Newspaper Page Text
#
10
TTTF ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS.
Hope, You Can't Rush A High-Priced Plumber
Os**rl*ht. 1911. International Plawa
Silk Hat Harry's Divorce Suit
By TAD
AP£ '
Gon/vA. \
j
Good’/
**8 CjDJT
chi ta fro
THOSE X
PLUM OF]RSX
rs-Ob* r>re X
MlMOf?S \AJU_L^
Mures. ItuSHEO
VJ&LL- 4 - ^
I'M TVE^Rf,
V/irx3 0UCK5
FOIL THE
■smcwjoowa/
/ » <?OT >
j th lies'
' -LA DIG'S
<?ue« ••
COPAOr/»fW
SlT 00va»ih
I'm ontovous
.STUpF-VOu'AE
LOOK/fJ6 'FOIL
Am OoT- YOUfcfc
Ahead ,—^
V0Vft£. aj(JT ammov/ajq-
Ai\jVOim£ - YOU iTAY ,
U/UTIU 1 'JA-V (
. £uOUQ-H ^
«UQ <r
a/iut
THAT-
8U7
Vj£LL Oo AH£A0
NOW 8un>k —
OEAL °P~
ONCG AROU^P
POi-iAft. UMlT"
TX£>l 'ME'QUiT'
p-J-r
TVMicE
NH0 DWJ£
u<H+Ti odT ^
Aleckthan/de^JJ
ITTH .TIME.
, TO THA'Y
L GOOD MKtMT^
ire 7Voo octacf —
I HATE TO 9uir
VAiMEN I'M AHEAO -
3yT fiW AFAAiD we
AWMOV THE MIS SOL
GOOD WORK means
more practice and
lower prices.
We have reduced our
prices on all Dental
work, but the quality
of our work remains
the same.
Gold tfjq oo
Crowns vu*
Bridge tfJO 00
Work Vd.
Set ot Teeth
Best That
Money Can Buy
We Uee the Beet Meth
od* of Painleee Dentistry
Atlanta Dental Parlors
Cor. Peach tree & Decatur St*.
■atranc* 19 M Paachtraa II
FODDER FOR FANS !
VjjHffttA MATTER^/
BigReduction
Dental Work
DR. J. E. WHITE Red Sox Prove
PUT CUE BULL fr*t
B OSTON fan* probably have a per
fect right to complain of the
showing of their Red Sox in the
pennant race this month, but they
have no reason to hint that the
A sheville, n. c.. Aug 22.—To
the Rev. Dr. John E. White, a
• prominent Atlanta minister of
the Gospel, who is now v'.•Irina in
Asheville, goes the honor of having
pitched the first curved ball ever
thrown over the batter'* box on a
North Carolina baseball diamond, la
cated west of the Blue Ridge Moun
tains. At that time it was Professor
John E. White, of the faculty of Mars
Hill College, in Madison County, and
the first curved ball was pitched in a
game between Weavervllle College
and the Mars Hill aggregation. Thu
contest resulted in a heated dispute
between the two teams, which after
ward took up much gnace in the news
papers of Western North Carolina.
Professor White, now Dr. White
of Atlanta, had been the captain and
pitcher of the Wake Forest College
baseball team of 1889 and 1890. anl
brought the curve ball across the Blue
Ridge with him.
Strange to say. too, his catcher was
James Clause, who runs every day on
an an Asheville street cai »ln the
capacity of motorman. Catcher
Clause received the delivery of curved
balls sent over the plate by Pitcher
White with bare hands, without the
least s<gn of a mask or protector of
any kind, and worked right under the
bat. The meeting to-day between the
old battery mates was an interesting
one.
Yesterday the pitcher and catcher
who made the curved ball famous in
Western North Carolina went to the
’■ame between Asheville and Char-
ottej of the Carolina League. Dr.
White said that the Mars Hill team
of 22 years ago could beat, with the
greatest ease, either of the teams, or
anything that the Southern League
now has.
world’s champions owe their present
position in the championship stand
ing to lack of recuperative powers.
The Speed Boys have proved to be
the best ralllers in American League
this seuw-n, having won seven games
in the ninth inning and only having
let three contests escape from them
in the final spasm.
The Naps* and the Senators have
also captured seven battles In the
last regularly scheduled round, but
the Clevelanders have met with de
feat seven times in the final chapter
and the Washingtons have been belt
ed five times in the wind-up period.
The records of the other American
League teams In games decided In
the ninth inning is as follow*; De
troit, won 5. lost 6; St. Louis, won
5. lost 6; Chicago, won 4. lost 4;
New York, won 3. lost 4; Philadel
phia. won 2. lost 5.
In 35 of the 40 American League
games decided In the ninth this sea
son. the winning run was put on the
records either on a hit or an out;
In three contests errors turned the
tide; In one a uteal of the plate set
tled things, and in another the pitcher
forced the deciding count over by
issuing a pass. Only one American
Leaguer has succeeded in driving
home the winning marker in three
contests. He is Tris Speaker, of Bos
ton. who won the Chalmers car of
fered to the most valuable player* in
the younger organization last season.
Speaker ha* caused defeats to be
marked up against Chief Bender.
Willie Mitchell and Earl Hamilton
this season by striking telling blows
in the ninth chapter when the count
was knotted.
Players who have won two games
for their teams by producing timely
hits in the last inning this year are.
Duffy Lewis, of Boston; Ivan Olsen,
of Cleveland; Maurice Rath, of Chi
cago and Pete Compton, of St. Ivouis.
The latter way acting In a pinch-hit
ting capacity on each occasion he
made himself popular with his boss.
George Stovall. Other sub swatters
who have won games ir. the ninth j
this year are Carlsch, of Cleveland; |
Brief, of St. Louis, and Williams,
of Washington.
* • •
TdE plavers responsible for their
* team*f ninth inning successes are
enumerated below;
Heroes of the Ninth.
Boston—7.
Speaker. 3; Lewi*. 2; Carrlgan. 1,
Gardner, 1.
Washington—7.
Ainsrnifh. 1; Moeller. 1; Morgan.
1; Williams. 1; Milan. 1. One of
the Senators' ninth-inning victories
was due to a steal home by Gandil
and another to an error by Lapp, of
Philadelphia.
Cleveland—7.
Olsen. 2; Lajoie. 1; Carlsch, 1;
Graney, 1. The winning runs in
Cleveland’s other ninth-inning vic
tories were due to errors by Bo^ie,
of Chid^go. and Dauss. of Detroit.
To Be Raffiers'470 POUNDS OF
for Winning Out in Ninth
St. Louis—5.
Compton, 2; Brief, 1; Agnew, 1;
Johnston, 1.
Detroit—5.
Crawford, 1; Moriarity, 1; Gainer,
1; Cobb, 1. Gregg, of Cleveland,
forced in the winning run in one of
the game* won by the Tigers In the
ninth.
Chicago—4.
Rath, 2; Collins, 1; Easterly, 1.
New York—3»
Peckinpaugh. 1; Midkiff, 1; Swee
ney, 1.
Philadefphi-a—2.
Mclnnis, 1; Lapp. 1.
* *' •
THE pitcher who has figured in the
1 greatest number of ninth-inning
reverses this season is Tom Hughes,
of Washington. He has been the
Senators’ moundman in three games
that the enemy have grabbed at the
finish. Walter Johnson has not let
any games escape in the ninth. On
the contrary, the Senators have ral
lied four times in the ninth behind
the Idaho phenom this year and
pulled games out of the fire.
* * *
THE American League pitchers
1 charged with ninth-inning de
feats this year follow:
Beaten in the Ninth.
Cleveland—7.
Steen, 1; Cullop, 1; Gregg. 1; Kah-
ler. 1; Falkenberg, 1; Blandlng, 1;
Mitchell. 1.
St. Louis—6.
Hamilton. 2; Stone. 1; Baumgard
ner. 1; Leverenz. 1; Wellman. 1.
Detroit—6.
T>ake, 2: Bush, 1; Dubuc, 1; Wil
lett, 1; Klawltter 1.
Washington—5.
Hughes. 3; Groom. 2.
Philadelohia—5.
Bender. 2; Brown, 1; Plank, 1;
Bush, 1.
New York—4.
Keating, 1; Ford, 1; Fisher, 1;
Shulz, 1.
Chicago—4.
Scott. 2; Russell. 1; Walsh. 1.
Boston—3.
O’Brien, 1; Wood, 1; Hall, 1.
GERMAN ATHLETES WILL
COMPETE AT SAN FRANCISCO
Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian
PER1.IX, Aug. 22 —James E. Sulli
van, secretary ot the Amateur Ath
letic Union, to-day obtained the
promise that a team of German ath
letes would be sent to San Francisco
to compete at the Panama-Pacific Ex
position in 1915.
In return for this courtesy, it la
considered likely that the American
team which is to compete in the
Greek Olympic games at Athens in
the spring of 19K will make a trip to
Berlin and participate in an athletic
meet there.
Representatives of France, Den
mark. Norway, Sweden and Finland
gave assurances to Mr. Sullivan that
their countries would be represented
at the exposition by teams of ath
letes. Hungary* also will probably
send a team.
By H. M. Walker.
I OS ANGELES, Aug. 22.—The
biggest boxing card ever
staged on the coast will be
put on at Vernon, meaning that some
470 pounds of fighting weight will
be shifted into the ring of the Pa
cific Athletic Club.
Heavyweights Jess Willard and
“Bull’ Young, each scaling in at close
to 235 pounds, will enter in a sched
uled twenty-round contest.
Willard is the young giant who is
being boosted as a heavyweight
championship possibility by Tom
Jones and Ad Wolgast. Willard stands
6 feet til-2 inches.
Young a Young Giant.
Young is six inches shorter than
his opponent, but more than makes
up for his shortage in girth. From
buckle to buckle this elephantine
party is wo big that it takes two
men to measure him.
In reach Young takes much the
worst of the situation. He has but
a puny 74-inch reach at his com
mand. while Willard is credited with
83 1 -2 inches.
It is claimed that five pairs of
gloves w'ere manufactured for Young
before a glove big enough to accom
modate his great hands had been
found.
Cross and Dundee Sign.
After two days of skirmishing
Leach Cross and Johnny Dundee yes
terday signed articles for their
scheduled twenty-round go to be
held on Labor Day. They will scale
in at 133 ringside.
H0ERR AND M'QUISTON
QUALIFY FOR NET FINALS
DALLAS. TEX.. Aug. 22.—Roland
Hoerr, of St. Louis and Paul McQuis-
ton. of Dallas, playing as a team,
yesterday won their way into the
finals in double* for the tennis cham
pionship of the Southwest, being
played on the courts of the Dallas
Lawn Tennis Club.
In a brilliant semi-finals match
they defeated J. B. Rix. of Austin, and
Augustus Bummerstadt, of Dallas.
6-4. ti-4. 6-8.
J. R. Adoue, Jr., and R. F. Shelton,
of Dallas. Southern champions, wiij
meet Lionel Mosie. of Dallas, and V.
R. Smith, of Atlanta, in the other
semi-finals match to-day.
ECZEMA
1 An<t all ailments of the akin, such as tetter.
1 ringworm, ground Itch and erysipelas are ln-
1 stantly relieved and permanently cured to stay 1
; cured by
TETTERINE
Don't suffer when you can relieve yourself i
| so easily Read what Mrs. A. B. King. St.
; Louis, says: •
Have been treated by specialist for ecze
ma without success. After using lettering
e few weeks I am at last cured.
60c at drufflsts. or by mall.
SHUPTRINE CO M SAVANNAH. GA.
Dll BATTLE
MV, Oil
BEAUTY’ if
LOANED TO SALARIED MEN
AT LAWFUL RATES
ON PROMISSORY NOTES
Without Endorsement
Without Collateral Security
Without Real Estate Security
NATIONAL DISCOUNT GO.
1211-12 Fourth National Bank Bids.
CUB RECRUIT GETS SEVEN
WALLOPS IN EIGHT TRIPS
DR. WOOLLEY’S SANITARIUM
Opium and Whisky
and all Inebriety and
drug addiction* echmti-
flcally treated. Out it
years' experience show*
these diseases are curable. Patients also treated at their
homes Consultation confidential. A book on tha eub-
lect freg DR. B. B WOOL! EY 4k l»N«e K* YU
lot haaitarlaim Atlanta, ua*
-THE VICTOR"
FORSYTH 2: T 3°o D r«f3 T o
TOOTS PAKA AND THE
HAWAIIAN MUSICIANS
WillieWeston,Kennedy ARooney,Grace
OeMar, Foster & Lovett, Nlkko Troupe
TOIL TO-DAY
E LLIOTT DENT or Slim Love
, probably will draw the pitching
job against the Billikens this
afternoon, facing Elmer Brown, some
$7,000 beauty, if that expensive show
girl’s bum finger is mended enough
to let him work. If not, it looks as
If Mr. Dobbs will have to shoot Curly
Brown back at us. or take a chance on
Jack Reid*, who joined the Dobbers
here yesterday from the Rome club
of the Appalachian League.
Reids is another human office
building, and should he and Love en
counter each other on the mound, the
contest should be worth going miles
to see, though you could see the two
giants much farther than that.
Manush may play right field in
place Calvo, who wab injured by a
pitched ball in the first game of yes
terday’s double-header.
The Crackers need both the re
maining games with the Billie* if they
are to work into second place this se
ries. The dog-fall yesterday left the
relative standing of the two clubs un
changed. It may well be expected,
therefore, that here will btr some des
perate ball playing at Ponce DeLeon
to-day and to-morrow.
The lead of the Giants in the Na
tional League has gone back to ten
games in consequence of the victory of
the leaders over the Cubs and Pitts
burg’s defeat of the Phillies.
* * *
The Athletic* are lengthening out
their lead again in the American
League, having defeated the White
Sox yesterday.
* * *
The New York Yankees and the Ti
gers were idle in Detroit yesterday be
cause of rain. They play two games to
day.
* * *
The Pirates are now doing the heav
iest hitting in the National League.
They made fourteen hits, two of them
home runs, in the game with Phila
delphia.
* * *
Shortstop A1 Bridwell, of the Cubs, is
scheduled to get back to his old posi
tion to-day, after a three days’ suspen
sion.
* * *
Manager Tinker, of the Reds, expects
to have Cy Morgan, formerly of the
Athletics, in the line-up before the end
of this week. Morgan was sent into a
minor league in the West, but the Reds'
manager thought he saw talent going to
waste so picked Morgan up.
* * *
President Ebbets announced that he
had signed up Fred H. Gross, captain of
the Leland Stanford University team
in 1911, to play shortstop and second
base for the Brooklyn Dodgers.
EXTRA! CARL MORRIS HAS
SECURED A NEW MANAGER
MADISON WINS.
MADISON, GA., Aug. 22.—In the
} second game of the series being
played here with Newborn. Madison
won yesterday 5 to 1. This victory
gives Madison the unchallenged ama
teur championship of the State. Bat
teries—Newborn. Pitts and Smith;
Madison, Perryman and Orr.
CHICAGO, Aug. 22.—Larney Lich
tenstein has closed a contract with
Carl Morris, the Sapulpa heavy
weight. and will handle the latter’s
business hereafter. Whatever ring
matches Morris takes part in will be
made by Larney.
The latter has hurled a challenge
at Joe Cox. Doc Krone's heavyweight.
Larney would like to get a Labor Day
date for this pair.
ONEY
WINONA WINS PENNANT.
ST. PAUL. MINN., Aug. 22. -With
the playing of the games on Sunday
the 1913 season of the Northern
Baseball League will come to a close.
The Winona club is the pennant win
ner.
A base on balls gave Boston a vic
tory over the St. Louis Cardinals yes
terday by forcing a run over the plate.
* ♦ •
The Boston Nationals have bought
Pitcher Jack Quinn and First Baseman
Schmitt from the Rochester club, of the
International League.
* * *
Manager Chance has quit predicting
that the Yankese will finish the season
in the first division and now is prophe
sying that they won’t finish last.
* * *
“Old Master” Mathewson came back
yesterday after being trounced earlier
in the week by the Pirates.
* * *
Long I.arry McLean, catcher for the
Reds, is developing into one of the fast
est runners in the league.
BASEBALL
TO-DAY
Montgomery vs. Atlanta
Ponce de Leon Park 0 clock
BigG
Cnrei in 1 to 5 dayi
unnatural discharges
Contains no poison and
rear 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
•eceipt of $1. Pull particulars mailed on request
THE EVANS CHEMICAL CO.. Cincinnati, Q.
KINKY HAIR STRAIGHT
Don't be fooled by using some fake preparation which claims to straighten
youx; hair. Kinky hair can not be made straight. You are just fooling yourself
halr before y° u can straighten ft. Now this EXEL-
QLININE POMADE is a Hair Grower which feeds the scalp and roots
SOFT
AND
SILKY
. .. J . HU scalp and roots
of tne hair and makes hair grow very fast and you soon can see the results
after using several times * - -
d silky, and you can fix up your hair the way you want
back if it doesn t do the way we claim. Try a box.
and stops failing hair at once
soft and '”
money
Price 25 cent* by all druggists or A a ent * Wanted Everywhere. Write for
by mall on receipt of stampe or coin. exelenti P «eoici« ‘coVfut mim, e*.
CADILLAC, MICH., Aug. 22.—Out
fielder “Pete” Allison, purchased last
week by the Chicago Cubs, made sev
en hits in eight times at bat in a dou
ble-header between Cadillac and Lud-
ington, Michigan State League teams,
yesterday afternoon. Allison hit safe
ly six times in succession. He made
two triples and two doubles, scored
six runs and stole three bases.
grow very rast and you
It Is a wonderful hair grower. It cleans dandruff
It leaves harsh, stubborn, nappy looking hair
it It. We give