Atlanta semi-weekly journal. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1898-1920, April 15, 1913, Image 5

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THE ATLANTA SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL, ATLANTA, GA., TUESDAY, APRIL 15, 1913. D ^OUAITRY M niir TIMED' IjOME topics CW)CTEP Wf JTRS. V: HJTELLTOA . DELIVERING THE MESSAGE IN PERSON. AM truly glad the new pesident is willing to. break off from some old- time customs and pecedents and thus rid the country of several moss- back fashions, etc. That inaugural ball was a useless thing—has long been a burdensome affair on the purse of the nation, because every dollar that is taken out of the United States treas ury has been put there by the business and labor of this country It was ex actly well-omitted and like the ab sence of wine at state banquets, which were first abolished by the good sense of Mrs. President Hayes, it raised ob jections only among the classes who feast and frolic in Washington City. Gregariqus millionaies enjoy the oppor tunity to display diamonds, and lobby money frequently exploits itself in the national capitl, but dancing and frolick ing are both well omitted, as national drinks and ruinations,-for this nation. So we bade good-bye to the inaugural • ball with a thankful heart. It was a useless, and I might say, a silly ap- ( pend age, to national legislation. Likewise, I was glad to see the pres ident able and willing to talk to con gress face to face. Surely that body needs reproofs, when it was boting away a billion of dollars last winter it should have been rebuked. I again repeat it, every dollar that body votes away is placed first by labor and capital in the national treasury, and congress is expected to guard its outgo, like the directors of a bank are expected to watch the money 'of the in stitution, as i.t is drawn out. I wish Mr. Taft had been willing to go before congress during January and February last and emphatically warn these spend thrift public servants that they owed some duty to the people at home. But he did not go, and I am sure he would have been more in his place if lie had gone rather than in haunting the golf links around the national capital. In my opinion he was a round peg in a square hole. So I am glad Mr. Wilson went to con gress and gave them to understand that the president of the United States, like the president of a bank, is expected to report progress, as well as w T atch the strong box of the nation. Of course, the people “who-know-it- all” produced a sneer along with a smile and said it was not necessary that con gress would humor him and listen to him, but he was simply wearing out ehoe leather and w r asting his breath to “speak his piece” in that noble com pany. The wise- ones looked at each other and nodded, intimating that he was like a new preacher just called to his church, and had to do an extra stunt to show he was an individual and not simply a succeeding pastor, that he sought nov elties, etc., etc. Be that as it may, the common folks of this country (and they are in the majority) are not a bit displeased be cause Woodrow bucked up against the dignity of the United States congress and gave them to understand that he j was attending to his own job, and fully acquainted with what they are expected to do. If he makes no bigger mistake than reading his own speech, rather than allowing some automaton to do it for him, he has lost no ground in his busi ness methods up to date. He is going to be blamed or praised not only for what he does himself, for what Mr. Bryan does not foreign govern ments, but for what congress does. It Is his business to keep close after those unruly ones, especially when they be long to the “interests.” The last Demo cratic house needed a master or it, would not have run amuck on the people’s money. It was a left-over stock that is “dead goods” for the Wilson adminis tration. Do it again, Mr. President. Talk to ’em! INSANITY HAS MANY PHASES. Unless we knew how the cog had slip ped in jthat poor woman’s brain, and in duced her to leave her home and her children to follow a sorry man out to Texas, we should be careful as to our judgments. I am more than satisfied'that her men tal # cogs have been displaced and that she will go deeper into maniacal extrem ities unless she can be properly doctor ed. It seems also a murderous pity to placard the poor woman, because of the effect on her children. Anybody is lia ble to insanity, just as anybody is liable to other diseases, and insanity has an infinity of symptoms or phases. When it takes on a lustful phase it is just as much insanity as when ie becomes a religious mania. It is just as ungovern able and unmanageable as any other type of insanity. The only difference lies in the way the critics and gossip-lovers view it' In the sight of honesty and justice, the woman is a victim to insanity of a rabid and dis gusting kind and her organs are dis eased and need medicvation and she needs confinement. Of course her life has been perfectly blasted by a man who is not insane, and the burden of sin lies in the tempter and there should be pity for the tempted and diseased woman, who lost control of herself by reasos of this mania. And there are thousands of such cases. Any vital organ in the human body is liable to disease. Any one that touches the brain nerves can produce brain dis ease, an I bespeak for that poor woman common pity, until her condition is fair ly analyzed and examined, root and branch. If she h‘ad been naturally a base wom an she would have practiced conceal ment when she was finally discovered. Her painful frankness convinces one person that the poor woman needs shel ter and pity. SUNDAY AT THE PARM. On Sunday mornings years ago, when but a little lad. I used to come to salt the sheep in this same field with dad. The little clouds that floated round I thought were bits of wool; The sky was blue as’t is today and calm and beautiful. Now dad is gone, and mother, too; they lie up on' the hill. Just by that clump of popple trees be yond the old red mill; For Time has kept a-creepin’ on, and you and I are men, And little Robbie thinks the thoughts that I was thinkin’ then. There’s a brown thrasher in the tree that stands there on the knoll. Just hear the little tyke a-spillin’ his immortal soul! Our preacher says that man alone has got a soul, but vet What pretty critters God has made, and loves ’em, too. I’ll bet! I know the city pretty well; I lived there once a while, But I was the homesickest boyeyou'd meet in many a mile. The very horses on the street looked sad, it seemed to me. There wa’nt no colts a-friskin* round nor lambs as I could see. So when in June the breezes blew across the prairied west. I packed my grip and told ’em I had got enough, I guessed! Of course, there’s city folks who keep their faith in God and man, Though if they stay there all the while I don’t see how they can! We’ve had our troubles, wife and I, we buried little Dot; Upon that slope we made her grave— a green and sunny spot; And Death will never more to me seem terrible and grim. Since I have seen my little girl a-smil- in’ up at him. And often now I come out here and set me down a spell. Where rustlin’ leaves and wavin’ grain seem whisp’rin’ “All is well:” I wish that all who’d like to feel their dead are safe from harm Could come out here and spend with me a Sunday at the farm. —F. L. ROSE, in Chicago Herald. LADY SCOTT RETURNS FROM NEW ZEALAND Widow of Hero of South Pole, Returns to London From Futile Trip (By Associated Pres-.) LONDON. April 12.—Lady Scott, the widow of Captain Robert Scott, who lost his life on his return from the south pole, arrived in London yesterday from New Zealand, whither she went in a vain proposal to meet her hus band. Her three-year-old son, Petev, stood on the doorstep of her home on Buck ingham palace road to greet her witn a hug and kiss. He knew that “daddy” was not Coming back with her. but no effort has ever been made to explain to him the whole story of his father’s great career and courageous end. $30,000,000 IN TAXES FROM U. S. CORPORATIONS Net Earnings of Corporations During 1912 Was Three Billion Dollars WASHINGTON, April 14.—The net earnings of corporations of the United States for the calendar year 1912 were $3,000,000,000, an increase of $250,00(1,000 over 1911. This amount will yield an income to the federal government under the corporation tax law of $30,000,000, which is $2,500,000, or 8 per cent greater than a year ago. Royal E. Cabell, commissioner of in ternal revenue, has just received returns from practically all corporations and to day completed assessments to the full extent of the $30,000,000, which must be paid to the government by June 30. In addition $2,000,000 will come from delinquents of previous years. Net corporation earnings for 1911 de creased 2 per cent as compared with 1910. The figures for 1912, however, showing an increase of about 8 per cent over 1911, were 6 per cent greater than 1910. <®njsh Sent To Yon For A Year’s Free Trial Why Shouldn’t You Buy As Low As Any Dealer? More than 250,000 people have saved from 1100 to •150 on a high grade piano and from $’36 to $50 on a first class organ In purchasing by the Cornish plan—why shouldn’t you? We offer to send you an Instrument, freight paid If you wish, with the understanding that If It Is not sweeter and richer In tone and better made than any you can find at one-third more than we ask, vou may at any time within a year send It back at our expense, and we will return any sum that you may have paid on It, bo that the trial will cost you absolutely nothing,—you and your friends to be the Judge and we to find no fault with your decision. You Choose Your Own Terms Take Three Years to Pay If Needed. The Cornish Plan, in brief, makes the* maker prove his instrument and saves you one-third what other manufacturers of high grade instruments must charge you because they protect their dealers. Let Us Send to You Free the New Cornish BooR Tt Is the most beautiful piano or organ catalog ever published. It shows our latest styles and explains everything you should know before buying any Instrument. 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CHALMERS & CO. 538 So Dearborn St. CHICAGO A Curable Blemish on the bishop Most Beutiful of Capitals w. a. candler T HE British Ambassador at Wash ington. Mr. Bryce, is a man of great learning, who has traveled in every part of the world and observed things with a critical eye. He has seen and studied the capitals of all the great nations of the earth. His remarks concerning our Capital, Washington City, should receive the at tention of all patriotic American citi zens. In an address which he recently de livered before “The Committee of One Hundred on the Future Development of Washington" he compared our national capital with the capitals of Europe with decided advantage to the former. Among other things lie said: * “You have great advantages in Washington which these European cities do not possess. If you want to make a large improvement in London or Paris it is a most costly business. The land is very dear. You cannot disturb the old lines of streets and the drains and water pipes and telephone lines that lie under them. All that is exceeding ly costly. And every improve ment that has to be made in a city like London must be made at a cost so heavy that where it is added to the necessary expenses of maintaining modern appliances in an old city it becomes almost prohibi tory. “But here you have much more space, and while you are growing very fast, still if you take fore thought and consider your future you can lay out the parks over which Washington is beginning to spread in a way that will be far more beautiful than it is possible to do in the growing parts of London and Paris, where land is so expen sive. London and Berlin and Paris are crowded and you are not yet crowded. You have still elbow room here to do what you want. “You have another great advan tage in not being a large commer cial or manufacturing city. If you had manufactories you would have tall chimneys, and as it seems im possible to enforce an anti-smoke law in a manufacturing city, you would have black smoke, which would spoil the appearance of your marble and granite and sandstone buildings, the soot clinging to them as it does now to the buildings in London. “It was, I think we will all agree, an act of wisdom on the part of the founders of the Republic when they determined to plant its capital in a place where there was not already a city and where there was no great likelihood that either commerce or industry would, spring up. “It was wise to have the capital city, the seat of the legislative, ex ecutive and judicial branches of the government, removed from the in fluences of an immense population. Your city, it is true, is large and is growing larger; but it is not likely to be the home of any vast, excitable industrial population, such as is growing up in these other cities. It is not receiving those crowds of immigrants which are making New York, Chicago, and, to a less ex tent, Cleveland, Cincinnati and Phil adelphia, more foreign than Ameri can. “Under * these circumstances, what is before you in Washington? The city of Washington should try to set before it, should feel that its mission in life is to b e a great capital, that it is to be the embod iment of the majesty and the stateliness of the whole nation, to be a capital of capitals, a capital of the whole nation, as each state lias its capital, overtopping the cap itals of thos e states as much as this nation overtops those states, representing all that is finest in American conception, all that is largest and brightest in American thought, representing an ideal what the capital of a great nation should be. It should do that part ly by th e stateliness and number of its edificies; but above all, by their beauty. \What one desires is thatthis city should represe/it the highest aspirations as to dig nity and beauty that the people can can form for that which is to be the center and focus of their na tional life.” Mr. Bryce kindly omitted to point out a most serious blemish on our na tional capital; he made no reference to its shamefully inferior Church build ings. The political buildings of "Washing ton are not surpassed, if equalled, by similar buildings at any capital in the world; but its ecclesiastical structures are far below its civil edifices. The contrast is painful. No such contrast WARREN A. CANDLER. is seen in London, Paris, Berlin, St. Petersburg, or Rome. In those cities the Churches are quite as imposing as any of the parliament houses or pal aces. The case of our capital is easy of ex planation. In the first place, there is no estab lished Church in the United States. Many of the great Churches in the cap itals of Europe have been erected with funds from the government. But with our government such an expenditure of public money is unlawful. In the second place, Washington is not a commercial centre, and it is not inhabited by an opulent population such as commerce creates. Its people are for the most part employes of the government and such trades-people as are required to supply the wants of the city in the matter of food, clothes, fur niture etc. Moreover, the population of our national capital changes with every change of administration. In view if these facts, we can not ex pect that the churches of Washington will ever be such as comport with the importance of the place, if we depend upon public funds or local contributions to erect them. This blemish upon the most beautiful of capitals can never be removed unless each of the larger de nominations of the country will by gen eral collections erect at least one great' representative church there. In this way this disfiguring defect of Washing ton can be speedily and effectually cured. With their unparalleled wealth the American people can easily cure this ugly blemish on their national capital, and adorn the city with churches as beautiful and impressive as the best in Europe. It is time they had set about the task. Some of the churches have taken up the matter. The Roman ’Catholics are planning a church in Washington to cost not less than $1,000,000, it is said. The late Bishop Satterlee, of the Prot estant Episcopal church, set going a similar movement for his church. President Taft incited the Unitarians to undertake an enterprise of the same sort to cost no£ .less than $500,000. The Southern Methodists are propos ing to erect at an early day a represen tative church in Washington. A nation al building committee has been consti tuted to direct the work of building, | and the financial agent, Rev. George S. Sexton, D. D., has secured a subscrip tion of more than $300,000 for the pur pose. All the great churches of the republic should follow the example of these de nominations, and erect without delay worthy temples to represent them at the national capital. They owe this much to the republic, as w§ll as to themselves. All patriotic citizens should be glad to* contribute to tjiese enterprises, and to contribute as liberally as their means will allow. Every one, who can make a contribution, should be eager to have a part in curing this curable blemish on our national capital. Some of our multi-millionaires have a chance to immortalize themselves by erecting at their own cost some of the churches needed, or by making notable gifts for placing striking memorial fea tures in such buildings. Washington is destined to be the greatest capital in the world. Chris tianity will be depreciated in it, if the churches are so inferior to the public buildings as the churches there now are. Wholesome Foods at Little Cost PRUNES AS POOD. BY J. A. HUSIK. M. D, The prune is a very common article of diet, and its use is world wide. Prunes are nothing more than ordinary plums subjected to the action of heat in order to drive off the water, of which the fresh fruit contains over 78 per cent. The plum grows nearly everywhere, the best American varie ties coming from California. Certaip varieties of plums transplanted, to this country from Japan are held in par ticular esteem for their size as well as for other qualities. The edible part of prunes contains over 2 per cent of proteins, or vege table meat, and more than 73 per cent of sugar. They are, therefore, of very high nutritive value, and for that if for no other reason may well form part of the ordinary diet. But they have other good qualities as well. Compared to other foods, prunes form a very cheap diet. For example, if one could subsist on either prunes alone or eggs alone ,it would cost about one-quarter as much to live on the for mer as an the latter. To be specific, with prunes at 12 cents per pound and eggs at 35 cents per dozen, it would cost us 35 cents per dozen, it would prunes and $1.13 to live on eggs. It is wise, therefore, to make this fruit serve as part of the diet to add to its nutritive value as well as to cheapen the cost. Besides their nutritive properties and low cost, prunes have a hygienic value in that they stimulate the diges tion. The fruit may be eaten either raw or cooked, and there are many ways in which it may be prepared. A simple and very wholesome dish is the prune jam. It is made by first soak ing the prunes for several hours and boiling until tender. They are then passed through a colander and mashed to remove the skins and stones. Sugar is then added to the pulp, and the whole is boiled for several minute^, with the addition of a little water. Prunes also contain quite a high percentage of mineral matter needed by the organism, particularly lime salts and iron. By reason of these they are especially valuable for grow ing children, who need plenty of lime* salts to supply the bones of the grow ing skeleton. The juice of the cooked fruit may even be given to very young children. By virtue of all these quali ties prunes are valuable as ’food. They are nutritious, wholesome, and cheap. LANE WILL NOT ACCEPT GEORGIA’S DECLINATION Secretary of .Interior Insists That Fuller Calloway Take Indian Commissionership BY RALPH SMITH. WASHINGTON, D. C., April 11.— So favorably impressed is he with the fitness of Fuller E. Callaway for In dian commissioner that Secretary of Interior Lane will not accept the Geor gian’s declination until after he has had a personal interview with him. Callway i sexpected to return from Europe on the 20th of this month and at the request of Secretary Lane will stop in Washington for a personal in terview. Secretary Lane will urge Mr. Calla way to make the personal and financial sacrifice which he realizes will follow the acceptance of the Indian commis sionership. He has hopes of inducing the Georgian to see it his way and withdraw his declination. “I know lots about Mr. Callaway,” said Secretary Lane this morning, “and all I know is good. I am anxious to have him accept the Indion commis sionership, and hope to see him upon his return to America. A WOMAN’S APPEAL To all knowing sufferers of rbenmatlsro, wbetb er muscular or of the joints, sciatica, lumoagos, backache, pains In the kidneys or neuralgia [tains, to write to her for a home treatment which has repeatedly cured nil of these tor tures. She feels it her duty to send it to a!' sufferers FRE12. You cure yourself at home as thousands will testify—no change of climate be ing necessary. This simple discovery banishe* uric acid from the blood, lossens the stiffened Joints, purifies the blood, and brighteus ttu* eyes, giving elasticity and tone to the whole system. If the above Interests you. for proof address Mrs. M. Summers, Box 327, South Bend Inri, SAVE C-WHOLESALE FACTORY PRICES FOR EVERYBODY—.CATALOG FREE Golden Eagle and White Star Ve hicles are built throughout of the most oaretfully selected and tested materials, finely painted and finished, and guar anteed for long life, service and per manent satisfaction. Quick shipment from factory In Atlanta. 125 Styles in Catalog GOLDEN EACLE BUCCY CO., Write your name on a post card for our bLg free catalog and full explana tion of the special plan by which we will save you from $15.00 to $40.00 on your next purchase. 125 differ ent styles to select from. 32-42 Mean* St., Atlanta, Ga. "25 Styles in Catalog YOU AND YOUR WIFE THE CURE OP JEALOUSY. BY GRAHAM HOOD. When jealousy exists, especially j when it is that morbid kind of jealousy j that has no real justification, its cure \ can be effected if the proper methods j of treatment are applied. Tears and sneers ar.d recriminations will not do the work. Anger and condemnation will not cure. An exhibition of that false pride which condemns the one to sit in silence while the other drifts far over the sea of life alone, will never succeed in restoring the faith and tiMSt that have been lost, sight of tem porarily. Met in such moods, suspicion will continue to grow stronger until a violent explosion comes and love is buried too deeply to be Gasily resur rected. Where love gains all its sustenance from faith and confidence, jealousy thrives upon fear and suspicion. Ac cordingly, a proper treatment of this malady of the mind requires that the cause of the suspicion—the source of the fear—be removed at the first possible moment. If the endeavor is made in time, this may be done with out too great difficulty, but to accom plish the result, the effort must come from one whose love and faith are so strong that they are able to conquer suspicion by the sheer force of their own sincerity and unselfishness. As it is seldom that jealousy is ac corded this treatment, it is usually nec essary that the cure, if it is to be ef fected at all, must be brought about through the effort of the one who has been the subject of the attacks. Even he whose heart is torn by the tempest which rages when jealousy holds sway in the realm that should be ruled by reason, may sometimes awaken to a realizing sense of the folly and injus tice of an attitude that is so certain to bring grief and misery, if not fatal disaster, to the two whose duty it is to sail the matrimonial seas together. It is at such a time that the first step in the campaign for the over throw of jealousy must be taken, for unless reason is upon the throne every argument of love, > every appeal to jus tice, every assurance of confidence, will fall sterile upon a mind benumb ed by the paralyzing effects of this mental poison. There are times, however, when there is more justification for jealousy—when through thoughtlessness, or something worse, rights to possession are seriously threatened. To maintain one’s supremacy in such a case it is necessary to do something more than merely assert the rights of proprietorship, for where words of pro test may do no good and appeals to the better nature may fall on deaf ears, the power of personality may finally steer the wavering affections into a safe har bor. Unfortunately there are comparatively few persons who can hold themselves In check in such times of emergency. Al though they may realize that everything depends upon the attitude which they assume toward the new problem that confronts them, they find it impossible to make or carry out a definite plan to prevent^ the catastrophe which so seri ously threatens their happiness. Goaded by the thought that the one whom chey have loved so devotedly has ceased to love them—that their lopalty has been repaid with rank disloyalty—they pro ceed to do the very thing which most tends to make the recovery of their po sition more difficult, if not utterly Im possible. No man ever succeeded in calling back a wife’s love by a systematic course of accusation and abuse. No woman has ever recovered the affections of a recre ant husband by spending her time in tears or by making her presence dis agreeable to him by a continuous exhi bition of complaints and suspicions.* Were she to succeed in concealing the wounds that have cut so deeply into her heart; were she to be brave and cheery WOMAN’S ILLS DISAPPEARED Like Magicafter taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. North Bangor,'N. Y. — “As I have used Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound with great benefit I feel it my duty to write and tell you about it. I was ailing from fe male weakness and had headache and backache nearly all the time. I was later every month than I should have been and so sick that I ha(i to go to bed. “Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com pound has made me well and these trou bles have disappeared like magic. I have recommended the Compound to many women who have used it success fully.”—Mrs. James J. Stacy, R.F.O. No. 3, North Bangor, N. Y. Another Made Well. Ann Arbor, Mich.—“Lydia E. Pink ham’s Vegetable Compound has done wonders for me. For years I suffered terribly with hemorrhages and had pains so intense that sometimes I would faint away. I had female weakness so bad that I had to doctor all the time and never found relief until I took your remedies to please my husband. I recommend your wonderful medicine to all sufferers as I think it is a blessing for all women.”—Mrs. L. E. Wyckoff, 112 S. Ashley St., Ann Arbor, Mich. There need be no doubt about the ability of this grand old remedy, made from the roots and herbs of our fields, to remedy woman’s diseases. We possess volumes of proof of this fact, enough to convince the most skeptical. Why don’t you try it? Elegant Thin Models Watch $31° Hunting cats beautifully engraved, gold finished throughout, stem wind and stem set, fitted with jeweled American lever movement, guaranteed 20 years, with long gold finished ohain for Ladies, vest chain or fob for Gent*. $3.50 Guaranteed 20 Yearn IF YOU 8EE IT YOU WILL BUY IT. Let us send it C.O.D. for examine, tlon at your nearest express offioe. and If you think It a bargain and equal in appearanoe to any $15.00 gold finished watch pay the excress agent onr •pecial sales pries $3.50. Mention if you want Ladies’, Men’s or Boys’ sits. Diamond Jewelry Co..E 38*189 W. Badlson 8t.ChicM9.Ub and helpful; were she to try to display the charms which once fascinated Jiim, instead of exhibiting the side of her na ture which compares most unfavorably with the charms of the other woman, there is more than an even chance that the love which was in danger of being lost to her may be regained before it Is too late. Crossed Ocean to Wed; Changed Mind When She Saw Him (By Associated Press.) PHILADELPHIA, April 11.—Assum ing her womanly prerogative—Flaviano Folconia, who came from Naples to this country to marry Vincenso Tulli, a prosperous Italian of Germantown, changed her mind when the .ceremony was about to proceed yesterday. Tulli awaited her arrival on the steamship Taormina, with a marriage license and a priest in readiness, but she declared that she was not ready. His descrip tions of the wedding feast that had been prepared and the home awaiting her occupancy failed to move her and she left the wharf in company with her aunt who had arranged the match by mail, declaring that she was not sure that she would ever marry Tulli. REVOLUTIONARY DAMES GATHER FOR CONGRESS President Wilson Will Wel come Daughters of Amer ican Revolution WASHINGTON. April 11.—Women Ot all ages aiid description, but all dis playing fluttering badges, crowded in and around Continental hall today and the preliminaries for the twenty-second continental congress of the Daughters of the American Revolution were launched. The congress will convene Monday when President Wilson will welcome tho delegates to the national capital. Several hundred delegates and alter nates it is expected, will register their arrival today and tomorrow at head quarters. Two important committee meetings were on the program for to day. They were the committee on the continental hall and the committee on press arrangements. Both had many details to arrange before the main body of delegates arrived. A number of committees will meet tomorrow and be tween now and the actual opening of the congress more than a score of so cial affairs have been arranged. Arrested for Murder GREENSBORO, N. C., April 14.—John E. Fogleman was arrested today and is held without bail charged with the mur der of W. H. Tucker, who was shot from behind shortly after last midnight. MSTOBH For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of iranteed under the ttoodi Exact Copy of Wrapper. In Use For Over Thirty Years CASTORIA TM* fiBRTAUR QOMNBTi RCW YORK OrTf. Farmer’s Favorite $1=22 The Three Leading Papers for only One Dollar and this pair of - Gold Handled Shears FREE Sign your name and ad dress to Coupon below and send to us with One Dollar and we will send you THE SEMI- lO „ , WEEKLY JOURNAL 10 Months The Biggest Newspaper in the South. Home and Farm 12 Months The Big-gest and Oldest Farm Journal In the south. Woman’s World Magazine 12 Months Most Widely Circulated Magazine in the Word. and the Gold Handled Shears FREE Name ... Postoffice R. F. D... State..