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What a blessing is gooei Soap and healthful Talcum Powder in
the hot summer time.
Try a box of our 3 for 25 cents Soap. Lilac, Carnation,
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Woman’s Relief
I immediately commenced to improve, and
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V recommend it to all sick women, for I
know it will cure them, as it did me. ’'
Cardui is pure, medicinal extract of
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. Try it for your trouble.
V Every druggist sells it
In $1.00 Bottles.
With the odor of Fresh Violets, counteracts excessive perspi
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WRITE
US
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and frankly; describing "V Ti
your symptoms. We will 'w.
consider your case and give
you free advice (in plain sealed '
envelope). Don’t hesitate, but
write today. Address: Ladles’ Ad
visory Dept., The Chattanooga Medi
cine Co., Chattanooga, Tenn.
Best Cream and Fresh Candy.
It looked safe once.
Shirt-Waist Free
Poole showed up well in right.
Nunley bingled twice, once for two!
On next Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday we
will launder free ONE SHIRT WAIST with your
package of laundry, provided same amounts to as
much as 25 cents. We will not allow more than one
to each patron. ,
Now, don’t think this proposition is not for you
because you haven’t been patronizing us. You are
the one we are after. We want to show you what you
have been missing.
The team was badly crippled, any
The head work of Ham is really
hoggish.
A $40 guarantee is lost with each
rainy day.
we have just received. They are beau
ties, everyone, and at unusually low
prices.
Snodgrass got the only three-bagger
in the game.
Albany
Laundry.
New
Steam
There was very little kicking on the
new umpire.
Nolley’s control was all there, not a
one walking.
Crosley, in center, ljas three put-
outs to his credit
iurschba^im
At an average reduction of twenty-five per cent.,
we offer about fifty men’s and young men’s two-piece
Outing and Flannel Suits. Some three-piece Worsteds
and Serges. Not a suit offered worth less than $10.00;
■ at uniform price for three days —
'•’’Vi'
.
■
nmmi!
W$M«MWWWMW»BIW
ANOTHER GAME LOST;
NEW MAN THE CAUSE.
■i
Seven Errors Against Only
One—Ham Hit Hard but
Supported — Nolley Puts
One Over the Fence — A
Three-bagger for Snod
grass, Doubles for Eldred
and Nunley—Score, 6-4.
RESULTS YESTERDAY.
Waycross, 6; Albany, 4.
Cordele-Columbus, rain.
Valdosta-Amerlcus, rain.
TODAY’S GAMES.
Amerlcus at Albany.
Waycross at Cordele.
Columbus at Valdosta.
STANDING OF THE CLUBS.
Clubs—
Played. Won. Lost.
Pet.
Waycross ..
15
13
2
.866
Columbus ..
..... 13
8
5
.638
Cordele ....
13
7
6
.538
Valdosta . T
15
7
8
.466
Albany
14
5
9
.357
Amerlcus ...
12
1
11
.083
It was rather a pretty game, though
a sorrowful one, for there were sev
eral times that it might have been
wo'n, several times that it might not
have been lost. But skidoo to the re
grets of the past. The team was crip
pled up, and Hardeman, a new man,
on third, is one of these regrets. His
dumb work was bad and his stick
work was very good to a certain Mr.
Ham; his field work was abominable.
His hair needed cutting, and he need
ed canning. He’ll go back to the tall
timber today.
It would have been not so very dif
ficult to .win. Once the bases were
full. Snod and McCormack each tried
to do it, but Ham was too much. Even
a high fly would have meant a run,
but it could not, be. .The hitting of'
the men was excellent. Eldred got
two singles and a double, Snodgrass a
three-bagger, McCormack two singles,
Nunley a single and a double, Nolley
a single and a home run, and Boyd a
single, eleven all told. But the hits
were scattered, while those of W.|y-
cross were hunched.
Wagnon was a star in the short
field. He nabbed one of Snod’s, a hot
liner that was surely gone, with his
left after a lunge, and dittoed one of
Eldred’s grounders also.
Tom Griffin, on second, also played
a nice game. Crosley, for us, was
there in the center patch, and Nolley
was thq stick hero, home-running in
the fifth.
The ground, the ball, the attendance
and the drizzling rain, all these were
in bad condition. But the game was
worried through, and Waycross has
one more to her list, Albany one less.
It might have been different, hut ft
wasn’t.
grounds to Ham. out at first. Boyd
same thing. Snodgrass gets three
bases. McCormack flies out to Allen
in center. Hits 2, runs 1.
Sixth Inning.
H. Griffin ozones.' T. Griffin singles,
Blanton gets three strikes. Ham safe
on Hardeman's wild throw, and steals
second later. Wagnon grounds to
pitcher, out at first. Hits 1, runs 0.
Poole hits to second, out at first.
Crosley strikes out. Hardeman hits to
second, out at first. Hits 0, runs 0.
Seventh Inning.
F. Beusse safe on Hardeman's fum
ble. Tribble files out to Crosley. Carl
Beusse strikes out. Allen pops out to
Snod. Hits 0, runs 0.
Nunley ozones. Nolley draws fonr,
Eldred gets a two-base hit. Boyd gets
a base. Bases full. Snodgrass pops
to Ham. McCormack grounds to sec
ond, out at first. Hits 1, runs 0.
Eighth Inning.
H. Griffin files out to Poole. T.
Griffin fans. Blanton high-pops to El
dred. Hits 0, runs 0.
Poole walks. Crosley safe, hut Poole
forced out at second. Hardeman foulB
out to catcher. Nunley- hits for a
couple. Nolley files out to Ham. Hits
1, runs 0.
Ninth Inning.
Ham fans. Wagnon flies out to sec
ond. Fred Beusse singles. Tribble
ditto. Carl Beusse follows suit and F.
Beusse scores. Allen singles and Trib
ble and Beusse come in. H. Griffin
files out to Poole. Hits 4, runs 3.
Eldred blngles. Boyd is given one.
Snod gets hlL McCormack gets a hit
and Eldred and Boyd score. McCor
mack is caught oft first by C. Beusse’s
assist. Crosley safe on F. Beusse’s
fumble. Hardeman fans. Hits 2, runs
2..
OFFICIAL SCORE OF THE GAME
THE GAME IN DETAIL.
First Inning.
Wagnon gets hit. Beusse, F., safe,
but forces Wagnon out. Tribble Out,
Boyd to Snod. Beusse, C„ ditto. Hits
0, runs 0.
Eldred singles to left. Boyd gets n
hit in right, advancing Eldred. Snod
flies out to center. McCormack sin
gles, scoring Eldred. Poole flies out
to left. Crosley. pops to Ham. Hits 3,
runs 1.
Second Inning.
Allen safe on Boyd’s -fast grounder.
T. Griffin sacrifices. H. Griffin flies
out to Crosley. Blanton bunts, out at
first. Hits 0, runs 0.
Hardeman flies out to Boyd. Nunley
singles. Nolley also. Eldred balloons
to left. Boyd fouls out to first. Hits
2, runs 0.
Third Inning.
Ham safe on Nolley’s wild throw to
Snod. Wagnon safe on Hardeman’s
fumble. Fred Beusse singles, Ham
scoring. Tribble safe on fielder’s
choice, Wagnon dying at third. C.
Beusse hits for two, Tribble trying to
score, called out for falling to touch
third. Allen blngles. H. Griffin also,
Beusse scoring. T. Griffin ozones.
Hits 4. runs 3.
Snodgrass files out to short. Mc
Cormack same thing to Blanton. Poole
strikes out. Hits 0, runs 0.
Fourth Inning.
Blanton flies to Crosley. Ham, two
bags. Wagnon fans. F. Beusse fouls
out to Mac. Hits 0, runs 0.
Crosley hits to Wagnon, out at first.
Hardeman and Nunley strike out.
Hits 0, runs 0.
Fifth Inning.
Tribble pops to Boyd. ,C. Beusse
strikes ouL Allen hits to Boyd, who
assists to Snod. Hits 0, runs 0.
Nolley makes a home run. Eldred
WAYCROSS
— AB R H PO A E
Wagnon, ss. ..
...... 4 0 0 2 0
0
Beusse, F„ 3b.
...... 5 2 2 0 1
0
Tribble, rf. ...
6 1 1 0 0
0
Beusse, C., c..
5 2 2 8 1
1
Allen, cf
6 0 2 2 0
0
Griffin, H„ lb.
4 0 1 10 0
0
Griffin, T„ 2b.
4 0 1 0 4
0
Blanton, If. ...
4 0 0 3 0
0
Ham, p.
4 1 1 2 5
0
Total
40 6 l'O 27 11
1
ALBANY—
AB R H PO A E
Eldred,.2b. ...
5 2 3 2 0
0
Boyd, ss
3 1 1 2 3
1
Snodgrass, lb.
4 0 1 7 0
0
McCormack, c
-5 0 2 9 2
2
Poole, rf. ....
4 0 0 2 0
0
Crosley, cf. ..
6 0 0 3 0
0
Hardeman, 3b.
6 0 0 2 0
3
Nunley, if. ..'.
4 0 2 0 0
0
Nolley, p
3 1 2 0 3
1
Total
38 4 11 27 8
7
Innings—
123 466 789-
R
Waycross ....
003 000 003-
6
Albany
100 010 002— 4
Summary.
Sacrifice Hit—H. Griffin.
Stolen Base—Ham.
Home Run—
Nolley.
Three-base Hit—Snodgrass.
Two-base Hits—C, Beusse, Ham,
Nolley.
Struck Out-
-By Ham, 7; by Nol-
ley, 8. 1
Bases on Balls—Off Ham, 4.
Wild Pitches—Ham, 1; Nolley, 2.
Passed Balls
—McCormack.
Hit by Pitcher—Wagnon, Snodgrass.
Time 1:55.
Umpire Weakley.
FAN-ATICS.
The excitement was at "fever beat"
once'or twice. ' x
And now It's Amerlcus. Who says
we won’t win now?
DeCoBta, who will probably play
first, will he In the game today.
Not a double play was pulled oil, iu
spite of two or three chances to make
them.
Croslqy is the lucky man on the
team when it comes to getting to first
on errors.
Nolley, as -well as Tribble, doesn’t
mind that right field fence. Snod, too,
has tested it.
In the third inning Waycross made
4 hits and 3 runs; in the ninth Inning
4 hits and 3 runs.
The weeds have grown so in the
outfield that the fielders have trouble
with ground balls.
The wild throws were nearly all
(pitchers’ and inflelders’ alike) made
bn account of the wet ball.
Except for Hardeman's work on
third the game was a pretty one, if
the pitchers were .tapped a little
freely.
Both the pitchers were hit freely,
but Ham’s support was away better
than Nolley’s. Only one error behind
him.
Three hits the first inning and two
the next looked a little bad for Ham.
In all he yielded eleven and gave four
Eldred’s batting yesterday was
something else. Two clean singles
and a two-bagger to center were all
he cared to make.
Nolley’s home run was unexpected,
therefore pleasing in a higher degree.
A pitcher, as a usual thing, isn’t much
of a batter.
Even a blind beggar can see that
Waycross Is better than Columbus.
And Albany, when Snodgrass getB the
team in shajft, will be better than
either.
Wagnon made an unusual stop, left-
handed, of Snod’s hot drive In the
third. It was a clean hit and with al
most any other shortstop would have
gone by.
Ham pulled Waycross out of two
difficult places. The bases full and
Snod and Mac, the two best men on
the club, according to batting aver
ages, each had a chance, but both
failed to deliver. Snod went out on a
pop to Ham and the hoy hugged It
hard, too.
Tribble was called out for cutting
third. There were several who stren
uously denied this, but Tribble himself
In true baseball style, accepted the
verdict in silence. This Is only one of
the qualities that go to make him a
ball player. He Is not a kicker, even
against an adverse decision.
At Waycross, Harry Eldred and
Nunley indulged in a little pillow fight.
Nunley finally landed one on Eldred’s
head that tore the pillow up and scat
tered tile feathers on the floor.
”1 want to pay for the pillow” (to
the landlady.)
’’Two fifty, please," in reply.
A rather expensive amusement,
isn’t it, Nun?
LOOKING AT EYES
as long as I have been, has certainly
qualified me, and justly my claim to
tho title of
EXPERT OPTICIAN
so that when your vision troubles you,
the best and simplest way out Is to
place yourself In my hands for treat
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but I'll Improve your appearance with
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have a complete OPTICAL stock to
select from.
LET ME LOOK AT YOUR EYES.
Examinations are FREE. SEE!
Dr. See. Eye. liutchason,
OCULIST.
And Albany’s Leading Optician
Davis Exchange Bank Building.
6 Per Cent. Farm Loans.
THOS. H. MILNER,
Htlornoy-at-Law,
Room 811 - DavlB-Exchfingo Bank
Building, Albany, Ga.
Blind Headache
“About a year ago,” writes Mrs. Mattie Allen, of
1123 Broadway, Augusta, Ga., “1 suffered with
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no relief until 1 tried
SELiliiS I'J
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