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TTTF ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS
Now, Speaking of Admirals
C«rrrl#ht. IBIS. International New*
Silk Hat Harry’s Divorce Suit
By TAD
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THINK IS THE"
BOSS AROOioO HERE? ,
FIGHT Expensive Hurler Had Off Day CALVD GOES;
+•+ + • + +•+ + •+ +•+ _ _ "
Slim Love Beat E. Brown Easily
T HE last game of the series and
the aeason with the Billikens
begins at 3 o’clock this after
noon. the time being shoved for warn
half an hour by way of giving the
visitors a chance to hook an early
rattler for New Orleans, where they
are scheduled to appear Sunday.
The game Is Important, as deciding
the title to second place for the time
being. The Billies now have a couple
of points' edge on the Crackers, mere
ly by reason of the fact that the clubs
have not played the same number of
games, the victories and defeats being
at a stand-off
Bill Smith has nominated Elliott
Dent to put the final game where It
belongs, while Manager Dobbs Is con
fronted with the problem of having
to work Curley Brown again, he hav
ing suffered a beating In the opening
game, or a youngster without experi
ence In this company.
A new outfielder will bo exhibited
to the fans to-day—A1 Nixon, who
was bought by the Crackers this
spring from the Virginia League an 1
farmed to Macon. He bats and pegs
left-handed, and will replace the Cu
ban Calvo, who returns to Wash
ington with an Injured arm.
THREE ATHLETICS RETURN
HOME TO GET "REPAIRED"
PHILADELPHIA, Aug 23.—'Three
Injured players of the Philadelphia
Athletics arrived home from the West
to-day to get into condition for the
final dash of the American League
leaders for the pennant. The players
are Catcher Lapp, who has a broken
finger. Outfielder Strunk, wrenched
leg. and Utility Infielder Orr, who ha*
a badly swollen hand.
vcrtEM A MAN WAmj A
HAIR CUT
he comes straight to “Leslie’s"
There he gets the right kind
The sanitary conditions are per
feet there.
“77.o ittlc White Shop
Around the Corner”
ns« to c.
Alabama
E Ll_ - PLAC,
Bv 0. B. Keeler.
W HEN one pitcher has an off
day, and another pitcher,
pitching against that pitcher,
has an on day, the first pitcher is
d-ue for a licking.
And that goes, if the first pitcher
is C. Mathewson. Or (to bring it
down here where we live) Elmer
$7,000 Brown.
That was the stick-out feature of
the Friday game at Ponce DeLeon.
E. Brown was having an off day, j
and the ”E” stood for easy.
Slim Love was having an on day.
That was all there was to it.
• • •
CTILL. there is one point that may
^ well be noted as having to do
with Mr. Brown’s easiness.
The bum finger mentioned in the
advance stuff on the game evidently
had a lot to do with lack of control
and absence of the old anti-hit tonic
on the pill in the tight places.
Brow’n walked five men in seven
Innings, hut that doesn't measure the
e>tent of his wildness. He wan in
tK hole with nearly every batter;
when he didn’t walk, he had a chance
to hit at the Bllliken pitcher’s de
livery minus some of its stuff—for,
say what you w ill, no human pitcher
regularly crowds the next one when
the count Is three and one. And
jgh^n it is three and two, that last
one goes up there with a prayer on
it in addition to what the petitioner
smears with his good whip.
• • •
T? BROWN’S middle finger on his
^ pitching hand has recently shed
a large blister, that almost covered
the first joint, inside. The new skin
was tender and in no condition to
stand the wear and tear of curve
ball pitching, while the fast ones had
an inch less leverage back of them.
That makes a lot of difference.
OUT now we start the second reel.
** and it is a long one. having to
cover Slim Love at full strength.
Chapman caught the long boy. and
seemed to steady him and give him
a lot of confidence. Certainly Chap-
} man's support was encouraging, and
it enabled Slim to allow four hits
in seven innings and still hold the
total number of batsmen facing him
to 22—something of a stunt in itself.
• • •
| N the fifth inning the Billies had
* their only real shy at a tally.
Sloan opened with a single and
went to second when Long stuttered
with his hands An out put him on
third, and the infield crept in on the
grass lx>ve did his part, and Sloan
died at the plate on a bounder to
Smith.
• • •
THE rest of the way wns rose-
* strewn for the tall hurler. His
control was excellent, and he worked
his change of pnee at intervals. But
mostly it was the old swift on the
hall, with a startling hop that was*
| hard to hit anywhere profltab’v.
It may have been that Bill SmMh
was placing a hunch w hen he selected
Love for slab duty. If 90, it was a
beaut’ hunch* Love looked h*»tt* r
I than in any of his previous exhibi
tions
He certainly had an on day.
T HE Crackers got three hits and
the same number of runs off
Brown in the first six innings, the
wallops being mixed judiciously with
Elmer’s wildness. Three more hits
fell out in the seventh and final
round, and a couple of errors and a
base on balls ran up five more mark
ers in that frame.
Then the sky, which had been
threatening to leak for several in
nings, came all apart, and the game
was over.
• • •
A FEATURE of the contest was
Brown’s three-base peg past first
In the opening session , on which
Tommy Long rode home. Tommy
got another run later and needs only
six more this season to get in the
record class.
Other notable plays
Gribbens bumping Joe Agler off tho
track when Joe was trying to score
on a double steal in the second. Joe
bounced so far that Grib got the ball
on him before he could scramble back
to the plate.
Agler’s sliding tag on McDowell in
the fourth, when Chapman nipped the
speedy centerflelder off first.
Tommy Long’s neat catch of El-
wert’s long drive in the seventh.
Tommy ran away with the wallop,
turned' at the right place, and
froze it.
I move’s caressing manner when he
picked up McDowell’s bunt In the
seventh and held it until too late to
peg out the runner.
PJAILY feature; The Gulls won
again.
I'rospects for second place: Fair
and warmer.
For first place: Cloudy, with
showers.
J ACINTO CALVO goes back to
Clark Griffith with a fractured
throwing arm as a memento of
his pastimlng in the Southern League,
and AI Nixon, farmed to Macon, in
the Sally League, will play in right
field for the Crackers this afternoon.
The little Cuban w’as hit by one
of Curly Brown’s fast pitches in the
first game of the double-header
Thursday, and his throwing arm was
so damaged that he was forced to
leave the game. In the last Inning of
the second game he ran for Chap
man and was out trying to steal sec
ond base, wrenching the injured arm
in his dash. Friday an X-ray pho
tograph showed evidences of what is
termed a ’’green-stick” fracture, or
partial break.
Nixon was recalled at once. He
has been playing fine ball for the
Peaches, and in his final game yes
terday he hit a double and a triple
in four times at bat. He is a fast
man, with a good throwing arm. Last
year he played in the Virginia League
JOHN "BULL" YOUNG NEAR
DEATH FROM WILLARD GOj
LOS ANGELES, Aug. 23.—John
•Bull” Young, the heavyweight who
was knocked out by Jess Willard in
the eleventh round at Vernon Arena
last night, has a bare chance for re
covery. according to the surgeons who
operated upon him. He has not re
gained consciousness, but his tem
perature and respiration showed con
siderable improvement.
The operation was undertaken as
the only chance of saving the pugi
list’s life. Young was still uncon
scious from the effect of Willard s
right uppercut to the chin when the
doctors opened his skull, and no
anesthetic was used for the opera
tion.
Young’s bout with Willard was his
first appearance as a principal in a
boxing card. He came here from
Wyoming as sparring partner of Lu
ther McCarty, who was killed by a
blow from Arthur Pelky at Calgary.
He was greatly devoted to McCarty,
and it was he who insisted, after Mc
Carty’s death, that the latter had
been poisoned, and asked for an ex
amination of McCarty’s stomach. His
theory, however, was scouted by those
who had handled McCarty and wen*
at the ringside when he met death.
Expansion of New
League Would Cost
At Least $5,000,000
DETROIT, MICH., Aug. 23.—The
report that the Federal League would
expand for 1914 and take in several
Eastern cities has opened talk from
the major league managers.
‘‘In order to establish a circuit that
can live, the Federal League pro
moter - must have at least $5,000,000,”
declares Hugh Jennings, of the De
troit Tigers.
’’There is no demand for this or
ganization, for the baseball public is
plentifully supplied with amusement
by the two major leagues. The cogtlv
stadiums in the various cities afford
such accommodations that the public
will not patronize cheaper plants.
"The players under contract to the
National and American Leagues are
receiving big salaries. In order to
entice some of them to jump, the
Federal league would be comoelled
to put up increased salaries in cold
cash and guarantee pay for more than
one or two years.
The Federal League this year is
run on a cheap basis. The best
players receive $200 a month. That
is why the outlaw promoters haven’t
been driven to the wall.
“When the American League broke
into organized base >all conditions
were much different than now. The
National League had abandoned sev
eral good cities and the club owners
had become unpopular with the pub
lic and the players.
“There was room for a second
major league circuit, and Ban John
son took advantage of tt. Johnson
BASEBALL
Diamond News and Gossip
Darkness put an end to the Pirates-
Phillies contest in the thirteenth in
ning at Philadelphia yesterday when the
score was 3-3. Fine fielding by Cra-
vath and Dolan prevented Pittsburg
from winning in the tenth and eleventh
innings.
• * *
The Giants added their third season’s
series to their scalp belt by beating
the Cubs yesterday. They had pre
viously taken the honors from the Reds
and Cardinals.
* * *
The Giants gained a half game on,the
Phillies.
* * •
While the Red Sox were takeng the
measure of the Naps, the Athletics fat
tened their lead in the American League
yesterday by beating the Whit Sox.
• e •
Manager Chance, of the Yankees, has
sold Inflelder McKechnle to the St. Paul
club, of the American Association.
When the Boston Nationals drafted Mc
Kechnle from the St. Paul club last
year there was an understanding that
if he was ever sent back to a minor
league. St. Paul should get the first
chance.
• • •
Pitcher Roy Mitchell, of the St. Louis
Browns, who has proved a hoodo to the
Senators all season, proved up to his
record again yesterday by trouncing the
Washingtons.
* * *
Big Jeff Tesreau, of the Giants, al
lowed the Chicago Cubs but five hits
yesterdaly at the Polo Grounds.
WORLD'S SERIES WILL BE
CLOSE, SAYS FRANK CHANCE
ST. LOUIS, MO:. Aug. 23.—Lasing
his prediction oi) the assumption that
the Giants and Athletics will be the
contenders, Frank Chance forcasts a
remarkable struggle for world’s
championship honors this autumn.
“The leaders of the two leagues ap
pear to be evenly matched,” said
Chance, in discussing the teams, “and
I look for a close, exciting series. In
my opinion the winning club will be
the one that gets the early ‘breaks’ in
the play. You can’t eliminate the
‘breaks’ in baseball, and in a series
as important and as short as the
world’s championship, it always has
proved a prominent factor.”
0. & F. EOLF
TROPHY PLAY
ON TO-DAY
T ^JE qualifying round in the com
petition for the Davis & Free
man golf trophy Is to be played
this afternoon at the East Lake
course of the Atlanta Athletic Club,
beginning the fifth annual contest
for this handsome prize, which must
be won three times before becoming
the permanent possession of any
golfer.
F. G. Byrd won the tournament in
1909 and 1910, W. R. Tichenor :n
1911 and Hamilton Block in 1912. Mr.
Byrd will not be in the tournament
this year, but the other two winners
will try for it the second time.
The qualifying round will be played
this afternoon. Players will qualify
from scratch and play in the first
flight will be from scratch. In all to
other flights the club handicap will
apply.
The first and second rounds of
match play must be played by August
28. the semi-finals by August 30 and
the finals by August 3^ The finals
in the first flight will be 36 holes, 18
in all the others.
Only two more tournaments remain
after this one is contested, the cluo
c hampionship and the tournament for
the T. A. Hammond trophy.
The invitation tournamen had to
be called off, owing to the condition
of the fair preens. But the golf com
mittee Intends to hold this tourna
ment later In the fall.
ENGLISHWOMAN COMING TO
AMERICA TO PLAY GOLF
LONDON, Aug. 23.—Three of the
most noted women golfers in Great
Britain have arranged to go to the
United States soon to compete with
the best that America affords. They
are Miss Gladys Ravenscroft, ex-
chamnion; Miss Harrison. Irish ex
champion. and Mire Muriel Dodd,
open champion 1913.
Thej' sail for Montreal September
10 and will play In various matches
in Canada, but they are not eligible
for the Canadian championship, as
six months' residence i9 necessary.
BASEBALL
TO-DAY
Montgomery vs. Atlanta
3:30
Ponce de Leon Park oC ioci«
FORSYTH T0DAY AT
2:30 A 1,30
TOOTS PAKA AND THE
HAWAIIAN MUSICIANS
Wlllle Weeten, Kennedy & Rooney,Grace
DeMar, r oeter Jk Lovett, Nlkko Troupe
TOBACCO HABIT XT: a “,UT,."
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eanoke pipe, cigarettes, cigar*, art ray Internetting
Tobacco Book. Worth It* weight In gold. Mallad fro*.
C. J. WOODS. S34 Sixth Avo.. 741 M.. Now York. N. V.
LOWELL TEAM SCORES 25
RUNS IN SEVEN INNINGS
HARRY HOLLMAN WINS
FLAT ROCK TENNIS
Harry Hollman, well known in At
lanta tennis circles, was twice a win
ner recently in the Highland Lake
Club’s tennis tournament at Flat
Rock, N. C. Mr. Hollman won the
club trophy in singles and with Jack
Monroe, of New Orleans captured
LOWELL. MASS., Aug. 23.—The
season’s baseball scoring record was
established here yesterday when the
local club in the New England League
scored 25 runs in seven innings
agains the Brockton. Mass., team,
which was held scoreless. The game
was called on account of darkness.
The Lowell club made 24 hits off two
pitchers, including three doubles, two
triples and three home runs.
ITCHING PILE
Every sufferer from Itching pile* should read
these words from H. S. Hood, of Bellaire. Mich .
who was
Cured by Tetterine
MADISON WINS AGAIN.
MADISON, GA., Aug 23.—In the final
f ame of ball here Friday, Madison won,
to 1, from Newborn, making a clean
sweep of the series. Batteries—New
born: Hartly, Batson and Shepherd;
Madison: Bostwick and Orr.
|0t * box ef Tatterln*
mad* • o« vplets
n yean
frem Itch lag pile*. I gat a
and la** than half a box
cur*.
Tetterine give* lnatant relief to all akin d1*-
eaaee, such aa ernema, tetter, ringworm, groxind
Itch, etc. It has the right medicinal qualities
to get at tha cause ard to relieve the effect.
Get It to-day—Tetterine.
50c at druffUt*. r by mall.
SHUPTRINE CO.. SAVANNAH. GA.
DON’T WAIT S3
Frost arrives with chilly
winds and wintry blasts and
you are shaking and shiver
ing, but buy your COAL
NOW, and have it in the bin.
Prices are RIGHT, delivery
PROMPT.
Randall Bros.
PETERS BUILDING, MAIN
OFFICE. YARDS:
Marietta, street am> North Avenue,
both phone* 376: South Boulevard
and Georgia railroad. Bell phone
638. Atlanta 808; McDaniel street
and Southern railroad. Bell Main
$54. Atlanta 331; 64 Krogg street
Bell Ivy 4165. Atlanta, .06; 15$
South Pryor street, both phones
IM.
TWO FAST TRAINS
Lv. 7:12
i