1 s PENS ACOL A JOURNAL. MONDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 2,1920 EIGHT THE I', t - S' . ; . . 1 'I a v ll I MlCUAEiZJ-STERV VALix-r:asr CLOTilSi From Sun Kissed Spain comes a navel olive shade that we'll rut against any other hat color brought out this season. Just enough brown to keep the frreen from looMngtoo fresh and the partic ular shape we have in mind could grace the brow of a deacon without alarming his flock. If you haven't time today we wish you'd run in and holler "I read your Olive ad in The Journal" and extem- pore we'll trot out the finest looking soft hat that you ever sr.v for eight dollars and a half in American money. l.TSS You can make Wash Day" a pleas ure by calling either of us. Star Laundry Empire Laundry Perfection Laundry Associated Advertising Launderers, Cleaners, Dyers Please Remember That we carry a Most Com plete Line of OFFICE SUPPLIES OFFICE FURNITURE LOOSE LEAF LEDGERS BINDERS INDEXES FILES Senhusch Self-Closing INK STANDS Schaeffer's feelf-Filling FOUNTAIN PENS 1920 CALENDAR PADS SHARP-POINT PENCILS MAYES PRINTING COMPANY OUALITY PRINTING MODERN OFFICE KOI IPMENT AND OFFICE Sl IM'LIES Phone 181 20-22 W. GOVERNMENT ST. NORTHUP & WOOD FUNERAL DIRECTORS AND EMRALMERS Ambulance Service Day or Night. Phones 59, 53 or 56 Office 12 cad 11 W. Intendentla St. L. E. NOBLES & CO. Agents Hart Schaffner & Marx and Kiischbaum Suits EVERLASTING FABRICS CO. Pensacola'is Representative Store THE CENTRAL PHARMACY "In the Heart of Pensacola" THE HOME OF QUALITY ICE CREAM 177 Phors 178 nV ' HI Uft III , FISHER-BROWN We Will Bond You 918 Pliones 910 Vhon 1785 FALLING PR AREPROPHE READJUSTMENT CERTAIN, SAYS EXTENDED " DEPRESSION MAY BE AVOIDED. Prospects of falling prices are dis cussed by the National Bank of Com merce in New York in the February number of Commerce Monthly, the bank's publication, just issued. The bank, while not predicting a definite time when price readjustment, may be expected, mantains that the process need not mean disruption to business. "If, when the tide turns." .says the bank, "readjustment is not too long resisted and production is not too much slowed down, and if the situation is flexible and competitive, we may ex pect to meet the reaction without dis aster. The country is not as well braced now for reaction as it was at the time of the armistice,, bitf so many of our major industries are irr an exceedingly strong position, and our banks are as a whole in such ex cellent condition, that we should view the prospect without undue appre- ! hension. "The question of price readjustment in the United States is tied up with our attitude toward - Europes econ nomic recovery. If it is felt that we pre in a common economic future. 1 active. As a part of such a policy, new continuance of our exports essential tO reconstruction would delay the pro cess of price readjustment. "Withdrawal of the present exten sions of credit to support exports to! Europe would soon check the present abnormally one-sided trade. This would necessitate our domestic mar ket's absorbing three or four hundred j million dollars' worth of goods each month which our market has not ha i" ( to absorb during 1910. With goods thrown back on the domestic market in this volume a relaxation of the strain in our commodity markets would follow. Two possibilities would then be opened. On the one hand, we might have a speedy readjustment of prices and wages and a revival of busi ness activity on a lower level. On the other hand, if efforts were made to resist price reduction by artificial means, we would be exposed to the dangers of a painful period of real business depression. "When this readjustment comes, the business men of the country will have opportunity for the policy toward labor which will go far in making for industrial peace in the years that fol low. In so far as the balance sheets ! permit it, business men will find it wise to let prices go down first with out making too vigorous efforts to re duce wages. The natural, course of events will lead to substantial wage reductions in time. However, we can not expect to see wages recede, as rapidly or as far as prices, because the elimination of immigration in re cent years has left our labor supply relatively short. 'Even without reduc-' tion in wages, labor costs per unit of output will be reduced with the re storation of shop discipline and the cessation of overtime work." The chief cause of high prices out lined by the bank is the rhortage of sup-plies for the domestic market, due to the drain upon American produc tivity by Europe's demands. The short age has been accentuated by the cur tailment of output in many lines fol lowing the armistice. Other causes are the creation of an abnormal amount of credit by government loans for destructive purposes and extrav agance by the public in a post-armis-lice relaxation from war-time economy. Concerning the relation' of the value "THE BOYS IN THE OTHER CAR" tt ThE ANVIL ) InaHiii Y WELL CHORUS f I AWHILE t WHAOAVOrt KNOCKED J VAIUL. VUH J v -rH-rr s y2(r X ) cnoti x G sXLr a s . S VOOSE 60V5 V (MAKERS V .-V GK V hqte STP T COL RICHARD P. HOLi ' - i , r $ i ; Colonel Holz . will , be the chief speaker t the dedication of the Sal vation Army citadel .Tuesday after noon. The building is located at 14 W. Government. The colonel will be accompanied by Staff Captain and Mrs. David' Main Birmingham, En sign Ernest R. Holz, New York, and ether officers of. the army. Captain and Mrs. Bergen, officers in charge, ex tend invitations to the public to be present at the dedication. Captain Bergren has completed the j arrangements for the dedication and i the big quarters of the army .are all M" w . PUUllC. VaptitHl DCI &l 11U.3 UH- tiring in his efforts to get the building 'and have it finished as the home of the army, and its inception is due to the captain and his wife. of gold to prices, the bank has this to say: "The great change in price, in the United States has been due, not to a fall in the. value of gold, but to a rise in the values of goods. At the present j time, forces are at work tending to make the value of gold rise rather than fall. High prices and high wages are curtailing gold production, and with diminished production there has come also an increased industrial con sumption of gold. At the present time the arts and industries are consuming more gold in the United States than our gold mines are producing. If no ether factor were at work, this would mean in the long run a fall in prices." Double Its' Beauty! "Q-Ban" Hair Tonic Grows a Mass of Thick, Lovely Hair, Kills Dandruff, Too. After the first aplication of "Q-Ban" (pronounced Ku-Ban) Hair Tonic, it changes your plain, dull, half dead, flat hair to one of shimmering beauty. Your hair soon becomes abundant, soft, glossy and full of snap and life. Q-Ban Hair Tonic dissolves the scales, dandruff and film of gVease which forms on the scalp and which soap cannot remove, removes the dust, dirt and excessive oil from your hair and scalp. Your "hair then quickly becomes a mass, so soft and lustrous and so pleasant to handle. Let Q-Ba.n Hair Tonic put more life, color and vigor in your ham The bald spots soon fill in writh new hair, so it grows long, thick and beautiful. Druggists or by mailr 50 cents. Address, Q-Ban, Mem phis, Tenn: Adv. , GROW SOFT LONG HAIR INFLUENZA PREVENTIVE SIMPLE AND EFFECTIVE (By Dr. M. O. Terry.) To protect, save the annoyance, avoid the danger and the awful mor tality of the "flu," requires simply just that attention that routine care requires to keep yourself in a ' good sanitary condition. Iast year I -.sent "a letter to a dis tinguished friend of mine, in fact, one of the " most prominent men in Florida Aslhe.is a humanitarian at heart he quicjcly. published the same knowing that I was' indifferent to such all announcement,- as I had withdrawn from active practice many . years ago. It was in 1872 when I began practice in Akron. ' I .was immediately initiated into a general spread -of what was de nominated ."epizootic." It was; as con tagious then as it is now under the ' nose sprays were used- I am not pre pared to say witK what efficacy. There is in the span of my active practice a line of facts well substantiated that this is a germ diseases, as is the La Grippe, epizootic or the flu, which may be a difference in degree and not in kind the same requirements for treat ment being the same. As , a throat specialist trained in Herman Knapp's School of Opthalmology, Otology and ! Laryngology, the New York Eye and Ear and the Manhattan, I have been familiar 'with the methods of 'the greatest schools on these line, so all or the various sprays and .treatments have been tested with questionable re sults. , When I note the confessed results of the treatment for re-visiting of the ' unwelcome flu, noting the awful raor jtality, especially in pneumonia, it ap pears io me mat any suggestion wnicn involves no danger, prevents the spread of the infection, should be con sidered by newspapers, public offi cers of authority, who have nothing to recommend .but a handkerchief to the nose, which handkerchief will contain' millions . of the germs throw into the atmosphere in the specks or Imt dis- j seminated by every use of the hand j kerchief- These germs are let loose in all of their activity and virulence. J After you have noted the great mor , tality of the disease in question in- stead of the ridiculous treatment ad vised, try what was tested last season on my recommendation expressed in i the Florida papers and in California through friends. My discovery of this treatment was laei'iueniai. 11 iijiug an on siray i years ago, I noticed that instead of getting these influenza attacks imme diately following the treatment, I had ceased to be infected with them, which ! the mimn within twenty-four hours, formerly carried me into a laryngitis, ' the Ptomain poison of which render then bronchitis of a septic nature re- j uncounted numbers of people invalids quiring many weeks to disappear. for a11 time' even If they survive the Cresoline, inhalation of Eucalyptus ' invasion of this calamitous germ dis vapor, and rock and rye now a thing jease- . of the past were tried, the latter! The question may arise by scientific quite fascinating. I am giving these Physicians as to " inhibition of germs facts to show the utter rot of the or- dinary recommendations and isolated treatment as carried out from the for um of official reference. Hundreds of lives were saved in Florida last year by the line of treatment re-stated. It means that it should be followed up sick or well with the regularity of the use of a hygen.ic tooth brush and to get rid of mouth germs the tongue should always be brushed with antiseptic solutions. The failure of previous treat ments suggested is due to the fact that drugs not in oil solution used as sprays" will not destroy the germs. Oil inhibits the growth of them. That is why if a medicated oil spray is used systematically at least morning and evening, more frequently under marked exposure, so that the mucous membrane has the ' spider netting of oil, as it were, the germ will not gain admittance into the circulation, thus avoiding systemic infection. This treatment cuts out the doctors, pre vent nose colds and the extension of the flu, which causes pneumonia Go to any drug store and get two ounces of liquid petroleum to which add one dram of Eucalyptus oil ? too irritating, double the oil or divide the Eucalyptus. Use any oil spray -By Grove "Discover s. RATTLEOF "BOTTLES J)N THE SO IT HyV.F i ifr- Did you ever tforikiof so like this Fashionable society is' to a man relaxation, to" woman a profession in which success means position, marriage, her heart's desire. To its glittering circle men bring wealth, women beauty, for the great exchange. Ah, the heartaches and the Jiidden "tears that sear the sou! behind' the smiling face in fashion's cold exchange "The Beauty Market." T 1.. n.V Kir Knnoccitv . Her Triumphant March to Wealth. 'night.-' ' fflWl 2Se " 5oe : rs GM." .:. ' ."FATTY" ARBUCKLE IN. "BACK S.TAGE" Ijnmm irtV As tast as a tk Kabbit In Front oi a I'rarie ure and as Hill or l.liuckles as a Selling riM: - - - - - Hil:-- -- ........ . 1 The best pocket one is No. 38, Wrhife-hall-Tatum, of New York. ., Inhale the spray fully in the nose and throat. Finally it is 'my belief that in spite of the questionable sneer of the doc- j tor that the mortality in these cases will be just about nil, and that ; tens of thousands of lives : will be saved in this country, - wrecked constitutions saved from infirmities due to these microscopical germs which multiply by ln an 011 solution, m reply win state that it has been proven that as the breathing apparatus of the germ is on the outside the germs are thus smoth ered immediately by contact with oil. TEACHERS ASK FOR ARMY PAY , BASIS Pittsburgh, Pa., Feb. 1 Thirttlen male teachers in the public schools of this city have made a proposition to the board of education to be put on an army basis for pay and subsistence. These teachers served with distinction in the world war and they ask the school board to give them $33 a- month !with board, clothes and lodging fur nished. They claim they do not get the equivalent of that now. As teachers their pay ranges from $12 to $217 a month. " v T O NIGHT . At the Big Tent Ed.C.Nutl Comedy jPlayers OFFER THE BIG DRAMATIC CROOK PLAY Ey WILUARI MACK WONDEROUS, ALLURING INTENSE KEST PLAY YET OFFERED Betler Than "Under -Cover" ALE NEW VALDEYILLE SAME BARGAIN PRICES LAST HALF THIS Yt'EEK "THE GRAFTERS" ANOTHER GOOD ONE " N ATI V E H ER B - TABLETS Lack of exercise, poor food, im proper digestion and mental worry often cause :- v. SICK HEADACHE Biliousness, Dyspepsia, Constipation and Stomach disorders, Bliss Native Herb Tablets are a great Kidney and Liver Regulator or 30 years recognized as the only standard herb remedy. Safe, gentle,' rvery. tablet contains this trade mark. Put up in two sizes, 50c and $1.00. Sold by leading druggists and local agents everywhere. Made by Alonzo O. BIis Co., Washington, I. c. "KICK IN" BLISS li inrlc I iva inrl I on lr-nc7 I mnPfl SAEXGEH MBIT '"" j'"1' '' mi u ' t-a Vii4 &3 uj hJ Vi It Purifies and Enriches the Blood. It Builds up and Strengthens the Whole System. It Fortifies the System Against Colds, Grip and Influenza. When cold damp weather chills the blood try taking GROVE'S TASTELESS Chill TONIC and see how Warm and Comfortable you feel when other folks around you are complaining of feeling chilly. This will prove tc you the value of GROVE'S TASTELESS Chill TONIC as a general strengthening tonic. It Improves the Appetite, Brings Color to the Cheek? ara Restores Vitality and Energy by Purifying the Blood and making it Rich. You can soon feel its strengthening, Invigorating Effect. It is acceptable to tne most delicate stomach and does not cause nervous ness oi; ringing in the head.- Very Pleasant to take. Price 60c. I n r as.. ... . TODAY HOUDINI GRIM GAME" A SL'PEJt -TIIRI LLEIl Two airplp.nes were racing throiielt 1 1 . - sky Hip firm .was lowered from ono with a third phmo following close to . "film'.' his leap onto tlie soc.nl j.l;ne jusi then the" pieces . crashed in. an ;trcil-Mit. luinil over and over and plunged to the ground :tKM fet helow. NOTE The Airplane: Accident Is Absolutely Aiitlirntie IXTEISXATIOXAL .NEWS, TOO mzj