Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, May 13, 1913, Image 11

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THE ATT ANT A GEORGIAN AND NEWS. TUESDAY, MAY IT IDin. —— — 1 ■ ■■■■■■- ' — — — - — - - — - J— — "■' - Jeff Says It Was Worth the Money m u i By “Bud” Fisher By John (Chief) Meyers. B ATTING ability is the high art of baseball. Tr«e skill with the stick hides many a minor fault. Brilliancy in all other lines pales into nothingness if not backed by at least average hitting power. There is a so-called axiom in our profession that "batters are born, not made.” I disagree with such logic, There is the same opportunity for improvement in batting as in fielding or ba**e running. Not every one. of course, no matter how studious, may become a Tv Cobb or a Honus Wagner. And it is a mighty good thing for the pitchers and catchers that this is so. Few athletes have the lightning speed of Cobb, which enables him to beat plenty of infield taps which would be easy outs against average runners. Few again have the muscular power of Wagner, which enables him to drive the ball with rifle-like velocity. 300 Notch Real Feat. When one stops to consider condi tions, a .300 batting average strikes home as real achievement. It means hitting safely three times in every ten chances. The batsmen, single-handed, must fight an army of obstacles. In the first place he has a per fectly round stick Iwlth which 'to change the direction and propel a perfectly round ball thrown from a distance of 66 feet w r ith all the force or human power. He has approximately half a sec ond from the time the ball leaves the pitcher’s fingers until it is up to him. In that half-second he must swing his bat so that the curved surfaces of the two objects (bat and ball) meet fairly in the middle of their re spective lines of flight. Now there are nine agile and active opponents so distributed throughout the playing field that any sort of high fly means certain retirement. If the batter hits a fraction of an inch over the ball he sends it down to the ground where the speed is checked, and where it is generally quite easy for one of the inflelders to intercept it. Add to these complications a skilled pitcher who can make the ball vary many ways In its flight to the plate, and that little half second of grace dwindles almost into an Infinity. The wonder then is that so many reach the select class. Chief Tells Secret. Still there are certain principles of batting science that will help to over come these obstacles. Th£ most im portant, to my mind, is that of meet ing the ball in front of the body. This is no more than the swing of the player who Is termed the natural hitter. Zimmerman, Wagner. Lajole. Doyle and Cobb all employ the style. Some of them may do it all uncon sciously. I know I did for several years before I joined the Giants. Mc- Graw pointed out to me the reason. He drills and drills this idea into his men. A1 Brldwell is a player that I would term a “made” hitter. In a pinch he was one of our most trusty batsmen, for he was sure to play every shade In his own favor. Brldwell became proficient by learning to meet the ball In front of himself. Uppercutting !» Fatal. In the old days great hitters, like MeGraw and Jennings, used to run out to meet the ball before It broke. The present rule about staying in the batters’ box prevents this. But the principle may be applied through the medium of the natural swing. The swing should be made in a horizontal arc. The bat naturally has a tendency to propel the bah directly in its course. An "uppercutter” is a batsman whose thrust ascends after the fash ion of fungo hitters. This style of hitter usually raises high flies or pop-ups, and can never hope to be come proficient. A downward stroke is practically as weak, for by it it is practically im possible to hit the ball with speed along the ground. SEATTLE CREW TO ROW IN EASTERN REGATTA NEW YORK. May 13. -Permission was to-day granted the University of Wash ington to compete in the regatta at Poughkeepsie on June 21. The Seattle • arsmen, whose expenses will be paid by a student subscription, will leave for New York about June 1. Bv W. W. Naughton. S AN FRANCISCO, May 13.—In the balance of his journey toward the championship goal Gunboat Smith will have to do principally with cowboys. The rough riders he has to work past are Luth McCarty and Jess Willard and if he can es cape being thrown, rOped and brand ed he will be In a position to write champion heavyweight of the world after his name. At least that is the way the heavy weight outlook looms at present. That the Gunboat Smith-Jess Willard bout at Coffroth’s Eighth Street arena on May 17 will be the semi-final in the blue ribbon tourney is universally ad mitted. But that Luther McCarty will be the man the winner will meet is not so sure. Luther is to hook up with Arthur Pelky at Calgary on May 24 and while it docs not look as though McCarty is endangering his title, you can’t always tell. Pelky Is the big husky who recent ly held his own with Tommy and vanquished Andy Morris, may not be much, to he sure, suggests that Mr. Pelky is in’ up.” Burns That but it build- There are no really finish ed products among latter day white hopes and the sporting world is apt at any time to ring with the praise:* of some new heavyweight who was scarcely known twenty-four hours before. Willard Defeated Pelky. It’s strange how Pelky’s fortunes have been linked with those of Jess Willard and Lute McCarty. Willard defeated Pelky in New York. At another time Pelky was to box Luth er McCarty and failed to put in an appearance. Willard took his place at short notice and, in the opinion of Eastern sport writers, outboxed Mc Carty. Now McCarty and Pelky are to meet at Calgary. The month of May will surely clear the way for a decisive championship encounter. The Gunboat Smith- Jess Willard and Luther McCarty-Ar- thur Pelky bouts are only a week apart and there should be little dif ficulty in signing the two victors for a Fourth of July match. It is un derstood that Promoter Coffroth has his eye on the attraction and it is to be hoped he lands it. for it will be the biggest thing that has happened in pugilistic circles for a long time. O’CONNOR IS TICKLED; HE WINS HIS LAW SUIT Heisman Ranks Alabama Second I v • v +•+ *1* • 4* Dobson Works Miracle at Clemson By J. W. Heisman. T HE first two games of the Teeh-CJeorgia series were the big noise in college circles last week. They did not have much bearing on tiie championship no matter how they came out. but they were of special interest to all Georgians and of some interest to all Southerners, nevertheless. No matter Imw grand a record either of these teams may make or how punk, up to the time when they don the gloyes for each other, every body has come to understand that It Is going to be a battle to the frayed and frazzled finish between the two despite any seeming disparities. Over and over again this has hnpiiened in the past, and the apparently weaker team has overthrown the stronger to the bewilderment of all fol lowers of the college game in the South. And realizing this to be a fact, as they more and more are doing, peojjle in larger and larger numbers each year find It well worth while to cut out some other attraction and arrange their affairs so they can go and see the Tech-Georgia games, whether they take place in Athens or in Atlanta. That is the explanation of the huge crowds that last Friday and Saturday witnessed these contests in Athens. On these two days ail previous Athens records for baseball attendance Were badly shattered, notwithstanding it appeared to the man without bias that Georgia was bound to make a runaway affair of both games. Those who remembered their baseball history, though, couldn’t see it that way. and made sure of lieing on hand when the factory whistle blew. Nor were the) disappointed, for if ever there were two hard fought and evenly-contested games anywhere, these were they. Roth games were lost by Georgia by a margin of one run only, and in both the Athenians had men on bases when their last batter was retired in the last half of the ninth inning. What now about the comparative strength of the two teams? Before these games the records of the two teams seemed to have settled that mat ter pretty thoroughly. But when it comes to the all-around effectiveness and playing ability of the two teams right now as they played yesterday and as they would play to-day?—that may be a very different matter. Despite the promising nature of the new material on hand this spring at Tech, it early became evident that seven new men on the team meant a badly balanced organization, and one that was bound to get some bad bumps from first to last before the season was over. With this fact recog nized, high aims for a whole season’s record were ruthlessly abandoned, and fivery word and plan and step of action was bent toward whipping the green team in such condition of preparedness and fitness as would result in their giving a good account of themselves in the Georgia scries alone. That result has, seemingly, lteen attained by the Yellow Jackets, and that is the season why they ap]>enr to-day to be a match for the Red and Black, whereas a month ago they would have been mince pie for their rivals. , ALBERTS MEETS LOUGHREY. NEW YORK. May 13—"Ktd" Al geria. of Elizabeth. N. J., ami Frank Lough re'.. of Philadelphia, will meet here in a ten-round bout to-night. ST. LOBIS, May 13.—.lack O’Connor, veteran ball player, was happy to-daj over the court’s ruling yesterday that the St. Louis American League club must pav him the $5,000 salary which he claimed was due him. O’Connor was demoted as manager of the club be fore the expiration of his contract. B I T do not be misled Into believing that the tables are turned to any such extent as to make of Georgia mince, or any other kind of pie for Tech. Far, very far, from it. Tech won the first games by a hair’s breadth only: ami perhaps they have good old side pal Mr. O’Confidence to thank for helping them to even this much margin. * * * P RAISE, more praise, and yet again praise, is what is overdue the Olemson team and Coach Dobson for the way they have fought their way to the light out of dark wilderness and triumphed over teams that were whole laps ahead of them in form and condition when the season opened. Two out of three from Auburn on the latter’s own playground is a glorious finish to a game, up-liill season. And 1 cannot, forbeat to cite the faet. unknown to many in tills section.'that besides winning ten straight from the colleges of South Carolina, the Tigers wrested a 4-3 victory from the University of North Carolina and played Trinity a 14- inning 3-3 game at Durham. This certainly puts them up in the running in the estimation of all fair-minded fans. By Way of Aftermath “Vanity on the highway” still pays a ridiculous toll for automobile travel. But two hundred thousand new Fords will this season go to buyers who prefer real ser vice at reasonable cost rather than ostentatious dis play at unreasonable cost. More than a quarter of million Fords now in service—convincing: evidence of their won derful merit. Runabout, $525: Touring- Far. $600; Town Car. $800—f. o. b Detroit, with all equipment. Get interesting “Ford Times from Dept. F. Detroit: Ford Motor Company Ml Peachtree Street, Atlanta. A few points that neither the box scores, nor yet the detail of the games, show of the recent Tech-Georgia bat tles may be worth jotting down. * • * I never saw amateur pitchers who can I wheel and throw to second any quicker i or more accurately than do Corley and ' Morris. They must have put in hours iand hours of practice to have acquired this precision: it was very fine. * * * Hutchens is one grand catcher much tiie best l have seen in college circles this year. He throws like a machine, bats ‘left handed, and hits them ker plunk on the proboscis. He would make his mark, and a wide one. in professional ball. * * * Wootten. the Tech freshman, grandly justified my judgment in putting him back into the game as a varsity man in spite of his failure to get a single hit in the entire first eight college games in which he played. Who shall say how ' much Ids home run (the only one of 1 the series) the first time be stepped to I ;Bn plate didn't have to do with the ! winning of both games by Tech? * * * Ginn is the fastest and most finished Base runner 1 have seen in the colleges in many, many years. He gets away with it at any old stage of the game, and ! no matter how we lay for him * * * On Friday Tech had six men in the i game who were playing their first year i u f varsity ball, and on Saturday they bad seven such in the line up. All but • me of the ten who played are due to i t,e back next year, and also every last one of the present scrub players; so that , Tech men think they have little cause > worry over next year's troubles If not • yen a single new man comes in. * * * To my mind, the umpiring of both the officials was splendid work. I am thoroughly convinced that the final out come of neither game was affected, or would have been affected, hv the chang ing of anv close decisions tLat came up. Messrs. Harmon and Holland are two fine umpires, two clever gentlemen, two ibsclute sportsmen: they typify the ! best traditions of college life and col- ! Ago athletics. 0*0 d another 'ear Amazon should size to thoroughly till Holliday s shoes • liret huso This youngster has even inure ymtural reach and stretch than Holliday, and lie is fast picking up in every way. Had McWhorter not been playing unusually deep for him, every one of his three terrific drives to cen ter in Friday’s game should have been good for a home run. As he himself puts it. though, all he accomplished was to give Bob a chance to ne a hero. (Never mind. “Amy," I am sure Bob appreciates the courtesy.) 0 0 0 Bob McWhorter is surely one good base runner, and he is as sure and graceful in his handling of fly balls as the cleverest professionals. * * * During the past three seasons Fax Montague has made a success of every position in which lie has been placed. Now lie is a second baseman, and a good one "Fax” is also a real cap tain; one of the very best Tech has ever had. * * * You'll have to hand it to both Fitts and Eubanks for pulling themselves up from positions of only mediocre repu tation to where they have earned the undving gratitude of their college mates. With both it was a case of tightening their belts and their courage up to the very last hole, then "up and at 'em." and. finally, of "staying" with the op position till the cow’s came home JOHNSON STICKS FINE ON TWO MORE PLAYERS CHICAGO, May 13.—President Ban Johnson, of the American League, has fined Catcher Nunn^maker, of the Bos ton Red Sox, and Third Baseman Olson, of Cleveland. $25 each for their fist fight in Cleveland last week. President Johnson said the reports of the fight were greatly exaggerated, and that these two players were the only ones involved in the trouble. He said he obtained a straight story of the trou ble from the two players themselves. SWEDES WILL SEND TEAM TO 1915 MEET MATTY HAS PITCHED 47 INNINGS WITHOUT ALLOWING FREE PASS NEW YORK, May 13. R'Jnninp along with Waiter Johnson in his efforts to pitch a record number of scoreless inning is Christy Mathewson, who is setting a mark for perfect control that may never be equaled. The star twirler of the New York Giants finished his forty-seventh inning yesterday afternoon without a base on halls. Matty has given only two passes this year. That was in the first game he pitched against Boston on April 17. Matty has won five games and lost one so far this season. 'He was beaten by the Phillies on May 3. the score being 3 to 2. two men being out when the winning run was scored. Baseball Summaries. SOUTHERN LEAGUE. Games Tuesday. Atlanta at Memphis. Chattanooga at New Orleans. Birmingham at Montgomery. Nashville at Mobile. Standing of the Clubs. W. Mobile. 24 8 N’villt. 16-13 Atlanta 16 14 M’phis. 15 14 PC. .760 .633 .517 W. L. Mont... 13 16 Chatt.. 12 17 B’ham. 10 16 N. Or.. 10 18 P C .448 .414 .385 .357 Monday’s Results. Memphis 8. Atlanta 5. Montgomery 5, Birmingham 1. Chattanooga 4. New Orleans 2 Nashville 5. Mobile 4 NATIONAL LEAGUE. Games Tuesday. St. Louis at Boston. Cincinnati at Brooklyn. Chicago at New York. Pittsburg at Philadelphia. Standing of the Clubs. Willard Is Hard Man to Handle 4-*-:- Nervousness May WreckChances By Ed W. Smith. C HICAGO, 111.. May l.’L Unless Jess Willard curbs his inclination to extreme nervousness as tlie day of. an important ring battle draws nigh, he is apt. to wreck all of the good chances he has of gelling to the top of the heap of white hopes that are struggling for recognition at the present time. This is the straight opinion of Charley Cutler, Wil lard’s old friend, and the man who is chiefly responsible for getting the elongated Kansas fighting proposition a good start oti the pugilistic sea. Cutler knows the tall Westerner better than anybody else in the world, and while he is still friendly with fillard and eager to see him win. which would justify all of the nice t ngs Cutler has said aland him, he rears his one weakness will In* his urn ug. 0 0 0 T'OM JONES has the Willard affairs in hand right now, and is training A him in person for the affair with Gunboat Smith In Jim Coffroth’s arena a week from Tuesday. Coast critics are saying some nice things about Jess and the form he Is showing out there in his preparation, and that Is what moved Cutler to speak at tilts time. "Knowing Willard as well as I do, I can speak freely of him,” the big wrestler-fighter told me the other day. "There is one weakness that he will have to overeome. That is his extreme nervousness the day Indore a battle and on the day of the event. I wouldn’t call it fear exactly, because I have scon some of the games! men in the world quake as if they had the ague just before stripping to go into tin* ring. It is merely a high-strung condition, ami unless la* gets over it bis chances of becoming a real star will go glim mering. * * * <<TT is my honest opinion that Willard is as game, If not gamer, than J any of them among the big fellows right now. At heart he knows he can defeat all the Gunboat Smiths they can lead to him. but the fact re mains that Millard is a terrible Letter. He gets morbid and morose as the tight draws near, and tills is followed by a state of acute nervous ness that is apt to completely unfit him for a hard battle. Once he is in the ring and the real work logins, Willard is all right. * * * UT JNLKSS Smith gets him quick and gets him in the right spot, I be- lleve Willard will whip him nicely. Further, it is my opinion that if he does this, he is apt to enter the ring with Luther McCarty at a later date and be made an equal favorite with the big man from Nebraska. I wouldn’t venture an opinion on that light right now, preferring to see how Willard come out with Smith. If he can whip the Gunboat lie will have a lot of confidence, and then he will lie a mighty hard man to l>ent.” Phila.. B’kiyn Ch’go.. St. L.. W. L. 13 6 15 8 15 11 13 11 AC. W. L. P C. N. York. 11 II .500 Boston. 9 12 .429 P’burg. 10 15 .400 C’nati. . 6 18 .250 Monday’* Results. New York 5, Chicago 1. Boston 6. St. Louis 4. Philadelphia 6. Pittsburg 5. Brooklyn 4, Cincinnati 3. SOUTH ATLANTIC LEAGUE. Games Tuesday. Macon at Albany. Columbus at .Jacksonville. Charleston at Savannah. Standing of the Clubs. OTHER RESULTS MONDAY. International League. Toronto 3, Jersey City 0. Buffalo 11, Baltimore 1 (first game). Buffalo 3, Baltimore 2 (second game). I ’rovlder.ee 1. Rochester 0 Montreal-Newark; off-day. American Association. Todedo 2. Columbus 1. st. Paul 9, Milwaukee 3. Minneapolis 5. Kansas City 3. Louisville-lndianapolis; off-day. Federal League. Pittsburg 2. Cleveland 0. Chicago 5, Indianapolis 4 St. Louis-Covington; rain. EVEN - J. AGLEH By Joe Agler. M emphis, tenn., May is.— "King” Brady will be the se lection to twirl the second game for the Crackers, with Graham receiving. Bernhard will probably use Kissinger and Seabaugh. The Crackers lost the opener here. The Turtles come from rear and over came five runs obtained by us. Chappelle made his debut in a Cracker uniform and was knocked off of the rubber. Furchner, who suc ceeded him. was treated very roughly by the Turtles. The Crackers hit the hall hard, but it seems lately that the luck breaks with the other team. The Crackers stored all the runs in one inning and was not able to score again. The nec essary wallop could not be produced. Chappelle had everything at first, but weakened, and the Turtles romped on him, which will win many ball games for them. "King" Brady should win his game to-day with ills steadiness and con trol. He is the kind of a pitcher that will win from this club. The Turtles are drawing well. The;* have big crowds and are supporting a good team. We should at least break even here, and that would give us an even chance to keep above the .500 mark on this road trip. Virginia League. Newport News 2, Norfolk 0 Portsmouth 12, Roanoke 0. Petersburg 13, Richmond 3 (first ! game). Petersburg 13, Richmond 0 (second game). N Help for the J? Crippled « Carolina League. Charlotte 8. Greensboro 5 Raleigh 7. Durham 0. Winston-Salem 6. Asheville 1. Appalachian League. Knoxville 14, Mlddlesboro 3. Bristol 1, Johnson City 0. Cotton State* League. Pensacola 5. Jackson 1. Meridian 6, Selma 3. j Children l| Club Feet, piseasss of the Spine and Hip Joints, Paralysis and other afflictions successfully lifnjfiT treated. Established 38 years. WfJM Write today for illustrated cab- if rTP National Surgical Institute, 72 S. Pryor St. Atlanta, Ga. * W. I* S’v’nah 16 5 J’ville. 13 8 CTbus. 10 H P.C .762 .619 .476 \V. L. Ch’ston. 9 12 Macon.. 8 12 Albany. 6 14 r.r .429 .400 .300 Monday's Results. Savannah 5, Charleston 0. Jacksonville 2. Columbus 1. Macon-Albany; rain. AMERICAN LEAGUE. Games Tuesday. Philadelphia at Chicago. Washington at St. Louis. New York at Cleveland. Boston at Detroit. Standing of the ClUD*. W. L. P C. Phila.. 17 5 .773 CTIand 17 8 680 W’gton 14 7 .667 Ch’go.. 16 12 .571 W. L. P C St. L. .11 16 .407 Bolton.. 9 15 .376 Detroit. 8 18 .308 N. York 6 17 .261 NKNA YORK, May 13 reived here from Sweden that the Swedes will he i the Panama-Pacific game will send over a strong team. A letter re- o-dav stated ►presented at In 1915. They Monday's Results. Detroit 8. Boston 7. Philadelphia 3, Chicago 0 Washington 2. St. Louis 0. New York 4, Cleveland 3. EMPIRE STATE LEAGUE. Games Tuesday. Valdosta at Cordele. Americas at Waycroas Brunswick at Thomasville. • Standing of the Clubs. W. L. P.C. I W. «. W’cross 7 3 .700 C’dele... 5 Th’vllle. 6 4 .600 I B’wick. 5 f V’dosta 5 5 .500 Amcus 2 8 Monday's Results. Brunswick 2. Thomasville 1. Cordele 7. Valdosta 0. YVaycross 6. Americua o. -» C. .500 .500 .200 GEORGIA-ALABAMA LEAGUE. Games Tuesday. IjA Grange at Anniston. Talladega at Gadsden. Opelika at Newman Standing of the Clubs. \V L. P.C 4 3 571 W. Opelika. 3 l.aGr’gc 2 An'at on 2 L. P.C 4 4L’> Monday’s Results. Anniston )8. LaGrangc *> Opelika 8, Newnar 3 Talladega 5, Gads4k.n 4. Linen, Canvas-or Buck Lovers of Cool, Summerieh Footwear »ay that our assortment of White and Gray Canvas —- White Buckskin and Ecru Linen is the most attractive yet shown— We show these in two or three distinct models, including the much sought English Last— $2.50 h uys a splendid grade of Canvas in White and Gray—Lace only — $3.50 huys a still better grade of Canvas in White and Gray— Button or Lace— $3.50 huys a beautiful quality of Linen—Ecru shade—Lace only— $5.00 b uys a genuine Bucksk in in White — Lace only. $5.00 huys our new Golf Shoe in Tan, Russia Calf---hob nails in sole and heel— Golf Shirts, half sleeve- — $1.50. Long sleeves— $1.00 to $2.50. Norfolk Golf Suits—$20 to $30. Golf Caps $1.00 and $1.50. Parks - Chambers • Hardwick 37-39 Peachtree COMPANY Atlanta, Georgia