Atlanta semi-weekly journal. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1898-1920, September 16, 1913, Image 5

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4 THE ATLANTA SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL, ATLANTA, GA., TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1913. A Wise Way To Review a Real Difficulty By Bishop W. A■ Candler THE. EVENING STORY (Copyright, 1918, by W. Werner.) President Harvy Pratt Judson, of the University of Chicago, has made a vig orous deliverance recently in favor of shortening the college courses. He thinks also that seven grades are quite sufficient for the preparatory schools. He insists that as -the courses of study in preparatory schools and colleges are now constituted, the student who wishes to take a professional course after go ing to college is compelled to wait too long before he gets his professional ed ucation. I In all this contention President Jud- 1 son is right in the main. Many influ ences have contributed to bring to pass: in this matter a bad state of things. ' The public high schools, supported; by state, county, and municipal taxa tion, conform their courses most justly: to the needs of the majority of their! students, and a majority of their stud-1 ents do not intend to go to college at! all. Whatever education these students; obtain Is completed with their work in j the high school. Most naturally these; high schools undertake to give them asj much as possible. Moreover the classes! are larger in these tax-supported high! schools and the element of personal at- j tenlton to each pupil in their classes isj f greatly diminished. The most apt and the i#ost dull boys must be carried along mechanically in the same classes, and the courses which they cover are curved more towards commerce than to- » wards culture. Again, in schools of every sort in the United States there has prevailed in recent years a manja for what is called “raising the standard.” Gram mar school teachers, high school teach ers, instructors in medical schools, and the faculties of law schools, have all fallen under this spell, and all have de manded “courses of four years length.” Students have been sacrificed to steeple chase races in which the schools have vied with one another in cramming their published courses with all sorts of sub jects. By consequence the unreasonable raising of courses has taken precedence of the right rearing of men. An elab orate system of taxidermy has been practiced in the schools upon children and youth, by which they have been stuffed with a lot of scholastic saw dust, until they have lost all their men tal agility as Mark Twain’s famous frog of Calaveras county lost his power of Jumping by being filled with buck shot. It does not seem altogether wise for the colleges to pursue the same process of tunneling their students with all the academic concoctions which impractical school-men compound with a view to making their departments look big in the annual publications of courses of study. But there is one thing the colleges ca ndo, and which they ought to do to relieve the difficulty which President Judson points out; they ought to pursue steadily the policy of making their terms fis short as possible (consistently with good work, of course), and their vacations as long as possible. Thereby they woult^ reduce the expenses of a college course, and give vacations of such length that young men of limited means would have time between terms to make as much money as possible to meet their college bills. The poorer young men who attend colleges furnish the over-whelming majority of the most successful students, and the way through college ought to be made as easy as possible for them. If the acad emic year could be reduced to seven and a half months, the reduction of the be of untold advantage to such young men. Now the average length of the college year in American institutions •is ‘about eight and a half months— f more than that of the English and Scottish universities. | _ But in view of the length of time boys are required to continue in the * grammar schools and high schools of our country before they enter college, the academic year can not be shortened unless all needless, absences of students from class-room work are rigidly prohib ited. Inter-collegiate games, with all the absences and distractions incident to them, must be eliminated from col lege life, or the terms must be length- ed, or the amount of instruction given be idminished. An average of a dozen games a year is lower than that which is allowed at most colleges in which inter-collegiate sports are not prohib ited. Three days are less than each game will generally destroy for all pur poses of study. Thus twelve games take thirty-six days out of the college year; and this is more than a month of the year, which is worse than wasted. The physical well-being of the stu dents would not be. impaired by elimi nating these inter-collegiate games. Any college can arrange for games enough on its own campus, and exercise sufficient ii its own gymnasium to pro- biskof w. a. candles. Dandelion Greens vide most effectively for the bodily health and development of its students. Intercollegiate games, even if it were established that they are entirely whole some and perfectly free from physical and moral perils, do nothing for any students who are not connected with the teams. Besides the absences from college, which they involve, these games lay financial burdens upon young men of limited means and upon parents who are struggling at home to educate their sons, which ought not to be imposed upon them. The salaries of the “coach es.” Which are often larger than the salaries of the presidents of the col leges, have to be paid. Railway and hotel and other expenses must be met. It is nothing to the purpose to say the “gate receipts” meet all these demands. As a matter of fact, the gate receipts do not in most cases, and if they did, there are grave objections to setting young men to playing for gate receipts, —objections which are abvious to all right minded people. Who shall end this evil? The col lege authorities? Most of them pri vately admit that intercollegiate games are evil. The restraints and regula tions, of which they try to minimize the bad results of these games, show how evil clings inseparably to inter collegiate sports. But most of the collegiate authorities are afraid to op pose what they freely confess is in jurious. There is an unreasonable and vicious ambition in many of the col leges to show large enrollments; there seems to be more concern to exhibit a great number of students than to do work of the highest quality. Out of this race for members on the rolls runs a race of intellectual runts from these colleges on graduation days. To get members collegiate games are supposed to be a means. Students, therefore, are sent yelling over the land as advertisers, as negro boys with placards on their backs are sent crying through the streets to advertise certain wares of low class tradesmen or second rate shows in the cities. The young men of limited means, who desire college education at a cost which they can meet, can do much to arrest this evil. Let them refuse to attend in stitutions at which intercollegiate games are allowed, and college authori ties will take notice of the fact. Parents, who are struggling to edu cate their sons and practicing hard self- denials to obtain the necessary funds for the purpose, can do much to stop this mania for intercollegiate games. Let them refuse to patronize institu tions which are willing that needless financial burdens shall be Imposed upon them, and the colleges will put away speedily these “sports that kill.” It is of the utmost importance to the country, and especially to the south, where most of the young men who use college advantages well are poor, that the academic year should be made short er and the vacation longer. But this can not be done in a college as long as a considerable number of the stu dents in the institution are absent from college work on an average of mort than a month during each scholastic year. It is time to value intercollegiate games less and real education more. Young men who make sport a serious matter at school will probably make sport of serious matters in after lifa. Pamela Carr came out into her yard holding a small shawl together about her shoulders. The morning was still fresh and there was a brisk little breeze which made a shawl a necessity to an old woman of something more than three score years. Pamela had come out to look at the dandelions. They had blown over night, and the short, damp grass was sprinkled with them. If some ple thoric purse had burst and scattered its golden contents throughout Pamela’s yard there could not have been a braver showing. Pamela sighed as she gazed about her. “If they was gold pieces now I’d soon have my apron full,” she thought. “And then—and then” she shook her head, sadly. “But they ain’t gold pieces. They’re just dandelions.” She bent her stiff old back and picked two or three of the perky blossoms. With worn, knotted fingers she caressed them gently. They felt like velvet. A faint smile grew upon her face. She had something of the same pleasure in the flower that she had experienced in her f^r away childhood, when every dan delion was a prize and a handful of them a precious hoard. “Pretty little thing,” she murmured. “I don’t know but it’s worth while be ing hungry just to have you ’stid of a yaller metal that men fight over. I guess you ain’t ever brought anything but pleasure into the world. That’s I something to live for even if you ain’t more’n a common dandelion.” A movement, the glint of a tin pan and the sound of an old voice quavering \ out a stave from an old song inter- ; rupted her contemplation of the dan delion. Beyond the fence, with its rank overgrowth of blackberry vine®, was i another yard the size of her own, sown I just as plentifully with yellow disks. : And there an old woman had appeared ; with knife and pan. “She’s going to dig her a mess of ! greens.” Pamela thought. “Well, now! Dandelion greens! They’d taste mighty “Yon want me to go away?” she asked 1 du*ly. JOHN D/S PASTOR IS CHARGED WITH BE A TING FA THER TERRE HAUTE, Ind., Sept. 15.—Four members of the Hanley family late to day were subpoenaed to appear before the grand jury here Monday mqrning to tell of the alleged assault made upon Calvin Hanley, of Middleton, by his son, President E. A. Hanley, of Frank lin college. Those summoned were President Hanley’s mother, his sister, a brother, Oakley Hanley, and the lat ter’s wife. President Hanley tonight arrived here from Indianapolis, where today he issued a rtatement admitting that he had switched and. spanked 1 his father. H'; is a guest of the Rev. C. R. Par ker, a member of the executive board of Franklin college. The Rev. Mr. Par ker, in a brief statement, said the ex ecutive board had full confidence in Dr. Hanley and that no hasty action would be taken on the case. Calvin Hanley was resting easy to night and his physician said he did not consider his condition serious. Dr. Hanley is one of the leading edu cators of Indiana and a former Bap tist minister. At one time he was pas tor of the John D. Hockefefellfr church in Cleveland. Dr. Hanley and his father were recon ciled tonight when the son motored to his father’s home. In the presence of all the members of the family, the two embraced and asked mutual forgiveness. According to a friend who witnessed the meeting, the father declared that he had been spoiled by being allowed to dictate to other members of his family. Dr. Hanley later returned to Terre Haute and departed on a late train for Franklin. CONGRESSMAN WILDER IS TAKEN HOME FOR BURIAL WASHINGTON, Sept. 15.—Accompa nied by committees of the senate and house, the body of the late Represent ative William H. Wilder ,of Massachu setts, was taken to Gardner, that state, for interment. His widow and five children were In the funeral party. Stomach Weak? WISH'S dw day suffering when aid is at hand so convenient and at so little cost. Blood Bad? Liver Lazy? Dr. Pierce’s Golden Nervous ? |yf ec jt C al Discovery aids digestion and purifies the blood. As a consequence both the stomach and liver return to their normal and healthy condition. Nervousness and biliousness soon disappear. The entire system takes on hew life. For over forty years this famous old medicine has “made good”—and nevermore so than today, enjoying a greater sale all over the world than any other doctor’s prescription. Fop sale at all druggists in liquid or tablet form, op you can send fifty lc stamps for trial box. Address y DR. R. V. PIERCE, BUFFALO, N. Y. 5 Year Guabahtu 98 CENTS POST PAID To advertise our bu*ine*r make new friend* ami introduce oar big caiamgue of Elgin watches we will send this elegant watch postpaid for only 68 cento. Gent’s size, high grade gold plate finish, lever escapement, stem wind and stem set, accurate time keeper, fully Guaranteod for 5 Years* Send 93 cenu today and watch will be sent by return mail, batisfaatlon guaranteed oi money refunded. HUNTER WATCH CO., Dept. 903, CHICAGO. ILL* good with a bit of pork in ’em. Trouble I is I haven’t got the pork. And then 1 don’t know as I could eat ’em after all my bothering. I don’t seem to have no appetite lately. When your heart is too full your stomach is apt to go empty. I notice. Well, well, well!” She watched the other old woman j furtively. It would not do to let Ara- 1 minta Peck see ^her watching. Ara- ! minta apparently did not notice her, i though there was scarce a stone’s | throw between them. They had not spok- | en in forty years. Yet all that time ' they had lived side by side on the same street. The enmity which had sprung up from one violent, youthful quarrel had lasted well. It seemed likely to outlast the old women themselves. Pa mela was proud, but years had worn down her resentment and she no longer regarded Araminta as the woman she had quarreled with and hated, but as the one thing left that had accompanied her out of the past. She had lost all that she had started out with—friends, relatives, husband, daughter—and she was now alone in the world. She had outlived all her contemporaries save Araminta. And yet because they had once vowed never to speak again they did not speak. “And we never will,” Pamela thought. “Sometimes I feel just like giving in, but I dassen’t, not knowing how she’d take it. I’m pretty old for grudges now-—pretty old. And pretty lonesome.” Sighing again, she turned and entered her house. It was a tiny house which had grown decrepit from neglect. Pamela had come to it as a bride and had never lived elsewhere. All her joys, sorrows, hopes, had been experienced within these four humble walls. Her child had been born there; had been married there; her husband’s body had been borne to its grave over the low threshold. She had seen youth pass and old age flower as the lilacs outside the window. And now she was waiting the last event of all. The room she entered was poor and bare. One by one things had given out and been tucked out of sight. They had not been replaced. There was no money. The house itself was not hers. Long ago it had been mortgaged and the mortgage had been foreclosed. But because the man who owned the mort gage was rich enough to indulge in a careless kindness now and then he had let the old woman stay on, thinking, per haps, it would not be for long. Pamela, however, was a woman of the old race, built for wear. She felt herself that she might live on for a long time unless the old stove -asphyxiated her or she starved. Yes, there was an actual possibility that she might starve. She had very little money, and she realized that it might have to do her for years, perhaps. And then there was her burying to look out for. SJie would not accept charity. A good rruyiy things had died out in Pamela —things like her old resentment against Araminta Peck, but her pride was still big and strong. She sat down in her rocking chair by the window and rocked softly, cuddling her dandelion greens she was gathering for dandelion blossoms. She was thinking about Araminta and the dandelion greens she was gathering for her dinner. Pame la wonderful dully about her own dinner: There was tea and a little bread; no but- rer, no milk. “But pshaw, what’s the difference? I don’t care for eating anyway.” An automobile burred and honked up the street and came to a stop before her door. A man leaped out, ran up to Pa mela’s door and knocked boldly. Pamela hurried and opened the door. “Good morning, Mrs. Carr,” said the man. “I’m sorry to trouble you so early in the morning. My name is Whitney and I have bought this place of Mr. Van Arsdale. I want to take possession at once, and * I’ve come to see how long it will be before you can vacate the prem ises.” and pink, his eye uncompromising, even He was young and his face was hard although Pamela stared at him as if he had struck ner. “You want me to go away?” she asked, dully. “Yes, ma’am—soon as you can. I’ve got a tenant ready to come in the first of the month. And I’ll need some time before that to make a few repairs.” Pamela stood holding to her posies, her old face white and drawn. Three times she tried before any words would come. “Why, I’ll go,” she faltered. “I’ll go, “We wouldn’t fight much at our ages.” of course.” She looked about the room at the few remaining treasures, looked ae she might have looked at her coffined dead. “All right, then. That’s all I want to know. Will three or four days be long enough for you?” Pamela bowed her head. He lifted his hat and turning ran back to his smart roadster. Pamela shut the door and fell back into a chair. The dandelions slipped from her hands. She had fainted. She came to herself slowly with a terrible realization of the threatening calamity. She sat up and rubbed her head. A voice seemed to cry to her from every corner of her room: “You must go! You must go!” And Pa mela cried back, despairingly: “I’ve got to go!” So far was she out of her senses that she did not consider how far that cry carried. She did not dream that Ara minta Peck could hear it as she prodded after a particularly succulent dandelion close to the fence—that Araminta, hav ing heard it, left her dandelions and, running round the fence, peered in at the window, and that, seeing what there was to see, she left the window and went to the door. Her entrance produced a shock that startled everything but astonishment out of Pamela’s head. “Araminta Peck!” she exclaimed. Aramita, vigorous and nimble still, rushed to her and seized her hands. “Pamela, let bygones be bygones,” she said. "Come over and eat dandelion greens with me. I’ve dug enough to feed a regiment, and I hate to throw ’em away. We’ve et dandelion greens together a good many times. There ain’t any reason why:,.we shouldn’t eat ’em together again. Is there, Pamela? Eh?” “I don’t know as there is, Araminta. I ain’t been mad at you this long while.” Araminta was shrewd and she knew whom she had to deal with. “Put on your shawl, Pamela, if you’ve got your morning’s work done, and come and earn your greens by helping look ’em over. I guess we’ll find something to talk about, consider ing we’ve been saving ^ip our gab for forty years.” j She chuckled merrily. She had al ways been noted for her gay spirits. Cleverly she got Pamela out of one house into the other. And over the greens she gradually probed Pamela’s confidence. “I saw that automobile,” Araminta said. ‘But, land, I never suspected what that fellow was up to. Of course, you don’t mind going, Pamela. ’Tain’t been safe this good while for you to live alone, or me either. I’ve been con sidering taking in a lodger just for com pany. If you ain’t settled on any other place to go, Pamela, why don’t you bunk in here with n^? I’ve got two empty rooms that’ll hold all your things, and 4 guess”—she laughed—“that we wouldn’t fight much at our ages. If we do, you're the biggest.” Across the pan of greens Pamela held out a shaking old hand. Tears were running down her cheeks. “Araminta Peck, God bless you!” she sobbed. “Pshaw!” mumbled Araminta But her hand clasp was very warm. 1 si and 5th Generation OUAITRY rJOME TlMELT TOPICS Conducted btjtrs. \r. h.jelltd/i . MEXICAN SITUATION GROWS WORSE. Tonight’s papers tell us that a great many" Americans in Mexico have been grossly maltreated, abused—raivished and murdered lately, and the governor of Texas is publishing some very straight Talk on this subject. If the restless and dissatisfied people of this country can push the United States into war it is surely going to be done, ere “many moons shall wax and wane.” Then we shall pay dearly for this rest less and dissatisfied conduct and rash ness. War is a very dreadful thing to think about, but it is especially horrible to get into. If we get into a war with Mexico, the border states will have the brunt to bear, as to raids and pil lage. We will not, within a century, recover from the losses that fell upon the southern states in the fateful sixties. Other people may muster up a war spirit, and want *to fight some other nation but here is one aged citizen that has had enough. I hope to be delivered from war. Governor CJolquitt, of Texas, says his state has nine hundred miles of hor de rlines with Mexico, and there are perhaps three times that distance with border lines i of New Mexico, California and other adjoining states. All that country must be patrolled and picketed. It will be hot work and dangerous, and encumbered with guerillas and desperate cut-throats. I can give no estimate as to the business losses, but I am sure there will be enormous expense—terri ble waste'and uncertain results. ANOTHER SIGN OP THE MILITARY MILLENNIUM IN OUR LAND. The reunion at Gettysburg, fifty years from the time of the battle, was one good indication of the growing har mony between the north and south, and the coming reunion of the G. A. R. at Chattanooga, Tenn., which begins on the 15th of tli© present month, will mark another long step forward in the same direction. The Chattanoogans are preparing *or a great time, and I have no doubt but it will be a most pleasing event to the citizens as well as the visitors. There are so many battlefields around that historic place*, with Lookout Mountain, Miosion Ridge and Chickamauga in close proximity, that five days will barely suffice to give the army veter ans full opportunity to visit and exam ine the monuments of which there are many, and full of interest to both the blue and the gray. As it is the first federal Grand Army reunion to be held in any southern state, the outlook is promising for a gala time. I hope there will nothing occur to mar the harmony of the gathering. In the com ing days when all the actors are in dust and nobody left to say, “I was here,” or “My regiment was over there,” there will be great satisfaction in the thought that the Grand Army could meet in its annual reunion and everybody feel that it was good to be there. ' I well remember those gloomy Sep tember days in 1863, when the battle of Chickamauga was on, and the rail road trains were filled with wounded soldiers and prisoners of war. I little expected that I ever should be really glad that Federal troops could be in vited and entertained so near me. But the joys of peace are great and glo rious. HOW THE PARMER PAYS THE PIPER. I did not understand until lately how Liverpool cotton buyers could put it over the poor southern cotton raiser. When he brings hi^bale of cotton to the weigher’s platform, ten cents is taken off, and the farmer pays it—not the buyer. The law now declares that the owner must be sure to have his cotton bale packed in first class order or $1 is deducted for failure to make the ginner do his duty. When it gets to Liverpool all charges must be paid by the cotton before the Liverpool buy er will buy it. Then he takes off 6 per cent of the bale’s weight for some reason best known to himself. Thirty pounds of lint cotton is de ducted from every 500-pound bale in Liverpool. If it weighs more, more is deducted. If cotton sells at 12 cents per pound, there is $3.60 deducted from the amount the bale sells for. Therefore, the American buyer pays just that much less than the cotton will sell for in Liverpool, and the cotton pro ducer has all the loss. If he sells it at 12 cents in Cartersville, he is obliged to pay for bagging and ties out of that selling price, pay for ginning and pack ing. He gets nothing for hauling to market, then he pays 10 cents for weigh ing, and lastly, he ismulcted $3.60 by Liverpool buyers as soon as it gets across the Atlantic ocean. The cotton buyer holds the price down in this country and then adds six-tenths of a cent on every 10 cents worth of cotton sold in Liverpool. Of course cot ton buyers are in the business for the money profit on the cotton, but the burden falls on the man who raises the cotton every time. Don’t it make you tired? Macon Churches to Have Law and Order Meetin$ on Sunday MACON, Ga., Sept. 15.—Perhaps the largest and most significant mass meet ing in the interest of law and order ever held in Macon will take place at tne city auditorium Sunday night. Five and probably more of the largest congregations of the city will abandon their night church services and unite in a mass meeting. The churches al ready enlisted in the movement are the Firt Baptist, Vineville Baptist, Taber nacle Baptist, Mulberry Street Method ist and First Street Methodist. The speakers for the meeting will be Rev. J. L. White, of the Vineville Bap-! tist church, and Rev. W. N| Ainsworth, J of the Mulberry Street Methodist church, j Painting Bought for Lifty-Six Cents May Be Worth $200,000 (By Associated Press.) VANCOUVER, British Columbia, Sept. 15.—A paintisg which recently sold for 56 cents is on its way to the national gallery of London from Melbourne, Aus tralia, today, for confirmation of the owner’s belief that it is worth $200,000 or more. Experts in Melbourne, says a cablegram from there, have declared it a genuine Rubens. The canvas, known as “Thisby and Pyramus,” now is the property of Dr. A. J. Summers, of Australia, who purchas ed it from a Melbourne vender recently for $250. The vender said he had paid 56 cents for it. When a woman suffering from some form of feminine disorder is told that an operation is necessary, it of course frightens her. The very thought of the hospital operating table and the surgeon’s knifij strikes terror to her heart, and no wonder. It is,quite true that some of these troubles may reach a stage where an operation is the only resource, but thousands of women have avoiacd the necessity of an operation by taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. This fact is attested by the grateful letters they write to us after their health has been restored. These Two Women Prove Our Claim. U El. P. MAHMING. Mr. H. F. Manning an<3 his great- great-granddaughter, ’ little Virginia Quattlebaum, of Unadilla. Mr. Manning died August 30, in Unadilla, at the age of ninety. He was well known in south Georgia and much loved for his kind ness, thoughtfulness and cheerful dis position. Cary, Maine.—“ I feel it a duty I owe to all suffering' women to tell what Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound did for me. One year ago I found myself a terrible sufferer. I had pains in both sides and such a soreness 1 could scarcely staighten up at times. My back ached, I had no appetite and was so nervous I could not sleep, then I would be so tired mornings that I could scarcely get around. It seemed almost im possible to move or do a bit of work and I thought I never would be any better until I submitted to an opera tion. I commenced taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and soon felt like a new woman. I had no pains, slept well, had good appe tite and was fat and could do almost all my own work for a family of four. I shall always feel that I owe my good health to your medicine.” —Mrs. Haywabd Sowers, Cary, Me. Charlotte, N. C—’“I was in bad health for two years, with pains in both sides and was very nervous. If I even lifted a chair it would cause a hemorrhage. I had a growth which the doctor said was a tumor and I never would get well unless X had an operation. A friend advise^ me to take Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegeta ble Compound, and I gladly say that I am now enjoying fine health and am the mother of a nice baby girl. You can use this letter to help other suffering women.”—Mrs. Rosa Sims, 16 Wyona St., Charlotte, N. C. Now answer this question if you can. Why should a wo man submit to a surgical operation without first giving Lydia E Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound a trial ? You know that it has saved many others—why should it fail in your case? For 30 years Lydia E. PinKham’s Vegetable Com ound nas been the sta.idard remedy for fe male ills. No one sicl. with woman’s ailments does justice to herself if she does not try this fa mous meuicine made from roots and herbs, it has restored so many suffering women to health. ffi^jg^Write toLYItIA E.CINKHAM NEOICINECO. SPC? (CONFIDENTIAL) LYNN, HASS., for advice. Your letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman and held in strict confidence. THICK, GLOSSY HI FREE FROM DANDRUFF Girls! Try it! Your hair gets soft, fluffy and luxuriant at once. If you care for heavy hair, that glistens with beauty and is radiant with life; has an Incomparable softness and Is fluffy and lustrous, try Danderlne. Just one application doubles the beau ty of your hair, besides it immediately dissolves every particle of dandruff; you canruot have nice, heavy, healthy hair if you have dandruff This destructive scurf robs the hair of its lustre, its strength and its very life, and if not overcome it produces a feverishness and itching of the scalp; the hair roots famish, loosen and die; then the hair falls out fast. If your hair has been neglected and is thin, faded, dry, scraggy or too oily, get a 25-cent bottle of Knowlton’s Danderine at any drug store or toilet counter; apply a little as directed and ten minutes after you will say this was the best investment you ever made. We sincerely believe, regardless of everything else advertised, that if you desire soft, lustrous, beautiful hair and lots of it—no dandruff—no Itching scalp and no more falling hair—you must use Knowlton’s Danderine. If eventually^why not now? Journal Patterns u 9694 9669 9682 96SS 96S4 9628 9664 9662' 9668 9694. 9694.—GIRL’S DRESS. Cut in 4 sizes, 8. 10, 12 and 14 years. It requires 4 yards of 44-inch material for an 8-year size. Price 10 cents. 9632. 9682.—GIRL’S DRESS. Cut in 4 sizes, 4, 6, 8 and 10 years. It requires 2ty* yards of 36-inch material for a six-year size. Price 10 cents. 9669-9655. 9669-9655 LADIES’ COAT SUIT. Coat 9669, cut, In 5 sizes: 34, 36, 88, 40 and 42 inches bust measure. Skirt 9655 cut in five sizes, 22, 24, 26, 28 and 30 inches waist measure. It requires 7 yards of 44-inch material for a medium size. This calls for two separate patterns. 10 cents for each pattern. 9653.—LADIES’ APRON. Cut in three cizes, small, medium and large. It requires % yards of *36-inch material for a medi um size. Price 10 cents. 9654. 9654—BOY’S RUSSIAN suit with knicker bockers. Cut in four sizes, 3, 4, 5 and 6 years. It requires 3% yards of 44-inch ma terial for a four-year size. Price 10 cents. 9700. 9700 GIRL’S COAT. Cut in four sizes, 2, 4, 6 and 8 years. It requires 2% yards of 44-inch material for a six-year size. Price 10 cents. 9664-9665. 9664 9665.—LADIES’ COSTUME. Waist 9604 cut In five sizes, 34, 36, 38, 40 and 42 iuches bust measure. Skirt, 9665, cut in five sizes. 22, 24, 26, 28 and 30 inches waist measure. It requires six yards of 44- ineh material for a medium size. This calls for two separate patterns. 10 cents for each. 9668. 9668. COSTUME FOR MISSES and small women. Cut in four sizes, 14. 16, 17 and 18 years. It requires 5% yards of 44-inch materials for an 18-year size. Price 10 cents. NOTICE TO LADY SUBSCRIBERS. The Atlanta Serai-Weekly Journal will give you a dress pattern when you renew your subscription, if you ask for it. THIS IS HOW YOU GET IT: Send us 75 cents for one year’s subscription or $1 for eighteen months’ snnscription to 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 pnttems for ladies and children. So, when you send your renewal select youf pattern, ns no free patterns will he allowed unless you ask for them at that time. Re member, the pattern is FREE when yon so- lcct no other premium, hut in case you do select another premium and want the pattern also, send 10 cents additional for the pat tern. CATaAEOOUE notice. Send 10c in silver or stamps for our up to-date 1913-1914 Fall and Winter Catalogue containing over 400 designs in Ladles’. Misses' ami Children’s Patterns, and a concise an* comprehensive article on Dressmaking, giving valuable hints to the home dressmaker.