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THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS
T^lie Bone Setter Has Been
famous in Basebal
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I DON'T NEED
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SV)ikneRXom-i3
Mike Finn’s Field Leader Has
Sure Had a Varied Career
on Baseball Pastures.
By X-Leagner.
M EMPHIS, Dec. 12.—Jimmy
Mullen, the new second saek-
er secured by Finn, and who
will be appointed captain of the club
•—the passing of Bill Abstein making
such an appointment necessary—has
had quite a varied career In baseball.
While Mullen Is comparatively
young in years, he has been playing
ball since he was old enough to hold
a bat, and commenced his profes
sional activity on the diamond while
In his teens.
ifr. Jack Solves the Servant Problem for a Few Minutes
IB CAPTAIN IF
TURTLES PLATER
IF JORDAN TYPE
Mullen has had the benefit of hav
ing played under two of the most
successful managers that handle
dubs in the American League to
day.
Mullen first attracted attention as
a substitute on Connie Mack's Ath
letic team. This was in 1904, and he
put In the most of his time on the
diamond that season as an under
study to Danny Murphy at second
base. although he also played other
positions on the team.
While Mullen fielded well enough
for the Athletics, he did not hit as
well as Connie Mack requires, and
he was turned over to the Washing
ton team.
Plays Under Jennings.
Mullen left the Washington team
in the middle of the season and
joined the Baltimore club, which was
under the management of Hugh Jen
nings. He remained with the Balti
more team until 1908, when he again
moved ills baseball paraphernalia to
another locker, that locker being in
'he clubhouse of the Newark baseball
club.
He only remained with Newark one
reason, when he again hit the trail.
This time his destination was Toron
to, of the same league as the two cit
ies in which he had previously played,
namely, Baltimore and Newark.
He remained in the Canuck city for
three consecutive seasons, and played
• onsistentlv good ball, being accred
ited one of the steadiest men in his
position in the league.
Toronto disposed of Mullen before
The summer Of 191 If, and he Joined the
Utica. club of the New York State
League. His work was quite a fac
tor in landing a pennant for that city
in one of the closest races that ever
occurred in the New York State
League, the last game of the season
deciding the winner.
Mullen Valuable Player.
While Mullen never leads any
leagues in hitting nor winds up a
season with anything remarkable in
the way of a fielding average, he is
what is known as A valuable ball
player and his worth is more appre
ciated by the ball players than by the
spectators.
He has a thorough knowledge of
The game and should certainly be of
benefit to Shanley this season and
wield a steadying influence over that
brilliant but erratic young player.
He Is the same type of player as
Otto Jordan, who covered second
several seasons for the Atlanta club.
The effectiveness of this kind of play
er is greater than is apparent to the
average occupant of the grandstand
or bleachers.
'Nooga’Boys Expect
To Down Athletic
ClubFiveTo-morrow
The Atlanta Athletic Club basket ball
team had better be prepared for a fierce
tussle to-morrow night. Advance no
tices from Chattanooga state that the
visitors are prepared to put up the
toughest sort of a tight, and really ex
pect to defeat the local boys
Joe Bean, coacli of the Athletic Club
hoys, is leaving no stone unturned in
an effort to gel his players in The best
of shape Joe is putting them through a
long drill every afternoon and says the
boys are showing much improvement in
their work. . . .
Following is the line-up of the rival
teams:
A. A C. Pos Nooaa
Smith.' R. F Norman
Forbes L. F McCollum
Du bard C ..Spencer-Brockhaul
.•arter R. G ohes
Weaver I. G,. Gambll-Harrle
Doc Seabough To Be
Let Out by Turtles
MEMPHIS. TF.NN., Dee. 12.—Doc
Seabough is slated for the greased
hute.
The veteran receiver of the Memphis
Turtles, formerly occupying the leading
position behind the wood for the T ols,
Is about to be let out. .......
Doc's grizzled head is dheto be
P.pped off by Manager Mike Finn dur
ing the next few weeks, and just as
soon as Sir Miguel can supply Doe with
a nice little Job In some lower league
the veteran will heat It. perhaps never
to come Lack again to the bouthem
'•ircult.
Mike is through with hts veterans
Ho wants 1o wipe his slate clean and
makf a fresh start, ns the Turtles have
been in a bad way for some time ana
y charge can not be otherwise than
beneficial.
Seabough’s berth Is a.s yet unsettled,
as Manager Finn is looking around and
In tends to do the best he can for Doc.
The passing of Seabough takes another
•>f the old guard away from the SoiUh-
ern, and in Nashville the veteran Doc
has hundreds of friends who remem
ber him for what he has done in the
BADGER OARSMEN TOILING.
MADISON. WIS., Dec. 12 -Taking ad
vantage of every opportunity seems to
be the hobby of Harry E Vail rowing
1 oach, who has kept his oarsmen on the
water every night for the past Two
months. A freshman and a varsity
*ight have been out daily.
KILLIFER ■
Champion Returns to the Ring
+ • +
-p • -
+•+
Dooin’s Catcher Led National
League Receivers in Turning
Back Would-Be Pilferers.
-I -T TILL KILLIFER, of the Phil-
V/V lies, who might still be on the
St. Louis American League
club had not Jim McAleer fired him
from that team in 1909. was the best
chrowing backstop in the National
League last season. He turned back
130 attempts to steal on him and was
one of three men who averaged one
or more men thrown out per game.
The other backstops who had a rec
ord like Killifer were Mike Simon, of
Pittsburg, and Jimmy Archer, of Chi
cago. Killifer aad Archer both re
ceived many votes from the Chal
mers Commission of newspaper ex
perts as being the players most valu
able to their teams In last season’s
competition for the car.
• * •
Cl MON averaged 1.04 victims to the
game and Archer 1:02, the Pitts-
burger flagging 96 men in 92 contest s
and the Chicagoan 105 in 103. Johnny
Kling, of Cincinnati, ranked fourth
among the windpaddists when It came
to pegging out men who tried to steal,
Ivy Wingo, of St. Louis, fifth; Otto
Miller, of the Superbas, sixth; “Chief”
Meyers, ot the Giants, seventh; Bill
Rariden. of the Braves, eighth; Will
Fischer, of the Superbas ninth, and
Bert Whaling, of the Braves, tenth.
In every instance save one the
catcher who was most active in head
ing off baserunners when they tried
to do the Raffles act was thie man
who was most often called on by his
manager to don the wlndp&d. The
lone exception oropped up In Cincin
nati, Johnny Kling, who caught 37
less games than Tommy Clarke, hav
ing an average as a thrower that was
.16 better than that amassed by his
young teammate.
• * •
\ LL told, there were 1.240 National
League players thrown out in at
tempting to steal second, third or
home last season. The Philadelphia
backstop turned back 179 men, Chi
cago's 169, St. Louis’ 165, Boston's
151. Pittsburg’s 151. Brooklyn’s 140,
Cincinnati’s 146 and New York’s 133.
The catchers’ record in this respect
is appended:
Thrown Av. Per
Games. Out. Game.
Killifer, Phila 120 130 1.08
Simon, Pittsburg.. 92 96 1.04
Archer, Fhirago . .103 105 1.02
Kling, Cincinnati... 63 61 96
Wingo, St. Louis 98 92 .94
Miller, Brooklyn .104 95 91
Meyers, New York. 116 102 .88
Rariden, Boston ... 87 76 .87
Fischer. Brooklyn.. 61 43 .84
Whaling. Boston . . 77 64 83
Clarke, Cincinnati 100 80 .80
McLean. St. L-N. Y. 70 52 .74
Bresnahan. Chicago 53 43 .74
Dooin. Phila. 60 36 .72
Hildebrand. St. L... 26 15 .57
Bums, Phila 15 8 .53
Kelly, Pittsburg... 40 20 .50
Coleman, Pittsburg. 28 14 .50
Gibson, Pittsburg . 48 21 4 4
Wilson. N. York. ... 49 18 .38
Roberts, St Louis. 16 5 .31
Howley, Phila 22 5 .23
Hartley, N. Y 21 3 .14
Nelson Not Surprised
Over Wife’s Action
MILWAUKEE. WIS.. Dec. 11.- ' Bat
tling'' Nelson, once lightweight, cham
pion of the pugilistic world, did not b*-
trav any surprise when he rear] a dis
patch from Portland. Dreg . quoting
Mrs. Fay King Nelson, his actress wife,
With saying that she would ask for a
separation.
"Fay is one of the finest little women
in the world.’ said the former cham
pion. “She is very impulsive, though,
and 1 am not surprised. She may be
right Perhaps we are mismated. We
love each other, but we couldn't get
along together.”
Mrs. Nelson is quoted as saying that
she never loved the Dane, but married
him “because he proposed so persist
ently.”
WISCONSIN WOULD KEEP COACH.
MADISON. WIS.. Dec. 12.—Wisconsin
students do not take favorably to the
idea of abolishing professional football
coaches Coach Juneau could be barred
a' any time that this rule were adopted
for he is engaged only for a year at a
time.
Auburn Announces
Football Schedule
For Season of 1914
Baseball Stars Shine on Gridiron
v • *1*
ALBURN. ALA., Dec. 12.—The Au
burn athletic authorities to-day an
nounced the football schedule for
1914. It will be noticed that this
schedule is the same as the 1918
schedule, with the exception of the
game with Louisiana State Univer
sity.
The authorities deemed it advisable
to drop one S. I. A. A. team, and in
asmuch as the L. S. U. game was the
poorest game from a financial stand
point, it is not to be on the 1914
schedule.
Auburn played eight F. 1. A A.
teams the past seasron, which is prac
tically double the number of S. I. A.
A. teams played by the other leading
teams of the association. Vanderbilt
played only three teams in the South
ern Association, namely: Auburn,
Tennessee and Sewanee. whereas,
University of Georgia only played
one-half the number that Auburn did.
Georgia played Alabama, Clemson,
Georgia Tech and Auburn.
•The Auburn schedule, as an
nounced for 1914. is as follows:
October 3—Montgomery Athletic
Club at Auburn.
October 10—University of Florida
at Jacksonville.
October 17—Clemson at Auburn.
October 24—A. & M. of Mississippi
at Birmingham.
October 31—Mercer University
(probably) at Auburn.
November 7—Georgia Tech at At
lanta.
November 14 —Vanderbilt at Bir
mingham
November 21—Georgia at Atlanta.
JOHNSON AND WIFE INJURED.
ARRAN. FRANCE, Dec. 12.—Jack
Johnson, the negro pugilist, and his
white wife were injured here to-day
when their automobile in which they
were en route to Paris collided with
the safety gates at a railway cross
ing. Both were cut about the head.
INDIANA FOOTBALL PAYS.
BLOOMINGTON. IND., Dec. 12. In
dlana made $14,000 out of the football
season this year The receipts from
the Maroon contest were nearly $3,000.
Baseball track and basket ball show
a deficit of $2,000.
Forward Passes Were Easy Money
WORGIN TRIMS MAHONEY.
BELOIT. WIS.. Dec. 12.—A1 Wor-
gin, of Milwaukee, defeated Kid Ma
honey, of Racine, in ten rounds last
nigh*
Bv 0. B. Keeler.
B EFORE the football gab has
sifted too far back into the
discard for the year, and the
sporting columns are given entirely
over to alleged boxing and the pros
pects for a stone-wall infield for 1914.
ij appears to us a good time to say a
few words about the relation Of foot
ball and baseball; that is. the occa
sional aid that training in the sum
mer sport is able to slip the prac
titioner of the gridiron.
Most people take it (and with much
reason) that the two great American
games are so unlike each other that
proficiency in one can have no bear
ing on the other
And that’s pretty nearly the case,
so far as football training helping a
baseball player is concerned.
• • •
OUT when it comes to football, we
LJ have just had quite a season
of illustrations in which baseball
training has helped football players
in action.
There is Bob McWhorter, Georgia's
great half-back. Bob played the out
field on the Red and Black baseball
team, and his unerring Judgment of
punts and sure handling of passes
bore witness to the value of his ex
perience in the outfield.
• * •
*"P HE most sensational gridiron vic-
* tory of the year easily was the
unexpected success of the Army over
the stronger Navy eleven. That suc
cess was due to the forward pass.
And the forward pass was operated
by a couple of crack baseball play
ers.
Quarterback Prichard w'ho flipped
the oval on the forward passes that
brought victory to West Point, played
first base on the baseball team last
year. # !Ie was noted for his accurate
pegging and his passes in the big
football game of the year were re
markable for their distance and ac
curacy, and for the fact that they
shot fast and low, like a catcher’$4;eg
to second, instead of “rainbowing” in
a slow arch that gave the opposition
time to get under the ball.
• • •
VfERRILAT, who caught two of the
•*•** passes for touchdowns and
dropped another only after a tre
mendous leap in the air. played cen-
terfleld for the West Point team last
year, and his Judgment of fly balls
and line drives, together with his
speed on the bases, made him a star.
The same speed enabled Merrilat to
slip away from the Navy grapplers,
and the same judgment of a ball
sailing through the air enabled him
to take two forward passes over his
shoulder while racing with the ball,
and another that he had to jump
for
It is one thing to take a punt in
the arms, and quite another to pick a
hurtling football out of the air with
the hands and that is where the
baseball training counts.
* * •
A NOT HER spectacular example was
** to be seen in the person and
performance of Sam White, a couple
of years ago.
Samuel is best remembered as a
football star who escorted Princeton
to victory by grabbing fumbled foot
balls and running away with them.
But Friend Samuel, of hateful
memory at Vale, first was a baseball
player skL Tigertown, and by his own
statement it was his training at
shortstop—-the practice on fast drives
and bad hoppers that stood to him
when he saw footballs bouncing er-
I ratically about the field.
• • •
[ F there must be such a thing as
* compensation, according to our
esteemed and ex-fellow countryman.
| Mr. Emerson, we beg to put forward
i on the. other hand t*hat. constant con-
| tael with Mrs. Mother Earth while
’ playing football ought to add confi
dence and daring to a baseball play-
• er’s method of “hitting the dirt,”
while head-on collisions with plung
ing half-backs should breed a certain
! amount of contempt for flying spikes.
And most of all, there’s the old
heart: the old determination, as Bob
Unglaun used to put.it- the old Eng-
lish-for-viscera. the demand for
which Is the same in both these
I games, and in all others.
That's where most of the mutual
. benefit gets on, we take it.
Ritchie’s Story of His Career
This is the fifth of a series of stories of the Lightweight Champion
li illie Kitrhir, written exclusively for The Georgian.
New Orleans Club
Reported Sold to
a
Frank's Friends
THOMAS MAY MEET WAUGH.
NEW ORLEANS, LA , Dec. 12 - Joe
Thomas, local lightweight, may be seen
In a Fort Worth. Texas, ring on Uhrist-
mas Day. Joe received a wire yestor
day offering him a match with Bobby
W augh there and has wired the Fort j
I Worth promoters Jor their best terms.
NEW ORLEANS, LA . Dec. 12 —The
New Orleans baseball club has been
acquired by local men who herteofore
have never been mentioned in any of
the negotiations during the recent
changes of the club and will be run
next year as an independent organi
zation free from entanglements with
any outside club, according to informa
tion received from apparently reliable
sources last night.
According to these authorities, those
who have secured control of the local
club have gonn about the matter very
quietly and; after getting logether the
necessary financial backing. simply
beat the time of the, Heineman-New
man intersts and completed the deal
with Mr Somers While the latter was
iti New York. At the same time it is
understood Secretary Helnemann was
waiting in Cleveland for Mr. Somers to
return and confer with him about the
J. K. Newman offer.
Details of the plans of the new own
ers were withheld, hut It Is understood
that there is a strong probability that
Charles Frank will return to his old
place as manager.
Kling and Weston
In Cue Match Again
CHICAGO/ ILL.. Dec 12.—Johnny |
Kling and Charles (“Cowboy”) Wes- j
ton have been matched for a 600-point
match at pocket .billiards Four years |
ag«» the baseball player won the cham
pionship from Weston at Kansas City
«nd the latter assorts he was not given
a square deal
TWO KNOCKOUTS ON BILL.
TERRE HAUTE. IND.. Dec. 12.—
Two boxers were knocked out on the
1)111 put on by (lie Wabash Athletic
Club last night. Spot Uavis. of Ko
komo. stopped Jimmy Watts, of In
dianapolis In the third round of the
opening bout. Jack Watts, a local
negro, knocked out Bill Donovan, of
I Indianapolis, in the third round.
Bv Willie Ritchie.
S AN FRANOTSCO, Dec. 12.—After
witnessing a few of the four-
round fights. I simply could not
resist the temptation to get back into
the game. I fought against It and
tried my best; but the feeling wrb
there, and that settled ft. Besides,
my friends kept coming to me and
telling me how foolish I was to quit
Just when I had a chance to go to the
front. They refused to give me g
rest.
Finally I went to my boss and threw
up my job. He. was sorry to let me
go. and. in fact, he offered me a nice
raise if I would stick with the auto
mobile business. I told him plainly
that I wanted to be a fighter; that 1
had had some experience and that I
Intended to try again.
One-Round Hogan was the big star
then. He had the reputation of be
ing a whlrlwlni and a knocker out.
They were boosting him to the skies.
He was getting the big money and
beating all comers. They 'touted him
I as a champion and he was swelling
I around the town as the whole show.
! Nobody could touch him. but I made
(up. my mind to take-a chance
I „?vow. f had seen Hogan fight several
I of hts battles, and I came to the con-
j elusion that I could beat him. I fig-
l ured it out in my mind that he was
Just made to order for me. The fans
laughed at me and said that I was
crazy, but thif did not change my
opinion. T wanted 'Hogan, that was
all, so I started put to issue a few
challenges for a four-round fight.
Passed Up by Hogan.
I was a full-fledged lightweight
by this time, strong and healthy and
full of pep. Maybe 1 looked too strong
for Hogan, for he passed me up. 1
kept after him, but he only laughed
at me and told me to go and get a
reputation. He said that he was the
big noise in the four-round game and
that he would not have anything to
do with dubs like me.
Abe Label was also a star then, and
the fans thought pretty well of him.
One of the four-round promoters of
fered me a match with Abe, and I
just jumped at it. I think that I
would have taken a chance against
Wolgast, and he was the champion
then.
Label was a hard hitter and knew
more about the game than 1 did. The
fans told me that I was foolish to go
on with him. that he wbuld beat me
up and send me back to work, snd
that I would be through with th6
game for keeps.
But nothing could stop me. I signed
up for the match and worked hard
to get into shape on about four days’
notice. I took something like $50 for
my end. All l wanted was expense
money and experience.
It was a tough old battle, snd I
non the decision on points Yes, 1
did run into a few of Label’s right-
hand jolts to the jaw, and they sure
did shake me up. But 1 knew that 1
must win. so I kept right on after
him and boxed as cleverly as I could.
I guess that my condition counted, as j
I had a nice lead at the end of the
fourth round
Label aet up a cry for a return
match, claiming that he was out of
condition. The fans seemed to like
the idea, .so I came right back the
next Friday night and gave Abe an
other trimming. I had him all the
way this time. The confidence was
there, and I was sure of my condi
tion. His blows did not seem to both
er me at all and the’victory was a
soft one.
The next in line was Charley Reilly,
the boy who gave me my first beat -
ing. He wanted a match, and I Just
Jumped at the chance. Here was m>
opportunity to wipe out the old defeat
and square myself wdth my friends. I
took on Reilly two weeks after I beat
Label the second time.
Well, this was sure one speedy miil.
Reilly had all his cleverness with
him and he stepped around and gave
me a boxing lesson for two rounds
They were writing their own tickets
on him to win. But he began to tire
in the third, and here 1 put in my
best licks. I Just rushed and slammed
away, for I was in grand shape- I
hammered him ail over the ring in
the last round and got the decision. I
guess mv condition did it.
McCarthy Proves a Tartar.
I feli that I was really on my feet
again and that l was good erjough for
any of them. I began a regular course
of training and kept’ on the sharp
lookout for matches. The game looked
better to me than it ever looked be
fore.
Johnny McCarthy had Just returned
from Kansas City, where he fought
Paokey McFarland a ten-round draw
I was not considered in his class, but
l went after him all the same, and
finally got the match.
Harry Foley, v ho is now managing
me, was then looking after the affair*
of McCarthy. We knew each other,
all right; but from the way that P’o
ley kept sizing me up I realized that
he’ did not think much of me as a
fighter. He thought that, he had the
makings of a champion in McCarthy.
That bricklayer gave me some
battle. I have to admit this. We
went four rounds to a draw', and we
kept at it hammer and tongs every
inch of the w’av. He was rough and
strong, and he to.«sed me all around
the ring. I could not box him at all,
and when we did get in close he had
the better of the mixups, for 4hat
sort of going was just what he liked
After that battle I gave Reilly an
other chance, and again won the de
cision. Then I started after Mc
Carthy once more, hoping to do bet
ter with him: but our second meet
ing resulted in a draw. It was al
most the same old thing over again.
He wa» too rough and too strong for
me, and I did not seem to be able to
hit him hard enough to make him
slow' down.
‘THE OLD RELIABLE”
DON 'T BE TORTURED
> K'Tema van hr lnstmntlj reliored *uri perma-
i nently cured. Head what J R M*»weil, At-
' Unta. Ga . say* It proves that
Tetterine Cures Eczema
I suffered agony with severe eczema Tried
sis different remedies and was In despair
| when a neighbor told me to try Tetterine.
After using 1- worth I am completely cured.
■ Why should you suffer when you ran so easily
i get a remedy that cures all skin troubles ec
’ zeuia. Itching piles, erysipelas, ground Itch, ring
1 worm, etc. Ge t li to day - Tetterine.
60o at druggists, or by mall,
TrNE CO.
SWUPTRfi
SAVANNAH. fiA.
“THt VICTUK
OB. WOOLLEY'S SANITARIUM
n , ■ ini ■ a all inabrtatr nl
Opium and Whisky a , affgt
these diseases are curable. Patients also treated M
homes Consultation confidential. A book on the lub*
Ject free. Dr. B M WOOLLEY A SON. No. Vloa
tor Sa*^tarlum . Atlanta. Qa* j*
T 1
By James Swinnerton
By a tme epoHeltat
who rosmwao* the export
ence of years. The right
kind of experience—doing
the eame thing, the right
way hundred* and per
haps thousands of time*,
with unfailing, permanent
result*. Don’t you think
It’e time to get th# right
treatment’ I will cure
you or make no charge,
thus proving ‘ that my
present day. Bctentlflc method* are absolute
1 !y certain. I hold out no false hopes If I 1 find
your case is Incurable. If you desire to con
sult a reliable, long established specialist of
vast experience, -vune tn me and lean; what
can be accomplished with skillful, edentlflc
treatment. I can cure Blood Poison, Vnrt
cose Veins. Ulcers, Kidney and Bladder dls-
t a»«». Obstructions. Catarrhal Discharge*.
Piles and Rectal troubles and all nervous and
Chronic Diseases ot Men and Women
Examination free and strictly confidential.
Hours; 9 a. m. to 6 p. m.; Sunday*. 9 to 1.
DR. HUGHES, SPECIALIST
Opposite Third N'ai'l Bank.
16 1-2 North Broad St.. Atlanta. Ga
INDOOR SPORTS By Tad
iPOS-TU
IAJPOOR
flM/J& U>P T>t€
TEAMS im THE
MAnovfti. LEACtuE
MR JACK SAID
I WAS TO SE .
SE.COMD NT A ID.
MEN
Cured Forever
- - - - - - - - — - — - ■