Atlanta tri-weekly journal. (Atlanta, GA.) 1920-19??, October 12, 1920, Page 5, Image 5

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"DANDERINE” Girls! Save Your Hair Make It Abundant! \ Sill lm”>fc.*Jatejy after a i assage, your hair takes on new life, luster and wondrous beauty, appear ing twice as heavy and plentiful, be cause each hair seems to fluff and thicken. Don’t let your hair stay lifeless, colorless, plain or scraggly Yon, too, want lots of long, strong, beautiful hair. A 35-cent bottle of delightful “Danderine’’ freshens your scalp, checks dandruff and falling hair. This stimulating “beauty-tonic” gives to thin, dull, fading hair that youthful brightness and abundant thickness—All Druggists.—(Advt.) FOR EXCESSIVE URIC ACID USE THE WILLIAMS TKEAWENT 75 Cent Bottle (32 Doses) FREE Just because you start the day worried and tired, stiff legs and arms, sore muscles and aching head, burning and bearing down pains in the back—WOßN OUT before the day be gins—do not think you have to stay in this condition. Get Well! Feel fine! Be free from pains, stiff joints, sore muscles, aching back or kidney trouble, caused by body-made Acids. Get more sleep. If your rest is broken or yon suffer from bladder weakness with burn ing, scalding pains, you will welcome the rest and comfort THE WILLIAMS TREAT MENT gives. W« will give you a 75 cent bottle (32 doses.) WE know The WILLIAMS TREAT MENT will end Kidney and Bladder troubles, Rheumatism and all other ailments, caused by excessive Uric Acid no matter how old, chronic or stubborn your condition. Send this notice with your home address and 10 cents to help pay part of postage, packing, etc., to THE DR. D. A. WIL LIAMS CO.. Dept. T 55 Postoffice Bldg., Ea*t Hampton, Ct. You will receive by paid parcel post, our regular 75 cent bottle (32 Doses) without in curring any obligations. Only one bottle free to same family or ad dress. No attention given second requests. Uaed by hundreds of thousands since 1892. (Advt.) ERH Em'/ / |ggp< ' q |H LISTEN I Let no one coax you gSa into buying feather beds or bed* g| ding before you see our BOOK OF FEATHER FACTS and SH BEDDING BARGAINS. We raa are the only manufacturers sell* ingdirect-by-mail at FACTORY Pa prices and guarantee to undersell ®U others. Beware of Imitators 1| and others who palm off shoddy, gS lumpy beds under pretense of giv* I ing bargains. Buy genuine PUR* I ITY BRAND beds and pillows. They are sanitary, odorless, 9 germless. Only new feathers and 3 government-standard 8 oz. tick* I ing used. Equipped with im* ,\| proved air ventilators. Four S national banka endorse our B legal guarantee of satisfac rion or money back. ■ WRITE TODAY for the PURITY ■ BEDDING BOOK—it’s free. REP* I RESENTATIVES WANTED, good ■ money. Purity Bedding Company I Dept. 319 Nashville, Tenn. Feather Bed Outfit Worth $33.50 Now On ly WaSb Sl9 - 50 XjGl'I 111 JUST THINK OF IT! This complete outfit for only Our Big Now Catalog FREE Jl9 50; consisting of 1 flrs«-c1... 3®-lb. new faath.r bed: 1 pair •-lb. new feather pillows, ono pair full .Izo bed blanket. and one tull.elzo bod spread. The feathers are all now, live, clean end sanitary and covered with beet-grade 8-oz. A. C. *. I.athar-proof ticking. Positively thn biggest bed bargains ever offered. Money.Osek Cuaranto.. Mai! money-order for 119.50 now and we will ship you thia bar gain at once, or maii us your name and address and we will promptly mail you onr bargain catalog, with order blanks, hook references, ete. Biggest bargains you ever saw Our prices save more than half. SOUTHERN FEATHER A PILLOW CO., t popartmont 15 GREENSBORO- N. C. GET A FEATHEMED SAVE 1 25-lb. bed. 1 pair B-lb. pillows, 1 blankets, foil site, 1 counterpane large size, all for #15.95 wrJSSt (lietail value $27.00) Baoae as above with 20-lb. bed $18.95; with 85-lb. bed #17.95; with 40-lb. bed $18.95. Bed, alone 25-lb. #10.95; 30-lb. #11.95; 35-lb. #12.95; 40-lb. #13.05. Two 2 1-2 lb. pillows #1.95. New feathers, best ticking. 81.000.00 cash deposit In bank to guarantee satisfaction or money back. Mail order today or write for new Catalog. SANITARY REDDING COMPANY, Department 105 Charlotte, Na C. FREE and Chain, pair Earoobs. Gold vlated Expansion Or Til Bracelet with Im. U Watch, guaranteed 5 JtSza ■ tnll S and :> Gold- MBSEBSI r AJ % / XSjgSßr I’lated Rings A).I. W V FREE for gelling only 15 pieces Jew dry at 100 each. Columbia Novelty Co.. Den. 301, East Boston. Mass. OTTJ Featherßed IjjljJL-*** Bargain Bock This book shows you how tn huy the best direct from tfcr featberCwbed market ot the world and will save you monevJ \ Yos positively make »o mistake it you order A from us nt our rock bottom factory prices Also tells about our 30-day free trial offer XgrJcX Write for (t today. Agent? wanted everywhere. - Jyl. Uw|i Feather Bti C»- PißLfiatjflutoHlt, Tun.J [ioy’t Air Rifle This Rifle free for selling only 26 pieces of our Jewelry at 10c each. Jewelrv and Rifle sent prepaid. F—iy V'-t-'i c.*.. Dept. 460. Erst M*<« THE ATLANTA TRI-WEEKLY JOURNAL. AUNT JULIA’S LETTER BOX “Help for the Helpless—Kindness to All Dumb Things” RULES No unsigned letters printed. No letter written on both sides of paper printed. All letters not to exceed 150 to 200 words. Dear Children: I went, as you will see by the paper, to the Berrj’ school at Rome, and I am so glad you decided to care for a child at Faith cottage. It is just the very loveliest place for little motherless children in the world. How I did wish for you all.. Saw Gladys Ellerby. You remember she was the first one of our girls to go, and Flora Morrison and her sister and several other of our girls who went because Gladys and Flora were there. You’ll see the story. They wanted to know all about the cousins and I had a copy of the paper and sent to the girls’ school so they could keep up with what we are doing and they promised to write and tell us what they are doing. Won’t you be glad to hear? Lovingly, AUNT JULIA. Dear Friends: A little more than a year ago I enlisted in the navy, and left for training at Gulfport, Miss. I enlisted as hospital apprentice, second class. After six weeks at the station I made H. A., first class, aud three months later made phar macist mate, third class. After a six months' stay nt Gulfport, I requested duty on board the U. S. S. Dela ware, and in less than two weeks my re quest was approved and I was on my way to Boston. Mass., where I went aboard this ship, known and recognized as the “Speed King.” She fired the first shot for the great nation, whose flag she proudly flies, in the world war to avenge the sinking of the Lusitania. While overseas she was called the “Lorie Wolf” by the allied na tions, having won her name by going alone wherever duty called her. There are twelve humfred of us aboard, all good fellows. The ship is a city within itself, electric lights, telephone system, barber shop, ice plant, canteen, postoffice and everything. We have the best of movies every night, band concerts, a library, a ship paper, which, besides giving “local news,” gives wireless messages from the outside world every day. Reveille is 6 a. m.; breakfast, 7:30 to 8 o’clock: “colors” and then the routine work, drills, etc., until 11:30 o’clock, dinner at noon, then in the afternoon the different divisions have instructions for about an hour; the remaining part of the day is given over as the sailors like best, to read or "calk off” (navy for sleeping); supper is 6:30 o’clock, then the movies and band. I can only touch the “high spots,” as space forbids a broader description of navy life. At present we are at the southern drill grounds, Hampton Roads, Va., for gen eral battle practice. With us are the dread naughts Oklahoma, Nevada, Utah, Arizona, Pennsylvania and Florida. All the after noon I stood on the quarter deck and watched the Florida firing broadside at the target being towed from her stern; as her guns thundreded and volumes of smoke arose, the wake of the bullets could be seen on the surface of the water a great distance after the target was pierced. Tomorrow we fire and then proceed to New York for a ten-day rest and recreg tion. January 1 the fleet sails for the south, through Panama canal, into the Pa cific and on to San Francisco, Cal. Leaving there we go to Peru and before returning will visit many’ places of Interest. One very interesting part of our. stay at Hampton Roads has been the submarine “attacks” in which the ship turns her powerful searchlights on the water, looking for the enemy. To make it more real, we have two "subs” with us; then comes a huge dirigible balloon and our searchlights are turned heavenward and the anti-aircraft guns are trained on her, following her as site moves. Two years in the navy Is a wonderful experience for anyone. We are proud of the uniform we wear; we are ready to protect our nation, to give our lives if necessary that others may live. .We live with this motto, “Mine Is a man’s part in life’s drama, I will play it well.” On Sunday we do not forget our duty to God and loved ones back home, and at 9:30 a. m. that prettiest of all calls is sounded, “church,” and the band plays something appropriate, ofttimes “AH flail the Power of Jesus’ Name.” Old Glory is lowered to give place to the church pennant, which during the divine service waves above all; then we gather to worship our Great Com mander. Some of the ships have Catholic services and some have Protestant. Each ship sends her men to worship on board the ship of his choice. I enjoy writing very much and will be glad to hear from any of you. Sincerely, FELTON RICE. U. S. S. Delaware, care Postmaster, New York. Dear Aunt Julia and Cousins: Will you admit two Florida girls into your happy circle? We have been silent readers for some time and certainly’ enjoy your letters. What do you cousins do for pastime? We go to school and are in the eighth grade and are dsskmates. We are very fond of out door sports, such as tennis, basketball, cro qniet and, most of all; swimming. We will now try to describe ourselves if you all won't get excited. I, Mary Belle, have dark hair, blue eyes, fair complexion, 5 feet 6 Inches tall, weigh 135 pounds and am fifteen years of age. I, Mollie, am a perfect blonde. 5 feet 4 inches tall, weigh 105 pounds and am fourteen years of age. IX any of you cousins care to correspond With two happy Florida girls, we will gladly receive and answer all mail. With love to all, Your new cousins, MARY B. HOLLIE, MOLLIE M. POLLOCK. Lakeland. Fla. P. S. —Aunt Juln, please print this. Tip-tap. Dear Aunt Julia and Cousins: Will you please let me in for a few min utes? I am a lonely soldier boy and would like very much to get letters from some of the cousins. lam 5 feet 6 inches tall, weigh 140 pounds, dark hair, brown eyes, fair com plexion. My age is between eighteen and twenty-one. I will close. Here is a dime for the orphans. Hoping to see this in print, I will say good-by to all. Now. cousins, I shall look for letters, so .10 not disappoint me. Sincerely, JOHN O. LAROCHE. Machine Gun Company, Forty-sixth Infantry, . Camp Jackson, S. C. Dear Aunt Julia: Will you let two Flor ida girls join your happy band of boys and -iris? We have been reading the letter sox a long time and do enjoy it, as there s always something interesting to read In it. We only live one mile from McAlpin nd go to school at McAlpin. We have a ■<iod school, four teachers. 1. Andry. am ■leven years old and In the fourth grade, f, Elda, nm nine years old and in the fourth grade. We both like to go to school and study and learn. We have seven months’ term. We have one little sister •and one little brother living. You cousins come to see us and we will show you one sweet little boy. only six months old. For pastime wo help mamma anil attend to brother. We live on a farm of 49 acres and plant corn. cane, cotton, rice, peanuts, po tatoes, velvet beans and peas. I like to live here. Well, a* we have got to pick cotton will ring off. If any of you girls wish to write to us Florida girls, let your letters fly to AUDRY LONG, ELDA LONG, Pine Mount. Fla., R. 1, Box 86. Dear Aunt and Cousins: Here I come again. Guess you cousins begin to think I had broken my promise, but don’t suppose any of you remember me anyway. What are you doing these warm days? I have been picking cotton. Not much fun, though, when it is real warm, but that seems to be the occupation of the southerners this time of the year. Miss Obera Glenn, swimming is fine these days, isn’t it? I am learning to swim, too. But believe horseback riding is greater sport. How many of you cous ins have started to school? I haven’t. The school hasn’t started yet. but hope It will soon. I go to school at Athens. Say, haven’t we a grand motto? But those rules! One has to be very, very careful or the letter won’t be printed. Just heard Aunt .Tulia say: “You had better watch out yourself.” Well, I’m gone. Alice martin. Gaston. S. C. P. 8. Find inclosed five cents. Dear Aunt Julia and Cousins: Another long-silent reader has found courage to write, and asks others in Florida to follow his ex ample X-J home is in a sixty-acre citrus fruit I Heov'e. three miles from Orlando. This is a beautiful plaea and we have many kinds of tropical fruits. I work here during vacation time, but for nine months of the year I at tend Orlando High school, where I will com mence my junior year this month. Here is my description: Brown hair nn<l eyes, dark complexion. medium height, weight 130 pounds. On October 16 I will be eighteen years old. Some of you will receive a ?rst letter from me, nnd I hope to hear from several cousins of about my age. Will be glad to describe the orange Industry to any one in terested. I remain your new cousin nnd nephew. FRANCIS “FED. Orlando. Fla.. R. F. D. 2. P. S.—Aunt Julia,’ I am inclosing 10 cents Cor the American baby. Dear Aunt Julia: Will some of you other ■>oys nnd girls who have already had some •if your letters in Aunt .Tulin's letter box 'dense move to one side nnd let n silent south Georgia reader have space enough to say just n word? I have been a silent reader of Aunt Ju lia's letter box for about six months and have enjoyed reading the letters written by boys nnd girls from all over the south. I snv south bnenußA most nil the letters are written by southern boys and girls. I am •i u'emb-'r of the I u-o Scouts of America The Tri-Weekly Journal’s Fashion Suggestions GIRLS’ MIDDY DRESS. An American institution is the middy which might be called the uniform of our school girls. No. 9.379 is a pattern which has all of the desirable up to date features, such as the regulation I’ollar and set-in sleeve and the new narrow plaited skirt in one , piece. The girls’ middy dress. No 9,379, is cut in sizes 4 to 14 years iefi \f\ U-y w 1 IA 2 flgr 9579 Che 8 year size requires 1% yards 36-inch material for blouse and 1% yards 36-inch material for skirt and % yard 36-inch lining. Price 12 cents. Limited space prevents showing all the styles. We will send our 32-page fashion magazine contain ing all the good, new styles, dress making helps, serial story. &c„ for sc. postage prepaid, or Bc. if or dered with a pattern. Send 15c. foe magazine aud pattern. In ordering patterns and magazines 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, 22 East Eighteenth St. New York City nn<l am highly interested in outdoor sport*. I am 5 feet 4 inches high and weight 110 pounds. If there is any boy or girl who is interested in outdoor sports that wants to correspond with me let your letters fly. A silent reader nnd cousin of Aunt Julia’s. SAMUEL HATCHER. Stricklan, Ga. Dear Aunt Julia and Cousins: Will you admit six Alabama boys into your happy band of boys and girls? We won’t send any description of ourselves, as there is too many of us; so all of you good-looking girls who want to know any more about us write to us. All letters will be answered. Our ages are between eighteen and twenty-one. We all enjoy reading The Journal, especially tile letter box. So all you good-looking girls let the letters flv to SIDNEY FINCHER, T. H. BERRY, G. G. JONES, , ANDY CALHOUN, HESTER BERRY, W. J. FINCHER, Notasulga, Ala., Route 3. Dear Aunt Julia and cousins: Will you admit a South Carolina girl into your happy band this morning? This is my fourth time, Ifiit haven’t "been admitted yet. But nev ertheless, I am not discouraged. I will try again. Now. Aunt Julia, you make them hush laughing until I describe myself. Here goes: Blue eyes, light brown hair, fair com plexion, weigh 109 pounds and my age Is between 18 and 22. Come again, Lucille McKellar; your letter was fine. What is the matter witli the South Carolina boys and girls? We are let ting our , Georgia girls and boys get ahead of us. You cousins ought to be here to go to preaching. There is a tabernacle at our county seat (Pickens), nnd services are there thme times a day. We go most every night. It is thirteen miles from my home. But we have a Ford and go just the same. Aunt Julia you and some of the cousins come to see me. I will give you a good time whether yon see ft or not. I heir Mr. Wastebasket coming again. Will have to make a home run. All you cousins write to me, both boys and girls; and if you expect to keep the rats out of your crib, send me one of your pictures and I will do likewise. Give my love to Yvonne and find inclosed 25 cents for her. A new cousin. EARI.ENE HOLCOMBE. Earley, 8. 0., Route 2, Box 4. A Proverb Puzzle Can You Solve It? J®l The answer to The Tri-Weekly Journal’s last Proverb Puzzle was: "It is more blessed to give than to’ receive.” Did you guess it? Here’s another. The little cartoon shown above illustrates an old, fa miliar proverb—one you’ve probably heard many times. Can you figure it out? Look for the correct answer in the next issue of The Tri-Weekly. miilil Hii iHihiH. i H Hinn nil 111 IlliiMilillliilill liliil! Hii 11 Hi 11 it mm CHAPTER XVI z / 'll [T AMMA, when she did slate • • \/| writing, had the boobs LVJL —that's what my step father always called them—sit well back from the table. She was on the other side and it was covered with a black cloth. You could work all right with one hand. Mamma took chances and did the pencil point—fastened to her leg above the knee—against the table top. But Ed. used to tell her it wasn’t safe. 'One woman we knew used a shoe with a woculen sole. The other had a pencil point strapped to it. You could get wonderful taps that way, they said. "People do not do automatic writing much at that time. Ed said he wished they would. It was lots easier. “ ‘The less you try to fool people, the more they will fool them selves;’ ” he always said. “There used to be a man and a girl who had a circle called ‘Uni sersal Love’ and who did automatic writing. I watched her lots of times. She just took the pencil in her hand and wrote on a yellow pad she carried. It was exactly like any other writing, as far as I could see. These two used Jo say they could cure the sick and raise the dead, “They said the holy sign was a se cret known to no one since the days of ancient Egypt except to them selves. But their business got too big—Ed always said they had too long a reach and it wasn’t a safe game. The police got them, after a while. “There were lots of others, but that is not what I want to ask you about. "It’s .this. Rosalie sat with me at the Ouija board —I did not want to. but I was crazy—l «had not heard a word from Roger—When the mes sage came that he was dead. And I did not move that board. “Less than a month ago Rosalie got another message, this time in au tomatic writing, from my father. It told me something that only Roger knew —unless —well —tell me this! Rosalie is the only close friend I have in all the world, and I must trust her. You know her, don’t you? You do not think for a moment that Rosalie, that she —you do not believe her untrustworthy, do you?” Slowly, thoughtfully, the young physician shook his head. “No. from what I know of Rosalie—l do not think it possible. And besides that first message of your husband’s death —how could she have known that?” “That’s what I say to myself,” ex claimed Nora. 'How could she, or how could any one have known? But if you believe that, if you think that —why then you, too, must be lieve—” “What Rosalie does,” said Dr. Find lay. “Not necessarily. Listen, Mrs. Mason, I am giving you the only treatment in my power—advice. It is this: “Try for a while to keep away from this whole subject. I know it will be hard, but I wil l help you all I can. You are normally the sanest, soundest-minded young wom an I have ever known. Your experi ences justify a far more excitable mental state than you have evi denced. I shall warn Rosalie not to discuss such things wiht you, or to mention them at all. Meanwhile let me think over those two messages of which you told me. «I shall see you as often as I can. I want to*as sure myself that you are holding your mind clear of this whole busi ness.” Nora looked very dubious. “I will try-—perhaps I can, for a—you see —“ love and loyalty shone from her wide eyes—“lt must mean, in away, life or death—not for me—but for Roger.” He nodded gravely. I am quite readv to trust you—as your mother did.” . Nora achieved a lovely smile. “I’ll try not to think,” she said, “If you do not make it too long.’’ Rosalie cajne hurrying in just as JDr. Findlay was leaving. He took her to one side and later she follow ed him into the hallway where they talked long. When she came back she greeted Nora very kindly. But the tender ness which had marked her manner since the accident had altogether vanished. The truth is that Rosalie was un accustomed to see slip away before her eyes something she fully in tended to appreciate. And there seemed a quite possible danger that some such thing might happen, in the person of Dr. Newton Findlay, nerve specialist, with a con sultation list that any professional man might envy. THE COUNTRY HOME CONDUCTED BY MRS.W.H.FELTON BURIED GRIEFS “Oh let me rest —the buried griefs, Why should we drag them to the day? They lived their hour of storm and shower. They lived and died and passed away. "Oh, let them rest —their graves are green. New life shall rise above the mould. The dews shall weep, the blossoms peep— The flowers of sympathy unfold. “So on the solitary moor, M The soldiers’ graves are bright with flowers. The wild thyme blooms and sweet perfumes Attract the roamers of the bowers. “There stays the bee to gather sweets and give this booming trumpet rest. There waves the heath its purple wreath. And there the linnet builds her nest. “Oh, let them rest, these buried griefs, The place is holy where they lie. On life’s cold waste their graves are placed, And flowers look upward to the sky." SAVING A LITTLE MORE THAN YOU SPEND If saving is a household necessity, and if ever economy was imperative, it is right now. The war has upset things, just as war always does up set them, and the wise men of all wilr-dilapidated sections will tell us, there is nothing but industry and economy that can set people on their feet again. At the starting point, there is very little difference be tween rich people and poor people, but there is a long space between the two after one only lives to spend and the other always saves to make money to keep out of debt. Wilkins Micawber, one of Novelist Dickens’ most enjoyable fiction characters, had a lecture on this subject which he frequently delivered. The more pov erty-stricken he became the oftener he held forth on this advice, for sav ing a little more than one spends. It seems very difficult to keep on an even keel on life’s voyage, when one aims to spend only one’s income. Accidents will happen, ■ sickness comes along, prices vary and busi ness disappointments will occur. Some rich folks after long years of prudence and caution, get an idea that speculation is a big thing to try. Like gambling, it is attractive. Last week I read of a. big Georgia fortune that had disappeared like a frost in the early merning, dabbling in cotton speculation last year. Less than a fortnight Ago another fortune sank out of sight. But nowadays, when it costs a man £IOO to buy a really good suit of clothes, and women pay anywhere from SSO to SIOO for a fall or winter suit, the advice, or counsel, to save a little of that money and put it in a savings bank is wholesome. I wore home-made homespun cot ton frocks during the time of the Civil war. I am wearing last year’s (and several years back) frocks anti bonnets at this time, because it is such a bad habit to go In debt, bor- CHAPTER XVII ROSALIE had always had her way with her own sex, even with Nora, a person of .pro nounced determination and with few feminine weaknesses to play on. But why should not Rosalie have acquired leadership? Explanation is easy. The clientele among whom she held sway were, most of them, women nearing middle age or paus ing at that strategic point to look about them and inquire anxiously what life still held for those no longer young. “Now, right there, you are think ing wrong!” Thus the beautifully gowned young lecturer was accus tomed to address her audience of women, gathered for a health talk or for a special service. Rosalie's voice was beautifully modulated. Her elocution training had stood her in good stead from the very first es say In Higher Life preachment. “Why give place in your thoughts to age? Do not think age, thfhk youth. Think youth strongly enough and you will retain youth, youawill even win youth back. Think not faded skin and tell-tale lines but unmarred beauty. Hold the thought of beauty and you will hold beauty or you will win beauty back. I, who tell you this—l know.” “For instance, this beautiful red rose—Rosalie unfastened the Amer ican Beauty from her girdle and held it out by its long, graceful stem. "I love red roses. I think red roses. And I am never without them. In some way, they always come to me. ' Barnum did not say that women love most to be fooled, but it may be true. Certainly, following Rosalie’s talks, there was no lack of women to order red roses by the dozen from the florists to be sent to her apart ments. For Rosalie was quite right. It s easy to think in a nice supply of red roses—if you do your thinking aloud, at the right time and in the right way. Handsome, successful, acclaimed as leader by a large group, Including many wealthy women, was it to be expected that Rosalie would take kindly to the threatened thwarting of a very dear and secret hope? Cer tainly not. Just how much of the things she said to other women Rosalie herself believed it would be impossible to say. But that it was not only with in her right but well within her power to win the man she wished as husband she did not for one moment doubt. Why and how she had fallen In love so deeply with NewtOn Find lay she could not herself have ex plained. It is a great mistake to suppose that ambitious, successful, and in telligent women are immune frojn sentimental weakness in anything. Like just proportion to the qualities mentioned. In fact, the ratio is quite as often the other way. Where realization of ability reaches the acute stage of egotism, the oth erwise clever woman is apt to over estimate her charm, mental, physi cal, or both. And should a longing for sentimen tal adventure seize her, her capacity for folly is sometimes limitless. Rosalie believed herself to be a woman of great attraction, which, in deed, she was. But her shrewdness and intelligence were rather too con spicuous for masculine appreciation. She had acquired no suitors worthy of consideration, and until she met Newton Findlay it did not really matter. She was still young and fully occupied. Perhaps the third or fourth time they were brought together—Di. Findlay, by no means blind to social opportunity as an indirect road to professional advancement, had never neglected worthwhile invitations — Rosalie faced the realization of her state of feeling. She was in love with Newton Findlay, and did not seek to disguise the fact. (Another installment of The Tri- Weekly Journal’s fascinating serial will be published in the next issue of the paper. Don’t let your sub scription lapse before it is finishem The label .on the front page will warn you when it’s time to send in ycur renewal.) row money and strain credit in a time like the present. A penny saved is a penny made. It is a bad example to show before younger people, too. We are living very fast in these extravagant times. The demands of gay society have made yoTtng people giddy and desperate about finery. I am not talking about miserliness — I appreciate good living and good clothes very highly, but I am never theless here to warn everybody that the on.y way to keep out of financial worries is to go careful and save a little more than you spend by the day ( or the year. About Poultry Clubs The object of forming boys’ and girls’ poultry clubs is to give a better knowledge of the value and importance of the poultry industry and the marketing of a first class, uniform product, to teach better methods of caring for the poultry and eggs, and to show the increased revenue to be derived from well bred poultry where proper methods of management are pursued. Cleaning Brass When hammered or engraved brass becomes tarnished, it can be cleaned by rubbing with a piece of lemon. It should then be wash ed in hot water and polished with a dry cloth. Fur Fashions Muffs will be pillow-shaped this season instead of barrel-shaped, de signers say. Long, straight stoles and fur capes that reach to the waist will be popular. DIAMOND DYES Any Woman can Dye now Each package of “Diamond Dyes” contains directions so simple that any woman < an diamond-dye any old i faded garments, draperies, coverings, everything, whether wool, silk, lin en, cotton or mixed goods, a new rich fadeless color. Buy “Diamond Dyes”—no other kind —then perfect results are guar anteed even if you have never dyed before. Druggist will show you Dia mond Dyes Color Card- “A JOURNEY WITH AUNT JULIA” BY MRS. ALICE V. S. GRANT (Known to Thousands of Southern Children as “Aunt Julia”) (This is the first chapter of the personal story written by “Aunt Julia” that Tri-Weekly readers have been looking forward to so eager ly. It’s going to be one of the most absorbing little narratives ever published in this paper.) I have just come back from a won derful journey! It was a journey that I wish all of my friends on the Tri-Weekly Journal could have taken with me. For it meant a glimpse into things that filled you full of happiness and tears and inspiration and hope. I went to a place where they ex change old lives for new. A mar velous human factory only it oughtn’t to be called a factory— where mountain boys and girls leave dreary pasts behind them, to go away later facing futures bright with ambition and courage and usefulness. I paid a visit to the Berry schools up in north Georgia, near Rome. 1 had beers wanting and planning to go for a long time. All of my chil dren who read Aunt Julia's Letter Box can guess why. I wanted to see the girls who have been so happy ever since the letter box helped them get to this school— the only one of its kind in the world. There are eight or nine of our girls there. I wanted to see them and talk to them and bring a message back. And if you could have been there when we met! But that’s another part of the story. And I wanted to see Faith Cot tage—the haven where the wee little folks are taken under the care of Miss Martha Berry, that wonderful, great-hearted woman who is suc cessfully giving her life to make other lives successful. Faith Cottage, you know, is the home where some fortunate Ameri can baby will be supported next year by the pennies, nickels and dimes given by the children who write to Aunt Julia’s Letter Box. This baby will be OUR baby, of course—just like little Yvonne, the tiny French orphan that the Letter Box children adopted and cared for, for two years. Telling you at the beginning that my journey was just a trip to a school may sound like a very or- MARY MEREDITH'S ADVICE TO LONELY GIRLS AT HOME Here I come for some quick ad vice. I am a little girl just now, fifteen years old. I have been talk ing to a grass widower. He says he , loves me very much, but I cannot think I love him as I could some one else. He is very smart. I think he would make me a living all right, but he has just quit his other wife, and my friends advise me to let him alone for he would soon quit me. My sister, also my brother-inlaw ad-* vise me to please take their advice let him be the last one I would marry. Are they right or not. We are to be married soon. He is about twenty-six years old. My brother in-law tells me if I marry him I would be living in sin (in adultery). Would I or not? And his reputation for honesty and otherwise is not very good; also his parents and the rest of the family is the same and the people that know him say his other wife was a good little woman and he just got tired of her and quit her. Do you think he would love me? Do you think if I marry him I could love him. Do you think I am too young to marry? I don’t think mother ought to advise me to marry him, do you? How old sh’ould I be before I should marry. My brother-in-law is a nice man and advises me a great deal about the company I should keep and scolds me about bad com pany, and says I ought not to think of such a thing as marrying so young. Do you think he is right or do you think I ought to listen to mother? fir? I I I | ~T' ~i GQE g U i irt-—===== P Il J- f ty'? . s S Uta ™H W J F ▼’"’W 8 11 A BKfcS so I | Escaped an Operation | There is nothing in the world a woman so much fears as a surgical 54 operation. Often they are necessary, but often not; and many have been avoided by the timely use of that good old-fashioned root and 3? herb remedy Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. If you are m 2 suffering from some dread ailment peculiar to your sex, why not A profit by the experience of these two women whose letters follow ? g These Two Women Saved from Operations. yj Cedar Rapids, la.—“ After the birth Sandusky, Ohio.—* 4 After the birth of of my last child I had such painful I had organic trouble. My iWO Zr? spells they would unfit me entirely for doctor said it was caused by too heavy my housework. I suffered for months lifting and I would have to have an an< l doctor said that my trouble was operation. I would not consent to an. C? organic ulcers and Iwould have to have operation and let it go for over a year, r)/ an operation. That was an awful thing having my sister do my work for moas mW J* to me,with a young baby and four other I was not able to walk. One day my T7] children, so one day I thought of Lydia aunt came to see me and told me about , E.Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and your medicine—said it cured her of the 0 1 how it had helped me years before and same thing. I took Lydia E. Pinkham’s ■V ( I decided to try it again. I took five Vegetable Compound and used Lydia JAFF bottlesofVegetableCompound and used E. Pinkham’s Sanative Wash and they tfA Lydia E.Pinkham’s Sanative Wash and have cured me. Now Ido my own 1P since then I have been a well woman, housework, washing and ironing and Fan able to take care of my house and family sewing for my family and also do sew- faY without any trouble or a day’s pain. I ing for other people. I still take a bottle • am ready and thankful to swear by your of Vegetable Compound every spring ,'iii medicine any time. lam forty-four fora tonic. I recommend your medicine iCj years old and have not had a day’s ili- to others who have troubles similar to WM ness of any kind for three years.”— mine and you can use my letter if you Ci? Mrs. 11. Koenig, 617 Ellis Blvd, Cedar wish.”—Mrs. Paul Papenfuse, 1325 Vj Rapids, lowa. Stone St.. Sandusky, Ohio. Thousands of Such Letters Prove the Curative Value of pS ® I ■Tri i i £?■ H 9 I H ra M9flß ki IS IL® IS II B C r LYDIA K*PINKHAM MEQICINg QO-, PfNN, MASS, " 1 TUESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1920. dinary, prosaic affair. But if you could have laughed with me and cried wdth me and been thrilled by sights I saw and had your heart fill up and overflow with gladness at the beauty and greatness of it all —well, it would have made anybody happy to be along! Anyhow, I’m going to try to tell you about it, from beginning to end, just as nearly like it happened as words will let you tell anything that moves you so deeply your thoughts are too big for expression. So to begin. After the train had whisked me up to Rome I went to a hotel and telephoned out to the school and they said they’d send one of the boys for me. Then I waited a while and no body came, and I waited a while longer and still nobody came, and I began to get fidgity for fear some thing had gone wrong. I was begin ning to have visions of losing half of that precious day and possibly spoiling the trip when I happened to think of something. “Maybe the boy they sent doesn’t know exactly how to inquire for me at the hotel,” I thought. So I hurried downstairs right away—and sure enough, there was my boy. a manly chap, with outrag eously Jong eyelashes, and bluest of blue e.yes, dressed in overalls, just like he had stepped off the farm. He was leaning against the desk, and he looked troubled. I was sure he was MY boy but I didn’t want to embarrass him so I asked the clerk if anybody had ask ed for me. It turned out that my consideration wasn’t needed, for the boy stepped right up and said: “Yes ma'am, I asked for you. But you see, after they told me to come for you. why, I forgot your name.” We both had a good laugh over this and that helped us get ac quainted In a hurry. (More of “A Journey with Aunt Julia” will appear iq the next issue, of The Tri-Weekly Journal. Watch the label on the front page that shows when your subscription ex pires. You can’t afford' to miss a single copy of the paper while this splendid feature is running.) Tell me just what you think for the 'rest. Adieu. RED BIRD. I certainly do “not” think you should marry the widower. If he grew tired of his wife and left her for that cause, he will be the same toward another wife. You are entirely too young to think of marrying any one. And your mother is doing you a great wrong to urge you to matrimony. Listen to your brother-in-law, if his advice is right. lam sure he must have your welfare at heart. You have plenty of years ahead of you before thinking of mar rying. I am a widow lady With five small children and I have studied over ev ery plan I can think of which to do for our best. As I am not physical ly able to do hard work I have de cided to take some business course. Now I want you, if you please to ad vise me on where I can correspond with some good college that teaches through mail. Also what do you think would be best for me to study. Please find enclosed envelope for quick rely. Most respectfully, MRS. E. B. T. The Eastman Business col lege in Pougheepsie, N. Y., teaches a business course through mail, and it is consider ed about the best in the United States. You might write to them. The smaller schools around here do not teach a course through correspondence. I would write a letter to the business college and ask their advice about what course of study to persue. They are bet tor able to tell you than I am. .a.. I GIRLS! LEMONS j | BLEfiCH; WHITEN j i Make Lemon Lotion to Double . i Beauty of Your Skin i* .A.. .r a.. •<••••••••♦■ Squeeze the juice of ' two lemons into a bottle containing three ounces of Orchard White which can be had at any drug store, shake well and you vc a quarter pint of harmless and delightful lemon bleach for few - cents. « Massage this sweetly fragrant lo tion into the face, neck, arms and hands each day, then shortly not* 1 the beauty of your skin. Famous stage beauties use lemon \ juice to bleach and bring that sori, clear, rosy-white complexion. 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