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Silk Hat Harry's Divorce Suit He Didn't Mean What the Judge Mean Copyright, 1912, National News Ass’n. By Tad
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Jimmy Archer Is Greatest of All Men Behind Bat
4-«+ +•+ •!•»•!• -!-••!• *>*•*!■ •?••?
Former Atlanta Backstop in Class by Himself
By. W. J. Mcßeth.
WE have with us today, gentle
readers, one of the real
novelties of the nation's
delight. Kindly step forward, Mr.
James Archer, of the Chicago
Cubs, till the populace gets a peek
at you.
Rather a handsome young gen
tleman. isn't he, with his raven
locks, swarthy complexion and Ro
man profile? Well, take it from all
the hall players in the National
league he's far better than he look.-,
even If he is a handsome kind of a
chap.
There may he better catchers in
the profession today than Jimmy
Archer, of Chicago. Rut there ate
no such backstops. There's a slight
distinction between the two class, s.
Catcher involves the broadei sense
of that special type of athletes that
wears mask, wind-pad and mitt V
catcher s value is reckoned relative
to his team worth, taking in his of
fensive as well as his defensive
ability. Backstop only Implies the
defensive issue the work of hand
ling ffttchers, crossing batsmen and
keeping runners glued to the sacks.
Wherefore —at least that potion
of enthusiasts who reside around
the metropolis—general fandom
will tell you perhaps that Chief
Meyers, of the Giants, is the best
catcher in the National league.
The statement is made keeping in
mind Meyers' all-round utility -
principally his deadly hitting eye.
for no major league maskman
pummels the pill as does the Mis
sion aboiigine But as a backstop
there is no man before the public
who can hold a candle lo the Cub
stalwart. From a defensive stand
point he is as superior to Moyers
as Meyers is superior to Jimmy of
fensively.
Sits on Back of Heels.
You have often heard a catch
er’s highest form of flattery toward
his pet battery mate. "Say. bo”
gays he, "I could catch that guy
sitting in a rocking chair ' An-bet
has never been known to make
such a boast. But every game he
works he handles bls pitcher to the
height of perfection from a far
more difficult position He doesn't
ait in a rocking < hair But he sits
on hfs heels And while crouched
on the rear view of his pedals he
can throw just about twice as ac
curately and twice as speedily as
any other man set firmly on his
feet for a peg
Jimmy Archer behind the bat is
the personification of athletic
grace It Is worth th, price of ad
mission alone to see him work
Fully three-quarters of the time
he squats- on his heels ti tn as a
deep-seated rock He is a well
knit fellow, muscled like a Greek
runner, hut far from giant propor
tions. Yet. while balanced on the
hacks of his shoes, he can take the
speediest shoots of Ed Reulba, h
without rocking an inch, and Reul
bach. when pushing them over, is
renowned for terrifi. <p t , l
A Nimble, Agile Fellow.
Few pitchers that wojk with
Archer have many wi I dings dur
ing a season For ins pet uliar
specialty gives Jimmy ~ narked
advantage in receiving From Ids
tegular working attitud, lie s so
low to the ground that a w b.,’.
can scarcely get past him H> , .in
smother it in the dirt with his big
mitt or shift more quickly from (sis
crouching attitude to Intercept it
if it takes a mean hop. 11- -
nimbi,,, agile fellow, quick as i
on his feet and with his hands
Wherefore, if the ball shoots ■ ig
he has simply to spring up and
spent it. It is a well known fa, ■
that it is far easier to go up for
high ones titan to dig -own fm
crazy chucks Th, same nalu.i
k advantage that protects a pit. het
from w ild flings also keeps Archer’s
passed balls to a minimum.
Backstopping literally means tlie
receiving of the pitcher's delivery.
In this special line, as pointed out,
Archer has no equal. But his re
sources do not stop there. His pe
-1 Ulin catching attitude seems to
be admirably adapted to perfect
throwing. Archer is a deadly
marksman. Either standing or
squatting, lie can peg the bull's eye
at any cushion 99 times in 100 His
throws snap out with rillelike ve
, loclty. hut his greatest adjunct is
tlie faculty of getting that throw
away at once. Ho wastes no time
in starting the ball on its course.
The minute the ball hits his glove
it's away again He never drfiws
back his arm; he shoots the hall
with a snap peculiarly his own,
and he saves stolen bases by mak
ing the foe hug the sacks Let a
man stray two feet beyond safe
ground at any base and he's dead
as a'door nail, if any one is on the
job at the other end. His squat
ting position behind the batter
seems to give Archer a distinct
advantage over a base runner. Ho
can watch, his man like a hawk
without tipping his hand.
Good For Many Seasons.
Ha’ t'hase revolutionized play
around first base. Archer has not
revolutionized catching simply be
cause there are none to follow his
lead. There is just one Archer as
there Is just one Chase. Rut they
can not mimic Archer as* they try
to Chase, for he—as mentioned In
the Introduction sentence—is the
real big novelty of th? national
pastime, I util there comes a gen
eration of aeiobats reared on their
heels instead of high chairs Jimmy
| FODDER FOR FANS
Th#- departure of [‘ft< her Kent from
Brooklyn to Toronto marks the end of
another man sent up from the Southern
last \ ear. He was a Baron in 1911.
♦ * *
Bill Douglas, tight hand hurler, who
has been u star with Don Moines, will
join the White Sox next week.
George Pierce, tried b\ both the Cubs
and the Giants and listed as a total fail
ure, has again been bought b\ the Cubs.
He has started with Scranton this year.
He struck out 21 players in a recent game.
*
Clark Griffith, who has seen every
pitcher north mentioning since the daxs
" hen they began to throw 'em’overhand,
>a.\s that Walter Johnson is the greatest
pitcher the world ever knew. He says
Walter has it on Busie s best efforts in
speed ami control
* • •
Joe Willis, the Cardinal southpaw, has
a couple of misplaced ligaments in his
shoulder and is due a week of rest no!
that it will make any material difference
in the pennant race
• ♦ •
Cobb is a great ball player* ail right
But that strike he started so disorganized
the Detroit team that it hasn't been in
the running since The signing of a two
jear contract with Detroit bj J.ennmgs
marks the end of that famous incident
* » •
Even Birmingham now admits that the
Barons will win the pennant
w w •
The players who kick don't last the
longest on the diamond, according to
Hank o'Day “Nine times out of ten,”
says Henry. “the players kick to ('over
up their own faults ”
If Daubert takes the job as manager at
BrookHn it is certain that he will not
have any very high managerial standards
to live up to.
The\ say that Tris Speaker, of Hub
haul city. Texas, is the reason Texas is
called the Lone Star State
• • •
New Orleans has accepted a first divi
sion berth for the Pelicans as the best
thing that can be hoped for and is talk
ing of 1913.
• • •
\ winning ball club disciplines itself.
Last year Patsy Donovan just couldn't
keep a lot of the Bed S<<x from tanking
ip This year. with pennant and *y orld <
series in sight a man who took two beers
, n a row would be paddled by his own
I ’ earn mates
In building for next year all thr old
I material Jennings intends to, use is Ty
j Cobb. Crawford. Bush and Stanage
• • •
I ‘Da y-Coach” league managers
| ate ■ •i '.stent Says Moffett, of Knox |
ville. “My new first baseman, Hanes, is
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. MONDAY. ATTEST 12. 19.12.
Archer is very likely to get the big
hand as one of the passing side
shows.
Almost as astonishing as the
great Cub catchers backstopping
and throwing skill is his natural
speed. Few catchers are fast But
Archer is an exception He belies
the theory that constant squat
ting slows up the leg muscles of a
receiver. Archer is far from a poor
hitter; In , fact, he is above the
average as catchers go. He's an
all-round star any way you wish to
take him.
Crackers Fairly Started on Semi-Final Trip—With Two Defeats in One Day
PLAY 2 DAYS IN NEW ORLEANS, THEN GO TO MOBILE
By Percy 11. Whiting.
UvELL, after losing two games
/ their first day’ away from
home, the Crackers are
fairly started on, their semi-final
road trip. They play in New 0i -
leans today and tomorrow. Then
tl.ie club gets a couple of off days.
And after that it opens in Mobile
for three days of hard going.
Not that it makes any particular
difference.
Nothing matters now but next
year.
And that doesn't matter so much
now.
* * *
ORMER Southern league play
ers. with such notable excep
tions as Daubeit, Rucker, Joe Jack
son, Dode Paskert, Tris Speaker
and the chaps who always make
good, haven't shown such a tre-
one of the best first basemen in the coun
try. He works like Hal Chase and I be
lieve him to be in a class with that peer
less performer. Manes has just been re
leased by the Northwestern league.“
And there you are
The Appalachian league nas sold a half
dozen players to dubs of higher classifi
cation already and is negotiating for the
disposal of others Knoxville got $3,000
for Pitcher Davis which is almost more
than the salary of alt the players on the
team for all the season.
Pitdiet Dixie Walker, kicked out by
W ashingt-.n, has slumped from Baltimore
to Wilkesbarre Pitcher Martin has also
been sent to that dub
Vernon. recently picked up by Wash
ington. is the Amherst college star, signed
originally by the Cubs.
It' Washington should happen to heat
the Red Sox. Jim McAleer would feel that
he had been whips a wed
• • •
Armando Marsans is said to he the one
last bet of the Rod team this year. Next
year the Reds will have two Cubans play
ing with them regularly.
• * •
The bitterest cup tor O'Day to gulp
down is the thought that, but for those
fifteen straight games that his Reds
handed McGraw, the New York team
wouldn't have an absolutely commanding
had in the National
* * «
The extremely high price paid for mod
ern pitchers is said to be due to the
lively ball It is a lot harder to get
away with it now than it used to be
♦ • ♦
I’horpe, the all-r.uind athletic champion
ot the world. will probably begin pitch
ing for the Pirate*- at the end of the 1913
college season Thorpe Is said t. be a
Sac (or Sauksi Indian, with some con
siderable whitt blood in his veins
Lee Tannehill lasted a long time in the
lug leagues and all he had was fielding
ability He couldn t hit and he was slow
on bases
Hank O Day admits that enough is
plenty He has passed on the news that
he is through as a manager and that lie
will ask for his old job of umpire back
again.
* » *
Harry Stahlhoefer. of Evansville. is a
candidate to’- the $3,000 ioh of president
of the Central league. Unfortunately for
Harry they offered him the Wheeling
franchise last year and hr tactfully re
marked. Give SB,OOO for the Wheeling
franchise’ Why I wouldn't give SB,OOO
’or the whole league” \nd now they're
holding that bright re# irk agains? him
land somebody else will get the $3,000
job.
1 ;
_— l
Ihe Big Race |
Here’s how the "Big Five” of the
American league are hitting the ball,
the averages including yesterday’s
games:
PLAYER. A.B. H. P.C.
COBB 402 168 .418
SPEAKER 427 171 .400
JACKSON 401 155 .387
COLLINS 382 127 .332
LAJOIE 263 80 .304
Cobb has been out of the game for
two days now and both Speaker and
Jackson have climbed up nearer to
him. In Saturday and Sunday games
Speaker garnered four hits in eight
times at bat. Jackson did even better,
smashing forth six swats in eight at
tempts. Collins got four hits in ten
trips to the plate. Lajoie connected
twice in eight chances.
mendous lot in the big leagues this
year. ,
Ki,rke. who looked liKf a wonder
with the Braves, isn't tn the line
up now. Jackson, who went from
the Memphis team to the Braves, is
doing better, thougli his batting av
erage is perceptibly less than the
34 7 he made in the 33; big league
games he ’worked last year.
Northern is doing good work with
Brooklyn, and so is Red Smith,
while Pitcher Frank .Allen manages
to hang on. though he isn't going
very strong. But Brooklyn has sent
back all the other Southern leag
uers of last year's crop—Daley,
Kent. Coulson and the rest, and also
Dolly Stark.
Pat Flaherty has passed back.
Bridwell has been out of the game
virtually all of the season with an
injured foot. Mclntyre, former
Memphis hurler. has dropped out of
the running and will go in for sa
looning Os course. Buck Becker
and Tris Speaker, graduates of the
lamented Little Rock .team, con
tinue to play’ big ball for league
leaders Hank Griffin has come
back to the Southern and then
dropped out of this league. Hub
Perdue manages to keep in the
limelight in one way or another,
and so does Hess, who went to the
same club from the Southern. Rut
, Bugs Raymond has dropped out of
' baseball Entirely; Oldrfng, a former
Montgomery player, has slumped
tremendously with the Athletics;
Neal Ball continues to be too er
ratic for regular big league service;
l ively has dropped off the Detroit
team; Lindsay didn't stick with
Cleveland, neither did Butcher;
Clarke lias gone from the St. Louis
team, and Casey has departed from
Detroit.
However, at that the Southern
league is probably as brilliantly
represented in tlie major leagues
right now as any Class A league. So
, long as Joe Jackson. Jake Daubert.
Zack Wheat. Dode Paskert. Beals
Becker. Jimmy Archer. Nap Ruck
er. slim Sallee. Tris Speaker. Ed
Sweeney and Russ Ford continue
to represent the Southern in the big
show as brilliantly as they have in
the past year, the Dixie league will
not soon be forgotten.
* * ♦
OW that the Birmingham team
has got the pennant ami gone
with it. it is recalled with some
amusement that at the first of the
season Baton tans and some Baron
sport writers couldn't see the Bir
mingham team at all. While At
lantans- were picking the Batons to
win the pennant, the Baron base
ball experts were poking fun at the
team and panning the life out of
Moleswort h.
Its an odd tiling, but somehow
Birmingham has not been able to
appreciate Molesworth. He lias had
his team "right up there" ever since
he really got it straightened out
and going some. And he is going
to take this pennant in a canter.
Johnson a Wise Champion in Retiring From Ring
Flynn Fight Made Him Realize He’s Going Back
j By W. W. Naughton.
rAt’K JOHNSON says he has re-
I tired, and it remains to be seen
J whether he mean- it Just at
■ present his resolve is of an ada-
I inantine character. He swears that
> the world will never hear him say.
i as John L. Sullivan said. "I tried
i once too often." and that never
. hereafter will the lure of gold bring
him back to the ring as it brought
i Jeffries back, when he was far past •
I his athletic prime.
The writer believes that Johnson
Os course, he has had enthusiastic
financial backing—but so did
Hemphill. So that doesn't prove
anything.'
* • ♦
17 ROM a man who claims to have
seen the letter, it is learned that
the Atlanta Baseball association is
conducting a near-dicker with Nor
man Elberfeld to take the manage
ment of the Cracker club for next
year.
We are a trifle inclined to doubt
the story. In the first place, the
local club isn’t going to do any’
dickering with a man under con
tract with another club. In the sec
ond place. Kid Elberfeld has had
his chance as a manager and ha.s
failed. The Kid knows baseball and
he has the pepper. Rut Elberfeld
never has been able to control him
self and will never be able to con
trol others.
|news from ringside
Packer Hommey was signed up a few
days ago to meet either Jim Coffey or
Boyo Driscoll for next Monday’s show at
the Garden A. C. in New York. If Hom
mey gains the decision Matchmaker Gib
son promised him a scrap with Young
Shugroe or some other leading feather
w eight.
Although Luther McCarthy lost the
popular decision to Jim Stewart in Go
tham a few days ago. he is not a bit de
spondent. Luther is matched with Tom
Kennedy a week from today and savs* he
will win in a walk. The big battler said
the crowd got his “goat” last time, but
that now he has got used to the mob and
yvill show’ them some speed next out.
* * *
Mike Gibbons is about ready to descend
upon the East once more. This time
Michael will carry along his brother
Tommy- who is as good as Mike, so Mike
says. Anyway, the pair will reach Go
tham early next month
t • •
Eastern sport scribes belieye .lack
Johnson's retirement from the ring is
simply a bluff to get larger ourses for
his fights. Johnson could stay in seclu
sion for several months until some "hope"
has made such an impression on the pub
lic that the promoters would be willing to
offer another purse, such as was posted,
when Johnson fought Jeffries, then air
"Lil" Arthur would have to do would be
hammer him around awhile, collect the'
money and then retire again.
...
Harry Rafael, who is managing Charlev
Miller, the latest entrant to the "white
hope” ranks, was in New York a few
days ago blowing about wtiat Miller could
do. He says what Charley will do to Pal
zer and the rest of the big pugs will be
enough to send him to the electric chair.
Miller will leave for the East after his
battle with Jim Flynn on Labor Day.
• • •
Luther McCarthy ami less Willard are
scheduled to mingle at the Garden A. C.
■in New York August Ik.
• • •
Jim Stewart lias, challenged Al Paizer
for a ten-round battle to he staged in
Gotham Stewart has won eight of his
recent tights by the K. O. route and savs
he has earned a crack at the big fighter
» • •
The Terre Haute boxing club is trying
to match George K. O Brown with Kid
Skelly for a match there Labor l>a\.
...
Packey McFarland will signalize his
return to the ring and the start of his
fall campaign of 1912 In a six-round en
gagement with Joe Hirst tn Philadelphia
August 30.
I Johnnie Dundee and Matt Brock will
1
r— .. ,
is out of the game to stay. The
heart knoweth its own bitterness,
and no one knows better than
Johnson what rough sledding it was
with Fireman James Flynn at Las
Vegas.
Two years ago Johnson would
have literally- spanked Flynn for his
bad ring manners. As it*was, the
best Johnson could do was hold on
and holler for help. Two years of
acquaintance with the Paris cases
and the pleasure haunts of London
had told in Johnson's case just as
sjmilar dalliance had done in the
case of Peter Jackson.
When the state police were clam
bering into the ring in New Mexi
co and Referee .Smith was mopping
his perspiring brow, a little bird
whispered in Jack Johnson’s ear,
"The time is ripe for retiring."
And who can blame him? He
has acquired a competence through
the use of his gloves, and now that
he feels he is not as spry or as sure
fisted as he used to be. he is show
ing good judgment in sidestepping
possible disaster. Because other
champions made mistakes is no
reason why Johnson should.
Wants To Quit Unbeaten.
Jn getting out at this time, John
son is catering to an ambition he
lias long felt, even though he may
not have given expression to it. He
would dearly like to be known as
the only’ negro who held the world's
championship and then retired un
defeated.
In support of this view, it is only
necessary to recall Johnson's atti
tude toward other colored fighters
since he became champion. It is
claimed that he'deliberately back
ed out of a match with Sam Lang
ford. in London, after signing con-
appear as the headliner of a boxing car
■' nival to be staged in Cleveland August 13.
Joe Rivers and Charley White have
- been practically matched for a bout to be
; staged some time next month. No club
lias been mentioned, but it is probable
the match will be staged in the East
somewhere near Chicago.
The only reason Young Jack O’Brien
was not knocked oflt in the sixth round
, by Leach t 't oss in New York the other
> night was that he held on to Leach so
I tight that the dentist could not hit him.
EAST VS. WEST ON BOXING
I CARD IN N. Y. THIS WEEK
NEW YORK, Aug. 12.—The East and
the West will he pitted against each
other in the only two important boxing
bouts that will he staged here this
week. At Madison Square Garden to
: night Jack Britton, a Chicago light
weight, will tackle Eddie Smith of
Ha rlem.
On Wednesday night at the St. Nidi.
, olas rink. Gunboat Smith, a Califor
nia heavyweight, will box ten rounds
1 with Porky Flynn, of Boston. There
■ at.' .y-veral other bouts on the program,
but all are of minor importance.
McFarland and wolgast
TO MEET IN GOTHAM OCT. 3
NEW YORK. Aug. 1 2.—Ad. Wolgast
and Packej McFarland will meet in a
ten-round bout under tile auspices of
the Garden Athletic dub in this, city
October 3, according to word received
today from a representative of that
club now in Cadillac, Mich. Both men
tre to weigh 133 pounds at 3 o'clock on
tile day of the tight.
RITCHIE STARTS WORK
FOR BOUT WITH HOGAN
SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 12.—Willie
Ritchie, who is to meet "One-Round"
Hogan in a font-round t>out at Dream
land Friday, has begun training. Willie
plans only light work. Hogan also
went to work today. He fought fifteen
rounds with Tommy McFarland a lit
tle more than a week ago and is in ex
i veilent condition.
tracts. He has been a veritable
will o’ the wisp to Joe Jeannette,
who has been after him for a long
time. He has often talked of going
to Australia to box Langford and
McVea, but, judging by his actions,
he was never for an instant sincere
in this. 1
If the last has really been seen
of Johnson as a pugilist, he will be
remembered as a fighter who was
seldom if ever ftfily extended. Some
say that his fight with Tommy
Burns in Australia was his hardest.
I his may- be so. He certainly
never had any hard fights In the
ordinary acceptance of the term in’
this country. His go with Jeffries,
from which so much was expected,
was so extremely one-sided that it
lives In memory as the joke of the
’ century. ,
A Great Uppercut Fighter,
Johnson’s style of boxing was,all
his own. He was master of the
straight left and right crosses that
educated boxers usually employ, but
he seldom relied upon them. In
the use of hooks, uppercuts and
lifting punches generally he prob
ably never had an equal.
Arguments frequently arise as to
how Johnson would have fared if
he had been sent against a Queens
berry crackajack like Peter Jack
son when the latter was at his best.
Well, there is no harm in forming
and holding an opinion on the point,
but right there the discussion ends.
It is a sporting aphorism that it is
bootless to argue any matter that
can not be settled by a bet, and
certainly there is no way of deter
mining which was the better man
Peter Jackson or Jack Johnson.
The remark is often heard that
Johnson was lucky—that when he
reached his prime there were really
no good heavyweights in sight.
That is true in a measure, but it is
the luck of the game. It very often
happens that staleness and long
service contribute to a champion's
defeat as much as anything else.
Seldom 2 Good Men at Same Time.
In the heavyweight division, it
; was seldom in recent years that two
really good men developed about
the same time. Possibly the best
instance of genuine rivalry in this
respect was when Jeffries and Shar
key were working to the front. No
more stubborn engagements than
the two in which Jim and Tom
were the principals were ever wit
nessed probably, and if Sharkey had
had a few inches more of stature,
ring history might have had an en
tirely different twist.
Who will be Johnson's successor?
Some people do not see much hope
for the hopes because Langfqrd,
McVea and Jeannette are still ac
tive. But these colored gladiators
are not by any means as youthful
as they used to be, and as there is
no negro novice in sight, there is
good reason for arguing that a
white man will rule the heavy
weight roster within the next cou
ple of years.
ALL WAIVE ON STORCH.
NASHVILLE. TENN.. Aug. 12.—1 t
uas announced this morning that
waivers had been secured on Harry
Storch, utility man of tlie Nashville
team, and he did not accompany the
team to Montgomery last night Storch
lias been with the Nashville team since
the beginning of the 1911 season, being
secured from Dallas, Texas, where he
was the leading home run hitter of the
league. He may go back to the Texas
league.
MILLER KNOCKS OUT YOUNG.
I’Hlt’AGtt. Aug. 1-’.—Hirsch Miller
knocked out Billy Young in the third
round of a fight held over the state line
yesterday afternoon. They boxed for a
Side bet and B.mm changed hands on
the battle. A big crowd saw the bout.
•