Newspaper Page Text
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fV'i L/A IN J -V < rfcUKlilAA
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This Is the Time of the Year That the Umpire Feels at Peace With All the World
<01
SPOETS"
oy
SILK HAT HARRY’S DIVORCE SUIT
Sno Use--the Judge Can’t Get In Right Again
PLACE SI HEAD
I DID LEAGUE
New President Was Former Player
and Knows the Game From
Every Angle.
B\ Frank <5. Mciike.
\ EW YORK. Dp. . lri ’-With ilc j
new pilot. Governor John K.|
Tener, at the helm, the goo*i
fehip National League to-day began <
tpur-year voyage that promised to I»•
afnoother than any ever experienced
by this old and battered, but attll sea
worthy. skiff
The presence of a new pilot a boat* J
-eemed to have a taming effect upon
the heretofore mutinous spirits of tic-
crew. composed of baseball owners I
They promised him to-dav that In
fair weather or foul the> would be
with him In body, heart ami soul, and
that they would leave the directing of j
the craft solely to him. Perhaps tin-
promise and submission were caused
by fears. Governors, as most per
.sons know, have the power to call out
the militia or marines, or whatever it
is they <all out In case of trouble,
and no doubt the crew did not care
for a c.ash with these rough military
persons
Tener arrived from Philadelphia
during the morning, and "as met
with an avalanche of greetings and
• ongratillations from the baseball as
semblago at the Waldorf-Astoria M
though iie did not give out any state
ment of policy prior to his induction
into office at the afternoon session, ho
Intimated that he intends to be the
tea! boss of the National League, and
that he will rule with an Iron hand if
no milder method supceede
Before Tener accepted the job
when il was formally offered to him
about a month ago, he stated that if
he became president be was to be
pepnittevl to be president not a fig
orehead and that lie would not stand
for any heckling or subway politics
with reference to ills ruling' and
met hods.
Elected on Four-Year Term.
Toner was elected for a four year
term, at a salary nut stated, hut it is
understood to he $25,000 a year, lie
will not draw any salary from the
league until after his term as Govern
or of Pennsylvania expire* on De< em
her 31, 1914, hut will give all the at
lention needed in the interim to Nn
tional League and National UomrnU-
sion affairs.
Of course. Tenor's arrival and his
assuming the Job as National League
president was the big feature of to
day’s confab at the \V aldorf-Astoria
Next in importance was the Tinker
question. Just what Is to become of
the deposed manager of the Cincin
nati Reds was an unsettled question
overnight, but rumors floating around
inclined to the idea that Josephus
would land finally with about fifteen
of the sixteen major league clubs
Tener a Former Player.
Some years ago in Pittsburg John
Kinley Tener. a oln**k in an office in
the Smoky City, gained quite a repu
tation as a ball player He had suf
fered with ill health, and on the ad
vice of hii physician, nought outdoor
employment, and entered professional
baseball. That marked the beginning
of the career of the man who was to
later become Governor of Pennsyl
vania. and who yesterday was elect
ed to the presidency of the Natfon-.il
league to succeed President Tom
Lynch.
John Kinley Tener was horn in Ire
land July 25. 1863 At the age of 9
bis parents came to America and set
tled in Pittsburg \t IS years Tener
had become quite well known as an
amateur ball player. He- had added
to his small income by playing with
amateur ball teams on Saturday aft
ernoons for $5 a game. When It be
came necessary for him to find work
in the open, his friends advised that
he become a professional ball player
Among those who so advised Mm was
William H. Moody, later a justice of
the United States Supreme Court.
In 1885 Tener obtained his first pro
fessional baseball engagement as first
baseman of the Pittsburg club. He
had become a husky youpgster.
weighing more than 200 pounds and
standing more than six feet. Tenor
did not make the tremendous hit that
his friends had predicted, and before
the season was half over he was re-
lea sed and joined the Baltimore team.
At his own request, be was released
to the Naverhill (Mass.) club, where
he finished out the season, to return
to business again, obtaining a clerk
ship with a Pittsburg house. He con
tinued to play amateur baseball, how
ever
Played on Anson's Team.
Tener's brilliant record a> a pitcher
in and around Pittsburg brought him
to the attention of A G. Spalding and
led to a job with Captain Anson's old
Chicago White Stockings This time
Tener more than made good He ac
quired a national reputation. He was
one of the men chosen by Spalding
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| TALKING TO YHATj
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HE HAS A DATE
SES -/6S THEM /VIEETT
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made me
SEW LI
INDOOR SPORTS
Harry Mi Cormick Tells About the
Kicks He and Matty Made
When at Bucknell.
Gosh you saj/ that
-youRE BoPro-Jo 1
Ana i - vYrtADtPyE 5AV
IP wE Beat it OOia/u
TU THE C ORvjER. A A/D
pi_A-y A little CtAmE
op Pool fh- i-na
V Si tic op the part-/-
C\
Sam Crane.
N ~
YORK. Dec. 10.—In these
om hi nation days of football,
baseball, turkey. Brickleys and
sm h it is timely, perhaps, to go back
a few y« »rs and. tell what other grid
iron liens did m t lie way of kick
ing.
Baseball i mixed in with this little,
short story as a sort of stuffing for
the Christmas turkey for the simple
l'-ason tha Christy Mathewson and
J Harry McCormick, both football
: lat of tiie past, are now quite
prominent in the great national
game.
Harry .McCormick is now manager
of the Chattanooga club of the
Southern League, and if he does not
make good 1 lose rny guess.
Matty Was a Star.
I am sure he will, because he has
started in the light wav. He has a
t'.itn already engaged, and li full (me.
too l!« is allowed only fifteen men
as a player limit whereas 25 is the
Pig league limit But Manager Harry
has proven himself to be the same
pinch hitter a# a manager he was
with th< Giants as the man with the
punch. He has taken time by the
forelock, and har now gathered to-
gether an aggregation of baseball
talent that will keep every other
Southern League manager guessing
lo equal
This is what Harry told me the
other day:
What is all this 1 hear about
Briekley making field goals, one after
the other, from the 20 and 30 yard
lines'/ Why. when Mathewson and 1
were playing together with the Buck
nell eleven those short kicks were
paltry.
“They were drop kicks, of course,
at which I was not so very good; but
as for punting, I think the present
players are now far short of our abil
ity in the same line.
1 remember in a game Bucknell
was playing in those good old foot
ball days when in preliminary prac-
I punted from midfield over tlie
GEE I CftWT
I 'N\ 6 WIN <j- '
this party
i see
BRO VN * S I W
TV+€"RE 5MILINJ&
■j JUST AS TV+OUG-H
They meant ft
By Tad Big Records in Southern in 1913
+•+ +•+ *•* +•+
Some Echoes of the Glorious Strife
INDOOR SPORTS
fHfe
POUS£"U/AfJft/i. aj Cr
p/\ p-PM
tin
goal posts with both the right and
left foot fourteen times in succession.
What college players can do that to
day?
Matty, Too, Starred.
"And then there was Mathewson.
our fullback, who made a goal from
tin* field against West Point from the
48-yard line, and at an angle from
the side lines that did not give him
any more than a foot leeway be
tween the posts. This was tne kick,
by the way. that put Matty on the
All-American line-up as the real full
back.
"There is no doubt the game of
football has changed since the days
• *f Matty and myself." continued Mc
Cormick. "but l can not see where it
lias improved. Mind you. in our time
we had to buck the line as well as
make our kicks. There were no for
ward passes and ail that, and the
game is more ‘open 1 now titan then;
but when we were playing we had
the 'punch.' We .were not afraid to
take hard knocks or to give them."
to rniike the famous basebaM i--ur ■ t. -j ■ -r i -rq • -i -j
1 « • ■ s - Italian Loads riold
and AH-Nationals in 1888-89. and act-
ed as secretary as well a# playing I
great bill.
In 1891 Tener abandoned profes 1
si anal baseball and settled In Char-
leroi Pa Where he again ' YORK Dw 10. Just a-
n i interests c -■ daw filtered through the windows bf
*»ral large corporations, became prvsi- Madison Square Garden to-day the
dent of a bank and head of a street ^en-.ed to inspire Fran-
railwav svstem. His fortune is estl- I ' Y< rrc t) f the Italian team, in the
mated*at close to a million In 1909 wix da> bike race, with fresh life
Mr. Tener became a Congressman. | v ^rri set up a hot sprint, which broke
and at the expiration of his term was I U P 1 twelve-team tie which had
nominated for Governor of Pennsyl-
\ ania by ihe Republicans and elected
term will expire on January
Ill Long Bike Race
His
191
rec
Governor Tener made a good
*d as t’hief Executive and enjoys
popular!tv in his Siat*>
Yerri set
up the twelve-team tie
exited overnight, as four of the
riders were taken unawares and lost
1. | laps'
Howexer, it the end of the fifty-
sixth hour the eight leaders were still
behind the record. The> had mads
1.140 miles and 6 la,ps
Many Good Bouts on
Card for To-night:
Ferns vs. Gibbons
CHICAGO, De< 10. - In addition to
tiie Ritchie-Murpb> affair on the
coast to-night, many choice matches
are scheduled for the Middle \\ « stern
part of t he count i \
New Orleans is wrapped up in the
meeting of Mike Gibbons, generally
called the welterweight champion
and Wildcat Ferns, the hard-hitting
Kansas City mauler. They should
put up a hot battle, one that will de
light the fight-loving Southerners
Gibbons has all the class of the
pair in a boxing way and
some himself. The weight, 14
at 3 o’clock, will let Mike in
his strength
Ferns lias nothing bu
and plenty of ruggedn* s
Radne will be the < enter • W is
consin's boxing interests In John
Wagner s Lakeside Arcu.i M.<; Me
Cue. of Racine, will make his first
fight under the management of Tom
Jones. His opponent to-night will be
Tommy Bresnahan. a tong t and \ *■ -
eran Easterner, capable of extending
any bo> of his inches T ■ weight
for the battle to-night is us pounds
at 3 o’clock.
Over at Windsor Joe Mamiot. <
Southern lightweight, will mix with
Patsy Drouillard. of Detroit. f>»reig t
rounds. Mand-fl b«s had much more
experience than Pats\ and s loubi
liave little trouble in outpointing him
Fred Gilmore, welterweight, boxes
Frank Bauer, a heavyweight.
i
White with Cleve Br^lges at
phis for December t5.
can Hit
pounds
with all
his punch
FODDER FOR FANS
J
at St.
Jack
Mem-
TflRfirm MARIT rou Mniuer It ANDERSON STOPS BAR
UHALLU nflol I , a *lly In 3 It- LOS \NG ELI'S l». K
1 your h»a'i>i. prelenf your life Vot a m ■ \n,jt*rson of M» ' *rd. Oreg
c'- manl> vlfor. r*ln nfrvf*. rl*ai •» - j ou Frank F> ’ ! .* '* N .llli’'
; ■ lor «lr«acth Whether you tIiaw »>r *mokt
r-p? ''r»r**'tA* gni mv
H f W'oHh L* in Mlll*d lri* t J
WOODS 34 Sixth Aw, M., Y»rk, N. Y.
ANDERSON STOPS BARRIEU.
10.—"Bud”
knocked
incomer. R
in th* 1 * tenth round of a scheduled
twenty-round contest at Vernon
Arena lum night.
BAKER WINS BOUT.
PHIL tDELPHI v Det 19.
"Knockout Harry" Raker, of Wil
mington. won by « slight margin over
Eddie Revoire, of Id-i <b 1 phi. c
rattling ^ix-round bout before a big
crowd at the Fairmount A « last
nighi
YOAKUM BESTS KELLY
DENVER ! S •
um was gi\en the decision <>\n Let
Kelly, of Sr Louis after fifteen
rounds of rough-and-tumble tigh! my
at the Colorado A C. last night.
Joe Tinker is said to have stated that
lie will not allow Garry Herrmann to
trade him to any other club than Chi
cago, Pittsburg or New York. If any
other berth is found for him. Joseph
will probably manage » Federal league
team next season.
* * *
Fred Clarke is now hot after Charley
Herzog, but it is doubtful if he ran of-
ter MeGraw anything in return. Clarke
made a bid for Herzog at the time Me
Graw traded Hank dowdy and \1 Brid-
well to Boston for the great little third
baseman.
Members of the Brooklyn team are
going to remember their former man
ager. BUI 1 Million, on Christmas Bill’s
stocking will contain a tine present.
‘•Red" Smith, \tlantan. is threatening
to unit the Dodgers. So Is Karl Ying
linjf However. when spring rolls
a round it's a good bet that both will
report at the training camp on time.
* V *
Tommy McMillan has started light
training already. He is taking a ten-
mile iaunt over the Roswell road every
afternoon.
* • •
Charley F’bbets is after Romanach.
tin' Cuban shortstop. Romanaeh fears
that tie will not he welcomed in organ
ir.-'d ball on account of being a Cuban
It's :« cinch, however, that the smooth
Ehbetts will convince him otherwise
Judge Kavanaugb should give .loe
Bonn an umpire’s berth next year. The
\tlanta Club coach knows the game
backward and would make a corking
official
Kavanaugb last spring promised to
keep Bean in mind when he started to
line up his taff for the 1914 season.
* * *
By the way. Anson will not admit
that his baseball playing days are over,
but he docs confess to being a golfer,
and a golfer, according to his own defi
nition. is "any player who can get
around under a hundred " Probably
to- - alls the others duffers. Me also
admits to being guilty of an 81 out In
Chicago.
m * *
When Fred Clarke affixed his John
Hancock to « Pittsburg contract last
week it was the twenty-first time that
be has agreed to work Tor Barney Drey
fuss.
» • *
Jersey City fans are confident that 1
Ruddy Hulawitt will give them n win
ner next season in the International j
League The former Lookout knows j
baseball from soup to nuts
Pop Anson declares that Jerry Cut- '
shaw. former Southern League star,
now a Dodger. Is a regular second base
man.
• * «
Mr. Tinker will not enter vaudeville
ihis winter, owing to the fact that he
appeared in burlesque all last summer.
New York Team to
Attend Athens Games
NEW YORK. Dec. I The lii.sh-
A in erica n Athletic Club has decided
to send at least ten men. headed by'
Melvin W. Sheppard, hero of several
Olympic games, to represent il in the
Athenian Olympic games to be held
in Athens during May of next year.
This team is expected to form the
J nucleus of a squad from all over the
! United States who will wear the
shield in competition algainst the
picked men of other nations.
Sheppard, the present track and
field captain of the Irish-Americans.
I was the first man chosen to make the
trip, and the atlil
the club is said to
proposition that tfi
letes of the club si
any serious compet
order that they it
! Athens invasion.
It is anticipated that men from
Boston, Chicago and San Francisco
will be included in the make-up of the
! American team, the expenses of the
j men to be met by the clubs they rep
resent. In this manner tiie United
i States will be enabled to make a good
showing, which will be necessary in
England. Germany. Sweden and
France to have competitors on the
j scene.
M’WHORTER HONORED.
AMES, low A. De< 10. -Ray S. Mc-
I Whorter. who finished twelfth in the
i Western conference eroys-.cmintry run
at Columbus, was elected captain of
J tiie Ann- crosscountry squad last
nigln.
tie committee ot
be a unit on the
* best of the ath-
ould abstain from
tion this winter in
ny be fit for the
GRAHAM CAPTAIN.
MONMOUTH. ILL. Dr.- K
ert Graham has been elected
of the Monmouth College
eleven for rmxt season He h,
ed quarter and halfback f<
y cart.
-Rob
Athletic Club Five
At Work for ‘Nooga’
ChampionsSaturday
The second scheduled game of the
season for the Atlanta Athletic Cl no
will be played Saturday night. The
Atlanta boys will face the Chatta
nooga Tigers, champions of East
Tennessee and one of the best teams
in the State.
The Atlanta boys are in the best .of
■ oridition, and with the initial game
posted on the win side of their slate
‘they are ready to fight hard for Sat
urday's game. The locals have been
putting in some extra time this week
at. field goal shooting and passing,
which they were a shade off color or.
in the opening battle.
Levinsky Outpoints
Flynn in Fast Scrap
NEW YORK. Dee. 10.—In a fast
ten-round bout here last night Bat
tling Levinsky outpointed Jim Flynn,
of Pueblo, to whom he conceded
twenty pounds in weight The first
’ 'll! . I * • ' A i the
fourth going to Flynn, and in the
others Levinsky proved himself the
master of his opponent. Only once
. tout did Flj nn appear to
have an advantage, when. with a
blow to the right ear. he sent Le
vinsky to his knees.
TEMPLE IN COMEBACK.
SUPERIOR. WIS„ Dec. 10.— Ray
Temple, after an absence from the
ring of seven months, staged a come
back last night, outpointing Joe Sher
man in. ten rounds. Jim Ahearn and
Buddie Logan furnished a spectacu
lar semi-windup, in which Ahearn
earned a decision. In the prelimi
nary ole Bull, of Winnipeg, defeated
Joe* Wolford, of St. Paul.
LOUISVILLE BUYS ZINN.
L« 'UISVILLE. KY . De D*. -
Louisville has purchased Outfielder
Guv Zinn, formerly' of the New York
Highlanders, from Rochester.
];4i4iiuTl
Opium ’Ylilikfy •*•«! Orv.; s
»i Hons* or •* Rook on sublff*
t\re. OR R M WOOD KY J**N. Vi«KM
Sanit*r<*«. Atlioti, <.•©/*»»
By 0. B. Keeler.
A RELATED, but none the less
interesting, boiling down of
stunts and records in the
Southern League last season reveals
a lot of things that may be used to
settle controversies in the Stove
League, and, even if there's no row
on, makfl pretty good reading for the
famished fans.
As to where we got 'em, that's an
other story This sort of dope accu
mulates. ns it were, during the run of
the season, and exudes, like the pre
cious attar of roses out of the Otter,
while the frost is on the pumpkin and
the scuttles of coal have been lugged
in.
You might look it over.
* * *
U/ITH regard to fielding achieve-
| ments, Atlanta fans were, privi
leged to witness the season’s most
spectacular day’s work. The day was
August 23. and the worker was Rlv-
ington Bisland. The. wonderful short-
fielder that day handled fifteen
chances—fourteen assists and one
put-out—without a skip, and hung
up a record in this league that is
good outside of it. so far as the de
ponent knoweth.
These men led in fielding averages
for the season:
First base. McGilvr&y and Snede-
cor, .984 (Agler fielded .982); second
base, Marcan, .971; third base, Kl-
wert, .943; shortstop. Flberfeld. .958;
catcher. Mayer, .984: pitcher, Hogg.
.991; outfield, Clark. .974.
* * *
IN the hitting department, Harry
1 Welchonce, of the Crackers, led
the league with an average of .338,
jumping to the front just a few' days
too late to cop the Rose medal, which
Dave Robertson, the Mobile slugger,
captured because it was awarded “to
the batsman leading the league one
week before the season closes."
Harry's performance included 194
hits. 21 being two-baggers, 12 of them
triples, and 6 of them home runs. He
Mrs. King Defeats
Her Husband in
HandicapCueMatch
Mrs. Bertha M. King, champion
woman pocket billiarn player, won
the handicap match against her hus
band. W. W. King, in the rooms of
the M. & M. Club last night. Mr.
King agreed to play 75 against Mrs.
King’s 40, but was able to collect only
52 points, while Mrs. King ran out
her 40.
The experts put up a great match,
Mr. King’s high run being 27 and
Mrs. King managed to make 19 on
one stretch. Many of the fair fans
attended the match and gave Mrs.
King a big ovation as she made many
difficult shots. They will play an
other exhibition match Thursday-
night.
set a new record tor number of safe
hits in a season.
* * *
AMONG 1 Ban
Prough. of Birmingham, was tli^
top-notcher. winning 23 games and
losing 6. He pitched 274 innings
yielded 227 hits, and gave up 69 runs
Elmer Brown, of Montgomery, fan
ned the most batsmen, striking ou
156 of the 917 who faced him in 269
innings.
Parsons, of Memphis, allowed more
runs than any other hurler in pro
portion to the Innings pitched, hi 36
games and 268 innings 139 men
scored against him, an average <>f
more than 4 1-2 runs to the game.
Brenner, of New Orleans, achieved
a record which be probably is n->t
bragging about. He started eighteen
games without winning one. He man
aged to tie three, and is charged
with losing eleven, the other four
being won for his successor on the
slab after he had .yielded to the bat
tering: Troy, of Chattanooga, start
ed eleven games and wound up the
season with a pitching percentage of
,000.
Coveleskio pitched the only one-hit
game of the season, and lost it. i at
that—a seven-inning affair with
Montgomery, July 12.
/ * * *
IN the miscellaneous records of 1913.
* Tommy Long’s 113 runs set a n
mark for following base-runners to
shoot at—and a tough mark to hit.
Clyde Wares, of the Billikens. led
the base-swipers with 60, Dave Rob
ertson being second with 57.
Perry, of Nashville, on August 20,
made five hits In that mans times u
and repeated the next day in N> '
Orleans. Young, also of Nashville,
made eleven successive hits in three
days
• * »
AND the biggest record of al
one of the biggest ever made in
any league, or that ever will be made,
was that last grand spurt of the
champion Crackers.
With an 80-point margin separat
ing them from the Gulls. Bill Smith’s
team took a brace, and of the next
32 games they won 2*;, tied 2 and lost
4.
There isn't much to add to the fig
ures—especially if you watched them
do it.
MAISEL PILFERS 25 BASES.
Maisel stole 25 bases in 51 gam
he played in the American Leag
after joining the Highlanders. S u
record for a youngster.
Maddening Rkln dlseane* ran’t exist If T<
Uie Is used because TeUeilne Is sclentlfl
j UJeCT l ° rmi0Te the rA, sE as well a:
TETTERTNE CURES
SKIN DISEASES
J«,f w. Srott MUledgertHfl, Ga., wrlti*
I suffered with an eruption two years a
one box of Tetterlne cured me and two of
friends. It Is worth Its weight In gold.
Tetterlne cures eczema, tetter, ground
erysipelas. Itching tiles and other alia
Get it to-day Tetterlne
50o at druggists, or by mall.
SHUPTRINE CO.. SAVANNAH. OA.
Yankees Purchase
Walsh from Mackmen
NEW YORK. Der. 10.—Outfielder
James Walsh, of the world's cham
pion Athletics, was to-day purchased
by‘Frank J. Farrell, president of the
New InrU Americans. The amount
was not announced further than a
statement that the price far exceeded
the waiver figures. Walsh is a very
fair hitter, a wonderful thrower and
a faultless base runner
catarrh:
OF THE
bladder!
Relieved In <
24- Hours;
TArh Catv ^—v ]
of nyrrntprfrftu
MEN
(til red Forever
Ry n true specialist
who possesses the experi
ence of years. The right
kind of experience—doing
the same thing the right
way hundreds and per
lisps thousands of tlme < »
with unfailing, pcrtnaie - '
results. Don’t you think
It's time to get the right
~ treatment? I will cure
you or make no charge,
thus proving _ that my
present day. scientific methods are absolute
ly certain. I hold out no false hopes if I find
your case Is incurable. If you desire to con
ault a reliable, long-established specialist of
vast experience, come tn nji and learn what
can he accomplished with skillful, scientific
treatment | ,an cure Blood Poison, Varl
cose Veins. ITrcra. Kidney and Bladder -Its
cases. Obstructions. Catarrhal Discharges.
FIIcr and Rectal troubles and all nervous and
Chronic Diseases of Men and Women
Examination free and strictly confidential
Hours 9 a. in. to 6 p. m ; Sundays. 9 to 1
OR. HUGHES, SPECIALIST
Opp.Hii e Third
IK ]-J North Broad
N* . A'Ian.a.
r,