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THE ATLANTA GEORG TAX AND NEWS. WEDNESDAY, MAY 7. 1913.
TO urn TO
BEIT JACKETS
A THENS, GA., May 7.—Celebrat
ing the last game before the
Tech series with a 14 to 1 vic
tory over Washington and Lee yes
terday, Georgia settled down to prac
tice to-day for the battles with the
Yellow Jackets on Friday and Satur
day.
Coach Cunningham will devote
much of each afternoon to batting
practice in order to keep his slug
gers’ eyes on the ball, as* it is the gen-
, eral opinion here that it will be the
heavy hitting of the Georgians that
will bring victory to the Red and
Black.
Corley and Morris have delivered
in the pinches from the mound at
home and stood the fire on the road
like veterans, but the fact that nei
ther of them has ever played in a
' Tech series where the unexpected is
always happening and where expe
rienced vets have gone up in the air,
is making Georgia pin a question
mark on to ljer confidence even now.
Georgia Is Clouting Ball.
But there Is one thing for a cer
tainty. if the universities* ewat the
pill and the pitchers hold up as they
have all season. Tech had better come
over armed with the Atlanta South
ern League team, for the way every
man on the Red and Black line-up
has been lining ’em out has been a
sight to behold. And everybody who
has seen the Georgia team in action
are from Missouri on the statement
that the Techltes are better fielders
than the Athensites.
The work of Harrison at second,
elements! at short and McWhorter
and Ginn in the outer gardens has
been phenomenal in the last few
games, while but few errors have
been registered against any of the
other players.
Henderson in Uniform.
Big John Henderson was out in
uniform yesterday for the first time
since the team returned from , the
Northern trip, and worked out with
the subs after the game. He will get
a trial on third thu» afternoon, but
may not be in the games this week,
as he has been advised by the team
physician not to try to break in again
so soon. Holden is still playing great
ball at this position for a sub, and so
far Covington has hardly been missed.
There is but one thing that is caus
ing any worry over the series here,
and that is that same old uncertainty
whenever Georgia and Tech are bat
tling each other. Remembering the
peries of 1911 and last year, it is evi
dent that the best touted team hardly
ever wins—and will such a story as
this be heralded from Sanford Field
and Tech Flats this season?
Georgia hardly thinks so, and in
stead of going into the fray over
confident. she is determined to win
«ven greater laurels than the team of
last year. The games will be called
at 4 o’clock and hundreds of tickets
• have been sold to the visitors who
are coming in from neighboring
towns.
CLEMSON AND CAROLINA
CLASH FOR TENNIS TITLE
COLUMBIA. S. May 7.—As a
result of yesterday’s semi-finals in
the Southern Intercollegiate Tourna
ment here, representatives of Clem-
son College and the University of
North Carolina will meet to-day to
play for the tournament champion
ship in both doubles and singles.
In the doubles semi-finals yester
day <'lem.son won from Georgia ana
North Carolina from South Carolina,
while in the singles semi-finals Clem-
*-on defeated Georgia anrl North Car
olina defeated Georgia Tech.
BOOKIES TO BE ARRESTED.
NEW YORK. May 7.—Governor
Sulzer lias perfected plans to bring
about the arrest of all book-makers
At Belmont Park when racing re«umes
on Decoration Day. The book-makers
had expected to work without inter
fere nee.
White City Park Now Open
Jeff’s from California and Can Prove It
By “Bud” Fisher
BASEBALL SUMMARIES
SOUTHERN LEAGUE.
Games Wednesday.
Atlanta at Mobile.
Birmingham at New Orleans.
Nashville at Memphis.
Chattanooga at Montgomery.
Standing of the Clubs
Mobile
Atlanta
N’ville.
Mont.
W. L. » C
20 6 .769
14 10 .582
12 11 .522
10 13 .435
M’phis.
B’ham.
N. Or.
Chatt.
W. L. P C
10 13 .435
9 12 .429
9 14 .391
9 14 .391
Tuesday's Results.
Mobile 6. Atlanta 3.
Chattanooga 3. Montgomery 1.
New Orleans-Birmingham, rain.
Nashville 2. Memphis 1.
AMERICAN LEAGUE.
Games Wednesday.
Washington at Chicago.
Philadelphia at St. Louis.
New York at Detroit.
Boston at Cleveland.
Standing of the Clubs.
Phila..
W gton
(Tland
Ch’go.
r.c.
.813
.733
.685
.591
W. L. P.U.
St. L. . 9 12 .429
Boston. 7 11
Detroit. 6 14
N. York 2 15
.389
.300
.118
Tuesday's Results.
No games scheduled.
NATIONAL LEAGUE.
Games Wednesday.
Pittsburg at Boston.
Chicago at Brooklyn.
Cincinnati at New York
St. Louis at Philadelphia.
Standing of the Clubs.
Phila.
Ch’go.
B'kiyn.
S. Louis 12
W. L
9 5
13 8
11 7
PC.
643
.619
.611
600
W. L.
N York 9 8
P'burg. 10 10
Boston 5 12
C’nati. 4 15
PC.
.529
.500
.294
.211
Tuesday's Results.
Brooklyn 4. Chicago 3.
Boston 3. Pittsburg 2.
New York 8, Cincinnati 6
St. Louis 3, Philadelphia 1.
SOUTH ATLANTIC LEAGUE.
Games Wednesday.
Columbus at Charleston.
Albany at Jacksonville.
Savannah at Macon.
Standing of the Clubs.
\V. L
S'vnah. 12 4
J’ville. 11 6
CTbus. 8 8
r.<
.750
.647
.500
W L PC
Chas’ton 8 9 .470
Macon 6 11 .353
Albany 5 12 .294
Tuesday’s Results.
Macon 7, Savannah 1.
Columbus 7. Charleston 2.
Jacksonville 2, Albany 0
EMPIRE STATE LEAGUE.
Games Wednesday.
Cordele at Americus.
Valdosta at Thomasville.
Brunswick at Waycross.
Standing of the Clubs.
W. L. P C. I \V. L.
T'ville. 4 1 ,80ft I B’wick 2 3
C'dele. 4 1 .800 I A’m’cus. 1 4
W’eross 3 2 .600 1 V'dosta. 1 4
Tuesday’s Results.
Waycross 5. Brunswick 4.
Cordele 5. Americus 2.
Thomasville 5, Valdosta 3.
PC.
.400
.200
.200
OTHER RESULTS TUESDAY.
International League.
Baltimore 3. Rochester 2.
Toronto 4, Newark 1.
Buffalo 6. Jersey City 1.
Providence 8, Montreal 5.
American Association.
Milwaukee 9, Minneapolis 7.
No other games scheduled.
Carolina League.
Durham 5. Asheville 4.
Winston 4. Greensboro 0.
Raleigh 13, Charlotte 12.
Virginia League.
Portsmouth 8, Norfolk 6.
Richmond 6. Roanoke 5.
Petersburg 4. Newport News 1.
Cotton States.
Pensacola 15. Columbus 3.
Jackson-Merldian, rain.
Texas League.
Dallas 3. Galveston 1.
Beaumont 1. Fort Worth 1 (13 innings!
Houston 2. Waco 0.
San Antonio 1. Austin 0
Federal League.
Covington 2. Cleveland 1
Indianapolis 9, Pittsburg 5.
No others scheduled.
College Games.
Cornell 6, Penn. State 3.
Lafayette 4. Harvard 2.
College Games Wednesday.
Washington and Lee vs. South Caro-
1 na, at Columbia.
Princeton vs. Brown, at Princeton.
Trinity vs. Wofford, at Durham.
Vale vs. Amhurst. at New Haven.
Columbia vs. Pennsylvania, at Phila
delphia.
Georgetown vs. Navy, at Annapolis.
Chattanooga vs Maryville, at Mary
ville.
Mississippi A. X- M. vs. Kentucky
Stale, at Starkville.
Mississippi vs. Henderson and Brown,
at Arkadelphia.
Dahionega vs. L. G. I., at Dahlonega.
Catholic vs. Holy Cross, at Worcester.
GEORGIA TRIUMPHS OVER
WASHINGTON AND LEE, 14-1
ATHENS, GA., May 7.—Georgia
continued her winning streak yester
day by defeating Washington and Lee
by the score of 14 to 1. The game
was a replica of Monday’s, the Geor
gians clouting the pill with regularity
while the visitors played a listless
game.
MCTWJIFT
COLUMN *
BANGKOKS
M ade from the inner slits of the Trop
ical Bamboo, a kind of Reed-Wood, hollow
and extremely light of weight, elastic, though
strong and serviceable.
If you have ever worn a Bangkok Hat,
then you know of their comforts, and need
no urging to buy another.
If you ve never worn one, come in and
let u* demonstrate to you their many features
of true merit.
We have a good range of these feather
weight hats in the popular Telescope Shape,
pencil curled brim at
$5 °0 and $£- 00
Splits. $2.50 to $5
Sennits, $2 to $4
Panamas, $5 and $6
Heidcaps, $1 to $2.50
Parks - Chambers- Hardwick
37-39 Peachtree Company Atlanta, Ga.
I T seems the sad fate of Southern
League clubs is to furnish their
best stars to teams that are never
contenders. There are exceptions—Tris
Speaker for one. But Russ Ford and
Ed Sweeney are dubbing their lives
away with the hopeless Yanks. Nap
Rucker, best of left handers, is hope
lessly buried with Brooklyn—as Is
Jake Daubert and Red Smith. Der-
rill Pratt is lost in the oblivion of the
St. Louis Browns. And Joe Jacksjn
has been buried and all but smother
ed until this year, with the usually
lowly Naps.
Another example, and right now a
brilliant one, is Charley Stengle, last
year with Montgomery, this year
with the Dadgcrs.
* * *
/CONCERNING Stengel center fleld-
er extraordinary of the Brooklyn
team in the National League, it may
be remarked 1 in passing that he ?s
no mean hitter. Nay, it would not
be stretching the truth to asseverate
that the youth who whanged a four-
sacker to center in the fir tf inning re
cently off th§ second ball pitched by
Hess, and repeated in the second in
ning with another when Miller was
on third and two were out. is all 10
the wholesouled and broad minded in
his clouting. He plays no favorites,
banging the ball just as hard against
the lowly and* downtrodden Boston
Braves as he did against the New
York Giants and the New' York Ame r
leans and the Richmond, Virginia.
Leaguers. He would just as lief d°-
molis a tailender as a champion.
Stengel’s career this season has
been peculiar. He hit well on the
training trip, and kept it up against
the New York Americans. He made
not only the first home run. but the
first run of any kind ever made on
Ehbetts Field when he slammed a
four-base hit to center off Caldwell
in the fifth inning on April 5. The
next day he got a double. Fine.
Then came a slump. In the first
three games of the National League
strife Stengel did not get hit, but in
the game in Philadelphia on April 10
he drew three passes, reached first on
an error and sacrificed once. His
initial hit of the regular season was
a single off Seaton on April 18 at
Ebbetts Field.
• * *
THE boy has ever been a pitcher
* since he cast himself upon a cold,
cruel'world after leaving high school
in Kansas City, Mf>., in the gladsome
spring of 1910. He attracted so much
attention as a fair haired boy and
gave rise to so many repetitions of
the school yell that he attracted the
notice of the management of the Kan
sas City Club in the American Asso
ciation. which was owned by George
Tebeau, who also picked up Joe Wood,
the Roston American pitcher. Georg-*
is a greater picker-up of unconsider
ed trifles in baseball, and what he
picks he salts down for future use.
When anything escapes him it pains
him so deeply it takes two doctors
and a third year interrj to probe t~>
the seat of the trouble. They are
probing now every time George thinks
of how Stengel was taken away from
him.
* * *
CTENOEL first made his reputation
^ as a pitcher and hitter. Tebeau
labored under the impression that he
was no hitter and knew he was no
pitcher, so he shunted him to Kan
kakee, Ill., in the Ulinois-Iowa Leagu*-.
It was also one of the well known
Fourth of July leagues, expiring amid
a tremendous roar of creditors on the
evening of the Fourth, 1910. Getting
hastily thence, Stengel Joined the
Maysvllle team In the Blue Grass
League, which was really the original
Horse and 1 Buggy League. Jim Nolan
organized a circuit In the Blue Grass
region away back In the days when
the earth was young and Cap Anson
was in doubts whether he would maku
good on the Forest City. Jim used
to visit the clubs, driving a horse and
buggy, and sometimes see two differ
ent games on the same day. Hence
the name. It is one of the most perti
nacious and tenacious leagues known
to science, holding all records for
blowing up and' reorganizing. It
stayed reorganized long enough in
1910 for Stengel to finish the cam
paign and be recalled to Kansas City.
* • •
CTENGEL had at his own demand
^ been put in the outfield in Kanka
kee and Maysvllle, and sought a job
in his new r capacity with Kansas City,
but the dust from the Kansas City
diamond had blinded 1 Tebeau to his
merits and in 1911 the boy was shunt
ed to Aurora. Ill., in the Wivconsin-
lllinois League, where he attracted
the notice of Old Scout Sutton and
others interested in the Brooklyn club.
He hit for .353 and led the league In
about all the statistics the secretary
had time to collect.
Brooklyn drafted him. but Charles
Holiday Ebbetts thought he needed
further seasoning and turned him
over to Montgomery, Ala., In the
Southern Association, where he tore
up things by the root with such vigor
«that he was recalled to Brooklyn last
September. He worked in 17 games
with the Ssuperbas last autumn, accu
mulating a batting average of .316
and stole five bases. His penchant
for long drives was only mildly in ev
idence in that spurt, as his only extra
base hits were a two bagger and a
home run. What he has done this
year is known of all men.
Stengel is 22 years old. 5 feet
inches high, weighs 180 pounds and
hats and throws left handed 1 . As
a runner the gay gazelle has some
thing on him and on Hans Wagner
as to gracefulness, hut It is noted
that he and the Flying Dutchman get
there just the same.
FACE GULLS IN
FINAL BATTLE
Bv Joe Agler.
M OBILE, ALA., May 7.—The
lucky Gulls defeated ‘us again,
this time the score being 6 to
3. Finn’s men are certainly having
all the breaks in luck, while our
pitchers are showing poor form.
Manager Bill Smith is breaking
his neck trying to get the boys to
gether for one of our early season
winning streaks. The boys will fight
hard to-day in an effort to capture
the final battle from the Gulls and
to keep them from making a clean
sweep of the series.
Jim Brady will do the twirling for
us to-day and I hope Jim is right.
If he is we will surely win, as the
luck Is bound to turn our way. Brady
has been pitching the best ball for
us lately and if he is given any kind
of batting support he should f op.
However. I don’t want to take any
credit from the Gulls. I really think
the team that wins the pennant will
have to beat them. They have a won
derful pitching staff and a couple of
dandy hitters. This fellow Robertson
is a hear.
Bausewein twirled for us yesterday,
but the Gulls managed to bunch some
hits off him in the first two Innings
and piled up four runs. This made
us play a careful uphill battle, while
the Sea Gulls were taking all kinds
of chances and getting away with n.
Peacock will not enter any men in
the athletic meet Friday. There are
plenty of men attending this school who
would comi>ere very favorably with any
of the athletes in the local Prep .League,
and yet Peacock stands by to watch
the other schools win the laurels.
* * *
Jim Glover, of The Atlanta Georgian,
will officiate at the prep meet Friday
selec * “* ‘
cted as official
Glover has been
starter and judge
• • *
Boys’ High and Marist will play off a
tie game Wednesday that went ten in
nings and was called on account of
darkness early in the season.
• • •
The odds in this game favor Boys’
High, as they have shown the best
lighting spirit of any team in the league
this season. Marist has been playing
an erratio game.
• • *
The 100-yard dash will be the big
event of tne track meet Friday be
cause so many expert sprinters are
entered. Each school has one or more
men for this event and the competi
tion will h© the keenest seen in years.
* * *
About three more weeks will bring the
local prep baseball season to a suc
cessful close. The race is close this
year, closer than It has been for a long
time, and right now any of the three
loading nines have a good chance to
win.
• * •
The Freshman baseball team is still
iiV the lead In the class tournament at
Emory College Tuesday a double-
header was played and both games were
the best that have been seen so far at
Emory.
• * •
In the first game the Sophomores won
from the Seniors, 1 to 0. It was a pitch
ers’ battle between Perryman, of the
Seniors, and Summers, of the Sophs,
and the latter did the best work.
* • *
It will be remembered that Perry
man is the lad who will report to the
GIBBONS DROPS MATCH.
EAU CLAIRE, WIS., May 7—Miki | Two SijeS
Gibbons, the St. Paul tighter, has ran- At-rrrs BiwwPD _
celed his proposed ten-round bout j Mr ILK UIIiIiLk k LLLOJ
with Labe Safro, of Minneapolis,
scheduled to take place here on
May 14.
JohnRuskin
ffl
New York Nationals as soon as school
is out in June. He hun't been pltch-
ing«big league ball at Emory lately and
he will have to travel fast when he
reaches the metropolis.
• • •
The Juniors beat the Freshmen by the
score of 5 to 4. This is the first game
the Juniors have won.
• * •
Following is the standing of the
teams in the class tournament at Emory:
Won. Lost. P<\
Freshmen 5 2 715
Sophomores 4 2 667
Seniors 2 3 .too
Juniors 1 5 .167
• • •
Here are the entries from Marist in
the meet Friday: 100-yard dash, Allen.
Lewis and Roberts, 220-yard low hur
dles. Allen and Lewis; mile run,
Cheeves, Fowler and Coche; half mile
run, Cheeves, Fowler and Haverty; pole
vault, Roberts and Massa; weights,
Fowler. Lowery and Wallace
* * ♦
A four-cornered track meet mn.v be
held in June at Rome between Rome
High School. Tech and Boys’ High of
Atlanta and Columbus High School.
This meet would prove a big thing, as
it would bring together the best high
school athletes in the State.
* * *
A large crowd will see the game on
Wednesday betwen Marist and Boys'
High on the Marist diamond. Boys' High
will have a band on the Job and plenty
of students to cheer them to victory.’
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