Atlanta Georgian and news. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1907-1912, April 12, 1907, Image 3

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THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. FRIDAY, APRIL 12. 1907. 3 Come Sale of Waists Share These Saturday Bargains Fashionable Suits Just in by fast express from New York- 100 dozen new and beautiful White Lin gerie Waists, made of fine lawn and elabo rately trimmed with laces and embroider ies—waists like those shown on Whitehall street at $1.50 to $2.5(1; choice tomorrow 69c Brand new line of very stylish Eton Suits of all-wool, plain fancy Panamas and Jumper Suits of Taffeta Silk in black and best colors—suits worth up to $25; all in this sensational Saturday Bargain Sale at the special price of ....> $7.98 Skirts Below Value Very handsome Skills of all-wool Panama in black, blue and brown, of guaranteed Taffeta Silk and of novelty gray plaids, etc.; made in very latest plaited styles and worth $10 to $12; just 50 in the line, and eveiy one should be sold OO by noon at this price w W Sale of Hats Here are 100 exquisite new Pattern Hats for a big bargain sale. All the best new shapes are included; all the most fashiona ble shades. Not a hat in the lot worth less than $7.50; many worth $10; you can take your choice tomorrow for $2.90 Elbow Silk Gloves Tomorrow we will put on sale another lot of those fine quality full elbow length Silk Gloves that are so much In demand. This line Includes black, white and best colors; worth $2.50; tomorrow at, QQp per pair...., % * wwv First Floor [Big Values in Hat Pina—a big line of new styles, worth up to 50c; 12o hem- 4c cholci Ladies' Handkerchief!—plain stitched white linen i only Ladies' Hoae In new lace lisle effects; real 60c 1 On value 1 Man’! Sox in plain black and new fan cy effects;. 19c 10c Children’s Hoae—fast ribbed; extra value black, heavy ...10c Ribbons—taffeta or satin, all beat col- i 1,c 10c Small Notions Castile Soap 1e Beat English Pins 3c Best Steel Hair Pins, pkg 1c Safety -Pins, all sizes, card 3c Best Talcum Powder 5c Embroidery Hoops, 2 for 5c Best White Cotton Tape '. 2c Featherstltched Braid, full 6-yard bolta 5c Regular 25-cent Hose Supporters, tomorrow 10c Open ’Til 10 Saturday Night Second Floor Waists of fine China Silk, elab orately trimmed In Val laces; T!**: $1.98 Allover Lace Waists, full silk lined; exquisite designs; worth up to $10; dJO QO choice Ladies' Drawers of good muslin, nicely made and trim- IQa med; only . Corset Covers, very dainty styles, worth up to 50 OfS** cents; choice .fcw** Petticoats, very handsome styles, finished with 8 to 4 OQa rows of lace Millinery Ladies' Trimmed Sailors In new “Mushroom" shapes; Cl CA 13.00 values Ladies' 8traw Sombreros, very stylish and worth fully QQ#i *2.60; only Leghorn Shapes, black or white; real *2.00 quality; ' EA r tomorrow Ladies’ Sailors, plain shapes, new styles; worth *1.60; Rt\r* tomorrow *3— Children’s Sailors, a big collec tion to choose dft* from, at Second Floor Misses’ Skirts of all-wool Pana mas, In plain colors Cl QQ and fancies Ladies' Petticoats of fine black mercerized aateen; fifi A *2.00 values WG Ladies’ Vests of light weight Hale, silk taped; 1 Ao 25-cent value Babies’ Caps, nicely trimmed; greatest values you 1 Q/> ever saw, at 'ww French Flowers for hat trim ming; worth up to *1.00; bunch We Give Green Trading Stamps. BASS’ 18 West Mitchell, Near Whitehall Lace Curtain Sale From a leading manufacturer we have secured 1,000 pairs of beautiful Saxon and Nottingham Lace Curtains—odds a nd end and surplus stock of the fac tory—Just 2 to 4 pairs of a kind and worth up to *6.00; tomorrow . QQ. you can take choice of the line for, per pair «OC New Mattings First Floor Ladies’ Bslts In new and most stylish designs; leather and 25C Tomorrow we will place on sale a line of heavy China Mattings, all new, handsome patterns and worth 26 and 31) cents; just 25 rolls to 14 | sell at, per yard, only.• -w Feather Pillows 300 full else Feather Pillows; weight, 3 pounds; covered with QQ n good ticking; only wWV elastic Men's Drawers, best patent elastic seam style; 76-cent _ quality / C Men’s Undershirts and Drawers of light Balbrlggan, 60c grado C3C Shopping Baas In new styles; regular *1.50 value; choice, dA A tomorrow Umbrellas, taped edge, silk cover, fan cy handles; *2.50 AQ. value White China Wash Silks, cents a yard, worth 60 22c Open ’Til 10 Saturday Night CYCLONE’S QUEER FREAK PUZZLES GEORGIA TOWN Hampton Home Is Wrecked Only in Interior. NARROW ESCAPE OF THE FAMILY Twister Moved House Ten Feet From Founda tions. A ryclone In the Immediate vicinity ht Atlanta is a good deal of a meteor ological phenomenon, but something lili" the genuine Western article—a baby Kansas “twister," It may be— visited the Clarkston neighborhood, a lew nights ago, and cut some fantastic capers. The principal damage was done a mile west of Clarkston, close to the 'ilcirgla railroad, the home of Mack Hampton being almost destroyed and Hie family narrowly escaping with their lives. <>n the night of Friday, April 5. It ralncil, but gently enough, and with Practically no wind. In the humble Hampton home there waa no premont- Hon of Impending disaster. The fant- 1 Is a large one, consisting of father, mother and seven children. Their dwelling consisted of two rooms, with a "lean-to" kitchen, and Iq these two rooms the nine people slept. Something like an hour after mid night, an Mrs. Hampton was lying awake listening to the rain outside, she niarrl a noise ns of an approaching freight train. As the roar drew near er. however, it was plain that It was ¥• Hie elements, for all the freight trains running at that moment In the •tale of Georgia,' with their noises "treed into one ear-splitting rumble, would not have sounded like the on- , HAMPTON HOJUE AT CLARKSTON. * The upper picture shows the exterior of the home, apparently unln* t ured by the cyclone, thobgh moved from its foundations. The picture ioIow snows the wreckage inside the house, where almost total destruc tion it shown. The force of the cyelone seemed to have been spent inside. coming cyclone. Lifted the House. Mrs. Hampton railed to her husband In the next room, and just ns he awoke the twister struck the house broadside, lifting It bodily from Its stone pillars with a mighty wrench and violently setting It down upon the ground at a Compiles with all requirements of the National Pure Food Law, Guarantee No, 2041, filed at Washington. "Our food was good—Bear , flapjacks, fresh bread, etc., fut nothing seemed to warm and lengthen us as much as a cup of ARIOSA Coffee, which we kept in A* original package and ground as needed." From ■ gntlewa now la D-vSWwm. Aibucllen* ARIOSA was the fint roasted packaged coffer,— packaged for the coaumet’a protection and the porei of each beny waled Uier the roauiag with froh egg, and mgar to zeep the goodneu in sad make the coffee rettle - ear sod quickly tilting angle, some ten feet from Its original Hues. Simultaneously the plaster on' the walls fell with a crash, burying the sleeping children on the beds and filling the pitch dark rooms with a stifling dust. Mr. Hampton was struck on the head by a mass of plas ter, which knocked him unconscious for n few moments, and to add to the ter rors of the darkness, the large double chimney came tumbling to the floor, some of the brick flying clear across I he room. The wonder Is that nobody was killed or seriously Injured. A newspaper was lighted by Mrs. Hampton after she had succeeded In finding a match and with this Impro vised torch she assured herself that husband and children were safo. Mean while Mr. Hampton had regained.con sciousness anil no time was tost In es caping from the-wreck to the house of a neighbor across the railroad. The flight was In their night clothes, every garment of every member of the family being lost In the debris of the ruined house. The Interior of the house was literal ly gutted. Bricks and plaster covered everything. and articles of furniture were smashed ’Into smithereens. The boards of the floor were bulged up ward, as If from an earthquake's up heavel, and window frames and doors were twisted Into all kinds of crazy- angles. The chimney above the roof was blown entirely off, but tqe roof was not damaged. A clock stopped at 1:10 a: m„ Indicating the time when the twister paid Its unceremonious visit. The dishes were broken and few articles of furnishing were saved Intact. Even the cook stove was broken. The cyclone that devastated the home of the Hamptons seems to have been narrow In Its track—no wider. In fact, than the house Itself. It blew down no trees or fences and seems to have dipped down to the earth In but a few places. A neighbor of Mr. Hampton went nut on hlB back porch In the early morning and was mystified to see the side of his barn staring him In tho face where before Its gable end had met his vision from that position. The cyclone had twisted It around. Two other barns on the other side of Clarks ton also caught a part of the twister's force, but it wrought Its chief havoc upon the Humpton home. Mr. Hampton, who Is a painter by trade, owned his own little home. The cyclone left his family homeless, with most of their household goods de stroyed, and the people of Clarkston are Interesting themselves In raising a purse to enable him to repair his se vere loss. Contributions for this pur pose sent to the Atlanta newspaper of fices or the store of Jolly A Branyon, Clarkston. will be acknowledged with thanks. The case Is one that makes a peculiarly strong appeal and it Is as worthy as tho need Is urgent. day night, after a short Illness. The funeral services were conducted In the chapel of Harry O, Poole Thursday afternoon. The Interment was In the family burying ground. M. DTciay. The funeral services of M, D. Clay, who was killed by a gas explosion Wednesday night at his residence, 146 Ormond street, were conducted Friday afternoon at 2 o'clock at the chapel of Harry O. Poole. The Interment was at the Beech Springs church. A, C. Banks. A. C. Banks, aged 72 years, died at his residence, 15 West Leo street. West End. Friday morning. Mr. Hanks hail been In 111 health for several years, but his death came unexpectedly to his friends. Ho Is survived by his wife. The body was removed to the under taking establishment of Harry Poole, from where It will be sent to Doug- lasvlllo, Oa., Friday night for Inter ment Deaths and Fimsrais Talk about “routedfre*h daily" the way to get a cup of coffee that taste* like coffee, with all the deGdou* flavor and aroma intact, is to buy Aibuckles' ARIOSA and grind it as you want to use it Waasia* U s Gale develop* 6e fiavar sad (rfacSsf tut- Codes loots in ideastr u calcs after boat amiad cr when cipootd to tht.oi- Never buy loose coffee out of a bf [, ’•in or tin. If it were good the toasie: would not be ashamed to sell it in a package with his name on it. Tbo-uko cf AlUtUos' ARIOSA eleccd duos of oil paa|*|l{Srlfwa rnmWfwJ II it the L«»t COflCC for you, tod carta you 1cm, If your grocer won’t supply, write to ARBUCKLE BROS.’ Nm Yd Gtr. George A. Clayton, 1 George A. Clayton, ■ Jr., the year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. George A. Clayton, died Thursday afternoon at the family residence, 361 Cherokee ave nue. The child's father, George Clayton, Is" a well-known Atlanta con tractor. The funeral services will be conducted Saturday morning at o'clock at thtf residence. Rev. 11. K. Pendleton will officiate. Mrs. A-TTphillips. Mrs. A F. Phillips, aged 60 years, wife of’ C. H. Phillips* commercial agent for the Missouri Pacific railroad in -Atlanta, died ,at her residence, 544 Washington street, Thursday afternoon at 3:10 o'clock. No funeral services will be conducted In Atlanta, but the body will be sent to Lafayette. R. I., the former home of Mr. and Mrs. Phillips, where the fu neral and interment will take place; Lee J. Brannan. The funeral servlcea of Lee J. Bran- nan, who died at the Grady hoapltal on Wednesday afternoon from injuries re ceived by falling from a wagon at 65 Augusta avenue, will be conducted Fri day afternoon at 2 o'clock at his late residence, 632 Marietta street. The Interment will be at Westvlew ceme tery. lie is survived by his wife and live children. DeWitt Davis. DeWitt Davis, the young son of Mr. and Mrs, Fred Dav|j. died at the family residence, 70 Jefferson street, Wednes Minnie Pitchford. Minnie, the young daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Pitchford, died at he family residence, 250 Ashby street, on Wednesday nlghL The funeral services were conducted Friday morning at the residence. The Interment was In Westvlew cemetery. i William C. Partridge. 1 William C„ the young son of Mr. and Mrs. John W. Partridge, died at tho family resldencei 226 Love street, on Wednesday night. The funeral services will bo conducted Friday afternoon at 2 o'clock In the chapel of Greenberg, Bond A Bloomfield. The body will he sent to Tucker, Ga„ for Interment. Remember the numbers, Bell 4927 Main or Atlanta 4401 if you are in a hurry to insert a Want Ad. We will charge it. THREE ’PHONE CABLES BECAME CHARGED CAUSING DAMAGE Special to The Georgian. Gadsden, Ala., April 12.—Fire de stroyed a block of frame buildings on West Broad street at midnight last night, known ns the "Tunnell Block." und occupied by negro dives. The heat was Intense and melted three large rabies of the Southern Bell Telephone Co., causing a loss of *2.000 to the company. One of the cables fell across the trolley wire of the street railway eompany and was melted, causing the wires to become charged with the powerful current which burned out all of the telephones In the city con nected with the cables. The loss on the buildings was in significant, as they hail already been condemned by the city. Character in Hats , and Hat Selling Just as the style of a hat and the way it’s worn, pro claims a man’s individuality—just so| can a hat store be fairly judged by its hat styles and the way it disposes of them. You’ll find no masquerades at Muse’s:—no three-dollar hats at three-fifty, nor four-dollar ones at five. Stock, style and price pass under scrutinizing eyes at this store. Imperial Telescope Knox Derby A Stetson Novelty $3.00. $5.00. $3.50. A high crown, narrow brim, Felt Hat, worn tel escoped, pulled slightly at front. Pearl, with black band. Pearl, with pearl band, and black. Style, Wilno. Bound edge or raw edge. The style that sets the pace in hats for men. Feather weight for Spring. Cedar, with brown band and binding, also in black. Worn just as shown in picture. Pearl trimmed to to match, and black. A fine selection of Young Men’s Hats at $2.00. Fancy Hot Bands 25c and 50c. MUSE’S, 3-5-7 Whitehall