known as “fast.” There
will be but one set of ropes under
the present scheme of construction.
Johnson does his training in a flf
teen-foot ring.
The arena is complete in its
present form excepting that the
walls around it have not been
thrown into place. That will be
simple matter of but a few hours,
according to the contractors.
Champ Vicious in Boxing.
Johnson showed singular vicious
ness in workout yesterday after
noon and had one of the best work
outs of his entire season here. He
started the work with Bob Watkins,
a newcomer in the camp. Watkins
is a tall, rangy colored man from
Denver, where he used to shine as
a fighter. They fought three
rounds, and. while it was earnest
and lively all the way through, it
furnished a whole lot of amuse
ment to the spectators, for Wat- ,
kins is something of a cortiedian.
Johnson had him tired in short
order and a fervent “amen" from
Watkins at the final call of time set
the spectators into a roar of laugh
ter. Calvin Respress followed and
Johnson went at liiin so viciously
that Rastus was in distress quick
ly and was forced to quit cold in the
third round.
Flynn Has Bad Eye.
Flynn is sporting a badly bruised
eye as a result of one of his des
perately hard bouts with Al Wil
liams, but it is an injury that will
yield to treatment quickly and' is
not giving the camp any concern.
He came into the city last night
and before the shadows were too
deep from the western mountains
was shown the old and the new
ring, the way Johnson insists upon
having it.
"Smaller the better for me,” h-e
said laconically, "but he’s champion
and seems to be getting everything
he asks for. But that isn’t goinjs:
to make a bit, of difference in tliie
result. 11l beat him sure.” ;
12—J ■ ' 1.1 -A—
--“If It’s at Hartman’s, It’s Correct’
Men’s Summer
| Underwear
In all weights. Nain
sook Underwear at 50c
to SI.OO per garment.
Elegant Silk Underwear
at $1.50 per garment.
Plain balbriggan, all
styles, at 50c per gar
ment. Our stock is ab
solutely complete, and
every Hartman garment
is an unusual value.
We make a specialty
of Young Men's Wear. >
a. *
Six Peachtree Street
(Opp. Peters Bldg.)
"Jf JL 5 Correcf > ,t saf Hartman's"
BAS EBALL
MONDAY
MOBILE vs. ATLANTA
Ponce de Leou Park, 4 o’clock
MONEY TO LOAN
ON
DIAMONDS AND JEWELRY
S t r I c t ly confidential.
Unredeemed pledges t»
diamonds for sale, SO per
cent less than elsewhere.
MARTIN MAY
(Formerly of Schaul *
May.)
II 1-2 PEACH REE ST.
UPSTAIRS
Absolutely Private
Opposite Fourth Nat
Bank Bldg.
Both Phones 1584.
WE BUY OLD GOLD