Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, June 18, 1912, FINAL, Image 7

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i i t<n ii v> r • •■:■ Mrs. Julia Clark Plunges to Her Death When Machine Hits a Tree. SPRINGFIELD, ILL., June 18.—Mrs. Julia Clark, aviator, was killed in a fall here yesterday when a tip of a winy on her biplane struck a tree and the machine crashed to the ground. The young woman was trying out her machine in the race track inclosure at the fair grounds. But few persons watched as she glided the machine from the ground and started on her spin at a low altitude. Whether she lost control or whether it was a case of mistaken judgment which caused the I machine to go close to the tree has not been explained. The end of a wing struck the tree, the machine toppled and crashed to the ground. The young woman’s skull was frac tured and she died soon after reaching a hospital to which she was rushed in an automobile. Decisions of Milwaukee authorities was partly responsible for Mrs. Clark not having any recent practice. She had intended making a number of flights there several weeks ago, but they refused to allow her to go up be cause it was deemed her machine was unsafe. Mrs. Clark is the second woman to be killed in aeroplane accidents. The other was Miss Susanne Bernard, who lost her life at the Farman school, at Pau, France, about two months ago. Mrs. Clark was a Chicago woman, who became interested in aviation dur ing the international aviation meet in t'hlcago in August, 1911. She became acquainted with the flyers and last fall went to San Diego, Cal., to learn to ' operate a biplane. * In this she wag successful and was the third American woman to obtain an international aviation pilot license. The Sensation of Atlanta and the South • / -■ ; I-IUNDREDS have been attracted to the “Store Beautiful”—the “Piano House ’ s Different”—that firm that is New York in its methods and its , _-4- ®j prices. Buyers from every hamlet in the state are now enjoying the benefits OW/ / wLWf DD OTIUTI IXV of LOWER piano pr ices through the result of this organization— / ixlßp * * MANUFACTORY AND DISTRIBUTOR. W r Why Not Take Advantage Yourself? ML ? ,; 3wNr*lsi Our Opening Sale continues through the week that you may own a beautiful, high grade Piano at prices so low and terms so easy that further procrastination is but robbing yourself. g^f too 11 | |- =========== RrMW Steinway Everet< RnHW Fischer Schubert 11 jags. l| -V- : hSlsh _ firt® taal® These Pianos, as with a large number of other used Pianos we have in our immense stock that we have taken in on exchange for Everett Grands and Henry & S. G. Lindeman Player Pianos, are dependable makes with a reputation behind each; and remember, our guarantee goes with every instrument sold. WHY WE HAVE BECOME LEADERS ” PIANOS SHIPPED ANYWHERE X1.,. Over IUU If you can not call, write. We have over 400 pianos to select from. Name the price you Ist. Direct manufactory distributors, carrying the largest and best stock Os * want to put into your piano purchase and we will guarantee to save you not only quality but Pianos and Player Pianos south of the Ohio. piRHOS SOlu snot 0 $165 in American coin 2d. The prices we quote are “One price and alike to all.” We never cut from \V I TIME IS MONEY DON’T WAIT Our advertised price. We ma,rk them down at first. Uast W CCK Do it now! Seeing is believing. We are se- Get quick action on some of the wonderful 3d We sell Pianns of proved merit, only. No others can have a place in our curing the trade of the wide-awake business values in our immense stock of used pianos. 3 k ore We. will, we must sell man. Are you one? New pianos, $l9B and up. Pay you to travel 200 miles. 4th. As now—we specialize—give the trade the benefit of our factory facili- more this week. Don’t M IRE THIRD NATIONAL BANK ties for making and buying. let the rain keep you 0 r an y newspaper as to our standing and the progressive spirit of this, the Largest Piano Com- sth. No commission paid salesman or teacher to help you select. In this away. pany in the South. Or, better still, join the crowd at our store and you will open your eyes and way we lower the selling expense. heart and send some kind of an instrument to your home. pT Cleveland=Manning Piano Company NIGHTS ° i BEAUTIFUL 80 NORTH PRYOR STREET. _J WmNGTON;* June W.—AmeFKarT "immortals” tn the number of 150 would be created under the National Institute at Arts and Letters bill which has just passed the house. The bill, which has yet to pass the senate, would give the institute a charter in the District of Columbia. Included in the list of im mortals are artists, authors, musicians and other contributors to American education. Theodore Roosevelt is named, and Senator Henry Cabot Lodge is the only member of congress so honored. George Ade and the gal axy of Indiana authors are in the list. The house, however, struck from the list the name of Francis D. Millet, the celebrated artist who went down with the Titanic, and inserted in his place the name of Albert Jaeger, of New York. three-’cornereTraces FOR SENATE AND HOUSE CARTERSVILLE, GA.. June 18.—An nouncements have been made by Dr. T. H. Baker. John W. Lt Brown and M. L. Johnson of their intention of making the race for the senate from the Forty-second district, and a most exciting three-coronered contest Is ex pected. Dr. Baker has represented this district and this county in both houses of the general assembly. Mr. Brown is at present president of the Georgia Ag ricultural society. He is a cousin of Governor Joseph M, Brown. Mr. John son at present is representative from Bartow. The race for the lower house Is also a three-coronered affair. Ed L. Cole, of Cartersville; Warren Dodd, of Eu harlee, and D. B. Freeman, also of Car tersville, are the candidates. E. T. MOON LTKELY TO RUN FOR HOUSE FROM TROUP LA GRANGE, GA.. June 18.—E. T. Moon, of the Troup county bar. Is be ing urged to make the race from Troup county for the legislature.* He states that he will soon announce his de cision. Mr. Moon If elected would sue. ceed Hatton Lovejoy, who with this session of the legislature retires. W. F. Hines, of Hogansville, is a candi date to succeed himself, without oppo sition. I 111 I I»H H HII fM i Georgia Boys, Freed of Studies, Hurry to the Great Kansas Wheat Fields. The lure of the wheat fields and the golden grain is calling the college boys front the campus to the plains. Per haps it isn't so much the golden grain as the golden coin which makes the rah-rah boy put on his old clothes and hurry toward the Northwest, but any way he is going, by hundreds and thou sands, and he will come back for the fair term with pockets full of cash and feeling fit and fine for the football field. Guy Jones, of the University of Georgia, son of a prominent farmer of Gwinnett county, left this week for the Northwest and the wheat fields. Sev eral others had preceded him. Jones is a student of the agricultural depar.t ,ment, and he will gain not only coin, but experience in his summer’s work. The great fields of the West need harvesters at this season. Labor Is scarce and unreliable. For several years the $3 and $4 a day and excellent fare offered harvesters has drawn students from Harvard and Yale and Princeton and all the great schools, and now the lure of the fields has reached even down to Georgia. They begin their work in Kansas, and as fast as the grain is harvested they move onward and northward, working as they go. They will find a whole summer's work in this way, harvesting their last wheat In far Saskatchewan, Canada, just in time to come back to college with funds to pay their way through another year. THEY’RE RAISING PRICE OF DIAMONDS ONCE MORE ANTWERP, June 18.—The German diamond trust has joined the Debeers syndicate to raise the price of diamonds five per cent wholesale, which probably means fifteen per cent retail. A tragic sequel to the criminal attack and murder of Mary Louise Kelly, 73 years old, came yesterday when her grandson, George Kelly, aged twenty, swallowed poison as a posse of officers was about to capture him in a river bottom thicket. He died in a few min utes. The body of the old woman was found in a bed in her cottage. Evi dence showed she had been attacked and the criminal had torn the clothes from her, probably after she was dead, laid them on a chair and placed the body in bed. Her savings, SIOO, were gone. George Kelly lived with his grand mother, as did her son, who discovered the crime. The former had been at the home during the day and could not be found after the crime had been com mitted. LA GRANGE COLLEGE LOSES PROFESSOR TO WESLEYAN LA GRANGE. GA.. June 18.—Prof. Leon P. Smith, of LaGrange Female college, has accepted the chair of phys ics and chemistry in Wesleyan college, at Macon. Ga.. and will assume his new duties with the beginning of the school year at that Institution. Prof. Smith, who Is the youngest son of Dr. Rufus Smith, president of LaGrange college, is one of the foremost teachers in Georgia. He has had 20 years expe rience and has had considerable work in Chicago and other universities of the North. He will shortly take up his residence in Macon, at present being at Chicago in studies there. Mrs. J. E. Dobbs. Mrs. J. E. Dobbs. 74 years old. a pioneer citizen of Atlanta, died at a private sani tarium late today. The remains were re moved to the chapel of Barclay & Bran don, from here they will be carried to Marietta. Ga., for funeral and interment. Mrs. Dobbs lived at 84 South Pryor street. She is survived by a number of relatives. THE LAX-FOS WAY. If you had a medicine that would strengthen the liver, the stomach, the kidneys and the bowels and at the same time make you strong with a systemic tonic, don’t you believe you would soon be well? That's "The Lax-Fos Way." We ask you to buy the first bottle on the money-back plan, and you will ask your druggist to sell you the second. It keeps your whole insides right. There is nothing else made like Lax- Fos. Remember the name—LAX-FOS. ••• Cooler IT 1 «' v\ 8”' er an<l ee|> S weeler Tempered in Our Cool Underwear! The “grill” of June gets “right next to your skin.” Clothing bur- Ib * Idens are lightened at every point. Cool Underwear is conducive to the I Ob jmi ■ greatest comfort consistent with the high points in the mercury." Our ■W I Gm |lh ■ Underwear department is a complete store within a store —not the ■ • uuLlQjf conventional “department” with a “skimp” of styles, and a “smat- , tering” of stocks. We’ve got the makes and fabrics you want, and | that every other man wants. n 1 I Athletic styles in two-piece suits, coat cut shirt with 1-4 length sleeves, a 111 11 and knee length drawers, have the “call.” We have these popular I » lIIUIB garments in sweet, cool, fresh nainsook and soisette; per garment, 50c to $1.50. \ mF 1 Nainsook Union Suits, SI.OO to $2.00. l J Soisette Union Suits, $1.50, «■ VS E. &W. all linen two-piece; per garment, $1.50. SB Pure silk separate garments; per garment. $1.50 to $2.00, Union Suits in pure silk, $3.50. ■yJw bhL And 8 mighty host of other styles, makes and fabrics. Come in and UA make your selection. BATHINGSUITS! Our line of Bathing Suits includes both the cotton and wool, in a variety of color and trim combinations. Cotton—Solid blue, red, white and blue trim, 1-4 sleeve SI.OO Cotton —Blue assorted trim, red. white and blue, sleeves and no sleeves 1.50 Cotton—Blue and white, and blue assorted trim. 1-4 sleeve 2.00 Wool—Black, assorted, trim, red, white, blue, very light weight 2,50 Other styles at $3.00 and $4.00. DANIEL BROS. CO. ■j 1 . - ■ JB Georgian Want Ads Bring Results