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GET THESE
Money-making Secrets
W AT H Farm Journal
CJARM JOURNAL (“cream, not skim milk”) is the great little
* paper published for 36 years in Philadelphia by Wilmer
Atkinson. It is taken and read by more families than any other
farm paper in the WORLD, hs four million readers (known as
” Our Folks ”) are the most intelligent and prosperous country htkis ntk pnptriy heldf
people that grow, and they always say the Farm Journal helped J'j',™ r
to make them so. Their potatoes arc larger, their milk tests higher, their hogs far mere important.
weigh more, their fruit brings higher prices, because they read the Farm Journal.
Do you know Peter Tumbledown, the old fellow who won’t take the Farm Journal? By showing
how NOT to run a farm, Peter makes many prosperous. Nobody can go on reading the Farm Journal
and being a Tumbledown too. Many have tried, but all have to quit one or the other.
The Farm Journal is bright, brief, “ boiled down,” practical, full of gumption, cheer and sunshine.
It is strong on housekeeping and home-making, a favorite with busy women, full of life and fun for boys and
girls. It sparkles with wit, and a happy, sunny spirit Practical as a plow, readable as a novel. Clean and
pure, not a line of fraudulent or nasty advertising. All its advertisers arc guaranteed trustworthy.
The Farm Journal gives more for the money and puts it in fewer words than any other farm paper.
37 to 80 pages monthly, illustrated. FIVE years (60 issues) for $1,00 only. Less than a cents a month.
No one-ycar, two-year or three-year subscriptions taken at any price.
The Farm Journal Booklets
have sold by hundreds of thousands, and have made
a sensation by revealing the SECRETS OF MONEY*
MAKING in home industry. People all over the
country are making money by their methods.
collection of discoveries
ncn. It glvn Felch’x famous
mating chart, the Curtiss method «>f getting one-half more pullets
than cockerels, Boyer's method of iiisurirtK fertility,and priceless
Secrets of breeding, feeding, how to produce winter egg*, etc.
HORSE SECRETS exposes all the methods of “bish-
oping." "plugging." cocaine and gasoline doping, and other
trick a of “gyps'' and swindlers, an.fenable* any one to tell M
unsound horse. Gives many valuable training secrets.
CORN SECRETS, the great NEW hand-book of Prof.
Holden, the “Com King," shows how to get ten to twenty
ich in protein and the best
stock-feeding elements. Pictures make every process plain.
EGQ SECRETS tells how a family of six can make
ble scraps Into a daily su
ird, get this booklet, le;
lIV <
hens turn its table scraps Into a daily supply of fresh eggs. II you .
have a back-vard, get this booklet, learn how to use up every
scrap of the kitchen waste, and live better at leas coat.
THE “BUTTER BOOK” tells how seven cows were
made to produce half a ton of batter each yer year. (HO
pounds is the average). An eve-opener. Get It. weed out your
poor cows, and turn the good ones into record-breakera.
STRAWBERRY SECRETS Is a revelation of thedis-
J. Parmer, the famous expert, i
iie« almost until snow flics. Ho 1
1 remove the Llussoins,
coveries and methods of L. J. Par
crowing luscious fall strawberries al
and when p'snt, how to fcr.ili.TC, ho
t, the famous expert, in
growing luscious fi “ * T ' ‘
and when to plant. .
how to yet three crops in two yean
GARDEN GOLD shows how to make your backyard
supply fresh vegetables and fruit, how to cut down your grocery
hills, keep * better table.end get cash for your surplus. How to
plant, cultivate, harvest and market.
DUCK DOLLARS tells how th«- great Webt r rhirk-
farm near Boston makes even year 10 cents each on 40.000 .luck-
lings. Tell* why du. k* pay them latter Ilian chickens, an 1 just
HOW they do eve-ytliing.
TURKEY SECRETS discloses fully the methods of
•Horace \W. the famous KIhhI- I land "turkey-man,” who su;*-
plies the White House Tha.ik-;-ivi..g turkeys It tell* h.nv to
mate, to set e to hatch, to he I a.. I calc b.rthe y.unir.to pre
vent Lukness,'u» fatten, and how to make a turkey-ranch PAY.
• methods hy
DELE-T//JailT shows ho
SMALL I FARM ? i
Farm Journal FOUR ft*!! y-
with any one of these booklet
Tka Beekkts an NOT aslJ te*.-i
He sure to say U’JIIC-
ial statement of
md f>r,■/*,<!; ulustnUed.
= ! both for $1.00
y—cal? srI’l Fc.-a Jjcnul.
What Our Folks Say About F. J.
yean," says C. M. Persons.
" It is a queer little paper. I have sometimes read
an<( thou, ^
.ught I v
esvith it. then pick it up again
and iimfsomething new to interest me," says Alfred Krogh'.
“Farm Journal is like a bit of sunshine in our home.
It Is making a better class of people out of farmers. It was first
—* ' —s preser* “ J * *'
K k L
_ and I think it the choicest present
1 ever received,” says p’. K. LeVallcy.
"YVe have read your dear little paper for nearly 40
Now we don't live on the farm any more, yet I stillI have a
• r tfte old paper. I feel that 1 belong to the family, and
' ir and familiar as the faces of old friends, 1 says
{unkering’h (
IJrs^ll. W. Edwards.
“I fear I neglect my business to read It. I wish it
could be in the hands of every farmer in Virginia,” says W. S. Cline.
“I live in a town where the yard is only 15 x 18 feet,
but I could not do without the Farm Journal," says Miss Sara
Carpenter.
“I get lots of books and papers, and put them aside
for future reading. The only paper I seem to have in my hands
ail the time is Farm Journal. I can't finish reading it. Can t you
make it less interesting, so ! can have a chance at my other
papers t" writes John Swsil.
^If I am lonesome, down-hearted, or tired, I go to
Farm Journal for comfort, next to the Bible,'* says Mabel Dewitt.
“Farm Journal has a cheerful vein running through
it that makes, if a splendid cure for tha "blues." When coming
home tired in mind and body, I sit down and read It. and it seems
to give me new inspiration lor life," writes G. E. Halderman.
“\\’e have n brother-in-law who loves a joke. YVe
live In Greater New York, sn.l consider ourselves quite citified, so
acceded ihc gift
gilt horse in the r
r* cfearT-
'lfowto
e fragrant tl.;
Tiiies of "the
. too well-lire
rny eye was caught by
organ io icau i«, men when I wanted the ha
mv husband d.-rply interested in an arti.
, begnn to ask, 'lux the Farmjournal con
nd uplift in this fine pn|«r that we anprecia
- lore and more," writes Ella B. Burkman.
alley. I
beautiful
« Journal
re vet ?• *Heis
re find so much
r N«w
“What yoj
“Duck Do
Itry i
forth their weight in gold.* says W. G. Ncwall.
• Egg Hook tells would take a beginner
ays Roy Chancy.
ars U the Ust book I ever had on duck-
M. Warnock.
“if vottr other booklets contain as much valuable
information a* the Egg-Book, I would consider them cheap at
double the price," says F. W. Mansfield.
“I think your Egg-Book b a wonder,” says
C. P. Shiicy. }
“The Farm Journal beats them all. Every Issue has
reminders and ideas worth a year's subscription," writes
ultur.il p
_ I what Farm Journal t
c paragraph," says N. M. Gladwin.
“It ought to Ik tn every home where there Is a chick,
number," says I. L>. Bordus.
WILMER ATKINSON COMPANY. : FAlLd JOURNAL.
WASHINGTON SQUARE. PHILADELPHIA.
ASKS $20,000 DAMAGES
(Continued from Page 3.)
stained with human blood—n man
whose greed for money mid rieliea
has not poisoned and blackened
!tis soul mul heart.'*
S. In this connection, petition-
or allows that mhiio amounts to an
averment that your petitioner is
a murderer, the inuneddo covering
same being that some years ago
your petitioner did kill one Per-
ritt Lanier, under eircumstnnei's
which made such act of petition
er’s justifiable, in that be was
forced to do so, in defense of bis
own person, and upon investipft-
tion of sueli killing no action was
at that time, nor has since, been
taken by the authorities. The de-
dendants ill this action refer in
the sentence quoted in the |wira-
graph above to sueli occasion,
with intent to convey the false,
scandalous, malicious, defamatory:
and libelous meaning that your
petitioner was guilty of murder,
and that be did then, and does
now, possess an appetite
peared in said article: “Sella
‘Three Ball' Shop. Scott T. Hea
ton announces that lie will sell
his ‘pawn brokers business’ oil
Haines avenue on January first.
This will influence some one to
look with a bit more favor upon
Heaton s Candidacy—for a ‘three-
hall merchant’ might get the city
in soak, through force of habit.
Hut what about Heatons interest
in the negro pool room and negro
barber shot around the corner
from the ‘throe-ball shop’
lie now attends to business? Will
he dispose of tli
Judge Quincy Aids in the
Use of Draw Poker Terms
GOOD ROADS
AND THEIR RELATION
TO RURAL SCHOOLS.
Washington, 1). C., March 2.—
The rural population is more wil
ling to support better schools to
day than at any previous time,
•where! It is being realized that all edu-
ational activities or agencies
interests or j must lie more or less correlated,
ontinue to operate these placet* j and, more than all else, that they
for revenue after lie becomes' must he made accessible to the
lected mayor? No -because lie J children. In many countries
won’t he elected mayor—intelli- where had roads prevail, most of
genee and refinement ill Wayerpns die schools are of the antiquated
goes farther than greasy dollars
if the better element has a
chance to decide the question
Vote for Halhml and help elect
mail whom the people of W;
one-room variety. They are us
ually located along had roads
which, during the winter, when
aj the schools are usually in session,
become so nearly impassable ns to
s would not he aNliamed of—[make it difficult for the children
ns their mayor—the chief exeeu- to reach them. This condition
of the city.” Petitioner causes irregular attendance nnd
blood. In this behalf, petitioner
shows that it was the intention of
the defendants to maliciously
charge that your petitioner’s
character was not above re
proach ; that he was not honest to
his fellow men, and that he could
not look you square in the eyas,
and said language was falsely,
scandalously, maliciously and li-
hclously charged.
!). Petitioner further shows
that the following language ap
peared in the said article: “Prow
ers Hacking Heaton—Want ‘Open
Town.’ The rumor comes to the
oters of Wa.veross—red hot—
that the American Brewers’ As-
iation arc going to furnish all
the money the opposition eandi-
late -Scott T. Heaton, needs to
put him jn the mayor’s office.
Why? Because Heaton favors an
open town. Ballard does not—
and will fight liquor with blood
and iron. This is no ‘slush fund’ 1
—it is the usual business practice
of the breweries they find men *|(f j n the premises are unknown.
further shows that the entire ar
ticle referred to was false, sean-
lalotis, malicious, defamatory, li
bellous and libelous per se. nnd
import damage to your petitioner.
That said false, malicious and de
famatory libel was scattered
broadcast throughout the City of
Wa.veross, the County of Ware,
the State of Georgia ami the Unit
ed States, and a copy thereof
mailed or otherwise delivered to
all the subscriber of the Way-
cross Morning Herald, owned ami
controlled as aforesaid, ami many
copies of such were put on public
sale nnd sold to the citizens of^
WaycroHs, nnd elsewhere in this possible,
state.
11. Petitioner shows that by
means of the publication of the
false ami malicious libel aforesaid
the plaintiff has been greatly in
jured in his good name, reputa
tion, fame and credit, and expos-
I to public hatred, contempt ami
ridicule, with and amongst all hiis
neighbors, and other good and
thy citizens of said county
and State, and elsewhere, inas
much that divers of his neighbors
nml citizens to whom one inno-
restriets the educational opportu
nities of the child. Not only this,
hut it often impedes the econo
mic consolidation of these smaller
schools into larger, stronger
graded schools, with high school
courses, directed hy a competent
principal and corps of teachers,
according to the Office of Public
Hoads, IT. S. Department of Ag
riculture.
On the other hand, ill counties
which have improved their roads,
the schools are easily reached,
the average attendance greater,
the efficiency largely increased
and economic consolidation made
Regular attendance at
who are of their belief—and nat-
sehool means consistent nml reg
ular growth of both school nml
pupil. ami consolidation of
schools means a maximum of ef
ficiency at a minimum of cost. It
is also noteworthy that there is a
marked tendency for the consoli
dated school to become the social
and intellectual center of the com
munity. Most modern rural
school houses are so constructed
a.s to serve the community, ns
gathering places for various
kinds of public meetings, nml
where vans are used to eonvev
ceneo and integrity of the plain- th(? H||Mrpn to Rr ., loo| <IllrinR lhp
into service to haul the farmers
America’s “national game,"
poker, came mighty near being
slaughtered at the concluding
session of Superior Court in
Charlton yesterday, according to
reports received here today.
In the trial of the ease of state
vs. T. A. Christie it seemed that
a game of draw poker was alleg
ed, and the attorneys, both for
the defense and for the prosecu
tion became sadly confused in
their arguments ill the ease.
Their terms were anything but
rreet, and Judge J. W. Quin-
v, who was presiding, eaine to
the rescue of the lawyers fre
quently. They would say one
thing, and he would ask if they
did not mean another, which they
agreed was correct.
It is said that Judge Quinccy
expressed it as his private opin
ion after the hearing that the at
torneys showed a lack of knowl
edge of the game. Incidentally,
Christie was convicted, and fined
$75.
count of the committing of . ... . . ...... ... ,
urally they want them in power-| t , 1P mul grievances from thence op entertainments 0 at th ’
TO ROAM IN WOODS
WITHOUT CLOTHES.
(larhed only in the original at
tire of Mother Eve, Miss Bawl
Douglas, of Straton, will enter
the dense woods of Franklin
ounty, Maine, and remain there
two months, some time this ytar.
Miss Douglas declares she will
enter the forests of her native
ounty as scantily clad as when
she was horn and will come forth
at the end of the two mouths ful
ly clothed in such garb as site can
obtain in the woodlands. She
will take nothing, feeling certain
that she can provide for herself
whatever she needs of food nml
raiment.
She knows every kind of tree
ami bird and animal to hcfoiiml
in that region of the state, knows
every sort of animal of the field
ami river hanks, and every varie
ty of fish frequenting the rivers
nml branches in her home district.
S?ic knows all their habits amt
peculiarities nml has no fear of
life among them for two months.
Miss Douglas is not large of
they furnish him the money to |,it1u- r to suspected and believed, . .. ’ T . frame, but is strong and agile, t'no
put him there for the good of* d M \ do suspect and believe Th “ consolidated ,
their cause. Perhaps they exam- the Wli ,j p i a j nt jflr f„ have been
ined Heaton’s record and sized iipj pil j|t v 0 r murder, the illegal sale
Anyhow it’s authen- ^vid^ciy, bribery, extortion.
Special Combination Offer
OF 1 THE
Waycross Weekly Journal
The Weekly Journal is regularly $1.50 a year. If you subscribe NOW we can
give you the Weekly Journal for one year and the Farm Journal FOUR
years, with any one of the Farm Journal Booklets, AI .1. for $1.50
And to every subscriber whose order is received befofe the edition is exhausted, the
publishers of the Farm Journal promise to send also their famous ALMANAC, "Poor
Richard Revived,” for 1914, provided you write on you order, “If in time please send the
Almanac. If you are now t iking the Farm Journal, your subscription will be moved
ahead for four full years. If you name no booklet. Farm Journal will be sent for Ove
years. To get both papers, till out order herewith end send to us, not to Farm Journal
WEEKLY JOURNAL, Waycross, Ga.
I accept your special offer. Please send me the Journal one
year and Farm Journal FOUR years, with this booklet
, all for $1.50.
MY NAME IS :
ADDRESS
Are you now taking harm Journal? Write "yes" or "no”.
There is more Catarrh in this
section of the country than all
other diseases put together, and
until the last few years was sup
posed to be incurable. For a
great many years doctors pro
nounced it a local disease and
prescribed local remedies, and by
constantly failing to cure with (
local treatment, pronounced it
incurable. Science has proven
Catarrh to be a constitutional
disease, and therefore requires
constitutional treatment. Hall’s
Catarrh Core, manufactured by
F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio,
is the only Constitutional cure on
the market. It is taken internal
ly in doses from 10 drops to a
teaspoonful. It acts directly on
the blood and mucous surfaces of
the system. They offer one hun
dred dollars for any case it fails
to cure. Send for circulars and
testimonials.
Address: F. J. Cheney Sc Co.,
Toledo, O.
Sold by Druggists, 75c.
Take Hall’s Family Pills for
constipation.
their man
tic—and they propose to open up
the ’barrel’ nnd spend the long
green—$25,000 if neeessnry—for
it is another chance to open up
grog shops and the hrcWfiVI are
betting on Beaton. ITaa Deaton
ever said he was for absolute pro-
cheating and swindling, nud the
various other matters so falsely
nud maliciously charged upon and
imputed to him hy the said de*
fciidants, as aforesaid, and have
hy reason of the publication of
said libel hy the said defendants,
discourse with said plaintiff as
they were before usod and accus
tomed to have and otherwise
would have had.
All to the damage of the said
plaintiff in the surn of Twenty
Thousand (20,000.00) dollars, ns
aforesaid, nnd therefore he brings
this net ion.
Wherefore, your petitioner
prays that process may issue re
quiring the saitl defendants to he
and appear at the next term of |
the City Court of Wayermw, of
said county, to answer your peti-l
tinner’s complaint.
Petitioner’s Attorney.
hibitionf Ballard has said he was ^ f rom thence hitherto wholely re
-and he mean* it too. Invcirti-. fl|S( .,i nn(1 nt ;|I do refine to have
(fato Denton ’a reeord all the long „ n v trnn , n „ tioni B( . n , 1B intnneo or
road hack—don’t ho fooled—ac
cept his invitation.’’ Petitioner
shows that such statements were
false, scandalous, malicious, de
famatory nnd libelous, the inten-.
tion of the defendants being to
Imrge that the American Brew
rs' Association had furnished, oi
would furnish $25,000 to delivei
tin* fair City of Wa.veross, if your
petitioner was elelee-d mayor, to
them to do with as they saw fit.
and said language charged your
petitioner with intention to make
wide open town” of Wa.veross,
the universal definition of which
is a town in which liccnioushcM*.
vice, lawlessness, h-wdness nnd
crimes of every kind, nature and
description are practiced. Peti
tioner further show* that the said
article charges him as being sized
up hy those desiring these condi
tions of affairs, and not found
wanting for their purpose, and
that the alleged sum of money
was furnished to petitioner for
putting him in office to the good
of their cause. Petitioner also
shows that the American Bret.*-
Association is a concern
which manufactures beer, and as
a matter of law it is illegal to well
within the hounds of the State of
Georgia such, and it was the in
tention of the language referred
to to charge your petitioner with
having entered into a cinspiracy
for the illegal purpose of hand
ling their wares.
10. Petitioner further shows
the following language also ap-
xchool a 8 ort of com- • ,imI ' le lifo of ,,l<! ■»« k "ood» «crv,
inanity ranter to wllioh all mill- i,,B 1,1 ,ho 23 ynirH of ,,Rr ,ifc to
rational ami nodal artivitira con- ,,on ’" ,rv " h,,r * tr,,,,Klh ftn ' 1 bni,d
vor«o. nml in order that it n 1)W ,l constitution
properly perform that function! Th " yo " nK wo,nnn no "°-
sll of the highways leading to jt; tor.«ty in the venture ahe will
should hr 80 improve,1 a, to ron- " mke ' , "" 1 1,11 P robal,,1,ty thc
der itreadily accessible through
out the year.
AUTO SAID TO BE SAFE.
Atlanta, March 3.—According
to the records of various coroners
both in Georgia and other parts
of the country, the autornohil
today a much safer vehicle than
the buggy or wagon.
For the number of miles travel
d more people have been hurt hy
horses and on wagons during the
past year than in automobiles in
Fulton county.
When you want a reliable med
icine for a cough or cold take
Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy.
It can always he depended upon
ami is pleasant ami safe to take.
For sale hy all dealers.
Subscribe for the Weekly Jour
nal and get the n'*ws.
ATLANTA POLIOS
GET RILED SOME.
Atlanta, March 3.—The police
nnd detective departments are
working like fiends to make a
proper showing on the new crisis
that has been put up to them—the
commission of seven burglaries in
Atlanta in one night.
Instead of roasting the critics
who have blamed them for ineffi
ciency, the police are this time
pitching in hammer and tongs to
show that they van do something.
Already three suspects have been
jailed whom tho. officers believe
are the right men, nnd the detec
tives are hot on the trail of oth
ers.
The most serious and difficult
of tie seven case* is that of W. M.
Jen lings, the restaurant keeper
whf was sandbagged and robbed
hy hree white men. All the oth
er burglaries nnd robberies were
supposedly negroes.
outside world will never know
she him completed her two months
nnd lived with the forest dangers
until the time is up. Unwished
for attention may he at the bot
tom of the venture, but the girls
fnmily will guard against intru
ders.
How to be Certain of
Curing Constipation
Prejudice is a hard thlnx
it where health In hi nt
jlnlon of thouaands of rr
differ* from yours, prejudice then be-
four menace and yo- *-* *-
aide. Thla la naid ir
peopla Buffering fr<
flon, a “
conatlpai
attention
worthy of
ought to
chronic
In tho opinion of leglona of reliable
American people tha most stubborn
constipation Imaginable ran la cured
by a brief usa of Dr. Caldwell'a Syrup
Penaln. You may not have heard of It
before, but do not doubt Ita merit* on
that account, or because it has not been
blatantly advertised. It has sold very
fully es word of mouth recom
mendation. Parents *r« giving
their chlldrea today who were given It
by their parents, and it haa been truth
fully said that more druggists use it
personally la their families than any
ether luatlvs
Lottera recently received frott Mr,
J. N. Catlett, Commerce, Ga., and ttrs.
Hose Garvin, lUdgevlUe, 8. C., are but
a few of thouaends showing the es
teem In which Dr. Caldwell's Syrup
Pepaln la held. It Is mild, gentle, non*
griping—not violent, like salts or cn*
ihnrtp'a. It cures gradually and picas*
anti;-, so that in Urns nature again
does Its own work without i
aid. Constipated peopla owo It to
salves to use thla grand bowel bjm
Anyone wishing to mako a trial
remedy before buying It in the
j3L,VuWf.s,*?SLra
have e sample bottle sent ‘
free of charge by simpler
W. a Caldwell, <•* Wi
MonUcello, III. Your nam
on n postal cord will do*