Newspaper Page Text
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II1K ATLANTA GEORGIAN, MONDAY. NOVEMBER 12. 100G.
Smith Signs Long-Looked-For Southpaw
Edited By PERCY H. WHITING. =
FANCY WORK poor handling of punts ISMITIf GETS
fAHLl ftUKIV CQST GE0RG , A WE game! 01 ’
OVER TRAPS
WINCHESTER TEAM AND POWDER
COMPANY REPRESENTATIVES
DO GOOD SHOOTING.
UnUout>trdl.r tb«* most remarkable rifle, re
volver soil* rbotgiiti Minuting ever seen In
Atlanta was done Sfctunla.v afternoon nt
Lakomvol ilmine tb<* exIilWtlon given by
the Winchester team.
The fancy rifle nud revolver shooting of
Mr. and Mrs. Toppenreln tvna n revelation
even to men who lis«l been shooting all
their lives. The ease with which they toss
ed small marbles into the nlr. broke them
with rifle I mils and then shattered the
pieces before they bit the ground was re
markable. With all apparent ease they
would eject a cartridge from their rifles and
then hit It with u bullet before It reached
the grouo'j. rolns, small cartridges and
other diminutive articles thrown Into the
air were easy marks for this wonderful
pair.
Their work mer the traps was wonder
fully good, and so was that of the repre
seotalives of various powder companies
who also shot. Crosby and Hatcher both
made 97 out of Hawkins and Half made
94, Taylor nud Money made 86. Crosby
made his last 80 without a miss. Mrs.
, Tepperwelu broke f*» out of 100.
Freeman, the e*-Atlnnta policeman, shot
with the eliih team, of whleh he Is a uiem-
I her, and scored n a mid two 34*a.
The scores follow:'
Winchastar 8quhd.
-Targets.
THE GAME, REDUCED TO FIGURES
Made ten yard* In three consecutive downs (unaided by penalties)—
Tech three times, Oeorgla once.
Distance gained by straight play, excrusive of the distance the ball
was run back after kicks—by Tech 76 ysrds (71 yards In llrst half);
Georgia, 27 yards (20 yards In flrst half).
Average gain per down—By Tech 1.7 yard*; by Georgia. 1.6 yards.
Time taken out on account of Injuries—By Tech twice.
Penalties assessed—Against Tech 25 yards; against Georgia, 6 yards.
Brown’s punts averaged 12 yards.
Graves’ punts averaged 24 yards.
Tech’s kick-offs averaged 43 yards.
Georgia’s kick-offs averaged 48 raids.
Neither team lost.the ball on fumbles In a scrimmage.
Georgia men fumbled punts 7 times and lost the ball each time.
Held for downs—Tech twice: Georgia, once.
Ran the ball back after kicks, Tech 88 yards In ten chances, an aver
age of 8.8 yajrds; Georgia, 20 yarda In 8 chances, an average of 2 1-2
yBr<, Tech wan forced to kick 11 times. Georgia 6 times.
The ball changed hands 27 times during the progress of the game.
ASOUTHPAW
GRANT 8CH0PP, LAST YEAR WITH
OTTUMWA IN IOWA LEAGUE
ACCEPTS TERMS.
N.dk -
Hawkins'.
arrsTa 1 a fomi
Toppel
Tsyler
nr
Powder Rsprsssntstivks.
V
* Tlnb*bH
lfuff. .
- War*!. .
I Moucs.
Worth*
TE
‘iTiTOiil
W~
Club StooUrs.
!'• xsnis.:-
i iotj: ..
I Fraemito. .
1 Armafaail.
I Kverett. . .
* Wrtmora. .
1 lfaanlrutt.
f Camden. . .
li«lor
. I sitter.
; Carnea.
gyj’ 1
Tale can no longer boast that of the
. big college elevens she Is the only one
■ that has not bow scored on.
Mummy Morse Is out of piece at full
' back. He cannot get moving as fast
■ ns when he was pluylng half back.
An Inability to hnndlP punts, either long
or short, coat Oeorgla her annual football
game with Tech. The score was 17 to 0,
with one point protested.
Unable to make ten ysrds Is the required
three downs, afraid to try forward passes,
and up against a defense almoat as good at
her own, the Tech team was forced Into s
kicking game. Woven times was Quarter,
hack Itoliert required to cell on the eer,
vices of the nimble toes of Brdwn, from
Punisrllle.
of these eleven pnnts seven were fumbled
by the Georgia bneks and Taeh men were
able to get down and fell on the ball or
else pick It np on the bound and go on
toward their opponent's goal.
The flrst touchdown came as a remit
of two fnlluree to handle kicks. Tech,
when unshle to gain by any other method,
Ineitcil the ball, the Georgia backs Joggled
It ami Teeb men fell on It near the Georgia
goal. A couple of bucke put It over.
The next touchdown wee a "dead fighter"
for the flrst and the third was like the
eeeond.
If the Georgia men had been able to hen
die punte and there had been no freaks
of fate, the score would very probably
have been 0 to a
Itnth lines held like a rock well. On
straight football the teams were evenly
balanced.
But when It cniue to handling punts
Tech was n star performer nud Georgia was
to lbo bull.
The game was well played and Interest,
lug. Both tennis fought hard anil the con
test was apeclneiilnr, In uptte of Its one
sided liens.
The ball was In the nlr "much of the time
ntnl the teams wero ou the move nil tbu
time.
The Athens men played n plucky up-hill
gHiim anil dlml game.
The game was absolutely devoid of unto-
ward Incidents nml passed off with unex
pected nuinotkueaa.
Thu crowd was tho most brilliant of tho
After Vanderbilt Waked Up
Rose “Poly” Proved Easy
r toThr (••'firglati.
Naabvllln, T>iiu., Nov. 11.—'ViniricrUU
■truck n hook Hu i unlay afternoon In I Ho
tettn from lion* pol.vierliulc Institute, of
Term KJauto, lod. It Hail been ImpntMl-
ble to get any klml of lino on tho Imllnii-
■n». N« one «*otiM l**nru of aujr gmuv they
hail played, and nothing van to bo uaccr-
tulnod refunding tho weight of tho to»ui.
ftut they brought u tomii to NnubvIUo nil
light; u Mu*. Hunl..v toniu, nvernglug nbont
17a pouodn to tho uiun. Vanderbilt Hud
beau looking for an on ay llilug. nud It hiin
propon'tl t<> Hturt tho logulura ut flrat;
tliau. If tbbiga Mont ail right, to put III aulm
and nave tho Imok field f«*r next Huturday'H
gani" ttltU J’o4-h. Tho*i‘oiumodoro.4 ptauuoil
to tako It rutbor «tay; In fact. It whu
thought tho guuio might prove a practice
affair. Tho voathor wua Hot, nud It might
hurt tin* obnnoe* In tho Tooii gaui*' to ruu
any rlak»
11004- molvot! the Mill in tho opoulug half
and m.vix*hoU straight dowu tho Hold to Van-
flcrhllt'a .'yard lino. They aiimahcal through
the line and rroM-hucked over tuoklo ut a
lively olip. Then Vanderbilt rvallgtNl they
ora Hark, got the hall on downs, nud then
made n tuiiohrimvn. Tho gold and black goal
waa never In danger again, save once whou
Bom* nttemptnl u place kick, which Cap
tain f)nn Illnke broke through and block
ed, Coatoii falling on the twill.
Owaley Mauler, Vanderbilt's stalwart
full back, wna the bright particular star
of the game. lie made nil ttvo of tho
touohdowua, aiuaahlng through Itooc'a line
nt will for long gains. Iloh Bluke kicked
four goals, nml mado n goal «li*o from u
plaoe kick juat lu*fore time was called In
tho last hnlf. The fluid ncoru was Van-
derbllt 33. Uom! 0.
Tho lentil that Itoao brought to Nash
ville Was really n wonder when It la re-
tneuilwred that tho uchool only has about
Sflu pupils. From tho manner In which
tho vhdtorn omiM consult about plsya bv-
fore making them, some of the M|»ectnlora
opined there might have boon a few “ring-
era" mi tin* visitors’ eleven whu did not
kuow the algunla. However that may Im,
the game was clean nil the way through.
Left Tackle Bachman, lllght Tackle
Htrecker and Left Half Whitlock played
•tar ball for Rom-.
OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCg
O FOOTBALL SATURDAY. O
O
- o Locale
O Tech 17, Georgia U.
O Tech Scrubs 2*. Donald Kroner 5. O
O Southern.
O Ohnrleaton 10, Mercer 0. O
O Clamaon 6. Auburn 4. a
O Kentucky Statu 21. Tennonxee 0. O
O Buoknell 10. V. P. L u. O
O Richmond 29, Roanoke 0. O
O Virginia 12, Georgetown 0. O
O Western Pennsylvania 17, West O
<i Virginia. 0.
O Rollins 6, Florida 0. O
O Rowanee 35. Tulane 0. O
O Missouri 11. Arkansan 0. O
p Eastern. O
p Pennsylvania o, Lufuyvtte u. O
P Harvard 3, Carlisle 0. O
P Princeton 8, West Point 0. O
p Yale o. Bwarthmore 4. O
p Cornell 1«. H<?ly Crow t> O
P Lehigh 27. New York 11. O
P . Williams 18. Wesleyan 11. O
p Dartmouth 4. Amherst 0. O
p Andover d. Exeter 0. * O
p Tuft* 28, Massachusetts Agrl- O
P cultural o. O
P Johns Hopkins o, Haverford 23. O
p Franklin and Marshall 11, Bus- P
p quehanna University 0. O
Western. O
P Indiana 12. Notra Dame 0. O
P Minnesota 4, Chicago 2. P
P Ohio Bute 8. Kenyon 0. P
P Gettysburg 69, Urelnus 0. O
p Wisconsin 1«, Illinois •.
OOOOOOO0OO O0O00OOOOQ 0OOOOG
For the first time In the history of
the Princeton-Yale football the Tiger*
will offer odd* on their team, claiming
It as the best eleven In the country.
NAT KAISER & CO.
Bargains in unredeemed Dia
monds. Confidential loons on val
uables.
15 Decatur St. Kimball Hons*.
FOOTBALL AT
COLLEGE PARK
yeer. All the statute were well mini, the
automobile end carriage apace was doing n
"standing roam only” business nml the
Held presented * brilliant sight, with the
bright costumes and multitudinous hinners
and streamers of gold and white nnd red
and black.
After the game the Tech students cele
brated with a "night ahlrt parade." ns la
customary, and amused the Htfurday night
crowds with their antics.
Line-up:
TECH. GEonUIA.
Brown, I. e Hatcher, 1. e.
Monroe. L t Ketron, L t.
Henderson, L g McCoy Napier. I. g.
Luck. e.... If. Ketron, e.
Bnyder-Bs | l, r. g Harmon, r. g.
McCarty, r. t DeLaperrlcre, r. t.
flweet, r. a. Orsvrs Reott, r. c.
Itobcrt. q. b Farris-Grares. q. b.
Davlea.Emerson, L h..Ranaon-Hndgsou, 1 h.
Hightower, r. h K. Smith, r. b.
Adamsoq, f. b Knooi, f. b.
Hummary—Touchdowns, McCarty 121,
Sweet (1). Qoel- from touchdowns, Ilrown
(2). Halves 25 to 20 mlnntes. Butler of
North Carolina, ratterson of Vanderbilt nnd
Brown of Mercer, refereea; head linesman.
Bemle McCoy; linesmen, Duncan of Tech
and Hudson of Georgia; timers, E. II.
Drury of Athena and Wright of Tech.
According to the rollng of Referee Butler,
tho scure wag 14 to 0. After-the eeeond
touchdown the hall waa kicked out. Tho
man who eanght It did not signal that ho
waa going to moke a fair catch nud at flrst
Mr. Bntler refused to allow on attempt to
kick the goal. Conch Hrlamnn contended
that tho rule* committee had decided that
a signal of Intention to make n fair natch
waa not needed when the hall waa kicked
out after a touchdown. Sir. Butler ml-
mlttod that Ihla might bo true, hot slated
that no official notfflcatlon bad been aeut
out tu that effect, and that ho must decide
on the rules as they stood. As n eompro-
mine Toch waa allowed the kick and tho
point waa protested. As Tech did not need
tho extra point, tho Yellow Jackets will
probably lie willing to lot tho score atuud
III to A.
The long search la over—Billy Smith
has landed a left-handed pitcher.
The new man Is Grant Schopp, pitch
er last year for Ottumwa, In the Iowa
State League.
Schopp was recommended to Smith
by 8. C. Williams, a man who has been
landed by the St. Paul team, of the
American Association, and a man
Smith was after. ‘ As soon as Smith
learned about Schopp ha began a
search tor him and Anally landed the
player, whom he found In East I-as
Vegas, X. M.
Here Is what. Williams says about
Schopp:
"Schopp Is a small man, about 5
feet 10 Inches, and weighs about 155-
wlth a dandy slow ball. Depends on
control und headwork. both of which
he has to the queen's taste.
‘-As to his games this year, I cannot
say; only don’t Judge the man by It,
as the Ottumwa team of this year was
mighty poor—only had eight men part
of the time, and at no time of the
season was It In any condition at all.
“As to hla ability for the Southern
League I cannot say, as I know nothing
of your league. He la plenty good for
the Western League, at least better
than several who did well In that
00000000000000000000000000
O ATLANTA'S PITCHERS O
0 ALL LOOK VERY GOOD. O
D - O
o Billy Smith took a few minutes O
0 off Monday morning and did a O
O little figuring over the last sea- O
0 son’s records of bis pitchers. O
O When he was through with It he 0
0 smiled a large. . face-involving, O
0 satisfied sort of a smile. 0
0 Here Is what the figures showed O
O of the work done by hi* men Inst O
O year: O
0 Zeller won 24, lost 14. 0
0 Spado won 18, lost 7. 0
0 Ford won 22, lost 9. 0
O Sparks won 10. lost 10. O
0 Schopp won 18, lost 12. 0
0 Childs won 6, lost 4
Harley won 10, lost 11. 0
5000000000000000000000000$
There Is a plan for a paid'staff of
football officials being talked of, as
colleges wish to avoid employment of
Incompetent men.
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FREDS.STEWART&C0.
6 Peachtree Street, on The Viaduct.
Three Georgia Golfers Ranked Among First Ten
With the ranking of tho Southern golfers
off his wind, tho writer draws a long
breath. It waa a task tho completion of
which caused him no n-grots.
And. he It said lit this point, and before
friends nrn lost, that tin? writer—lu fact,
no onu innn-ls responsible. This rauklng
Is the cotmensua *»f opinion of the best In
formed golfers In the Mouth, liicludlug Leigh
Carroll of Now Orleans. F. U. Ilyrd nud W.
IV Hill of Atlanta, Itoliert llnugh of Birin-
Ingham, J. IV Kdrltiiftou, li. f>. Maunders
and Harry Nnwlnud of Memphis mid An
drew MuuimiI! of Dnrleu, to nil of whom the
writer Is deeply indebted.
No two of tho men who expressed their
pinions agreed ou u rauklug. own ns far
ns the first nud second iHisitlons. Only
ouo man. Andrew Mnuson, nppenred ill nU
the rankings.
After going eurofully over Hie rniiktugs
contributed by the seven experts, studying
closely tho 4|unllf.vlug scores and tuntoh
rounds of the Hon thorn chnniploiisUlp and
the NushvlUo, Birmingham and Memphis
Invitation tournanionts, the writer sees no
reason to ehange the i*onetmsuN <>f opinion.
Presumably It conics nearer to representing
tho true standing of Southern players tlmti
any one man's opinion possibly could.
A great football • on test Is protnlsoil at
College Turk Monday afternoon, when the
Georgia Military Academy and D«eust
Grove temns meet. The game will tie ptnyed
on the G. M. A. grounds and will liegtn nt
1:30 p. m.
CHSOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOD
O ON GRIDIR0N8 TODAY. O
O O
O Unlveralty of Mississippi vs. ©
O Bewattec at Memphis. 0
0 Haskell Indians vn. Texas A. & ©
O M. ut College Htation. Texas. 0
O George Washington University at 0
O Washington, D. C. O
0 * O
30000000060000000000000000
Leigh Carroll Is nrhltrnrtly ranked flrst.
It Is the custom to give this honor ti» the
whiner of the amateur championship and
that even was taken by Mr. Carroll nfter
some briniam pb>. Tho cbamhlou bletselr
modestly ascribes bln 'victory to luck, but
there Is m> denying that he was playing
phenomenally good golf when the touri
..... .
tneut begun and that he stayed on Ills
game to the end and won ou Ills merits.
Mince that time Mr. Carroll has practically
dropped out t*f golf, but be will hi In At
lanta to defend bis title next spring, und
will bo a insu to reckon with.
The placing of Andrew Msusou second
would have caused the writer Htlo thought.
This Hcotchman Is beyond the shadow of
a doubt tho greatest golfer the Mouth has
ever known. IDntcapped by his stxc nml
none too stalwart physhpie, hi* has twice
been Houtheru chaiupiou ami twice winner
of tbe medal for low score nt a champion
ship. Ills form Is uearly Ideal nml he has
Ranking of Southern Golfers.
Leigh Carroll, of New Orleans.
Andrew Mnuson, Dnrleu, Ga.
Nelson Whitney, New Orleans.
. Birmingham, Ala.
F. G. Byrd, Atlanta.
It. II. Baugh. Birmingham, Ain.
tho ludomltnhlo pluck which la necessary
to carry him through a hard fought match.
Nelson Whitney, of New Orleans, Is
ranked third, nud thut this ranking Is just,
uobotly who has wi*n this “coming" golfer
In action can doubt. !u the last cbamplon-
Hll H4iutUcrii golf team Is doubti_. _
Schwarts is not In practice and ban not
been Ibis year. In spire of that, he quail*
fled fourth In the championship, defeated
month of practice, Mr. Schwarts could
beat sny player In the Mouth, and very
probably ho could. Mo, taking hla lack of
moitton ou one hand and the possibilities
conoitlon ou one hand and the posslbllltlet
*if his gaiui* ou tho other, fourth Is proha
bly nn equitable ranking for the Southern
A**oHntlou , s grst rhamplot,.
i.'na.i- —fifth with the sp
lat wrence Lust la goes flftli with the ap
proval of several of the ranking experts.
That be Is a wonder ut medal play Is
That he is a wonder ut ntcdnl pl_. _
quite I’vMcnt from tbo fart that no has
twice in succession t*een the ‘low-score man
In Mont hern chotnploushlps. That lie la not
us strong nt match play an at medal play
was shown by the fact that he lasted only
to the seml-linnl* this year, und that he
del not get that far tho previous year.
Noble A. Ilardoc has been given sixth
place largely, no doubt, oWTng to the fact
that lie was the runner-up In 19P3 to An-
ufably he Is u stout golfer.
Getting beyond sixth place In the rank
ing is a matter of guesswork, personal
oplulou a ml then some more guesswork.
I*.. ... II..I I, 4- ......IM. ...
haxe, from which they emerge bear-
lug three more names, which they tuck
“ .. 1 of their fist.
undecidedly onto the end of their list.
’ However, Jack Kdrlngton, of Memphis.
seemed to have, at least, n plurality. It
,1* gharri for anybody who has played with
Mr. Edrlngton on his own course—who has
after day nnd week nfter week*.
has seen him defeat uot only some of the
best players In tin* Mouth, but some of the
best In the country, to believe that he
could not defend a position better than
seventh. However, his showing In tourna
ments this year has not been good. Ho dhl
not reach the finals lit the Invitation af
fair over hla home course, ami was beaten
. ■ undoubtedly, lias every right
to eighth place, at least. Though he qual
ified In the second division In Memphis,
he proved the winner at Nashville, and
he showed that he In still hi form by
playlug the best routid In the qualifying
event In the recent Birmingham tourna
ment. Mr. Oliver plays n careful, steady
f ame, nud Ii likely to Ik* heard from lu
uture championships.
Another point where the writer feels
that ho Is not quite In touch with the
other men who submitted rankings Is lu
the placing of F. O. Byrd ninth. While
this was undoubtedly only Just, In v|ow
of the fact that the Atlnntn star has not
tlgarad In nny of the big tournaments of
the year, there JS little doubt that, placed
placed
n neutral course with any man lu the
Mouth and given all other conditions, but
’ng ability equal. Mr. Bynl could bold
mu with any of then*
It. II. Baugh, the *ccri>tary of the South
ern Golf Association, almost from Ire start.
Is given the tentn place. Mr. Baugh Is
'tie of the oblcst ami steadiest players
Whitney. He ims !h*cii playlug good pdf,
however, for tuauy years: ami In the flra?
Southern rhtttnplom’hlp be turned iii the
lowest qualifying wore.
With ton golfers ranked, a vast uuudwr
hate been left out whose claim** t«» uotlci-
iire \.try strong. It Is hard to a»*o, •for
example, how W. P. Hill eoulil lie over
looked. Mr. Hill w«» scuit-llnaltsi in the
championship of ISO*.', and ruuncr-up in 1904.
If anv■ on* of the last five players In the
ranging can beat him tS*gutnrly on u ueij-
tral course It would Ik* n surprise to the
writer and to all Atlanta players. Only
Mr. tllll’s III health during part of the
seoson can account for the fact that his
name does not appear among t&v flrst-leu.
Yule wa» beaten by tho Army In
1904. but nevertheless won from
Princeton and Harvard. It was "Jim*'
Hogan’s aggregation, too.
TECH 8CRUB8 WIN.
The Tech scrubs defeated Donald Fraser
Mat unlay afternoon on Tech Held lu a game
played botmeeu the halvea nml beferc the
big game. The seore was 2S to 5.
The lineup:
JM'IUM. DONALD FIIAHER.
Mulliolt, c Cook. c.
Mslholt, c Cook. c.
Ileiiderson. r. g — Simmons, r. g.
Amomus. I. g........ Wutsou, I. g.
Barnwell, r. t ..' .....WyUe, r. t.
McPherson, L t Walker, I. t.
Crane, r. e Desaansn. r. e.
Derrick. I. .* Klker. I. c.
Hmltli, q Crabh, q.
Jones, r. It Jenkins, r. It.
McClure. I. It Courtwright. I. It.
Vaughn, f. I* Powell, f. li.
Washington, Nov. i0.~ln 1906. Catcher
Kllng hit below the .240 mark, but this
year he boosted hla flgun*s to .M2.
Manager McGrnw says that Ames’ only
fault Is lack of control. A pitcher van
have no greater weakness.
"I think I could win the 19U7 lu n walk
If I could pull off a couple of deals I
would like to sev go through." says La Jolt*.
option on the New York Americans. It
Is uot likely that Farrell would sell, aw
he has made money there.
Bergen, of Brooklyn, has th« record of
lielng the'poorest hitter In tha National
League. Ho played In 103 games for the
measly average of .10. There are others
below Bergeu, but they played In fewer
games.
Magee wuh easily the liest Inside untu
of the Phillies last season. Ills hutting
and base running kept the l*hlllles lu the
flrst division. v.
The Beds will buve two good southpaws
uext geasou lu Welmer nml llltt. The lat
ter has U*eit tiouglit from the Man Frau-
It has lieeu learned that President Herr
mann, of the ciBcInatl Nationals, has an
0000000000000004>000000000O
O O
0 O'BRIEN AND MOIR ’ O
0 FOR CHAMPIONSHIP (?) 0
O Loin).m. Nov. 12.—The London 0
O fer u purse for a match between
O O’Brien and Moir for the world'* O
O ehamplon*hl|>. The match Is re- 0
0 gurded a* assured. The club 0
0 wishes tlu* figrht to take place 0
O fairly early next year. 0
O 0
000000000000000O0000000O0O
C0AKLEY NOW
BACK IN FORM
AS EUROPEAN SEASON WANES
WALTHOUR TURNS HOMEWARD
After a sojourn of month! In foreign lands, Bobby Walthour will soon
sail away for Atlanta, determined to make good his promise to eat un
Atlanta born-and-bred turkey on Thunksglrlng day.
Bobby will be home In about two tveeks. He will be accompanied by
III* wife, who was with him In Europe all the summer. He writes that lie
wus never In better form, und from his recent nice* In Paris und Berlin,
one must Judge that this Is true. ,
Bebby had u sunstroke while riding In Paris severalWeeks ago. II*
fell unconscious at the foot of the track. He was tuken to his hotel
apartments and It was several duys before he was anything like hi* for
mer self. 11-11(1 characteristic pluck, ho challenged his opponent to an
other ruco. Tho ehullengc was accepted and Bobby won.
Slnco then he has added a whole string or scalps to his belt. The
lie»t riders of Germany, France und. Rnglund have been forced to ac
knowledge Iris su|<crlority.
It Irf understqp.l thut Bobby's first race on American soil will be at the
Stadium, lu Atluntu, on December 2. lie will again enter the six-day
race at Mudtson Square Garden.
MEN. WHO HELPED TECH WIN
Washington, D. C„ Nov. 12.—Andrew
Ooakley Is now under the .are of Mike
Murphy, the fumous trainer of the
University of Pennsylvania athletes.
Murphy Is putting the pitcher'under
a special course of training, which has
greatly benefited him. It wan thought
that t'oakley was on the decline last
summer, but Andy's appearance at
present would not give one this Impres.
ston.
If ('oakley comes around all right, he
rill not be released by the Athletes.
Was the asking for waiver* on
■But o
Schreck. Uross and ('oakley a trick on
three are very likely to remain on the
club's |ay roll next year.
FROM LEFT TO RIGHT THE MEN ARE; SWEET, M'CARTY, BROVVN
AND ASSISTANT COACH BEENE.
McCarty made two of the touchdowns, Sweet made the third an.l
Brown kicked two goals and did some sensational punting. It va*
Brown s great punting and the ability of the Tech men to get down under
the klckes which lieat Georgia. ,
This snapshot was taken the day before the game. Brown did not get
Into practice that day or any of the previous days of last week.
OO0O0000000O0O0O00000OOO0O
O WASHINGTON TRAINS
O IN GALVESTON, TEXA8. O
0 _ ' 0
0 Washington. Nov. 12.— The 0
O Washington baseball club will O
O train at Galveston, Texas, next O
O .spring, according to word re- 0
0 celved from Manager Cantilllon O
0 yesterday. This will enable the 0
O Nationals' new chief to have a 0
O full month's time In- selecting his O
0 regular team. o
O00O00000OOO00CO000OOOOOO0
ML Pleasant was the only India*
who did not come out of the Errant**
game without Injury. HI*, however, w
not serious, and he will be sure to be »*
prominent as last year when the ra
dians strike the Stadium.
FOOTBALL PLAYERS
Take your old felt hat* to Bnsscy*
to bo cleaned and reshaped. 2-t*
Whitehall itrecL