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"DANDERINE"
Stops Hair Coming Out;
Doubles Its Beauty.
<wiL
A few cents buys "Danderine.’ l
After an application of “Danderine”
you can not find a fallen hair or any
dandruff, besides every hair shows 1
rte<f life, vigor, brightness, more i
color and thickness.—(Advt.)
REMOVE YOUR WRINKLES’
“Beautiful Eyelashes and Eye
brows, Beautiful Figure
Merely a Question of Will
ingness to Try.”
-HELEN CLARE.
Superfluous Hair, Pimples and Blackheads
Disappear “Like Magic,” Say Letters
K \
i.-' \
Thu clever woman has perfected a method sim
ple and yet‘‘marvelous’’ in the opinion of hundred*
of sister women, and the result has brought a won
derful change in her facial charm. “In a single
night.” says Helen Clare, “I have sensed the work
ing of my method, and for removing wrinkles and
developing the form, reports from nearly every state
in the Union are even more pronounced than my
own—and rapid.”
In an interview Helen Clare said: ‘‘l made my
self the woman that lam today. I brought about
the wonderful change in my own appearance, and
there are hundreds of my friend! who know how I
did it (in a secret, pleasant, quiet, yet harmless man
ner). My complexion today is as clear and fair as
that of a child. My figure, formerly almost scrawny,
I have developed into a beautiful bust and well de
veloped form. Thin, scrawny eyelashes and eyebrows,
Bo poor they could scarcely be seen, have become
long, thick and luxuriant: and by my own method.”
Referring to pimples, blackheads and superfluous
hair. Helen Clare continued: “I banished mine in my
own way and by my own method, using nothing but
my own simple home treatment, which any other
woman can now have the personal benefit of and do
as well as Ihave done “if”—“if”—“if”—they will
only make tbe effort and have even a little, teeny
bit of faith in themselves as well as in me.”
Hundreds of women are so delighted with the re
sults from Helen Clare’s methods that they write
her personally the most enthusiastic letters. Here
are extracts from just two:
"Thank you for what your Beauty Treatment has
done for me. It has cleared my face of blackheads
and pimples. My complexion is as smooth as a child’s
now. It will do all you claim.”
“And your treatment for removing wrinkles ■■
wonderful-removed every wrinkle from my face.”
The valuable new beauty book which Madame
• Clare is sending free to thousands of women is cer
tainly a blessing to women. All our readers should
write her at once and she will tell you absolutely
free, about her various beauty treatments, and will
show our readers:
How to remove wrinkles;
How to develop the hu«*-
How to make lot.*, <nick eyelashes and eye
brows;
How to remove superfluous hair;
How to remove blackheads, pimples and
treckies;
How to remove dark circles under the eyes;
How to remove ouble chin;
How to build up sunken cheeks;
How to darken gray hair and stop hair falling;
How to stop perspiration odor.
Simply address your letter to Helen Clare,
Suite- 72 3311 S. Michigan Avenue, Chicago,
111., and aon-t send any money, because particulars
are free, as this charming woman is doing her I
utmost to benefit girls or women in need of secret |
information which will add to their beauty and i
make life sweeter and lovelier in every way.
Delivery Free
Just send your name, ad
dress and size and we will
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green, gray and > >
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THE ATLANTA TRI-WEEKLY JOURNAL.
AUNT JULIA'S
LETTER BOX
Dear Children:
I am just saying good morning, sending .my best love to you all
and saying good-bye, to make up for my lecture in my last letter.
Lovingly,
AUNT JULIA.
Dearest Cousins: What is there more sad
than those words, “It might have been?”
What? Guess I won't tell, eh? Anyway,
we young ones would be saved a lot of
heartaches and sorrow if we would only
heed the advice of older people who know.
->*ter all, 1 suppose 'tis best that we should
have the "experiences.” Yes, even though
we go beyond tbe safety zone, provided we
come back; then we are stronge rtlmn be
fore, therefore less likely to take chances
again. Sometimes we are discouraged and
feel like giving up. But, dear cousins, that
is the time to fight harder. No matter
how low we have gone, if we make an hon
est effort to come back we can even attain
greater heights. Oh, I don’t mean to
preach, just have serious thoughts in my
mind tonight, that's all.
Isn't, Aunt Julia just awful good to us?
Why, we have the privilege to write her
personal letters unlimited.
Oh, say I wrote a letter once (fifty pages,
regular typewriter paper, too) that kept a
irl interested—no, I should have said busy
•wo hours reading it. A regular short
(love) story, eh?
Your friend and cousin,
LUTHER HUFF.
Talbott. Tenn.
P. S. —Aunt Julia, if I break the rules
or write too often, just give my message
to Mr. Wastebasket, please.
Dear Aunt Julia and Cousins: Here come
two north Georgia girls to Join your happy
band of boys and girls. We will not de
scribe ourselves this time, but if any wish
to know how ugly we are we will tell them
in personal letters. Won't you please put
Yvonne’s picture in print again? We didn’t
get to see it before. We think it grand of
Aunt Julin to adopt the French lassie, nnd
we think it would be a good idea to educate
some American child. For fear Mr. W. B.
will get this, we will close, and all of you
cousins write to us. I, Helen, am thirteen
years of age, and I, Velma, am sixteen
years old.
HELEN and VELMA HUNT.
Swan, Fannin County, Georgia.
Dear Aunt Julia and Cousins: Will you
please admit an Alabama boy Into your hap
ny band of boys and girls? I live on n
farm, and like farm life fine. I am ten
years of age. I help my larger brother
feed the horses. I go to the Brent grammar
school nnd I am in the fourth grade. I
have a little dog named Queen. I have n
little brothef, four years of age. Some of
you cousins come to see me this summer
ard we will go swimming. Well, as this ’s
my first time to write, I will close, but will
come again if this is in print.
Your new tienhew.
MURRY STEELE.
Centreville. Ala., Route 3.
P. S.—l will send my mite for the baby
next time.
Dear Aunt Julia: Will you admit two
North Carolina girls into your happy band?
We greatly enjoy reading the Letter Box.
I. Daisy, am a brunette, eighteen years old,
<55. inches tall, weigh 120. I get awfully
lonely sometimes, ns all the kids go to
school. I. Mary, am fifteen years old, a
blond. 65 inches tall and weigh 135 pounds.
I go to school and think everyone should
strive for an education. We would like to
correspond with boys and girls from every
state. Y'our nieces.
MARY and DAISY SMITH.
Mount Gilead, N. C.
Rear Aunt Julia and Cousins: I have been
a silent reader of the Letter Box for quite
a while, so I thought I would send a line or
two. My uncle takes The Atlanta Journal
and I always enjoy rending it. I am living
with my uncle and aunt here in Worthing
ton, but I board at Alachua. Fla., and go to
School. I like Alachua fine. I lived at
Manchester, Ge... two years ago, before my
mother died, and I like Georgia fine. I
Impe to live there again before very long. I
■’in in the eighth grade this yenr, bnt hope
to be in the ninth next. Our school at
\lacliua was closed for over a week on
account of the “flu.” It certainly is cold
weather for Florida this time of the yenr;
but J do like to sit by a big fire at night
nnd read. We have a Delco light plnnt of
our own, so we have our electric lights, if
this place is small. My uncle has a store
hero and Tstay in the store sometimes for
him to go fishing, as he Is crazy about fish
ing. Well, I hope to see this in print if it
la worth printing, nnd if it is I mny come
again if you nil will let me. I am
Your niece and cousin.
EMIE CLYATT.
Worthington Springs. Fla.
Dear Aunt Julia and Cousins: Will you
please admit a South Carolina girl into your
bappy band of boys and girls? Well, it
seems to be the rule to describe yourself,
so here I go: Blue eyes, black hair and dark
.complexion. I am 5 feet 5 inches tall and
1 am eighteen years old and weigh 175
pounds. I live on a farm, and like farm
life fine. I have four sisters, three married
and one single, nnrt seven brothers. Well,’
as this is my first, I guess I had better
close. fe’ome of you nice boys and girls
fl-rite to me. I will answer all letters and
.cards received. As ever,
Your new niece,
DORA OWENS.
Scranton, S. C., Route 2, Box 67.
Dear Aunt Julia and Cousins: Will you
let two South Carolina girls into your happy
band of boys and girls? Well, as it is the
rule to describe yourself, I will. Here 1
go: I have brown hair and blue eyes and fair
complexion, am fourteen years old and go
to school and play basketball witli the girls
on teams. I am in the fifth grade. Well,
I guess I had better ring off for this time,
as it is my first time. From
A new niece of yours,
LORENA WISE.
R. F. D. 2, Box 66.
Dear Aunt Julia and Cousins: Will you let
a North Carolina girl join your happy band
of boys and girls? I go to school and am
a senior and enjoy it just fine. Well, as it
is the rule to describe yourselff, here I go:
Dark hair, fair complexion, blue eyes, five
feet tall, weigh 110 pounds and am eighteen
years old. S'ome of you girls and boys of
my age write me. I fl’ill answer all letters
received. As this is my first, I will ring
off. I am Your true friend,
MISS CHLOE GRIFFIN.
Monroe, N. C., Concord St., Box 14.
Dear Aunt Julia and Cousins: Will you
all please let an Alabama boy join your
happy band of boys and girls? 1 saw eo
many nice letters, so I thought I would
write to the letter Box. Well, how are you
cousins enjoying this cold weather, anyway?
Fine. I am sure. I fl-onder what you all
do for a pastime. For pastime I gn to
school and hunt. I wish some of you boys
were here to hunt witli me. I am sure we
would have a nice time together. Listen!
I am sure you cousins are wonde.ring I
look, but I am not going to describe mysejf
tliis time, but will write again soon. But
my age is between fifteen nnd nineteen, so
you a'll can guess. Well, I will close. Some
of you cousins write if you don’t believe
you will get an answer. So, -wishing Aunt
Julia nnd the cousins a long, happy life, I
remain Yonr cousin.
BILL MIDDLETON.
Loxley, Ala., R. F, D. 1, Box 66.
Dear Aunt Julia and Cousins: Will you
permit another North Carolina boy into your
happy band of boys and girls? As I am
a stranger, I will describe mysef and not
stay long this time. Now, cousins, don't
laugh: Light hair, blue eyes and fair com
plexion. I go to school at Snead’s Grove
and am In the fifth grade. Oh. I forgot to
toll my age, so here goes: Eleven years old.
Well, Aunt Julia, if this escapes the waste
basket I will call again. Who has my birth
day—July 30?
Your new nenhew,
LUTHER NORTON.
Laurel Hill, N. C., Route 1.
Dear Aunt Julia and Cousins: Will you
admit another North Carolina girl into your
happy band of boys nnd girls? As I am a
stranger, I will describe myself. Now don’t
get scared and run: Brown hair, bown eyes,
fair complexion, and nm thirteen years old.
I live on a farm in Roberson county, near
the little town of Orrum. I go to school at
Orrum and am in the seventh grade. My
deskmate is Clara Stone, and, believe mo.
we have a good time in school. Otha Ed
wards. write again: your letters are fine.
Who has my birthday—April 22? Well, ns
this Is my first attempt to write. I will
close, nnd if this escapes the wastebasket I
will write again.
Your new niece.
ROSE ADA ISRAEL.
Orrum, N. C.. Route 1, Box 28.
Dear Aunt Julia and Cousins: How would
you all like for nn Alabama girl to join
you all? I live six miles from Cedar Bluff
and we have tc cross the Coosa river to get
to my home. Father hns built ns a six
room bungalow, and it certainly Is nF®.
We live close to tfl’o churches'- ®n® '« ”
Methodist, to which we belong, and me other
is the Baptist. I am n brunetr-'. line',
brown hair and eyes, weigh 135 pounds .and
I nm 5 feet 3 inches tall. Guess how old I
will be the 12th of this month? We have
two horses, two colts and a large, black
mule. We also have three farms, one three
miles from ns and the third one six miles
from Rome. Gn. We have lived in the city
all our lives until we came to live in the
country in 1915. I like to ride horseback.
Do any of you all? I will answer nil cards
or letters received. I wish everyone all
kinds of good luck and kindest regards.
The Tri-Weekly Journal’s
Fashion Suggestions
HOW TO GET PATTEHNS
THE ATLANTA TRI-WEEK-
LY JOURNAL has made
arrangements with the
leading fashion design
ers of New York City for
a high-class fashion service
to its readers. Designs will be
carried in this paper and tho
reader may obtain a pattern
for same by sending 12 cents to
our FASHION DEPARTMENT tn
New York -City. The Journal will
also print monthly a 32-page
fashion magazine which can be
obtained for 5 cents per copy or
3 cents per copy if ordered at the
same time a pattern is ordered.
In ordering patterns and maga
zines write your name clearly on
a sheet of paper and enclose the
price, in stamps. Do not send
your letters to the Atlanta office
but direct them to—
FASHION DEPARTMENT.
TRI-WEEKLY JOURNAL,
22 East Eighteenth St..
New York City.
fl ft
i 1 /
vjj -
Lady’s Nightgown
A novel style of nightgown is the
tailored model No. 9045. The treat
ment of the front suggests the pa
jama coat, as the nightgown is dou
ble-breasted and fastens with frogs.
The back is gathered to a yoke.
The .lady’s nightgown, No. 9045, is
cut in sizes 36 to 46 inches bust
measure. Size 36 requires 4 7-8
yards 36-inch material.
Limited space prevents showing all
the new styles. We will send you
our 32 page fashion magazine cqn
taining all the good, new styles,
dressmaking helps, serial story, etc.,
for five cents postage prepaid or
three cents if order with a pattern.
Send fifteen cents for pattern and
magazine.
Grain Feeds for Layers
The feeder must use his own judg
ment in deciding how much grain to
give the hens, as the amount of feed
which they will eat varies with dif
ferent pens and at different seasons
of the year. They will eat more feed
in the spring while laying heavily
than in the summer and fall when
laying fewer eggs, experiments in
the poultry division of the United
States department of agriculture
show.
A fair general estimate is to feed
about one quart of scratch grains
and an equal weight of mash (about
one and a half quarts) daily to thir
teen hens of the general-purpose
breeds, such as Plymouth Rocks,
Rhode Island Reds, or Wyandottes,
or to sixteen hens of the smaller or
egg breeds. This would be about
seven and a half pounds each of
scratch grains and of mash daily to
100 Leghorns and about nine and a
half pounds of each to 100 general
purpose fowls.
If hens have free range or large
yards containing green feed a gen
eral-purpose hen will eat about sev
enty-five pounds of feed in a year
and a Leghorn will eat about fifty
five pounds, in addition to the green
stuff consumed.
Old hens require a much larger
amount of feed of all kinds than do
pullets to produce a dozen eggs.
It’s only married women who say
that all men are alike. Every girl
knows at least one man who is supe
rior to all others. ?
Aunt Julia and cousins, tell me all about
yourselves, and write to me soon.
Your niece and cousin,
HELEN GQL'LD HOWEL.
Cedar Bluff, Ala., Route 1, Box 210.
Hello, Aunt Julia! Is that you? So glad
to see you. Lancaster is my name. Good
morning, cousins! How are all of you by
the bunch? 1 am all O. K. What are you
all doing this cold and windy weather? 1
am busy most all of the time around and in
tbe house. We live on a farm and work to
make an honest living. There are six of
us in the family. I have three brothers,
one sister and mother. My father has been
dead a little more than twelve years. We
have had to work hard, although I do not
prefer city life. Country life is lone
some sometimes, but I think it is best if
we do get lonesome a little. Don’t you
country cousins think so? We live on sandy
land. No river or large body of water near
us, no high hills or mountains anywhere
around us. Hello,-Willard Hearington! I
would be delighted to hear from you (I for
get your postoffiee address, but you are in
Georgia). Don’t you cousins know that
Aunt Julia is a good woman to adopt a little
French orphan ? She surely must be. I
will not describe myself fully, but hope to
hear from some of you, anyway. I am a
girl, seventeen years old, brown eyes, black
hair. If 1 see this in print and hear from
you cousins I may call again some time.
Aunt Julia, I will thank you so sweetly to
see this in print in The Journal. Don't folk
get my address. Now, cousins, I will gladly
receive and answer all letters received.
Good-by, Aunt Julia and cousins.
CI,ARD LANCASTER.
Mauk, Gn., Route 1.
Dear Aunt Julia and Cousins: Here comes
n little boy nnd girl from South Carolina. I
I have never seen a letter from this part of
! this state. Mamma takes The Journal nnd
reads the cousins' letters to me, for I am
! too little to read very much. I will be five
' years old April 18. Please send me cards
then. I will answer all I receive. I have a
, little sister ten months old. Her birthday
; will be May sth. Santa Claus brought us a
bank-book apiece and we save all the money
we get until wo get a dollar, then we send it
to the hank. We live on a farm, and like it
fine. When I get big enough I will help
daddy In the field. We have a pig and a
calf for pets. We will make our letter
short, as It is the first one. Pieuse do not
let the wastebasket get this letter.
Two new cousins.
PAMA REX STOGNER.
MARY MAGDALENE STOGNER.
Lancaster, S. C., Route 8.
Wealth Possible Even for a Newsie;
Boy Makes $6,000, Supports Family
A PROFIT of twenty-five cents
a day that grew into a sav
ings account of $25,000 in
eight years—derived from
selling newspapers at Five Points!
That was the story that the Sun
day editor sent me chasing down
to Covington for at the crack of
dawn—or doom; I couldn’t tell
which when the alarm clock went
off the other morning'.
But the story that I really got.
from Harry Bernstein, the retired
newsie, who was reported to have
purchased a dry goods establish
ment at Covington, a residence on
Easy street and an automobile, was
a much more significant one than
that. It opens up a long vista of
thought, and should give us hus
tling Americans pause to ponder for
a moment why these foreigners of,
well, let us say. the middle class,
can come to America penniless,
handicapped by the barrier of lan
guage and customs, and sometimes
beat us at our own game.
Harry Bernstein, at bis post in
front of Torn Pitts’, was a familiar
figure to many of us—and he knew
at least one-half of Atlanta.’s pop
ulation by face and disposition if
not oy name —but how many of
us, I wonder, if we ever thought of
him at all, dreamed of the ambi
tions back of the alert eyes and
the lusty call: "Paper, Extra!”
When I asked him how he did
it, he smiled in a droll sort of way.
and said: “I didn’t —that was just
a yoke’—(Somebody. 1 couldn't un
derstand just who, and he couldn’t
spell it) —"said that he was going
to have that put in the paper, but
it wasn’t true at all.”
Harry Bernstein is thirty-eight
years old, small of stature, with
dark eyes and sleek black hair, is
a native of Russia, and still speaks
rather broken English. He and his
statement gave one an oddly baf
fled sort of feeling. It was a
“yoke,”—and yet undeniably he was
there, to all intents and purposes
part owner and co-partner in one
of Covington’s most prosperous
looking clothing and ready-to-wear
establishments, on its principal
business street, facing the green of
the city square.
“Well,” he said, ‘‘l deedn’t Deen
in America but seven year, and tn
Atlanta four year, so how could I
have save twenty-five t’ousand dol
lar? Me, married, with a wife and
two children! But I save in that,
four year over six t’ousand.” This
he said was deposited in the Third
National bank.
All values are relative, you know.
That’s why I contend, and I think
you’ll agree that six thousand saved
out of four years’ earnings from
the sale of newspapers, supporting
a wife and two children in these
days of the H. C. L„ —is a pretty
big performance.
"Was this six thousand in four
years just actual savings from
what you made selling papers, or
did you make any of it on invest
ments or speculation, or anything
of that sort?”
“Just savings. Sometimes I lend
’nother boy forty, maybe, hunder
dollar. He pay me few dollar, use
it six month, but that only once,
twice. No make much that way.”
“How did you manage to get -by
with living expenses, and save any
thing?" I questioned.
“Get by?” he asked, with a puz
zled expression, not sure of the
slang.
“They told us,” I elucidated,
“that you lived on about twenty
five cents a day.”
He laughed. The “yoke” was
getting funnier and funnier. “About
$2.50 a day, to eat, and pay rent of
$25 a month, at 389 Central ave
nue. It cost us ’bout SBO a month
PROPER LAUNDRY EQUIPMENT
REDUCES WASH-DAY DRUDGERY
Washing and ironing are among the
hardest of the regular household
tasks, and ways of lessening the
work are much needed in many
homes. The ideal of every house
keeper would be a separate room for
her laundry, with running water and
modern labor-saving devices. These
cannot be provided in every home, but
even where the arrangement and
equipment are necesarily very sim
ple it is often possible to make minor
changes or to plan the work in such
away that it will take less time and
strngth.
In orden days, tubs and wash
benches were brought into the kitchen
because water could be heated there
most conveniently, and from this
seems to have developed the idea that
the kitchen is the place for the laun
dry. The odors and steam from laun
dry work, however, are disagreeable
in a kitchen, and the handling of
soiled clothing in any room in which
food is prepared is highly objection
able. If clothes must be washed in
the kitchen, the preliminary sorting
should be done elsewhere.
In some sections, it is considered
preferable to have the washing done
out of doors or in a room outside of
the house. Otherwise the best place
for a laundry is usually either in a
room next to the kitchen or in a
basement room directly below it, be
cause this makes it possible to use
the same chimney, and, if the house
is equipped with running water, the
same water pipes for both rooms. A
basement laundry generally means
too many stairs for the housewife
while a room adjoining the kitchen
may enable her much more easily to
carry on or oversee the work in both
rooms at the same time.
Worker Worthy of Good Tools
Good equipment is as important as
right methods in laundry work. Both
decrease the labor, shorten the time,
and assist in producing better re
sults. Equipment need not be ex
pensive, but it should be chosen and
placed from the point of view of
service and for the comfort of tHb
worker.
The working surface of nearlv all
laundry equipment is usually set too
low, and the woman operating it is
so out of balance that she is soon
How Nervous Shock May Produce Diabetes;
Dr. Brown Explains Condition of Nerves
When stocks go down in New York,
diabetes goes up. says Dr. George W.
Crile, of Cleveland. And Dr. W.
Langdon Brown in his presidential
address to the Hunterian society
(London) related that he had often
found temporary glycosuria—the
most notbale symptom of diabetes—
in men who had merely watched a
football cup-tie without participating
in the match. He had noted the same
condition in junior naval officers on
whom great responsibilities had
fallen.
Dr. Brown explained these condi
tions as due to stimulation of the
sympathetic nervous system, which
showed itself in an exaggerated met
abolism, the first effect of which was
a more abundant absorption of sug
ars. Thus sugar is found in the se
cretion of the kidneys of persons who
have been affected by some great ex
citement or disappointment.
Not only the kidneys, however, but
other glands respond by abnormal
action under such conditions, for Dr.
Uncle Sam Advises Spinach
As one Best Little Cure-All
WASHINGTON.—-If you want to
be full of pep, to gain youth, vim
and vitality, to be a human dynamo;
if you want to do this and at the
same time reduce the effect of H.
C. L. upon your pocketbook, eat
spinach—just plain garden spinach,
that you usually pass up while you
reach for the baby French peas and
the tender asparagus.
So say officials of the United
States public health service, who
point out that the strangely vitaliz
ing power of spinach lies in its high
percentage of “vitamines.”
Animals deprived of their normal
supply of vitamines waste away and
to live.” This for a family of four,
you understand.
"When 1 start out,’’ he said, “I
deedn’t have but enough money to
buy few Journals. That firs’ day I
make 25 cents. But beezness get
better and I have make much as
S2B in two hours. T’ree year ago
I buy right to sell at Five Points —”
“Whom did you buy it from?”
“Well, you see the newsboys nave
a—a —” he groped for the proper
word, gesturing expressively with
his hands.
“A union?” I suggested.
“That’s it. A corner belong to a
certain boy, and nobody else can
sell there/ I pay $lO for Five
Points, and I have four boys sell
under me”
About three hundred papers :th
evening is a fair average, says
Harry Bernstein, and from six
o’clock until twelve on Saturday
night more than a thousand copies
of the Sunday papers are carried
away from Five Points by the
downtown crowds.
“During war,” he said, “I make
mos’ money on extras. People
couldn’t buy extras fast enough.”
Asked how much the average
newsie should clear on one of the
downtown corners, he said that S4O
to SSO was an easy weekly average.
“Selling newspapers is a beezness.
just like any other. You have to
work, if you make it pay. I have
lots friends buy paper off me; Some
times they .say they have not mon
ey then. I say, 'all right, take pa
per on, pay next time.’ Sometime
they pay next time. Sometime they
forget. That’s all right—profit—
less. I want take care my custom
ers.”
Harry Bernstein, as stated, came
from Russia seven years ago, from
a place which he spelled, Kirlen,
arriving, at Galveston, Tex. At Gal
veston, the Jewish relief, assisted
him in getting work. “I go work
.in pipe shop, Anniston, Ala., but
work too hard. I no can stand, so
I leave, come Atlanta.”
In Atlanta he decided to try the
newspaper game. After work he
learned to read and write, and im
prove his spoken English, at the
Educational Alliance on Capitol ave
nue.
“I no like Russia,” he said posi
tively. “A poor man cannot leeve
(he meant live) there, on account
police. They make heem pay too
much.”
“Taxes?” I questioned.
“No —no —just make him pay let
him leeve there.”
t’Graft?”
“Yes. I theenk you call it that.
They come say, ‘You got no beez
ness here. You got get out.’ Then
you geeve him, maybe, t’ree dollar,
and he leeve you alone till he want
more money.”
Asked how he happened to decide
on Covington as a permanent loca
tion and business investment, he
said: “Well, you see, my wife, her
sister husband in beezness here —so
I go in partnership with heem. I
marry seence I come America. My
wife been here eighteen year. She
Russian, too, but I not know her
until I come America.”
“I hate leave Atlanta,” he said.
“Mighty nice people there, but nice
people here too, and clothing beez
ness good beezness. No, I not care
go back Russia. America my home.
America give everybody chance.
American people, though, they not
like save. And eef you want be
take care of when you not able work,
you got save.”
Thus Harry Bernstein, both by
precept and example, emphasizes
what a very wise person said a long
time before him:
“It isn’t what you’ve earned,
When you’re old. Dog Tray,
It’s what you’ve saved.”
fatigued. Little of the, washing proc
ess is done in the bottom of the tub,
and the working height is about half
way up the side. For the average
worker the top rim of the tub should
be thirty-six inches from the floor;
in all cases the tubs should be
placed so that the worker does not
stoop from the shoulders but bends
at the hips, laundry specialists in
the United States department of
agriculture say. A portable wasn
tub may be easily raised or lowered
to the right height. If the top of the
washboard' is too high, it may be
lowered by cutting *off part of the
degs. The ironing table or board
should be so low that force from
the shoulder can be applied easily;
thirty-one inches is a good average
height.
Where no special room is provided
for the laundry and there are no set
tubs, a portable bench of the correct
height and size is convenient.
A wooden tub is difficult to keep
in good condition. If kept dry it is
likely to shrink and fall apart; if
kept m list enough to prevent shrink
ing, it is likely to become water
soaked and slimy, and may have a
disagreeable odor. A portable, gal
vanized iron tub is fairly light, dura
ble and easy to keep clean, but may
corrode. A fiber tub is still lighter,
is easily kept clean, and is durable
if left dry, but is more expensive
than an iron tub. Any portable tub
may have a hole bored in it and a
plug inserted so that water may be
drained from it without lifting the
tub. Hot and cold water can be piped
to a portable tub as well as to a
more expensive stationary one.
Wood, which is now little used,
has the same qualities for set tubs,
as for portable ones. Soapstone and
similar materials are cheaper than
porcelain, but their dark cplor makes
it more difficult to be sure that they
are clean Porcelain or enameled iron
tubs are heavily glazed and do not
rust or absorb grease. Both white
and yellow porcelain tubs are on
the market; the latter are cheape;
but the color may make it hard to
tell when the clothes are white. A
home laundry is often equipped with
two tubs, but when there is no
washing machine a thi’-d tub saves
much handling of the clothes.
Brown notes that epidemics of hyper
thyroidism—exaggerated action of
the thyroid gland—followed the Kish
ineff massacres, the San Francisco
earthquake and the air raids on Lon
don.
It seems that the sympathetic
nerves and the glands work in cor
relation; the pituitary, thyroid and
adrenals, which Increase katabolism
or the breaking down of protoplasm
into simpler elements for the purpos
es of excretion, are stimulated by
the sympathetic, while those that are
anabolic or increase the construction
of protoplasm from the simpler ele
ments—the pancreas, for instance—
are inhibited or .checked by the sym
pathetic.
While Dr. Brown disclaims a desire
to imply that nervous shock is al
ways the cause of diabetes, he claims
that this disease is most easily ex
plained by disturbance of the sym
pathetic nervous system produced by
emotional stresses and strains.
die. the officials say. If the vita
mines in their diet are reduced they
may live, but they become nonpro
ductive. On the other hand, if
guinea pigs, pigeons and other fa
vorites of the experimenter are fed
spinach three times a day, they perk
right up like a flivver on a double
ration of gas.
Spinach may be green, unimpres
sive looking stuff, but as a red blood
builder it has every other known
material of human subsistance tied
to the post, with the exception of
yeast, according to the government
scientist?.
Just start a little spinach bed in
your backyard or window box and
watch yourself develop into a human
dynamo.
MARY MEREDITH’S ADVICE
TO LONELY GIRLS AT HOME
Will you help a heart-broken girl?
I am twenty-one years old and have
been going with a man twenty-nine,
for some time. He loved be very
dearly or said he did and said that
we would get married when he got
home from war. Well, he came home
but when he came to see me, I would
not kiss him, though I did kiss him
before he left, but was sorry I did
it and would not kiss him on his re
turn. I love him yet and don’t be
lieve I will evei' love another, but he
would not come back to me for any
thing. Do you think he would if
I’d write to him asking him to come,
and what should I say if I wrote?
Do you think that he loved me and
thought me untrue? We were not en
gaged, though I think he took it for
granted. Tell me what to do, and
how to forget him and love another
if I must. I am fair complected,
light hair and blue eyes. What
color would suit me best? I am
too old to go to college and enter
freshman class. I will thank you
a thousand times if you can help
me. “JONTELL.”
Going to war, and seeing a dif
ferent people, and the new
knowledge of their ways, has
changed many of our soldier
boys, some of them were in love
with nice sweet American girls,
but aftei’ they were turned loose
on the other side, they promptly
forgot the giei they “left be
hind.” which-is nothing to their
credit. All I can say is this, I
do not believe the young man
loves you very deeply because if
he did, he would contrive to see
you. Love laughs at locksmiths,
and a man in love With a woman
will try every chance he has to
see her. Give him up, try to in
terest yourself in something
else or some other man. Do this,
as it is the means of making you
frget. Perhaps your friend will
see that you are not wearing your
heart on your sleeve for him and
he might return. Self-control
must be practiced in order that
you can adjust yourself to the
conditions. I do not think he
cares for you the way you wish
him. I do not think you are too
old to enter the freshman class
at college and it will be of the
greatest benefit to you.
I. am a man 46, and in love with a
girl 17. She is a verybeautiful girl,
and we were to be married when
she reached the age of eighteen. For
a while she seemed to care for me.
But now she tells me she cares for
me only as a friend, and wishes to
be released from her promise. There
is a boy nineteen whom she says
she loves dearly. What must I do?
I love her dearly and could give her
every comfort and pleasure money
can buy. I feel that I cannot live
without her. Both her people an£
mine approve of our engagement. 1
have a nephew, a young doctor, age
24, who also loves her. He is in a
position to give her every comfort,
and he says he will win her re
gardless of cost.
Advise me what to do, and oblige.
J. G. C.
Would you want a woman if
she did not love you. Possession
means nothing but misery to yott
both. , If the young lady asked
you to release her from her prom
ise to you, by all means do so,
for you will be most unhappy to
wed her knowing she cares
nothing for you. She has a
right to happiness and a right to
choose for herself the one sine
would love. I shall relate a case
to you I know so well. There
was a man about forty years
old in love with a. woman in
her twenties. She thought she
loved him until she met the
other man; the other man wanted
to marry her, a!nd she told him
“yes;” the first love went to ev
ery conceivable length to break
up the match, even after the
woman was square enough to go
to him and tell him how she felt
and asked him to release her.
She was half way engaged to
him with the promise of mar
riage in one or two years. That
was all. He was not in a posi
tion to marry her at the time
even if she had desired it. Do
you think he did right, or acted
honorably? Ido not. He tried
to bring disgrace and misery on
a woman who had done nothing,
and who had acted fair to him
all the way through. (Selfish
ness of man.) I cannot under
stand why a man should want
to marry a woman who cared
nothing for him, or the same
with a woman- It would be
worse than a life term in prison.
As I wrote to you not long ago
and you gave me such good advice
will write again. My birthday has
been since then.; I am now fourteen
years old. Do you think I am old
enough to go with the boys (just to
pass the time)? Would there be any
harm in my sister and I correspond
ing with some of Aunt Julia’s boy
friends? We do not write to the
same one. Can you give me any ad
vice about something to stop a per
son’s nose from bleeding? I am in
the seventh grade at school. Do you
think that is far enough for me to
be at my age? Don’t you think Win
throp college is a fine place for me
to go to finish my education? How
old must a girl be before she can
start going with boys? I just like
them for a grand time and fun, that
is all. I want to wait until I am
older to worry about love. Don't
you think I am right? How is my
handwriting? Your advice will be
appreciated. Hoping to see this in
print next week,
Lovingly yours,
SUNBEAM.
I think you are old enough
now to have a few boy
friends. You need not worry
about loving any of them, but it
is nice for boys and girls to get
together and have pleasant par
ties, and good times in general.
Get a nice lady to chaperon you,
. and have picnic parties. I don’t
' see any harm in your writing to
Aunt Julia’s boys and girls; it is
nice for boys and girls to form
such friendships and exchange
ideas. Girls and boys who live
in the country do not have the
things to amuse them like their
city sisters and brothers, there
fore letters through Aunt Julia’s
letter box encourages friendship
and promotes a fellow feeling
among the young people. For it
is human to want friends, espe
cially when one is lonely. You
had better see a doctor’about the
nose-bleed. If you can possibly
go to college do so. Girls start
to college at all ages from four
teen up. Prep schools first, then
•on to college later. There is no
set age a girl should be before
she has boy friends, but to go
with older men I do not think
proper for a real young girl to
do. Boys under nineteen are the
right age for girls between the
ages of thirteen and seventeen.
Older men ate too wise. Try to
write more slowly and form your
letters more cle'arly; your hand
writng shows a tendency toward
nervousness. Winthrop college
is very nice;-any college is good,
but none of them will be of any
benefit to you unless you apply
yourself.
Here comes a girl of fourteen
years old for advice. Am I too young
to have any boy friends? How might
I fix my hair as the puffs over the
ears do not become me.
Is it any harm for husband and
wife to be divorced? How is my
handwriting? Would you advise me
to go through college and then go
to work or would you go to college
about two years and then take a
business course? Please do not
print my address, but please print
my letter in next week’s paper so
I may see it. Thank you. F. E. P.
F. E. P. I do not think you j
are too young to have boy
friends. There is no harm for
girls your age to count boys as
her friends, so many mothers are
prone to be very strict about
their young daughters, not real
izing that it is human nature to
want to do the things in which
we are restricted. It is natural
in young people as well as older
ones. And if mothers would let' l
their young daughters 1 invite a
few boys and girls at home cc- ,
casionally and let them enjoy
themselves in a clean, wholesome
way, there will be fewer heart
..aches. I have seen this plan
worked out often with good re
sults.
If the puffs over your ears
are unbecoming. do not wear
th«GU U W Aa-d for' me
TUESDAY, JULY 6, 1920.
to tell you how to fix your hair,
but keep it brushed well and
nice and clean, and do not tie
bows of ribbon on it as bows are
out of date. A barrette is used
to confine the hair in a pompa
dour. Your handwriting is very
good. You can take a two years’
course at college and then take
up a business course, and you
will be better qualified to make
a success in the business world.
I haven’t the right to assume to
pass judgment on the divorce
question; circumstances alter
cases.
I am a little Florida girl coming
to you for advice. Please tell me
where I can publish a story. It is
my first story and I am thirteen
years old. I have a few little poems
also. Do you think I will ever make
a story writer? I am ready for the
sixth grade at school. I am small
for iny age. Is my handwriting
good enough? I only weigh seventy
five pounds. Do I weigh enough for
my age? I have gray eyes, brown
hair, medium complexion. What col
or do you think would suit me. best?
Please* answer through The Journal.
Lovingly,
• MAY /LOWER.
You could write to the leading
magazines such as the Ladies’
Home Journal, Good Housekeep
ing, Woman’s Hoome Companion,
or countless other magazines,
send in your manuscript, cleai'ly
written, words spelled right and
punctuated properly, and if the
story is worth printing, they will
notify you, if not, they will send
it back to you. That is the only
wav to have a story accepted.
Often one has to pay to have a
stor v printed. If you have a
leaning toward writing do not be
discouraged, but keep it up, and
later in life you may make qu’te
a success of it. Put down your
thoughts as they come to you.
and do not wait to assemble
them at any set time. Then you
will get the most beautiful ideas
and thoughts. Write always when
vou feel the Inspiration. You can
wear most any pretty shade, or
ccior.
I am a girl of fifteen coming to
you for advice. „
I have been going with a boy or
twenty-two and love him very dear
ly He left here about two months
ago and I have been corresponding
with him very regularly. He says
he loves me eand cant live with
out me. He has a good job and is
of a nice famly. He has
to marry him when I finish migh
school. Do you think I would be
doing right to marry him then.'
I have been going with another
bov of seventeen and he seems to be
fond of me. I don’t care a thing
about him and don’t like to keep his
company. Please tell me how to get
rid of ’ him without hurting his
feelings?
Is there any harm for a boy to
put his arm on the back of a car
around you? .
Thanking you for
You had better finish school,
nerhaps you will form a differ
ent opinion about marrying
then. I think I would leave that
to the future a little if I were
you. However, it will not hurt
to remain sweethearts until
that time. Then things will
work out for themselves. About
the other boy, you could always
have an engagement when he
wants to make one with you,
when he sees that you do not
care to have his society he will
stop asking you. No there isn t
any harm, it only looks badly
to other people, passing to see
a boy’s arm on the back of the
seat in an automobile. Lots
of times boys do that without
thinking.
Dear Madam: I will ask space in
your column, if you please, for some
advice. I live in south Florida. I
was corresponding with a girl up in
Georgia; finally she insisted tnat I
call to see her. It was quite a ways
to go, but I went, and when I got
there I thought more of her than
ever, and she seemed to think a great
deal of me. We kept on until we
were engaged, and expected to be
married soon. All at once she failed
to answer my letters, and I can t
hear a word from her. I have writ
ten her twice to know what was the
trouble, but she won’t answer me.
I am sure I loved her dearly at that
time, but her treating me like that
has gotten me to thinking maybe it
is best not to take up my» time with
such a girl. She is beautiful, and I
would have given my life for her till
this happened. What would you do
go to see her or just let her go?
Please answer this through The
Journal. I am, yours truly,
SOUTH FLORIDA GUY.
Don’t be a quitter. If you
were engaged to the young
lady, and you had every
reason to believe that she cared
for you, do not give up so read
. ily. I would certainly go to see
her if possible. That is the
proper thing to do. You must
not censure her too readily; find
out first and make every effort to
do so. Then if you haVe it from
the lady’s lips that she wishes to
be released from her promise,
then the only manly thing will be
to do as she, requests.
The Country Home
BY MRS. W. H. FELTON
The Awful Waste of Taxpayers’
Money
• Take the extravagance in leather
bought by the United States gov
ernment for one illustration. Perhaps
one may be able to understand why
leather shoes and leather goods have
gone to famine prices. During the
world war the United States pur
chased 400,000 horses. They were to
be used for cavalry, for artillery and
for ambulance and supply service.
To equip these horses the govern
ment bought harness sets to the
number of 2,800,000 more than eight
for each horse. Nine hundred and
forty-five thousand saddles, more
than seven for each horse, thirty
shoes for each horse, besides brushes,
leather saddlebags, and such like.
When the armistice was signed the
government had on hand 900 tons of
black harness leather, which had
cost $1,000,000. After the armistice
was signed the government bought
70,000 additional automobiles and
trucks. The same ships that brought
some of the soldier boys home carried
30,000 of them to Europe, sold them
over there for one-fifth of what they
cost and took pay in ten-year bonds,
worth less than 50 cents on the dol
lar. In this count is not included the
vast number of them purchased be
fore the armisitce. Many thousands
were nevei’ uncrated and were con
sumed with rust, some on this side
and some on the other side of the
Atlantic ocean. This is only, one In
stance of the criminal waste of leath
er and leather products of American
politicians.
Foreign nations now owe the United
States over $9,000,000,000. The inter
est on that borrowed money is more
than $450,000,000 annually. If they
pay only the interest it is going to
strain their credit. If this country
presses its claim we will also lose
their friendship. Eighteen months
ago and the armistice was signed. We
have not made peace with Germany
yet. We have not had a dollar of
interest yet.
England has spent many millions
building airplanes since the war end
ed. We spent millions building air
planes before the armistice and that
money has gone glimmering. We are
likely to be good customers for Eng
land for steamships, as we are to
purchase airplanes. We have loaned
to these allies since June 3, 1919,
nearly $400,000,000.
When the war began Germany had
600 airplanes and twenty dirigibles.
France had 1,200 and fifteen dirigi
bles.
The sum of $1,050,000,000 was ex
pended in the United States for air
plane production. Toward the close
of the war, according to General Per
shing, there were only 109 American- ;
made planes, resembling French
planes, had been received in Europe
in time to be used and not a single
gun of larger caliber. These official
facts I gather from the Congression
al Record and they were announced
on the floor of congress.
SAY “DIAMOND DYES”
Don’t streak or ruin your material
in a poor dye. Insist on “Diamond
Dyes.” Easy directions in package.
«.
[ GIRLS! MAKE A j
I LEMON BLEACH j
i - •
j f
• Lemons Whiten and Double t
1 Beauty of the Skin
Squeeze the juice of two lemons into a
bottle containing three ounces of Orchard
White which can be had at any drug
shake well and you have a quarter pizt
harmless and delightful lemon bleach tw
few cents.
Massage this sweetly fragrant lotion Intv
the face, neck, arms and hands each day*
then shortly note the beauty of your skin.
Famous stage beauties use lemon juleJ
to bleach and bring that soft, clear, rosy
white complexion. Lemons have always
been used as a freckle, sunburn and tan re
mover. Make this up nnd try it.—(Advt.)
WOMEN OF
MIDDLE age
May Pass the Critical Period
Safely and Comfortably by
Taking Lydia E„ Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound.
Summit. N. J.—“l have taken
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com-
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIirrri P oun d during
I Change of Life
I a ”'l * think it i*
I a good remedy in
such a condition.
... : W| I could not digest
* my food and had
/ /f much pain and
! burning in my
! |: stomach after
I L -W meals. I could
F s!w|l not sleep, had
i | 1 backache, and
■w..... worst of all were
the hot flashes. I saw in the papers
about Vegetable Compound so I tried
it. Now I feel all right and can work
better. ’You have my permission to
publish * this letter.” —V ictobi A
Koppl, 21 Oak Ridge Ave., Summit;
If you have warning symptoms such
as a sense of suffocation, hot flashes,
headaches, backache, dread of im
pending evil, timidity, sounds in the
ears, palpitation of the heart, sparks
before the eyes, irregularities,
pation, variable appetite,
inquietude and dizziness, get a bottle
of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound and begin taking the medi
cine at once. We know it will helj
you as it did Mrs. Koppl.
Send ask u« to send you either of these
wonderful, dazzling, renuino Tifnito Gem rin»s to wear for
10 days. If you can tell it from a diamond, send it back.
No.l. Solid gold No. 2. Solid sold No. 3. Solid void
mounting. Eight- Ladio a’ newest six-prong tooth
claw idesign Hat mounting. Has a mounting. Gusr ;
wideband. Almost guaranteed genu- anteedgenulneTif
a carat, guar an- in e Tifnite Gem, nite Gem. almost*
teed Tifnito gem. almost n curat. carat in sire.
In sending, send strip of paper fitting around second join
of finger. Pay only s4.f>o upon arrival; then pay only *3.00 pel
month until the price *l6.£>(» is paid for either one. Otherwls*
return the ring within ten days and we will refund any pay
mentmade. This offer is limited. Si nd while it holds good
Fh. Tlfnit. Gem Co., Dept. 776 , Chicago, 111.
Magnolia Blossom
MTHk
Women If Sick or Discouraged
We want to show you free of cost
what wonderful results MnKnolln Blos
som can accomplish.. If you suffer from
ailments peculiar to women or from
some form *of female trouble, write us
at once for a free box of Magnolia Blos
som. We know what it has done for so
many 'others and it may do the same
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SOUTH BEND REMEDY CO.,
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Rub-My-Tism is a great pain
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■a BW Vh an Blf Treated One Week
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for Free Trial Treatment. COLLUM DROP
SY REMEDY CO., DEPT. 0, ATLANTA, GA.
3 Rings and Bracelet FREE
Sell 8 boxes Rosebud Salva at 25c boi
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piles, catarrh, cofdb. bunions, etc. Return the n
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©BBlvr today
we trust
YOU r
Rosebud PertumeCo Box 102 Woodsboro.Md
111'f h Lll
v h S JI Ik B B
sip
“I TREAT ECZEMA FREE”
Just to prove that my scientific discovery
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lar
Send us $1.75 for Tae At
lanta Tiri-Weekly Journal one
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The Tri-Weekly Journal, At
lanta, Ga.
5