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HEARST’S SUNDAY AMERICAN, ATLANTA, C,A„ SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1013.
GIFTS TO SCHOOL-BOOK
Classes Begin Monday, and Un
less You Heed Associated Char
ities Appeal for Poor Youngsters
250 Children Will Be Barred.
Nothing to Lose and Much to Gain
in Giving to Educate Those Who
Otherwise Are Likely to Become
Charges of the City of Atlanta.
Over your Sunday morning: break
fast table, and In the lazy, luxurious
moments that come after breakfast,
listen to the last appeal of the 250
poor Atlanta children who are asking
you through The Georgian and Sun
day American and through the Asso
ciated Charities to give them the
chance for an education.
This is the final appeal.
School opens Monday, and unless
the children are helped with a lit
tle money and clothes, the cast-off
clothing that is lying useless in your
closets, they probably will be kept
out of school this year altogether.
Even going to public school requires
a little money. There are books, you
know, and a new pair of stockings,
maybe.
There is no money at home for
these 250, and unless you help them
they probably will be kept out this
year. They probably will be kept
out next year, a lot of them, because
they will be bigger, and can work
then in the mills and factories or on
the street. Then it will be too late.
Then their chances for an education
will have gone glimmering, and a few
more hampered, woefully handicapped
citizens will be on the way to be
coming the city’s burdens.
Donations an Investment.
It is something of an investment,
that contribution you are going to
make to the schoolbook fund of The
Georgian and Sunday American. It is
an investment # in humanity, where
there is nothing to lose, and worlds
to gain.
The money sent to this office will
be directed to the proper place for
distribut'on.
Not much money is needed. A dol
lar will buy the outfits of the little
tots, who need only a speller and a
reader and the simplest of arithme
tics. t
Considerably more than that is
necessary for the books of the older
children, but altogether the request
that is being made of Atlanta is
■mall.
It is very' pleasant there in your
Sunday morning home, isn’t it, in the
luxurious period between breakfast
CONTRIBUTIONS TO
SCH00L=B00K FUND
Georgian and Sunday Amer-
ican
... $50.00
Cash
.... 10.00
W. L. Peel
.... 5.00
J. P. Allen
.... 2.00
Cash
.... 2.00
Cash
.... 2.00
George Winship
.... 25.00
M. W. Meyer
.... 5.00
Fred Lewis
.... 5.CO
Mrs. J. T. Huss
.... 5.00
Rutherford Lipscomb .
.... 5.00
Ed Jones
.... 5.00
H, A. Maire
.... 5.00
Carl Hutcheson
.... 1.00
Anon
.... 1.00
Cash
.... 3.00
Southern University of Music 5.00
J. O. Bagwell
.... 1.00
Tiny Feet Trip Along Peachtree
+•+ +•+ +•+ +•+ +§•!•
Child’s 121 B’s Fit Miss Spalding
+•+ +#+ +#4* +#+
Lovers Here Kneel atTrim Shrines
Miss Elizabeth Spalding and her dainty foot, which is declared
to be typical of Atlanta pedal extremities.
.r<>.
Conflagration Halted With De
struction of Fifty-five Blocks,
Leaving 2,500 Homeless.
and church time, with the newspapers
all about you? It is pleasant to read
and to smoke and to be lazily con
tented.
But even that simple luxury of
reading will be denied m$iny of the
250 unless you give them this year
their chance to go to school.
Face Spoiled Lives.
Your Sunday mornings would be
spoiled altogether but for your read
ing. So would your life be spoiled
but for your ability to read and to
understand. It is just such a strait
ened, spoiled career that confronts
many of the poor children whose ap
peal Is made to you to-day.
In Atlanta to-day there are 250
children who can not go to school
because they lack money to buy
school books. There are 129 who can
not go to school to-morrow because
they have no clothes to wear. They
can not face their companions with
out shame. Some of them, even, can
not leave their homes for want of
clothing.
Remember all this during your mo
ments of contentment and leisure this
morning.
The 250 children most likely are not
so contented to-day as you are. Most
of them, eager to go to school, prob
ably are very much dismayed over
the fact that school opens to-morrow
and there seems little chance for them
to go.
But of course they don’t know that
you are going to help them get their
chance.
Rome Business Men
Provide for Poor Children,
ROME,, Sept. 6.—The free ^school
book committee, consisting of a num
ber of prominent business men, has
taken up the work of providing school
books for children unable to attend
the public schools unless they are sex
aided.
HOT SPRINGS, ARK., Sept. 6.—
Rain in copious quantities to-day
proved a wonderful aid to the weary
lighters among the smoldering ruins
of the $6,000,000 conflagration which
swept this city last night, devastating
55 blocks. The downpour allayed fears
of a further spread of the flames, even
should a wind arise.
More than 2,500 persons are home
less as a result of the fire, and are
camping temporarily In the vicinity
of the Oaklawn Race Track and
State Fair Grounds. At a mass meet
ing to-day, a committee was appoint
ed to care for the homeless, and the
work of furnishing food and cloth
ing to them was started at once.
Stragglers Line Roadway.
Grand avenue, leading from the
burned area to the fair grounds, to
day presented a picturesque sight.
26,000 Ready for School;
Record Attendance Seen
It’s down to work, kiddies; no more
morning play.
Monday morning the bells in At
lanta’s 47 public schools will toll va
cation’s death and Bobbie, Helen and
Jimmie must get out the old book
straps.
Twenty-six thousand children will
get up a little bit earlier than they
have for three months past; faces will
be shining from a double rubbing, and
there will be great scurrying as the
minutes fly.
The first day of the school term is
always a puzzle to the kids. They
can’t tell whether they are happy or
sad. It’s hard for the good old va
cation days to be gone, but still it’s
mighty nice to get back with the old
bunch at recess.
Then there will be 1,000 new kid-
lets, who will be away from mamma’s
apron strings for the first time, and
who will have something new to
open their eyes about.
The attendance last year was 24,-
065. The prospects are that the 26,-
000 mark will be touched by the end
of this week.
There is the problem of taking care
of the ever-increasing attendance up
on Atlanta’s public schools. Each
year the Board of Education and City
Council has been put to it to pro
vide adequate facilities.
But a way is always provided for
taking care of every child and this
year they have taken time by the
forelock. Schools which gave indi
cations of being overcrowded have
been provided for by the renting of
adjacent building? and equipping
them as schoolrooms. These build
ings will be used until the school
structures can be enlarged or new
buildings erected.
Probably the busiest office in At
lanta for the past ten days has been
that of Superintendent of Schools
William M. Slaton in the Boys’ High
School building. Each day there
have been several hundred callers and
Mr. Slaton’s corps of assistants have
been taxed to their utmost to accom
modate every one.
Southern Railroad’s
Paymaster Robbed
Reward of $600 Is Offered for Trio
Holding Up Employee at
Parr Shoals, S. C.
A telegram from J. T. McClelland,
chief of detectives of the Southern
Railway at Parr Shoals, S. C„ tell
ing of the robbery of the Southern
paymaster there Saturday night, and
offering a reward of $600 for the ap
prehension of the robbers, was re
ceived at police headquarters.
One of the robbers was described
as being short and stout, weighing
about 190 pounds, while two others
were said to be tall and thin.
Bumper Orange Crop
Predicted by Grower
Wauchula Grower Finds Grove Giv
ing Promise of 45 Per Cent
Increased Yield.
\UCHTJLA, Sept. 6—W. W.
man, manager of the local citrus
singe, says there will be a bumper
ge crop this year. On one set of
as with which he is personally
liar he estimates this year's crop
9,000 boxes, against 20,000 last
e orange crop of the State last
was about 8,250,000 boxes, but no
wide estimate has been made for
season.
IGHTNING WRECKS P. O.
SD, MISS., Sept. 6.—Lightning
ished the postoffice here, in-
the negro janitor and set fire
o business houses.
Posed as Preacher,
Is Held as Burglar
Charged With Blowing Postoffice
Safe at Green Cove
Springs.
JACKSONVILLE, Sept. 6.—A. D.
Cannlmeyer, who posed as a preacher,
is in the county jail as a United
States prisoner, suspected of being
connected with the blowing of the
postoffice safe in Green Cove Springs
a few' months ago and the theft of
$1,000 in postage stamps.
Cannlmeyer has been Identified as
James Driscoll, who, With his part
ner, Robert Duncan, is alleged to
have blown and robbed the Cohen
Brothers’ safe here of $1,100 during
the early part of 1903. He since has
served a term rn the Alabama peni
tentiary. Deputy Sheriff James
Crawford, who was detailed on the
Cohen Brothers robbery, has never
given up hope of capturing Canni-
meyer, alias Driscoll, and knew the
man immediately after his incarcer
ation on the other charge.
Salesman Accused of
Giving Bad Check
Paper Drawn on Thomasville, Ga. f
Bank Worthless When Pre
sented, Say Detectives.
James Barwick, a traveling sales
man living at the Terminal Hotel,
was arrested Saturday night on a
warrant charging forgery. Barwick,
according to,the detectives, passed a
worthless check on a bank of Thom
asville, Ga. #f
The check, they say, was given ta.
L. Suddlth and called for $10.
Boston Can Produce No Entry in Cities Quaint
Race Where Atlanta Leads.
Atlanta lovers, growing rhapsodic
in the expression of their suit, still
kneel at the feet of their ladies, in
the good old orthodox way of lovers,
it is to be hoped. If they do, small
wonder, for the French-heeled feet
'of the Atlanta maidena are truly feet
to worship, being neatly small and
adorable.
Atlanta girls, favored of fortune in
every respect of beauty and smart
ness, are beyond criticism in that final
feature of feminine pulchritude, the
feet. Witness any parade along
Peachtree of an afternoon.
Miss Elizabeth Spalding, for in
stance, is one whoae feet attract the
eye. They are shod in pumps of
fairy daintiness. They are a bare
six and a quarter inches from toe to
heel and you can easily believe it.
They are of the size technically
kno-wn as a child’s 12 1-2 B. and that
fact, too. you accept as true at the
very sight of them.
Altogether, they are small and neat,
typical feet of the Atlanta girl. Miss
Spalding is not the exception; rather,
an example.
This little exposition on the feet
of Atlanta girls comes as Atlanta’s
entrance into a sort of civic com
petition. Everywhere in the United
States, it seems, a sudden interest
has sprung up in the size of the girls’
feet. Chicago comes forth, offering
Miss Anita Blair, the daughter of a
plutocrat, to refute the old. old charge
that the feet of feminine Chicago are
beyond the pale of gracefulness and
beauty. Then comes New York, with
a child’s 12 triple A foot to match
Miss Blair's. Boston could not do so
well, and a search through the ranks
of Back Bay society failed to reveal
feet about whose size Boston papers
could boast.
But Atlanta is more fortunate.
Take a turn down Peachtree street,
and see for yourself. There’s Miss
Spalding, for instance
Find ‘Kidnaped’ Boy
Intent on ‘Movies’
Detectives, Parents and Their Friends
Join in Frantic Search for
Missing Lad.
Detectives spent the greater part of
Saturday afternoon searching for Col
quitt Clark, Jr., the 10-year-old son
of a real estate man, who was re
ported as having disappeared from
a moving picture theater into which
he had gone with his mother at 2
o'clock.
The search was joined by a num
ber of friends of the missing boy's
parents and extended throughout the
downtown district, Mrs. Clark ex
pressing the fear that her son had
been kidnaped. Young Clark left his
mother in the theater, telling her
that he would return in a minute.
After half an hour’s waiting, the po
lice were notified and the search be
gan.
The boy was discovered later In
another picture theater watching a
film in supreme innocence of the dls ■
turbance which he had caused.
GRANDMOTHER AND UNCLE
FIGHT FOR CONVICT’S BOY
SAVANNAH, Sept. 6—J. S Har
rison, brother of Hugh Harrison,
serving a life sentence for the mur
der of Ruth Hester Harrison, his wife,
filed a petition with the Ordinary this
afternoon to secure the guardianship
of little How'ard Harrison, his neph
ew. The child's grandmother, Mrs,
Laura E. Bxleys, will contest the pe
tition.
KILLS SNOW-WHITE SQUIRREL.
SPARTANBURG,. Sept. 6.—While
hunting in the mountains at Union,
near here, William McDaniel killed a
snow-white squirrel. Experienced
hunters say they have never seen
anything like it before
QUARREL OVER HOG; DEAD.
MARSHALL, ARK., Sept. 6.—Frank
Cross was shot and killed by Will
Tucker. The men quarreled over the
possession of a hog.
13 Macon Saloons
Raided by Sheriff
Law Enforcement League Continues
Campaign to Close Liquor
Selling Places.
MACON, Sept. 6.—Thirteen saloons
were raided to-day and last night
by the Sheriff in pursuance of peti
tions for injunctions against the
places. The petitions were filed by
the Law Enforcement League in
continuance of Its campaign to close
up all of the saloons where liquor is
sold. Before applying for the in
junctions the Law Enforcement
League effected the purchase of whis
ky at each of the saloons, using de
tectives brought to Macon for the
purpose. At eight of the places the
Sheriff found whisky in large quan
tities on the premises.
The cases have been set for hear
ing on the first Monday in Novem
ber, and until then the saloonkeep
ers are under bond not to sell any
Intoxicating liquors. There are con
tempt cases now against three sa
loonkeepers who were served with
Injunctions last month, and who then,
It is alleged, sold whisky. These
cases will be heard on September 12.
Hundreds of families gathered along
the roadway with what little they
saved from their homes and worked
their way, gradually to the camp.
There were sworn ip to-day 250
citizens as special officers. No trou
ble has been reported so far. It was
not believed to-night that the city
authorities would have to call on the
State for assistance. Two companies
of militia will be sent here by Gov
ernor Hayes.
All saloons are closed.
Bareley had the ruins ceased to
burn to-day when workmen began
clearing up the debris. The exicte-
inent that prevailed last night has
subsided, and plans for rebuilding the
demolished section are being made.
A demand for laborers has been sent
broadcast.
Emergency Current Given.
The light and power company late
to-day provided emergency facilities
for the newspapers and other In
dustries. The city will be in dark
ness about a month.
About 6,000 feet of hose belonging
to the fire department was burned.
Many of the fire department horses
were left unfit for further duty.
P0ST0FFICE EMPLOYEES
MUST SWEAR TO EXPENSE
WASHINGTON, Sept. 6.—An oath
as to the truth of their expense ac
counts will be exacted hereafter from
postoffice employees, according to an
order issued this afternoon by Post
master General Burleson. The in
structions also call for Itemized ac
counts and traveling expenses, which
heretofore permitted of padding.
SWIMS WHILE FAST ASLEEP.
RACINE, WIS., Sept. 6.—Frank
Ryerson. an employee of the Lincoln
Ice Company at Brown’s Lake, lay
down on the lake bank and wok e up
near the opposite shore. He says he
swam across the bay while asleep.
CYCLONE IN MISSISSIPPI.
PURVIS, MISS.. Sept. 6.—A cyclone
parsed over this town, demolishing a
church and 25 residences. Two per
sons were fatally hurt.
White’s Slayer in Prison Hears
Band Concert in His Honor
and Makes Speech.
COATICOOK, QUEBEC. Sept.
While the town band played “God
Save the King" a great throng of
people surged about Harry K. Thaw's
quarters in the immigration deten
tion station here to-night and in two
languages shouted their admiration
for the millionaire slayer of Stanford
White.
Plans for a celebration of Thaw’fc
eleventh hour escape from the
clutches of William Travers Jerome
had been under way all day, and
when darkness fell there was already
a small group in front of Thaw’s
-Uni! Anuujsuoo sum sjqx sJ^IJunb
mented, and when the band came
marching briskly up with the music
so dear to the hearts of the French
Canadians resounding on the clear
night air, the pent-up enthusiasm of
Thaw’s well-wishers broke loose.
They cheered him again and again,
and finally the crowd became so en
thusiastic that the prisoner appeared
at his window and delivered a brief
speech of thanks.
Thaw Voices Thanks.
“I am glad that you are glad that
British fair play has finally won piy
fight,’’ he said. “Jerome Is at last
unveiled to the people of Canada in
his true light. He now knows that ns
has been beaten, and he may as well
go home.”
“We’ll put Jerome in Jail unless he
runs away,” howled the crowd. “If
you give the word, well tear away
your bars and put Jerome in your
place.”
“A diable avee Jerome!” shouted
one burly French Canadian. “A dia
ble avec Jerome, le loup (to the
devil with Jerome, the wolf)!”
"Mes remereiements an gens du
Canada (my very best thanks to the
people of Canada).’’ replied Thaw.
The demonstration lasted more
than an hour, and the crowd stayed
until the lights in Thaw's quarters
went out. Then the band marched
merrily away, with the cr*. wd follow
ing, still cheering. While the crowd
was around the detention station a
squad of Dominion police was sent
from Montreal for the purpose of
keeping a close watch to nip in the bud
any attempt to liberate the prisoner.
The authorities have no doubt thut
if the populace should find a leader it
would try to set the prisoner free
For that reason he will be closely
guarded day and night until the time
comes for his departure for Mon
treal.
Jerome Spends Quiet Day.
Jerome, who has been outwitted for
the present in his effort to secure
Thaw’s immediate return to Mattea-
wan, enjoyed a dilatory domicile to
day. He secured through counsel an
adjournment until Thursday of his
hearing on the charge of being a
common gambler in that he partlcl
pated with a number of friends in a
game of poker In an automobile
Thursday afternoon.
Until 4 o’clock this afternoon Je
rome remained at the Hotel Carpen
ter, a line house at Nortons Mills, Vt.
The bar of the hotel is In Canada and
the tobacco stand In Vermont. Thaw’s
prosecutor spent most of his time in
Vermont.
He had been advised that the tem
per of the people of Coaticook was
such that his life w'ould be in danger
if he returned there.
“I would like nothing better than
to return to Coaticook immediately
and face every one of those who think
I am their enemy,” said Jerome. “If
I were merely a private citizen I
would do so but I am a representative
of the Empire State and so I shall
not return until Thursday, when I
hope that the better sense of the in
telligent people will prevail.”
At Montreal Jerome will engage
lawyers and continue the fight for
Thaw’s early deportation. He still
believes that he will have Thaw over
the border within a fortnight and
will devise ways and means to com
bat the latest move of Thaw's law
yers in securing a writ of habeas
corpus returnable September 15.
Jerome thinks that the Minister of
Justice, or Premier Borden has pow
er to order the immediate execution
of the Imm.gration Board’s edict of
deportation to Vermont.
GIRL SEEKING $10,000 IN
BREACH OF PROMISE SUIT
CHATANOOGA, Sept. 6.—A breach
of promise suit brought by Mies An
na Mae Hawk, of Cleveland, agralnst
Grover C. Brown, also of that place,
is ready for the jury.
The plaintiff asks $10,000, aliening
that Brown, after promising mar
riage, married another last winter.
Both principals are prominent.
U. S BOAT MATE KILLED.
GREENVILLE, MISS,, Sept. 6 —
Robert I.. Llnnent, first mate of the
United States snagboat H. G. Wright,
was killed by a limb falling from a
tree where the boat was working, a
few miles up the river from here.
BENCH WARRANTS ISSUED
FOR NASHVILLE SAL00NISTS
NASHVILLE, Sept. 6—Criminal
Judge Neil today Issued benrh war
rants against saloonlsts of Nashville
for violation of the prohibition law
and every saloon is expected to be
closed after to-night for the first time
since the prohibition law was passed,
nearly five years ago.
BIRMINGHAM EXCUR
SION ROUND TRIP $2.50. |
Special train leaves Old
Depot September 22. Re
turn on regular trains.
SEABOARD.
Mrs. C. H. Smith
115 Peachtree Street, Next to Candler Building
Beautiful Display of
Chic Fall Models
New Models at Low Prices
Semi-Dress Hats . .. .$5.00
Children’s School Hats .. .$1.50
Misses’ Ready-to-Wear Hats , . .. .$1.50
Hat remodeling a specialty.
Life Sentence for
McNaughton Likely
Prison Commission Expected to Rec
ommend Commutation for the
Doomed Slayer.
That Dr. W. J, McNaughton, the
Emanuel Gounty physician under
sentence of death for the killing of
Fred Flanders, will receive a commu
tation to life Imprisonment on recom
mendation of the State Prison Beard
is the opinion of those in close touch
with the situation at the State Capi
tol. Arguments for and against the
pardon were closed late Friday after
noon, and the ca.se is now In the
hands of the Prison Board.
Chairman Davidson, of the Prison
Board, declared Saturday that the
case was by far the most technical
one that has been considered for
some time. Mr. Davidson left At
lanta Saturday for his old home. He
will return either Monday or Tues
day, when a final decision probably
will be reached and transmitted to
Governor Slaton.
Wild Beasts Believed
To Have Eaten Child
Hundreds Join In Search for Crook-
ston, Minn., Girl Who Van
ished During a Storm.
CROOKSTON. MINN., Sept. 6—Tne
hunt for the three-year-old daughter
of Jacob Ganthern, of Ersklne, who
has been lost for several days, was
continued by hundreds of people to
day. It is believed that the little girl
perished in a severe storm which pre
vailed the night following her dis
appearance and was later devoured
by a leopard that some time ago es
caped from a circus, or by wolves.
The country surrounding the home
of the Gantherns is said to abound
with wolves.
Bram to Stay Here;
Gives Sermon To-day
Paroled Convict Gets Employment
With Tailors and Intends
Living in Atlanta.
Thomas C. Bram, the sailor re
cently paroled from the Atlanta Fed
eral Penitentiary after serving seven
teen years for a crime of which he
claims to be innocent, will speak at
the Jones Avenue Baptist Church
Sunday night at 8 o’clock.
Bram intends to make Atlanta his
home. He is at present working for
a tailoring establishment.
SCRATCH OF STRAW
FATAL TO TEAMSTER
CHICAGO, Sept. 6.—A stiff straw
In a bale of hay was responsible for
the death to-day of Michael Verllck,
n teamster, who died at the County
Hospital of blood poisoning.
Verlick was unloading hay when a
straw in one pf the bales cut the
palm of his hand. Blood poisoning
set in.
TURKEY THIS
“Hesitation Drag,” in Which the
Partners Talk Constantly, Be
lieved Natural Successor.
NEW YORK, Sept.. 6.—The Ameri
can Society of Professors of Dancing,
which has just ended its four days’
convention at the Majestic Hotel, to
day issued an edict In which the fol
lowing thing;* are set forth:
THEY DISAPPROVE—
Gripping of the knees.
All shoulder motions.
Swaying from the hips.
Jumping and hopping.
Close contact of bodies.
THEY APPROVE—
More use of the feet.
Bodies more erect.
Heads and shoulders well up.
Dancing Instead of hopping.
Moderation In dips.
The society saddens society with
the declaration that the terrible tur
key trot and the tango axe to be
thrown into the discard. In their
places are to come the “Shadow,” the
“Manchester,” the "Sidestep Glide,”
the “Hesitation Drag” and the “Sen
sation Scroll.”
The new dances are said to permit
easy motion, with varied step® and
to combine grace with comfort.
In the “Hesitation Drag,” which
has won a certain vogue, ths part
ners face each other and their con
versation may never be Interrupted.
The man leads with a long glide with
the left foot, poises on the right foot
for two beats, and then sways his
partner on a quarter turn.
PITTSRURtt, Sept- Dancing
masters of Western Pennsylvania and
Eastern Ohio have declared the tango
too tame, and Its successor Is to be
the hltchy koo In the hitchy koo,
the turkey trot, the bunny hug and
the tango are combined.
WIFE OF MAYOR MARTIN,
LAWRENCEVILLE, DEAD
LAtVRENCEVILLK, Sajvt. 6.—Mrs.
Lovic R. Martin, wife of Mayor Mar
tin, died at her home here to-night
after an Illness of two weeks. She
was 42 years of age. * She is sur
vived by her husband, seven children,
her mother, Mrs. H. B. Hoyt, of At
lanta; three sisters and two brothers.
MRS. PRANK PEARSON
will sing this (Sunday) even
ing at the
HOTEL ANSLEY
during the concert from 6:30
to 9:30. Mezzanine Floor,
overlooking main cafe.
MANNING-
FALL OPENING SALE
Pianos, Player-Pianos, Organs
Monday and for the week, we place on sale
special designed styles of modern-made Pianos and
Player Pianos at a GREAT REDUCTION IN
PRICES.
THIS SALE INCLUDES
Everetts, Harvards, Daytons, H. P. Nelson,
Steinberg, Mason & Co., Mellville Clark Apollo
Player-Pianos, together with other high-grade
makes of Pianofortes.
Sample of What You Buy
Player Piano (mahogany finish, <t97C 00
Player Piano (mahogany finish, d»orn nn
bench, music) epJJlF.UU
Upright Piano (mahogany finish, Cl C7 ft ft
stool and scarf) ..«plO/.UU
Upright Piano (mahogany finish, 07 ft ft
stool and scarf) pll/l »UU
THE UNDERSELLING PIANO STORE
Is the slogan of this firm. More musical homes
and teachers of Atlanta use and indorse the pianos
we sell than any other store in the South. We in
vite your consideration of the merit of our pianos.
See us before you buy and you become a customer
of this store.
EASY PAYMENTS SATISFACTION GUARANTEED
Prices and Catalogues Mailed on Request
MANNING PIANO COMPANY
52 North Pryor St.
Opp. Lowry Bank