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THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS.
The Hot Stove I^enime Is Cold Comfort for tlie Kan Who Is Used to Regular Action
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If He Had Been Anything But a Kiltn
EISTM5EPT
n
Jimmy May Meet Scranton Boxer
in Milwaukee Ring—Ritchie
and Murphy Train.
By W. W. Naughton.
S AN' FRANCISCO. CAL.. Dm 3
Some fight* have no aftermath
The Clabby-Logan affair is of
that order. For one thing Clabby wa
•o much the master of the situatlo
at *11 times that there are no pegs o:.
which to hang arguments aa to how
different It might have been If curb
and such a mistake had not beer,
made
There were no mistakes The m*--
battled “true to form.” and I^ogan
did Just about as well as the betting
predicted he would.
Clabby goes East In a day or two
tre way of Los Angeles He has been
offered a match with Georg- Chip a-
Milwaukee, and the chances are he
will accept
It was Chip who knocked out Frank
Klaus a short time since. If Clabby
meets and vanquishes Chip the vic
tory will go a long way toward es
tablishing Clabby b right to call him
self middleweight champ! >1
Logan will have to begin again a
little lower down the ladder Like
Sailor Petroskey, he was a trifle too
ambitious for a new man It might
not be a bad Idea for that matter,
to send Logan and Petroskey togeth
er. They are game fellows and are
so equal In the matter of clas>< that
a soldier-sailor bout seems to prom
ise well.
T HE Willie Ritchie Tommy Murphy
contest, a genuine world's cham
pionship dispute Is the next thing to
attract the attention of the followers
of Queensberry sport The light (
weights will meet in Coffroth s Eighth |
street arena on the night of Decern- j
her 10.
The principals are already in train
ing. Ritchie being quartered at Mil
ieu's. near Cohns, while Murphy is
in camp at Shannon's. Sr.n Rafael.
Light work has begun at both
strongholds At Mlllett* yesterday
Ritchie went in for hag punching and
rope skipping and also sparred three
rounds with Joe Getz
* » •
B etting on the lightweight < h«m
pionship has begun Quite a
number of wagers of the small dimen
sion have been made Ritchie was
the favorite at odds of 10 to 8 The
commissioners seem to think that the
price against Murphy will lengthen to
10 to 7
It remains to he seen, however,
whether public opinion will continue
in the same groove when the date of
the match draw* nearer-. The train
in* of Ritchie and Murphy will be
watched closely by hordes of sports
and the work done at the rival camps
may be viewed in such a way as to
cause a change of sentiment among
betting men.
A* the start there is every reason
for believing that the change in the
weight scale has been looked upon a«*
r big factor in Ritchie’s favor and
has resulted in the champion being
Installed a pronounced first choice.
* * •
J OE RIVERS has fought his way
hack to popularity at Los Angeles
and already there Is well-defined agl
tat Ion for another Rivers-Ritchie
bout.
Jim Jeffries has joined the ranks of
those who are clamoring for a return
go between Joe and Willie.
Mordecai Brown Has
Not Been Picked to
Manage Reds in 1914
CINCINNATI. Her 3 - "We have had
no negotiations whatsoever with Mor
decal Brown to man??:.*, the Reds 1n
1914. 1 have not talked with him or
had any communication with him 1
can not understand how anyone could
sa> that we could have decided upon
Brown our next manager, because he
has not heen discussed. '
The above statement was made by
President Angus' Herrmann, of the
Cincinnati team, after he bad been told
that a letter had been sent to Oh'cago
stating that the club had already de
cided upon Mordecai Brown
HARVARD BASEBALL SCHEDULE
CAMBRIDGE. MASS . Dec 3 A
schedule of 31 games was announced to
day for the Harvard baseball team foi
l-wing a meeting of tin.- Athletic Council
The annual series with Vale will begin
with games on consecutive days, the
flrst to be nlaved at New Haven on
June 16 and the second at Cambridge on
Jun- 17 A third game, if necessary,
will be played In New York on June 20
TALBOTT TO LEAD VALE ELEVEN.
NEW HAVEN. Dec 3—Nelson S
Talbott, of Dayton. Ohio was elects
captain of the Vale football team for the
next year Talbott has played a strong
game at left tackle on the varsity eleven
for the last two years
ENGLAND TO SEND RELAY TEAM.
PHILADELPHIA. Dec 3— Oxford
University will send a team from Eng
land to compete in the annual relay
races under the auspices of the I'niver-
aity of Pennsylvania here next April.
Pretty Girls, New
Costumes. Great Show
At the Dutch Mill
The prettiest, daintiest and
p r i'.;htest bunch cf showgirls ever
mbled at one place are to be
at the Dutch Mill. The co»-
- lew, bright * n d
Rci . and the shew is a hum
mer from start to finish. There
is just enough of a mix-up to
make it interesting and the songs
and specialties do the rest. If in
doubt where to go. try the Dutch
Mill,* A dollar show for a dime
Tf 'lt>U ~ThiUK IM (sOGGA I
5=M*J0 FEft you 6b <«
To A HASQCZRAOt itJ 1
them 6hor7 skirt*
\y/rrn the mercokV
RE6ISTBfZiHfr llGM
ABOVE yocJ 6r<Sl AtJdfHCR.
6ul$$ Co/AiGb!
WCnACKIt- ILL PUT IT UP
To HER ESCOCT, HE* A
gkuflBll S6uU6 FfLIER AG
ME DOUT tf/AHGA 5EE HER
KE*KH Cold noMore w I oo.
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6000
KJlGHT
AlU&t!
W/HADDV'e.
ZAV.fal
7—
jminnn
OH n IS Wf ^
IT IS INDEED ~
INDOOR SPORTS
By Tad Robinson Wants Claude Derrick
+•*
*•+
+•+
+•+
+•+
Oklahoma Heavyweight Rules as
10-to-8 Favorite Over Jess in
Ten-Round Gotham Fight.
N EW YORK, Dec. 3 —Nearly 500
pound* of bone and brawn will j
clash In the Madison Square
Garden ring tonight when Carl Mor- }
rlH .and Jets Willard put up their 1
gb*H‘d hands for a ten-round bout, i
Willard said to-day that he would j
weigh about 230 pounds, while Morris |
admitted that he might tip the. beam 1
at 235 These men are the biggest
white heavyweights in the world and !
also the tallest. Willard stands I* i
feet 0 inches in his stockings and j
Morris is only two inches shorter '
Each was horn In 1886 and their ring :
experience is limited. Willard began !
fighting two years ago. while Mor id®’
first scrap for money occurred in !
1910
In spite of the fart that Willard lias !
AccCmplislimi more in ring contests, j
Morris Is a 10 to 8 favorite, probably
’ MIS® h® put up such a hard fight |
with Gunboat Smith in the Garden
early in October. Morris is wonder
fully strong and game He was a I
greenhorn when Jim Flynn hammer- |
ed him for ten rounds here two years !
ago. but he has kept on improving
until lie begins to look like a real
heavyweight He has changed his
style completely. His blows are de
livered straight from the shoulder
with tremendous power, and lie re
lies upon hooks and uppercut® instead
of the Ineffective overhand swings
which he employed when he tackled
Flynn.
Willard probably knows more about
boxing than the Oklahoma giant and
can lilt. too. Rut just what he can
accomplish when Morris puts him
under a heavy lire remains to be seen.
Willard is so tall that few of hie
opponents have been able to reach
his jaw. He moves about with sur
prising agility and has a good left
hand.
The State Athletic Commission at
yesterday’s meeting raised Willard s
suspension, while William Joh was
agreed upon as the referee.
Ot is Crandall Will
Quit Game for Good
NEW YORK. Dec. 3.—On the best
of authority it is learned that Otis
Crandall the noted emergency crew,
will not be a member of the Giants
or any other baseball aggregation
next season. The authority is none
other than “Old Doc" himself He
can afford to quit, and he intends to
quietly efface himself from the big
show. He does not relish the idea
of being shipped to the St. Louis Car
dinals or any minor league team
Crandall left New York with his
wife and baby immediately after re
ceiving his world's series check and
is now at home for the winter on his
broad Indiana acres. He may never
return to New York as an active ex
ponent of the national pastime. When
he departed he honestly believed he
was saying a long farewell to the
other players. But he may change
his mind,
Crandall’s sudden release to the St.
Louis club last season renewed his
determination to quit. Only those
whose whole major league experience
has been with a winning team real
ize the sinking sensation that ac
companies a transfer to a tail-ender.
McGraw recalled Crandall two
weeks after this deal was made, as
the Cardinals did not particularly
need him and the Giants felt that he
was entitled to another slash at a
world’s series melon.
But even if he is not traded it is
doubtful whether he will rejoin the
Giants. If he feels that he can not
i be of much help to them he will stay
away.
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JWOOOfl SPORT*
SHOVJlMfr A HI C*.
THE. CURIO CABi/ueT-
Third Chance for Georgia Boy
A
By 0. B. Keeler.
ND now it is beginning to
look as if “Red” Smith, the
Atlanta youth who plays
third base for the Brooklyn Dodgers,
iv ill have another Georgia boy for a
side-kick—the same being Claude
Derrick, quite a shortstopper, though
remembered as a second baseman at
the University of Georgia some s a-
sons Ago.
There is quite a little story tha;
may be told of the wanderings of
Claude, and we are now going to
tell it..
pLAUDE played football as we'l ps
^ baseball at the State University.
Some people fancied he played it bet
ter, but that is problematical. Any
way, he was a very good guard and
one of the best punters Georgia ever
had.
But football. In America at least,
comes to its normal finish when a
man leaves college, apd if Claude
hadn't also been a corking infielder
llie would in all probability be teach
ing school down about Clayton. Ga..
where he was engaged in that pas
time when Tommy Stouch rescued
him and took him to play ball in the
South Carolina League.
Claude played ball with Tommy's
team. which was the Greenville
bunch, and Claude played ball wed
enough to attract the attention, by
proxy, of Mr. Cornelius Mack, gover
nor general of the Athletics.
RONNIE MACK drafted Derrick an
L played him at shortstop
while Barry was out of the game. In
fact. Connie carried him along for
the best part of two years, and then,
with the brilliant Barry In good or
der again Claude was dealt out to Bal
timore.
• * *
("'LAUDE put up a wonderful gam«
with the Orioles last year, ant
Frank Chance, then reorganizing t* ■
hapless Yanks, took a fancy to him
and grabbed him.
This was not altogether lucky ' -
Claude, even looking over the fv
that he became a Yank. He pulled
bone at the wrong time—a time when
the Peerless Leader was in the m.e
fractious and irritable frame of mlmi
it is possible for a P. L. to be
And the P. L. let him go back to
Baltimore.
• A *
OF) it said to Claude’s credit jM
A 'hls two mischances in th^ 1 _
show did not break his heart, ilf
went right back to work with ; f
Orio’es, putting up a beautiful gam
in the field, and peppering the pill
with excessive virility, so that Wil
bert Robinson., then trainer-In-chief
for tho Giants, took a couple of slants
at him and was much pleased.
* * *
A ND now r Mr. Robinson, being t
x manager on his own hook, is
said to be seeking Derrick by way of
raising the general average of iti-
fleldlng on the Dodgers—a job, by the
way, eminently fitted for a person of
Claude’s surname.
This may be Claude’s Big Chance—
who knows?
ENTRIES
at charleston.
FIRST Three-year-olds, selling, purse
$300. a furlongs: \Yiley 104, Pluvious
10S xTheodore Cook 105, xDust T’an 100,
xHearthstone 103. Coming Coon 110.
Austin Sturtevant 105. Clem Beachey
105 Toison D Or 105. Surpass 107.
S E C Q N P Two-year olds, selling.
Purse $-100. 5furlong Lost Fortune
105 Stucco 1^1, xRun w ay 101. Flatbush
103. Flask 102. Ada 107. Supreme 107.
\Laura 9R. Billy Smal l y9. Charles Can-
nell 103
THIRD Three-year-olds and up. sell
ing. purs.- $400. 1 mile. Chilton King
101. Feathc Duster 109. xCamellla 104.
xSpring Maid 90. Brando 109. Dr. Dough
erty 112. Ardelon 108. xSpellbound 108
FOURTH All ages, handicap, purse
$.•00. 50 furhmgs: Yenghee 98. a Brave
Cunarder 100 aLochiel 108, Samuel R.
Meyer 114. Sir John Johnson 127, Star
Actress 100 taBedwell entry.)
FIFTH Three-year-olds and up. sell
ing. purse $300. 5 furlongs Rye Straw
112. xFred Levy 105, Amoret 111. Briar
Lath 107. Luria 106. Jack Kellogg 114,
Loan Shark 112, Klva 105. Sherlock
Holmes 112
SIXTH Three-year-olds and up. mi'e
and 70 yards, selling. purse $300;
xBeachsand 10t>. xMichael Angelo 113.
Servicence ill. xHaldeman ill. Schurl
113. Bobby Cook 115. Coreopsis 115. L
M Eckert 115. xAngter 110.
xApprentice allowance claimed
Weather cloudy; track fast
TENEYCK STAYS AT SYRACUSE.
SYRACUSE, N Y , Dec. 3.—James
A. TenEvck. rowing coach of Syra
cuse University, to-day set at rest
rumor? about his going to Yale a®
owing coach by renewing his oon-
| tract with Syracuse for a term of five
I ’ ears He get? a substantial increase
I in salary from Syracuse, but the
! amount Is not slated.
PIT~sBU RG ELECTS SMITH.
PITTSBURG. PA. Dec. 3 -Wayne
Smith right guard, has been elected
captain f the 1914 foot bail team of
the University of PitUburg.
AT JUAREZ.
FIRST—Selling. 2 years. fillies
5 1-2 furlongs: xTheodorlta 103, xlda
Lavlnia 103, xGipsy Love 103, Birkti
105, Crusty 105, Mary Pickford 105.
Ada Kennedy 112.
SECOND—Selling. 3 years up. 5 1-2
furlongs: Dad Stearns 107. Janus
107 .xFree Will 107, xVeno Von 107.
xKoronl 107 Moller 110, Joe Woods
112, Rio Ja 112, Lofty Heywood 112.
Maxing 112. Charley Brown 112 Bi
nocular 112. Quick Trip 112, Wicket
112, Balronia 112.
THIRD—Purse, 2 years, 5 furlongs:
Manganese 10S, Emerald Gem 108,
Sir Harry 111, Paw 112, Edith VV. 112
Ratlna 112
FOURTH—Handicap, all ages, 6
furlongs Swish 8, Sir Fretful 98.
Gold of Ophlr 102, Henry Walbank
102. Vested Rights 106. Inquiry 114.
FIFTH—Selling. 3 year? up. 5 1-2
furlongs: xGilbert Rose 107, xbrimar
Lad 107, xPaanell Girl 107, Madeline
B 107. Rosa Rabiee 107. xRose of
Jeddah 107. Rosemary 107, Palatable
110, Cha«. Goetz 112, Ben Stone 112.
Annual Interest 112,
SIXTH Selling. 3 years up. mile
Defy 104. Balcllff 106, Cubon 106. John
Louis 106. Little Marchmont 106. Jack
I.axson 106.
xApprentice allowance.
Sidelights on Sports
By A. H. C. MITCHELL
C ONNIE MACK is out with
the alibi for not putting
pinch hitters in place of
Lapp and Plank in the second
game of the World's Series,
which Matty won after a ten-
inning fight. Connie breaks an
Iron-clad rule to give his excuses
in an article in The Saturday
Evening Post.
Claiming that “Big Six" has an
advantage over a batter on his
flrst trip to the plate, but that
the charm wears off In subse
quent visits, Mack found that
T>app struck out the flrst time
he faced Matty, hit sharply to
Doyle the second time, and hit
safely the third. Therefore he
counted on him for further im
provement on the fourth trip.
As for Plank. Connie declared
that Eddie hit the ball harder
than any other player on the team
during the game, having made one
safety and being robbed of a hit
by Fletcher on another try.
Therefore he decided to let Plank
linger In the contest. But the
breaks went the other way, re
sulting In criticism for the man
ager and a late defense of his
actions.
• • *
THE following is taken from
1 the editorial column of the
Johnston (Pa.) Democrat, under
the caption. “Finds His Place."
"Congress needs able men: the
United States Senate needs able
men; the State Legislature needs
able men. But when John Kinley
Tener Is sized up one side and
down the other the verdict is.
Back to the diamond.’
“This is not to say that base
ball does not open up a great
career. True. President Taft be
came a college professor, not
withstanding the fact that he
might have become an umpire.
Roosevelt is lecturing and run
ning all of the world outside the
boundary of the United States.
Doubtless he could have secured
the presidency of the American
League had he gone after it. But
there is no accounting for tastes.
If Taft and Roosevelt choose to
pick out little careers for them
selves they must bear tHe brunt.
John Kin ley Tener is more as
piring. He proposes to step from
the Governor’s chair to a baseball
presidency. It la »n and up for
him .4*
"It is peculiar"/^ though. John
Kinley has been a pitcher and a
Governor. Everybody admits he
was a good pitcher. In the end.
as Kingsley says. every man
goes after his own place.’ Base
ball has relentlesslv claimed John
Kinley Tener for its own.”
* * *
THE above is meant to be bit-
* ing sarcasm. The trouble
with many editriaol writers, how
ever. is that they are ven* small-
minded and do not realize that to
be president of the National
League is to hold an important
office tha/t no man need be
ashamed of; that more people are
Interested in baseball than in
politics.
There are many thinking men
who. if they had the ability,
would rather be president of a
major baseball league than be
Governor of a graft-ridden State,
such as Pennsylvania is.
• * #
E DDIE AINSMITH, the star
backstop of the Washington
team, has a novel way of keeping
In condition during the winter
months. He has turned cow-
puncher and is working on the
Nicholas ranch, down in Comfort,
in the wilds of Texas
• * •
A S the New York baseball re-
porters failed to swap Mar*
quard for Tyler, they are now en
gaged In the pleasant pastime of
trading the Rube for Nap Ruck
er, the crack southpaw of the
Brooklyn club.
* * *
T HE New York reporters are
also saying that Bill Carrigan,
the Red Sox manager, is after
Russell Ford, of the Yanks. Bill
is snowed in down at Lewiston.
Maine. As soon as he is dug out
we will ask him about it.
FULL OF SCABS
Wh»' cmj’.d bt mor*. pitiful than the mndl*
•! , told of In ;hU letter from A R Avery,
Waterloo, N. Y.
Wr hive been uilny ycur Tetterlne It’s
the beet on earth for »k!n ailment*. Mr*
S C. Hart tea* a slfht to ie*. Her face
wat a mass of scabs. Tetterlne has cured
Cured by Tetterine
Tetterlne cure* rrremi. ground Itch, ring ? '
worm and ail #kln trouble* Its eCect l* ( j
S0« at druggist*, or by mail.
i (
SHUFTnINE CO.. SAVANNAH. UA
Pinehurst Autumn
Tourney OpensTo-day
PTNEHURST. N. C.. Dec. 3—The
tenth annual autumn golf tournament
of the Pinehurst Country Club wiU
start to-day and end Saturday.
The qualifying round and the finals
will be eighteen holes. A sterling cup
will be given for the best qualifying
score.
The president's trophy will go to the
winner of the flrst sixteen, governor's
cup to the winner of the second sixteen,
sterling cups to first division runner-up
and consolation division winner, silver
medal to second runner-up and con
solation division winner.
LeConte Elected
Captain of B. H. S.
Louis LeConte. who was elected man
ager of this year’s varsity football team,
and had to resign almost at the start,
due to an injury received at a prac
tice. was elected captain of the 1914
Boys’ High School football team.
LeConte w-as given a hard run for
the captaincy by Fraser. On the first
ballot, fifteen votes were cast and
Fraser and LeConte tied with seven
each, the other going to Schoen. On
the next ballot this one vote went to
LeConte.
Empire State League
Now Georgia League
AUBURN. N. Y, Dec. 3.—Chair
man John H. Farrell, of the national
board of arbitration of the National
Association of Professional Baseball
Leagues, to-day announced the fol
lowing changes in minor baseball:
Empire State League of Georgia
changed to Georgiy State League; ap
plication of Western Canada League .
for advancement to Class D not al- I
lowed.
SINNETT VS. COULON.
CHICAGO, Dec. 3.—Young Sinnett,
Rock Island's bantamweight, matched to
battle Johnny Coulon on January 4 or
5. will be iri town Monday to take up
w-ork for the match. Sinnett's manager
wants to prove that his boy is a worthy
opponent for the champion.
LEVINSKY HELD TO DRAW.
NEW YORK, Dec. 3.—Battling Le-
vinsky stumbled over a bag of thorns
last night at Brown's gymnasium in
the fighting person of Young Weinert.
of Orange. The Kkeeter held the bat
tle to a draw.
MAHMOUT NOT DEAD.
MINNEAPOLIS, Dec. 3.— Mahmout,
the famous Bulgarian wrestler, reported
some time ago a? having been killed
in battle in the Balkan war, i? alive. A
letter to that effect was received from
Mahmout to-day by Henry Irslinger, an
Australian wrestler, who Is now here.
Tom Brown Ill With
Smallpox Disease
NASHVILLE, TENN., Dec. 3 -Tom
Brown, Vanderbilt's great right tackle,
and picked as tackle on the all-South
ern football team. Is suffering from
smallpox at his home. No 250" ’ 1 V
avenue. Brown was stricken a few days
ago. since which time he haa been under
the care of Dr. R. O. Tucker, county
health officer. He is being treated in
his home and it is probable that he will
not be removed to the County Hospital
for Contagious Diseases.
Tom Brown played his last game
Thanksgiving, and at that time he felt
strong He noted the symptoms a day
or two ago, and immediately visited a
physician, who informed him he had
smallpox. Brown went to hi6 home and
Dr. R. O. Tucker, county health officer
took the case in charge. According ’0
Dr W. E. Hibbett. city health officer
It is -tust a case o f ordinary smaUpov
and will have to run its course.
CROUSE DEFEATS GRUP
ST. LOUIS. Dec. 3.—Buck Crouse, of
Buffalo, defeated Billy Grup, of St
Louis, in an eight-round bout last nigh
Crouse sent Grup down for the count
In nine twice.
I Opluo* WlU*fc«y and Druj Heblta *«ste*
•t Horn# or *t Sanitarium. Book on atibj«<?
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SnoJtnrlna*. Atlanta. Gaorate
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Ask the Ticket Agent
Central of Georgia
Railway
Fourth National Bank Beilding
Cemer Rsaebtree *nd WaHe*®a
Ph*ne Main 490