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MAYBE! e
X . Mayhe whem Bax John- %)
N tacinded' ho will join the (4
hye Peßce movement: AN
FOOTBALL COACH HAS RISEN
YEARBY YEARTO IMPORTANT
PLAGE IN COLLEGE REGM IF
By J. W, Heisman,
The social and professional
status of the college athletic
coach has undergone a markod
change and improvement in the last
twenty years. Prior to that time he
was looked upon In much the same
way as a baseball umpire, a horse
Jockey, a prize fighter.or an actor.
The latter's position has also risen
greatly in public' estimation in that
period, but the others are still no
where.
Professional baseball players are a.l
deal nearer the top and much further
away from the bottom of things than
they were even a dozen years ago.
This is partly because-of the great
numbers of college men that are go
ing into the game and partly be
cause the whole game is being better
and more discreetly handled and
managed by those woh have invested
large fortunes in baseball as a busi
ness; they have surrounded the game
with more protection to the refined
sensibilities of the patrons.
Ten years ago, and in many in
stances much less time than« that,
most Southern colleges changed thelr
coaches every year. This was some
times due, to the theory at such in
atitutions ‘that when it came to foot
ball coaching a college did best to
import each year a man brand-new
from the big KEastern or Western
universities, one who would be rigit
up to the minute in the matter of
new kinks and points in the game,
and who would be famillar with the
very latest and most approved meth~
ods of coaching and of playing Lhe
game. Twenty years ago there was
some sense in this argument; ten
years ago the argument was foungd to
be leaking rather badly. Nowadays It
{sn’t true at all. Neither the East nor
the West, nor any other section of
the country, holds a monopoly’ vn
football skill or knowledge, no more
in the origination of ideas than in
their eXec_ut_l_or.l.. AT
A Fall From Grace.
Many of the annual changes came
about, naturally enough, because of
the failure of the individual caffches
to give satisfaction at their respec
tive institutions. They failed to
prove their competency. Under such
circumstances the football coach loses’
out the same as does a man in any
eoOther calling in life, only his' fall
from grace comes much faster on the
football fleld than in most vocations,
But wheneevr a college in these
days ascertains that it has at last
found the “pearl of great price” (fine
pearl and big price usually going to
gether here, as everywhere), it takes
but little time in making up its mind
that it is going to “swing to” that
pearl for keeps, if there is any way‘
to do it. Coaches that can under
standinigly interpret new rules from
year to year and make the best of
them, that can take changing mate
rial and fit changing styles of play
to them as local needs may indicate,
can keep all manner of boys under
control and get results with all kinds
of material, are few and far between.
After perhaps a dozen attempts, a
college finds such a man and hangs
on to him.
Coaching a Steady Job.
This is how it comes that coaches
in the South are not changed nearly
as frequently as formerly, In fact,
it is safe to say that fully half of the
Southern coaches this year are men
who have already been down here
all the way from five to twenty years.
_,xnd as time passes we shall see more
and more colleges finding athletic in
structors that satisfy them and that
they will want to keep year in and
year out.
Athletic coaching is like anything
else—you have to “get your hand in"
bhefore you can attain big or even sa't.
sifcartoy results. A doctor or law
ver who keeps moving from one city
to another never can get a big prac
tice built up. A groceryman or drug- |
gist who is forever changing his lo
cation never builds up a good trade.l
A teacher who changes from one
school to another year after year}
must become acquainted each year,
with an entirely new set of etudentn,!
new ways of doing things, new sur
roundings, etc., and he doesn't get thel
results that he would if he had re
mained long enough in one place Lo
get settled and acquire that “at
home feeling” so necessary to the:
performance of good work. |
Plenty of Good Ones. |
For*hr’l coaches that know thelr|
busmess are more plentiful, thanks to)
the lapse of time, than they used to:
be. And it is well they are, for the!
game has spread and now is being
played by so many colleges and pre- |
1
MGold Band
Mokt %
“§Whiskey
lEABBOTTLED In sccord with the
00l N BOND U. S.Law, and un
WY e the direction of United States
Mo Yo} nternal Revenue Officers. Every
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] the cork stating that it is
(0243 ° & %
o YEARS 100 PRO\ F
. OLD AND OVER OUR
YEARS OLD
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SR AN B 8 Full Quarts 550
' HISKEY 12 Full Quarts 8.00
100 PROOF 24 Full Pints 8.75
oo Ipono] 48 Full Half Fints 9.25
I.CO.
ORLE FUA | Bort e Il pond FRER
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; ATLANTIC COAST
o DISTILLING CO.
~ Jackeonviile, Fla. ‘
“Who was the best 1 ever 0w
The old men shoak Wiz head
fdnd stroked Ms beard with
sensde powo -
Before he finghiy sdid:
paratory schools that if none but a
few Eastern graduates could take
charge of a team the supply would
not go one-tenth of the way around.
Now there are in the coaching busi
ness, as pald prbfessional coaches,
men repmnn'dnt‘a.t least one hun
dred different colleges that turned
them out. And the number of insti
tutions that are acquiring a sufficient
technical knowledge and skill in the
game to turn out not only good play
ers but good coaches as well is con
stantly growing.
As everybody xknows, all our foot
ball coaches come from col};ge teams.
That is to say, they were” amateurs
when they began to take charge of
other football teams for a salary, for
football {s nowhere in thig country
slayed as a game for professionals or
by professionals, $
But the introduction of college men
g Coach Heisman § T
§ NSy \\*\Wm\\“’ e R
;is paying strict { o eL e S o
attention to e L e s ' o
2 R R e SRR S | g
tackling this A e &}%»J‘% eR § B
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to take charge o even one branch of
the college sports has shown college
authoritlies how much better such
men are to have in charge of' the
boys than is wsually the case with
professional players in the control
;ot college bdseball teams. The lat
}ter kind may know, and even be able
to teach, the game all right,; but
‘there their interest in the college boy
ends. They have, and can have—if
they never went to college—no knowl
edge of collage ideals and traditions,
no sympathy with faculty aims and
endeavors. And so, more and more,
we are seeing the ex-college player
supplanting the professional player as
coach of the college basebal! team as
well as in handling the college foot
ball team. Fpngis e &
| Colleges Waking Up.
| College trustees and facultiss and
jcatalogues used to take note of the
‘department of physical education only
to the extent of what activities along
‘this line might be developed in and
by the college gymnasium. They had
not then discovered that gymnastics,
sports and exercises were, in the
malin, artificlal physical culture, while
the games and sports played by var
‘sity teams in inter-collegiate matches
are natural developers. And they not
only develop the individual engaged in
[them. but, by the premium of pub'ic
interest they attract, they act llke
e magnet and draw many another
|colgge boy into a study of and par
ticipation in physical culture who
otherwise would never have been
tempted to go into a gymnulum. and
‘would neither have thought or cared
about his physical development.
That point being now recognized,
trustees and faculties and catalogues
are paying more attention to their
fields of play than to their gymna
siums. They are spending more mon
ey on them, and “they are studying
the needs and requirements of out
door games meore than they are the
matter of gymnasium classes.” And
they have come to find that here as
elsewhere it pays to have a man In
charge who is college bred, who has
high ideals, who thinks about the
future of the boy after he shall have
been graduated, who l'kes and de
mands order and decorum on the
flo? and who llves a clean life him
sel? the same as does the other col
lege instructors. |
College-Bred Coaches Best. |
- But m&m are seldom gathered
HEARST’S SUNDAY AMERICAN, ATLANTA, GA.,, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1914.
‘“John L, was great,'and 80 was
Jefl,
Ang Corbett pleased the fane;
But Fitz was dest of all I sow
Egxcept, of course, Jos Gons.
STALLINGS BASEBALL
)
- CAREER IN NUTSHELL
]
t
' George Stallings, the Boston Na
tlonal manager, was born in Augusta,
- Ga., November 17, 1870,
Is serving his twenty-third year as
& baseball manager.
. Played his first game as an out
flelder with the San Jose,, Cal., club
in_ 1891,
- _Won his first pennant as manager
of the Augusta Southern League club
in 1893. Twenty-one years later he
~has a chance to win another with
the Braves.
,Started out as a catcher, but in
1896 took to the outfield and retired
actively after 1901 with Detroit.
' Has been manager for 22 years
~ with the following clubs:
: Igg—guston 1902—Buffalo
: —Boston 'l9ol—Detroit
. 1912—
1T EUTES ysee—-Dasrelt
1910—Yankees 1899—Detroit
- 1009-—Yankees 1898—Phil'delphia
1908—Newark 1807—Phil'delphia
- 1907—Idle 1896—Detroit
1506—Buffalo 1895—Nashville
1905-—Buffalo 1894—Nashville
1904—Buffalo 1893—Augusta
. 1003—Buffalo 1892--Ban Jose
McGraw Has Record
Squad on Pay Roll
NEW YORK, Sept. 26.—-Manager Mc-
Graw has so many players under con
tract at the present tha:
most lmlpouslble to keep account of
them, ncluding the refulm. near
regulars and newly-arrived recruits,
there are thirty-eight playerss which is
probably the largest squad ever carried
by a club at this time of the year.
¥ollowing is the complete list of the
{layers that are now under contract to
he New York club:
Pitchers—Matty, Tesreau, Marquard,
Fromme, O'Toole, Demaree, ‘%iltse.
Schauer, Schupp, Boyce, Huenke, Krick
son, Kirmayer, Ritter, Verbout, Palmero,
Cook.
Catchers—Meyers, McLean, Johnson,
Smith,
Infielders—Merkle, Doyle, Fletcher,
Grant, Stock, Holke, Brainerd, Beatty,
Bues. T
Outfielders—Robertson, Burns, Snod
grass, Murray, Bescher, Thorpe, Donlin,
Piez.
Ready for Opening
BALTIMORE, Sept. 26.—Prince
George's Park, Maryland's newest race
track, will be the scene of the inaugural
meeting of the Southern Maryland Ag
ricultural Association, October 1 to 12,
inclusive: |
The new track is a mile in lenfl«h.i
with a seven-furiong chute for nprlm‘
‘races. It is situated at Bowie, thirty
five minutes from Baltimore and Wash
ington on the electric railway connect-‘
ing the two citles.
The course has been completed and i
almost ready for the opening meet.
——:—-—*____—'—'—_———“——m
from the ranks of professiofial ath
letes. Although increasing in num
bers steadily now, they are stlll all
tOO rare anywhere. The happy com
bination of good points required in
the one man is the hard thing to find.
But when such a man is found at
lasi the previous unsatisfacory ex
periences of each coliege are so fresh- {
ly remembered that it seldom takee
tho-ekin authority long to decide that
the known qualifications their man
possesses are much greater in value,
taking them broad and long, than
could be the one point of not having
recently mixed with the latest and
most approved methods of play of this
or that big Eastern or Western or
Northern university., Indeed, if he
Is a real instructor and coach he will
himself be of those that are ever in
the forefront of discovery and Inven
tion, of progress and lmprovement,
A RINGSIDE RHYME
"I loved to see old Mitchell fight;
Mysterious Smith was good ;
And Jaskson's one I cannot &light,
While Rygn's underséood,
A Sure-Enough Hard %
Tackle by Tech Man
S ey This shows Hugh Mauck
/W i "’// /”////////W/% diving into a dummy. The big
Z pmersmsesss il | g lineman hit it so hard that it
7 Y. & é { broke the heavy rape that
Z . i 7 {held it to the frame. Mauck
g ] t é %is sure to develop into a great
Z | % g 2 player.
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EATON, COLO., Sept. 26.—Mrs. Mary
King is advancing claims to being the
first successful Ponce Dekeon in the
United States. Mrs, King, who s 74
years old, says she has found a real
means of beating Father Time with a
motorcycle.
She was induced to ride on the rear
seat of a motorbike to Greeley by her
grandson, Otto Morrison, a month ago.
Since then she has become so keen for
speeding that young Morrison has added
several auxillary valves to his machine
and the two are daily seen ‘“‘burning
up” highways in the vieinity of laton
at sixty and sixty-five miles an hour.
“Fifty vears younger to-day than a
month ago,” says Grandma King. She
declares a determination to drive the
machine herself and is studylng its
wnechanism. :
Billiardßecordßrok
By Mexican Player
ST. LOUIS, Sept. 26.—Plerre Mau
pome, of St. Louis, set a new world's
record which he made a high run of
18 at three-cushlon billiards. The for
mer record, 15, was made by G. W.
Moore.
- MORE MEN JOIN FRATERNITY.
DENVER, Segt. 2%, —Every member of
the Denver club except Manager Coffey
and two others has joined the Baseball
FPlayers’' Fraternity. With the addition
of the Denver fhyers practically the
entire Western League iz now lined up
with the fraternity.
PARALYSIS Gnauered st Last-
By Dr. Chase’s Bpecial Blood and Nerve Tablets,
Dr. Chase, 324 N, Tenth Btreet, Philadelphia, Pa.
[T
DIAMONDS AUTOMOBILES
+HARRY - MAY .
25% WHITEHALI
“MeAuliffe, Dempsey and Mo
Coy'"—~
He clawed his Rirsule strands—
“ But Fite ke was the dest of all,
Ezcept, of courge, Joe Gana.
Pennsy Is Training
“Strong Man" for the
'156 Football Eleven
PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 26.—The
coaches of the Unlversity of Pennsylva
nia football team are trying an inter
esting experiment this year with Mike
Dorizas, a Greek student who has bro
ken all the university’'s records . for
strength, but has no football experience.
Out of the crude material which Dori
zas represents the coaches hope to make
a real football machine. Football ex
perts are watching the experiment with
great interest, as it will go a long way
toward proving or disproving the saying
that, given the requisite strength and
stamina, a football player can be
“made.”’
Dorizas is a giant in stature, and the
feats of strength which he has per
formed in the college gymnasium are
worthy of a professional strong man. In
the preliminary practice so far Dorizas
has made a creditable showing and has
tessed some of the 200-pound line can
didates around like feathers. He bhas
not yet fiot a real try-out, however, and
it is still a problem how he will act in
a real serimmage. If he can be taught
even the rudiments of the game, the
Pen‘;\ coaches figure that he will make
good.
After a practice last week one of the
coaches reproached the big Greek for
playing sluggishly. Dorizas looked at
him in surprise. “You don't want me
to hurt someone, do you?” he asked.
At one of the practices last week the
coaches lined up Dorizas against Nor
wald, Pepper, and Witherow, three 200-
pound linemen. Dorizas played in the
tackle position of one line und the other
three men massed opposite him on the
other gide of the line. At the snap of
the ball Dorizas charged and toppled
over all three of hig opponents.
.
Carpentier Reported
Wounded in Battle
Special Cable to The Atlanta Georglan.
LONDON, Sept. 26, —Georges Car
pentier heavyweight boxing cham
pion of Europe, who was reported as
Faving been seriously wounded while
serving in the French army, is sald
to have been taken to a hospital in
Liyons,
: "y SATARRH
’S'ANTA B BLADDER
R T 24"#8‘"""‘8
QY -
. Beware of counterfoits
“THE OLD RELIAELE"
HV-CLCDE ST
' C el fi'CAPSULEj S
REMEDYFRM % N
AT DRUGSIBTS.OR TRIAL BOX BV MAIL Bos
FROM PLANTEN 93 HENRY ST. BROOKLYN.NRY.
-BWA' E 2: |u4lu= ;
“And there were few like Kid
Lavigne .
When he woe in his prime;
McGovern—keep his memory green—
He pleased me ¢n his time, |
FEDERAL LEAGUE
Hoosiers, 8; Rebels, 4. |
PITTSBURG, Sept. 26.—The In
dianapolis Federals evened up to-day
by defeating the Rebels 8 to 4 Four
runs were made off Moseley before he
was retired and replaced by Mullin,
who held his opponents without a
score. Camnitz, Dickson and Barger
were easy for Indianapolis. Timely
bunching of hits by the Indians in
the fourth, fifth, seventh and eighth
innings gave them two runs in each
of these rounds. The box score:
P'tsburg. ab. r. h. po. 1.l Ind’polls. ab. r. h. po. a.
D'ahnty,if 8 0 1 2 O] C'pbeli,t 3 2 1 2 0
Menosky,rf 2 6 1 4 0 MKnledbd 1 4 1 0
Onkes,of 2 0 0 1 0/ Kanffef 4 1.1 0 0
Lennox,sb 4 1 1 0 0! Laporte,2b 4 1 2 2 2
Yerkesss 4 2 3 2 6| Carrdb 5 0 2111
Budl?.nb 3$ 1110 llhmoml.u 4 3.3 38
Lewis,2b 8 0 0 8 2| Rouschif 4 0 1 6 0
Berry,¢ 4 01 4 6 Rarldene 4 0 238 1
Camnitzp 2 0 0 0 2| Moseleyp 0 0 0 0 2
Dickson,p 0 0 0 1 lluxflclwer 330
xJones 1000 O/Mullinp 3 111 2
Batgerp 0 0 0 0 1
xxSavage 0 0 0 0 O -
Totals 30 4 nv'fiJ Totais 3§ 81627 12
Jones batted for Dickson in seventh.
Savage batted for Bn.rfcr in ninth.
gcheer batted for Moseley in fifth.
core:
Pltsburg ......covinveooo..o2o 200 000—4
Indlanapolls ..............000 220 220—8
Summary: Errors—Bradley, Oakes,
Esmond, “Two-base hit—Lennox.
Three-base hit—Perry, Stclen bases—
Menoskey, Oakes, Kauff, Sacrifice hits
—-Memuke{. Bradley, Lewis, McKech
nie, Rousch, Moseley. Bases on balls—
Off Camnitz 1, off Dickson 2, off Bar
ger 1, off Mo-eiey 2, oft Mullin 8. Struck
out-—'By Dickson 22, by Moseley 3. Dou
ble play—Moseley to Esmond to Carr.
Hit by o%ltchod ball--By Moseley 1.
"r.m;‘e—z: ~ Umpires—Brennan and Cu
ck.
Terraping Win and Tie. |
BALTIMORE, Sept. 26.—The Ter-‘
rapins drove Davenport from the
mound and captured the first game |
of this afternoon’s double-header 6 to |
4 while the second contest was halted
at the end of the seventh because of
darkness with the score standing 1 to
1, In the first game Baliley struck out
eight batters in five inings but Issued |
the same number of passes and had
to be relieved by Suggs with the bases
full. The latter was tapped rather
lively but managed to maintain the
lead of his team mates, The box
score:
FIRST GAME.
Baltimore. ab. r. h. pe. a, | Bt. Leuis. ab. r. h. pe. a.
Meyoref 65 32 2 1 O/Tobinet 3 1 0 0 0
Duncanf 8 2 2 1 O|B'dwell,2b 3 0 1 3 1
Batesof 2 0 1 0 0| Hartley,2> 2 0 2 0 11
Kmersef 38 0 0 0 Of{Kirbyef 2 0 0 0 0
S'mons,2b 3 0 0 2 2| Drakecf 2 0 0 3 0O
Kkp'kdb 4 0 2 1 0/ WMiller,Jf 3 1 1 2 0
Swacina,lb 4 1 2 4 1| Chapmanc 4 0 1 3 0
Dolanss 3 0 0 4 4| Boucher,3b3 0 0 1 2
Jkl'chee 4 0 113 2| HMiller,lb 3 1 110 o'
Balleyp «1 0 0 1} 2| Missess 4 1 1 2 5
Buggs,p 32 0 0 0 1| Dav'p’th 100 0 1
xCrandall 0 6 0 0 0|
Keupper,p 2 0 2 0 0
Totals 33 51027 12| Totals 32 4924 10
xßatted for Davenport in fifth,
Score by innings:
St. Louis .. .. %. .. .. 000 000 130—4
Baltimore .. .. .. .. .. 011 210 00x—5
Summary: Errors—Dolan, 3; Tobin,
Misse. Two-base hits—Meyer, Duncan,
Misse. Three-base hit—Duncan. Sacri
fice hits—Duncan, Drake. Stolen bases |
--Kirkpatrick, Swacina, Meyer, 3. Dou-‘
ble plays—dJacklitsch to Dolan, Dolan to
Swacina, 2. Bases on balls—Off Bailey,
8; off Suggs, 1; off Davenport, 2. Struck
out—By Balley, 8; by Bug‘s, 3; by Dav-*
enport, I,—Passed ball—Chapman. Time
—24:30. Umpires—Anderson and Goechel. |
SECOND GAME.,
Baltimore. ab. r. h. po. a. | St. Louls. ab. r. h. po. -.l
Meyer,f 3 1 1 0 O/Tobinsyf 4 1 11 0
Duncan,lf 3 g 1 8 o}B'dwell,3b 2 0 0 3 3
Bates,ef 3 2 1 o{Drake,f 8 0 2 1 O
Sim'ns.2b 3 0 0 0 1| WMiller,dt 8 0 0 1 o]
Kkp'k3b 3 0 ¢ 1 1 Hartleye 2 0 0 8 2,
Bwacina,lb 8 0 1 5§ o' Beherdd 2 0 0 3 1|
Doolanss 2 0 0 0 2| HMlllerlb 2 0 0 7 1!
Kerr,c 3 0 010 1/ Missens 10001'
Balleyp 2 0 0 1 2‘Groom.p 201 % a‘
Totals 28 1 621 7| Totals 22 1 42111
’ (Called on account of darkness at end
of seventh.)
~_Score by Innings:
Bt Xouls .i . 4 s weidn 300 000 01
Ball Ore. o c: 2 51 2v v VBl 000 O-~~1:}
Summary: Two-base hits — Tobin,
Drake. Three-base hit—Drake. Sacri
fica hits—Doolan, H. Miller. Bases on |
balls—Off Baliey, 3; off Groome, 2.
Struck out—By Bailey, 8; by Groome, 7. |
Time—l:4o. bmpires—Anderson and |
Goeckel. ;
Bisons, 3; Packers, 2. |
BUFFALO, Sept. 26.—Buffalo en- |
gaged Kansas City in a pitcher's duel !
to-day, the Buffeds wining 3 to 2.
Krapp pitched a good game and re- |
ceived splendid support. Cullop, too,
pitched well but five infield ervors |
counted against him. The game was |
decided in the third, as neither pitcher
ellowed any more runs to come across. !
The box score: i
Bufiale. ab.r.h.po.a. |K. City. ab.r. h.po.a. |
Aglerf 3 0 0 2 0 Cdbnelt 4 0 01 0!
Downey,2b 2 1 1 0 4| Coles,rf 40 010
MeD'ldrt ¢ 1 1 2 1/ Knwy2h 4 0 0 6 1
Chuse,db 4 1 1 7 oirnmm.ub 328
Hnf'def 8 0 2 3 0 Stovalllb 3 1 1 5 2/
Engle3b 2 0 0 4 1! Kruegeref 3 0 0 1 0,
Smith,ss 3 0 0 3 1| Rawlingss 3 0 1 8 1]
Blair,c 8 016 I|Brownc 3 0 06 1!
Krappp 1 0 0 0 I|Cullopp 8 0 2 1 8/
Totals 25 8 637 9| Totals 30 2 52411,
Score: {
BUIRIO. siooi o onneeoessv 101 200 00%--3 |
Kansas City ........e.....020 000 000—2 ;
Summary: Errors—Perring, Krueger,
| - JEFFERSON CLUB
¥ f
g s aratien w—_y % .
N SMOOTH AND RICH
J;'.'.' 7.’ PRI 5 R DR GIRR AR SRR SN RS NG AL | ARSI TR o E . ' |
o 5 s g This is the one Whiskey that has become uni- — -'
MXN versally famous for its smoothness and richness—a :
SR e palatable drink of uniform quality. It's the finest m '
< product of the distillery. Iwy |
: 9 ' Choose Jefferson Club and you choose right. For ERGE
|9l ROU $Y| sale by cafes and mail order houses.
3
B raling STRAUS, GUNST&CO. &
Gifod e DISTILLERS AND DISTRIBUTORS, &= |
ELOIIAR | cotabablished 1878 RICHMOND, VA. _SRNC |
k. {: 5 -J' | L i .L‘@; e ;
l.\———j Excellent and Superior *!
f “And there was Dizon, and Attén,
8o clever with their hands;
But Fits was dest of all I saw,
Except, of course, Joe Gans."
‘ -~DAMON RUNYON,
Brown, Cuxlns. Bases on balls—Off
Krapp 2, off Cullop 4. Struck out—By
Krapp €, by Cullop 8 Stolen bases—
Hanford, McDonald. Double plays—Per
rlng to Stoval to Brown., Wild pitch—
Cullop 1. Time—l:4s. Umpires—Shan
non and Manassau. : ‘
Chifeds Win Twice. l
BROOKLYN, Sept. 26.—The Chi
feds strengthened their hold on first
place by vanquishing the Tip-Tops.in
both portions of a double-header to
day 7 to 6 and b to 8. The mecond
game was called after the fifth on ac
count of darkness. In the first game
Chicago overcame a six run lead.
Tinker protested the game in the sec
ond inning claiming that Seaton used
emery paper on the ball. The box
score:
FIRST GAME.
Chicage .ab. r. h. po. a. | Brkiyn. ab. r. h. po. a.
Flaclglf 5121 ojAnd’son it 5 0 0 1.0
Zelder,3b 2 0 60 0 1! D'l'h'ty.2b 4 0 1 2 38
FritzBb 1 1 1 1 O|Ch'pard,ef 5 1 1 0 0
Wison,e 2 1 0 4 J|Evansf 4 2 8 4 1
Clemens,c 0.1 0 3 0| Hofman,lb 4 1 210 1
Zwling,ef 4 1 0 1 n’w--'m.w [ O }
Wkl'def 5 1 2 0 0 Holt,ss 500 2
Tinker.as 1 0 1 1 4| Lande 3 3383
Smithss 1 0 0 1 1| xShaw 00000
Beck,lb 2 01 7 0| Owens,e 000 00
Jkson,lb 1 0 0 2 0| Seaton,p 38 0 1 © 2
Farrel,2b 3 1 1 65 2;xxCooper 0 0 0 0 0
Brennan,p 1 0 0 0 0{ Sommers,p 0 0 0 0 0
Fisk,p 30 0:9.1
Stanley,ss 0 0 0 1 ol
Toatls 31 7 827 10| Totals 38 612 27 11
xßan for Land in eighth. xßatted for
Seaton in elghth,
Chicago .......cvooveene.. 000 011 0507
Brooklyn ........cc0000.....032 100 000—6
~ Summary: Errors—Hoffman, Wester
zil, Holt, Land. Two-base hits—Wyck
land, Beck, Farrell. Three-hase hits—
Chouinard, Evans, Hoffman, Seaton.
Sacrifice hie--Clemens, le)_;):r. Stolen
bases—Zelder, Delehanty. üble plays
—Land to Holt, Holt to Delehanty to
Hoffman, Evans to Delehanty to Holt.
Bases on balls—Off Brennan, 1; oft
Seaton, 6; off Fisk, 8; off Sommers, 1.
My Message The Rellable,
=" DR. HUGHES "
Men n Specilalist
. e —————— OF RECOGNIZED ABILITY.
‘ W “‘\%\*‘:“ Permanently located with the finest equipment in
LN Atlenta for the treatment of Nerve, Blood, Skim
g B L ‘(g and Special Diseases of men. Are you weak, ailing,
o k 54 run-down, diseased! Will you appreciate honess
b SN k {advice, conscientious and skillful treatment! You
‘ I e should consult Dr, Hughes in person and learn the
Ty S e § truth about your condition. When you call at my
T f{oftice T will meet you every visit, face to face, a 8
o ; F.l man to man, open and aboveboard. There will be
‘\“ e ;\fi) no deception or misrepresentation practiced in my
Sl fS¢] oftice. lam no medical company or so-called medi
g L 0 cal institute, and have no fourth-rate assistants of
L | t{’ questionable ability to treat my patients. My spe
Ol . Ve cial megsage is to those diseased men who have been
o i ke )
4 : ¢ i treated for weeks and montm self-styled spe
-3 g“ 0] cialists with practically no ts, and in some
AR T SR wv’i cases have gradually grown worse. I want Yon to
RN ._,i.kq come to me and let me show you how quickly and
3 b 61 permanently youn ean be cured by the right kind of
Iy P rrntment. )I-ny of my Srnteful ]}ltientn have 'Fivn
y me sworn testimonials of cures T effected. hese
P KN % you can seo at my office, * »
| > Scientific Method
Dr.Hughes’ Scientific Methods
Make vigorous, muscular men of the runiont, weakest specimens of ‘‘half men;*’
strengthens the nerves, enriches the blood, increases the courage and ilvel & man
rowo‘-r of mind and body such as any man shonld be proud of. Makes the eye
bright and the step elusiic; make an athlete of a sluggard. REMOVE the disesse
by restoring strength. Methods based on science and exp\er!ence alone can _do this.
I accom litfix quick and lnstinf cures in Blood Poison, Nervous Deecling, Ruptu
Piles, P’i)stulu Kidney, Bladder, S&eclll and Contracted Disesses, Drtinrl“:P
Losses and ail Diseases Peculiar to Men. My scientific methods will bring ts
when all else has failed.
Mj' arguments are good, my system Is good, but I know {on haven’s time
to study thess. You want proof, and I am able to give you that, snd lots &f
it. When your own neighbor teils you what I have done for him, you will know
I did. Tt will feel good to be strong and well again. Come and talk your troubles
over with me. I can and will help you. I own my own oifice—no one to see
but me.
No man too poor to %at s consuitation, examination lnd'mfi best advice F‘R“
I will give the XyOUREH man a chance, as well as the RICH, to rgceive honest
treatment from me at a SMALL COST, Call at my office and invéstigate what
remarkable suécess 1 have made in my specialty. gy
. .
New Energies Put in Worn-Out Bodies
Are You nervous and despondent, weak or debilitated, tired mornings, ne
ambition, lifeless, memory fwor, easily fatigued, excitable and fi»
ritable, eyes sunken, red and blurred, pimples, restleas, haggard looking, weak back,
bome paine, hair losses, ulcers, sore throat, lack of energy and confidence?
The following diseases are among those which I successfully treat: EIDNEY,
BLADDER and DISEASES OF THE PELVIC REGION, VARICOSE VEINS,
RUPTURE, ULCERS and SKIN DISEASES, BLOOD POISON, ECZEMA, RHEU
MATISM, MALARIA, PILES, FISTULA and CONTRACTED AILMENTS OF
MEN.
OUT-OF-TOWN MEN VISITING THE CITY, consult me at once upon arrival,
and maybe you can be cured and return home on the same day. |
Men are dnilg exchanging mone{ for guesswork and mistakes with those
inexperienced in the treatment of their ailments. You have tried the rest, nnj
come to me and get the best. . |
Health Counts in a Life of Success. Why Be a Weakling? Become Strong
Call on o6r write to Dr. Hughes to-day for information regarding treatment.
CONSULTATION free and strictly conddential. Office hours 9 a. m. to 7 p. m,
Sunday, 10 to 1 only. '
(6%2 N. Broad Bt. Just a fow doors frem »
DR. HUGHES i .o' oo Atlanta, Ga.
)
% SAME DLD STORY §
War falls to halt Hel
ldnd’s preparations for
1015 Fair, Can’t beat the
Duteh!
Struck out—By Seaton, 7; by Flsk, &
Hit by pitcher—Seaton, 1. P d bait
—Land. Time-—2:45. Umpires—MecCor=""
mick and Cross. O
Chioage? ab. £ b por o) | Breskivn: sooBb R
o . ab.r. h. .|, . “
mw:fl: 2 5% % And'm.gl "0 K ¢
Zelder4b 0 1 0 1 IIDI'Niy2O3B 1 28 0
Zwiingsd 3 13 1 o|Comerrt 3 018 8
W , ) e
“”ll:gd.rti 100 ofHomen,lb3 0 1 8§ O
Tinkerss 1 0 1 0 2/ Wt'sL3D 3 1 1 § &
Beck,lb 20 0 & 1] Hoit,ss 2 0038
Fereell,2b 1 0 0 2 2| Owens,e 3101 N
Pra’gstp 2 0 0 0 0 FWisonp 2 0.1 005
s | W . S e ——— |
Totals 15 6 415 7| «Totals 28 3 8156
Score: . s e
CRICHEO «cussnivanscansvssssse MOO SN
BROOKRIYNE oo §ncbs oo o nkoniny s hilin -3
Summary: Error—Farrell. Two-b 4
hits—Zwilling, Tinker. Three-base hit==
Westerzil. Stolen bases—Flack, A, Wil- =
son, Tinker, Farrell, Hofman, Dou Dle .
gla{s-—“’esterzn to Hofman. Base on
alls—Off Presdergast 1; off F. Wilson g
Struck ont—Ry Prender&ast 2, b“
son 4. Passed ball—A. Wilson. O
1:15. Umpires—Cross and McCormick 2
Women Auto Drivers
KANSAS CITY, Sept. 26.—'Tt is bad :
enough to permit a woman to drive 2
motor car In the daytime, much less
permit one to be at the steering wheel
at night. It {s my opinion that women
should not be permitted to drive a ma
chine.” - ':fix
Thus did Jedge Welch speak %
lecturing E. O, Edmonds for teaching a#
voung woman friend to drive his lfl‘-i
chine narrowly missed several emg.._:
and almost ran over John Merrett, a&jfi%
torcyele patrolman, who arrested -
monds and the young woman. b
ARMOR CIGARS
“Get Better.” *
Phone, West 1322,
9 B