Newspaper Page Text
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THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN. FRIDAY JULY, 20, 1906.
EASTERN CLUBS WIN GAMES
AND PENNANT RACE WARMS UP
KAVANAUGH WILL PUSH
CASE AGAINST “BREIT
'99
Judge Karunaugh baa flren a good ex
ample of bli firmneaa In lnalitlng on de
cent ball In tba Southern league by the
action b« baa taken In the "Breltenateln*
Carey" Incident.
In a game In which Breltenateln utnplred
In Memphis. he made an aeanult with hla
Hate on Carey. An attempt waa made liy
the New Orleana and Mempbia managers to
whftewaah the affair. but the Memphis pa*
pera demanded an Investigation, and Pres
ident Karanaugh baa sent the following let
ter to Manager Frank:
"The newspaper reports nnd other unof
ficial reports which have reached me make
this matter look very had. The cold facta
would make It a cake that demands some
action on my part. If Breltenateln had
l>een a regular umpire and acted as he
did In this case, bis services would no
longer hare been retained. The newapa
pera reported that you had tak«jn this mat
ter In hand yourself and had suspended
Breltenateln. I bad hoped that this was
a fact, and this would enable me to say
that the manager of the New Orleans club
had seen fit to punlah his own players as
they deserved, but I notice from the reports
of the gome that Breltenateln worked last
Saturday, and this puta It up to me where
I must take cognisance of the matter.
I must Insist upon a more detailed
port than has been furnished. I regret
very much that such a thing as this should
have occurred, but as It has occurred, for
the good of the gnme I must soe that the
principal offenders are made to suffer In
some way for, their Indiscretions. I will
be glad to bear from you further on the
subject."
Ninth Consecutive Victory
Is Captured From Bluffers
ATLANTA 3 MEMPHI8 0
Atlanta Is out for another record, nnd
Thursday afternoon made It nine straight
games by shutting out Memphis. The
score was t to 0.
It was Tommy Hughes ngnlnst Georg‘r
Suggs, and the hard luck Memphis pitch
er bad the worst of It, In spite of the
fact that he pitched magnificent httlL
The hits were even—five and five—tmt those
made by the Crackers were sufficiently
well bunched and mlaed with errors, so
that they gave the game to the home
club.
Barring the fourth Inning, when. Atlanta
put over her runs, nothing much was
stirring. The Atlanta team was doing the
errorless stunt again, and, although the
players from the burg on the Mississippi
were slightly generous In their mlsplnys,
they made up for It by brilliant field
ing.
The Bluffers pulled off some "heart dis
ease*'' plays, and It looked several times ns
though they were going to score. But
Tommy Hughes and his team mates got
together In Jnst the right manner, and
nothing along that Une happened.
The score follows:
(’roller, If. .. . •
Jordan, 2h
Winter*, rf
H. Hmltli. 3b
Morne, *•
Fox. lb
Wallace, cf
Archer,
Hughes, |»
—All. it. II. h>:XTT
3 0 0 3 0 0
4 0 0 1 2 0
4 1 2 0 0 0
....3 1 0 3 0 0
3 1 2 2 3 0-
3 0 l 10 0 0
2 0 0 2 0 0
3 0 0 6 0 0
2 0 0 0 4 0 1
Totals
....26 3 5 27 9 0
MKMIillH.
Thiel, If
Itnbb, 3b
Carey, lb
Xlcholla, ••
Xmlemi, cf.. .. .. ..
liana, rf
Ilnblt. 2b
Hurlburt, c. . . .
Hiigg*. p
All. It. 11. PO. A. IS.
••..4 0 2 1 0 0 ,
. ...4 0 2 0 1 1 *
.. ...4 0 l 8 0 0
....4 0 0 1 1 1 1
....4 0 0 1 0 0 *
....3 0 0 2 0 0 ;
...3 0 0 1 2 1 *
3 0 0 10 2 0
.. ..8 0 0 0 4 1
Total*
.. ..82 (I 5 24 12 4
Score by Intilngf:
Memphla
Atlanta
000 000 000-0
000 300 00*—3
Summary: Stolen
lilth, Wallace, Fox,
off Hugga 2: struck
Kugga 9. Time of
Carpenter.
haaen, Babb; nacrlflcf
Oroxler; banes on Imlla 1
out by Hughes 4, by c
game, 1:35. Umpire.
An Outbreak of Savagery
On Diamond at Montgomery
At Montgomery Thursday afternoon a
crowd of baseball fans sttempted to mob
Umpire fludderham.
In the first Inning, according to the press
• services' account of the happening, Byrne
stole second and was declared safe by the
' umpire. Mullaney, In tht gentlemanly way
for which be Is noted, made a kick and
was put out of the game.
In an Instant a crowd of savages swarm
ed over Into the dlamoud and made for the
umpire. Only the timely Interference of
Governor W. D. Jclks, who happened to
be at the game, saved Iludderham from
serious Injury.
Such an outbreak of savagery has not
been noted In the Houthern League In many
years, and for a disgraceful exhibition of
bush league tactics It Is hard to beat.
Montgomery by such an act brought dis
grace on the league, and the organisa
tion can have nothing but regret that It
numbers In Its circuit a city where that
peculiar class of cannibals goes to base-
hnll games.
When tho Houthern League took Mont
gomery Into Its circuit, It understood that
It was taking n town right out of the sticks,
but It hoped that by association, as It were,
with decent cities, It might Itself become
almost decent. ThurFdny's outbreak would
seeiu to Indicate that this view was
wrong.
It Is to be hoped that there are no more
such outbreaks amoug the batiuirlaus of
the Montgomery capital. If there are, then
give us Chattanooga In preference to Mont
gomery. Anything for the advancement of
civilisation!
TOURISTS OFF
ON LEMON RUN
STRIKE UP INTO UNKNOWN QUE
BEC ON HARDEST RUN
OF THE TOUR.
By Prlvst, Lcnscd WlM
Mnntrnl, (Jiii-h,--, July *0.—Willi fwir mid
treiptilfn, (he Glfdd.ultc started oat v«ry
soon .(ter daylight for thi-Jr travel to
Throe Itlvrr., tt aaiall town of unknown
rating facilities Id th.< province nr gue-
bsc. They kn,w nauttht on leaving hum ex
rept that th.y were to mu Into a unit hog far yesterday sn.l forfeiture and will run
and nn uphill .If.lr of rnthnr uncertain "* »“• -*« -'nr,
distance. Upon arrival they are to sleep
on a steamboat which Is chartered and
which Is supposed to nnchor III the Three
Btvers. About six nnd a half hours sre
allowed for the run of ninety-six miles.
This Is a rather "breaking" pare, particu
larly when the cars have run 600 miles
and are !u no very good eondlttou. The
motorists have dubbed the run us the
"great Canadian lemon," and only horn
for the best. ,
Those who get there will be more than
lucky. The people along the way do not
•peas a great deal of English. The towus
ROW IS ON IN
MINNEAPOLIS
O'BRIEN FINES CLUB FOR RE
FUSING TO PLAY WITHOUT
8U8PENDED MEN.
By Private Isonned Wire.
Milwaukee, Wls.. July 20.4"There will
be more fining at Minneapolis." said Pres
ident O'Brien, of the Amorlean Association,
today. 'If the management of the Minneap
olis club refuses to play the game today
with Coluaibua without Freeman and Oy-
m * a ■ i
every
BARON LIEBHARDT, OF MEMPHIS, IS FIND OF THE SEASON
A few thousand columns of dope sre
printed each year about the various finds
of th# season.
But In Llebbardt, the Memphis team un
doubtedly Has the greatest "discovery" ol
the 1906 campaign.
Tom Hnghes, Atlanta’s leading pitcher,
was no "find," for Billy Smith knew he
was a wonder before he lauded him. Every
body knew what Torn Fisher could do,
and Maxwell, while he was "discovered,
all right, does not class with the mighty
"Llebby."
Llobhardt has been pitching for three
years, most of the time In the Western
League, and with only Indifferent
MW.
When Babb got him he was practically
tinheard-of, and the algnlng was tlie best
stunt pulled off by the "boy manager*
this, his first season as a manager.
Last year, "Llebby" was with a cellar
club, nod lost his Inst nine games, with a
total of forty-five errors behind him.
This year, the Hutch count Joined the
Memphis club after his release was pur*
chasiil from Bes Moines.
Ills first notable game be lost to Cincin
nati, 3 to 2. Up to the ninth Inning, he waa
n winner, 2 to 1, but with two out and two
on bases, n very easy grounder was bit to
On
Since the championship opened, Lleb-
ardt has lieen a consistent worker all the
line. He has one one-hit, one two-bit,
brec three hit, three four-bit nnd three
Of Llehhnrdt's seven defeats,, three were
Baron Von Llebbardt had the proud hon-
"Bed" Fisher met two of his defeats
' year on these notable occasions,
no double-header was on the road, and
the other at home.
THE DUTCHMAN'S PITCHING FACE.
In the last game of Llebhardt'a second
double-header, that Is, In the eighteenth In
ning he had pitched, he struck out the
three men who faced him—Absteln, Daley
and King.
He Is worthy the name of Iron Man,
which so long has been held by McOln-
nlty, of the New York Nationals.
He has everything that goes to make a
successful pitcher. His spit ball la hla long
Doing Things to Westerners
In Swing Through the East
suit, and be holds It differently from any
other pitcher, and so delivers It that It
has no bad effete on his arm.
"Lleb's" friends are numbered by the
score, ss be has a sunny disposition,
defeat or victory, and be always carries
the same old smile that won’t come off,
He Is an ardent worker for his clutfi
success, and Is always In condition to give
bis best services.
Manager Babb rightfully considers
"Llebby" the find of the Honthren League.
Harlan T. McDaniel, sporting editor of
The Memphis News-8dmitar, recently wrote
the writer:
"What do you think of that boy Lleb
bardt? He's about the beat In the bust
ness. The last time out bo won two lu
one day. Two games! In the two gomes,
only three bits weut past the Infield,
ended the second game by fanning tbreg
men In the ninth, and was pitching bet
ter at the finish than at the start of
the flrnt. He has a spit ball under good
control, uses his head at all tltncg,
bluffing half the time with the spit ball,
has a nice drop, all other corves, nnd In
the last five or six games has worked the
change of pace racket to a fraxsle.
lost a 1 to 0 game in New Orleans, but
beat the mighty Tom Fisher the Inst time
he met him by a 1 to 0 score. He Is slated
for the Idg league next year
That Llebbardt will go to the big league
la as certain ns anything that ever hap
pened. And If be doe* not make good,
provided he has a winning dub behind him,
or even half decent support, he will sur
prise about 40,0X1 fans who have seen him
work In the Houthern this senson.
Manager Babb has already admitted the
certainty that he will lose "Llebby," and
will Join with the young Dutchman's
friends throughout t)je Houth In wishing
him success with whatever cltlb land'
him. Probably the deni for him tins al
ready been dosed, although Babb refuses
> say so just at present.
In addition to I.lehhardt, the Memphis
club will probably lose by draft or sale
NIcholls, and. perhaps. Babb himself.
In spite of nil this, however, tho Mem
phis dub should have next year n nucleus
around which a winning aggregation cau
be built. This year, Manager Babb, with
some considerable assistance from Secre
tary Tom McCullough, has built up from
nothing at nil save Ed Hurlburt nnd Geor
gia Huggs one of the best teams In the
league. What the "hoy manager" will do
next year with such a foundation as he
will have left Is something for the other
managers to ponder over.
§ LIEBHARDT'8 GRIP
O • ON THE SPITBALL
oOO<k>ODOODO<hJO<kKh><h><h30<kJO
All the western clubs were defeated
Thursday—nnd the three strongest were
shut out. Birmingham did It to New Or
leans,. Montgomery to Hhreveport—and, as
has been remarked before, Atlanta did
stuuts with Memphis.
Wilhelm pitched a mngnlficeot game, let
ting New Orleans down with two bits.
"Little Eva" f Is certainly In rare form
these days and deserves n world of credit
for sorno of his recent work.
In the opinion of Charley Babb It Is tho
work of Wilhelm nnd Beagnn which Is
keeping tho Barons up where they arc at
present
Kudderhnm was arrested again In Mont
gomery on tho old chnrgo of using abusive
language.
This arrest, the coustunt knocking of
umpires by Montgomery papers, nnd the
lack of support given the league Judges of
play by the Montgomery manager probably
combined to bring about tho disgraceful
game they fall to piny while the siispen
won of those two men lasts. They wanted
me to go to Minneapolis to Investigate, but
through whleh the route Ilea are railed
Chnrlotnnuge, Ht. rani, L'Hermlte, L'As-
siiiiiptloi! mid other hard names.
On arrival there Is little prospect of
food, for the town Is of only si tost 4.0U0
population and extremely primitive. There
Is said to l»e a hotel In the place whleh
Is something larger than the bath room lu
a New York flat.
The Georgian’s Score Card,
ATLANTA.
CROZIER, If
JORDAN, 2b
WINTERS, rf
S. SMITH, 3b ...,
MOR8E, ■■
FOX, lb
WALLACE, cf .
ARCHER, c
SPARKS, p
DUGGAN, p
TOTALS
E. ( MEMPHIS
THIEL. If
BARR, 3b
NICHOLLS. ■■
NADEAU, ct
HAIDT, 2b
HURLBURT. c..
LIEBHARDT. p.
| LOUCKS, p
TOTALS
Score by Innings: 12 3 4
9 10 11—R
Memphli
attack on
Thursday.
the umpire which happened
PITCHER WILHELM.
This erratic Baron twlrler startled
the league the other day by pitching a
no-hlt, no-run game. Hte next' time
up *a, Saturday, when Naahvllle col
lected thirteen hit, for fifteen basea oft
hi, dellrery. Thursday be pitched a two-
bit game nnd Mem, now to be riibt at
the top of hi, mine. It I. certain tbnt he
I, not the league', I tent pitcher, Iwcsuse he
doe, not win game, n, llliche., Zeller.
I.b-bltnrdt. Fisher ulut Maxwell do. Hut by
hi. cleverue*. off the Held nnd hi, gentle
manly conduct on It, he bnn won ■ world
of friend. Ill the South mid a lifelong job
with the Huron*, provided be want, to
■lay.
BIGWRESTLINGMATCB
Panama, and old hau celaned and
reshap'd. Buuay, 2S1-3 WhlteUalL
Even Nn.hvllle won. Keith, the begin-
ner, pitched just a little better hall than
Schmidt, the veteran.
Ilrelteneteln did about ae well ee Wil
helm In Thuridny’e genie. lie let Shreve
port down with two bit. In eight Inning,.
Perlmp, tbnt t, better, for the tinker, are
aeunlly more desperate hitters then the
I’ellcnus.
New York managed to turn It on Chicago
Thursday; 4 to 2 wee the score.
Cleveland took a aonple from New York
Thursday. Jot, anil Ithoades did the trick.
Awful blow to tbc Yankees all right.
Knne, Baker and Ilolmra each pitched
four-hit gamea In the South Atlantic
Thursday.
Speaking of Kane the Columbia 8tate
aayi:
Hurry Kane, Saviiunali'a premier slab-
man. has the remarkable record of having
pitched 114 consecutive Inning, mid allow
ing lint two runs to he ninde while he oc
cupied the ,lab during that time-one made
by Columbia, when Kane wa, lieateu, 1 to
0, without havlug yielded a bit, nud one
run In the afternoon game of the Fourth
of July—whleh run Is not offlclnl, as the
gnme wa, forfeited to Savannah.
"Kane abut out Mneon ivltb four hits,
the mime temn with three hits; Charleston
with three lilts, ami Columbia beat him 1
to 0, with no hit,." aay, the Savannah
Morning News, “lie ahnt out Augusta
with three hits, Columbia with two, nnd
Columbia again with one hit. He abut
out Mat-on laeven Inning,) with no lilts;
Augusta with one hit; Augusta for four
nud one-third Inntugs (when the game w-|ii
ealled) with one bit; Charleston with three
blta.
"The eonneentlve great games he pitched
were: Savannah I. Charleston 0; Savan
nah 0, Columbia 1; Siiruunah .2, Augusta
0; Savannah 1, Columbia 0; Savannah 2,
Columbia 0; Savannah 8, Macon 0 (seven
Inning,); Savannah 1, Augusta 0; Savannah
0 (Augusta forfeited to Hnvnnnah 9 to 0),
nud Savannah 4, Charleston 0.
The records show that Kane pitched S3
consecutive Innings with lint one official
run; it) straight Innings, w-ttli one tally,
nnd 43 Innings straight without a tally
(M-liig made -officially 40 bluings without a
tally.
"He also pitched six games with a total
of five hits.
"Kane ha, gdtehml three one-hit gamea.
two six hit games, two go-hit game,, one
two-hit game, four three-hit games, one
four-bit game. In 14 games there has Is-en
on average of 2.8 hits per gnme.
'Them- re'eords will probably remain un-
equaled. At home Kane has pitched 10
games, whining 9. lie baa to hi, eredlt
at home eight shut onto, one forfeited ahnt
out, and one game In whleh he was beaten
7 to S. In the Inst mentioned game be was
-called In' without having a chance to
warm op.”
Kane pitched one Inning against Charles
ton on Monday and yielded one hit.
AIN’T GOOD ERNOUGH.
Gene Dcmontrevllle, once of
Atlanta, but now with Toledo,
Incurred the wrath of J. Ed
Orlllo, manager of the Mud
Hens, and was put on the bench
without cause". Leonidas Polk,
of The Toledo Newa-Bee, then
gave tongue "to the following:
Gene Demont ain’t good ernough
To play far Grlllo. He
Ain’t good ernough ter cover
short
With regularity.
All he's fit fer, la ter set
Back In th' sun and aee
Th' fellers whut KIN show him
how,
Show how ter wear a "T."
(Poor Gene!)
Gene Demont ain't good ernough
Ter play fer Grlllo. He
Kin atop th' ball and throw th'
ball.
An' bat like Heck; but gee!
J. Ed ain’t lookin’ fer thet sort.
An’ J. he's presIDENT.
He ain't agoln' ter hev the rest
Anuraln* discontent
(Poor Gene!)
Ter play fer Grill
May. know th' game an' work
fer true, Q
An' shine eternally. O
But he don’t wear hts hht jet’ O
right: O
His walk ain't Jet' ter ault; O
He's got er way uv. breathing O
air O
Thet ain't ter aay, jes' cute. O
(Poor Gene!) O
..... O
8o, Gene can’t play, a
No, Gene can’t play, O
He may be soon for rent 0
Did you say why? ' O
t by. O
presIDENT. O
OOOOOQOOOOOOQOOOOOOOOQOQOg
O WHERE THEY PLAY TODAY. O
t Memphis In Atlanta.
New Orleana In Birmingham.
Shreveport In Montgomery.
Little Rock In Naahvllle.
OQO<HSO<HSOO<HWOOOOOOOOOOOOQ
FOUR-LEAF CLOVERS
HELPED BILLY WIN
To a Urge bouquet of well prwuol four*
loaf clover flora Billy Snilvh. of the At
lanta bnselmll Huh. pay homage. Not that
the genial chieftain la a bit superstitious,
hut then—we all hare onr own way of
thinking nhout these matters.
The thing happened In Montgomery, Ala.,
juat before Atlanta's last game with Mul
ls ney'a men. The Crackers had already
smothered four straight games on the
Jnnnt, and Billy was mighty anxious to
take the laatone before returning home;
“ ““ Jsst had to
In fact, B. Smith mM
have it.
Ju.t aa tba player, were getting ready game la the Crackers' pockets.-Exchange
to leave for the liell park, the clerk of
the hotel banded the Imss a letter, with
tlie name, "Manager Billie Smith, of tba
Atlanta clnb." Billy opened the letter, and,
pinned neatly to n theet of Immaculate pa
lter. vraa the bunch of clover. Juat above
the clover were the word*. "I Hope There
Will Help Yon to Win," neatly written Is
a feminine hand.
The players crowded around their mana
ger, and Sbl Smith wanted to conut ’em
and see If there was not oue for each
man. Imt Billy lariated that there wasn't
but one Manager Smith, and that vraa him
self.
The hotninet remained Intact, and Billy
lug. It around In hla pocket, and when b,
■peak, of clover, hla voice strikes a tout
of reverence-
Note: The afternoon the clover came to
Billy, Atlanta had two rent, and when
Montgomery got the baara full, and no one
out. their beat hitter at the plate. It wow
then that the Irish weed got In- Ita work.
The rain poured with heft nnd the pro
ceeding, cams to a standstill, with the
PUGILISTIC PICKLES
By Private I-eased Wire.
New York, July Xk—One of the most
Important contest, lietwren little fellow,
will he decided at Denver tonight when
Tommy Mowatt. the fighting conductor, of
Chicago, and "Fighting Dick" Hyland will
clash for fifteen rounds—weigh In at 128
pounds, ringside.
A fight which I, arousing Interest In th,
west I, on the carpet for tonight at the
Partflc AthletH- Clnb, of low Anguleg. The
principal, will he yohnny Thompson, c
Rtreator, Ills., and the "Montana Kid. 1
The men are to meet for twenty rounds,
welgh-ln at ( o'clock. They have met on
two occasions, and both bouts reanlted In
drawa. Each Is determined to win tonight,
aa Manager McCarcy baa promised the win
ner rereral good match*,.
The fight follower, of ItcadlD/i received
■ jolt la,t night when District Attorney
Knta sent a notice to the management of
the Bijou theater that If any attempt waa
made to poll off the yack Cardlff-KId .Felt-
man boot, he would arrest the principals,
second! and the managers of the ahow.
The retirement of Mike Ward, the clever
Canadian middleweight, from the ring, la
announced here, on the authority of the pu
gilist himself. Ward Is now In Toronto,
and baa rent hla final decision from that
city.
The two Stinger boxen bad a battle laat
night it the Broadway Athletic Clnb, of
Philadelphia*. "The Kid" Stinger had some-
thlag on the Battllhg one. The bout wa,
a hummer from the start, with knock
downs and fierce fighting to every round.
GAME WA8 FORFlrrEP.
Special to The Georgian.
Villa Blea, Oa„ July 20.—In the game
played here Tuesday between Carrollton
and Villa Rica, Villa Rica wa, awarded
the decision l\y th, score of 9 to 0. It waa
a very Interesting game and the score was
7 to 7 In the ninth Inning. After the tenth
Inning, Carrollton refused to finlah the
game, and It waa awarded to Villa Rica.
BETHLEHEM WINS.
„ .. -T-. . -oly 20.—Bethlehem 17.
Bethel 4. was the score of a alow gam.
Of twll between the two clubs played*here
aw-SErr
LITTLE WINNER8 WIN.
„The Uttle Winners played a good game
Wednesday afternoon at 1:90 p. V, at the
COMMERCIALS
GOINGSTRONG
RACE FOR GEORGIAN’8 PENNANT
ATTRACTS ATTENTION AMONG
INDEPENDENT TEAMS.
The fifth round of games In the (v. En ,—
elnl League will be played Sstunbij-
mum. The following tea mi will meet-
Regensteln vs. Foot A Davies, ,t (;,-
mage Craning.
Weet End r«. Beck and Gregg r„„
McPherson. Fort
81lrey vs. Knta, at Weat End, Grad.
Place.
The Kuta line-up: W, Sullivan
Richardson. ll>.;. Abies, et;.Sartor)n., ab .
; N. Sullivan,
I-Men. p.; E. Sullivan,
Abrams, rf.; Bradley, If.
The race In the Commcrelal league t.
the winner of whleh will go The AtUtta
Georgian’s pennant, la wnxlng warm, and
every Saturday adds new lntercat to th.
content.
Jnat nt present, the M. Kntx team la |„
the lead, with West End nnd J an,-
tied for second place. The Knti-Jw,„
game la, therefore, the moat Intereating
one which la promised. If M. Kuta t M „
can win. It will demonstrate quite —.
dual rely that It ha, a firat-claaa claim on
first place. • If. It lores the race will |»
more Involved and, more Intereatlng tht,
ever before. In preparation for the mo.
teat, the J. Silver team will put p,
line-up In tho gnme, and will make .
efTort to win.
The llne-op for the J. Sllrej team for
Saturday follows: Voting, c; Kellj. n-
Sloan, as; McWhorter, lb; Dabney, 2Ti' q!
Ilngton, 3b; Solomonton,-cf; Polk, rf- Pit-
ker, If.
League Standings I
SOUTHERN.
Clubs—
Birmingham .
Shreveport . .
New Orleans .
Atlanta . . .
Memphis . .
Montgomery .
Nashville . ,
Little Rock .
37 41 .474
Clubs—
Augusta .
Savannah . ,
Columbia .
Macon . .
Charleston .
Jacksonville
80UTH ATLANTIC.
- Played, Won. Lent Pet
COTTON 8TATE8.
Clubs—
Meridian . .
Mobile . . .
Baton Rouge
Jackson . .
Gulfport . .
Vicksburg . .
Clubs—
Philadelphia
Cleveland . .
New York .
Chicago . .
Detroit . . .
St. Louis . .
Washington .
Boston . . .
Clubs—
Chicago . . .
New York .
Pittsburg . .
Philadelphia ,
Cincinnati . .
Brooklyn , .
St. Louis . .
Boston . . .
Played. Won. Tout Pet.
45 36 .554
Played. Won. Lost Pft
. 84 59
m
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION
Played. Won. Lo»t. P£-
Cluba—
Columbus . .
Milwaukee .
Minneapolis .
Louisville . .
Toledo . . .
Kansas City.
St. Paul . . .
Indianapolis .
87 36
88 33
51
THURSDAY’8 RESULTS.
Southern—
Atlanta I, Memphis 0.
Nashville 5, Little Rock 4.
Birmingham 5, New Orleana 0.
Montgomery 5, Shreveport 0.
South Atlantio—
Columbia 3, Savannah 3.
Jacksonville 1, Charleston 0.
Augusta 1, Macon 0.
American League—
Bt. Louis 4, Philadelphia 0.
Cleveland 5, New York 0.
Cleveland 3, New York 2.
Detroit *, Boston 1.
Chicago 8, Washington 4.
Washington 1, Chicago 0.
National— ,
Pittsburg 8, Philadelphia 3-
New York 6, Chicago 2.
Brooklyn 8, St. Louis 3.
Boston 4, Cincinnati 2.
American Association—
Toledo 1. Milwaukee 0.
St. Paul 4, Indianapolis 0.
Cotton 8tatea—
Baltimore 4, Toronto ».
Montreal 8. Jersey Cltl 0-
Rochester 1, Providence 1-
Baltimore 8, Toronto 3. —
Willow street ‘" ,1
if Willow street ana ,
( | Une. winning from the
lants, Jr., team. R H A
Score by Inning,: jo-4 I H
Jttle Winner.. U !j J
East Atlanta. Jr.. --. W.-lhv- D*vH ***1
Batteries: Keen and Hamby.
PaMbrmpIreJ^Mh^^^^^
NAT KAISER & c0 *
Confidential loan* on valuable*.
Bargains In unredeemed Diem- I
- — Kimball l |,- *l
IS Decatur SL
ATLANTA vs. MEMPHIS
JULY 19-20-21
GAME CALLED 4 P. M. LADIES’ DAY, FRlDAjj.