Newspaper Page Text
Chance of your
life—HERE
IN The Georgian WANT AD
section. Read it. Would you
like to go into business—are
you looking for a partner—are
you seeking an opportunity to
place your ambitions and capi
tal into something really worth
while?
Bee the WANT ADS in The
Georgian.
It pays to read The Georgian
Classified advertisements.
N l To—Stimulate Your Business.
ow 18
. To—lncrease the Consumers’
the Tlme Demand for the Goods on
. Your Shelves.
Mr. Retailer
To—lncrease Your Stock Turn
over.
’ To—Reduce Your Selling Costs.
U. 8. DEPARTMENT BY Advertising Regularly in
. OF LABOR Your Local Newspaper.
W. B. WILSON, Secretary A :
Directer Genmera!, Information and Edues-
Adv. No. A 6 tien Service.
.
Neither Soap, Water, Nor a
Sharpened Blade Can Re
move the Soul Theught
. ’
Lines From a Man’s Face
You can’t hide ADVERSITY any more than you
can Prosperity,
You are in debt—worried sick—misery is writ
ten all over you—the very atmosphere of your
presence is depressing.
You CAN and MUST get away from it—HUMAN
DEPRAVITY KNOWS NO DEPTH.
Just a little ready money in the Bank wonld
make a different man of you—as much as five dol
lars would help. There is nothing so soothing as
SAVINGS ACCOUNT
to soothe the lines of worry from your face.
We are holding a nice clean sheet on our ledger
for your account. One dollar is a beginning.
4 per cent interest paid.
. . :
Georgia Savings Bank & Trust Co.
Member Federal Reserve System.
YOUR hot water problem for the rest of
your life is solved by installing a
$ COIL
u\ CADET v i HEATER
{ It works simply. Attach to [your water
: ' tank. Does not burn gas.
E [@URNS COAL The top of the
: ' |_AND wooo l v Cadet heater is large
: ; o enough to allow you
gl 2 / to heat irons, boil or
2 l ¢V¢ ¥ fry as the water
:|’94 § [ gcatcsl. Ideal for laun
¢ Lok (A 2 M@ dry days.
. ‘ .."- ‘\ p / \
i ;__j_[_‘,‘_‘_'_ ,w_‘ INSIST ON A
| = ' CADET
E )‘\ Be sure and specify a
1 |[Pectec '-~—:’ Cadet. Call it by name
SR lm}i"if your dc;ler i\q?;'\'to:}e ;‘e_nd
- 1€ Gt the parine. Codot with the name
o) amaitbr L A
“ _.: I 1 '
1N A v ATLANTA STOVE WORKS
./ c‘fgfi‘ \ Mnfrs, Fameus Barrett Ranges
b ATLANTA, GEORGIA
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN & & A Clean Newspaper for Southern Homes i THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1920.
Co-operative Plan Being Worked
Out in Industry With Employ
ees Acting as Employers.
George Lansbury, who sent the sub
joined wireless dispaich, is a Social
ist member of the English House of
Commons. His paper, the Daily Her
ald, is the official organ of British or
ganized labor., Much surprise was
manifested in British official circles
recently when it was learned that
Lansbury had obtained passports to
Russia, and in some quarters his voy
age. was linked with Premier Lloyd
George's avowed efforts for peace
with that country. Since his arrival
in Moscow, Lansbury has been send
ing dispatches giving his conclusions
after a thorough investigation of con
ditions, and wurging prompt peace
with the soviets. This is his first dis
patch dealing in detail with indus
trial conditions in bolshevik Russia:
By GEORGE LANSBURY.
(Special Radio Dispatch.)
MOSCOW, Feb. 26,—“T1l Russla
will become a united all-Russian co
operative society of workers—that is
our aim,” said Nicolai Lenin, boi
shevik prime minister, to me the
other day.
I have visited several state factories
here, where automobiles, bicycles and
airplanes are being built. There we
could see how much has been accom
plished during the period of trouble.
Before the revolution, Russia was
dependent upon the outside world for
nearly all machinery, Now, with her
own raw materials she i{s building air
! planes, automobiles and bicycles.
THEIR OWN EMPLOYERS.
I have seen tool makers, foundry
workers, machine minders and engi
neers working at full speed, ana 1
have mentally compared them with
the thousands I have seen in England
and France. The only difference—
and it is a vital one—is that the men
here are their own employers. They
are working not for a boss or to
produce rent profit interest, but for
the soviet state, which means them
selves.
They participate in the organiza
tion and direction of their industry.
The people of England often talk of
waste in government and municipal
enterprises. In Russia’s national
workshops exactly the contrary is
the case. Every secrap of raw mater
ial coming in is carefully registered
and accounted for, |
The products of factories are care-:
fully inspected and stamped. All in
ferior work is rejected. v \
In the Moscow waterworks, the
workers have partial control and they
show extraordinary initiative and en-‘
thusiasm. They have helped relieve
the fuel shortage by new methods of
heat burning and by the construction,
on their own initiative, of a narrow
gauge railroad.
THEY'RE SATISFIED,
The red armies could not possibly
have been fed and supplied with mu
nitions, nor could the nation have
been kept alive except by this sort
of enthusiasm. Not a single person [
have met dreams of altering thesei
conditions. All believe things would
be much worse under any other gov-!
ernment than the present,
The position of the women in in
dustry here would give complete sat
isfaction to every leader of the wo
men's movement. Women work in in
dustry here side by side with the
men, and they are recognized upon
terms of absolute equality as citizens
of the state. Every post is open to
them. In one thing only there is in
equality: women are working on day
rates and are allowed the same wages
as man though their preduction falls
fifteen per cent below that of men.
In piece work there is a minimum
wage which is the same for men and
women, In cases of sickness and un
employment full rates are paid, and
the sick get extra food. The workers
are given ten church holidays vearly,
also with publie holidays yec rly, and
Sundays and Saturday afternoons, as
well as two weeks vacation with pay
Vaeations are extended where neces
sary.
Overtime is paid at the rate of time
and half for the first two hours and
double rates thereafter.
Much overtime is being worked at
present and a great deal of voluntary
‘'work is being done, which means that
the people work in other than their
normal occupations in order to as
sist the nation.
A big wave of enthusiasm is rising
among the peopls, who talk now
about the “bloodless front,” meaning
the industrial field.
DoctorskKail
“Terrible case of Eczema-— contracted
when a mere bo’-fnu.ht disease for ten
r::n with half doren rpechlhh. Both
s In terrible condition. Almost a
nervous wreck, [t took just 8 bottles of
D. D. D. to clear up this disesse.”
This is the late testimony of & prominent
newspaper man We have seen so many other
sufferers relieved by this marvelous lotion that
we freely offer you a bottle on our povrnl
ruarantes. Try it today, Bsc, 60c and SI.OO,
JACOBS' PHARMACY.
» m Bowels regular do not
become o
A
fartheot Obtamabie ot biry Grapevis. erors
whare, unluummwmu,'
W constipation, head dizzy
» bolohing. gas, heartburn, torpid liver,
braath, mervonsness, drspepsia, indiges. '
3& obesity, mental aod phowicsl dullass,
Britons Watch
Talk,Not Dress,
(By International News Service.)
LONDON, Feb, 26.—"The peo
ple in the future will be
less interested in what Vis
cbuntess Astor wears than what
she says,” said the Manchester
Guardian yesterday, commenting
upon Viscountess Astor's mai
den speech in the House of
Commons when she defended
liquor control in England.
The general tone of the press
and parliamentary comment was
that the viscountess had made a
triumphant entry into Commons
deliberations,
Kibler & Long Clothes save
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THhis Sping—iay
Witler “Lonng Clethies!
$25 to $3 5 —Two Stores in Atlanta— $3 0 tor $5 0
7 DECATUR ST. 33INTHE U. 5. A. 70 PEACHTREE ST.
F. W, King, 22, 13 1-2 Auburn ave
nue and A. M. Pittman, 18, 18 Hay
good avenue, were given a hearing
in Police Court Thursday morning,
charged with picking pockets at the
Auditorium, They were held to the
Clity Criminal Court under bond of
S2OO. Pittman is the half brother of
little L.ouise Madeline Pittman, cen
tral figure in the swapped baby
case,
According to Detectives Whatley
and Turner who arrested the young
men Wednesday, they, by taking ad
vantage of being members of the
State militia with headquarters in the
Auditorium, could ply their pick
pocket work successfully at enter
tainments.
Police sav they recovered several
stolen articies from the young men.
These include an overcoat and a
watch they claim to have found.
PACKERS HAVE NEW SYSTEM,
(By International News Service.)
WASHINGTON, Feb, 26,—~Conceal
ment of the identity of owners of the
stock yards and defeat of the income
tax laws Is possible under the sys
tem adopted by the packers of Is
suing “bearer certificates” to stock
holders, Federal Trade Commisgioner
(olver declared Wednesday before the
House agricultural committee at the
packer hearing.
Cuti S
Without M
Cutiours Sosp b the favorite foraafety razer shaving.
—because we have cut our
margin of profit this spring
to the lowest 1n our hlstory
in an effort to kcep prices
dOWH and' incrcasc our
volume.
KIBLER & LONG Clothes have always
been sold to you on an extremely,
small margin of profit. Now we have cut
that margin even lower, which, when com
hined with the savings we make by quan
ity buying for 33 stores, produces a
* greater saving than ever for the buyer of
Kibler & Long clothes—a saving that no
ordinary retailer anywhere could possibly,
equal. :
We are showing attractive, new
Spring clothes now. See them in
our windows. Come in and try on
the new models. You’ll not only
admire their smart style and drape
—the good wearing all-wool fab
ries and fine tailoring—but will
surely marvel at the moderate
prices. 1
Demonstration!
GEE-GO Wonder Soap
Kress' at the Viaduct
Brown Hayes Co.
387 Edgewood Ave.
Jackson Drug Co.
Broad and Marietta Streets
Have the spots and stains removed
from your own clothing '
5