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INUAY AMERICAN ATLANTA. <L\
LN'DAY. DECEMBER 28. I'D
WELSH HOPES TO FORCE RITCHIE TO A TITLE BATTLE WHILE IN ATLANTA
Castro Figuring Ten-Round Bout
Between Two Champs During
Shriners’ Week.
WOULD DRAW $20,000 GATE
Englishman to Come to Atlanta
for Whitney Scrap Day Af
ter Dundee Affair. *
T-Vtimw. VVKI.SH th- Kngllnh
lightweight champion, who in to
t • .-meet Frank Whitney, of Cedar
Rapids, Iowa, here on January H. has
wired The Sunday American Sporting
Editor tlie .following from Now Or-
h-ana, where Freddie is training for
hie bout ftn New Year's Day with
Johnny Dundee
New Orleans, Dec. 26, 1913.
W. S Famaworth,
Atlanta Georgian.
Will arrive in Atlanta day afte r
my Fight* with Dundee. Will finish
what training I need in your city.
While In Atlanta will issue a
challenge to Willie Ritchie that
the American champion will
either have to accept or admit
that I am his matter.
FREDDIE WELSH.
Having no idea what said challenge
tnll be, the , writer can not comment
on it.
However, TiOti f'Yistro, who is pro
moting the Welsh-Whitney battle. Is
figuring on a championship bout here
next May. The Shriners w ill be In the
city and the Count figures that he
can offer KUfifci* mmd Welsh a tre
mendous purse to twnk up here.
"I figure that with the Shriners in
the city I could draw at least a $20,000
house with Ritchie and Welsh in a
ten-round bout," said the genial pro
moter yesterday. "At any rate, I am
figuring on such a match."
Baseball Signals
Joke, Declares Huff
CHAMPAIGN. ILL.. Dec 27.—George
Huff. Illinois' famous baseball coach,
sabl last night tha! the tradition that
Intricate systems of signals are used by
good ball teams is a Joke Huff's remark
was occasioned by the interview In
which Dean Small, of Chicago, dec&red
In favor of retiring baseball coaches to
the grandstand that the players might
play of their ..wn Initiative and not as
puppets moved by a master hand on the
bench. . .. ,.
Tm willing to sit In the stand sabl
Huff, 'hut I hate to see such Ideas pre
vail They were foster.,! by the eclen-
'iflc writers on baseball in the ntaga-
itines The good teams, big league or
allege, don't have Intricate systems or
signals We've been fairly successful
invt the largest number of signals I ever
had was three, and that was excap-
tional. . , ,
'There is nothing in the spirit or let-
,er of baseball rules forbidding bench
caching Football is a different matter
and 1 think they'd better retire the
. ..aehea from the side lines first;
De Oro Will Defend
Three-Cushion Title
NKW YORK, n«Ce 27.- Alfredo IV-
Oro.the veteran Cuban cue wlelder. who
recently relieved of his pool cham
pionship. will defend his only remaining
title in a three-cushion billiard match
* ih ‘"buries Morin, of Chicago, early
nett month
The match will he played on January
U ♦> and 7 in this city, probably at
Doyle’s Academy.
Thte match has been in prospect for
gomt- time, but »*• the champion has
k-ft; uiider the weather recently be put
off to tTu* last his notification on the
’challenge by Morin Morin wanted the
match played in Chicago, but DeOro ex
orcised the champion’s privilege to ae-
•er. the place for playing and chose
New York
Carpentier to Accept
Gunboat's Challenge
* LONDON. Dei 27.- Georges Carpen
ter. the French pugilist, has advised
hts manager to accept Gunboat Smith s
challenge for a twenty-round bout ut
hie National Snorting OHib here short
ly. the slakes to he 110.000 a side.
Eluted over -his one-round vieio
*
body; the second, an <>
er Bombardier Wells Oarpentier
illing to fight any man in the world.
o\
y i
Smith is in vSan h ration loo at the
♦resent time preparing for his twenty-
round contes- with Xrthur IVlky on
rCew Year n Day
Only Five, Including Two Doubt
ful, Remain in the American
and National.
H OW many more years before the
playing managers will be en
tirely cut of existence in the
major leagues? N *xt season then* will
be just two playing leaders in the
American League, while there will be
about three or four in the National.
Not so many years ago thin was
entirely changed. Most of the man
agers for ball clubs took active part
on the diamond, but at the present
time most of them do their managing
from the bench.
When the 1914 campaign opens,
there is a possibility that only Joe
Birmingham, of tit. Naps, and Bill
Carrigan, of the Red Sox, will be play
ing managers. The other nix will act
from the bench. Carrigan, being a
catcher, and with good understudies,
may not participate in a great num
ber of games, while Blrmy also may
be kept on the bench owing to a bad
leg.
If this is the case, there will be no
playing leaders in the A. L. Frank
Chance and Jimmy Callahan, not so j
long ago, were playing managers, but
retired in 1913. and there is hardly a j
chance they will return in 1914.
This is altogether different from the
start of 1913. when Geoige Stovall,
Jake Stahl, Joe Birmingham. Jimmy
Callahan and Frank Chance were the
playing leaders. But times change
everything, and the national pastime
is no exception to the rule.
It will be a little different in the
senior body There \v« r four playing
leaders in the organization which will
be presided over by Governor Tenor,
of Pennsylvania, while in all proba
bility there will he a like total during
1914.
Those who took active part on the
diamond and also handled ball lucsb in
the National during 1913 were Miller
Huggins, of the Cardinals; Johnny
Evers, Cubs. Joe Tinker. Reds, and
I Charley Dooin, Phillies. At that, the
iatter did not play so very regular,
i letting BUI KUlifer. the former
| Brownie, do most of the catching,
j Unless the unforeseen happens,
j Miller Huggins. Johnny Evers and
Charley Dooin will again manage
| from the field in 1914. while the Cin
cinnati club has secured Herzog \o
j take Tinker’s place.
The managers for major league
chibs ill 1913 and 1914:
American League
1918. Team 1914.
| S'ov»U, p St L*uU Rii-ktsr. b.
j Stahl. p H *-nn CarttRim. p
Muck.. I CliUmlolpbi* . . Muck. i
I OriWih. t W.t-hliiK' (.’rtmtti. h
>I» 1 «• Jennitig*. b
iifbaui, i* . t'level*n<j nirmlngham. p.
e. p . NVa York Chant-**, b
iati, p. v'Mcato Callahan, b.
XMAS RATES
Reduced over N.. C. & St.
L. Ry. and W. & A R. R.
Apply any Agent,
nuulna.
Kv.tv v
Clark.. b
Tinker. p
M.Uraw.
I Stalling*
| D ah ton. »
! Dooin p
National League
n>nan.i. p.
K*.r« n
Clark*, d.
Hereof. p.
MriJraw, b.
Stalling*. b.
Robins.-n. h.
"THE OLD RELIABLE'
PlANJ’ E 51’?ok Black
C CAPSULE
REMEDY.-3R MEN
AT CHUGSI8T8.0R TRIAL BOX BY MAIL bO.
FROM PLANTER 93 HENRY ST BROOKLYN NY.
— BEWARE O F . M ITATIOffa —
Motorboat Race to
Bermuda on June 6
Very Few Present-Day Ringmer
Display Any Gray Matter
When Fighting.
I>y Otto C. Floto.
D ENVER, Dec. 27.—Probably no
branch of sport suffers to the
same extent as does boxing in
the matter of brains. We don’t mean
the ordinary amount of gray matter
that w'e all possess, but the quick-as-
lightnlng thoughts that often bring a
battle to an end at the psychological
moment, or the kind that work so fast
that an apparently defeated man saves
himself frdm defeat. It is the latter
kind of goods that are lacking in tile
make-up of our fighters to-day. The
same thought germ that prow led about
in the noodles of McAuliffe, Dempsey,
Kid McCoy, Peter Jackson, Tommy
Ryan, Tim Corbett and others is not
visible when we view a contest now
adays.
Thinkers Are on Top,
It is a sad commentary on our
fighting men’s mental caliber, to say
the least. And yet those who have
the intelligence are on top, viz: Wil
lie Ritchie. Johnnie Coulon, Packey
McFarland, Eddie McGoorty and a
few more of that type. None of them
is of the slugger variety, and yet
whenever they face one of these hay
maker products they make him ap
pear like a wooden man
But in the period when the first -
named bunch thrived it was not only
a battle of strength, skill and hitting
powers—it was a fierce contest of Wit
vs. Wit, of brain pitted against brain
as well. The fellow who could think
the fastest providing the men were
equal in all other particulars—won.
No false moves crept into the fray,
and every mother s son of them knew
why and the reason for every blow
they aimed at the top-piece of the
adversary or could give a grand ex
planation why they sent home ’ Bet
sy’' to the mid-section when they
learned that the weak part of the
ramparts was in that spot.
Science Should Rule.
There was no throwing away of
strength, sameness or stamina just to
be busy and chance to fate that one
of the wild swings on rampage might
land In or on a vital spot and win the
contest, heaven knows how. I have
seen probably ten bouts in the last
month, and not in any single one of
them has intelligence been used. The
same old slam-bang stuff, the same
old chances of landing, the same old
clinch and struggle for freedom, the
same old dragging about the ring, but
not once a move that suggested an
iota of science of the game or a clever
maneuver with a straight lead, or a
cross-counter, or a blocking of some
loud or swing for the head or body.
Just chance pure and simple, both in
the offensive and defensive, consti
tuted all the work 1 saw, by which
they hoped to bring about results
When the hue and cry to abolish
the London prize ring was heard all
over England, the venerable Marquis
of Queenaberry, then a graduating
student from Oxford, framed a code
that had the effect of removing bru
tality from the fracas. Under this
new set of rules science was promul
gated and we graduated from the old
school of Sayers and Mace to clever
er men with the fists, and Jem Mace
himself became the craftiest of the
whole lot Men improved in boxing
skill for years after, and it is only
recently that we present the new
school of wallop without science and
trust to luck to win or lose
What A merican
League Needs in
the 1914 Season
UK needs of the American
-4- League clubs seem to be
{ about as follows:
Philadelphia—A right-handed bat
ting outfielder to replace Walsh, who
goes to New York.
Washington—A hard-hitting out-
' fielder and another right-handed
pitcher.
Cleveland—a right-handed pitcher,
a catcher and a right-handed batting
, outfielder; first base could be Im-
> proved by the acquisition of a better
batetr than Johnston.
Chicago—Outfielders of more all-
around ability than Bodle and Col
lins, and a better second baseman
than Berger.
Boston—A second baseman, a reg
ular first baseman and an under
study for Shortstop Wagner.
Detroit—One outfielder, three in-
fielders and three pitchers.
New York—First baseman, a pitch
er. a catcher and at least two out
fielders.
St Louis—A catcher, a right-
handed pitcher, a first baseman, a
second sacker, a shortstop and an
outfielder or two.
that Freddie shoots either to the jaw or
The firs t is a left uppercut
^b
'.HEBE photographs, posed especially for The Sunday American, show how Welsh delivers some of his best blows. - «, ----------
overhand right ( hop to the face,' the third, ready to shoot a right to the wind: the fourth, a long, straight left to the jaw: the fifth, working his famous shift.
CULT IS
LEADING PHASE
HEM
Etowah Gathers $24,984.75 Dur
ing Harness Racing Season.
Ten Are Close Second.
B
AUK in midseason It looked as
Iseas
(2. (
PREPARING EDII
I SID OLYMPIAD
Lieutenant DeLaval Will Be Pen
tathlon Representative — To
House Athletes in Berlin,
\T ,T *
IN
BigG
Cures in 1 Vo 5 days
uDOsturst <Jiaeharf«*
OntfaAus do poison*, and
may be fuU
■ trsDSth •bsoHi'stj
bout fear Ousrsn-
Pmmb
•***• r < * 130Y CURE YOU* SSL FT
why . _
At DTuggiRtB. .or by pare*-! p**'
* bottle? $2.75 Pert rule- «
or ntaM“d on request
-tuf fcVAN6 CHEMICAL
THfc tv* Cincinnati, Q.
PHIUApKLLHlA. Dec 21. The an-
jiual motorboat race to Bermuda, which
it was thought for a time would be
abandoned will be run as usual next
year. June 6 L the date that has been
announced for it
RYAN, ANGRY. QUITS GOTHAM
I NKVV YORK. l»ec 27 Paddy Ryan,
'champion weight thrower, who r«*s'g n ed
from the Irish A U . may go to Chicago
[and compete for some club there, his
friends declare.! *o-da> Ryan and J.
»
1
ft cl a! a to show proper fraternal spirit.
COY MAY COACH NEXT YEAR
| WASHINGTON. Di . Ted Coy.
j famous fullback of the Yale eleven a
COMPANY
lern shoo
fing boric
irig tabriors next
iy .Janies S. Mitckel,
World’s Champion Weight Thrower.
)T only have the athletic coun-
ies of Europe been absorbing
the advanced American ideas
of sport, but a few have even shown
inclinations to go the Yankee plan
one better, especially in the line of
making a timely start for big events.
Sweden seems to be foremost in
this respect, as can be demonstrated
by the manner in which they regard
the Olympiad at Berlin in 1916. The
fixture is more than two years off.
yet the Swedish Olympic Committee
has started to make arrangements to
house its team at the German capital.
They are first as far as a definite
move toward preparation goes, for no
other country has yet bothered .about
how the teams will live or eat a
couple of years from this data
Already the Swedes have had the
trial for the modern pentathlon,
and the winner turned up in Lieuten
ant DeLaval. This is a record in the
way of preliminary trials. It is re
ported from Stockholm that Lieuten
ant DeLaval is to train steadily for
the next two years, and is sure to be
returned a winner.
By the way, nobody feels certain
that the modern pentathlon will be
included on the German program.
The Swedes are out to win the
point championship from the United
States at Berlin, and they are going
to leave no stone unturned in the de
velopment of point winners.
The Swedes were confident of win
ning the point championship for the
track and field items at their own
Olympiad, and were thunderstruck
when the}' saw their champions
smothered by the Americans.
They couldn’t understand it. and
only in the end did it dawn on them
that running against a champion op
ponent is a totally different game
running records against an
day clock.
The Swedish runners broke ail sorts
NEW YORK. lk7!c~ T! , Brooklyn I ? f r ? 00 , r J s n a f al, ? st watch-hold-
t'lub. Of thr National Lea K ue. announce" In*, bu failed miserably when It came
that negotiations have been completed to duplicating the times against the
the young j Yankees.
It looks now as if the Greeks would
be left alone in the Athenian Festival
next spring, except that here and
there some patriotic athletes and big
clubs might help them out in the way
of stars. Several months ago the
Greeks asked the International Olym
pic Committee to help them out, but
nothing has come of the request. The
governing bodies of the different
countries figure that the Grecian
meet is too close on that at Berlin,
and that big teams can not be mus
tered every year, or at least so soon,
on top of each other.
Madden’s fleet, game and con
sistent laughter of Moko, would have
a walkaway as the leading money
winner of the year among harness
race horses. But shortIv afterward
she began to show signs of being the
worst for wear, and long before the
campaign originally mapped out for
her had been concluded she was forced
into retirement by lameness, her last
victory being in the classic Oak stake
for $10,000 at Hartford, Conn., which
she entered September 1.
The following week, at Syracuse, in
the race for the $10,000 Empire State
stake, she virtually broke down and
had to be withdrawn and retired for
the season, at least, if not perma
nently.
Up to this time she had won $24,-
148, and there was only one possibility
of her losing her position at the head
of the iist of money winners for the
season of 1913. That was involved in
the result of the campaign of Etawah,
the blind colt, confessedly the best
three-year-old trotter of the year.
Etawah Near Breakdown.
If the latter could win practically
all the rich futurities of/'the fail in
which he was engaged, he had a
chance to beat Tenara out, for pre
vious to the time of Tenara’s going
wrong he had already won something
like $12,000.
As it fell out, a fit of sickness came
near cooking Etawah's goose, and had
he not been a real trotting wonder,
he, like Tenara, would have fallen
by the wayside.
But. while he never recovered his
early form, he struggled on so gamely
when out of condition from his illness
and his “class” was so high that, de
spite the fact that he lost one of his
richest engagements, the Horse Re
view Futurity, at Columbus, he “came
back” in the Kentucky Futurity, the
biggest plum of the season, and drag
ged it off.
When his winnings had been finally
figured up, they reached the sum ol
$24,493.75, which enabled him to nose
out the Madden mare as the cham
pion money earner of the year by the
small margin of $158.75.
Leads by $158.75.
In doing this he .started in eight
races, with the following result:
FldL'O an<l Dat* Time. Wm>.
(ireenrille, Ohio, .lime 25 .. . 'iiliS 1 * $ lfiO.OO
North Randall. Ohio. July 8 .2:093* 9ar..ft0
Kalamazoo. Mich., Aug. 5 '-ItOfPa ".TOO on
Detroit. Mich.. Auk. 12 2:07^ fiOO.OO
Indianapolis, Imt.. Seta. 8 ... 2:1044
Columlms, Ohio. Sept. 24 .... 2.0-'>\
Columbus, Ohio. Oct. 3 2:0f^i
Lexington. K.v . Oct. 7 2:0844
Record Prices Paid
For Star Players
Joe Tinker, Cincinnati, bought S
j by the Brooklyn club, National '
; League. $25,000.
Marty O’Toole, St. Paul, Ameri-
j can Association, bought by the
| Pittsburg club, National League, ^
, $22,500.
Larry Chappell, Milwaukee,
American Association, bought by
Chicago club, American League,
$18,000.
Lefty Russell, Baltimore, Inter
national League, bought by the
; Philadelphia club, American )
> League, $12,000.
Fritz Maisel, Baltimore, Inter-
- national League, bought by the
J New York club, American League, :
$12,000.
Rube Marquard, Indianapolis,
American Association, bought by
the New York club, National
League, $11,000.
CRITICISED ERR
Runyon Declares West Can Never
Protest Again—Michigan is
Suitable.
No Stock Taken in
Fogel, Says Griff
“Horace Fogel’s comments on Garry
Herrmann are entirely unfounded, and
can not be seriously taken tor a min
ute,” says Ciark Griffith, rallying to the
defense of his former employer. Fogel’s
most recent outburst is to the effect
that he has been commissioned by the
Fleishman interests to have some one
purchase their interest in the Cincin
nati club.
“Herrmann is one of the squarest men
in the game, has done much to put
baseball on its feet and keep it there,
and has suffered much adverse criti
cism which was entirely unwarranted,’’
says Griff.
The whole truth of the matter is that
Herrmann was forced to get rid of Tin
ker. and after having several bum
trades offered which were ridiculous in
the extreme, let Tinker go at what he
thought was the best price. Players, it
is understood, were not available, and
those that were offered were in every
way undesirable.
Cashion Must Show
Underhand Delivery
WASHINGTON, Dec. 27.—There is one
chance for Carl Cashion. the big right
hander remaining with the Nationals.
If Cashion can develop an underhand
delivery he has a chance of sticking as
a flinger. If he fails, he probably will
be sent to the minors
Cashion is a big right-hander and
showed lots of speed, but little control,
when he was able to work last year
and the season before. During the 1913
campaign he injured his shoulder and
was of little use to Griffith. He played
' if* 7*. a few contests in the outfield, being a
1,200.00 [fairly good hitter
10,83$! 66
N r EW YORK. Dec. 27.—It appears
that John Harvard was just
bound and determined to bat
some Western college into a football
argument next fall. Never was such
a fussy old party loose in the land
with a schedule to fill. Being haught
ily repelled at Chicago, the Cambridge
institution began picking on Michi
gan. with the result that it will in
veigle the Wolverines into the Har
vard arena along about October.
Therefore, let us» all exude one long,
subdued Tear for the team!
We have been hearing a great deal
of conversation about what some of
these Western football teams would
do to the Eastern nigskin rollers if
they could only get a chance to do it;
in fact, we felt that way about it our
selves. We felt that the Easterners
were obstinately depriving the under
takers of a lot of w r ork by not per
mitting the Western football teams
to impinge upon the Eastern sched
ule. We felt that the Easterners were
a mighty nefarious lot for not allow
ing the West to horn in somewhere.
When Harvard recently suggested
a willingness to play Chicago we an
ticipated a mad rush from the insti
tution that stands for the all that is
Westerly, as well as for the name of
John D. Rockefeller. We had gath
ered the impression that the West
erners were simply fining away for
an opportunity to leap on the poor
Easterners, but it soon developed
that such was by no rneans the unan
imous case. Some of t\ie Chicagoans
may have wanted to leap all right
enough, but they w’anted to leap with
reservations.
Whereupon John Harvard set about
stalking the proteges of “Hurry-up”
Yost, which is a Western college all
right enough. Michigan was willing.
Michigan always seems willing, and
so we are to have a great intersec
tional clash.
Harvard is the acknow ledged foot
ball champion of the Bast. Maybe
you disagree with that view, and
maybe we disagree with that view,
but that’s the way the Crimson is
rated by the football sharks. It will
open 1914 as champion, and any team
that licks Harvard licks the cham
pion.
That talk about the game not be
ing for the championship of anything
in particular is all very nice, but you
know, and everybody knows, that it
will be just about the biggest thing
in the football line that will be staged
next season.
Daring American Player Picked to
Succeed Harry Payne Whit
ney in 1914 Clash,
\ T OW that an intern.; < n >
maten in 1914 is pra< . . \
sured, the American spor
loving public may look forward vUtii
keen anticipation to witnessing again
this most thrilling and most wonder
ful sport in the world.
The American ”Bi.g Four” won over
the English invaders last June, bu:
only after olaying the grandest, mu”
death-defying game ever staged •
any field. Only after they were r
to the end qf human endurance, for
ing to the limit (heir 'powerful i nit.-,
riding with the speed of a. w irlwind,
unmindful of life or limb, were they
able to triumph over th- wonder? i
Britons.
What are the Americans han*es
of repeating the victory in ■ • ■. 1
This is the big question polo en
thusiasts arc asking to-day, and it
one that will be difficult to ■-w •
The team that represent l the Brin-
last year has been scattered to i ••
four points of the compass; an en
tirely new quartet of invaders w/
make their appearan< *
The chances are that the old "Big
Four” combination, which has brought
so much glory to the Americans fr :
the polo battlefields, never will
together again. A new team will h, ‘
chosen, and Devercux Milburn, o
garded as the greatest poloist th
ever swung a mallet, will be the on y
member left of the famous
Four.”
The new 7 American combine
probably will be; 1, Rene La Mo
(ague: 2. Devereux Milburn: i"’
E. Stoddard; back, Malcolm Steve?;
son.
The Polo Association, which t: nu
the team, figures that v
playing forward and Stevenson
goal guardian, the Amei ' n
w’ould be noticeably stronger. M.
burn is a wonderful player <
sition. w’hile Stevenson? 2 c
value is in the backfield.
BRAVES RELEASE DICKSON.
BOSTON. Dec 27.—The Braves y
released Walter R. Dickson t<> ’
ter, cutting the pitching ? aft down
seventeen men.
Brooklyn Secures
Cuban Shortstop j -X-
Romanach.
with Tommy
shortstop of the Almendares club ...
Cuba. Manager Robinson says that the
player has accepted their terms. When
the Brooklyn team was in Cuba last
month Captain Jake Daubert was very
much impressed with Romanach’s plav*-
ing and tipped President Ebbets off to
the player Romanach is only IS vears
old.
HANDS IN RESIGNATION.
> \N FRANCISCO. Dei 27 B1li> Ior
dan. veteran announcer of ring contests,
handed in his resignation as a market
hi spec tor to-day. He retire* at the age
of 82 and will spend the balance of his
days in the Yountsville Soldiers' Home
Total $24,488.75
In c omparison, the campaign of Te
nara, which comprised precisely the |
same number of starts, tabulates a$
follows;
Place ami Da:*.
North Kaudwll. Ohio. July 10
Pittsburg. Pa.. July 19
Port Krfe. Ont.. July 23
Ur*ml Rapid*. Mich.. July 30
Kalamazoo. Mich., Aug. 13
Detroit. Mich.. Aug. 13 ....
Hartford. Conn.. Sept. 1 ....
Syracuse, N. Y . Sept 9
Time.
2:07 4
.2-.0814
.2:094
,2:05\
. . 2:07*«
. ,2:0t$k
. .2:07*1
. .2:08’4
Wo:
$ 640.00
.'1.666.OO
fl.oOO.OO
2.500.00
5.000.00
Total $24,140.00
Each of the pair raced eight times.
Etawah won six races, was once third
and once unplaced. Tenara won four,
was once second, once fourth and
twice unplaced. Neither of them ap
proached the showing made by last
year’s leading money winner. Baden
(2:05 1-4).
This stout stallion piled up the rec
ord sum lor one campaign by a trot
ter of $35,700. I11 order to do this,
however. Baden had to race no less
than seventeen times, or more than as
many as did Etawah and Tenara com
bined. Of these seventeen races he
won twelve, was second, third and
fourth each once, once • fifth (there
being money awarded the fifth house
on that occasion, hence he was placed,
although not in the first four horses),
and once unplaced.
catarrh!
OF Twe
BLADDER
Relieved In
24. Hours j
Each Cap
sule bears the
name
j t Be+mr* of cnfrntrrtoitf *
47 This famous old whiskey is noted as a smooth, rich, palatable drink of uniform qualitv.
Jefferson Club Rye Whiskey is the finest product of the distillery—It’s "excellent and
4-IT n ? r " a hvonte at the clubs in the home, everywhere when the be.<t is served.
4| Order it by name of any cafe or mail-order house.
Straus, Gunst & Co., Distillers and Distributors, rkhmond.va
BiiBiiaMiMasassissn™--
mm mm