Newspaper Page Text
WEATHER FORECAST
For Georgia—Fair tonight and
Sunday; light frost in north and cool
er south east portion tonight; rising
temperature in north and west por
tion Sunday.
FORTY-FOURTH YEAR.—NO. 78
DEATH TAKES EX-EMPEROR CARL IN EXILE
MARKET MAN IS
CLAD OF EXPOSE,
BUTBLAMESCITY
R. T. Mathews Recalls Appeal
For Proper Inspection—
Says Good Will Result
That the meat market men of
Americas, or at least some of them,
will welcome rigid sanitary inspec
tion, was the statement made to the
Times-Recorder today by R. T. Ma
thews, of Mathew c Market.
“I have been sick witu a cold for a
couple of days, being at home, and 1
missed all the fun personally,” said
he, “but I want to say that I am
heartily in favor of rigid inspection.
We need it. I have been expecting
for some time what happened when
the state inspector came here this
week; in fact, 1 thought it would
come before this. Some practices
have been going on about here that
nave been shameful. For example,
one day a man brought some meat to
sell to me. I wouldn’t buy it frmn
him because it wasn’t fit for food. He
went out onto the street in front of
my'place, cut it up and sold it out
in the treet to people who carried it
home. He shouldn’t have been al
lowed to do it, and he wouldn’t, had
we had real sanitary inspection.
•‘lt will be remembered! that last
January when the butchers were be
fore the council I appealed to the
mayor and council for proper inspec- j
tion. So did Mr. Glawson and Mr.
Bragg. But what did they tell us?
They told us it was up to every fel-,
low to look out for himself.
“There have been bad things about
town; there have been plenty of
cases of bad meat ’“ld in some of the
market-, which a .lot kept as they
should be. 1 admit we have all gotten
too careless under the lack of restric- 1
tions. But the fact is, with bad
meat being sold at cheap prices in
some of the shops, we who wanted to
conduct high lass places couldn’t 1
carry high-priced or fancy meats and!
ompete. And we have gotten ca/e-
‘‘But I am glad Dr. Walsh Came
and I am glad he told the people :
what he found. It will do us all .
good. And maybe it will bring to the !
attention of the mayor and council '
the necessity of doing what we mar- i
Ket men asked them to do in January,
—see that all meat sold in the city '
is properly inspected.
“I am not seeking notoriety for my
own business, but we have been given
the ‘devil,’ and I feel that we should
be given our due. lam glad that it
has all come out now, and I know we '
will benefit by it.”
GLAWSON S MARKET
GIVEN CLEAN BILL.
“My market and myself feel slight- j
ed,” said J. L. Glawson, proprietor ,
of the West End Market, today in !
conversation with a Times-Recorder ;
reporter. “Three weeks ago, when I
Dr. R. M. Walsh, state sanitary in- I
specter from Atlanta, paid Americus |
a visit, he called on me, and I took 1
great pleasure in showing him about
my market and grocery store. He
seemed well pleased with conditions, 1
expressing entire satisfaction at the I
surroundings, and complimenting me
especially on the sausage room and
the utensils used in making this pro
duct. He spoke of the first class
condition of the screening, and I felt |
mighty good. Finally, when he was i
ready to make his report, he handed i
me out a certificate stating that my
market met with all the state sani- I
tation laws regarding the slaughter- I
ing and selling of meat.
“Yesterday when Dr. Walsh again |
paid Americus an official visit, I na- j
turally concluded he would come to I
see us. He did not, and I am today
reading again my certificate of san
itation that he gave me, and rejoicing
that he found conditions abot.c my
market such that a second visit was
not necessary.
“My motto has always been and al
ways will Re cleanliness is next to
godliness.”
NAMED RECEIVER.
At a meeting of creditor’s repre
sentatives from James Tift Mann,
commi. doner, in Albany, yesterday,
11. O. Jones, of Americus, was ap
j (.inted receiver for the bankrupt
• lock of S. L. Sills, here. J. Lewis
Lilis has been trustee.
•je -I n ■ n n .»■ n ~r*~ |
| GET BASEBALL
TICKETS NOW
' General admission seats on sale
Americus Drug Go.
Howell's Pharmacy.
Nathan Murray, Druggist
Lawson Drug Co.
Windsor Pharmacy.
Reserved seats at office of
Times-Recorder only. Don’t tele
phone. No seats laid aside. Cen
ter grand stand, directly behind
home plate and protected by wire
netting, 50 cents each.
Reserved seats in Left and Right
grandstand, 25 cents each.
All who possibly can do so are
advised to get tickets in advance
on account of crowd expected
Tuesday. Reserved seats are lim
ited.
MAN WHO CIRCLED
GLOBE ON BIKE TO
TALK HERE SUNDAY
JI
Ik
HENRY SPICKLER—-
At the First Baptist church to
morrow night the world traveler and
chautauaua lecturer, Henry Spick
ler, will <b liver hi lecture-sermon
“Derelicts of the Deep,” or “Why
Young People Fail,” at 7:30. Every
one cordilaly invited.
Spickler is the man who rode a
bicycle around world starting abso
lutely penniless, visiting twenty
counties. lie is the author of the
book “Around the World Without a
Cent,” and of several patriotic songs.
For three seasons he lectured in Chi
cago high schools for the Chicago
Daily News.
“The Rockford Star (Ill) says:
“Every word heavy with thought.
Never heard a lecture ii which ev
ery sentence was so fui. of truth.
One minute he makes you feel like
laughing, and the next like crying.
Young and old alike were held as by
a spell, when they gave vent to their
tense feeling by prolonged applause.”
AGGIE SCHOOL
TO HAVE RADIO
Much Os Plant Already Assem
bled By Students, Says Prof.
Hatfield
A radio station will be installed at
the Third District Agricultural and
Mechanical school within the next
few weeks, according to information
given this morning by W. A. Hat
field, a member of the faculty. The
apparatus will be made by the stu
dents of the college, Mr. Hatfield
stated, or as muc hos it as can
be manufactured by amateurs. Much
of it has already been assembled.
The school is already in communi
cation with the Bureau of Standards
at Washington for the erection of the
station.
An air area of 250 to 500 miles
will be accorded the Aggie station,
and Americus at large will benefit
from the installation.
CARLOAD OF BEES IS
UNLOADED BY NIGHT
MOULTRII , April I.—The first
carload of b??;; evei chipped to Moul
trie came in yosrerday afternoon. The
bees were consigned to J. T. Chris
topher. They were bought in Brad
entown, Fla. There were 350 hives
in the car. The purchaser waited
until after nightfall before unloading
the bees. Persons handling the hives
wore masks and heavy gloves. Dur
ing the day hundreds of bees had left
their hives and were clinging to the
sides :uid roof of the ear. Those were
picked up by the men with gloves on
very much as they would have gath
ered up cotton seed.
Mr. Christopher runs one of the
biggest honey “factories” in the state
and finds the business a profitable
one.
FRENCH NEVER CONTESTED
PAY FOR U. S,. SAYS NOTE
WASHINGTON, April I. The
French government “never had an
intention of contesting the right of
the United States to be as complete
ly reimbursed for their army costs
as other governments with troops on
the Rhine,” says .the reply of the
French government to the American
note in relation to army costs, made
public, today at the state department.
KIWANIS CLUB TO SEND
TO TORONTO
Dr. Carl W. Minor, president of
the Americus Kiwanis club, was
elected delegate to the International
convention at Toronoto in June at
yesterday’s luncheon. Bradley Hogg,
club secretary, was named alternate.
Each club is entitled to two dele
gates, but the Americus members
voted, because of the expense, to
send only one.
i ■
THE TiMESORfCORDER
PUBLISHED IN THE HEART OF DIX.F doA'I
americus'.' Georgia Saturday afternoon, april i, 1922
STALLINGSAND
COBB TO DINE
WITH CITIZENS
To Be Guests At Lions’ Luncheon
And Members Os Other Or
ganizations Are Invited
Ty Cobb and George Stallings, two
eminent Georgians and managers of
the Detroit American and Rochester
International baseball teams, who
will play in Americus next Tuesday,
Golden Rule -sale day, will be the
guests of the Lions club at the dub’s
regular luncheon from 12 to 1 o’clock
that day. Probably several mem
bers of their teams also will be pres
ent, invitations have been extended
to them. Several visiting sporting
writers, who are making the train
ing trip with the two teams, also will
be present.
Telegraphic acceptance was receiv
ed this morning from Ty Cobb, who
is at Augusta, by K'. E. Allen, pres
ident of the Lions club, in reply to
his letter of invitation sent several
days ago.
The luncheon will be served in the
Tea Room.
In contemplation of the acceptance
of Cobb and Stallings, plans had
been laid by the Lions for a rather
expanded affair, so that other organ
izations of the community might
unite with the Lions in extending a
welcome to the baseball visitors, and
it was announced by Mr. Allen that
the Lions will be glad to have as
many of the members of the Kiwa
nis and Rotary clubs and the Cham
ber of Commerce as care to dine
with them on that day, as joint hosts
to Cobb and Stallings, in a manner of
speaking, each man to pay for his
own luncheon at 75 cents per plate,
as is the custom of all the clubs. The
expense of entertaining the visitors
will be taken care of by the Lions
themselves. No invitations will be
issued to the organizations, other
than the published notice, because of
the shortness of’the time, it was said.
All members of these organizations
who care to accept the invitation for
that occasion, are asked by President
Allen to notify A. R. Royal, secre
tary, at Churchwell’s, not later than
noon, Monday, so that the Tea Room
ladies may be infformed how many
plates tb prepare.
The two baseball teams and the
sporting writers, of whom there will
be several, will reach Americus from
Macon on the 5:14 a. m. Central of
Georgia train Tuesday in three pri
vate Pullman cars. This will give
the players ample time to enjoy a
morning workout as usual without
interfering with the luncheon engage
ment or rushing for the afternoon
baseball game.
The turn in the weather today,
with clearing atmosphere and a cool
wind blowing from the northwest,
gave hopes of fair weather through
Tuesday. In the event of good wea
ther it is feared the crowds will tax
the capacity of the grounds and the
committees to handle. Many are
counting upon between 4,000 and
5,000 people, many of them visitors
from a distance.
The seat sales committee issues a
warning to all to buy seats now, both
general admission and reserved. If
the crowds are as great as is possi
ble, it will be almost impossible to
sell seats at the grounds. Reserved
seats are on sale at the office of the
1 imes-Reeorder. General admission
for adults and for children may be
had at Americus Drug Company, at
Lawson Drug Co., Howell’s Pharma
cy, Nathan Murray’s, Windsor Phar
macy, all of Saturday and Monday.
TIMES-RECORDER TO
CLOSE FOR GAME
In order that all its employes may j
have an opportunity to see Tuesday’s !
baseball game, The Times-Recorder
will publish only one edition that day,
going to press with the home edition
at 1:45 p. m.„ the usual time for the
first mail edition. Carrier service,
however, will not be given until af
ter the game, which should be before
6 o’clock.
A number of the merchants of the
city have inquired of the Times-Re-i
corder whether other business houses !
would close for the game. Many of
them, apparently, wish to close at
2:30 until after the game, so that
their employes may attend, believing
that the bulk of the Golden Rule trad
ing will be completed by that hour.
The Times-Recorder wili be glad to
publish the list of firms that will close
if notified by noon Monday.
IRISH ARMY DRILLING
IN SECRET ATTACKED
BELFAST, April I. (Bt Asso
ciated pj-ess.)-—A fierce /fight be
tween party police and members of
the Irish Republican arm* took place
near Cookstown, near rhe eastern
border of Tyrone countv, Ulster,
at midnight last night. The police
had come on to a large body of sol
diers drilling. One soldier was kill
ed and a number wtfunded.
The roll of fatalities from fac
tional disorders in Belfast reached
a total of sixty-fonr for the month
of March, the blackest month in Bel
fast’s history.
HIGH GAME OFF.
Because of tile rain Friday fore
noon, the baseoall game scheduled
here for Friday afternoon between
Ashburn and the Americus high
school, the high’s first scheduled con
gest of the season, was cancelled.
PROTECTION FOR
PUBLIC AIM OF
I US IN BIG STRIKE
Government Decided On Policy
Os Non-Interference—Good
Coal Supply On Hand
$ WHAT THE COAL STRIKE J
INVOLVES j
OUREAU oL the Census fur- Z
nishes these figures, showing )
) the size of the American coal in- i
s dustry, Pen4sylvania anthracite <
< mines not included ,for 1919:
> Number of mines. .. 8,314 $
< Salaried employes 33,562 (
? Wage
$ (Average)- 545,356 S
< Capital $1,903,652,355
<, Salaries 68,644,930 >
s Wages $681,937,911 S
S Supplies 142,308,281 <
’ Royalties and
I Rents 22,242,440 .
Taxes 34,571,558 <
( Production in tons
, s Output value at )
£ mines ... $1,143,001,507 J
(By Associated Press)
For the first time in history, both
the bituminous and the anthracite
union coal fields were idle today as
a result of cessation of work by six
hundred thousand miners, effective
last midnight.
Union officials said 100,000 non
union miners were included in, the
walkout and that 6,000 of the 7,500
mines of the country were shut down.
The first day of the strike fell on
the anniversary of the adoption of
the eight-hour day, a day generally
observed as a holiday. Today’s esti
mates of the completeness of the sus
pension were not regarded as final.
WASHINGTON, April I.—Decid
ed up or a policy of non-intervention,
at least at this stage of the dispute,
the administration viewed the begin
ning of the national coal strike to
day with the protection of the gen
eral public in the matter of coal sup
ply and prices as the uppermost con
cern of the offiicals. They believed
this to be assured both by existing
conditions and the present coal sur
plus, in addition to uroduction at the
non-union mines during the strike.
NOT A MINE CLOSED
IN ALABAMA FIELD.
BIRMINGHAM, April I.—Not a
single mine in the Alabama district
was closed down by reason of the
miners strike, according to informa
tion available early today. Not more
than 2000 union miners are employed
in the field, it was stated, and it is
considered unlikely they will be call
ed from their work, according to the
operators of the union properties.
KANSAS MINERS
TAKING HOLIDAY.
PITTSBURG, Kans., April I.—De
spite orders from the Kansas Indus
trial court extending the agreement
between the miners and operators,
little coal was mined in Kansas today.
Both sides said today was a holiday
and the real test would come Mon
day.
The miners in Oklahoma and Tex
as are reported idle.
95,000 MINERS
OUT IN ILLINOIS.
SPRINGFIELD, April I—Approx
imately 95,000 miners had suspend
ed work in Illinois, in 1,025 mines
today.
BLALOCK OUT WITH HIS
FORMAL ANNOUNCEMENT
ATLANTA, April I.—Declaring
for a policy of co-operation between
the state department of agriculture
and the state college of agriculture,
and for all*possible aid and service
to the farmers of the state, A. O.
Blalock, of Fayetteville, today issued
his formal announcement as a candi
date for commissioner of agriculture
in the coming fall primary.
Mr. Blalock, who is familiarly
known as “Bud,” is a well known
Georgia figure, and for several years
under President Wilson held the po
sition of collector of internal rev
enue, at Atlanta.
ALL READY AT AGGIE
FOR BIG FIELD MEET
Everything is in readiness for the
field day at the Aggie school next
Tuesday, Principal Prance announc
ed today. The new Athletic field has
been put in first class condition, with
a splendid running track and other
facilities for the contests. The field
has been enclosed with a fence, al
though the board fence which will
obstruct all view from the outisde
has not yet been erected. The grand
stands, neither, have been erected,
although the material is on hand,
other pressing work having held this
back. The literary contest will be
held Monday night. •
LITTLE FURLOW STREET
TRIMS LITTLE LEE 48-7
Little Furlow street baseball team
defeated Little Lee Street’s team at
the Jackson avenue diamond Friday
afernoon by a score of 48-7.
Batteries for Furlow* street were
Wade Hines and Paul Hines; for
Lee Street, Fort .aud Turpin.
EX-EMPEROR CARL, DIED IN EXILE
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LITTTLELEFTFOR
CITYCOURTTERM
Sawyer Case To Go Over And
Little Criminal Business Is
Expected
City court for this term practically
i came to an end yesterday when
Judge Harper recessed until next
Wednesday, when the criminal dock
et will.be taken up. There are a
number of cases on this docket, but
most of them are old charges and
little actual court business is expect
ed to result. Because of lawyers
interested being called upon to ap
pear in Supreme court in Atlanta
the following week, the damage suit
of W. H. Sawyer and Sons vs the
Seaboard railroad, set for its third
trial a week from Monday, will prob
ably be postponed, it was said.
The criminal calendar for next
Wednesday follows:
Hattie Rodgers, larceny from the
house.
Otis Killebrew, having whisky.
Tim Burton, gaming.
Elias McCulolugh, gaming.
L. H .Lee, trespass.
C. W. Black, having whiiiky.
Will Mike, having whisky.
Arthur Davis, reckless driving.
Rufus Bailey, carrying concealed
weapons.
A. T. Salter misdemeanor.
John Booth, gaming.
Guice Hallman, gaming.
Allen Johnson, gaming.
Fudge Wilburn, cheating and
swindling.
Seay Ray, assault and battery.
Will Langley, allowing minor to
play pool.
Will Timmons, assault and battery.
J. A. Fitzgerald, cheating and
swindling. jfe
Leonard Wilder, disposing of morir
gaged property.
Laura Hawkins, disposing of mort
gaged property.
Rosa Merritt, having whisky.
Ben Williams, simple larceny.
Jim Cross, wife whipping.
John Martin, Jr., misdemeanor.
NEW MUSCLE SHOALS
OFFER IS TRANSMITTED
WASHINGTON. April .I.—Secre
tary of War Weeks has transmitted
to Congress an offer from Charles L.
Parsons, of this city, for develop
ment of Muscle Shoals of the indus
try for fixation of nitrogen and the
uso of the government's nitrate
plants for that purpose.
The parson’s offer was announced
by Chairman Kahn, of the house mil
itary committee. He said executive
Sessions of the Committee would be
gin April 10, to reach an agreeemnt
on the various offers for Muscle
Shoals.
TO SAVE RAILWAY FROM
ASHBURN TO CAMILLA
MOULTRIE, April I.—The form
ing of a temporary organization to
handle the negotiations with a view
of purchasing part of the Hawkins
ville & Florida Southern railroad is
believed by those interested to make
it certain that part of the line from
Ashburn to Camilla, a distance of
some fifty miles, will be saved from
the junk pile.
The temporary organization is
headed by J. N. Pidcock, of Moultrie,,
formerly president of the Georgia
Northern and still prominently con
nected with that line.
PRICE FIVE CENTS.
LOBBY CHARGE OF
GOVERNOR FAILS
Mississippi House Investigation
Reports It Did Not Substan
tiate Russell
—i
JACKSON, Miss., April I. The
special committee of the Missippii
House of Representatives named to
investigate charges preferred by
Governor Russell that certain fire
insurance interests were maintaining
a “pernicious lobby” and had inspir
ed the If 100,000 seduction suit
against him by Miss Frances Birk
head, his former stenographer, re
ported today that its investigation
had failed to substantiate the gover
nor's charges.
SCOUT BONDS TO BE SOLD
IN WAYCROSS DISTRICT
WAYCROSS, April I.—Plans were
made Friday for the immediate sale
of Boy Scout bonds thorughout the
distiict under the jurisdiction of .the
Okefenokee courtcil for the mainte
>ance of the council during the com
ing year. The plan to be followed in
the district is identically the same
is that followed by the Waycross
council several months ago to raise
funds for the local council, each bond
being dedicated to some former scout
or future scout.
JANNEY BACK, BUYS
500 BALES OF COTTON
G. H. Janney, of Montgomery, a (
cotton buyer who spends much of his
time in Americus, returned here yes
terday after an absence of three
weeks and was warmly greeted
about the warehouses, where he is a
familiar figure. Mr. Janney celebrat
ed his return by putting some new
lile into a cotton market dead loeal
■ ly, buying 500 bales and paying a
good price for them. It was the first
sale of importance since he had been
away, cotton men said.
SUB-LEVEE NOW HOLDS
SWIRLING MISSISSIPPI
HELENA, Ark., April I.—Work
men returning from the Old Town
levee, 17 miles south of here, where
caving in continued early today, said
the water was being held by a sub-
Icvee and that the situation was un
der control at the* present. A crev
asse here would inundat" thousands
of acres of farming lands of south
eastern Arkansas. No large tow..s
are located in the threatened terri
tory.
AMERICUS SPOT COTTON.
Good Middling, 17c.
NEW YORK FUTURES
May July Oct.
Prev. C105e17.92 17.31 16.94
Open 17.98 17.38 16.95
10:15 am 17.93 17.29 16.94
10:30 17.91 17.27 16.93
10:45 17.91 17.28 16.94
11:00 17.91 17.28 16.92
11:15 17.90 17.26 16.91
11:30 ..17.89 17.22 16.91
11:45 17.87 17.24 16.90
Close ...1...17.83 17.32 16.98
NOME
Mfr
LASTHAPSBURG
FALLS VICTIM
OF PNEUMONIA
Man Whom Allies Banished Af
ter Two Attemps To Regain
Throne, Succumbs
FUNCHAL, Maderia, April I.
(By Associated Press.) Former
Emperor Charles, of Austro-Hun
gary, died here today in exile from
double pneumonia.
Ex-Emperor Carl, tee last of the
Hapsburg dynasty, was exiled to Ma
deria island by the Allies a few
months ago, with ex-Empress Zita,
his wife, after two unsuccessful at
tempts to seize the throne of Hun
gary.
Ke was born in 1887, the son of
the late Archduke Otto of Saxony,
and was an unpromising major in the
Austrian infantry regiment when the
shot of the assassin who killed the
Arehdue Francis Ferdinand, on June
28, 1914, made him the heir appar
ent to the throne. He acceded to
the Austrian throne on December 30,
1916, on the death of Emperor Fran
cis Josef.
On October, 1918, shortly before
the end of the great war, Carl an
nounced plans for the Federalization
of Austria-Hungary and in an ad
dress to the Hungarian Diet frankly
admitted his throne was in “peril.”
A day or two later Count Karolyi,
leader of the Hungarian republicans,
announced the success of a blood
less revolution in Budapest and de
clared Hungary a free and independ
ent state. Still later the German
and other provinces declared their
purpose to become autonomous en
tities and the House of the Haps
burgs, once the leader of the Holy
Roman Empire, seemed to be about
to collapse like a house of cards.
HEILMAN USES
LIGHTEST BAT
Harry Heilman, the new batting
king of the American League, who
will be seen in the Detroit line-up
in the game between Detroit Ameri
cans and the Rochester Internation- ,
als here Tuesday, April 4, uses one
of the lightest bats ever carried to
the plate by a baseball player. In
the hands of the Titantic Heilman,
he is as big if not bigger than Babe
Ruth, the bat looks like a fungo
stick for hitting flies to the outfield
ers in practice. Ruth uses the heav
iest bat in baseball, a bat weigh
ing 56 ounces. Heilman’s bat
weighs only a bit*more than one-half
as much.
However Heilman and his light
bat, showed Ruth how to pile up hit:;
and when the season ended the home
run king was comfortably far behind
the clouting Heilman. This giant
from California is as good-natured
as he is big, as happy as he is pow
erful. If he had taken baseball seri
ously before last year he would long
ago have established himself as the
leading right-hander of the Ameri
can League.
Heilman finished the season of
1920 batting .309. In 1921 he bat
terd for .394 and led his league.
This jump of 85 points in his bat
ting average seems remarkable t ut
it is really not so extraordinary when
one begins to figure Heilman. Be
fore 1921, Heilman took baseball
lightly. It was his ambition io go u>
West Point, He always wanted to
get into the army; the army life
I appealed to him. But he missed out
on going to the United States mili
tary college and when the war came
Heilman, instead of getting into the
army, got into the navy and was
aboard a submarine.
With the war over, and no war in
sight for the future, the army idea
left Heilman and when Ty Cobb be-
I eame manager of the Detroit club,
j Heilman settled down to play base
! ball. Then he jumped the 85 points
above mentioned and is the first
right-hander since Larry Lajoie to
lead Ban Johnson's organization. And
he claims he will repeat this year.
POOR SUPPORT IS GIVEN
ANDERSONVILLE PITCHER
ANDERSONVILLE, April I.
: Oglethorpe defeated Andersonville
High in a fast baseball game at Ogle
, thorpe Friday afternoon bv the score
I of 6 to 4.
Johnson, of Andersonville, had the
Oglethorpe batters at his mercy at
all times, but poor support in the
pinches lost the game for him. He
| struck out 10 batters and allowed
but 3 hits, one of these a scratch hit.
At bat he proved his worth by con
necting safely three times out of four
. trips to plate. Two runs were earn
ed off his delivery, while his team
mates secured seven hits and earned
the 4 runs they made. Aycock got a
single and a double out of four trips.
The ground was wet and rough,
which accounts for the erratic field
ing of both teams.
Batteries: Oglethorpe, Ansley and
Murray; Andersonville. Johnson and
Shockley. Struck out, Ansley 2;
Johnson 10; hits, off Ansley 7; off
Johnson 3; base on balls, Ansley 4,
Johnson 4; errors, Oglethorpe 3, An
dersonville 7. Umpire, Stewart.