Newspaper Page Text
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AUmj^l 1 A, VA-
-TUB ATLANTA OBUttULATi-
-MONDAY. MAT 17, 1915.
©
Bringing Up Father
Fighting Has Ceased in Lisbon
and New Cabinet Has Been
Organized.
<By I nternational Newt Service.)
LISBON, May 17.—The revolution
ha? been completely mjccesaful. The |
fighting ffias ceased and the capital I?
resuming its normal aspect.
The Cabinet has been reconstruct -
ed under the premiership of Jao Cha
gas and they took under considera
tion the matters of international pol
icy which have been a cause of con
tention for many months.
The casualties of the revolution are
estimated at 20 killed and 150 wound
ed. but reports that ex-Premler Costa
had been assassinated are officially
declared to be untrue.
Reign of Terror as
Rebels Seize Lisbon
(By International Newt Service.)
MADRID, Ma> 17 The Portu
guese Government was taken over
to-day by the revolutionists. Presi
dent Arriaga has fled and the reins of
power have been seized by Jao Cha
gas. who Is reported to nave pro
claimed himself dictator. The Lisbon
garrison, after a futile show of re
sistance. has surrender and word has
been sent to the detachments of pro
vincial revolutionaries that were
marching upon the city to retire.
Oporto has been bombarded by the
gunboat Limpopo, whose crew mu
tinied and joined the rebels
One hundred and eighteen persons
were killed and 350 wounded in Lis
bon during the successful revolt, ac
cording to latest advices received
here. Arrangements have been made
to let President Arri&nga serve the
rest of his term, which expires in
August. The Spanish warship Es-
Refugees arriving at Radajoz de
clared that anarchy prevailed
throughout the republic and that the
royalists are preparing a counter rev
olution in order to iestore Manuel to
the throne. Scenes that have not
nr.ji<*;«s- here
A PUPP'T I
PROMISED TO
SUE S NOT
home now-
I'LL OVE IT
TO HER WHEN
£>he COMES
IN • '•
?
I'M f>ORRT - PUPPY-
^>UT I'M <ONNA
C>T R\D OP YOOSsE '
I CAN'T STAND
PER OOCS IN
the house:
7i
7 Mi.
it” ^
J'
FRIEND-ILL
<IVE YOU TEN
DOLLARS IF YOU
take, this dcx,:
Youre
ON BOSS-'
y
I SUPPOSE THAT
CUY WILL SELL
IT TO SOME POOR
BOOtS ■
<=3
m
T/>
LOOK at THE OCX, I
BOUGHT FOR TWENTY
dollars- the MAN
SAID SOME BOOB
WANTED TOOT RID
jOF IT - ISN'T HE
A OEAR•
OWK!!!
j been paralleled since the days of the
French revolution are described by
tnr Portuguese refugees,
j Hundreds of arrests are being
made. The revolutionary party Is
sued a manifesto declaring that all
citizens found with arms outside the
ranks of the revolutionary army
would be arrested.
A Lisbon dispatch says:
“Ex-Premier Castro and ex-Minis-
ter of Public Instruction Mederlos,
w’ho were taken prisoners when the
Government was overthrown, were
removed from the military barracks
to-day and placed in confinement on
the warship Vasco da Gama.”
Sixty State Health
Officers Meet Here
WITH THE MOVIES
\/AUDETTE
jf Horn# of the Ml
Mirror Screen.
T uesday.
“Exploits of Elaine," two-reel
Pathe, featuring Pearl White and Ar.
nold Daly. “Their Own Ways,” Edl-
■on drama. “The Little Scapegoat,”
Biograph comedy.
TEXAS QUARTET.
•HE DE SOTO
T uesday.
“Adventures of Florence,” two part
Thanhouser. “That Springtime Feel,
ing,” Keystone comedy.
More than 60 State and field direc
tors of the International Health Com
mission, a department of the Rocke
feller Foundation, will meet In At
lanta Tuesday in conference on the
commission’s work. The meetings will
be held in the convention hall of the
j Hotel Ansley and will be concluded
Wednesday night.
There will be addresses by promi
nent health officers from various
Southern States and by members «f
the State boards of health of Georgia.
Alabama, Tennessee and other States
In the Southern territory of the com
mission. Dr. A. G. Fort, of the State
Health Department. Is In charge of
the local arrangements.
JUDGE ELLIS RETURNS
Judge W. 1). Pill is Monday was back
on the bench In the Superior Court
after a visit of several days in
Charleston. Judge Charles S. Reid,
of the Stone Mountain Circuit, pre
sided last week in the absence of
Judge Kills
TrtF. MONTGOMERY
* Tuesday.
“Three Weeks." Elinor Glyn’a
drama that has startled two conti
nents. A thrilling five-part feature.
Binding]
WEBB & VARY CO.
ATLANTA. GA.
•HE STRAND
m Tuesday.
Nance O’Neil, America’s foremost
emotional actress, in "Princess Ro
manoff,” a William Fox photoplay in
five parts.
T he victoria
Atlanta’s Newest Theater.
T uesday.
The great Western star, William S.
Hart, in “The Taking of Luke Me-
Vane.” Also "Ethel's New Dress"
and “The Actor and the Rube," two
good comedies.
A lamo No. 2
T uesday.
Beautiful Anita Stewart In the
second episode of "The Goddess.”
Other good pictures.
A lamo No. 1
The Little Playhouse With a
Big Show.
I Tuesday.
Clara Horton In an Ideal drama,
“Avarice.” Also Marlon Swayne in
an Empress comedy, “The Auto
matic House.”
The alsha,
* Tuesday.
Our patrons see the best hrst-run
pictures.
r .4£ GEM
MARIETTA. GA.
T uesday.
Good first-run pictures.
J^bnrra§ on
fop oi the
/"■> W&XlA
( o/or&c/o
\~\his summer.
Camp out slcy-liigk m i
tke Col orado Rock
ies -6,000 to 10.000
feet above sea level.
You dont have to
skoot or fisk — tke
camp, tbe tent, tbe
big rim of tbe bon-
son, tbe trees, tbe
grass and tbe pure air
—tkat s all you want.
Vacations in Rocky
Mountain-land cost little
because of tbe low summer
tourist fares on tbe Santa
Fe. Go tbis summer and
take tbe family.
A hundred miles view of tbe
Rockies; Fred Harvey meals;
and sleep-easy roadbed on tke
Santa Fe.
Four daily transcontinental trains;
one vis New Orleans and Houaton.
route of tke "California Special. *
Aak for our our picture folder.
**A Colorado Summer.'*
P H Rogrra
Southern !*»*» Agent
i N. Pryor Hi.
Atlanta. (la.
Phone, Maiu Mi
By Christy Mathewson.
(The Giants’ Famous Pitcher.)
I F the magnates and lawmaking
bodies of organized baseball
would upholster McGraw with a
bankroll and then leave him alone, he
would come nearer ending this war
with the Federal League than any
other man mixed up in the game to
day. .
McGraw is a. two-handed fighter
when it comes to baseball wars and
does not set much stock in affidavits,
injunctions, etc. He has had some
valuable pH**t experience in these
matters, etc
The owners of ball clubs in the Na
tional and American Leagues have
been complaining about the Federals
cutting down their profits and taking
away players, but when McGraw
goes and gets the strongest card in
their league, then a whole lot of or
ganized baseball people say "Mao' if*
all wrong 1 have never seen the
Giants’ leader so sore as* after the
Kauff incident.
What's the use?' he complained.
You go and bring hack their best
ball player, and then our bunch Won’t
let you play him. This baseball war
will go on forever if they don’t stop
patting one another on the back. The
j way to beat the Feds is take away
their players."
• • •
! HERE never would have been
■ any Federal League if il had
not been for some of the club own-
I **rs in organized baseball. They made
the league and now they are keeping
it alive. If nobody had paid any at-
! tentlon to the Feds when they first
started, the circuit would have died
like a merry-go-round with the ma
chinery broke. But organized base
ball started making a fuss about it.
and this was like a pulmotor to
them .’’
I believe McGraw is right The
Federal League could not survive
long without players. The two big
leagues ran afford to make it very
expensive for th*' Feds. McGraw is
the one to draw away the players, for
almost every man In the country
hopes some day to come to New York
and play for McGraw.
Kauff would have been a very val
uable asset to the Giants, too, and
perhaps for this* reason the Braves
made their protest so strong. There
is no use in besting around the bush.
The New York club is shot to pieces
with the pitchers all out of shape and
several of the regulars absent from
the game. The casualties have torn
up the team.
Fred Merkle is out of the pastime
for a month, anyway, and be was go
ing better than he has in years He
was hitting harder than any man on
the club, and really playing cham
pionship ball. During his long lay
off. he will lose his condition and
have to work into shape all over
again. T.obert was spiked and Snod
grass has a bad hand. Burns still Is
bothered by his ankle. None of the
pitchers, outside Tesreau. is right
• • •
I T was the pitching which gave the
Phillies their fiving start. Moran’s
team jumped into the race with the
twirlers ready to work in midseason
form, while the staffs of the other
clubs in the league were all out of
kilter. Watch the Philadelphia club
fall hack In another month. George
Stallings spilled some opinions In
mv hearing recently which might
bea r repeating.
"The Phillies are not dangerous,’’
he said. "I fear the Giants and
Brooklyn Robinson has a good team
over there with simp star pitchers.
He'll make a lot of trouble if he
doesn’t meet with a run of hard luck.
"1 look to see Detroit, win the pen
nant in the American League. Jen
nings' club is playing great ball and
has a steady bunch of workers. It \z
about ripe to come back 1 don't ex
pect to see the Red Sox win.”
Therefore, we have discovered a
very good reason why the Boston
dub is not anxious to have McGraw
play Kauff. If he is anything like the
ball player be is cracked up to be. he
would strengthen the club just where
it needs it—in the hitting. Our pitch
ers will come around in another two
weeks, and a fast mnn with a clean
up wallop would put the team right
up there in the mce.
(Copyright, 1915. bv Christ^ Mathew-
•on.)
Alpha
Tuesday.
Sydney Ayrea and Dorris Pawn In a
two-reel feature, "What a Blind Man
Saw." “A Stool Pigeon's Revenge.”
L-KO comedy.
66-68 N. Broad Street
Corner Poplar
Is where you will find us now, and we will be glad to see you.
The Tripod Paint Co.
!
Peter Maher Had Great Wallop
% <£2 <§0
He Is Still the Irish Champion
Freddie Welsh is one of the poorest
drawing cards as a champion the light
weight class has had in years. It seems
that fans refuse to turn out to see the
champion in action, and Freddie has no
one but himself to blame, or is it his
manager. Harry Pollok?
• • •
Lver since Welsh won the title from
Willie Ritchie in Ix>ndon, the champion
lias refused to take on worthy oppo
nents over a distance. True, he has
fought the best lightweights in the
country over the short route, but it has
long been known that to take the title
away from ,»elsh in a ten-round bout
is almost impossible.
• * *
Also it must be remembered that every
time Welsh steps into a ring for a short
battle he has everything In his favor.
Take his bouts with Charlie White for
instance. When Welsh battled White,
who can make 12« pounds ringside if
necessary, he (Welsh) insisted that the
bout should be a eatchwelght affair.
Welsh, at catch weights, weighed 141
pounds for one of his scraps with White,
while the Chicagoan was around the 130
mark.
Now. can any fan imagine a boy
weighing but 15U beating Welsh at 141,
at the latter’s own distance, ten rounds
Mill, this White boy held his own
against Welsh in one bout, while he
was shaded in another because Welsh
would not stand up and fight.
* • *
Despite the fact that White gave
Welsh these tough arguments. Freddie
has time and again ignored White’s plea
for a return encounter over tbe twenty- 1
round distance. It is tactics of this 1
kind that are making Freddie Welsh
tl;p most unpopular champion the light
weight class has ever had.
• • •
Whitney added another victory to his
list the other night when the "Fight
ing Carpenter” disposed of Young Wol-
gast In two rouncls.
• • •
Joe Mandot continues to dodge a
match with Whitney. Tommy Walsh,
who is managing Mandot, says that
Mandot hasn’t any time to bother with
the Atlanta favorite. Probably Tommy
has not forgotten the narrow escape
Mandot had at the hands of Whitney
when Frank dropped Joe for the count
of nine twice in a New Orleans scrap
about two years ago.
* * •
Whitney is now fighting better than
ever before. He w ent to Chicago, where
Walsh makes his headquarters, to try
to force Mandot into a match, but
Tommy would not give Frank any sat
isfaction.
* • •
Further than that the "Boxing Trust”
around Chicago even went so far as to
keep Whitney from meeting any of the
topnotchera around there for fear that
the public would demand that Mandot
or some other good boy meet Frank.
The> tried Whitney against Sherman
and they nd doubt saw enough of Frank
on that occasion, as they refused to give
him another chance after his victory
over Sherman.
• * *
Red Walsh, who handles Pete Herman,
is anxious to bring the Southern ban
tamweight king here for a match. Her
man is again a big card in the Pelican
Citv. where he is fighting great.
* • «
K. O. Brown handed fans somewhat
of a surprise by besting Billy Murray
in Kenosha last week. Brown must have
had an off night when he lost to Leo
Houck here.
Southern League
Mobil,. 7; Chattanooga. 0.
MOBILE. AM., May 17. Mobil, hit
Wagner and Maranall hard, and had no
trouble defeating Chattanooga 7 to 0.
Hogg pitched tine hall throughout, giving
up hut four scattered hits.
Score by innings
Chattanooga hJO W9 000 0
Mobile OSb Hit—7
Marshall. Wagner and Kitchens; Hogg
and Schmidt.
Memphis. 5; New Orleans, 3.
NEW ORLEANS, May 17. Bunched
hits in (he sixth and eighth innings en
abled Memphis to overcome a lead of
tv runs and defeat New Orleans. 5 to 3.
Score by innings:
Memphis . diXi 002 030—5
New Orleans 010 100 000—2
Keeley and Schlel; Bagby and Higgins.
VETERAN BALL PLAYER DIES.
EOS ANC.BI.ES, May 17.—Wallace
Bray, known to the baseball world as
"Happy" Hogan, died at his home here
to-day. For tbe past week the veteran
loader of the Tigers, as the Venice club
of the Pacific Coast League Is known,
had been suffering from pneumonia.
JIM JEFFRIES RECOVERING.
LOS ANGELES. May 17.—James J.
Jeffries, who has been suffering from
pneumonia, vai ao far recovered to-day
that he was able to walk about and
visit friends
By Left Hook.
P ETER MAHER is still the Irish
champion, and no one can take
the title away from him. Even
when he battled and was licked, as he
was on various occasions, Peter re
fused to let the victor tote off his
gariand, and, though he has now been
out of the ring for several years, he
is still ready to fight if anyone tries
to put "Irish Champion” after his
moniker.
This is written as a gentle hint to
Jim Coffey and other big fellows who
call the Emerald Isle home, and they
had better heed the warning or they
will be taking great chances of hav
ing one of Maher’s famous wallops
slammed against their jaws.
And that wallop of Peter's was
nothing to be taken lightly. He was,
when In his prime, probably the hard
est hitter the heavyweight division
ever had, and dangerous at all stages.
Even when tottering about the ring,
seemingly out on his feet, Peter had
a deadly wallop, and more than once
turned what looked to be certain de
feat into glorious victory with a sin
gle punch.
Although Maher has taken part in
many battles and taken lickings, and
hard ones at that, with fortitude,
many followers of the ring say he was
not the gamest fighter in the world.
He has been accused of quitting once
or twice, but such a good judge of
fighters as Tom O’Rourke, the New
Yorker—and Tom doesn’t like Maher,
either—denies that Peter was any
thing but game. Instead of having a
weak heart, O’Rourke says Maher was
handicapped with a weak jaw and
that the battles In which he was ac
cused of quitting were genuine knock
out affairs.
• • •
rjVER his own signature O’Rourke
" said that Maher was the greatest
hitter, bar nobody, that ever stepped
into a ring, and that with better
judgment in placing his blows would
have been a champion. He goes on 10
say that Maher lacked a head, had
little confidence in his own ability and
was unfortunate in having a weak
jaw.
O'Rourke says he saw Maher
knocked out with the slightest punch
on the jaw, and at once heard a howl
of "Fake!” and he cites Maher’s bat
tle with McCoy to prove the case. In
that contest Peter had McCoy all but
out at the end of the fourth round, i
but in the fifth McCoy beat Maher to
the punch with a right on the jaw,
and the fight ended ten seconds later.
Maher was born in Dublin. Ireland,
March 16, 1869, and was making a fair
living in a Dublin brewery when Pe
ter Jackson, the great negro heavy
weight, visited Ireland in 1889. Jack-
son was meeting all comers in three-
round bouts, and Peter was one of
the comers. Peter had. up to that
time, fought a few times and had vic
tories over Tim O’Doherty. Martin
O’Hara. John Sheehan and Robert!
Hare to his credit. He had size in
his favor, too, as he weighed about
170 pounds and was 5 feet 11 1-?
li.ches tall.
Peter was just 20 years of age when
he went on with Jackson In Dublin,
and he put up such a good exhibition
that Jackson expressed the opinion
that the raw Irish youth would make
a star in the ring if he kept at it. This
listened good tA Maher and he start
ed out as a reeular fighter. He won
a few more fights in Ireland and Eng
land and then, under the manage
ment of Tony Sage a famous book
maker. came to the United States. He
landed here In 1891.
• • •
I N his first battles here he made a J
great reputation with his knockout
punch and scored many quick victo
ries.
He was then matched with Bob
Fitzsimmons for a twenty-round bout'
at New' Orleans in March, 1892. In
the first round of the bout Maher
caught Fitz with a right on the jaw.
and the Comishman went to the mat
dead to the world. There was fully
a minute of the round left, but the
late Bud Renault, a well-known
sportsman, who had a big bunch of
money bet on Fitzsimmons, hit the
gong with his cane, indicating rhe
close of the round. Had it not been
for Renaud’s trick, Maher would
probably have been credited with a
knockout over Fitz, for it seemed im
possible that Ruby Robert would have
been able to get to his feet within a
count of ten.
Be that as it may, the fact remains
that Fitz came back between rounds
and gave the Irishman a fine trim
ming. knocking him out in the twelfth
round.
Later the same year Maher met Joe
Goddard at Coney Island and was
again defeated, this time lasting but
three rounds.
Among some of Maher’s perform
ances In the years that followed were
his defeats of George Godfrey in six
rounds, Jim Hall in six rounds, and
Steve O’Donnell in jig time on several
occasions. O’Donnell was always a
cinch for Maher. They met five times
and. bar one no-decision contest in
New York, which went six rounds,
Maher always threw over the sleep
wallop with force, precision and speed.
Their first and second fights ended in
the first round, their third was the
six-rounder mentioned, their fourth
went two rounds, and the fifth was
another one-round event.
* * *
A FTER his first meeting with
O'Donnell at Maspeth, L. I., on
November 11, 1892, Jim Corbett en
tered the ring, and, after congratulat
ing Peter on his quick victory, resign
ed the championship in Maher’s fa
vor.
Maher did not enjoy his laurels for
any length of time, for Fitzsimmons
wrested them from him in a contest
on the banks of the Rio Grande on
February 21. 1896. Fitz scored a
knockout in one round.
From then on Maher was a very in
consistent performer. He knocked
out Joe Choynski in six rounds in
November, 1896. He made a very poor
showing against Gus Ruhlin In 1902
and lost in three rounds.
Finally, the old warhorse went al
together to the bad and was stopped
by Jack Fitzgerald in one round in a
Philadelphia bout in 1909. This ended
his career.
To-day Maher is making a living in
New York City as a saloon keeper,
and is a regular at any fight In which
Jim Coffey is listed »s a competitor.
He seems to think Coffey will uphold
the prestige of Ireland, but hasn’t yet
decided that the* new white hope is
good enough to be trusted with his
copyrighted and all rights reserved
title of Irish champion.
Big Bicycle Race
Bill for Saturday
CHICAGO, May 17.—A delegation of
bicycle riders from Salt Lake City ar
rived here to-day to begin training for
the season at the Rivervlew Velodrome
starting Saturday. Included in the par
ty are Samuelson, Whittier and Ber-
quest. pacemakers; Lloyd Thomas, Bob
Dlefenbacher, Albert Crebbs, Ned Young,
James Huey and Steve Senhouse. ( A
squad of Newark cyclist sare expected
to-morrow.
“KING COLE” ORDERED HOME.
DETROIT, May 17.—Pitcher Leonard
(King) Cole, formerly a Cub, and now
with the New York Yankees, has been
ordered by physicians to his home in
Bay City, after an operation for tumor
Cole may be forced to retire from base
ball
YOUTH WINS LONG HIKE.
CHICAGO, May 17.—Richard C. Vail.
16, won the walk from Fifth avenue and
Harrison street to Hammond, Ind.. yes
terday in four hours and five minutes.
More than 100 pedestrians started the
hike and thirty-six finished, among them
Dan O'Leary, promoter of the event, and
former Alderman Joseph Badenoch.
PALM
BEACH
SUITS
Dry Cleaned
(Not Scrubbed.)
BOSTON DRY CLEANING CO.,
82 Garnett Street.
WeVe as Near as Your Phone.
Main 760. Atlanta 4222.
KofP
May
Convention
SAVANNAH
Festival
Southern Railway
The Official Route
Knights «* Pythias
SPECIAL K. of P. TRAIN
Leave Atlanta 9:45 p. m. MAY 18
Arrives Savannah 7:00 a. m. MAY 19
Tickets on sale May 17 to 22
Good returning until May 23
CITY TICKET OFFICE
No.l PEACHTREE Telephones 142
Cut This Out—
It Is Worth Money
Cut^ out this advertisement, inclose 5
cents* to Foley <6 Co., 2835 Sheffield
Ave., Chicago, Ill., writing your name
and address clearly. You will receive
in return a trial package containing:
(1) Foley’s Honey and Tar Com
pound. the standard family remedy for
coughs, colds, croup, whooping cough,
tightness and soreness in chest, grippe
and bronchial coughs.
(2) Foley Kidney Pills, for over
worked and disordered kidneys and
bladder ailments, pain in sides and
back due to Kidney Trouble. sore
muscles, stiff Joints, backache and
rheumatism,
(3) Foley Cathartic Tablets, a whole
some and thoroughly cleansing cathar
tic. Especially comforting to stout per
sons, and a purgative needed by every
body with sluggish bowels and torpid
liver. You can try these three family
remedies for only 6c. Sold everywhere.—
Advertisement.
EXCURSION
Tallulah Falls, To-morrow,
May 18.
$1.50 Round Trip. Two Children
Twelve Years on One Fare.
Train Leaves Terminal 7 a. m. Re
turning Arrive Atlanta 8:45 p. m.
Auspices Central Baptist S. S.
BASEBALL To-day I
Atlanta vs. Little Rock I
PONCE DE LEON PARK
Game Called at 3:30 o’clock.
SURE CURE FOR
Leave Winder
Leave Athens.......
Leave Elberton
Arrive RICHMOND
People who suffer from constipation
are being poisoned by putrefying waste
accumulated in the bowels. It ruins
health, destroys vitality, causes mental
depression and many other dreadful
conditions that follow' in its trail.
Scientists say that 95 per cent of all
sickness comes from the stomach and
bowels. The bow'eis should act well
once every day—it is absolutely neces
sary to keep them regular. Mineral
waters, effervescent salts and such
things do more harm than good—you
have to keep taking them until they
have no effect at all and theJhow’els are
left In worse condition than an the be
ginning. The only sensible cure for
constipation and torpid liver is a tonic
laxative—purely vegetable—such a
preparation is Digestit Elixir; it is not
had to take and does not make you
sick. A short treatment of Digestit
Elixir will cure the majority of cases
of constipation. Then to stay cured
you must keep your stomach in order—
the food you eat must be digested.
Brown's Digestit tablets will digest the
food and keep it from souring and ac
cumulating in the bowels. You can
get both of these preparations from
your druggist or from W. L. Brown.
New Orleans, La.—Advertisement.
The Atlanta
Veteran Special
To be composed of first-class Day Coaohes, Dining Car
and Standard and Tourist Sleeping Cars.
TO RUN THROUGH SOLID FROM ATLANTA TO
RICHMOND AS A SECTION OF THE FAST "ATLANTA-
BIRMINGHAM SPECIAL,’’ only making stops at LAW-
RENOEVILLE, WINDER, ATHENS and ELBERTON.
Leave Atlanta 12:30P. M., May 31st (Central Time)
Leave Lawrenceville 2:33 P. M., May 31st (Eastern Time)
3:03 P. M., May 31st (Eastern Time)
3:40 P. M., May 31st (Eastern Time)
4:38 P. M., May 31st (Eastern Time)
6:30 A. M., JUNE 1 (Eastern Time)
SEABOARD
Air Line Railway
Veterans and their friends from points on C. of Ga. Ry.,
A., B. & A. Ry., A. & W. P. Ry., SEABOARD, west of Atlan
ta, and W. & A. and L. & N. Railroads can get into Atlanta
MONDAY morning, the 31st, get a fast train, only making
stops made by the fast "Atlanta-Birmingh&m Special,”’ and
arrive in Richmond early in the morning June 1st.
$11125—Round Trip From Atlanta—$11.25
Low fares from other stations on SEABOARD and con
necting lines. See that your ticket reads via SEABOARD,
from Atlanta or nearest Jnnotion. Stop-Overs allowed on
tickets going and returning. Tickets to be sold May 29th to
June 2d! Limit June 10th. By paying 60 oents limit can be
extended to June 30th.
TWO REGULAR THROUGH TRAINS EVERY DAY.
Leave Atlanta 11:33 A. M., and 8:55 P. M.
For information or reservations call on SEABOARD
Agents, or write
D. W. MORRAR T. P. A. or FRED GEISSLER. A G. P. A^
Atlanta, Georgia.
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