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DR. HAUX—The Spectacle Man—ST. LOOT!
pu agreed s
I complete
fleet Vision”
:lck to that
w I herewith enclose this four-dollar coupon, which
r in the above advertisement to accept in full aJ
payment of a brand new pair of your famous “H
glasses, and I am certainly going to make youj
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My age is M
Karac 1 Postothce M
S3,Rural Route and Box No State.*,
THE
IRLS DROP PITCHFORK
AND PLOW FOR SOCIETY
USELESS GIVING AND
ffishop
USELESS GETTING
W. A, Candler
Above, Otilla and Frieda. Baltz; below, William Balts and Katie.
(Special Dispatch to The Journal.)
MILSTADT, Ill., Jan. 6.—While the
three Misses Wilson are making their
debut in Washington, D. C., society
from the White House at one end of
Pennsylvania avenue, three farmer girls
will enter the same existence of gayety,
dances, receptions and all that from
the other end of the same well known
thoroughfare.
Tl}ey are Katie, Frieda and Ottilia,
daughters of Congressman-elect Wil
liam Baltz, who came through via the
landslide last November.
Congressmamto-be Baltz is a farm
er; besides which he runs a bank and
a mill and a few other things in and
around Milstadt. And Katie, Frieda
ana Ottilia are real farmers!
Katie is twenty-three; Frieda, twenty;
Ottilia, eighteen. During the farming
season they ask no oclds of any hired
man on their father’s big place. For
them it’s 3 a. m. every morning, and
work in the lields until the cows come
heme in the dewy eve. 4 ,
Tijey harness their teams, as quickly
as' the men folks can, and drive as
well.
Tliey -plant the corn and other seed,
riding the planter up and down the
field as jauntily as the society girl
guides her electric along the city
streets.
sowing ..is
done, KaTie, Lire a a and Otilia take to'
the cultivator as ducks do to water.
When the wheat is to be put, Katie,
Frieda and Ottilia “follow the* binder,”
gathering and stacking the sheaves.
When the corn is ripe, Katie, Frieda
rnd Ottilia cut stalks, stack them, and
later qn husk the ears.
Between times all they do is to help
Teed and care for the live stock, at
tend to the milking, butter-churning and
poultry, and haul the farm produce to
the mill or elevator.
And Katie, Frieda and Ottilia have
found time to learn to play the family
piano well, sing, and read whole shelves
of good literature!
Now they are going on to Washing
ton with their dad. They are set on
making a “showing” in the society
down there. In the parlor of the big
farm home they sat discussing their
chances.
“I know the square dances,” ex
plained Miss Frieda, “and I am going
to a dancing school when we get to
Washington and learn oiner dances,
too.”
“Well, as for me, I wouldn't learn
se dances, the newspapers speak so
^ully about,” said Miss Katie, “and
can’t find enough nice folks there
society I will come back home.”
So, while their dad is making laws
for the nation, Katie, Frieda and Ot
tilia, garbed in the latest Mnstadt cre
ations, will venture upon their social
campaign. —.
Of course the girls can’t do the “bun
ny-hug,” They don’t know the A C
of bridge, and never saw an opera. A
male butterfly of society garbed in a
full dress suit will be stranger to them
than a dodo. They never saw a taxi, or
a bottle of champagne; and of all
things! a low-necked gown won't be in
their collection of trunks. They’ve
never saw the interior of a Pullman
car.
Now, maybe you begin to realize the
size of their undertaking—breaking in
to exclusive society where it is of no
earthly benefit to possess a record of
stacking wheat, shucking corn or
plowing. t
Tall, broad shouldered Congressman
Baltz and the girls’ mother, who tells
with a deal of pride that she once
walked between the plow handles, will
back the girls to the limit.
BANK OP MAYSVILLE
INCREASES CAPITAL
MAYSVILLE, Ga., Jan. 4.—The an
nual meeting of the stockholders of
the Bank of Maysville was held here
yesterday. More tj»an three-fourths * of
the stock was Represented either by
the owners or others h©lding # their
.proxy. A sepaL-annual dividend of 4 per
cent was declared and the rest of * • •
earnings passed up to undivided profits.
By unanimous vote the captial stock
was increased from $15,000 to $25,000.
The new stock was all taken by the
stockholders present.
The following directors were elected
for another year: C. T. Bacon, D. J.
Brock, J. O. Bryan, E. C. Jackson, A.
M. Chandler, M. C. Sanders, H. P.
Camp, W. H. T. Gillespie and J. A.
Sasser.
J. A. Sasser was elected president;
Dr. E. C. Jackson and H. P. Camp, vice
presidents, and M. C. Sanders, cashier.
DIAMOND BROOCH FOUND;
STORY EXAGGERATED
(Special Dispatch to The Journal.)
WASHINGTON, Jan. 5 —The diamond
broach, which Miss Lucy Hoke Smith,
daufchter of Senator Hoke Smith, lost
at /the navyi yard dance last Saturday
night has been returned to Miss Smith
by a youn;r lady friend, who found the
ornament. It had caught in the friend’s
dress.
Senator Smith stated today that, the
reports sent out as to the value of
the brooch were greatly exaggerated—
that it only cost $300 and was pur
chased by his daughter with a gift left
to her by her grandmother and on that
account it was prized very highly.
«?*S WG&SZM Gi
DoYou Feel
This Way?
Backache or Headache
Dragging Down Sensations
Nervous—Drains—
Tenderness Low Down,
]
It is because of some derangement or disease
distinctly feminine. Write Dr. R. V. Pierce’s
Faculty at Invalids’ Hotel, Buffalo, N.Y.
Consultation is free and advice is strictly
confidence.
Dr. Fierce’s f^avorife prescription
restores the health and spirits and removes those '
painful symptoms mentioned above. It has been
sold by druggists for over 40 years, in fluid form,
at 51.00 per pottle, giving general satisfaction. It can
now be had in tablet form, as modified by R.V. Pierce, M.D.
B (Sold by Medicine Dealers or trial box! .
> mail on receipt of SQo in stamps j
In New York there has been or
ganized a “Society for the Prevention
cf Useless Giving”. Its president is
Mrs. August Belmont, (ind among its
members is Col. Theodore Koosevelt, a
gentleman who is somewhat addicted
to the habit of joining new things.
Doubtless there is need for concerted
action to arrest useless giving. The
holiday season witneses to good deal
of foolish giving of needless things
to the well-to-do and the rich. There
are also not <*% few gifts made to the
poor which are something worse than
useless, which are absolutely injurious.
There is a pernicious form of careless
charity which breeds the iiicst demor-
lizing and degrading types of mendi
cancy. There are also certain popular
“hold-ups” carried on by young women
on yyhat are called “tag days” which
should be frowned upon by good people;
for they engender evils worse than the
ills which they are designed to remedy.
But W'hile all this is true, there is
much more urgent need for some effort
to discourage useless getting in our
country than there is necessity for a
society to prevent useless giving. The
acquisitive powers of the American
people are developed out of all propor
tion to their faculties of benevolence,
and a mania for getting money pos
sesses the whole nation. It. affects all
classes and inflames social antagonisms
of the most dangerous sort.
The poor are affected by it, or per
haps we should say the classes which
account themselves poor because they
do not possess as much as they desire,
although having comfortable homes and
all their real wants abundantly sup
plied. They live under intense strain
and indulge a hurtful discontentment
which robs their hearts of peace and
their homes of happiness. They do not
suffer themselves to enjoy what they
have because they are so bent upon
getting more.
The rich are affected by this wretch
ed distemper. They have the means to
cultivate their minds py reading and
their hearts by active benevolence, but
most of them do neither the one nor
the' Other. They are so absorbed in
useless getting that they lose interest
in the things which make for Intel
lectual culture and destroy their capaci
ty for reading and reflecting upon higher
themes than money-making. Outside
the limits of money-getting and money
spending the rich among us are as a
general thing a very stupid .and ignor
ant lot.' Just the other day an Ameri
can millionaire, who was once a senator
of the United ^States by the power of
his money-bags, made himself the
laughing-stock of two continents by his
foolish expenditures in purchasing pic
tures in London. ' He has spent a life
time in useless getting, and does not
know what to do with the needless
hoards** which he has accumulated.
Nevertheless he continues to get more,
although he is now an old man and
evidently lacks the ability to use wisely
'what he has already' gathered together.
There are men, more thoughtful than
this (lull ex-senator, who nevertheless
are as foolish as he in the matter of
useless getting. They allow ^themselves
little or no leisure in which to enjoy
the pleasures of home-life and to se
cure its spiritual benefits. They are too
hurried in the morning to hold fam
ily prayers and too tired at night to
give thanks to God for the mercies of
thie day. They can not take time enough
to go home for luncheon at mid-d'ay.
Arid all their hurrying and scurrying
they practice In order to get money*
they do not need and which they can
not turn to good account when they
get it. This insatiable desire to get
gain is the quintescence of that covet
ousness which the Scriptures denounce
asf idolatry. Tne Greek word in the
New Testament which we translate
“covetousness” simply means grasping
for more.
Why should any man seek to acquire
more than is needed for the mainte
nance of himself and those dependent
upon him, unless he proposes some
benevolent work which cap not be done
without money?
John Wesley’s rule was “make all you
can, save all you can, and give all
you can”; and that is a very good rule
if it is observed as Wesley obeyed it.
Early in life he found he could live
decently and comfortably on twenty-
eight pounds a year, and he resolved
never to spend more than that upon
himself 'annually. In later years his an
nual. income from his books and other
sources greatly exceeded the modest
sum of twenty-eight pounds, and he re
ligiously gave away what he made.
When he died, although he had been a
poor man all his days. It was discoyer-
< ed th'at he had expended for the bless-
i ing of others above $250,000 and had
bestowed less than $20,000 upon him
self. Let a man of that sort get 'as
• much as he can, will never fall
| into the foolish habit Of useless get-
I ting; but one who accumulates simply
to have and to hold property falls into
a temptation and a snare and pierces
himself through with many sorrqws.
Nothing is less admirable than a man
who turns himself into a coagulating
basin for storing stagnant stuff.
Of course, men absorbed in useless
getting offer many specious defenses
for their mistaken course. One of their
common pleas in extenuation of their
fault is the claim that they are trying
to make provision for their children
after # they have gone the way of all the
earth. Yet in moments of sober
thought, they will admit that their
money is the ruin of their children and
that it would be better for their off
spring to inherit less property and ac\
quire higher character. It is not for
their children that men who are addicted
to useless getting toil/and strive; it is
for their own gratification.
They go hunting for money as some
men go hunting f6r birds; they take all
in sight, although the game may spoil
in their hands. Our laws limit the
number of birds that greedy sportsmen
may kill in a day; but there seems to
be no limit to the useless getting of
dollars. Yet many an over-grown for
tune smells to heaven with the moral
putrefaction which it has wrought in
the children who inherit it. The gain
ful father took too much game in the
fields of mammon, and the children die
of moral ptomaine from feeding on it.
It is of the last importance that a
man who has a gift for getting money
should study also how to use it well;
for otherwise he will do a great deal
of getting that will be worse than use
less. It is at this point our civiliza
tion is decidedly*lop-sided. As a nation
we have developed enormous powers of
getting wealth; but we show ridiculous
ly small ability to expend it wisely.
'Many of our rich men who show in the
counting house the ability of princes
of commerce, reveal positive babyish
ness in the use to which they put their
money. They use their wealth as a
child would use a toy. They bore them
selves and each other with inane en
tertainments of a costly sort, and when
the vapid occasions have passed they
confess that they have victimized them
selves. To a thoughtful man, who has
an eye for discerning the ridiculous,
nothing is more laughable than a com
pany of serious business men inflicting
on themselves a conventional “func
tion.” The comedy would me a “roaring
farce,” if it 'did not involve so much
of moral tragedy.
Moreover, not a few men of wealth
«how themselves to poor advantage
when they honestly try to be benevolent
The history of philanthropy in our coun
try is filled with the annals of freakish
gifts. Stephen Girard, for example,
knew how. to make a fortune, and when
he died he bequeathed a very large sum
for the v founding of Girard college;^ but
he coupled' with the legacy such con
ditions as have made his memory a dis
honor and his gift far less fruitful of
good than it might have been, if he
had possessed as much sense about giv
ing money as he had ability for get
ting it. Very few men who have devel
oped and displayed large powers for get
ting money have shown anything like
equal ability ip disposing of it. It is
a high art to know how to give gifts
unto the world. The world has produced
an oversupply of great military com
manders; most of the Alexanders, Cae
sars and Napoleons might have beer,
spared without the race suffering any
very material loss. There have sprung
from Adam’s race a .great number of
great philosophers and statesmen, very
many of whom mankind could have dis
pensed with er.i3ily and incurred thereby
no serious diminution of its real good
But the stock of truly wise philan
thropists has always been very small.
Midas and Croesus have been followed
with an innumerable company of mis
guided men wfiro have waited their lives
in useless getting of money; but the
number of those who hive known how
to give wisely, as well as get abun
dantly, would not make a list too long
for even a feeble mind to “learn by
heart” and carry without taxing the
memory.
Mrs. Belmont’s society for the pre
vention .of useless giving is rather too
negative in its character. It were bet
ter to have a society for the promotion
of useful giving. It is «3afe to say that
such a society, if conducted in a sane
way, would severely exclude “monkey-
dinners” and such like from the list of
things which exemplify the right use
of money. It would doubtless “cut out’
some of the habitual expenditures of
the leading members of the ,4 Spugs So
ciety” (the “Society for the Prevention
of Useless Giving”). And it would prob
ably condemn a great deal of the use
less getting which many of the “Spugs’
indulge.
COL DEL FUNG0 GIERA IS
SHOT FOR HIGH TREASON
»
Wealthy Californian Who Join
ed Madero Is Executed for
being Friendly to Diaz
(By Associated Rresl)
SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 4<—‘Word was
received here yesterday of the execu
tion in Mexico City, December 23, of P.
L. E. Del Fungo Giera, who had a me
teoric career in San Francisco financial
circles ten years ago.
The information received in a private
letter was to the effect that Giera,
after accepting a colonelcy in one of
Madero’s regiments, became friendly
with Felix Diaz and was captured in
the latter’s ranks when the revolution
dissolved at Vera Cruz. A courtmartial
convicted Giera of high treason, the let
ter says, and he was shot.
Giera came here from Germany
twelve years ago, bringing his bride,
the daughter of a noble German family.
He made a fortune in the operation of
a tannery, which he sold and invested
the proceeds in San Francisco real es
tate after the great fire.
About a year ago his wife r«t ’
Germany and he enlisted under Madero,
who twice complimented him for
bravery.
BETTER THAN SPANKING
bed-wetting-. There is a constitutional
cause for this trouble. Mrs. M. Sum
mers, Box 327, South Bend, Ind., will
Send free to any mother her successful
home treatment* with full instructions.
Send no money, but write her today if
your children trouble you Ip this way.
Don’t blame the child: the Chances are
it can’t help it. This treatment also
cures adults and aged people troubled
with urine difficulties bv day or night.
Health is the foundation of all good
looks. The wise woman realizes this
and takes precautions to preserve her
health and strength through the pe
riod of child bearing. She remains a
pretty mother by avoiding as far as
possible the suffering and dangers of
such occasions. This every woman
i may do through tbe use of Mother’s
Friend. This is a medicine for
external application and so penetrating
in its nature as to thoroughly lubricate
every muscle, nerve and tendon .in
volved during the period before baby
comes. It aids nature by expanding
the skin and tissues, relieves tender
ness and soreness, and perfectly pre
pares th§ system .
for nattiiral and CfWryffVl/ZA
safe motherhood. “te
Mother’s Friend
is sold at drug
stores. Write for free book for ex
pectant motliers, which contains much
valuable information.
p*Mnrr*ll, pr^uiATfR CO.. >'*»«»«. C*.
Low-
Fares!
On tbe 1st and 3rd Tuesdays
of each month the fares are
extra low — and allow stop
overs free and 25 days time—
via Cotton Belt Route to
Arkansas
& Texas
The Cotton Belt Route is the
direct line from Memphis to
Texas, through Arkansas —
two splendid trains daily, with
through sleepers,chair cars and
parlor-cafe cars. Trains from
all parts of the Southeast make
direct connection at Memphis
with Cotton Belt Route trains
to the Southwest.
Write to me today
I will tell you exact fare
from your town, sched
ule, and send you splen
did illustrated books of
farm facts about Arkan
sas and Texas.
L. P. SMITH,
Traveling Passenger Agent
2028 First Avenue
Birmingham, Ala.
All year Tourist
Tickets also on
sals Daily to cer
tain pointsinTex*
as. 90-days limit.
Good Advice to Rheumatics.
If you want a permanent cure of
Rheumatism, you must correct the cause
in the body which .creates Rheumatism.
Powerful drugs relieve for a time, but
the bodily irregularities keep on work
ing unless checked by proper correctives.
Thus repeated attacks finally cause
Chronic Rheumatism. Bodi-Tone per
manently cures such disorders by cor
recting the bodily conditions which
cause them. You can try a dollar box
without a penny. See offer op last page.
(Advt.)
h This Man Gifted
With Strange
Power ?
Prominent People Say He Reads
Their Lives as an Open Book
end Me One Cent
when you answer this announcement, as I am going to mail you a brand
new pair of my wonderful "Perfect Vision” glasses (known in the spec
tacle business as “lenses”) absolutely free of charge as an advertisement, j
As soon as ypu get them I want you to put them on your
eyes, sit down in front of the open hearth one of these cold>
wintry nights, and you’ll be agreeably surprised to discover*
that you can again read the very finest print in your bible
with them On even by the dim firelight; you’ll find
that you can again thread the smalleet-eyed needle you
can lay your hands on, and do the finest kind of em-|
broidery and crocheting with*
them on, and do it all night
long, if you like, without any/
headaches or eye-pains, andl
with as much case and comfort'
as you ever did in your life.
Or, if you’re a sportsman and like tet #0
out hunting occasionally, just shoulder yojUr
gun and go out into the woods some aafrly
„ .... . morning when the haze Is yet in the air,/a/nd
a / - you’ll be* greatly delighted when you /drop
* the smallest bird off the tallest tree-tc>p/ at
, the very first shot sure, with the herlp of
these wonderful “Perfect Vision” glasses of mine. And in the evfeijing.
when the shadows are gathering in the twilight, you’ll easily distingjilfeh a
horse from a cow out iri the pasture at the greatest distance and aslrar as
your eye can reach with them on—and this even if your eyes are #>/very
weak now that you cannot even read the largest headlines in this pay^fr.
Now Don’t Take My Word For k
but send for a pair at once and try them out yourself for readinfe,, sewing,
hunting, driving, indoors, outdoors, anywhere and everywhere anyway
and everyway. Then after a thorough tryout, if you find Ah at every
word I have said about them is as honest and as true as gospel, and if
they really have restored to you the absolute perfect eyesie/bt of your
early youth, you can keep them forever without one cent of vf&y, and
Just Do Me A Good Turn
by showing them around to your friends and neighbors, and /speak a good
word for them whenever j>ou have the chance. Won’t you iftelp me intro
duce my wonderful “Perfect Vision” glasses in your legality on this
easy, simple condition? . I
If you are a genuine, bona-fide spectacle-wearer (no# children need
apply) and want to do me this favor, write your name, sMdiress and age
on the below four-dollar coupon at once, ajjd this will entiflUs you to a pair
of my famous “Perfect Vision" glasses absolutely free Wof charge as an
advertisement. |
Write your name, address and age on the below co
J3
15.
Eleyjbn Jeweled
Genuine .lev tn jeweled watoh, worth |16 to anyone who require' an al
r and a watoh that will late a lifetime. Loeomoiivt
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or medium weight solid orWilver duitproo' eersweata.
£0 YEAH
ftUAT -nlTKC
,e eleven jeweled
f reliable timek
•tamped and
A qulek train, fitted
I) both eaae and work* a
' a aow Meads and
’ this elegant watch to
this advertisement ■
paid. Satisfaction
rare*
ly guaranteed for SO years. To advert It. ou.’ business
our great catalogue of Elgin watobes we will send
dress by mall postpaid for O N LY $3.76, 8 * , “*
76 and watoh will be sent to you by return mall post
refunded. Band fd.76 today. Addrera
* CO., 6S8 So. Dearborn SI.. CHICAGO.
Do You Want to Know About
Your Business, Marriage,
Changes, Occupation, Friends,
Enemies or What to Do
to Achieve Success?
TEST READINGS FREE TO ALL
ATLANTA JOURNAL READ
ERS WHO WRITE AT ONCE.
Attention of the mystically Inclined seems
to be centered at present upon tjie work
Mr. Clay IJmton Vance* who, although lay
ing claim to no
special gift of
8 u per n a tural
powers, attempts
to reveal the lives
of people through
the slender clues
of hand-writing
and birth-dates.
The undeniable
accuracy of his
de 1 i neat ipns
leads one to sur
mise that here
to Mre palmists,
prophets, astrol
ogers, and seers
of divers beliefs
have failed to
apply the true
principles of the
science of divi
nation.
Askcfi to . ex
plain the method
by which he give?
his delineations.
Mr. Vance , re
plied: “I have
simply resurrect
ed an ancient sci
ence and mould
ed it Into a key to
human nature.”
The following
letter is pub
lished ns evi
dence of Mr. Vance’s ability*
Prof. Dixon, M. A., Director Lanka Ob
servatory, member of the “Soclete Astro-
nomlque de France,” member of the ‘‘Astro-
nomiqtie Gesellschaft.” Germany, writes:
Prof, Clay Burton Vance:
Dear Sir—“I duly received your letter and
Complete Life Reading. I am perfectly satisfied
with your Reading; it Is In nearly all the
Items as exact as it could possibly (ie. It
seems strange that you should refer to my
suffering from throat trouble. I have Just
had a imd flttuck and usually nave It two or
three times per year. I shall certainly recom
mend you to my friends who desire a Life
Reading.”
Arrangements have been made to give free
test Readings to all readers of The Journal,
but It Is especially requested that those who
wish to avail themselves of tb*» generous of
fer make application at once. If you wish
a delineation of your own life, if you wish a
true description of your characteristics, talentc
and opportunities, simply send your full name,
the date, month and year of your birth (state
whether Mr.. Airs., or Miss), and also copy
the following verse in your own handwriting:
“Your power is marvelous,
So people write.
Please read my lift*—
Are my prospects bright—*
Send your letter to Mr. Clay Burton Vance.
Suite 730-C, Palais Royal, Paris, France. If
you wish you may enclose 10 ccnrs (stamps o*.
your own country) to pay postage, clerical
work, etc. Please not^ vi>«* * «'>nts postage
is required on letters posted to France. Do
not enclose coins or silver in your letter.
ATLANTA JOURNAL INAUGURATION
Name of Student ....
Home of Student ...
Name of College ...
Where located ...
Must Be Voted/On or Before
17, 1913. , >
CAMPAIGN V0TING COUPON
ATLANTA JOURNAL INAUGURATION
N"ame of Student
Home of Student
Name of School .. t v.v«
Where located
Must Be Voted On or Before
JANUARY 17, 1913.
CAMPAIGN VOTING COUPON
AGENT OR
CARRIER.
ATLANTA JOURNAL INAUGURATION
Name of A*gent or Carrier
Home of Agent or Carrier
Name of School attended .*
Where Located
Must Be Voted On or Before
JANUARY 17, 1913.
CAMPAIGN VOTING COUPON