Newspaper Page Text
Sunday Americai
ra Corps -oil
Ex]
5>er
ts Cover AH Sports
SOME LADIES’ MAN
By Tad
Copyright, 1913. International New* Service.
SILK HAT HARRY’S DIVORCE SUIT
11 i t . > ' ! ! i 1 L!—i-i-t-TT P'V.' , 7 . '7*1
AMERICAN LEAGUE
BROWNS 4, WHITE SOX 0.
ST. LOUIS, Sept. 6.—Roy Mitchell
kalaomined the White Sox to-day,
the Browns winning 4 to 0. The Cal
lahans made only five safeties, while
the locals pounded Scott, Lathrop and
Smith for nine safeties. The Browns
scored one each in the second and
third rounds, another in the fifth and
a final run in the eighth. The box
•core:
Chicago.
Weaver, ss. .
Lord, 3b. . .
Collins, rf, .
Chase, lb.. .
Bodie, cf.. .
Chappell. If..
Breton, 2b. .
Easterly, c..
Meyers, c. .
Lathrop, p. .
Scott, p. . .
Rousch . . .
Rchalk . . .
Smith, p. . .
oTtals ... .30
ab.
r.
h.
po.
a.
e.
. 4
0
0
2
4
1
. 4
0
0
0
2
0
. 4
0
1
2
0
0
. 4
0
1
6
2
0
. 3
0
1
1
2
0
. 2
0
0
2
0
0
. 3
0
0
1
0
0
. 2
0
0
0
1
0
. 1
0
1
5
1
1
. o
0
0
0
0
0
. 1
0
0
0
2
0
. i
0
0
0
0
o
. 1
0
0
0
0
0
. 0
0
0
0
0
0
.30
0
4
24
14
•>
ted for
Scott in
sixth.
for Lathrop in eighth.
ab.
r.
h.
po.
a.
e.
2
2
1
o
0
0
. 4
1
3
2
3
0
. 4
0
1
3
4
0
. 4
1
1
1
0
0
. 4
0
1
1
0
0
. 2
0
1
14
0
0
. 3
0
1
0
6
0
. 3
0
0
4
2
0
. 3
0
0
0
1
0
.23
4
9
27
16
0
.noo
ooo
000
—0
.011
010
01*
—4
Bases
on
balls—
Off
ft Scott,
1.
Struck
out
• hv
Lathrop,
4;
by
Two
-base
tits-
-Shot-
Stolen
base—Austin.
St. Louis.
Shotten, cf.
Austin, 3b.
Pratt, 2b.. .
Walker, If. ,
Meinert, rf.
Stovall, lb.
Balenti, ss..
Agnew, c.. ,
Mitchell, p.
Totals . .
Chicago ..
St. Louis ..
Summary:
Mitchell, 2;
—By Scott, 5
Mitchell, 2.
ten, Stovall.
NAPS 3, TIGERS 1.
DETROIT, Sept. 6.—Cleveland won
a tight game from Detroit to-day, A
to 1. The contest proved ;; pitchers
battle between Falkenberg and Dauss.
The Naps tallied once in the second.
The next scores came in the ninth,
when Johnston stole home and
bunched hits counted another. Craw
ford’s triple and Cobb’s sacrifice gave
the Tigers their only run. The box
Veach batted for Platte in ninth.
Onslow batted for Tutweiler in ninth.
Score by inning:s:
Cleveland .. .010 000 002—3
Detroit . . i 000 000'001—1
Summary: Two-base hits—Jackson,
Turner, Johnston. Three-base hit—
Craw'ford. Sacrifice hits—Vitt, Gra-
ney. Stolen base**—Johnston, 3; Gra-
ney, 1. Struck out—By Falkenburg,
6; by Dauss, 5. Double plays—Lou
den to Tutweiler to Bush. Time—
1:50. Umpires — Hildebrand and
O’Loughlin.
SENATORS-9, YANKEES 1.
WASHINGTON, Sept. 6.—The
Yankees went to pieces in the three
closing rounds of to-day’s game and
Washington won, 9 to 1. New' York
only made one hit off three pitchers
during the game. McHale, the Yan
kee recruit, allowed only two hits
during the first six innings. The box
score:
New York.
Malsel, 3b. .
Wolter, cf. .
Cree, If. . .
Hartzell, 2b.
Knight, lb. .
Gilhooley, rf. . 2
Zeider. ss. . . 3
Sweeney, c. . . 3
McHale, p. . . 2
Pieh, p. . . . 0
ab.
3
1
3
4
3
h. po.
Totals
.24
1 24
2 12
1 2
leveland.
bold, cf..
ipman, ss
kson, rf..
ole. 2b. .
nston, lb,
■ner, 3b. .
ney, If. . . .2
isch, c. . . .3
kenburg, p. .3
ab.
.4
.4
.4
.3
.4
.4
H.
1
0
1
0
2
1
1
0
0
po.
5
0
1
2
7
0
4
8
0
Totals ... .31 3
Detroit.
Bush, ss. . .
Vitt, 2b. . .
Crawford, rf,
Cobb, cf. . .
Platte, If. .
Tutweiler, lb. ..3
McKee, c 3
Louden, 3b. . . -2
Dauss, p 2
Comstock, p. . .0
ab.
.4
.3
.4
.3
.3
8 27
h. po.
2 0
0
1
1
2
14
5
4
0
0
Washington, ab. r. h. po. a. e.
Moeller, rf. . . 5 1 0 2 1 0
Milan, cf. . . . 5 1
Foster, 3b. . . 4 2
Gandil, lb. . . 4 2
Laporte, 3b. . . 4 2
Ainsmlth, c. . 3 0
Henry, c. . . . 1 0
McBride, ss. . . 4 0
Gedeon, If. . . 4 0
Cashlon, p. . . 2 0
Engel, p. . . . 1 0
Bentley, p. . . 0 0
Atfotsa .... 1 1
GREAT FIGHT
Totals ... .38 9 12 27 19 2
Acosta batted for Engel In eighth.
Score by innings:
New' York 000 001 000—1
Washington 000 003 51x—9
Summary: Two-base hits—Gan
dil. Three-base hit—Gedeon. Stolen
bases—Foster, Gandil, Laporte. Dou
ble play—Cashlon to Ainsmlth to
Gandil. Sacrifice hit—Gilhooley.
Bases on balls—Off Cashlon, 7. Time
—•2:05. Umpires—Connolly and Egan.
'ratals
.30
6 27 13
h batted for Dauss in eighth.
ATHLETICS 9, RED SOX 2.
PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 6.—The
Athletics defeated the Red Sox, 9 to
2, to-day. Both teams pounded the
ball, but the locals hit at opportune
times and w’ere better on the bases,
pilfering seven and scoring three runs
on the double steal. Anderaon proved
easy for the Mackmen from the start.
Shawkev was never in trouble. The
box score:
Boston. ab. r. h. po. a. e.
Rhehg, rf. . . .5 0 0 1 0 0
Engle, lb 4 0 1 12 0 0
I Speaker, cf.. . .4 0 3 1 0 1
* Lewis, If 4 1 1 1 0 0
Gardner, 3b. . .4 0 2 0 2 0
Yerkes, 2b. . . .1 0 0 0 3 0
Janvrin. 2b. . .2 1 1 2 3 0
Wagner, ss. . . . 3 0 2 4 3 0
Thomas, 0 1 3 4 0
Continued from Page 1.
of at least two of Atlanta’s alleged
officers of the peace.
More Than 10,000 There.
Thompson’s fine pitching was the
other big feature of the Last Game—
and the great crowd that for the sec
ond time In two days trimmed the
playing field with a solid bank of
spectators. Ten thousand is an easy
estimate of the attendance of the last
rites, which were sad only in view of
the fact that New Orleans was visi
bly being trimmed on the big score-
board by the hated enemy down In
Mobile (close harmony).
Sounding hits and fielding explo
sions produced a pair of runs In the
first inning, and similar tactics gained
two more in the third. Then Howell
became stingy and his help began to
w r alk on the ground, and nothing else
happened until the eighth, Carl
Thompson bein^ as tight as the peel
on a billiard ball, so far as any attack
was concerned.
Add to the Records.
Rivington Blsland, commonly known
In Atlanta as The Best Shortstop In
the World, got his accustomed pinch
hit and put on some show'y fielding:
Harry Welchonce got one more hit to
cinch his record-breaking feat of ex
celling Huelsman’s mark of 1901 in the
season; Tommy Long boosted the
league record by another run, and thf*
crow'd would have been blissfully and
idiotically happy —had it not been for
that visible licking the Gulls were
Anderson, p. . .3 0 0 0 1 0
Hooper 1 0 0 0 0 0
Mundy 1 0 0 0 0 0
Totals ... .36 2 11 24 16 1
Hooper batted for Anderson In
ninth. Mundy batted for Engle In
ninth.
Athletics. ab. r. h. po. a. e.
Murphy, rf. „. .5 0 1 0 0 0
Daley, cf. . . .3 1 2 2 0 0
Oldring, If. . . .4 1 1 2 0 0
Collins, 2b. . . .4 3 2 4 4 0
Baker, 3b. . . .2 3 2 2 2 0
Mclnnis. lb. . .3 1 2 9 0 0
Barry, ss 3 0 2 2 3 0
Schang, c 4 0 1 6 0 0
Shawkey, p. . .4 0 0 0 2 0
Totals ... .32 9 13 27 11 0
Score by Innings:
Boston 000 100 010—2
Athletics 020 220 03*—9
Summary: Stolen bases—Oldring,
Collins 2. Baker 3, Mclnnis. Left on
bases—Athletics, 4; Boston, 9. Earned
runs—Athletics, 9; Boston, 2. T%vo-
base hits—Mclnnis, Collins. Sacrifice
hits—Mclnnis, Barry, Wagner. Struck
out—By ■Shawkey, 5; by Anderson. 4.
Bases on balls—Off Anderson, 3. Wild
pitch—Anderson. Hit by pitched
ball—Yerkes. Time of game—1:50.
Umpires—Evans and Ferguson.
handing the Pelicans, over on
scoreboard.
At that, the season ended in the
wildest explosion of hilarity ever
seen here.
The crowd was edging in from the
outskirts of the field while Thompson
was fanning Pepper Kids in the
ninth, and the final play w r as the
signal for a roaring outburst »f
cheers and a tidal w r ave of bugs,
sweeping out across the field.
Then there w*as a Pillow Fight.
Bleacher Confetti.
Half of the bleacher occupants had
scrambled over into the field when
their ex-pals began pelting them fu
riously with hundreds of cushions.
The presumably higher-browed
grandstand took the cue, and there
ensued a carnival of cushions.
From the elevation of the press
coop It looked like Mardl Gras and
showers of Titanic black confetti. The
at? was full of noise and leather
squares. The ground was cushioned
to a depth of several layers.
It was all in huge good humor, of
course. But women were being kept
prisoners in the grandstand as attack
ing thousands tried to storm the
w'alls, being driven back by other
thousands. And women w'dre being
struck by the cushions, and their hats
being smashed—we saw' eight girls
crowding behind one small post, with
the showier of cushions flying on
either side.
Police Active Again.
So the police got busy once more,
and presently three cops came
through the crowd, each leading two
protesting victims—not over-grown.
And then, after a quarter of an
hour of celebration, the curtain came
down, the last fan wandered through
the big gate, there was a clanging of
street cars, and the sun and the
Baseball Reason of 1913 set in a blaze
of glory.
Atlanta fans—and they are a game
and faithful bunch, too—watched the
season wane and set In the glory of a
great fight by a grand ball club.
More Them a Pennant in It.
The pennant Is not lost, even now.
But if it should be—
Well, boys, there are BIGGER
THINGS in baseball than pennants.
One of the Bigger Things is the
uphill fight of the Crackers of 1913.
In fact, boys, that’s the BIGGEST
THING.
Papke \o Try Again
In the Squared Ring
CHICAGO Sept. 6.—Billy Papke, at
one time champion middleweight, and
who has been living quietly at his home
In Kewanee, Ill., the past summer, is
to take another flyer at the game and
also the title—that Is, if he can make
the weight.
Billy had intended going back to
Paris this fall for a match with either
Frank Klaus or Georges Carp#*ntier, but
he hss changed his mind and now says
he will remain In the States and grab
off some of the matches in the Middle
West. He is anxious to meet Jack Dil
lon or Eddie MoGoorty.
He has been working: about the home
all summer, doing light W'ork In the
gym. and says he Is in better shape
now than he has been at this time of
thi’vMHr in nuvornl iieuMuna.
This Is a Thing of the Pas! for Our Tire Customers
RING IVY 2023
! '
/
Three service cars and two motorcycles on duty day and night,
every day in the year, to come to your assistance.
BUY YOUR TIRES FROM US
(We sell all makes.)
Oar prices are no higher and the service is free
JOHNSON-GEWINNER COMPANY
83-85 North Forsyth St. Opposite Ansley Hotel
Free Air Station
Gasoline 17c
We can reach
the farthest
points in 30
minutes.
Service
within 30
miles of
Atlanta
1