Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, July 30, 1913, Image 13
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THE ATT, A NT A GEORGIAN AND NEWS.
ROSY FUTURE
L P. HUS
Bv “Chick” Evans.
C hicago, ill., July 30.—The
Western has come and gone,
and we have a new and very
representative champion. Wood has
played golf of championship quality
for many years, and has been finalist
in the Western three times and once
in the National. His friends—and
they are legion—are delighted that,
after years of trial, his fine golfing
skill is fitttingly rewarded.
The surprise of the tournament was
the playing of E. P. Allis III, of Mil
waukee. and he has certainly made
himself a big star in the golfing
firmament. He was almost the whole
show at Homewood, and certainly did
remarkably well. In consequence,
much interest was taken in an analy
sis of his game. Golfers I consulted
were unable to decide whether he had
good golfing form or not. It was
easy to be seen that he has been
playing for a long time, fo^ his game
was developed during the era of the
A hook, and he plays every shot with
that addition, except his puts. This
is an excellent way of playing, when
it goes right, but without constani
practice it has many dangers. Allis
plays all his shots' off his right foot—
that is, the position of his ball is
nearer the right foot than the left,
a stance not seen very often. His
swing was not too full, but of a
strong, even, full length.
Approach Puts His Best Shot.
His best shot is an approach put,
and I am glad to see that he uses an
iron putter rather than a barred cen
ter-shafted type. Not only does he
put his approach put so close that It
is impossible to piiss the next one,
but he frequently holes it. His put;
ting stance is a good one. but known
a long time. He puts both elbows
out along the line of play, he hangs
his putter well and he does not in
dulge in the needless habit of put
ting the blade in front of the ball.
Mr. Allis' next best shot is his ap
proach shot, which he plays with a
pitcher, a club with a rounded bot
tom and a loft, between a mas'hie
and a niblick. Strange to say. he hooks
this shot with a turn-over of the
head and gets’ splendid results. The
rest of his game is fair. He has lit
tle confidence in wooden clubs, and
his long irons have too large a hook
to be reliable. He knows little about
bunker shots, but had little use for
this knowledge at Homewood; also,
his shots ou* of the long grass are
not good. These shots will come
In time, and his golf future looks
A rosy, indeed.
Possessing an ideal ~''lflr~ tem
perament and an abundance of
“nerve” and every thoroughgoing
sportsmanlike ~”Mity. a champion
ship of nation-wide importance may
not be far awav from him His name
must be added to the ten or twelve
National possibilities this* year.
Too Many Good Golfers Absent.
From a golfing standpoint, the
J tournament last week was not very
strong. It is* true that there wer?
good golfers there, but the plavers
who Qualified did not comprise all of
the very best players in the West.
There were too many absentees. The
• beet golfing round was a 7!>. and the
best two rounds were Ned’s medal
plav. 72 In the morning against me
and an easy finish for the s’ame score
in the afternoon. Tb^ scores ran be
tween 75 and 80. rather than below
75 The weather, the golfer’s best
friend or worst enemy, was perfect.
SHEl TON BEATS NEELY
IN WESTERN TOURNAMENT
CHICAGO. July 30.—John C. ffeely.
of the Wanderers’ Club, one of the
favorites in the Western tennis tour
nament. was defeated by Robert Shel
ton. of Texas, one of the doubles
champions of the South. Neely won
th6 first set 6-4, and defaulted on
the third. Shelton took the second 6-3.
W. T. Hayes defeated A. L. Green.
Western Intercollegiate champion, 6-2,
6-2
Miss Gwendolin Rees, of Minneapo
lis. Central Western champion, won
an easy victory over Miss Elizabeth
Moore, of Chicago. 6-1. 6-1, in the
women’s singles. Miss Rees and Miss
Carrie Neely, of Chicago, are cqpsfid-
ered leading candidates for the wom
en's Western title, now held bv Mrs.
* Thomas Bundy, formerly May Sutton,
of San Francisco. Miss Neely won
from Miss Elizabeth Bruce, 6-2, 6-1.
Neither Mrs. Bundy nor Maurice
McLoughlln, Western champion in the
men's singles, who is now' in Eng
land. will be on hand to defend their
titles, so the winners in the tourna
ment finals will assume the cham
pionships by default.
BRITISH PAPER FINDS AN
ALIBi FOR TENNIS TEAM
LONDON, July 30.—An anonymous
letter appearing in The Standard to
day declares that the English compet
itors in the Davis cup tennis matches
were the better all-round players, but
that the Americans won the trophy
because McLoughiin had mastered
and concentrated his play on a smash
ing service, in which any number of
English players could have equally
perfected themselves.
“Thus the cup was won." the letter
continues, “bv a trick, though a per
fectly legitimate trick within the
rules, which does not further the best
interests of lawn tennis, and unless
this smash service is barred. like the
spot stroke in billiards, tennis is with-
ing measurable distance of death.'*
CHICAGO FOLLOWS LOCAL
EXAMPLE IN MARATHON
CHICAGO, July 30.—A 26-mlle
Marathon race will be the feature of
the card at the Rivervtew Motordrome
to-night, it being the first event of its
kind ever scheduled for decision at
the North Side track. Wiley Gibson,
of St Louis, who holds the Marathon
’ race record of 19:45. will ride against
the field, which will be composed of
Mike Caffarella. Kenneth Verrill. A1
Savalak, George Meyers and Ed Har-
mer.
Bringing Up Father
• •
• •
• • •• •
• • •• o
• •
• •
By
~
George McManus
7 1 —
No Place to Stage Mixed Match
Promoters After Best White Man
D ON’T be surprised if this com
ing campaign you read of Pat
rick McFarland butting into
the heavier fellows’ game.
Fop unless the authorities govern
ing the execution of the mailed fist,
whoever they are, move the weight
beam of the. lightweight class, that is
what will happen.
McFarland learned while in train
ing for his ten-round contest with
Jack Britton that he can take the
measure, inch by inch, of middle-
weights. Eddie McGoortv, one of our
mes' prominent 158-scale artisans,
worked out with Packey for the Brit
ton go. The black-haired and Sven-
gali-orbed Irishman, gave Ed a box
ing lesson every day of the jousting.
• * •
N OW. McGoorty is accredited a
clever gentleman, the cleverest
in his department outside of Gibbons,
and a stiffer hitter with his left. He
can feint out an opening and drive
his punch in ahead of an opponent al
most as w’ell as anybody, and he
kn6ws the counters Still McFar
land, ring parlance adopted for the
moment, “made a monkey out of him."
While working out for the Britton
festival, Packey likewise learned that
the fat does not leave his body as
readily as it used to. for the reason
that there’s not much fat on him. An
ounce over a certain small amount
and he is removing solid flesh. A
good trainer will not allow his man to
train off solid flesh except under rare
circumstances, such as when a big
forfeit must be saved.
• * *
P ACKET did not train hard enough
for Britton, or rather did not give
himself enough time to reduce to the
prescribed figure. It does take time
in Packey's case. As a consequence,
when he got in New York, he had to
resort to the Turkish bath to make
the weight and he went into the ring
registering in the neighborhood of
140, with a yellow look on his face
and circles underlining his eyes.
McFarland has not been a legiti
mate lightweight fod two years nr
over. But he is a smart fellow and
has been getting away with more
stuff than any boxer in the profes
sion. He has had pounds on most
every man he’s boxed for many a
day. More power to him for doing
it, but the end probably came In the
Britton affair. The public saw how
big he was, and now he will indeed
have to show some sharp tactics to
get on with any more lightweights.
What's more. I don’t think Packey
wants to. He's taking on more
muscle.
* * *
T HE hardest task McFarland faces
is that of making weight. He
does not do this often—only when
the coin is thick and tawny—but
there’s no doubt he considers it in
the light of a crime for who wouldn't
if he were as wealthy as Packey and
as high in his chosen trade. It is
not the fighting that's distasteful to
these veterans: It’s the training.
It's not hard to detect the close
of Packey’s tirade among the light
weights. He can't get on with Rit
chie, for he’s too big. He has
whipped Britton. Cross and Murphy,
so there is not much show for him
there unless he wants to undergo
the agony of again making a lew
weight and I surmise he is past that
stage.
There’s a load of money in the
bigger divisions for Packey Mack,
without as much effort as his “light
weight” affairs call for, and he has a
noble chance for the halo of the
middle ranks. Packey wants to be
called'a champion before he leaves
fistic warfare—another authorized
fact—so the zodiac seems to point to
an enlargement of activity for the
stockyard star.
DANVILLE HUiRLER WORKS
NO-HIT SHUT-OUT GAME
DANVILLE. ILL. July 30—Harry
Chapman, pitching for the locals, shut
out Bloomington yesterday without a
hit Danville winning 5 to 0 This is
the first time this feat has been ac
complished in the Three I League this
season.
Bv Ed W. Smith.
C HICAGO, ILL., July 30—They are
saying a lot of sarcastic things
about the white hopes just now
because one or two of them made
the statement when Sam Langford
landed in this country that they had
put up the bars and would not meet
a colored fighter. Jess Willard, out
on the Pacific Coast, is credited with
the statement that he would have
nothing to do with the black fighter,
and Arthur Pelky. Tommy Burns’
gladiator, is said to have given ut
terance to somthing along the same
order. These statements caused many
t*porting writers to say mean things
about the “white hopes.”
• * •
T T is a queer situation It can be
* summed up In this wise: The
white man is*roaKed and toasted for
declining to have anything to do with
the blacks. Yet not on? of the men
who are saying these unkind things
about the white men could find a sin
gle place in America where a , match
between a big white man and a star
black could be staged! There is no
puch place on the map. So why should
there be a howl because the whites
decline to mingle? If Willard or Pel
ky agreed to take on Sam Langford
they couldn’t find a promoter any
where who would Stage it.
• * •
ALMOST as soon as the announce-
T* ment was made that Langford
was on his way back looking for a
lot of trouble. ,the subject of mixed
matches camfe up. and. they were
promptly tabooed In the chief boxing
centers. New York was one of the
first to put the ban on, and Cali
fornia followed in a hurry. In most
of the other spots where boxing is
tolerated, and is not protected by any
State law, it would be the next thing
to suicide for a promoter to suggest
such a thing as a mixed match, es
pecially with such a man as Lang
ford engaged.’ Why, then, with no
chance of any such matches in sight,
comes all this talk about this one or
that one being afraid?
6 * •
'T'HERE are enough blacks to go
1 around, and there is only one
chance for them. That is to battle
among themselves and settle the
question. They say Langford isn't
what he was, that Jack Johnson has
passed his best day. that Jeanette is
there strong, and that MoVey, etc.
With the black heavies placed the way
they are, there should be little trouble
in getting a settlement among them-
selvec. During the trouble the white
heavies can settle their own conten
tion among themselves, and every
body will bd satisfied. •“
mum
THE first of these white contests
1 will be flashed in N?w York Au
gust 5 between Jim Flynn, of Pueblo,
and Gunboat Smith, of Philadelphia
Jack Curley, who is handling Flynn's
affairs, very truthfully and tritely re
marks*: “They may be a bad lot.
these big white fellows, but there
must be a best man among them.
That’s what we want to try and un
cover.” There is every reason to be
lieve that the public will become in
terested if we ever succeed in get
ting a “best man." one who stuck out
as Luther McCarty did when he met
his unfortunate end.
• m •
B UT there isn’t now’ and w’on’t he
for a good long time any de
mand by the public for mixed
matches. The public was taught a
severe lesson in the last big mixed
match, and there doesn’t seem to
be any hankering for a repetition, or
even the possibility of a repetition of
such an affair as that at Reno in
1910.
Sporting Food
QBORQI ft. PHA1R —
BASEBALL SUMMARY
SOUTHERN LEAGUE.
Games Wednesday.
Atlanta at Mobile (two games).
Chattanooga at Birmingham.
Standing of the Clubs.
W. I.. Pc. W. L. Pc
Mont. 59 40 596 Chatta. 49 47 .510
Mobile 61 44 .581 M'phis. 50 56 .472
B’ham. 53 46 .635 Nash. 42 57 .424
Atlanta 50 45 .526 N. Or. 34 63 .351
Tuesday’s Results.
Birmingham 4. New’ Orleans 3
Chattanooga 2. Montgomery
innings, rain).
Nashville 2. Memphis 1.
AMERICAN LEAGUE.
Games Wednesday.
Detroit at Washington
St. Louis at Philadelphia
Chicago at New York.
Cleveland at Boston.
SOUTH ATLANTIC LEAGUE.
Games Wednesday.
Macon at Charleston
Albany at Columbus.
Savannah at Jacksonville.
Standing c
W. b Pc
Col’bus. 19 10 655
Sav’nah 16 11 .593
J’ville 14 14 .500
of the Clubs.
TV L Pc
Albany 14 16 467
Chas'n 14 17 .452
Macon 10 19 .345
(six
Tuesday's Results.
Jacksonville 6. Savannah 5.
Charleston 4, Macon 2.
Columbus 2, Albany 0.
EMPIRE STATE LEAGUE.
Games Wednesday.
Cordele at Thomasville.
Valdosta at Waycross.
Americus at Brunswick.
Standing of the Clubs.
Standing c
W L. TV
Phila. 66 28 .702
C’land. 58 38 .604
Wash'n. 55 40 .579
of the Clubs.
W. L. Pc
Boston 46 46 .600
Detroit 40 59 .404
S Louis 39 62 .386
319
W. L. Pet
Cordele 15 11 577
T’ville 14 11 .560
B’wick. 14 12 538
W. L. Pet.
Valdosta 12 14 .462
Am'cus. 12 16 444
W’cross. 11 15 .423
Chicago 51 49 .510 N'. York 29 62
Tuesday’s Results.
Philadelphia 8, Detroit 0.
Washington 2, St. Louis 1.
Boscon 5-2, Chicago 3-0.
Cleveland 6-6, New York 3-3.
NATIONAL LEAGUE.
Games Wednesday.
Brooklyn at Pittsburg.
Philadelphia at Cincinnati.
New York at Chicago.
Boston at St. Louis.
Tuesday's Results.
Brunswick 4. Americus 0.
Waycross 7, Valdosta 4
Thomasville 4. Cordele 2.
GEORGIA-ALABAMA LEAGUE.
Games Wednesday.
Talladega at Opelika.
Gadsden at LaGrange.
Anniston at Newnan.
Standing of the Clubs.
W. L. Pet.
G'den 43 31 .581
Newman 38 34 .528
Opelika 38 36 .314
W L. Pet
L'G’ge 35 38 479
Annfs’n 34 40 459
Tal’dega 33 42 440
Standing of the Clubs,
W. L. Pet
N York 65 27 .707
Phila. 53 34 .655
Chicago 48 45 .616
P'burg 46 46 .495
TV L Pet
Br’oklyn 42 45 483
Boston 39 51 .433
C’natl. 37 59 .385
S. Louis 36 58 .381
Tuesday’s Results.
Gadsden 10 LaGrange 2
Opelika 8, Talladega 0.
Anniston-Newnan. rain.
Tuesday’s Result*.
New York 1-3, St. Louis 0-1.
Philadelphia 7. Pittsburg 4.
Cincinnati 6, Brooklyn 5.
Boston 9. Chicago 1.
Virginia League.
Petersburg 1. Newport News 0.
Rcanoke 7, Portsmouth 4
Richmond 8. Norfolk 4.
Carolina Association.
Winston 6, Charlotte 3
Durham 4. Greensboro 3.
FLY CASTERS TO ORGANIZE.
Atlantans interested in fly and bait
casting are to meet Friday night, August
1, 8 o’clock, at the Yancey hardware
Company, Peachtree street. All inter
ested in the sport are invited to be pres
ent. ar.d participate in the organization.
Fly and bait casting clubs are in exist
ence all over the country, and tourna
ments are held Chicago. Denver San
Francisco all have clubs and one of the
most interesting sights of the New York
and Boston. Sportsman Shows is the
casting tournaments. Prizes are of
fered for distance and accuracy.
, ABSENCE.
“Absence makes the heart grow
fonder:
That is why I long for you."
Thus a lovesick poet warbled
When his chicken up and blew.
Absence makes the fan grow fonder
When the team is far away,
And is burning up the circuit.
Winning pastimes every day.
Rut when things are breaking badly
And the team goes on the blink,
Absence makes the fan grow fonder
l—DON'T—THINK!
Quoth Charlie Somers, the well-known
baseball impresario: ‘‘Few of the major
league clubs will show a dollar profit
this year.” We notice Mr. Somers and
his fellow Impressarlos sellina out, do
we not?
We note that Sam Langford Is match
ed to fight some mysterious person
whom he does not know. We might also
say that said fightef's relatives will not
know hkn when Sam has finished the
Job.
It is said that red-headed men have
great executive* ability. Likewise it is
rumored in England that red-headed
men can play lawn tennis.
While we look upon tennis as con
siderable pastime, we do not hesitate
to say that a snapshot of a woman play
ing that game would never win a prize
in a beauty contest.
Washington fans are raising a fund to
buy a loving cup for Walter Johnson,
and It is rumored that seven American
League managers are raising a fund to
retire him on a pension.
Ad Wolgast having parted with Tom
Jones, it might be said that he has lost
h)s voice.
In view of the success of Napoleon
Lajole after every session on the bench,
it would be advisable for Frank Chance
to bench his whole team every other
day.
E. WALSH.
The little old spitter is on the frittz
And feeble and weak it floats,
No more like a shot through the dir
it flits
To capture the focmen's goats.
Time wa* when Ms little old arm. was
new
And he was a strong young geek,
And they never gave him a thing
to do
Rut work seven days per week.
It Is true, as the papers say, that Pal
Brown is off for Australia. In fact, Joe
Woodman will vouch for the statement
that any fighter who goes to Australia
is off,
SPEAKING OF LEFTY RUSSELL.
Lives of pitchers all remind us
We ran kill our pitching arm.
And a few short years will find us
Pitching hay upon the farm.
MIDSEASON MUSING8.
The melancholy days are come,
The saddest of the year,
When baseball teams go on the bum
And not a fan to cheer—
When fans no longer rise to shout
And often rise to jeer.
And managers are tryirrg ht/f
Recruits to use next year.
When Ray Schalk Is chased out of the
game for protesting a decision there Is a
general suspicion that the said decision
could not have stood up under the pure
food laws
Sam Langford and Joe Jeannette are
said to have been matched. We were
about to add the word “again,” but we
considered it unnecessary.
The fact that Carl Morris knocked out
A1 Benedict reveals the ead fact that
you can always find something worse.
Clarke and Conzelman Selected
•£•••?• +•+ +•+
T wo Games W ith Gulls—Per haps
By Joe Agler.
M obile, ala., July 30.—one of
the hardest rains I ever saw
spoiled our chances of cleaning
up on the Gulls yesterday, or maybe
it spoiled the Gulls' chances for
cleaning up on us, the way things
have been going lately.
Anyway, about ten miriutes before
time for the game to be called, the
bottom fell out and there never WuS
a chance for the game. We are going
to try to wind up the full series by
playing two games this afternoon.
Clarke and Conzelman will do the
pitching for our side, with Chapman
and Dunn* back of the W’ood.
The team will present a new link
up. and may not work very smooth
ly at first. But at any rate the
Crackers will go into the rest of the
campaign without cripples. Holtz, the
new outfielder, will play In right this
afternoon. Manush will be at third
and the captain. Wallop Smith, will
play second.
Wally, by the way. is a proud fath
er to-day, and he is about the proud
est I ever saw. He got a telegram
yesterday afternoon late that Wallop
Junior, weight 9 pounds, had arrived
at the Smith home in St. Louis and
was stopping with his mother.
Wally immediately converted his
home run #f the day before into
cigars and all the boys were smoking
on him last night.
We will be mighty glad to get back
home, if only for three days, and our
friends will have a chance to look
over Clarke. Love and Holtz, who
have- joined the team since it left
home. . —
BE ERECTED ON HONEST OF All
PONCE BEIEOH SPORT GAMES
S D sure are those who are pro
moting the exhibition polo game
at Fort McPherson a week from
to-day that the game will prove a
success that they are planning for a
permanent club and grounds.
It Is not unlikely that the club will
be located on Ponce DeLeon avenue,
Just opposite the baseball park. This
would be an ideal spot. It wouldn’t
cost a heap of money to tear down
the old amusement buildings that now
“decorate” the grounds.
Would Be an Ideal Spot.
The club would surely prove a suc
cess if locatel there. It would be only
a fifteen-minute ride on the street
car, and the members could easily get
out there after business hours, ^njov
an hour or two of playing, and still
be home in time for dinner.
The backers of the polo venture
have also looked over a stretch of
land out Peachtree Road, not far
from Buckhead. Another desirable
location would be at the Speedway.
The track could be torn down. There
Is an ideal clubhouse there now.
while the grandstand w’ould surely
be a marvel to witness a polo match
from.
Game Sure to Be a Success.
There is no doubt about the game
next Wednesday being a success.
Everybody is talking about it. The
Capitol City and Athletic clubs will
turn out en masse, it ip not un
likely that these tw-o foremost clubs
will form- teams for a match a few
weeks later
The Fort McPherson team, which
comprises four lieulenants. captained
by Lieutenant Hornsby Evans, is hard
at work training. Tom Weaver.
Lamar Hill, Dr. J. O. Seamons, who
will play on the All-Southern team,
will start practising to-morrow.
Two crack players from South Caro
lina are expected to arrive Friday to
help the All-Southerm* in their at
tempt to down the soldier boys.
tVOULD you give 25 cents for a good
Job? Place a “Want Ad" in The Geor
gian and get one.
By Billy Sunday.
Old-Time* Ball Player and World-
Famous Evangelist
E verywhere i go i am asked:
“Are you still interested in
baseball?”
You might as well ask a CalifoT-
nian. “Do you love the sunshine?” or
ask an old ex-fire ho^se, “Do you re
member the sound of the gong ’”
Baseball is and always will be loved
and honored by the American people
as long as it is kept clean and free
from gamblers and crooks and from
the taint of suspicion .that it’s not on
the square. It is on the square, al
though a bunch of lobsters have tried
to cast a cloud over the game.
I don’t believe fhe game is any
faster to-day than twenty years ago
do not believe the players are any
classier or speedier than in the past.
• • *
THERE are some fine twirlers In
A the game, but I will put old John
Clarkson. Amos Rusie or Charlie Rad-
bourne up with any of the pill sltng-
ers of to-day. Why, when any of
these old sports cut loose in the box
all you could see was a white streak
going over the plate, and the tem
perature would drop three degrees as
the ball shot past.
They double-columned the fact that
Ty Cobb scored from second base on
an infield hit. Why, Bud. I pulled off
that same stunt two times in one se
ries over twenty years ago. I used
to go around the bases in fourteen
seconds from a standing start. It’s
the player who has plenty of gray
matter and passes up the booze who
keeps in the spotlight.
SAYS HEDGES
S T LOUIS, MO., July 30.—Presi
dent R. L. Hedges of the
Browns returned from a trip to
Montgomery. Ala., last night, with
Branch Rickey’, the club’s secretary,
and the announcement that he had
exercised his option on Pitcher Ed
Manning and bought Outfielder Wal
ker, of the Montgomery team.
Still another player from the same
club may be obtained before the close
of the s-eason. The Browns paid $4,000
for Walker, who is esteemed the best
asset on the club, in the fielding de
partment.
Doesn’t Want to Buy Club.
President Hedges, when asked if he
had closed a deal to buy the Mont
gomery club, said he had not.
"Furthermore. I don’t expect to.
The club Is a loser, and worth noth
ing. Montgomery is a town of 40.000
persons, half of whom are negroes.
The team has never been a money
maker, and in my’ opinion can never
be made a paying investment. For
the sake of a place to send my play
ers, I might have bought the club*
but the price was laughable.”
Incidentally, Hedges took occasion
to deny the rumor that has been go
ing the Southern rounds that Man
ager Johnny Dobbs, of the Montgom
ery club, would be made manager of
the Browns.
Dobbs Will Not Lead Browns.
"Dobbs is the smartest man in tho
Southern League to-day.” declared
Hedges. “He could be manager o{
any one of four teams if he cared to
accept the job. But a?« for his com*,
ing here, you can dismiss that from
your mind. ~
“Dobbs, hpwever, Is a better major
league manager than half the men
now in charge of big clubs to-day.”
President Hedges stated that he ex
pected to go to Indianapolis Satur
day. He wants to look over the play
ers of that club Hedges will also
take a peek at Niehoff, of the Louis
ville club.
Secretary Branch Rickey depart*
to-day for a tour of the bushes in
rearch of good-looking baseball ma
terial.
LOOK—You have read this; If you want
anything, others will read your ad if
it’s in the Want Ad Section.
catarrh;
OF THE
BLADDER<
Relieved In «
24 Hours «
Each Cap- 1
Buie bears the (MIDYf 4
name a
Beware of counterfeits 4
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Headaches caused by eye-strain are
cured by our scientifically fitted
lenses. Oculist service at opticians'
prices. L. N. Huff Optical Company,
two stores, 52 West Mitchell. 70
Whitehall. adv.
full of scabs
Wh*t could be more pitiful than the condi
tion told of In thU letter from A. It. Avery.
Waterloo, N. Y :
Wr have been using your Trttrrlne. It's
the best on earth for skin ailments. Mrs.
S. C. Hart was a st®ht to se*. Her face
wa» a mass of scabs. Tctterlne has cured
Cured by Tetterine
Tetteylne cures eczema, around Itch, ring
worm and all akin troubles. Its effect la
magical
50c at druviUts. or by mall.
SHUPTRINE CO.. SAVANNAH. GA.
Coast - Wise Ships
for Pleasant Trips
— CENTRAL OF GEORGIA RY.
TO
Savannah, Ga
Thence a cool ocean voyage on
palatial steamships.
Round-trip Fare, from Atlanta
Including meals and berth while at aea
New York. .$38.25
, Boston 42.26
A) Baltimore. 29.25
Philadelphia 34.05
Correspondingly low fares from
and to other places.
Ask nearest Ticket Agent.
W. H. Fooo,
District Passenger Agent,
Central of Georgia Railway,
Atlanta, Ga.
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