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trackers, Undaunted, Phy Barons Another Brace
I Human Shock Absorbers Bumped Twice Yesterday
i
By Percy 11. W hiting.
rplli; < ‘rack< ' liavi been beaten
I so often this year that the.v’re
th, human shock ttbuoi bent.
Nothing really Jolt: I‘lent They
might get Into a rail , <1 wieck or
a dynamite explosion that would
agitate them a little but the mere
mutter of losing both ends of a
doubhheutler to the league lenders
doesn’t matter at all. Despite such
an occurrence yesterday, thet’raek-
I ers bob right up again this after-
i noon ready for another doublehead-
‘ er—right in the same spot, if neces-
[ sary. Joe Grim, the Human Punch-
i ing Bag. never hud anything on
L them.
r The Barons play their concluding
■ game of the season here tomorrow.
K On Monday and Tuesday only the
|. Montgomery team is scheduled to
play. Wednesday Is one of those
Southern league rarities—a sched
uled off day Thursday. Friday and
Saturday the Gulls play in Atlanta.
Then the < ’rackers make a quick
jump for New Orleans, where they
Mk open their last stand in the Far
" South. .
The Birmingham team has a tre
mendously useful batting attack.
They bowled over the Crackers
with it several times yesterday.
Any time when a couple of men
like Almeida and McGtlvray are
bunched together on a batting ol -
der. they are likely to make trou
ble any old time.
It appears to me that Almeida Is
easily the best third baseman that
the Southern league ever saw. If
he has a fault, be has never dis
played It on the Atlanta field He
is quick as ti cat, fields faultlessly ,
throws like a ride shot, bats like a
dem ml If he has a falling, which
isn’t admitted, It is that he throws
a. shade too hard to bases. He
drove the ball into second yester
day with speed enough to telescope
L an average baseman But if this is
a fault ii <<>ines from over-wllllng
‘’ncss ait<i Isn’t charged up against
him in the bis books of the league.
\ ■’i’>r ft.i; ■ f new Crackers made j
- ■**' icir 'list appearance 'yester
• day. They were Lyns and Dug
gleby bytins is a chunky bit of a
man. with a tine baseball build and
a ; plenty of speed. He has e. moder- i
ate wing and a useful look at the
* plate. Doubtless he will do well
Bill Duggleby pitched a fair sort
of a game against the Barons. H's
support wasn’t as good as Cracker
pitchers usually g< t. and he was up
against the stoutest team of the
■EK league.
Mg? ■ ...
THE Cracker fans certainly pulled
* themselves sideways trying to
get Bill Foxen beaten. Their hatred
for him is something pathetic. As
k long as he If hi sight they whistle
and hoot derisively and y>-|| at him
I Old style ||
■ black iobacco
Q never tasted
I I ,ike I
| DRUMMOND I
NATURAL LEAF
gg CHEWING TOBACCO E
remark-' intended to remind him
Hint. in loc.-l b: ball literature, lie
I. the "Lay Down Kid" They be
lieve he "quit" while witli Atlant.' 1 .,
a.id th-.-' ini'n-i io keep reminding
him of it
Hill’s sorrowful assortment of
faded niru r was at Its feeble best!
ye ferday and. thanks to good sup
|i<Trt. he got-away with the game.
Hilt Ulli is a sorry pitcher, His
action is as tied up as a bundle of
laundry, and how he geta any rosed
on the ball continues to be a marvel
to the assembly.
...
r p 11E frequent arguments that
arise over balls hit under the
row of signboards In rigid field
aren’t really necessary. It has been
agreed that players are entitled to
"what they can get” on balls hit
there. That makes it necessary for
the outfielders to do a lot of undig
nified scratching and scrambling
and pawing to get the hall out. in
an attempt to hold the runner at
third. Crawling under fences after
the pill isn’t a legitimate part of
liasebdl. All this trouble could be
obviated by boarding up below the
signs. Then no ball could go un
de:, and every ball which went over
Would be a it-gitlmiite home run.
« * *
't II \T Hu footb:.ll season Isn’t
* far nw was Indicated yester
day by the presence in the Atlanta
press box of \V. Heisman, “Bo”
Willi.ims and Dean Hili.
"Red" Hill, by the way, is grand
stand ticket seller at Bonce DeLeon,
nnd yesterday he bad a tale to tell.
It seems that a lady walked up
to the main gate anil started to
I FODDER FOR FANS
—--—l.■■■ - ■ -- - ■
And how the Giants hit cussing a tailor
the one who rut I'm pi re Bush’s coat too
full in the bark. \ hatted hall hitting the
slack in Kush’s jacket cost the Giants a
ga me.
A « •
Erank Dessau allowed ten hits In his
first game in the American association
I and lost a tight contest to Louisville,
j 2 to 1.
With so many minor leagues in distress
it is refreshing to note that no loud yells
have yet been emitted bv the Stilly cir
cuit.
Tim .lordan is wanted by the Pittsburg
club. Barney Dreyfuss figures that the
■ old lad would be better than anybody.
• • •
The Jersey City club will not be trans
ferred this reason, at least.
♦ • •
Red Nelson, the reformed brakeman
who beat thv White Box for the Brown
every time he faced the Chicago team
lust year, but who couldn’t beat h drum
this \?ar. has been released. Fie may go
back to “brakeing."
♦ • ♦
The Spartanburg club has signal
(’hug Coombs and Paul Stowers, noth
former (’rackers —one for ten minutes,
the other for ten days.
Pitcher Harry Krause’s return to the
big leagues wasn’t a success. The ex-
Athletic has been turned back to Toledo
by the Nups.
• * •
I‘eaceful .lack (’money once a (’packer
backstopi et, now with Spartanburg,
mixed up in a fist fight with Gus Gleich
man while a recent game os in prog
ress. Glelchman hit Coveney behind the 1
ear and the subsequent proceedings didn't
materially Interest Jack.
• • •
No National league pitcher has yet
xunkrd off a no-hit game this season.
• • •
Duffy has signed his 1.91 S contract
with Milwaukee.
. . .
The Pels me likely to send both John
ston hi < Hendry x to the Naps at the end
■ of thv season
They say that anybody who wanted to
; buy the Yazoo Ctt> team "offen” A. .1
i Heinemun. business manager of the Pelt
; vans, could trade
Charles Murph} is credited with having
remarked, “The more I hear from the
svoutH. the better 1 like rnv present
I dub." f .
Wlmn the Jersey City dull held Itn ben-
I efit game on)y u few over 2.000 paid to
see tlie contest
Detroit bus "bought Third Basemen
I.M< I a-rniott from Providence
The Yankees at, going to liang onto
• r ■ € . ■ ■• • ..»■•. i • ... . - Tyj*u»?w-T w<w?u?'■*. l^,. || w* i
frTrt ATLANTA GEORGIAN A.NI) NEWS. FRIDAY, AUGUST 2. 1912.
brush right in without a ticket.
The gate keeper stopped her and
explained courteously that if site
would go to Hie ticket window she
could obtain a ticket from the gen
tleman stationed theft*.
So back went (he lady t<> the
window ami announced to Mr. Hill.
"The gat' keeper sent me over and
told me to tell you to give me a
ticket."
Whereupon the unsuspecting
"Red." supposing that the lady was
the gate keeper’s wife, or sister, or
something of the sort, handed her
a ticket.
As soon as the rush stopped, he
went over to the gate keeper to col
lect 25 cents for the ticket he had
advanced.
The gate keeper proved an alibi.
He had never seen the lady before.
And now Red" swears he was
robbed. For he had to pay the
quarter out of his own pocket.
Altogether it was t’olonel Hill’s
off day. A gentleman approached
the window, bought a ticket and ten
dered a ten-dollar bill. In the rush
a mistake was made in the amount
of change and the fan received only
$8.5(1 instead of the $9.50 to which
In- was entitled. He stepped in
front of the window, counted the
money and then, i ante back, de
manded his dollar, and, of course,
got it.
As h< walked away, pushing the
change down in the inside pocket of
his vest and clamping it with a
safety pin. lie was heard to mur
mur, sadly, “They're trying to trim
me already and It's my first day
in Atlanta.”
He must have been from Macon.
—■ ■■■■—,
George McConnell if be costs them a mil
lion games. Wolverton sax s the South
rner has the stuff and will win when he
gets support.
• • w
Kbbetts Is kept busy denying that he
is going to give Dahlen the can at the
end of this season. It seems likely, at
that.
• • *
The umpire plastered a tine of $25 on
Placid Jack Coveney for his right on the
diamond the other day with Gus Gleich
man. Also $25 for Gus.
< •
This has been a bad season for bat
boys, even though a tolerably good one
for "pop" boys Kid Smith, tlie 'Top
King," contlnue%to star with the Barons;
but Tony Carlo, former Cub bat boy. rec
ommended to Danville by M. Brown bas
been released.
Billy Hamilton is looking over Shortstop
Corrldon, of the Kansas Ctty team, for
the Boston Pilgrims. The looking is
cheap, but the buying comes high, in
Corridon’s case.
AAA
lutrnc Kirby, the pitcher bought hy the
Giants from the Traverse City team, of
the Michigan State league, has won 16
out of 1R games this season McGraw
has a liking for (he M S. league. He
dug Fred Merkle out of the depths.
A A •
Barney Dreyfuss, by constant ballings
out. has Marty O Toole so badly in the
air he Isn't likely to get down this sea
son. Martin has nerves and they are
about raw now.
• A A
Sam Frock and Johnny Berkle, former
• ’rackers, ar? both playing In the New
York State league this year. Frocks
jdismal showing since he left Atlanta goes
a long ways toward killing the rather
! silly story that he “laid down’’ on Jor
dan. Th< truth was he was pitching for
;a wretched team.
A A »
Mutz Ens. the White Box recruit, tried
and turned down b\ Birmingham, has
been batting .356 with Galesburg In the
Central association, and will be given an
other trial by Callahan next spring
A • •
When Congalton Is in shape to play for
Toledo, he will g>» to left field nn<i Hurry
Niles will g” to second base (’ongalton
Is the man Clunky Hemphill succeeded
on the Cleveland club
KM Elberfeld Is playing twill like th»*
Tabasco KM of old minus the tobasco.
When Charley O'Day took over the In
dlanui'«»lis team he began reorganizing
by asking waivers on seven of the 22 men
, oh the squad.
• • A
Outfielder l.ev (’aliabuit, of the Elmira
i team, look- mighty good, but there’s been
no itzdlng vet As thins’!- stand now
the deal looks like thU. BM b> Kt
» li.OOO, asked b> Elmira, $6,000
rhe Big Race
Here is how the “Big Five” in the
American league are hitting right up to
date:
PLAYER— A. B. H. Ave.
COBB 375 153 .421
SPEAKER 339 154 .396
JACKSON 368 134 .364
COLL! NS 346 114 .330
LAJOIE 232 74 .319
Cobb dropped off two points yester
day by failing to get over one hit in
four times at bat. Speaker jumped up
one point, grabbing two safe swats in
four trips to the plate. Jackson, Collins
and Lajoie “stood still,” as the Naps
■nd Athletics again postponed their
game on account of the Grand Circuit
meet being held in Cleveland.
Crackers* Batting
Averages, Including
Yesterday *s Games
Those averages include yest/rday's dou
ble-header with the Pelicans.
P.. 'rs--- ~G7iABJ~R. H. Av.
These averages include all games
played to date:
Players. g. ab. r. h. ay.
Becker, p. . . . 6 It! 1 6 .375
Lyons, rs. . . . 1 3 0 1 .333
Harbison, ss. . .40 132 15 38 .2XB
Alperman, 2b. .94 358 52 97 .271
Graham, c. . .40 122 13 33 .270
Bailev, es. . . .94 333 59 89 .267
Callahan. If. . .52 208 23 50 .240
Donahue, c. . .58 120 11 28 ,233
McElveen. 3b.100 362 43 84 .232
Aglet', lb.. . .31 100 14 23 .230
Brady, p. . . .15 46 2 7 .152
Sitton, p. . . .19 4S S • .146
Revnohts. c. . . 3 7 0 I .143
Waldorf, p. . . 5 14 0 0 .000
Duggleby, p. . 1 2 0 0 000
PROGRESS CLUB TENNIS
STARTS THIS AFTERNOON
Beginning this afternoon, the Prog
ress club will hold a tennis meet on
the Lakewood courts. The schedule of
matches for this afternoon are as fol
lows:
Men’s Singles.
Morris Solomon vs. Joseph Schlesin
ger.
Herbert TMttler vs. Malvern Benja
min.
S. P. (Tonhelm vs. Ed Simon.
Guy Goldsmith vs. Dewaid Cohen.
Laurence Kaufman vs. Milton Klein.
Herbert Schiff vs. Eugene Stahl.
Clyde I>< walil vs. Joseph Schroder.
Leon Rosenberger vs. Leo Strauss.
Julian Loeb vs. ('erf Kalin,
Lester Einstein vs. Ernest Asher.
Bert Kaufman vs. Sinclair Jaeobs.
Morris Steinheiiner vs. Morris Adler.
Men's Doubles.
Millon Klein and S. P. Cronheim vs.
Lester Einstein and Leon Rosenberger.
Joseph Schlesinger and Ernest Asher
vs. Joseph Schroder and Ed Simons.
Eugene Stahl and Cerf Kahn vs. De
waid Cohen and Morris Steinheimer.
Morris Adler and Clyde Dewaid vs.
Sinclair Jaeobs and Guy Goldsmith.
Herbert Dlttler and Morris Solomons
vs, Herbert Schiff and Leo Strauss.
Malvern Benjamin and Bert Kauf
man vs. Laurence Kaufman and Julian
Loeb.
DANNY GREEN. ONCE A
DIAMOND STAR. DYING
CHICAGO, Aug. 2.—Friends and ad
mirers of Danny Green, for years an
idol at the West and South Side ball
parks, will be grieved to learn that he
is confined in the Cook county Infir
mary at Oak Forest and that hope of
h's getting better has been given up.
Tuberculosis is Danny’s complaint. He
has been ill for two years, bat it was
not until a month ago that he gave up
..nd yielded to his friends' pleading that
he go to a hospital.
Green first won a place in the hearts
of Chicagoans by his work as an out
fielder on the West Side team when
Bill Lange, Dahlen, Callahan and Grif
fith were members of the club. H.- was
fast on his feet and a dangerous hitter.
When the -baseball war started Danny
Jumped from the West to the South
Side and took a regular Job in the
White Sex outfield. Later i e went to
Milwaukee and when his league days
were ov: r played on sen i-pro teams
here. .
QUITMAN WINS FIRST GAME.
Qt’ITMAN, GA- Aug. 2 -Quitman
won the first g.nm> of a series with
Adel. 7 P- 5 The features were the
tle'ding of DuFree ami the batting .if
Oglesby With the score tied tn the
last half of thv ninth. Doxter hit a clean
two-lwigg.-r, Whipple was struck by a
pitched ball and Oglesby bit to deep
center, bringing In Doxier,
Other Black Battlers Better Than Pale-Skins
4-»4- -!•••£• 4-»4-
Johnson’s Self-Effacement No Help to Whites
By Ed. W. Smith.
/"|~BHE self-effacement of John
Arthur Johnson is of no im
mediate help to the white
race.
No matter what may be said on
the subject and how the public
/ may choose to figure out a techni
cal and a tactical reason for put
ting him <-ut of the championship
he remains the champion still and
always will be so regarded.
And another thing sticks out
prominently when we are told to
hope for the early return of su
premacy of the while race. There
are exactly three large, dark clouds
on the horizon that must be tapped
before such a situation can be
brought about.
No White Man Capable.
These clouds are labeled Jean
nette, Langford and McVey. If we
could but find a white man capable
of sloughing either one of them we
might find cause for rejoicing, but
alas and alack, there isn't a white
person in sight who stands the
ghost of a chance with them.
So what matters it if Johnson
does retire, speaking now of white
hopes? The title may revert to a
white man in time and that man
NEWS FROM RINGSIDE
Al "Balzer and Tom O’Rourke have
patched up their trouble, according to re
ports from Gotham. It is said O’Rourke
will be seen in Palzer’s corner when the
big ’hope" tights again.
A A *
TJomniy Buck, who was knocked out by
Frankie Fleming at the Garden Athletic
club in New York July 22, is in a serious
condition at a Philadelphia hospital. It
is thought he has concussion of the brain.
AAA
Willie Lewis, fresh from his 20-round
draw with George Carpentier, will hook
up with Freddie Flicks in New York Mon
day night.
AAA
Frank Klaus will remain in Europe for
some time, according to reports from his
manager. Klaus has just been engaged
by a summer garden in Paris to do some
exhibition boxing.
AAA
Johnny Kling and Jack Britton have
been practically matched for a bout in
New York some time in the near future.
♦ » *
Taither McCarthy is the latest claimant
to the heavyweight title.
• A •
Owen Moran, a disgusted and downcast
pugilist, will sail across the pond to his
home within the next few days. He
claims he was robbed of a decision in his
recent light with Jack W hite.
AAA
Frankie Nelson and Eddie King, and
Dave Harrison and Benny Leonard are
scheduled to box ten rounds in Newark
tomorrow.
AAA
Tim Hurst, the veteran umpire and box
ing referee, who has been in a critical
condition for some time. Is improving
rapidly.
« A A
It is getting quite fashionable nowadays
for fighters to get smashed up in auto
mobile wrecks. Ray Bronson is the latest
pug to meet with a mishap while riding
in an auto. The Hoosier middleweight
was injured near Napoleon, Ohio.
• • »
Tom McCarey, the Los Angeles boxing
promoter, has written President Taft a
letter asking him not to sign the bill
which will prohibit the shipping of fight
films from one stale to another. t
Jim Flynn has been offered a match
with Joe Jeannette by the Garden Ath
letic club of New York However, the b!g
fireman refused, claiming that he had
drawn the color line.
AAA
Dan Flynn, Boston’s entry In the "white
hope" race for boxing supremacy, will box
Dr. E. G. Griffin’s Dental Ream’ |
Over BROWN & ALLEN’S DRUG STORE. 24'H WHITEHALL ST.
$5 4k Set of Teeth $3 |
COMPLETED DAY ORDERED |
22k Gold Crowns, S 3 E
Special Bridge Work, £
A'' Dental Work Lowest Prices.
Hours—B to 7. Lady Attendant. J
may have consideration enough for
hfs fellow pale kins to forever and
ever do what Tommy Burns failed
to do —bar the blacks. But just
now those clouds are real clouds
that look too high to be punctured
by any of the white men aviating
in that general direction.
Means What He Says.
Personally I believe what John
son says about his retirement. 1
have reason to know that Jack is
so infernally sick of the grind of
training that it simply makes him
sick to even give thought to it.
And at his age and after his seven
teen or eighteen years of activity
in the ring, some of those years
being mighty lean in a financial
way, he can scarcely be blamed for
feeling that way about it.
During a discusison of lean times
one day out at Las Vegas. Jack
mentioned this, and seemed anx
ious to impress his hearers with
the sincerity of the thing.
“Why, the first time I landed in
Chicago it was the middle of the
winter and I didn't have an over
coat. And, believe me, that year it
didn't even start to get summer
time until along in August,” lie
said.
Jimmy Barry, of Chicago, in New York
August 6.
• • •
Jack LaMarche, the former welter
weight boxer, has been promised a bout
before Tom McCarey’s Los Angeles club
some time in the near future.
GET OUT AN EXTRA! WHY?
JUMBO WELLS WINS A GO
CHICAGO, Aug. 2.—Jumbo Wells,
former New York light-heavyweight
fighter, made good in his fifteen-round
battle last night witli Billy Shanks,
winning in every round. Only the cov
ering up style of Shanks prevented
Wells from scoring a knockout.
The match was held in private near
the outskirts of the city.
COAST STARS FOR BROWNS.
ST. LOUIS, MO., Aug. 2.—Frank Dillon,
manager of the Los Angeles y'lub. is in
St. Louis for the purpose of arranging a
few deals witji the Browns. It is said
that Hedges will get Pete Daley and a
few other stars from the Angels.
Annual Mountain
Excursion
SOUTHERN RAILWAY
Saturday, August 17
$6.00 Asheville, N. C.
$6.00 Lake Toxaway, N. C.
$6.00 Hendersonville, N. C.
$6.00 Hot Springs, N. C.
$6.00 Tate Springs, N. C.
$6.50 Bristol, Tenn.
Final limit September 1.
Three trains to Asheville,
Morning Noon 1 Night.
8:00 a. m. 11:15 a. m. ! 9:00 p. m.
MAKE RESERVATION NOW.
"It’s different now, of course, but
even in my present affluence I nev
er look back to those old days with
any great feeling of pleasure. They
were hard days, and I never found
a great many friends.”
Has Business Instincts.
It doesn't seem possible that they
will ever succeed in breaking John
son, judging from the rare business
acumen and strength he shows in
his dealings in ring affairs. This
. trait shifted over to its purpose in
the ordinary pursuits of life should
make Johnson everlastingly and
forever safe from the touch of want.
One must know that Johnson is
pretty sick of the fighting game
when he will deliberately turn his
back upon a pile of $20,000 that he
could gather as easily as he gath
ered his money in Las Vegas a
month or so ago. It doesn't appear
to be possible to find the man who
has so much money that he doesn’t
care to garner just now a little bit
more, but here’s one man to whom
the lure of the coin amounts to
nothing and is easily turned aside.
Johnson was an unusual cham
pion and it looks as if he would
continue to be unusual until his
dying day.
MARQUARD MUST PAY $25
FOR PITCHING ONE INNING
CINCINNATI. Aug. 2.—Rube Mar
quard, star pitcher of the New York
Nationals, was fined $25 by the national
baseball commission for pitching one
inning for the Port Chester, N. Y„ in
dependent baseball team.
In so doing, although not in uniform,
the commission holds that he violated
its ruling that no national agreement
player can play with or against out
side clubs during their contract period.
Marquard had telegraphed for per
mission to attend the game, and consid
ered the commission’s consent sufficient
to pitch one inning.
ffTORSYTH I 2:»
■ Atlanta's Busiest Theater J Tonight 8:30
STELLA MAYHEW' NextVeeT
Assisted by Billie Taylor
6 MUSICAL CUTTYS Marshall P.
Norton & Nicholson — ULfiMn,
Norris Baboons—H. T. WIJUCr
McConnell —3 Emersons p.i • a
—Brooke & Harris. fcthel GFeGD
AWIIW II t 11 HI I ■mil ■!■■■»
HOTELS AND RESORTS.
Ocean View Hotel
W . H. Adams, Owner and
Manager,
Pablo Beach, Florida.
Forty minutes from Jacksonville,
Florida, the most desirable seaside re
sort I’m tlie accommodation "f Georgia
pee.pl ■. One night’s ride from Atlanta.
European plan, rates one dollar pci'
day and up; $5.00 a week and up. Ex
cellent case i:i connection. Special re
duced rate to regular guests.
ATLANTIC CITY. N. J.
ATLANTICCITYOrHCIAIiGIM
R p,>zos. .2, illustrations. Al! attractions and 1
fl :li< i‘lading hotels described, with rates, city 1
■ n.a’." . etc. Send 2.,- stamp for mailing f i copy I
E Atf.iiith ( ity I pee Information Bureau u
um I*. (>. Box NUJ. Atlamic ( it). N. J aw
I THE & Wil]
flDar! borough
|
ffTL/JNTtCaTY.fy
Lcddinc Resort I louse of the World
j S’ lOM*tl Whin 5 SOUS (OMPABY ■