Atlanta semi-weekly journal. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1898-1920, February 28, 1913, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

THE ATLANTA SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL, ATLANTA, GA., FRIDAY,' FEBRUARY ‘28, 1913. TO KEEP YOUTH and beauty—to prevent wrinkles and “crow’s feet” and deep black circles under the eyes— nothing is as good as Dr. i Pierce’s FAVORITE PRESCRIPTION, Give it a fair trial for banishing those distressing pams or ulal ty. This prescription of Dr. Pierce’s regulates all the It eradicates and destroys “Female Complaints” and drains on one’s vitality womanly functions, weaknesses that make women miserable and old before their time. Every girl needs it before womanhood. Every mother needs it. It is an invigorating tonic for the female system. All medicine dealers have sold it with satisfaction, to customers for the past 40 years. It is now obtainable in liquid Or tablet form atdrugstores—or send 60 one-cent stamps for trial box, to R. V. Pierce, Buffalo. B. OR. PIERCE’S PLEASANT PELLETS icgiiiate and invigorate stomach, liver and bowels. Sugar coated, tiny grannies, easy to take as candy. ,Si HIS WIFE IS Guest in Hotel Heard Some One Running From Room Be fore Last Shot Was Fired-I nquest Is Held - Ambulance . Man and Policeman Both Declare Shots Could Not Have Been Fired by Appelbaum- Mrs, Appelbaum Declares Husband Has Divorced Wife Liv ing and Hints at Other Women to Whom He Was At tentive-Letters Found in Her Hat Seem to Confirm Her Story From the undertaker’s establshment, where the inquest was held, Mrs. Appelbaum was carried to the Tower in a cab. She was accom panied by J. A. Branch, of her counsel, and Coroner’s Bailiff Bryant. At the Tower she registered as Mrs. J. A. Appelbaum, aged thirty- five years, and after sitting in the waiting room a few minutes, slig was assigned to a room in the woman’s ward. By a peculiar chance the room she drew was the one occupied so song by Mrs. Daisy Grace, who was cleared of the charge of shooting her husband by the same attorneys, Moore & Branch. AVhle in the waiting room, Mrs. Appelbaum sobbed continuously and spoke only once, when she astked the verdict of the coroner’s jury. The womaq is held simply for investigation by the grand jury, but the case involves murder, and as a result she can secure bond only after a hearing before a judge of the superior court. Attorney Branch, stated after a conference with his client, that no move will be made in the case until the grand jury sets. Sirs. Applebaum, it is> understood, wall not be permitted to make any statement except through her attorneys. A MYSTERIOUS MURDER was committed in the Hotel Dakota, down town in Atlanta at the corner of Pryor and Houston streets, Tues- , day morning at. 7 o’clock. The victim of it. J. A. Appelbaum, a traveling, man representing the A. L. Arundell company, of Chicago, was found gasping his last breath upon the floor of the private bath adjoining the room occupied by himself and Jiis reputed wife on the second floor of the hotel. He died without making a statement, almost immediately after he was found. The revolver, his own, which had beep used to shoot him, was - -lying- beyond his reach in the hallway connecting the bed room and the bath, and in such position with reference to the body as to indicate that it could not have been dropped there by himself. His supposed widow, Mrs. Appelbaum, was held by the coroner’s jury for the grand jury. The verdict of the coroner’s jury was that Mr. Appelbaum had come to his death from a gunshot bullet fired by the hand of some unknown person. Mrs. Applebaum was carried to the county jail. No bond was assessed for Mrs. Appelbaum at 2:30 o’clock. Suspicion pointing to the supposed Mrs. Appelbaum, she was ar rested by the olice. The clerk of the hotel had encountered her on the . stairs as he started rushing up them to to answer the alarm from another guest'that shots had been fired in the Appelbaum room. She was clad in her night clothes and a kimono only, and was hysterical and inco herent. Examined by the police she did not admit that she knew even that her husband had been hurt, the detectives Anally informing her that he was dead. A number of letters were found in the hat which Mrs. Appelbaum wore to police headquarters and to the inquest. Some of them were signed “Blanche,” that being supposedly the name of Mr. Apelbaum’s alleged former wife; and others were signed “Girlie.” All of them were very loving and affectionate. They tended to support Mrs. Ap- pelbaum’s sensational charge againBt her hushand that though she had married him twice he had another wife living in Kansas City and was engaged to marry a third wife, a woman physicihn, in Saginaw, Mich., ip May. The letters were not read before the jury, but were submitted to the jury and were read by its members in closed session. Dr. J. W. Hurt, county physician, testified that the shots were fired not closer than two feet to the body of Mr. Appelbaum and that the wounds could not have been self-inflicted. HAD AS MANY Full Story of Mrs, Callie Scott- Henderson - Kelier - Appel- baum's Matrimonial Career f Told in Dispatches Developments on Wednesday in the Dakota hotel’s sensational murder mystery tend to show that the woman accused of the killing has experi enced as many matrimonial adven tures as her dead husband. She was a Miss Calle 3cott, it has been learned, and came originally from Brewton, a little town in Ala bama. Her first husband is said to have been a man narked Henderson, whom she. divorced and by whom she has u seventeen-year-old son, who is attending the Montgomery high school. j Next she is said to have married J. M. Keller, a Montgomery automo bile dealer, who declares that he spent $10,000 to get rid of her. It Is charged that the woman, who says that she “doesn’t believe she shot her husband,” operated a dis orderly house in Montgomery and reaped a harvest of $30,000. Records show that undoubtedly she 1 married Appelbaum on July 1 of last year in Birmingham, despite the fact that another wife secured a divorce from him only last week. Mrs. Appelbaum gives her age as thirty-five years, and apparently she was married to Henderson about eighteen years ago. They were di vorced and her marriage to Keller followed. Lastly, several years after, her second divorce was a matter of record, she was united to the muchly married Appelbaum by a hasty cere mony performed by a Birmingham probate judge. HUSBAND’S CAREER. Appelbaum’s first wife, a Salt Lake City girl, was deserted by him soon after their marriage, according to dispatches, and she divorced him in 1908. Soon he married again, and wife number two secured her divorce in Kansas City only thirteen days ago. Except for her aged parents in Brewton and her son, Mrs. Appel baum is said to have no other blood relatives. Mrs. Appelbaum remains in the Tower and Aven police officers are denied admission to her .cell. There is no probability of the grand jury acting on her case before Friday, if then, and her attorneys intimate that no immediate attempt to secure bail for the incarcerated woman is to be expected. The full story of Mrs, Appelbaum’s career, is told by the following dis patches from Montgomery and Bir mingham: Story of Woman’s Life Told in Dispatches (Special Dispatch to The Journal.) MONTGOMERY, Ala., Feb. 26.—Callie Scott,,alias Kathleen Keller, alias Cal lie Henderson, supposed to be the “Mrs. J. A. Appelbaum,” charged with the murder of her husband in the Hotel Da kota, Atlanta, is the former wife of J. M. Keller, an automobile deader of Montgomery. Her photograph clipped frbm The At lanta Journal could not be identified by Keller Wednesday morning. It is probly she,” declared Keller, “but because of the peculiarly shaped mouth and fleshy face I am unable to say positively. But it is /just like Cal- jL Smoke of Herbs Clares C&iarrb. A Simple, Safe, Reliable Way and It Costs Nothing - to Try. This preparation of herbs, leaves flowers and berries (containing no to bacco or habit-forming drugs) is either smoked in an ordinary clean pipe or smoking tube, and by drawing the med icated smoke into the mouth and in- halfng into the lungs or sending it out through the* nostrils in a perfectly natural way, the worst case of Catarrh can be eradicated. CITADEL CADETS MAY NOT GO TO WASHINGTON CHARLESTON, S. C., Feb. 26.—It Is probable that the entire cadet corps of the Citadel will not attend the inau guration of President Wilson, as planned on account of the legislature not making the appropriation. A movement is, how ever, on foot to have the military col lege represented by company or two, GOOD NATURED AGAIN Good Humor Returns With Change to Proper Food “For many years I was a constant sufferer from indigestion and nervous ness, amounting almost to prostration,” writes a Montana man. “My blood was impoverished, the vision was • blurred and weak, with moving spots before my eyes. This was a steady daily condition. I grew ill- tempered, and eventually got so nervous I coulcf not keep my books posted, nor handle accounts satisfactorily. I can’t describe my sufferings. “Nothing I ate agreed with me, till one day I happened to notice Grape- Nuts in a grocery store, and bought a package out of curiosity to know what it was. “I liked the food from the very first, eating it with cream, and now I buy it by the case and use it daily. I soon found that Grape-Nuts food was sup plying brain and nerve force as nothing in the drug line ever had done or could do. “It wasn’t long before I was restored to health, comfort and happiness. “Through the use of Grape-Nuts food my digestion has been restored, my nerves are steady one© more, my eye sight is good again, my mental facul ties are clear and acute, and I have become so good-natured that my friends are truly astonished at the change. I feel younger and better than I have for 20 years. No amount of money would induce me to surrender what I have gained through the use of Grape-Nuts food.” Name given by Postum Co., Bat tle Creek, Mich. “There’s a reason.” Read the little book, “The Road to Wellville,” in pkgs. Ever read the above’letter? A new one appears from time to time. They are genuine, true, and full of human in terest —(Advt.) the cadets paying their own expenses. This will be the only representation in a military way of South Carolina at the inauguration, since Governor Blease forbade the departure of the national guard, on account of negro troops from northern states marching in the pa rade. JUDGE WITH HAMMER PUTS THIEF TO ROUT (Special Dispatch to The Journal.) ATHENS. Ga., Feb. 26.—Judge Levi Hamrick, of Princeton, Tuesday stepped into his country home to find a burglar ransacking the rooms. The burglar was a colored convict who had escaped from the camp a mile away. . The negro had stolen Mr. Hamrick's pistol and with it backed the owner out of the room. The judge, with a hammer he picked up in his retreat, knocked the pistol from the hands of the negro and took him prisoner. The convict guard arrived at that instant and in a disagreement over the disposition of the quarry, it is said the guard drew his rifle on the judge. The matter was adjusted’ and the con vict returned to camp. TRADE BOARD FORMED BY MADISON CITIZENS MADISON, Ga., Feb. 26.—The cham ber of commerce of Madison was formal ly organized Tuesday night in the pres ence of a large crowd of Madison citi zens. The constitution and by-laws were read and adopted, committees were organized and will immediately go to work. Many enthusiastic speeches were made and the citizens to a man are filled with a determination to boost the city until progress and prosperity are the reward. BLEASE PAROLES C0NVIVCT ALLEGING MISTREATMENT (By Associated Press.) COLUMBIA, S. C., Feb. 26.—Govern or Blease has sent to *the legislature a message charging brutal treatment of Simon Ellis, a negro convict, and announcing that he had paroled the ne gro. The governor’s charges resulted in an order for an\investigation of the charges. The governor alleged that the negro had been ill-treated because he had spo ken to the governor while working in the state house grounds. The senate committee on penal institutions was or dered to make the inquiry. CONTAINS NO TOBACCO TRAM HAM IC0I5TERER .It is not unpleasant to use, and at the same time it is entirely harmless, and can be used by man, woman or child. Just as Catarrh is contracted by breathing cold or dust and germ-laden air, just so this balmy antiseptic smok ing remedy goes to all the affected parts of the air passages of the head, nose, throat and lungs. It can readily be seen why the ordinary treatments, such as sprays, ointments, salves, liquid or tablet medicines fail—they do not and can not reach all the af fected parts. If you have catarrh of the nose, throat or lungs, choking, stopped-up feeling, colds, catarrhal headaches; if you are given to hawking and spit ting, this simple yet scientific treat ment should cure you. An illustrated book which goes thor oughly Into the whole question of the cause/ cure and prevention Of catarrh will, upon request, be sent you by Dr. J. W. Blosser, 51 Walton street, At lanta, Ga. He will, also, mail you five days’ tree treatment. You will at once see that it is a wonderful remedy and as it only costs one dollar for the regular treatment, it is within the reach of everyone. It is not necessary to send any money—simply send your name and address and the booklet and free trial package will be mailed you imme diately.—(Advt.) lie, that is, to get mixed in an affair like this.” The woman came from a respectable family of Brewton, Ala. She has a son by her first husband attending a Mont gomery school, and boarding in the city. His name is Claud Henderson, seventeen years old. After securing a divorce from Henderson, the woman married Kel ler. “It cost me more than $10\000 to get rid of her,” declar6d Keller Wednes day, when shown the picture of the woman. “Many a time she has thrown a pistol in my face and threatened to kill me. I believe she is’ insane, or if not, she is a number one actress. She can change her appearance and for this reason I am unable to positively iden tify that the photograph is of her.” “IT SOUNDS LIIPS,. CALLIE.” The woman’s statement that she knows nothing about the death of Ap pelbaum also convinced Keller that she js his former wife. “It sounds like Callie,” said he, “and the fact that she declares' now that she remembers nothing concerning the death of the man convinces me that she is the one whom I married several years ago.” Keller denied that the Scott woman furnished the money for the opera tion of his automobile business, but instead stated that he was forded to spend practically all of' his money to get rid of her. ^ The Scott woman operated a disor derly house at Hall and Eugene streets for several years, but sold everything and left Montgomery,, supposedly for the west, between three and four years ago. Keller, in describing the woman’s pe- .v™- Low One-Way '-V Colonist Fares to the Great Northwest T HERE’S a farm for you out in that great, prosperous country penetrated by the Great Northern Railway — and it’s easy to get under the yq ew Three-Year Homestead Law —which gives full title to 320 or 160 acres in three years in Montana or Oregon. Crops last year biggest ever—the Northwest produced many times its share of the nation’s tremendous ten-bil!ion-dollar crop. Prospects great for this year. There are thousands of opportunities to win wealth and independence all through the wonderfully productive states of Idaho,Washington, Oregon. Montana, and in British Columbia. Low Round -'Trip Homeseekers* Fares in effect 1st and 3d Tuesdays of each month to all points Northwest. Write Now for Free Booklets and Full Information. We will gladly mail you interesting booklets, hiaps, data and other literature*—the most complete data ever compiled on the opportunities in the Northwest. Send the coupon, or a postal or letter to E. C. LEEDY, Gen. Immigration Agt., Great Northern Railway *• Dept. 80 ST PAUL, MINN. Panama-Pacific International Exposition—San Francisco—1915 ussQiiiBxiiEBiiaiiBUMPER CROP COUPON E. C. LEEDY, Gen'l Immigration Agt., Dept 80 Great Northern Bldg., St. Paul, Minn.: Please send me booklets and all litera- ' ture relating to opportunities in the Northwest—free. S32 from ST. PAUL to MONTANA Points $37 to Points m laano, Washington, Ore gon and British Co lumbia. Propor tionally Low Fares to ALL POINTS NORTHWEST! TUFT GOMES 10 GEORGIA BAY AFTER Leave Washington After noon of Inauguration Day (By Associated Press.) WASHINGTON, Feb.. 26.—-Final r.r-' rangements for the departure of Pres ident and Mrs. Taft for August^, Ga., March 4, were completed today. They will leave Washington in a pri vate car and probably by special train over the Atlantic Coast Line railway shortly after 3 o’clock that day and are due in Augusta early March 5. A committee of Augusta citizens is ex pected here to escort guests south. Augusta will stand the expense of Mr. Taft’s trip and he will be a guest of the city at a winter resort hotel for three weeks. Miss lielen Taft, Mrs. Laughlin, Mrs. Taft’s sister, Sec retary Killes and Mrs. Hilles probably will be in the party. Mr. and Mrs. Henry W. Taft, Mr. and Mrs. C. P. Taft and their daughter, Louise, and John A. Hammond are, expected to join the Tafts later at Augusta. Mr. Taft will stfend most of his thre e weeks in Au gusta resting and playing golf. From Georgia he will go v north to New Ha ven to take up his duties at Yale. - ■ . ... ■ —, V ! ovneai culiarities, declared that at times he thought she was insane and at others a firstclass actress. THINKS HER INSANE. “If I were put on the witness stand now, J believe I would have to testify that she was insane,” said Keller, “be cause I canot see how a sane person could act like she did in Montgomery. I lived with her a year because I want ed to convince my attorneys that it was she and not me who was responsible for the marital unhappiness.” Keller denied that the woman used intoxicating liquors and said this also deepened the mystery about her ac-' tiOhs. When she left Montgomery it was understood that she was going west, to live with or marry a traveling sales man. It is not known whether or not the person was Appelbaum. Since moving away the Scott woman hag returned to this city several times and spent a few days each time. Married in Haste Before Probate Judge (Special Dispatch to The Journal.# BIRMINGHAM, Ala., Feb. 26.—The marriage ceremony of Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Appelbaum was performed in Bir mingham July 1, 1912, by Judge of Probate J. P. Stiles. The license was issued to Callie Scott Keller, residence not given, and J. A. Appelbaum, of New York, by Clerk of Probate Wool- sey Morrow. The ages of the two were given as thirty-seven and thirty-six re spectively. Mr. Morrow declares that the two seemed very much agitated and wished to have the ceremony over as quickly as possible. Accordingly they were rushed into the next room and Judge Stiles took off enough time to pro nounce the words that made them man and wife. > Judge Stiles does not remember any thing of the affair. The two were said to have gone to the Mecca hotel immediately following the ceremony, but no record of this can be found. —— * Other than the fact of their appear ance in the court house rio further trace of Mr. and Mrs. Appelbaum can be found. What more can we do to convince you that you positively can find perfect health and reljief from your suffering by using Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound? All the world knows of the wonderful cures which have been made by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, yet some wo men do not yet realize that all that is claimed dor it is true. If suffering women could be made to believe that this grand old medicine will do all that is claimed for it, how quickly their suffering would end 1 We have published in the newspapers of the United States more genuine testimonial letters than have ever been pub lished in the interest of any other medicine for women in the world — and every year we publish many new testimo nials, all genuine and true. Read What These Women Say! one what your remedies have done for me.”—Mrs Riioda "Win gate, Box 396, Bluff ton, Ohio. Bluffton, Ohio. — “I wish to thank you for the good I derived from Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegeta ble Compound sometime ago. I suffered each month such agony that I could scarcely endure, and after taking three bottles of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com pound I was entirely cured. “Then I had an attack of organic inflammation and took Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and I am cilred. I thank you for what your remedies have done for me and should anything bother me again, I shall use it again, for , I have great faith in your reme dies. You may use my testimo nial and welcome. I tell every Pentwater, Mich.—“A year ago I was very weak and the doctor said I had a serious displacement. I had backache and bearing down pains so bad that I could not sit m a chair or walk across the floor and 1 was in severe pain all the titne. I felt discouraged as I had taken everything I could think of and was no better. I began tak ing Lydia E. Pinkham’s vegeta ble Compound and now I am strong and healthy.”—Mrs. Alice Darling, R. F. D. No. 2, Box 77, Pentwater, Mich. Cor 30 years Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has beeu the standard remedy for fe male ills. No one sick 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. Ml MW1 Write to LYDIA E.PINKHAM MEDICINE CO. mf (CONFIDENTIAL) LYNN, MASS., for advice. Your letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman and held in strict confidence. V —and Your SAMPLE SUIT FREE Stops Tobacco Habit In One Bay Sanitarium Publishes Free Book Show ing: How Tobacco Habit Can Be Banished in Prom One to Five Bays at Home. The Elders Sanltamm, located at 640 Main St., St. Joseph, Mo., has published a free book showing the deadly effect of the tobacco habit and how it can be banished in from one to five days at home. Men who have used tobacco for more than fifty years have tried this method and say it is entirely successful, and in addition to banish ing the desire for tobacco has improved their health wonderfully. This method banishes the desire for tobacco, no matter whether it is smok ing, chewing, cigarettes or snuff dipping. As this book i# being distributed free, anyone wanting a copy should send their name and address at once.—(Advt.) to your own measurements and let you pay for it out of your profit on the first few orders you take, will you act as our local agent? Will you accept a steady position that will pay from $8 to $10 a day —every day? Send no money. :• Our BRANCH MANA0ER We want you and must have you 1 dressed better than anybody else. Many making $60 to 6200, a v/eek. It's easy. You can do it. Your friends will want suit , like yours. Latest cut made-to- measure sample suit will be sent!,, you. Choice of hundreds of mod-1’, els, all kinda of goods—samples |\ show you just whatyou and your V friends want—FREE. No exper- 1 necessary. No capital. 1 We back you every way in your ££?Jl?5 lv ^J ;errit;or y* Everything FREE. Write quick. RELIABLE TAILORING C0MPAN , 500 Reliable Bldg, Chicago. III. If w» sand you a sample suit tailor-made Send No LADIES’ SIZE WATCH CHATELAINE PIN OR LONG CHAIN and RING This beautiful Ladies size watch is CDCC the best timekeeper evor offered as I 11 Cb a premium. It is handsomely en graved and guaranteed. Is stem wind, stem set. j If you want this fine ladies* watch Tree, all you I have to do is to dispose of only 12 setof fine col ored ART PICTURES on a special 25 cent offer. They are all the rage everywhere. Send me the $3 you collect and for your troubla I will send you this fine LADIES* WATCH, also a FLEUR DE LIS CHATELAINE PIN or LONG NECK CHAIN and a BEAUTIFUL BET I RING as an extra present. Write to-day. M. O. SEITZ, IC 70| CHICAGO, $3.50 Recipe Free For Weak Men Send Name and Address Today—You Can Have It Free and Be : Strong and Vig orous. I nave In my possession a prescription for nervous debility, lack of vigor, weakened man hood, failing memory and lame back, brought on by excesses, unnatural drains, or # the fol lies of youth, that has cured so many worn and nervous men right in their own homes— without any additional “help or medicine—that 1 think every man who wishes to regain his manly power amL virility, quickly and quietly, should have a copy. So I have determined to send a copy of the preparation free of charge, in a plain, ordinary sealed envelope^ to any man who will write us for it. Thlfc prescription comes from a physician who has made a special study of men, and 1 am convinced it is th><» surest-acting combination for the cure of deficient manhood and tlgor failure ever put together. I think I owe it to my fellownian to send them a copy In confidence so that any man anywhere who is weak and discouraged with repeated failures may stop drugging himself *Yith narmful patent medicines, secure what 1 »elieve is the quickest acting restorative, np ftuildlng, SPOT-TOUCHING remedy ever de vised, and so cure himself at home quietly and quickly. Just drop me a line like this,* Dr. A. E. Robinson, 3771 Luck Building, De troit, Mich., and I will send you a copy of this splendid recipe in a plain ordinary en velope, free of charge. A great many doctors would charge $3.00 to $5.00 for merely writing out a prescription like this—but 1 send It en tirely free.—(Advt.) This Wonderful Suit FREE To Our Active Agents Made to Measure—selected from complete line of world's exclusive Cloths—Fashioned up-to-the-Minute in Style and Workmanship We wantmore good agents to take orders forour made-to-measure Men’s Suits. Pants and Vests—we trust you and make such tremendously low prices that no one can equal our great values—we guarantee fit, style and absolute satisfaction or no pay—we take all risk—oursimple system of taking measurements cannot go wrong. ini Yes, in actual gold—Startling Revelation— BHPSra a RaBiSiP something so different, expensive and orig inal that no other tailors would dare try to imitate our book of samples and fashions. It’s remarkable how easy this outfit makes it ?o take orders and for agents to make C£13 fS and you need only to spend justlan hour or so a tiwiJSy day at ii—no experience orcapitalneeded as we furnish everything (res. We can use you now so don’t hesitate but send ns your name and address on postal today We pay all c-xpress charges even on your own free Sample Suit—your complete outfit of Samples, Book of Gold, Fashion Plates—all Free. Your Free Suit will at once cause great admiration, they will all want a suit made like it—that’s where wo get even—it’s great advertising for us—that’s how it pays . us to dress our Agents right. Send postal fe-)day to COPAT CCMTDKI. TAB! ABIMft EHaa*. A ftHIAAfift. HJL 1 New Parce.1 Post Map and Chart of Horse Remedies We have just bought a large number of New Four Leaf Charts, which we are going to give with The Semi-Weekly Journal. This Chart contains a 1913 Calendar, Pictures of our Presidents from Washington to Wilson, a Chart of Horse Ailments and Remedies, giving Symptoms of Diseases and How to Treat Them; a Parcel Post Map of the United states, with instructions; a large State Map of your own state, besides oth^r in formation and statistics, valuable in every household. We are giv ing a Chart to each person sending us One Dollar for the following papers: The Semi-Weekly Jour nal 18 months, Farm Life 12 months, and Every Day Life 12 months. Use coupon below. THE SEiVSI-WEEKLY JOURNAL, Atlanta, Ga. Enclosed find One Dollar, for which send me The Semi-Weekly Journal 18 months, Farm Life 12 months, and Every Day Life 12 months, and mail me absolutely free your NEW Ready Reference Parcel Post Chart. NAME '..... P. 0 R. F. D STATE