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HEARS? S »LMIM> AMhitn A.\ BAStBALL 4UMD OTHER SPORTS SUNDAY, MAY 11, 10U1
Showing Here That Jeff Is Also SOME Ring General
By “Bud” Fisher
By Tick Tiehenor.
W HILE I stated In last Sunday's
Amtrlcan that our Rolf does
not yet class with that of the
Bast and West, still there has been
s marked Improvement in the work
of our players In the last five or six
years
For example let us compare the
scores made In the first tournament
held over the East ljtke course and
the tournament which ha* Just been
finished for the Henry \V. IJavis cup
over the same course.
The 11 ret tournament held by the
Atlanta Athletic Club was held Sep
tember If. 190«. and an examination
of the cards returned In the qualify
ing round proves beyond the shadow
of a doubt that the Rolf now beina
played has improved on an average
of at least n stroke a hole.
It Is true that when this first tour
nament was played, now nearly -seven
years ago, the course was new
»r,d therefore was not in very Rood
ondltion But even making al
lowance for the defective condition
of the course there is too great a
difference between the scores then re
turned and those now being made to
be accounted for in any other way
than in the Improvement in the men
swinging the clubs.
* * •
I N this first tournament there were
thirty-two starters In the quali
fying round and F. G. Byrd was the
only one to turn in a score of less
than a hundred In fact his ninety-
eight was eleven strokes better than
W. J. Tilson. who was the next man.
The scores ranged all the way from
Byrd’s ninety-eight to Joe Colquitt’s
two hundred and six which So far
as I know is a record.
W. G. Byrd and the writer had the
only fives at the twelfth and Byrd’s
four was the only one at the thir
teenth. Not a man got a four at the
fourteenth but TV. .1 Tiison, S. TV.
Trawick B. J. Clay. Lotvry Arnold.
TV K. Stone, C. P. King and IV. H.
Glenn all had fives. Byrd and Tra
wick had the only fives at the fif
teenth qnd Marye and Langston had
t-lie only sixes at the sixteenth S. C.
Williams was alone in the glory of
having the only five at the seven
teenth, while Byrd scored the only
six at the eighteenth. This made
the best ball coming home forty-four
or one under fives. The only hole
which-was played under par was the
fifth at which Lowry Arnold and O.
TV. Street holed threes.
• * •
N OW lit the tournament which was
started on April 26 and finished
last week there were only fifty-five
players who returned cards but of
this number there were twenty-seven
who were as good or better than the
low score In that first tournament
seven years ago
. If other evidence is deeired to es
tablish the general Improvement In
the playing of our golfers let us
compere the score returned in the
qualifying round of the first South
ern Championship played here in
June, 1907, and those made at Chat
tanooga last June.
In 1907 there were only two men
of the one hundred and forty, who
teed up in the qualifying round of
the Southern Championship, who
were able to break a ninety. Law
rence Eustia, at New Orleans, won
the low score medal with an elghty-
alx and K. G. Byrd was second Just
onr stroke behind him. R. H. Brooke
and Neleen WTiltney tied for third
place with an even ninety. All of
those who were as good as ninety-
seven qualified In the Championship
flight, which at that time was limit
ed to sixteen Those whose score*
were between ninety-seven and one
hundred qualified in the second flight.
The first flight In tills tournament
consisted of eight players and all of
those who made as good as one hun
dred and sixteen In the qualifying
round got In It Playing true to
the form exhibited in the qualifying
round F G. Byrd and W. J. Tilson
met in the final which Byrd won
eight up and six to play.
Those who made between one hun
dred and seventeen and one hundred
and twenty-three got tn the second
flight which also consisted of eight
players This flight was won by J.
Q Darling who Jisposed of P. H.
Whiting in the final at the fifteenth
green.
The third flight consisted of all
tb» other entries and was the only
flight of sixteen. In some unex-
piatnabb manner yours truly, who
had qualified with a score of one
honored and twenty-six, managed to
win from V Carrol! Latimer in the
flr.al of this flight
IF we go further in an examtna-
1 tion of the cards returned in the
qualifying round of this tournament
you will And that the best ball of
the entire thirty-two players was on
!y elghty-one. In making this best
ash soore P Thornton Marye was
the only man who had as good as a
three at the first hole W. P. Hill,
C. A Langston and F a Byrd had
fives on the second. Byrd had the
or!y threo at the third and Marye
the only four at the fourth. Lowry
Arnold and O. D street had threes
at trie fifth and H clay Moore had
the oqlj four at the sixth The
seventh was easy, if we are to judge
from the number of players who ne
gotiated it in five They were W
J. Tilson, C. A. Langston, B. J. Clay.
T B. Paine. J. G. Darling and A. T
E. Brown. P H. Whiting was the
only man to get a five at the eighth
S W. Trawick W J Tilson and B
J. Clay had the only fives at the
ninth. This made the best ball go
'tig out total thirty-seven. Coming
home F. G. Byrd alone had a four
at the tenth W. J. Tilson, P T
Marye. S W. Trawick and Fulton
Colville tied with fives at the
eleventh
* • •
FROM one hundred to one hundred
* and three qualified in the third
flight and from one hundred and
three to one hundred and six made
the fourth flight. All of the flights
at that time were made up of six
teen players each.
Last year at Chattanooga the qual-
tvir.e r-«und was thirty-six hole*
nstead of eighteen as in 1907 and
it t o’; one hundred and seventy-five
for the two rounds or an average of
els i> -seven and « half to get Into
•hv nrst thirty-two as against a
■v-mareft for the same number in
'#< ani t also took « good aa nlno-
I’O List To rttqp
ANOTHER. JMWettSe. '
SCHOOL FJot TO SLAffV
<n tht j0.w today
THOVe LlTTce GGNS
Ducit Aovjp
■•OR.
r
SA'f, JEFf, 1 JUVr jA>l
another. Gap ak.ov>nd
THE CORfMSE
OH , LfcAO
N.t TO IT. Leu-j;
.UPftR
Bean Writes About Hit-Run Play
0 © © © © a o
Calls It Hardest Offensive Stunt
Clemson Wins Final
Game From Auburn
By Joe Bean-
A FEW yearn ago while watching
a game at the Boston Ameri
can league grounds, I was in
troduced to the captain of one of the
largest Eastern college base ball
teams. During the course of con
versation he Intimated that they used
the hit and run style of play a great
deal.
The thought struck me that they
must be pretty well advanced In the
art to accomplish thl.« to any great
extent, especially as this is the hard
est offensive* play to make. The way
to puil it off or the way to break It
up is utterly unknown. The hit and
run as we all know is called “hit
and run” because the player that Is
on base runs before the ball Is hit.
* * *
W E will take the play with the
runner on first base and the
ripnal Is given for the runner to steal.
The sign.il has been given by the
batsmen because he has figured that
the condition of balls and strikes
that he has against him is in his
favor. He things the pitcher is go-
in* to put It over. That is. he ex
pects to have the hall come near
enough to lake a crack at It. Algo
he has figured opt who is going to
cover second base and he is going
to hit it through the opening left by
that player. If the batsman strikes
at tlie ball and misses, the catcher
can or cannot get him at second base.
This all depends on the quickness yf
the play, but the chances are against
the runner. If lie hits the ball in
the Infleld the base runner who lias
had n good start reaches second and
the batsman retired at first, but if
the batsman hits through the Infleld
the runner will Invariable go to third
and the play has been a success.
While the batsman.is figuring out the
play and giving the signal to the
runner there is also some figuring
going on by the pitcher, catcher and
infields of the opposing team
* * *
S UPPOSE the catcher has gotten
wise to the hit and run signal.
He calls for a waist ball or a pitch
out. The players on the infleld saw
It also, and knew that the danger of
the batsman hitting through the in
fleld was not very great. Supposing
that the catcher did not get the sig
nal, it Is up to the short stop or sec
ond baseman to break up the play and
this Is* done by not going over to
cover the bag until the ball has pass
ed the batter and the catcher has
it. In this way the infleld Is always
in place up until the last possible
fraction of a second and then the
infleld. hall and base runner come
into the. play and n fast double play
is the result.
Some people will say It was
tough luck and can not see the good
play made by the inflelders. though
of course a double pla> is appre
ciated by the baseball public in gen
eral. How many times have you seen
the baserunner start to steal and be
enlied back because the batter has
hit a fly ball. There are players who
when playing hit and run take th• ir
healthy wallop Just the same as the.'
do when driving for a long tilt and
the result is a fly to the out field or
infleld. Skillful pla>ers are h little
more careful.
* * *
I N writing about this play I have
brought into view' Just why thie
play is used with a man on second
or with a man on first and second
It is Just as difficult to make under
one condition as it is under another,
though it has been said that to work
it from second Is easier than from
flr-"t. When the play is pulled off
correctly it is a great play and one
that brings applause and commenda
tion from the fans. The opposing
team feels it badly, and when it is
broken up the offensive team feels
the same way. So you can see that
ty-one to get into the first sixty-
four which Is equivalent to the four
flights as arranged in 1907.
* * »
T HE team match in 1907 was de
cided by the" four lowest scores
returned by the player- of any one
club and it was not necessary to
name the members of the team be
fore starting as it Is now. Vet In
1907 the lowest scores returned by
the four players of any one club
was three hundred and fifty-eight,
while last year, with a team named
before they started the Fountry Flub
of New Orleans’ cut off forty-three
strokes from the above number or
an average of nearly eleven’ strokes
per man
True it is that the Chattanooga
course is somewhat easier than the
course of the A A. but the differ
ence is only two or thre? strokes
and not eleven as the dope o?
qualifying rounds show. Therefore
there ran be but one answer for the
differem in til© scoring—our golf
Is imA'ing
the lilt and run play If pulled off
successfully is a great help.
* * *
FVJRJNG the spring practice when
new players are reixjrting. many
interesting tales are told, yome con
cern the former playmates, some the
majors, some the happenings during
the winter, and every one connected
with baseball gets theirs. Dur
ing one of the fanning bees In Provi
dence on a wet day the players were
all congregated around the stove and
Bill Murray came in and joined the
crowd and after listening to the bill,
started in to tell about his experience
on the Dover, X. H., team. They
had a good team and started the
season well and were leading with
1.000 per cent when they took aslump
and lost quite a few games They
eventually got back on their feet and
started up the ladder when one of
the newspapers had a long article
saying that if the team kept up its
present gait they would soon be back
to 1.000 percentage.
AMATEUR GAMES
SUNDAY SCHOOL LEAGUE.
Three games were played in the Sun
day School League yesterday. 8. V. D
won its second straight battle by trim
ming Westminster 20 to 7 in a feature
less battle. The score.
R. H. E.
8. V. D 221 400 029—20 16 10
Westminster 101 120 002— 7 7 8
Batteries: Robertson and Huekably;
Mitchell and Parks.
St. Phillips defeated Grace by a score
of 10 to 6 in a five-inning game. The
score:
St. Phillips B12 02—10 7 4
Grace 003 03— S 5 5
Batteries: Cape and Fox: Fenv and
Hair.
Collage Park won from Capitol View
in a slugging match. 16 to 11 The score:
College Park 230 012 800 16 14 5
Capitol View 100 403 003—11 12 6
Batteries: Alonquino and Heard;
Alley and Smith.
"... \,.’T.—
Manufacturers’ League.
Atlanta National was a 7-to-3 victor
over Murray Company. The scofie:
Atlanta National 101 020 80—7 11 4
Murray 101 010 00—3 8 5
Batteries: Golightly and Anderson;
Smith and Curtis.
Hallet & Davis shut out Louisville
Railway, 13 to 0. The -core.
Hallet «Sr Davis 023 320 102—13 14 2
Louisville Rail way. 000 000 000— 0 4 10
Batteries: Blackman and Nert; Fer
guson and Durrett.
P. P. G. & Company won a close game
from Red Seal. 8 lo 7. The score:
l\ IV G. & Co 004 003 10—8 16 4
Red Seal 003 130 00—7 8 9
Batteries: Kelley and Chaplin. Was-
sem and ,lubant.
Baraca League.
Jonathons won a slugging game from
McDonald by a score of 16 to 10 The
score R. H.E.
Jonathons 31.0 120 45* 16 18 6
McDonald 002 120 0^3—10 IT 6
Bateries: Hafer and Vandergriff:
Morgan and Herod
Agogas was an 18 to 2 winner over
Gordon Street The score: R. H E.
Agogas 080 102 «5l IS 20 3
Gordon Streei 010 010 000 2 2 8
Bateries: Jenoley. Weston and Lew
is; Brown and Slate
Wesley downed Grant Park* 14 to 4.
The score: R. HE.
Wesley ... H 000 260 14 14 2
Grant FLrk .400 000 000 4 5 4
Junior Sunday League.
Asbury trimuphed over Grace. 11 to
9, in the only sjame played in the Junior
Sunday School League \ esterdav
Score R. H. E.
Asbur> 001 520 010 2 It 13 11
Grace .201 110 400 0 9 7 8
Batteries: Speake and Wilson: Mur
phy and Holman.
Railroad League.
Standard OH defeateo the Texas
Company 19 to 3 in a one-sided battle
Score: R. H. E.
Standard Oil .820 400 028 19 22 4
Texas Company . 000 020 0\0 3 7 7
Batteries: Cooper and GlUete;
Hughes and Bullock.
West Point rolled up a S3 to 6 score
against Woodward Company.
Score. K. H. E.
W est Point 513 T84 300 -83 22 4
Woodward Co. .01^ S03 000 6 11 11
Batteries: Edmondson and Snow:
Hazzlehurst and Hoykil.
Saturday Afternoon League.
Fulion defeated Atlanta Gas Company
8 to 3. The score R. H.E.
FuUon 000 $00 03* 6 6 2
A O C 000 200 100—3 8 3
Ratt tries: Howard and Milton: Dukes
and Meyers.
Whittier walked away from Exposi
tion Mills. 13 to 7. .’he score: R.H.E
Whit :e- J CI'*> f;* 12 14 9
Exposition . .. - 'T 013 000 7 0 5
Bate-ies. u.wards ar.d Thompson:
I awsen and Gillette.
Auto Ten took a slugging catch from
.V A. Stars. 10 to P The score: R. H.E.
Auto Top 100 230 l^t 03 jo is 3
N. A Stars .013 001 002 02 9 11 5
Batteries Henderson and Garret.
UaCtouuel and Strong
Winners Clinch Second Place in
S. I. A. A.—Ezell and Davenport
Play Last Contests.
A uburn, ala., May 10.—Clem
son defeated Auburn in the
deciding game of the series’
here this afternoon 6 to 3. The game
was fast and exciting till the end
and was full of brilliant fielding.
Daves was hit hard, but was steady
In the pinches.
Cureton started the game by bit
ting out a home run. Davenport hit
n long triple in the sixth but was
thrown out trying to stretch it to a
home run Hutto, Hires and Tenant
featured with three hits each. Moul
ton featured in the field by scooping
Brown’s grounder over second and
throwing him out at first.
Auburn threatened to overcome
Clemson’s lead in the fifth when .Ma
jor opened for two hags and was
sacrificed to third by Moulton Harris
hit a hot liner at Ezell which he
caught and threw Major out at third.
Williams’ pegging killed many base
runners,, only one base being stolen
off him. The game was hard fought
as second place honors in the S. I.
A. A. depended on the outcome of the
series.
Ezell and Davenport played their
last S. I. A. A. games, Ezell going
to Pittsburg with the close of college
The box score:
Auburn. ab. r. h. po. a. e.
Major, 3b . . 4 0 1 1 1 0
Moulton, sb. . 3 0 0 2 2 0
Haris, cf . . 4 ft ft 2 it 0
Davenport, lb . 4 0 1 8 0 1
Locke, rf. . . 3 1 1 1 0 1
Williams, c. . . 3 2 1 9 3 0
Graydon, If . . 2 0 0 2 0 0
Louiselle, 2b. . 4 0 ft 2 1 1
Davis, p. • . 3 0 0 1 1 u
Totals • .. .30 3 4 27 8 3
Clemson. ab. r. h. po. a. e.
Cureton, 3b . . 5 1 1 ft 4 0
Heirs, cf 6 I 3 1 1 l
Hutto, 2b. ... 5 1 3 1 3 0
Webb, lb ... 4 ft ft 15 ft ft
Tarrant, rf.. . . 4 1 3 1 ft 0
Walker, If. . . 3 ft 1 1 ft 0
Dean, c. . . . 1 ft ft 1 0 ft
Brown, c. . . . 3 ft 1 4 ft 0
Coles, 3b. ... 4 ft 0 2 2 0
Ezell, p 4 1 0 l 4 •)
Totals . . .38 6 12 27 14 1
Score by innings:
Auburn 010 200 000—3
Clemson 300 100 100—5
Summary: Two-base hits—Hiers,
Major. Three-base hit—Davenport.
Home run—Cureton. Stolen bases
Walker, Williams, Louiselle. Graydon
Sacrifice hits—Moulton, Webb. Walk
er. Bases on balls—Off Ezell. 4; off
Davis. 2. Struck out—By Ezell, 4; by
Davis, 9. Double play—Ezell to Cure-
ton. Umpire—Barr
JOHNSON HURLED RUNLESS
BALL FOR 86 INNINGS
WASHINGTON. May 10.—Way out
in the state of Washington in 190 7
when American League batters did
not know what it meant to stand at
the plate with palpitating hearts and
watch Waiter Johnson, speed king
prepare to shoot a fast one towmv
them the marvel of the hurler’.
mound bung up a record that western
fans will never forvet.
For 86 consecutive innings not
run had been made off the big
Swede’s delivery in the games he ha-J
pitched and It was not until the nintn
inning of a game between Johnson
team. Weiser and Caldwell, played at
the latter’s city, that a man scored.
Two were down and a Caldwell man
got to first on an error, stole second
and reached third on a passed l>al!.
A fluke hit through the infleld scored
the runner. Blankenship, sent to look
Johnson over by Washington, saw he
game and brought the phenom to the
big league.
MORGAN MAY BEAT DUNDEE
OUT OF KILBANE MATCH
IT-I
ATHLETES USE
S AN FRANCISCO, CAL., May 10.—
The man who said there is
nothing new under the sun did
not keep track of the constant
changes that are taking place in the
various lines of sport.
The old style of boxing, which had
tor its basic principle “stand straight
and hit from the shoulder” has gone
its way. Nowadays the best expo
nents of the art crouch and hit from
every old angle.
Later-day jockeys perch upon a
horse’s withers instead of riding with
the long stirrup of other years, while
the innovations that are seen in foot
ball, baseball and wrestling are sure
ly “too numerous to mention."
Now certain teachers of swimming
have discovered that the breast
stroke, even though It has endured
since the beginning, is all a mistake,
and that in order to achieve the best
results the young idea must be taught
to swim on its side and, for a change
method of natation, use the “crawl.”
Well, here is one threatened reform
that lends itself to discussion. With
the human family swimimng is an
acquired art and it stands to reason
that the living things wdth which the
practice is natural long ago settled
w r hich is the best stroke. Whoever
heard of a frog or a sturgeon or a
duck using anything but the breast
stroke?
Pretty soon the aeronauts will be
discovering faults in the method of
air navigation followed by the birds.
* * *
Ad Wolgast has become the man
ager of Willie Hoppe. This means
that Manager Tom Jones is now the
manager of a manager.
“Giants and Senators
Look Best“~Griffith
Washington Manager Says Speed
Will Win Pennant for Both
Ball Teams.
McCarty a Card Despite Roasting
© © ©
O 0
WASHINGTON, May 10.—Clark
Griffith declares that Washington is
going to win the American League
pennant and is equally positive that
the Giants will win in the National.
“And let me tell you something,” I
he said. “It ought to be the greatest
world’s series that has ever been
played. It will be the first time that
two really fast teams have ever got
together for the big prize. In the
past one of the teams always has been
superior on the bases while the other
was superior at the bat. The Giants
and my club operate along the same
lines, and, believe me. when we get
together it will be some fight.”
“Do you think you could beat the
Giants in a world's series?” he was
asked.
“Yes,” he replied. ‘In a seven-
game series I think Walter Johnson
can beat any club, though up to the
present I have considered Mathewson
tlie daddy of all pitchers. There will
never be another like mm, but John
son is younger and stronger now.”
“Don’t you seriously think that the
Athletics and the Red Sox have it on
you in batting*?”
“They may have,” he answered,
“but we rre going to beat them out
just like the Giants are going to beat
out Pittsburg and the other clubs —
on speed. There is nothing to it' the
day has come when the main thing
in baseball is gast base running. That’s
what McGraw and myself have.”
Heavyweight Has Many Offers
RIVERS VS. MURPHY.
NEW YORK. May 10—Only the
ouestion of weight appears to stand
in the way of a ten-round bout be
tween Harlem Tommy Murphy and
Joe Rivers here. Rivers wants to
weigh in at 133 pounds ringside, while
while Murphy ts insisting on 133
pounds at six o’clock.
Bv Ed W. Smith.
C HICAGO, ILL., May 10.—While
all the sport critics'of the
East have been putting that
white champion, Luther McCarty, on
.the grili and roasting him to a finish
in the last few days or ever sinec he
failed to make much of an impres
sion on Frank Moran, the Pittsburg
heavyweight, the Nebraska man con
tinues on his merry way, unmindful
of it all. As long as the promoters
continue to want McCarty’s services
for ring battles and the show end of
the game, Luther is content to take
the short end of it from the critics
and go along about his business just
the same as if they were tossing bou
quets at him. The big fellow has
a thick skin.
Fight fans around the Middle West
and on Lhe Pacific (''oast have long
since ceased to regard the Eastern
opinion as one to string along with
or to make many wagers on. Out
here the general feeling prevails that t
New York never could “see” very j
much that came out of the West in 1
an athletic line, and the critics there j
have been compelled so often to eat i
their own words that it has become
something of a joke. Occasionally
they pick out real live orres to laud ;
and only recently showered all sorts j
of encomiums on Mike Gibbons and
Packey McFarland. They couldn’t 1
help boosting in either case.
New York Roasted Jeffries.
It is well remembered that the first
time that Jim Jeffries showed in New
York -he was rcyasted out of the city.
The critics couldn’t find enough
harsh things to say about him. He
wasn’t exactly,a champion at the
time, but several good judges in the
West saw in him the right sort of
material, and the fact that escaped
the observation of the wise men of
the East made no difference to the
Western men, who proceeded to mold
Jeffries into one of the greatest fight
ing machines the ring ever saw.
Ad Wolgast always was a joke
with the Eastern men and they
laughed him to scorn when he showed
there. Yet out on tjle Pacific f’oasi,
where they kjnpw a real chkmpjon
when they see one. Wolgast al\va\s
was regarded as one of the greates*
of the lightweights.. .Wolgast proyt J
it more than once, too. over the real
championship route. So Luther Mc
Carty needn’t feel so terribly bad
about it, and incidentally, he doesn’t.
Luther to Meet Fulton.
McCarty and his manager. Bi'iy
McC’arney, whose unpopularity , with
certain promoters and press agents in
New York may account for some of
the roasts the fighter has been gel-
ting, passed through here recently on
their way to Kansas* City, where they
are showing for four days. They will
be in Omaha on the 8th, and after
that they will journey to Saskatoon,
where Luthtr will take on a big fel
low named Fred Fulton in a ten-
round encounter. From theFe they
will go to Calgary, where Tommy
Burns has Luther hooked up with
Arthur Pelkey, the New England
heavyweight ,
The four weeks following that will 1
be spent on the Pacific Coast in a
tour of the larger cities of that sec
tion. Nothing further has been book
ed for the big feliow, but it is a cer
tainty that lie will get on at one of
the fight arenas there with the win
ner of the Wijlard-Smith fight, the
date to be July 4. McCarney is so
confident of getting a big match for
the national holiday that he thinks it
is an absolute cinch. Billy declines* lo
express an opinion regarding the out
come of the meeting between M illard
and Smith other than to say 4hat
Willard will have to be absolutely at
his best to stick the twenty rounds
with the Gunboat.
Ffrtf CA*4c« thm WmM
Over
LOS ANGELES. CAL.. May 10 -
Promoter Tom McCarey decided that
ti e public was not enthusiastic over
the prospect of a return 'Kilbane
Dundee tattle. He immediately be
gan planning tor a bat tle bet we* n
Kilbane. who is featherweight
champion, and Edqle Morgan, who i-
classed as the featherweight cham
pion of England. McCarey hopes to
get Morgan and Kilbane Into the tin?,
for twenty rounds $bout the middle of
July.
CHANCE ORDERS CLARKE
TO JOIN TEAM AT ONCE
AMES IA May 9—Manager Frank
Chance of the New York American*
has ordered Georg? Clarke. Am
University student, to report to tlu
club at once. Clarke was with thi
Yankees part of last season and wa
farmed to Rochester of the Interna
tional league
He refused this spring to sign .i
Rochester contract becau» he woulr
not break off at eo|cge and was in
formed of Ms su*pw.#ion.
F lagrant Saazer Hop Gardens
Anheuser-Busch imports more Saazer Hop* than all other brtwias
Its this exclusive Saazer Hop flavor dut placed thdr master brew
Budweiser
Absolutely ALONE at the lop
of the world's bottled beers. The supreme quality and purity of
Budwei-^r cc me from our breving and aging only from die choicest
Barky ard n» est Saazer Hops. Our plant is the largest and finest
in the world bnd our output is the greatest.
F ntlmi only u 6m Ime pitot in ScLout*
Anheuser-Busch Brewery
ScJLoois.
JAS. F. LYNCH, Distributor Atlanta. Ga