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Sitton Pitches Magnificent Game and Locals Play Like Whirlwind Behind Him
CRACKERS’ LOSING STREAK SMASHED AT LAST
By Percy H. Whiting.
A LOSING* streak which, for
duration and intensity, set a
lot of new records was
smashed by the Crackers here yes
terday afternoon when they won a
tight game from Memphis. 2 to 1.
It was the first spasm of a dou
bleheader. Rain prevented the
second.
It was a game with whiskers on
—a regular prehistoric neolithic
megatharium, a tar baby with a
punch. The Cracker team, which
has been wallowing in a slump as
deep as the bottomless pit and
fully as depressing, suddenly pulled
out. It didn't play just ordinarily
good ball against the Turtles. It
played phenomenally good ball.
In the first place there was Ved
der Sitton! Now, Vedder doesn't
like to see his name in print, but
we’ll have to trespass on his well
* known good nature long enough to
say that he pitched one thunder
ing fine game of baseball. Real
flossy fielding around second when
Moulton tapped to Alperman would
have given him the shut-out he de
served.
The only run by Memphis was
scored in the fourth. Crandall sin
gled cleanly enough to left. Moul
ton then stung one down toward
second that was awkward to handle.
It appeared th it Whitey was neat
enough to the second bag to have
stepped to it before Crandall got
there. Instead, he tried to throw to
O'Brien. Pete was coming in fast,
got the ball over his left ear. and
finally didn't accomplish the out
Then Kerr singled neatly to right,
and the only Memphis run was
over. The Turtles only made three
hits, aside from that pair in the
fourth.
Yea. verily, the South Carollnan
pitched some real baseball.
♦ • •
1,0) or" NEWTON, he of the huge
size and the slab-sided de
livery. didn't pitch any bad game
of ball himself A shade better
fielding by Moulton in the second
inning might have prevented the
first Cracker tun. McElveen stung
what was admittedly a mean one
to handle. Moulton’s throw to first
was a shade wide, and Empire
Breitenstein, after deliberating a
bit, called McElveen safe. To the
crowd it was a doubtful decision,
but as the Turtles kicked but faint
ly, it was probably eminently cor
rect. O'Dell then executed a sacri
fice. and O'Brien chipped in with a
two-bagger. That scored the first
run
The second tally came across in
the seventh. Black storm clouds
were piling up then, and it looked
as though rain might fall and chop
off the game while it was still a
tie. With such a happening immi
nent. Al O'Dell hacked off a one
sacker and stol- second. O'Brien,
who had delivered before, could
C* O HEALS
0.0.0. SORES AND ULCERS
S. S. S. heals Sores and Ulcers in the very simplest way. It just goes
right down into the blood and removes the cause, and the place is bound
to heal because the impurities and morbid matters which have been the
means of keeping the ulcer open are no longer absorbed from the blood.
External applications of salves, lotions, plasters, etc., can never produce a
cure because they do not reach the source of the trouble. At best they
can only allay pain or reduce inflammation; such treatment is working on
symptoms and not reaching the cause. Every nutritive corpuscle in the
blood is weakened or infected, they cannot nourish the fibrous tissue around
the place, but instead they constantly discharge into the flesh around the
sore a quantity of impure, germ-laden matter which gradually eats into the
surrounding healthy tissue and causes the ulcer to enlarge. Since impute
blood is responsible for Sores and Ulcers, a medicine that can purify the
blood is the only hope of a cure. S. S. S. has long been recognized as the
greatest of all blood purifiers, possessing the qualities necessary to remove
every impurity from the blood. While curing the sore or ulcer S. S. S.
brings about a healthv condition of the flesh by supplying it with rich
healthy blood, and thus makes the cure permanent and lasting. Book on
| ©ores and Ulcers and any medical advice free to all who write.
THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, GA
only fly out. but Pat Donahue, who
has been there with a lot of the
pinch stuff this year, stung out a
single, on which O’Dell scored with
the winning run.
It was all good, clean baseball
Phenomenal work might have
changed the result. But there
wasn’t anything bad about what
was offered, and it was a clean
and as bard fought a game o* ball
as a man often sees. It was so
exceptionally good that it wasn't
spectacular. Machine-like work on
both sides made a mechanical fort
of production of it. Yet no man
should kick at the home-made ex
hibitions put on by the Crackers in
recent spasms.
• • •
r T HE game, though almost too
A good to be true, was enlivened
by a few snappy incidents. In the
third Inning Pitcher Sitton served
Baerwald with a bean ball. "Rudy”
fell to avoid a fractured skull, and
his bat struck the ball, lifting a
puny pop that Sitton nabbed.
This was a good Joke for Sitton.
Then there was one against him
in the eighth. Vedder is the fastest
man on the team over to first
base. So when one of his wild
swings resulted in a feeble roller
down the first base line, he had a
FODDER FOR FANS
Baseball must be a peaceful game at
Marion. The other day Ered <>dwell was
suspended for a run-in with Empire
O'Brien and O'Brien was arrested for
mauling a newspaper man.
Earl Mack. Connie's son. is managing
the Atlantic City team this year. It
seems to run in the family.
Charley Frank's wild man, A! Bonner,
was let go to Montgbnterj when Hunk
Griffin reported. That Dutchman likes
'em savage but not wild
• * •
Dobbs seems to be trying to make up a
team of cast-offs. A good bit more than
half the men on bls <-lub now have pre
viously played with some other clu> in the
Southern league
• • •
Another freakish thing about the Rilli
kens Is that seven of the fourteen men on
the payroll are pitchers. They are Bills,
Bonner. l ively, Altchlson, Johns. Paige
and Batla ba ugh Three of those men are
former Crackers; Bills was with Memphis
once Bonner is an ex-Pelican; Altchlson
formerly performed for Nashville
• • •
If Montgomery ever gets going as it
ought to anti forces Chattanooga back
where it belongs, and unless the Crackers
get started, the four southern division
dubs of the Southern league are likely
to finish the season one-two-three-four,
Johnny Dobbs quit playing because, no
matter how much he exercised and how
little he ate. he couldn't reduce weight
This year he hasn't played, but he has
coached Ami right now he is lighter than
before in years
• • •
Crazed with winning baseball. Wash
ington is now trying to get the game on
Sunday as well as on week days. It may
take time, but It is coming
• • «
Blanchard, the ambidextrous pitcher,
has been signed by Guelph, of the Ca
nadian league He was with the Ath
letics once That’s the way all the ambi
dextrous chaps g<' It's hard enough to
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. SATURDAY, JUNE 15. 1912.
swell chance to beat it. He dashed
away, but just as he reached the
ball it rolled foul. So Vedder
turned and walked back to the
plate. After rolling foul for a while,
the ball changed its notion, rolled
back into fair territory, and Sit
ton was out from Newton to Ab
stein.
Crandall, in the fourth inning,
demonstrated that it is possible to
play pretty good ball sitting down.
After Alperman had walked, New
ton snapped one over to Absteln.
and ’ Whitey," making a virtue of
necessity (or whatever the saying
is to that general effect), romped
on toward second. Crandall came
in fast to take the throw at sec
ond, but. finding the ground slip
pery. he plumped gracefully to a
sitting posture exactly on the bag.
Sitting there, he received the ball
and touched Alperman out as he
slid in.
It would be poor business to
make any bets that there will be
a game today. It rained bloody
murder Thursday night. It was a
terrific shower that prevented the
second game of yesterday's double
header. Nobody will be surprised
at bad weather today. If there is
much more rain, it’s all off.
If there is a game, it will be
started at 2:15.
get by with one-handed pitching, with
out mixing up with the two fisted article.
• * •
The man who was thrown in on the
O’Toole <ieal, Kelly, is proving so good
with Pittsburg that he is forcing Gibson
Into the background.
Mike Donlin says the Giants are about
due to pop. Maybe he thinks that Maybe
he only hopes It.
• • •
Hyatt, the West Pointer secured by
Detroit, is to be farmed.
• • •
'They are passing the hat now for the
Richmond ciuh of the U S. league. Maybe
by d’at of an occasional strawberry fes
tival. with a grand amateur minstrel
show on Fourth of .Inly night, they can
keep the old tub afloat awhile.
• • •
Joe Wood, of Boston, has developed a
slow, round-house, side-arm curve that
he delivers with the same motion as his
fast bull The combination is said to be
deadlx
• • •
Memphis has an 'M. D'' battery—in
"Doc” Newton and "Doc" Seabough.
• « •
Ed Pfeffer has dropped to the Grand
Rapids team of the Central league
• ■ ■
Big old M’hitey Guese. formerly of the
Dixie circuit, has been released by Man
ager Bill 1 hillips. also an ex-Southern
leaguer.
• • •
The Rochester team did a lot in bolster
ing up the Washington team for the great
race it has been running It sent Moeller
and Foster there and both are doing help
ful work.
• • •
Walter Johnson has rounded out his
repertoire this year with a slow ball and
a slow curve Up to this vear the Swede
hadn't anything much but speed—and
didn't need It.
FIFTH REGIMENT TO
HOLD BOXING BOUTS
The athletic committee of the Fifth
regiment wish to announces that they
are now ’eady to receive entries for the
innual sparring contests to be held by
the regiment. All entries must be in
bv Monday. June 24. same to be ad
dressed to Lieutenant G AV. McCarty.
Jr . Company F. and to be placed in the
mail box of that company at the ar
mory. Men wishing to enter must give
name in full, company, date of enlist
ment. weight and class.
There will be four classes, viz.:
Heavy, middle, welter and lightweight.
Lightweights are to range from 125 to
135 pounds; welterweights from 135 t>
150 pounds; middleweights from 150
to 165 pounds, heavyweights from 16*
on.
JACK GRIM TO MARRY.
CINCINNATI. OHIO, June 15 —Jack
Grim, the manager of the Newport
News (Va > baseball team, will be
married to Mary Ellen Gleason at Old
Point Comport, Va., on June 19. Grim
is a Cincinnati hoy and was formerly a
scout for the Reds.
The Mysterious Guy Is Shown Up at Last
CRACKERS GET
AGLER.ACRACK
FIRST SACKER
CHARLEY HEMPHILL, in his
struggle to give Atlanta fans
a winner, has just secured
Joe Agler, a corking young first
baseman, from the Chicago Na
tionals. He will report to the
Crackers Monday. Agler was the
star initial sacker in the Eastern
league that was last season, per-’
forming with Joe McGinnity’s
Newark team. The Cubs secured
him last fall.
Agler has not been bought out
right by the Crackers. He comes
here under an optional agreement,
which means that a big string is
tied to hltn. In sending him here.
Charley Murphy, president and
owner of the Cubs, has informed
President Callaway that next
spring the young man will again
join the Windy City aggregation.
Although his records are not
anything to cause alarm, Agler,
nevertheless, is one .of the most
promising first basemen in the
country. In his case, figures do
not show his ful worth. He bat
ted .255 for Newark last season,
garnering 122 hits for. a total of 156
bases. He swatted out ten doubles
and twelve triples. Twenty-five
bases did he pilfer. His fielding
average in 140 games was .988,
which shows that he is a bear on
the defensive end of the game.
With the coining of Agler, O'Dell
will have to be shifted to some oth
er position than first base. Man
ager Hemphill is undecided just
where he will place Al. It may be
that he will keep him as pinch hit
ter and utility man.
President Callaway denies that
he gave up Sykes, Paige, Johns and
a couple of million dollars for Mc-
Elveen. "We got McElveen at a
very reasonable price,” said the
Cracker head today.
PASKERT, EX-CRACKER.
RANKS WITH BEST NOW
Dode Paskert, former Cracker, is
playing the game of his life this year.
Ever since he was moved up to the top
of the batting order he has been clout
ing the ball in al! directions.
George always was as good a fielder
as anybody, and in hiS present streak
of hitting makes him one of the great
est outfielders in the business. He
worked a neat play the other day in a
Cincinnati game in scoring from second
on an infield hit. He had doubled in
the fifth, when Titus hit a bounder be
tween first and second. Hobby went
over and handled the bail, and Fromme
covered first, apparently in time for the
out. but Empire Johnstone called Titus
safe. Paskert saw that the play was
going to be close and that Eromme
would have his back turned to the plate
and would be in no position to turn for
a quick throw to the pan. so he kept
right on coming. He took Eromme by
surprise, and the throw home was too
late to get the speedy runner. Some
base running.
CHICAGO UNIVERSITY TO
BUILD $170,000 STAND
CHICAGO. June 15—Plans for the
$170,000 grandstand ano wall for the ath
letic field at the University of Chicago
have been announced
They provide for a concrete stand of
10,000 capacity, bleachers to seat 5.000
and a concrete wall fourteen feet high.
The improvement will be Gothic style to
correspond with the campus buildings
A movable steel stand will be erected
on the east side of the field. Including
the room for temporary stands at the
south end of the held, the total seating
capaeitt will be 27.000. The improve
ment will be completed about October 1.
LIMA BUYS TWO PLAYERS.
LIMA. OHIO. June 15. Lima has
purchased Pitcher Dot le from the Ak
ron club of the Central league. Doyle
has been pitching for Terre Haute.
Tom Plunime, outfielder with last year's
Piqua club, was signed and joins the
team soon.
Ed M/. Smith Interviews Challenger in His Training Camp
“I’LL BEAT JOHNSON OR DIE IN RING”
Bv Ed. W. Smith.
East la§. vegas, n. m„
June 15.—"1f I don’t win
this fight I want to die be
fore they carry me out of the
arena." This was the fervent state
ment made today by Jim Flynn,
Pueblo fireman, challenger of Jack
Johnson, and Jim meant every
word of it.
He had just come out of the
gymnasium after one of the best
workouts of his month’s stay here,
and the gleam of the Colorado
fighter told of the coming of good
condition, if not actually of the
arrival of it.right now.
"What I want is to make Curley
have a gun trained on me during
the fight and if I am not returned
as the winner I want him to touch
it off right at my head,” Jim con
tinued.
This is indicative of the confi
dence held by the Pueblo man. I
haven’t seen anything like its spir
it in a championship contender in
a long time.
"They tell me • Johnson isn't
training the way he should," Jim
worried along in his earnest way.
"1 may prove to be the snap he
thinks I am, but there is a bare
chance that he may be mistaken
and I would hate to have it said
afterward that I whipped a man
who wasn't in any sort of shape.
Why don’t somebody make him
work ?”
When assured that Johnson was
doing all that was considered nec
essary to get himself In first-class
condition for the meeting. Flynn
was partially mollified.
Jim's brother. I.ouis, met John
son on the road the morning be
fore and told Jim of it, telling him
that Johnson looked as if he was
just finishing a long journey over
the hills.
Fight Three Weeks Away.
Three weeks more and the big
gladiators will take to the arena
and the work of training has de
veloped into the final stage. It
hasn't changed a great deal, ex
cepting in spirit, from what has
been during the past two weeks.
But you can all wager heavily
that the spirit is there, and there
in. large gobs. There is a feeling
of quiet confidence and subdued
willingness in the camp of the
champion, out at Old Town, where
everybody is smilingly' polite and
suave, from the boss of the job
down to the most lowly of the
helpers.
Johnson is accepting the situa
tion and all of its strange and pic
turesque details with a great deal
of complacency. Indeed, this feel
ing borders to the casual onlook
er upon actual carelessness and
indifference. The champion him
self loafs along through his idle
hours and some of the sharps now
here are complaining that he is
not displaying the snap and gin
ger that he should three weeks in
advance of such an important fight.
Johnson a Plodder.
But when one digs down under
the crust of the big black man one
finds that the right spirit is there.
Johnson is not full of fuss or flur
ry, differing vastly from the hur
rah methods of the challenger.
Jack plods along through his work,
laughing and kidding with his help
ers and the few spectators that he
knows, in those quaint cosmo
politan crowds that watch his daily
offerings in the way of work. But
he gets a whole lot out of what he
does. He never makes his work
look like work. To the ordinary
onlooker he seems to be merely
putting in the time. But when
one digs deep one sees that John
son is training as hard for this
contest as he ever did for any. and
is slowly and surely getting the re
sults.
Yesterday, for instance, in box-
Copyright, 1912, National News Ass'n.
ing with both Cutler and Respress,
he pulled the triggers of some of
his best guns and as a result the
boxing work was cut down to six
full rounds. But they were good
rounds, every one of them full of
vigor and hard smashing, coupled
with plenty of speed. Johnson put
in exactly an hour and five minutes
at all sorts of work, and at the
close of his work he looked sleepy
and tired. But it was the most
useful sort of work that he could
have put In.
NEWS FROM RINGSIDE
The portable arena to be used for the
Johnson-Flynn fight at Las Vegas has ar
rived and is now being put In place. The
arena has a seating capacity of 17,150
people. The fans sitting on the last row
will be but 87 feet from the ring.
» * •
Orders for seats are constantly coming
in through the mall and Treasurer Murk
Lewis Is finding it a hard job to fill them
as fast as they arrive.
• ♦ •
The largest orders for tickets are com
ing from different parts of Colorado, the
Fireman's home state.
♦ • »
Tex Rickard, who promoted the famous
Jeffries : Johnson fight. Is promoting a
trans-Andean railroad near Argentina.
...
Although reports have been sent out
that James J. Jeffries will referee the
Wolgast-Rivers fight next July, Jeffries
says he does not care to be seen in the
ring again, not even as referee. However,
he says if no one else suitable can be se
cured to decide the winner, he will be
glad to accommodate Tom McCarev.
« « «
Although Wolgast is signed up to box
Joe Rivers in Los Angeles July 4. reports
say his manager, Tom Jones, has wired
Promoter James Coffroth in San Fran-
WOMEN ATTEND FIGHTS
AND SMOKE CIGARETTES
NEW YORK, June 15.—Officials of
the St. Nicholas Athletic club an
nounced today that stricter precautions
would be taken in the future relative
to the admission of persons desiring to
see the fights. This announcement
came with the presence of two women
in boy’s clothing at the ringside last
night. Each of the women smoked
cigarettes constantly during the bouts.
Ten separate bouts were on the pro
gram. The 501 T men present paid more
attention to the semi-disguised women
than they did to the boxers.
Out of oldest Eygpt comes
this new trade-mark of ours.
The pyramid of the Pharaohs
typifies strength, substantial
ity, permanency. The
wings of the sacred ibis signi
fy lightness, speed, grace.
And “the Winged Pyramid”
stands for all that’s best in
automobile construction.
Seventy-five thousand new Fords go into
, service this season—proof of their une
ijualed merit. The price is $590 for the
roadster, $690 for the jive-passenger car,
and S7OO for the delivery ear—complete
with all equipment, f. o. b. Detroit. Latest
catalogue from Ford Motor Company, 311
Peachtree St., Atlanta, or direct from De
troit factory.
By Tad
===FLYNN
Both Flynn and Johnson have
received several offers of exhibi
tions around this section of the
country the night Immediately fol
lowing the battle, the offers being,
of course, to the winner of the con
test.
Johnson, it is said, intends to
hurry away the night of the Fourth
for Chicago, win or lose. But, of
course, he believes he will have the
winner’s honors safely stored away
when he boards tfie eastbound
limited at 11:05 that night.
cisco that he will consider a July 4 offer
for Ad to box in 'Frisco.
... <
Joe Gorman is training hard for his
eight-round handicap match with Tony
Caponi in Chattanooga June 18. Capon!
had agreed to put the Westerner to sleep
inside of eight rounds.
...
Johnny Coulon has entered a protest
against the claim that his fight with
Frankie Hayes was a fake. Coulon says
he was to forfeit the SI,OOO guarantee if
he was disqualified, and for this reason
he was boxing cautiously until the ref
eree left the ring, declaring It to be a
frame-up. He says after the chief of
police ordered the fight to go on he saw
he could easily put Hayes out. so he
rushed in and knocked him cold.
...
Ed Exnicos, who has been promoting
boxing matches in Nashville, has thrown
up the sponge, claiming there is no
money to be made in the game in that
city. However, it is likely that some one
else will take over the club and continue
to stage bouts in the Tennessee capital.
...
The last fight staged in Nashville was
between Yankee Schwartz and Tommy
Kilbane, a brother of the famous Johnny-
Tommy used such rough tactics in his
bout with Schwartz that many fans left
the hall in disgust. •
KID ELBERFELD TO PLAY
SHORT FOR MONTGOMERY
MONTGOMERY, ALA.. June 15.-
Norman Elberfeld, the “Tabasco Kid,”
former Yankee and Senator, will suc
ceed Humpty McElveen, now’ a Crack
er, on the short field of the Blllikens.
Elberfeld has not played any this
season and may not help the Billies
any, but if he gets into shape he wil
prove of much assistance to the Dobb
ites and round out a good Infield.
With the signing of Elberfeld
Dobbs will probably remain a bench
manager. Joey’ Bills staying in the out
field.