Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, October 25, 1912, HOME, Page 4, Image 4
4 PDLICEH IE SIX FROM FUMES J. L. Huggins and Family Are Routed From Sleep Just Be fore Roof Falls. Sleeping with fl m> - eating their way to their bedsides. tlm family of J. I- Huggins, of 33" P m ■■ DeLeon avenue, was roused this morning by Policemen Ranker and Wood just a few mom' nts before the r» f fell in. The p.>,i enim had, to break through a window to warn to • sleeping familv, and Mr. and Mrs. Huggins and theii four children lushed out in their night clothes. The fifteen-year-old daughter of'the family ran out then remembered that three younger children were still in the house. Without hesitation, she plunged back into the dense smoke and fought her way to them. All were brought safely out, although not even their clothes were saved. The policemen were passing by on their bicycles when they saw a light from the big apartment house Mr. Hug gins Is building. The Huggins resi dence had been moved to the rear of the site for the apartment house. Sud denly the flames broke through the roof of the house, and the policemen rushed to warn the inmates. None was hurt, though the house was totally destroyed. The family spent the rest of the night at the homes of neigh bors. KENTUCKIAN SAYS HE KILLED FATHER ABUSING MOTHER LOUISVILLE, KY„ Oct 25.—William ; Schuler, 22 years old, has admitted to the I police that he was responsible for the I death of his father. Joseph Schuler, on I August 2, 1911. He says his father had i been abusing his mother, he tried to stop him and in a fight struck him in the head with a brick. His father ran upstairs after him, then fell back and died. Schuler, who is under arrest, says his conscience has been troubling him incess antly and his grep.' hope 1* that his father's death will bo found to b.-.ve be*n due to the fall and not to the blow. PLACE FOUND TO CURE JAG IN SEVEN MINUTES NEW YORK, Oct. 25. Broadway is overjoyed over the accidental discovery in Sanbenito in the Rio Grande valley that seven minutes’ confinement in a cooler will cure the worst kind of a jag. |ZSA Your Dollar Will Do W Triple Duty At This Sale! W I DUFFY’S Mill Outlet SaIe=SATURDAY==MiII Outlet Sale at DUFFY’S I Hosiery Specials SuiiS,Skirt and DIOSS Spec’ls Be Sure MILLINERY SPECIALS Dress Goods Specials 9.Z PiUr i! Jad . n ‘ S ? I X Sll ’V lo^ Pa i i r V i 9c flltrl C - 50 bolts best Serge Dress Goods, yard . 10c 750 P< '" -jle All w ° ol Ser S e Dressesss.oo 0610 wOHIC 500 hand-made Hats (worth d’ble) $1.48 75 bolts all-wool Serge, $1 valuesoc 1,000 pairs Silko Socks for men; come and see a 50c All Sill ' Dresses $7.98 1 500 hand-made Hats (worth double) 48c 36 bolts all-wool Flannel 25c BI All-wool Serge Skirts, listen $2.49 250 Paris models (worth double) $3.50 25 bolts Wool Suiting, yardlsc —— All-wool Panama Skirts $3.50 1,000 Misses’and Boys’Hats (worth double)soc Underwear Specials superb suits, the latests6.9B 2.50 tine plumes, listenso c Shirt and Other Specials Children's and Misses' Fleeced Pants, pair 12c Extra supertine Suits $9.98 116 Ostrich Feathers $1.49 375 Heavy Work Shirts 25c gP ( hildren s and Misses Pants and Vestslsc Tailored Shirtwaists 50c 750 Baby Caps, silk2sc 720 Dress Shirts, now 50c IB Ladies’ Heavy Ribbed Vests and Pants2sc .... . . 1 xr\ *1 aa .. .1 7k„ All-silk Shirtwaists $1.98 875 Baby Velvet Hats 75c Overalls, $1.0( grade H Ladies fine Union Suits 50c x -aa -nr 1 m r«. • trip 000 pairs Work Gloves, listen, pairloc SUIT SPECIALS Underwear Specials Qlinr a OiiuL FOR BOYS FOR BOYS AND GIRLS OlltJL x 1,000 Boys’ Suits, some 750 Boys’Fleeced Shirts 1 1 O I serge ’ SoUle elleviots ; aud Bl'awers; just the OOFOiBI O F ,r L Wml mLb I Aid thing for „ w , WM 1 ONLY 75 PAIRS OF M \tm3 P $1.44 25c M THIS SHOE IN THE Ml W 5,000 pairs shoes, worth no. blv 5,000 pairs shoes, LOT; TANS ANO consisting of La- VISIT consisting of La- MjA dies, Gents and die’s, Gents’ and Velvet k _X Children’s, on sale ® Il H Children’s, on sale $1.50 J R ° W at t *' e * r DURING THSS SALE now at their per pair regular price. corner Forsyth and Mitchell Sts. regular price. ■ ■■■ NdUuWwMMBOKMR H HIGHLAND AVENUE’S PEOPLE SEE HOPE OF STREET BY YULETIDE Highland avenue citizens at last see prospects of having the paving of that stri ct completed in time for Christmas deliveries, the contractors having put a large force at work yesterday, with the announcement that the paving would be pushed on to completion. This was re ported at the meeting of council yes terday afternoon, when the street com mittee recommended that the Nichols Contra, ting Company be given 131) days extension of time for this work, dating from September 12. The recommendation was adopted, in spite of a fight wag(>! against it by Cotmi ilman Thumps m and Aiderman Maddox, the latter a contractor who handles a number of big contracts. The rumor that citizens of Highland ave nue would enjoin the city from extend ing the time was not followed by such action. The street committee reported favor ably on eight petitions for excavations of streets by corporations which desire to lay pipes and car tracks. GEORGIA STATE FAIR ENDS TODAY: WAS BIG SUCCESS MACON, GA., Oct. 25.—The Georgia State fair comes to a close tonight, aft er a most successful season. The at tendance for the ten days will average more '.han 9,000 per day, and as a re sult a small profit will be realized. The attendance record was not only broken this year, but there were more exhibits than ever before assembled. More than sll,oou in cash prizes have been award ed, the largest being the first prize of $2,000 to the first ptemium winner in the agricultural department. CUSMRETSTONIOHT! IF BILIOUS, CONSTIPATED, HEADACHY UNO SICK Turn the rascals out —the headache,and fermenting food and that misery biliousness, indigestion, constipation, making gas, take the excess bile from . . . . . , r , your liver and carry off the decomposed the Sick, sour stomach and foul matter constipatl()n p ‘ oigon turn them out tonight with < ascarets. from the bowels. Then you will feel Millions of men and women take agreat. Cascaret now and then and never know A Cascaret tonight will straighten the misery caused by a lazy liver,you out by morning—a 10-cent box clogged bow els or an upset stomach. keeps your head clear, stomach sweet, Don't put in another day of distressliver and bowels regular and you feel -wake up r< freshed and feel fine. Letcheerful and bully for months. Don't Case.arotH cleanse and sweeten yourforget the children -their little insides stomach; remove the sour, undigested need a good, gentle cleansing, too. CANDY IO CENT BOXES-ANY DRUG STORE Wl-IN• ALSO £5 Qc 50 CENT HOX.ES- -- THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1912. YEAR’S BUILDING NOW 08,1)113 October Showing Is Already Nearly $3,000,000, Banner Month of the Year. Atlanta's building figures have climb ed to date during October to $2,743,- 481, by far the greatest total of any month in the year 1912. The figures have been boosted by the issuance of permits for $2,450,000 in the Healy building at Forsyth and Walton streets, the Hurt building at Edgewood ave nue and Exchange place, and an $850,- 000 permit for work on the new court house at South Pryor and East Hunter streets, and the only other months that approximate these figures were Apiil, with $1,135,- 396, and July, .with the Albert Howell apartment at the corner of Peachtree and Ponce DeLeon, with $1,039,551. The total for the year to date is $8,459,583, distributed among the months of 1912 as follows: January, $294,295; February, $402,337; March, $419,050; April, $1,135,396; May. $788,089; June, $589,538; July, $1,039,551; August, $478,- 159; September, $568,587; October (to date). $2,743,481. GIRL, SHINING SHOES ON WAGER,PAYS COST OF TOUR OF COUNTRY MONTGOMERY, ALA., Oct. 25. Capitol officials were startled yesterday when a winsome, young woman called and requested that she be permitted to shine their boots. She proved to be Miss Evelyn Altofair, originally of Nashville, Tenn., who started out from Mobile six months ago on a “shoe-shin ing” tour of the United States to win a wager of $1,500 and convince the world that a woman can do anything she set tler mind to. Under the agreement, she is to go into every state in the Union, making her living throughout by blacking shoes. She was r cently in Mississippi and shined the shoes of the Miif-issipp! gov ernor, for which she received 75 cents. She must not earn muney otherwise. AGED WOMAN IS KILLED BY AUTO IN LOUISVILLE LOUISVILLE, KY., Oct. 25.—Mrs. Ida Biggs, 76 years of age, was run down and killed at Eighth and Broadway by the automobile of J. L. Bullock, a local lumber man, who was driving it, early today. We Always Endeavor to Pro mote the Interests of Our De positors. In addition to providing customers with abso lute safety and painstaking, individual service, the Management will be pleased, at any time, to render to those seeking advice on financial mat ters, such assistance as is within their power. This interest in the welfare of our depositors has always been so closely allied with our regular routine work, as to be easily classed as a very important and influential branch of our service. Such intelligent advice combined with our ability to financially assist our customers in the promotion and development of their business en terprises, recommends this bank to those who need or desire HELP in their business. THIRD National Bank Capital and Surplus $1,700,000.00 FRANK HAWKINS President JOHN W. GRANT . . .Vice President JOS. A, M’CORD Vice President THOMAS C. ERWIN Cashier R. W. BYERS .... Assistant Cashier W. B. SYMMERS .... Asst. Cashier A. M. BERGSTROM ..Asst. Cashier A. J, HANSELL Asst. Cashier M’CLURE, REPENTANT IN CELL, FEARFUL OF FATE FROM SHOOTING AUGUSTA, GA., Oct. 25.—J. H. Mc- Clure. the young Georgia railroad en gineer from Atlanta, who shot Lucile Harrison in the restricted district yes terday afternoon, frankly savs he knows he has gotten himself into very serious trouble “I did not intend to kill the woman,” he said in his prison cell, “and no one knows how deeply penitent I am. I did not intend to do the woman any harm —God knows X didn’t. But that explanation, I fear, will not satisfy the law and the public. I was drinking in Fannie Young's resort, and I know I had no business being there; but I was thebe just the same, and see what it has cost me.” The general opinion is that the grand jury, which is now in session, will in dict McClure. THE TEST OF AN EGG Is the eating. If they taste right, they are fresh country eggs. If they taste wrong, they are cold storage. You can get fresh eggs at the Cash Grocery Co., 118 Whitehall St. (Advt.) , Jj \ fK \®* \ “Ml That Can Be Desired" You soon lapse into that compensating way of paying in full the compliment deserved, when you wear MUSE Shoes. How many of you have reached this earth ly state of beatitude? Just as many women as have walked in Muse Shoes Such statement has its foundation in our experience with men, women and shoes. We’ve fitted many women. We’ve heard the expression very many times. We’ve fitted many women very many times over. That’s why. The shoe and the fit leave nothing to be desired. All advanced styles All Standard models All Leathers— all sizes All widths $3.50, $4, $5, $6 GEO. MUSE CLOTHING CO.