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AMA

til he reaches the fifties, without realizing the hazard. It may take sudden business reverses or failing health to show him his insecure position.

The far-sighted man keeps prepared. He knows that his personal earning power must diminish sooner or later; but, in the meantime, he accumulates a fund of good bonds, sufficient to maintain the income which his circum stances require.

The modern idea of saving is not so much for some temporary emergency, as for insurance of adequate income through the years of declining personal earning power. In his prime, the average successful man nowadays ac

customs himself to a scale of living which cannot be sustained indefinitely unless there is a well invested surplus to fall back upon.

A clear outline of this problem and how to meet it is interestingly treated in our new booklet, "Looking Ahead Financially." It tells definitely how any man of good earning power can supplement and eventually replace current income with permanent incomethrough simple, business-like planning. We shall be glad to send you a copy.

LOOKING

AHEAD FINANCIALLY

Write for booklet AT-17

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Associated Gas and Electric System

Founded in 1852

Service to Large and Small

The operation of groups of properties under one central management provides improved service to small communities and a stronger financial position through:

(1) More experienced management, greater engineering skill, broader supervision; (2) large quantity buying of materials and supplies; (3) interchange of methods and personnel; (4) larger financial resources for construction and improvement; (5) production of electricity by larger, more up-to-date generating plants.

The Associated System has taken particular interest in building up high grade service for small communities. Some 18 municipal plants in Tennessee and Kentucky and many small plants in New York State and New England have recently been added. In these areas new construction and extension work is carried out. The local plants are supplemented by connecting them wherever desirable with the transmission lines of the System. The resulting improvements mean larger, better and more dependable service, growing numbers of customers and increasing demands for service. These in turn tend to promote business activity and community development.

Associated Gas and Electric Company

SSOCIATES
SYSTEM

GAS ELECTRIC
1857

Incorporated in 1906

Write for our booklet, "Interesting Facts"

Associated Gas and Electric Securities Company

61 Broadway

New York

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THE BRIGHT FACE OF DANGER. By Clifford M. Sublette. Boston: Little, Brown & Co. (Atlantic Monthly Press).

Mr. Sublette's first book won a prize and the present volume probably would have the same good fortune if it were entered in contest. It is historical and romantic drama al its best. The tale takes the reader back to the days when the Virginia plantations were the stamping grounds of adventurous young Englishmen, when the King was represented by Sir William Berkeley, who so muddled affairs as to bring to a head_the Bacon Rebellion. New York Evening Post.

$2.00 AT ALL BOOKSELLERS

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Serving the WORK
SHOP of America

In the territory just south of Chicago
and bordering the southern shore of
Lake Michigan industrial activities have
reached a high state of development.
Called the "crossroads of the continent"
this territory is a beehive of industry.
Subsidiaries of Midland Utilities Com-
pany supply electric light and power, gas
and transportation to 194 communities
inthisand adjoining territory. More than
28,000 stockholders share in the earn-
ings-and the 74.85 per cent increase in
electric sales and 20.27 per cent increase
in gas sales in 1925 indicate the region's
fast growing demand for utility services.
We represent public utility companies
operating in twenty states. Write
for further information.

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SERENITY and MATERIALISM

L

DET the poets and psychologists talk. We know that a satisfied and serene state of mind depends largely on material security.

Modern life insurance realizes this. You can now buy material security for yourself as well as for your dependents and heirs. We make arrangements of policies to fit every income and situation.

We have printed a booklet on this angle of insurance; it is called "A Satisfied State of Mind." Your local John Hancock office will be glad to send you a copy, or one can be obtained by writing to Inquiry Bureau,

John Hancock

LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

OF BOSTON. MASSACHUSETTS

197 Clarendon Street, Boston, Mass.

A.M.

CAUSES AND

THEIR CHAMPIONS By M. A. DeWolfe Howe

ONE

NE'S first reaction to Mr. Howe's book of historical and biographical studies is one of satisfaction and enjoyment because of its succession of graphic portrayals of character against scenes of equal interest; and the next is of wonder at the immense amount of work that went into the collection and study of the materials.

Mr. Howe's purpose is to make the book as a whole a portrayal of the reforming temper that filled the nineteenth century in America, and with this as a background to sketch under its illumination some of the people who were so identified with the reform movements as to become their champions. The result is a singularly fascinating mixture of history and biography.

The causes and their champions of which he writes are the Red Cross and Clara Barton; Temperance and Frances Willard; the New Uses of Great Wealth and the Rockefellers; Tolerance in Religion and Phillips Brooks, the American Labor movement and Samuel Gompers; Woman Suffrage and Susan B. Anthony; Negro Advancement and Booker T. Washington; World Peace and Woodrow Wilson. - The New York Times. $4.00 at all booksellers or

THE ATLANTIC MONTHLY BOOKSHOP 8 Arlington St. Boston

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FOR your January funds THE BALTI- Mortgage Company, which is the larg

MORE TRUST COMPANY offers real estate bond investments that combine a 6% yield with guaranteed first mortgage security. The underlying mortgages range from only 35% to 60% of the independently appraised value of the mortgaged properties.

THE MORTGAGE GUARANTEES Payment of principal and interest of each bond is the direct obligation of the Baltimore Mortgage Corporation. In addition, payment of principal and interest of the mortgages securing the bonds is guaranteed by a mortgage company in the locality in which the property is situated, and by the National Surety Company or the United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company. The National Surety Company and the United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company are the largest surety companies in America.

THE TITLE GUARANTEE

Titles to the mortgaged properties are
guaranteed by the New York Title &

6%

est title insurance company in America,
or by some other title company accept-
able to the surety company and THE
BALTIMORE TRUST COMPANY.

BOUGHT BY 300 BANKS
The bonds are sold with the recom-
mendation of THE BALTIMORE TRUST
COMPANY, a bank with resources of
Sixty-Five Million Dollars, whose real
estate bond offerings have been pur-
chased for the investment of deposit
and trust funds by more than 300 Na-
tional Banks, State Banks and Savings
Banks throughout the United States.

THE NATIONAL MARKET

THE BALTIMORE TRUST COMPANY dis-
tributes real estate bonds through its 15
offices in Baltimore, Md., and through
a number of banks and investment
dealers in various parts of the country.
These distributing facilities have en-
abled THE BALTIMORE TRUST COMPANY
always to obtain prompt and satisfac-
tory bids on real estate bonds which it
has distributed.

FOR YOUR JANUARY FUNDS

Bonds in coupon form are sold in $500 and $1,000 denominations, at
par and accrued interest, to yield 6%. For further information, and
for list of banks and investment dealers from whom these bonds
may be bought, write to THE BALTIMORE TRUST COMPANY, 25 East
Baltimore Street, Baltimore, Md. Ask for booklet No. 10

THE BALTIMORE TRUST COMPANY

The Largest Trust Company in the South Atlantic States
offering complete banking, trust and investment services.

CAPITAL AND SURPLUS $7,000,000

MEMBER

FEDERAL RESERVE TOTAL RESOURCES $65,000,000

SYSTE

75,000 DEPOSITORS

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