Newspaper Page Text
4
” 1s to Build l'!. in New York City Great
» Banking Organizations Capable of Handhing
Op"mhnns of the First Magnitude
ke By B. C. FORBES |
'} ean announce that during 19 4
b banking policy of !f"'l"~x‘h"a."
— will be adopiad Bere |
most powerful financial inst
\ ia this country are to bring |
the ablest bankers money ol |
- In Burope |
:" [} have air=aay Leet
R i with the most! desiralle inier |
- banking experts in Los
L plan s to builda up In News
Panking organizations capabis
i,-, . ) and handiing, with n
ur) d akfll, financial operations
3 i first magnitude in any part f
S America how has he capital, the
eredl! and & nucleus of the banking
- for reaching out to be
, the world's international |
s are capable of producing more
Fovds with which to supply the
Noric's markets than can any other
on arth. The Income o the
Al people from agriculture, |
manufactures, (ransportation |
and other productive occu- |
_ PAtions Is computed at §30.000,000.009
# = lation Is greater than that |
= .l’”gfirbfln competitor, and
E we have not lost our hest hrains
: = Brawn by war, our ability to both |
% and buy should be superio ‘
Will Not Be Boycotted, ‘
. Our national wealth -s" 600,000, - |
i almost equal to thilft of Great |
; France and Germany © m»;
1
F s have made a begiining in |
w’ into being American ships to |
e merican merchandise to and |
. 4 foreign markets ;
s will not be boycotted by Aany |
™ after the war, as certain power- |
5 oversea nations probably will i
"N will be anxious to trade with us
‘?’,‘ therefore, do we lack to
us for the twentieth century
Bght for supremacy in international
L pe, International commerce and
[ Bsrnatior exploitation of rail
. publie utilities, industries,
~mir and other enterprises”
~ Waelack experience
. We iack trained men.
§ We lack “international” brains.
£ Very well, we are going to gt
oy wer there is a man of tran
-4 t ability, be he in London
Berlin, Petrograd, Peking., Rio
& Puenos Alres, efforts will be made
"in due course to enlist him in Ameri.
's army of commercial world.con
. Quest.
i Announcement of the first ap
rumn of this kind, in London, by
b great American banking finstitu
- tlon, should shortly be made.
t During the last five years New
" York banks and trust companies have
- @ttracted to thelr forces business
| men of mark from all parts of the
r{mln’. 80 far the movement has
only national
i Now it is to be International, for
fibummmullnm is the new keynote
. of American enterprise
. The news here presented is, there
p of infinite significance. I
i Internationa! Balance Sheet.
& We have strengthened our interna- |
financial position tremendously |
~ since the war began
.~ Here I 8 a rough outline of our in
~ ternationa! balance sheet for 1916:
j Our International Income.
. Balance of exports over
- _ imports L bhaasnssesL7ooooo.ooo]
Ew 450,000,000 |
! on loans to for-
B lEnerS .o..ocovoneea. 50,000,000
! $2,200,000,000
~_ Our Internaticnal Payments.
k 4 _securities Tre
_ purchased ............$1,200,000,000
. and credits to |
- F ernennesnns 1,000,000,000
s and interest |
.on American securities
_ still held abroad, pay
zmomptnlel. remit- |
»} etc., perhaps. .. 400,000,000
? ; $2,600,000,000
Leavin umrmdedcuh
. and credit balances
5 B haiasseasee 500,000,000
B pe still owns Amer
,uu ncufl‘ t tles to the’2
i 3 of, S&Y, +...... 2.250,000,000
.30" balance is running at
4 !‘u about $150,000,000 monthly,
a despite efforts by the Allles to
yduce it, the flgure for the current
ear can not fail to be very large.
" Meanwhile our dividend and inter
. est payments to Europe are being cut
own and foreign interest payments
»> us are increasing.
~ Before 1916 ends our international
: (and dividends) account
: 1d about balance.
~ Banking Resources Increased.
. Qur domestic financial position has
1 experienced remarkable lim
sovement.
" The resources of our national banks
have increased $1,000,000,000
the war began. By comparing
" the Comptroller’s statement imme
ately preceding the war (June 30,
’ ¢) with his latest return (Septem
-1916), a gain of $785,000,000 in
SOUTC ‘xvshd. and the in
pas! the last four months
has unquestionably brought the grand
total to the billlon mark.
s country's trust companies in
. year of the war added more
© $400,000,000 tc their resources,
: ngi the recorded total to well
_above $6,000,000,000.
" Motal deposits of American banking
stitutions—national, savings and
tate banks and trust coxlxllpanlesl——
‘are estimated by Comptroiler wil-
Mams at fully $23,000,000,000, an in
_erease of $14,500.000,000 since 1900,
. Gold imports last year reached al
most sm,ro.ooo. a movement never
- parallel y any country.
_ Thanks in large measure to the/low~
err requirements unde the
Federal reserve law, the member
‘banks have surplus reserves which
would permit of additional expansion
' loans by at least $3,000,000,000, a
ct of the most momentous consider
- tion ir ‘ufln!uflour general finan
commercial outlook.
T Future of Securities.
-Ar can investments h‘ne‘!orth
will occupy an enviable position of in
ernational pre-eminence.
_ European institutions will buy back
Very large quantities of them, to be
held as a “secondary reserve,” as re
and profitable instead of expensive to
Carry
Wealthy Kuropean familles also will
realise the value of having part of
thelr fortunes tnvested in the United |
Siates with iis fresdom from the .un.|
stant politionl bickerings of the ¢ 4]
Waorld and where revolutions are not
among the rechonable possibilities
1 may sa) that a generation llu‘
more than one very rich European
famiy. foresesing the danger of & Eu
ropean cataclysm. wisely invested mal
lions here, & course that has proved
almost supernaturally prudeut '
We can safely count, | think, upon
& very important overses demand for
the best grade of American lpvests
ments once the “forced selliing,” under
the sexis of the Allles, has effectsd
its purpose
This will be beneficial, because It
will absorb American securities and
enable cur financial leaders to divert
& corresponding amount of Rome sav
tngs into new channels—into the de
velopment of South Amerioa. Russia
China and other countries with which
our commerce can be enormously and
profitably increased.
No amount of foreign absorption of
our securities, however, can render
unnecessary consistent saving by our
own people
It is basically true that upon the
readiness of the American people to
spend less than they earn rests our
future as a world power
If we consume all we produce, If we
create no surplus capital available tor
investment we can never hope to be
come the greatest financial center in
the world, the greatest power in banx
ing. of, indeed, to look far ahead, the
greatest naval and military power, for
the abllity to maintaln armamenis is
dependent upon & people’s abllity to
provide funds therefor.
It is vitally important, of course, to
have the right brains in the nation, to
have energy, enterprise, ingenuity,
inventiveness, daring, stamina and
ambition.
But capital is the tool which all
these require for the accomplishment
of their ends
Capital Is a prerequisite for every
form of business activity, -
And in the end it is the nation
which can create the most capital
which, other things being equal, will
endure.
The European struggle is now en
tering & stage demonstrative of *hils
fundamental fact,
One of the highest forms of patri
otism open to Americans at this stage
of our evolution is, therefore, rational
economy.
Every dollar saved and Invested
adds one stone to our glorious odifive
in-the-making, the United States,
Speedy Ending of War Good.
The best thing, not the worst thing,
that could happen for the United
States would be the speedy ending of
the European war,
Were the struggle to drag into 1917,
with its additional expenditures of
$35,000,000,000 or $40,000,000,000, it
would leave the whole world In a pitl
able state,
We in the United States would have
an artificial, exotic, dangerous specles
of “prosperity” for the time being.
But it would prostrate half of the
human race, it would ruin the great
body of our customers, it would ren
der them unable to buy from us and
plunge us in time into depression, for
commerce is an exchange of wealth,
and if one side has nothing to glve,
:he other can not afford to go on giv
ng.
T know no ,ru! financler, however,
'who expects the war to outlast 1916
Not one belleves the belligerents can
g 0 _through another winter of warfare,
" The strain is already becoming un
‘bearable. Reports of uprisings and
riots among the peopel are becoming
‘more frequent.
German exchange has lately fallen
\mon than 22 per cent, reflecting
something of the conditions there.
Austrian exchange is down nearly 40
per cent.
English exchange has recovered to
within 2 per cent of normal, but the
masses in Britain are beginning to
revolt against the compulsory mill
tary service which some of the Gov
ernment leaders deem essential to
success, Political strife is also be
coming acute.
Everything, therefore, suggests
that long‘ before 1916 has run its
co:ordu t bell‘!i‘eunh wlllp::uln a
m to entertain peace pro 8.
What Will 1916 :rlngf
Industry, in my opinion, has sllned
sufficlent momentum in the United
States to carry us through 1916 irre
spective of the course of events
abroad.
But we have one or two serious
{ssues to adjust at home. Bhe up
shot of these may cause tompomy‘
unsettlement. |
The chief problem confronting the
country is labor's attitude. |
The anthracite coal miners and or
ganized rallway workers throughout
the country are preparing demands to
be presented when existing agree
ments expire next Aegrll.
It is not at all certain that grave
trouble will be averted, particularly
in the coal region.
A second danger, arising from our
superabundance of money and cred
it, is inflation and, as a corollary,
overexpansion and overproduction.
That we will end up in overpxoduc
tion in numbers of non-baslc indus
tries, and even in some basic indus
tries, I have not the slightest doubt.
1t is inevitable,
But limiting our survey to 1916, the
prospects favor:
Extremely active trade.
Full employment of labor at ad
vancing wages as long as the war
lasts.
A contix:_;unco of the advance in
good securities not .&?fid extrav,
gantly overboomed, % *%
& Pronounced nation-wide prosper-
Y. Wky v 4 oy
To avert fatal disaster later on,
both finance and labor must ‘exercise
restraint and common sense,
Those commanding purse-strings
must refrain from reckless expansion.
Labor must keep its dpmang: with
in reason. 25 '
Overreaching by either side will
invite catastrophe. s
Although the year brings a Presi
dential election, no disturbance is
feared therefrom, as all parties now
realize the urgency of alding rather
than harassing business, the rock on
whlcé.h all our material prosperity is
MEARST'S SUNDAY AMEPICAN, ATLANTA, GA, SUNDAY, JANUAKRY 16, 1918
S]Rfl JOSEPH B. DR
FOREST, who deelares
she was ousted from the
Ameriean Soclety of Civil
Engincers ‘‘for the heinons
erime of being & woman.'
» =
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: |
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¥ 1
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R = ' ",
e
O Y
o N\ -
; . From Engineers
Mrs. Nora B. DeForest, Seeking As
sociate Membership, Charges
Discrimination.
NEW YORK, Jan. 15.~Mrs. .\‘on‘
Blatch De Forest, who wes the only
woman member of the American So
clety of Civil Engineers, Is no longer
& member—ousted, she declares, for
“the crime of belng A& woman™
But Mre. Do l#rest, who is the.
granddaughter of dlub-(h Cady |
Stanton, the daughter of Mrs. Harriot
Stanton Blatch and herself an ardent
suffrage worker when she lsn't busy
supporting her little daughter by be
ing & civil engineer, doesn’t intend
to remain outside the soclety lif the
law man be invoked, |
Clement Herschel, one of the vice
presidents of the soclety, denied that
Mrs. De Forest had been expelied.
“She was & junior member and she
applied for promotion. She wanted to
become an associate member,™# uldl
Mr. Herschel, “The board voted her
application down. As junior members
Cease aytomatically to be members
when they reach the age of 31 Mrs.
De Forest is no longer a member."”
Mrs. De Forest was elected a junior
member of the soclety in 1908, She
was admitted without question, but a
Httle later, when a Miss Wilson, an
engineer, applied, she was told that
the constitution forbade the admis
sion of women.
Mrs. De Forest was the wife of Lee
De Forest, the wireless inventor,
whom she divorced several years ago.
Live Stock Exhibit
ATHENS, Jan 15.—Nearly 25,000 per
sons have attended the live stock ex
hibits ...3 addresses held at B 2 points
in Georgia since November 27. The
campalgn has been carried on by the
Georgia State Collog- of Agriculture in
co-operation with the rallroads and the
United States Department of Agricul
ture. The exhibit of fine live -toc{ from
the College Farm has elicited the great
est Interest gt every nopylu point. A
carload of home-grown feeds has at
tracted much attention also. In addi
tion to the exhibits practical speeches
have been made on ralsing live stock
and wvaluable literature on the subject
has been fhtrlbutod.
The exhibit starts out afn'n January
24 and will tour portions of Georgila not
yet reached.
C%UIT#HW LASTED 25 YEARS.
QUINCY, ILL., Jan. 15.—After a
eouruh? ox!ondlnlhovor a period of 26
(‘ll’l. uring which time both elerked
n the same store, Robert Kerley and
Miss Martha Wright have just been
married.
cx\(' Fig
"I "," = g \\
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NGRS
. S J ¢
Walter Peck Stanley
PUPIL OF LESCHETIZKY,
TEACHER OF PIANO
STUDIO: 15§ THE PRADO, ANSLEY
PARK. lvy 5842. J.
CHILDREN’S HAIR
CUTTING
| Your children appreciate
the ocomfort of short hair.
Hsve the hair trimmed often.
Best bring the tiny folk
in the morning.
Evervthing sterilized.
OHAS. R. FOSTER,
Fourth Floor J. P. Allen&Co.
Leaders in State's Cattle and
Farm Pursuits Plan Sessions
January 18 and 19.
ATHENSE Jan 15.--The twenly
fourth Annualmesing of the Georgia
Dalry an i Live Stock Assoclation will
be held at the College of Agriculture
At Athens January 18 and 15, Joint
sessions will be held with the Geor
gia Precders’ Assoclation and the
Georgia State Hortieultural Boolety
on the afterncons and nights of Jan
uary 17 and I 8 Bpecial rallroad
rates hane been granted for the
meetings
The program for the Georgla Dairy
and Live Btogk Assoclation has been
flpfl#flfled and s as follows
uesday Morning, January 18,
10:00--Call to erder
Address of president, A. H. Bar
nett, Washington, Ga
Appointment of commitiees
Report of the treasurer, O. T. Good
win, Athens, Ga
Results of Co-operative Swine
Demonstration Work, Professor Ross
M. Gridiey, Athens, Ga
Development of the Pure-bred Hog
Business, W H. Peacock, Cochran,
Ga
Hrose Production for the South, Dr,
Carl W. Gay, Philadelphia, Pa.
Feeding the Dairy Herd, Professor
W. H. Howell, Athens, Ga.
Wednesday Morning, January 19,
10: 00--Call to order
Steer Feeding in North Georgia,
Hon. T. W. Harbin, Calhoun, Ga.
Cattle a Necessity in Diversified
Farming, J. E. Hite, Gallatin, Tenn
Utilization of Native Cattle, Cap
tain C. W. Parker, Elberton, Ga
Silage as a Cattle Feed, Perry Van
Ewing, Experiment, Ga.
Monday and Tuesday afternoons
and evenings, January 17 and 18, the
five Stock Assoclation will meet In
joint session with the horticultural
and agronomy section In the aundito
rium of the Agricultural College.
HMUNGRY, RETURNS TO JAIL.
OZARK, MO, Jan, 15.-Cold and hun.
gry, Harvey Reals, who escaped from
the Christian County jail here with
Frank Kosmato, returned, and gave
himeslf up to Kherif® John Turner. hTe
two men made their escape during the
absence of Eheriff Turner by digging a
hole through the brick bullding
ADVERTISEMENT,
* .
Heals Aggravating Affections,
Causing Them to Disapper.
Broken-out skin Is unpleasant to see,
distressing to endure. There should be
on your medicine shelf a remedy for
this above all physical disorders. When
it comes to A cholee accept nothing less
efficient than Poslam
Try Poslam; compare it. Know the
Intensity of its healing power, the ra
pidity of its action. And it can serve
yvou in many ways; from clearing an in
flamed complexion overnight to eradi
cating Eczema, Acne and stubborn dis
enses
Poslam Soap is doubly agreeable,
doubly beneficial for the skin, because
medicated with Poslam.
For samples, send 4c stamps to Emer
{rm-_\' Laboratories, 32 West 25th St,
New York City. Sold by all druggists.
—Advertisement.
& .
Don’'t Use Poisonous So-Called
Superfluous Hair Removers.
You may escape permanent injury it
vou use so-called hair removers, but
you can not escape an increased growth
because after each removal the hair is
bound to grow out more briskly and in
time it will become so coarse that nolq
ln% will remove it but a razor.
he only safe way to remove hair is
to devitalize it. It is useless to use
pastes or rub-on preparations because
they only remove hair from the surface
of the skin. DeMiracle, the original
liquid depilatory, devitalizes halr by
attacking it under the skin as well as
on the skin.
Imitations of DeMiracle are as worth
less as pastes and rub-on preparations
because they lack certain ingredients
that DeMiracle alone contains which
give it the power to rob hair of its vi
tality. Remember, DeMiracle 1s the
only depilatory that has a binding guar
antee in each package which entitles
you to your money if it fails. Insist on
the genuine DeMiracle and you will get
the original Hquid hair remover. Others
are worthless imitations—refuse them.
DeMiracle is sold in bOoc, SI.OO and
$2.00 bottles. The largest sizes are the
most economical for dermutologists and
large users to buy. If your dealer wil
not supply vou, order direct from us.
The truth about the treatment of su
perfluous hair mailed in plain sealed en
velope on request. DeMiracle Chemical
Co., Dept. B, Park Ave, and 129th st.,
New York.—Advertisement.
ARTISTIC
WEDDING INVITATIONS
If there is any form of printed matter
that demands exact correctness more
than others, it isa wedding invitation
We make a specialty of turning out engraved
invitations'that are things of real beauty.
We also make all other varieties of engraving. that excel in every
qualification. May we be of service to you?
BYRD PRINTING CO., ATLANTA.
Our catalogue printing and typewritér uvplm are par W
Thres Mundred Residents of Georgia
Town Stockheiders in §750,000
' Enterprise.
LA cm.asmat Jan. 15.~The bulding
of the new Hiliside Cotton Mills, & §7se
000 project, just put in operation hefs
affords & n(fl.lh&cm%fl of the power
of eooperative eWort mt ent
which will consume about 15,000 ks o
cotton yearly, and provide s lvelihood
for 1,206 to 1560 persons, woud ot
Lave been possibie 16 & Single person fe
siding in Latirange or even several, but
It was called lnw’rm through the
"35"’ invesiment about 300 stock
halders For QDL“M part these
:vmlhuldou’huo ‘mn:” ‘.u:‘"lm.
‘ount s 8O the gr -
tion u‘ «’:: .mm.&:mu seem nund.'.
"‘?‘h? bon "1.1.. of 'f'“ by the
nn vperations
"m:amum«‘t 14" ¥ l::sur“:u
e n ‘.
zl‘tl also, .’;‘rc:%t of La-
TANge S mi
The maln mw-fnwu{mm
three stories In he 'mn'". ahed
213 by 156 fr« are 1% v&
houses, sach 75 pg.ll feot, When
completed the mills will huve about 38~
00 spindles and between 5,000 ¢oo
looms and will have its own ing
and dyeing plant. About 400 opera
tives will be mulnd. The )ul.mdo wil
lage will inel more than houses
Mississippi Likely
To Abofish Gallows
JACKSON, MISS., Jan. 15 ~Bills were
introduced In both Houses of the Legis
inture m%uuh to abolish Mnlmr.
provided that the electric chair be the
method of legal death, all executions
1o take place at the Rankin State Con~
viet farm, and that the executions bs
strictly In private, witnessed by not
more than ofic dozen persons,
For several m:mm-“ mon' hr m'n :
vzwflu cam pa st AEAIn
tu ie hangings T:. mumw. and the
ilis are In answer to what seems to be
& very strong publle sziiiment on the
subject.
WASHINGTON'S LETTERS SOLD.
NEW YORK, Jan 15.-W, V. King
rld sllO and Thomas Bell $107.50 for
wo autograph letters of “‘uh!n?ofl at
A sale here. An eight-page letter by
::'lnbun;c ngz appreciation ofb \‘}ln'r
vage landor was brought by J. .
Drake for 38250
_ADVERTISEMENT.
Difficult to Keep Your
Hair Wavy? Read This
If you have not yet tried the new
way, the silmerine way, by all means do
so. You'll never aguin use the ruinous
heated iron. The curliness will appear
s 0 perfectly natural ana the halr will
be so beautifully lunroufi instead of
dried amd parched. Thus To“d silmer
ine serves also as a beneficlal dressing
for the halr. It s neither sticky nor
greasy, but q‘ulu ?lemm to we It
should be -p‘r ie! & M'Mll“‘ a clean
toothbhrush, drawing the ter through
the halr from root to tip.
The hair will bave the loveliest curls
ahd waves imaginable in the morning,
and it will be casy to manage, no mMat
ter how you do it up. A few ounces of
the liguid from your dnu(;( will last
a long time.—Advertisement.
To Have Perfect Skin
Throughout the Winte
These days the face and hands need
special care and attention. Strong
wlnda; quick changes of temperature
from indoors to outdoors, are severe on
the skin. Their drupnnln. effects are
best overcome by the application of pure
mercolized wax. This keeps skin and
pores in a cleanly condition, the com
plexion beautifwly white and spot.ess,
(‘h:dpp«‘l reddened, blotchy and rough
ened cuticle are -ctunlw absorhed by
it. One ounce of mercolized wax, ob
talnable at any drug store, is sufficient
to completely renovate a weatherbeaten
complexion. 1t Is used like cold cream
allowed to remain on over night, and
washed off in -the morning.
As the skin tends to expand in a
warm n!mosghere. cheeks and chin to
sag and wrinkles to form, a good astrin
gent lotion should be used by the wom
an who keeps pretty much indoors these
days. Dissove one ounce go'dered SAX
olite in one-half pint witch hazel. Bathe
the face in this mornings or before going
out for theater or social affair. It is a
remarkable skin tightener and wrinkle
eraser.—Advertisement.
Hair Dressing Store
We are experts in Manicuring,
Chiropody, Shampooing, Scalp
Treatments, Face Massage and
Children’'s Halr Bobbing.
We Make and Sell Swilches
Transformations and Men’s Tou
pee’s. Rent Wigs and Dye Halr.
Prices right. Satisfaction guaran
teed.
TheS. A. Clayton Co,
18 East MHunter. Both Phones.
BOOKHAMMER'S
HAIR DRESSING PARLORS
Manicure, Massage,
Chiropody, Secalp Treat,
Marcel Wave by expert
—Manufacturer of hair
goods. Children’s hair
cutting.
4814 Whitehall.
Main 214-215.
Alabama Official's
0. M. Brooke, DuPont Powder Mill
' Guard, te Plead Discharge of
Duty at Trial ‘.
RICHMOND, Jan. iB-Oshorne M.
Freoke, of Luverne, Ala, former Du-
Pont guard st Hopewsll, whe is In Jail
Sere charged with the murder ‘of On
more Enead, of Charlotiesville, expects
to be put on trial this month at Prince
George Courthouse
Brooke's defense will be that he kill.
od Bnead In the discharge of his of
ficial duties and was justified In o
doing According to his clalms. he or
dered BEnead 1o stop amoking in the gun
cotton plant and when the later refused
to obey he drew his pistol. A scuffle
followed during which Enead was fatal-
Iy shot. Bnead was an employes of the
rhnt, He had & cigaretis elutched be
ween his 3:.&: whet he was J'“’" up
m‘?« b.' two after the killing
a elght years & Btate account-
Brcoke is & son of the late Hadiey Y.
Proke, for egiht years & Btate account
ant g xi:;n Last June he mar
rled Miss ise Chitwood, daughter of
Fugene Chitwood; & contractor, who re
sided for & number of years in Colum
bus. Ga., prior to moving to Chatlanoo~
% three years ago.
ADVERTISEMENT.
Lady Gives Simple Home Recipe That
She Used to Darken Her
Gray Hair.
l‘ory—.u’luhdtomtm-ymy
hair to its natural color with the pre
pared dyes and stains, but none of
them gave satisfaction and they were
all expensive. 1 finally ran onto a
gimple recipe which I mixed at home
that gives wonderful results. 1 gave
the recipe, which ia as foliows, to a
number of my friends, and they are
all delighted with it: To 7 ozs. of
water add a small box of Barbo Com
pound, 1 vz of bay rum and 1-4 oz of
glycerine. These Ingredients can be
bought at any drug store at very lit
tle cost. Use every other day until
the hair becomes the required shade,
then every two weeks. It wiil not
only darken the gray hair, but re
moves dandruff and scalp humors,
and acts as a tonic to the hair. It is
not sticky or greasy, does not rub oft
and does not color the scalp.—Adver
tisement.
HEAD STUFFED FROM
CATARE[I_OR A COLD
u”manudulm
Opens Air Passages Right Up.
F22S L 2 EPEEEELOES
e e oom (AL &, (e oir
© n open up; the air
passages of mr head clear and (ou
can breathe ly. No more hawking,
snuffling, blowing, headache, dryness.
No struggling for breath at night; your
cold or catarrh dm&mn.
Get a small bottle of Ely's Cream
Balm from your druggist now. Aprly
a little of this fragrant, antiseptic,
healing crhelm Ln your noa,trlla. It pen-'
etrates throu every alr passage o
the head, -ootTus the {nfluuod or swoll
en mucous membrane, and relief comes
instantly.
It's just fine. Don't stay stuffed up
with & cold or nasty catarrh.—Adver
tisement.
1 was badly ruptured while lifting a
trunk several years ago. Doctors sald
my only hope of cure was an operation.
Trusses did me no good. Finally I got
hold of something that quickly and com
pletely cured me. Years have passed
and the rupture has never returned, al
though I am doing hard work as a car
penter. There wWas no operation, no lost
time, no trouble. I have nothing to sell,
but will give full Information about how
you may find a complete cure without
operation, If you write to me, Eugene
M. Pullen, Carpenter, 438-B Marcellus
avenue, Manasquan, N. J. Better cut
out this notice and show it to any oth
ers who are ruptured—you may save a
life or at least stop the misery of rup
ture and the worry and danger of an
operation.—Advertisement.
It's Just a Matter of a Few Days
With Stuart’s Calcium
Wafers.
TRIAL PACKAGE MAILED FREE.
The correct and best blood purifier
known to science is Calcium Sulphide.
This great cleanser is contained in
proper quantities m Stuart’s Calcium
Wafers and that is why all blood
troubles and skin biemishes rapidly
disappear after their use.
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“I¢'s Wonderful How Stuart’s Calcium
Wafers Clear Up the Complexion!”
An unsightful and pimply face due
to impure blood is a repulsive sight.
Every first-class druggist in this
country carries Stuart's Calcium Wa
fers, which are pleasant to take,
harm!e?. and may be obtained for
50 cents a box. Mail coupon below
for free trial package.
Free Trial Coupon
F. A. Stuart Co, 320 Stuart
Bldg., Marshall, Mich: Send me at
once, by return mail, a free trial
package of Stuart’s Calcium Wa
fers.
NAMEO ..cocsssecsccsscscsssscsace
Street jcccveccstsccosnreecssecccces
B L atiivonnr . DIRIE (ibases
MARRIAGE INVITATIONS
Reception and Visiting Cards
CORRECTLY AND PRONPTLY ENGRAVED
Send for Bunplu'md Prices.
J. P. STEVENS ENGRAVING CO.
Forty-seven Whitehall Street, Atlants, Georgia
/
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MUSIC! MUSIC!
————— ————————————— ———————
$250 Worth of Music for
$29.00
The Ideal Music Library
Contains 1,300 compositions by 400 composers
of 15 different nationalities.
In separate form the selection
wi1fc0at...........‘ . & vaeuattna T
Special Advertising Price .......... 29.00
A BAVING OF .........coner -$221.00
Our Guarantee
““To anyone who can purchase the musie
contained in The Ideal Home Music Library
for less than $250 we will send our check for
$250 and a complete set of music free of
charge.
. Limited to 300 Sets
Sold on the Club Plan
The Library is on display at Turner's
Drug Store, No. 1 Mc‘Len(?on Street; Med
bck's Pharmacy, No. 27 Gordon Street.
For full particulars, address
T. ASHLEY
Music Department, Chas. Scribner’s Sons.
612 Temple Court Building, Atlanta, Ga.
Warners Safe Remedies
have proven their great merit by the beneficial results
obtained through their use during the past forty years,
in the treatment of the different diseases for which they
are recommended.
WARNER’S SAFE REMEDIES
Warner's Safe Kidney and Liver Remedy, 50c and SI.OO
Warner'’s Safe Diabetes Remedy................ 5125
Warner's Safe Rheumatic Remedy .............$1.26
Warner's Safe Asthma Remedy ................ 70¢
Warner’s Safe Nervine ................50c and SI.OO
Warnep/s Safe Pills (Constipation and Biliousness) 26¢c
For sale by leading druggists everywhere, or sent post paid on re
ceipt of price. Free sample of any\ one remedy sent on request.
WARNER'’S SAFE REMEDIES CO.,
Dept. 435, : Rochester, N. Y.
An End To The Curse
Of Wearing Worthless Trusses
e
I NoMoreßuptureTroubles
iy -
| 60 Days’ Trial
To Prove It
You Don’t Have to Risk a Penny.
Here is something absolutely guaranteed to keep
your rupture from coming out.
And you can try it sixty days—make a thorough
prove-it-to-you test—without having to risk a penny.
It it doesn’t hold—if it doesn’'t keep your rup
ture from bothering you in any way—then it won't
ocost you a single cent.
The Only Thing Good Enough
to* Stand Such a Test.
You know as well as we that you can’t tell any
thing about & truss or anything else for rupture
merely by ttying it on. That's the worst of going to
a drug store or local truss fitter’s.
A truss or so-called “appllance” may seem
all right when you first put it on, and afterwards
prove utterly worthless.
The only way in the world you,can make sure
of exactly what you're getting is §y a day-after
day test.
And our guaranteed rupture holder—the famous
Cluthe—is the only thing of any kind whatever for
rupture that you can get on sixty days’ trial, the
only thing good enough to stand such a long and
thorough test.
Something Nothing Else Does.
The Cluthe is so utterly different from anything
else for rupture that it has received eighteen sepa
ir‘b patents.
It provides the only way ever discovered for lover
[omning the weakness which is the real cause of
rupture.
’ Just how 1t does that—entirely automatically—
is all explained in the free book. .
‘ Will Save You From Operation.
. The Cluthe has so thoroughly proved Its merits
that physicians in all parts of the world and sur
meons in the U. 8. :}'my and Navy now recom
mend it instead of vising operation. It has
brought complete recovery i hundreds of cases after
operation has proved a fallure
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No Belt or Leg Straps to Annoy You,
That's why people who have tried it say it i ey
comfortable as their clothing. It 1s wm:
will hold in, the bath. FEaslly kept clean.
Get World’s Greatest Rupture Book.
Don’t send any money—just write for our free
book and find out everything you want to know,
Full of facts never befors put in print. Qloth
bound--96 pages—2o separate articles and 28
photographic illustrations. Wil save you from
being fooled and save you from wasting money.
Explains why elastic and spring trusses are a
wicked. crime—why they are the ruptured man’s
worst enemy—why the law should stop thelr sale.
Exposes the humbug ‘‘appliances,” ““methods,”
‘“‘plasters,” eto,
Shows why operation is often a needless gamble
with death, and why, if a man manages to get
well from the operation, he often has to keep on
wearing a truss.
Andnmhmmmaummw-vm
cmuyndxt.ydmlndbwl.mloumflm
keep it. \
Gives endorsements of over 5,000 peaple
Better write for the book to-day—it tells things
you could never find out by going to doctors ory
drug stores. smmlyuuthaoouponormlns
letter or postal, “‘Send me the book.’*
THIS BRINGS IT
Box 724—~CLUTHE COMPANY
125 East 23rd St., NEW YORK CiTY
Send me your Free Book and Trial Offer,
Si el isl
A Ll