Newspaper Page Text
t'KINT
, X /wv;,
Thirty prominent Albanians
fined for uiing too much
WATER.
For This
Week,
19c White Goods 15c
Monday we offer 19c value white goods, including
sheer lawns and Swiss stripes at uniform \ EL *y.
Monday we offer one lot of white goods on center table,
including ^0 inch White I<awn, Nainsook,
Linon and stripe Dimities, with values
up to 15c, yard.
Every woman covets a
shapely, pretty figure, and
| many of them deplore the
loss of their girlish forms
after marriage. The bearing
of children is often destructive
to the mother’s shapeliness.
All of this can be avoided,
however, 17 the use of Mother’s Friend before baby comes, as this
great liniment always prepares the body for the strain upon it, arid
preserve* the symmetry of her form. Mother’s Friend overcomes all the
danger of child-birth, and carries the expectant mother safely through
this critical period without pain. It is woman’s greatest blessing.
Thousands gratefully tell of the benefit and relief derived from the
use of this wonderful __
, Sr* IKs Oth&F*&
book, telling all about m at
this liniment, will be sent free. msti
Til Bradfleid Regulator Do., Atlanta, Gi. a J' SM
Greatest value to mothers for daily use on little babies. Exceptionally,
cooling arid healing in irritations of tender skin. Exquisite for the
toilet, the bath and after shaving. Cures rough skin, itching, chafing
and eruptions.
Of all sad words of tongue or pen,
The saddest are “If might have been.”
(With apologies to one John Green-
leaf Whittier.)
Posey is all there. He’s a pitcher,
W. E. SMITH,
Attorney-at-Law,
Room 4, Woolfolk Building.
Albany, Ga,
Best Cream and Fresh Candy.
Serves them right, they
should use
Flint Rock
It's a Ginger Ale.
And there is no fine for
using too much.
Made only by
111 BOHLING
Albany, Ga
Do You Use a
Fountain Pen?
Then see our $1.00
special. Each pen is
fully guarantee cl.
Made in chased holder
and solid gold pens.
We will refund your
money if not satisfied
with your purchase.
We also carry a
complete line of self-
’filling pens from $2.50
up. Satisfaction or
money back.
LONSBERG’S
BOOK AND MUSIC HOUSE.
COLUMBUS CONQUERS;
ERRORS RESPONSIBLE.
Posey Pitched a Nice Game,
but Lacked Support—Had
It Won but Gave It Away.
Five Times the Error Was
Chalked—Score, 6 to 4.
RESULTS YESTERDAY.
Colupibus, 6; Albany, 4.
Cordele, 1; Valdosta, 0.,
Waycross, 11; Americas, 0.
. GAMES TODAY.
Albany at Columbus.
Valdosta at Cordele.
Waycross at Americus.
lay aside your doubts, if you have any.
It’s just been his luck to pitch when! s0 ” °P Gne ^*
the error column was full.
^ We’ll take this series. Alec took
the Cordele series, remember, knock*
ers, and then home again.
than ever they have not been having
much rowdlne88.
The pennant is beginning to look a
little dim to Muggsy McGraw’s lamps.
It’s a matter of Chicago.
The American League, as usual, has
no great difference between the per
centage of the top and bottom clubs.
It is always this way with them. Need
less to say, it increases the interest
in the circuit wonderfully.
The views of the other Southern
League teams concerning Shreveport
have changed materially since the sea-
Dexter, for Savannah, is hitting in
his usual style these days.
Rube Zeller seems to be the most
popular of the Atlanta pitchers.
Mclnttre, who went* from Memphis
The boys are working hard, any- ■ Brooklyn, is one of the mainstays of
„„„ *"■' the team.
Ketter Is catching good ball for Co
lumbia.
Spade goes back to Macon. He will
help them out-of the hole.
It’s good to see their determina-
GEORGIA STATE LEAGUE.
Standing of the Clubs.
way.
tlon.
Where is Americus?
The Cordele-Valdosta game was a
pretty one. Lavender was there.
Cassidy is about all there is to the
Valdosta club.
Columbus can still retain those four
figures—until today. •
Clubs—
Columbus.
Waycross.
Cordele. .
Albany . .
Valdosta. .
Americus.
Played. Won. Lost. Pet.
The best, safeguard against head
ache. constipation and liver troubles Is
DeWitt’s Little Early Risers. Keep a
vial of these famous little pills in the
house and take a dose nt. bedtime when
And Waycross is to be reckoned you feel that the stomach and bowels
with, the wise ones sav. It looks that need cleansing. Thev don’t grlne.
i Sold bv Albany Drug Co., Hilsman-Sale
way a little. |Drug Co.
McCormack is getting good things \
He
.286
.000
NOTES FROM THE LABOR WORLD.
earns them, too. | The beginning of May witnessed a
Eld red is credited with having the state of general industrial unrest
most “nerve” of any player on the throughout that section of the country
team. From the way he gets bases on bounded ty the Mississippi on the
.714 sa W about him all over the league.
.600
.400
it looks so.
Piepho, formerly second baseman of
...Good Groceries all the Time..
If you want the best in the
Groc’ery Line, and want the
right prices, too, ’phone your
orders to No. 91.
S. STERNE,
Washington St. Grocer
Just when it seemed we had It, it
was gone. Five measly errors did It the Macon team of the South Atlantic
Posey was a peach,, hut the men be- League, and more recently the man-
hind him gave way at the wrong time.| ager of the Valdosta club, in the Geoiv
Hope dwelt in the hearts of. the fans state League, has received his re-
until the last, but it was useless. Way i ea se from Manager Arthur Starr, of
up and higher still soared the crowd' that club. It is said that Plepho’a
at the telephone return when it was manners were too metropolitan for
chalked up, Albany 4, Columbus I-1 the people of Valdosta.—Atlanta Geor-
The boys began to talk of home, and g) an .
it seemed a cinch, all the way through, I Thl8 ]s 1(]eal balI weat h e r. But is
hut it wasn’t.
But it’s no use tp kick. The next
one falls to our hunch. We couldn’t
quite take three straight. But If we
all the ball played ideal?
Everybody admits that the Albany
club has been ^'misjudged” Evidently.
, , . ,, . , , , , Everybody is remarking at the num-
had—why, we would have stood closer . . ... . T
. .. „ her of errors that are being made by
thn trm that o dll AnVWdV if Wfifl ...
to the top, that’s all. Anyway, It was
a nice score.
While someone will say that the
error column was full, which it was, it . _ _ , .
must he remembered that the season tween Waycross ®|gqhy.bus.
is just opened, and the players are not
yet in mid-season form.
all the qluhs in the Georgia State
League.
The knowing ones declare it’s be-
Foster, for Columbus, is doing nice
work.
Americus has twelve errors record-
OFFICIAL SCORE' OF THE GAME. ei ' aBaln5t them - 11 is cIea 7 why ^ hey
lose.
Power Motors, f. o. b. New
York City:
1 H. P., $54; 2H. P., $60; 3
H. P., $70; 5 H. P., $126.
Albany Electrical
-AND
Construction Co.
105 Broad St., Phone 415.
G. W. 8AYE, President.
FOR SALE!
Three Sites for Stores
on Broad Street,
(Near Jackson).
Size, thirty feet front on
Broad street and running back
210 feet to alley.
This property is rapidly en
hancing in value and will be
worth double present price in
few years.
COLUMBUS—
! AB R
H
PO
A
E
Hessler. ss
.. 3
0
0
3
4
1
Lewis, 2b.
t uJ
0
1,
1
2
4
Fisher, lb
..2
1
0
8
0
0
Dillard, 3b
.. 3
0
1°
2
1
0
Goodrich, If
.. 4
1
0
1
1
0
Cranston, c .
.. 4
3
1
9
0
0
Mercer, cf
.. 3
1
1
3
0
0
Weaver, rf
.. 3
0
1
0
0
1
Foster, p.
.. 3
0
1
0
0
0
Total
..29
6
5
27
8
3
ALBANY—
AB R H PO A E
Eldred, 2b
•, 4
i
0
2
4
1
Rambarger, ss. ...
.. 5
1
2
2
0
2
Snodgrass, 11
.. 3
0
1
3
1
0
McCormack, c. ...
.. 3
1
0
9
3
1
Boyd, cf.'
.. 4
1
1
1
0
0
Dudley, rf.
.. 4
0
1
0
0
0
Poole, 3b
.. 4
0
2
2
•o
3
Alexander, lb. ....
.. 4
0
1
5
0
0
Posey, p.
.. 4
0
0
0
1
0
Total
..35
4
8
2.4
9
7
off
Full information on applica
tion to
Al-
FOR THE BEST
Values in Marble and
Granite for artistic work
manship, and the finest
material in ’
Headstones, etc., try
The Albany Marble and
Granite Works.
Summary.
Earned Runs—Columbus, 1.
Three-base Hit—Cranston.
Bases on Balls—Off Foster, 2
Posey, 4. ‘)
Left on" Bases—Columbus, 4;
bany, 5.
Struck Out—By Posey, 8; by Fos
ter, 6.
Double Plays—Lewis to Hessler to
Fisher.
Triple Plays—Snodgrass to Eldred
to Poole.
Passed Balls—McCormack, 2.
Hit by Pitcher—Hessler.
Time of Game—1:56.
Umpite—Coniff.
Attendance 500.
Scorer—.1. Foley.
AT AMERICUS.
Innings— 123 456 789—R. H. E.
Waycross 011 311 004—11 13 1
Americus 000 000 000— 0 13 12
Batteries—Tribble arid Buesse; Me-
Knight and Stephena. Time 1:45. At
tendance 300. Umpire McGrath.
AT CORDELE.
Innings— 123 456 789—R. H. E.
Cordele 000 000 010— 1 8 3
Valdosta 000 000 000— 0 2 4
Batteries—Lavender and Harwood;
Weakley and Walters.
W. H. MILLER,
Proprietor
west and Kentucky and the Virginias
on the south. Pennsylvania, Ohio and
Illinois were occupied with the great
coal strike, whilu the states bordering
on the Great Lakes had to do with the
greatest strike of longshoremen in the
history of the lake traffic. Through
out New England the month opened
with many minor labor conflicts, con
fined mostly to the building trades,
while the housesmlths of New York
continued the flght against the Amer-
lean Bridge Company. All In all,
general labor situation has hot for a
long time been more serious.
Seven hundred and seventy-seven
new members were Initiate^ into the
Order of Railroad Telegraphers dur
ing the month of Marclp.
The Interlocking tower operators
and switchmen of Indiana are work
ing for the passage of an 8-hour day
law. They are now employed twelve
hours a. day.
The releasing of players Isn’t over
yet.
Things are going hard with the
pitchers all over/the circuit. And a
few will be released. After Wednes
day’s game Manager Holt, of Cordele,
had a little heart-to-heart talk with
some of his pitching staff.
Alexander has gathered a hitting
crew around him. And It’s stick work
that, wins, anyway.
When the team was practicing, be
fore any games were played, Alec
said that primarily he was after a
slugging team.
The anvil chorus got in some work
last night.
The newest thing in the pitching
line Is a pitcher who Is all control and
nothing else. Look at Mr, Hall, of
Cordele.
The heartaches that a defeat bring
one are hard to overcome. From last
reports none of the Columbus club are
suffering from palpitation of the
feeler. :
Carlton Buesse seems to take to
managing easily. And as Waycross
thinks, successfully. •
None of Albany’s players seem to
be playing for a "record,” but put their
efforts out In “team play.”
Pride goeth before a fall, and Colum
bus dittoes.
Denny Shea, backstop for Jackson
ville, Isn’t showing up as well as usual'
this year.
There's no question about the pop
ularity of Jim Fox In Atlanta. He lias
made good with a rush, both In hitting*
and fielding.
Brown is about the best twirler that
Memphis has. Anyway, he wins the
games he pitches.
Things so far this season have been
especially good for the umpires. Al
though clothed with greater authority
The membership of the Internation
al Typographical Union Is 47,344, in
cluding the allied. Out of this total
membership 33,226 are at the present
time working but eight hours a day,
The constitutionality of the new
Pennsylvania factory law, which the
labqr unions were Instrumental in hav
ing enacted, Is to be tested by several
large factory ownprs.
■■■ . ■~ Trr -’W*»'JJVgi —
D.
UNDER THE OPERA HOUSE.
Special Notice to
the Ladies! '
I fiave Just received a lot of
WHITE JAP SILK 8HIRT
WAIST8
which were to have been here for
the Easter and Chautauqua trade,
but somehow they were delayed In
transit. In order to dispose of them
quickly I will give my patrons the
benefit of this delay. The regular
prices of such waists are $3.00 and
$3.50 each. My price, aB long as
they last will be only
Come
size.
$1.98
while you can get your
0. Neuman,
Agent for May Manton Patterns.
50c China Silk 39c
We offer for next week’s selling our entire line of
China and Jap Silks, values to 65c a 39c
yard, all colors, yard.
19c Linen Suiting 13c
About twenty pieces Linen Suiting, 30 inches wide,,
values to 20c a yard, we offer it for one |
week only at
Two for a Quarter Vests 8c
24 dozen bleached taped neck Vests, on sale Monday,
real two for a quarter value, for one week at, 8 c
each
$1.25 Ladies’ Waists 89c
Monday we offer one lot of several dozen ladies’ dainty
Waists, $1.25 value, different patterns, j'j~
all good, each. <...■'
15c Indio Linon 11c
32 inch wide India Linen, a 15c quality, yard,
one week ... ,.;.
1“
%
±=—a
! :'
. . And . .
epair
. ' \ ■», •{.
%he Bacon Equipment 1 Co.
Shops—Foot of Third street.
Offices—304-305 Davis-Exchange Bank Buildiiig.
! - r'
B orated Violet Talcum Powder.
Purifies, Softens, Sweetens and Preserves the SkimL
Delicate pervasive odor of fresh : :
VIOLETS " j.
", ■ .V vivi-li , ’ ■ •