Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, December 09, 1913, Image 12

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

T7TT: ATLANTA OLOKOTAN AND NEWS. I'he First Thinir cm Earlv Frost Usually Lands On Isa New Baseball League t 'A JACK BRITTON SILK HAT HARRY’S DIVORCE SUIT Poor Judge; He Can't Pin a Rose On Her McFarland Manages to Pile Un .Lead in Majority of Rounds. Nelson “Kids” Vidor. By Ed W. Smith. HICAGO. Dec. lb Packey Mc- I Farland. world's greateKt box er. lost hie head but won a fight «si night Opposed to Jack Brit ton, of Chicago, the Idol of the stock yards displayed so much feeling of a disagreeable nature that he couldn’t box a lick, and when it came to fighting Britton, he lost much of the sterling, sparkling qualities that j brings him that title of "world’s! greatest boxer.” The battle vent the full ten rounds, | nd at ihe finish tiie general verdict I was that McFarland had had a good shade the better of It. In addition to being pitted against •nn of the best lighters In the busi ness In the legitimate l.lR-pound I class, Packey was badgered and j heckled by one Battling Nelson, once j world’s champion of the division and avowedly Packey** lifelong bitter enemy. Nelson sat near McFarland's j ■orner, and sent messages over to Britton’s corner, even attempting J openly to have Referee Stout act as a messenger boy for him Stout wouldn’t, but the Incident obviously annoyed Packey, who leaned out »>f 1 the ropes between the fifth and sixth rounds and yelled at Nelson j "It’s a good thing for you I haven’t go» you in here to-night. I’d knock your head off.” Nelson, knowing he had the Me Farland goat meandering. merely grinned and tossed some notes across the ring The papers were promptly kicked out, but Packe> was as wild as a loon after that, and didn't re cover Ids bearings for a full round. The contest was a keen disappoint ment. especially to Packer's friends, because lie didn’t do the impossible - knock Britton out. He failed In this just as every other good fighter has. not so much because be lost bis head in anger, but because he can not beat Britton any more decisively than he did last night at least In ten rounds. Packer has flashed his speed be- <ore Chicago crowds against a lot of mediocre opj*onents He beat them without trouble Assembled In the ling last night wllL one of the bos* men iti the business, the crowd of Pa< key's friend* though lie should treat Britton in much the same man net When he didn't do it. inere was hissing and booing, and the crow.I yelled in disapproval. It was hardly hist, because M« Farland did his ab solute best. The first three rounds were in Britton’s favor, the next two were fairly even, but from the sixth round on it was McFarland's battle in a big walk. In the ninth and tenth rounds Brittons gloves were heavy a* lead, and* he couldn't hold them higher than his waist with any success. Packey. too. was dog tired, but he arrled all the battling to the North Sider. and was entitled to the shade. ( WH^TAA <5<JV GO K>b> A DO sii wipr- ujoil'T TALK TP HINA — HCA& J TVDfl-OMl+A, u S gT*_ 1besprtnn »v 8e« 6ia>cw \MO*L»teo TO DEATH Lfrr MitrrHiS \hitf- CAllCP W/aa A iAJ A*£ I /J TME &■?-* sr rop- 7®0A-y vuo*it/rD AHO TTW/fJCr TO G€~r IS S-00t> AT AtOMlE — tb> me 'mtah ttmET J/lp hat wap-p-t posik> #- THE. TOO <n=: ( C JnuC AAIVE THF WAlTHE U AA AwHjL rA*f.(jLL OF TYte'rHATTE'R- CoMAAOMCy CAU-ffD the. Bl/LL MAE BET-iEMEi Hina- o WAF-T-V C«AJT/AJUe.i V. I ! I 1 ■ 1‘puke 70 fnqvni ^j|, ij, VMHATi THC ^*TTC1L 'jj j \AnfPT77L vwlEE ®€t | LA.it wifrrtT AHE CAlUT) Aw ! f««AIRAKE iwTVte&BAST f \HEU-— WAVS * CAA A/ffT / |\ Kiwe EvOO <rH IP Iter- i|il WELL- I LL OO F-lfrtI r Ijl oOT MO'AJ A^O C-CT- 7'll -n •— JOL"E * 0SE£ tn TmT 7 F Hi AW BE 1 WAmEWT TV-eA *eT> the wiff rightat that- I'LL 6FJAL& THEiE FLOwEAf LOr/t aJOvt/ AWO JETMV>«LF | IN* l»OOP - IMAlOT a tWfitQJiOWAL huJBAWP \ tvu r I OELIB^B iw WAV'*' 0- \ ru.Kia-s c**«reFFi_>L- a I T>»€ HODIi_ ^ x f /WfF6 -OU A«.e evv pea*. - SOME ^/<C.E •PB e 3H fCOV-iE^- f All eop vo u a ( iilil ( ' foA TVie V V ' p si •-V*T yt . > - v ... \V 3^ 70 Be. co^n nj wfeO Random ‘Heisman Reflections' +•+ Defense—Has It Retrograded? BASEBALL Diamond News and Gossip 1 President Baker, of the Philadelphia Flub offered to trade I>ool*n and Knabe to Cincinnati for Tinker and «i!oh. In reply to the offer Carrs Herr maun telegraphed back two words. Quit kidding Bill Smith will a 1 tend the National l.t-ague meeting with Clark Griffith Kill stopped off at Washington to pick ,p dnff Some tun» in Qay Gotham • u these two “youngsters." Memphis has lost Paul Smith, who Kir bought b> Memphis from the \dr.an Club, of the Michigan Assoda- • ion Smith has contracted to play with \ * hingt<»n and the national commis- < .>1 has ruled that he had the right so to contract. • • • Tt e Worcester, New England League. lnl< IS fighting the draft of outth Icier Shorten who is the property of the M'ruphis club .1 esse Burkett former National league batting king mans gen Jie Worcester club, and is endeavoring ■ • fnd a flaw in the draft ! which to build the football coliseum that will be required in that day. • * • I_JAI) you noticed how the use rf * * shift formations is spreading like wild fire over the eou. try? The quick | Jump-shift—very similar to the Min- 8 VO learn had <»nly fl\e yard*,to gain ! nesota shift that was introduced ; to make first down, they Invariably i New Haven hy Shevlin in 1910, Just fall to wondering how the defensive | lTlci to the Yule F’rinceion game was first shown in the South hy Tech B\ ( oai-li Ilfismari. U THENKVKR present-day foot- / ball players stop for a mo ment to contemplate the fact that some years ago the often- team ever held their opponents f-»r downs ai all. Admitting, as they do. that the defense of today could not stop a team for that required gain, the inquiry is pertinent as to wheth- nlAii in 1910? But Tech never learned It from Y’ale, or from Minnesota either. They took It up weeks before Yale ever heard of it, right after the, Alabama game In October, and worked not only the barks into the er modern defense has not detrrtor- j Jump, but the line as well. And that a ted. ' very year yet they used it to get a «• ,, ,, * . „ ,, I high grade punt formation—a pur- Well, lhai depend,. l”1r„ of all, I*, ?„ r wh1 % „ wag not , mpl o y ed it det*ends upon what you arc con- j by any team that year, nor the next sidering. If by stopping a team you-either. merely mean stopping its running or 1 ^ ,,al surprised me this year was , .. , not to see a good many college teams rushing attack, of courae there <an lplayin(f „ j llm i f ,. bu , g goodly number of prep teams as well. The jump-shifts of Tech High, of Bovs’ High, of Riverside and of G. M. C. were all different from each other, and all had points of merit. Other prep teams doubtless used such as well, but these happened to be all the prep teams I saw' fr< m this State this fall. I did see a game between two Tennessee prep teams, however, out neither of the«e used Jump-shifts , . . , . . , 1 was particularly impressed with aocondury defense found .1 not only lhe exce i Ipnce of the „. ork lU)ne b y safe but eminently proper, to come thp Tl „. h H1 h toarn ln thu ,i Ppart fjfht up behindI the line and plu> on nlpnt of pUn Th elr shifting was lhe verj haunch,., „f the tackles. I. p^ticiUarh fast, clean and uniform, our secondary defense of lo-dny were I f, not vlolatp thp rllles ln ailv permitted to do this, no doubt they | am t n « as done quite as well could also do better .n the matter of stopping a rushing attack. Still, it must be admitted that be little doubt that the defense of to-day is not "near a« sturdy as i; ' used to he in the days when \\ hoh» 1 afternoons were put in by the coaches teaching the player* how to get un der the line and stop the dreaded "guards back" or the famous “tackle over" ramming, smashing, grinding plays of that period. Hut. then, it must he borne in mind that no forward passes were played In that day; and, as a result, the I INDOOR SPORTS By Tadj |j i V 'ill 1 as tlie best oollegt teams could do U This means that in a year or ho the , . # , „ , . prep players who come to college will ondarj defensive players of to-day |; lr ^ a ,{ y haVB bppn thurnughly initiated Into the mysteries of quick shifts. are not in a class with those of a dei ade xgn. «Hen i, cornea to getting „ hlch will make lhe wri of the into tin- mix-up and doing their full , . uhiive t „ n, ,1 P l ul nt.ldti n- ,1 at e.\tl .v , I« 1/ o share toward stopping u strong huck (»n •oaches easier, tile other hand. this matter of through tlie line; and that no matter 1 \\ here they might be permitted toi- f k flirmat i ong th „ hackftcld ,nd station themselves Nowadays they mnn j maneuvers calculated to tata j are mostly coached how to stop ft 'ward passes, not bucks; and what tackling lhe> do is mainh on the opposing end runners. Heme they have not had the coaching on stop ping tlte stuft through the line that used to be expended on these sec ondary men On the other hand, it can be point ed out with equal truth that the sec ondary defensive players of that day would have made an even greater f the job of trying to atop for al Isengue clubs. natl. Pittsburg and Chicago are after Pitcher Hovlik of tb< M Iwa tea club Having disposed of Outfielder I«rry Fhrtppelle lor fTb.000 tlie Brewer* may uj to K**' about $10,000,000 for Hovlik advantage of the wording of the rules In new and unexpected ways that it would not surprls me if the ru. s committee did no: take a hand in the * ame and do some legislating regard ing these quick shifts in a year or two. They make i ngs too hard tor the officials, for tlms can't waF'i everything in ;i game as the games are now played. TH1.5 \T> VOOff 5ALARV J ' ' 7VUO OOLLAH.S SHORT V VHAODv£ ME AN !! DO voo THIA/K that I CAW Vas A GR0L£*v ICETAALI, BAKE1*-, BuTTHelT SkWSELF AMO G iv,e S OVE 0UTTA THi A • - \ suppose wow MEr , mlcaff£^ v ' amo ©ovuLero a pe'w VWHAT? nrrnTn , ’i , r i r IMtXDOR SPORTS' BRIM&IAjG HOM.E THe BA CO w* * TNWO BOCKS SmoR-T b 16 HIS mess of the .lob of trying t<> slop Tor r* r>\ . mil P "«rrt pas.**, ha, lhc> l.cci . i I OtXlll 1) btODS 1 ctliV 01 upon to do it without several year.-*! I A pon of working up to it. In short defense of ten years ago was strong er for stopping the offense of thn period than would he the defense * t< -day, while the converse is true i*e gardlng defense under present rub - when contrasted with what the de Yale-Michigan Game rrnr.Uio, Dec. 9 Walter Camp, ath letic adviser for Y’ale. yesterday put a stop to ttie talk that tie is attempting to arrange a game between Y’ale And feneive players of bygone days could , the I’niversity of Chicago for next sea- ilo with the game of to-day. ' »«»n * • • Camp denied lie is here on such a mis- HAT Is KOlrnc to bp the limit ,oi al "", and furth ® r “i* 1 ®' 1 that there are the ihfonRs that n ill patron, j ,. all tilli he pin>eh l-’irat. he ,h>rlar««. tlie football of the future I 'mi , . y H | ( , i;M4 sehtslule 1s so fille<l that would he difficult to sa> Had coo ! q would bo almost impossible to slip noticed that the attendance grows in another, and. secondly, he doubted greater eveiv year? whether Coach Staug would take his The Tala-Harvard Kama draw 42 team to New Haven for a olash. non thla year. The A rim Xnvv B am.’ ' “">P there tan 1 a rlmno, of ^ ale ,Ir,-r 47,000 None of the h'y cano e I * * Wet diM w , In the Southern cities the attend T /\pn| Kytrn q f" Wfll’l/ nuce has beer ! n th aigcr than ; UUUwtl X IV b Ci U THU h W White Sees McCue Floor Ad Wolgast In ‘Gym’ Workout CHICAGO, Dec. 9. -Charlie White, who is matched to box Ad Wolgast In Milwaukee on December 19. saw his opponent dropped to the floor from a right cross, and Charlie will likely try that punch repeatedly when they meet. Ad and lil* stable mate. Matty j McCue, put on the gloves in Lewis yesterday. In the third round Wol gast rushed in at his opponent, and Matty shot over a right cross. Ad 1 hit the floor like a log. his head hit ting before his body. Food for Sport Fans Boston fans anvllle onsider “Rabbit" Ms in any previous Thirty years «g» < ;n " “ For 'Nooe;a' Quintet ■ K ■ • O x ung man’s father still insists ttiai does Penn’s in Philadelphia, would » son should have stuck to the plumb | hcen considered non comp 8 hislnwf ! mentis Hut thn, 30.000 oaividty Is no longer sufficient for the Army Navy game, so they took their game to the field with the largest stand# President Johnson has i-ome out with in the country; and then t wasn't ’ nearly large enough. Harvard’s sta dium was built to hold 40.000. and “Walter was doing nice as an apprentice in n tinner's shop ind should have stuck to it." says Pop- i»er. ’The Atlanta Athletic Club basketball team has started work for next Sat urday night., when they play their sec ond game of the basketball season The Chattanooga Tigers, champions of Fast Tennessee and one of the best fives in Tennessee, will clash with the local five. The tigers went through the 1912-1913 a strong boost for “Three-Fingered* Brown as manager of the Cincinnati Reds a team that 1h without a leader at present. A few days ago President Herrmann, of Cincinnati, published u C' "‘Y Yai« with h^r ^O UiVu 'm i ‘hat section of the South. iat«.merit In which lie shi.1 thn' Tinker N ‘" voinc \me with Her i.c oou ,\- | , . ,,,1,1,1 not be re-encased pacity etad'um well under waj And will it be filled with spectators when ompleted? At the big games it cer tainly will, and running over. And isn’t thHt remark:* l Mr Johnson stated that he constd- Brown a credit to the gam* and n h’s Jong experience in baseball . till it didn't hold mor* 1 than half of i season without a defeat, eliminating those who clamored for admission > tm of the strongest teams throughout SPRINQ DATES FOR REDS. 1NCINNAT1, Dec 9 The Red spring had never met a squarer or more nteiligeni representative of the na n»nal pastime than Brownie. From his ! vernation It could easily b* seen that tv Johnson would not hesitate to name Irown as the Red manager If such a hing was in his power • * * But, of course, the National League w nen you stop to think that New Haven dates have all been tilled by Frank Ban croft. who Is always right on the Jl>H at getting favorable games for the club during the practice season. The team ( s» f ir from being a large cit\" lu j will play at New Orleans March 2S and ether words, they will not depend at Niemphis. March 20 and 31. and at verv much on the resident population ! Louisville. April 1. 2 and 3 At Red’and nr up the Mg saucer The reopt? > h ® ®"‘ b , pla , y p " a ? h i n y , " n * . t . m . Vpril 4 and 6. Cleveland *> and ». I>e- pour In from hundreJs of m. is Ir ;, u s , anJ 10 anrt rr.ston 1! arxt 12, in every' direction The ancient Coliseum a Rome he'd far from being within Mr Johnson’s j ^ ut 7(1 000 spectators and while It : risdictlon. At the same tjme. he has PLAYER SIGNS CONTRACT. NEWARK OHIO. Dec. 9. —Bert A11ICI P 0,1 1 •' «P, ^ p . ildered the “big man" in baseball , seum of to-da> and that the stage ieroa> it’s not going to hurt settings were particularly and r»e .. . „• )ai..i g thu • ( T jl1ar f v r?Hlt?ttc rmth»r mor? so than GAME T „ ne bit bv having him come . H CHAM I ILL.. Deo 9.—The * ;i A n boost ln our . ' rniverslty of Illinois to-day booked a many others who view the 1,1 years the query at j basket hall game with .lames Mllliken * 'im-mnat i in the 9ame I each college w ill be where will they | x*niv« rslty of Decatur, to he played * find a plot of land large enough on * here December 18 Jones May Quit Yale To Enter Business NK.W HAVEN. Dec. P.—Now that the captaincy of the YaJ« football team for 1914 has been decided. Interest shifts to th« appointment of the coach ing staff for tlie coming .'ear. and though it la generally regarded certain that Howard Jones will he at the head of alTalrs next fall, a report is current in Y’ale circles that Jones may not he here after all. Tt Is rumored here that Jones is being pressed to take a po sition In another line <>( business. FORMER BALL STAR DEAD PITTSFIELD. MASS . Dec. ?. John J. Grunt, aged 76. a member of the Fck- ford bHUfhall team, of Brooklyn, which won tlie championship of the country in 1861 and 18b3. died laat night after a short Illness. He was a native of New Y’ork City and joined the Eckfords as shortstop ln 1856 TEMPLE VS. SHERMAN. SUPERIOR, W1S.. Dec. 9.—Ray Tem ple. Milwaukee lightweight, and Joe Sherman. Southern boy. will clash here to-night in a scheduled 10-round set-to Sherman was a former sparring partnei for Joe Mandot. who was once defeated by Temple. PURDUE ELEVEN DREW WELL. LAFAYETTE. i?>D„ Dec 9—The re- celpts from football games played by the team of Purdue I’niversity during the sea*on Just closed amounted to $18.- 000 This is the largest amount cleared In the history of the university. THE WHITE HOPE. A White Hope is a large section of human flesh surrounded entirely by hot air. It is called White because that Is the color of its liver, and It is calied a Hope because it hopes to obtain a living with out working for it. Technically the White Hope is a fight er. but it generally has about as much fighting spirit as a senile clam*. The only time a White Hope shows any fe rocity is when it attacks a free lunch counter. On such occasions It resem bles a famisned behemoth. It beards the Bismarck herring in its den. it smites the pickled pig's foot hip and thigh and ravishes the Boston baked bean on Its very threshold. The White Hope, however, is no* wholly to blame. It Is a child of cir cumstance. It Begins life as a human being in some sequestered hamlet far from the madding crowd's Ignoble strife It waxes strong In the back and weak In the mind, utterly ignorant of the terrible fate In store for It. Then comes the Manager like the vil lain In the movies He Inveigles the feeble-minded creature from its happy nome. forces it to sign the fatal pa pers. and from that time on its doom is sealed It is a White Hope. The White Hope Is then taken to a newspaper office where It is Bertll- loned. photographed in fifty-seven poa tures and Introduced to the world with the accompaniment of a brass band. It then climbs Into a prize ring and. for a stipulated share of the gate receipts, demonstrates that Phlneas T. Barnum knew whereof he spoke THE BACKSLIDING OF P. M’FA‘?- LAND. He trfj# a shining model in th■€ eyes of honest men. With his sterling and his upright lispoiitiim: He was a thing cf credit to the fight ing game—and then He, decided to become a politician. While it is sad to reflect on Mr. Mc Farland's plunge Into politics. It might have been worse. He might have be come a wrestler. Reports from Mexico Indicate that all the star* are jumping the Federal League. After figuring up the cost. John Evers came to the conclusion that a cable gram to his boss In Europe would be TOPHAM TO HEAD BUCKNELL. LEW IS BURG. PA . Dec. 9.-Earl Top- I ham. of Philadelphia, has been elected . 4 . ! captain of the Bucknell College fo. tbsll noth.nc; short of sufc.de j team for 1914. Toptaam played fu l-j hack for Buckre’l during ‘he i set sea- Ga ' will rrv Hfrrman says Mordecai Brown not manage the Clnoinnat* team. but neither will the unfortunate person who is hired for the job. Yussif Mahmout writes from Paris to deny the report that he was shot. He avers that he wasn’t even half shot. The All-Stars beat the Soldiers. Si to 7, instead of 23 to 7. This important point having been settled, let the world proceed on its way. Christy Mathewson did not bean a batsman all last season, but he probably figured that with so much ivory In the league it would be useless. Kid Williams, pugilist, has awakened to the sad fact that It Is one thing to get a guarantee In Milwaukee and an other thing to GET IT. JAKE SHOULD GRIEVE. Jake Stahl sat in his banking house Through all the Boston Hurry. l He piled his money, note hy note. And nn*irered, “/ v'as once the goat. Hut I SHOULD WORRY!” L Jimmy Johnston is wanted by the St. Louis Browns, but it is expected that Evers will nlve him a thorough try-out before sending him to the minora. If Joe Tinker accepts that job In the Federal League he will be able to write a dissertation entitled. “From Messen ger Boy to Manager.” Those Federal magnates discuss $10,- 000 salaries with the ease and non chalance of a free-lunch fighter offering to make a $10,000 side bet. Collins and Barry are finished artists at working the double play, but Murphy and Herrmann are world’s champions at working the double cross. THE OASIS. You fair oasis gleams i.the hlivtlong day— You shaded spot where amber foun tains play. llll . All day it mocks my dry and burn ing throat. So near to me and yet so far away. J icander homeward when my job T ! quit. Xor grasp a stein of lager in my mitt. ■ Till Xew *Year's Day I tread the' desert sands Aud five hard bones is all l win by if. 1 Tech Players Will Compete in All-Star Game on Xmas Day CHATTANOOGA, Dec. 9.—Chatta nooga will stage another all-star foot ball game this Christmas. But the players tn this all-star game will be men who are still in school and who expect to play again next season. Gene Patton Talley Johnson. Cush man and Senter, of Georgia Tech, all Chattanooga boys, will carry the bulk of the interest at thla game. Vander bilt. Sewanee and Auburn will furnish some of the men in the game ii Cracker Outfielder Also Keeps Busy Telling Home Fans About Local Team’s Great Finish. rirjILy is the third of a scries of / lefteis from members of the ^ champion Cracker team. It is fiom Tommy Long, who will again be in the outfield in 19]). Tommy writes that hr expects to be in great shape for spring practice, and hopes to help tin Atlanta club to another rug. fi Toinette. Ala., Dec. 1, 1913. YY S. Farnsworth. Snorting Edit.qv The Atlanta Georgian: Friend Rill—Tour letter received a> few days ago, and was glad to hear that the boys in dear old Atlanta are feeling fine. Have been taking pret ty good care of myself, and expect to report in great shape in the spring and help tlie Crackers cop another pennant. I went to my home in Bladon Springs for a ten-day visit after th© close of the ball season, and from there came here to accept a j>osition In the commissary of the Cochran Lumber Company. The mill, how ever. burned down on the night of October 17. throwing'the greater part of the employees out of work. I had a great time while at work, dealing with the people of the town. They all wanted to know about the Crack ers’ grandstand finish, and kept m© busy reviewing the dope. I am now spending much time fish ing and hunting. I landed a six- pound black bass tlie other day. be sides others of smaller size. Gee, but it’s dandy sport, especially if you happen to be lucky. Near here there is a river swamp abounding in game of all descrip tions, where many ducks, both .Mal lards and Teal, as well as numbers of squirrels, have fallen victims of rny dogs and gun. T was a member of a camp hunt held in tills swamp Thanksgiving week, and killed eleven ducks and 53 squirrels. Well, Bill, have nothing else to write about, so will close with re gards to all< my friends in Atlanta Your friend, TOMMY LONG MITCHELL TO CAPTAIN BROWN. PROVIDENCE. R. I., Dec. 9. -Setli Mitchell, 'varsity center, will captair, the Brown eleven next fall. He ha* played center three yea.rs, coming here from Phillips-Exeter Glree I prompt relief J without inconvenience. Ej # particularly In niistinate caM»*. I H Preferable to nauwatini; drupe which are 1 deetrrjctlve to the etomach. All drutr^tfita. PAY ME FOR CURES ONLY i? yeu have been taking treatment for weeks and month* and pay •ng out your hard earned money without being cured, don't you think It I* high time to aeeept DR. HUGHES’ GRAND OFFER? You will certainly not be out any more money if not mired. Coittul- tatlun end Examination are Free for the next thirty day*. If I decide that your condition will not yield readily to my treat ment. I will be honeat with you and tell you no. and not accept your money under a promise of a cure. My treatment will positively cure or I will maka you no charge for the following dleeaeas. KIDNEY, BEADDER AND BLOOD TROUBLE, PILES. VARICOSE VEINS, FISTULA. NERVOUSNESS, WEAKNESS, FUPTURE. ULCERS AND SKIN DISEASES, i CONSTIPATION Eczema, Rheumatism, Catarrhal Affection*. Pile* and Fistula and all Nervous and Chronle Dliease* of Men and Woman. NVw and Chronic Ccsps of Burning. Itching and Inflammation stopped ln 24 hours. I am against high and extortionate fee* charged by some physicians and specialists My fees are reasonable and no more than you are willing to pay for a cur* All medicines, the purest and best of drugs, are supplied from my own private laboratory. OUT-OF-TOWN MEN VISITING THE CITY, consult me at once upon arrival, and maybe you can be cured before returning home. Many rases * an Iw* cured in one nr two visits CALL OR WRITE—No detention from business. Wea’ment and advice confidential. Hours 9 u m to ti p m. Sunday. 9 to 1. If you can't call, write and give me full description of your case ln your own words. A complete consultation costs you nothing and If I can help you I will. DR Opposite Third National Bank. nUUilLJ l 6 t. North Broad Street. Atlanta, Gs >: “THE VICTOR” DR. WOOLLEY'S SANITARIUM Opium and Whisky • years' experler.es shows these disease* are curable Patient, aleo treated u homes Consultation confidential. A book on the tub, tact free. (Jr. R VC' ittLI.KY * BOS’ v. , A w. tor Saoitartutc . Atlanta, wa. A.