Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, April 18, 1913, Image 13

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'mi ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS DAY, A 1*1? I 19 TV 13 iB GET BLEBS tA SHVILLE, TENN, April 18.— The qualities of loyalty and pimeness are alien to the pop- led baseball boss who Infest the L,] s in Sulphur Dell. Throughout Southern League their proficiency L, the hammer has become, prover- L an d though in the past President |Hk has refused to read the hand ling on the wall, just now he has Iked up to the fact that Nashville Lpiy will not support a losing club. Harking back to 1908 when the Is snatched a pennant from Cholly Ink’s Pelicans in that famous 1 to tame before 1,000 and more luna- L a record was set for the South- 1 League teams to shoot at for |ny moons to come. Lii of which has to do with the loding of the major leagues wltji jegrams begging for twlrlers. lough coin Is being spent on wires wreck a young mint, but Bill jnvn-tz is determined to have a de niable sting of hurlers. Thick Smith, the former Redleg, fiiready on hand and will probably a chance to turn the rampant tickers back when they invade the 111 Cincinnati has also offered the |ja a pitcher named McManus. |ile Brooklyn can do without a fltn- who signs the register as Dal- |n Little is known of either of two latter other than that they right handers and are offered Inn with a bunch of verbal bo- Ku. 1 • • • [IRSIG is dickering with the Cub Ipeople for Rudy Summers, al- (mgh he has little hopes of getting : former Voi back since Kid Elber- I wants the little southpaw mighty and will probably ofTer more In than Nashville. fBum" Barrett and Johnson, two tmising kid bowmen from the then, have been tucked away in the Pit League for seasoning. Both a string tied to them, for the Ir, especially Barrett, look too good lose and the club management n't forgotten that Orlle Weaver |l Grover Brandt got away from fm entirely and both brought fancy Ices In the majors, fhe release of these two cuts the jelling staff down to the veterans |«e and Pleharty. Miner Hendee, llllams. Beck and Morrow. The |ter who came to the Vols from jooklyn will be carried until May I when the squad will be cut down llg men. The acquisition of Smith, Jllanus and Dalgren will precipi- |e a lively scramble in the hurling One thing is certain. It will Ing out the best stuff in every slab- |n which Is the main point in ques- n. S'obody at present is certain of a unless it be Lefty Williams for |» portsider is in grand shape. He Ids his position in great shape, fj..s the runners hugging the sacks in the pinches he is magnificent. * * • |0 far In every battle the foe has garnered more hits -than the Vols 1 Schwartz’s crew seem out to Elate the famous hitless White They are coining tallies out of hunched hits and are taking Ivintage of every weakness of the jmv. p li'v rtz lias succeeded in having players master the squeeze play l the hit-and-run play something Vols could never before learn. I’l-y. Goalby, Callahan and James lightning fast and their daring crunning has set the fans wild. Sot for a minute should the Vols I classed as “hopeless” for they are ping a high grade of inside stuff, pitching staff will be strengthen- I and If they continue to manufao- le runs without a flock of hits no- py will have any kick to register. Mutt Must Have Forgotten the Crackers are in Nashville To-day By “Bud” Fisher £ rut got a oca as an INSuRahcg A&CHT, ITS the SCsFTe vt thing in Ttie V,'ORCt> T ° stLI - in sc ran cm . Just nail You* man and talk fast. 1 VTAWr Tocav JUST THINK or IT * IF YOU’/?p SICK you GMT J/00 AtJAN. IF You LOSE an MYC You GET *,5000 . |p You DIM YOU S6Y *30,000 and if you live twenty years you GGT *30000 AND not ONLY that Buy tvunk cm vour ease of MIND . YOU CAea STILL drink -ItXIRSet-F to Death knowing that YOUR family WILL NOT HAV6 YD TAK£ in washing And THINK OF IT AS A Business proposition. You CAN INSURE YOoR WIFE in YOUR NAM6 AND THON STARVE HER TO DEATH. Vi HAT DO YOU SAY’ HUH ? OH WELL IF THfcCRACKEES BEAT THE. VOL^ TO-DAY THEY W1CL-- ,i.<lllllll I N~ CoptX/g#r&£> BASEBALL Diamond News and Gossip JRPHY’S PARK ORDERED INSPECTED BY COUNCIL pHICAGO. April 18.—The City unrll last night passed an ordinance the inspection of the stands of i Chicago (National League) base- |1 park to find whether they cora- with the requirements of the fire finance. By the same order the Bureau of fe Prevention and Public Saf=tv Is directed to investigate and report Tk to the Council whether the pro lions of the ordinance requiring V aisles be kept unobstructed was |!ated In the game Sunday between Chicago and Pittsburg teams. Vidth of aisles, number of seats in fj’s between aisles, width of scats space to be allotted each chair I the boxes and the number and pth of exits are some of the preyi n' made In the fire ordinance. If you have anything to sell adver- p in The Sunday American. Lar- |t circulation of any Sunday newa- per in the South. ' NEILL TO PILOT OUTLAWS. Philadelphia, April is.—The (hing of Joseph P. O'Neill as man- of the Philadelphia Club of the Jked States Baseball League, was | unced last night by the owners. I' i!l was formerly manager of the | sonvllle (Fla.) team of the South untie League and he has pitched several minor league teams. Nearly everybody in Atlanta reads . Sunday American. YOUR ad- ■ ‘sement in the next issue will sell Ids. Try it! BROU’S INJECTION—-A PERMA NENT CURE r t)iA moat obsu*j«t« caaaa guaranteed In r r ’’ 3 to 6 days; 1*0 othar treatment rc- ' ur °d Sold by all dr«o«lata. BUSSES nsl Supports, Elastic Hosiery, pert fitters; both lady and men nts; private fitting rooms. cobs* Main- Store 6-8 Marietta St. The Turtles lost a good pitcher,when they sold Ferguson to Vernon—a good pitcher who couldn’t win. He was one of those big leaguers who couldn’t be satisfied to work in a Class A league— and who wasn’t good enough. * * * By the w T ay, has anybody heard any wailing lately because Ed Donnelly re fused to report to Atlanta? If Edward has been missed we don’t know r where. The treatment he received at the hands of Atlanta must have surprised him. * * * Nashville’s verdict is that Dug Harbi- son learned a lot of baseball from Frank Chance down in Bermuda—and he al ways was a batter. * * * Sam Crane springs it as a news item that New York City is big enough to support two major league ball clubs. • * * Great guns! It ought to be. * * * Jack Warhop will not be worked much until hot weather sets in. Jack is no “frost feller’’ anyhow, and he has a lamb shoulder now. * m * Hans Wagner has a floating cartilage in his knee, and unless the blamed thing runs aground he is due a bad season. * * * Bobby Byrne isn’t even a shade plate- shy as a result of his bump on the bean by Joe Wood. He is hitting us well as ever and crowding the plate like a hungry tramp. * * * Babe Adams seems a champion pitch er again. The hero of one world s se ries promises to be the hero of the regu lar 11*13 season. * * * The Indianapolis ball park is back in good trim, which is more than can be said of the ball club. * * * Rudy Hulswitt has been off the Louis- ville line-up for several days. He has a hum finger. This adds murk to the al ready gloomy situation in the Ky. me- trop. * * * With the Milwaukee team leading the American Association race, less than 600 turned out to see a recent game. That’s regular Montgomery enthusiasm. * * * Harry-MoGilliouddy. younger brother of Earl, and fcon of Cornelius, is star ring on Earl Mack’s Raleigh olub. Con nie will soon have the whole Mack fami ly in. baseball. * * * Hans Wagner always goes fishing every dav it rains. “For one thing, says Hans. “I can't play hall then, b or another, the fish bite better.” # • • Jack Dunn is trying to get Outfielder George Muisel from the Browns for the Baltimore club. * * * Denver has sold Ed Kinsella, former big leaguer, to Sacramento. An office fixture manufacturer is suing .lohnnv Evers for the stuff he put into .lawn's shoo store in Chicago the one that blew flp. Johnny replies that the owner of the shoe store was a corpora tion and that he is not personalis re- sponsible. * * * Brooklyn adimts that Smith is a com- mon name, but denies that Carlisle any common Smith. * * * The Cincinnati cluh is now eating hy the foot. Each player was given a Wp of coupons the other day each for a nickel's worth of food. lhe> weie handed $14 worth at one time, so each man had 280 inches^ of ^eats. •'Speaking of the White Sox.", says Louis Arms, “ he ts^a great team. Bresnahan caught a hall up his sleeve in a close play at the plate the other day and coikln't fish it out in time Jo retire the runner. Or line how . Charley Dryden says so. But Charley is liable to say anything.^ ^ # Pete- Lister. ex-Cracker, is to play with Peoria this^season. A Chicago guy says that when you are approached by an attendant these days It the Cub park, he is cither trying to sell you grape juice or put you out of your seat. * * * t. C. Davis says that while the Tigers are Cobblcss, the famous Peach is Job- less. * , ' * The same guy says that the Chicago fans are very busy m*k.ng presents to Tinker, to Evers^ to^ Chance. Joe Tinker tried to buy Jimmy Sheck- ard from Murphy, but Chawles wouldn t even answer Joe's telegram Joe doesn t stand over deuce high at Cub head- I quarters. * * * Chief Meyers claims to have noticed I that when ball players arc traveling land the train stops,^they want to eat. Tt mnv be we are more observing, but I it ha“ come To our attention that they frequently experience the name dec,.re while the train is moving. EVERS SUED FOR $300. CHICAGO, April 18.—Johnny Evers manager of the Cubs was sued for $3(10 bv a manufacturer of s.ore and office fixtures who alleged that fix tures Installed In a shoe stqre whi -h Evers and Charles Williams. Secre tary of the Chicago Nationals, trieu unsuccessfully to run here, had never been paid for. A Few Funny Things in Baseball 0 O Q © © Q> © Coach Heisman Tells About 'Em By J. W. Heisman. S OMETHING like a score of years ago I was a spectator at a game in which a very funny thing transpired. This game was between the first teams of the towns of War ren and Sharon, Ohio. Neither team was in any league, but these are good sized towns and they turn out some pretty nice ball clubs to this day. It was about the eighth Inning and Warren was one run behind;- but they had a runner on third base, albeit two men were down. There had been considerable money wagered on the outcome of the game, and the feeling between the tw r o teams was far from being the most cordial ever. Luckily for the Sharon club the game was being played in their home town, else it is doubtful whether any of them would ever have escaped with their lives after the stunt that their third baseman pulled off at this juncture. The Sharon pitcher had thrown one to the batter, and then he decided he had a chance to nail Warren's run ner pn third, so he slammed the ball over to that corner next. The third baseman tagged at the runner after catching the throw, and then bluffed to toss it back to the catcher. In stead of letting it go just them, how T - ever, he put it up under his left arm- pit, a very common thing in those days, no matter how silly it would strike a modern ball player. An instant later he appeared to take the ball out from under his arm and throw it back to the pitch er; whereupon the runner once more stepped off the bag. No sooner had he done so, however, than the Sharon third baseman once more reached up in the region pf his left armpit, pulled out another ball and promptly touched the runner out before he had discovered what was happening. The umpire called him out, and forthwith the “decla-pendence of indignation” was on. The whole Warren team desired to know at one and the same time how the Sharon team could use two balls at the same time and get away with it. while even the Sharonans had their doubts about the legality of this kind of strategy. But the umpire and the Sharon pitcher showed them that it wasn’t a ball at all that the third baseman had tossed back, but a very round potato. As there was nothing in the rule book entitling a runner to step off a base because the other team chose to throw potatoes around, “Umps” stated that he had no choice but to call the runner out when the really, truly ball was put on him while standing off a base. And then came the fight, and the police force. 1 think they got out the fire department before it was over. But the game was never finished; not that day at all events. * * * F EW of the younger generation of ball players ever saw the great Tony Mullane in action, and plenty of them have doubtless never heard of him. Suffice it to say that Tony was one of the game’s greatest twirlers 30 years ago when performing with the Cincinnati Reds, and the Reds of those days were “some” ball players. Well, Tony was born and reared in Oil City, Pa., and it was up there that the game took place in which the in cident I am about to relate occurred. There was nothing in the shape of a backstop but a very high fence or bill board, as it were, erected behind the plate. The top of this was invaria bly lined with all who were early and agile enough to get up there. While the game was still young, I observed a man trying to scale the heights by wedging his fingers and toes between the boards. He was very much the fattest man I have ever seen try to climb a backstop of this character, or, indeed, a high fgnee of any kind. But lie had heard so much of Mul- lane’s wonderful curved ball (curve* were quite a new thing at that time yet) that he was determined to get somewhere where he could see them with sis own eyes. He had reached a height of about 8 feet from the ground, and here he seemed to be. stuck, as he couldn’t seemingly wedge the toe of one shoe in anywhere else for a higher step. Of course, his back was turned to the diamond and he was puffing and per- fpiring like a hippopotamus. At this juncture the batter struck up a foul j and promptly the catcher started aft- I er it. High up it soared and back- j ward toward where the fat man was doing his Alpine act. Directly it be- i t ame apparent that the ball was com ing down right over “Fatty's” head, | and right under him comes the catch- ^ or, laying for the ball. It was a question whether it would | drop in front of the backstop or be- I hind it. Everybody began to yell, but. * of course, the climber couldn’t tell what they were hollering about—he was having troubles of his own. Presently something took place. That blamed ball landed “kerplunk” on top of the fat man's head. It dazed him and knocked his hat off. In stinctively he let go his handhold and reached tip either to catch his hat or to rub his poor fat head, and that instant wrought his literal downfall. Down he comes, but for a scant 2 feet only, for he lands right on top of the catcher, who had come up under him after the foul. “This is too much,” gurgles the slight catcher as the man-mountain flops over his head and shoulders like a mattress. He staggers and sits gracefully in a tub of lemonade that some vender had made up and was keeping in the shade of the tall backstop. Talk about your Yellowstone geysers! I don’t be lieve one ever spouted that could splash it up the way those two chaps baled out that tub. There were no more lemonade »al?s that day, and for two reasons—first, there wasn't any more left to sell, and, second—well, no one else was thirsty. BOXING News of the Ring Game Johnny Coulon, bantamweight cham pion of the world, has called off his bout with Francis Hennessy, which was scheduled for April 29 before the Fu ture City A. C. at St. Louis. * * • Coulon made a very stiff demand on Matchmaker Sullivan in the w r ay of a guarantee, and the latter was forced to call off the mill. Coulon may go over to Kansas City to meet Hennessy there. * * * Another heavyweight from the West is in New York. He is Marty Farrell, of St. Paul, who was brought East by- Tom Gibbons, a brother of Mike Gib bons. Farrell has been matched to box Antoine Pollet, the heavyweight of Canada, in a main bout before the Polo A. C in New York to-night. • * * Jack Britton and Pal Moore com pleted training yesterday for their six- round set-to before the Olympia A. C. of Philadelphia, Monday evening. The two clashed ih a twenty-round bout on the coast about two years ago. On that occasion Britton was awarded the verdict after a fierce fight. • * * Louis Smith, who has been appointed matchmaker of the National Sporting Club of Winnipeg, would like to hear from all boxers who are anxious to box before his club. A letter can reach him care of the National Sporting Club, Winnipeg, Man. * * * Joe Golden, manager of Joe Thomas, writes that he has his protege in great shape for his fight with Charlie White in the Pelican City Monday night. Joe says the winner will be matched with either Joe Rivers, Joe Mandot or Leach Cross. * • • Up around Chicago the fight followers st ill insist that Toni Caponi, the-veteran middleweight, is a fighter. They must be badly in need of a real middle weight. • ♦ * Joe Rivers may fill a short theatrical engagement while in the East. He has had several offers. * * * Mike Gibbons, who has not fought since he met Eddie McGoorty in a tame ten-round contest in New York several months ago, has signed articles to box I^abe Safro at Eau Claire, Wls., May 1. • * * Kid Williams, the Baltimore flash, de feated Frankie Bradley in a fast six- round bout at Philadelphia last night. Both boys are bantamweights. • * • Dan McKetrick says he is going to ask the New York Boxing Commission t uat why they wiii not let Joe Jeannette •ox some white heavyweight. The an swer is ready for him. * * * Billy Papke and Eddie McGoorty will probably meet in a ten-round bout at Kenosha or Milwaukee, Wis. Frank Mulkern and Nate Lewis are bidding for the match. • • • Ad Wolgast and Tommy Murphy are on edge for their twenty-round fight at Frisco to-morrow night. Tom Jones says Ad is in great shape and will surely beat the New York boy. • « « Rudy Unholz wishes to announce that he is still in the ring. Rudolph would dearly love to come here and exchange wallope with Battling Nelson. Rudy is also managing Eddie McGoorty. • * * Local fans are still talking about lit tle Jimmy Grant, the boy who held Kid Young to a draw at the Orpheum fiasco Tuesday. These boys put up the only fight of the night, and should be re- matched. By Ed. W. Smith. C hicago, ill.. April is.—is wis- consin producing another Ad Wolgast in this latest fighting sensation—Matty McCue, of Ra cine? Everybody is wondering. Mat ty has all the earmarks of the real thing, and if he doesn’t live right up to the expectations of the Chicago fight fans there will be many who will revise their opinions of them selves and come to the conclusion that they do not know the real goods when said R. G. are placed before them. No fighting machine of such a sensational character has been seen in this neighborhood in many a long day. McCue is nothing if not sensa tional, for he has the kick in either his port or his starboard mitt, daz ing and straightening an opponent up with a sizzling left and leaving things nicely placed for the deadly right cross that he whips over in such con vincing style. When if is considered that this lad is only eighteen years old one may judge that with careful handling and a little bit of luck he cannot help developing into something of a real wonder. Just now he is in the hands of John McCue of Racine, a grizzled old veteran of the game, who has been in athletics off and on for these many years now. It is from John that Matty takes his fighting mon iker. for his right name is Matthew Paulson. He is a native of Racine, and is of Danish and German ex traction, a pretty fair blood combi nation when one considers the good Danish fighters and some of the top- notch Germans that infest the arenas of the present day. Only eighteen years old a couple of months ago! And during his brief career iie has had forty-one battles and without a single defeat of any kind to mar his record. His last seven fights have been the cleanest kind of knockouts. McCue Has Wolgast’s Crouch. Don’t overlook the fact that this boy has got a good left hand as well as a smashing right. He steadies them with the left and then it is all over but the counting—and some times that is entirely superfluous. "When we liken Matty to the Wol gast we knew In the early Wolgast days we are mindful of the Wolgast crouch and shell into which Matty goes carefully when attacked only to come out of it, whaling and slam ming mightily, in just exactly the old Wolgast style. Yen, he's a great kid. a real wonder, and if they don’t rush him too fast right now—well, there’s no telling. Smith Beat Rodel. Gunboat Smith didn’t knock out George Rodel in their second meeting last week, but iie gave the Boer a trouncing that he won’t forget. We glean from some of the stories of the contest that though Smith knock ed Rodel down five times he merely “shaded” him. For the love of Mike, whatever could Rodel have done to stand off those five Brodies, that he did to the canvas? And what do New York fight critics expect a man to do to actually win by a safe mar gin instead of merely "shading” an opponent ? Dan McKetrick. now handling Frank Moran, the Pittsburg heavy weight, is campaigning wildly for a match for his man with G. Smith. The latter bested Moran in a twen ty-round battle on the coast when Moran, they claim, was ill and far from being at his best. Dan is some dandy little booster for his mefo, and if he doesn't force Smith into a re turn match he can at least (Tedit himself with making a superlative ef fort. Nearly everybody in Atlanta read* The Sunday American. YOUR ad vertisement in the next issue will sell goods. Try it! Muru/Jirr COLUMN* ({YHAVE heard learned diseus- I sions full of high-sounding phraseology,” says Frank Houseman, the retired ball player, “and I must say that in my tlm rt I have encountered many men who could throw the English language around most delightfully, but I wish to say that there was once a time in my life whgn I realize the possibili ties of English, the glories of our native tongue and the flexibility of the unwritten dictionary. This oc casion was in Florida many years* ago. I was wintering down there with a lot* of other players, among them being Johnny McGraw, now manager of the New York aggregation. W: were playing a game one afternojn and I was on third base. McGraw had .reached second and thought he saw a chance to get clean home when a safe drive went whizzing out in the field. 1 saw he could do it, also that the umpire was looking after the ball, and as Mac drew riigh I gave him the hiplock and double tackle. He whirled round and out and shot far away into the suburbs. Over and over he rolled, bringing up with his face in a clump of weeds and hij mouth full of sand. "McGraw scrambled back to the base before the ball could reach him and I judged it best to move up the line a bit out of his reach. And there he stuck with his foot on the big and delivered an oration. Ati^ what a speech it was! “Sometimes I wake up in the night and think 1 hear once, more the words Johnny used. Eloquence, fire and forcefulness, complaint and de nunciation, classified references to my family tree, my personul habits and appearance, my destination after death—all those were features of McGraw’s oration. I listened spell bound, but I did not move. Not even when he added peruasiveness t > his elocution and offered me atrac- tive inducements to come within his reach did I change my position. “I have heard Bourke, Cochran; I have heard William Jennings Bryan—I have heard them all—but never in all my life, before or sim , have 1 heard anything to equal the speech McGraw delivered there upon the coral sands of Florida.” * * * B UT list to William Atherton Du Puy, not a writer but a journalist, if you please, who jumps on Father Chadwick’s favorite pastime as fol lows, to-wit, viz., etc.: “As a wrecker of careers and chloroformer of intellects, the world has never known the equal of the so-called national game—baseball. In realty, it is the ‘national curse,’ breed ing Indolence and fostering folly. T assert that there are as many boys who lose their Jobs, business men who fail and professional men who fizzle out on account of baseball, .is from any of the drugging vices. “The game is drugging the national intellect. Nine men out of every ten have but 20 minutes a day that they devote to reading, and they give it all to the sporting page. They know nothing whatever of what is going on outside this sporting page, and they can talk intelligently on but one subject—batting averages. “Yet this information is of no pos sible worth, and their careers depend on keeping abreast of the times. There you have it! Baseball i« a curse, a violent and virujent disease. “Besides, only a drone will hire someone else to do his athletics for him, while he sits stupidly in the sun and looks on. Fans are not lovers of athletics, but fat loafers to whom the mounting of a street car step Is almost un impossible exertion. I wil! take my chanced with a nice, ripe habitual drunkard, but spare me from the baseball fan!” Wow! * * * DILL PHELON kicks in with the following yarn: The biggest curve ball of recent year? was thrown by Wingo Ander son, who was with the Vols a few seasons back. It actually described the shape of a half moon as it curled into the plate, but tne youngster was so wild that he had to go. Ask Ed Konetchy about that enormous curve. One of them started so far outside the plate that the Big Train stood and laughed—then It darted round on the half-moon track and nearly killed Konetchy, who was laid up for weeks. He will swear, iT you ask him, that no mortal man ever threw such a curve, and that no law of nature or physics could account for that hair-moon ball. Strange curves, a lot of them—hut all you hear of now Is “the slow one,” “the straight fast one,” and “ball with a hop.” As that hop appears on route, so the different pitchers ire distinguished, and the critics talk about "the sharp break to the curves.” If ever a pitcher can throw with the outdoor ball the mysterious, gigantic) upward leap that can be thrown with the big indoor ball, that pitcher will make Marquard's record fade. It’s a cinch to do It, too—I can take a Spalding, grip it as the indoor ball is gripped, and make it curve upward in the same identical fashion—BUT— there will be no force, no speed, and the blamed ball will not go 30 feet ere falling dead. But what a snap for a strong arm pitcher who will prac tice it some winter! KLING TO JOIN REDS WITHIN A SHORT TIME CHICAGO. April 18.—Catcher Johnny Kling already has started practice and is Retting ready to Join the Cincinnati Reds, according to Al derman Lewis Stitts, a close friend of Kling, who returned, from Kansas City yesterday. Kling told Stitts, acordtng to the Alderman, that he will sign a con tract within a few days. COTTON DEFEATS PRATER. King Cotton defeated Ed Prater at the Capital City Pool Parlor last night, 100 to 61. The two will play their second match to-night at 8 o'clock. -THE VICTOR' DR. WOOLLEY’S SANITARIUM Opium and Whisky and all lnsbrlsty and drug addictions scienti fically treated. Our 30 years experience shows these diseases are curable. Patients also treated at their homes. Consultation confidential. A book on the sub ject free. DR. B. B WOOLLEY 4 No. %-X YIt* tor Sanitarium. Atlanta. G*» ' ^ NOW! is the time to Get Measured for an elegant new“Dundee” SPRING SUIT! (5^ \ P ! / Made to Your Individual Measure Union Label in Every Garment Why Not Save $10 to $15 on Your Next Suit? Every “Dundee”* Suit is cut and made with absolute ac curacy to fit every line and curve of your body-of pure wool fabncs-tailored by the best craftsmen in the business—to conform to the very latest dictates of fashion—in every way equal to other good tailors’ $25 to $30 suits. Fit and satisfaction guaranteed—at $15. Order To-morrow. Open Saturday Nights 75 Peachiree, Corner Auburn Avenue