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pyright, 1918, International Feature Service, Inc. Registered U 8 Patent Office,
v D
RO'7 NEEDS
AR be it from us to make any pre
F diction on the prébable outlconis
of tne big baseball embroglio be.
tween Ban Johnson Harry Frazee,
Harry Hempstead and oftier involving
the justly celebrated William Howard
Taft. but things look to bhe in a big
mess, ad should be immediatel traight
ened out, or at the earliest posgible mo
ment, anvhow. The prolongation of the
present argument is Souring the fan
more and more on our great national
game
The consensus of opinion among base
ball writers who know whereof they
speak, is that Mr. Taft is the man for
the berth ag one-man National Commis
gion, to look after the matters hereto
fore coming before Garry Herrmann,
Johnson and Tener, who composed the
high court of baseball No introduction
ig required for Mr. Tafl It is not ad
verse to add, however, that he I 8 a real
baseball fan and has always taken a
great amount of interest in the sport
There are some who thin} he is wmot
giited for the job, owing to hig never
having any econnection with the game,
but it is a false npressison Mr. Taft
has never been enrolled in the Jam
but he is well-up on the tricks of the
trade, and a splendid arbiter so all
matters
Then the seat at the head of the Na
tional League isß empty, 80 far as 2 real
ruler is concerned John Hevdler, to
yvears one of the Jeading mea of the
league, and a business man from top to
hottom, I 8 at present acting as presi
dent, taking over the joh when b
K. Tener stepped out \lr’ Hev Iler
seems to be the choice of th g league
sporting writers, but there are other
candidates for the position Mr. Heydler
hasg the insied track, it seems, and prob
ably will be elected to the presidency,
which would be a good move, apparent
ly, from this distance
S 0 much has been written about the
reconstruction plans of the magnates
and what must be done with the inter
nal part of the pastime The moguls,
first of all, should agree to eliminate
all matters pertaining to the financial
side from the public prints The only
wWay to add to this is to quit talking
publicly on baseball deals, and give no
hint of a trade or sale until it has been
completed Then keep the price on
the dark side
Baseball fans will, never again, stand
for the magnates running over them
The fans like to see good, hot battles,
and the only way to furnigh that sort of
amusgement is for the club managers
and officials to see to it that the play.
ers hustle to keep their jobs. If they
do not, they should be relegated to the
I
|
‘»
\
!
If you want the theill of drama in
real life—a plot of wction eof
her and new-—to see o Kreat
photplay founded on un Wdea
that bas lsanched o huge ITY
triotic movement for suppressing
les, false rumors and propuagandn, |
Visit
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EMPLE OF B MOTION PICTURES
FORSYTH 11A M toll P. M.
Adults, 15¢; Children, 10¢
B e BERES e
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Presents Action, Pep, Thrills, in
“S o
PORTING LIFE”
Thousands Jammed Forsyth Theater All Day Monday to
See and Enjoy the Picture Event of the Yem
ALSO MACK SENNETT'S 'HER FIRST MISTAKE
THE HOME OF SCREEN SUCCESSES
LASTING ENTIRE WEEK
Rl A L I O 11 TO 11—-CONTINUOUS
Picture Fans Wildly Enthusiastic Over
A beautiful Red Cross nurse—a brave soldier—a dangerous spy—and
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I'HE ATLANTA GRORGIAN
Eißas MY @ [E
‘f, UFFERIG WWILE B[
IT% OWNER. o () 2/ &)
pASVp T o 0
DRWE (T, ; L™\ 2
' &4 NIV
—— AW T B
—— s ’ L
SO Ll
SPORT FOOD
THE INVINCIBLE ARMADA,
It was an ancient mariner,
He cussed in hopeless Woe,
“Some fleet!” he said, and shook his head.
“Some fleet, belicve me, bo!
“For years we hoped, for years we loped,
Aboui the -pnuhu' Seus,
The Teuton hid, and all we did
Was watch and wait und freeze,
“For years we trailed, for years ye sailed
The billows day and night,
And new the Hun, when all is done,
Gives up without afight,
“Some fleet!” he said, and shook his head,
And tears rolled down his map,
“You can not beat w battle flect
That won't @ome out and scrap.”
A we understad it, the German fleet
couldn’t afford to come out on aecount
of the war
War is the world's greatest educator
It has enanbled Eastern football experts to
dlsgover Paddy Driscoll
Reports from various diverce courts in
dicate that the motion pleture game has
developed the artistic temperament
THE MOVIE P. A,
One time ditorces were the rage
;\nmnf the folk who trod the stage,
The movies now
Have bought, somehow,
An option on the old front page,
We¢ have a report from Rotterdam that
they haven't Gotterdam revolution in Hol
land
It is to be hoped that there will he
more ‘wna'« in the I»urm- of Nations than
there is in a league of baseball clubs,
Juack Dempsey dida’t knock anybody out
Inst night, but maybe the cemeteries were
closed.
Admiral Koilchak has made himnse!f
dictator of Russian affairs at Omsk, there
by superseding the erstwhile Ufa govern
ment Now you know as much about it as
we do
THE HARDY'S ANNUAL,
It lives and thrives from spring fto fall
When other {mnthnn die,
You can not kill the game of ball,
No matter how you try.
Retrenchment ig the order of the day,
80 to speak. Having appointed one man
minors or penalized In some manner,
One of the wiesest things in the world
to do would be fore the president of the
league to instruct the um‘»lrra to allow
the players more leeway in the matter
of pep and let them rave a bit more,
The fans delight in see ag an amusing
coacher out on the side lincs, and in
sceing the plavers ght for, everytning
The game should he kn-)’:' clean, of
course, above all things, but still the
games In the past have beena hit lst
lesss and unless there I 8 » playver or
two yeiling and ctting up during a
game, it proves very uninteresting and
tiresome to the fan. i
Because you and
everyone else
worth reaching
read The Daily
Georgian and Sun
day American they
are
The South’s
Greatest
Newspapers
Growing Firms |
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PO TR R B o s T
" FIERCE LOADS =
LWITHOUT COMPLAINT ~ * 4 ’
17— BOBw %
/ A .’"‘\ o"4 .‘"”
(- @ oSVt
|A, = \/J\
president and manager, the Cubs, no doubt, 1
will hire Tris Speaker, who plays center
feld and second base at the same time
Tons und tons of food were found In!
the haiser’s castle in Berlin, Dat (he‘
father of a family has to prepare for the
winter when he has six sons who refuse to
work or fight. ‘
If there be any truth in the report that
Augle Kieckhefer has lost his stroke, one ‘
Is constrained to wonder what would hap
pen if he were, a 8 the baseball scribes
say, in midseason forn:.
Von Tirpitz eseaped from Germany witlu‘
out his whiskers. But probably he con
stders hinwelf bicky to make a getaway
with w chin to grow them on. ‘
It Is almost as hard to imagine Von
Tirpitz without wind chimes as it I 8 to
Imagine Bob s Follette with his hair
parted in the middle
TOO LATE.
“The submarines gave up today,”
The papers sald,
The subicarvines gave up that day.
But not their dead, .
Georges Carpentier is coming over
here again This i® a nimposition on
Georges, He has been coming over
here without intermission for the last
four years
It is estimated that Carpentier has
traveled farther by cable than any other
man in the universe.
A bout between Carpentier and Wil
lard might be arranged if it were staged
so rthe benefit of world’s champions af
flicted with fatty degeneration of the
bank account
AFTER THE WAR.
After the war, when lads come home
And boxers in the ring
Wallop each other on the dome,
And jab and hook and swing,
After the war.
After the war, when lads return
And sit ‘round a ring some night,
‘““Gosh!"” they will echo in words that
burn,
‘“Gosh, how them birds can fight,
After the war!”
* o
Drink It on the Spot
.
In Ohio or Not at All
By International News Service.)
COLUMBUS, OHIO, Dec. 3.—A1l the
liquor drinking in the city of Columbus
from now until the saloons close for good
next May must be done on the premises
No goods can be sold over the bar and
there will be no more rushing of the
“growler’’ from “Murphy’'s” or *“Gro
gan's.” The Columbus City Council has
passed an ordinance which puts all who
sell liquor to be ecarried off the premises
in the class with bootleggers, and they
wre subject to the same punishment.
y
Veteran Mandot Bows
.
To Moran in 15 Rounds
NEW ORLEANR, Dec. 3 Joe Mandot,
veteran lightwelight of this city, was out
rointed by Pal Moran, also of New Or-
Yeove now fast 16-round bout here last
night
b e
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JACK EAGER
|
O BATTLE
|
\
.
\
BIG CHAMP
By JAMES J. CORBETT.
ACK DEMPSEY is wild in his eag
ernegs to try conclusions with Jess
Willard over the distance route.
And every boxing enthusiast in Amer
ica fervently hopes 7 o 8
that such a match
will be made But
I doubt if any in- 7 6
P
ducement ever o e
could coax the
giant Kansan back ’.; w g‘
into the ring ,fi*' B ’\ ‘is
It is quite like ’ :’ E 5
that Willard wil ‘/": 4
go down in history
as the only unde : %
seated heavyweligh!
champion B ut 1
there will be no i’ 4 3
glory in it for hin 5 3
He has remainec 1 %
unbeaten, not be ¥ %
cause he whipped §
every man who § :
wias a worthy foe %
but rather because i’" —— sy
he carefully has avoided taking them on
One fight in nearly four years as
a champion—and that fight a short, no
decision bout against a man who was
something over L 0 pounds lighter and
nearty 6 inches shorter
That is 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
had been no real men for him to fight
since 1915 then e nacilvity of Willard
would have been excusable But since
the day that the giant Westerner flat
tened Jack Johnson in Cuba, several
men have performed sufficiently well in
a pugilistic way to warrant their being
given a chance at the championship.
If Willard had taken on even one of
these men in a decision bout he woul®
'not have lost such a tremendous amount
of the prestige he gained in Havana,
Willard has conducted himself unlike
any heavyweight champion in ring his
tory John L. fought practically every
man who wanted to fight him When
- Bob 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
erful and bigger in every way than was
Fitzsimmons. Game old Bob took on the
big Californian,
Jeffries fought every man who seemed
worthy of a trial Those whom he
' whipped once who insisted upon a return
mateh, got it—and were whipped again.
Jeffries was no fluke champion When
he cleared the pugilistic horizon of every
real rival, then—and only then-—-did he
retire from the ring game And filve
vears later when Jeffries had passed his
pugilistic prime —flve years after retire
ment-—Jeffries 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 some
one in defense of your title.” But Wil
glard has ignored every such request.
Karlier his excuse was that the pugilis-
LdOJ 90) [Bad OU JO IBRO POV PIIOM ON
him But since the advent of Jack
Dempsey, Willard has not made any
such excuse, but merely has avoided
the making of a mateh with the new
wonder of the pugilistic world
“Who would win if Willard and
Dempsey actually did meet?"’ is the moot
question of pugilism today
The quizz can be answered dvfiuirory‘
only if the two men ever get into the
ring—and that is unlikely But, if hy‘
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 something like 60 or 70
pounds lighter than Willard, about 6
inches shorter and would have to “spot"
Willard a number of inches in reach.
But, just the same, Dempsey is one of
the most remarkable fighters that the
ring game ever has known. He has
a wallop unlike that of any man since
John L.'s days He is rugged to an
extreme, can stand up under terrific
punishment and has more than the av
erage boxing skill He ißs game, clear
through, has the aggressiveness—and
the speed —-of Terry McGovern at his
best, and certainly would put up a whirl
wind battle. Dempsey right now is in
perfect physical condition—at his fight
ing best.
B BRI L R el T
Just what Willard's condition would
be even after three or four months of
riqoroun training, is a big 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 I doubt this considerably. My ex
perience in the ring game has shown
me that 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 anvwhere
near to the shape he was in when he
foufhl Johngon in April 1915,
If the two men meet it is a certainty
that Dempsey will be in lurerh 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,
FOR CHRISTMAS!
A Fountain Pen
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R e
.
Black Demon Missed,
.
But Noroflk Did Not
NEW YORK, Dec. 3 They dug up a
fellow to box Kid Norfolk in Bridgeport
the other night. A big, dusky demon he
said he was, and he even insisted on
dresing in Norfolk's quarters in order to
announce just what was coming to Nor
fodk
“Git out of dis dressing room or I'll
fan yvoah chin,” threatened Norfolk
“Ah’'ll jess bet vou one hundred bucks
dat you'll do no chin fannin' eider in dis
room or out in de ring Ah hab he hun
dred men right chere, and ah'll be de
stake-holder,” caid the demon.
All hands r paired to the ring and the
demon was floored with the first punch.
As he got up he kissed his right gloved
fist and said ‘
“To Keed No'fo'k, with mah ebbeh, eb
beh lovin' regahds.”
And the demon swung And the demon
missed And the demon passed from this
world to the land of dreams where pink
cows amd lavender birds abound! |
Norfolk had not missed! 1
e ot |
Begged to Go Qver, but
\
Appealed to Wrong Man
(By International News Service.)
CAMP DEVENS, AYER, MASS., I)m‘.i
3.-~Just before 775 medical replacement
troops left this cantonment for uvers-'ufl}
a sergeant from the Depot Brigade eame
before Lieutenant Colonel C. C. .\I"-‘
Cornack, division surgeon, and asked
for a transfer to the detachment about
to leave “If 1T don't get across now I 1
never will,”" he said. “I'll be a hell of
a soldier, won't 17"
‘‘Sergeant,” said the colonel, smiling.
“You've got a fine chance of getting
any sympathy out of me og that score,
I've been in the army 20 years and
haven’'t got across yet. What are you
kicking about?” |
Tulane and Gordon
. . .
Meet in Pelican City
The Camp Gordon football team will
leave Atlanta Thursday for a week's va
cation, during which time it will play
the Tulane University eleven, of New Or
leans.
The entire football squad, of about thir
ty-five men, and a few officers will be in
the bunch that departs Thursday. Sat
urday afternoon, the Tulaners and soldiers
will ¢lash in the Pelican City |
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SRy s 72J I, e IR | | %/f.u i I\ e '-:\%.\.
She mixed everything so SRy YA N A \“‘ i g'3\N\ NN a 2
carefully, just as the cook x.;;':g'-i‘-‘;!“‘ “;I i ”L‘ | ‘ "R (‘ eT R g X f \\Y%\\\ . s
book said, and yer they (| ISEGEEY Y @ WY §(S& LR (S G | 138 37NN\
were such horrid cakes! ‘;";‘ 3 ;(W h' \ ‘rl'j; o B AAE M% ‘\/\&\ &3 .:/{';:','
vt = NIR N\ e
CONME O S ——= 0 A = — RPN &/
// N ;; 1« QAN // s
-N g I (,}‘\\ , \\ ’ / ‘/v Al //
Then she learned how other women do it. She just added water to Aunt Jemima '-.\:, {’
Pancake Flour, Swch fluffy, delicious cakes—he said he could eat twe aozen! 1 - /’.’
B\
®
Don't experiment —
tart his d ' g'ht
- - . . \
Don't risk failures that disappoint your husband —
you can so easily give him the breakfast that other
men love!
" Surprise him tomorrow with a plate of hot Aunt
Jemima Pancakes— whose flavor last year made 120
million breakfasts successful! How he will smile as
he cuts the tender, golden-brown cakes !
Even the sweet milk has been added
An Aunt Jemima breakfast is so easy, so economical,
too! Everything is mixed in the flour—even pow
.'S. - . o
gicred sweet mllk.. Breakfast is ready in no time—and “Pos in toww Honend™
it costs only a third as much as meat or eggs.
Have Aunt Jemima Pancakes tomorrow. _Make e T
. b . el TETRISN
Aunt Jemima mufhins and waffles—they’'re delicious. RN
° & /.f’ ‘4’\‘_\. O ) BV
And for variety order Aunt Jemima Buckwheat - RS
Flour—in the yellow package. Read on the top of = A B, o
any Aunt Jemima box how to get the famous Rag . \;i:'} =g b ;
Dolls. Aunt Jemima Mills Company, St. Joseph, P Dok :
. & ’ e \'..'»- / L
Missourt. o TR \
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&5 i R i
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= |pUNT Jemim B
2o by uu"-"m/f' - g ¥k
4 *\w N CAKE Floyg [
Copyright 1918, Aunt Jemima Mills Company A ,ST ey ‘._))’/ . s ERES 2%
B — = x- e ™ "
TUKSDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1918.
CAND BE E AR
fi&i)ufg ;oR 1 . T .;../,25;‘
| W WEEKs AT i(am,\ &=y
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ELCTIT 04 O
I
. .
Western Association
To Hold 1919 Tourneys
CHICAGU, —-Directors of the
Western Goit Association have decided to
hold the regular golf championship tour
naments next season,
Tournaments were suspended last Sum
mer by the Western Association, “while the
United States Golf Association has not
held national mects for two years on ac
count of the war,
The places for holding the amateur open
and junior meets will be deecilel at the
annual meeting of the association in Chi
cago on January 18,
To celebrate the ending of the war and
’[m_\ cornepliments to the work of golfos,
a jubilee dinner will be held hefore the
meeting. All the players who wok part in
the Red Cross exhibitions, which raised
more than $300,000, will be present go tre
lm-lvv medals for tbeir work.
l . = o
Fighter Posing as
“ $ »” *
| Old “Spider” Britt
‘ Young Britt, the Atlanta bantamweight,
is all up in the air. He read with sur
prise in a recent Nashville paper where
‘Spider” BHritt, his brother, was to box in
that city on Thanksgiving night.
The youngster declares his brother is a
soldier at Camp McClellan, and is at pres
‘vm in the base hospital, and that a fight
er 18 working in Nashville as “Spider”
‘ern. from Atlanta. “Spider” had a
splendid reputation as a boxer in this sec
cdon, and his brother declares the impos
ter is just trying to pick up some money
by using his name,
.
Ball in Englanl Pays
.
~ Profit te Equip Teams
The Anglo-American Baseball l.eague
games among American troops in eities of
England last Summer netted 4 profit of
$15,000. It was used to buy «thletic cquip
ment for members of the teams.
MICHIGAN VS. ILLINI
~ ANN ARBOR, MICH., 107 &.—There
is a possibility that Michigan and Illinois
will come together on December 7. Both
colleges seem willing to make this
match, in that it means the cancellation
of the Ohio State battle. Indications are |
that the heads of both schools will get
together to arrange the December 7
game.
"TAVD 1T FINALL LA™
| HEARS (TS OWNERS T "B AB)
\TALKGNG OF W% ol 21 ¥
FIRWG 1T /\’v':s,uzzrz s Ay
JAND GETTING (M aswiren/ FRai=S ‘\
A NEW CAR- \CEin—~ pis e
g% -
|-.~l', ===- 0}
“ .—— St ;g |
— E—— N e
“obbr > PN :
:
SEASON IS
BY CHARLES SHONESY.
3 HIS Inter-class Basketbal. lL.eague
gets under way at Tech High to
day. ‘l'ne freshmen will open the
season, and there are already five teams
organized. 2
Lhere is some excellent material
among the under class men and this
method nas beemn adopted to develop the
future teams of tue scnool. 't'he other
ciasses will get organized as soon as
possibie and then ‘lech High will have
a 4 league of its own.
it 1s understood that the varsity five
will start practice the latter part of
tnis week., ‘lne Tecnh High boys _are
sore over the defeat nandeu their eleven
by Boys' High School last Saturday, and
wney answered tne call of the basket
ball coach in large numbers. :
Tech High has some goed material
and a great team should pe developed.
Joe Beunett is the captain of the bas
ketball team and the smithies are con
fident that the second team he handles
for them shail have greater success than
the football team.
Fulton High has been practicing for |
several weeks and as most last year's
squad are present this year the boys
are scheduled to raise some dust. They
have never been off the bottom before, |
but they say that the future has a bet- |
ter outiook than the past. \
' G. M. A, champions of last season, |
‘wm be represented by a strong team
and one that they are confident will re- |
| peat last year's success. The College
‘ Park boys always possess wonderful fignt ‘
' and with a man like Mr. David at the
ihn-lm they are due tqQ set the wunu‘
afire . |
| Boys' High has some fine material and ‘
\ln few of last year's players Just who |
‘»\HI coach the boys is doubtful, but they ‘
are after a good one, and claim that
after the defeat they administered to
their rivals last Saturday, thereby break
img the jinx, they are going to mop n;rl
the league. McGarity, Staton and Da-
AND ATTER > =
Lk |T% LOYAL S | # | ¥
19 601 D i & g .
ok <, &
WOULDNT 4 S L—> ™t
PUMP -y /
A FLWVVERY \ k B —
P -j..z_;r;,,‘.pflufi&_g_z: 2‘ ‘
Ml S
Boston Red Sox To
Be Sold, Is Report
BOSTON, Dec. S-—The Boston Red
Sox are on the market and in all proba )
ability will be sold before the openln&
of the 1919 baseball season. This in
formation came direct from the Red
Sox office. Rumor has it Ban Johnson
would relieve Harry Frazee of his ball
club, but this was denied by the chief
executive of the league. He may, how
ever, be instrumental in securing new
owners.
SPORTS FOR ITALIANS,
A movement to establisn sports definite
ly in the schools in Italy has been bhegum,
and is rapidly gaining favor,
A NI NN NI NN NN NN
vis, of last year’'s team, are no longer
with the Boys' High players and a new
squad will have to be organijzed.
Marist, under the hands of the wiz
ard, Joe Bean, always makes it hot for
the other teams, and he nearly won the
championship last year. Just who Joe
has to build this year's squad around
is not known, but he is confident "of
doing big things.
Peacock will make another attempt.
to play in the league this year. Last
vear they started, but failed to keep
the pace set by the other teams and
dropped out.
Commercial High will be a strong
contender in the race. This team has ‘
lost very few players and those who
remain are due to make names for
themselves,
s * -
The girls will have their league this
vear also. Fulton High, Marietta and
Washington Seminary are already prac
ticing. Fulton High was last year's
champion, and unless the other players
have unearthed some star players, they
are due to have another championship.
“It’s in the Cut”’—
and THAT you can safely leave
to Talbot for building suits and
overcoats of smart style, fit and
finish, at S2B to $45.
C. P. TALBOT CO.
Tailors to Men Who Care.
3 D f
| 9-A Auburn Ave. (3 Doprs from )