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Starts fexxrgm Citizen
Published every Thursday.
; PH0N3ES :
Editorial and Easiness Offlce
Local and Society Editor
Official Organ of the County. Official O'gan
of the United. States Circuit and District
Courts, Northwestern Division, North
ern District of Georgia.
T. S. SHOPS, \
A. J. SHOWALTER. 1 Proprietors
CHARLES H. OAViS, Editor and Manager.
Terms of Subscription
One Tear
■lx Months
Three Months
S9*Entered at the Dalton, Ga., Postoffice for
transmission through the mails as second-
class mail matter.
Thursday, Aug. 6, 1903.
INDEX TO NEW ADVERTISEflENTS
Chattanooga Dry Goods Co.
Chattanooga Shoo Co.
W. A. Anderson—Farm for sale.
“Property Owner"—City lots for sale.
Toil on! toil on! ye sons of men,
Examples all aronnd yon,
For instance, take the scratching hen—
Then go to work, confound you!
There seems to be more
“charges” in that lobbying at the
legislature than anything else.
Those lobbying charges by some
of the members of the legislature
is a sort of tempest in the tea-pot
affair.
It is now up to Bill Jones to
return to Dalton where criminals
are protected. No harm can come
to him.
Atlanta has sprung a first-class
milk scandal. You can depend
on Atlanta doing her “stunt”
anything.
“Dixie” is a favorite air at all
of the G. A. R. gatherings. There
was a time when it had no such
cheerful sound.—St. Louis Globe
Democrat.
If those people who have striven
so hard for clemency in the Perry
case would have put forth their
efforts for good, this community
would rise up and call them
blessed.
Governor Terrell got ninety-two
votes in W hitfield county at his
election and John Perry got his
sentence commuted against the
wishes of about ninety-two per
cent, of our people.
The anniversary edition of the
Atlanta News was a credit to that
excellent afternoon paper. It was
full of good, healthy looking ads
We congratulate the management
of the News bn its splendid suc
cess.
When Perry talks for publica
tion he talks differently from the
way he talked on the witness
stand at his trial, and the other
day in his cell, when he said if it
were possible he would shoot with
intent to kill Judge A. W. Fite,
Sam P. Maddox, Frank Summer-
our and T. S. Shope.
If there is any honor attaching
itself to the commutation of John
Perry it is due to Hon. George G.
Glenn, his attorney, and The Cit
izen most heartily congratulates
him on his victory. Of course
there are “cat-paws” who will claim
the credit, but the claims will be
empty and meaningless.
Crime, steeped in the blood of
innocents, laughs gleefully over
its victims, and mocks menacingly
the law enacted for its suppres
sion. It shames and humiliates
law-respecting citizens and brings
odium on a community which re
tards material progress and tends
to arrest moral development.
The commutation of the death
sentence of a man who says he
murdered wilfully and would do
it again, who says there are peo
ple in Dalton who, if it were
possible, he would kill now, is a
striking example of the ineffect
iveness of our criminal law and
what a sickly, maudlin sentiment
can do.
The Slaton insanity hill has
passed the house by a good vote.
This bill is intended to do away
with the insanity plea in murder
cases.- The legislature ought also
pass a bill compelling the governor
and prison commission to “hands
off” in murder cases, especially if
they intend to heap on other com
munities the same disgraceful pro
ceedings they did on this one with
reference to the Perry case.
THE NATIONAL ROAD QUESTION.
The Citizen is in receipt of the following letter from United States
Senator Clay, of Georgia, on the question of a national road from
Chattanooga to Atlanta, which contains gratifying assurance of his
willingness to extend all aid in his power to secure the necessary ap
propriation for such a highway :
Marietta, Ga., July 29, 1903.
Mr. C. H. Davis, Editor North Georgia Citizen, Dalton, Ga.
My Dear Sir:—I have your favor of the 25th, inst., in reference to
the establishment of a national road from Chattanooga to Atlanta.
This matter, you know, has not yet been discussed before congress.
In order to secure an appropriation for such a road it will be essential
to show that such a road will he of national importance. This I think
can he done, taking into consideration the battles that were fought
from Chattanooga to Atlanta. I have not given the matter much
thought as yet, but will do so at once, and will be glad to render any
assistance within my power to secure the necessary appropriation to
begin and complete such an important work.
Yours very truly,
A. S. Clay.
The Chattanooga Times of last Sunday takes the question up edi
torially in the following strong article of endorsement of the project:
The North Georgia Citizen (Dalton) is agitating with commend
able and intelligent zeal the movement for a “national highway” from
Chattanooga to Atlanta, along the line of Sherman’s march in his
memorable campaign during the closing days of the civil war. Mr
Charles H. Davis, the editor of the Citizen, is taking an active per
sonal interest in the great enterprise and is devoting much of his
time to creating sentiment in its behalf.
We have called attention to this matter before and have indicated
the approval of the project by the people of this cii;y and vicinity
who, we feel sure, stand ready to help it in any way they can. Mr
Davis has succeeded in interesting a number of public men in the en
terprise, and he has strong hope of uniting the Georgia and Tennessee
congressional delegations in an effort to secure the appropriation nec
essary to carry the idea into execution.
The Hon. Gordon Lee, senator frortf the Walker county district
writing from Atlanta, cordially approves of the idea, and says:
I assure you I am greatly interested iu this movement, as suggested by The Cit
izen. I dp not think it a “wild dream," but I do believe by the active efforts of
the patriotic citizens and our governor and senators and representatives in congress
that this splendid boulevard can be built. The road suggested by you would not
only, to my mind, he the most suitable monument that could possibly be erected,
but it would also connect a succession of battlefields, not only of national but of
international interest. The government, when it builds this road, would honor
the Union and the Confederate soldiers alike, and in so doing would erect to itself
the greatest monument in the world.
As yon say, it would be a fine example of road-building, and all intersecting
roads would be improved, for the people of Georgia would see the value of goocl
roads.
The idea of such a great boulevard connecting Chattanooga and
Atlanta, the two Southern oities most interestingly associated with
the closing scenes of the “national tragedy,” the two cities w! ere oc
curred the culminating struggle between the matchless armies of the
two sections, as a monument of the greatness and heroism of the men
engaged in that epoch-making conflict, commends itself strongly not
only to the sentiment but to the patriotism of the people. The cost
of the proposed boulevard would be inconsequential compared with
the vastness of its soope and meaning.
Senator Lee calls attention to one of the substantial and material
benefits to accrue from the building of such a thoroughfare, namely,
it would call the attention of the peoble of the middle South to the
vast importance of good roads and give them an object lesson of how
they should be constructed and maintained to bring the greatest ben
efit to the greatest number of people. Good roads are needed by the
people of the middle South more than any other public improvement,
and the building of this boulevard would be the opening up of a mag
nificent crusade for good thoroughfares that would be irresistible.
%
| PASTE POT
AND SCISSORS, i
ttfe t(r ***
“Butter goes down,” says the
headline over a market item. Not
as strong as it was, in other
words.—Macon Telegraph.
Silence is sometimes as eloquent
as a thunderstorm—as when, for
instance, your mother-in-law looks
at you but speaks not.—Frank L
Stanton in Constitution.
The Rome baseball team evi
dently labors under the impression
that it is better to have played
and lost than never to have played
at all.—Rome Tribune.
AS TO THE GOVERNOR AND PRISON
COMMISSION.
THE “BLOODY SEVENTH.”
The Citizen has a long time
believed that our law of capital
punishment is a farce—not of
itself—but made so by weak-kneed
officials—officials who know their
duty and fail to do it, for political
or other purposes, generally poli
tical. It is a sad commentary
when justice miscarries on account
of such conditions.
The governor knows, and the
prison commission knows, that the
direction they have seen fit to give
the Perry case is not to the best
interest of this section, or of any
section of the state. It is a bad
precedent and tends only to in
crease crime.
It is a disgrace to Whitfield
county and places it before the
world as a place of lawlessness.
It places it where, in all probabil
ity, the next murder committed
will result in a lynching, to our
everlasting shame, with the re
sponsibility resting on our ineffi
cient governor and prison commis
sion, for the most part a set of
groveling politicians, elected by
the people to enforce law and
order, instead of defeat it.
In the light of the case they
had no reason founded in fact for
their action. They know full
well that Perry is a self-confessed
unrepentant murderer, thirsting
for more blood. Even the
gentle Christ, whose teachings
were wholly those -of mercy,
never taught to forgive without
repentance.
We defy the governor and
prison commission to give a palpa
ble reason for their action,knowing
as we do, that no facts were put
before them to justify it. A
maudlin sentiment was brought to
bear, aud that was all, save a
worthless and meaningless petition.
Senator Gordon Lee,represent
ing the 44th senatorial district
was a visitor to Marietta last week
He, it is said, was here looking
into “the lay of the land
of the Seventh Congressional
District; and it is farther said
that he aspires to fill the shoes
of Hon. John W. Maddox. -We
do not know how this is, but we
do know that Mr. Lee is quite a
polished gentleman, competent and
capable, and that should he enter
the race for honors in the “Bloody
Seventh” there’ll be some stirring
about before he is beaten. Mr
Maddox is regarded as one of
Georgia’s strongest representa
tives in the lower house of the
national assembly and is person
ally known to nearly all his con
stituents; but Mr. Lee would bring
with him into the race the buoy
ancy of young and vigorous man
hood, a magnificent personality
and form, large wealth and thor
ough mental equipment for such
labors as congressional honors de
mand. We look forward to the
developments along the liue of this
contest with considerable interest.
—Cobb County Courier.
Guiseppe Sarto, a Venetian car
dinal, has been elected as Pope
Leo’s successor. He takes the
name of Pius X.
OASTOHIA.
Bean the /f Tl> 8 KM You Han Always Bought
Signature
of
Hon. John W. Maddox, Hon
Gordon Lee and Solicitor Moses
Wright have all been thought of
with respect to 7th Congressional
district honors. If there are any
more probable candidates we are
not aware of it, and we propose to
indulge our share of interest in
the developments as they ma
terialize.—Dade County Sentinel
Hon. A. W. Fite has been
thought of and favorably men
tioned himself a few times.
The Dalton Citizen continues
to go after that proposed military
road from Chattanooga to Atlanta
and here’s to its success.—Ac-
worth Post.
Strength and rigor come of good food
duly digested. “Force,” a ready-to-
serve wheat and barley food, adds no
burden, but sustains, nourishes, invig
orates. tf.
Lamb at W. M.
Haig’s. Trading
Stamps.
Mississippi’s primary occurs
Thursday, and the Jackson News
observes that “those who have
brought the negro into Mississippi
politics in this state are going to
be sorry for it.”
The fair fame of Georgia de
mands that every rumor of criminal
and improper lobbying be chased
up to the bar of the investigating
committee, and now is the time to
beat the bushes.—Constitution.
The cure of a man in London of
a propensity to theft by an opera
tion on his brain opens up a wide
field for discussion on the econ
omic question of whether it would
be cheaper to keep on with jails
or perform operations.—Albany
Herald.
A Chicago chemist claims to
have found a way to decompose
water and says he can supply il
luminating gas 400 times cheaper
than the present prices. It is to
be hoped there is something more
than gas in this talk.—Savannah
News. v
Carrie Nation was arrested in
Scranton on Wednesday and fined
0 for selling without a license.
She was selling souvenir hatchets
when the police decided to do a
little smashing themselves and a
regular Kansas melee followed.—
Atlanta News.
REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS.
Real estate transfers in Whit
field county since July 30, as
recorded by Clerk W. M. Sapp,
are as follows:
Patsy Morris to M. E. Heggie, lot
in Dalton, $100.
G. W. Mills to R. R. Clark, land
in Tunnel Hill district, $2,500
W. F. Lasater to Mrs. Claude
Fox, land in 9th district, $5.
********** «* : , » T m
f Of A Purely Personal Nature^;
Walter Hightower, of Rome,
spent Sunday in Dalton.
Mr. Paul Buccholz will be a
visitor to Gordon Springs soon.
Dr. G. H. Hightower made a
business trip to Rome Tuesday.
Gen. B. M. Thomas has returned
from his visit to Milledgeville, Ga.
Misses Lulu and Forence Blake
are spending a few days in At
lanta this week.
Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Hester, of
Chattanooga, visited,, Dalton Sun
day.
Miss Julian Perdue leaves Sat
urday for a visit to Dalton, Ga.
Constitution.
Miss Ida Hudson, of Adairs-
ville, is the guest of Mr. aud Mrs.
J. L. Hudson.
R. L. Mehaffey, of the Union
Stove & Manufacturing Co., was
in town Tuesday.
Dr. J. C. Bivings and family
will probably return from Gordon
Springs on Thursday of next week.
Misses Geraldine McCutchen
and Nora Sanders left Monday for
a visit to relatives at Rising Fawn.
Miss Dora Hunt, who is now
teaching at Varnell, spent Satur
day and Sunday with her mother
here.
P. B. Trammell spent yester
day in Atlanta.
R. Y. Gray has returned from
a visit to Rhea Springs.
Mrs. Ab Flemister has been
somewhat ill the past few days.
Mr. and Mrs. M. E. Judd re
turned Saturday from Europe.
is
W. B. McKnight, of Memphis,
with Dalton relatives this week.
Miss Floy Felker, of Monroe,
Ga., is visiting Miss Lula Felker.
Miss Mary Seay has returned
from her visit to friends at
Clements.
Charlie Smith, of the W. & A
and Claude Brown, of the South
ern, are spending the week at Co-
hutta.
Walter Schneider left last night
for Florence, Ala., where he will
spend a couple of days on bush
ness.
W. A. Mann, of Cohutta, i s re .
lieving W. M. McDonald, of the
Southern, who is spending the
week in North Carolina.
Mrs. Fred Hayes, of Chattanoo
ga, was with her husband at the
Fincher House several days last
week.
Mrs. Fannie Lester returned
Sunday from a pleasant visit to
friends in Cleveland and Chatta
nooga.
Manager J. W. Beard, of the
Dalton & Alaculsey, railroad,
spent the first of the week in At
lanta.
Mrs. Lee Harlan will return to
day from her visit to Tunnel Hill.
Arthur Keith, of Memphis, is
with home folks here for a brief
visit.
Miss Minnie Hamilton returned
Tuesday after spending a week in
Atlanta.
William DeJournette was the
guest of relatives here Sunday and
Monday.
Mrs. Thomas Treadwell, who
has been seriously ill, is reported
improving.
Dr. and Mrs. R. I. Peak, of At
lanta, are in Dalton for the month
of August.
Walser Seay, of Atlanta, has
been with his mother, Mrs. Stroup,
for the past week.
Miss Angie Blosser, of Atlanta,
arrived Friday last for a visit to
Miss Carrie Horne.
Misses Maymie and Jimmie
Lou Fincher left today for a week’s
stay at Cohutta Springs.
Mrs. Horace J. Smith left yes
terday for Ringgold, where she
will remain until Sunday.
Dr. J. A. Dubose and wife, and
Miss Alice Bell, of Anniston, Ala.,
are guests of Mrs. J. W. Bailey.
r ffo the Citizens ef SDalten and Vicinity:
It is our intention to show to the trade this fall and winter not ^
only the largest, but the very best stock of MEDIUM AND FINE ±
GRADES OF STYLISH
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itkees and Slippers
MARRIAGE LICENSES.
Marriage licenses have been
issued by Judge Jos. Bogle since
July 30, as follows:
Ira W. Deverell and Josie Ledford.
Henry Q. Wilson and Ethel L.
Huffaker.
James T. Moreland and Decia
Caldwell.
Jessie Wilson and Orra McGill.
Raises Fine Ones.
Mr. J. D. Gore, the night man
at the Cherokee Lumber Co., pre
sented a Citizen man with some of
the finest peaches and tomatoes
that he has ever seen. Mr. Gore
lives on Judge Bogle’s North Dal
ton place and says he has succeed
ed in raising a good crop of peaches
each year for the past three years, avenue *
and he does it by putting straw
around the trees when the ground
is frozen and then covering the
straw with about six inches of
earth. This keeps the peaches
back until all danger of their being
killed is gone. This is Mr. Gore’s
theory and it is a good one.
Mr. Gore grows big Belgian
hares as well as big peaches, hav.
ing one now which weighs fourteen
pounds.
The Largest Yet.
Prof. A. J. Showalter showed
The Citizen man last Friday the
largest peach he has ever seen or
heard of. It was an Elberta,
weighed 18 ounces and measured
12 1-4 inches in circumference.
This immense fruit specimen was
the product of Mr. Showalter’s
own orchard, near Dalton.
Miss Lulu and Oscar Armstrong,
of Dalton, Ga., who have been the
guests of Mrs. Fitzsimmons and
other friends at this place for the
past two weeks, left for their home
Friday.—Cleveland Banner.
&
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shown in the South.
We give you the best.
We fit your feet correctly.
We want your trade.
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'Chattanooga tfhoe 'Company
803 Market Street,
Chattanooga, » « Tennessee.
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Mrs. Georgia Robertson return
ed Tuesday afternoon after a six
weeks’ visit among friends in At
lanta and other points.
Mrs. R. E. Parker and children,
of Atlanta, are with the former’s
parents, Mr. and Mrs. I. E. Shu
mate, on School street.
Mrs. C. B. Willingham returned
yesterday to her home in Marietta,
after being the guest of Mrs. J,
M. Sanders tor a couple of weeks.
Miss Annie May Thorne, who
for the past week has been the
guest of Miss Dimple McCamy,
returned Tuesday to her home in
Atlanta.
Miss Forrest Smith, of Boyn
ton, is visiting Miss Hattie Cav-
ender.
Mrs. F. B. Van Deman, of
Jacksonville, Fla. is at Hotel
Dalton for the summer.
Mr. and Mrs. Pryor Campbell,
of Hughes, Ga., spent Tuesday i Q
the city shopping and meeting
their many friends.—Cleveland
Banner.
Prof. A*. J.. Showalter leaves to
morrow for Manitou, Ky., where
he will conduct a four weeks’ nor
mal. This will end his seasons’
normal work.
Sam Loveman was down Sun-
day from Chattanooga, spending
the day at the Richardson farm
where Mrs. Loveman and child
are summering.
Mrs. Robert E. Parker and fam
ily leave Saturday morning for a
month’s visit to Col. I. E Shn-
mate, of Dalton, Ga., Mrs. Parker’s
father.—Atlanta News.
Miss Maude Davis, who for
several weeks has been the guest
of Misses Lucy and Lizzie
Maddox, is visiting Toccoa and
Tallulah Falls. She will return
to Dalton next week.
Mr. White, with the Southeast
ern Car Service, spent the day in
Dalton yesterday. Mr. White
goes on record as saying that Dal
ton has the best amateur ball
team in the state.
Mrs. Fannie Lester, of Dalton,
was the guest of Mrs. Varnell this
week. Mrs. Lester has been a
teacher in one of the schools in
Dalton for thirty years.—Cleve
land Banner.
Mr. H. Clay Moore, of the Haw
ley Down-Draft Co., leaves with
Mr. Ivan Allen tomorrow for New
York, where they sail at once for
Europe, expecting to be absent
until the I5th of September.—
Atlanta News.
PLAYS WINNING BALL
Dalton Takes Four Straights From
Talladega Club.
Dalton has resumed her old
time form, and now it seems has
entirely forgotten how to lose a
game of baseball. In the series of
games with the Talladega, Ala.,
club last week Dalton captured
them all. The score of the first
was published in The Citizen last
week. The following are the
scores of the remainder of the
Miss Laura Graham, of Carters-
ville, is the guest of Mrs. Onie
Starr, on Thornton avenue.
Miss Kate Black, who has been
studying organ in Atlanta for the
past month, returned Monday.
Charlie Graves has returned to
Jacksonville, Fla., after a month’s
stay with homefolks in Dalton.
Morris Loveman, who occupies
a very prominent position among
Birmingham legal lights, is the
guest of his mother on Thornton
Miss Agnes Harris, enroute to
her home in Rome from Knoxville,
stopped over in Dalton Saturday,
and was the guest of Mrs. S. M.
Lowry.
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Heggie, of
Tunnel Hill, Ga, are visiting Mr.
and Mrs. J. B. Sea well at Hemp
hill Station water works.—Con
stitution.
Miss Josie Meriwether, who has
been the guest of Miss Willie
Puckette for the past week, re
turned to her home in Chattanooga
Tuesday night.
Dr. William Owen, of Atlanta,
is at Hotel Dalton. Dr. Owen is
the possessor of a magnificent bar
itone voice which was heard with
much pleasure here last summer.
Mrs. Percy R. Baker, of San
Diego, Cal., is the guest of Mr.
aud Mrs. R. H. Baker, and will
remain for several months. Mrs.
Baker started to Dalton last
Thursday, to attend the funeral of
her mother, Mrs. Lynn, but was
delayed on account of a railroad
wreck and reached here twelve
hours too late.
Miss Rosa Huff went up to
Chattanooga Friday, in which city
she will spend the balance of the
month.
Rev. M. D. Smith leaves this
week for a month’s stay at Tybee.
Mrs. Smith will go to Indian
Springs.
Marsh Bodenhamer returned to
his duties in the government print
ing office in Washington last
Thursday.
John M. Berry’s resumption of
business is noted with pleasure.
Mr. Berry was quite sick for a
couple of weeks.
Jack Seay is filling Claude
Brown’s position with the South
ern during the latter’s absence at
Cohutta Spring*.
# Judge A. W. Fite was in the
city Tuesday for a few hours, com
ing down from Ringgold, where he
is holding court.
Beverly Barrett, who is now
holding an excellent position in
Chattanooga, spent Saturday and
Sunday in Dalton.
The Citizen is pleased to note
the re-appearance of W. Lee Mc
Williams at the store, after bat
tling several weeks with illness.
R. A. Giddens, a prominent
resident of Rural Vale section,
was in the city Friday, and was a
welcome caller at The Citizen of
fice.
games:
SECOND GAME: Time, 1:30.
(Umpire Sperry.)
123456789
Dalton ...,0 0 0 0 3 0 10 *=4
Talladega. 10000000 2=3
Batteries: Dalton, Hayes, Ison.
“ Talladega, Roberts, Fisher.
Hits off Hayes, 1; off Roberts, 5.
Two-Base Hits: Dalton 1, Snodgrass.
Base on Balls: By Hayes, 5; by Rjb-
erts, 4.
Struck out by Hays, 8; by Roberts, 10.
Sacrifice Hits: Dalton 1, Scott.
Stolen Bases: Dalton 4, Dillard 1,
Snodgrass 1, Ison 2; Talladega 2, Fisher
1, Daniels 1.
Errors: Dalton 1, Talladega 2.
Earned Runs: - Dalton 2, Talladega0.
Feature of the .game was Whitaker’s
left hand jump catch on second base.
Left on Base: Dalton 5 on 3rd base,
Talladega 1 on 2nd base.
THIRD GAME: Time, 1:30.
(Umpire, Wilson.)
1234567S9
Dalton. .0 0 0 3 1 0 9 8 *=h>
Talladega 0 1 0 1 0010 0= 3
Batteries: Dalton, Cottingham, Ison.
Talladega, Hart, Fisher.
Hits off Cottingham 6, off Hart 14.
Two-Base Hits: Dalton 2, Whitaker,
Snodgrass.
-Three-Base Hits: Dalton 1. Hamil
ton ; Talladega 1, Cheshire.
Home Runs; Dalton 1, Dillard.
Base on Balls: By Dalton 1, by Tal
ladega 4.
Struck out by Cottingham 4, by Hart a.
Stolen Bases: Dalton 6, Diih'rd,
Spencer, Whitaker, Scott, Hamilton -,
Talladega 1, Daniels.
Errors: Dalton 3, Talladega 1.
Earned Runs: Dalton 8, Talladega 1.
Left on Base: Dalton 5, Talladega j.
Double Plays: Dalton 2, Whitaker to
Kilpatrick, Whitaker to Scott.
FOURTH GAME: Time, 1:10.
(Umpire, Wilson.)
123456789
Dalton.... 1 11212*
Talladega. 0 0 0 0 o 0 2 r"
Batteries: Dalton, Spencer, Ison.
Talladega, Dnnlap, J
O Till n ian 0.
Hits off Spencer 2, off Dunlap 6,
Fisher 5.
Two-Base Hits: Dalton 2, Snodgrass,
Ison.
Home RnnB: Dalton 1, Whitaker.
Struck out by Spencer 6, by Dunlap
Base on Balls: Spencer 1, Duniap -
Stolen Bases: Dalton 6, Dillard, 0
tingham, Kilpatrick, Ison, Spencer
Errors: Dalton 2, Talladega 3.
Earned Bans: Dalton 5, Talladeg •
Left on Base: Dalton 6, Tallaceg* •
Doable Plays: Dalton 1, Whitaker -e
Scott. _ ar
GEO. SPENCER, Official Scorer.
DR. S. A. BROWN,
PHYSICIAN AND SURCEON,
Office first door north of Hardwick s
up stairs.
Calls cheerfully answered day or nigk 1 -
Offlce Phone 154. Residence phone
r~'xl ii
HfiSH
.