Atlanta tri-weekly journal. (Atlanta, GA.) 1920-19??, April 20, 1920, Page 4, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

4 THE TRI-WEEKLY JOURNAL ATLANTA, GA., 5 NORTH FORSYTH ST. Entered at the Atlanta Postoffice as Mail Matter of the Second Class. Daily, Sunday, Tri-Weekly SUBSCRIPTION PRICE TRI-WEEKLY Twelve months $1.50 Eight months SI.OO Six months 75c Four months 50c Subscription Prices Daily and Sunday (By Mail—Payable Strictly in Advance) 1 Wk.l Mo. 3 Mos. « Mos. 1 Yr. Daily and Sunday 20c 90c $2.50 $5.00 $9.50 Daily 16c 70c 2.00 4.00 7.50 Sunday 7c 30c .90 1.75 3.25 The Tri-Weekly Journal is published on Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday and is mailed by the shortest routes for early delivery. It contains news from all over the world, brought by special leased wires into our office. It has a staff of distinguished con tributors, with strong departments of spe cial value to the home and the farm. Agents wanted at every postoffice. Lib eral commission allowed. Outfit free. Write R. R. BRADLEY, Circulation Man ager. The only traveling representatives we have are B. F. Bolton, C. C. Coyle, Charles H. Woodliff,- J. M. Patten, Dan Hall, Jr., W. L. Walton, M. H. Bevil and John Mac- Jennings. We will be responsible for money paid to the above named traveling representatives. NOTICE TO SUBSCRIBERS The label used for addressing your paper shows the time your subscription expires. By renewing at least two weeks before the date on this label, you insure regular service. In ordering paper changed, be sure to mention your old as well as your new address. If on a route, please give the route number. We cannot enter subscriptions to begin with back num bers. Remittances should be sent by postal order or registered mail. Address all orders and notices for this Department to THE TRI-WEEKLY JOURN AL, Atlanta, Ga. The Men, the Issues, thehTinner, THE Georgia voter will go to the polls today with a wish first of all to do -what is best for his party, his State and his country. He is interested in can didates primarily for the principles which they represent and for the means which they afford of advancing certain important inter ests and ideas. He will ask himself according ly who of the contestants in the primary is best qualified, by virtue of ability and under standing of the urgent issues of the day, to serve those ends which loyal Democrats and loyal Americans have so deeply at heart? Which policies are the more conducive to the early restoration of an honorable and well-grounded peace, those advocated by Senator Hoke Smith or those of Hon. A. Mitchell Palmer? Which attitude toward the League covenant is the more consistent with American ideals, and which is the more likely to bring actually to pass the estab lishment of a peace-conserving company of nations in which the United States will play a free-hearted and effective part—that of Senator Smith or of Mr. Palmer? As be tween these two, moreover, who has a like lier chance of being nominated at the San Francisco convention, and, if nominated, the better chance of being elected—the Georgian or the Pennsylvanian? These are the press ing questions which the voter is called upon to adjudge and which he earnestly wishes to decide for the good of Democracy and Amer ica, and to the glory of Georgia and the South. As to the treaty and the League covenant, Senator Smith’s attitude has an obvious ad vantage over Mr. Palmer’s, at least in the eyes of those who recognize the need, the imperative need, of a speedy return to normal conditions and who entertain practical hopes of America’s entering a peace league. “Prac tical” hopes, we say. There are those who are committed unalterably to one particular plan of a League of Nations; they will have that or none. While condemning the proposed modifications, they submit no com promise of their own, and choose to leave our international relations in indefinite and e fH° US s " s P?. nse rather than come to terms with those holding a different opinion Now if one prefers shadow to substance, if one considers a League of Nations on paper of more worth to the cause of concord and hu manity than a League of Nations in practice then he can consistently support Mr. Palmer’s policy and vote for him in the coming pri mary. But no believer in the League purpose and principle, who stands upon real rather than Utopian ground, can do so. For it is an utterly impracticable policy which Mr. Pal mer i epresents and on which he is seeking the Democratic nomination. No one asserts no one imagines that the personnel of the Senate, the majority of whose members insist upon reservations, can be so changed within the next eleven months or the next two years as to make possible the ratification of the present treaty without reservations. Sup pose, then (if such a thing be supposable) that we could elect a President upon a plat form of “no reservations,” what would it ad vantage us, with the Senate still adamant against that view? Wherein would we be nearer peace and normality and international co-working in 1921 than in the confused and troublous present, by merely swapping one deadlock for another. Grant for argument’s sake that the cove nant which President Wilson brought back from Paris and which Mr. > Palmer insists should stand virtually unmodified, is perfect. Should we, therefore, reject all other plans simply because we cannot put this one into effect? It was not in this spirit that the American Federation was formed or the great Constitution under which we have gone pros perously forward was adopted. Not in this spirit has any hope of man’s political better ment been carried a jot toward fulfillment. Call some of the reservations required by the Senate “nullifying,” if you will. la it not better to lose certain equipment and cabin furni ture than to wreck the whole ship by insist ing that they be kept aboard? The nations with whom we won the war and who would be our associates in the League evidently do not consider the Senate reservations destruc tive of the League’s vitality and serviceable ness. They have indicated beyond doubt that they stand ready to accede to the proposed changes touching Article Ten and other im portant sections. Is it reasonable, then, is it right, is it fair to America and to humanity to hold out unyieldingly for just the plan which the President wants, when this serves only to delay the healing processes of peace and to thwart the workable hopes of an in ternational league? The Journal can easily see how “Bitter-Enders” like Reed and Borah —those whose aim is to ditch the Treaty in its entirety—derive satisfaction from that uncompromising stand. But we cannot see how one who recognizes any good in the League idea and who has sensed even dimly the peril of prolonging'our present unsettled state, can feel otherwise than hostile toward the irreconcilable and utterly fruitless policy to which Mr. Palmer is committed. Let that policy of proud willfulness be con tinued, and we shall not only lose our hope of a League of Nations, but in all likelihood find ourselves in the extreme of national and THE ATLANTA TRI-WEEKLY JOURNAL. international embarrassment. It is of the utmost, importance, therefore, that every Georgian who wishes the present cleared of its dangerous confusion and the years ahead safeguarded by a League for conserving peace, should vote for Senator Hoke Smith on April the twentieth. His candidacy represents the reverse of Mr. Palmer’s immoderate and real ly obstructive position. Senator Smith does not stand for the covenant in precisely the form in which it came from Europe; he be lieves that certain reservations are essential to American interests and rights. But he does stand for a covenant that will go a long way toward preventing wars and be, indeed, a greater stride for world harmony than was hitherto proposed or dreamed of. A vote for him is a vote for speedy and well-but tressed peace. A vote for Mr. Palmer is a vote for prolonged uncertainty and barren strife. The fact is, of course, Mr. Palmer is not seriously a candidate for the Presidential nomination. If his part in the Georgia pri mary is motived by anything beyond the de signs of a factional clique, it is merely a feeler of popular sentiment. Now, its im portance in this connection should not be overlooked; for by declaring emphatically at this juncture against the wretchedly advised policy -which Mr. Palmer represents, the Democrats of Georgia will exert a salu tary and perhaps determining influence on the party’s and the nation’s affairs. Indeed, it may be taken for granted that his decisive defeat in Tuesday’s primary will mark the beginning of the end of that unyielding stand against unavoidable reservations, which blocks the way to peace and readjustment. But no one who has taken account of political conditions and developments in the country at large faintly imagines Mr. Palmer’s being nominated for President, much less elected. The outcome of the recent Michigan Demo cratic primary was of itself enough to ex tinguish any such chance as his promoters were trying to fan into flame. With no one aggressively opposing him and with the State’s National Committeeman swinging the party machine into his service, he ran fifth and hindmost, receiving scarcely more than one of every ten votes cast. Mr. Hoover, Mr. McAdoo, Mr. Bryan and Governor Edwards all far outdistanced him, although they had asked their friends not to consider them really in the contest and although Mr. Pal mer had made the most vigorous campaign of which he and the resourceful politicians behind him were capable. It is commonly known, moreover, that he is not supported by the Democracy of his own State, let alone that of other regions; and it is commonly conceded that the Democratic party would no more appropriately choose a standard beaiei from such a Gibraltar of Republicanism as Pennsylvania than the Republican party would from Texas or Mississippi. Georgia’s senior Senator, on the contrary, hailing from the heart of the unswervingly Democratic South and holding a far more dis tinguished and substantial record than that of any other proposed nominee on either side, is a real candidate with a real cause. In his own State he represents political progress and fair play. On national issues he repre sents the country’s best-balanced and surest visioned‘thought. His services in behalf of education have carried his name into every schoolhouse on the continent. His services in behalf of agriculture have made him known in every countryside from the Atlantic to the Pacific. His truly historic contribution to the upbuilding of the Far West, when he was Secretary of the Interior, left a lasting im press upon the mind and heart of that region. His effective fight to protect the joint inter ests of the Middle West and the South against grave injury by Northern shipping monopo lists, in the matter of rates to our ports, has won warmest esteem in that great industrial ;erritory between the Ohio and the Mississippi. His dependable judgment on difficult eco nomic questions, as evidenced in his distinc tive part in the shaping of such legislation as the Banking and Currency act, commends him to the confidence of all legitimate busi ness, big and little alike. His zealous and efficient labors in the work of winning the war, both as a member of the Military Af fairs and other vitally important committees and also as a floor champion of all the great war measures, commend him—a thousand times commend him —to every patriot’s grat itude. Truly a national figure he is, a Dem ocrat of Democrats, an American of Amer icans. < “I am supporting Senator Hoke Smith in this campaign,” writes Vice President Weaver, of the Georgia Farmers’ Union, “because I regard him as the ablest representative the agricultural interests ever had in Washing ton; because I think the time has come when the Democratic South, which furnishes the votes to elect Democratic Presidents, should begin to furnish the Presidential nominees; and because he is qualified in every respect, by ability and experience, to serve as Presi dent of the United States. Assuredly the time has come when this cradle land of Democracy, whose never-failing loyalty is the party’s very heart and sinew, deserves recognition in hon ors as well. This is not only the just but also the sensible view, particularly when the South, and the Empire State of the South, affords so highly available a candidate as Sen ator Hoke Smith. A petty group of political feudists have been reviling him with viciousness and falsity that knew no bounds. They have attributed to him utterances which he never made and have condemned him for sentiments which they themselves are on record as having voiced. They have tried to distort and belittle his magnificent record of ,var service, when they themselves, ir. instances well known, hung cravenly back while all important issues were in the balance. They have maligned him be cause he has dared think for himself. They have slandered him because he has pioved courageous. But they can never take away one iota of ail that he has done for his com monwealth and his country. v There his record stands,'written large in years of splendid labor, in deeds of impel ish able worth This Georgian who never failed his people and never fumbled a trust, who is recognized the nation over as one of the great figures of the hour and whose views on urgent issues commend him to the soundest thought of the time —shall not his fellow citizens of his own beloved State stand by him in Tues day’s primary against an imported and impos sible candidate from Pennsylvania? The Journal knows that in this contest Senator Smith deserves to win. We earnestly HOPE that he will win. We confidently BELIEVE that he will win. True Samaritans. Some two weeks hgo forty houses in Mel rose Park, one of Chicago's suburbs, were destroyed by a tornado. Forty families were left homeless. Scores of men, women and children were without shelter. The people of Chicago had given generously of money and clothing and food to alleviate the distress, but still the families were homeless. The organized carpenters of the Chicago dis trict came to their rescue. They rose nobly to the occasion. Fifteen hundred of them volunteered their services last Sunday to re build the homes that were destroyed by the tornado. They gave up their day of rest, and they did it cheerfully. The carpenters were organized in squads of 100 men each, and they performed a mar vellous lot of work. Houses were recon structed in a hurry. One house, whose family was without shelter, was re built, from the ground up, in seven hours and fifteen minutes. Before the day was over half the houses had been rebulit, and the carpenters have announced that on the succeeding Sundays they will complete the work of reconstruction without cost to the home-owners. CURRENT EVENTS OF INTEREST According to Article 131 of the Peace Treaty, Germany/is ordered to surrender certain valuable observation astromical in struments, which she removed from Peking during the Boxer rebellion in 1900. Not only is she to restore them to their right ful owners, but she is to defray all expenses incurred in removing the instruments from Potsdam, transferring them to Peking and setting them up in the observatory there. This is an exceedingly interesting bit of his tory, and from 1900 up to the present day the fate of these instruments has been much discussed in China, Germany, France, Amer ica, and England, says the Christian Science Monitor. The Peking observatory is mentioned by Marco Polo, and the date of its construction, in the southeastern corner of the Tartar city, is generally ascribed to the reign of Kublai Khan, founder of the Mongol dynas ty, in 1279 A. D. The original instruments were: (1) An armillary sphere; (2) a transit instru ment: (3) a brass globe; (4) a sector, which, according to some of the best-known writers, was constructed under the Yuen, or Mongol dynasty. In 1673 six new instruments were made by order of the then Emperor, Kang-he, un der the superintendence of a missionary and the official astronomer, to replace the old instruments. These consisted of (1) a zo diacal sphere; (2) equinoctial sphere; (3) azimuthal horizon; (4) sextant; (5) alti tude instruments; (6) celestial globe. Some figures concerning the American farmer are given by Senator Arthur Capper, of Kansas, in an article headed “The Farm er’s Place in American Business,” contrib uted to the current issue of The Journal of the American Bankers’ association. “The average buying power of the Ameri can farmer,” he writes, “has increased dur ing the last four years from $1,600 to $3,- 400 a year, over 100 per cent, whereas the average buying power of the city man still remains, approximately, at S9OO a year. “Two-thirds of all farmers in America own their own homes. Contrast this with the knowledge that two-thirds of all city dwell ers rent and do not own their homes. Farm ing is a profession, and despite many excep tions to the rule, a profession which is passed from father to son through many generations; in other words, there is a per manency both about the profession itself and about the men who follow it.” President Wilson’s health is showing ex ceedingly slow but gradual improvement, it was explained by persons close to the White House who have been kept busy denying re ports that he has suffered another break down. There was slight danger, they said, of any setback, provided the president continued the course of rest and quiet that he had been following- Where the stories started that the presi dent had suffered a setback nobody knows, but apparently they vrere widespread. The inquiries have reached the White House from the correspondents of newspapers in a great many cities, which would indicate that the reports emanated from a central point, per haps sent over some private telegraph wires. To all these rumors the officials made em phatic denial to check them if possible. Mr. Wilson many papers each day, and, al though he has not visited the executive offices yet, be is able to accomplish a great deal in his room. According to a message received from San Diego, Cal., the Prince of Wales arrived off Point Loma aboard the cruiser Renown, which is carrying him to the Antipodes. The prince and members of his party are to be guests of San Diego for two days. A committee of citizens and prominent British residents were taken to the Renown aboard a submarine chaser to be received by the prince. Luncheon was served aboard the New Mexico, Pice Admiral Williams, of the Pacific fleet, presiding, in the absence of Admiral Hugh Rodman. After luncheon the prince and his party came ashore for an extended program. IF YOU NEED REST By H. Addington Bruce (Copyright, 1920, by The Associated News papers.) YOU have gone to your doctor com plaining of nervous symptoms. You tell him a sad story of insomnia, in digestion, strange aches and pains, inability to concentrate on your work. Examining you, he can find nothing organ ically wrong. Questioning you, he* does find that you have not merely been working hard for months, perhaps years but also have been worrying hard about your work. Emphatically he tells you that what you need above everything else is rest. “Take a holiday,” he prescribes, “and a change of scene. Forget all about your work for a time. In a month, perhaps sooner, you’ll feel a new man ” This is excellent advice—provided you can afford to take it. But suppose you cannot? Suppose circumstances are such that you cannot afford to leave your work for more than a few days, if at all. Does this mean that you are doomed to suffer an outright nervous collapse? Does it mean that you are quite without hope of relief? Not necessarily. Take stock of your living habits. Observe, in especial, how you spend your time when away from work. Ask yourself, in fact, if you ever really are away from work, so far as your mind is concerned. The likelihood is you will have to answer this question in the negative. The further likelihood is you will have to admit that the reason you never get away from work is that you have no vital play in terests. When you are at leisure you actually are at much of a loss how to employ your time. Perhaps you go to the theater a good deal, but you are not truly interested in the thea ter. Perhaps you play cards or billiards or bowl, but with no genuine enthuiasm for any of these amusements. It may even be that you consider yourself “a great reader.” You take several news papers and magazines; you make it a point to buy and read the latest novels. But all the while, honest self-analysis in forms you, you are so little interested in what you read that thoughts of your work continually intrude. In other words, because you are keenly interested in nothing outside your work you give no rest whatever to the brain cells that have to busy themselves with your work. Your essential need is not to rest your whole organism by complete mental and physical inactivity, but to rear the particular brain cells by activeily turning your mind to other employment outside business hours. As my friend, Dr. J. Madison Taylor, has ad mirably phrased it: “A hundred means are available for any one to secure rest by substitution of inter ests before breaking into one’s progress. A vacation can be had in a thousand excellent ways while still on the job. “Any one who gives his mind to it can al ways do two things in one and the same day. He can do all he is capable of doing in his chosen occupation, and he can become skilful in some substitute play or occupation or hobby. QUIPS AND QUIDDITIES “Now, Alice,” said Mrs. Bounce to her new maid of all work, “while I’m out just pare the potatoes and get them ready. I shall not be long.” About an hour later Mrs. Bounce came back from her shopping expe dition, bringing the meat that was destined to accompany the potatoes to the dinner table. Alice was calm ly seated on the floor, surrounded by a goodly collection of the delectable tubers. “Good gracious!” exclaimed the horrified mistress, “what are you doing?" “Doin’, ma’am?” replied the maid. “Doin’ what ye told me, indeed. I’ve done the best I could, too.” “Then she pointed, to the potatoes. “I’ve paired off all of ’em ma’am,” she mumbled, but try as I will, I can’t find a mate for this little fel low.” Chubson was very keen on his newly purchased farm and wanted to increase his stock. So he bought some pigs before his new sty was quite ready He went to a neighbor and asked him to allow the pigs to be put in the latter’s sty. “I’ve bought two thowth and pigth,” he explained. The neighbor wasn’t used to Chub son’s lisp, and scratched his head. “Two thousand pigs!” he mutter ed. “Why, my sty will only hold half a dozen!” “You don’t understand!” said Club son, shortly. “I didn’t thay two thouthand pigth, but two thowth and two pigth!” “I understand all right,” replied the other, “but you must be crazy.” “I’ll thay it again!” yelled Chub son, in a rage. “I didn’t thay two thouthand pigs, but thowth an two pigth!” Little Julian has already decided that he will be a doctor. In talking over the matter one day his father rather facetiously asked whether Ju lian intended to adopt a special line, inasmuch as that was the way to make a lot of money in medicine. “I think I shall,” replied Julian quite gravely. “What do you think of specializing In airplane accidents, dad? There ought to be a great future in that line.” Side dress your Cotton with GERMAN POTASH KAINIT 20 per cent MANURE SALT and NITRATE OF SODA 100 pounds of Manure Salt go as far as 160 pounds of Kainit and have the same effect as a plant food and plant disease preventive— Neither one will injure your crop. For prices write nearest Office of Nitrate Agencies Company New York Norfolk Savannah Jacksonville New Orleans Houston, Tex. Stocks at other leading Atlantic and Gulf Ports I WRI TE TODAY FOR FREE CATALOC-«M DUR NEW CATALOG shows all the latest styles) fjfS&SS in buggies which, we have ready for immediate Is shipment the famous light running, easy riding I I and long lasting GOLDEN EAGLE BUGGlES— buggies built to give years of perfect and x, factory service, and every one covered by an tfelfl iron-clad guarantee. FROM THE MANY STYLES SHOWN, '/\\ '\ select the outfit you like best, and we -kS , will ship it. —tL- J DIRECT TO YOU AT WHOLESALE PRICE saving yon every cent of middlemen’s profits of from $15.00 to $50.00, and guar anteeing you absolutely perfect satisfaction. More than a half milb’on pleased customers gained in 16 years’ successful experi ence in dealing direct with the vehicle users are our best friends because we have saved them good honest money on the best buggies they ever owned, and We will do ps well or better for you because we strive to do a little better each day. Better write for new catalog now before you forget—it’s Free and we pay the nostage. GOLDEN EAGLE BUGGY CO. 272 m ßaN s ST . ATLANTA, GA. NA BARNESVILLE PRIDES AND A mmscr from factory to you. KfIunnBSMMBBBBRMai We make what you want—a quality buggy—and we sell it the right way— I ■ direct to you. Our buggies have that style, elegance, strength and dura- ■ bility which insures satisfaction. They are the choice of thousands. ■ Any Barnesville Pride or Beauty Buggy will be shipped upon deposit ’ H of SIO.OO, safe delivery guaranteed and subject to our 60 days’ driving trial. E We guarantee our Pride AA-Grade buggies for all times against defects in K material or workmanship. Open Buggies S7B up, Top Buggies $89.90 up, ■ Harness $15.75 up. Write for catalog of our complete line and factory prices. I B. W. MIDDLEBROOKS BUGGY CO., 50 Main St., BARNESVILLE, GEORGIA Don’t Send a Penny Here’s a stunning outfit needed by every woman to complete her wardrobe this Beason; a white voile waist, white wash skirt and FREE pair of white hose tozgffiHKU-1 B' *’. You will want this! We are ao sure aat we will send you tbe complete outfit, \ OCRu ncluding Free Hose, for examination ICm» ind try-on without a cent in advance! . I Os lust name and address on a postal brings 'S'X,- everything without tbe slightest risk or V’S I <||S Jbligationonyourpsrt. Sendaow,today. Fitifii Ladies' All-White Outfit k Today FREESa*®|k ,o n beauty! Os {inequality w'> VWC3SOE voile, front handsomely / trimmed with pin tucks, narrow plaits - If' and hemstitching on each side of center. SS Large, stylish collar is edged with fine . izg:; SilsSw: quality lace. Full length sleeves, finished : I '«• . t with turn-back cuffs; elastic waistband. >.■:< Sizes: 34 to 46-incb bust. S i '- SkSri ful design white Bamie A linene, cut in 'L; latest style, n! Two full-sized •. patch pockets, ar tisticallytucked.and handsomely trimmed x-xz-r with large white pearl buttons. Skirt is finished with detachable belt, set off with shirring and pearl hot tons. Sizes: 22 to 40 inch waist; 36 to 42-ineh lengths. are of splendid quality; reinforeed toe and heel, mrter 0338 top. A pair of these hose given . " free with each outfit. ' mw. Your name and Seno -1 0 No money now. Pay only Sa ; ' K 'r -4 on arrival. Examine and ifcrv k- i try the waist, skirt and hose on. If AS VS k- • you don’t think them the most stun- J 1 kv A k • . ning outfit and best bargain you ever JB - J J'-.jSB I saw, return the articles and we will MS. return your money. Send for this •» ,;>? Jaj 'sj SsSaH wonderful all white outfit today and ■' « iASM be sure to state sizes wanted. Send ■ 3 S. V-kicTfißl no money. Just name and address ■ ' 5 c on a postal or in letter. And, re- Sfe-awSMa -■ Ba member, we take a!l the risk! You EsaHa ? have nothing to lose—much to gain BWBBa ikw inding at once for these splendid bar- wESr This is one of the most astounding W’’- offers that we have ever made. 'Remember that the hose are given absolutely w free with tbe waist and skirt. Do it now! Order by No. 811501. r LEONARD-MORTON & CO. z Ovpt, 6057 CHICAGO, ILLINOIS @£BBUF DOROTHY DIX’S TALK ON Giving the Girl the Once Over as a Wife BY DOROTHY DIX The World's Highest Paid. Woman Writer \ YOUNG man has written me a /\ letter in which he says: \ “The only thing that a man knows about women is. that he doesn’t know a single, solitary, blooming thing about her. Now, I wish to get married, and I will be eternally grateful to you if you can put me wise to any method by which I can tell, on the safe side of the altar, even approximately what sort of a wife a girl is likely to make.” Surely son, surely. The one really clever thing that women have ever done is to establish in the minds of man the tradition that they are creatures of mystery beyond his fathoming. That has enabled the fair sex to camouflage its arts and its wiles, and to run in all sorts of hocus-pocus stuff on poor unsus pecting men. For, you, see, man has been so thoroughly convinced that woman is a conundrum whose answer he can never guess, anyway, that he never tried to guess the riddle at all, but goes it blindly and trusts to luck, where she is concerned. Which is all nonsense, for woman, in real ity, is a simple creature that he who runs may read, if he will. To begin with, if the man who is thinking of getting married would pay more attention to what is in the skull immediately under a. girl’s hair than he does to the color of it, and if he would take more no tice of the size and shape of her jaw bone than he does of her com plexion, and if he would give more time to observing whether her nos trils are thin and quivering than he does to whether her profile is class ic or piquant, he would start off with a very good tip as to the kind of a wife he is likely to get if he marries her. For matrimony works no miracles. It will not change a fool into a wise woman, nor will it convert the maiden with a square, bulldog chin into a soft and yielding, clinging vine who asks her husband what he thinks she thinks, and whose only desire in life is to flop on some manly arm. Neither is the maiden who is nervous and emo tional by temperament apt to be TUESDAY, APRIL 20, 1920. calmed and soothed by the stress of matrimony, which is no rest cure for any woman. Aside, however, from the hints conveyed by a careful study of the lady’s physiognomy, there are va rious points in the daily life and conversation of a young woman that a prospective benedict may consider with profit to himself. First, never marry a girl until you have seen her in the bosom of her family, and against her own background. Any girl can look good in a party dress, and be amiable in company, especially in the com pany of a young man whom she is stalking in the husband hunt, But when you see her at home you get a real line on her. It is desirable, of course, that she know how to cook and run a house, shall.escape much trouble with your stomach, and large bills to the butcher and baker, if you pick out a girl for a wife who is mother’s helper, and who has learned how to broil a steak, and make bread, and buy green gro ceries at her family’s expense. This is not absolutely necessary, however, for any girl who can read can take a cook book and learn how to cook in six weeks, and she will do it if she is sufficiently in love with the man she marries. Some times a girl who has never done anything but manicure her finger nails before marriage takes corns on her hands working after mar riage, and conversely, who has spent her life in the kitchen comes out of it on her wedding day per manently, and can never be induced to enter it again. You never can tell, and domesticity is worth tak ing a chance on, anyway. The thing to observe is’ whether the girl bosses her family or not, for bossiness grows by what it feeds on, and no tyrant was ever cured of tyranny. Especially the domestic tyrant, who is the meanest and most grinding of all tyrants. Notice well, then, if a girl’s mother and father are afraid of her, if they assume a deprecating air in her presence, and if they say that Sally won’t let us do this, and Dont Send a Penny W<3 only with that we had a big; enough stock of these V wonderful shoes to prove to every rtim iD the country that they are the moat seneatiorVil eiioe bargain ever offered. 11 9nt the euipply ia limited, and we can AkMBK promi le to fill orders only as long as they List— “first come, first served.'* (Lu.M 1 t You mMt hurry to avoid disappoint- 11 IfiiaigggirMilW'rA -- ffiareMßsWagi rnent Listen: These Len-Mort Hard Knox, l|lack Solid Leather Work and OutDoo’Shoes are’*wizards”forwear. I® a® tbe aiM(l I'mit in sturdy strength combined! with comfort and dressy IB ’RTTa/jW appearance. Built on stylish lace Blucher 1 ist;drill-lined;leather insoles; sruarante ed counters; two full solid leather sc les—clinch nailed and sewed IgWw —runnin;’ clear through to the solid, atrong keels that won’t come off. Wonderful shoe value, illustration telle the etory - You see a ' most MA a glance why we are safe V ,n saying "DON T SEND f a penny.” Note the rugged con struction —tbe ■* ' s 1 CTear-defying quality built right in. giving protection at every point. So durable—so strong 1 YWMKwßgllk. —vet so flexible, soft and %./ ?< - '' easy on the feet! Is it any wander that shoes like these outwear two or three pair a of the ordinary kind? Truly a Great Shoe Remarkable UsM Ohet Bargain i ai.shof’SHrcejv'clallv signed to serve the i % is of modem f-nxr-rs and out door city workers, Yet they are much more \ ,2T / r ion a mere work nboe. Ths f nappy, clean cut style end ■-■<sy round toe make this n..dei shoe suitable for almost any '.ear, and n remarkable bargain at jg*. -n-low special offer price. You be ths edge of all this. Just slip a pair of these dines on your feet, and let them do the talking! SI NDNO MONEY. Ju-t your name, address and lize wanted. Pay only $3.98 for shoes on arrival. Try them on. Examine every feature critically. If you don t And them the easiest, most comfortable, best wearing and satisfactory shoes you ever wore, return them and we will refund your money, 9fsee6toll. Wide widths. Otidsrhy *ft>. Alßl7. Do it now! Be sure to give order number and state size when ordering these shoe*. Leonard Morton & Co. Dept. Chicago, HI. f LIBERTY The only Indestructible Sparip Plug that is guaranteed for the life of your carl Insulator non-breakable—p oin t s always the same—rust-proof—will stand any heat test. When you buy LIBERTYS you will never have to buy another set of plugs. Any size, $1.50. Send for set today. Open territory for live dealers. AGENTS, SALESMEN, DEALERS, write us today! SERVICE SALES CO. 314 Flatiron Bldg., Atlanta, Ga. Also the only indestructible Shock Absorbers and Hub Meters for Ford Cars. I 1 1 ~~ How to Reduce I Shoe Costs ™ I flocC YOU can reduce shoe costs by get- ** ting a dollar’s worth of value— comfort and durability—for every dollar you spend for shoes. Shield Brand Shoes give you a hun dred cents on the dollar in style, TVT comfort and durability—they “Fit . Best—Wear Longest”. i- / r By buying Shield Brand Shoes, you I will not have to make as many shoe 1 J purchases, thus reducing your shoe costs. Ash your dealer for Shield Brand Shoes. ‘ M.C. KISER CO. *’Shield Brand Shoemakers’* ATLANTA, GA. BRAND SHOES Sally won’t let us do that, and Sally wants us to move into another house, and Sally has made us take all the rocking chairs out of the parlor, and Sally won’t let father smoke a pipe any more. Also, do not let It escape you hpw the little, brother and sister act when Sally is around, whether they scurry away at her coming, or cling to her skirt. You may be very sure that any girl who has got her family ter rorized will have a husband whose hand shakes as he puts the key in his door. You may be very cer tain that any girl who can put it over her parents, and her little brothers and sisters, will have a hus band so henpecked that he will say “our pants.” But if a girl doesn’t try to run the house, and is just the light and joy of it, if mother wants Sally al ways at her right hand and father hugs her up to him as he talks, and the little brothers and sisters adore her, grab her off, son, and rush with her to the minister, for she will make a wife who will be pal, friend and companion, and not one who must be obeyed. Then observe how a girl dresses. If she is arrayed like Solomon in all his glory while the balance of the family go shabby; if she is dressed beyond her means, and her father looks bent, and worn, and anxious, pass her up son. She is selfish and greedy, and she will work you to death, even as she does her father, for a wisp of chiffon. Take note of how a girl acts when you go to see her. If she is never willing to stay at home of an evening, if she always drags you around to some place of amuse ment, if she lays a heavy hand on your pocketbook, beware. She is pleasure mad. She has no resources within herself. She considers nothing but her own amusement, and she will make the sort of a wife who is never happy unless she is gadding about somewhere, and who consid ers that the chief good of a hus band is to buy his wife fine clothes and take her out to show them off. But when you find a girl who loves to camp under her own pink shaded lamp, who dresses modestly and likes modest pleasures, and who can keep you entertained by talk ing Intelligently and sympatheti cally on any subject In which you are interested, seek no farther. She will make the kind of a wife with whom you can spend the next forty or fifty years in peace and comfort by your own fineslde. (Copynight, HM2O. by the Wheeler Syndicate, Inc.)