Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TWO
A GLANCE AT YOUR HANDWRITING ENOUGH
Bv MILTON BRONNER
NEA Service Correspondent
LONDON, November 20.
If you have any secrets from
vour wife, your mother-in-law,
your business borr. or the po
•'ce, give a wide berth to Ra
fael Schermann, who is on his
way to America. And above alb
don’t let him get his eyes on any
of your handwriting.
For Schermann is declared to be
the modern man. Just a couple el'
rimes, idly scrawled by you, reveals
to him your pasty and your future,
$17.85
for a
brand-new
high-grade
storage battery
rizht from the factory
Here’s a money saving offer on a standard
capacity, 6 volt, 11 plate battery. You never
bought such real value in a battery at this
price. $17.85 buys one for your Ford. Chevro
let, Overland or other light car. (Batteries for
other types of cars at similar low prices.)
This offer is subject to withdrawal at any time
without notice
CHAPPELL MACHINERY CO.,
Cotten Ave. Americus, Ga.
Nc substitution—we handle
PREST-O-LITE AND COLUMBIA
Storage Batteries and parts exclusively. If you do not need a
nc-v battery our repair department will give you full satisfaction.
Make Your Xmas
Selections Now
You may call, make your purchases for Christmas
now, pay one-fourth down and the balance by the
week.
Dolls By The Hundreds
Be sure to see our Horseman Dolls, made by the
oldest manufacturer in the United States. They are
the Dolls that improve each year.
Tea Sets of Aluminum, China and Tin.
Games, Rubber Balls, Footballs.
VC icker and Wood Doll Carriages
Iron and Coaster Wagons and Velocipedes
Hightower’s Tovland and
Gift Shop
I . ‘ I
Everything that Santa Gifts For Every Member
Claus Can Think Os CZ <»n e „< the of the Family , fs
& How Many Days Before
“ CHRISTMAS
M A SHOP NOW
XjyC/fCS'L v „ \'tk And let us pack your goods away
XXg!? X • keep until the holidays. Bring /■,,- „—_ .J
xSr- VxQ «$A- the little ones and let them help,
I < FOR CHRISTMAS /-yj
U GET TH AT DOY A
RIDJkISYQ IL
I tag® W IfM
'\ F\m have everything for boys and //Jf
-d / girls—and lots of things for the
J * grown-ups.
—- T'XHX. - *•■ ~
B Postoffice Williams-Niles CoM p ™
J Al
your aptitudes, your habits, your
I illnesses, everything a person would
1 want to know about you and, per.
I haps, more than you know about
; yourself. ,
Schermann, whose people are o f
■ Polish origin, used to work at i
i regular job in Vienna as fire dam
| ages appraiser. Suddenly he dis
| covered his extraordinary power,
j as a graphologist and has been at
| it ever since, giving exhibitions of
I his gifts before scientific men in
I Vienna, Budapest, Prague and Zu
i rich.
There is no possibility of his
' having a card index on all the peo
I pie whose handwriting he examines
I The stuff doesn’t even have to
1 signed. All he needs is a few
,\"come. on yo>) '•nt nc.
/ X. eork. ove o. - youV£
/ N HOLDING out a
8. I • \ ’’ DOLLAR AN I ’* •
WO
BV STUDYING HOBBYS
’ HAMP wQiTmq , the. wife_
onBBLE TO DETECT AIL
T OF Hls " SHOUT comings".
•* 1" -'VT i ’of "
WMBBfetw a bum- jost I’iwA
W-
- A.
RAFAEL SCHERMANN, MO
I lines of your ordinary script.
By some unexplained gift he at
once deduces from this a physical
and psychical photograph of the
writer, telling about hi.s gait, voice
and gestures, aptitudes and fail
ings, state of health, likes and dis
likes, traits of character and tem
perament. But that is not all.
The accumulation of personal,
psycho-physical detail is merely the
raw material of his vision. Out < f
this detail revealed to him by the
I dots and line of your handwriting,
: he is said to tell the course of your
| life.
j Three samples:
First—He analyzed the hand
writing of a man who came to him.
Schermann said the writer used to
have his face smooth-shaven; that
the heavy black mustache was
something designed to disguise aim
that '■>“ was in trouble because of
his cleverness at imitating other
people's scri"<. Not long after, the
man was arrested by the police as
' a forger for whom a warrant had
been long standing.
Second—A young woman sub
mitted her handwriting. He tol-.l
her she had quarreled with her
lover, had taken to drugs and was
contemplating suicide. She con
* fessed it was ‘rue.
Third another girl showed the
script of her sweetheart. He told
her the young man had incipient
tuberculosis and advised her to
wait until he was cured. The doc
tor’s examnation showed this was
the truth.
In Vienna where he lives they
ray that of the analysis made by
Schermann 70 per cent were cor
rect, 22 per cent partly wrong and
only 8 per cent totally in error.
Schermann personally' strongly ob
jects to being classed with clair-
WORSE'S
INDIAN k
PILLS t
• ’• * h \mV2 out the body k
7X. V '’ll poi .onj. Keep we!?. r
?k'’.??<• M I Kl p l ' K * c 4 ' ;tem act - ve * &
I-«j’icve constipation.
z3b\ R
“4b- \J FavoredFcr (PILLS) V
- Yee.rs
THE AMERICUS TIMES-RECORDER
HERN MIRACLE MAN.
voy; pts and mediums.
Some Viennese scientists think j
he has a sixth sense. lie has. been '
carefully watched by Professor J
Benedikt, the famous alienist of
Vienna University. Benedikt ad
mits seeing some wonderful things, |
but says he can’t explain them. !
Schermann’s own theory is that j
the whole individuality of a man,
with all the details of his life, is
microscopically contained in his
script and the trained eye per-
I reives all in a sequence of( pictures
passing those of a movie film.
And just as a movie film can be
reversed, so Schermann can re
verse his process. Just as from
looking at your script, he can tell
you about yourself, so from look
ing at you he can tell you what
your handwriting is like. It is
: claimed his imitations of people’s
handwriting made by merely study
ing the person himself have in a
majority of cases been very simi
i lar to the real handwriting.
N. C. RANKS HIGH
IN CASE DISPOSAL
ATLANTA, Nov. 20—The North
Carolina Supreme court during the
calendar year 1922 disposed of
more cases per judge than any oth
er similar court in the United
States, according to an investiga
tion of the American courts of last
resort instituted by John 11. Deni
srn, associate justice of the Col
orado Supreme court.
The average in North Carolina
was 160 cases per judge. Tennes
see ranked second, with 130 cases
per judge. Georgia was eighth,
with 91 cases per judge. Among
the other high averaging courts
were the following: Mississippi,
128; Arkansas, 127; Oklahoma, 100;
Kentucky, 99; Alabama, 97; Louis
irfia, 73, and Florida, 52.
The number of judges ranges
from three in Alabama, Arizona,
Nevada, New Mexico and Wyom
ing, to thirteen in New Jersey.
Most of the states have from five
to eight justices.
TREE DEDICATED TO
WORLD WAR VETERAN
ATHENS, Nov. 20.—A tree las
been dedicated to the memory of
Captain Jewett Williams at the
I State Normal school. Captain Wil-
I liams was killed in the World war.
, He was a son-in-law of Chancellor
I David C. Barrow; and as one of the
I first Georgians killed in battle.
miLLMTIBI
FLOWING INTO HO USE
Committee Approves Bussey |
Bill To Get Measure Upon
Floor of Assembly
(Continued From Page 1)
tentative Holden, of Clarke, to ex
empt from taxation until January
1, 1935, all cheese factories, and
the cows supplying the milk ,as
well as the pasture which these
cows grazed.
Three bills bv Representative El
ders, of Tattnall county, were fav
orably reported by the committee.
One of these provides for a corpor
ation franchise tax, one for a tax
on ’’luxuries and the unnecessary
things of life,’’ and one for a heav
ier inheritance tax.
At the morning session of the
committee, the bill introduced by
Representative Bussey, of Crisp, I
and others, providing for elimina-!
tion of ad valorem property on j
county tax digests from state' taxa- I
tion, imposing a state income tax i
on individuals and corporations,
and exempting ■ from taxation all i
incomes derived from agriculture,
iwas favorably reported.
! Governor Walker appeared Be
fore th e committee-and urged a fav
orable report on this Dill.
| .1 e senate met on Monday morn-
i. - >g, hut with no business before it
| ready for action, it adjourned in
(four minutes, to meet again Tues
day.
New House Bills
New bills introduced intthe' e house
Monday were as follows: '
By Ennis, of Baldwin: To create
a state department of revenue.
By Holden, of Clarke. To ex
empt cheese factories from taxation
until January 1, 1935.
. By Boswell, of Greene. To au
thorize the comptroller general to
employ a field force to collect spec
ial taxes.
By Covington, of Colquit. To
authorize the comptroller general
to employ any competent person as
arbitrator in disputed public ser
vice corporation tax cases, instead
of limiting him to the appointment
of seme member of the public ser
vice commission.
By Ellis, C f Tift, and McCluer
V, aiker. To create a state budget
commission.
The Time For -Get
ting Personal Greet
ing Cards is Short
o
Let us show them to you.
We also have a display
of E.mbossed Cards which is
neat and not as expensive
as the Engraved line.
We can furnish these
Cards with
Lions, Kiwanis
And Rotary
Emblems
HIGHTOWER’S
BOOK STORE
oeeeeeeeeeee ©eoeeeee®«••••>•••••••••••
••eeeeeeeee©
22 w w «2
:: Look •:
0 Jui For 0
• • jHmSwFi ••
i:||L Page H
iiM Three g
!■ THUR - N
H IIL Nov. 22 p
M""'"
I Offer Girls
My aids to beauty, and to woman youth
By Edna Wallace Hopper
I had a rich, ambitious mother.
She searched the world with me to
find th c supreme beauty helps.
They made me a famous beauty.
And now, after 40 years in the lime
light, they keep me a beauty still
Other girls, in' these same ways,
can multiply their beauty. Other
1 women can, to old age keep their
j vouthful bloom. I want to help
! them do so. The very helps that
I Fri nee gave me are now at your
; command.
j I am very—very busy on the
' stage. But fam taking time to tell
I you the secrets of my beauty and
tnv youth. And I hope th e time
I will come when girls and W.men
Iby the millions will enjoy what I
i enjoy.
32 Helps in Four
I found 32 things that women
j need to keep them at their best.
French experts combined them in
fetir applications. Thus beauty and
perennial youth were made very
easy for me.
One is my White Youth Clay. Not
like the crude and muddy clays so
many use today. This clay is white,
refined and dainty. Twenty years
of scientific study have made it
amazingly efficient.
I use White Youth Clay to purge
my skin of all that clogs or mars
it. It gives me that rosy, baby
like complexion Blackheads or
pumples, oiliness or blemishes are
unknown to me.
It firms th e skin, combats all
lines and wrinkles, keeps the face
skin ever like a girl’s.
On e application of my White
Youth Clay brings almost unbeliev
able results. Many women seem to
drop ten years. Continued us e does
marvels, as it did for me. No girl
CHEAP MONEY ON FARMS
$2,000,000.00. Two Million Do!lar» to lend on good farm*, well
improved, at 5 1-2% interest, the borrower having the privilege of
naking payment, on the principal at any interett period, stopping
he interest on such payments. Also, we have large sums to lend at
5%, 6 1-2% and 7 per cent. Loans can be closed as soon as abstracts
of title, can be made. Our contract is as good as the best and you
io not have to wait. See us for we car saVe you money.
I Loans made on choice city property.
Write u. or see G. R. Ellis or G. C. Webb in charge of our Horn
J Office, at Americus.
EMPIRE LOAN & TRUST COMPANY
Americus. Ga.
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1923
or woman who once tries this clay
■ will ever go without'it. The price
is 50 cents and sll
Two Matchless Creams
My Y uth Cre.rm is a cold cieam,
based < n lemon and strawberry. It
' is made to embody the best that sei
enee knows to whiten, feed, protect
i and smooth th e skin. I use it after
the clay. It is also my night cream,
■to on retiring. Daytimes I
■ use it as a powder base No one 1
; ever found a cold cream to compare
with my Youth Cream.
My Facial Youth is a liquid
cleanser. It contains no animal, no
I vegetable fat. It cannot assimilate
jin any way with the skin. But it
; penetrates the skin to the depths.
iVvhen I wipe it off, all that clogs
| ihc . kin comes with it. No other
| method clears a skin like this.
9
Luxuriant Hair
My hair is thick and lustrous. It
grows finer every year. I have never
had falling hair or dandruff, never
a touch of gray.
This is due to my Hair Youth, an
other French creation. I apply it
daily with an eye dropper, directly
to the scalp. It takes but a moment
and it does not mus sthe hair. I
can do no greater kindness than to
urge you 4° employ it. It costs 50
cents and sl.
All druggists and toilet counters
supply these products which I use.
The price is small. Every girl or
woman, if she will, can have the
benefits I got Go find them out.
My Beauty Book comes with each.
Edna Wallace Hopper, Business ad
dress, Waukesha, Wis.
Note.—Miss Hopper is now play
ing the Pantages Vaudeville circuit
og the Western States.