THE CHABLOTTE NEWS, SEPTEMBER 2, 1911 MR. I. L. SHOWEM. He Tries a Little Thought Suggestion on the Cook Bv RYAN WALKER CHAtwifc. CH6jT68.C«»t^eJ SidrJtu'iVl ^ HA«TewT6D WORJ>S Of- // '(ov^ MAISMtorf. * ^ oi Think Ht's one: ofThim A’RaS Yfe DfeviL.'O Uu BfcT Yfc2T TR'fIM' ter. VrSH A waRT on irfcR /Mfc! SO^y, ^ \ Howu'/ 5aint5.' Hfc Looks UiKt WWAIU of- A 6A/^sMa I WONOe:*^ fP n£ DI2ESS IS ^usrto oPfeN' i3e(;o«ra* HtMAV C^ts ftLKi Hoozf /LLoMOWfe/^ IhAT ^lAjQfeSTVr^ »$A qCMT TH|fq I, iK 1 1 VII.I. S(X;;6ST Tq ooa i ( MA>M SUIHCte TAAT SHfc Tufe OMt Thatll ri]i HE- IS Tft'fiN' TEP Pt/r i&tu iKfcTm*> PkACfc A'HO flm 62 A V0tC4 Pioia 0 $TA1 WMe -fHoi/QHT-- i 3 ft n/ AmOTLQ VIRGINIA LEAGUE. Petersburg 2; Norfolk 0. Second game: Petersburg 4; Nor folk 1. Lynchburg 2; Roanoke 0. , - Second game; Lynchburg 1; Roa noke 2. Danville 3; Richmond 1^ EASTERN LEAGUE. Newark 3; Montreal 2. Providence 8; Toronto 1. Baltimore 4; Buffalo 2. Jersey City 5; Rochester 11. HOiETS TIIKE THE SPIiEfiS Maclolmson, c. Agnew. 2b . Shceslcy, p, . 3 0 2 5 1 3 1111 2 110 1 CHIP DIAMONDS. Totals 27 4 6 27 9 1 Sl'owins a Kiear improvement and r-vf!‘-al oi furm over the day iiefore, !i •■ ri-inneis ar.d Hi>rnef3 tighten' d up aiiil i!-.illrd (uV on«.- i.f the Mhtt-st and in ?" exriting panics that has been playod ht’iv this year. Sheesley and J’.!;=:^e\ wei’f- 'i»e hill-toppers and up Ui ';.o V was a battle r;)yal •-hrtween thf'se two artists, when Rus- ‘'t\v ueak-’rod and allowed the ■ ^nral^? tn race over the dish three liilimes for the pame. The final score 4 tn 1. Sheesley pulled another his rnnsisten^ twirling stiints and h^'iJ the Spinners d^wn to lour meas- li'-'f iUiFSty allowed six. The game "as exceedingly fast, being i)ullcd in me hour and 12 minutes. Spinners Score First. ' In th® third paragraph Sheesley al- ‘■’^owed Bussey to take an amble olt ^ ^dowD the first line. Griffln ran for ..!th© pitclier and accidentally stole sec- jond and lumbered in home on the hit-and-run play, with Sharp lambast- > ing to right. Hom«t* Tie Up Matters. I Not until the seventh inning did [the Hornets have a look in. in this jframe, with on© in the oats. Wofford fwalked, Weiser whiffed, and Hankie (also drew & free ticket. .Malcolmson ^Tse np, and assuming his accustom ed position when a hit is needed, smacked the pill on the nose for a ' bingle to left and matters stood tied ' up. In the very next Inning the insects busy and sewed up the thing by racing over thre« runs. Agnew dou- ’ l>h d, Sheesley bunted and both were Spsafe when Bussey threw' to catch Ag. third. Selgfried then singled to cen- - ter and Agnew romped. Garman grounded out, second to first and Sheesley scored. Wofford sacrificed out ' to deep left and another was pushed across. Score: Charlotte 4; Green ville 1. Features. The game was snappy and fast with the good work of the Spinner's infield holding down the local score consid erably. Weiser was probably the hero of the game by pulling off one of the prettiest catches in left ever seen on the local diamond. In the fourth Good man hit a Texas leaguer over short and Weiser racing in at break neck speed acooped the pop as it was about to hit the ground, almost cutting a f ,fllp. It was a wonderful catch and the stands nearly went wild. Seigfrled stabbed a liner from the bat of Doak m the ninth that would have fetched over Hoey, who had just doubled. . , The score: Greenville: Lohr, If. . Sharp, ss. .. Hopy, lb. . .. Smith, 2b. .. ! loodman. rf. i Doak, cf. . . j F(1 wards-, 3b. , ! K'te, c I liussey, p. .. I 'I'otals 30 1 4 24 9 0 i ' Score by innings: R. 1 Greenville. 001 000 000—I 1 Charlotte 000 000 13*—4 Summary: Two-base hits, Hoey, Ag new. Sacrifice hits, Agnew', Wofford. Base on balls, off Bussey 3, off Shees ley 2. Struck out, by Bussey H, by Sheesley 4. Hit by pitched ball, Doak. Stolen bases, Bussey. I.eft on bases-, Greenville 5, Charlotte 4. Time, 1:12. Tmpire, Mr. O’Brien. Attendance, 300. AB R H PO A E i Bauswine, who has been drafted by 4 0 0 5 1 0 Cincinnati, left last night for his 3 0 1 2 0 0 home. 4 0 1 4 0 4 0 0 3 0 Duncan and Kulenwider, both old 4 0 0 0 0 0 stars of the state university have been 3 0 0 0 0 0 sold to the majors. Fully goes to New 3 0 1 3 1 0 York Giants, and Duncan to the De- 3 0 0 7 2 0 tioit Tiger&. 0 1 1 0 0 0 TWINS POUND SMITH. Charlotts Seigfrled. ss. Garman, lb. McMillan. 3b. Wofford, rf. Weiser, If. . Hankie, cf. . AB R H PO A E 12 4 2 0 0 8 0 0 0 0 3 ..210010 .. 4 .. 2 0 0 0 0 7 0 2 0 ♦ STANDING OF THE CLUBS. ♦ ♦ ♦ AMERICAN LEAGUE. Won. Tjost. P.C. Philadelphia 79 42 .653 Detroit 74 48 .607 Xew York 64 50 .520 P.oston 62 60 .50S Chicago 61 61 ,500 (Meveland ........ 60 61 .406 Washington 52 71 .423 St. Louis 35 85 .292 NATIONAL LEAGUE. Won. I^st. P.C. New’ York 74 44 .627 Chicago 67 44 .604 Pittsburg 71 50 .587 Philadelphia 64 54 .542 St. Louis 61 55 .526 Cincinnati 54 62 .466 Brooklyn 46 70 .397 Boston 31 89 .258 SOUTHERN LEAGUE. Won. LosL P.C New Orleans 69 48 .590 Montgomery 68 53 .562 Birmingham 70 56 .556 Na^vllle 61 59 ,508 Chattanooga 62 62 .500 Mobile 59 67 .468 Memphis 54 67 ,446 Atlanta 46 77 .374 SOUTH ATLANTIC LFAGUE. Won. Lost. P.C. Columbia 45 19 .703 Albany 37 26 .587 Columbus 36 26 .581 Macon 32 28 .533 Jacksonville 28 37 .431 Savannah 24 40 .375 Wife—“So the convention Is over and you haven’t been T ominated. Just think of all the money you’ve wasted on those horrid bums and rounders. Every dollar gone and— Husband—“Don’t yon worry when there’s nothing to worry about. I have that money all back. Before the fall campaign opened I bought a soloon.” Carolina Association Standings Team Won Lost P C Winston-Salem 71 37 .658 i - Creensboro ) ^ 66 42 .611 ;'CHARLOTTE 51 58 .468 Anderson 46 59 .442 .Spartanburg 44 62 .415 •-fGreenville 42 62 .400 ,At the present writing Wf> are un able to say where Sheesley, McMillan, Wofford, the league-leading swatter, and Coutts, the champion slugger ol the association, who has 10 homers. 13 triples and 11 doubles to his credit, are to report. Special to The News. Winston-Salem, N. C., Sept. 2.—The I'wins pounced on the offerings o*f Smith, from Spartan town, and knock- i ed the pill all over the lot, winning by the score of 7 to 0. Stewart was : the mounder for the locals- and twirl- ea a beautiful game, allowing only i two hits. j Shumaker distinguished himself in j the third inning by parking the ball ' over the left fence with the bases clus- 'ered. Stew^art’s twirling featured. The box score: AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. Indianapolis 7; Columbus 2. Minneapolis 6; St. Paul 8. Milw'aukee 5; Kansas City 2. Louisville 3; Toledo 1. APPALACHIAN LEAGUE. Johnson City 4; Asheville 2. Knoxville 4; Bristol 3. Eleven in nings. Second game: Knoxville 2; Bristol 0. Morristow^n 5; Cleveland 3. Togo Bently, the fuzzy-head back stopper who once cavorted in this com pany, passed through the city last night en route home from Charleston, where the recent storm blew' their team to smithereens. Agnew is the one Hornett to gain the all-star team that is to play in W'ilmington next w'eek. Seigfrled, Ryan, McMillan and Wof ford will leave along with Sharpe, J. McCarihy, Kipp, Westlake, W. Kelly and Ferrell for Winston-Salem tomor row where they play Monday and Tues day with the league champions. The receipts are to be divided among the players. Fullenw'ider pitched a wonderful no- hit, no-rim game day before yester day in the South Atlantic. A league composed -of Charlotte, Greensboro, Winston, Du’’ham, Ral eigh and another North Carolina city looks good for next season. Winston-Salem. AB R H PO A E 3rown, rf. 4 1 1 0 0 0 D'Halloran, 2b 4 0 1 2 2 0 Shumaker, cf. .. . 4 2 2 2 0 0 I Jlancy, ss 4 0 2 2 1 1 'ates, 3b 4 0 0 2 2 0 tewart, p 3 2 2 0 4 0 Clemens, If. .. 3 0 1 2 0 0 Dailey, c. .. ., .. 4 1 1 5 1 0 Boyle, lb. .. .. 2 1 0 10 0 0 Totals 32 7 10 27 10 1 Spartanburg. AB R H PO A E Kipp, ss 3 0 0 5 1 0 Laval, lb. .. ' . 2 0 0 8 3 1 Wagnon, cf 4 0 0 1 0 0 McCarthy, 2b. and c 3 0 0 6 0 0 Totman, rf. and If 3 0 1 1 0 0 Watson, 3b 3 0 1 0 1 0 Westlake, c 1 0 0 1 0 0 Combs, If. and 2b. . 3 0 0 0 0 0 Smith, p 3 0 0 0 1 1 Ferrell, rf 2 0 ,0 0 0 1 , . Totals Score by innings-; 27 0 2 24 11 3 R. KULL MASTERED PATRIOTS. Special to The News. Anderson, S. C., Sept. 2.—Kull was master of ceremonies here yesterday afternoon, and held the hefty swatters from Greensboro to seven hits and one run, winning by the score of 3 to 1. The locals found Houser easy and lambasted him for 11 hits. Brannon hit for the circuit in the sixth, tieing up the score. The scores of the locals in the eighth came over on hits by Taylor, Kelly, J., Brannon and Brannigan. The Greensboro outfielders had 13 put-outs to their credit, many being hard line drives. Greensboro; AB R H PO A ® Rickard, cf 4 0 0 8 1 0 Fuller, 2b 4 0 1 0 1 0 Doak, 3b 4 0 2 2 2 0 Clapp, lb 4 1 2 6 0 1 Lowman, rf 2 0 0 3 0 0 Carroll, ss 4 0 0 1 2 1 Stuart, If 3 0 1 2 1 1 c 3 0 1 2 2 0 Hauser, p 2 0 0 0 4 0 Totals 30 1 7 24 13 3 Anderson: AB R H PO A E McCoy, 3b 3 q 1 q 2 0 Taylor, ss 4 1 2 1 2 0 Kelly, W., 2b 3 0 1 4 2 0 Kelly, J., rf 4 0 1 l 0 0 Fogarty, lb 4 1 0 14 1 0 Brannon, c. 4 1 3 7 1 0 Brannigan, cf 4 0 2 0 0 0 Hayes, If 3 0 0 0 0 0 Kull, p 3 0 1 0 6 0 Totals 32 3 11 27 14 0 Score by innings: r. Anderson .. OOO 001 02*—3 Greensboro 010 000 000—1 Summary: Home runs, Brannon. Sacrifice hits, Hau&er, Lowman 2, Mc Coy, Kelly, W. Struck out, by Kull 6. Stolen bases, Brannon. Left on bases, Anderson 7, Greensboro 5. First base on errors, Anderson 3. Time, 1:20. Um pire, Mr. Wilkinson. Attendance, 200. Professor—“If a man had an arm long enough to touch the sun and burn his fingers he would not feel the pain for 5,682 years.” Student-p“And for how many thou sands of years would he be swearing about it?” Winston-Salem .. .. 004 101 10*—7 Spartanburg 000 000 000—0 Summary: Two-base hits, Shumaker. Home runs, Shumaker. Sacrifice hits, Clemens. Base on balls, off Stewart 3, off Smith 2. Struck out, by Stewart 4, by Smith 4. Wild pitches, Smith. Hit by pitched ball, Boyle. Stolen bases, La val, Boyle, O’Halloran, Brown. Double plays, Kipp, Laval to Westlake; Gates to Boyle; Clancy, O’Halloran to Boyle. Passed ball, McCarthy. Left on bases, Winston 5, Spartanburg 3. First base on errors, Winston 2, Spartanburg 1. Time, 1:30. Umpire, Mr. Liebrich. At tendance, 700. Struck Out 14 Men. By Associated Press. Tulsa, Okla., Sept. 2.—Striking out fourteen jnen in a five inning game here yesterday afternoon. Pitcher C. M. Marion, of the Newsboy team of the Twilight Association, estab lished what is believed to be a re cord. The game was called at the end of the fifth inning on account of dark ness. YESTERDAY’S RESULTS. CAROLINA ASSOCIATION. CHARLOTTE 4; Greenville 1. Anderson 3; Greensboro 1. Winston-Salem 7; Spartanburg 0. AMERICAN LEAGUE. Washington 0; New York 6. Cleveland 2; Chicago 1. Philadelphia 1; Boston 0. Second game: Boston 1; Philadel phia 3. NATIONAL LEAGUE. Boston 5; Brooklyn 8. Second game: Boston 4; Brook lyn 2. New York 3; Philadelphia 2. Elev en innings. Second game: New York 2; Philadel phia 0. Cincinnati 3; Pittsburg 2. Second game: Cincinnati 4; Pitts burg 14. SOUTHtRN uEAGUE. Atlanta 6; Nashville 0. Mobile 8; New Orleans 1. Chattanooga 3; Memphis 4. Birmingham 5; Montgomery 4. SOUTH ATLANTIC LEAGUE. Columbus 3; Jacksonville 2. Savannah 1; Columbia 3. Albany 5; Macon 5. Called; dark- nese. Automobile Racing At Brighton Beach By Associated Press. New York, Sept. 2.—The automo bile track at Brighton Beach, after nearly a year’s idleness, was in ex cellent condition today for the se ries of racing events programmed to last from this afternoon through Mondaj". The great free for all, with six entries, three of them 200 horse power cars and all of them driven by famous pilots, was the star offering of thep romoters. The winner of this event gets the Remy Brassard prize, carrying a salary of $75 a week while he holds it. Thep rize has been held by Bur- man for most of the time that it has been offered. Patschke, Hughes, Cobe, Disbrow and Tow'ers are some of the drivers entered. > Great International Wrestling Match Next Monday Many a woman’s longevity is due to her fear that her husband might marry a second time. By Associated Press. Chicago, Sept. 2.—The principals in the international wrestling match which is scheduled to take place at the White Sox baseball park next Monday afternoon at 3 o’clock began early today the last of their training for the contest. Frank Gotch, the champion, went from his hotel to the Chicago Ath letic Club where during the day he will wrestle with his training part ner and do some light gymnasium work, George Hackenschmidt, the Rus sian challenger, was up early at his camp on the North Side and went for a w'alk along the lake shore. “I am going to wrestle carefully and all the£%;; stories about me mak ing a rushing bout are .false,” said Gotch. “If I allow Hackenschmidt to get hold of me at the start he is liable to break some of my bones with his mighty strength. He is a hard customer to handle because of his power coupled with weight. “I cannot say that I have locked , heads with him five or ten minutes. I can appreciate the fact that Hack enschmidt has improved greatly and learned more since I last met him. j It is because of this that I must be careful, for I am going to do my best to keep the title in America.” “I believe it will simply simmer dow'n to a case of condition. The man with the greatest endurance will win because both of us are strong and able to stand a long, gruelling match. I am in condition and when I say that I am ‘right’ you can take it from me, I’m ready. “I intend to do a little work to day which will consist mostly of wrestling with my trainers. This will I enter the ring on Monday. Tomor row I intend to do a little gymnasi um work and then my preparation will be ended. Martin Delaney, physical director of the Chicago Athletic Club, says today that Gotch looked in perfect condi tion. “Gotch showed me some of his holds and the best one to my w?.'- of thinking is one he calls the ‘new up-ender, ” said Delaney. “It is a simple improvement on' the old hoH of tl\e same name. It is leg scissors applied from behind or when the de fensive man is on the mat. With the scissors in place Gotch sits down, and using his leg as a stanchion, he has a pry with the other leg and both arms. The wrestler who gets into such a hold has no chance to get out and the more he works against the hold the easier it is for Gotch to win. for the man who is under w’orks against himself.” Hackenschmidt expressed a desire to meet Gotch after the champion ar rived from Iowa yesterday and it may be the two will visit between no'v and Monday. Hackenschmidt has done most of his training in secret. Frequently he has had his trainers up at 5 o’clock in th’ morning and f other times has been on the mat at II o’clock at night. About $50,000 has been taken in at the box olfice to date and before Monday it is expected the receipts will reach $75,000. The prevailing odds are 5 to 4 on Gotch, though betting has been light. EXCUSE ME! Drawn By M.MYER TICKEIT TO THE SHORE- hoorry GfETYOLIR SWEET VAHILLR CHOCOLATE FULL M.EaU —:::d in erch packh^te:’ HUH-5aMPLE THIS IS THE GREtATEST ROPiD E-VER.' SOUVENIR POST- CBRD5 " LET YOUR FRIENDS KNOW \yJHEREYOU SPEND YOUR 1 MONEY :-r— PONT fOR£jET THE FOLKS- RT HOME WITH SOME SRLT WATER. TFKFFY'' WELL HERE HE IS RGflIN’ & theCrb not SRMPLE5"y NO- THEY NOT SAMPLES YOU BOOBthrtwill (TOST YOU OUST #3.75’ LOOK THIS 3C0K OVER.:' vJutST OUT' EXCUSE