Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, September 03, 1912, HOME, Page 14, Image 14

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14 THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND PROFIT— GEOKGI AN WANTADS-USE FOR RESULTS TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 3, 1912. Real Estate For Sale. Real Estate For Sale. Real Estate For Sale. SEE BEAUTIFUL “Bonnie Crest” Where $lO Monthly Will Buy the Lot You Have Always W anted Only 20 minutes’ ride from the center of Atlanta—on car line. All lots are ele vated and covered with beautiful shade trees, ioo to 210 feet front by 200 to 400 feet deep. Some of them front too feet on two streets, and can be redivided into four large lots. There are only 15 of these elegant lots to be sold at from SSOO to SBOO each, on terms of SSO cash and $lO monthly. So see us at once about yours! “Bonnie Crest” IS THE IDEAL SPOT FOR A SUBURB AN HOME OR INVESTMENT. COME AND SEE US OR CALL US UP AT ONCE AND LET US TAKE YOU OUT. View the city of Atlanta and the su perb scenery of the Chattahooche valley from “BONNIE CREST” today. Bailey & Rowland 1520 Fourth National Bank Building. Bell Phone Main 3829. Ask for Mr. Brum lev. Real Estate For Sale. - Real Estate For Sale. RAMSEY, GREEN & ANDERSON 214-215 Empire Building. Main 66. Atlanta 344. CHARMING new bungalow, stylish and attractive, modern to the minute, in West End, elose to two car lines, and on level, elevated lot. Easy terms and only $3,500. BRAND NEW colored renting property in one of the best sec tions in the city. A fine little investment for $1,400. Rents for $16.00 per month. Marietta St., SBO Front Foot ON MARIETTA STREET we offer you a lot 25x100 at $2,000. Assume loan of SSOO. Will take pur chase money notes for balance. HARPER REALTY COMPANY ! 717 THIRD NATIONAL BANK BUILDING. BELL PHONE 672. t ATLANTA PHONE 672. WILLIAMS-HARTSOCKCO? REAL ESTATE AND BUILDERS FOURTH NATIONAL BANK BUILDING Phone 2106 Main. WE WANT YOU to hear In mind that wfc build GOOD HOMES. We build either for eash or on easy terms. Why not let us build and finance a home for your vacant lot'.' You select your plans or come to us and let us help you. In' the event that you do not own a lot, we will purchase you one and build' a house to suit your taste DO YOU WANT a dandy new bungalow on MORELAND AVENUE’ We are Just beginning one on this pretty street Will let you select mantels, fix tures, colors, paints, etc. Will sell you the place on easy terms, and for less than you will be able to buy it for within five inonths from now. BEST Bl V IN VACANT LOT ON NORTH SIDE—4B feet frontage; all street im provements down and paid for: close to Peachtree street. It. of course is good resident section. For quick’sale, we can let ft slide for $1,700 It is worth even' cent of $2,100; half cash, balance arranged. NEGRO HOUSES RENTING $24 per- month. Price. $2,400. EDWIN P. ANSLEY ~ Real Estate. Realty Trust Building. Ivy 1600. Atlanta 363. SIO,SOO.OO—ANSLEY PARK HOME. The surroundings are the most important factor in the selection of a home. This house Is in an excellent neighborhood, with superb construction, and the stvle of architecture is unsurpassable. Con tains 8 rooms, sleeping porch, bath. With all modern improvements. Lot 75 by 125. with garage. Owner non-resident; anxious to sell. $4,000.00 BUYS a beautiful shaded lot on the Prado in Ansley Park. 75x250 ' A SPECULATION. $150.00 PER FRONT FOOT, lot 30x190, within two blocks of the Candler building Other property here being held at $200.00 per front foot. LIST YOUR PROPERTY with us exclusively; we will cooperate with other agents. FOR SALE Real Money Propositions. We still have on hand, and continue to JOHN J.. find, good investments. Come see us about WOODS I DE M - DILLIN-MORRIS CO. 609-10 Atlanta National Bank Bldg. Both Phones 4235 s3,2so—We are offering a bargain in a vacant lot. 50 by 200. on Ponce DeLeon avenue. Owner needs some cash and must sell. Terms. IN WEST END—We have a dandy good six-room bungalow: has furnace heat, stone front and everything it takes to make a good home. We have a spe cial price of $3,650 if sold in the next few days. No loan. Can make terms. 457 CREW STREET—Pretty new six-room furnace-heated bungalow Can sell on ternas of S2OO cash and»balance $25 per month. We are offered S3O rent for it. WE HAVE SIX LOTS in College Park, 50 by 190 each, w’fth all improvements. We can exchange for good renting property. What have vou? SALESMEN: CHARLES R. COLLINS. FRED C. WOODALL. \V EOFFEK JOB acres on the Howell Mill road, south of the junction of Pace's Ferry road, at a price that will double your money in less than two years. If you want the best acreage bargain in Fulton county call at once. SMITH & FULLER 311 Walton Building. J. L. BOWLES & CO. 205 Austell Building (first floor). Phone M. 5534. IF you own your lot or have it partly paid for, we will build you a home 01. terms like rent; or if you can make a reasonable cash payment, we will buy you a lot and build you a home to your own ideas. Plans designed ami drawn on short notice at very reasonable prices. Your business will he highly appreciated. HOME SEEKERS ARE YOU in the market for a home? If so. it will be to your interest to confer with us at once LISTEN! Do you own a lot anywhere in the city or sub urbs paid for or half paid for? If so. let us build a house on it to suit your ideas “and arrange terms like rent or easier. Houses we build range second to none in point of workmanship, material and beauty. Ask our customers. Plans and specifications will cost you nothing Gate City Home Builders REAL ESTATE AND BUILDERS. 809 Third National Bank Building. Phone Ivy 3047. j-gfi ~~~ ■ ForWy your business || against a falling off in trade IS Every day in the week|| are H H WONDER WORKERS || PROGRESSIVES ARE FOR A VISIBLE GOVERNMENT, SAYS SEN. JOS. M. DIXON By SENATOR JOSEPH M. DIXON, Chairman of the Progressive National Committee. NEW YORK, Sept. 3.—The Progressive parts' is determined to have a visible and not an invisible government in this coun try. It is determined that the man who pays the taxes shall get value received for his taxes. It is determined that pub lic men shall work for the voters who put them In office, and not for interests whose object is to raise the already tre mendous cost of living that they may personally profit. The Progressive party believes In the suffrage for women because it believes that women are just as intelligent, just as honest and Just as interested in the welfare of the nation as men.are. A mother who has a son who must make his living as an American citizen can be trusted to vote to surround him with the right conditions, and to give him honest opportunity. A woman who is supporting herself can be trusted to vote to make conditions of labor better. It is unthinkable that any woman would vote for a man who defended child la bor, or who sought to give anj’ employer the right to work hfs employees, men or women, twelve or fifteen hours a day. Better Labor Laws Urged. Better labor laws are insisted on by the Progressive party. We do not attack property, but we hold that human life is more precious than property. And while wee intend to do no man an injustice, we do not propose to permit any man to do other men injustice. Go into any city slum and you will see the need for a government that takes an interest in the welfare of the people. What this country needs is intelligent effort to conserve human life: to place a decent living within the reach of every man or every woman who works; to pro tect the aged and the weak: to guarantee to every human being the right to hap piness. We know that the laws now on the statute books are not all suited to pres ent Condithions. Some of them have been put there dishonestly, for dishonest pur poses. Some of them were put there years ago by men who could no more foresee our national, social and industrial development than they could foresee the aeroplane, or the telephone, or the eigh teen-hour train between New York and Chicago. It will not be a light task to write our program into the statute books, but it can be done, and we mean to do it. Dishonest laws must be repealed. Statutes written in a bygone age and un suited to the times must be repealed and new statutes must take their place. It is the people who will do this. The new laws will come from the people.' and the legislators who try to stand in their way will surely be brushed aside. “Courts’ Power Too Great.” As for the judges who attempt to say that they and not the law-making bodies of the states and of the United States shall make the laws, we have provided a remedy for them—the recall. No hon est, upright judge has any reason to fear the recall. No dishonest judge has any reason not to fear it. Judicial terms are often long, in some cases for life; and until the people have the power to re call those officials either too stupid or too dishonest to discern the difference be tween right and wrong, the power of the courts is greater than Is good for the country. No one knows that some Judges are cor rupt better than the lawyers themselves. No one suffers from corruption on the bench more than the lawyers who prac- Legal Notices. A PROCLAMATION. Submitting a proposed amendment to the constitution of the state of Georgia, to be voted on at the general state elec tion to be held on Tuesday, November 5. 1912. said amendment relating to the power of the general assembly to exempt from taxation public property, so that the general assembly may exempt from taxation certain farm products. By His Excellency. Joseph M. Brow’n, Governor, State of Georgia. Executive Department, August 24, 1912. Whereas, the general assembly at its session in 1912 proposed an amendment I to the constitution of this state as set . forth in an act approved August 6. 1912, ' to-wit: An act to amend .article 7. section 2, paragraph 2 of the constitution of this state, which relates to the power of the general assembly to exempt fnom taxation public property, so that the general as sembly may exempt from taxation cer tain farm products, and for other pur poses. Section 1. Be it enacted by the gen eral assembly of Georgia and it is hereby enacted by authority of the same, That article 7. section 2, paragraph 2 of the constitution of this state be and the same is hereby amended by adding to and at the end of said paragraph the follow ing words: “The general assembly shall further have power to exempt from tax ation farm products, including baled cot ton. grown in this state and remaining in the hands of the producer, but not longer than for the year next after their production.” Section 2. Be it further enacted. That if this constitutional amendment shall be agreed to by two-thirds of the members of the general assembly of each house, the same shall be entered on their jour nals. with the ayes and nays taken there on. and the governor shall cause the amendment to be published in one or more of the newspapers in each congressional district for two months immediately pre ceding the next general election, and the same shall* be submitted to the people at the next genera! election and the voters thereat shall have written or printed on their ticket "For ratification of amend ment of article 7, section 2. paragraph 2 of the constitution of this state” (for au thorizing the general assembly to exempt from taxation farm products), or “Against ratification of amendment of article 7. sec tion 2. paragraph 2 of the cAistitution of tills state" (against authorizing the gen eral assembly to exempt taxation farm products) as they may choose, and if a majority of the electors qualified to vote for members of the next general assem bly voting shall vote in favor of ratifica tion, then said amendment shall become a part of article 7, section 2. paragraph 2 of the constitution of this state, and the governor shall make proclamation thereof Re it further enacted that all laws and parts of laws in conflict with this act be. and the same are repealed. Now. therefore. I. Joseph M. Brown, governor of said state, do issue this mv proclamation hereby declaring that the foregoing proposed amendment to the constitution is submitted for ratification or rejection to the voters of the state qualified to vote for members of the gen eral assembly at the general election to be held on Tuesday. November 5 1912 JOSEPH M. BROWN. Governor. Ry the Governor; PHILIP COOK, Secretary of State. -3-8 It was back in the olden titres that they had to have a person go crying it out If any one had anything to sell or wanted to buy. or to notify the people that so and so had lost this and that. The way was »he only one available It's different now" Your wants can be told to an audience of over 50.000 in this section through a Want Ad in The Georgian No matter what your want is an ad in The Georgian will fill it for vou Georgian Want Ads buy sell, exchange, rent, secure help, find lost articles and countless other things. tice before it. It ought not to be neces sary to invoke congress to get rid of a judge the people do not trust. The peo ple should be able to do it themselves And the great majority of both the bench and bar will privately admit tha> this is so. AU we ask of the voter is to think about the issues. We have made most of them. We provide remedies for evils the other parties provide vague promises to correct them. If our program is given careful thought we shall win And we are going to try to get every voter tn think about it before the end of the cam paign. msn it is REFUSED DIVORCE Judge at Reno Thinks Mrs. Hutt Has Failed to Make Out Case. RENO. NEV.. Sept. 3.—Judge French refused to grant Mrs. Edna G. Hutt a di vorce from her husband, Henry Hutt, the New York artist. Judge French said tne charge of wilful desertion against Hutt was not sustantiated, and Mrs. Hutt's at torney has asked that a date be set when he may introduce further evidence. Judge French has set September 16 as the time for the taking of further depositions in New York. Mrs. Hutt, wearing a dark satin gown, took the stand. She testified her hus band had stayed away nights from the r apartments at No. 342 West Eighty-fifth street, New York, and told how they had quarrelled. Finally, she said, she became in poor health and her doctor recom mended that she go to the seaside. Furniture Was Gone. She went to Narragansett Pier on July 2, 1910, and with the full consent of her husband, she asserted. Hutt went to their New York apartments and took ev erything out of them. When she eamt back from Narragansett Pier, she sain, she found her apartments bare and her husband gone. Mrs. Hutt testified she was compelled to go to Jier aunt's. She declared she had been a dutiful wife, and upon ques tions from Judge French, stated she hail not seen her husband after her returr from the seaside, and that she had not rung him up by telephone. Hutt told her attorneys that he wanter nothing further to do with her. Mrs. Hutt said. There was no possibility of a re conciliation, she felt sure. Mrs. Hutt denied there had been arfy agreement to separate permanently. She described a number of quarrels with het husband, which, she asserted, made hei nervous, and affected her young son. She Was Artist’s Model. Mrs. Hutt, whsoe husband once declare, her more beautiful than the Venus De- Miio. won a suit for separation a yeat ago. An allowance of $l5O a month ali mony was made to her. She came here in January last and has been living with Mrs. Harry Mechiing. daughter of Mira beau L. Towns, of New York Previous to her marriage Mrs. Hutt was Edna Garfield Della Torre. She was noted for her beauty as an artist s mod el and had posed for Charles Dana Gib son, A. B. Wenzel and other artists. The romances that ended in her marriage be gan when she posed for Hutt. Hutt declared that his wife had beer cruel to him and that she had ceased tc be an inspirations for his work. ~ AT THE THEATERS" LYRIC OPENS SEASON WITH BLACKFACE SHOW Tommy Van's popular priced minstrel was greeted by a splendid audience last night at the Lyric. There is nothing startlingly original ir \ an s minstrels, but. every member works hard, and last night's crowd was generous and distributed its applause among the star and his co-workers indiscriminately. In the first part the jokes were good and the songs practically new. and both of these minstrel accessories were well received. Van's “I'm the Guy" was en cored repeatedly and Honey Harris' “Just for a Girl" was well received The soft shoe dancing of Joe Coffman and the clog dancing of Howard Martin both received well earned encores. The second part was an arrangement of vaudeville, -thereby departing from the usual burletta of minstrelsy. This fea ture was very satisfactory. tans minstrels play the week nightie and matinees today, Thursdav and Sat urday. INTEREST IS SHOWN IN “THE BALKAN PRINCESS" Tlie advance sale of seats today for ''The Balkan Princess” promises to ex ceed yesterday's sale. Theatergoers seem to be awake to the fact that this production is of unusual merit and that it is not a No. 2 organization, with an in ferior cast, but that it is a No. 1 pro duction. With two exceptions, every member of the cast has appeared in the initial performances of the production either in London or in this country. The engagement is at the Atlanta Friday and Saturday. GEORGE WILSON MAKES HIT OF FORSYTH BILL The man with the grouch—the man sore with the weather and everybody is particularly invited to see and hear George Wilson on the Forsyth bill this week. For the famous minstrel has ah act which will banish the worst grouch and cause smiles and laughs in the place of frowns. He has a good line of jokes and an inimitable way of telling them and his general talk and appearance are all that can be asked of a minstrel. The second part of his act. a speech to suffering suf fragettes. is equally as entertaining a the first part, and he kept his audienc* in a roar of laughter. And notwlthstanri ing the fact that Mr. Wilson has been before the footlights for many years. !■•’ still retains his good voice and his sing ing is a pleasing part of his act. That his work was appreciated was demon strated by tlie enthusiastic reception which he received. Another pleasing feature of the Forsy ’ bill is tlie act of Carlton and Kay. wl ' sing catchy songs, dance gracefully an 1 pass out musical comedy ideas. Tlie Clarence sisters and brother, bill' as "The Australian Nuggets;” Harry H; ■ man and company in a sketch entitle! "The Merchant Prince,” and Chester Johnstone, on the program as the "king ’ bicyclists,” complete the bill, with tie moving pictures. Each of these acts interesting and entertaining and the et tlre bill shows tHat popular vaudevH " at the Forsyth is just as popular as the shows formerly put on.