Atlanta semi-weekly journal. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1898-1920, August 05, 1913, Image 5
THE ATLANTA SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL, ATLANTA, GA., TUESDAY, AUGUST 5, 1913.
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CcWPOCTED BTiTRS. U: H.JELTO>1.
THE INJUSTICE OP BANPOSOUS
POLITICAL PREJUDICE
The instance in my mind is the fu
rious political hatred that was heaped
on President Andy Johnson after he,
by the death of Mr. Lincoln, succeeded
to the presidency. In spite of this hot
dislike and furious political rancor, he
made Christmas day in 186S memorable
by a presidential proclamation which
gave a full pardon to everyone who had
taken part in the “rebellion.” When ne
was impeached before the senate of the
United States, and only saved from con
viction by one vote, he was berated alike
by Republicans and southern Demo
crats. In his endeavor to hold an even
balance between the radicals in both
parties he was abused and reviled with
out mercy. With our clearer vision at
the present time and the lapse of half
a century, we discover that he fared
hardly, because he as a union man had
resisted secession; he fared even worse
when he sought to prevent the rule of
Thad Stevens and Joshua Giddings in
our national business. Faults he had
(who is without them?); but he did a
long sight better for the southern peo
ple than any other Republican of na
tional fame who might have been
elevated to ‘his position at that era of
our history.
He should have been forgiven by
southerners for his opposition to se
cession when he bravely vetoed the'
congressional measures which forbade
southern representative in congress.
The measure was passed over his veto.
The hate grew so in'ense that articles
of impeachment followed, which failed.
He was elected to the United States
senate in 1S75. but deid the year he
took his seat, from a stroke of paral
ysis. He had been congressman from
Tennessee for ten years, governor of
Tennessee twice, and Unitel States
senator for six years when he was nom
inated for vice president on the Lin
coln ticket.
A fellow apprentice taught the or
phan boy to read. His wife taught him
to write. But his force of character
was go potent that he was elected to
many and various offices.
I am fully satisfied he made an hon
est effort to better southern conditions
after the war and was met by unrea-
loning-pplitical hate.
INTERESTING TO EIRD LOVERS.
My Dear Mrs. Felton: As you doubt
less know, there has been incorporated
In the new tariff law the following
clause:
“Provided, that the importation
* of aigrettes, egret plumes or ‘os
prey’ plumes, and the feathers,
quills, heads, wings, tails, skins or
parts of skins of wild birds, either
raw or manufactured., and not for
scientific or educational purposes,
is hereby prohibited; but this pro
vision shall not apply to the feath
ers or plumes of ostriches, or to the
feathers of domestic fowls of any
kind.”
This clause, which is earnestly ad
vocated by the women of America for
the total suppression of all importa
tions of wild birds’ plumage (except os
trich plumes for millinery purposes),
has passed the house of representatives
and is now before the senate.
A very dangerous amendment has
been introduced by Senator Clapp, of
Minnesota, which is as follows:
“Strike out the period and insert
the following: ‘Or to the feathers
or plumes of game girds usually
killed for food purposes and birds
which are killed as pests.’ ”
If this amendment were adopted it
would mean the extermination of many
of our most beautiful wild birds.
We, the women of Georgia, do not want
this amendment. The millinery inter
ests are pushing it in every way possi
ble.' Will you write now, today, to Sen
ator Hoke Smith, to ' Senator Bacon
and. your congressman?
Will you, today, get ten other per
sons of your town to write to him, or
put their signature to your letter?
Truly,
NINA HORNADY.
The foregoin gletter explains itself.
We seem to be very indifferent people
to the birds that were placed in this
country by the Hand of the Creator.
A great variety of beautiful birds are
already extinct. This bill, if passed,
will nearly complete the destruction.
Mrs. Russell Sage, in the goodness of
her heart, has purchased an island near
the m^uth of the Mississippi river, ex
pending a quarter of a million dollars
for it, -to be kept entirely as a home for
our native birds—one place where they
can have a legal right to live, maks
nests, and raise their offspring in peace.
She particularly deplored the destruc
tion of the robins, and she hopes there
will be some protection to our native
birds in the island that belongs to
them.
It was a lovely thought, and could
only be carried into execution by such
a great-hearted philanthropic ladju
The vandalism which has destroyed
the native birds and beasts of the
United States is unpardonable destruc
tion—and one that can never be recti
fled.
The Evening Story
‘ irht 1H18. b.e W Werner. I
COAXING THE WORLD
W BISHOP
Eighteen Cents
a Yarn
TO ATTEND CHURCH
IV.A. CANDLER
THE MARY P HA GAN CASE.
The murder was committed in April.
It is still in the newspapers, in August
and still before the courts. Whoever
is convicted will be doomed on circum
stantial evidence unless the murderer
confesses. That much is certain.
If this case should have been tried
in England, the result would have
been reached inside of three weeks or
a month, but there is no telling when
it will be reached in the city of At
lanta.
It is the law’s delay in America
which has made the movement strong
for the recall of judges who fail to
meet existing conditions and who also
fail to meet public expectations as to
results. This terrible crime was com
mitted in the very heart of Atlanta, in
broad day time, and with a town full
of policemen and court officials. It
has no possible redeeming feature
about it.
It was a tender little fourteen-year-
old girl who was destroyed; and under
circumstances so revolting, that every
man in Atlanta should have felt it nec
essary to hunt down the destroyer or
destroyers, as soon as the mutilated
little body was found in the pencil fac
tory. But it was not done.
And the papers are crammed full of
news items and the multitude in the
court house are watching the skill and
the fencing ability of opposing law
yers to see “which will turn the neat
est trick! My! my! Doesn’t it make
you tired? The agony of that mother
and of the young sisters, makes one
sick! The courts are called courts Jf
justice, but what are they?”
Miss Wilson's Fiance
Has Passed Bar Exams.
(By Associated Press.)
NEW YORK, Aug. 2.—Francis B.
Sayre, President Wilson’s prospective
son-in-law, was notified yesterday by the
appellate division that he had passed
bar examinations on the substance of
law and on the code and pleadings. He
will be admitted to practice in New
York state next fall.
Mr. Sayre is connected with District
Attorney Whitman’s office, but in Febra-
ary he will go to Williams college as
assistant to President Garfield.
MRS. HAWKINS GUILTY;
SENTENCED FOR LIFE
(Special Dispatch to The Journal.)
GAINESVILLE, Ga., Aug. 2.—Mrs.
Sylvia Hawkins, charged with being an
accomplice in the murder of her hus
band, Arthur Hawkins, was today
found guilty and by the jury recom
mended to be punished by life impris
onment. This sentence was pased upon
her by Judge J. B. Jones.
Jim and Bartow Cantrell, convicted
of the murder of Arthur Hawkins, were
sentenced by Judge Jones to be hangeu
I on Friday, September 26, 1913. It is
I said that a motion for a new trial has
j been filed in all three of the cases. All
j of the parties bore up well under the
| sentences.
RED-HOT IRON FLAKE
CAUSESJDEATH OF MAN
ROME, Ga., AUg. 2.—J. B. Clanton, of
Cedar Bluff, Ala., died at the Curry hos
pital here last night, after an operation
which failed to save his life.
Clanton was struck in the nek by a
piece of red-hot iron flaked from a plow
that was being repaired in a blacksmith
shop at Cedar Bluff. He began bleeding
badly, and was brought to Rome in an
automobile, but nothing could be done
for him. f
Am
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Whenever you tee an Arrow think cl C
For weeks Katherine Manning had
prepared for the vacation she and Will
were to spend with Will’s Aunt Myra,
whom Katherine had never met. She
had studied advertisements in the
dailies, gone to the department stores
in search of bargains they had set forth,
and bought mulls and silks at prices
that astonished even Will, who never
took the slightest interest in shopping.
“And the best of it is,” she gleefully
informed him when she displayed fin
ished garments, “every blessed stitch
in them 1 took myself. They look posi
tively expensive, Will, though this tan
for traveling, which looks like genuine
ratine, only cost 18 cents a yard.”
Suddenly her triumphant smile
evolved into an expression of wifely
concern. “Have I to tell you again.
Will, that our time is short? You
haven’t three weeks to get ready and
you haven’t a dud fit to take to your
fashionable aunt's. Remember, she
knows nothing of this abominable habit
>f yours of going about absolutely shab
by. What in the world would she think
if you landed in on her select house
party in that villainous tweed suit
you’ve worn for three years?”
“Just what you do, little girl, that
I’m all right.” Will Manning’s likable
blue eyes were frankly impudent and his
wife’s frowning face cleared.
“Of course I think you're all right,
but other people are not me, and at
fashionable country homes they go so
on appearances! You’ve got to fix up,
Will!”
“All right. I can do my shopping
in two days. During tne next ten I’m
going to be awfully busy getting
things in shape at the office, so don’t
worry me.”
“But you’ll have to order a suit!”
“Ready made,” he answered.
“And white flannels? You can af
ford it this once, especially when my
things have cost so little.”
“Sure! Now forget it and leave me
alone.”
During the week which followed she
refrained from mentioning his shop
ping, knowing that her end would never
be gained if she harped on a subject
distasteful to him when he was partic
ularly busy. And the week before
their vacation began she was important
ly engaged at her sister’s.
She did not leave her sister until the
day before their vacation began. Her
clothes were ready. Will had ’phoned
thr i he had shopped and packed; that
there was no occasion for haste.
He met her at the station.
"Why didn’t you wear your new suit,
will?” she asked as they walked to the
street car.
“O—h—” he began. She knew the
tone; she turned on him’sharply. “Will
Manning, didn’t you buy one?”
"Wh; I say, hurry up, Katherine;
here’s our car.”
When they were seated they discov
ered the Thompsons in front of them.
Mrs. Thompson and Will changed seats.
Mrs. Thompson wanted to hear about
the baby. Katherine answered her at
random; her eyes were going from
Will’s shabby tweed to Mr. Thompson’s
Immaculate serge.
“Well,” she cried, when she had him
alone, “didn’t you get a suit?”
“Little girl, just hadn’t time. An im
portant out-of-town customer drifted
in—”
Katherine’s eyes were tragic. “Oh,
Will, don’t! You told me that you had
shopped. What under the sun did you
buy?”
“Just what I need for the country—
sweater, gray flannel shirts—”
“Gray flannel!” she wailed, “for your
fashionable aunt’s! For pity's sake!
And the white flannels?”
“I’m no white flanneled kid, little
woman. Now, see here, forget all about
It and have a good time.”
./hen she thought it over she knew
that was the only thing to do. So the
following day when they landed at
Aunt Myra’s and found on the veranda
fashionably attired guests she forced
away the humiliating knowledge that
Will’s suit showed unmistakable signs
of wear, and smiled sweetly at strange
Aunt Myra, looking so charming and
up-to-date in her home-made traveling
gown, that all eyes followed her admir
ingly while x she gurgled inwardly. “If
they only knew—18 cents a yard!”
And after they had unpacked and she
noted during their progress down the
stairs the white flannelled men in the
reception hall she smiled brilliantly,
though her heart felt like lead when
she thought of Will behind her, looking
much as he did when he swung off the
car at their corner at home after a
hard day in the office.
And when Aunt Myra approached, a
surprised light growing in her eyes as
the/ traveled past Katherine’s perfect
attire to Will coming unconcernedly
down the stairs, she felt as though she
wanted to fly back to the city, where he
would not be subjected to unkind crit
icism. But she continued smiling
bravely, and, looking exquisite, mingled
with the guests seemingly as uncon
cerned as Will himself.
In the days that followed, miserably
conscious though she was of furtive
glances cast at seedy suits and flannel
shirts, she loyally maintained this un
concerned attitude. “There isn’t a man
here in it with Will,” she thought,
“when it comes to looks. And it's his
holiday. I’m not going to spoil it.” So
she proceeded to show pride in him
ofcenly.
“Will is a splendid looking fellow,”
Aunt Myra said once.
Katherine’s eyes glowed. Then at
something in Aunt Myra’s eyes as they
rested on her own daintiness before go
ing on to Will’s shabbiness, she said
defensively: “And he’s so sensible, not
fussing over clothes on his vacation.
He goes in for comfort.”
Abruptly, Katherine thought, the sub
ject was changed, and suddenly It came
to her that Aunt Myra understood Will’s
little idiosyncrasy and her own deter
mined effort to make the best of it
Well, she would thank her before they
left and tell her that Will was the best
ever in spite of his peculiarity.
Somehow the opportunity never pre
sented Itself until the hour of their
departure, when Aunt Myra called her
into her sitting room. Her eyes were
tender and very kind. “I’m going to
thank her,” was Katherine’s swift
thought, “and tell her about Will.” Then,
dazedly, she heard Aunt Myra say:
“Little girl, I’v e grown fond of Will’s
wife, and I don’t want her to feel hurt
at what I’m going to say. Katherine,
you and Will are very young—just
starting life together. You are very
happy; but don’t you think that
thoughtlessness is going to spoil hap
piness? You—” Aunt Myra’s eyes swept
her traveling dress—“like fine clothes,
and Will is not in a position to give
them to you and look as he should look
for himself. So,- because you are young
and want things you make yourself be
live it does not matter with a man. And
because Will loves you, he goes with
out, dear boy, that you may have. You
look most charming, Katherine, in that
costly gown, but, if you only had put
half the money in it you must have,
Will might have had ”
Just there Will called that they must
hurry, and Katherine’s hysterical laugh
that puckered Aunt Myra’s brows in
a shocked frown was strangled at its
birth. The absurdity of Aunt Myra’s
point of view had kept her standing
there speechless. Her “costly traveling
gown!” She wanted to shriek that it
was a sham at 18 cents a yard; that
she had sewed it on when Will was
deep in his first sleep; that Will
couldn’t possibly buy a respectable pair
of trousers with what she had “put in
it.”
Somehow she got through the fare
wells with her brave smile, and at last,
in the car with Will, had out the laugh,
or cry, or something that choked her.
“What in the world”— Will began,
looking at her, amazed. ‘Why. I had
no idea you minded leaving so much!’’
She turned to him, eyes blazing
through tears. "Will Manning,” she
cried, “shut up! Just wait—wait!"
And Will Manning waited. In fact,
when they boarded the empty Pullman
he found he would have been glad to
wait—indefinitely.
Half an hour after they reached the
WITHOUT A WORD HER ARMS
WENT AROUND THE GIRD.
city found them at Will’s tailor’s, whom
he visited on an average of once in
three years. When they left Will had
ordered a business suit, a dress-up suit
and a fall overcoat.
Then, homeward bound, for the first
time since breakfast Katherine laughed,
as she noticed Will’s lachrymose ex
pression. “Never mind. Billy,” she said
as her hand found his on the car seat,
“you will be glad when you see yourself
in new togs. Get the habit, then nasty
things like this morning can’t happen.”
“Darn the clothes!” Will squeezed
the little consoling hand. “That’s not
what’s bothering me; it’s Aunt Myra’s
opinion of you.”
“Never mind, I don’t care.” But she
did. She had grown fond of Aunt
Myra.
She was thinking of her wistfully
one morning when, without the slight
est warning, Aunt Myra walked in
with Will. Without a word her arms
went around the girl.
“You loyal little youngster!” she
cried. “Will wrote me everything, the
reprobate! I packed a suitcase the mo
ment I finished reading his letter, wired
him and here I am. I don’t know what
to say to you, Katherine! I—. But,
my goodness, that stunning gown we
were all g^een over—18 cents a yard!
For pity’s sake, child, where did you
buy it?”
Want Postmaster
Removed Because
He Has the Mumps
(By Associated Press.)
WASHINGTON, Aug. 1.—A Republic
an postmaster is bad enough under a
Democratic administration, but a Re
publican postmaster with the mumps is
an affliction that good Democrats can
not tolerate without protest. This evi
dently is he conviction of cerain resi
dents of Almond, N. Y., one of whom
has written to Senator O'Gorman asking
for the immediate removal of George P.
Hellmer, Republican postmaster there.
The request for Postmaster Hellmer’s
removal came several days ago and
Senator O'Gorman asked for a statement
of the reasons for the office holder’s per
emptory dismissal. 'He received a reply
today to the effect that Hellmer had the
mumps and was assorting and deliver
ing mail with his head tied up. The
writer said the residents of the town
feared the contagion might spread. The
senator is in a quandary. He is said to
feel that a man with the mumps is in
misery enough, without having his trou
bles added-to by the loss of his job.
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T HERE are sundry methods of try- |
ing to induce people to attend |
church services which seem to be;
utterly beneath the dignity of the
church and hurtful to the cause of re
ligion.
For example, it has been reported re
cently that a church in New Jersey has
adopted th€i custom of having ice-cold
lemonade passed while the service is in
progress during the summer months to
j refresh, the languishing listeners. In
another church in the State of New
York it Is said that the pastor has
adopted the habit of preaching on warm
days without coat or vest in order to
show thos$ whom he would have at
tend on his ministry that everything is
so Informed in his church a man may
do pretty much as he pleases, if he
will only come to it.
These are extreme examples of a vi
cious tendency in our day to put the
church of God in the posture of beg
ging patronage of the world. Pains are
taken by many churches to assure the
public that everybody and anybody
is “welcome” to come to their services,
as if this were not true of all churches.
All sorts of demagogic devices are em
ployed to draw men to places of wor
ship by appealing to their desire for
entertainment, or by catering to their
whims. Advertising, which a reputable
physician or lawyer would scorn, is
used by a certain class of preachers.
Now it is all well enough to try
by all proper means to induce people
to hear and heed the gospel. No preach
er and no church can be too zealous in
the work of trying to save lost souls.
But the very nature of the work pro
posed by the church of God forbids
that it shall ever assume the attitude
of asking the worjd for its patronage.
The church is the bride- of Christ and
ministers are the ambassadors of God.
Can the bride of Christ beg worldly
men to smile upon her? May she seek
popularity in the world by em
ploying all sorts of meretricious
charms? Can an ambassador of the
court of heaven employ the arts of a
-peddler of sacred wares? Has the
church or the ministry any thing to sell
which justifies the use of advertising
methods?
The church of God is in the world
to bring men to submit to the author
ity of the King of kings and Lord of
lords; the message of the church, there
fore, must be spoken with authority,
and not uttered with the obsequious
ness of one who begs for some petty
good from them whom he approaches.
To approach the world as if it could
render the church some great and indis
pensable service is to reverse the po
sitions of the world and the church.
The church has something the world
needs, but it needs nothing the world
can give. It can not be brought under
obligation to men. But this patronage
seeking method of some churches and
some preachers has gone so far that it
has induced some men of the world to
imagine that they have done God and
the church and ,-the preacher a most
gracious favour by attending upon a re
ligious service. Let all such know that
it is no favour to a preacher for a
sinner to hear him preach the gospel
of repentance and faith, whereby all
sinners must be saved. Christ does not
come into the debt of any man who
gives an hour to hearing the procla
mation of the word of truth by whlcn
salvation is offered to a lost world. God
does not come under lasting obligations
to a man because he consents to walk
under the light of the sun; on the
contrary, the man ought to be pro
foundly grateful to God for giving him
sun-light by which to walk.
When a church hands around lemon
ade to the occupants of its pews, it
says in effect thmat the gospel is not
worth hearing if one has to be warm
while listening to its proclamation. But
sinners are bound to hear the gospel,
whether the weather is cold or htft; It
is not a matter of physical comfort,
but of imperative spiritual necessity.
The church is the angel of the vision
of John in Patmos, flying on swift wing
with the everlasting gospel to preach,
and she does not consult her dignity,
but does herself and her Lord dishon
our, when she attires herself in the
garb of a waiter to serve soft drinks at
a cold-drink stand.
Quite aas reprehensible Is the pulpit
demagogue who is constantly bidding
for the patronage of the world by giv
ing men to understand that he does not
believe any more than they believe and
does not preach any higher standard of
living than t they are accustomed to ob
serve. Such men try to win the favour
of the world by berating the church and
making a parade of their own great lib
erality. The demagogue in politics, at
tacking all settled principles of govern
ment and promising the people every
kind of impossible benefit, if they will
only give him their support, is bad
enough, in all conscience; but the dem-
agoge in the pulpit, denouncing all the
creeds and all the churches and all the
other preachers in the land Is even more
disgusting.
In the long run the preacher, or the
church, undertaking to live by catering
to the world, wins only its contempt and
neglect. Men may listen for a time to
soothing flatteries, but in their serious
moments they will endure no such tri
fling with the solemn interests of their
souls. When conscience is aroused with
a sense of guilt before God, or the heart
is broken with remediless grief, men
want the truth as it is in Jesus, and
they will not tolerate shallow and cod
dling preachments that supply no solio
comfort for the soul.
In our country at least, If not In other
lands, the policy of petting the world in
order to win its patronage has been
thoroughly tried, and It has utterly
failed. Offering the gospel with a cake
of soap and a plate of free soup thrown
in to induce men to accept it is a plan
that is both unworthy and ineffective.
That sort of thing sounds more like the
arts of a vender of patent medicines in
the street than it does like the voice of
apostolic preaching. Such a method as
sumes that the gospel alone is not
worthy of acceptance, but that it may
be brought up to such a point by adding
a premium to it. But a gospel which
in itself is not indispensable is worth
less; It is no gospel at all.
Sometimes in place of “free lemon
ade” and ‘shirt-sleeves preaching,”
churches seek to allure the world by
musical programmes. They advertise
good in the right sense; but it is not per-
the music of God’s house can not be too
goodi nthe right sense; but it is not per
missible to substitute for the preaching
of the gospel a sacred concert. Men
may be saved without music, but it is
certain they will be lost without the
preached word.
In a recent issue of a musical maga
zine a choir-master seriously insists
that the services of the church should
be entirely under the control of the
leader of the choir, who should select
all the hymns, determine the order of
exercises, and introduce the preacher at
‘the psychological moment" for the best
success of a brief sermonette. What a
pity this sapient singer had not been
present to introduce St. Peter t-o the
great audience in Jerusalem on the oc-’
casion of the Pentecost! Would he not
have cut a figure then and there with
his gyrations and performances? How
long would that conscience-stricken
multitude have waited to hear such a
oreature and ‘his troupe sing? The
e&rixy church would never have turned
the world upside down, it it had adopt-
Wm §5
v >a ’' ' V., *
BISHOP W. A. CANDLER.
ed any of the modern coddling meth
ods used by some to secure the atten
tion of men.
If the world is ever to be saved, all
• this coaxing of it to attend upon the
I preaching of God’s word must cease. It
| must be brought to see that its life,
and not the life of the church, is at
stake, when the call to repentance is
j sounded by a messenger of God. It
must be delivered from the delusion
that God and his church are dependent
upon the patronage of men. Jt must
be caused to understand that in preach
ing the gospel the ministeis of the worn
are not seeking their own advantage,
but that as ambassadors of heaven thev
are beseeching men to be reconciled to
God.
Christ declared that He had not com®
to b e ministered unto, but to minuter,
and to give his life a ransom for the
lost. Such also is the mission of His
church. It. asks no service of the
world; it comes to offer salvation to the
lost. It is constrained by love, and it
is not moved by any purpose to secure
for itself any earthly favours. It ap
proaches the world In the spirit of gen
tleness and tender concern for the wel
fare of men, but it speaks more with
the note of command than with the
whining voice of coaxing servility. It
stands not with hat in hand, begging
recognition from any man. To kings
and lords and peasants and paupers
alike it speaks with a word of divine
authority.
The preacher who approaches the
world as one seeking its patronage and
begging for its recognition, misrepre
sents both God and the church. He
has nothing to give to men, but he
seeks to get them to give him some
thing. He is at heart a mendicant, ask
ing alms of a world to whom he has
been sent as an ambassador, if he was
ever really called to preach at all. A
suppliant at its feet, he fears Its frown
more than he fears to displease the
God whom he professes to serve and
dishonor the gospel *hich he claims to
preach.
dy in Repair
Nature intended that the body should do its own
repairing—and it would do so were it not for the
fact that most of us live other than a natural life.
Nature didn’t intend that we should wear corsets, tight collars or
shoes, nor live in badly ventilated and draughty houses, nor eat and
drink some of the things that we do, nor ride in street cars when we should walk.
The consequence is that the body when it gets out of order must look for out
side help to make the necessary repairs.
For weak stomachs and the indigestion or dyspepsia resulting, and the multitude
of diseases following therefrom, no medicine can be more adaptable as a curative
agent than DK. PIERCE’S GOLDEN MEDICAL DISCOVERY.
This famous Doctor’s prescription has been recommended for over 40 years,
and is today just as big a success. Restores a healthy appetite. Cleanses the blood.
Strengthens the nerves. Regulates stomach and liver. Demand the original.
Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery
Sold in Liquid or Tablet form by Dealers In Medicines
Send 31 one-cent stamps to pay cost of mailing only on a free copy of Dr. Pierce's Com
mon Sense Medical Adviser, 1008 pages, clothbound. Address Dr. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y.
\
••
9660.
9Q°0.—A PLEASING MODEL. LADIES’
HOUSE DRESS.
Chambrey, gingham, lawn, percale, or
galatea are most serviceable for this style,
but It will develop equally well In voile,
linen, silk or Inene, and may then serve as
an afternoon or home dress. The pattern
Is cut in six sizes: 82, 84, 86, 38, 40 and
42 inhes bust measure. It requires 5 yards
of 44-inch material for a 36-inch size.
A pattern of this illustration mailed to
any address on receipt of 10c In silver or
stamps.
9662
9652.
9652.—-A DAINTY MODEL. LADIES’
ROUND YOKE NIGHT GOWN.
White nainsook, embroidered on the yoke,
and trimmed with val lace is here shown.
The design is also suitable for lawn, dim
ity, cambric, crepe or silk. The pattern
is cut in three sizes: Small, medium and
large. It requires yards of 36-inch
material for the small size.
A pattern of this Illustration mailed to
any address on receipt of 10c in silver or
stamps.
9672—9671.
9672—9671.—A NEAT AND BECOMING
HOME OR AFTERNOON DRESS.
Ladies’ dress with or without chemisette,
with long or shorter sleeves, and with raised
or normal waist line.
White linen, with blue ratine for trim
ming and buttons and loops for decoration
is here shown. The design is unique in Its
shaping, and will lend itself equally well
for development In gingham, chambrey, lln-
ene, eponge, serge, voie, or silk. The
chemisette may be omitted. The skirt has
a slightly raised waist hue, nut may be
finished at normal waist line if preferred.
Ladies’ waist, pattern 0C72, and ladles’
skirt pattern, 9671, supply the models The
waist is cut in five sizes: 34. 36, 38, 40
and 42 inches, bust measure. The skirt in
five sizes: 22, 24, 26. 28 and 30 inches
wafst measure. It requires 0% yards of
44-inch material for a 36-incb size.
This illustration calls for two separate
patterns, which will be malle dto any ad
dress on receipt of lCc for EACH pattern
in silver or stamps.
9205.
9205.—A PLEASING FROCK FOR MOTH
ER’S GIRL. GIRL’S DRESS WITH CHEM
ISETTE.
Brown poplin with fancy orald for trim
ming was used for this design^ which
suitable for cashmere, henrietta, galat**,
gingham, chambrey, chnllis and all oth8?
wash fabrics. The pattern is cut In five
sizes: 6, 8, 10, 12 and 14 years. It re
quires 4 yards of 44-inch material for the
12-year size.
A pattern of this illustration mailed to
any address on receipt of 10c In silver or
stamps.
9206.—A PRACTICAL STYLISH FROCK
F0$ THE LITTLE KISS.
Girl’s dress with side front closing, and l
with long or short sleeve. Designs with
front«closing are especially attractive and
the model here shown will n it fail to please.
The round neck is becoming and the Gib
son plaits and shaped front are very pop
ular. The pattern Is cut in four sizes:
6, 8. 10 and 12 years. It requ-res 3% yards
of 40-inch material for the 8-year size.
A pattern of this illustration mailed to
any address on receipt of 10c la silver or
stamps.
(