Atlanta Georgian and news. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1907-1912, June 15, 1911, Image 5

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THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS: THURSDAY, JUNE 15, 1911. 1 > Friday 25-Cent Sale Blue and White Enameled Ware The final days of our Six-Day Clearance Sale in Third 'Floor Department offer the best values of the week. We have a big lot of Blue and White Enameled Ware which must be closed out Friday and Saturday at one-half and one-third less than regular prices. This affords you an opportunity to. supply your kitchen needs at a very moderate cost. Dish Pans—10-quart size; regular 75c value; OCa Friday only........ CwW Since Pans—6-quart size, with 50c value, at CO c Sauce Pots—6-quart size, with cover and handles; 75c value, at. 25c Baking Pans—Handles on each side; regular 50e value, at 25c Double Boilers, like illustra tion: regular 75c OCft Value; Friday only. £wv See Show Window Extra Sales Force to Wait Upon You Water Pails—10-quart size; wooden-ring handles; 50c SfR ..25c Preserving Kettles—6-quart size; regular 50o OCa value; Friday bvw SATURDAY 10-Cent Specials TRUST MAINTAINED El To Manufacture Union bacco to Catch the Labor Trade. To Regular ' 25c Extension Wood Window Screens, 18x33; for Saturday only. 10c Five Packages Gold Dust 10c Other Bargains Through out the Entire Store Dairy Pans - of gray enameled ware; 4, 5 and 6-quart size; X ri ". y . 10c cClure Ten-Cent Co. "An Economy Shop for Economical Shoppers" Comer Whitehall and Hunter Streets Daily Statistics deaths. , , L. S. Collins, aged 7». 201 Capltol-are. • Hattie Simmons, aged 19, 1*2 Capitol- *Yiarry chandler, aged seventeen, 1» Pa- J 0 J.*Hobby, aged SO. 99 North Lawn-st. MARRIAGES. 1 O. C. Gossett to Mrs. W. E. McCal- ll»trr. June >: by E. It. Orr. Justice of the / (Mace, BUILDING PERMITS. , * Jt.500—B. I). Watkins, 10 Waverly way; dwelling. '* • $7.500-B. D. Watkins, 8 Oakdale road; dwelling. . „ „ , * $1.385—Mrs. M. Hlrsowlts, 138-B Capl toJ-ave.; repair Are damage. $100—Dr. 8. T. Dumas. 35 Aufuata-ave., a»ltl room. - . _ . $3,700—Pulton county. Pryor and Eaat Hunter-sts., to remodel building. $150-Dr. William KldrUlge, 615 Cheat nut-st.. additions. „ $3,000 -Western and Atlantic Construe tlon Company, 133 Pe%plea-at., one-etory dwelling. .. . $400 -8, B. Crawford. 425 Weat Hunter, additions. $7,250-Western and Atlantic Conatnic tlon Company, 320*328 Oordonat., two frame houses, 92,500 and 93,750. WARRANTY DEEDS. 91.500- -Brookhaven Eatatea to E. Bishop, lot on Pulton and DaKalb coun ty lines, 10 feet south of line of land k>t No. u, and containing ten aceea. Hay 30. and Other Valuable Consideration*— G. H. Ware to H. H. Ware, lot on •outh side of Wara-st., 250 feet weat of Ohurch-st., weat 76, south 200, eaat <8, north 200. June 13. 93.500— Mrs. J. K. Johnson to Mr*. AH' Jde E. McArthur, lot on north corner of itlchardeon and Formwalt-ats., eaa.t 32 north 105. west 32, south 105.* 22. $450—Mrs Fay Banner to j. W. and Mary Arnold, lot on weat aide of State- 65 feet north of Wallace-at., north 49, , west 100, south 40, eaat 100. July 3, 1909. $400—Robert Gregg to. W. P. .Walthall, lot on west side of Avenue B, 750 feet south of Johnaon-at., south 100, weat 140, north 50. weat 140, north 60. east 280. September 26, 1910. $2.260—Mrs. Mattie E. Jones to C. D. •Montgomery, Jr., lot on southeast corner of Hnrdln-ave. and Myrtle-et., In College Park; east 100, south 100, west 100, north loo. .Tune 13. $300-j. b. Built van to J. G. Sullivan, Jot of 324 acres In land lot 25. October 14, 1907. 91,550—C. H. Goodman and W. M. Thur- nian to A. E. Ramaaur, lot on north side of 30 ^1909 N,nlh * lt » land ,ot M. October 92.000—A. E. Ramaaur to Quinn Cello* > Jot above described. June 14. PHOTOGRAPHERS SEEKING THREE VEi / LOVELY LADIES «>. nnove fiescriDeu. June i*. *199—West view Cemetery association to trah q. Dobbin*, lot No. 194.' section 10. ^Ulntn, im square feet. August 24, t2!t(W-J. S. Floyd to F. B. Eavea. lot ?» '»»< *ltle of Peeples-st. 100 feet north it Matthewa-,t.. north 60, east 127. south J 0. weat 177. June 1*. *l. r > Green Thompson to Mrs. Fannie Grogan, lot No. It, 12x11. Hollywood cem- rtcry. Slay 4. 1909. *10—Mrs. Fannie Grogan to Mrs. M. E. •Jartln. lot I2xH, known as No. «5. In Hoi. * i'LS! 1 rsmetery. June 14. c Green to Mrs. J. A. Bsrt- lot In College Park, on east side of llaaa-st. 360 feet north of Blount-*t.. r,o r i h S00- south 60. wsst 300. Also IS* Gi College Park, on east aide of Hass- . 0?f«t north of Blount-st., north 300, *5. u,h 700. west 60. June 12. '.1,250-p. J. Clarke to Harvey Hatcher, ™on south side of Trlnlty-ave. 12 feet *”* of Central-ave.. west 42. south 106. r»»t 12. north 105. June 12. it ™ .PONDS FOR TITLE. K« AOslr to Mrs. Gertrude I< i* on WMt Side of Tlfton or T 'K No-’'; J"n* I- H-w-Sim* to aama, lot on south side Three lovely* ladlei, a dainty blond of the Dresden china type, a brown maid with Titian hair and a tall and statuesque brunette who falls natural ly into the queenly class, are very much In demand in Atlanta just now. If three such beauties culled from Atlanta's garden of pretty women Will take steps to interview the manager of the Southern Photo Material Company at 22 Central-ave., they wilt please the manager immensely and receive a flat tering offer as models. When the photographers convention, which !• scheduled tor Atlanta. June 26, , 21 and 22, la In full swing It will be detailed above. necessary to have three models of su perlative beauty to Illustrate photo graphic setting and the lights and shadows thereof The-work will be, of course, of the moat refined type. The model* will pose just as If they were having their having i own photograph snapped In a Whlte- hall-st. gallery. But the management of the Southern company la strong for pulchritude. He want* his models, who will be exhibited dally under the lens of the camera to Instruct the novice In the art of photography as to what Is what, to be dassllng beauties. He wants them also to be of the divergent types st of Hubbard- * , V6.600^-Mra. Bettle C p l«endon S. E. Lewi*, lot on west side 16 addell-st., 60 feet south of Waddell Place. June O’ 622,600—Mrs. Meta a. Doo'r a"d Lou- |*e G. Dooly to W. M. .Nichole, *£• known at IS Central-ave.. 150 feet south of Hunter-at. June 14. - 912.500—Mrs. Dor* 8. rnit Phillips, lot on southwest side of Cle- burnc-ave., 205 feat northeast of 8t. Clair* ^M.IM^-wVe. Worley to K. K. KeJley, lot on south aide of Vlrglnla-av*., 295 feat west of Old Todd road. Jun* J* . . 912,320—Mra. Gertruda Dickey, J. I* DtekSy! ewmom'oPjamM u n Wcksy es- K’9. Feld to Mr. \tarv t Horwlts. lot on south elds of HtcSrdio”.t 4.'f«e t ess. Suit 60, south 140, weat 50, north 140. May. ?L .. „„„„ uthwest corner of Auburn- 612,500—C. J. Sheehan to W. R Beck- ham, lot on southwest eorner of Aubuni ii™ and Him*rd-st.. west 60. south 70, east 60, north 76. April 4. , ial _,r«TT B irown 8 io Allan.* Banking 7nd SajHnp Company lot £n northwest o’Pwelllngt^-rt JunpH. ' " 6420-M.?tle CaldSslI to Atlanta Bank- y#F^/« loVon ViuM of ’Killian'at., 140 feat eaat of Waldo-at. M Kl2—N. M. Echols to C. E. Thomas, lot on* northeast comer of North and Payne- 1T tTb00-M 6 Cohn to J. Rosenberg, lot on i&cw.wa'te 10 ti 400-F 1 B. Eaves to Merchants end north of M*tthews-*t.. north 60. east 17.. south 60. west 177. June s. LOAN DEEDS. 1760—c. O. Hannah to Georgia Saving* Bank and Trust Company, lot on south east side of Campbell ton road. 726 feet southwest of chart road. June It- * 61 900—Mrs. J. A. Bartlett to,Southern Jan snd Truf * «*» •- rark. on east north of Blou.. south 60, wsst 600. Houston, lots 167 and 166 In northwest A *8fc- “ ‘ ... . Held' Houston, lot on Vest side of West tPeschtree-st.. 67x140.7 feet. November 6, 54.200—Alexander Dunbar to Mrs. Willi* E. Blsndford, lot on southeast side Euclid- ave., 40x1101 feet. June,16. 6140—Archibald P. McCravy to Ida M. Wilson, lot st northwest corner of Ethel and Grnve-ats., 60x164.6 feet. November 6600—Mra Lillie Zimmerman to Ulysses Ward, lot on south aide of Kssard-at., 66.4 by 116.7 feet. June 5. _ > 6100—Isaac M. Roberts to Standard Oil Company, lot In Koswsll, 60xluo feet. JU 61?760—WIUIs M. Everett to Mr*. Mary F. Hubner. lot on east side of Btewart- ave., 42x150 feet. June 6. 60lo—Equitable pany to w. Loan and Security Com- rtin. lot on south aide of 10 feet. January 6, 1107. Raleigh, Juns IS.—The feature of today's session of the trial of the suit of the Ware-Kramcr Tobacco Company against the' American Tobacco Com pany, Wells-Whltehead Tobacco Com pany, and W. M. Carter, for 61,200,000 damages on the grounds that the Inde pendent company, operating first In Wilson, N. C. f later at Norfolk, was crushed out of business by the trust, was the reading of the deposition of Vice President Perclval S. Hill, of the American Tobacco Company, declaring that the Wells-Whltehead and other secret companies were maintained to manufacture union goods to catch tabor trade. Ae means of communication between the American company and the Wells- Whltehead company, letters were ad dressed to Miss Helen V. Simmons, Baltimore, and romailed. Hill admit ted giving Jobbers In all parts of the country concessions to handle trust goods and money was loaned them for advertising purposes. Hill denied that Carter, after Janu ary, 1909, manager of the Ware-Kramer company, was secretly employed by the American Tobacco Company to wreck the plaintiffs business, as alleged. Prior to 1909 Carter was with the American company. Fair progress Is being made In the trial, which will occupy three week*. COicIWlEI ITS General council will probably hold Its sessions In Taft hall until the regular session of congress In December. City Attorney Mnyson has ruled that the netv city hall must be formally ced ed back to the state of Georgia before the framing of legislation can take place there without question as to Its legality. News has been received from Washington that the Democratic cau cus refused to add a bill ceding this property to Georgia to the program for the extra session. Congressman William Schley How ard and other Georgia representatives worked hard to get Mr. Howard’s bill added to the program, but a row devel. oped over the dollar-a-day pension bill, brought up by the middle West Demo crat*. and Mr. Howard was Anally per suaded to desist from his efforts by Speaker Clark, to prevent a split of the Democrats. Mr. Mayson says that Georgia ceded the new city hall property to the Fed eral government when the old postofllce was built and that since the Federal government has not ceded It back, les- lalmtlon passed by council would je liable to stuck In the courts. General council has already desig nated Taft hall as a meeting place and the regular meetings will probably be held there until Congressman How ard's bill passes. There Is a possibility that It might be added to the extra session program at nother caucus, but It seems hardly probable. WALTER ANDREWS BACK FROM TRIP TO PANAMA Colonel Walter P. Ahdrews returned to Atlanta Wednesday night from on Inspection of mining Interests In South America and a visit to the Panama ca' ml. Colonel Andrews was accompanied on his trip to the troplce bv J. H. Trerlse, representative of n New York and Bos ton syndicate, and they* were sent to Investigate mining Interests In tht stato of Colombia. In speaking of his trip, .Colonel An drew* said: "We landed at the port of Colombia and traveled about 160 miles up the Magdalena river, the orettlest stream I ever saw. to the properties, where we found the greatest denoslt of gold ever found. The company we represented has all of thla property under control, and It will develop ft. but at preaent the trouble Is the means of transports' tlon. Everything la by horse. "After looklnr over the properttea we visited the Panama canal, work on which la progressing Anely. The canal will certainly be completed by 1916, but could be completed within one year It the gnvemmeilt wished to do so. I went from Colon to Panama on the PaclAc. and the work was all practical, ly done except the cut thru Culebra mountain." I>ark, on east slda of Haaa-st.. 200 feet north of Blount-st.. north 200, west 60. QUITCLAIM DEED. 66—Lillian M. and Laura F. lacy ex ecutrices of esute of F, C. lacy, to 61. E. Ray. lot known as 110 Park-*t. eaat 46, south 190. west 46. north 164. May —. WARRANTY DEEDS. L.MO—James nanas to o. «. wweuars. at southeast corner of East Fair and Cameron-ata., 166x40 feet. June 16. MORTGAGE. 6660—Alex S. Jones to Mutual Loan and Banking Company, lot on south side of Emmett-st.. 60x160 feet. June 10, 1611. With power of Mir DEED TO gECURE DEBT. 6600—Welter H. Butler to Miss C. Mc Donald. lot on north side of Rankln-st., 6516x200 feet. June 12. TAX COLLECTOrT’aND EX-OFFICIO SHERIFF'S DEED. 614.67—A. P. Stewart to the Mutual ■tn and Banking Compar- ■* cjst corner of West Hun ■ts., 40x60 feet. Juns 6. H^T^d^roVl^BsmetL lot on south side of Anna-st., 551-5x110 6^06—Mays- Bsdgeit to Clarence B. prayer. NEGRO PYTHIANS MUST HUNTT0R NEW NAME Montgomery, Ale, June 1&—Negro Pythian* of Alabama will be compelled to hunt a new name, new banners, en signs, emblems and mottoes, under a decision of the Alabama supreme court Thursday aAlrmtng the decision of Bpe. clal chancellor J. M. Chilton, of Mont gomery, which virtually enjoins the ne gro grand lodge of Knights of Pythias from using the name of the Caucasian grand lodge Knights of Pythias of Ala bama. The proceedings were entered by the white grand lodge In tbe chancery court of Montgomery and Judge Chilton was designated to sit because of the Incom petency of Chancellor L. D. Gardner, who Is a Pythian. Judge Chilton over- ruled the demurrers of the negro lodge, thereby sustaining the bill and Its CRUELTY TO A HORSE COSTS LEVINSON $100 A. Levinson, a tailor, was found guil ty by a Jury In the criminal court of Atlanta Thursday of cruelty to animals and Judge Calhoun assessed a Ane of 1100. There were several witnesses present to testify against Levinson and what they had to say made things look bad for him. It developed that he had hired a horse from Ous Newsom’s Ivery stable Sun day and drove and bent It until It was nearly dead. He Is said to have given a most life-like Imitation of a Are com pany answering a cal) aa he drove back and forth up and down Decatur-at. near Pledmont-ave. Officers stated that at least a half a doxen persona called up headquarters to tell them of Levinson's tactics. ATLANTA REAL LEADER IN LIFE INSURANCE After all Atlanta heads the Hat with the largest amount of life Insurance paid on any Individual In Georgia dur ing the year 1910. On Wednesday The Georgian published statistics showing Insurance payments In this state last year, which credited Dublin with Arst place In Individual cates. 6141.060 hav ing been paid on the life of Thomas J. Pritchett, of that city. Atlanta had second honor, with 6100.000 on tbe life of Hugh T. Inman. Local lift Insur ance men, however, say that Arst place belongs to Atlanta, since the total In surance of Mr. Inman’e life wa* 6145 - 000, the Equitable bavins carried 6125,. 000 and the Northwestern Mutual 620, - 000. That give* Atlanta almost 62,000 over the Dublin payment and the In dividual record for the state. Special attraction at rink. Sale of Long Silk Gloves SPECIAL VALUE AT 69c A general clearance sale, preparatory to inventory, of all our i6-button length, pure thread silk gloves, excepting Kayser’s. These gloves include the famous “Foster” make, and are to be had in black, white, mode, tan, beaver, champagne, navy, brown and a few in light blue. All sizes. Many of these gloves were originally $1.25 the pair. x Jet floor, main building Odd Lots of Fine Ho siery at prices which should insure clearance WOMEN’S PURE SILK HOSIERY Blacks and Tans Only SPECIAL VALUE AT 39c PAIR , WOMEN’S 50c HOSERY 23c About three hundred in this lot; mostly black or tan lace and embroidered hosiery. Some of it originally sold at 75c the pair. The least expen sive was for merly 50c. INFANTS' 25c HOSE 15c Infants’ plain black and bl;ick luce — also fancy topped hosiery. Small sizes; 25c grade at 15c. MISSES' 50c HOSIERY 35c Misses’ pure silk hosiery in black! and white only. They are fashioned especially to fit the young miss. Regular 50c value 35c the pair; 3 pairs for $1.00. Special Sale of Table Cloths Thofe sold regularly at $2.00 now at $1.50 Excellent grade, German silver bleached, bordered table cloths; size 60inches by 80 inches. Sold almost universally at $2.00 each. Tomorrow $1.50. 25c LINEN SUITING 19c This is a very good grade of white linen suiting—full 36- inch width—with 15 per cent admixture of pure cotton. The established value of this suiting is 25c per yard. Spe cial tomorrow at 19c. Sl.oo LINEN SHEETING 85c This 90-inch sheeting is of pure linen—nothing but flax enters into its manufacture: suitable not only for sheeting, but also for dresses, suits, etc. Recognized value $1.00 per yard. lit floor, lintn itetion A Comprehensive Showing of Newest Styles in Bathing Suits • for women, misses and young children \ Our .stock of bathing suits is now complete. The latest modes in bathing apparel are here shown, and at truly moderate prices. Fine serges and mdhairs predominate, which, while satisfying all dictates of modesty, yet are of scarce! y-perceptible weight.Allthe accessories,also-bathing caps and shoes—in just the styles you wish and at attrac tive prices. Women’s Suits $2.50 to $10.00 Misses’ Suits $1.98 to $5.00 Children’s Suits $1.25 to $3.00 2d floor Sale of Dainty Tub Dresses WERE $4.00 NOW $2.69 These pretty little tub dresses are of sheer lawns and service able linens—some of the linens in pure white with contrasting color trimmings—the lawns in a wide range of clever foulard and floral border designs. On account of the extremely low price we shall be unable to alter any of these dresses at any price. WOMEN'S LA WN WAISTS50> These waists are of very sheer white lawn. They are all tailored and are to be had in three very effective patterns. All new and fresh* 89c value at 50c each. One day only, tomorrow. WOMEN S WASH SKIRTS $1 These new skirts, so much in demand just now, are of very good grade white linene. They compare favorably in material, style and fit with those generally sold at about one-half more.