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THE ATLANTA (jtEuKGIAN AND NEWS: SATURDAY, APKIL 29, 191'.
OF LIVE SPORTING NEWS
Crackers Play 4 Games Here With Memphis
Next Week, Then Go on Road For Long Trip
THESE ARE THE MEN WHO TRIMMED ALABAMA
,n»*, , »«. e * P,By8r * ,l * he t0p * re ’ from , ® ft to riflht| 8lo * n cf.i E Mont*au™ b„ «nd SmUh, p. F On H the^uom^row^'ra E. Hill, If.i M. Hill, e.) CMhoun, p. and tb., Holland, oaptain and 3b.;
OKOUTS WHISTLING NOW
TO KEEP UP THEIR COURAGE
Say It Will Improve as
Time Passes.
. • a* in in a i With Kaiser, of the Cubs; Messenger
iy Admit Team Is Punk, But or Jejune a. a third mate In the outer
' garden to Collins and Northern, the
Lookouts will be far from weak In that
department, and when this Improve
ment Is made Billy's Battlers will set a
pace that will make some present lead
ers of the circuit look like rank out
siders
Yes. it Is admitted that the Lookou's
have not shown championship form as
yef, but if they are not one. two by the
Ides of June, when thc’lr Incomparable
pitching staff shows Its real form, this
scribe Is willing to accept honorary
membership In the Ananias club.
By GEORGE H. BUTLER,
etunooga, Tenn., April 29.—There
chance for denying It. the Look-
have made a miserable showing
their departure from Cracker-
the T nnlfnuta nrA "ffillnir
Yes, the Lookouts are "going
thev arc not showing the form
was anticipated by local fandom,
around the circuit, or Billy
himself.
the fans here are disappointed
_ several cases aro disposed to
vent to variations upon the anvil
u that Verdi carelessly forgot to
potato In his harmonic master-
must be admitted, but they should
considered as falling In the cat-
of knockert.
fans In thla burg are. as a whole,
bunch of sports, but thoy are
' consequently hard losers,
proud—overproud—of the club
Billy Smith has collected. Thoy
the club which represents Chatta.
to make a phenomenal record,
they are not to be blamed; the
who wishes raiment of *Uk and
the price of silk has a right to be
■fled when he Is handed calico,
the fans here will make a cham-
hlp team a profitable Investment,
er expensive, was evidenced by
t that Chattanooga easily won
p tot opening day attendance,
wing the town of New Orleans,
la live times Its site.
All Hope Is Not Lost,
rest assured, Chattanooga has a
g team, or will have, aa toon us
ulsltlons which are contemplated
lorn! management are effected.
' ookouti are an aggregation of
With the exception of Ben-,
ery man upon the club Is of tried j
•ted caliber and no one need have
pprehenslon In regard to the Rube,
club has been late In getting
. but It will strike Us stride—It
just aa surely as water must run !
hill. - '
he training camps each season Is
s phenomenon which Is exactly
_ou» to the condition of the Look-
In the early days of the spring
g seasdh ."phenoros" without
r buil forth. Each spring comes
ory that veterans of the seaaon
arc slowing up; that they are to
pplnntod by a newly discovered
nt," a diamond In the rough. Thu
comes that Mathewson Is slated
release; that ho hasn't got enough
left to make a seminary girl’s
*ter; that bis curves wouldn't do
to an angular spinster In a bath-
Rubo Sklwnsh. from the Kit,
An order for a 5-ton truck to be used
for transporting prisoners between the
various police stations and the county
jail In Chicago, has just been placed
t>y the municipal authorities .of that
city with the F. B. Stearns Company,
of Cleveland.
The use of a motor truck for such
purposes Is something new In thla
country, altho It Is In uae In a number
of European cltlea. The body of the
truck Is designed to seat 60 prisoners
besides the necessary guard of officers.
The seats are so arranged that they
■nay be folded up when not In use, and
the truck used for regular truck pur
poses, such as the transporting of fur
niture, etc.
There are two Pratta In the league thla
season. Montgomery's third baseman
broke Into the game last season after
making a reputation as both a baseball
and football celebrity at tha University of
Alabama, while the aecond. a Baron
catcher, Is the same that was owned by
Calhoun Swatted,
Still Tech Wins
ab. r. h, po. a. e. t
.3 j j o 0 01 .
.2 0 0 1 0 i i so I am told, Jimmy Kyan would!) 1
Tuscaloosa, Ala., April 29.—Some
thing happened to the University of
Alabama players here yesterday after
noon that they dldn'f
defeat at the hands
Likewise something happened that
Tech didn't expect. Calhoun was bat
ted out of the box and Hubert saved
the game.
It was a game worth saving, too, a
corker from the first tap of the bell.
The box score
Tech—
E. Hill, If. . .
Johnson, ss. . .
Holland. 3b. . .
Sloan, cf. . • .
M. Hill, c. . . •
McLln, rf. . . .
Drake, lb. . . ,
Montague. 3b. . •
Calhoun, p. . .
Hubert, p. . . •
Totals. . • •
Alabama-
Moody, 2b. ... ,
Anderaon. o. . . .
Baumgardner, ss. .
Heara, 8b
Peebles, rf. ... .
McDowell. If. . . .
Austin, cf
H. Vandergraff, cf. ,
Qosa, lb
Moorer, p-cf. • • .
Greer, p. . • • • .
Totals.
Score by Innings: • R
Tech 010 008 000—4
Alabama.. ; 008 000-r8
Summary: Three-base hits—McLln,
Moody. Stolen Bases—Moody. McDowell,
Greer 8. Passed balls—Hill. Struck out—
By Calhoun 4: by Hubert 8; by Moorer 8;
by Greer 8. Bases on balls- 1 -Off Calhoun
TRIANGULAR TIE NOW IN
RACE FOR PREP PENNANT
Marist Defeats the Boys High
School Friday and the Race
Grows Decidedly Torrid.
By W. A. PHELON.
"Jimmy Ryan .was no bonehead," says
Charlie Bart son, once a pitcher for
Comlskey, and now so rich his money
cation of the sutures in his skull. To i
. 3 0 0 7 8 0
.201210
. 8 0 1 2 5 1
. 0 0 0 2 1 0
.80 ~4 7 27 U 8
ab. r. h. po. a. s.
4 0 0 3 1 0
. 1 O 1 0 2 0
.84 3 *8 17 13 1
Umpire—Chenault.
ao 1 am told, Jimmy Kyan wouldn’t run
out a grounder, but walked half wav to
first, turning to the bench as the Infield-
er made the throw. Many a game, no
doubt, was lost for the old Chicago team
by that mulishness, but still Mr. J. Ryan
remained upon the payroll, He was there
so strong In other ways that they never
go.
THEY’RE TOUTING J. JACKSON
AS CHAMPION THINKER! WOW!
By ED DANQ.
Cleveland, Ohio, April 29.—Tha mora
one sees of Ihl* Joe Jackson person the
more one admires and respects, him as
a wide-awake, brainy ball player. He
haa yet to display the first symptoms
of owning ail Ivory pate and It Is the
consensus of opinion that he will never
pull a "bone” piay.
Cleveland fans marveled at Jackson s
sensational double play on Thursday.
On Friday he proved conclusively that
he Is ever alert to any occasion that
may arise. The Napa were leading, 6 to
0, when the Browns went to bat In the
fifth Inning. Before you ciuld say Jack
Robin the Browns had two runs In,
thrse men on base and only one out.
. Jimmy Austin drove a long fly to
eult, |s to succeed, him. The | center. Everybody expected Jackson to
ncs shed a tear for the de- make the throw to the plate In an «•
Matty and pay their homage at
tine of the great Sktwaih, but lo
‘hold: when the Slants return to
ncentral heath the announcement
• that Big 8lx la actually to be
ed nnd that I^ube Sktwaeh haa
leased to Peoria, Kalamaxoo or
Bitty "Content to Loasl I I"
•bus it la with the Lookouts. Be-
l er -m,, they are alow In atort-
thoy have not shown yet their
“ft"- They are not straining
ve* to cop at this stage of the
Tlieg are content to lose a fen-
la In order to develop a powerful
ve and defensive machine. Half
•Heat, which the Lookouts have
'« been due to an uneven break
luck or to experiments which
" valuable to Billy Smith at a
Like an engineer with an
Hlar machine, Billy Is gradually
out the various component parte,
putting her thru her paces, and
he discovers the gait which alts
nsl-tently pursue, day after day.
• slump pr fluctuation, and
the throttle Into that notch, a
l"n will result which will startle
mult.
°t Y»t, of Course, But Soon.
. revelation will be postponed
ays yet, as the absence of Huls.
tom second greatly cripples the
practically destroying Its field
•hip. end then, too, there are
1 two defective parts of the ma-
ahloh can not be remedied, but
M replaced. These Improvements
made at once. Just as the defect
ter was removed by the sale of
and the acquItUlon of Northern.
ASEBALL UNIFORMS
IV HOLM ALE PRICES. You can
>"ur team right from our stock,
uarantaa Immediate delivery. Our
Is complete.
, writs The College Co-Op
Shelley Ivey. Mgr.’
..... J 97 Peachtree.
m *il orders filled.
moke the throw to the plate In an ef-
fort to nail Sohweltxer. That looked like
the proper play to moet of the fans. But
was It? It was not. And tione realised
It sooner than Jackson.
He figured that It was far better to
allow the Browns this one additional
run and hold the runners on second and
first Instead of taking a chance on
throwing to the plate and losing out on
Schweltser, and having the other run
ners move up to third and second, re
spectively. .from whence they could
score on a single.
Jackeon'e reasoning was good and
Schweltser scored without moleetatlon
on the part of the Nnpa' center fielder.
Joe made a bluff to throw to the plate
and then shot the ball to Lajole at sec
ond, hoping to catch Wallace off hie
guard. The Browne’ hose wae wide-
awake, however, and stuck close to the
b8 fiad Jackson made the peg to the
plate and felled to nail Schweltser and
Wallace and Hoffman had moved- up
and then scored on a single, Joe would
have been put down as brainless for
allowing the Browns to come within a
run of tying tho Naps' score when he
could have kept his own team In front
by a margin of three runs by exercising
a little Judgment. That's what Jo,
did. He exercised Judgment and kept
the Naps three runs In the lead Instead
of playing to tha grandstand.
WALTER JOHNSON GETS SALARY
OF ABOUT 51 FOR EACH THROWj
|1 to him In his first
•very time that be huriedthe^mdl Ma
fer*s y average* earnlnpi per peg of sphere,
W H h f. U UMbT. P Vta{ n t1.u"rmS , 'onlyBlne-
sSSEKSig aras
number*oMteUspHcbed JtfJohnyn wo.
waKsrasfcri
follow*:
ChllUoma.
(Washington Herald-)
'1 once proposed to * girl In a conaerr-
“if fe «re
season, even .. _
friends and the wise ones who predicted
that we couldn't escape finishing In flrst
position. And Jimmy was one of the stars
of that old team—amt Jim, Just as stub
born and self-oplonlated aa svar. but
still playing the A-X ball. Nevertheless,
J. Ryan achieved one bonehead that
memorable season, and that bonehead atoi
a game.
r lVe were playing In New York, and
Buck Ewing's gang was working some, I
can assure you. The teams were pretty
close up; a game either way counted
heavily, and Buck's push hustled furi
ously. They'd have won a flag, too, In
that one Brotherhood campaign If they
had kept John Ward at short Inatead of
letting him run the Brooklyn team—but
that's old history now. and those days
can never coma back. Ilelgh-bol to ba
young again! , ,
"Anyhow, this game was a crucial
one, and I realised the responsibility, for
l had to pitch. I Was the kid hurler of
the staff, and sons of the veterans ought
to have been In. but Baldwin. Dwyer and
King had all worked during the previous
games and Comlskey decided to take the
long chance on me. It was 0 to 0 for six
innlfin- I was going good and that old
crowd could help some If they really
wanted to play the game.
"Things livened up in the seventh, and
there was a double explmlon. Two runs
apiece. I held New York runless In the
eighth, while we collected one more, and
we swung Into the ninth I to l. Our half
didn't get us anything, and Ewing s herd
came up for their lest rally. I wavered
a little and Issued a free puss. Next man
hit one down to Arlle Latham, and lath •
throw hit the ground way In front of
Comlskey'a hoofs. Next man died on a
pop to Pfeffsr. The next batter singled
over tha Indeld. and the sacks were full,
with theblg Saturday crowd yelling their
he "Somebody hit down Into the diamond
and Williams put the'ball home. Boyle
sitting on the runner. Two gone, bases
full end Ewing himself came up. As I
looked around the field I
walking away, with his bock to tnd at*;
mond. but took It for rrsnted th»the
playing out for Ewing’s long dies,
turned, wound up and let go. Ewing
the ball with a crash and a sure h
run went sailing out, miles beyond
reach of any flelder.
"And, gasing after that ball, I e»w a
figure, so far down In eenter thnt you
could hardly make outlts Identity, rigs
up with lifted hands. Down hr the club
house steps the hall descended, and fell
light ns a feather Into Jimmy Ryana
h *~Ryan had miscounted the outs. He
thought the second put-out was the third,
he decided that the game was over. snd
had been calmly wa king re tha dub-
house. The yell that followed Ewlng'ii
smash mads him turr« •rnunri- Juiit In
time to receive that Jnall and savetths
gams, when no flelder In his proper post-
tlnn could have come within 1(» feat of
the projectile!"
LOW RATES AND SPE
CIAL TRAIN TO LIT
TLE ROCK, MAY 14,
ACCOUNT U. 0. V. RE
UNION.
Get full Information at Seaboard
Ticket Office. IS Peachtree.
8TANDING OF THE CLUB8.
P. W. L.
B. H. S 4 I 1
O. M. A. ' 4 I 1
Marist 4 11
Peacock 4 1 J
Tech High 4 0 4
ITS A SNAPPY LOOKING CAR
COLONEL HARVEY HILL IN OVERLAND.
The cut shows Colonel Hill and his eon, Harvey Hill, Jr,
Overland 40 toraeds roadsis—
ice has dropped one game.
9. St. A. defeated Marist In the open,
t contest, and the College Park boys
By WARD 8. QREENE,
Friday afternoon the two fast teams
of Marist college and Boys High school
met In a battle royal at College Park.
In which the Ivy-sL cadets put a crimp
In the 1,000 per cent of the league lead
ers by defeating them 4 to I.
* The result of this contest tics the
pennant race Into a hard three-corner
ed knot from which It seems Impossi
ble to name a victor. Tho season Is
exactly half-way over. Each team has
played every other team once, and each
of ths three schools now tied for flrst
place has droj
Ing'
In turn lost to B. H. 8., which team
then loses Co Marist.
The second round of the schedule
starts next Wednesday, when B. H. 8.
meets Tech High and Marist and O.
M. A. fight It out once more. From
that time until tho close of the season
the Prep league will witness ths most
exciting pennant race It tun yet had
the good fortune to see, and with three
teams so svenly matched as Marist
O. M. A. and B. H. S.. It would take
some prophet to pick the winner.
Few games will equal tha Marlet-
B. fl. S. contest of Friday. This was
a corker from start to flnlsh, altho
Marist college had the edge all the way.
The cadets made their runs by hard,
clean’ and timely hitting, and deserved
every one of them. The High echooi
lads played a crackerjack fielding game,
but seemed unable to connect with
Murphy's benders, as they secured but
three clean hits.
Mnriet's flrst rune came In the flrst
period, when Dinkins singled and
■cored a mlnula later on a hit of Har
rison's which tho left fielder failed to
handle properly. On his error Harri
son also tallied. Murphy's home run
In the fourth added another tally, and a
wild pitch by Fox In ths seventh al
lowed another man to cross ths plate.
B. H. 8. was blanked each time until
the seventh. Then Terrell walked nnd
scored on a clean hit by Thompson. A
moment later he also tallied on Don
aldson's scorcher to second which Har
rison could only stops
Murphy's pitching was one of the
bright spots of the game, while be also
hit well Fox also pitched good ball.
He struck out eleven men, but gave up
somt costly hits. Holliday did tho best
stick work for B. H. 8.
Box score:
Four fast cars have, since April 1
been added to the flying Held which will
' start next Memorial day In the 500-
; mile International sweepstakes raco at
‘ the Indianapolis motor speedway. Caleb
Bragg, the Cincinnati millionaire, will
j pilot a monster Flat, becoming tho team
mate of David Bruco-Brown, tho mil
lionaire drlvor from New York. Bruce.
! Brown will have a larger car than
{Bragg, but the alight youth wl
quered Oldfield at the first Los
[ motordrome meeting knows how to get
every Inch of speed from his motor and
j is figured ns one of tha favored con-
I tenders In the race. Tho car which he
I will drive will have 5.1 Inch stroko and
II 1-2 Inch bore, with 417 cubic Inches
; of piston displacement. Edward Parker
I will be the relief driver to taka ths car
I 1 from Bragg In case he leaves the wheel
before the end of the race.
Ralph Beardsley, of New Brunswick.
. N. J., who has been one of the big con-
I tender* in many of tnc greatest n.mi
races and track events of the past, has
entered a Simplex which comes within
three cubic Inches of tho 600 cubic Inch
limit. Beardsley becomes the team mate
of Ralph DePalmo. mile track champion
of 1910. The car which Beardsley will
drive has 6 3-4 Inch bore, 5 3-4 Inch
stroke, with a piston displacement of
697 cubic Inches
Tha other additional entries are two
Mercer cars entered by the Mercer Au
tomobile Company, of Trenton, N. J., to
be driven by Hughle Hughes, famous
English pilot, and Charles H. Bigelow.
As a supremo test for vanadium steel
with Ford heat treatment as against
any other steel used In automobile man
ufacturing, Henry Ford recently sug
gested a race from Detroit to Lansing, a
distance of 100 miles over a road cleated
with cord wood. While Mr. Ford shuns
the angle of betting on such a proposi
tion. he has given It as his opinion that
no other car could follow the Ford over
such a route and be Intact at the end of
the Journey.
The practical Indestructibility of va
nadium steel, which Is used throughout
tho construction of Ford cars, Is the
quality that mokes Mr. Ford so certain
that his cor would win the unique race
he suggests.
The past few days havo seen an ava
lanche of American automobile records
come Into the Warren-Detrolt's net.
Chairman Butler, of the American Au-
obilo association, has stated that
Warren "30," driven by Jack Tower
In the Jacksonville (Fla.) races, hntl
been declared title-holder for the live
and ten-mile distances In Clan B (pis
ton displacement 161 to 230). Tower’s
time In those races was 4:34:13 for the
live and 9:10:62 for the ten-mile event.
Another proud distinction that came
the Warren's way was the car's victory
B H. 8.
Donaldson, ss. . 4
Ewing, If 2
Holliday, lb. . . 4
Armlstead, o. . 2
Lccter, to 4
Terrell, 2b. . . 2
Spurlock, cf. -.4
Thompson, rf. . 4
Fox, p .. 4
i. t.
2 3
• 1
0 0
t 1
1 0
2 0
0 0
Total*.. ..
2
4
17
It
Merlet.
ab.
P.
h.
Pf.
a.
C. Smith, cf.
. 4
0
0
t
0
Dlnklne, c. .
. 3
1
1
«
2
. 4
1
I
4
2
Griffin. 3b. .
. 4
0
1
i
0
Brannen, If.
. 4
9
1
1
0
Murphy, p. .
. 4
2
2
0
H. Smith, lb.
. 2
0
0
JO
1
Tln«l.-y, rf.
. 4
0
1
2
0
Allen, ae. . .
. 3
0
l
1
0
Total*.. ..
..31
4
9
27
•
thot grind the Warren won th
plonshlp of America for Its »!•«* by do
ing 1,107 miles, nearly 200 miles more
than its nearest competitor was able to
negotiate. "Scoot" Miller and Word
were tho drivers In the long contest.
There will be a new entry In the (Hid
den tour this year, the Warren "SO." Its
entry In the (Hidden will be appreciated
,^ #r o{ warren owners,
cent Warren triumph
New York Maxes will be kept on tha
defensive a little more than aver .from
now on. The fire department of tha
metropolis haa Just ordered ten Ford
Model T care for the uae of Its divi
sion chiefs.
wa,^ Is one^of the first In India to get
Olive princes of India have taken to
ine automobile with great enthusiasm,
but their preference thue far has been
for European rather than American cars.
The maharajah of Hathwa haa a city
residence In Calcutta, as well as hie pal
ace at JIalhwn, some 200 miles distant,
Ha uses the Hudson "11" In going from
one residence to the other.
Uerroun. hailed at the close of last sea
son as "tha Itetlrlng King of tha Speed-
way, ,r haa coma back to tight for hl«
honors at the wheel of hit six-cylinder
racing car, the Marmon "Wasp."
returned to
d announced
. he would never alt behind
the wheal of a throbbing steal Jugger-
Not only thla government, but those
of European nations, are welching with
Intense Interaat the military experiments
with motor cars which have boon a
feature for several years of the work at
the Northwestern Military academy, near
Chicago.
Major R. P. PavMaon, the commandant
director of the various experiments, an
nounces that during the coming summer
It la his purpose to test out the utility
of motor car* In the work of the slgnai
division.
The two Cadillac machines which have
figured In carrying out the Ideas of Ma
jor Davidion and his students are to be
fitted with bodies especially adapted to
the new Bervlce. They will have tele
scopic masts, bearing antenae wires,
whereby wireless messages can be trans
mitted over distances ranging from 50 to
40 miles. Should It be necessary to send
a message farther, small balloons ha\*e
been provided as part of the regular
equipment of each car. These little gas
bags were e
with their
naut In competition. Harroim's face lit
Charles Merz, the young Hooaler racing
pilot, is rapidly making a place for him
self as a long distance driver. Since
January 1 Merz has won one flrst and two
Los Angeles motordrome. Mars entered
tho Tanama-Pacific road races. In thla
contest he drive a National 40 against
some of the oldest and most experienced
men In tho racing game. After driving
a consistent race throughout and showing
his ability to handle the blue car to hla
credit, ho threw the throttlg wide open
on the home stretch and flashed by the
checkered flag more than a minute Ahead
of his neaniHt oornpetltor, winning the
magnificent St Francis Hotel trophy.
In the S00-mile race over the Atlantlo-
Pablo Beach track, Merz again demon
strated his ability tp stay In long distance
contest*.
With thla string of long distance per
formances to his credit so early in the
present racing season, Merz is expected
to make a place for himself In the big
five-century run at the Indianapolis
ord-smaahlng stralght-
s have developed new
Ions.. Of these the most
away
ihlln rhamnlnna. < ....
. . whlon the putulo
Is most Interested la the stock car title
holder. It Is In the performance of such
car*, and not the 200-horsepowcr freaks,
that the public sees the development or
the kind of machines It gets. And all
hats have been lifted to Howard 8. Wil
cox and his National 40 stock car, regis
tered No. 311. which set the new mile
stock mark.
Wilcox drove his National 40 stock car
mllo over the slower Jacksonville
„jach In 40 32-100 seconds, reducing the
former record, which had been made by
Barney Oldfield, over the faster Daytona
course. Tho performance was all the
greater In that the car was new and stiff
from lack of work and also because it was
the only mile record set during the meet.
All the big machines failed In going for
lo marks they sot out to lower,
illy was this true of the big 200-
horsepowcr foreign cars, the Benz and
the Mercedes.
Those Schiller Players at
the Lyric are the talk o’ the
town.
BICYCLES
New and Second Hand
At All Prices
Good Tires $2
ANY SIZE.
Baby Carriage Tires Put On
Roberts, 115 Whitehall
ecTon ....
Mcswessofies
i
Score by Inning.: R-
B. H. 8... 000 000 200—2
Mallet ». -.200 100 100—4
Summary: Threa-baee hit—Griffin.
Horn, run—Murphy. Boeea on ball*—
Off Fox 2 off Murphy 4. Struck out—
By Fox 11. by Murphy «. Wild pitch—
Fox. stolen baxet—Donaldson. Holli
day, Allen 2. Tlneley. Sxcrtflco hit.—
H, Smith, Spurlock. Umpire—Stonx.
Atlanta consumes
200,000 pounds Queen Qw
ity smoking tobacco.
BlLLY GRIFFITH WlN8.
Louieville, Ky„ April 29-—Billy Grif
fith, of Cincinnati, defeated Pat MoAn.
drew,, of Philadelphia. In two round,
before tha Tri-City club last night,
Delicious, Delightful
Queen Quality.
AUTOMOBILE SUPPLIES
We carry every up-to-date accesiory—
O. ft J. Tire*—Havoline Oil.
ELYEA-AUSTELL CO., 35 N. PRYOR ST.
Phone 1028.
The
White
20-30 Touring Car; two models; gasoline.
20-30 Toy Tonnoan; detachable; gasoline.
20-h. p. Touring Car; steam.
40-h. p., 7-passenger Touring Car; steam.
120-122 Marietta Street.
4-Cyl. Shalt Drive, 20-11.1’.. Boat
Magneto. $759 f.o.b. factory
E. D. CRANE 8c CO., Gen. Agte.
Atlanta, Go.
TRY MILLER
The Largest Automobile Supply House In America.
ATLANTA BRANCH
66 Edgewood Avenue.
NEW YORK PRICES.
CHAS.E.MiLlEW
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