Newspaper Page Text
6
POLICEMAN WHO
SLEW MAN FREED
Young Cabinetmaker Is Shot
to Death When He Ignores
Command to Halt.
Policeman E. H Ph ham. who -hot
and killed John R Wright, a young
eabmetniakc . eaii\ yesterday morn
ing when he* attempted to escape from
the rear vard of a house at 5 Johnson
street, was exonerated today by a cot
one s jut)
Parham and ' tfficer V J Bender were
summoned by Henry Panders, a negro,
w ho charged that Wright was trying to
steal his cow. As the policemen ar
rived on the scene Wright fled, and
ignored the policemen's command to
halt.
:F.i ham fl •-.! th’e« shots, the first
two in the air to frighten the tleelng
yont i. and the third a the young man's
eg? I.e bn let. however, entered the
back d::ect : y beneath the right shoul
de ba > and penetrated til' breast
" ight died two hours later in Grady
ho-pita The body was removed to
? r s : nd-: taking establishment
Wr.ght was 'about 24 years old.
TAILOR'S LIFE SAVINGS
LOST BY BABY'S KICK
RIN SHAMTOX. X Y Sept 23.-
I red dollars, the ratings of
ter or •> of John Rrannas. a Polish
' ■ .i babj ■ ar-
riag. t the man s restless c hild today
an* on the city streets. Grannas
- t for years to build his own
tai’or shop and sent his wife to the
•er s c the money tin the way
hbme ’lie money was lost.
The Men Who Succeed
as -■ xcs of la ge, ent**:’prices are met.
on tr-.tr Simeess. todav de-
mand- health To ail is to fail.' It's
>itt<-’ f'Jlv for a man to . ntmre.a ,w,«ak.
run -down, half-alive * and it ion when
Electric slitters will, put njm right on
■ ' Four bottles
did me more real good than any othei
medicine I eve, look '' writes • has H
Allen. Sylvania.' Ga Aftei cars of
suffering with rheumatism, liver trou
ble. Stomach disorders and deranged
kidneys. I am again. thanks to fclectrh
Bitters, sound and well.' Try them
Only 50 cents at ill druggists. •••
(Advertisement I
'■'Were al', medicines. as meritorious
as Chamberlain s Colic, Cholera and
Diarrhoea Remedy the world would lie
much better off and the percentage of
suffe-mg g eal!\ decreased" writes
l.indsu' Scott. Os temp!... Ind. For
•alp bv all dealers (Advt )
$2.50 TO CHATTANOOGA
AND RETURN.
The W. & A. R. R. will
sell round trip tickets At
lanta to Chattanooga and
return for train leaving At
lanta at 8:35 a. m, Thurs
day, September 26. 1912,
good returning not later
than train arriving Atlanta
7:35 p. m„ Sunday, Septem
ber 29, 1912.
C. E. HARMON.
General Passenger Agent.
ONLY ONE HEADING'
IS NECESSARY NOW
PRESENT IT AT GEORGIAN'S OF
FICE AND. WITH A LITTLE
CASH. GET AN ATLAS.
The Georgian office has been con-
Riatui.ip-d on every aide on account of
Its- handsome off. r of the best book of
r. feren. e published in exchange for six
conse. utive headings and a small ex
pense bonus.
\ g'eat many people eagerly grasped
that opportunity.
The Atlas distribution is to close in
a few days, however, and In older to
bring it to a brisk windup and give Its
readers mot. benefit than ever. Till
Georgian lias abandoned the six head
ings plan, and now only one heading
is required
I o -ave time, it is said, is to length
en life.
Here is . . hat e for you to save time
and trouble also
No on. .an afford to overlook this
opportunity to in. i*. as, his earning ca
pacity as the result of the mini num
effort required to secure one heading
and the s ight expense of the bonus
money.
If you take .dvantage of this off, r.
'ou wi ' ..cm more neat ' to getting
somet it foi nothing than you ev.i
did befon ot probably ever will again
Do not delay , as tile . 'os. is only a
few days away
Clip the heading and profit bv the
alx-in-one proposition.
Xsk your friend that got one of the
books about it
Th.n p.iiit by your tardiness and
get one for one heading.
All explained under the Atlas ad
vertisement planted .-ewh.lv in this
Swj | p
(Advertisement »
f REAL N.
/jE JUCOCOAIX
| THE PROCTER COAL \
I COMPANY
\ Toth Phones 1672 /
\ 359 DE JR 1
SUES POWER COMPANY FOR
DAMAGE CAUSED BY A DAM
JACKSOX. GA.. Sept. 23.—J. L.
Rarne.s has tiled suit against the Cen
tral Georgia Power Company in the city
< ourt of Jackson fm SIB,OOO. The suit
grows out of alleged damage to health
and property of the plaintiff on ac
count ®f the back water from the dam
of the defendant on the Ocmulgee river
The ease will come up for trial at the
November term of the city court. This
is the largest suit yet filed in the local
courts.
Chamberlin-Johnson-Dußose Company— Atlanta-New York-Paris— Chamberlin-Johnson-Dußose Company
■
IgUr 11 11111111 “S® I \ XV.- I \
r -whKh \ \ K o
ft \ aw
A ■ v/' nl \
// w < xj ///// \ \ A
J-’ 1 C* 'I 'X 'i- h.".' 1 i
J | [/1
\ . S=T' - K A (/ \ V* Vi if -MVaV/ i lc I f 3k-
1 f) 1 ' w
fxL4 / IBM
i w \ r bLX
/ iA»/ / ru/ '
1 \/ ® [/
Not as advertisements or fashion papers say they are, not
as ‘ word comes from Paris” but as the Suits and Dresses that
come from Paris say they are, as a woman’s own eyes will tell
her tomorrow, when she sees the fashions as they really are.
And the fashions this autumn are worth knowing!
I hey represent more than woman’s instinctive desire for
becoming dress. I'hey have a deeper meaning, a deeper inter
est attaches to them. The artists that evolved them were in
spired by the splendor and glamour that surrounded the courts
ol the Louis ol Prance. T here is history in the new fashions
and romance; the unhappy story of Marie Antoinette comes to
mind, and ol Catherine de Medici. And with the heritage of such
history and romance and lavish beauty of dress is it any won
der that artists oi the France of today have given to the world
the glorious fashions of this autumn?
-GRIZZLY BEAR” DANCER
IS DYING AFTER FIGHT
CHICAGO, Sept. 23. Sigmund
Youngvist is dying in the county hos
pital today because he danced the
"Grizzly Rear.” His feat was per
formed at a Polish society dance. Pa
trolman Weibush ordered him to stop.
Youngvist continued ’until he was ex
pelled from the hall. A few minutes
later, with half a dozen friends, he ap
peared. There was a fight. In a strug
gle with Weibush, Youngvist was shot
through the head.
What Every Woman Wants To Know===The Fashions
Chamberlin=Johnson=Dußose Co.
' THE AUsAM A GEORGIAN AND NEVTS.MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 23. 1912.
MYSTERIOUS MURDER
BANKRUPTS HOSTELRY
NEW YORK, Sept. 23'—Miss Juliart
Curran was murdered mysteriously at
Hotel Boulevard a few weeks ago.
Reinhold Russe, the hotel proprietor, is
now a bankrupt. His petition blames
the tragedy.
JACKSON CUTS TAX RATE.
JACKSON, GA., Sept. 23. —City coun
cil has fixed the tax rate for 1912 at
$13.90 per SI,OOO assessed valuation
Last year the rate was sls. The taxa
ble values of the city total $1,004,413
TWO WOMEN HELP TAKE
THREE HOLD-UPS TO CITY
i SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 23.—While
attempting to hold up the entire town
: of Plainfield, five miles south of here,
1 today', three robbers lost- their nerve
and surrendered to two men and two
women.
Mrs. Henry Purinton, Mrs. Anna
Stanley, James Purlnton and Shorty
Thomas fired on the trio and the rob
bers surrendered.
It would be odd were they anything but gorgeous!
But what are the fashions, you will ask
And we will answer -BEAUTIFUL. But to the
essentials, the form of the beauty, we will not attempt. It is
too varied. It is not to be measured by words and phrases.
But your eyes will tell you why this suit and that suit are so
striking and this dress and that dress so smart.
And so you are invited to the suit department tomorrow.
Come expecting more than you have ever expected of us, and we
warrant you will even then be surprised.
The display is as authentic of the Paris fashions as Paris
could make it.
It is Atlanta s authoritative display of what the fashions
really are.
FORMER ATLANTAN DIES.
LEAVING SIOOOOO ESTATE
LA GRANGE, GA., Sept. 23.—The
body of W. B. Meetze, aged about 55
years, yvho died at his home at Gab
bettville, Troup county. Saturday after
noon. has been sent to Lexington. S. C.,
for burial. Mr. Meetze was among the
most prominent business men of his
section of the county. He left an es
tate estimated at about SIOO,OOO. ,He
owned a ginnery, mercantile business
and mill, in addition to farm propertv
around Gabbettville. He was a South
< arolinan by birth. He moved to At
lanta about nine years ago and about
OF FIRST IMPORTANCE
YOUR SUIT
M here will your fancy lead you in the questinn
of your suit, where there is so much distinction
and smartness? .The pictures here are not fanciful
drawings, nor are they taken from a fashion
hook. They are from our fashion display. The
are accurate copies of suits you will see here to
morrow. They show in outline the style tenden
cies of this season. The hats arc from our milli
nery department.
The figure sitting is of a model of French un
cut velour, a shade and a material in high favor.
Its trimmings of hand-embroidery are done in a
deeper shade of blue. The draped skirt is shown
here in its real .beauty.
The figure in the center shows the lines of one
of the correct cut-away coats as Paris has decreed,
also the still narrow but new'skirts. This is of
brpadcloth in a deep olive shade. The hand-em
broidery on the side back is in gold; the shawl col
lar and the turnback cuffs show a touch of amber
velvet.
The figure standing is of a Paris model—a
three-piece dress of black charmeuse. combined
with velvet.
However, its richness can not be shown in the black and
white of a newspaper. It is one of the most typical of ths
fall fashions—the cutaway eoat. the draped skirt, the- lace
edged ‘sleeves and revers. The collar of white faille silk is
overlaid with hand-embroidered gold medallions.
But it seems almost unfair to picture only three suits
where so many are worthy.
Those of zibeline .in solid and two-toned colorings,
soft and silky in finish, “roughish” in looks; basket weaves,
diagnosis, eponge and serges for .the practical and every dav
service. These in navy and brown, and taupe and mole
skin. and a new and unnamed shade of blue that is just dif
ferent from the Copenhagen.
They are all here awaiting your pleasure.
And the Dresses
The originators of fashions have taken as their
own not only the dress of that most luxurious pe
riod of France, but have gone to the Orient for col
ors. And you shall be the beneficiary! The exqui
site lines of the French, the draped skirt, the Robes
pierre collar, the 'lacy sleeves—all the smart
ness of the Paris designers—worked out in amber
and rose and old blue and turquoise anil a shade
of green, to which attaches the name of those who
first used it. It is (’allot green. These in char
meuse,' charmeuse crepe and velvets combined with
charmeuse.
And the dresses for street wear, the heavy
looking but softly woven materials, wool eponge.
serge, diagonal weaves, Bedford cord, velvet, vel
veteen and charmeuse, in vanilla brown. in
taupe, in moleskin, in navy, in black and white
mixtures.
If we could show in detail any one of many
hundreds of dresses we could better impress you
with our right to claim this as the authentic show
ing of the Fall Fashions.
five years ago went to ■
is survived by his wife a' ' H ’
Mrs. Annie Daniel, and two L dauß!1 ’ , ‘ r '
and Earl Meetze. 0 80ns ' ' v H.
“I was cured of rtiarvk
dose of Chamberlain s ‘('o“k a r*
and Diarrhoea Remedy " wZ
Gebhardt. Oriole. Pa. The ?7 M E
ing better. For sale by all fle a 'Z. n °?.;
(Advertisement.)
BIRMINGHAM AND~RETURN
$2.50, Thursday, Sept. 26th. 19 P
7:00 a. m., return limit Sept 29th
1912. SOUTHERN RAILWAY