Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, November 16, 1912, EXTRA, Image 7

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WHAT COACHES AND CAPTAINS SAY ABOUT TODAY’S ROYAL BATTLE AT PONCEY ('OA<’H HEISMAN, OF lE(ll—The team Tech will put in the field today is one of the lightest I have ever coached. The men are in superb physical condition, and will do their best against the seemingly overwhelming odds. The team has learned a good deal of football this year, and are working well together. Georgia should win by at least two touchdowns, ano more than that if McM hotter gets loose too often. ( API AIN LEI HRMANN, Ob IE( ll—\\ <• are going into.the game determined to win. Every man on the lech eleven will fight his hardest from start to finish, and I will have no excuse if we are beaten. “We 11 give Georgia all that we’ve got.” ie our slogan. Yale-Princeton Game Biggest on Schedule Today -*••-!- Harvard Meets Dartmouth; Indians Face Pennsy By Monty. \-EW YORK, Nov. 16.—Here they come, rounding the final turn, galloping down into . ujrne stretch under full head ... -the big teams of the country. T:., best, most important day of . football year has arrived, and ,e’ of the six leading machines th*’ East copes with a foeman orthy of its steel. The charge of ■ ie Vale Bulldog into the Princeton Tiger’s lair heads the bill. Harvard .■fends its Cambridge goal against • . Dartmouth onslaught at Cam bridge. Those blood-curdling Car >!. Indians swoop down upon old lather Penn’s stalwarts in the City ~f Brotherly Love. W ould that a man could be at ire. places at once, to glue his parlous orbs upon the entire ,r. -star offering of King Foot - day and date! Since that can not be done, most of us hearties have to be content with sitting u on, stand and listening to the ...ui, discordant sounds that issue .-..in two other press stands byway tie telegraph wire. The para . .ant question of “which game?" a i hard one to answer from the -i.mdpoint of "which game will be ■ best treat to the eye?" The ur ion f "which game is the ..st important?" might be called foolish one number eight mil ..on and three." As with one voice comes the unanimous reply, “Yale l‘i ineeton.” All Depends on Yale's Improvement. Tin- big question up for decision :i the little New Jersey town this as ernoon is the strength of tiie Yale team. The virtues and faults of the Tigers are known. What they can and can not do when pit ted against opposition of their own Dass has been shown by their de feat at the hands of Harvard two weeks ago. Some of the failings will be remedied and the team gen rallj van be expected to prove a nor,- compact, a more dependable lag. because of two weeks more "f polishing. But in a general way vi. be about the same team, both i' strength and weakness, that fell b for,- Harvard. Yale is practically untested. Last i, k's performance against Brown, * v ■ tory by only 10 to 0. showed oache- the very things about ir charges that they would have nr- ii a week earlier had the t'ol u fraj not been culled off be ,u-c of the deatlt of York. Yale ■ I.' has lost a whole week by the ! or of that date off tile sehed ind as a result this week the r PHIS remarkable A Turkish-blend has brought a new definition for a cigarette. ‘Distinctively individual” —you will quickly under stand in the smoking! 20, wrapped plainly that’s why the price is 15c. di- 20 for JISHkXZ, MARTIN MAY ' 19% PEACHTREE STREET UPSTAIRS STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL UNREDEEMED PLEDGES > zK FOR SALE / ZHOW PRINCETON ’ : AND YALE WILL : : LINE UP TODAY : • Yale. Princeton. » • Bomeisfer, leAndrews, le. • • Talbot, ItPhillips, It.,® • Cooney, lg'Shank, Ig. e • Ketcham, cßloethenthal c. • • Pendleton, rgLogan, rg. e • Warren, rtPenfield, rt. • • Avery, reWight, re. ® • Wheeler, qJ. S. Baker, q. • • Philben, IhPendleton, Ih. • • Spalding, rhWaller, rh. <» • Flynn, fDewitt, f. ® I 000000000000*0000000000000 mentors have found a task of jam ming ten days work into five. Vpon what they have accomplished since last Saturday depend.- Yale’s chances to beat the Tiger-. The Yale team, in a summary glance, can be classed a.t probably tile greatest collection of football players among the big three. Yale as a team is a different proposi tion. Last Saturday it was not a team that beat Brown. It was merely a bunch of individual stars with hardly any co-operation or uniform method. This, it seems to us, is due almost entirely to a su perfluity of coaches, the men be coming confused by the conflict of ideas jammed into their heads. A poor grade of coaching, well drummed into a team, is better in our opinion than twenty different styles of best grade coaching, con fused and untaught to the men. If Yale has become adjusted into a team with team work, it looks from here as if the Tigets are due for their doom. If Yale has not pro gressed in the last few days past the individual stage, it is good-bye. Elis, and possibly a neat littb- to- # tai run up by the Orange and Black. Yale teams have accomplished the almost superhuman in single weeks of past years, notablj Daly s t mini of two years ago. Have they repeated thi- tear? We doubt it. In other words, we think Yale is in for a spanking. Harvard lias quite a bit mor. than a sinejeure on it.- hands in the person of the Dartmouth eleven. LOCAL SOCCERS PLAY IN LITHONIA TODAY Tii,. Atlanta soccer football ,iub left this morning for Lithonia, vv.ti they , playa return engagement witii . i< fast Lithonia, elevon. Lithonia was returned tiie vie:or in the game p+uyed at Piedmont park two weeks ago, but the local lads have bet n practicing faithfully forth ■ i■ ;st two weeks, and believe th.it ti-, y will lie able to reverst the tab ,ts. BOARD OF ARBITRATION MOVES OVER TO CHICAGO CHICAGO, Nov. 16.--The beard of ar bitration of the National Association of Baseball Clubs transferred the -oene of operations from Milwaukee to this city today. A largo number of cases still re main to be disposed < f ami the board mav not b< able to get through today. \t Milwaukee yester.l iv a dozen cases were di-noseu of. among which whs the division of the Central league into two leagues, to be known as the Central league am! the Interstate league. AUBURN TO SEND WHOLE WORKS TO BIRMINGHAM MONTGOMERY. AI.A.. Nov. 1« V - cial train, bearing about a thousand A., bum rooters will g" through M-iitgomerj the morning of November 23 to Birming ham for the Xuburti-Vanderbilt football game, which will decide the- championship of the South. The train will start out from Auburn with fourteen coache- an.! about 70n stu dents. Al Motltgomerj It expected to add two coaches to carry the orange ami blue fiends from Montgoinerj ami sur- I i .unding territory. Ir is expected that at lea-t '.lO rooters will board the train | here. WILLIE HOPPE FAVORITE OVER ORA MORNINGSTAR NEW YORK. Nov. 16.—Betting odds of 5 to 4 that Willie Hoppe would win . the 18.2 bulk line billiard tournament for the championship of the world were offered today. Hoppe and Ora Morn ingstar are tied for first place, each having three victories against one de feat. CARRIER DELIVERY FOR CALHOUN STARTS 20TH CALHOI’N, GA.. Nov. 16. Announce ment has been made by Postmaster For rest lx Dyar that Calhoun is to have city delivery. The new system will be inaugurated on November 20. This im proveinent was brought about throng l ' tie efforts of Mr. Dyar. who ■ ircuiated a pe tition some months ago and presented it to the postal authorities. The town la alreadj b< ■ n un eyed i mJ ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. SATURDAY. NOVEMBER Hi. 1912. The Green team, when it lost to Princeton, looked much like the Yale outfit —a great array of mate rial without polish. The over whelming of Amherst and Cornell since then would indicate that the Hanoverians may have improved, I but it is almost too much to ex pect them to beat the Crimson, which has defeated their only con querors. J'itis game holds unusual appeal because of the reappearance of the great goal-kicking Charley Brickley on the battlefield. I Indians Too Tough For Pennsy. Those who watch the Carlisle In dians attack the Penn in Quaker town stand a good chance of wit nessing the most spectacular game of the day, the most picturesque. The remarkable brace of the Penn sylvanian- in tile Michigan game, slashing to victory after being 21 points to the bad, has brought them back in our midst with glee and gusto. I’ei.n, always noted for genuine gameness, seems this year to be one of the grittiest teams ever sent forth by the institution. They probably will tlnd lite red melt too stiff opposition to overcome, but they can be relied upon to tight back witii all the strength that is in them and to dispute the braves’ claim to every inch of ground. Penn is opposing a team that in many ways appears the strongest in the • country. It is too bad that the Indians do not meet Yale, Har vard or Princeton. Without such a game to play, they can not by any means be rated the champions of the country, no matter how badly they may efface all other aggrega tions. in our humble mind. Carlisle is a touchdown better than any of tlie big three, Harvard not except ed. However, there is no way to , prove or disprove that. This year, as in otlrnr years of the recent past, the football season is concluding with a succession of three games of forefront rank on adjacent Saturdays. The Princeton- Yale game today is the first, .then n« xt Saturday the Yale-Harvard game at New Haven and u week later the so-ca'led post-season tilt of th.- Army and Navy. Not for getting, of course, Penn and Cor nell on Thanksgiving day. a game which, while, not of title importance, always has proved a brilliant spec tacle. iTECH Y. M. C. A. FIVE BEATEN BY CENTRALS . J Thi basket bo.!' tiv. s of the Centra’ Young Men’s Christian as-citation anc tile Tech Y. M. C. A. met for the sec ond time this season last night at the . Central i assoi lation court, in which ■ gam.- tin- Central fix', defeated the Tech quintet in a beautifully plaxa-d game by 1 th- t■ .-> close score of 2.1 to 23. The Tech tea.n -lefeate? th.- Central asso ciation five a few weeks ago, and' the teams ar, now tied, each having wot. one game. I HARVARD-YALE TICKETS SCARCE NEW H A VEN. <'< iX N . Nov. 15.—The football association today sent back more than sl2."o<i !■ ;t had been sent I w ith requests for seats at tile Yule- Harvard clash on November 23. About 6,000 persons, including more than 4.000 i Yale graduates, who inted to sei. the ' game were disappointed. The W j • MOTOCYCLE &fWLUWI for 1913 Eleven neu: features in addition to the fourteen of 1912. No change in prices. Greatest motorcycle improvement ever dreamt of. Discovery of the correct spring system. The Cradle Spring Frame Rear axle connected by stays to two 7-leat springs extending straight back from frame-joint cluster below saddle. A hinge-joint at forward end of fork enables rear wheel to yield to rough spots on road without affecting the body of machine. j f'fr' ~ ,Jgng "' ‘ “•nm All shocks absorbed by leaf , bf springs. Life of the motorcycle Wtr ■ ■ ■>—gt er.tly increased i 7H. P. Twin Cylinder, with new Cradle Spring Frame, S2EO 1 (.’OR Purfnrv 4 H.P. Single Cylinder, with new Cradle Spring Frame. S2OO i /0 nthff imprnvttntftfs rxfi'.aintd in »ar adrtnet ratalog. Dm b for it totiv. THE HENDEE MANUFACTURING COMPANY •457 Peachtree St., Atlanta, Ga. ■Kllff COLE W lUIffICER - Os A BARBER SHOP By R. \V. Lard Her. Chicago. Nov. ig. —That tilings- can happen in the Corn Exchange Bank build ing, even when Charles W. Murphy is out of town, is almost too much to believe. Nevertheless, witii the Cub owner in Milwaukee, a deal was pulled off there—on tile tenth floor, too —by which King < 'ole climbed to a managerial position. No. the King lias not robbed Johnny Evers of his job, nor is lie going to Cincinnati to succeed Hank O’Day. He has been appoint ed bench manager for John the Harber, x ith a possibility that, in a, pinch, he will do some shaving and haircutting himself. Mr. Cole, and Mr. John were brought together in Mr. Murphy's office by Diplomat Al Campion. Al hates to have any one mad at his bos-, and King had not been feel ing any too cordial toward Presi dent Murf since the well known Pittsburg trade. Al figured that if he should prove instruim ntal in finding a lucrative occupation for King during the winter months, much of Mr. Cole’s soreness would wear off. Conference Lasts Three Hours. John and tire King were eloscteu for three hours. At the end of the | conference the former announced that he had signed Leonard to spend the off-season in his shop and direct the work of the baime.rs. it will lie recall,-d that King took a tonsorial <L gr-- in lowa belore he broke into league baseball. He will have absolute authority over the men in the shop, find the cus tomers, too. telling them what tonics to use. whether they shall be combed wet or dry. shaved d"se or far-away, attacked with shears or clippers, singed or slianu ■ <>e»l. rnassagt-ii by hand ,r macliine, ami whether or not their shoes med shining. He will also name the amount of the tips and share in them. Asked for a lai- inenl regarding his appointment. King replied: "Why all this xuperfluous ton s-iria) herpicide? The matter is sine qua non. I have nothing < !-> Murphy Shaves in That Shop. President Mtirphv has tils fa- I cial and hitsutieal work done .in I John'.- place. After this lie will lie waited on during King's him-h hour. TONY ROSS HANDS AL PALZER A FINE 6 ROUND BEATING PliD-AIiELI’IHA. Nov. 16. \l ■ “vshite hope,” got a bound thrashing here lasi night at tho hands <*l T««n.\ Goss, the Italian boxer, of Newcastle. I’.- . who is much smaller than I alzer and. seven teen pounds lighter. Ross made Palzt r look like a n<»v<ue i in several of the rounds. It was a six round afiair. Palzer’s swings were wild and l.e landed only a few < OA( 11 (I NNINGILXM. OF GEORGIA —Mv t.<-<iiii is I'eadv for the battle. We never an ticipate defeat. Ini! I do think the teams are evenly matched, everything’ considered. Every man remaining on the squad is in good condition. I look foi' it good, clean game, for if we win I want it to be known that the best team won. Te<-h has a great bunch of fighters, and I admire their spirit. May the best eleven be returned the winner. < APIA IN PEA( O( K. OF (iF.ORG I A—l hope and expect that Georgia will win. but look for a very, very hard tight. II we win it will he by clean football, for we are going to play fairly no mailer how hard we are pressed. One touchdown will probaldv decide the winner. 1912 Proves a Poor Year for Champion Fighters AtteH Loses Title; Wolgast and Conlon Lucky By Lett Hook. r 11E year I!'I2 will go ■ own .11 j the annals of boxing us a most disastrous one to champions ami near-champions. in the champion class Abe A tell wa-- tile- first to g.-t into tr.'Ubb- ami he lost t-ds crown to Johnny Kilbanv alter twenty rounds of milling, in which time tile <.‘lev eland streak always had a *.-ife lead. Attel! lias since prov ■ •<; bv two or th'.-’ ve indifferent fights t.iat lie has gone back past all hope of ever figuring again in the championship ranks, lb was a wonderful pugil ist in liis day. and it will lie years, if ever, before we see his equal in his class again. In his prime, the present crop of featherweights would have been duck soup for him, and lie held bis titl* longer tiyin an,/ ottn world’s championship Here’s "J uh" MacEachran /' ' H7/o Th inks f Jase. The (Georgian’s Marathon Rater / • .<jsWrß \ Is "Just Grand” JW \T -- - \ f W \7l x«Mr I I JBidX* ’#\-Jk A / W.~ £' - ?y **" fs’-'* fIE »/ Slf W 3 / £.\” T " fw \ / B' ■ V! ' wteb t Ws • w > j- ’W' -. ' \SI f 7/ Wf "—- ——Z=z= »%• . ZfflL®®iL i. - v* “Jim Maclxachrau is Atlanta s best Known \ juvenile actress. Sh<* ha" been lootlight favorite* ZsHb &\ ' IPIP r ‘ ie ul ’ <,< ‘*J'‘ r l ,a|-t ol ynimg life. Delighted O\ audiences have been applauding ami taking / ' \ ' lel ' ,l^( ' , l ,, ‘' r h , ‘Jii , ts siin-e she was live yeais old. \ i ■ hh en theater in the city has had her name on it> iy3; program at one lime or atiotle r. lOOr -m > Naturally ‘•Jim" is a lover of healthy, whole- iwF’F some out-of-door recreation. Ami that's whv The ’■ t ieorgian s Marathon Racer appealed io her. \ mo- niciit's study of the picture will show von that I */ "Jim" is having the time of her life with this i; M / "turd; little car. \ W S ■[ / I'hery l»oy ami girl \ho reads this advertise* \ I S W / imni can obtain a Marat, >tt Racer in return fora ft / little ser\ ice for The (ieorgian. No expense whut vwKjMPMiKt' / ever. Iwery youngster who has won a Racer has x. agreed that the task imposed was “dead easv.'' ' We'll be glad to tell you full details of the plan. L'ill out this coupon ami mail it today. Marathon Racer Department, The Atlanta Georgian CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT, 20 EASI ALABAMA SI. Please send me instructions telling how I may secure one of The Georgian Marathon Racers without money. Name Age . z Address City State Sample Cars are on display at The Georgian office. 20 East Alabama street. You are cordially invited to come in and try this nev. ind popular Car. ever was held. Ad Wolgast was the second title ' j holder to have a narrow escape. This was his own fault, however, as lie agreed to tight one of the j hardest contenders in his division I six months after his- <>;><-.atiou ? He I managed to retain his titi;- through , an unprecedented mixup at the fin ish. in which the referee deci,'; ii him tiie winner. Immediately aft> ■ he went to his corner and collapsed ; and everybody who saw th" light Knows that if it hadp’t !>• ,-n for the technicality that gave him the de cision he would have been unable to go on. Conlon Risks His Title. The third world'- champion to get into the danger zone was litl! ■ Johnny I'oulon. who only saved ills crown tin othei night, owing to tin fact that it was .1 no-uecision 1 oil iest. This b"> Wil iams. howa-ve . 1 guv him tiie scare of his fair i young life, as the following account | from a New Y- h pape.- will show: "Ten tliou-aml persons saw 'Kid' I Williams, th, liu :tning lilt!-- ban- I lam from Baltimore, gave Johnny (.'onion, the champion of the a decisive beating hist night at Madis.'ii .Square Garden in ten loimds. As it is against til :;iw in this state to give decisions, i’oulon ] still holds the title. Had tin? bout be, ;i staged where th, 1. ’tree might d.eclai ■ a wnmc.. .1 tow headed iad who was a newsboy a short time ago mfghi. Io tin wta.'i : of the e.'ow n. i’oulon weighed 112 pound- and Williams scab I three pounds more shipped. “I mt of til ten ro-.tmi- thc-i as only e:., in which the- c.iamt.-f_>n had the belter of t'm- argument.®,ie second. Th< sou t uni the sev>- <-nt!i '. .1 clos ■ enough to be call d ev a. T! . i’i st of it was a a ill fa vo, of W'.iiiams." 1 • t-'WW w« -» • ■ l«l' -1 Bin mwg