Atlanta semi-weekly journal. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1898-1920, August 19, 1913, Image 5

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i TUB A-fLAiTfA SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL, ATLANTA, GA., TUESDAY, AUGUST 19, 1913. OU/NJTRY' topics rt/.WCTEt. njiss.-urHj-ELTOfl. THE IMPEACHMENT OF GOVERNOR SULZER. When Mr. Sulzer ran for governor last year and was assisted into tile office oy Tammany and uie bum eie- rnent or New I oik City, and when he succeeded, although Mr. Oscar Straus was ins opponent, one of the most aoie. generous ana philanthropic men in this nation, 1 began to asa myself if the glory of the republic had departed. When i was in New lorn City in May, and the Maine monument was un veiled, a tiiouie that cost nearly $2uu,uou and was the gift of thousands of children ana generous people every where, ana Governor Sulzer made such a poor speech and declined to pull off his hat wnen tne invocation to Al mighty God round every otner mans $ head bare of covering, 1 said to myself: “Tins gentleman will have extraordinary luck 11 ms pi me does not get a fall!’ And the lall has arrived on time. That he was born poor, in the slum part of New fork, was his misfortune, not his lauit. but his laiiure to appre ciate tne religious reelings of his con stituents was hot praiseworthy, to say the least of it. He may escape disgrace when the final vote is cast, but it will be only his wires self-sacrifice that will save him if he escapes, she having under taken to proclaim herself tne guilty one to shield her husuand. | fectly delightful now-a-day» «o go to i Paris and meet those Christians who ; retain a lively remembrance of his , earlier services. The newspapers gave a very little assistance to this tabernacle meeting oi i 1913. In Rev. Sam Jones’ time the Atlanta papers gave entire columns to this purpose. But this year, this hot summer, witu its congressional squabbles and Mexi can dilemma, should be designated as the “Mary Phagan mdrcfer summer,” because the Atlanta newspapers are filled, crowded and I might say, gorged with the minutia of this horrid case. Sometimes four pages are devoted to each day’s incidents, and we would know those lawyers’ plcTures on the coast of Africa. It was a delightful rest from this horrible affair to hear Gypsy Smith talk of the triumphs or the Cross on five continents. \ The streets of Cartersvme were full of these daily newspapers, but the people preferred the Gypsy to the pic tures of Conley and Frank. So the world wags, with its ups and downs! TOWN AND COUNTRY. The w r oods are very green and fair, And fair and green the gien; And fair, too, is the treeless street That swarms with living .men. And beautiful are forest aisles Beneath the centuried oak, And beautiful tne chimneys tall That beich with tactory smoke, The songs of birds, the low of herds, The hum of bees in June, Chime with the foundry’s clash and clank In no discordant tune. God made the undiscerning ‘earth, The earth it brought forth trees! God also made discerning man, And man made tactories; And so the factory and the tree Are parts oi nature s plan, Both man-made mill and earth-made tree Should please the God-made man. The bobolink’s song and the motorman’s gong Are paits of one .refrain. The cattled hills and the towered town. .The wood path and the alley, The word-thronged streets whose streams are men, And the rivulet-threaded valley— These are all the equal home of the man W.ho loves the human brood; The home of the man who loves the world And calls the whole world good. The robin’s strain in the backwood lane. To this man s ear is sweet; And so is tiie rhythmical pulse of the pave Witil its tread of a thousand feet. He loves to see the pine tree glow And see the warehouse loom, And see the steamboats throng the wharves And see the buckwheat bloom. For towns grow up beside the streams As oaks grow on the hills, And mills spring up like growing corn And homes like daffodils. The breath of the fields its worship yields, Like prayer it rises high; And the smoke from a thousand chim ney tops Is incense to the sky. —SAM WALKER FOSS, in Leslie’s Weekly. GYPSY SMITH IN ©ARTERSVILLE. The Tabernacle meetting where Gypsy Smith preached twice a day for ten days closed last Monday night, and the crowds increased until That last night, when standing room was at a premium. Every seat was filled and the place packed before the weary evangelist rose to tell the story of ijis life. He was tired with much speaking and the torrid temperatures, but he spoke an hour and a quarter before he quit. He is A regu lar gypsy—born in a tent in old Eng land, and his kindred had been nomads, traveling here and there, for a long period, running into centuries. His motther died of smallpox, and her Infant was' buried with its mother. So his father raised him and his motherless children in gypsy fashion. His father’s conversion followed the wife’s death, and then the. children were converted to Christianity. For thirty-five years this gifted son has been preaching, as he pays, on five continents. This is not his first visit to America, but his first in the - south. He has a marvelous voice for its car rying power. He appeared to be speak ing in only a regular conversational tone, but the people heard him, and the Tabernacle seats above 10,000 people, and how many hung on the outside en closure or stood in the aisles I do not know. He has also a wonderful singing voice; the lowest tones are audible, soft and low. He told, of his evangelistic tour in Paris some years ago. He said France was anything but a religious nation— that it was weary of Catholicism and perfectly Indifferent to the formal exer cises of Protestant organizations. His description of this apathy was certainly a word picture to be remembered. • He spoke French very indiffeerntly and could not make any headway with an interpreter, so he had to confine his exerciser to the elite of the city who were well educated and could speak English. F’'nallv be succeeded in interesting these educated ladies, who crowded the piace, because no enurch was opened to him. He told his audience that it is per- A HIGHLY APPRECIATED LETTER. Savannah, Ga.. Aug. 13, 1913. Mrs. W. H. Felton, Cartersville, Ga. My Dear Madam: I received some days ago the book, your “Memoirs of Dr. Felton,” and have read it about through. It ought to be more widely distributed among Georgians. It is well worth the moderate price you get for it. Aside from the personal interest, it is really a valuable historical work, and, moreover, it is charmingly written and I should think It would be sought by all friends as well as those who thought themselves Dr. Felton’s political foes in his lifetime. Although you are seventy-seven years of age. no one can notice any diminu tion of the vigor and power of the great mind which has always distin guished your literary work, and made you the worthy companion of one of Georgia’s really great men, both an honor to the state which both loved and served so well. With my best wishes, f remain, Tours very truly, J. S. W. The Evening Story Faulty Intuitions (Copyright, 1913, by W. Werner.) Mexico, 7 he Monroe Doctrine, r SY BISHOP And Malignant Mammonism W. A. CANDLER They had been coming to the Ar cadia moving picture theater for over three months every Wednesday and Sat urday evenings when there was a change of films. Nettie, sitting behind the Iron network and handing tickets over for the nickels of a line of people that never lessened till the last show began, had learned to know their faces. The girl was a pretty violet-eyed doll. The young fellow was tall, broad-shouldered, Mothers Bill Is Now Law Of Georgia Mrs, George Brown Takes Measure to Governor and Secures His Signature The bill giving; the mothers of Geor gia an equal standing in court with fathers in the awarding of custody of minor children was signed by Governor Slaton Friday morning, and is now a statute of the state. This law was passed very largely through the indomitable zeal and perse- veiance of a pretty and persuasive littl® woman. Mrs. George Brown, wife of Dr. George Brown, the well-known At lanta specialist, who was himself a member of the general assembly fot four years, deserves especial credit for the success of the measure which means so much to the mothers of the state. Although the bill was introduced late in the session of the general assembly and its chances of passage appeared very doubtful, Mrs. Brown interested herself in it and through her personal acquaintance with the members of the house and senate, coupled with her un selfishness and her logical arguments in iis behalf, the measure made record time in passing both houses. Mrs. Brown haunted the corridors of the house and senate, never overlooking an occasion to put in a word for the bill, until she saw it receive over whelming majorities in both houses. It went througn the senate Thursday aft ernoon. Friday morning Mrs. Brown vis ited the capitol and prevailed upon the -presiding officers and secretaries of the house and senate to sign the mothers’ bill ahead of other measures. She then took it in person to Governor Slaton and stood beside his desk while he af fixed his signature to it. HE HAD A COURTEOUS WAY OF SAYING “THANK YOU.” and looked—well, Nettie often wondered why the film firms hadn’t snapped him as a star actor long before. He had keen, gray eyes, square chin and a courteous way of saying “Thank you” when Nettie gave him the change that stirred her demure little heart. In six months of city life Nettie had learned to be very wary of the impertinent faces that smiled at her through the network of the window. Usually she was very glad of that network’s protection. But he was different. They usually came about half-past eight. The girl wore simple but pretty clothes—the kind that cannot be bought readymade. Nettie got in the habit of fashioning her own shirt waists and one-piece dresses after hers. But she could not copy the lovely yellow hair, although after she got to her room late at night she tried to twist her own wiry black hair into the same fluffy, graceful knot. Then usually she pulled the pins out, and crossly went to sleep. This city way of living wasn’t what she had dreamed of back on the farm —all light and a good time, with a place to go always. The lights were there, and there were plenty of places to go, but it is lonesome wandering about alone; and it happened that in the big seedy rooming house td which a neighbor back home had sent her (the landlady was a long ago schoolmate of Mrs. Reed) every one was so busy try ing to make one dollar do the work of a dollar and a half they had no time to entertain newcomers. Though she had plenty of cn«nces to make acquaint ances elsewhere, Nettie learned quick ly to distrust too pleasant faces, long string of faces passing the window from 1 p. m. till after 10 was diverting and took, in a large measure, the place of more personal pleasure. She learned adeptness in the parrying remarks in tended to be witty. She learned to cultivate a smiling aloofness that was an effectual shield against impertinence But in between times she was lone some and wished disconsolately that she had pretty yellow hair and and some one to take her inside nickel show’s, in stead of having an olive skin, straight black hair, and a high chair behind the iron network. Then one night the girl came shortly after 8—with another young fellow—a thin chap with a flaring green tie and the snappiest brown eyes that Nettie had ever seen. They were laughing O UR country was never confronted by a more perplexing situation than that which is presented Oy conditions in Mexico today. On the one hand, tne Monroe doctrine, which lorbids the intrusion of any Eu ropean monaicfiy into this hemisphere under any pretext, must be maintained for the sake of our own welfare, as well as tor the sake of the Latin-Amencan nations to the soutn ot us. On tne other hand, this policy must not be asserted in such a way as to ohend tnese Soutnein republics, if, however, we warn European powers off the West ern hemispnere, we can not escape tne responsibility for maintaining good or der and the security of lile and prop erty in the lands over which we thus extend a quasi-protectorate. It is obvi ous that the position oi our country is, in view of all tnese things, one of great delicacy and great danger. The fact can not be disguised that some, if not all, the European powers, would be glad to- se such conditions arise as would force the abandonment of the Monroe doctrine. And it is also a fact that in La tin-America, during tne last decade, there has been deevloped a good deal of sentiment adverse to this peliy of our government. European traders and native publicists in these countries south of us have contributed to the creation and maintenance of suen a sentiment, and it is more or less prevalent in all these nations, from Mexico to the furthest extremity of South America. It is perhaps most ac tive in Mexico on account of the Mexi can war, for which most of the Mexi can people have never quite forgiven us. The disquietude which has prevailed in Mexico since the uprising against the administration of President Perflrio Diaz presents a most perplexing prob lem to our government. Our govern ment can not look with indifference upon such conditions, and it can not recklessly intervene for the tranquiii- zation of Mexico without incurring the gravest difficulties. No man w r ho knows any thing of the Mexico of today will think lightly of the possible consequences of interven tion. Such an act upon the part of our government would instantly unite all factions among the Mexican people against us, and the worst of wars would follow. It would not be such an affair as that conducted in the for ties under the leadership of General Man in Love Has Right To Lie, Rules Judge \ (By Associated Press.) NEW YORK, Aug. 15.—That a man who is in love is privileged to lie, was the ruling * anded down yesterday by Supreme Court Justice Guy. To quote the Justice: “It is also a well known principle that in the state of mental exaltation accompanying courtship, statements made as to men tal, moral or financial qualifications of the accused may not be too closely scru tinized, nor shall they be held to a strict accountabiity therefor.” In such a state of mental exaltation Phillip Cusick, while courting the woman he afterward married, told, her, she avers, that he was earning $30 a week, whilp as a matter of fact he was a property boy at the theater at a week ly salary of $13.50. Later when Cusick vanished Mrs. Cusick applied for di vorce, counsel fees and alimony. Justice Guy’s ruling accompanied his •refusal of '■he ’equest for •‘BLOOD IS THICKER THAN WATER” Without good red blood £ man has a weak heart and poor nerves. Thinness of the blood, or anaemia, is common in young folk* - as well as old. Especially is it the case with those wijo wovk in illy ventilated factories—or those who are shut up indoors in wintertime with a coal stove burning up the oxygen or emitting carbonic (oxide) ga..-. This blood, or blood which lacks the red blood corpuscles, in anaemic people may have been causti by lack of good fresh air breathed into lungs, or by poor digestion or dyspepsia. Sometimes people suffer intense »ain over the heart which is not heart disease at all, but caused by indigestion. Vhafever the cause, there’s just one remedy that you can turn to—knowing that it has given satisfaction for over 40 years. DR. PIERCE’S GOLDEN MEDICAL DISCOVERT Is a blood cleanser and alterative that starts the liver and stomach into vigorous action. It thus assists the body to manufacture rich red blood which feeds the heart--nerves—brain and organs of the body. The organs work smoothly like machinery running in oil. You feel dean, strong and strenuous instead of tired, weak and faint. Nowadays you can obtain Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Dis covery Tablets, as well as the liquid form from all medicine dealers, or tablets by mail, prepaid in $1 or 50c size. Adress R. V. Pierce, M. D., Buffalo, N. Y. DR. PIERCE'S GREAT 1008 PAGE ILLUSTRATED COMMON SENSE MEDICAL ADVISER WILL BB SENT FREE, CLOTH BOUND FOR 31 ONE-CBNT STAMPS. HE CAME AND LOOKED OVER HER * SHOULDER. gayly. Nettie looked at the girl re proachfully as t she handed over two tickets, but since she was quite un aware of Nettie’s interest, he/ gay smile did not diminish. For three weeks regularly she was ac companied by the snappy eyed chap. Nettie wasted A great deal of time won dering where the other one had gone and if he felt very badly. “I'd be ashamed ao treat him so,” said Nettie aloud one evening. “What's that?” asked old Mr. Bange, who owned the theater, peering up from the ledger* over which he was puzzling his brains and tying his forehead into such a tangle of lines that one wonder ed how he would ever get them straight ened. “I—nothing.” stammered Nettie, crim son to her ears, and thereafter she at tended strictly to business. Then for a week the girl did not come. Nettie, even though she disapproved of her conduct, missed her. A glimpse o the pretty, smiling face was worth any three of the reels inside. Finally, late one night, after the last show had be gun, “he” came. “He” was the first fel low—the one with the gray eyes. The brown-eyed chap, Nettie slightly* term ed the "other one." He looked tired, and there was a grave intent look in his eyes that stirred Nettie's pity. She didn’t wonder. Any one would hate to give that pretty bundle of blond gayety up, and some time that silly girl would be sorry. “He” was worth ten of the “other one.” Nettie gave out the wrong change twice while mentally viewing with much satisfaction, the deep regre’ the some time would droop the yellow head. “Doggone these figures!” shouted old Mr. Barge. “1 can’t get ’em to come out right. I know I’m making money every day. Ain’t I?” fiercely. “I should hope so,” said Nettle in much surprise. “At least, I take it in.” “Sure I am. Don’t I put it in the bank? Ain’t I got it all safe? Then why do these pesky figures say I’m losing? See that deficit- It ought to be a credit. I got the money right down on my bank book—but durned if I can figure out how I got it!” Nettie laughed. She had grown to like her sputtering old employer. “If you’ve got the money in bank,” lightly, “it doesn't matter, does it? I wouldn’t bother with figures.” Old Bange scratched his head. “I’ve got to. I can’t feel easy till they’re straightened. I guess.” solefully, “that I’ll have to hire some one. I never was good in arithmetic. Fractions al ways make me nervous.” It was closing time. The last pic ture was being shown. So Nettle hurried out. She had five rather lone ly blocks to walk, and was always glad when they were covered and she was safe in her room. The next evening “he” came in from on/j door just as the girl and the "oth er one” entered /from another. There was a short interchange of words among the three. The girl tossed her head, and “he” was frowning and the “other one” merely smiled. Nettie was recalled to business by an irate old lady who declared an grily that she had given in a two-dol- lar bill, not a one, and if any one thought she could short-change her that person was mightily mistaken, and where was the proprietor? Nettie hastily made up the missing amount and flush ed under the suspicious glare that the old lady flung back over her shoulder. She turned at a low, amused laugh The young fellow with the gray eyes had come through by the side cor ridor and was in the booth. A mo ment later Mr. Bange hurried back from the stage. * He introduced Mr,. Stane to Nettie. "I couldn't go no farther with pesky figures alone. So Mr. Stane is going to straighten ’em out,” he said. Mr. Bange hurried back to the stage and Nettie, with pink cheeks, turned to the window’. For an nour she was busy. That time of the evening was the busiest. Behind her ^ Mr. Stane w’orked industriously. At the end of the hour he came and locked over her shoulder. “It's about time for my -sis ter to be corning out,” said Mr. Stane At that moment there was a change of pictures inside and the crowd came | out. "*Leila,” Stane called as the yel- j low haired girl and her escort came j through the door farthest from the window. She turned, pouted slightly, but came over. “You get yourself some quinine.” Jier brother advised sternly. “And don’t you let me see you again slip out without rubbers!” Sh<j tossed her head. Her escort called back with a smile, “Don’t wory. Burt, I’ll see that she follows your orders.” It dawned upon Nettie that one's in tuitions do not always hit the '^ruth. His sister! And her pity had 1 been wasted. But he proved that he could be solicitous for other girls, too. It took three evenings to locate the old man’s blunder. He had jumbled his columns indiscriminately from debit to credit side. Mr. 0 Stane was a bookkeeper days for a big downtown firm, and he and his sister, who were alone in the world, boarded. He has been used to taking her around when she had no one else. It horrified him to learn that Nettie went home by herself at that late hour. He cut the work short to take her. And by the end of the three evenings *he was on intimate enough terms to tell her that her sober, swee^ face had brought him there quite as much as the change of pictures. Only, with Lela on his hands,, he had not .dared to think of . But now Lela wasn’t going to be on his hands much longer. “If it hadn’t been for those pesky figures,” old Mr. Bange grumbled a few weeks later, “I’d still have had a ticket seller. Now. plague on it, I got to advertise for another!” OUR SPEOttL'6* Suit Made to Order r Linis»jjs OuaranSaetl tor Two year* Made to your individual measure fromar.y selection of cloth. In any style and guaranteed to fit you per fectly. Our suits are mads by the only system in the world, which insures f ierfect fit. and are not approached n price, variety of style, quality of materials, trimmings and workman ship by any other house. We save you half on any clothes you buy. nmum AGENCY CFFEH Write us and we will send you abso lately free, complete c&mplo outfit, and ift.'Bo selection of cloth samples, latoet fashion Illustrations, order blanks, taps measure, complete Instructions how it take measurements. We will show you how- easy It Is to get Into well paying business. Hundreds of our agents are making to $10 a day. You need no money or experience— we furnish you everythin! to start. You cai make good money using spare time only. Profit on two orders payefor your own suit . THR CAPSTOL TAILORS fOopt toti * fttoar** * Martel a to, Tayior ana General Scott. It would re- qulie an army oi not less tnan zoo.Uuu men ana an expenditure of millions upon millions oi money. touen a conilict would invite compli cations witn otner powers, especially wun Japan. The occasion wouid oi- xer oppu*iunity xor tnose governments wmen dear us any slignies.. grudge io settle their grievances to tneir ad vantage. The opening of tne .Panama Canai, with all tnat is involved in mat prodigious enterprise, would be imper-! lied. if our country should be successful 1 in suen a war, at its close we would j nnd ourselves isolated among ihe Amer ican nations. Kveiy one or them would iook upon us witn distrust and suspi cion. Tne smouldering sen ament against us, which now exists among tnem, wouid blaze lute a continental follow such a conflict, a rew may be conflagration. Tne most far-reaching can not fore tell ail the results of evil which would brought in view. (1) Our commedce with the Latin- American nations would be ill-affected. .European merchants and manuiacturers would take advantage of the situation to alienate trade from us, and that alienation would continue for a. genera tion. (2) In such a war thousands of precious lives would be sacrificed. Both countries would be plunged into mourning. By it homes whicn are now happy, would be shadowed by clouds ot grief which never could be lifted. Women wouid be left in widowhood and children in orphanage. (3) All the senemes of brotherhood and the moral movements by which the welfare of both Mexico and the Uni ted States are mutually p romoted would be arrested in their progress, if not utterly destroyed. It would seem, therefore, that no one could be found in our country willing to do anything whereby such a ruin ous conflict might be precipitated. The thing looks to be so inhuman as to be nettling less than monstrous. Yet Senator Williams, of Mississippi, charged on the floor of the United States senate a few days age that there was a lobby in Washington directing its energies to fomenting this Mexican trouble. He intimated that these lob byists were operating in the interest of those who hoped to profit financially by a war with Mexico. The allegation of the senator from Mississippi seems to have justification in fact. The manuiacturers of army supplies wculd like such a conflict to come to pass. The Krupps in Germany have been exposed recently in schemes to sell their products, and the men in our own country, who make dividends Out of war materials, are perhaps no more virtuous than the Krupps. Men of their sort enriched themselves with gov ernment contracts during the war be tween the states, and others sold “em balmed beef” and like products to our war and navy departments during the war with Spain. By this time they are probably hungry for more profits. Then there are. mining interests in volved. Americans who own mines In the bordering states of Sonora, Sina loa, and Chihuahua, would like to see a war with Mexico with the hope that in the end these states in which their mines are located might be annexed to the United States. Some of these men have mining interests in Arizona, Nevada, and New Mexico, which may account for the bellicose utterances of certain Western Senators concerning the Mexican situation. In addition to the peril arising from the interlacing of all these and other interests in a lobby to promote inter vention in Mexico by our government, there are certain sensational newspa pers who lend themselves to the same diabolic ends. Some of them are paid by the “interests” to make their sensa tional publications; others are simply silly and senseless, like Nero, who fired Rome and fiddled while the city burned. The latter would not hesitate to kindle an international conflagration, if there by they could issue millions of “extras” and find ready sale for their sensational issues. Under all these inflamatory agencies lies the motive of malignant mammon- ism, ready to plunge two neighbouring countries into an awful war for no better reason than that of making monetary gains. The flight of hungry vultures, seeking to feed on the bodies of the deaa, could not be more base. It is impossible to frame a statement which could do justice to the blackness LXjjHOP W. A. CANDLER. of the infamy of such mammonism. Nevertheless the president of the United States is daily embarrassed by these foul agitators in his efforts to deal with the Mexican situation. The acts and utterances of the Secretary of State are misrepresented, and. there by, obstacles are thrown in his way which add to the perplexities of a prob lem already extremely complicated. The Mexican people are irritated by these misrepresentations, and by the inflam atory utterances of men In position to make trouble by what they say. It is time for the good people in our country to rebuke in the most marked manner the men who are conducting thv._o machinations of malignant mam monism. The men of commerce ought to re buke them; for they are the enemies of ou- international trade The men of agriculture, who grow grain and cotton, ought to rise up against them; for they would hinder by war the international exchange of these products for the goods of Latin- America which our farmers need, such as coffee, sugar and rubber. The men of humane purposes ought to resist them; for they aim at an end which can not fail to hinder every humane enterprise designed to ameli orate conditions in the countries south of us. The friends of peace ought to con demn them; for a war with Mexico would draw after it international peal- ousies and conflicts which would not end i.i the life-time of a generation. All Christian men should oppose them; for they set christiap princi ples at nought, and agitate for the most godless purposes. All men of all classes, who fear God or regard man, ought to withstand these agents of a malignant mammon ism. 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Box 277, Oak Park, Ill. contracts, the dividend* of mining •locks, and the potty rewards of “yob* low Journalism,” President Wilson end his advisor* have a task sufficiently difficult with* out the additional complications which nris. from the machinations of these agitators. Every pa trio tie American citizon should support tne adtmuici*o* tie n In 11p; t-iTciss • n ho. o. One thing any man and every man can do to support the pacific efforts of •* adminlstifttion: Ho can pr >?'<'■ self-control, and refused to be excited by any thing the agitators may do or say. There are some senators at Wash ington who would better serve their country by silence on the Mexican sit uation than* by the wild talking which they are indulging. In fact there are a number of Senators who comt nearer to earning their salaries by masterly silence than by the “masterly argu ments” attributed to them. In fact, for some time Western gales have been blowing too strongly through the capitol at Washington for the good of the Republic. This Suit Yours To learn how you can have b swell tailored suit without co»t(we pa / express,)make$10.00everyM day; to learn what beautiful tailoring really is;V to offer atylea that everybody goes wild about; 1 to get all your own clothes easy, do this now—! write us a» d say “Sond mo your Now Wondor- i ful Tailoring Off**-," and you will receive a f beautiful set of samules and styles to Dick from, and an offer so good you can hardly believe it. L No money or experience reeded. Your spare* time will do. Write now—sure. Address BANNER TAILORINGS CO., Dept. 429 CHIC NOTICE TO LADY SUBSCRIBERS The Atlanta Semi-Weeldy Jour nal will give you a dress pattern when you renew your subscrip tion, if you ask for it. THIS IS HOW YOP GET IT: Send us 75 cents for one year’s subscription or $1 for eighteen months’ sub-1 scription to the The Semi-Weekly Journal, and give us the number' and size of the pattern desired,, and we will send you the pattern FREE. Each issue of The Semi- Weekly Journal shows several patterns for ladies and children. So, when you send your renewal select your pattern, as no free patterns will be allowed unless you ask for them at that time. Re member, the pattern is FREE when you select no other premium, but in case you do select another premium and want the pattern “ also, send 10 cents additional for the pattern. JOURNAL PATTERNS 9041, 9G41. Girl’s Dress.—Cut In four sizes: 0, 8, 10 and 12 years. It requires 4% yards of 40-inck material for an eight-year size. Price 10c. 9263. 9f83.—Ladies* CapB. Cat In one size. It requires l\b yards of 2’Mnch material for No. 1 and %-yard for Nos. 2 and 3. Price 10c. 9638. 9033,—Ladles' House Dress. Cut In 0 sizes: 32, 84, 80, 88, 40 and 42 inches bust measure. It requires 5% yards of 80-inch material for a 3G-irmh size. Price 10c. 9348. 9G48.—Ladies' Apron. Cut in three sizes, medium nnd large. It requires 3% yards of 361nch material for the medium size. Price 10c. 9C39. ®f89.—Drees for Indies, misses nnd small women. Cut in /four sires for Indies: 80, 8P, 40 nud 42 Inches bust measure. Cut in three si-e-a fnr m’ssrs: 14, 10 nnd JR years. It requires 0% yards of 44-inch material for tb" 80-inch sije<4 nnd 0 yards of 30-intli ma terial for a fourteen-year slse. Price 10c. 964^-9632. 9C44-9632.-—Ladies' Costume. Waist 9044 cut in six since: 32, 34. 36, 38, 40 and 42 inches bust measure. Slrirt 9632 cut in five sires, 22, 24, 26, 28 and 30 inches waist measure. It requires six yards of 44 Inch material for n 36-inch rise. This cal’s for two separate patterns. 10c for each pattern. 9SC3. EGT3.—Girl's Dress. Cut in four sizes, 3, 4, r» nnd 0 years. It re juires 2\£ yards of 40-Inch material for a four-year size. Price 10c.