Newspaper Page Text
*»AOE SEVEN
THE BANNER, FRIDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 1, 1918.
LYflAUfiaa' 5 ? .oniRriOii
MADE STRONG
By Lydia E. Pinkham’s \-
Vegetable Compound
Banner Bureau,
•• ■ .y. > •> /The Kimball House,
Atlanta, Ga..' Jan. 31.—The tte-up
—‘ABWW formore , n th ^0,000 United State* eppro-
•^^^^^^•priaUon for the operation of the ex-
rest at night— perlment station In Georgia—which Is
yranUtte eWafce and no nearer being untied, sd'fa'jWs state
get bo nervous I
would have to get , , , . ...
up and walk around ton, as it haa bteen all along, and the
and In the morning immediate temporary solution for
would all ^tired t0Q , g Washington unattended to
I.ydia E. Pinkham’s hod been arranged. ,
Vegetable Com-j Intimation has been made, and de-
pndand thought rE , nt | y repeated, that the blocking pf
nervousness soon G* e federal appropriation for the sin-
left me. I sleep tlon came through the Instrumentality
well and feel fine in the morning and ot ,h e state College o' Agricultutw
authorities, when, as a matter of Rfct
The Facts In The Case As To The
Federal Fond? JfqrThe
Georgia Experiment Station, Griffin
The' letter referred to, written to
Compound to make weak nerves
strong.”—Mra Albert Sultze, 603
Olmstead St. Winona, Minn.
How often do we hear the expression
among women, "I am so nervous, I can
not sleep,” or "it seems as though I
should fly.” Such women should profit
by Mrs. Sultze’a experience and give
this famous root and herb remedy,
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com
pound, a trial.
For forty years it has been overcom
ing such senous conditions ss displace- i
ments, inflammation, ulceration, irreg- i
clarities, periodic pains, backache, diz- 1
ziness, and nervous prostration of
women, and b now considered the stan
dard remedy for such ailments.
not only Is that Incorrect, but the re
verse of the situation Is true. j '
It developed here today, in cop-
ment by officials of the state on this
situation, that the mistaken impres
sion obtains in the state that Geor
gia is putting up a large sum of mon
ey for the station, which is intended
Governor Joseph • M.i Brown, under
date June li, 1913, by B. T. Galloway,
acting secretary of the U. S. depart
ment Of agriculture, among other
things says: e.n’Jt ■
“The 1 recent inspection of the Geor
gia Experiment' Station by Dr. E. W.
Allen, of this department, has brought
to light« situation which 1 beg to calf
yorir attention.” 1 :l “ "' ’’
Mr. Galloway emphasizes the fact
hat “the Experiment Station is a v
cientifle institution, designed for the
nrestlgation of problems relating to
agriculture,” and charges that “thii
undamental requirement haa not been
met In the administration of the Geor
gia Station," specifically along that
line saying:
One large and contributing factor
In this situation has been the unfor-
Thompsonor the Ked Cross i > ’■
Thompson of the Rocky Mountain
. Club Hoover Fund for Relief in
Belgium. .: t : : j /; * j ; ;
Thompson of the Federal Reserve
«* Bank I ; i 1 -: - i u -- IJJ ;• s'.
Thompson of the Inspiration Copper
Company
/ Thompson of Montana
Thompson of New Fork
Thompson of the Rocky Mountain
Club
Here he 1st
A-'olonel William B. Thompson, of
ioe numerous connections indicated
' ibove, returned to the United States
d recently from Knssla, where, ns
bead ,of the American Bed Cross
Mission, be Spent four months try-
lugto be of service to the Russian
peo|ile. A very successful figure in
Wall street, he learned much about
the rights of man and the. Instincts
of democracy, and on bis return to
sis native country he said, in the
.course of an Interview:—
“Russia is not anarchistic. Rus
sia is not lawless. The despised
Bolsbevlkl are not and never have
been pro-German, and the attitude
. , of the American press Id failing to
tunate location of the station away t understand them has tended to aid
from the college of agriculture and the Kaiser's cause. The fact is that
the university.'a - condition .which flndn
R USSIA; POIN’J'S TH E WA Y TO ■ A v LiA~KUEi^- s
parallet in only one other state. This
to be expended jointly with an amount I separation haa affected the standards
WEATHER
put up by the United States govern
ment when In reality the United States
government Is putting practically all
the money into the station, and the
state today finds itself caught ini a
Jam of paying no attention to formal
notice given.it. to make necssary cor
rection or the money would be stop
ped. ”*' '
'' —— j Some weeks ago, after a great deal
Atlanta, Ga., Jan. 31.—Athens and of bickering and pulling and hauling
vicinity: Friday fair. > one wa y or another- to try at tho
Georgia: Friday fair, colder In east eleventh hour to straighten out a tan-
and south portions. ........ gled situation, an arrangement was
Weather.-Summary. made in Washington whereby Sec re-
The storm In the south has practl- Houston would approve payment
rally, disappeared leaving the weath- 0 , , hg *u h i,eld fufids for the Georgia
er, however,,more or less imsettled st8tlM) and president Wilson wofild
.-and generally cloudy in the southern appr0Tej 1f a congreseional resolution
states. Rains fell mostly over the deglKned> and *„*** so, to fit the
■ southeastern.sr.ctiopof the .country g^^Hon would,.be put through con-
and snow in tho northeast. gross. The .resolution. was drawn anti
The feature of the weather map approved and made ready for con .
this morning is Ike severe cold in ,. re8S i 0na i pn ssage, but never lias gone
and Ideals of the station, cut it oft
from many material advantages, and
deprived its staff of tho association
ami the atmosphere surrounding a
seat of learning so stimulating and
helpful to research.
“The advantages of close associa
tion with the agricultural college or
university, are so numerous and. so ' not exchange their new-found free-
urnersSlly recognized, and the dim- dotn for the conditions that obtain
cillties pf: ntalntdlnlfig an efficient sta-
Russia baa been under the leader
ship for several months of. the most
radical socialist group, but this fact
Is neither unnatural nor a thing to
provoke despair. It simply means
that Russia is pointing the way
toward a new order.- of society
throughout the world—a larger free
dom, a more complete equality and
wbst I believe to be a pnrer de
mocracy than the world has ever
known before. The, Russian people
have inado tremendous sacrifices
for this ideal, but they bare been
happy In their suffering and would
anywhere else on earth.
Tl sincerely believe tbat Russia is
pointing the way to a general peace,
,1*t as she Is pointing the way to
great nnd sweeping World changes.
It W iirit lu Russia slods that the old
«
tho extreme northwest. TJ>e current t , irough fhe n6cc , sary course; rathtr ,
temperatures Thursday morning rang- thgre hgg „ , Q Wa , hlngton , aom6 .
ed below 30 -degrees helojy zerp over a dtapoglttall to pick flaws
eastern Mpntana, and, more than 20 mnke amehdmMlts t0 , taW a
below zero over tbeJJakottu. Mlnne- |ot that ^ of ,„stead of tak-
“■iaSfSBsft,' &i«.«■•*■
homa S bak>w at Kansas City and 4 3hovlng ! l ‘ h . r ®°8h congress. “I hnve taken the liberty of calllnR
above' at J5t liwuis; the atmospheric T,lnt ’ ¥ * tells the; Moryfyour attention to these matters in or-
st- 1*111$. Tne aunospnenc ' . ILwIL* •; 4 t '
pressure, in th 9 northwest w«i above ° f ,he T , a ‘ the
30.8 inches at several stations. reason tHe * not uh,led -
.The coM area' wijl probably grad- ^vustigation today among the offi-
nadly flow: over tho-so'utheastdrn sec- ‘'W Wffft rtTea ^ the “ mKn **
tion of the United States during the Hnd” the, preaqhMtutus of the expert-
next several days. Fair weather Is "lent station and Its federal funds not
Indicated for Atlanta and vicinity, ! ‘ 5 anybody In Georgia, or any move-
with gradually falling tejnperature. '’•tenf In Georgia, directly or indirectly
Below freezing temperatures are In- connected with the state experiment
dlcaetd .'for Friday and pbssihly aev- station, but Dr. E. W. Allen, of the
eral days following. federal department of agriculture
: L who, In 1913 made a report, following
Chamberlain’s Tablets. an Inspection of the station, which
These Tablets are Intended espsc- brought official notice to the state of
"'"Ally for disorders of the stomach, Georgia that the manner of operating
1 liv er and bowels. If you are troubled the Station would have to bo changed
with 'heartburn, Indigestion or con- that the federal law was nbt being
complied with. That correspondence
was had with Governor Joseph M.
Brown, first; then with Governor
John M. Slaton; was followed up with
Governor Harris and finally has drift-
tfon under the conditions and the In
fiuencee which have been in control
ars so great, that It seetns impossible
that' so Illogical an arrangement, p,,Jvt is rasslug.. There is A lot of
which Is out of harmony with tho* theoldovder.In America,and tbst fs
specific terms of the acts establishing' f t0,n R to °- W ® ^ mni
stations, should bo allowed to con- {/me has come everywhere when sf-
tiUUe.” I falrs inu«t-be handled for the beno-
Mr. Galloway makes marked cbm-
plaint against the "diversion of*fed
eral funds from their proper use’’ and
ngairist the "numerous devices which,
have been resorted to,’’ and com
plains that “the State of Georgia has
been conspicuous by Us failure to aid
ibh station in its work Or its equip
ment” The mo it pointed expression
(n the letter is that in which Mr. Oat
toway concludes by saying:
cqmpwatlvify. few, and what I call
leglsflltmb Pr Vmbx'.i'nii*fCv!sse.
“I am glad It is so. When I aat
sod.p'Otched .those dcuiocrutlc coll
claves In Riisslu I felt that I wimld
i| wch i'oie a ’«lrt(ltSr scene In the
UuitiSl States. Some cultured pro
fessor or some gre.'it iyi|itqln of in
dustry now in Congress'might he
answered by some locomotive ftfe-
nmn in hobnail hoots: nnd often
tlohnnlls would have n shade the
,l)fl«t of the oratory; I'd IlkP tn see n
lot of woVklnumen tn the United
state Peoaie— n»t merely attorney*
for workjmnuru, hut tavB-wlsis \
der that you may be advised of the; ’uusii hanily or rough and ready
situation and nay take such steps as ssr;
Colonel William X. Thompson
way* show that they art actually
doing the world’* work. Than I'd
like to tee real employers aide by
side with them .Instead of
FrftMeM Wilstm btfsbown that
he appreciates_tbe full situation.
upon
' na-
under
standing. It shoUrd he received by
the workers,of Germany with the
samp enthusiasm that it was re
ceived In Fefrogmd and it Is not
beyond my expectations that it may
prove a death blow to German ini-
pi'rlull*m”
Kliortly after Ills return home from
Russia (kthuiel Tlwixpwm w.-i- rltvn
a dinner 'by the l.'m-ky vimnnnln
Club, of which in- lias for many
i
years bean tjca president The
3*2? fitted to advance .to J
Herbert Hoover, Food Adtnlnistra*
tor, who approved it and wrote u
-follow*:—
very gMd to aay to the.
Rocky 'MomrtSln-Blob.-and through
that unique organization to all my
Western if Hands, that they can get
up Just (ga good dloiters as they
ever served nnd still keep within the
lines of food conservation which the
exigency of war makes necessary to
laydown. liatteL.: cm
"I congratulate the Rocky Mottn-
tajn Clnh upon Rs hearty c«rO|>er.i-
tfou in,setting a 'good exfiui'plc. mol
ask for the work of the Food Ail-
lulnlstrsilnt) Hie some stileiHlrd snm
|inrt that has lap-n so i harnctiirl't ■
c' etirfneeV* t"«l vVc^tvruv.t #
ttirmighuut tills tvnr''
;a •
stipatlon they will do you good.
SPECIAL NOTICE.
On and after February 1, cd on down 1° Governor Dorsey's ad
iniq Opwipp Station m> n| st''htIon, though the crisis came
1918, my service station ^ Govprnor Harrl8 . admlnlstratIon ,
will be run a stuctiy spot and ke put k f U ny and squarely up to
cash basis .to everybody. I the legislature that this state was go-
trust that each . and every- Ing to lose the experiment station ap-
one of my friends and cus-, pr "P rIatlon . , ,
Y . V,, ,,-it, I The present atatua of the whole nf
tomers will co-operate v\ itn fa)r lg a f ter the repea ted neglect
me. and I will assure you 'on the part of the state legislature to
more prompt and efficient put through the proper enabling act,
cavvice [and to make the necessary changes In
servK. . ,. method of administration, as demand-
I have secured the services ed by WasWngt0 „ t a(t8r tha Bl t ua u 0 n
of Mr. G. Cartey, who is weU . was brought officially Into the records
known to the motoring pubr [by Dr. Allen, of Washington—and not
lie. He, with Mr. Wallace V m ceorgia-Georgu is
| _ui« j just about as dangerously near losing
Moore, will be able to _ *m- tbe wbole wor j( gi g0 ( ar a8 the federal
die our Service Station in a government If concerned, as well can
satisfactory,manner, giving.be without losing them. The next
the very best attention to legWWvp fiewlon may be able to np.
j • » T , j ply the remedy demanded. If It see*
Dodge, Nash and Hudson flt t0 d0 g0
cars.
tf
MORRIS YOW,
Distributor.
Use
Exe lento^i
ir^jBsrjsKtisa
Exelento
»toi,3 fafiins hair at cr.co. Emry paclhw*
somnntoed. Accept no fdu mvponUiDn.
Ack foe Exelento. Prfco 2Se ca receipt
of itamss or coin. * , ^ « *
The whole scrap, though, dates back
to June 11, 1913, when B. T. Gallo
way,' of the U. S. department of agri
culture ' told Georgia that department
would 'thereafter be insistent In Its
position,' and finally' would recom
mend “the suspension of the appro
priation” ft the federal laws were not
compiled with by the state of Geor-
Li III-:.-'
gla.
The records In the case make an
Interesting showing in the light partic
ularly, of recent developments: i
On Jane 23, 1913, E. W. Allen, act
ing director of experiment; stations -of
the U. S. Department -of Agriculture,
wtote bovernor John M. Slaton a let
ter In which he said:.
I ; “In connection with my regent In
terview with you upon the condition
I of the Georgia Station, ) recall your
t suggestion ;that '•!' feretklt you' e.-copy
.of the letter to Governor Brown, set-
f ting forth the -present situation, the
necessity for a chapde of policy, aid
IS« >i*ed of state, support.”
teem advisable in the direction of a tlon located at Griffin, Go. The feder
remedy. 1 mar say that. In view of ,al government appropriates all of the
Ute present condition at the station money for the support of this Btatlon.
oiul the unsatisfactory use It has made The -federal officials In charge of
of Us funds in the past, this depart- this department now demand that the
ment wlll feel constrained to Insist bn Experiment Station should be brought
very literal interpretation of the Into closer relationship with the Agri-
laws In the future use of the federal cuUural Colldge at Athens. The fed-
appropriations, and to recommend efal law under which the Experiment
their suspension if such conditions are stations were established requires
not maintained as enable a legal and that they should be under the control
efficient use of those funds." - of the Agricultural Colleges. It can-
In his message to the general as- riot be denied that this provision Is
senthly Governor Nat E. Harris pre- violated by our Georgia sta'totes, which
sented the acuteness of the sltuatlorf, It will probably be necessary to
and said: ' amend in some way, as suggested by
"Unless some legislation Is secured Governor Harris. The experiment
to remedy the present defect in the station could serve the purpose for
government of the experiment sta- which It was created far better If lo-
tfod, the appropriation made by thri cated in proximity to the Agricultural
United States will be greatly endan- College of the state at Athens, and
gored and probably withheld." should have been established there.
Following this, the records show, and should now be moved there, ex-
the state of Georgia was put on notice cept for the fact that Griffin is cn-
by the U. S. department of agriculture tltlea, In all good faith, to retain the
that, following a long period of years Institution by virtue of n contract
In which that department had been that city. 1 helleyri that it pdvls-
unable to get the Georgia legislature able to lopate this. Institution at Atli-
tq conform to the federal laws, unless ens, but In view of tile equity Griffin
the then succeeding, session of tho undoubtedly, has, owing to the way it
state legislature did conform Secre- was located, I would not ndviso.fts
tary Houston would suspend payment removal from the present location
of the appropriation to this state. without the full consent of the people
Governor Harris saw the Import of of that community, and without suh-
thls and made this further comment stituting therefor an lnstltut|qi), which
In his message: ,, . , would be equally os desirable to the
“I earnestly ask your attention to people of Griffin. - A committee of the
this matter as tt would bp a great mis- general assembly, or a commission,
fortune to the farmers of the state should be appointed, with plenary
tills state, was not living up to the
terms of a federal beneficlence it has
been enjoying, and to continue the en
joyment-of which it must correct the
error of- its ways., On the outer cir
cle of all of which, tho federal depart
ment of agriculture has cited the writ
ten law, passed Its conclusion and Is
now sitting back In justified repose
on this problem. , 41 iiri r
Over Half Executives of Red Cross
Division Are Women—Working Gratis
Atlanta; Ga., (Wire from "Washing- that particular work. Thesi apfioint-
ten), Jan. 31.—Out of 253 executives . ments have been made regardless of
to lose the appropriation which the power to adjust this matter.
United States government is making There Is no department of our agrl-
for their boneflt.” cultural work that is of more Import-
Governor Dorsey found that state of ance than' that of an experiment sta-
affairs to exist In respect to the sta- tlon. If scientifically conducted. Pap-
tion when he took office, and he, like tlcularly should politics and rlyalrj
his predecessor, tried to impress its be subordinated to the general goo<
Importance on the legislature, telling 1 concerning this matter,
them the federal officials then were 1 ) I woiild not have anything done jvltl
'demanding” tbit- proper correction reference tp this question that did nol
of methods be made. “It cannot bq treat the people of Spalding count]
denied,” said GPvernpr - Qoraey, Vtfaaf with absolute fairness, and indood
this prortslpadsi being violated by our would not propose any plan that did,
Georgia' st*tuips„ wUtcir it will prob- not meet prlth tlyelr,hearty approval:
afily be necessarjj to amend In sonte but I km sore that there'wtll'iio no
way, as suggested by Governor Har- difficulty In arranging this situation
ris, ... f ,. ,, ,,i 1 so as to enable tho State ot O eor-
At that tltpe the federal govern- gla to continue to receive the $30,000
ment still was paying $30,000 to the federal appropriation, and obtain- the'
station apd the legislature fixed $800 best results through its Experiment'
Georgia’s appropriation, but pass'Station, because the: citizens of the!
ed no corrective legislation such as community where it is'now located;
the federal government demanded. are as patriotic as say, and as thor-
In respect to the- operation ot tho oughiy .devoted to the interests of our
station. Governor Dorsey said, in his state, and wilt not ask-more than nb-
message; f*. v • csolute fairness. •• <»• » :• •'* M- 1 ;
My predecessor in. his final message And here rests the sRhatlon today,
of June 27th, 1917, tpage 16) called Bickering and parleying still going on,
your attention to the status of the when in stern reality the Ultimatum,
federal fund appropriated for tha-originated In Washington - and has
maintenance of the Experiment Sta- been carried oak tn Washington; that.
I; *
la .the fourteen divisipn offices of the
American Red Cross, 150, or 59 per
cent; are women according to a can
vas which has just been made. These
figures apply only to those fibldlng
Important executive positions In dlv
islon offices and do not include chap
ter officials.
Xt was further shown that 56 per
cent of these executives are volim-
t qrs serving without remuneration,
The division form of organization
has been In effect only since the ap
pointment of the Red Cross War
Council, and was found necessary be
cause of the tremendous growth of
the activities and operations of the
Red Cross brought about by the war.
The work of millions of Red Cross
members Is now directed by division
offices which are Intermediaries be-
tv een national headquarters and sev
eral thousand Red Cross chapters
scattered throughout the United
States and foreign countries. Prior
to the establishment of these geo
graphical divisions, the operation of
he Red Cross was centralize!) at na-
t'onal headquarters slid the only wer
men In the headquarters organization
were three-In the nursing bureau and
ope whd was a member of the central
coin tn! tfee. ’-‘"i ’I 1 ; 1
Since -the appointment of the War
Council, this number has been ip-
creased to twelve, and Miss Eliza
beth S. Hoyt has been appointed as
sistant to the general manager. There
Is also a woman’s advisory commit
tee of eleven jnemhers and a woman’s
advisory committee on navfil auxiliar
ies to the War Council coniliilng of
fifteen members.
There has recently been establish
ed about twenty-live institutes of
home service which qre . training
schools for Red Cross home service
workers who will assist the families
of soldiers and sailors- There are two
executive positions In each of these
institutes, snd the number of men
and women Is practically equal.
These have not been included in the
above figures. '
"In the selection of officials to con
duct various activities,” said Harvey
D Gibson, general manager, ‘tue
policy Is to obtain-the most efficient
politics, sex or religion.
HOW TO RELIEVE
BABY’S COLD
The best plop Is to USl A very mfldA
salve containing the correct propor
tions of the soothing, - cleansing and”
antiseptic oils of Eucalyptus, Winter--
green. Menthol and Plnus Sylvestrls,.
with Camphor and refined petrolatum.
All the drug stores now sell this mild
salve under the name of Eucaplne
Salve. It is especially prepared for-
the mother's use with her children nnd
sells for twenty-live cents for a large
family jar. ' r 1
The little tofs enjoy 1 Eucaplne Salve
and soon learn to cal! for It by name
and doctor themselves when they
feel Irritation of the nose and throat. •
They consider It fun -arid It keeps their
noses and throat comfortable, cteqn, /
sanitary and free from secretions and <•
germs. Bncaplne Salve may be had in
AtltenS Tat the drug stores of H. U.
Palmer & Sons and at other leading
drug Mores. Price twurity-flve cents
or a large family Jsr.r-udv. ,I ’
Increase of Rates
, ' Granted to Railroads
‘ v;;r lin'i fifn ! -.; -.rji |
Cfy. ,Appclfited Press,) {
WashHfgtbn, Jan, 3l.—The lntir-
•tatA commence commission today
rendered 1 A* ‘decision authsrizlng
transcontinental railroads to Increase
rates from eastern points to -Pacific
seaports to a level of the rates pre
vailing to Inter-mountain points. ■ *
■
About ConMlpatlon.
Certain articles of diet tend to
Check movements of tha bowels, The
most common of theta are cheese, .
tea and boiled milk; On the other
hand raw fruits, especially apples
and bananas, also graham bread and
whole wheat bread promote' a mo^f-
ment of the bowels. When the hot
els are badly. constipated, however,
the sure way Is to take one or two
0VW* , S0f r Jrtl’» Tablets Immediate-
available person hes^ qiialifietl^ for|iy after supper.