The Augusta herald. (Augusta, Ga.) 1914-current, July 12, 1914, Page THREE, Image 11

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SUNDAY, JULY 12. attack made on ' THE EMPIRE LIFE IS NOT JUSTIFIED Segment By President W. W. Action Piled in Atlanta Wednesday afUmnon of this week k petition was filed in the Superior »'? rt * n Atlanta by three law firms acting in conjunction asking for a re ceiver for the Empire Life of Atlanta. J he attorneys are supposed to be rep resenting James R. Brown of Canton. La., who is a stockholder in the com pany, The petition was filed before Judge Ellis, who has issued a rule nisi citing the company to appear and show cause July IS why a receiver should not be appointed. The petition ulleges that the company is insolvent and further that the statement as filed with the insurance department is in flated. In talking to a representative of The Insurance Field about the matter the Georgia insurance commissioner said that he would rather not be quoted. He however has approved the state ment of the company which is now on file in his department with his stamp of approval. President Reid’s Statement. To a representative of The Insur ance Field Thursday President Reid of the company gave the following statement: "The filing of the petition by seve ral attorneys representing James R. Brown of Canton, Ga., is not taken with any degree of seriousness by the officers of the company owing to the fact that the allegations set out in the petition are so distorted as to elimi nate an yelement of real truth. Par lcularly is this true in the statements made about myself in the sale of the stock to Mr. rßown. Heretofore Mr. Brown has alw r ays been on the best of terms with myself and the other of ficers of the company, and expressed himself as well satisfied with his in vestment, both in person and in writ ing. It would therefore appear that the filing of the petition is more in the light of malicious persecution. Out last statement as filed with the In surance department of Georgia shows the company to be in a perfectly sol vent condition. It must be borne it mind that the figures in this state ment w'ere not made by the officers at will as the petition would indicate, but they were made by a duly accred ited actuary of the insurance depart ment of Georgia, acting for that de i -irt ment in his official capacity. Our h newer will of course be made on the 3 Pth but we have no fear of the out remc, I nst month was one of the best in the history of the company.”— insurance Field, Louisville, Ky., July 10th, 1914. RAPID STRIDES IN ANTI-TRUST Bills in Revised Form to Be Ready For Submission to Senate Early in Week. Washington—Rapid strides were were made by the senate judiciary and commerce committees today on the administration anti-trust bills, and assurances were given tonight that railroad securities measure and the Clayton bill would be ready tn revised form for submission to the senate ear ly' next week. The commerce committee spent the day on the securities bill and virtually decided to strike from the measure the provision investing the interstate commerce commission with power to direct the purposes for which stock or bond issues of railroads should be ex pended. The amendment would pro vide that the commission investigate all applications for stock issuances and to reject or approve them, but in cases of acceptance, the commission would not have the power to determine how the money should be expended. The elmmittee did not complete its work Other points will be disposed of Monday. It was also decided to strike from the bill the provision permitting pick eting on the premises of employers in time of strikes or other labor troubles. The committee proposes to revise somewhat provisions prohibiting in terlocking directorates, holding oom l antes and price discriminations. These changes will be perfected Mon day. Fight Against Liquor Fails in Savannah Savannah,—The Law Enforcement Committee today announced the hope leas surrender of the fight to run liq uor out of Chatham county, following the acquittal of f'harlea Abel, the first of twenty dealers against whom the ronrmtttee claimed to have absolutely irrefutable evidence. The case was tried In the city court. Uniformed soldiers from Tort Screven were used to (ret the evidence. The jury was out only a short while. meroenthaler linotype SALESMAN IN THE CITY Mr. F. l!“ Immer Enroute to Commerce, Oa., to Meeting of Georgia Weekly Press Ass n. Mr F L Irmner, represeptlng the ■ \>w ' Orieans agency of the Mergan thaler Linotype Company, at MS Ra ronne street. Is In Augusta «n route to the annual meting of the Georgia Weekly Press Association which will convene at Commerce. Oa.. this Mr Immer came hy Augusta to pay s short visit to Mr. Jas. C. Harrison, .{.reman of the Herald whom he knew t’"rv pleasantly while both were trav eling for the Keystone Type Foundry. Mr Immer Is an up to date traveling ralenman and Is a splendid gentleman jf*r serially. THE STATE WITH A FUTURE rgla Is the Empire Stale of the uth the legitimate objective of ev ery financial builder of the country. Reid Declares That Receiver- Has No Justification. THOSEAMAItURS FROM THE U. S. The Paid Amateur Representa tives of the “Stars and Stripes” a Lesson—Olympic Games. London.—Despite the lukewarm re sponse to the Olympic Council's appeal for a $500,000 campaign fund the aeaveh for talent goes on. Economies will have to be practiced and the origins 1 scheme has been considerably curtailed but the members of the reorganized council are all out to get the best athletic represen tation possible at the Merlin games in 1916. TKe American lesson has been taken to heart and the old order is changing. British amateurism is tak ing a wider range. When America ut such a figure in the 1908 Olympiad in London, you will remember the scream about the paid amateur representatives of the “Stars and Stripes" It seems to have dawned on this effete old coun try that such squealing, while all the plums of the athletic world were passing into foreign hands, was not of much use. Great Britain will not even have the consolation of shouting about the purity of her amateurism if she fails at Ber lin, for vve have trainers of all sorts here now and we shall have more when the wheat is sifted fVom the chaff. The outdoor athletic meetings are just starting and at al! the chief gatherings there are special scratch Olympic field events, which are to he utilized as the media of elimination. Javelin. Special attention is being devoted to the pole and high jumps and to throwing the javelin, in each of which the Brit ishers have been sadly wanting. In view of the revision of the program of Olympic games, the Amateur Athletic Association has decided to add to theiv list of championships the following events: Throwing the javelin, throwing the discus; hop, step and jump, and 440- yard hurdle race. It. O. Kitchling, the champion javelin throw’er here. has several times ap proach 150 feet and his keenest rival, Kenneth McLennan, is coming on so fast that Kltchling’s supremacy Is threaten ed . The fans here set great store on A. E. Fbixman. the old English hammer throwing champion, who is said to have accomplished “what the American ath letes have always held to be impossi ble" by throwing the 16-pound hammer with four turns from a seven-foot cir cle, thereby increasing his throw up to nearly 15*> feet. Recent events In the spelling world have acted as a powerful stimulus to athletic enthusiasm in this country and it may be assumed that the British team for Berlin will be even better equipped than was the one which did duty at the London celebration. SUFFRAGE BAND DISCUSS WAGES In Talk With Prime Minister Asqnith—Average Wage of Women is Discussed. London,—The recent meeting be tween Prime Minister Asquith and the women representing Sylvia Pank hurst’s East End Suffrage Club is unique in English history, for never before have women workers of the lowest social class told tneir wage grievances to so high a personage. The average wages of women throughout the country. Mrs. Julia Scurr told the Prime Minister, is but seven shillings a week. Many women, she said, supported children and par ents on this, although the Immigration Board has held that a woman cannot live in London on less tlwi 17 shil lings and six pence a week. To small wages and the severity of the strug gle was attributed the large number of suicides among married working women of the city. Mrs. Scurr said the poor law attached harsh and hu miliating terms to the relief given and was thoroughly hated by the. Indigent. In Justifying the demand of the working women for suffrage, the del egates told the Prime Minister that there did not seem to no any other way of making their wrongs known to the public. Women are still sent to prison for inability to pay their taxes, and few of those who suffer from drunken and brutal husbands can af ford the luxury of a divorce. One of the suffragists, Mrs. Hughes, opened her argument by laying on the Premier's table a brush that retails at ten shillings. "For my share In making that, I get two pence,” said Mrs. Hughes. Her pay, she explained, was two pence for filling 200 holes with bris tles, and her husband got two pence half penny for finishing the brush. To support her home required four teen hours work a day. Another delegate said she was rear ing a family of six children under the age of thirteen on her husband's pay of 25 shillings a week as a docker. A pitiable story was related by a woman, who had started work In a Jam factory at the age of eleven. When left a widow with two children, she shared her small rom with an un fortunate girl whose hahy had been horn In a workhouse. As the widow's wages could not feed them all, the girl drowned herself and hahy In the Thames Mr. Asquith In reply said that It would l»e perhaps difficult to get sub stantial and Intelligent reform In the Kant End unless the women them selves had a voice In choosing the members of Parliament. But their problem was such that It could not he solved by any short cut. He promis ed to consider their cnee fully. Although the Premier treated the delegatee as non-militants atid at 'acked militancy the East Ixindon I Federation which they represented, I has never repudiated militancy. Nor I have the delegates. THE AUGUSTA HERALD, AUGUSTA, GA. HUERTA TO GO ON BRITISH WARSHIP SAYS » SING I ‘DOPEJGHOOL Astonishing Picture of Vice Given State Commission. Con victs Taught to Use Drugs. New York,—Although he denied the existence of a political ring that makes many thousands of dollars yearly out of th drug and whiskey trade with Sing Sing prisoners, James M. Clancy, former warden of that institution, re vealed to the state prison commission an astonishing picture of vice and graft. Summoned to answer questions about the alleged interviews, in which he put the drug, evils squarely up to the politicians, Clancy refused to ad mit there is a ring at work, but show ed liis eagerness lo tell about corrupt keepers, dishonest lawyers and schem ing relatives of prisoners. “Untold quantities” of drugs are smuggled into Sing Sing, he said. His description of the methods employed by the drug users and their allies made a profound impression on the commis sioners. Clancy was questioned in a law office in No. 54 William street. Clancy pointed out one of the weak nesses of tlie present penal system when he spoke of the low wages paid to keepers and the heavy profit reaped by every one concerned in the drug trade. A quantity of opium that could be bought by the keeper for a dollar, he said, could be retailed to the pris oners for $lO. He advocated higher salaries for keepers and isolation of prisoners who are drug victims. Making use of pencils, fountain pens, shoe U els, handkerchiefs, embossed postal cards and even letters marked ' Rockefeller Vice Society,” the smug glers have kept a steady stream of drugs going through the prison. As soon as Clancy started an investiga tion, the price of cocaine, morphine and heroin was increased by tlie deal ers. That was the only result of his attempted reform, he said, except that the prisoners who revealed some of the Becrets of the traffic were threat ened with death by the other convicts and had to be kept locked up day and night for their own safety. “Those informers would have been killed had they crossed the. prison yard,” said Clancy, “and the murders would have been committed in plain sight of the authorities." tinder the instruction of the keepers, whom he described as drug fiends, the younger prisoners Hoon become vic tims of the vice. Sing Sing, in Clancy’s opinion, has become nothing more or less than an academy for “dope fiends." Almost every employe and civilian in the prison was suspected, Clancy said, of taking a, hand in the lucrative traf fic. Clancy gave the commissioners a few pointers on the condition of the prison buildings, saying all the rooms where crafts and industries were car ried on ought to be enlarged. The foundry he asserted, is likely to col lapse at any time and kill the work ers As for sanitation, he said, pneu monia, tuberculosis and rheumatism have grown to such proportions that they threaten to rival the drug trade as Sing Sing's worst evil. GOV'T OFFICIALS, PLEASURE CRAFT Washington.—Representative Good, republican, of lowa, made an attack in the house Saturday on the use of revenue cutters as "pleasure craft" by Secretary McAdoo. Representative Good declared that the revenue cutter Onondaga made regular week-end trips out of Boston to accommodate "par ties of democrats.” lie quoted an article from a newspaper saying Mr. and Mrs. McAdoo had made a cruise to Mattupolsset, Mass., in the Onon daga. . - Mr. Good read a statute enacte-i some time ago prohibiting the use of revenue cutters except for government busihess. "If the public had the power, he concluded, “It would demand the re moval of the secretary of the treasury, who not only fails to enforce the law, but himself violates it." PLUNGED INTO THE CHANNEL London. —An American. Walter U Brock, today captured first honor* In the aeroplane race from Hendon to Paris and return. Brock outdistanc ed his nearest rival, Raoul Garros, a French aviator, by more than an hour. Ills fMng time for the distance—so 2 miles In a direct line, was seven hours, three minute*, six seconds. A thrilling incident was a plunge Into the English Channel which Ba ron Cart.cry suffered when his aero plane fell Trom a considerable nelght when half wav across on the return trip. A life belt kept l-ord Carbery afloat, until he was picked tip by a steamer. Eugene Rcnaux lost his way several times on his way to Paris, more than seven hours being required to make the trip to the French capital. He carried a woman passenger. Garros had trouble with his pro pellers and steering planes on the outward flight. PII.ES~CURED’aT HOME - BY NEW ABSORPTION METHOD If you Buffer from bleeding. Itchlri* blind or protruding Pile*, *end me your address, and 1 will tell you how to cure yourself *t home by the new absom lion treatment; and will also send aorrie of 'hie home treatment free for trial wl'h references from your own locality If requested Immediate relief end perm anent cur* annul ed. Harm no money, but tell other* of thin offer. Write Unlay to Mrs. M. Hummers, Box P, Notre Larne. Ind. Will Resign Monday and Im mediately Leave Capital, is Report. Carbajal to Arrive Sunday Vera Cruz.—The resignation of Presi dent H n rta may be placed beftrt’e con gress Monday, the general departing im mediately thereafter for Puerto Mexico or Vera Cruz under British escort, ac cording to reports In circulation here to day. which originated from a source that is usually well Informed. Reports from the Mexican capital also state that Francisco Carbajal, the new ly appointed foreign minister, replacing Esteva Ruiz, the acting minister, who will arrive hefro tomorrow on his way to Europe, will be named provisional president. This appointment is said It* be sanctioned secrotly by both General VemiHtlano Carranza, chief of the Con stitutionalists, and the United States and assurances are said to have been given by the Constitutionalists that hostili ties will cease with Carbajal’s assump tion of office. Rear Admiral Sir Christopher Crad dock of the British squadron is ia the City of Mexico and it was reported to day that th® real purpose of Ills vffcit was to escort General Huerta and »ho latter’s family to the coast, where they probably will board a British war.saip. While it was Impossible to obtain posi tive confirmation here the reports point ed out that many recent developments indicate the probability of some such plan having been made at the capital. NEGRO ATTACKS C. H. OELLRICH LAST NIGHT Storekeeper on Old Savannah Road Barely Escapesßeinq Killed By Unknown Bludgeon Wielder. Sheriff Plunkett to Use Bloodhounds The Old Savannah road 1 nthe region of Carmichael’s was again the scene of a serious crime Inst night. Within half a mile of the place where Walker Green was killed by his brother-in- Inw a month ago, a man was almost murdered at 10 o’clock last night. Mr. C. H. Oellerlch, who keeps a store on the Old Savannah road just where the road turns off to Car michael’s Club was attacked by a ne gro, who entered the store apparently for the purpose of robbery. The ne gro came in asking for some cheese. Mr. Oellerlch told him he bad no cheese on hand at the moment. The man then asked for a nickel's worth of crackers, and when he had received these, he asked for a soft drink. Mr. Oellerlch went to the iee box. “What Do You Want?” "What do you want?" he Inquired. "I’ll take a clear soda,’ ’said the n egro. As Mr. Oellerlch leaned over the box to get the bottle out, he saw the negro make a movement towards him which caused hint to dodge. The fact that he ducked his head probably saved his life, for the negro struck him with an implement of some sort, hitting him a glancing blow about two inches above the left ear. From the wound It was apparent af terwards that the Implement had been a "billy,” the most deadly weapon In the world, outside of firearms. Madie Another Pass. Mr. Oellerich was tsunned, hut not rendered unconscious as he would have been had the blow been straight, and he half fell, half stumbled across the threshold Into his bedroom which ad joins the tsore. The negro made an other pass at him but missed him. Mr. Oellerich was able to stagger to his shot gun, which was leaning against the mantlepiece in the room, and the negro, seeing him reach it, made for the door. Mr. Oellerich man aged to get to the po*ch and fire once at the retreating figures of two men, the other being a white man whom he had seen on the porch when the negro first entered the store. He then fell unconscious, where he was found by his wife a moment afterwards. With His Wifs. Mr. Oellerich Is a man fifty-odd years of age, who lives alone In his store with his wife, and It is obvious that the object of the assault on him was robbery. He hail never seen the negro or the white man before, but stales that he thinks ho would he able to identify the negro. Mrs. Oellerich did what she eould at first to stop the blood which was streaming from the wound in her hus band's head. About ten minutes nfter the crime a machine passed going from town and Mrs. Oellerich rushed out In the hope of stopping it. she was too late to catch It, hut before going hack Into the house she saw another machine coming towards town. This ear she was able to flag down and Mr. A. O, Brinson of Waynesboro, who was In the car, was the first person on the scene.. It was he who called County Policeman Murphy and fetched Mr. H. H. Oellerich, the injured man's son, P»»»*d Thsm Both. Mr. Brinson stated that he had passed a white man and a negro walk ing up the hill away from town. It so happened that he passed them Just as he passed the other machine, so that he eould see them distinctly by the head-lights. He said that he no tired they turned sway their faces and ducked their heads as he went by so that he was unable to see their feat ures At first It wa sthought that Mr. f)<llerlch wns fatally Injured, until he began to come bark to htmself and show signs of consciousness. At 11 o'clock he wan able to sit up and talk to the reporters, though he was suf fering a good deal from pain In hN head. Sheriff Plunkett. He stated that he came to America from Germany In 1870, Just before the outbreak of the Franco-Prusnlan war. Luring the paat eleven years he has lived with his wife alone at the store by f'arrnlchnel's, his children being grown and married. Sheriff Plunkett arrived on the scene about 11:15. and it wns thought prob able they would start out With the hounds before morning on the trail cf the criminals. DEMONSTRATION, IRELAND MONDAY Monster Procession to March in Belfast on Anniversary Battle of the Boyne. Belfast. If the celebration of the Bat tle of the Boyne passes without a col lision between Orangemen and Gat holies, Ulster home rulers will have passed an other (Tit leal danger point. The an niversary of the l tittle falls on Sunday. A demonstration in honor of the day will take place Monday, when a great procession will inarch to Druinbeg, four miles distant to hold the customary celebration. The Protestant district of Bel Cast 1h decorated more lavishly than In former years. Flags and lan tiers hearing in scriptions defying home rule are dis played everywhere The presence of Sir Edward Carson, the Ulster loader and armed guards surrounding his head quarters, together with a review of bat talions of. volunteers today caused much excited talk hut men In colest touch with the people of both factions predict the occasion will pass without trouble. Thousands of members of the constab ulary have been brought north to pre serve peace Monday. Great Crowd .« Glaesow. Twenty-five thousand West Scotland oVangemen held a demonstra tion nt Blantyre. Lanarkshire today. The grand master of Scotland, the Rev. Da vid Ness declared their policy regarding home rule was “no surrender.’ Great crowds witnessed the procession through the streets. Lively skirmishes occurred, but only four persons were arrested. “SNAGGLE TOOTH” NEGRO LANDED BY DETECTIVES One of the “Pocket-Book” Artists Who Has Been Growing Rich at the Expense of Rural Population. A negro named James Daniel, alias “Uamma" (presumably shorl for Ala hiuiKi) is now in the pall owing to his k\”l in perpetrating what is known as "Pocket-book trick." Detectives Glover, Horn, Roney and Reid sat up all Thursday night over his case, fl nally landing him at dawn out on the New Savannah Road hy raiding a. negro gambling house in which they heard he was. Several complaints had reached the police about a “enaggled-tooth nig ger" who had on more than one occa slon beguiled gullible country mem hers with the famous trick. It was on this description mainly that they arrested Daniel. An old negro was sent for all the way from Blythe, Ga., to identify the prisoner. About seven or eight ne groes wore In the guard room yester day and the old negro was told to go down and pick out his man. He went alone, so that there would he nothing to Influence Ills choice. He went straight up to Daniels: “You's do one!” he ejaculated ex citedly. "You's do nigger got my nine dollars. You, in de white shirt." Daniels made some very uncompli mentary remarks to the old negro while tills was going on. Another negro victim who lives at 310 Wylde Street, was sent for Just to make sure of the Identification. Daniels is now safely under lock and key. It is easy to be popular All you have to flo Is make people relieve that they know more than you do. This would he n fine world If we would si>end as much time correcting our own faults as we do criticising the faults of others DR. WHITLAW FAMOUS PAINLESS DENTIST Ido not claim to be the possessor of some secret formula, whereby ALL work is done without pain, but Ido possess methods and treatments which, when combined with gentleness and expert workmanship, relieve the pain to a minimum. If you feel the slightest undecided, call at ray office any day from 8 a. m. to Bp. m. and talk with people who have neglected their teeth because of the dread of the ordinary dentist’s treatment. Now they are my friends, and are continually sending their friends to me. My offices are equipped with every scientific device known to the dental profession. I ESPECIALLY SOLICIT a call from those who have either been the victim of inferior dentistry or who have neglected their teeth because of the dread of the ordinary treatment. MY METHODS ARE HARMLESS and PAINLESS. FULL SET $5.00 They newer slip or drop I give a written guar antee for 15 yearn with all my work. No charge for painless extraction when other work is being done. References Union Savings Rank and my work. TERMS: DON’T WORRV DR. WHITLAW PAINLESS DENTIST 8 a. m. to 8 p. m.—OFFICE OPEN DAlLY—Sundays 10 to 3. 840 42 Broad Street. (Over A. & P. Tea Store) Augusta, Ga. OPTION ON PLATZ PROPERTY MUST BE EXERCISED BY AUG. 20 Joint Meeting of Finance and High Schools Committees of Board of Education to Be Held Early in August to Con sider Matter—Believed Property Will Be Secured. It is officially Announced that a joint meeting of the high school anct finance committees of the hoard of the board of education will he held the first part of August for the purpose of taking definite action on the matter of buying the Schuetzen Platz prop erty as a site for the new Tubman High School. As stated yesterday af ternoon, these two committees were given tlie power by the entire board of trustees of the public schools of Augusta and Richmond county to pur chase the property. The option the board holds expires on August i!0. It is the consensus of opinion among the members of the hoard of education that the proposed property is the proper place to put the new girls’ high school. The lot is twelve hundred feet deep and fronts on Walton Way 314 feet. The Duetscher Hcheutzen club house is situated some distance back from the street, and the property in front of the clubhous is owned by Mr. Then. Zoller. The remainder of the proper ty is owned by the club, and in nil amounts to seven and eight tenths acres. It is all for sale together, the price being SIB,OOO. with splendid fi nancial arrangements. The proposed purchase of this land was strongly endorsed by Supt. L. B. Evans at the meeting of the board of education yesterday. His talk on the subject brought forth remarks from Messrs. T. I. Hickman, Geo. <\ fele, P. S. North. C. F. Baker, B. W. Barrow and others. The lot is rectangular in shape with the exception of a portion which pro jects out in the rear, which lias been used for the club's rifle range. The board proposed to use this part of the land for an athletic field for the Tub man, which, when built, will he equip ped with an up to date girls’ gymnas ium. One of the beauties of the Platz FOR INFECTED RATS, $5 EACH Bounty Offered at New Orleans Fails to Bring Any in—2,330 Rodents Examined. New Orleans “Any person finding a plague-infected rat will he given a .bounty of sr», provided the rat is proper ly tagged where caught, If alive and where found, if dead.’' Tills reward was offered today by Pr William Rucker, assistant surgeon genersl of the United States public health service, In clia'rge of the rat de struction campaign to prevent a spread of the bubonic plague In New Orleans. Ills offer applies to employes of the health service as well as the general public. <)f the 2,330 rodents examined not one has been found to lie Infected, it was announced. Nearly a wagonhcul of thu little animals 749 In number—were trapped on the waterfront today. Th yy were hauled to the laboratory for ex amination. No new cases of the plague were re ported today, the total since the cut break on June 27th remaining at four. Three deaths huve occurred. I invite you to call and inspect my offices, and have your teeth examined FREE, T will tell you in advance just what your work will cost you. I save aching teeth, I save broken-down teeth, I save ulcerated teeth, I can save 90 per cent of the toeth others extract. Phone 716. Lady Attendant. property Is a grove of magnificent shade trees, some of which are be tween 50 and 100 years old. After the Tubman matter had been thoroughly discussed Mr. Sherman in troduced a motion to have the secre tary of the board investigate the method in other cities in regard to pensioning indigent teachers, with a view of doing the same thing here. The motion was carried. The Magnetic Girl. How She Compels Others to Obey Her Will. 100,000 Copies of Remarkable Book de scribing peculiar Psychic Powers to be distributed Post Free to readers of The Herald. “The wonderful power of Personal In fluence. Magnetism, Fascination, Mind Control, call it what you will, can surely be acquired by everyone no matteV how unattractive or unsuccessful," says Mr. Elmer Ellsworth Knowles, author of the new hook entitled; “Tlie Key to the De- velop ment of t h« Inner Forces.’’ The book Jays bare many astound ing facts con eern in g t h e practices of the Eastern Vogts, and describes a simple though effective system of c o n t rolling the th oughts and acts of others; how one may gain the love ami friend ship of t hose w h o might other wise re main lndiffer en t; how to quickly ami ac curately judge the character and disposition of an individual; how tu i lire ihe most obstinate diseases unit hnblts without drugs or medicines: even the complex subject of jrt-ojeetlng thoughts (telepathy) Is explained. Mlse Josephine Pnvls, the popular stage fav orite. wpose portrait appears nhove, de clares that Prof. Knowles’ hook opens the door to success, health and happi ness to every mortal, no matter what Ills or her position In life. Hhe be lieves that Prof. Knowles has discovered Ifflnclples which, If universally adopted, will revolutionize the mental status of the human race. The hook. Which is being distributed broadcast free of charge. Is full of phot graphic reproductions showing how these unseen forces are being used all over the world, and how thousands upon thou sands have developed powers which they little dreamed they possessed. T) lft p|- e e distribution of the 100,000 copies is be ing conducted by a large London insti tution, and a copy will he sent post free to anyone Interested. No money need he sent, hut those wtio wlsii to do so ninny enclose 5 ceqgs (stamps of your own country) to cover postage, etc. All requests for Ihe free book should be ad dressed to: National' Institute of Sci ences. Free PlatrtbutiO'n Pept. 1054. No. 255. Westminster bridge Road. London, S.E.. England. Simply say you would like a copy of “The Key to the Develop ment of tho Inner Forces,” and mention The Herald. Po not enclose edna In yonr letter. Poslage to England two cents. FOUNDER OF PAINLE33 DENISTRY ” ’’*. V 'rf; *^P«P^3|ES3 ‘ v£"P. Crown and Bridge Work ~ $4.00 and $5.00 Fillings .. 50< and SI.OO THREE MffF