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“THERE'S NO SENTITTENT IN BASEBALL.” SAID THE VETERAN AS HE WENT
“The Magnates Spcll.ll ‘Centiment’---W ith the Accgnl onAlfie'Ccnl'"fi o T T
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World's Greatest Baseball Player
Is Part Owner of Hunting Pre
serve Along Savannah Rmr.l
AVANNAH, Jan. I).—~Ty Ceobb
S the world's greatest ball player,
is now part owner.of a hunting
preserve and a professional trainer of
dogn.
Ty, with E. C. Rogers, a clothing
manufacturer; John Phillp Sousa, Jr.,
and several others, has purchased a
plantation of §,OOO acres along the Sa
vannah River in Georgia and will use
it as a hunting ground. They wiil
stock the place with fish and .amo.‘
and will go there every winter for the
season's session with the rifle.
Cobb has been assigned the job ol‘
training the dogs to be used on the
hunt. He can prepare & dog for the
hunt as well as he can “bone” a bat
for a campaign against the pitchers
of the American League
The leading batter and base runncr
of the American League would rather
punt than play ball However, by
z‘ylu ball in the summer he is go
& to be able to hunt in style in the
winter, \
Only he and his partners in the
ownership of the preserve will be al-
Jowed to hunt on it, and by stocking |
the place with game they will know |
there is going to be something to
shoot when they go there, ‘
Cobb has been hunting most of the
time thig winter. He and three oth- |
ers bagged 65 quall and one wild tur- |
key in one day. 1
By having a private hunting ground
Cobb will overcom@ one of the handi- ‘
caps he has had to contend with In
the past. He will escape entertain
ments. Wherever the Georgia Peach
goes in the South he Is feted. This
winter when Cobb and his party
landed at a little village near Au
gusta, from where they were going to
operate, they were met by a crowd of
citizens. A big fedst had been pianned
in honor of the famous son of the
South, and Instead of being able |u!
start right out after game Ty and his
&fl)‘ had to officiate at a big foed
‘hen they returned from the woods
at night another feed was lald tor‘
them. <
Cobb is criticised every spring be- |
cause he reports late at the Tixvrl
training camp. Ty says it is not be
cause he wants to be highfalutin’,
but because by hunting all winter he
keeps in good shape, and all he needs
to do In the spring is to throw a foew
balls and he is ready for dlamom”
work. |
. . i
Red Sox Training '
BOSTON, Jan. 16.—Manager Bill Car
rigan is & bellever in a late start on
training trip stunts. The first squad of
World's Champions will re{mrl at an‘
Springs, Ark.,, on March 2, the men
being pitchers and catchers. The othar
&l:yerl will assemble on March 18. The
rt from Hot Springs for Memphis,
Tenn., will be made 80 as to play there
on April 1, 2 and 3. The jump is (hon!
to Brooklyn for April 6, 7 and 8. A
game may be arranged between Mem
phis and Brooklyn.
The American l.eague will probably
open April 12. Manager Carrigan w!nl
find some place to take his team for
Eflctlce after the Brooklyn series. Thul
d Sox expect to open at home.
Get Haughton Again’
- i
CAMBRIDGE, MASS,, Jan. 15.—The
g‘lnlflg of a contract for another vear
y Reginald W. P. Brown, advisory
eoach of the Harvard football team, was
announced to-day, For more than twen
ty years Brown has been associated
with football at Harvard and his worlk
has been that of a strategy expert.
Tt is understood that definite selection
of a head coach will not be made for
several weeks. It is not yet known
whether Coach Percy D. Haugy{non'.fl
g’nrv};une of an interest in the Boston
ational League Laseball club will pre
vent his return to his position at }hr
ward.
lgosition as Coach
STATE COLLEGE, PA., Jan, 15.—Ac
g:dlng to campus rumors, Robert N.
rryman, Penn State's All-American
palfback, may sign a contract to coach
the football eleven of the Agricultural
:ndc Mechanical College at Clemson,
Berryman has sald he wanted to un
dertake coaching for a year or two
after his graduation next June, and be
fore he actively begins his professional
work. Of the several propositions Ber
ryman is now considering from the col
leges seeking his services, the South
Carolina contract Is the most attractive.
American Jockeys
Barred in" Hungary
BERLIN (via London), Jan. 16.—The
employment of American jockeys on
Hungarian race horses has virtually
been stopped through a resolution nrn-'
posed by the Hungarian Jockey Club,
which excludes foreign jockeys from all
races the stakes of which are below
20,000 crowns. The resolution is worded
#0 as to affect “foreigners,” but Amer
feans are almost the only foreigners
riding on Hungarian tracks.
Ex-Red to Guide
Sioux City Club
BIOUX CITY, IOWA, Jan. 16.—Harry
Gaspar, manager of the Sloux City
Western League team, during the last
few weeks of the. 1915 campaign, has
signed a contract for 1916.
Gaspar announced he will take his
turn on the mound. He formerly
!itched for the Cincinnati and St. Louis
onals,
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DGOSR !J
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Wi 9 ON IRUN TORN MYI
Ye Caulifiower Ear.
BOUT elght out of every ten fist fighters you see nowadays own the
A “caulifiower,” or “tin™ ear; an ear so battered and tunched by the
bludgeonings of fiveounce gloves that it isn't really an ear any
;on at ‘.:LI but just a misshapen chunk of cartilege clinging to the side
the h
Now the “tin” ear has been the badge of the boxer for so long that
the memory of man runs not to the contrary, but of late years it Is un
doubtedly getting much more common than it used to be.
All classes of fizhters carry ‘em these days, from the very cleverest
men we have in the ring to the kind who can't fight much at all. Seo
famillar is the “tin” ear among the gladlators of the present eara fas you
might say, {f you wanted to pun on a very delicate subject) that one not
familiar with the situation might get the impression that there Is some
fistic law compelling the disfigurement.
The mashed-up ears of a Battling Nelson are not surprising in viey
of his style of fighting, but one would scarcely expect to see a clever
fizhter marred in that manner. None the less, most of the so-called clever
men of today carry the “tn” lsteners. They do not carry them with
any particular pride, it is true, for the “tin™ ear, to a clever man, is &
badge of disgrace—but they um. them. .
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Abe Attell Speaks.
IN the old days, not even the fighters of the mauling type always col
lected the bad ears, as is almost invariably the case with that same
type to-day, while a “tin” ear on a really clever man was something*of a
rarity. There is a reason for all this, of course, and In paging the local
fist fighting settlement for the reason yesterday we encountered Abe Attell,
former featherweight champlon, and as clever a man as ever slipped
between the ropes. .
“Why all the caulifiower ears, nowadays, Abraham?™ we inquired.
“Why all the wrecked hearing apparatus?®™
After feeling of his own ears to see if they were all there, and finding
them quite intact. Abe spoke as follows:
“Ask me something dificult. The reason you seek is as plain as the
nose on my face. The buuged-up hearers are due to the change in the
style of fighting, or, rather, to the change in the style of not fighting. In
the old days the men stood more erect, and picked off punches with thetr
hands, or jumped away from them, or stepped inside of them. Now they
bore in"the head down, and carried sideways, and block punches with their
beans.
“The ear being in between the head and the punch, naturally the ear
gets all the blows. It gets smeared up, and the blood coagulates, of some
thing, and unless it is attended to at once by some one who knows his
business the result is the tin ear.
“When | was fighting | never took any punches I could possibly avoid,
If & man swung at me, | would hop away from the swing: ¥ he set to
drive one, 1 would try to slip inside of it. Sometimes when [ would appear
to be getting a terrible pasting around the face and head and my nut would
be bobbing this way and that apparently from the force of the blows, I
would in reality be escaping injury entirely, because I would be letting my
head drift with the punch, so lh.n uo.llck.eonld land solid.
Dixon Taught Him.
ul STARTED in the fighting game as a knockerout, as strictly a fighter;
but I changed my whole system overnight, and from a few minutes’
observation of George Dixon, the little colored boy. That was fourteen
years ago, in Denver, Colorado, when I was just a novice.
“I saw Dixon box Young Corbett, and it was a revelation to me. [ sat
with my mouth open, watching George blocking, and stepping away, and
getting inside, and ducking damage in a way that I never dreamed existed.
I thought he outpointed Corbett a mile that night, but they gave the de
cision against Dixon. From tbficflmo on, however, I became a boxer. |
had discovered that there was h a thing as preventing the other fellow
from hiting me while I could be slamming him,
1 boxed Dixon right after he met Corbett, and I made such a showing
against him by employing his own méthods that from that time on I was
called a clever fighter. Yet if you look up my record, you'll find [ scored
something llke sixteen knockouts in a row when I first started, and
about twenty-two knockouts out of my first twenty-six fights before I met
Dixon.
“If I'd continued my old style, I suppose I'd been as badly marked up
as some of the boys vou see around now, githough it seels to me that
everybody was boxing different from what they are now. Young Cor
bett was a slam-bang fellow, but he came out with his ears all right, and
so did any number of other fellows I can name who were always tearing
in. They didn't block with their heads—or with their ears. They knew
more about fighting with their hands. I guess that's the answer.”
And most likely Abraham is correct. At least his solution will have
to stand until a belter one comes ;k.mz.
. .
| Mike Is W
M(KE GIBBONS, accounted an extremely clever man, and one who has
a decided aversion to getting mauled, has a “tin” ear of which he is
keenly conscious. True, Mike has the excuse that he got it in his very
first fight, but a “tin” ear acquired in a first fight sticks just as long as
one collected in a last fight, and in the old days the boys didn’'t get them
first or last.
Freddy Welsh, the lightweight champion, and Ten (“Kid") Lewis,
both clever boxers, have “tin” ears. In fact. nearly every fighter of any
prominence in the ring to-day either has a decided “tinner,” or a strong
suggestion of one. Some of them got them in the gymnasium, but they
didn’t develop in the gym any more than they did in the ring. And the
training methods of the old days were little, if any, different from what
they are now.
Most of the old fighters would have disdained the use of the heavy
foothall headgear now worn as a protection in training by a majority of
the boxers. They not only have headgear nowadays, but they wear rub
ber teeth guards. 4
Oddly enough, the colored fighters, past and present, displayed few
“tin” ears, which is perhaps explained by the theory that the colored man
1s Instinctively a good defensive boxer. He has a natural dislike for get
ting hurt, and so his very first development is apt to be along the line of
cleverness.
FULTON, MO, Jan. 15.—The biggest
success in a baseball coaching way In
collegiate circles of Missouri is C. B.
Ferguson, former pitcher for the Boston
and New York teams of the National
League.
Ferguson has just been re-elected
basebail mentor of the team at the
American School of Osteopathy at
Kirksville, where he is proraring him
self for a career as physician. Last
season Ferguson developed an aggrega
tion that won everg game on its sched
ule. Ferguson finds time to train the
athletes between his studies ut the
school. <
e ——————————
Lincoln Ball Club
LINCOLN, NEBR,, Jan, lS.r?The sale
of the Lincoln club and franchise of the
Western League by Hugh L. Jones to
the Lincoln Baseball and Amusement
Company was finally completed yester
day. The sale price of the club was an
nounced as $12,500.
George R. Stone, former member of
the St. Louis Browns, now a banker at
(‘nlerld%e, Nebr., is the new president of
the club.
™ s ———————————————————.
Senators April 5-6
BOSTON, Jan. 15—The announcement
{s made from the office of the Braves
that Manager Stallings’ men will meet
the Clark Griffith crew in Washing
ton on April 5 and 6. As the season
opens on or about April 15, the club has
about a week of open dates. On the
way up from Miami, Fla., the club will
lay games in various cities with the
i’iighhndcrl.
HEARST'S SUNDAY AMERICAN, ATLANTA, GA, SUNDAY, JANUARY 16, 1916
Tennis Stars Take
Kindly to Golfing
Maurice MecLaughlin is not establish
ing a precedent in taking so kindly to
golf that he has already broken 80 sev
eral times. The change from tennis to
golf has been made by more than one
great racquet wielder with exxllent re
sults. H. L. Doherty, a champion of
champions in his day, has Played golf to
the exclusion of practically all other
sports the last few years, and has done
so well at it that he Is rated a plus
man on the other side.
Norman F. Brookes, the Australian,
has filayed the Country Club course at
Brook!ine, Mass,, in 77, and was entered
for the national amateur championship
at Ekwanok a year ago, but did not
lay. Willlam A. Larned, Bzals Wright,
Prving V\"ri%ht. Nathaniel C. Niles, R.
Norris Willlams 24, and Champion
Johnson himself are other tennis stars
who have reached proficlency on the
links.
“THE OLD RILBLE" E
PLANTE i & T
.C &.% “CAPSULES
REMEDY R VIEN
AT DRUGGISBTS.OR TRIAL BOX BY MAIL 50¢
FROM PLANTEN 93 HENRY ST. BROOKLYN.NY.
«g;wa‘ii OF IMITATIONS—
s —————c SN i
r A thRH
(Y LI/.IR sLioper
relieved in
CAPSULES 24 HOURS
- Each Ca
M‘ DY mlahunl&@
< name &~
Beware of counterfeils
NoTncrease in Prica
TEDDY'S
Young Archie Roosevelt Wants to
Prove Himself “a Chip of
the Old Block."”
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HICAGO, Jan, 15, == Archie
| Roosevelt wantis to prove a chip
| of the old block and hopes to
establish as good a record as a box
er, If not better, than did his W‘
when the Colonel was an undergrad
uate beyond the Charles. \
Archie is enrolied as & lightwelght
in Harvard's candidates for the box
ing team. His father fought in the
same class while in college, and also
trained Willlam A. Gaston, president
of t: Shawmut National Bank, for a
| tournament. |
Dad m; stripped at 133
pounds when be entered the light
welght sparring contest, the only
event he ever took part in. ‘
Donald in his book “Theo
dore Roosevelt ag/an Undergraduate”
says of the bout:
There were only six contest
ants, The Advocate says. In the
first bout, Mr. Hanks won. ThLe
second bout, between Mr. Cool
idge and Mr. Roosevelt, was won
| x the latter, who displayed more
{il and cooiness than did his
opponent. Mr. Cushing easily won
the last bout.
“Mr. Hanks was then paired
with Mr. Roosevelt, and a spir
' ited contest followed, In which
' Mr. Hanks succeeded in gel.ing
the best of his opponent Dy his
quickness and power of endur
ance.”
“It was no fight at all” says
one of the students who were
guthered around the toiling men,
Hapks had longer reach and was
stronger, and Roosevelt wag
handicapped by his eyesight, /
1 can see the guh fellow vet,
staggering about banging in
to the air. His o:ponnt could
not put him out, and he wnand not
. give up. He showed his fighting
qualities, but be never entered
another bout.
Mr. Gaston himseif has told the
story of the wrestling match for
which Roosevelt trained him. He
\nn:
The rules for wrestling matches
in those days were arbitrary-—
different at each mesting, accord
ing to the views of the umpire.
If you thought a decision’ unfair,
l all you could do was to appeal
to the committes in charge of
athletics
' There ,was going to be a light
. weight wrestling match, I hes!-
tated about entering It. Roose
velt sald: “Come on, Biil; I'll
train you.” Me didn't know any
| more about wrestling than I did.
. The first day 1 threw two men
and had just got the first fall
. from the third when the umpire
called off the sports for the day,
insisting that the last fall T had
~ got should not count. Of oou‘so.
that meant that I should have'to
| throw my opponent three timed
and he throw me but twice to win
a vietory. Roosevelt banged his
foot down on the floor. “Out
rageous! Bill, it's outrageous!
Come on, we'll go and appeal to
the commlittee.”
“Now, Bill, you'rs hot-tem
pered,” he warned as we ap
proached them. “I don't want you
to say a word. I'll talk to them.
I'l explain this thing.” In ten
minutes Roosevelt had offered to
fight every one of them. I had
to pacify him and smooth things
over. We won our point, though.”
.
McFarland Anxious
.
To Sign for Bout
NEW YORK, Jan. 16.——Plckoly Me-
Farland, the L‘!\lc.fi: boxer, will u?ln
enter the ring and ttle welterweights,
according to word received here by
Matchmaker Jlmaxy Johnston, of the
Madison Square Garden. DPackey states
that he is in fine shape and anxious to
get back into the ring.
McFurland is anxious to meet Ted
Lewis and has offered to do 142 pounds
ringside.
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3 Py #' "‘ ) 7
|2B
D\ =e, L
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More Fun For
Trapshooters
Enjoy your favorite sport any
where, anytime with the
'TRAP
TRAP
Throws targets 40 to 75 yards |
Imitates ducks, quail, etc. Packs
in your suit-case for use in the
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$4.00 at dealers or prepaid.
' Witte for Hand Trap boaklet. |
E. I. Dupont de Nemours & Co.
Established 1802 Wilmington, Del.
Matty Still a Won.deri
Hugoins Lauds Big ‘Six’
Sl N 5
‘" MERER just one difference
botween the Christy Math.
ewson of to-day and the
Christy Mathewsofi of five and ten
FOR age skl Miler Huggins man -
ager of the Cardinals,
“And that jo--1
“The Matty of to-day no Ionl"‘
possesses & fast ball—that, and that
nhuhibommml«td-i
footiveness. In the old days Mj
Matty's arm was in Ite , he had
a wonderfully fast b‘mo raraly
nndu:lht whenever he did, it was
with telling effect. He used it only to
‘oross’ the batter, and he did ‘cross’
- g g TRy m-r“\: of
gone, ty no an of
fective as in the old days, but even st
that he's still a wonder,
“Matty was one of the first pitchers
to learn that the changes of pace was
& pitcher's real asset. He threw
curves, straight balis, fadeaways,
drops and the speed ball. He has
some . tantalizing curves and he'd
foed them to us fellows. We'd just
about figure out those curves and get
ready to whang the next one, 'm
23 would serve up his apesd
we'd pop up some puny little
fly or be out on strikes.
“I've battied against Matty many
times In the years that have gone and
"’"’&.?"“T”?.n""."‘ ot:.l‘kg
ol MBl Sba olberinge-- bt ml
a.l ball was sofaething else again
omthmkn&nawouhforufl
to 1& familiar with it, or with the
motion he used Matty used his
speed Dall only in unexpected mo
ments and he surely made a wonder
ful record.”
Boosts Bob Bescher.
Huggins tossed a nosegay at Bob
Bescher, the veteran Cardinal outs
tielder, when he sald:
“Bescher does not steal as many
bases these days as he used to steal
when he was younger and lighter, but
he steols as nany bases In critical
moments as any man in the game.
And those are the thefts that count
“Bescher uses %--hud now more
than he used to do. He recognizes
the fact that it is foolhardy for him
to try to sieal a base when the trick
will not help his team's chances. He
steals now only when that steal
means something.
“l always have admired a player
who gives his club the best that is in
him at all times, but I don't want any
of my men to take unnecessary
chances of temporary injury or per
manent crippling when there is no
need for it. The troulkie with most
youngsters is that they are too Y
and by their very eagerness .‘lm
make mistakes and oftentimes pull
‘boners.’
“Conserve Energy.”
“Bescher in his earlier days used to
try to steal bases whether his club
was neck to neck, ten runs ahead or
ten runs behind. He stole bases be.
cause he wanted to complile a base
stealing record. But he has learned
that unnecessary exertion at a time
when nothing is at stake does not
help his team’s chances for victory.
And so he steals only when a ltul]
IMPROVED METHODS CURE
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9 W S s A e -a.
Dr. T. W. Hughes has been practicing medicddine in Atlanta for the past six yeéars and
during that time he has made for himself & coterie of personal and business friends that
any man should feel proad to have as his own.
The entire second and third floors of the building at No. 18% North RBroad street,
fust & few doors from Marietta street, are occupied by Dr. Hughes’ handsomely fitted offices,
-ndu:mn is probably not another doctor's offices so well fitted or equipped in the entire
Sou
DR. T. W. HUGHES, Specialist, 16 N. Broad st, ATLANTA, GA.
Huggins Under Alias
In His Rookie Dlys§
el 3
AT LW&..J«- 18=it is net |
S y known that Miller
N...m..nmwdunui
Lowis Cardinale, masqueraded un
der an alias in the sarly nineties, |
before he breke inte big league |
circlos. {
Huggine was known as James
M. Procter when he played on the |
8t Paul olub. Me couldn't use the |
family name because his father
objected to & professional baseball |
oaresr for his son. :
The elder Huggine had ne ides |
that his sen would sver become & |
N.huw.nhodvmdh«uhs
stay out of bassball and practice
law, but his son became & star
two yoars later, The
Manmmn.m
the alias.
will help. He no longer wastes his
"-'-R’. men who have lasted longest
in baseball are those who have con
served their energy—have used It
only when needed. Mathewson Wag
ner, Lajole and the other velerans
are Instances. No one ev saw
Matty pitching his arm off d& there
was no need for it. If his team xot
away with a big lead In the early
part of the game Je took things easy
~he saved his arm,
“And Matty is still In the game,
while hundreds of men, with arms
that seemed to be as powerful as his,
but whose brains were a somewhat
minus quality, have gone—and been
forgotten.™
Huggins Still a Star,
Huggins didn't include himself in
the list of veterans whose brains have
enabled them to linger under the big
tent many years beyvond the allotted
time. Modesty wouldn't permit It
But, just the same, Huggins ranks in
the Matty, Wagner and Lajole class
a wonderful, mechanical ph{:.‘:nd
even more wonderful as to
| .
BOSTON, Jan. 15.~1t has bean an
nouhced that twelve-ounce gloves will
be used b;. Harvard student boxers
instead of the five-ounce gloves worn in
the prize ring, so that hard blows will
not disfigure the contestants. There
has been a revival of the Q‘port at HAr
wvard, and hundreds of students have
taken it up.
A" e oamare. i asmatege contost
some of x n
to be held In New Yori‘m.gflon. b:lé
the collage has not as yet sanction
such & course. The students are taking
up the sport a¥ an exercise, and they
have no desire to become gladiators or
prise winners. }
Evers and Chance
mhe Hatchet
Many Years
RAN NCISCO. Jan. WJehnny
B Tel B
teatn, “here Durled’ (5 Pasehet for
time raey Oldfield, the aute
mn-f:ma whom Chance came up
feoum Angeles the other day, was
'..hrm hl'o Culifornis with the ali
?xm:fl'.uc e «ua.ufl-.-‘
m ¥ b - |
m::fl”é‘.‘-‘.“w "‘::‘ !b‘::.‘
“He ‘&o":.& Mstory of he feud bo
sls Lok s Ty he hach oad
u‘gun-mmm-»-u.nr.}
::' trying to avoid Evers, -umu-‘
oo ').un'a Joo-ny‘ '::3& xwuy:g c:'?
dereg Oldiield, |
Evers apd Chance extended thelr
right hands without hesitation, shook
heartily, sald they were giad so meat
one another, ro-uru, how well sanh
was louking, #nteres axicab and drove
lum w celobrate !go Rl ion. <
|
8. American Likes
. )
National Pastime
R g R T )
mm'u Mfl:la{w dh Amer
fen. lrt l!:'o';:- ::: in ng the
“R:' .a' M-. been Mmr'
e O e eTI
m will ask !T-o National Com
[s‘):dn to -:m‘%:‘umkgu over :sh:
'..m!g' out of the schedule in cham
’M fashion.
|
Notre Dame to Start
1 .
Season Against Case
. CMICAGO, Jan. 15.—Case Scheol of
Cleveland will furnish “'ufl"' teat for
ey e Bt ety
x:::mbcr 20, n’id will L the first ever
played between teams of the two In
stitutions, P
Cleanse the Blood
Banish Rheumatism
Rheumatism Due to Bad Blood. S. S. S. Your Remedy
I Thousands have been made well. Peo
ple In the poorest health, suffering from
Rheumatism, with whom pain was con
stant. Who believed that :’hdr vitality
was u:p‘d beyond repair. It was prov
en to them that the cause of their trou
bie was the bhiood; that Urie Acid, tha
most taithful u‘K.or Rheumatism, had
ELPRS s s s Soatiied
sapped its strength. The
blood has allowed son and impurities
to accumulate, & all emrry was lost
They felt "poorlt" were listless, paln
was ever present, with poor digestion
Obstinat Di
-
and Satisfied Patients Say
Science is on the wing. Treatments used one year ago
are back numbers now. To be a TOPNOTCH Specialist
requires not only skill and energy, but capital. The pub
lic is not satisfied with the doctor who sticks in the OLD
RUT. I am prepared to give my patients the benefit of
all the great discoveries as soon as they are perfected.
People come to me because they read my STRAIGHT
FORWARD announcements or because I have cured
some of their friends.
Every testimonial is on flle in my office. T never pub
lish testimonials without consent of patient.
Extracts From a Few of Many Sworn Testimonials:
T. L. Davidson, 801 Crew street, Atlanta, Ga, says: “About
five vears ago Dr. Hughes cured me of a chronic case of Kidney
and Bladder Trouble after many doctors had failed.”
W. W. Statham, 1114 Candler Bullding, Atlanta, Ga. nm
“Dr. Hughes cured me of a case of Kczema that had resis
the best efforts of other doctors.”
T. F. Beall, Lafayette, Ala, says: “Dr. Hughes cured me
of a chronic case of Constipation and Plles without outtlng. pain
or inconvenience, and I consider the money I pald Drn Hughes
the best investment I ever made in my life.”
I have used Salvarsan and Bacterins in hundreds of cases.
Each case I treat now gets the advantage of this vast experience.
In my hands these remedies cure; in inexperienced hands they
are worthless.
Rheumatism, Acne, Skin, Abscesses, Bronchitis, Carbuncles,
Bowel and Liver Trouble, Gall Stones, Kidney and Bladder Al
ments, Blood Disorders, Piles, Varicose Veins, Weakness, Ner
vous Debility, Catarrhal Discharges and many other diseases [
men and women are cured. Whatever your ailment, call
I will examine you; if necessary make a chemical and m$
croscopical analysis of secretions to determine pathological and
bacteriological conditions. Your case may be one that has hefe
tofore been considered practically incurable, but it will yleld
to this new method of treatment when intelligently and skilk
fully administered. ]
CALL TO-DAY—DON'T DELAY. A friendly talk and thom
ough examination will cost you nothing, and may be the means
of saving you money as well as years of suffering. Everything
confidentlal. A large measure of success attained by me in treat
ing obstinate conditions is due to the fact that I personally em
amine every patlent.
I am not connected with any other Doctor Hughes tra
around through Georgia representing himself to be the o
Atlanta specialist. Any announcement of mine will be signed.
HOURS: 9to 12 and 2to 7; Sundays, 10 to 1 enly. *
2
Yale Eleven First
| .
To Use gfinfla in
A Football Contest
An asent 1o pung the rounds b
!.h‘:“m h--hlfl " “"“w
tor, u!m.cu '-ur.n slgnais in q
m‘ them for o first time [
Beeton aom"o"uo latter -ha‘
¥y Parke M. Davis Pripceton ~
t. of ll‘dmu flh’;‘w-’:“ll“
“Poth m ~ :‘ e e
s LiE gl
-m." ' c‘uuu‘&‘tugn‘ rryY.
MN‘ and Captain y Tom
of the Tale cleven. Walter Cam
in his the original d':R
those m‘ are as follows:
LA i e
e'num that bly would run
the rushiine, being pushed by Petars
harp ~Tnarie e ]
oL T 8 L,
2 g e
that m:'r-u m”"h? t::mu h.g
or mu‘mw:su would follow,
“BUYs - hard strong,” ‘Peta'p=
hard and um%' ‘Deac—same signil &8
usual,’ weare others, and the" meaning
of these wonrds n;.lln tha «ugm
e called for the play for
NE or any part of the .om
::x' for the play, thus giving
;dh.o ver yod m:fME
in 1888 :“h‘o&" EE l’: urlv..l.
Military &lflo‘: that u:l‘ lm' s
the ‘-‘.vh now erron g
charged & Princeton varsity eleven ™,
.
Giants Give Out 1916
‘ . . *
Training Schedule
NEW YORK, Jun. 15.-The New York
l';“ tralning nho::‘;: :‘h.!em
the following games:
March 11 and 13, Dalins m
March 18, Oalveston, Texas: Ma: 1
Houston, Texas; March 22 w.an
troit Americans In Dallas; M &
Houston, Texas; April 1
Texas, Lmu* Detroit Amerieans in
Houston ; Agi 8, lLouisiana mu.’gn
versity ot ton Ron?. La.: A 0:
Asel ?’:"-:!; u‘&'o"' York A“‘ :
lgf'r::'»‘nmmi April 1%, Yale on Pele
roy
and They tried B 8 8-
Mlnm tonic. They gave up
drugs. This compound of nature’s
remedies of roots and herbs did what
drugs falled to do. It literally washed
the blood free from polson, and with
the flow of kun blood came back
Bl g 2 BER
o stre . -
ness St 4.5 8. from your 4 :
neist upon =, 8, 8 If yours s a long
standing cm write for special advice
to Swift 8 fle Co, Atlanta, Ga., but
begin taking 8. 8. 5. at once.—Adver
tisement.