Newspaper Page Text
Ml UWH ”I Sl
suinilioeapnsian
Savings Divisi
vings Division of the Treasury
+JHas Complete Plans for
Observing Day.
Thrift Sunday is to be observed
thm_ughout the country on June 22,
The project has been launched by
t.h_e savings division of the United
States Treasury Department, which
is assisting the national movement to
conserve war-taught habits of thrift,
and has met with hecarty approval
from many interests and organiza
tions.
Every man, woman and child in the
United States will be asked to con
sider and discuss on Thrift Sunday
the present necessity for economy and
its wrmnnent value to personal com
munity and national prosperity.
Thrift is the highway to freedom.
The liberty of people i’ this country,
that is, so far as they do not inter
fere with the rights® of others—is
ugnally restricted only by lack of
funds to carry out plans. If one would
be frée to obtain an education, free
to own a farm, to own nroper equip
ment, free to marry, freé to improve
his property or acquire more, free to
educate’his children, the practice of
systematic saving and safe invest
ment will realize each and all,
THRIFT STAMPS CONTINUED,
The safe and profitable investment
may be within the reach of everyone,
the Treasury Department is continu
ing Thrift and War Savings stamps.
The latter, costing a little over $4,
pay the high rate of interest of 4 per
cent, compounded quarterly—one of
the very best rates for savings, War
Savings stamps are made very easy
to acquire. Thrift stamps cost but a
quarter each, and sixteen of these,
plus a few cents additional, may be
exch\gged for an: interest-bearing
War Savings stamp. If necessary,
War Savings stamps may be cashed
in at any posteffice on ten days' no
tice.
In addition to their value as a se
curity in stimulating thrift, ifvest
ment in War Savings stamps gives a
ecitizen a definite financial stake in
his country and arouses him to a more
active interest in its affairs.
+ SAVINGS SLOGAN.
Save first, spend afterwards is the
slogan of the savings division. Put
ting away a portion of proceeds regu
larly before the balance is touched
for spending makes a surprisingly
large amount for worth-while outlay
pile up in a short time.
Every minister in the country is
being requested by Harold Braddock,
director of the savings diVision, to
ca-operaté in making Thrift Sunday
a success. It is expected that on that
d each pastor will speak on the
m§ning and value of intelligent thrift
to his congregatien, will possible sug
gest plans for community and indi
vidual thrift and encourage church
organizations to enroll as Government
savings societies,
A message from Secretary Glass
haggbeen sent to all ministers and will
be read from the pulpit.
SPRING AND SUMMER SHOWERS
All Nature Points The Way
I
ey shat bring
‘-- BB ahae forth blossoms
\:‘?M:a“fl and make
K sl nature mare
(‘? ‘, wpt{ beautiful often
N "“&‘5 eause uniold
NS ?g@ misery to man-
AL %‘,"u kind in svhose
. \' KGR | bleod the peis
\;",r‘ M. f; sans of the past
g ,f""*;‘\**fl, 2 :;g,‘ winter haye
¥3 LS (4 {% uor.mm';‘lnmd,
Sk il Drive the pojs
, o »N gong from the
o Rlae N blood and
PRt &{ build up the
k 7 \ o svelem with a
o - reliable lmm
! v—aioh pa
S %ll' Pleree's
D XY Galden Medi
eal Diseovery, whieh has steed the test of
time for a half century,
No ene ever takes oald unless eansti
pated, or exhausted, and having what we
call mal-nutrition, which is attended with
impoverished blood and exhaustion of
nerve farea, Tonhics eonsisting of l»uvfa
ml of aleehol do notk fiuufi the
¢ changes u‘l the blood, heeausa
they do net enter the gystem and are nob
absorbed into the blm:&x“ with the exeep
tion of the aleohel, wlm-\ shrivels up the
ved blood ecorpuscles when it eomes
in txmt with them, This betanieal
exisot of Dr. Pierce's oontains ne
aloohol, and offers & reasouable and
scn‘nn(ln method of uumini the bloed,
by improving the nutritive funetians of
the patient, The “Galden Medical Dis
covery” aecomplishes this, by firsk re
storing the enfeebled digestiveorgans, so
lhuj foed, the natural tissue lnuhlc:r. will
be digested and assimilated. For these is
generally present in these eascs, loss of
appetite nnf lack of sufficient neurisls
ment to replonish the waste of flesh. Al
druggists. Liquid or tablets
- Advertisement
@RUDGING the streets to find a horge
-25 like room, house or apartment ils enlrely
out-of-date. g
The Direct Line in Atlanta Is Througp
~ The Daily Georgian and Sunday American
5 “For Rent Columns.” Send in your ad NOW!I
SUFFRAGE NOTES
LLINOIS was the first State to
ratify the Susan B. Anthony
suffrage amendment; Wis
consin the second; Michigan, whose
Legislature was in extra session,
wag the third. New York's Gov
ernor hag called an extra session to
ratify it.
A few belated Legislatures are
now in session. These are Illinois,
‘Wisconsin, Pennsylvania and Mas
sachuets. Six States. only meet
yearly: New York, New Jersey,
Georgla, Rhode Island and South
Carolina. The Legislatures of Ken
tuey, Louisiana, Maryland, Missis«
sippi and Virginia meet in 1920,
These States, with a few called for
“extra sessionsg would be tae only
ones with an opportunity to ratify
the amendment before nresidential
election in 1920 in the normal cqurse
of things, so the passage of the
amendment by the Senate found the
women of the State branches of
the Suffrage Association with suit
casges packed, ready to Yoard trains
for State capitals to urge on the
Governors the need for spec'l sFS
sions,
Henry J. Allen, Goverror of Kan
sas, is polling the members of the
Legislature suggesting that they
come voluntarily to Topeka without
cost to the State and spend one
day ratifying the suffrage amend
ment. 1 do not know wny Kansas,
with her wheat crop so big and its
price so high, should have to be so
economical. - Perhaps she is using
her money to some good purpose'
It took Illinois little over a half
hour to ratify the amendment.
Ana Shaw has long bad a wager
that American will beat '‘‘urkey to
suffrage, lte come what wiil!
* % =
During the first month of the 1919
legislative session of Congress, 12
State Legislatures sent memorials
to the United States Senate urging
it to pass the amendment. ;
Governor Harding, of lowa, has
promisel an extra session t> ratify
the amendment.
Among the ninetecn amendments
to the Constitution, there is abun
dant proof of swift ratification.
Article XII on the manner of ¢hios
ing President and Vice President,
wag propoced by the Eightn Con
gress on December 12, 1803, and was
declace 1 ratitiel by the Sacretary
of State on September 25, 1804—
less than ten wonths, Another was
declared ratified’ within eleven
months; several in a little more
than a year. The provision in the
- eighteenth amendment-=the prohi
bition amendment—for a year's' de
iay in execution has confused the
issue in the minds of the public.
The yegar's delay was given for eco
nomic reasons, to enable manufac
turers of liquor to re-establish
their busines so as to meet the
changed conditions, So the Suf
frage Association is calling upon
the Governors of States the coun
try over to call special sessions and
redeem the belated pledge «f justice
to women made by the United
States Congress.
S X N>
Of late years this amendment has
been called the “Susan B. Anthony”
amendment, but Miss Anthony was
no more its author than was Sen
ator Sargent op Mrs. Stanton, or
Parker Pillsbury. The final form
which the amendment should take
_was determined after a - lengthy
discussion by the Suffrage Associa
tion. It was the work of no one
suffragist, but was approved by
all because of its simplicity and it
likeness to the XVth, which it was
expected to follow, It reads as fol
dows:
“Resolved by the sSenate and
House of Representatives of the
United States of America in Con
gress assembled (two-thirds of each
House concurring therein): That
the following article be proposed to
the Legislatures of the several
«States as an amendment to the
Constitution of the United States,
which, when ratified three
fourths of the said Legislatures,
shall be valid as part of said Con
stitution, namely:
“Section 1. The right of citizens
of the United States to vote shall
not be drnied or abridged by the
United States or by an' State on
aecount of sex.
“Section 2. The Congress shall
have power, by appropriate legisl‘-
tion, to enforce the provisiong of
this article.” ‘
5o 9
Events in the suffrage world are
transpiring with such rapidity that
news items change overnight.
Georgia women are on the -sul
vive, and are faking steps to have
the Georgia Legislature ratify the
_amendment at this its June ses
sion. Long live Senator Harris and
Representative Upshaw! May cur
cheers for the Georgia Legislators
be as hearty! And God grant that
Georgia women may not have to
wait on Turkey! /
.
The first congressional hearing
ever-granted women wng on Jan
uary 26, 1869, when Miss Antkony
and Elizabeth Cady Stanton pre
sented their cause before the dis
triet committe eof ‘he Senate, un
der the sponsorship of Senator Har
lan, of lowa, chairman of the com
mittee, Now women are voters,
either actually or potentially. ’
- - .
On May 29 the Yukon Legisla
ture extended full political equality
to women on the sam=> terms as to
men. It also asked the Canadian
Federal Government (0 grant sim
' ilar rights to women in ail future
Federal elections, Woraen of Can
ada have the ballot, hut with con
- ditions, The Yukon legislators
| wonld have them have equality of
| rights,
.0
One of the last cablegrams of
greeting from across the sea to the
National Amnerican Woman Suf
frage Association, after the Fed
eral suffrage amendment passed,
HEARST'S SUNDAY AMERICAN — A Newspaper for People Who Think —- SUNDAY, JUNE 15 1919,
was from Buenos Aires, and was
from the Union Feminista Nacional,
It reads: “Congratulations,
triumph.”
"N N
In the recent suffrage campaign
in Texas, led by an impeached ex-
Governor, the anti-suffragists fairs
ly outdid themselves in vicious vi=
tuperation, So raw, so cruda werg
they that the Texas press repeat-.
edly administered scathing ‘vhukes
to “them, and the Téxas lLower
Nouse, one day, ?ndlnz the anti
sg&ue brand of matter on the
desks of members, voted over
whelmingly in’ condemnation of
such campaign literature.
It seems now that there was
fraud in the elections, for on mony
of the tally sheets, the suffrage
amendment was given secand plice,
and the women worked for the
amendment in the second plice, .
Then on some of the ballots, their
amendment wag given fourth place,
and the amendment substituted, be
cause of its obscure wording caused
confusion in the minds of the
voters, so the question is not yet
settled. Texas, at first was report
ed a victory for the suffragists, and
later returns changed the count.
. s =
“You were black-balled, old fel
low. 1 did not think you had an
enemy in the club.”
“I have my suspicions,” said the
black-balled one dryly. “My wife
belongs to that club. We have three
children, and ‘somebody has got to
stay home nizhu."-—-—Hoflthost.
- .
MANY MEN TO ANY WOMAN.
(By Alice Duer Miller.)
If you have beauty, charm, refine
ment, tact,
If you can prove that, should I
set you free,
You would not contemplate the
smallest act
That might annoy or interfere
with me;
If you can show that women will
abide
By the best standards of their
womanhood—
(And 1 must be the person to de
cide
What in a woman is the highest
good);
If you display efficiency supreme
In philanthropic work, devoid of
pay,
If you can show a clearly thought
out scheme s
For b{inging the millennium in a
day;
Why, then, dear lady, at some time
remote,
1 might consider giving you the
vote,
. " -
A currentmagazine says the cause
of the woman's suffrage movement
is that women began to think, and’
that is surely the reason for it.
It says: “So long as there were no
radicals, conservatives of this old
world were left in comparative hap
piness, they were not compelled to
think. That has been until late
ly the pesition of women, for no
body cared what she thought. So
she didn't, and proved herself a
valuable conservative. But during,
the last 40 or 50 years, first in Rus
sia, among the Nihilists, then in
Scandinavia among the moral re
formers, and a little later in' Eng
land and America among the wom
an’s rights advocate, and in Ger
many among the Social Democrats,
there have risen women who
thought, and nearly all turned to
some form of socialism. They are
intensely irritating to their con
servative sisters who do wish
they'd let the old world alone. But
they don't, and they weont. They
insist on invading peaceful villas,
and when confronted bx organized
opposition, belch forth such masses
of figures abhout infant mortality,
exchequer receipts—so many facts
and names and dates, that enraged
by having no similar ammunition
with which to reply, the conserva
tive woman is being more and more
driven to acquire some. The poor
thing who goes out to collect po
litical shell with which te pulver
ize the labor womgn, often comes
home ,with a boomerang, which
when discharged flieg back and
hits her between the eyes and wafts
her into an entirely unexpected po
litical attitude. Not an ideal way
of obtaining an education, but a
necessary one unders the circum
stances,”
Mrs. Tom Thumb, 77,
-
Slowly Losing Sight
MIDDLESBORO, MASS,, June 14,—
Lavinia Warren Bump, famous ou two
hemispheres under the name of Mrs.
Tom Thumb, and now the Countess
Magri, has been slowly losing her
sight for a number of months and is
now almost blind,
Mrs, Tom Thumb for many years
occupied an unparalleled place in the
affections of the amusement-loving
publie, appearing first with P. T, Bar
num. She became the wife of the late
General Charles Stratton, also a fa
mous Liiiputian, marrying the Count
Magri later.
For a number of years she has lived
at her old home, the James Brmp
farm. at Warrenton. She Is 77 years
old. Her sister, Minnie Warren, wife
of Commodore Nutt, died many years
ago, and the Commodore died a few
years ago in New York City.
Woman, 85, Comes From
.
India to Attend Meeling
(By International News Serviee.)
BOSTON, June 14.--Although 85 years
of age, Mra. Lois Lee Parker, widow of
the late Bishop Edward W. Parker, of
India, came all the way from that country
aléne to attend the jubilee of the Wont.
an's Foreign Missiopary Society of the
Method st Episcopal Chureh, of whieh she
wng one of the founders Mrs. Pirker han
Jhoen in missionary work in Indin 61 years
and ia the sole survivor of that small
group of wonien who started the mission s
ary movement half a century ago.
: ) d v
¥ E \
N )
A campaign against the spread of
malaria fever, to be carried out
through vigorous efforts looking to the
extermination of mosquitoes, will be
begun in 43 countics of South Geors
gia within the next two weeks by the
Georgia Landowners' Association, in
co-operation with the State Board ot
Health, the Department of lEducation
and the IFederation of Women's Clubs.
Final plans were mapped out Sat-.
urday at a conference between I\ H
Abbett, secretary of the Landowners’
Assoclation; Drs. T. F. Abercrombie
and M. F. Haygoed, of the Board of
Health, and other officials of the State
Departments interested. |
The decision to put on the cam
pajgn was made following the cum-‘
plete success of an auu’—mosquiw}
drive staged in Lowndes County,
which marked the innovation of an]
entirely new method of fighting the,
germ-carrying pests.
Dr. Marcus Mashburn, the d.owndes
County health officer and an oflicial
of the United States Public Health
Service, got behind the movemon'.,‘
following reperts from the South
Georgia Normal School that mosquis
toes were becoming almost unbear
able
DYNAMITE USED.
Instead of using negro labor in digy
ging ditches to drain off the stag
nant pools the county officials made
the ditches by using dynamite. Sticks
of the explosive were placed in the
bottom of holes, the same depth as
the diteh desired. Fifteen or twenty‘
sticks were placed about 15 {m‘hes‘
apart, and the fuse and cap atlached
to the middle stick. the concussion
setting off the other sticks. The re-l
sult, it is reported, was remarkable. |
The ditches were dug automadtically
at about one-fourth the cost of labor,
to do the same work. In instances
where ditches were not made, cil was
used. Dr Haygood reported Saturday
morning that hardly a mosquito can
be found in Lowndes,
The (Georgin l.andowners’ Asnsocia
tion entered into an agrecment where
by motion pictures were taken of the
methods used and the results ob
tained. These pictures will be shown
in all the other counties where the
work is to be undertaken,
Dr. T. F. Abercrombie, who is sec
retary of the State Board of. Health,
has been given authority to map out
the campaign. Present plans are to
include 43 cbunties, prineipally in
Southeast Georgia, where the mala
ria-carrying mosquitoes are worst,
and it is probable the campaign will
be extended to other counties later on,
AREA OF CAMPAIGN.
The territory to be taken in by the
drive begins at Decatur and Early
Counties on the west, and extends
east, taking all but one or two cqun
ties, almost as far north as Macon.
The campaign will be conducted by
the State officials as an educational
proposition.” A means of exterminat
ing the mosquitoes and preventing the
gpread of malaria will be shown.and
the counties will be left t 6 do the
work, with the Issistance of the State
Departments when requiresl.
Professor M. L. Brittain, Superin
tendent of Schpols, has agreed to use
his influence and facilities to carry
the educational features in' the rural
schools of the territory ingluded.
Through Mrs. Nellie Peters Black, the
chairman of the Georgia Wederation
of Women's Clubs, the co-operation
of that organization was obtained,
}
SHARPEN YOUR OWN
)i¥ N !
Simple devicee, with single RQall-bearing, adapt
able for auy blade. A SH}"PENER- not A
| stropper “Hair test” guarafteed, Mukes one
blade last indefinitely; never gets out of order;
ANyONe Can Use. Price 25 cents, postpald.
AGENTS WANTED. New. DBig demand waiting
Be the first to get the cream. Working sample
and special terms, 25 cents. Wm. Summerbell,
\gmmm. 155 Potomac Bank Bidg., Washington,
. C.—-Advertisement
Bo e S
|
SHE WAS OBESE
. The shadew on this picture
gives you an ides of how she
looked and feit, By taking L E
oil of Korein and following
the easy directions she redused
38 pounds in three months
Now she is agile, attractive, ”
moentally alert and in bet~ /
ter health. Rellable ant |
fat sc)f-treatment. Boy a = I
small box at the drug stope ——
Ol of Korein; it comes in
capsules, Many women have reduced casily, last
ingly, 10 to 60 pounds. Safe apdd pleasant methed,
indorsed by physiclans. Wor free book of ' adiiee
(in plain wrapper) write ‘to Koreln Co., NC 302,
Sation ¥, New York Cuy,
.
Prelty, Wavy, Curling
» re
Hair Wikhout Hot Iron
s ftmaieio e s
- Let mgq t(e you of a simple method
which 18 a favorite of the belles of a
certain excAusive soclal set I'm sure
you would §ike to kuow of it, because it
will give gour hair such a pretty eurli«
ness and Tlustre and permit you to do
;;xwu: w!b; the ruinous waving iron for
eyer,
| Just get from, any druggist a few
ouncer/ of ordihary Vquld siimerine, and
At n'feht apply a little with a clean
tootl ¢ hrush, drawing this down the ful]
lwn/n; of the halr. In the morfing you
wil'/ have a real surprise, the fascinat
‘m/, fluffy, wavy effect will appear so
n Jtural, and there will be no fro-:w-'.
2immy, Streaky or other unpleasant
ace of this Harmless liquid You will
also find this a splendid dreaging for
. the hair.—Mona Mowow in The Club
ivmmun. Advertisement
Tk i s
Growir 4 Firms
Il hind M
| oo
," / profital:lc ”:,P
i to f
?‘ii} aclv::tiu ”!l}
he‘Georgian
, * i n.
f ft
1L EAPER] It
| Y :
| f 1! " y ‘
! 1 L Wil
J. Prince Webster, rate exp 't of
the Georgia Railroad Commi s sion,
has tendered his resignation te¢ be
come. effective. July 1, Mr,, Wddbster
announced that he probably wil'{ spe
eilalize in public-sefvice or regulation
'aw and, rate revisions, in_eonn tction
with rates and services of el pctric
light and power companies, tele graph
and telephone companies, ra flroad
companies and all other publie s irvice
companies, "
In addition to his desire to onter
another field, there is another rea
son, that of insuflicient: salary pro
vided by the State, that prompte 1 Mr,
Webster to make that move.
“It is exceedingly diffleult, fjor a
man to pay the cost of,living in; 191 f)
on a salary fixed by the Legis! atur e
in 1879,” said Mr. Webster, 1h His
letter to the commission, “an i U e
amazing thing to me has beer itb at
commissioners have been willl pg, or
abfe, to make the financial sagri.ice
that you gentlemen have in s prving
your State for the small yearly saj.ary
of $2,600, and it is just as hard for' me
to proceed in 1919 on g salar)y /.ixed
in 1907,
“In severing my official redd.tions
with the State of Georgia, T «lo so
with the hope that at no dista ny{ date
some remedy will be found for Daying
fair and living salaries to the pubuc‘
gervants who are busy all tlae time
serving their fellowman., C grtainly
a man should not be penal ‘:ed for
accepting public office and gtanding
the gaff of all criticisms tha t are di
rected toward a public offi pjal, just
because he has an ambitiov,and de
sire to serve his State anil her in
terests.” "
Mr. Webster started worl ¢ with the
Railroad Commission lfi)l Al 1, 1909,
and has progressed from i clerkship
to the highest position in t! je commis
sion's organization, He ¢ studied law
at night and was admitted to the
bar in July, 1917. He is {in honorary
member of the National , Association
of Railway and Public UJtility Com
missions, has been a member of
many of the important] committees
in that organization and mlso has been
selected as chairman foi;several com
mittees.
Mr. Webster volupnteeped his serv
ices in the war, and 'wasy comrission- J
ed a captain in the senvice, He wa';
honorably disgharged Jin Decembe ¢
1918, and returned to: the commi ;-
sion.
R Y T '
JAGOB'S SALES.CU.
AN T ,
CWE B
Wflwm
i 4
e e l
Girls! Makei beauty lotion for }
a few cents—Try it! ‘
mw-« 888 el B
Squeeze the juias of two lemons into
a bottle containing three ounces of
orchard white, sbhiake well, and You
have a guarter pint of the best freckls
and tan lotion, aml complexion beau
tifier, at very, veny small cost.
Your grocer has the lemons and any
drvneg store or tollet counter will sup
ply three ounces of ‘onchard white for
a few cents Massage this sweéetly
fragrant lotion into the face, neck,
arms and hamds each day and see
how freckles and blemishes disappear
and how clean, soft and rosy-white
the skin becomyes. Yes! It is harm
\ess and never irritates-—Adv,
/)
After Trying T—w-c—r:ty_-.one. Doct o rg in
Vain, Alabama Preacher T g (o 6
BAUGHN’'S TREAT' ¢ JENT
And Is Completely Cu g 04,
CALERA, ALA.—The l"' 3.0,
Jones, of this place, write: wus follows:
“l want to say that I ~:"' at last,
well of Pellagra. 1 trie M twenty-one.
doctors, but got no b ,4ear” sphen ”
took Baughn's Treatr Lo+ 'gor three
months and think 1 ‘oo completely
cured, The trouble s not returned
and I can’t say 100 r 0 e Baughn's
Pellagra Treatmen “y yoow that 1
could not-have liv od it I had not
taken it I thank ghe Good Lord and
r’m Jpraise this /(reatmom ‘wherever
go,"
Hundreds of © 4, miar jetters bear out
the fact that “pajjagra 1S curable,
Don't glve up 4, gespair! There still
s hope, ¥O o 56 cun be cured of
this dreadfu’ “4i ongo, which shows it
solf by suck Louinitoms as: Red hands,
skin peell o "oer. wore mouth, lips,
throat an’ ,“tpeye a flanvng red, with
much M,y and choking; Indiges
ton anc /Whayusen; diarrhea or consti
pation. " write today to-the American
Comp ,unding Co., Box 8103, Jasper,
Al fop free bock on Pellagra and
tull upticulaps about Baughn's Pel
o
1880 4" Preatment, which is guaranteed
0 cure, or money refunded.~Adv. |
Assogiation Form
| ed
To Conduct Concert
Tours in the South
«oUrs 1N the sou
"
. Concert managers—those folk
‘ with a vi sothwnorgbisn li-dßfi- tu
with a vision who bring singers
- &nd violinksts and pianists from
‘the big centers and frequently take
& “gamiller's chance” on the size
of the audience—have organized
, an assodiation for the heneflt of all
concernad and expect to conduct
the tQurs of the big artists on a
morg business-like bagis in future,
- accalding to Jack D. Salter, who
- with, Lawrence D. Evans conducts
theg! KEvans-Salter Musical Bureau
in Atlanta, They have just return
ed from the organization meeting
o/! the National Concert Managers'
/issociation in New York,
“It was attended by representa
tive managers. from all over the
country,” said Mr. Salter, “and the
concert businegs was discused I'rom
all angle. We believe the asocla
tion will wogk for' the benefit of
artists, managers and music lov
ers alike, providing more froguent
appearances for the artists and
improving the quality of the recit
als,
“Atlanta recvieed a great deal of
favorable comment on the sues-
Sesg of its most unusual season of
musgic of the last fall and winter.
There was no other city of its size
which wa visited by so many of
the foremost artists or which gave
them such excelelnt patronage.”
The BEvans-Salter Musical Bu
reay, which conducts the All-
Star Concert Series in Atlanta, was
| made, regional director for the
- South and will establish regional
~ headquarters here. It expects to
announce aAn excelent list of artists
for the approaching fall and winter
season,
WEAR HUFF'S
GLASSES
o e e e
AFTER LG AUTO
RIDES USE SLOAN'S
[for “Auto Leg’ and All Other
Aches and Pains. |
B .
It's when you climb out of the car,
after hours at the steering wheel, that
you realize how stiff and sore your
lmnm-lvs and joints are. And when
Sloan’s Liniment is along, you learn
what a boon it is in “ironing out”
the lame back, the cramped muscles,
the joint-stiffness
~ Take a_bottie with you on your va®
cation, You will need it' every day.
Keep it han@y for the bites gnd stings
of insects and nwsquitos. It relleves
quickly, penetrates witbout rubbing,
wen't stain the skin., Soothes the
afflicted part and prgznotes quick re
lief. All drm‘[:_isi.:‘,r:ma-' 60c, $1.20,
Sloan's
I RERY W (& iy D
e A
A Re:/
@7/l Remedy
r F"n .
or Faliing Hair
Keeps. / e
eeps jcalp Clgun and Healthy—Pre-
Wh verts Dandruff.
1m your hair becomes faded, dry,
streal ted and geraggly, when it falls
out ' mdly ay,d new hair can not grow,
the roots rihould be immediately vi
tali ted ar.a properly neuwrished. To
do this ‘quickly, xut'n and at little
€X pense | there is not gso offective
as, Pars gian sage (liquid+form), which
You ¢an get at all good drug and
t piler counters.
It" s guaranteed to abelish dandruff
¢ Igp scalp itch and falling hair and
'!’P omote a new growth or money re
-7 inded. It's in great demand by dis
(4 riminating women because it makes
l’ the hair so soft, lustrous, easy to ar
range attractively and appear much
heavier than it really is.
A massage with Parvisian sage is a
rea! delight--easy to use, not. sticky
or greasy, and delicately perfumed—
an antiseptic lauid free from dan
gerous ingredients and guaranteed
| not to enlor the hair or sealp. If you
want good looking hair and plenty of
A it, by all means use Parisian sage-—
a little attention now insures beautl
ful hair for years to come.—Adv,
i Nk
| ( -
{
| |
|
|
|
When Poslam takes hold of virulent
and stubborn eczema, it soothes and
cool nt once putting A stop to the
terrifi itehing Ut raw parts of ure
skin | feel bnmeasure gratefu
As Poslam continues to penotral there
davelops just the heading pprocs need
ed Contrast the ¢ o of healing with
the severit of e 1 bl ind Po
lam's w remarkable indeed
Ope sunce of Poslam is wordh a pound
of ointment lons cfficient
Sold everywher I fre san
wril ! Fanerger i ’ ri¢ a4l
W 47th '} New Y !
Urpe y kin ) Wit o fresher
clenrer ! 1 ! ! ‘ T of
| Poslam Soap, medicated w Poslam
) Advertisemoent
GROWING FIRMS
find it most profitable to
adwvertise In
THE GEORGIAN
.
Aeroplane on Auction
. o 7
Fails to Find Buyer
(By Internationnl News Service.)
LONDON, June 14.—The first aeroplang
put up for auctiop in the histery of thg
world did not find a buyer,
The auction was held at the Hepdon
acrodrome, A Grahame-White machine,
fully equipped, a sporting single-seater,
tuned to 100 miles an hour, was for sale,
Bidding weut up b'; &mall stages until
$3,260 was reached. hen 1t slackened to
n standstill, and the machine wasg with
drawn, as the resrve was $2,600,
“People are still very shy,” said Claude
Grahame-White, “but it will come all
right.”
.
Laberer Inhales His
. .
Beer and I! Kills Him
(By International News Service,)
LONDON, June 14.-—A Pimlico laborer
named Willlam O'Connor drowned himself
in a peculint manher
At the inquest evidence waa given that
he drank o quantity of beer oh Good Fri
day and died suddenly. Dr. Ceollier sald
a 0 T v ARPP J Aty rn oo~y aaman -~ o~y .
R T ! ; . “ p
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e Sy R : Py Aéfs’u" o
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i s 3 pon o P AN ",J.;.(;J,L_:: T
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& RONTNI
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s & B . St
g‘ f:}- A S iy s R S i !
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B 01 i S S
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£ " g " . e e
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: e g f"",>:; s o o
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T T ggRN ¢y S S
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SRR, 3 = :
¢ e o ot
S L Sk % o
£ IR )
RRi \ o
LB ¥ PR SRO 2 b e
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BR N g SRer * ¥ Q, : $
o e D e R 2 | it 4
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R. R N
JOE A. DALY, MANAGE}.
. A FUNERAL ARRANGEMENT
Once place&in our hands means attention to every detail; no matter
how seemifigly unimportant.
® Outoffown calls given prompt attention day or night:
Auto Ambulance Service.
A. O. & ROY DONEHOO
Funeral Directors and Embalmers.
No. 81 Washington St., Atlanta, Ga.
Bell Phone Main 1847. Atlanta Phone 4100. .
R T == 4
|NN &
r/z;u,\ 2 2
o L !'%\_ f‘\‘
= | AT ¥EF
@, |abgery),
£ ) =\i
/P 4 ¢
:~ - \\“"4
h'g‘*«@ “‘s’;2 7 '
Ouch! Sore, Touchy Coms!
Lift Corns Out! Doesn't Hurt!
Don’t let corns aehe twice! Lift any corn ox
callus off with fingers—Here’s magic!
For a few eents you can
get a small bottle of thol
wmagic freezone discovered by
a Cincinnati chemist. |
Just ask at any drug store
for a small bottle of luuope.l
Apply a few drops upon a
tender, m¢hing corn and ln-i
stantly tbat old bothersome
corn stops hprting, then
shortly you can lift it out,
roub and all, with the fingers,
that he found -beer in the man's lun
dand that doubtless O'Con,:ror hl\hd tll}o a
deep bréath and had dra na(‘ imself by
bringing the beer down infa his lh%“.
The cause of death was suffocatioh, and
the verdict accidental depth. JasE
Films - Developed
Mall us your fiime fer expert
developing. Our business built
on promptness and quality. Mast
orders malled out day recelved.
Full Line Films and Packs,
Branson Sisters Studio
105 N. Pryor'St.
Atlanta, Ga.
Just think! Not one bit of
pain before applying freezono
or afterwards. It doesn's
even irritate ghe gurround.
ing skin,
Hard corns, soft corns, or
c¢orns belween the toes, also
hardened calluses on” bottom'
of feet shrivel up and fall off
without hurting a particle,
Ladics! Keep freezone handy
on your dregser, Wonderfull
wAdvertiscment
7A