The Albany daily herald. (Albany, Ga.) 1891-190?, June 27, 1906, Image 3

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3 ED. R. a CLAYTON JONES. Attorneys-at-Law, Bayers . . . AND . . Sellers of Real Estate. We have five plan tations within a few miles of Albany for sale at reasonable prices. We also have a number of improved lots in the city of Albany for sale. We also have list ed with us for quick sale a house and lot on the corner of Pine and Madison streets. This is an extra good bargain at the price asked. If interested, i see us at once. Ed. U Clayton Jones, Rooms S, 4 and S, Hobbs Building. Phono 408. . { ; \ resgr - THE ALBANY DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 27, BASEBALL IN THIRTEEN INNINGS ALBANY SHUTS OUT THE IGIC CITY. Brunswick Wins a Slow Game—Val dosta Gets Seventeen Runs—Game Today—Yesterday’s Contests—Club Standings. STANDING OF THE CLUBS. Clubs— Played. Won. Lost. Pet Fleischman, ss. .. ...5 0 0 1 0 2 Waycross. .. .... 40 29 11. .725 Blanton, If ...6014 0 0 Brunswick. . .... 39 25 14 .641 Allen, p ...5000 4 1 Valdosta ... .... 42 24 18 .571 Cordele .... .... 39 21 18 .538 Total 3 Albany .... 40 14 26 .350 R. H. E. Anmricus. .. .... 38 10 28 .263 Albany ... .000 000 OO'O 0001— 1 8 3 U/ Waycross . .000 000 000 000 0— 0 7 3 RESULTS YESTERDAY. Albany, 1; Waycross, 0. Valdosta, 17; Americus, 3. Brunswick, 8; Cordele, 2. GAMES TODAY. Waycross at Albany. Brunswick at Cordele. Valdosta at Amerlcus. IN THIRTEEN-INNING GAME ' THE CLIMBERS WON. Fine Contest at the Ball Park Yester day Afternoon. WAYCROSS— AB R H PO A B Wagnon, cf. 6 0 1 2 0 0 Buesse (F.), 3b .6 0 2 1 3 0 Bowen, lb j.. 4 0 0 16 0 0 Beusse (C.), c 4 6 0 6 3 0 McCormack, rf. ..... 5 0 1 1 0 0 Griffin, 2b 5 0 2 6 5 0 In a splendid game from every standpoint Albany shut out Waycross yesterday. Exciting in the critical moments until the outcome was a re lief, and fielded from every position, on both sides, in as capital a manner as could be seen on any diamond, played by any league. Nunley pitched and fielded the game yesterday in such a manner that if he did not have an enviable reputation already it would be made now,-and made proper. The game yesterday was fast, live and thirteen innings. Pretty! Well, I guess. Double plays were the fea ture for both clubs. Nunley’s double play in the ninth was about as clean and pretty a play as a pitcher could make. A hot, grounder, that was hot, so -Nunley says, came swift from the bat of C. Buesse, and fielded with one hand by Nunley. The fans weTe lond in their yells-^- loud for Albany. It was a fine game, from the first through the thirteenth Inning. At two periods in the game it looked cloudy for Albany, hut the score came out 1 to 0. Allen did excellent work and he was backed up by team work that would make good readable matter. T. Grif fin, on second, did the home team out of something several times that’looked like hits. Wagoner—he has an an gelic way of capturing those halls that fly out to center; and,Buesse was be hind the hat. At the tenth inning everything was excited. At the eleventh we left our seats. At the twelfth we couldn’t stand in one place for long; and in the thirteenth those that went know, and those that didn’t missed the greatest treat that Albany has ever had in the baseball line. Siner, you’re 0. K., and that smile of yours; you did some work in the fifth—a peachy double. Eldred covers his post all the time—he’s everywhere. Kirkham and Griffin, on the bases, were no slow coachers.* 1 Nolley, we all take off our hats to you, Bo. “You done noble,” and that run on a hit! After the stinger in the ninth Nunley was as fresh and swift as in the first. Summary. Bases on Balls—Off Nunley, 2; off Allen, 1. Left on Bases — Albany, 9; Way- cross, 8. First B^ise on Errors—Albany, 3; Waycross, 2. Two-base Hits—Cawthorn, H. Grif fin, F. Buesse (2), T. Griffin. Struck Out-r-By Nunley, 7; by Al len, 6. Double Plays—Allen to Griffin to Bowen, Kirkham to Griffin, Nunley to Griffin. Stolen Base—Siner. Umpire—Weeks. AT AMERICU8. Amerlcus, June 27.—The game here yesterday proved a great farce, the home team being defeated by Valdosta in a game that was replete with hits and home runs for the visitors. Val dosta got five home runs when the bases were full. Innings— 123 456 789—R. H. E. Valdosta 124 012 043—17 18 2 Americus 000 011 100— 3 5 3 Batteries — Lamar and Stephens; Barber and Walters. AT CORDELE. Cordele, June 27.—In a poor game Brunswick took a victory from the home team here yesterday. The work ing of the leftfielders, Deyo and Lew is, were the features of the game. Innings— 123 456 789—R. H. E. Brunswick' .....301 000 040— 8 12 1 Cordele ........ .011 000 000— 2 5 4 Batteries — Foster and Cranston; Ramsey and Cranston. Today’s Game With Waycross. The last game of the series with Waycross today. There will be things doing at the park, “as sure as you are horn.” The batteries have not been given out, "but there is no doubt of the goodness of them-. Yesterday’s game was a peach—watch the one today. Two hundred and fifty-three paid ad missions—pretty good—but this kind of hall deserves lots more than that. Make it 300 today. The game will be called at 4 o’clock sure. Of course there’s no doubt in our minds as to the outcome, but that’s not the game, Tomorrow will begin the series with Amerlcus, and they look forward to three great games with us. They will get their expectations gratified, with out a doubt. OFFICIAL SCORE OF THE GAME. ' ALBANY— AB RHPOAB Boyd, cf .... 5 0 0 2 0 0 Kirkham, 3b. .. .... G 0 0 2 0 1 Siner, ss ..,.6 0 2 3 5 0 Nunley, p .... 5 0 0 1 4 0 Cawthorn, c. .. .... 5 0 2 7 1 1 Eldred, 2b .... 5 0 0 2 1 0 Snodgrass, If. . .... 5 0 1 4 0 1 Griffin, lb. .... 5 0 i 17 0 '0 Nolley, rf .... 5 1 2 1 0 0 Total 47 1 8 38 17 3 ^DOPE ^ Attendance 253 yesterday. Fearful Fleiscliman frown. Nolley showed up in style. Wagoner, the angel fielder. Oh! that double in the sixth. Bowen was on first, all right. Raise your sights, Mr. Umpire. Cawthorne—a single, a double. Better anchor Wagnor—he’s apt to fly. Nolley’s run in the thirteenth did the biz. Wish somebody would read up on balls. Kirkham did a double stunt in the third. T. Griffin is the only hole in the doughnut. Errors were costly yesterday—es pecially one. In the first, Allen to'Griffin to Bowen doubled some. Valdosta, 17; Americus, 3!—back to the farm, boys! Looked sldddy in the eleventh- three men on bases. That stop Nunley made of Buesse’s hot liner was a stunner. Player (to fan in grandstand)— “Don’t mind me; I am always kidding idiots.” Fan—“Yes; I was an idiot to pay money to see you play. Come ’round this evening and see how the other games In the Georgia State League came out. Detailed tele graphic accounts at The Office. tf An Old Jockey. After holding the ribbons over some of the fleetest steppers in the country for more than ninety-two years, or since he was 8 years old, “Uncle Char lie” Taylor, the oldest horse jockey in the world, has retired from the track, and will not enter another ra^i, says the New York American. The cente narian horseman is easily the most remarkable physical specimen of old age alive today. It is not because of any inability to handle a horse, or even mount a sulky, that Charles Taylor has abandoned the life which he has led since he was a mere boy, but it is because he fe # els that there are not sufficient induce ments in the business today to run chances of being hurt and, possibly killed. He has not lost confidence In himself, and he has not lost his nerve, but he has gone beyond the time when money is an object, and he has a good home as long as he lives with James Ballard, the son o£ his old racing part ner, and that Is all he wants. Then, again, he has won all the laurels that he desires, and he believes in stepping nside and giving the younger element chance. But the old “war horse” of the turf declares he is not an old man in the strict meaning of the word, and that is the only thing about which he is sensitive. He has a record of his birth, which makes his age 100—December 28, 1905—but he believes that he is as young in ideas and activity as many men a generation his junior. While it may be almost impossible to credit it, the old man can hurdle a fence five feet In height, kick a hat from the head of a six-footer, run at a clip which would distance many men fifty years younger than he is, do a hard day’s work, jump across a brook arid perform many stunts which would put young men to shame. 1—0! Chicken! Waycross! Who’s hot? Again today. Siner got two. Some rooting. Thanks, Nolley! See Siner smile. Thirteen innings. Eight-seven—hits. Thirteen unlucky? TVaycross shut out. Hjere’s to you, Bo— TJhat’s playing some. And yet a few knocks! Nolley won the money. Poor little Fleischman! Don’t forget the Fourth. (Attendance 200 Monday. BASE BALL Death From Lockjaw never follows an injury dressed with Bucklen’s Arnica Salve. Its antisep tic properties prevent blood poison- blood poisoning. Chas. Oswald, mer chant, of Rensselaersville, N. Y., writes: "It cured Seth Burch, of this place, of the ugliest sore on his neck lever saw.” Cures Cuts, Wounds, Burns and Sores, 25c at Albany Drug Co. TOMORROW Albany vs. Americus GAME CA-t LED 3:45 tins leave corner Washington and Flint streets at 3:15, 3:30, 3:45 and 4 O’clock. We Are Living in an Age of Graft and Trickery Beware of the un scrupulous imitators. Beer consumers are entitled to what they pay for and- we hereby caution everyone to ask to see the seal of the bottle before it is opened so as to insure the pur chaser that he is getting what he calls for. Our beers are protected by seals with our registered trade mark on every seal so is that of every self-respecting brewery. Ask to see the seal of your favorite brand and thus avoid deception.. Yours for square deal, G. L. SHEPPARD, Agt. Chattanooga Brew ing Co SECpND WEEK OF June Clean-Up Sale Greater From Viewpoint of Bargains. Ginghams and Cham- brays In nearly every color, also checks, plaids, and stripes. These are all re liable makes, including “A. F. C.,” “ Renfrew,” and Linen-finish Cham- brays; 10c and 12j4c quality; nothing but new, desirable styles. • June Clean-up Sale, 8j4c. Ladies’ Hose Lace stripe, plain Lisle; 25c value. A Second Week offering. June Clean-up Sale, 19c. Percales Some remnants of Madras in the lot; 10c to 12j4c values; this season’s choice patterns. June Clean-up Sale, 8c. Jap Silhs 59c quality; yard wide; colors, black and white only. June Clean-up Sale, 37c. Men’s Oxfords Values from $2.50 to 3.00; all sizes will be here to begin with; Patents, Vicis; all styles, every last. June Clean-up Sale, $1.98. < » 4 ► < > SELLS IT FOR LESS Special Rug and Matting Sale. We have just opened up a big lot of Rugs and Art Squares, all this year’s patterns and for the next fifteen days will offer them at remarkably low prices. We include in tliist-’sale our entire stock of Mat ting at greatly reduced prices. You cannot afford to miss these bargains if you are needing anything in these lines. A# S. A. y W. T. Freeman. BHZ3 anc HELLO ! SB WE ARE WITH YOU. i, Something for Nothing. Get Your Name on Our Register and Contest for the Prizes. Coupon. Cut This Out. XXX* * * X * X ********** * ‘ This is to certify that I wish my name entered * * for free subscription tor Boys and Girls’ Paper/* * “THE PUZZLER,” for one year. * X X X Name * x x x x 'x x x x x x x x x x x x X X - x ONE COUPON FREE FOR EVERY FAMILY^ Out-of-Town Children can have the paper mail ed to them free by sending 12 cents, cost of mailing for one year. Owl Drug & Seed Co. . HICKS’ CAPUDINE MMKMXflLY CU(U HEADACHES (mb'* COEDS lasts IX Hours iMMUk Mini am ALBANY BRICK CO BRIO EL. —MANUFACTURERS'OF— Annual Capacity, 10,000,000,