The Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, GA.) 1906-1907, June 19, 1906, Image 12

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H /» | T n it (* , || M CPORTC c. . i vi (c r t n | Cracker learn Badly Lnpplsd ; (Vi V/AV JL I W L ^ Edited By k J 1 L PERCY H. WHITING jrare League now LQming-1 o i 1 ! i J No Danger of a Smash-Up In Georgia State League The prospects of the state organise- tlon ere brighter now than they were a couple of days airo. The above telegram, aent by Preal- dent Thomaa In reply to the query aa to whether or not the league was In any danger of going lo plecea aa a re- eult of Anterlcua' withdrawal, apeaka for Iteelf. The rumor that Cordele waa withdraw from the league proved to be groundleaa and Cordele announcea that ehe will have a club In the league aa long aa there la any league. Now cornea newa from Amerlcua that the club there may be revived sufTI- clentlv to laet out the aeaaon. Public- aplrlted cltltena have gotten together, rained eeveral hundred dollara and de clare that they Intend to keep a team In the city. BRUNSWICK OET8 TEAM. BpMal to The tleorglan. I hr* tend rk. tla.. June 13.-A telephone menage received here yeaterday afternoon from repreaontatleea of the men who hove boon trying to land a hnssluill team for lirntawl-k, atatea that Mr, ttavnreaw. of H'tvanuah. owner of the Cnlumbua team. In the Georgia Htate lew fur. hna i-loaeil a t! al whereby that team will lie trnnaforred to ftriinawlrk, the tlrat game to la* played here next Thnratlay with t’orilele. Mr. Ha- - raeeaae retalna the ownerahlp of the team, hut It will In future Ite cal hoi the Ilruna- v Irk hall team. Work will commence Immediately on the hell park here, and the grounds will he put In thorough repair In time for Tboradny'a game. The llrupawlek fana are very much e'att-d over thla newa. and the outlook la protulalug for a large attendance *t all thu gamea pulled off In thla city. Amerieu* Keapa Club. Special to The Georgian. Americun, Ga., June It.—For the sec- ond time thla year the Amerlcua bane- balf club haa reorganlaed. Last night n meeting tvaa held by an entirely new crowd from the one which haa hereto fore managed the team and they de cided to take the franchise Into their own hand* and to run the club to the end of the season. The present management knows full well that under the present government 9000000 000 0 0 0000000 o o O BRUNSWICK TO GET O o BRUNSWICK TO GET COLUMBUS FRANCHISE. Columbus, Oa., June 18.—J. W. Savareae, the owner of the Columbus franchise In the Stafe baseball league, has transferred his purchase to Brunswick to day. The team will go there Thursday to play C’ordele. ooooooooooooooooooo Special to The Oeorglan. Savannah, Ga., June 1>.—The Georgia State League Is In no danger of going under. Five or six towns are after Amerlcus' franchise; will be given to one of them tomorrow. J. W. THOMAS, President Georgia State League. TERRIBLE JAR FOR CRACKERS BLUFFERS LAND ON THEM LIKE A WHOLE TON OF HOT BRICK. MEMPHIS 10 ATLANTA 3 S| Vi*lnI to Tta Georgian. Memphis. Jimf 19.—Crippled by tta ab- hcnrp of Captain Otto Jordan from tta gam#, tlr#d after n hard trip from New Or leans am! generally dlaorjraidied by the htronuoui* happenings In the Crescent City, the Tracker tenm met a terrible defeat hpra ymtwtiay. The m*ore waa lh to 3. At the mart It looked like Atlnntn’s lucky •1 The Crackers tallied twlee lit the aec- cud apuRtn and one# In the alith. Then tbe dornls of trouble tagon to roll up, and th«- atonn liroka lit the Inat half of the ► lith. Mbrae led off with an error nud that evidently put Ilurtiiini In the air. The Tat Boy hnd tacn pltehlitif fottd ball up to that time, but right on thnt apot the Kluffera lauded Into him and the air waa Idaefc with Ilyin* blta and muttered euraea. the latter ftirulalted by Hie Atlnntaiia. Fire runa were Morel In the allth. mid then came a lull. It did not laat Ion*, however, for n aecoiid tornado of bit* landed on the Traekera In the el*hth and A combination of errors uud hlta put five more rnna over the plate. The awful atory, put Uowu In figures. la here given; ATLANTA. €’rosier. 2b. . , AVI ntera. rf. . Kmltfc. at*. . . Monte, aa. . . rot, lb. . . . stliiaou. ef. . l!"£r;.. ,f .v lluruum, p. . Totals. . . Thiel. If. . . . Itabb. 3b. . . Tarey. lb. . . Mr hell*. »a. . Nadeau, cf. . Plaaa. 31*. . . Matiuah. rf. . Owen. rf. . . , lltirlhurt. e. . Tlark, |*. . . . Totala. . . . oosil All. It. II. 1*0, A. K. .31144 .5 I 2 2 .41150 .41123 .31 I« 15 27 IS 3 Moure by Innings; Atlanta. ....... Metnphla 8umraary; Two-l»aae hlta. Thiel, Plans. Three-tase hlta. Tarey, lluchea. Htolen baaea. Crosier. Babb, Tarey. Nadeau. Baaea oa tails. off Bttmum 1. off Tlark 3. Struck out, by Buruuni 6. by Tlark 3. Sncrlrtce hlta, Thiel. Nleholla i.t. Double plays. Smith to Foj, Hu mum to Smith- Time, I K. Tmpire. lTemiln*er. BROWNSVILLE 10. POWDER SPRINGS • Fpeclsl to The Georgian. Powder Springs, Ui„ June IS.—Browns- ▼111# won from the local boya on Saturday la an eleven Inning game by a score of 1# to 9. The feature of the game waa the pitching of Bartlett for aevea Inning* During that time he did not allow the opposing team to eeore. The winning run waa made lu the eleventh by Bartlett.' who arole third, and on the catcher * .wild throw he went home, bringing In the winning ran. The I tatter! e« for llrownavllle were Bart lett. Bagiev and lieu ton. For Powder Springe, Middle brook*. Kerkendoya! and I-ff. ooooooooooooooooooo of the league It will not be eelf-eue- talnlng, but they said that It would alwaye give Amerlcua a black eye In the baseball world to be the flret town t*. drop out of the league. They thought that the good It would do the town would more than compeneate the loaees hlch the team Incurred. Several hundred dollars were freely subscribed for the immediate needs of the team and It left for Waycroaa this morning. The team only mlaaed one game, the one which It wae to play yesterday In Waycros*. Two of the playera which were employed by the former manage ment left the team, Weatbrook and Poole, both fielders. They went to Cordele. It la generally thought here that If the team can go through thle eeason It can be put on a paying baele next year. Thoee who are especially pushing the team are W. C. Carter, George D. Wheatley, John W. Splver, C. J. Clark and Jack Cleghorn. Mr. ('leghorn wae appointed temporary ninnager and le now with the team In Waycross. The people of Amerlcua will stick to tho team as well as any town In Georgia, and they will run It through the sea son It such a thing le possible. League Standings SOUTHERN. CLUBS— Played. Won. Lost P.C. Shreveport . . 64 33 ft ,gn New Orleans. Birmingham. Atlanta . Memphis . . Montgomery. . 64 2* 18 .4*1 Nashville ... 67 24 II .421 Little Bock. . . 61 14 37 .276 BREWERTON PICTURES SOME INCIDENTS OF MONDAY'S GAME A3 THEY CAME OVER THE WIRE. Monday*s Jolt and How it Was Landed Oh, those Bluffers! Lot ha nt them! They bare cniiHcd Atlanta more trouble and sadness than all the others put together. Defeat In bad enough, but when It comes from that second division aggregation and cornea so bard, It in more tbnu the average fan cares to tasr.' Burnuni seems to have loat hla knack of hen Hug Memphis. Lust year.be did It In great style on more than one occasion, but yesterday, alas—! Clark, the “Texas I/Sfl filer," pitched aver age good hall ngnlnst the Crackers. But the Memphis Imnch prated more than aver age good hitters. And so things happened. Here's hoping that Jordan will lie hack In the game soon. Ills place Is one tpiicli can't be filled by nnother player now in the Southern league. Crippled or not, that Shreveport tenm i n hard one to head. tat them atay at home right aloug and they would lie about lurinclbitf. can aurely whip Little It la about time thnt something was done to stop this disgusting wrangling In the Southern League. The recent games In sev eral cities have been made obnoxious to all respectable fana by the fighta and jawing matches which have occurred. In Shreve port Monday two Nnahvllle playera bad to be sent from the field on account of their squabbles with the umpire. It took police- meu to do It, too. Such scenes do not do baseball any good, and the offenders ought to be punished. . No league umpire In New Orleans Mon day, either! Guess peace-lorlug men will fight shy of that disreputable burg; after whnt the people tried to do to Otto Jor dan and Umpire Kennedy. Clark, of Birmingham, lasted one-third of an Inning before New Orleans hatters yes terday. Maybe the ball was unduly lively. It wouldn't be surprising. Vaughan seems to be playing pretty fair ball for Birmingham nt first. And atilt the Birmingham papers ait up on their hind legs and howl for a new first baseman. Otto Jordan la going to bring ault against the New Orleans Hnselml! Association for false Imprisonment and defamation of char acter. Here's hoping be wins out. The Atlanta tenm presented a strange line-up Monday. With Crosier at second base and Hughes In left field, the team was certainly far from being at Ita strongest. Knne pitched tbree-hlt -ball against Au gusta Monday and won bis game 2 to 0. tarry .Hoffman's single helped toward the only rims. Only one game was played In the National League Monday and that was between Bos ton anil Chicago. It wss'one to one until the ninth Inning, when Bates soaked the I Mill over the fence nnd Boston won, 2 to 1. Pfeffer and Rtieltacb each gave up 4 hits. When Chicago finally defeated Boston Monday It waa only after one of the longest and hardest-fought games of the present season. The affair went fifteen Innings and the final score was 4 to 3. Dlneen pitched steady talk but In the fifteenth, after se curing two outs, he gave a has? ou halls and then Ferris made an error which al lowed n run to score and loat the game for the Once-Champions. “Noodles" Hahn did not show hla usual 19M form In the game against Detroit Mon day, and be was Ignomlolously knocked out of the tax. Clarkson succeeded him, but did little better. Philadelphia and Cleveland bad a great game Monday. Hess outpltcbed Plank, but bobble by Rosaman gave the game to the Champions. Dope and News Dragged From Exchanges Club, Auxuxih . Columbia . Charleston . Havannah . Macon . . . Jacksonville SOUTH ATLANTIC. Club* Wayrroiit. . Columbus . Cordele . . Valdosta . . Albany . . Amerlcua . GEORGIA STATE. 10 u .68* .468 .608 .440 .400 .806 .694 -.600 .338 .300 COTTON 8TATE8. CLUBS— Played. Won. lrist. P.C. Baton Knuffe. . 4* 2* 21 .571 Jackson .... St 2* 23' .649 Meridian. ... 4* 26 22 .642 Gulfport .... 49 26 23 ,631 Mobile 49 23 26 .469 Vlckaburg ... 61 18 S3 .363 NATIONAL. Played. Won. Lonb P.C. ■ 66 39 17 .696 .61 34 17 .667 . 65 35 20 .636 . . 67 30 27 .526 . 67 24 33 ,421 . 69 24 35 .407 . 6* 22 36 .379 . . 64 1 6 38 .29* CLUBS— t'hlrugo. . Pittsburg . New Yoik , Philadelphia HI. Inuln . Cincinnati. Brooklyn . lioatun . . . AMERICAN. Club— Played. Won. Loat. Cleveland, ... 49 so 19 New York .... 63 32 21 Philadelphia . . 52 St 2t Detroit 50 -7 23 Chicago .... r,t 26 26 HI. Loula .... 62 27 25 Waahtncton . . 63 IS 35 Boaotn .... 54 16 38 AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. t'luba— Played. Won. Loat. Toledo .... 66 13 23 Milwaukee. . . 64 31 23 Columbus ... 611 34 26 laiulavllle ... 66 30 26 Kanaaa City .. 66 28 27 Minneapolis , . 57 28 29 Indianapolis . . 68 21 15 St. Paul .... 54 19 36 NAT KAISER & CO. Confidential loans on valuables. Bargains in unredeemed Diamonds. 15 Decatur SL Kimball House. MONDAY'S RESULTS. Southern League— Memphis 10, Atlanta 3. Xqw Orleans lo. Birmingham 4. Shreveport 3, Nashville I. No garni* In Utle R«x*k — rain. Georgia State League— Albany I. Columbus «». Cordele 3, Valdosta ft. Waycroaa 9, Amerlcua 0 (forfeit.) South Atlantic League— Columbia 2. .Macon 1. Savannah 2, Augusta 0. charleston 8, Jacksonville 2. American League— Chicago 4, Boston 3. St. Loula *, Washington 3. Detroit 9, New York 2. Philadelphia 3, Cleveland 2. National League— Boston 2. Chicago I. American Association— Indianapolis 3. Kansas City 4. - Louisville 2, Milwaukee 10. Columbus 2. Minneapolis 4. Toledo 2. St. Paul 2. Cotton 8tates League— Mobile 0. Jackson 1. Baton Rouge a. Vlckaburg 2, Meridian 8, Gulfport 1. In speaking of Ata's work In Huoday's game at New Orleans tta Picayune saya: “One of the star features of the game waa the. work of Jake Ala ns uu umpire. Ats was quick on Ida decisions, and remarkably accurate. Hla calling of bulls and strikes was beyond question. As uu umpire he was so much of a star that Atlnntu didn't have one stiiglo chunre to enter n single protest." Ats has everything but the voice. That lisp of hla would sound peculiar when It came to inukiiig long ituuounceiueuts. Woodward Is lending off id the batting for Baton Rouge, these flays, McMillan comes seoond. Woodruff third nud Rernte McCay fourth. "The game yesterday could not have been more peaceful," says Monday'S PHiyune. "It was a thoroughly Htiuday exhibition. Not a cross word was exchanged. Quite n contrast front the other days of the, memorable aeries." "Baseball took several steps backward," Is the caption In n New Orleans paper ac companying a practical confesidou that facta. In the "phoney ha Retail" Incident appeared to l*ear out Captain Jordan and Mnnnger Smith In their contention that '(rubber" balls had been employed to win the game. The New Orleans public Itself lias always been Inclined to treat visitors fairly. If Manager Crank Is found guilty of rtnglug tactics hla career with the pub He may come to a sudden termination.L .MemphU Commercial-Appeal. “The Baron* today open In the midst of thnt primeval forest of rubber tails," saya Monday's Birmingham Ledger. "It caunot ta foretold, but It la probable thnt Frank will endeavor to run In some of Ills pe culiar tricks on the Barons. Harry tinglian. however, will l*e on the qul vInvalid It la (lettered that he will reqdlly. perceive any little fetching exhibition of Ids Inordinate eutetiess that Frank may attempt. Alcock Joins Yiitiglinu In New* Orleans, and the team will be strengthened on thnt uceount. I'Frnnk, II seems, la either determined to dictate the policy »nd politics off the South ern tangue. or to ruin It. It behoove* the league to either dislodge him, or make him king, for It la better that he rule than ruin. Frank, ns the father of the league, should ta more cobsldkratc. It Is evident, however, tlpit hq. Csrra little for the wel fare of any one save Frank, and It looks as If he cares little whether there Is a breaking up of the union or not." Nothing or nobody seems to ta able to stop the pennant aspirations of Billy Smith’s hunch ef boosters.—Birmingham Age-11 era Id. But Red Fisher.—Atlanta Georgian. And Hickman and BUI Phillips.—New Orleans States. And Munucl.—Shreveport Times. And "Tesna" Clark. What been uu* of Umpire Kennedy la n question. It was understood that he had orders to go to Memphis, but It was also understood thnt these orders had taen changed. When the teams arrived at the park Kennedy was missing and Jake Ats was agreed upon as the umpire. Alt's work was of the best quality.—New Orleans Picayune. MAN WHO BEAT CRACKERS. “TEXAS** CLARK. This minor l#agu# recruit Haa taen pitching g#co ball this aaason for Memphis and Monday ho ac complished tho downfall of the At lanta team. Just oue more pitcher like Maxwell and Montgomery will ta a serious contender for the flag.—Montgomery Journal. Yes. if Montgomery bad ns good a team as Atlanta, and as much luck ns New Or leans and as much grit aa Shreveport and the purpose." the stoicism of Nashville, and the gall of Birmingham she would ta pretty bard to stop. Alas for those "Ifs." Wonder whose leg O'Brien will try to Uri*sk today.-Birmingham Ledger. It would perhaps be for the tast Interests of tasebatl If ('barley Frank would atop trylug to make hit henchmen commit mur der. arson, assault and battery and a few other felonies right on tUg boschsll diamond aud would transfer hts activities elsewhere. It would ta so much more gen Her. % tity to poison the players nt the hotel, or have lhem strangled down eomJ tack alley rather than attempt to slaughter them right be fore the eyes of a couple of thousand vpectntofs. The Atlanta association Is going to de mand nn Investigation of the alleged ac tions of Charley Frank, manager of the Pelicans, In placing rubber tails into piny. Good for Atlanta. Go the route With the Dutchman. It Is time some one was calling him to taw.—Birmingham Newa. * We sure will. About the biggest fool superstition among tall players and those .who engage lu varl Iona branches of sport la the fear of a '‘pho tographic boodoo." Dispatches from Mem phis state that Bahh ordered a photogra pher sway from third base during a game the other day, tacaoae, as long an the pho tographer was there, no Memphis roan reached the tag. In thin day of enlightenment and educa tion It la particularly sickening to aec grown man who thinks It will give him "had luck" to have hla picture taken. Breltenstfln, of Montgomery, leads the pitchers of the league In tatting, and Hughes, of Atlanta, Is nt the bottom of the percentage column In tatting among the pitcher*.—Birmingham Age-Herald. But not In “per cent of games won," however. * A dispatch from Hsu Francisco saya: “A picked tall tram from the Hau Francisco police and fire departments will leave here In a few days for the east to play depart ment teams in all principal cities for the tatorfif of wblows and orphana of the two departments In this city, many of whom lost their all In the recent fire. The men have been granted leave of absence for Many Nationalities Mix In Fights at Los Angeles By Private Leased Wire* Iso* Angeles, l’*I. 9 June 19.—The Interna tional fracas comes off tonight nt pavlUon of the I'srtpc Athletic Club. Vari ous representative*/ of nations heretofore supposed to ta nt peace will puminei each other to their hearts’ content for tho edifi cation of patrons of the cluh. Among the men who will appear In the ring It la safe to any that Ah Wing, the original and only fighting yellow kid from Hacrnmcnto, hns managed to attract the largest share of attefklon. Wing is strouger llmtad nnd looks to put Caesar Attell to the lmd long tafore the end of the sixth round. There will* ta one surprised and •ore Chinaman In town tonight If Caesar happens to deni him ont the sleep potion. Tne taut of the evening will ta the ten rounds encounter between Harry Baker, amateur featherweight champion of the country, and Kid Ifaltoa, the Italian who knocked-ont Joe Ktlsey In the second J about * mouth ago. Almost as clever with hla hauds nnd t^ t ns Attell. Baker will have n chain., ta demonstrate tonight whether he Is „ n ,. b ,\ those whirlwind three-round fighter* nr he can stay n ronte. He meets a Mur ,,_ opponent lu the hard-hitting Italian 1*? nud opinions are evenly divided on the salt. The order In which the bout* will ran off will ta ns follows: * #.lx <e raumls!' ,lU<UUer *** lnnt Lurks, lilllv Walsh against Young Bern- .1. rounds. • . ..11 Jack Walsh against Tommy Lcahv. rounds. . " P1X The Turk ngnlnst Jim Tremble .1. rounds. * 811 Ah Wing against Caesar Attrji. .1. rounds. ’ 8,1 Harry Baker ngnlnst Kid Dolton, t . n rounds. ’ 1 " A "MUGGSY” TRICK. The Cubs are telling a good story on Johnny McOraw. The Chicago players claim that one of the reasons they have made 52 hits nnd scored 37 rnns In the first three games In New York Is that they have been wise to the trick that handicaps every visiting team. The Cubs claim that the dirt around the home plate Is mixed with some greasy, or soapy, 'substance ’ that causes the bat to slip ont of the hatters' hands If they rub their hands in It. The same dirt Is around- the pitchers' •lab also to make the ball hard to hold. The Cubs' pitchers ami hatters did not rub their hands In this dirt and did not suffer ns n consequence. Pfelster said after the game: “I am sure thnt there Is aome substance In thnt dirt thnt makes the halls slippery, nnd once or twice I felt It nnd after that I didn't nso any more of the dirt on uiy hands."—SL Louis Star-Chronicle. WHY CHICAGO CHEERED. 3 "What Is Chicago cheering for?* Wrltcrln-the-Shadc. “We've got the pennant ■wallowed." th# Chicago Rooter said. “It's early lu the season." ventured Writer- lu-the-Hbade. 1 r “Aw. that don't make 110 difference." tbs Chicago Rooter said. "For Captain Chance nnd his brave crew ^ flva making heaps of talk: Their batters never foozle, and their pitch er* never talk. We'll win the blooming championship, and win it In n walk. ‘ For I got It straight from chubby m Charley Murphy." —\\ llllam F. Kirk In New York American. ANDERSON CANNED. Little Rock. Ark., June 19.—Catcher And? Anderson lias been released. Chief Zimmer says his throwing has not been up to expectations, and given n* nn additional reason for his release the fntt that Little Rock hns to reduce In number of plnyiws. Anderson has been out «»f the gnme sin Umpire Emmons for Quality. Presblmt A inert ne says Mttllntiey Is look ing ror.Monietblug good In the twirling Hue on this trip and may put bis brand on some promising pitcher tafore returning to camp. -Montgomery Jonranl. It Is understood that Chinn might ta se cured. OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO Some of them* days this old b*ague Is go ing to riH*l and rock.—Hlrtuingbsm Ledger. iHro’t worry, though. The league will ta light at the same old stand for a goo«| many years to come. .Too tnnrh money Is tied up In It to make any violent eruptions protable. Talk la cheap • sad generally harmless, but the magnate* will think quite s while tafore they will take any action which will endanger the life of the league. As long as the .goose continues to lay the golden egg It will find Its life very _ s Mr. Vaughan is now lu New Orleans. Look f O out for rubber balls. Harry, and don't let ! o w your players get spiked. If New Orleans OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO Is looking for trouble, you look the other ^ v SMITH TO GO BACK IN TEAM Special to The Georgian. ■ Memphis, Tenn., June 19.—Becauae of the trouncing given the Flrecrackera In the opening conteat yeaterday, Manager Smith raid thla morning that he would try to' atrengthen hi, team thla afternoon by getting back Into the game hlmaelf. He will play either center flefd or second base. In the latter cane. Crosier will go to left field, and there will be a gen eral shifting. By Smith going back Into harness, the Atlantans, by the way, will again atep over the fourteen-men limit. Sparka, who atopped ovar at hla home at Oxford, Misa., yeeterdav, came up today, and will pitch for the viators. Ltehhardt will be In the box for th* locale. Where They Play Today. Atlanta In Memphis. Birmingham In New Orleans. Montgomery In Little Rock. Nashville In Shreveport. ■ you way.—Rlmilusbam News. Pretty good eitrlee. too. The Its runs open today for a series in ’ellcaRTlIlr, and It la hoped they will not mlar aa mrn-h disturbance there aa did the Boostere.—Illnutnghaai Axe-Herald. It la hoped, for their eake, that It will nut be neceaaary. " To (he Sporting editor Atlanta Georgian: The Anatell lMinelM.ll team liega to deny the itatement made hy the Villa Rlra ball team In regard to the game played here Jana 14.- A double header waa played. Vlllg Rica winning the' flm hy the .nee of 9 to 3, aoj , , ^^^^^^^WAaatell winning the aecood. which waa a Down In New Orleons! How marh pent-1 lire Inning game, by the wore or * to - np meaning la contained In that simple aea- We ciaaot understand why Villa Bka tenor: Rubber ball*. iMkcl ball,, charge*i rt.raht misstate thla. Very reapeetfuUr preferred, trlehery. trenrbery. tirades nnd THE Al'ftTELL BAKEIIALL t lXR. rtddlew Let sa hope the Rarona will come. Per J. B. BUhop. Manager, •at alive.-Birmingham Ledger. Austell, Ga., June 15 AUSTELL'S DENIAL. Apparel for Your Vacation Trip About to be off for your vacation trip? Let us help you get ready. We can be of valuable assistance so far as apparel is concerned. Stylish, perfect-fitting, light weight two-piece suits, negligee shirts, hosiery, neckwear, in fact everything to wear that will add to your comfort—and looks. Two-piece Suits $10,00 to $25,00 Flannel Trousers $3,50 to $5.00 Straw Hats $1,00 to $4,00 Panama Hats $5,00 to $7.50 Neckwear 25c to $1,00 Fancy Hosiery 25c to 75c Leather Belts 50c to $2,00 Cool Underwear $1,00 to $4.00 Negligee Shirts $1.00 to $2.50 Bathing Suits in solid blue with white and colored stripes, of worsted and cotton materials. For Men $1.00 to $3.00 For Boys $1.00 to $1.50 39 and 41 Whitehall Street.