Newspaper Page Text
inn
A X JJA11 A A
ununiTj a
:\ i f rs i’j >\ n
\\J
Tliis Is tlie T'inie of the Yenr 'Plicit the Umpire Keels cit Peace W ith All the World
TENEfi ACCEPTS
SILK HAT HARRY’S DIVORCE SUIT
Sno Use--the Judge Can't Get In Right Again
' I Oa/T THAT
•i** TS+-IO THArT A(
i-Le=fi Kifrp.**—< «=vep y
AW — Ovt - OW - vA/Clj
j kMOVT MFfT '+tF- r
N£5 THIS ih TH6 XUDtyE -
om nus ii me bar ass'aj-
IsEi -T£i Txev */ite*r
\td~i<thT eh— hej- i ' <_i_
\ Re over*. — S' 30 e h -
| SES-OF COURiE ^ /
V. COUiJT Of' AAE. y
HC MU TUT RE
T7AL<t N 5 TO TH AT
\*J a t TTZ-ETTW —
1 HE H-Ai A DATCj
WAY CA/ OU O-H -
HER. /-U 13*00 CAuf'i
'jfrKt A L-cn<J QACA-TH
f 7cjw wirYKsur JoiAr
^g-A^uis/Cr ^ &_
attachct 0 to jams or mu
Cen^ur AfS 1 t ixaav-
if+Ci OM TO HU irt/t-F--
&UV-
1+0' 00MT|<n’0'H j ^ W *’ r
ITS RU- a, 3OCff —
Fo(t- /N.1T7WCE —
T>Ui eWA-M M ft—
(+E^ <*T" HO
Tf«E PMoMt (iso- RmOC-
(TS AN JO ^ &-E - —
i+e AN'iouc'%j~—
sw RFMi— wru-
1. \ s&e we. j
i,i BR.OVJMS lM ^
^ 7v*-<r®'+- JMlUWfr
j!/ JV5T A! TH-OUG-H
V TueV meaut it
DOtoT AuO MPS
LOOK
5 ujE'0t- racy
ARE A t-OUELy
COuPlE -1 HE'AR
THEVvE wFVET-
IAAO A Pt 6-0 T"_
m rr+e hou
ce T+eyyiSRe
y£i- I HEAP-V
t>+ at rneV I
Ofe-T ALOMfr /
LUTE TUJ<j I
.Straw 6-e J
0Ui_uDO&'' / i
Gee 1 C-Amt*
m 6niM <3-
Mi s part/
1 TMcy
I &0 OUT
| I ro THE
li YARD
INDOOR RPOIvTS
thE
h OU A C\sj 4 , 11 /V cy
PAP-TV
PUCE IT HEAD
OF DID LEAGUE
PAR ATTHOTrUATHUfU BS ~
1 know n+e: SAP- —
yoo UJElWf MEET that RiOMAV
New President Was Former Player
and Knows the Game From
Every/ngle.
Prank <!. Meuke.
N -EVv YORK. Dec. 10. -'With fiaj
new pilot. Governor John K.
Tener, at the helm, the good
- up National League to-day began f*
our-year voyage that promised to be
smoother than any ever experienced
by this old ana buttered, but still sea
worthy, skiff.
The presence «.-f a new pilot aboard
denied to have a taming effect upon
ie heretofore mutinous spirits of t.»e
■ev composed of baseball owners.
They promised him to-day that, in
"ah weather o foul they wouici be
with him in body, heart a.nd soul, and
i!iat they would leave the directing of
the craft solely to him. Perhaps the
promise and aubmisaion were caused
i \ fears. Governers, as most per-
on. know, hare the power to call out |
* in ,it.a »>r marines, or whatever it
is they call out in case of trouble.!
nci r-o doubt the crew did not care j
tor a c«Esh w ith these rough military I
persons.
Tener arrived from Philadelphia
i.iing ti.e morning, and was met
. 5th an avalanche of «re«*tingH and
ongrotulations from the basebands- j
>einblage at the Waldorf-Astoria. AJ--
tough iie did not give out any sh ie ’
ment of policy prior to his induction j
nto office at tiie afternoon session, lie
ntlmated that lie intends to be the
**u’ boss of the .National league, and
■’liat he will rule with an iron hand if
• o milder method succeeds.
Before Tenor accepted the job. j
lien it was formally offered to him :
about a month ego, he stated that if •
e became president lit* was to bn J
♦*rmitte.l to be president - not a fig
reheati—and that he xvouTd not standi
or any heckling or subway politic*
vvith reference to his rulings ami
met hod k.
E'.ectecl on Four-Year Term.
'Tener was elected for a four-year
**rm, at a salary not stated, but It is
.nbenstood to bv $25,000 a year. He
• ii. not uraw any nalary from the
e.igne until after his teiin an Govern-
■ r »: Pennsylvania expires on Decem
ber 31, 1014. but. Will give all the at-
ention nee*ied in tr.e interim to Na-
i mnal League and National Commis
sion n rr* ire.
Of course, Tener** arrival and his
•.^'imhig the job uh National I>eag'iic
resident as the big feature of to*
::>■* ronfnb at tiie Waldorf-Astoria.
'Next in importance was the Tlokei
iiiestion. Just what is to become of
*;e deposed manager of tiie Cincin-
* Keds was an unsettled question
verriight, but rumors flouting around
•u lined f<» the Idea that Josephus
'• oil’d land finally with about fifteen
r the sixteen major league clubs.
Tener a Former Playsr.
S' iiic years in Pittsburg John
Kiuley Tener. a clo"k in uit ofTico in
be Smoky City, gained quite a repu-
ntion ; s a bail player, lie had »uf-
•red -vit.il ill health, and on the ud-
ice of hi- physician, sought outdoor
i;; b’> ment. and entered professional
.isoball. That marked the beginning
of the career of the man who was to
+ t**r become Governor of Penimyl-
o >es$4 pdas ‘ ,!4 tltct-
. .. ).re«idency of the National
l.i ugiie to succeed President Tom
sjfjM iViADE. ME
IJ&M6
yAjAYR^ 1 ^
00 ,
“f 5fT OobUeA
, WOO*£
Rouov*
rM6
INDOOR SPORTS
By Tad
Harry McCormick Tells About the;
Kicks Ho and Matty Made
When at Bucknell.
y\* YORK, Doc. 10. In these
combination days uf football,
baseball, turkey, L rick leys and
such it hs timely, perhaps, to go back
a few y ears and tell what other grid
iron heroes did n t.lio way of kick
ing.
Baseball [.% mixed in with L.is llttb ,
short story ua u soi-t of stufilng for
btmu.M turkey for th#* slmpto
that t’hrlsty Mathowaon and
rmlck, IxHh football
past, ore now quite j
O-OSH-voo rHXr \
Vou’PE ooP-ro-Ao
AMI - YJ+t-APD'./E YA'V
IE VAJt; B4TAT IT OOLV*-’
T® -T-|« C ORwETP. rNMt> \
■pi.^1 a i-irri_& G-AjaE )
Of ■pool- 0rt- t‘NN
<X. OR- rAE PA AW
■M.
great, national ;
the
reason
Harry
Rtarn of
prominen
game.
Harry McCormick . ; now manager J
of the Chattanooga -’lub of the!
Southern League ..and if he does not !
make good I loae my guess.
Matty Wb« n 8tar.
in suro ho w ill, because he has j
Kinlev T
way born in Tre-
At the age of
started in tiie right way. He has aj
team already engaged, and a full one. '
too. He in allowed only fifteen men
aM a player limit, whereas lio in the t
big league limit. But Manager Hairy j
has proven himself to bo the same {
pinch hitter hm a manager be wa.s i
with the Giants as the man with the
punch. He has taken time by the
forelock, and has now gathered to
gether an aggregation of baseball
talent tlpi.t will keep every other!
■ Southern League manug-u guessing
| to equal.
This in what Hm:y told me the)
other day:
“What is ail this I hear about, j
Ih ickley making field goals, one after \
the other, from the 20 and ilO yard
lines? Why. when Mathewson and I
FODDER FOR FANS
Joe Tinker is said to have stated that
lie will not allow Garry Herrmann to
trade film to any other club than Chi
cago, Pittsburg or New York. If any
other berth is found for him, Joseph
will probably manage a Federal League
team next season.
Fred Clarice is now hoi alter Charley
Herzog, but it ia doubtful if he can ot
ter McGraw anything in return. Clarke
made a bid for Herzog at the time Mc
Graw traded Hank Gowd.v and Ai Brid-
well to Boston for the great little third
baseman.
Member* of the Brooklyn team are
going to remember thoir former man
ager, Bill Dahlen. on Christmas. Bill’s
stocking will contain a fine present.
It’s a cinch, however, that tiie smootk
Ebbetts will convince him otherwise
Judge Havana ugh should give Joe
Bean an umpire’s berth next year. The
Atlanta Club coach knows the game
backward and would make a corking
official.
Kavanaugh last spring promised to
keep Bean in mind when he started
line up his taff for the 1914 season.
By the way, Anson will not admi
that his baseball playing days are over,
but he does confess to being a golfer
and a golfer, according to his own def:
nition, is “any player who can get.
around under a hundred.” Probabb
he calls the others duffers. lie als>-
admits to being guilty of an 81 out in*
Chicago.
“Red Smith. Atlantan, is threatening
to quit the Dodgers. So Is Earl Ting
ling. However, when spring rolls
around it's a good bet that both will
report at the training camp on time.
Tommy McMillan lias started light
training already. He is taking a ter
mite jaunt over the Iloswell road every
afternoon.
Charley Ebbets is after Romanaeh,
the Cuban shortstop. Romanaeh fears
that he will not be welcomed In organ
ized ball on account of being a Cuban.
When Fred Clarke affixed his Join
Hancock to a, Pittsburg contract las-
week it was the twenty-first time thy
he has ag/'eed to work for Barney Dre:
fuss.
Pop Anson declares that Jerry Cut
ahaw. former Southern League stai,
now a Dodger, is a regular second base-
man.
Mr. Tinker will not enter vaudeville
this winter, owing to the fact that ho
appeared in burlesque all last summer
ener
ISliS. At in- ii*i* 0.1. j n e ,. P ,,laying t„K«th,»r with the Uuck-
to America and set- nell elav
• u Pittsburg:. At 18 years Tener
ecome quit** well known ns an
Gt.ateur ball player. He had added
* ■;> lno'cne by playing v\itii
• lateur hall teams on Saturday aft-
n < • n® for *'» a game. When it be
anie necessary for him to find work
• : the open, 1..* friends advised that
r become ;• nrofet'sional ball player.
\ niong tho?*e who s«» ad\ ?®ed him was
Will?am H. Mood) , later a justice of
* United States Supreme Court.
in 1885 Tener obtained hi® first pro
visional baseball engagement as first
>a.«einan of the Pittsburg club, He
yd become a husky youngster.
'■,-ighing more than 20t* pounds and
standing more tiian six feet. Tener
did not make the tremendous hit that
is friends hu>. predicted, and before
li e season was lialf over he was re-
eased and joined the Baltimore teaiq.
At his own request, he was released
i t the Naverhi’.l (Mass.) club, where
e finishe ‘ out the season, to return
businehb again, obtaining u clerk
's ip with a Pittuburg house. He con
tinued t • p. amateur baseball, liotx-
1t K T T • T\ T
*' Mrs. King Dcfbcits
All-.Nutiona e in l\sS-S9. and act- { ^
Her Husband in
‘Played on Anson’s Team.
j’ener'K brilliant record u.s a j ifidier
;u and around Pittsburg brought him
to tiie attention of A. G. Spalding and
ed t*» a job th «hiptuin An boil's old
• ‘h'cago White Stockings. This time
Tener more than made good. He ac
quired & national reputation lie was
one of the men chosen by Spalding
to make
the
and ,
ed at> i^eoretary as \\e.l as playing!
great bi.ll.
In 1891 Tener abandon*- . profes-
? lonal baaeball and settled in * ar-|
leroi. Pa., where he again entered J
business, acquired Interests in sev- |
er&l large corporations, became presi
dent of a bank nn«l head < f « ‘*r*et
railway system. Ills fortune Is call-
mated at close to a million. In 1909
ir. Tener became a Congressman,
and at the expiration of file term vas
oininateo for «4overnor of Pennsyl-
. .ia hi tii»- Republican** and te*
His erm will expire on January 1,
:cr». Governor Tener made a good
•* oru as Chief Executive and enjoy*,
biuch popularity in Ills State.
paltr>-.
“The.' were drop kicks, of course. '
at which l wua not so very good; but ;
a* for punting, f think the present ;
players arc now far .short of our ab'.l- i
Ity in the same line.
*’I remember in a game Bucknell j
was playing in those good old foot
ball days when in preliminary pra*.-- ‘
tire 1 punted from midfield over the
goal posts with both the right and
left foot fourteen times In succession.
What college players can do that to
il a y v
Watty, Too, Starred.
' And then there was Mathewson,
our fullback, who made a goal from
the field against West Point from the
48-yard line, and at an angle from
the hide lines that did not give him
any more than a foot leeway be
tween the posts. Tlds wax the kick,
by the way, that put Matty on the
All-American line-up us the real full
back.
“There •« no doubt the game of
football has changed since the days
of Matty ;.nd myself.” continued Mc
Cormick, “but I can not see where it
has improved. Mind you, in our time
we had to buck the line as w ell as
make our kicks. There were no for
ward passes a id all that, and the
game is more ‘open’ row than then;
but when we were playing we had
the 'punch.* We were not afraid to
take hard knocks or to give them.”
Many Good Bouts oil
Card for To-night;
vs. Gibbons
HandicapCueMatcb
J0BACC0 HABIT
Y •« c**i '*• tuer It
•Mfty I •»
• '•(**9 •9U' IS* ' o tc » »u n.
Mrs. Bertha M. King, champion
woman pocket billiard player, won
the handicap match against her hus
band. \N W. King, in the rooms of
the M. M. iHub lust night Mr.
King agreed to pluy ?3 against M.*s.
King’s 40, but was able to collect, only j
.'•i: points, while Mrs. King run out
The experts put up k great match,
Mr. King’s high run being ”7 and
.Mrs King managed to make 19 on
stretch. Many of tiie fair fan*
gave Mrs.
mace many
FHU'AGu, Dec. JO. in addition to
the Ritchie-Murphy affair on the
eoist to-night, many choice matched
are scheduled for the Middle Western
part of ‘the countr>.
New Orleans \a vvru 4 c**•] up in Lie
meeting of Mike Gibbons, generally
called the welterweight champion,
and Wildcat Ferns, the hard-hitting
Kansas City mauler. Thny should
put up a hot battle, one that will de
light tiie fight-loving Southerners.
Gibbon® has all the claxx of the i
pair In a boxing way and can hit |
«oine himself. The weight. 1F> pounds
at ft o’clock, will lei Mike in with all
his strength.
T'eri/*- has nothing '.•> • Lis punch
and plenty of ruggednes .
UaC no will bo the cent.,
consin's boxing interests.
H'agner’s Lakeside Vrena
f’ue, of Racine, v ill muk
fight under the management of Tom
Joru**». His opponent to-night will bo 1
Tommy Rresnahar. a toug!i and vet
eran Easterner, capable •>* extending '
any boy of Ills inches. Th** weight |
for t.be Ivattle lo-i ig : U : l‘.*S pounds!
at S o'clock.
Over at Windsor Joe A!undot, the
Southern lightwelgh .- ill mix with
Pat>> Drouillard, of Detroit for eight
rounds. Mandot has . ad much more
experience than Patsy and should
Jmve little trouble in outpointing him. i
Fred Gilmore, welterweight, boxes
Frank Hauer, a heavy weight, at Si.
t’harle®. Fred lias matched .huk
White with (Meve liridges at Mem
phis for December
Big Records in Southern in 1913
•>••;* •>•*> *•;•••> v#v *;••*;*
Some Echoes of the Glorious Strife
By O. B. Ivecior.
\ TALL VTi.'D, but none thr >
/“A interesting, boiling down of
stunts and records in the
Southern League last season reveal*
a lot of things that may bo used to
settle controversies In the Stove
League, and, even if there’s no row
on, make pretty good reading for the
famished fans.
You might look it ov*-
t oj Wis-
In John
..Jatty Al
lis first
\ y
* * men I re pr i vi •
leged to witness the season’s most
spectacular day's work. The day was
August 7?. sad the worker was Riv
lngrun I’.island. T*"* wonderful shoit-
ftel.iev that day handled fifteen
chances—fourteen assists and one
put-out—without a skip, and
up a re n»rd in this league t
good outside of it, to far as t:
ponent knoweth.
These men led \n fielding a\
for the season:
First las.. AG-Giivvay and Snede-
cor, .981 (Agio fielded .98-»; second
base. Ma'van. .971: third base. K!-
wert. .9! ’>. shortstop. i .lbertVld. .9.'.8;
catcher. Major. ‘.*84: pi'.chcr, Hogg,
.991; outfield, Clark’. .974.
season \Gtlv a pitchin
.000.
Coveh'skie pitched the only oiie-liit
game of the season, and lust it. at
that—a seven-inning affair with
Montgoineix, July
32 games they won 2G, tied 2 and lost!
4.
There isn’t much to add to the fig
ures—especially if you watched them
do it.
Maditeniliff s!<in di«e«8«i f-an't -TUt If Tcttrr- <
tne is lite«<l because Tetterl;.= is s.-lonUflcar* 1
P*rei tu reaio>a the CAUSE ^ well aj in 9 1
EFFECT. <
TETTERINE CURES
SKIN DISEASES
IN' the hitting department. Harry
* Welchoncc. of the (’lackers, led
the league with an average of .33N,
jumping to the front just a few days
too lute to cop the Rose medal, which
Dave H >bertson. the Mobile slugger,
xaptured because it was awaTded “to
the batsman leading the league one
week before the season close-.'
Harry's performance included 194
hits. 21 being two-baggers. 12 of .them
triples, and t» of them home runs. He
set a new record tor number of safe
hits in a season.
Jens* W. Scott. MJUedgertlle. Pa., writes:
l suftored with an eruption two veare and
• ne box of Tetterlne cured me and Go of my
friends. It is worth Its wisht in gold.
Tett*rlue r.urtM tewma, truer, ground Itch, i
rysipele.4. itching pilet and other ailments. .
1 Gut it ic-day—Tetterlne.
f>0c at druggiits. or by mail.
SHUPTRIKE CO.. SAVANNAH. GA.
SE32SHZT3
Opium WhUiay «od Dru ; Habit* *i*ate4
•t Horn* 9t at SanltaHnrn. Book oa auhlae#
fY*e. DR. » M. WOOLLSY. M-S, ¥mS09
fa a i tan am. Atlanta. )<«orM
• ages
e miscellaneous re <>rds . »f 1913,
1 Tommy Long's i .: runs s* : Tb new
mark following 5ase^runners to
eiu*<»t ; t- ami a tougli mark to hit.
Clyde Wales, of the Billikens. led
the base->wipers with «>'*. Dave Rob
ertson being second with o7.
E’er.'. <*f Nashville, on August 26,
made five hits In that many times up,
and repeated the next da> in New
Orleans. VoUUg. also of Nashville,
made eleven su<' *sslve hits in three
BAKER WINS BOUT.
PHILADELPHIA. Dec. 1m. -
‘Knockout Harry'' Raker, of Wil
mington. won by a slight margin over
Eddie Revoire, of Philadelphia, in a
rattling six-round bout before a big
crowd at the l-Virmount V. C. lust
night.
he match
ovation
YOAKUM BESTS KF.LLY.
DENVER, Dec 10. Stanley Yoa7
pui whs given the decision over Le<
VCe.ly. i ’ S*. Louie. »' .-'V fi'teer
rounds • i*< ■ 5 -a’- -turn-' • i *. h: i: e
\ MON
-A j»* -": s of Binning oam, was the
top-notche.*. winning 33 games and
losing 6. He pitched 274 innings,
yielded 227 hits, and gave up 69 runs.
F.iiuer Brown. **t Montgomery, fan
ned tlic most hui.smen, striking out
IN*; he 917 wno faced him in 269
innings.
Parsons,.of Memphis, allowed more
pro
portion to toe inning pitched. In 36
games sind 2t»S innings 139 men
scored against him. «tn average ot
more than 4 1-2 run* to the game.
Brenner, ot New Orleans, achieved
« record which he probablj is not
bragging about. He started eighteen (
games witl < ut winning one. He man- !
aged to tie thr.'e, and is charged !
wit losing e'ever., tiie ot ter i mi
being .vet; ft> • .» . ■ es-or on : e ,
Sian nftci be ,ih«- yielded to the unt
ie >»• tC m nooga - ,
* the biggest record of
no of the biggest ever made
league, or that ever will be mat
that last grand spurt o£ t
champion < ’racket s.
With tin v».point margin so pitrat
ing them from the Gulls, Bill Smith’s
team took m brace, and of the next
CATARRH \
Of THE
BLADDER '
Relieved is j
24 Hours;
Each Can- s J
i»! a™L h *(MIQV)4j
«'»•
* ila ran# tt(wiV'V'i
MEN
Cured Forever
By a true specialist
f —* who posse:v*e8 the oxperl-
ein-e of years. The right
\ kind of experience—doing
, J
hai>a tuouaands of tlme3.
I wt;i! unfailing, per-.
T \ It's time to get the right
treatment! I will cure
you or make no charge,
tliua proving that my
preat*’. - day, eclentlflc methoris are absolute
ly v'ert.aln. I hold out no fate*; hopes if i U/.ci
your case ts lru’urahle. Ii you desire to con-
f th u reliable, ioivg Mtablisiie'i »i». ialls' of
^■it experience, ri.me t - me and learri wha*.
• an ’ i mX‘ouipl1'he«t wiBi sHcnfif. ;
treatiuent. I -an cure Blood Potion. Vari-
’se Veins. Ulcer-. Kidney e:.d Ih adder .1.-
ea<es. oi.-rr,; .'.<c.s. Catanhai L*is.-ha'g «.
fifiee and Heotal tr>* ; and aii i.-r»ou« a. i
cui'imc DLseaics of Meiu ai.d Women.
1A a min a don tree a.-id strictly confidential.
Xlouxs: 'J «. ra. to e p. m.; Sundays. •} tu ..
UK. HltiHES. SPECIALIST
Christmas
Neckwear
A fie is never amiss, and the misses, as
well as the “missus,” are large buyers of neck
wear for husband, father, brother or sweetheart,
or other male kin or friends.
Our selections embrace the greatest variety
• •I colors, fabrics, shapes and designs ever before
shown at one time in any store in the South.
Prices 50c to $5
(Main Floor. Right)
Christmas Slippers
1 lie eoniiortable, well-shaped, fine-fitting
* hppers -Romeos, Moccasins and Fausts, for
men, boys, misses and children.
$1.50 and Up
Eiseman Bros. me.
11-13-15-17 Whitehall St.