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Tech’s Showing Saturday Makes
Coming Battle With Georgia
Look Best Game of a Decade
By Percy 11. Whiting.
Ti’CH outplayed Sewanee—and
1,,m on a Huke. Sewanee
and Georgia tied. Tech and •
, ; H .„ x ia meet next Saturday at
r,,nee DeLeon park. Figure it out
xourself. Will it be SOME
rLuTHALL GAME? Well, from
ingle it looks suspiciously like
SOME GAME, INDEED.
It s.-ems foolhardy, considering
...iivi.lual ability, weight. speed
tar players, to say that Tech
'.'in the same class with Georgia.
\ n ~|i who studied the two teams
oiild say that Georgia would de
. Tech by three touchdowns. But
x who has followed the Tech
.... . ;i of late believes that Georgia
(iO it- 'east of all Georgia men.
. nt le most rabid admit that it
it- going to be mighty close.
Tlw Georgia team is good—it is
up of fine individual players,
J well drilled, it will be in per
.... t condition for tile Tech game.
, l(l ill. re poundage it ought to beat
1( . Tech team. And the players
, : i..rm will gamble that way, and
, cb.Zy blames them.
i. fa.’t is. though, that Tech is
....ng to be about as dangerous an
■ | mi. nt as Georgia cares to tac
kle.
• • •
'rill; mtwn you can't figure the
1 Tech team is that it so often
i w better than it knows how.
Anl it's made up of the gamest,
applest little Turks that ever
mi out in football togs and
mtched and snarled and kicked
nd < iwml their way along. In
th bi o. with Sewanee Saturday
i'.riling comparable with their vi
iitrging has ever been seen.
< outs; . ther ■ has been harder
ugiu- but never by a team that
■. .s outweighed twelve pounds to
the man and beaten at that, even
though on a duke.
It's < asy enough to make a good
<• -■ wing when you are winning and
■ n you have it on your oppo
ii strength, weight and speed.
i i: it take- real native cpurage to
. p right on scrapping after you
■re i.< iteit- and beaten by a
stronger, heavier, swifter team.
Tmis,- Jackets didn’t know they
n• r. beaten. On the last pjay be
s" . tiie last whistle blew they
were charging just as hard as they
had been at the start.
Now, when a team is as game
a- icis and as resourceful as the
ll' isinan teams always are there is
no tolling what it may do.
Vwi can figure that the Georgia
i. am will bt in top trim for the
I- h game. You can figure also
that they will play their hardest
and best in that game. So natural
« there is every chance they will
win.
They ~iil, however, find them
playing against a corking
riotball team, and they will be
• ■ ■ ' jostled before tile bickering
is i o’npletd.
\ .imei bilt-Ha; vard game
■•'.i.utda,. is a bit of a disap
n'm. nt. blessed if it isn’t. The
■dores nade a corking show-
I'ut if they' could have gone
'■ rou( tyith all the men in eondi
mstead of losing they might i
i: ivi won. The fact that
‘i'l <in Hardage, the most bril
ot ot Southern backs and the man
" ■ tn.-ows were counted on to
" p ‘ plisll the success of tllD
rl.ill forward pusses, was
n.i ir. i and was forced to retire
in the game ruined every
■uu. \ half dozen of tile Com
'’odor.w were out of condition. If
"Hunt been, there would be
■s, s ne essary. As it was, a
■i score wasn't half had. even if
■ ' and Brickley didn't plav.
* $ gt
1 a old of friendly sugges
'ion to the Tech and Georgia
'■■■ auth<(rities: Don't let tin
t <»n tlir Hehl before, dur
-1 ■ Saturday's game. Don't
" ' unless you gentlemen are
" ". ■' ruction that will he a
1 >■ :■ Xubiirn and Tech men
w iat nearly developed
'' ''"n And there wasn't a
! 1 " 1 ' 1 oitl' l be no better medicine
■, ’’ 111 " r lain s <'ougii Remedy. yp
" ''" all siei; with whooping
wT of ,"as In bed. had a
' ar,l ‘ "as coughing up blood.
' g| f U "‘ Chamberlain's
• Ui 10-medy and the first dose eased
b "” les cure,i them. "
urn Milt' R !'. A ' ’‘‘'naldson. of Lexlng
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Seaboard Establishes New
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WASHINGTON AND RE
TURN-$19.35.
SOUTHERN RAILWAY,
un sale November 8 14. Re
turn limit December 1
speck of hostile feeling between
the two colleges.
There isn't any need to go into
the matter of the feeling between
Georgia and Tech.
It may not be amiss to suggest,
however, that the athletic and col
legiate authorities of the two col
leges use their powers to preserve
the fine spirit that was shown last
spring at the baseball games. The
students of Tech and Georgia are
gentlemen and representatives of
the best families of Georgia and
other Southern states. It only needs
a suggestion to that effect from
the college authorities to overcome
the natural ebolutions of youth that
now and again bubble over into
something dangerously close to a
riot.
BOYS HIGH AND G. M. A.
MEET AT PONCY TODAY
Boys’ High School and G. M. A. will
line up this afternoon at Ponce De-
Leon in what will no doubt prove a
good game. The last time these elev
ens met G. M. A. was returned victor
in a close game, but the High School
is out for revenge this time and will
fight the harder.
The High School will probably line
up as follows:
_ Let'onto, loft end; Fraser. left tackle;
Starr, left guard' Gann, center; Mayo,
right guard; Daly, right tackle; Jen
kins. right end; Reynolds, guard; Knox,
left half back: Fox (captain), full back.
DECIDE CONFERENCE
TITLE ON SATURDAY
MINNEAPOLIS. MINN., Nov. 11.—A
Strenuous week’s work was ordered to
day by Coach Harry Williams, of Min
nesota. for the Gopher football squad,
.in preparation for Saturday's game with
Wisconsin, to decide the conference
championship.
Williams saw the game between Wis
consin and Arkansas, and was im
pressed with the Badgers' strength. He
is devoting himself to strengthening
his line and developing his back field.
WELLS PICKED TO BEAT
WELSH IN BOUT TONIGHT
LONDON. Nov. 11.—Great interest
; was manifested today’ in the fight sched-
I uled to take place tonight between
: Freddy Welsh and Matt Wells at the
I National Sporting club for the Lord
* Lonsdale belt. The winner will prob
i ably meet Ad Wolgast for the world's
ehampionshiii.
■ The betters picked Wells as the win
j ner of tonight’s fight, and the betting
odds were slightly in his favor.
« -fl L?
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;®WI • r-t.l
W^ en you I
wy■ tackle a real I
*
iMMsS //■ . SSp big job ■
When everything is working
■ f JIII^HK' I ♦>£ . ‘ slow —
When you are in a peck of
hO® ,: * Wt'' ;>s<£W 'Vtroub 1e —
;-'? - When you arc at your wits’end
what to do next —
Take a good cncw. H|
J* w help you fasten down to work,
h•- 1Z &/,* Seems to just slip in and smooth out the
y W% V ~<*~ rough places and untangle all your diffi-
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THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1912.
CAMP'S SON MAY NOT
PLAY FOOTBALL AGAIN
NEW HAVEN. CONN., Nov. 11.—
Walter Camp, Jr., son of Yale’s great
football authority, has broken training
on the advice of physicians, and may
never play again. He is suffering from
neuritis and can not stand the rigors of
the hard training necessary to success
on the gridiron. He was considered one
of the best halfbacks at Yale, and his
loss is sure to be felt.
MORE COACHES FOR YALE.
NEW HAVEN, CONN., Nov. 11.—
Play resumed by the Yale coaches
for this week calls for a heavy outlay
of work in preparation for the game
with Princeton next Saturday. Then
will be severe scrimmaging tomorrow.
Wednesday and Thursday. Light work
was on tap for this afternoon. A fresh
batch of coaches will join the staff to
morrow.
| FODDER FOR FANS
Jake Stahl says he will retire-—IF he
finds a man he considers as good as him- :
self. So will Stovall, Birmingham, Cal- i
lahan, Htlggins and Evers, not to men
tion several minor league managers.
•* • ,
Jake Stahl’s trouble is that he lias to .
i carry 200 pounds fast on a pair of long ,
legs. The props are wabbling. ,
* ’ "
Janvrin, Engle and Cady may be tried
at first next spring for the Red Sox.
Buck Herzog, who is shooting in Mary
land. has informed the natives that the
Giants would undoubtedly have won the
pennant if they had played a little better. ]
Charley Dooin denies that he has put
in a claim on Roger Bresnahan. "I 1
don’t want-him," says the Phillies' mana
ger. Wise "Red." It is a fool mana
ger who hires a candidate for his own <
job.
« » • I
Miller Huggins doesn't even have to
start something to find out who is boss
where he works ,
«• • ,
Now that Garry Herrmann has grabbed
Frank Chance, there seems nothing to
prevent Lim from selling Frank to the
New York Highlanders, If he paid $1,500
for Chance, he ought to turn a few hun
dred per cent profit on the trade.
« • • i
Hans Lobert has joined Hans Wagner
in the list of poultry-raising ball play
ers.
*• 9 '
Wild Yarn No. 23: Frank Farrell is I
going to get Harry Davis to manage the 1
Yankees. t
• * •
it isn't often that a manager wins a
big league championship and three games
out of seven in the world’s champion
ship and then worries over his team.
But McGraw is doing this thing. He
has Just cause, too, for Pitsburg will
beat him next year, just as sure as guns.
The baseball magnates are not worry- ,
ing a lot over the players’ union. Thyy
figure that they have it on the players
in brains and money. Also they remem
ber the Brotherhood.
• • *
Ed Walsh tried his hand at pitching in
door ball the other day and they ham-
| mered him helpless.
• 99
Davy Jones recently got the decision
over a lunatic armed with a knife.
Jones ended the first round by throwing
the wild man out of a drug store. The
second lasted only long enough for Davy
to plant a right to the jaw. Ding, ding,
ding. ding'. Ambulance!
* • •
When Miller Huggins took over the
management of the Cardinals, he re
served the right to hire and fire, bat boys.
: Mis. Britton reserved all the other
1 rights.
I WILLIAM DAHLEN SIGNS
I TO LEAD DODGERS AGAIN
BROOKLYN, Nov. 11.—Bill Dahlen
will manage the Brooklyn Superbas in
; 1913, when President Charles H. Eb
bets has formally announced that Bad
‘ Bill had signed a one-year contract.
. In making the announcement, Boss
, Ebbets said he had no excuses to of
s fer, but pointed to Dahlen's efforts in
building up a brand new team since he
took hold of the Superbas, in 1910, and
declared that Bill deserved a chance to
show that his judgment was good.
FANCY WORK FOR CHICAGO.
■ CHICAGO, Nov. 11. -Dissatisfied with
the showing of his team Saturday,
, Coach Stagg has doped out a fancy as*
; sortnient of prat tice for his squad be
i fore the game wl'lt Illinois. Paine,
■ quarter, who has been out for a week,
was expected to resume practice today.
Johnny Berkle (Bierkotte) has left for
the Pacific coast, where he will play
third for the Oxnard team this winter.
If Roger Bresnahan’s contract with the
cardinals, which calls for $19,000 a year
and 10 per cent of the receipts, is any
good at all, the Rajah can take it tol
erably easy for the next four years. Hut
then, probably it isn’t. They seldom are.
* * *
The annual American league meeting
will he held in Chicago December 14.
* * •
Miller Huggins will get SB,OOO a year
for managing the Cardinals. That makes
SIB,OOO a vear and 10 per cent that Mrs.
Britton will pay for managers—if they can
collect it all.
• ♦ •
Connie Mack will let Oldring and Ben
der go--but not to the minors. Several
American league clubs are willing to try
to keep them straight.
• • •
\ ( ’hieago paper suggests that Griffith
probablj sent Pitcher Herring to Atlanta
for a little pickling.
• • •
The world series made a hero out of
Bed lent—a bum out of Snodgrass.
'Hie St Paul club would be willing to
give Johnny Kling a job as manager next
year has - announced itself, in fact.
Everybody is willing except Johnny.
• * ♦
Everything is so peaceful in the Amer
ican association that they have taken to
quarreling over the opening date for next
season.
» * «
in forts' years in professional baseball
the Washington team, until this vear.
never finished better than sixth.
• ♦
Herman Nickerson, sporting editor of
The Boston Journal, has been named
secretary of the Boston Nationals. This
wouldn’t be a promotion for anybody but
a newspaper man.
An Englishman who saw one of the
Reds make a home run in one of the
closing games of the season, said lie did
not see what it was all about; that the
man simply ran like- mad and got no
where, for didn’t he finish right where h<
started?
• * •
If Bill Clymer can shake loose from
\\ ilkesbarre, he will almost certainly
get the managerial assignment at St.
Paul.
♦ VW
If Tinker is going to manage the Reds
what in the mischief does Garrv Herr
mann want of Frank Chance?
“Old Wahoo" Crawford chipped in iast
season with thirteen sacrifice flies. Tin
entire Tiger team made 56.
Gridiron Title Will Be in Air
If Princeton Beats Yale and
Bulldog Downs Johnny Harvard
By Damon Runyon.
IF Princeton defeats Yale, and
Yale defeats Harvard, the team
that conquered Princeton, how
much are we bid for the football
championship title of 1912?
The Tiger h ts a chance to trim
the Bulldog, and the canine is ever
liable to bite his address in the
Crimson blankets. Thus we relapse
Into a high fever of uncertainty
until the Yale-Princeton encounter
is over.
Harvard should give Yale one of
those close-decision trimmings
when the teams meet at New Ha
ven a week from Saturday in the
biggest.event of the football season.
Harvard should win if the showipgs
of the two teams to date can be
taken as the basis of argumeuL
But Harvard always has to contend
with a strong New Haven preju
dice against anything or anybody
from Cambridge doing anything- or
anybody in the city which Mr.
Charles S. Mellen kindly Included
on his right of way.
The Blue eleven is classed as an
enigma, which is so serious an af
fliction as it is in the dictionary,
and it will take the Princeton game
to develop all the films of weakness,
as well as strength. Even then the
Harvard eleven will still be handi
capped when it faces the Bulldog
by the fact that it comes from Har
vard, which is a very grave offense
in the eyes of Yale.
While the youthful, square-toed
Charley Brickley kicked a hole in
the door of football fame large
enough to admit the entire town of
Everett. Mass., whence lie hails, we
find that It was the No. 14 boot of
another young man in that Har
vard-Princeton game which really ,
loosened the panels. We refer to
one Felton, of left end fame, whose
leggy lifts were the chief subject j
of a rueful discussion among the |
Tigers after the catastrophe.
"Felton seemed able to place the
ball wherever he wanted to, and
that Was usually where we wasn't."
commented a young Jerseyite with
a swollen nose and no great gram
matical finesse. “He lifted it at the
most amazing angles, and it was I
the hardest ball to handle I ever
saw.
"Bricklej Yes, he’s a bear but
that Felton must have been born
kicking. Brickley gets his shots
away so fast that It is almost im
possible to break through and block
him. It’s a mighty helpless feel-
ing to see a bird like that drop back
and know he’s going to kick. You
can’t do much of anything but
stand still and watch the ball float
over.”
Kicking defeated the Tigers, and
kicking probably will be the route
picked by Harvard when it travels
toward the Y’ale goal. With a man
like Brickley constantly cracking
away from all angles and all ranges,
the Blue eleven will have some
thing to worry it from start to
finish.
As long as field goals count in
the scoring, and as long as scoring
is the main thing desired by a
football team, it seems like excel
lent generalship to keep a wonder
ful hooter like Brickley shooting
steadily, and making him take all
manner of chances. Just as the
Everett boy did against Princeton.
He may miss some, but he is also
bound to land some, and Brickley’s
goal from a 47-yard placement
shows that no distance bars him.
A touchdown is all very well, but
when a team wants to win the field
goals are just as useful as the
touchdowns.
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