The Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, GA.) 1906-1907, June 16, 1906, Image 12

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THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN', SATURDAY. JUNE 16. 1D0C. “PHONEY BALLS,” DECLARE CRACKERS, AS THEY QUIT THE fiAME IN DISGUST! What Are Our Boys Up Against ? OOOdOOOOOOOOOOOOO O ° O THE BALL WAS PHONEY, . .0 O 8AY6 MANAGER 8MITH. 0 O o O Special to The Georgian. O O New Orleans, La., June. 16.— O O Manager Billy Smith, of the At- O O lanta team, wild: * • O O "A lively ball waa run Into the O O game. We Baked for another O O ball, but Umpire Kennedy would O O not give It to ua. We got a O O raw deal." O O o OOO 0000000000000000 Special to The Georgian. New Orleana, June 11—In a game a* full of lurid Incidents as a day in Ruslitn' Hus ain or .a .‘-liaplcr from the moat awful of tin* Meadwo.nl Mick aeries, Atlanta waa yesterday drfeated by New Orleans 6 to ft In eight Innings. Atlanta refused to finish out fite game, and l: was thereupon award ed to New Orleans b- mplre Kennedy by th* conveutlnnnl score of 9 to 0. In the ruction whlrh ensued, Otto Jordan, eaptnlu of the Atlanta team, was arrested on the charge of stealing baseballs and be- fore the Incident waa done with It took a cordon of police to get him safely from the grounds, for the New Orleans fana went after him, beuf on tearing him limb from leg. Atlanta null the game liecnuse the players charged that ('hurley Frank or some of his foxy cohorts had run Into the game balls which were, too llrely for practical pur poses. Harley waa pitching for Atlanta and Manuel for the locals. In (tfie first Inning the Crackers dropped on Manuel, bent the ball all around the enelosnre and scored five runs. In the flrat New Orleans put one runner over, In the sixth they rallied two more. Nothing happened hi the seventh and then came the eruption. Atlanta did nothing In her half and next came the IVHrnna to the bat. Hint, the 4rst man up, waa an easy out, and then Came Oilrlea. The asld O'Brien la n noto riously weak batter, but he landed on the rurtea of Harley and amacked the ball way out Into the Held. It took a moat marvelous bound and went Into the bleachers. That waa a phenomenon which could not Iexplained except on the theory that the ball-was more lively than the rules of the gsme allow, lint this happening was tame compared with what followed. Ktrntton got a scratch hit and Manuel came after hltu at bat. Now, Moxle la one of the languid "Arthur Herman" sort of liattera. and nothing more than an easy out la ever expected of him. SORRELL IS BADLY HURT Special to The Georgian. I.lttla Rock. Ark.. June 11—Pitcher Mor rell. of the Nashville team, la pt Ht. Vln- . ent Infirmary with a badly cut arm and It la doubtful If he will ever again be able to do elab duty. Ills right arm la the one Injured. The accident occurred In Morrell'a room at tha Capitol hotel. While he waa dreaalng for yesterday's game with Itohannon, hla roommate, he engaged In a friendly scuffle. Itohannon grabbed him by the belt, and In hla effort to get away the belt broke and Morrell fell, and hla arm struck the Jagged edge of a broken earthenware rue- padore. The plnar artery and several liga ments ami muscles were cut. He suffered, the loss of considerable blood. Fought Until Exhausted By Private Leased Wire. Beoton Harbor. Mich., June 11—In the ninth round of one of the fiercest ling bat tles ever fought In Michigan. Benny Yanger of Chicago won from Johnny Morrlaon of Oshkoah In thla city last night. It was not a clean knock-out. but Morri son. battling like a demon, loot hla strength and battered by a volley of right and left Jalie to the Jaw, aauk to the floor exhaust- •d. And yet he walked to the bat and knocked the ball ovcf tip fence for the aecond home run of the Ion tog. He and Mtratton. of course, scared and that put the Pelicans ft the lend t*y odb* run. Mnnagfi' l Mmttb hud been ordered off the field In the seventh Inning for throwing a (mil over the feme, which, be said, was •punk." and Otto’ Jordan was In full charge. When the second home run came Otto frothed at the mouth. grablied the I Mill that Umpire Kennedy had thrown out to play with and declared that Atlanta waa l»elng roblwd by the use of balls too heavily packed with rubber.. As Jonisu refused to let the Atlanta team finish out the conteat, PITCHER MANUEL. This is the man who Pitched the phoney ball* and— Who hit tho phoney home run— Which won tha phoney game. MONTGOMERY BADLY HURT Special to The Georgian. Ilsni)»hla, Town.,. June 11—Uny Montgom ery, the Barons' third lutHcma 11, left for Birmingham this morning with a badly mashed huger, lie waa injured lu-the third Inning of the game yesterday, but said nothing .about It and played to 'the>end. Afterwards, when he went to the city hos pital, ho learned that hla huger waa frac tured. , Vaughan has wired to Meridian for Al- cock uutll Montgomery Is able to play. CHINN 18 RELEASED. Special to The Georgian. Little llnck, Ark., June IS.—Manager Stint- tner has released Pilcher Tom Chinn be cause he waa unable to pitch one game a week. He returned thin. morning to hla home In Clarence, Mo. 000OOOO0OOOOOO0OOO0 0 O 0 ACTION UNWARRANTED, O 0 8AY8 MANAGER FRANK. O •b o O Special to The deorglart. 0 O New Orleana, La., June It.— O O "The Atlanta player*', action 0 0 waa unwarranted. Had they 0 0 requeued that the umpire keep 0 0 the ball for Inapectlon, I would 0 0 aurely have agreed. 0 0 "The umpire le sole judge, 0 0 and not the player*. ‘ O 0 (Signed) "CHARLES FRANK." 0 0 0 00000000000000000 no course was left i'raplH* Kennedy except lo declare the game forfeited to New Or leans. As soon aa this announcement was made and tbs crowd got up to go out Otto Jordan made a grab' for the ball In the hope of being able to use It aa evidence against New Orleans. 'Manager Frank made a aus piciously strenuous objection to tills and hnnlly had Jordan arrested, charging him with petty laroeny. Only the presence of n goodly force of po lice prevented a nasty row at this stage of the game. The bun I fans wanted to take It out of the Atlanta players and Atlanta players were ready to fight 'moat anybody, The wore which follows does not conut but. such na It la IL here It la: ATLANTA. Crosier, If. . Winters, rf. . M. Hiultli. flli. Jordan, -Mi. . . Fox. Stinson, vt. . Morse, aa. . . Ever*, r. . . . Harley, p. . . Totals. . Alt. It. II. I'O. A. K. .11 I 2 0 0 ..310210 .311811 .3 1 1 2 0 0 . 4 0 2 0 € 0 . 3 0 0 3 1 1 .300030 .29 5 *7 22 16 ~4 NRW nlll.FANS. Illckerf. If. .... . Cargo, ss Blake. Kind I. rf. Ileck, lb. Bird, cf . O'llrleii. 3b Stratton, e Mnnuel. p. . • • • • Totals Alt. It. II. I'O. A. B. .. 2 0 0 3 0 0 .. 2 0 0 0 3 0 .. 4 1 0 4 2 0 -.3 0 0 1 0 0 ..311700 ..301200 . . 4 2 t 1 2 1 ..312630 .. 4 1 3 0 2 1 •One out when game Score by Inulngs: Atlanta New Orleans was forfeited. Summary: Two-bnao hits. Jordan. Fox. O'Brien. Crosier. Home runs, o'ltrlen and Mnnuel. Sacrifice lilts. Winters, Smith, Stratton. Jordan. Bird. Struck nut. by Mnnuel 4. by Harley 1. Bases 011 bails, off Mnnuel 3. off Harley ft. Time, 2:41 Um pire. Kennedy. ANDERSON OFF WITH $7 FINE Little Keck, Ark.. June 1,.—Andy Andrr- Min, Ike Little Rock catrher who Iweame Involved In n difficulty with Umpire Ruek- ley during Tneaday'a gaum with Ulrmlng- kniu, pleaded guilty In a Juatlco court In ike charge of dl.iurldng the peace ami waa deed It nnd coala, nuiouktlng In all lo 117. Aaalatant - I'rnaeeullng Attorney llrlm. who rcpreaenlcd the atale, waived Ida coat a. nuiuuutlng to 816, rcduelog the line lo 17. AUSTELL DEFEATED. League Standings 80UTHERN. CLUBS— Played. Won. LoaL P.C. Shreveport .11 72 16 .617 New Orleans . . 53 31 22 .685 Atlanta . . . 52 29 23 .553 Birmingham . 52 29 23. .558 Memphla . . . . 60 26 24 .520 Montgomery . . 52 24 28 .462 Nashville . . 55 24 .at .436 Little' Rock . . 50 11 17 .760 80UTH ATLANTIC. Club*— Piayed. Won. Loat. P.C. Augusta . . a . 50 71 19 .620 Columbia . a 50 28 22 .560 Savannah . . 61 26 25 .610 Charleston . . . 48 23 26 .458 Macon . . . 48 21 27 .438 Jarknonvllla . . 49 20 26 .408 NATIONAL. CHIBS— Playad. Won. Loat. P.C. Chlrago . . . 46 78 18 .679 Plttaburg . . 51 33 18 .647 New York . . 54 34 20 .630 Philadelphia . . 57 70 27 .626 Kt. Lout* . . 68 24 12 .429 Cincinnati . . 57 72 75 .163 Iloaton . . . 52 16 16 .108 Brooklyn . . 57 22 IS .286 AMERICAN. Club— Played. Won. LoaL P.C. New York . . 61 11 20 .608 Cleveland ... 47 Si II .617 Philadelphia . . SO SO 30 .600 Detroit . . . 48 36 23 .543 St. Louis . . . ftl 26 2ft .BIO Chicago .... 48 24 24 .500 Was I\1 tiff ton . . BO 17 33 .340 Boston .... 51 1ft 36 .214 AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. CLUBS— Played. Won. I*oat. P.C. . 63 31 Si . 43 27 31 Special to The Georgian. Villa Itlcn. Ga.. June 16.—Villa Rica de feated Austell In n pretty game of base ball Thursday by the arore of 14 to 2. The fi*nture of the gnme waa the pitching of N'alley and tlu* fielding of Will Kinney, for Villa Rica. Toledo . Milwaukee Columbus . laoulnvllle . Kansas City Minneapolis Indianapolis 8t. Paul. . It SO FARMER BROWN RELEASED. Special to The Georgian. Memphis. Teun., Jnne 16.—'"Farmer” Janie* Brown, one of Whittier's assets In 1364. left last night for hla IVnnaylvanla home. He has the consent of Manager Babb to sign where he pleases. Brown has l«een working slowly this yesr. One game a week has been about hts average. He showed little form and decided to rest. Tom Chinn, a left hander with Utile Rock nntll recently, may lie added to HU Brown's place In the slab corps. NEW BATTING ORDER FOR AMERICU8 TEAM Special to The Georgian. America*. Ga.. June 16—The batting order of the Amerh-us team ban recently undergone a considerable shake up. At present It la: Poole, cf.; Brennan. 2b.: Stephen*, c.: Morrells. Stv; Heron ter. |b.; Westbrook. If.; Newkirk, as.; Minlth. rf.; Limar. Whalen and Hpencer, pitcher*. The batting of the team Is now fairly good. Poole and Brennan, who lead off. are pretty apt to get to flrat, either by hitting the ball or getting a baas on balls. Mtephena la a rather hard hitter and Mor rells’ awata are timely. With this batting order (he team ought to do better work thau before. C ► MORE SPORTS ON PAGE SEVEN. NAT KAISER & CO. Canfldantial lean* on valuables. Bargain* In unredetmed Diamond*. . 15 Decatur 6L Kimball House. ‘ GEORGIA STATE. CLUBS- Played. Won. Loat P.C. Waycroaa . . . 82 7] * .719 Cordate . ... it 18 10 .441 Cnlumbua . . . 17 I* II .5*4 Valdoata ... 11 14 17 .457 Albany . . . . 81 . . 8 72 .2*0 Amertcua ... 77 7 71 .250 FRIDAY’S RESULTS. Southern League- New Orleana *. Atlanta 0 (forfeit.) Nanhville 1. LRIe Rook 2. Memphl* «, Birmingham 5. Shreveport 4. Montgomery t>. South Atlantia' League— Macon t. Auguata.O. t'harlealnn 2. Jarkaonvllle 0. Savannah 7, Columbia 6. Georgia 8tate League— ( nlumbua 7, Albany 0. tVaycroaa a, Amerlcua 1. American League— < ’leveland 5, New York 2. Itoalon t, St. Loula 2. Washington 10, Chicago 2. Philadelphia 4. Detroit 0. National League— Chicago l. Philadelphia 0. New York 2. St. Louta l. Pttt.burg 4. Brooklyn l. Boatnn I. Cincinnati 1. Cotton State* Laapue— Vl<dt*burg 2. Mobile i. Raton Rouge I. Meridian 17. Gulfport 4. Jackson I. Baitern League— Newark 1. Jeraey City 2. Toronto 7. Montreal 2. Buffalo I, Rochester 0. Baltimore t. Providence, 1. Thi» kind of ball playing hat a (cent worn than tha boat truaL 0O000OO0OO00O00000O o o 0 WHERE THEY PLAY TODAY. O O 0 O Atlanta In Naw Orleana. 0 0 Naahvllle In Little Rock. 0 0 Birmingham In Memphla. 0 0 Montgomery In Shreveport. 0 0 0 0000000000000 00 0000 "BOBBY” WON FINAL EVENT DEFEATED BOTH HALL AND Mo- LEAN IN EXCITING RACES * AT COLISEUM. Bobby Walthour proved the winner of the triangular motor-paced race which waa held at the Coliseum Friday night. The Atlanta, boy trimmed Hugh McLean of. Bos ton and Tommy Hall of London in turn and proved himself to be by far the faateat man of the trio. The flrat heat was between Hall and Mc Lean. and It waa marred bjr the fact t)iat M«*I.ean’s saddle slipped. He wit .given time to replace it, but after resuming the race the seat proved to be out of place again and McLean stopped and the raca was awarded to Hall. In the aecond heat Walthour beat Mc Lean and In the third he rode a great con- teat against the Englishman, defeating him In fine atyli Hall and MtLeau left after the rare for Boston, and Walthour will Join them later. All three will race at Revere Reach. FREEMAN WINS ANOTHER CUP RETURNS FROM WARM SPRINGS WITH FIR8T PfclZE—NEWS OF THE SHOOTERS. PRESIDENT JOYNER SORE OVER THAT “RAW DEAL” Chief Joyner; the prealdent of the local baaeball aaaoclatton,' la Indignant at the happenings In New. Orleans Fri day. "I'm going to run thl* thing down; I don't care what It costa. It's dirty work aomewhere," he aald. "They arrested Otto Jordan because he tried to get evidence. Then they took the ball away from him, and they say that they are going to keep It for evidence. Well, anybody knows how that will work. "I have written President Kava- naugh asking for an Impartial Investi gation. If our boys are wrong I want to know aboftt It. "Of course I wish they had finished out the game. But It Is possible that before the game was forfeited so many people got on the field that It was Im possible to go on. "I never saw the people of Atlanta so worked up over anything In the world as they are over this. Bualnea* men of Importance have come to-me today and asked that I withdraw from the Southern League. They want a league made up of Atlanta, Savannah, Charleston. Chattanooga, and Knoxville. They see clearly that wa cannot get a square deal In the Southern League. "That man Frank has a fine Idea of gratitude. Last year yellow drove him out of New Orleans anaTI and his team were wander,™ov"r face of tho earth. What did ... 5! then? Why, we offered him theuaerf our ball park, the best In the leneJ. and In the best drawing town n>n he came up here, and what happen,J? The peop!e of Atlanta got io™J baseba 1 and as a result we lost probably a thousand dollars. . ■ "And now look at what Chsrie. Frank Is doing. I'll tell you on* rf the thing that the public does n « know. While ne was here last he hZ hla player* going around among — suspended men trying to get them ti admit that they were getting mone, from us In an effort to prove u, above the fourteen-player limit. That's the kind of a man Cnarley Frank Is. “I'll.tell you another thing. Ever, will make affidavit that after O'Brien slid Into him the New Orleans player told him he did It on purpose and that he tried to break bis leg. "IPs certainly a funny thing that the only three catchers In the league who have been spiked are Evers Arch- er and Grafflus and that all of them were spiked by Now Orleans plavert. Isn't there something significant lii the fact that the two teams whose men were spiked were fighting with New Orleans for the pennant?" HARRY LEWIS TOO CLEVER FOR CHAMPION JOE CANS By TAD. By Private Leased Wire. Philadelphia, June 11—Joe Gana met the Kluff of Tnntallsera last night In the person of Harry I^wla, of Philadelphia. The fight, which waa scheduled for six rounds, went the limit, nnd It was a Jump affair from start to finish. Gana woo the master throughout, but the Tantallser sprung surprises one after an other, which kept ibe crowd In a continual stew. Gana started In to get Lewis as soon as the bell rang. Hp mlased a terrific left drive and then grated hla man's cheek with a right. Lewis waa on the Jump, dodging thla aide, then that, and barking all around the ring. Gana wore that worried look aa he pulled hla right leg after hla- left. In hla corner he caught Harry with left aud right and there waa an awful yell, the crowd thinking Lewis gone, but he recov ered and came again, l^wla was very care ful;, yea, very. He did not unbutton hla blocks for a aecoud. In the. second Gana came out with a spurt like a cannon bait and drove the Tan tallser across the ring with left and rights to the head. Occasionally (inns drove a right to the riba. In the third Gana staggered bewli with a right and uppercut, sending him | N »unr* lug on the ropes, but when lie waded in to land another on the same place It na* cupled with blown and glove*. Lewi* nmt back to Jabbing and tantalizing. He mu clever with hla »trtde»-t here's no getting sway from that. Gnu* kept after bln. however. He had the at lug In the right that he wanted to peddle-but, gee. wh«u out Lewis waa over i repetition of the flrat three, I<ewl* never lo*tL.. of hla speed. He wiin not damaging < and Gana pushed them over nml i.ulM away from a few, trying to get In the right. waist and stalled until the referee unbred the break. The six rounds were too abort for (bum to work on such a clever fellow. The Jolt* nnff chops he landed during the debt would have taken more effect bad the tight gone on. bnt as It waa l*ewla wenthereil theta nicely and went the six round* humping tho floor or getting hla roof damaged. II. !>. Freeman.- the best amateur trap shot In Georgia, and one of the lieat In America, returned Friday from the three- day Interstate . Mboot In Warm Mprings, Ga.. where he won a handsome loving cup. Hla acore. 378 out of a possible 400* waa the liest score made by any amateur and waa. only beaten. by one uian. H. J. Bor den. a professional, who bad the high average for professionals. In the Interstate Mhoot Mr. Freeman went tip against some of the beat ahota In the Month, and hla showing was a remarkably good one. II. II. .Worthen. also of Atlanta, waa at the shoot and made a good showing, shoot lug especially well toward the end. Mr. Freeman leaves. Maturday night for the Grand American handicap, the Mg four- day shoot for the championship of America, which will lie held at Indianapolis this year. It begins Tuesday and between ft) and 4M of the best shots In America will .be there. The Atlanta Gun Club will hold Its regular weekly shoot Maturday afternoon on the club grounds, while the Atlanta Athletic Club will pull off Its weakly shoot at the same time at Fast Lake. RACING BEGIN8 AT OVERLAND PARK By Private leased Wire. Denver, Uolo.. June 16.—What promisee to lie the greatest race meeting ever held at Overland Park opened today. It will continue nltieteeu days. Never before has there l*eeu such an abnndance of high- ciaaa Horace on hand, and the Jockey talent la of the very licet. A dozen or more good ■takea are to' be run during the meeting. Aa asoal the Colorado Derby Is the event cf the opening day. RATHER POOR FIELD FOR THIS YEAR’S SUBURBAN By J. 8. A. MACDONALD. New York* June 16.—On Thursday an other milestone In the annual round of the Metropolitan turf- will have been reached with the running of the $20,000 suburban handicap fit Mheepahead Bay, the home course of the Coney Island Jockey Club. It la the laat Mg race of the distinctly spring term of racing* the meetings which follow at Brighton Beach and Maratoga Spring*. N. Y., 1 In Jply and August being regarded as the mid summer span In the yearly turf calendar. • Mheepahead Bay la oftentimes termed the "ffgrdrn course" atad one only needs to go down early on the day of suburban handi cap running—long l»efore the Invasion of a ruthless army of hlgh-aplrlted race-goers— to catch the aptness of thla appellation. Everywhere biasing flower beds, artistic rookeries and prettily trelllced vinery la to be oeeu lighting up .the vast expanse of green spreading award, alas, all to l»e crushed, smeared and obliterated with the oncoming of the. thousands a abort while later. Metropolitan handicap afternoou at Ilelmont park la proverbially cold and chilly, while the Brooklyn handicap Is a race of the masses and plain friends of the Messrs. Dwyer, not an affair of social eclat. The field will lie coui|Niratlvely small this year. and. like the Brooklyn handicap, which Tokalon. a 26-to-l shot, won, and the Metropolitan handicap, which went to a selling plater. Grapple, a 10-to-l chance, the suburban handicap may fall to a rank out sider In 1906. John A. Drake will very likely start Ort Wella* who la training finely. Roseben'a right hoof Is split nnd he will be reserved for sprinting only In the future. "Diamond Jim" Brady I* de pending upon the S-ycnr-old Olsen a. while Hydney Paget baa a strong band In f'nlrn- gorm nnd Tradition. Thoms* llltrbwk's colt. Dandelion, woo wn* « letter rare horse than Tokalon In the Brooklyn handi cap* la. a aura starter. These are the l*'»t rated chanrea In the forecast of the promi nent handlcappera. A genuinely regretable feature of thl* year's suburban handicap I* the disability of Burgomaster, the famous son of Ham burg* In the stable of Harry Payne Whit ney. He It a 3-year-old, nnd by hi* ties in the Carlton stakes and the Belmont atakea many expert* believed he would re peat the wonderful achievement of Afri cander and win the great event n* n Xyror* old. On Tuesday morning Trainer Uodgeri had Burgomaster galloping In preparatw for the suhtirhnu handicap. The colt rau denly wrenched hla fetlock holding* **«i came hobbling l»aek to the stable, lie «** sent back lo Brookdale farm the next W* He may be taken up and tided f, ’ r "'J* next year. He will not be seen again twj season. Ort Welles or Olaenu are nos « liked by the smart Insider*. Herewith Is presented at n glancejw probable field of starter*, the jo< key*, pr^ able prices, etc., together with a tsbj» abridgement of the history of to** ban handicap from Its Inception nwny w 1806 Mnburbnn Handlcnp-Thm* y«ir-oM and upw*ard; oue mile aud a ijtmrter. $2),000. Glseau Proper Calr/ronn t... Tradition First . Meson Ram's Horn Go Between Dolly Kpoukcr I mlellon Oxford Merry Lark Tokalon “Inrake landy PROBABLE JOCKEY. _ Garner .... J. R. Brady .O'Nell W.' B. Jennings Williams .. Sydney Paget Davis Hydney Paget Ilorner .... r. R. Rowe Sewell T. Williams.... Perrine .... Alex Shields J*baw It. T. Wilson. Jr T. Hitchcock. Jr Radtke .... J. McLoughllii iitbleorand Newcastle Htalde Miller J. W. Fuller Bedell ...... James R. Keene ....McDaniels Angust Belmont Joues pRrtBABI-R pnit'fc. RECORD OF THE SUBURBAN 83EY You! YOU GUYS IN THE BLACK •SUITS - HOVU MUCH ARCYC GlVIN' THAT * UMP ? STUDIES IN EXPRESSION BY CARTOONIST BREWERTON. General Monroe <l> Pontine (41 Troubsd«»ur (41 Earns (4) Elk wood (ft* Its rebind (41 Halvator (4* IxMntaka (ft* Montana (4* Ltwlander Uamapn *4* «... Ijixsarone «4I ... Henry of Navarra (ft*. Hen Rnuh (4| Tlllo *4* KJnley* Mark* (IL!!.!!!!! Alcedo (4* Gold Heels (41 Africander (ft derail* (ftl (4) Bar Eagle (4) Richmond (Imp* ««>.. Richmond *4) Orfflamme i3| Terra Cotta it) Torn* Cotta (Si Cassius (4) m — Third. % Walter (ft* Commoner (II... Winner («> Bannockburn (4»... Etbribert *«* Wa tenure •*» Pentecost O ..PM Jack of Hearts i«> ..Hi Rataplan *41 ) Mazanae »...* Wickham (ftl. # FI renal (4)...^ * Sorgo (4* ..1<*7 Teany (I* .' ..Wt Cassius (ft*..... IJimpBgkter *3* Lamplighter <4* Mport 14* Mono ami Dance «4> Havoc (5* \arreatoa «4».... E aides (St nddy 14* Hue* (4i Hunter Ralne (4* Number t of Mtartera. 3:113-4 2 M 1*2 2:121-4 iiSii 2:38 4-5