Atlanta tri-weekly journal. (Atlanta, GA.) 1920-19??, October 21, 1920, Page 5, Image 5

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

STRENGTHLESS . SEEMED DYING So Weak She Could Hardly Move, Says Indiana Lady. One Bottle of Cardui Put Her on the Road to Recovery Tangier, Ind.—“ Four years ago t'ais summer I was sick in bed," writes Mrs. Lillie McElweee, of this place. “I had been under the doctor's care for five weeks. ... I was pretty bad, and I was just as nerv ous as I could be. ... I could not sleep at night until 10 or 12 o’clock. When I would doze off and wake up I would be all of a trem ble with nervousness. “The doctor called my trouble ca tarrh of the ... It gave me such pains that at each one it would seem that I could not bear another one. Then I would chill . . . the pains would just seem to shake me all over, and the next day I would be so weak I could hardly move. I would be so utterly strengthless that it would seem as if I were dying. “After one of my bad spells . . . and I had almost died, I picked up the Home Treatment Book and de cided to try Cardui. Before I had taken a whole bottle, I could sleep at night. ... I don’t remember just how long, but in a short time I was up and helping with the woi;k . . Over forty years of successful use has proven tne value of Cardui in the treatment of many common fe male ailments. All druggists sell Cardui, for wom en.—(Advt.) I LISTENI Let no one coax you into buying feather beds or bed- I ding before you see our BOOK OF FEATHER FACTS and PJ BEDDING BARGAINS. We gH are the only manufacturers sell* ingdirect-by-mail at FACTORY I prices and guarantee to undersell ggia all others. Beware of Imitators 1 and others who palm off shoddy, H| lumpy beds under pretense of giv* g&g ingbargains. Buy genuine PUR* ITY BRAND beds and pillows. They are sanitary, odorless, germless. Only new feathers and government-standard 8 oz. tick* ing used. Equipped with im* proved air ventilators. Four national banks endorse our ;W legal guarantee of satisfac tion or money back, al WRITS TODAY for the PURITY BEDDING BOOK—it’s free. REP* RESENTATIVES WANTED. <ood money. Purity Bedding Company Dept. 319 Nashville. Tenn. Many Ills Due To Catarrh The mucous membranes through out the body are subject to catarrhal congestion resulting in many serious complications. PE-RU-NA Wall Known and Rciiablo Coughs, colds, nasal catarrh, stom ach and bowel troubles among the most common diseases due to catarrh al conditions. A very dependable remedy after protracted sickness, the grip or Span ish Flu. PE-RU-NA is a good medicine to ' ave on hand for emergencies. , or Liqß id Sold Evorywhon IN USE FIFTY YEARS Feather Bed Outfit Worth $33.50 \N o w O n 1 y ' JUST THINK OF IT! This complete outf t for only Our Big Now Catalog FREE jig jq. consiatintf of 1 first-class 30-10 new feather oed pair B-lb. new feather pillows, one pall fu» size bed blankets and one full-size bed spread. The feathers are all now Mee, clean end . sanitary and covered with best-grade 8-oz. 1 A. C. A. feather-proof ticking. Positively the biggest bed bargains ever offered. Money-Back Cuarantoe. Mail money-order for $19.60 now and we will ship you this bar gain atonce, ormail us your name and address j and we will promptly mail you our bargain ■ catalog, with order blanks, bank references, etc. Biggest bargains you ever saw. Our prices save more than half. SOUTHERN FEATHER & PILLOW CO., Department 15 CREENSBORO N. C. i GET A FEATHMED SAVE 125-lb. bed. 1 pair 6-lb. pillows. 1 blankets, full size, 1 counterpane large cize. all for *15.95 < lietail value $27.09) xM u Same as above with 39- bed $16.95; with 35-lb. bed $17.95; with 40-lb. bed $13.95. Beds alone 25-lb. $19.95; 39-ln. $11.95; 35-lb. $12.95; 40- 313.95. Two 2 1-2 lb. pillows $1.95. New feathers, best ticking. $1,090.00 cash deposit In bank to guarantee satisfaction or money back. Mail order today or write for new Catalog. SANITARY BEDDING COMPANY, I Department 105 Charlotte, N. C. leather Bed i Bargain Bock I . Tins dhows you bow to buy the bent direct from the I feat bed market of the world and will nave you money] \ Yoa poallhefy make no mistake if you order I J Ifroru os at our rock bottom factory prices. I x/j Alao tells about our SO-day free trial ofler. I Write Tor ft today. Agents wauled everywhere |1 .jGC Lrwlt Feather TtnaJ FREE Fine Ckelete mahogany An ished, four gut strings, brass frets and instruction book. All elven for selling 25 Jewelry Novelties at 10c each. Eagle Watch Co., Dept. 462 East Boston. Mass Milk.Q. Sni.b air grfl 8 VL) i,-> boxes Mentho-Ncvji Salve at 2Sc. V. S-i-wlr Ca, 84. THE ATLANTA TRI-WEEKLY JOURNAL. SABBATH SCHOOL LESSON For October 24, 1920—Matt. 5 DR. MARION MU. HULL Golden Text: Ya therefore shall be perfect as your heavenly Father is perfect. Math. 5:48. Perhaps no well known passage of the Bible is more misunderstood than the “Sermon on the Mount.” In the first place, it wasn’t a ser mon; in the second place, it wasn't spoken to Christians; in the third place, it was spoken to Jews about things that pertain to Jews pri marily, but which some day will be realized by everybody. If we right ly divide the of truth we shall probably have to unlearn a good many things we have been taught heretofore. For example, did Christ teach that we should live by the Gold en Rule? Think that out during these next two or three studies. No this was not a sermon. The words are all those of Jesus, but the arrangement of it Is Matthew’s. He was writing to the Jews to prove that Jesus of Nazarith was the Mes siah of /prophecy, and he had been speaking of Him as the King. It was most natural therefore that he should gather up srome of the say ings of Jesus which set forth the principles that should govern the subjects of the King—or, in other words, the Constitution of the King dom. Matthew follows a well-known literary device, adopting a style of so-called Wisdom literature, which consists of a terse statement which is further amplified. For example, the first beatitude Is expanded sev enfold. I ndoubtedly Jesus spoke some of these words on a mountainside; some of them were also spoken on a plain (see Luke 6); but Matthew has ar ranged them in away to catch the Jewish attention, as pointed out above. He shows the King’s idea and ideal of happiness; His plan as to the relationship the subjects of the kingdom should bear to outsid ers their relation to the Law; their relationship to worship and to His commandments. This sevenfold ar rangement of itself would appeal to the Jewish mind. Today we are to study the first three of these sections. Character Not condition. How different the King’s idea of blessedness is from the world's. But let us study them carefully. The poor in spirit—emphasize the last two words. Poverty is not happi ness; but to be poor In spirit is to appreciate your own nothingness in the light of God’s everythingness. Absolute dependence upon God, and realizing it—this is the greatest blessing that can come to anyone, for them the Kingdom of heaven is his AU that God has is his when in recognition of his utter dependence upon Him, a man cast himself whol ly on Go. The other beatitude sare a seven fold expansion of this first one. The man who is poor in spirit mourns— not over personal sin, not over the loss of loved ones, but over the ru ip that sin has wrought in the world. Christ was aman of sorrows and acquainted with grief, and He says, “the reproaches of them that re proached thee are fallen upon me. It is love’s judgment over the ruin that sin has wrought that He bless es here; he who recognizing his own nothingness shares with Christ the sorrow over a ruined world shall be comforted, for he is assured of a time of rest, God’s rest. Such an one is meek. "Meek" means “one who listens.” Blessed is the man who recognizing his utter de pendance upon God, and shares with Christ His sorrow over a ruined world, listens to what God has to say; for such an one shall inherit the earth. . His own sense of need in view ot the will of God revealed to him cre ates in him a hunger and thirst after righteousness. Everything else pales into insignificance; he craves only the highest, and he shall be com pletely filled. Mercy is righteousness. To be merciful is to b erighteous. In chap ter 6:1-2 we find this, as Jesus Him self is speaking. “Take heed that you do not your righteousness before men, etc.” Almgiving and righteous ness are iffeed as synonyms. Blessed therefore are the merciful, the right eous, for they shall obtain right eousness. There is no thought’ here of buying mercy by being kind heart ed and generous. Righteousness does not come in that way; but by recog nizing your utter dependence upon God, casting yourself entirely on His mercy, listening to what He has to say, and hungering after the highest that He has to give. To such an one righteousness comes, and with it purity of heart and life which will eventual in see ing God. The “eyes’ ’are in the heart (Epb. 1:18). Those to whom Christ came did not see Him as their King because their hearts were not right. Those who are poor in spirit who mourn, who hungfier and thirst after righteousness, who are merci ful, become pure in heart and have eyes for God and can see Him in every circumstance of life and shall see Him as He is some day. Such persons become peacemakers, not just settlers of difficulties, but make peace between rebellious man and an offended but patient and gra cious God. This was the life work of Jesus the Christ, and identified with Him in this work, they shall be called the sons of God. But sue ha life condemns the worldling and persecution follows, but even persecution for righteous ness sake, and for the King’s sake becomes a blessing, an source of joy. and an assuurance of reward in heav en „ . , So the King’s idea of happiness depends upon character, not upon conditions, thus differing entirely from what the world’s idea is. Did vou notice, though, that this is a picture of the King Himself He was poor inspilrt. He emptied Himself (Phil. 2:6), He mourned, He hun gered, He listened for His Father’s voice, He was merciful, He was pure in heart, He broke down the mid dle wall of partition and made p»ace, He was persecuted. He want ed His people to be like Him, but they rejected Him. Relation to tlie Outside World Then He set forth before them His plan for them as for as they were related to the world about Him. “Ye are the salt of the earth.” “Ye are the light of the world.” Salt and light—salt to create an appetite, and light to show the way. In the new kingdom which He came to estab lish. and would have done so then if they had not rejected Him, His peo ple will be salt and light. But salt about Palestine some times lost its saltness and then was good for nothing except to be thrown out and pack the roadways hard. His people lost their saltness and have been cast out temporarily. They hid their light under a bushel, and God has failed to get the glory that should have been His. Relation to the Law Then the King set out their rela tion to the law. He did not abrogate the law; He emphasized it as neces sary, and maintained that not one jot nor one title of it should pass until all be fulfilled. Since Chris tians are not under the law, He could not have been speaking to the church, but to the Jews who were DYEJdGHI Buy only “Diamond Dyes” Each package of “Diamond Dyes” contains directions so simple that any woman can diamond-dye worn, shabby skirts, waists, dresses, coats, gloves, stockings, sweaters, draperies, everything, whether wool, silk, linen, cotton or mixed goods, new. rich, fadeless colors. Have druggin: show you “Diamond Dyes Color Ca - (Advt.) Housewives Should Choose Curtains That Are Becoming to the Home; This Special Article Tells How l f K/( MwSo ; I ! I A dSSwt 'o It . IT —J B— itf[ - LIZ =£= LX- f4| BY VIOLA FLEISCHMAN, Interior Decorator CLEVELAND.—“I always judge a house by its windows.” Curtains do give character to a house ,and that is what these good housewives mean when they say they judge a house by its windows. Before selecting material for cur taining the windows of your home you should consider the type of win dow, its relative proportion to the room as a whole and wall spaces and the amount of light the room re ceives. A window which has the appear ance of narrowness or seems long and high for the size of the room should have a curtain arrangement which makes this less obvious. At such a window cross curtains, similar to those shown at the left in the il lustration, should never be used. Cross curtains, however, are beauti ful for wide windows if made of net, grenadine, marquisette, self-starch ing organdie, dotted or plain Swiss and muslin. For Casement Windows Casement windows and French doors require a curtain arrangement which will not interfere with opening the swinging frames freely. A double set of rods is usually employed—one set above and one below when the curtains are made up as shown by the French doors sketched. Nets have been used and still are being used for curtaining doors, but even softer lighting effects and more grace can be given, especially when the curtain is tucked as shown, by using georgette, silk gauze or shan tung silk. A fringe of silk, wool.or chenille—according to the curtain material —may be used as a novel finish at the bottom. An interesting arrangement of hangings for a group of windows in a bay is shown. Casement cloth could be used both for the side hangings and the valance, employing the ecru or natural color material for the hangings, and soft old blue, or other color note of the room itself, for the scalloped and shirred valance. Weighted tape is stitched to the hem of this material to give the necessary weight. Dispense With Shades Shades can be dispense d with at these windows if draw-cords be pro vided to allow for pulling the side hingings across the window readily when the light or view int othe room is to be shut off. Casement cloth is a raw silk, sim ilar to pongee and comes In various weights, textures and colors. It is becoming more and more popular be cause of the grace with which it hangs and the way it softens harsh, cold light. Attractive roller window shades for such parts of the home as the sun room, breakfast room and sleeping rooms are made of figured materials, usually oiled silk or glazed (varnish ed) chintzes. The Tri-Weekly Journal’s Fashion Suggestions uADY’S TWO-PIECE SKIRT Odd little pocket laps and a few bone buttons are practically all the trimming necessary on one of these simple but serviceable two-piece skirts, which are being featured so much this season. The lady’s two-piece No. 9,555 is ■Mj W f'i 9535 cut in sizes 26 to 32 inches waist measure. Size 26 requires 2% yards 44-inch material and % yard 27-inch lining. Price 12 cents. Limited space prevents showing all the styles. We will send our 32- page fashion magazine, containing all the good, new styles, dressmak ing helps, serial story, &c., for 5c., postage prepaid, or 3c. if ordered with a pattern. Send 15c. for maga zine and pattern- 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 let ters to the Atlanta office but direct them to — FASHION DEPARTMENT, ATLANTA JOURNAL, 22 East Eighteenth St., New York City. a deeper meaning to it than they had ever dreamed, so that they had to be more righteous than the Phari sees and the Scribes ever dared to hope if they were to enter the new Kingdom. He dealt with six of these —a very significant number, showing man’s failure. The out ward act was not to be the criterion, but the inward motive determining murder and adultery; the simplest statement being all that was neces sary to establish a fact: retaliation being replaced bv the “second mile;” hatred supplanted by love; and nothing less that the completeness of God the Father being sufficient to satisfy the demands of the King for His subjects. Os course, as Christians, we are not borned by law; but since He has kept the law. we shall be enabled to more than meet its demands by hav ing Him dwell in us and live His life in us. I *V / I I • Cross curtains are beautiful for wide windows; French door curtains usually need a double set of rods; attractive roller window shades are made of figured materials; in a group of windows in a bay, small side hangings with a short scalloped and shirred valance of a contrasting color are interesting. ALICE VS. GI&KT (Knownto tfioosands of soutfwTn<£ildn?nas'4w2tJalia) (For the benefit of anybody who has not read the opening install ments of “A Journey With Aunt Ju lia,” it may be said that this chron icle is a record of a visit to the Ber ry Schools, near Rome, Oa., the only place of its kind in the world. The narrator of the story is the noted conductor of “Aunt Julia’s Letter Box,” a feature of The Tri-Weekly Journal that has no rival in the Amer i ican newspaper field. The “Journey” is a fine experience for anybody who likes to hear about the good things of life.) We went out to a porch to see a garden the girls are planting; they study the beautifying of the home inside and out. This garden was all full of sweet old-fashioned flowers, shrubs and perennials—and across the fields I saw the beautiful blue of the mountains. What a setting for such a place! It just seemed like God smiled on them. I had a lot more things to see and was saving Faith Cottage for the last, so started again and we went towards the boys’ school, al though it meant doubling back to Fa’th Cottage. And do you know it has just oc curred to me that I haven’t told you one thing about how this Wonder Place really looks and I don’t know whether I can give you a fair idea, I left out all about how it started and a lot of interesting things. Well, first—Miss Martha Berry wanted to be a writer, you see, she had been away to one of the best of schools and she had never thought seriously any any work; but she knew she could write and she chose a small cabin on her father’s place for the purpose. One Sunday afternoon she was in her little cabin and was playing on a small half-worn-out organ and OUR HOUSEHOLD CONDUCTED BY LIZZIE O.THOMAS THE FORTUNE (A True Incident) Ten new pennies! What lot’s of fun? What shall I do with them, every one? One I borrowed from Dorothy Lee. And one for c’lection on Sunday must be. One for baby to buy a balloon, One for the monkey that plays a tune, And five for violets, sweet and blue, For the mother dear when she walks with you. » There’s just one left; now what shall I do With this last penny? Now what would you dq? “Why yes of course,” said my lad die bright, "I’ll give it to Jesus to send his light.” "But dear, I said, you have done your part; Your tenth was given with all your heart; You gave your first one to Him, in deed.” “I know —but that one belonged, you see. To s’pport the Gospel right here for me; But this’n—well, this’n a present will be. Just because I love Him, and He loves me_Y That Armenian Fund So many new subscribers have joined our big Tri-Weekly Journal family that I am requested to tell them something about this particu lar fund, and this is the story brief ly told. Last December, the day after Christmas I asked for funds to help the Near East Relief association keen little children In Armenia and Serbia from freezing and starving. I have been so gratified over the way the money has come in—not many big checks, but from so many people. God has his ministers and laymen working all over this' land for all sorts of good causes, and 1 have tried to emphasize the fact that we must not “rob Peter <.O pay Paul.” In other words we must not fail to pay our pastor, or church as sessment, and give as an excuse that we have already done so mu< h. If you have kept books you know ex actly what your tenth is, and thfen you can say, if you have been hon est and have given God his own, “But that belonged, you see, To s’pport the Gospel right here for me. But this’n—well this’n. a present will be, Just because I love Him and He loves me.’ Several times I have been the me dium through which conscience money has been paid, and to my no tion, the right way to pay conscience money is to the party themselves, through others if you want to, but not to Uncle Sam. Here is a letter enclosing a check for five dollars. I sent this man ten dollars that I’d been requested to forward. The writer said he knew it was not more than that amount, but it stood be twen him and Heaven. Here is a por tion of the letter that came back to me: “I received your letter and want you to tell the party that he, or she, is freely forgiven, I am enclosing my check for five dollars, you can give for Armenian relief or any other charitable purpose that you may wish to help. With kind re gards. ‘Yours very truly, “B. F. I.” So you see we have nearly enough singing some hymns when she felt that someone was looking in the window, and when she turned, it was to see some ragged little chil dren with their faces pressed against the pane—blessed little things who loved the music. She took them inside and they were mighty shy at first, but; after a while they sang, too, and when they left it was with the promise to come back next Sunday and bring some of their folks. And sure enough, they did; there was a line of mules and oxen and wagons; and big folks and little ones. They were ignorant, but they could not help it, for there was no school near enough that they could go to and they had to have other kind of clothes for city schools. That started the thought In Miss Berry’s mind —“my mountain folks must have a chance to learn." She tried to start schools in different places, but she soon found that that wouldn’t do, so then, in spite of ad vice from family and friends, she deeded one hundred acres of her property to a board of trustees to be held by them for the use of the poor boys and girls of the mountains. The school opened on January Ist, 1902; since that time she had given all of her time to interesting people in the school and In sharing the life with the girls and boys, she has watched a miracle of growth per formed on the land she so generous ly gave for such a noble cause. (More of “A Journey with Aunt Julia" will appear in 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 :s running.) to make this last report read one hundred and fifty, and we have two months more to round out the year. ! I hope none of you have ever been in a city where the financial crisis made it necessary for the city to have a brad line. That is heart rend : ing. I saw it once, and when I looked at the picture the Near East Relief sends of their “Hunger Line” which is twenty-four miles long, it ' brought to memory that other hun ger line. Last, winter we of the ; United States sent $750,000 worth of 1 child feeding supplies, chiefly ce reals. Shall we care for them this winter? They are a year older and . to die of hunger or cold now would ' be suffering longer than if they had died then. They are our brothers and sisters. I suppose the majority of you read God’s promise and warning in the , Sunday school responsive reading of October 10. If not turn to Deuter , onomy VI chapter and see what the Bible tells us about how to live, what to talk about and to whom to look for victory over temptation. Is this a little “preachment?” It is well for all of us to look into our . hearts and see what sort of treas ures we .have laid up; It is well for all of us to remember the good things that have come into our lives , and then beware lest we forget that ' it -was God who opened the store house of Heaven and gave us these blessings. . “There hath no temptation taken i you, but such as is common to man; but God is faithful, who will not suf- ■ fer you to be tempted above that . ye are able; but will with the temp tation also make away to escape ■ that ye may be able to bear it. • ——————————————— 1 A Proverb Puzzle Can You Solve It? 1 sss/ 1 ■ f L? 1 / AN \ < I I WAS \ I ~ V only GOinJ V\ * O y ! 5 i 1 /ill “ l 1 ! t The answer to The Tri-Weekly , I Journal’s last Proverb Puzzle was: r j "Finders keepers, losers weepers.’ - 1 Did you guess it? T 1 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 1 in the next issue of The Tri-Weekly. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1920. Il Wfj F J H f 1 ? jn ( hi; i: i.'i Chapter KXV z z y DO not see how sisters could • • I ever be better friends than JL Betty and I have always been, zuft , Possibly because we are as -T as l’ ossib l<?.” the nurse told Aora. lam independent, and even and r aenH e a J L Betty is tfmid an .< T entle ’ like my mother. . K mother the year I was graduated from high school. She made my graduating dress and all of the dainty things I wore that night, never worn them since, but m . e u lmes take them out and look ‘’•’ready a little yellowed with age, and then I can see her, my mother, just as she looked when she sat at our dining room table in theg evenings, whipping on lace and runZ mng in ribbons. “She sewed in the evenings to keep me company while I studied, she al ways said, but I knew the reason her needle dared not stop. I was study ing for the final school tests, and we planned together, as we sat there, for the time when I should be a trained nurse and earn a salary, and she could stop sewing for other people altogether. “I believe I would have given up completely and gone after mamma when she died if it had not been for Betty, whom she charged me to care l ßd this the day she died, ana I think that the very first thing this promise bound me to, the neces sity of living on without my mother, was the hardest test to which I have ever been put. I cannot explain why I was so desperate at losing my ’mother, be cause I cannot explain the kind of mother she was. “My father died when Betty and I were babies. Then mamma did dress making to support us. The hardest part to stand, it seemed to me at the time, was that she should have been u i n Just when 1 could at last lift the burden and begin to care for her. "I will not try to say anything more about this part except that six years afterward, on the night that I decided to marry Ben Morgan, I thought about those things my moth er nad made for me and that I would ' v ?ar them on my wedding day. I told Ben about it, just before we said good night. I think that this shows how much I loved him. . • was eighteen wljen she mar ried the first time, several years after we were left alone in the world. She lost her mind through shock when her husband, Will Morgan, Ben’s old er brother, was killed. Wijl was kill ed right before my sister’s eyes, four weeks before Frankie, their baby, was born. We were all liv.ing together at the time, for Will was kindness itself and he said that Betty and I should not be separated. I was kept busy nursing and Betty kept house. “Will sacrificed his life to save Betty. He snatched her from under the wheels of an automobile one eve ning at dusk when they were taking a little walk along the roadway near our home in the suburbs. Betty, who always had childish ways, had run back across the road to get some wild asters growing there. Will tried to hold her, but she broke away, laugh ing. When she realized her danger she was transfixed with fright and he rushed between her and the ma chine. throwing Betty to one side. “Will was killed instantly, but Bet ty was unharmed physically. “No one really knew what had hap pened to Betty's mind until about five weeks later when Ben Morgan came. He had gone to California to ranch when Will and Betty were married. “Ben had wanted me to marry him at that time but my heart was still too full of grief over mother to be able to feel anything else like that. Yet just as soon as he was gone I longed for him to come back, just be cause of my grief and lonesomeness. It often happens that way, I think. Betty had left me too, you see. Al though neither of us would admit it, things were not the same between us —there was bound to be a difference. She had loved Will, at first with childish tenderness and later with the fully awakened love of a happily married woman. His tragic death completely stunned her and she lay in that condition for weeks, never speaking, and eating only* when urged. “We awaited the crisis, believing that it must bring a change and fear ing, yet hoping for what that change would be. But what we hoped for did not happen. MARY MEREDITH’S ADVICE TO LONELY GIRLS AT HOME Dear Miss Meredith: Please give me some advice. I. am a girl tw - enty years old, and am in love with a boy about twenty-four We have been going together for about five years. Do you think he loves me? Are we old enough to get married? Is it right to go with more than one boy at a time? How often should a boy call—is three times a week too often? Is it right to kiss a boy after you are engaged. Please advise as early as possible. BEAUTY. You should know your own minds. At twenty years a girl’s mind should be matured enough to know whether she is in love seriously enough to marry the object of her affection. If you are not contemplating marriage it is alright to have as many beaux as you wish. Three times a week is not too often to receive young men callers. Kissing is not to be indulged in unless you really are going to marry the man. Will you please do me the kind ness to give me the address of some wholesale millinery business in Atan ta that I can write to and find out if I can go there and learn the milli nery business, as I am real anxious to learn this. If you can I will greatly appreciate your kindness and inclose stamped envelope. OLINE. You might write a letter to Kutz Wholesale Millinery com pany (to the manager) and see if they can place you. That is the best concern I know of. Or you may write to Mrs. E. M. Buch annan, 342 Edgewood avenue. Atlanta. She has a millinery store and may need help. I am writing you for your best advice. I am a girl of 16 years and I married a man of 17 years. We have been separated for 11 months and my parents w - ant me to get a divorce and stay at home, but I do not feel right at home any more. My husband was good to me and I love him dearly. He seemed to think the world of me. The reason I don’t want to live with him mother and all of the people make fun of him for being so little. He makes good wages. I w - ill close, thanking you for your advice, as I am unde cided. Yours truly, MIKE LITTLE. If you love your husband and he has done nothing to cause you to leave him and he is will ing to provide a home for you, your place is with him, regard less of what your parents say. You will have to live your own life you know and it is very wrong for you to listen to tales against your husband’s . physical appearance. For history tells us of a beautiful princess who mar ried a hunchback because she saw his beautiful soul. I am coming to you for advice. My age is seventeen. I was never able to complete school because my father died, leaving only I and my mother alone. Since I was fif teen years old I went with a boy older than me. but since a month ago he does not seem to want to go with me. Perhaps it was because I did not finish school. My father died when I was in the seventh grade. Please advise me what is best to do. DOT. Do not worry about the boy. I’m sure if he cares for you at all, he will not mind your lack of, education. You can help your self by ceadlug good books* kk Chapter XXVI z z f —COM the hour of little Frank • • ie’s birth I have been his I mother,” Miss Haldeman continued. She could see that Nora was greatly interested in her story. “When her torture cea’sed, my sister turned her wan face and great sad eyes toward her new-born baby, then looked away as if she had not even seen him, sighed deeply and closed her eyes. “Ben had come all the way from California to be with us in our trou ble. and he tried tq help me in the awful ordeal. But there was some thing awful yet to come. Ben and Will had always resembled each oth er very much, and in the two years that the younger brother had been away the resemblance had become startling. "It made us hesitate about allow ing hftn to see Betty, but finally we did two weeks after the baby was born. Dr. Findlay sanctioned it — just to see if it wrnuld rouse her. It did. Betry rose up in bed at the first sight of Ben's face, then held out her arms. “ ‘Will!’ she cried. ‘At last! Oh, Will!’ “Ben caught her in his arms as she threw herself toward him. ‘Dearest, dearest! I knew you would come back,’ she sobbed, her head on his breast. “Well, that’s how it was. Betty at once became perfectly normal in all other respects, but she could not be persuaded that Ben was not her dead husband or that Frankie was her child. It was awful. “Even if Betty had been in her right mind and loved Ben for him self, he could not have taken Will’s place and married her. He loved me. I never realized how much he did love rue until that time, nor did I really know until then that I loved him in return. “Even now it tortures me to recall that dreadful time. Things went on that way for more than three months. Betty regained her physical strength very slowly and the doctor kept her in bed, so it gave us a little time to think and to try to plan. But there was no possible plan. Ben went in to see Betty every day. This was his part of the torture, for she expected him to caress her just as Will would have done. I took care of little Frankie, with the help of a hired nurse. “Even this circumstance compli cated matters. Seme men are born fathers, I think, just as some women are born mothers. Ben was a born father. “Finally one night, when Ben found me sitting with my poor little foster baby in my lap, he just opened his big strong arms and took us both in by main force. I could not help it. Finally, however, I got enough moral strength together to pull away, and with it came the courage to tell Ben what he must do —go away and stay. He pleaded with me in away that shook my very soul, but I held on somehow. He saw that I meant it and tljat I could not be changed. And finally he promised he would go. “Y’ou see, I could not marry Ben unless I did what the doctors at last advised, and even Betty away in a sanitarium. They held out no hope that Betty would ever regain her reason. “The doctors even admitted that for Betty to be separated from the man she thought was her husband and from me at the same time might destroy what faint chance she had left. They only advised this step, I knew, on my account, and I never even considered it. I was nursing all this time, for my money was badly needed, so badly that I allowed Ben to pay a few bills and help in some other ways. He wanted to give me every cent he had, which at that time was not much, poor fellow, for he had barely gotten his first start. “Will left nothing but the. little house we lived in, which still was heavily mortgaged. Ben paid this mortgage, borrowing on his ranch, the only thing he owned in the world, to do it. He did not tell me, knowing that I would have protested, until the matter was concluded. That is the sort of a man he was—the man I loved. (TO BE CONTINUED.) isn’t what we learn at school So much as absorbing things worth while in later years. One should read, as it helps wonderfully in educating the mind to better and higher things. To Revive Frozen House Plants If a house-plant happens to get frozen during the winter, it should be removed immediately to a cool, dark room and drenched with cold water. The supposition that a paint should be revived with warm wa ter and heated air is wrong, as the treatment must be gradual. Plain Jackets With Checked Skirts Skirts of extremely large checks will bb.worn with plain jackets this fall, is the word from Paris. | LEMON JUICE | | FOR FRECKLES | I Girls! Make beauty lotion I j fora few cents —Try it! | Squeeze the juice of two lemons into a bottle containing three ounces of orchard white, shake well, and you have a quarter pint of the best freckle and tan lotion, and complex ion beautifier, at very, very small cost. Your grocer has the lemons and any drug store or toilet counter will supply three ounces of orchard white for a few cents. Massage this sweetly fragrant lotion into the face, neck, arms and hands each day and see how freckles and blemishes dis appear and how clear, soft and rosy-white the skin becomes. Yes! It is harmless and never irritates. (Advt.) Draws Like Hot Flax-Seed Poultice HEALS STUBBORN ODD SORES FROM BOTTOM UF. J'jst like a foot flaxseed poultice, Allen » Ulcerine Salve draws out poisons and germs from boils, sores and wounds and heals them from the bottom up. It heals In one-thiro lime that common salves and liniments take, Allen’s Ulcerine Salve is one of the oldest remedies in America, and since 18(51) has been known as the only salve powerful enough to teach chronic ulcers and old sores of long standing. Because it draws out the poisons and heals from the bottom up it seldom leaves a scar, and relief is usually perma nent By mail 65c. Book free. J. P. Allen Medicine Co., Dept 82. St. Paul, Minn. irn Davis, Avery, lex., writes: ”1 bad a chronic sore on my toot for years and doctors said it would never heal without scraping the bone. One box of Alien’s Ulcerine Salve drew out pieces of bone’ and lets of pus, and it healed up permanently."—(Advt.) CASCARETS “They Work while you Sleep’ ? ’’ ’ ’ ■ Ti W 1 1 Knock on wood. You’re feeling fine, eh? That’s great! Keep the entire family feeling that way always with occasional Cascarets for the liver and bowels. When bilious, constipat ed, headachy, unstrung, or for a cold, upset stomach, or bad breath, noth ing acts like Cascarets. No griping, no inconvenience. 10, 25, 50 cents. (Advt.) FROMFORTYFIVE TO SIXTY A. Word of Help to Women of Middle Age From Mrs. Raney. Morse, Okla.—“ When I was 45 years old Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege 'Tl 1 1 H I I1 WTTl'n 1 1 11 HITTT1 table Compound carried mo j through the criti* 1 cal period of the ■ Change of Life in We safety. I am over 60 and have raised \ \ ; a family of eight J children and am V ■*°* v *»' j i n fi ne health. My I ■■/flu daughter and JU Ju z daughters-in-law recommend your 1 r ] Vegetable Com- k < pound and I still take it occasionally myself. You are at liberty to use my name if you wish.”—Mrs. Alice Raney, Morse, Oklahoma. Change of Life is one of the most critical periods of a woman’s exist ence. This good old-fashioned root and herb remedy may be relied upon to overcome the distressing symptoms which accompany it and women everywhere should remember that there is no other remedy known to carry women so successfully through this trying period as Lydia E. Pink ham’s Vegetable Compound. If you want special advice write to Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., (confidential), (Lynn, Mass. Your letter will be opened, read and an swered by a woman and held in strict confidence. The newost creation in fine G*!ina making —a beautiful 42- Piece set of exquisite ware. Full size, dec orated with popular Bose floral de sign, edged with / 10 f B gold. Each piece will fee decorated with your personal ini- NtagT tial in pure gold, or the emblem of Ma- Ij sonic, Odd Fellows, w Ik. of p., wood l l va \ la men, Elks, Moose, 1 I “ / etc. This accomp- lishment is abso lutely new in fine China malting, and gives vour set an added personal value. Just think, we give it to you abso lutely free for telling your friends and neighbors about KIBLER’S ALUROUND OIL The Oil of a Thousand Uses Truly the perfect furniture polish, cleaner and brightener, rust preven tive and leather preserver. It’S the national standby. Takes the drudgery out of cleaning—makes cleaning a pleasure in over two million homes. It is so well known that it sells on sight. To get this beautiful dinner set —or cash commission simply order and sell 30 bottles of this won derful oil at 60 cents each. Return the SIB.OO collected and the dinner set is yours. Or you may have choice of Silverware, Rugs, Lace Curtains, etc. SEND NO MONEY. We trust you and take the oil back if you cannot sell it. Order today, giving your nearest express office. Be the first to enjoy the luxury of these new, novel and beautiful dishes. The Kibler Co,, Dept. A-28 Indianapolis, Ind. Down cornel omrices We Lead the Fight Against Profiteers Order direct from ui. Ourraluei defy competition. We jiuuniee to zzve you Our prices are almost ai low aa wholeaale. We deliver all rood* FREI to your door. Your money will be refunded inatantjy i f you are not satisfied with your purchaae. B BIG i BOOK Write for thia newillu- \ atrated Fall and Winter o*^?A h Bic Earjain Book. It’a \ crammed full of bariaina \ \\\Vl which have no equal. \ '' A poetcard will brine ft to IWC you at once—FREE!—POST- \ \ I pa!di - Don’t buy a thiaj fer yoar •el! or family until yoa get our bargain book aad compare oar pricea. Gilbert Bros? DEPT E NASHVILLE, TENN. 6 yaara, given FREE for selling L2boxe« yA o f Rosebud Salve at 25c per box. House hold remedy for horns, tetter, sores, piles, catarrh, coms, bunions, etc We send saive postpaid on credit, thistyou until sold. BIG CATALOG other premiums, wrftches. curtains, phonographs, etc. sent with salve Write today and get started. ROSEBUD PERFUME CO., Box 206 WOODSBORO.MD. 1 Made by egents ttßlng Our WOf, d®dul Fecial Soap. Perfume*. Toilet Anic,ea * s P‘- et ' trrtis, etc. free cake 1 °• p & ■D® n ’> t®™» mllad to any address. Laeassian C 9., Dept. 4~9 St. Lotris r Mfr, Cuticura Soap Clears the Skin i and Keeps it Clear; Soap, Ointment, Talcum. 26c. everywhere. Sample! ‘ free of Cntlcura Labor»torle«. Dept. U Maldtn, Mau. 5