Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, May 27, 1913, Image 6

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THE ATLANTA (JKOIbil \\ \\l* NEWS. TUESDAY. MAY 27. 1913. 0) j±=/lx f*r off th| By I‘er<-\ II. Whiting. T HE wonder of it is that the Pelicans have won those thirteen games that now «iat p their records! How did they set them'.’ What happened? The •Felder Mystery" is as nothing compared with it On what the Pelican. t’honed here yesterday, when they lost to the Crackers 8 to 3, they wouldn't he entitled to win thir- een gamrs in ten years. According to Charley Frank hla elub isn't altogether to blame. Ah is the case with most tail-end clubs Injuries have done their devastating work Both of the Pelicans' catchers have been shot *wa\—and Yantr is out of the *nme for a year with a broken leg. Manush's bum knee has gone wrong again and he is out of it — for an indefinite stay It is possible that he will never be his old self again. They think so in Toledo, where the accident hap pened. The Pelicans are complaining or another affliction of the tm iI - enders—their nerve is gone. They couldn’t take a game if it was handed to them They are the worst fielders in the league—and they did not irnpr# • their aver ages any in Monday’s game. * • • C* ELIOTT DENT more or less *-* vindicated himself Monday. Rill Smith slipped him in and he beat the Pelicans He weakened • fraction in the eighth and ninth but he showed a lot better than bis last out. With plenty of work this man may prove a star. He does not sgem at his best yet. but maybe the next time he is worked he will be able to go all the way through. • • • T HIS Cast-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 sort 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 faet that Williams was an involuntary cast-off saved the Crackers from that misfortune. • • • 117ILLIAMS was not the only ** man who did some surpris ing batting. Another was Pitcher Dent, who scratched a couple through the infield and beat them to first. Snedecor put a scratch and a double to his credit. He and Williams made three-fifths of the • Pels' hits. Welchonce put a single and a eery timely three-bagger on the records. Welchonce had Dunn and Dent on bases and. of course, something ferocious whs needed o score them Welchonce hit it ill right and both of the speed nerehants tallied. Harry Welchonce made six nice put-outs yesterday and added to he half-dozen he made the day before, gave him twelve put-outs in two days. His hatting was .imely but he made one of those old-time "Atlahta hunts"—a wal- loj ing drive to Evans which re sulted In a put-out at second. THE Crackers have two more games with the Pelicans and ought to win them both, unless the Pels show a tremendous im provement. Charley Frank has' no pitcher calculated to stop the local batters and his fielders arc pretty much to the bad Thursday Montgomery turns up for four games. On Friday, be cause of Federal Decoration Day, there will be two games. Blood Bath Knocks Rheumatism SILK HAT HARRY’S DIVORCE SUIT The Judge Didn’t Mean What He Meant Copyright. 1913. International News* Barrie*. By Tad T*< RA,W l KruEVJ IT A5 SOOu AS I BUV A fuBA ' r , 11 TO <NV / b „ Me* . o T it J& yj i Camt p.|fvD vMBRCTJ-A. STD &€T I'U. TO ASX S0”£ TO TEL L M ST we+eve i ca S' etiv oce / J Tv hey II 'ioo I? ( sat ) ; o<0 you j-er- i i that umbbeu-*J) i 0 I 1 MI £0> cSt*& Bringing Up Father Copyright. 1913, International News Brrric* By George McManus oh: too must YMT UNTIL MT HUT.BM«D COMPS HE'S DUf AT Si* AMD He'S MfVffc late ; >.S> SURtuT - we'll wait 't>« oelichted TO MEET HIM ' I'M OTIMh TO MEET HIM. r 4 i ~ a CEE' I'M OUE AT ME l*XJSE. Mow HOW A •, . coin' to M*KE IT* trove (jp WITH Tlevt. HE S UOIM Toon wax ot coi lt : l WAS COCKt 1 0 CST TOO AT1‘ TOO LOim' Tep; i<;o 1 . -21A S’.«Hr past —, Tour house' TOUR WAX . . C WHAT'S THE MATTER - OiO TOO WANT ONE 0E THE r 3 K6CV. *'» Jf. ftKl x- JUNE 6 TO SEE BASEBALL SUMMARIES Sporting Food SOUTHERN LEAGUE. Games Tuesday. New Orleans at Atlanta, Ponte Pe- j Leon (lame caller I at 3:45 o’clock. I Montgomery at Birmingham. Mobile at Chattanooga. Memphis jjt Nashville. Standing of the Clubs Remarkable Effects of a Rem edy That Actually Irri gates the Entire Blood Supply. It sound* queer to take a blood bath. bu,I that is precisely the efTeot of a most remarkable remedy known as 8 PS It has the peculiar action ol soaking through the intestines directly into the blood In five minute* Its In fluence is at work in every artery, vein and tiny raplllar> Every membrane, every organ of the body, every enunc- tory becomes In effect a filter to strain the blood of impurities The stimu lating properties of s S S compel the skin liver, bowels, kidneys, bladder to all work to the one end of casting out every irritating everx pain-inflict lr.§ atom of poison, it dislodges by irriga 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 fling rheumatic rains \rd, best of all. this remarkable rem edy is welcome to the weakest stom ach If you hove drugged yourself un til your stomach Is nearly paralyzed, you will be astonished to find that S. S S gives no sensation but goes right to work. This is because it Is a pure vegetable infusion, is taken naturally into your blood Just as pure air Is in haled naturally into your lungs The great Swift laboratory nas spent millions of dollars In perfecting, pro ducing and placing in the hands of the public this wonderful remedy. So give your blooo a good hath with S. S S . for it knocks the worat forms of rheu matism every time You can get It at any drug store at II per bottle It i* a standard remedy, recognized everywhere ns the greatest blood specific ever discovered Yf yours Is a peculiar ca«e and you des’re ex ert advice write to The Swift Specific bmpar, 127 Swift building. Atlanta. K W ITH a band concert an nounced for Sunday and with the date for the opening set for Friday night, June 6. and with lhe hoard motordrome at the old 1 i* cur grounds pretty well finished, At lanta's season of motorcycle racing in the "giant washtub" is closirtg in. j And you get the idea of what id I going to happen from the expression 1 "racing in a giant washtub." That's I exactly what it is like. Jack Prince's new track is little more and no less than a board track, 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 hoard tracks. Jack has gathered in Atlanta already the best motorcycle racers in the world, lie has more on the way. He is erect ing comfortable seats, every one of which commands a view of the big nclosure. He has engaged a band He has arranged for a corking car tcrvice a service that will take the patrons of the motordrome from Five *olnts to the track in barely more ban five minutes. He has an at tractive program for opening night. Ns a result he will be greeted by one *f the largest gatherings that ever vitnessed a motorcycle race In Amer ica. PEACOCK FLEET GIVES BOYS' HIGH BIG SCARE Boys’ High School nine received the clones* call ofthe season yes- eidav afternoon when they were held to a 6 to score by the Peacock- .Meet m hoo! aggregation. Boys' 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 leading the score. The winning tally was registered In the ninth inning when Johnson scored on an error. STARS ENTER MEET. IOWA (TTY. IOWA. May 27 Hoy I of Greenfield, who promises to be the Iowa Olympic candidate in 1911>. will >e entered in the State University's ■nnual tntersc'no '.astir invitation j field meet May 3f. American Association. Ww n ’k• - Minneapolis. 1 Indiana pel is-Leuisvilb . rain I No othtt games scheduled. \V L Mobile. 30 16 N'vllle 22 19 \tlanta 22 20 M’phis 21 20 \V L Chatl.. 21 21 Mont.. 20 22 B’ham 18 21 New t>.13 28 Monday's Results. Atlanta. 8. New Orleans. 3 t'hattanooga 4. Mobile. 0 Birmingham. 1 ; Montgomery, Memphis-Nashville; rain. NATIONAL LEAGUE. Games Tuesday. New \ ork at Boston. Philadelphia at Brooklyn. (Tnoinnatt at Pittsburg St. l.ouis at Chicago. Standing of the Club* W Phila.. 22 7 770 B'klyn p.« 14 .‘>76 St. L. 18 16 .529 N York 16 II 533 W. L. Ph'cago 18 17 I ‘’burg 1 •> It Boston Hi 18 O'nnati 10 24 Monday’s Results. New York. 7, Boston. 2. Philadelphia. S. 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. W L Pc Phila.. 22 10 .688 C land 24 12 .667 W'tOll 19 14 5.6 Ch’eugo 21 16 568 W L. Boston 15 19 St. L.. 17 2J Detroit 15 23 New Y 9 24 Results Monday. Boston. 3: New York. I Philadelphia, 4. Washington. 0 (first game i Washington. 9; Philadelphia. 3 (second Kamel. St. Louis, l. Detroit. 3. Chicago Cleveland. rain. SOUTH ATLANTIC LEAGUE. Games Tuesday. Savannah at Charleston. Albany at Columbus Macon at Jacksonville St^ndim. of the Clubs W L. Pc . W L. Pc. S'v rah 26 7 78S Macon >;» 16 454 " Thus 18 15 545 J Ch ston.13 20 .394 Pville 17 16 515 Albany S 23 258 Results Monday. Jacksonville. 1: Macon. 0 Savannah. 5 Charleston, 1 Columbus. 2: Albany . 0. EMPIRE STATE LEAGUE. Carnes Tuesday. Brunswick at Cordele Wayrros*® at Thomas ville. Amtricus at Yaldostn. r ‘and*nr of the Club* W L pr I TV L. Pc Y'dcsta.l* < k-8 W'« rossll 11 .500 ( "dele 13 '■ 591 B wick 9 13 4»'9 1 ville 11 11 50“ j Ain'ctt. 8 M 364 Results Monday. Way cross. 5. Thomasvillc, 1. Cordele, 4; Brunswick. 1. Valdosta, 4; Americus. 1. GEORGIA-ALABAMA LEAGUE. Games Tuesday. Newnan at Gadsden Upelika at Anniston. LuGrange at Talladega. Standing of the Club*. L Pc f W I.. Pc. (i'sden 12 7 .63:. Opelika 9 9 .50v> N'nan. 11 8 .579 1 \n sion 8 10 44' T’tlega 10 8 .556) uuG'ge. 5 13 .278 Results Monday. Opelika, 4: Anniston. 0. Talladega, 21; LaUrange. 1. Gadsden. 10; Netvnnn, 4. Texas League. San Antonio. 4. Houston, 0. Galveston. 2'; Beaumont. 1. Waco. t. Austin, 2 Fort Worth, 6; Dallas, 5. Cotton States League. Pensacola, 7; Jackson. 2 Columbus, 8. Selma. 7 Meridian, 5; Clarksdale. 2. Federal League. St Louis-Clevelaml; w et grounds. Chicago-Pittsburg; rain Virginia League. Portsmouth. >; Newport News, 2 Petersburg. 6, Norfolk. 0 Roanoke. 7; Richmond. 1. Carolina Association. Raleigh. 5; Asheville. 4, Durham. 5; Greensboro. 2. Winston-Salem. 4; Charlotte, 3. International League, Baltimore. 4; Newark. Jersey City. 9; Providence, 2 Montreal. 6; Toronto, 2 Buffalo, 3; Rochester. 2. MONDAY’S GAME. New Orleans, ab. r. h. oo. a. e. Hendry x, rf. .5 ft 0 2 ft, ft Ate, 2b. ... 4 ft ft 4 2 1 Clancy, s»s. . . 4 0 1 3 3 1 Breen, rf. . . . 3 ft ft ft ft 0 Spencer, If. . . 4 1 2 4 ft 1 Williams. 3 b. .4 1 4 ft 1 n Snedecor, lb. . 3 ft 2 5 ft l Adams, c. . . 2 ft ft 6 l 1 Evans, p. . . . 3 1 1 ft 2 0 Totals . . . .32 3 1ft 24 9 5 Atlanta. ab. r. h. po. a. e. Long. If .31 131ft Welchonce. cf. .5 1 2 6 0 0 Alperman. 2b. .5 ft ft 3 3 ft Bailey, rf. . . 4 0 1 «» ft ft Smith. 3b. ... 4 1 1 030 Bisland. s«\ . . 2 1 ft 2 4 ft Agler, lb. ... 2 1 1 9 1 1 Dunn. c. . . . 4 l 1 3 ft ft Dent, p . . . 4 2 2 1 2 0 Totals . . 33 8 9 27 14 1 Score by innings; New Orleans ..ftp* 000 011 — 3 Atlanta 020 100 32*—8 Summary; Two-base hit — Snede cor Three-base hit, Welchonce. Dou ble pi ty —c ancy to Snedecor. Struck out—By Evans 5. by Dent 1. Bases on baP* off Evans* 5. off Deiy 3. Sac rifice hits Adams. Evans. Bisiand. Stolen basev—Smith 2 Welchonce. Wild pitches—Evans Hit by pitched ball By Dent (Sncuecor* Time- l;5". Empires— Pfenninger and W l ight. - By GEORGE E. RINGSIDE NEWS ODE. Thin in mi ode to nirn of great re nown : An od< t<> nun who laugh and xay: "Tot/li! Pool'!'' An od( to men who hold a gnat game done And xnag their fingerh. Haying: "That for you!" Thin >■: an ode to thoxe who laugh and xay "Old /\ T. Itanium hud the proper dope. / h oxi runimiix will he with ux (eery day And pay their hale and xit there full of hope." / lave to hear the walhgi of the hat And xee the pill i/o hounding down tin dell. Hut when a lot of guyx grow rich and fat And than thru nth it in—O what- thehel! Jake Daubert has been suspended for *hree days Jake Daubert is a member of the Brooklyn team, which has been winning too many games for the good of the National League. Tom Jones says he will bet $10,000 on less Willard if said Jess Willard tights Gunboat Smith again. Mr. Jones shows his business acumen by speaking thus. It would cost him 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 indnage Jess Willard. Ed Walsh threatens to teach the spit- all by mail Various hatters in the American League would give half their vear's salaries if Ed would only deliver 'iis spitball by mail. AS J. EVERS MIGHT SAY. 7 do not love you. Thomax Lynch. I could not. even in a pinch. In fact, it is a lead pipe cinch 1 do not Ion you, Thomax Lynch. Jack McGuigan says he has secured lack Britton's signhture 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 his 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 .:t St. Louis Wednesday night. Tren dall and Kelly met several months ago, and the former was credited with the shade. * * * Jimmy Perry 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-td, 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 great 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 bis end of the purse that he neats Britt. The little Hebrew also says that be is going to he right this time, and will BRANNIGAN HANDS M’CUE FIRST DEFEAT OF CAREER MILWAUKEE. WJS.. May 27. Matty McCue, variously known as the Racine terror, 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 McOue’s first defeat, but it was de cisive all along the ten-round route. JAKE ABEL BEATS WHITE IN EIGHT-ROUND FIGHT MEMPHIS. TENN.. May 27 Jake vbel. of Chattanooga, easily defeated Frankie White, of Chicago, here last night Abel floored White in the eighth round with a right to the ribs White did not land «>ne clean blow EILLITER WINS MAT BOUT. ST LOl'lS. May 27.- Johnnie Bii- 'itor won two out of three falls last ni*ht from Eddie Hammer. NOTICE! Closing-Out-Ends $7, $8, $9 Trousers Made- to-Measure 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. * t * Tom Jones continues to challenge Gunboat Smith in be.half of his heavy weight. Jess Willard. As yet he lias not received any satisfaction from Jim Buckley*, manager of Smith. * w * 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 crown. « * * Arthur Pelky threatens to quit the ring for good. The big heavyweight has taken McCarty’s death to heart, and says he 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, hut Freddie had a big shade at the finish. DON’T BE TORTURED Eczema can l>e instantly reliever! and per manently cured Itoad what J. R. Maxwell, Atlanta, da., says. It proves that Tetterine Cures Eczema I sutlered agony wlh severe eczema. Tried six different remedies and was In despair when a neighbor told me to try Tet- terlne. After using $3 worth I am com pletely cured. Why should you suffer when you can so i easily get a remedy that cures all skin trou- , i hies—eczema. Itching titles, erysipelas, ground , ' itch, ringworm, etc. (let it to-day — 1 Tetterine. 50e at druggists, or by mall. SHUPTRiNE CO.. SAVANNAH. GA. Kinky Hair Straight SOFT and SILKY White City Park Now Open BigG Cure* in 1 to 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. i EX ELEN TO never fairs to do what it claims. It stops falling HAIR, cleans DANDRUFF at once, and jus»t feeds the SCALP and ROOTS of the I HAIR, and makes HAIR grow so fasl l that It is a w onder. Every package is guaranteed. Plain talk: Don’t fool yourself by using some preparation w*hich claim! to straighten your HAIR. Kinky HAIR can not be made straight. YOU have to have HAIR before you can straighten it. When you use EXEL- EXTO QUININE POMADE, it will promote the growth of the HAIB very fast, and you will soon have nice, long HAIR. which will be long, straight, soft and silky. PRICE—25 CENTS, by all druggists or by mail on receipt of stamps oi coin. EXELENTO MEDICINE COMPANY, ATLANTA, GA. AGENTS wanted everywhere. Writ® for particulars to-day. THE TAILOR, Inc, 8-10 N. Pryor St. NEAR UNION DEPOT 0UISVILLE THROUGH SLEEPERS Lv. 6:45 AM., 5:40 PM. ■THE VICTOR" DR, WOGLLEY'S SANITARIUM • j mi ■ ■ end all Inebriety an^ Opium and Whisky savisssr *i r * years’ experience eho\?if these diseases are curable. Patients also treated at tbei* homes Consultation confidential. A book on tha sufc Ject free I)R B. B WOOLLEY & BON., No. 3-A Yl* tor Sanitarium. Atlanta. Ga» SARATOGA GETS FUTURITY. NEW YORK. May 27.—At a meet ing of the stewards of the Jockey t’lub it was decided to transfer the Futurity of 1913 from Coney Island td Saratoga. 1 K to