Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, May 16, 1913, Image 10

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THE ATLANTA UJliOKliiA-N AND NEWS, KK11JA1, MAY lt>, 1913 Us Boys Big Doings Now the Masked Marvel Is on the Job K^ginterad Tniteil States Patent Office By Tom McNamara M HEP E1*M PARK, MKMTHIS, TENN., ay 16.—The Cracker* defeated the urtles in the final game of their aeries ere this afternoon by a acore of to 4 Pill Smith a men pounded Kroh hard i the early innings. Wallie Smith so ured his ninth straight hit when he ii)g!c<] his first time up. He whh hit by pitched ball hit second time up and ied to right on hla third chance. Paul Musser hurled for Atlanta Hailey. Long and Alperman starred at lie bat. LISTEN SOU), CAGLeBEAK SKyUDER. > AIN'T 60NNA PlA'I UilTn US NO ( *WRE BUT STICK AROOND AND WE -i \ SHOO) YOU SOMETHIN OUST AS 6000! THE GAME FIRST INNING. Long doubled to left. Bailey also doubled to left, scoring Long Hailey was retired at third, trying to steal. Seabaugh to Ward. Alperman fanned Welchonce grounded out, Ward to Ab stein. ONE RUN. Shaniey fanned. Baerwald grounded it. Smith to Agler. Ixjve filed to Bai ley. NO RUNS. SECOND INNING. Smith singled to center Bisland bunted to Kroh. who threw wild to Ab- stein. Smith went to third and Bisland t<> second. Agler grounded out, Butler to Abstein Graham singled to center, scoring Smith, and Bisland went to third Musser popped to Seabaugh. Long was hit by a pitched bull Bailey fanned. ONE RUN. Ward singled to left Abstein popped to Graham Merritt singled to leff and Ward went to second. Butler popped to Agler. Seabaugh singled to left, sc Ward and Merritt went to second, grounded to Smith, forcing Seabau second. Smith to Alperman. ONE RUN. THIRD INNING. Alperman filed to Merritt. Welc filed to Baerwald. Smith was hit pitched bail. Bisland singled to c and Smith went to second. Agler ut a slow one to Kroh, filling the bases. Graham fanned. NO RUNS. Shaniey fanned. Baerwald filed tc Welchonce. Love also filed to Wei- .•nonce. NO KI NS FOURTH INNING. Musser fanned Long singled to lefl and stole second Bailey walked. Al- pernian tripled to center, scoring „ and Bailey. Welchonce Hied to Love, and Alperman scored after the » smith was hit by a pitched ball and went to second on a passed ball. Bis land singled to left und Smith took kgter walked* fining the 1 Graham fanned THREE RUNS. Ward tiled to Long. Abstein singled to left Merritt grounded to second and a double play resulted, Alperman Agler NO BUNS. FIFTH INNING. Musser singled to left. Long beat went to second. Mussei second, Seabaugh to popped to Seabaugh A to Ward NO KI NS. AOAslAtiER FLYNN S SPEECH '0 THE FANS INTRODIJtflNk' HIS NEui TUJIRLER. UJltffrlEY 0JArsO^TH6 ' SOUTHl£S NEU) left handed TtUIRLER J1H0 PlfCHEO AtSAlNST THE /MYSTERIOUS /OEUJ COMER YESTERDAY- HE WAS outclassed. ■vc w AvdiSE WY WHO CLAIMS HS KUOUIS UHO THE MWERlOL* MASKED NEUI COMER. IS, ROT iUONT TELL THANK 600DK)ESS HUE ARE RID OF THIS PEST NOW THAT HER STEF . BROTHER HAS BEEN CANNED UUMiERE THE MYSTERIOUS MASKED 0ME DISAPPEARED AFTER YESTERDAY'S GAME - BUT USYen MOM, HE'S A LEFT HANDER - HE'S A MArtUB. - HERE'S r - WE tWA'l HE UJINDS "HtS IS THE LAST TIME ILL . TELL YOU TC |j DROP THAT J_BI5fUlTA*JD r S'V 4 V'-~II , YOUR '■=s'i iif-"Y the meuj Pitched seems to haue made ANJ ™E 0Y6D-in-THE- WOOL RAWS ALL RtkHL All RIGHT"- Butler. singled to center third. Kroh aingl Hutler Seabaugh went out at to short, forcing Kroh at second, Bis iftfio to Alperman HaurwaM walked Love grounded to Bisland ami was naff on Bi slant is fumble. Ward filed to Bai ley. ONE RUN. SIXTH INNING. Welchonce heat out a slow groundet first Smith filed out to Baerwald. BIsland tripled to left, scoring Wel- .-honor. Agler popped to Seabaugh. Graham fanned. ONK RUN Abstein popped to Graham. Merrltl g (.untied out. Alperman to Agler. But- ler walked anti stole second Seubaugl groumle<l out, Alperman to Agler. NC RUNS. SEVENTH INNING. ff first, Kroh to Ward filed to Wel- k is ted. Lor Abstein. B was caught NO RUNS. Kroh walked. S Alperman to Agle second. Baerwald kroh took third. I ond. Love walked cbonce and Kroh a \bstcin popped to Bisland. ONE RUN. EIGHTH INNING. ;„.pped to Shaniey. Smith filed to Ba« wald. NO RUNS. Merritt popped to Smith But! grounded to Smith and was safe on A u r's error Seabaugh was hit by ball Kroh fa nned. 8ha nl -inglctl to left, scoring Butler. Baerw* popped to Bisland. NINTH INNING. Bisland fanned Agler popped to Bi lei Graham singled to right. Mubf Lov« walked. Ward hit into a double play. Smith to Alperman to Agler. Xbsw-m singled to center Merr J “ out, Musser to Agler. SMITH BUYS TWO PLAYERS: .MLMUlilS. Ti:NN.. May 15. Billy Boston Braves, he club at once $3.50 Recipe Free For Vi, eak Kidneys. Relieve* Urinary and Kidney Trou ble*. Backache. Straining. Swelling. Etc. Stops Pain in the Bladder, Kid ney* and Back. Wouldn't It be nice within a week or so to begin to say good-bye for ever to the scalding, dribbling, strain ing. or too frequent passage of urine; tho forehead and the back-of-the- head aches; the stitches and pain* in the buck the growing muscle weak ness. spots before the eyes, yellow skin, sluggish bowels, swollen eye lids or ankles; leg cramps, unnatural short breath, sleeplessness and the despondency? I have a recipe for these troubles that you can depend on. and if you want to make a quick recovery, you ought to write and get a copy of it Many a doctor would charge you $8.50 lust for writing this prescription, but 1 have It and will be glad to tend It to you entirely free Just drop me a line like this Dr. A E. Robinson. K-708 Luck Building. Detroit, Mich., and 1 will send It by return mall In a plain envelope. As you will see when vou get it. this recipe contains only pure, harmlese remedies, but It has great healing and pain-conquering power It will quickly show its power once you use it, so 1 think you had better s*® what it Is without delay I will send you & copy free—you can use yourself at home. CRACKERS. . . . 110 301 000 6: TURTLES .. . . 010 010 110 - 4 CRACKERS— AB. R. H. PO. A. e. ; Long, If .... 4 2 3 l 0 0 Bailey, rf .... 4 1 2 2 0 0 Alperman, 2b ... 5 1 1 4 5 0 j Welchonce, cf ..... 4 1 1 3 1 0 ! Smith, 3b 3 1 1 2 4 0 Bisland. ss . 5 0 3 2 1 i Agler, lb ... 4 0 l 8 0 1 Graham, c .... 5 0 2 5 0 0 Musser, p 5 0 1 0 1 0 Totals 39 6 15 27 11 2 TURTLES— AB. R. H. PO. A E. Shaniey, 2b .... 5 0 1 1 0 0 Baerwald, rf. . . . . . 4 0 1 3 0 0 Love, cf .... 3 0 0 2 0 0 Ward, 3b .. . . 4 1 1 2 1 « Abstein, lb .... 5 0 2 10 0 0 Merritt, If .... 4 0 1 1 0 0 Butler, ss 3 2 1 2 2 0 iSeabough, c . . 3- 0 2 6 2 0 Kroh, p ... . 3 1 1 0 1 1 Totals .. . 34 4 10 27 6 1 SUMMARY: Two--base hits Long. Bailey. Three-base hits —H11 >1 •riiiait. Bis- land. Double I’lavs Al| terniau to Agler. Strue i Out —by Kroh 6; b\ Musser 2. Bases 01 Balls -off l\ roll 1 ; off M usse 2 Haeri- fice Hits Ward. Stolen Bases—Long, Butler. 1’ asset! Ball Sea- baugh. Hit by Pitched Ball by Kroh I tOIlg ). Umpires, 1’ifield and Kerwin. SOUTHERN LEAGUE AT MONTGOMERY— BIRMINBHAM . . . . . 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 - 1 4 1 MONTGOMERY .... 2 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 X - 4 10 1 Sloan, Foxen and Clifton; Bagby and Gribbena Umpire*. Stockdale and Hart. AT MOBILE— NASHVILLE .... 13 1 0 1 1 0 1 0 - 8 15 1 MOBILE .... 10 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 - 2 5 2 William* and Noyes: W. Roberteon and Brown. Umpire*. Pfenninqer and Breitenateln. AT NEW ORLEANS— CHATTANOOGA . . 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 - 0 1 0 NFW ORLEANS .... 3 0 0 0 2 0 0 1 X - 6 7 1 Dyc.ert ?nd Hannah: Brenton and Y antz and Angemier. Umpires. Rudder- ham and Wright. NATIONAL LEAGUE the n£vv sensation A MASKEC LEFT HANDED TUaRlER SI6MED DP YESTERDAY BY MANA6ER FLYNN TO TAKE THE PLACE OF fAGLEBbAK. SPR0DER uMO HAS BEEN RELEASED— two* SINK IS W0UD OUT OF WORK - THREE ARDENT WORSHIPERS OF THE MARUELOL's EAOLESfcAK WHO FEEL PRETTY BAD ABOUT HIS DEPARTURE- OME OP THEM JUST 60T OUSR THE MUMPS TOO 1 . FOOD For PANS -tow oo wj J ,, Il LIKE Ml HAjfX S v PAStlO IN \z~~sy THE MIDDLE? CooicEn AND <£fo/nin^«r I KNOLU WHY EA&LEBEAK isOT CANNED .AAHT j KNOW WHO THE PITCHER is BUT i AIN'T 6m TO TELL-ltS A SECRET DOMTASK ME NOW. l TOLD YOU 1 COULDN'T fTt-a, THAT'S ALL THEY IS To iT! SlANTS BEAT POUThiES YESlStOAY OlEAS BEAT RlNKieS «»TANDlNt» OF THE CLOUS HlNIOES 5'V.W Giants r 3 .as oleas («.(.. Ft. H A-Sou I 7 ./if SKlNMY SHANE R'S 600U.Y DfcPT Shaner’s EASY ^ „ §) DRAWING /NO. 18 LESSONS PRECklE (.FROM LIF8) ' Cwuu>€4 oj^£Xoru$Jix«ki__, JUHAT part OP a FISH is like THE END OF A BOOK? THE FlN is 00 TOO 6lT THAT OR SHAU I Sfff IT 0UER.T HfiJlfli. Ol. dUVndUy fo-ddy. FROM euTcn T0INS-LHUOttlHURST O.sTX IS A MECHANICS C0ATUK6 A ATHLETE? a)0U) take YOUR Time, you HAviS All day To-morrow to dope this out S AMERICAN LEAGUE AT CLEVELAND— 000000000-0 1 1000000X-2 Plank, Wyckoff, Bush and Lapp; Falkenberg and Carisch. and Hart. AT CHICAGO— Umpires Dineen 000001001-2 00201000X-.3 Schulz, Klepfer and Sweeney; Scot t and Schalk. Umpiree, O’Loughlin and Ferguson. AT ST. LOUIS— Wood and Nunnamacher; Weilman, Adams and Agnew and Crossen. Um pires, Hildebrand and Evans. CHRISTY HAT0OTS BIG LEAGUt GOSSIP Washington-Detroit game off; rain. SOUTH ATLANTIC LEAGUE AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Horton and Smith; Adams and Qelbel. COLUMBUS— ALBANY- 5 1 < it and AT NFW YORK— PITTSBURG 23 0 1 1 0 000-711 2 NEW YORK 20 0 00000 0 - 2 7 1 Robinson and Simon; Domaree. Wlltse and Meyer and Hartley. Umpires, O'Day and Emslie. AT BROOKLYN— ST. LOUIS 2 0 0 1 t 0 1 1 0 - (» 14 0 BROOKLYN 0 3 2 0 1 0 1 1 X - 8 15 1 Steele, Perrltt. Sallee and Wlngo and McLean; Ragon, Rucker and Miller. Umpires. Brennan and Ea on. AT BOSTON— CINCINNATI 1 0 2 0 2 0 3 3 0 - 11 19 1 BOSTON 1 00101002 - 5 93 Johnson and Clarke: Hess. Dickson, Gervais. Strand and Whaling. Um pire*. Klem and Orth. AT PHILADELPHIA— CHICAGO 0 0 1 0 0 3 1 0 0 0 -5 10 4 PHILADELPHIA 2000100021 -6 13 1 Overalfiand Archer; Alexander, Rlxe y, Brennan, Seaton and Killifer. Um pirea, Rig*y and Byron. m ’ I 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 X -4 12 2 Baker and Thompson; Dugglesby and Veils. Umpire, Pender. AT CHARLESTON. MACON— 000300200-572 CHARLESTON— 00 0 000000-024 Martin and Kunkle; Eldridge and Men- efee. Umpires, Glatta and Moran. INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE AT BUFFALO— PROVIDENCE— 0 0 0 2 0 1 0 0 0 -3 10 3 BUFFALO— 00 0 04001X-5 80 Lafitte, Moran and Kocher; Jameson. Holmes and Gowdy. Umpires. Mullen nd Cross. AT ROCHESTER— NEWARK— 0 10001000-260 ROCHESTER— 000 0 00000-036 ack and McCarthy; Hughes and Jacklitsch. Umpires, Hayes and Fin* neran. Baltimore Toronto wet grounds. Montreal-Jersey City not scheduled. VIRGINIA LEAGUE. Roanoke 110 000 010 3 11 3 Richmond 004 020 02x—8 12 2 Carpenter, Brown and Presaly: Grif fin and Rogers. Umpire, Kennedy. Score: R. H. E. Norfolk 000 200 200 000— 4 6 6 Portsmouth 030 100 000 001— 5 4 1 Gaston and Riley; Llewllyn and Gar vin. Umpire. Colgate. Petersburg . 011 000 001 0— 3 7 2 Newport News 001 100 020 0—3 5 2 Hedgpeth. Richmond and Brennegar; Barton and Powell. Umpire Norcum. Called on account of darkness. FEDERAL LEAGUE Cleveland-Indianapolis game off; rain. St Louis - Pittsburg wet grounds. CAROLINA LEAGUE. Score: R. H. E. Charlotte 010 000 000— i 7 1 Asheville 000 021 100— 4 9 1 Smith and Malcolmson; Betslll and Milllman. Umpir«, McBride. Score: R. H. E. Greensboro 000 000 100—1 6 1 j Raleigh 010 002 10*—4 10 2 Fesperman and Robinson; Belanger and Mack. Umpire. Chestnut. | Score; R. H. E. ! Durham 020 100 220—7 6 2 | Winston-Salem 010 001 000—J S 7 Ferris and Ulrich; Lfe and Smith. * Umpire, Miller. AT KANSAS CITY— TOLEDO— 020100000 KANSAS CITY— 02200000X -3 4 0 -4 10 2 Collamore and Livingston; Morgan arrd O'Connor. Umpires. Murray and Hand Iboe. FIRST GAME. AT MILWAUKEE— LOUISVILLE— 0 2 0 0 1 0 0 3 4-10 14 1 MILWAUKEE— 00002000 0- 2 64 Smith and Clemons; Cutting, Watson and Hughe*. Umpire*, Chill and O'Brien. SECOND GAME. LOUISVILLE 0002000. . . MILWAUKEE— 0100110. .-. . . Laudermllk and Roth; Nicholson and Marshall. Umpires, Chill and O’Brien. All other games off rain. EMPIRE LEAGUE Score: R. H. E. Cordele .202 240 23x—15 17 2 Waycross 000 000 030 —3 6 5 hoo cmfwyp cmfwypetaoin etaoinnn Filllaer and Eubanks; Runy and Wa- hoo. Umpire. Bennett. Score: R. H. E. Thomasvllle 000 230 02x—7 9 4 Amerlcus 200 000 010— 3 7 2 Myer* and Dudley; McCarty and Man cheater. Umpire, McLanglln. Score: R. H. E. Valdoet 501 010 320—12 13 0 Brunswick 500 010 shrdlu upoo Brunswick 500 101 000— 7 10 3 Wood. Tillman and Pierre; Slocumb. Hawklne and Gestlne. Umpire. Carter. GEORGIA-ALABAMA LEAGUE Score: R. H. E. LaGrange 011 311 10—8 13 5 Gadaden . .. 102 000 0*—3 2 2 Beasley and Donaldson; Stewart and Jordan. FIGHTERS STILL WRANGLE OVER REFEREE QUESTION SAN FRANCISCO. May 15—The question of a referee for the Jess Willard-Guboat Smith fight next Tuesday evening is still haging fire. Managers Jones and Buckley held a two-hour conference with Promoter OofTroth and at Its conclusion it was announced that the impresarios had failed to reach an agreement. COULON VS. GOLDMAN. CHICAGO, May 15.—Johnny Coulon will battle twelve rounds In Boston on May 20 with Charlie Goldman, of Xew York. Graduating exercises, : Southern Dental College, Grand Opera House to night at 8 o’clock. Public i invited. White City Park Now Open N -1 *\\ YORK. May l... The biuwest surprise of the baseball season so far Is the Brook lyn Hub, which is playing wonderful ball right now. The team is not Winning through luck, hut liec-atise it is hitting hard, fielding smoothly and getting good pitching. I ran into Joe Tinker, the manager of the Cincinnati Reds, the other night after his club had met Brookly'n in a couple of games. It is always good to get the angle of a smart player like Tinker. “What do you think of Brooklyn." I asked Tinker. “They’re diving and taking all kinds of chances,” he replied. “I would rather meet the Ciants right now than the Brooklyn club. The players have got that winning bug. and it gives them self-confidence. You can’t stop them. I had a man stealing second base by ten feet in the game to-day, and he took a dive at the bag and nearly cut my leg off in an effort to make it. That’s what is winning ball games for them. It is the first time I ever saw such spirit in a Brooklyn club.” “Do you think they’ll hold up through the season?" “I can’t see the team as a pennant winner. If the club should get up in the race for the pennant, the strain of the fight would crack a lot of those players. But they are certain ly playing great baseball now." • * • T INKER’S diagnosis looks to me like a good one. It is not my opinion that the Brooklyn team lias a chance for the championship, but there is no getting around the fact that the boys are playing high-class baseball now. I haven’t seen them in action since they really ran into this winning streak, because the Giants made out pretty well in the last series we played across the bridge, but Evers and the rest of the managers who have humped into I lahlen’s crowd recently declare they are tak ing all kinds of chances and getting away with them. . Two or three of the pitchers have developed in good shape, too. Rucker, of course, is a wonder among left-handers, although for a long time he has always pitch ed in hard luck and received pool- support. Ragon, Curtis and Stack have shown surprisingly good form this season. u w self,” continued Tinker. “He was one of those once-in-every-four-days boys. After he pitched he didn’t even want to put on a uniform the next afternoon. “ ‘Why, I never had to do it be fore.’ he protested the first time I ordered him to report the next day after pitching. “ ‘Well, you’re going to do it if you stay with this ball club,’ I told him. ‘1 might want you to get out there and finish a game of ball for me to-morrow.’ “A lot of the Cincinnati players won’t think. And my pitchers have gone bad on me. Two of the veter ans I expected to do the best box work have fallen down badly. One has a sore arm and the other is out of condition all around. As soon as these pitchers work around into some kind of shape there should not be any question about the club climbing. My hardest job now is throwing the fear of discipline into the hearts of the players. I hare instructed every man to be in the dining room not later than half past nine each morn ing when the team is on the road. “ ‘Vv 7 HAT do you want me down 7 HAT do you think of the ants?” I asked Tinker, continuing our interview. “Same trouble as the Cubs had in 1S109, and that the Athletics develop ed last year,” he answered. “There is too much confidence. The players go out every day with this thought in their minds: “ ’Oh. pshaw, we’ve got the ball club. Wait until we once get start ed ! We are the goods.’ “And then there will come a time when they will have to get started or lose out, and the club won’t be able to get away with it. It is the hardest thing in the world for a manager to contend with this feeling of snug satisfaction. McGraw is do ing ail that he can to correct it, and he should accomplish his purpose if anyone can, because lie is a game guy. The Giants are playing bad bail now. There is no doubt about that. The pitchers are not going well, and no play is certain. “Some of the men are taking throws with one hand when tbe.v could grab the hall with two without any trouble aud make it sux-e. I think McGraw will drive the team together eventually, and if he does, it looks like the best club in the league to me. It lias not the rugged ness it displayed last year, however.’ * * * U r | QW about your club. Joe?” I il inquired. “Chance and I have l“-*-u up against much the same kind of a proposition this year. I saw Frank just before the Yankees left New York for their Western trip and had a long talk with him. “ -Joe.’ he said, 'the club’s not in very good shape, but the worst fault Is that nobody ever made them play baseball before. No manager over rode them since Griffith left. They have llet'll doing as they pleased, and I am trying to make them play my sort of baseball, and they don’t know what to make of it. There is one pitcher on the club who wants his four days’ rest, and he hoi I "ted the other day because I stuck him in to finish a game.' "I have u pitcher like that, whined one player the other day. ‘We never iiad to get up that early before.’ “ ‘You'll get up that early if you are going to work for me,’ was my answer. “I believe in ball players getting up early. You cannot expect a man to lie in bed until noon and then get out on the field full of ‘pep’ and ready to play good baseball at 2 or 3 o’clock. If they sleep late, they are bound to sit up late, which is a bad thing, since late hours lead to the only places which ai-e open, mostly saloons. I am not trying to spring any alibis for the Cincinnati team. Matty, because I have pulled some ’bones’ myself since taking charge, but I am trying to teach my players baseball. “If a pitcher looks kind of bad. I’ll tell a player to go up and take a strike. He takes it and then looks over to the bench at me. “ 'Go on and hit,’ I nod to him. “Maybe he swings and misses one. It's two and nothing on him. He gets the count two and two, and then fans out. “ ‘What's the matter?’ I say to him when he comes back to the bench. “ ‘If you’d let me hit that first one. I’d have knocked it out the lot,’ he answers. ‘It was right where I like them. No manager ever made me take one before.’ “It’s tough work polishing off a team which has had this sort of training, and it can’t he done in a month or two. Some of the players don’t understand why I want them to take one, and then after they do they know they have an alibi for not hit ting it when they come back to the bench, and maybe they ain’t up there fighting all the time. Outside of m.v pitching staff, my club looks good, and we are bound to rise.” • • * < < U UNNY, Chance and you should F run into the same kind of going,” said I to Tinker. “I saw Mr. Farrell the other day,” answered Joe, “and we were talking about Chance. “ ‘You’ve got the smartest baseball manager in the world,’ I told the own er of the New York Americans. ‘Give him time, and he’ll give you a ball club.’ “Wait until Chance gets in the ■ game himself and starts riding those pitchers out there from first base,” predicted Joe, in conclusion. “Just wait." (Copyright, 1913, by The McClure News paper Syndicate.) DO YOU ITCH? If so, use Tetterine It cures erxema. ground itch ringworm. Itching piles. Infant sore head , Hud’ all other skin troubles. Read what C. B Raus. Indianapolis, says: Enclosed find $1. Send me that value In Tetterlne. One box of Tetterlne has done more for eczema In my family than $50 worth of other remedlea I have tried. Use Tetterine It relieves skin trouble that ha* baffled the i beat medical skill. It will cure you. Get It i to-day Tetterlne. 50c at druggists, or by mall. SHUPTR1NE CO.. SAVANNAH. GA. m ST IKE RA :s i !GH HAIR T SOFT ADD 1 SILKY do The Guaranteed Liquid Hair Daetrsrar A Perfumed Depilatory It Is the only preparation that Immediately an* without the slightest Injury to the moat delicate akin, will remove Superfluous Hair EXELENTO never fails to do what It claims. It stops falling HAIR, cleans DANDRUFF at once, and just feeds the SCALP and ROOTS of the HAIR, and makes HAIR grow so fast that It is a wonder. Every package is guaranteed. Plain talk: Don’t fool yourself by using some preparation which claims to straighten your HAIR. Kinky HAIR can not be made straight. YOU have to have HAIR before you can straighten It. When you use EXEL ENTO QUININE POMADE, It will promote the growth of the HAIR very It Acts Instantly wherever applied , fa f^ ® T n . d , r , you _.?'A 1 , 1 . EO °". h ? ve nlce - be long, long HAIR, which will £1-Ratio is the only Depilatory sold with straight, soft and silky, in absolute guarantee of satisfaction. Yo«, price—25 CENTS, by all druggists vill rln«l if not offensive, a requisite otheri lare not claim for their preparations. Price $1.00 at JACOBS' TEN STORES. Take no substitutes; insist on El Raoo. f Bo- kUti f valuable information f»'t on request. PILGRIM MFG. COMPANY ‘7 Ea«» New YorV or by mail on receipt of stamps or coin. EXELENTO MEDICINE COMPANY, ATLANTA. GA AGENTS wanted everywhere. Write for particular* to-day. If you have anything to sell adver- f tise in The Sunday American. Lar gest circulation of any Sunday news- « paper in the South. f¥L m Opium, Whiskey and Dra* Habit* treats* at Home or at Sanitarium. Book on subject Free. DR B. M. WOOLLBT, 24-N. Vlciae Sanitarium, Atlanta. Georgia. ,