Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, August 05, 1913, Image 12

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. - ysK’rj-j vR-y ss^-gwr-iiiar i* -mm*™ 12 o THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. Us Boys d* <£ <£ Rpglsterpd United Rrntwi Patent Office. Skinny Gets a Regular Caruso Job rpi By Loft Hook. tflE Whitt*-Whitney bout, sched uled for Wednesday night. Au gust 3, will be held In the Auditorium-Armory- Lou Castro was afraid that his new arena out at Poncy Park would not be completed In time, so the match was shifted to the Auditorium-Armory. Three companies of the local regi ment will share the receipts of the match, and from the outlook the sol dier hoys will get enough money to buy brand new uniforms It Is a cinch that the biggest crowd that ever witnessed a mill In Atlanta will be on hand when the lads climb Into the ring The demand for tickets Is large, even though they haven’t been placed on sale yet. Castro has received let ters from fans In Macon. Augusta and Athens asking that he reserve choice seats for them. Popular prices will prevail. The balcony scats 111 be $1. The ring- aide “berths’ will be $2, while the dress circle seats will set each fan who purchases them hack $1.50. There isn’t another club in the coun try that wouldn’t demand at least $5 for rlngUde seats for this same scrap. * * • T"> ATTLING NELSON Is one of the squarest boxers that ever wor» a five-ounce glove. When he boxed Frank Whitney here, there was a mis take in his "cut." He was overpaid $151.20. The mistake was not known until the next day, and the Battler was then on his way to Chicago. «About a week ago Captain Homer Weaver, one of the promoters of that contest, told the writer about the mis take. I suggested that the honorable captain write to Bat about the mat ter. He did. And yerterday Weaver received a check for the amount. How many boxers are there who would “come across” like the old champion did? Right now Nelson Is strong on th* 1 “retire” stuff. Well, here’s hoping that If he ever does return to the game that he can be Induced to come . bn k to Atlanta to display hls wares. •We want Just this sort of a fellow rfwith us. # • • THE Southern Merchants’ Conven- * tion which Is to be held here will have a strong representation st th>* Whitney-White mill. Three thousand 'of them have practically arranged for a section of seats. , A special rate has been made for them. • • • H 1T.LT LUTZ believes that he has the coming welterweight cham pion In Eddie Hanlon. Bill gave us the following earful of chatter last , night when we humped into him at • £Mve Points: “I’ve got the next welter champ sure. Why. Eddie Is only 19 years old; can box with the best of ’em. and carries terrible kick. I’m plan ning to take him to New York In the fall, and he'll come hack to Atlanta a champion, sure.” Hanlon really is a classy hoy. He showed wonderful Imjfrovement In hie Jr event bout with Terry Nelson. J. K. McDonald Wins Payne Golf Trophy The .1. Carroll Payne trophy, prin cipal prize in the East Lake golf touYney. finished yesterday, was won by .1 K McDonald, who defeated K. R. Cobb; 6 up and b to play in 36 holes. In the second flight. J. L. Dickey won over hi D. Duncan, 1 up. in a well-played and closely contested match R. P. Jones won the third flight, defeating D. R. Cowles. 6 up and 5 to play. CROSS AND RIVERS TO BOX 20 ROUNDS ON LABOR DAY !\ AUJ SHRIMP'S JUST JEALOUS Af? ME 'CAUSE I PITCHED A WINNIN’ 6AME yesterday- I SHOULD WORRY- GUESS ILL SIN6 A „ SON 6 AT mSELF 1 y IH THE "MORNING BY THE MOONLIGHT ON THE SIXTY THIRD OF JUNE a • 4 ^ n fa'- ( ALUNPhO ^sSSw! 7 sKhhh skinny, ndary Jlfsr This moment FELL * - FELL ASLEEP- BE QUlF-T SHHHH1 ms YOU MOST PARDON ME FOR. ASK/N6 -v YOU TO STOP YQUR SIN6IN0 iTWAV T^AT POTHER T<5 SLEEP ~ ACIC AND Sing some MORE JC _lPM M-Samara 000 FOR PAMS COOKED V dtp To-day uue play the “Oleas' 1 on our. HOME & ROUNDS-MAYBE l WILL PLAY IF SHRIMP FLYNN UMLL LET ME- I WON'T PITCH THOUGH - EA6LE8EAK 15 60/N6 TO SHOW UP - THAT'S UiKAT HE SAYS^ SHANER'SGOOOJ DEPt SHAIMER'S , HINTS NO.3 5W)0( , ron TO WlEAlTff A NlCKEL- what is the oLaesr TREE IN AMERICA ? THE ELDER. TREE ! - NOW JUST THINK THAr OVER. Uin,in (jM foi to-ddy. rRDN) JAMES fcURNS-D.S, A. WHY IS THE LCTTb'R. LIKE A 8ACUL/N6 ABY ? ANSWER KRAZY KAT &A&V ) cu. LOS ANOELK Cross an<l his style ed iiereabouts So won a match with Day. The pair vs at Vernon. The weigh 135 pounds the battle IS. Aug 5—Leach of milling are admlr- tnuch so that be baa Joe Rivers for Labor ill go twenty rounds boys have agreed to several hours before HERMAN BEATS WALSH. MEMPHIS. TKNN . Aug 5 —Kid Her man. of New Orleans, gained a decision over Jimmv Walsh, the Chicago ban tam. last nights after eight rounds of fRFt fighting FORSYTH T 2 0 3 0 D r. fl 3 T o MERE IS REAL VAUDEVILLE A GREAT Variety Show 8 Berlin Madcaps—Van Hov- *n—Annie Kent—Harry Hay ward 4. Co.—Pero 4 Wilson. Freeman 4 Dunham and Ev erest's Monkey Hippodrome. 2:3 °s to GRAND 8:30 to io REAL MOVIES ALL FIRST RUN SPECIALS SEATS EXCLUSIVE FEATURES 10 cts All Cheered Up +•+ +•+ +•+ Holland Starts a Bv 0. B. Koolor. A MONG the cheering effects of | getting the Jump game off the Lookouts might be mentioned the picking up of half a lap on the Gulls and the Blllikens, who were idle, the continued good pitching of Elliot Dent and the Improved focus In the batting lamps of our young friend, Harry Holland. Harry got a couple of satisfactory wallops, one a double and one a sin gle with the towpath Jingled, the lat ter punch coinciding with our idea of the proper Juncture to produce a hit. Harry’s fielding continued sharp and flashy, the report goes, and alto gether he looked mighty good. * • • THE Crackers had fully expected to * bump Into Mr. Ooveleskie, the well-known Irish newsboy, In the opener. They weren't much afraid of the Terrible Telephone Pole, and rather hoped to meet him and get It over with They needn’t worry about that. They'll meet him, all right. And the chances are strongly In favor of some body—Mr. Price, for example—having to work a game of very few tallies to pin the flag on the right side at the finish. • • • A T that. The standing of the Craek- ** ers In the percentage column appears exactly the same this morn ing as It did yesterday. President Havana ugh has handed down a ruling on the Justly celebrat ed, but never played, game in Nash ville. claimed by forfeit by both the Crackers and the Vole. Each city loyally espoused the standing select ed by its noble wrecking crew, and the papers have been somewhat con fusingly at variance for some weeks. Now Mr. Kavanaugh has decide J not to settle the matter by the tra ditional method |>f a quarter, flipped up. but has ruled that the contra dicting clubs shall play off the game at the next (and final) visit of the Crackers at Sulphur Dell. So the game comes off the stand ings for the nonce • • • J OE AGLER gazetteer at the front, reports that Slim Love is under the weather. Our guess 1? that the Human String Is suffering from kinks In his system caused by trying to stow himself away In a Pullman berth • • • T HE story Is current these days that the success of Joe Boehllng. | Washington’s now celebrated fork- hander. Is due to the coaching of by the Victory +•+ +•+ +•+ Batting Average Nick Altrock. himself pome southpaw, back In the days when he started the White Sox toward a world’s cham pionship by licking Mordecai Brown, of the Cubs, in the first game of the series of 1906. Nick presumably Joined the Sen ators, after playing with Minneapolis and Kansas City In the American As sociation, to make vaudeville shows on the coaching lines In company with Germany Schaefer. But the story goes that Nicholas now Is ndvtser-1n-chief to the won derful young southpaw, who was be- wMldered at first by too many coaches and was floundering around dismally. • • * \VT ELL. Nick Is a wise old bird He vv has been in baseball nearly 20 years, and he knows a thing or two about the game. Also, he has the smoothest balk motion that ever nip ped a hapless runner off first And that is one of the things he Is teach ing Boehllng In the matter of pitching. Nick had a very simple system He once ex plained It to the writer “All I ever did was to make ’em hit the ball,” Nick asserted. “I hard ly ever tried to strike a man out. I tried to make him hit it, with some thing on the ball, and not where *ie wanted it. Make ’em hit bad ones, was my motto.” If that's the system Nick is teach ing Boehllng there is additional proof that it’s a pretty fair little system. MOTOR RACES TO-NIGHT, 8:15 OTORDROME Monday’s Game, Chattanooga: ab. r. h, po. a. e Walsh, ss. ... 4 0 0 2 2 2 | Flick, 2b. ... 4 0 0 1 0 1 | Johnson, If. . . 4 0 0 2 0 0 Elberfeld, rf.. . 4 0 1 R 0 0 King, cf. . . . 4 1 1 3 1 0 Graff. 3b. ... 3 0 1 2 2 0 Williams, lb.. . 2 0 1 6 0 n Street, c. . . . 3 1 1 7 0 0 Sommers, p. . . 3 0 1 6 2 0 Totals. . . .31 J 6 27 ^ 7 3 Atlanta: ab. r. h. po. a. e. Long, If. ... 5 0 1 2 0 1 Agler, lb. . . 6 1 2 10 0 0 Welchonce, ct. 5 0 2 4 1 1 Smith, 2b. . . 3 1 0 6 3 0 Btsland, ss. . . 8 0 0 1 7 0 Holland. 3b. . . 4 1 2 0 2 0 Holtz, rf. . . . 3 0 0 1 0 0 Chapman. ..110000 Manush, rf. . . 0 0 0 0 0 0 Dunn. c. . . . 4 0 2 4 1 l Dent. p. . . . 4 1 1 0 1 0 Totals. . . .37 5 10 27 14 3 Batted for Manush in the fifth. ChattAnooga 000 010 100—2 Atlanta 001 000 040—5 J Summary: Stolen bases—Street, Long. Sacrifice hits—Bisland. Graff. Williams. Two-base hits—Welchonce, Sommers. Holland. Graff Bases on I balls—Off Sommers. 1. Struck out — By Sommers. 6; by Dent. 2. Wild pitch—Sommers. Time—1:40. Um pires—Breitenstein and Hart. American Association. Toledo, 3; Columbus, 4 Louisville. 7; Indianapolis, 5 Minneapolis, 1; Milwaukee. 0. Virginia League. Norfolk, 9; Roanoke. I Newport News. 5; Petersburg. 4. Portsmouth, 2. Richmond. 2 Carolina Association. Greensboro. 6; Charlotte. 0 Raleigh. 4; Durham. 2 Winston-Salem. 9: Asheville. 4. Appalachian League. Johnson City. 8: Knoxville. 1. Morristown. 14 Mfddlesboro, 4 Rome. 9. Bristol. 2 Federal League. Cleveland. 4: Indianapolis, 2. St Louie, 9; Chicago, a. • • • • • • • • It's Not a Very Safe Place at That ^>T0P, PAW'S, HESiTATfc, is not A~TfeetTc^t. A Perilous Placet For. to feocw: A BAfeY /Aj,r -lOH N0-rso\ VEfty "KRA2.y' (AIOY So VE£V Baseball Summary, SOUTHERN LEAGUE. Games Tuesday. Atlanta at Chattanooga. Birmingham at Nashville. New Orleans at Montgomery. Standing of the Clubs. Mont. Mobile Atlanta B'ham . W. L. Pc. 60 42 .588 64 46 .682 65 47 .639 55 50 .524 W L Po. Chatt... 51 50 .505 M’mphls 53 57 .482 N’ville 46 60 .429 N. Or. 35 66 .347 Monday’s Results. Atlanta, 6; Chattanooga. 2. Nashville, 7, Birmingham, 6. No other games scheduled. SOUTH ATLANTIC LEAGUE. Games Tuesday. Charleston at Albany. Jacksonville at Macon. Columbus at Savannah. Standing of the Cluba, W. L. Pc. Col’bus 21 18 618 8’v’nah. 18 15 645 Albany. 18 17 .514 W. L. Pc Ch’ston. 17 19 .472 J’ville. 16 18 .470 Macon 13 21 .382 Monday's Results. Macon. 2. Jacksonville, 1. Savannah. 3; Columbus. 1. Albany, 5; Charleston, 2 AMERICAN LEAGUE. Games Tuesday. Chicago at Washington. Pt Louis at Boston. Cleveland at Philadelphia. Detroit at New York Ilk CHIEF “i Standing W. L Pi Phtla.. 69 30 .697 Cl'land 68 39 618 W’ton.. 56 43 .666 Chicago 53 51 .510 of the Clubs. W L. Pc. Boston. 46 51 .474 Detroit.. 42 61 408 St. L. 41 64 390 New Y 32 03 .337 Monday’s Results. New York, 6; Detroit, 4. Chicago. 5; Washington, 3. Philadelphia, 7; Cleveland, 1. Sporting Food NATIONAL LEAGUE. Games Tuesday. New York at Pittsburg. Boston at Cincinnati. Brooklyn at Chicago. Philadelphia at St Louis. Standlnn of the Clubs W L Pe. New Y 68 29 .701 Phlla 58 35 624 Chicago 51 48 .515 P'burg.. 49 47 610 W. L Pc. B'klyn.. 43 60 .462 Boston . 41 66 427 C’nati. . 40 62 .392 St. L. . 38 62 .380 Monday’s Results. New Tork, 2. Pittsburg. 1 Philadelphia. «; St. Louis. 3. Brooklyn. 7; Chicago, 1. Cincinnati, 13; Boston, 4. EMPIRE STATE LEAGUE. Gamas Tuesday. Thomasville at Cordele. Waycross at Valdosta. Brunswick at Americus. ta o W. L Pc. W. L. P C. T’vtlle , 18 12 600 V'dosta. 15 16 484 C'dele 17 14 548 Am’cus. 15 17 .459 B’swlck 15 16 484 | W’cross 13 18 419 Monday’s Results. Thomasville. 8; Cordele. 4. Americus. 6; Brunswick. 2. Waycross. 8; Valdosta. 4 GEORGIA-ALABAMA LEAGUE. Games Tuesday. LaOrmnge at Talladega Opelika at Anniston Newnan at Gadsden. W L. Pc j TV. L Pc. G’sden 46 33 582 j LaGr'ge 38 40 487 Newnan 41 37 626 j An'ston 38 42 475 Opelika. 39 40 494 I T’dega 35 45 437 Monday's Results. Anniston. 3. Opelika. 2 LaGrange. 2; Talladega. 2. Gadsden 5; Newnan. 1. International League. Baltimore, 8; Buffalo, 1. Montreal 7: Providence. 6 Jersey City. 2-7; Toronto, 1-1 Other game not scheduled Texas League. Dallas, 8; Houston. 6 Waco. 5 Galveston. 2 Austin, 8: Beaumont, 4. Other games not scheduled. By Allen Sangree. ’LL quit when they bridge the Atlantic Ocean,’’ rumbled Husk Chance yesterday after a whale of a storm balked the gladiators from mingling. Chance was good and sore, but demnition grateful to the fans and press of New York for giving him a decent advertisement. “I’m here to shove this club up into first division,” said he. “and I sure would be a quitter if I slipped off the rails at this stage. “This American League is fast,” he went on. while dickering for an auto mobile, and Husk is some chauffeur. “Looks to me as though the general run of pitchers In the A. L. have an edge on those of the National. The proposition of pulling a club up into firft division among this company from the bottom step is enough to make your hair turn gray. Jennings, Callahan and Stovall are all out to butt Into quality, and they had the Jump on me. Now it is a case of melding the big league material on hand and supplementing It with what the scouts bnng In.” Frank Chance Is “There.” Friend Writer has a notion that Chance Is there. He concludes this from history. When George Stallings took hold of the Yanks he was a pret ty old fellow, and yet he maced that bunch of old-timers into form and in two years had the Yanks barking for the pennant. Stallings was deposed by a series of shifty deals, and we do hear that Ban Johnson allowed “Stal- lines must go.” He went and he came back. Who told you to say that? Chase had his fling and does not wax into any Julius Caevar, where upon the club rambles around with Wolverton and finally sizes Chance, who Is so well off that he probably wouldn’t have undertaken the job If C. Webfoot Murphy were morgued. Baseball managers seem to be born, not made We notice that Bresnahan and a whole bunch of youngsters could not deliver, while Clark Grif fith. and we might even mention I. McGraw. whose hair is almost as white as Sam Crane’s, have swung through the seasons. Chance is a severe taskmaster. He has fined a lot of the boys heavily for this and that. We hear stuff that the team is sore on hlnj. Well, let the team be sore The team was sore on George Stalling*’ There was Jack Klelnow. Lou Criger and a bunch of old-timers who thought Stallings was a Joke because he started a baseball school at Macon, Ga., when the club was training there in 1909. CHANCE OFFERS SIOTOOO FOR MINOR LEAGUE PLAYER BALTIMORE. Aug. 5.—Manager Prank Chance, of the New York Ameri cana. to-day made an offer of $10,000 and two players for Fritz Maizel. of the local International League team. Stallings, of the Boston Braves, is also bidding for the star athlete. ■y atonal a. phair > TYPE. Once a portly baseball magnate read a book of knightly lore And the tale of blood and glory thrilled him to his bosom's core. For it told of noble tourneys where the knights in iron coats With their spears and battle axes strove to get each other's goats And it told of slender muidens and of portly jeweled dames Who were gathered there in myriads to watch the noble games. “Ah!” he muttered as he pondered on the quaint and knightly lore, “If I only had been living in the wondrous days of yore! If I only were a magnate in the days of long ago / could pack 'em in by millions at an iron man per throw!" ENTRIES KEUPPER JOINS FEDERALS. BLOOMINGTON. ILL, Aug. 5—Word was received by the Bloomington base ball club officials to-day that Pitcher Henry Keupper, ore of the most ef fective members of the staff, who had been on leave of absence, had Joined the St, Louis Federel League team, and was playing under the name of King. DT fiTSC!^TT THEMED. reller, 1 JL swelling, short breath » soon removed,often entire relief In 15 to 2IS dars. Trial treatment gent FREE. | Write Dr. M. h Grttn* Sen. Sex C. Atlanta. Ga. AT SARATOGA. FIRST—Three year olds, 6 furlongs: Royal Message 107, Granida 104, xThrif- ty 102. Tritier 96. Fond 102, Lady Light ning 107, xLittle Hugh 93, Paleck S. 104, Discovery 103, Magazine 112, xLuria 9b, xHumility 91. Working Lad 112, Incision 109, xBobby Boyer 102. xWater Welles 104, xlvabel 102, Findinette 107, Labold L12, Bunch of Keys 106, Nello 102. SECOND—Five year olds and upward, owners handicap steeplechase, about 2 miles: Wickson 148, O'Bear 152, Juver- ance 146, The Prophet 155, Nosegay 140, Big Sandy 147, Buck Thorn 140, Astute 135, Octopus 135, Hiddis 132, Rhomb 132. THIRD—Two year olds, se’ling, furlongs: Superintendent 105, Salon 105, Della Mack 105, Lilly Orme 105, Heart beat 108, Charmeuse 105. Northerner 105, Eustace 108, Peterkin 105. Korfhage 112. FOURTH—Three year olds and up ward. Delaware handicap, about mile. Guy Fisher 104. Adams Express 120. Se- bago 113, Lahore 112. Shackletcn 109, Light O’M Life 10" Springboard 104. Flying Fain’ 109. v tiff Edge 98, Star Bottle 95, Coy Lad 97 FIFTH—Three year olds, selling, ml’e: Grasmere 111, Stentor 114. Kate K. 106, xBreaker Bey 109. xFrank Purcell 106. Dalmrfleld 108, xBouncing Lass 101, Lo- dona 99, Kormak 111, Taypay 108, Nello it)6, SwMsh 108. SIXTH—Two year olds, maidens, 5^ furlongs: Bartlett 108. Undaunted 105. Hapenny 108. Stars and Stripes 108. Bradley’s Choice 105, Brawney 105. Great Surprise 108. Humiliation 105. Hlnata 105. Cliff Edge 108. King McDowell 108. O’Reilly 108, Raoul 108, Miss Cavanagh 108. xApprentice allowance claimed. Clear, fast. Price Against Coveleskie To-day *•+ + •* I* ® *x* Lookouts in a By Joe Agler. C HATTANOOGA, TENN.. Augr- 5. We copped the jump game, all right, and Gilbert Price draws the job of fronting the celebrated Pole, Ignatz Coveleskie. In the sec ond contest to-day. We all expect Gilbert to go some to beat this lad. and we are going to do all we can to make pome runs for him off the big southpaw. Joe Dunn will catch for us. In the game yesterday, Dent had a fine little pitching duel with Som mers until the eighth inning, when Dee Walsh went to pieces and the Crackers bunched three hits, good for Hitting Slump four runs and the game. Harry Hol land. the Tech star, was the timely hitter in this round, his single with the bases full practically sewing up the game right there. He al**o got a double, earlier in the game, and played cleverly in the field. The Lookouts are in a hitting slump, and I can’t see anything to stop us short of three games out of the four. All our boys are well except Slim Love, who is a little under the weath er. He is pretty certain to be all right when his turn on the slab comes around, however, and Bill Smith says the long boy earned a regular turn in that game he worked last Satur day. clivitv 109, Monami 111, Dust 111, Flem ing 111. SIXTH—Selling. 6V£ furlongs: Song of Rocks 112. Maliten 112. Booby 112, Sam Bernard 114, Cherryseed 114, Kit- tery 114, Toniata 114, Fairchild 1714, Jim Milton 114. SEVENTH—Selling. 6% furlongs: Brush 105, Miss Jonah 105. Our Nugget 109. Nila 109. Yankee Lotus 109, Earl of RlchmondSlll. Cassoway 111, Casque 11.1 EIGHTH—Selling, 7 furlongs: xElee trie 100. Cecil 106. Baron deKald 106, Chemulpo 107, xThe Busy Body 108, Herpes 108. Eva Tanguay 110, xGolden Treasurer 110, Sure On 112, Pierre Dumas 112. x—Apprentice Allowance claimed. Weather cloudy; track fast. AT FORT ERIE. FIRST—Six furlongs: three-year-olds and up: Ralph Lloyd. 102; Joe Stein. 107; Pretty Molly, 95; Cedar Brook. 105; Chilton Queen, 103; Goodday, 108; Coun terpart, 103; Cosgrove. 108; Ruvoco, 96. SECOND—Purse, $600; 5M furlongs; two year olds: Superl, 103; The Usher. 109; High Priest, 103: Big Spirit, 106; Miss Gayle. 103: Hodge. 106; Rustling Brass. 106; Vandergrift, 118. THIRD—Selling; 6 furlongs; purse. $500; three-year-olds and up: Right Easy 98, Camelia 109. Tankard 103, Three Links 110, Sprlngmaid 105, Rus sell McGill 110# Dr. R. L. Swaringer 108, Chapultepec 113. FOURTH—Dominion handicap; three- year-olds and up; $500 added; 1% miles: Jennie Geddes 96, Donerail 108, Lochiel 102, Hamilton 110, Flora Fina 102, First Sight 112, Flabbergast 107. FIFTH RACE—Selling; purse, $600; 6 furlongs: Panzareta 95, U See It 108, Calgary 97, Carlton G 113. Marjorie A 100. Helen Barbee 108. Leo Chares 112. SIXTH—Three-vear olds and up; $500; selling: mile and 70 yards: Wentworth 92. Ardelon 104, Adolante 100, Burning Daylight 105, Grosvenor 103, Aunt Alice 106. Miss Joe 103, Spindle 110, Capltan Bravo 114. SEVENTH—Three-year-olds and up; $500; selling; mile and 70 yards: Tre- vato. 93; Effendl. 96; Mois&nt. 98; Henrv Hutchinson. 110; Gerrard, 102; Gates, 112; Billy Vanderveer, 104; Rash 111. The Rump 105, El Oro 115. Weather clear. Track fast. Do not suffer from eye-strain. Glasses fitted scientifically. Oculist service at opticians’ prices. L. X. Huff Optical Company, two stores, 70 Whitehall, 52 W. Mitchell.—Advt. AT TORONTO. FIRST—Selling, about 5 furlongs: Lady Havoc 91, xlronical 106. Miss Har- vle 109. Vale of Avoca 111, Courtbelle 113, Satin Bower 113. Miss Edna Fen wick 113. Longrus 115. Porcupine 115, Outclassed 115. SECOND—Selling, about 5 furlongs; xMrs. Laly 98. Ponkatasset 99. Field- flower 99. Paul Davis 102, Cassover 103. Sally Savage 105. Lady Elna 109. First Aid 111. Danville II. Ill, Boana 111. THIRD-^-Selling. 5 furlongs: xSena- tor James 103, LInbrook 103. Tee May 105. Yankee Lady 109, Carrillon 109, May Bride 109, Monkey 109, Johnny Wise 111, John Marrs 111, Excalibur 111. FOURTH—Selling. 6H furlongs: xTi- ger Jim 109. Mamita 112, Lily Paxton 112. Modem Priscilla 112. Radiation 114. Maxton 114. The Royal Prince 114: Mc- Andrews 114. Port Arlington 114. FIFTH—Selling. 5 furlongs: Ancon 105. x.llm L 106, Racingbell 109. Gay 109, Elma 109, Naughty Rose 109, Pro- BigGi Caret in 1 to 5 dayi unnatural discharges Contains no poison and may be uaed full strength absolutely without fear. Guaranteed not to stricture. Prevents contagion WHY NOT CURE YOURSELF? At Druggists, or we ship express prepaid upoo eceipt of $1. lull particulars mailed on request TOE IVANS CHEMICAL CO. ClacinaAd, a And the little Ford shall lead them. It’s first in sales-first in economy-and first in the esteem of those who love safety, surety and comfort- because of its wonderful simplicity, strength and lightness. It leads in sales- service--satisf action. Think what these prices mean—for the car that has stood the tests: Runabout. $500; Touring Car. $550; Town Car. $750—f. o. b. Detroit, with all equirment. Get catalog and all particulars from Ford Motor Company, 311 Peachtree street, Atlanta. (