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UP-TO-DATE NEWS
OF SPORTING WORLD
! WITH SPORTSMEN
EDITED BY
PERCY H. WHITING
TECH DEFEATED DAVIDSON
IN A WELL-PLAYED GAME
All the Dope on the Game—A Story of
What Happend and a Moral, for
Davidson’s Benefit.
DOPE SHEET OF THE BATTLE
Made ten yards In three down*—Tech four time* (once In flrat half,
three times In second; Davidson nine times (sis times In first half, three
times In second).
Distance Tech men carried the ball, exclusive of returned punts, 9$
yards (38 In first half, 6u In second.)
Distance Davidson men carried the hall, 160 yards (94 In first half,
66 In second).
Average gain per down In first half: Tech, 2.7 yards; Davidson, 3.6
yards; In second half. Tech, 4 yards; Davidson, 3.
Time taken out because of Injuries to players; By Tech, 5 times;
by Davidson, once.
Penalties assessed against Tech. 34 yards; against Davidson, 15
yards.
Distance punted by Brown, of Tech. 230 yards (an uverage of 29 yards
per punt): by Davidson, 115 yards (an average of 29 yards).
Tech kicked oft once for a distance of 45 yards; Davidson kicked off
twice for a distance of 83 yards.
T,ost ball on fumbles; Tech, 1.
Han backs, punts and kick offs; Tech. 25 yards (an average of 5
yards); Davidson, 49 yards (an average of 5.5 yards).
Dost ball on downs: Tech, 0; Davidson, 5 times.
Forced to punt: Tech, 6 times; Davidson, 3 times.
Ball changed hands 22 times.
O O
a *10,000 PURSE FOR 0
O GANS-HERMAN FIGHT. 0
0 0
0 Los Angeles, Cal., Oct. 29.—It Is 0
0 asserted that the Pacific Athletic 0
0 Club has offered a purse of 110,- 0
O 000 for the Joe Oans-Kld Herman O
0 fight. Herman, It Is said, Is fa- 0
O vorable to the proposition, think- 0
0 Ing that a large enough purse. 0
O Gans has not yet b.een heard from. O
O but It Is thought he will accept. 0
O O
00000000000000000000000000
0 O
O FOX TO COACH FURMAN. 0
O 0
0 Jim Fox wilt coach the Fur- O
0 man College baseball team next 0
0 spring. He has already closed 0
0 a contract to look out for this 0
0 team. O
0 In a letter to Smith, Fox said 0
0 that he would have a surprise for 0
0 the Atlanta public about Christ- 0
O mas time. Whether this surprise 0
0 Is In the nature of a visit or the O
0 announcement of his marriage or 0
0 "what" nobody seems to know. 0
New York. Oct. 29.—But one more
season on the flat and possibly ' not
that, and then the king of sprinters,
Roseben, Is to be pointed for the an
nual -cross-country championship
stakes. His owner, Davy Johnson, hav.
Ing subjugated the sprinting world,
now longs for honors among the stee
plechasers, and plans to use Rose
ben as the medium.
Roseben has all the necessary quali
fications of a great steeplechaser-
speed and ability to carry the weight.
Racing between jumps merely consists
of a succession of short sprints, and
any horse than can carry weight and
has speed can more than earn his live
lihood between the flags.
Of course, he must be able to jump,
but as horses that are nimble on their
feet usually jump well, Roseben should
be able to take to that nart of the game
THE GAME
Tech defeated Davidson Saturday afternoon by a score of 4 to 0 In
a well played game on Tech field.
In the first half Brown made a kick' from placement. Otherwise,
neither team could score.
THE MORAL
.Tb«rs‘s ■ moral dua because of Tech's
victory.
After the battle, roach Graham, of the
North Carolina team. said. "W# would
have beateu them under last year's rules."
The thought which comes to us. brethren,
on this cheerful Monday morning, is that
the games this year are not being played
under last year’a rnles. and the moral
Is that the guys who do not take n top
ple to this fact are Just a year behind.
•There lie those" who saw the game who
Insist that Davidson played the better ball.
But this Is obviously tommyrot. David
son did gain ground more profusely than
Te«*b. but the galtia were not sufficiently
continuous, except Just once, to endnuger
Tecb'a goal. This was In the first half.
when the Tar Heel* made four ••first
downs" for a total of f>0 yards, and ad
vanced the ball to Tech's 1-ynrd Hue.
Here the Yellow Jacket* held and Dnvld-
sou lost the ball on the one and solitary
occasion when their attack looked formid
able.
Tech did prnrtlcnlly n* much in the sec
ond half. In three "first downs," the At
lantans carried the ball 37 yards, and with
in the danger line. Then came a fourth,
then a 15-yard penalty, then nnothcr fum
ble, which was the disastrous end of an
attempted triple pass. This ended Tecli'a
really geod wotk In advnnclug the ball.
Atldo from these two predatory expedl-
tlona Into the enemy'a territory, the two
teams i\ent moat of their time itewlng
•round lu the center of the field. Gen
erally Davidson had the ball, but live
limes she lost It on downs, and three
times she was forced to punt. The North
CarollunnH could gala ground easily, but
not continuously. They played nice foot
ball. but It was of the 1906 brand.
Brown and Hubert were the Tech stars.
Brown kicked ua pretty a goal from place
ment as ever n man saw. It was his first
public attempt, and the first successful
place kick ever tniwi* on Tech field dur
ing n game. The kick was made from
the 33-yard Hue.- Hubert's work In ruuultig
with the ball was . excellent.
For Davidson, Whitaker, her right guard,
was the star, anti he looks like all-South-
ern material. No Hue man has shown
more hrllllnnt work on Tech field this
The line up:
Davidson.
Fdgertou.. ..
GREAT ROSEBEN MAY BE
RUN IN STEEPLECHASES
eaally and become an adept after a lit.
tie echoollng.
Some of our greatest steeplecha,*
horses have been sprinters pure ami
simple. Ballaratt could scarcely rac.
more than five-eighths of a mile
the flat, but through the field he could
eaally go two and a half miles and
won many brilliant races.
0000000000 t >000O00000O £> 0 OOO
SATURDAY’S RESULTS.
Local.
Tech, 4; Davidson, 0.
Southern. g
Georgia Varsity, 16; Georgia o
0 Scrubbs, 0. n
0 Maryville, 16; Dahlonega, n. o
0 Virginia Polytechnic Institute, a
0 0; North Carolina, 0. q
0 Vanderbilt, 45; University of o
0 Texas, 0. J,
0 Virginia, 12; Richmond Col- 0
0 lege, 6. q
0 Tulane, 0; Howard, 0. o
0 University of Mississippi See- o
0 ond, 6: Memphis University 0
0 School 0. ‘ 0
0 Georgetown, 6; Washington and o
0 Lee, 6. n
Position. Tech.
, ..wider Monroe
left guard Henderson
. ..H,.||
Whitaker right guard
Walker left tackle..
Seymour right tackle.
Sadler
furry.
right i
.lert
..right end.,
.Met’orty
.. .Brown
.. ..Sweet
.. .Hubert
.. .. Davies
.Hightower
fely quarter..
Miller left half..
Kenney right half.. ....
MeKny full back Adamson
Summary: Goal from placement, Brown;
referee, Phillips, of Sown bee; umpire, Sib
ley, of Vanderbilt; bend linesman, Profea
sor Higgs, of Clcuioon; linesmen. MrDminle.
of Tech, and Huntington, of Davidson;
timers. Knht. of Tech, and Dr. Douglass,
of Davidson. Halves, twenty minutes.
East. o
Carlisle. 24; Pennsylvania, 6. o
Harvard, 5; West Point, o. o
Princeton, 14; Cornell, o. O
Yale, 12; Amherst, 0. o
Annapolis, 0; Bucknell, o. o
Dartmouth, 0; Williams, o. o
Lafayette, 17; Colgate, e. o
Bates, 6; Bowdoln. 0. o
Tufts, 6; Maine, o. o
Harvard Freshmen, 6; Phillips- o
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0 Andover,
0 Brown, 27; Norwich, 4. o
O Washington and Jefferson, 2; O
0 Dickinson, 0. 0
O Wesleyan. 22: Vermont, 8. o
0 Haverford. 23: Urslnus, 17. 0
0 Exter, 5; Colby. 0. o
0 Swarthmore, lit; Gettysburg, ft. o
O New Hampshire College, 24; 0
0 Connecticut College, 0. o
0 Lehigh, 33; Franklin and Mar- O
O shall, 0. 0
0 Holy Cross. 29; Massachusetts 0
0. Institute of Technology, o. O
In the upper picture Is shown Frank O'Nidfl. who works out bis own horses when lie wants to find out
Gallant Dnu and l.lttle Minister, whleh are shown being broken to the barrier. A pony Is htdug ridden alongside the
getting too nervous In tlielr training work, llotli ex-jockey* are known as careful handlers of horses In their stables. Tli
races recently.
in. In the lower picture Is Daggett's
keep the high-strung animals from
x-Jockeys are now owners, and won
Atlanta Boys Will Play
For Tennis Championship
Football Committee’s Dope
on Some Doubtful Rulings
Hers are some Interpretations of the
new football rules ns handed out by
the Intercollegiate football rules com
mittee at a meeting In New York at
the end of lest week:
Considering rule 5, It was voted that
In putting the ball Into play the ceh-
ter rush may pass the ball back to ono
aide and need not necessarily snap It
between his legs. In either, rase, the
ball must leave his possession while he
Is on the line of scrimmage.
Under the same rule. It was voted
that In case of a punt out, the catcher
of the kick need not raise hla hand as
a signal for a fair catch.
The committee declared that the rule
preventing hurdling Is Intended to ap
ply only to the man carrying the ball,
and was passed to prevent a dangerous
play. It Is Intended to allow, under
-hurdling In the line,” stepping over a
prostrate player, one foot at a time,
even though both feet of the runner
be momentarily off the ground at the
•ame time.
The section under rule II. which pro
vides that no player of the side which
has the ball shell be In motion at the
moment when the ball Is put Into play,
Is construed to mean that this will not
prevent a player from running back
ward from the scrimmage line toward
Ills own goal line.
Under the section of rule 11, which
provides that none of the five men oc
cupying the middle positions, renter,
gttnril or tackle, may drop back front
the lino of scrimmage on the offense,
the committee declares:
"If a captain, during the progress of
the game, wishes to change a center,
guard or tackle to a position In the
back field, or to the position of end, he
may do so by speaking to the referee,
but no player thus vacating the posi
tion of center, guard or tackle shall
thereafter during the game go back
to any one of these positions."
In discussing rule 14, the committee
decides:
"When a forward pnss touches the
ground In the field of play, without
touching the player at either side, the
ball Is dead, and goes to the opponents
on the spot where the pass Is made, ex
cept Irt case that the hall crosses the
goal lino without touching a placer of
either side, when It Is a touchback. In
both Instances, the penalty may not
be refused.
"In nil cases of unlawful pass',where
the bull goes to the opponents on the
spot where the pass was attempted, the
ball is dead."
)••••••••«•••••)
i JOHN 0. KEENE IS WORKING
FOR RADTKE'S REINSTATEMENT
Memphis, Tenn., Oct. 29.—John Oliver
Keene, who had much to do with the
development of Jockey Herman Radtke,
the'boy under suspension In the Hast,
will assist In the movement In behalf
of the rider to secure his restoration,
so that he can ride at a California
track during the winter.
Keene, who ta here with hi* yearling
thoroughbreds, believed that bad asso
ciate* during idle hour* caused the
downfall of the crack Jockey Radtke.
rather than any shortcoming* on Hu*
race truck.
"Radtke rode many winners for me,"
said Keene, "ami 1 can't believe he was
doing anything .mot e than violate rid
ing orders sometimes, when he thought
he could do better.”
Keene, it l* understood. ha* been
asked from semi-official sources or the
Jockey club concerning the habit* of
Radtke.
VIRGINIA WAS '
HARD PRESSED
Hprrlal to The Georgian.
( hsrlutte. Va., G«f. 2».—Klubtnylid col
lege, wht«l» early lu the season ‘was de
feated -2 to a. gave the omtige anti blue
the surprise of their lives Saturday after
noon. Although the varsity won. It was
by the unisII wvtv of 12 to 6.
Rh'hmoiid kh'ktnl off lu the first half nnd
the thin! down was a touchdown for tlielr
o|»jMineiif *, Captain Johnson eklrted the
n.«l* f.. r n 4^ yard run. Randolph kicked
irieasy g.«|.
Ike next touchdown came by hard work.
orltig by push -
Virginia finally sueivded Ml ...
lux Cook through the Hue for it yard
ball was punted out, and Kuudolph again
ball.
-kin
field f«
this everything went Rietuuoud'a
idn. after receiving the next kb k
as finally forced to kbk. ich-h
united and Ibmdolpb mUlinlu-ed the
Itichtnoiid'x tight etnl took the pig-
.eed In
broke tl
Iliey the
ortng,
through
elves
K
and blue’* I
Johnson
Kin la. Imt.
game for m , J
up to Us usual standard.
•dipped do
Time ami ngniu. they
1 Mocked kicks. Then
utUI kick and recover the
wide through the orange
Special to The Georgian.
I’nlverslty of Georgia. Athens. Gn., Octo
ber 29.—On Friday afternoon. Kd Carter,
of Atlanta, defeated Will Gary, of Au
gusta. in two of three hard-fought sets lu
the filial round of the 1'nlverslty of Georgia
tennis tournament.
Winning tfcls match from Gary give* Car
ter the tournament %nd the right to chal
lenge Heyward Deane, last year's champion,’
whom he will play on Monday afternoon
for the college championship
Gary played a magnificent game nt the
net. ami It was only by all-round star
work all over the court that Carter was
able to win out. Deane stands In the
foremost ranks of Southern college play
ers. .For two years, lie ha* played on
the tennis tennis that have been victorious
ovVr Tech and Emory. Deane plays it very
hrllllniit game, and, strange to say, an ex
ceptionally, steady one fit the Maine time,
lie plays net and back court equally
well, *mb will prdvo n hard mau for any
one to beat. .
Carter I* a younger player, bdt gives
promise of developing Into a star player.
The detailed score of the tournament fol
low*. the winner*' name appearing first.
First Round—Hcott-Wltluim. . $-1* 0*0;
Swift Brooks, 6-4. 5-7. 0-3; GrovfitUAnder
son. default: Fort-Newmnn, 63. ^-O. 6-4;
Mays-Cox, 6-4. 6-2; AVcltnor-Roberta, 6-3, 6-1;
RrouMou-Walker. ;6-l, 6-1; GUfflfh-Rngan,
6-0. 6-3; llidmeH-Brnntley. 6-2, 6-2.
Second Hound—Jerger-Harris, default; Da
vis-Wright. 6-3. 6 0; Coxart-Tnylor, 6-4, 6-2;
Wllllstna-VUley, 6-4, 6-2.
Third Hound—Ueynolds-Seott, 1-6, 8-6. 6-4;
Gary Swift, 6-3. 6-4; T. AndersoieGraves,
default; Mnys-Fort. 6-0, 6-3; Carter-Welt nor,
default; Bronson-Alleu, 6-2, 8-10, 6-2: Grlf-
flth-Williams. 6,4. 6-0; .Terger lloluies, 3-6,
6-2: Davls-Coxart. 4-6, 6-4, 6-1; Gsry-Rcy-
itold*.*6-4. 6-4: Mays-Anderson, 6-4, 6-3; Car
ter- Bronson, 6-2; 6-1.
Fourth Hound— Jerger-Davl*. 12-10, 0-6;
Gnry-Muy*. 6-3. 8 6; 4 'urter-Grlffltk, 6*4, W;
'orter-Jerger, 6-6, 6-4.
Athletic Situation Among
Prep. Schools of Georgia
The follow ing article by Jesse Sibley, now'connected with Stone Moun
tain .Beliooi, throws Home Interesting light bn tfiO athletic situation among
the prep schools about Atlanta. Mr. Sibley la « graduate nt Vanderbilt,
The
where be played football and baseball, and last year he coached the Geor
gia Military Academy.
As there must undoubtedly be "another side, to this question,
Georgian will gladly give-space to.lt.
By JESSE B. SIBLEY.
a persona! grudge existed between the
members of the High School team and
the present coach of Stone Mountain,
Mr. Riaver. for action In seemingly
throning the High School out of the
league last spring for playing a dis
qualified-man. The writer was more
responsible than any one elee In hav
ing the president of the league act,
being then connected with Georgia
Military Academy as coach.
If iiersonal grudges are going to he
harbored In the controlling forces of
our schools, for which the student body
Ik made to suffer, then wr believe ath
letics are harmful, and should he done
away with.
Then the matter resolves Itself to
this: tl) Either a had case of cold
feet: (2) or an unfair discrimination
against Stone Mountain. The Univer
sity School for Hoys stands ready to
play any of the Atlanta teams. In At
lanta or Stone Mountain under uny
reasonable conditions whatsoever.
As an exponent of pure, amateur ath
letics In secondary schools, for the pur
pose of the greatest good to the great
est number, the * writer believes that
the schools In and about Atlanta’have
gone on a wrong road In, ilalng- dis
criminating tactics. The general aim
of athletics Is-practically, the same In
every one of these schools, though too
often the means used. have destroyed
the purpose anil heaped ruin on the
one using such meuns.
Injustice to the people Interested.In
such schools, ami to stone Mountain
School In particular, the writer' feels
that the actions of the Atlanta schools
towards Stone Mountain should be ex
plained. As a member of the northern
division of the G. I. A. A., they have a
right to request games of the other
schools. The best teams have always
met on the gridiron, hut so fur a game I
:ih not been played between ihe Uni- j Farmer Killed by Train,
erslty School for Boys and any of I Kim-lat tn/riic Ucorglnn.
the schools. If It Is a case of "cold I Chester, S. t\, Oct. 29.—Rainey WII-
fect" developed since the game between ; a pr0 |„|nent farmer, res tiling near „ goal'
OKn Ternc wdllng to chwe ‘the "rgu- Lowry vine, this county, was run over McMahon ,
ment her*. But ws can't belfev*. this am! Instantly killed Thursday mum- j Hererat H
„ f ul - ipe couch, manager, teuni and ; Ing by Southern train No. 33. near j uisde by Vanderbilt men,
student body «>f Georgia Military * Ogden. Both hi* legs and bead were |
Academy have expressed severally to i completely severed from n l* body. It
the writer, not only a willingness but is reported that he was Intoxicated,
a desire to piav Stone Mountain. Then i , —j_j_
Milton Dargan Lands First
In Great Golf Tournament
Milton Dargan proved the star of the At
lanta Athletic Club golfers In the tourna
ment Saturday afternoon over the Fast
Lake course. He negotiated tbo long, hard
round-in 94 strike*, which was marvelously
good, •specially In the face of the fnbt
thnt the temporary greens in use nre far
from good and because the wind was blow
ing a couple of gales all during the after
noon. Mr. Dargan had a handicap of five
strokes and put both the low gross nnd low
net score* to his credit.
Dr. Langston, who scored 97 strokes, was
second. His handicap was five nnd tils net
score 92. \V. I*. Hill, with n gross of 98 and
a net of 94. nnd A. T. K. Brown, with a
gross of 122 nnd n net of 94, tied for third
place.
Thirty-four players took pnrt In the
tournament and It proved-In every way n
success. In spite of the blustering wind
the scoring was low nnd the. handicapping
proved unusually equitable, especially for u
first event. *
The scores follow:
Rounds.
1st. 2d. Gross. Hd. Net
J. C. Wheatley... 81 89 170 22
Lnttimor 63 62 125 16
Hammond 58 60 118 16
F. W. Htoue 63 63 116 15
Hopkins 55 77 132 30
Iluse 74 77 151 40
Dargan 40 54 94 5
Langston 45 52 97 5
Hill 46 62 98 4
W. K. Stone 53 62 115 14
Holland 52 63 115 12
Tllaon 51 • 64 105 - 5
Angler 40 58 107 12
J. X. Goddard.... 48-59 107 10
Byrd 47 54 lot . *
A. T. Brown 64 > 68 122 28
Street 53 64 117 8
Moore 49 «o ioo 8
Mlkoll 66 67 123 18
Williams 55 61 116 18
Heed ; 47 67 114 8
Hall 60 68 128 15
Broyles 63 ?.» 142 20
strong 59 60 119 20
Ttehenor . 63 63 126 14
Whiting 57 66 .113 9
I’/tinicr 60 «6 126 15
Stovall 53 00 113 15
C. IV King 70 63 135 20
D. Brown,...: 67. 63 120 20
Itnluspeck 75 68 143 18
Poke Davis. 61. 81 142 20
Mo rye 47 64 101 5
Texas’ Terrible Team Lost
To Commodore Aggregation
Wsst.
Michigan, 28; Illinois, 9.
Chicago, 33: Indiana, 8.
Minnesota, 22: Ames, 4.
St. Louis University,, 71; Mis-
O sourl School "of Mines, 0,
O Minneapolis. 22; Ames, 4. O
O Western Penn., 31; Carnegie O
O Tech, 0. o
a Iowa, 26; Missouri, 4. o
a . a
OOOOOt»lM»(»OOiMHSOt««KR»
HANDBALL RESULTS
Dick Palmer nnd Carleton Smith won
the handball doubles championship of Ih*
Atlanta Athletic Club In a tournament held
In the dub house Saturday night. The
•cores of all the matches follow:
First Hound—Brine and Coll defeated Ar
nold and Colquitt. 11-6, 6-11, 11-1; Grant
nnd Thornton defeated Callaway tod Gold
smith, 7-11, 11-1, 11-3; Atkinson and Rams-
peek defeated Heins gtnd Brown 0-11, 11 1,
11-7; Pnlmer nnd Smith defeated Smith
and Rhett 11-1, 0-11, 11-10.
Seml-FIhnls—Brine and Coll defeated
Grant and Thornton, 6-11, 11-41, 11-7; Palmer
and Smith defeated Atkloaon nnd Rnma-
peck. 11-3. It 9.
Final Hoimd^-Palmer and Smith defeat
ed Brine and Coll. 9-11. 11-1, 11-3, 11-4.
Special to The Georgian.' '
Nashville, Teun.. !2%—In the opinion
f Coitoh-Schenker. of. Yale, who haa charge
of the'giant team of the Fnlveralty of Tex-
as, Vauderbllt ha* tbc' fastcst tefim he .ever
saw. In spjte of the’ fact that the boys
from the Ljme Star State sent an eleven
to Nsshrllle that weighed 175 pounds to
the man. the McGugtn machine defeated
the Texans on Saturday by a score of 45
to 0. In the opinion of the great erowd
that witnessed the gnrne, It was the l»e*t
Hist 1ms been played on Dudley field In
yeara, and lu all probability wna the tnnat
spectacular ever played on the famous field.
There was something of the sensational
order every moment. The new rules were
employed on many occasions by Isith teams,
and the forward pass nml the short kick
cere seen throughout the .entire game.
Texas was unable to run Vanderbilt's
nds. and could not make any - headway
through the line. Their attack was terrific,
nnd on one occasion it looked a* though
the visitors would surely ■core. Bob Blake
made n forward i»os*. ami' several men
lived for the ball, lu the mix up. Krnhl,
the Texas full back, got the bull. He sped
toward the gi>al Hue ns hard ns he could,
and. with a good start, it looked ns though
he would not Ih» headed. Maui Costen, Van
derbilt's fast and plucky quarter, tore down
the field after him. however, aud ualled him
with a beautiful -flying tackle,
yulte a pretty feature In.the first half
from placement by Bob Blake,
ns the star for Texas.
Me vent I long and neiswtloiuil run* were
ad the Texans
failed to show any. of jhe . "fen-second"
roeq about which they had wired to Naah-
ville. Ham Costen. Vanity's n#w quarter,
who, by the way .1* .qujte. a find, got the
bail on a fumble nod ran 60 yards for a
touchdown, nobs of the Texas team liclng
able-to efiteb him, although Qiey raced him
nil, the way. Dan Blake skirted an end
for a run of 52 yhrda and n touchdown,
nml Vaughn Blake made n touchdown af
ter a sensational rtin of 42 yard*.
Toward the iloso of the second half,
Coach McGugln asnt In several substitutes
The teams lined up as follows:
NEW SLEEPER ON
W. & A. R. R. TO
CHATTANOOGA.
Effective at.Atlanta. October 27th.
and Chattanooga, October 29th, the
W. &. A-. Railroad will operate on its
trains, No,. 3 and 4, Pullman sleep-
era betaeen. Atlanta and Chattanooga,
train leaving Atlanta at 8;B0 p. m..
and passengers can remain in same
until 7:00 a. m. next morning in Chat
tanooga, returning passengers can get
in sleeper at Chattanooga at 9:30
p. m. and arrive Atlanta 7:10 next
morning.
C. E. HARMAN,
' General Passenger Agent.
Post III) II.
Vanderbilt.
V. Blake and
• ’mudngimin. *. . M«ft end ............
....left tackle H. ltiiiiisdell
(’mining!
ritcharu..
Churn and
KhorrllL. .
Htonc
McLean and
Lockhart. ,
.Wl
B. Blake., „
Costen and
Hall quarterback..
Craig left half.
right half.
Texas.
Fink nud
.Williams
•right gusrd.
..right tackle
. ..right end.
..Mainland
. .6*c I«1 ha lie
.. .Jtnticau
filer nml
. .McMahon
.. ..Adams
■Caldwell
nml llcudrlckNoii
....Kraht
rulg..
D. Blake..
Mauler ..full hack
•Captain.
Summary: Touchdowns. Mnnier 2. I).
Blake 2. V. Blake. Craig, Costen: goal* from
tomhdowii. B. Blake 6; goal* from place
ment. B. Blake i: official*. Walker. Virgin
ia. referee; KIglu. Nashville, umpire; Per
ry, of Vanderbilt, timer; Hamilton, of
Vauderldlt, linesman. Time of list res, twen
ty-five am) tweuty uiluute*.
tin not a game be arranged?
Rvldentlv a negro is In the woodpile.
Donald Fraser has refused to play (be
fnlveralty School for Boys, as they
rightly should, being outclassed by
most i'f the school* about Atlanta.
A game was scheduled between High
,»if I,, imm, School and Stone Mountain, to be
thouBh tier a d ■ played at the latter's ground*. October
27. This they cameled at the Inst min
ute. saying fnlversfty School for Boys
would not stand for ex|>enses. Noth
ing could be farther from the truth,
for the fnlveralty School for Boyi '
team proposed to come t
and pay its own expenses
refused.
NAT KAISER & CO.
Bargains in unredeemed Dia
monds. Confidential loans on val
uables.
15 Decatur St. Kimball Honse.
May Land Walker After All
up tb** Ih**I giiute ft
be Im.l out
hi* play
uot quite
Piedmont
_ This, was
it was later developed that
SOFT FEELING
Felt Hats, and stiff ones also, clean
ed aud reshaped. Bussey, 281-2
Whitehall St.
Billy Smith, manager of the Atlanta
Baseball Club, will institute proceed-
lugs Monday against the Montgomery
and Jackxonvtlle clubs with a view of
having the trade of Mullaney for
Pitcher Walker declared Invalid In
order that the Atlanta draft on Walker
mav be rendered binding.
Smith, as all fan* will remember,
drafted Walker, and Secretary Farrell
of the National Association. Informed
him that the man had been awarded to
Idm letter he changed his decision
and said that as Walker had been
traded to Montgomery for Mullaney,
the draft did not hold.
This trade, however, was made dur
ing the drafting season of the major
leagues, and was. therefore, In the
opinion of Billy Smith, not binding
To assure himself on this point he
wrote Garry Herrmann, and In his re-
ply the Cincinnati mogul said:
"Replying to your* of October 25,
would suit, that a minor league club
cannot sell or trade a player during the
drafting season of the major leagues.”
Thin was nil Smith wanted and he
v^lfi at once take the case up with Far-
BOY VANDALS DRINK
AND RUIN HOUSE
New York, Oct. 29.—At the beautiful
and historic home of Charlea B. Reed,
the wealthy New York publisher, at
Greenwich, Conn.,-a museum of valua
ble paintings, bric-a-brac, tapestries
and laces, practical}* was wrecked by
two vandals, one 9 ait(| the other 10
years of age, after they had broken In
nnd failed to find any money, and had
become drunk on champagne from the
wine cellars.
BOARDED WRONG TRAIN;
MET DEATH UNDER WHEELS.
Mpoclnl to The Georgian.
Cheater, S. C., Oct. 29.—J- A. Mas
sey, a prominent farmer living In the
outskirts of this city, was killed hy
the Seaboard Air Line train Thurs
day near Rlaney, S. C. Massey ha*
been to Columbia to attend the state
fair, and It seems as if he boarded it*
wrong train for home, getting on in
Seaboard Instead of the Southern.
is reported that he was on ton of the
train and fell ofT. His body " as
brought to Chester. . ...
Massey leaves a wife and two enn
dren and was in good clrcunistante--
HOME COMING WEEK,
AUGUSTA, GA-
For the above occasion the
Railroad will aell Round Trip *' c "' .
on October 27th, 28th and 20th. S«°
for return until November J 6 ’ J. ,
Rate from all ttationa on, fif**"*'*
fare, plus 25 ccnta.
R. E. MORGAN, General Ag‘ nt