Newspaper Page Text
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THE ATLANTA HKOTJO] AN AND NEWS.
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EMglitens Are Not ]
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Priced Wines;
'hey Very Seldom Improve With Age j
GEORGIA COURTS WILL BE ASKED TO REVERSE JIM PREAS DECISION
FIGHT CASE ID
SILK HAT HARRY’S DIVORCE SUIT
And Such a Name for a Judge!
a i
fl
Also, Amateur Athletic Union Is
To Be Asked to Rule on Ath
letes' Standing.
By W. S. Farnsworth.
J IM PREAS has been turned down
by the Southern Intercollegiate
Athletic Association. He applied
Jor reinstatement and was refused.
And with the rendering of the de
cision starts the merriest little war |
that ever happened in athletic circles. I
Tech authorities and admirers of |
the college boy have placed Preas’
case in the hands of a noted Atlanta
attorney. If necessary they are going j
to law to have the decision of the
8. I. A. A. tested.
Also, the Amateur Athletic Union
will be asked to reinstate Preas over
the heads and ruling of the S. 1. A. A. |
officials.
Wanted to Go to Berlin.
Preas has ambitions to make the
American Olympic team that will go
to Berlin in 1916. Unless the A. A. U.
changes the decision of the S. I. A. A.
lie will not be eligible to make the
trip
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INDOOR SPORTS
By Tad House-Cleaning for Volunteers
V®*i*
'W 1
Hut whAtlier or not I hr A A. U.
renders an adverse decision to the H.
1. A. A. the Georgia courts will be
given the opportunity to decide Press'
amateur standing.
one of At Ian la s' biggest real estate
inen lias taken keen Interest In the
Plea* case. He Is willing to spend
a fortune to see the lad "fflve-n a
.square deal,” as he puts It.
There are many other wealthy
graduates of Tech who, too, have de
clared that they will see the ease
through to a finish
In rendering their derision the b.
I A. A. officials did not make known
the grounds for the finding of their
decision.
Tech authorities claim that It was
Colonel ltlngham, president of the
Bingham School, who gave the evi
dence Unit caused the young John-
s,,n City hoy to be ruled out. Colonel
Bingham issued a statement a lew
weeks ago lo the effect that he gave
Preas free tuition at the prep school
partly for Ills athletic ability and
partly for his all-round good work
In Ills (Masses.
Pr*»a Denies Any Knowledge.
iTeas has a 1 a avs denied that he
knew he was getting a scholarship
for his athletic ability. He was only
sixteen ( ears of age when he entered
Bingham School a mere stripling of
Pr. a s' father, who Is the richest
resident of Johnson City, Tenn.. being
rated at *300,000, did not know that
his son was getting a scholarship for
anything hut for his excellent class
room work Surely a man of Hr.
p rea s' standing wouldn't allow a pro-'
r< ssional taint to stain h1s sons rec
ord if he knew it. .
The S. 1. A A. has slarted'n merry
war by ils ruling: it has found a
holy, who, when but sixteen years of
ao-e was tempted, unknowingly, as he
stoutly alleges, guilty of profession-
'Will the Georgia courts agree with
the S 1 A. A. officials and find a
minor by five years guilty of the same
charge'.’
1 doubt It.
TALENT FOR
'1
I
Twenty-two Players Have Already
Signed Lookout Contracts
for fJext Season.
( CHATTANOOGA, TENN., Dee. 13.
Manager "Moose" McCormick
already has at his disposal 22
athletes from which to pick his 1914
team.
Of this total ten are reserved from
the 1913 aggregation while twelve are
athletes signed by the former pinch -
swatter of the Giants after stepping
into the breach left vacant by one
Norman (Kid) Elberfeld. From the
standpoint of positions the men are
divided as follows: Four outfield
ers. six infielders, four catchers and
f ight hurlers. The pitchers are Kroft,
Sommers, Howell, Grimes, Lorenzen,
Sllne, Gross and Hardin. Catcher#,
Graham, Street, Glddo and a semi-
pro whose title. McCormick has not
.vet announced. Infielders. Coyle.
Flick. Balenti, Graff, Gillespie, and
Brandt. Outfielders, McCormick, .Ja
cobson, King and Johnson.
,s, Hickman and
snny Turned Down
By S. I. A. A. Officials
XCKSONVlbLE, FI.A . Deo. 1*.—
Southern Intercollegiate Athletic
ociatlon convened in this city last
it. I")r. \V. L. Dudley, the presi-
r is in attendance upon the con-
t'ion. but owing to the advic-e of
physicians, did not preside. Alee
stdent W. M. Klggn of Clemson,
-d In his stead. The executive
imittee of the association recom
piled that Maryville College, of
messee. be rated in the future as
ollege instead of a preparatory
W IHI-'U the statement that 32 men
are under contract and win oe
brought to Andrews Field for the
spring work-out lends the impres
sion that McCormick faces difficult
problems in elimination in practically
®verv department, such is far from
being the case. On the other hand,
the Lookouts, taking into considera
tion the period of the year, are better
fixed than has ever been the case
since 1911, when Billy Smith had his
aggregation of plutocrats signed be
fore the new year dawned.
In fact, in only the outfield and the
heaving departments does McCormick
face the necessity of indulging in se
rious thought in making final selec
tions.
Take a glance at the receiving ma
terial. With Street, Graham, Glddo
and a semi-pro signed it can be
stated with all but absolute certainty
that "Gabby’’ and Pat will fill the
tv.o positions. Both are capable and
heady men and are dangerous hit
ters. There seems no chance of any
aspirant crowding either of the
pitchers mentioned out of a perma
nent berth.
JOE.
he University of Chattanooga was
unmended t<» membership to the
iciaiion, and this portion of the
>rt was adopted.
he University of Mississippi was
ored to full standing in the as-
ation.
reas, of the Georgia Tech, who
candidate for the Berlin Olym-
games. and who applied to the
>ciation for reinstatement, was
*nn\, of the University <*f Flor
was permanently disqualified, as
Hickman, of the Mississippi Col-
Yankees Again Grab
Outfielder Channell
NEW YORK. Dec 13.—The Yan-
ees have purchased Outfielder Les-
r Channell from the Denver club of
e Western League. Channell was
member of the New York Ameri-
• n he broke his leg after
a few games in the season of
’ the Western League last season
11 ad a batting average of
• * ms • J' iwo-base ?s. M
: hits -7 home runs and
- le' 12 bases. Jack Hendricks, man
tiger of the Denver team, said that
Channell was the best player he had
ever seen The Yankees paid a cash
bonus and al«» agreed to turn over
a pitcher to be agreed upon later on.
THE heavers, as before admitted,
* present a real problem. Kroh,
Sommers. Howell. Grimes and SUne
appear to have the Inside track upon
the five regular berths, but nothing
is definitely settled. Hardin. Loren
zen and Gross are all highly recom
mended. The first two were secured
from Detroit, while the latter is a
local semi-pro. The first, quint named
gives McCormick two southpaws and
three right-handers. It is an admit
ted fact, however, that "Moose" ex
perts to get further material from
McGraw. so the matter is delightfully
unsettled.
The infield is already pretty well
defined, with Coyle on the initial sack.
Flick on the keystone cushion. Balen
ti at short and Graff on third. Brandt
or Gillespie "ill be retained ns util
ity man with the chances favoring
the former, if he lives up to expecta
tions. because of his youth.
In the outfield the problem resolves
itself absolutely into a fight between
Jacobson and King for center. Jack
Johnson in left and McCormick in
right are absolute fixtures.
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fASHVlLLE, TENN.. Dec. 13.—
That clean-up campaign in-
j augurated by Bill Schwartz is
not panning out as the howling and
hurrahing success whicli it was in
tended to be The Boy Manager’s
widely advertised marked down sale
of shopworn ball tossers. after start
ing off with a whoop, with the sale
of the baseball pitcher Fleharty to
Venice and Catcher Eddie Noyes to
Galveston, has sorted bagged down at
tlie knees, which causes many wrin
kles to infeJft th«* erstwhile placid
brow of Mr. Schwartz.
I t- s something to put cn the block
a bunch of old-time st?rs and yelp
for bidders. and something else
again to gain the attention of a few
purchasers, as the Vols’ boss can tes
tify. Bill can stand any sort of lung
test that can be devised, so it isn’t
that he isn't yelling loud enough,
but the Southern League moguls
don’t seem to be jostling each other
to pay real money for any of the
Schwartzmen. Looks as if Bill will
have to dump all those slated for
the discard into a big sack and ped
dle them out at the Atlanta meet
ing much after the manner of those
! pussy-footed and persistent foreign
ers who have fuzzy looking shawls to
dispose of at fancy prices.
Even though he isn't having any
luck at getting rid of the 1913 Vols,
Schwartz keeps on talking in glow
ing terms about next season and
smiling mysteriously about where
they are to come from. But you
don't hear the Boy Manager making
any phonograph records about where
next season's crop is to come from.
For that might crab some of the
present arrangement with a prosper
ous major league club to hand some
of its surplus material to the Vols for
ripening. Schwartz is pretty sweet
in the idea of having a big league
club build up his team, jut as the
St. Louis Browns did for Montgom
ery for Hie past two seasons with
most excellent results.
ers from
with.”
the recruits I will start
McFarland Hopes to
Redeem Himself by
BoxingMikeGibbons
for Sport Fans
CHICAGO, Deo. 13.—Packey McFar
land is out to redeem himself.
He feels that he did not do jus
tice to the McFarland reputation as a
boxer and tighter in his recent collision
with Jack Britton at Milwaukee.
Smarting under criticism of his failure
to do more than shade Britton and
alarmed because of the defections from
the ranks of his friends, the speed mer
chant of the yards is ready and willing
to tackle the toughest man in the game
of his weight, lie won’t meet him in
Milwaukee, however. The big mill is to
come off In Madison Square Garden.
New York, because it will draw three
dollars there to one iron man in Mil
waukee.
No doubt you have surmised by this
time that Mike Gibbons, the man who
slaughtered Wildcat Ferns at New Or
leans Wednesday night. Is to be Pack
er’s opponent. Yes. he's the fellow, and
if McFarland actually signs up to timet
the great Michael all the soft •matches
of recent years will be forgiven him. If
lie whales the phan* •»’* from the North
west he will win back all the friends
he lost last Monday eve. and then some
! Athletic Club Five
Ready for ‘Nooga’
Quintet To-night
Willard Stops Davis
In Second Round
SOX PICK TRAINING CAMP.
CHICAGO. Dec. 13.—The Chicago
Americans will train again at Paso
Rob’ee*, ra’., i* was announced to-
cay by Secretary Harry Grablner.
ie members of the team who made
it he world’s tour will leav*' for the
'Pacific 'oast immediately on their
arrival at New York in March, while
oilicrs will report earlier.
BUFFALO. N. Y . Dec. IS.—Jess Wil
lard, of Kansas, knocked out George
(One-Round) Davis at the Queensberry
Athletic Club last night in the second
round of a scheduled ten-round bout.
Willard weighed 338L, pounds and Davis
18!) l , 2 . Willard's superior weight and
reach gave him an immense advantage
Davis forced the fighting at the start
but after being Jarred by a punch or
two he eVoted to stand off and box.
j Davis survived only a minute and a
half of the second round, and it was
fully five minutes before he got off the
floor after the knockout.
Ex-Cracker Catcher
Purchased by Gulls
MEMPHIS. TENN . Dec. 13. Manager
Finn, of the Memphis club, to-day an
nounced the purchase of Catcher Wade
Reynolds from the Macon club of the
South Atlantic League. Reynolds for
merly pla\cd with Atlanta, being sub
catcher under Charley Hemphill in the
spring of 1912. He was Injured last
season and as a consequence played In
but few games Manager Finn intends
to use him as second-string catcher or
assistant to the veteran Harry Bemis.
'Ne
BAKER HELD TO DRAW.
PHILADELPHIA. Deo. 13. Although
floored twice in the third round in ids
bout with "Knockout" Harris Baker,
the Wilmington middleweight. Howard
I Truesilale of Kensington, tallied so
1 strongly in the fifth and sixth rounds
•that he earned a draw in a fast six*
round bout last night.
w Orleans Club
May Be Sold To-day
CLEVELAND. OHIO. Dec. 13.—The
New Orleans Southern League Baseball
Club may be purchased to-day by A. .1.
Heineman. of that city. C. W Somers,
president of the Cleveland American
League flub, who also owns the New
Orleans franchise, admitted to-day that
negotiations are pending with Hrfne-
man. but denied that they had beta
i closed.
IN 1920.
MADISON. WIS., Dec. 13.—Anoth
er wave of reform surpassing that of
1913 was instituted here to-day by
faculty representatives of the confer
ence in their annual meeting at tic
W. C. T. U.
One of the most drastic measures
adopted wa&the elimination of croquet
from the intercollegiate athletic pro
gram and the substitution of chess as
a major sport. For some time croquet
has been viewed with disfavor owing
to its brutality, but to-day's action
was due directlv to the deplorable ac
cident in last Saturday's game, when
Harold Fuzzlethwaite. captain of tne
Minnesota team, was carried from the
field with a broken stay.
It was also decided to substitute the
game of authors for tiddledewinks, as
the latter game has a tendency to heat
the blood and render the participants
foroetful of their dignity as college
athletes.
Wisconsin received a heavy blow in
the expulsion of Archibald Umph, the
clean-up hitter of the Badger debat
ing team. It was discovered that he
had once participated in a debate with j -4jm/
his father over the size of his month
ly allowance. According to Rule 5, J The
The report that f’harlie Murphy in
tends to start a ball league in Scot
land must have been due to a mis
print. It should have been a bull
league.
YOU CAN SEARCH ME.
The air is filled irith breezes chilled
And sturms of bleak December,
“While far a trail the athletes stray
Where sunlight smites the livelong
day.
Hut where the So.r and Giants play
I c(in not quite remember.
If
Billy Papke can hurt his hanJ
on a punching bag, the only way he
can make any impression on George
Chip is to use brass knuckles.
To-night tlie Atlanta Athletic Club
basket ball team plays its second game
of Uie season, clashing with the Chat
tanooga Tigers. The boys from
Lookoutville defeated the strongest
teams in the State last year.
In the Atlanta team the Tennessee
quintet is pieeting a bunch of seasoned
ball tossers and should find the locals
hard nuts to crack.
Both teams are in the best of condi
tion. The Atlanta boys put In their
final scrimmage last night and Coach
Bean says his players are ready for the
fray. The Tigers arrived this morning.
The line-up of the teams will be as fol
lows :
Chatta. Position.
McCollum L. F...
Norman R. F....
Borckhaus C ...
Allln L. G....
Gambil R. G...
Atlanta.
.... Smith
. ...Forbes
.. .Dubard
Carte
.. .Weaver
It is said that Ad Wolgast conducts
a farm in Michigan when not en
gaged In making matches and calling
them ('IT.
Klaus Finally Gets
Return Go With Chip
ll’f
ONE VIRTUE.
find some good in everything,
whatever it may ln\
if we probe but deep enough,
some virtue ire may ser.
six-day race, for instance, is a
pastime dull and drear.
! Hut. like the merry Christmas tide. it
comes but once a year.
Section 7, the said dobate has made
him a rank professional.
Shortly before the xlose of the ses- j
sion Professor Pussyfoot formulated
the following resolutions, which will .
be placed before the Ancient and Hon- Official records show that Christy
orable Order of Mollycoddles for ap- 1 Mathewson is the most effective
proval: ; pitcher in the National League. Mr.
“Resolved, That students be per- \ Mathewson is a cripple much after
mitted to take no part in the conduct the fashion of HaWs Wagner,
of intercollegiate games, but be re- • "
quired to take seats in the stands with J CQJNTROL.
the spectators, while the faculty t ^ hcji say that t hristy Mathewson 8
members play the qames on paper. control is wondrous great.
"Resoived, That the undignified ' And wondrous is the tray he works
cheering which has marred intercol- J the corners of the plate.
leqiate sport in the past be restrict- j 77,,,,, sn „ hr a baseball trained
ed, and that no spectator bo perm.*- „ Hrh , lhn i ic , tc ,
ted to applaud any louder than a
whisper under pain of expulsion from ' V i. ! , k ‘"/ hnU
the park. » distant right-field feme.
“Resolved. That no student be al- J Hut Matty hndn t anything on me
lowed to participate in intercollegiate irhen / teas young.
athletics whose collar exceeds No. 14. J And deadly and mo t ring were the I
or whose chest measurement exceeds snowballs that I flung.
^Jl? ches ' - *i_ * ! And though I man hare inisst'd a
The meetmfl closed with a st rrmg . R
adcress by Professor Erasmus Bi.ge .
water on ’ Th, ouujuqation of the j * throirm : i .it „
Red Corpuscle." < uliiinug Stoirpipf Iwl.
t
PITTSBURG. Dec. 13. By keeping on
the ;rail of George (.’hip for over a
month, Frank Klaus has finally succeed
ed in getting a return bout with the
Newcastle middleweight, who one night
last month, when everything appeared
to be going nicely, slipped over a knock
out punch to the jaw of the East Pltts-
burger.
Yesterday the match was consum
mated. articles being signed which call
for the two to be in the ring In Du-
quesne GaMen on Tuesday night, De
cember 23.
E haven’t got the money to rush
out and bolster up the club
when we begin to crack by buying
Migh-prlced major leaguers who are
on their way out, like Atlanta does
every season," says Bill. "Fact is,
we haven’t made any money to carry
on that sort of thing for some time
past, bumping into all kinds of trou
ble on this Sunday ball proposition
and winding up by having to pay the
costs in the case, which amounted
to enough to make a big dent in the
national debt. Why, at the end of
last season we were in such a fix
that we weren’t able to draft any
Players from the class 13 and C
leagues.
1*? 0 ?’ thar arran ^trt°nt we had
with Brooklvn did us practically no
good at all, far what they were will-
ln g to give us were players passed
up by Newark and if thev can’t
make good In the International T don’t
see how they can make good in the
Southern, which in my opinion is the
fastest of the minors. We tried
Cincinnati a while, but the players
Herrmann sent down here, like Me-
Manus and Dalgren, only cost us a
lot of time fooling Trlti' them and
aid thp club po good at all
"Next season «e are going to have
a club made up of hard-hitting fei-
fast and heady on Hie paths.
JT 1 can I intend to start with a set
nea'V.£ aC f S ~“ n “' V ‘° th, “ ^Ub and
nen to the league—if possible. I have
hopes of landing some high-class
pitchers and 1 ought to be able to
develop one or two dependable twirl-
Commodores Sign
Two-Year Contract
With Virginia Team
NASHVILLE, TENN.. Deo. 12.—The
Vanderbilt games committee has signed
a two-year contract with the Virginia
Athletic Association for 1914 and 1915
football games between these two In
stitutions, making the first settled game
on the Commodores' next season sched
ule. The date for the -Virglnia-Vandei-
bilt game was fixed for October 30 in
Nashville. The Commodores will visii
Charlottesville In 1915.
Soccer Teams Clash
At Piedmont To-day
The Stone Mountain and the Foote Sr
Davis soccer teams will try conclusions
at Piedmont Park this ufternoon a
3 o’clock.
The following players will represem
the Foote & Davies team:
Goal, Muse; right back, J. Harlarid
left back. Walker; right half. Schrim
per: center half. Spangler; left center.
Shugart; outside guard. Dyson; inside
right. Milhous: center. P. Hiiriand; in
side left. Chamberlain; outside left, Cox.
substitute. Foote.
Tlie Stone Mountain line-up has not
been decided on, but a. strong team i*
sure to be on hand.
MICHAELS WINS IN SEVENTH-
CHICAGO, Dec. 13.—Sam Michaels, a
local middleweight, knocked out Boh
Hanlon in the seventh round of the)'
match, held at a suburban resort last
night. Five hundred fans saw the bou'-
Gordon's Bout With
Sinnett Postponed
the
CHICAGO, Dec. 13.—The Johnny Cou- •
Ion-Young Sinnett match billed for Jan- I
uarv 1 at ltacine has been postponed
until January 10 or 12, the exact date
to be decided on ater. The staging of
the Bresnahan-McCue battle on that day
caused Coulon's bout to be shoved back.
Later in January Steve Ketchel and Joe
Mandot will come together before the i
Racine club.
PAY IV!E FOR CURES ONLY
T X the box Schwartz will have back
1 Forest More, secured in the mid
dle of last season from Chattanooga,
and Boland, who came to the Vols
when the Akron Club disbanded and
showed worlds of "stuff," but rather
poor control. Next season he should
make one of the star slabmen of the
circuit. There was Sam Hendee. the
giant Iowa coal miner, who started
oft like a cyclone and blew up with
a bang, yet down in the Kitty
League he had a great season and
Schwartz figures he is about ripe for
fast company. The same goes for
Leslie Johnson, a recruit from West
Tennessee, who was farmed along
with Hendee to the Kitties and proved
one of the leading heavers in that
league. Snyder, another Kitty /ling
er who finished the 1913 season with
the Vols. will be given a chance, and
and a big left-hander named Rogers
who was recommended by Hub Per
due has been signed. Bill is hoping
for great things from this boy, who
was covered up with Henderson las.
season until he could wear the rough
edges off his work.
This crop of heavers won’t win
the bunting in the Southern, but
Schwartz lias* his weather eye peeled
for several fancy slabbers who. if
they are landed, should make the
Vols riflemen one of the most depend*
able hurling crews in Judge Kara *
naugh’s circuit. One of the pros
pects is Ben Harris, a Nashville boy,
who for the past two seasons has
been with Denver in the Western
League. Ben don’t seem to be able
to get friendly with the peculiar cli
mate out there and is anxious to
get back down in Dixie. His work
has always been of high grade and
the Nashville boss is willing to part
with a large chunk of money if his
release can be bought.
• < y«ii hav« been taking t-eatment Tor waaka and months and
!?? L 0U J v#l,r hard n^rned money without being cured, don't y*o
think It is high time to accept DR. HUGHES’ GRANO OFFER'
' °' T U1 certainly not be out any more money If not cured. Consul*
tatlon and Examination are Free for the next thirty day*.
if I dedHe that your condition will not yield readily lo my treat
nent, i niil be honest with you and tell you ao. and not accept
your money under a promise of a cure.
My treatment will positively euro or I will make you no chargs
for the following diseases:
KIDNEY, BLADDER AND BLOOD
TROUBLE, PILES. VARICOSE VEINS,
FISTULA. NERVOUSNESS. WEAKNESS,
RUPTURE. ULCERS AND SKIN DISEASES.
CONSTIPATION
Di, t WnmVn 1 ’* 1 AB * rtl0 "*- plt '* Fistula and all Narnnua and Chrnnlo
na'lnu , M.n C 3r 1C „r“.r "! Ftn'ilns aiul Intlnmmatlon stnpprtt In Id hnura. I an
rSwaliln and no chara.-l by some rb.rnictans ami spnclallnts. M» lew «•
, * * r,d ao more ’han you are wil'm* to n«v r,.r . tn i..— *v, a M . r «i ,
BOXERS REMATCHED.
MILW Al KKF.. T »c-\ 13. The* great
battle put up by Matty Mct’tie and
Tomm; Bre»nahan at Racine this wee);
has resulted in the tw.» being ie-
’■natolled f*T a ten-round bout o i Next
Year's day at John Wagner’s i iub.
I
Inn- * 1,,"TVrt FO“ •» willing to pay fn- a oi7n’ AH medinTniarthe"pureai ar-l
■i-Mt riTV “ ,r " m " w, ‘ Pfi'ate laboratory. OUT OF-TOWX MEN VISITIN'!
: uie Mai'iv -*? U - nie * f xjP° n arrival, ana maybe you can he cured before returning
in" nn x?’ 1 ]”* nirmi ,n on * two visit*
a ® • « r, wSnSri., tr ;l m Tr « , ment «n.l .ddee rwfldentlal. Hour. 9
, i5e in rour non a," J ' * ° )f ' " ' writ** and cire me full description of your
A corupiete consultation cost* you no'liini and if I can help you 1
DR. HUGHES
coat* you nothin* and if 1 can help you 1 »
Opposite Third National Bank.
*5 p North Broad Street. Atlanta. Ga
mm