Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, May 31, 1913, Image 8

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I A BE SHOT ■ A THING AF THE PAST use SILK HAT HARRY’S D.VORCE SUIT o?o <Timyfl|ht. It 18. Inturi-aUuna) Newt Serflre By “Chirk” Evans C hicago, ill.. May 33.—The brassle shot is becoming more « thing of the past, and by a bras sle Phot I mean any shot after the tee shot has been played that Is too long for the irons. Donald Ross says that three-shot holes are really only names now. Years ago before the advent of the rubber-cored balls the brassle was a very Important club, but since the coming of the new ball its use for the second shot hue con stantly decreased among the more skillful players. It may be explained for the benefit of those new to the game that a bras- sie is really a well-lofted driver with brass-covered sole. Sometimes it is shorter than the driver, but that is a matter of Individual choice. As the ball lies close to the fair green and it is not teed up Ilk© the driver It Is easy to understand that the brass sole Is Intended to prevent the J4A-HA-HA TH£ ■Juuu-t- i Su/U<r A •F-EU-QVA/ PC3 6100,000 DAaaaG-eY For CaU-ooG- him. A DR.Usifc'- AR.& AmO I'M GFTH-t \sj<r\J£^sS- I'm t-o TywvT H-if HCuDR Nfcw Tot/CHei UcrER. - ) ( HE W A1 A/ FV E R- /u A G-ILOETO CAFE AFb— DA*- W IT THtEB-E GC^S Hv/ ~ \ f V club from being injured by the rough ground underlying the fair way. I appealed to Tom Bigelow, the well- known golf authority, for a detailed explanation of the origin of the club and I found the Information very In teresting. "At a certain length from the tee at a certain hole at fit. Andrews,” said Tom. "there was a gravelly out cropping” In consequence the wood en club used for the second shot hud to be constantly repaired. At first the club was mended with a bit of ram's horn, but it was finally de termined to shoe the new club, ns Tom expresses It, to avoid the neces sity of frequent repair. Then some oneetrled a brass plate covering the entire sols, and as this was much more tlurable the innovation at once be came popular and lasting. Brassie Once Useful Club. In the days of the gutta-percha ball the brassle was very useful. In those days bogey was figured at 17fi yards for a drive and 150 for a brassle, and a player getting home on a 325- yard hole was playing remarkable Rolf. Of course there always was a bras sle shot on those 326-yard holes and when winds were a little unfavorable three brasaie shots of good length and direction were needed to help out the drive, it Is hard for us to realise a time when the taking of four wooden shots of the w ell-hit kind was necessary to reach the green. With the change in balls came long er shots and bogey distances moved up. Holes of 40(1 yards were reached with a drive and a good brassle. and at the present moment there are few holes In the country of the recog nized long-hole length. 500 to 600 yards, that cannot be reached with a drive and a brassle. This mentis that different irons have supplanted the brassle on nearly all distances of 450. yards or so, and there are few holes now over that length. So while the brassle could formerly be used on perhaps sixteen out of eighteen holes and then often more , than once. It Is now used probably only once or twice on the round 1 Sometimes on the few long holes where one can use a brassle then are bunkers guarding the green and • the player will find It much safer to * play short with an Iron instead of trying to place a brassle shot Just over the bunker. It's the Driver and Spoon Now. One can play round after round on Chicago golf and use no brassle at all. Even on the windiest day It may not be needed more than three or four times and many players.now carry only a driver and a spoon. Necessarily the decreasing tisc of the brassle Is developing u corre- ipondlng uncertainty In playing It, and perhaps It Is to counterbalance this weakness that aome players are adopting It In the place of the driver They claim they can get just as far and It keeps tluem In practice with the club for use on the fair green; yet, on the other hand, 1 have seen several players use a driver on the fair way. The wooden clubs give advantage to the strong, but they lack the deli cate accuracy of the Irons, and It Is the desire for this accuracy Joined to shorter holes and longer balls that Is depriving the brassle of all Its legitimate use. \j\JM0A'!l' | CAk/T GO TO C0 0R-T MliU0T ( a top pie ce OH GE.6 !!! f>»EP-EE IT CyOES jU&HT /WTO Ttf-AT 5AL.OOM- IT Do for ioeopce to see m£ 'h TytETR-£ r- Folly and Her Pals /f’s Those Little “Incidental” Expenses Copyright, 1913, International News tanc* By Cliff Sterrett I Suppose You HE/Jro 4BOC/T OLD MAU PEPkiuS BuYim A AUlO, YbSILRVA'Y. 5 ID Like'To cmj oub Buy i'm -t'PE/Tm "1 of 'em ! (Good UIGhj] Lr NlA'Sh i r *iddle£t icks! wy A Child KIM DRIVE one of Them * IM&erSou'' Run v4~Bouf£ Like HllHLl E 5 MV D/TTYer Pollyt OUT a lbSTolj in priv'v YHiX /AFTERNOON AM' 5he!s ToNNA LEARN ME. AS" 5he <ooe5 ALoU6l BuT ThE'/re $o HORRiBLy tKPEwSi ye., 5AM ! -a EYpthSe f MV 57/ARS!*. Y Don’t Calu A Lit dASoUHE flow aw “Then EVPEUS& i —\ Do YouT n— OMlfVT W/IK£ PERKiwf! PWOiED? 6r E4T (S/Uf! (Sal , vast I WAYE Vou J Did-T' 1 RAN INTO ONE OF Them Stationary CbF5 OR FiVed on. \>f/H4T EVER, vfoo Call EM "gbT IT Y1M ALL HKI PAuLX “The Bib Boob NEV/ER EVEN TURNED /ROUND WHEN I HoWkED MV HORN' ; Chamber Works for Vital Record Bureau J. A committee on vital statistics from the Chamber of Commerce began work Saturday to throw the weight of its ln- •fluenoe behind the medical societies In •having a State board of vital statistics established. Tlie committee was organ ized with Alfred C. Newell chairman and Dr. Stuart Roberts secretary Dr. J. P, Kennedy, city health officer, who appeared before the committee d that Georgia was one of the four states In the Union that had no leglsla *'on on the subject. Physician Arrested For Patient's Death CHATTANOOGA. TENN., May 31 — I>. 6 Hamilton, of Griffin. Ga , has caused the arrest of Dr. E B Anderson, a prominent physician of this city, rs the result of the death of Horace Ham ilton here May 19. following the admin istration of a dose of phvlacogan The physician will be given a hearing June 5 The case hss attracted attention in national medical circles Jack London’s new story, *‘The Scarlet Plagrue,’’ begins in the American Monthly Magazine given free with every copy of the Sunday American. TINTED LENSES For the mountains or seashore. Have your prescription filled In amber shade for the glare of sum mer sun at John L. Moore A Sons, 42 North Broad Street. Vt Lite oity Park Now Open By Bill Bailey C hicago, ill, May z6—"silk” O’laou&hlln, American League umpire, declares that Albert Russell, the Sox southpaw, has bet ter control than any lefthander who ever broke into the American League “He’s going to be a great pitcher,” said O'Loughlin. “Not only has he control, but he has a lot of stuff on the ball. But his control is the thing that makes a hit with me. 1 do not believe that I ever saw a young lefthander who had the control that he has.” And Russell has control for the reason that he warms up in a way different from almost every other pitcher in the league. Russell works for control from the moment that he gets the ball in his hand until the Anal warmup. Can Place Ball Well. “Four at your waist,” he will say to the catcher. Then he will pitch four at the waist. It doesn't matter so much whether there is anything on the ball. His first Idea is to get those four at the waist. "Now at the knees,” Russell will say. Then he pitches four at the knee. He pitches just as carefully as If there was a man at the plate and he wanted to break the ball at his knee. “Now at the shoulders.” he will fol low. And four are shot at the shoulder. It’s control that he is after. He has an idea that his speed and his curve ball are with him always and that it is the control which will make or break him in the contest to come. Bender Gives Tip. Thief Bender, the star Indian of the \thletics. is another pitcher who warms up that way. And it was from Connie Mack’s Indian that Rus sell got his idea. When the Ath letics were in Texas In 1912 Bender was instructing some of the San An tonio youngsters how to warm up and he insisted that the only way to do was to try for control. Some youngster who was coached by Bender saw the good point of It at once. That isn’t the way the ordinary pitcher warms up by any means. He just throws the ball BASEBALL SUMMARIES SOUTHERN LEAGUE. Games Saturday. Montgomery at Atlanta, Ponce De Leon Two games. First game called at 2:15 o’clock. Memphis at Chattanooga. Mobile iit Nashvilli New Orleans at Birmingham. ia oi W. L. Pc . Mobile. 32 11* 627 l N’ville..26 21 .543 1 X. \ Chatt. .23 24 Mont.. 22 24 Atlanta 24 22 .522 B’ham. 21 23 M’phis 24 22 .522 ' New O. 15 31 .326 in the general direction of the plate. His idea is to start pitching easily at first, then putting more and more speed on until his arm is in condi- tion to permit him to put everything! he has on the sphere. But it’s control first with Russell. Friday’s Results. Atlanta. 13; Montgomery, 2. Memphis. 5; Chattanooga, 4 (first game). Chattanooga, 4; Memphis, 0 (second game) New Orleans. 3; Birmingham, 2 (first game). New Orleans. 6; Birmingham, 12 (sec ond game). Nashville, 7: Mobile 2 (first game). Mobile, 6; Nashville, 1 (second game). NATIONAL LEAGUE. Games Saturday. Brooklyn at Boston. Philadelphia at New York. Chicago at Pittsburg. nils Cincinnati at St. Louis (two games). Standing of the Clubs. W. L. Pc Phila.. 22 10 .6SS B’klyn 20 15 .671 N. Y.. 19 16 .543 Ch'go. 20 19 .613 W. L. Pc. St L... 19 20 .487 P’burg 18 20 .474 Boston 14 19 .424 Cin'ti. 13 26 .333 Friday’s Results. Pittsburg, 2; Chicago, 1. Brooklyn. 2; Boston, 1 (first game). Boston. 7- Brooklyn. 6 (second game). Cincinnati, 5; St. Louis. 3 (first gamer St Louis, 6; Cincinnati, 4 (second game) New York, 8; Philadelphia, 6 (first ga me). New York, 5; Philadelphia, 1 (second game). AMERICAN LEAGUE. Games Saturday. Detroit at Chicago St. Louis at Cleveland. New York at Philadelphia Boston at Washington. Standing o f the Clubs. W. L. Pc. I W. L. V'dosta 17 9 .654 \V’crossl3 13 C’dele. 15 11 .577 B'wick..ll 16 T’ville 13 13 .500 | Am’cus. 9 17 Friday’s Results. Cordele. 9; Thomasville, 2. Americus, 4; Brunswick. 3. Valdosta, 12; Waycross, 2. GEORGIA-ALABAMA LEAGUE. Games Saturday. Newnan at Anniston. LafJrange at Opelika. Gadsden at Talladega. Standing of the Clubs. W. L. Pc G’sden 15 8 .652 T’depa 13 10 .565 Opelika.12 10 .545 W. L. Pc. An’ston.12 11 .522 New nan 11 12 .478 L’Gr'ge. & 17 .221 Friday’s Results. Anniston. 4; Newnan. 3 Opelika, 20, LaGrange. 11. Gadsden, 15; Talladega, 1. Carolina Asoclatlon, Asheville. 6; Winston-Salem, 4. Raleigh, 9; Durham, 4. Charlotte, 6; Greensboro, 1. Appalachian League. Johnson City, 7; Bristol, 5 (first game). Johnson City, 2; Bristol, 0 (second game). Knoxville, 4; Middlesboro, 2 (first game). Knoxville. 5; Middlesboro, 4 (second game). PoeLandmarkSite ForBaseball Field Federal League. Chicago, 2: Cleveland, 1 (first game). Chicago, 4; Cleveland, 3 (second ga me). Covington, 3; Indianapolis, 2 (first game). Indianapolis, 18; Covington, 3 (second game). Cotton States League. Meridian, 4; Jackson. 1. Selma, 4; Clarksdale. 3. Pensacola, 15, Columbus, 0. Standing of the Clubs. W. *0. Phila.. xvi .730 Cl'land 28 12 .700 Wash'n 21 17 553 Ch’go.. 23 19 .548 W. L. Pc Boston 16 21 .432 St. L... 18 27 .400 Detroit 17 26 .395 New Y. 9 27 .250 Friday’s Results. Philadelphia, 3; New York, 3 (first game). Philadelphia, 7; New York, 4 (second game) Washington. 4: Boston. 3 (first game). Boston, 1; Washington, 0 (second game) Detroit, 3; Chicago. 2 (first game) Chicago. 9; Detroit, 1 (second game). Cleveland. 5; St. Louis. 4. SOUTH ATLANTIC LEAGUE. Games Saturday. Charleston at Albany. Macon at Columbus. Jacksonville at Savannah. ZOOTE BEATS M. ATTELL. SALT LAKE CITY. UTAH, May 31.—Ad Zoote, of Stockton. Cal. was given the decision over Monte Attell at the end of a twenty-round bout at Midvale last r.ight. Both fighters weighed in at 118 pouuu* Standing of the Clubs. W. L. Pc. I W. L. S’v’nah 30 7 .811 J’ville. 18 19 Col’bus 19 18 .514 | Ch’ston 13 24 Macon 18 17 .514 i Albany 11 24 Friday t Savannah, 7, Jacksonville. 0. Albany. 4; Charleston, 3. Macon, 4; Columbus. 2. EMPIRE STATE LEAGUE. Games Saturday. Brunswick at Arr.eripus. Thomasville at Cordele. Waycross at Vaxdu.-^ Texas League. Beaumont, 5; San Antonio, 0 Houston, v; Galveston, 2. Waco. 3: Fort Worth, 2. Austin, 6; Dallas, 4. Virginia League. Portsmouth, 8; Norfolk. 3 (first game) Norfolk, 3; Portsmouth, 2 (second game). Richmond. 6: Petersburg. 5. Roanoke, 4; Newport News, 0 (first game). Roanoke, 13; Newport News, 5 (second game). College Games Saturday. Yale vs Princeton, at New’ Haven. Harvard vs. Anderson, at Cambridge. Brown vs. Colby, at Providence Cornell vs. Pennsylvania, at Philadel phia. Navy vs. Army, at West Point. Holy Cross vs. Williams, at Williams- town. HILL STREET SCHOOL WINS. The Hill Street School triumphed over Capitol Avenue, 27 to 9 in a slugfest Friday. Winburn and Gastrell did the heavy clouting. The winners scored sever T-uns in the second and nine in the fourth. WINS PANAMA TITLE. PANAMA. May 31.—Abe Hollander- s’ky. a former New York newsboy, last night won the heavyweight championship of the Panama Canal Zone from Jack Artega on a foul in the ninth round. JOCKEY YORK INJURED. BELMONT PARK, L I.. May 31.— Roth well York. a jockey, was fatally In jured while exercising a horse on the track here. Falling from the saddle. I his foot carp't in the stirrup and he was dragged 40 yards. C LEVELAND, OHIO, May 31.— One hundred thousand dollars In cash Is the bonus that Cleve land business men are reported to have offered the Naps If they can bring the pennant of the American League to this city. The f$ct has not been advertised in Cleveland and will not be until all of the money has been subscribed. But the Cleveland ball players have been told that there is every reason to believe that the full amount will be donated. One of the players told Manager Callahan, of the White Sox, that the winning of the pennant by the Naps would mean the enrichment of every man on the team by $4,000. They figure 25 men in on the division should the plan go through and the Naps should win. NEW YORK, May 33.—Kings bridge Tavern, a landmark of 100 years’ standing and a resort where Edgar Allan Poe used to wait for his manuscripts to come back from unappreciative edi tors, is about to give way to the march of progress. It is on the site of what will be the new American League baseball park next summer, at 226th Street and Broadway, and a gang of laborers has taken possession of the old tavern as a shelter for themselves and their shovels. Efforts of Poe’s admirers to prese-v-' the old tavern for its historical interest failed. NATIONAL COMMISSION REINSTATES PERRYMAN VGHIT. SMS CINCINNATI, May 31.—The National Baseball Commission has declared Player E. K. Perryman, of the New York Na tional League club, to be in good stand ing. The player stated that he did not report to his club this spring owing to his desire to complete his college course and therefore no penalty was In flicted By Ed W Smith RAFAEL ALMEIDA WANTS TO BECOME A PITCHER THIS would be the largest purse 1 ever split by a baseball club, and that regardless of whether the Naps were victorious In the world’s cham pionship series or not. Incidentally this may reveal anoth er reason why those Cleveland play ers are battling so hard for every game. Winning a pennant is a whole lot. It means a part of the world’s series money, but add 5100,000 to the sum to be won in the big series and you have a purse that almost any fellow would strive with might and main to win. r J'HAT the men are fighting hard to win that pennant is a certainty. Clark Griffith, manager of the Sena tors, went out of town claiming the Naps were playing “dirty” ball to 'vin. There has been nothing to in dicate that in the games between the Sox and the Nape. T-.'t the Sox do know that the Cleveland lads are showing considerable more fight than they ever have before. TOLEDO GETS DAVY JONES FROM MANAGER CALLAHAN CLEVELAND, OHIO, May SI—The Sox yesterday heard that Davy Jones would be with them no more. They weren't a bit surprised. They ex pected it and were interested only in knowing where he was going. Nor was there any surprise expressed when told that he had been sent to Toledo. When Shaller made good Jones wa's doomed. Callahan took Jones from Detroit only that he might pro tect his outfield. The South S'de manager wasn't either long or strong on fly chasers and isn't yet. so far as that goes. So when waivers were asked on Davy he grabbed him. GASTON TO ST. LOUIS. COLUMBUS, GA. May 31—Dave Gaston, who has been a bone of con tention in the Sally League fur past several months, and whom Co lumbus wanted this season, is on his way to St. Louis, where he goes to sign a contract with John O’Con nors team in the Federal League. CINCINNATI. May 31—Rafael Al meida, the Reds' Cuban fielder, is practicing pitching and thinks In time he will get to be quite a hurler. He Is working out every day with Kling and Brown, who are giving him the benefit of their expert advice and coaching. Almeida says that all he needs is practice enough to insure his having control. He claims that his curve ball will fool the cleverest hitters if he can get it over. That's a big “if” with a whole lot of pitchers. BRITISH GOLFERS WILL BE HERE NEXT AUGUST NEW YORK, May 31.—Edward Ray and Harry Varden, the present and former open golf champions of Great Britain, respectively, will be in this country as early as the middle ■ of August, according to word received at the Shawnee Country Club. The famous Britons will make their first appearance in this country as competitors in the Shawnee tourna ment, August 22 and 23. Later they are expected to go to the Pacific coas to give an exhibition match, receiving $2,500 each. LEAVE FOR GOLF TOURNEY. COLUMBUS. GA.. Mav 31—A team composed of L. D. Hill, Dr. G. S. Murray. Joe Methvin, Charles Hick man, Marshall Morton and C. E. Bat tle will go over to Montgomery, Ala., to-morrow to be ready for the open ing of the annual Southern Golf As sociation tournament In that city .Tune 3-7. They will represent the Country Club of Columbus. C HICAGO. May 31—Though Luth er McCarty, the powerful young boxer who dropped dead In the Calgary arena last Saturday, was a care-free, indifferent young man on the surface; he was sensi tive to criticism and read all the sto • ries that were written about him with the deepest attention. He never said much about the criticisms that were heaped upon him in the East because of Billy McCarney’s unpopularity with certain people there, but that they af fected him keenly Is well known to his close friends. As a matter of fact, McCarney is outspoken In say ing that McCarty never was the same after their recent campaign in the East, during which the big Nebraska athlete was roasted severely. “I’ve seen McCarty In tears after reading some of the unjust and un true things that were said of him," McCarney told me a couple of days after the contest that resulted In such a hideous manner. "I won't say exactly that this has tened his end, but I do know that he grieved deeply over the cruel things that were printed, especially in the East. While training for the Frank Moran bout in New York some of the worst things imaginable, and all of them absolutely without founda tion in truth, were printed about him. “For instance, it was sent out over the country broadcast that we had been ordered to leave a New York hotel because Luther walked through a corridor with nothing on but his fighting togs and a bathrobe on his way to and from "the arena. There wasn't a particle of truth in the story, yet until right now t never took the trouble to deny it. “The hotel people were indignant and wanted to make a statement, but I couldn't see It. The proprietor told us when we were leaving we could always return there and be welcome. "That’s merely a sample of the out rageous yarns that drifted into the papers. A11 of them affected the boy keenly, and he would grieve for hours over them. He worried a lot. “There never was a grain of fear in this man's make-up. He was a bundle of courage and liked the honor of the thing above all else. He was none too careful of his money and spent it freely, but not In what might be called a foolish manner." LED0UX ARRIVES; WANTS GO WITH JOHNNY C0UL0N NEW YORK, May 31.—Charley Ledoux, the French bantamweight champion, who arrived here yesterday from France, wants bouts with Kid Williams, of Baltimore, or Johnny Coulon, the champion. Pimples Should Be Watched May be Means of Absorbing Disease Germs in Most Un expected Manner, Make Your Blood Pure and Immune With S. S. S. GRIFFITH MAKES BET. WASHINGTON, May 31—Man ager Griffith has bet Ray Morgan and Walter Johnson a suit of clothes apiece that he would not speak to another umpire on the field in any championship game. HILTON RETAINS TITLE. ST. ANDREWS, SCOTLAND, May 31.—Harold H. Hilton, of the Royal Liverpool Golf Club, won the world's amateur golf championship, beating Robert Harris, of Acton, England, by six up and five to play over a 36-hole course. This is the fourth time Hil ton has held the title. “CHICK" GANDIL TO MOVE. WASHINGTON. May 31—Chick Gandil, of the Senators, has decided to take up his residence in Washing ton immediately upon the close of the baseball season. Gandil lived for years in Louisiana. FAST TIME EY DREW. BANGOR. MAINE. May 31—The timekeepers gave Howard T. Drew, the Springfield, Mass., runner, a mark of & 3-5 seconds in the 100-yard dash vhich he won at the games of the ! ld Town Athletic Association yes terday. The world renowned laboratory of the Swift Specific Company has col lected a vast amount of Information regarding the spread of blood dis eases. In thousands of Instances the most virulent types have been the re sult of coming In contact with dis ease germs in public places, and the apparently insignificant pimple has been the cause. It spreads with as tonishing rapidity, often Infecting the entire system in a few days. It is fortunate, however, that there Is a remedy to cope quickly and thor oughly with such a condition, and thanks to the energy of Its producers i the famous S. S 5. may now be had i i at almost any drug store In the civil- 1 i tzed world. | This preparation stands alone as a , blood purifier. It is somewhat revo- i lutionary In Its composition, since It accomplishes all that was ever claim ed for mercury. Iodides. arF»nic and , other destructive mineral drugs and | yet It is absolutely a purely vege- | table product. It oontains one Tn- i gredient which serves the active pur- 1 Pose of stimulating each tiny cellu- I lar part of the tissues to the healthy ! and Judicious selection of Its own i essential nutriment. There are more 1 cases of articular rheumatism, looo- ! motor ataxia, paresis, neuritis and similar diseases resultant from the ; use of minerals than most people are aware of. These facts are brought out in a highly Interesting book oom- -CC*. tfl ® medical department of The Swift Specific Co, 13, Swift Bldg Atlanta, Ga It is mailed free to gether with a special letter of advice , to all who are struggling with a bl«3 i disease. 1 Get a bottle of S. S. 8. to-day of ! your druggist. It will surprise you with its wonderful action in the blood. 1