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Jim Thorpe Is the Greatest of Gridiron Warriors
Indian ji Champion in All Branches of Sport
By W. J. Mcßeth.
JIM THORPE, of Carlisle, will go
down in athletic history as the
"noblest redskin of them all.”
It is doubtful if any human being
ver combined the manifold ath
letic proclivities of this young
buck” of the Fox and Sac tribe.
By winning the decathlon and
.ntathlon in Stockholm last sum
mer, this aborigine proved Ameni
a's greatest individual star, and at
the same time the most wonderful
man who ever took part in the
great international athletic cham
pionships since Greece first estab
.ighed this classic in tne shadow of
Olympus.
There is nothing relating to sport
or athletic strife that Thorpe can
not do, and do exceptionally well,
in fact, he is a champion at any
hing to which he turns his atten
ion. There have been many ver
satile athletes, but none before
Thorpe has been so versatile to
hampionship degree in all.
Thorpe is all round champion of
the world in track and field sports.
He is the best baseball player at
Carlisle. He is the greatest half
back of all American football his
tory, and perhaps the greatest
gridiron warrior of all time. Like
all good Indians, Thorpe is a won
der at lacrosse. He plays basket
ball, soccer, hockey and hand ball
■ dually well.
Just now the world is ringing
with his gridiron deeds, and at this
particular branch of sport he is
worthy of full discussion. Those
who were fortunate enough to see
Thorpe in Carlisle’s game against
the Army at West Point saw.
doubtles. the greatest exhibition of
individual football skill portrayed
on any gridiron.
Devore Calls Thorpe Superhuman.
1 saw Captain Devore, of the Ar
my, in the dressing room after the
game. Devore is the best tackle
in the country, and probably the
strongest man in football. He is a
perfect specimen of physical de
velopment, built symmetrically, and
he stands six feet four inches in
his football gear.
“That Indian,” said the Army
aptain, discussing Thorpe, “is tha
pATIMA, Turkish
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and no frills. Simple
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R. 0. BARKSDALE CC.
1 Deca‘ur St., Kimball H
greatest player I ever saw in my
nve years experience. He is su
perhuman, that's all. There is no
stopping him.
''Talk o f your Ted Coys! Why,
ns Inman is as far ahead of Yale's
great back as Coy was better than
a . l ? rep s ‘ hoot P la > er. There is
nothing he can not do. He hits the
hue about twice as hard as Coy did
He kicks better in every respect,
and he is far more cunning and
capable of worming his way
through a scattered field. There
never was a man who knew more
ot following interference and break
ing away from it at just the prop
er moment to his best advantage.
‘You may have your ‘Lefty’
Hynns and your Brickleys and
your Ted Coys, but I’ll take. Thorpe
for mine every day in the week."
" alter Camp selected Thorpe on
his all-American football team a
year ago. The Indian is sure of a
Pl.no of such high honor again this
rail. He was good in 1911; he is
superb this season.
His game against the Army was
slightly marred by fumbling, but it
was noticeable that he muffed only
"hen thrown hard after making
"ng runs, it was noticeable after
the first quarter that the redskin
held onto the leather like the grip
of death.
Glenn Warner said that the ball
bad been inflated too much at the
start, and it surely looked, in the ’
light of later developments, as if
this had been the case.
Arcasa, Thorpe’s running mate,
shared with his captain the glory
of Carlisle’s victory over the Ca
dets. But it was noticeable that
Arcasa was not called upon re
peatedly until the soldiers had been
hammered into submission. The
battering ram that accomplished
this happy result for the aborigines
was none other than Jim Thorpe.
Army “Laid” For Thorpe.
the Army was “laying" for
Thorpe throughout the game, and
Welch, the quarterback, undoubt
edly "crossed" the Cadets by switch
ing to Arcasa when he did. Thorpe
had done more than his share. West
Point gave Arcasa his chance to
shine because that team had eyes
only for the giant who had slashed
through their line, skirted their
' ends and bowled irresistibly
rFODDER FOR FANS 1
fterre Meek led the Northwestern
league this year in batting with an aver
age of .346. That’s believable. But
what'll knock you cold is the fact that
he stole seven bases.
By working hard on the TUiker deal
Garry Herrmann should have it entirely
consummated by the F’ourth of July.
we*
It’s hard to understand why Herrmann
is so hysterical over getting Tinker, when
he already has Frank Chance. The mat
ter of salaries may have something to
do with It.
Manager Smith has been released!
Great sensation. However, it’s Richard,
not Bill. He managed Springfield last
year. He will probably hook up with
Scranton.
Later: He did!
* * «F
The Athletics, playing in Cuba, have
been cleaning up the Pearl of the An
tilles tor whatever they call the pesky
I island when they get real flossy) with
i the best ball teams down there. Even
the dark and devious Mendez -the Black
I Mathewson —has been hammered hard by
I the Philadelphians.
• •
Rudy Hulswitt will play with Louisville
next year. Two years ago he wasn't good
enough for Chattanooga. At this rate of
progression he should be in the big leagues
soon.
* . »
Evansville business men are alleged to
have offered SIO,OOO for the South Bend
franchise of the Central league. We don’t
make this as a bald assertion. It might
be libelous to insinuate that any busi
ness had as little judgment as to pay
SIO,OOO for the S. B. franchise.
» # •
It’ McGraw wins the National league
pennant three times running he will be
the sixth to accomplish the feat. Anson
was the first, Selee was the next. Then.
• came Hanlon. Then, coming down to
modern managers, followed Clarke, of
Pittsburg. And after him Frank Chance.
Frank Chance is slated to succeed Colo
nel Lynch as president of the National
league—or so they say. .
Bennv Meyers, of Toronto, wants to go
to the Giants. Five clubs put in drafts
I RUSSELL AND KETCHEL
I FAIRLY SET RING AFIRE
NEW ORLEANS, Nov. 26. —After ten
1 of'tlie most sensational rounds of box
-1 mg ever seen In this city, Frankie Rus
sell was awarded a close decision over
Steve Ketchel, of Chicago, last night.
. It was only Russell’s cleverness that
saved him from a knockout in the early
rounds, but his superior condition won
f °The' 1 bovs will be matched for a fu
ture date', perhaps for twenty rounds.
ONLY FIFTH OF MACON
FOLK WANT SUNDAY MAIL
M ACON GA., Nov. 26.—A census of
, v holders of the Macon postoffice
I ... i x Tip- answers have been
i a i ituj'ti. the department, but it is
I lot 1 IkeW that any change in the present
1 "ysiem will be ordered.
THORPE TO QUIT SCHOOL:
I CANT STAND NOTORIETY
"' I lf< ’’tlo ’rm i's 'the Carlisle' Indians,
I 1 1,1 ■ 1111 1 i ere fur the Browns game
■martc-i'; 1 , 1 / announced he will quit
I I 'i week because of the notoriety
h which' he has been subjected.
MTARLAND FIGHTS DONAHUE.
I 1 P" m*', for Indianapolis today,
limel « h( ,| to meet Harry
I " !l * ' ..... ill. in u ten-round
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS.
through the scattered field in the
early part of the competition.
Jim Thorpe is an ideal football
player. He appears at halfback
because he is of greatest use at
this position. Put him anywhere on
the eleven, however, and he would
still be a star. He has the strength,
size and weight for any line posi
tion; the speed for an end.
He combines every quality of
football skill. He is sure at han
dling punts and is in a class all by
himself at running them back. He
combines the crushing power and
hammering force of Brickley with
the kicking skill of this same indi
vidual and the punting ability of
Felton or Flynn.
Thorpe is the most deliberate
player In the country. He never
becomes excited, never loses his
head. He can run just as fast
with the ball as without it; he is a
sure tackle and is possessed of
such strength that he can keep on
like Ted Coy, with an army of
tacklers clinging to him.
His motive power is augmented
by the fact that he charges lower
than any back in football. He is a
man of whalebone, whose anatomy
Is impervious to injury; a human
torpedo that plows its way through
all sorts of opposition.
Great in Broken Field.
As a runner in a broken field.
Thorpe is in a class all by him
self. He plans his run with amaz
ing intelligence and fools the
tacklers by an easy lope that car
ries him over the ground at re
markable speed without betraying
any undue haste. His dodging can
be likened to nothing better than
that of a rabbit close pressed by a
hound. Thorpe can stop instantly,
twist about and start instanta
neously. And, with him. the
straight arm is a work of beauty.
Save that his color is less pro
nounced than the average Indian.
Jim Thorpe is a typical Indian.
He has the facial cast, high cheek
bones and straight, jet-black hair.
His legs are long, but well put up,
as is his torso. In street clothes
he appears of the greyhound type,
but when stripped his unusual phys
ical development is strikingly evi
dent. He is as near a perfect type
as can be found anywhere.
for him this fail, but they all lost out. i
I.ho only city in which the Beds won a 1
majority of games last year was Brook- i
lyn. Great road work, that. {
♦ ♦ 9
And now they say that the Highlanders i
aren t sure to go to Bermuda next spring. ;
I hey say it will be left to the new man- ’
ager—when there IS a new manager.
*♦ ♦ 1
Cree. Wolter and Daniels will probably ’
form the Highland outfield next year, if
they don’t break any more legs.
*
They wanted Tom Downey (now a Cub)
to play, ball this winter on the coast, but
Thomas decided that, he got all he wanted
through the regular season.
■ « •
The American association is showing
hopeful signs of intelligence. It is go
ing back to a. 154-game schedule, instead
of that 168 thing.
• • ♦
Great year for Boston: Red Sox and
Harvard, both the same fall.
Empire Bigler and his picked team will
start for Cuba right after Thanksgiving
* * *
Pendleton, of Princeton, will probably
decide not to enter professional basebail
at all.
* ♦ *
Frank Farrell has received a barrel of
requests for places as manager. One from
M. .[MUSSELMAN. of New Orleans. |i
wound up with: "If your club does nm
make a better snowing under me titan last
season, why 1 won’t want a single cent of
salary.' That chap is looking for some- i
thing soft. |
The baseball year is revolving around
toward the open season for bottles. In ■
other words, the league meetings are al- 1
most upon us. ’
_ }
REMEDYtoR MENI
Bread at a dollar a loaf is not
more ridiculously extrava
gant than big-car travel at
twenty cents a mile. One
hundred and nine miles at a
total cost of eighty-one cents
is a recent but not unusual
accomplishment of the Ford.
Every third ear a Ford —and every Ford
user a Ford “booster.” New prices—
runabout $525 —touring ear S6O0 —deliv-
ery ear s62s—town car S6OO with all
equipment, f. 0. b. Detroit. Get particu
lars from Ford Motor Company, 311
Peachtree street, Atlanta, or direct from
I
JfIWFMD
15 J MISSIVE
YOUNG CUNT
JACK M’FARLAND dropped into
The Georgian office this morn
ing to introduce himself. Along
with him came his manager. John
ny Oliver, who brought out the
sensational Tommy Murphy, for
years a lightweight contender for
the title.
• McFarland created quite an im
pression. He weighs 215 pounds,
is as hard as the proverbial brick
and stands about six feet two
inches. He is only 22 years old and
lias a square jaw that looks as
though it could take any amount of
punishment.
Oliver tipped us off that in a
training bout with Joe Jeannette,
who is claiming the heavyweight
championship, now that Johnson
appears to be a dead one, McFar
land clipped the negro on the chin
and dropped him for the count.
The white hope looks strong enough
to drop a mule.
The New Yorker is going to in
sist that the referee break he and
Morris fast Thursday. He has
heard that Southern referees allow
boxers to work longer than the
rules allow in the clinches. And
McFarland doesn't, want any of that
wrestling stuff with the giant Mor
ris.
AD WOLGAST IS SORE:
CAN’T GET UP WAGERS
SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 26.—Cham
pion Ad Wolgast was paying more at
tention to future matches today than he
was to his Thanksgiving day bout with
Willie Ritchie.
The champion, looking tit and ready,
strolled into Coffroth’s place and want
ed to know why more money was not
being bet on Ritchie. He declared he
had $7,000 to bet and had difficulty in
getting $3,000 of It down on the com
ing contest.
Wolgast is doing only light training
stunts now. He said he didn’t think
any more training would be necessary
for the bout because of his prime con
dition.
Ritchie, on the other hand, is work
ing a little every day and said that he
would, wind up his training with just
enough work to put on that edge he had
when he fought the champion before.
Ritchie looks strong and rugged and be
lieves he will come off the victor. Both
men will .enter the ring in good condi
tion.
BABY DIES IN MOTHER’S
ARMS ON CENTRAL TRAIN
M ACON, GA.. Nov. 26.—A girl baby died
in the arms of its mother, whose name
could not be ascertained by the local of
ficials. just as the Central of Georgia
passenger train left the depot yesterday
afternoon for Atlanta. The woman hail
transferred from a train from south Geor
gia, carrying the child in her arms. Just
as the train began to move, the little
one breathed its last. Attention of pas
sengers was attracted by the mother's
heartrending cries.
T ° xX
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Expert Naughton Thinks Wolgast Is Going Back
■b*'b
Appendicitis and Over-Confidence the Cause
By W. \V. Naughton.
SAN FRANCISCO. Nov. 26.—The
critics throughout the coun
try appear to be of one mind
in regard to Ad Wolgast. They
think the future is filled with fore
boding for the world’s lightweight
champion.
Nor is the opinion based merely
on what happened with Joe Mandot
at New Orleans. The so-called
Michigan Wildcat seems to have
been going to worse ever since
he went under the knife a year
ago.
His four-round go with Willie
Ritchie in San Francisco a few
months after leaving the hospital
conveyed a hint that Wolgast’s nat
ural fighting qualities had been
impaired: ills bout with Rivers
strengthened the suspicion; his
short contests with Teddy .Ma
loney and Daniels failed to sub
stantiate the Wolgast claim that
a sojourn on the Cadillac farm had
restored his vigor, while the late
unpleasantness in the Smithland
may be described as the closest
call of all for the king of the 133-
pounders.
It is claimed by Wolgast that
things were not nearly as bad as
they were reported at New Orleans.
The spectators, lie urged, saw the
affair through New Orleans specta
cles, and the ringside correspond
ents were so saturated with the
local pride that every little trick
Mandot turned was exaggerated in
the describing.
Crowds With Under Dog.
If New Orleans erred in the
manner described, it was both hu
man and understandable. The in
clination in fight crowds all over
the world is to gloat when the un
der dog steals a march on the
champion and the incentive to ex
ultation is ever so much increased
when the under dog is a home
product.
But Ne.s Orleans enthusiasm
could not very well influence the
blow for blow accounts of the fight.
These detailed reports are general
ly dictated or jotted down in a
cold-blooded, mechanical way by
men who thoroughly understand
their business, and there is little
chance of a wrong impression being
gained by any one who reads these
returns carefully.
The “fight by rounds” reports
that came away from the New Or
leans ringside told as plainly as a
moving picture presentment that
Mandot in the beginning was cau
tious and that Wolgast was at all
times anxious to bring matters to
a focus quickly.
Noticing that overeagerness to
|| I 3
Hall Caine’s Story
“The Woman Thou Gavest Me” L
I
The opening chapters of this great serial are just off the
press. Hearst’s Magazine for December contains this
powerful work of the most noted of all the living English
writers. It has the defining marks of a master’s touch
I The story is about Mary —a beautiful young girl whose I
stern and reckless father attempts to sacrifice her for
his own worthless purposes. She rebels against him . j
and the events that follow are most exceptional, ab
sorbing and masterly. Your newsdealer has Hearst’s
Magazine on sale. §
More New Letters
j Written by Standard Oil ||
I Further evidence of dealings between corporate interests I
and government officials are clearly disclosed in these
I reproductions. Hearst’s Magazine for December pub
lishes them in the interest of truth and for the enlight
enment of the people. |
DECEMBER NUMBER
Now on Sale at All News-stands J
Q or Send 15 Cents to
Hearst’s Magazine j
: Fomin Avenue, New York
I
’ B " Hr — ||||||N1 L| It|| |rnmjl . rarill|[l| „ llll| , L ■u- ,T| n ml mcwiiwiffl S
score rendered Wolgast wild, the
Southerner took advantage of the
champion’s mistakes and rolled up
credits that could not be wiped
out.
The lesson gathered from the
punch-for- punch descriptions is
that had Mandot started out with
the same degree of confidence he
finished up with, there might have
been a new world’s champion. As
it is, Wolgast can pause amid his
protestations and thank his stars it
is no worse.
On all sides one hears the query
propounded: “What is really the
matter with Wolgast?”
Operation Stirred Him Up.
To the writer it appears to be a
combination of appendicitis and
overconfidence. I know that old
trainers of field athletes claim that
an operation such as Wolgast un
derwent will convert a ten-second
man into an eleven-second one, and
it hardly requires a knowledge of
mathematics to figure out what ef
fect the experience will have on a
champion fighter. A ten-second
sprinter is a rarity; an eleven-sec
ond man is a common occurrence,
and it is beginning to look as
though Wolgast has • been trans
formed from a rarity to a common
occurrence.
What makes it worse in Ad’s
case is that fighting is as the
breath of his nostrils, fie possesses
the typical pugilistic temperament,
and it would require something
more depressing than the jab of a
surgeon’s knife to imbue him with
the idea that the earth held a bet
ter fighter than himself at equal
poundage.
In his heyday he had everything
S.S.&SCATARRH
When we say S. S. S. cures chronic Catarrh we <lo not mean thatitmere
ly checks the symptoms for a time. Some local applications will do that
by simply cleansing and soothing the irritated mucous membranes. But
ail the while the cause which produces Catarrh is left in the system, and
as soon as the local treatment is left off, the trouble returns with all its an
noying symptoms. S. S. S. cures Catarrh by cleansing the blood of all
impure catarrhal matter and at the same time building up the system by
its unequaled tonic effects. It goes into the circulation and attacks the
disease at its root, and removes every trace of impurity that is causing
the trouble. Under the purifying effects of S. S. S., the inflamed mem
branes are healed by rich, pure blood which is carried to these parts, the
offensive discharge from the nose ceases and severe headaches and neural
gic pains are no longer felt. In fact every symptom of Catarrh disappears,
the stomach is toned up and the disease is thoroughly cured. Thousands
of chronic cases of Catarrh of the most stubborn character have been com
pletely cured by the use of S. S. S. The inflammation which produces
chronic Catarrh can never be permanently relieved until thecause has been
removed from the blood. This S. S. S. will do, and then nature hastens the
return of perfect health. Book on Catarrh and any medical advice free to all.
THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, GA.
to flatter this vanity—for vanity it
is. He was among lightweight!
what Tod Sloan was among jocks.
He was a fullgrown man cast in a
small mold, and. while training,
never had to coddle himself in any
way or provide against the effects
of reducing weight.
He could go right along about his
work knowing that he would be at
the right poundage when the grind
of preparation came to an end. He
was formed on symmetrical lines
and possessed all the strength that
It was possible for a man of his
weight to possess.
Was an Ideal Lightweight.
He was, in fact, the ideal 133-
pounder, and when it is considered
that there are few fighters in any
class who do not have to weaken
themselves to som extent to remove
the excess that accumulated between
contests, it can readily be under
stood how Wolgast’s natural ad
vantages, combined with hia indom
itable fighting spirit, made him feel
and perform like a man who was
every inch and every pound a
champion.
The idea is beginning to prevail
that Wolgast’s final physical pow
ers have suffered a.nd that his ex
alted opinion of himself remains
intact. If it is that way. of course
he is bound to strike trouble before
long. But it will not do to begin
singing his requiem until he is
down and out.
Courage and self-reliance, such
as he possesses, tide a man over
many a tight place in life, and It
may be that if he shortens down on
his “one-night stands” in the pu
gilistic line and sets a champion
ship date and keeps it in view, he
may cause those who are predicting
his downfall to change their tune.