Newspaper Page Text
4A
Colonel Williamm A. Bishop, premier
fying sce of the war, who sent down
92 German aeroplunes in flames ofli
chally recorded, and unoffieially cred
fted with 110 machines out of 200 en
gagoments, Is comdng to Atlanta the
latter part of March to lecture on the
part the zeroplane played in the late
war.
Colonel Bishop = coming to At
lanta under the aunepices of the At
lanta Woman's ('lub, and its percent
age of the proceeds will go for the
eetahlishment of & home for feeble
minded children in the city. He comes
to Atlanta after filling Carnegie Hall
in New York City to capacity on two
return engagements, and iz duly ac
aredited by all nations as being the
greatest and nost spectacular ilver
the war produced
In vears, Cok 1 Rishop is onty a
boy. Before he Lad attained his ma.
Jority he was accredited with thir
teen enemy planes, and when the war
ended was only 24 years of age. Born
in Canada, he is more American than
Bnglish, under whose flag he foumbt,
and despite the fact of his years, was
one of five members of the British adr
board, who directed the operations of |
22006 airplanes |
Colonel Bishop graduated from the
Canadian Military Academy, which
sorresponds to West Point, and sailed |
for France as an oTicer in the Cana- |
diam tafantry during the first few |
months of the war. On arriving i“i
Bngland, and seeing the picturesque |
fife of the aviators, he secured a
transfer to the new branch of war
fare ;
Yor several monthe Colonel Bishop
ocarried a scries of articles in 'rh('!
Saturday Evening Post, under the ti
tle of “Shooting Stars” This work,
which was widely read, s guid to give
more in detail the operations of the
air fleet than any articles written on
the subject during the war
Mrs. B. M. Boykin, chatrman of the
comm ittee uppointed to arrange for
olone! Bishop's lecture, hasgs made
arrangements for him to speak in the
Auditorium. Tearning of the purpose
of the organization in devoting the
proceeds to a charftable organization
Colonel Rishop wired his representa
tive to lower his guarantee by prac.
tically half.
. .
Returning Soldier
. . o
Finds Wife Remarried
(By International News Service.)
ALLENTOWN, PA., Peb 15.--Pri
wvate Miles . Roth, crippled and worm,
arrived home the other day to find that
his wife, belleving him dead, had mar
ried another. Roth had fallen In bat
tle and the War Department had eent
the mistaken report of his death to the
wife, But Roth, severely wounded, was
Lrought back to health.
The modern EBnoch Arden heard the
mews philosophfeally.
“Well, she's o mighty fine girl”™ be
said. ™ always loved her and In this
mizxup Ym not one to Etart any trouble
With me ‘“dead’ as reported 1 don't
wonder that some other man was at
tmoted to her. And mistakes will al
ways happen™ he mused, as he started
BWAY.
Corns, Calluses |
[ ick!
Qll!t QUIC °
Two Drops of “Gets-It™ Will Do It. |
Bver hand-carve your toe with a ;
knife trying to get rid of & corn? Bver |
use gpcissors and snip off part of hn;
corn tog ose to the gulck? |
4! ‘\§ "y A _
{ IR
i A
f/ W\ o
" i '
" J o 2 ,
G ¥
NS Lol
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5 7] (s
) W % ‘;”;‘:}' % X
«3 . Ye ; e S -~
y oA T RO, ~ y
. {d‘?’ Bg W Xb %
o b -« S
b é-;:)g & < ).ig) G
SGets- I Puts Your Feet in Clever
it Kods Corus Quickly.
Bwer pack up your toe with “eontrap- |
tions” and plasters as though you wers
demu a glass vase for parcel post
EWer use greasy ointments that ruat f
on your stocking? Kver use sticky tape
that gets jerked off when you pull you
stocking off? Kind o foolish, when 2 «
2 drops of "Cets-I1" on any ocort r
eallous gives it a guick, paluless, peace
ful, dead -aure ftuneral' Why potter and
suffer? “Gots-It" stops eorn pains
jets you work, smile and dance, ever
with corns It"s the comnmon sens:
way, the only rcimpis CURY WAY- PO
corne off like a banana peel Used by
millions It never fails
“Cets-It.” the guarapteed, mone)
back corm-remover, the omly re Wa
costs but a trifte a wny drn sto
M'fd by B lawrence & Co., Chicag
I —Advertisemnent
If Your Doctor Can't Tell What's
the Matter With You, Perhaps
Your Dentist Can.
*f g 0 to the dotcor and he gives me
medicine, but | don't seem to gel any
Detter.” This is a commonly -heard re
ark. If that's your case, the chances
are your teeth need attention. Bo often
A blind abseess at the root of a tooth
Wil canse il heaith, especially heart
frouble. The abscess may not give you
ARy pain. But it's doing Its deadly work
zml the sam: You can easily settle
he matter definitely without trouble and
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tal Parlors. laet one of the WfT of
Sentists there make a thorough exan
ination of your tecth and gums. Such
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Marly every six months, especially if one
inelined to be alling The Atlanta
B‘l\l‘l Pariors & an old estabiished in
fflmflon of Atlanta and has been grow
ng in }}"-puh:‘x’w for the last fiftee
Years, very case pecejveg th
tareful trestment by the mosi approved
painiess methods. Charges are always
Spaponable, Call any time-at your con
wenlence. Atlanta Denptal Parlors, Dy
€. A. Constantine, proprietor and in
W‘envmr« and Decatur streets
[ e, 19% Peachtree). - Adw,
L 3
Peace Session to Change
World Spirit, as Well as
Boundaries, Says Lansing
After Agonies Humanity Endured, Peoples Can
Not Accept International Order
That Existed.
By HON. ROBERT LANSING.
Secretary of State of the United Stat es and President of the Peace Confer
ence Committee That is to Fix Responsibility for the War.
| We shail go no further than to as
sume that a universal peace, interna
tionally just, will usher in a new era
and a new phase of clvilization, 1o
which we will have to conform our
ideas so that we may not futilely op
pose but may wisely apply the irre
sistible influences which thass years
of conflist have brought fortn and
which will materially affect the social
order,
The period of readjustment and
restoration which must now follow
the disorgmanization and destruction
caused by the war will tax human
wisdom to the uttermost.
In a cooflict so widespread as to
inwolve the whole earth, In a conflict
which has compelled the mobiliza
tion of all the manhood and re
sources of the nations, which required
the expenditure of wealth mhulmmj
beyond comprehension and foreed |
governments to assume M(ranrdinnry‘
powers over national and individual
energies, new impulses of human ac
tion have been set tn motion, not only
in the political, industrial and com
mercial spheres, but in the structure
of society and in the spiritual life of
mankind.
Principles To Be Changed.
Many of the fundamental prinei
ples of the present social order will
be threstened; some will be changed;
sorme discarded; while novel and pos
sibly extravagant and dangerous doc
trires will find earnest and honest
advocates. With all this we must
reckon.,
After the horrors and the unspeak -
ahle agonies which humanity has en
dured as a consequence of the old po
litical organization of the world, it
would be unreasonable to expect the
peoples who have borne so much to
acecept as a basis of national and in
ternational order that which previ
ously existed.
The status quo antq beltum of so
ciety, as well as of boundarfes and in
ternational relations, seems impossi
ble. This, we belicve, must be ac
cepetd as a necessary premise in de
velopdng a program for the future. We
do not see how it ean be avoided; and
we are not snre that it would be wise
to avold it if we could.
We belleve that we must also as
sume anotherbgem}m n striving to
solve the problems which e before
us. It is that the temper of the peo
ples who have engaged In this in
ternecine struggle will for some time,
cortainly at the immedine moment, !m{
impressed with hostility and hatred
for one another. ‘
Material Standards Wrong. |
The result of this mental attitnde
will make more diffeult the estab-
Nshment of an equilibrinm between
nations, for it will produce an !m«m-i
perate basls which will impair judg
ment and cause vindictivenoss toward
former enemies unless influential and
gober-minded men resist this natural
feeling and preserve their minds open
and free so that they will impartially |
welgh the trith and ‘&d impute gullt
to the misguided n; o Agn t. <
We know that this is a cult
thing to do, beeanse it is ;1! 120 to |
dissociate the inst ent of evil from |
the one who m:a’:"m the evil and
directs the Instrument. ‘
But, none the less, sound, common
sense imposes upon us the duty of
correcting, ®o far as we are able, this |
tendency which will, if it econtinnes,
weaken muatertally the true spirit of
justice which is essential to endur
ing pence. '
Believing in the brotherhood of
man, the American people, now that.
the war is over, ought not cherish a |
pitiless hate for all those who have!
merved the military dictators of Cen
tral Furope, l
We should discriminate between the |
ignorant and the intelligent, thwaon;
the responsible and the irresponsible, |
between the masetr and the serf. !
It scems to us that it is the plain
Aduty of all those who can influenced
public opinfon to so guide American
thought that passion will not prevent
the putting into operation of a wise
plan for the readjustment of the
worl when peace finally is restored. |
To the problems which involve po
litieal instiutions, Industrial and '
commercial systems, and the obliga
tions and rights of individuals as
well as of nations, we must apply &
spirftual standard rather than the
material one of which we have heen
accustomed. §
it iz the verdict of history that a
eol, ealoulating materinlism sows
ress,
iin the life of a peaple the meeds of
degeneracy rather than those of prog-
It is not unreasonable, in view of
the recent past, to fear that there
will be a strong tepdency, to appiy
materialistic doctrines 1o the state
of peace, and we are by no means
sure that these doctrines, which will
Ye termed “humanitarian” will not
find warm supporters among sin- |
pere Christians, for it searcely oan
be denied that the Christian Church
in later years hasx been increasingly
dlsposed to emphasize works rather
than faith,
Unless the eoterna! priciples of
Christian ideals and percepts be
come a living force in the transfor.
mation of the world, the pesce which
will be established will not be an en
during peace
Miterialism is an exaltation of the !
phiysteal Ite chief end is earthly
happiness obtained in a large meas- |
ure through power and possessions,
1t i® essentially selfish, It even hases
morality and justice indirectly on |
aelfizh interest
A state of selfishness can hardly
faii to produce ambition and greed
and the efforte to gratify them.
These are the evil® which gave us/|
militarism and war in the past, and
¥¢ will they again if they ure per.
mitted to dominate men and CGovern.
ments
ln'juniu Must Cease.
Materiallsm as the bhasic idea of
the new orders of things will revive
those very impuises to do evil which
the world today abhors. ~
Humanity is not unprepared to re- |
ceive the great spiritual truthse which
should be the foundation of the re- |
lations between men and betwoeen
nations if we are to have a continu
ing state of peace,
War. with all ite appeal to thel
PIBTUR E*FRAHES
SUUTHERN PHUTV MATERIAL CO
SEVENTY-TWO NOURTH BRUAD
primitive instincts of man, has a
measure of compensation in that it
compels men who go forth to battle
' to turn their thoughts to that which
lies beyond this life, as they realize
ita uncertainty
f And not alone to those who face
danger and sudden death in the serv
ice of their country do these thoughts
come, but algo to those millions at
home who await with anxious hearts
in fear and in hope for loved ones
on the field of baitle
The life of American has been so
‘bhered by the peril of her sons, The
spirit of the nation Is reaching for
wird and upward to the Supreme
Bemng for strength and counsel
International injustice must cease.
All men must be free from the op
pression of arbitrary power. [Unrea
wning class hatreds and class tyran
nles must come to an end. Society
must be organized on principles of
ustice and liberty.
The world must be ruled by the
deminant will io do that which is
right. We see no other complete so
liutions of the great problems, no
other means of destroying forever
that soulleas materialism which
plunged the nations into these ytars
of agony,
Debt We Owe the Dead.
There is no time to be lost if this
nation is to be made ready to enter
with the right spirit and the right
principles upon the task of readjust
ment and reconstruction. There is
no time to be lost, because the day
is here when the spirit of liberty
stands triumphant above the spirit
of militarism.
To those noble Americans, our
friends and brothers, those who have
made the supreme sacrifice, and to
those who have dedicated their lives
to the canse of thelr country, to the
brave men of the Allied nations who
have so gallantly died that liberty
might live, we owe a debt which
imposes on us the obligation of mak -
ing eertan that tonetr service and sac
rifice have not been in vain. Thev
fought for a better world. It lies
with us to do our part to make it
better,
Beer Sells at Sixty
Cents Per Glass ata
Popular Paris Case
(By Universal Service.)
PARIS, ¥eb. 15 Maxi'm case is
just around the corner from the
Hotel Crillon, and as a result
Maxim's is basking in the same
" briliant sunshine of prosperity as
a “last chanee” bar on the edge of
the Sahara Desert,
Not that the American peace
commissioners, or the commis
sion's staff, have individually or
colleetively brought prosperity to
Maxim's—perish that thought
but the fact is that every Ameri
can in Paris strolls in or around
the Hotel Crillon, and Maxim's is
the nearest place of conviviality,
The revolving doors at Maxim’'s
are always revolving, and the
American cash register within
rings a constant joyful paean, per
haps in honor of the fact that peace
has come, but undoubtedly because
drink in Maxim's- -not excepting a
mournful and lonely little glass of
beer--may be purchased for less
than § francs, which in our money |
is 60 cents. |
i B |
L. . ‘
eyden, Being Irish,
.
Had to Fight, So He
Joined ‘
oined U, 8. Navy
LIVERPOOL, ENGLAND, Feb, 15 -
locai police foree has got a bit of its
own back from the United States navy
~§2, to-wit,
This case came about through the
sirgnge case of James levden, who
for more than a year has been serv
ing as a biuejacket aboard an Ameri
can warship in BEoitiah waters
TLeyden has bean fined in court for
abenting himwelf withoui leave since
Deceniber, 1016, from duly as a Livers
poeal policeman. ‘
Tw vears agv Liverpools' chief |
coustable was asked by the Govern- |
mant to releass a rumber of men for |
LAry EBeérvice Leovden, who had
Beert ‘wn vears or the Liverpool po- |
YHea W among those selected |
He failed to parnde one day and a |
warean! wos tssusd for his apprehens
pion ‘
Levien | in Irishman, and he |
! i t Wieh eouner! that he dis
Appe avold service (o the Rreit-
L ey, also. in extengsation of his
Aecir that he had proceeded to
America aud enlisted In the United
Ntates navy
The benoh decided, in the cireum
stanees te take a lenient view of the
case and merely Impored a fine of
five pounds
¥ »
{ nele Sam President
Y Y Y
Of U. 8., Says Laborer
‘.B{ International Nows Service.)
DAYTUN, OHIO, Feb 1) - Edward J
Kenuady, of the Naturalisation Bureau,
Washington, D, .. was going through |
Dayton factories making o survey. Me
topped before an Intelligent -m\\:ng‘
man and asked ‘
"Who i# the President of the United
Hiates”
WQuick as a flash the foreigner »nupul
ped back, “Uncle Sam.” (
Kennedy ie urging foreigners to take |
out naturalization papers, but on the |
#ide he hinted that u first class night |
school in Dayton might not come amiss 1
: |
Centudies Old “Co-ed”
.
Arrives at College
RTORRE. CONN., Feh 15.--A new co-od
haa arrived st the Connectieunt Agricultural
Cellops nd | receiving considerable at
tention bhath from students and the faculty
The mtudents have a!! declared that she
tacks ‘pep’’ and her forehead 18 too low
te denoie any suverfluous gray matter
Bhe has fine teeth, however The eosoid
in a sheleton of an African woman who is
supposd to have existed several centuries
R'n
A SIO.OOO TICKLE,
LOB ANGRLES Feh 15 -1t coste u Los
Angelen subutrban ratirond company §lB
G 0 heeayse ope of e motormen tickled
& bhoy passonpes and csusd him to fall
under the wheels, erippling him for lfe
The comipany teld the court the boy was
‘monkeying" with the motorman snd the
latter, being in a playtul mood, poked a
fivigor in the bave' pba
HEARST’S SUNDAY AMERICAN — a wewspaper 10: reopie wno Think — SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1919
{2 MONG the many eminent
) ‘A visltors to Atlanta February
e 28 for the Southern Con-
Efi gress of the ILeague of Nations
i 5 are these: Above, William How
{ ard Taft; center, James W. Ger
-5 ard, former Ambassador to Ger
!¢ many; below, Henry Van Dyke,
| 4 former Minister to Holland,
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In Louis XIV. Chair
“B k" P 1
By “Buck” Private
BY JAY JEROME WILLIAMS,
(By Universal Service.)
PARIS, Feb. 15.--There's many
a tale of woe in connection with
the peace conference, but none can
equal that of A. H. Lamplough, of
Sioux City, lowa, and W. C. Wein
kauf, of Clarinda, which is in the
same State, Weinkauf and Lam
plough while the war was in prog
ress were “buck” privates, and
now that peace has nearly come
they are “boss barbers,” presiding
in all their glory over the tonso
rial parlor in the Hotel de Crillon.
An American barber shop,
manned by ~Americans, and set
down in the heart of Paris, is an
innovation, but the struggle of
Weinkauf and Lamplough to fur
nish and Americanize their shop is
a sid, sad tale.
When given their assignment as
barbers they began a still hunt in
Paris for regular barber chairs,
regular razors, regular hair cloths,
and all the other accoutrements of
a well ordered establishment.
Chairs were not to be had, an to
make a long story short they final-
Iy ended up with two red plush
cukhioned chairs, presumably of
the period of Louis XIV., and it
was only after a ten days' search
that they obtained two white bar
ber coats,
S 0 now, when Weinkauf or
Lamplough proceeds to shave an
American peace plenipotentiary or
one of the commis=ion's large staff
of aids and experts, one hand
serves us a lap for the plenipoten
tinry's head while the other hand
weilds the razor,
A shave ix a long, hard task, but
a Weinkauf or Lamplough shave,
after wseveral weeks' axperience
with Parisian barbers, is the first
real bona fide evidence that peace
Las come.
THE FAITH IN THEM,
LONDON, Feb, 18 Who's who at the
peace conference? The Freneh Prime Min.
mter and Marshal Petaln are agnostios
Marshal Foch is 8 Roman Catholie. Mar
shal Hag and Presideont Wilzgen are Press
by torians Premier W M. Hughes, of
Australia, s s staunech HBaptist., Austen
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Phone M-8211 =i- 1006 WHITEHALL STREET -i- Prone 113211 !
OVER <JACQB? PHARMACY » Cor. WHITEHALL & MITCHELL ST I
The most imposing list of speakers
that have ever addressed a single
conference in the South will be pre
sented hy the Southern Congress of
the League of Nations, which Is to
be held in Atlanta on February 28 and
March 1. Headed by ex-President
Wililam Howard Taft, the president
of the League to Rnforce Peace, the
speakers’ program will include diplo
mats, statesmen, leadd's in religion,
labor, rural life and woman's work.
There will be three sessions each
day at the mammoth Auditorium-
Armory, each session being open to
the public as well as to the 4,000
delegates which are expected to be
present from eight Southern States.
Each session will be devoted to some
special phase of the league of na
tions probiem as it affects the various
classes of the population.
The aim of the congress, which is
entirely nonpolitical and patriotie in
its motives, is to fully arouse the peo
ple of America to the vital necessity
for a league of nations, and to get
them actively interested in the drafl
that is being drawn up under Presi
dent Wilson's leadership in Paris, so
that if mayv be properly ratified by the
Swmate of the United States at the‘
proper time. ‘
The Friday session, which will be
called to order at 10 o'clock by Sam
uel (. Dobbs, president of the Atlanta
Chamber of Commerce, will be opened
by Clark Howell, of Atlanta, the re
gional chairman of the congress, who
will dellver the assembly into the
hands of President Taft, who winl
deliver the first address. Mr. 'l‘aftl
will be followed by Edward A. Filene,
of the Chamber of Commerce of the
United States, and by President A,
Lawrence Lowell, of Harvard Uni
versity.
The afternoon session, dealing with
| American interests and the league of
ilmtimxsfl will be addressed by Dr.
| George Grafton Wilson, professor of
international law, Harvard Univer
sity: Robert F. Maddox, president of
the American Bankers’' Association;
- Dean E. C. Branson, professor of ru
ral economies and sociology, Univer
sity of North Carolina, and Henry
Morgenthau, formerly Ambassador to
Turkay.
The evening sesison on American
ideals and the league of nations will
be addressed by Hon. James W. Ge
rard, formerly Ambassador to Ger
many; Dr. Anna Howard Shaw, hon
orary president, National American
Woman Suffrage Association; Dr.
Frank Crane, editorial writer, the
Associnted Newspaper; Henry Van
Dyke, formerly Minister to the Neth
erlands.
The Saturday morning session on
religion, social. progress and the
league of nations will be addressed
by the Right Rev. Benjamin J. Kei
ley, Bishop of Savannah: Bishop W.
~A. Candler, Bishop of the Methodist
. Episcopal Church South; Dr. Charles
F. Brown, dean, School of Religion,
Yale University.
The afternoon sesison on responsi
bility of the American democracy for
establishing a league of nations will
be addressed by Henry Van Dyke and
Edward A. Filene,
The evening session on labor's de
mand for a leagne of nations will be
addressed by Frank P. Walsh, for
merly joint chairman of war labor
board: Jerome Jones, organization A,
F. L, editor of The Journal of La
bor, and Mr. Taft. l
. .
Miss Grace M. Miller
Opens Language School
Miss Grace Moncrieff Miller has estab
lished a school in Atlanta in the use of
proper English, foreign languages and
good forms of letter writing, Miss Miller
passed the Oxford senjor local examina
tion in England, with honors in French,
and has made a dingent study of other
languages in the countries where they
are spoken, Her work in Atlanta, which
will be in line with the recent drive for
proper English at the Girls’ High School,
nias been indersed by the Atlanta Wom
en's Club.
She will open her gchool in the Mec-
Clure Building, No. 11 Whitehall street,
February 17, where classes will be held
Mondays and Thursdays at 11 a. m. and
7:45 p. m. Her course consist of fifteen
iessons.
. .
Superstitious Autoist
-
Certain of 1919 Luck
(By International News Service.)
MARION, OHIO, Feb. 15— RB. J.
Brehman, of Bucyrus, near here, is
sure of good luck this vear, A firm
bellever in the good fortune which ac
companies the magic number seven and
fts multiples, he has drawn auto HN
cense No. 212,121, Without premedita
tion, purely bv chance, he has ob-,
tained the same number two years in
succession. He didn't have an acci
dent nor a blowout all last year, and
the only time he ran out of gas the
machina stopped twenty vards from a
garage,
———————— T ———————————— T——
Prevent Influenza
Stop Your Cold!
Get Jacobs’
— e This splendid,
S T T .. pleasant :lh‘d(itf
ey -.‘l ficlent Salve reme
‘3 1 oedy rubbed on
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i bac nd in a
fi i, A SALVE nn:«\ ‘; el i‘r v o':o
B e enen || colds gnd stops
> & g " congestion. You
1:.....—.. ‘n ho u'| t‘! :\:wuy)
Jorly ey ave it handy.
i 1..;...... .I,‘cr 25¢ at your
e druggist’'s, or sent
by mail, postpaid, from
Jacobs' Pharmaecy Company, Atlanta, Ga.
C HARLES PERGLER, com
missioner to the United
Stateg for the Czecho-Slovak Re
public, who is coming to Atlanta
February 22 for a talk to the Ki
wanis Club,
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Czecho Envoy to Speak
| > , ¥ .
At Kiwanis Celebration
Charles Pergler, commissioner to the
United States from the newly created
Czecho-Slovak Republic, will be the
principal speaker and guest of honor at
the Washington's birthday celebration
of the Kiwanis Club next Saturday even
ing Pergler was born in Bohemia in
1882, coming to America at the age of
8 years and receiving his education in
American schools. Immediately wupon
the outbreak of the war, he plunged into
the task of aiding in the liberation of
the Czhecho-Slovacks, and was one of
the signers of the (Czecho-Slovak Decla
ration of Independence published in No
vember, 1915. He acted as secretary to
Professor T. 3. Masaryk, firse President
of the new republic, and became the ac
credited diplomatic representative of
Czecho-Slavonia to the United States
upon Ifrvsi4t.-vat Masaryk’s departure |
from this country.
Other aistinguished persons {o whom |
invitations have been sent include: .
Governor Hugh M. Dorsey, 8. G. Me- l
Lendon, W. G. Bryvan, J. 8. Cohen, Clark
Howell, of Atlanta; Mayor Murray Stew-
. P T A
e
Special
peCla |
; L Y ;
:- %&‘*s* y M
% | ! R ?:w:\"l,t’u ,**w 2.
froememe g | ,
| g N TOMORROW ONLY—AS LONG AS i
Bmmmy 0 8 A genuine Vietrola with Con- ||
i;i% vertrola Filing System, like il- |(g
; i t lustration—six 10-in. Double- |
| § ziy»&’{t Faced Records. |
! H":‘%& ‘. % (12 Selections—Your Choice) ||
| m .;--1:f:,... \\ G
§§ - Price Complete, $70.00.
% s SPECIAL TERMS
- $8.50 Cash and $6.50 ||}
Height (with lid closed)
—— 4;29 inc\;'ives: wlfito:ew a Month
inches; depth 23 inches. ' '
° : ‘
Aeie, — N )
§2.84 N. BROAD STREET, ATLANTA, GA. \USEcsfammeys §ud
NG L AT e
— e e R
HOW TO PREVENT
APPENDICITIS
Appendicitis is primarily doe to the
ggisoml formed by decaying food in the
wels. It is a disease caused by im
proper and insufficient bowel elimina
tion. Muany ){«mple have on|;\‘r a small
passage in the center of the bowels
while the sides are clogged with old,
gtale, fermenting matter. They may
have a bowel movement every day but
it is not a complete movement and the
old stale matter stays in the system to
ferment and cause trouble. Besides
appendicitis such unclean bowels
cause heandaches, stomach etrouble and
90 per cent of all other gickness. The
old sou! matter sticking to the sides of
the bowels often stays in for months,
ro!mlng the body and ecausing that
tutleaa. tired feeling known as “auto
intoxication.”
| HOW TO AVOID TROUBLE.
‘ The way to avold sickness and to keep
tdeling fuli of ambition is to watch your
bowels. Just as you keep the outside
of F)ur body eclean, you should also
KEEP THE INSIDE CLEAN, It is even
‘more important to keep the bowels ciean
than it is to keep vour body washed,
because the millions of pores jn the
thirty feet of bowels quickly absorb
poigons generated by decaying food left
carelesgly in the bowels. Don't allow
the okd, fermenting, fiithy stuft to a:a*
in _;i‘w bowels for weeks, but GET IT,
OUT and keep it otit, Remember, filthy
;:g""& mre,tmi‘::un of‘ maost alc;_knuu—-m
i 8 t of any o organ
can do fi work with a t&mml
. R SRS
'arti Gordon Saussey, General Peter
Meldrim, of Savannah; A, M. Smith, J,
H. Hopkins, of Brunswick: W. T. An
derson, G. H.'®Long, Mayor G. Glenn
Toole, of Macon; Charles Hall Davis,
J‘x-mrsburfi, Va.; A, H, Ort, New York
City: € . Ashley, J. M. Ashley, Val
dosta; Fred B. Gordon, W, C. Bradley,
Columbus; J. W. Ogleshy, Quitman; 8.
B. Brown, Albany; James H. Becker, C.
R. Ricker, St. Marys; John F. Koler,
Disputanta, Va. The members of the
}‘rvsdidents‘ Club of Atlanta are also in
vited. g
Arrangemenfs are being made by the
local Kiwanis to make this the most en
joyable event in their season’s activities.
E FORSYTH G
FOAs G
R\ STREET \&)lhs
< Ivy 7893
e (Quality Shoe Repair Co.
A New O izati
Of skilled shoemakers, offers to the people of Atlanta and sur
rounding vicinity the opportunity of securing HIGH-GRADE
SHOE REPAIRING. This shop is equipped with the most modern
machines, and nothing but the hizhest grade of materials will be
used, insuring QUALITY and SERVICE to every patron alike.
F t S i l. t
In addition to shoe repairing, there has been an orthopedic de
partment established. SYLVAN G. COX, an expert in his line,
will give his personal attention to those suffering from any kind
of foot trouble. Mr. Cox has just been discharged from the
army, where for twenty months he served, organizing and super
vising the largest shoe repairing and manufacturing plants in
the country, doing Government work exelusively. Mr, Cox also
gpecialized on the care of soldiers’ feet.
Before entering the army Mr. Cox was in charge of the orthopedic
department in the largest exclusive women's shoe shop in the
United States.
Perm t Relief
With his excellent knowledze of the human foot, Mr. Cox says
that permanent relief can be obtained when the foot is properly
nd intelligently treated,
e N “SHOE RANCE Rl
sending out gases and poisons, Even if
your bowels move glightly each day, that
is not ennu%{i. There must be an occa
glonal THOROUGH, oumi»lem cleansing
to rid your system of all accumulaled‘
decaying matter, |
HOW TO CLEAN BOWELS QUICK, ‘
The-MOST COMPLETE bowel cleans. |
er known is a mixture of buckthorn
bark, glycerine and ten other ingredi
ents, put up in ready prepared form
under the trade name of Adier-l-ka.
This mixture I 8 so powerful a bowel
cleanser that it ALWAYS does its work
properly and thoroughly. It removes
foul and poisonous matter which other
)mtharflc or laxative mixtures are un
able to dislodge. It does a Pt‘?Ml'LE‘TE‘
Job and it works QUICKLY and wimoutl
the least discomfort or trouble. It is so
gentle that one forgets he has taken it
‘until the THOROUGH evacuation starts,
1t is astonishing the great amount of
foul, poisonous matter a SINGLE
SPOONFUL of Adler-i-ka draws from
the alimentary canal--matter yvou would
never have thought was in yvour system.
Try it rtght after a natura! bowel moves
ment and notice how much MORE foul
matter will be hrought out which was
polsoning your system. In sligat dsors
ders such as occasional constipation,
sour stomach, “gas on the stomach” or
sick headach‘g. one agaonlul brings re-
Hes alinost INSTANTLY, Adler-i-ka Is
the MOST THOROUGH bowel cleanser
and antisepticizer ever offered in ready
prepared form. It is a constani surprise
Shoe Clerk Too Rough,
Girl Is Awarded $1,250
(By International News Service.)
PITTSBURG, PA., Feb. 15—Twelw
hundred and fifty dollars 1s too much
to pay a woman just because a sales
man handied her foot too roughty whed
squeezing it into a new shoe, according
to the proprietors of a downtown shoq
shop. They have asked that a verdic]
obtained by Gertrude Robertson be sel
aside. £
to people who have used ~nly ordinary
bowel and stomach medicines and th¢
various olls and waters,
REPORTS FROM PHYSICIANS,
Dr. James Weaver, Loa, Utah: “1 have
found nothing in my 50 years' practice
to_excel Adler-i-ka.”
Dr. W, A. Line, West Baden, Ind: ‘A
use Adler-i-ka in my practice and haw
found nothing to excel it.”
Dr. ¥, M. Prettyman, Mallard, Mnn.{
“I use Adler-i-ka in all howel cases and
have been very successful with it. Somq
cases require on)y one dose,”
Druggist D. Hawks, Goshen, Mj
“One of our leading doctors has use
Adler-i-ka in cases of stomach troublq
with wonderful guccess. e has not lens
a patient and saved many operations.
J. E. Puckett, Glllham, Ark.: “I had
bad stomach trouble. After taking Ade
ler-i-ka feel better than for 20
Haven't language to express the Ma
impurities which were eliminated from
my/ system.”’
Cora 15. Noblett, Saf”.vah. Otha
“Thanks to Adler-i-ka can sleep a
night now, something 1 could not do for
years.,
Mrs. L. A. Austin, Ausland, Minn.: 1
could not eat a thing, my stomach was
s 0 weak, Adler-i-ka made me feel h.ttq
and am now able to work and gaining.
Adler-l-ka is seid only by the mm!
druggst in each city. In Atlantas h
Jacobs' Pharmacy Co. (and all
§ists) —Advertisement,