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The Birmingham age-herald. [volume] (Birmingham, Ala.) 1902-1950, April 23, 1918, Image 6

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Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn85038485/1918-04-23/ed-1/seq-6/

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SUCH a hue and cr.v has pone JP
all over the'country and so many
sensational stories have come to
the ears of the anxious, that we are in
great danger of being misinformed as to
true conditions, by well meaning but
over zealous workers, says Sylvia North
in an article in the Mother’s Magazine
for April, dealing w ith life in the offi
cers’ training camps.
It is a regrettable fact that when one
exceptional case is found among a thou
sand men, the publicity it is given con
demns all, but the sensible mother real
izes that where thousands of men are
assembled they must necessarily come
from all walks and conditions of file,
and every phase of human nature be rep
resented. The mere donning of a uni
form and the pledge to respect and honor
all that it stands tor, together with the
severe tests, physical and mental, ap
plied by the government before gran.ing
the privileke of wearing that uniform,
will not immediately make a weak man
strong, nor a strong man perfect, so de
spite all the instructions and enlighten
men begun in the officers’ training
camps, still being successfully continued
for each private in every cantonment
throughout the land.
CHILDREN OF MARY I
CARD PARTY
The Children of Mary of Our Lady of
Sorrow Catholic church will give a card
party at the Knights of Columbus hall
this afternoon at 3 o’clock. Mrs. W. W.
McGowcn and Mrs. E. J. O’Brien will be
in charge.
SCRIPT DANCE
The Holiday club will give a scrip
dance this evening at the Knights of Co
lumbus hall. Dancing from 8:30 to 11:30
The chaperons will be: Mrs. A. S. Klyce,
Mrs. K. S Busenlehner, Mrs. E. J. Clark
and Mrs. Joseph Wieferich.
MRS. HOOPER IN GADSDEN
Mrs.. J. F. Hooper, chairman of the
woman's committee, council of defense,
will be the principal speaker at the meet
ing of the Alabama division of the Na
tional Music association, w'hich meets in
Gadsden April 22, 23, 24. Mrs. Hooper
will speak on the “Service of Music in
the War," says the Selma Times.
The convention will adjourn to Camp
McClellan, where it will give a musical 1
programme for the soldiers, demonstrat
ing the part which music is playing in
keeping up the spirits of the camps.
Mrs. Hooper will come down to Bir
mingham Wednesday, the 24th, and will
iema.n there until the 26th, having been
asked to take charge of the organization
of the junior division at the big Sun- I
day.school convention to be held on those
dates.
CAPTAIN AND MRS.
JEWISON HONORED
Mr. and Mrs. Mason Dillard enter
tained at dinner Saturday evening at the
Country club in honor of their daughter,
Mrs. Elbert Jemison and Captain Jemi
son. who are visiting relatives in the city.
The guests included:
Captain and Mrs. Jemison. Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Jemison, Dr. and Mrs, Rewis 1
Morris, Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Adams, Capt.
Arthur Adams and Miss Elizabeth Cald
well Locke.
• • •
BLUEBIRD SHOWER
FOR MISS HAWKINS
One of the prettiest parties of the
spring was given at the home of Mrs.
J. C. Lj-nch at Norwood by Misses Lynch,
Mrs. Bessie S. Barry and *Uss Mary
("raven, honoring Miss Hazel Hawkins,
who will be married May 1 to Mr. Joseph
B. Pool.
The house was thrown open and beau
tifully decorated with cut flowers, ferns
and palms, combined with many blue
birds. The afternoon was spent playing
hearts and the gifts were showered from
a huge bluebird, which was suspended
between the living room and dining room.
The refreshments carried out the blue
bird idea, and the guests included about
50 friends of the lovely young guest of
honor.
LYRIC PARTY
Mrs. William Martin and Mrs. Hay
wood Nixon will entertain at a Lyric
parly on Thursday afternoon, compli
menting Miss Hazel Hawkins, a bride
elect.
MISS BONHAM TO
HONOR MISS HAWKINS
Mrs. W. C. Bonham will entertain at
a luncheon tomorrow at her home on
Ohestnutt Hill, honoring Miss Hazel
Hawkins, a bride-elect. The guests will
include a few close friends of the guest
of honor.
BIRTHDAY PARTY
Mr. and Mrs. David Roberts, Jr., en
tertained at a buffet supper at their home
at Mountain Terrace on Saturday even
ing, in honor of Mrs. Roberts’ birthday.
The guests included.
Mr. ar*l Mrs. Robert Brooke, Mr. and
Mrs. Herbert Tutwiler, Mr. and Mrs. I.
J. Osbun, Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Asbury, Mr.
and Mrs. Ed Tutwiler, Mr. and Mrs. 1?aul
Chalifoux, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Knight, Mr.
and Mrs: Houston Davis, Dr. and Mrs.
C. M. Nice. Mr. and Mrs. W. R.,J. Dunn,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Daniel, Mr. and
Mrs. Saxton Crawford, Mr. and Mrs. Ed
Crawford, Mr. and Mrs. Pelham Ander
son. Mrs. Ernest Hettrick and Mr. S. E.
Simpson.
COX-NORWOOD
The following from the Montgomery
Advertiser of Sunday, will be read with
interest by Birmingham friends:
“One of the most interesting weddings
of the spring season, owing to the promi
nence of both young people, will be that
of Mr. John Lewis Cox, of Birmingham,
and Miss Florence Norwood, which will
be impressively solemnized Wednesday
evening at 8 o'clock, at the home of the
bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Nor
wood, on South Perry street. The home
will be elaborately decorated for the oc
casion.
“Miss Norwood will be attended by her
sister, Mrs. Henry Hall Clarke, of Mo
bile, as matron of honor, and by another
sister, Miss Isabelle Norwood, as maid
of honor.
“Master Edward Watts will be ring
bearer and little Anne Carroll will be the
dainty flower girl. Master Norwood
Carroll will be the ribbon bearer.
“Mr. Cox will be attended by Mr. John
B. Cox of Birmingham, as best man.
Rev. W. J. E. Cox, father of the groom,
and Dr. Charles E. Stakely will perform
the ceremony. The bride will be given
In marriage by her father, Mr. Joseph
Norwood, and following the ceremony,
there will be an informal reception. Later
in the evening Mr. Cox and his bride will
leave for a wedding trip, after which
they will reside in Birmingham. The
bride is one of Montgomery’s most cul
tured and charming young women, with
a large circle of friends who regret that
her marriage will take her elsewhere to
make her home."
RANDOM NOTES
Miss Margaret Todd left a few days ago
for Washington where she will spend
several months doing government work.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Holzborn have
named their young son for Mrs. Holz
born’s brother, Lieut. Robert Craig Per
kins.
• • •
Lieut. Robert Craig Perkins of 117th
field artillery, will spend tomorrow in
the city as the guest of his parents, en
route to Fort Sill, Ark.
Mrs. J. B. Troup and daughter. Miss
Lois Troup, left yesterday for Atlanta,
where they will spend sometime with
relatives.
Miss Ruth Loeb of Montgomery, is
spending a. few days in the city as the
guest of Miss Julia Hirsch.
• * •
Miss Bland Tomlinson will return to
day from Maryland, where she is visiting
her sister, Mrs. Jack Carter.
Mrs. James Randolph of Morristown,
Children Cry for Fletcher’s
The Kind Yon Have Always Bought has borne the signa
ture of Chas. H. Fletcher, and lias been made under his
personal supervision for over 30 years. Allow no one
to deceive you in this. Counterfeits, Imitations and
“Just-as-good” are but experiments, and endanger the
health of Children—Experience against Experiment.
What is CASTOR IA
Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare
goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It contains neither
Opium, Morphine nor other narcotic substance. For
more than thirty years it has been in constant use forthe
relief of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic and
Diarrhoea; allaying Feverishness arising therefrom,
and by regulating the Stomacii and Bowels, aids the as
similation of Food; giving healthy and natural sleep.
The Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend,
The Kind You Have Always Bought
* Bears the Signature of
In Use For Over 30 Years
▼HE CCNYWIOOMNlIVi HEW YORK CITT.
I am Sincere! Stop Calomel!
I Guarantee Dodson's Liver Tone
Listen to me! Calomel sickens and you may lose a
day’s work. If bilious, constipated or
headachy read my guarantee.
Liven up your smuggler! uveri rwi
fins and cheerful; make your work a
pleasure: be vigorous and full of am
bition. But take no nasty, dangerous
calomel, because it makes you sick and
you may lose a day’s work.
Calomel is mercury or quicksilver
which causes necrosis of the bones
Calomel crashes into sour bile like
dynamite, breaking it up That's when
you feel that awful nausea and cramp
ing.
Listen to me! If you want to enjoy
the nicest, gentlest liver and bowel
Cleansing that you ever experienced,
lust take a spoonful of harmless Dod
son's Uver Tone tonight. Your drug
gist or dealer sells you a bottle of Dod
son’s Uver Tone for a few cents under
my personal money-uaea guarantee
that each spoonful will clean your slug
gish liver better than a dose of nasty
calomel and that it won't make you
sick.
Dodson’s Liver Tone is real liver
medicine. You’ll know it next morning
because you will wake up feeling fine,
your liver will be working; headache
and dizziness gone; stomach wrill be
sweet and bowels regular.
Dodson’s Liver Tone is entirely veg
etable. therefore harmless and cannot
ralivate. Give it to your children.
Millions of people are using Dodson s
Live Tone instead of dangerous cal
Qmel now. Your druggist will tell you
ithat the sal*' nr r%'omei is almo*
(stopped entirely h«-iv.—Adr.
- «
N. J., is the guest of her son, Mr. Theo
dore Randolph, and Mrs. Randolph.
Mrs. Sam Black of Mobile, who is the
guest of Mrs. David Roberts, will leave
soon for her home. She will be accom
panied by Mrs. Roberts, and they will
spend sometime on the southern coast.
Miss Margaret McCormack and Mrs. E.
M. Kilby have returned from a week’s
stay with friends in Montgomery.
Mrs. Phillip Oster, Mrs. Houston Davis,
Mr§. Edna Gockel-Gussen, Mrs. C. J.
Sharpe, Miss Kdgell Adams, Mrs. Oscar
Hundley, Miss Emma McCarthy and
Mrs. O. I,. Stephenson and Mrs. Victor
Hanson will leave today for Gadsden,
to attend the state musical convention.
Mrs. W. li. Murdoch left Sunday for a
week’s stay in Mobile.
Misd Carrie Knox, who has been the
guest of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Nelson for
the past few days, has returned to her
home in Anniston.
Mrs. Hugh Lokey has returned to her
home in Atlanta, after spending a few
days in the city as the guest of her
brother, Mr. Thomas Hamilton.
Mrs. Edward D. Smith has returned
from a short stay with relatives in Mont
gomery.
Mr. and Mrs. N. E. Cross have returned
frhun their wedding trip, which was spent
on the southern coast, and will be at
home at 1015 Eula street. Mrs. Cross was
formerly .Miss Eula Weakley.
Miss Margaret Chenoweth, who has
spent the past few weeks in the city as
the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Chen
oweth, left Saturday for her home in
Philadelphia.
Dr. and Mrs. Frank Nabers and chil
dren have returned from Florida, where
they spent a few weeks as the guest of
Mrs. Naders’ parents. Gov. and Mrs. B.
B. Comer, at their island off the south
ern coaat..
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Hobb of Selma
will be the guests of relatives in the city
this week to attend the Sunday school
convention.
Mrs. Felix Blackburn returned yester
day for Pittsburg, where they spent 10
days with the children of Mr. and Mrs.
Coleman Ward during their stay in New
York.
Mrs. Oscar Hundley and her guest.
Mrs. Lucile Harrington Dole of New
York, will leave today for Gadsden,
where they will attend the state musical
convention.
Dr. William Jordan, who is stationed
at Fort Sill, is spending a few days in
the city with his family.
The following from the Anniston Hot
Blast, will be of interest to Birmingham
friends: •
“Maj. Elbert J. Lyman, 1313 Christine
avenue, Anniston, of the 323d infantry,
Camp Jackson, has been promoted from
captain to the rank of major.
Miss Ruth McDonald has returned to
her home in Selma, after a short stay in
the city with friends.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bonnelli wull leave
this week for Selma.
Miss Sadie Wilson spent the week-end
in Anniston as the guest of Mr. and
Mrs. Clarence Thomason.
Mrs. Stephen R. Thompson leaves to
day for Birmingham to attend the Ala
bama Sunday School convention, and will
make an address on Thursday afternoon.'
She is teacher of the Philathea class of
the Parker Memorial, which was the
first organised Bible class for women
in the state, and is a gifted speaker
Anniston Hot Blast.
I Mrs. J. B. Cunningham. Miss Louise
Cunningham. Mrs. Sutherland, Miss
Kathleen McCarty, Miss Kate Gray,
Miss Helen Terrill, Miss Elna Anderson.
Miss Gladys Bailey, Miss Josephine John
son and Miss Josephine Davis of Bir
mingham were week-end visitors to An
niston.
♦ • •
Mrs. Robert Newman is in Meridian.
Miss., where she appeared in concert last
evening as accompanist to Florence In
gram, contralto of Chicago.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
The Nineteenth Century club will meet
with Miss Mary Parke London, instead
of Mrs. Hardeman Mehde, tomorrow aft
ernoon «.t 3:30 o'clock.
The Woman's Civic board will meet
this morning at 10:30 o’clock at the li
brary. *
* • • 9
The Judson alumnae will hold its regu
lar meeting tomorrow afternoon at 3
o'clock in the parlors of the Civic asso
ciation. A cordial invitation is extended
any visiting alumnae to attend.
The Huntsville Avenue C. L. S. C. will
meet tomorrow afternoon with Mrs.
Brownlee.
The central chapter of the Delphian so
ciety will meet in the clubrooms of the
Civic association in the Jefferson County
Bank building this evening at 7:3U
o’clock.
• • •
There will be no meeting of the Graded
union this week on account of the state
convention of Sunday schools at the
First Baptist and First Methodist
churches.
* • •
The St. Paul School Improvement as
sociation will meet this afternoon at 3
o’clock.
* • •
Mrs. T. P. Hayes. Jr., has returned
from a visit to relatives in Tennessee.
The Worthwhile club will meet today
at 2:30 o’clock at the home of Mrs.
Thomas Taylor.
A meeting is called for 3 o'clock this
afternoon of the members of the Central *
W. C. T. IT. at headquarters.
War Has Not Hurt Straw
Business, Declare Makers
Washington. AnHl 22. — Although
more than 1,000,000 young men who
might otherwise have bought straw
hats have been supplied with campaign
headgear by the government, there is
no indication of severe disturbances in
the straw hat industry, in the opinion
of the tariff commission, which today
announced the, result of a preliminary
survey. The decrease in sales to men
will be compensated in part by higher
prices for women’s hats, which are
now “made of more expensive mate
rial and in more intricate patterns,”
the commisison reported.
Rome’s Founding Celebrated
Rome, April 22.—The founding of Rome
in the year 753 before the birth of Christ
was celebrated Sunday, one of the features
being an address by the mayor, Prince
Colonna. from the or.pitol 1 eforc all the
civic authorities, the diplomatic repre
sentative* and a vast concourse of peo
ii'e. m “The War In the Light of the
locals of Civilization of Ancient Rome.'
a
When King George of England Asked My Opinion .
Of American Soldiers, I Told Him That the Canadians
And Americans Were the Same Sort of People
With the Same Customs And Same Ability”
—SAPPER JOHN BOUCHER.
By dolly dalhymflr
,EN 1 hart successfully
m passed for 48 years of age,
^ and had served for eight
I months with the engineering corps on
| the Flanders front and was just begin
j ning to feel that I was safely installed
in the army, I came to grief through an
I officer finding out that my real age was
73, and so I was shipped back to Cana
I da. It was in London on my way home
that I was sent for by King George V
of England, who said he wanted to shake
1 hands with the oldest man who was
wearing the English khaki in the present
war and it was during this audience
with the King that he asked my opinion
of the Americans as soldiers, and if 1
thought they could stand the test with
so little preliminary training. I stood
attention to the King during all this un/ll
he said: ‘Be seated; you are too old a
man to stand.’ Of course I obeyed and
then I replied to his question about
Americans, by asking one; Your Ma
jesty,’ said I, ‘Do you think the Cana
dians have stood the test?’ He replied:
’They have made a place for themselves
in history.’ ’Then, your Majesty,’ said
I, ‘The Americans will do the same thing,
because the Canadians and the Ameri
cans are the same sort of people with
the same customs and the same ability.
The only difference between them is that
they live on different sides of the Great
Lakes. They will stand the test just
as the Canadians have stood it.”
As I walked down the street yester
day, about 10 feet behind Sapper Boucher,
with whom I had an appointment at the
Jefferson a few minutes before the ini
tial matinee of the great war picture,
•‘America at War,” which is being shown
there this week, I mentally noted the
splendid physique and supercarriage of
the man ahead of me; Sapper Boucher
walks with a spring and a swing and
a bearing that is unbelievable for a man
of his age—73; I won’t say 73 years, but
as our good friend, Dr. Oliver Wen
dell Holmes, put it “73 years young,”
for that, indeed, is what any one would
think of Mr. Boucher; his figune is as
erect and straight as a boy of ‘-5; his
bright, twinkling eyes are filled with the
courage of youth as well as with the
wisdom of age; his slightly gray-tinged
hair about his temples and his ruddy
skin proclaim youth rather than age—and
that he is a born fighter, is readily ob
served, especially when he speaks of his
hatred of the Germans, for then all the
vitality and vigor of his big manly body
are dominant in his expressive face and
his gesture as well as words.
“When I said in a city not far away
from here a few nights ago, some things
I thought about the Germans,” Mr.
Boucher observed, “a man said to me as
we left the theatre: ‘You were pretty
rough; didn’t you see that there were a
lot of Germans in the audience?’ Said
I: ‘I don't give a damn if they were;
I wish there’d been that many more, so
I could have told them, too, how I felt
toward them.
“And you can’t blame me. uear iau>,
he apologized, presently, “for using such
language as I do or feeling as L do about
the Huns; if you’d been ‘over there’ as
I have and you could see and know the
vile brutalities and atrocities committed
by those people, you'd swear, too. I
can’t even mention to you, a lady, nor
to an audience where always you’ll find
a large number of ladies, the things
I would like to of how the Germans have
treated women; they are unspeakable;
impossible. But some of them should be
known. Take, for instance, one little
incident, a Bed Cross nurse was caring
for two others—poor, pitiful women being
brought in from the firing line-these two
poor creatures groaning and moaning in
great distress, when some one asked
the nurse what the matter was; she
told them that the two nurses had had
their hands cut off above the wrists,
and each had her tongue cut off several
inches and both were victims of outrages
from German soldiers. Doesn’t that
make your blood boll?”
“I met Miss Anne Morgan recently in
New York,’’ said Mr. Boucher. ’She, you
know, was one of the first at Bordeaux
when the wounded were brought in from
the battle of the Marne. I tat'.ed with
her of various incidents, one of which
shows the frightful ingratitude of the
Germans. A German general had been
fearfully wounded and a Red Cross nurse
had stayed by him and nursed the gen
eral through the dreadful crisis of ill
ness, like the saint that she was. When
she got ready to go, Hhe went to say
good-by to some of the prisoners and also
lo the,German general. When she ex
tended her hand he asked her to shake
“German fashion,’’ which, as you know,
is giving both hands. He grabbed her
hands roughly and before she knew what
was happening he had broken both her
wrists anti damning her, said he’d fix her
so she'd never be able to nurse ano.her
soldier.
“Do you think that a Canadian can
forget those things?” Mr. Boucher asked.
“No; a Canadian is like an Indian, he
never forgets, and we haven’t and never
shall forget Sergt. Harry Band or
the Fifteenth Canadians, whom our boys
found crucified to a barn door by the
Germans. We don’t forget anything,
and we are going to see to it that the
Germans pay, pay, pay to the last drop
of blood. Peace could never be declared
without victory. We’ve got to win and
we are doing it. The American soldiers
‘over there* feel just as we do, for they
know how the Germans have turned all
the venom and hatred that they've had
for the English and thq Canadians to
the Americans. God! how they hate
Americans! The outcome of this war de
pends now absolutely upon the rapidity
with which the United States can get
troops to the front; that’s all.
“I recall last July when the engineering
“PURITY AT PARKER'S”
Plumosus
Ferns
In Pots
15 cents
Two for 25c
Tuesday
No telephone orders
accepted. No deliveries
^3
PARKER’S
Flower Store
Woodward Building
The Convenient Corner
Phone M. 918
SAPPER JOHN BOUCHER
Seventy-three-year-old veteran of the civil war, who came over on the
same ship with Lord Reading of England recently, after serving with
the Canadian engineering corps on the Flanders front for eight months.
Mr. Boucher is the guest of Birm ingham for a few days with the big
“America at War” picture now show ing at the Jefferson theatre.
corps to which I was attached turned
over 60 miles of railroading to the Amer
icans and how those fellows finished up
things,’’ said Mr. Boucher.” Shelled by
long range guns during their work, the
American engineers found themselves in
the midst of the melee and fight around
the Cambrai front and a group of nine
Americans who were caught in a trap
Vith three times as many Germans ab
solutely cleaned up the entire lot, six out
of the nine Americans returning un
harmed.
“One cf the most horrible examples of
what Canadians hold against the Ger
mans,” Air. Boucher said, ‘‘is a returned
soldier of ours who today is just a shed
of a man. He is kept in a basket like a
baby, for his hands, eyes and feet are
gone. He is the most horrible sight you
ever saw and when he came back to his
home when his young wife saw him she
went raving crazy, and is today in a
lunatic asylum—the, two, one no less
than the other—victims of German bru
tality.”
Bitter animosity for the Huns, how
ever, is not Sapper John Boucher’s most
remarkable trait, for by far the most de
lightful and fascinating thing about this
splendid .3 years “young” veteran of two
wars is his healthy optimism, buoyancy
of heart, and firm belief that the allied
nations of the world will soon wear the
victor’s crown. His divine faith in the
frfcsh, virile, well-clad, courageous Amer
ican air, marching side by side writh his
own native soldiers, the Canadians, who
will eventually destroy the Boche army,
at present spent and weary, reduced to
tired old men and mere lads, ill cared for
and tired of the struggle, who just see
as does this splendid old veteran hero
that their leader, the mighty Kaiser, self
styled “the right arm of the Almighty,”
is now withered and snauerea almost to
the breaking point.
Orders for 100,000 Cars
Will Be Placed at Once
Washington, April 22.—Orders for 300,
000 freight and coal cars, containing a
large proportion of wood in order to save
steel for shipbuilding and other war pur
poses, will be placed probably this week
by the railroad administration with
about 15 leading car manufacturers. The
contracts will total about $300,000,000, rep
resenting profits to manufactures of prob
ably 5 or 6 per cent, about half the rate
first demanded by them in negotiations
with John Shelton Williams, director of
purchases of the railroad administration.
Quantity delivery of the cars will be
gin in about four months, and all prob
ability will be completed in six months,
when more will be ordered. Within two
weeks, Mr. Williams expects to order part
of the 2000 new locomotives which rail
roads will need this year.
NO ADVANCE IN PRICE
I/CORE THROAT
j or Tonsilitis—gargle
^ JP or Tonsilitis—gargle
, with warm, salt water
^ then apply—
m
Little Body-Guard inTbtir Home'
ICK5VAP0RU
25c—50c—$1.00
r---\
tfie best thing to leave g
TAB
Homefolks and
Friends
when you go <o nnr Is a
STEPHENSON
Studio Photograph
of Yourself
V..... J
r^please dorit break up
anoiher partij^
No one knows the humiliation of be
ing a “wall flower’’ better than the girl
with a red, rough, pimply complexion.
If your skit '.s not fresh and smooth,
or has suffered from an unwise use of
cosrr odes,try ResinolSoap and Resinol
Ointment for a week and see if they
don’t begin to mafceablessed difference.
They also help to make hands and arms
soft and white, and to keep the hair
live, glossy and free*from dandruff.
All druggists and dealers in toilet goods sell Res
inol Ointment and Resinol Soap. You’d better try
them ! Trial free. Write Dept. S-S, Resinol, Balti
more, Md.
Dalton
FACTS
No. 4
Why the U. S. Steel Corporation
uses over 250 Daltons
The Steel Corporation was quick to see 10-key simplicity and 10-key
efficiency. The DALTON stood up to their most exacting requirements.
Why should the Pennsylvania R. R., the American Radiator Co.,
the Chicago Elevated, the Western Electric, the American Steel and
Wire, and other nationally known corporations, buy hundreds of
DALTONS unless they are getting efficiency not to be had elsewhere ?
That is the point you should investigate. Time spent learning the
superiority of the DALTON will be money in your pocket.
Let us demonstrate the DAL TON in your own office
■Mt I* THE DALTON ADDING JNAtHlNE CO.. CINCINNATI, OHIO
See the machine with only 10 keys, one
for each numeral, that puts each figure
in its proper place automatically.
See the machine that can be operated
like a typewriter or a piano, without look
ing at the keys—that holds the record
for speed.
The DALTON saves eye-reference to
keys, is fastest for novice or expert and
is the only machine that anyone can use
i at sight.
You men who are giving your trained
assistants to the great service of liberty—
get this big idea.
Only 10 keys. A machine you can actu
ally use yourself. An inexperienced girl
can use it at once. She will soon turn
out work with a speed impossible on old
style machines.
See the 10-Key DALTON. Call or
phone for demonstration.
Birmingham Salas Agent: S. M. HANBY
Phone Main 2324 627 Jefferson Bank Bldg.
/ /
ADDING AND
CALCULATING MACHINE

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