Newspaper Page Text
Influence of America Abroad Will Be Bigger
After the War Than Now, Declares William
Martin, Swiss Diplomatic Student,
By WILLIAM MARTIN.
Foremost §yviu Authority on Diplomatic Matters.
GENEVA, Feb. 16.—When the year
1017 began Russia was still an em
pire and the United States was still
neutral. This step on the path of
progress will mark by its lasting con
sequences the greatest advance of the
war, Neither the arrest of the Ger
man offensive on the Marne in 1914,
the crushing in 1915 of Russia, and
the wiping out of Serbia, nor the
restoration of Poland in 1916 can be
measured with the political upheaval
which we have witnessed in 1917,
The entry of the United States,
followed by nearly 01l the new worlj,
not only in the war but in world pol
itlcs, has overthrown the terms of
all the problems of Europe. Without
going so far as to think with the “Fi-‘
garo” that the seat of civilization will
henceforth be transported across the
seas, it is impossible to blind oneself
to the fact that the United States has
assumed a determinant role in Ru
rope from the political and economic
point of view, of which no one dream
ed a year ago.
The United States, which has al
ways asserted it had no interests oth
er than in America, is today and will
be still more tomorrow the arbiter |
of all political and territorial ques- |
tions. ,
Center of Capital.
While before the war capital was’
dear in the United States, and barelyf
sufficed for internal needs, the coun
try is now pourinf out on Europe a]
deluge of its prbéducts and money.|
All economiec, customs and financial
problems are thus renewed. l
The American declaration of war |
was the first symptom of a reciprocal |
interpenetration of a new era in the‘
political world.
The importance and the gravity of
the American intervention exceed by
a great deal the limits of the war. It
affects us all, neutrals and belliger- |
ents. For Germany it is a military
and economic menace of which tho!
extemt has not yet been perceived
1t probably contains the definite over-l
throw of the material hegemony to‘
which the German people had the;
right to look forward before 1917 as/|
a near eventuality. For the Allies|
it is salvation in a situation which,l
without the United States, would bel
well night desperate. But it is not a|
salvation entirely without price, and |
the following exclamation of Inquie-l
tude is attributed to one of the most|
eminent of the Allied generals: “We |
must take care that we do not be- |
come the Portugal of Amenica.”
Discounts War Power.
American -intervention in 1918 will
continue to develop, slowly but surely,
its economic, financial, political and
military consequences. But one must\
not count this year on thundering’
successes by this army, so gdmirably‘
egquipped, organized and lnstructed.‘
full of zeal and an insatiable desire
for glory, but still a novice in the art
of war. Time alone will give it all
that is lacking and only three hun-
.g_ 3— At J"i“ :,;;-
0 Pty e | " &
A &Sty
% flw 6Sk
e 2 - P
P~ >
; .\i\\ E 4
Tomorrow ¢ <
Will Be a Good Day é
—to have your eyes fitted
s with glasses, BUT—
Today Is Better |
\ We are fully equipped to ren
der you all the aid that glasses
will give you and assure you
of a service that you will ap
preciate. Do not hesitate long
er, but come in TODAY.
E. M. MORGAN
JEWELER AND OPTICIAN
10 E. Hunter St.
BUILD A HOT BED NOW
7 = </‘
By 4///0
g, e - -
G b
Get an Early Start
" — __ ON YOUR GARDEN
4 HOT BED SASH
) Size 3x6 Cypress Rails, Glazed,
PRICE $3.25 EACH
F. 0. B. Atlanta
*4AIL ORDERS FILLED PROMPTLY
Everything to Build
| and Paint With
WEST LUMBER CO.
ATLANTA, GA.
240 Peters Street Phone Main 573
dred and sixty-five days separate us
from 1919,
It is necessary to know how to wait,
Patience seems to us the most fun
' damental quality of which the Allied
'peogles will have the need in the
coming year. Only in calm and in
resignation can they today “envisage
final success,
. The war never stops. At this mo
' ment even, if the signs do not deceive
us, the Germans are preparing a for
midable offensive, and it is marvellous
to observe with what. serenity the
French army ond people see ahead of
events. They have the certainty that
whatever may be the resources of an
adversary when circumstances serve,
the danger for them is no longer a
' military one.
| France Must Wait.
~ They know that even if the Ger
‘mans obtain some successes, which
is possible, they would be only tem
porary and without a morrow. They
draw from this certainty a resolution
whi¢h is unshakable.
But this resolution has no other log
ical consequence than to walit. The
problem of tomorrow for France con
siste of repulging Germany in order to
wait—and perhaps for more _than
twelve months-—the full effort -of
America. It ig under this form that
the famous “equation” of victory to
day presents itself.
But in face of the American inter
vention the other great event of the
past year, the Russian revolution
ranges itself. Thc revolution has put
jdea:s in movement throughout the en
tire world Among all peoples it has
provoked the backwaters in a way
which is as yet ill-discerned, but
which will certainly aggravate. Noth
ing i§ more fluld than thought. It
cxtengls above the frontiers and
crosses distance in a mysterious fash
ion.
It has been said in allusion to Na
poleon that the royal crown was more
contagious than the £hrygian bonnet
(the cap of Liherty). But that is only
in appearance and of a transient
fashion. The thror\e of Napoleon has
gone, his crown is in disuse, but the
ideas 0fT789 have invaded Europe.
Russia Menaces Teuton.
The Russian revolution is a danger
for the Allies because it brings peace,
and no idca is more insidious. But it
is no iess a danger for Germany, to
whom it signifies democracy, and for
Austria-Hungary, to whom it preaches
the right of peoples. At Brest-Litovsk
(the seat of the Rassian peace con
ference) the greatest benefit appears
to be assured to the Germanic em
pires. But tomorrow belongs to no
body. The Russian ideas will filter
into all th emoral fissures that they
find in their way, and the more re
fractory the medium the more de
structive will be their effects.y Thelr
outbreak in Germany may be retard
ed, but it will, without doubt, only be
more violent. % g
Lenine is trying at this moment to
give form to humanity's need of peace
and to the discontent of peoples. He
symbolizes aspirations which are pro
found and universal. We hope that
his social and international theories
will not triumph. But it would be
imprudent to rely on.silence for that.
It is only in battle that Lenine will be
vanquished, not only in Russla, but in
each one of our nationdl homes.
The Russian peril today is every
where, and menaces all the world;
1918 will see, no doubt, the hatching.
It will be, after the vear of great hap
penings, the year of great battles of
ideas.
At the end of the year we shall find
ourselves before a universe of unsus
pected problems, of new conceptions,
of unexpected formulas which will
have taken shape. The world is await
ing a birth, but the sex of the child
escapes its eyes.
Sr N S e
¢ BOY TAKES COLD TRIP.
PORT MORRIS, N. J., Feb. 9.—Half
starved and nearly frozen, Joseph Dol
silli, 11 years old, arrived here a few
days ago after a mid-winter trip from
Chicago in a refrigerator car. After a
hearty meal and a few hours of warm
'<helter Joseph was none the worse for
his frigid journey. Trainmen who
found the boy are unable to understand
‘how he survived the trip.
HEARST’'S SUNDAY AMERICAN
Lonely South Sea
Island Is Sought
For Honeymoon
HONOLULU, Feb., 16..-To
dream away the long summer
days beneath the waving: palm
trees, on an uninhdbited isle far
away from civilization, is the
honeymoon that appeals to Ross
Carpenter, Seattle business man,
and his bride-to-be, a New Zea
land girl. They plan to meet in
Honolulu this spring to be wedded
and then hope to find seclusion oh
A South Sea island where man
travels not.
' Carpenter so expressed his
quest in a letter to the Hawaii
promotion committee,-asking in
formation if Hawail ¢an provide
such an Eden as he seeks.
“We have planned a rather un
usual honeymoon,” he says. “We
wish to find some wild, unfre-
;. R AO R R R Y N s » ] e
e @ ; \’ e 3 i SR R SR 4
R SN ;\\ Sm e BN PR R ¢ 1
: b RS . 5 o s B S
B&ei§ 8 A ¥ g ;
§ 3 S N A 1 LN o Oet LA ’ N g
¥ S 1 ” & SN T B 3 ho ey X v 3
B G i wm\- ; ok ’ s s
. B 3 SN S 1 \: N A - {
o g kS ) RN
BB ‘\: \,& - U S PR 5; b\g g SR
L 5 oY o % A " RS ‘ ; e i
g\. R § ; ¥ "*}/‘*‘ 3 bR %‘:“,’ "" 3 L ¥AR ot
o ; T R Ll *gx ! o 5 e T N % o~ :
& L "‘ . SENRIRIS RS NOO R S A 3 :
R e T % R - 3 i 5 A ! a R ]
¥ o : 3 » L N \ SRS ¢ O SRS ] 9\“‘ -,35'?%’5 4 : ‘ .
R : g CRRR oy R o el ePN ORGSR s R
WiSWRN S e \ :
i i b, o : Nl hxs g g 3 " il
& \“‘* Tel 3 T : : *\Q“ S ,-» .
& .Nw".‘_"*\‘ '\"“'*.( g R o i o S i oel 3
T e L SR i - & R I :
‘ \M‘\' -~ »“ «\‘ '}li I,7‘*‘ n . 4 ‘ i i
: N ~- : LR 38 e : R s B ;
Lo ”“-"»N‘,,:.s"" il v:, '(:« t B T 0 m’:. +o i s ?‘( :
k N i o - RSty Eraaprnn IR IR AL 2] 5 g ¥ o
( R o “NK"‘"v . " . f\; e, B e SRR S T e 4 M&'fl'm /5 i
£ b, BRS s LY B S —— S ¢
£ NGI o \@f ""o"\r ) e w . ‘LMA ; 5
Bion e : 7,,;3‘, g 1. ! ] i
B S 5 N ) e o (o 5% !
t ' TR PR, iy / “ > s 5 i
E, W i 3 )_},‘, ' : 4 : . 3
&3 i Y o o 1 box A b
B SN '*’ AR St g A i s i
k:£IRT B o s o
e i SR AN S PR L 8 . o R o e § 3
J“‘\*‘\*( oo;« ¢ oI O? g R s 4 :
PSSR . $ AR b e S
E. 3 3 ‘ fi%”\\\{/@“ R § e TS ¢ P §7
- N PUIS MR - % # R o i
g y Ve 5 ROSNSRRS ke d A R . 5
¥ % : N 4 '3§/. 5 s a YR R e 2 % % G
; 3 4 S Pr SRR % 2 A Py B :
e TR L R oP e B e
i : PRI, 20 0 eSR Ly (A B O =
R G Pr L \‘%f Sl SRER R S e B o
i 3 S N ‘ o BN C i SR ’ s L } 8 i \‘\f' § e
5 RS ey oo VOIS - S s .oo g
U’ S e ; : s S W T DG ’\; . P
§ 3 ey d g : . ol T AR SEE TR L SRI S
t 3 ) " (EAB. - Mg s S b b AT 2 AL B i i
AL AR R Sk R R S A s 5 ki
Wit ERTIRR aN FUL WA % B E { : ik
P R soOR TP O LTI e, e B ; ol
BRI eTR T T m‘;‘i : : e
| B LR . s ] et o O R R
BR2RRN s 3 » X "
At top is a photograph of ‘‘The Human Fly,”’ snapped while he was sixteen stories above the
ground. Below, the ‘‘Fly’’ stepping from another great climber, the Apperson light, which holds
many hill climbing records.
quented spot for the summer—a
la Adam and Eve. (I understand
there are no serpents in the Ha
waiian Islands). it would be so
romantic if we could discover an
uninhabited island, or at least
some portion of the sea coast of
the Hawalian group which would
be sufficiently isolated for such
an adventure.”
Carpenter’s brother in I.os An
geles, Dr. Carpenter, is director
of the weather bureau there, it
is said. ’
SEWARD, ALASKA, Feb. 16 —Four
steamships on the Alaska run have been
wrecked in as many weeks—the Al-Ki,
Manhattan, Mariposa and Spokane.
Five months age a bomb was discov
ered in the hold of the City of Seat
tle. another Alaska steamship, while
she was anchored at Ketchikana.
The compasses of a number of steam.
ers have recently beén at variance, un
accountable breaks in machinery have
been frequent, steering gear has be
come faulty without apparent reason,
and many other unusual happenings
aboard Alaska steamships lately have
provoked the suspicion that there is
method in these various accidents.
As tending to confirm the fear that
enemies are at work, a number of em
ployees of Alaska steamships have. been
arrested, but officials have given out
no information for publication touch-
Ing on the charges for which they were
made.
el e N S s
BURIED IN COAL—UNHURT.
ST. GEORGE, B. L., Feb. 16—Michael
Reilly, a laborer, was buried beneath
geveral tons of coal for six hours and
emerged unhurt. When examined and
‘bathed at a hospital his one comment
was:
" “Tive lost quite a bit of sleep ‘ately,
If you don't mind I'll take a nap.” |
Abdominal Supporters, Elastic
Stockings fitted by expert pro
prietors.
(V.E.)Perryman-(J.C.) Burson Co.
lvy 2964. 109 N. Pryor St.,
Opposite Candler Bldg.
Walk across the PLAZA and
save a QUARTER
ATLANTATAXI CO.
OPPOSITE TERMINAL STATION
52 MADISON AVENUE
caßiso G. W. WHITE, Mgr. “sios
— A Newspaper for People Who Think —
Fly to Q‘lim})".Wifi"ecoff' Monday
Crowd to See Sensational Stunt
,\ \s ‘» \\““&\\W&\\\\ i \\\W
B\ S e
- By 0. B. KEELER.
i Nr”. it's pretty much up to the
weather man. If he lets it rain Mon
day, after 9 o'clock in the a. m., why,
the Fly won't be able to climb the
Winecoff Hotel. 1f it doesn's rain,
and doesn’t get colder than 10 de
grees, gbove zero, why, the Fly will
climb.
Winecoff Hotel. At 12:30 p. m.
Monday. - \
If it doesn’t rain.
And now we're all set, and if you
want to get within a quarter of a
mile of thHe climb you'd better get
yvour seat picked out and be standing
on it as soon after high noonh as pos
sible. . Because the Fly will start
frcm the sidewalk, going skyward, at
exactly 12:30 o'clock. And before that
minute there won't be any standing
room only—and no reserved seats,
unless you have an office or a friend
who has an office, or a friend who
has a friend who has an acquaintance
who owes him $2.50 who has an of
fice in some building{in sight of thel
Peachtree streect side of the Winecoff |
Hotel. e |
Better play it safe and get there
early.
You know how it was at the last
climb here—or do you? If not, for
your informatlon permit me to state
that T.do not believe two more per
sons could have seen that climb. Pos
sibly one tall man and one child
might. have seen it, providing t,he'
child was held on one or the other of
the shoulders of the tall man. But
certainly not two adult persons, un
less occupying the same positions.
I mean to say, there'll be a crowd.
Better get there early.
The Winecoff is a good building to‘
climb. That is, it's a bad building
to climb. I mean it's a good building
for the spectators to watch a Human
Fly making a difficult climb. It is
tall and Bkinny and excessively per-l
pendicular. There are mnot many
‘projections or jiggerpops sticking out
of it, to hold on to. li{ter the l~‘ly‘|
made his last climb here, on the
Fourth National Bank Building, 1
swore I'd never watch him/ again. |
RESORTS.
e e et
Capacity 400. Close by the
P‘lfll Beltb HOlel largest hotel. but with less
formality and more moderate rates. Booklet: goif.
Daneing in Cocoannt Grove. Warm sea bathing
By rail 38 hours. March best time here,
But 1 feel myself slipping. T reckon
I'll see this one, too.
“Aw, come on,” says the Fly. “We're
going to have a nice big Apperson
Jack-rabbit to ride around to the ho
tel in, and all.”
Yes, but even an Apperson J. Rab
bit with eight cylinders won't take
the Fly up the face of that Winecoff
Hotel. He'll have to make it under
his own steam. I'll stick with the
Jack-rabbit, T reckon. Anyway. 1
won't go up the hotel with the Fly.
After the climb Monday, the Fly
will start in filling an engagement at
the Grand Theater Monday, Tuesday
and Wednesday. He will appear on
the regular bill with a brief lecture
and motion pictures of his most spec
tacular climbs, including an authen
tic photograph of his only really bad
fall, 56 feet from the dome of the
State Capitol at Columbia, S. C,
Man Wasted Food;
" Is Given 14 Days
LONDON, Feb. 16.—David Evans was
fined 2 shillings or fourteen days' hard
labor in defawlt for wasting food. The
evidence showed that Evans, when
under the influence of drink, had
thrown his dinner, which consisted of
meat and vogotnhfns, on the flre. He
then took hold of a large bread pan
containing & mixture of flour, oatmeal
and veast, intended for m&kfng cakes
for, the family's tea, and poured the
'mixture down a drain, remarking, “I
will gee that no one has any tea now
that I have had no dinner.,”
% ,
5! UNIFORMS
*
55 If you are in the Army branch of Gov
%4 ernment service and in a uniform,
whether commissioned officer or man
in the ranks, we can outfit you com
' pletely with regulation ‘apparel in
strict accord with the military re
quirements.
Uniforms from $27.60 to $46. Over
coats, $36 and $37.60. Also a
; complete line of accessories.
Keep Door
Open To
Night I'MILITARY SHOf o)
* 116 PeachtrcelSt
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY, 1% 1918
fi l
President Wilson Saw Through
Drive on Italy as Revenge of
Ghibellines Over _Guelphs.
Germany Faces Ultimate Defeat
By Jacques d'Urville.
European Autho?y on International
Affairs. '
PARIS, Feb. 16.—From the ruins ufi
the vast Muscovite Empire, now fall
ing to pieces, a new machine for the
civilized world emerges—the bloe of
Germanism, reconstructed and irre
sistibly redirected by historic truth
toward that land of Italy, where the
Emperors of the Holy Roman Empire |
came to seek spiritual ('(mse('ratiun‘
of their all-embracing power, |
The entry of the Austrian forces
into Venet'a® shoulder to shoulder
with the descendants of Frederick IT,
was a symbol, the profound signifi
cance of which could ndt escape the
reflective mind of President Wilson. It
is the revanche of the Ghibellines
over the Guelphs; it is the reprisal
of Germanism against the Latin ele
ment; it is a direct blow at the all
too-learned policy of the diplomats of
the Consulta; it is, in short, the con
demnation of national particularism.
Wilison Not Deceived.
Wiser than numbers of Western
idealists, President Wilson is not at
all deceived as to the true value of
gertain pseudo-humanitarian doctrines
of the Central Empires., He under
stood perfectly that his League of
Nations, interpreted by a hardened
feudal of Count Hertling’s stamp, the
mouthpiece of the worst German
‘autocrats, would lead, not to an eman
cipation of races grouped according
to their affinities and their own in
clinations, but to a federation of lit
tle nations, progressing at a goose
step under the inexorable German
ferrule.
The lesigns of Austria, now merged
in Greater Germany, likewise became
clearer every day. After the refusal
of Count Audrassy to admit that Ser
bia might be reintegrated, even
within her pre-war limits, Count
Czernin, in Eli!i turn, renounces the
Royal and Imperial policy in regard
toww progressing emancipation of the
races subject to the Empire.
By a bitter irony of fate, ufter the
overthrow of (zarism and the pre
cipitdte retreat of the Italians, be
yond the Piave, the only protectors
who might, until the advent of a new
order of things interest-themselves in
favor of the Serbs, the Roumanians,
the Croats, Polish, Slavs, or Yougo-
Slavs, are precisely th®ir oppressors,
the houses of tohenzollern and Haps
burg.
~ In the same way Germanism ad
justs itself badly to the humanitarian
theories which are opposed to its
hereditary brutality.
Socialism itself, if favored among
the old Liberal democracies, is noth
ing here but an article of exportation.
Results alone are of any interest,
The fall of the Venetian capital calls
up in the minds of the Austrians the
power of the Doges, their symbolical
marriage with the Adriatic, their
domination of Albania, Macedonia and
a part of the Morea; in a word, their
economic and marine supremacy
extended to the L.evant and the coast
of Turkey in Asia.
, Need Control in Balkins.
~ The realization of this program
necessitates a free hand in the Bal
kans and the Germanization of Greece.
'One must wait and see exactly ‘on
'whom this coup de force will be at
tempted next. It becomes the more
interesting from the fact that the
Kalser i 8 forced to count with claims
i from a discontented Bulgaria, the
mistress who may hold open or olose
'the rouie to Constantinople, as her
humor inclines. i
l The possession of Salonica and Al
bania, carrying with it the forced co
ioperutinn of Greece, moreover offers
' such advantages to the Central Pow
ers that with Roumania annihilated,
one must suppose them capable of
}puttlng everything into operation to
reallze their aims.
| Supported by the great strategic
port on the Aegean Sea-~transformed
into a vast dockyard for the inten
' sive manufacture of submarines—and
by Spain, Awustria-Germany would
lqnivkl,\' achieve the double result they
have in view, that is to say, she would
!pmhibit by means of her submarine
flotillas all practical navigaticn of the
A GOOD
s-g P - t
| MAKE A SPECIALTY OF SIGNS
ON GLASS. Out of town orders for
card slgns and cloth banners solicited.
Walter Wilson, 217 Arcade.
-
Sobriety and New
Machi Result
Of War Conditi
(By International News Service.)
I.ONDON, Feb. 16.——'“The war has
brought us two compensations for
all its woes and 1lls,”” says a London
editorial writer.
“It has equipped the country with
new machinery and it has materially
decreased the wasteful vice of
drunkenness. Lord D’Abernon
stated recently that drunkenness
among women has decreased by 73
rer cent, The restriction es public
wuse hours has doubtless heen &
contributory cause, but the real rea
son for the decline is the Increase
in self-respect ,g{at has come with
wider employmeft and greater inde
~ pendence. The war has added to
~ women's interests and made their
. lives fuller. It is the ldle and the
- bored who are most likely to drink
‘ too much. The man or the woman
to whom life offers constant inter
~ est and even occasional thrills is
’ not tempted to seek forgetfulness,
and at the same time to lose hu
manity. Lord D'Abernon suggests
that present conditions will continue
after the war. If this be true of
the novel restrictions it is certainly
equally true of the new privileges.”
Man Who Shot Wife
. ; |
Asphyxiated-in Sleep
\ ————
L.OB ANGELES, Feb. 16.—Arthur D,
Loomis, who ive years ago shot and |
wounded his wife on a crowded street
of Venlice, in the Oxford Hotel, at Po
mona, was asphyxiated while resting
propnrn(ox“; to attending a family re
unfon at the home of Bert Barnes. (
Mr. Loomis, who was 33 years old, and
was station agent for the Southern‘
Pacific at Tucson, Ariz., had registered '
at the hotel earlier in the day and,
gone to his room to rest. The clerk,
knocking at his door later and re
celving no rr\sfmnse, climbed to the
transom and mmediately forced the
door on discovering Mr, Loomis' condi
tion. A gas fire burning had evidently
devitalized the air to such as extent as
to cause his death.
\
75,000 in Bank
$75,000 in Banks,
LEXINGTON, KY., Feb. 16 —William
Stoue, 60 years old, with §75,000 in bank,
ttarved himeelf to death through fear of
losing his wealth. He ate only a few
crackers dally. He was a college gradu
ate and member of a wealthy family.
Mediterranean and organize a coun
ter-blockade which would enable her
to prolong the war until the Allies,
demoralized and relentlessly pursued
by venomous propaganda, are forced
te accept a German peace.
In fact, the Germans, despite di
visions on the Russian front, despite
the grandiloquent utterances of Von
Hindenburg, harbor few illusions as
to the igsue of the operations on the
western front, where the American
contingent has entered into line.
That is why they are preparing, in
case their line of defense should bé
carried, to eonfront the Entente with
a reconstructed Germany of Charles
Y.
That is why to escape the asphyx
iation which threatens them, they are
already breathing through the Rus
sian lung and seeking consolation In
{the Hast. ,
B tP ;
-
for YOUR home is among
the 40 designs at our store
Hearing them side by side, you can determine
casily, intelligently and finally which one you
should purchase. For this is the factory home
of pianos of -character—a fact which insures
your obtaining of us a piano value that cannot
be duplicated elsewhere.
WELLINGTON. T ——
The lowest priced high W] 'g--" 3
grade piano in the world. - .
Style W _sells at $295, 3 e |
Terms of $7 a month if de- S —
sired § .?‘. g . =t 2
| PR e
i &% e !
et i : oy ‘
55 TR M oom |
.}‘fi"flf ¥ \J F ” < RTL,
Thed 00l AT 7 R pe
(PN TN .\ ICTROLA — Outfit No. 1010
{ | ! Includes SBS Victrola and $6.75
'-‘ |iy worth of records. Complete with
T1};; Jn e needies, $91.75. Cash or terms of
. M SERTTTONY. $7.50 a month.
k LA e
BRI T "
e
; -Ee 53
' Ib nNE=
EUPHONA ST
INNER-PLAYER :"_ s 481
Kquipped with the fam L i ¢
ous Miniature Key- ' . x
board, yet 3200 lower § .‘,:. o, 8 'l
in price than any for- H ._‘;;‘;‘ i A | | |
mer Inner-Playver, Cash S i e
or easy wv'm\l‘ of 515&] 4?“_‘- ‘!‘—i.““ T e
month y i I
CALL NOW or write for Catalog, prices and
details of our Easy Payment Plan.
[able Piana (o
1 R AAT A —~—
82 N. Broad St., Atlanta, Georgia
e e R
CABLE PIANO CO., Atlanta, Ga. A
Send catalog checked.
Nas Lol g e S 2
Ao o o i b
[ Pianos [ Players O Victrolas [ Rebuilt Pianos
GIRLS ASK CcOzZY CQRN’”
CARNEYS POINT, N:J, Feb tg;
lLoneliness has resulted lgun request
the girl workers at the Pont Pow
der plant here that they be prwgg:
with chaperons and cozy corners.
girls are housed in big, comfortable
dormitories, but they have no glm to
entertain their male admirers between
working hours.
First
1s what you
demand of a
drug store
when pre
scriptions are
Concefned.
At Cone's you
get accuracy,
purity of drugs
-and promptness
of service, thus
insuring safety
first and last.
May we fill your
next prescrip
tion? Bring or
send it to
A _}
DroG SToRE" BAN A
3A