Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, May 07, 1913, Image 8

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TTTK ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. WEDNESDAY, MAY 7. 1913. SILK HAT HARRY’S DIVORCE SUIT ;; Next Performance at 8 P. M. Copyright, 1918, International Newi Service By Tad By .T. W. Heisman. S M MEDIATELY nftfr the Ruin*.- with Alabama the Tech team wan given a severe shake-up, some six regulars being: sent to the berfch for awhile. This was not at all by way of discipline, for the boys hadn’t been deporting themselves in any out of the way manner, but they were play ing mighty ineffective and unsatis factory baseball nevertheless, and something had to be done, A few days of play on the Scrub side seem ed to be the tonic they needed, with result that several of them were giv en trials again 1n the Sewanoe games, and their “pepper” and play both showed marked Improvement. Tech lost to Wake Forest, as 1 had expected they would Wake Forest has about the best college team I have seen In three or four years: It is beautifully rounded out. Their per formance of winning 23 out of 25 played has not been duplicated In a long time. By time for the Sewanee games ihe Yellow Jackets had managed to patch themselves pretty well togeth- « i- again, and the result was two of the best played games, so far as Tech whs concerned, that anybody could ask to see. Four More Games On List. There remain for Tech but four more games,—all with Georgia, Tech is out of the running for champion ship bailors of any kind, but the fact remains that at the rate she is now going she Is likely to give Georgia about a:* good games In these four »ontents as the Red and Black has bumped Into all season. The advan tage clearly lies with Georgia, espe cially In hitting and pitching; hut it is probable that she will be made to extend herself to the utmost The games should be the best of the col- legc year and worth going many miles to see, Georgia Still Winning. It is little short of remarkable the, wa> tic Georgia swatters and the Georgia pitchers both continue to keep up their stride. It is clear the A i cuians have one of the very best oil M- teams the South has turned nut in some time. Their overwhelm ing defeats of Vanderbilt and Ten nessee last week put them almost b\ themselves In the pennant race. There 1- onl> one eventuality that <-ould give their claim an argument; and tlmt would be-if Alabama should . outturn* to win from till the remain •ug competitor* on her schedule, and Georgia should unexpectedly fall Mown to Tech. In such event both Genrgia ami Alabama would have lost a series But neither of these con tingencies has mu oh likelihood of happening. Sewanee's Trip Too Long. vjeu. ■!') /TT\ t f 3USV 'FOR that 1 X^ONr 00 iT AT AM- Marquard Anticipates Best Season 0 o o © © o © The Tigers found tliat a trip over a week in length, from the salu brious* breezes of the mountain away down almost to the tropics, and play ing ball everv day. was a good deal more of a good thing than they had bargained for. Pitcher Gordon did some line work in overthrowing both Mercer and Florida on this trip, hut to ask him to take the game from Tech also was an unreasonably large assignment. The team looked as 1 hough it could play good ball when Ht its best, but the long hike with its numerous defeats lost them all chance of a high standing at the end of the season. Vanderbilt Not So Strong. It is now but too true, as i pre dicted it would prove, that the t'um- ipodores without Collins, Morrison, Freeland. Hard age, el al would he a much easier proposition tHis year for all opponents than was the Vander bilt aggregation of a year ago. Two shut-outs bv Georgia and a heavy defeat on their own errors by Mer* ear in one week gives their record a black eye for keeps, pafticularly #s they had already lost handily i« <’umberlaiid and Michigan. It will be a toss-up as to whether the Commodores ran defeat Sewanee or not when they meet In about three weeks. Gordon will have rested by then.; and hi* is very likely to get away* with every game he pitches against the Nashvillians. Clsmson Has Good Record. Unfortunately for Ulemson sh * does not seem to be playing any S. 1. A A. colleges since locking horns with Tech and Georgia, and all her energies have been exerted toward overcoming the colleges of South Carolina. In this task she has been phenomenally successful, as 1 have not heard of a single defeat they hav* suttered in those games, though they have met Furman, Wof ford. Erskine, Newberry, Clinton, and others more than once each. It is apparent Clemson is playing a strong game of ball, but she cannot expect the ranking from victories over the South Carolina college teams to which she would be entitled had they been achieved over the average run of S. 1 A. A. teams. AUBURN met with rather a rude I awakening at the hands of Marlon, Military Academy But that hap pens to everybody now and then. So j far Auburn has a good record of college games won. and the only pity is that she hasn’t played many of he s. 1. A. A. teams. TENNESSEE. Tulane and Louis- j ;anu are hopelessly out of the run ning with very weak teams. Mis sissippi A. & M. has a pretty fair team, and some particularly able in dividual players. They have not played enough games. MERGER is getting along pretty w«■ 11 with her Freshman pitchers,! winning one about every time she one. While not pennant on- benders the Baptists have not done at all badiy, all things considered. Another week or two and the Rah. Rah games will be over for another year. Outside of the fine showing of Georgia and Alabama the season ■ annot be said to have disclosed any thing remarkably fine or satisfying But many of the teams are compos- Will Pitch Arm Off For Giants t By Richard (“Rube”) Marquard. (rltiintpiuti left-handed pitcher of the major leagues and holder of the world's record of nineteen consecutive victories.) T HERE Ik very little nourishment to anyone in trying to live on a repu tation. In my profession there is absolutely no possibility of sticking around very long on past [lerformanoes. For which reason I am all the* more anxious to gel busy just as quickly us possible and help the Giants to win n third straight pennant. I look for my best season the coming campaign. I have been rather unfortunate, else I would now bo taking my regular turn in the box and striving with might, and main to pile up such a record as I never dreamed within my possibilities when to the general public I was posing on the iM'tich as the “eleven-thousand dollar lemon.” That I aiu not tit as any regular under command of McGraw is no fault of mine. Unfortunately, just when i had rounded Into my winning stride I was stricken by a severe attack of tonsilltls. For a week now 1 have been a victim of this provoking aggravation. I have improved so steadily from the first, however, that i think I will l>e my old self in a very short time. It is my ambition this year to shine as the leading pitcher of New York’s champions. To do so I will have to make every opportunity count for tlie moat, for on my own club I will encounter much stlflfer competition lliun ever before. tt tt K rpllE greatest pitcher tlial the world lias ever known must lieeoine one of I my follow victims if I am to lead McGraw's stable al the end of the drill. Christy Mathewson arises after twelve years of brilliant work to a height of perfection ever before attained -at least since I have Iieen one of his associates. .loff Tesreau, the young Hercules, was an excellent performer In 1 With the added experience tie should he even better now, and one worthy of bidding for honors with the very liesl in the league. Ueon Ames will have Ids host year, or I am sadly mistaken. George Wlltse Is hack to ids 1908 form -practically Invincible when worked once a week while Al Demarco appears a recruit of exceptional promise. Now. here is the point I am trying to drive. If I had nobody to lieat out hut .Matty. I would have the toughest little job of my life. But when there are three or four other pitchers jusi as likely as not to step rigid out with the grand old master, then it is time for one to liogin to consider the little things. They may develop grave matters. And not the least is a lale start. For tills reason I hope for an early return to form, so tliitt I umy lie able to lump rigid Into the frav tiefore my associates get too much of a jump. tt tt tt 1 STATED aliovo ttmt I expected my last year in 1913. I will tell why 1 am Imbued with'such self-confidence. Barring my present slight indlspo- sitlon. I have never felt better physically. My arm never was in lietter shape thus early in the year. Many people believed lliut I hud not done justice to myself by falling to report in Marlin with the rest of the team. I disagree with them. Be cause i had not intended to take the filll course of preparation In Texas, I was all the more careful to look after my heallli and physical condition during the off season. M\ theatrical engagements of the winter were not allowed to interfere in the slightest degree. 1 spent a great deal of time out of doors. 1 made excellent use of gymnasiums in the various cities 1 visited. 1 may trutli fully say tliat when 1 did report to Manager McGraw I was far from the physical wreck tliat the press of certain localities painted me. Indeed, I lielieve tlint I was in much lietter condition at reporting time than the majority of my team mates upon-their arrival at Marlin. More than a quarter of an hour each day throughout the winter 1 devoted ex- Hiisivch to the development of my pitching arm. Then, later, when I got to t’aiifornin in the spring. I had an opportunity of conditioning my wind and logs. 1 worked Just about as hard, on the side, as it would have Iieen possible to work In Texas. I was fortunate in being able to take advantage of the White Sox training camp and derived untold benefit from association with Callahan’s men. 1 am satisfied in my own mind I will prove as much to the public be fore many weeks roll round that I am every iiil as good now as I was a rear ago when I was compiling my record of nineteen straight wins. Tliat experience taught me a good lesson. It taught me the emptiness of individual honors us compared to team effectiveness. I think 1 should have made a liottev showing for the season if i had not won nineteen straight. at «» tt r CAN tell you the worry of those last few games was something terrible. 1 Walter Johnson and Jim- Wood, you will remember, were crowding me pari ,,f the time. It was not so had then, for 1 had something to take the worry off myself. When Wpod stumbled the strain increased. But when Johnson fell by the wayside, and i alone win witlitu easy distance of the record, my nervous tension cannot l*e realised. it showed plainly enough in the reaction following my first defeat, it took a long time. 1 can tell von, to regain my equilibrium. I shall never forgei the remark of a strong-hinged fan in a game shortly afterward when i was getting my bumps "Take out the big stiff,'’ he shouted to McGraw. "Nineteen straight. cliV Somebody must have Iieen kidding him. But that’s the way with fandom. And it showed how foolish, under prevailing lack of sentiment, It is for anybody to try to s|ieolaliae on indi vidual performance That record wasn’t much of a comfort to me. when the nervous reaction got me in Its grip. Chicago and Pittsburg were rushing up so fast that our early lead was dwindling to comparatively nothing. I’d have given the old record, cinch us 1 prize it. just about that time to have Iieen aide to mount the mound with normal effectiveness, l^ist year's record jierfornianee. of course, assured me a very satisfactory season, and if I can go out this time and heat my old marks 1 shall do so gladly, if a pitcher didn't try tiis liest to win every game he wouldn't get verv far; hut of tills you may he sure: If I win twenty-five in a row 1 shall not worry one iota about the twenty-sixth. I'll pitch In it just the same as in Hie first, and will think no more of the outcome one way or the other. in the main, of new men this — and thdt means thev will be :i -:.ck with a superior w>rand of goods again in 1811. MIKE MURPHY AGAIN SICK. PHILADELPHIA. Mai 7 .Mike Mtirphv. veteran trainer of the Uni versity of Pennsylvania team, is suf- ia\ from a recurrence of his % and it may be some time will be able lu resume hts APPALACHIAN LEAGUE OPENS SEASON THURSDAY KNOXVILLE, TEXN . May Appalachian League opens 1 set to-morrow Following opening da> schedule: third i th* Ml Clev Johns' at Km el j d at Rom »»o» Cll> Bristol, LEO HOUCK AND M'GOORTY MATCHED TO BOX MAY 27 DENVER COLO Max 7 Eddie McGoorty. of Oshkosh. Uas signed to meet Leo Houck, of Boston, in a ten- round bout May 27. The weight agreed upon is 160 pounds at 3 oVloel Rudy Unholz is working with M Goort> dally si the Arvada training quarters. mu BUG EARLY III lift By Rev. Goo. H. Bradford. Chancellor Oklahoma University. G uthrie, okla., May 7.—i win always pull for Clark Griffith to win, and now, of course, I am watching with great interest the work of Walter Johnson. Clyde Milan, Carl fashion, and Griffith'- other stars, hoping they will win the pennant in the American League this year. Clark Griffith and I were roommates at the Wesleyan University. Bloom ington, Ill., twenty-four years ago, and even in those days, Griffith was entitled to the designation of “Old Fox.” It was utterly impossible for Grif fith to study when springtime brought on baseball fever. He and 1 roomed together and studied Latin together. 1 remember this study in particu lar. He was a fine student and an all-around excellent fellow, but—to use a common expression—baseball had him grabbed, and 1 believe that his success to-day is based on the foundation for bis future career th^t he laid at Bloomington. Could Not Resist Baseball. Baseball commenced to work on Griffith regularly about this time of year, and he just could not resist the call. 1 was even then preparing for the ministry and was kept hard at work most of the time. Griffith would become entirely dis gusted. however, with my attempts to study, and many a time he has thrown my Greek and Latin books out at the window and then hidden them underneath the walks and buildings so that 1 would be com pelled to put on an old glove and catch for him. Tie used -me for a battery mate while he acquired con trol and speed and got his curves to .working just right. He never want ed to quit, and I was always the one to finally call a halt. 1 have stood many a time, with my back to one of the buildings, and caught Griffith while be was getting his arm in condition for the spring season. Griff Wasn't Graduated. We had a good baseball team at Bloomington, in those days, and Giif- flth, of course, was one of the stars The best of my knowledge is that he is the one big baseball star produced by that school. 1 do not remember that Griffith was studying with any particular future career In his mind, and J am certain that he was not studying for the ministry, but he quit school before be graduated in order to go into professional baseball. His success shows that he was correct in Ids judgment, for I doubt If many graduates of Wesleyan make as much salary per annum as does the Wash ington manager. I learned to love baseball because of my associations with Griffith, and 1 am glad to pro claim myself an ardent fan to-day. PEACOCK NET STARS MEET IN FINALS WEDNESDAY With tlie exception of one match, the tennis tournament among the stu dents of Peacock-Fleet has now nar- j rowed down to the finals which, the i weather permitting, w ill be played off j this afternoon In the singles Hoff Sims drew a berth in the finals* by defeating Lewis' Sams yesterday by the close score of 6-4, 2-6, 9-7. His opponent for the school championship will be the win ner of the match between Black and Beall, which will start to-days pro gram In th** doubles Sims and Black took a place in the finals by defeating Knox and Hunnicutt. 6-1, 6-2. By defeating Howard and Scott. Orme C. and Hop kins will be their foes. PETER KNISELY REPORTS TO MANAGER MOLESWORTH BIRMINGHAM. ALA . May 7.—Pe- ter Knisely. center fielder and hard hitter, recently purchased from the Chicago Nationals, reported yesterday to Manager Molesworth for duty on the Birmingham ba*-vball club. He will probably join the team when it leaves New Orleans Knisely Is in good physical condition. He an nounces that McDonald, the third baseman also purchased from Chica go, \4 Hi report here fn a few days. Birmingham U said to have paid $6,400 for the two players | Sporting Food j y QKORQE E. PH AIR WHO LAUGHS LAST LAUGHS BEST. "It grieves me to think you have fallen so low." No id Evers to Tinker and Chance. "It grieves me to see them all trim ming you so" Said Evers to Tinker and Chance. “Perchance if you gents will drop in for a calI, And watch while we cop the world's series next Fall, My athletes will show you some regu lar hall." Said Evers to Tinker and Chance. Reports from Detroit indicate that there is almost as much peace among the Tigers as there is in Mexico. In view of his showing against this Moran person, we are all the more firm ly convinced that Luther McCarty Is a good cowboy. BUSINESS OF WORRYING. (By Any Mogul.) My athletes clout the hounding hall And round the bases hurry, And in my safe the dollars fall, SO I SHOULD WORRY! The report, that the French are be coming proficient at baseball reminds us that a gent named Napoleon Lajoie is a fairly good player. Tom Jones manages Ad Wolgast; Ad Wolgast manages Willie Hoppe. If V'/ll- lle Hoppe manages to get any money out of that combination, he is SOME manager. Still, we fear that Mr. Wolgtst never will become a successful manager, ilis conversational faculties have been sadly neglected. It is not true, as a headline asserts, that the tank season ended last night. In the interval between this paragraph and the one above, w r e hiked across the streer and punished one. One good purse deserves another, so to speak. In other words. Messrs. KiI - bane and Dundee will meet again. I WONDER WHY. / know not why. hut when I make my way To yonder park to spend ft joyous "time. The athletes seem like wooden men. and play A brand of hall that is a heinous crime. And yet. when I am forced to stay away. - Each athlete plays the game like Tyrus Cobb. I wonder why it is they always play Like fiends ichen / am not upon the fob* As for combination.- the New York Yacht Club is a combination in restraint of sportsmanship. The National Commission was In ses sion yesterday, but there is no truth in the rumor that unfermented grape juice was served. In view of the fact that there is no ninth place in the American League, the Yankees are in eighth place. Possibly Bai Nelson will spurn our advice, but when a man takes a beat ing from a youth with a name Hke Gilbert Gallant, it is time to retire. “I am the greatest boxer in the world.” quoth Luther McCarty, making a violet resemble a brass band. Whenever we gaze on a wrestler we are grieved to think that the lure of the sporting game has shattered a promising career as a piano mover. WHAT’S THE USE? Lives of baseball stars remind us We may play like Tyrus Cobb, And, departing, leave behind us Some (me else to fill our job. BILL CHAPPELLE TO JOIN CRACKER SQUAD SOON MOBILE. ALA.. May 7.—Manager Billy Smith, of the Atlanta team, an nounced last night that he would sign Pitcher Bill Chappelle, of the Chattanooga team, in the near future. He would not give any Intimation, however, of who he would release to make room for the big right-hander. George Rohe played in the game yesterday and was signed up as util ity player Kernan was released out right and given transportation back to Atlanta. Manager Smith stated that he ex pected Oytfielder RAiJey to join the team In Montgomery to-morrow. GOLF COURSES Oil Tills SIDE By “Chick” Evans. C HICAGO. May 7.—I went up a few nights ago for a farewell dinner with Mr. and Mrs. H. S. Colt of London, England. Mr. Colt is the noted golf course expert who has been In this country for several weeks. I first met Mr. Colt during the Brit ish amateur championship at Prest wick. Scotland. He came up to me, introduced himself and invited me to visit him at his beautiful home* at Sunning Hill, near London. It was a most kindly and gracious thing to do. I had landed in England with a most terrible fit of homesickness, but from the very beginning such thor ough kindness and hospitality was shown the homesick boy that he can never forget it. It was not a per sonal question at all—just genuine British hospitality shown to a very young American golfer. Our conversation at the dinner nat urally drifted to the subject near my own heart. Chiefly I was anxious to find out what he considered the most prominent weaknesses of our courses, because we naturally assume that the British courses are the best in tiie world and Mr. Colt a leading British authority. Mr. Colt told me that he considered our shots up to the bole, as a rule, are not closely enough guarded or bunkered; he thinks that they should be narrowed more as they approach the hole. He also objects to our fre quent cross-hazards because they punish equally the long drives of our best players and the short second's of our poorer ones. He does not share our intense keenness for water haz ards—be thinks them relatively unim portant. He objects to parallel courses, not only because they are monotonous, but because they are ex tremely dangerous, much more so than those crossing at right angles. Mr. Colt is a great believer in kinks in the sw r ing of the course, that is, in making the line of the course vary considerably from the straight. He also believes In many tees and no erections—that is, be does not believe in the terraced tees, or terraced greens, of which we have so many. These ideas of Mr. Colt are, inter esting to hear and wejl worth con sidering. While in America lie has been put ting in a twelve-hour day, and a lit tle later I shall give a detailed ac count of seme of his labors. After leaving Chicago he went to Detroit^ From Detroit he will prob ably use the following itinerary: To ronto. Ottawa. Montreal. Brookline, Garden City and a new course near Philadelphia. rOBACCO HABIT Vou c,n C ° nv ” r * T ^UNVVV easily i n 3 days, lm prove your health, prolong your Ilf: No more stomach trouble, no foul breath, no heart weak ness. Regain manly vigor, calm nerves, elear eyes and superior mental stronfth. W’hether you chew or smoke pipe, cigarettes, cigars, get my Interesting Tobacco Book. Worth Its weight In gold. Mailed fret. K. J. WOODS. 534 Sixth Ave.. 748 M.. New York. N. Y. By William F. Kirk. Copyright, 1913, International News Service. W HEN the sands of the desert grow frigid, To quote from a popular song, When jelly and^syrup grow rigid. When days in December grow long; When newly born babes begin thinking. When everything dry becomes wet, When good old John D. starts in drinking And losing his coin at roulette: When every man's wife is contented. When husbands stay in every night. When all of the crooks have repented. When Johnson and Langford turn white; When women stop talking of voting. When vice is extinct in New’ York, When cork in the water stops floating And lead becomes lighter than cork; When all of these miracles stunning Take place to the wonder of men, Our “Matty” may lose all his cunning— And it isn’t a cinch he will then! Organized baseball does not fear the Federal League—but Just as a precau tion against the impossible, they have arranged to transfer games so that there will be something doing in every Federal town on opening day. * * * Pitcher Ira Hogue, last year a Crack er. has been sold to the Minneapolis club of the American Association'. Ira is a. willing cuss, and so anxious to learn that he is sure to improve fast. • * * Somebody rises to inquire why,* if baseball is as bad as he pictures it, Horace Fogel remained in so long. » * * * Davenpprt says the Federal League will open on the Installment plan— Cleveland to-morrow, and so on. * <■ V It will probably close with a loud bang * * * The manager of the Syracuse team was forced recently to suspend five players for refusing to sign their con tracts. They must have a salary limit up in the N. Y. State League, too. * * * McGraw is going to put hobbles on Snodgrass when he gets to first to keep him for breaking for second* # * * Don’t worry, they will not forfeit any games that Atlanta played with Wil liams on the team. President Callaway had formal permission from President Kavanaugh to use the man. * * * Wisdom of Carleton Molesworth: “There’s no use firing poor players to get worse ones.” * * * Umpires are human after all. For instance. Brick Owens Is said to be saving igarette coupons. * * * At Charley Murphy’s park the pop and popcorn peddlers are said to out number the spectators on dull days. * * * In eighteen games, the Red pitchers allowed 248 opponents to get to first. Charley Hemphill is batting 431 for St. Paul. Judged from preliminary announce ments the team Jack O’Connor has rounded up for the St. Louis Federal League club would make a fair show ing in the Empire State League. A lot of "iron men” are on the scrap heap. UMPIRE OWENS LET CUT. NEW YORK, May 7.—President Lynch, of the National League, an nounced last night that he had dis missed Umpire C. B. Owens for viola tion of the rules of deportment. The violation alleged consisted in entering a gambling resort. FULL OF SCABS What could be more pitiful than the rondi tion 10’d of In this letter from A. R. Avery, Waterloo. N. Y.: We have been using your Tetterlne. It’s the beet on earth for skin ailments. Mrs. S. C. Hart was a sight to see. Her face was a mass of scabs. Tetterlne has cured It. Cured by Tetterine Tetterine cures eczema, ground Itch, ring worm and all skin troubles. Its effect Is j magical. 50c at druggists, or by mall. 8HUPTRINE CO.. SAVANNAH. GA. 606 SALVARSAN 914 Neo Salvarsan The two celebrate, German preparation, that have cured per manently more ease; of eyphillis or bloo< poison In the last twi years than has beei cured in the history o the world up to thi time of this wonderfu discovery. Come anc let me demonstrate t( — you how I cure thli dreadful disease ir three to five treatments. I cure th< following diseases or make no oharae Hydrocele. Varicocele. Kidney. Blad der and Prostailc Trouble, Lost Man. hood, Stricture. Acute end Chronlt Gonorrhea. ana all nervous and chronic diseases of men and women Free consultation and examination! Hours; 8 a. m. to 7 p. m.; Sunday, DR. J. D. HUGHES 16'/a North Broad St., Atlanta, Ga. Opposite Third National Bank. IT SEEMS ALMOST MARVELOUS White City Park Now Open OI7PHIISLE .nd Dn.sm.sn. This time it is no other than a young man 20 years of age—Mr. Charles D. Owens, who resides with his parents at East Point, this city. He has been a sufferer for the past five years with what was supposed to be some form of stomach trouble, but after taking six doses of Quak er Extract, expelled a monster 61 - foot tapeworm, head and all com plete. Mr. Owens Is a young man of this city. Although 20 years of age. he has had a hard struggle for life. The commencement of his trouble was about four years ago. He would have a great distress in his stomach, bloating, belch ing. sometimes fluttering of the heart, short breath, dizzi ness. headache, sometimes pains in the back of head or in back of low er bowels, sometimes extending down into the lower limbs. Charley, as he is familiarly called, has bad several very good positions. Vet, | i— —i— - — —■ -> i -i —> —i — —i —i -i -i -i owing to his poor health, would have to give them up afer a short time. He has had several attacks of fever. Four years ago he was laid up for several weeks: in fact, has been very much alarmed, and the strangest thing of it all, with all his poor health he could eat more at one meal than an ordinary small family. After eating a good, hearty meal within one hour he would be hungry again, and still he grew thinner and weaker. During all these five years he has been trying different treatments, dosing with almost everything on the market, but nothing he took ever gave him even the slightest relief, and so he suffered on, as he said, w hen he called at Coursey & Munn’s drug store and told how he suffered with his stomach, and- told about all the treatments ne had taken, without the least results. He was told then that a tapeworm was causing alights trouble. I truly believe It. And If it is, you take this Quaker Extract ’ according to directions on the bottle and watch for results,” he was told. He did, and behold! six (Just six) doses were taken. He felt a little disturbance 1n his bowels, respond ing to nature’s call, and expelled a monster tapeworm, head and all spuirmlng and alive, and this min ister 61 feet in length. This case should convince even the most skeptical of the wonderful power of the Quaker Remedies. Where the worm expelling power is a great thing, it Is one of the smallest virtues of the wonderful Quaker Extract and Oil of Balm, They are cures for rheumatism, catarrh, kidney, liver, stomach or blood trouble, constipation, Indi gestion, and will build up weak, run down man or womam Obtain the Quaker Remedies at Coursey & Munn’s drug store, 29 Marietta street. We prepay express charges on all orders of $3.on or over.