Atlanta tri-weekly journal. (Atlanta, GA.) 1920-19??, May 27, 1920, Page 5, Image 5

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j ‘ Diamond Dyes" j I Don't Spot, Run 1 * : j Don’t Risk Material in Poor | Dyes Hiat Fade or Streak Each package of “Diamond Dyes” contains directions so simple that any woman can diamond-dye a new, rich, fadeless color into worn, shabby garments, draperies, coverings, whether wool, silk, linen, cotton or miked goods. .Buy "Diamond Dyes”—no other kind—then perfect results are guar anteed even if you have never dyed before. Druggist has color card. (Advt.) B I ■■ rn Here’s || Free Proof || That You Can Hear! || The wonderful improved Acousticon ||| has now enabled more than 400,000 |s| deaf persons to hear. We are sure S 8 it will do the same for you; are so B absolutely certain of it that we are -S’- eager to send you the 1920 Acousticon I For 10 Days’ Free Trial || No Deposit—No Expense There is nothing you will have to do bsst ask for your free trial. No money to pay, no red tape, no res ervations to this offer. Our confi dence in the present Acousticon is so complete that we will gladly take all the risk in proving beyond any doubt that The Joy of Hearing Can Be Yours Again! The famous Acousticon has im provements and patented features which cannot be duplicated, so no matter what you have ever tried, just ask for a free trial of the Acousticon. You’ll get it promptly, and if it doesn’t make you hear, re turn it and you will owe us noth ing—not one cent. Dictograph Products Corporation. 1316-B Citizens & Sou. Bank Bldg., Atlanta, Ga. iik.. “ ■■ i j Ve&ige For the ChildrendL A Safe Old Fashioned' Remedy for Worms Seventy-five years contin- JTj uous use isthebesttesti monial FREY’S VERMIFUGE can offer you. Keep a bottle always on j- —, I hand. It will help keep the little ones happy and frTrl I healthy. 30c a bottle at your druggist’s or general store; or if your dealer can’t supplyyou,send hisname A? and 30c in stamps and we’ll / [d'/H send you a bottle promptly. I—/CJ E. & S. FREY, Baltimore, Old. [ VsggSay GOITRE I hsvs an honest, proven remedy for t RBf A blg neck) - H checks the 2 Gl ? nc ?’ reduces the enlarge. A J k meat, stops pain and distress and re- w Ueves In a little while. Pay when well Tellyourfrlendsaboutthn. Write ° D £x7W* MilwauVe? * Also^ ac ®urtaim,Bogers r SI eti » fine Lockets, c> LaVallicrsandmanyother valuable presents fey «eil *Dg our b eau **f u l Ar t & Re ligiouspictures at lOcts. each. Order 20 pictures,when sold send the <2.00 and choose premium wanted, according to big list. KAY ART CO., Dept. 34 CHICAGO,ILL. Cured His RUPTURE 1 was badly ruptured while lifting a trunk several years ago. Doctors said my only hope of cure was an operation. Trusses did j me no good. Finally I got hold of some thing that quickly and completely cured me. Years have passed and the rupture has never returned, although 1 am doing Ijard work as a carpenter. There was no operation, no lost time, no trouble. 1 have nothing to •ell. but will give full Information about how you may find a complete cure without operation, if you write to me. Eugene M. Pullen, 656-F Marcellus Avenue, Manasquan. N. J. Better cut out this no tice and show it to any others who are rup tured—you may save a life or at least ston the misery of rupture and the worry and danger of an operation.—(Advt.) YOUR HEAR! a Try Dr. Kinsman’s Heart Tablets In use 25 years. 1000 References Famished. SI.OO per box at druggists. Tria treatment mailed free. Address Dr. F. G. Kinsman, Box 8 65. Augusta, Maine Cr PRICES SMASHED. **l’ d UDIES OUR LOSS, YOUR V iji. GAIN. Elegantly en- graved, double hunting "* or °P en f-‘ ice case, stem wind and set gold watch. Very fine full Jeweled movement. A -SfcriW' P GUARANTEED AC- If CURATE TIME “ KEEPER. Send NO MONEY. Special lim 'refl time offer. We tvill send to any ad dress for full exarn ““ ination this latest model. _relinble railroad style watch. C. 0. J.). $5.75 and charges by mail or express, FREE. A gold plated chain and charm. EXCELSIOR WATCH CO.. Dept. 23. Chi cago. 111. (Advt.) SWS 8 <O-% A post car, j wll l put you Er“ ■6® •on to something that will I turn your green a« a env - v after seeing eg ■ 'kff a a yon catch dead loads of fish in streams where he has become disgusted try ing to catch them the old-fashioned way. It will tickle you to see it soon get rid of terrapins and craw fish. No <atch house and musk rats, and you will other tackle catches at all seasons like this. EUREKA FISH TRAP CO., GRIFFIN, GA THK VIIANTA Tia-WJUKKIuY JOLKXAL. OUR HOUSEHOLD CONDUCTED BY LIZZIE O.THOMAS Some Answers for the Anxious I Dear Mrs. Thomas: —Please tell me what will stop little chickens having gapes? I am trying to raise some turkeys and chicks to help. My tur keys have just hatched off. so please tell me what is the best feed for them for the first two weeks to make them strong: to grow pin feath ers as they say that is the critical time. J heard that egg custard with the exception of sugar and butter, is fine for them, just ’beat egg and sweet milk together, put in a little flavor and cook it to the stiffness of thick batter and feed them with n:. it' o weeks Do you think that is good feed for them? In 1918 my small chicks had gapes in May, the same, in appearance, as this year. I was feeding meal with a lit tie soda, but p. neighbor sent me. word that it was the dough giving it to them She advised mo to cook the •th, and soak it in water. I did so and the gapes stopped. This year I did the same thing, but the gapes keep up and there is a rattling in their throats. I give them clabber and buttermilk. Will Sloan’s lini ment do any good? Do you think cooked corn, cracked peas and hom- i iny will be good to feed them? lam not able to buy regular chick feed. Do you think beat-up charcoal with that bread will do any good? They range from five weeks to one week old. I have a few thoroughbred Ply mouth Rocks, the others are mixed with some of every kind, it seems like. The older ones have gapes, the smaller ones have not taken it yet. Please advise me. I am so dis tressed about them. Can you feed young turkeys with nux vomica to kill hawks? How much? Please give one a recipe for a nice plain cake and for macaroni pie? I am an old subscriber to The Journal. Answer.—There has been so much dampness this spring I am inclined to think that is what causes the rattling. T must confess that I have had very little experience with gapes. When I moved to this place the chickens here had gapes, but it at tacked the young ones. Some were saved by bending a hair from the horse’s tail and putting it down the windpipe and pulling the bunch of worms out. They are tiny red creat ures. They should be burned. Wipe the hain on a paper and do not let them get back on the ground. The little red worm is a parasite of the common earth worm, and get In the windpipe when the earth worm Is eaten. As many chickens died as got well. A lady wrote me that she put her chickens bothered with gapes in a basket, put a coarse piece of sacking over the basket and sifted unslacked lime through it on them. They coughed and threw off the worms. One must be careful not to keep them in the basket long enough to strangle them. Dip the basket in boiling water to destroy the worms, for if they get on the ground they may find themselves in other chicks’ throats. I had the yards, orchard and the garden limed and the earth turned over. We scattered grain in it, and the chickens kept busy all fall smoothing it for us. I’ve never had gapes since then. Feed all young chickens dry feed, or just moist enough to stick together, and always put it on a clean ’board or hard sur- Here Is the Right Way of Mixing Cheap Cakes, Which Are Very Toothsome If your experience has been that cheap cakes have a poor flavor and a coarse texture It is because you have not been -putting them together in the right way. An inexpensive cake requires careful mixing. No difficulty should be experienced in compounding a cake which is excel lent in texture and has a delicious flavor when plenty of eggs and but ter are available. It is when it is necessary to economize on these ex pensive materials that the cook who is not skillful has her troubles. Food specialists in the home eco nomics kitchen of the United States department of agriculture have been making extensive investigations in cake baking, especially in the baking of one-egg cakes. Their experiments with cheap cakes show that the best results are obtained when the batter is beaten very little after the baking powder is added and when the cake is baked in a very slow oven. The recipe which was used in the experiments follows: One-Egg Cake Three level tablespoons fat, one half cup of granulated sugar, one half to two-thirds cup of milk, one and one-half cups flour, two and one-' half teaspoons of baking powder, one teaspoon of vanilla and one egg. Cream fat and sugar together, add beaten egg and beat thoroughly. Then add flour and liquid alternately, about one-third of each at, a time. BOTULISM BECOMES ALTOGETHER TOO COMMON, WATCH THE FOOD The recent death of two persons 'in Brooklyn as a result of eating canned spinach draws attention once more to the form of poisoning that has become only too common under the name of botulism. Dr. L. Bit ter, of Kiel, Germany, describes in the Deutsche Medlzinische Wochen schrift (Berlin) six cases of this poisoning from eating pickled her ring and raw ham. In all of these bacillus botulinuh was found. The herrings had been pickled with too little vinegar, and the ham was rancid. Dr. Bitter’s ex periments proved that a pickle con taining 2 per cent of acetic acid or a 10 per cent brine would prevent Many Uses for Sour Milk Soul milk has many uses and not the least is its action on ink stains. If the stain is fresh, put into sour milk and soak until the spot is gone. An old stain may not respond to sour milk alone. The milk will remove the worst darkness, but it may need a weak solution of chloride of lime to make the article clear. After soaking two or three hours in milk rinse in the solution. If the stain is still in evidence try rinsing in ammonia water. ~ MOTHER! “California Syrup of Figs” Child’s Best Laxative Ch X Accept “California" Syrup of Figs only—look for the name California on the package, then you are «ure your child is having the best and most harmless physic for the little stom ach, liver and bowels. Children love its fruity taste. Full directions on each bottle. You must say “Califor nia.”— (Advt.) I face. Filth and where fowls have run for years is sure to be full of disease.’ I give baby chicks corn bread cooked for the family, only it is a day old. I buy baby chick feed, made of small grains not larger than a pin head. Meal sells for $2.50 a bushel, and one bushel of meal would pay for all the baby chick feed you would need in a season. I buy scratch feed for the other poultry. Just now I would have to pay $5 a 100 pounds for it, but that is as cheap as meal or corn, and corn is not a , balanced feed. There are all sorts of grains in the sort we buy, and mixed in the right proportion. For the rattling in the throat, put your fowls in a dry place, damp roost ing quarters kill more than a new roof would cost. If a whitish cheese like formation is in the mouth, or down the throat the fowls cannot eat nor breathe. Take a sharp point of some sort and get it out, then put burnt alum or carbolated vaseline and feed bread crumbs. And, as a means of safety, put enough permanganate of potash in the. drinking water to make the color purple. Take the wheezing, snorting, or ranting® fowls and dip their heads in some of the purple water. Have it in a deep cup or old jelly tumbler and let the head stay under till the bubbles come up. That shows that the fowl has taken th" water in and breathed it out. After using that water throw it where they will not drink it and scald the vessel. All of this spring I’ve used some liniment in the drinking water for. the baby chicks, even those a month old. A teaspoorful of liniment to a quart of water is enough. Please don’t write and ask me if it is Sloan’s or Watkin’s or whose I use. Take your bottle and see if it pre scribes it for cramps, dysentery, etc. What is good for people is good for poultry. As for turkeys. I wrote all about them a few weeks ago. Dry bread crumbs, hard clabber, fresh butter milk and onion tops cut fine will make them grow like ■weeds. Once a week be sure to put carbolated vase line, just the least bit, on the top of the head, under the beak, or throat, and just below the vent. Be as gen tle with them as you would a but terfly, for a bruised turkey dies. It takes two to grease turkeys, for they must be caught in such away that they will not be hurt,) and grabbing them single-handed, even in a pen is not easy work. I have forty eggs setting and I know what’s ahead of me all of June and part of July. I hope to have the chickens out of the way. Do not misunderstand me, 1 am ready to answer questions, but please read over these directions, or others that I’ve sent The Journal and see If I’ve not told you what you want to know. I must leave the recipes for anoth er time. To Can Beans To every three quarts of water use one pint of vinggar and one cup of sugar. Have ij. all boiling together and put the beans in, cook thirty minutes or longer and seal. Soak in 'clear cold water one hour before cooking. I have never lost a can that way. Please tell me how to can tomatoes, okra and corn together. Thanking you for all advice you may give me, I am Sincerely, MRS. B. T. K. Beat the batter thoroughly after .11 flour and liquid have been added. Vanilla may be added during this beating. Last of all scatter the bak ing powder over the surface of the batter and fold it in lightly with six or eight motions of the spoon so as to get it thoroughly mixed with ev ery part of the batter. Do not beat the batter after adding the baking powder but turn it at once into a cake pan and bake. This cake may be baked as cup cakes in muffin pans, or in layers, or in a loaf. If it baked as a loaf of the size given above it should be put into a very slow oven, which is allowed to warm up gradually (280 to 375 degrees F. for one hour is suitable even temperature). At'the first trial one is more sure of suc cess in baking the small cakes than the loaf. The cake can be put together l>y other methods than the one described above. Any approved method may be selected, but the two points which give the most difficulty are the too vigorous beating of the batter after the baking powder has been added and baking the loaf in too hot an oven. If directions in the above recipe are carefully followed the resulting cake should be light, of even tex ture and uniform grain, tender and moist. It should not be coarse and muffin-like in texture, nor dry and compact. the development of this bacillus and make the food safe. He says that it is impossible to give too much publicity to the fact that there is great danger in any preserved vege tables, fish, meat or sausage that has a disagreeable odor, taste or appear ance. Even thorough cooking often fails to kill the germs. The . bacillus botulinus develops only in food that has been preserved carelessly or stored in too warm a place. There is only one safe course to pursue in selecting food for preserv ing—reject all that is not perfect; and in canning or bottling it the most scrupulous cleanliness and t v -orougli cooking are necessary. Reflections of a Bachelor Girl BY HELEN rowland (Copyright, 1920, by the Wheeler Syn dicate, Inc.) The Baby Vamp I do not fear a siren With a mass of midnight hair, With wicked, drooping eyelids. And a blase, worldly air— But. oh, I cross my fingers, And I breathe a little prayer, When I meet a blond-haired cutie, With a blue-eyed baby-stare! And I take extreme precautions. That my Love is not about. For the Baby-Vamp will GET him. If 1 ’t watch out! Virt doesn’t consist in running away from temptation, but in smil ing serenely in its face, and passing it without recognizing it. A husband’s wildest expression of passionate enthusiasm: "Gee! You look all right, in those togs!” No man ever lived,- who didn’t firm ly believe in the wisdom of offering a woman a kiss in place of an apolo gy. a pose in place of repentance, and a box of roses in place of reform Every girl dreams, of being loved madly, wildly, desperately, by a man with enough plain, practical common sense to support a wife, keep up a motor car, and put the studs in his own shirts. A man is always secretly con vinced that he knows “exactly what a woman means,” until he discovers that she is telling him the honest truth. Then he gets all mixed up. Sometimes, I wonder what sweet, romantic dreams of love and mar riage are those of the little girls and boys, who acquire all their knowledge of domestic life from the comic supplements. When a girl marries for love, alone, in these prosaic days, she has to think up some really plausible explanation to offer her friends. You may turn a confirmed bache lor into a husband, and a brunette into a blonde—but alas, they are al ways the same at the roots! MARY MEREDITH’S ADVICE TO LONELY GIRLS AT HOME Dear Madam: I am coming to you for advice. I am a girl of 14 sum mers. There is a boy who seems to love me dearly, but is bashful. He will hardly speak to me, but sends me all kinds of good news. He has been married once—he and his wife are not together. There is also a boy of 14 who seems to think a lot of me, and I like him better than the other nne. How can I show the younger boy that I love him and want to be friendly? I don’t think it would be very nice for me to talk with the oldest boy, do you? Is it any harm for my broth er-in-law to give me a wrist watch? Do I write a good hand? I hope to see this in the next Journal, as I am a motherlesfs child. I am, . A BEAUTY. A Beauty: Take my advice and let that married man alone. He is too’wise for a girl of your age. Run ilong and enjoy your self with Ae younger boy. That man wh; has been marr.el has no business making love to you. And girls are to blam-s for en couraging any advance. Don’t do it; only harm can come of it. I wish with all my heart that young girls would take this ad vice from me. Would you will ingly go into a person’s home and steal jewelry, or s>ry other valuable thing? No, well, t is a thousand times more harmful and degrading to steal a woman’s husband from her. At the ex pense of your good name and character. For a married jnan will lie to a girl nine times out of ten, and in his heart con demns her weakness for him. Marriage laws should be sacred and the man or woman who wil fully acts the.vandah is mighty ordinary and no good will ever come to them. Yes, you write a very good hand. Dear Miss Meredith: We are two boys from Pickens, S. C., coming to you for advice. I, the twenty-four year-old one, have been going with a girl one year or longer and I think a lot of her. I don’t think she cares anything for me. How can I find out if she cares anything for me? If a boy was going to ask for a girl, whic his the best way? Your advice will be greatly appre ciated. BLUE EYES. Your questions are much like Black Eyes’. I have told him pretty much what you want to know. If you want to find out if a girl loves you, watch her when she is with another boy; also, see how many dates you can make with her and if she likes to please you, and if she acts kind of shy in your presence. Then the surest way is to ask her. I am sure she will tell you the truth. And if you want to marry the girl and expect to ask for her, • just go to her father and mother and tell them in a manly sort of way, that you love their daugh ter, and want to marry her, if they will give permission. Be honest and straightforward; it isn’t so hard, and her parents will appreciate the courtesy. Here comes a lonely boy in trou ble to you for advice. I am in love with Miss Eva Van . aged eight- een years, and I am eighteen years old. I love her dearly but she does not seem to care for me. I want you to advise me how I can win her love back. I want you to write my name in print. I wan’t her to see this. So good-by. i ROBERT HENRY THOMAS. You really must be in love if you want me to advertise it for you. This is rather a silly thing to do, and if I were the girl I would feel greatly embarrassed, to think you would do such a thing. I cannot tell you how to win her love so it will stay, be cause I’m no sorceress or fortune teller. I cannot fortell the fu ture by your handwriting, but if the girl cares anything at all for you, make it grow by being just a little bit better than the rest, and at the same time do not let her trample on your affections. Don’t let her bully you, but have pride and act as indifferently as you decently can, and work hard to get her to love you. Perse verance conquers in the end, I am told. So go to it. I am coming to you for advice. I am a boy 18 years old, and am in Lace Curtains JMp jMjpyMMMi •‘WsOF'ijA'\\ % m. W— 5 / ft Av Put In Boiler of] \ BotWeterandPowderJ \ ed Soap -ieavo & / Here is a simple but successful way to wash cur* tains, if you use Grandma s Powdered Soap. \ J First —Put them in cold water to Rins? jpg/J jap drive out the smoke. Second— Boil with Grandma's Pow* dered Soap for one-had hour. TVixrtf—Rinse welL They come out beautifully done—no solid soap particles to get into the None of the rough handling that comes from rubbing tn bar soap. A big, generous sized package for sc. iHlfaiifeab . Kwdewd SOAP ■ Powdered Soap Today It! The Clobe Soap Cbmpanq. Cincinnati. love with a girl the same age. I met her over two years ao, in a Georgia city, quite a distance from here. We wrote to each other each week for two years, and during that time I saw her twice, but all the time she semed to love me very much, but at the end of the two years I went back to see her and she had fallen in love with another fellow, and said she had given me up because I was loving other girls when I did not. Please tell me what I can do to win her back for I love her dearly and it seems that I can’t do without her. Hoping to see this in The Journal, and thanking you in advance for any advice you may give me. BROWN EYES. Brown Eyes: That old say ing about “distance lends en chantment,” may hold a lot of truth. It is all’ right for mar ried couples who grow tired of seeing each other around the house and hearing them com plain, but to a boy who has fall en freshly in love it is alto gether a wrong idea. You should have made it convenient to have gone to see her a little oftener, but you are not too late yet. Write to her interesting letters and send her an occasional box of candy, but do not tell her of your love. Be interested in her “affairs,” but tell her nothing about your own life, and for goodness sake don’t spoil it by writing her a loL of love stuff. Then ask her if you Can call, and when you do go to see her, be very pleasant, so she will be glad to see you again. You can get ahead of the other boy yet if you try hard enough. Wake up and don’t let him win her away from you. I am coming to you for advice. I am seventeen years of age and have been going with a boy age eighteen, but I don’t like him. I have slight ed hjm several times, but he still per sists in coming. He is a pretty good fellow but he is too conceited. How can I get him to stop without hurt ing his feelings? Once in a while would be alright but three times a week is entirely too often. He doesn’t make dates but just comes. I will appreciate any advice you will give me. “DIMPLES.” P. S.—ls it unladylike for a girl to allow a boy to sit on the arm of her chair at a party if he doesn’t put his arm on the back? DIMPLES. All right if you do not wish to see the young man who is so per sistent. Just don’t be at home to him when he calls. Say or leave word that you cannot be seen. Do this several timps. and through his thick skull might leak the idea that you do not wish to see him. There are lots of ladylike ways to do and at the same time you will not hurt his feelings. Or you can tell him you would prefer his not calling so often, and if he wants to make one engagement a week with you, you are willing to give him an • evening, but you really cannot see him any often er than that. And if he then puts in appearance just ask him to excuse you. I don’t think the young man meant any harm when he sat on the arm of your chair. There isn’t any harm if none is intended. I am coming to you for advice. I am 5 feet tall, have auburn hair, gray eyes, dark complexion. What colors would suit me best? If I wet my hair and comb it to have my picture taken would it take light or dark? Can you tel] me what will fill up a bony neck and how? Is it any harm for a girl to write to a boy whom she never has seen? Thanking you for any advice. GRAY EYES. Brown in any shade is becom ing to a girl with auburn hair, then lavender, or canary shade, navy blue, black, and white. Your hair would take a dark shade, all red hair does unless it is red gold. Massage your neck every night with cocoa butter or pure olive oil, rubbing upward in long strokes, then drink lots of whter and milk. You will fill out all the hollows and angles and gain more flesh, which will help the appearance of your neck. It depends on the circum stances, if the boy is known by ' THURSDAY, MAY 27, 1920. The Old Cio’es Man The old fashioned pants with the springs at the bottom, With welts at the seams and with stripes an inch wide, Still hang in the attic, I’m glad I have got ’em— Those duck footed pants of my passionate pride. Ah, well I remember how haughty and airy I strode down the avenue, thrilled to the heart, 1 Mazie beside me as blithe as fairy— A fashion plate couple so trim and so tart. The coat, a Prince Albert of tail lengthened splendor, As tight as the skin of an eel, bless my eyes! Plum hued, double breasted—my heart is still tender Tor that senatorial garment, a prize! It went like the flowers of spring time when fashion Decreed that its usefulness then out of date? Quite WjTong —in the attic! You can now bet your cash on The fact Uncle dons it again, and with state. The garments once scorned on the line take an airing To rid them of scent of moth balls, I should smile! Your Uncle is wise, <md no more he’s despairing— For profiteer sharks are no longer in style. So, fashion go hang! I; am satisfied, truly,\ With what I've dug up—for next Sunday arrayed In attic adornments you bet I’ll be duly Observed of observers when out on parade. HORACE SEYMOUR KELLER. U A Bit of Truth” “Fear of ridicule,” declares Pro fessor A. Holla Dome, “is the main spring of human conduct. “The average biped wouldn’t be laughed at if it meant a paifi-up pas sage to paradise. “A man will make any kind of a fool out of himself to keep others from thinking he is. “The niere thought that some one might snicker causes a man to wear a collar that makes a long-distance telephone the only means of com munication between his hat-rest and his clothes-rack. “And the scornful .sneer of the waiter brings results a highwayman’s revolver never hoped to obtain. “But men have no corner on the fear of ridicule. “An up-turned nose—on a neigh bor’s face—will make a wife bank rupt her husband buying frocks, and the pitying smile of a social leader will drive hei’ into wearing anything from a feather duster at a New Year’s ball to a fur coat at a Fourth of 'July picnic. “Rather than be laughed At, she will put more paint on her face than an artist needs for a six-foot canvas, wear less clothes than :• Fiji islander, and dance with all the random energy of a malarial monkey in an Arkansas swamp. "Yessir, fear of ridicule will drive people into doing anything—excep something worth while.” “suchTs/life I pray you, think not I am bold ’Twould be indeed amazing, If calves like Nancy’s I’d behold. And not be loud in praising. Perfection marks each luring curve. With comeliness distracting; In truth, as models would they serve To please the most exacting. And shameless Nancy feels quite free— (lmmodestly alarming!) To urge that all her friends should see Her calves that are so charming. Yet not a friend that you may meet Will think her conduct shocking; Her calves—you see—have each foui’ feet. And never knew a stocking. some of your family, relatives or friends and you are sure he is a gentleman and of good character, it can be no harm. But’ unless known to be all right and you are sure of his identity, do not write to him, because you may be taking a great risk. Lots of harm may come from your letters to him. ’■DANDERINE” Stops Hair Coming Out? Doubles its Beauty. A few cents buys “Danderine.” After an application of “Danderine” f you can not find a fallen hair or any - dandruff, besides every hair shows - new life, vigor, brightness, more ! color and thickness.—(Advt.l FAINTING AND DIZZLSPELLS The Cause of such Symp i toms and Remedy Told in This Letter. Syracuse, N. Y.—“ When I com menced the Change of Life I was niiiiiiiiiniuriiiiiiinini p°° r iy, had no I appetite and had I Fainting spells. I suffered for two or 1,1 ree years e^ore began taking Lydia E. t 'Mm -jlsrnl Pinkham’s Vege table Compound and Liver Pills which T saw ad vertised in thr. pap e i and in your little books. T took about 12 bottles of your Vege table Compound and found’ it a won derful remedy. I commenced to pick up at once and my suffering was re lieved. I have told others about your medicine and know of some who have taken it. I am glad to help others all I can.”—Mrs. R. E. Deming, 437 W. Lafayette Ave., Syracuse, N. Y. While Change of Life is a most critical period of a woman’s exist ence, the annoying symptoms which accompany it may be controlled, and normal health restored by the timely use-of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Moreover, this reliable remedy con tains no narcotics or harmful drugs and owes its efficiency to the medici -1 nal extractives of the native roots and herbs which it contaifis. save sio.ou ; '. 25-lb. bed, 1 pair olb, pillows. 1 pr. blanketsL - TIfIHET lull size), 1 pane (largosize), all ri* jsagSsgsKgsa. lor $15.95 -retail value $25.00. Beds 25-lbs. $0.95 , 30-lbs. jKlfiSSaiß’/ * $10.05; 35-lbs. tll.05; 40-lbe. $12.05. Two3-lb. pillowssl.7s. Newfeato ers, beet ticking. SI,OOO cash deposit in bank to • guarantee eatiifaction or money back. Mail order I today or write lor new catalog. SfiNITARY BEDDING Co.,De ß t IM Chtrlotte.il. C. | New Feather Beds Only $10.55 New FEATHER PILLOWS, $1.05 per pair. New Feathers. Best Ticking. Write for new Catalog and Bargain offers. Satisfaction guaranteed. SOUTHERN FEATHER k PIL LOW CO., Desk IS, Greensboro, N. 0. Magnolia Blossom Women If Sick or Discouraged We want to show you free of cost what wonderful results Magnolia Bl«s --som can accomplish.. If you suffer J™"} ailments peculiar to women or from some form of female trouble, write ua 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 for you. All we want is a chance to con vince you. Send us your name .and ad dress and let us send you thia almpia Home treatment free. Address SOUTH BEND REMEDY CO.. Box 31 South Bend, InßtaM Many are making sls and up per day . canning frulte aftd~vegetablee for market, neighbora and home by using a ■tv ‘•favorite" hom« cannkr F—\ Made better, last longer.no waste, lU, \ gives best results, uses lese fuel, Jf easy to operate. Prices, $450 and up. We furnish cans and labels. Write ior FREE BOOKLET. CsroluaMstalPrefectsCs., P.O.Bsxll? RUPTURED? TRY THIS FREE New Invention Sent on 30 Days’ Trial With out Expense to You Simply send me your name and I will send you my new copyrighted rupture book and measurement blank. When you return the blank I will send you my new for rupture. When it arrives put it on and wear it. Put it to every test you can think of. The harder the test the better you will like it. You will wonder how you ever got along with the old style cruel spring truss es or belts with leg straps of torture. Your own good, common sense and your own doc tor will tell you it is the only way in which you can ever expect a cure. After wearing it 30 days, if it is not entirely satisfactory in every way—if it is not easy and com fortable —if you cannot actually see your rupture getting better, and if not convinced that a cure Is merely a question of time, ftst return it and you are out nothing. Any ruptla-: appliance sent on 30 days’ trial with out expend you is worth a trial. Tell your ruptured ti.irc.ds of this. EASYHOLD CO., 1005-E, Koch Bldfe., Kansas City. Mo.— (Advt.) 3 Rings and Bracelet FREE Sell S boxes Rosebud Salve at 25c box Valuable preparation, for bums, acret, tetter. km?:, choice from ®salve today WE TRUST YCU Rosebud PerfumeCo.Box 102 Woodsboro.Md 5