Newspaper Page Text
Although It naturally hurts us to set* any
other team distancing our o # wn, Billy
Smith's boys nre playing a grent game.—
Montgomery Journal.
Strange. Imt that poems to ho the con
sensus of opinion.
Boston fight fans claim thnt Jlimuy Walsh
Is the only genuine bantam. ns ho Is the
only oiii' among the top-notchers who con
uiako tho weight.
of rhlcngo Interscholaatic moot. In every
event there will Ih» scholastic stars of more
than usual ability. The truck Is fast, the-,
field Is In good condition and with favoralde
weather Director Stngg looks for n record
breaking meet.
It Is difficult to pick a winner, or eren
to dope the vnrloua events neeurntely. It
Is predicted that not over twenty-five points
will In* needed to win. so widely will the
point* In* distributed.
U*Wl» Institute, however, from Its vic
tories In the unrthwesterii and Michigan
meets. Is considered a slight favorite,
though It will have to fight hard, especially
Little Englishman Lost Race
By Private Leased Wire.
New York, June 9.—The esse of Franklin
Murphy, the Irish athlete who Is barred
from this country for the novel reason that
he is so strong that hts heart can't supply
the necessary blood to feed his muscle, may
tieeotue su Atuerlenti after all. Influential
men have Itecome Interested In his case
ami the ruling may be changed.
their game In Idg league style, McCarty
accepting all chances without a fumble
whll. I'oyle tin ft two pnned Imll., whirl!
were difficult to mrh. Nosh, nt short
on.l MttrbrII. at omad. aloo wore henwa. ’
Btrnch oot. bj Msnetmi 10, tijr Wutttlr.
w? IS.
Krow lijr loolncs: B. n. E.
• ■"oyrrn .....009 #»«»--’ * <
Ilrokrr* 000 009 100-1 ( JI,
Ilatterle.: U»nm and C»rlc; Whittier ,
and McCartv. I'lnnlro ita*
MAHER
• Um*«Y r\AwL m.VD PACEMAKER.
Tommy Hall, motor-paced champion of England, proved
Watthour in the series of races just completed.
Button.
Team Leaves for Lohg Hard Trip
THE SUBURBAN, WORTH $20,060,
QUITE LIKELY TO GO TO AN OUTSIDER
By J. 8. A. MACDONALO.
New York. June 9.—With the Suburban
handicap—the mosf coveted prise on
turf calendar—to l»e run within the next
few days (or, to be correct, on Thursday,
June 21), devotees of racing from Han
Francisco, Cal., to New York, N. Y„ arc
Just now rubbing their eyes and betbtnklng
themselves of the probable outcome of the
momentous struggle. A Tokalon may win
the Suburban handicap this year, for, like
the recent Brooklyn handicap, the field
for tho approaching Suburban handicap Is
distinctively meager In quality, and likely
as not a rank outside selling plater may
come on, after the claas hornet* have fought
themselves Into the ground, and win by a
fluke. There you have the sum and sub
stance of Tokaldn, a 26 to 1 shot, wlnnlug
the $20,000 Brooklyn handicap on May 21
. at Gravesend. Do not scout the possibility
of the very same thing occurring In the
Suburban handicap—In fact, the remem
lira nee of Tokalon Is going to make tbott
sands of speculators chance a flyer on th«'
tail-end choices In whatever little future
I netting tuny be had on the race—^“little
future lotting" being said advisedly, since
th» postal authorities at Washington. D.
have glveu the projectors of the ••Kid”
Weller future book on the Brooklyn hand!
cap to understand that no further trails
mission of beta on horse races through the
malls will tie tolerated.
The Suburban handicap, like the nrook
lyn handicap. Is worth $20,000, this amount
of money lielng divided among the owners
of the first three horse*. These fixtures
are two of a trio, the Brighton handicap,
the richest of them all, standing ns third
of the series. They nre nt a mile end n
quarter for horses, three-year-old* and up.
the Brooklyn handicap being tbe feature
event nt the annual opening of the Brook
lyn Jockey Club's spring meeting at Graves-
end. the Huhtirban hmidtcnp doing the same
^ rvlce for the mld-sumiuer meeting of tho
mey Island Jockey Club nt Hheepshead
buy, and the Brighton handicap lending the
hurrah effect on the first dny of the always
welcome meeting nt Brighton Beach, down
by the rolling ocean surf. The running of
any oue of them Is the signal for an exodus
of anywhere from 40,000 to 70.000 persons
from the city to tho Long Island racing
grounds. The turf is keeping pace with
tbe growing life of the country and each
year sees a greater number of racegoers
In attendance. For Instance, 66,000 paid
admissions were recorded nt Tteliuont pork
on Decoration dny this season—n record
'crowd for an American race track—and
folly 60,000 admlrera of the thoroughbred
will probably look on the finish of the
coming Suburban handicap.
At this time, Harry I'ayno Whitney seems
to have the best chance of winning, for he
has the wonderful three-year-old. Burgo
master, and the great mare. Artful, !»otb
the progeny of Hamburg, entered, urn! In
Im*111♦ for the race. Artful won the Brighton
lutridlcfip Inst year, but Is said to be not
quite herself Just now. Hbe may be with
drawn. Ou the other hfliid. Burgomaster
strikes one ns another Syaouby, the more
you get to know of bis capabilities. Orig
inally assigned 106 |H>uuds by the hail'll-
capper, lie must take up n twelve-pound
pennlty for winning the Belmont stakes at
Bcliuout park and the Carlton stakes at
Grareseud. With Burgomaster. It Is a
caw* of taking a good big colt against a
good small but older horse. Dandelion. The
latter has cooled out of Ills driving finish
with Tokalou lu the Brooklyn handicap
and will tome to the front In the Hiiburban
handicap a very doughty candidate. Though
hut alsmt fifteen horses will face the start
er the following still remain eligible:
• Lbs. I Lbs.
Ort Welles 126 1 Dolly Spanker 107
Olsenu ,.125 1 Oxford 107
Stalwart 125 | Dandelion 107
Artful 123 j Merry Lark 116
Proper 122 i Tokalon 118
Agile 122 f Santa CutaMmi 1»6
The Picket 120 I Pulsus 106
Itosebeu .123 j Kbituesha 103
Cairngorm 119 Burgomaster 116
Tanya 118 Jacqulu 103
llapld Water 117 Gnbismltli 100
Watertight 11H[ King Henry 100
Tradition Ufl i Jocund M
Lord of the Yale..115
Fils 116
First Mason 114
Colonial <ilrl 113
Illiiinly UC
llaiii'ii
Horn
Bedouin 110
Ormonde's Bight. 110
Oraxlnllo
Knight Krrnut....109
Ivan the Terrible.|0!»
Glorlfiei* 100
Go Between 108
Oliver Cromwell... 98
ltohenilnii 08
Kehnllnn 97
Muster of Craft...*97
Timber 97
Astronomer 96
Ccdcrstroute ...... 96
Albuiu
Itutflcnxo 93
Holscher
Auenssln
It will Im cheering news to the regulars
of the turf who follow the horses from the
summer grounds to the winter raring
course to know thnt the sport will be again
actively conducted nt San Francisco, Cal.
It Is a long fly from the present moment to
the first snow flurry mid the annual exodus
to the South mid Far West, and lu the
meantime the coast metropolis will have
entirely recovered from the recent disaster.
The humor of the city Is not now for rar
ing and theaters, but next autumn It will
be different. President "Torn" Williams,
writing to n friend here lu New York, this
past week Intimates thnt Eiueryvlllo will
open on scheduled time and race ns In pre
vious winter seasons. He wrote from Hop
laud. Cal., the home town of Messrs. Burns
A Waterhouse's Candelaria stnd farm,
am In very, very good health and shall Ite
with my turf friends In New York along
about October," he writes.
What Exchanges Say and
What We Think About It
Gllks lore# Harry Vnughnn like Satan
loves holy water. And Ynugban recipro
cates.—New Orlbana States.
Vaughan's popularity la something pretty
fierce, anyway.
Anything to heat Birmingham, aaya
"Bobby" Gllks, but he didn't have any
thing with which to do It.-Birmingham
Newa.
Not now, hut soon.
The Southern League's race has given
little room for settlement'of doubt so far.
At least four teams look strong enough to
win the pennant. There Is very little dif
ference In the strength of these four team*
and the chances nre thnt from now until
the end of the season the four will be
changing positions lu the first dlvlalou.
Atlanta Is tanking the strongest hid of
the bunch right uow, but Atluutn’s team
has always torn notoriously strong nt
home and notoriously weak on the road.
Walt until the Crackers hit the road and
they nre likely to tumble In a manner
pretty much the same aa that In which
they climbed. Atlantn fans are accustomed
to tht* kind of business and they are not
claiming the pennant right now. ns they
would have done two or three years ago,
when they bad not much experience In fnst
baseball.—New Orleans Item.
Well, old boss. If Atlanta can't do ns
well as New Orleans did then here goes
for a long run and a high Jump Into the
Chattahoochee.
"Every Uttle Bit Helps," says Atlanta.—
Birmingham Age-llerahl.
It does, say one more from Memphis,
for example.
Atlanta papers now see the pennant. It
ta still some months off.—Ill ruling hntu
Ledger.
The Birmingham press saw It before the
opened at all. -New Orleans States.
Charley Frank Is the most unhappy mag
nate In tbe Southern league—Montgomery
Journal.
How ilwiit Harry Ynughatil
A remarkable thing about the game to*
tween New Orleans and Memphis Sundny
la that only one ball was used during the
entire game, the tall lu play never getting
out of tbe Inetosiire.—Montgomery Adver-
econotnlca!
Be careful and take them all. This would
serve to furnish Gllks with more food to
talk awny.—Birmingham I**dgcr.
Now tb**y are Insinuating that Gllks talks
about his food!
above the water. For that reason Bir
mingham has Just and strong return claims
on the league, nnd no discrimination from
any quarter ahnuld be tolerated, either 4»y
the local association or by the directors
of the league as n whole. It Is n certainty
thnt Harry Yatighnu nnd the Borons were
brow-beaten throughout the western trip.
All of these things should be told the di
rectors, and told forcibly.
There Is oue other thing. Mnnnger Gllks,
In Birmingham nt present, should In* com
pelled to appear In*fore the directors and
explain tbe statements thnt lie In alleged
to have made In Atlantn lu reference to the
reported comldnntlon thnt exists. He was
quoted as anylng thnt Malinger Vnughnn
could not win n pennant. It matters not
how good his team limy be, or how fine
nn article of Imll It played, for the simple
reason that the other malingers of the
league "had It In for him." Manager Gllks
should be made to say whether or not he
made thnt statement, and If he did make
It. to explnln what was meant.—Birming
ham Ledger.
Yes, Rro. Bobby made the statement nnd
If we know Bobby he'll glndty explnln It.
NO RACING IN
OLD MISSOURI
THRE E BRIGHT STARS OF THE TURF WORLD. ,
In the center le lord of the Vale, Auffuat Belmont’* Ha«tln«» home, w hlch ha* been a ff<x*l w inner at odd tlmee. The head In profile 1* tnat ot
D. C. Johnson'* Ben Strome eprinter, who has proved pretty much of a flixle in distance event*.
LOUCKS, RELEASED FRIDAY,
SIGNS WITH MGR. BABB
"Lucky" Louckn, the pitcher released Frl
dny by Billy Hmith to make a place for
Btirnmn. has been secured by Charley Babb
for the Memphis tenni.
\ Babb will have to release p pitcher to
make room for Loticks, and It Is probable
thnt Leroy Taylor will be the limit. toroy
pitcher of grent ability nnd Babb Is
enthusiastic over his work, but he has not
been pitching any Imll during the spring
or aumyier and lu consequence Is not hard
enough to go Into competition with sea
soned twtrlers who have been working
cry day for nearly two motnha and n half.
Atlanta fans will l»e gnhl ro know thnt
toucka has landed so promptly nnd with
so good a team. He la a hard working
pitcher and has undoubted ability,
pitched good halt Thursday, In splto of the
fact thnt he lost, and he will undoubtedly
do well with the Babbltes.
This addition to the Memphis pitching
staff makes It one of the strongest In the
league. In Llebhart the club has n Jewel.
He has won eleven out of fifteen games
nnd those he has lost have been wonders.
Ho Is the man who all but bent Cincinnati
In the sprlug series nnd did likewise or
thereabouts for several other dubs.
Huggs Is nnother ninu who Is destined to
In* n league star, "lie Is pitching e
is good ball ns Llchhnrt." said Ruhb
Saturday morning, "and I don't think he
hna any renl superiors In the league. He
isn't wtunlug games, but thnt. Is due to
hard luck ns much os anything. When
watch him work I Just don't see how they
lilt him. He has everything."
SYS0NBY NOW
DOING WELL
By Private Leased Wire.
Knusns City, Mo., June 9.—The racing
game In dead In Missouri; the criminal
court llils morning found Charles Oldham,
a lh>oktnnker, guilty of receiving bets nt
Elm Itldge track and fined hlui $600.
The Missouri legislature two years ngo
passed a law agalust the receiving or regia
terlug of tot* at race rracks. Three weeks
ngo a race meeting was held for tho pur
pose of testing the law. Bets were received
at tbe track and registered lu Kansas City.
The grand Jury Indicted Oldham and the
trial has resulted In a conviction. Dr. J.
Gardner, president of the Kbit Itldge
Race Track Association, wns acquitted.
Oldham will appeal to the supreme court
HOT BA8EBALL AT COMER.
Wonder If Manager Gllks considers yes
terday's game "fair treatment?" He waited
over lu Atlantn. according to The Journal
of that city, that he could never get a
square deal here. That Is ridiculous.—Bir
mingham Ledger.
CUrlcs Murphy, presideut of the Culm, ts
with tbe team, but keeps In retirement.
There Is a general desire on the part of the
fans to get a glimpse of him. Come out.
Murphy, and stop blushing.—New York
Globe.
While It might be tertued presumptuous
to advise the management of the Birming
ham Baseball Club, something In reference
to the alleged combination against the
Barons should to Mid nt the meeting of
the league directors lu this city tomorrow.
Birmingham Is one of those few cities of
the circuit which serve la the aggregate to
make up the backbone and keep the heads
•f teams from Little Bock. Nashville. Mont
Hjieelnl to The Georgian.
June 9.--Comer and Bowman
tied In the second game of the series
played here Wednesday. The game wns
exciting from ihe beginning, but It reached
fever heat, when Bedding, of Bowman,
stole home In the ninth Inning, wtth two
men out and two strikes on the batter, thus
tlelng the soul'. In the tenth nnd eleventh
Innings neither team scored and the game
was called at tbe end of the eleventh on
account of darkness.
For the visitors. Bedding nnd Bussey
played star games, nnd Plttard pitched
well. Mttrrah aud Baker ptayed well for
the locals.
Score by Innings: It II. E.
Comer 102««3»<»-6 11 6
Bowman 001 <W 281 t»-6 8 10
Batteries: Porterfield and Htevena; l*tt-
tard and Bedding. t'mplrc. Hill. Attend
anee. 200.
In a very slow game—the ihlrd nnd Inst
of the series—Comer defeated Rowiunu
Thursday. The game was called early to
allow the I low ninu players to leave for
home, but an enthusiastic crowd of fnns
braved the burning sun, to root the home
team ou to victory.
I'ittnnl began the flinging for Bowin*ti<
but was touted out of the box In the sec
ond. and Bedding took Ids place, but fared
little better. Wilson, the "grand < **
■thrmport and mm Metnpbl* at iMaefanil, pitched hi. 8r»l fa
By Private 1 .eased Wire.
New York. June 9.—James R. Keene de
ntes that Hyson by, the "horse of the cen
tury," is suffering from an Incurable dla-
ease auil will have to 1m* shot.
, Keene snys thnt'the grent runner
hns been a victim of « skin ailment only,
nnd thnt he Is now on the rood to |>erfect
health. It was rumored thnt not only
Hysonhy. but Ills stable mate would have
In* destroyed.
i sow Hysonhy on Sundny," said Mr.
Keene, "nnd I received n tip today that
he hns continued to Improve."
BIG MEET FOR
SCHOOL BOYS
By Private leased Wire.
Chicago, June 9.—With several Inter*
scholastic records doomed, nnd In a meet
thnt promises to In* the greatest Inter-
schnlnsttc event In the West, nearly 300
athletes will gather from eleven states on
Mnrshall Field this afternoon to i
f_. - *- *
of i
Clark, tho Texas Leaguer,..Iff. doing nice
work for the Memphis team, and Brown
Is doing reasonably well.
Manager Babb Is looking forward already
to the prospect of losing I.lchhnrt and may
be Huggs to the big leagues nt the end of
the year, nnd he Is not nt all certain that
Xlcholl* will not go. too. They are nil
doing wonderful work and If they keep
their present stride they will In* nt the
top of the ladder In their respctlve classes
In tho league standings.
"l*U have n lot more mntcrinl around
which to build a club next year than I did
this year," Mid Mnnnger Babb. "This
spring I had nothing much left—In fact,
only three men, Horthurt, Suggs and
Brown. They were awfully good, but you
can't piny ball with three men, especially
when two of them arc pitchers.
"Next year I should have some catchers
ami some pltcbors left. Then, even If I
lose NlcholIs, I'll have myself at third nnd
Carey nt first. And I ought to hold my
outfield. With such n bunch I can build
pennnut winner, J hope. I think my
team Is playing goofi ball this year ns It
Is. It Is well within the limit nnd no
d'Mlglng. The bunch I have costs me less
than $2,71)0 a mouth nnd every contract I
hnve sent the league headquarters Is the
renl goods nnd no dodging. We nre getting
a lot out of reasonably priced players nnd
I am pretty well satisfied with the team.
We nre going home now for a good slay
nnd we have a long ruii of games ngnlnst
Little Rock. If we have good luck we
ought to go up pretty fnst for awhile."
Gllks has loaned Pitcher Beeker to Nash
ville. Poor old Nxabrlllc, If It weren't for
outalde help—money from Powell nnd play
ers from most anywhere—It Is hard to see
how tbe club would keep golug.
The Barons do not steal enough bases.—
Birmingham Ledger.
How ubout baseballs?
Wonder If there will In* any franchise
declared forfeited on next Saturday?—Bir
mingham Ledger.
Answer—No, Bo, not any, or even less.
Little Bock Is not In the same class with
other dabs In the league. Johnson, Do-
Armond, Douglass, Watt nnd Zimmer nre
the only men who nre Houthern league ma
terial on the club nnd these men nre crack
lug go<Mi oue*.—Birmingham News.
ATLANTA MEN
GO CANOEING
START SATURDAY MORNING TO
PADDLE DOWN THE CHATTA
HOOCHEE TO WE8T POINT
»o members of the Atlanta Athletic
Club, 11. M. Ashe and Dr. Cllutou Brackett,
left Hnturdny morning on n novel trip.
Paddling lu a small «*nnoe, equipped with
in ping supplies and ready to the minute
for whatever may linp|N>n lu the way of
Upsets and similar accidents, these two lu-
trepld canoeists will try to make their way
down the Chattahoochee to West Paint,
Ga.
Just how fur thl* trip Is. Is uncertain,
but Judging by air llni* aud railroad dis
tances It is considerably over 100 miles,
though protmbjy under 150. They expect to
uinke the trip lu two or three days.
Both uteu are experts with a canoe aud
perfectly at home In tbe water. In coitse-
ee thetr trip ought to be n wife urn!
pleasant one. •
Little Bock has won two games on the
present trip. Both of these were won from
Alabama towns, Montgomery nnd Birming
ham being the victims.—Birmingham News.
1 Nashville failed to put Atlanta on tbe
top yesterday, but watch Birmingham to
day, nays a Birmingham exchange, nnd
finally they did It. Few things will nmke
tbe Birmingham fun happier than to send
Gllks down the ladder owing to his bab
blings concerning the local club.
Several of the Birmingham players are
Improving In their Work every day, which
Is encouraging to nil who want to see Bir
mingham go to the top. Others, however,
nre hardly holdliyr their own, which Is n
drawback to the whole team. With such
pltcblug ns tbe local twlrlers nre handing
out now the* Bnron* v ought to be playing
peunaut winning ball. A little battling will
do the work.—Blrinltigbani Age-Herald.
Finns are on foot do add n little ginger
to the Pelican*. They might tarrow some
thnt Nashville has been taking out of
Hhreveport.— New Orleans States. *
Hod Fisher hns wou thirteen games out of
fourteen. Guess we ran tell you off hand
the name of the club thnt accounted for
the fourteenth. We will state,. as n sug-
geatlou, that the name begins with an "A."
Atlantn established, the Houthern league
record for the season, winning their elev*
enth straight victor)*. Three from Hbreve-
jM>rt, four from Little Hock and four from
New Orleans. That Is golug some.—Shreve
port Times.
You bet!
Jack Ely's sprained angle Is si
shape nud It will be some days
Is lu condition to play. Poor
vllle.
It Is snld thnt tbe billionaire Pellenu ng-
there are visible fenrs, too. In Atlanta. The
directors hnve a meeting Saturday.—Bir
mingham ledger.
Fenr not, old nport. We guess wc enn
stand it If Birmingham can.
being out for Interfering. Ardor's interw
ference caused some player to mlvnnre nn4
the putottf should go to the one who m»uM
hnve had the putout If no Interfprrnrp
ciirred. Wake up nnd read the rules-Nrv
Orleans States.
It seems that Charlie Frank was correct
when he stated thnt the Hhreveport scorer
Is Incompetent. The scores sent out by
the A. P. show It. In the nddeuda. It.
Smith Is said to he out for not touching
second base. As a matter of fact, Smith
wns not out until tho ball wan fielded to
some oue of the Hhreve|N>rt players, who
touched that base, which retired Smith,
the putout going to tbe player making the
play. Then again Crocker Is referred to aa
OUTLOOK BAD *
FOR M’GRAW
DOCTOR SAY8 HIS STAR PITCHER
WILL BE IN BAD SHAPE
ALL 8EAS0N.
By Private Leased Wlh*.
Memphis, Tenn., Juno 9.—A local special
ist who treated Mnthewaou when tlie New
York pitcher was suffering from uasql diph
theria during the spring practice, snld to
day when commenting on the showing 1 of
Mnthewaou In recent games, that In bis
opinion the worst has not come yet.
He declared that Mnthewson would en
counter hardships In breathing property
when the heated term arrived and thinks
thnt the lit effects of the umlady, nuiy c6n-
tluue all sennoii.
I
It I
f *
{mints U
1.1'vU I
tnrle* 1.
meets, l-
though It will have to I
against the Detroit. 1L„ __ ..—
Phillips. Joliet. Wheaton, West Aurora,
Kansas City and Setou. N. J., athletes. \
IRISH STRONG MAN MAY
BE ADMITTED AFTER ALL.
ATLANTA BROKERS PLAY
EXCITING GAME OF BALL
Special to The Georgian.
Conyers, Ga., July 9.—Ui one of the fast
est games of baseball ever seen in this city,
Conyers defeated the Atlanta Brokers yes
terday by a score of 2 to 1. It waa a
' battle from start to finish. Both
Whittlesey and Mnngum were In the pink
of condition and their work at critical
momenta was splendid.
Ill the second Inning It looked very blue
for the Brokers, when, with * ssTfi hit
a fret* pass to sack number one, tbe
l man up got In the way of whlttlesej'n
. filling the I hi**** with nobody out.
..I this Juncture, Whittlesey displayed his
ability, striking out the three ’ Tallowing
batsmen, and thus retiring the aid". After
the second Inning there was but one hit
.7 Whittlesey, until the eighth, when,
with a single and a base bn balls, the
Y m * n n P hit one of those hnrd-ro-
line-drives to center, which Stanton
If Clark Griffith ever succeeds In poibh-
Ing young Deiehnnty off ns a fielder It
as though lie will have n very rnluahl#
ninu. He Is certainly a sweet bitter. Ill
Is a well molded chap, nnd while he hat
none of the-grace nt l*at that charncterlwd
his famous brother, Ed, he mnunye*
them out with surprising speed nnd Jodp
uieut. He slapped out iwn elegnnt single!
off Smith T ties'lay and knocked Wall*-#
down n few times. As n fielder Itelehnaty
does not Impress one nt nil fnvortbly. H#
dropped a hit from Stone's Imt that woill
lmve 1nn*u easy picking for n member •!
the Bloomer Girls team. Still the lad rai
hit. That's the'.principal nsset. The IM4-
ing will come in time.—8t. touts I'<
Dispatch.
BEGIN SHOOT
FOR BIG CUP
SERIES OF EVENTS FOR DUPONT
TROPHY BEGINS ON SAT
URDAY.
r.'.ag iM
Tin- AU.ititn <J«II olnl>"» wrl.* «<
f..r lb* ppssof.lou »f Un- «>» JFj* '
Pont powder Company cup will |H 2*“ j
iirdny afternoon:
Accord in;?, to the
competition, the <**r _
with the I test score In tea **v**i»ts-
will lie Jield,**V4»ry Saturday all mm*" -
fOni-.h^ollDS In .Hi, Hnunlay
moti'Mimt* urift nnnmmi - wlwnOT
Hi,., im> iCioiidnt! ftir tin- «P- *
jnn.l<- l.y uim. wlitf Hut 'WJJ
out for thl- <n|> will !«• kn"
tovnnt 111, In 111"
Juki how Ion* tlir Saturday "
lutiuh, I* imi’,ria)n. hut <’ ; "y
on until tS, Ms lunw»!ut, , f' r ®“J}
which will’In- Riven aa 11,11.11 by iw
which will iw Riven u, • •• •
Inula Oun I’inli In the fall-
will laal three day,, anil will unit. * _
be attended by unlll.v of tlw e™ ck ‘
of the South.
twenty-eighth season, aad had no trouble]
in holding down the Educators.
ora l»y imdug*: V
be given at the new trap*
Athletic Huh .Saturday after""™ j
IIround* . have linen imt In *t2Ti
eecrjrthlilR. I* In .rejutlne*« fur •“*
The elnb hotuv la uow .nrupWvl *"
Rroumla nre read; for the re»slor . .
shoots. • •
ABLE SEAMAN
HITS SHARKEY
By Private Leased Wire.
New York. Jane 9—T
knocked down aud got a h ,-wi
from Able Seaman Fisher.
ship Alalttiua, now at the nr ‘*
yard. Fisher had gone *»t“ ‘ ^«
Fourteenth street saloon aiA
go into the Mg room In the rear
— — shout listening ^ 1 ; j
* v..
- -