The Augusta herald. (Augusta, Ga.) 1914-current, May 10, 1914, Home Edition, Page TWO, Image 2

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TWO Little Sweetheart - , I If (hO. YOU DO NT) r ‘ YOU WANT \ "" /' 11 Mb FATHER'S) i foNE. HONET'A WANT TO STAY A .POOR MAMA • TH*NK HOW W / GOING TO L / NATURE TO A DOT ! / HERE! YOU /r* TO GET RWN j PAPA SHOULD \ $ TELL PAPA M\ s 0 INDEPENDENT* L MS DEFEAT THE COMERS In a Ninth Inning Rally Jack sonville Beat Columbia Out By a Score of 3 to 2. Jacksonville, Fl*. —In a nlnth-Innlng rally Jacksonville beat out Columbia yesterday by the ■core of 3 to 2, in, > mss prolmMy tha pr«ttl< Unit has been p-ayad on (ht local dia mond this aeaaon. It was anybody's Rat»ir until the ninth inning when I'ow* nail and fitarr singled and f'arroll laid down perfect hunt. cxcCut iir * beau tiful wqiteets play which brought the winning run across the pan The box score follows: Columbia. Ab. R. H. Fo. A. IC. Kbcrle. If 3 0 0 2 0 0 Holland. ss .. 4 o 0 q ti 1 1. es 4 <• 1 a. 0 o I lari.lson. :'h .. 3 0 1 H , oti Ret sell, 2b 4 0 d 2 8.0 Finn* gan. 3b 4 2 2 1 3’o Unrdl'n; p .. 3 0 1 1 4 0 Hr*tin. c ....... m.. ...2 0 0 4 1 I Lowry, p ... ... 3 o 1 o o i Totals 30 2 <1 24 10 3 Jacksonville Ab R. H. Po.A. K. I*o w nail. If f. 2 3 5 0 0 Starr kb 5 o 0 2 0 o Carroll, cf ... *....*. i.. 8 1 3 7 0 U. <*filLthuit. Jb ...4 0 0 2 0 ft Hofftiuui, if 2 o o 2 ft ft MrcTvSfj, jib .... 2 0 0 8 0 0 Ofokrfler. ftb ... 3 0 1 2 2 1 Kfsbs. *c 4 0 0 1 2 0 Johnson. p • ..... •*...! 0 1 ft 2 ft Total* .......33 3 9 37 7 1 Starr. 3b . ..... #....5 0 2 0 1 0 Score by Innings: R Columbia „ Oft 000 100—2 Jacksonville .001 900 011—3 | Summary: T\vi»-bjtu> bits, Gat'd n. Fin I no*an Three-bnae hits. Carroll. Ha * > ripot hita, Cardin, floffinan. Stolen, bases, Hotxell Pownall 2. Meloholr 2. First lihmj on halls, off Johnson 4; off Gardtn 3. Hit by pitcher, Hoffman. Struck out, Hardin 3. Time 1:88. Um pire, 14i n son. Cornell Track Team Wins Over Harvard . ■■ l Ithaca. N. Y.—One of the greatest ! t»a«k victories that a Cornell team evsr has idjiovwl on Perry field, was wlt uessed Saturday when Coach Moakloy's man triumphed over Harvard by a score of 75 2-8 to 41 3-5. Cornell won eight firsts, the crimson took four. speidfn and Bonder. both of Cornell, ran a sensational r*ce in the mile event Bingham. of Harvard, hung up a new l*M*til tm<*k record in tre quarter-m le w’tti time ftf 4k 4*B seconds. Hnrron. of Harvard, won the 220-yard dash Mil ton and Frit*, both of c.ornell. tied tor first place In the pole vault at 12 feet 4 1-2 Inches. A CURTAIN LECTURE. Miss Polly—When I was In the city 1 intended a vaudeville show, and It w*s just grand. Villager—What were the names of the pieces? Miss Polly 1 don't remember all, but the curtain said the first piece was Asbestos.—Buffalo Kxpress. Lombard’s Bath Pond opens May 10th. Henpecko the Monk S\r:,° L' x --- 1 110l lo - ■ l °- *j f^mT^ '• uj [comc Zm ■ sf A p NAM^| ~- "’ ••■ fOXES LISE TO TIE INDIANS Savannah Won From Columbus Yesterday By the Score of 7 to 6. Columbus, Ga.—lty bundling lilta In tho ai'vnutli Inning, HavunnOi scored -It run* after two men were out, overchill ing Columbus' flv,-run lead. and win ning ycHli-rilHy'. khimh by ib« *t:tfrn of 7 In fi. Woolf began the gam. for HhVan nnh but was r*plue*d In tho third by Smallwood. Savannah. Ab. It. M. Po.A. E. liundlbou,. u( * 4. 1 I 1 1 o I.lpo, 0 0 1 <1 It Mayer, rs ;t 1110 1 Hunt, lb 1 1 3 10 O 1 Wlnaton, If 5 1 2 2 o 1 Crowell, hh 3 112 2 0 Zimmerman, 2h 5 2 3 ft 5 0 Smith, c 0 1 4 3 1 Woolf, p 1 0 1 0 1 0 Smallwood, p ... 3 0 0 0 1 0 Total* 37 7 IS 27 13 4 Columbua. Ab. R. IT. Po.A. E. Herndon, 3!> 4 1 l 1 i o Hawkins, rs 4 1 1 o 1 o Kolmar, If 4 1 2 2 0 . Hlgga, rs 3 n 0 4 0 1 Thompaon, o 4 i 2 7 2 0 McUtlff, 3b 4 0 1 1 1 0 Moore, hh 4 i 12 7 i Fox. It J a o 1 10 0 0 Deriding, p 3 1 1 0 1 4 Total* S 3 6 10 27 13 2 Score by Inning* R. Havannah ... .' 010 000 (100 7 Columbua 014 100 000 « Summary: Two-ham. hit, Zimmerman* Thre.-bam- lilt*, Hn !h Redding Mneriv Klolrn l)*«e«. Mayer ? Winulon, Zim merman. Thompaon. Double plat*. Zim merman to Co*!; Crowell to Zimmerman. Bn an on halla. Redding 4. Left on lame*, Bavumuh 0; Columbus 2 lilt by pll. h ed ball. Ilanillhoe lilt* off Woolf 5 smirk out. Redding 5. Woolf 1. Small-' wood 2. Sarrlflre lilt*. Crowell. Fox. Time 7:1.2. Umpire. IVttsr. Dartmouth Track Team Beaten By the U. of P. Philadelphia. The University of Penn aylvanln trark team defeated Darlinouth today In their mimial trac k meet G 7 1-2 point* to 43 1-2, but Pennsylvania paid a heavy penalty. Koran*e Donald Lip. plDOOtt, the tntrr-rollegtate 230-yard rhamplon and aharer In the world * rer ord wa* seriously hurl lie pu led a tendon 111 the 100-yard riaah. Madeira, of Pennsylvania, ran the mile In 4:10 4-5. OTHER RESULTS INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE. At Jersey City 3; Montreal 4. At Rochester: Newark 3. Robheater 4V At Toronto: Providence 6. Toronto 0. At Buffalo: First game- Baltimore 2; Buffalo 3. Second game—Baltimore 0; Buffalo 1. (18 Innings.) NORTH CAROLINA LEAGUE At Winston-Salem 9, Greensboro 7. At Raleigh 14; Charlotte 3. At AahavlUe 6; Durham 6. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. At Minneapolis 2: Columbus 4 At Wllwnukce 13; Loulavllla 0. At St. !*aul 9. Cleveland 4. At Kansas City 4; Indianapolla IS. YALE WINS IN TRACK CONTEST Annual Event With Princeton Goes to the Blue. The Sum maries. "* A New Haven.—Yale today won Itn an nual track and field meet with Prince ton. Final score: Yale 87 2-B; Princeton 16 3-5. Summaries In order: Mile-run: MacKenzle, Princeton; Pnucher, Ynlo: Atha lYlnreton, 4:24 3-4. 440-yard dash: Wilke, Yale; W Hare, Princeton; Hrotten, Vale. Time :49 3-6. 120--ynrd hurdles Potter, Yale; Church, Princeton; Hhcdder, Yale. Time 16 1-6. Phot put: Harblson, Yale, 44 feet 6 1-2 Inches: Roos, Yale, 43 feet Ift Inches: J.*jirHen, Princeton 41 feet Ift ]-2 Inches. High Jump: Tie. at 5 feet 11 inches be tween Oler, Doug as and Hartswlck, all of Yale. Two-inlle run: Frost. Yale; ClnTk, Yale; Morrison. Princeton. Time 9 min utes. 60 seconds. vault: Tie for first place be tw crnJohnstono and paries of Yale at 11 feet 6 Inches: third place tied be tween Mettler' and Htiok of Yale and Baker Carey and Buford of Princeton at 11 feet. COLLEGE GAMES At New Haven rnlveralty of Pennsylvania 1; Yhlo (12 innings ) ) At Hwarthtuore. Pa.— Swarthmore 7; Johns Hopkins 3. At Went Point, N. Y.— New York National nuhstitutes 2; Army 7 At Princeton. N. J.— Cornell 6; Princeton 2. At Cambridge. Mass.— Harvard 16; Amherst 1. At Ann Arbor, M ch.— Syracuse 2: University of Michigan 4. Turner and Farber; Slaler and Baer. At New York Holy Cross 1; Fordhnm 1, (14 innings, darkness.) At Hanover. N. IT.-- Dartmouth 6; Weslevan 4. At WHllamstown, Mass Tufts 7; Williams 4. At Providence R. I Brown 6; Trinity ft. At Annapolis, Md Catholic University 7; Midshipmen 2. Tech 4; Georgia 3. Athena. Ga.-—'The Georgia School of Technology agnln lost to the Unfvcrsltv of Georg a in baseball here yestfrday the university team winning by a score of 5 to 4 Two more games remain to be played between the twm teams at At lanta Today’* score: Score: R. H. E. Georgia Tech ... 4 2 4 Georgia 5 7 5 Batteries Pitts and Wltherlngton; Corley and Torbett. At Bloom ngton. Ind Indiana Unlvora’ty 9; Ohio State ft. Keep Bowel Movement Reaular. Dr. King** New Llfo Pin* keep stomach, liver and kidneys in healthy condition. Rid the body of poisons and waste. Improve your complexion by flushing the liver and kidneys. "I got more relief from one bqx of Dr King s New Life Pills than any medicine I ever tried.' say* C. K Hatfield, of Chicago, 111. at your Druggist. . Nearly, Very Nearly Caught This Time • riE AUGUSTA HERALD, AUGUSTA, GA His Father Must Be a Bird Standing of Clubs South Atlantic. Clubs. W. L. Pet. havannah 21 8 .724 .Hickson villa ... ....18 10 .043 Columbia 15 14 .51/ Charleston 16 13 .552 Macon 14 16 .467 Albany ... . 12 15 .144 Augusta ... ...10 20 .333 Columbus 9 19 Southern League, Clubs. W. L. Pet. Chattanooga 15 7 .682 New Orleans 16 8 .640 Atlanta 12 10 545 Nashville 11 12 .478 Mobile 10 12 .457 Birmingham 12 11 .462 Montgomery 9 16 .360 Memphis 8 15 .348 American League. Clubs. W. L. Pet. Detroit 16 7 .696 HI. Douis 11 9 .6 8 Philadelphia 9 7 .563 New York 9 8 .829 Washington 9 .9 .500 Chicago ...9 13 .409 Cleveland 6 14 .300 Federal League. Clubs. W. Ij. Pet Baltimore 11 5 • .6^B Chicago 11 8 .579 St. Louis ... ... 13 9 .571 Indianapolis 9 8 529 Brooklyn 7 7 .500 Kansas City 9 11 .459 Buffalo 7 10 .412 Pittsburg 6 12 .333 National League. Chibs. W. Tj. Pet. Pittsburg 15 3 .833 Philadelphia 8 6 .571 New York 8 6 .671 Brooklyn 9 5 .563 C’ncinnatl 10 10 .54V) Chicago 8 12 .400 St. Louis 7 15 .313 Boston r . 3 11 .214 FEDERAL LEAGUE Chicago Wins. Chicago.—'Time'* hitting enabled Chi* cago to bent Brooklyn yesterday. 3 to 1, after a pitchers’ battle between Brennan for the locals and Lafltte. Murphy’s liomerun gave tho visitors their only score. Score: R. H. EL Rrooklvn ftftft ftftl ftftft—l 6 ft Chicago 0(>0 ftlO 020 3 8 0 Batteries: Lafltte and Land; Brennan and Wilson. Buffalo Defeated. Kansas City. A single in the eleventh Inning bv I’errlng after Kentworthy h’d tripled, enabled * Kansas City to defeat Buffalo yesterday, 8 to 2. Score: R. H. E. Buffalo 10ft ftftft 001 Oft—2 6 2 Kansas City .. .. Oft 002 Batteries: Anderson and Blair, Allen; Harris and Kasterly. Pittsburg 5; St. Louis 2. St. Louis.—St Louis lost the game of the Plt’sburg series. 5 to 2 vest©’day In the l.’wd inning W. Miller scored on H. M llgrs sacrifice fly. and Prak* scored on Hartley's single. Score: R. H. E. Pittsburg.. . . . .102 001 010- 5 11 3 Bt. Louis ftftft ftoft <w>2—2 4 o Batteries: Walker and Berry; Groom and Simon. Indianapolis Is Victor. lndia n apolis.—Mull n. al ho 'gh allow'* lug six hits, kept them well and tndi’napolis won yesterday the fin 1 game of the ser'e* with Balt’mo e. 3 to ft. Janies A. G' bn ore provident of the lenpue. witnessed the game. Score: r. h. H Baltimore ftftft 000 oft—ft 6 1 Indianapolis ftftft oil 010 -3 9 1 Batteries: Suggs and Jacklttseh; Mul len and ltariden. NATIONAL LEAGUE Giants Win. New York.—Matthewson won a pitch ers’ battle from Tyler of' Boston here yesterday, the Giants veteran scoring a shutout over his young rival, 2 to 0. After having the better of Mathewson for six Innings, Tyler weakened in the seventh. A feature of the game was that in the eighth inning, 'the first four New Yorkers up hit safely and the fifth got a base on balls, but there was no scoring. Score: R- H. E. Boston 000 AftO 0-00—0 9 1 New* York 000 000 200—2 11 2 Batteries: Tyler, Cocreham and Wal ling; Mathewson ana Meyers. Pirates Lose. Plttaburg.—Lavender broke Pittsburg's w'inrnng streak yesterday and Chicago beat the local’s badly. O’Toole made his season’s debut in the fourth, when | he relieved Kantlehner -with the bases j full and none out. J. H. Kelly, was hit by a pitched ball in the third and had to retire. Score: R- H. E. Chicago .302 201 002—10 15 4 Pittsburg 4X>O 100 010 — 2 7 3 Batteries: Lavender and ATcher; Con zelman, Kantlehner, O’Toole and Gibson, Kafora. Brooklyn 14; Philadelphia 3. Philadelphia, Pa. -Brooklyn won from, Philadelphia yesterday, 14 to 3. Dalton, Daubert and Cravath starred at the bat, while Paskert made a wonderful one hand catch of a drive off Smith’s bat. Score: R- H. Brooklyn ..410 130 050—14 15 6 Philadelphia .. .. ...000 003 000 — 310 4 Bitteries: Rrulbarh and Fischer; Chalmers, Oe4rhger and Dooin. Burns. Cincinnati 3; St. Louis 0. St. Louis.—Timely hits in the first, third and ninth innings, enabled Cincin nati to shutout St. Lous aga n yester day, 3to 0. It was the third time the •loon's have been shutout of the aeries, each by the same score. Score: R. H. E. Cincinnati 101 001—3 10 2 St. Louis 000 000 000—0 6 1 Batteries: Yingllng and Clark; Robin* son and Snyder. AMATEUR GAMES Hicks Street Stars Win. The Hicks Street ?tars dialed the C. and W. C. vesterdsv afternoon by the score of 12 to 1 The feature of th° trmo was the all-around play'ng of the Stars. The Stars are pi ylng some ball now. and hope to cop the game next Wednesday from th n enr men. Batteries: Stars. PHIIIp* and Beard; C. and W. C., Go’den and Murphy. Orlo'es Win from Pl'grims. The Pilgrims were vesterday efternnon in a bemt’fullv Thrived gam** of ball bv the Orioles, the final scop** t’eing 3 to 0. Sheehan Pitcher for t*e Orioles w*ns Invincible, allowing the P’- *Hms but one scratch bit Not a man reached first b-»se unt'l after two were down In the eighth inning. Bath Is Victor. The Path tecm won from NoHh Au gmsta S 'turdav afternoon by the score of 4 to 2 The only feature of th 1 same was the pltchlne of Kelb’ fc r Bath who held h’s opponent* to »wo hltp Batteries: Bath Ke’lv spd T e n-»n~s North Augusta, Woodward and Boyles ton. . « DPIVEN TO IT "Can you make me a bureau with a secret drawer?” "Yep. Place to hide a wiT. eh*” "No; I just want to have a ’pDee where I can keep a few clothes. My wife's things occupy all the visible ■pace.'* Lombard’s Bath Pond opens May 10th. - . - - By Winsor McCay USE HERALD WANT ADS ARE YOU A VICTIM OF BLOOD POISON? Do You Wish to Be Cured of Your Disease and Be Sure That It Will Not Return? If You Are Sick of Experimenting Sick of Failures, Sick of being Sick, Why not Consult Me. It may be You can be Per manently and completely Cured Consultation Eree and Confidential Lst Me Offer You the Results I Am Giving Others Daily and Leave the Payment End of It In Your Own Hands. > No man is too poor to receive my best efforts; no man is so rich tha he can procure better service than I am qualified to give to ‘the special diseases which I treat. My office is permanently located in Au gusta. MY BEST REFERENCES ARE MY CURED AND SATISFIED PATIENTS. If you want skilled, scientific and conscientious treatment. COME TO ME. FREE CONSULTATION AND ADVICE. PILES. I cure piles without the knife; without detention from business; without coutery; no danger. No one need suffer from this complaint when this humane cure is awaiting them. BLOOD POISON I use the newest and latest treatment for Blood Poison and Skin Diseases (Professor Ehrlich's of Germany), NEOSALVARSAN, or “914,” the improved, and all other latest cures recognized by the medical pro fession. Neosalvarsan and these improved remedies are absolutely safe and harmless, and can be administered in the office, painlessly and with absolutely no ill effects whatever. ULCERB. I care not how long standing, I usually cure them in a short time. BLADDER AND KIDNEY TROUBLES. Under my system of treatment show signs of improvement at once. REMEMBER—My fees are moderate; terms satisfactory. I try to give the most for the least money. Consultation and Advice Free and Confidential. Office Hours, 9 a. m. to 7p. m. Sundays, 10:00 to 2:00. DR. GROOVER, Specialist 504-7 DYER BUILDING. AUGUSTA, GA. SUNDAY, MAY 10. By Gus Magcr