Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, April 26, 1913, Image 7

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7 TilK ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. SATl’lfDAV, APRIL 26. 1913. HWr DUE 10 Jeif Is Bum on History, but a Bear on Poetry • • • • By “Bud” Fisher Uv Percy 11. Whiting. M \NA<J@R William Andrew StnltH has .liist one pitcher who hasn't -hccrv shot away in the !iW two' names, snlrt pitcher being ,,, s Brady. This man will work Atlanta in. the opening game of xjahvillr series this afternoon. I* this is Memorial day the game „ i in stalled at tour o'clock, in stead of 3:30. Bill Schwartz has not given out I,is pitcher but it seems likely that the old right bander, Charley ‘ Case, ait be shot against the Crackers. H<' figured, with Dahlgren, in the 9 m 1 walloping that the Crackers gave the Vnls their last day in Sulphur PpII: but Schwartz may still believe h„ ,au win ugainst Smith's Thum pin' Tarrier*. A* the\ have any more like that the lwgue can get a new official scorer for Atlanta. For I’m through. The Chattanooga team used 1;’ plovers, the Crackers 14: they shift ed around, were hauled out and new ones stuck in. a man would bat for somebody else and then still a third man would run and there was more stuff pulled and more time spent than jn the whole of an ordinary world’s .series. And the (.'rankers won yes, 5hey generally do-—score 10 to 7. Slower games may have been play ed but it is not within the memory of mortal man. It took two hours And twenty-three minutes to play 7 innings A full-length game, at that rate, would consume three hours and seventeen minutes. In that time, go ing at the rate the Atlanta Club riid. when it set the world's record for, a fast game, it would be possi ble to play 6 full games—or' 54 in nings Instead of 7. * * * T HE game was as interesting as it . was long—like one of these qld, ttfree-volume novels. The plot not ffnightily drawn but at times but the tame was so jammed full of inci dent that nobody cared. It had ac tion to it like a snake tied by the tail. * * * THE game was slated for a hurl- * cr's melee. With Musser working fo; Atlanta and Coveleskie for Chat tanooga it seemed a cinch. Rut Miisser was sent scuttling before the fourth had ended and Coveleskie last ed only into the fifth. Banspuein succeeded Musser and ast- *! less than three innings. Then, 4»ame Price, who finished it out. For Chattanooga Coveleskie was s reeded by "Rudy” Summers, who had a short career on the pesky slab Hp pitched seven balls, walked one man and retired to let More finish It out. Before we turn to other subjects it should be mentioned that, out of the whole boiling, Price looked mighty good. He worked one inning, valked the first man up and let the ^‘Ond hit. But when he was need ed he buckled down, fielded the third man out on a sacrifice and'struck out the next two. * * * THE managers hurled not only pitchers but everything else into the breach. In the fifth Graham hatted for Do- bard and then Keating succeeded Graham when the Crackers again took the field. Graham’?: batting car- fSpr "as fortunate. Stuck in. in a pinch, he could deliver only a high f0! 11 , But GaJjbv Street, after c atch- r -g it. threw wild to second to catch 'Aa \ Smith who had advanced on 'h“ out, and on this miscue Long scored with a run that tied things ’•i* The °nly other Cracker who’ got ntn the game was Kernan, who made ^ "ne and only Southern League appearance when he ran for Bause- *ein in the sixth. !• or Chattanooga, in addition to the etchers. Hannah batted for Massey j m the seventh. * * * THE game was finally won by the trackers in the sixth. The last' Aalf °f this inning opened with the | Lookouts leading, 7 to 6. Bausewein *■' oft lor the Crackers with a sin- 1 * a 8 Vi a 1 ked» Kernan was | ir > f -n stuck in to run for Bausewein. Tern:an attempted a push-bunt- * a <Tifiee but Harbison messed it tip r the bases were full. More w.ilk- • i Wel' honce, pushing Kernan over. I popped out. Long hit. a field- -■ toiee and Agler was forced at l n* plate. Jhon old Walloping Wally Smith 1 ■ ; with a two-bAgger that r. r ; tvv<) runners across and gave the l ose r ' 8 Iead thev ,lid not again I ♦ * * Jhe umpires made a couple of L,;"!? decisions on matters o£ | h i, "ice a wild throw to second it,,, mp . ir ? K * rin - Wider Rule 55. ' " a PP p are that all runner* L ,1? • lave heen required to return thf.,r bases. This section says | , '“ner shall return to his Ik. I l he umpire he struck by a L ' .'” n hy-• ■ .fleWer to intercept I, - 1 lunner. After a. consultation LL" ve,in an ' 1 Hr.-HenstHn did I ‘81, the base runners 'back. , '-'her occasion Elberfeld out of the box and Before fNOW JCFf , 1'^ COIN’ Q(^ I YCX/R €DUCATiqn . (V/0\m N\G WH^N DIO Discover. "■ p n( to the bench. Ifci j , wa '° reR umed, however, Elber ISnmmJ? ng f d ,lis lninii anp l ordered Ifi c . r , ,p', , to relieve Massey in left la-.;,',; als .the umpires refused to Is.',,..' 1 "d'uinfr. it is assumed, that |t;,|' had gone out of the game I ■ nnt does not seem to be CoV- |u, lhe rill ? s but It Is logical _/ e that a man is not ofti- of the game until his suc- ■ , ' taken his place, t be changi lanj . 11 ann °unced by the umpires I " aafl be< n resumed! How. I i,,. . ' iJ mps made it stick. ‘ in is deserving of bl line .ook, , ng , tae same lag as it did. The |a n ,- s failed shamefully for time hanem particularly slow about “nging pitchers. umpires will have bac-k- »f . ’Ugh to discipline a couple k| for delaying games there fan chance that the ha Ml f " broken im L OOKING backward down t . * dusty lanes of dope you arc driven to the conclusion the.'. O. Mathewson, the splendid old ruin, has been going back for so long that he is almost there Poor old Matty! He struck put only 134 batsmen in 43 games last seas m, •whereas, in 1908, he fanned :'M» in a; combats. You can see from these fig ures that he ought to have fanned .u least sixty more men last seas u . And his control seems to be getting away from him. He gave thii ty-i'o;:: passes last season, that being hbciu four-fifths of a base on balls to each contest. We understand that A1 •- Graw has told him he will have « steady down this year if he expects to make good. He was just a trltie wilder the season before that, but his mark last year will probably stand as a pitching record so-long as the new concrete and steel grand stands-survive. Matty's whole big league reco ,,, i looks like witchcraft, dud the black est part of the' magic 1s that after twelve years of'hard pitching in T- fastest company in the world life is as good as ever. The most amazing feature of the lot is his strike-out record. In those twelve years he pitched 524 games and fanned 2,302 men. which makes an average »f nearly nine men to a game! * * * A LL the rest of it is worth a lo >k. A * In the same number of games lie gave only 183 bases on balls, whio.i makes On average of about two and one-haJf to a game. This average woujd be higher if his first season or two were eliminated, because he was a bit wild when he broke into Vne league. In the past four seasons his average has been k j ss than ohe to a ga me. * + * T HE sighs of decay set in unmis takably last year. Matty lost all control.of iiis aum and hit two men. * * * T KAPINfr lightly to tlip other si-' ■ r. of tile national same, .consider the efforts of the celebrated "holdout, T. I'obh. to prevent any Mathewson from getting under way in the Amer ican League. The Southern cyclone holds all records in Detroit ami most of those in the country for long and middle distance belting. Cobb Ins been with the Detroit club less than seven seasons. In that time he has managed to gather 149 two-baggers, sixty-seven triples and thirty-seven four-mu sled drives Our adding m i - chine being out of kilter we are un able to present also the figures on tils singles. * * * T 'HIS year Cobb has earned a new honor. He is now holder of the holdout record. * * * HE following from .lark Britton, xpTains itself. . - NEW VO UK. April 23. - Dear Sir: Billy ltocap's action in stopping ,ny contest with Pal Aloore. was both outrageous and unjust. 1 firmly be lieve that there was something behind bis action, for two clubs were bidding for my bout with Young Erne and there was a lot of hard feeling. Thai it was a plan to injure me and Ed wards' club is certain. Why. Mr. Ed wards told me after Recap bau stopped the bout 'hat he knew 1 was doing my best, and ilie match with Erne would be liebl May Now the;, have gone and fixed it so that he cannot hold the bout. I was doing my very lies! when the bout was stopped. Ten months ago 1 fought Pal Moore twenty rounds in California. Why should they expect me knock him out now in a couple of rounds'' Has anybody ever knocked oul Pal Moore 1 .' He fought the besl lightweights around here, and no one ever knocked him down. 1 appeal to the fans to seriously weigh Ihese facts before passing judgment I had no reason to "pull" my punches. 1 had everything to gain by whipping Moore decisively and everything to iote by being dishonest. I have whipped Cross and. in fact, every lightweight in the East, and am In line for a fight with Wtlhe Ritchie. Is it within reason that l would jeop ardize mv chances of losing a fight that would make me world's eham- plon. . . . 1 have been boxing for eight years and never before was ] even censured by a referee, never lost a contest on a'foul and never was there any ques tion raised as in my honesty. A1> past record is the proof thal 1 offer MSI 2,51 THIS SEASON Schwartz Banks on New Hurlers G 0 © © 0 © © Vols’ Pitching Staff Not So Bad T against ik< record of tke -man who ■stopped the bout and said I was not trying my l>e*.. Respectfully. .J.V’K BRITTON. * / * A NI!\V Oi lcans light e xport has th following aftermath story of th recent Thomas-White fight. ”<Tose observers* of pugilism ar.* relating how Charley White and his manager, Nate Lewis, worked one of ihe shrewdest tricks pulled in t c boxing game hereabouts for the last three years on doe Thomas and Lis seconds at the Orleans Athletic* Club -Monday night. And as a result •» the trick White caught ’I nv.vas. uu- ore pa re il. which, in a measure, may be parti; responsible for the Third T> strict boy dropping to the floor nine times In the second round. "To hear the so-called ‘wise-fel lows' spin the vain and the details it seems as if White came here com plaining his right hand was in very poor shape. White accordingly ex plained, the situation to Thomas be fore 'he* donned t4*e glovds a.vi showed .Toe a small -piece of- cotton under the bandages, inquiring if Thomas lrad arty objection. Thomas. probaHv overjoyed "that White's mi*T was. to »lie ehc' .'V. readily consented, to the use of additional tape and the cotton. "White's ‘stall’ with his Supposed ly injured right naturally is said to have led Thoir.as to believe the hard est punch would be sent from that list. But this did not occur, for Thomas kept his eye on the right. White slipping over a left hook to the jaw, which did the work. Some persons will contend the trick is an- . cient, but White got away with neat piece of work, hut hereafte i - isn’t likely to be worked so success fully.” ALABAMA DEFEATS TECH ON MUDDY FIELD, 7 TO 3 TCSCALOOSA. ALA.. April 26. Tn a slow and one-sided game, played on a muddy field. Alabama easily defeated (reorgid. Tech. 7 to 3. Alabama had little trouble in hitting the three pitch ers used by Tech. On the other hand, I'ratt, with the exception of one inning, kept the Geor gians’ hits well scattered. The Tech Infield pulled off two fast doubles. Gosa’s hitting and Joplin's base-running were the features. A walk, an error and two three- baggers gave Tech their runs. GALLAGHER WILL PUSH PROBE OF BASEBALL TRUST WASHINGTON, April 26 T> Cobb's agreement with the Detroit baseball club will not deter Representative (Jal- lagher, of Illinois, from pressing bis proposed Congressional investigation of the so-called "baseball trust." Galla gher conferred with members of the Itules Committee to learn what the chances were for hearings on his reso lution soon as the tariff is disposed of. Representative Hardwick, of Geor gia, declared he had abandoned his in tention to introduce a similar resolution because of the agreement between Cobb and the Detroit management. MEREDITH WILL COMPETE IN PENN. GAMES TO-DAY PHILADELPHIA. April 21. Tllr large number of entries, including many who won fame in the Olympic games as vveN as intercollegiate events, has excited unusual interest in the University of Pennsylvania relay races at Franklin Field to-day. Pennsylvania supporters were cheered by the announcement that Meredith, an Olympic hero, had been declared eligible by the faculty com mittee and will run in his freshman ra ee. GEORGIA AGAIN BEATS MICHIGAN AGGIES, 4-0 LANSING, MICH.. April 26 -The Fniversity of Georgia baseball team made it two straight from the Michigan Aggies yesterday afternoon, when they took an abbreviated contest by the score of 4 to 0. The game was < ailed after the sixth inning, when rain began to fail in torrents. D etroit, mioh.. April 26. -Ty Cobb, rated by most critics a?' the greatest ball player in the game to-day. will receive $12,500 for the coming season. This was the of ficial statement given out at tin De troit Baseball Club headquarters here this morning. Ty has been holding out for $15,000 for months, but signed yesterday to play at the above figures I is re ported here that Cobb received $9.»'fifv last season, and that after a long conference here yesterday Cobb agreed to play for $12,500. Nothing was said by the Detroit club about bonuses to be given Cobb at the end *of the season. The con tract signed by the Georgia Peach, as far as could lie learned, calls only for the salary. Whether Cobb will receive more next season is another question. The contract calls for one year. Ty re ported for practice this morning, but will not be in the game for several 1 days. Ban Johnson v ID probably hang a line on the Tiger outfielder, for not j reporting en-ur. How *r. the amount is not expected to exceed $100. BASEBALL Diamond News and Gossip If Chattanooga had staved one more day ti'ere wouldn't hav* neeh a oi.... <-r left on either ... -i * * Yesterday’s game e Ye red more excite ment for less i -. D’v :'u any game ever seen at Ponce Del. Wally Smith drove in six runs with three singles which is pinch-hitting some. ♦ t* * In the first inning Musser walked three men in a row, and yet didn’t allow a run. * * * Raul was saved by ; 1 uc i-cv plav. With ti e bases full and only one out. Elston took a mifcuty swing at the ball, pot only an "edge" and dumped the ball three, feet in front of the plate. Dunn tackled the sphere with a flying leap, fell down, touched' the plate with one foot, thus establishing a connection which retired the rnan at third. in the meantime. Elston stood arguing about it with the umps. ami Dunn threw him out at first, though he might as well have touched him and made a double play unassisted. After the game was over. Elberfeld look about three minutes off for the sole purpose of telling Empire Breiten stei.n what an awful offense be was against the national pastime. loe Dunn, the Alllrr Kid. managed to whale out three hits out of four times up. one a home run that he stretched inti* a two-bagger. * * • The sewer back of the stands hanfeh 1.000 again yesterday Let's see. ilie dear old city was going to have that sewer covered some three years ago * fa * Elberfeld makes it a point to announce th*- pitcher be is not going to work which no doubt he considers fine tactics. Ijew McAllister watched part of the game, but was forced to leave before Ft was over to catch his train for home. * * * \ pup stole Tommy Long’s glove while Tommy was batting, and retired behind the signs to eat it in peace, but a hard-hearted boy wrested it away from him. * * * Amos Strunk Is out of the game again. I his time with a wrenched something or other. Amos is a fragile lad, any how but how he does pickle that old pill! * fa * It is figured 1!a 1 ('base will be a pret ty fair outfielder when he gets so he can Judge fly balls I F Cy Dalgren and Joe McManus, castoff twfrlers secured from Joe Tinker's Cincinnati club, bolster up the wobbly Volunteer hurling crew, as Bill Schwartz believes they will, the boy manager will have little to fear from any other team in Judge Kavanaugh's circuit. The Vols are minus hitting strength but are guaranteed 99 per cent pure in fielding, so Bill intends to pin his faith on high grade twirling ;o carry him in the hunt for the bunt ing. Just now Geo i go Beck, th. Molin • marvel, is the backbone of the slab corps, but several’additional vertebra are needed to make the spinal co'- umn work smoothly. George has s a! ted three times and on each occa sion has flashed under the wire a winner by the same score—3 to 2. Lefty Williams, farmed out by Eb- betts’ Trolley Dodgers, has never rounded into form, being troubled with a sore arm. but Schwartz isn't worrying about" this boy.'"for he ha.** oodles of stuff and can be counted on to win his share of games when ue hits his stride. Dalgren Good But Wild. Cy Dalgren has already had otic I tryout— against the Crackers, but he was bothered with his old trouble of difficulty in locating the plate and! was yanked from'the hill. Whenever | he did manage to slip the ball across he made It cut all sorts of .capers and he made a great impression on Schwartz despite his poor showing', lie ha,; a most deceptive delivery and can smear all sorts of stuff on th< pellet. Joe McManus, the oilier recruit, was with Ottawa in the Oanndmn eLagu* last season participating in twenty games, fourteen of which lie won. al lowed an average of six runs to i battle and caused 105 Canuck batters to go out by the strikeout route. Me- I Manus was the first Redleg to th*- full nine innings in the spring prac tice. turning tile trick in Kick woo .1 Park, when he turned the Barons back with one run, although lie w is touched up for eleven hits. Joe is at his best with men on the sacks, keep- | ing th* base* miners hugging the bag- arid is cold as an iceberg under fir- | Manager Molesworth told Bill Schwartz that he had picked up a treasure in ihese two eX-Reds. and Mo>ey is foolish lik- a fox when it comes to sizing up pitchers. Will Hang on to Hendee. Bill will hang on for awhile ♦<» Dynamite Sam Hendee. the huge coal miner from Colfax, Iowa, which used to be a part of Frank Gotch’s fat m. Sam is a wonder just as long as ie cah keep the bases empty but th minute they begin to choke the giant miner pulls, fires up the airship and away he goes. Schwartz has adopted a novel blan to curb this trouble. Ev ery morning he takes Sam to the park and scatters Vols around ever, base with Jawn Lindsa.v and Kddi- Noyes on the coaching Dues. With—i batter up. the base tampers begin fo pester the husky Sam, running up and down between the stocks and Schwartz promised Ilendee a stiff call dawn when lie falls for the kidding. The boy manager makes good with his call down. too. So far Sam * an t tell the difference between roasting from h friend and that from an ene my. but Schwartz believes tl\-e big giant has the goods and will make a winner if he van only get over his nervousness. Could Have Had Summers. The Vols could have had Rudy Summers, who went to the Lookouts frqrn the Cubs, for the asking, but Schwartz* believes the little southpaw is unfit to stand a hard campaign in this hot climate for he was always, on the ailing list last summer, and he was passed up w hen Murphy of fered him to Nashville. For the very same reason. Morrow was returned to Brooklyn. He has a wonderful underhand ball but was in bad two-thirds of his time and when he went home to attend the funeral of his brother who fell a victim to tuberculosis. Bill wired him he need not come "back to Nashville. The veterans. Case and Flehart.v, are both troubled with stiff muscles and have had little to offer. They both are at their best when the sun begins to shine hottest and can be I counted on to deliver later on. GREGG’S FATHER IS DEAD. ( LA RKSTON, WASH. April 26. Charles' <*. Gregg, father of Vean Gregg -*f the Cleveland American League Club, died suddenly at his home . here yesterday of heart dis- BUCK BECKER IS POUNDED BY LA GRANGE BATTERS LAGRANGE, GA.. April 25 With Buck Becker, one of lhe Atlanta baseball team pitchers, in the box pitching for Greenville and using his best benders against the LaGrange team, the local boys defeated Green ville 3 to 2 yesterday. The crowd, after the fourth inning, simply went wild, and the police had to keep them off the diamond Becker was ridiculed until he was riled, and when he attempted to shoot back something at the crowd an up roar ensued which lasted several min utes. Becker was loaned to Greenville by Atlanta for this game, but La- Grange got eight hits off him. and two home runs. The captain of the l,aGrange team, Hudson, who played last year with Cordele, got the first home run, and Rutherford got the second. WHITE SOX RELEASE BARKER. CHICAGO. ILL.. April 26 The I Chicago American League Club has released Recruit Pitcher "Tiny” Bar ker to the Wausau Club of the Wis consin -1 Hi nois League. Barker was 1 signed by the locals at Los Angeles on the training trip. TENNESSEE AND VANDY CLASH ON TRACK TO-DAY NASHVILLE. TE,\'N' , April 2R.— The dual track meer which will take place on Dudley Field this afternoon between Vanderbilt and the Univer sity of Tennessee, will offer the first real test of the Commodores’ much- discussed strength on the cinder path and in the field events. Coach Anderson has been sending his men through a strenuous prac tice campaign, in a desperate effort, to make a few stars out of the abundance of raw material he has on ha nd. It has been definitely decided that the Commodores will not under any consideration participate in the S. i. A. A. meet to be held at Clemson. for Vanderbilt has refused to accept the drastic legislation in regard to the relay race, enacted at the winter meeting in New Orleans. CORDELE. 4; LOCUST GROVE. 0. CORDELE. GA., April 26. In the first exhibition game on the local diamond yesterday Cordele defeated the Locust Grove High School team by the score of 4 to 0. Opium. WhUkey «n<J Drug Habit* treated at Home or at Sanitarium. Book on aubjert Frm*, DR. B. M. WOOLLEY. 24-N. Victor Sanitarium. Atlanta, Georgia. Blood Bath Knocks Rheumatism Remarkable Effect of a Remedy That Actually Irrigates the Entire Blood Supply. TOBACCO HABIT ■>“ f; ,T,r I jirove your licaLih, prolong your lit* > o more " ftlonuch trouble, no foul breath. 1 m-art u**»i r>e*s Kegalfi manly vigor, calm nerve*, clear eve* anil superior mental strength. Whether you h-w or smoke pipe, cigarette*;, fifar*. get mv In!*res ng Tobacco Ron! Worth lt« weigh< In *< i 1 Mailed free. E. I WOODS. 534 Sixth Ave . 74RM . New York. N V. The Hardest Nut of All, Rheumatism. Is Cracked by S. S. S. It sounds queer to take a blood hath, but that i.\ precisely the effect of u niost remarkable remedy known ms S- S S. 11 has the peculiar action of soaking through the intestines directly into th** blood. Jn live minutes Its In fluence is at work in every artery, vein and tiny capillary. Every mem brane, every organ of the body, every emu pet ory fieotmies in effect a filter to strain the blood of impurities. The stimulating properties of ,-v s S com pel' t he six in. liver. bowels, kidneys, bladder to all Work to the one end of casting out every irritating. every pain-inflicting atom *»f poison: it dis- ! bulges by. irrigation all accumulations In the joints, cans*-.-* acid accretions to dissolve, renders them neutral and scatters those peculiar formations In the nerve centers thal cause such mystifying and often baffling rheumatic ; pains. And best of all, this remarkable remedy is welcome to the weakest stomach. If. you have drugged y«ur- sel: until your stomach is nearly para lyzed. you will be asi*>nish%l f<- find that S. S. S gives n*» sensation, but goes rlghr to work This Is because it is a pure vegetble infusion. Is taken , naturally into your blood just as pure air Is Inhaled naturally into your lungs. You can get S. S. S. at any drug store at $1.00 a bottle. It is a standard remedy, recognized everywhere as the greatest blood . antidote ever discov ered. If yours is a peculiar case ami you desire expert advice, write (** The Swifi Specific <’** . 137 Swift Bldg.. At- j lanta. Ga. ^ New York Dental Offices 281/2 and 32y 2 PEACHTREE STREET. Over the Bonita Theater and Zakas' Bakery. ^ 3 Gold Crowns . . . $3.00 - . . $4.00 All Other Work at Reasonable Prices. No-Rim-Cut Tires 10% Oversize No Extra Price / We cut the price on No-Rim-Cut' tires about 11 per cent in April. Partly because of lower* rubber—partly/ through multiplied output. Now these oversize tires—these tires that can’t rim-cut—are sold as low as any stand ard clincher tires. Your Choice Now, at the same price, you have this choice: You may get a hooked - base clincher tire of which 23 per cent become rim-cut. Or yau may get, at the same cost, a No-Rim-Cut tire which never can be rim-cut. You may get an old-type clinch er tire, barely rated size. Or you may get, without an extra penny, a tire ten per cent larger in air capacity. ‘ An extra capacity which, on the average, gives 25 per cent more mileage. What Men ' Buy Of course many tire users, out of fixed habit, cling to old-type tires. Some have used them since bi cycle days. Goodyear AKRON. OHIO No-Rim-Cut Tires With or Without Non-Skid Treads They are content with their tire mileage, oDly because they don’t know what their neighbors get.-^ But hundreds of thousands have come to No-Rim-Cut tirea»jAnd legions of new users start ievery month. Goodyear tires, because;of this’, new type, far outsell every other tire. Over a million sold in the past 12 months. That’s more than we sold in 12 years before that/ * Come see these ^ tires. Seethe nou-skid^tread^theToversize, the No - Rim - Cut f feature.’ You*are ( ,bound to^adopt them then. Write for the Goodyear Tire B ook—1 4th- year edition. It tells all known ways to econo mize on tires, x THE GOODYEAR TIRE & RUBBER CO., Akron, Ohio Tliis Company ban no connection whatever with any other rubber concern which use* the Goodyear name. Atlanta Branch, 223 Peachtree Street Phones Bell Ivy 915-916. Atlanta 797 atom Attention, Baseball Fans! All the Box Scores in The Sunday American