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

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12 0OOO0O0000000000000000000000$ 00000000000000000000000000000$ a NEWS OF THE wv p^VWV1irWWW<IIVW«M3Mi'^¥W'¥‘#WWWWV'l!Mifl i j Sporting world baseball in big bunches $0000000000000000000000000000-0 EDITED BY PERCY H. WHITING $000000000000000’ 0 0 0 0 O O * 0 PLAYED BALL TWO DAYS FINAL SCORE 296 TO 234 To the Fportlng Editor of Tho Georgian: I ban recently returned from a trip to tonth Georgia, and while In a country Til la(o near Cuthbrrt. Gl., I wltneeeed what la aald to ba the Innaeat (ama of haarball aa record. Tha fame waa played for tba ebamplontblp of aontbwoat Georgia. Tba contenting tee tut ware the Horneta, from RlTerrlllr, and tba Lightning Buga, from Bed Oak. and they met on balf-way ground at Baxtrre Croaalng. Tha partldpanta In thla content were of the dark eat hue of Africa'* tone. Tba thermometer atood at about 1UH degree* under an umbrella. I held tha umbrella, while a friend of mine, aleo from Atlanta, held tha thermome ter. Tha umpire, who waa a tall, greeny, choeolateenlored cltlaen, - called "Play belli" at 1:10 o'clock, thla being Friday afternoon. Then the fun alerted. I can't gin tha game by Innlnga, aa It would take up too much of your raluable apace, but can juat any they played until dark that afternoon, and called the game natll 1 AO o'clock Saturday afternoon. Haring to remain orer Saturday, 1 de cided to go out and ana the flnlah of thla game, but to my aorrow, night came too aoon, for they only played aaren and a half Innlnga. The Horneta were the victor, win ning by the arore of 296, while tha defeated team made only 2M rune. The oRIrlal arorer not haring paper and pencil, kept the acore In the aand with a atlck. After hoatllltlra had ceaerd,' It waa found that nearly an acre of ground had boon uaed for thla purpoae. The Horneta aerated 29 home rune and made 41 error*, while the Lightning Buga aecured only U home run a, and were credited with M error*. No count waa kept of the bate, hit* made, a* tha acorer waa working orartlma keeping up with rune and error*. I waa aura that tho ball* were of the phoney tribe, or "Frank ball*,'' but after eiamlnlng them, I found that they were made from thread raveled from old yarn eoeka, with a hickory, not In the cen ter. Should I bear of any mare gameo of thla kind In my travel*. I will get a more complete account of the aame and forward to yon for publication. Tonra very reapect- fully, C. D. a. Seventy-Three Start in Tour For Glidden Trophy By Private Leaned Wire. HufTalo. N. V., July 12.—Juat aa the full gray of dawn crept over the city, the Prat confetti car, which la to leave the trail for the Glidden tonrlata, pulled away from the atartlng line at Edward and Goodaal* atreata. Walter C. White, of Cleveland, waa driving tha car. and tha bande of the official watch pointed to ex- actly 5 o'clock when the line waa croaaed. At 7 o'clock, the drat of the context- anu for the trophy pulled away from the line. The occupant* of tba car were Ben jamin H. Knowlea and wife, George C. Knowlra and Nelaon Flannagan, and they rode In a Locomobile, Knowlra driving the machine. Not more than 100 pereona wit- neaacd the atart. Thirty aeconda after Knowlra bad got un der way, Louie F. Dralnr, of the New York Auto Club, with a party of four, came to the ecratch, and received hla check from Official Checfer Forguaon. 11a waa follow ed by Thro Schulte*, aleo of New York, and ho In turn by Frank E. Wing, of Boaton, a member of the Bay State Auto Aeeoclatlon. At 7:10 o'clock, twenty-five machlnea had been checked and were a peed- lag away In the direction of Wllllamavllle. Following White hy thirty aeconda went a aecond confetti car, carrying A. II. Grant and D. H. Learla, of Buffalo, piloted by C, 11. Babbitt, -who will drive to Auburn In that capacity, then continue’ to Bretton Wood* with the party, making It a plea*. ore trip. Percy Pierce waa the drat of tha celehrltle* to atart. H* left the lino at 1:10. He carried a patty of newapaper men. Charley Illinium got the word at 1:41, and dftern minute* later Webb Jay whirled away, followed by the applaua* of the crowd. It waa exactly 10 o'clock when the laat of thp conteetant* departed. Thera were In all elghty-two entrlea, eeventy-tbreo ac- tualy atartlng, alxty-alx croaalng the line here. There are nine acratchea. Seven conteatanta will be picked tip along the rout*. The weather la all that could be aakrd for the atart. Every man atarted promptly, and not a hitch occurred In the program. There wilt ba little Inconvenience to the conteatanta from duet, aa the wind la blowing acroaa the route. BLASTS FROM BINGLEVILLE Manager Smith haa landed two new men —Brown and Duggan, from the Inter-State League, which blew up In the atretch a couple of daya ago. noth men were doing good work In that organlaatlon. It la, re ported, and ahould help the team. ' The faet that Brown played In center field Wedneaday mean* that Billy Smith la out of the game for thla eeaaon. To play Brown he bad to declare hlmaelf a uon-playlng manager, and Preaidant Kava- t.augh ha* gone on record to the effect that ho will not allow anjr more “eleventh- <bour declaration*" on tba part of Man, agar* Smith and Vaughan. Brown bagan hla career with the At lanta team auepldoualy by cracking out a two-bagger. The next five tlmea at bat, 'however, ware not productive of any re nal t a. * Atlanta played an arrorleaa game Wedneaday. Pretty tine bualneaa, that. Llkewtae the Cracker* mads U hit*. % Archer made three of the hlta and Creator, Jordan, Winter* and more two ekeb. Not a man on the team failed to get at leaat on*. Jordan had nine chancea and Fox thir teen. Neither made any errora. ' If our new man Duggan la not any bet ter than hla llttla brother Johnny then for goodaaaa aaka let'* not bother with him. The prevent pitching etaff la pretty good. The run of had lack Mike Finn haa been up agalnat (Inca tha drat year he wal In Little Bock haa been aometblng phenome nal. With tha Traveler*, In Toledo and with Naihvllle bad luck acema to have puraued him. Mtk* I* a good manager. though, and with good lurk and plenty nr backing he will give Naahvlll* a Aral- claaa tenm. What he haa done thla year, conalderlng the handicap, la marvetoua. Malarkry pitched pretty fair ball Wedneaday agalnat Birmingham. In ten Innlnga he allowed only two hlta and on* baae on ball*. ''Bag*'' Keegan held Montgomery down to four hlta and neither team acorad. Manuel acema determined to abow that hla now famoua home run In New Or- lean* waa no accident. In Wedneaday'* game agalnat Memphla he made the only hlta made by the Pelican*, on* a two- bagger and the other a three-bagger. Suf fering await, did any on* avar bear the like! Keith, the Little Bock team'* college pitcher, won hi* game agalnat Shreveport Wedtieaday. Pretty good for a beginner. Brrltrnateln got off with a fin* of fit when ho waa tried In police court In Memphla for aaaault on George Carey. “BIG TOM" THE GOOD8. Special to The Georgian. Tennllle, Ga., July 11—Wrlghtavllle and Tennlllc met at Tennllle Tueaday and Ten- nllle won by a arore of 9 to A The fea ture of the game waa the pitching and batting of Big Tom lleartly, who atruck nut 12 of Wrlghtavllle'* heavy hitting team, gam up only 1 hit and did not give a paaa via the Itlg Four route. Murphy, at third, played a (tar game at the luit and on third. Swan, of Ten- nllle, caught an errorleaa game. In fart, every player on the Tennllle team waa there with the gooda. Wrlghtavllle did get two men to aecond baae, hut they could not reafh the third aack. FINN’S TEAM IS SMOTHERED 8MITH AND HIS MEN PLAY RINGS AROUND NASHVILLE'S AGGREGATION. ATLANTA 18 NA8HVILLE 6 Special to tha Georgian. Naahvlll*, Tana., July 11-The Naahvlll* team waa beaten to a fin* young flnlah her* yaatarday afternoon by the Georgia Crack era. The (core waa if to 6. and at that It did not rapreaent tha beat effort* of tha Goor- glana, for, after the game waa cinched, they let up a bit and took thing* eaay. Spark* pitched for Atlant*.«*n<L although he gave up tea hlta, he did plenty well enough to win the game. Duggan atarted lu to do the pitching for Naabvllle, and after aometblng orer a do*ett hlta had been made, Caetro, who never before poaed aa a pitcher, - traded place* with Duggan, and did nice work to tha end of tba game. The acore: NahIIVII.LB-— Gilbert, rf. .. .. Wleemen, rf Peenon, If... , , . Janalng, (b. . .■ , HchmlJt, 2b Frary, lh Castro, aa and p., ., Coogan, o.. .. ., Duggan, p and as.. " All. U. 1!. tA. A. G. ....411200 .. ..8 0 2 2 0 0 . ..4 0 2 J 0 0 . ...4 1 0 0 2 1 .. ..2 0 0 6 2 0 ....411160 Total, .. atlAntA- Croaler, If. ... Jordan, 2b Winter*, rf H. Ktnlth. Ill Mora©, aa Fox, lb llrown* cf Archer, c.. Hparka, p ab. h. u. Vo. a. e: 2 14 5 0 6 0 112 0 ..,.4 3 2 3 7 0 .. .5 1 1 11 2 0 « 2 13 0 0 .. ..« 2 3 3 0 0 ....411110 Total, ..48 It 11 27 It 0 Bcore by Innlnga: Nashville .. Atlanta..' 100 100 022— « 020 043 900-18 haac hlta, Coogan, fluarka. Archer:'hit by Pitcher, Duggan; loft on baa**, Naabvllle S, Atlanta 10; baaea on Italia off Duggan I, off Caatro 2, off Sparka 1; atruck out bv Spark* 2. by Duggan l by Caatro 2; alolen bate*, llllltert. Janalng, Moran 2, Archer, Time, 1 hour*. Umpire, Rudder- LATEST LIST OF HANDICAPS COMMITTEE ANNOUNCES ALLOT- MENT OF STROKES FOR "ODD HOLE” TOURNAMENT. The entry Hat for the “odd hole” tourna ment which will ho played over the Pied mont park' golf courae Saturday afternoon promlaea to be large and a good afternoon of (port acema likely. The rearrangement of halee ahould provide an unuaually Inter- eating courae and aotnn fancy golf will have to lie played by the conteatanta. Owing to the length of tho "odd hole" courae only 1 hole* will be played. The bandlrapa arranged by Megan Til- aon and Stona follow: R. R. Arnold 6 O. D. street « A. Ward Cobb... • FAN TYPE No. IT. ( "©Hi OOH5! / i • You BOYS Vo MAKE* ME TIRED! ’ STUDIES IN EXPRESSION BY CARTOONI8T BREWERTON. HUSKY GENTS WORKING HARD P.-O. Byrd Plu* 3 W. P. Hill. Plus 2 Win. J. Til eon 8 !. A. Lengvton H aowrr Arnold 8 C. Cfey Moor© H Prank Holland . G. Darling \ W. Stone Jboa. B. Pain©...... 3 Percy II. Whiting... 3 Marine© Angler 3 Fulton OMvflla \ T. Mary© irntna Flay "aa. Cothran . Phillip* * . Mortimer Darby. 4 V. K. 8ton© 6 uy Mitchell....... . 1. Kagan ./HI Glenn _ W. B. Htovall t Thod. Ho in wand., g Stuart Boyd. 6 It. A. Palmer 7 F* M. Mlkel 7 j: Sam William...... 7 George L. King... 7 Clyde 1„ King... i D. W. Rountree... • W. M. Whaley..,. S O. C. Fuller » Judge J. Lumpkin > T. I). Meador..... » Rert Adnma ( F. I. Stone * Ewell Gay IP Latimer Carroll.. 10 W. J. Dennett....10 ANPER80N IN FORM. Special to The Georgian. Winder, Ga., July U—Winder took the third gem* from McDonough hy a acore of B to 1. Andereon, for Winder, pitched euperh bell, while Normen, for MrDnn- oug)i, we* hit herd, giving np eleven bit*.' Score by Inning*: R. II. E. Winder 22! DM 00ft—B 11 2 McDonough MO 000 001-1 B I Batteries: Winder, Andaman and LoFtttc McDonough. Norman and Winn. Time, 1:25. Umpire. Mlllsap. BY-PRODUCTS OF THE DOPE FOUNDRIES No doubt, Carey will cut out hi* strong Una of talk after the trouncing he re ceived yeetorday. Bnlteneteln, even thoqxb be I* not a pugilist, showed yesterday that be can go some when It cornea to bolding hla end np With nature's own weapons, aaya The New Orleans Item. What the Memphis police court judge ■aid waa "Twenty-five dollora and coats.” Atlanta uaed to I* ‘It” and It la self ish to want too much too long. Every on* should be glad that Birmingham and Atlanta did draw so well, for the goad of the league. Little Bock. 8hrevcport, Nashville and other hangers on needed the money, and Birmingham and Atlanta were tha ones who banded It over. Shake!— Birmingham New*. Beside* having n ball rlnb that can go same Vanghan baa * couple of the beat cnacbera In the Southern League la Math- ewa and Meek*, a steady, making volcano of cholca "English as she la spoke" exud ing from tbalr faces nil the time.—Mont gomery Advertiser, If Matty ever gtra* np baseball, he will make a flrat-claaa fan. Ha haa both lb* enthusiasm and tha lungs. Hen's boptee that the Atlanta aeries NAT KAISER & CO. Confidential loam on valuable*. Bargains In unredeemed Diamonds IB Decatur St Kimball House. may boost the team along toward the .EM mark. If any club ha* a right to be- Here In hoodoos, the privilege Is enjoyed by Montgomery. That .BOO mark serma to b* unattainable.—Montgomery Journal. Don't rount too strongly on tbnt, old sport. Atlanta !■ pretty hard to beat, right now. The Augustane still continue to bawl about entering the Southern I-cogue, can any one Imagine n gang Ilka that In tha Southern.. They would stand a swell chance of giving Little Bock a race for the booby prlxe. But If they really want to be the whole show, which It la evident they do, they might Bad a berth In the Georgia State League—Savannah News. Gee! That roast la sultry enough to have come out of a Birmingham paper. The salary limit la a complete farce, anyhow. Every ton knows thla. Every manager kuowa It. Every baseball player knows It. Even Judge Kavanaugh la aware of the fact. To aay that Frank's men receive only the limit stipulated would fe* making a ronllah nsaertlon. Ball players do not work for glory. The Pelican tenm la not the only one where this stale of attain exist. Birmingham, Atlanta, Mont gomery end Shreveport ell have ball play- era who arc not working to make a repu- tm ion. Let's rat out the talk about Frank la'iug over the salary limit. . Thrown mto il lie* sometime* return In the stupe of boomerangs. Let It drop. Jealousy la at the bottom of the dlecuaelon. Nobody In this town would kick If Manager Vaughan got big leaguer*. Every tan want* tba beat—Birmingham ledger. We are convinced that the lieeeball writer of The Ledger Is In error In enylng that the Oilary limit Is a complete farce. Both Nashville and-Little Rock have been living up to It nil the eeaaon jaat as. hard a* they could. Meeks le one of the jolllest, wittiest lull players that ha* atrnck the local hall yard In a long time and he le already n favor. Itc with the tans—he used to play with Mullaney up In the nortbweat some years ago. and the two hard hitting, fast fielding flrat basemen are kidding each other all during the game.—Montgomery Advrrtleer. Mock* muit he coming out some. He was quite a.dummy here. Harry Niles, formerly of the Cotton States and Southern league*, hut now play ing right field for thr St. Louis Brnivn* has mad* over a score of parachute leap* end many more Iwltoon ascensions. Ones he dropped about |M tost through the air before hie parachute opened, and when he reached the earth he was nearly dead. But that did not atop him, for he has made eeveral since. That shows be haa plenty of nerve and ought to make a good ball player, lie to proluhly the fattest man getting down to first twae In tha big league, not even excepting Harry Bay. With experience, he looks as though he should develop Into one of the best hall players picked op from the minora In many a day—Chicago Wally News. If Harry ever gels hla balling eye hack In running order he will he one of the wonder* of the Inga*. laaaaaaaaaagaattapftti SOUTHERN. BOB ALl.THE TURK. Boh All,- tho Turk, urn! Demetrlal, th© Grook, aro working hard In preparation for tbolr bouta, which are ecbeduled for Mon day night, at th© Peachtree itudltorlnm. Olaen and GUlmare, th©lr oppouonta, are duo Friday, and Haturdny will b© ©pent In bogy work-out*. All four iiH'ii are reported to be In tip-top trim, aii«l the bout will undoubted!/ draw out a large crowd. Wrestling I© not t game ©*{M*cla!!y well known In Atlanta, hut the International flavor which haa been lent to the affair, mid the proapeet of some thing really good In the wrestling line will combine to turn out u drat-ctaa* crowd. WILL TACKLE ROMANS. 8pectal to The Georgian. Ga<i*)eue Ala., July ii—The famous base ball team of Rome, Ga., wttf play a gam© In thla city Tueaday and th© contest prom- to lie a lively one, aa the Gadsden team has been greatly strengthened and the two outfit* will be about equally bal a need. Trlon, Ga.. comes for a ©erica of three game*, beginning neat WAnemlay. GAME~WANTED SATURDAY. The Grace Chnreh Bnrraeav challenge any team in the city for n game Saturday afternoon on the diamond at Highland and Randolph. Address sll challenges to Grace Chnreh Barrscas, care Atlanta Georgian. oooooooooooooooooooooooooo O WHERE THEY PLAY TODAY. O O Atlanta In Montgomery. a O Birmingham in Nashville. O O O OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO More Sports on Page U. Club*— Played. Won. Lost Pet. Shreveport . 74 45 29 .608 New Orleans . 78 46 30 .605 Birmingham . . 72 43 29 .597 Atlanta . . . . . 72 39 33 .642 Memphis .. 39 36 .627 Montgomery . 71 35 3K .479 Nashville . Little Rock. . 75 28 61 .154 . 71 22 61 .101 J 80UTH ATLANTIC. Clubs— Played. Won. Loat. Pel. Augusta , .. . . 71 41 10 .589 Savannah . . 71 41 30 .677 Columbia . . 71 29 34 .534 Charleston . . 68 24 34 .600 Macon . . . . 71 S3 38 .466 Jacksonville . . 67 22 46 .324 COTTON 8TATE8. Club*— Played Won. Lost. P.C. Meridian . 39 28 .582 Mobile . . . . . 68 17 >1 .644 Jackaon. . . 70 17 82 .629 Baton Rouge . 63 34 34 .500 Gulfport . . . 63 28 28 .478 Vicksburg . . . <6 24 42 .264 NATIONAL. • Clubs— Played. Won. Lost Pet. Chicago . . . . . 77 62 24 .688 New York . . 71 46 27 .630 Pittsburg . . 75 47 28 .627 Philadelphia . 77 40 17 .SI*' Cincinnati . . 77 32 45 .416 Brooklyn . . 71 28 45 .184 48 49 .185 .155 Boston . . . . 76 >7 AMERICAN. Clubs— Played. Won. Lost Pet. New Ybrk . . 73 44 28 .611 Philadelphia . 72 44 28 .611 Cleveland . . . 72 48 29 .697 Chicago. . . . 74 43 12 .668 Detroit . . • 72 39 34 .634 St. Louis . . .' 74 36 18 .486 Washington . 72 36 47 .147 Boston . . . . 76 19 68 .351 AMERICAN A88OCIATION, Clubs— Columbus i Played. Won. Lost. 50 11 P.C. .602 Milwaukee , . 79 46 11 .512 Toledo'. . . Louisville . . . 78 44 34 .564 . 79 41 l« .644 Minneapolis i -82 42 40 .612 Kansas City . 80 17 41 .463 3t. Paul . . . 80 20 50 .175 Indianapolis . 78 28 60 .159 DOPE ON SAM BERGER WHO FIGHTS O'BRIEN MONDAY By TAD. By Frivate Leased Wire. New York, July 12.—Two yean ago when Bam Berger waa but an aspiring amatenr, Eddie Graney, the nun who haa refereed more championship battles thau any other referee In the world, picked the young Californian as the sneceaaor to Jim Jef- frie»' title. At that time Jim Corliett waa training at Groll’a garden In Alameda for hla bat- tie with Jim Jeffries, and Berber was the man he selected aa hla spnrrtog partuar. If yon trill tpiueinber at thla tlm* Cor bett was training for the punch. He waa the cleverest man In the world, hut be thought that with strength added to hla cleverness, there waa nothing In the world who coaid atop him. It waa a grand Idea, bnt It didn't pan out. At any rate Corbett saw In Berger t ■trapping Idg fallow and juat the one he could exchange wallop, with, without fear of hurting hla man. They were great bouts, too. For six long weeks Corbatt trained like a beaver and Bam Berger waa there every day for hla idx-round boat and they packed the gymnasium every after noon of the six week,. We uaed to go over there three and four times a week to see the big fellow, box. and It was worth th(f trip. Eddie Graney was on* of th* many who traveled over oumeron* times, and It waa then that t. wrote, quoting Berger as the coming clum. plon. He aald that Berger, at hi* sge, wa, a more remarkable boxer than even the greet' Corbett, and added that Him ba,| a much better panch, more weight wit* It end could stand a gruelling battle mwh better than the great Corbett. Onr.e. Ww a great future for Berger If he kept In the straight and narrow path. Berg., ha* done this. He has galqed at lean j) pounds sine* that time, has beaten all the big amateurs In the country, and now t, up for trial. Eddie Graney, may b* right; ho may know a diamond In the rough when he «ec« it. Berger I* going Into th* fight with O'Brien next Monday with a bunch of things i* hi* favor. He h*s roach, height aud youth < agnltut the epeed and experience of O'Brien. If Berger gave as much aa he received when he boxed with Jim Corbett at Al*. metis, why can't he do the same again,t O'Brien? That la the catch In thli fight. O'Brien la an old timer at the game. II, know, tricks that Berger never heir it of; be know, bow to fight the dlatanco nnd a Imneb of other tblnga; hut he Is to meet * atrong, fast, young fallow who Is :;| clever aa he la and dead anxious to win. DUGGAN HAS GOOD RECORD Special to The Georgian. day or tomorrow, and will be used In a (Sine against Montgomery. Duggan I* s whale, ■ standing over t feM tall and weighing 175 ponnds. In tho Interstate League, Duggan pitch- rj eighteen James, and won fifteen of EVERS IS RECOVERING. Jack Ever*, who has l>een at home and quite 111, Is on the road to recovery. For aome day* after tho tenm left, he waa In quite a serious condition, but he Is now getting back Into good health again. BASEBALL AT TRION. Ga., July 12.—Trlon continues to win moat of her l«*©bal! game*. The list two were with .Menlo and Itossvllle. Trlon won from Menlo by a score of 6 to 5 and from Roseville by a acore of jo to 1. Trlon nnd Gadsden, Ain., team* will play July 18, 19 and 20, at Gadsden. SOCIAL CIRCLE WINS. Special to The Georgian. Social Circle, Qa., July 11—In n pretty game of ball here Tueaday afternoon the Monroe team met defeat at the bands of the local aggregation by a acore of 5 to 4. Score by Innings: It. H. E. rods I Circle 002 090 000-*', id t Monroe- : 003 100 000-4 8 8 Batteries: Social Circle, Wiley mid Stan, tou; Monroe, Hammond and Mobley. Summary: Two-lmee hit, Stanton; itrnck out. by Wiley 15, by Hammond 7; bases on balls, off Wiley 1. off Hammond 4; hit hy pitched ball. Wiley 1. Hammond 1. Time of game, 1:40. Cmplre, It. I*. MItcbeU. Attendance, 200. 8Y3QNBY IN MUSEUM. By Private Leased Wire. New York. Jnly 12.—Sysonby Is to be hla own monument. The l*ody of the great rnr© horse has been exhumed from thr Shccpe* head Bay race course, and taken to the American Museum of Natural History, Emmons for Quality. Cool Apparel for Summer Wear WEDNESDAY’S RE8ULTS., Southern— Atlanta II, Nashville (. Montgomery 0, Birmingham 0. New Orleans 1, Memphla 0, Little Rock 2, Shreveport 1. Shreveport I, Little Rock 2, South Atlantic— Macon 2, Augusta 1. Savannah 7, Jackaonvlll* 1. American— New York 4, St. Louis 2. St. Louis t. New York 0. Philadelphia 5, Cleveland L Chicago 2, Boston 1. Chicago S. Boston 0. Eastern— Montreal 1, Toronto *. Montreal (, Toronto I. Baltimore 2. Providence 0. Buffalo 8, Rochester*. National— Cincinnati t, Naw York 2. St. Louis (, Philadelphia 2. Brooklyn I, Pittsburg 1. Pittsburg 6, Brooklyn L Chicago 2, Boston 1. American Association— Minneapolis S, Louisville 2. Columbus 17, Kanes* City 1L St. Paul t, Toledo 1. Indianapolis 5, Milwaukee 4. Cotton State*— Mobile *. Meridian 1. GRESHAM ASHFORD SHOE CO. 93 PEACHTREE ST. Cool Two-Piece Suits of light weight airy materials of Worsteds, Serge and Wool-Crash materials. Skeleton lined and light in weight, yet these suits fit and hold their shape as well as the full-lined heavily-pad ded kind. That’s where hand-tailoring and fine work manship come in—and why we insist on having no other kind. In the popular shades of gray and blue, in single and double-breasted coats—with roll-up “peg-top” trousers. $10.00 to $25.00 Negligee Shirts ...$1.00 to $ 2.50 Straw Hats ... 1.00 to 4.00 Panama Hats ... 5.00 to 7.50 Fancy Hosiery 25 to .75 Airy Neckwear .25 to .75 Leather Belts ... .50 to 2.00 Cool U nderwear ... 1.00 to 4.00 Flannel Trousers... ... 3.50 to 5.00 Serge Coats ... 5.00 to 10.00 ■ Bathing Suits $1.00 to$3.00 (§mm&n3 ^ 39 and 41 Whitehall Street.