Atlanta tri-weekly journal. (Atlanta, GA.) 1920-19??, March 18, 1920, Page 5, Image 5

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Don't Send aPenny Send just your name and taE’MpESjSffiwffi addresa. Let ns send for vour approval thia truly gorgeous fancy flowered WSaF W?F Voile frock—a delight to O every girl’s and woman’s W heart Just the exqoi site, modish model A sig»g you’ve set your heart .&?■ 1 s-k on having. An exact . ’W, duplicate of the expensive . SB**:-' SSS?. << dresses shown in America’s % T > most exclusive fashion ARTS? (rvgx shops. And the price pWO! V3S. we are able to Bet on ft '^Bk 'B amazingly low—a fiMB fist'® \s\" ,on ' B history. W’?® ; 3sSiSsE*: Yon cannot duplicate it jKSiiia at double 13®5^V^*s^'S£kqa- :;: 7 our price. Ifesgf Sena only jsSyfej /SsisSsJ your name Sjijgj end address. CSJKM See yourself in SsKslS’BSi* this stunning,new » frock. If not over* fswgs joyed with its won* fKarderful lines and i£?a SOOL quality, return it. tW f SE, The try-on will VC SHO Coßt you nothins: ’ M ffil W-® latest W iIH life SßModcl *f||olVoile wWil Dress Bar Saln fSsss A smart frock, KroSsr : S&k sF SErv made of splendid quality fancy flow* | sa&. W ered voile. See the exquisite newdesign full flared tunic now the smartest fashion. See the smart white organdy 4SS collar and cuffs daint* gs3u & WJ® ■&?-? ily edged with hand* some pattern Vai laee. Vestee trimmed with S£3B»SW;2SEiaOS: fine pearl buttons. EeWtSSJ- Sleeves £ length. Full cut skirt. Colors: Navy Blue. Rose or Lavender. jSfes Sizes, bust 34 to 46. Misses, ag&M bust 32 to 38. Order by No. jOVI 8882 for Blue, 8883 for gjgSjH |A Rose, 8884 for Lavender. Be sure to give size. Don’t RUSH yours before TZ ** _ * wHsr ‘hey are “U gone. At our ffgfjVl/—* price they are sure to be _ VS snapped up quickly. Few Zl f»T filniJU v 3 women can resist such an unusual bargain. Send no money—just your name and address—now. Then pay our low price, $4.95 fordress on arrival. Examine and try it on. If you think you can duplicate it at double our price—if for any reason you do not wish to keep it—return it and we refund your money. __ LEOMARD*MORTON&CO., Dept 614 k Chicago | GETTINe GUAY? It’s no longer necessary to use hair dyes to bring your gray hairs back to natural col or and we intend to prove it to thousands in every part of the United States at our risk, nothing to pay unless Kolor-Bak brings your gray hairs back to their original color, no matter what the color was. Not a dye or stain—not greasy, mussy or muddy, abso lutely stainless, colorless and guaranteed harmless and that is more than can be said of any hair dye. Guaranteed to cure dan druff in two applications, stop falling hair and it’s the simplest treatment in the world. The discovery was made that gray hair, dandruff and falling hair are produced by the same cause, inert follicles and pigments'. Results come astonishingly quick. Write Hygienic Laboratories. 3334-3338 West 38th street, Dept. 366-A, Chicago, for free book which explains everything and gives* pos itive proof.— (Advt.) ■ A A ■ n ■ M Genuine. Name m Iff a K># H I*B on efl< th tablet. Adri II BN rgrX.^a : - tionally advertised; 400 tablets. Vegetable Cocoanut Oil Shampoo Soap 25c, postpaid. Sent anywhere. Free catalogue. Merit Chemical Company 151 Union Ave. Memphis, Tenn. HandsomeGuaranteedWafchsW Hunting eaan ar open taco. Cents,boya & ladle* alza ' £-?- p pa reel pus i fa Uiirtu ou vaMlwo.n 011 l Mad tU* hsadsowa doablo 11 natlar Case or Open Fare Watch,l6 ■!» for m«a or boys u S tin Bondar mm for ladles, beautifully on<nn4 olootro (oldplated,MM with duly tooted taoromonq white oaamol dial, stem wind oad item sot, teal C. 0. D. puool port! whoa you roootM It peTjou portnut e * w A only and it It youo. SATISFACTION GUABANTSkD. Svlyou foil port offloo eddroto, box or ttroot aombor. Addna Beaten Jewelry Ce. 39 W.Adamt St. 26 A. Chloago.lll. WATCH AND RING FREE at 15c. Bverybody wants them. Whon sold send os the 53.00 and choose watch or other highly deeirable_prize from oar bi? list. You can sell the pictures in one day. Send year name and addresa today* CAMBRIDGE ART CO. 1721 Cambridge BMg. v CHICAGO ■ 2 LACE CURTAINS given for selling 8 boxes of Prof. Smith’s Headache and Neuralgia Tab lets at 25 cents a box. Cata logue of other premiums sent with goods. SMITH DRUG CO., Dept 81. Woodboro. Md. Many are making sls and up per day 3 . vanning fruits afribvegetablea for market, neighbors and home by using a fc* \ “FAVONITff" HOMI CANNKR £1 P\ Made better, last longer, no waste, IjL, [G \ gives best results, uses less fuel, easy to operate., Prices, $450 and up. We furnish cans and labels. v Write for FREE BOOKLET. CircliM NstalPfMlKte Ce„ P. 0. Ba 117 Hilaa«ba,N.C. CtwaaMOMM Send name and address for 18 beautiful Good iMck IVatfcftra aDd A* Seen”- io colors. They _ sell for 15c and 20c like lemonade wMM at a circus. When sold, send ua . _ fI.TS and keep balance, or select pwas* 9WWfWBrO ram from our large list. AmmFs «e* VANKER STUOIO.Oept. 118 |MS9*KCCs 3094 w. Lake M.. Ma. O>CM*aß» Magnolia Blossom Women If Sick or Discouraged We want to show you free of cost what wonderful results Mngnolln Blos som can accomplish.. If you suffer from ailments peculiar to women or from some form of female trouble, write us at once for a free box of Magnolia Blos som. We know what it has done for so many others and it may do the same for you. Al) we want is a chance to con vince you. Send us your name and ad dress and let us send you this simple Home treatment free. Address SOUTH BEND REMEDY CO., Dox 31 South Bend, Indiana 60 Days’ Trial If you suffer from Debility, Nervousness, Insomnia, Lack of Vigor, Rheumatism, Lum bago, Lame Back, Poor Circulation, Dyspep sia, kidney, liver, bladder weakness, or any trouble due to low vitality, send for our ire? Book telling all about the genuine Sarden Electric Belts and now they are sold on W days’ trial, with no cost to you unless you are absolutely satisfied. Price $4.85 up. This is an opportunity you should not miss. i You are fully insur-i agaiast failure and * ’ lake no risk whatever. '1 he Sanden Her cules Belt is the best in the world and oui offer is absolutely genuine. Write for Frei Book today. Addresa THE HERCULEX CO., 1416 Broadway, A New York (Dept. M,), TTTE ATLANTA TRI-WEEKLY JOURNAL MARY MEREDITH’S ADVICE TO LONELY GIRLS AT HOME J>ear Miss Meredith: I am coming to you for advice. I urn a lonely girl of 16, have been go ing with a boy of 20 for aßout two years. He said he loved me better than any other girl and he seemed to think a lot of me until about seven months ago. He did not say any thing about being mad, but just stop coming to see me. He will smile and speak to me, but will not have any thing much to say to me. I love him dearly and don’t think I could be satisfied without him. Do you think he loves me yet. and how could I find out and get him back? I am five-feet eight inches high. Weigh 142 pounds. Do I weight enough as to my height? Thanking vou for your advice. FROM A TROUBLED HEARTED GIRL. Perhaps he disapproved of something you did or said, and is sulking. Can you recall any thing you did —which would lead him to break off calling on you. May be he saw you too often. Don’t let them call too often. They will get tired of you. Men are funny—all of them. The more indifferent a woman is to them, the more anxious they are to see her. Just treat him the way he treats you, and don’t let him known through any one else that you love him. But always have a good word for him. I think he will renew his friend ship after awhile. But don’t you run after him. That will spoil it all. Dear Miss Meredith: I am a girl, age 19, coming to you for some advice. I am correspond ing with a young man in South Carolina, age 20. He is very hand some, tall, fair, with brown eyes. I love him, and he says he loves me. Am I old enough to marry or not? He has been to call on me several times. Should I accept boxes of candy he send me? How often should I allow him to call on me? Should I allow him to kiss, or em brace me? Now, I have large brown eyes, black hair, very fair complexion. Please advise me what to do. From CHERRY CHEEKS. Cherry Cheeks I’m quite sure you are a real sweet girl, judg ing from your letter, and worthy /// I A oj Reliable Information | All American women know of the great success of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound in restor- I ing to health women who suffered from ailments pe culiar to their sex, yet there are some who are skeptical and do not realize that all that is claimed for it is absolutely true —if they did, our laboratory would not I be half large enough to supply the demand, though today it is the largest in the country used for the manufacture of one particular medicine. The Facts contained in the following two letters should prove of benefit to many women : Buffalo, N. Y.—“ I suffered with Sacramento, Calif.—“ I had or organic inflammation and displace, ganic trouble and had such terrible ment. When lifting I had such pain pain and swelling in the lower part and bearing down that I was not of my side that I could not stand on ■ able to stand up, and it hurt me to my feet or even let the bed clothes walk or go up or down stairs. I was touch my side. I gave up my work going to a doctor without any re- thinking I would not be able to go suits and he said the safest thing back for months. My mother ad would be to have an operation. I vised me to take Lydia E. Pinkham’s meta lady who told me she had Vegetable Compound as it had saved three operations and was not well her life at one time, and it put me until she took Lydia E. Pinkham’s in a wonderful condition in a couple H Vegetable Compound. of weeks, so I can keep on working. I felt relief after taking two bottles I work in a department store and of Vegetable Compound and I kept have to stand on my feet all day and ra on with it until I was cured. I al- Ido not have any more pains. I ways use Lydia E. Pinkham’s Liver surely recommend your Vegetable Pills and they are fine. Everything Compound to all my friends and you H used to turn sour on my stomach and may use these facts as a testimon- ■ the Liver Pills relieved that.’’—Mrs. ial?’— Bbbtha J. Paokbb, 3320 M B A. Roqxbs, 603 Fargo Avenue, St.. Sacramento, Calif. Buffalo, N. Y. The fact is, the Best Medicine for Women is [E L.YOIA E.PINKHaw"I*IEOICINE' CO., LYNfI.MASS, “"Hfl B \* W.ll TI JilLItM Here is the newest creation in fine China making r ——a beautiful 42-piece aet made of exquisite ware. vrlW Each piece is full size, decorated with the popular Old Rose floral design, and edged ~ ■ —— Stwa, * w 'ith gold. In addition to these deco* «« Ki rations each piece will be decorated KiMzsW’tf wiibyoarparseaalinitisliaparegcW.orthe cables as any fraternity, Maaonic, Odd JbjMwiW*. _., ~ . ..... . .Fellow., K.otp .Woodman. Elka. Moom. etc. I L. ' I TWe .crocipllahtnent la abaolutely new In fine china makln,. .nd flee, your art »n added peraonalT.lue— I I bendiomeaadezchulrtManhelrloon. Juettaink.wogl.eHtoyou.toototelytaotortelfingy<Mrtzlends ! KIBLER’S ALL’ROUND OIL n ’SLfJ!”“ th® perfect furniture polish, cleaner and brightener, met preventive and leather preserver. | $ - I; the national standby. Takes the drudgery out of cleaning—makes cleaning a pleasure <q over two mil- I * TT. P lion homes. It is so well known thet it sells on sight. To get this beautiful dinner •et-or cash commission I r '*»**’•j —simply order and sell SO bottles of this wonderful oU at W cents each, Batura the SIS.OO collected and I E the dinner set is yours. I Owmw I SEND NO MONEY. We trust you and take the oil back if you cannot sell ft. Order today, giving your I Hws rwmsHe Q nearest express office. Be the first to enjoy the luxury of these new. novel and beautiful dishes. I Qww | TKg KI3LER COMPAMY, DEPT. A7O INDIANAPOLIS, IND. § WATCH, CHAIN AND TWO RINGS a« premiums—send no money —simply name and address merely giveaway a FREE 12 Beautiful Art Pictures with 12 Boxes of our famouz White ~gn ’v, Ctoverine Salve, which you sell at 25c each. WewillsendyouthisGenuine sl] American Watch, also Chain and two Gold Shell Rings, according to jjjl Hz*’ 7 All °^ er * n our P rem * um Catalogue which you receive with the Salve. Millions are using dj VWW Cloverine for cute, I A Q f YOU CAN ALSO EARN A BEAUTIFUL DINNER SET I OR SIX LACE CURTAINS “ A’ll and many other beautiful premiums. Out plan is the easiest and | >1 A absolutely square. Write quick—Pictures and Salve sent promptly, | fl S post-paid. Be first in your town. I THE WILS ON CHEMICAL CC., I BIG CSSH IWNISSiati TO SFFHTS L 132 Tyrone, Pa. | of any good man’s love, and if this young man has all flhe qualities which are needed in a good husband —will provide fsr you and loves you—l see no rea son why you shouldn’t marry him In the next six months. T don’t thing there is any harm in accepting candidy and flowers. They are little tokens of love or admiration. Unless you are quite sure you and he will marry, I would advise you to be very careful and not allow him too many privileges. Hold yourself sacred —he will love you all the more. 6 March 3, 1920. I am coming to you for advice. I have blue eyes, light complexion. Weight 109 pounds, dark hair and I am nineteen years old. I have a mighty nice young man coming to see me, he is twenty years old, has been coming two years right regu lar, three times a week and letter once a week. He insist on me mar rying right away. My parents like him very well. Other young men are coming to see me. I am enjoying myself sin gle, but I like him better than I do any other young man I know. Would you advise me to run the risk of losing him by putting him off. BLUE? EYES. Is he able to provide for you? Do you think you love him well enough to give up your free dom? You are only nineteen, and your life is before you, even if you do run the risk of losing him—you had better do that— than marry him not feeling sure that you love him. But if you love him enough to for sake all others for his sake, there Isn’t any reason why you shouldn’t marry him. He might wait a while longer if he has the assurance you will marry him later. Will you please help a boy In trouble. I am 16 years old and was engaged to a French girl, age 14. I loved her very dearly. She tried several times to break up our en gagement, and I wouldn’t give up. She said she was too young to mar ry, and I told her I would wait for her, and she still refused. I’m so troubled I don’t know what to do. I will never love another girl. Answer at once in The Semi-Week ly Journal, Yours truly, “DORT.” My boy, your love seems big and overwhelming now, and I know you are going through many heart aches. Boys your age take love very seriously. They can’t eat, sleep, work or play. And their folks get awfully anx ious about them. But everything will come out all right. The lit tle French girl is right. You are both too young to entertain such thoughts as marriage for one minute. If you love her deep ly I know you will wait for her. And if she loves you she will do the same. And if she doesn’t just go along, and hope, and don't worry her with your at tentions and “time” will bring you love and happiness in the years ahead of you. March 3, 1920. I am coming to you for advice. I am fifteen years old, have black hair, brown eyes, weight 120 pounds. I have a young man coming to see me, he is twenty-five years old, he went to see another girl five years and went to the camp and stayed a year and came back and started to see me. Would you let him come or not? . BROWN EYES. I don’t see any reason why you shouldn’t let him call to see you occasionally. If he is a nice young man and if he isn’t engaged to another girl. There is a certain code of honor about that. You could<n’t accept at tentions from a man knowing he is honorably bound to an other girl. That wouldn’t be fair to her —even if you don’t know her. Let him break the en gagement first if there is any existing. CHICKEN RAISING ay lizzie o tmomas Answers to Enquirers Judging from the letters that I am getting, there is renewed inter est in the poultry business. The price of eggs for the table is three times as much as it used to be, and it has been folly to cut down the flock because feed has been twice as high. A dozen eggs can be sold and the money will buy a pound of steak or two days’ feed for the whole flock of 25 hens, if they have any range. We find the hens an ad vantage in getting the grubs out of the garden. The Farmer gave it a thorough plowing a month ago and the next day “the floods descended.” We have broken a forty years’ rec ord for rain and snow. Not a field plowed when oats and rape should be ready to use. But now to answer questions. WhaX incubator is best? Don’t think that you can get a good incubator for nothing any easier than you can feed a hen on nothing, or make a scrub hen a profit. I like hot water incubators because they seem more reliable in sudden changes. I sup pose I’ve paid out as much as any two others on cheap incubators and lost as many eggs in them. I know what I can do with a first-class in cubator, but I’ve always wanted to be able to recommend one that would not be too expensive for the farm er’s wife t< buy and use early and then, if she wants to, put away till next spring. But I’ve given it up. Under twelve dollars, excuse me. Some of my friends use the round ones with excellent result, but they are not cheap ones. I know some that sell for twelve dollars that give ’fairly good results. Even last year one could get a good one for that. I know two kinds that sold for that and one had a brooder, but the same sorts are now fifteen and eighteen. But you must not forget that forty chicks eight weeks old would bring a fancy price right now. I kpow that a great many people say that a machine that will hold sixty eggs is/ as expensive to run as one with double that capacity, but the farm flock or fancier's flock can furnish fifty eggs as fresh as you need them, and a larger machine would be only half full., I think two small ones better because you can handle forty chicks easier than a hundred, and its a waste to hatch chickens and let them die for lack of growing space. They will crowd unless you keep everlastingly with them. The next enquiry is: “What did you say would kill hawks?” A tea spoonful of powdered nux vomica in a pint of meal. Make a crumbly dough and feed the chicks night and morning three times in succes sion, then once a day till you get the hawk. It takes one chick to kill the hawk, and it also kills rats, dogs and cats. It is a fine tonic for hogs, so don’t get the idea that you can kill the chicken-eating sow with it. But a pinch put in an egg will settle the suckegg dog. And a pinch of calomel in an egg will make a dog so sick that you may be sure it never will want another egg. Nux vomica is a fine tonic for peo ple, so you need not be afraid to eat the eggs nor the chickens when you are feeding it to the youngsters. At this season you may have some with black combs. That is bad liver, their indigestion has about got the best of them. I use one mild liver pill for that one and give all of them a thorough purging. A tablespoon ful of Epsom salts to three hens, mixed in a crumbly mash. I first dissolve the salts in warm water,' then I am sure it is eaten. Only once or twice a year do I use this quantity of Etpsom salts, and I give it early In the morning. The usual quantity once a week, for the hot months, is one teaspoonful to four hens. If the weather stays sunny, after you give this first big dose of Epsom salts, give the flock some sulphur mixed in meal and water. The next question is about sore head. I do not think that it is sore head at this season. Damp roosting quarters and crowding gives roup and canker. Keep permanganate of potash in the drinking water. At least once a week scald the drinking vessel and make the water a deep wine color. When a head seems swelled put it in a tin cup or old glass of the purple water, keep the head down till bubbles rise. That means the fowl has drawn the medi cine up its nostrols. Then grease the head, ears, and throat with car bolated vaseline, give a piece as big as your thumb and put the sick fowl in a place where the others will not take the disease. But all the medi cine and care will not avail until you give them dry quarters and see that they are not in a draft. Sealey leg comes next. I find crude oil, black oil some call it. the best thing yet. Lard and coal oil is good, but it sometimes takes more than one application. The thick black oil gets in the scales and stays there. Don’t let it get on your setting hens, nor on the eggs you expert to set. Apply with an old tooth brush and paint the roosts with it for mites and lice. There are some other questions but I must write personal letters as this is all the space. I always answer by letter inquiries concerning sick birds. Before the baby chicks hatch make up your mind that you will not feed them for two days and that a little fresh buttermilk will be their first taste even if you have to use a fountain pen filler and open their mouths. DOROTHY DIX’S TALKS The Family Quarrel BY DOROTHY DIX The Highest Paid Woman Writer in the World NE of the most amazing things I in the world is why married people who are, otherwise, o well-bred and good-mannered, so often fight in public. Matrimony is, of course, a dull and drab state of existence when it slides into the long, long trail that goes winding through the year, and nobody would interfere with the pleasures of the man and woman who seek to vary its monotony by a little scrap now and then. But surely there is ample oppor tunity for these domestic bouts to be held in privacy, in the time which a husband and wlte perforce spend at home, and when the doors can be shut, and the blinds pulled down, and the key holes plugged up so that neither sight nor sound of the encounter will penetrate to the out side world. To inflict these affairs on the innocent bystander is a criminal cruelty to dumb animals, for there is no other situation in life that is so acutely embarrassing, nor so filled with poignant and helpless agony as to be forced to assist, in the French sense, at a quarrel be tween a married couple. Neither discretion nor tact of fers the victim any safe way of es cape. To take either side is to in vite assault and battery. The lady may call her husband a brute, but if you agree with her she will turn upon you like a wildcat, and tell tb her husband is a perfect gentleman, and that you are a beast of low degree yourself to traduce that noble and generous man. The husband may say that b > wife is a pin-headed idiot, and de mand of heaven to know why he was ever fool enough to marry her, but if you assent to his estimate of his spouse he will accuse you of being a jealous cat, if you are a woman, and punch your nose for in sulting the pearl of her sex if you are a man. In either case you will have made two enemies for life, for there is this peculiarity about a husband-and-wife quarrel—that it brooks no interference and both com batants invariably turn upon the out sider who butts into it. Nor is it any safer to try to pour oil upon the troubled waters. No hand Is artful enough to apply the lubricant just where • the friction is. so the only thing that the unfor tunate third party can do is to keep still, and noncommital, and preserve an unarmed neutrality until the storm has blown over. It is a far from exhilarating ex perience, however, and nobody’s idea of a plsasant and enjoyable time, yet it is one of the social martyrdoms that we are all called to go through far too often. All of us know married people who are really charming, cultivated, delightful people, who would be the most agreeable of companions ex cept for the bad. habit they have formed of fighting in public, and ' which makes them wet blanket every . festive occasion which they attend. These people will take you out In ■ their car, and you will be having a i most beautiful time, bowling along a • lovely road, through exquisite seen- i ery, and listening to their witty j chatter. Suddenly some foolish question comes up about a turn in i the road, or one who owns a certain ; estate, or how many miles they made , on their last ride—and biff! bang! they are at it, hammer and tongs. They say the most insulting things of each other. They make the most criminal charges against each other. They delve down into the past and drag out family skeletons that have been locked In their closets for years and years, then just as you think | Woolens SSSx I ffi: Jr rM Bk\ h ' \\ W?K ?j^^^T l m z’C z/W J wajw )I\ C) iWS^ya*O®k iSII st:i i Xvr- 881 /irvw/w hands // PmsfSF :i:a ‘ 11BSMHK vd pane water luke MF '"I |m|f I One woman —® constant user of Grandma— K~A /a tells us she always has soft, fluffy woolens—woolens /-A Uj£Sr retain, their shape woolens that are un- ' Wh shrunken. v1 V& ® IC ma ® ceß a BU^B Grandma’s Powdered \ I ffl!Or Soap and hot water and lets it stand until luke M warm. Then she washes the woolens merely by squeezing out between the hands, and rinses in luke warm water to which a little powder is added, as woolens should never be rinsed in clear water alone. She then wrings dry and shapes by pulling lightly and shaking, dries them in a warm place, and irons them with an iron that is not very hot. Clean ana protect your woolens and flannels by using this easy method. Don’t forget —a big, generous sized package for sc. The most economical soap you can use. Powdered SOAP * ■ ’ Trq This Powdered Soap Today “Ybwr Grocer Has lit t Hie .flioijQ. Soap Cbmponq. Cincinnati, THURSDAY, MARCH 18, 1020 that murder is bound to be commit ted, they simmer down and diplo matic relationships are again re sumed. But your ride has been ruined, your pleasant afternoon spoiled. A thousand times better to hang on a strap in a street car in peace, than to 101 lin a limousine with a raving husband and wife. Or perhaps you are invited to a wonderful dinner by a belligerent couple. The table is an artistic pic ture. The food is a chef’s master piece. The guests are interesting and congenial. Suddenly either hus band or wife shies his or her hat into the ring, and there is a free fight on, so fierce that everybody begins to duck, for it seems impos sible for the cutlery and crockery not to follow the verbal onslaught. Os course, having had these little domestic mix-ups a million times before, the husband and wife, fig uratively speaking, get up and shake hands after they have been to the mat, and everything is as before be tween them. But not so with the guests who have been outraged and humiliated, and who feel justly that they have been ill used in having been dragged into a disgraceful scene that they would have given much to have avoided. Os course married people quarrel because they enjoy it. It relieves the domestic tension. It warms their blood and puts pep and ginger into them, and makes them feel good t > .fight. Otherwise they would not do it, because there is never a family spat that could not be avoided if either the husband or the wife real ly desired to sidestep it. If a husband and wife get any real fun out of insulting each other, and saying unforgiveable things to ea:h other, it is their personal privilege to do so, but It does seem that the most elementary consideration of the feelings of strangers should induce them to reserve their quarrels for home consumption, and not to force other people to be a witness to them. Nobody cares to know what a hus band’s and wife’s real private opin ions of each other are, nor to listen to a recitation of their faults, nor to any speculation as to why they married each other, and to be forced to be a party to such revelation fills one with a vicarious shame for those who have no shame for themselves. Therefore, let those who delight in slaughtering the dove of peace do it privately at home, but when they go forth in public let them sign a domestic armistice that will hold un til they get back under their own roof tree. After all, it’s a poor quar rel that won’t last two or three F SAVES YOU MOST MONEY g : Write this minute for price-slashing catalog, EM “ FEATHER FACTS and BEDDING BARGAINS’* | 'i /fee Jor the asking. No other bedding book like K! ■ , jt. every page crammed with special offers under- Eg selling all middlemen. Why make dealers rich H v „ - ... i when you can buy DIRECT rUKII I Bwww 5 FROM FACTORY and keep /TX M BEPPNGCQ n hjpjjp |o your owo pockets, A Vnußwal Hg y A \ Offer to K WE GLADLY SHIP C. O. D. ) I Ageato Send for this PURITY book Dow. BEFORE you / I write elsewhere. You can't afford to miss our bar- g ■'*"’Ni g.iin offers. Everything sold on MONEY-BACK [ ?ZM GUARANTEE backer! by four hanks rod thousands L. of K 'tlsfled < iiatonrerv. C. O. D. erderg filled. AU I shipments same day order Is received. ’"•* 'H PURITY BEDDING COMPANY 319 Sparkman Street Naahvillo Teno. A Few Hints Regarding The Newest Fashions Making the skirt and waist portion of a dress of contrasting materials is only one of the many caprices that have been introduced this spring. Combinations of plain and printed silks and of printed silks with serges are much in evidence, and foulard patterns, which look as if they are embroidered are chosen for the de velopment of spring models. Cotton materials are as remarkable as woolens in their weaves and color ings. Cotton voiles embroidered in high colors are being much used for advanced summer dresses. Pleas will be much worn; also flounces. Bhe pleated skirt is quite the vogue. Pleated and checked skirts with plain, dark blue coats are very much used. The waist line is lower. Sashes are much used. They may be tied in back or on side. The new skirts show a -tendency to put out at the hips. Sb’/rt coats are newest of wraps. Blue serge in suits is as smart this season as last. Made from it are those “chic” little street suits and one-piece dresses than which there is nothing more appro priate nor more satisfying for spring wear. So many of the suits show eton jacket effect. Shoes are not as fancy this year as last. For general wear the dark brown or tan oxford is very good. MARY MEREDITH. hours, and the delay and the wrath they have been nursing will enable them to go to it with added vim and vigor. (Copyright,. 1920, by The Wheeler Syndicate, Inc.) OLD WOOL DRESS ■wm ho “Diamond Dyes” Turn Fad ed, Shabby Apparel into New Don’t worry about perfect results. Use “Diamond Dyes,” guaranteed to give a new, rich, fadeless color to any fabric, whether it be wool, silk, linen, cotton or mixed goods,— dresses, blouses, stockings, skirts, children’s coats, feathers, draperie’s, coverings. The Direction Book with each package tells so plainly how to dia mond dye over any color that you can not make a mistake. To match any material, have drug gist show you “Diamond Dye” Color Card. —(Advt.) ‘ SYRUP DF FIGS" a Look at tongue! Remove poisons from stomach, liver and bowels A/, H I H fl ■' r /ZJ ! Accept ’'California” Syrtip of Figs only—look for the name California on the package, then you are sure your child is having the best and most harmless laxative or physic for the little stomach, liver and bowels. Chil dren love its delicious fruity taste. Full directions for child’s dose on each .bottle. Give it without fear. Mother! You must say “California.” —(Advt.) S2OO “ a Month New Model Combination Camera It takes and In- "*stantly develops twelve entirely different styles of pictures, combining 3 sizes and 6 styles of PAPER POSTCARDS,and also the same sizes and styles of TINTYPE PICTURES. Requires no experience whatever. Everybody wants pictures. 500% Profit. The World's Biggest Money-Maker Small investment secures complete outfit, including Camera, Tripod and material for 150 pictures. Make money the first day, no matter where you live or what you are doing. WE TRUST YOU. Write today for free information and our Great Half-Price “Special" Offer J. B. FERRIS, Mgr., 615 W. 43d St. Dept. 141 NEW YORK, N. Y. BIG VALUE for l O Cts tfl Songs, words and music; 25 Pictures Pretty Girls; 40 Ways to Make Money; 1 Joke Book; 1 Book on Ixive; 1 Magic Book; 1 Bosk Let ter Writing; 1 Dream Book and Fortune Teller; 1 Cook Book; 1 Base Ball Book, gives rules for games; 1 Toy Maker Book; Lan J guage of Flowers; 1 Morse Telegraph A’phabet: IS Chemical Experiments; Magic Age Table: Great North Pole Game; 100 Conundrums; 3 Puzzles; 12 Games; 30 Verses for Autograph Albums. All the above by mall for 10 cts. and 2 cts, postage. ROYAL BALES OC., Box 22, South Norwalk, Conn. How to Make Lo.o (NEW BOOK) Tells how co tret Acquainted; How to Be gin Courtship; How to Court” vN- 1 a Bagful Girl; to Woo a Widow; to win an Heiress;i if ' ” how to catch a Rich Bache* lor ’ *" )W t 0 tuauake your beau JI to make him propose; bow to make your fellow or girl love | you; what to do before and * after the wedding. Tells other things necessary for Lovers to know. Sample copy by mail 10 cents. Royal Book Co., Box 33. S. Norwalk, Conn, , Crying Baby Doll CDFE* ® ,e nn awfully ■ rate. Noisy Baby. You can hear her /TlWjJh a!1 over the house - Sounds just M like a Ilve bal, y- Wcars a 101, S ’UuI ll white dress and baby bonnet. We send her free, by parcel post paid, for selling Only six easy-selling,, timely novelties at 15c each. We trust you. Sini nlv send vour full name and address to JONES MFG. CO., DEPT. 331a ATTLES BORO, MASS. THIS NOVA-TONE SC TALKING MACHINE Cate Mahogany 6nieh, enameled pails do motor to get out of order, excelled reproducer, enjoyment for all. Sell 12 boxes Mentbo-Nova Salve, great foi cuts, bums, influenza, etc. Return $3 and the machine h yours. Guaranteed. (Records free. Order today. Address U. S. CO., Box 464, Greenville, Pa. AGENTS: S4O A WEEK , New hosiery proposition for men, women and children. , 4 h I All styles, colors and fancy stripe. |V*4 J Ji-J Including the finest line of silk hose. Guaranteed One Yeir: rt a prospect In every hom* Open sell dozen IJ pair to ene family Repeat orders v. 11l make: r ,SBsi you a steady Income. You can sell for less than store prices. Mrs. McClure made over Z 8200 first month. Mrs. Perry made $27 a XX W week In afternoon! Work spare time or full \Ume. Anybody can sell this line because It n is lust what people need. Silk Hose for particulars if you mean business, and e‘.ate size of hose worn. Thomaj Hosiery Co.# 8522 Elk St., Dayton, O. New Feather Beds Only SIOO New FEATHER PILLOWS, $1.»5 per pair. New Feathers. Best Ticking. Write for new Catalog and Bargain offers. Satisfaction guaranteed. SOUTHERN FEATHER & PIL LOW GO., Desk 15, Greensboro, N. O. CHA FEATHERBED *.. VE SIO.OO ' 1 25-lb. bed, 1 pair 61b. -LißWi pillows. Ipr. 7nHW ’fall size), 1 pane ( large size), all for sls.9s—retail value $25.00. Beds 25-lbs. $0.95; 30-lbs. $10.95; 35-lbs. $11.95: 40-lbs. $12.05. Two3-Ib. pillowßsl.7s. Newfeatn- MP- I ers, best ticking. SI,OOO cash deposit in bank to I guarantee satisfaction or money back. Mail order I today or write for new catalog. SANITARY BEDDING CO., Dept W Charlatte.N. C. | ' Boys’ Air Rifle This fine Rifle free for selling , only 15 pieces of Jewelry at 10c each. Write for Jewelry today. 00- LUIUBIA NOVELTY CO., Dept. 245, East Boston, Mass. ( ’ HOT BREAD OR ROLLS In Two Hourp -• When you use HALEY YEAST Keeps indefinitely without ice. Send 12c for full pkge. We have fine agency proposition. Write Haley Yeast Box 766, Atlanta, Ga. ■ NEBVMS DISORDERS y you suffer with Epilepsy, ■■i hi Fit,, Spasms or NeArous Disorders, I no matter how bad, write to-day for a large I ? W - H - Zeke’s Treatment, ABSO- I LUTELY FREE. 5