Newspaper Page Text
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS.
COVERED^
Copyright, 1918, International New»
Service
SILK HAT HARRY’S DIVORCE SUIT
t
m ERROR
2 BIT
W. L. Pet.
MOBILE . . 80 55 .593
ATLANTA . 79 56 .585
By 0. B. Keeler.
PONCE DE LEON BALL PARK.
Sept. 4 A hot batting rally by the
Gulls In the ninth Inning gave them
a 2 to 2 tie against the Crackers in
the third game of the crucial series
here th'f afternoon.
After pitching wonderful ball for
eight Innings, Joe Conzelman weak
ened In the final period, and the vis
itors managed to bunch a few timely
hits. An error by Joe Agler with two
out also Helped Finn’s men to their
two runs.
Campbell was on the mound for
Mobile, and hurled good ball. Snith’s
crew fround him for one run in the
second and another in the eighth.
The game was fiercely fought
throughout.
FIRST INN I NO.
The Crackers were given a great ova*
tion as they took the field at 3:30. A
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consultation was held between the liva'
managers and umpires at the home
plate At 3:35 Conzelman hurled the.
first ball of the game to Stock. It was
a fast ball over the heart of the plate
for one strike. He repeated with the
same kind. Conzelman wasted a fast
one on the outside. Ball two was high.
Stock refused to bite at a wide one.
with two ind thru on him. Stock
grounded to Bisland and was out to
Agler Starr missed Conzelman’s slow
drop. The next pitch wai high. A curve
ball broke low. A fast one cut the cen
ter of the plate Starr grounded to Ag
ler and was out to Conzelman. The
latter made a great play by taking Joe >•
relay In his gloved hand. O'Dell fouled
a curve ball for strike one. A fast ball
broke outside. O'Dell hit a curve ball
between HI si and and Holland. The
Cracker shortstop got the ball by a
wonderful play and retired O'Dell at
first bv a stop No hits, no runs.
Agler was cheered Wildly when he took
hit place . 11 bat Cam p cell*■ firet ball
was a dandy strike that cut the plate.
The next ball was outside. Joe fouled
a spltter. Ball two was a fast one in
side Agler fouleo the next pitch into
the bleachers. Agler lined to Stock.
Campbell slipped two beautiful curves
over on Tommy Long A curve broke
wide Tommy fouled a spltter and fol
lowed by fouling a slow curve. He lift
ed a spltter to Robertson In center field
Welchor.ee watched a fast one cut the
corner of the plate for a strike. A splt
ter broke outside. Harry went out on
a fast grounder, Starr to Paulet. No
hits, no runs.
SECOND INNING.
Paulet hit the first ball pitched and
was out, Smith to Agler. Robertson
missed a curve Inside. He fouled off a
slow curve for strike two. Robertson
swung at a wild one. hitting the ball in
front of the plate, and was an easy out.
Chapman to Agler. Schmidt missed a
drop by six Inches. He fouled the seo-
' ond. The Gull catcher watched a fast
one cut the heart of the plate, fanning
on three pitched balls. No hits, no runs.
VVallie Smith filed to Robertson on
Vthe first pitch. Bisland let a fast one
out the plate He fouled a fast Bail
over the bleachers Hall one was fast
and outside. Rivington got the first hit
of the game a clean tingle to left
Holland refused to bite at a s-low one
that was high. Campbell hooked his
curve over for a strike. Campbell
grinned as Harry refused to go after It.
Holland fouled a speedy curve. Hall two
wa> a curve outside The ex-Teeh play
er filed to O'Dell. With one ball called.
Nixon fouled off two fast ones. After
fouling off two more. Nixon lined a
nasty bounder to the right of Starr, who
knocked it down but was unable to
catch either of the runners. Chapman
fouled a curve and then Chapman sin
gled to right and Bisland scored the
first run of the game While the ball
was being returned Nixon raced to third,
while Chapman took second. Two belli
were called on Conzelman. The crowd
went wild when Campbell's curve broke
wide for ball three The visitors* twirl*
er then grooved two over the plate. Con
zeltnan hit a swinging bunt In front of
the plate and was out. Campbell to Pau-
let. Three hits, one run.
THIRD INNING.
Conzelman slipped a fast one over the
plate for the first strike on Clark. The
second pitch was In tho same place. A
curve broke outside. Clark hoisted a
high one In front of the plate that was
easy for Chapman Conzelman’s curve
broke wide on Miller. A fast ball cut
the inside corner of the plate for a
strike. He watched a slow curve cut
the plate and then grounded to Smith,
who fell while taking the ball and re
covered too late to catch Miller at first.
Campbell missed a fast boll. 11« bit on
THE BOX SCORE.
Score by innings:
Mobile 000 000 002—2
Atlanta 010 000 010—2
CRACKERS, r. h. o.
Agler, lb 0 1 14
Long, If 0 1
Welchonce, cf. .. .0
Smith, 2b 0
Bisland, ss. 2
Holland, 3b 0
AT CHATTANOOGA-
NEW ORLEANS 000 000 030 01 -
CHATTANOOGA 000 001 002 00 -
Walker and Adams; Sonpmera and Street.
AT NASHVILLE—
Umpires, Flfield and Kerin.
Nixon, rf
Chapman, c. ..
Conzelman, p.
.0
. .0
.0
a.
1
0
1
5
3
3
0
1
3
Totals 2
GULLS. r.
Stock, ss 0
Starr, 2b 0
O’Dell, 3b 0
9 27 17
h. o. a.
0 3
1 2
0 1
Paulet, lb 0 0 11
Robertson, cf. ... 1 1 3
Schmidt, c 1 1 4
Clark, If 0 1 2
Miller, rf 0 3 1
Campbell, p 0 1 1
Totals 2 8 27 8 3
Summary: Two-base hits—Starr,
Schmide. Struck out—By Conzelman,
4; by Campbell, 2. Bases on balls
Off Conzelman, 3; off Campbell, 2.
Sacrifice hit—Long. Stolon bases—
Starr, Miller. Stock. Umpires—Rud-
derham and Pfenninger.
a waste ball outside. On the hit and
run play Campbell singled to center, and
when he tried to take second was out,
Welchonce to Bisland to Smith. Miller
romped to thin! on the hit. Stock let
a fast one break inside for a ball. Smith
made a dandy stop of Stock's nasty
grounder and retired the runner at first.
One hit, no runs.
Agler fouled a fast ball, and then bit
on a slow curve for the second strike.
Joe drove a slow grounder to Slock near
second base, und reached second when
the Gull shortstop threw the ball wide
to first. Long sacrificed, Campbell to
1’aulet, and Agler took third. With ore
ball called, Welchonce hit a grounder to
Starr, and was out at the Initial sack.
Agler was .held on third. Smith missed
a fast ball. Wallie popped to Clark.
No hits, no runs.
FOURTH INNING.
Conzelman’s first ball to Starr was
high He followed by hitting a double
to left field. O’Dell fulled In his first
attempt to bunt. A fast ball cut the
Inside corner for a called strike. O'Dell
grounded to Holland, who chased Starr
back to second and then threw O’Dell
out at first Paulet refused to go after
a drop that broke low He fouled off
three fast curves and then hit to Hol
land. Harry caught Starr between the
bas^s and the latter was out, Holland
to Smith to Holland to Smith. Robert
son smashed a high bounder over first
that Joe speared, and beat Dave to the
base by a gr eat slide. One hit, no runs.
Miller made a fine running catch of
Bisland's long fly down the left field
foul line Holland watched two curves
go over the plate and refused to bite at
a bad one. He frit to O’Dell and w r a.s
out to Pajilet. Nixon was safe when
Starr fumbled his fast grounder. A slow
curve made Chapman look foolish for
one strike. Chapman grounded to O’Dell
and Nixon was forced at second by
Starr. No hits, no runs.
FIFTH INNING.
The first ball to Schmidt was wide.
The Gull catcher missed a fast one on
the outside. He bit on a curve ball for
strike two. Schmidt drove a hot drive
through Bisland and when the ball
bounded to Long the husky catcher took
second. Clark missed an attempt to
hunt and fouled off the next pitch. Con
zelman wasted a curve. Clark bit at a
curve ball and beat it back to the bench.
On a curve ball Miller popped a high
fly that Smith grabbed. Campbell missed
a curve and then fouled a fast one
Campbell missed a curve by six inches,
retiring the side. One hit, no runs.
Conzelman watched a fast one sail
over the plate for strike one. Starr
made a fast play of Conzelman’s ground
er and threw to first ahead of the
Cracker hurler. Agler refused to bite
at a bad one inside. He took a strike
over the heart of the plate and fouled
a spltter for strike twV>. Campbell’s
spltter broke outside for the second ball.
Agler walloped a line drive straight into
Starr’s hands. Long drove a foul that
sailed to the corner of left field bleach
ers. Tommy was easy for Paulet. No
hits, no runs.
SIXTH INNING.
Stock refused to go after one inside,
but bit on a big drop for his first strike.
A curve broke low for ball two. Stock
hit under a fast ball and popped a
weak fly that was easy for Agler. Starr
took three bad ones and walked on a
curve that broke low It was the first
pass of the game. The first pitch was
wide to O’Dell. Conzelman put a fast
ball over the plate for strike one. O'Dell
fouled a fast curve over the press box
for the second strike. Agler took care
of O'Dell’s easy pop fly. Paulet stood
still while a high fast one shot by. Con
zelman worked the inside corner for a
strike. Paulet fouled the next, and as
Starr started to steal Paulet did the
Casey act. No hits, no runs.
Welchonce hit the first pitch for a
clean single to right. Smith grounded
to Paulet and Harry was forced at sec
ond to Stock. Campbell’s fast ball was
outside to Bisland, but the second pitch
cut the plate for a strike. Rivington
fouled a curve and took his second ball
on a fast one Inside. The Cracker short
stop hoisted a fly to Robertson. Holland
fouled a curve and then popped a high
foul near the stand that Schmidt
dropped after a hard run. Campbell
wasted a wide one. Harry smashed a
clean single to left and Smith went t<3
second. Nixon grounded to Stock and
Smith w’as forced at second. Two hits,
no runs.
SEVENTH INNING.
Dave Robertson, the league’s leading
slugger, stepped to the plate. He missed
a fast one on the outside for his first
•trike. Dave wu,s easy for Smith and
Agler. The first ball to Schmidt was a
strike. Schmidt hit a slow- roller down
the first base line that Chapnlan grabbed
and tagged Schmidt out. Smith rr.d
Agler disposed of Cla,rk. Conzelman
pitched onfV five balls in this inning.
No hits, no runs.
Chapman popped the first ball to
Schmidt. Conzelman fouled off three
fast ones and then fanned. Agler took
a ball and then fouled off two. Joe
hit a grounder that Stock knocked down
with his bare hand, but was too late
to catch Agler jft first Long drove a
line drive just one inch outside the foul
line. Tommy wa* called back from sec
ond base. He fouled olY a fast one for
his second strike and refused to bite at
a bad ball. Lonr singled to right, but
Agler was held at second. A slow* curve
was high for Welchonce. Harry popped
to Stock. Two hits, no runs.
EIHGTH INNING.
Mike Finn had everything threw' out
of the Mobile bench, including bats and
gloves. Miller took t’wo bad ones, and
Conzelman followed by putting two
strikes. 'Ball three was outside. With
two and three on him, Miller smashed
a straight one for a single to left. Con-
zelman's fast ball was wide for Camp
bell. Another fast one was outside. On
strike one, Miller stole second. Camp
bell fo\iled the next pitch, and then
went out, Smith to Agler. Miller took
third on the out. Stock watched a
fast one cut the plate for his first
strike. A fast ball was outside. Stock
hit a bounder to Holland, and Mi'ler
was caught between third and was
out. Holland to Chapman to Holland to
Chapman. The crowd went wild. Stock
took second on the plow. Ball one was
low to Starr and almost a wild pitch.
Starr fouled a f
third ok boll tw
MONTGOMERY
NASHVILLE ...
100 -
20X -
!
4
5
10
E. Brown and Gribbens; Williams and Smith. Umpires, Wright and Stock-
AMERICAN LEAGUE
FIRST GAME.
AT PHILADELPHIA—
BOSTON 202
PHILADELPHIA . ...... 000
Pennlock,
8 10 1
6 10 3
Brown, Bush and Schang.
001 030 -
004 200 -
Leonard, Hall and Carrlgan; Plank,
Umpires, Ferguson and Evans.
SECOND GAME.
BOSTON 011 100
PHILADELPHIA 110 000
Moseley and Thomas; Houck and Lapp. Umpires, Ferguson and Evans,
AT WASHINGTON—
NEW YORK 000 000 300 -
WASHINGTON 000 010 010 -
002 - 5
000 - 2
3
2
12 1
2 1
Umpires, Egan and Connolly.
4 11 4
3 7 2
Fisher and Sweeney; Gallia and Ainsmith.
AT CLEVELAND—
DETROIT 800 010 001 011 -
CLEVELAND 000 100 100 010 -
Dubuc and McKee; Gregg and O’Neil. Umpires, Hildebrand and O'Loughlln.
AT ST. LOUIS— ^
CHICAGO 020 001 001 00 - 4 12 2
ST. LOUIS 000 004 000 01 - 5 6 1
Russell and Schalk.; Schwenk and Alexander. Umpires, Dlneen and Sheridan.
Score: R. H. E.
Kansas City .... 100 100 000—2 10 1
Minneapolis .... 030 010 OOx—4 5 1
Lange and O'Connor; Patterson and
Owens. Umpires, Connolly and Mur
ray.
Score: R. H. E.
St. Paul 000 000 000—0 5 2
Milwaukee 000 201 21x—6 7 2
Brandt and Miller; Slapnlcke and
Hughes. Umpires, Chill and Irwin.
Score: R. H. E.
Indianapolis .... 000 033 000—6 11 3
Columbus 000 000 030—3 6 0
Merz and Casey; Cook Davis and
Smith. Umpires, Johnstone and O’Brien.
Score: R. H. E.
Tole 1o 002 400 13G—10 14 0
Louisville 000 000 001—1 5 2
Callamore and Devoght; Powell, Clem
ons and Severold. Umpires, Handiboe
and Westervelt.
Second Game—Score: R. H. E.
Kansas City .... 000 110 000—2 5 1
Minneapolis .... 400 001 OOx—5 10 2
Richie. Covington and Moore; Burns
and Rondeau. Umpires, Connolly and
Murray.
Empire League.
POST-SEASON SERIES.
VALDOSTA—
000 000 000 - 0
THOMASVILLE—
110 000 30X - 5
6 2
7 0
Walker and VanLandingham; Cherry
and Dudley. Umpires, Derrick and Pen
der.
INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE.
Score: R. H. E.
Newark 001 100 000—2 8 4
Providence 000 120 0$x—6 10 2
Holmes and Smith; Cline and Ons
low. Umpires, Hart and Finnneran.
Score: R. H. E.
Jersey City .... 200 000 010—3 7 2
Baltimore 000 001 100—2 6 3
Thompson and Blair; Russell, Dan-
forth and Egan. Umpires, Carpenter
and Hayes.
Score: R. H. E.
Toronto 002 000 010—3 9 1
Rochester 000 110 002—4 9 0
Schwab, Gaw and Brown; Martin and
Williams. Umpires, Halllgan and Mul-
(In.
Score: R. H. E.
Montreal 202 000 000—4 5 2
Buffalo 0«j 005 01 x—6 11 3
Smith and Madden; Fullenwider and
Gowdy. Umpires, Nallen and Owen.
FEDERAL LEAGUE.
Score: R. H. E.
Cleveland 400 100 000—5 13 2
Chicago 100 001 112—6 7 3
Wilcox and Cooper; Timmerman. Fisk
and McDonough. Umpires, Flaherty
and Vansyckle.
VIRGINIA LEAGUE
Score:
Roanoke
Newport News .
Efird and Selbs
Umpire, Norcum.
Score:
Richmond . .
Portsmouth
a h. e.
. 120 000 01x—4 6 f
. . 000 000 00—0 8 5
Austin and Dempsey.
. . 000 030 05x—8 13 4
. . 000 000 010—1 4 2
Ayers and Suskey; O’Brien and Hol
loman. Umpires, Williams and Kelly.
fouled another one down the left field
foul line. The first ball to Conzelman
was high. Joe fanned on a slow curve.
Agler refused bite at a high ball. A
fast ball cut the Inside corner for a
strike. He fouled the next pitch and
then Joe was called out on strikes.
Dong took two wide balls. Tommy
swung at a fast curve for his first
strike. Long popped to Starr. No hits,
no runs.
EADE’S
The
Old ar.d
Popular Remedy
for Gout, Rheumatism,
Sciatica. Lumbago* pad.a in
thenead, face and limbs. All druggists.
E. FOUGEUA & CO., Ini!..
Agents for U. S , 90 Heckmuii St, N.Y-
NATIONAL LEAGUE
FIRST GAME.
AT NEW YORK—
BROOKLYN 006 006 000 -
NEW YORK 902 000 000 -
Walker, Wagner and McCarthy; M arquard, Crandall and Meyers.
Brennan and Eason. SEC ON g GAME
BROOKLYN 000 010 000 -
NEW YORK 002 000 OOX -
Ylngllng and Fisher; Tesreau and Meyers. Umpires, Brennan and Eason.
FIRST QAME.
AT PITTSBURG . „ ,
ST LOUIS 301 000 000 - 4 8 0
PITTSBURG 010 010 000 - 2 8 3
Sallee and Hildebrand; Robinson and Simon. Umpires, Klem and Orth.
SECOND GAME
ST. LOUIS 020 001 000 l -
PITTSBURG ..Oil 000 100 2 -
Geyer and Roberts; McQuIllen, Hendrix and Kelly and Gibson
Cincinnati-Chicago—Not scheduled.
Philadelphia-Boston—Postponed; rain.
Big Aulo Races Friday
Last chance to see “Wild Bill” Jones and others burn up the track.
Special 100-mile race Friday 2 o’clock sharp. Take cars at Alabama
and South Forsyth streets for Atlanta Speedway.
CRYSTAL POOL PARLORS
Closed From 3 to 6 P. M., To-day, Thursday
EVERYBODY GOING TO THE GAME TO PULL FOR ATLANTA 1
4 11 5
5 10 1
Umpires,
three. Starr watched a fast one cut
the plate for his second strike. With
the count two and three. c “ r ‘J elm ,‘L"
shot one Inside and Starr walked. On
strike one Starr stole second unmolest
ed A^Sonzelman was ready to wind
up Stock dashed for the plate, and
was out on a close plaay to Crapman
The play was very close. DNL. w.i,
^ With^one strike called. Smith popped
to Starr. Campbell curved a b ? a , I
ful strike on Bisland. Rlvmgton fouled
the next pitch for his second strike.
Bisland singled to center, and only good
fielding by Miller kept the hit , flor ^
going for extra bases. Holland refused
to bite at two wide balls. -pother one
outside gave Holland his third ball.
Harry walked on four straight balls.
The first pitch to Nixon was also wide.
The next w as Inside for ball two. Camp
bell hooked a strike over the inside cor
ner. Frank Manush was put off the
first base coaching line for too much ac
tion Old reliable Joe Dunn to#k his
place. Nixon singled to right and Bis
land romped over the counting station.
When Miller let the ball go through him
Holland reached third. He tried to score
when the ball rolled Into the infield and
was out. Miller to O’Dell to Schmidt.
Nixon raced to third on the play. Chap
man missed two swings for strikes.
Two
fast curve. Stock stole Chapman out. Stook to PauleL
A fast one was ball hits, one run.
NINTH INNING.
O’Dell, the ex-Cracker. was first up in
the Gulls’ final chance. He bounced one
over the slab that Smith got by a nice
play and threw to first ahead of the
runner. Conzelman’s curve broke out
side for Paulet. Paulet popped to Smith.
I lave Robertson refused to bite at a
fast ball that was low. The next pitch
was in the same place. Another one
was outside. Conzeiman shot a fast
one over for a strike. He worked the
same comer for strike two. Conzelman
grooved a fast one and Robertson sin
gled to center. Schmidt missed a fast
curve outside. The first ball to Schmidt
was outside. The Mobile catcher fouled
off a fast curve for his second strike.
Schmidt hit to Holland and whs safe at
first when Agler dropped Harry’s throw.
Robertson raced to third on the error.
Conzelman’s curve broke low’ for Clark.
Conzelman sneaked over a fast one for
a called strike. Ball two was wide. Clark
fouled a straight ball to the grandstand.
Clark singled to center, scoring Robert
son, -and Schmidt took third Miller
missed a fast one Inside. Miller fouled
off another fast one for his second
strike. Miller singled to left, scoring
Schmidt and sending Clark to the far
corner. A curve ball broke high to
Campbell. Campbell swung at a fast
one. Campbell popped to Bisland. Three
hits, two runs. .
Conzelman fouled off a spitier.
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