Newspaper Page Text
M'DONALD LI
MAN IN PAYNE
TROPHY PLAY
Rain Made Golf Difficult in Qual
ifying Round at East Lake
Course Saturday.
K. R. COBB SECOND
WITH A CARD OF 76
Plucky Showing in Heavy Show
ers, Only Two Being Dis
qualified for Stopping.
By W. R. Ticlienor.
F IFTY-FOUR players defied the
rain and returned cards in the
qualifying round of the tour
nament for the J. Carroll Payne tro
phy yesterday afternoon at East Lake.
J. K. McDonald returned the lowest
net score, having a 74, which was
two strokes better than his nearest
competitor, K. R. Cobb.
Nearly every player was caught at
some point on the round by one of
the several showers which fell dur
ing the afternoon, and many of them
played more than half of their round
in the rain.
The disqualification of a bunch of
players in the last tournament for
taking shelter during the rain which
came up during the qualifying round
had the effect of keeping the play
ers moving in the tournament, and it
was necessary to disqualify only two
of them for discontinuing playing and
taking shelter and these two did not
know that they were violating the
rules.
Following are the qualifying scores
of all who returned cards:
Name. Gross Score. Hdk. Net.
J. K. McDonald
. . 87
13
74
K. R. Cobb .
... 97
21
76
H. C. Moore .
. . 88
10
78
H. P. D. Cowee
. . .86
8
78
W. Alfriend . .
. . 98
20
78
J. A. Ellen . .
. . 87
8
79
W. F. Spalding
. . 87
8
79
T. L. Cooper
. ..100
21
79
J. D. Eby . .
... 91
12
79
It. Arnold . . .
. . *7
80
W. P.. Tlchenor .
... 84
3
81
C. V. Rainwater
89
8
81
J E. McMichael
. . .104
22
82.
J. 8 Derr . .
. . 96
14
82
J. O. Smith . .
. . 95
13
82
C. J. Holditch .
. . 93
10
83
I. I,. Graves .
. . 92
9
83
H. Block . . .
. . 90
7
83
E. D. Duncan .
. .100
16
84
J. L. Dickey .
. . 108
24
84
R. E. Trippe
. .105
»0
85
T. B. Fav . . .
. . . 93
8
85
S. C. Williams
. . 98
13
85
H. B. Lowndes .
. . .101
15
86
C. Donaldson
. .100
13
87
W. F. Upshaw .
. . .110
23
87
J. Q. Burton .
. .103
15
88
J. G. Darling .
. .111
22
89
T. A. Hammond
. . .111
21
90
R. A. Palmer .
. .105
15
90
H. S. Irvine .
. .116
24
92
E. G. Beaudry
. .116
24
93
W. Markham .
. .112
20
92
G. A. Nicolson .
. . .110
18
92
D. R. Cowles . .
. . .107
24
93
T. L. Ingram . .
. . .114
21
93
H. R. Calef . . .
. . .111
18
93
Milt Saul ....
. . .111
18
93
J. W. Bachman .
. . .109
16
93
R. I. Gresham .
. . .118
24
94
F. Meador . .
. .116 *
22
94
C. A. Thornton .
. . .110
15
95
D. Brown . . .
. . . 98
3
95
J. P. Webster . .
. . .119
24
95
R. T. Jones . .
. . .114
18
96
A. A. Doonan .
. .108
12
96
L. H. Beck . .
. .112
15
97
W. C. Spiker . .
. . .117
20
97
R. Morris . . .
. .115
15.
100
S. Hard
. . .109
9
100
George N. Spring
. . .126
24
102
W. J. Tilson . .
. . .111
9
102
Chip Robert . .
. . .128
24
104
C B. Howard. .
. .132
24
108
The
^airings.
J. K. McDonald vs. I. L. Graves.
• C. V. Rainwater vs. W. Alfriend.
W. F, Spalding vs. L. Arnold.
J. S. Derr vs. H. C. Moore.
H. P. D. Cowee vs. J. C. McMichael.
\V. R. Tlchenor vs. J. A. Ellen.
T. L. Cooper vs. .7. D. Eby.
J. O. Smith vd. K. R. Cobb.
Second Flight.
C. J. Holditch vs. G. A. Nicolson.
J G. Darling vs. R. E. Trippe.
S C. Williams vs. W. F. Upshaw.
R. A. Palmer vs. E. D. Duncan,
j L Dickev VS. T. A. Hammond.
J. 1. Burton vs. T. B. Foy.
H. B. Lowndes vs. C. Donaldson.
E. G. Beaudry vs. H. Block.
Third Flight.
H. S. Irvine vs. W. C. Splker.
J. P. Webster vs. H. R. Calef.
J W. Bachman vs. C. A. Thornton.
A. A. Doonan vs. D. R. Cowles.
T. L. Ingram vs. R. T. Jones.
D. Brown vs. M. Saul.
R I Gresham vs. F. Meador.
L.' H. Beck vs. W. Markham.
M’CAREY INVITES COULON
TO TAKE TRIP TO C0*ST
>08 ANGELES, CAL., July 26 —Tom
Carey has written Johnny Coulon in-
in* him to come to the Southland
lie he is recovering: his health and
ting In shape to enter the ring again.
tcCarey has no desire to take the lit.
fellow’s title away from him and
is that if the champion could be in-
-ed to come here and rest for some
le he would gain in strength and be
ne acclimated so that he would be it,
ipe to fight for the title sooner than
remaining East.
Vs soon as Coulon announces that he
ready to battle the McOarey belt
1 be put up and the champion will
•eive a chance to settle all disputes
rarding the championship.
PHILLIES AFTER SCANLAN.
PHILADELPHIA, July 26—It is
reported to-day that Che Philadelphia
National League club is making over
tures to “Doc" Scanlan, the Brook
lyn twirier, who refused to join the
Quakers owing to differences on the
salary question. He may join the
team’ next month. Scanlan is prac
tising daily. Recently in New Bruns
wick. N. J-, he shut out his opponents
without a hit.
ATLANTA, GA„ SUNDAY, JULY 27, 1913.
A PAIR OF DRIVING
CLUB TENNIS STARS
Colonel Carthew-Yorstoun, Crack
British Player, Talks of the
Game’s Requirements.
“EXPERTS MUST PRACTICE,
EAT, SLEEP AND LIVE POLO”
Colonel Van Orsdale Offers Fort
McPherson Parade Ground
for Practice Matches.
By O. B. Keeler.
P OLO In Atlanta.
The phrase has a curiously
pleasing sound. Polo, with its
tang of British India and R. Kipling;
its smack of Newport, and Devereux
Milbum and the Waterbury brothers
and society at large and In particu
lar.
And all the romance of the West
chester Cup, and the international
matches, and the $100,000 strings of
ponies, and red waistcoats and green
turf.
And so on.
Dr. J. A. McLeay, Lamar Hill, Sam
Slicer, Dr. J. O. Seamans, Tom Weav
er hnd the officers at Fort McPher
son think all of that.
Dr. McLcay, who played the game
in Canada, is keen to start it in At
lanta. In Atlanta, so there might be
well-dressed exhibition matches
framed in large and densely populated
motor cars. And challenge matches
with nearby and Northern teams. And
maybe (later on) tournaments, with
visiting fours from the big plubs of
the East and West.
To which end, Dr. McLeay already
has obtained a cordial welcome ,from
Colonel VanOrsdale to the big parade
ground at Fort McPherson for prac
tice and exhibition matches.
Furthermore, Dr. McLeay has con
sulted an authority on the subject—
Colonel M. E. Carthew-Yorstoun, late
of the British service in India.
* • *
pOLONEL YORSTOUN lives at
^ East Lake. For his personal di
version he prefers golf to polo, hav
ing badly broken an ankle years ago
training a fractious polo pony.
That was in India. And It means
that Colonel Yorstoun knows polo
from the ground up, having played it
upward of twenty years in the land
where more polo is played than any
where else in the world.
And in Colonel Yorstoun’s expe
rienced estimation, polo In (Atlanta is
a most desirable thing. Says the col
onel:
“There were years on end at Poona,
over near Bombay, when my first
waking thought would be, ‘Is this
polo day?’ If it w r as I couldn't get into
my clothes fast enough, and then the
round of the stables, and the looking
over of ponies, and the limbering-up
gallop—and^then the crisp ‘click’ of
the first shot, and the drumming of
hoofs on the turf.
“That’s the way polo takes hold of
you.
“And if it shouldn’t be polo day,
why, there were the raw ponies to be
trained and taught, and hard shots
to be practiced, and if the weather
should be bad there were the wicker
‘wall horses,’ dummies for you to sit
on, taking swings at rolling balls, fed
you by grinning native youngsters,
who would roll a ball at you and
then duck behind a barricade to es
cape your drive.
“That’s polo—and there’s nothing
like it.”
And the colonel, despite his ankle
won’t admit it’s a very dangerous
game. One must have a good seat
and hands; good hands are very nec
essary. But if your ponies are well
trained—and that bring up another
point.
* * *
T HE trained polo pony plays about
half the game, in partnership
with his rider, lie follows the ball;
follows the ball as a cat follows a
skittering mouse. There’s next to no
such thing as riding with wraps in
polo. You may see the loose, free
seat and rein of the nonchalant cow
puncher, combined with the swing
and dash of the most Spectacular
game on earth, in the performance of
every* polo crack. The ponies know
the game. It becomes an instinct with
them, lige the bloodhound’s scent or
the bird dog’s inborn faculty.
mm.
Eleven Atlanta Batsmen Down on
Strikes Before Curves of $7,000
Beauty—‘Curly’s’ Luck and Price’s
Weakness Cause of Second Defeat.
COLUMBUS BALL TEAM
TO GET BOOSTER GAME
COLUMBUS. July 26.—Monday has
been designated as “Booster Day”
with the Columbus baseball team
when it begins a series of three games
with Albany. The management of the
team is undertaking to arouse interest
to keep the treasury ir. a safe condi
tion during the wans at the season.
Yankees Take Third
Match; Another Win
Brings Tennis Title
Princess Mary, Daughter of King
George, Watches Americans
Down British Team.
pecial Cable to The American.
WIMBLEDON, ENGLAND, July 26.
Stars and Stripes floated in triumph
over the renowned Center Court here
this afternoon for the American Da
vis cup doubles team lowered the
English team, sending the hopes of
the Yankee contingent present into
the high heavens.
The victory gives the United States
the advantage of two matches to one
and even the most skeptical Britons
who saw the match admitted that
nothing short of. a miracle would pre
vent the cup being lifted. America
needs but one more match in the two
remaining singles to be played Mon
day, and at the very worst McLough-
lin ought to take the measure of
Dixon.
The doubles teams In the match
to-day were Maurice E. McLoughlin
and Harold H. Hackett, for America,
while England’s honor with the rac
quet was upheld by Herbert Roper
Barrett and Charles P. Dixon, the lat
ter pair-being present holders of the
world's championship in doubles. The
match was the fiercest seen at Wim
bledon in 36 years of its history, and
when the last shot was struck the
Americans were announced as the
winners by the score of 5-7, 6-1, 2-6,
7-5, 6-4.
The crowd was not as large as that
which watched the sin" 1 ' matches,
but the stands were well filled apd
considerable eclat was lent to the
scene by the presence of Princess
Mary, daughtr of King George, who
occupied a seat in the royal box.
PALZER STILL BELIEVES
HE’S A REAL FIGHTER
NEW YORK, July 26—A1 Palzer Is
back in New .York to-day, looking for
fights. He weighs about 220 pounds and
says he is in good 9hape.
Palzer expects to meet Jim Flynn her©
if the latter beats Gunboat Smith, Au
gust 8, but in the meantime will take
any bout he can pick up. Early in Sep
tember Palzer will sail for France to
prepare for his fight with Carpentler, the
French champion.
ART ALARD TO FIGHT BENZ.
BUTTE, MONT., July 26.—Art
A lard, of New York, and Art Benz, of
Butte, have been matched for a
twelve-round contest here September
1. Bonz has fought twelve battles, in
every one of which he has .knocked
out his opponent within four rounds.
HORSES TO BE SOLD.
BALTIMORE, July 26.—The Blenheim
stables, owned by W. Wallace I^anahan
and Walter R. Abell, and containing Al-
goma, declared to be the finest horse in
tne United States, are to be- broken up
and the horses sold. The sale will take
place at the Long Branch horse show
next week, at which the animals will be
exhibited.
THE PRICE OF LARRY.
A St. Louis statistician has figured
out that 360,000 loaves of bread, or 225,-
000 pounds of Texas steer, could be
bought for the price the Sox paid foi
Larry Chappelle, the $18,000 outfielder
from Milwaukee.
ANOTHER PITCHER FOR TORONTO.
NEW YORK. July 26 —The Brooklyn
club has released Pitcher Kent to the
Toronto club. The release of Kent was
necessary to bring the Brooklyn roster
down to 25 ment, since the recent pur
chase of Pitcher Walker.
The top
photograph
shows
A. M. Bentley
returning a
difficult
drive. The
lower
photograph
was snapped
just as
Dr. John S.
Hurt
started
one of his
difficult
serves. Both
of these players
are in top-notch
form now, and
are giving their
opponents
plenty of hard
work on the
courts at the
Driving Club.
Constant
practice has
perfected their
game, as both
play every
afternoon.
Wood Wins Western
Title; Beats Allis
HOMEWOOD COUNTRY CLUB,
FLOSSMOOR, ILL.. July 26.—Warren
K. Wood, of Homewood, this after
noon became Western amateur golf
champion. He defeated E. P. Allis, of
Milwaukee. In the final match play on
the Homewood links, 4 up and 3 to
play.
The morning card follows:
Wood, out. 465 3 4536 3—38
Allis, out 46564635 3—41
Wood. In, 45463443 4-37-76
Allis, In. 44553563 6—40-81
Following is the afternoon card:
Wood—Out..4, 4, 4, 4, 6 5, 8. 6, 3—39
Allis—Out. . 4. 5. 4, 6. 4, 5, 3 5, 2—57
Wood—In 1 4, 4, 4, 5, 3 4
Allis—In 4. 4. 5. fa, 3, 4
BROTHERS OF BASEBALL.
Cleveland Is going to send Dave
Gr**gg, a brother of the great Vean,
back to the minors. Brothers of fu-
mmis twirlers never stick. Witness
the fall of Hank Mathewson, Jim
Magee. Ed Scanlan. Joe Evers, Ira
Plank and many others.
THREE SELLING EVENTS
DURING HARNESS MEET
HARTFORD, CONN.. July 26.—An In-
novation in the Grand Circuit racing
program here in September, it was an
nounced to-day, will he three selling
races. One will be for 1:25 paces and the
others for 2:24 trotters, and three years
old eligible to the 2:30 class. The value
of each horse entering is fixed at $1,000
and the winner in each event is to be
put up at auction within twenty minutes
after the finish of each race.
WOULDN’T GO TO GAMES;
GADSDEN BASEBALL ENDS
GADSDEN, ALA., July 26.—It has
been announced by the baseball man
agement here that no more games will
be played In this city on account of
poor attendance. The scheduled con
tests have been transferred to New-
nan and Opelika, respectively.
COOMBS BACK AUG. 1.
PHILADELPHIA. July 26.—Jack
Coombs is renorted to be so nearly
well that he will join the Athletics
soon, possibly August L
SHERIFF STOPS PUT“IN-BAY
BOUT; DELANEY HAS SHADE
PUT-IN-BAY, OHIO, July 26.—
Sheriff Wolfe, of Ottawa County,
stopped the eight-round fistic bout
between Cal Delaney, of Cleveland,
and Kid Julian, of Syracuse, N. Y„
in the eighth round here this after
noon. The fight was to have gone
twelve rounds, but on account of the
small, crowd it was decided to cut it
to eight. The boys were in the
midst of the final round when tlM
Sheriff ended the battle. Delaney had
a shade the better of the fight. There
were two fast rounds.
“SPIKE” WANTS FIRST BATTLE.
MADISON, WIS., July 26.—“Spik©"
Kelly, Chicago, claimant of the welter
weight title. Is in Madison trying to get
the first fight under the new law legal
izing ten-round no-decision contests. No
permits can be granted until the mem
bers of the commission have been ap
pointed and have organized. The Gov
ernor has thirty days in which to ap
point the members of the commission,
but is not expected to wait that long.
The Power
Which Erring
Men Call Chance
Plays no part in the life
of an American “Want
Ad.” It does its work
surely and convincingly.
It makes your wants
known to the people who
want to know them.
READ FOR PROFIT
AMERICAN “WANT ADS”
USE FOR RESULTS
By Joe Agler.
M ONTGOMERY, ALA., July 26.—The color scheme of two-
ply killing at the hall park this afternoon was blue and
brown—especially Brown—and you could broadside the
caps on that and not apologize.
The scores were 2 to 0 and 3 to 2, and the Crackers, on the
shy end in each case, continued to skid toward the second division.
'Pile Bilikens’ weather man finally got the climate under con
trol to a certain extent, and the Billies and the Crackers got to
gether for the fatal bargain day ball. A huge crowd turned out,
principally due to the advertis
ing power of $7,000 worth of
pitcher, which was exploited in
box car letters in the public
prints this morning.
And that is precisely what the
luckless Crackers faced in the opener.
There was $7,000 worth of Elmer
Brown on that hill. And he looked all
of that.
Here are a few things that Elmer
did to celebrate his purchase by the
Hon. (’harlp* Ebbcts, all the way from
Brooklyn:
Elmer fanned eleven Crackers. He
had only seven Innings in which to
operate, or he probably would have
gone further and the Crackers would
have fared wor.se. Besides, Elmer had
been living In Alabama so long that
the 7-11 combination appealed to him
strongly.
Elmer permitted four hits, which
settled sparsely among the several
rounds of play.
Elmer walked one Cracker. At a
late hour last night no good reason
had been produced for that maneuver.
Elmer Simply Was There.
In short, and In fine, and as a mat
ter of fact, Elmer had everything a
$7,000 slabman ought to have, and
enough loft over to help out a wab
bling $22,000 beauty or two.
The rest of the film is devoted to a
peckish little attack on Joe Congel-
man. It wouldn’t have amounted to
anything had the Crackers been pitted
against an ordinary human pitcher.
But those two little runs were just
twice as many as the Billies needed
with E. Brown on the hill.
Now, just keep your seats for ■-*
minute and the next reel will star',
after a few advertisements have been
thrown ora the screen, showing
Charles* Lbbets flip-flopping about his
new ball park and Charley Jones
counting his rrfoney.
Now we start.
Still a Sepia Tone.
And here we have another sepia
setting, with warm tones of Brown
predominating.
This Brown is of th© common or
Charley variety, making the third
Charles that has horned into this
brief tragedy. He is sometimes known
as “Curly," by reason of the decep-
tiveness of his hookball, which starts
from the fork-hand side.
Brown II was fairly good. What
was better, he was plastered with
four-leaf clovers. Thing point Is, he
got by with it. There was not the
eclat about his method that distin
guished that of the expensive other
Brown. But he got by.
Had the second encounter been a
life-sized game, the Crackers might
have got an even break on the day’s
work, as they were beginning to
bunch them on Curly toward the
finish. But Price, who had,been sent
home to rest and evidently hadn’t
rested long enough, was pounded sav
agely in the first two innings. Then
three runs in Dutch, Clarke came on
and wasted a fine job of pitching
through the Inability of the Crack
ers to abolish the lead gained off
Price, One hit was the extent of
Clarke’s suffering at the hands of the
reckless Billikens.
• Hit Curly Hard.
The Crackers kept after Curly and
got a run in the fourth Inning, after
two were out, when Manush hit for
three bases and scored on Dunn’s
two-bagger. They got another in the
sixth, when Dong beat out a bunt and
Alperman tripled. Curly got his
hooks to working and Whitey lan
guished on third while Smith, Manush
and Dunn tried vainly to rescue him.
Knaupp opened the second inning
for Montgomery with an exceedingly
long home run over the center field
fence. Two more hits and an error
gave the Billies another in the same
frame, but that was all, as Clarke
was boBs all the time he was on the
job.
Another feature that , might be
mentioned was the canning of Bls-
land and Manager Dobbs for debat
ing with Umps Fifield In the second
game. Fifield’s work was sufficient
excuse for debating, to say it softly.
Dent Works To-day.
The club leaves to-night for the
Mobile series. Dent is due to open
the ball there, with Chapman catch
ing, and the boys believe they are
due to shake the jinx before coming
back home. Bill Bailey will be out of
the game several days, possibly
weeks, with an injury received from
a pitched ball in New Orleans. The
X-ray will be turned on Bill in Mo
bile in an effort to find out how badly
he is damaged.
HENRIKSEN RECOVERING.
CHICAGO, July 26.—The condition
of Oiaf Henriksen, the Boston Amer
ican’s utility man, who was operated
upon for appendicitis here last tveek,
is so satisfactory that his physicians
expect him to leave the hospital |s-
day.
It's Awful, Mabel 11
First Game.
Atlanta. ab. r. h. po. a. e.
Agler, II). ...3 0 1 4 0 0
Bisland, ss. . . 2 0 1 2 2 1
Welehonce, cf. . 3. 0 1 0 0 0
Long, If 3 0 0 1 0 0
Alperman, 2b. ,3 0 0 t( 3 0
Smith, 3b. ... 3 G 0 1 0 0
Manush. If- . . 3 ft 1 0 0 0
Chapman, c. . . 3 0 (t 4 4 0
Conselman, p. . 2 0 0 0 1 0
Totals. . . .25 0 4 18 9 0
Montgomery, ab. r. h. po. a. e.
Walker, cf.. . . 3 1 1 2 0 0
Wares. 21). ... 2 0 0 0 l 0
F.lwert, 3b.. . . 2 1 0 0 10
Sloan, rf. . . . 3 0 3 1 0 0
Jantzen, if.. . . 2 0 1 0 o 0
Knaupp, ss. . . 2 O 1 12 0
Snedeeor, lb.. . 2 0 0 5 O ()
Donahue, e. . . 1 0 111 0 0
E. Brown, p. . . 2 O 0 0 3 0
Totals. . . .10 2 7 21 7 0
Score by innings:
Atlanta 000 4)00 0—0
Montgomery 100 100 x—2
Summary: Two-base hits Agler,
Bisland. Sacrifice hits--Wares.
Stolen bases—Bisland. Double plays
—Bisland to Agler, Chapman to Al
perman. Bases on bails—Oil < 'ouzel-
man, .2; off Brown. 1. Deft and bases
—Atlanta 5, Montgomery 1. Struck
out—By Conzelman, 4: by Brown, 11.
Time of game—1:30. Umpires—
Breitensteln and Fiefeld.
Second Game
Atlanta. ab. r. n. po. a. e.
Agler, lb. ... 4 0 0 6 0 0
Bisland. ss. . . 3 0 1 1 1 0
Chapman, If.. . 1 0 0 0 0 0
WelehoDce, cf. . 8 0 0 2 0 0
Long, rf 1110 0 1
Alperman, 2b. . 3 0 2 2 1 O
Smith, 3b. ... 3 0 1 0 0 1
Mannsh, lf.-ss. .2 1 112 0
Dunn, c. .... 2 0 1 6 1 0
I*rice, p. > . . . 1 0 0 0 3 0
Clark, p 1 0 0 0 1 0
•Dent 1 O 0 0 0 0
Total*. . . .27 2 7 18 9 2
•Hit for Clark In seventh.
Montgomery, ab. r. h. po. a. e.
Walker, cf. . . 3 0 1 0 0 0
Wares, 2b. ... 3 1 1 0 6 0
Elwert. 3b.. ..1 0 0 0 2 0
Sloan, rf. . . . 3 0 0 1 0 0
Jantzen, If.... 1 0 0 1 0 0
Knaupp, ss. . . 2 1 1 0 3 0
Snedeeor, lb.. .2 1 1 14 0 0
Gribbens, c. . . 2 0 1 5 1 0
C. Brown, p. . . 2 0 0 0 2 0
Totals. . . .19 3 5 21 14 0
Score by inningR:
Atlanta 000 101 0—2
Montgomery ...» .120 000 x—3
Summary: Two-base hits--Walker,
Dunn. Three-base bits—Manush,
Alperman. Home run—Knaupp.
Stolen bases- -Wares. Sloan. Sacri
fice hits—Manush, Elwert, Snedeeor,
Brown. Bases on balls—Off Clark, 4;
off Brown. 1. I»eff on bases—Atlanta
6, Montgomery 6. Hit by pitched
hall—Walker (by Price), Elwert (by
Clark). Hits—Off Price, 4 In 2 In
nings; off Clark. 1 In 4 Innings.
Struck out-—By Price, 1: by Clark,
2; by Brown, 5. Time—1 :25. Um
pires—Fiefeld and Breitensteln.
Jakey Atz Breaks
Ankle in Sliding
Thirteen of Charley Frank's Pelicans
Out of Game Because of
Injuries.
NEW ORLEANS, LA., July 26.—
Charley Frank saw his thirteenth
player put out of the game because
of injuries this year as Jakey Atz
fractured his ankle sliding into thirl
base in the fifth inning of the second
game to-day. Atz will be out for :he
balance of the season.
Outfielder Daley, borrow ?d from
Nashville to fill in because of Spencvr
leaving the club, was turned back 'o
Manager Schwartz to-night. Outfield
er Stevenson, Pitchers Gudger and
Peddy and Shortstop Erwin will re
port to the local club Sunday.