Newspaper Page Text
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Tl I !•: ATT. \ Yl A < ■ fcUKtilA N AMi,\hU\ I II l KS5DA Y, \ I'K11. N. UU3.
GLOBETROTTER,
LEFT MILLIONS.
C APTAIN ALFRED
BROWN, who is sought
here, to be told he is heir to
millions in England.
Builders of Atlanta
English Army Officer, Reported
Heir to Fortune, Thought To
Be in Atlanta Now.
The Atlanta police to-day joined In
a world-wide search for Alfred James
Edward Brown, lately a captain in the
British royal navy, who, while walk
ing around the world to earn a wager
of a few thousands, has, according to
a rather dubious looking letter
received to-day, inherited $25,000 in
cash and estates In England valued
at several millions of dollars.
Brown was In Atlanta a few weeks
ago, and Chief Beavers, In a letter re
ceived from Samuel Irwin, of Bris
tol, England, this morning, is asked
to make every effort to find him. Mr,
Irwin writes that Brown's mother,
Mrs. Trevillyien Brown, died in Eng
land three months ago and left her
eon 5,000 pounds sterling and the es-
SPECIAL PULLMAN
SLEEPING CAR
ATLANTA TO MACON
CENTRAL OF
GEORGIA RAILWAY
APRIL 21-22 23 24 25 26.
To accommodate those who may
attend the grand opera in Atlanta
and wish to return to Macon after
the performance, the Central of
Georgia Railway will operate a
Pullman sleeping car from Atlan
ta to Macon on train No. 8, April
21 to 26, inclusive. Train No. 8,
scheduled to leave Atlanta at 11:45
p. m., will, on the above dates,
leave Atlanta Terminal Station
12:01 a. m. This car will be open
for occupancy at 10 p. m. Berths
In this car may be reserved in
advance at Central of Georgia of
fices in Macon or Atlanta.
W. 11. FOGG,
D. P. A.
tates of Squire Montiugel Trevill
yien, valued at millions. The land is
located in Belmont. Bristol and
Gloucester, England.
Canadian Attorneys Search,
The law firm of Wilson & McCon
nell, of Toronto, Canada, is also In
terested in the search for Brown, and
have notified Chief Beavers that they
have $8,000 with which to pay the ex-
I>enses of the quest and send Brown
bark to England to take ci» irge of
his property.
Brown left Nome, Alaska, several
months ago, having made a wager
with friends that he could walk
around the world in a certain length
of time. The wager was for $3,989.
He has been trailed all over England,
Scotland and Ireland and European
countries, and across the Atlantic to
America. The trail lead to Atlanta,
where it was lost.
Probably in Atlanta Now.
It is thought he Is still in this city.
He was here several weeks ago, and
at that time said he expected to re
main here some time, recuperating
from a broken arm he suffered when
he fell off a bridge while crossing In
diana.
The Georgian printed several sto
ries about Brown and his travels at
the time. He is described as being 55
years old, military bearing,, wearing
a khaki suit and an army hat, 5 feet
7 1-2 inches tall, blue eyes, Roman
nose, light mustache and a brown
complexion.
Nearly everybody in Atlanta reads
The Sunday American. YOUR ad
vertisement in the next issue will sell
goods. Try it!
Tariff is Not Troubling Big
Business Half So Much
As Cash Shortage,
BY BOERSIANER.
To sav finance needs money sounds
like saying that man requires air
Yet then; are times when man must
have more air to be healthy.
Finance, national and international,
could make most excellent use of
much more cash at present. Europe
has enough, but It Is panickly se
questered and therefore not availa
ble. A permanent truce in the Bal
kans would release huge hoardings.
The situation abroad is amenable to
immediate relief.
In this country the supply is con
stitutionally scant. One may apply
the simile of the small blanket serv
ing to cover several persons who are
eagerly tugging at the wholly inade
quate shelter.
The business Is here—good crops,
good earnings, good everything—but
the medium of exchange is insuffi
cient and must be so recurrently un
til Congress shall do for financier*
what it hopes to do for the average
layman in adopting a new tariff.
Three Roads Borrowing.
The inadequacy of the money sup
ply was thrown into bold relief last
week when three railways entered
the market for funds. The Pennsyl
vania boldly—or was it adventurous
ly? -offered $45,000,000 of stock at
par upon which it promises to pay
6 per cent, dividends. The St. Paul
offers a bond, bearing 4 1-2 per cent.,
under par. New York Central paid
6 1-4 per cent, for a $10,000,000 ac
commodation in London.
Jn normal times this total demand
ed of the money market hardly would
be discussed. Currently it is regard
ed as a “drain." It served to flinch
the stock market, where the accu
sation was general that “hanking in
terests” had supported the list for
the single purpose of facilitating St.
Paul’s and Pennsylvania’s financing.
If the country had a civilized cur
rency system such a “bear point"
would ridicule the accusers.
The taut money position occupied
the financial districts more than the
tariff bill. The publication of the pro
posted customs duties was received
with indifference. The reason may
be psychological. The street always
has an eye for the thing next its
nose if there is something closer in
proximity to its proboscis. Imme
diate results—or effects—are wanted.
Shows Prosperity Increasing.
Consequently the limited railway
financing was exploited adversely.
Logically considered, the professional
selling of stocks on the basis of rail
way monetary requirement is not
quite within the limits of sanity.
When prosperous railroads apply for
more capital to carry on their busi
ness it means, obviously, their pros
perity I? increasing.
As a measure for the reformation
House wreckers have begun tearing
down residences at 229 and 233
Peachtree, formerly occupied by Dr.
W. 8. Elkin and the late Governor
Rufqp B. Bulloch, respectively. A
12 or 15-story office building Is ex
pected to be erected on the site by
Mrs. J. B. Whitehead and E. W. Al-
frlend, who control the property.
This building will be a pioneer in
the section among office structures.
Plans are not definite. Mrs. White-
head is abroad, and Mr. Alfriend has
thought of several other projects.
The Elkin and Bulloch properties
afe on the east side <4 the street be
tween Cain and Harris streets, and
;ire two-story brick affairs. Governor
Bulloch lived at No. 233 *until about
1900. The place then started chang
ing hands in the realty market, and a
good-sized fortune has been made out
of it. A J. & H. K. West sold it to
Captain James W. English for $11,000,
and Captain Plnglish sold to Captain
Joseph F. Burke for $16,000. Captain
Burke made a profit of about $12,000,
and Mrs. Whitehead paid the last
owner approximately $75,000. The
Bulloch and Elkin homes were the
< ene for many years of brilliant so
cial gatherings, and their destruction
means the passing of two other land
marks of early Atlanta. The lots ag
gregate something more than 100 feet
frontage, and are of good depth.
Closer to the center of town, the
old residence at the northeast corner
of Poplar and North Forsyth Streets
has finally been razed, and a sign
hung out which reads, “Brick and
lumber for sale. Also bath tub."
To Build Near Postoffice.
J. B. Thompson, owner of lots north
of the postoffice, which front 21 feet
on Poplar Street and 40 on Fairlie
and connect in the rear, has begun
excavating for business houses. He
will dig down 11 feet for a basement,
but beyond this his plans are vague.
When You Want
The Doctor
You Want
Him Quick
The quickest way
of all is to call him
over the Atlanta TV
ephone.
An accurate, rapid-
fire service in your
home for 8 1-3 cents a
clay.
Protection in case
of illness, robbery or
fire. Convenience in
shopping.
Call our contract
department to-day.
ATLANTA TELEPHONE
AND TELEGRAPH CO.
DECATUR
The Business Center ol DeKalb County
DECATUR IS THE COI XTY SEAT of DeKalb County
the counties of Georgia In taxable values.
which ranks SIXTH among
DECATUR 1* connected with every part of DeKalb Coulity by
of highways that are being constantly improved. y
splendid .system
yf'
dustriei ,y fOF hUndred * °. f t,,hcrH who wUh 10 «WW "i any of these important in-
Within a radius of v mite and a half from the courthouse of DFP VTi'H
.?.'Xi,vs. tho, ' sani>
. vr S72LS golu, 1,T «i ESSE™
»™w com* if »e h.d mor, ,.r mU i In Z hS“m, "'bo.KtS
DECATUR NEEDS RIGHT NOW MORE MERCANTILE X8TABII s H \ fEvts
take .are of the increasing trade of this section. m»ia»M1!HMENT8 to
DECATi H NEEDS several large hotels and many apartment houses.
DEt ATI It NEEDS an lee plant and another laundry
DECATUR NEEDS a cot I on buying establishment.
DECATUR NEEDS spell opportunity for YOU and YOt and YOU.
Decatur Board of Trade
Bell phone
Decatur 148 DECATUR, GA
of the currency may not be submit
ted until the tariff bill is well under
way, economists may watch the
course of the latter with undivided
interest. Perhaps its best recom
mendation is that It satisfies neither
the free trader nor the protectionist.
The time is past for economists
to consider radicalism the be-all and
end-ail of an economic proposition.
This is a period of temperate think
ing, of modifications, of mutual con
cessions.
If there is any nation adapted for
free trade it is England. There the
steps toward a purely manufacturing
community were irrevocably taken
and the question would seem to have
been what are the best means of re
maining with safety and prosperity
in the far-developed stage?
Looking at the geographical situa
tion of England, counting her popu
lation, seeing her small agricultural
resources and her vast manufactur
ing equipment, ii would appear that
there a policy of free trade alone is
tenable.
Reaction in Great Britain.
Yet a reaction has been on against
free trade for several years, a reac
tion supported by pretty effective
arguments. These arguments all
turn to the sensible expediency of
reciprocity arrangements. It is now
found that absolute free trade will
not do even for “free trade Britain."
Hence the reciprocity provision in
what may be called the Underwood
bill is a comfort to all except the
extremists in international trade
science. There are a sufficient num
ber of highly taxed schedules in the
Underwood proposition to give Wil
son scope for treaties with desirable
trading countries. The expense of
living undoubtedly will be reduced by
some of the free and low entry
clauses.
Whether^ thsvcost will be reduced
to general expectations is doubtful
for it may be restated profitably that
living costs have risen not only in
the Americas and Europe but in the
finer parts of Asia and Africa.
Man new' wants much here below
and he wants that much longer than
in former ages. (Civilization implies
complexity. The luxuries of the fath
er become the necessaries of the
son. A longer purse is required to
lead the simple life of this year than
the luxurious life of yesterday.
Tariff Not a Wonder Worker.
There is no wonder w’orking magic
about the tariff. It is purely a proba
tive force: necessarily experimental
individually; a tiling of experience
Each nation must decide for itself
what it wants. Some principles
universal application it has; hut in
its practual workings a thousand anc!
one differentiated things come into
play.
Were the world altruistic, the prob
lem would be easy of solution. Fair
trade, or exchange, would rule.
An apartment house with a store on
the ground floor has been suggested
for the property that faces on Poplar
Street, opposite the north entrance to
the post office.
A 30x40-foot space has been cleared
on the Hugh Richardson property at
the southwest corner of Luckie and
North Forsyth Streets, to provide for
a temporary improvement which is in
tended to make the parcel income-
bearing. Although a big department
store has been suggested f<*r th
ner, nothing definite has been done.
Steel Work Postponed.
Steel work was to have started a
week ago on the Healey Building, but
a delay in getting tw’o heavy derricks
from Pennsylvania has made it im
possible to begin. The steel is here
and wlli probably go up in about a
week. Work is being rushed in the
meantime to mak * the ground level.
Banquet To Be Well Attended.
Return postal cards received by
Executive Secretary Joseph D. Greene,
of the Atlanta Real Estate Board, in
dicate that there will be a large at
tendance at the board’s monthly dinner
at the Cafe Durand to-morrow night.
The speaker of the evening w ill be A.
P. Coles, vice president of the Cen
tral Bank and Trust Corporation, and
the host will be H. W. Dews, sales
manager of the Willingham Real Es
tate Agency.
Water for Piedmont Road.
The Piedmont Water Company, an
organization of property owner.-* who
live along or in the vicinity of Pied
mont Road, w'ill apply soon for a
charter so that the company may
work for an eight-inch water main
from Ansley Park northward on Pied
mont Road to connect with the main
at Peachtree Road. This improve
ment, it is pointed out, will do a groat
deal to boost property values in ihe
section mentioned. Another advan
tage will be to increase the water
pressure at the point of joining with
the Peachtree main.
LIFERS FREEDOM CHURLS HANDS
Building Continues Good.
Contractors continue to flock into
the office of Building Inspector Ed R.
Hays, asking for permits to erect
residences and apartment houses. A
permit has been sought to build a
two-story brick veneer apartment nt
168 Angier Avenue, to cost $12,000.
L. W. Hudson, Jr., and J. S. McCau
ley are the owners. J. L. Wright will
build a two-story frame dwelling at
154 Peeples Street, and J. H. Pritchett
will build a two-story frame at 373
Greenwood Avenue.
An official of Marist College. Peach
tree and Ivy Streets, has taken up
with the building inspector some plans
for> u three-story addition to trie
school buildings, to cost approximate
ly $20,000. Dormitories, library and
recreation rooms are called for in tnt
plans.
The Red Men’s Wigwam Associa
tion has applied for a permit to make
a three-story concrete addition, cost
ing $32,708. to their quarters at S6
Central Avenue. Details of the plan
have been announced. The front will
be replaced later.
Peachtree Lots at Auction.
On Saturday at 3 o’clock John H.
James will offer for sale at auction 30
lots at the Seaboard Railroad and
Peachtree Road, on terms of $25 cash
and $10 a month, at 6 per cent. J. W.
Ferguson & Son will be the auc
tioneers.
Lagomarsino Lot on Sale.
A valuable parcel of land adjoining
the Governor’s mansion at the south
west corner of Peachtree and Cain
Streets, will be offered at auction be
fore the Court House door the first
Tuesday in May. This is in the es
tate of the late Mrs. Mary Lagomar
sino, and will be sold for the first
time since Mrs. Lagomarsino bought
it July 12, 1882, from Sarah E. Phelps.
The lot is on the northeast side of
Carnegie Way, at the corner of an
alley, runs easterly 162 feet to the
mansion property, then w esterly along
the mansion line 215 feet to Carnegie
Way, then southeasterly along Car
negie Way 80 feet to the beginning
point. The terms of the sale will be
cash. Chess Lagomarsino is the ad
ministrator. He recently sold off an
adjoining parcel.
Good Price for Lease.
The Thompson Restaurant Com
pany, of Chicago, will pay $9,000 a
year, or $750 a month, it was learned
to-day, for the Marcus store at 57-59
Peachtree Street* on the east side of
the street, 50 feet south of Auburn
Avenue. This rental price shows a
great increase over the prevailing fig
ure. The Marcus Clothing Company
has been paying $375 a month, or
$4,500 a *year. The new' concern will
take possession shortly.
Prison Board’s Requests Fail to
Show Nature of Crimes,
Says Governor.
Governor Brown refused to con
cur to-day in recommendations made
by the Stae Prison Commission in be
half of two life-termers sentenced for
murder.
In the case of James Conger, re
ceived in prison from Colquitt Coun
ty in 189V, the Governor said the rec
ord consisted of little besides re
quests and petitions showing the rec
ord of the man while in prison. “There
should be shown something of the
nature of the crime committed. I can
not approve on the showing made,"
was the notation on the petition.
Another disappointment was given
the scores of persons from Washing
ton County who have been pleading
for the last ten years for clemency
for Willis Clayton. Governor Brown
declined to grant the parole recom
mended by the commission. Mem
bers of the jury which convicted
Clayton of murder in 1893. the pre
siding judge and many others have
joined in the plea for clemency, but it
was the attitude of the Governor that
practically nothing had been said of
the nature of the murder or the cir
cumstances under w’hich it was com
mitted.
Shine Hayden, convicted in Jeffer
son City Court of carrying concealed
weapons and discharging a pistol on
Sunday and being drunk on the high
way, was granted his freedom after
having served about one-third of the
sentence against him.
Rabun Ayers, sentenced from Hab
ersham County to eight months for
gurglarv and four for drunkenness,
was ordered released on the expira
tion of the eight months’ sentence.
Charles V. Gonzales, sentenced to
ten years from the Fulton County Su
perior Court, was given a parole on
the representation that the offense
which technically was a burglary, in
reality was barely more than a mis
demeanor.
Doss Knicks, a Murray County
youth, was granted a parole after
having served a few months of his
two years’ sentence. The $150 which
he was accused of stealing was re
funded.
Charles G. Smith, sentenced from
Taylor County, found his plea of ill
ness ineffectual in obtaining clem
ency.
Property in Postoffice Section
and Eight West End Blocks
Are Sold.
The local real estate market awoke
with a start to-day following dull
business due to had weather, with a
swap of semi-central property in the
postofflee section and eight blocks In
West End, involving nearly quarter
of a million dollars.
H. J. Brure, a loan agent in the
Empire Building, sold for the Union
Savings Bank. .1 T. Holleman. presi
dent. to the Walton Realty Company.
3!) acres in West End, bounded by
llolderness Street on the east. Capers
Street on the south, Muse Street on
the west and Greenwich Street on the
north, for $110,000, and to the Union
Savings Bank for the Walton Realty
Company nine lots on Nassau, Wal
ton, Bartow and Spring Streets for
$100,000, the Walton Realty Company
paying the difference in cash.
The Walton Realty Company will
subdivide its new holdings in West
End and the Union Savings Bank
will probably erect a substantial im
provement on part of its semi-central
property, although plans for the
building are not definite.
Luclle Avenue bisects the West End
acreage and Atwood and Hopkins
Streets are also included in it. Bat
tle Hill is to the north, Oakland City
to the south. West End to the east,
and West End Park to the west. The
Westvlew car line passes through. All
of the tract is in the city limits, and
it has a considerable amount of pav
ing, die walks, sewers, water and
lights, but no houses.
The Southern Mortgage Company,
controlled by the same people as the
Union Savings Bank, owns the point
of Walton, Spring and Nassau
Streets, and five of the nine lots ac
quired by the latter concern are west
of the point and adjoining it, with
frontage of 40 feet on Walton and 67
feet on Nassau. The other lots are
one which fronts 30 feet on the west
side of Spring Street, just north of
Nassau; one fronting 45 feet on the
northeast side of Nassau, near the
northeast corner of Bartow, and two
at the southeast comer of Nassau
and Bartow, fronting an aggregate of
50 feet on Nassau Street.
Quarry Owner Loses
Fight on Power Co.'
Injunction to Prevent Stringing Wiree
Over Granite Fields Denied
by Supreme Court.
C. H. Buechler, owner of a graniis
quarry In Fulton County, lost a suit
for injunction against the Georgia
Railway and Power Company, brougtg
In Fulton County Superior Court and
appealed by Buechler to the Supreme
Court, which to-day affirmed the low.
er tribunal.
Bcuchler asked that the corporation
be restrained from stretching Its wire,
over his quarry, declaring he feared
blasting would break the heavily
charged wires and permit them to fail
to the ground, where they would be a
source of danger to his workmen.
The injunction was denied by the
Fulton County Court . The Supreme
Court, in affirming the decision, said
an injunction to prevent a corpora
tion from condemning a mill or fac
tory in actual operation can not be
extended to cover the property from
which the raw material ip obtained.
Every Woman
4» interested and should know
about the wonderful
lMARVEL Whirling Spray
1 ^ a new Vaginal Syringa.
Best—most convenient. It
cleanses Instantly.
Ask your druggist for it
If he cannot simply i
MARVEL, accept no othei^R
but send stamp for illustrated
book—sealed. It gives full particu
lars and directions Invaluable to ladle
MARVEL CO.. 44 East 234 Rinat. Mew lark*
Whiskey sod Dn»« Hsou
t Home or et Sanitarium. Book oo eubleci
. A-W. DR B. M. WOOLLEY, 34-N. View
I Sanitarium. Atlant*. Geordt.
KODAKS;";;-
First Class Finishing and En
larging. A complete stock films,
platen, papers, chemicals, etc.
Special Mail Order Department for
out-of-town customers.
Send for Catalogue and Price List.
A. K. HAWKES CO. Kodak Dtptrtmeil
14 Whitehall St. ATLANTA. GA.
OBITUARY NOTICES.
Mrs. Mary J. Wilkins, aged 77, widow
of William W. Wilkins, died this
morning at Grady Hospital. Mrs.
Wilkins had for the past five years
been an inmate of the Home for
Old Women. She was a member of
the West End Baptist Church. Fu
neral services will be held in Pat
terson’s chapel. Dr. Purser officiat
ing. at 4 p. m. Thursday. Interment
will be in Fayette County to-mor
row.
Miller Scroggins, warden of a convict
camp at Austell, died to-day from
a bullet wound received yesterday
afternoon when he accidentally
dropped his gun to the pavement.
The bullet entered the abdomen.
He is survived by three sons, all of
Austell. They are E. V., J. A. and
J. W. Scroggins.
E. B. Sutton, aged 50. died at a local
sanitarium this morning at 11:30
o’clock after a short illness. He
lived formerly in Tignall, Ga., but
had recently moved to Atlanta and
was living at 419 Washington
Street. He is survived by four sons
and five daughters. He also leaves
a sister, Mrs. Summan Ware, of
Tignall, Ga.. and a brother, James
Sutton, of Metersville, Ga.
NEWS JOTTINGS
ABOUT TOWN
UNION FIRE INSURANCE
HEAD IS A BANKRUPT
Voluntary petition in bankruptcy
was filed to-day by T. E. McAfee,
president qf the Union Fire Insurance
Company, with offices in the Fourth
National Bank building. McAfee list
ed his liabilities at $8,062.05, with as
sets of $1,300. The principal creditor
is W. N. Smith, vice president of the
company. (
A Pioneer Bank
E stablished in 1865, the Atlan
ta NATIONAL BANK is the oldest
national bank in the Cotton States, and
one of the strongest and most influential
hanking institutions in the entire South.
This bank has been constantly growing
in strength and efficiency, as well as in
years. Its long and successful experience
in all branches of commercial banking—
especially in the selection of safe invest
ments for its funds — insures depositors
every safeguard and the best of banking
service.
YOUR account is respectfully solicited.
Atlanta National Bank
Assets
$10,000,000.00
Frank T. Reynolds, manager of the
Empire Hotel, former manager of the
Hotel Cumberland, has accepted the
position of publicity manager for the
new Hotel Ansley. He will enter upon
his new duties at once.
A runaway horse, belonging to C.
E. Thomas, of 40 South Pryor Street,
was killed to-day When it collided
with a wagon driven by R. L. Sut-
tles, a negro. Suttles and a small
white boy were knocked from the
wagon, but escaped injury.
Rubin Mongeman, aged 20, ah ac
tor from Baltimore, is in the Tower
to-day in default of $5,000 bonds ac
cused of being a professional pick
pocket. He was bound over when
three witnesses identified him as hav-
j ing robbed them.
I The annual meeting of the Atlanta
Woman’s Missionary Association will
be held at the Central Congregational
Church, corner of Ellis Street and
Carnegie Way. Friday at 3:30 p. m
There will be an address by Mr. Mem-
minger on "Christian Social Service
a solo by Mre. D. W. Yarbrough, re
ports of the Travelers’ Aid work dur
ing the year and of the Martha Home
and officers for the year will be
elected.
CARTERSVILLE MAN ARRESTED
CHATTANOOGA, TENN.. April 17.
I Wanted on a charge at Cartersville,
Ga., Henry Parker, a railroad engi
neer, was arrested here this afternoon
while preparing to board a train for
the West. The local officers acted
under instructions from Sheriff C. N.
Smith, of Bartow County.
Farmer Commits Suicide.
GREENVILLE- G. A. Williams, a
farmer, 28 years old. of Harris Coun
ty. committed suicide late yesterday
afternoon by shooting himself
through the heart. Despondency is
said to have caused the act.
“Law Brothers for Quality'
SPRING
OXFORDS
Have you seen the
new low heel and sole
English Tan Oxford
at $4.00—it’s the lat
est. We’re ‘‘on the
job” with a complete
line of the “right
kind” of Spring and
Summer Oxfords for
men—all leathers—
SPUING
O UR n e w Colonials.
Oxfords and
Pumps are the finest
creations ever conceived
for Women’s Feet!
The art of Shoe designing and skill has
reached its culmination in these attractive Low
Cut Shoes.
All Styles at $3.50 to $6
Select Your New
Shirts for Summer
—to-morrow is a good time—
fine things from the world’s best
makers; soft-fold as well as reg
ulation cuff's, $1.50 to $2.50.
Silk Shirts $2 to $5.
10 WHITEHALL ST.
'Men's Furnishings--Tailor
ing--Hats--Shoes.
Oxfords in Button or in Tie Models.
Leathers of Cun Metal Calf, Patent Calf,
Tan Russia or of Black or Tan Suede, Velvet,
White Nubuck, etc. High toes or receding toes,
with low walking heels.
$4, $5, $6 to $7.
Colonials and Pumps in Dull or Bright
leathers, in Tans, Suedes and Satins. Many
beautiful models.
$3, $4, $5 to $6.
Too many choice styles to attempt anything
but a brief description. May we show you?
J. P. ALLEN & CO.
The Home of Better Shoes
NIGHT SERVICE
VIA
DIRECT
LINE
No Detour
CH&D
THROUGH
SERVICE
DAILY
Lv. CINCINNATI 8:10 A.M 9:45 P.M.
Ar. DAYTON 9:45 A.M JJ:25 P.M.
Ar. TOLEDO 2:00 P.M 4:45 A.M.
Ar. DETROIT 3:47 P.M 6:45 A.M.
Lv. CINCINNATI 9:00 A.M.
Ar. INDIANAPOLIS Ji:25 P.M.
Ar. CHICAGO I via Monon Route! .... 5:40 P.M.
Through Sleepers—Parlor Cars—Dining Cars—Coaches
F. J. PARMALEE, T. P. A.. 213 PETERS BLDG., ATLANTA