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THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS.
GREAT DREAD
IF
By Otto C. Floto.
P ACKEY McFARGAND Is out
again with the statement that
he will not make weight for
any man living “I think I am a light
weight. and if any of the men of that
clase meet me It will be at practi
cally catch weight*—by which I mean,
pay 135 pounds at 3 o'clock on the day
of battle. That's near enough to the
lightweight poundage for me "
And still 1 have it from one who
knows that if McFarland would real
ly agree to train he could make the
133-pound limit, which, after all, is
BASEBALL
Diamond News and Gossip
W*
the official weight of the class. I
sonallv. i have my doubts and don't
believe he can do any v such low-
weight and be "right, and fit," and a
man who enters a battle unless well
prepared for it is a fool. No one has
ever yet accused I'arkey of being in
any way weak in his business train
ing
The real truth of the matter is that
Packev has a dread fear way down
deep in his heart. It haunts him every
time he thinks of it, and for that rea
son refuses to “make weight." McFar
land fears the awful "white plague."
He is under the impression that
a pugilist who continually trains and
battles is heir to it, and all the argu
ment In the world can't shake this
conviction from his mind. That's the
real truth, and the why and where
fore that keeps Packey from agree
ing to the 133-pound notch.
• • •
have before us the names oft
three victims—three of the mosti
w-onderful champions that ever lived
—who were carried away by the great
est foe the flesh must combat. Mc
Farland has probably read the old
volumes of Flstiana and learned these
things for himself—else why this hor
rible dread of reducing whenever ask
ed to do so? Thero arc many more
of the fighting brigade that exited
out of this old world with the cough,
but three will be sufficient to men
tion.
First and foremost we have Tom
Sayers, the greatest man of his weight
and inches that England ever pro
duced. And at the time of his hold
ing the championship Britannia rul
ed the world in pugilism. Sayers,
never much more than a middle
weight, fought all the heavies they
brought to him. Only Itob Fitzsim
mons, in our time, could he compar
ed to him. Sayers was only defeat
ed once, and that hv Nat Langham.
his battle with Heenan being a draw.
Sayers died from tuberculosis before
he had reached his fortieth year. Con
stant training preparing for battle
hastened his death.
• • •
T HEN there was Peter Jackson, the
wonderful Australian and without
any doubt whatever the greatest
heavyweight that ever lived. True,
Peter was not forced to “make
weight,” but he was required to train,
and in doing so trained away a lot of
vitality whic h brought about his sick
ness, and add to this the fact that ho
continually exposed himself to the
weather.
It’s only a few years ago that Joe
Gann went by the same route. Noth
ing more than his constant reducing
to make the required weight brought
on the dreaded plague to (Jans. He
drew upon Nature to so great an ex
tent in reducing away the flesh that
should have remained on his frame,
that the old machine of flesh and
bones cracked under the strain, and
he passed away, barely having gone
over the 30-year line.
So with Sayers and Jackson it was
the constant grind of getting into
shape, while with (Jans it was ridding
himself of muscle and strength. The
end of all these three great chain
pions was the same, however, and
brought about by the same methods
It is the dread" of this occurrence that
has struck fear into the heart of
McFarland, and that's why he won't
tackle the job.
• * »
A ND yet Packey is determined to
battle the men who agree to live
up to the rules and make the pound
age the official code calls for. So then
he cannot be classed as a lightweight.
There cannot be made any exceptions
for one man without making the same
concession to all If 133 pounds is too
light for that division—and Wolgast,
Nelson, Rivers and other champions
declare it is NOT—then we will have
to establish a new weight.
But suppose we make the mark 13a
pounds. What then? Along would
come some boy who couldn’t make
it. but could scale dow n to 137 pounds.
Wouldn’t he have the same right to
demand battles against lightweights
as McFarland demands now? Of
course he would, and the first thing
we know the lightweight limit will he
soaring somewhere around the 140-
pound level.
A 140-pound man comes pretty near
to knocking for admission to the wel
terweight. set. and our lightweight
patron 1 * would b« eliminated from any
standing at all. They’d be like a man
without a country—too light for the
140-pound men and too heavy for the
featherweights.
“.lawn'' McGraw, boss of the Giants,
is a very, very peeked gentleman these
days. "Jawn, ' who has taken to writ
big pieces for the papers, solemnly de
clared a few days back that the Cardi
nals wrr«> traveling far ahead of their
speed, intimated they were flashes in
the pan, and emphasised the fact that
Just as soon as the Cardinals went
hgainst a good team they would be s<.
badly beaten that undertakers would
have a difficult little Job assembling
their frames for burial.
• • •
To date, the Giants have dashed twice
j with the Cardinals—and twice the <‘ar-
dials have won. McGraw sicked
Mathewson and Tesreau. his two star
(lingers, on to the St Louis boys with
the result that the Cardinals knocked
Matty out of the box and then turned
around and trimmed Tesreau in rather
easy fashion The Cardinals are now
within one point of third place.
• * •
Walter Johnson, the “Mighty Swede."
isn't a Swede ut all. It has been dis
covered that .Johnson, although ho did
come from Minnesota, which turns out
nearly as many Swedes as does Sweden,
Ik «»f Scotch-Irish parentage.
• • •
Over In Brooklyn they are forming
lynching parties to-day for the pur
poso of stringing Klem, an umpire per
son, to a very high tree. Klein gave
some decisions yesterday that were
weird—then some. And all of them j
were against the Dodgers, who eventu
ally lost the game.
CHRISTY MATHLWSON'S
BIG LEAGUE GOSSIP
N i:\V YORK, May The Athletics still steadily maintain their winning pace In the
American I.oague with a persistence which looks as if they would surely take the pen
nant. Washington has encountered considerable hard luck, and the club of Griffith
ha- fallen off the monstrous pace at which It started the season, largely because the tw r o ends
nf the Washington infield have tieeu in the game only irregularly. Cleveland is the surprise
of the race. „
The Washington club has I wo weaknesses at present. One is the pitching staff, outside
of Walter Johnson, and the other is the torn up infield, which takes away the normal speed of the team. If
Johnson could pitch every day there would not Is 1 any question raised In the American League about which
club will win the pennant. That would 1st settled now. But Johnson cannot pitch every day, and an argument
therefore remains in the league. Besides Johnson, no other Washington pitcher has shown exceptional form this
exception of
Sporting Food
1
-By GEORGB S. PHAIF
at
year, with the possibl
Broome, who is an inund-oute
Itest.
“(live me one airtight pitcher.”
Griffith used to wall constantly when
he was managing the Cincinnati club,
"and I will win a pennant."
T
HEY gave him about the airlight-
liave hurt the Washington team's
chances for the pennant, although 1
believe it still has a look-in. The sea
son is young, and the Athletics may
have an attack of Injuries. “Connie”
Muck’s pitchers don’t look any too
good anyway, outside of Bender and
Blank. And Griffith is still asking
for a pitcher.
I one in the business when he, “Give me one airtight left-hander,”
joined out with Washington, and he says now. And in the next breath,
dan If he didn’t almost grab the "There Is no such animal at large.
ting. Then this year, when it looked I
Washington boys. His strength lies
in his pitchers and Lajoie and Jack
son. The rest of the team has not the
rttggedness to make a tough tight of it
for the pennant.
T'
HE Athletics, of course, are the
class of the American League
to date, and are liable to remain the
class of it indefinitely, from all indi
cations. I do not see any club that
can Iteat them out of the pennant
.. . , i , The team is moving at its old time
the one hand, the Cleveland speed an(] the play | r8 are awake to
plonsltlp, roster, me young — dub is the sensation of.the tlio fact that thev must keep hustling.
m r c? ft hll l 1 Jm% P s U y«*ferd U ay tW *m i'mling thtrd-bn-email whom Griffith Imil American League, and, on the_other: None of , he oW listlessness which
throe doublet, a triple anti a home rur
no*;. in''* ii" " ” v v f
ns if lu* bad his ho t chance to take (1
the championship. Foster, the young v - y <*b
Uravath headed the swatter* with five
hits out of as many times at the bat.
Incidentally the Phillies garnered twelve
runs while the Reds drew nine goose
« gRH.
• • *
The White Sox engineered one of the
greatest ninth inning rallies of the sea
son yesterday, scoring six runs, brtt
their rally fell short and the Red Sox
•won the game. 10 to it
4 » m
The two straight defeats of the Dodg
er? and the two victories of the Phillies
hfftve widened the gap between the teams
to .nearly 100 points, and it looks an If
the dream of the Brooklyn fans of first
placd honors from the old league won't
come- true for a week or so, at least.
• * *
Those who believe In the spring
showing of ball teams as a basis for
doping’’ out the outcome of the pen
nant races, may witness the following:
The Giants took the measure of prac
tically {-very team they played during
the training series, yet they have had
a mighty task in tvinning fifteen out of
twenty nine league games. The Phillies,
who were the easiest propositions struck
hv any team during the soring games
and who were extended the heartfelt
sympathy of the sporting fraternity,
have won' nineteen out of twenty-six
combats.
whom Griffith
raised and carved out into a bik' hand, as the orators say, the Boston i beat the club last year is apparent
leaguer, was taken ill with typhoid team is the big surprise of the race’fhj K season. I do not see who can
fever and will In* out of the game for to date. The Cleveland boys are I s top them. Mack has two veteran
several weeks. Gandi), the first base startling because of their unexpected |
man who has done so well for the j good showing! and the Boston Red j
Washington club, was injured some j Sox, champions of the world, because |
of their surprisingly poor display. 1
tfme ago, and is out of the game.
(Mark Griffith asserts that, it was
Gandil who put the teaiu^on a win
ning basis last summer. One good!
player, filling up a weak spot, will
often do this for a club. The Wash
ington team had liecn badly tieaten by
the Yankees in a series last spring.
pitchers who are reliable, Plank and
Bender, and he can piece out his
pitching from the rest of the staff
for the remainder of the games.
JOYFUL GLOOM.
John Ever* said to Frank Leroy \
"It given me, bitter pain, old boy.
To nee your athletes in the rut;
l hate to see you losing, but—
I told you so!”
Raid Frank Leroy to Keystone John :
“You're looking worn and weak and
wan.
It fills tny bosfffn with regret
To see you Ofi the slide, and yet—
/ told you so!”
They had a feeling of relief
To see each other deep in grief.
They gloried in each other's pain.
And so they sang this sweet refrain :
"I told you so!”
Looking over Mr. Chance’* alleged
baseball team, we find that all he needs
to strengthen his infield Is a net.
Those Red Sox may be champions of
the world, hut an innocent bystander is
led to believe that they are trying to
keep it a secret.
Players in the American Association
have taken up the practice of clouting
each other with bats. Up to date, none
of the umpires has taken it upon him
self to Interfere.
Watching a motorcycle race is much
| like watching an aviation meet. Some
1 times it fizzles out without an accident.
CONCERNING A B. B. MAGNATE.
And still they gazed, and still the.
wonder grew 9
That one small man could throw the
bull he threw.
ENTRY LIST IS REOPENED
FOR HILLCLIMB SATURDAY
E. H. Elleby, secretary of the Atlanta
Automobile and Accessories Association,
received word Wednesday that the en
try list for the Stewart Avenue Hill
Climb could be re-opened owing to the
postponement.
This permission was granted by the
American Automobile Association under
whose sanction the event is going to
be run.
A Buick, another Ford and others will
enter in the fully equipped cars, ama
teur event, and there will probably be
several other entries in the other events.
The climb was scheduled for last Sat
urday, hut owing to the downpour was
postponed a week.
M he auto classic, which is the second
under the auspices of the Atlanta Au
tomobile and Accessories Association, is
attracting wide attention.
Fully 3.000 persons lined the course
last week to witness the event, and it
is expected that that many more will be
on hand this Saturday.
Fast time has been made in the trials
this week, and it is confidently expected
that the time will be lowered in several
of the events.
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AGENT8 wanted everywhere. MMte
for particular* tc-day. 1
Birmingham seems to lie a natural- That club will absorb a lot of bail
horn manager, one of tlie few any
where in the world. As a makeshift,
lie took hold of the team last year
after it had all the heart beaten out
of it by nearly every club In the
American League, and he gave Cleve-
pttching and still win bail
because it hits so hard.
ga mes,
The allhl architects (some times
known as New York sport writers) have
resumed operations tn-day. They blame
the "in" and "out#’ work of the Giants
to lark of hitting, poor hase running,
fielding errors and the poor condition of
the, pitchers They assert, however, that
except for these few minor dereais, the
Giants are playing a fine game of base
ball
* * •
Outfielder Cree was the only Yankee
to secure a hit off Pitcher Earl Hamil
ton. ot the Browns, yesterday.
• * *
The Braves maule five runs in the
eightinning yesterday, but fell one
short of the total anassed by the Cuba.
« „ .
Williams, a pinch hitler for the Sena
tors. tied up the senrre with a home run
tn the ninth inning, yesterday and his
learn bent out the Napa In the tenth
frame.
• * *
O'Rourke, the Buffalo third hnsemnn.
is hatting .108 this season. Ty Cobb,
please write.
• • •
It seems that Paul Rented can't stay
out of the Southern league. As utility
man he ought to help the Finns But
suppose he and Mike start quarreling!
• * *
Well, anyhow, if the Giant-Sox tour
goes through it will keep a lot of ham
actors off the stage next fall.
• * ♦
Joe Tinker says that one of the chief
reasons why he wouldn't give Rube
Benton and $5,000 for Pitcher Beck, of
Nashville, la that he never heard either
of Beck or Nashville.
• * *
Fred Bender, brother of “Chief,'' may
get a try-out with the Naps.
Is he a pitcher?
No, he's an Indian.
• * *
The police in Newark have to pro
tect the umpires these days If New
Orleans newspapers don’t show a little
sense the same thing will be true in
the Crescent City.
• * •
Roy Mitchell, of the Browns, got by a
nine-inning game with 87 thrown balls
Sunday Economical Roy.
* * *
What do you know about Baron Kent-
zer, of the Dodgers. He's still holding
i out.
• * *
George Stallings hasn’t yet been
thrown out of a National League park.
They say it was not always thus when
the Georgian was In the International
League.
• * •
Doc • Adkins, the pitcher released by
Baltimore, will take up the practice of
law at Durham. N. C.
• * *
A fan in Boston recently collected
$100 on a $5 bet that Boston would win
four straight from Pittsburg The thing
hadn't happened before in 11 years.
T 1
UR condition of the Beil Sox.
which deserves some expert at-
, , ^ tention, Is not to be explained easily,
and the dull scorned to I>e going to land tin* first good btiaeboll that it There tin* the sridp men who won
pieces rapidly. Griffith got on a has watched in several years. With championship of the world, but
train on Saturday night with Mon- practically the sgme men that worked. team is all off its balance. The
treaI ns ids destination. b*r tin* club Inst year, Birmingham pitchers who (lid such remarkttble
"I made up my mind, snld Gril lias sot his team up in the fight for W ork last year are not pitching any
fith, in telling about the purchase t he pennantstiffs time. Even with the p a jj at a jj* season. Of course,
later, “that something had to be done I mighty Frenchman, Lajoie, out of the some of mv readers may advance the
and done quickly to plug that hole at ; lineup* they ga\e the Athletics a \ery argument that I think the Giants and
first base it fin* team was to in* kept still argument in the series last week. Pittsburg still have a chance for the
tnmi falling out of the league. I paid j * * * .. . . . pennant in the National league, yet
$!J.0OP to the Montreal club for Can V t*'" Yankees, considered to be L ey hoth ?et away t0 hm , s tarts.
tlil at ii time when Hie WnshiiiKton j 1 the easiest team In the league That is true. -But the Giants and
nutnfij.'emetil could ill afford to spend and ns welcome anywhere as an in- pirates have not such clubs as the
that amount of money, it was just heritanee, upset the Naps badly. By Athletics and Washington to overtake,
after Gandil Joined the team wo start a study of the Cleveland club, it as have the Red Sox. The Boston
od our winning streak which ran up j strikes me that Birmingham has a team will finish in the first division,
to seventeen games, and we got the; very small chance of beating out the where It normally belongs, but I do
purchase*price hack many times dur year. Without Foster and Gandil no t believe it has better than a very
im,' tills victorious spell. Gandil had (the Washington infield is badly slow- outside chance for the championship,
rounded out the infield.” ; ed up. Laporte, who is taking Fos- ft j s below its regular residence in
* * * , iter's place, is exceptionally slow on j the standing of the clubs now as it
f~* HIFI' ITI1 S game 1ms been speed. i,js f.o-t. These two missing players wag above it last season.
V 1 It was the speed that won the Athletics, ami it would surprise me (Copyright , 1913i by the McClure New*-
games for tin* Washington club last | greatly to see him finish above the J paper Syndicate.)
Some men spend their time shooting at
clay birds, demonstrating how little
some men think of time.
Umpiring an amateur ball game in our
fair city affords a pleasant pastime—to
the bystanders.
OTTO JORDAN DRAWS
INDEFINITE SUSPENSION
WAYCROSS, GA., May 22.—Ottor Jor
dan, former manager of Atlanta's South
ern League team, was to-day indefi-
nately suspended because of his conduct
in Brunswick yesterday, when he was
ut out of the game by Umpire Bennett
3an is manager of the Valdosta If
the
put out of the game by Ump:
Jordan is manager of the Valdosta Ifm
pire League team and feels that
suspension is unwarranted.
Olympic Champions
May Compete Here
Kohlemainen and McDonald are
Pleased at Invitation of
Portola Committee.
NEW YORK, May 22.—In a loiter
to the athletic committee of the Por
tola Festival received yesterday, Jas.
K. Sullivan, secretary of the Amateur
Athletic Union, conveys the informa
tion that he has delivered the invita
tion of the Portola Committee to Pat
McDonald and Hannes Kohlemainen.
the athletes whose presence is desir
ed at the athletic games to be held in
connection with the celebration.
Although the athletes will not be
able to answer the invitation defi
nitely. Sullivan writes that they will
do the best they can to make the
trip, and states that both men were
greatly pleased to be asked. McDon
ald is the shot putter who won the
16-pound event at the Olympic games
in Stockholm, defeating Ralph Rose,
and was in turn defeated by Rose in
the two-handed shot-put contest.
Should he visit San Francisco in Octo
ber, local followers of athletics will
yhave an opportunity to see the two
greatest weight putters in the world in
competition.
Kohlemainen proved himself to be
the greatest amateur distance runner
In the tvorld at the Stockholm games,
aVia it is proposed to arrange a spe
cial two-mile invitational race if he
is able to be present at the Portola
sports.
The plans for a land and water re
lay race from Sacramento to San
Fronciscb on the opening day of the
festival have met with an enthusias
tic reception from the athletes of the
•Young Men’s Christian Associations
and the high schools, and the event
promises to be an interesting one.
AUSTRALIAN NET PLAYERS
PRACTICING IN BOSTON
BOSTON, May 22—The Australian
tennis players, Captain Stanley M.
Doust, Horace Bice, Aubrey' B. Jones
and Manager E. W. Hicks, arrived here
for ten days’ practice on the courts
of the Lon gw 004 Cricket club.
Later in the week the American ten
nis team, Maurice E. McLoughlih, of
San Francisco; Norris William, of Phil
adelphia, and >1. H. Hackett and R. D.
Little, of New York, will appear at
Longwood. While the players will not
meet on opposite sides of the net, they
will give exhibition matches during
their stay. Each side will, therefore,
have a chance of seeing the other in
action ten days before the first of their
White City Park Now Open
international matches in the prelimi
nary round for the Davis cup.
BASEBALL
TO-DAY
MOBILE vs. ATLANTA
Ponce Deleon Park o ’Clock
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R. L. BAYLOR, Division Passenger Agent, 1 Peachtree Street, Atlanta.
Write for beautifullv illustrated booklet on “The Land of the Sky.” Specially reduced fares for summer.
Liberal stop-overs. Besides America’s most charming; all-year-round vacation district. Southern Railway System
embraces territory offering unusually remunerative investment in fruit culture, farming and manufacturing.
Ask the “white
coat” boys at the
ball park fora
bottle of
The drink that
kills the “grouch”
That pleasing, deli
cious and wholesome
drink you get for a 5-
cent piece in bottles
at all drink stands and
ball parks.
wholesome
refreshing
stimulating
5
c in steril
ized bottles
Made by the Red Rock
Company, Atlanta