Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, April 25, 1913, Image 11

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m 9 Mutt Is Too Impatient To Be a First-Class School Teacher By “Bud” Fisher Uv Percy II. Whiting. M anagers smith and ei- I.erfeld will sound the big Kll ns of the campaign to-day ^ hig guns of, the campaign who h,,om from the slab this after- .MusstT' and Summers, i -cl- is the bright hurling star , cracker team. Summers is !’ -ginny left ltander the Elber- hi\, just secured from the . -the same "Rudy” Summers, ,v„n 13 and lost 7 for tile Nash- ,,11,. team last season. , these men go as advertised it i I,, a grand battle. However it there should be excitement, if lines of yesterday and the day i.edu-e van be regarded as indica- T is up to Mussel- to go some. Buck Becker is to be turned . rift right away. And Orlie Wea- , ins Bill Smith worried bright blue Weaver lias started three times did three times he lias been hunched out of the box. I tight now he is claiming a sore ,, ,, There seems nothing the mat- , ,, X eept a kink somewhere abaft i u-eiirm. But it is a real kink tins Weaver absolutely tied up. \\-i,, n orlie warmed up Wednes- seemed to have everything ’by; it didn't stay with him. How- - Bill Smith hopes he is Improv- Weaver has been counted on as h~ big pitching success of the t'rack- : tr im and if he goes astray it will bother a good bit. Per the present Smith is not go ing In worry. Brady and Price both aunt d> work twice a week. Musset- is ..nen for game a week. Bausewein ; 1UK I,1 :o be able to stick through his next game. And Smith will not , A . of course later if he neeus ,, man from the big leagues there may be one forthcoming. \ J6FF, I've CXrOOeD To iNlPKoVe ! your eouc'VnoN.'tovj'Re SADLVf CfVCKtNO- , NON I'U. I STAR.T BY ASKING Too THE ( SH<»,pe oe -me woRUi J f*JEU.,T<M#M>w> I’LL HCLC YOU OUT. IS THE BHfSPe op f*v ojfp-buttons THE CRACKERS won again yes- I ; .-day. o' to -1. And they surely perspired profusely before it was over. The game was scheduled for til, tn-out of George Bausewein, : | , charlotte wonder. And don't hold it against him. He is a big, busia chap, inclined to run to fat. h j- hard enough for hint to keep it, endition, under the most favor able circumstances. And lately', be ams, of a sprained ankle, he has been unable to work at all. He lasted three innings fine and with the score 3 to 0 in favor of Atlanta it appeared that the game was on ice -here it belonged, for the day was warm. in the fourth Coyle beat out a tut through Dobard, Flick and King walked and Elberfeld drove in three runs with a triple into the center field ditch. That last hit ended Bausewein's try-out. But don't consider that any sure Indication that Bausewein is not go ing to be one of Atlanta',s pitchers. He needs work and he will get it. His- next out may be highly im pressive. I went in and it stuck there about two minutes, after which Elberfeld HI EATERS SST.LEAGUE sciiced on Massey’s sacrifice fly. Then the Trackers started bid ding f t the lead again. They cot : • i: in the fifth and then Kid | T: who was hurling for the El- I'orkhl.-, struck out Welchonce and Hail- y. the league batting leaders of 1H1 _ and considerable hitters this a b’gosh. In the sixth Smith laced at a triple, with one down. But Dobard and Dunn couldn't de ll vei . IX good time came the seventh 1 inning. Price grounded to Elber- - , nd the Kid errored. Agler ■ i diced. And then came Alper- H- romj It u; ond score run ii noted that Alperman had al iunde three singles in succes- ut of three times up. It was ; li' too much to expect that he i 'ingie again. But he did, a alow to right field, and Price ed home with the run that tied “Whitey” went to sec- "H the throw to the plate and when Welchonce singled. This gave Atlanta the game. T IS Alperman is a had hitter. He Hi. ball to all four i - of the lot yesterday and ■ where the fielders went for him rcssed them. Once, when they him figured out, he drove such die lick to Elberfeld that it ■d the Kid all over the dia- A nd speaking of Elberfeld, you have ml it to him for trying to play hole diamond. He goes to the ;"i‘ bunts, he goes to the out- f"! flics, lie goes to third for d plays and nobody will be 'id if he covers home plate or few in a pinch. The Kid > ing nice ball and his lilt yes- ■ nearly put the hall game to Cabi. 1 -2 pitched a marvelously good yesterday after he re- 1 Bausewein. Just one hit was ff his delivery, and that was Street’s dubious double, ■eemed to have a lot of con- and a lot of curves. \\ : l H real reluctance Bill Smith given Lew McAllister his ■' itional release. The Albany }!nted Lew for a manager and , le Atlanta club could have made , '“"tiey selling him. It is re als!» I hat Chattanooga would an it waivers were asked. But 1 <1 dub felt that, as Lew had iwhen a free agent, he was 1 a to his release. Two of Lew’s | . h.i-< n are sick and he is anxious 10 Sri home. T HE Atlanta Gas Light Company • was admitted into the Saturday Afternoon Baseball League at meeting of the board of . directors of the league held at the College Co-op. Exposition Mills, Fulton Bag and Cotton Mills, Whittier Mills, Auto Top Company, and North Atlanta Stars are the othet'five teams con stituting this league. All of them were in this circuit last season. W. E. Bradley,, who was vice president of the league last season, is president now J. T. Webb, Jr., is secretary-treasurer. The season opens on Saturday with three games. The league has three excellent baseball fields, located at Whittier, Fulton and Exposition Mills. A playing schedule for the entire season was adopted at the meeting last night, providing for fifteen games for each team. The schedule in full: APRIL 26—Auto Top Company vs. Atlanta Gas Company at Fulton; Ex position Mills vs. Fulton Bag at Ex position; North Atlanta Stars vs. Whittier Mills at Whittier. MAY 3—Auto Top Company vs. Exposition Mills at Exposition; At lanta Gas Company vs. North Atlanta Stars at Whittier; Fulton Bag vs. Whittier at Fulton. MAY 10—Auto Top Company vs. North Atlanta Stars at Exposition; Atlanta Gas Company vs. Fulton Bag at Fulton; Exposition Mills vs. Whit tier at Whittier. MAY 17—Auto Top Company vs. Fulton Bag at Fulton: Exposition Mills vs. North Atlanta Stars at Ex position; Atlanta Gas Company vs. Whittier at Whittier. MAY 24—Auto Top Company vs. Whittier at Whittier; Exposition Mills vs. Atlanta Gas Company at Exposition; North Atlanta Stars vs. Fulton Bag at l$u ton. MAY 31—Auto Top Company vs. Atlanta Gas Company at Exposition; Exposition Mills vs. Fulton Bag at Fulton; North Atlanta Stars vs. Whittier at Whittier. ' JUNE 7—Auto Top Company vs. Exposition Mills at Exposition; At lanta Gas Company vs. North Atlan ta Stars at Fulton; Fulton Bag vs. Whittier at Whittier. JUNE 14—Auto Top Company v*. North Atlanta Stars at Whittier; Atlanta Gas Company vs. Fulton Bag at Fulton; Exposition Mills vs. Whit tier at Exposition. JUNE 21—Auto Top Company vs. Fulton Bag at Fulton;- Exposition Mills vs. North Atlanta Stars at Ex position. Atlanta Gas Company vs Whittier at Whittier. JUNE 28—Auto Top Company / £ - Whittier at . Whittier; Exposition Mills \s Atlanta Gas C ompany at Exposition: North Atlanta Stars vs. Fulton Bag at Fulton. JULY 5 -Auto Top Company \ s. Baseball Fans Side With Cobb q o e © o © .© Many Clubs Would Pay $ 15,000 Dropping all the pesifiago that in fests both sides of the Ty ( 'obb argu ment, there are only two practical questions that concern us outsider**: 1. Is the Gem of Georgia worth $15,000 a year to the Detroit Baseball Club? 2. If Cobb is not worth $15,000 a year to Detroit, is it fair to Cobb or to the “fans” to prevent him from playina where he may be worth $15,- 000? There is a bunch of other questions hanging upon the above—such as ‘the future of organized baseball,” the hazardous' returns on baseball invest ments, the manner in which Cobb and Navin handled their respective sides of the argument, etc.—but these ques tions are of no real practical concern to the public You can’t get the “fans” heated up about any of these side arguments. The meat of it. to them, is served up above in two chunks. What the “Fans” Think of It. Atlanta Gas Qompanv at FMlton. Ex position Mills vs. Fulton Bag at ki- iii sition: North Atlanta Mars \s. Meredith out of races. j * HR-ADELPHIA. April 25.—Ted vl, !t h, star runner of the Uni- Pennsylvanla, Is at odds C hr- faculty because he has | in s °me of his examinations | j " 1 faculty may not permit him ‘■nv'uge in the races Saturday. KODAKS ‘The Best Finishing and Enlarg- inn That Can Bp Produced.” Kastman Films and com plete stork amateur supplies. , Ice for out-of-town cu«tonw*rs. - r Catalog and Price List. A - K. HAWKES CO. K D «gSR 1 - Whitehall St., Atlanta. Ga. Whittier at Whittier. 11 • I,V 13 — Auto Top C ompanj - - ■ Exposition at Exposition; Atlanta oils' Company vs. North Atlan.a Stars at Whittier; Pulton Bag Whittier at Fulton. , in V 19—Auto Top ( ompan> North Atlanta Stais at Whittier; At lanta Gas Company vs.HuUon Bag at Fulton; Exposition Mills vs. IV hit Top Company vt Fnitnn Bag at Fulton; Exposition MUls vs North Atlanta Stars at Ex position ; Atlanta Gas Company vs. Whittier at W hittier. nil-S t " Auto Top Company vsi Whittier at Whittier; Exposition Mills vs Atlanta Gas Company At Exposition; North Atlanta Stars vs. Fulton Bag at Fulton. VICTOR MUNOZ WOULD FORM CUBAN BALL LEAGUE L (,S ANGELES. CAL.. April 25.— Victor Munoz, the Havana base ball writer, is behind a movement to form a Cuban baseball league, composed of three teams in Havana and others In Matanzas. Clenfuegos and Santiago. He says that the came has not advanced far enough yet for the idea to be popular, out that in a few years' time he wi.l have suclt a league play on the is land every winter. LORD TO LEAD BALTIMORE. BALTIMORE. MIL April. 25. --Jack has fter I Dunn, of the Baltimore team, decided to hare A field captain fall ; ,nd Briscoe Lord will get the | appointment. Here if a sample: The writer met a rich old “fan” recently—the old- fashioned vested interests “bug,” who is a foe to the organization of em ployees for any purpose whatever. He looked like the right kind of a man to approach for an anti-Cobb argu ment. This is what he said: An outrage—an outrage, sir! I go to the ball game every pleasant afternoon. It’s my recreation. I pay a good dollar almost every day to sol- baseball. There are thousands more like me We are entitled to the best baseball there is. in return for our money. It is up to those fellows (the mag nates) to give us the best there is. They can afford it. Why. look at that crowd! (He pointed to 7,000 “fads.”) Thai* paid about $4,000 to see thi« game. If they gave Ty Cobb $15,00,0 a year it would amount to about $100 a game. If we pay $4,000 to see a ball game—wnich is a moderate day at most big parks—$100 a game is little enough to pay a f' ver who gives us the run for our money we get from Cobb. That is, if they can’t get Cobb for less. I know some of the baseball sal aries are mighty good money for the time ppent in the game. But what’s that to me? I only pay five times as miich to see opera as to see a ball game, and they think nothing of paying from $1,000 to $3,000 a performance to an ar tist who is as great a star in opera as Cobb is in baseball. No, sir! We want what we pay for. It’s a fhamp to keep a fellow like Cobb from playing baseball. Is Basebail Slavery? On the other hand, a working man who holds just the opposite economic views was tackled. He opined: Those baseball players are the worst kind of victims of wage slavery. They have to toe the mark for their employers, and take what the bofs gives them, or quit playing altogether, it’s slavery. They're bought and sold like so many catle. T know they get good money for the time they spend and the amount of actual work they do. But it's the principle of the thing that’s at stake—the right to sell your labor where and when von please, and for what you can get. It’s the skill with which they do it that gets them the good salaries. Only a few at the top. in base ball. comparatively, are good enough to get the good jobs with the best paying clubs. And they only last a few years. Yes, §15,000 a year—or $100 a game—is a lot of money for a fel low who gives up only four hours a day six months in a year to the game. But what of it? How about the doctor whose skill get*’ him $1,000 for an operation that takes but fifteen minutes? He didn’t spend any more time learning how to perforin that operation than the baseball player did in learning how to play the game skillfully enough to become a big league star. And he lasts longer than the star. And if it weren't for fellows like Cobb you wouldn’t see those jammed grandstands and the magnates wouldn’t be taking for tunes in at the gates. The players are all there is to the game, and they're entitled to a fair share of the profits and to work for whom they please. The Middle-of-the-Road “Fan.” Then there is the half-way-between ••fan”—the fellow who isn't worried tine way or the other about other people's business or abstract econo mic problems. Here’s what one of them .-aid: What's it to me V if Cobb pulls BASEBALL Diamond News and Gossip Umpire Kerin displayed some of the finest voices In the game' yesterday and looked like a pretty good umpire with it. the money in at the gate they ought to pay him for it, oughtn't they? I’m blamed sure nobody goes to see ball games because so-and-so happens to own the team. No, they go to see rous ing baseball—the kind that keeps you excited. If Detroit can't make enough off Cobb to afford to pay him $15,000 a year, and some other city can. let him go to the other city. If none of the magnates can afford to pay such a salary and imke a good profit, then let ’em pay him less, and if he isn’t satisfied with that, let him go to —well, wherever he prefers to go. That’s all 1 care about it. Barring influences “higher up.” it is *afe to say that there are at least four clubs, and probably more, that would be gl ul of the opportunity to hire Ty Cobb at $15,000 a year—re gardless of what the owners of these clubs might say publicly on tht; ques tion at this time. These clubs are: Boston Americans. Chicago Americans, New York Americans. New York Nationals. It is likely that two or three oth ers would slip in a bid at those fig ures if (’obb were a “free agent.” Magnates Want the Cobbs. A magnate heavily interested in one of these clubs was asked what he thought of tlm Cobb proposition, and whether he would like to engage Cobb. He declared, emphatically: Would I? Well, you give me a chance and see. Would Cobb make trouble for me and my team by his erratic ways and his influence on the team? I don’t care. I’d take a. long chance on that. But whether Cobb gets $15,000 a year is a question be tween him and tile Detroit Club, j solely, as it stands. It is a good guess that any one of the clubs that could and would take ('obb at a record salary would be willing to give Detroit in exchange enough valuable players to materially strengthen Jennings’ ball team. But the Detroit magnates are loth to sell or trade Cobb for fear of the effect it would have on the Detroit baaebal’ public. What the “Fans” Want. It is a good guess that whil^ most •’fans” appreciate the benefits of baseball so organized as to assure good contests, they are willing to let the magnate* wrestle with that fea ture of it. About the only practical concern most of them have in the game is, first, they \Vaint the best baseball that can be produced, play ed by the best players obtainable, and, second, they want the magnates to pay whatever they have to, in or der to give them that kind of sport. Concerning C*>bb in particular, most of them seem to be willing to admit that whether Navin can afford to pay Cobb $15,000 is a question for Navin to decide, but if he can’t, then (’obb ought to be allowed to play in some city that. CAN afford to pay him that sum. Cobb is certainly a good enough drawing card to return a big profit on $15,000 a year in several cities, his personal eccentricities to the con trary notwithstanding. And the “fans” want to see ail the Cobbs that can be produced right out there on the diamond. You can’t bring ’em on fast enough to auit the base ball ‘‘bugs.’’ Wally Smith surely burns the ball to first when there is need of hurry He nearly telescoped Agler on a couple yesterday. Whoever told Elberfeld his men could steal at random on Dunn crossed hint. They tried it at the start of the game, and I >unn threw them out. one b> one. by aboqt ten feet apiece. MDTWJirr COLUMN When Elston tried to steal in the sec ond. Alperman goi the hail and stood twiddling his thumbs, waiting for the runner to get near enough to be tugged out. Elberfeld is the wise guy about his pitchers. fie will not announce them until just before the game starts. This would be all right if it made anv differ ence, but rot with the Kid’s stuff. Dune earned ids pa> Both Bausewein and ITire gave him a couple to stop that were right on the ground. The sewer bad a big da; yesterdaj and the smell—whew! Detroit got 21 men (o first in a recent game, twelve to second, six to third and only three to home plate. Detroit papers are panning the Tigers HARD Now they say Hal Chase is i<» go to center field. It is pretty gencrallx ad mitted now that he can't play second base. • Wilbert Robinson is working Jim Thorpe with a spltball every morning, and believe me he may yet d velop the Redman into a fair slabster. Mortop F. Plant, backer of the New London club, is not only financing a losing venture, but has built for him- ?elf and his friends a little private grandstand. Left-handers are starting BIG in the major leagues Weilman and Gregg w n their first three games, largely w.thout support. But then there are right-handers- for instance Beaton, who opened with two shut-outs. MORRIS STOPS BELMONT. ST. LOUIS, April 25.—Carl Morris, Oklahoma heavyweight, knocked out Kingdon Belmont, of St. Louis, in the third round of their scheduled eight- round fight here. SUNDAY BALL BARRED AT YALE NEW HAVEN. CONN., April 26.— Any student of the Sheffield Scientific School at Yale who takes part in a Sunday baseball game will render himself liable to suspension. This is the dictum issued by the acting di rector of the school. HOGAN VS. SHUGRUE. NEW YORK, April 25.—One-Round Hogan, of California, has signed to meet Young Shugrue, of Jersey City, for fifteen rounds at the Annex Ath letic Club, of New Haven, on May 12. VALDOSTA TRIMS COLUMBIA VALDOSTA, GA., April 25.—The Valdosta league team defeated th * j his hitting Columbia College baseball team from I Jack O’Connor will manage the St. Louis club in the Federal League which ought to assure the success of the team, the league, disorganized base ball, the earth and the universe. Jack was sure a grand manager in his South ern League days. It may not be entirely due to an im provement in John McCJraw’s eyesight that he’is able to announce he can see the weaker teams of the National League have improved. If Congress is goin$ to investigate baseball, why not begin witli the Chat tanooga team. The Cubs have a scheme for banishing the batting jinx. When they can't hit. they mix the bats all up and pick a stick at random. It always results in a batting rally. “Heinie” Zimmerman recently made an exceptionally successful steal of home, except that the umpire didn’t allow it. The Cincinnati fans have an odd sys tem for keeping their courage up. They say that last year the Hurtling Hanks made a fine start- and then fell dead. This year the team has started so slow ly that it ought to keep moving all the season. Rube Waddell and Bill Lelivelt (the latter late <>f the. Southern League) have been shipped by the Minneapolis team of the American Association to the Minneapolis team of the Northern League. Think of Rube Waddell ip the North ern League! Davenport says ttie Ww Yorks are running for Sweeney Instead of for Chance. Baseball is becoming popular in France which should not field against the game in any way. In speaking the name of Cleveland’s new pitcher, Glavenich, accent it on the last syllable. If Dolly Stark could get hold of the ■Ml rrai money spent on his carfare recently he would be able to retire. From San An tonio to Cleveland, to Dayton, to the Southern League, to Brooklyn, to Buf falo, to Sacramento is nothing for him. He <»ught to visit Alaska and Japan by way of rounding out his career. The penalty Pat Graham pays for be ing popular with Bill Smith is that he has to work In almost every game When Smith fancies a catcher he surely works him. Charley Sterrett won his job a* Chance’s understudy on the strength of A S nearly as we can make out from the comments of the base ball moguls on the resolution to investigate the Cobb case in Congress, these gentlemen are better money- grabbers- than lawyers. Cobb is the most popular ball plac er in the world to-day, and as he was about to be frozen out of ins - ball in spite of the fac t that thousands of f ins go to the ball Darks of eight cities every summer to see him play, the method by which this was brought about is worth a look or even U e looks. Cobb demanded a .-•alarv of $15,0<> from the Detroit Club this ycir and was told to behave and be glad to take w hat be was offered. (Y>bb re fused to sign as suggested, and In* is now automatically suspended. If •a player does not sign at whatever figure the club sees fit to appraise him at. within ten days after tfii. opening of the eeason, he cannot play baseball anywhere for money until In* Is reinstated by the National Com mission. No other club of the 325 in the gigantic baseball trust will bid lor his services. To at least a dozen of these clubs (’obb is worth a pur chase price of $25,000 and a salary of $15,000. but none of them Is al lowed to negotiate with him on pen alty of a heavy fine Observe gentle reader, Cobb not now under any contract. His agree ment with the Detroit Club has ex pired But tlier.' is a reserve clause which makes hirti the property of the club just tlie same and inake$ the length of contract a farce. They can sign him up for a minute, a month or a decade, and it makes no differ ence. to their title They own him for as long as they want him, and no one else can even make him an offer. Any league that Is organized to plnv the national game of the American people without permission of Bar. Johnson, Garry Herrmann. Tom Lynch and others is promptly de clared “outlawed.” It Is boycotted and systematically wrecked. In much the same fashion ns the National Cash Register Company’s officers showed prospective creditors the “boneyard,” filled with the remains of others who tried to fight them, the heads of organized baseball can point to the long trail of wrecked leagues that have tried to play independent baseball in the United States. Baseball is no longer a sport. No one thinks it is a sport but the fan who pays his money to see good ball playing, and be has to see juK the kind of ball playing that the bosses of the trust see fit to give him or slay away. It is a purely commercial proposition, organized and conducted for the sole purpose of making as much and as quickly as possible. Do you suppose it is an accident that McGraw is able to buy nearly any ball player he fancies, or merely because he can afford to pay more? Well, it isn't. It is to the interest of both leagues to have a winning club in Now York. Then they can all make more money. How do you suppose Frank Chance got out of the National League? Do you think no one wanted the man who had won three world’s championships? Think everybody in the National League thought he whs done? You can bet —but not inside a ball park that they didn’t. Yet seven club owners in the National League waived on Chance or lie could not have gone to New York. The heads of the organization cay that they will be glad to have an in vestigation. Ball Dlavers would prob ably be even more glad and the pub lic ought to be tickled to death. Th • right of contract in the case of the ball player has been utterly suspend ed You don’t have to go any further than that to get a line on what an investigation would show. Of course he doesn’t have to sign unless he wants to. Danglars in the bandits’ cave didn’t have to pay the $20,quo for a meal that the bandit*' charged him. All he had to do was quit eat ing. TEAM TO-DAT “T 1 HE reserve clause in players’ 1 on tracts,” said President Lvnch, of the National League, “is the foun dation of baseball.” Now. that just shows how a false impression will gain ground. Here for a quarter of a cintury the American public ha rj been going along in the blind belief that skill, sportsmanship and pluck were the foundations of baseball. But Mr Lynch means that the reserve clause is the foundation of the base ball monopoly. HUGGINS’ FATHER DEAD. * ’IN( 'INNATI. Anrll 24.—James T. Huggins, father of Miller Huggirr manager of the St. Louis National baseball team, died suddenly at hls home here yesterdav. He was 63 years old. LEAGUE TO MEET. The Junior Sunday School League, which opens its season to-morrow] will hold its final meeting prepara tory to the opening at 6:30 o’clock to-night at 97 Peachtree Street. All teams are requested to hav<' their reserve lists ready for the league secretary. HE Tech Yellow Jackets cross | bats with the Alabama boys to-day in Tuscaloosa. The University of Alabama has not play ed Tech since 1911. and they are de termined to get away with the se ries. Pitts will pitch the opener and Eu banks will try out his whip in the last game. Both of these men are going good in practice, and there is no reason why they should slump in games. Attridge will catch one of the games. A mason, the lad from Stone Mountain, will play the initial sack. The remainder or the line-up will he the same as used in all pre vious games. Tech this year has rounded into great shape. There has been very' lit tle lagging in practice, and the men have been working with a vim for weeks. The team left last night and will return Monday morning. They will play the boys from Wake Forest here Monday. This should be a good game as Wake 1’crest has been playing ex tra good ball this season. The new r diamond is in good shape, the recent hot weather having given the workers a chance to smooth and pack it. It is now one of the fastest diamonds in the S. I. A. A. AUBURN AND MERCER CLASH IN BALL SERIES Here You Are! A Regular $25.= Suit Made to Your DON'T BE TORTURED i Eczema can Ik* Inatantly relieved and per- i mancntly cured Head what .1. It. Maxwell, i Atlanta, (It., says. It pro*** that Tetterine Cures Eczema I suffered agony wlh severe eernma. Tried six different remedies and w;is In despair when a neighbor told me to try Tet terine. After uslno $3 worth I am com pletely cured. Why should you suffer when you can ■<> ' easily get a remedy that curen ell akin trou ' bleu--eczema. Itching piles, erysipelas, ground 1 itch, ringworm, etc. «;<*t It to-day Toterlne. 30e at drudges, or by mall. SHUPTRINT CO.. SAVANNAH. GA. Lake City, Fla., here yesterday by score of 15 to 0. Rochester Syracuse. .will send Me Murray BROU’S I N J FCT10r<—A PERMA NEJUT cure nb«e./*:o (axe* fun enterd tn to 6 days no ■•th* '.riatmvnt re- M itred Fold ty all druggists. Individual Measure For Only $ 15 With Union Label in Every Garment If It’s a “Dundee” IT MUST be r i g h t. Fully guaranteed all-wool, hand-tai- >red, iu latest style and a per- et tit. \ our money back with- >ui a question if not thoroughly atisfied! Do it now! Open Saturday Evenings WOOLEN M/LLS vcitiiiiiou, uiTnej Auuurn Avenue j 1 AMERICUS. GA., April.25. Auburn and Mercer will play a series of three games here to-day and Saturday. A double-header is scheduled for Satur day. 1 i p i