Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, April 28, 1913, Image 9

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

I f l i THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. MONDAY. APRIL 28. 1913. Crackers After Flag This Season +••»* +•+ +•+ »!•••!’ Directors Will Spare No Expense THE BASEBALL FAN AT HOME AND ABROAD HI If! /r: •I.#.;. Williams to Play Short To-Day OH toe sun .Slimes i fcRIfcrKT IN N.-4 OLD KEHTUCKN *01*6 ^-1"' (NS*. 0£*R , By Percy H. Whiting. tt^'P’rE'RE out In front. W*'rr> W going to stay there if money will do it.” So says Charles Nunnally, director of the baseball association. "We have bought a short stow If he does not fil r the bill \ve will uy another. Our pitchers are uncertain. If we find we need other pitchers we shall buy them. This city deserves a pennant winning ball club this year and we are going to give it one if buying ball players will turn the trick. * * * T'HE local association is tickled pink with the showing- thus far both on the diamond and in the box office. The team has been win ning ball games and the fans have been turning out as never before. If the local team had had good wea ther for opening day and Memorial Day it would have shown attendance records that would have been strict ly big league. * * V THE baseball association recog- A nized the need for a new shirt stop just as quickly as the fans did — and they have a new one readv for a try-out to-day. If he does not work, well, still another will be bought. If the new man, Williams, comes through there is only one source of worry—the slab department. An odd thing about the team is that the catching department, that looked as though it were going to be weak, has proved strong. Pat Gra ham has converted us all and has demonstrated class that makes him look the best young catcher in the league. And Joe Dunn, supposed to be ready for the punk pile, has turn ed up as chipper as a cricket and is playing good ball. Both Dunn and Graham are hitting above their stride and their throwing to second his been most amazing. * « * DUT those pitchers! Just when H everybody was willing to admit that Bill .Smith had a wonderful staff, what happened? Why, the whole boiiing developed sore arms— or all at least except Gilbert Price and we expect to get a report on him this afternoon. Old Buck Weaver, the Hurling Hottentot, suddenly springs a mus cular blow-out. "Diamond Jim" Brady, generally as reliable as Old Faithful, gets a kink In his whip. Paul Musser springs a streak of hur ling hysteria. Buck Becker loses everything in the way of curves. And old George Bausewein combines sprained ankle with a lack of sta mina. Gilbert Price is the one man in the lot who is effective. And of course Gilbert, willing cuss that he Is, can't pitch every game. * * * DILL SMITH has a worry coming to him. He must decide right quick whether his pitchers are just tem porarily incapacitated or whethei they are all through. It is incredible that the whole bunch suddenly went wrong at once—to stay wrong all the season. Kvidentlv Smith believe* that the thing will not last. He has picked Becker as one man not likc!v to come around this season. And Becker will go. Weaver has Smith guessing. This man has pitched three bad games in a row—and he the one who was counted on to be the star pitcher of the Uracke r squad this season. It is reasonable to suppose that Weaver will come around all right. But it is high time he was showing symptoms. Musser will be all right after a bit and Brady will improve as the weather warnia up. Bausewein is the man whose fa*e must be decided first. Owing to his sprained ankle he has had the least chance to show' Manager Smith his wares And because he was almost an unknown when he reported here he is the very one who should have had the most opportunities to rfhow his stuff. • * * T HE big leagues are pitching their excess hurlers overboard in shoals these days. Men who can win in the Southern are on the mar ket every day. It has been demonstrated to f h” local association that their receipts for a day or two while the club s winning, will buy the best pitc .er turned loose this season. They will buy if Smith nods his head. * * * F ILL that gap at short, as Williams is likely to fill it. and give the pitching staff just a shade mire strength and the pennant is a pipe. Smith does not need his usual hurling strength. He has such a team of sluggers that if the pitchei'3 hurl even moderately good ball the Crackers will win. The chief point of it all is that everybody 1s set for a pennant. And especially is the local association de termined to land one and it is will ing to shoot the whole contents of its pocketbook in the direction of the big league club which offers a winner—and dum the price! TTY) >. Of-TWE C-UPi - \nMEn SOU A.RE F/NISHEC> GET &UW On THE hmj. ca ITS KiAf-HjU-V DIET-I V' JOHN !) CONT TAKS ft LL. 0^.-4 DUSHNfr-) IHftviE TO HAVE TRESE" muinDONS. washed vps fhewth£ fat C.0MES MuwtrMMiN- Mut6t.Rft.vf. |»NV L.ncc strew in ir*L' J ■&. . GMGKERS ARE J AuiT Contractor /^HOISTHAT -\ Bic> buu-M "T. N Ar THE GAUL OrA/^lT. FODDER FOR FANS The Washington players consider President Wilson a jinx, and say they • an t have any luck while he is at a game. Probably it's professional. Jeal ousy. * * * Four Cotton States League graduates Snedecor. Manush, Clancy and Hen drix are playing with the New Orleans team. * * * OUie Pickering, manager of the Vin- oennes team of the K. I. T. League, has forty-two players under contract. * * * And the salary limit in that league is a month. The baseball world is still gasping at the feat of Christy Mathewson in pitch ing a full ball game in which he threw’ the ball but sixty-seven times. He aver aged a shade less than seven and a half ttails to an inning—a less number than •is though he had struck out every bat ter. * * * With the Reds standing worse than they ever did before at this time of the year. Tinker’s team embarked on the udest trip a National League team ever took—live full weeks of barnstorm ing. « * * The announcement that' American League umpires will wear white uni- lonns on hoi’days and festal occasions . made a hit—with the laundrymen. * <• * Frank Chance's vindication does not show in the standing of the clubs. * * * The American League managers are ruing wise to Walter Johnson, and '• hen he pitches against th*m they use recruit hurlers and save their real slab 's for some occasion when they have ’* chance. ' r he law is a fine thing The case of .lack O’Connors against the St. Louis club for salary as manager it set for a aring May II. a full two years after everybody in the world had forgotten bout it. The fact that a majority of ball clubs lose money doesn't prove that baseball isn’t a trust. It proves only that it's a bum trust. • * A cloudburst recently washed away mo9t of the Pirates' training grounds at Hot Springs. About all that is left is the title to the property. * * - * Hugh Jennings has a system for w’orking pitchers He makes the rookies carry the burden in the spring When they flicker the regulars take it up. * * * Ovie Overall has abandoned his curve ball almost entirely, and if he makes good this year, will do it with a spit- ter. A A * "Wahoo Sam" Crawford is still bat ting considerably under .300 When Ty Cobb is put back in the game he will probably go to right, while High will remain at center. High has been playing good ball in Cobb's place, and seems worth a place on the team. Beumiller is batting* only .244 for, Louisville. ■* * * Of course, they’re calling Schang "Li Hung." * * * Foster, of the Red Sox was with Houston last season. He went to Texas from ihe Browns. * * * Claude Derrick is in bad condition as a result of the spiking he received at Ebbett's Field, and may be out of the game for a good while. * * * After Congress gets through investi gating baseball, will they please gag Horace Fogel? * * * Manager Stallings has been working Wilson Collins, his Vanderbilt recruit, Jn the outfield. ■ * * * The opponents of the St Faul club made 143 hits in eleven recent games. FIGHT PROMOTER Boxer-Manager Announces Three Championship Matches at Cal gary During Coming Summer. CHRISTY MATHEWSON’S BIG LEAGUE GOSSIP GOLF LUGGAGE IS N 1 E\Y YORK. April 2S. Investigations having spread over Ihe country like the prickly heat or eczema within the last few years, there is now some talk of the legislators looking Into the so-called baseball trust that prevents a player from signing with an other club if lie is dissatisfied with the conditions of the team to which he belongs. This whole question hinges on the reserve.clause, an instrument that has been termed unjust by many baseball authorities. So far as 1 can see, such an investigation would not benefit the players, because it woyld KLING SIGNS CONTRACT; HAS RELEASE CLAUSE CINCINNATI, April 21.—Reports - ame from Kansas City last night that Johnny Kling, the baseball catcher, had signed a contract to catch for the Cincinnati team dur ing this season. Tt is stated, however, that there is a provision in the signed contract which gives Kling his un conditional release at the end of the present season. As yet the contract has not reach ed President August Herrmann, of the local baseball club. The latter would not comment on the uncondi tional release provision to-day, say ing that as he had not received such a contract he did not think it wise to say whether or not he would sign it until he knew the exact wording of it. TECH AND WAKE FOREST MEET ON DIAMOND TO-DAY The Tech Yellow Jackets will play their first home game in three weeks this afternoon. The Wake Forest College team will be their opponents on Grant Field, the contest starting promptly at 3:30 o’clock. BASEBALL GEORGIA CLASHES WITH VANDERBILT TO-MORROW ATHENS, GA. April 28.—'The Uni versity of Georgia baseball team has mapped out a strenuous schedule this season. The team is just back from a week’s road trip through the West and. with a rest to-day, will get into action again. The Vanderbilt Commodores come for games to-morrow and Wednesday. These games will have a direct bearing on the Southern college title. Vanderbilt has been mopping up in her section just as Georgia has down here, and the results of the games will do much toward deciding who will fly the college bunting. Friday and Saturday the Universi ty of Tennessee will be here. SEWANEE BASEBALL NINE HAS BUSY WEEK AHEAD By W. W. Naughton. S AN FRANCISCO, April 28—Fight promoters beware. Tommy Burns is about to enter the field as a maker of matches, and if his plans thrive, Calgary will become the hub of the boxing universe. Nor does Tommy intend to emu late the timid, tentative wights who,; in order to protect themselves, begin any new line of business "in a small way.” Tommy is ambitious and self-re liant at the outset. Hp has announced that he intends pulling off three world championships in different classes this summer, and any one cognizant of the trials and tribula tions that attach to conducting pugi listic enterprises knows there is nothing small about that. The weight divisions in which Tom my aims to develop blue ribbon men are the welter, middle, and heavy weights. According to the entries so far, the various competitions will be notable "free for all." Here and there appears the name of a man who has made a bit of a mark in the lighting game, but taken by and large Tom my’s championship candidate roster reads like a newspaper list of appli cants for marriage licenses. In the heavyweight department Tommy is pinning great faith to Ar thur Pelkey. who he thinks with in telligent treatment can be fashioned into a world’s champion. Burns boxed Pelkey recently and found much in him to admire. Right here is where Burns has the bulge on the. average promoter. If he has doubts a« to a white hope's ability he can fight the gentleman and find out all about it. * • • TN a recent issue of The Sidney Rcf- *■ eree there appeared the startling caption: "Sam Langford a Human Man." The story beneath is a short one »nd ii does not take the reader long to disabuse his mind of any suspicion that Langford is claiming to be a member of the Caucasian race. It sceme that during the voyage of lie steamer Wyreema from Sydne\ to Brisbane a stowaway was discov ered. Having no money, the unfor tunate man was doomed to confine ment until an opportunity should oc cur for handing him over to the short authorities, when Langford came to the rescue. Sam paid the price of a second- class passage for the man—a mat ter of 38 or $9. and immediately put himself in wild with those on board. A fellow passenger wrote The Rer- eree about it. He said Sam’s act of charity was performed so quickly and unostentatiously — without "putting it to music." as the Australians say -that the Wyreema travelers with one accord proclaimed Langford a ‘human man.’’ tend to destroy ^he interest in has iW eball. The purpose of the reserve c lause is to keep a man from jump ing from one team to another that o ffers him more money, which jump ing would tend to destroy the pres ent enthusiasm over baseball. One e the interest and gate receipts ar e gone, the player is bound to lose out. If a man could force his club t strikes me that a solution of the HETHER or not the reserve clause is unjust depends upon the use to which the owner puts it. Many magnates try to crowd a man out of the business if be refuses to sign with their club, but, when a player becomes a stubborn holdout, there is generally a tendency toward arbitration, and the powerful men in the league bring their influence to bear, particularly if the man in ques tion is a star, as he usually is. It o release him to the team willing t o pay the salary he demanded, the game would revert to the situation which prevailed in the old war tim es. All the largest cities where baseball was in the most prosperous state would possess the star- of the game, and the little towns would be wiped out as pennant contenders. question would be to have a board of arbitration appointed on which were both players and club ownors in equal numbers. Whenever a player be came dissatisfied with his salary or other conditions on the team, his case could be submitted to this board, and both sides would be forced to agree to the verdict, As for the case of Cobb, the one RINGSIDE NEWS TO-DAY- NASHVILLE vs. ATLANTA Pouxe ddsaa Park 3:3 The Sewanee baseball team has a long road jaunt on. Friday and Sat urday they played the University of Tennessee in Knoxville. To-day and Tuesday the Mercer University team will be played at Ma con, a double-header being scheduled for Tuesday. Jumping to Gainesville. Fla., the University of Florida will be played Wednesday and Thursday, with two games on tap for the first-named date Friday and Saturda> ihe Georgi; Tech Yellow Jackets will bf their op ponents at Grant Field, in Atlanta, a double-header being scheduled for Saturday afternoon. FOUR BASEBALL LEAGUES OPEN SEASON WEDNESDAY The New York State League, the Uentral Association, the Tri-State League and the New England League will open their playing seasons on Wednesday. This will leave only a few scat tering league.- 1 which have not opened their seasons as yet. The Georgia - A labama League will open its season May 5. the Soutluun Michigan and the Ofcio State May 7. aud the Empire State May 12. Jim Flynn apparently doesn’t mind a little thing like a beating at the hands of Luther McCarty. He is now hot after a ten-round battle with Gunboat Smith, and would like to pull it off in New York. The metropolis certainly has to stand for a lot of coarse work in the pugilistic line. Bud Anderson, ihe San Francisco lightweight, through his knock-out vic tory over "Knockout" Brown, of New York, lias been inatohed to box Joe Mandot ai Los Angeles next month. Tommy Walsh and Mandot have already left New Orleans for the coast. .less Willard will make his first fight on the coast May 17. .less lias been matched to exchange blows with Gun boat Smith at Frisco in a twenty-round bout on that date. The winner Is to get on with Luther McCarty Tom McCarey is seriously thinking of staging a lightweight elimination tour ney. Tom says there are about six boys worthy o f a chance at Ritchie's title, and that the ortly way to give one of them toe big matrh is to put. them all together and let them tight it out over the derby route. Pal Moore and .lack Britton are barred from Philadelphia for six months.. They are accused of putting up a fake scrap last Monday night. Charlie White writes from Chicago that he had little trouble heating .Joe Thomas, and that he Is anxious to come to Atlanta and meet Freddie Welsh. Charlie has not lost a tight In two years. He has beaten such hoys as Young Shugrue, Owen Moran, Pal Moore. Johnny Dundee and Steve Ketchel. * • * Boh Moha is a 10 to x choice over Jack Dillon for their ten-round battle at Milwaukee to-night. Moha re cently shaded Eddie McGoorty, and is being picked by the Brewer City boxing followers as the next middleweight champion. Jimmy Grant, the Chicago bantam weight. who is spending his time here, is simply aching for a fight. Jimmy does not care whether it he Johnny Coulon or Kid Young, hut wants to swing the padded mitts very soon George Gealelis. the prominent Greek spprtsman. is willing to back Jimmy«for any amount. Jimmy Hurst, manager of "Wildcat'' Ferns, sends along some interesting newspaper clippings regarding his pro tege Ferns battled Tommy Howell at Kansas City the other night in a bout billed for the welterweight champion ship of the world. Although the referee called the scrap a reports give Ferns draw, the newspaper a wide shade. "Bring him along and I will sign up for the match at once." w-ails little Meyer Pries, when asked about hie re cent bout v/lth Spider Britt. Pries still thinks lie was entitled to a draw' in their last scrap, and is willing to settle the question of supremacy at once. Promoter Tortorieh is after a .Lie Mandot-Charlie White battle. White and Mandot have rnrt a couple of times, with honors even, hut Joe was at his best then and will probably have a hard time holding the Chicago boy off now * * * Frank Klaus, who heat Billy Papke in Paris, is taking several taps at the Kewanee hoy for the harsh things Billy has been say ing about him in this coun try Klaus accuses Papke of being yel low and afraid to take a beating like a man * * * Harry Forbes, ex-har.tamweight cham pion. is gathering quite a stable of fighters in Chicago Harry is physical instructor at Nate Lewis’ gymnasium in the Windy City and is getting along fine. Harry is also handling the reins over Paddy Keller. "Stockyards" Tom- mi- Murphy, Jimmy Murphy and Nate Kolb. Rudy t nhoiz is creating quite a name for himself as a manager. Buoy Is man aging Eddie McGoorty . and has already brough' his boxer home a winner on two occasions Since under Unholz's management Eddie lias defeated Fred die Hicks and Gus Christie. my ECZEMA SUFFERERS | Read what I. H. Glddens, Tampa. Fla., sj i It pruvas that Tetterine Cures Eczema For arven years I had eczema or ankle. I tried many remedies and merou* doctors. I tried Tetterine and after H'lht weeks am entirely free from the ter rible eczema. rine will do as much for oil,era. czema. tetter, erysipelas and other skin trouble*. It cures lo stay cured. Get it to day Tetterine 50c at druggists, or by mall. SHUPTRINE CO.. SAVANNAH. GA which has stirred up all the talk, I am not familiar enough with the de tails to express an* opinion, but it strikes me that a man of Cobb’s drawing ability is worth a lot of money to his club The sting could be taken out of the reserve clause by establishing some neutral body to adjust all arguments. * * * QFTEN followers of baseball have asked me if a pitcher does not feel discouraged when he is knocked out of the box in a game. "1 shouldn’t think you would ever want to go back to the box again," a fan said to me once. Doesn't most every man have a had day at business when nothing breaks right for him? Don't most actresses have had days when they are out of voice? It is the same way with a hall player. We all have our off days. As George Ade once said, "not even a humorist can go to the bat every day and bang out a three-bagger." It is this fear of going back into the box which harms so many young pitchers, but it does hot bother veterans * • * I RECALL a game 1 started in Pitts- * burg last season The Pirates had a habit at that time of hitting the first ball, and McGraw warned me to watch out for this before I went into the box. ‘"Look out for that first one, Mat ty,” he said to me. I went into the box with this in mind. Byrne was the first man up to the bat, and he crowds the plate. 1 tried to waste a ball on the- inside, and he stepped back and singled. Be cause they were playing a rushing game. I figured he would try to steal, so I attempted to waste one on the next hatter. Bang' There was an other base hit. With two on. I was looking for a bunt and threw- the ball at the next batter’s head, because* a high one is the most difficult to lay down. He kissed it for another base hit. and the Pittsburg team had three runs before the inning was over. "Better let some one else finish the game,” said I to McGraw when the club went to the bench. "They're hit- ting|\vihJ pitches to-day." “\">u're putting them over too good,” answered McGraw. I didn't go back to the clubhouse that night feeling I couldn't pitch any more. It was not m> day. and that was all. This is the way most veterans regard being knocked out <>f the box. Only the youngsters lose their confidence. (Copyright. 1913. by the McClure News paper Syndicate.! Players No Longer Ashamed to Moore - Pound ' Don * ldson and Mon - tague Draw Lay-off for lndi*fer- Carry Bags of Queer Shaped Clubs Through Streets. Or By “Chick” Loans. NK of the commonest sights of arly spring just now on the lowntown streets is the man w-ith hie golf bag. Time was when the golfer felt uncomfortable at the very thought of being seen carry ing his clubs through thd crowded Atlanta streets. During those days of the first introduction of golf It was an object of much ridicule and a target for every would-be wit who happened to be acquainted with the game, and his name was legion. There was something in the necessary cos tume. the peculiar chape of the clubs and their more peculiar names that appealed strongly to the multitude’s sense of humor. In those days office boys and caddies were hired to carry the clubs to the railway stations, while the owner slipped in a little later unincumbered by mirth-inspir ing luggage. All of that, is now changed. The semingly uncouth no menclature has been transferred into houshold words and the corners of al most every office hold a bag of clubs. Now the golfer himself sallies forth laden with the heaviest of bags, and he iy proud, conscious of the fact that he is an object of envy, not ridicule. The check rooms of all the city clubs, notably the Atlanta Athletic, and all the railway stations ar crowded with the paraphernalia golf, for every man and his cousin goes golfing these days. There is everything to remind tis of golf— even the well-worn golf bag used by the street vender of canes to hold hiy wares. ASHVILLE, TENN., April 28.— "One of the most unwise things nnv manager can do is to make a prediction of n pennant winner or where his own club will finish in the league race until e has care fully compared all the teams in that league with his own club,” said Manager Molesworth. of the Barons, in discussing the practice so freely indulged in this and other leagues of forecasting the result at the fin ish. "You see what I got into over in Atlanta and it all came of my effort to kid a young reporter. I was going through the gate at Ponce De Leon 'Park, when this hoy grabbed me and asked me what I thought of Billy Smith’s team. I was in a hurry and I thought the quickest way to get rid of him was to tell him that Atlanta had the best club I had ever seen in this league and ought to walk off with the pennant. Admit They Can Hit. "I will say that Atlanta haj* the hardest hitting bunch that we have faced yet but in speed and brains, which go a mighty long ways toward winning baseball games and thereby pennants, there are several clubs that art equal to Atlanta and a few who arc far ahead of them. Take Bir mingham for instance. It's tru< vvf have not been hitting anyways neai like Atlanta but I do not believe that there is a club in this league who has 1t on us in gray matter. "None of my pitchers are right, hut when they do get into condition you can look out for us. Boyd, who last year was on** of the most dependable men 1 had, hasn’t thrown a ball this season but when he rounds to 1 ex pect him to prove the leading pitcher of this league. Foxen Is Getting Right. "Koxen is just no w getting into shape, while Hat dgrove Ls troubled with a sore arm. "What I need more than anything else right now is one more good hard hitter and 1 hope to be able to land a man I am after in a few’ days. When 1 get more hitting strength <>n the club I will be able to give any body a fight.” Heisman Suspends Four Tech Players ent Work Against Alabanv As ti result of indifferent play ing in the game Saturday against Alabama at Tuscaloosa, four members of the Tech baseball team are enjoying an indflnite lay-off by request of Uoach ‘Heisman. The quartet consiits of "Scrappy” Moore, third baseman; Murphy Pound, outfielder; Jack Don- aldcon. shortstop, and Edgar Monta gue. second baseman. A number of shifts were made necessary by this ruling, but ('oath Heisman has the places pretty well filled. LOOKOUTS PURCHASE NEW OUTFIELDER; STARK SOLD CHATTANOOGA. TEN’S., April 28. Outfielder Thrasher, formerly with Cleveland In the Appalachian League, will join the Chattanooga club at Bir mingham to-day. H*'v,as at one lime a member of the Afr mphis c lub. He led the Appalachian in hitting three seasons. He was bought from Co lumbus, Ohio. outfielder Gillespie, who has been in the hospital, also i -joins the club to-day. Pitcher Stark has been sold to the New Britain Eastern Associa tion club. FARRELL BEATS POLLET. NEW YORK. April 19.—Marty Far rell. protege of Mike Gibbons, had an easy time last night defeating An toine Pol let, the French heavyweight, in their ten-round bout. re, or! S5 ESTABLISHED 23 YEARS DR.E.G. GRIFFIN'S GATE CITY DENTAL ROOMS BEST WORK AT LOWEST PRICES AEI Work Guaranteed. (ours 8 to 6-Phone M. 1708-Sundays 9-1 24 . Whitehall St. Over Brown A Allens It C | While on the Pacific Coast read the San Francisco Examiner INDIGESTION C U R E O ported, it will be seen that the suffer ing public should be thankful that such a grand remedy is within their reach. It would be a very difficult thLng to thoroughly and minutely describe all the distresses that were endured by Mr Backus. He often had such pains in his stomach that he wotfid be in an agony from which it was hard to re cover. His stomach would bloat fear fully. He was at tlme« so nauseated at the sight of foods that he could not eat. TTe kept getting weaker and weaker. He was In a miserable condi tion. Money was spent by Mr. Backus in his trials for relief, and many dif ferent remedies were used, but ail he got in the way of results was a little temporary relief. Of tills he finally tired, and made up his mind to make one more effort in his endeavors to find a cure. He called at the Uoursey K- Mmin drug store, and, after explain ing his case, decided to purchase a a severe case of Indigestion When the | treatment, which was four bottles, as results of the wonderful Quaker Kx j it had done so much good work in this tract become known b\ the people who cit\ He began using he Quaker Kx- care to investigate the case here re- I tract according to directions, and How Many People You Heaz Say, “Oh, If I Did Not Have Indigestion, I Would Feel Good. If I Could Only Get Something That Would Cure Me I Would Be Happy.” Mr. I M Backus, aged r>5 years, who lives at 16 Cooper Street, cer tainly owes his happiness to Quaker Herb Extract During many years of Coursey it Munn’s experience they have seen many remarkable ooses where results wer.e shown In an aston ishing!’ short time, hut this * ase of Mr Ha- us has no equal For more than six years the man suffered from >f EVERY DAY soon began to find relief from the very start, but it was so different from the average medicine’s relief, most of which was a mere exhilaration, that he knew he was on the right track at last. He continued faithfully and he called again at the drug store and* said: "Well, l feel as though I should tell you that your remedy has cured me. After suffering so many years 1 can hardly believe it true that I have no more of the former distresses, but it must fie so. 1 can eat a heavy meal with h relish and perfect digestion. I feel like a new man, and can appre ciate the real work that has been •lone in my case. You can bet I will ! always tell what Quaker Extract has j done for me Thank God that He has j sent such wonderful remedy as Quaker Extract into this city*.” Call to-day, do rot delay, but ob tain Quaker Extract six for $fi, three ; for $2.50. Oil of Balm 25c a bottle, or i five for #1. At Coursey & Munn’s I drug store, 29 Marietta Street. We prepay all express charges on all or- I der-; of 13 or more.