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. EDITED W. 9 FARNSWORTH
And Now Mutt Knows How to Pitch a No-Hit Game :: :: :: By “Bud” Fisher
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Bat Choking Not Popular With
Red Sox; They’re Free Swingers
By Bill Bailey.
U THAT’S all this talk about
' choking the bat to hit the
pitching of the modern
t wirier?
You have heard and read the
stories. Ty Cobb Is one of those
who remarks that you have to
choke if you expect to get the base
hits.
Take a look at the Boston Red
Sox and you are at least likely to
have some doubts on the subject.
You may not become convinced that
choking of the bat Isn't necessary.
But you are bound to admit that
there are two sides to the argu
ment. Because there are just two
of the Red Sox regulars who choke
their bats.
The lads who line them hard and
far are the fellows who grip the
bat at the very end and then take a
good, healthy swing. •
* * *
AMONG those who do not choke
‘ * their bats are ‘ Sluggers’’
Yerkes, Speaker, Lewis, Gardner,
Wagner and Cary When Stahl is
tn the game the count Is 6 to 2
against the choking of the war club.
The pitcher Isn’t counted, but when
Wood is on the mound the fellows
who grip the club near the handle
have another vote. Because Wood
also stands up there and whales at
the ball, getting all the power he
can behind his drive and grasping
said drive-producer so near the
handle that his left hand Is on the
knob
You know there is a theory In
baseball that choking the bat Is
more scientific. Those who favor
that method claim that the pitch
ers of today break their curves m
Quickly that the fellow’ who grasps
his bat at the very end and swings
Is sure to make a show of himself.
They claim that by choking the
bat the slugger can hit quicker
and, while he may not get the dis
tance that the long swinger does,
that he will get so many more
base hits that he will be the gainer
in the end.
HUNTER. SECKEL. TRAVIS
AND EVANS PLAY TODAY
CHICAGO Sept IS Charles Evans
Jr., Wfistern golf Champion, today is
Playing Albert Seckel. formerly West
ern champion, and Walter J. Travis,
formerly American and British golf
premier, is contesting with Paul Hun
ter in the semi-finals for the Mayflower
golf tropin .a th, Onwentsla club
Evans yesterday made two rounds in
71, defeating both \v E flow Jr ot
Onwentsla. and Eraser Hale? of’Skokie
four and three. ♦fravis had two easy
matches against Chicago golf. v de
feating J. M. Tait, 9 Up and S, In the
forenoon, and Allen Reed 7 and 5 , n
the afternoon. Seckel won his wav to
the semi-finals by d, feat mg \\ ’ i>
Egan, formerly Western . hampion
and 4. Hunter, yesterday a’teino'on
defeated K. M McEiwee. of Onwentsla
ho earlier had eliminated (’ <; w
do, Jr, Connecticut champion IP ' i
\\aldo last week defeated for nier
(hampion Harold Hilton in the nt
tlonal tournament.
ATTELL FIGHTS TONIGHT
IF SHERIFF LETS HIM
FeelL. , . .
will make an , ffort to
Madison Squar, Garden tonight unh>s
his scheduled ten-round boxing .op
test with Ham Thomas, ol Ei gl tnd
is stopped by Sn. l ift Julius Harburg, r
"hen asked whether he would
the bout to go on or not. in th. light
Os Governor bit s r< . .-nt lett.-r th.
•ho iff snid "1 will enforce th. law.
Sporting circle# In r, heard a report
that Manager Billy Gibson, of tin Gut.
den Athletic club, would go into court
some time during the day and ask for
an injunction preventing tin autliorl
t les from interfi ring
KETCHELI. BESTS CLABB V
HAMMOND IND Sept st. v.
Ketchell defeated Eddi. I'latd.v'in a
Irti I < ind bunt f!« r« ' -t Ji t! ii*
J T hasn’t been so long ago that
Tyrus Cobb was quoted on this
proposition. “Time was when I
thought I could grab my bat at the
very end and swing with all my
might,” said Tyrus "But these
curve ball pitchers broke me of
that habit and ruined that belief.
1 realize now tnat the way to get
the most base hits Is to choke the
bat and then meet the ball. I may
not get tlie power behind the drive
l hat I formerly got. but 1 get more
hits Because by choking the bat I
am In position to hit quickly and so
take advantage of a quick breaking
curve if it breaks w’here I can hit
It.”
Now. there are not many who are
going to dispute what the Detroit,
sltiggjg has to remark on the ques
tion of hitting. But at the same
time you have this Boston club to
take Into consideration. There
isn't a pitcher In the American
league who is going to claim for a
moment that the Red Sox can’t hit.
It’s an accepted fact that they can.
and If you don’t believe It consult
almost any pitcher of your ac
quaintance. and he’ll tell you about
the time that they made him take
to the woods
• ♦ •
X/’ET. the only men who choke
their bats on that club are
Hooper, the man who leads off, and
Wagner, the shortstop, who bats
seventh. There Isn’t a freer hitter
or a longer swinger In the game
than this Tris Speaker And
Yerkes, Gardner and Lewis stand
up there and start their swings be
hind their backs
No one in the game is going to
dispute that the free swinger is the
lad who drives in the runs when he
does connect with the ball. Chop
ping hits may be fine and the thing.
Rut w hen you see those lads from
Boston standing up there with their
hands at the very end of the handle
and swinging from the shoulder you
are bound to have some doubts
about it.
CHECKER TOURNEYS WILL
ALL BE HELD IN ATLANTA
KNOX\ ||,LE, TENN , Sept. 13. The
fifth annual tournament of the South
ern Checker association clos’d two
days of play In this city last night.
John M Allen. Jr. of Knoxville, who
won the championship at the Green
ville. S. it, tournament last year, suc
cessfully defended bls title against all
comers s. s. Hallman, of Spartan
burg. S. c., won second honors; G C.
Raymond, of Atlanta, third; S
Neville, of Knoxville, fourth, and F. B.
Eishbuin. of Anderson, S. (’’., fifth.
I’he minor tourney was won by C:is
Frazier, of Knoxville, with W. T. New
man. of Atlanta, second
i' B. I'ishburn was elected president
for the ensuing year, and Frank James
of Columbia, s. C., secretary and treas
urer.
Beginning with the 1913 convention
annual conventions will be held at that
point.
“YALE PROSPECTS NEVER
BETTER" COACH A. HOWE
NEW H WEN. CONN., Sep:. 13
1,1 “J Coach Arth ir Howe’, of the Ya <
football el< ven, sold today that tile out
look for 1912 could not b, brighter.
Sixty men. including six veterans have
r. port,,! t’m practice. Bomeßter one
ot last season’s stars, said he would be
on i e field this afternoon. Work this
: Week and the tits: . ’ next will consist
I of falling on the ball, passing and dlliu.
my tackling.
THORNTON DEFEATED IN
DOUBLES AT CLEVELAND
«' lE\ 111. A N1». OHIO, Sept 13.
I’.ax tm In th, seinl-tina s of the state
t« nn s tournament y, sterday. w 8
•M'-F.l "> Pittsburg, heat J C Roy ■
"f ' '''link fi-3 r.-i and 9-7, and
J G Nelson, of Dartmouth college, de
ft lied T W Step, ens. of Wll kilt s ~ U1 g .
x -<•. 7-5 and fi-
I" 1,11 ihir,l r .und of men’s doubles
Reed ~n j Man, ••sb " beat Thornton
and Armstrong, . ... and 1.-4
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS.
- - - ■ .
Baptist College Should Have Best Team of Its History This Year
MATERIAL IS HEAVY AT MERCER AND PROMISING
By Percy 11. Whiting.
IT’S a tough job pulling out of
an athletic rut. The University
of Tennessee Is finding it out.
So is the Atlanta ball club, the
Boston Nationals, the St. Louis
Americans, the track teams of
England, and Walter J. Travis —
for a few assorted examples. Some
times teams fail at it. For in
stance, the University of Nashville,
which has slumped from promi
nence to nowhere. Others succeed
-as witness the Washington base
ball team and the Vanderbilt elev
en, which was a joke twelve years
ago.
All of which is byway of lead
ing up to Mercer. The Macon col
lege a few years back was nowhere
in football. It ranked a little bet
ter than the average prep team,
but not a lot.
Then they set about building up.
It was a tough job, but they put a
good man on it—-Frank Blake, of
Nashville. He made a grand start.
When he dropped the work, Coach
Strouds was secured. And he’s at
it yet, with good chances of suc
cess.
Last year, for the first time in
ages, the Mercer team was a tough
proposition. Good colleges quit
leading off their schedule with it.
and Mercer games ceased to be re
garded as practice affairs by Tech,
Georgia, Clemson, Auburn and the
big colleges of the middle South.
• * *
IF you ask any of the Mercer men
about prospects, they at once be
gin unloading a tale of woe,
“Why, look w’ho we lose,” say
they; "Grice, Conger, Zellars. Fox
worth and Bradford. Wow!”
Well, you have to hand it to them.
That's a pretty big loss to any
team. Grice, who played well at
center; Conger, a guard; Zellars,
quarter and captain, and Foxworth,
half back, were the mainstays of
the team last year.
But then it’s always the main
stays that go. College men don’t
seem to realize that. The 1 oach
gets hold of a man and trains him
three years. By the time he en
ters the fourth year he has be
come a mainstay. But, of course,
tht next year he is graduated. And
the old cry goes up. “We've lost
our mainstays."
The good coaches are the ones
who always have a good crop of
mainstays coming on.
♦ * *
pOACH STROUDS will have
some real material to work on
this year, of last year’s team lie
will have back these men:
Norman, captain and full back.
Irwin, quarter, and perhaps the
best all round player on the team.
Very fast. He played half a dozen
different positions last year.
Cook quarter and general sub.
Light, but fast and versatile.
McKnight. end.
Jameson, end.
Westmoreland, guard.
Heinshon. Miles, Hughuley, Kelly.
Jenkins, Grenade, Stribling, lines
men. all subs last year.
There are some good men in that
lot. Out of that batch of 1911 subs
some clever regulars should be de
veloped.
• • *
uT HE one bright spot." they tell
me. “about the team is that it
will be the heaviest in the history
of the college."
Fine business. Weight will bo
needed this year, for heavy men can
plow through and make the need
ful ten yards in four downs
A little investigation shows,
however, that experts expect the
Mercer eleven will average 165
pounds. That’s heavy tor Mer
cer. but it’s mighty light for a 1912
football team How ever, .you can
safely count on it that they are
putting the figures low. and It will
not be surprising if Coach Strouds
has an eleven that win total one
ton before he Is through.
OME good men are going to
Mercer this year from various
Georgia prep schools. One is Hol
man Grice, of Edwardsville, Ala.,
w’ho played grand ball at Norman
Park this year. They probably will
use him at center, where he will
succeed his brother. He weighs
227 pounds, and is said to be a bet
ter man than his brother—which
makes him tolerably good.
Here is an assortment of good,
strong candidates for positions,
some of them subs and scrubs of
last year, and some of them new
men, but all promising candidates
for regular positions;
Bob Heinshon, sub guard last
year.’ Weighs 175; will be guard
this year, and sub at center, if nec
essary.
Asbury Hall, half, from Adel, Ga,
Went to Sparks institute last year.
Weighs 166.
Holman, from Shellman, Ga. At
Norman Park last year. Either
tackle or end.
Herschel Forrester, a north Geor
gia boy; guard. He is certainty.
Huguley and Kelly, subs last
year, each weighing 172, are practi
cally assured of positions as tackles
this year. Regarded as valuable
men.
Miles Smith, of Norman institute.
Picked to be a flashy half. Weighs
165, and is very fast.
L. B. Aultman, of Tifton, weighs
170, and is expected to be a star
end.
Miller Wood, of Cochran. Ga.,
BASEBALL
Diamond News and Gossip
The Appalachian league sent up quite a
lot of players for a rank bush organiza
tion Davis to Cincinnati, Walker and
Cullop to Cleveland, Williams to Brook
lyn, Sloan to St. Louis and Shaw to Kan
sas City.
♦ • •
Gonzales, the Cuban who has been
signed by the Boston Braves, can't speak
English
♦ • •
Armando Marsans, of the Red team, has
been given leave of absence for the rest
of the season and has departed for Cuba.
♦ ♦ ♦
'l’he national commission will arrange
for the world's series at a meeting which
will be held Monday at Cincinnati.
« * *
’l’he national commission has decided
tii.ii the Cincinnati club has purchased
Teter Kinstjey after the end of the
purchase season and that he is subject to
draft. You would hardly look for Garry
Herrmann’s chib to pull a bone over the
rules.
* • •
Mrs. Helen Britton says that Roger
Bresnahan s contract as manager of the
Cardinals has still four years to run and
that Roger will have to stick to the finish.
She denied that she ever interfered with
him except in the' one famous fizzle—the
one that made Rajah see red.
• « •
The sporting program for the fall and
winter:
World's series.
Presidential election.
Absolutely nothing.
• • •
Herman Schaefer Is calling the atten
tion of the world to the fact that Detroit
hasn’t won a pennant since Jennings let
him go—not that ij made any difference.
The fund for the Birmingham baseball
players has reached *6OO. if the play
ers get SSO apiece out of it when it is
finished they will be doing remarkably
well.
« * *
Extra Adrian won the pennant in the
South Michigan league. What of it—if
Anything?
♦ * •
Cleveland hhs bought the Waterbury
club of the Connecticut league and will
use it for farming purposes.
♦ ♦ ♦
Wellman, of the Browns, is said to be as
big at Jim Wiggs.
« • *
’l'he fact that so few real sales were
made by Southern league clubs to major
leaguers this fall is another indication
that the league this year is vastly slower
than normal.
• • •
Newark rumors have it that a draft
will be put in b? Brooklyn on Blllv Zim
merman. former Cracker outfielder. He
has played fairly good ball this season.
• « •
Those w ho have been waiting all season
for the Red Sox to crack are still wall
ing So is McGraw It’s bls best chance.
Saturday s gate receipts at Mobile will
bo divide.l among the Gull players Seems
as though this act tn'glit run foul of the
league s salary Inuit.
comes from Locust Grove institute,
where he starred; candidate for
line.
Hugh Cochran, of Buckhead. Ga..
,at Gordon institute last year, and
was one of that prep team’s best
players, at end.
Mills, sub last year, candidate for
line. _
♦ • •
p ROFESSOR R. W. EDENFIELD,
who is head of the athletic de
partment at Mercer, is crammed
full of enthusiasm over this year’s
prospects. He says that never be
fore has a Mercer coach had such
material to work with. And more
over, according to his beliefs, never
before was there such a coach at
Mercer as Dr. Strouds.
The doctor, by’ the way. is a gen
uine M. D. He has a lot of train
ing and coaching methods that are
peculiarly his own. and he will go
through the season without an as
sistant coach.
Mercer is making a big try to
“come back.” It would like to re
gain a place in Georgia where it will
rank as the athletic equal of the
University of Georgia and Tech. It
may not succeed in doing it this
year but if it doesn't it will not
be for any lack of trying.
f< /f It's At Hartman s It's Correct"
ft s time to lay that straw away and don
a lid’ that’s new. ’
See Our Great Opening Display of
Men’s 1912 Fall Hats
Tomorrow, Saturday, Just Arrived* = Beauties
The new fall styles are so hand
some and attractive and there’s such
an immense variety of shapes and
shades in this stock, that, instead of
even attempting to do them justice
here in cold type, we have decided
to devote our entire two big show
ti>i"' I «';ii i.p ini,ial , , M<,n ’ »»birds
h , hea J dwear with one stone to-
know' what that means. aMjou Come in
There are fuzzv “brush” alnine, u U<? f y °“ r
and English doth hats there are > ’ y ° Ur '“T
smooth "alpines and nrw derbTes g” IT pUrS6 at
lore. Jn fact, any and every new S ”° ’
fall and winter style you ran men
tion is here and ready’ for your se
lection.
Priced at $2.00 to $5.00
SIX PEACHTREE (Ipp. Peters Bldg.
If It s Correct It s At Hartmans"
With Walsh Out Cubs a 1 to 5
Shot Over Sox in “Chi” Series
By R. W. Lardner.
CHICAGO, Sept. 13.—1 f there’s
a city series between the
Cubs and White Sox this
year It is almost certain to last one
or two games longer than the one
played last year. No member of
the South Side team can be found
who will claim four straight. Most
of them are willing to bet on their
chances, but they will not venture
a guess as to the number of games
that will be required to settle it.
The prospect is that the Cubs
will rule slight favorites because of
their brilliant fight for the National
league championship. If Ed Walsh
were not a member of Callahan's
pitching staff, the odds would prob
ably be 4 or 5 to 1 on Chance's
club. But Walsh is still on the job,
and that means that any team is
going to have trouble beating the
Sox.
Cubs Stronger in Fielding.
The Cubs undoubtedly are
stronger in fielding and batting
than their South Side rivals. And
this season, all things considered,
they seem to be the equals of Cal's
outfit in pitching. Big Ed has
something on any other member of
either staff, but Doc White Is in
anything but good condition. His
leg bothers him to such an extent
that he can not take his stride, and
therefore he hasn’t much confidence
In himself. Eddie Cicotte ought to
give a good account of himself, but
he is going to face some mighty
tough hitters In Zimmerman,
Schulte, Tinker, Evers, Sheckard,
Leach, Saier and Archer.
There is just a chance that Bill
Lange and Jim Scott will round to
before the series. With them In
shape things would assume an en
tirely different aspect. But as ths
staff is constituted at present Man
ager Callahan has little to boast nt
and is compelled to depend almost
entirely on Walsh.
Sox Catchers Inexperienced.
Then, too, the Sox catchers who
are now being used regularly,
Schalk and Kuhn, have never taken
part In such an important event,
nor have they eve.r had experience
w’ith the Cub hitters. It will prac
tically be up to the experienced
pitchers to give their own signs
Jim Lavender and Larry Cheney
ought to bother the Sox batters.
There isn’t a spitball In the Ameri
can league that looks like Laven
der’s, although Walsh’s has a big
ger break. The Sox aren’t accus
tomed to hit against good spitball
pitching, for the reason that they
are on the same club with Big Ed,
and the American leagua possesses
no other dispenser of moisture who
is in his class.