The Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, GA.) 1906-1907, November 03, 1906, Image 20

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EDITED BY PERCY H. WHITING BIC DAY IN FOOTBALL HERE IS THE BUNCH WHICH TACKLES MICHIGAN TODAY THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1906. TECH BATTLES TODAY AGAINST AUBURN TEAM Both Teams Confident of Winning and Dope Appears to Give Each an Even Chance. Little Betting on Outcome. Tt’« Tech against Auburn on Terli this afternoon—Helsinnii agaInst Donahire— the yellow nnd white against the orange and blue—Georgia ngnlnst Alabama. And may the best team win—whirli It probably will, though there ia no count- Inc. Heldotn have two team* faced each other on Tech field which were inoro ronfldent of winning, which were letter matched In weight, knowledge nnd experience, and seldom two whlrh ran lie counted on to play their beat—whatever happen*. Both teams arc ready to the very sec ond for n gruelling butt hi. strong, fast and likely to spring anything in the way of n football surprise. Donahue has a reputation of developing pretty shifty football teams. laist year he had n good one and this year he appa rently hits another out of the same mold. And the Auburn players nre proverbially plucky The Alabama team urrlvod Inst night, and ull of the men are reported to he in good condition. The llelsman machine, witich has l*een Improving steadily. Is now «t « higher state of efficiency than It has been before tills year. Faculty requirements. Injuries and eligibility rules have shot to pieces the none-too-hrllllant muterhil with 'which roach Helsnian was provided when the season opened. Hut for nil htnt, the shat tered remnant has gone steadily forward- plugging at the rudiments of the game, the new rules, the fine points, slgunls—(earplug everything nt once nnd apparently learn ing all filings well. And today come* one of the hardest tesla of the rear. Besides being bitter rivals at all times, Tech and Auburn are espe cially anxious to win out this year. It Is presumably a question of third honors for one and fourth for the other. Any wav, the team which loses c»n*s down n peg—and Tech Is determined that the losers shall not l*e the wearers of the yellow and white. The line ups of the I wo teams in the game this afternoon will he ns follow: Brown.. Mweef.. Robert.. Auburn. ...Davis .Pickett . Gantt . .Holly .. Teft tackle. . .right tackle.. .. ...left end Hughes .right end.... .. .. ..Batson . .quarterbnrk.. -.Wilkinson • Lacy No very heavy ladling Is lielng done ou the outcome of the game, Imt most of the wagers which have goiio up have beeu even money. Apparently the men who lw»t regularly on all (he events could not dope tills game out to suit them, nnd many.of them have “stayed off." The hackers of the two col leges. while confident of winning, nre not Imlmod with licit especial brand of confi dence which leads u college mnn fo plunge. Apparently all who are Inclined to n small gamble on the side realize that the gamo Is ii very close matter, and few caro to wager money on the outcome. Between the liiilve* of the “big show*" this afternoon, the Georgia Military acad emy team will tackle the Tech Scrubs In it game which promise* to furnish consid erable excitement. Coach Patterson has trained Ids school hoys well, and they arc playing fast football. t ouch Beene, however, has done equally well with the wealth of scrub material which h* has found nt Tech, and the game between tho pupils of the Vanderbilt and Pnlveralty of Tennessee coaches will Hitched with Intereat. Glidden Starts on Last Lap of Auto Tour AroundWorld Top Row, Left to Right—McGugin, coach; Cunningham, tub. end; Vaughn Blake, cub. end; Stone, guard and center; Bob Blake, end; Crawford, tub. half; Wynne, center and guard; Lockhart, aub. half; Ed Noel, tackle; King, aub. guard. Bottom Row—Coeten, quarter; Hall, aub-quarter; Craig, halfback; Mani.r,fullback; Dan Blakt, captain, halfback; Chorn, guard; Pritchard, tackla. RACE TRACKS ON COAST HAVE HURT NEW ORLEANS' GAME GOOD BATTLE SEEMSJJKELY ALABAMA FOOTBALL TEAM IS TO PLAY MISSISSIPPI A. & M. IN STARKSVILLE. Forty thousand miles In an nuto and over roads In thirty-six countries of the world—which means, at least, nil where tho Kugllsh language Is spoken nnd much of tho uetul-clvlllsed portion*—Is tho record soon to be completed by Charlea J. Gild den nnd wife, of Lowell. Mass., anys The New York World. They leave Boaton to morrow* on their ruu to the City of Mex ico, where they will apend New Year's day. ••Charley" Gltddcn, nn he Is popularly known In the little manufacturing city about AO miles from Boston, made more than enough money to put n new set of liras on his nuto for nearly every mile he has ridden, simply by being wise to the fact that n certain stock W’ouhl not always sell for a dollar n slinro. l!o got nil the shares he could at the atart, stowed them nwray and kept getting more, and when the company waa organised he had so many that he has been "It" ever since. When the nuto fever started, Gltddcn In*, ram* an euthuslast, nud finding the sport of counting nil the telegraph poles In New England rather tame, he began to esti mate the number aa well na he could from « faster car on longer Journeys. Finally, having followed the t»olen through noariy every state In the union, he started off to And the one furthest north. This Is the only pole he has not seen, hut ns he got nesrer to It than any one else with au auto, he has been satisfied. Following his tours In the western hem isphere, midden projected n tour around tho world, being the first to adopt the novel experiment of fitting his auto with wheels suitable for railroad rails nnd then limning Ida machine ns a "special' over the Canadian Pacific tracks front Win nlpeg In Victoria, on the Pacific coast. Al the Vanderbilt cup race, Mr. (Bidden told the writer that this was tho most enjoya ble trip ho has ever made In tils nuto. Having practically n right-of-way, the ma chine was speeded nt timed to more than n mile a infinite. A similar trip Is that which be has now projected to Muxlco City. Leaving Boston tomorrow*, this most famous of nuto tour ists will drive to Washington to see Pres ident Boose veil, from whom he will receive n letter lo he personally delivered to Pres ident Dins, ot Mexico, lieturning to New York, the mule of (Hidden will bo through Albany to Chicago, where ho has « ape rial permit of the Chicago nnd Buck Is land Railroad Company to use Its tracks lo Fort Worth. There ho transfer* Ills nuto, with wheels fitted to railroad rails, to the Interna I lonnl and Great Northern, going to Laredo, and the Mexican National lines to ho New Orleans Club Has Bought Lot For New Ball Grounds Willl&m J. Bos worth, Jr., to Alex J. Helnemann, portion Carrollton and Cleveland avenues. Pierce nnd Pal myra, $7,000: terms—Mnrx. The above very Inoffensive looking clipping from the real estate trans fers In Sunday's Item has a very sig nificant meaning. Jt means that the halcyon Houthern League days at Ath letic park are drawing to a close, anti that In a year or two the Pelicans will have a new* park. In a way this is news. Local fans who read The Item all the summer knew* that something waa happening In that direction. This newspaper pre dicted a new park in the near future. The plot purchased by Mr. Helnemann covers an entire square—a very .large square—and by carefully uttllxlng the space a modern baseball park can bo built there. It is not known whether Mr. Heine* nmnn merely represented the club In buying the property for the now park or whether he bought the square on Ills own hook. It may be that Mr. Heine* nmnn will build the park himself and will lease It to the club, but those who have u good Insight Into the club’s affairs believe that the whole associa tion is Interested directly In the pur chase uml that the new park will W owned exclusively by the association of which Messrs. Stern. Frank and lleinemAnn are the heaviest stock- but the story wasn't given credence by the other sheets. They never give any- j holders. thin* credence unlrss they *.-t lo II tlr*t.! M(|y Q , Likt p olo Groundt Although the club will not. give out nv of its plans, enough is known of he sltuutlon to surmise a little. That he elnb will undertake to Improve on Anyway, The Item said thered be new park unless the differences of the owners of Athletic park it ml the Peli can management were patched up. uml Mr. Helnemann'* little IT.ooo purchase bears out The Item In that statement. Erection May Commence Soon. It Is not known when the new park will be built. Mr. Helnemann won’t say a word. It would not la? surpris ing to see work on the place begun right away, but It is believed t«* h« the plan of the Pelican club to tuny another summer ut Athletic par said that the dub’s lease Athletic park is a foregone conclusion. It would be foolish for the association not to hulld a park that would meet the requirements of baseball In this city for yeuis to come. A smaller park than Athletic park would not be large enough In a few years although ade quate f«»r the business of the present It is | time. lutrk i Athletic park bus n reputation tiu By J. 8. A. MACDONALD. New York, Nov. 3.—With tho inau guration of the final meeting of the Metropolitan season at Aqueduct today the winter campaigner, be he owner, Jockey -or common rank soldier of fortune, bethought himself of the shift to salhbrlouH Houthern climes. This current meeting of the Queens County Jockey Club here nt Aqueduct continues to November 15. On the very next day, the race track army In vades Washington, IX 0„ where the an nual autumn term of the Washington Jockey Club at Henning, D. L\, en sues for a run to December 1. Then comes the long drop down to New Or leans, La., or across the continent to Los Angeles, Cal., or Han Francisco, Cal. In fact, racing nt these points commences some time before the close down at Penning, the curtain going up at New Orleans, the Haturdny be fore Thanksgiving day, or November 24. The now California Jockey Club commences Its 150 days' session on No vember 17 at Oakland. However, It Is of New Orleans the majority of Eastern racing folk wot of most. Every nutuinn the agents of the respective racing associations In Louls- laiia and the Californian wage a brisk campaign among the owners, bookmak ers, Jockeys, etc., with art Idea of di verting their presence to their particu lar courses. These advance agents have made a warm fight of it this fall. "Jimmy” Hcanlon. one of the best-liked and progressive hustlers from the Pa cific count, representing Torn Williams’ Oakland game, while John Poden, Hr., tho newly appointed secretary at Los Angeles, Cal., has been looking after the Ascot Park’s Interests. Not until the last few days did either of the New Orleans associations— the Crescent City Jockey Club and the City Park Jockey Club—have a booster on the grounds. Martin Nuthanson Is now doing a lit tle missionary work here at Aqueduct. City Park Is unrepresented, and so fur not a single stake book or announce ment of any sort respecting the Corri gan plant has come to hand. Coast Tracks Busy. Naturally the California tracks have made Inroads on Now Orleans. Hun dreds of horses nnd scores of turfmen, billed for the Crescent City a month ago, me now heading toward the Golden Gate. ”8am’’ Hildreth and his big stable have been lured away from the Louis iana winter field to Han Francisco. It took three weeks of talking In the pad dock by day and about the Imperial hotel corridors ut night on the part of Hcanlau before ''Ham” finally broke away from tne fair grounds, where he has been racing anil spending $50,000 each winter for eight straight years, to the far West. Hildreth has already shipped to Oakland 31 head with Guid ing Htar, winner of the last Crescent City derby; Security, Rapid Water uml old Van Ness, all New < irleans favor ites, lu the Hildreth special palace horse cars. Jockey Knapp will ride for him. * Ah soon u^'Hoots” Purnell's rein statement was announced Williams and Hcanlan nulled him for Oakland, too. It Is supposed Durnell 1ms the tlnnnclul support of John W. Gates. He will take twelve useful horses West late this week, with Arthur Redfern as his Jockey, the latter agreeing to make 105 pounds for Durnell by December 15. New Orleans Is In for one grand win ter of racing and general, all-round sport. Nutlmnson says every stall at the fair grounds has been let, while he expects about thirty bookmakers to declare In on Thanksgiving Day. Cook Goes West. Talking of bookmakers reminds me of Fred Cook’s Intention to race and book at New Orleans' rival, Oakland. Cook left here lust Heptember shortly after a maiden colt of his happened to bo left at the post after being played from 4 to 1 to 7 to 10. Cook’s trainer, "Bill” Phillips, Is now speeding to Frisco with a collection of horses, joint ly owned by Cook and J. AV. Dobson. Cook Intends to make u $100,000 book there. The interesting thing about Cook’s defection Is In the suspicion of the ow^ier-bookmaker having received the ”23” number from the City Park people where he raced last winter. Of course Cook knows full well the peace compart between the warring tracks did not mean amnesty for him. The fair grounds somehow hate Cook. Last winter at City Park Cook and Jits agents controlled Jockey “Dave" Nlcol and maintained a strong stable and a “Big Htore” hooking enterprise. One very interesting thing Nathanson Is communicating Just now Is the fact that both City Park and the fair grounds Intend playing a fair, square game. There will be no pre judice on either side. When the fields urc crowded and horses have to be thrown out I do not propose to say, “Oh, well, you were with us In the re cent fight, so your horse goes, and this former City Park adherent’s horse must be excluded." "Every horseman will be treated on exactly the same basis. There will be go favorites at the Fair Grounds.” No Lid in New Orleans. Here Is another bit of good news for the winter followers of tho bangtails. New Orleans’ “lid” will be off for tho first time In many seasons. By Thanks giving day night, bright lights and a merry company will be seen within at least four of the old-time clubs, all nt which means a bustling winter down in Dixie Land. As to the official staffs at City Park and the Fair Grounds, It Is understood, Francis Trevelyan will not bo seen ut City Park, while Richard H. Burke, of the Jockey Club, Is to fill an important post at the Fair Grounds. Frank J. Bryan, the well-known judge, now of ficiating at Baltimore, Md., will be at the Fair Grounds as usual. Late this week Thomas II. O’Connor, racing edi tor of The New York Globe, was ap*- polnted assistant secretary to John Bo- den ut Ascot Park. Probably the stroftgest stable racing at either of the New Orleans tracks will be that of "Mose” Goldblatt. “Mosek’ cmne East a month ago backed by the strongest sort of financial sup port. He picked up the good filly KII- Uecrankle and a string of useful and high-class young horses for the winter campaign, and as no horse-handler in tho country has “Mose” surpassed In the matter of being able to point and place race horses to advantage, the old fox Is bound to cut the premier role in the Fair Grounds doings the l.ext three months. Bel mere, the winner of the Brooklyn derby, will be about the best class horse In the Houth tills winter. Fred Berlew will train the colt, and will take along Jockey Lee Sewell in stead of “Frankie” O’Neil, as his stable rider. Probably 25,000 racegoers from all parts of the country will winter down at the Crescent City, attracted prima rily through the racing. Special fi> The Georgian. University, Ala., Nov. 3.—T;,* University football team has gone i, Starksville, Miss., where the annual Alabanin-Mlsslsslppl game will i.« pulled off this afternoon. Reports fr<n n across the border indicate that Conch Martin has rounded together a very likely bunch of pfg-skin chasers and a hot contest Is looked for. In the past Alabama has usually been able to put It over the’A. & m boys, but the latter have been steadily Improving, and should give a good u. count of themselves this year, playing as they do on home territory. Besides, Pollard’s pets are still in a very crippled condition. Franklin, tin- heavy left guard, and one of the best players on the team, Is nursing a bail cholly-horse. It Is possible that h** will be sent to Atlanta to take dots on the Auburn-Tech game. Instead of lin ing taken to Mississippi to adorn t!.*• side lines. Several other members of ^|ie regu lar ’varsity may also be kept out f the game, aa the coach Is not willing u sacrifice too much to lick the agri- culturlsts, the Auburn game being Mill In the future. Several new faces, there, tore, may be seen In Saturday's lint • up for Alabama. GREAT CHANCE FOR VLACKAS Jack Foy. tho local pugilist, who Is still putting hi his spare (lino In “listening” i-» hear Harry Mtiitch's money “talk," a»tnt>-« that If Chris Vlackas, the New Orle.-m* Greek who I* looking for a fight, Is will- lug to meet any welterweight, that la* <Foy) will take him on. Foy can readily get down to the welterweight limit, an I will do so If he sees a chquce of meet lug Vlackan or any other welter. Foy I* willing to meet the New Orleans Greek for n purse or side bet, and will fight him wlnner-take-all. Mercer and Georgia Meet in Second Football Game Hpecinl to The Georgian. Macon, Ga., Nov. 3.—The second football game of the season will be played In Macon this afternoon when Mercer and Georgia will fight it out on tho gridiron at Central City park. Coach Whitney and eighteen members of tho Georgia team arrived In Macon last night and the men were In fine condition and confident of victor/ Many undergraduates arrived this morning nnd will root for the red nnd black this afternoon. Mercer had a final practice game yesterday afternoon nnd the team showed up well, and Coach Tarr Is well pleased with the chunces of the Bap tists. Mercer will probably present the following line-up: Center, Adamson: right guard, Me* Uathren; left gunrd, Sams; right turkle, Scoggins; left tackle, West- bury; right end, Oglesby; left end, Melton; quarterback, Conner; right half, Loftln or Newman; left half, Dickey, nnd fullback, Shaw. Stone Mountain After Scalp of the Georgia Second Team (peelol to Tin* Georgian. University of Georgia, Athens. Go.. Nov. L—While the ’varsity I* lu Macon ploying fiercer, the fast Stone Mountain team lilies up ngaliiHt tin* Georgia second team on Her* ty field Saturday afternoon. Stone Mountain come* with a long string if scalp* nt her holt, and wants to add Teorgts Scrub* to her already largt STARS OF AUBURN TEAM adornment*. However, Stone Mountain <loe« UHik surprisingly strong. She liter ally wiped up Tech hollow with the Yel low Jacket Junior*, nnd piled up largo scores against the various prep schools she has lined up against. The Hccoud team ha* worked steadily nud hard this year, nnd several men qn it have shown exceptional form and have been taken on ’varsity. The team, as a whole. I* strong, nnd from present Indications tho game will In* n hard-fought one. With the regular team nwny, and no other gome In Athens, u large crowd Is expected. The university band, which played nt the games all last yeur. will contribute their music to the occasion. FOOTBALL TODAY. 0 GOLF TOURNAMENT. O o a 0 A handicap golf tournament Is 0 O In progress today on the Atlanta '0 O Athletic Club’s East Lake course. 0 0 Handsome prizes have been offer- O 0 ed. the handicaps are liberal and 0 O the entry is large. Lafayette, at Philadelphia: Wesleyan and Springfield Training School, at Middletown; Amherst and Massachu- sett Aggies, at Amherst; Bates and New Hampshire, at Lewiston .•"Annap olis nnd Pennsylvania State, at An napolis; Carlisle Indians and Syracuse, at Buffalo; Hwarthmore nnd Johns Hopkins, at Baltimore; Lehigh and Dickinson, at South Bethlehem; Tufts and Howdoln, ut Tufts; Colgate and Williams, at Wllliamstown; Cornell and Western University of Pennsylvania, at Ithaca; West Virginia and George Washington University, nt Morgan town; Franklin and Marshall and Hav- erford, at Lancaster. On Western Gridirons Today. University of Iowa vs. University of Wisconsin, at Madison. University of Nebraska vs. Univer sity of Minnesota, at Minneapolis. De Pauw vs. Rose Polytechnic, nt Terre Haute, Ind. Utah vs. Montana, nt Sait Lake City. Indiana University vs. Colorado School of Mines, at Bloomington. Ind. Olivet College vs. Hillsdale College, at Hillsdale. Mich. Ames vs. University of South Dakota, at Ames, Iowa. Rlpon College vs. Marquette College, at Milwaukee. Washburn College vs. Fafrmount College, at Topeka. Haskell Indians vs. Drake University, at Des Moines, Ia. Purdue vs. Notre Dame, at Lafay ette, Ind. Ohio State University vs. Oberlin. at Oberlln, O. Ohio Medical University vs. Western Reserve University, at Columbus. O. Denison University vs. Case'School, at Cleveland. O. Ohio Wesleyan vs. Kenyon, at Gam bler, O. Wooster vs. Mt. Union, at Wooster, Ohio.’ Ohio University vs. University Cincinnati, at Cincinnati. University of Oregon vs. Willamette, at Eugene. Ore. University of North Dakota vs. State Agricultural College, at Brooking*. Today’s Games in ths South. University of Virginia vs. Buckneif, at Richmond, Ya. Sewanee vs. University of Tennessee, nt Knoxville. Tulane University vs. Texas Agrl cultural nnd Mechanical, ut New or leans. University of Alabama vs. Mississippi A. & M., at Starkesvllle, Miss. University of North Carolina Georgetown, at Norfolk, Va. Davidson College vs. Cleifison, at Charlotte, N. C. Roanoke College vs. V. P, I.. M Blacksburg, Va. Naval Cadets vs. Pennsylvania Stntt College, nt Annapolis. University of Georgia vs. Mer University, at Macon. Ga. University of Mississippi vs. Tulane University, ut New Orlcuns. TEN MINUTES WITH THE COACH IHIIHIHIIHIIHHI r I country over and ever since it wu> ; built it Ims been the pride of the South- does not expire until next year And the whole (rouble grow that lease. It Is said that when thej club approached the owners of Athletic. **rn League But the new park will park In regard to signing a new lease j doubtless outdo Athletic park. The the owners said they were going up.on j grandstand and bleachers will hardly :upy us much ground space as ut the ,th* price. And they struck a price un der Mr. Helnemann 1 * no** that stagger ed the secretary. A conference of war xvas held anil Messrs. Stem, Frank uud Helnemann concluded that If the own ers of Athletic park carried out their threat about the park they would build a new park. It now seems that both threats will be carried out. New Park Near the Old. The site of the new parlf is not far from where the Pelicans hang out now. It Is further up toward canal street and is more easily reached by Cunal old park, but a double story grand* stand, dmllar to the grandstand at the Polo grounds or like the National League park at Chicago, will take the place of the expanded affair at Athletic park. The capacity of the new park will very probably be set at 12.000. always stiff felt hat Belt can than by Tulane avenue cars. Durey's. GOOD ADS Have your old soft or -leaned and reshaped at MS—S—SIMMS—SMMMMIMMMM—IMWIWMW New York, Nov. 3.—Today marks | practically the pivotal point In the ! football seuson. For the big college ! teams ft lie games hitherto have been ! more or less In the line of practice } when new plays und players have been . tiled out. The coaches now haw mind the make-up for the final teams 1n the big games and have mapped out j the campaign und the style of play on i which they will depend. J Princeton will have a real test today In Dartmouth, which of late years has , Invariably managed to make a good ; showing against the strongest teams. I Yale also has n strong team In West Point, while all eyes are on tho Har vard-Brown contest at Cambridge, which Is likely to prove the game of the week. Other big games in the East sched uled for today are: Pennsylvania and These three men are tho candidates for tho positions of tacklss on tho Auburn toam. Thoy art. from loft to right, Thaggard, weight 170 pounds; Holley, weight 180, and Ponton* weight 172. NAT KAISER & CO. ! Bargains in unredeemed Dia monds. Confidential loans on val- : uablea. 1 15 Decatur St. Kimball Bon**. I’lny-' other .... .... .. cIhiii to make, and you ruunot do It q«‘ ,,ll . f without delaying practice, reserv “If yon do not feel ’fit' you an* a 'l™** for st triiui I* only it* fast nnd strong -f* It* wi-akcMt. slowest .meuilier. Knt "“'J what I* most nourishing. nud that u» nv”} Inr hour*. Discard pastries, tobacco, lnt«*u cunt*. Isto hour*—In short. live a • '•‘ :l 1 n - temperate, healthful life. Breathe work hard. Brace and pad nny weak j of your nnntomy; nlwnys ntteud to lnjun«’» of any kind it* soon n* possible. A shower I with ami brisk rub down diooi'i follow the day’s practice. "A roll roll at every day'* work sill ■'J the role. If a limn Is absent repeated without *uffh*hnit rouson he will In* «lf' , i'f l " from the *qund, for lie is no use i * ,u * •f III* |H»*ft|o iffcri*** t-uinlo: go ut lib IMMMMMMtM««MMMMMMMM**MMMMMMMMMMI Tile footlmll coat-li cauto out on the field, surveyed the sqtiud critically, nud then said: ••Well, bunch up. fellows, Everybody on the jump, ltemember this I* no ballroom, and when your coach or mptnlu speak* * on the ruu. Do everything on the roil. Now. you’ve been kicking nnd catching the three or four bulls you have *1111 this after noon mlwiiys have that luiuilier, if poNNlhh*. practice) as If you'd never seen a footlmll before. It’s not it hnsclmll, so use your hands less und your nrms uud iHxly more. Ymi, buck* uud end* especially must uiakc yonr catches sure. “I sei* two or three uien in the nquail without complete outfits. Now. tomorrow have nil the requisites for iKHlfly comfort uud protection, even to leather ankle lirucc* nud heudgenr, for much depends on them. “Moreover, then* Is one thing everylwdy on tie* squad ’ must have—namely, a 1PW iMM.k of rules. Bead It through carefully, for Uni going t» qnlx you every day ou the rules uml have y*m question me. *0 that on tin* field you will obey them Insttlietlvely. The n.-i-d of perfect familiarity with the rules I cannot cinphuslice too strongly. Im not In- H.-uUtied with on** «*r two |M*ruNul*. but study them rejHfitedly until you esu V.7. T* iV the rtr- aitswer any question I ask without lookln. i !!!,“* >’ f *“«**• for - U ! l,at m It Up. The duties of umpire Mild . nro distinguished from «*a«-h other, nnd till the ixMinltl*** need not he memorized Imme diately. hut every ineiulier of the tenm must know under what conditions the hall gue* t«* the opponents and the relative se riousness of offense* ami fouls. “There nre several things which must Ih» „ thoroughly under*t«H*l from the start If we J Special to The Georgian. ar»* to hare a whmluu from. ’Everybody must realize that throughout the scnsoti. tn every game, and during every minute of every game, nil the inemlM-r* of ‘* entire squad are working together for success of the team n* n whole. If a back make* a sensational run the credit I* more his Hum It U Hull of the guard center, who Is ntrcunoiisly keeping hi* -ii from hn*uklng up the piny. It t* to * credit of the team ns n whole, mid not Hint of nny one tuemlier alwvi* the rest. Your stogau must ahroi* pe, 'Every man in - In oinking holes, through. Inn king, nnd Interfering. '*Bneh player should go at Id* *»pp"" a different way. Every time you • twit him. keep him guessing, and a-" get the lump on him—get started tN*f* din**. Go u 1 him harder every time, the 0I/1 n’h out ot him In the first tw I n«k* wit hour* hktklt.tr I the game, for It Is Hint 1 ask without looking u, a t „fieu wins or lose* In short, nlwnys use your head game for hendivork.* , Kxe|utnge. SHOT IN THE FACE WHILE OUT HUNTINO Meridian, Mi**., Nov. 3.—V. <> I 1 -*' vie*, a Mobile und Ohio locomotive gineer residing here, was ahot In face und badly injured while bird ing; near Laurel yesterday- wan accidentally fired by Dr. A- Perry. , .„* Yesterday wan the first day of ^ open shooting season and the * ' and fields were filled with hunter*