The Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, GA.) 1906-1907, June 16, 1906, Image 12

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V "I I Wra att,anya OBondim 1 , .WuftM?, TOe m am: ns lanFa Players Robbi :d ef Game ILL / J!M! ilL New Orleana. La., June 1*.—Smart ing under the treatment accorded them by the Pellcane and their aup- porter* on Friday, the Atlanta end New Orleana team* fought It out again befor* 3,000 excited fan* and beneath cloudy aklr*. continually threatening rain, th* game proceeding aa follow* Firat Inning. broiler hit* to right field for one hag. Winter* popped fly to pitcher. Croaler out at firm on double play. Smith grounded to aecond; out at flrat. One hit: no run*. Rlckert filed out to (hort. Cargo walk*. Blake grounded to aecond: out at flrat, Cargo trotting to necoud. Knoll died out to aecond. No hit*: no run*. 8*eond Inning. Jordan out. third to tint. Fox 'grounded to pitcher, out at flrat. Stln- «nn grounded to third, out at flrat No hit*: no run*. Beck grounded to third, out at flrat. Bird grounded to pitcher, out at flrat. O'Brien fll*d out to center field. No bit*: no run*. Third Inning. Mora* fouled, the ball hitting Umpire reaumrd, Mora* filed out to center field. Ever* get* ante hit to right for one bag. Hughe* grounded to pitcher. Second baaeman drop* ball and both runner* aafe. Croaler grounded to aec ond, who fumbled ball, and aafe on flrat. All aafe, haaea full. Winter* filed out to center field; no advance. SmltH grounded to pitcher, out at flrat. On* bit; no run*. Stratton walk*. Oueae filed out to right field; no advance. Rlckert filed out to eecond. Cargo hit line drive to pitcher: too hot to handle. Safe on flrat. Stratton to aecond. Blake filed out to pitcher. One hit; no run*. Fourth Inning. Jordan filed out to right field. Fox filed out to catcher. Sttnion hit to left field for one bag. 8tln*on out trying to ateal aecond. One hit; no run*. Knoll grounded to ahort, out at flrat. Beck hit* to center for one bag. Bird filed out to flrat. O'Brien, who aplked Ever* In Friday'* conteat, roundly hlaaed by the apectator* at both time* up. He grounded to aecond; Beck out at aecond. One hit; no run*. second. Four hita; three run*. KnoJI filed out to aecond. Beck aln- gled to center. Bird filed out to first. O'Brien grounded to second, out at flrat. One hit; no run*. Ninth Inning. Ever* grounded to short’, out at first. Hughe* grounded to pitcher, out at first. Crosier filed out to right. No hit*; no runs. Stratton singled. Oueae struck out. Rlckert singled to single. Stratton to aecond. Cargo hit and Stratton scored. Rlckert and oJrdan collided at *eeond; time called. Rlckert ruled out at sec ond; Stratton at third. Blake grounded to short. Cargo out at second. Atlanta— R. H. PO. A. E. Crosier, If. 0 1 ft 0 « Winters, rf. 1 0 1 ft i K, Smith. Sb 1 1 1 3 ft Jordan. 2b. 2 1 5 3 1 Fox, lb 0 2 10 0 ft Htlnnon, of. 0 2 2 0 0 Morn*, ns 0 ft 3 2 ft Evers, 0 1 4 1 0 Hughes, 0 1 2 2 0 Totals 4 9 27 12 2 New Orleana— R. ii. PO. A. E. Hlokert, If 1 1 1 ft 0 Cargo, aa 0 2 2 1 ft Hlake, 2b 0 0 ‘J 3 2 Knoll, rf 1 1 1 ft ft Heck, lb 0 2 17 ft 1 Hint, c 0 ft 3 1 0 O'Brien, 3b ft 1 0 2 0 Stratton, <• 1 ft 4 2 0 Gues*. ft 0 1 » 0 Totals 2 i 27 IS 2 Summary—Two-baa* hit—Fox. Dou ble play*—OuOse, Beck to Blake; Morse, Jordan, Fox; Bird to Blake. Struck out—By Hughe* 3, bu Guess 1. Base* on balls—Off Guess 1, off Hughe* 6. Sacrifice hit—Beck. Stolon bases—Rlckert, Jordan. Attendance— 1,000. AT LITTLE ROCK ft. II. B. UttleRock.02300440x—1317 1 Nashville. 002001000— 3 9 1 Batteries: Watt and Orr; Chinn and Well*. Umpire—Rudderham. AT MEMPHIS— " R. II. E. Memphis.. 000000100—.1 9 1 B’gbam... 000000110— 2 9 0 Batteries: Lourks and Owen*; Wil helm and Matthew*. Umpire—Pfen- nlnger. AT flllHEVKI'dllT- , It. II. K. Shrevep’t... 100003000—4 5 2 Montgom'y 200050000—7 11-1 GEORGIA STATE. Columbus 1 Albany Amerlru* Waycross I Cordele ... ... 1 Valdosta 0 AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. Columbb* 401 103 00-— 7 * St. Paul 300 000 311— « * Batteries: Bergen and Ryan; Veil and Blue. Minneapolis .. ..300 000 100— 4 0 Toledo ....001 100 101— ( 10 3 Batteries: Kllrdy and Shannon Camment* and Abbott. Milwaukee nos 003 130—11 17 3 Indianapolis : ..000 001 000— 1 0 3 Batteries: Dougherty and Roth; Fisher, .Walker and Holme*. RACE RESULTS. Strenuous Doings in New Orl ?ans Gravaaand. Gravesend, N. V., June It.—Despite unfavorable weather a big'crowd came a-raclng here thl* afternoon with the with the annual renewal of the stake* with the renewal,of the 3!0;000 Brook lyn Derby of on* and a half miles and the rich tremont stakes for 3-year-old* proving thd attraction, the derby th* presence of the In terest to th* evenL while Sydney Pag et entered over-night the great colt Water Pearl and hla scarcely lee* dis tinguished mate, Charles Edward, win ner of the National'Stallion stakes. Owing to the heavy rain through the nigh the footing was not at Its beat. Probably 13,000 race goera wera on hhnd today. Paget'a Water Pearl won the Derby In 1.00 1-3. Accountant did not have • look In for. the money, Saraclneacn romping hbm* aecond and Golf Ball third. FIR8T RACE—Fay, 10 to 5, won; Jaunty, 4 to 1, aecond; Donna Elvira, I to I, third. Time, 1.03 3-3. SECOND RACE—Mandarin, 3 to 1, won; Grenade, 5 to 1, second; Entree, 10 to 3, third. Time 1:4* 2-3. THIRD RACE—Water Pearl, 7 tolO, won; Saradneaca, 3 to 1, aecond; Golf Ball, 4 1-2 to 1. third. Time 1:001-2. FOURTH RACE—Belmere, 0 toSR won; The Quail, 7 to 10, aecond; King Henry, 8 to 1, third. Time, 2:37. I PTH RACE—Coy Maid, 3 to 1, Conslat- What Are Our Boys Up Against ? PRESIDENT JOYNER SORE OVER THAT “RAW DEAL" won; Fllpflap, 6 to 2, aecond; Com enL 3 to 1, third. Time, 1:4* 2-3. SIXTH RACE—Rice, 11 to 20, a Fifth Inning. Morse strikes out. Evers flled nut to short. Hughes hit safe to left for one bag. Crosier sent hot liner to pitcher, who stopped It and out at first. One hit; no runs. Stratton strikes out. Guess drivss one to pitcher, out at first. Rlcksrt walks. Csrgo grounded to third, out at flrst. No hits; no runs. 8!xth Inning. Batteries: Frits and Ryme; Malar- key and McAleese. Umpire—Buckley. SOUTH ATLANTIC. Macon 4 Augusta ... ., i Clarke and Roblnaon; Moore Carson. Winter* grounded to aecond, out at Itn grounded to ehnrt, out at flrat. Smttl flrat. Jordan walk*. Fox lylt aafe to right Held for two bags, acoring Jor dan, Fox going to third on throw In. stlneon flled uut to center Held. On* bit: one run. Blake walka. Knoll hit aafe to left Savannah 0 Columbia 1 Raymond and Berry; Helaman and Sweeny. SOUTH ATLANTIC. Jarkaonvllle-Charieeton gam* post poned; rain. going to third. Knoll to second. Bird grounded to second, Blake out at the plate, Knoll going to third: Bird eat* on first. O'Brien hit safe to right field for one bate, scoring Knoll, Bird going to third. Catcher threw to aecond and Knoll out at the plate. Two hits; on* run. Seventh Inning. field for one bag, advancing Blake. Heck hit* to pitcher, out at flrat, Blake Moree out. abort to first Ever* grounded to, second, out at flrat. Jlughea fanned. No hits; no run*. Stratton grounded to aecond and on fumble, aafe at flrat, Gueae grounded to short and on double play Stratton out at aecond and Gueee at first. Rlck ert walked and stole second. Cargo filed to right field and on error aafe at flrat, acoring Rlckert. Cargo went to aecond on the throw Id. Blake out, pitcher to flrat. No hits; one run. Eighth Inning. Croaler bunted and waa aafe on first Winters bunted to pitcher, forcing Cro- xler out at aecond. Smith hit to right field for one base, advlnclng Winters to third. oJrdan hit to renter for one AMERICAN. Boston 000 000 000— 0 4 1 Chicago JOt 020 00*— ( 1 3 Batteries: Tannehlll and Arinbrus- ter; AHrock and Sullivan. New Tork 300 001 003— I 10 1 Detroit 000 100 001— 3 4 3 Batteries: Cheabro and McGuire; Killian and Warner. Philadelphia ,.000 020 200— 4 It 3 Cleveland 010 203 02-— 0 14 3 Batteries: Bender and Schnick; Rhoades and Bemls. NATIONAL. Cincinnati not 20s lit— ill l Boston ... 000 000 040— 4 7 4 Batteries: Welmer and Schlel; Toung and Needham. game poat- Phlladelphla-Chlcago pontd; rain. Brooklyn-Pittsburg game postponed; rain. Ht. Louie 001 010 000— 2 3 2 New Yor)t 411 100 32*—11 * 0 Batteries: Brown and Raub; Taylor and Bowerman. . won; Optician, 4 to 1, second; Fire Brand, 100 to 1, third. Time. 1:11 4.6. SEVENTH RACE—Sir Caruthers, 3 to 1, wonfll Progress, 13 to 1, aecond; Llatlesa, IS to 2, third. Time, 1:12. - Hamilton. By Private leased Wire. Hamilton, June 14.—Here are 8 to 8, lay'* racing result*: FIRST RACE—Loupanla, won; Asellna, 3 lo 3,’ second; Dixie iwa, I to 1 Andrews, 8 lo 1, third. SECOND RACE—Mias Ceaalrian, 4 to 1, won; Pedro, 3 to 1, second; Mon- telltnar, 3 to I, third. THIRD RACE—Wild Range, 5 to 2, • Aaaawg-e wlk v* aati iituiflt , O 111 m, won; Gypanlso, 4 to 1, eecond; Casa- dnre, 4 to 1, third. FOURTH RACE—Factotum. ^ t<^ 1. won: Nonaenae, 2 to 1, second ful. 4 to 1, third. FIFTH RACE—Judge Richards, 2d to 1, won: Redando, I to 1, second; RACE—Stoeaael, 6 to 1, won; Sheriff Bell, 3 to 1. second; Blue Grouse, I to 1. third. SEVENTH RACE—Hilarity, 3 to 3. won; Wistful, 0 to 2, aecond; Kamerun, 3 to 2. third. Kenllworthi By Private Leaaed Wire. Kenilworth, June 14.—Her* ar* to day's racing reaulta: FIRS TRACE—Platoon, 5 to 1, won; Edict, 8 to 3, second; Avauntes, 7 to 3, third. SECOND RACE — Pulque, even, won; Dave Lewis, I to 1, second; Pterepont, 18 to 1, third. THIRD RACE—Elliott, 7 to 1, won: Wing Ting. 3 to 1, second; Uromobol, 7 to 2. third. FURTII RACE—Proon, 12 to 1, won; Robbie Kean, I to 1, second; Red Leaf, 4 to 1. third. FIFTH RACE—Mescal. 8 to 1, won; Ancient Witch, 4 to 1, eecond; Day time. 8 lo 1, third. SIXTH RACE—Blennenworth, 8 to 3, won: Silver Wedding, 3 to 1, second; third. Hyperion, 2 to 1. Windsor. By Private Leased Wire. Windsor, Ont., Juno 18.—Her* are today's racing reaulta; FIRST RACES—Jerry Sharp, even, ■ melt won;, T. Wllroy, 5 to 1, second; Stanley, 12 to 1, third. ' SECOND RACE—La Pucelle. even, won; Fox Mead, 8 to 1; second; Sunny Brook. 30 to 1. third: THIRD RACE—Bon Mot, 4 to 1. won; Ecclamatlon., 8 to 1, aecond; Be linda. 4 to 8, third. > ' FOURTH RACE—Peter Sterling, even, won; Ohyeea, aecond; Shine On, third. FIFTH RACE—Chandler, S to 2, won; Wabash Queen, even, second; Asel. 5 to 1, third. SIXTH RACES-Frank Collin*. 3 I, won; Denamore, 18 to 1, aecond; Reticent. 8 to 1, third. OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO WHERE THEY PLAY TODAY. O O Atlanta In New Orleans. Nashville In Little Rock. - Birmingham In Memphis. Montgomery In Shreveport. O0O00000 00 00 0000000 "BOBBY” WON FINAL EVENT DEFEATED BOTH HALL AND Me LEAN IN EXCITING RACES AT COL18EUM. Latenla. By Prlrste leased Wire. Lntonla, June 1(.—Here are today's racing reaulta: FIRST RACE—J. K. F., 10 to . won: Nnedsha, 4 to 3, second;- Begonia, 1 to 2. third. SECOND RACE-MVoolma, 8 to 1. won; Medrenev I t* 2,.second; Antrim, 2 to 3, third. THIRD RACE—Devout, 7 to 5, won: Major C. J. Carson, 4 to 3, second Ralbert. I to 3, third. FOURTH RACE—Sir Huon, 11 to 8, won Dutch Barbara. 3 to 1, aecond; John Carroll, 2 to 2, third. FIFTH RACE “ ’ ,CE—Bell Scott. 3 to 3, won; King Leopold. 1 to 2, eecond; Froward, even, third. SIXTH RACE—Concert, 11 to 8, won; Monachord, 8 to 5. second; Hub- hard, ouL third. League Standings CLUBS— Shreveport. . . New Orleane. Atlanta Birmingham... 80UTHERN. Played. Won. Loet. . . S3 22 30 81 .3(1 .310 .472 .43* .378 Stinson singled to left, ad vancing Fox to second. Slone tiled out to center Held end Fox waa doubled at ANDERSON OFF WITH $7 FINE Little Rock. Ark.. June 16.—Andy Antler* non. the Little Rock catcher who became Involved In a difficulty with Umpire Ruck* ley during Tuesday's game with Binning- ham. pleaded guilty In a Justice court to the charge of disturbing the peace and was fined SI and costa, amounting In all to SIT. Aaalatant Prosecuting Attorney Helm, who represented the- elate, waived hie costs, emountlny to $10, reducing the fine to |7. Fought Until Exhausted By Private Leased Wire. Benton llnrtx*r, Mich., June HI.-In the ninth round of one of tin* fiercest ring bat tle# ever fought lu Michigan, Benny Yangrr of Chicago won from Johnny Morrison of Ofthkneh In thU city ln»t night. It was not a clean knock out, hut Moral eon. battling like e demon, loet bis strength end bettered by a volley of right and left Jabs to the Jaw. sank to the floor exhaust MORE SPORTS ON PAGE SEVEN. 1« h NAT KAISER Si CO. C«irfldsntlal leant on valuable*. Bargains In unrtdttmtd Diamonds. 1« Decatur St KImbaH Hsus*. SOUTH ATLANTIC. Clubs— Played. Won. Lost. P.C. 61 23 1* .327 61 28 21 .871 32 27 -23 .60 42 13 33 .46( 4S 23 27 .44* 4* 20 2* .402 NATIONAL. Played. Won. Lost P.C. .470 .(47 .818 .534 .441 .2(7 .211 .303 AMERICAN. Played. Won. (3 >( .(II .311 .811 .110 .310 .140 .2*4 CHINN IS RELEASED. l.ttlt* Rock. Ark., June II.—Manager Zim mer lisa ret **•*.! Pitcher Tnm Chinn Im ran** h* waa snaM* f» ptfrk oa* gam* a w**k. it* r*tnmad this morning lo hit bom* la Clnrracf, Mr. Bohlty Walthour promt th* winner of the triangular motor-peml race which waa held at th* Coliseum Friday sight. The Atlanta boy trimmed Hugh McLean of Bos ton ami Tommy Hall of London In turn and pmred hlmaelf to b4 by far th* fastest man of the trio. The flrat heat was Iwtweon Hall and Mc Lean, aud It waa marred by th* fact that McLean's saddle dipped. If* was given time to repine* It, but after resuming th* nr* tin- Sent proved fo b* out of place again and McLean Mopped and th* rnr* was awarded to Hall. ‘ In the aecond heat Wallbour beat Mc Lean and In the third be-rode a-great con test against the Englishman, defeating him In fine stylt Hall aud MrLean left after the raee for Boston, and Walthour will Join them latar. All three will rare at Revere Bench. FREEMAN WINS ANOTHER CUP RETURNS FROM WARM 8PRINGS WITH FIR8T PRIZE—NEWS OF THE SHOOTERS. D. Freeman, th* best- amateur trap shot In Georgia, and oa* of the beat In America, returned Friday from the three- day Interstate ghoot In Warm tlprtngs, (la., where be won a handsome loving eup. Ilia score, 171 out of a possible 400, waa tb* beat aeon mad* by any amateur and waa only lieaten by one man. H. J. Bor den. c professional, who bad tb* high average for professional,. In the Internals ghoot Mr. Freeman weut up against some of the beat Shota In the Koutb, nml bis showing wn* a remarkably good one. -B. II. lVorthen, alto of Allnnfn, was at the about and made a good ahowlag, shoot ing especially well toward tb* end. Chief Joyner, the president of the local baseball association. In Indignant at the happenings In New Orleans Fri day. Tm going to run this thing down;" I don’t rare what It costa. It's dirty work somewhere." he said. “They arrested Otfo Jordan because he tried to- get evidence. Then they took th* ball away from him, and they say that they ar* going to keep It for evidence. Welt, anybody knows how that will work. "I have written Preeldent Kava- naugh asking for an Impartial Investi gation. If our boy* are wrong I want to know about It. Of course I wish they had finished otft the game. But it I* possible that befor* the game was forfeited ao many people got on the field that It was Im possible to go on. “I never taw the people of Atlanta *0 worked up over anything In the world as they ar* over thla. Business men of Importance have come to me today and asked that 1 withdraw from the Southern League. They want a league made up or Atlanta. Savannah, Charleston, Chattanooga and Knoxville. Thby fee clearly that we cannot get a square deal In the Southern League. "That man Frank has a line Idea of SORRELL IS BADLY HURT Special to The Georgian. Little Bock. Ark., Jane 11—Pitcher Bor- rell, of the Neebvllle teem, le mt Ht. Vin cent Infirmary with n badly cut arm end It le doubtful If be will ever again be able to do eleb duty. Hla right arm la the one Injured. The accident occurred In HorreM'a room at the Capitol hotel. While he waa dreealug for yesterday's gahie with llohannon, hie roommate, he engaged In a friendly eenffle. Bohannon grabbed him by the belt, and In hla effort to get away the belt broke and HorreR fell,- and hla arm atruck the Jagged edge of a broken earthenware cue- padore. The ulnar artery and eerernl llgn* meats and muacfea were cut. He suffered, the lots of considerable blood. AUSTELL DEFEATED* 8peclnl to The Georgian. VlUa Rica, 'Ga., June -11-Villa Rica de feated Austell In. a pretty game of base ball Thursday by the score of 14 to 2. The feature of the game waa the pitching of Nalley and the fielding of Will Kinney, for Villa Ulca. fever ; gratitude. Last year yellow ... drove him out of New Orleane anV| , nno hi* team were wanderers over tht '*“ —gj What did we 3* face of the earth g then? Why. we offered him the u.e our ball park, the beat In the Iea tu . sod In the best drawing town. WcfC he came up here, and what happened- The people Of Atlanta got too much baseball and aa a result we lost money probably a thousand dollara. ' “And now look at what Charley Frank I. doing. I'll tell you one of th* thing thnt the public does know: While ne was here last he had hla player* going around among ra , suspended men trying to get them u> admit that they were getting money from ua In an effort to prove us above the fourteen-player limit. That's th. kind of a man Charley Frank la. “I'll fell you another thing. Ever, will make affidavit that after O'Brien slid Into him the'New Orleans player told him he did icon purpose and that he tried to break his leg. “If* certainly a funny thing that the only three catcher* In the league who have been spiked ar* Ever*. Arch er and Grafflun and that all of them were spiked by New Orleans players Isn't, there something significant In the fact that the two teams whose bien were spiked were lighting with New Orleans for the pennant?” MONTGOMERY BADLY HURT Special to The Georgian. Memphis, Tenn. t June 16.—Roy Montgom- •y, the Barons' third basemnn, left for Birmingham this morning with a badly mashed finger. He was Injured In the third Inning of the game yesterday, but said nothing about It and- played to the end. Afterwards, when he went to the city hos pital, be learned that hie finger woe frac tured. Vaughan hae wired to Meridian for A!- cock until Montgomery It able to play. FARMER BROWN RELEASED. Special to The Georgian. Memphle, Tenn., June 16.—"Farmer" Jnmee Brown, one of Whistler's aeeeta in 1904, left Inet night for hla Peunaylranis home. He ha* the consent of Maaacra Babb to sign where he pleanee. Brown lim been working elowly thla year. One gnaw week hue been ulwtit hla average, lit ahnwed little form and decided to ran*. Tom Chinn, a left-hander with Llttlt Bock until recently, may be added to flj Brown'# place In the alab corps. RATHER POOR FIELD FOR THIS YEAR’S SUBURBAN Mr. Freeman leave# Saturday night for the Grand American handicap, the Mg four day shoot for the championship of America, which will lie held at Indianapolis thla year. It begins Tuesday aud lietween ft) and 400 of the beat shots In America will be there. The Atlanta Gun flub will hold Its regular weekly shoot Saturday afternoon on the dab grounds, while the Atlanta Athletic Club will pnll off Its weekly shoot at the tame time at Kaat l*ake. RACING BEGINS AT OVERLAND PARK By Private Leased Wire. Denver, Coin., June 16.—What promisee to lie the greatest race meeting ever held at Overland l»ark opened today. It will continue nineteen days. .Never before has there lieen such an abundance of high- class horse# tut hand, and the Jockey talent Is of the very best. A dosen or more good stakes are to be run during the meeting. Aa nana! the Colorado Derby ts the event of the openlug day. By J. 8. A. MACDONALD. New York, June If.—On Thursday an other milestone In the annual round of the metropolitan tnrf will have been reached with the running of the $20,003 suburban handicap at Hhrepabcad nay, the home course of the Coney Island Jockey Club. It Is the last big race of the distinctly spring term of racing, the meetings which follow at Brighton Beach and Saratoga Springs, N. Y., In July and August t*lng regarded as the mid summer span In the yearly turf calendar. Hheepsbead Bay la oftentimes termed the 'garden course" and one only needs to go dowu early on the day of suburban handl cap running—long before the Invasion of a ruthless army of high-spirited race-goers— to catch the aptness of thla appellation. Everywhere biasing flower Imda, artistic rookeries and prettily trelllced vinery la to be teen lighting up the vast espnusc of green spreading award, alaa, all to Im crushed, smeared and obliterated with the oncoming of the Uiouaands a short while later. Metropolitan handicap afternoon at Belmont park Is proverbially cold and chilly, while the Brooklyn handicap Is a race of tht masses and "plain friends of the Messrs. Dwyer, not an affair of social eclat. The field will be comparatively small thla year, and, like, the Brooklyn handicap, which Tokalon. a ft-to-1 shot, won. and tbs Metropolitan handicap, which went to a selling plater. Grapple, a lft-to-1 chance, the suburban handicap may fall to a rank out- abler In IM. John A. Drake will very likely start Ort Wells, who is training finely. Rose ben's right hoof Is spilt and he will Im reserved for sprinting only. It the future. "Diamond Jim" Brady Is dr- pending upon the 3-year-old Oteenu, wbife Sydney Ikiget lias n strong hand In fair#- goruii and Tradition. Thomas ltltchcovk‘1 colt, Dandelion, who was a l»etter horse than Tokalon In the Brooklyn handi cap, Is a'sure starter. These are the losl rated chances In the forecast of the promi nent bandfeappers. A genuinely regretnble feature of thla year's suburban handicap la the disability of Burgomaster, the famous son of Ham burg, In tbo stable of JJsrry J’ayno Whit ney. lie Is n 3-year-old, and by hi# victo ries In the Carlton stakes and the Itchnont stakes many experts lielleved he would re peat the wonderful achievement of Afri cander and win the grent event ns a 3 ym* old. On Tuesday moralng Trainer Rodger* had Burgomaster galloping In prepn ratio# for the suburlmu handicap. The colt «ud- derily wrenched his fetlock bolding* »u<l came hobbling Imck to the stable. lie **• sent Imck to Brookdnle farm the next tl«j. He may Im taken up and fitted for raring next year. He will not Im seen again thin season. Ort Welle# or Otaaau are now aril liked by the smart Insiders. Herewith la presented st n glance t*f prolmlile field of starters, the Jockey*, prob able prices, etc., together with a tabnUr abridgement of the history of the Hnlmr- - ban handicap from Its Inception away In 1634: 1906 Snlmrlmn Ilandfcap-Tbree-yesr^.li and upward; on# milt and a quarter; : PROBABLE IIORSE. Ort Well* Oleenu Proper ......... Calraorm Tradition First Mason;.. $20,600. PUOBABLE . -w. WEIGHT. AGE. OWNER. JOCKEY. I’ll!' E John A. Drake..* Garner 1?3 ir m B. Brady .O’Nell W. B. Jenntngs Williams Sydney Paget .Davis .... Sydney Paget Homer C. r. n — Row# He well ... ...tweefa 106 Dolly Spanker It? Dandelion 197 Oxford T. Williams Perrin# Alex Shields Sbinr R. T. Wilson, Jr Burn* r. Tokalon Karaite Blandy 4 T* Hltchroek. Jr Radtke 4 J. McLnnghlln .....Hildebrand 4 Newcastle Stable Miller ..... 6 J. W. Fuller Bedell 5 James R. Keene McDaniels 4 August Belmont Jones RECORD OF THE SUBURBAN First. G*a*rat Monro* it) IShuIs* (4) Tmabadmr (II - Ranis 14) E h wood )6> **la*tl )4) list** 14) laiaataka Montana Ht Ix>wl*nd*r )H Haauipo 14).. m toe i Henry ef Navarre ih.. - Brash t«» ES ■jif War East* (4) lltebaKHKt (Itap) 14).. Rfc-hamxl <4t Orl Aa mm* it) T*rrn t'ntu Hi T*rrn Cmt* tit Cawlna <«» Major IN*mo (O T*rrlfl*r •() H*a*«*l i.i Wr Walt*r ill Th* i‘nanaa**r Hi... Th* Wlnn*r Hi H**iprr Kgo ill Raasorktnmi ill RtkHhrrt 1(1 tV.f*rp*r* <41 P*«t*«-o*1 13) Jark of Hearts til.. Rataplan (4) Saranac «s> Wickham ill Flrrast Hi. Harco t4*.~ T**nj Hi Caul an ill Ijampllghlrr (I) Lampllsklrr HI.... Lampil*kt*r Hi cucrunl id Havoc ill., Olrten «41 Warreuton <«) 1 <>nld*n it) Sr l6La* n Raise <4».. Number of Starters. Time. 2:ir3-4 2:t» 1-3 2:12 1-4 2.12 2:97 1-2 2.-06 44 Sh 1 2:96 34 24614 2^? 44 fiwi-t mt ifij 2*3 14 t:W 24 2* ttm BM*r of Winner. i