Atlanta tri-weekly journal. (Atlanta, GA.) 1920-19??, June 05, 1920, Page 5, Image 5

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“DANDERINE” Stops Hair Coming Out; Doubles Its Beauty. A few cents buys “Danderine.” After an apjfllcation of “Danderine” you can not find a fallen hair or any dandruff, besides every hair shows new life, vigor, brightness, more color and thickness. — (Advt.) PAINS NEARLY DOUBLED ME UP Nothing Helped Me Until I Took Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Wyandotte, Mich, —“For the last four years I have doctored off and on I without help. I have had pains every • month so | bad that I would nearly double up. Sometimes I could not sweep a room without stopping to rest, and everything I ate upset my stomach. Three years ago I lost a child and suffered bo badly that I was out of my head at times. ’ Mv bowels did not move for days and I could not eat without suf fering. The doctor could not help me and one day I told my husband that I could not stand the pain any longer and sent him to the drug store to get me a bottle of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and threw the doctor’s medicine away. After tak ing three bottles of Vegetable Com pound and using two bottles of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Sanative Wash I could do my own housework. If it had not been for your medicine I don’t know where I would be to-day and I am never without a bottle of it in the nouse. You may publish this if you (ike that it may help some other woman.” —Mrs. Maby Stendeb, 120 Orange St., Wyandotte, Mich. " BARKER’S HAIR balsam bandraff SiopsHairFUtHng i -Ja Restore* Color sad Beauty to Gray and Faded Hair buc. and at draci-ists. FULL SIZE 4G-PC. DINNER SET FREE FOR THE SALE OF ONLY 11 BOXES OF SOAP each box containing 7 cakes of fino Toilet Soap and with every box, clvoas * premiums to each purchaser a Pound of Baking: Powder, Pair of Shear* and package of Needles. Many other useful Premiums such as Toilet Sets, Linen cats. Furniture. Dry Goods. Wearing Apparel, Enamelware, etc. Wen'so pay largeeashcoinmlrslon. Special Free Present We Pay The Freight Jh?.Y?a£ A Hleh-Grado Granite Kit- on fioap. Dinner Set and Premiume. Di.h a 10 al lowing Plenty of time to ex- ut Puddfn^p^rnrfc-? clivcr and collect be /S. Paying ono cent. Send coßt or work of anv kind. >f jou T Jjl 2 l now Toronr Big FREE Agents Uo Outfit. No money needed. A Beautiful and nay cash Yohw etamp or po«t cardie vnur only Tor appointing ugente for ua. expense WRITE T6DAV THKPERRY c. MASOM W, Pe.rIsT^CINNATI.O. E»t? re 97 w nSpedades4ree M Sen Me The Coupon Below j[ y<x//Z Get Them At Onee^- — I D° n> * Send Me A Cent S When you answer this advertise- NS. ment don t send me a penny. I in- Bist on sending- these glasses without . T - not one penny. I want you to try them free. When you come home from the Y our ®y® e burn ajid ache from the heat and glare of the sun, wind yo ? dow ,R and pat my glasses on your eyes and see with what ease and comfort they will enable you to read and sew, or eee clearly at J? or in shadow, morning, noon or night, without the slightest headache or eye pain. vauJ h t h? a J°J? ot ' ce . how , weU you can nKqln read the finest print in your bible with them on, or eee clear across the field as far as you ever did In your young days. 1 don’t want you to try them just for one night. Try out C £ ter * day*—Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday; Friday, a 'hl < t? y "vv n d VL ree d a >' a more. Not one day; not one week, but a a them around the house, notice-how easily you can see to file the finest-toothed saw; or out of doors, at church and meeting, out hunt ing, and everywhere else you go. Try them faithfully. Test them at my ex pense. Let me send you a pair of these gold-filled Perfect Vision Spectacles 2nd wo^n W Mi n o a ve? dl ’ UnOe by Un ’ of oi raen I Will Send Them To You Free Sit down right now—this very' minute—and fill out the below coupon ae cnce; let Uncle Sam deliver into your own hands, at your own door, a pair of these Gold-filled Perfect Vision Spectacles of mine, In a handsome Vel •-KJ-Uned, Spring-back. Pocket-book Spectacle Case, absolutely free, for *2 I will even pay the postage on them, and you are to judge them for yourself. Can anything be fairer? Fill in this coupon, mall It to me at once, and you will get a pair by return mall. ST - LOUIS SPECTACLE HOUSE, Room 1 ST. LOUIS, MO. I herewith enclose this coupon, which entitles me, by return mail, to a H pair of your Gold-filled Perfect-vision Spectacles, complete, also a fin© ■ leatherette, velteen-llned. spring-back, pocket-book spectacle case, without B cost tc. me, »o 1 can try. then' out. under your own offer, of a full ten days’ K actual test ,Thie free trial le not tp cost me one penny, and if I like the ■ glasses and Keep them. I an> to pay you 11.95 only—no more ana no less. Sa But if, (or any reason whatsoever. I don’t wish to keep them (and I. myself, fl am :c be the «o!e Judge), j wi!) return them to you without paying you a ■ glne e cent for them, ae you agreed in the above advertisement to send them fl or. tan days absolute free trial. With this understanding I mall you this I c-stL..cate,-and it U agreed that you win stick to your word and I will stick E to mlns. Be sure and answer the following questions; K How old are you? How many ycar« have you used glasses (if any)?.,.... ■ Name M g Post Office || 8 Rural Routeßox No. State THE ATLANTA TRI-WEEKLY JOURNAL. AUNT JULIA'S LETTER BOX On the car the other day I noticed a couple of young girls, and the thought came into my mind, maybe those are two of my nieces, I heard them say they lived on one of the rural routes. They were so sweet and fresh looking. Pretty, too, but here is the sad story, when they laughed and showed their teeth, that should have been in the pink of condition, I am sorry to say that they showed absolute lack of care. Now the worst part of that is not simply the looks, but from the standpoint of health it is a grave mistake to neglect the teeth, many painful and lasting illnesses come from bad teeth, and as a general rule, bad teeth indicate. lack of care. The teeth should really be brushed after every meal, but at least they MUST be brushed the first thing in the morning and the last thing before retiring. I am not saying that you don’t do this, but young folks are a bit careless and I want you to have the best health in the world. Lovingly, , AUNT JULIA. Dear Aunt Julia and Cousins: Won’t you let two little twin girls into your happy band of boys and girls? If you will let us in we will promise not to stay very long. I guess most of you cousins are going to school now. We are going and study in the fourth grade. Well, we will describe our selves if you all won’t laugh; so here we go: Dark brown hair, blue eyes, fair com plexion, age nine years, weigh 65 pounds. Say, some of you little girls near our age come and go to school with us. Our teacher can’t tell us apart. Her name is Mrs. Brannon. Well, I guesa we had better be running, for we are afraid’ of Mr. Waste basket. So please print this, Aunt Julia, for we want to surprise mamma and papa. So good-bye to all. Your two new cousins, ESTHER AND HESTER HALL. Marble Valley, Ala. P. S.—All you cousins write to us. My Dear Friends: I am sitting in the swing this beauitful spring afternoon, wi-th a beautiful view before my eyes. A slight breeze stirs the shrubbery. The peach and pear trees are blossoming. The rose bushes are beautifully green and give promise of fine roses in the itfar future. The violets are peeping up,, with sweet frangrance. The hawthorn and golden bells are a mass of bloom. Taking it all together, cousins, is it not grand? I’ll’say* it is. How much you city cousins miss. The reason I am not in school, and have time to sit in porches and write letters, is because I am just convalescing from a bad cold or the “flu” and do not feel like doing anything. Hop ing to seo this in print in our fine paper I will close. Everybody write and I will answer all. DEANE RITCH. Matthews, N, C. Dear Aunt Julia and Cousins: Will you let an Alabama girl enter into your happy circle of boys and girls for a short chat? Please move over, cousins, and let me have a seat by the side of Aunt Julia. .How many of you cousins like to read story books? I do for one. Some of them I have read are I “Tom Betty,” and also “Belgutn,” and “Miss Minerva” and “William Hill Green.” Well, I will describe myself and go. Now don’t you all run, but I suppose you will: 1 • have blue eyes, light hair, light complexion and weigh 100 pounds, age twelve. I will go before Mr. W. B. comes out of bls room. Your new niece and cousin, Red Level, AIa.NAOMI MASON. Dear Aunt Julia and Cousins: lam com ing again and talk with you all awhile. What do you girls do far pastime these beautiful days? My occupation is cooking mostly. I live -in the country, one mile west of Jemison. I am not going to school now, although I like to go. Some of you cousins write to me. Would rather hear from those from sixteen to twenty-five. Will answer all cards and letters received. How many of you cousins can quilt? I can for one, am going to give a quilting for the girls in a few days. Aunt Julia, gather up all the cousins and come over and help me. We will have a grand time. As my letter is rather long I must leave you all for awhile. Will come again soon. BERTHA CROWSON. Jemison, Ala. Dear Aunt Julia and Cousins: As I have written twice before, I thought I would write again to Mr. W. B. My daddy has been taking The Atlanta Journal for three years. Mamma reads all the letters to me. I like them fine. My daddy is n farmer. I am just five years old. I go to school and am in the second grade. My teacher’s name is Miss Blanche McClary. I think she is the finest teacher I ever saw. I love her dearly, I hope the W. B. won’t get this letter. Inclosed find 25 cents for the French babe. Your new cousin, VIRGIE BELLE SKELTON.. Old Fort, Tenn. Hello, Aunt Julia; cousins, too! Open the door and let me through. I am afraid to walk your way For fear it is wastebasket day. Now I will walk Inside, Although wastebasket may hido; Maybe Aunt Julia will catch him And please have him tied. My eyes are hazel, Brown is my hair: My complexion is very fair; Now, cousins, take your chair! I am five feet one inch tall, I am ninety-six pounds small. Oh, did anyone squall? Now, cousins, I guess that’s all. The one who can guess my age just so I will present with my photo. My age is between twelve and fifteen; Now I guess you will know. Now let your cards and letters fly; I’ll answer all Vy-by. I close my bit for the orphan child, I will say good-by with a joy and smile. Your loving niece and cousin, MISS SARAH FERGUSON. Fitzhugh, Va., Box 6. Dear Aunt Julia and Cousins: Will you let a North Carolina girl join your happy band of boys and girls? My brother sub scribed for The Atlanta Journal about two weeks ago, so you see I have not been read ing the cousins le’ters very long. I sure do enjoy reading them. I live in the country, seven miles from town. I go to a rural school, am in the seventh grade. Did you cousins celebrate George Washington's birthday? Our school celebrated Washing ton and Lincoln’s birth days combined. We went on a picnic, had a very nice time. Well, as it is the rule I will describe my self: Brown eyes, dark complexion, 5 feet 7 inches tall? age fourteen years. I would like to exchange letters with some of you cousins. I would be glad to see tills in print, as it is my first letter. A new cousin. MARY CULBRETH, Rutherfordton, Route 1, N. C. Dearest Auntie and Cousins: Will you please admit another little Georgia girl into your happy band of boys and girls? I have written once before, but I guess Mr. W.'B. got my letter, so I will try again. I am a farmer’s daughter, and like farm life just fine, although I don’t work in the field very much; I stay in the house and help mamma all I can. I go to school and am in the third grade, but I’m not going just now, as our school closed on account of the “flu.” Aunt Julia, you will find inclosed ICc for the little French girl. Here are some riddles, and then I'll go: Where was Solomon’s temple? Why is a roomful of married women like an empty room? I would like to hear from some of you cousins. A new nie’ce ami cousin, WILMER L. MORGAN. Blairsville, Ga. Hello, Aunt Julia and Cousins! Here comes another little Georgia girl to join your circle. I enjoy reading the Letter Box very much. I've thought for some time that I would write, but just couldn’t pick up the courage to do so, so will try to write a few lines. I wonder what you cousins are doing these cold days. As for myself I’m sitting by the fireside. I guess some of you cousins are going to school now. Our school closed week before last on account of the “flu,” and I’m very lonesome stay ing at home. Miss Willie Hill is my teach er, and I like her fine. Well, I'll describe myself and go: Light blue eyes, sandy hair, fair complexion and weigh 117 pounds and thirteen years old. So I'll bid you all adieu. A new cousin, IRENE E. MORGAN. Blairsville, Ga. Dear Aunt Julia and Cousins: you please move over and make room for an other Tennessee boy? My uncle takes The Journal, and I enjoy reading the Letter Box. I live on the farm, and like farm life fine. Well, I guess you all are wondering what I look like, so here goes: Blue eyes, light hair, fair complexion, 5 feet 1 inch tall, weigh eighty-five pounds. I am twelve years old. Some of you cousins write to me. I will answer all I can. A new cousin, MARION HOOD. Beryllia, Tenn. Dear Aunt Julia and Cousins: Will you please admit a Georgia girl into your happy band? I live in the country, about fourteen miles from Elberton, Ga. I like country life fine. I will describe myself, as this is my first time to write. Don't get frightened and run off: Brown hair, gray eyes, dark complexion, weight 136 pounds, height 5 feet 6 inches, and sixteen years old. I am a twin. My twin sister's name is Margie. What do you cousins do for pastime? I crochet and tat. I like it very much. Aren't you cousins glad spring has come? I am for one. I think spring Is the prettiest season of the year. I will close, as this is my first letter. Aunt Julia, please print this. Your new niece and cousin, MAUDE JONES. Middleton, Ga., R. F. D. 1. Dear Aunt Julia: I have been wondering If you will admit another lonesome little girl into your happy club of boys and girls. I get lonesome sometimes, so I decided to write to Aunt Julia and the cousins. My sister, Eunice Smith, lias been writing to {he Letter Box already, so now you see it's my time to write. First, I will describe myself and then I’ll be going. I have black eyes, black hair and dark complexion; I am twenty years old and weigh 140 pounds, so you see I am quite a small girl yet. Aunt Julia, Eunice tells me that it's against the rule to write too much. She says Mr. W. B. will get It if I do, so I’ll be going and write again. I will answer nil cards nnd letters received from the cousins. So by-bj’. From MISS ILA INEZ SMITH. Crichton, Ala. Hello, Aunt Julia and Cousins: Will you let two Georgia girls join your happy band of boys and girls. I. Beulah, will describe myself, so get behind the door for here I go: Fair complexion, blnek hair, blue eyes, weigh ninety-seven pounds, 5 feet high. I will leave you my age to guess, which is be tween twelve and eighteen. I, Gertie, dark complexion, brown eyes, black hair,? weigh 120 pounds. 5 feet 5 inches high, my nge is between twelve and sixteen. We go to school at Ridge Grove. We are in the sixth grade. Our teacher's name is Miss Lillie Rogers. Now If this escapes Mr. W. 8.. we will write again. Now, if any of you girls wish to correspond with us let your letters and cards fly to BEULAH WILLIAMS. Ringgold, Ga., Route 2. care R. S. Wil liams. GERTIE GAY, Tunnell Hill, Ga., Route 1. My Dearest AunWulia and Cousins: Will you please make room for two Florida girls? We live in a small town and enjoy our sum mer resorts here. Our nge is between ten and eighteen. I, Louise Sessions, am 4 feet 3 inciies. I have dark brown hair and eyes, weigh seventy-five pounds, and have dark complexion; in the fifth and sixth grade. I, Margret Louise Hilton, am 5 feet 7 inches; I have black hair nnd eyes, dark complexion, weigh 111. I am in the second grade of higli school. Well, Aunt Julia, if this is printed, we will come again. We will an swer all cards and letters. Your cousins, MARGRET LOUISE HILTON,, LOUISE SESSIONS. Dear Aunt Julia nnd Cousins: Will you please move over so I can sit down? I live in the country and like it fine. I am 5 feet 6 inches high, weigh 125 pounds, have brown eyes and hair and dark com-’ plexion. How do you all think I look? I have some flowers in boxes, one tube rose, three August lilies and some oxalis bulbs; hope this cold weather won’t kill them. We have a lot of pretty flowers every summer. Among them nre salvia, petunias, zenias, phlox, marigold, nastur tium and diantbus pinks. I go to school nt Apalachee, Ga. Am in the sixth grade. I have four sisters and one brother--Eliza beth, Lois; Louise, Lainier and Wilson. I am a member of the Canning club. Some nf you cousins write to me. Age 15. Your niece and cousin, ELLA MAE BISHOP. Madison, Ga., R. F. D. No. 6. Sixty-five per cent of all the acre age farmed in California is now be ing- cultivated by tractors propelled either by petroleum products or by steam. Eighty-seven per cent of all for mer Austro-Hungarian mills are lo cated in the Czechn-Slovak jtanwhiu The Country Home BY MRS. W. H. FELTON Marconi—The Discoverer of Wireless Telegraphy Less than fifty years from now there will be universal appreciation and loud acclamations over two great . men, still living, and of whom the pupblic thinks but little about, be cause they are here and largely over looked in the rush and hurry about us. I allude to Mr. Edison, the dis coverer of electrical possibilities and applications, and Mr. Marconi, the discoverer of wireless telegraphy. They are the two great men, above and beyond anybody else, in this era of the Twentieth century. Electricity is, of course, the genius, the master spirit, of the air—and to Benjamin Franklin and his experi ments with a kite, a silk string and a key, we owe the early develop ments of the electricity in the at mosphere. The telegraph was not known until 1844, as a public factor, and it is said that the results of the Polk and Clay campaign were among the notable usages of what can now con nect two hemiphers, in daily, aye, hourly communication. I was a bit of a girl in 1844, and have therefore some knowledge of what has been evolved from Morse’s discoveries ai d his application of Franklin’s ad ventures, when the latter drew the lightning from the sky, and chained the fiery bolts to general and world wide usage. Electricity ts the modern Alladdln’s lamp. iWe now “rule the lamp,” and it runs the errands, drags our street cars and cooks our meals. It builds up fortunes, compared to which the wealth of the famous Golconda tales sink back into insig nificance. We start a current ard run an electrical chair in Sing-Sing, and the criminal is dispatched more quickly and certainly than the French guillotine dispatched its victims in the French Revolution of 1793-8. We arrange an X-Ray ma chi a* afftl proceed to count the bones and expose the inside secrets oof the hu man frame. These things are all mysteries to my mind, and one dis covered idea opens the way to the discovery of more astounding and multiplied mysteries. Marconi was born of a Lombard father and and English mother, and still in his youthful prime, he ’works miracles with Franklin’s kite artd key. Our minds were seeking to grasp the telegrapphic mys'tery when a little machine in America could send a message to England in a second of time through a wire that lies o.i the bottom of the Atlantic ocean, -and that message could be printed in the daily papers of both continents at the same hour, on the same day. But Marconi comes along, and fixed up an electric spark apparatus, I a miniature lightning maker, and produces high up in the air three | dots, and called the “8. O. S. call,” | and ships hundreds of miles distant ] can receive it—from another elec- j trie spark apparatus, and these ships can locate the high up call, with three dots, and the last one of them , rush to the point on the trackl*« ocean, and rescue hundreds of pas sengers and crews from the sink ing vessels. In the late war these wireless messages were in continuous service, and the German submarines could go to a ship, British or French or American, on the trackless ocean, and blow it up with almost fiendish audacity. This wireless mystery is still a mystery to me. I see the lightning flash over the earth and blaze in the sky. It can kill one sleeper in the same bed and not harm the one by his side. I have seen these things since I can remember —more than eighty years ago, but I know as lit tle about the why and wherefore as I do about Marconi’s three dots up in the air—that can race across wide seas, and tell its story with absolute certainty. “God works in a mysterious way His wonders to .per form.” Bearwell and Billings; Wilkinson and Schalk. News From Here and There Wolfskin makes the best parch ment for banjos. A lion in a jungle will jump twen ty-five or thirty feet from a standing start. Underdone beef is said to be the favorite dish of the king of Spain. The Chinese begin dinner with the dessert and end it with tdie soup. There are 130 colleges in China de voted to the teaching of scientific agriculture. The output of maple sugar in the Province of Quebec is about 15,000,- 000 pounds a year. Steel, when hardened, decreases in specific gravity, but increases in length and diameter. The jungle fowl of Australia builds a nest fifteen feet high and 150 feet in circumference. The Justinian legal c<Sde, estab lished In the early sixth century is the basis for modern law. Two-fifths of the adult population of Switzerland have bank accounts, and beggars are few. The wife of a poor weaver in Scot land, in the sixteenth century, is credited with having borne sixty-two children. Import duties on butter yield the British government an esttimated an nual profit of more than $15,000,000.' What’s the Use, Anyhow? “I’m very fond of Hazel, but—” I heard a maiden say. Now, maybe Hazel is a nut, Or maybe tout a fait. But when this dulcet phrase occurs, I know that Hazel’s getting her’s “You just must like Geoffrey, but —’’ I heard a hearty plaint. Perhaps Geoffrey is a mutt, Or maybe, he’s a saint. No matter. After that beginlng, Geoffrey’s in for one fine skinning. “Dear Cicely’s such a sweet thing, but—” Two soft lips made remark, And then the gates of mercy shut, The sunlight turned to dark. When you want Cicely, you'll find her Just underneath the sausage-grinder. “Fine fellow! and my best friend, but —” I’ve said myself, I own. And then with some sarcastic cut, I’ve ripped him to the bone, The first phrase simply let me by To smite my best friend, hip and thigh. “Oh, yes, I like Cooke’s verses, but —” What’s that? What that you say? I shriek into my humble hut To make my getaway. No use: you flay my every fault And tour on vinegar and salt! (Copyright, 1920, N. E. A.) To clean granite a stiff wire brush comes for that purpose and one may use Dutch cleanser, or anything like that. Pumice stone is good to clean marble, also soda sprinkled on mar ble will clean it. Use it as you would any other kind of powder, dampen the brush with water and scrub vig orously. 5 faDontSend ft- StaiX a Penny M j&zk fee®. ff° u b y-Not a penny to Rend to have this exquisite outfit of ; x> _& .<33g>j: three of the most charming undergarments sent on ap- >5 >$ 1 V < D r ® v ® l % ttis such an exceptional bargain that it will X y K . \ 3 <f i• 1 delight your.heart but you must act quickly, for / A ZZ f •?: ' stock is limited. Orders will soon be pouring in. A i A Bargain in 3-Piece Muslin mEj A.I ItJUnderwearSetMh h S W You Get Al! 3 Garments about it from our description. Wo want you to ace fx: : . examine tho material ana the workmanship, to know from »:?< . w » •:•/ £“* actual careful inspection what an unequalled bargain thia ;:$> .■& »<1 /'< J-s 3-piece si t is. ougt.t al! 3 garments of fine quality material, and fc»x •.£»• « : :<| ?$’ :■ x 5: i most daintily niade—a complete outfit. Just compare with similar *.«•:. •»••>! / •: ’ £ £ • I garments and sao what an opportunity this is to eave money ■••«••’• : : iS- X•s i ! 4 Envelope Chemise 1 O /\... ' I\*>' J Intf: si)k\ shoulder r-traprf. Narrow silk ribbon insertion gives j:-w •: «x. /> $;• • ' £ ’J tight-closing effect. Bottom trimmed with Vai. lace. Sizes. 34 to p:«L:% /g fc i 4< * Color, flesh. One of the daintiest garments you have ever seen. :-<S ® /I‘ •/ i Ir \ Embroidered Gown J‘ n u^ , r l ;" un^7 c v h .^,: P o ' © f s / "■■■’ > • x: J neck. llemßtitchcd with ribbon insertion in Empire effect. Quar- & <1 I.'.■•••». x- a s *?; ter edged sleeves, prettily embroidered at edges. Bust sizes. 34 State which st* Is neck wanted squaro, round or V-thape. «l »-. Made of fine muslin Cut full. Dainty em x hroidered flounce. Tape waist band and draw % length, 3G to 42 irfchen. Color, white. k •;•& : :«L '-'u<7A yend today no money We ship the complete -v CvC & » QJ/HBCb4I outfit-3 fine garments- on approval. Pay only special price, $3.98 for outfit, on arrival. If not W®** ' ’ \v£xc>'** : oatistied with this splendid bargain, oend it back and we refund your money You don t rink a penny. Order by Wo. 8X1045. Be auro to civ* wanted on all 3 garments. -ROHAfiD-MORTON & CO. Dept. 6529 Chicago, Illinois MARY MEREDITH’S ADVICE TO LONELY GIRLS AT HOME Dear Madam: lam 18. I’ve never had a sweetheart yet. Do you think I am old enough for them? I went to see one of my friends—a boy came home wtih me. It was the first time I had ever met him. He seems to be a nice boy, has lots of manners. He only stayed an hour. There were some other boys here when we came. They began making fun of him be fore he came in the house, and when he started they commenced again. I don’t know whether they were jok ing or not. He didn’t take it for a joke. Do you think that would keep him from coming again or make him think less of me? I’m so sorry they did it. He got one of my pictures. I didn’t give it to him. Is there any harm in a boy getting a girl’s picture in that way? P. S. Answer me through The Journal as early as possible. Thank you, Lovingly, SYBLE. Syble: I think you are old enough to go with young men. It was very rude and ill-mannered in those other young men to poke fun at your caller. He certainly was justified in getting angry with them to be insulted before you. You couldn’t expect anything else from him, could you? You should have called the offenders down, they were in your home, and they didn’t treat you with the proper respect. It made no difference, if they might have had a “laugh” coming. It was very rude. I should think the young man would feel a hesi tancy about calling on you again, if he feels the least sensitive. He really should have asked you for a picture, but if he stole it you can ask him to return it. Use your own judgment about that. It depends on his charac ter and whether you think you would prefer his keeping your picture or not. Dear Miss Meredith: I have bean visiting one of my friends and while there met a young man who said he would like to correspond with me. Whose place is it to write first, his or mine? Respectfully, LEILA. Leila: Good taste prompts the'man to write first and if the the girl wishes to keep up his acquaintance she will answer his letter. You could say to a man who wants to correspond with you, that .you would be pleased to get letters from him and that yoq will take pleasure in an swering them. But to write to a man first is poor taste. Let him take the initiative. If you really care to hear from the young man, and your friend whom you were visiting knows him, you could -write and tell her you are looking for a letter from him (just in a joking manner). There is away to do everything. I am coming to you for some ad vice. I am a widower with chil dren. Do you think there could be a very happy marriage between me and a widow with children. I thank you for your advice. Yours truly. “OLD WIDOWER.” Old Widower: Yes, I think there can be happiness gotten, if each one of you will do your part, but you should have a plain understanding before mar riage and if your children are old enough, make them under stand there will be nothing but harmony between the two sets of children and yourselves. It Canning Kitchen Reduces Work During Busy Season Community canning kitchens are no longer in the experimental stage, but are established and highly re garded institutions in the many lo calities which have had the wisdom and foresight to erect them. Fruits and vegetables hav e the unfortunate habit of coming into their fullest bearing fight when the season is hottest and the housewife busiest. The added task of putting up the winter’s supply of fruits and vegetables seems often “the last straw” to the already overburdened woman. Yet there is much more fruit ripening in the garden than can possibly be used while it is fresh. So she gets out her cans. Most women freely admit that can ning is not particularly hard work In itself. The difficulty is, it must be sandwiched in between numerous regular tasks. Help Difficult to Obtain It is almost impossible nowadays to obtain help in the home; so, es pecially in their homes where there are small children, as much work as possible must be sent out to relieve the burdens of the housewife and mother. A community canning kitchen, either of the type to which members may bring their products to be canned at a fixed price per can or that in which members work in groups on special days with the help of modern large-scale equip ment, saves garden products which would otherwise waste because the housewi.ves of the locality have not time or strength to can them. It conserves food for those who are unable to conserve for themselves, and relieves the pressure of work in the home at a busy season. • Various types of canning kitchens are in use today in different parts of the country. The successful one must be adapted to the needs of the locality. Usually much more is canned in one of these kitchens than the families interested in it can use. It is customary to sell this surplus and use the proceeds toward paying expenses. Financing the Enterprise Some working capital is needed at the outset for the purchase of ade quate equipment. Expenses for rent, fuel, salaries, raw materials, and miscellaneous items, too, must be met for some time before returns can be realized from the products canned. It is therefore necessary to make definite plans for financing the kitchen, based on a careful estimate of probable expenses. Community kitchens have been financed in vari ous ways—for example, b5 r school boards, by boards of trade, by busi ness men’s associations, by loans from banks or from individuals, and by membership fees. Direct gifts from individuals or a small group of persons is, perhaps, in the end, the least satisfactory method. The mem bership-fee idea is the best, in the opinion of the United States depart ment of agriculture, which is advo catin gcommunity canning kitchens. The selection of a building and its equipment should be considered jointly, for the type of equipment frequently depends upon the sort of building to be used. Since a pri mary object of the community can ning kitchen is to secure the best SATURDAY, JUNE 5, 15)20. can be done. Be sure you love each other first though before you enter the marriage contract. I am coming to you for advice as I have been reading your advice to other girls for some time. I am seventeen years old. Do you think I am too young to go with boys? I will tell you to start with that I am not in love with the boys, but there is a young man twenty-four years i old, who says he loves me more than any girl he ever saw. He has proven it. He is a very nice boy and my parents like him very much, but I simply do riot care anything about him. I treat him coldly but it does no good. Do you think J am right? I am considered good-looking and have lots of girl and boy friends. I am corresponding with one of my school chums. I have not seen him in a long time. He tells me that he loves me dearly and asked me to be his wife, but I told him I was too young to marry him. He is twenty one. Did I do right? I like him very well as a friend, but I am really not in love with him. He says he can never be happy without me. Thanking you for advice, your new friend, LONESOME STAR. Lonesome Star: You are young and considered good-looking and you may have many admirers, and it is not doing yourself jus tice to marry the first one who asks you just because he happens to say he is in love with you. My advice is this, never marry a man unless you care a great deal for him and you are per fectly sure you can live with him happily, because marriage is so serious and you cannot get rid of your husband so easily, his disposition and habits may be a source of annoyance to you, and unless you can forgive him and have enough love in your heart to forget his shortcomings, both of you will be miserable. If you are not in love with any one, why not wait awhile until you get older, just keep the • friendship of these men and tell them honestly you are not in love and you are willing to be friends with them, but nothing ' more. Oftentimes men write a lot of love stuff to girls just to fill their heads with nonsense. I Some men think it smart to teTi a girl they are In love with her, i just to see if she will act silly over them. Dear Miss Mary: I am coining to you for some advice. I am a widow with three children and am in love with a .widower with three child ren. My children are two boys and one girl and his are three boys. Mine are all older than his. If I marry him do you think we would be hap py. Thanking you for your advice. CARRIE LOU. Carrie Lou. I do not see any reason why you cannot marry the widower, if you desire it, you can train your children to re spect him and then too you will be able to get along if you will treat his children with the same consideration that you will treat yours. And if the man will do that, you two will get along. But unless you do, there will be trouble, and both you and he will be very miserable, and the poor children will have it hard est of all. Fifty-fifty treatment all the way through, is the only way you can handle the situa tion. returns for the time, effort, and capital invested, the use of modern labor-saving equipment, thoroughly adequate for the kind and volume of work to be done, will prove econom ical in the end. THE SEAL OF APPROVAL PLACED ON THIS MEDICINE BY TWO GENERATIOHS Merit decides the popularity of a remedy the same as for any other piece of goods. For nearly fifty years Pe-ru-na has held the confidence of the American family. The real goodness of the medicine, its success in |rea|.t j.® the treatment of catarrh and catarrhal conditions OBrllW has made this possible—nothing else, fj PE-RU-NA FOR EVERYDAY ILLS Whether the catarrhal inflammation takes the form of a cough and cold or a derangement of the stomach and bowels, Pe-ru-na has proved equally good. It regulates the functions of dl gestion, enriches the blood, aids elimination, tones up the nervous system and thus carries its soothing, healthful influence to the mucous mem branes, which line all parts of the body. Pe-ru-na is a tonic laxative with great power in overcom ing catarrhal conditions. Very effective as a body builder after a protracted sickness, an attack of the grip or Spanish influenza. Sold Everywhere Tablets or Liquid I ex Q u^te fragrance of the Tube 1 Rose is equalled only by the com pletely satisfying and pleasing effect of the famous Tube Rose Sweet Scotch | Snuff. Tube Rose Snuff exactly suits the taste! The more I I you use it the better vou like it, because it’s pure, I i clean and good. | If your dealer does not handle it, give us a chance 6 to convince you by sending 10c for a trial can. BROWN & WILLIAMSON TO&1CCO CO. WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. ITCH-ECZEMA!' (Also called Tatter. Salt Rheu.-n. Pruritus, Mi Ik-Crust, Wetpinc Skin, etc.) CCZCMA CAN (BE CURED TO STAY, and when I Bay eured. I mean junt what I eaf-C-U-R-E-D, and not H merely patched up for awhile, to return worae than before. Now, Ido not care what all you have used nor how jrt many dorinro here Cold you that you eouid nnt be cured—all 1 aak to jaat a chnnee to rhow you that 1 know what ■ lan talking about. If you Will write me TODAY. I will send you a FREE TRIAL of my mild. Boothingjruaran- ■ teed cure that will convince you more in a day than lor anyone e’ae could in a month's time If you are dfopusted ■ end discouraged, I dare you to give me a chsnre to prove mv claims. By writing me tnday you will enjoy more reel ■ KJS comfort tbau you had ever thought thia world holds for you. Just try it, and you will see lam CeDins yon the truth. K DR. J. E. CANNADAY m £164 Park Sqrars SEDALIA, MO. I IA RofarcncQs: Third National Could you do a better art >h«n to send thia ooUea to eocae H Bank, Sedalia, Mo. pour eufferer of EcaemaT SAY “DIAMOND DYES” Don’t streak or ruin your material in a poor dye. Insist on “Diamond Dyes.” Easy directions in package, r------ j GIRLS! LEMONS | j BLEACH; WHITEN | I f i - t i ♦ I Make Lemon Lotion to Double | i Beauty of Your Skin Squeeze the juice of two lemons into • bottle containing three ounces of Orchard White which can be had at auy drug store, shake well nnd you have a quarter pint of harmless nnd delightful lemon bleach for few cents. Massage this sweetly fragrant lotion into the face, neck, arms nnd hands each day, then shortly note the beauty of your skin. Famous stage beauties use lemon juice to bleach and bring that soft, clear, rosy white complexion. Lemons have always been used as a freckle, sunburn and tan c— mover. Make this up and try it. — (Advt.) Beautifully Decorated 31-Piece DINNER SET lE't'KP Would you like to have a splen- JT JEW. Bu did set of dishes? Thia beauti ful 31-piece Dinner Set is a won der and we know you would be more than pleased with it. It is first grade, every piece guaranteed to be full size and beautifully decorated with gold border and dainty flowers. It must be seen to be appreciated How to Get Dishes Free We will send you twelve $1.25 boxes of HOG FAT, prepaid. Sell them among your neighbora. They buy it readily. Keeps 2 00 for yourself and tend u» 113.00. On receipt of the $13.00 we will send you absolutely free, this splendid 31-piece Dinner Set. E. B. MARSHALL COMPANY 401 Marshall Bldg., Milwaukee, Wi,. Send me twelve $ 1.25 boxes HOG FAT, prepaid. I agree to pay you $13.00 in 60 days and you are then to ship me absolutely free the beautiful 31-piece set of dishea. Name,, ..R. F.D. P. OState Agetowncowl,horses,chickens, acres of land. Also Lace Curtains.Rogera EVHf “k. 7= Silver Bets, fine Lockets, V 3 B;WS|EflL»Vallleraan<Lnianyother valuable presents for ssll lnr onr bsautlf ul Art A Rs- Jigious pictures at lOcis. ssch. pictures,when sold send the $2.00 and choose premium wanted, according to bir Het. RAY ABT CO., Dept. 84 €HICA«O,IIX. GET A Di SAVE SIO.OO ; 25-lb. bed. 1 pair Gib. pillows 1 pr. blanketß/jS^BTgfcTwK. q G full size), 1 counter pane (largo size), all for $15.95-re tail valne $25.00. Beds 25-lbs. $0.05 ) 30-lba. $10.05; 35-lbs. $11.05; 40-lbs, $12.05. Two3-ib. pillowssl.7s. Newfeata- I ers, best ticking. SI,OOO cash deposit In bank to I guarantee satisfaction or money back. Mall order I today or write tor new catalog. SANITARY BEDDING CO., Dept 1W Charlotte,N.C. | selling 8 boxes of Prof. Smith's jj-XwWfeii Headache and Neuralgia Tab ,ets nt 25 cents a box. Cota- SaSedIEXMaJ mguo of other premiums sent with goods. SMITH DRUG CO.. Dept. 57. Woodboro. M<l. 5