Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, September 06, 1913, Image 7

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

TTTE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. B,v \\ . S. Farnsworth. I K the Crackers defeat the Lookouts to-day and Mobile wins the two games with New Orleans, then naJ 0 ^' club have ><>« the pen- nant through a bad mistake of the At l?. nta ,P astha11 Association Vf ™;directors should have started yesterday s double-header a full hour ahead of 1:80 o’clock. The games had f '"' ,hpd at 4:40 o’clock to al- Orlean* 116 *° ° atCh 1 train for New Mike Finn Inserted on two full nlne.j Inning games. And, thereby, the' irishman put one over on the local director*. «««"§■ the flm »t ltso rclock and allowing a ten-minute re*r between the battles, the two games nad to be played In exactly three Hours—one and one-half hours .for each game. And what a fine chance! * * • IT takes nearly two hours to play a game in the Southern League. So how in the world did the local as sociation figure they could ever crowd two decisions in three hours. It was a big oversight, and it is likely to cost us a pennant. Vou can overlook a ball player for booting one in the pinch, but you can not overlook this mistake on the part of the club officials. Mobile must lose a game to the Pelicans. Of course it could rain in Mobile to-day and to-morrow, and then we would have a chance. But even so, you can not forgive somebody, whoever he may be, for not seeing to it that the Crackers had all the time needed to play that sec ond game. • • • A ND the Crackers would have won that second game sure. They were outplaying and outgaming Mo bile. The Mobile players admitted after the game that they were “on the run.” Charley Starr even went so far as to tell Joe Agler that the entire Gull infield were up in the air. “Why, I didn’t know what I was doing,” is the exact statement that Starr made to Agler. Yes. if we win to-day and are beaten out of the pennant then there is no one to blame but the local club officials. • • • O NE of Atlanta’s biggest advertis ing men called up The Georgian this morning to tell us how sore he and many of his colleagues are be cause the Atlanta Baseball Associa tion did not see to it that the two games were played until a decision was reached. “We were given to understand that we would see two games. But we were bunked.” Us Boys Registered Catted States P»t«l fHTlee. Is Everybody Happy? When the Medal’s Pinned On. O'! JlWfWN't 601? that’s right; i ONCf 6 or Fl\»6, the Bos*, PORfeOr ONE - 6£E, IN) GLAD Y0l> POT ME VMI9E. THANKG ; F.QOO FOR. FANS COOK) *1 s COOKED ANO SERVED r/x v50, -Tb-OAY <DE IS TO PLAY WE HIMKies 60ESS ILL PITCH - IP I 1UIN ILL SLIP MYSELF ANOTHER, MEDAL - IS You W'TH MOH ? IT uliLL BE CHR»sTP)AS OP Fore vue tcAtouo iT" inonT i] - f • , SHANE RS oOObiY DEPr HINTS To hvSAlTH BOSS WHAT5 THB^ WATTtA orP W LOOK TWATS SOPJS PUN' LIKE ) ir:-6«S, 06nT try To ^ THE BOSS MO*>T HAVE SO^PPOAT ON his miwo lately he's ge** formRw LIKE SIXTY* MevER Your mo *61 INTO TW6 OcfiAN — zufoWf AM kARUlWfc U&h i <saiu><|umb see* \ DO NT TVW»K SO ML)«H OF HIM, Do YOU ? Hendii aw. to-da* HOC-\gDPORD PARK. UjHAPs' we OIFF eeTWESN A RICH MANS 5ON, A ORPHAN Boy, A BALD HEADED C,lNK AND A ADONKEYs aaoTngil { SIDELIGHTS ON FOURTH GAME AT PONCY PARK H day: By W. S. Farnsworth. JDRE are two tables of figures showing just how many balls each hurler uncorked yester- FIRST GAME. Innings— Price Dent Cavet Fitst 7 _ 23 Second 16 13 Third 8 8 Fourth 9 .. 16 Fifth 16 .. » Sixth 8 .. 7 Seventh 23 8 Eighth 7 13 Ninth 16 13 Tenth 13 13 Totals 86 36 123 SECOND GAME Innings— T’mpsfn Hogg First 17 11 Second 17 13 Third 12 14 Sports andSuch BASEBALL VS. SPORTS. The little old game has become a trust And bloated and rich it stands; The magnates are gathering piles of dust, With calloused and grasping hands. Time was when the little aid game wax new And it carried a spotlcxx name, But the business end of the pastime grew »Till it strangled the, got darn game. Ore of the year’s greatest bfnehead plays was made by the gents who framed the baseball schedules. Labor Day without a big league game In Chi cago hits baseball a terrific blow In the box office. The report that Branch Rickey has been appointed manager of the Browns may be mere gossip, but Branch has good grounds for a libel suit. The sonder yacht races are being held near Marblehead, a city named after Fred Merkle. EVERYBODY’S DOIN’ IT. A baseball scribe upon a rainy dag Was at a lass to write his daily yarn. . ... It rained so hard the athletes did not play . And there was nothing stirring worth a darn. He pumped the athletes dryer than a bone, „ , 1 He trailed the baseball magnate to his den, ‘■AH, all in vain.'" he muttered with a groan. “/ guess I'll have to sell Ty Cobb again." The French nut who looped the loop In an aeroplane la still alive, but It It not his fault. There are several notable comebacks this year, including the Justly cele brated Summer. Some of those malodorous trades In the National League remind us that as a sport baseball Is a great business. Dan McKetrlck has left for Europe with a string of flve pug Msts. The only fault we have to find is that he will bring them back. There is beauty in all things, but we 11 be hornswoggled if we can see an> of it in a motorcycle race. “America," says James E. Sullivan, “maintains amateur athletics In its nurest form.” If James ever lost his fob he could make a living as a humor- v appear strange to some, but the fact that no champions each other on the jaw, Labor s not called off. after effects. dancholy days are came, the oddest of the year, am back upon the job with ee/ings brown and sere, tin is active as a sponge, my energy is nil, have not enough ambish to ■oil musclf a Totals 46 40 FIRST GAME GOSSIP. Price’s first ball was a fast one and Starr fouled it off. * • * Cavet’s opening offering was also a fast ball. Agler banged it on the ground to ’.Stock, who relayed to Paulet. • • • Welchonce’s first hit was a lucky one. The ball took a bound past Stock. • * • Long made a nice play after being caught asleep off third in the first inning by tearing straight for th<* plate instead of running back and forth. • • • Bisland’s single in the first spasm was a wicked grounder to left that would have gone a mile had it been a ballooner. • * • Bizzy then made a beauty steal of second, pulling a dandy hook slide. * * * Finn had Berger warming up when Cavet was being pounded in the first inning. • • * Robertson would have been out a mile on his pilfer trip in the second had not Chapman’s throw been low • * • Miller, the young man who tied up Thursday’s game with a single, looked like an awful boob the first time up. He fanned on three curve balls. • * • Robertson made a peachy try for Nixon’s single to tenter in the second. He almost speared the pill at his shoetops. • • • Chapman crossed the Gull infield nicely in the second. With Nixon on first Chapman tried to sacrifice on the first ball. But on the next bail he banged the ball hard to Stock and beat It out for a hit. • * • Price was robbed of a hit when he was declared out in the second on a bunt that Cavet threw so wide to first that Starr left the bag. Starr was covering the bag as Paulet had run in to get a bunt. • • • Bisland was lightning fast cover ing Cavet’s demon grasser in the third. And he made a pippin chuck while out of position, too. • • • A bunch of fair fans crowded into the Gulls’ bench In the third inning. There wasn’t a nook inside the park that wasn’t occupied. • • • Bisland robbed Paulet of a sure hi* when he made a one-hand stab of a hard-hit grounder back of second in the third. • • • Agler’.” catch of Schmidt's twisting foul In the fourth was right up against the "smoker." • * • Holland was declared out stretching his single in th§ fourth. But Starr never did put the ball on him ... When Tommy Long turned that wild throw in the fifth we all had to forgive him. Tommy doesn't mak • a wild chuck very often. • * • Agler sur^ did rob Starr of a double, and possibly a triple, In the fifth, when he pulled down his demon liner. • * • Welchonce now holds the Southern League record for hits, with a total of 192. . . . | Smith threw Schmidt out in the sixth, but Agler naved Wally an error by digging the throw right out of the dirt. • * • Ca\et deserves a heap of credit for coming back and pitching such a nice game. And he is not in the best of physical condition, either. • • * Cavet pitched only seven balls in the sixth inning, yet we grabbed^ a run. • * • Paulet’* trfple in the seventh would have been an easy out had not the crowd been In the way. Nixon would have surely grabbed the ball with a clear field ahead. * • * In the eighth inning Dent pitched only seven balls, but all of them were curves. • * * Holland made his best play of the series when he tore in for Miller’s short tap down the third base line in the eighth Inning. And Harry made a dandy peg to Agler, tQO. • m m Smith and Paulet were both hurt when they collided in the eighth. Smith just did manage to beat out an infield tap. but he end Paulet both went down in the melee. a • « Chapman was a bearcat in thp eighth. H“ caught Cavet napping off seednd aid then nailed Stock a min ute later trying to pilfer to the mid way. • e • Long had Stock'* throw of a grounder beaten two yards to first in the ninth, hut Pfenninger was asleep and called Thomas out. • * • Smith’* three-cushion soak in the tenth would have surely been a cir cuit clout had not the ground been on the job, thereby holding the hit to a triple. • • • Cavet purposely walked Bisland in the tenth so as to get Holland, next up. But Rill Smith crossed the Gull pitcher by sending Manush in to bat SECOND GAME. The Mobile player* started stalling for time right off the reel. Stock re fused to hurry up in going to the plate. Pfenninger cautibned the young shortstop to get a hurry on himself. * * * O’Dell made a nice steal of second, Chapman * peg being a bit too high. • • • Paulet was called out on strikes in the first inning, although he had onlv two against him. The first ball was a waste ball. The second, he swung at and missed; and then he missed another. * * * Thompson was dead game when h j knocked down Miller's hot shot in the seennd. The ball was traveling at a miie-a-minute rate at the time. • * • Long’s* single in the first spasm handcuffed O’Dell. • * • Pfenninger called a third strike oi Holland in the second that was a curve which broke outside the plate and was way low. Play Starts To-day In A. A, C. Golf Championship The golf tournament for the cham pionship of the Atlanta Athletic Club will be started this’afternoon over the course at East Lake, with the quali fying round of eighteen holes being scheduled for the day. The players will qualify from scratch and as manv flights as fill will be played. Match play in the first ftight will be from scratch and club handicaps will apply in all the other flights. The first and second rounds of match play must be played by Sep tember 11, the semi-finals by Sep tember 13 and the finals by Septem ber 14. In the first flight the finals will be 36 holes and 18 In all the others. It is expected that upward of a hundred contestants will be in the qualifying round, as interest in the sport at East Lake has reached a phenomenal stage this season. Pretty Tough to See Crackers Pulled Off While doing Is Good GRAND BATTLING GAINS ONLV TIE IN FLAG RACE The Official Score By O. B. Keeler. B OYS, we're still THERE— And not so BLAMED still about it, either. Our bread-\Cinners tremble as these lines are indited. The typewriter trembles with conflicting emotions and type-bars. The desk trembles. The Qld work-shop trembles. We recall something Scriptural about the little hills skipping or danc ing together, or something. Must have been at the shank of a bitter pennant fight—what? • • • XHTS small writing is going to stut- * ter. Possibly the magic of the linotype will keep the alphabet straight. Don’t know— Don’t care; Thing is. , We’re still there! The typewriter did that. Just *,tewed out of it. Jlke the precious attar of roses out of the otter. Ought to put quotes around that. Old .Mark Twain's stuff. Let's be honest, though the bottom drops out. That’s Lycur- gus, now. * * * Vi7 E'RE still there, because we won. YY We would be more, there, but we lost, too—lost the second game because we didn’t win it. We won one and we lost, too, be cause we didn’t win two. Try that over on your typewriter. It looks sort of suspicious to us. i • * • D OYS, that was one ball game! u Everybody thought so. Every body saw It. It was a grand afternoon for second-story men. .Most of the houses In this town were depopulated. Also, most of the dinner conversa tion last night was in husky whis pers. Also, it was about the ball game that was, and the ball game that wasn’t, hut ought |o have been. And about the pennant that may I)"* —AND OLTGHT TO BE. if right really does prevali and a mighty uphill bat tle is to be rewarded. • * • THE Crackers won the final game * of the series by whipping the Gull*. Thisr time they outplayed as well as outfought the enemy, and only the weakening of Gil Price’s over worked arm in the seventh inning saved the doomed Gulls from a dis tinguished licking within the ,nin« rounds prescribed for an ordinary hall game. It was on the heels of the seventh inning disaster that the courage the Crackers flashed more brighny athwart the gray horizon than ever before in all their desperate, grueling grind of eighteen victories out of twenty games. Price yielded under the savage at tack of the Gulls, but Elliott Dent’s great heart and arm and Chapman's deadly whip mastered the onslaught and fought back the invaders until the final crack of victory in the tenth. * • » A ND it way an honest victory, well earned, for Pug Cavet, blinders and all. was pitching a grand game of ball after a bad start—a gritty, calculating, heady game, that rated him for all time with 15,000 Atlanta fans as a pitcher of courage and ster ling ability. Had it not been for the yielding of Price, we would have been helped to a ball game by the cracking of the Gulls in the first two rounds. As it turned out. w f e smashed out a victory that was earned to the core. • • • A ND there is small doubt in 15.000 minds that the Crackers would have taken the second game and the lead in the pennant cha*e—would eventually have won thnt terrifically- fought-for flag—but for the grave mismanagement of the club directors in arranging the play-off of the drawn battle of the day before. • • • B Y some quaint method of reason ing. it apparently was figured that the tw*o games could be played In just three hours of playing time, leaving an odd ten minutes for the necessary interval between the con tests. A game played in an hour and a half is a fast game. There must be no delays; no wrangling*, not much scoring. No important ball game ever was played in an hour and a half, and the club owners must have known it. They knew that the Mobile club had to leave the park at 4:40 o’clock* and agreed that the second game should be called at that time. It was called at that time—and A was called after the third inning, the game having gone juat 4ft minutes. • • • IT was bad management. 1 The directors must have known what it meant for Atlanta NOT to wdn BOTH games Everything was in Mobile’s favor. If Mobile should score at the jump of the second game. Mobile could afford to play fast and make it a regular contest. If Mo bile should be in danger of losing, the Gulls could stall In a thousand way* no umpire can combat, and there would be no chance of making it a legal contest. • • • T HE first game went tw f o hours and thirteen minute* — just about w Ifat might havq been expected in *3 important a contest. Eighteen min utes were consumed between games, and when play was called In the second, exactly' FORTY MINUTES regained in which to make the Gulls stand up and take it. The Gulls did not stand up and take It. They played slow ball. They placed slow ball In the first game. There never was a chance to make the sec ond content a legal game. We are not blaming Mike Finn or Mike Finn’s hall club for stalling. The opportu nity was rammed down their throats They simply preferred to take the charge of beating New Orleans TWICE to playing it out in one final death grapple with the Crackers. On the whole, they probably w'ere wise. • • • A ND now. where do we stand? Well, there are about a hatful of things that can happen in the three games left of the Southern League pennant race—our game with Chattanooga to-day, and the Gulls’ two games with the Pels, one to-day, one Sunday. * * • H ERE are a few variations. You can devise more, ad lib. If Atlanta wins to-day and the Gulls break even, Atlanta wins the pennant. If Atlanta loses and Mobile breaks even, the Gulls wdn the rag. If rain prevents Atlanta from play ing—this is a new hunch—and Mo bile breaks even. Atlanta wdll win the pennant by a fraction of one point in percentage. If Atlanta wins and Mobile wins two. Mobile wins the flag. If Atlanta loses and the Gulls lose two, Atlanta wins the pennant. If Atlanta win* and Mobile takes one game and It rains out the other, the season ends in a tie. which prob ably would be played off in a special series. * • • I F you don’t find your favorite con tention listed in the foregoing, work it out for yourself. * It beats Canfield. IT i* our private hunch that the 4 court business Is going to increase horrifically as a result of arguments to-day on this very topic. Suggestion: Equip yourself with a rule book and a percentage table rather than a pint bottle and Irish confetti. * • • T AKING It by and large, which is a favorite way of taking things, it appears that we have a pretty fair chance. It’s a better chance than it was a week ago. It would be a better chance than it was after that first game with the Gulls, exceot for one thing: The Crackers' chances no longer depend solely on their own courage and ball-playing ability. A Third Party has horned in. New Orleans must win one of those games from the Gulls, or the splendid rush of the Crackers of 1913 wdll fall just short of the flag. • * • O NE cheering ray: Cholly Frank will beat Mike Finn out of a pennant if he can. He likes the genial Aiique just exactly that much. Another hopeful symptom: Cove- leskie nitched yesterday. * • • A VI) the best- thing of all, and the thing that can’t be taken away from us. The hone«t pride and joy in the grandest fight ever made by an At lanta ball club vVin, lose or draw'—THAT GOES! Following is the official score of the final game played in the series piled by O. B. KeKeler, of The Geor- between Mobile and Atlanta, com- gian, official scorer for the Southern League in Atlanta this seasson. Mobile. ab. r. h. po. a. e- Atlanta. ab. r. h. po. a. e. Stock, ss. . . , . . A i 0 3 D i Starr, 2l>. . . , . . A i i n 2 l, O’Dell, 31). . . . . 5 0 1 o 3 0 Paulet, lb. . . . . 4 0 o 13 i 0 Robertson, cf. . e . O 0 i 3 0 i Schmidt, c. . , 0 0 1 i 3 Clark, if. . . , . . 4 0 0 2 i 0 Miller, rf. . . . 3 2 i 0 0 0 Cavet, p. . . , , . 4 1 2 1 •) 2 ..36 « 28*15 8 5 0 1 14 0 0 4 110 0 1 5 0 3 3 0 0 5 2 2 2 6 0 SOUTHERN LEAGUE. Games Saturday. Chattanooga at Atlanta Game called at 3:15 o’clock. New Orleans at Mobile. Memphis at Montgomery Birmingham at Nashville. Standing of the Clubs. W. Is. Pc. Atlanta. 80 56 .588 Mobile.. 80 56 .588 B'ham. 73 64 .533 Chatt... 70 62 .530 W. L Pc. Mont.... 68 66 .507 M'phis 62 73 .459 Neville 62 75 449 New O.. 44 87 .336 Friday's Results. Atlanta, 6; Mobile. 5 (ten innings). Chattanooga, 5; New Orleans, 1. Nashville, 4: Montgomery, 3. Birmingham-Memphis. rain. AMERICAN LEAGUE. Games Saturday. Chicago at St. Ixmls. Detroit at Cleveland New York at Washington. Boston at Philadelphia. Standing of the Club*. W. L. Pc Phlla.... 84 45 .651 I Cl’land. 78 52 .600 W’gton. 72 56 562 . Chicago 68 64 .516 i W. L. Pc. Boston.. 65 62 .512 Detroit. 67 72 442 St L. . . 49 84 .369 New Y. 44 82 349 Friday’s Results. Boston. 6; Philadelphia, s. Chicago, 1; St. Louis, 0. Cleveland, 7; Detroit, 6. Washington, 3-1; New York, 2-0. NATIONAL LEAGUE. Games Saturday. Philadelphia at Boston. Brooklyn at New York. St. Louis at Pittsburg. Cincinnati at Chicago. Standing of the Cluba W. L Pc. I W. L Pc New Y.. 87 41 680 i B’klyn.. 54 72 429 Phila 74 47 .612 Boston. 54 69 439 Chicago 71 57 .555 > C’natl... 56 78 .414 P’burg. 69 59 .539 I St. L. . 46 87 .346 Friday’s Results. Cincinnati, 9; Chicago. 4. New York. 6; Brooklyn, 0. Pittsburg, 8-11; St. Louis, 3-3. Philadelphia. 1-0; Boston. 0-0 (second game ten innings; darkness). International League. Baltimore. 4; Jersey City, 2. Rochester, 12; Toronto, 2. Other games postponed. Texas League. Waco, 26; Austin. 11. Beaumont, 2; Houston, 1. Galveston, 1; San Antonio, 0. Other games not scheduled. NOTE THEOLOGIAN DIES. GLASGOW .SCOTLAND, Sept. 6.— Professor James Orr, one of the best- known theologians and writers on theology in the world, died here to day, aged 69. In 18!^> he visited America and delivered a series of lectures on German theology in Chicago. Two years later ho deliv ered a series of lectures at Prince ton University. SHELL FRAMES. Have your lenses mounted in a shell spectacle or eyeglass frame. They’re light weight, easy' on the face and decidedly popular. Come In and look at a pair. A. K. Hawkes Co., Opticians, 14 White hall street. TOBACCO HABIT. ” nrnti* Tour hoalth «rfii«na wm You can conquer It eaally In 3 day*. Im prove ymir health, prolong your life. No more atoni- arh trouble, no foul breath, no heart weakness R galii manly vigor, calm nervee. clear eyee and so perlor mental strength. Whether you chew or smoke pl|*v cigarettes, cigar*, get my Interesting Tobacco Book Worth Its weight In gold Mailed free. E. J. WOODS. 534 Sixth Ave., 748 M . New York. N. Y. CONROY TO HEAD ELMIRA. ROCHESTER, N. Y., Sept. C.—Wil liam (Wld) E. Conroy, formerly of the Washington American League team and for two seasons with Rochester in the International League, was released to Elmira subject to International League waivers. It is understood Conroy will manage the team; vice, Lew Ritter. PAPKE NOT GOING TO PARIS CHICAGO, Sept. f. Billy Papke, Ke- wanee’s star middleweight, Is going to become a resilient of Wisconsin. In cidentally he is not going to Paris, France, to battle Georges Carpentier, the champion of Europe, in u return en gagement, because there is no money in it. or at least not enough to make the trip worth while, according to Billy’s way of figuring. OTHER RE8ULTS. Federal League. Indianapolis, 11; St. I^ouls, 2. Cleveland, 2; Clhcago. 1. Pittsbrug. 8; Kansas City, 4. Virginia League. Petersburg. 3; Norfolk, 2. Portsmouth, 4; Richmond, 3. Newport News. 4; Roanoke, 2. American Association. Minneapolis, 7; Kansas City, 5. No oihar games scheduled. BANKRUPT SALE Two Bay Horses and Delivery Wagons. On Monday, September 8, at 11 a. m., I will offer for sale two fine bay horses about four and five years of ago, re- I spectlvely, and two grocery delivery wagons belonging to the estate of C. 8. I Wyatt C. O. D. Company. Sale will take . place in the office of P. H. Adams, Ref eree In Bankruptcy. 513 Grant Building, at which time sealed bids will be re ceived and opened Bids will be accept ed either separately or as a whole, and all Lids subject to the confirmation of the Referee. Terms cash. For inspection of the said horses and wagons, inquire of the undersigned, or J. M. Moore, 209 Whitehall street. H A FERRIH, Trustee MOORE A POMEROY. HENRY NEWMAN, Attorneys for the Trustee. DON’T WAIT S Frost arrives with chilly winds and wintry blasts and you are shaking and shiver ing, but buy your COAL NOW. and have it in the bin. Prices are RIGHT, delivery PROMPT. Randall Bros. PETERS BUILDING, MAIN OFFICE. YARDS: Marietta street an«l North Avenue. both phones *70: South Boulevard and Georgia railroad, Bell phone sas, Atlanta 303; McDaniel street ana Southern railroad, Bell Main Sit, Atlanta 321: 64 Krog* street Bell Ivy 4166. Atlanta, 706. 152 South Pryor street, both phones >36. . it 0 1 ti .4111 4 4 0 0 0 1 1 o 0 0 O II 2 O 0 0 Total .... Agler, lb. . . I-oiik. If. . . Welchonce,' of. Smith, 2b. . . Bisland, ss. . . Holland, .’ib. . . •Manush . . Nixon, rf. . . Chapman, c.. . Price, p. . . Total .T) 6 11 oO l(i 1 Score by innings: Mobile 000 020 300 0—5 Atlanta 220 001 000 1—6 •One out when wdnning run was scored. xBatted for Holland in tenth. Summary: Three-base hits—Pau let, Smith. Double play—O’Dell to Starr to Paulet. Hits—Off Price, 6 in 7 Innings; off Dent. 2 in 3 innings. Struck out—By Price, 2; by Cavet, 1. Bases on bails—Off Price, 4; off Dent, 2; off Cavet, 3. Sacrifice hits— Bisland, Chapman, Price (2). Stolen liases—Long, Smith, Bisland, Starr, Robertson. Hit by Pitched ball—Mil ler, by Price. Time—2:13. Umpires —Rudderham and Pfenninger. Maddening skin dlffoanes can’t exist If Tetter- i lne Is used liecauao Tcttertue Is scientifically ' prepared to remove (tie CAUSE as well as the 1 EFFECT. TETTERINE CURES SKIN DISEASES Jesse W. Rcott. MinedgevUle. Ga., writer. I suffered with an eruption two years and one box of Tetterlne cured me and two of my friends. It Is worth Its weight in fold. Tetterlne cures ecwma. tetter, ground Itch, eryslpelax. Itching piles and other allmenta Get It to day Tetterlne. 50c at druggists, or by mall. SHUPTRINE CO.. SAVANNAH. GA. a Opium Whiskey and Drug Habits treated at Home or at Sanitarium. Book oa subieel Ft me. DR B. M. WOOLLEY, J4.N, VldM# SaoltartMs. Atlanta. G«ora*a / BASEBALL TO-DAY Chattanooga vs. Atlanta Game Called 3:15 LYRIC ALL THIS WEEK Matlnaes Tues., Thura. and Sat. EMMA BUNTING In Her Greatest Success “THE CIRCUS GIRL” Next Week—“Call of the Heart" LYRIC NEXT WEEK THE SEASON’S GREATEST PLAY "THE CiLL HEART" With i Call of Morlf 4 treat Stag. froOudlon Matinee Price* I Night Prices 15c to 35c I 15c to 50c rnncvTU to-day 2:30 rUn9T I n TO-NIGHT 8:30 Sam Mann & Co., Leader WILLARD SIMMS A CO. ALEZANDE8 L SCOTT 6ASCH SISTERS MAMIE ELMORE CAMILLE'S BOODLES 8 E. KEANE KEITH VAUDEVILLE ALWAYS