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FOUR
SEA GULLS AND
TIGERSJIE-UP
Macon and Charleston Went
Twelve Innings Yesterday
Afternoon to a Tie.
Macon. Ga.—Macon and Charleston
went to a 1 to 1 twelve-inning tie
KB trie yesterday afternoon with the
pitching between Martin and Spade
about evenly divided. Bashan’s home
run in the Tlfth scored Macon's only
run.
Cates went In as a pinch hitter for
Charleston In the ninth and with a
runner on second doubled, scoring
Charleston's lone run. The vis. Lots
had several chances to win the game,
but twice got crossed tip on signals
and players got out trying to steal
borne
The box score:
Macon. Ab. R. H. Po. A. B
Matthews, cf .. .. 5 0 1 2 0 0
Moore, 2b 5 0 2 8 I 0
Bowden, If 5 0 0 1 0 o
Stinson, rs 5 0 1 1 0 0
Munn, lb 5 n 1 10 2 0
Bashan. c 5 1 1 9 2 0
Firetitlne, as 5 0 1 2 3 1
Bell, 3b 4 0 0 2 I 0
Martin, p V. h 0 0 0 6 0
Totals 44 1 7 36 21 1
Charleston, Ab. n. H. l’o. A. E.
Russell, cf 4 0 1 1 0 0
Harris, 215 ...... 3 0 1 2 1 0
Bernsen, If, 3b .... 5 0 0 3 0 0
Babrie, lb (1 0 2 9 0 0
Mc Millan, rs 5 0 3 0 0 0
Marshall, < 3 1 3 12 1 0
Hamilton, 3b, ss ... 3 0 0 a I l
Dnrraeyer, ss .. .. 3 o 1 3 2 0
Spade, p 0 0 0 0 0 0
Cates, If 2 0 1 0 0 o
Totals 36 1 12 -G 5 1
Score by Innings: ft
■aeon 000 010 000 000 I
Charleston .. .. 000 000 001 000—1
Summary Two base? hit. Cates;
home run, Bashan; sacrifice hits.
Marshall, Harris, Russell Hamilton;
stolen bases, Harris, McMillan, Mar-
double play. Moore to Munn to
Bell; bases on halls, off Martin 5 off
Bpsde 2; left on bases, Macon (>, Char
leston 11; hit by pitched balls, Spade
2; struck out. by Martin 5, by Spade
7; passed balls, Bashan. Time, 2:30.
Umpire, Pender.
ALBANY BABIES
MOTHER
Albany Made it Two Straight
From Columbia Yeaterday By
Winning 5 to 3.
Albany, Ga —Albany made i two
straights Trom Columbia yesterday *»y
the »core of f> ty ;t. ,Mororw waa wild
and writ, relieved b> Wllev In the third
while Green was tilt hard and was re
lieved by Hardin Wllcv and tiarrtln
liltehed steady ball. The feature wag
the hitting of Erwin, who Rot four
clean drives out or five trips to the
plate, Wells and Wlllmr figured that
btought the stands to their feet. Ths
playing of Cain at second was again
a feature, the second sacker robbing
the visitor* of two lilts In the ninth.
Cardin did some masterly pitching in
the fourth when lie relieved Green
«lth the bases full and none out re
tiring the locals without a run
The box score:
Columbia. Ab. R H. To. A. K
Eberts, IT 4 1 1 ? 0 0
bake, rs I! 1 1 1 0 i
Weir, cf .1 0 op, o l
Bel r el. ?b -1 u o "2 0
Harblkon. lh 2 I I r.>gl 0
Osteen, ss o I o I o
Fltinssan, 2b .. .. 3 0 o l 2 0
C(talker, c 2 n 2 « 1 i
Ofaen. p . 2 0 1 0 l 0
Hardin, p 2 o n 2 l 0
aCorrell 1 0 0 0 0 0
•——
Totals 80 i 7 24 3
Albany. Ab. R. 11. Po. A. B.
Erwin, as R 2 4 2 2 1
Cain. 2b v. v 3 0 1 « r o
Wilbur, cf R 0 0 3 0 0
Well*, c ... 3 o 1 ti | 0
Hanna. If 3 o o 1 i o
Prouftb. lb 3 o 1 g 0 0
McDowell, rs 4 I 2 0 0 0
Manual!, 8b 3 3 1 0 1 0
Morrow, p 1 0 0 0 1 0
Wiley, v 2 0 1 0 2 0
Totals 82 S 11 27 13 1
x Batted for Weir In the ninth.
Score by Innings: R
Alt an' ( SO 000 02x—5
Columbia 200 010 000- 3
Summary Two-bsse hits. Green,
Manush, McDowell; stolen bases.
Harhlaon. Eberts. McDowell (21; sac
rifice hits. Harms Oatpen Finnegan,
Wllev; sacrifice flies. Weir, Cain,
bases or# ball* off Morrow 2, off Wl
lev 1, off Uardhi 1: le'ft on bases Al
bany I<*. Columbia 8; hit by pitched
balls l/*ke (21. Wells; hits, off Mor
row J In 2 1-3 Innings, off Green 8 In
three innings; struck out. In Green 2,
by Wllev 3, by Cardin 1. Time, 1:45.
empire. I*u*on
SOUTHERN LEAGUE
Cracker* 5; Baron* 4.
At Birmingham—
Score; R. H. Hi
Atlanta .... ..1M 1W IWV- *, « 2
Birmingham .. no:’, too 000 t s :i
William* and Tyree; Roth and
Tragesser. •*
Pete 6; Lookout* 6.
At Chattanooga -
Score' R H K
New Orleana .. .180 010 I—6 * 1
Chattanooga .. .. 0»0 00l I—s1 —5 6 5
Bagby and Higgins; Slndler and
Street
Gull* Win.
At Memphis—
Score: R.H. K
Memphis .. .. OOt) 000 100—41 S e
Mobile H 2 020 lop—TO 14 1
Kent, Works and Bernls; laggard
and Schmidt.
Postponed.
Nashrllle-Montgomery. rain.
A Hint to th* Wl*t I* Sufficient.
Whtn const!paled lake Chamber
lain's Tablet* The> are eeav to take
and mott agreeable In effect For
sale by ell dealers.
THE DAILY PUZZLE
I h lk I
V\\ I s^lTa
I§l§^
rflt 'jSjfe I
What la thla Want Ad?
ANSWEK TO nsOTEBDATS PCZitLI
Cat flowers and bouque-ts.
FOXES AGAIN
DEFEAT INDIANS
Columbus Won By Score of 3
to o—Only One Savannah
Player Reached Second.
Columbus, Ga—Redding was in rare
form yesterday, allowing but five hits
and fanning eight, while Causey was
hit herd eight t tnes, the hits coming
when needed and scoring three runs
and enough to win from Savannah, 3
to 0. Only one Kavanah i layer reach
ed second base.
The box score:
Savannah. Ab. R. 11. Po. A. E
Handlboe, cf 3 0 0 2 0 0
Upe. 3b 3 0 I 1 1 1
Mayer, rs 4 0 0 o 0 0
Oust, lb 4 0 1.1 1 0
Winston If 4 o 0 2 0 0
Smith, c 3 0 1 4 1 0
Crowell, ss 3 0 l 0 4 0
Zimmerman, 2b ... 2 0 1 0 5 0
Causey, p 3 0 0 1 0 0
Totals 30 o r. 24 12 1
Columbus. Ah R H. Po. A.E
Herndon, 3b 4 0 0 1 2 0
Rrooks, 2b 4 1 1 2 1 0
Colmar, cf 4 1 3 5 1 0
.lark soil rs 4 0 1 0 0 0
McDuff, hr 4 1 1 3.2 1
Cox, 1b 3 0 0 6 0 0
Thompson, c 3 0 1 8 0 0
Hawkins, If 3 o 1 2 o 0
Redding, p 2 0 0 0 2 0
Totals 31 3 8 27 8 l
Score oy failings: B
Savannah 000 000 000 —0
Columbus otH) 200 lox—3
Summary—Two-base hits, Jaekson;
stolen bate, Colmar; double plays,
Herndon to Brooks to Fox; Kolmar to
Fox; bases on hulls, off Causey 1;
left on Inases. Savannah 5, Columbus
5; lilt by pitched ball, Handlboe;
Mutt’s Memory Was Altogether Too Good
j T \
the ocd DATS BACk \ V/»VIOL\ | the vooxhEß of th* dws J wbnt Br - o ** ***> s**** 1 r
* PRJ*CO. CAN VOU ) J | BURJMS HANOICAf? fll'THi “ TO VOU rvuo SAID-.- ‘ mutt,)
THOM «QOD ffV&y • v **mc«am!l^
i»• --y j ~r~
•/ FUn. ‘ f r-'X- HAPP> DATS. I IweLL THBKr> , '
tb**' 1 ! (HOW IWCLL I / ANO fcl 1 ***■*& VOU FOR ACROSS/ gggS^ r t ‘ \ , .| /
ANT> thb Meter Y{ss\ Rcmcmbcr. 'fctj/ wewr Si >ou '-a ia* YOU MAt> ,n> ' rte . 4 I. |UI/
"* - v .... |
\ •
struck out, by Causey 4, by Reffiling
8; wild pitches, Causey. Time, 1.25.
Umpire, Vltter.
STANDING OF CLUBS
South Atlantic League.
Won Lost P.Ct.
Charleston 13 7 .850
Albany 14 9 .609
Combacks 13 9 ,591
Columbus 13 9 .591
Columbia 11 12 .478
Savannah 10 13 .435
Macon 8 12 400
Jacksonville 6 17 .261
Southern League.
Won l/ost P.Ct.
Atlanta 46 37 .554
Mobile 48 40 .545
Chattanooga 47 41 .534
New Orleans 47 41 .534
Birmingham 45 41 .523
Nashville 45 43.' .512
Memphis 37 50 .425
Montgomery 33 56 .371
American League.
Won Lost P.Ct.
Philadelphia 45 32 .584
Detroit 45 37 .549
V/ashington 43 36 .544
Chicago 42 36 .538
Boston 43 38 .581
St. I.ouis 42 38 .525
New York 29 46 .387
Cleveland 26 52 .333
Federal League.
Won Lost P.Ct.
Chicago 46 31 .597
Indianapolis 41 33 .554
Baltimore 40 35 .533
Buffalo 37 35 .514
Brooklyn 36 34 .514
Kansas City 35 43 .449
St I ,ouis 34 45 .430
Pittsburg . ..30 42 .417
National League.
W ? on tost P.Ct.
New York 44 30 .595
Chicago 42 37 .532
St. Louis 41 39 .513
Philadelphia 36 37 .493
Cincinnati 38 40 .487
Brooklyn 33 37 .471
Pittsburg 33 38 .465
Boston 33 42 .440 i
!HE AUGUSTA HERALD, AUGUSTA, GA.
Oh, you old
jimmy pipe!
“Lead me to it” say men in all walks of life,
since they’ve found out that Prince Albert
tobacco can’t bite the tongue and can’t parch
the throat.
“Lead me to it” you’ll say just as quick as
you invest in a tidy red tin and find out first
hand just how good P. A. is as a pipe or
cigarette tobacco!
Fringe Albert
the national joy smoke
brought thousands and thousands of old
jimmy pipes out of the garrets. It has revo
lutionized pipe and cigarette smoking !
That’s because Prince Albert is made by a patented
process that cuts out the “grouch” and just lets in
the sunshine! Never in your life have you hit such
flavor and fragrance and freshness!
Play P A. in a jimmy pipe or roll up the corkingest
makin s cigarette you ever put fire to. It’s all one
and the same thing—just good for what ails your
smokappetite! And it rolls up so dead easy. Being
mighty fresh, it just stays put and doesn’t blow
away or run away like the dujff-brands.
And, you know, today’s the day!
Buy Prince Albert everywhere. Toppy ret l
bags Sc; tidy red tins, 10c; alto handtome
pound and half-pound humidors.
R.J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO CO., Winston-Salem, N.C.
Eugenics Will Solve
State Problem, He Says
Chicago, Ills. The “modern eugenic
program mokes entirely feasible and
practicable a certain degree of social
advancement for which it is well worth
while to strive,” sa-.d Dr. Frank 1.
Drake, of Waupun, Wis., today before
the meeting of alienists and neurologists
brought together by the Chicago Medical
Society for the discussion of mental dis
eases. Iv. Drake discussed Wisconsin’s
fight against degeneracy and after out
lining the conditions in the state and
«rnrn>^mm
' V
'wXv/lvlwX'XOwSffiffiS.j? A „ /
Mi i i
B 81 ®BS
i H
J -J;
giving statistics showing that there
were more than 12,-000 inmates in Wis
consin charitable, reform anil penal in
stitutions, / made a plea for eugenics as
the solution of the state problem.
APPROPRIATE EXPRESSION.
“The professor has a very grave look.’’
"Well, can’t you see that he’ buried In
thought?”—Boston Transcript.
WEDNESDAY, JULY 15.
TOO MUCH MILITANCY.
“Would George enlist?”
“No, I don’t think he would.”
“What’s the reason? He comes of
fighting stock.”
"That’s the reason. He’s soured on
fighting. His giandmother is a Colo
nial Dame, his aunt is a D. A. R. and
his mother is a militant.”—Cleveland
Plain Dealer.
By “Bud” Fisher