Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, July 24, 1913, Image 9

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IIP, ATHLETICS; T Polly and Her Pals M ARIST College, known as the greatest athletic prep school south of the Mason and Dixon line, has decided to give up sports. No, don't pinch yourself. You’re not asleep. It la the real cold truth. The school has decided that it can not afford athletics, yet the very one thing that has “made” It has been athletics. Every schoolboy in Georgia knows Marist because of its ability to win in athletics. It has been the am bition of every youngfiter in the State to attend the foundry of learning on Ivy street. J6e Bean made the announcement this morning that he had been dis charged. Said Joseph: “Father Rapier called me in and told me that my services were no longer needed. I nearly strangled to death from the shock. But Fa ther Rapier says* that the school can not afford to dally in athletics any more.” Marist is no longer on the athletic map. But ohe J. Bean IS. He is going to make a corking instructor for one of these other prep schools. Already he has received two offers, and will probably close for one of them within the next week or ten days. i nfcLL y’B4l C<*jeoc*JD it 1 EVER SlWCE. , A<MT MA66l£S CXhi E^Eyy sr jg&aisuf 60) or ‘Trouble!j Jr AM'old MlSCH/tr Wkei? AM' I W&M r BASEBALL Diamond News and Gossip Pitcher Boehling established a season’s record in the American League when by defeating the White Sox he won his eleventh straight victory. * * * “Lefty” Hamilton’s string of six vic tories was broken when the Athletics took the Browns into camp. * * * Outside of the sixth inning when the Pirates got their two hits. Rube Mar- quard held them hitless and the Giants made it a shut-out for the third vic tory over the Clarke tribe. * * * Chink Yingllng. the Dodger twirler who makes a specialty of beating the Cardinals, lived up to his reputation when Brooklyn scored an easy victory. * * * Manager Stallings shook up the Braves’ hatting order and the scheme worked with good effect, the Reds never being in the hunt. * * * Dooin used six pitchers and thirteen other players,-but the Phillies could not stop the Cubs’ slaughter. * * * Opportune hitting in the fourth and sixth innings enabled the Naps to make it three out of four from the Kml Sox. * * * Ta-day will mark the wind-up of the second Western invasion of the Eastern teams of the National League the teams leaving after the games to continue their struggles in the land of the setting sun. WEDNESDAY’S GAME. Atlanta. ab. r. h. po. a. e. Agler, lb. ... 5 0 1 13 1 0 Bisland, ss. . . 3 1 1 l 4 o Welchonce, cf. 4 0 0 4 0 0 Long, rt. . . . 4 0 3 0 0 0 Alperman, 2b. 4 0 1 l 2 1 Smith, 3b ... 4 0 1 1 3 0 Bailey, If. . . 2 0 1 1 0 0 Dunn, c. . . . 4 0 0 3 1 0 Thompson, p.. 3 0 0 0 3 0 Manush. ... 1 1 0 0 0 0 Totals ... .34 2 8 24 14 1 Manush hit for Thompson in ninth. Memphis. ab. r. h. po. a. e. Love, 2b. ... 5 1 2 3 3 0 Merritt, cf. . . 5 0 1 2 0 1 Baerwald, rf.. 5 1 1 1 0 0 Ward, 3b. ... 3 0 0 2 0 0 Schweitzer, if.. 4 2 2 2 0 0 Abstein, lb . . 4 2 1 3 1 1 Shanley, ss. . . 4 2 2 1 4 0 Snell, c. . . . 3 2 2 7 0 0 Harrell, p, . . 3 1 2 0 4 0 Totals ... .36 11 13 27 12 3 Score by innings: Atlanta 001 000 001— 2 Memphis 001 000 37*—11 Summary: Two-base hits—Ab stein, Love, Shanley, Bailey. Home run—Love. Sacrifice hits—Ward, Harrell, Bisland 2. Stolen bases— Manush 2, Long, Shanley. Double plays—Shanley to Love to Snell. Bases on balls—Off Harrell 3, off Thompson 1. Struck out—By Har rell 6. by Thompson 3. Time—1:65. Umpires—Hart and Rudderham. Carolina Association. Wii, Hon-Salem, 5: Asheville, 0. Asheville, 4: Winston-Salem,-1. Goldsboro, 5: Charlotte, 1. Raleigh, 8: Durham, 5. Virginia League. Roanoke, 7; Norfolk, 2. Newport News, 4; Portsmouth, 1. Petersburg, 2; Richmond, 2. HOW TO HEAL A STUBBORN ABSCESS A Home Method Sure to Restore Flesh to Natural Health. Do not cover any external sore so as to interfere with perspiration and the formation of protective scabs. Keep it clean and bandaged. If it is a stubborn case, flush your blood with S. 8. S. This famous blood purifier works wonders. And you can easily give your blood a good, thorough cleansing by using S. 8. S. There is no need for anyone to be despondent over the Illness of blood im purities. No matter how badly they at tack the system or how unsightly be comes the skin, just remember there is one ingredient in S. 8. S. that so stimu lates the cellular tissues throughout the body that each selects its own essential nutriment from the blood. Do not fail to get a bottle of S. S. 8. to-day. You will be astonished at the results. If your abscess is of such a aaaure that you would like to consult a gpH^Ailist. write to the Me^>al Dept., The ’ffcift Specific Co., 187 Swift Labo- VtObi Atlanta, Ga. | Jim Flynn Gets Chance at Title Gunboat Smith Is His Opponent RITCHIE FIGHT Bv W. W. Naughton. S AN FRANCISCO, CAL., July 24.— Lightweight Champion Willie Ritchie is quite willing to risk his laurels again. He says he is not particular against whom he is sent, so long as the price is right. Ritchie Is not naming the sum he thinks should be paid. He wants each of the promoters to make a bid, and he will accept the highest'offer made. It is no use mentioning “percen tage” to the champion. He ha3 thrashed it all out, and has discover ed that flat offers are the best. One of the charges Billy Nolan made against the champion was that Ritchie was “money mad.” Nolan meant, of course, that money occu pied Ritchie’s thoughts to the exclu sion of other things. There is noth ing about Ritchie’s actions when money is in question to suggeK that his mind Is unbalanced. Having received something like $18,000 from Promoter Graney for the fight on July 4. Ritchie will probably expect as much or more when he boxes again. And the chances are very much against his getting it. The fight between Ritchie and Rivers drew something more than $29,000. As “houses” go nowadays, it was a mighty good clean-up. But not for Graney, for if he broke even he is lucky. Ritchie Received $18,000. It is easily enough reckoned if Ritchie got $18,000, Rivers $7,000 and it cost $i,500 to hire Coffroth’s arena, Graney had little more than $2,500 to meet all the expenses of advertising and help, and the chances are he had to dig down into his jeans. It is an object lesson for fight pro moters and for such as think there is money in handling affairy of that kind. Graney worked like a beaver and used every influence he could command to advertise his show. And when it came off the boxers re ceived nearly 90 per cent of the tak ings, and the promoter found him self on the wrong side of the ledger. This is a matter that will have to be regulated, although it is not easy to. see how it will be done. As mat ters stand, all a champion or near champion has to do is set the pro moters bidding against one another, as Ritchie is doing right now, and prices will go soaring. “What was I to do?” said Graney. “If I had not given Ritchie what he asked some one else would have given It to him.” Graney Has Good Lesson. Probably, now that it’s all over, Graney wishes he had not ytood in the way of some other promoter. Of course, Graney will be chary of of fering big money to Ritchie again, and this means that there will be one fool less among the promoters. It looks, indeed, as if this theory of paying the fighters more than they are worth—and more than they draw —will only stop when each and every promoter in the country has had his fingers burned. International League. Baltimore. 4; Toronto. 2. Montreal, 8; Jersey City, 4. Newark, 8; Buffalo. 3. Rochester, 9; Providence. 1. American Association. St. Paul. 2-2; Columbus, 0-8. Minneapolis, 3-2; Louisville, 0-0. Other games postponed. Federal League. St. Louis. 6; Chicago. 4. Indianapolis, 6; Pittsburg, 4 Cotton States League. Columbus. 7: Meridian. 4. Clarksdnle, 3; Pensacola. 2. Pensacola. 2: Clarksdale, 0. Jackson. 2; Selma, 0. Texas League. Houston. 5; Fort Worth, 0. Galveston. 2: Austin. 1. San Antonio, 2: Dallas. 3. Beaumont, 4; Waco, 5. By Ed W. Smith. I T takes a good bit of managerial skill to boost Jim Flynn, of Pu eblo, up from the depths into which he had been forced through successive defeats into a real match for a real belt which is to be emblem atic of the heavyweight cham pionship of the boxing world. That skill has been yhown by one J. Curley, Flynn’s manager, and the Pueblo man is to get his second chance to win a title—or 1* it the fourth or fifth?—in a bout in New' York early next month when he faces Gunboat Smith, of Philadelphia and San Francisco. And the winner will be given a belt to replace the qne that went out of com mission when Luther McCarty died in Alberta the latter part of May. « • * ^LYNN’S peculiar position in the * boxing world is brought to mind now’ and then by a dispatch from Missouri telling of the progress th* boxer i.« making in his automobile trip from Pueblo to New York. The other day. the wires bore the news that Jim had been pinched in a small town for speeding, after having had his machine repaired. Flynn ever has been a thorn in the side of the as pirants for the white title, but un fortunately for the hardy fellow from the mountains he always has Just failed of getting there. Jim is a trifle too small, in the general opinion of the critics, or rather he is too short to cope successfully with the tall men of the heavyweight division. * • • T F many of the fight fans do not 1 like Jim for his brash ways and the overabundance of ego that he dis plays constantly, they nevertheless must admire the man for his sterling fighting qualities. Gameness is Jim’s middle name, and he ha« proved In the last four or five years to be the grandest little trial horse the ring ever has known. As a matter of fact, a man never would be thoroughly tried in the ring until he had met Jim in a real encounter. If ha could get by the Pueblo ringster, hia fu ture would be pretty well assured. '• • • * AS a matter of cold fact, it was never demonstrated that the late Luther McCarty was a real fle-hter until he had sent Jim into a crushing defeat. Then we all knew that Lu ther was the real thing, a demonstra tion that the poor fellow strengthen ed a s»hort time later by whaling the stuffin’ out of A1 Palzer, one of the behemoths of the ring. Flynn got his chance at McCarty out on the coast after he had demonstrated that he couldn’t do much with Jack Johnson, and figured that if he had whipped Luther he would have had little trou ble with Palzer. who was sent in against the winner. But McCarty proved far too big and strong and lengthy in the reach for the squatty Flynn. * • • I N Gunboat Smith. Flynn will meet a man much more to his own measurements, though the Gunboat is a long, ranarv chap. But he hasn’t the weight that most of Flynn’s op ponents have possessed, and for that reason Flynn believes he has a royal chance of being returned the win ner. The heavyweight class is a mysteriously weak division just now, and almost anybody has a chance of dragging down the honors. * * * O UT in Los Angeles, where Flynn hap done some of his best fight ing. they like him. As a matter of fact, they like the rough, tough fel low pretty much out there without losing sight of and giving free credit for his cleverness and skill. Both Battling Nelson and Ad Wolgast, former lightweight champions, were great favorites there. So were George Memslc. Rudy Unholz, Frankie Con ley, Charley Dalton. Bud Anderson and other strong boys of the ring. They like the puncher out In Tom McCarey’s town, and haven’t a great deal of use for the fancy boxer. -SOUTHERN LEAGUE. Games Thursday. Atlanta at Montgomery. Chattanooga at Mobile. Nashville at New Orleans. Birmingham at Memphis. Standing of the Clubs. W. L. Mont... 56 40 Mobile. 57 43 Atlanta 50 41 Chatt... 48 44 PC. .583 .570 .549 .522 W. L. Pc. B’ham.. 47 44 .516 M’phis. 47 53 .470 N’ville. 41 53 .436 N. Or.. 31 59 .344 Wednesday’s Results. Memphis, 11; Atlanta, 2. Mobile, 8; Nashville, 0. Montgomery, 6; Birmingham. 0. SOUTH ATLANTIC LEAGUE. Games Thursday. Charleston at Jacksonville. Columbus at Macon. Albany at Savannah ding U Pc W. L. Pc Col’bus 16 8 .667 S’v’nah 13 10 .565 Albany 13 12 .520 W L. Pc. J’ville.. 11 13 .458 Ch’ston 11 15 .423 Macon... 9 15 .376 Wednesday’s Result*. Charleston, 5; Columbus, 0. Macon, 4-0; Savannah. 2-3. Albany, 2-2; Jacksonville, 0-1. AMERICAN LEAGUE. Games Thursday. No games scheduled. Standing of the Clubs. W. Phila... 64 27 Cl’land. 65 37 W’ton.. 52 39 Cta’go... 61 45 Pet. .703 .598 .671 .531 W. L. Pc Boston. 42 46 .4 Detroit 39 57 St. L... 38 59 N. Y ... 28 59 406 392 .321 Standing of the Clubs. N. Y.. Phila.. Ch'go.. W. 61 26 50 33 46 43 P’burg. 44 43 Pet .701 .602 .517 .506 W. L. B’klyn. 39 43 Boston. 37 49 St. L... 35 54 C'nati.. 35 56 Pet. .476 .430 .393 .385 Wednesday’s Results. Chicago. 13; Philadelphia 8. New York, 2; Pittsburg. 0. Boston, 4; Cincinnati, 1. Brooklyn, 7; St. Louis, 2. EMPIRE STATE LEAGUE. Games Thursday. Thomasvtlle at Americus. Oordele at Waycross. Valdosta at Brunswick. Standing of the Clubs W. L. Pc. Cordele 14 8 .636 _ V’dosta 11 9 .550 Am’cus 10 11 T’ville. 11 10 .524 \\”cross. 7 14 \V. ... L. Pc. B’swick 10 10 .600 .455 .333 Wednesday’s Results. Cordele. 4-5; Waycross. 0-0. Valdosta. 2-4; Brunswick, 0-3. Thomasville, 2; Americus, 0 Wednesday’s Results. Philadelphia, 8; St. Louis, 1. Washington. 7; Chicago, 1. Cleveland, 5; Boston, 3. NATIONAL LEAGUE. Games Thursday. Cincinnati at Boston. Pittsbuig at New York. St. Louis at Brooklyn. Chicago a; Philadelphia GEORGIA-ALABAMA LEAGUE. Game* Thursday. Newnan at Talladega. Anniston at Opelika LaGrange at Gadsden. Standing of the Clubs. W. L. Pet. I \V. L. Pet. G'sden. 39 30 .566 \ L’Gr’ge 34 34 .500 N’nan.. 36 32 .529 An'ston 32 38 .457 Opelika 35 34 .507 i T’dega. 31 39 443 Wednesday’s Results. Gadsden 4; Talladega. 0 Anniston, 9; LaGrange, 2. Opelika. 1; Newnan, 0. Appalachian League. Morristown, 5; Bristol, 4 Johnson City. 3; Knoxville, 2. Mlddlesboro, 11; Rome, 4. Opium Wblik** and Dru* Habit* treated at Home or at Sanitarium. Bock on n<b|«(l #Ve«. DR B. M. WOOLLEY Sanitarium, Atlanta. Gtorgia Sporting Food I my oaonaa a. pmaiw WHY PITCHERS DIE YOUNG. That guy is there!” the ranter oried who lingered at my side, While Old Oil Price was going well and many a batsman died. “That guy is there!" the rooter eried and rent the summer air, And as another man went out he yelled: “That guy is there!” A youth came up and smote the ball unto a distant spot. Another youth came up and made another swat. And when another youth came up and made another clout The gent who sat beside me rose and hollered: “Take him out!” _. I Oh, would I were a hunter on the trail of ivory! I would not hunt where elephants are roaming o'er the lea, But l would buy a grand stand scat and take my gun in hand, For there are tons of ivory in every baseball stand. Ban Johnson refuses to allow Messrs. Altrock and Schaefer to work their fun ny stuff while games are In progress, possibly on. the theory that the players perpetrate enough comic stuff under the guise of baseball. While Jack Knight has taken a fear ful slump, we are forced to admit that he was a Knight for a day. Wretch! Don’t you dare to strike muh! As we diagnose it. Heine Zimmerman has the artistic temperament in his ankle. Fuzzy Woodruff avers that Carl Mor ris is underrated, thereby establishing a reputation as the World’s Greatest Kid der. Walter Thornton, who was hit on the head while earning money for a baseball magnate, is now in a padded cell. You have noticed the rush of magnates to his assistance, have you not? It Is reported that Jack Coombs will be ready for work by August. Connie Mack is preparing to sing that popular ballad entitled, “Good-by, Everybody." J. Evers evidently labors under the impression that it is impossible to man age a ball team with R. Bresnahan try ing to run it from one end and C. Mur phy trying to run It from the other. The heluvitls, he can’t bench C. Murphy. THE GREATEST PLAY I EVER SAW. It was In the eighth Inning. The Gulls were one run ahead, but Hogg had be gun to wabble, and the bases were filled with one out. Tommy Long stepped to the plate, fouled off two and watched three wide ones go by. The next one was low. on the inside, and Long pulled a terrific drive toward right. Robert son started the moment the ball was hit. and a youth with a large basket on his arm stepped in front of me and remark ed: “Peanuts! Five a bag!" Clarke Opens Against Billikens Smith Orders Price to Join Club By Joe Agler. M ontgomery, ala., July 24 — Unless Billy Smith changes hi?* mind at the last moment those cocky Billikens will have Clarke shooting at them from the offside in the opening game of the series this afternbon. Chapman will catch. The boys hooked the rattler rtut of Memphis last night, feeling pretty blue at losing the odd game to the Turtles, especially as the Billies were winning at the same time. But they packed their fighting togs and took them along, and they know one thing for certain—the Billies can't win game for game with the Cracker* on this series, at least. Somebody is going to lose And this bunch won’t believe It will be the Crackers. LIARRELL was lucky yesterday In 1 1 the first five innings, or we should have piled up some runs. At that, there Is no accounting for the way Thompson exploded in the last two rounds. It was just one of those things that happen to the best pitch ers once in awhile. And when we take a beating it might as well be a good one. Clarke looks to me like a first-class pitcher in every way. He has every thing a good pitcher needs, and after getting used to the going in this league he is bound to win a lot of ball games. * * * T UNDERSTAND Price has been or- 1 dered to rejoin us in Montgomery, although Billy hasn’t wild so outright. I hope that is the case, as he will come in mighty handy in the series, the way I see it. POP-POPS IN RECORD RACE; 149 MILES IN TWO HOURS M’DONALD DEFEATS TAYLOR FOR CYCLE CHAMPIONSHIP NEWARK. N. J., July 24.—Donald McDonald, the New York Athletic Club cycle crack, clinched the Na tional Amateur championship when he defeated Aubrey Taylor, amateur champion of Australia, in the one mile race at the Velodrome here last night. Thorwald Ellegaard, the Dan ish rider and winner of six world’s championships, was sent down to de feat by Jackie Clark, the speedy Australian, in two straight heats of a special one mile match race. DELANEY VS. JULIAN. NEW YORK. July 24.—Cal Delaney, of Cleveland, sparring partner of Johnny Kllbane. has been matched with Kid Julian, the Syracuse feath erweight, to box twelve rounds at Put-in-Bay, Ohio, Saturday night. DON’T SCRATCH If you only knew how quickly and otnlly ' Tetterlne cures eczerua. even where everythin* i else falls, you wouldn't suffer and scratch. Tetterine Cures Eczema Read what Mrs. Thomas Thompaon. Clarkea- i fine. Ga*. *a.v* I suffered fifteen year* with tormenting («nma. Had tha beat doctors, but nothing did me any good until i got lettering. It cured me. I am so thankful. Ringworm, ground Itch. Itching plies and other skin troubles yield aa readily. Get It today— | Tetterlne. 50c at druggists, or by mall. SHUPTRINE CO. SAVANNAH, GA. NEW YORK, July 4.—Arthur Chap- pelle and Paul Ohne, of New York, established a new world’s record for the two-hour motorcycle race when they captured the championship team race at the Brighton Beach Motor drome last night. The pair covered 149 miles and 1 lap. The former mark was 141 miles, made on the same track by Lockner and Shields last yeaT. Ray Veditz, oi Philadelphia, and George Mercier, of New York, were second, with 146 miles and 2 laps, while Bert Sayer, of Newport, and George Sperl, of Brooklyn, rode third, with 144 miles and 2 laps. Charles Davis and Bert Fisher, the Brooklyn team, finished fourth, with 144 miles and 1 lap. EVANS AND ALLIS TIE IN WESTERN TOURNEY TO-DAY CHICAGO, July 24.—Interest in the amateur championship tournament of the Western Golf Association at the Homewood course to-day centered In the matches between Charles Evans. Jr., present Western champion, and E. P. Allis, of Milwaukee, who made a world’s record on the first day of the meet by sending thf* ball off the first tee 306 yards into the cup in ono shot. Warren K. Wood, who came within one point of becoming champion lairt year, was matched with Frazer Hale to-day. DELHI BACK IN MAJORS; PIRATES BUY TWIRLER PITTSBURG, July 24.—L. W. "Flame” Delhi, the young giant right-hand pitcher, who was bought by the Chicago Americans from Los Angeles in 1911, and who went to Great Falls, Mont., of the Union As sociation, has been bought by the Pittsburg Pirates on Manager Clarke s belief that he has come back. Clarke likens him to George McQuil- len, who has been pitching great ball since he was pulled out of the minors a few weeks ago. VOLS SIGN SPRATT. MOBILE, ALA., July 24.—Spratt, who started the season with Mont gomery and later went to Selma, Cot ton States League, has been pur chased by Manager Schwartz, of the Nashville club, announcement being made to-night. He will report at New Orleans. Baumgardner will be benched. Red Sox Owners Are On Verge of a Split DETROIT, MICH.. July 24—That there is a ruction imminent in the Boston American League baseball club came to light here tg-dav through the reported attempt made by Boston to trade Speaker and som) other player for Ty Cobb. President McAleer did not make the offer, but the offer came. It is understood that the other player Included with Speaker was “Smoky Joe” Wood. McAleer scouts the idea of any such trade. But John I. Taylor and his father. General W. S. Taylor, want to put it through over his head. The Importance of the offer lie* in the indication that the Taylor* are attempting to take the reins of man agement out of the hands of President McAleer and again become the active heads of the Boston club. SANDPIPERS ARE VICTORS. NARRAGANSETT PIER, R. I., July 24.—The Narragansett Sandpipers cap tured the first semi-final game in the Overture Cup series in the Point Judith polo tournament yesterday by defeating the Point Judith team 9 goals to 5. The Sandpipers received a handicap allow ance of 7 goals at the start. PORCELAIN-NO GOLD CROWN AND BRtPQ* WORK OUR 8#>*C*ALtV, $3X0 No MOro. SILVER FILLING* ■ .28 GOLD FILINGS .50 CLEANING TEBffir.. TWENTY-YEAR GUARANTEE Eastern Painless Dentists SaVfc Paaetvtree Street “Yfl HAMMETT AND GALVA0 IN WESTCHESTER FINALS NEW YORK, July 24.—A D. Ham mett, winner of the trophy in 1911, and Maurice Galvao will meet to-day in the final round of the Westchester Country Club championship lawn tennis singles’ tournament at Travers Island. In a hotly contested three-set match yesterday Hammett defeated E. F. Leo, 6-1, 4-6. 6-3. w'hile Galvan disposed of C. Roper In straight sets. 6-0, 6-2 Miss Bessie Holden reached the final round in the women’s singles by de feating Mrs. C. F. Porter in straight sets, 6-0, 6-2. h\ Low round trip fares North and West Commencing June 1st and daily thereafter round trip tickets over the Louisville & Nashville Railroad will ^ be sold at greatly reduced fares to all the principal lake, mountain and sea shore resorts and to many of the larger cities in the North and West. These tickets will be good returning until October 31st, and beat liberal stop-over privi leges. Round trip fares from Atlanta are Mammoth Cave. Marquette — ... EXCURSION Atlanta, Carrollton, Forsyth and intermediate points to TYBEE and SAVANNAH TTTT.V 9S $6.00 ROUND TRIP. SpecialTrain—Coaches and Sleeping Cars. Ask the Ticket Agent. CENTRAL OF GEORGIA RAILWAY .$17.40 _ 45.70 _ 31.75 _ 43.20 Cincinnati — .$19.50 Charlevoix -- 38.08 Chautauqua Lake Pts. 34.30 Chicago . 30.00 Colorado Springs— 47.40 Denver — 47.40 Detroit. 29.00 French Lick Springs 21.70 Indianapolis 22.80 Loui.ville - 18.00 Toronto-.... — - 38.20 Mackinac I.land 39.50 Yf.lowatono Park 67 60 The., are bat a few of the peinte. There are a freat m.ey other, aad we will be plea.eJ to firs fall iafonnation upon application. Proportionately low farts from other pouts in Georgia. Milwaukee . — Minneapolis -— — Niagara Fall*-.--————- 35.85 Petoskey — — ■ —38.08 Put In Bay —- 28.00 Salt Lake City ■ 60.40 St. Louis —•— ■ 25.60 Let Us Arrange Your Vacation Trip CITY TICKET OFFICE 4 Peachtreo St. PHONES 1 Atlanta 178 7 Bell - 1688 ATLANTA )