Newspaper Page Text
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS.
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, MOT.
It is “wall-papering” put upon the plane of the highest art in
But you'll find it is not necessary ttf carry the prices up with
things are within easy reach of the modest home-building purse.
■aasaassrsaer:
his "offinl-
recognized
any South-
THE DUTCH FRIEZE.
A rural scene treated In a most-out-of-the-ordlnary style.
The prevailing tones are greens and blues with a touch of brightness in the women’s and children’s dreassa.
While it is bold in coloring, It is done with a true feeling of harmony.
WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 11th,
And we will treat the good ladies of Atlanta with another
one of those big bargain sales on gray, white and bine En
amel Ware. Already this year we have had two- of these
special sales and there has never been anything in Atlanta
just like it. We supplied hundreds of homes with some of
the best stuff ajid for the least money that ever happened in
Atlanta.
REMEMBER,
These prices are good only one day, Wednesday, September
11th. The day before or the day after does not count.
White Enameled Ware
Regular. Special
Price. Price.
White Enameled Wash Bowl..$1.50 75c
White Enameled Wash Bowl..$1.25 60c
White Enameled Baking Pan.. 25c 10c
White Enameled Baking Pan.. 30c 13c
White Enameled Baking Pan.. 35c , 15c
White Enameled Mixing Bowl. 30c 15c
White Enameled Pie Pans 25c 13c
White Enameled Pie Pans 30c 15c
White Enameled Chambers 40c 25c
White Enameled Chambers,..,. 50c 30c
Assorted Colors
Regular,
Special Q
#
Prlo«.
Price. ■
Size 12 Tea Pots
.... 40c
15c |
Size 13 Tea Pots
.... 50c
20c I
Size 14 Tea Pots
.... 65c
25c C
Basting Spoons
.... 16c
5c 8
Soup Ladles.
.... 25c
10c 1
3-quart Pudding Pans ...
.... 25c
ioc B
6-quart Pudding Pans ...
.... 35c
15c 3
H
WHITE ENAMELED COVERED
CHAMBER RAILS
. , $2.00, $1.30
In the Blue and White
1- pint Blue and White Enameled Boilers, i,u
covers 13c
2- quart Blue and White Enameled Boilers,
with enameled covers 10c
2 1-2-quart Blue and White Enameled Boilers,
with enameled covers 26c
3- quart Blue and White Enameled Boilers,
with enameled covers 34c
4- quart Blue and White Enameled Boilers,
with enameled covers 44c
This Is Something New and Very Fine Qualify ,
Here Is Where You Save Money
Alcohol Stoves
Wood Salt Boxes
Wood Lemon Squeezers
Table Mats
Japanese Nut Bowls
Wood Fiber Wash Pan
(ias Mantels— 20c,
Stove Pirns..
Iron Broilers
Iron Broilers I
llcin’s Broilers
Tin Dish Pan ;
Bread Makers,..
Hein’s Potato Masher .........
. 50c
35c
25c
: 50e
$1.00
15c
30c
25c
25c
35c
40c
50c
$2.00
25c
15c
15c
10c
15c
30c
5c
15c
10c
10c
10c
20c
25c
75c
10c
Loose Bottom Cake Tin..
tllass Dipper
Van Deuscn Egg Boater.
Van Deusen Egg Beater
Round Tube Cake Tins..
Round Tube Cake Tins..
Octagon Tube Cake Tins.
Octagon Tube Cake Tins.
Curling Irons
Square Tin Pans
Fly Killer
Tin Slop Jars
Tin Water Carrier
Tin Foot Tub
Knife Box .. .71
10c
6c
. 5c
2c
. 10c
4c
. 15c
3c
- 20c
Oc
. 15c
3c
. ‘20c
5c
. 10c
6c
. 10c
2c
. . . s
5c
. 50c
25c
. 50c
25c
. 50o
25c
. 25c
10c
P’O INVESTIGATE
CITY WATERWORKS
The committee appointed to lnvestl-
&te ihe waterworks system, and which
4 composed- of both council members
Ed citizens, wHll probably begin Its In.
titration the latter part of the pres-
nt week.
The delay on the part of the commit-
ee h caused by the unavoidable ab-
irnce from the city of Councilman Har-
Coundlman Longlno, chairman
If Hi.* committee, stated Monday morn-
(iie that he had been requested by Mr.
Jlarman not. to call a meeting of the
ommittoe until hla return to the city.,
"Mr. Hannan expects to return about
|ht middle of the week,” said Dr. Lon-
glno, “and Just as soon os he returns
I win call a meeting of the committee
|nil the investigation will begin.”
I The committee was appointed for the
lieclilc purpose of InvestigutilK the
lie is of the waterworks system and
■he best method of Improving It. In Its
import the committee will recommend
Ihe kind of pump which It thinks most
desirable for the needs of the city.
The committee Is composed of the
following gentlemen: Councilman
|"nglno, chairman; Councilman C. E.
ffarman, Alderman H. M. Beutell, J.
pviiie Pope, E. Van Winkle, H. C.
and City Engineer R. M.
pay tm.
MIS HAND DESERTS
IIIS GIRL WIFE
Aihevllle, N."c., Sept. 9.—Word has
■ti received from Cincinnati that Mr*,
['■liter Miller, aged 18, formerly Mlaa
flcrcedea Goldsmith, of .Asheville, had
<tn deserted by her husband and was
n ’Mnclnnatl seeking him.
upon receipt of the Intelligence that
lit, daughter was In Cincinnati seeking
husband. Mr. Goldsmith at once
Mred to Cincinnati urging hi* daugh-
P to return home Immediately and
[femlslng her a welcome.*
Judge Geiger May Run. ,
fecial lo The Georgian.
-'It. Vernon, Oa., Sept. Judge J. B.
'Hgcr, 0 f the city court of MU Vernon,
1 "Ing urged by the members of the
ckl bar, and also by hi* friend*
ughout Montgomery and other
r? unll *» composing the Oconee Judicial
I 11 ' 1 'tit. to enter the- race for the
Jf gishtp of the Oconee circuit In the
"'"aching primary.
ROME, GA., MAN WINS
A VIRGINIA BELLE
Washington. Sept. 9.—Wade 8.
Cothran, of Rome, Oa.. and Miss Car
ter Warren, of Harrisonburg, Va., were
married at the Sboreham Hotel here,
Rev. E. S. Dunlap officiating. It was
a runaway match and was witnessed
by a few friends of the bride add groom
only.
Mr. Cothran Is prominently connected
with the Howell Cotton Company, of
Georgia and Texn*. and come* from one
of the oldest and most aristocratic
fumllles In the South. Mr*. Cothran,
as Miss Warren, had been noted a* a
belle and a beauty for the past two
seasons.
After a short wedding tour, Mr. and
Mrs. Cothran will leave for Rome,
where they will reside.
NEW RECTOR IN
WASHINGTON, GA.
Special to The Georgian.
Washington, Ga., Sept.. 9.—A large
congregation greeted Rev. J. J. Lanier,
the now rector of the Episcopal church
In Washington, who moved to Wash
Ington with his family on Saturday.
For many years Rev. Lanier served the
Stephens Episcopal church In Miltedge-
vllle, but resigned there to accept the
call from the Washington church. Pre
viously he had been the rector of one
of the leading Episcopal churches In
Savannah.
Advice to the Aged*
Ace brings Infirmities, such as slug
gish bowels, weak kidneys and blad
der and TORPID LIVER.
Tutt’sPills
perform
In youth and
IMPARTING VIGOR —.
to the kidneys, bladder and LIVER,
They arc adapted to old and young.
Good Watches
For men and women
who want accuracy and
reliabilty in a watch, we
have a wonderfully com-
S lete range of styles and
esigns—all good.
Maier & Berkele
COUNTY SCHOOLS
BEGIN SESSION
The public acbools of Fulton county
opened Monday with a probable regis
tration of 9,000 pupils. Superintendent
M. L. Brittain expects to seat every
one of these, although the number Is
a considerable Increase over last year.
The teachers met with Professor
Brittain Saturday and went over the
plans for the coming session. The
prospects for a successful year seemed
unusually bright. The corps of teach
ers this fall‘Is perhaps the best quail-
fled of any ever employed.
RAPID PROMOTION
FOR WILSON BURKE
Wilson Burke, formerly of Atlanta,
but who has for several yeara been con
nected with the Cincinnati Post, has
been appointed managing editor of The
Post and has entered upon hi* new du.
ties.
Mr. Burke was well known In Atlanta
newspaper circles, having been con
nected with the old Atlanta News and
with The Journal. He Joined the staff
of the Cincinnati Post some time ago
and has risen rapidly until his promo
tion to the head of the news depart
ment of that paper. His friends In At.
lanta will be glad to learn of his pro
motion.
Camp Meeting Begins.
Special to The Georgian.
Anniston, Ala., Sept, t.—The annual
camp meeting at Peaceburg has be
gun and will continue until next
Wednesday. c is of the most noted
divines In the Methodist Episcopal
Church. South, will be In attendance
and deliver sermons during the meet
ing. On Sunday many people from
Anniston will attend the meeting.
WILL M BOO!?
Vardaman and Noel Will
Make Radical Sugges
tions.
Jackson, Miss., Sept. 9.—It Is under
stood that the final message of Gov
ernor Vardaman to the general assem
bly will contain several radical recom
mendations.
Governor-elect Noel will also send a
message to that body containing sug
gestions contrary to those of Varda
man. Many reforms are certain to be
enforced, but the Influence of the two
men will decide the Issues In the i
scmbly.
SOUTHERNERS KNEW
If you fail to attend this great sale you certainly lose
some of the greatest bargains ever offered by any house in
Atlamta. The. reason for it is solely as an advertising feature.
King Hardware Co.,
Both Stores: 53 Peachtree St87 Whitehall St J
By JAMES V. HACKETT.
Ferdinand TCInney Earle, who
now because he has bargained with his
wife that she may secure
enters who patronized the Normandie
Hotel, on Broadway, while General
Earle was proprietor. .
It always was the Impression of the
writer that General Earle served 1.12.
the Confederate troops during the war.
His name does not appear In the rec
ords of the officers on either side, how.
ever, and hla title may have been <'
to his appearance and manner. ,In 1893
and 1894 his hair was almost white and
his mustache and goatee were fast ap
proaching white, although there was a
bit of gray In them then.
6ls hotel. Just above Herald square,
was a favorite hostelry with Southern-
ers who found the old Broadway Cen
tral too far down town for them. And
then, too. It probably was the wuy that
the general greeted hts guests that ap
pealed to the man from the South, for
It seemed that he always was there In
the lobby to come forward and shake
the hand of any man who ever had
stopped with him before and to call
him ^y nqme.
Ferdinand, the son. who bears the
same name as his father, was much
about the hotel In the winter of 1893-4.
With hts Frenchy beard and eccentric
dress, he frequently was mistaken for
on? of the singers from the Metropoli
tan opera house, across the street. Ella
Wheeler Wilcox knew him, but at that
time she was too deeply interested In
Swam! Vlvlcanda. the Buddhist of the
black robe and red sash, for either her
or her husband to give Earle, who had
not ’’ arrived” then, much time.
To any one who- knows Monroe, N.
Y.,.the Earle home. It is hard to under,
stand how ho eould get such Ideas of
"affinities” and "century-old love”
there. But perhaps they are the re
sult of his residence In Paris. Monroe
Is less thah 80, miles from New* York,
In ' Orange county, which Is In the
southeastern corner of the state, with
the Hudson river on one side, the New
Jersey state line on the other, with the
Susquehanna river coming up to touch
It at Port Jervis, and the Cdlsklll
mountains, where Rip Van Winkle
slept, on the north. For years this
county supplied New York with milk,
butter and cheese, and the finest thing
a dealer eould say about a dairy prod
uct was that It came from Orange
county.
Surely It wasn't, from this vnlley,
with Its maple-shaded roads and Its ce
dar-crowned hills, that Earle got his
Ideas on the malrlmonlnl question. Up
there you will And on the farms with
the broad meadows, on which the Hol-
stelns graze, families of six and eight
and even twelve children. The name
of the county Itself Indicates their loy
alty to William of Orange, and the
sturdy stock of the original Holland
settlers can be noticed today. It Is the
same Mtock that • President Roosevelt
came from on his father's side. And.
therefore, no one wonder* that'the In
dignant cltlsen* dragged Earle from
his carriage and splashed him In the
mud when he returned home after
sending his wife to France to get a di
vorce.
A FEW NEW FRIEZES
. - V
It has become an axiem with ths best schools of modem art in lpuss d?c-
oration that a room to bs satisfying must be considered as a whols.
Coler-schemes are planned as carefully as the composition of a picture, ahd
artists whose names on canvas ars recognized the world ever I?nd their art to the
designing of the beautiful friszss and wall-coverings that figure so largely in ths
best interior work.
These
i wall decorating,
the sentiment.
“THE DAYLIGHT CORNER”
School opens Septem
ber 9th.
Our suits for boys are
ready—are your boys’
suits ready.
The acquisition of
learning is a heavy load
but to learn where to
buy the best clothing is
but a single word—
X^6I*6!
EISEliN k WEIL,
1 Whitehall Street.
A lazy, restful stretch of greenish water and bluish eky. Hardly enough breeze to 611 a tall, but just enough
to ripple the eea and rumple the reflection of the boats in the water.
One would never tire of leoklngat Dutch Selling boats so admirably rendered.
THE MARCHING CRUSADERS.
A stern, grim bit of composition. Armored knights with austere facet) a mighty
the upper edge of your room.
The colors are rich and.deep—eaubsr greens, purples and reds
A-magnificent decoration for a large living room with maeaiv*
eatings.
■aJMlf* TUEi XAUm'S.
A freize whose beauty i* merely suggested in the illustration. A pise* of hand blocking.
Th* whole composition is in light tone and vary dim and hazy, with an atmospheric effect of the setting
tun. The prevailing tones are toft tans and th* rosy pink of sunset. Behind the boat* there's a glimpse of low
tend dunes euggeeted in broad waehae of transparent brown.
Th* whit! sails of the yachts, the eea and sky art bathed in the rosy pink of the setting tun.
For anything in th* lin* of artistic and exclusive decoration for wall or sailing, or for suggestions and color
schemes in carpets, rugs and draptrits, call upon the strvics of our decoration deparement.
Ckamberlin-JoHnson-DuBos? Co.