Newspaper Page Text
.
tudents in Arrears
or Dues Heave Snow
na VONNE, ;’_.-—J., March 3.—Prin
“ pro<ron H. Smith had male stu-
Bnts of the high shecool who were in
Seare for dues remove' snow from
be 11 of the school,
L
%. | MYERS-MILLER -
; \f( Will Divide Your Payments */
:\ ’ \l-cl Andrew J. Miller
R R
Bed, 35-Ib. Mattress and National Spring
/ N
Ll —i N $ 00
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Lo £ &?"" 4 W:l? y : (=
WD P ) /24 I | .
Jord v. d‘: s\/, i T ’
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. 14:'!{?]: / ) $2l
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W “, have on sale the “MYERS-MILLER SLEEPWELL SPE
CIAL,” which consists of the following combination:
: A HANDSOME IRON. BED,
A SOFT 35-LB. COTTON MATTRESS,
A HEAVY IRON FRAME NATIONAL SPRING.
The IRON BED is in either Vernis-Martin or White Enamel—
has two-inch continuous posts—ten very heavy fillers. This is a
usual $2l value—but it’'s OUR special—and we'll sell you the
IRON BED, the 35-Ib. COTTON MATTRESS and the heavy iron
frame NATIONAL SPRING for a total of only $15.00. MYERS
MILLER will divide your payments—if you wish,
| ® 4
| T e pey eey TR ;
f - /N
New Reclining Model r‘«— N
TR RO YIT M
Give vour baby plenty of fresh air and sun- / '3,!'-3,
chine. Its heaith and happiness demand them. ?’!\
With an Oriole Go-Basket-—a combined Go-Cart, 4 )
High Chair, Jumper and Bassinet—baby can go | H‘* /
with vou anywhere. " e /i
On erowded streets,. trains, cars and elevators R Tj ¥k )
vou can take baby without trouble and reos 1 Tk
need never once lift it out. By simply ) S )
puiling a cord at the back, the wheels : . st
enter little pockets. The Go-Cart can £ {;;iiié}'.
then he carried on the arm, or left to (CRETTRNNGE 7‘("~ i B
stand alone withont fear. gf toppling over. \& a};?}‘k { [ A
The new reclining model Oriole can be &{.fi:?:'f\‘fi\‘x\ g [T e
sed from the ‘baby's birth until it no TR R o
longer needs a perambuldtor. i ",,‘.. .u
They Are Priced From LU XU
$7.50 to $15.00
' Furniture Company
band BW. Mitchell Bt. 2Doors From Whitehall
wved beaut:fully with a clear, transparent touch.— | rn'l‘lrlc\li"r‘ng{ioh?l exp(x;e?sive playing ]hertpnssesslon of a
Lelpzig, Germany, April 6, 1911, | e S L T
DISTINGUISHED
rt e V VI AMERICAN
; PIANIST
N and the
S e j';_\li
' s Sl
B e KIMBALL P lANO
B ¢ «The Kimball Piano meets the highest
L L ideals of the artist and represents success- -
e
é . Y fully the greatest combination of all musi
, N T cal qualities.”
- g — Myrtle Elvyn.
: , v‘;:;t;:I:::I(;;;zll{”klml;{h']'?*l]nfi”md dignified tone pro- | (\:|:;ly;\\;h‘;fi 'l‘:filv!l(;.n!“ and thoroughly musical.—Berlin, De-
ATLANTA APPEARANCE
SOLOIST WITH
ATLANTA PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA
AUSPICES OF THE ATLANTA MUSICAL ASSOCIATION
e Thursday, 8:30
Atlanta Theater' — March sth, P.M.
TICKETS ON SALE AT WARE-ROOMS OF W. W. KIMBALL CO.
shifayaed tho beliignt giid chacming Dlanietes 597 | uonai D bons APFII 89, 10k i, P BROS
A Complete Line of the Artists’ Favorite Piano—THE
KIMBALL—In Upright, Grand and Player-Pianos
Now Displayed at
; . A 1 DA O.
BRANCH STORE
H. R. CALEF, Mgr.
94 NORTH PRYOR ST, ATLANTA, GA.
vas reaegiss OF (i sloigb s M el S| o Oet . e
CHICAGO, March 3.—Of the 70 Al
dermen invited to attend the political
tea to be given by the Illinois Eqgual
Suffrage Assoclation this afternoon,
three sent notes of acceptance,
IDELIGHTS on
GIORGIA. &
POLITICS -}
To the Honorable Editor of Side
lights: g 1
As the days go by Georgia seems
more certain than ever of having
fome real politics this year.
Indeed, it now looks like there will
be factionalism within factions by
the trend of events in the Senatorial
situation the past week.
Wherefore (and there are lots more
like me) the bars should be let down;
Bl?d let every man, down to the “lit
tlest” voter, have an equal hand lni
the scrapping. : |
By this I mean, do away with the
county unit system and let every
man’'s vote count the same, whether
he be one of the 150 or thereabouts in
Glascock or one of the 15,000 or so in
Fulton. Then whoever is elected long
Senator, short Senator, Governor or
Dog Catcher, will know he is the
choice of the most voters, instead of
the most counties, as in the past few
years,
Do you remember what a squabble
was threatened two years ago when
the county unit vole of Pottle and
Broyles for Court of Appeals judge
was tied? Suppose the Senatorships
should get tied up that way this year?
In the Pottle-Broyles case, the ma
jority vote finally ruled. Wouldn't it
have been better to let it rule in the
first place?
It has occurred to me that Georgia
will be takirg a chance of running
afoul the Government’s new constitu
tional amendment for the direct elec
tion of Senators if it hangs on to phe }
county unit system in the primaries. \
Georgia would be in a pretty pickle if}
some rabid Republican should raise
the point in Congress. ‘
Remember, there's a chance, though
a most unlikely one just now, for the
G. O. P. to “come back” and wipe out
that slim Democratic majority in the
Senate, to say nothing of the House,
in the fall elections.
The terms of a third of the present
Senators expire next March. Just
suppose things did go wrong and the
Republicans needed to tie up two or
three Democratic Senatorial votes to
put the Democratic administration in
a ‘“hole.” Couldn’t they raise a con
sfitutional question over the county
unit system in Georgia as being con
trary to the spirit of the direct elec
tion amendment? L
It is true that the primary does not
ELECT—the actual election coming
after the primary—but the primary
SELECTS the man or men to be
elected.
This direct election amendment is
too new to take chances with. Let's
don’t do it. Anyway, it’s lots more
fun to count everybody's vote like he
votes it, and then watch the totals
grow, than to throw away a few
thousand in a county like Fulton or
Chathamn because three' little counties
in the mountains or the wiregrass
happen to go the other way.
Give every voter an equal chance in
the fight this year. ’
_ Yours for Georgia and riore polities,
A. RANKIN FILER.
P, S—l came from Elbert County
MER L o Weadaa® AA7 T NNANCR AN AN LY NIY VS,
originally, and I'm red-headed. That's
why I like ‘a scrap “like'we used to
have in the good old days.” :
. ! A. R, F.
Those persons who read A. Rankin
Filer's previous illuminating commu
nication, duly promulgated in this
department, doubtless were inclined. to
sugpect that he i§ an incendiary and
pestiferous cuss, bent upon making
mischief whenever and wherever pos
sible!
However, he is perfectly welcome
to kick the lid off in this column,
whenever the spirit moves him-—in
deed, one of the primary purposes of
this department is to see that the lid
does not get jammed on too tight!
As to the things concerning which
this correspondent blithely inquires,
however, Sidelights will neither affirm
nor deny-—neither will he point with
pride nor view with alarm.
It is Sidelight's private opinion that
A. Rankin Filer is both politically
mean and depraved enough to get np
a nolsy and fussy row entirely with
himself, if nobody else <will dispute
what he says, g
The suggestions he makes, never
theless, are both pertinent and imper-.
tinent. He, at least, starts two lines
of controversy that likely will breed
copious argument—that is, whethor
we shall have a‘county unit or a plu
rality primary, and whether a county
unit primary would not—or might lot
—cloud the title of the Senators thus
nominated. [
Women's Spring Apparel at Keely’s
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Keelyqs, Headquarters For Stylish Gowns
ice Under P
Police Under Probe
"In Waycross Slaying
WAYCROSS, March 3.—Chairman
Fred Brewer, of ihe Police Commit
tée of City Council, to-day called (o
an investigation of the conduct of two
memberg of the police force in con
‘nection with the murder of Denuy
Dixon in Waycross Saturday night,
" The officers involved are Captain of
Police P. Padgett and Patrolman ‘W,
(. Gardner, The first :hearing took
place this afternoon.
W & /
i, CHURCH PLANS ORDERED.
J:‘A‘bmmn. “ALA., 'March.* 3.—The
First Presbyterian Churgh has ordered
Iplans drawn for a new. brick church
butlding, costing $15,000, to be erected
on Chestnut street this summer.
‘ BISHOP VOSS DIES.
Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian.
- OSNABRUCK, GERMANY, March 3.—
Bishop Voss died here to-day, aged 73.
- EXCLUSIVE EXHIBITION
Of Distinctive Imported
Models— Costumes, Suits
and Blouses.
34, Whitehall Street |
Host of Friends at
Mrs. o'Keefe's Burial
IS, eeie’s buria
Many beautiful flowers and the at
tendance of a host of friends testifled
to the love borne for Mrs. Sarah
Branch O'Keefe, whose funeral was
conducted Monday afternoon from the
Sécond Baptist Church,
In the absence of the pastor, Dr.
John' E: White, Dr. A, T. Spalding,
who had known Mrs. O'Keefe when
sheé' was Miss Branch, a belle and
heiress of Greene County, Georgia,
and who was a r'ollege mate of her
husband, the late Dr. Daniel Cornelius
‘O'Keefe, conducted the services. The
pallbearers were E. V. Carter, Frank
Weldon, Dr. Wildam Campbell,
Charles Davis, Br, Walker Duns,n
and Willilam Hurd Hillyer.
BOND ELECTION ORDERED.
GADSDEN, ALA., March 3.—The city
council has passed an ordinance pro
viding for an election on April 20 to
authorize $30,000 bonds for sewers.
ARSO S P3B £ i LA A AP 5 RO SN
@ : 'av
P E H
T To-finbrrow the cream of the fiew models in Dréues wdl be ré;dy for you
Twenty-six styles of new Dresses in : " ‘i
Slll(s.' CI"CPCS. POPllnSq Broca‘des,. ‘MOII'CS
We show you FIRST the accurate copies from latest imported models. Each
Dress is a smart one, and the wide range of models insures an INDIVIDUALITY so
much desired by swell dressers.
Moire Poplin Gowns. fancy stylcs i $37.50 to $5O
Fancy CrcpcDrcues. short coat stylcs . 4‘5.00 to 60
Black and Colored Moirq Dresses . 25.00 to 60
Crcpc de Chine Dresses, tunic styles . 17.50 to 40
Wool Crepe Dresses, tier tunic styles,. 25.00 to 65
Changcamc or Plain Taffeta Gowns . 35.00t0 75
Taffeta Gowns. new pannier stylen .. 20.00 to 45
Pussy Willow Taffeta Dresses . .. . 3'o.'oo‘ to 65
Taffeta Afternoon Dresses . . . . . 25.00te 50
Besides the more elaborate styles in taffetas, moires, brocades, in values from
$50.00 to $125.00, ‘
Pannlers, Puffs, Fl‘lllS and Rufflcs
Are shown in all of their charming variations. Many single expressions of the
newest importations developing the pannier styles in COMBINATIONS of puffs
and ruffles with Poiret waists of net and frills. : :
BURNETT OPENS CAMPAIGN,
GADSDEN, ALA., March 3.—Con
gressman John L. Burnett has arrived
here and to-day opened his campaign
for re-election with a speech at Cedar
Bluff,
JACOBS’
10c Camphor Ice,
Tube0r80x........K...............5c
$l.OO Genuine Henry K. Wam- e
pole’s Cod Liver Oil 390
Rum, Honey and Tar,
for Coughs and Colds . ............ .SOC
VICREBRIVE: .. i iirmiae s SMR
Jacobs’ Cathartic Dovers-Quinine, l 8
Tablets or Capsules ............... C
Cures a Cold in One Minute
, FOR CHILDREN
Jacobs’ Castor oil Elixir, no taste, no 25
- odor of oil, pleasant and palatable . . C
March winds play havoc with the face,
hands and lips. ' = &
Use Robinnaire’s Rose Cold Cream and
keep them in condition ...........25¢c-50¢c
Jacobs’ Ph
aACODS - armacy
l : Eleven Stores
i REWARD FOR SLAYER.
RALICIGH, N. C.,, March 3.—Gov
ernor €raig to-day offered*a reward
of $lOO for the arrest of thq murderer
of Preston Lyerly at Barber Junttion
lagt week. Rowan County has offered
'a similar réward,