Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, May 23, 1912, HOME, Page 4, Image 4

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4 WOMAN KEEN TO FICHIBRMEN Mrs. Shaw Says She’ll Show Wallingford Deal and Prove Her Process a Success. Mra. Frances D. Shaw expects ♦r» show the world from the clay field:- of Georgia that the Shaw process for the manufacture of brick is not a joke, the legal battles and the financial tricks of the brick manufacturers of Georgia to the contrary. notwithstanding "It will take more than the allega tions In a contract fight between Mr. James English. Jr., of the Palmer Brick Company, and the Chatham Brick Com pany to indicate that the Shan process won t work." said Mrs. Shaw today in discussing the injunction suit filed In superior court by the Chatham com pany as a result of Shaw kilns erected in McDuffie county "In the first place, they did not build the kilns right down there, and 1 don't believe toey wanted to. Discovery Pure Accident. "I have always been interested In the development of the 'lay industry ." said Mrs Shaw at the Georgian Terrace. "It is in my blood. The intention came as a sheer accident through an explo sion in a chemical laboratory. It is hardly more than the burning of brick with crude oil. but it will change the industrv "When I came to Atlanta 1 had de cided to work with the Georgia clays; but It seems as though the brick man ufacture! "f Georgia don’t want to make brick, they want to play the game of high finance and I have learned a lot of th.it little game since coming here. "But they won’t stop the Shaw- proc es, Il can’t he .'•topped I am going to stay right hero until II is working su< ' ’ ssfully ill over the state " Allege Wallingford Tactics. James W. English. Jr., who formerly owned the rights to the Shaw patent and who is defendant in the suit of the Chatham Brick Company for $30,000, sold to have been secured by him through Wallingford tactics, says ft is the Chatham company suit and not the Shaw patents which fa the joke. "They didn’t want their plant to work down there, because my contract calls for a payment of $25,000 w hen It does work," said English. "They want to unload that plant on me. "You can say for me that 1 will post a bond for surety and if 1 don't put that McDuffie county plant in working order in six weeks 1 will pay those fellows the $30,000 they claim It cost them to put up their kilns." English cited the Georgia Brick Com pany at Athens, the plant recently in stalled by Mrs. Shaw, as an example of the improved plan working when it is built properly. "They will have a worrisome time making me buy that plant at Brick stone by any such tactics,” concluded Mr. English. J.MJn6HCOmNYJ.M.HIGH COMPANY Come Here For BathingSuits=== Ladies’ Mohair andw Big Stock of Children’s Taffeta Suits, Princess |l\ . ~ . or two-piece styles. \\ \ and Misses Suits Ready Sizes 34 to 44. \\ Vv ™ . • o • - .x/x ,2A Misses Bathing Suits $2.50 to $15.00 Y 3 with skirts. Sizes 8 through 16 Bathing Caps" $2 00 to $3.50 in new, nobby styles Children’s Bathing and colors -they keep Suits without skirts the hair dry, prices sizes 4 to 8. 25c to $2.50 S L2S Mens 2 Piece $ Suits, with or $1.50 without I j \ sleeves I \ \ Men's Jersey Knit Suits, T I all sizes Accordion 2- f 7 Fj tone weave Bathing Shoes of 4 \ \ Suits, all Canvas or Satin, size ® fitted, right and and left foot ' P air Ss' BXSII 25c to socy ~y ,J.M.Hwh Cqmiwnt. J.M.Hjgh Comity. $500,000 Land Deal To Boost Business In Southern Georgia! Eastern capitalists arc preparing to close a ssoo.omt deal for real estate in southern Georgia through the Fisher Realty < ompany. of Atlanta John Ruddle, manager of the realty company, accompanied by a number of the proposed investors, visited the lands yesterday, returning to Atlanta late last night. Early today they vis ited other acreage tracts near Atlanta, and purchases may result. The Fisher Realty Company owns several hundred acres of land within a short distance of the Georgia line, near Pensacola and it is supposed the buyers plan sot an enlargement of com mercial affairs in the South with the opening of the Panama canal. OIVORCEO WIVES 10 LEI FIGHT Former Husbands. Both Dead. Were Brothers, and Claims to Hand Present Tangle. Two women, divorced wives to brotheis now dead, faced each other In the first division of the superior court today in* what may prove a lengthy legal battle over Decatur prop erty said to he worth hut $5,000. The women are Mrs. Marion T. Mc- Clellan. former wife of the late John McClellan. and Mrs. <da B. McClellan, former wife of the late Walter Mc- Clellan The property lea residence lot near the Agnes Scott college. Rack of the suit is an unusual stor; . The property, according to the fact brought out before the court, first be longed to Mrs. Marion T McClellan and was deeded hy her to her brother in-law. Walter McClellan, at the re quest of het husband, John McClellan. Mrs. McClellan told Judge Ellis today that her husband forced her to exe cute the deed. Walter, upon receiving the property, had the deed recorded in DeKalb coun ty. This act was responsible for the present suit Walter McClellan who had just been divorced by his wife, made an agree ment witli John McClellan in which the property went back to the latter, but not to his wife. John subsequently secured a divorce from his wife and the property went to her ir, the alimony settlement. Then both of the brothers died with in a year of each other. Mrs Ida B. McClellan, widow of Walter, ascertained the fact that the deed conveyed to her husband by Mrs. Marlon T. McClellan was the only one of the many properly recorded. So she went and squatted on the land, according to Mrs. M. D. McClellan, who also claims the property. THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS: THURSDAY. MAY 23, 1912 MYRTLE MINS SEEN NEAR LAKE Witnesses Swear Girl Was at Ab McCall’s Home and With < George Bradley. HENDERSONVILLE, N V.. May 23. J J Cornwall, a new witness, gave the most important testimony heard today in the trial of Ab McCall and six other defendants, charged with being prin cipals and accessories in the death of Myrtle Hawkins, whose body, it is claimed, was found In Lake Osceola last September. McCall, who is a driver for a lumber company, swore that he saw Myrtle Hawkins with several other persons on the porch of Ab McCall s home shortly before the finding of the body in the lake. He said he went to the home to take a load of wood. On cross examination he persisted in his. ■ tatement that he was positive Myrtle. Hawkins was there, and was equally positive that the day of the week when this incident took place was Thurs day. Dr. E. Long, a homeopathic physician, who '-pent last summer at Henderson ville. testified that on’the same Thurs day he strolled toward the lake and saw Myrtle Hawkins walking leisurely with George Bradley, another of the defendants. Dr. E B. Drafts, the Hawkins’ fam ily physician, was admitted as an ex pert. He was present at the autopsy over the body found In the lake. H* gave it as his opinion as a physician that if a body lay in the sun two days, overnight in water and then in the sun a few hours, it would be as much decomposed as the bodj that wa found The prosecution claims that the body of Myrtle Hawkins was ex posed to the element in this man ncr. ALABAMA MONUMENT TO BE DEDICATED AT REUNION IN MAY, 1913 CHATTANOOGA, TENN.. May 23. The dedication of the monument just erected in Chickamauga park by the Alabama Daughters of the Confederacy in memory of the Alabamans who fell In the battle there, fixed for June 3, has been postponed until May. 1913, when the Confederate reunion is to be held here. Mrs. T. R. Leigh advises Colonel Baxter Smith, of the Chickamauga park commission, that this action has been taken at the suggestion of General Bennett H. Young. RICH MAN FOND OF JAIL; SAYS IT BEATS REST CURE LOS ANGEI.ES, May 23.—After spending ten days In jail for exceed ing the speed limit In his auto. Mil lionaire George E. Fetterman said that jail was not such a bad place after all. "It bet.ts a lot of rest cure san itariums." he declared. Old Peachtree Homes Doomed by Business Pushing Up the Street "There’ll never be another residence built in Peachtree street between Five Points and Tenth street." said a real estate man today. "The old homes are tumbling down, one after another, like blocks set up in a row for a child 'o play with, and business houses are tak ing their places. Withjn ten years Peachtree will be one solid stretch of plate glass fronts from uptown to far out beyond the Georgian Terrace. "Do you know that there are a few owners of Peachtree street property Who are busted’ so far as ready money goes? Take a man or w oman who owns two or three old homes just beyond the present business center and owns nothing else. The rental for that prop erty. from boarding house keepers and lodging houses, will hardly pay taxes and keep up other expenses, of course there’s a fortune in the land, hut un til a business house w hich pays a real income replaces the 'dead' residence property it is a white elephant on an owner's hands ' “TIZ Reminds Me of My Barefoot Days!” “My Feel Never Get Sore, Tired or Chafed Now, and I Have No More Corns or Bunions, Because I Use TIZ." Send for FREE Trial Package of TIZ Today. \\\ W* / M WT>at You Thinkin About C. OT C" j ©> S 8 I hl iO rTrwJ / ' l\ v/ J I 2 "TIZ mikes tne feel like a boy again. Nothing would hurt my feet in those days, even when I'd run around bare footed with. Rover, over rocks and peb bles and sticks ■ "To be able now tp have feet that never ache, never get tired, blistered, swollen or chafed, or have corns, cal louses or bunions, is a glorious recom pense for all the other aches and pains one suffers in the winter of life. TIZ makes the feet feel young, and young feet make you feel young all over. "I've tried many things for my poor old tired feet, for those bunions of 20 vears, and for those corns that have added wrinkles to my face I've tried plasters, powders and salves -and noth ing has ever given the relief that TIZ .Skill, Experience, | Modern Equipment With a corps of most skillful and thoroughly I experienced dental surgeons and the very finest I scientific equipment, it is no wonder that the den- § tai work done in our establishment is of superior quality. Using only the best materials and giving ex treme care in every case has built for us a most | enviable reputation. ; You are very cordially invited to visit our par lors- —now the handsomest South. All Work Examina- Guarantsed lions Ten Years Free These Are Our Prices for Best Quality Dental Work— GOLD CROWNS $4.00 AND $5.00 Set of Teeth, $5.00 Bridge Work, $4.00 ATLANTA DENTAL PARLORS DR. C. A. CONSTANTINE, Proprietor and Manager. Cor. Peachtree and Decatur Sts. Entrance IDVo Peachtree Use Georgian Want Ads 14,000 MEDS RESUMEBATTLE JIMINEZ, MEXICO. May 23.—With 14.000 men engaged in the battle of Reliano the greatest of the present rev olution was resumed at daybreak. Gen eral Huertas' federal forces engaged General Orozco's main insurrecto col umn. The engagement, which followed a five-hour fight yesterday, was marked by a long range artillery duel. The federajs lost heavily yesterday and retreated to a new position, leaving many' dead and Wounded upon the field. The battle was one of the most spec tacular of the revolution, being contin ued after nightfall, when tne darkness was punctuated by flashes of cannon and small arms. has My feet are now strong and vig orous. they never get tired or swollen, 1 have no corns, callouses or bunions any more—they are boy’s feet on an old man!” TIZ gives instant relief and cures al! foot troubles. It operates on a new principle, draws out all the poisonous exudations that cause foot miseries. Don’t accept a substitute. An elder ly man especially, has a mind of his own; see that you get TIZ. TIZ, 25 cents a box. sold everywhere, and recommended by all drug stores, department and general stores. M rite todav to Walter Luther Dodge A- Co., 1223'South Wabash Ave.. Chicago. 111., for a free trial package of TIZ by re turn mall, and enjoy the real foot relief you never felt before. Week-End Specials at Rogers’ Stores Friday and Wherever Saturday possible let should be us have your more than orders early usually busy Fn(l days at the [^3 5 during Stores, for prompt the values to delivery and be offered avoiding the are “extra Saturday special.” PIEDMONT HOTEL BRAND Finest Creamery Butter FRESH DAILY AT ALL OUR STORES. Full Cream Cheese, 21c lb. WE DO NOT HANDLE SKIMMED MILK CHEESE. Salvation Matches Non-Poisonous—Safe Congress by passing the Esch Bill put the ban on poisonous phos phorus matches. Club women all over the country are making a cru sade against the use of these dan gerous matches. You can now buy at the Rogers Stores the Salvation Matches—the only non-poisonous matches/ made in America. Boxes of about 500 Matches, 5c each, 6 boxes for 25c, bundle of 12 boxes, 50c; small boxes, 5c dozen. Real Imported Sardines, small, fat fish, 14 to 16 to the can; r* per can W Fresh Fruits and Vegetables Finest home-grown Strawberries, fresh each morning at all <>ur stores. New Red Cherries on sale Friday and Saturday. Finest new Red Irish Fresh Tomatoes, good Potatoes, Friday and grade; this 1 O Saturday. sale, per quart per quart • 2*-' Fresh, crisp Georgia Extra fancy Fresh To- Snap Beans; this sale, niatoes; this sale 1 *7 per 0 _ l’ ei " * • quart OC Finest Head Lettuce, Finest Onions. large 10c, 15c and 20c head. bunches. 5c bunch. Finest Evaporated Peaches; spe cial Friday and Saturday; -I per pound 11 V Specials in Canned Foods Finest Kalamazoo ('elery in No. 2 size sanitary tins; one tin equal to 3 large stalks 1 q of fresh Celery; per tin 1 ZiC Sleepy-Eve Brand Red i Peeled and Cored Apples in Cherry Preserves; No. 3 size q No. 2 tins, only .. ol>C lull park cans OC Sleep-Eye Brand Brets. No. Georgia Pie Peaches in No 3 size tins; TO. '' S!Z '’ I'”’ O this sale, per tin... £ cans, only <7C Other Seasonable Bargains Pickles, Olives. Potted Red Rock (linger Ale, pure, Meats. Sardines. < nickers. sparkling, healthful—- and all oilier picnic foods at all our stores. Very low 1 Q prices. Quarts, each X OC Best Granulated Sugar, any . quantity. £1 '‘ aph per pound O2L ~n ,• i . ~ ‘I Rebale of 25c per dozen for Wl -Puund lobs of best ( oin- | |intt|ps an(| any <|f Q <>ur "bn'es will send for P‘‘ 1- P olin<i them. California Sun-Kissed Oranges; Extra 40c Grade. On sale Saturday only. Dozen ... Z-UyC Rogers’ f" Stores