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f W HOME
. nf v Topics
(onmictra 8u
WfcJtbK._
HEART BALJI.
Tell me about the Master;
I am weary and worn tonight.
The day lies behind me in shadow.
And only the evening is light!
Lith with a radiant glory
That lingers about the west.
My poor heart is aweary, aweary.
And longs, like a child, for rest.
Tell me about the Master!
Os the hills he in loneliness trod.
When the tears and the blood of his
anguish
Dropped down on Judea’s sod.
For to ma life’s seventy mile-stones
But a sorrowful journey mark,
Rough lies the hill-country before me.
The mountains behind me are dark.
Tell me about the Master!
Os the wrongs he freely forgave:
Os his love and tender compassion.
Os h!s love that was mighty to save;
For my heart is aweary, aweary.
Os the woes and temptations of life.
Os the error that stalks in the noonday
Os falsehood and malice and strife.
t
Yet I know that, whatever of sorrow
Or pain or temptation befall.
The infinite Master has suffered.
And knoweth and pltieth all.
So tell me the sweet, old story.
That falls on each wounded like a
balm
And my heart that was bruised and
broken
Shall grow patient and strong and
calm. • —Selectea.
CONSim.VATIOIf OF FOOD.
The average farm woman has been
raised to save food and scraps of food.
Generally the saving goes Into the slop
bucket, and the slop bucket travels to
the pig pen at least once a day. Poul
try Is generally raised from scraps,
bran and nraste grain. It is not the
farm woman who shuld be lectured on
food waste, because they are not the
sinners in this connection.
The people who keep servants (and
the waste in kitchens where servants
perform Is always greater than in homes
where the wife and mother does the
cooking) are those who can be lectured
with profit.
Only today I heard a careful matron
say:. “My sister-in-law says her cook
usee three buckets of lard where use
one in your kitchen.’’ There are waste
ful cooks, nevertheless, who are white
There is wastefulness with cold bread,
cold grits and left-overs of all kinds.
In careless households, that should be
saved and utilized. I dearly love cold
grits sliced and floured and fried like'
fish. I like the second stale far more
than the first cooking. There Is great
skill in using such things the second
time for the table.
Children are generally wasteful, and
when they are allowed to go to the pan
try or refrigerator and pull over cold
victuals the remainder will hardly be fit
for use later on. Children are also apt
to take more food on the plate than
they can eat at one time. They mess it
over until It Is unfit for a second serving. ;
It is a wise parent who can train chil
dren to eat at regular intervals, and
(Girls! Use Lemons! |
Make a Bleaching, |
Beautifying Cream |
The juice of two fresh lemons strain-;
ed into a bottle containing three ounces
of orchard white makes a whole quar
ter pint of the most remarkable lemon;
skin beautifier at about the cost one
must pay for a small jar of the ordinary
cold creams. Care should be taken to
■train the lemon juice through a fine
cloth so no lemon pulp gets in then
this lotion will keep fresh for months.
Every woman knows that lemon juice
is used to bleach and remove sach blem
ishes as freckles, sallowness and tan.
and is the ideal skin softener, smooth- |
ener and beautifier.
Just try it! Get three ounces of or
chard white at any pharmacy and two
lemons from the grocer and make up a,
quarter pint of this sweetly fragrant
lemon lotion and massage it daily into
the face, neck, arms and hands. It nat- 1
uraily should help to soften, freshen. |
bleach and bring out the roses and
beauty of any skin. It is simply mar
velous to smuothen rough, red hands.
(Advt>
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COLUMBIA NOVELTY CO. K
©EFT, X 46, MET ROETON. MAEE. i
who will discipline them to eat what !s
before them, in a good humor, and who
can teach them to eat what they take
on their plates, in a neat and careful
manner. Those who can do so should
always keep a pig to eat up kitchen
scraps, and the pig will consume enough
to keep in good order, which would oth
erwise be wasted. There are, of course,
skimpy folks who cook but little and
fare poorly, but I only expected to say
in this connection that farm women are
the only people I know who learned how
to save and yet have plenty to eat.
nrr good friesd bemembeked me
For three succeeding years Mrs. Hol
land, who lives in Paulding county, has*
sent me a bottle of syrup at syrup-mak
ing time. As usual it came along the
other day. and she is certainly an expert
in preparing sorghum cane juice for a
table luxury. It is as clear as maple
syrup, thick, ajnber-colored and deli-
C.OUS. *
A neighbor of mine has put up 300
gallons and an- enterprising colored
family has made more than 200 gallons
by grinding and cooking cane juice for
their neighbors.
This 200 gallons was their toll for
the work, and they are still grinding
and cooking can e juice every day except
Sunday when the weather permits.
I wish I had statistics to show how
many thousand gallons of sorghum syrup
were grown in Georgia during the Civil
wag. Everybody that had a plantation
or even a small farm cultivated the
sorghum cane and toward the close it
was a great standby, to eat with corn
hoecake, (t tided many a poor house
hold over scarce rations.
We were not allowed to raise cotton
and wheat was not grown to any con
siderable extent in southern Georgia, so
w e were forced to raise syrup to help
along with the corn pone. Potatoes
played a large part in that crisis. I look
for a potato boom now.
Often and often have I made a social
visit to my neighbors in refugee times
when we had a potato roasting as re
freshments before we bade adieu, and
the little ones generally had a saucer
with syrup in which to sop the corn
bread.
It will stay the pangs of hunger, and
1 expect we will find Mr. Hoover taking
over the sorghum syrup question if this
war holds on.
Mr. friend Mrs. Holland could show
him how to make it.
SAVE YOUR ODD CLOTHES.
A good many will feel obliged to wear
their own old clothes, because there is
scarcity of funds to buy new and high
priced ones, but there are also a great
many people who will discard their old
ones after new ones have been pur
chased.
Take It from one who went through
the war of the sixties, that nothing that
anybody can wear or can eat should be
wasted in a crisis like the present.
Children were largely clothed at that
time by cutting down the worn gar
ments of their elders, and no matter how
carefdl you can be, or they may be,
there will be plenty of folks who will
be glad to get what you have thrown
aside as unfit for your service. Only
yesterday a widow woman with five
children called to see me. hunting old
clothes to make over for her family.
She has a little farm, but there are
debts, owing, to illness and death in her
family, and she asked for worn things
that could be worked over, and I prom
ised to keep her In mind. Shoes are so
high that new ones will take a lot of
money, but sometimes there are half
worn shoes which would keep tender
feet from the cold ground where there
is no money to buy new ones.
Woolen cloth Is bound to be high
priced, as wool is scarce.
Cbtton cloth is constantly advancing,
and I cannot find plain white domestic
of fair quality under 20 cents a yard.
Old clothes can be patched and do
great service for a long time. Quilts
can be renovated by skillful patching.
Begin in time to save old clothes, and
do not forget that everything that will
keep out cold will be needed in the ap
proaching winter.
Holland-American
Liner is Refused Coal
WASHINGTON. Oct. 9. —The govern
‘ ment has definitely refused license for
bunker coal to the Holland-American
liner Nieu Amsterdam because the Neth
erlands government would not give as
surances that the ship would return
! to the United States after discharging
her Belgian relief cargo.
This action is said to forecast the
complete embargo of the large fleet of
Dutch ships now in New York harbor
unless Holland, permits them to carry
cargoes for the United States.
THE ATLANTA SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL, ATLANTA, GA„ FRIDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1917.
-
THOUGHTS FOR THO WEEK
“He hath showed thee. •• man. what
is good; and what doth th- Led re
quire of thee, but to do justly, and to
love mercy, and to walk humbly with
thy God.
“O Lord God. with thy blessing let
the house of thy servant be blessed
forever.
“Thou blessest. O Lord, and it shall
be blessed forever.
“The blessing of the Lord it inaketh
riefi. and he addeth no sorrow with it.
“Blessed Is he that considered! the
poor; the Lord will deliver him in time
of trouble.
“As every man hath received the gift,
even so minister the same one to an
other. as good stewards of the mani
fold grace of God. If any man minister,
let him do it as of the ability which
God giveth; that God may in all things
be glorified through Jesus Christ, to
whom be praise and dominion forever
and ever.
“Who maketh thee to differ from an
other? And what hast thou that thou
didst not receive?”
THINGS TO DO. AND NOT TO DO
October sixth we had our first frost.
The farmer said it was sure to come I
by the tenth and we have been doing all
sorts of things with the early coming i
of Jack Frost in view. 1 hope that all
of the “chicken raisers” have at least
a small patch of rye in the ground. In
the meantime, if you have had*to pen
a flock of chickens, let me tell you how
to keep them up to their best work.
Oats. I know, are high. 1 gave ninety
cents a bushel for five bushels last
week, but each bushel will pay you at |
least five times ninety cents. Did a
trench at least three inches deep, fill
it with water, then fill it with oats and
cover lightly. On top of the light cover
of dirt pour more water and |hen have
a wide board heavy enough to keep the
chickens from moving it. Put that on
top of the planted oats and in a few
days they will begin to sprout. In the
yard where I have ten or a dozen fowls
I pull the board down a yard. They go
to work and you will enjoy seeing their
pleasure. If you have a board twelve
feet long you make it last at least four
days. They are not so greedy after the
first week. The day that I begin to
feed them from the first planting I dig
another trench and plant more oats, so
there Is a rotation. They will mdye the
boards unless you weight them down.
The farmer planted California black
eyed peas, he could only get one gallon
of seed, and half as many of the little
white pea. The blackeyed is a bunch
pea until It has begun to ripen the
first crop then it runs and the second
crop comes In nicely for the table In
the late fall. Peas are picked here on
the half and half system. So, as I had
to “do my bit” in some way I decided
to pick the peas. The farmer started
me off, he picked one afternoon, and
after that I took it leisurely, and fin
ished them just in time to save them
from an all-day down-pour. Now we
are going to shell them as pastime
dark days. The whipporwill peas will
go through the scheller, but these white
ones will be more carefully handled.
The farmer says you will get more corn
by putting your rows six feet apart
and peas between, and the peas will
be clear profit. Next year the corn
/ WW -ZTS
I
,p' ' i ? ' r i i
I --/gsc -A \_rA_. I
® I w
IL, „.i » lljW / /// L ' f V, fl 11
fJ\vvyj ll* \ |II J I I’ v ■
I /f /U yv \ ® |
I Jfvoia Operations
Statistics show an appalling increase, every year, in operations.performed upon women for
• ■ some derangement of the feminine organism. • » »<\ K
jO It is perfectly true that some of these troubles may reach a stage where an operation is necessary—but it is
also true that many women have escaped the necessity for an operation by removing the trouble with
I Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound i
even after an operation has been advised as the only means of recovery. • /
These Three Letters Prove That Statement.
Tennille, Ga.*‘l want to tell you how much I have Des Moines, lowa.—“ Four years ago I was very sick Bellevue, Pa. —"I suffered more than tongue can tell
been benefited by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- and my life was nearb’ spent. The doctors stated that with terrible bearing down pains and inflammation. I
pound. About eightyears ago I got in such a low state j would never get well without an operation and that tried several doctors and they all told me the same stonr,
dza of health I was unable to keep house for three in the without it I would not live one vear Mv husband ob- J ne Y e * could get well without an operation and 1
family. I had dull, tired, dizzy feelings, cold feet and without it 1 would not live one year. My nusoana oo Just dreaaed the thought of that. I also tried a good g
hands nearly all the time and could scarcely sleep at all. jected to any operation and got me some of Lydia E. many other .medicines that were recommended to me
The doctor said that I had ulceration and without an Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. I took it and com- and none of them helped me until a friend advised me
operation I would always bean invalid, but I told him menced to get better and am now well, am stout and to give Lydia E. Pinkham’s \ egetable Compound a trial.
I wanted to wait awhile. Our druggist advised my hus- a ble to ( ] 0 m y own housework. I can recommend the The first bottle helped, I kept taking it and now x don t
band to have me try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Vegetab'e Compound to env woman who is sick and run know what it is tobe sick anymore and lam picking up
Compound and it has entirely cured me Now I keep ! egewuie vompounu to any woman wno i» sita. <xuu luu Jn welght J am 20 years old and weigh 145 pounds. It
house for seven and work in the garden some, too. lam down as a wonderful strength ana health restorer. My will be the gseat€St ple e me if I ca n have the
so thankful I got this medicine. I feel as though it husband says I would have been mmy grave ere this it opportunity to recommend it to any other suffering wo- g
saved my life and have recommended it to others with it had not been for your Vegetable Compound.”—Mrs. man.”—Miss Irene Froelicher, 1923 Manhattan St,
KM benefit.’—Mrs. W. E. Lindsey, R.R. 3, Tennille. Ga. Blanche Jefferson, 703 Lyon St., Des Moines, lowa. North Side, Bellevue, Pa.
Tho strongest and most trustworthy letters come from women who have escaped this terrible ordeal by the timely use of
Lydia E.Pinkhain’s Vegetable Compound. Unless an operation is necessary at once, try this famous old remedy first.
It can do no harm and in many casesit has been a blessing. The Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass.
will grow where the peas nnw are. If
I the, weather permits there will be rye
for a cover crop and it will be plow
ied under next spring.
t This is the time of year to begin to
plan for your Christmas presents and
[Christmas flowers. Os course you will
not spend any money in presents, for
the lied can buy things for the
boys away from home much more eco
nomically than we can. But we may do
little things for people. If you have
never had a narcissus in bloom at
iChristmas now is the linn- to begin.
Get good large bulbs. If you are going
to use them for presents >ou .should
only put one or two in a tumbler, or
glass dish, put some pretty stones or
pebbles in there to holu them straight,
pour in the water, just enough to cover
them, and set them in a dark place.
After six weeks bring them out and
let tnem have sunshine, and every bulb
will give you a nice bunch of flowers.
You must not forget to buy some
' fresta bulbs.
Plant half a dozen in a pot that will
hold a quart of earth. Put them in
the dark closet and in six weks bring
■ them to the'light and they, to,, will re
ward you. Sometimes the water that
lis in the narcissus pot may have a
jthin cake of ice on it, but it does not
i kill it. Though I always try to keep in
a moderately warm room. The freesias
are not as well known as their beamy
and perfume deserve, so begin to get
acquainted with them. I have some
geraniums that are beauties, and I
shall enjoy them as long as 1 can; but,
as I have no pit I shall have to see
them freeze after awhile. Chickens and
leggs are all that I can keep up with
when freezing time comes.
That time surely comes and all we
can do then is to see that the live stock
Ila out of the biting wind and-stinging
i sleet or cold rain. God. who says “a
'merciful man regardeth his beats” will
j surely hold you accountable for Y° ur
cruelty to his dumb creatures. At least
1 build a shed and fix the north side so
•as to break the wind, and God will bless
• you.
Right here let me tell you that yofi
are indulging in a foolish superstition
every time you copy one of those so
called prayers and send it to a friend.
I Prayer is the soul’s sincere desire, but
to copy a lot of stuff because you are
afraid that some harm wil come to you
if you do not is rank superstition. The
heathen people are ruled by the fear of
what their gods will do to them. Ours
jis a loving heavenly Father. And if
you feel inclined it is abeautiful thing
to write to a friend about spiritual
things. Pray to our Father in heaven
and earnest prayers are answered. It
may not be in your way, but as sem
; eth best he sends the answer. God is
I all love, truth, justice and mercy, but
'to expect a blessing because you are
scared into copying a rigmarole and
isending it to nine friends is utter fool
ishness. 1 am sure that from the first
one received more than ten years ago
up to yesterday I’ve burned, or torn up
at least one thousand. And if any ex
tra “bad luck’ has come to me I've been
too dull to recognize it. Put your time
to a better use. When such letters
come to you Just ask God to forgive
the writer and to shed more light into
that heart, and burn the letter.
Faithfully yours.
LIZZIE O. THOMAS.
Tuscumbia. Ala.
Woman's
<storjf\
CHAPTER CI.
W iEX Bruce told Ills father that
I “got sick out walking,” he
gave me a sharp look.,Then as
thuugii sp.tistiea, he turned away, a
bitter smile curving ills jips.
“Muvver’s sickness -un i dangerous,”
iie told Brucv- th»*n to xny relief
Martha \>ued us to dinner.
»>ui 1 could no' dismiss the blonde
stenographer so lightly. Was I to have
still another cause for unhappiness?
Was it not enough that Phyllis Lawson
should be a perfect nightmare of jeal
ous fears to me? Must this lovely girl
of whom I was already afraid be in
dailj contact with Robert? Us one
thing 1 was sure. 1 would not remain
away from h:s oflice as 1 had done while
Miss Perkins was there. Whether he
liked it or not 1 would iind some ex
cuse to visit Robert often. I would
know just how matters were between
him and the new stenographer.
It may seem that knowing Robert's
dignified bearing, his pride, etc., 1 should
not have been so suspicious of his ac
tions. But aside from my jealous dis
position, 1 had the sure knowledge—or
thought I had —that women, beautiful
or accomplished women, were his weak
ness. 1 had read somewhere that “the
most dignified, the most erudite, the
cleverest men, were addicted to this one
thing in lives which otherwise were
above reproach.”
I had never forgotten this, and, nat
urally, in my jealousy endowed Robert
with the same falling.
1 said nothing more to him. however,
just then about Miss Bailey—that was
the new girl’s name—not because I
didn’t want to, but because it would do
nd good.
Now he was away more than ever.
Often I knew he was out of town,
oflice. or went to his club, and remain
ed late. At least that was what he
said, when he told me anything. 1 grew
more and more disturbed, more and more
unhappy because of his actions his
neglect as I called It.
I had been so sobered by the chil
dren’s Illness, so prostrated by fear of
the result, especially to Bruce, that I
had had neither time nor strength to
think of other things. But it seemed
Robert had time to find and hire a new
stenographer, and to read Phyllis Law
son’s stories.
I knew he was reading ' them, be
cause the day I went to the office 1 saw
a magazine lying face down on his
desk, and unthinkingly, in my nervous
ness at finding Miss Perkins gone, I
turned it over. The Crucible, a story
by Phyllis Lawson,” stared at me from
the upturned page.
I felt all my old reckless ideas re
turning. sharpened by what I consider
ed my discovery of Robert's new af
fair with the beautiful girl in his.of
fice. If only I weren't so unhappy, if
only I did not love him so dearly!
Through all this time of sickness and
trouble. Harper Carleton had been un
obtrusively kind and thoughtful. His
notes of sympathy and gifts of flowers
often brightened the dark days spent m
the sick room: and his unaffected de
light at seeing me again, worn and
tired as I looked, when the. quarantine
had been removed, was very flattering.
Since then he‘has often taken the chil
dren out in his roadster. Bruce thought
It a great treat, and always begged to
go. Harper had also called several
times. always—unfortunately, I told
t A WORD FROM ♦
: AUNT JULIA ♦
♦ -•
♦ Dear Children: The editor has ♦
given me this extra space so
that I may ask you again to ♦
c«me to see me next week at ♦
♦ the Southeastern fair. Bring ♦
♦ your mother, father, sisters, ♦
♦ brothers and friends. I want to ♦
♦- meet you all. ♦
♦ Come to The Semi-Weekly ♦
♦- Journal booth, in one of the ♦
♦ buildings. We can have a nice ♦
♦ chat and you can rest a while. ♦
♦ Lovingly,
♦ AUNT JULIA. ♦
♦ -♦
•« ♦•-♦♦♦ «»+*-♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦
Germans Remove Their
Dead by Trainloads
LONDON. Sept. 16. (By mail.) —The
Germans are removing their dead from
the field by the truckload stacked tip
like train sacks. A photograph taken
from a prisoner showed bodies lashed
together in blundles of fours and thrown
upon the cars.
him —finding Robert absent.
“You are much alone.” he said to me
one evening as we sat on the piazza.
“I imagine you are often lonely.”
“Not often,” 1 parried. “You see when
Robert's necessarily away some one is
sure to drop in as you have tonight.”
Yet all the time I was talking I wa?
quivering with indignation that he
should be obliged to comment on my
loneliness because it was so evident that
I was a neglected wife.
I flattered myself that I handled this
man, whose attentions were so welcome
in my life, in a masterly way. Never,
since the day I rebuked him, had he
said one word of love to me, nor had he
shown In any way a desire to be more
than my true and loyal friend. I often
smiled to myself as I thought of the
mistaken idea ma*y people held about
platonic friendships. Surely there could
be none more platonic than ours, none
more free from anything with which
the most exacting Mrs. Grundy could
find fault.
That Harper knew, or even suspected,
how unhappy I was because of Robert’s
neglect I never dreamed. I was very
careful when with him to say or do
nothing which would enlighten him.
One day Robert came home unex
pectedly in the late afternoon, and found
Harper with me. He had just that mo
ment arrived, and I was holding the
roses he had brought me, when the liv
ing room door quietly opened and Rob
ert came In.
He greeted Harper pleasantly, then
apologized to me for interrupting us
without knocking, which In any one else
would have seemed like sarcasm. But It
was not so with Robert. He always In
sisted that every one, even a servant
was entitled to their privacy when their
door was closed. He had returned for
his bag and fresh linen as he was going
away for the night.
“Is there anything 1 ean do for you?”
I asked. “I am sure Mr. Carleton will
excuse me.”
“No. nothing.” Robert answered.
I The ONLY Saaltary Feather Bed En-
PURITY mvikeloUomd by ■ reeosnlsed pubtte
I
our special PURITY PROCESS which make* them purely ODORLESb tad GLRMLt-SS. Ata
drop' vs” *POSTAi7tODAY for our beautifully illustrated" 32 pare FREB CATALOG. Our
a F 11 t* wrirea are amaTinrlv LOW. Juat a little above our actual economical cost of manufacture. WK
■ <-<ZI Pafrgi SELL DIRECT FROM FACTORY TO YOU. Every bed positively auaranteed to be Just wbat
H we claim or your money baclc. YES. YOU CAN ORDER C. O. D. IF YOU
J BEFORE YOU BUY read onr BOOK ON FEATHER BEDS. Write today and YOUR copy
out by return mail.
PURITY BEDDING CO. Dept. T, Nashville, Tenn.
Mothers
Vemtfuge
For the
A safe old fashioned ||
remedy for worms (LZ ftT
Seventy-five years continu
ous use is the best testluio- w
nial FBrY'S VERMIFUGE
ean offer you. ,——,
Keep a bottle always on
hand. It will help keep the —>
little ones heppy and healthy. CsSJ
25e a bott'e at your drug- .
tists or gen -I store: or it IrUTj
your dealer can't supply you, u
send his name and 25c in
stamps and we'll send you a
bottle promptly.
E. &S. FREY, J
Baltimore, Md.
= Try Making Your Own |
Cough Remedy
: Yon can «av« abet 32, and have E
i a better remedy than the ready- =
made kind. Easily done.
If you combined the curative propertiea of
every known "ready-made” cough remedy, you
woulr’ hardly have in them all the curative
power that lies in this simple “home-made”
cough syrup which takes only a few minutes
to prepare.
Get from any druggist ounces of Pinex
(6Q cents worth!, i>our it into a pint bottle and
fill the bottle with plain granulated sugar
syrup. The total cost is about 65 cents and
gives you a full pint of really better cough
syrup than yon could buy ready made for $2.50.
Tastes pleasant and never spoils.
This Pinex and sugar syrup preparation gets
right at the cause of a cough and gives almost
immediate relief. It loosens the phlegm, stope
the nasty throat tickle and heals the sore. Ir
ritated membranes that line the throat, cheat
and bronchial tubes, so gently and easily that
it is really astonishing.
A'day's use will usually overcome the ordi
nary cough and for bronchitis, croup, whooping
cough and bronchial asthma, there is nothing
better.
Pinex is a most valuable concentrated com
iKiund of genuine Norway pine extract, and has
been used for generations to break np severs
coughs.
To avoid disappointment, be sure to ask yonr
druggist for “2% ounces of Pinex” with full
directions, ,and don't accept anything else. A
guarantee of absolute satisfaction or money
promptly refunded, goes with this preparation.
The Pinex Co., Ft. Wayne, Ind,—(Advt.)
5