Newspaper Page Text
TTTE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS,
13
THt^ I* A TOUGH WOR.Lt).
5 fc(NT SEEN A DOU-fcR. FOR.
so lone You could pass
CDNEeOERATE NONE'r ON iv\e
ri/Aes AR.e awful hard.
I'M ASHANveD TO THINFOF
WHAT I’D do" Foil }1
MF'TY CENTS
OF COURSE X COULD
JtEMAlN IN town anO
Put THROUfcH TMA.T
C .6 and w DeAL AND
NET M-TSElF say -
•®/5000 and probaoln
i ACtO&E TH6R. ON The !
( month x nu&w . . J
CLEAN up eifcHTY
OR. NINeTT THOUSAND
Dollar.^ Buy you
<now that isn't
VJORYH ONE'S uuKH-C
I .THIS U/ARM u/eATHER.
i ETC - >
Y6 S, I'M CouNfeDouiN TO
the COUNT R.Y FOR- THE
|[|111 REST OF THE SOMMETL •
I ill BUSINESS ISN’T UN ELY
jj|lj[ EN0U4H TO V-4A.R-R.fcNT
iwjl KEEPING OPEN this kind
^ OF U/6ATHER-. WE ONOf
T| TOOK in-®3ooo LAST
Si WEEK- AND —
Hev. 66T
OPf HER.e
cdmes t-hg
PHILADELPHIA
e-Kpee s s
t KNOvu
SAS Sr, ah' TtJEy'5
•#|0 IK1 IT TtRTHE
Coy woT Leads
Mt To IT 1 ^
V Poor ‘S'imp 1 .
Voo BEEN
Sleepiw' pigkt
|W FRONT OF
yER ffrtAOi
all WIGHT!
DONT i ole Top!
I Am (jc>X
“The HMR't!
WHADDYE MEAlJ
V'/IAJT 6oT r
^ “THE- I
| HEART ?
IM A BURGLAR \
&’trade, See ?/u'
id Crack a Cape
FER A P/ME, SEE I
gJT This HE«e.
(vyyouLD Worry Me
WALK
But The tJAME
Co ME B4CK To
ME IW ^ DREAM
ITS 'WALK ItJti* f
WALK INN*
Pi -GSOMM
sms ik
By John (Chief) Meyers.
(Star Catcher of the Champion New
York Giants and one of the leading
•luggers of the National League.)
A L DEMAREE is, to my mind,
on© of the most picturesque
characters in baseball. He is
but a colt, yet he is one of the chief
resources of the Giants. His career
has been meteoric—as professional
baseball dnreers go—yet it is one that
is not liable to flivver and sputter
out before many, many years of use
ful ness.
Demaree is to-day Just about the
best young pitcher in the business.
That is putting it pretty strongly, 1
will admit. One must not overlook
such class as that boasted by Joe
Hoehling, the sensational southpaw of
Washington. Boehling is doubtless a
grand pitcher. He has shown it by
.netting a record of eleven straight vic
tories for the season before be met
defeat.
Naturally, I am not familiar with
his work—he is in a different league.
But I would go broke that he pos
sesses no more stuff than Demaree,
nor knows how to use to better ad
vantage his natural endowments.
Demaree Forces Recognition.
Griffith, hounded by misfortune,
wae forced to take a chance on the
recruit. It is to the credit of Joe
that he won his spurs.
But Demaree forced recognition
through pure class alone. He so im
pressed McGraw that our very able
manager from almost the very start
of the season assigned the youngster
to the same consideration as a regu
lar tosser.
That fact In itself is the highest
praise. It 1s not McGraw's wont to
accept a gTeen man as a regular. His
time-honored custom—and it has pro
duced wonderful results—has been to
cultivate talent through observation
of “Inside” baseball from the bench.
Outside of Demaree there are practi
cally no exceptions to this rule.
Demaree needed no further school
ing when he came to our club. He is
one of those very, very rare young
men possessed with the head of an
old man. He seems to have shed his
youth in his boyhood days. He is a
very close student of the game: he
never forgets to profit by experienoa
Knows Batters’ Failings.
No man in our club—with the ex
ception of the grand old master, Mat
ty—is better versed in the strength
and weakness of opposing batsmen.
Much of his knowledge A1 has gleaned
from personal observation. A great
store he has laid in from conversa
tion with his teammates.
Demaree is the closest approach to
Mathewson I have ever seen. In
many respects he resembles the “Old
Master." Like “Big Six," he is poa-
eessed of a beautiful delivery—one
from which the ball comes right on
top of the batsman before he Bees
it. For a-youngster of his limited ex
perience, Demaree possesses a change
of pace that truly phenomenal. But
one of his greatest attributes is con-
trol.
This very important adjunct of the
pitching art is usually acquired only
after long years of experience. Dem
aree possesses it at the very begin
ning. Were he equipped physically
as nobly as was Mathewson when
“Big Six” broke into the big show. I
should predict for Al every bit as
brilliant a future.
Demaree is a pitcher who will last
for many many years He may never
be able to shoulder the same amount
of work that Mathewson has per
formed. But he will come through
triumphantly in the great majority
nf his starts, because he pitches as
much with his head as with his arm.
When in easy going he depends upon
his support. Only when absolutely
necessary does he employ all the cun
ning at his command.
Master at Changing Pace.
I said before that Demaree is e
master at changing pace. His con
trol is well nigh perfect. Add to this
i good curve ball and a fine turn of
speed and vou will see he has quali
fications of worth possessed by very-
few recruits.
Furthermore, he holds runner* io
their bases very well. He hasn t
caught a great many of them nap-
Ding. Yet his delivery is so puzzling
that they are always fooled and forced
to hug the cushions. They do no.
know when he is going to throw to
first, and those few he has caught
have been nailed flatfooted_
Demaree is very easy on his catch
er. He throws what i* n . al ?
baseball parlance as a light ball.
It is not hard to handle. Because of
the known quality of steadiness Als
ratchpr can always be In a position
to throw well. This, with his afore-
mentioned deceptive Hvery
baae-mnner at a distinct disadvan
tage. ______________.
Wonderful
Blood Remedy
Brings Health to a Host
of Sufferers
The remarkable
action of S. S. S.
in the blood is giv
en Impetus by a
letter received
from Earl C.
Cook, 708 South
Center St., Bloom
ington, Ill. He
says, "I suffered
several months
and took treat
ment here, but ob
tained relief only
for a few days at
a time. Becoming
doubtful of re
sults, I quit the doctors, and there
v as marked improvement from the
Ktrrt. I used thirteen bottles of S. S.
S. and was entirely cured. My blood
was in a dreadful condition, and 1
can not thank S. S. S. enough for my
wonderful recovery."
This preparation stands alone
among specific remedies as a blood
purifier, since it accomplishes all that
was ever claimed for mercury, io
dides, arsenic and other destructive
mineral drugs, and yet It Is absolute
ly a purely vegetable product. These
facts are brought out in a highly in
teresting book compiled by the medi
cal department of The Swift Specific
Co., 192 Swift Bldg., Atlanta, Oa. It
is mailed free, together with a special
letter of advice to all who are strug
gling with a blood disease.
Get a bottle of S. S. S. to-day of
your druggist. It will surprise you
with its wonderful action in the
At That, the Way Some Guys Talk About Coin Would Drive You Dippy
By “Bud” Fisher
Copyright. 101 &, tatmwtional Rervi'm
All Pa Had to Do Was Walk In
ybo Cm vfxjYE 60X
A OSTXAGt OUT HERE a
To'kur HouSe Beach*
ah’ V*Slept ipJ
^TWfe. Cahd All
J116HT ?
I<3uldut
MEMBER T«e
A/AME of THE
CdUA6ti AU' I
6oT LoST
It/ ~-rvm.
DARK 1 f'
Packey McFarland Praises White |||[j||[[[ jj|[]
+•+ +•+ +•+
‘5 Mere Lbs. and He’d Be Champ’
B
C
By Packey McFarland.
HICAGO, ILL., Aug. 8.—Five
pounds in weight Is the only
thing that stands between
Charlie White and the lightweight
championship. I firmly believe that
Charlie to-day can take either Ad
Wolgast. Johnny Dundee or any other
boy weighing around 128 or 130
pounds and stop him.
Furthermore, I will say that if the
lightweight limit was 133 pounds
ringside. White would have a great
chance to cop the title. 1 have boxed
with Charlie several times, and can
truthfully say he packs the hardest
wallop of any boy I have ever met.
This may sound a little boastful, but,
nevertheless, it is true.
poundage—that is, the added weight
that keeps me from being a legiti
mate lightweight—1 think a battle
between White and myself would be
the greatest of all battles. Charlie's
big handicap now is his weight. Wil
lie Ritchie, the present title holder,
can not make 133 pounds ringside.
If White were to meet Willie, the lat
ter would make 133 pounds in the
morning, which would bring him into
the ring around 136.
Charlie Weighs Only 128.
Now, Charlie never weighs more
than 12S in condition. I know’ this to
be a fact, as I boxed with him four
days before he went to box Britton at
New Orleans on July 4, and he tipped
the beam at 127.
I also told Nate Lewis a year ago,
when Charlie left to box Owen Moran
that his protege would surely defeat
the Englishman. At that time I had
a match pending with Moran on che
coast, and when Lewis told me he
had White signed to box Owen I
nearly cried. I was to get $5,000 guar
antee to box Moran, but I knew White
would beat him and rob me of the
bout. Many of the local sporting
men laughed at me when 1 told them
Charlie would beat Moran. They told
me that Charlie wag too light and
all that. But I knew Moran was
making 133 ringside, and Owen was
taking White lightly.
Charlie stopped Moran in nine
rounds and proved my assertion. I
lost the match and $5,000. Monti
never has been any good since that
fight, and I don’t think he ever will
amount to much again. That left
hook of Charlie’s will take the heart
out of anyone
White Has Stiff Punch.
When Lewis matched White with
Britton. I told Nate that White's only
hope was to stop Jack. It was a
good match at that, as Charlie has a
good chance with any of them, and
had everything to gain and nothing
to lose. And. believe me, if Charlie
ever caught Jack on the jaw instead
of on the neck in the seventh round, it
would have been good night with
BrittonV claim for a chance at
Ritchie’s crown. Luckily Charlie hur*
his hand landing the wallop, and had
to do the rest of the milling with his
right member.
Charlie After Britton.
When Charlie returned from the
match he begged Lewis to get him
a return engagement. Lewis, how
ever, told Charlie to wait until
took on a couple of pound* During
the entire eighteen rounds of milling
in the recent Britton-White go, the
former never even floored White
Charlie told me that Britton never
even staggered him. A badly cut* lip
caused blood to flow from Charlie’s
mouth and made it look bad to the
ministers around the ringside, and
they appealed to the Sheriff to stop
the bout.
Now, can you Imagine a boy weigh
ing 128 pounds fighting Jack Britton
at 138 and putting up the battle he
did. Jack.is one of the leading claim
ants to a match with Ritchie, and ip
also one of my greatest rivals. Yet
Charlie to-day would be nearly an
even-money bet against him.
Blow Travels Four Inches.
Yes. if Charlie White had fivtj more
pounds in weight he would be light-
' the world. If
If I could give Charlie my excess ’he^ghtwelglue"*”/. fighting at 133
pounds ringside, Charlie White would
be an even money bet against the
bevt of them. He has the o/ie big
advantage over all the 133 pounders
to-day. He has the punch, and it
If I had his
only travels four inches,
wallop I would box any heavyweight
in the world to-day. Take my tip
and watch this boy’8 rise in the next
year.
All Set for Polo
Match To-morrow
c
BUT ir EVERS
HICAGO, ILL., Aug. 5.—Johnny
Evers, manager of the Cubs,
started to weed out several
of his veterans yesterday when he
announced the disposal of Ed Reul-
bach, for years a West Side star, and
Mike Mitchell, outfielder.
Reulbach was traded to Brooklyn
for Eddie Stack. Th e latter is a for
mer Chicago semi-pro twirler and
has pitched fairly good ball for Dah-
len’s crew. Reulbach has been an
In and outer all season. When in
form he is one of the greatest hurlers
in the country.
Waivers were asked on Mike
Mitchell, but Fred Clarke, of the Pi
rates, refused to allow him to go to
the minora. He will probably be used
regularly in center field or may be
kept as a pinch hitter. Ward Miller
will be used in left field for the Cubs.
BOXING
News of the Ring Game
HOT SCRAP EXPECTED WHEN
FLYNN AND SMITH HOOK UP
The Atlanta polo four await with
Interest the announcement of the
quartet representing the Seventeenth
Regiment, which will meet them In
the first polo match ever put on In
Atlanta, scheduled for to-morrow at
the big parade around. There has
been much rlval.*> for places on the
officers’ team, and there probably will
be a long list of substitutes left over
when the final selection is made.
The Atlanta squad is composed of
Captain J. O. Seamans, Albert S. J.
Tucker, PI M. Landrum p.n' 1 Milton
Wise. All are experienced in the
game.
Preliminary to the match there will
be gymkhana events—wrestling on
horseback, a mounted tug-of-war,
and other equestrian sports and ex
hibitions. The officials for the match
are Colonel M. E. Carthew-Yorstoun,
referee; Robert F. Maddox. timer;
Wilmer L. Moore, scorer; and James
R. Gray and Clark Howell, goal
judges.
NEW YORK, Aug 5^-If there Is not
a real slugging match at Madison. Square
Garden next Friday night there will
be a good many fight fans badly dis
appointed. With Jim Flynn and Gun
boat Smith to provide the slugging, it
is hard for any one to believe or even
suspect that there isn’t going to be a
fight.
Two better men for the job would be
hard to find. So far as condition goes,
both men are fit and ready for the gong
The consensus of opinion favors Flynn,
and while there isn’t, much money being
wagered on the result the probabili
ties are that Flynn will rule a favorite
in whatever betting there is.
SENSATIONAL TWIRLER
SIGNS WITH WHITE SOX
ASHLAND, WIS., Aug B.—Jaok
Doyle, for the Chicago White Sox, to
day signed up Quardars, the sensa
tional pitcher of the Ashland baseball
team.
Edward Herr, of the Bt.. Louis Na
tionals, made an ineffectual attempt to
get Mm two weeks ago. Quardars’
even' day atunt is to strike out from
twenty to twenty five men.
AUSTRALIAN HANGS UP NEW
MARK FOR 300-YARD RACE
MANCHESTER. ENGLAND, Aug. 5
—Jack Donaldson, of Australia, world's
champion sprinter, broke the 300-yard
running record at a professional athletic
meet here yesterday, covering the dis
tance in 2V\ eeconds. The former rec
ord of 80 seconds was made by
Hutchins and had stood since 1884
H
WELLS CAN LICK SOMEBODY.
LONDON. Aug. 6.—Bombardier Wells,
the English heavyweight fighter,
knocked out Pat O’Keefe, welterweight
chamnlon of Ireland, in the fifteenth
rmysrl of a bout held in the Blackfriars
District i&et nlghu
TOMMY RYAN, 43 YEARS OLD,
INTENDS TO “COME BACK’
SYRACT.'SE, N. Y . Aug 4.-—Tommy
Rvan. the former welterweight cham
pion, to-day began road work for his
“come back’’ In the ring this fall and
winter. Kyan in 43 years old.
He declares that he can beat any
middleweight whom he has seen box in
the past two years, and says that he
will go after the 158-pound title.
RED SOX BUY SHORTSTOP.
BOSTON. Ang fi.—The Boston Red
Sox have purchased .Jimmy Cooney, the
shortstop of the Worcester team of the
New England League. He will report
to the World's Champions at the Hose
uf the New England League season.
Eddie Hanlon and Mike Paul are still
wrangling over the Weight question for
their coming beut on August 13. Billy
Lutz, manager of Hanlon, called at The
Georgian Sporting Department yester
day and stated that he would let Eddie
nmk*- 138 pounds at 4:30 for the Fight
ing Hebrew. He is now waiting to h**ar
from Mike
• • »
Kid Ruff, local featherweight, Is after
bouts with some boys in his division.
Ruff says he is particularly anxious to
f at on with either Kid Young or Charlie
^ee.
• • •
Dan McKetrlck, manager ef Frank
Moran, claims that all the Mg fellows
are side-stepping his protege. Al Falser
has been offered a date with the Pitta-
burger, but he is holding out for more
money.
• • •
# Kld Williams, of Baltimore, and
Frankie Burns, of Jersey City, may be
matched for a 2t)-round go on the coast.
Tom McCarey i« after the match for a
September date.
* • •
Some time ago the New York Box
ing Commission passed one of those fool
rules which, in effect, was that there
should not be over 10 peunds difference
in weight below the heavyweight class
How about the Beecher-Attell go?
• » •
Frank Ix>ughrey. the Eastern welter
weight, has been engaged by a Boston
club‘to meet “Wlldcat ,T Ferns In about
two weeks’ Urns.
• • •
A Milwaukee promoter has offered
Knockout Brown, of New York, a guar
antee of $3,500 to box Ad Wolgast on
1-ja.bor Day. Danny Morgan, acting for
Brown, has accepted* Wolgast hi now
being sought by the Brewer City club.
• • •
Johnny Dundee and Jack White win
be the principals In the next boxing
show to be staged on the coast The
pair are billed to clash In a 20-round
set-to in Tom McCarey's arena on Au
gust 11. Following this bout comes the
heavyweight affair of August 22 be
tween Jess Willard and “Bull" Young
• • •
"If Young Abe Attell Is seeking action
In the padded ring, t will sign up for
a match at once, chirped Kid Brooks
after reading Attell's challenge in The
Georgian the other day. Brooks sa>«
the sooner Attoli signs for the match
the better.
• • •
Terry Nelson Is seeking some trouble
with the padded mitts again. Terry la
l>art!cularly wild to get a certain gen
tleman, Mike Paul, into the ring with
him Nelson says he will make any
weight suitable to Saul.
• • •
RItchio and Wolgast, two fighters,
side bet of $25,000 and a purse of steen
millions. Can’t tell whether lt’» the
heat or not, but the press ageDt Is
earning his coin for the way he bats
them out. Jack Robinson and Danny
Morgan, take notice
• • •
Jimmy Murphy, the Chicago newsboy
boxer, has been matched to box Mickey
Sheridan In a ten-round go at Terre
Haute, Ind., on Thursday night Mur
phy recently knocked out Danny Good
man In the Ilooaler City, and is a big
card there.
• • •
Jack Dillon, claimant of the middle
weight title, will trade wallops with
George Ashe at Winnipeg. Man., on Fri
day night. They are scheduled to go 15
rounds, but George will be a lucky party
If he is on his feet at the end of the
tenth.
• • •
Two other good battles arc scheduled
for this week. Jim Flynn 1* carded to
take on Gunboat Smith in a ten-round
engagement at New York Friday, while
on tne same day Boh McAllister and
.Pallor Petroskevi^are billed to go over
the twenty-rouiiA route at Frisco.
BECAUSE HEDGES
SUED E.
N EW YORK, Aug. 1.-—Manager
George Stovall has departed
from hitherto to yon In search
of talent. A friend of his connected
with the Wilmington, Del., club drop
ped In the day the Browns arrived,
and weld he knew two pitchers and a
catcher who can hit.
Stovall Is not so keen for the pitch
ers. but he most surely would like a
receiver who can swat the pill. Hence
he departed for Wilmington in search
of the Juvenile phonom. He will look
him over carefully and make recom
mendation to Colonel Hedge*’, who
has said he will join the dub in Bos
ton.
Manager Stovall did not get a
ohance to see the Wilmington phe-
nonifl perform, as an adult rain broke
loose Just as he arrived at the Dela
ware ball yard. Hence $5 worth of
perfectly good expense money way
wasted on a vain mission.
Stovall did have a pleasant after
noon with Bill Coughlin, the old De
troit »tar who 1b managing a club In
the Tri-State league. Bill etlll plays
once In a while, and flays managing
in the minors Is no slouch Job.
Wanted Elmer Brown.
Stovall, by the way, Is greatly dis
appointed that Elmer Brown got
away “I told Mr. Hedges,” he said,
“when Brown was sent to Montgom
ery last year that he should send him
with a atrlng attached, nnd he led tn^
to believe that Brown went out that
wav.
'Tyaert vear he woe not exactly right
physically, and could last for only six
or seven innings In that time he
ehowed everything, but he would blow
up.
“T have followed hl« work carefully
this year, and I understand he has
been leading the Southern Leftgtie.
“I considered him too good a man
to get away, and I was disappointed
when shown clippings that he was go
ing to Brooklyn. We need good right-
handed pitchem. t nd I am sure from
what Brown showed and from h :
record thfc* year he was just ths mu
to strengthen our staff next season
Nobody Consulted Stoval.
“However, I was not consulted ;
the matter. It may bo that the club
scouts have dug up a world beater !r.
this Manning.
“I know nothing of him, but I do
know that I would like to have had
Elmer Brown back next season, and I
knotv he would have been a lot of use
to our club.”
Big Race at Motordrome To-night
+•+ +•+ +•+ ,
Richards and Graves to Clash
H AB Tex Richards’ days of su
premacy over the motorcycle
demons at Atlanta at the pres
ent time come to an end? Morty
Graves thinks It has, and says he will
prove it to-night when the patr clash
at Jack Prince's Motordrome.
Local fans had their first chance to
see Morty on his new machine last
week, and those that were present
know what happened Graves defeat
ed Richards by a nose In the only race
they clashed in, and is out to prove
that it wasn't a fluke.
On the other hand, Richards thinks
he is still king of the demons who
are spending their time here. Rich
ards says tnat Morty took him by
surprise last week, ais he underrated
the speed of Graves’ new machine.
* * •
‘*T T will be a different story to-
* night,” J-'aid Tex yesterday. "I
nrn going to let my machine out at
full speed, and if Mortv beats me, he
will have to break some record. I
have my machine in perfect shape,
and Graves will be the most surprised
man on the track when the race la
over.”
Graves will ride 1n the Atlanta
Sweepstakes, the classic event of the
local season. In the asme race will
be “Tex” Richard*. Swartz, Lewis and
Lock nor. They are all ready for the
sound of the gong, and some rt*ce it
should be. The distance in the final
of the Sweepstakes will be ten miles.
• • •
THERE will be two heats to the
1 race, with five men In each event.
In the second, Renel, Shields, Glenn,
Luther and McNeil will compete.
A special match race between Glenn
and Shields and the Motordrome
purse and other events are to be put
on, eo one can readily wee that some
real sport is to be handed the motor
cycle bugs.
Here Is the complete program;
First Event.
Motordrome Purse—Three 1-mile
qualifying heats: final 2 miles First
heat. Graves, Bwartz and Shields.
Second Event.
Second Heat Motordrome \
Lockner, Richards, Luther.
Third Event.
Third Heat Motordrome Furte—
Renel, McNeil, Lewis, Glenn.
Fourth Event.
Special match race between Glenn
and Shields. Distance, 8 miles. Best
two heats In three.
Fifth Event.
Final of Motordrome Purse, 2 Miles
—First in each trial heat and second
man In fastest trial heat.
Sixth Event.
Special Match Race—Second heat
between Glenn and Shields.
Seventh Event,
Atlanta Sweepstakes—Two 1-mlle
trial heats and 10-mlle final. First
heat. Graves, Richards. Swarts, Lew
is. Lockner.
Eighth Event.
Second Heat Atlanta Sweepstakss—*
Renel, Shields, Glenn, Luther, McNeil.
Ninth Event.
Third heat, If neoassary, matab
race between Glenn ajid Shields.
Tenth Event.
Filial Heat Atlanta Sweepstakes,
Milan—First and second men In saoh
trial heat and third man in fastest
trial heat to start.
TETTER
Tetferln* tun* tvtter. Read what Mrm. V. C.
HcQulddy, Ectill Spring*. Tonn, Any*
I had a severe cast of totter on both
hande nnd I finally got htlgle**. A loading
■ hytclan knew of no cure. I decided to glvo
Tetterlne a trial. To my utter surprleo and
•atlsfactloa It wortod a egeedy curt.
Use Tetterlne
It cures ranmiL tatter, erysfrelag. t lotting
. plies, ground Itch sad all akin nnladlos.
90o at druggists, or by mall.
8MUPTRINE OO.. SAVANNAH, GA.
-THE VICTOR”
DR. WOOLLEY’S SANITARIUM
and all Inebriety aai
drug addictions scienti
fically treated. Our W
rlence shows
Opium and Whisky
tb«M aiMMM *r» o«r«W». P»<t»nu .too trMtad at th.lf
homM Consultation confidential. A book on the auk-
jact fraa, DR. B. B. WOOLLEY * HON, Ka. K* Xtf
Kanllariam. Atlanta Qa
"THE OLD RELIABLE”
PtANTE-Yb
C C *CAPSUL--
REMEDYfdrMEN
AT DRU9GI8T8.0RTRIAL BOX BY MAIL6O0
FROM PIANTEN 93 HENRY8T BROOKLYN.NY.
^ —BEWARE OF IMITATIONS —
EXCURSIONS
Two great tour* Fast and West
1 rtli
pa; all ex-
On August 9
ppeoial trains, exclusive
pense paid, beat hotels.
Souther* Merchants* Tour (free to
merchants) visiting Cincinnati, In
dianapolis. Chicago, Milwaukee and
Lake Michigan. An eight-dar ex
pense-paid trip for only $49.75 (ticket
good for thirty davB), August 16. Our
great 6,000-mile rlrole tour of Cin
cinnati, Detroit. Buffalo, Niagara
Falls, Great Gorge, Toronto, Thou
sand Islands, Montreal, Boston, New
trips oa lakes.
An eighteen-day
for only tte M
York. Philadelphia. Atlantic City,
Washington, Baltimore and Sevan
r.ah, with 8teams
river and ocean,
expanse-paid trip —. .
(tickets good for thirty days, with
stop-overs). Special trafna on both
tours leave Atlanta, Birmingham.
Chattanooga and Knoxville. Limited-
and select party. Special cars for
ladies aiona Write to-day for reeer- *
ration and full_partlculars. J V F. Mo-'
Farland, Agt . Box 1624. Atlanta.. Ga. t