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A 1345
1 (% W hitehall
i 3 o Street
I Shoe Department—Fiyst Floor. '
Thursday & Friday
A Special Sale of High Grade Pumps and Ties in
Satin, Bronze Kid and Patent Leather.
These are broken lots of the season’s most want
ed styles. . :
All sizes and widths in the lot—but not all sizes
in each style.
Values to $12.50
Your Choice
$7. 50
£ ;"‘3“'-
(= e
[ L .a’;z ™s]
SO U - $77.50
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Mail Orders Filled Promptly
s .
Neither Soap, Water, Nor a
Sharpened Blade Can Re
move the Soul Thought
o ’
Lines From a Man’s Face
You can’t hide ADVERSITY any more than you
can Prosperity.
" You are in debt—worried sick—misery is writ
ten all over you—the very atmosphere of your
presence is depressing.
You CAN and MUST get away from it—HUMAN
DEPRAVITY KNOWS NO DEPTH.
Just a little ready money in the Bank would
make a different man of you—as much as five dol
tars would help. There is nothing so soothing as
SAVINGS ACCOUNT
to soothe the lines of worry from your face.
We are holding a nice clean sheet on our ledger
for your account. One dollar is a beginning.
. 4 per cent interest paid.
L .
Georgia Savings Bank & Trust Co.
Member Federal Reserve System.
YOUR hot water problem for the rest of
your life is solved by installing a
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’k It works simply. Attach to fyour water
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o
', The top of the
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i _J_'.__'f__‘_'_‘: ‘ INSIST ON A
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A pre—— ang.ifyour de:ler hATln'tonle :‘cnd
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‘.'.«..,..__‘_g%w o e oPt
T A
)/ I N\ ATLANTA STOVE WORKS
Y -o/ k‘flfj \ Nnfrs. Fameus Barrett Ranges
Ceconaumical 1y ATLANTA, CEORGIA
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN
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This Time, However, Wife Is
‘o |
Unforgiving, and There ls |
No Brother, 1
(By Universal Service.) |
KANSAS CITY, Feb, 26.—A para,llell
to the famous Spiker case has de
veloped in Kansas City. This time it‘
is a French, not an English girl, and
there is no brother of the \Jloged!
guilty man to step into the breech
to save the girl from deportgtlon, and
unlike Mrs. Spiker, the wife is un
forgiving.
The man is Lee Shippey, Misscurl
poet, once a candidate for “poet
laureate” of the State, a newspaper
man, lecturer and forfnerly editor of
the Higginsville Jeffersonian. He
was editor of “Missouri Notes,”™ a
column in a local newspaper, until the
case bacame public. He is understood
to have gone to Los Angelex.
The girl is Madeline Babin, who,
since she came to Kansas City from
her home in Paris, where she met
Shippey, has been living with her
‘mother, a war widow, and her sister,
Georgette. The family came to
‘K:lnsas City fro;n Paris several
‘months ago. '
HEARINGS IN CASE.
‘ The case was brought tn the at.
tentfon of Federal officials by Miss
‘"‘nnsmnce Woodson, a sister of Mrs.
Shippey. Mrs. Shippey is a daughter
!nf Mrs. Blake Wondson, an active
club worker. Her father is a widely
known attorney.
Warren Long, in charge of the bu
reau of immigration here, has held
two hearings on the case and has
sent recommendations to the bureau
of immigration.
Mrs. Shippey, while her husband
was in France as a Y. M. C A
worker, carrifed on his newspaper
work here. She is understood to have
refused to sue for divorces The
Shippeys have one child, a boy 10,
The story, as told to federal au
thorities, is that Shippey was in Paris
when he met Madeline, the French
girl. He was assigned there by the
Y M. C A
HOW THEY MET.
They met on a street car on All
Saints’ Day,” Madeline having been
on her way to a cemetery to put
flowers on graves of soldier dead.
Her younger sister, Georgette, was
accompanying her.. Shippey’s desti
nation was the same. He inquired the
way and was told to follow the two
girls.
Later Shippey, who was acecom
panied by a gray haired army cap
tain, offered to carry the flowers for
the girls.
While shippey was taking photo
graphs of the services at the ceme
tery, he ran out of plates and noti¢ing
the girls had a kodak borrowed it.
The girls gave their address, and his
visit to return the camera was the
first of many.
Later Shippey boarded in the Babin
home.
‘When Shippey returned to America
he was met on the dock by his wife.
According to information given fed
efal authorities by relatives of Mrs.
Shippey, he seemed cool, and told his
wife he had lost his heart to a girl in
France.
“I love a little girl in Paris,” he is
reported to have told her. “I want
you to get a divorce so 1 can marry
her. Choose your own grounds.,”
WANTED TO WED GIRL.
The reason for a divorcs, Shippey
{s said to have told his ‘wife, was
to enable him to do his duty to the
girl, Mrs. Shippey refused to take
steps for a divorce, but offered to
take the child.
Mrs. Shippey, broken hearted, per
suaded Ner husband to return to
Kansas City for the sake of their
young son and to forget Madeline.
They returned, but shortly after let
ters began to arrive from Madeline.’
Mrs. Shippey read them and realized
the affair was growing more dan
gerous to her. Later Madeline, with
her mother and sister, came to
America., Madeline had signed a
contract to teach school in Oregon. It
is sald by federal officials that rela
tives of Shippey live in Oregon. But
the Babin family came direct to
Kansas @Qity. }
Madeline is 22, though she looks
younger. Her hair is fair and curly,‘
her eyes blue. She speaks English
well,
“I would not hurt him for worlds™
e#ald Madeline today. “He was a good
friend. That is all. He lived at our
house and was most solicitous, 1 can
not speak of this. I would never
wish that I should hurt him. It
would be too terrible.
“After all, you see, it is my own
‘private afl?r. 1 do not wish that
people should look at my life. I wish
to be let alone to go hy way. I can
teach and I can get along with my
mother and sister. Surely those who
know Mr. Shippey can believe he
would do a kind act for a girl for the
sake of kindness alone, becausé he 1s
so good and gentld.”
Mrs. Shippey is prostrated. Her
mother, Mrs, Blake Woodson, said her
daughter patchéd up matters with
Shippey in an effort to hold together
a home for the sake of a 10-year-old
boy, who was waiting to welcome his
“daddy” from F'rance.
“He had written her, saying he
Doctors Fail
“Terrible case of Ecxema —contracted
when & mere M’-roumd(nnfluh
rur-‘ with half dosen specialists. Both
egs in terrible condition, Almost »
nervous wreck, It took just 8 betties of
D. D. D. to clear up this disesse.”
This is the late testimony of a prominent
newspaper man We have seen 8o many other
wufferers relieved by this marvelous lotion that
we freely offer you A bottle on onr personal
yuarantes. Try it today, 8,00 c and §I.OO,
m} Totion for Skin Dumoc'
JACOBS PHARMACY,
constlilisinesmisia st
" u-n:- your mdn a'=
o -'-Luum-: st vy Kxuault
wafe, gentle, wholesome, Dost and pgoes
farthesl. Obtatnabie at buaey ¢,-vznnl. overy
whers Kereiax is relief for -A:X.M .
ineluding constipation, head L, ey !
spolls. belohing, zas, heartburn, torpid NHeer, ,
mh--v:n ervousiess dysprpe'a, Indiges- |‘
obes'ty, twulal snl physieal dulines,
A Clean Newspaper for Southern Homes
‘wanted her to come to meet him for
a » second honeymoon,” said Mrs,
Woodson. “Shortly after Mr. Ship
pey met my 'daughter ne told her of
the Freneh girl. While she realized
affection was dead between them, yet
she urged for the sake of their child,
who had been waiting to eagerly to
see his ‘daddy,’ who was a hero in
his eyes, that they return here and
make an attempt to rebuild their
home.”
After Mrs. Shippey learned the
French girl was in Kansas City, in
an apartment, Mrs. Woodson said,
she told her husband she would not
countenance him Kkeeping up two
homes. Shippey then went West, his
mother-in-law said.
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Police and Firemen in
Albany Get Pay Raise
ALBANY, Ga., Feb. 26.—Albany
policemen and firemen have received
another monthly raise of $lO, mak
ing the lowest pay sllO. Officers re
ceivedumob raise.
% g
N e 5 because we have cut our
RSSR’¥ g . . e .
’_;% e | margin of proflt this spring
\‘ , o to the lowest in our history
B < S
SAko¢ K * B 5
B 0 NG R 0. P
/ i{fl\ffi R- S - | in an effort to keep prices
b 8 o e R e = 3 P 7
e 5 S &Z«% ’;«‘% " &'R’ b 5, 3 -
Y *éa Lot 3 3 down and increase our
i } m‘%%g% o B O :
it 7 TN oTR U S ¥
R N e
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bIB oi g @é{?‘ gk % i’“v‘
- . Vo e e
53 ¢ % ) S i i
R TR Ve T vk B
SRR i AP G T l< IBLER & LONG Clothes have always
IR i, R i W 6]
i e } CE U been sold to you on an extremely
B, ;,2 )L LT small margin of profit. Now we have cut
gt e 1 &é%gém PO that margin even lower, which, when com-
A e g N 3& ) bined with the savings-we make by quan
-4 i YL RO A,v'».',';f.‘,s( MR \i Ry . o '
2 bl Re ™ AR ity buying for 33 stores, produces a
e T C’gfi\”%}%fi%@' greater saving than ever for the buyer of
. R . %ffz‘ ; Kibler & Long clothes—a saving that no
L B | el S ordinary retailer anywhere could possibly
T e e M T g o
i : ) ;e o § Ahe equal' '
S s, Rate e
‘?‘s@%%3‘? T et 1§ %fic »
TR e v MRI
ey LS T il AR
I L 4 3 §‘:;4:\&,¢_§ . % 5%’2: . 3
_E : 3 ELE TR We are showing attractive, new
. AR A . Spring clothes now. See them in
T W L our windows. Come in and try on
g R .*3.'% the new models. You'll not only
U « o UL %j&‘s admire their smart style and drape
i(5 SV —the good wearing all-wool fab
% i * rics and fine tailoring—but will
% f.gfi’i‘ S &4 < B 008 R
L A . \% . surely marvel at the moderate
R AL e prices. : bst W mnciultatiin
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. . , $ $
$25 to $3 5 —Two Stores in Atlanta— 3 0 to 5 0
7T DECATUR ST. 33INTHEU. 8. A. 70 PEACHTREE ST.
Cross Slaying Trial
At Macon Near Close
MACON, @Ga. Feb. 26—The evi
dence in the case of H. Lee Cross,
charged with killing Frank J. Hodges,
real esate maufillkely will come to an
end this afternoon or tomorrow morn
ing. The case has been one of the
hardest fought in years.
Hodges and Cross were business
partners. Because of a note for §27,
the men had an argument last Sep
tember and Cross shot Hodges. The
note was im favor of Cross. The de
fense is contending Cross shot Hodges
in self-defense,
Albany Rotarians Give
« Anniversary Luncheon
ALBANY, QGa., reb. 26.—The Al
bany Retary Club celebrated the fif
teenth anniversary of Rotary with a
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1920.
luncheon today. The local club, four
vears old, for some time was the only
club in the world in a city as small
as Albany.
PACKERS HAVE NEW SYSTEM,
(By International News Bervice.)
WASHINGTON, Feb, 26.—Conceal
ment of the identity of owners of the
stock yards and defeat of the income
tax laws is possible under the sys
tem adopted by the packers of is
suing “bearer certificates” to stock
holders, Federal Trade Commissioner
Colver declared Wednesday before the
House agricultural committee at the
packer hearing.
Cuti S
\
| uticura cap
[Without M
‘ Cutigurs Soup is the favarite formfotyrazer sheving.
Demonstration!
GEE-GO Wonder Soap
Kress' at the Viaduet
Brown Hayes Co.
387 Edgewood Ave,
Jackson Drug Co. o
Broad and Marietta Streets
Have the spots and stains removed
from your own clothing