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Copyright, 1918, Intermational Fealure Serviee, Inc Registered U, 8 Patent Office
By JAMES 4. CORBETT.
ACK DEMPSEY is wild in his eag
erness to try conclusions with Jess
Willard over the distance route
And every baxing enthusiast in Amer
ica fervemtly hopes
shat such a m.nhh R ¥ ’P’%
Swill be made. But § & P . -
doubt if any in-§& 2
ment ever)
®uld ocoax thel -
mn 'l.h.n-nn back § 9 ! - .
the ring. RN, o
It Lq“anlls likely k% Q&y;’ ;E
that Hard will 2 oy
go down in history § B 8 g
a 8 the only unde % .'am;i
seated heavyweight § &9 S
ochampion. But§ 5 SN -.
there will be no § iGRERNE 1 4
mry in it for him §SI LB 55 |
bas remained 400 BRI
uabeaten, not be
cause he whipped every man who
a worthy foe, but rather becausec he
carefully bas avolded taking them on.
Owe fight in nearly four years as
& champlon—and that fight a short, no
decision bout against a man who was
something over 50 pounds lighter and
nemrly 6 Inche sshorter
That I 8 Willard's record
No man who is fond of the boxing
game can view Willard's actions with
out a feeling akin to disgust If there
bad been no real men for him to fight
slnoe 19156 then the inactivity of Willard
would have been excusable But since
the day taht the gian Westerner flat
etned Jack Johnson in Cuba, several
men have performer sufficiently well in
& pugilistic way to warrant their being
fi\'en a chance at the championship
f Willard had taken on even one of
thege men in a decision bout he would
mot have lost such a tremendous amount
of the prestige he gained in Havana
Willard has eonducted himself unlike
any heavyweight champion in ring his
tory. John L. Fought practicall every
tnan who wanted to fight him When
Bobb Fitzsimmons took the champion
ship from me he didn't remain long in
idleness. The public demanded that he
meet Jim Jeffries, a man far more pow
-1 and bigger in every way than was
tzsimmons. Game old Bob took on the
5 Californian,
effries fought every man who seemed
worthy of a trial Those whom he
whipped once who insisted upon a return
mateh, got it--and were whi wped again
Jeffries was no fluke chump‘on When
he cleared the pugilistic horizon of every
real rival, then—and only then-did he
retire from the ring game And filve
yvears later when Jeffries had passed his
pugilistic prime-five years after retire
i After fifteen vears at 12 Whitehall Street,
i [ have removed iy
Custom Tailering Business
—~TO —
112 Peachtree Arcade
Where I hope to serve all of my old friends
and hope to make many news ones,
ED. A. CERF
. CUSTOM TAILOR
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L BROS &CO. 4B Aarianta oA o
THE ATLANTA GFRORGIAN
R AP B
SURERE, WHILE AN\ -~
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Prive. (1~ AT\ 4 g
ol —o} “.\M -3 f\ >
i, -v/ ¢
N
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sl
ment—Jefifes came out of it at the
public’'s call to fight Jack Johnson,
What a contrast is furnished in the
case of Jeffries and Willard,
For more than three years the public
has clamored for Willard to “meet gome
one in defense of your title.” But Wil
lard has ignored every such request.
Eariier his excuse was that the pugilis
tic world could boats of no real foe for
him. But since the advent of Jack
Dempsey, Willard has not made any
such excuse, but merely has avoided
the making of a match with the new
wonder of the pugilistic world.
“Who would win If Wallard and
Dempeey actually did meet?’ is the moot
question of pugilism today.
The quizz can be answered definitely
only If the two men ever get into the
ring-—-and that is unlikely. But if by
some miracle performance, Willard de
cides to take on Dempsey, | daresay
that Jack would go into the ring a fav
orite in the betting and with a splendid
chance of victory.
Dempsey is mmm.hlw like 60 or 70
round- lighter than illard, about 6
nches shorter and would have to “spot™
Willard a number of inches In reach.
But, just the same, Dem y I 8 one of
the most remarkabl .n;f-’:n that the
ring fume ever has known. He has
a wallop unlike that of any man since
John L.'s days. He Is Nfl!fl to an
extreme, can stand up under terrific
punishment and has more than the av
ornge boxing skill, He is game, clear
through, has the aufireulvonen»nnd
the speed-—of Terry cGovern at his
b‘i“ and certainly wauldr(ml up a whirl
wind battle. Dempsey right now Is In
perfect physical condition—at his fight-
Ins best,
ust what Willard's condition would
be even after three or four months of
rigorous training, is a hl{) problam
Willard claims that he has been keep
ing in fair shape ever since he became
the champion; and it wouldn't take him
long to get Into condition for a fight
But 1 doubt this considerably. My ex
perience in the ring game has shown
me t hat unless a man remain active
he slips away from perfection. The
longer the inactivity, the farther "he
slips It certainly would take Willard
three or four months to get into fight
ing condition. And even then_ it is not
sure whether he would be anywhere
near to the shape he was in when he
fought Johnson in April 1915,
If the two men meet it is a certainty
that Dempsey will be in nufierh condi
tion—and it is a great problem as to
Willard, Therefore, should the two men
ever battle, all the odds would favor a
Dempsey victory.
Ad Wolgast to Look
.
After His Property
LLOS ANGELES, Dev, 2. Adolph
Wolgast, once Wghtweight champion of
the world, filed a petition Ln the Probate
Court to end a *uurdlnnl ip of his af
fairs ordored in 1917 and to regain con
trol of property valued in the petition at
$13,000. He alleges that he is now fully
competent to direct his own affairs.
!Do Your Christmas
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Slen st Il dhieh =g~ 2R AR
PEEVED AT
|
~ OUTCOME
{ By ED CURLEY,
' HILADELPHIA, Dec. 2-Jawn
P Doempsey pulled out of Phila
| delphla rather upset in mental
!(qu-lmrmm. Not that Jawn is loose
|ln the garret, but simply his mind
| machinery was awfully perturbed. It
lsoemn that Jawn feels there is a ter
'rlhlo smear on ris coat-of-arms be
cause Billy Miske lasted six rounds
against himm Thanksgiving Day.
. This feeling wasn't origihal with |
Dempsey, but grew when a numberl
of his friends politely inquired, “"Why |
didn’t you flatten that bird, Jawn?"
He heard the same remark so often
' that it began to prevail upon Jawn
' that he committed a terrible crlme‘
by not stopping the flitting marvel
from Minnesota,
“If 1 don't knock 'em out I get !hfil
razz,” babbled Jawn, "and If 1 do,‘
' they tell me the other fellow was a
stiff. Watcher goin' to do?” ‘
" The husky pugilist, who is referred
"to by overzealous announcers as “the
Lheavyweight champion of the world,”
!Is headed for New Orleans, where he
is slated to mingle with Carl Morris.
l’rhe humorous side of the crowning
of Jawn is that all the shillabers
know Jess Willard is alive. And ‘at
press time he was still recognized as
the titleholder,
In meeting Morris, Jawn won't face
a rival that's as clever as Miske. The
latter is probably the smartest and
craftiest ring general in the big divi.
sion. He can battle anyone and make
him look foolish at times by his
knowledge of the fancy stuff, If
Miske could hit a la mule he would
take 'em all, including Jawn Demp
sey.
In sizing Dempsey up, from his'
fight the other day, he still lacks the
real class needed for a man of his
build to be champion That Jawn
| san hit, Miske easily proved. That
! he ecan hit, Jawn also demonstrated.
| Dempscy misses often, a bad habit, {
one that gives the other man a won
derful advantage. Again, it takes
him a few rounds to hit his stride.
To oftset this greatly he punches
hard with those short, snappy jolts
that carry destruction with ‘em.
Against a clever boxer of the Miske
type Dempsey would have to get the
jump early to make the battle of
short duration. Otherwise it would
be a case of wearing down his oppo
nent until the chance came to sling
over the haymaker. Jawn possesses
one outstanding advantage in that he
appears tireless: a trait that seldom
falls to break down the morale of an
antagonist,
There Is one thing to be said In
tavor of Dempsey-—he is steadily im.
proving, He is developing a shift
that will bother future opponents, If
he continues to show better in his
scraps, then there is no obstacle that
gtands In his way of winning the
world's crown. That is, figuring Wil.
lard has retrograded, as all reports
asserts,
If Jess hasn't “gone back,” then
Jawn will have a man’s job in snatch
ing the bauble from Willard's dome,
for he's far from being such a soft
\ mark |
To Make Attempt to
Pass IlUl. Boxing Bill
A new attempt to have boxing lv-gnh&rd
in Uinols will bs made when the fifty
firth gensrnl aspembly cvonvenes In Janus
ary Poxing in the army and navy has
wreated an impression favorable to the
]-mrt. sponsors of the bill say They
declare they are confident of its pass
age. Under the propesed bill, bouts would
be of ten Tounds and the Ntate would re
celve a poicentage of the receipts. Sena
’!nr Richard ). Barr, Republicun leader in
the senate, sald he would support a
| nroperly drawn measure,
e ———————————————————————
Wanted-~The voters to know this
office should collect §58,000.00 to
SIOOOO.OO annually in street tax
| | which the city loses every year from
those who never pay tax. Bill John-
I son will coliect them. This makes
! th: eoity money above the expense
l of running the office.—Adyv
Gite W beautifyl Diamond Ring,
usmn o!m "n ateh Chain or Fobh Ree our
| 2—40 Christmas bamgaing. Uredit. Lofis Beos
Co, 0 8 Broad Si--Adv.
A Clean Newspaper for Southern Homes
7500 UP ONVER % F
Hadlkinpe
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e N
OLD BILL
WQ LD .. KEELER e
STARTED ' out to have a fine,
l julcy gloat over the Saturday
mishap to the man-eating
Panthers from Pittsburg, that had
chewed up our pet ... owwsmmmsmesmenrny
Tornado just a S T
week before. 1% A
started out to say r
“Ah-ha-a-a-h!"at 4 —
them, which is the SRR 00N
official goat-get- i "‘f;éfig‘g
ter of stage and f &- & G L
field, supportable § -"-1,';5;;5.-.;-;:;1-‘:f'-';v'-‘%_;_'f;;fi;:
only by the pure§ sl
In heart and the§§B 2 A
stout of back. But SQFTasy R e
now 1 dont know " E ,?f
’ i R
I don’t know. Of @ & ™
course, Pitt got i e N
licked, by a single 5 7 iy |
point—l¢ to 9, SR ey b
due to the archa- :Wm
ic system of al- oy SR
lowing a goal shot "\ _w
from touchdown . ;&?‘
to count This is A
A relic of the a 8
MR -DUAAod AQn " T ——
in football and will soon be abolished.
Anyhow, Pitt got licked by the Cleve
land Naval Reserve team, and my
first impulse was to burst into song
~hymns of thanksgiving and so on.
Then it occurred to me that this lick
ing suffered by Pitt didn't tend to
gild the Golden Tornado to any glit
tering degree. From a technical view
point, it Is better to be licked by an
undefeated champion than by a
champion that somebody else has
licked. It began to look as if a gloat
were out of order,
Still, there were compensatigns. 1
reckon new the Pitt players and fans
will agree that forward passes, field
goals and such matters may be ac
compiished by Southern-bred players,
and that line-bucking is not exclu
stvely a development of the section
‘that lies above the Smith & Wesson
line. Our Mr. Harlan and Auburn's
Axworthy’s Skeleton
Is Going in Museum
(By International News Service.)
LEXINGTON, KY., Dec. 2.-~lLee Ax
worthy, 1:58%, world's champion trotter,
which died here recently, will be exam
ined, his skeleton articulated and
mounted in the Meseum of Natural His
tory in New York. An expert from the
museum is here for the preliminary
work, which will likely be completed
next week., Harry Devereux, of Cleve
land, president of the Grand Circuit,
and one of the owners of the trotter,
readily gave his consent to the articu
lation.
Lee Axworthy will be the only light
harness horse ever to be so honored,
and only four horses in history have
been mounted, They are Sysonby,
whose skeleton Is in the same museum
in New York where Lee Axworthy will
be shown: Lexington, In the Smithson
fan Ingtitution, in Washington;, Or
monde and Eclipse, in the British Mu
seum. KEclipse flourished about 125
Years ago.
Big Ten Coaches to
Frame 1919 Schedules
(By International News Service.)
CHICAGO, Dec. 2.--Coaches of the
Big Ten universities will meet here next
SundQY to outline football schedule for
the 1919 season. The meetmub.hal been
called by Howard Jones, football coach
of lowa University, chairman of the
coaches committee.
According to Coach Jones, control of
conference athletics will nour pass out
of the hands of the War Department
and revert to the conference faculty
committee, Just what action faculty
representatives will take on freshmen
who played this year I 8 not known, but
it is one of the things they are con
cerned about, Pones says.
RAISE SHEEP ON LINKS.
(By Internntional News Service,)
TORONTO, CAN, Dec. 2--Members of
the Rosedale Geolf Club at Toronto are
looking forward to a feast of lamb and
mint sauce next Spring For some time
past the club has had 100 sheep pasturing
on its course, and the venture proved so
successful that the number has recently
been increased to 120 “babas” The di
rectors have decided to keep the sheep on
the links all Winter, Many ‘rnn ago the
Baltusrol Golf lub made this same ex
periment and more recently a club in Pitts
burg and one on Long Island had sheep
roaming on their courses
Seruten name | her ra\ with &
MAm«':.n' lasts ¥ 3 Q:.M A lfetime
Im‘pm. L:ua(‘n Termm. lafus b &
Ca, 0 8 Dbroad =~ Adv. G Ve
= =
A HUD"' .';:" i “
G, =
J ?i o )T
B s‘:‘:{?{}-‘ o/
P, %“\ ”‘\; fj_’ /.’—’.
| oo TP =0
T T
Mr. Moon Ducote showed 'em a thing
or two—and 1 admit freely that I
would have given a leg to have been
in the stand when Ducote and that
other chap were flipping passes ovet
the hewildered pates of the Panthers.
I would have given my left leg, any
way, which is not much good. It
would have been a real treat to see
Auburn’'s good old Duke shooting ‘'em
on the ground, just the way they shot
‘ern at and over Tech’s green young
sters the Saturday before. Good old
Duke—more power to his elbow and
his good right posterior limb, or
whichever he does his kicking with!
And here's another consideration:
Pittsburg played three games In eight
days; in one week, it would be called
—Tech, Penn State and the Naval
Reserve. This is almos: unprece
dented, and is undeniably bad foot
ball management. It takes any team
nearly a week to get over the strains
and bruises and exhaustion of even
an ordinary football game, and no
one would say that the Tech game
was an easy one for the Panthers, the
Panthers least of all. The Penn State
game itself was no practice romp—
and then, with the interval of only
one day, they take on the Navul Re
serve.
That was a sporting thing to do, no
doubt, just as it was a sporting thing
for Tech deliberately to send a fresh
man team against the veteran Panth
ers for a patriotic purpose. But Tech
paid a heavy penalty in the shape of
a terrific licking, and while the defaat
of the Panthers was not at all deci
sive —indicating merely that Moon
Ducote's toe was a shade more ao
curate in one particular instance than
that of Mr. T. Davies—still it is a
safe bet that Pittsburg feels worse
about that one-point licking than |
Tech does about the recent calamity
at Forbes Field.
9o 1 reckon we can say “Ah-ha-a
a-h," after all.
.
Schupp Is Trying to
Get Wing in Shape
. NEW YORK, Dec. 2-—Ferdinand
‘Stubblefield Schupp, the most noutherly'
of all the Giant southpaw pitchers, wm'
‘soon be wending his way to Hot/
‘Springs, Ark. Schupp has been working
here in a shipyard, A few Sundays ago
he pitched a few innings for a ship
yard team upon which Art Fletcher, |
Larry Doyle and other Giants played. |
~ Schupp is going to Hot Springs be
‘cause John J. McGraw is in hope that |
the trouble with Ferdie's left wing, th:u‘
kept him on the bench all last season, |
can be bolled out. With the war over, |
there I 8 no longer any necessity of
Schupp doing shipyard duty. |
McGraw does not bellieve that the In-i
et et
® |
Rheumatism
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~~Advertisement.
Ask any physician or druggist and he
w il tell you that the first step in the
treatment of a cold, cqugh, influenza or
grippe should invariably be *“a brisk
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— - ——r e P m———————
TUESDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1918,
AND BEEWN CET- ;/7 » ',/{/_47 e -
s =&
LU 040
- By Tad
jury to Schupp's arm is one that can
not be cured. With prospects of a gala
| baseball season in 1919 before him, the
Giant deor will leave no stone un
turned his effort to get Schupp fit
to pitch again.
All Now in
Pink Wrappers
To save tin foil for Uncle Sam,
WRIGLEYS is now all wrapped
in pink paper and hermetically
sealed in wax: :
)
. The tangey 0 S'PRM,T ;%
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WD GETTING LR
Ve - e Vs,
= EE oD
bl o NS |
5 1. CHIEr
LD irresistible Dame Rumor,
O who presides over the Winter
League, is making a noise
again. This time he is for ousting
President Bob Baugh from the South
ern League and sticking Billy Car
penter, veteran umpire, in his place
next year,
It is said that Atlanta, New Or
leans, Chattanooga and Little Rock
are in favor of placing Billy at the
head of the circuit. With four clubs
behind him and three uncertain this
early, it would surely mean the job
for Carpenter, who is one of the most
popular umpires the league ever
worked with.
The reign of Bob Baugh has not
been so successful, for he has had
much opposition. Everything he had
done, whether or not it was for the
good of the league, has been argued
by his club owners, who seem sure,
sooner or later, to oust him from his
position. Mr. Baugh became presi
dent of the Southern League while
president of the Birmingham club,
giving up all interest in the latter,
Birmingham wili be for the re
election of Baugh. Nashville is on
the fence, aad so are Memphis and
Mobile.
This is rumor, of course, but Car
penter has been held in high esteem
by the Southern magnates, and there
may be something to it.
e e,
The smartness of this season’s
models is due to their trim-cut,
military lines. Trust Talbot to
design, cut and fit clothes that
express your individuality. Suits
and Overcoats made to order at
S2B to $45.
C.P. TALBOT CO.
Tailors to Men W;tlo Can[
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WWF“T == ;
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fi E=E4
il aSa———%
.
Pitt Would Play Again,
.
But Reserves Disband
PITTSBURG, Dec. 2.—Officials of the
University of Pittsburg have asked the
Cleveland Naval Reserves for a return
game, stating that the local team was
not at its best last Saturday, when it
was beaten, 10 to 9, by the sailors. The
Panthers played three games within
eight days.
The Cleveland Reserves have been
disbanded by Government order, it has
been learned here, so that will make a
return game impossible.
Matt Brock Is Barred
From Cleveland Ring
CLEVELAND, Dec. 2.—The Cleveland
boxing commission today decided to bar
Matt Brock indefinitely from bouts
Cleveland, and will ask the State com
mission to take similar action. Sam
Ginsberg, Brock’'s manager, is Included
in the penalty. This aciion was takes
as a result of Brock’'s sumKking and
knocking down his opponent, Frankie
Britt, o¥ New Bedford, Mass., in their
bout here after time had been called.
Brock's share of the purse is withheld.
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