Newspaper Page Text
THE ATLANTA SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL, ATLANTA, GA., TUESDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1913.
^OUAITRY
rJOME TOPuS
connctep BrjTus.-u:H.irtLToy<.
THE EVENING
STORY
' AT THE CAFETERIA
Copyright, 1913.
By W. Werner
X
WHAT TAINTS MONEY?
The dispute now growing more and
more acrimonious between the authori
ties of Vanderbilt university and the
bishops of the Methodist Episcopal
Church, South, regarding the acceptance
of a large donation of money to erect
and endow a medical department makes
the question of tainted money, so-called,
very pertinent.
Mr. Carnegie offers '$100,000 for such
purpose, but he insists that the bene
fits to accrue from this donation shall
not be sectarian, but undenominational,
where everybody can be helped.
This is the gravamen of the disturb
ance. The trustees, those in control,
declare they will accept the gift. The
bishops declare they will refuse it. So,
there you are, and the “fat is in the
fire!!” The North Georgia, the South
Georgia and the Mississippi conferences
haye declared against the acceptance
There 1ms been much talk and some
publications concerning the agnosticism
of Mr. Carnegie, and occasionally we
hear about “tainted money."
When I read of the herculean strug
gle Atlanta is now making to raise a
sufficient sum to endow' a Presbyterian
university, to which all classes of so
ciety—Jew and Gentile, are generously
contributing cash money, it seems some
what abnormal to make a kick against
$100,000 in a solid lump, with only one
little string tied to the gift.
1 recollect also that the Methodists
' had a famous contest over accepting
donation from congress, which had a
string tied to it, and that string was
the avoidance of lobbyists in collecting
the cliam. If there was any lobby
fee to be paid, the donation was Vnill
and void.
The Georgia conferences and the Mis
sissippi conference, along with others,
cried out, “Don’t accept," when consid
erably more than one-third was paid
to the lobbyists. It w'as a case celebre
and a dubious scheme.
But the bishops declared for the ac
ceptance of this “tainted money" and
the money was largely applied to in
creasing the salaries of the “boss men”
who paid out the money for lobbying.
What is tainted money?
WOULD WE ACCEPT PEACE IP WE
COULD GET IT?
There is a proposition before congress
to suspend the building of warships
and be quiet as to war for a twelve-
month, which is an echo of a similar
proposition advanced in England by
Hon. Winston Churchill, a prominent
leader in English legislation.
It requires fifteen millions of dollars
I
Students of Princeton
Planning to Organize
Club for Saving Life
PRINCETON, N. .i., Dec. 15—What is
/ to be known as the “Princeton Univer
sity Swimming and Life-Saving club,"
4 is to be organized after the close of the
intercollegiate swimming season under
the direction of the department of phys
ical education. Frank Sullivan, swim
ming coach, is to be the instructor. The
5 object is to equip the undergraduates
with the fundamentals and fine points
in* swimming and life-saving.
The membership test will be more
severe than that used by the Royal
Life Saving society of England, and the
Volunteer Life Saving corps of America
Town Swept by Fire
LE PAS. Man., Dec. 16.—Le Pas. the
new Hudson bay railway terminal town
on the Saskatchewan river, was fire-
swept this morning. An entire block
of ’buildings and several others in ad
joining blocks were burned. The loss
was estimated at $175,000. Many guests
at two hotels that were burned fled in
night attire.
\\>V \\j
HAVE YOUR MEALS
ON TIME !
Without- looking,* Miss Miller, the
cashier of the Elite cafeteria, knew what
the figures would be on the yellow pa
per strip that the slim, tired girl in
rather shabby blue serge laid on the
desk. Twelve cents, not a cent more,
to build a first class battleship and at
least ten millions more to equip it for
service, according to estimates that are
published in navy' statistics. It costs
more than a thousand dollas each to
fire one ball from a single gun. a single
time, when a warship is in action. The
life of a battleship is limited. Motn
does not bother, but rust corrupts m a
terrible way. In a few years, the ship
is docked and repaired from stem to
stern at terrific cost, or it goes to the
junk heap, if r it does not founder ana
go to the bottom of the sea. v
We are gravely told that of our bil-
lion-dollar apprqpriation to be made by
congress in a few days to support the
government 60 per cent and upward is
devoted to soldiers, seamen, battleships,
forts and pensions. It takes this enor
mous amount of money, more than six
hundred millions annually, to cover the
military part of our government, li
there are two battleships built before
next July’, there will be an Increase oi
an additional thirty millions of dollars.
There can be no stop to pensions, ana
the pension bill, instead or ctecreasTng
.by death of veterans, grows bigger
every year, a clear case of graft, and
chicanery. England has a similar bur
den. These facts are startling. It looxs
like cur statesmen learn nothing by ex
perience, but continue to fling away the
tax money of the people. The end may
be slow in coming, but it is /coming
sooner or later. Nothing can stand
against this flood of waste, and it seems
that we won’t accept peace, if it is oir-
fered to us.
WHERE ARE DICTAPHONES MANU
FACTURED?
Pittsburg, Ala., Dec.'5. 1913.
Mrs. W. H. Felton, Cartersville, Ga.—
Dear Madam: Enclosed find self-add
ressed and stamped envelope. Kindly
use this and a moment of your valuable
time and inform me just how and where
I might purchase a dictaphone? I no
ticed your write up of the dictaphone in
Semi-Weekly Journal of November 4.
3o far 1 have been unable to find just
who or where the dictaphone are made,
therefore my note to you. Your reply
will be well appreciated. I am a stran
ger to you. but I bear you quite a bun
dle of kind wishes: among them I wish
you many more years of happy life upon
this glorious earth and at the demise
of your useful body I trust your soul
may find sweet and perfect rest within
the “shadow of His wing."
Respectively yours,
W. C. JETER.
Route 1, Box 196.
Smuggled Note Sends !
Police Women to 'Aid
Of Girl Held Captive
(By Associated Press.)
LOS ANGELES. Cal., Dec. 15.—An
swering a note smuggled out of a cot
tage in the south end of the city, po
lice women today found Bertha Lake,
twenty-three-year-old daughter of an
oyster man near Providence, R. I., who
said she answered a matrominial ‘ ad
vertisement and had been drugged and
held a prisoner for two weeks by the
man she came here to marry.
The man, Robert Ciboch, a young Aus
trian, was arrested and an investigation
is under way which may result in the
filing of a white slavery charge against
him.
J.
To Exclude Asiatics
(By Associated Press.)
WASHINGTON, Dec. 15.—An amend
ment to the Burnett immigration bill
designed to exclude Japanese, Hindus
and* Chinese laborers under the general
term of “Asiatics,” was adopted today
by the house immigration committee
after a heated discussion.
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“You didn't give me enough money,”
she said.
not a cent less. Coffee, 5 cents; meat
or soup or beans, 5 cents; bread, 1
penny; butter another. It had been
that amount every day during the six
months that she had been coming. Miss
Miller got her dinners thrown in with
her $9. A grimace contorted her fat,
good natured face at the thought of be
ing restricted to 12 cents. “And she
looks hungry," she confided to Jane, the
girl who carried away the dishes.
“Daresay," yawned Jane. She was not
much interested in one shabby patron
out of the hundreds that came be
tween 11 and 2. “What’s she always
trking coffee for, then? That ain’t fill
ing," contemptuously. “She could get
5 cents’ worth of something else—pie
or cake."
Miss Miller had thought of that, too,
but she knew that coffee has a 1,charm
above mere food and a “filling" power
that power that pie or vegetables does
not posses. “Oh, well," she sighed, com-
niiseratingly, and then as usual, for
got her till the next day. The Elite
cafeteria was in the exact center of the
loop and a great many slim, tired faced
girls lunched there. Among so many
objects pity must necessarily be mo
mentary. And there were some thin,
tired faced men, too. One especially
tiiatiMiss Miller had noticed. His check
was always numbered around 12 cents,
but it was not so invariable. It occa
sionally ran as high as 14 cents, and
dropped as low as 9 cents. On that oc
casion Miss Miller had to inform him
that the lowest sum accepted in the
Elite cafeteria was 10 cents. And she
knew by the regret that flitted, gossa
mer-like,, over his thin, worried face,
that he wished that he had taken an
other slice of whole wheat bread and
so not wasted that extra penny.
“He looks hungry," she confided to
Jane. “My! It’s Sort of uncomfortable
working at this place. If I wasn’t a
person of hearty appetite I’d feel dumpy
p 11 the time watching folks." And then
Miss Miller, who didn’t have to bother
with checks, since her m^als were in
cluded, w^nt after another helping of
roast pork and sage dressing.
“You never can tell," cynically re
torted Jane as she heaped saucers
atop plates and jcups atop saucers.
“That old dried-up guy that never
takes anything but stewed prunes and
bean soup—you’ve noticed him at the
table by end window? They say he
owns the middle plank of the board of
trade.
“Yes, I’ve noticed him,” said Miss
Miller. “He nearly had a convulsive
fit one day because there was a mis
take and ha got a 12-cent check in
stead of a 10-ceAter. But he ain’t got
the wornout, hungry look that these
two have. He’s just got a stingy,
hungry look.”
It was the next day after that con
versation that the girl lay down the
usual dime and two oermies and
check marked twenty-one. Miss Miller
pushed it back wonderingly. Never
before had the girl gone over 12 cents.
“You didn’t give me enough money,”
she said. The girl gasped. “Why—
oh! She’s made a mistake. I only got
12 cents’ worth."
Miss Miller frowned and caught her
full underlip/ between her teeth. She
was responsible for the amount which
the checks footed up. And if one made
it up out of one’^ own pocket, why,
one could be doing it every day.
Maybe the girl got the wrong check;
maybe she didn’t. In several years’
cashiering at food clubs Miss Miller’s
faith in human nature bad been
punched full of holes. Still this
girl-—’’
“I haven't the other money with
me," she said in a small voice. “T’ll—
I’ll have to leave something as security
and—and bring it tomorrow."
“Oh, never mind," said Miss Miller
good-naturedly, “bring it any time.” She
guessed, with a twinge of scorn for her
momentary uncharitable hesitation, that
she could stand it if the girl didn’t
make up the 9 cents.
But the girl had a queer pride; It
was almost morbid. From the shabby
black purse she took a small change
purse—a pretty little thing of soft
green leather and mother of peart
sides. “I’ll leave this,” she said. “It’s
worth more than 9 cents." She took a
nickel from it—all the change it held.
“I have to keep this for car fare to
night." ,
Then she was gone, the impatient line
behind moved up ,a step, and Miss Mil
ler, feeling meafi and uncomfortable,
mechanically made change and wished
that she hadn’t hesitated that one mo
ment.
The line kept on, the 11:30 rush gave
way to the 12, the 12:10, the 12:30. Miss
Miller watched the clock. She was hun
gry. But it wouldn't be after 2 before
she could leave the then dwindling line.
Some one laid down a 13-cent check and
three nickles. Absently she pushed back
two cents and extended a tired hand for
the next check.
“Where’d you get that little pocket-
book?" demanded some one hoarsely.
Miss Miller was fawning. Her hand
fell from her open mouth. She looked
in surprise at the eager questioner It
was the thin hungry man whom she had
discussed with Jane. “Why?” she
asked.
“I want to Know," /he said fiercely. “It
Isn’t yours!" It was more an assertion
than a question.
“You see,” Miss Miller told Jane aft
erward, “he took me by surprise, and I
didn’t know as it really was any of his
business. And I just thought to myself
that maybe the girl didn’t want him to
find her. You never earn tell, you know,
seeing how many queer things happen in
a city. And so at first I wasn't going to
tell him anything at all. For a few min
utes I pretended that it was mine. You
know I was going to let the girl know
about him before I let him know about
her. But he laughed, mad-like and
flipped up one mother of pearl side, and
there were two initials scratched.
“Tell me," he begged sort of tired
like.
“My gracious!" breathed Jane. “Ain’t
it like 'a novel!”
“Wait,” said Miss Miller after she had
swallowed a third of a fifth of an apple
“Maybe she don’t want yon to find
her,” says I.
pie. “Wait till I tell you the rest. I
simply says shq’s a friend of mine that
eats in here. But I didn’t know where
she roomed exactly. And he says,
“She’s Tny wife, that’s who she is. I
been ’ooking for her for six months!’
So I says, ‘May be she don’t want you
to find her?’ But, Lordy, I knew that
she’d be tickled to death. There was a
tired, hungry look on her face that
wasn’t brought just by not getting
enough to eat. And he said, as meek as
Moses, ‘May be she don’t. But—I’d like
to ask her.’
\ “And then he thought for a while.
And I waited. Pretty soon he said,
Would you mind telling her that I’ve
saved enough now to furnish a home?’
I nodded—1 didn’t know what to say.
And, gracious! I didn’t know how I
was gtaing to say anything like that to
a girl that I didn’t know. But I’d let
him think that I knew her. Say, this
rice pudding wasn’t so good,” nibbling
tentatively. “She must’ve forgot the
cinnamon.”
“Oh, go on,” said Jane impatiently.
“What you say, and what did be say?"
“That was about all. I want—’’ she
rose and waddled toward the counter—
“some m^re pie. She must’ve borrowed
the 9 cents from some one where she
worked and came hustling right back
with it—and, say, Anne’s got to be more
careful about giving out wrong checks—
and he was there when she hurried in.
They looked at each other, and he
got white and so did she. And he said,
‘Nell,’ and she said, ‘Ed,’ and then They
walked out. But when he came back to
day——she ain’t coming no more—be
told me that they ;married on nothing,
and she wanted furniture, and somehow
they couldn’t save. Seems as though
he couldn’t get out of the habit of treat
ing the boys when he met ’em. And
so they rowed, and then they 'rowed
worse, and then she went off and got
her old -position back. And that’s all.
If you’re coming back this way, Jane,
bring me a chocolate copky. And now
I guess she’s mighty glad to quit this
place. From the way they looked at
each other when thdy left I guess
they’ll stick this time. I wish—” Fat
Miss Miller sighed plaintively. “A girl
does get awful tired of eating at a
cafeteria."
FAMOUS “FRAM” WILL SAIL THROUGH
PANAMA CANAL ON WAY TO ARCTIC
Social Salvation Is to Be Secured
I Only by Personal Salvation
BY BISHOP W. A. GABBLER.
M R. ROSS FINNEY, in his work
on “Personal Religion and tne
Social Awakening,” says, “We
need the insight to discern that per
sonal salyation is a vital requisite to
Social Salvation; and that, it the
social hopes of the present age ar«
to he realized, a revival or personal
religion must sweep through our civ
ilization.” This is most profoundly
true.
Most of the current! unrest about
the social system, as it now stands, is
selfish in its motives and sinful in its
methods. The over rich grasp foi
more, and then denounce the less for-;
tunate for doing the Same thing. Tne
men who are not rich denounce thei
opulent classes for having wealtn,
and then proceed to chase dollars as
edgerly as the .men whom they aej-
nounce. Botli parties to the contro
versy are making too much of hav
ing money and the things which mon
ey can buy, while they think too lit
tle of the higher things or character
and happiness which money cannot
buy nor the want of money prevent
one from possessing.
The men who are preaching most
loudly for “Social -Salvation” do
more to influence the soc^ system
than they do to save the masses; they
irritate more than they elevate. The
final outcome! of. their gospel is revo
lution not reform; its end is a con
flagration and not a conversion ot»
bad conditions into good conditions.
They preach like they were mad; and
a mad preacher is always a bad
preacher
The true remedy for the ills of the
social system is a revival of that re
ligion of which a fundamental prin
ciple is that “The life consisted .not
in the abundance of the things a
man hath.” Such a revival Would
soften the hearts of the prosperous
with an abounding brotherly kind
ness towards the poor; and it would
purge away any mahgnant envy of
the unfortunate towards their more
successful neighbors. If would ar
rest the mania for luxury which pos
sesses the rich, and which leads them
to such selfish and senseless displays
of wealth as inevitably inflame hos
tility towards them; and, on the oth
er hand, it would remove malignant
passions from the hearts of those
who look with evil and coveious eyes
upon such vain displays because such
indulgences are beyond their reach.
The present condition of the social
system is not very unlike that which
prevailed in England about the mid
dle of the Eighteenth Century. 'A
new industrial era dawned when
Brindley with his canal joined Man
chester with Liverpool in 1767. The
success of the enterprise led to the
rapid introduction of water carriage
throughout Great Britain, which was
speedily traversed in every direction
by three thousand miles of naviga
ble canals. This meant much for a
country which before that time had
b&en almost roadless, and in which
for lack of transportation people in
London had famished for bread,
while at a distance >or less than a
hundred miles from the metropolis
farmers hoarded or wasted surplus
grain for want of an accessible mar
ket. Two years before the opening
of Brindley’s Canal Watt had trans
formed the steam-engine from a toy
to a Titan, and his great invention
still further quickened the growth
of the industrialism which had
sprung up. About the same time
came the development of the coal
and iron mines of England. Quickly
following these things came the
spinning-jenny of Hargreaves and
the spinning machine of Arkwright.
Then Cdmpton invented the spinning
mule, and speedily after It appeared
the power loom. It was as if all the
secret forces of nature were being
called forth to enrich Great Britain.
But the development of so much
power |to produce wealth brought
great perils to the social system.
Great manufacturing centers sprang
into being like magical creations.
Men unused to the feverish excite
ment and fearful temptations of such
a situation were massed together
where all the. allurements to vice
were multiplied and all the inspira
tions to virtue were diminished.
Rich men became greedy and their
employes became irritable. The
wealth of the country was vastly in
creased, but the inequalities Uf its
distribution grew far more rapidly.
The contrast between the arrogant
popLence of some and abject indi
gence of many caused great unrest
among the masses. Conditions be
came so inflamed that a revolu
tion threatened to break gut in Eng
land as fierce as that which raged in
France. Mr. Leckey, who is notori
ously free from any bias towards re
ligion, in his “History of England in
the Eighteenth Century” gives the
chief place among the forces which
averted such a revolution to the Wes
leyan revival. That checked the
godless extravagances of the rich,
and turned the wastefulness of their
luxury into a healing, helpful philan
thropy. It did also restrain the envy
and covetousness of tne laborer,
while it purged away tne greed of
the capitalist. It fused all classes
into a social fellowship from yyhich
suspicion and hate were excluded
and in which love and brotherliness
prevailed. Thus the British nation
was solidified and saved.
Sydney Smith said sneeringly of
the Methodist revivalists "All mines
and subterranean places belong to
them.” It was well that what he
said was true; for otherwise in a
little while there would have been
left nothing above ground or be
low ground to make life in England
worth living.
We need now a revival religion as
much greater and more powerful
than the Wesleyan revival as our
present industrialism is greater and
more inflammatory than the indus
trialism of the England of the Eigh
teenth Century. Nothing else can
save us.
Parties and platforms can not
bring us the salvation which we
need. Unions and counter-unions
can not meet the needs of the situ
ation. Strikes and lockouts are
worse than useless. Frenzied re
formers and enraged preachers can
not avail to bring us deliverance.
“Our hope is in God; from him com-
eth our Salvation.”
The life of Christ in the individ
ual soul must give a Christly char
acter to the Social System. Social
salvation must come as the fruit of
personal salvation. We will save
the mass of men by saving individ
ual men. We can not save the indi
vidual by applying palliative pre
scriptions to the mass. If we ean
not save all by saving each, then
the case is hopeless.
It Is high time we had put away
Sociological nostrums ana returned
to God. We must have fewer “box
parties” at the theaters and more
family altars in our homes. We
need to pray more in secret and pa
rade less in public farces and func
tions.
SUNDAY SCHOOLS HOLD
MEETING AT DALTON
DALTON, Ga„ Dec. 15.—The Sunday
school Institute, ocnducted at the First
Ffeptist church here by Rev. W, A.
Frown, of Chicago, superintendent of
the mission department of the Interna
tional Sunday School association, and
E. W. Sims, of Atlanta, secretary of the
Georgia Sunday School association, held
its opening session this morning. It is
being 1 held under the auspices of the
Whitfield County Sunday School asso
ciation, and will close tomorrow even
ing.
Mona Lisa,
Long Lost,
Is Found
Italian Who Stole da Vinci’s
Famous Painting From Pari
sian Louvre in 1911 Is Ar
rested in Florence
FLORENCE, Italy, Dec. 15.—Leonardo
da Vincfs masterpiece, “Mona Lisa,”
tne mysterious disappearance 1 of whicn
from the Louvre in August. 1911. threw
the art world intc consternation, was
found today in Florence. The man who
stole it was arrested- He is an Italian.
“Mona Lisa”—hiore properly known as
“La Joconde”—is one of the world’s
most famous paintings and is regarded
as priceless. Leonardo da Vinci took
as his model for the picture Lisa del
Giocondo, a woman of Florence. He
worked on the picture for four years
from 1500 to 1504. It was bought for
France by Francis I.
The value of the work can only be
imagined, since all offers to buy it were
refused, among them one reported to
have been made by the British govern
ment of $5,000,000.
Since the disappearance from the
Louvre of the picture, the search had
been world-wide. It has been reported
found in Russia, Germany, England,
Spain and even in the United States.
Stole Picture to Avenge
Corsican’s Thefts, He Says
(By Associated Press.)
PARIS, Dec. 15.—The famous “Jo-
conde” was found today when the pic
ture was offered by an Italian resident
of Paris to an antiquary of Florence,
according to an announcement made
this evening by the French minister of
Public instruction.
Both the picture and the Italian are
now in custody of the police o$ Flor
ence. “I stole the picture,” said the
man, “in order to avenge the thefts
which Napoleon I committed in Ttaly."
ft
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J
SUFFRAGE LAW CONTEST
THROWN OUT OF COURT
CHICAGO, Dec. 15.—A suit to test
the constitutionality of the women’s
suffrage act passed by the last Illinois
legislature was dismissed for want or
equity by Judge Foell in the superior
court today. The case will go on appeal
to the supreme court of Illinois for
final ruling.
if I Ate That
Mllfould Die
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9803
9*Z0
“At Every Banquet You Will Alway« See
Some Person Who Is Afraid
of Pood.” /
Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets are a com
pound of pepsin, and those elements
that must be secreted by the stomach
if the food is to be digested. When
the stomach fails to secrete enough of
these digestive agencies, the only sane
remedy is to supply a sufficient quan
tity of these elements to digest the
food. This is the service for which
Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets were made
and they are recommended by leading
doctors and scientists. One or two of
these tablets is sufficient to digest the
largest dinner. They stop almost tp-
tantly all forms of indigestion, such
as sour stomach, belching, heartburn,
dizziness, brash and dysentery. Stuart’s
Dyspepsia Tablets contain digestive
elements, a single grain of which is
capable of digesting 3,000 grains of
food, such as meats, eggs, grains, vege
tables, starches and mineral matters of
all kinds.
If your stomach is sluggish or worn
out, let Stuart’s Dyspesia Tablets do
your digesting for you until the stom
ach can recuperate. Give it a little va
cation. It has a hard enough struggle
at the best, with all you put in it. And
even when your stomach is in perfect
coindition, you will occasionally need
one after a big banquet or other social
affair that taxes your stomach to the
uttermost.
Make Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets the
ever-read j' friend and assistant to your
stomach. Get a 50c box of your druggist
today.—(Advt.)
9359
- O uA/nnHwco
cor*
The/ famous schooner Frarn, of Antarctic exploration fame, waiting in !
Colon roarbor, Panama, for the opening of the canal. She will be one of the
first vessels to pass through the big waterway. The Fram is bound for
the arctic regions for north polar work. It was this schooner which was
used /toy Explorer Amundsen pn his voyage to the antarctic when he discov-1
ered the south pole.
I 1
Sent To You For A|
Year's Free Trial
Why Shouldn’t You Buy,
As Low As Any Dealer?!
More than 250,000 people have saved from $100 to I
$150 on a high grado piano and from $25 to $50 on j
a first class organ in purchasing by the Cornish i
plan — and so can you. We offer to send you
an instrument, freight paid If you i wish, .
with the understanding that If It Is not
sweeter and richer In tone and better made
than any you can find at one-third more than l
we ask, you may at any time within ay earl
send it back 'at our expense, and we winf
return any sum that you may have paid on it,I
so that the trial will cost you absolutely"
nothing,—you andyourfriendstobe the Judge
and w$ to find no fault with your decision.
You Choose Your Own Terms
Tako Three Years to Pay If Needed. The Cornish Plan, In brief, makes the 5
maker prove his Instrument and saves you one-third what other manufacturers of high
grade instruments must charge you to protect their dealers and agents.
Let Us Send to You Free the New Cornish BooK
It is the most beautiful piano or organ catalog ever published. It shows our latest styles and explains
everything you should know before buying any instrument. It shows why you cannot buy any other
high grade organ or piano anywhere on earth as low as the Cornish. You should have this Important
Information before making your selection. Write /7At*tilth 17A Wa»Hii*rfto*ie V ~
tor it today and please mention this paper. 111917 Established Over 50
9801
9571.
9571—GIRL S UNDERWAIST, BLOOMERS
AND PETTICOAT.
Cut in 0 sizes: 2, 4, 6, 8, 10 and 12
years. For the 8-year size if will require
1% yards for the petticoat, 1V6 yards for
the bloomers and 1 yard for the waist,
of 30-inch material. Price 10c.
9802.
9802—GIRL'S DRESS.
Cut in 4 sizes: 1, 2, 3 and 4 years. It
requires 2% yards of 27-lnch material for
a 4-yenr size. Price 10c.
9803—LADY’S BOLERO ANp VEST IN
TWO STYLES.
Cut In 3 sizes: Small, medium and lnrge.
It requires lVi yards of 27-lnch material for
No. 1. 1% yards for No. 2 afnd \% yard#
for No. 3 for a medium size. Price 10c.
9787.
0787- I' A DY’S SHIRTWAIST.
Cut in 7 i s: 32, 34. 30, 38, 40. 43
and 44 iwh bust measure. It requires \
2% yards of 40-inch material for a oG-lncb
size. Price 10c.
9420.
94?0—BOY’S SUIT.
Cut in 4 sizes: 3, 4. 5 and 0 years
It requires 3 yards of 44-Inch material fo»
the 8-year size. Price 10c.
9808.
9808—GIRL’S DRESS.
Cut in 5 size®: 8. 10, 12. 14 and 1*
year*. It requires 4% yards of 40-inch
material for a 10-yeav size, price 10c.
9359. 1
9359—LADY’S WORK APRON.
Cut in 3 sizes: Small, medium and large.
It requires 3Vj yards of 86-lnch material
for the medium stz*». Price 10c.
9800-9801.
9f00-9801—LADY’S COAT SUIT.
Coat 0800, cut in 6 sizes: 32. 84, 30.
38, 40 and 42 Inches bust measure. It re
quires 4 yards of 44-inch material for a
34-inch size. For shorter length %-yard
leas. Skirt 0801, cut in 5 sizes: 22, 24.
26, 28 and 30 inches waist measure. It re
quires 3 yards of 44-uich material for a 24-
inch size. This calls for TWO separate
patterns, 10c FOR EACH.