Newspaper Page Text
WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 17, 1920.
DAILY TIME8-ENTERPRI8E THOMASVILLE, GEORGIA.
Steyerman’s Style Shop
ANNO UNCI NG=
For Thursday—Friday—Saturday
The Sale Sensation Of Thomasville By Placing On Sale Their Entire Stock
COATS and SUITS
Of
Your unrestricted choice at three prices only:
Garments Originally
Garments Originally
Garments Originally
Priced $75.00 - $115.00
Priced $50.00 - $75.00
Priced $35.00 - $50.00
choice $59.00
ci “ $39.00
ch ° ice $29.00
CASH ONLY
CASH ONLY
CASH ONLY
These are prices, that we realize, are far below those offered in the general run of sales, (es
pecially coming at a time when you are just beginning to feel the need of Winter Clothes)
and we have no excuse to offer, except that we seldom have a sale and when we do we try
to make it a real one.
/
STEYERMAN’S STYLE SHOP
S. V. Steyerman, Prop. • Thomasville, Ga.
y/iwv
w Why r,
Eg Suffer? k
Cardin ‘Did
Wonders for Me/' Wfa
Declare! This Lady,
"I suffered for a long
time with womanly weak- Kof
ness,” says Mrs. J. R So
Simpson, of 5? Spruce mr
St.,Asheville,N.C. “I K4
finally got to the place 4 A
where it was an ellort for
me Jo go, l would have
bearing-down pains In Hpag
my side and back — es-
pedally severe across my
hW back, and down In my T^d
tide there was a great 56^
bales that we can’t use because the
capacity of our mills la only B,000,000
bales.
IBE
HALF OF QUOTA 1
ternatfonal experience will be elected, here yesterday a total of 1,125,000 was
the entire earnings to go to-the stock- subscribed for capital stock of the
holders, banka with a capital under u Federal Foreign Finance Corporation,
million dollars may subscribe lawfully recently organized in this city anil
before January 1, under the Edge ex- pledges were made that will bring the
port nuance act, the business of the state’s total up to Its quotu of 1,600,-
$0,000,000 company may be $60,000,- 000. The state Is expected to sub-
000, and the European debentures scribe at least $2,000,000.
and securities given the company us ne8olllt i OI18 were adopted by the
security or credit will he offered on bank „ r8 calling for subscriptions from
tho market.
each bank In the state of 2 per cent.
8
great
deal of soreness. I was
nervous and easily Op-
set.
TAKE
CARDIN
The Woman’s Tonic
beard of Cardul and
decided to use.lt,” con
tinues Mia, Simpson. “I
saw shortly it was bene
fiting me, so I kept It up
and it did wonders for
me. And since then I
have been glad to praise
Cardul. It is tbs best
woman’s tonic made/’
Weak women need a
tonic* Thousands And
thousands, like Mrs.
Simpson, have found
Cfcrdtotof frftnfflt ftpfhgi n.
urad Of Benefit toinem* ■mrA
Try Cardul lor your trou-
" ALL «
n
ALL
DRUGGISTS
“Cotton ot some grudes is being sold
as low ten cents a pound, the kind
of cotton on which the foreign mills
can run.
The purpose of the Federal Inter
national Banking Company, which of
fers 60,000 shares of stock at (100 a
j share, will be to facilitate transporta- ^
nQB enn e l J U ! lIon in lhe * orm °* varl0UB sporting I * n «P«aking of the usefulness of the y f its capital stock and surplus and a
,088,500 Subscribed to the companies and other agencies. It will I corporation from a port standpoint, committee was appointed In each Con-
Export Corporation Which : not enter tho Held as a competitor of [ Courtney Thorpe, vice-president of gresslonal district to solicit subscrip
Is Designed to Provide Mar- the exporters, but will merely co-op- j the Savannah Bank and Trust Com- u 0D1) from an banks not represented
ket for Cotton Raised in the erate wlth such companies. The time pany, said that in his a opinion the ex- !lt ihe meeting here yesterday.
i,them State* extent bt papor of foreign companies 1 port company will receive tho needed St()ck 1){ th0 finance corporation,
oouuiem oiaies. ! credited will probably be limited to! facility for marketing tho crops of the capHa iiaed at $6,000,000, Is being
Macon, Oa„ Nov. 17.—Georgia bank- «l* months. Our enterprise will be a . South. subscribed by tho banks of the |
ora In extraordinary scsalon here yea- j reservoir of credit to help the South's I The following resolutions presented twelve Southern states for the pur-1
terday subscribed a total of $1,088,500 oxport business. Every bankers’ as-! by the committee named for the pur- pose of assisting Southern producers [
to the stock of the Federal Interna- sociatlon In the South Is taking action j pose, in which the plan for the cor- j n finding foreign markets for their
tlonal Banking Company. Georgia’* * this week." ! porutlon Is adopted, were passed unan- products through the extension of
quota In tbe proposed capital ot $6,- j John K. Ottley. president ot tho ; Imously: credit to prospective puchusurs.
000,000 Is $1,500,000 and It was pro-' Fourth National Bank of Atlanta, said ! "Be it resolved. That this assoclu- Reports reaching local promoters
dieted by Idadlng bankers that Goor- ( the South has a common problem, but ' tlon hereby adopts the plan us pro- of tbl . movement indicate that many
gla will over-subscribe the quota. | no common agency for handling It. He sented for the organisation of the u f tb( , 8 t a tes will have an ovi-rsuh-
The Spent Dollar
is a lost friend—gone forever
Do you know the Savings Bnnksof the United
States hold over $3,000,000,000.00 in small de
posits?
Are any of these Dollars working for you?
Do without some unnecessary thing and
start a savings account with Si.00
WE INVITE SMALL ACCOUNTS AT
The Peoples Savings Bank
THOMASVILLE. GEORGIA
One hundred and sixty-flve banks. gave assurances that the company
were represented out of a total of ’ would be honestly, safety and Intelli-
eight hundred and eighty-four and gently handled.
elghty-flve counties were represented j The choice of New Orleans was
out of a total of 165.
Resolutions endorsed the Federal
International Banking Company,
which Is designed to provide a market
for Southern cotton. The first pay
ments of 25 per cent, of the sub
scriptions will be mado on Dec. 1.
In stating the purpose of yesterday's
meeting, F. Warner Martin, vice-presi
dent of tho Lowry National Bank of
Atlanta, said It was tho aim to Inform
the bankers ot Georgia of the neces
sity for fust such an export corpora
tion as Is being formed and to obtain
subscriptions from each bank ot 3 per
cgnt. ot Its capital stock and surplus.
He stated that tho opinion ot tbe
bankers ot tbe South appeared
overwhelmingly In favor of the plan.
Robert F. Maddox, president of the
Atlanta National Bank, and chairman
of tbe organisation meeting and the
campaign committee of Georgia, out
lined In detail the Federal Internat
ional Banking Company, and said the
Edge export finance act provides what
la needed for the succeaa of the enter
prise.
“A Southern bank to finance the In
terests of the South Is a vital need,”
said Mr. Maddox. *tbe nations that
were In tbe wtr are now with little or
no raw materials. Germany and Aus
tria-Hungary In 1913 used 3,000,000
bales of cotton of the 9,000,000 bales
that the South exported. They are
mentioned os the one central point In
the South for the home office, and the
following board of directors of the or
ganization, who wore proposed to
serve for ono year, were read: Ala
bama, Oscar Wells, president First
National Bank, Birmingham; Arkan
sas, Morehoad Wright, president Un-
Fedoral International Banking Com- s lcr |ptlon when the books
panles, and urges each bank in the ; )nc 20.
state of Georgia to subscribe to the •
TSr 1eT::Z7etZ ‘tocT.nd PROMINENT COLUMBIA
surplus of each bank.
“Be it further resolved, that the j i
IUCEMAN SAYS THAT
RE-CU MA DID WOND
ERS FOR HIS MOTHER
subscriptions to said company he re- j
celved by a chairman In each of five
groups of the association, said chair
man to be uppolnted by the president
of the association, and an active can-
Ion and Mercantile Trust Company, va ss be promptly made, subscriptions |
Little Rock; Georgia, Mills B. Lane, j received, be reported to the chairman ^ resent ee ng n etter ea (
president Citizens and Southern Bank, j j n time for the total state quota to bo
Savannah; Georgia, Robert F. Maddox, I reported by the tenth of December,
president Atlanta National Bank, At* | and,
We Offer'You the BEST
Beet Pork g Veal, Hams g Bacon
Cut and sliced a you like it.
The Enterprise Market
The 8hop of Quality, Qt antity and Personal Service *
2 Phonet 226 and 227 A. C. Walden. Pro>
lanta; Louisiana, J. P. Butler, Jr„ ex*
“Be It further resolved, That the
ecutlve vice-president Canal Commer- j Qeorg|a llttnker8 . Asaodatlon appre ci.
clal Trust and Savings Company, New
Than She Haa Had For Years, and
8he Expects to Keep it In the House j
Always.
Mr. M. C. Torbovllle, residing at No. |
Haskell Avenue, Columbia, South!
us. cm. trust anuoavmbscompau,. ates the | mp o r , aDC e and value of pub Carolina .and whose duties as o!
he Orleans; Mississippi, S J. vlc * || c lty as a means of promoting the or- j policcmaV, keeps him guarding the!
a* president Peoples Bank an Tr st , ganlzatlon. and' therefore requests public's Interest around the State
Company’. Tupelo; North Caro na, -! tbat tbe ncw , paperg 0 f the state lend House. Is glad to tell folks about the!
El wood Cox, president Commercial: iuch a(d and c or#Hon M can RE-CUMA haa done for'
National Bank, High Point; South; 1 1
. ... • presenting the facts and advantages
Carolina, J Pope Matthew, president; of foreign bank to the
Palmetto National Bank. Columbia; ; 0| Qeorgla „
Tennessee, R. Brinkley Snowden, vice-, po „ ow ri?port of tbe rcsolu .
president Banket Commerce and j , nd th , . doptlon „t
Trust Company, Memphis; Texas T> he reaoIutlon8i tbe , |lt of bank8
J Caldwell, vice-president Fort Worth meetlo( vu re .d,
National Bank. Fort Worth; Texas. ! each member Klylng amount
which his bank subscribed with
scarcely an exception. The bankers
present pledged, usually subject to the
confirmation by the directors ot their
banks, and other banks will be can
vassed which were not represented.
J. A. Pondrom. vice-president South;
Texas Commercial National Bank.)
Houston; Florida. Art F. Perry, preit- i
dent Florida National Bank, Jackson-1
vllle; Oklahoma and Virginia yet to j
be announced. , j
The discussion which followed
brought ont several features, chief
now without cotton, practically, and!among which were that the stock Is
wo have a surplusage ot 9,000,000 negotiable, a president ot brood In-
Louisiana Banker* Subscribe
New Orleans, La., Nov. 17.—At a
meeting of Louisiana bankers held
his mother. Mrs.. TorbevtUe suffered;
for years from Rheumatism In its most'
Intense form, with particularly severe j
pains In her shoulders and back; alsoj
In various portions of her body. She;
was confined to her bed most of tbe
time. She received a bottle of HE-
CU-MA; took It as directed; It was but
a very short time before the could
feel the benefits. She la at present
feeling better than she has for years.
RE-CU-MA la sold with a guarantee j
that your money will be refunded If J
you do not feel benefited after tak-j
Iny it four day*. RE-CU-MA sell tor j
$1.20, plus war tax and can be had at;
R. Thomas Drug Store and all good!
SAY, don’t you think its getting
time for SHOES? You had bet
ter come down to,
WARSHAW’S BIG SHOE SALE
now if you want to
Save Money.
SALE NOW ON
Warshaw’s Cul Price Shoe Store
Call Phone 63 and we will tell you
about it now.
drug stores—adv.