Newspaper Page Text
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THE ATLANTA UE0RG1AX AND NEWS.MONDAT, MAY 5, 1913.
13 Lift; GULLS
J_b'A Aii r=?i\
SILK HAT HARRY’S DIVORCE SUIT ::
The Judge Helps to Entertain
Copyright, 1913. by the Star Company.
o •
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By Tad
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m-trM Gaps /
Bur
IT
Ht
. itii t\% o hit f
i single ami
which was
i f added un-
•in n s» nt in am. te had
and should not have been st ored on.
There is only one thing that looks'
-<>od from our standpoint, and that it*
Weaver looks to be in grand condition
I must give Mobile credit—they
have tlie beat looking ball club the
«’racliftrs Lave faced this year. They
a I are fa sit and seem to he hitting
good.
Well, there are three more games to
p ay. and you cun take is from me. we
have the confidence and we will he out
.u that old park working just as hard
;s« wo ar<* able. l’robubl\ we can re
peat the Birmingham series.
The Crackers have played t<» 16,500
persons in the laet two games.
Nearl> 8,000 persons ‘•aw .vest* r-
day’s game. The score was 9 to 4.
The Gulls pounded .Mtimer out of
the box in the first. Retting two dou-
b'es and as many singles for three
runs, without an out. Weaver was
-ent In and did better, though ho was
not given support which was calcu
lated t*> help him in his uphill light.
Mobile got the fourth run over in
t ic first, and then in the fifth on two
bits, three walks, two double steals
;*nd a wild heave, scored four more.
They added the ninth tall\ in tin *e,
• nth inning.
We scored in tin first
and Stocks’ error. On
two infield outs, one «
dumb playing by Uavct.
other score. On one hit. two gifts and
two infield outs in the seventh, we put
over our remaining two scores.
Ground rules prevailed for both
fields.
BASEBALL SUMMARIES
SOUTHERN LEAGUE
Games To-day.
A llama at Mobile.
Birmingham hi Now Orleans.
Nashville at Memphis.
Chattanooga at Montgomery.
Standinci o f the Clubs.
\Y L P.C. | W 1. P.C.
Mobile IS T .720 1 M'mphis 9 12 .429
Atlanta 14 8 .020 B'ham 9 12 .429
.VviJJe. 11 19 .624 N. Or. '♦ 13 .409
Mont 9 12 129 1 < ’hat t S 14 .30-1
Yesterday's Results.
Mobile 9, Atlanta 4.
Memphis Nashville 2.
Ww Orleans t Birmingham l
Chattanooga 5. M«»ntgomer> <
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Games To-day
Philadelphia at New York
Washington at Boston.
Standing of the Clubs.
\V. I.. P.C I \\ L. I*.t\
Phil*. 12 3 .800 | S. Louis 9 12 .429
W"ton. 10 4 .714 Boston 7 10 .412
<"Iand. 13 i'» .085' Detroit 0 14 300
Eh go. 12 9 .571 \ York 2 14 125
Ye6**rdav‘g Results.
Detroit 2. Chicago I.
SI Louis 4. Cleveland 3
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Games To-day.
Boston at Brooklyn.
New Yjfirk at Philadelphia
Standing of the Clubs.
\V. L. B.C. ; \Y. L. PC.
P!nla 8 1 .667 \ York S 7 533
Ch’go 13 7 050 • P’burg 10 9 526
S IvOUis 11 s .79 Boston 4 11 267
B’klvn 9 7 563 Cnati. 4 II ,222
Yesterday s Residts.
St Lou.s 19, Ctiieago X
Pittsburg 1. Cincinnati 0
SOUTH ATLANTIC LEAGUE.
Games To-day.
« olumbus at Charleston
Albany at Ja< ksonville
Savannah at Macon.
Standing of the Clubs.
\Y L. P.C.
rah 11 3 .786
ille. 10 ;• *167
’bus 7 7 .500
Macon
Albany
L I
<5
10
Yesterday's Results.
N«* games scheduled.
OTHER RESULTS YESTERDAY.
-- Texas League.
-San Antonio . Austin
i •alias 5, Galveston 4
Waco 4. Houston 1.
K-.rt Worth it, Beaumont »;
Internationa* League.
.Montreal 5 Jerse> Cit\ 3
Rochester 5. Newark i
Providence 7. Buffalo o
American Asset lation
Columbus 4. Kansas Cit> 1
s Paul 9. I .ouisvillc i
Toledo 8. Minneapolis ••
Indianapolis 7. MUwauk*-.- 3
OTHER GAMES TO DAY
Empire State League.
Coi'eae Games.
Georgia vs. Washington and Let
11 hens.
Catholic vs. Navy, a; \nna polls
• ■ - • n and Ne\
riHii-oii v.< Ncubciry at C! •
•» ,AMO*-.Min and Br*
C, M C vs. M*M . r Sub Varsii\
North Carolina vs Guilford, at
HU-SPAMP vJOHT - \
G-OJB HE'S- A MIOC&- -
HS Og£S AU, the
JMOPPlAJCjr HiAAjGGF-
D0ES THE MGUjeVOf-K
AMP ftGVJ A*-<- THE
CKlA^fciTNJS CLCTH-e^
HE ipENlOi AWV1
OurTi+e ev/eruiM<s-- I
SO mean /
Dc VWOEF H0??£S- (
TO AATHAT" j
Hfe'O S 0ETAD /
PL~-l -F-P-ONA a 8LIVT>
( 5AHGOf-VvlHAr
DO THE PEOPLE-
, THI ST OF TM AT
\ GdAPESVIGE FEEP 5
I THAT 3TV ft KJ 6^E_
op
FATE OF ITT
By II, \l. Walker.
I OS 'aN'CiKLKS. Mrt\ 5.—"How
would you feel if you owned a
business and that was worth
$100,000 and knew that a ’soup' ped
dler was hiding in the basement try
ing to hand you a McNamara high
ball?”
Thomas Jefferson Mel 'arey's an
swer when asked if he was feeling a
bit nervous.
The Browne bjll. aimed t<» kill box
ing con test p in California, is to bo
taken up again to-day in Sacramento.
The fate of the game should be known
inside the next few hours.
As MeOarey, together with Pro
moter James \Y. (’offroth, of San
Francisco, practically controls the
whole world so far as championship
contests are concerned. It will be seen
that he is not padding his assets
when he mentions the mere sum of
$100,000.
“I can not believe that the spo ! i
will be legislated out of the State.”
said Met'arey to-day.
"For ten years we have bundled u
here in so clean a manner that th
enemies of the game, 99 per cent of
whom never witnessed a game, have
been unable to say a truthful worn
against it.”
ii is learned from a reliable source
that the city of New Orleans wou' j
welcome McCurey in case the boxing
game is killed in California.
Twenty-round contests are n >\v
permissible in Louisiana, and the
Crescent City would become the logi
cal championship battleground with
this state closed.
Tommy Walsh, manager of .1 *••
Mandot, tin* Southern lightweight, ha j
a tew words to say concerning ♦he
New Orleans situation.
• We are to start twenty-round box
ing bouts down there this miint!^
said Walsh, “and the sports have l^?fen
flank in demanding that the gayrfe oc
handled as il has been liamTlcd in
California for the past terp-'o* fifteen
year®. They want chamvfbiiMhip edn-
t. t- McCarey am! C>fiTroth as pro
moters have been... mentioned
along < anal Streef.
Also ther* 1 exists the possibility that
Mt *’arey ii>jght go to New York and
tgkc a^JUaThd In tin* ten-round thing.
? s£orge ”K. O.” brown wins.
XMW YORK. May 5. Members of
the St. Nicholas Athletic Club were
treated to one of the best entertain-
j ments in months Saturday. The
main attraction was between Knock
out Brown, of Chicago, and Battling
J Larry Ryan, of the West Side, in
I which the former was master of the
j situation from start to finish, in the
fourth ami seventh sessions Ryan
I went through tile ropes.
BIG LEAGUI GOSSIP
By Ed ('un-Tv.
N EW YORK, May 5. There was
a semblance of a tragedy en
acted last week at tin St. Nich
olas A. (\, when Frank Moran bat
tled Luther McCarty ten hard rounds.
The crowd cheered on Moran when he
landed a telling punch on tho ac
knowledged best man *>f the white
hope division.
Moran always answered \vi th a
smile and was apparently the most
cheerful man at tin* scene. He left
tin* ring laughing and joking, but it
was only by a strong effort that the
blond-haired gladiator acted the part.
Down deep in his heart there was a
leaden feeling, for Moran knew what
few other* were aware of; his right
hand was totally out of business
through the breaking of >< small bone,
and what was more important h»*
wasn’t to receive a penny for his serv
ices.
Held Luther Even.
For 3o minutes he fought McCarty,
ami in the majority of rounds gave as
uadi us he received. All th«* time he
was in action Moran realised that with
a useless hand h<* did not have the
slightest chance of knocking out Mc
Carty, which feat would he the only!
solace for the fact that he was tight-.
ing for nothing.
h was an exhibition <»f g imencss,
ind the real heroism of tjjrrf whole af
fair a a- that Moran ygfrriod out his
part without a nnrpriu Tie r, was
..•thing tor him^-n gain and every-
hing for him-mo lose. He went
through with it and gave the specta
tors their money’s worth, for he did
most of the forcing and made the
fight.
Few realized tLat the tight was aH
good as . am eled Wednesday morning.
Moran’s handlers knew he was really
unfit to enter tin* ring and wanted him
I., call the affair off. He said, "No."
Few Morans in Ring.
\g.ih? in the evening lie heard the
receipts vt ere only a little over $8,000.
Accord) ig to his contract, he was to
receive a percentage on all over $4,800.
When ho wu- told that all he was to
receive \pis t beating and that the
Injured hand would he accepted as a
legitimate excuse. Moran simply said:
i’ll fight MoFarty if lie knocks me
out in tla* first round. I never ran
away from a fight and no one is going
lu cverauy I dodged McCarty.*’
There ar** few Morans in tlie ring.
STOVALL IS SUSPENDED.
CHICAGO. May f». Manager Sto
vall. *d the St. Louis Browns, to-day
was indefinitely suspended by Pres
ident Ban Johnson for his imbroglio
with Empire Ferguson in St. Louis
during Saturday’s game with Cleve
land.
■^IIILAHHLPHIA. May o. Now comes the real test for the Giants, when the Western
* teams in the National League journey East this week for their first intersectional series.
The stlffest contenders for the pennant are bound to come from the West in tiie Pittsburg
and Chicago clubs. After all the four Western teams have made their Eastern visit, there,
may be something to tell about the finish of the race.
outside of the Giants. Chicago and Pittsburg will find little opposition in the East, ex-
**ept possibly in Philadelphia. Boston and Brooklyn will 1m* weak-kneed against the charging
Cubs and plunging Pirates, and it will lx* an excellent chance for oy <>f these two clubs to open up a lead.
* * #
VEltS has shot out ahead with his team in grand style, but as soon as he drills into the East it is going to be
E
a question of pitchers with him. The (Nibs have been hitting the ball very hard so far this season, harder
than any club in the league, but they
have not met any finished pitching.
The Pirates, who have a collection of
twlrlers that look very good on pa|>er,
have not received any effective box
work, all the men being off form.
This is practically the stlffest pitching
the Cubs have encountered. The Chi-
engo batters have easily cluhtied their
way through the pitchers on the Cin
cinnati and St. Louis clubs.
But when the Cubs hit the East
they will meet able pitchers in lx>tk
New York and Philadelphia, with-■-one
man. Nap Rucker, delivering''a good
game in Brooklyn. The pitchers on
Ixdh the Giants and Phillies are much
further advanced in their work than
the twlrlers on the Western clubs.
McGraw has six pitchers in good eon
ditiou now. while the Philadelphia
staff is in tiptop form. The batting
averages *>f the Cubs are liable to
shrivel up a little bit when the stick
ers meet up with some real twirling.
I OOK at tile thing from the other
—' angle. None of the Chicago
twlrlers have shown phenomenal form
s*> far. For a long time this season
not one of them had finished an entire
game, but the team has been w inning
on its robust sticking ability, pound
ing out victories by big scores. Noy.y
if Evers* pitchers do not improve'"and
the Cubs meet good twirling in the
East, they are liable !<• strike a slump
which may tumble them off their
perch. If they‘Mo slump, the pitch
ing stall* will be the cause of their
down fait.
-
'■pm: cast- of Tittslmrj; is slightly
1 different from that of Chieago,
but the outcome of the impending
Kastrni trip will have a large amount
of influence on the Tirates’ chances.
Clarke has an excellent pitching
staff. \o one denies that, lint it is
like a powerful engine which is run
ning on only a elyinder or two and
not tiring very strong on these. The
twlrlers are ail out of slmiie. Hen
drix started the other day and could
not find the plate. Adams went in
and was no better. Pittsburg is a
club that will vome like a house atire
along in July or August, but it con
ditions slowly. What Clarke needs
most now is pitching, competent and
able. If he fails to get any worth
while on Mils’ Pastern trip, his team
maj>be crowded back so far that by
flic time it is in good health there’ll
lie a long road to travel to overtake
the leaders, whoever they may be.
The Giants are not sorry to see the
Cults beat Pittsburg now, because we
still figure the Pirates to be our
strongest rival for the pennant, and
the further back they are crowded,
the longer spurt they will have to
make in the middle and at the end
of the season. The team is bound to
come through eventually. The ability
is there.
* * *
I F Wagner can return to the game.
Ihe Pirates should give the j
Giants a hard battle for the flag.!
Reports conflict on the Dutchman's*
condition, but it is doubtful whether
lie will be able to play for a long time, j
if ut all. That will hurt Pittsburg, j
because the infield is badly damaged j
with him out of it. The Giants do
What Walter Johnson
Has Done This Year
April 10—Against New York, won
2 to 1, allowed 7 hits, fanned 3,
gave 1 base on balls, no earned
runs in 9 innings.
April 20—Against New York, won
3 to 0, allowed 5 hits, fanned 9,
gave no bases on balls, no
earned runs in 9 innings.
April 24.—Against Boston, won 6 to
0, allowed 2 hits, fanned 7,
gave 2 bases on balls, no earned
runs in 9 innings.
April 26.—Against Boston, allowed
2 hits, fanned 1, gave no bases
on balls, no earned runs in 1
inning.
April 30—Against Philadelphia,
won 2 to 0, allowed 4 hits,
fanned 10, gave 1 base on balls,
no earned runs in 9 innings.
May 3—Against Boston, allowed 4
hits, fanend 4, gave 1 base on
balls, no earned rur.„ in 5 in
nings.
Summary—Won 5, lost 0, allowed
24 hits or 5 per game, fanned
35 or 7 1-2 per game, gave 4
bases on balls or 1 per game;
has been scored on but once,
an unearned run, and has
pitched 4 1 innings without al
lowing a run.
Georgia-Alabama
League Opens Season
Billed to Meet on Dia-
PREP LEAGUE NOTES
Veteran Jimmy Clabby si ill ranks as
one of tho greatest middleweights in
tho game to-day. Last week the Ham
mond boy held Eddie MeGoorty. claim
ant of the middleweight championship,
to a draw at Denver in 10 rounds, after
nearly all the critics in the Middle \V4*st
had picked Eddie to beat Clabby.
Clabby has a wonderful record, hav
ing met nearly everybody of any ac
count In his division. Jimmy also took
several trips to Australia whore he best
ed several of the leading heavweights
on the other side. Clabby could make
164 in a pinch.
So anxious is Gunboat Smith to meet
Luther McCarty, that he has offered to
guarantee McCarty $5,000 if he will meet
him. Smith claims that Luther has
been dodging him for tho past year.
* * *
In the meantime Smith L doing light
work in New York for his 20-round en
gagement with Jess XVIllard on the coast
May 17.
I*atsy Brailnigan and Eddie Winder
have been matched to box 10 rounds in
Steubenville. Wts,, May 12. Both* boys
are featherweights
tling Nelson a stiff fight for 12 rounds.
» if. *
Steve Ketchel, Chicago lightweight
who recently parted company with his
manager, Larney Lichtenstein, writes
that lie would like to come hero and
meet some star lightweight. Ketchel
has fought such boys as Charlie White,
Pal Brown and Art Stewart.
Abe At tell is trying hard to get on
with Johnnie Kilbane on tho coast. Abe
says his recent bouts have proven that
he can still swing the padded mitts as
of old.
* * *
Joe Mandot is on the coast doing light
work for his 20-round fray with Bud
Anderson May 80. This will be Man-
dot's last chance at the lopnotchers it'
he is beaten.
Tommy Murphy says he will heat Wil
lie Ritchie sure if he ever gets the cham
pion in the ring with him. Tommy says
.titehie Is far from a great champion.
“KEEP PURCHASE PRICES
SECRET," SAYS JENNINGS
JACK BRITTON IS SUED
BY HIS FORMER MANAGER
not expect the Cubs to hold up, and j §j x j eams
figure the Pirates will In* the boys to , _ , _ . . .
beat. Therefore, the Chicago victories [ mond To-day; Schedule Closes
now are not troublesome. August 16.
—
LAGRANGE, GA., May 5.—Every-
j thing is in readiness for the opening
of the Georgia-Alabama League r o-
day, six teams being billed to get into
NEW YORK, May 5.—Jack Britton, | action *
the Chicago lightweight, who, in pri- Every club in the league has a r--
vate life, is William J. Breslin, wasi selve *" un 'd money on hand with
ma> the defendant in the City Court ™ ich \o start the season, and intense
. . , , _ , : interest is prevailing at every town
in a suit brought by John L. Costello in the league. The 1913 season will
his former manager, to recover an i run from May 5 to August 16. after
aggregate of $2,187 for money he al- "'hich time the winner of the pennant
legos ho advanced for personal ox- "a!J les aTsoveral^f^he‘’towns'"nthe
pens'es of the boxer during the time he j league with other small league pen-
nant winning teams.
recites I The sa l ar >' limit of the Georgia-Al-
, j abama League is $850 per month, in-
that from February, 1911, to July. { eluding the salary of the. manager,
1912, he managed the fighter under an ! who is supposed to be a playing man -
agreement by which he was to receive • ^£ er - ^ salary limit was made low
r .. ' , . in order to enable the league to stand
one-fourth of all the money earned by together in oast- of bad attendance.
the fighter in his bouts, and in addi- 1 and heavy fines will be imposed upon
tion was to be reimbursed by the ! an Y t eam found exceeding the salary
fighter for all moneys he expended for j
necessary expenses.
was under his management.
Costello, in his coinplaint,
NELSON SAYS HE WILL
QUIT RING ON MAY 4
[ Gharli** Allen, of Marist. has nuule ion a:
|lnt.s mi the last i\n.> games his team has
1 p!a.\o*l. Vilen wan close to the top In !
I I’rep leugue balling last year, ai d if he j
i.eeps* ut* his present pace he wil$ lead
210 In his stockings
Peacock was scheduled to pia> u game
Athena Saiurdaj with the Athens
it en, all this season. In the game with m , S( . hoo , ni ne. but the contest was
<n m- Mountain last J*rida\ lie gut tour
s iigb s (lilt of four times at ba. I postponed Peacock will enter some
'boys in die Prep meet next Friday.
1 There ar** at bast half a dozen athletes
I • * I* High 1 mi* ,-! ' gumest : al p,.acock who look promising
(catchers in the league if* "Babbit Hair, j # #
I I lair had a Unger nail knocked off in the ,
gam** with Marist in the first inning. II. HzendoHT. of Boys High, will no
j bint finished out the gan.** without a J * A •; i l»t win the pc’c vault in the meet
n urmia lb is a freshman at Tech , Frida.\. while Fowl* r, of Marist, will
! I probably cop the hammer throw of th
DETROIT, MICH., May 5.—Hughey
Jennings opposes the giving out of the
purchase price of star minor leaguers.
"If 1 had my way not a club in the
would announce its purchase
prices.” declared he. "In nineteen
i meet
Kivt
Hay
c* nuntie
side. In
<- trim:ii
oppoaln
en safet
five
g n
* former Boys
pitch big leugu*
lust game he pit
Gordon 13 to 2
• hits Very se
Hgh I
bail j
•hed ]
ie get
ff 11a,
MONEY
Attain;
•Id the
Here is
local Prep
Clubs
Boys High
Marist .
Tech Nigh
Peacock
G. M. A. .
he )’!<■•
League:
siuiiuing
»n Lost
.760
000
Joe Sullivan, manager of Jeff O’Con
nell. laughs at Matty Mc-Cue’a story that
{ lie refrained from putting out Posey
I Williams at Milwaukee the other night
because he had a bad hand. Sullivan
says the Racine boy is in for a trimming leagu
when O’Connell meets him at Racine on
May 15.
* * * cases out of twenty this practice ruins
George Dugdule, manager of Billy a ball player. Marquard wasn’t a bit
Walters, writes from Chicago that lie | of good for two years after he went
has his protege matched to box “Wil<l- j to New York. 1 could name dozens of
Ferns at St. Joseph. Mo., on May j instances where ball players went
fought one | wro „g because in the first few days
* they failed to live up to expectations,
Meyer Pries, the local bantamweight! ^hd after that they lost confidence in
says he will gladly meet little Jimmy themselves.
Grant, the Chicago boy, in a private j "What difference does it make
bout, for a side bet. These boys have whether a man cost the club $20 or
l>**eu wrangling for some time and it« j $20 *i«»0 so long as he delivers the
about time they coilld get together. ; Th ■ ...fair if it
George Cadelis. Grant’s backer, says l t ,7*,! .? J
Pries can meet him at the Georgian of- I choose?* to i»u> a nigh price lor the
flee and sign up foi* tli** bout at once. player, just the same as it is the
• * « club’s affair when it pays a star a big
Frank Klaus and Jack Dillon will price for his services.”
met at Indianapolis instead of Mil- <
PHILADELPHIA. PA.. May i
Battling Nelson last night announced day:
his retirement from the prize ring
The clubs are all in condition to
play snappy ball, and almost all oi
the teams are made up of young
sters, and there will undoubtedly be
many fine players developed and soM
from each team at the end of the sea
son :
Following is the schedule for to-
Anniston at Gadsden.
, , Opelika at Talladega,
after his tight in Pittsburg on May 14. LaGrange at Newnan.
He declares that he is satisfied that
he never can be a contender for the CROSS AND TRENDALL SIGN,
lightweight crown. "I promised the ST. LOUIS, MO., May 5.—Leach
public 1 would make this announce- Cross, of New York, and Harry Tren-
ment when I had satisfied myself dull, of St. Louis, signed articles yes-
that I could not come back. I am j rerday to fight eight rounds here May
satisfied.” ; 8 at 135 pounds.
IT NEW 10111
N EW YORK, May 5.—The St.
Nicholas Athletic Club will be
in the field again this week with
mother high-class bill, featuring with
.en-round bouts between boys of
■hree classes. The main event will
show Johnny Lore, of the West Side,
against Sam Robideau, one of the
oest lightweights which Philadelphia
} as turned out in some time. Robi-
icau has had considerable experience,
*nd is regarded as one of the most
promising boys of his class In the
ion-round semi-final the contestants
pill be George “Knockout” Brown, of
hicago, and Leo Houck, of Lancas
ter. I best- two middleweights have
been figuring In bouts with the top-
'lotchers of their class for the past
gvo years, in the opening ten-round
bou the principals will be Kid Black,
f t ^ ® ,de » and Tommy Houck,
>f Philadelphia.
* * *
T HE „ A, ! antir G arJe n AUiletic Club
,"' 111 al? ° Put on an all-star shou-
at its club house to-morrow night.
!• rankle Burns, the Jersey City ban
tamweight, who has fought all the
eading ooys of his class, including
the champion, as well as two feath
erweight champions, will oppose Jim
my Murray, in the main event. Bat
tling Hurley, of Passaic, and Young
1" rank, of the West Side, will come
together in the ten-round semi-final
“.nd the opening bout will show Young
Graawell. of Newark, vs. Gene Gilvev
"t local 133-pound boy.
* * *
THREE ton-round bouts will be put
on to-morrow night at the Brook-
yn Beach Athletic Club, of South
Brooklyn. Jack Hanlon and Al Mc-
Closkey, heavyweights, will be the
headliners. The other bouts will bring
together Jack O’Donnell vs. Young
McGowan, and George Frazer vs
Jimmy Jarvis. ,
The new Polo A. A. will put on its
regular weekly show Friday night. On
Saturday night the usual programs
hill be put on at the Fairmont, St.
Nicholas and Atlantic Garden Clubs!
of New York: the Irving National and
Gowanus Clubs, of Brooklyn, and the
T.iberal Athletic Club, of Staten Is-
’and.
* * *
veal feature on the week's card
* i* The show to be staged at the
Forty-fourth Street Sporting Club. It
was intended to reopen this club to
night. but a postponement was found
necessary and the show arranged for
to-night will he put on Friday night.
The star event of the card will bring
together Mike Gibbons, of St. Paul,
*nd Dave Kurtz, the rugged middle
weight of Newark. Gibbons has not
boxed here since his unsatisfactory af
fair with Eddie MeGoorty at Madison
Square Garden several months ago.
In the ten-round semi-final at the
same show Tom Gibbons, who made
such an impression in his two recent
bouts here, will test his 'speed and
skill against Antoine Pollet. the Cana
dian light-heavyweight, who won two
bouts by the knockout route at the
new Pol -) A. A. Another ten-round
bout will complete the card.
EDDIE FOSTER STILL ILL.
WASHINGTON. May 5.—No change
has been noted in the condition of
Eddie Foster, th** Nationals third
baseman, who is ill at Georgetown
Hospital with typhoid fever.
15 Tin* boys have already
draw
ANOTHER MAN CORED OF RHEUMATISM
M. A.
< ’« . oh Griffin, of t.
i tin* baseball team along as
! s!bl< He realizes that tin
! to get dowt
, is hustling
fast as pos
y will havt
tv* hard work if th»*v t*x-
teasou in anything Pet
al G. M. A. has been badly
[ band Flipped since the two star pitchers,
i !tardi*m;;j; and Hurlottg loft school. Dur
den and Babb ar*- the only two* available
I twirlers :it G \t. A now and Babb is
■ • valuable a man at third base to be
j put in the box
meet
waukee George Jingle says the Hoosier j
City offered better inducements for the j
- n will clash m.o 29 in a]
I scheduled 10-round affair.
* » *
Tom McCarey may stage a bout be- j
tween Eddie Morgan, claimant of the
featherweight championship of England.
uiiil .lonnv k’ilhflnA before fie outs on
tin* return scrap between Kilbane and
T fiinde**. McCarey thinks this would
give the fans more time before wit
nessing another struggle bet wren tfie
two American featherweights. He
would then put on Dundee with the w in
ner of the Morgan-Kilbane tussle.
I other MeOart\ and his manager Bil-
1 ly MrCarney w ill b**af It for Calgary thD
[week where Luther is billed ».> m*-et
I 1 .. ii..!'. i.. 1 • 1.... 1 . M ,
John RusKin
A Cifiar. FOR ALL MEN
Two Stjes P^4
AFT ^c P E k N s NER ’ O
TRUSSES!
\bdominal Supports. Elastic Hosiery/
etc Expert fitters, both lady end men,
Quaker Herb Extract Again
Produces a Startling
Result.
s At last it seems a remedy has
s been discovered which actually
| j gives results. Quaker Herb Ex-
\ trai t. which ha& been introduced at
’oursey & Munn’s drug store, has
( certainly produced such marvelous
( results that it has proven its worth.
Tiiis great remedy. composed of
< God’s choicest gifts to mankind,
viz., herbs, roots, barks and blos
soms. is the same remedy which
has been so successfully used by
our forefathers, tho friends of Qua
kers. There is not one ingredient
in the remedy which can possibly
harm, and for that#reason it may
be taken by all, young and old. It
is a tonic which builds up quickly,
a blood purifier and system cleanser.
For sufferers of rheumatism, ca
tarrh and stomach troubles it is
particularly recommended, and that
it actually gives wonderfully quick
results can be proven by the hun
dreds of people right here in At
lanta who have been cured.
Another great cure was reported
at Coursey & Munn’s drug store.
Mr. McWhorter said: “I had a se
vere case of plain, every-day rheu-’
matism. just like thousands of other
people have. It seemed to locate in
my right side. When I arose in the
morning I was sore and stiff." Mr.
McWhorter had used almost everv
liniment and rheumatic relief known, )
but they had failed to do anything \
in his case. He was becoming dis- ?
couraged until he called at the drug \
s’tore and obtained Quaker Herb /
Extract. After using twelve bot-
ties, he states that he is entirely >
cured, and his wife is now using the ?
Extract and states-she is highly';
pleased. He lives at 301 Luckie ;
Street, if you wish to investigate. ;
If you suffer from rheumatism. 4
catarrh, kidney, liver, stomach or \
blood troubles call to-day at Cour- ?
sey & Munn’s drug store, 29 Mari- \
etta Street, and obtain Quaker Herb
Extract. $1.00 per bottle. 3 for $2.50^
or 6 for $5.00. Oil of Balm, 25c or ^
5 for $1.00. We prepay express >
charges on all orders of $3.00 or ;
over. (
l