Atlanta tri-weekly journal. (Atlanta, GA.) 1920-19??, September 16, 1920, Page 5, Image 5

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“NOTHING BETTER AS A LAXATIVE" Asheville Lady Finds Black- Draught an Effective Rem edy in Her Family for Com mon Ailments of the Di gestive Organs Asheville, N. C.—Mrs. A. K. Jarvis, 4 1 Moodrow avenue, this city, says: “I have used and heard of Thedford’s Black-Draught for years, and I cer tainly have found it splendid for headache, sour stomach, indigestion and other ills that come from a de ranged liver. - “My husband and I keep Black- Draught in the house and think it is splendid to keep off sickness. I have used it in small doses as a laxative, and there 4s nothing better. “Black-Draught is a mild liver medicine . . . any child can take it. I have found it splendid with them for colds.” Thedford’s Black-Draught has benefited thousands in relieving liver ailments. It helps to drive bile poisons and other unhealthful mat ters out of the system. Black-Draught is a stand-by In thousands of family medicine chests. It should be in yours. Its use should help to keep the whole family well. Prompt treatment is often half the battle against many ailments. Get some from your druggist to day.—(Advt.) lend y«ar name, address. JUSC s ze and color, and we will /w send this fashionable sweater to you. You don’t pay one penny until the UJ B R wi sweater is delivered at your door by the /Ft // postman. This is a wonderful opportunity •7.1 B il jBF to get als 00 sweater for 12 98. Our pnej I ■y? J M Is an emsting bargain. Compare :t with f// / others and see for yourself. I • • / g Fashionable &-/ E Serviceable Sweater L'/l K 3 This i. B very beautiful sweater, made of heavy Aw •}-£< J?»t.>A’.V vjM £® yarn woven in fashionable ohaker knit etiich. ID a fttfDifirg XVv H cUjlffiaLV. A/UA aVSg; Ba a largo shawl collar, two serviceable pocket, and HJ-J'L! l AVls<wssS! S 3 a broad loose belt. Sweeter can be worn willi- 53; J- 1 H out belt if desired. A good heavy weight sweater, M. 1; QE excellent for chilly evenings or winter wear. Sires (W H to fit misses or ladies ?2 to <5. Color., navy blue, 44; BJ maroon, rad or gray. When ordering, be eure 04 ; dr j and give site and eolor. A 6* WifCzHljjj g $5.00 Reduced to $2.98 g Ira In 1914. before the war. a eweater of this quality sold for more Wk than 12 98. You can see what a big saving J am making y/u. WS Order now. while they last. Our price of $2.98 includes all tg, transportation charges. /. - -“‘ vJn a j Juat your name and address—no money, X S9??d MOW Also civa size and color. When sweater i. Hfllive-ed rt veir door, by the postman, pay him WV e Mfor the y .wlafcr ’We bav/paid the delivery Wk Surges. Wear the sweater—we know yoa will be pleased. If youdon’tfind ’tall that you expected £ 'mCA for any reason whatsoever, return it at our a expense and we will cheerfully ref ond your C«wa money at onee. Thisiacurrisk.net -// DaVC yours. Order by number 79. 02 waltr field ca,oepuioi4 Z' Delivery 3iis.MtehtunAv». 3 adaaßr W* Xi IWf 1■ f t r J SiiiiittiiiiniiiMUinn&SßM J j Release fir Women who Suffer j The multitude of American women who suffer terribly day after day n 0 and year after year from ills peculiar to theirsex is almost beyond belief 0 | —yet there is hardly a town or hamlet in the United States wherein / some woman, and often many, do not reside who have been restored A Y to health from some of the worst forms of female ills,and often avoided T I operations by taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. J 0 These Two Women Tell of Their Experience. 0 v Carrollton, Ky.—“l suffered almosi Onalaska, Wis.— “Every month I 7 • two years with female weakness. I had such pains in my back and lower £ could not walk any distance, ride or part of stomach I could not lie in bed. ■ take any exercise at all without resting. I suffered so it seemed as though I a / If I swept the floor or did any kind of would die, and I was not regular either. j A work it would bring my sickness on I suffered for a year and was unfit to do A I was weak and languid, had no energy, my housework, could only wash dishes and life was a misery to me. I was once in a while. I read an advertise- I under the care of a good physician for ment of what Lydia E. Pinkham’s X | several months and tried other remc- Vegetable Compound had done for L dies. 1 had read of Lydia E. Pinkham’s other women and decided to try it. It i p Vegetable Compound and decided to surely did wonders for me. I have 6 try it. After taking twelve bottles I no pains now and can do my own. S 1 found myself much improved and I house-work without any trouble at all. J took six more. I have never had any I will always praise your medicine as J 4 more trouble in that respect since. I Ido not believe there is a doctor that Z d have done all kinds of work and at can do as much good for female weak- v X present am an attendant at a State ness as can Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege- f I Hospital and am feeling fine. I shall table Compound and you may use t always recommend yourVegetableCom- these facts as a testimonial.” Mrs. H pound.”— Lillian Tharp, 824 South Gth Lester E. Warner, R. 1, Box 69, ? Street, Carrollton, Ky. Onalaska, Wis. I ft Thousands of Such Letters Prove the Curative Value of fl hfHnanmmsiiM 5 ■ Jinnii i pwifflnojfMWffl j i PINKH AMI y TTUJ AT'eA.’.:. I T’*.J •». i-ih’iLY JOURNAL. DOROTHY DIX TALKS KEEP YOUR_OWN HOME BY DOROTHY DIX The World’s Highest Paid Woman. Writer (Copyright. 1920, by the Wheeler Syndicate. Inc.) I AM a middle-aged woman, and have recently lost my husband. .All of my children are married and living in dis tant cities, and they are insistent that I give up my own home and come and live with them. “ ‘You will be so lonely living here by yourself, now that father is gone.’ they tell me, ‘you have worked enough, so come and spend the bal ance of your life in ease with us. Why toil just to keep up a house for yourself? Sell, or give away all the junk in this place and come to us. And it won’t be just living with one of us. You can visit around among us, and have nothing on earth to do except to amuse yourself.’ ‘‘Of course what my children say is reasonable, and I appreciate their loving desire to have me live with them and to make my life easy. Os course it will be lonely ri the old house with the man who brought me to it as a bride gone from it. but I cling to every brick and stone with a passion they do not understand. It seems to me It will kill me to leave it, and that I can have neither peace nor happiness save under the roof that has been a sanctuary to me so long. ‘ “You are a woman, and, I Imagine, a home-loving woman. Will you tell me what to do?” So writes a correspondent to me, and my advice to her is most em phatic. Stick to your own home, sister. Don’t let your children per suade you or brow-beat you into giving it up. They mean well, but they cannot even imagine what het home is to a ■woman your age. They do not know that after a woman has had a home of her own for thirty five or forty years she becomes a sort of human snail. She has car ried her house on her back so long that she has grown to its walls, and to even attempt to separate her from them is fatal. Inevitably you will be lonely liv ing by yourself, but you will not be so lonely as you will be in another’s home, no matter how welcome a guest you are, nor how kindly they treat you. For the thing you will never forget for a moment is that it is somebody else’s home and not your own. In her own house a woman .is a little queen. Her will As law, her taste stamps everything. Everyone who sits at her table, or by her fire side, must bow to her rule, but when she goes to live in another woman’s home, she abdicates her throne and becomes subject to that other wom an’s whim. This is just as true when a wom an goes to live with her children as when she goes to live with perfect strangers. Now it takes a woman of heroic mold to be able to step down and out gracefully, and that is why another almost always becomes peevish and jealous and suspicious and nagging, and raises the Old Harry with her in-laws just as soon as she breaks up her own home and goes to Mary’s or John’s. I say nothing here of the fact that statistics show that mothers in-law wreck more homes than all the vamps and sirens put together. I speak only of the misery, the homesickness, of the woman who. is idiotic enough to give up her own house and become a hanger-on in somebody else’s house, where she has to be either a. loathed butt inski, or else keep the emergency brake clamped down good and hard on every impulse, and wear a per petual Maxim silencer on her tongue. „ , As for mother knocking off work at middle age, and sitting down with folded hands to wait for death, that way lies suicide and madness. From fiftv to seventy is generally the healthiest time of a woman’s life, and she is a million times better off and happier in every way, for hav ing plenty to do. It’s the women who sit with idle hands who get senile and tiresome, and afflicted with mel ancholia. It’s the women who have no interests of their own ivho_ turn into scandal mongers and gossips. The best preventative In the world fcr rheumatism and gout is house work. The real elixir of perpetual youth is to keep busy, and the wom an who gives these up to go and sit in somebody's chimney corner signs her own death warrant. Therefore, I urge every woman to keep her own house, and do her own work, or to hang on to her job if she has one, and so live her own life to the very last minute that it is possible to her. her. And the comfort a woman gets out of being surrounded by hed own be longings is not to be told in words. A woman’s furniture to her consists not of mere tables and chairs, ana beds and china. They are memory and association; all that has made her life story, and they tell her tales, etc., which she is never weary of listening to. All this makes them far more precious in her sight, no matter how tawdry they are in reality, than the splen did period furnishings of her pros perous sons and daughters. These are her lares and menates and she ceases to worship them at her peril. A home is a woman’s anchor fi nancially as well as spiritually. I once asked Hetty Green what she would advise a woman to do with a small amount of money. “Buy a home,” she answered. “In good limes she can keep the home. If eveil days come, the home will keep her.” So again I urge every woman to keep her own home, and live in it. New Use for Fowls A farmer tells about the gather ing of tobacco worms by chickens. He sal dhe raised a large number of chickens in his barn and that his tobacco patch was located near the barn; that his chickens and turkeys ranged in the tobacco patch, and during this year he had not had to give any attention to tobacco worms which generally play havoc with plants unless taken off while the leaves are growing. He said he had oboserved the fowls walking around in the patch and had witnessed them gathering worms. ‘W eaponless Defense’ No. 2—“ The Front Hammer Lock” The upper picture is not a new college dance. It’s Miss n Grace Bliss starting out to put Earl Wight, husky young athlete, on his knees, by the -17 Iff famous ‘‘front hammer lock.” O i t The lower picture shows how he did it. r' < IB i ’ J i —” Sir li ilk B YEARL WIGHT (University of California Expert.) The assailant comes toward you, lifting his right arm to strike with a club or knife. You step forward, grasp his right wrist with your left hand. At the same time slip your right hand under his threatening arm, bringing your two hands together over his wrist, bearing down on his cramped forearm, as shown in the picture above. The lower picture shows the results. The Tri-Weekly Journal’s Fashion Hints A IA TK\ ml 111 >W \ -93 6 3 O (\ <Sw : ' G \ \ H/U Jol 3 n 033 Mrwk y ij/w, ■ 'll V m l || I U9J4-8 *| ' ll; | 'l II / 'If 3522 Hi * \ Il| I! ffl 0 9383 —Girl's Dress. Cut in sizes 6 to 14 years. Size 8 requires two and one-quarter yards thirty-six-inch material, with five-eighths yard thirty-six-inch contrasting. 9347 —Lady’s One-Piece Apron. Cut in sizes thirty-six, forty and forty-four inches bust measure. Size 36 requires four and one-eighth yards thirty-two-inch material and eight yards binding. 9456—Lady’s and Miss’ Smock. Cut in sizes 16 years, thirty-six, forty and forty-four bust measure. Size 36 requires two and one-eighth yards thirty-six-inch material. 9327 —Child’s Box-Plaited Dress. Cut in sizes 2 to 10 years. Size 8 requires two and one-quarter yards forty-inch material, with three eighths yard thirty-six-inch contrast ing. 9348 —Lady’s House Dress. Cui in sizes thirty-four to forty-two inches bust measure. Size 36 requires four and one-quarter yards thirty-six-inch material, with five-eighths yard thir ty-six-inch contrasting. 9489—Boy’s Suit. Cut in sizes 8 to 14 years. Size 8 requires two REFLECTIONS OF A BACHELOR GIRL BY HELEN ROWLAND (Copyright, 1920, by the Wheeler Syndicate, Inc.) a T THE end of the summer, the /\ all-absorbing question, in a man’s mind, is not “what is love?” but “which is love?” Sudden shock has been known to turn a woman’s hair white in a night —but then, sudden determination will always turn it red again, in a day. Isn’t Nature wonderful! Opposition is the life of love—as far as a man is concerned; coercion rolls off him like rainwater off oil skin. How antique furniture must suffer in the atmosphere of modern man ners! Fancy the feelings of a stately Colonial "sofa," for ihstnnce, whim a and one-eighth yards forty-four-inch material, with five-eighths yard thir ty-slx-lnch lining. 9511—Lady’s Four-Piece Skirt. Cut in sizes twenty-six to thirty-two inches waist measure. Size 26 re quires three and one-eighth yards thirty-six-inch material or three yards forty-four-inch material. 9633 —Lady’s Dress. Cut in sizes thirty-six to forty-two inches bust measure. Size 36 requires three and five-eighths yards thirty-six-inch ma terial and three-quarter yard thirty six-inch contrasting for trimming. All Patterns—l 2 Cents Our thirty-two- page Fashion Mag azine, containing all the good, new styles, dressmaking hints, etc., sent for 5 cents, or 3 cents, if ordered with a pattern. One pattern and one Fashion Magazine for 15 cents. In ordering patterns and maga zines write your name clearly on a sheet of paper and inclose the price, in stamps. Do not send your letters to the Atlanta office, but direct them to FASHION DEPARTMENT, ATLANTA JOURNAL, 32 East Sighteenth St. New York City young girl sits on it with crossed knees and discusses Freud, divorce, or hygienic kissing, with a young man who calmly puffs his cigarette in her face. When a confirmed bachelor girl and a professed woman-hater start in for a summer of platonic friendship, it is time to begin saving for the wedding presents. Some wives, who are just begin ning to get acquainted with their husbands, these days, are shocked to discover that a lot of the little fail ings they attributed to John Barley corn continue to flourish quite as well on aqua pura. By the time a woman has suc ceeded in making herself over ac cording to a. man’s ideal, she usually discovers that he has found another “Ideal.” Riches won’t buy love —but a man fondly fancies that they will buy a good imitation, that will last just as long as he will have any use for it, anyhow. Making a grass-widow of a green eyed woman is carrying gold te the Yukon. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER Isl, 1020. OUR HOUSEHOLD CONDUCTED BY LIZZIE O.THOMAS Prize Pickles and a Monday Dinner The months of August and Sep tember carry two distinct lines of responsibility for mothers and house keepers. Schools usually begin the first of September and there must be some new clothes for the children. No matter how many or how few new clothes they had all summer there must be additions if possible, and I am indeed sorry for the younger children who cannot have the new outfit. Older ones may have been raised sensibly and can “see reason,” but life is more serious with the primary classes, they take things more to heart, and it nearly kills them to be different from their play mates. I knew a little girl whose linen aprons were an eye-sore be-1 cause all the others wore gingham Her parents were not snobs, they 1 would not tell her that she was bet ter dressed, and I doubt it that would have comforted her. The other line of responsibility is gathering up the fragments, utilizing the small tomatoes, the okra and lima beans. It is astonishing what some people like. The Farmer and I were talking over old times, things people once liked and what a blessing the can ning clubs have been to homes Plenty of people used to eat the worst mixtures and think them fine. Cucumber pickles are one of- the things easy to spoil. Put up in stuff about as sour as the rinse water of a molasses barrel, soft and tough and a sickly hue they are material and labor wasted. One does not need vinegar so acid that it eats beets and cucumbers, but one wants a sour taste. Pickles are not supposed to be food, a relish is not supposed to be eaten in the quantities as cabbage and beans, and the lining to one’s stom ach sooner or later rebels when whole meals are made off of cucum ber pickles and cake. Here is a recipe that is not to be excelled if you get sure enough vinegar. Most of you have cucumbers in brine, many, I hope, have young beans in brine; if not in brine, see if these late rains have not put new beans on your vines. Put this recipe in your book for next year if you do not use it now. I may not be on the earth then, or I may not be able to send you this recipe, for I never “carry them in my head.” If you have had your cucumbers, beans, mangoes, or whatever it is, in brine I two weeks and are ready to put them ip, pick them over carefullly, reject ' ing the soft or speckled. Wash the dcklcls and put in cold water for wenty-four hours. Change to fresh i and lelave for another twenty-four hours. Line a porcelain or alum inum kettle with green grape leaves and pack in the pickles, scattering a lilttie alum over each lelayer. A piece the size of a walnut will fur nish crushed alum for a two-gallon kettlle. After you put in your pickles cover with the green vine leaves MARY MEREDITH’S ADVICE TO LONELY GIRLS AT HOME I am a girl of sixteen years of age coming to you for advice. I have finished the ninth grade at school, and want very much to complete my education. Do you know of any place where I could work my way through. There is a boy age nine teen years old, wrote me a letter and put silly poetry in it. • He is of a low, ignorant class of people. I don’t want to hurt his feelings as he used to live close by here. Would you answer his letter? If I do he will keep on writing and I don’t want to have anything to do with him. I am five feet, four inches tall and weigh one hundred and thir ty pounds. Do I weigh enough for my height? Is brown Oxfords sty lish? Do you thing a cerise hat and old rose dress would look well together? Is it all right to shake hands with an old acquaintance on the street? My shoulders are stoop ed, what can I do to straighten them? Is egg shampoo good for hair? Do you think it any harm for a girl to go to the picture show with a bov alone? Is my handwrit ing alright? Please answer all my questions through The Journal? BLUE EYES NO. 2. You might write a letter to Mr. Wardlaw and ask him about your education. He is superin tendent of the Atlanta schools here. And if you will state ex actly what you wish to do, I am sure he will help you. I am unable to give you further in formation. Ignore the letters from the boy you mentioned, or else send them back to him unopen ed. That is the best way to rid yourself of him. If he has one grain of sense he will see that you do not want his company or anything to do with him. Either do this or write him a polite formal note and tell him plainly you do not care to have him write to you. Use your good sense in wording the note so it Will not sound in sulting; your weight is suf ficient. Brown Oxfords are al ways good style. Cerise and old rose do not harmonize at all to gether. It is perfectly proper to shake hands with an old ac quaintance. Try taking physi cal culture. Learn to take deep breaths in the open air and walk with shoulders thrown hack. Build up your general health by “Little Country Theater” Lets Rural Communities e * Stage Own Entertainment NEW YORK. —As a step toward making country life so attractive that the young folks will not want to leave the farms, the department of rural organization of the New York State College of Agriculture this year is again co-operating with the state fair officials in conducting “the little country theater” as one of the features of this seasons ex position at Syracuse. The venture at the last fair was real innovation, attracting interest throughout the country in dramatic and country life circles; it was term ed by critics “the most unique ex periment of all.’” As last year, the main interest will be a group of one-act plays — one old one, "The Neighbors,” by Zona Gale, the hit of last season, and four new ones. Besides this, the workers intend to branch out -in a new direction and run a model demonstration stage, so that all in terested can see how it works. Brief lectures will be given on the rural dramatic movements in other states, and other information pertaining to the community theater movement Educational motion pictures will be on the program, and experiments in community singing will be tried. Capacity Houses the Bule Although capacity houses were played to last year, some 6,900 per sons in all, the influence of the work will be extended if possible. The demonstration is to show how really worthwhile plays can be put on by a comparatively inexperienced yet sincere group of actors, in a building unpretentious for dramatic entertainment, such as a church, school, garage, barn, or any avail able hall, would afford. The equip ment and scenery are such that any one can- make and can be set up and used wherever there is space. The idea of the experiment is to show the people of the small com munity that thir dramatic entertain ment lies not in the occasional road show or the movies, but is within their ability to provide for them selves. How Plays Startea The Cornell Dramatic club, which will present the plays, has been ex istent now for twelve years and for five years has been conducting a “little theater" In the Cornell com munity. At first the work was con fined to a comparative few, and the organization was obscure, but it has three deep, fill with cold water, cover the kettle closely to keep in the steam and simmer five hours. Do not let it boil once. Then take out the “greened” pickles and drop in ice water, or as cold as possible; leave them in it while you are heating the vinegar, good apple vinegar. To each gallon allow one cupful of sugar, three dozen whole peppers (the un ground black pepper), three dozen whole cloves, half as much alspice, one dozen blades of mace and a tea spoonful of celery seed. Bil five minutes, put the drained pickles in ; a stone crock or jar and cover with the boiling spiced vinegar. Two days later reheat the vinegar and pour it while hot over the pickles in the crock or jar. Repeat this in four days and again in six days. Get some stiff paper and a stout cord and tie over the jar or crock and put in a cool place. Forget them until Thanksgiving, then add half a cup ful of sugar for two gallons of vine gar and serve some to your guests, and if thev do not want your recipe It will prove that they are not used to good pickles. I have had this sort good af ter a year’s keeping but every month after I began to use it I added a cup of sugar to the vine gar, if it averaged two gallons and that keeps the vinegar better fla vored. It will pay you to get out your stone jars and your mother s way of tying a cloth and some stitf paper over the jar. Never let any one put a fork or spoon in any sort of pickle untill you dip it in hot water and are sure it is absolutely free from grease. Your vinegar will certainly spoil or be “killed” if grease gets in your pickle jar. , It is raining, The Farmer has a cold that has almost got him by the throat. Our appetites are not encouraging at such times and this is going to be our six o clock din ner, only of course, three of us will not need this quantity. It will be a change and I can use the left-overs, macaroni, baked beef and brown gravy. A good Monday disn: One pint of cold boiled macaroni, one pint of stewed or canned to matoes, one pint of finely chopped beef, mutton or lean pork, one and a half pints of fine bread crumbs, three onions chopped fine and fried in four tableslioonfuls of butter, one teaspoonlui of salt and almost as much pepper. Mince a green sweet pepper or two, butter a fire proof baking dish, put in a layer of crumbs, then meat, macaroni, tomatoes, and last a layer of crumbs, mix the minced peppers with the tomatoes. Sprinkle each layer with the salt and pepper, add one and a half pints of boiling water to the fried onions: pour them over the filled dish, dot with butter and bake slowly an hour, brown the top and serve. getting plenty of rest and healthful food. It is proper to go with a boy to the movies alone, provided he is the right sort of boy. If he isn’t your instinct will tell you, then do not go again. Your handwriting is very good. I am a boy of thirteen summers. I am freckled, have brown eyes and black hair. Would a uniform be come me? Was it any harm for me to give my girl friend my ring? Ev eryone teases me about it. Excuse mv long letter. Sign mv name, FRECKLES AND TAN. I am sorrv you haven’t heard from me sooner. I just came across your letter; I am sure a uniform would look • fine on you. No. I don’t think you caused any particular trouble when you gave your little girl friend your ring, and don’t pay any attention to those who tease you. They will get tired after ■ a while and quit. We are two lonely girls coming to you for advice. I, “Peggy,” am 17 years old, 5 feet 6 inches, weigh 144 pounds. I have large brown eyes and fair complexion and brown curly hair. I "Saflanders,” am 15 years old, five feet tall, weigh 112 and am a typical blonde. We seem to be very attractive but none of the boys rave over us (the ones we like). There are some nice boys and girls that we associate with near our home. Please tell us how to win these boys. They are very cute. Now these boys seem to like two other girls better than they Co us, although they seem to be good friends to us both. Do you think we are too young to have regular beaus? Please answer in next Journal as we are very anxious to hear from you. PEGGY AND SAFLANDER. You two girls would be more attractive if you didn’t think so much of your looks. Being vain and conceited lessens any girl’s attractiveness. Be kind, ‘consid erate, and bright without being flip. Above all, be sincere. When you are forgetful of “self” then others are quick to recognize your true worth. Try to choose an ideal woman from some good book. It will help you to be come attractive. People are quick to see the sterling quali ties within us if we try to live up to the highest ideals. steadily gained in ability and pres tige. Starting with a aozen or so earnest workers and a play or so a year, the club has now reached a point where last season there were over 250 applicants for work in the Organization and a group of plays a month put on. The stage, too, i s a growth; in the beginning it was a mere platform in a lecture hall, but now is furnished with adequate equipment, all of which was built by the members of the club. Movement Spreads The movement has spread from out of the bounds of the undergrad uate body; the audiences at first were made up largely of students, but now a good half of them is made up of the older people of the com munity. Not only that, but last year the club had the pleasure of having these older folk catch the spirit and give a play under the club’s aus pices. The “little theater” movement has succeeded in the Cornell community because there was a ened for it, and th college thinks it will succeed in other places for the same reason. The demonstration at the fair Is to show the best solutions of ama teur problems, as they have been worked at practically by an organi zation and a director that has had every problem to face and has come through with permanent success. New York Mines Coal At Bottom of Sea NEW YORK.—CoaI mining at the bottom of Long Island Sound has proved successful, it was announc ono toda y in a bulletin stating that 300 tons of fine bituminous coal had been removed at a depth of sixtv feet. The coal was brought up by the latest invention of Simon Lake, in ventor of the submarine, designed to salvage cargoes from sunken ships. Long Island Sound, a graveyard of wrecks, is regarded as an ex tremely profitable coal field at the very doors es New York and New England. Three salvaging equipments are about to be put to work capable of recovering 2,000 tons a day. Ships sunk during the war could yield 20,- 000,000 tons of coal. itaMaPar Snap up thia chance to pet 2 splendid garments - the price of ona. A moat beautiful skirt at astunn S bargain and a petticoat ah lately free. Not a penny to r with order Only s our request ■ 1 -noney/and you get by mail dh‘« 1 this W’onderful.Btylißh.well m . i skirt md also the free pcttic i i —the petticoat included if .’ S', send right now. The numb. of free petticoat* ia limib I Wirt So don’t wait. Get couponu> Yjr. poet card in mail today. Sicilian AMOHAIR fi Skirt Beautiful Model Splendid Sicilian Mohf efoth. Looks like sil'C Skirt gathered at be < with double shirrin' : ?x>: '■'Ste? • ' Wide detachnole be ; F ancy trimmed pec!. • v finished with imitat g nmpSsS ayftft : : : & K?.: buttons’ and butts » 5? holes. Silk fringe tri’ ’. & Y" med pockets. Ex X:copy of verv cor J : model. You ll be pf« <W' to own ■ tnr,n ’ v ekirt nnd arnnsed wl » iWvu . £ W ® w . i t h o?. h ? t - N'-'V blu», Hack a Comes In all nizes. No extra ebnrrea. Giv.- waist, hip nd front length. - Pries £4.9C. Yaffetlnr Petticoat Frio. C Kc. EXI47JI. fejl 1 FeMcoat yj 3 Simian Skirt eon), this sol :. .idd< cticoat rent with the skirt Good quality taf- : : :yi- fetinc. Deep flounce, smartly trimmed with clusters of air tueka, finished nt bott« m with /?./»' knito plaited ruille. Elastic tr.ttfMkP wtv ;th:»nd. Front length I!2 t 042 J inches. Hip measures up to 45 Color blade. This apler.did petticoat is free. Nothing to pr, at any time. Sinipiy order the Sicilian Mohair Skirt and y» get tnc free petticoatr’Rht along with skirt. . Send no money, not a penny. Justyoa* reque-. ■ we .''end the stylish skirt and the fr ■ ■ uj pe ». ; con t Only one free petticoat to each pci . eon will be sent with skirt. Send the coupon now. O C3E& CSESS CfIUA! CCJTB EBCOOI BONB GOCB MNM ■■■■ Cl Dept. 7580. Chics: Send the Sicilian Mohair Skirt No. 8X14791 and the <r i tafTetinepetticoat. When they arrive, I will pay £4.98 l<i the skirt; nothing for tho p -tticoat. It not satisfied after e.i ! amination, I will return both and you will refund my moncj Lengthin. Widthin Hipin. Color Name Address Thin Model—2s Year # GelddiHed Case 0 | W Adjusted—’r”"! l To Temperature v A y fiJ To Isochronism gfZg® tt J|| To the Second VUcMF A MONTH No Money! You Don’B Risk A Cent when you deal with Harris-Goar Co. Merely Bend your name and addressXposta! will do) bo that we may place this superb watch in your own hands for free examina tion. We want to prove to you, as we have to thousands of others, that this in the world’s greatest 19 Jewel watch, and that OUT price is the lowest. Write us Today l We want to send you this watch on 80 days’ Free Trial. We have trusted wajre-camers everywhere for more than 20 years, and we will trust you. Uur t!at7!nsi will bo mailed yon same day Sfyr. w: hear f-om you. it is full of Watches, Diamonds—real bargains—l he name an vre carry In our largo branch stores. Wo often oave our customers a third, besides giving them easy terms. Send your name—do It today. Hakris-Goar Company Dept. 13S IlngeMuCtty, Miaeoarl j (GET A FEATHEOED SAVE 1 25-lb. bed, 1 pair 6-Ib. pillows, 1 pair blankets full size. 1 counterpane largo site, all for 510.E5. (Retailvaluo|3o.oo.) Same as above with 80-lb. bed. Jl9 95; with 351 b. bed, $20.95; with 40-lb.bed, 321.95. Beds alone 25-lb., $10.95; 30-lb., $11.95; S6-lb., $12.96; 40-lb., sl3 95. Two 21-2 lb. pillows, $1.95. New feathers, best ticking. $1,000.00 cash deposit in bank to guarantee satisfaction or money bask. Mail order today or write for new Catalog. SANITARY BEDDING COMPANY, Department 10E Cherlotte, N, C. how to buy direct from the feather market of the world and get the utmost for your money. Why lake clianeoal We protect you with our low priced legal ffunrimto'* nnd ?‘2,fioo guaranty bond. Write today for Big Bargain Feather Bed Book and samples FKEK. Agents wanted everywhere. 1 , Lewis Feather Bed & hllow Co., Peptic jNpshville f Ten». New Feather Beds Only $14.70 Now Pillows, $2.80 per pr. New. Odorless. Sanitary and Dustless Feathers. Best Ticking. Satisfaction Guaranteed. Write for new catalog and bargain offer. Southern Feather & Pillow Co., Dept. 18, Greens boro, N. C. all rDri? -rßffjri^jfc£j(lol ( l -plated Laval- “"l Chain, ■<l iair Earbobs. Gold- CBK Expansion S 9.ffu Vi#- Bracelet with Im. 8 KA Watch, guaranteed ll it.v and 3 Gnld- WU r'ated Rings ALL Xs/ x’T FP.EK for selling ?. 9. . „ . - ©sM«bCsid3i>aaw®i. e ] ry a t io o sad,, Columbia Novelty Co.. Dep. 361. East Boston, Mass, roggffSwAzr- Laco Curtains,Rogers B- WUZniy*^r^! s ‘ lv * r Seto, fine Lockets, ’EM SS ; Xte iji LaValliorsand.manyother »»“• ‘Srizhs valuable presents for sell ’our beautiful Art & Ke* ligious pictures at lOcts. each. *2.00 and chooro preniiem wanted, according to big lift. HAY ART CO,. Dept. CHICAGO, ILL. Clear Baby’s Skin With Cuticura j( Soap and Talcum Soap,Ointment,Talcum,2se.every where. Foreamplef address: CuticuraLabors.torles.Dept. U Malden, Mass. —"w fl' Y. H -J* t*»l» J«welry layoara for Miller onlv < Mentho Nora tfalro at 2g Wonder* w ful for eatarrb. eut*. barns, ate Order todA* Wbea sold rotaru 01 60 and aU 0 Flaeea are yourij $. SUFHT COMPAMT, BOX 354 Groennllg, p* th,s NOVA-TONE TALKING MACHINE f f Cmo Mshogtny fw.itb, enameled puls J /.,lrwr~..rj»~- Jinir.l r,> to oU «ceCen 7^teproduccr, enjoyment lor all. Sell 12 1 bores Menl.’to-Nova Sslve, great fol JT ~~ cuU ’ bum*, mQuenza. etc. Return $3 Jf I . ... 1 ard th* machine is yoina. Guaranteed. • f ' I • Records fr** Order today. Address, ‘ \ U. S. CO., Box m, Greenville, Pa. GOITRE I bars an honest, proven remedy for K soitra (big neck). It checks the P > a growth at once, reduces the enlarge. £ J \ ment, stope pain and distress and re- 'WjF W llereslnallttle while. Pay when well. ok Tellyourfrlends about this. Write meatonce. DR. ROCK.S Dept 2 J 737, Mllwaukw, Wit. rfgjmg FITS If you have Epilepsy, Fits, Fallfag BMto ness or Convulsions—uo matter how !>«•*• write today for lay FREE trial I'sed successful!}’ 25 years. Give age explain case. Dr. C. M. Simpson, !lth St., Cleveland, Qkr~' 5