Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, November 18, 1912, HOME, Image 16

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16 THE ATT ANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. READ FOR PROFIT— -GEORGIAN WANT ADS— USE FOR RESULTS MONDAY. NOVEMBER 18, 1912. Real Estate For Sale Real Estate For Sale. EAST LAKE ROAD AT TTTE southwest corner of East Lake road and T upelo street we have a lot 200x372 for $3,250. It is a beautiful building site, just three blocks from en trance to Country club. The lot runs away back into an oak grove; sewers and water can be obtained. It would be the stroke of wisdom for someone Io buy this for a home and have a house sitting back 100 feet off the road. FORREST & GEORGE ADAIR THIS AD CARRIES BARGAINS ' ONLY i PKJ» FOOT. Peachtree lot; near Pine street. , It’s cheaper than any lot this side of Pine street. Terms to suit. S4O PER FOOT, on West Peachtree street. We have this for a few days. It’s a gem. Terms. PONCE DE LEON avenue home: west of Jackson street, for $12,000. on reasonable terms. Do you ..am city or eight room*'. all conveniences, large lot? The lot alone is worth the price you will have to pay. This place has a large garage and stable com bined: tile drive and large garden of flowers in rear. We can not tel! you about this over the phone. It only takes $2,500 cash to handle this and assume loan, and it’s going to be sold. $3,600- —flow about a nice bungalow in Druid Hills section? We have one at this price; has bath, gas and electricity; new, on lot 50x110. No loan, and terms of S4OO cash, balance $25 per month. This beats renting. $250 PER FOOT. Edgewood avenue, close in. Here is the place to double your cash before next spring. Only requires S4,(XX) cash, balance one and two years. G. R. MOORE & COMPANY 14(19 CANDLER BLDG. IVY 4978. EIGHTH STREET BUNGALOW—S4,2SO. NEAR North Boulevard, we have a new 6-room bungalow which is jam-up in every way. Furnace heat, splendid lot, right off car line with ten-min ute schedule. SSOO cash and the balance to suit. See this place, as they are scarce on the north side at this price. TENTH STREET BUNGALOW. NOT far from West Peachtree street. This beauty has 6 large rooms and sleeping porch, is new and up to date in every way, elevated lot 45 by 160 to alley. Tenth street will soon ho one of the choicest streets for homes on the north side. Price $6.000,0n terms. THOMSON & LYNES 18 and 20 Walton Street. Both Phones 458. Main 1804. Atlanta 999. MERCER W. GILMER No. 8 Auburn Avenue. STORE AND COTTAGE $2,000—111 health compels owner to sacrifice. The business will pay you your lay-out in short time. SI,OOO WILL establish you on the very best corner investment on the north side. ’Tie worth SIOO a foot now. The present is there. The future Is here. Emergency compels sacrifice at $75 a foot. After the SI,OOO, make your own terms. $5,250 —North wide, 7-room home, neighborhood Al. We avoid advertising if not worth the money, and feel that our integrity is at stake when we say; "This is a bargain." INVESTMENT—White property, two houses, 14 rooms, renting for SSO month. Right here in walking distance. SEJM I-CENTRAL— If you’ll look at this, compare values per foot, you’ll find a money-maker. However, $34 a month comes in regularly. $5,500; SSOO cash turns the trick, A 12-room house, subject to big enhancement by a little improvement $4,500 will take this. Will exchange. G. T. R. FRASER “Ruys and Sells Real Estate.” 19 AUBURN AVE., T. M. C. A. BLDG. BELL 1817 IVT HAPEVILLE ACREAGE. ABOUT 34 ACRES of good land adjoining eastern limits of Hapeville. Fine spring and 8 acres of bottom land, oak grove and a bargain at $4,500. Might exchange for income property WEST END. A VERY nice 11-room home, with hardwood floors and two baths; hot house and servants’ house; on lot 66x150; for $7,500. Might exchange for smaller home in Inman Park. West End or north side. Loan of $3,000. ’ MAKE OFFER BOULEVARD TERRACE, half block .iff North Boulevard, on cherted street. Splendid residence section; six-room, modern | cottage; lot 50x185. Property worth $3,750. Price cut to ' .*3,200. but owner must sell; so make us offer. Some one will get ■ a big bargain. Why not you" The owner’s loss is your gain. Keep this ad. See us. RAMSEY. GREEN & ANDERSON _ 214 EMPIRE BLDG. MAIN 66, ATLANTA 344 FOR SALK BY PRETTY Lt ITS OR BUNGALOW » ir-' *.-r »' have what you want’i Cjr J-L £l, N Fl ’“' KE DRIVE. we have two x 1 *-* beautiful shaded lots; east front mid R- » - KAL I V CfA \ v rx \ ON PRETTIEST L<'T tn West End park. V J VI I- Y eoni-r.omaiK splendid view, six-rvin EMPIRIC BUILDIN •: REAL ESTATE, RENTING. I, .ANS. Phones 1599. Get a One-Acre Lot I IN BEAUTIFUL | “BONNIE CREST" For SIO.OO Cash and SIO.OO Monthly Only 20 minutes’ ride from the center of Atlanta. Bonnie Crest is part of the Moore prop erty, situated about 5 miles northwest from the Atlanta postoffice, on the Atlanta Elec tric Line to Marietta, Ga. It is in Fulton county, right at the junction of three of the most prominent highways out of Atlanta. It is in line for tremendous future develop ment. All lots are elevated and covered with beautiful shade trees. 100 to 210 feet front by 200 to 400 feet deep. A Bonnie Crest lot is the ideal plate for a suburban home. Many of Atlanta’s most prominent cit izens have homes on this carline and further out than Bonnie Crest. If you want a delightful suburban home site, buy in Bonnie Crest. If you want to save $lO a month, put it where it will pay you big dividends. Buy in “Bonnie Crest” Buy It. Buy It Now While It’s Cheap ONLY $450 UP There are only eleven of these elegant lots, and they are all bargains. Come and get one today.. BAILEY & ROWLAND 1520 Fourth National Bank Building Phone M. 3217 BATH TUB TRUST OWED WIT Supreme Court Affirms Former Dissolution Decree—Fifty Defendants Hit. WASHINGTON, Nov. 18.—The su preme court today reaffirmed the de cision of the circuit court of appeals, dissolving the bath tub trust. Fifty defendants were named by the government in its bill asking for the dissolution of the trust, 16 corporations and 34 individuals. It was allowed that the defendants owned 195 of the 250 furnaces in the country and through re sale agreements were in combination with 400 jobbers, four-fifths of the total number in the United States. The combination was brought about by means of patents on a. dredger, an implement used for sifting the white powder over the articles to be coated with porcelain. Ostensibly as a royalty for the use of the patent, the manu facturers agreed to pay to the asso ciation a fee of $125 for each furnace and to subscribe to the trade agree ment not to sell "seconds,” not to sell a jobber who did not sign a trade agree ment, and not to sell below certain prices. A portion of this fee was to be returned after a certain length of time, but an amount varying between $40,000 and $50,000 remained in the hands of the officers of the association consti tuting practically cash bail or guaran ty for the observance of the agreement. Similarly by means of a rebate system a certain sum constituting a cash bail given by the jobbers remained in the hands of the association. The main question at issue in the case was whether by the manipulation of a patent a monopoly could be built up which under other circumstances would constitute a restraint of trade. The “trust” laid stress upon the pat ent feature of the case and insisted that the alleged combination or asso ciation had benefited the consumer and reduced prices. The circuit court of appeals decided in favor of the gov ernment and ordered the trust dissolv ed and the trust appealed to the su preme court. ASQUITH ARRANGES NEW PROGRAM FOR HOME RULE BATTLE LONDON, Nov. 18. —A compromise by which a new financial clause will be attached to the home rule bill was pro posed "by Premier Asquith in the house of commons when parliament reassem bled this afternoon and was accepted by the house without a division. By this compromise the government narrowly averted th® shoals which threatened to wreck the Asquith min istry and postpone indefinitely autono my for Ireland. Addressing the house of commons upon his proposition to rescind last Monday’s vote against the original financial clause Premier Asquith said: “The government believed that was the simplest and most direct way out of the parliamentary difficulty. As a com promise, however, the government sug gests that the whole financial plan be negatived and a new clause be set up in the committee on finance. This pro gram would be: Consideration of the new clause in committee on Tuesday; report of the committee on Wednesday; debate on the committee's l report on Thursday. The opposition leaders then agreed to the program and a vote to kill the old financial clause and all action taken on it carried. DOCTORS MEET AT WAYCROSS. WAYCROSS, GA., Nov. 18.—Today and tomorrow the Eleventh District Medical association is holding the last convention of 1912 in Waycross. The meeting is at tended by about 100 delegates. Two At lanta physicians. Dr. Montague L. Boyd and Dr. H. F. Harris, deliver addresses during the convention. What have you lost? Try a three-time ad in the "Lost and Found” columns of The Georgian and recover your articles DILLIN-MORRIS CO. 609-10 Atlanta National Bank Bldg. Both Phones 4234. Go norarAULwmJ TWO-STORY SLATE-ROOF HOI SIL. <*N LARGE Lo ! . WE HAVE A SPECIAL PRICK ON 'PUTS FOR A FEW DAYS. TERMS, SSOO CASH. 1 KILL ON IMIS riK $2,000 FOR SIX-ROOM COTTAGE. CLOSE IN. ON THE SOUTH SIDF: TERMt^^O^LCKtN 8 PER MONTH: MODERN AND IN PERFECT REPAIR SIO,OO0 —ON COURTLAND STREET. RIGHT AT ELLIS WF HAVE \ GOOD TEN-ROOM TWO-STORY HOUSE, ON i/tS9BYI2BTOALLEY RENT PROPO^It/oN PE GOOD^TERMS° U CAN NOT AFFORD ™ OVERLOOK THIS Decatur Street 40x120 FEET, about 100 feet west of Hilliard, on the* north side of Decatur street. $l5O per foot. This is a good place to get in on the ground floor. J. H. EWING 116 LOBBY, CANDLER BUILDING. Ivy 1839. Atlanta 2865. FOR SALE j- TT A T t Large lot, 103x150 feet. Terms, || 1 l—l |\j I cash and S3O a month. No loan ' I V.Z JL JL X x I . bargain. No. 21 Pierce St., near Ste art Ave. WOODSIDE TH,,s,I,L _ THE HOUSE you will build, buy or rent will not be a modern home unless it i s wired for Electricity. THIO OFFICIALS FILE EXPENSES Sheriff and Solicitor Comply With County Commission Or der-Tax Officers Fight. Only two of the seven Fulton county officials affected by the salary act of 1911, which will become operative on January 1, 1913, have filed a schedule of office expenses with the county com. mission in response to the commis sion’s order. These two are Sheriff c. W. Mangum, who sent his statement calling for $55,000 on Saturday, and So licitor Hugh Dorsey, who sent in his statement today. Tax Collector Stew'art and Tax Re ceiver Armistead have notified the commission that they will not comply with the order. Judge 'Wilkinson, of the court of ordinary, is on the fence not sure whether he will or will not comply with the order. Neither Ar nold Broyles, clerk, nor Lowry Arnold solicitor of the criminal court, have made public their attitude. According to the provisions of the act, upheld in a resolution adopted No. vember 1 by the county commission, the statements are due in the office of the commission on or before November 20. In case the statements do not ap pear within that time, the delinquent officials will be served with mandamus procedings to compel them to comply, SUPREME COURT OF GEORGIA Judgments Affirmed. Hall vs. Hilley; from Polk superior court —Judge Price Edwards. W H Tra wick, Fielder & Fielder, for plaintiff in error. John K. Davis, W. W. Munch contra. Hinesley et al. vs. Stewart et al.; from Carroll—Judge R. W. Freeman. S. Hol derness, W. F. Brown, for plaintiff in error. W. C. Wright, Leon Hood, contra Aiken et al. vs. Weldon et al.; from Fayette—Judge R. T. Daniel. W. B Hol lingsworth, J. W. Culpepper. Aldine Chambers, for plaintiffs in error. J \v Wise, contra. Monk vs. Foy; from Tift—Judge W (•; Thomas. J. J. Murray, for plaintiff in error. Gainesville Railway and Power Com pany vs. lowa Gold Mining Companj; from Lumpkin—Judge J. B. Jones. II H Dean, for plaintiff in error. O. J. billy, W. A. Charters, contra. Whaley vs. Rear; from Whitfield- Judge A. W. Fite. George G. Glenn, for plaintiff in error. Maddox, McCann Shumate, contra. Short vs. Dowling, mayor, et al.; from Colquitt—Judge Thomas. Alfred It Kline, for plaintiff in error. J. D. Mc- Kenzie, contra. Winn, administrator, vs. Bridges; from Polk—Judge Price Edwards. J. S. Jones, for plaintiff in error. W. T. Roberts, J, R. Hutcheson, contra. Judgments Reversed. Central Georgia Power Company vs, Cornwell: from Jasper—Judge J. B. Park. Walter T. Johnson, Greene F. Johnson, Hatcher & Smith, for plaintiff in error. W. S. Florence, contra. Worthy et al. vs. Farmers’ Life Con federation et al.; from Fulton-Judge Pendleton. Henry Walker, for plaintiffs in error. John F. Methvln, W. H. Ter rell, contra. Smith, executrix, vs. Burrus, executor; from Richmond—Judge H. C. Hammond. William K. Miller, J. S. Watkins, for plaintiff in error. Henry C. Ronej. con tra. Announcement. In some of the cases that were dis missed during the call on Tuesday last, motions to reinstate have been made. In each of such cases the court has directed that a written motion be filed with the clerk, and notice be given to adverse counsel; and that such motions be heard and considered on Monday, November 18, at 9 o'clock a. m. SUPREME COURT OF GEORGIA. Judgments Affirmed. Stephenson vs Empire Life Insur ance Company, from Muscogee supe rior court, Judge Gilbert. Hatcher & Hatcher, for plaintiff in error; Charlton E. Battle, Howell Hollis, contra. Johnson vs. Williams et al., from Bui. loch, Judge Rawlings. J. J. E. Ander son. for plaintiff in error; Fred T. La nier, contra. State of Georgia vs. Western and At lantic Railroad Company, from Fulton, Judge Pendleton. T. S. Felder, attor ney general, James K. Hines, for plain tiff in error; Tye, Peeples & Jordan, Claude Waller, contra. Judgments Reversed. Busbee et al., administrators, vs. Chapman, from Dooly, Judge Whipple. Joseph H. Hall, Busbee & Busbee, for plaintiffs in error; J. T. Hill, J. W. Den nard, contra. Charleston and Western Carolina i Railway Company vs. Union Ware i house and Compress Company, from ! Richmond, Judge Hammond. William IK. Miller, for plaintiff in error; William j H. Barrett, contra. •