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THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS.
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LEAVE VOLS
SHVILLE. TENN., May 19.—
The passing of Hard Luck Char-
i *aj«p from the Volunteer**,
marks the exit of the last of the old
guard, who, under the Bernhard re
gime brought in 190* the last piece
of bunting that has floated In
Sulphur Dell.
The new manag. r for the Turtles
Drought t’hick to Nashville from the
pirates and it was due in a groat
measure to his grand twirling during
that gruelling campaign with the
Pelicans that enabled the Vols to
flash under the wire ahead.
It would be a strange prank of
Fate did the season which vent rase
to Montgomery allow history to re
treat itself and give the gonfalon to
the Schw artzmen.
It must be admitted that the Vols
are displaying a bunch of nerve In
harping on pennants with their box-
men doddering along and being blis
tered with wallops day after day, but
if Schwartz ever should he able to
gather a quintet of steady hurlers
It would be hard to tjgure his crew
among the flag confenders.
To the naked eye the advantage
gained by either Nashville or Mont
gomery in the trade of Case for Pig
gy Paige is not visible. Charlie is
on his way, and has travelled a good
distance toward the other end, while
Paige Is about through Either will
have to travel quite a bit before they
meet a firi-t-clas* twirier coming out.
Wanted to Join Turtles.
Case would have preferred to land
with the Turtles and it would no
doubt have been better for him. for
he and Bernhard are great jkiIh and
Big Bill certainly did inject in some
mysterious manner into Doc ,Hea -
hough new life when he looked to
,be down for the count.
Fleharty is the only veteran re
maining for slab duty and the bean-
ball artist has not proved of any great
value to the club so far. If Schwartz
can land i high-grade mound
artist. EarJ will be Invited to visit
his home folks But the Vols art'
having a tough time landing depend
able flingers, having already hired and
flred a list of alleged pitchers as
long as the delinquent tax roll.
The Reds continue to hang on to
Chick Smith. «ilthough they have sold
this southpaw to the Vols. and. despite j
the gaping holes in the slab corps,
he ha
And Now Jeff Is Back to the Silk Hat Again
By “Bud” Fisher
Je*F, Ti*\e to cau_ in THose
. STIPF HATS, 15 r “ or '■'SAT l*>
LAST CALL. CONSC With A(ve AND
Bust your.sslt=- a stpawhat
T THOUl&HY
THIS UOOK^Ol
PRATtYV toot) l
Ts
UIKt < T
r
NEVER MIND LOOKING
IW THE 6LAVa,!T'S
SwptL, take kv word
tor it. Pat tor it. .
-I'llil
7 •
f WHgN WE 6CT
hoiae- you can
LOOK IN THE GLASS-
You'll ee
stuck o n rr
PeACM, AIN'T
IT ?
iiinmniLL! ■
H'
Kbfr
coRGSi»rtT iSi’J e/'erHR.N*.
L“
Hy II. M. Walker.
ANGELES, CAL., May
111 —
The light that he will make
against Joe Mandot next Tues-
failed to put in an appear-1 day night w ill either "make or break"
anre * ought to bolster up the y oun>lf Bud Anderson. The Medford
staff considerably since a number of . ... .... . .
thr Southern Lennue Clubs thin xea- bo >’ wl " oith *‘ r U ’ aVP ,hp rln * «* on '’
son appear to be helpless against j of the best lightweight cards in the
portsiders, tin most conspicuous of j country or an exploded "comer" with
l h : 1 ^ nrl , l J:' i".?.. 1 ,! 1 : !^''"*" l '?u nothin* better thon Reonnd yrn.le
for any left-hander w'ho waves his
glove in the fares of the Schwartz-
men has them beat to a frazzle.
New Pitcher on the Job.
Jack Dandridge, the big righthand
er w'ho was signed as a free agent, is
in town awaiting the return of the
club from the present road trip. He
was with Vernon last season, won a
majority of his games and is in good
all ape.
Bill Schwartz appears to have Coz-
xjed when he turned down Rudy
Summers, on account of the boy’s
health, since lie has been setting the
league afire for the Lookouts, crack
ing George Beck’s winning streak
to say nothing of busting up the
Gulls’ long string Schwartz had
the dope of Rudy all wrong, for lie
figured he couldn’t last In this cli
mate another season, for the little
fellow was always on the sick list
while with the Volz Surely a
grand pitcher for a hoy hilled to the
undertakers
Williams Going Immense.
The sudden return to form of Lefty
Williams and his feat of defeating
the fast going Gulls twice in three
days, one game running for eleven
Innings with only one scratch hit off
his delivery, is the most encouraging
happening of the present road trip.
The Springfield. Mo, box stood a
great chance of finding a pink paper
in his mail just when lie began t<»
deliver the goods He crowded
right up into the select circle that so
far Ha* been monopolized by Beck,
for whom the Reds offered 7,500 reg
ular dollars and Reuben Benton. Of
course the Vols’ treasury is too small
to accommodate such a swarm of
dollars and there is no place on the
team for Benton Of course not.
Time enough when the season is
over to turn this trick and Peck will
be worth just as much then us he
would bring now if lie keeps up his
brilliant work, and there is little
chance of his g*>ing the draft route
for too many of the majors will he
after him for that In happen The
quickest way for Hirsig to wreck
baseball in Nashville would be to
q1spo>e of Beck, and Hirsig is tool ping a
much interested in collecting the eggs Joe w
It
to inv
gO,KM-.
mitted. but
loo little t(
riosity
ate the anatomy of the
t a great temptation, ;»u-
goosr cats entirely
trant any undue eu-
dates In store for him.
Anderson and Mandot are matched
to box twenty rounds before the Pa
cific Athletic Club at Vernon on
Tuesday night. The weight is 13)1
pounds at fi o’clock. There Is no
choice in the betting, which is at even
money.
Just as Joe Rivers began an un
known and fought himself into a fol
lowing of thousands, so Anderson is
building for himself, and should he
win decisively over Mandot, a m^tch
between Bud and the Mexican would
necessitate the enlarging of the arena
building.
Bud’s Best Punch Left Hook.
Manager Dick Donald made an in
teresting talk to-dav concerning ♦he
chances of his protege.
"Anderson’s best punch is his left
hook.” said Donald. "He had little or
no chance to use this blow against
Brown, as ’Kayo’ fights with his right
hand extended. We realize that .Man-
dot is a fast and clever boxer. Were
we foolish enough to try to outbox
him, we probably would he outpointed
in every round. What we intend to
do is to keep on top of Mandot and
make him fight every inch of the way.
I am as sure that Bud will stop Joe
inside the limit as I am that 1 am
standing here."
Mandot. working at Venice, has
trained faithfully. Joe figures that
Anderson has been greatly overesti
mated and takes it for granted that
he will have an easy time of it with
the Oregon youth.
Mandot’s Manager Confident.
"We know exactly where we stand
In this affair." aald Manager Tommy
Walsh. Monday. "We have been
brought out here to act as a trial
horse. We are wili ng to be - a!' f
a trial horse so long as it gets us the
money. Mandot is a more srientifl-*
man. is a better ring general, and ha*
had much more experience than An
der.son. He will make this voting chi'
look like a boob.
• We figure though, that by
ig fellow like thlm boy thi
in line for another cra'i
We are easy to do but!
Wednesday morning we
Sporting Food
! By GEORQK I. PHAIR
THE HAMMER.
Meneath a spreading chestnut tree
The title smithn stands.
The smith, a holding fan is hr
II ith lungs like iron hands.
He strings with wild and ghoulish glee
The hammer in his hands.
The lowing of a distant row.
The warbling of a lark.
Are all that stir the village now
The forge is cold and dark.
'Tin' blacksmith swings with dripping
brow
At ponder baseball park.
Mr McGraW called Mr. Klem a cat
fish, thereby offering a deadly insult to
an innocent fish.
The St. Louis baseball magnate who
was amputated from $5,000 is on the
road to recovery, but he never will look
the same.
THERE IS HOPL.
There, little (hib, don't erg!
You are hitting the bumps. I know.
And a winning streak that would last
a week
Is a thing of the long ago.
1 on MA ) be a winner when horses
flu.
So there, little Cub, don't erg!
1’nder the workmen’s compensation
act, T.v Cobh is entitled to $10 a week
while hors du combat. Under the pres
ent circumstances the rest of the team
is entitled to that amount while play
ing.
The consensus of opinion is that the
United States League died of Infantile
paralysis.
If we mistake not. the United States
League onc6 offered Ty Cobb $15,000 a
year. Still. It was a great little offer.
FAKE.
Though thi motorbikes were scooting
And the frenzied crowd was rooting. ;
A of a single man was seen to break j
his bark.
"Thru are alt a bunch of fakers!"
Said a pair of undertakers
.1 s theg beat it sadlg homeward
from the track.
CHRISTY MATHM'S
BIG LEAGlIt GOSSIP
N'
EH' YoHKji May lit. The race in the National League so far this season has
been the most unsettled one I have seen since I came into tlie big league. The going
of the first three clubs in the American League has been steadier and more according
to the dope. The National league lias lieen crowded with upsets and surprises.
of the two teams that were leading the National league through the first weeks of the
race, one is holding up, but none too strongly, and the other has wilted. The Cults and Phila
delphia made the early going, and the Phillies spent last week struggling to keep ahead of
tlie plunging Brooklyn boys. The Chicago Hub has cracked badly since invading tile Cast, and I cannot see it
ns a pennant contender. It looks like a had road club, and the traveling ability of the old Chicago machines
was what won the pennants for them.
'-p HE percentage table is still all
* tangled up. and the teams have
shown little inclination to straighten
themselves out in the order it was
expected they would liefore the season
opened. The Giants were the only
rated contenders who approached
their natural form last week. The
New York club bucked up consider
ably and settled to something like its
normal stride, although it is still vtery
unsteady in the field.
McGrow, fighting the old over-confi
dence which was holding the team
down, tore the club apart and shook
up his batting order until it now
looks ns if he had found a strong
combination. By sticking Shafer in
center field lie has propped up the
club in the hitting department, and
seems to luivo slipped a plug in the
right place. Shafer has lieen batting
as hard as anybody on the team this
season, and is playing wonderful ball.
T f
HE pitchers are returning to
form. Tesreau showed some of
ills last season’s stuff in a game
against the Cubs last we.;k. when he
delivered the best battle he has pitch
ed so far this season. Demaree is a
great addition to the staff, but has
lieen working In very hard luck so
far, giving few hits and losing many
games through bad support. Mar-
quard is not himself yet. hut he has
hardly recovered entirely from weak
ness following the attack of tonsilitis.
Naturally, I cannot sec any club
but the Giants for the pennant. I
know we have the stuff there, and
tlie team is better this year than last.
The aggregations we have to beat to
get into first place now are the Brook
lyn and I’hiladelphia clubs, and it
does not strike me that either one
can hold up through a gruelling face.
They should cause us little worry.
Brooklyn has been playing great ball,
the dashing, irresistible, winning
sort, but it is not a pennant team.
* * *
P ERSONALLY, I still have faith in
tlie IMttsburg club. I appreciate
that I am in the small minority, even
many of the Pittsburg fans having
deserted the ship after the team had
lost seven straight games in the East,
four of these going to Boston. Hav
ing played against the Pirates. I
know them for battlers. They are
like the Giants. They have not got
going, but their poor start lias
brought no tears of sorrow to our
eyes, because it is generally realized
among us how they are liable to fin
ish. The team is playing bad bail,
but it is only necessary to read over
the list of the names of the men asso
ciated with the Pittsburg movement
to realize it will play better ball very
shortly.
(Copyright. IP 13, hy the McClure News
paper Syndicate.)
Sports and Such
RINGSIDE NEWS
Up to (Lite, Gunboat Smith has not
mangled any sparring partners, demon
sirating that his press agent is not there
with the punch.
If it be. true that Tyrus Cobb has weak
/*>es, we know a great number of ath
letes who are stone blind.
Baseball player** play ball when not
engaged in joint debates with umpires
and. boating it off the field
Two important bouts are scheduled
j to take place on the coast Tuesday
j night. Hud Anderson, tlie Western
sensation, will meet Joe Mandot in
Toni M« Carey's .arena in Los Angeles,
while J( Willard and Gunboat Smith
will clash at San Francisco. Both bouts
are billed to go twenty rounds
• * •
Honey Mellody, ex-champion welter
weight of*the World, has retired from
the boxing game for good. The other
day be had a catara-t removed from
his eye. He will be compelled tf* wear
glasses the rest of bis life.
I^each Cross
fra ting Johnny
New York
eceived $1,000 for de-
l*"han la s t week at
Tom MeCarey may give Jim Flynn,
_ the fighting fireman, another chance
Pep is a great little Institution. but a , the I raw vs eight title. The coast
not when it is wasted In casting asper- i promoter m;t\ match Flynn against the
smns on the ancestry of an umpire. w nner of the Luther McCarty-Pelky
— - bout, if the cowboy refuses to meet the
LINES TO F. CHANCE. Smith-Willard winner
! Thru lore gou for the wag gnu smote
the tmll
In ancient da us whrn Cubs and
Giants pinged.
| Theg tore gou for pour worth, but
niftst of all.
Thi
R
I However, Flynn must beat Savage
when the two heavyweights clash here
June 9 in order to get the match. Dan
ny Morgan, manager of Savage, has al
ready received several offers for his
j protege's service, providing Savage is
I the winner. Both heavyweights arc do
lor# gou for the enemies Ing light training out East for the
match
gou’re made.
PREP LEAGUE NOTES
The G M A
hat ded after a
ha.- won but or
that was again*
He will
be fall
cidlng
ill
the
pas*-
a g r cat asi
For the
istead, the
led the I oca
| season bis
j was o\'er
; siderable o
tf
thf
t He is a husky
s played fine ball
titer Georgia Uni
ting p't' lung mar-
year, ought to be
team next year.
ca rt
For many
>ry have been transp*
on to 1 heir college b_
. and all are glad of the cl
.'u.lfiiii Hi The Mails! s
. q from Gtt\. I "i ' h* * ws. \\
the nl.t mule ''ui* have hie
past two years Sam Arni-
• ■atcher of Boys' High, has
I Prep men in batting. Last
average for fifteen games
>00. and this > ear it is con
fer too
sf Specials have three stars
iglex ami Adair These
i playing good ball all
JOE RIVERS WILL NOT
R0X RITCHIE AT FRISCO
Log ANGELES. May 19 “Joe Riv
era will not box Willie Ritchie at San
Francisco on July 4." said Promoter T.
J MeCarey, of the Pacific Athletic
Flub, to-day, relative to the announce
ment last night by Ritchie’s manager
that a match for the lightweight cham
pionship had been arranged with Ed
die Graney. McCarev declared Rivers
had agreed to box at Vernon arena on
,the Fourth of July with any lightweight
selected b> MeCarey.
PENN STAR GETS TEXAS JOB
PHILADELPHIA. PA, May 19.
Texas Rumsdell, Penn football star
and runner, has been elected director
of athletics at the University of
Texas.
mge
Joe Bean, the Marist coach, is
ing hard with the team In
have ii in fine shape fur the postponed
game with Boys' High, v hich will be
played soon. The Martst lads an
anxious to even up for their defeat at
the hands of the high school boys last
week
Nearly exe*- team in the local Prep
League this st. nn has a better bat
ting average tl*m in form*’!* yn'ts This
shows the result of special coaching in
this line early in the season. Boys’
High haa tlie best team batting average
-*f arc rVme it rhi Tagi
Bob McWhorter, of Georgia has a
brother playing ball on the Gordon In-
White City Park Now Open |
A
jZBYSZKO AND CAZEAU
IN FINISH MATCH MONDAY
NEW YORK. May 19. Stanislaus
Zbyvzko. the Polish heavyweight mat
champion, and Raymond Oasieau meet
in a finish match at the Garden to
lls i n t |;e
strength of their work will depend
whether the sport can be re-established
in tliis city Frank Gotch intimated
recently that be vv< uld be willing to
coin* here and meet a worthy foe
The Mike Saul-Terry Nelson scrap
which will l>o staged as the semi
w’ndup to the Flynn-Savage set-to
should also be a corker. Although
neither boy is a champion, both arc
good willing sluggers, and should put
up an interesting mill They ore bill
ed to go ten rounds
* * #
Meyer Pries stopped at the Georgian
sporting department the other day long
enough to announce that he would like
to get on with Spider Britt again. These
t\x.> bantams put up a corking mill for
six rounds about a month ago
TWO WHITE SOX TWIRLERS
ARE OUT OF THE GAME
champion to clash with the Racine sen
sation. We would advise Abraham to
be extremely careful if he dons the
gloves with Mr. McCue.
In the other match between the pair
Thomas was stopped in eight rounds,
but be blamed the defeat to a lucky
punch White landed on his chin in the
second session. That is, Thomas says j
the punch was lucky.
Tom MeCarey has wired an offer to
Jimmy Johnson, of New York, to bring
George Rodel, ihe Boer heavyweight, to
Vernon for a battle with Bull Young,
.i promising heavyweight, who helped
train McCarty for several bouts on the
coast.
It took Matty just 90 seconds to pol
ish off Jeff O'Connell, one of the tough
est featherweights in the game to-day.
O’Connell has fought such stars as Wol-
gast (four times), Frankie Whitney,
Frankie Conley and others.
* * *
Not satisfied with having been knock
ed out twice by Soldier Kearns. "One-
Rourd" Davis, the Buffalo heavyweight,
asked for a reiurn match after he was
pyt away in Buffalo a few nights ago,
and Kearns agreed. They will meet for
the third time at Buffalo on the night
of June fi.
Mike Gibbons and Jimmy Perry will
exchange blows in a scheduled' six-
round affair at Pittsburg Mav 29. Per
ry will have to be at his best against
(be St. Paul boy, as Mike has been
going great of late.
Billy Kyne, the Frisco fight promoter,
puts offered a $10,000 guarantee to Wil
lie Ritchie, lightweight champion, to
meet Joe Rivers on the coast July 4.
If Ritchie accepts, Kyne says he ‘will
build a big open air arena.
CHICAGO, May 19.—Two of the
stellar lights in the White Sox pitch
ing corps are out of commission, but
Manager Callahan is comforted by
the thought that he has a reverve
pitching staff second to none in the
American League. Eddie (Mcotte re
ported to his chief to-day that he
is suffering from tonsilitis and will
not be able to wmrk for several days.
Ed Walsh was called to Meriden,
Conn., by the death of a relative.
STONE DEFEATS SUMMERS.
BRISBANE. AUSTRALIA, May 19.
Harry Stone, the American fighter, y es
terday defeated Johnny Summers, the
British middleweight champion, on
points in a twelve-round contest.
MATTY THE MARVEL.
IlfHEN Earth's last ball game is
rr finished and the leagues ere
busted and done.
When the fattest magnate has
wilted and no longer gum
shoes for spon,
We shall rest—go bark to the
bushes and lie up a season
or so
Till the master of alt the magnates
announces the real big
show.
And those that were bugs shall be
happy—they shall sit in a
ten-cent seat
(The which shall be back of the
catcher) and hare free pea
nuts to eat.
They shall have new umps to euss
at—nice targets, broadlike
and tall;
They shall peg bottles at them for
hours and never be tired
at all.
And none of our bunch shall make
bobbles and all of our bunch
shall make hits;
They shall fall on the enemy’s
tirirlers and pummel them
all into hits;
And there with hi*-“smoke” and
his fader"—this is the sure
thing of all—
11V shall see the same trusty old
Malty still pitching his old
shut-ball.'
THERE ARE THE MAKINGS
of a humorist in a young man who
boxed in a preliminary at a local
club a few weeks back. His oppo
nent was pounding his face xvith great
skill and accuracy, and when he re
turned to his corner his second
growled:
"Stop some o’ them—stop some
o’ them!"
"Stop ’em!” retorted the fighter,
indignantly. "You don't see any of
’em gettin’ by, do you?"
Out of the finuth the wild news
runic:
“The (’nickers win another game."
T
BASEBALL
TO-DAY
"AH E promoters of the boxing con
tests to be staged at the Audi
torium-Armory June 9 have
now clinched two crackerjack ten-
round bouts. In the main event Jim
Flynn will hook up xvith Jim Savage.
In the semi-\vir\dup Mike SaijJ and
Terry Nelson will travel over a sche
tiled ten-round route. There is still
one other ten-round scrap to be ar
ranged.
It is likely that Spider Britt and
Meyer Pries will be selected to meet
in the other ten-rounder. These lads
always put up a corking battle when
pitted against each other. They have
met a half dozen times and the resuit
has always been doubtful’. In a ten-
round mill it’s a cinch that one or the
other will have earned a big enough
lead to give him the decision. i
Kid Young also wants to get on.
But there is nobody around this neck
of the woods who is of his xveight
and at the same time in his class.
It may be just possible, however,
that in case Britt and Pries can't
agree on weight, terms, etc., that some
topnotch boy will be imported to meet
Young.
606 SALVARSAN
S14 Neo Salvarsan
TKi two coletwated
Oonnan preparation 9
that hava cured per
marently more cur,
of eyphlllls or blood
polaon in the last two
years than haa been
cured In the history of
the world up to the
time of this wonderful
discovery. Come and
let me demonstrate to
you how I cure this
dreadful disease In
three to live treatmente. I cure the
following diseases or make no charge
Hydrooele, Varicocele, K*ldney, Blad
der and Prostatlc Trouble. Lost Man
hood, Stricture. Acute and Chronic
Gonorrhea, all nervous and
chronic diseases of men and women
Free consultation and examination.
Hours: 9 a. m| to 7 p. m.( Sunday,
DR. J. D. HUGHES
W/ 9 North Broad 6t.. Atlanta, Ga.
Opposite Third National Bank.
&
MEMPHIS vs. ATLANTA
Ponce DeLeon Park
3:30
o’Clock
Make State and Coun
ty tax returns now. Office
corner Pryor and Hunter
Streets. T. M. Armis- j
tead, Tax Receiver.
Best Gasoline - 19c per ga!.
Oil 35c per ga!,
~ ' " = Open at Nigh t = —
Day & Might Service C®.
12 Houston Street
lust of* Peachtree St.
Joe Thomas will l ave a chance Mon
day night to redeem himself for his
former defeat ai the hands of Charlie ,
White, the Chicago speed marvel j
Thomas and White meet In a ten-round |
battle at New Orleans, and the fur
should fly
i;
CAMPBELL TO JOIN OUTLAWS.
ST LOUIS. May 19.—Vincent Camp
bell. former star of the Boston Braves,
is said to he about to join an outlaw
league, although he was held on the re
serve list when he retired to enter
business
Matt' McCue may meet \be Attell ‘
at Kenosha. Wis.. before long. Nate .
Lewis, matchmaker of the Kenosha
club, is trying hard to get the ex- |
- y P[ UTr ' Whiskey and Drue Hnb!f« ‘rrnted
t at Home or at Sanitarium. Book or auhjec* i
iFf - DR B M. WOOLLEY, M-N. View, ;
I sanitarium. Atlanta, Georgia. ,
ECZEMA SUFFERERS
H«a<! what t S Glddeuj, Tamra. F!a.. saya.
t proves that
Tetterine Cures Eczema
For wvfn year* I had rwema on mv
anXK I tried many remedla* and nu
mrrou* doctor*. I tried Tottrrln* and aft-r
• IfTf *onk* am entirely free from the f«r
rlb'h ccroma
Tei'ert’c Mill do as much for others If
>-.irrs ecaema. totter. er>*ipelas and o'her *Mr
troubles It (urr* to stay cured Get It to 1
day Tettcnn-
X0r a t druff 1st*, or bv mail
SMUFTRUF C0. SAVANNAH, G A
MONEY
LOANFD TO SALARIED MEN
AT LAWFUL RATES
ON PROMISSORY NOTES
Without Endorsement
Without Cellitersl Security
Without Keai Estate Security
NATIONAL DISCOUNT CO.
1211-12 Fourth National Bank Bid3.
“QUAKER DU) IT AND I WILL SWEAR TO IT
Strong Assertion Made by Mr. G. A. Smedley, at
Coursey & Munn’s Drug Store.
The home of G. A. Smedley is lo
cated .it 140 West Tenth Street, a
locomotive engineer for a contract
or, Mr. C. A. Daley, very eonven-
^ ient for any person to call who may
x wish to investigate his remarkable
) results from the use of Quaker
' j Herb Extract, particulars of which
j> are given herewith. For over three
!; years he had been suffering from
catarrh <>f the bowels and his ap-
ix pendix. When he arose in the morn-
j ( <iig he \x as more tired than xvhen
|) he went to bed. His limbs ached,
i < He w ould cough up great chunks of
)> mucus After eating his meals he
j l xvould be in misery for hours, and
some things w^ould not agree with
him at all. Headaches w r ere a com
mon occurrence, and continuous
pains in the appendix. His breath
xxas simply awful and his tongue
continuously coated.
During the time that this man
vxas afflicted he used many reme
dies, tried various physicians, but
somehow they never seemed to do
any good in his case. Altogether
he was in a pitiable condition.
Many a day he was plying his vo
cation when he really should have
been in'bed But w eak and flick as
he was. he had too much will pow’er
to give up.
Mr. Smedley went to Coursey &
Munn’s drug store to explain his
case. and. after doing so, was ad
vised a treatment of the Quaker
Herb Extract, which was bought bv
him. and used faithfully according
to instructions. He ' again re
turned to the drug store and said:
"I came back to get three more bot
tles of the wonderful Quaker Herb
Extract. Since I used it I have
found that my appetite is good and
I am much stronger. I can get
about better than I ever could; my
troubles have disappeared, and I am
so very much pleased that I am
telling all my neighbors and friends.
I had begun to think that there was J
no cure for my troubles, but I know
now that I am on the right road to •
health. M j
If you are a sufferer from catarrh
in any form, stomach trouble of
any description, kidney, liver, rheu-
matism or blood troubles, you are ?
the one to call at Coursey & * Munn’s (
drug store and obtain Quaker Herb
Extract, 6 for $5. 3 for $2.50; $1 a
bottle. Oil of Balm. 25c, or 5 for $1. ’
So call to-day at Coursey & Munn’s ;
drug store, 29 Marietta Street. We J
prepay express charges on all or- ;
ders of $3.00 or over.
VMM