Newspaper Page Text
THURSDAY, MAY 28, 1914
MUCKALEES LOSE CLOSE'
GAME TO BRUNSWICK PILOTS
mCKALEE CAST-OFF WORKS SUpj^ts,B AGAINST AMERICU3
AND JUST AS THEY 3e TO HIM IS YANKED AND
HARTNER SAVES GAME—OTTO He. Ith IN BRUNSWICK LINE-UP -
GEARY WORKS FOR AMERICUS AND (HVES UP 8 HITS— DACEY
WILL WOK TODAY AGAINST TH E PILOTS AND THEN THE BOYS
COME HOME
%
. (
• I
STANDING OF CLUBS i
\ Georgia State League.
W. L. Pet i
Valdosta 22 14 .611
Waycross 20 15 .571 ’
Thomasville 18 17 .527
AMERiCUS 17 18 .485 ■
Cordele 17 18 .416 i
Brunswick 11 24 .314 ,
(By Li. J. Levy.)
Brunswick, Ga., May 27.—(Special.)
—The Pilots took on new life today
and won the opener from the Mucka- 1
lees 4 to 2. Gtto Jordan was in charge
of the Brunswick team and the whole
Lunch seemed to take on new life and
play winning ball.
Hodge, an Americus cast-off, work
ed the first seven innings and went
good until the seventh. Then the
Muckalees got next to his slants and
were winning them a game when Otto
yanked the String Bean and sent in
Hartner to relieve him. The south
paw got out of the hole that Hodge had
gotten in and pitched winning ball the.
Lest of the way. I
Geary worked for the visitors and|
showed worlds of stuff. In addition to
I
pitching good ball, he got two neat
■hits out of four trips to the plate.
The Muckalees played fast ball in
the field, and the game was a peach.
.'Salome Ellis at first handled 11 out of
12 hard chances and looked more th in
,good. The big fellow failed to get a hit
■ during the game, but fast fielding rob
bed him of two that were labeled for
.extra bags. Leonard at short, and
SUMMER CLOTHES!
/
Summer clothes are usually of light
weight fabrics; you want them
cool. If you want them to fit
and stay fit, buy Hart Schaftner
& Marx clothes; all-wool for
wear, for shape-keeping, for ser
vice, and Hart Schaffner & Marx
name in them means correct
style.
This season’s men’s and young
men’s clothes are made on “nat
ural” lines; not much if any pad
ding; narrow shoulders; very
soft draping of all the garments
and coats with soft front.
Hart Schaffner & Marx have per
fected this styleof garment; they
know how to make a soft front
that “stays put”; doesn’t get flab
by in a few weeks’ wear.
You’ll see the difference as the sea
son advances; better see it on the
other fellow; not on yourself.
Fancy worsted suits sls to S3O
Blue Serge suits sls to S3O
Palm Beach suits $7.50 to $lO
Glad to have you come in and look them over.
W. D. Bailey Co.
This store is the Ameiicus home of Hart Schaffner
& Marx good clothes.
/
Grady Bowen at third played sensa
tional ball in the field, and Manager
Gaston made a catch in center that
was highway robbery from the Bruns
wick standpoint.
Manager Gaston will send Dacey in
Thursday against Jordan s tea-i. The
scrappy Muckalee manager has sign
ed Erl Bitting, former manager of the
P.iots, to play short and he will make
his debut in the game. Leona r 1 will
be sent to second and Mitterna :ht car
ried as a pitcher until two other twirl
ers that are due to report in Americus
Sunday are on hand.
President Kalmon, of the Georgia
State league, was present and watched
the game from the grandstand.
Here is the box score:
Americus ab r h po a e
McLain, If 4 0 11 0 0
Gaston, cf 3 1 0 *2 0 0
Bowen, 3b 4 0 0 2 2 0
Riley, 4 0 0 2 0 0
Geary, p, 4 1 2 0 2 0
'.Ellis, lb 4 0 1 11 0 1
I Manchester, c 4 0 1 3 11
I Leonard, ss, 2 0 1 2 2 0
Mitternacht, 2b, ......4 0 1 2 3 0
Dacey 1 0 0 0 0 0
Totals 33 2 6 25 10 2
Dacey batted for McLain in ninth.
Brunswick ab r li po a e
Reiley, ss 4 11 1 0 0
Jordan, 2b 3 11 0 2 0
Schuyler, If, 4 0 11 0 0
Parker, 3b 4 0 1 2 1 0
Seigfried, cf 3 1 0 3 1 0
j *******************
| Baseball Result f
* *
Southern League!-
—> i
Mobile 2, Atlanta 10.
Birmingham 8, Memphis 2.
New Orleans 2, Chattanooga j,js
Montgomery 1, 3.
American League
St. Louis 1, Philadelphia 1. Fifteen
innings; called on account of rain.
Detroit 0, Washington 7.
Cleveland 3, Boston 5
Brooklyn-Pittsburg; no game; rain.
Federal League
St. Louis 3, Baltimore 4.
A1 lother games off; rain.
South Atlantic League
Augusta 6, Jacksonville 3.
Charleston 5, Colmnui:- _
Macon 3, Columbia 5.
Savannah 4, Albany 2.
Alabama Georgia League
Anniston 7, Talladega 8.
LaGrange 3, Newnan 7.
Opelika 4, Selma 5.
Gadsden 0, Rome 1.
Gallagher, rs 4 0 11 0 1
Reynolds, lb, 4 1 2 8 0 0
Schuman, c 3 0 1 10 0 1
Hodge, p 2 0 0 1 3 0
Hartner, 1 0 0 0 0 0
Totals 32 4 8 27 8 2
Score by innings;
Americus 100 000 100—2
Brunswick 100 101 lOx—4
Summary Stolen bases, Riley
(Pete), Schuyler, Reynolds; two base
hits, Leonard, Reynolds, Gaillagher;
double pays, Manchester to Mitter
nacht; Seigfried to Schuman; hits off
Hodge 6 in 6 1-3 innings, off Hartner,
0 in 2 2-3 innings; struck out by Geary
3, by Hodge 5, by Hartner 4; base on
balls, off Geary 1, Hodge 1, Hartner 3;
wild pitch, Geary; hit by pitcher, Gea
ry (Jordan.)
Time 1:50. Umpire, Gentle.
NINTH INNING RALLY
•GIVES m HORNETS
(By E. R. Jerger.)
Thomasville, Ga., May 27.—(Spec
ial.) —In a ninth inning rally Thomas
ville made three runs and w'on the
game from Waycross today. McFar
land pitched great ball in pinches, but
was miserably supported, Fenton and
Anderson and McCoy and Jones error
ing. The locals couldn’t hit in a pinch
and Roth was wild at times, forcing
in one run and alloiwng another to
score on a sacrifice fly. Roth’s hot
one to McCoy in the ninth w'ith two
on tied the score, and he scored when
Klump hit one right at the pitcher.
Score by innings: R. H. E.
Whycross 000 110 000—2 7 5
Thomasville 000 000 003—3 9 2
Batteries—McFarland and Coveney:
Roth and Dudley.
VALDGSTA WINS OPENER
FROM CORDELE RAMBLERS
(Special to Times-eßcorder.)
Valdosta, Ga., May 27.—Zapke held
the Ramblers to six hits and one run
today and won the opener of the two
games series here today 4 to 1. The
Millionaires hit Hall for 10 safeties
and they came when hits were needed.
The score: R. H. E.
Valdosta 4 10 1
Cordele l 6 1
Batteries—Zapke and O’Brien; Hall
and Eubanks.
♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦*♦♦♦
♦ SWISS GOVERNMENT ♦
♦ TO EXHIBIT AT ’FRISCO. ♦
♦ ♦
♦ Berne, Switzerland, May 27. *
A Swiss federal government today ♦
♦ decided that Switzerland should
♦be represented officially at the ♦
♦ Panama-Pacific exposition at San ♦
♦ Francisco. *
♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦•*•♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦
Shine On Old Sun.
If hoopskirts should come back into
fashion, and there should be no more
over them than—but we refuse to fol
low up the thought—Enquirer-Sun.
r JF gw IS
JbL. ...
CHARLIE HERZOG 1$ /. S U RIGHT NOW IN DEAR CINCY,
' - BUT WILL THEY LOVE HIM IN OCTOBER AS THEY DO IN MAY
Cincinnati, May 27.—Charley Herzog,
Red manager, is the idol of the Cin-,
cinnati fans. His manner of running
a ball club, his determination to be
the real head of things and indeed his
whole deportment on and off the field
meets with the entire and hearty ap
proval of all Cincy baseball bugs.
When Joe Tinker left Cincinnati last
year there was a great deal of dis
pleasure expressed by followers of the
Reds. Many declared that there tvould
never be a real manager in Cincy as
GASTON SIGNS NEW
STUTSTBPFHR TEAM
Manager Gaston has signed Erl Bit-,
ting, former manager of the Bruns
wick team to play short for the Muck
alees. A telegram from Dave to the
Times-Recorder last night carried this
information. Leonard will be shifted
to second base when Bitting goes to
short. Manager Dave is determined to
get a winning team even if he has to
get new men for every position. Right
at present Dave is after two jam-up
pitchers to relp out his twirling staff.
I
BLOOMER GIRLS WIN
FROM ATHLETIC BOYS
- • I
The Star Bloomer Girls handed a
large size lemon to the Americus Ath
letic club yesterday in the shape of a
7 to 1 defeat. Carry and her “girlies 1 ’
played rings around the boys and had
the game won from the second when
they scored three runs. |
The Bloomer girls played jam-up
ball. A catch by Hazel in centerfield
and one by Agnes in left were both
«
peaches. Thelma on first and Peg in
the box were stars and made the
men who played on their team look
like a bunch of boobs. The Score by
innings: R. H. E.
Bloomer Girls . .030 200 020—7 9 1
Americus 000 001 000 —17 2
Batteries—Cunningham and Harry;
, Pantone and Hawkins. Umpire, Dunn.
i STATE WIDE SEARCH EOR
, CHINESE CONSUL'S GIRLS
i
San Francisco, Cal., May 27.—State-
wide search was inaugurated today
for the two little daughters of Shan
Ching Shu, Chinese consul general at
San Francisco, who disappeared from
, their home Sunday night. Sano Guai,
►
, aged 13, and Min Lien, aged 8, were
i
taken away from the residence of the
consul general according to his report
to the police between 10 Sunday night
and 6:45 the next morning. Neither
can speak English. The theory is ad
vanced in Chinatown that enemies of
I the faction represented by Shuan spir
ited the girls away for political rea
sons.
Gemini
)
(Special to Times-Recorder.)
1 Gemini, Ga., May 27.-*Mr. and Mrs.
Tom Summers, of Americus, were the
' guests of Mr. and Sirs. O. A. Summers
Tuesday.
Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Lane and daugh
' ter, Jewel, spent Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. Murray Griffin in the 28th dis
trict.
Misses Annie and Bertha Penning
■ ton spent last week with friends and
■ relatives in Americus.
' Mr. Wallis Pennington attended a
• barbecue at Croxton’s Cross Roads on
' Friday.
■ Mrs. J. D. Pennington is visiting
■ her mother, Mrs. C. M. Clark, in
■ Americus. this week.
' Miss Jessie English was the guest
of Miss Lily Belle Pennington Sunday.
Mr. Judson jLane spent Saturday
night and Sunday with Mr. Dallas Pen
> nington.
> Mrs. J. I. Pennington is visiting her
- niece, Mrs. C. L. Rooks, this week, at
her home near Americus.
.long as the directors and owners—,
.there are many of them —continued to ;
horn in and interfere with the manag
ing of the team. Tinker was a favor
its with the fans till the owners be
gan to hamper and halt him. Joe left :
lin a high dudgeon. And the fans ae- i
I dared that the Cincy team would i
never be properly managed. c
Charlie Herzog came to Cincinnati 1
with the determination to run things i
himself or know the reason why. fteji
showed the players and fans at once'i
GARRANZA TO SEND
DELEGATES TO MEETING
I
Washington, D. C., May 27.—Rep
resentatives of the constitutionalists
here took steps today to reopen the
question of representation of the
Niagara Falls mediation conference. ,
John Lind and C. A. Douglass, le
gal representatives of the constitu
tionalists, after what w r as termed a
neutral conference, went to the state
department to take up the subject
with Secretary Bryan. The secretary,
j however, had gone to the capitol to
ccnfer wUh senators of the foreign
relations committee, and his callers
said that they would return again
later in the day.
j Neither Mr. Lind nor Mr. Douglass
would disclose under what conditions
the constitutionalists were willing to
participate, but the opinion was re
vived that the powers of a Carranza
representative would be very limitel,
perhaps without plenary authority |
and for the purpose of furnishing ln
' formation only. I
What sudden turn In the negotia
tions had brought about the new at
titude of the Carranza group was not
disclosed.
Today’s development, undoubtedly
one direct outcome of long confer
ences General Carranza has been
holding over a special telegraph wire
with Emilio Zubaran, his minister of
I
the interior, in charge of the constitu
tionalist agency here, was pointed ont
' as justifying the optimism of the last
day or two in official circles, in which
it repeatedly has been said negotia
' tions were progressing satisfactorily,
i Jose Vasconcelos, who has been
| mentioned as a probable choice to
[ represent Carranza at Niagara, still
is in the city.
I Luis Cabyera, Carranza agent, came
from Eruope today on the steamer
Olympic, and Fernando Calderon, a
»
third constitutionalist representative,
1 is in El Paso.
'i It is said that if Carranza sent rep
j
resentatives to the Niagara confer
t
, ence those three men probably would
be selected.
Whatever might be the first cond : -
tions upon which Carranza would send
representatives to the mediation con-
I
ference, the fact that he may be will
ing to send them at all, is generallv
regarded here as a very favorable in
dication.
| Although the nationalists have n
iterated that they were willing to
participate in any mediation which
dealt with the relations of Mexico
with the United States, but oppose 1
to taking part in any mediation over
the internal affairs of Mexico, it was
pointed out that the recurring propo
sal for the re-establishment of a pro
visional government to be selected by
the mediators, the Huerta delegates,
and the American delegates, and to
be recognized by the United States,
may have advanced the situation to
the point where the constitutionalists
think it best for their interests to
1 have representatives on the ground.
i
: ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦*♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦•*•
i ♦ TWO KILLED IN A ♦
(♦ MOTORCYCLE ACCIDENT ♦
■ ♦ +
.J ♦ Chicago, May 27.—A man and ♦
♦ a woman were probably fatally ♦
♦ hurt here early today when two ♦
♦ motorcycles ran intg a loaded ♦
■ ( ♦ expres wagon. The injured are Ed *
: ♦ ward and Marie Kierna. ♦
I that such was to be and to date thev
are all with him in a body. Many
who know the fans of Cincinnati de
| clare that they are not always easy
to please. Their esteem and affection
1
for ball players, and especially mana-!
gers, is said to vacillate frequently and i
oft. Herzog’s friends hope most earn- I
estly that he may retain the favor jf
his fan following till the end of the
season, thereby achieving what all
agree would be a considerable achieve
ment.
CANNING SCHOOL FOR
GEORGIA TEACHERS
CANNING CLl’B AGENTS OF STATE
NOW TAKING COURSE AT STATE
COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURE.
Athens, Ga., May 27. Fifty canning
club agents and five district agents are
now attending the canning school it
the Georgia State College of Agricul
ture at Athens, A week is being de
voted to practical work in canning to
matoes, using the canning outfits rec
ommended for use in the canning work
of the girls clubs. This instruction
precedes the canning work which eacli
agent will supervise in the various
counties where canning clubs have
been formed - among the girls,
j The work is done as far as possible
under conditions which the agent will
meetin going about the Country. A
portable hand canning outfit is used.
Caning work is done under the oax
trees near the College. Each agent is
required to go through the process and
do the work successfully,
j Aside from the actual canning, a
I number of lectures are given that are
applicable to the work of the county
agent and form the basis of instruction
and addresses of the agents before the
canning clubs.
I The fifty women constituting the
county agents of the canning clubs are
school teachers whose schools have
closed and who now have time to carry
out the canning work which they have
organized and superintended for the
country schools of their respective
counties.
The canning school is more largely
attended this year than ever before a3
a consequence of the growth of the
organization of canning clubs in the
state.
’ I
| Legal Advertisements ■
Petition For Charter.
GEORGIA, Sumter County:
To The Superior Court of Sumter
County:
The petition of W. T. Calhoun, C. A.
Pope and L. B. Lott, all of Sumter
County. Georgia, respectfully shows
the following facts:
L
That they desire for themselves, their
associates and successors, to be incor
porated and made a body politic un
der the name and style of Pope Furni
ture Company for the period of twen
ty years.
IL
The principal office of said company
shall be in the City of Americus, Sum
ter County. Georgia, but petitioners de
*-- _ cue Wfjrir
PUMTEfIS BIHK OF MENUS j
PAGE FIVE
sire the right to establish
fices within this state or
whenever the holders of a majority!
th e stock may so determine. 1511
The object of said incorporation®
pecuniary gain to itself and its sh3Rj
The business to be carried
! said corporation is that, of a ges|Hj
furniture business. They
j right to buy and sell furniture;
| and repair same, and to #c any
| all things necessary in
general furniture business as aftjHl
The capital stock of said
shall be Five Thousand
Eclairs, with the privilege of ihcreSf
ing said capital stock to the sum 1
Ten Thousand ($10,000,00) Dolla-sB
a majority vote of the Stockholm*®
Said stock to be divided into shares®!
One Hundred ($100.00) Dollars eaS
Ten per cent, of the amount of a®|
capital has been actually paid in. ®|
Petitioners desire the right to i®
and be sued; to plead and be implead®!
to have and use a common seal, I
make all necessary by-laws and
lations, and to do all other things
may be necessary for the succflpjjHl
carrying on of said business, tael®
ing the right to buy, hold and I®
rea 1, estate and personal prope®;:
suitable to the purposes of the cor®'
ration ,and to execute notes and tKM®£
as evidence of indebtedness incuriHi
or which may be incurred, in the
duct of the affairs of the corporal®!
and to secure the same by mortga®?
security deed or other form of l|Hj
under existing laws. sB
They desire for said incorpor&t®
the power and authority to apply flf
and accept amendments to its ciui|®
of either form or substance by a V®s
of a majority of its stock outstaod®;
at the time. They also ask aut&djHi
ior said incorporation to wind up Bps
affairs, liquidate and discontinue B
business at any time it may detefaiHj
to do so by a vote of two-thirds of Bp
stock outstanding at the time. IBf
They desire for the said incorpo®'
tion the right of renewal when i®f
as provided by the laws of Georfl
and that it have all such other rignßl
powers, privileges and immunities®
are incident to like incorporations®!
permissible under the laws oK/Ge®;
Wherefore, petitioners pray to l''".
incorporated under the name
aforesaid with the powers, privill®
and immunities herein set forth, s®l
! as are now, or may hereafter be Bp
; lowed a corporation of similar char®:
. ter under the laws of Georgia. H
H. O. JONES, I
Attorney for Petitioners^
Original Filed in Office, May 14®
! 1914. , „ v s - R - HEYS, 1
Deputy Clerk, S. (fl
GEORGIA, Sum ter County;
I, S. R. Clerk of ®l
Superior Court for the Count®!
I Suniter, do hereby Certify that ®f
j above and foregtWbg application *fj
| charter is a true cooy of the orlgt®!
now of file in this offlke in the-gw®
of Pope Furniture Oc®jany, Appli®
tion for Charter. :|||
Witness my Official
seal of said Court this'LffU
of May, 1914. g. ®
Ancient Cult of the Flvl®
Beelzebub was the fly g o ,i 1
(referred to in II Kin;*’
10). The great god Baal w®®|l
times worshiped as the “lord%(®
fly," as he who drives oft
The flies were then and are
worst enemies in Palestii t and ! 3.
We remember well how we harf
continually fighting them off with f®
when we were traveling in those
The flies settled on the eyes of ciBI
children and literally sucked out i-h.lfi
eyesight.—Christian Herald. S