Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, June 02, 1913, Image 8

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8 THE ATLANTA GEOTJfJIAX AN7> NEWS FINS BELIEVE CHIPPFLLE DUE Tl 1 Silk Hat Harry’s Divorce Suit • • • • Copyright, 1011, International N«wa Kerrlca • • • • Doctor’s Orders---Thipt’s All By Percy IT. Whiting. it TSiG Bill Chappelle, if they giv** |j him the chance, is going to be the sensation of the Southern Teague Reason," says an Old-Time P'an (No, they never wt*nt their names used but this one is a genuine w i*<* guy). “He in going to be the Bartley, the Maxwell and the Demane of the 1913 season." • • • \ ND it might happen. Stranger things have. For instance, take the historic caae of Bill Bartley. Wil liam w.is a grand looking pitcher once—so good that even Connie Mack liked him and carted him around awhile. He was a fine, big, handsome blue-eyed, ladies'-day-hero sort of a chap hut lie didn’t have a lot of stuff, it seemed. Bill dropped back to the Eastern League but he didn’t show a lot there and Charley Frank, who had owned his services before, grabbed him. Frank gave him a thorough trial and then passed this verdict: •’All Bill Bartley lias left is his looks." And then he sold him to Bill Smith. Atlanta manager. That was in 1909. when BiU was putting up a great fight for the pennant, but he was in some thing the same fix a* this year. Bill had everything but pitchers. ’The league figured it a fine joke that Frank had played on Bill Smith. They chuckled over it mightily. Xobodv knows what hapj»ened hut Bartley came to life the day he hit Atlanta. With good support he couldn’t lose a game. For the whole season he piled up a mark of 19 won and 11 lost. But several of his de feats came before Smith bought him. The rest caine after the pennant was cinched. While the battle was at its warmest he hardly lost a game. Not even Johns and Fisher did more than Bartley !n cinching the rag. * * • C ONSIDER then the case of Bert Maxwell. The tall Arkansas chap got a big league trial and was turn ed back to the Southern where he was kicked around like a second hand football. Atlanta had him in 1909 but he couldn’t make it here and was tum<Kl over to New Orleans, where he did little. He stuck there the rest of 1909. all of 1910 and part of 1911. And all the while he was going bad. Then he was handed to Birmingham for a song. Right then Maxwell came to life. No pitcher the league ha* ever known showed more stuff He was tfi< reigning sensation. And so good did he look that the Giants bought him for a stiff price. He showed but little for McGraw and was turned over to the International 1/eague, where he has since remained. He wasn’t “good’' for long, but while be was he made a punk ball club look great. • * ♦ C 'OMING down to more recent times there is the celebrated case of AI Demarce. He couldn’t show anything much for Chattanooga and the Cr&ek ers thought so little of him that af ter they gal him on a deal they didn’t trouble to have him report. l^ast year Deinaree went to Mobile. He didn’t have a lot of team behind him. but he set the league ablaze anti transformed the naturally weak Gulls into a dangerous team. * * • ^JOTlCE the similarity between these eases and that of Bill Chap- pelle. Bill has been to the big leagues He has looked good but per formed indifferently for several clubs of the league. He is shifted to At lanta when the team is in distress True. Chappelle hasn’t set the league to smoldering yet. but he hasn’t pitched a bad game for the Crackers, and he stems ready to win a bunch of them when he gets the right sup port Chappelle has the size and the strength to he a great pitcher There never was any question about his “speed" and he has a lot of other stuff besides. Rut somehow he hasn't fitted into any of the teams he has been with lately. Rill Smith and his players believe that Chappelle is sure to be one of the sensations of the season. Maybe so, maybe not It would help a lot If he happened to get go ing right. And. as was remarked before, strati ger things have happened. NER HONOR I POUNJO THIS W\frN 0Witt THE iu FLOOENCE Or L-ICedR AMf> WER^ HE IS ( viaM0 OROCS-fc-fc THEVA'’ jounces or MINT JUtEP '/j. P/nt or SADIE'S-A - j prop s BRANlW * N 60 ATS MlLtf. Uounces or DON’T SCRATCH If you only knew how quickly and eaalty i Totterln* cur** tvEema. evwi wh«*re everything i else falls, you wouldn't suffer and scratch. Tetterine Cures Eczema Road what Mrs. Thomas Thonuwou, Clarkes > Tille. fla.. aaya I suffered fifteen year* with tormenting eczema. Mad the beet doctor*, but nothing did me an> good until I got Tetterine It rured me. I am so thankful. , Ringworm, ground Itch, itching idles and other , skin troubles yield as readily Get It today — » TetUrine. 50c at druggists, or by mall. !?!**_-CO! .__SAVANNAH. GA. 606 SALVARSAN 914 Neo Salvarsan The two celebrated German preparations that have cured per manently more cases of syphilis or blood poison in the last two years than lias been cured in the history of the world up to the time of this won derful disco very Come and let me demonstrate to you how I cure tlds dreadful disease In ihres to five treat- I cure the following diseases or make no charge Hydrocela. vari cocele, Kidney. Bladder and Frost at io Trouble. Lost Manhood. Stricture, Acute and Chronic Gonorrhea, and all nervous and chronic diseases of men and women Free consultation and examination Hours. Pa m to < p m.. Sunday 9 to I DR. J. D. HUGHES 16' 2 North Broad St.. Atlanta, Qa. Opposite Thied National Bank. [ OF GOLF COURSE AMONG HILLS By “Chick” Evans. A BOUT twenty miles north of the city of Detroit, on the road be tween Detroit and Pontiac, are the beautiful Bloomfield Hills. De troit itself is situated on a bit of fiat land and for that reason these hills come upon one in the nature of a surprise. Two years ago a golf club was formed by some sport-lov ing citizens of Detroit and a site for the course was selected out among the Bloomfield Hills. A great deal of money has been spent on the links; tlie course has been gradually worked into excellent shape and from a scenic standpoint, few places excel It. The course can be conveniently reached either by the Interurban, which runs through these hills from Detroit on the way to Pontiac, or by an automobile or carriage. As it happened to be my lucky day, l went out to *he course a few weeks ago in an automobile with Thomas Neal. Joel Stbckurd, Standish Backus and Gilbert Waldo, who is known as “the man who beat Hilton.” The ride was un especially pleasant one. through tlie residence part of the city, then past large automobile factories and finally a delightful run through a little real country. Soon the road, which I was told had been rising im perceptibly ever since we left the city, made a bold &lope upward and we found ourselves among the hills, and on every side were beautiful houses with spacious lawns. At last, through a little valley. I saw the club house, gayly bedecked with flags, and 1 heard irregularly across the hills the strains of munio. Then we turned up a little driveway and found our selves in full view of the golf club on Its formal opening day. Fine View From Club House. The club house i« new and situated on an eminence, and from every side it commands beautiful views of hill and valley and handsome residences It was a vision to make glad the heart of any golfer, and the wanderer from Chicago, after doing full Justice to a delicious luncheon, fairly jumped into his golfing clothes and made for the links. The first three holes were long and a bit strenuous. They were two wood en shots and brasste for me, and then came a shorter hole The third hole presents an apple orchard as an un usual carry from the tee Fancy driv ing across that orchard pink with bloom In the spring, or of sending a ball crashing through fruit in au tumn. The seventh is one of the best nat ural holes I ever saw Tlie tee is set in the woods and the drive is out and through a widening avenue of trees, and then there is a hill with a plateau which covers the right hand half and another a little farther up which covers the left-hand side The good and daring driver plays to carry onto this plateau, but the player who pulls too much runs off and the one who cannot reach ends up in a hollow The next shot is just a vary ing mashie chip. Links Not Yet Bunkered. Of course the links are not trapped or bunkered yet and. therefore, not a green is guarded nor is a pulled or sliced shot penalized. Another bad feature is the nearness of the holes and the paralleling which permits wide tee shots to land unpenalized on another course. It seems to me that there are too many blind holes. It might be a good idea to force the player of a poor shot to make a blind one. but the good player should have a fair chance to show his skill. It was interesting to look over the Bloomfield Hills course and see that H. S. Colt had been there. For a moment, as 1 looked at the stakes that mark suggested improvements, I thought I was back on Chicago Golf At the seventh hole Mr. Colt advises the digging away of the faces of two hills to make hazards. The ninth is a difficult and pretty hole ending near the club house anil the eighteenth gives a long finishing hole direoHy in front of the club house Detroit has some excellent golfers and in their company my day on the beautiful Bloomfield links was a very enjoyable one. Tff*r ‘Cuiitj Opium, Whiikty *nd Drug Habit* (rtttrd ■t Horn* or at Sanitarium. Book on subject Fret. DR ». M. WOOLLEY, J4*N. ?l«Wi , r* i , BASEBALL SUMMARY Results of Every Game of Im portance Played Yesterday. SOUTHERN LEAGUE. Games Monday. Atlanta at Nashville. Mobile at Memphis New Orleans at Montgomery Birmingham at Chattanooga. Standing of the Clubs. Mobile N’vllle M'phls Atlantf W. L 34 19 26 22 24 23 24 24 Pc. 042 . 542 ,f.ll .600 W L. B'gham 22 23 Ohatta 23 24 M g'ery 23 26 N. O. 16 32 Pc. 489 480 .476 333 Sunday Results. Nashvilie 2. Atlanta 1. Mobile 6. Memphis 2 New Orleans 6. Montgomery 2. AMERICAN LEAGUE. Game Monday. Philadelphia at Washington. Standing of the Clubs. Phila C’land W'ton Chi’go W. L. 28 1.0 30 13 22 17 24 20 l'C. .737 .698 .564 546 W La Boston 16 22 Detroit 18 27 St. L. 19 29 N. York 5 28 Sunday’s Results. Detroit 1, Chicago 0 Cleveland 6. St. Louis 1. St. Louis 9. Cleveland 3. NATIONAL LEAGUE. Games Monday. Brooklyn at Philadelphia. Boston at Pittsburg. Standing of the Clubs. W. L. Phila. 22 11 B’klyn 21 15 N York 21 16 Chi'go 21 20 Pc .667 .583 .568 .537 \V. I j. Pc | P'burg 10 20 .487 I S. Louis 19 23 450 i Boston 14 20 412 | C’nati 15 27 .357 Sunday’s Results. New York 4. Cincinnati 1. Chicago 4, St. Louis 2. SOUTH ATLANTIC LEAGUE. Games Monday. Savannah at Albany Columbus at Charleston. Jacksonville at Macon. Standing of the Clubs. W L. Pc Sav'h 31 7 816 C'l’bus 20 18 526 Macon 18 18 500 W. L Pc. J’ville 18 20 474 Ch’ston 13 25 342 Albany 12 24 .333 Sunday's Results. au' CHRISTY MATHEWSON'S BIG LEAGUI GOSSIP C INCINNATI, June 2. Tlie Giants are not beaten yet. You cannot beat a ball club like the New 7 York team in May. The recent defeats have awakened the players to the ne cessity of hustling, and they are starting West determined to fight their way to the top, as the team did hack In 11)11 when we won the pennant in the eventual dash to the wire. “What is Philadelphia going to do?" is the question that is stirring those interested in baseball now 7 . The Quakers got a good start, and were in the race until July back in 1911, but they began to slip after that, and finished entirely out of the running for first place. The Giants played a series with tlie Quakers In the first part of July in that year, and they won four out of five games from us. The carping critics declared that the Giants were gone after those battles, and began to recite our obituaries^fbut the team flashed through the West in a final sprint, inspired by the fighting spirit of McGraw, and won the pennant, al though it was said broadcast that it could not be done. No games scheduled GEORGIA ALABAMA LEAGUE. Games Monday. Newnan at I .arrange Gadsden at ilpelika Anniston at Talladega Standinq of the Clubs W L. Pc I W L. Pc Q'dsden 16 8 667 Opelika 12 11 522 T'degn 13 11 542 I N wnan 1 1 13 458 Ann'ton 13 11 542 I L'Gmge 6 17 261 Sunday’s Results. No games scheduled. EMPIRE STATE LEAGUE. Games Monday. Valdosta at Americas. Cor dele at Brunswick Thomasville at Way cross Standing of the Clubs. W. L. Pc. I W. L. Pc Y’dosta 18 9 667 : W c'rn IS 14 481 Cordele 15 11 577 B’wick 11 16 40; T ville 13 13 .500 Am’cus 10 17 S70 Sunday's Results. No games scheduled OTHER RESULTS. Texas League. Fort Worth 1. Waco 0 San Antonio 7. Houston 4 Houston 10. San Antonio 2. Pallas 8. Austin 6 Austin 2. Dallas 1 Beaumont 7, Galveston 4. Galveston 2, Beaumont 0. International League. Baltimore 2. Providence 1. Montreal 6, Buffalo 5 Newark 3. Jersey City 2 American Association. St Paul 5. Minneapolis 2. Kansas City 5. Milwaukee 0. Toledo 7. Indianapolis 5 Columbus Louisville; rain. Federal League. Indianapolis 6. Pittsburg 1. Cotton States League. Pensacola 8. Columbus 5. Others not scheduled T HERE is one factor on the New York team with which most folks do not reckon when considering the season’s prospects. This is John McGraw. No ball club in the world can go through a season and not play the game for him if he has to shake it from the roots to the top. McGraw admits and concedes that the Giants are playing bad ball now, but he is not letting it go at that. If you could listen to some of his post mortems in the clubhouse after the games you would consider a blast of dynamite to Ik* a nerve soother compare^ to bis conversation. He picks the games apart ami shows where they were lost He has done a lot of picking lately, too. What the Giants lack at present is the old hitting punch in the pinches which they had carried for two years and which had made them famous and champions, too. The greatest tonic the team could have at present would In* four or five more victories, and these wins are bound to come right now, in my opinion. We move along to St. Louis from here, where we should encounter fairly easy trav eling in spite of the fact that the Car dinals gave us a tough argument in New York. Their pitchers are not go ing as well now as they were. From St. Louis the Giants go to Chicago, and that brings us to the discussion of another team. • • • r PHE Cubs are a good ball club out- a side of their pitchers, and Evers has one top-notch man, Cheney, who is showing signs of overwork at pres cut. Lavender and Rich! eboth look ed like fair performers last season, but they have not been able to make any impression on the National League this spring. Perhaps it is the weather. All pitchers blame the weather when they are slow in start ing. It is an inexhaustible alibi. Lavender and Richie both looked very had against the (Hants when the Cubs were in New York. Lavender lacking any semblance of control. Richie, as is well known, has always been most effective when working against the New York club. Evers* best chance to get a winning ball club is to have Overall return to bis old form. He showed a flash of that In a recent battle. With Overall and Cheney in good condition, then Evers could piece out the rest of his pitching from Lavender, Richie and Ueullmch exjierimenting with these boys until one of them touched some thing like winning form. The rest of the club Is ns good both at the bat and in the field as any team in the league. The catching staff is with out a jieer in the country. The team is well, balanced, and works smooth ly if Internal dissension can Ik* avoided. HI T the Cubs are up against three U clubs which will develop great pitching staffs in*fore the schedule is played out, and 1 do not honestly fig ure how they are going to compete with this sort of high-class twirling. Philadelphia lias already shown box- men who have stood all the other teams on their heads, and both New York and Pittsburg have pitchers who are bound to come and lie big winners. Besides these two teams, Brooklyn has been receiving good pitching, and Boston gets occasional outbursts of effective twirling. The way the Cubs crashed down through the league when they were making their recent tour of the East indicated that they could not stand the doses of pitching being administered by the Eastern clubs. M 1 WALSH MAY BOX KILBANE. BOSTON. June 2.—Jimmy Walsh, of this city, has accepted an offer from the Queen City Club of Cin cinnati to box Johnny Kilbane in that city July 4 White City Park Now Open It. CHARLES W. Mi’RPHY gave out a recent statement, declar ing that I had attacked the Cubs In these articles because he had refused to let me insure the players ou the team on whom he had taken out poli cies. That looks to me like a poor alibi, but it is not my intention to get into any controversy with Mr. Murphy, because I need my wind for pitching, since he spoke the truth when lie said I would have to work to win my own games from this point along. 1 have always had to work to win them. Also I know Mr. Mur phy’s endurance record for long-dis tance talking, and could not hope even to tie him. I gave what was an honest opinion of (lie Cubs after watching them play and lose three games out of four in New York. Evers Is a friend of mine, and his success so long as it did not crowd the Giants would gratify me. He is a game hall player, but he ran into a hard situation in Chicago when lie took hold of the team. )Ir. Mur phy had made many enemies for the Cubs by the way in which he treated some of his old stars last fall. But that is his business and not mine. B ROOKLYN has already started to drop back toward us, and the St. Louis club cannot hold up. Their two star pitchers, Harmon and Sallee, were both beaten last week and these two have been keeping the team in the race. / * • * piTTSBURG is still a dangerous J- club, and will come strong to ward the end. as it did last season. There is lots of tight in that team, hut, like the Giants, the Pirates have not been able to get goiug. They have good pitching and good hitting, and are bound to come. It is my opinion that the battle -will finally be between the Giants and Pirates. It is a long way to the finish, and both of these teams have the best staying qualities, to my mind. (Copyright, 1913, by the McClure News- ' paper Syndicate.) BASEBALL Diamond News and Gossip Meyers, the slugging catcher of the Giants, recovered from his batting slump yesterday long enough to crack three hits out of as many times up. * • * The Naps took the first game of a double-header from the Browns yester day. giving them nine straight victories, but lost the second despite the efforts of fifteen players, including four pitch ers. Josh Devore, the former Giant out fielder. now with the Reds, touched up Rube Marquard for three slashing hits yesterday. • * * Lajoie. the vet Nep second sacker, got back into the game regularly yesterday for the first time sinc$ about three weeks ago, when one of the Yankee pitchers smashed some bones in his left hand. * * * The Tigers nosed out a 1 to 0 victory over the White Sox yesterday in a pitch ers’ battle ♦ * * The Cubs took kindly to the delivery of Harmon yesterday and won from the Cardinals 4 to 2. • • • Here is another question under dis cussion, which is the best ‘ wrecking crew”—Magee and Cravath of the Phil lies, Cobb and Crawford of the Tigers, Collins and Baker of the Athletics, or Jackson and Lajoie of the Naps? B‘ DIES OF BASEBALL INJURY. ANACORTES, WASH.. June 2.— Parris Smith, an 18-year-old high school student, who was nit on the head by a baseball while playing in a match game here, died to-day in a hospital. Milo Stock, aged 23. who was struck by a pitched ball in the same game, suffered the loss of an eye and may die. OSTON, MASS., June 2.—Forget ting the early season series be tween the Boston Nationals and the New York, Brooklyn and Phila delphia teams as one would forget a nightmare, it may be said that George Stallings' team has been going well enough lately to suit the most rabid partisan. His kid players have turned the trick. When the pitching is good, nine times out of ten, the team behind the pitching will play good ball, and it will be gingered up so that it can bat out the winning run. The batting of the Boston team has not been particularly brilliant. On the contrary, it has been below the average, but it must be remembered most of the men played in the minor leagues last year, and it will take time for them to get accustomed to big league pitching. TIGERS SELL KLAWITTER. DETROIT, MICH., June 2.—Pitcher A! Klawitter was sold to-day by the De troit Americans to the Sacramento club of the Pacific Coast League, from which circuit he came to the Tigers. 3 j' Established 1865 EISEMA.N BROS., Inc. Incorporated 1912 T HR Phillies deserve some eon- ideratiou right here, beeause they are leading the league at pres ent, no matter where they finish. 1 'ooin has a good ball club, but his main strength lies in four star pitch ers Alexander. Itixey, Chalmers and Seaton. This quartet Is moving at top speed now. but should any one of them slow up for a minute or two Dooin is going to have a difficult time when he rufts into the duster of dou ble headers that he will be forced to face. BV the addition of Frorame. McGraw is well stocked with twirl- era for these double hills later along. He has five competent performers. It is my notion that the Quakers| will fall back on the road trip, al-j though these may he merely the ob-1 serrations of an optimist. They do not move as well away from home as they do on their own diamond, as was shown by the fact that we out played the dub in New York, while they trimmed us handily in Phila delphia. RINGSIDE NOTES Johnny Ooulon’s next opponent is like- to be Frankie Burns. A New York club is trying to match the pair. Burns’ signature has already been secured Frankie is the boy who came near put ting the bantam champ away in New Orleans several years ago. * * * Patsy Brannigan signed articles yes terday to meet Eddie Winder In a six- round scrap at Pittsburg Saturday night, June 14 • * • There is also some chance of Branni gan meeting Matty McCue in a return engagement McCue has asked the Mil waukee promoters for another chance at Patty, and it is more than likely that the match will be closed in a few days. * * • Hats off to Jack Dillon. The Indian apolis middleweight defeated Frank Klaus last week, and now has the best claim to the middleweight title. Dillon is one of those few boxers who does not pick his opponents, and is always willing to meet the best of them. * * * Local fans should see some dandty mil 1 • ing at the Auditorium-Armory June 1*. Three 10-round bouts have been billed for the fans, and every one of them should be a corker. The Flynn-Savage set-to needs no introduction. The Meyer Pties-Spider Britt go should be one of those old-time grudge affairs, while Mike Saul and Eddie Hanlon ought to give the fans enough real mill ing to last them for weeks. • * * Young Shugrue and Sam Robideau were matched yesterday to box ten rounds in Madison Square Garden, New York* Juno 5. If English Lounging Suit! ’SounvjvaclL Gtcftkeb TW StJnW.r* mf Am.ri*# “Hess” Shoes Harmonize hand somely with the Lounging Suit. Blucher Oxfords in all leathers, partieularlv fine models in the English last and tans—$5, $6, $7. A characteristic, effective ENGLISH Model, that instantly ap peals to Young Men; because out of the trend of fashion's formal ities, the “LOUNGING SUIT” stands as a distinctive style inno vation. The Coat is form-fitting—not padded, although so skillfully tailored that it will retain its shape permanently, and shoulders and collar fit snugly and perfectly. Coat is quarter-lined, and all seams piped, the garment being exquisitely finished throughout. Has “patch” pockets, adding to its individuality. We have a superb collection of these Suits, both in TWO and THREE-PIECE models; vests of the three-piece have unlined vest with patch pockets. The ENGLISH “LOUNGING SUIT” as we show it repre sents the highest standard of tailoring perfection and skill in Ready-Service-Suits for Men. They are of “unconscious” weight —COOL—comfortable, extremely stylish and serviceable. Made of a sumptuous variety of sprightly, high finished, phantom-weight weaves in attractive colors, and "penciled effects' on dark grounds. The ENGLISH LOUNGING SUIT combines all of the essential requisites possible to embody in clothes for warm weather, without sacrificing a “whit” of style. $ 25 .00 One of our “new” model Straw Hats is the harmonizing headgear for the lounging suit $1.50 and Up Eiseman Bros., Inc. 11-13-15-17 WHITEHALL m