Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, September 17, 1912, EXTRA 1, Page 9, Image 9

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BAsraA! in, g&feßoas ■shfr®. Us f LEAGUE CLUBS— Won. Lost. PC CLUBS— Won. Loßt . p c Ke* \ nrk -‘o 4} -6.»9 Philadelphia 63 72 467 Chicago St Louis 57 81 .413 Pittsburg. 83 03 MO Biooklyn 49 86 .363 Cincinnati «v oil , Boston 43 y*j .316 AT BOSTON: Jl. m a ST. LOUIS 101 100001-4 8 BOSTON 070000 01x 8 9 4 Woodburn and Snyder; Tyler and Rariden. Umpires, Johnstone and Eason. AT BROOKLYN: n H e PITTSBURG 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 - 2 3 0 BROOKLYN 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 00 -1 4 1 Robinson and Gibson; Ragon and Miller. Umpires, Orth and Klein, FIRST GAME. AT PHILADELPHIA: r p K CINCINNATI 00005 10 0 0 613 1 PHILADELPHIA 00000 00 0 0 ti 4 1 Fromme and Zeveruid; Rixey and Kllli fer. Umpires, Finneran and Rigler. SECOND GAME. CINCINNATI OOUIOOOO 0-1 6 C PHILADELPHIA 00000 00 0 0 0 5 1 Benton and Clark; Alexander and Dooin. Umpires, Rigler and Finneran. | AMERICAN LEAGUE | I'l.rßS- Won. Lost. P.C. 1 CLUBS Won. Lost. P.C. Boston 57 "Il .713 Chicago «7 fi'.l .493 Philadelphia 83 56 .51'4 Detroit 64 75 .460 Washington 82 57 .51'6 New 1 ork <8 8» . Philadelphia 81 57 .587 | St. Louis 47 89 .345 AT CLEVELAND: R H. e PHILADELPHIA 0000 0 17 00 - 8 9 1 CLEVELAND 0 0 0 0 0 > 0 0 0 - o 4 6 Plank and Egan; Mitchell and Carisch. Umpires. d'Loughlin and Westervelt. No other games scheduled. INTERNATIONAL At Toronto: R. H.E. BUFFALO 020 102 000—5 14 1 TORONTO 040 030 02 —9 10 0 .laan on and Schang: Lush anti Gra ham I mpires, .Mullen and Kelly. At Montreal: R. H.E. ROCHESTER 200 000 100—3 9 1 MONTREAL 000 000 000—0 2 1 tydnn and Blair: Dale and Madden. Umpires, Byron and Nallin. At Newark: R. H.E. BALTIMORE 000 000 006—3 14 4 NEWARK 202 000 011—6 9 4 t ickers and Payne; Bell and Higgins. Umpires, Guthrie and Phyle. At Providence: R. H.E. JERSEY CITY 030 101 001—6 11 0 PROVIDENCE 000 000 100—1 7 2 Manser and Rondeau; Lafitte and Schmidt Umpires-, Murray and Carpen ter For Home Decoration ■ '•. ■ ' :, 4^ F •:.w& - ? ' i W mmMOWiMV** >w M> «W'^l»-f IS£®-. '■« ' WfcfSJK ' ’ 'Wifww - ■ • ■* • —■— ——.. ._. . , .■■ _.-_ J .- ■H,I ■■rarii I.aj- «a ■ . .m4M«iMn»i ■r.wn II ■ ■■■■■■■■■ » These Beautiful Pictures * '*’——"tn-TTm—I—J—JU—IM _>, .■!>—■ IB- -■iimi. . —ll —ll I MIL I mi- - »■»?.■■ »» I> uu.n I ■ ,\.,y .f’-i' ••? t >' : X" H A W"' \ !! > fSST /^ W ' ' > t f/ j/ j* -T ' 1 ;•& -fe i ' ■’’ *’'* ”’ • - ' ■“'''’- ~ <..</-'■* .-« ( xTV>i"' •■. • a*SSF l *3*«U> >T- | - . _ , _ . . - ' -- ~...- ._, At Less Than Half Their Value Choice of four siibjeds. attractively framed, in two SI ZIS ; 16x24 75c and 2 coupons. 20x28 89c and 2 coupons. Sep Premium Coupon on Page 2 nt this issue. The Atlanta Georgian Premium Room 20 East Alabama St. HIGH-CLASS ROUTS FOR GAY GOTHAM THIS WEEK NEW YORK. Sept. 16.—This week's boxing schedule for New York will ■ bring together a number of clever lit tle fellows. Two champions are sched uled to show their wares. At Madi son Square Garden tonight, l.ecvis D. Ponthieu, lightweight champion of France, will box ten rounds with Tom my O'Keefe, of Philadelphia. “Young Jack" O'Brien, of Philadel phia. will meet Young Brown, of this city, at the St. Nicholas Athletic club Wednesday night. On Thursday night, at Madison Square Garden. Johnny Kil bane will clash with Eddie O'Keefe, of Philadelphia. THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 17. 1912. Light, Fast Man Likely to Prove Individual Star of Gridiron Season WHO WILL BE A SAM WHITE HERO THIS FALL? By Philip Bruce. AT THO will be the Sant White yy of Abe 1912 football season? Sanford B. White won the football championship for Prince ton last year, and for himself he gained recognition as the most brilliant athlete in the annals of American collegiate sport. His in dividual work won both the Yale and Harvard football games of 1911. Many experts say that this year’s new rules will obliviate this Individual starring, that the team whose players are of the greatest average strength will do the win ning. Now, it is only the truth that these experts know very little about what football is going to be like this year. Under the new rules ways may be discovered to revolu tionize the gridiron game. These experts no doubt reason thought fully in doping but the end of in dividual prominence, but still it is the writer's humble opinion that more than one of the important games of 1912 will be one-man vic tori s. and that next Thanksgiving will see i new collegian crowned the hero of footballdom. It was Sam White last year and Ted Coy (lie year before, and it will be some one else this year. There's a new one every year. Even when the hero of one season has another year in the game, he doesn’t repeat. The most important change that will be brought about by the new rules is the allowance of four downs instead of three in which to advance the ball ten yards. This, it is widely claimed, puts a pre mium on the old-time game—the kill-the-tackle mass plays—giving a decided advantage to the heavy teams that are best at straight football. This argues that the 1912 star will be Smother catapulting line plunger of the Ted Coy type. Sprinter Has Best Chance. A little thought, however, will make it clear to the student of the game that the husky full back is not the. logical candidate. A com paratively light man is more likely to be the owner of the face favored for display on the. November sport pages. He will probably be a lithe, shifty sprihtbr. with great ability An dodging and shaking off tackler’s, and a particular knack of catching the forward pass and getting away with it fast. The reason for this lies in the fact that the forward pass will reach its greatest development this Harbison, Atlanta's . • Crack Short Stop, Is Drafted By Yankees I New York American Grab For Star Cracker- Other Drafts on Southern League. » CINCINNATI. OHIO, Sept. 16. ! Douglas Harbison, crack shortstop of the .Atlanta team, Southern league, was" drafti-d tpclaj by the New York I Americans at the meeting of the na tional commission today. The Yan kees’ scout. .Arthur Irwin, had received favorable reports about the youngsters playing, and believes he will develop into a big league stat. Other crafts from the Southern I league follow: from Birmingham. Yaritz, by St. JjOUis .Americans; Chattanooga, Bal enti, by St. Louis .Ante: Scans; Mont gomery. Walker, by St. Louis Ameri cans; Nashville. AVelchonce, by New I York Americans; New Orleans, Wag |ncr, by Brooklyn Nationals. j Derrick, a former University of [Gtorgia boy, was drafted from Balti j more by Detroit. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. At Columbus (first'game): R. h.E ■LOUISVILLE 000 000 112 —4 7 1 COLUMBUS 000 200 000—2 6 2 Northrup and Pearce; Cook and Smith. , Umpires. .Anderson and Ferguson. <■-—d r-me: R. h.E. LOUISVILLE 000 000 000--0 3 1 | -W 000 00"—2 5 1 ; Maduox and Pearce; Kimball and ISn Ith. Umpires, Keigiuon and Anderson. At Toledo: R. H.E. INDIANAPOLIS . 000 000 000—0 5 1 TOLEDO 000 021 01"—4 9 1 Asltenfelder and Keene; U. .lames and I i and. ILmdilme and Hayes •iv,e: r. h.E. ST. PAUL 000 000 000— 0 7 4 -- ... ... „w aa-—l3 13 2 i.iirtinur and C">~‘t; Nicholson and ' Hughes. Umpire, Chill. At Kansas City: R. H.E. MINNEAPOLIS .010 003 100—5 7 2 .KANSAS CITYOOI 000 102—4 10 4 Patterson and Owens; Riley and James. , Umpires, Connolly and Irwin. SEVEN PRISONERS SAW OUT OF JAIL; WIFE OF ONE HELD I'HILI.K'OTHE, OHIO. Sept. 16.- Seven prisoners of the county pall made thel: es .ipe here enily today by suiting the bars of their eeUs. Mrs William Wolfe, wife of one of ■the escaped prisoners, was arrested this nierning. charged with complicity in the es. ,ipe of the men Five white and two colored men. all of whom were charged with burglary, made their e»- year. This is the play that is going to make the high scores, and that is going to win games. And it is .the star performer in this play who will be the star of the 1911 season. The four-down rule, coupled witli the new rule which allows the at tacking side to make forward passes of unlimited length, even across the goal line, opens up unlimited pos sibilities for the forward pass. As the rule protecting the receiver of the forward pass is still in force, the offense is given vast liberty in the use of this play. The right of the offense to make forward passes over the goal line will make it necessary for the de fense to keep its second line back, instead of massing its whole strength on the line in the manner that caused so many failures to score last year after the offense had carried the ball down to the ten-yard line. Princeton Has Had Great Men. Princeton won’t.have Sam White this year, but she may have his suc cessor. Walter Camp once said. "For brilliancy of achievement, no teams have produced so many stars as those of Princeton.” Princeton has had men like Mc- Mann, McNair. Moffat. Lamar, Ames, King and DeWitt, who alone have won a groat game, and it has iiad a Poe. who alone defeated Yale two years in succession, but never before White’s time has Princeton or any other college had a man who by individual achievement won two baseball games from Yale and a football game from both Yale and Ha rvard. White's fame has not been for gotten with his graduation. His achievements seem aIL the more marvelous in retrospect. In 1911 he won Princeton's third and deciding baseball game with Yale. With the score a blank. White reached sec ond base. Sterrett, who Is now with the New York Yankees, drove a short hit into right field, which Corey gathered up on the run and swiftly whipped to .Merritt, at third, to catch White. White, according to rule, should have slid to the base. Instead, be kept his feet aud, taking a daring chance, rounded the bag and leaped for the plate. The bull seemed to -strike, Merritt's glove simultaneously wit it White's foot on the bag. Something, per haps White's audacity, caused Mer ritt momentarily to juggle the ball, and in that moment White slid across the plate with the winning run. Last autumn, in the Princeton- CARE OF THE TEETH IMPORTANT TO HEALTH Without perfect teeth one can not enjoy perfect health. Decayed or im perfect teeth are not only painful and continuously annoying, but a positive menace to health and even life. Do not n. gleet your teeth. Upon the first sign of decay have them treated and save suiferlng. Or. if the teeth are already in bad condition, have them at. tended to at.once. The modern scientific painless meth ods in use by the Atlanta Dental Par lors rob dentistry of its former terrors, and th<> most difficult operations are performed quickly and without pain. This handsome establishment is lo cated at the corner cf Peachtree and Decatur streets, entrance at 19 1-2 Peachtree. **• i Advertisement.) It was back In the older, times that they bad to have a person go crying it out if any one had anything io sell or wanted to buy, or to notify the people that so and so had lost this and that. The way was the only one available. It's different now. Your wants can be told io an audience of over 50,000 in this section through a Want Ad In The Georgian. No matter what your want is an ad in The Georgian will fill It tor you. Georgian Want Ads buy, sell, exchange, rent, secure help, find lost articles and countless other things Buying Trusses BUYING a truss is eusy enough but deserves a little thought. Rup ture Is too serious to have, to guess work. You should get the tru’s that fits exactly. In our truss department we have not only th" scop" of stock styles and sizes, but an expert who knows which is best ata! how to fit .a truss exactly. Private Ftting Rooms at our .Main Store. Sec ond R or, quiet and apart from the general business Men and women at tendants. Belts and Bandages Stout persons < an be made more com fortabh by using a belt to support the abiloim t: It will h-sen the es -u nod "rev nt strain of th" ab domlnnl muscles . mt We have erei style in tin fine i nported Ge mat ? good’. Jacobs’ Tnarmacy Atlanta, Ga. Harvard game, Dunlap. Princeton’s 1 ft tnd. knock <1 the ball from the hands of Hollister, of Harvard,W lio was about to try a drop-kick. Al most before the ball touched the ground, the ever alm White had seized it and was off for the goal, 100 yards away, in a race in which he ditanced his pursuits and scored a touchdown. Scarcely bad the second half opened when Gard ner. of Harvard, iasiily tieeicied to scoop up a bounding ball on his one-yard line, instead of falling on it. find instantly he v. as swept 6V: r the goal line in the strong arms of White for as afety and the deciding score of the game. Two weeks later Yale, in the first ten minutes of play, was driving Princeton to the goal line with a bewildering shift play. Suddenly, on a pass from center, the ball struck the ground at the side of Dunn, full back for Yale. Sam White, dashing in from i nd, picked up the ball from the ground as he would a baseball. Instantly'he was in full stride for Yale’s goal, S 3 yards away, which he crossed, car rying with him Arthur Howe, the Vale captain, who had tackled him on the live-yard line. And thus came a football chimpionship to Princeton. Last June, at Princeton, Yale led the Tigers by one run on the dia mond. Princeton was at bat, with one man out and the bases full, it was Sam White who came to the plate in the crisis. Coolly he let three balls go by, one of them a strike, and then met the fourth squarely with his bat and drove it far over the left fielder’s head, scoring tlir t men and winning the game. A Good Scholar, Too. But the reliability of this in in l« not confined to sports. At Princeton last autumn Professor J. Duncan Spaeth, of the English department, the day before the football game with Yale, assigned to Ills senior class in English a tin me which each man was to write and present the following Tuesday morning. The next day Princeton defeated Yale, through the efficient playing of Sam \\ hite. Sunday intervened, ami Monday was devoted to a holi day celebrating the victory. When the senior class in English assem bled on Tuesday mo.rning, man aft er man arose and asked to be ex cused from handing in his essay, on the ground of the previous day’s distractions. One man alone did not flunk. Quietly he handed in his essay, and it was a good one. That man was Sam White. CURE FOR WEAK KIDNEYS FREE Relieves Urinary and Kidney Troubles, Backache. Strain ing, Swelling, Etc. Stops Pain in the Bladder, Kid neys anti Back. Wouldn't it be nice within a week or so to begin to say good bye forever to the scalding, dribbling, straining, or too fre quent passage of ruine; the foreheiid and the back-of-the-head aches; the stitches and pains in the back; the growing mus cle weakness; spots before the eyes; \e|- low skin; sluggish bowels; swolh h cyeiios or ankles; leg cramps: un-natural short breath; sleeplessness and the despond ency ? Table Stuart’s Buchu and .Juniper Com pound for above troubles if you want to make a iiulck recovery. Stuart’s Buchu and Juniper Compound contains only pure jngred’ents and quickly shows its power over kidney and bladder diseases, (hires whore all else fails. All symptoms quick ly vanish. $1 per largo bottle at drug stores. Samples free by writing Stuart Drug Company, .Atlanta. Ga I Advert isernent.) MARTIN MAY x' ' 191/ PEACHTREE STREET UPSTAIRS STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL UNREDEEMED PLEDGES y X. FOR SALE 'Wx rzcaM ano answer the Want Ads in The Georgian. A good rule for every Individ uul who reads. Make it your rule and you will l»e more prosperous and more ■ nntentu-d LOCAL POLICEMAN SAYS “QUAKER” IS REMARKABLE Another Member of the "Finest” Has Occasion to Test Vir tues of Quaker Remedies. And still they come. Read thia case. J. (’. Sw inney, who Ilves at 88 Pearl -tieet has been on the police force of this city for over flic years For the past four of those fixe yours he has had a severe -toimndi trouble. which bus nt tlim-s disabled him completely When he ata a meal, no matter how light II w is, lie found that It would lie like a Boston Boys a Tortoise Team; Steady Plugging Wins Pennant By Bill Bailey. IF baseball duos had mottoes, you can wager that Jake Stahl would select one running consistent. And it is their consist ent and you'll count world's series money.' That’s what those Red Sox are consistent. And it is their consis ency which has landed them in the high place they occupy In the American league pennant race. . They are going to clinch a pennant I in a mighty few days simply be- | cause of that true-to-form trait. , The Red Sox have not played es- ! pecially brilliant oi startling bajl this year. They didn't startle any- ■ body at the start of the'race. They | didn't pile up game after game and I astound by their brilliancy in the middle of the race. They are not traveling such a swift pace at this stage of the game. Neither did they play bad base ball at the start of the fight. Nor did they fail into a slump during the middle distance. There are no indications that they are going to play bad baseball at the finish. That's- the reason they are going to win that pennant. White Sox Sprint—Th,n Blow Up. If the White Si.x had maintained tile clip they started on their first trip in the East they would have run away with tiie pennant. Bu they slumped. The Athletics, away to a bad sta"t. played fairly well during tiie middle stages and then fell back. The Washington Sena tors had a brilliant streak, won game after game and then fell back. 'Put the Boston Red Sox went on their way. winning a cou ple <;f games, tnavbe losing th- next day and then winning a couple and losing anotiier. They had no bril liant winning streaks. Rut they also had no slumps. They main tained the pace that put." you on top at the end. It was the steady driving, smashing', not-to-be-de nied style that they adopted. Wood and Speaker Only Stars. With tiie exception of Wood, their pitchers are and have been of the steady and good type rather than of the briiliant today and bad tomorrow kind. And, with the ex ception of Speaker in the outfield, that holds good of almost every man on the team. They didn’t re- I serve their heavy fire for the lead ers and thin scatter what was left on the tail-enders. They played the same game day in. and day out. It was the consistency of the play of the Red Sox which landed them where they will clinch that The Men Who Succeed as heads of large enterprises are men of great energy. Success, today, de mands health. To ail is to fail. It's utter folly for a man to endure a weak, i run-dow n half-alive condition when I Electric Bitter- w ill put him right on I ills feet in short order. "Four bottles ' did me more real good than any other) medicine I ever took,” writes ('has. B. I Allen. Sylvania, Gi. "After years of j suffering with rheumatism, liver trou-i blc. stomach disorders and deranged I kidneys, I am again, thanks to Electric ; Ritters, sound and well." Try them.] Only 50 cents nt all ilruggi ts. *•* i < Advertisement. > Dr. E. G. Grifffm’s c^ c i, JEX South’s Largest, Best- Equipped Dental Rooms Sel Delivered Dry Ordered. IgroSMPfL »‘K GM CI3WII . . . 53.00 Perfect Bridge Work.. 54.08 Phone 1703. Lady Attendant Over Brown & Alien’s Drug Store—2ll-2 Whitehall. FOR SALE I Roofing Pitch, Coal Tar, IMMEDIATE i| Cre osote , Road Binder, HFI IVFRV 'i' ™ etal Preservative Paints, DELIVERY Rooting Paint and Shingle Stain. Atlanta Gas LighTcch Phene494s load of lead in th. stomach. He would bloat, his heart would palpitate, belch ing spells were frequent and he some times had severe headaches. Some foods would not agree with him at all, and he had to be very careful what he ate it a I times. H" had it tired, languid, don’t care feeling neurit all the time. He was at n sanitarium for over four weeks, but left that Institution In as bad a shape us before ho went Into it He continued to suffer with all the dlstregges. He com tneticed a treatment of the Quuk-r Herb Extinct. After a few weeks he saw that hi was gutting real, curative results, which caused him t<> continue the treat mont. and utter taking -lx bottles about til, weeks treatment, he | M a will man '-k him what has made him a different P<| on physically, and he will cheerfully pennant. "A good ball club, but one that will be out of the race when it has its first slump,” said the practical baseball men when the season was still young. It might have been; but the first slump never came. “Be consistent and you'll count world's series money and hear world's series cheers." . tire is the slogan of the Red Sox. J® ? OPTICAL WO«K CT THE ' HIGHEST CLASS Is what Dr. Hines, the Opto metrist. gives in every ca-e. H - • xamines tiie eves and fits glas-e --in such away that they relieve .. the trouble, rem v< all strait' I from tin- n- rv -i and muscles, give I is if ct sigi.t and in ik ■ lit.- worts I 'lving. | H doe- all th:s i.hoiit para- lyzing th" -y - with p: i-i Hoti- ! drops and u't 'g“. Huv< your ! yip ■ ■■< iminoil by scientific n: "th- 1 otl.s and get pleasure, comfort and 1 i- 'i' f out of ;.-our ••las-- sat once 9 Er; iminai ion Frt >-. | The "Db.'e” linger top eye fl i classes, the invtn'i m of D . ] a l.’in s. will star on any no--. can not slip cr fa 1 off. ( HiNtS tPTiCAL 9LMY 91 reschtrec Si. : flwcv'i Ven ro-ert r;!. enr 'hn ! er; ; Men and Women I CURE YOU TO STAY CURED, of all chronic nervous, pi i vaie. bloou and skin diseases 1 use the very attest meth- therefore getting desired results 1 give CO6. the celebrated German preparation, for blood poison, with out cutting or deten tion from business. I cure you or make n<> charge. Everything contldent’ai dime to me without de lay, and let me demonstrate how I give sou results where other physicians have failed. I cure Vari cocele, Stricture. Piles, Nervous T>e bility. Kidney, Eladder and prostatic troubles Acute discharges and in flammation and a’.l contracted d’s eascs EREE consultation and exam ination. Hours, 8 a. m. to 7 p. m. Sundays, 9 to 1. Dr J. H. HUGHES, Specialist Opposite Third r National Rank. 16 1 •_N orth Broad St., Atlanta. Ga. ECZEMA HAS NO TERRORS FOR THIS YOUNG LADY SHE HAS EOT ND TETTERINE. “I have used your Tetterine and re ceived great bmelit from the use of same. The eczema on my fact usually appears in the spring and your salve always helps it. I use F'o other preparation but Tet terine and find it superior to any on the market ” respectfi Hv. ELSIE M JI DERINE, Edgar Spring. Mo . July 15, 1903. tell you at any time, fop he, like many hundreds ot people w ho have been ben efited here in Atlanta by the Quaker Remedies, is grateful for the work done in his case, and is willing to let other sufferers know the cause of Ids cure. And don t forget. If you suffer w ith anv branch of stomach, liver, kidney, blad der and blood tioaidis, catarrh, rheu matism. indigestion, worms etc., you certainly could not remain skeptical after seeing nil this gr and work dune by a remedy right her. In your own city. <’all today ut t'oui-ey A Munn’s 1 img Store, 2S' Marietta street. for the won derful Quaker Herb Extract 6 for tin :: fin 12.50 11.00 singe bottle, because limy iilwavs keep if. -h suppi. \\ * P I pi i exj <■- - i ii,i ig< . 00, all ord nt of <>' "Vir (adit.l 9