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THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN ANT) NEWS.
5
TANGO SLIPPERS AND FISH SCALE STOCKINGS ALL
EVERYTHING MUST GO;
WILL ARRANGE TERMS
See Our Two Floors of Dining Room Furniture
Solid Mahogany, Arts and Crafts Fumed Oak,
Golden Oak, Early English
Circassian Walnut, Mahogany, Golden Oak
White
Our $50,000 Stock of
BrandNewGrand Rapids
FURNITURE Must Be Closed
Out During the Next 30 Days
Set Your Own Prsces.The
Least You Can Save is20%.
On Many Pieces You Can
Save as Much as 40% and 59%
The Street in front of our store is to be lowered eight feet and our building must be lowered accordingly. This
means that WITHIN TH£ NEX 1 30 DAYS our entire stock of absolutely new FALL STOCK of elegant GRAND
RAPIDS FURNITURE—the very finest furniture MADE—must be sacrificed for what it will bring. Our buyers have
just returned from the leading markets of th'? world, and their orders are on the wav. Therefore these goods will be
taken from the cars and put on our floors, where they will be marked at SACRIFICE PRICES. Think of that! Did you
ever hear of such an opportunity before? If you need ANYTHING in t e furniture line, you’d better hurry down here
and pick it out. The way we have slashed prices will move EVERY THING in a very short time. REMEMBER THE
PLACE—The early buyers have the choice.
The Petite Trianon.
Fond Mammas Are
Blamed for Insanity
CHICAGO, Sept. 3.—Present-day
home life in the cause of much of
the increase in Insanity, Dr. H. C.
Norris, of Ederlin, N. D., told the Na
tional Congress of Alienists and Neu
rologists here. He said:
“Instead of being trained to he a
member of the family, the boy of to
day Is taught to be President of the
United States. The children are being
petted and allowed to have their own
way until they get an exalted Idea
of their own inde pendence.”
TROLLEY LINE UP LOOKOUT.
CHATTANOOGA, Sept. 3. —The new
trolley car line up Lookout Mountain will
be completed Thursday. It will result in
the cable incline, which has the steep
est grade in the United States, being
practically abandoned.
Body, Shipped 12,000
Miles, to Rest in Sea
NEW YORK. Sept. 3—After four
trips across the Atlantic, a distance
of more than 12,000 miles, the body
of Mrs. Johnna Strich, who died here
two months ago. will be buried at sea.
Mrs. Strich directed that her body
be buried in Breslau, Germany. Her
daughter took the body to Germany
and brought itf back again, as the
charges for the grave were too high.
Persuaded by relatives the daugh
ter made a second trip with the body,
but found there was no room in the
cemetery at Breslau.
PRESIDENT ARRIVES HOME.
WASHINGTON, Sept. 3.—President
Wilson's train, returning from Cor
nish, N. H., reached Washington 3t
11:35 o’clock, five minutes late.
New Location at 506 Ponce DeLeon Avenue.
Young children taken to board. Special home care and evpry advantage.
All grades of city school work specialized, as well as best advantage in ail
branches of music. Large grounds and outdoor games Session September 1-
May 9. (MISS) LUCY A GARTRELL, Directress.
Phone Ivy 157-L.
SUGGESTIONS:
Handsome Rockers and Arm
Chairs, Magnificent Parlor Suits,
Willow, Rattan and Reed Furni
ture, Iron and Brass Beds, Baby
Carriages and Go-Carts.
Freight paid on out-of-town orders
The Bulgarian Sandal.
The Bow Tango Slipper.
Another Tango Pump, with fish scale stocking.
CRUSH HILTS TEST
OF WRECK THEORY
Making a teat run on the Georgia
Railroad to demonstrate that an ac
cident of two years ago easily was
avoidable, fast freight No. 210 piled
up In a head-on collision Tuesday
night with switch engine No. 614 at
the Hurt street crossing, injuring
two of the train crew seriously.
The Georgia Railroad Is being sued
by Engineer Gillian, who was injured
In a wreck at Decatur two years ago.
Gillian asserts he was approaching
the station at a fast rate and was un
able to see the train which was stand
ing on the track.
Tuesday’s test was being made to
determine whether or not Gillian was
right in his assertion.
Switching Conductor R. A. Perrot’s
back was wrenched badly in the col
lision and Emmett Smith, a negro
brakeman, was cut about the back
and head. Perrot was taken to the
Tabernacle infirmary and Smith to
Grady Hospital.
The members of the swtichlng crew
•ay they understood train No. 210
would not be along for ten minutes
and that for this reason they had
not been in a hurry to clear the
track for the demonstration. The
officials of the railroad began an im
mediate investigation. Superintend
ent Brand, of Augusta, is conducting
the inquiry.
Helen Keller, Burns
And LaFollette on
Lyceum Program
All arrangements have be* n com
pleted by President Russell Bridges
of the Alkahest Lyceum System for
the 1913-14 course In Atlanta, and
season tickets will be put on sale
Monday, September 29 to October 2
inclusive.
The program for this winter’s sea
son Is perhaps the most striking At
lanta has ever had. Ten brilliant at
tractions have been booked, including
the appearance of a number of people
of world wide fame. The three big
gest attractions will be Helen Keller,
William J. Burns and Senator La
Follette.
The ten attractions combine in Ideal
proportion the dramatic, musical and
lecture elements.
An effort Is being made to arrange
for the date of the Helen Keller re
turn so that it will come about the
same time as the Psychological Con
vention in Atlanta.
EMPIRE FURNITURE CO.
The Basket-Ball
Girl Says:
Davison-Paxon-Stokes Co.
“A Warner for Mine!”
ECAUSE, in it,
she may make her
freest thro w s,
without sense of cramp
ing or restriction —
braced by her corset, but
not bound by it J
Every young girl needs
a corset to help her fig
ure develop up to the
ideal physical type.
Warner’s Rust - Proof
Corsets are a synonym
for the free, untram-
meled comfort that is only
another word for grace.
The right Corsets for walking,
for rowing, for dancing, for
the singing lesson, for the ac
tive duties about the house.
All these Warner models .here.
Rxercise becomes a joy. and
drudgery a quickly dispatched
task in a corset that just
won’t let you get tired!
And that’s a Warner—your
own model, of course. A.ny
number of models from which
to select.
Price $1.00 to $8.00.
Every pair guaranteed.
Jfmter
-Proof
£orsefk
EMPIRE FURNITURE CO. EMPIRE FURNITURE CO.
EMPIRE FURNITURE CO. EMPIRE FURNITURE CO.
SUGGESTIONS:
Mohogany Dining Room Suits,
Circassian WalnutBed Room Suits,
Stickley’s Fumed Oak Library
Suits, Elegant Leather Davenports,
Chifforobes and Dressing Tables.
Oath Bars Chicagoan
From State St.; Can’t
Remain Sober There
Cftll HE 2,000 II
PUPILS PREDICTED
CHICAGO, Sept. 3.—Hereafter when
Robert H. Court goes shopping in a
State street department store he must
cf^efully skirt the lake shore and slip
In through an entrance on Wabash
avenue or on one of the cross streets
in the loop.
Once Inside he may gaze longingly
down on State street from a window,
but closer than that Court may not go
on pain of breaking a lifelong oath
which he took in municipal Judge Sa-
bath’s court.
Mrs. Court told Judge Sabath that
her husband followed the strait and
narrow path except when he got on
State street. His State street itinerary,
she said zigzagged from one saloon door
to another. Whereupon Court arose, ad
mitted the charge, raised his right hand
on high and solemnly took oath that
so long as he lived he would never
walk, ride or set foot on State street,
nor cross it.
HELD IN LIQUOR CASE.
COLUMBUS.—United States Dep
uty Marshal W. D. Owens has re
turned from Harris County with Vir
gil Watkins a prisoner. He found five
barrels of whisky stored in a gin-
house on Watkins’ farm. Watkins
was arraigned before Clerk N. A.
Brown and bound over to the Decem
ber term of Federal Court under a
bond of $300.
Anticipating an increase of nearly
2.000 In the school attendance. Super
intendent William M. Slaton, has is
sued an order urging all parents to
secure entrance tickets for their chil
dren at the earliest possible moment
in order to relieve congestion on open
ing day.
Superintendent Slaton predicted on
Wednesday the total school attend
ance this year would be nearly 28,003,
as compared with 26.000 in 1912. As a
result of this increase every school
building in the city will be taxed to
Its capacity, and the rule "first com'*,
first served,” will have to be invoked.
Plans for opening are practically
complete a?* a result of strenuous ef
forts of the superintendent and his
corps of assistants and teachers dur-
EMPIRE FURNITURE CO.
TALLULAH FALLS
$1.50 Round Trip $1.50
Thursday, Sept. 4, 1913.
Leave Terminal Station
8 a. m.
SOUTHERN RAILWAY.
Ing the last few weeks. The teach
ers’ normal school, in session at the
Boys’ High School, will continue Wed
nesday and Thursday, and open meet
ings will be held in addition by the
teachers of the various grades. En
trance examinations will be held Fri
day.
According to announcement Wed
nesday, the Neal Academy, on More
land avenue, has been leased and will
be opened as a graded school within
the next 30 days.
EMPIRE FURNITURE CO. EMPIRE FURNITURE CO.
EMPIRE FURNITURE CO. EMPIRE FURNITURE CO. EMPIRE FURNITURE CO. EMPIRE FURNITURE CO.
The Tan<?o Pump, after the fashion worn by Marie Antoinette,
with clasp at top.
Annie Garifcrell Memorial Conservatory of Music