Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, May 27, 1913, Image 10
'i’ll K AT LAN I A (ihOKGlAN AM) NhVVS, TL hSDA V, MAY 27. 1913
PELICANS KB
'11
SILK HAT HARRY’S DIVORCE SUIT • • The Judge Didn ’t Mean What
He Meant
• • Copyright, 1913, International News Service.
• •
:: By Tad
By
T * H
5
eomr
here
teen g
Acrt
club Is
clubs
cievast
Pel Sen!
01V\
lilrte
Cra
. Whining.
f It Is that the
•e won those
nes that now
* How did they
jappened? The
is as nothing
ell.ans showed
Ihii they lost
8 to 3. they
^d to win thir-
^ding
I’t altc
case
njurie
itlng
s* catt
and 1
wrong
—for
possib
Old 86
Toled<
pened
The
anoth
f*nder;
could t
hande
Worst
they c
ares i
o Charley Frank his
gether to blame. As
with most tail-end
s have done their
tvork. Both of the
hers have been shot
antz Is out of the
r«>r a year with a broken leg.
-h's bum knee has gone
again and he Is out of it
an indefinite stay. It is
le that he will never be his
If again. They think so in
), where the accident hap-
Pelicans are complaining of
•r affliction of the tail-
i—their nerve If gone. They
i’t take a game if it was
.1 to them They are the
fielders in the league—and
lid not improve their aver-
iny in Monday’s game.
E LLIOTT DENT more or less
vindicated himself Monday.
f ill Smith slipped him In and he
eat the Pelicans. He weakened
« fraction in the eighth and ninth
but he showed a lot better than
his last out. With plenty of work
this man may prove a star. He
does not seem at his best yet. but
maybe the next time he is worked
he will be able to go all the way
through.
* * •
T HIS Cas*t-Off’s Revenge stuff
is getting to be a howling
farce “Rebel” Williams, a
Cracker-for-a-day a while back,
turned up Monday with the
fiercest aort of batting and laced
out four hits in four times up.
He had but one fielding chance,
which he looked out for in good
style
William’? regular batting stride
is so far below that which he
showed yesterday as to make the
whole thing a blooming burlesque.
But it always happens. Generally
the cast-offs win the game. May
be the fact that Williams was an
involuntary cast-off saved the
Crackers from that misfortune.
* * *
IX7IL1JAM8 was not the only
** men who did some surpris
ing batting. Another was Pitcher
Pent, who scratched a couple
through the infield and beat them
to first.
»r put a scratch and a
his credit. <11<* and
made three-fifths) of the
Sncdee
U
Williams
Pels’ hitf
W.clchc
very tim
records,
and Pent
ace put a single and a
ly three-bagger on the
Wclchonce had Punn
n bases and. of course,
something ferocious was needed
to score them. Wclchonce hit it
all right and both of the speed
merchants tallied.
Har|y Wclchonce made six nice
put-outs yesterday and added to
he
the day
him twelve put-puts
f\ His hatting was
le made one of those
tn hunts’’—a wal-
to Evans which re-
.it-out at second.
the half-dozen
before,
In two day:
timely but )i
Old-tlTTU-* "At
loping drive
aulted in a i
THE Cracker have two more
games with the Pelicans and
ought to win them both, unless
the Pels show h tremendous im
provement. Charley Frank has
no pltclier calculated to stop the
local batters and his fielders are
pretty much to the bad.
Thursday Montgomery turns up
for four games. On Friday, be
cause of Federal Decoration Day.
[bi
TXejR£‘s tme ra/ai
l KmEVJ ir- A5
SOOAJ AS I BUV A
MB* KEL.W IT
EaiiJS- NO*/ iLU
mTTO CNV
UM0f5eU-A
b
* a
GEE • CAUT F-lb'O AM
l/MBREU-A STDR'E"
I'u. 0AW£ TO a K
TO TE2-*- AA !
VHr+eFR-E - 1 A>
GUV O ME
Bringing Up Father
• •
• •
• •
• •
Copyright, 1913, International News Service
• •
• •
By George McManus
JUNE BID SEE
F!
SOUTHERN LEAGUE.
Game# Tuesday.
New Orleans at Atlanta, Ponce De
Leon. Game called at 3:45 o'clock.
Montgomery at Birmingham.
Mobile at Chattanooga.
Memphis at Nashville.
Standing of the Clubs.
W'
end Gaiti
Knocks Rhaumatism
Remarkable Effects of a Rem
edy That Actually Irri
gates the Entire
Blood Supply.
1TH a band concert an
nounced for Sunday and with
the date for the opening set
for Friday night, June 6, and with
the board motordrome at the old cir
us grounds pretty well finished, At
lanta's season of motorcycle racing
in the “giant washtub” is closing in.
And you get the idea of what is
«>mg to happen from the expression
racing in a giant washtub.” That's
exactly what it is like. Jack Prince’s
new’ track is little more—and no less
than a hoard truck, set on edge.
Instead of riding on the floor of the
tub the racers hurtle around on the
inside of the sides, like cockroaches
on the kitchen wall, setting laws of
gravity at naught and affording to
the spectators the most spectacular
form of racing the world has ever
known.
Jack Prince really has a big offer
ing for the Atlanta public. His track
is the latest and best board track in
the world. It represents the last word
in the building of aboard tracks. Jack
has gathered in Atlanta already the
! best motorcycle racers in the world.
lie has more on the way. He is erect-
| mg comfortable seats, every one of
which commands a view' of the big
! inclosure. He has engaged a hand.
' It sounds ,uw lo tak* a blood bath. I Hl- ,ms ^ranged ™ r
but that is p>. isel\ the effect of a « rvice a service that will take the
i 1 moan remarl:.:t .* remedy known as S. nitrons of the motordrome from Five
i S. S It has the peculiar action of Points to the track tn barely more
; foeklriK through thr ime»tiii#s directly , , hHn n VP minutes. He has an at-
I P'- T ram /er opening nigh,.
■ and tins capUlnn ! veiw membrane. « result he will be greeted by one
: every organ of the laxly, evert- eminc-I -f the largest gatherings that ever
tory become* in effect a filter to strain witnessed a motorcycle race in Amer-
the blood of impurities. The stlmu- I
iating properties of S S. S. compel the .
*kir. liver ■ wt kidneys, bladder to knnnu n rrT cu/rc
all w Tk 1 • • . - , . ' rapfng out PEACOCK FLEET GIVES
every' irritating, every paln-foflfctlni
\V. L. Pe.
Mobile. 30 IB t>b2
N’vllle 22 19 .537
Atlanta 22 20 .524
M’phls 21 20 .513
W L.
Chatt.. 21 21
Mont... 20 22
IVham. 18 21
New 0.13 28
Pc.
.500
.476
.163
.317
Monday's Results.
Atlanta, 8; New Orleans, 3. .
Chattanooga, 4; Mobile, 0.
Birmingham, t; Montgomery,
Memphis-Nashville; rain.
NATIONAL LEAGUE.
Games Tuesday.
New \ork at Boston.
Philadelphia at Brooklyn.
Cincinnati at Pittsburg
St. Louis at Chicago.
Standing of the Clubs.
W. x- Jc
Phllft.. 22 7 .750
B’klyn ID 14 .576
St. L. 18 16 .520
N York 16 14 .633
W. L.
Ch'cago 18 17
P’burg 16 19
Boston 10 18
C'nnatl 10 24
Pc
.514
.357
.294
Monday's Results.
New York, 7; Boston, 2.
Philadelphia. 8; Brooklyn. 5.
Other games postponed.
AMERICAN LEAGUE.
Games Tuesday.
Detroit at St. Louis.
Chicago at Cleveland.
Washington at Philadelphia.
Boston at New York.
Standing of the Clubs.
atom of poison: it dislodges by irrtgn
tion all accumulations In the Joints. !
dissolves acid accretions renders them
neutral and scatters those peculiar
formations in the nerve centers that
cause such mystifying and often baf- ,
7 fling rheumatic pains
t And. best of all, this remarkable rem-
s welcome to the weakest stem- 1
If you have drugged yourself un-
4ur stomach is nearly paralyzed,
mill be astonished to find that S.
sensation but goes right
> edv
I
ach.
til y
i°%
to w
J vege
j Inli*
hale.
) millh
I duel,.
{ publii
RTh
i mat if
< bloo-
It, a
jes,
T1 is be rause it is a pur#
infusion, is taken naturally
blood just as pure air is in-
urally into your lungs
at Swift Laboratory has spent
>f dollars in perfecting, pro-
id placing in the hands of the
s wonderful remedy. So give
d a good bath with S. S. S.,
ck. c the worst forms of rheu-
i g- t it at any drug store at $1
li is a standard remedy, '
i everywhere as the greatest
•ifle ever discovered. If yours i
BOYS' HIGH BIG SCARE
Hoys* High School nine received
the closest call oft he season yes-
erday afternoon when they were held
to a 6 to 5 score by the Peacock-
v leet school aggregation.
Hoys' High began the scoring in the
first inning when they registered a
single tally and each team took its
turns throughout the nine chapters at
hading the score. The winning tally
was registered in the ninth inning
when Johnson scored on an error.
ase and you ne
te to The Swift
Swift building.
specific
tlanta.
STARS ENTER MEtT.
IOWA CITY. IOWA. May 27.— Hoyt
' f Greenfield, who promises to be the
Iowa Olympic candidate in 1916. will
1 • entered in the State I’niversity s
inn ual Interscholastlc invitation
field meet May 81.
American Association.
Milwaukee. Minneapolis. 1.
I ndi a naix'js-Louisville: ra in.
No oth^f^ames scheduled.
W. L. Pc.
Philu 22 10 688
Gland 24 12
W’ton 19 14
Ch’cAgo 21 16
.66'
.576
568
W L
Boston 15 19
St. L. 17 2*
Detroit 15 23
New Y. 9 24
Pc.
.441
ns
.335
Results Monday.
Boston. 3; New York. I
Philadelphia. 4: Washington. 0 (first
ga me).
Washington, 9; Philadelphia. 3 (second
game).
St. Louis. 4; Detroit, 3.
Chicago Cleveland; rain.
SOUTH ATLANTIC LEAGUE.
Games Tuesday.
Savannah at Charleston.
Albany at Oblumbus.
Macon at Jacksonville.
Stenriino of the Clubs.
\V L. Pc i W. L. Pc.
S’v'nah 26 7 78S : Macon, id 16 4S4
C’l’bus 18 15 545 Ch'ston 13 20 .394
I'ville 17 16 .515 ' Albany 8 23 258
Results Monday.
Jacksonville. 1; Maecn. 0.
Savannah. 5; Charleston, 1
Columbus. 2; Albany, 0.
EMPIRE STATE LEAGUE.
Games Tuesday.
Brunswick at Cordete
Waycross at Thomasville.
Americas at Valdosta.
R*andino of the Clubs.
W. L. Pc I \V L Pc
V'dosta.14 8 .636 W'crossn 11 .500
(“dele 13 9 .591 B wick. 3 13 .409
T’ville...ll 11 .500 1 AinVus. 8 14 .364
iday.
Waycross, 5; Thomasville, 1.
Cordele, 4; Brunswick, 1.
Valdosta, 4; Americus, 1.
GEORGIA-ALABAMA LEAGUE.
Games Tuesday.
Newnan at Gadsden.
Opelika at Anniston.
LaGrange at Talladega.
Standlng-of the Clubs.
W. L
G'sden 12 7 .632
N’nan. 11 8 .579
T'dega 10 8 556
L.
W.
Opelika 9
An’ston 8 10
HaG’ge. 5 13
Be.
.500
.444
.278
Results Monday.
Opelika, 4: Anniston, 0.
Talladega. 21; LaGrange. i.
Gadsden, 10: Newnan, 4.
Texas League.
San Antonio. 4. Houston, 0.
Galveston, 2; Beaumont. 1.
Waco. 4, Austin. 2
Fort Worth, 6; Dallas, 6.
Cotton States League.
Pensacola, 7: Jackson. 2
Columbus. 8; Selma. 7.
Meridian, 5; Clqp'ksdale, 2.
Federal League.
St Louis-Cleveland; wet grounds
Chicago-Pittsburg; rain.
Virginia League.
Portsmouth 3; Newport News, 2.
Petersburg. 6; Norfolk. 0.
Roanoke, < ; Richmond, 1.
-
Carolina Association.
Raleigh, 5: Asheville, 4
I mrham, 5; Greensboro, 2
Winston-Salem, 4; Charlotte, 3.
International League.
Baltimore, 4: Newark, 2.
Jersey City, 3; Providence. 2.
Montreal, 6. Toronto, 2
Buffalo, 3. Rochester. 2.
MONDAY’S GAME.
New Orleans, ab. r. H. do. a.
Hendryx, rf.
At*, 2 b. . .
Clancy, ss.
Rreen. rf.
Spencer, If .
Williams, 3b.
Snedecor, lb.
Adams, c, .
Evans, p. . .
Totals . . .
Atlanta.
Long, If. . .
Welchonce. of.
A1 per man. 2 b.
Bailey, rf. .
Smith. 3b, . .
Bisland, se.
Agler, lb. . .
Dunn. c. . .
Dent, p. . .
ab. r.
. o 1
. 5 0
. 4 0
. 4 1
. 2 1
. 2 1
. 4 1
3. 10 24
9
po.
3
6
3
o
o
9
3
1
1
0
3
n
3
4
2
0
2
14
Totals ... .33 8
Score by innings:
New Orleans 010 000 011—3
Atlanta 020 100 32*—8
Summary: Two-base h\t-»-Snede-
cor. Three-base hit. Welchonce. Dou
ble phi\ Oianey to Snedeoor. Struck
out — By Evans 5, by Dent 1. Bases
on bai’s -Off Evans 5. off Dent 3. Sac
rifice hits Adams. Evans. Hisland.
Stolon basen— Smith 2. Welchonce.
Wild pitches—Evans lilt by pitched
ball Bj i *■ : SnedscorL Time -
1:55 Umpires—Pfentiinger and
W right.
Sporting Food
■~~By GEORGE E. PHAIR—
ODE.
This is an ode to men of great re
nown :
An ode to men who laugh and say:
'Took! Took!”
An ode to men who hold a great
game down
And snap their fingers, saying:
”That for you!"
This is an ode to those who laugh
and say
“Old I\ T. Barnum had the proper
dope.
Those rummies will he with us every
day
And pay their kale and sit there
full oj hope."
I lore to hear the wallop of the hat
And sec the pill go hounding down
the dell,
But when a lot of guys grow rich
and fat
And then they rub it in—0 what-
thehel!
Jake Daubert has been suspended for
three days. Jake Daubert Is a member
of the Brooklyn team, which has been
winning too many games for the good of
the National League.
T( n Jones says he will bet $10,000 on
Jess Willard if said Jess Willard fights
Gunboat Smith again. Mr. Jones shows
his business acumen by speaking thus.
It would cost hint at least $7.50 to hire
a hall.
Not that we care to queer an honest
man’s business, but our idea of obtain
ing money under false pretenses is to
manage Jess Willard.
Ed Walsh threatens to teach the spit-
ball by mail. Various batters in the
American League would give half their
year’s salaries if Ed would only deliver
his spitball by mail.
AS J. EVERS MIGHT SAY.
/ do not love you. Thomas Lynch.
I could not, even in a pinch.
In fact, it is a lead pipe cinch
J do not lore you, Thomas Lynch.
Jack McGuigan says he has secured
Jack Britton’s signature to meet Young
Erne at the baseball park in Phila
delphia on Decoration Day. Both boys
will weigh in at 138 pounds ringside.
* * *
"Bud’’ Anderson is taking up con
siderable of the pugilistic limelight. His
knockout of Joe Mandot stamps him as
one of the most dangerous boxers in
hts class.
* * *
Jack O'Brien, the Philadelphia heavy
weight and one of the real veterans of
the game, donned the mitts the other
day. He boxed a three-round exhibi
tion with Harry Ramsey in Pottstown,
Pa.
* * *
Harry Trendall and Leo Kelly will
clash in a scheduled eight-round bout
at St. Louis Wednesday night. Tren
dall and Kelly met several months ago,
and the former was credited with the
shade.
* * *
Jimmy Terry will have a chance, to
make himself one of the biggest cards
in the boxing game Thursday night.
Jimmy is to take on Mike Gibbons in a
six-round set-to, and the fur should fly.
Reports from the Pennsylvania city
state that both boys have trained hard
for the go. and are ready for the gong.
* * *
Perry’s friends here are anxiously
awaiting the result. They point to the
fact that Jimmy has been going gTeat
lately, and for the first time in months
has trained faithfully for a scrap.
• * *
Meyer Pries, who will meet Spider
Britt in one of the three ten-round
bouts to be staged at the Auditorium
June 13. paid us a visit yesterday.
Meyer says that he is going to bet his
end of the purse that he beats Britt.
The little Hebrew also says that he is
going to be right this time, and will
BRANNIGAN HANDS M’CUE
FIRST DEFEAT OF CAREER
MILWAUKEE), W1S., May S7.-MatU
McCue. variously known as the Racine
terroV, the Wisconsin whirlwind and the
Racine wonder, is to-day simply plain
McCue. for all the terror and whirlwind
and wonder were punched out of him by
Patsy Brannigan. of Pittsburg It was
McCue’s first defeat, but it was de
cisive all along the ten-round route.
JAKE ABEL BEATS WHITE
IN EIGHT-ROUND FIGHT
MEMPHIS. TENS'.. May 27.—.Take
Abel, of Chattanooga, easily defeated
Frankie White, of Chicago, here last
night. Abel floored White In the eighth
round with a right to the r}bs. VV hite
did not land one clean blow.
BILLITER WINS MAT BOUT.
ST. LOUIS. May 27.—Johnnie Bil-
liter won two out of three falls last
night from Eddie Hammer.
NOTICE!
Closing-Out-Ends
$7, $8, S9
Trousers Made-
to-Measure
$3.50
FORDON
THE TAILOR, Inc.
8-10 N. Pryor St.
NEAR UNION DEPOT
start work for the bout in a couple of
days.
* * *
Abe Attell is still gathering in the
soft dough The former featherweight
champion has agreed to take on Phil
Bloom in the ten-round windup of a
special show at the Irving A. C., Brook
lyn. Attell is to receive $700, win,
lose or draw'.
* * * *
Tom Jones continues to challenge
Gunboat Smith in behalf of his heavy
weight, Jess Willard. As yet he has
not received any satisfaction from Jim
Buckley, manager of Smith.
* >». *
Buckley is not worrying much these
days. Besides having Smith, he also
has a neat meal ticket in Harlem Tom
my Murphy, one of the leading con
tenders for Willie Ritchie’s cro*>'n.
* * *
Arthur Pelky threatens to quit the
ring for good. The big heavyweight has
taken McCarty’s death to heart, and
says be will never be able to enter the
ring again and fight at his best.
* * *
Jack Denning, the New York middle
weight, wants to get Into action again.
Denning is anxious to exchange blows
with Dillon, Klaus, McGoorty or Jack
McCarron.
• • •
Frank Klaus received the newspaper
verdict over Eddie McGoorty in their
six-round bout at Pittsburg Saturday
night. Both boys were strong at the
finish, and could have gone a number
of rounds more.
• * •
Freddie Welsh, the English light
weight, had an easy time defeating Kid
Scaler the other night. The bout went
the full fifteen rounds, but Freddie had
a big shade at the finish.
White City Park Now Open
BigGI
Cores in 1 *• 5 days
unnatural discharges.
Contains no poison and
may be used full strength
absolutely without fear.
Guaranteed not to stricture. Prevents contagion.
WHY NOT CURE YOURSELF?
At Druggists, or we ship express prepaid upon
receipt of $1. Full particulars mailed on request.
CHE EVANS CHEMICAL CO., Cincinnati, O.
SARATOGA GETS FUTURITY.
NEW YORK, May 27.—At a meet
ing of the stewards of the Jockey
Club it was decided to transfer the
Futurity of 1913 from Coney Island
to Saratoga.
DON’T BE TORTURED 1
Ecsema can be instantly relieved and per- \
manentlv cured. Read what J. R. Maxwall. ;
Atlanta, Ga.. aays. It proves that {
Tetterine Cures Eczema ;
I suffered agony wih severe eczema. \
Tried six different remedies and was In 4
despair when a neighbor told me to try Tet
terlne. After using $3 worth I am com
pletely cured.
Why should you Buffer when you can ao '
easily set a remedy that cures all skin trou ,
* hles—eraeraa. Itching piles, erysipelaa. grround (
1 itch, ringworm, etc. Get It to-day—Tetterine.
50c at druggists, or by mall.
SHUPTRINE CO.. SAVANNAH. GA.
Kinky flair
Straight
SOFT
and
SILKY
EXELBNTO never ta.tr* to do
it claims. It stops falling HAIR,
cleans DANDRUFF at once, and ]u«t
feeds the SCALP and ROOTS ot t
HAIR, and makes HAIR grow so f&if
that it is a wonder.
Every package is guaranteed.
Plain talk: Don’t fool yourself bj
using some preparation which claim!
to straighten your HAIR. Kinky
HAIR can not be made straight. TOO
have to have HAIR before you cafl
straighten it. When you use EXEL<
ENTO QUININE POMADE, It will
promote the growth of the HAIR
very fast, and you will soon have nice,
long HAIR, which will be Ion®
straight, soft and silky.
PRICE—25 CENT8, by all druggists
or by mail on receipt of stamps or
coin.
EXELENTO MEDICINE COMPANY,
ATLANTA, GA.
AGENTS wanted overywhrre. Writ*
For particulars to-day.
0UISVILLE
THROUGH SLEEPERS
Lv. 6:45 AM., 5:10 PM.
-THE VICTOR”
IRc WOOLLEY'S SANITARIUM
in • j mi t | and all lnabrlatjr aMl
Opium and Whisky
tfcasa diseases are curable. Patient# also treated at inalr
homae Consultation confidential. A book on tha lua*
>ect free. DR. B. B WOOLLEY & SON* N* *»A YlSa
tor Sanitarium. Atlanta. Ga.