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State-Wide Drive Is Ready for
Launching to Benefit Mercer,
Bessie Tift and Hospital.
Reaiizing the imperative needs of
its three most important Baptist in
stitutions in Georgla, the Baptist
State Convention has decided upon a
state-wide subscription campaign to
raise a half million dollars. The
three institutions to b 2 bengfited by
the fund are Mercer University, at
Macon, Bessie Tift College, at For
#yth, and the Baptist Hospltal, in
Atlanta.
The plans of the convention prac
tically are complete for a systematic
campaign, and a committee of five on
ways and means already has been
appointed, consisting of Rev. Dr. . C
McConnell, of Atlanta, chairman;
Rev. Dr. John D. Mell, of Athens; Dr,
I. G. Hardman, of Commerce; Hon,
J. P. Nichols, of Grifin, and Judge E.
(. Collins, of Reldsville,
This committee announced the ap
pointment of#¢ C. J. Hood, of Com
merce, prominent Georgia banker, as
director of the campalign. All details
are now in Mr. Hood's hands, who is
expected within the next few days to
00 YOU GET UP WITH A LAME BACK?
Pain or dull ache In the back is
often evidence of kidney trouble. It
s Nature's timely warning to show
you that the track of health is not
clear.
Danger Signals.
If these danger signals are unheed
»d more serious results may be ex
pected; kidney trouble in its worst
form may steal upon you.
Thousands of people have testified
that the mild and immediate effect of
Swamp-Root, the great kidney, liver
and bladder remedy, is soon reallzed
—that it stands the highest for its re
markable curative effect in the mogt
distressing cases. If you need a medi- ‘
cine, you should have the best. |
Lame Back. |
Lame back !s only one of many
symptoms of kidney trouble. Other
eymptoms showing that you may need
Swamp-Root are being subject to
embarrassing and frequent bladder
troubles day and night, irritation,
sediment, etc.
SPECIAL NOTE—You may obtain a sample size bottle of Swamp-
Root by inclosing ten cents (o Dr. Kllmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y.
This gives you the opportunity to prove the remarkable merit of this
medicine, They will also send you a book of valuable Information, con
taining many of the thousands of grateful letters received from men
and women who say they found Swamp-Root to be just the remedy
needed in kidney, liver and bladder troubles. The value and success
of Swamp-Root are so well known that our readers are advised tg send
for a sample size bottle. Address Dr. Kilmer & Co,, Binghamton, N. Y. Be
sure to say yvou read this oifer in The Atlanta Sunday Amerlcan.—Ad
vertisement.
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T | e Vaigmes®
Poor Ventilation Causes Colds
_ A large manufacturing concern found [i)oor ven
tilation n their offices caused their employees to
have colds and that every cold meant a loss of
$24.00 to the business.
How much do you lose when you have a cold ?
You may be an employee, you both lose: it
1s expensive and dangerous.
A cold does not get well of itself. Take no
chances. Eat nght, avoid exposure and drafts.
When you feel dull and.headachy, fevensh, start sniffling
and sneezing, tight chest and sore throat you have a cold that
needs attention. ;
The first aid 1s an old reliable remedy that has been used for
coughs and colds for nearly 50 years-Dr. King's New Discovery.
It has given years of universal satsfaction and those that have
used Dr. King's New Discovery longest are its best friends. It
is pleasant to take ard it contains the ingredients that have
proved best for coughs, colds, croup and bronchial affections.
Your druggist has it—he's sold it for ‘many years.
announce the lines along which the
campaign organization will be con
ducted. The committee is being con
gratulated on its choice of Mr. Hood,
not only because he is a prominent
and active church worker, but is re
garded as one of the ablest business
men in the State,
The plan has the enthusiastic in
dorsement of Baptigts throughout
Georgia. The exact sum of money
to be asked for is $415,000, with the
object of freeing Georgia's Baptist in
‘stitutions from debt, and it has been
‘unanimously agreed by the Baptist
Convention that no money collected
will be paid out until the full $415,000
is in hand. i
“The task to be accomplished Is
large, co-operative and in every way
worthy of the best that is in us”
says the Rev. J. W. Graham, editor
of the Christian Index. ‘“We have
a big task. The very bigness of it
is a challenge to our numerical and
financial strength. The task requires
the largest giving in the history of
Georgia Baptists, and if they start out
by trying to satisfy their consclences
by giving one hundred when they
ought to give a thousand, and by glv-
Ing a thousand when they ought to
give ten thousand, they will fall
This is a time when the word ‘fail’
should have no place either in thelr
thought or In their vocabulary.”
.
Boy Kills Brother
.
While Out Hunting
JESUP, Jan, 18.—Cecil Grantham,
age 13, accideritally shot and killed
his brother, Otis Grantham, age 7,
while out hunting this morning.
The boys are sons of Mr. and Mrs,
Willie Grantham. Mr. Grantham is
one of the leading farmers off Wayne,
residing about two miles from Jesup.
The funeral will be held at Bethle
hem Baptist Church tomorrow after
noon,
Lack of control, gmarting, uric acid,
dizziness, indigestion, sleeplessners,
nervousness, sometimes the heart acts
badly, rheumatism, bloating, lack of
ambition, maybe loss of tHiesh, sal
low complexion. \
Prevalency of Kidney Disease.
Most people do not realize the
alarming Increase and remarkable
prevalency of kidney disease. ‘While
kidney disorders are among the most
common diseases that prevall, they
are sometimes the last recognlzed b,v‘
pations, who very often ocontent
themselves with dootoring the effects,
while the original disease may con
stantly undermine the system.
Regular bO-cent and one dollar size
bottles at all drug stores.
Don't make any mistake, but re
member the mame, Dr. Kilmer's
Swamp-Root, and the address, Bing
hamton, N. Y. which you “will find
on every bottle.
M. Rich’s Store Announces Big Bonus
Employees Will Share in $35,253.03
One of the profit-sharing checks given by M. Rich & Bros. Co. to a valued employee.
™ i NU'N YORK Ofrl‘CE 4B WRlrrgT ” -
PR, o B P 20 S,
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m\(% January 10, 44%_2_
v ,é,%wx¢;.m-.mox N R e J‘_‘_‘_;’B.__ ,
__our hundred and forty four dollars,and 90/100====cemeccenccnocanns WM V
Te T Wfl% j .%«{/Q/’ 7
s THE THIRD NATIONAL BANK, 2
64.5 ATLANTA. GA. Jl o\ 00 ft cate 1 o
i President:
Employees of the big department
store of M. Rich & Bros. Company
ltkely will spend today at home figur
ing on what to do with their share
of the $36,263.08 distributed among
them 1n bonuses. Three hundred and
twenty-five employees shared In the
bonus based on the business of 1916, |
For some time the Rioh store haa
had a system by which the sales
people receivel a share of profits on
sales above thelr gpecified minimum,
and this worked very well. But it
didn't meet the situation, for there
were hundreds of faithful, energetic
employees who didn't sell a cent's
worth in a year —floorwalkers, cash
iers, dellvery men and others.
8o the directors held a meeting last
week and adopted a bonus systerp in
whioh evey employee who had been
with the store a year or more would
share. And when the gures were add
ed up they came to $35,28.03, Every
body-—cash girls, bundle wrappers, el
evator operators, office boys—every
body who helps in a big way or little
to keep the machinery of a depart
ment store tunning at top speed
shared in the bonus.
M. Rich, who in 1867 founded the
business which now bears his name,
said:
“No progressive step that the h?uae
has taken since it was founded (has
given me greater pleasure than the
inauguration of the present bonus
system. It seems particularly fitting
that the announcement be made at
this time-—the beginning of the fif
tieth yvear of our business life,
“It i a far cry back to 1865, when Y
first opened a store in Albany, Ga.
Sherman had marched away a few
months before, leaving Atlanta in a
. )
Khorassan Knights
.
Plan Big Ceremony
["or the first time since the tem
ple was established, officers of Klb\a
Temple, No. 123, Dramatic’ Order,
Knights of Khorassan, will he install
ed at a public ceremony Wednesday
evening in the temple, on the ninth
floor of the Forsyth Building.
The officers to be installed are:
Royal vizier, W. G. Moore; grand
emir, Frank T. Ridge; sheik, B. L.
Owens; mahed!, R. M. Bubanks, sec
retary, R. M. Jones; satrap, G. F.
Cox; sahib, J. Fred Mayfleld.
HEARST’S SUNDAY AMERICAN. ATLANTA, GA., SUNDAY, JANUARY 14, 1917.
condition that proved war to be ex
actly what he said it was. 1 was a
lad of 18. Two years later I came to
Atlanta and opened up a store on the
site now occupiled by Maler & Ber
kele. My partner was Mr. Titlebaum.
Our stock consisted of a few thou-.
sand dollars’ worth of men’s clothing,
hats, shoes and dry goods; not much
to brag about, to he sure; but it fitted
in right well with the needs of the
soldters of the Confederacy returrdnnx
to thelr homes after the conclusion
of the war, A couple of years later
1 purchased my partner’s interest, and
for some time tf:rea.tter the name of
M. Rich appeared over the door.
“lI don’t remember the exact date
that my brothers, D. Rich, now vice
president of the Nrm, and E. Rich,
who died about fifteen years ago,
joined me. Then the irm name of M.
ißich & Bros. Company, as it stands
today, was born.
“The business grew to such an ex
tent that we were unable to look after
its manifold responsibilities. You see,
Atlanta, was growing at quite a rate,
and we were having all we could do to
keep up with it.
“Lucien York came to us more than
30 #years ago. He was a stock boy
then. His grasp of affairs resulted in
his being elevated to the position of
general manager a number of years
ago. D. H. Strauss became associated
‘with us some time later, and is today
secretary. W. H. Rich, son offb Rich,
is treasurer and holds the st of
‘merchandise manager.
~ “We are proud of the fact that most
of the store executives, the depart
‘ment heads, grew up with us. Today
‘every person that enters our employ
knows that through energy and appli
\aation to business they can attain
i
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Senate Members Are Unable toi
Reach Any Agreement on Pres- |
' ’ '
idnt’s Rail Measure. ‘
(By International News Service.) l
WASHINGTON, Jan. 13.—The Sen- |
ates Interstate Commerce Committee |
is deadlocked over President Wil- |
son’s strike prevéntion proposal. Aft- |
er several hours' debate of the meas- :
ure in executive sessien today, thei
committee failed to reach an agree- |
ment on a draft of the measure, and
adjourned until Tuesday. |
Four Progressive members of the|
committee—Senators Clapp, of Min- |
nesota: LaFollette, of Wlisconsin; |
Cummins, of lowa, and Poindexter, of |
Washington—declared themselves un- :
alterably opposed to the proposition |
of making strikes or lockouts unlaw- |
ful for a period of four months pend- |
ing investigation by a presldentml‘
commission. It is reported that some
of the Democratic members are equal- l
ly opposed to the measure. '
Talk was current about the Sen
ate that the committee would com
promise on a measure providing
merely for investigation without at-'
tempting to make strkes or lockomsl
unlawful. The administration, it is
understood, would regard such a com- |
promise as valueleas, and if no strong- |
er measure can be secured in theJ‘
committee, would prefer nbandonxnent‘
of the whole proposal. ]
b i s ‘
| .
Consul Quits Post;
'
~ Mad With Wilson
a (By International News Service.)
| WASHINGTON, Jan. 13.—Because
{he believed that the President’'s note
asking the terms of the belligerents a
| “disgrace,” George L. Lorillard, first
| secretary of the American diplomatic
| mission to the Balkans, has tendered
| his resignation to Secretary of State
| Lansing.
Mr. Lorillard's brief cablegram, re
| signing his post, reached the State
| Department late today, but its details
were not divulged. At the depart
! ment it was strongly intimated that
| some action may be taken for the en
! voy's open criticism of the adminis
tration while still serving in the diplo
matic corps. Mr. Lorillard recently
has been stationed at Corfu, seat of
the Venizelos revolutionary govern
ment in Greece.
I :
Sees No Relief
In Shipping Bill
(By International News Service.) 1
WASHINGTON, Jan. 13.—John
Donald, New York shipowner, and
one of the President's appointees to‘
the Shipping Board, told the Senate
Commerce Committee today that he
believed the shipping dbill would fur
nish only temporary relief, and that
in the long run private shipping could
operate more cheaply.
Mr. Donald was closely questioned
as to his reason for operating all of
the ships of the Donald Steamship
" Line under the Britjsh flag
.
any position at Rich's.
“I believe 1 am today the only mer
chant on Whitehall street who was
proprietor of a Whitehall street dry
goods store 50 years ago. My friend
Henry Hirsch conducted - a clothing
store on Atlanta's big shopping thor
oughfare then as he does today. But
he is the only man 50-years-a-mer
chant-on-Whitehall besides myself.
“I'm now golng on 72 and I'm still
one of the younger generation of At
lanta. I expect to be down to my
desgk and walk around the store every
day for many, many years to come,
And I promise that many other pro
gressive methods looking toward clos
er relations between employer and
employee will be put into effect here
as time goes by.”
Complete, Modern Engraving Plant for the
Production of Finest Business and Social
Stationery Part of Webb & Vary Equipment
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HE WEBB & VARY COMPANY, which has a
T reputation for producing high-class printing
promptly and properly, is now adding to that
reputation by the service rendered in its steel die and
copper plate engraving department. The production
of the latest and best social and business stationery,
wedding invitations, etec., at reasonable prices is the
aim. That the stationery department has attained
Special Car’to Carry Delegates
From Atlanta to Elberton, Leav
ing January 22,
Plans have been completed, it was
announced in Atlanta. yesterday, for
the annual meeting of the Woman’s
Missionary Society of the Methodist
Church, South, which opens Januar&"
22, in Elberton, and continues through
January 26, |
Mrs. W. B. Higgenbotham, of West |
Point, will preside, and speakers will
be Mrs. W. A. Albright and Mrs. L. G.
Johnmon, of Atlanta, members of the
Woman's Missionary Council; Miss
Daisy Davies, president of LaGrange
College; Miss Ella’ Leaveritt, of
China; Mrs. J. N. McEachern, secre
tary of the conference; Mrs. H. K.
Gairdner, of Elberton, and others.
Mrs. J. D. Hammond, of Dalton, will
conduct the ‘“noon devotionals,” tak
ing as her subject, “The Social Mes
sage of the Bible.”
A young people’'s evening, directed
by Mrs. W. F. Trenary; a children’s
pageant, directed by Mrs. J. P. Wom
ble, and a moving picture evening,
directed by Mrs. E. W. Brogdon, will
be features of the meeting.
Mrs. R, J. Atkinson, treasurer of the
conference, will make the yearly
financial report, and« Mrs, L. S. Ar
rington, of Augusta; Mrs. Paul Alken,
of Cartersville; Mrs. C. A. Mauck, of
Atlanta; Miss Sallie Stewart, of Ox
ford, and Mrs. Fannie Hutcheson, of
Canton, will make reports for their
departments.
Delegates will leave Atlanta over
the Seaboard Air Line Monday after
noon, January 22, at 2:35 o'clock. A
special coach will be provided and
delegates from other towns are ad
vised to reach Atlanta in time to take
this train. All names of delegates
Lshould be sent at once to Mrs. H. K.
Gairdner, Elberton, Ga. A small re
Relieves Serious Case
of Chronic Constipation
Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin
Corrects Condition That
Seemed Hopeless.
After suffering from chronic con
stipation until she was so run down
gshe was unable to do any kind of
work, Miss H. A. Frees, 209 Adams
street, Dayton, Ohio, obtained a bot
tle of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin
and used it with such gratifying re
sults that she continued the treatment
and has written to Dr. Caldwell that
‘her condition is again normal, and
that she wants to recommend Syrup
Pepsin to everyone who suffers with
constipation.
Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin is a
combination of simple laxative herbs
with pepsin, gentle in its action and
free from: griping or other pain or
discomfort. It contains no oplate or
narcotic drug, and, while acting read
fly on the most stubborn case of in
active bowels, is absolutely safe for
the tiniest babe, so that it is the ideal
family laxative and should be kept
on hand in every household for use
when needed.
Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin costs
only 50 cents a bottle and s sold in
drug stores everywhere. To avold
imitations and ineffective substitutes
its aim is shown by the fact that this department is
already enjoying a splendid patronage. Orders
have come not only from Atlanta, but from all parts
of the Southeast. An inquiry, either by letter or tele
phone, directed to Webb & Vary, 381/, West Alabama
Street, will receive prompt and expert attention.
Samples and prices will be furnished immediafely'.
—Advertisement. .
duction of fare will be given to par
ties of ten. leaving from one stad
tion.
- NEW SWISS LOAN. _
BERNE, Jan. 13.—The Swiss .Gov 4
ernment is issuing a 41-2 per cent
loan of $20,000,000, Of that amount
$6,000,000 will be used in repaying the
first war loan of § per cent, due on
February 26. .
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be sure you get Dr. Caldwell's Syrup
Pepsin. See that a facsimile of Dr.,
Caldwell’s signature and his portrait
appear on the yellow carton in which
the bottle is packed. A trial bottle,
free of charge, can be obtalned by
writing to Dr. W. B. Caldwell, 45;
Washington street, Monitcello, Illi
nois.
Two views
of the
Engraving
Department
s . as
Webb & Vary.
This plant
is one of the
finest and best
equipped in
the South?