Newspaper Page Text
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EDITLV A- V/. 9 FARNSWORTH
’DOPE' UPSET IN
NW LEWS’
PENNINTHUNTS
By Danmn Runyon.
BASEBALL has away of In
variably upsetting all prog
nostications The only sure
thing about the game Is that it will
always be different from what Is
expected. After the hairline finish
In the National league last season
It was generally believed that the
1912 '•ace in the older organisation
would be a thrilling affair, while
the American league campaign was
figured as simply a.n uninteresting
parade, with the Athletics 1n the
band wagon showing the way
Many fans believed that the
Giants were lucky in winning the
pennant In the National and that
the Phillies, the Pirates and the
Cubs would give them a terrible
battle this season They also be
lieved that the Athletic band would
run tls opponents off their feet
early in the game and have the
pennant cinched early in the sea
son.
Hard Fiqht In Younger Leaque.
In other words, tt seemed certain
that the National league would
again afford ah the excitement,
while the American league race
would be tame and uninteresting
Conditions are lust reversed
Wh<l* most people are engaged in
figuring out Just how far the
Gianta will win, the Johnsonian
organization has settled down to a
hand-to-hand struggle with six
clubs in the melee.
John J McGraw's club is now
believed to have better than a 2-
to-1 chance of repeating in th» Na
tional lesgite while 1t was hardly
even monev at the close of the (
1911 season Connie Mack's dele
gation was considered a cinch nt
any odds to win another pennant
In the American league this year,
particular’'- aft»r the world's series,
but now tn the merry month of
June 11 *« believed that he will have
•he ■-* h:s life to overhaul the
tv- ■' -r - Red Sox He may do 1t
probab'- most fans believe he
w h,.- a strong element of un
*■•■ has entered into the mat
te -
Phillies Biq Disappointment.
It is a remarkable upsetting of the
"dope." The Phillies supposedly
the Giants' most dangerous foe
after last season —are nowhere.
The McGraw machine is far out in
front and the only other new sen
sation of the National league—the
Cincinnati Reds.—faded early.
Pittsburg and Chicago are coming
very very slowly, probably too
•lowlv to do them any good, while
the other cluhg are running to
form
In the American league there
have been two distinct surprises—
the White Sox nnd Washington.
The Red Ser are living up to the
winter books, as they were always
figured 1n the fight for the job of
runner-up, at least Cleveland did
not do as well ns expected, and De
troit has failed to Justify the win
ter prophecies Meanwhile, the
champions of the world are lagging
along and showing hut little of
their 1911 form It may be argued
that they lagged last season, too,
but with such delegations as the
vari-colored Sox out in front. It
behooves the champs to be up and
doing—for this is the middle of the
merry month of June
waiversTsked by tigers
ON MULLIN AND SUMMERS
DETROIT. June 17.—The Detroit Amer
ican league baseball club. It was learned
today, has asked waivers on George
Mullin and Eddie Summers, veteran
pitchers and stars of season past Sum
mers has been in poor health, and ft Is
claimed Mullin has been indifferent
J— 11 '* "■
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BASEBA ELI!
Diamond News and Gossip
_j
Catcher Lem nr. r ' by a nf i
Southern leagpi* : - n - s ner reached ;
the Texa* league : * • . <’*d a hind |
and can't earn h< - H* r? earned,
part of h in r> * - ' ■ •rr
In hie la«t *>o rr « ? o *-* plate George .
Paskert has made -4 r.‘.
• • •
The Trl-State ragL f ir.ak*? mor* fran
chise changes than the Southeast Ar
kansas league and is a clobe second to
the Kitty The Altoona franchise has
been transferred to Reading You all
know why It was due to our old friend.
“1. of p ." which, being interpreted means
lack of patronage
• • •
There are several clubs in the South
ern league suffering from that same
“L of p.“ complaint.
• ♦ •
The Pnhitiibln. S C.. team has bought
four players from the Cincinnati team.
But not the Reds. Nixie The V. S.
leagme thing
“Red" Keating, who fizzled with Al
bany, has Bren signed by Jacksonville.
• • •
Every time the Mobile team wins as
many as two games in a row the Gulvllle
scribes swear the team has just struck
its stride
Wild Bill Donovan is doing a little
scouting among American association
clubs for the Detroit team.
• • •
The Southern league has a grand lot of
road teams this year. Only two of the |
eight clubs have won more games at .
home than away frrom home The Crack
ers have played nearly A hundred points ’
Better on foreign soil than at Ponce De-
I icon.
• • •
Cy Watson, the man who recently
pitched a no hit no-run one-base on-balls
game for Houston, has only managed to
win five nut of his ton games this year
Scouts for the Browns are looking Into
his case, but he hopes with luck to be
saved from any such misfortune.
• • «
"Luck and Bad I’mpiring Wreck Cubs'
Chance.” says a Chicago headline They
<umld have reversed to read. “Wreck
Chance's Cubs ' it la ever thus when
you are losing
• • «
The United States leagtie may be con
tinued with four dubs this season And
then again It ma\ not be continued at all.
• • •
’Peaches’’ Graham will go to Toronto
if waivers are secured
• • •
o'Day would have claimed Pel tv for
the Reds if Washington had waived on
him Hank" thinks Pelty’s arm is all
right, but that ha needs a new team
• • «
Reumiller, ex-Cracker shortstop who
has been playing phenomenally good ball
lor the phenomenally had Louisville team,
’s out now with a broken thumb.
• • *
Herman Schaefer, as hi:- baseball abil
ity slips away, replace:- it with new
vaudeville stuff He now does an Imlta
tion high wire act along a chalk line that
’s said to be funny enough to make
"Slivers swallow bls make up
• • •
The other da\ Schaefer was sent in to
ha? for John Het” \ \s the giant catcher
walked to the bench Schaefer grabbed
him and holding him h> the hand, turned
to the stands and announced
"Ladies and Gentlemen \llow me to
| mtrcMluce to yon M? Henr> He is the
i gentleman 1 am to bat (nr"
When Schaefer w.'krtl to the plate fm
I pire Bijl\ I’vrnu mk.-d pun who he wa -
batting for
\|. ' \ .died h.<Hi ’ Who, M E •
Win am I hatting •. r ■ p, n batting for
exercise
• • •
Constant l ift - o' playei s have hurt
the Tigers th>s vr,r They have never
-- ?thd down into < real lean’ vet.
QUITS TEAM BECAUSE HE
COULD NO I ROOM ALONE
MACON G \ June 1” Because the
pr oprieto’ : of a local b'»tcl w"o are al •
• ovneis of the Macon ball club, ’nfused
’,<» give him a loom to himself at a less
r.itY than w.«> 'bargod the other plaxerc
M or’stop John <’ >o!, ha* quit the team
'll of the play rt > stop at the ho’el, and
’wo ate a* -' U pp.t t,. a room
i ’onk wan’r l to h< b\ himself at half
I price chaigfd l.u • Haser- for a
■ when this wa ’• »”• I him h, ‘
brr.l to plav witl th' ’• m lonrrr I
ir e ident t imoi ( ., K , he will be sus- j
uenutd mdehniteb
rHE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. MONDAY, JUNE 17. 1912.
League Schedule Hands Atlanta Awful Lemon in Short Saturday Games
KAVAVtI fiH COO HELP SOME, BUT NEVER Will
B\ Percy 11. Whiting.
* SK any bast-ball man what is
Z-X the best baseball town in the
Southern league and he'll tell
you "Atlanta.'' Ask anybody in
Atlanta what city is getting all the
worst of this year’s schedule and
every year’s schedule, and they'll
give you the same answer, "At
lanta."
Os all punk arrangements ever
inflicted or» the public this schedule
that makes Atlanta the victim of
slx-lnnlng games on Saturday aft
ernoon is the most outrageous. The
Standard oil Company never in
flicted anything worse on a com
petitor.
VUHOSE fault Is it? Not the lo
’’ cal association's surely, for
the directors put up an elegapt yell
against It. Rut they had one vote
against seven The local associa
tion has been protesting for years
against an arrangement that neces
sitated short Saturday games. And
all it has achieved whs some ex
orcist, for the lungs.
The Southern league is responsi
ble primarily and the league sched
ule committee secondarily. And.
since the main cheese of the sched
ule committee is President W. M
Kavanaugh. It is likely that he is
the ring leader in unloading such
an imposition on the best baseball
city in the leae-ue.
* • •
I TLANTA gets short games on
Saturday so that the teams
playing here can get away in time
to play Sunday games. It so hap
pens that the big Sunday towns—
Memphis, Mobile and New Orleans
are reached by trains that leave
Atlanta early in the exening, so
earl, that teams playing with the
Crackers must get an earls start
in order to catch them.
The whole rotten arrangement
arose from the obsession of the
Southern league that the inoned it
makes on Sundav is a little better
than the money made on week
days. And the league will delib
it it elx ci ipplc it. . vttl.ix a- w cek
> it it-- for the benefit of tho.-e which
plax Sunday l>all
W7 11 'l' S to be d"Hr ibout it ’
* * It's too hilt to ■ nange the
schedule ihis y< al and it would be
imiu .sfbl. to get a majority in At
lanta's lux "r, .nn iiow .
< >ne thing that ■ 'mid hr done
xxould lie to xx,,ive tills silly rule
that the game must be railed one
limit lietore (ruin time. Waiting
automobiles > .mid hurt) players to
eifhet station in 1J or 211 minutes.
II would <■ st xtsiting te mi- a
shade more imi it would be duced
h unph asani for the x isiting plax
el s to bax e t > dt • - ; op fhr 11 ailt.
Blit it 'em. to it.- that tin added
expetc-e and the added trouble •
x\o||ld l>" more than justified bx
tie tut that the pt opig of \tlan-
t t would '- t ,i lltib' more baseb ill
for their nt"n< v.
The milt game are liurftns
V ’ lanta’-, attend , n, ■
'. not l> ; ">•.!>. ; 11, I f be ,1m
1 would be to insUUU the uuituta lx; 1
hustle these abbreviated games
They could increase the speed of
any game a good 25 per cent., if
they only would. Bx playing these
games at very top speed and by
keeping them going until 20 or 30
minutes of train time it ought to be
possible to play a full game every
Saturday afternoon.
The ba-ebttll tans do not so much
mind the early start. What is
hurting the attendance is the fear
of the fans that they will not see
a full game, even if they go early.
Os course Saturday's game was
particularly short because the rain
just before game time made a
slight delay in starting necessary.
A game that starts at 2:15 is all
wrong. Three o'clock is not bad.
Very probable 3:30 would be the
ideal game time in Atlanta in mid
summer. Rut 2:15 is too early.
Doubtless early starting of Sat
urday ball games have cost the
Atlanta Baseball association three
Crackers' Batting
Averages, Including
Saturday's Game
Those averages include Saturday's game
w 1111 .X loin phis:
Players [O. AB. IR. I _H•_I Ay-
Dessau, p.l 11 I 32 I 4 I 11 | iJ44
Hemphill, es 491191 24 hl .318
Bailey. If. 53 190 35 54 .284
Donahue, c 15 43 5 11 -t'J
<' I 'ell. th I'.' 170 2b 43 253
Alperntan. ss 53 206 29 51 Li,
O'Brien. ss.-2b . ...i 50 168 19 1 41 ..>l4
Cast, 2b 41 130 11 29 -223
Graham. <• 17 45 4 10 .222
stltton. p 10 23 1 5 -1 ‘ |
xtkins. pI 10 26 2 •> ’['2
Callahan, cf '1 1 53 3 9 1,0
Bra.lx. p 3 11 0 . 1 031
HOW THEY PAIR OFF
for mc.michael cup
The following are the pairings in the
three flights of the golf tournament for
the I <’ McMichael cup:
First Flight.
T H Fax- vs 1.1, Graves.
C. Knowles vs. C. .1 Holditch,
I> R Hcnrx vs. W. C Holleytnan
T J Mi i;111 vs J. S Itaine. Jr.
C I’ King vs. H. C Moore
William Richards vs T. I’. Hinman. |
R I’ Jones xs W F Spalding
Dr F Holland vs C E. CorwTn
Second Flight.
C Angier xs D. Jemison
J F. W ebster vs. H D Thorn
G A Nicholson. Jr., vs <» A Howell.
I |> Osborn vs W' R Tichenor.
r Minh- vs H M Blount
It \ Palmer vs it J Hopkins
C X rbornton vs. J C McMichael
I Moore xs. It. James.
Third Flight
W I, Hudson vs X Hammond
.1 w Pearce vs * » w- \dair
N It Brovles vs \v W Cunningham.
X W Hoilnett \s W. C Warren.
I. II Beck vs J D. Eby.
*' M Selple vs. W F I pshaw
Si mt Hudson vs H 'I. Butler
C S Davis vs R. E Richards.
OFFER JOHNSON $30,000
TO RATTLE JEANNETTE
I,IS VEGAS. June 17 John Arthur
John op is certainlx a lucky man The
i s ,meh boxing promoters, through Vic
tor Brey, r. have < abled an offer of $30.-
UOO to th" champion if he will fight Joe
. i. intiMtti- in rounda in th< fair < ttx nt ,
j i > 't'.| that •.!!.<> m o - "hethet j
Lil Altha wins, loses or draws.
or four thousand iron men in the
last two years.
♦ * ♦
'T' HERE is small chance of ma
terially bettering conditions
this year. President Kavanaugh
is, of course, too busy with the task
of running Little Rock to give any
attention to the Southern league.
Witness that when Nashville was
about ready to drop out of the
league, which would have been the
severest blow that had fallen since
the league was organized. Presi
dent Kavanaugh couldn't waste the
time to go over and look out for
things himself. He sent bis sec
retary. Small thanks are due the
league's chief executive that the
tangle was straightened out as well
as it was.
Because the league president is
getting his fat salary for giving the
league ills moral support only,
which some of us believe isn’t
worth the price paid, no remedy is
is sight right now.
Whether the future will offer any
improvement can't be determined.
The anti-Atlanta forces of the
Southern league would be in the
majority if the matter of giving
the Gate City a square deal with
the Sunday hall towns came for a
vote at the next schedule meeting
President Kavanaugh, who will, of
course, be elected president again
next year by a doting and misguid
ed following, will make the sched
ule and if past schedules can be
taken as a criterion he can be
counted on to give Atlanta all the
worst of it
! I
That ulcer can be cured
Your case is no worse than what
these people had.
Yet see how quickly 8.8.8.
cured them.
“I was down three years with an
ulcer on the leg,” writes Mrs. Marie
Cooper of Mobile, Ala. ‘‘l used only
three bottles of R.R.R. and it did me
more good than fifty-six bottles of
another remedy. Those who knew my
condition and saw what ß.B.B. did for
I me were surprised.”
Mr. R. L Irving of Center Point,
I Texas, writes: "I had a bad sore leg
which I could not get cured. T had the
best physicians; and tried various rem
edies. All failed until I used 8.8.8.
: Now my leg is cured entirely and gives
me no pain.”
Miss Florence King of Atlanta. Ga., I
writes: "I had a very bad foot. I could I
not walk for six months. I spent much ;
money trying to be cured. Since using
R.R.R. the foot has healed up. All in
flammation is gone and I can walk
without pain. R.R.R. is the best blood
Medicine I ever took.”
These are only three cases out'
of thousands, which 8.8.8. has
cured quickly and completely after
every other treatment failed.
Any good druggist will supply
you with 8.8.8. Insist on having
it.
hate* ,7 * R.B,
fails to help you
BOXING
Late News and Views
Joe Alandot is certainly training hard
for his bout with Willie Ritchie in New
Orleans June 24. Joe boxes daily with
ambitious youngsters who are willing to
cion the gloves with the Southern champ
* • •
Jim Flynn is now down to 195 pounds
The fireman will probably enter the ring
against Johnson at this weight
♦ * ♦
Johnson will probably weigh 215 pounds
when he faces the Pueblo fireman Al
though he will have some weight on the
white man, Flynn says his speed will
even matters up
• • <
Governor Donald says the anti-betting
law will be strictly enforce* 1 , at the John
son-Flynn fight next Julv Many fans
anticipated open betting.
• • •
The Gowanus A. C., of New York, will
hold it« last fight two months from to
day. when Willie Fitzgerald and Al .Mc-
Coy wdli mix it in a ten-round bout
• • •
Now that Al F’alzer has clinched the
match with Bombardier Wells for June
28 he is working out every day in order
to be in the best of condition when ho
enters the ring against th*» Englishman.
LONG SHOT CAPTURES
$37,200 FRENCH DERBY
PARIS, .lune 17. The Prix du Jockey
club, the French derby at the Chantilly
course, was won by a rank outsider.
Prince Murat's Friant 11.. at 32 to 1 Au
gust Belmont's Amoreux 111., quoted at
5 to 1, finished second, and Compte De-
Berteux's l.'kase 11., at 17 to 1. was third.
W K. Vanderbilt's Sightly finished fourth,
hut Dldlus. also a Vanderbilt entry, ran
unplaced.
The French derby is a three-year event
at one and one-half miles It is worth
this year $37.‘200. Seventeen horses
started Friant won easily by two
lengths.
The Road of a, Thousand Wonders
SUPERIOR SERVICE
Via. NEW ORLEANS to
TEXAS. OLD and NEW MEXICO, \RIZONA. CALIFORNIA
OREGON and WASHINGTON
TWO dailv TRAINS to PACIFIC COAST with connection* toy PORT
LAND and SEATTLE.
Leave New Orleans 11:30 A M. and 3:26 p M.
THREE daily trains HOUSTON with direct connections for NORTH
TEXAS POINTS.
Through Standard and Tourist. Sleeping Cars
The Safest Route, Every Inch Protected by Automatic
Electric Block Signals
Oil-Burning Locomotives—No Smoke—No Dust—No Cinders
Best Dining Car Service in the World
LOW ROUND TRIP EXCURSION FARES
TO California And
* Oregon Washington
In effect during May, June July. August. September October
DELIGHTFUL OCEAN VOYAGE
ONE HUNDRED GOLDEN HOURS AT SEA
NEW ORLEANS TO NEW YORK SERVICE
For particulars and literature, cal! iw or write
O. P. BARTLETT, Gen, Aaent, R. O. BEAN, T. P A ,
1901 FCst Avenue. 121 Peachtree Street,
Birmingham, Ala. Atlanta. Ga.
MEES ffl
GIANTS TO M
ON SfflE 10
Bv W. J. Mcßeth.
N’EW YORK, June 17.—1 r thle
sordid age of business aman
who wilfully closes his eyes
to an opportunity for doubling his
profits is usually regarded as fit
candidate for the "white house on
the hill.” They may be bom ewry
minute —but they are not so deise
as to stumble across a bundle of
yellowbacks without taking ti»
trouble to pick it up
All of which is apropos of the
local baseball situation. Frank Far
rell has the privilege of playing
on the Polo grounds in the future.
President Brush is willing to share
the beautiful Brush staudium with
his rival promoter. The sentiment
springs from no philanthropic in
stinct on the paYt of John T. He does
not intend to welcome the competi
tor as a hallowed guest. With him
it Is a plain business proposition
and consequently entails profit to
himself.
Brush stadium, the most gor
geous, monumental tribute to or
ganized baseball, was conceived
after the old wooden stands at the
Polo grounds had been burned in
the spring of 1911. Erected of re
inforced .concrete and steel, the
edifice proved correspondingly cost
ly. Before the foundations were
laid Brush estimated a $750.00(1 ex
penditure. It comes from excel
lent authority that the sum even
tually proved far greater. For un
scrupulous under-offli ials—perhap*
the number should be held to a
singular—taking advantage of Mr
Brush's poor health, let out con
tracts Irrespective of blds at self
profit and consequent disad' antag>
to the owner of the Giants.
Yet, calculating the cost o
Biajsh stadium at no more tha
$750,000, we find Brush with
gigantic financial proposition o
his hands That sum. at the io'
rate of 5 per cent, would ear
$37,500 annually. Before buildin
his remarkable plant it was nec
essary for the boss of the Giant
to take out a 30 years lease on hi
grounds from the Coogan estate
The rent is said to be $40,000
year. Wherefore, before he make
one cent profit on his investmen
Brush must clear $77,500 each sea
son. That sum doesn't cut a grea
figure to a promoter blessed witl
such an aggregation as McGraw’s
championship Giants. Yet there
have been years—and they may
come again—when the Polo
grounders found little in the treas
ury after paying salaries, travel
ing expenses, rent and office held
foi' a dull campaign.
Farrell pays s3.non yearly rent
for the Hilltop. He got the prop
erty, when it was practically val
ueless. on a ten years lease. It
cost him considerable money to
convert a huge boulder into a
playing field, so his rent altogeth
er has not been as modest as the
lease figures would imply. Mr.
Farrell's lease has almost expired.
It is up to him to move, tor 'he
landlord will not listen to sane tig
ures. The rGoperty that was made
valuable by the occupation of the
American league team is now a
mighly fine real estate proposition.
Brush has offered to rent his
stadium to Frank J, Farrell. By
such an arrangement both the
Giants and Highlanders would util
ize the historic Polo grounds. Such
a plan would he quite feasible, for
there have been no local major
league conflicts for some years. It
is said that Brush is willing to
lease ills grounds for half the rent
be pays. J'.’n.ono a. year.