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12
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN ANT) NEWS.
BEAT * G
mx
SCORE 4-1
I’ONCE DE LEON BALL PARK.
May 28.—The Cracker* took the final
same from the Pelicans here this after
noon, 4 to 0. The victory give* Bill
Smith’s crc”* imn out of ihe three
name* played.
Paul Musser. on the slab for the
Crackers, twirled a food game He
Kept the few hits secured off his deliv
ery well scattered.
Wilson was not much of a puzzle to
the Crackers. They managed to hunch
their hits and would have scored more
runs had they been able to bunt on a
couple of occasions.
THE GAME
FIRST INNING.
Hendryx singled to center Atz
fanned. Hendryx pilfered second
Clancy fanned. On a passed hall Hen
dry* strolled to third. Breen popped to
Smith. NO RUNS, ONE HIT
Long out. Wilson to 8nsdscor. Wel-
chonce filed to Hendryx. Alperman
went out, Clancy to Snedecor. NO
RUNS. NO HITS.
SECOND INNING.
Spencer fanned. Williams out. Smith
to Afler. Snedecor walked. On a wild
nitch Snedecor went to second. Adams
fouled to Chapman NO RUNS. No
HITS
Bailey doubled past Snedecor. Wallie
Smith made a regular Atlanta bunt—a
pop out to Adams Bisland struck out.
Afler also fanned NO R T 'N'S, ONE
HIT.
THIRD INNING.
Wilson walked Hendryx grounded to
Smith and Wilson was forced at second
to Alperman. Hendryx was doubled at
first on Whltey's relay to Agler Atz
singled to left Clancy filed to Wel-
. hom e. NO RUNS, ONE HIT.
Chapman filed to Breen in deep right
field. Musser was called out on # strikes
Long out. Atz to Snedecor. NO RUNS.
NO HITS
FOURTH INNING.
Breen filed to Bailey. Spericer struck
out Williams walked. On a wild pitch
Williams took third Williams tried to
steal home, hut was an easy out. Mus
ser to Chapman. No RUNS. NO HITS.
Welch once slipped one past Williams
for two bases. Alperman hunted to
Williams and was out to Snedecor and
Welch once went to third on the play.
Bailey singled to left and Welchonce
scored Bailey ptole second. Smith
filed to Hendryx and Bailey took third
KIsland lined to Hendryx. ONE RUN,
TWO HITS.
FIFTH INNING.
Snedecor out, Bisland to Agler.
\dams filed to Welchonce. Wilson
staffed to left. Hendryx struck c«t*.
NO RUNS. ONE HIT
Agler popped to Snedecor. who
dropped it for an error. Chapman
wanted. Musser sacrificed,* Williams to
Snedecor. Long doubled to right and
Agler and Chapman scored. Long was
out trying to stretch the hit Into n
triple Breen to Clancy to Williams.
Welchonce doubled to left Alperman
'o Bren* TWO HUNF, TWO
HITS
SIXTH INNING.
Atz walked Clancy fanned Breen
Hied to Welchonce. Spencer singled to
right and Atz went to third Williams
died to Smith. NO RUNS, ONE HIT.
Bailey fanned. Smith out. Clancy to
Snedecor. Bisland singled to left Agler
hunted out. Williams to Snedecor NO
RUNS. ONE HIT.
SEVENTH INNING.
Snedecor grounded out to Agler.
Adams also grounded out to Agler.
Wilson singled to left. Hendryx ground
ed out to Agler. NO RUNS. ONE HIT
Chapman fouled to Adams. Musser
tanned. Long walked and stole second.
Welchonce out. Atz to Snedecor. NO
RUNS. NO HITS.
EIGHTH INNING.
Atz out. Alperman to Agler. Clancy
walked. Breen hit into a double play,
Musser to Bisland to After. NO RUNS,
NO HITS.
Alperman popped to Atz. Bailey out,
Clancy to Snedecor. Smith walked and
stole second. Bisland singled to center
anti Smith tallied. Bisland went out
trying to steal second, Adams to Atz.
ONE RUN. ONE HIT
NINTH INNING.
Spencer fanned. Wdiams walked
>•.'decor struck out. Adams tlied to
Long, NO RUNS. NO HITS.
CITY LOSES IN I
SILK HAT HARRY’S DIVORCE SUIT
• •
e •
His Honor Meets a Right Guy
e e
e e
Copyright, 1913, International News Service. .
• e
o e
By Tad
He wito m
<*A HJUt OF SOOKH-r
v ** r \ TXOie t SHOULD
THE BOX SCORE
9
PELICANS .... 000 000 000 - 0
CRACKERS ... 000 120 Oix - 4
PELICANS v A B. R. II. PO. A. E.
Hendryx, cf .. ’ 4 0 1 3 0 ©
Atz, 2b 3 0 1 2 2 ’ 0
Clancy, ss 3 0 0 (I 4 0
Breen, rf 4 0 0 2 1 0
Spencer, If , t 4 0 1 0 © 1
Williams, 3b 2 0 0 1 3 0
Snedecor, lb 3 0 0 9 0 0
Adams, c 4 0 0 7 1 ©
Wilson, p ...’ 2 0 2 0 1 0
Totals 29 0
5
12
1
CRACKERS-
AB. R. H. PO. A. t E.
Long, If 3
Welchonce, cf 4
Alperman, 2b 3
Bailey, rf 4
Smith, 3b 3
Bisland, ss 4
Agler, lb 3
Chapman, c 2
Musser, p 2
©
1
©
0
1
0
t
1
©
1
2
o
2
0
2
0
1
3
1
1
2
1
8
Totals
28
© 1©
© ©
7 27
(l
0
2
0
2
2
©
0
2
INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION
AT BALTIMORE—
NEWARK—
2 0 01 0 0 020-57 0
BALTIMORE—
1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 - 2 8 6
Eniman and Higgins; Morrisette and
Egan. Umpires, Finneran and Quigley.
FIRST GAME.
AT BUFFALO-
ROCHESTER -
1000 0 0 100-291
BUFFALO—
0100000 0 0 -182
Keefe and Jacklitsch; Frill and Gow-
dy* Umpires. Carpenter and Bierhalter.
SECOND GAME.
ROCHESTER-
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 1 - 4 4 3
BUFFALO—
3 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 X - 5 8 0
Martin and Williams; Beebe and La-
longe. Umpires. Carpenter and Bier-
halter.
All other games off rain.
SOUTH ATLANTIC LEAGUE
SOUTHERN LEAGUE
AT BIRMINGHAM— •
MONTGOMERY 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 - 2 7 2
BIRMINGHAM 000022 5 01- 10 10 1
E. Brown and Oonahue; Hardgrove and Mayer. Umpires, Kerin and Hart
AT NASft-tVILLE—
MEMPHIS 0 00000400-4 4 2
NASHVILLE 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 2 X - 5 10 3
Kissinger and Snell; Beckenrldge and Gibson. Umpires, Breitensteln and
Stockdale.
AT CHATTANOOGA—
MOBILE
CHATTANOOGA .
1 1 4 0 0 0 0 1 0 - 7 9 1
3 1 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 - 6 9 1
Hong. Robertson snd Schmidt; Hunt. More and Street. Umpires. Fifield and
Hi'daerham.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
f
AT PITTSBURG—
CINCINNATI 0 1 0 0 10 1 0 0 - 3 9 0
PITTSEURG 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 - 1 7 2
Slidos Clarke; Hendryx and Simon. Umpires. Rigler and Bryan.
AT CHICAGO—
ST LOUIS© 1 0 1 0 0 2 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 -8 16 4
CHICAGOO 0 2 1 0 2 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 -7 15 3
Griner and McLean; P^arc© and A -cher. Umpires. Klem and Orth.
All other games off, rain.
In a unanimous decision by the 8u-
prt'Hie Court of Georgia, the eitv loses
tn its fight to uphold the legnlitv of
the $276,000 crematory contract and
Atlanta faces a serious health prob
lem.
The ruling declares the Contract il
legal on the ground that the moral
obligation Involved 1n the pledge of
payment to the Destructor Compun.x
of New York is a debt. The consti
tution of the State expressly forbids
the Council of one year binding the
Council of another in a financial obli
gation.
The decision acts as an injunction,
the city and the contractors being
restrained from continuing operations
on the crematory' which is now under
construction until two-thirds of the
voters shall have approved of the
project at a spectial election.
Mayor Woodward, who fought tne
contract from the biginning, scores
a Dig victory, but Atlanta is con
fronted with a menacing problem in
the disposal of its garbage during the
summer months. The decision was
written by Chief Justice Fish.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
FIRST GAME
AT CLEVELAND—
CHICAGO 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 - 1 6 1
CLEVELAND, .. .1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 X - 2 5 1
Cicottc and Schalk; Kohler and O'Neill. Umpires, Ferguson and Dinecn.
SECON D GAME.
CHICAGO 0 0 0 1 0 2 0 0 0 - 3 8 2
CLEVELAND 2 1 0 2 0 0 0 0 X - 5 10 0
Walsh, Wh»te. and Kuhn and Schalk; Gregg and Carisch. Umpires. Deneen
and Ferguson.
AT ST. LOUIS—
DETROIT * 0 0 0 1 2 0 1 0 1 - 6 11 2
ST. LOUIS 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 - 3 7 2
Hall. Stanage and McKee: Baumgartner and Agnew.
brand and Connolly.
Umpires, Hilde-
All other games off, ra in.
T tamp.\ M k*° NS m, BU :s N i, B0ND ,f-i WILLIAMS BREAKS YALE'S
t>" miiv p v LONG WINNING STREAK
en by the Masons last night when I
V’fL b ' ,rn f d l U -,'l 00 ,' V K O m,m ut can - i NVSVY HAYKN. t’ONN., May SS.-Wit-
celed bonds on theii building. liaii.s broke 1 ale s record of seventeen
.— con’ei'ii*i\e victories by shutting out
A wonderful magazine riven 't!'' I; ‘ : un v »'« ' »>• - «» <•
FREr. with every copy of the .m r.:. « >h • ... fait..,"
White City Park Now Open , next Sunday American. ‘“ani* ' "* ls 1 "' h ,ea " ‘ l,: -
—
AT CHARLESTON—
SAVANNAH—
0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 - 2 7 3
CHARLESTON—
0000 0 0 0 00-022
Adams and Geibel; Chappelle and
White. Umpire Pender.
AT JACKSONVILLE—
MACON—
0 1 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 - 3 7 7
JACKSONVILLE—
000 0 00 0 00-064
Martin and Reynolds; Stewart and
Hawkins. Umpire, Moran.
A. COLUMBUS—
ALBANY—
1 0 0 2 1 0 0 0 0- 4 12 9
COLUMBUS—
2 0 0 3 0 3 3 1 X-12 10 3
Premmerhoff and Wells. McCormick
and Krebs Umpires. Glatts and Barr.
EMPIRE LEAGUE.
FIRST GAME—
Americus 100 002 000—3 9 5
Valdosta 031 001 220—9 12 4 |
Wolfe and Manchert^r: Elrod and
Pierre. Umpire, Carter.
SECOND GAME
Score: r. h. E.
Americus 009 0—1 6 5
Valdosta. 200 0—8 14 0
Wolfe .and Mancherter; Elrod and
Fierre. Umpire, Carter
Score: R, H. E.
Waycross 202 100 000—5 6 0
Thomasville . 000 001 010~2 7 4
Warwick and Wahoo, Elliott and Dud
ley. Umpire, Bennett.
Score: R H. E.
Brunswick 200 005 000— 7 7 2
Cordele 515 030 10*—15 16 6
Vickery, Slocumb and Leifert; Rein -
• an and Eubanks. Umpire. McLouah-
Wn.
, FEDERAL LEAGUE.
Score: R. H. E.
Cleveland.. 000 000 000—0 2 0
Chicago 000 000 001 — 1 9 0
Miller and Klelnow; McGuire and
Donough. Umpires. Fyfe and Nlppert.
Score: R. H. E.
Indianapolis 000 110 001—3 10 1
Covington. .. 203 010 00*—6 13 3
Billiard and Manning; Henning and
H leks.
Score R. H. E.
Pittsburg 000 002 300—5 7 1
St. Louis 000 000 030—3 5 2
Achcnfelter and Lucia; Gwynn and
Green
CAROLINA LEAGUE.
SECOND GAME—
Score; R. H. E.
Raleigh 102 410 000—8 8 3
Asheville 014 000 000—5 7 2
Mahaffey and Lidgate; Betslll and
Milllman. Umpire. Miller.
Score: R. H. E.
Greensboro . . 000 010 010—2 9 2
Durham 200 010 00*—3 3 3
Jordan and Coveney; Von and Lowe.
Umpire. Henderson.
Greensboro-Durham: First game was
called off on account of rain.
Score: R. H. E.
Charlotte * 013 100 3—8 10 3
Winston-Salem 000 020 2—4 9 1
Vanpelt and Neidercorn; Boyle and
Smith Umpire. McBride.
GEORGIA-ALABAMA LEAGUE
Score: R. H. E.
Opelika 001 007 000—8 10 1
Anniston 000 000 001—1 4 4
Ery and N.cholson: Killingsworth
and Shepperd.
AT COLUMBUS—
TOLEDO—
1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 -2 11 2
COLUMBUS—
0 1 2 0 2 0 1 2 X -8 13 0
Baskette Collamore and Livibgston;
Davis and Smith. Umpires. O'Brien
and Chill.
AT ST. PAUL—
KANSAS CITY—
200001001 1-5 91
ST. PAUL-
01 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 0-4 8 2
Covington and Kritchell; Gardner,
Walker, Leroy and Miller. Umpires.
Westerveit and Irwin.
Miller. Umpires, Westerveit and Irwin.
AT INDIANAPOLIS—
LOUISVILLE—
020300003 -8 13 1
INDIANAPOLIS—
000030000 -3 91
Laudermilk and Clemons; Karserling
and Clark. Umpires. Murray and
Handiboe.
AT MINNEAPOLIS—
MILWAUKEE—
0000 0 3000 -3 10 0
MINNEAPOLIS—
0000 0 0000 -0 22
Dougherty and {Hughes; Patterscn and
Owens. Umpires. Johnstone and Con
nolly.
COTTON STATES LEAGUE.
Score: R. H. E.
Columbus 000 000 000—0 8 1
Selma. 000 000 201—5 12 1
Pocle and Utter; Holtz and Love.
Umpire. Thompson.
Score: R. H. E
Pensacola ..000 300 107—11 *17 1
Jackson 100 200 000— 3 9 6
Berm and Hauser; Cheney and Rob
ertson. Umpire. Robertson.
VIRGINIA LEAGUE.
Score: R. H. E.
Richmond . . 002 100 090 002—5 13 0.
Roanoke . .000 003 000 000—3 8 1
Ayes and Luckey; Brown and Lafitte.
Umpire, Norcum.
SECOND GAME—
Score: R. H. E.
Richmond 003 100 000—4 11 1
Roanoke 000 000 000—0 6 0
Griffin and Lusky; Efird and Lafitte
and Stewart. * Umpire, Norcum.
Norfolk at Petersburg: No game; rain.
Newport News - Portsmouth : No game;
rain.
Hammerstein Quits
London Opera Field
Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian.
LONDON May 2S. Oscar Ham
merstein'? operatic connection with
London was severed to-day with the
sale of his interest in the London
Opera House to E. A. V. Stanley,
chairman of the syndicate which had
leased the building.
The sa’e was made in the name of
Arthur Hammerstein. a son of Oscar,
and was consummated with 48 hours
after the Hammerstein* had paid
a $240,000 mortgage on the opera
house.
Trustees to Learn
Of Mercer Friction
MACON, < IA.. May »8. 'The trustees
of Mercer University on Monday after
noon wilt receive a special committee s
report of an investigation of alleged
friction among President S. Y. .Jame
son. the faculty, the student body and
the prudential committee. This com
mittee had an exhaustive hearing sever
al months ago. but its report was formu
lated and reserve! until the trustees
met.
President Jameson has declined the
presidency of Ouachita College, at Arka-
delphia, Ark.
Nine Hurt on British Warship.
LONDON. May 28.—Nine persons
were injured to-day on board the
British battleship Colossus by the
the bursting of a shell.
CHRISTY MATHEWSONS
BIG LtAGUt GOSSIP
N‘
miist natural hitters I have ever seen,
It ml it is Impossible to get him to go
after a bad ball. He has a wonderful
eye and is .a splendid judge of halls
and strikes. His batting average does
not show his true strength, because
he reaches first base so often on
passes. He is also lightning fast on
the bases once he arrives, and will
worry any pitcher badly.
Burns is capable of batting better
than he is doing at present. He is
still a little strange in the big league
berth, but lie is a good ball player.
Fletcher is batting hard, and Mer-
kle and Murray have picked up with
in the last week. Meyers so far has
not acquired his last season’s punch.
The club will get batting, and then
we should climb through the league
like the gossip of a kiss through a
hoarding house.
* * *
ITT.SBIJRG a frittered away bait
after the tine manner in which the
Boston club cleaned up four straight
on Clarke’s crew. The Pirates have
the pitching and the hitting, and will
lie in the contention for the cham
pionship. *
K\V YORK. May - . A few days ago I discussed t(ic different teams in the National
League race in general. To day ! will return to the same subject, sizing up the (Bants
and Pirates. Both teams were off all over in the early part of the race.
The New York players displayed some of the worst lidding seen on any diamond since
the late world’s series. Nothing was sure to the Giants. The pitchers were also out of sorts,
Tesreau failing to get moving and Marquard being out of condition from sickness. The Giants
hopjied into their lidding stride last week with a single bound, and the infield is moving like
a string of firecrackers now. Instead of turning outs into base hits, as we were dotyig, the infieldors are now cut
ting down base hits and converting them into outs, as several of the Pittsburg players will tell you if you get a
chance to consult them. That helps. ,
Following thistencouraging sign, both Tesreau and Marquard stepped out and pitched good baseball last
week, Rube showing ( a very fine game
against the Pirates when lie got tan
gled up in a pitching battle with
Camnitz, the one that went fourteen
innings. His fast ball had the hop
on it for the first time this season,
and when he is getting the jump on
his fast one tie is one of the best
southpaws in the business anywhere.
I Tesreau also stepped forth in tliclat-
: ter part of this same game and dis-
I played his old speed and the break
on his spitter which made him really
the leading pitcher of the National
League last season.
With these two men going at their
best, the Giants are sure to get pitch
ing. The only man on the staff not
up to the top of his stride now is” A1
Demaree, the recruit who has shown
such grand form so far this season.
He strained his side recently, uiul
will not he ready to work regularly
again for about a week. But Tesreau
can go to the lx>x every other day
if necessary, but it won’t lie necessary
with Marquard gild myself in shape
to take our regular turns.
'T'HF Giants have not hit up to any-
-•- tiling like the pace they showed
piTT,
York, when it took one of those sud
den braces and battled us to a practi
cal standstill. After leaving the Polo
Grounds, the Pirates went over to
last season so far, hut they should j Brooklyn and choked down the fond
bat harder. Shafer, who has replaced hopes of the Dodgers, when IJahlen
Snodgrass in center field, is one of the I had lieen led to expect something soft
B
ROOKLYN has started to fade.
drop. Of course the club will not go
down to the depths to which other
Brooklyn teams have descended in
years past, but it will be fighting to
remain out of the second division be^
fore the last word is in.
T
‘HE St. Louis club is a big sur<
prise, especially to the Giants,
but it is going ahead of its normal
speed now. It has not the staunch
ness to last. The team has two ex
cellent pitchers. Harmon and Sallee,
and Konetchy is a great ball player.
So is Huggins. The ix»st of the team
is nothing out of the ordinary, and
a club must l>e out of tin* ordinary to
win a pennant. Huggins’ peppery
personality has done a lot for the
team. Sallee will do a lot more if
he sticks in shape all season.
(Copyright, 1013, by the McClure News
paper Syndicate.)
FODDER FOR FANS
Overall, of the CubL and Sallee, of
the Cardinals, engaged in a pitchers’
battle yesterday, which resulted in fa
vor of the former.
. . .
The Athletics took a double-header in
I easy fashion from the Senators yester-
! day, winhing the first S to 0 and the
| second 7 to 1. Eddie Plank, the veteran
southpaw, pitched in the first and al
lowed Ihe Senators only two hits.
y * * *
r^ckinimugh the former Nap utility
infielder, secured in tract by the Yan
kees. will be given a regular position at
shortstop. "Diet' is regarded as h
fast and brilliant fielder, but somewhat
shy with the war club.
Johnny Evers, manager of the Cubs,
openly accuses Pitcher Camnitz. of the
Pirates, with deliberately hitting Cheney
and Archer with pitched balls and at
tempting to hit Zimmerman. Evers
intends taking his complaint to Presi
dent Lynch.
* * *
Harry Lurnley, once manager and star
player with th« Dodgers, has been re
leased by the • t oy. X. Y . team. An in
jury to his ibrowing wrist perhaps will
necessitate his retirement from baseball.
* * *
The lowly Braves administered a dou
ble defeat to the Giants, pushing the
New Yorkers down to fifth mace. 259
points behind the leading Phillies.
The Bra>es' second victory of the day
was a clean-cut. deserved affair, but the
first game was won or. a fluke. In the
ninth Sweeney hit to the outfield, and
Connelly, rounding third, started for tlie
plate. Burns would have thrown him
out by nearly ton feet, but the ball, in
stead of hounding into Catcher Meyers'
hand, struck Sweeney’s discarded' hut
and bounded away, while Connelly
scored the only run of the game.
Manager Stovall’s triple in the seventh
which scored a run, followed by Aus
tin’s single, scoring .Stovall. were
enough to gain a victory yesterday for
the Browns over the Tigers.
a * *.
C. Webb Murphy, owner of the Cubs,
who recently forbade his players to con
verse with reporters, has another griev
ance against the newspapers. A short
time back Murphy set out on the trail
FREE, NEXT SUNDAY.
The American Sunday
Monthly Magazine, contain
ing the first chapters of Jack
London's new story,, is
G^VEN FREE with every
copy of the next Sunday
American.
Jack London's new story,
“The Scarlet Plague,’’ begins in
the American Monthly Magazine
given free with every copy of
next Sunday's American.
of "Rube” Scheur, a promising pitcher
of the Superior, Wis., team, in the
Northern League. The newspapers
printed the fact and the Superior club
owners at once boosted the price of
Scheur so high that Murphy balked.
Mutyhy now states the newspapers
"queered my deal."
* * •
Dick Rudolph, the recruit from the To
ronto team, in the International League,
who pitched for the Braves Monday,
holding the Giants at his mercy, acted
as a relief pitcher again yesterday and
nn£e again the New Yorkers were una
ble to score on him.
CARDINALS WILL HOLD
ON TO JIMMY SHECKARD
ST Louis. May 28.—A yarn ema
nating from Cincinnati to the effect
that Jimmy Sheckard would be re
leased by the Cardinal club because
his salary was too bulky was spiked
yesterday by .Manager Huggins. "I
have no intention of releasing Sheck
ard." declared the Cardinal com
mander. "and I want to state that
emphatically. Sheckard is a great
ball player, and he was paid accord
ingly by the Chicago club. We took
over his contract, but we’re not kick
ing. Whether he will play regularly
if a question. Our club really hasn’t
shaped itself as yet.”
BURNS STOPS HOPPE.
‘OAKLAND, CAL.. May 28.—
Frankie Burns, the Oakland light
weight, knocked out Willie Hoppe, Ad
Wolga^’s protege, in the ninth round
of their scheduled ten-round bout last
night.
‘free. NEXT SUNDAY.
The American Sunday
Monthly Magazine, contain
ing the first chapters of Jack
London’s new story, is
GIVEN FREE with every
copy of the next Sunday
American.
DANS SHADES SMITH.
DES MOINES, IOWA, May 2S.—
j George Dans, of Monmouth, ill., and
■•Andy Smith, of Oklahoma City, fought
eight rounds before the Iowa Bankers’
Convention at the Auditorium last
night, Dans having a shade the best
of Smith.
GRANEY NAMED REFEREE.
SAN FRANCISCO, May 28.—Eddie
Graney. the veteran referee, is the
| choice as the third man in the ring on
July 4, when Joe Rivers and Willie
j Ritchie battle for the lightweight
I championship title.
BASEBALL
TO-DAY ;
New Orleans vs. Atlanta
Ponce DeLeon Park o’clock
ATLANTA
3
MATS.
MON.
WED.
SAT.
25c
All This Week
Pdiss Billy Long Co.
ST. ELMO
By Request
Nights 15c, 25c, 35c, 50c,
FORSYTH
Matinee To-day 2:30
To-Night 8:30
THE IRISH QUEEN
MAGGIE
CLINE
The Great
Howard-
Madden &
Fitzpatrick
Caesar Nesl
NEXT WEEK
LILLIAN SHAW
I Opium, Whiskey and Drug HobSt* treated
B at Home or at Sanitarium. Book on subject
I Frer. DR B. M. WOOLLEY, 24-N. Victoo
I Sanitarium. Atlanta, Georgia. ,
Make State and Coun
ty tax returns now. Office
; corner Pryor and Hunter
Streets. T. M. Armis
tead, Tax Receiver.
TR USSES
Abdominal .Support*. Klastic Hollar?
*tc. Expert litters; both lady and met
attendants; private flttlne room*.
Jacobs’ Main Store
. 6-8 Marietta St.