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Red Gleams of Hope at Georgia
-!-••!• +•+ •!•••!• -!-••!• •!■••!•
But Gloom Supplies Black Enough
m TH FA'S. Sept 16 The Georgia
Z-X football squad augmented bv
several new recruits. started its
second week of training yesterday by
spending the afternoon in the gym
narium. the rain keeping them oft the
field. There are on hand to date, with
the opening of college only a day off.
25 candidates, and the arrival of al
moat even’ train boosts the Red and
Black gridiron tuck
The pros ports last week were
gloomy indeed, with hardly an old
man on hand of real merit, ami but
few of th»* new ones w< a ring anything
that savored of a varsity look How
ever, the arrival of Crump, (’onyers,
Thompson and several other last year
“near champions la < a using a gle mi
of light to |K«nvtrate the gloom in the
vicinity <>f Sanford Mend There Is
still anything bir a srintt’.lfiting halo
of prospects greeting the makers of
football history for the season of 1913
• • •
/~’*OA«’H < LN N INGHAM was with
X-* the squad for the that time yes
terday afternoon, and he wus given a
cheering welcome, hut the absence of
so many of the counted-on and nec
essary players is causing much worn
Paddock sUU is to be lured from his
home in the <'ltv of Churches, and
seems extremely eager to lie close
enough to the Polo Grounds to sec
New York ami Philadelphia tussle foi
the baseball title of the world Ma
lone is unaccounted for. ‘Rig .John’
Henderson has been overdue a couple
of days, and despite reports. Conklin,
the hard-tackling end who ma le the
touchdown that won the Auburn game
last year, lias failed to show any In
clinations to return. So it seems that
Jkveorgin is to have as much trouble
FODDER FOR FANS ]
Th? tight J «r batting honors in the
American Ijeagtu •as now developed
into a three-i-orncrvl one While Cobh
and .link san. wh> Live b*t n battling
for leadership ah -• is<>n. hax? been tn
fa • • '
Tris Speaker tin Sox eiugg ’ !as .
been rushing ah'ng ■ a rifle » . : and
la new onh a ft * ’ ’> in th? rear
The J’hiihes ano beds bulled t-n in-
i 2-1
ending on a« • • nt t darkness
I; .. . Whitt x twfrh w
has be* n th* <’’• • ag< a ns’ tnamstay m
th. > all s. a- • g! ■! Wll tie
Senators > • >t»rda> and coated them
with white wash
Larry Doyle, the G .ant s’ slugger who
b««i. in a ' p nearly all • is.-n
and now h«.s . • • •: ave’ag* t ■
.270. is trying lo muk- go**.’ ‘ : • -n’.se
to finish tn- season over :’•*> 'k an
nexed th ret i.iis in - x th: * - r vas
ter lay
'■
fore th?v submitted to detent XS r I
the Cubs ’WM runs n the i. *r ’ lie
ninth inping. X S.mr polo ■ a
hot- r m. - ndit g !’’' <■
plat* ah."L_i of h ■'» 1 la- Gian's
a run hi tt - • welGh .>• ' >ai« - • ■’
wise Th? Giants an. * -r
in ’.he thirteenth 1 ’ <hf ’ i x
chan** to bat in mat ruing the
Giants grabbed tin t. u’:,.
* • •
The C h W.w «."■ P , f
; heir old tncks yvsirr. ■> Th<-> irvi-r
NOTICE
The regular annual ns-ot.ng ■ f th? ;
( stockholders of th. Atlanta and \X *-st <
Point Radroad Company will be held <
' at the off <? of the <”ompanj. Room '
' No ’i. Atlanta Terminal Station. At- ?
lanta. Ga . at 12 o < lo< k noon on Tues- <
> d.o <»< I'd.er ;’l. I'l ?>
W H HR I CE. Secretary ?
“AIN’T I RIGHT?”
rounding up her players as in round
Ing out a winning team.
ry»N’AUr> M KIXXOX. w 1.. aw
* mho under MrGugin «i Mi< hi
gan two veats ago and was in college
last year, blew in from the celery
farm on th» Michigan shore y«-s;ei
day , and looks to be in great shape
He weigh I'hi pounds Wingate, from
the Third I». strut Agric'ult ural
S-diool has matriculated and looks
lik« a 200-pound guard. The Smith
brotl . r . the ‘"Siamese Twins ” from
Riverside. Roy md Ralph, are two
nervy 150-pounders working for ends,
while Thrash, from Godron. ami How
«r<l M«-Whom i . a brother of Roh,
look like promising hack Holders oth
er new men who |< k fairly well are
Potrei- from Powder Springs. Shi-
• from R Davidson,
from Moiitlcrdo, and <»wen, from the
< ’avnlry
• • ■»
\ Illi; I- I ’. \ J’RRRI Tl.i
* * of the l'.»ll t< un. has decided to
re enter Georgia this year. It is re
ported. and will atrixe to-day from
Winder This will give Cnnninglmm
a good man to take (’ovirigt<»n s place,
ami if he • an find two guartls to re
pla< < lai' H and Pea- •. k h<> will have
a faith good line with I hdnperriere
at center. Malone and Henderson at
tackle provided they n t urn. and
Hitchcock and <'rumt» or Conklin at
ends <'ony<‘i > has subbed at guard
for a < <’iiple of seasons, and since he
weighs ?"n {founds, will be no slouch
at this position
It is too early, though, to be shap
ing up a probable line up. and too
many men expected are missing That
old maxim that a bad beginning au
gur.- a good ending is giving more
than one Athenian courage as to grid
iron possibilities .lust now
did ha\< h \• rv grr.u fondness for I'm I
pm- Bill Klrni. -nd when Rill gave h
couple ”f oec-ioi’- that seemed t” fa
wr the N»« Yorkers the <’ub fans be
gan , ■gg . ■■ ons m Rill -r« ction
Th< ' v*’.' • vrn further. th< y called
Bill a call the one im< ■ ■
nuik. Dill iwfully n ad In dav-»
'k- tn ''« H •- ’ piuycrs out of
t • • win .i ed sin-! a name in
very well
the so '•» away, io he had
to grin and bear it
The Braves and I' r.*t« split a double- '
! vester” •> Ide RrH\»-< t.-ok tie
nett«d ’I ' *” three rm: while >! »* T*
rat< > g’.ib'in'd t! »■ second ganiv aided by
b Wagnei
w: ma thr»« safeties m four trips
le the plale
e ’ gers •!♦ seated tl • y ankees in a
4
. m t! • t :nth Inning giving them a 7 to 5
v. ■ • r x
1 e K»d S« x had rathe’- a tough • b
i vi - . • u* ; Hr. w-t
It'. • an.i Athb-t < s met \esier
da ■ m t. . >. . ri,.| . .-H of the final
■• -• . ;e X i left. -
tl . th. »d H ’.he N t g < \ ’n the
tr - W e|< arch -- u • . the Mh
i - . : to .re »»ur more lai-
Big Western Yacht
Race Dates Fixed
«
th. M.h • up r.v c hav. been sv
j le.’od i rl.rc t<> Commodore
} i .Lunes I I Hex w-u-th. of the Chicago
| Yaoht ‘lib The first race is t<» be
■. sailed S -ii \ t'ne se. .md M •ndav
• j and final Tm i.n The ra. es an- the
■ I bbl* ribb. • 's f the Western
i V *it Ut.llf, <i. . li.
Os Course If Had To Be League” Was Writfen AU Over Him
PREDICTED DRAFT OF R. BISLAND WELL DESERVED
By <). B. Keeler.
St ► it is Riv ngton Risland, after all.
< »f course-
Kyery time we lamped that
lad there was the sign Big League”
all over him
Wr were sure Ritzy would be taken
from us. and we predicted It. and re
p« ited tin* prediction.
If < ouldn’t be helped, even if any
body could be bum vport enough to
want to see a grand player kept out
"f a big league berth
Rut if IH)F?S «eem rather tough
'•n Rlm and. nt that.
The Browns have got him
• • •
TVVEIAIC dubs had drafts m for
1 Rlvlngton
That's how the Rig Show regard
oil The Be-'t Shortstop in the South
ern League
So the Hon Nat <’om put all the
twelve names in a hat probably- a
Kelly behmglng to Auggx Herrmann
md then Secretary Rru< e. i»erform
ing somewhat after the fashion »f
Little Ja.-k Horner, put in his thumb
md pulled out a plum for the St.
Louis Browns
That'.- toe way the Hon. Nat. Com.
works.
Congratulations. Mesnrs Browns
• • •
Al' that it isn’t so bad for Biszy ,
* With the Browns the youngster |
will get the chance to Jump in with
i fine lit th- splash and begin reeling
off the da/xle stuff.
Bobby Wallace grand old Scot
is about done He has been at It a
l<»ng time longer probably than any
other player in the \merican League.
And Riz/v Is slated to be the man
:n the shoes and the chances are all
tn favor of his being the man In the ,
breeches, too. no matter how tight
• ♦ •
OS! AXP ine to the Crackers
from the B rates late last spring
' »r Home more seasoning. a mat
t*-r of fact that wasn’t the reason
: l':. z\ hid i fine little Job with the
I’ ates being understudx to Han”
\\ agner.
Fine chance what 0
Xnd next to the Ifiitchman. there
w.is X'oix. *’mp sh<»rt-top himself
So Bi-.’z\ iu-’t come tiow n here and
’ Tied open the Boor of opportunity
I for himself not being content merely
I n. ran.
• • «
x’ ■ ps • vise geeks
lx I it Bls
ind - lou’.d hav»' been ‘\-overed.” and
| th preserved to the Cracker box
of 1914
By "covering is meant the delicate
process by which a ball pla'er is sold i
»\ ■ minor ’vague club to a major
■ igue bib. with a -<'r’ of nvisible |
-u ■ g tied to ' un Th < {'reserves
-m from the drafting process, and i
•r» - imably’ wrenches h. m back to
■ht old stamping ground when the.
i » \t season rolls around
\ow why waen’t covered*!
<I ’ I'HOCT 1 Mng -e ann in er
V \
u« \v»- don’t mir.d hazarding a bit o ;
The management of the Allan: >
lub wouldn't have be c n doing ;:.e
- ,■ ■■ ir»‘ t'• u’g bv Rislar.c
Bi- and s good enough for a tr\
the big league game, at he very
least
That brilliant fielding ability of
; Risland’s -that disposition to hit in
h- pinches that smooth, ha :ft ac
■ lon > 1 that s Blsland> < • ital In
life •
<»f course Bisland i< imbitious. He
; wants* to play in the Big League He
} wouldn’t be a true ball {lay er, else
Then there’s the money part of it
for T must be remembered that
iB-'.-a’s capital is hie baseball
SPOBW '
By Tad
C«q-yrir’ *, 1913 Inter.’ at Iona! News Pervice.
I ‘HIKING at it that way’ what
* v would you think of a ball (lub
management that would craftily seek
io hold a great play»r in a minor
league, when he had the chance to
pl.iv on any one of a dozen big league
< luba?
Exactly’. Our idea to a dot.
• » *
IF we had tn make any criticism of
* thr Atlanta management in the
handling of the Bisland matter, it
would be for the reason that only the
meager draft price was realized for
one of the greatest minor league
shortstops to go up 1n recent years.
<’orriden went from Kansas <’itv.
and Tebeau got De! Drake md Tex
Covington ami “Tillie” W.ilker for
him -the latter, by the way, being
good enough to go up this \»ar in a
w’haling big trade with the Reds.
And <’orriden never saw the day he
looked as good as Rivington Bieland
has been looking the last two months.
» * •
IT does seem the Atlanta < lub should
4 have been able to get a neat trade
in players, with maybe some money
NORTH CAROLINA TEAMS START WEEDING OUT
Raleigh, n c sept. 16.—with
the first games of football only
three weeks off, the coaches of
the four North Carolina institutions
whose students participate in the
game begin to-day to weed out the
candidates for the first teams
The season will op. n at Chapel
Hill October 4 with Wake Forest Col
lege against the University of North i
i<’arnlina and in Raleigh on the same
dav with the men from the United
States training ship Franklin lined up
against the team from the Agricul- (
tural and Mechanical College here.
Never before in the historv of the
.-port have the States two leading 1
institutions, the University’ and the |
Agricultural and Mechanical College,
made such elaborate preparations for ■
th»» season Carolina has four coaches, ,
Doggie Trenchard being head)
< oach. and To’ T Pendleton. Thomas
A Wilson and Arthur B’uthenthal.
all former Princeton stars, as his as
sistants. The A. & M College has
Eddie Green, a former Pennsylvania 1
all-American, and Jack Hegarty, the
famous Georgetown player. Tren
) chard was also a ITmceton all-Am.r-
I :can in his day
• • •
A REPORT from < hap»\ H to-o.<\
stated that Coach Tren. hard ad
i as many as S 0 candidates on the field
m a single day but that the weed
ng out process would >*tart this after
noon. Os last team. Cap’air.
Xbernethy and six other \ arsity pie\
ers are back, and good men have i
.erne from other institution* None
f them have made their teams how .
At the Agricultural and Mechanical
HV pronu-C r. ..r-f |g|
without inconvenience H
JS| narticnierlt tn or>«tm«te H|
4H t«' >’.rti<i. which ntc
ucirt- u«e t<» the stem*, h Ci omggiMK
TTIE ATLANTA CTEOItGIAN A** NEWS.
■ COWBW EXPERTS
I
Por>
r~» <k_ao f
to r-Mj / klz a" £
nt ‘ . S
PIWT TM.-SVT j gs
mmom on W I '/
t \ fineoct sa io that
I THAT ) i NIbHTS \MOU-0
\T>o d . ; Bt 9VIET IF TMM"
e s&p _
I fk
fe mA
on the -ide. for Bisland, instead of
merely the draft price.
<’ertait!\ the drafting proves
showed Bizzy was* in demand In manv
quarters.
• * •
DLT let’s let that ”< over” thing die
out naturally.
Il’s an idea unworthy of Bisland
value. and unworthy of the Atlanta
iub's attitude toward its players,
which attitude has been uniformly’
generous and praiseworthy.
♦ • »
'T'HE Agler incident is proof of that
* contention.
.Joe was “covered” last year, and I
everything worked out satisfactorily. !
But this year Joe blossomed, forth I
after the fashion of the mellifluous
magnolia, and it became a question
of whether Joe should waste any
more of his fragrance on the desert
air—desert being used as a compara
tive term, when Joey could get SI
i month more from Jersey City, w ith
an extremely good prospect for going
College 60 men are working for the
team. Seven old men are back and
i dozen promising players lave re
ported. Van Bro. klin. formerly end
with Georgetown, has joined th**
squad The prospectm are bright here
for n successful year.
Wake Forest and Davidson Colleges
promise light hut fighting trams this
fall.
• • •
/"A F < i.ef interest in North Carolina
will be the game here Saturday,
November 15, between Carolina and
ihp A. & M. College This will be
the first time the football elevens have
! met in ; »»ven years The Farmers
have tied the University three time*
i in fifteen years, but have never been ]
able to score a victory Both team- •
I will train especially for this contest !
| md enthusiasts from all parts of th”
State will < ome here to back their j
' patriotism and judgment.
The season will clone with the
Thanksgiving Day game. Carolina
v g p against ts ancient riv al,
the University of Virginia, and A. A
M will met ? Washington and Lee a:
Norfolk. Xs is usually the case. Tar
Heels will Invade Virginia soil In
i Large numbers for these contests.
• • •
THE records of football teams at
* both Carolina and A. & M. have
1 not been brilliant for the past several
I \ earn. The I’niveraity has lacked
oac.hing and the a. A M. teams have
not had the speed necessary to win
ning contests. The Farmer* how
ever. have shown better in action
•egpmj. Cures in 1 to 5 dan
M 1 unnatural discharges
EFwKa’ H ( ontains no poison and
! Jltg W B rnai be used full atreng’b
absolutely without fear
Snaraateed notto stricture. Prevents contagion.
WHY NOT CURE YOURSELF?
it Pruggtsta, or we ship express prepaid upon
•ece pt of fl. Full particulars mailed on request
THE gVANS CHEMICAL CO.. Cincinnati, a
DINING CARS
WITH A’LA CARTE SERVICE SW?!
10 CINCINNATI & LOUISVILLE gSIOI,
SILK HAT HARRY’S DIVORCE SUIT
right over to take up a job with
an American League club.
The Atlanta dub. bound by its sal- ■
ary limits, couldn't pay Joe what he
could get in Jersey City. Jersey City I
was w filing to pay a fair price. Joe I
probably would have been drafted. !
to sell him to give lim the •ha
to earn more money
A little expose of these things
doesn’t hurt the game any. Rather.)
it improves the flavor
• * *
AND. by the way suopo-e we jus:
slip one to Messrs. Callaway.
Ryan et al for that little Job of
; handling the Agler bu.-'n»
The Crackers got iron men to th”
i extent of $3,000 for Joe. selling him.
I bag. baggage and secondhand first
. baseman’s mitt, to J” s< \ City.
Just about the time Joe gets to
I J. C., Detroit nails him in the draw,
at the draft price of $2..’>00
Rather tough on Jersey City—
-1 | w hat
This drafting thing i< a funny busi-
l ness -
than their neighbors in Orange
County. (
Jake Stahl Manager
Os Semi-Pro Club
CHICAGO, Sept 16. Jake Stahl,
manager of the World's <’hampions
in 1912. will become a semi-pro man- •
ager fnr the second time in his ca
reer when he becomes boss of the
Jake Stahl Club.” starting next Sun
day
Ti e announcement was issued at
| last night’s meeting of the Inter-City
I Baseball Association by the present
I manager, who will turn over the team
I at next Sunday’s game at Peru. Ind.
Stahl will play first base for the club
* from now on. and expects to make it
one of the big clubs on the local cir
cuit next year.
__2Z. H E OU) RE LIABLE”
. -« B EWA R F_ ; M f TZ> TI oNS L.
CHATTANOOGA.
i Only $3 round trip. First
i class tickets. Sold daily Sept.
i 12th to 19th and morning 20th. 1
Return limit September 27. privi- i
lege extension. Honored on all
trains: .stopovers permitted.
SOUTHERN RAILWAY.
t foumo rwvfr
|WEO<
ITHwT HWMUA
Va Er
EL d i
1 Fi
OCnt
OUGHT TO TMce oue 2J 'Q (
■~TTr
wel <2ri
—Wa - ——
Charley White Stops Sheridan
•E«4-
Can Beat Ritchie, Says Expert
By E. J. Geiger.
Chicago, sept. 16.—if that
Charley White person of this
city ever gets a chance to
trade wallops with Willie Ritchie, and
negotiations are now under way,
look out. Ritchie Charley again dem
onstrated his wonderful ring work
when he knocked out Mickey Sheri
dan in the second round of wha* was
to have been a ten-round go. A left
• lip to the jaw that traveled no more
than four inches brought his heavier
opponent down with a crash and it
was ring down the curtain.
Sheridan has been in the ring five
years and has fought some pretty
tough boys. In ail that tim#» he has
never been knocked off his feet. The
boys agreed to do 133 pounds at 6
Not Much to Story
Os Patten Protest:
Tech Gets Another
So far as could be learned at Tech
headquarters this morning there ap
pears to be nothing to the story em
anating from Sewanee to the effe t
that Gen* 4 Patten, of Chattanooga, the
celebrated nrep school halfback, will
be declared ineligible to play wVh
Georgia Tech by reason of his having
received pay' for coaching a high
school team at Jasper. Tenn., last
Coach Heisman was reticent, hav
ing. as he said, not sufficient informa
tion to warrant him in referring spe
cifically tn the charges said to have
been made by "Jenks’’ Gillem and
Manager Gass, of the Sewanee team.
Another good porspect arrived yes-
You can’t judge a man by
the shape of his nose—nor
an automobile by’ the size
of its magneto. Tne har
monious working of all of
its parts makes the Ford a
great car. And big pro
duction makes the price
small.
Five hundred dollars is t lia new price of the Ford
runabout, the touring ear is five fifty, the town
•ar seven fifty all so. b Detroit. complete
with equipment Get catalog and particulars
from Ford Motor Company, No 311 Psachtree
street, Atlanta.
|
\ WJMAT TH ITH MLTMTXHh/ 1
< ' / TH at >
I JL / 1
IM
( (T A«uT F=OR M£ "j
ITS FOR VQV y
x
—4m
o’clock. Charley weighed 128 and
Sheridan 135 when the battle began
Cool and collected. White spirit the
first three minutes judging his op
ponent. Then scarcely had the sec
ond round opened when he whirled
Sheridan around and sent in the left.
White to-day is the best boy at his
weight, and if he doesn't best the
(hampion when they me.et, I’m ready
to buy’ the drinks.
Charley comes mighty near being a
second Joe Gans and the only regret
hereabouts is that Backey McFarland
is too big for him. Those of us who
have watched White and Parker In
gym work are free to admit that in
science, speed, cleverness and ring
generalship, the little Hebrew has It
on the Irishman. Ho sure has It on
him in the kirk and by a big margin.
if Ritchie gets here for an October
match, he can get it without trouble,
terday from Chattanooga. Senter,
captain and tackle of the Vhiversitv
of Chattanooga, a man standing well
over six feet and weighing close to
200. is a baseball and basket ball star
as well as crack fontball p.ayer.
ELECT SCHMIDT PRESIDENT.
CHICAGO, Sept. 10.—Otto E.
Schmidt was elected president at the
annual meeting of the Central Asso
ciation of the Amateur Athletic
Union.
TETTER
i T*tfertne cure, tetter Read what Mrs. V Q
' McQulddy. Eatill Springs. Teran s*yF *
I had a severe oa»e ol tetter on be th . ’
hands and I finally got helpleM A leadtne
phytclan knew of no cure. I decided to give 1
iTetterlne a trial. To my utter ,ur>rlM and
satisfaction It worked a speedy eure.
Use Tetterine
S It cures *c»pme, fetter, erysipelas Itch in* i
$ piles, ground itch and all skin maladies.
50r at druaglsts, or by mall.
SMUPTRINE CO., SAVANNAH, GA. )