Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, December 14, 1913, Image 10

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IS D The “Six” you will choose for the best of all good reasons—because no other six in the world offers you as much for the same money. “SIX” Sedan .... Model “25” Hoad (ter Model “25” Touring Car Model “35” Touring Car Model “35” Coupe , Six-Passenger “SIX” . IliMliM ■: • ■ |f j| [ [ ELEVEN Now, Listen, Dear Reader, and You Shall Hear! •v v •§*••§• ^*v '!•••!* +•+ v• •’,« *!•••> IE Ye Strange Tale of Ye Strange Spitball Hope Dashed of Playing Chicago, but May Meet Dartmouth and Syracuse Next Year. \T X >i Did Elmer Strickiett Discover the Spit Ball? No, Elmer Did Not Discover It. EW HAVEN, CONN., Dec. 13.— When the Yale football sched ule for 1934 is announced ex- fttmslYe changes In the annual date •tst are certain. Yale will have a new stadium which will cost some $500,- "ub on her hands, and a partially built general play^found plant valued at about $600,000, and the question of financing them has led to a decision to expand In football engagements at home. lh making up the schedule the new administration, headed by Captain Nelson Talbott, banks on the Har vard game, here biennially, as the trump card. There will be seats and standing room for more than 70.000 people here next fall, and it is pos sible that the price of tickets may be elevated. Even this number of seats will hardly fill the demand, it is ex pected, for the Yale football manage ment estimate t that the requests for tickets at the past two or three Har vard games here could not have been filled with less than 125,000 seats. The Yale Football Association will make a bid for the Army-Navy game in another season, for the first time. The new “Bowl,” it is felt here, will prove the only American gridiron plant capable of accommodating even partially the demand for tickets for the battle between West Point and An napolis, and it is believed here that the invitation for the game to be played here will be accepted. Yale’s share of the receipts from this game would be of great benefit in relieving the strain caused by the expense of constructing the athletic plant. Yale-Chicago Game Would Draw. It is probable that another game that will prove a drawing card will be added to the Yale schedule. One that is favored in some quarters is a bout with the University of Chicago. It is practically certain that Yale pre fers Chicago to any other Western eleven and it seems equally clear that this meeting of the East and West would fill the stands to their capac ity as no other match outside a Yale-Harvard game could pack them. But Walter Camp to-day said on this subject, at Chicago: All the leading Eastern and ■Western universities had a hard season this year, and none prob ably could have withstood the strain of an intersectional game*. “I did not come West for the purpose of trying to arrange such \ a game, but on purely business matters. There is little chance of Chicago and Yale meeting in the future. May Play Dartmout. Another college whose advent on the Yale schedule ‘ is discussed is Dartmouth. The Green Mountaineers have not figured as Yale’s gridiron opponents in exactly two decades, although it was revived as a remi niscent feature of the banquet of Captain Corbin’s ’88 eleven here three weeks ago that Y'ale sent its eleven to Dartmouth to teach football there about 30 years ago. The ability of Dartmouth to pack the Yale stands is hardly doubted, but the preference of a game with Chicago has been held generally at Y'ale. Y'ale will make an effort to get back Syracuse upon her schedule next fall. That college was not played the past season because of its demand that if Syracuse came to Yale in 1913 Yale must agree to play at Syracuse in 1914. Y’ale was unwilling to make that concession. May Drop Two Teams. Lehigh and Holy Cross are likely to be dropped. Yale did not fancy the brand of football exhibited by the Holy Cross eleven and Lehigh failed, to meet expectations in playing strength. Any eleven not strong enough to either beat or tie Yale the past fall is now regarded with some suspicion. Colgate, Maine and Wash ington and Jefferson, all of whom proved too tough to be defeated by the Blue, will be urged to come back for a return engagement next fall at which Yale hospitality will be keenly in evidence. Phillies Introduce 14 Baseball Season H ERE is where an old discussion Is to be opened once again. Elmer Strickiett did not dis cover the spitball. Someone bobs up occasionally with the positive dec laration that the spitter existed when Father Adam heaved one of the Eden Bellefieurs at a trespassing ptero dactyl. But in baseball circles far and wide it is understood that Elmer Strick iett, one-time star of the Coast League and afterward a member of the Brooklyn club of the National League, was the :eal Columbus of the moist and elusive shoot. The Strick iett balloon will now take a puncture. The spitter was discovered by George Hildebrand, former Coast League ball player. later (’oast League umpire, and now umpire on Ban Johnson's American League cir cuit. Hllde showed Strickiett the spitter. Strickiett showed it to Chesbrough. Ohesbrough threw away a world's championship by spitting at the wrong time, and since then the spitter has been common property. In base ball it has become not so much a sur vival of the fittest as a survival of the spittiest. The poor baseball has be gun to plead for local-option laws' being a firm believer in a certain amount of dry territory. Mike Fisher, former manager of the Sacramento club, told this story pf I T it a thing of mystery, This sf ‘ * ' ‘ tery, This spitter sort of twistery, Whose origin and history Are in dispute, gol ding it! - .. agnei Can hit a ball that’s rightly gUT not a Wagner nor Cobb slobb- Bered by a man who Holds his job By knowing how to fling it. And every one you run across Will swear without a moment's loss , He was the first to heave across The spitter. Would you believe it? WET East and West and North * and South— Save pitchers sticken with a drouth And hence all dried up in the mouth— You’ll find the men who heave it. the spitter’s discovery, and Hilde brand corroborated it. Also Hllde added some important details, so It might be better to tell the story in Hilde’s way and say that Mike cor roborated it. “Back in the earty part of 1902,” said Hilde, “Frank Corridon, a young pitcher who was afterward with the Chicago Cubs, 'was with the Provi dence club. He had a habit of spit ting on his slow ball, and in fun one day 1 imitated him in practice, and then said, 'Why don’t you shoot ’em in faster?’ Then i moistened up the ball again and threw a fast one. I noticed it took a peculiar shoot, and I George Hildebrand, a Former Coast League Player. Is Real Columbus of Mystery. experimented with it a number of times, and even discussed it with Cor ridon. He used R in one game 1 remember he struck out twelve men in Fix innings, and then wrenched his arm. I doubt if he ever tried the spitter again, or if he even realized that it was of much value even then. “Toward the end of the 1902 season I jumped organized ball to play with Mike Fisher's Sacramento club. Strickiett was a member of the club.” “And he wa» going badly,” inter posed Mike. “I was getting ready to tie the can to him. He was worse than useless to me. “During the warm-up in Los An geles one day, I said to Strickiett, ’Let me show you something they can't hit,’ and I showed him this ball that 1 had experimented with in the blast. He immediately >egan to experiment with it. That was the beginning of spitball pitching. Strickiett got so ne could control the ball, making i! break In any direction he chose. “About a week after that he begged me for a chance to pitch,” added Mike “I le. him go in, and the op posing club got about two hits off him. In the post-season series he pitched two games against the All- Americans and All-Nationals. In one of them he allowed three hits and in the other two. Strickiett went up to the big league the very next year. But if Hilde hadn't shown him the spitter he would not have been on my club when that season ended.” Joe Tinker Only One Of New Managers in 1913 To Be Let Out The removal of Jo© Tinker as man ager of the Reds removes from major league basebrtil one of five new pilots of 1913. The other four—Joe Birmingham, of the Naps; Evers, of the Cubs; Chance, of the Yankees, and Stallings, of the Braves—will be retained in their pres ent jobs at least another year. Joe Birmingham had his team lighting for the American League pennant right down to the finish. Evers did as well as any one could have expected with his Cubs. Stallings made his team a winner, and it is predicted that it will do even better In the coming campaign Frank Chance mace a good start with - Yankees, weeded out considerable dead wood and finished* one berth above the last hole. Tinker alone in the quin tet made a bad showing finishing sev enth with a team that had finished in fifth place the year before. OVERESCH TO CAPTAIN NAVY. ANNAPOLIS. MD, Dec. 12.-H. E. Overesch last night was elected cap tain of the Navy football team for next year. He played tackle on this year’s eleven. Wolverines Not to * Lose Yost as Coach ANN ARBOR. MICH.. Dec. 13.—To quiet disconcerting rumors afloat to the effect that Fielding H. Yost was not to coach at Michigan next year, an official statement has been received from Ath letic Director Bartelme and also from Yost to the effect that the Wolverine football mentor will be on hand next fall. The fact that Yost's actual con tract with the athletic authorities at Michigan ran out a year ago has caused ‘ a popular rumor that he would not take ■ charge of the squad next year. Di rector Bartelme states, however, that, according to a written agreement with Coach Yost, either party must give no tice to the other 30 days before the close of the football season if a change is de sired the following season. Yost coached the Wolverines this j year under this agreement, and as no notice has been filed by either party during the season just played, it is a logical supposition, substantiated by both Yost and Director Bartelme, that Yost will be on hand next fall. WHITE VS. WOLGAST. The Charlie White-Ad Wolgast ten- round scrap at Milwaukee on December 19 is the next big bout to be staged. It will eliminate one or the other as a lightweight contender, as a defeat for either boy means a drop to the lesser fights. McCleave and King- Will Not Coach at Princeton Next Year PRINCETON, N. J.. Dec. 11.—Prince ton’s graduate coaching committee met her yesterday and Roscoe P. McCleave, ’OS, who has been chairman of the football committee during the last two seasons, and Philip H. King, ’93, will not coach here next year. The other three men. Knowlton Ames, ’09; Donald G. Herring. ’07, and Barclay H. Farr, *12, were re-elected to the committee by the board of athletic con trol, and they appointed Ames as chair man. Men to fill the two vacant posi tions were agreed upon, but their names will not be announced until it is known that they will accept. There will be another meeting of the committee soon, when it expects to an nounce the new coaches. It was learned from good authority that Ames may not act as head coach next year, but that the committee may select someone else. BOXERS SIGN FOR GO. PHILADELPHIA. Dec. 12.—Leo Houck and Joe Harrell, star middle- weights, have signed to meet in a six-round bout here. lUOuLi! ISIS EXPERT Eastern Heavyweight Failed to Show Class in Bouts With Willard and Morris. By Ed W. Smith. ITTHETHKR Gunboat Smith’s \\l knockout punch is the real!® thing or not is a matter that is very much up for discussion these days at all the various meetings of the Queensberry Club. We call it a knockout punch because It has done the business on various occasions, but at the same time we feel that per haps we should merely designate it as a punch without any qualifying words of any sort. It hasn't worked to the general end of a K. O. on many and divers occasions and therefore is open to suspicion of not being all that it is generally cracked up to be. It didn't even get Kam Langford off his feet in the recent Boston turnup, but that’s another story—also, by the way, very much open to suspicion. Gunboat has been hooked up with th/it puzzle of all puzzles, Arthur Pelky. of Chatham, Ont., the man who was Lute McCarty's op ponent that fatal day in Calgary, Alta., last May. They are to battle before Jim Coffroth's club in San Francisco the first day of the new year, both sides having agreed to all of the preliminary arrangements. Now, the Gunboat is possessed of the big slam, there seems to be little doubt of that. He may be able to hang it on the Pelky boy and may be he can not, for there seems to be a little class there and against class Smith hasn’t been such a world- beater. Note what happened in New York when Carl Morris started slam ming them into (ninbot at a lively | rate. Smith claimed a foul in the j fifth round on a blow it is said by j some ringside spectators to have been well above the b'lt line. Note, also, that Gunboat and Jess I Willard, the Kansas ri nt, went 1 twenty rounds in San Francisco not so very far back and Smith had all he could do to hypnotize the referee I into giving him the verdict at the 11 finish. V" Haven’t You Often Noticed The Popularity of Overland? You've seen them everywhere—on the city streets, on the country roads, in quiet neighborhoods and at fashionable places. The Overland design has become so fa miliar that you recognize it at a glance. Did You Ever Consider the Reason? It didn't just happen that all these peo ple bought Overlands. They found out for themselves that the Overland represents the very highest pos sible automobile value at the very lowest possible cost. Why Don’t You Find It Out? Overland Southern Auto Company 232 Peachtree Ltreet. Atlanta, Ga. Five Minutes Will Win You to All-Weather Treads PHILADELPHIA. Dec. 13. — Sam Payne, the Phillies’ sroundkeeper, has left this city for Wilmington. N. C., which has been selected as the team’s spring training camp, in order to lay out the diamond and give instructions as to the kind of soil to be used. Last winter Payne prepared the playing field at Southern Pines, and the Phillies de- | dared the diamond to be the best that ; they had ever had for pre-season work. Payne will be gone for several days. I He will probably make another trip; to Wilmington after the Christmas holidays to see how the work is pro gressing and to make sure that his orders are carried out. Joe O'Rourke, second baseman of the Venice, Cal., club, was a visitor at the Phillies’ headquarters. O'Rourke was transferred from Sac ramento to Venice last sumemr. He has spent several seasons on the coast, but he may not return to the Pacific | Coast League next season, as he is in line for the management of the Wichi ta. Kan., club. LOT OF COIN FOR JEFF. LONDON’, Dec. 13.—Jeff Smith, American middleweight who got 2S9.60. for defeating Bernard, the French middleweight, saided yester day for Australia, where he is sign ed for three fights. mm , FREE T R E A T I 8 f. t The Leach Sanatorium, j Indianapolis. Ind.. haa I published a booklet which gives Interesting facts about the cause of Cancer. also tells what to do for pain, bleeding, odor. etc. Writ# T«r U to-dajr. mentioning this pap«r. catarrh: OF THE J BLADDER 1 Relieved In < 24- Hours J Each Cap- , su}© boars tii© (M1DYj « name < p Beware ofcounterfeit» \ The treads are double-thick— The rubber is extra tough— The grips are deep and enduring— The edges stay sharp— They face the skidding direction— The blocks meet at the base— The surface is flat and smooth. Here is a tread which runs as smoothly as plain treads. It is just as economical. It gets rid of all features which made anti skids costly, or made them cause vibration. On dry roads it runs like a plain tread. To wet roads it gives an irresistible grip. It is the tread for all wheels and all seasons. On Goodyear tires—the largest-selling tires in the world — it is outselling plain treads with users. In winter it is an essential. Five minutes will show you that no other anti-skid begins to so meet the requirements. Some are shallow, some soft, some irregular. Some have rounded grips. Some have separate projections which center the strains at one point in the fabric. Some cause much vibration. Here is a flat tread, broad, smooth and regu lar. Here are deep grips which last for thousands of miles. Here is rubber toughened by a secret process. Good-Year No-Rim-Cut Tires With All-Weather Treads Here are sharp edges which stay sharp. And the edges face the skidding direction. Here are blocks that widen out and meet at the base, so the strains are spread as with plain treads. This is the latest of Goodyear inventions. It solves anti-skid problems, as never before. It combines plain-tread economy with the safety of a most tenacious grip. You are bound to adopt it., A five-minute comparison will make you a convert. Don’t buy a tire for winter use without coming to see this tread. Plus These Savings All-Weather treads, if wanted, now come on No-Rim-Cut tires. And you get these fea tures too: Tires that can’t rim-cut— Tires that save blow-outs— Tires that save loose treads. We control the No-Rim-Cut feature. The saving of blow-outs adds to our tire cost $1,500 daily. No other maker adds this extra cost. Our way of preventing tread separation is patented, and we control the patent. You get all these savings in No-Rim-Cut tires, and in no other tires in the world. As a result, these tires today are the largest - selling tires in the world. You are courting tire trouble, you are wasting tire money, so long as you go without them. Let us prove this to you. THE GOODYEAR TIRE & RUBBER COMPANY, AKRON, OHIO This Company has no connection whatever with any other rubber concern which use* the GcKHlyear naina. 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