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PHE ATLANTA SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL, ATLANTA, GA., TUESDAY, JANUARY 14, 1913.
^pUAITR’Y
,rj0ME topkS
^POCTED Bt'J'TRS. \T. H-FELTO/l -
AN AGGRESSIVE CONSERVATISM AN
BY BISHOP
URGENT NECESSITY JUST NOW
W. A. CANDLER
“For age and want save while you may;
No morning's sun can last the livelong
day.”
. While I am a great believer in the
overruling providences of the Lord Al
mighty, I am equally a strong: believer
in the old saying, ‘‘God helps them who
help themselves.”
One of the most pitiful things in
everyday experience is the sight of help
less and dependent old age. It is cal
culated to drive from these old people a
spirit of contentment and they become,
as a rule, abnormally sensitive and
therefore continually unhappy.
Of course, you will know I am obliged
to speak generally.. Everybody will
doubtless tell of exceptions to this rule,
but as a rule the very fact of depend
ence will sour the sweetest dispositions,
and provoke a spirit of dissatisfaction
and discontent. I often think of Betty
Higdon, so wonderfully portrayed by the
master hand of Charles Dickens, a truly
honest, worthy woman, who had mortal
terror of the county poor house, and
who saved and skimped with her pennies
to preserve her proud feeling of inde
pendence.
You have likely heard the story of the
dependent old father, who was disagree
able when he dribbed with his eats and
drinks, and who was given his bite in a
wooden tray, while the over-nice family
ate at a well-appointed table. The little
grandson had a liking for carpenter
work and was often praised for his
clever aptness. But one day when he
was encouraged to show his smartness
to visitons and brought out some speci
mens of his skill he exhibited something
that was shaped like a bowl and still
like a platter. He brought the crimsor.
to his father’s face when the youth ex
plained that he had made it for his
father’s use, when the latter got as old
as grandpa.*”
“For age and want save while you may,
No morning’s sun can last the livelong
day.”
THE BEDBUG- PROBLEM.
December 5, 1912.
Mrs. W. H. Felton.
Dear Mrs. Felton: Can you or some
readers of our “Country Home” tell
us some method to rid an old-time
house of those dreadful pests, the bed
bug? We are goisg to move into such
a house and would be very, very glad to
know of an exterminator. If any one
cad give one, am sure'Mrs. Felton will
put it in our paper for the benefit of
many good housekeepers.
A Subscriber.
The foregoing explains is own pur
pose.
It is proper to say in this connection
that the bedbug problem has been be
fore the country so long that the house
keepers have learned to bring them in
to subjection. My mother used to tell
me that this housekeeping problem
could be solved try one Word, and
what it stood for, namely, cleanliness.
Bedbugs like dusty beds and dirty
bedding; but we must also recollect
that* people may often be obliged to
move into rented houses, where bed
bugs had been accustomed to lodge, and
low-bred, pests.
Scalding water is a good but a heroic
remedy- You must tear up things,
niove' out furniture and scald cracks
everywhere to reach the bugs with
steam and scalding water. Strong lye
soap and hot water applied plentifully
will help a whole lot. but the sure-kill
remedy that I have found to do good,
was quick silver, with white of egg
beaten to froth, or a corrosive subli
mate lotion, applied to all infested
places. Carbolic acid is the great germ
I
• destroyer of modern times, and al
though I have had no occasion of late
years to pursue bedbugs, I should cer
tainly spray liberally with a solution
of carbolic acid.
I remember the indignation of a nice
country farm woman, who followed
some lazy housekeepers as she and her
( husband rented the dwelling after they
| departed. The walls were specked for
five feet above the bed rails, even the
door facings and window facings were
blackened in streaks, every bit owing
to the indifference of the woman who
occupied the house previously. There
was no lack of water, and the condition
which this good woman complained
about grew out of pure laziness and
dirty housekeeping.
Choosing and Furnishing the Home.
The common problem, yours, mine, every
one’s,
Is,—not to fancy what were fair in life,
Provided it could be—but, finding first
What may be, then find how to make it
fair
Up to our means; a very different thing!
—-ROBERT BROWNING.
If I had only one bit of advice to
give and could not possibly give another
word to young people who are making
a home that word would be “Don’t go
beyond your means.” I know of a fine
young man who is the mainstay of his
widowed mother, who builds a bit at a
time, and then stops, and is man enough
to say, “I’ll do some more when I can
spare themo ney-” He is one of na
ture’s noblemen because he can face the
facts and does not shirk the truth, and
does not shirk debt.
Strike a level account with your de
sires and decide on “what may be,”
and not fancy what is wanted, “provided
it could be.”
It does not require a gigantic spread
of things in the house you live in. To
come down to plain facts, you do not ab
solutely require but very few things.
You must have a comfortable bed, a set
of comfortable chairs, a good fireplace
or heater, and a satisfactorily arranged
cooking place, to save steps and fa
tigue, but poor folks or those living on
an uncertain salary have no call for a
lot of furniture or jim-cracks to haul
about in renting drays.
“If you have money to spare,
Then find out how to make it fair,”
but so long as you must decide upon
only essentials, then face the music
bravely and say, “We ill stop—up to our
means.”
The fortunes of Georgia in ante-bel
lum times were not made by spending,
but by saving. The fortnes of this time
are to be made in the same way, par
ticularly by not spending what you
haven’t got to spend. Do I make this
proposition clear?
BLEASE WILL READ
RETURN IN COURT
COLUMBIA, S. C., Jan. 11.—Governor
Blease has prepared his return, as chair
man to the sinking fund commission, to
the suit of W. W. Ray, to have the
refunding act declared unconstitutional
and will appear in person in the su
preme court on Monday and read his re
turn.
The governor is out of sympathy with
the rest of the commission and has not
attended a .meeting in months and it is
known that he is in sympathy With the
efforts to have the refunding act set
aside.
It is said that his return will contain
a bitter attack on certain of his polit
ical enemies.
Ovoid
QfieAaficrrub
When a woman suffering from some form of feminine
disorder is told that an operation is necessary, it of course
frightens her.
The very thought of the.hospital operating table and the
surgeon’s knife strikes terror to her heart, and no wonder.
It is quite true that some of these troubles may reach a stage
where an operation is the only resource, but thousands of
women have avoided the necessity of an operation by taking
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. This fact is
attested by the grateful letters they write to us after their
health has been restored.
These Two Women Prove Our Claim.
Cary, Maine.—" X feel it a duty I
owe to all suffering women to tell
what Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound did for me. One year ago
I found myself a terrible sufferer.
I had pains in both sides and such a
soreness 1 could scarcely staighten
up at times. My back ached, I had
no appetite and was so nervous I
Could not sleep, then I would be so
tired mornings that I could scarcely
get around. It seemed almost im
possible to move or do a bit of work
and I thought I never would be any
better*until I submitted to an opera
tion. 1 commenced taking Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and
soon felt like a new woman. I had
no pains, slept well, had good appe
tite and was fat and coiu'ld do almost
all my own work for a family of
four. I shall always feel that I owe
my good health to your medicine.”
—Mrs. Hayward Sowers, Cary, Me.
Charlotte, N. C—"I was in bad
health for two years, with pains in
both sides and was very nervous. If
I even lifted a chair it would cause
a hemofrhage. I had a growth which
the doctor said was a tumor and I
never would get well unless I had
an operation. A friend advised me
to take Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegeta
ble Compound, and I gladly say that
I am now enjoying fine health and
am the mother of a nice baby girl.
You can use this letter to help other
suffering women.”—Mrs. Rosa Sims,
16 Wyona St., Charlotte, N. C.
Now answer this question if you can. Why should a wo
man submit to a surgical operation without first giving Lydia
E Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound a trial ? You know that
it has saved many others—why should it fail in your case?
For 30 years Lydia E. PinKham’s Vegetable
Com otmd oas been, the standard remedy for fe
male uls. No" one sicL with woman’s ailments
does justice to herself if she does not try this fa
mous medicine made from roots and herbs, it
has restored so many suffering women to health.
Ra^pfcWrite to LYDIA E.PIYKHAM MEDICINE CO.
(CONFIDENTIAL) LYNN, MASS., for advice.
Your letter will be opened, read and answered
V/ a. woman and held in strict confidence.
Whatever may be thought of Senator
Bailey, of Texas, and his farewell ad
dress in the senate of the United
States, he expressed one conclusion
which thoughtful and fair-minded people
will surely accept. He insisted that
in recent y^ars all* sorts of freakish
theorizers and eccentric theories have
secured far greater publicity and con
sideration than is in keeping with their
merits or consistent with the public
welfare. We are living in an era of
sensationalism, and just because a piece
of folly serves the ends of sensation
alism it is accorded a degree of atten
tion which is nothing short of danger
ous. The strenuous and the shocking
occupy the stage all the time.
Of course w^ell-settled principles are
not susceptible of sensational treat
ment. They are common-place like the
common-place air which men must
breathe to live, the common-place sun
shine, and the common-place rain. For
this Veason multitudes, who can enjoy
nothing which is not startling and ex
citing, are impatient with these funda
mental truths and run eagerly after
every grotesque novelty which is able
to secure public utterance.
Established principles of religion are
decried, and the crude fancies or crass
but daring ignorance are accepted as
the final solution of all mysteries and
the ultimate attainments of the human
intellect.
In the realm of political thought a
similar state of things exists, and the
ravings of demagogic agitators are re
ceived as platforms of progress, while
the reasoned conclusions of wise states
manship, in both thfe past and the pres
ent, are set down obsolete and ex
ploded notions of benighted minds. We
are told that we have outgrown the
fundamental principles upon which the
founders of the republic erected our
governmental structure, and that we
must subvert this government to make
room for a more modern structure fash
ioned by frenzied reformers and set up
between sun-up and dark.
But while the agitators are making
much noise, both their numbers and
their ability have been overestimated by
themselves and by others. They pour
their strident utterances into the public
ear, and then interpret the echoes of
their own wild cries as proofs of world
changing tendencies. They are thus
both deceived and deceiving. They do
draw after them a certain number of
unsettled floaters, who run with any
current; but there is a vast silent mul
titude wholly unaffected oy them except
with contempt. But the time has come
when this silent and sane multitude
must make themselves heard and felt
in rebuke of these inflamatory agitators,
who though in a pronounced minority
and unworthy of any respectable follow
ing, have a‘power to pull down without
the ability to build up any worthy re
ligious, political, or social institution.
A scampering monkey can set fire to a
house and burn it to the ground which
required the expenditure of architectu
ral skill and much treasure to build. The
bigness of the blaze he makes may im
part to him a certain notoriety which in
his own eyes may more than off-set the
damage he has done; but the loss may
be irreparable. The thing to be done
by sensible people, whose lives and
property are imperiled by such a simian
fire-fiend, is to cage the stupid and
irresponsible creature.
The time has come for the conserv
ative people of all classes in our coun
try to put an end to the dangerous
antics of certain parties, wnq having
taken leave of both sober reason and
so^nd conscience, seek to draw un
stable minds after them td thfe injury
of themselves and everybody else. These
conservative people by reason of their
very confidence in settled principles
have taken it for granted that the agi
tators could do no serious ha*.m, and.
herce, they have allowed some evil
propose to bo an honest man, and I
thank no demagogue to propose steal
ing from the rich in ihy interest. I do
not need money that badly, and would
not wish it obtained for me in that way,
if I were starving. I own no stock in
any railway or other corporation, and
I hold no brief to defend corporations
which have done wrong or which may
do wrong; but as an honest man and a
Mo man is
Stronger
Than his
Stomach
The Medical Adviser by
R. V. Pierce, M. D., Buf
falo, N. Y. answers hosts
decent American citizen, who cares for ©/* delicate questions
the welfare of his country, I make bold about which every man
to denounce the
things to go to dangerous lengths. VVe
need now a period of aggressive and
active conservatism. Without such a
counter-movement against radicalism,
We shall live to see the ordinary prin
ciples of common morality called in
question, and ethical systems proposed
ir. which wrong will be called right and
right will be stigmatized as wrong
Such a state of things came to pass
in trie days of the prophet Isaiah, who
was forced to cry against those who
were debasing the moral currency of
his nation, “Woe unto them that call
evil good, and good evil; that put dark
ness for light and light for darkness;
that put bitter for sweet and sweet
for bitter”. (Isaiah ,v:20.)
Similar conditions liave arisen among
us; there are men among us who in
the name of what they call “social
justice” are commending moral wrongs,
and seeking to create a public sentiment
that will condone the wrongs which
they commend. In the name of rights
they demand the doing of iniquities, j
Whatever may # be the motives by which
they were originally impelled to their
agitations, they have gone beyond the
limit of both sense and safety when
they imagine that any good can come
to any class, high or low, by trans
gressing the moral law.
It is quite possible that there are
over-grown fortunes in some sections
of our country, but we dishonour our
selves and damage our social system
by proposals to correct this evil by
uniting in schemes of popular robbery
under the power of excited majorities.
It is the veriest ndn-sense (and worse)
to seek to justify such schemes of
spoliation by suggesting some sort of
antagonism between “property rights”
and “human rights.” . Property has no
rights, but one of the most sacred hu
man rights is the right to hold prop
erty; and if a majority conspires to
take property unjustly, simply because
it has the power to take it, the crime
committed is just a plain case of rob
bery and stealing. There is no use
to mince words in such a case; a band
of thieves using the ballot for ends
of injustice, or the jury box for pur
poses of spoliation, is no better moral
ly than a band o£..burglars with their
jimmies and explosives.
And yet this kind of thing has been
encouraged among us in the name of
the rights of the poor and the “com
mon people.” For one, I profess to
be one of the “common people;” but I
WOMAN sms VERMIN
FILL GINNING GIMPS
Mary Boyle O’Reilly, Social
Worker, Gives Testimony
Before House Committee
(By Associated Press.)
WASHINGTON, Jan. 11.—-Conditions
among workers in canning camps of
New York state were attacked today by
Mary Boyle O’Reilly, a social worker,
who addressed the house rules com mit-
teee, which was considering a resolution
for the appointment of a special com
mittee to investigate conditions in the
fruit and vegetable canning industry
throughout the country.
PHOTOGRAPHS SHOWN.
Miss O’Relly said she had spent a
months as a worker in the canning camps
of New York. She produced a large
number of photographs taken in the
camps
Diseased workers, bad housing condi
tions, lack of sanitation and neglect of
ordinary sanitary precautions in the
preparation of canned products, were
charged by Miss O’Reilly. She said
that all of the children in the camps
over the age of ten were eipployed in
the factories. She named one boy, eight
years old, who, she said, worked ten
hours a day for 20 cents. She told of
score*; of families lodged in shacks with
out water and without accommodations
for cocking. In one instance she said
she found six children under eleven
years old “keeping house” in the cellar
of a shack while the remainder of the
two families to which they belonged
were at work in the camps.
The factories and shacks occupied by
the workers, Miss O’Reilly said, were
“overrun with rats, bugs, flies and every
sort of vermin.”
HOUSES FULL OF RATS.
The mothers are often afraid to leave
their children in the shacks while they
are at work, she said, “because of rats.”
The labor in the camps, Miss O’Reilly
said was largely “recent immigrants,
Poles and Italians.”
“The padre collects the ‘herds,’ as it
is called, about June 15,” she said, ‘‘and
the workers are taken to the camps,
where they remain until late in the win
ter. The managing force of the canning
camps never goes near the camp. They
pride themselves on keeping away from
them and knowing nothing of the condi
tions there.”
Miss O’Reilly detailed a list of can
neries in small towns in New York. She
cnarged disgusting health conditions ana
emphasized a lack of water supply in
the camps. Members of the committee
wanted to know wliy improvements had
not been asked for from the state of
New York.
“This matter seems to me to be under
the authority of the state alone,” said
Representative Hardwick, of Georgia.
“Why haven’t you gone to the state of
ficials?”
“I have laid the matter before the
state officials,” said Miss O'Reilly, “but
I am no politician, I do not know what
the relations have been between the can
neries and the capitol at Albany.”
SAVANNAH WOMEN JOIN
STATE GLUB FEDERATION
Representatives of Various
Organizations Will Affiliate
Georgia Clubs
crimes perpetrated
against corporations by agitators who
profit by injustice while professing to
demand justice. It is the fashion to
harrass corporations without any con
sideration of what is right or wrong,
and it is time this evil fashion were put
away from us as the base thing which
it •really is. If any man or men who
are conducting an incorporated enter
prise of any sort commit crime, let
them be punished; for “guilt is person
al.” But in the name of common hon
esty, let us cease the effort to correct
the crimes of officials in corporations
by stealing from all the stockholders.
Stealing is 'stealing, whether done in
bulk or in detail.
.-ind murder is murder, and no sort of
“social injustice” whether real or im
aginary, can by any possibility justify
the crime. This statement is no more
than the statement of a primary, ax
iomatic principle of every-day morality*
Nevertheless w r e have seen a huge con
spiracy organized to commit murder
systematically, and actually Committing
the crime of taking lives entirely inno
cent of any connection with the injus
tice which the conspirators professed to
avenge, defending as a proper thing.
No man with a human heart in him is
indifferent to the wants and aspirations
of the men who win their bread in the
sweat of'their brows; out no good man,
whether he be capitalist or laborer, can
justly defend murder, although it be
done under the pretense of protec-
ing “organized labour.” Dynamite plots
ar infamous wrongs whoever may do
th - n.
And it is the utter confusion of moral
values to say that the secret and mur
derous use of dynamite is no worse than
appealing to the lawfully constituted
courts of justice for an injunction to
prevent threatened wrongs and assert
legal rights. Such talk hurts all classes
more than any and all forms of “social
injustice” so-called.
When a candidate for the presidency
in the recent national election was shot
by an assassin, many said it was the j
outcome of bitter denurfeiation of that
candidate by his political enemies; his
foes were censured accordingly, and,
perhaps, justly. Equally is it -true that
violent and unreasonable arraignment of
the whole social system, and the courts
in particular, is worthy of censure for
the growth of anarchy ,n our day. Such |
wild talk deserves to be denounced as
incendiarism, whether done by a man
who seeks to be president of tho United
States or who is actually president . of
a vastly extended industrial organiza
tion. No sort of position can justify
such utterances.
Against all such there must be an up
rising of an aggressive conservatism.
The great multitude of sensible and
virtuous American people have allowed
the agitators to make the impression
on too many weak men and women
that they and their followers are the
only righteous persons in the land; the
agitators have had their way too long.
It is time now to let them and all men
understand that the great majority of
the American people are neither fanatics
nor revolutionists.* We have had cfaite
or woman, single or mar
ried ought to know. Sent
free on receipt of SI one-
cent stamps to pay for
wrapping and mailing.
L ET the greatest athlete have dyspepsia and his
strength will soon fail. One's stamina—force-
fullness and strength of mind or muscle
depend upon the blood, and the blood in turn,
requires a healthy stomach, for the stomach is the
laboratory where the food is digested and such ele
ments are taken up—or assimilated—which make
blood. In consequence all the organs of the body,
such as heart, lungs, liver and kidneys, as well as
the nervous system, feel the bad effect if the stom
ach is deranged.
Hr. Pierce's GoMen
Medical discovery
helps the stomach to digest food properly, starts the
liver into new activity, removing the poisons from the
blood, and the various organs get rich, red blood, in
stead of being illy nourished. The refreshing influence
of this extract of native medicinal plants has been
favorably known for over 40 years. Everywhere
some neighbor can tell you of the good it has done.
Sold toy all medicine dealers in ISqnld or tntolet form:
or send SO oiae-cent eteraps to Dr. Pierce. Invalids*
Motel. Buffalo, uaC a trial box will be mailed yon.
enough of hysterical reformers and
feverish reformations. Fitful convul
sions and faithful consciences are rare
ly, if ever, found together. Hysteria,
and a well-poised mind are never united.
MONGOLIANS THANK
RUSSI AFjOR RECOGNITION
(By Assoc'ated Press.)
ST. PETERSBURG, Jan. 10.—A depu
tation of Mongolians under the elader-
ship of a Mongol prince arrived here
this afternoon from Urga to thank the
Russian government on behalf of the
Kutuktu or Khan, of Mongolia for its
recognition of the independence of Mon
golia.
Thi> Book Is Free
The Mysteries of Hypnotism and
Personal Magnetism
Revealed
Ox-Cart Days
RED DEVIL LYE
To labor over a bo^ng soap
kettle is out of fashion be
cause absolutely unnecessary.
Red Devil Pulverised JLye maices the
finest hard soap in fifteen minutes, without
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lye and the boiling process after using
Red Devil Lye one time, would be like get
ting out of an automobile into an ox-cart.
Red Devil I«ye is pulverized like very
coarse granulated sugar. It dissolves
quickly in hot or cold water. It is clean
and pure. There is no waste as you re
move the friction top, take out just what
you want, then cloee the can again.
For washing, scrubbing, cleansing and
soap making, Red Devil Pulverized bye
is ideal. It is cheaper than any other
because it goes so much farther.
Save Tho Labels,
They Are Valuable.
WM. SCHIELD MFG. GO., St. Louis, Mo.
The New York Institute of Science, ot
Rochester, N. Y., has just published a
remarkable book on hypnotism, personal
magnetism and magnetic healing. It ia
by far the most wonderful and com
prehensive treatise of the kind ever
printed. The directors have decided,
for a limited time, to give a free copy
to each person sincerely interested in
these wonderful sciences. It is the
result of the combined effort of twenty
of the most famous hypnotic specialists-
i" the world. You can now learn the
secrets f hypnotism and personal mag*
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3
’ POWER. THE SCIENCEOfXMLTH.
UW* MYSTERIES UKVE1LSD.
new york fKsrrnrrc or smcr.mmnm.
r. a. a.
(Special Dispatch to The Journal.)
SAVANNAH, Ga., Jan. 10.—At a large
ly attended meeting held yesterday aft
ernoon in the room of the Independent
Presbyterian church Sunday school, the
representatives of the various woman’s
clubs of Savannah decided to affiliate
their organizations with the Georgia
Federation of Women’s clubs and in
turn to become a part of the national j
federation. _
Mrs. H. C. White, of Athens, the pres- j
ident of the Georgia Federation, de
livered a very interesting address at the
meeting, and what she had to say
largely ‘influenced the Savannah women
in their determination. Mrs. White in!
her address made a most favorable
impression and there was the greatest
enthusiasm shown in the meeting.
Miss Eugenia Johnston has been at I
work on this plan locally for a long
time and she did much of the prelim
inary work that resulted in the deci
sion to affiliate with the other organiza
tions throughout the state.
New Cotton Record
(Special Dispatch to The Journal.)
SAVANNAH, Ga., Jan. 10.—Today 1
the receipts of cotton at Savannah :
reached the million-bale mark. This is j
not the first time this has been done, j
nor have, the figures been reached as j
early this season as in the past, but
considering the short cotton crop.it is
looked upon as a pretty good record. Sa
vannah will probably maintain her rec
ord this year as the second cotton port
of the world.
FREE TO YOU—MY SISTER ering from Woman’s^Ailments. **
I am a woman.
I know woman’s Bufferings.
I have found the cure.
I will mail, free of any charge, my Don# treat
ment with full instructions to any sufferer from
woman s ailments. I want to tell all women about
this cure—yco, my reader, for yourself, your
daughter, your mother, or your sister. I want to
you how to cure yourselves at home with
out the help of a doctor. Men eannet understand
women’s sufferings. What we women know from
experience, we know better than any doctor. I
know that my‘home treatment is safe and sure
cure for leucorrhoea or Whitish dischargee, Ulceration. Dis
placement orbing of the Womb, Profuse, Scanty or Painful
Periods, Uterine er 0»ar;an Tumors, or Growths; also pclns in
head, back and bowels, bearing down feelings, nervousness,
creeping feeling up the spine, melancholy, desire to cry, hot
flashes, weariness, kidney, and bladder troubles where caused
by weaknesses peculiar to our sex.
I want to send you t complete ten day’s treatment
entirely free to prove to you that you can cure
yourself at nome, easily, quickly and
surely. Remember, that, if wilt cost you nothing to
give the treatment a complete trial: and if you
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n <>b interfere with your work or occupation. Just send me your name and address, tell me how you
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per, by return mail. I will also send you free of cost, my book—"WOMAN’S OWN MEDICAL ADVISER" with
explanatory illustrations showing why women suffer, and how they can easily cure themselves
at home. Every woman should have it, and lqarn to think for herself. Then when the doctor says—
it ou must have an operation,’ you can decide for yourself. Thousands of women have cured
themselves with my home remedy. It cures all old or young, To Mothers of Daughters. I will explain a
simple home treatment which speedily and effectually cures Leucorrhoea, Green Sickness and
its use ° r irre ®* ular Menstruation in young Ladies, Plumpness and health always results from
Wherever you live, I can refer you to ladies of your own locality who know and will gladly
tell any sufferer that this Home Treatment really cores all women's diseases, and makes women well,
strong, plump and robust. Just send at your address, and the free ten day’s treatment is yours, also
the book. Write to-day, as you may not ?.ee vhis offer again. Address
ttiRS. M. SUMMERS, Box 327
Hypnotism strengthens ydur memory
and develops a will of iron. It over
comes bashfulness, revives hope, stimu
lates ambition and determination to suc
ceed, and gives you that self-confidence
which enables you to convince people of
your real worth. It gives you the key
to the inner secrets of mind control.
It enables you to absolutely control the
thoughts* and actions of whomsoever
you will. When you understand this
grand and mysterious science you can
plant suggestions in human minds
which will be carried out in a day or
even in a year hence. You can cure bad
habits and diseases in you' self or
others. •
You can cure yourself of insomnia,
nervousness land business or domestic
worry. ,
You can instantly hypnotize people
with a mere glar.oe of the eye, without
! their knowledge, and powerfully Influ-
I ence them to do as you desire. You cap
I develop, to a marvelous degree, any
musical ^r dramatic talent you may
have; you can tnc ease your telepathic
or clairvoyant pdwer; you call givw
thrilling and funny hypnotic entertain
ments; you -can win the love and ever
lasting friendship of those you desire;
you can protect yourself against the in
fluence of others; you Can become a
financial success and b e recognized as a
power in your community.
The New York Institute • guarantees
,to teach you the secret of attainfhg
these thinjs. It is the largest and most
successful school of hypnotism in the
world. It is chartered by the state laws,
and carries out every promise faithful
ly. If you want a copy of its free book,
just send your name and address on a
postal card—no money—to the New
York Institute Of Science, Dept. 268C.
Rochester. N. Y., U. S. A., and you will
receive it by return mail, postpaid.
(Advt.)
Elegant Thin Model v 50
_ YEAR Watch $319
Hunting cut beautifully engrave!, gold Onlebed throughout, (torn wind
and item set. fined «lth jeweled American lover movement, guaranteed
goldftnlahed chein for Ladle*. reat chain or fob for UaaU.
80 yean, with long^
$3.50
Banrantoed SO Tears
IK YOU SEE IT YOU WILL BUY IT. Let ue tend It0.0.D. for •zuntaa-
tion at your nearest ezprese office, and If you think It a bargain nnd equal in
^ ~ _ __ . . appearance te any fl6.00 gold finished watch pay the espress agent our
Bond. Ind.. II. S, A* special sales prioe *3.50. Mention If you want Ladies’, Men's or Boys* site.
,MU, f V- O-"* ; Diamond Jawalry 0«.,E88,l*OW.Madlaon8t.Ohlcago,llfe
FEEL BADLY TOO!!?
TGNI
No Headache, Biliousness,
Sluggish Liver or Constipated
Bowels by Mocning
No odds how bad your liver, stomach
or bowels; how much your head aches,
how miserable and uncomfortable you
are from constipation, indigestion, bil
iousness and sluggish intestines—you al
ways get the desired results with Casca-
rets and quickly, too.
Don’t let your stomach, liver and
bowels make you miserable. Take Cas-
carets tonight; put an end to the head
ache. biliousness, dizziness, nervousness,
sick, sour, gassy stomach, backache and
all other distress: cleanse your Inside or
gans of all the bile, «<tses and consti
pated matter which is producing the
misery.
A 10-cent box means health, happiness
and a clear head for months. No more
days of gloom and distress if you will
take a Cascaret now and then. All drug
gists Bell Cascarets. Don’t forget the
gentle cleansing, too. (advt.)
OUR NEW FAMILY CENSUS
CALENDAR ATLAS FOR 1913
IS NOW .READY
Do you want a Nice Large Map of your
own State, besides a Nice Map of the
United States and the World? Do you
want a Pretty Calendar for 1913? We
are going to give you one of these Nice
Calendar Atlases provided you renew
your subscription to The Semi-Weekly
Journal, promptly.
How to G-et The New Family Census
Calendar Atlas.
Clip the Coupon below and send to us —
with One Dollar, and we will renew your subscription to The Semi-Weekly
Journal for another year, and send you The Farm and Home, The Woman’s
World Magazine and Gentlewoman Magazine one year each, and mail you Ab
solutely Free, postage prepaid, one of our
New Family Census Calendar Atlases.
This Atlas contains Four sheets or eight
pages 22 1-2 inches wide by 27 inches
long, in beautiful colors, and will make a
decoration on the wall of any room. It
contains much useful information, mak
ing it useful as well as ornamental. Don’t
Delay, Send Your Dollar at Once. «... M a P *.
Beml-Weekly Journal, Atlanta, Ga.
Enolosed find one dollar; send me Beml-Weekly 7onr.
nal, Farm and Home, Woman’s Wor.d, the Gentlewoman
one year each, and mail me absolutely free,
Family Census Calendar Atlas.
one new
Name
... .R. F. D..
Btate ; .