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Alperman Out to Build Up Team for Next Year
Crackers Will Open Series With Billikens Today
By Privy 11. W hiting.
< i c H E <’rackets were so busy last
I week in playing double
headers that Manager Al
perman didn't have much chance to
whip his faltering team in line.
This week things should run a tri
fle easier. Only five games are
scheduled —two with the Montgom
ery Billikens. of pugtltstlc memory,
anti three with Mobile.
The Billikens open today. The
suggestion that the entire team
be put under bond to keep the
peace has been dismissed as un
necessary. but Cracker platers are,
likely to hunt in couples until the
blood-thirsty Hobbs and his two
fisted cohortV have departed
It will, of course, be recalled that
the last time the Billikens were
hero a mess of them jumped on
"Humpty" McElveen and man
aged to pound him a good bit be
fore assistance .11 rived Thete lias
been much talk of revenge, but it
is probable that th, incident has
been declared dosed by all con
cerned.
* • ♦
pRIi.M now until tin end of the
seaspn Manager Alperman will
work in just one direction hi will
try to build up something for next
year. Every new playet will get a
real tryout. The old ones will tie
gtv en a chance to show if they real- !
ly have something or not.
The <’l ackers w ill carry over a
few faille good players into 1913.
Let's look them over
<>f the catchers, Graham has
proved himself a pretty good per
former and has Improved steadily
His one weakness Is in handling
tough plays at the plate when a
runner is coming in He will do
very well tor next year, however.
Ham" Reyonlds the new man
picked up from Albany, has caught
useful ball. Hi doesn't know all
about baseball yet. but if lie learns
handily he might make a pretty
useful man
The pitching staff continues to be
a puzzle. With a winning team.
Verifier Sitton would have won an
awful lot ot games this year. He
will surely bo retained and tried
out again King Brady ;s an
other puzzle. He has looked tre
mendously good a times and then
again he ha.-n t. With real support,
instead of the 1912 Cracker varie
ty. "the King might be a good i
winner "Buck" Hecker will do to
keep and should prove a wonder
This chap is really the most prom- I
ising looking performer in the lot.
Rudolph Waldorf will surely be
brought back for a tri.,: again m-yt
spring. Tins chap has everything
on earth but control, and he will
doubtless get i ■ nty of drilling in
that necessary art b-tween now
and the opening of tne n- xt South
ern league season Waldorf still
belongs to ihe Cubs but will prob
ably be buugnt. Bill Huggleby . the ;
remaining inembci of tin staff w.is
really bought to help out here at
the tag Ind of the season. How
.VI r, if h< - . tot of Stu
mav be brought back next year. At
that it isn't probably. !'■ t B ’ has
been up in this league on . tnd
had po gr< at luck.
• ♦ «
THE infield turn■> • - i •■-■■tbicm
* If the <’lackers ,an g. ■ Joe
Agler back for use next y< ,r - o-y
ought to do it sue I: is pl, - i tn d
that Joe still belongs to tm i’uh«.
but it is likely that he is a s .am I
light in weight and in hitting air -
ity to play in the big leagui s He
Is a corker, though, in this league.
Alperman. it is presumed, is a fix
ture at second, and his work this
year has been so wonderfully good
that nothing betetr can be hoped
for. It is to be hoped that he keeps
himself right the oat s<. on. Kid I'
Harbison has proved such a cork- ,
I
ing good man at shot t that the
t'rackera will be lucky if some club
doesn't buy or draft him Several
S'outs have looked him over very
carefully he may go higher.
Atlanta will be lucky if he remains.
He is as good a young player as the
elub is likely to pick up. Third
base is a puzzle. If Kid Howard's
arm is right, no better performer
is asked. It doesn't seem to lie
quite light yet. Rut it may be by
next spring Certainly the Kill will
be ordered to report next March for
another workout. If his arm Is
right, he will go to the big leagues
next year. McElveen seems to be
a shade slow for third base, and It
is likely that he will find himself
in lite outfield next year. He is
usually a good batter and lively on
the bases, so he should make a good
man there.
In the outfield there will be some
men needed for next year. There Is
some doubt about Bailey's ease. If
he had kypt hitting at, the 300
clip he was going a while back, the
New York Americans would have
recalled him sure For he is fast
on tlte liases, a steady fielder and
knows the game But lately, doubt
less because of the depressing In
fluence of being on a tail-end team,
his batting has slumped. As If
Stands now. thete is grave doubt
whether or not he will be recalled.
i If he is nfit, Atlanta fans will be
pleased. He has been a good
worker this year and would help
out next year.
Puzzle No 2 in th* outfield is
t'allahan Last yeai Dave looked
like one of the best outfielders in
the business. This year his fielding
work has continued good, but his
batting has slumped far down. If
lu can evei lilt his batting stride,
he will be useful. He is worth
another tiial next spring. The
< hances ate that this was an off
yen for Da\e If he takes to bat
ting next year he will prove a
y ilu.ible outfielder. If he doesn't,
he will not stick
Mike Lyons, the I bird Cracker
outfielder at present, hasn't been
here long ’enough to make accu
rate judgment of his worth pos
sible. Mike hasn't hit 'em much
yet. If he takes to meeting them
on the nose, he will do all right
He seems to be pretty keen in the
other departments of the game.
Well, there you ate. That's the
FODDER FOR FANS~j
Rih k Becker had been in organized
baseball just one year on last Friday His
tirsi da> in the game be helped the Wash
ington team heat the W hite Sox and held
them io throe hits < )ne \ear later his
teatnmatrs helped him to lose to the
Ba t ons
Kd Sw. » n» > ix . <»niing up in his batting
I suallx I'.d is ‘ail stove up" at this time
of tht stason. hut this year he is in mod
era tel \ good trim
• • •
W» heat mmh annul plavers tump
ing the South because the\ don't like the
> innate that Lea \ngermier s case is pos
itiveh stimulating H. -oiit the Montreal
club brcause he didn i like th* Canadian
climate.
♦ • •
Tty> i .ii's share of then- rc. ent fnur
day series in New York was rnereh SIS
nan
• a •
Frank Chance will he operated on a’ I
’hr end of the present season The dot
tors believe that the) can relieve his ox
. pssivc nervousness with an operation and ,
Chance has consented that an attempt be
made in that d’tomion
* • •
When i.ooigp Leid) , of the San \nto
nio Hub. fell sick the other da\ Frank
Metz took the job temporarily, 'the sub
manager did. so well that when l.eidx re
coxered he found he didn't ha\r a j«»h
♦ » *
• ‘rt h Collins the Human Flea, has now
l«'St nut as manager of the Meridian team
outfielder Cox. recently of Yazoo Cit\.
succeeded him
• • «
lam Ix-eune Is batting tot in the
I'entral league. Il is possible that those
loim'es will tompt some big leaguers to j
draft Inin But at that it ten t probable.
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. MONDAY. AUGUST 5. 1912.
list.
Can Alperman use these men as
a foundation on which to build a
real ball club? That's the big
question now. l»Ve'|| admit that it
is a. decidedly depressing job.
* • •
q TORIES have been published in
local papers lately that the di
rectors of the local baseball asso
ciation have served faithfully this
year and "deserve another chance."
That's fine.
It's like the warden of a peniten
tiary who found that one of the
trusties yyas about to depart "No.
37.681 has been a good, reliable
prisoner." he said, "and I'm going
to ask the judge to give him ten
y ears more."
It's the same with the directors.
The fans haven't a kick in the
yvorld. But the directors want the
job just the way a millionaire
wants the bubonic plague.
"Directing" a tail-end ball club
is one of the most depressing jobs
in the yvorld. And the present board
has had about all of it they are
calculated to stand. It's a ten to one
shot that if. at the end of the
season. President Arkwright of the
Georgia Railway and Power Com
pany should slip up to some board
meeting and announce. "Gentlemen.
I have come to give you your jobs
for next season." the three directors
would quarrel among themselves
as to which should first jump out of
the fourth story window to escape
the honor.
Sure, they "deserve" it all right,
and every fan hopes that Messrs.
Calloway. Nunnally and Ryan will
stick to the ship. But anybody who
considers them in the light of "de
serving candidates" doesn't know
them. What they say they deserve
is their release. If they do finally
agree to serve again next year,
they ought to get Carnegie hero
medals foi bravery. They all lose
time and money every day they
serve as directors and officials, and
they do it only for the good of
baseball and of Atlanta
And while the medals are being
passed around. President Arkyy tight
of the Georgia Rallyvay and Power
t'ompany deserves one He has
stood by the baseball association
just as though it yvas a money mak
er. and he has piled coin into it by
the thousands, yvith no apparent
< hance of getting it out.
I Thf.i’r.- heard hint think and it's a noisy ,
process
■ limmy Ab Aleer's luck was a long time
in turning Rut finally it turned Now.
as main mogul of the Red Roa. he 's in
a fairway to make a keg of money
• • •
I
\ game was forfeited in tne Cotton I
Stales league rhe other dav because there *
weren't enough official balls io plav the
«*»ntest. It happened at Vicksburg
• « •
New York reports sav that Hub Perdue ‘
has again uult the Boston Pilgrims This
time h** didn't tea? up his uniform
Hush Anti Loudon are the only Tiger in- ■
fielders who will be used next xbar j
men will fill the other two pos ’ions 1
Navin is working toward a new dub and
he needs it.
• • •
Hereafter Detroit will . s'ebra’e August
30 as ' Ty Cobb Day On t’ at day. m
1505, Cobb broke into the American
| league
The fact that Ty Cobb made seven hits
on July 17 set the dopestera to digging
and it was learned that the world s record
sot hits made in one .lay belongs to Ed
Delehanty, then of the Phillies, who ripped
off eight singles and a triple out of nine
times at bat
• • •
Blown Keene broke into the Indianap
olis lean: when he was in a hitting slump.
It was days before he even made a single
Now he is coming along better
• • •
I \e big league managers Griffith Cal
:la ban Chame. Dahlen and AAolverton
jaic graduates of the < nb machine. The'
must teach 'em baseball there. i
lIHITE HOPE”
PILOTS WE
FOOLISH MOVES
By Ed. W. Smith.
Is it any wonder that 'the public has to
laugh every once in a while about all this
‘white hope" business? Think of some
of the fotilfsh moves that the pilots of
these men make and the reason for the
public's giggles is ]ijain.
The latest is from Billy McCamey, guid
ing hand of Luther McCarthy, the young
giant from the Far West. Billy not only
has entered a claim for the discarded title
of John Arthur Johnson, but has an
nounced that he is entering into negotia
tions to take his star to Australia for a
series there of five contests.
McCarthy a representative of fighting
America! No wonder it is to laugh, and
laugh heartily.
Too Much Work Right Here.
McCamey is a clever young man with
an endless line of chatter that sometimes
is impressive. But he is up against a
difficult proposition in making the sport
followers of this country think that he
has any right to bundle his half-baked
fighter off to a foreign country at this
time and set him up as an American
champion
We've got nothing against either Mc-
Carthy or McCamey in a personal sense
It would be gratifying to see McCarthy
make steady progress toward the goal
of his ambition —presumably the top of
the white heap. But he will find such a
plenty to do in this country whipping all
of the aspirants to the title vacated by
J A. J., that all thoughts of a foreign
trip ought to be banished from his mind
instanter.
Many Men to Get By.
If McCarthy can get by in matches
with Jess Willard, Jim Stewart. Al Kauf
man. Al I’alzer. Jim Barry and a few' of
the other almost near champions and then
could contrive to dump Bombardier Wells
into the mire, then we might be glad to I
see him take an Australian trip Just I
now such a thing is ridiculous. I
fOUR TOURNEYS REMAIN
ON EAST LAKE COURSE
I'he golfers of the Atlanta Athletic
club will contest for the trophy offered
by Perry Adair, beginning Saturday,
when tile qualifying round will be
piayed. This is the second year that
this trophy has been contested for.
The players will qualify from scratch.
I'he first and second rounds of match
play must be played by August 16. the
semi-finals hj August 17 and the finals
by August IS. In the first flight the
finals will be 36 holes, 18 holts in the
others.
But three mote tournaments remain
to be played after the Perrx Adair tro
phy is completed * ThLy are the tourna.
ment for the Davis & Freeman cup.
which, like the Perry Adair ttopljy, is
to be won three times: the club cham
pionship and the vice president's cup.
The qualifying round of the Davis K
Freeman trophy will be played August
24. the first and second rounds of match
I play August 30. the semi-finals August
31 and the finals September 1.
The qualifying round in tlte club
championship will be played August 14,
the first and second rounds of match
play by August 20. the semi-finals by
September 21 and the finals by Sep
tember 22.
| The qualifying round in the vice
| president's tournament will be played
October 5. the first and second rounds
I of match play by October 11, tlte semi-
I finals by October 12 and the finals bv
I August 13.
PLAY CONTINUES TODAY
FOR PRESIDENT'S CUP
Play will continue today in the five
flights of the president's golf trophy
that has been in progress at East Lake
for oxer a week.
In the first flight T. R. Fay plays (.'.
V Rainwater in the semi-finals, and H.
G. S'ott. the club champion, meets the
w inner in the finals.
In the second flight J. D. Osborne
meets r A Thornton and R. A. Palmer
meets C. M Sciple, the "winners meet
ing in the finals.
In the third flight W Z. Hazelwood
meets P. Adair in the semi-finals, and
J Q. Burton meets the winner In the
finals.
In the fourth flight B. M. Blount
meets J S. Derr in the finals.
In the fifth flight H M. Ashe meets
Milt Saul in the semi-finals, and the
winner plays W. \|. Markham in the
finals.
Jimmy McAleer Is “Missing Link" to Boston Team
Hub’s New President Lets Manager Run Outfit
By W. J. Mcßeth.
IET me introduce James R.
McAleer, president of the
Boston Americans. Here is
one of the most remarkable men of
baseball history. He is remark
able because he appreciates the
honorable dignity of his position
f as few magnates do. He keeps his
■ hands entirely free from the play
ing end of the Red Sox and there- .
by sets an example that would
profit about nine-tenths of the
club presidents of the major
leagues;
There is naturally great tempta
tion for club'owners to trifle. They
say quite rightly. “It’s my money,
and I'm going to have my say."
I More than three-quarters of the
major league baseball leaders are
hand-cuffed and manacled before
they assume a leadership. Club
presidents ami big stockholders are
the real managers. Those credited
with the title ate simply decoys.
The one man in the big show per
fectly qualified to offer advice to
his manager Is Jimmy McAleer.
president of the pace-making Bos
ton Speed Boys.
M'Aleer Was Great Manager.
Yet he has never so much as
batted an eyelash In the direction
of Jakg Stahl. McAleer yvent to
Boston as head of the American
league club an experienced mana
ger. Previous to his long mana
gerial connections with the Browns
and the Senators he had shone for
many years as one of the most re
markable outfielders of any time.
McAleer knows baseball from every
angle backward.
But in knowing that a presi
| dent s position is a truly executive
. one he holds the whip hand over
his distanced rivals. No one in
I the American league Is better qual
ified to Interfere in the manage
ment of a club,yet McAleer always
keeps in the background and lets
Stahl really manage and reap
whatever glory lies in success.
The Boston Red Sox are the
great btyeball surprise of 1912 No
body dreamed that- when the cam
paign opened that the Hub had the
ghost of a show with the world's
champion Athletics, nor did they
under old conditions. John I. Tay
lor. the retired presidents always
had butted In" on his managers.
He figured to do so again this sea
son. for he still owns half of the
stock. McAleer wished Jake Stahl
as a first baseman. He had to of
fer the management to wean J.
Garland from the banking busi
ness in Chicago. Then on the side
Jake demanded a chance to buy in
a nice block of stock for himself.
Looked Like Too Many Cooks.
The complications that that sort
of a combination held in store were
foreseen universally. Every shaip
pi edieted a civil war in Boston cir
cles that would rip a pennant pos
sobility right up the back. Noone
eouid see how the broth could pos
sibly come out wholesome with half
a dozen brawling cooks.
Why didn't the expected sto ins
break ?
lames R McAleer is the answer.
He s the buffer that stands between
Jake Stahl and interference, and
Jake, a practically inexperienced
man al the business. has made '
good w ith a rush Jake js a great
player and a wise head. Rut it is a
•■'l to I bet that he wouldn't have
delivered the goods under former
Boston conditions, lucky as the '
Hub was in drawing a real pitch- 1
ing staff for the first time since ■
1904 ;
With McAleer's case so strik- j
ingly hefoie them, doesn't it seem r
a wonder that the rest of the £
American league magnates do not t
get onto themselves? They simply
must meddle or let Ban Johnson ’
meddle so them. Perhaps McAleer t
would have felt differently himself
hatj not presidential interference 1
made his long experience in St.
Louis one of gall and yvormwood.
Experience Is the great teacher
and all elub presidents have not
the brains or ability to get into
the kindergarten of that old school
from which McAleer yvas gradu
ated.
Probably a few examples might
set the fussy magnates thinking if
they could only spare time from
the managements of their clubs to
listen. Just once in his life John
McGraw let John T. Brush man
age the Gients. Mr. Brush got
such a burn therefrom that he has
scarcely recovered. Blush insisted
upon McGraw pitching "Rube"
Marquard in a big game in 1908
shortly after the champion SII,OOO
beauty reported New York not
only lost the game and the pen
nant. but two years' service of the
best southpayv in the country, not
to mention the thousands upon
thousands of dollars gate money
that hung upon that blunder.
Mack Has Free Rein.
Connie Mack oyy ns a quarter of
the Athletics and he is the one big
noise In the management. Connie
has been successful because he has
no general staff of advisers. The
same holds good for Frank 4'hance
and Fred Clarke. President Frank
Navin did not like the way Hugh
Jennings was running a three-time
champion team. He insisted upon
passing out advice: now the won
derful Tiger machine has disin
tegrated into a Joke combination.
They had the crepe out for Clark
Griffith till he really got a chance
in Washington. You see yvhat he
has already done with a team that
Relief for Rupture
Without Operation
No Hospital or Doctors’ Bill,; No Loss of Time from Work
Sent on 60 Days’ Trial
\ , I r,n rr.-o' , o .... i . ■
in the i ß , e 'i, an> - need t 0 drag through life
in the clutches of rupture.
No earthly excuse for letting yourself
keep on getting worse.
No big expense to stand in vour wav
woriii of ri°” * haVe t 0 take a single cam s
Think of that! you who have Spent dol
lar after dollar without finding a thing
that has done any good.
Think of that!—you who have been
afraid that some day you'd have to risk
the dangers of operation—you who dread
the surgeon s knife because vou know it
results in permanent weakness or death
about as often as in recovery.
• • •
In the last 24 years probably more rup
tured people have been cured WITHOUT
operation than by all the operations ever
performed.
Cured without leaving home—without be
ing m bed a single day without losing a
single hour from work ,
Cured by the wonder-worker Cluthe
Truss il'luthe Automatic Massager)
something so remarkably beneficial that
nearly all feel better and stronger get im
mediate relief- after trving this truss
Bor this is far MORE than a truss- far
more than merely a device for holding the
rupture In place.
Test It on 60 Days' Trial.
We have so much faith in the Cluthe
Truss that we are willing to let vou prove
at our risk, just what it will do for you.
AA e ll make a Cluthe especially for your
ease and allow you 60 days trial to prove
that it will hold your rupture securely In
place, when working and it all other
times—that it will put an end to the trou
ble you've heretofore had and do vou a
world of good. If the trial we allow you
doesn t prove it. then lhe truss won’t cost
you a single cent.
Eor your protection, we guarantee all
this in writing
Healing Takes Place While You Work.
We guarantee that with the Cluthe
Truss on you can do any kind of work,
exercise, take a bath or swim < this truss
is water proof!, etc., with absolutely no
danger of the rupture coming out
You see this truss- unlike all others- is
self-regulating, self-adjusting: can't slip
or shift away from the rupture opening;
automatically and instantly counteracts
every one of the strains or sudden move
ments which, with ordinary trusses, ale
almost certain to throw the rupture out.
And. in addition, something no other
truss or anpliance in the world does—
It is made to overcome the WEAKNESS
which is the real CAERE of rupture
All day long, without anv attention
whatever on your part, it AI'ToMATIC
ALLA’ MASSAGES the weak ruptured
parts
And this massage STRENGTHENS just
didn't figure better than seventh
position. In New York and Cin
cinnati the Old Fox’s hands were
tied. You see he is the largest in
dividual stockholder in Washing
ton.
McAleer figures less prominently
in the baseball firmament this year
than at any time since he broke
into the profession. But his light
is not hidden under a bushel. And
it is doubtful if he ever heard
money Jumbling into his coffers
one-fourth as fast. Past failures
are redeemed by present success,
and McAleer will live in history as
one of the’wisest guys of the na
tional pastime. He knows when to
keep his mouth shut.
CROSS FAMILY IN RING
AGAIN ON WEDNESDAY
NEW YORK. Aug. 5. In what has
been flamboyantly announced as "the
best card ever offered by the St. Nich
olas Athletic club." the Cross family,
Leach and Phil, will form an important
part Wednesday night- Leach has been
matched to fight Young Jack O'Brien
in the main event.
Phil will start the pugilistic ball in
action with Johnny Loree. Sandwiched
between the Cross brothers’ bouts will
be the Johnny Dundee-Patsy Kline
match—a bout of ten rounds that has
all the earmarks of a featherweight
championship battle.
PALZER DENIES STORY
NEW YORK. Aug. s.—Al Palzer has
l^ Ued “ den . ial of the stor - v ‘hat he and
loin () Rourke have settled their differ
ences and that O’Rourke again is acting
as his manager. The suit between the
two men still is in court.
as EXERCISE strengthens a weak ARM
so XJT’t mal A ,hp -upturVparts
‘° strong and sound that the ruuturp
»» « andn e oX U ol
sonw at or S ,he Cllllhe Truss h as cured
record— th St cases Qf ru * nur ‘ ! ><"
i2«°S?i ,he P’ [ P en and women 50 to 70
Sears old, who had been ruptured 20 to
?hi^ ars T " ,an - v of them after every
’hing else, including operations, had
proved utterly useless.
Get Wor'd's Greatest Rupture Book,
want ? J °V can Judße for yourself, we
wan to send you a tree book we have
written— a cloth-bound book of advice
Even physicians who have read it sav it
is the best book ever written on rupture ’
It sums up all we have learned’ in 40
years ot day-after-day experience—in the
successful treatment of over 200,000 eases
It deals -in simple language and photo
graphic illustrations with rupture in al
its forms anti stages explain’s the dang
ers <>f operations; puts you on guard
against throwing nmney away on things
that can t stand a fair test. ming.
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gives their names and addresses—perhaps
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Box 55—CLUTHE COMPANY
125 East 23d St.. NEW YORK CITY
Send me your Free Book on The
< tire of Rupture.
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