Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, August 03, 1913, Image 5

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HEARST’S SUNDAY AMERICAN. ATLANTA. 0A„ SUNDAY. AUGUST 3, 1013. 5 D ASSETS EXPERT Dr. Scott Nearing, of U. of P., Says Five Persons Need S650 to $1,000 for Efficiency. THE STANDARD OF LIVING Cats Disport on Mrs. +•+ +•+ +•+ Newport Fashionables A. G. Vanderbilt's Shade •J..+ -i- • Stare at Very Latest Fad CM.LEI] ft i 010 Mrs. Vanderbilt and Her Parasol. REPRODUCE LI National Efficiency, He Declares, Must Rest Upon Efficiency Methods of Living. PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 2.—"I am vow completing a study which seems v-d justify the statement that three- fifths of the jobs offered to adult males in this part of the United States do not pay enough wages to enable the men who take them to maintain a wife and three children in decency.” In these words Dr. Scott Nearing, of the Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania, summarized an elab orate investigation, which he has been conducting, of wages, prices and standards of living. “There are two standards by which you may judge the sufficiency of a wage,” continued Dr. Nearing. “In the first place, you may ask, •Will this wage keep a family above the starvation line?’ In the second place, you may ask, ‘Will this wage provide the necessities and decencies of modern living?’ “The first standard has been aban doned long ago. Everyone takes it for granted that people shall not starve to death. In a country as rich as the United States everyone has a right.” Cost Does Not Vary. “The variation in the cost of the different items of the family budget is not so extensive as has sometimes been assumed. The comparative ta bles prepared for the British Board of Trade show that food and rent—th^ two largest Items of the family budget —do not vary greatly from one city to another. “On the other hand, the intensive studies made by Chapin in New York, by the Federal authorities in Fall River, North Carolina and Georgia, by Miss Byington in ‘Homestead,’ by the New York committee in Buffalo, all tend to the same conclusion—name ly, that a family of five, a man, wife and three children under 14, require from $400 to $600 to provide sub sistence, and from $650 to $1,000 to In sure efficiency. “The variations occur to some ex tent between cities, but largely be tween cities and towns. Generally speaking, rents and produce are lower in the small towns than in the cities. Nevertheless, the facts at hand indi cate that a family of five needs at least $400 for th^ maintenance, and a* least $650 for efficiency. This income may be in the form of money or of goods. Some Wages Satisfactory. “The statistics showing the wages of adult males are, in several cases, very satisfactory. “The prevalence of the ‘efficiency idea' in the industrial, political, re ligious and social atmosphere makes anv further plea for its extension su perfluous. Even the fastest runners may read the plain writing on the signboards of progress. The dullest of wits have grasped the idea of using sharp tools. Whether behind the gun or behind the steam shovel, the man must be accurate, keen, vigorous, en ergetic. Efficiency pays. “Perhaps the efficiency idea has taken the strongest hold in Germany, but America has been quick to follow her rival’s lead. From the conserva tion of resources to the Icing of milk, from the stitching of a shoe to the welding of a rivet, efficiency, scientific management, is the apotheosis. All Depends on Manhood. ‘‘Conservation, icing, stitching, riv. eting—even scientific management itself—depend, in the last analysis, upon muscle, brain and virility. Ef ficiency is based on manhood. Man hood involves good feeding, sanitary housing, adequate clothing, recreation and education. The nation which provides these things for its citizens is efficient; the nation which fails to provide them is not efficient, hence national efficiency must rin the last analysis, on efficiency standards of living. “The problems involved In wages, prices and living standards thus as sume a grave importance in national policy. The question of the efficiency or inefficiency of living conditions forges to the front as one prime in terest. How many battleships shall we build? Shall we wage war? Can this foreign market be conquered? Ask, rather, whether the standard of American living will man the ships, and the regiments, and produce with such efficiency as to secure a market How much efficiency will the standard of American workingmen permit?” ICE CREAM CONES BREAK HUNGER STRIKE OF BEARS CHICAGO. Aug 2—Somebody men tioned Labrador in the Lincoln Park Zoo the other day, immediately a ton and a half of polar bear became pas sionately homesick and went on a “hunger strike.” The heat helped the sulks. Cy DeVry, keeper, fed the bears with ice cream cones—heaps and heaps of them—until Mr. Bear and his wife began to think icebergs grew in Chicago and could be eaten. They have decided to stick around during the summer. Mrs. Alfred Gwynne Van derbilt, who refuses to tell Newport friends where she purchased parasol that is the envy of the society set, the pictures of the frolicsome felines on the imported shade making the colony stare. / • i '/iff V v /. f; >7 $ iff *r ■> ** f. : ' /■ - .... •> «7 ■ | : -- - 4 * A ■ t i ’ ■ <~ Y i. ♦ t $ v , 7 < J/ \ f i ■ « fl Mrs. Vander bilt has amazed Newport by the wonderful array of gowns, hats and parasols she brought from abroad. New Nininche hats, so much in vogue at Longchamps, among the confections worn by the former Mar garet Emer- son-McKim. Bank Officials Declare Launder ing Foils Tellers’ Delicate Touch—Want It Abolished. WASHINGTON, Aug. 2.—Another of the currency innovations intro duced during the regime of Franklin MacVeagh while Secretary of the Treasury is being fought by members of the party now in power. This is the washed money division. Efforts have been made to develop opposition among bankers to ‘laun dered money.” most of it based oi the ground that the economy works to the encouragement of counterfeiting. A number of letters have been received condemning the washing of money by the Government. These letter.- have been filed with the Senate by Senator Martine of New Jersey. Bank Head Voices Protest. Charles McCulloch, president »f the Hamilton National Bank of Fort Wayne, Ind.. son of Hugh McCulloch, who was Secretary of the Treasury under President Arthur, voi e» ‘he general sentiment expressed in these letters. He says: “The washing business is -i string economical proceeding for \ great Government like ours. Toe Bank < f England never pays out :■ i.oie tin second time. Certainly this Govern ment is rich enough and should have pride enough to keep in circulation fairly clean bills without resorting to the washing process.” Say Bank Tellers Compla'n. According to hank presidents who oppose the innovation, there is a gen eral complaint from bank teller? against washed money. They assert that not only do washed notes lose a degree of the sharpness of engraving, but the washing process changes the paper in a way difficult to describe making it similar to the paper of most counterfeits, removing the protection of the delicacy of touch by which most tellers detect counterfeits. Already the plan of Mr. MacVeagh to change the pize of the currency notes has been vetoed by the present Administration. There has been no expression from the Administration as yet on washed money. From Sunken Gardens and Aquar iums of Wonderful Fish ‘The Road to Hell’ Goes to Crater. Girl Wakes After Sleep of 150 Hours School Teaching Makes Her So Tired She Thought She Could Slumber Years. Topless Potatoes Grown in the West Maine Woodsman Is Modern Day Samson Giant Is 6 Feet 6 Inches Tall and Weighs 235 Pounds of Solid Muscle. BANGOR, ME., Aug. 2—John I. Nugent, of Caratunk, Mo., is the big gest man in the Maine woods. He is 34 years old, 6 feet 9 3-4 Inches tab. weighs 235 pounds and strong in pro portion. He has seven brothers, all of whom are more than 6 feet tall. Nugent uses a sled 8 feet long by 30 inches wide. On one occasion Nu gent had loaded on the sled the butt of a tree which he had cut. The butt was 17 feet in length. He started to haul the butt to the landing, a full half-mile away. The log was so long that it caused the front part of, the sled to tip up. and in orde the load balance he placed front part two railroad ties, added a weight of 250 pounds. He reached the landing on schedule time. pari oi, Mic er to\ e E*d on f -..ft tics, wnieh They’re Only Pictures,but They’re the Sensation of Sum mer Colony, NEWPORT. R. I.. Aug. 2.—The Par- isian parasol carried by the beautiful new Mrs. Alfred Gwynne Vanderbilt (Margaret*EmersoR-McKim), who has just come from the “other side,” is the sensation of Newport. Its chief fea ture is the representation, on each “panel,” of a frolicsome cat. All the society leaders are asking each other where in the world she got it. Mrs. Vanderbilt is not at all in clined to say. The parasol is quite the most distinguished affair that has made its appearance at Newport the present season. Mrs. Vanderbilt has brought over quite the finest assortment of new frocks, hats, parasols and Louis Quinze shoes the Rue de la Palx can turn out. These include confections from Doucet, Worth, Felix, Redfern and Virot, and some of the new Ni ninche hats so much in vogue at this time at Newport, Deauville and Long- champs. False Pretense in Love Ruled No Crime Married Man, Who Wrote Girl He Could Make Her Happy, Goes Free. CHICAGO, Aug. 2.—Attempting to “obtain love under false pretense” not an offense punishable by law, according to developments resulting from a complaint mad^ by Florence Smith, 16 years old, of this city, against Edgar Phillips, a traveling salesman. Love is neither a com modity nor cash, so the police only could warn the alleged “love pirate” to behave himself. Phillips said he advertised for a stenographer, and wrote a “friendly letter” to Miss Smith, in which he described himself as “a real gentle manly young fellow, who can do hl« share toward producing happiness.” He told the police he Is married and lives 1n New Castles. Pa. He came to Chicago and was lonely. Electrician Hit by Son£ Bird Extinction 11,000 Volts and Lives Predicted in Address FRECKLES Don't. Hide Them With a Veil; Re' ; move Them With the Othlne j Prescription. This prescription for the removal < of freckles was written by a prom- j lnent physician and is usually so ( ■uccessrul In removing freckles and < riving a clear, beautiful complexion that it la sold by Jacobs' Pharmacy under an absolute guarantee to re fund the money if it fails. Don’t hide your freckles under a veil; get an ounce of othine and re move them Even the first fe* ap- f ilications should show a wonderful mproverrient, some of the lighter freckles vanishing entirely. Be au’-e to ask the druggist for the double strength othlne; it is this that is sold on the money-back guar antee. 10 Tons of Cards For China’s Monaca Shipment From Seattle to Oriental Gambling Resort Contains 96.0G0 Decks. SEATTLE, Aug. 2.—Ten tons of playing cards, approximately 96.000 decks, were among the shipments taken aboard the Japanese steamship Tamba Maru of the Nippon Yusen Kaisha, loaded here for ports in the Orient. The cards arrived from tne East by train a few days ago. They are 1 for Macao. China, the Monte Carlo of the Orient, situated 40 miles from the island of Hongkong on the main land. near the mouth of the Pearl or Canton River. It is the gambling resort of the den izens of the British colony. NEW MEXICAN MODEL TOWN NAMED FOR A. G. SPALDING LOS ANGELES. Aug. 2.—Wilbur David Cook, landscape architect, ha? been commissioned to lay out the new town of Spalding, six miles from Deming. in New Mexico, for the Rio Mimbres Irrigation Company. The town iu named for A. G. Spalding, of San Diego, manufacturer of sporting goods, who is heavily interested in the company, which owns 100,000 acres of irr’gable land around the pro posed town site. The town will be laid out along the lines of modern city planning. Automatic Switches Blow Out When Body Comes in Contact With Wires and Bring Aid. WATERTOWN, N. Y., Aug. 2.— While working about the transformer in the Black River generating plant of the Watertown Light and Power Company, J. S. Koines, an electrician, received 11.000 volts of electricity to day and still lives. The contact of the wires with the man’s body caused the automatic switches to blow out with a flash that was noticed in the Watertown plant and caused an investigation. When found Koines was uncon scious and lay among the transform ers, his right side badly burned. He was brought to the Sisters’ ! {ospital here and revived. Wild Turkeys, Geese, Brant and Ducks Have Disappeared From Missouri In Century. KANSAS CITY, Aug. 2.—“Save the birds of Missouri,” was the earnest admonition of D. C. Allen in his ad dress to the Kansas City Hospital Society. He predicted the complete extinc tion of song birds from the State un less measures are taken to re-estab lish their natural habitats. “A hundred years ago wild turkeys were so plentiful in Missouri only the white meat was eaten,” Mr. Allen said. “Geese, brants and ducks lined every sandbar on the Missouri. Mock ing birds and songsters were far more numerous than to-day.” Farmer Out in Kansas Plants Eyeless Tubers and Finds New Species in Fall. SENECA, KAN?., Aug. 2.—Potatoes without tops are being grown by J. C. Monney, a farmer, near Oneida. Two years ago Mr. Monney had trouble in getting seed potatoes. Finally a dealer offered him some which he said, however, he considered poor, as they had few eyes. Mr. Monney bought some of them, and picked up those which appeared to have the best eyes. He planted two rows. Apparently the potatoes were what the dealer said; very few sprouts appeared. Monney allowed the rows to run to weeds. but when he plowed the ground in the fall, was surprised to find that the share threw out big po tatoes. Struck with this peculiarity, Mr. Monney discarded all the potatoes which had eyes, and a year ago last spring planted only the eyeless tubers. When he dug Into the ground last fall he found a big crop of potatoes. The topless potatoes are slightly different in appearance from the reg ular tubers, but there is no difference in the taste. The crop averages about the same as potatoes with tops, but the big advantage to them in their favor ie that there is no danger to them from early frosts and insect pests. Hen Held Prophet of Lost Tribe’s Advent Chicken Lays Eggs Eight Inches Long Bearing Inscriptions, De clare Hebrew Colonists. SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 2.—In a letter written by Mark Twain shortly before his death, to H. P. Wood, of Honolulu, the celebrated humorist said: “Yours is the loveliest fleet of islands that lies* anchored in any ocean.” Mark Twain had spent many years of his lift flitting from deck to deck of that lovely fleet of islands. In his day, it was a long and tiresome jour ney to the Hawaiian Islands. It was a journey made up of various “re- shipments,” as Mark Twain himself put it. With the Panama Canal in opera tion, the elysium fleet of the Pacific may be reached from the Eastern states of America in a direct route, shorter and easier than previously. Hawaii is anxious to Impress that fact upon tlie world, and it has been decided that no better opportunity could be afforded for that impression than the Panama-Pacific Exposition in 1915. An appropriation of $100,000 has been made and is about to be in creased very probably lo $200,000, a sum which will most likely be supple mented by an additional side appro priation of $50,000 or $100,000. Freak Fish in Exhibit. The Hawaiian exhibit will be con tained in two main sections. The one section will be comprised of a vast aquarium containing all the speci mens of the remarkable kinds of fish that color the waters of the Pacific In the neighborhood of the Hawaiian I .‘■'hinds’. Fish with pennants on them, yards long; fish the shape of pine apples and just as prickly; fish with eyes all over them, and fish with no eyes at all; fish that walk on the bed of the sea. and fish that fly over the surface; fish that are black as Ink. and fish that are colored like coral; fi.-'h that glitter as if with coats of sapphire, and fish that look like chunks cut out of a rainbow—all these will be there; and, to show that the same waters can produce even an or- dinsry-looking kind of fish, there will be shoals of the famous mullet which is declared by expert epicur* se to pro vide the most delectable dinner dish in the world. From this there will be a roadway loading to the other and larger sec tion of the exhibit. This roadway will be a model in miniature of the famous “Volcano road,” which Is known colloquially as “The road to hell.” Fern Road Into “Volcano.” The road, cutting almost In a straight line, seven miles long, through the most beautiful fern for est in the world, leads direct into the pit of the great active volcano, Ki- lauea. The replica of this wonder ful road will lead from the aqua rium into the pit of a perfect work ing model of the giant volcano. Kilauea. belching forth clouds of steam, bubbling with rumbling acres of red-hot lava, rolling and heaving and spitting and roaring, like the safety valve of the Pacific, which is one of the wonders of the world. The cast for the model of Kilauea is now being made by one of the cleverest experts in that kind of work in America. It will be 50 feet in diameter across the crater and will cost as many thousands of dollars :o build and work. This will be the center attraction of the second sec tion of the , Hawaiian exhibit. The remainder of this section will be taken up with iadramas of scenes in the is lands. At the extreme end of the inclosure there will be another model as rea' istic as the dne of Kilauea. This will be of the extinct volcano, Mauna Loa. This is the largest crater in the world and 4s surrounded by some of the most wonderful of scenic won ders. It will be reproduced in all its glory. ST. LOUIS, Aug. 2.—Miss Chris tine Fischer, who had slept uninter ruptedly for 150 hours, following a tennis match, regained consciousness to-day at the Jewish Hospital. Miss Fischer made the following statement: “I was awfully tired. My work as a school-teacher has been most wear ing. and for a month I have felt as though I could sleep a million years. “i went out on the hot tennis court Monday afternoon, and when I went to dinner I sat on the edge of the bed to rest myself. “Suddenly I felt myself going, sink ing. sinking, and I must have fallen asleep then, for I can remember noth ing more. “It’s just six days taken out of my life, that’s all. I didn't feel anything unusual, but I do feel greatly re freshed now, though I’m very weak. The doctors say I will be all right in a week or so, and won’t feel any effects of the sleep.” Garard S. Parsons Quits Bonne Terre Lead Corporation; Will Attend M. S. U. BENTON HARBOR. MICH., Aug. 2.—A wonderful hen that lays eggs eight inches long, bearing Biblical in scriptions and mystic letters, has stir red profoundly the colony of Israelites, located here. On the first of these seventeen eggs appeared the inscrip tion. “Of Benjamin.” When Biddy la‘d a second with the inscription “Benjamin and Mary, 1915,” she cackled her throat sore. Finally, when she laid J.he seven teenth egg. labeled “Revelation—Ga briel—name,” she laid her head over the edge of the fancy nest and used her pretty comb on her proud plum age. The good elders are keeping careful guard over the hen and her silken nest. They believe the inscribed eggs foretell the coming v tn Benton Har bor of the lost tribe of the Israelites. Pastor at Picnic in Wife Seeks Health Mistake for Funeral On Wandering Trip Hebrews Going Back To California Land $1,000,000 Company Is Promoted to Establish Big Jewish Colony Near Los Angeles. $579 Paid for $30, Man Still Owes $150 Injunction Is Asked to Keep Loan Company From Collecting Any More on Account. CHICAGO. Aug. 2.—Selwyn H. Maxson objects to paying more than $579.10 for $30 that he borrowed from a loan agency nine years ago, so he filed a bill for an injunction yester day in the Circuit Court to restrain Nate Palmer and Mrs. K. B. Palmer, of the Standard Credit Company, from enforcing any alleged liability against him. They still demand $150 from him. In 1909, on obtaining a second loan of $50, he says he was forced to sign a note for $100, though he had been paying $5 monthly for 24 months. Later, on borrowing $40, he says he was compelled to sign a sec ond note for $140, followed by a third for $215. Will Run for Mayor Soon as She Can Vote Young Cleveland Suffragette An nounces Her Candidacy Before She Is Given Franchise. CLEVELAND, Aug. 2.—Miss Cath erine Kline is after Mayor Newton Baker’s Job. She wants to take the reins of city government into her own hands. Just as soon as woman suffrage carries in Ohio Miss Kline announces that she will become a candidate for Mayor of Cleveland. Miss Kline Is Just 24 years old. She intends to save $1,000 for her cam paign expenses between now and her nomination. She puts so much in the bank each week toward this fund. She says if people can’t pay all their campaign expenses they ought not to run. Constable’s Badge Of Office Is Stolen Do*j Arrives in Time to Stop Thieves From Taking Everything in House. BARRINGTON, R. I.. Aug. 2.— Burglars entered the home of Con stable Frank C. Dodge early this morning and, while a bulldog slept peacefully under the bed of the offi cer, the thieves got away with a coat with the police badge attached. Mrs, Dodge heard footsteps and woke up the constable He sent the dog down the stairs. The thieves had spread a tablecloth on the floor and were preparing to loot the house when the dog arrived. Then they ran. BONNE TERRE. MO.. August 2 — Although he was brought up in the lead mining business and was assist ant manager of one of the largest lead companies of the United States, at a salary approximating that of a Cabinet Minister, with a $14,000 house rent free, Girard S. Parsons has re signed his official duties with the St. Joseph Lead Company., a $20,000,000 corporation, and will turn farmer. Parson’s* will go to the farm at Riverside. Mo., with his wife, who was Mips Flora Bowman, daughter of Dr. G. A. Bowman, of No. 3605 Delmar Boulevard, St. Louis. An Heir to Millions. Parsons is one of the five heirs to the estate of C. B. Parsons, who first developed the lead belt of St. Fran cois County and left a fortune esti mated at between $5,000,000 and $6,- 000,000. The farm to which Pardons will re move, while it has no more than 400 acres, probably Is the best-developed in Southern Missouri. Virtually the eptire farm is lighted with large elec tric arc lights. Tiled and graveled roads, built by the late millionaire miner, gridiron the estate. Along the Iron Mountain Railway tracks, which bound the es tate on the West, is a 10-foot wall of solid masonry one-half mile long. To Take Farm Course. Not having had much experience in agriculture, young Parsons will add to his meager knowledge by taking the winter course at Missouri State University, that known as the “short horn course.” It was when Parsons’ salary as as sistant general manager was cut that he tendered hip resignation and turn ed to bucolic pursuit. He will retain his stock in both the St. Joseph and Doe Run Lead com panies, each of which for years has paid a regular 6 per cent annual divi dend. aside from large surpluses, out of which stock dividends are declared from time to time. In his new pursuit Parsons will de vote hip attention particularly to the growing of fancy live stock. Boy of Eleven Gets $2,000 Hero Award Grabs Little Girl From Railroad Track Just as Engine Is About to Crush Her. BLOOMINGTON. ILL., Aug. 2.— Kenneth Oliver, of Tampico, aged 11. has received a bronze medal and $2,000 from the Carnegie hero fund commission for saving the life of Gladys Russell, 7. It was the largest award made by the commission at its recent session. Kenneth saw Gladys playing on the track of the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad. Speeding toward her from the east was a freight train, drawn by two engines. The little girl did not hear or see the train. The boy rushed to the track, seized the child and pulled her off, and the two rolled down the bank as the train dashed by. The edge of the pilot beam of the leading engine struck the girl, bruis ing her slightly, and narrowly missed the boy., Confusion of Messages to Minister Causes Postponement of Burial of Child. NEW BRITAIN. CONN., Aug. 2.— Through misunderstanding, the Rev. J. C. Franklin went to a picnic in stead of officiating at a funeral to day. A message had been sent asking him to conduct the funeral services for Dorothy Johnson, a child. Through an error. Dr. Franklin heard nothing of the engagement, and agreed to at tend the picnic. Hurried messages brought the min ister to the house of mourning, but the funeral was postponed until to day. Doctor Recommends Open Air and Couple Take to Road With No where as Objective Point. TOPEKA, KANS., Aug. 2.—Leading the simple life in search of health. Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Bemis, of Hutch inson, went through Topeka the other day on their way north. They have been on the road for the last month, part of the time walking and occa sionally riding on the one-horse cart in which they carry their camp equlp- aee, a tent and a few simple cooking utensils. “Just traveling, going no place In particular.” explained Mr. Bemis. “Mrs. Bemi.s has been in poor health and the doctor recommended open air life, so we took to the road.” LOS ANGELES, Aug. 2.— A back- to-the-land movement in fulfillment of one of the most ancient promises of the Old Testament has been in augurated by a group of Los Angeles Jews under the direction of S. Hirsch. Plans for purchasing 30,000 acres of land in California at a cost of more than $1,000,000 for the founding of a Jewish colony have been matured. Hirsch managed a similar undertak ing in Palestine twenty years ago. PORCELAIN—NO GOLD CROWN AND BRIDGE WORK OUR SPECIALTY. \ halebone; «st Set, $3.00 No More. No Less. GOLD CROWN (22-K) *3 00 BRIDGE WORK.PER TOOTH 3.00 SILVER FILLINGS 25 GOLD FILINGS 50 CLEANING TEETH 60 TWENTY-YEAR GUARANTEE. Eastern Painless Dentists 38'/* Peachtree Street G, 0. P. Postmaster Discharges Himself Republican Sends in Resignation on Theory That To the Victor Be longs Spoils. WASHINGTON, Aug. 2.—Fame is following close upon the footsteps of H. M. Martin, postmaster at Shel- byville, Ill. He is the only Repub lican postmaster in Illinois who cheerfully sent in his resignation without being asked for it, to make way for a Democrat. And, further, he has written to Senator Lewis about the other who are not so cheerful, saying: “Save ’em, Senator, from the wrath of the powers that be; otherwise they will be minus a few thousand in sal ary. And to the men up the sapling, it looks much as if it is the fear of this that is driving them to the limit of exposing the yellowishly dis gusting streaks in their composition. And sympathy expended on the ‘yel low’—whether in man, monkey or ca nine—is sympathy wasted. “Very respectfully, “H. M. MARTIN, Postmaster. “Commission expires January 16, 1915. “Resignation filed May 15, 1913. “To the victor belongs the spoils.” Ruptured People- Try This lor Relief and Cure IV3A1L YOUR FILMS TO US For developing We are mm specialists with the larg est laboratory In the South. All prints made on Prize- Winning Cvko Paper All roll dime developed FREE, no matter whe-e purchased. Brownie Prints, 3c eaoh Write for desc iptlve Camera Catalogue G Prices *3.00 to *86.00 Cse that fast Anseo film; fits any camera or kodak costs no more, but also gives true color values. Mall Order Desartment. C. H. Cr*N€, Inc., 2 Stores, Atlanta, Ga. Only Thing Good Enough To Stand a 60-Day Test Here Is something you can try sixty days—Just as a test—without having to risk a cent— . 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