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

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warn} Atlanta Players Robbed of Game l ^f° ^6 St renuous Doings in New Orleans • liWii «• I 1w PERCY H. WHITING 8 < “PHONEY BALLS,” DECLARE CRACKERS, AS THEY QUIT THE CAME IN DISfiUST What Are Our Boys Up Against ? DOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO O o O THE BALL WAS PHONEY, . .O O 8AY8 MANAGER SMITH. O O O O Special to The Georgian. O New Oilcan*, La., June 1C.— O O Manager Billy Smith, of the At- O O la n't a team, said: O O “A lively ball waa run Into the O O game. We asked for another 0 O ball, but Umpire Kennedy would 0 O not give It to ua. We gbt a 0 O raw deal." O O O O0000000 0 0 ooooooooo .Special to The Georgian. New Orleans. June Id.—fn a game na full of lurid Incidents ns a day !u Hustlin' Hus- «(a or a chapter from the most nwful of the I lend wood lllck series, Atlniitn waa yestenlay defeated l»y New Orleans 6 to 5 fu eight IntiIn**. Atlanta refused to Anfsli (Hit the game, and It was tliercu|M»» award ed to New Orleans b- -nplre Kennedy by the eonvenllpnsl score of 9 to 0. Ill the motion whlob ensmil, Otto Jordnn, cnptntu of the Atlanta bam. waa arreated oil the charge of Mtcnllllg luisebnlls nnd In*- . fore the Ineldeiit wna done with It took a cordon of |*dlre |o get him nnfely from the Hounds, for the New Orleans fans went nfter him. Imot on tearing him limb from leg. Atlanta quit the gnnie t$ccau*c the playera charged thst ('hurley Prauk or some of his /o\<f cohort* bad run Into the gnme bulla which were too lively for praetleal pur- Harley wns pitching for Atlanta and Manuel for the local*. In the first Inning the Crackers dropped on Manotd, l»ent tbo ball nil nfutihd the enclosure snd scored five . In the first Net* Orleans jmt one runner over. In \h% sixth they tallied two more. Nothing happened In the seventh nnd then twine the eruption. Atlanta did nothing In low half nnd nest mine the Pelican* to till* Imt. Bird, the 4r*t mail up, wna nn enay out, nnd then cauie O'Brien. The anld O'Brien Is n noto riously weak batter, but lie landed oil the caries of llarley and atnackcd the ball way out Into the Held. It took n most marvelous bound and went Into the bleachers. That wae u phenomenon which could not be explained except on the theory that the ball waa more lively than the rule# of the game a How. Hut this happening waa fame compared with what followed. Htrnttmi got a scratch hit and Manmd came after him at bat. Now. Moxte la one of the languid “Arthur Herman" enrt of batters, and nothing more than an eaay out la ever expected of him. And yet he walked to'the bat and knocked the (Mill over the fence for the second home run of the. Inning, lie and Htratton, of course, scored nml that put the I'ellcuna In the lead by one ran. Manager Nmlth had been ordered off the field In the aerentb Inning for throwing a ball over the fence, which, he said, was “punk." nnd Otto .Jordan waa In full charge. When the second home run came Otto frothed at the mouth, grabbed the ball that Umpire,Kennedy had thrown out to play with and declared that Atlanta waa tielng robbed by the use of ball* too heavily packed with rultlier. As .Ionian refuted to let the Atlanta team finish out the contest. . m V" w SORRELL IS BADLY HURT Bburlal to The Georgian. I.lttle Rock. Ark.. Juue 14.-Pitcher Har rell. of the Nashville team, la at Ht. Vln- • cut Infirmary with a badly cut arm and it Is doubtful If he will ever ngaln bo aide t<> do stab duty. Ills right arm la the one Injured. The kerhlent occurred In Sorreil'a room nt tlie Capitol hotel. While be waa dreaalug for yesterday's game with Bohannon, hta roommate, he engaged in a friendly scuffle. )<• i.annou graldied him by the lielt, nnd lt> hi* effort t»» get away the licit broke snd Harrell fell, and hla arm struck the Jigged edge of a broken earthenware cua- l adore. The nltinr artery nud several llgn- ments and muscles were cut. lie suffered, ti. lesa of considerable tdood. Fought Until Exhausted IK Private Leased Wire. Hutton Harbor. Mich.. June 16.—In the ti.nth round of one of the fiercest ring hat- ties ever fought In Michigan. Benny Ynnger rf Chicago won from Johnny Morrlaon of Oshkosh In this city last night. It waa not n clean knockout, hut Morrl 9-nItsttllng like a demon, lost his strength ami Irnttered by a volley of right and left jabs to the jaw, sank to the floor exhaust- ed FARMER BROWN RELEA8ED. 8pedal to The Georgian. Memphis, Tenn., June 16.—“Farmer" James Brown, ose of Whistler's assets In 1)94,-left last ulfht for hla Pennsylvania heme. He has the consent of Manager Babb to sign where be pleases. Brown has been working slowly this year. One game a week has Iteen about Ida average, lie skewed little form nnd derided to rest. -Tern Chinn, a left-hander with Little Iteek until recently, may tie added to All Brown's place In the slab corps. PITCHER MANUEL. This la the man who Pitched the phoney ball, and— Who hit the phoney home run— Which won the phoney game. 000000000000 0000006 0 O ACTION UNWARRANTED. O SAYS'MANAGER FRANK. O Special to The Georgian. O New Orleari*. La., June 1«.— 0 "The Atlanta players' action 0 waa unwarranted,; Had they requested that the empire keep the hall for Inspection, ! would aurely have agreed. V . "The umpire la eole ( Judge, and not the playera. (Signed) "CHARLES FRANK." 00000000000000000 no course waa la ft I'aipfre Kennedy except to declare the game forfeited to New Or leans. As soon as this announcement waa made nnd the crowd got up to go out Otto Jordnn innda a grab, for the hall In the hope of lielng able to use ft aa evidence against New Orleans. Manager Frank made a sus piciously strenuous objection to this nud finally bnd Jordan arrested, charging him I with petty larceny. Only the presence of a goodly force of po lice prevented a nasty row' nt this stage of the game. The loen! fans wanted to take It out of the Atlanta players and Atlanta players were ready to fight 'most auybody.- The score which follows does not cqatit; but, such aa It la It, here It Is: Thi* kind of bail playing ha, a scant wore* than tha b.»f trust. 0000000000000000 00 O WHERE THEY PLAY TODAY. PRESIDENT JOYNER SORE OVER THAT “RAW DEAL” ATLANTA. 4’roller, If Winter*, rf H. Hmltl). 3b Jordan. 2b. . Fox, lb Htlnaon, cf. ..... . Mor*e, aa IJver*. c AII. It. II. FO. A. B. ,3 1 t 2 0 0 . ft 1 0 2 1 0 . 2 0 1 2 2 2 .411320 . 3 1 1 II 1 1 .3 1 1 2 0 0 .402000 . 3 0 0 J11 . 3 0 0 0 2 0 Hurley, p Total*.. .29 6 *7 2$ 1* 4 KKW GRLBAN8. Rlckert. If. ..... . Cargo, ** Itlnke, Knoll, rf. . . Hock, 11 . . Bird, ef O’llrlen. Htratton. e Mnuticl, AH. It. II. FO. A. K. .3 0 0 3 0 0 . 2 0 0 0 3 0 . 4 1 0 4 2 0 .900100 .911700 . 3 0 1 2 0 0 .422121 .312030 .412021 Totnla .20 4 . 8 24 12 2 •One out when game wna forfeited. Hcore by lunlnga: Atlanta .ft0000ftft<k-4 Now Urleon* 1 0 0 0 0 2 0 »-« Hutnuinrr: Twobaae hit*. Jordan. Fox, G‘llrlen. Croxlcr. Home run*. u’Brlen and Manuel. Harrlfice hit*. Winters, Smith. Htratton. Jordan. Illrd. Htruck out. hr Manuel 7, by Harley 1. Baae* on balla. off Mnuiiel 3, Off llarley 5. Time, 2:48. Um pire, Kennedy. . _ AT COLISEUM. CLUBS— Played. Won. Lost. PC. Shreveport . . 61 $3 i* .427 New Orleans Atlanta . . . . 62 . 62 31 29 22 23 .695 •558 Bobby Walthonr proved the winner of Birmingham. Memphis . . . 62 29 2$ .558 the triangular motor-pared race which w** . 60 26 24 .520 held at the Coliseum Friday night. The Montgomery . 62 24 21 .4$: Atlanta boy trimmed Hugh McLean of Boa- Nashville . . . 65 24 21 .436 too and Tommy Hall of London In turn and Little Rock . . 50 i$ 37 .260 proved Itlnieelf to be by far tba fastest mao of the trio. The (rat beat waa between Hall and Me- SOUTH ATLANTIC. MONTGOMERY BADLY HURT Hpeclal to The Georgian. Memphis. Tenn., Juno 16,-Hoy Montgom ery. the Barona* third liasenian. left for lllrmlugham IfU* morning with a badly mashed Anger, lie wna injured In the .third Inning of the game yesterday, hut said nothing about It an<i played to the end. Afterwards, when he went to'the city hos pital. he learned that his finger was frac tured. Vaughan has wired to Meridian for At- cock until Montgomery Is able to play. CHINN 18 RELEASED. Special to The Georgian. Little Rock, Ark., June 16.-Manager /.tin nier has released liteber Tom Chinn be- esnse he was unable to pitch one game a week. He returned thla morning to hla home In Clarence, Mo. ANDERSON OFF WITH $7 FINE UMI* Rock, Ark., Jun, 1,.—Andy Antler- •on, the l.lttlo Rock catcher who bccamo Involved In n difficulty with Umpire Ruck- Icy during Tuesday's game with Birming ham, pleaded guilty In a Juatlce court to the charge of dieturhtng the peace aud waa lined II and costa, amounting In nil to $17. Asatutnnt Prosecuting Attorney Helm, who repreeented the state, waived iff••*,«•«,««••«•••««««••»,««l League Standings Club.— Rayed. Won. Loit P.C. Augusta .... (0 II It .*20 Columbia ... $0 II 22 .$<0 Savannah ... $2 U It .620 Charleston ... 4$ 23 3, .4(8 Macon .... 48 21 27 .428 Jacksonville . . 4, 20 20 .408 NATIONAL. CLUBS— Played. Won. Lost. P.C. Chicago .... 48 18 V 18 .170 Plttaburg . . .' 61 38 18 .647 New York . . $4 34 20 .630 Philadelphia . . 67 30 27 .626 St. Loula ... 66 24 32 .429 Cincinnati ... 67 22 36 .316 Boaton .... 63 16 36 .301 Brooklyn ... 67 33 16 .213 AMERICAN. Club— Played. Won. Loat. P.C. New York . . 61 31 20 .608 Cleveland ... 47 30 IS .017 Philadelphia . . 60 10 20 .000 Detroit .... 48 28 22 .643 fit. Lamia ... 61 21 26 .610 Chicago .... 48 24 24 .600 WselRngton . . 60 . 17 13 .340 Boaton .... 61 16 2* .214 hie costa amounting to 110, reducing the line to $7. AUSTELL DEFEATED. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. CLUBS— Played. Won. Loat. P.C. Toledo .... 63 31 31 .606 Milwaukee . . 48 27 31 .663 Columbua ... 66 30 26 .646 ljoulavlll. ... 60 20 34 .630 Rpeclal to The Urorglax Villa Rica, tla., June Iff Villa Rica de feated Austell lu n pretty game of twan- hall Thursday by the score of 14 to 2. The feature of the game was the pitching of Nalley end the Balding of Will Kinney, for Villa lllca. Minneapolis . . _ „ __ Indianapolis . . 60 SO 3« .400 Bt. Paul. ... 49 19 30 .138 NEW BATTING ORDER FOR AMERICUS TEAM (■pedal to The Georgian. Amerlcue. (la.. Jtin. lff-The hattlut order of Ibc America, team ha, recently ' undergone a coualderalde ahake-up. At preaeat It la: Poole, rf.; llrrunan. 2b, ; I Stephens, c.: Horrrlla, lb;; lb-coster. lb.: Westbrook. If.; Xewktrk, as.; Smith, rf.: Lamar. Whalen and Hpencar. pitcher.. Tha batting of the tram la now fairly good. Poole and Brennan, who lead off. are pretty, apt to get to tlrat. either tiy hitting the hall or getting a Imre on balla. Stephens la a rather bant hitter and Hot- ret la' earata are timely. With thla batting order the team ought to do batter work tffan before. MORE SPORTS ON PAGE SEVEN. k NAT KAISER & CO. Confidential le.ua on valuabltg. Bargains In unredeemed Diamonds. 16 Decatur St. Kimball House. GEORGIA STATE. CLUBS— Played. Won. Loat. P.C. Wayrroaa ... 32 21 9 .719 Cordala .... 21 16 10 .641 Columbua ... 13 19 13 .594 Valdoata ... 31 14 17 .463 Albany .... 31 - 9 22 .290 Amerlcua ... 23 7. 21 .360 FRIDAY'S RESULTS. Southern Leegua— New'Orleans 9. Atlanta 0 (forfeit.) . Nashville 3. Lltte Rock I. Memphis 4, Birmingham 6. 8hreveport 4. Montgomery 0. South Atlantie League— Macon 1. Augusta 0. charleston 2. Jacksonville 0. Savannah 3, Columbia 0. Georgia State League— Columbus A Albany 0. Waycroes 6, Amerlcua I. American League— Cleveland 6. New York 2. Boaton 3. St. Louis 2. Washington 10. Chicago 2. Philadelphia 4, Detroit o. National League— Chlrsgn I, Philadelphia 0. New York 2, Bt. Louis 1. Plttaburg 4, Brooklyn 1. Boaton 3. Cincinnati 1. Cetten Slates League— Vicksburg 3. Mobile 8. Baton Rouge I, Meridian 17. Gulfport ,. Jackson 1. Eaatern League— Newark >. Jersey City 2. Toronto 7, Montreal 2. Buffalo 9. Rochester 0. Baltimore 9, Providence 1. Atlanta In New Orleans. Nashville In Little Rock. Birmingham In Memphis. Montgomery In Shreveport. 0000000000000000000 “BOBBY” WON FINAL EVENT DEFEATED BOTH HALL AND Me LEAN IN EXCITING RACES I.can, end It wee marred by the feet that McLean's, saddle slipped. He wee given time to replace It. but efter resuming the race the eeet proved to l>e out of place again snd Hclesn .topped aud the rare wae awarded to Hell. . In .the second beet Welthonr beet Mo- Lean and In the tblrd he rode a great con teat against tha Englishman, defeaUng him fn tine atyl. Hall'and McLean left after the rare for Boston, and Waltbonr will Join them later. All three will race at Revere Beech. FREEMAN WINS ANOTHER CUP RETURN3 FROM WARM SPRINGS WITH FIRST PRIZE—NEWS OF THE SHOOTERS. II. B. Freemen, the beet nmateur trap shot In Ueorgta. and one op tha heat In America, returned Friday from the three- ■ley Interstate Shoot lu Werm Springs, tie., where hr won a handsome loving cup. Hie score. 971 out of a possible 40A wae the beet score made by any amataur and was only Iicaten by one men, II. J. Bor den. a professional, who had tha high average for professionals. In tha Interstate Shoot Mr. Freeman went up against some of the beet shot* In the South, and hla showing waa a remarkably good one. n. IL Worthen, also of Atlanta, waa at tko about ami made a food showing, shoot log especially well‘toward the end. Mr. Freeman leavea Saturday night for the llr,nd American handicap, the Mg four- day shoot for the championship of Amarira. which will tie held' at Indianapolis this year. It tieglaa Tuesday aud lietween J64 and 400 of tha best shots In America will be there. The Atlanta Gnn Club will hold Its regular weekly shoot Saturday afternoon on the club grounds, while the Atlanta Athletic Clnh will pull off Ita weekly (boot at tha saute time at Rett Lake. RACING BEGINS AT OVERLAND PARK By Private Leased Wire. Bcnver. Colo., June 14.—YVlint premises to lie the greatest race meeting ever hcbl at overland I'ark opened today. It will continue nineteen day. Never before bea there liern such an abundance of high- class horses on hand, and the Jockey talent la of the very licat.- A doaen or more good stakes are to t-e rnn dnrtng the meeting. As msorI the Colorado Derby la the event of the opening day. Chief Joyner, the president of tha local baseball association, la Indignant at the happenings In New Orleans Fri day. “I'm going to run this thing down; I don't care what It costf. It'a dirty work somewhere," ho eald. "They arreated Otto Jordan because he tried to get evidence. Then they took the ball away from him, and they *ay that they are going to keep It for evidence. Well, anybody known how that will work. "I have written President Kava- naugh asking for an Impartial Investi gation. If our boya are wrong I want to know about it. "Of course I wish they had finished out the game. But It Is possible that before the game teaa forfeited so many people got on the field that It waa Im- p.ifdlde to K" on. "I never saw the people of Atlanta so worked up over anything In the world ns they are over this. Business men of Importance have come to me todav nnd asked that I withdraw from the Southern League. They want a league mnde up of Atlanta. Savannah, Charleston. Chattanooga and Knoxville. They see clearly that we cannot get a square deal In the Southern League. "That man Frank has a fine Idea of gratitude. Last year yellow f ev .. drove him out of New Orleans and h« and Ills team were wanderers over th. face of the earth. What did we do then? Why. we offered him the use of our hall park, the beat In the league and In the best drawing town. WeiL he came up here, nnd what happened* The people of Atlanta got too much baseball nnd as a result we list money ' probably a thousand dollars. ’ "And now look at what Charier Frank Is doing. I'll tell you one i the thing that the public does not know. While ne was here last he ha4 his players going around among my suspended men trying to get them to jwB that they ware gettlrig money from us In an effort to prove us ahov, the fourteen-player limit. That’s th. kind of a man Charley Frank Is. "I'll tell you another thing. Ever* will make affidavit that after O'Brien slid Into him the New Orleans piaver told him he did It on purpose and that he tried to break hla leg. •It'a certainly a funny thing that the only three catchers In the leagut who have bean spiked are Evers. Arch er and Orafflus and that all of them were spiked by New Orleans player.. Isn't there something significant In the fact that the two teams whose men were spiked were fighting with New Orleans tor the pennant?" HARRY LEWIS TOO CLEVER FOR CHAMPION JOE GANS By TAD. By 1 Private Leased Wire. Philadelphia, June 18,-Joe Gan* met the King of Tantallxera last night In the peraou of Harry Lewis, of Philadelphia. The fight, which waa scheduled for olx rounds, went the limit, and It waa a jump affair from •tart to finish. Gan* was the master throughout, but the Tantallxer sprung surprise* one after an other, which kept the crowd In a continual •tew. Gana started In to get Lewis as soon ns the bell rang. He 1 missed a terrific left drive and then grated hla man's cheek with a right.' Lewis waa on the jump, dodging this side, then that, and backing all around the ring. Gana wore that worried look •■ he puffed hta right tag attar hta left, la hla corner he caught Harry with left and right and there waa an- awful yell, the crowd thinking Lewis gone, bat he recov ered and came again. l*ewls was Tery care ful; yea, very. He did not unbutton hla blocks for a second. In the. second (Ians came out with n •part like a cannon ball and drove the Tan- tallxer acroaa the ring with left and rights to the head. Occasionally Gan* drove a right tf> the ribs. In the third Guns staggered Lewi* with a right and uppercut, sending him Imunc- Ing on the rope*, bat when he waded in to land another on the same place It was oc eupled wfth blown and glove*. Lewis went itsck to Jabbing nnd tantalising. He waa clever with his strides—there'a no getting away from that. Gann kept after him. that he wanted to peddle ...... he thought Lewis was there and Rent it out I^wl* Was over there. The last three rounds were n repetition of the first three. Lewis never li*st _ .IP of his speed. He was not damaging Cnnt and Gana pushed them over and pull'd away from a tew. trying to get In the right. but It was no use. In the last round he rornered Lewis, feinted once or twice nnd then brought th' right orer with the speed of a bullet flush on Levis’ cheek. -The bitter'* head Ixrtdied. he reaehed out, grabbed Gann nrouml the waist and stalled until the referee ordered the break. The six rounds were too short for Gana to work on aarh a clever felfoir, The J«U» and chons he landed daring the fight would have taken more effect hnd the fight gon« on, bat as it waa tawls weathered them nicely and went the six round* humptug the floor or getting bis roof damaged. RATHER POOR FIELD FOR THIS YEAR’S SUBURBAN By J. 8. A. MACDONALD. New York, Juntt 1,.—On Tbnnday »a- other mllntono In Uto mutual round of Iho metropolitan turf will have Iteen reached with the running of tbo $20,000 aulturiHtn handicap at Rheepehcad Bay, the home couree of the Coney Inland Jockey Clnlt. __ le the loot Mg rare of the dlatlnctly eprlng term of racing, the mretlnga which follow at Brighton' Beach and Saratoga Sprtnga. N. Y., In July and Auguat lielng rrgnrtlrd aa the mfd-eummer apan In the yearly turf calendar. Bbeepahead Bay la ofteutlmra termed the “garden couree" and one only neetla to go down early on the day of nburhaa handi cap running—long I* 1 fore the Inrnalou or a ruthlraa army of hlgh-aplrllnl rare-goera- to catch the aptncaa of thla appellation. Kvrrywhore lilaalng flower bedu. nrllatlc rookeriee and prettily trelllced vinery la lo be area lighting up the rant eapanao of green cprradlng award, alna. all to lie rntabed, unrated aad obliterated with the oncoming of the thntiunde a ahort while later. Metropolitan handicap afternoon at Belmont park la proverbially cold nnd chilly, while the Brooklyn handicap la n race of the taaaart and plain frieuda of the Meaare- Dwyer, nut an affair of aortal erlat. The Held will he eoutimratlvely email thla year. aad. like the Brooklyn handicap, which Tokalon, a S-to-1 abol. won, and the Metropolitan handicap, which went to a arlllng plater. Grapple, a 10-to-l chance. Hie •nhurliaa handicap may fall to a rank oat- alder la 19361 John A. Drake will' very likely atari Ort IVella, who la training ditrly. Roeebea'a right hoof la apllt aad he will bo reserved for aprinting only ia Ibc future. "Diamond Jim" Brady I. de pending upon the J-year-d!d Olarnti. while Sydney l'aget baa n etrong hand In Cairn gorm and Tradition. Tbomna Hitchcock', colt, Dandelion, who waa a better race hone than Tokalon In Iho Brooklyn handi cap. la a ante atartrr. These are the beet rated ebanera In the forecast of the promi nent bandlcappere. A genuinely regririable feature of this year’s anbnrltan handicap Is the dluhlllty of Burgomaster, the famous son of Hem- burg. In tbo stable of Harry l'ayne Whit ney. He le a $-year-old. and by hie victo ries In Ike Carlton stakes and the Belmont stakes many esperts believed he would re peat the wonderful nchlefament of Afri cander aud wjn the great erent aa a J-yenr- old. Oa Tuesday morning Trainer Ibalgrrt had nurgomaater galloping In preparation for Ihe aulmrltan handicap. The colt aud- denly wrenched hla fetlock holding, nnd came hobbling Iwclc lo the stable, lie wa. ■cut Itnek to Brookdate farm Ihe nett .lay- lie may be taken up nnd fitted for racing neat -year. He will not be seen again ml* nen sou. Ort Welles or Olaean are new well, liked by the smart Insiders. Herewith Is presented nt a glance th, probable Held of aMrtora, the Jockeys, prob able prices, etc., together with a tnhalar abridgement of the history of the unbar, lain handicap from Ha Inception away back la ifit: 190, Suburban Hantllcap-Thrre.yoarotd. and upward; one mils and a quarter: vain* $23,000. IIORSE. Ort Wells IS Olsran .... rropes .... 1'RonARi.E WEIGHT. AGE._ OWNER. JOCKEY. TRH E ( Calrgorni '.. II* Tradition 11C Klr*t Maonn 114 Ram a Horn lit Go Betwvru • M|»auk«»r !. 107 l»nti*lc!U>n Oxford 107 • Morrjr I.ark 115 Tokalon 1» 5.“™)* JjJ I John A. Hrako Garner 4 J. B. Brail;... ...G'Nril ... * W. n. Jointing* William* 4» ffjdnejr l'aget.. Pavla .... 4 MVUnrjr Fagot Horner .. • 4 . R. novo.... Hovtdl ... 4 T. Willlaiua Ferrine .. R Alex Shield* mShniv .... 5 It. T. Wllaon, Jr Hmm ... 4 T. Illtehcoek. Jr Radtke Mi’LonghUn iti.«le:$rau«l 5 J. W. Bland; t Jantea U. K*$'tie ■MrljitMt ^ 4 Anguit Belmont Jonea RECORD OF THE SUBURBAN SSey you! You OfUYS in the Black -Suits - HOVY BAUCH ” ARC 'VC Givin’ THAT • UMP ? STUDIES IN EXPRESSION BY CARTOONIST BREWERTON, Tr.mlHid.mr tii... Kura. 141.. Elk wood t$l Unceland it Halvator (4» I.o« ntaka i&t Montana (41 Low U odor Imxxfi go* l Tllto (41... Imp tl) Klnlejr Mark »4l Aired* 141 Gold Heel* »(> Africander tit Ilrnul* (St Beldame (4) War Ratio «4» ItlrhtaoBd (Imp) Kkhtmmd (41 Oriflamnte a».. Terra Fottrt i... Term Unttx (ft) I'aNln (4).... Major Porno hTorriflor 4)... arr- 3 *- sir w.iter -.- RanmirkVttru (4i..\.. •* IVntrtwMffl i?) Herbert The llrkot (4) Proper (Sq ....A... Jark of Hearta (I) Rataplan (4) Katana4* tJ> Wtctkam lb.: L*itu..a lit ' Ftronal <41.1 HP. Gmrgo <4».r Toni; <4# I’OMlna *5e l-impllchter |S). lanipllgtiler (4) Kong and Dance (il. Clifford (ft) Ilaror (ft) Ogden (4i >. Warren ton Hi..... Gulden (J». m «♦* Number of Ktnrteru. Time. 2:115-4 2^0 1-3 2:151-4 2.12 5^7 1-2 , 2^7 24 2^4H 2:«H 247 44 iSiff 2411$ 244 4-6 246 3-6 i|!4 IS,4 Winner. T. Donohue. olney. FI tap* trick. Ih»vfa7 W. Martin. Uarrinon. L Murphy. Bergen. Garrioon. F. McDermott. Tnral. Hamilton. GHffln. Mam itarton. v. Turner. Mct-oe. . ?FSSSiy. Fuller. Redfern. O’NellL ■