Newspaper Page Text
Frankie Burns Puts
One-Round Hogan Out
In Ten Rapid Rounds
sFRANCISCO, Sept. 10.—In a con
characterized by great gameness on
he part of the defeated man, Frankie
: . ns . ~f Oakland, eliminated One Round
can of San Francisco, as a lightweight
.Ability by knocking him out in the
en th round of their fight here. As early
'he third round Burns proved himself
.j ..pan's master, sending him to the mat
times in the round.
\ grudge of long standing was settled
jv the right The hatred that sped every
v.rch was so intense that sheer force
A 'a- necessary to send the belligerents
their corners on one or two occasions
ifter the gong had ended a round. The
. ctt.o was one of the. bloodiest witnessed
r i local arena, and the gameness of
Regan under the heavy face punches of
(turns was its chief feature.
Hurns took command as early as the
icrd round when a right cross caught
'.' an on the point of the chin and sent
, reeling against he .ropes and then to
p mat Hogan struggled 'to his feet,
u series of similar jaw punches again
ruled him over. Twice more the per
irmance was repeated, and only the
rr.elv gong saved Hogan from defeat.
Burns tried to end it in the fourth, but
Hosran opened a deep gash over Burns'
est ear and all but closed his left eye.
Hogan gradually took on strength and
•onfldence. and administered much pun
shment to Bums.
■■he tenth round saw’ the end. With
>,,'l; fighters bleeding profusely, Burrts
net his opponent with a vicious left up
ercut Quick as a flash he crossed his
-ght thrice to the jaw’, and Hogan fell
,'-> the floor. His fighting spirit, how
ever was unconquered, and he struggled
io liis feet at the count. Burns then
Wanted a solid finishing punch to . the
•bin. and Hogan crashed to the mat and
put.
THE BASEBALL CARD.
SOUTHERN LEAGUE.
Games Today.
Chattanooga In Atlanta; Ponce De I .eon
park: game called at 3:30 o'clock.
Birmingham in Mobile.
New Orleans in Montgomery.
Standing of the Clubs,
W. L. P C. W L. P.C.
R'ham 84 50 .827 N’ville. 63 68 .481
Mobile .76 57 .571 Mont. . 62 73 .459
N Or. .69 62 .526 C’nooga. 59 70 .458
Memphis 66 68 .493 Atlanta. 50 81 .390
Yesterday's Results.
Atlanta 5. Chattanooga 2.
Memphis-Nashville, rain.
Birmingham 5, Mobile 3.
Montgomery 9, New Orleans 6.
AMERICAN LEAGUE.
Games Today.
Boston in Chicago.
New York in St. Boule.
Philadelphia in Detroit.
Washington in Cleveland.
Standing of the Clubs.
W. L. P.C W. L. P.C.
Boston . .92 38 .708 Detroit . 61 72 .459
Phila. . .79 52 .603 C'land. . .58 73 .443
Wash. . 79 54 .594’ N. York .46 84 .354
Chicago. 64 66 .492 S. Louis 45 85 .346
Yesterday’s Results.
No games scheduled.
NATIONAL LEAGUE.
Games Today.
Chicago In Boston.
Cincinnati In Brooklyn.
St. Louis in New York
Pittsburg in Philadelphia.
Standing of the Clubs.
W. L. P C. W. L. P.C
N York 91 39 .700 Phila. . .63 66 .489
Chicago. 81 48 .628 8. Louis 55 75 .423
P’burg. .77 53 .592 Br’klvn. 49 81 .377
C'nati. .65 67 .493 Boston .39 91 .300
Yesterday's Results.
New York 8, Brooklyn 1 (first game.)
New York 7, Brooklyn 2 (second game.)
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION.
Games Ted ay.
Milwaukee in Minneac 1
Kansas City in St. Paul.
Standing of the Clubs.
W. L. P C. W. L. P C.
M apolis 98 55 .641 M'w'kee 72 78 .480
C Ires. 95 59 .617 S. Paul. 70 86 .446
Toledo .91 63 .591 L’ville. . .58 95 370
K City. 74 77 .490 I'apolis. 54 99 .354
Yesterday's Results.
Sf Paul 2. Kansas City 1.
Minneapolis 11, Milwaukee 2.
INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE.
Games Today.
Baltimore in Jersey City,
t'rovidence in Newark,
only games scheduled.
Standing of the Clubs.
_. w pc. w. L. r.c.
Toronto. S 3 59 .584 Buffalo. 65 72 474
Roh. 81 59 .578 M'treal. .66 74 .471
N wark. 70 67 SIJ .) city .64 77 .151
H more. .69 69 .500 P’dence. 59 SO .425
Yesterday's Results.
. j-' o ' ’ jty 8. Baltimore 7.
u Z a !° Rochester 2 (first game.)
rsu.ralo 4, Rochester 2 (second game.)
Newark 11, Providence 5.
WHITE SOX SIGN LAMLINE.
A Porte. IND.. Sept. 10.—Arthur
lomline. pitcher for the American
■odge team at Gary, has been signed
tlm White Sox for next Season and
"ill report in a few days.
Io the Public
This is to certify that William La
,'a' x ls n ° ,on ger connected with us
n . ot be responsible for any
" . ac *s m ade with him or any money
paid to him.
GEORGIA AUTO REGISTER CO.
Men and Women
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Dr. J. D. HUGHES, Specialist
Opposite Third National Hank
>- ~ No| th Broad St.. Atlanta. Ga. ■
baseball I
WEDNESDAY
CHATTANOOGA vs. ATLANTA
Ponce DeLeon Park
' Game called 3:30.
Sewanee Football Prospects Uncertain; Six Regulars Sure to Return
TIfiERS WILL REPORT LATE; COPE WILL COACH
By Percy H. Whiting.
SOUTHERN football has an an
nual mystery. it's Se
wanee.
Up to the week before the Van
derbilt game nobody knows for
sure what to expect of it. Before
the players report fhets concerning
it are about as numerous as inside
dope on the political situation at
Ngabo, Kongo Free State, Africa.
The reason is apparent. The col
lege is located "on the mountain"
in remoter Tennessee. There aren't
any dailies there to show curiosity
about the situation. The coach,
Harris Cope, lives in Cartersville,
where he cultivates his happy fac
ulty of saying nothit»g at all. The
Rev. Henry Phillips, who is usual
ly the assistant coach, is no news
source at all. If asked, he dodges.
"I have no information at all,” he
always says. "Football is merely
a vacation pastime with me. I
have more serious work. I find
out things only when I go to Se
wanee.”
JN a search for information, how
ever, we turned naturally to
ward Cartersville, and from Coach
Cobe got what bears the closest
antie-season resemblance to train
ing-table dope
Coach Cope has ordered the Se
wanee football men to report for
practice September 19. This will
give the Tigers probably the very
latest start of any top-notch
Southern college. And in this late
start and in the wonderful fall
climate of “the mountain” per
haps lies some of the secret of Se
wanee's success. The Tigei ath
letes do not report until late. When
they do the weather is cool.
They can go at it full tilt. And
they do go at It this way. There
are no other attractions on the
mountain for the football men—
nothing to distract their minds
from football—no theaters, no mov
ing picture shows (unless they have
opened one since I was there last),
no amusement parks, no groggeries
and no grog (save an occasional
sniff of real old limberneck, as rec
tified and retailed by the “coveites"
of the neighborhood and not cal
culated to encourage dissipation).
When football starts at Se
wanee it starts in earnest. And
nothing stands in its way until the
setting of Thanksgiving day’s sun.
COACH COPE expresses consid
erable doubt about which men
will be back and which will not.
He has received a letter from Se
wanee. carrying the rumor that
Gillem will not return. It is said
that he will join the army. May
be he will, maybe not.
Here 1:4 the probable list of var-
Correct Proverb Solutions
Picture No. 67 Picture No. 68
ACAIN -
.I4OVU \_\y~-f jfITTiWiYN \ Ano,f WYi LPU. J ' LL I
1111 l HC 3A 1 /ff/mTSn AM
fe~\ CFa l < -JMART i <== <Vt/C7
W Mwf _ST| 71 J
“W ■
J ~~'c''\ W-d I
He that lets his fish escape may cast his net A wise lawyer never goes to law himself,
often yet never catch it again.
CORRECT PROVERB SOLUTIONS TO DATE
1 — The early bird catches the worm.
2 All is not gold that glitters.
3 A miss is as good as a mile.
4 A rolling stone gathers no moss.
5 Beggars must not be choosers,
a—A burnt child dreads the fire.
7 A pitcher that goes oft to the well
is broken at last
8 — A new broom sweeps clean.
9 Practice makes perfect.
10 - A cat may look at a king
11—Great bodies move slowly.
12 Forewarned, forearmed
13—Many hands make light work.
14 Better half 1 loaf than no bread.
15 — Let the cobbler stick to bls last.
16- An idle person is the devil’s play
fellow
17 -Between the hand and the lip the
morsel mat slip.
18 A ragged colt may make a good
horse.
19 Better- a tooth out than always
aching.
20— Ask thy purse what thou shouldst
buy.
21— Drowning men will catch at a
straw.
22 Bad excuses are worse than none.
23 When one will not, two can not
<1 uarrel.
21 When poverty comes in at the
door -, love leaps out at the windows.
25 What jour gla-s tells you will
not be told bv counsel ,
26—Never rub against thr grain.
27 * I ■ • sooner said than done
28 Fasting is the physician's hat
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 10. 1912.
sity men who will return: Stoney,
three years on the team, guard;
Magwood, one year on the team,
guard; McCullum, two years on the
team, tackle: McClanahan, one
year on the team, end; Parker, one
year on the team, halfback; Tal
ley. one year on the team, half
back; Ham. substitute tackle:
Leigh, scrub guard; Horner, scrub
guard.
Two men who may return but
about whom there is some uncer
tainty are Eckert, one year on the
team, halfback, and Gillespie, one
year on the team, fullback. It
might be added in passing that Se
wanee has one of the most l»ya1
bands of alumni in the world and
that any man who has promise and
who is wavering is likely to find
pressure applied that Is hard to
withstand. They usually get most
of their "prospects'' at Sewanee.
Summing it up. six regulars, with
Wtotal aggregate experience of nine
years, or a season and a half of
experience on the average, will re
turn.
• • •
ixrlTH only six men back. Coach
’’ Cope will have a tremendous
task to build up a strong team.
He loses some wonderfully good
performers: Myers. Gailor. Swain.
Farrlsh, Gillette and Gillespie.
Their shoes will be hard to fill—
not because they wore such big
ones, but because they filled the
ones they wore so excellently.
♦ • ♦
pOACH COPE will go to Sewanee
September 16. He will then
take hold at once. Thus far no
assistant coach has been appoint
ed.
Mr. Cope is depending a good bit
on the freshman class. It promises
to b.e exceptionally large, and there
are bound to be some good ath
letes in the lot. It will be neces
sary to develop five or six good men
from the freshmag class to work
with the substitutes and the scrub
team men in filling the gaps.
Heimsheim
29 — Never too old to learn.
30— Every one as they like, as the
woman said when she kissed the cow.
31— Faint heart never won fair lady.
32 A chip of the old block.
33 Wha,t can the virtues of our an
cestors profit us if we do not imitate
them '.’
34 Lean liberty is better than fat
sla very.
35 —ls strokes are good to give they
are good to receive.
36 Coming events cast their shad
ows befote them.
37—The wise man knows the fool,
but the fool doth not know the wise
man.
38 Procrastination Is the thief of
time.
39—A boaster and a liar are cousin.-.
4u Many who wear rapi< rs are
afraid of goose quills.
4)—z\ crooked stick will have a
crooked shadow.
42 —He who peeps through a hole maj
see what will vex him.
43 Every man doth his own business
best.
44—New-made honor doth forget
men's name*.
45 -There Is a tide in the affairs of
men which taken at the flood, leads to
fortune.
46 I had no thought of < at< hing you
when I fisfied for another.
17 Strike while the iron !•> hot.
48 He dcclßK- him <-;f guilty why'
jo- To himself befort accusation. 1
Al' Sewanee this year it will be
** largely up to Coach Cope He
will have a lot of green material to
whip into shape—and no great
amount of time for the whipping
Mr. Cope's work at Sewanee has
been watched with the greatest in
terest throughout the South The
Tennessee college was the first one
in the South which went in for an
exclusively alumni system of
coaching. Thus far Mr. Cope has
been uniformly successful, in ad
dition to knowing the game he has
the faculty of imparting his knowl
edge—ahd making it stick. And
more than that, he has a person
ality that has inspired confidence,
devotion and rare enthusiasm.
Coach Cope’s teams always play
their heads clear off. And that
they do is largely because of his
coaching and his inspiration.
YESTERDAY'S JOYFEST.
The score:
CHATTANOOGA—ab r. h po. a. e.
Coyle, lbs p 2 9 0 0
Gaston. 3b. . . . , 4 l> 1 6 1 0
£ r y IS< N ’f 4 1 2'2 0 0
Balenti. ss 2 0 0 2 5 1)
Tutwiler, cf. . . 4 1 2 2 0 0
Jordan. 2b 4 0 1 J 3 0
‘'UY' rs 4 0 1 0 0 0
Glddo. c 3 0 1 3 0 1
Coveleskie, p. . . . 3 0 0 0 0 0
xNoyes 000
Totals. . . . .*3 2 10 24 9 1
xßatted for Coveleskie in the ninth
ATLANTA— ab. r h. po. a e.
Agler. lb 3 1 0 10 2 0
Bailey, If. ... 3 2 2 5 0 0
Harbison, ss. . . . 3 2 2 2 0 0
Alperman, 2b. . . 3 0 3 5 5 0
McElveen. 3b. ... 4 0 0 n n 0
Callahan, cf 3 0 0 3 1 0
Graham, c 3 0 0 2 1 0
Wolfe, rf3 0 0 0 0 0
Brady, p 3 0 0 0 4 0
Totals2B 5 7 27 13 0
Score by Innings. r
Chattanooga. 000 101 000 2
Atlanta 000 203 00*—5
Summary: Two-base hits—Harbison.
Cruise. Three-base hit -Tutwiler. Dou
ble plays—Balenti to Jordan to Coyle. Cal
lahan to Brady to Harbison. Struck out—
By Brady 2, by Coveleskie 3. Bases on
balls—Off Coveleskie 3. off Brady 3. Sac
rifice hits—Gaston. Alperman. Balenti,
Harbison. Stolen bases—Gaston. MeF.l
veen, Alperman. Time. 1:50. empires
Rudderham and Pfenningei
49 A small demerit extinguishes a
long service.
50— AH things are difficult before they
ate easy,
51— A bad workman quarrels with
his tools.
52 Follow the river and you will get
to sea.
53 The very falling of leaves fright,
ens hares.
54 A shameless beggar must have a
short denial
55 -Great engines turn on -mall piv
ots.
56 1 can not be at York and London
at the same time.
57 II Is time enough to <r\ oh! when
you are hurt
58 A shoeoiak r's wife ami ,i smith ■
mare ate always the worst shod.
s'l He that beareth n torch shadow
eth himself to give light to others.
60 —He that listens for what people
say of him shall never have peace
61 -It is easier to descend than as
cend.
62 \ rascal grown rich has lost all
his kindred
63 He- that can read and meditate
will not find his evenings long or lift
tedious.
64 He will see daylight through a
little hole.
65 —A small leak will sink a great
ship.
66 He cares not whose child cry sit
his laugh.
6 7 He that lots his fish es<ape mu
' ast h’s net often, yet noy. > cate • P
’ .iga In
o ,\ vis awyei nevei goes to
1 him- *
Here's How Crackers
Are Hitting the Ball
Right Up to Date
These average.- include vesterday’e
game:
Players. G. A.B. R. H. Av.
Price, p 4 9 o 3 .333
Harbison, ss. . . ;s 272 36 79 .290
Bailey. If. . . .130 459 ss 132 .288
Alperman. 2h.. .127 47S 62 137 .287
Agler. lb 68 230 39 ' 63 .274
’’allahan. cf. . . 91 341 33 911 .264
Graham, <■ . . f,< 197 20 4x .244
■McElveen. 3b.. .137 496 7,2 118 .238
Reynolds, c. . . . 25 79 12 15 .190
Becker, pl 6 38 2 7 .184
Brady, p 24 74 3 12 .162
Wolfe, utility . . 23 63 6 Hl .156
Sitton, p 29 67 11 I'l .146
Johnson, p. ... R 18 0 1 .0561
Waldorf, p. . . . 11 28 (11 .036
JEANNETTE BEATS ROSS
ON FOUL IN SEVEN ROUNDS
NEW YORK. S- pt !(>.—Tony Ross
the Newcastle. Pa., heavyweight, will
probably be barred from boxing at Mad
ison Square Garden in the future as a
result of his fouling tactics in his
scheduled ten-round bout with Joe
Jeannette there last night. The man
agement of the Garden Athletic 1 lull
served notice today that they would
take up with the state boxing commis
sion the question of prohibiting the Ital
ian heavyweight from furthe r bouts in
the biff arena.
Jeannette's exhibition has not put
him very much farther along in tile
estimation of the fight fans. He was
unable 10 put l.is chunky opponent
away. Finally in the seventh. Ross
landed a couple of jabs below the belt,
after having been cautioned earli.i in
the ion test. anil Referee Billy Joh slop
ped the bout.
There- was a number of good side
fights.' George Kirkwood, of St. Louis,
knocked out Frankie Fleming, the Ca
nadian bantamweight champion, in the
first round; Gunboat Smith, ul Califor
nia. shaded Tom McMahon, the Pitts
burg "bearcat.” who was substituted for
Dave Smith, of Australia.
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lln <listriliiition cl the l-i-piet f* blue and g’o[<] decorated Ihinier Sets will
'■lose this week. ,
I his is your last <diaiice to obtain this set for sd.ott and the six Preinitmi
< oiipotis ent Iroin Iho Georgian. (Seepage 2.) The olur will be withdrawn
next .Saturday, September 11.
A new supply of the 26 Piece Berkshire Silver Sets has been received.
I hey w ill be offered for 2 Preminin Coupons and “<2.('O cash, and will go fast.
II you want one of these sets order it today.
rhe Atlanta Georgian
Premium Room 20 E. Alabama St.
CROSS VS. DUFFY TONIGHT.
NEW YORK. Sep;, ill. Leach Cro
the "Bowery dentist," rules favorite’:
over Jimmy Duffy, the Buffalo light-,
we ight, for their ten-round bout at tie
St. Nicholas Athletic c lub tonight.
neaff and answer the Want Ads in The
Georgian. A good rule for every inclivid-:
ual who reads. Make it your rule and
you will be nfbre prosperous and more
< ontented.
Ifta
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JEFFRIES INHERITS $12,490.
LOS ANGELES. Sept. 10 -Mis Re
becca, Jeffrii i. mother of James J Jef
fries. the so mer heavyweight cham
pion pugilist, who died last winter, left
in estate valued at $87,430, according
to inheritance tax appraisers. The for
mi ■’ champion’s share was J 12.490, the
estate having been equally divided
among seven children.