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GEORGIA FARMS
RANK SECOND IN
NUMBER IN U. S.
That Georgia has the second largest
number of farms among the states of
the union is one of the many inter
esting facts contained in the report
of the census bureau concerning this
department of the recent census.
Only the state of Texas,-the larg
est in the union, surpasses Georgia
In the number of farms. The total
!n Texas is 435.666. while the total
in Georgia is 310.737. Mississippi
is third with 272,437; Kentucky is
fourth, with 270,676: North Carolina
is fifth, with 269,740; Missouri is
sixth, with 263.124.
Georgia in 1900 had a total of 224,-
691 farms; in 1910, a total of 291,027,
end in 1920, the total above given.
Georgia’s gain in farms from 1910
to 1920 was 19,710, which was a gain
of 6.8 per cent. This was a small
percentage of gain as compared with
some of the newly settled states of
the west where the population has
increased rapidly and thousands of
new farms have been opened up to
cultivation in the past ten years.
Montana, for instance, shows a gain
of 119 per cent.
The census bureau defines a farm
In the following language:
“A farm for census purposes is
611 the land which is directly farmed
by one person, either by his own la
bor alone or with the assistance of
members of his household or hired
employes. When a landowner has
one or more tenants, renters, crop
pers or manager, the land operated
by each is considered a farm.’’
The report of the census bureau
contains some further interesting fig
ures on the number of farms in each
county. It shows that Carroll coun
ty leads the list with a total of 5,-
436 farms. Laurens county comes
second with 5,337; Burke comes third,
With 4,675; Gwinnett comes fourth,
With 4,460; Emanuel comes fifth, with
3,916. Glynn county, on the coast,
Where most of the land is salt marsh,
is last on the list with a total of
331 farms. Camden county, also
on the coast, is next to the last, with
834.
Cobb County Farmers
And Merchants to Meet
MARIETTA, Ga., Nov. 27.—The
farmers of Cobb county will hold a
meeting at the Marietta courthouse
Friday, December 3, to discuss the
cotton situation. The merchants of
the county have been invited to at
tend the meting.
J. J. Brown, of the department of
agriculture; N. G. Mills, state presi
dent of the Farmers’ union; J. G.
Fleming, state secretary, and Martin
Amorous, president of the Cobb
county union, will be speakers.
Mr. Amorous outlined a plan sev
eral weeks ago whereby he believes
the cotton crop of the south could be
marketed at. a profit for the farmers
through federal aid, and this propo
sition will probably be discussed at
the meeting Friday.
Mr. Amorous went to Washington
With his proposition several weeks
ago and he believes he can have ac
tion taken on the matter by congress
If he can enlist the support of the
southern farmers and merchants.
SEND NO MONEY jf-gpigF
Thes® Black Solid Leather Outdoor and Work iljfe/■
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C. O. D. for jour own acceptance and approval.
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that you will be sure to keep them, so don’t hesi- Z-
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Note the rugged construction —
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Full lace, waterproof, belli,ws
toagne and strong back straps.
A Great Value
Never again will you be able to buy a
better shoe at the price—only *3.95 oa t 1
arrival—and the shoes are yours. 50. sir |
you don't have to send us a cent until J
you get the shoes, and we pay all 'ZiSYZfei?
postage. There is no need of you \ raRR < z :i i :'W.
paying $5 and $6 for a shoe
not near as good when t
you can order bv •??.'
mall and save the A
difference. Be auick
—just fill out and .
mail the coupon and B*
we will send them bv BL "J? K. 9 Ohl
RETURN MA I Jl W ‘*3
you don’t have t BW Q
wait at all. Sizes ‘
to 12. No half size PRFPfiIII
(250 extra ' «ria.rM?ty
sizes 11 and 12.)
Atl. r. W. Journal | ORDER COUPON | Noe. 23. 25. 27, 1920
—4». S. SUPPLY CO., (U. S. A.)
Dept. 106, Atlanta, Ga. ,
Send Black Work Shoes prepaid by return mail C. O. D. I will pay for them on arrival,
but can return if not satisfied.
Number of pairsSizeWidth. MUNSON LAS!
Name
Address
Town State
PELLAGRA
MISSISSIPPI BOY CURED
Doctors of Laurel and Hattiesburg
■who waited on the son of J. T. Chil
ders, gave him up to die. He had
open sores on his face, hands and
legs. His throat was inflamed and
full of scabs. He suffered terrific
pain in the stomach, arms and legs
Put the boy’s parents heard of
Bsmghn's Pellagra Treatment and
decided to try it. Soon after the
treatment was started an improve
ment was noticed. The pain was
relieved and the sores started to
heal. In a few months the patient
was completely cured.
If you suffer from pellagra as this
THE ATLAxVTA TRI-WEEKLY JOURNAL.
HatW ins Prize
In London Contest
a 1
; ; ig|L
\ $ .m.
■ 1
When Captain Eric Leighton, of
London, arrived recently in New
York he wore the oddest hat that
ever crossed the Atlantic. The hat.
which the captain calls a “Sandring,”
won the prize of 500 pounds offered
by a London newspaper for the most
original creation in men’s headgear.
Forty thousand designs were sub
mitted. The hat is a dull shell shade,
with a peculiar taper crown, full at
the sides and with awide brim.
Data Shows Women
, Broke “Solid South”
MEMPHIS, Tenn., Nov. 27. —Data
presented that tends to prove it was
the Women’s vote which broke the
solid south and put Tennessee in the
republican column is one of the main
topics of discussion today among
members of the Nineteenth Century
club.
This data, compiled by Mrs. Isaac
Reese, shows that although the dem
ocrats lost Tennessee, Cox actually
polled 53,274 more votes this year
than Wilson did in 1916. Taking
these figures as a basis, suffrage
leaders today contend that the demo
cratic party got its normal amount
of male votes in Tennessee and that
the women turned to Harding and
put the state republican. Thei total
vote Tennessee shows Harding 219,-
738;; Cox 206,556, compared with
Wilson 153,282; Hughes 116,223 in
1916. It is estimated that 150.000
women voted for President In Ten
nessee this month. Suffrage leaders
insist that of the feminine vote 51,-
000 or 34 per cent went to Cox and
99,000 of 66 per cent to Harding.
boy did, by all means investigate
this treatment.
Baughn’s Pellagra Treatment was
discovered by a big-hearted man,
living in Jasper, Ala., who is devot
ing his life to the relief of pellagra
among his neighbors. He is glad to
help you. He has written a booklet
on “Pellagia and How to Treat It,’’
which we would like to send you. It
will help you effect a cure in your
case. Send your name and ad
dress and we’ll send the booklet
without obligation to you. Ameri
can Compounding Co., Bpx 587-L,
Jasper, Ala.—(Advt.)
Q=D D
New Questions
1. Are swans ever used for food?
2. Who made the first motion pic
ture machine? <
3. How long is a Russian mile?
Which European country has the
longest mile?
4. How vid is Man o’ War?
5. What i< the origin of the
word, “sabotage?”
6. What is the difference between
misfeasance, malfeasance and non
feasance?
7. What proceedings must a Ger
man take who has not been in this
country six years and wishes a pass
port to Mexico?
8. How many states allow voting
by mail?
9. Can you tell me which was the
best-paid army during the war?
10. Was the month ever divided
into weeks of ten days?
Questions Answered
1. Q. vVhy is a cotton gin so
called.
A. “Gin” is a contraction of “en
gine” and a cotton gin is merely an
engine for separating seeds from
cotton.
2. Q. Do porcupines really shoot
their quills at enemies?
A. The quills of a porcupine are
loosely inserted in the sain, and may,
on being violently shaken, become
detached—a circumstance which may
have given rise to the purely fabu
lous statement that the animal pos
sesses the power of actually ejecting
its quills like arrows or darts at an
enemy. •“
3. Q. Will the amount of elec
tricity in some individuals affect a
watch through their clothing, and to
what extent?
A. The bureau of standards says
that the amount of electricity in an
individual body will not affect a
watch.
4. Q. How many Shriners are
there in the United States?
A. The membership of the Mystic
Shrine up to November 1, 1920, is
slightly over 385,000.
American Legion Moves t o
Consolidate All Bureaus
Governing Ex-Soldier Aid
WASHINGTON. Nov. 28.—Repre
sentatives of the American Legion
informed officials of the war risk in
surance bureau, the federal board for
vocational education and the United
States pyblic health service Saturday
that the Legion proposed to urge
measures designed to cut red tape in
the bureaus and to “compel the gov
ernment to function” in its dealings
with discharged and disabled service
men.
The Legion representatives who
met here with the heads of the three
bureaus to discuss a plan to combine
the work of the .bureaus, made the
position of the Legion clear, declar
ing that it proposed to press for leg
islation consolidating functions of
the three government agencies and
doing away with "long-winded talk
about co-operation and co-ordina
tion.” John Sherbourne,, of Boston,
a member of the Legion's committee,
admonished the government con
ferees that if the proposed consolida
tion destroyed their present organi
zations, “it would simply have to go
ahead and destroy.”
Sherbourne Replies
Dr. C. W. Lavender, representing
the public health service, made a
plea for the continuation of “other
work in the health service outside of
that done for the veterans of the
world war.” saying that his bureau
had many other functions in addition
to the work with disabled veterans.
“I have read every one of your
appropriation bills,” Mr. Sherbourne
replied, “and I find that the money
you have to spend for the soldiers,
sailors and marines is much greater
than for all other purposes combined.
Now, we don’t want to be rough,
and we do not want to Impair or
handicap any governmental agency
unnecessarily, but I will go to the
line on this: We are faced with the
problem of government agencies not
functioning and we do not propose
to permit any single agency to stand
in the way.”
liegian Plan.
Robert Marx, Cincinnati member
of the Legion’s committee, declared
it appeared each of the three agen
cies affected by the proposed changes
was seeking to retain its separate
entity and was opposing the program
solely because itt-meant the concen
tration of the three bureaus under
the direction of one responsible head.
This Was declared by the bureau rep
resentatives to be an incorrect rep
resentation of their position. All de
clared their willingness to work out
a plan w'hich would yield better re
sults.
The consolidation plan as outlined
by the Legion representatives pro
poses the creation of an assistant
secretary in one of the executive de
partments, probably in the treasury,
to have direct charge of the work of
the three bureaus having to do with
ex-service men. The government
representatives, R. G. Cholmeley-
Jones, director of the war risk insur
ance bureau: Uell Lambkin, member
of the vocational education board,
and Dr. Lavender, approved this fea
ture of the plan, but doubted the
advisability of actually combining
the three bureaus.
Several members of the Legion
committee will remain here to com
plete drafting of the proposed bill,
i The three bureaus represented at to
; day’s conference have assured the
i committee they will aid in this work.
GranuiatecTSugar Hits
New Low, 9 1-2 Cents
NEW ORLEANS, Nov. 27.—The
price of granulated sugar made a
new low record here today when a
number of local grocers cut the re
tail price to 9 1-2 cents per pound.
5. Q. What are the days of the
week named after?
A. The days of the week are
named after the following: Sunday,
named for the sun; Monday, for- the
moon; Tuesday, for Tuesco; Wed
nesday, for Woden or Oden; Thurs
day, for Thor; Friday, for Frea, and
Saturday for Saturn. Tuesday, Wed
nesday, Thursday and Friday were
named for Norwegian gods.
6y Q. Are wild animals scarcer
during open season for huntings or
do they merely seem so?
A. The department of agriculture
says that wild animals seem to
know where they can find protection.
In places where there are game
sanctuaries, wild creatures hasten to
them at the beginning of every Open
hunting season.
7. Q. How can air be weighed?
A. The bureau of standards says
the weight of air can be determined
by taking a glass bulb fitted with a
stopcock, the air from
the bulb, weighing the bulb and then
admitting air and weighing again.
The difference in weight equals the
weight of air contained in the bulb.
8. Q. When did Coxey’s army en
ter Washington and how many men
were in it?
A. This industrial army entered
Washington on the 29th of April,
1895, numbering 336 men.
9. Q. How many full-fledged gen
erals have we now?
A. The war department says that
General Pershing is the only gen
eral in the United States army at
present. General March held the
title during the war, but is now a
major general. General Bliss was
a brevet general, but is now retired
from service.
10. Q. Is there such a thing as
a varnish tree?
A. This name is given to several
trees because their resinous juice is
used for varnishing or lacquering.
India, Japan, Java, Sumatra, Bor
neo, Celebes and other East Indian
islands are the homes of these trees.
Recurrence of “Flu”
Epidemic This Winter
Is Not Believed Likely
WASHINGTON, Nov. 28.—Indica
tions are that a recurrence of the
influenza epidemic will come this
winter, Hugh S. Cumming, surgeon
general of the United States public
health service, said Saturday
“As a result of very careful analy
ses of the epidemiology of Influenza,
especially as the result of intensive
studies in homes where it occurred
in 1918 and 1919, it may be stated
that an attack of influenza appears
to confer a definite immunity to sub
sequent attacks —the immunity last
ing for several years,” he said. “In
asmuch as the epidemic of 1918 and
1919 affected so very large a propor
tion of the population there would
seem to be reasonable grounds for
believeing that even should ‘flu*
become prevalent here and there, it
would not assume the epidemic pro
portions of the past two years, nor
would it rage in such severe form.
Os course, there is no definite way
of telling whether this winter will
bring a recurrence of the influenza
epidemic.”
Uncle John Schell
Will Visit Chicago
John Schell, 130 years old, will
leave his home in the Kentucky hills,
near Lexington, and go to Chicago
on December 15, where he will be
examined by the most prominent
physicians of the country, who will
try to find out why Schell has lived
so long.
Schell says the recipe for long life
is “m> pampering in boyhood, hard
work "h )ugh life and no worry.” He
drinks v> liisky when he can get it.
and eat • everything he can get hold
of, he says.
Schell has a daughter ninety years
old, who lives near him, and a seven
year-olfl son, who lives with him.
hamboneTmeTiTatioTs
DE 'LECTRUF LIGHT HOUSE
DONE BROKE DOWN.EN
IT IN DARK O' PF:
N\OC?N~- UH.' A MAN
GOT T' SM_ELL HE WAY
ROUN' AT NIGHT JES'
SAME EZ A DAWG!’.
1
Copyright, 1920 by McClure Newspaper Syndicate;
Mystery Statue
. T
ml
liSK -1
■ ■ 1
- I HIM ■—»—llf l I
WASHINGTON—President Zach
ary Taylor “sits” in solemn and
dignified manner among the othc«r
“immortals” in the Capitol build-,
ing, but nobody knows how he got
there or whose' work he is. The
marble bust has been in the build
ing for a long time, but is not
catalogued and of unknown origin.
It is the “mystery statue” .of the
capitol.
BIG YEAR PLANNED
BY FITZGERALD’S
BOARD OF TRADE
FITZGERALD, Ga., Nov. 27.—The
Fitzgerald Chamber of Commerce
Wednesday re-elected all its present
staff of officers for the ensuing year,
approved plans for close co-operation
between the chamber and the Ben
Hill County Farm Bureau federa
tion, indorsed the Community Serv
ice council’s work and assured it aid
in a campaign for funds next month,
and voted an appropriation wtth
which to help sustain the Fitzgerald
Concert band, recently organized here
by G. S. Wilcox, former mayor ot
Ocilla and manager of the Ocilla
Woodmen of the World band.
The officers for 1921 will be .Tack
H. Mayes, president: Will A. Adams,
secretary; J. C. Glover, treasurer; C.
A. Newcomer and J. E. Turner, vice
presidents. The board of governors
will be Forrest Farmer. Ed Hussey,
G. S. Wilcox. J. L. McCarty, I. C.
Smith, O. L. Bradshaw, C. T. Owens,
Dr. Frank Ward. W. R. Bowen, L. L.
Griner, J. L. Dominey, Isidor Geld
ers and S. G. Pryor, Jr.
A committee of nine was appointed
to’ confer with the county advisory
council 'of the Ben Hill County Farm
Bureau federation at its meeting
Thursday afternoon on means of
closer co-operation between the busi
ness agricultural interests of
the county. The committee was C. A.
Newcomer, W. R. Bowen, W. A.
Adams. J. J. Dorminey, G. A. Jolley,
J. C. Bre-wer, C. S. Isler, J. H. Mayes
and Lon Dickey.
Two Newspaper Men
Capture 600 Reds
SEBASTOPOL. —The humors of
war share places with the casualty
lists and military movements in the
news.
When General Bogaevsky was exe
cuting the retrgat of Wrangel’s troops
in the Taknak region he found his
train surrounded by the rapidly ad
vancing Bolsheviki. As in motion
pictures, he jumped from his car
window into an automobile and there
followed a flight toward the river
with the reds in pursuit.
The bridge collapsed as the gen
eral’s car rolled onto it and the auto
mobile tumbled into the river. Gen
eral Bogaevsky leaped from the ma
chine as it fell and landed In a
swamp where he hid in the rank reeds
until morning. Meantime the reds
in their turn had retreated.
Northeast of Alexandrovsk where
there had been fighting, two newspa
per men, Charles Rivet, of the Paris
Temps, and Guy» Beringer, of Aeu
ters. Limited, the British press as
sociation, captured 600 reds. They
saw a broken regiment of tired, hun
gry men near a village; they walked
up to the Bolsheviki, proposed they
surrender so as to get food as Wran
gel’s prisoners, and marched back into
the south Russian lines at the head
of the breadline.
Judge Howard Lenient
With Aged Forger
Tom McHugh, an aged man, plead
ed guilty to a charge of having
forged the name of Attorney Fred
Harrison to a check and following
a plea for clemency by Mr. Harrison
Friday afternoon Judge G. H. How
ard, who was presiding in the crim
inal division of the superior court,
sentenced McHugh to three months
on the chaingang and then sus
pended sentence on good behavior.
McHugh was a former client of
Attorney Harrison. When arrested
a few weeks ago he was found to
have a check in his possession for
$25 and signed by Attorney Harri
son. The latter denied signing the
check, but out o-f sympathy for the
aged man represented him in court.
Army Estimates increase
TOKIO, Nov. 27. —The army esti
mates for the forthcoming year to
tal 245.000,000 yen, an increase of 50
per cent over last year. Os this sum.
40,000.000 yen will be expended on
new defense schemes. Service in the
cavalry branch of the army will be
reduced from three to two years.
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1020.
THRONGS FLOCK
TO FLORIDA FAIR
' AT JACKSONVILLE
JACKSONVILLE, Fla., Nov. 27.
Congressman Charles H. Randall, of
Pasadena, Cal., the only member of
congress elected on a prohibition
ticket, is spending the week in
Jacksonville enlisting the sympa
thies and co-operation of Florida cit
rus fruit interests in a protective
tariff on citrus fruits, lemons espe
cially.
Mr. Randall, who is an interesting
figure in national and California
politics, conferred with Governor
Sidney J. Catts, who has been here
during the week in connection with
the disturbance created by the re
fusal of his son-in-law, K. PR. Pad
erick, to vacate the office of tax
collector of the county, claiming
that he was appointed to serve dur
ing the unexpired term of J. W.
Rast, his commission reading “Until
January 4, 1920.”
The governor expressed his inter
est in Congressman Randall’s mis
sion, stating that he would be glad
to co-operate in obtaining the intro
duction and passage of a bill provid
ing for the protective tariff during
the coming session of congress.
Florida en masse has attended the
state fair being held in the Brent
wood section of Jacksonville this
week. Tuesday was press and ro
tary day. and Rotarians and news
paper men from throughout the
state thronged the grounds through
out the day. At noon, a barbecue
was featured, the Rotarians and ed
itors being the guests of honor, and
various interesting amusements were
planned by the fair authorities.
Wednesday was Farmers* day. and
Thanksgiving day was devoted to the
entertainment of boys and girls’
clubs.
Friday, which was American Le
gion day, was a thriller, and Satur
day, the closing day of the fair, was
se taside as Fraternal day. the va
rious fraternal orders receiving es
pecial attention on that day.
Two Missing Men
Are Being Sought for
Killing of Salesman
PHILADELPHIA, Pa., Nov. 27.
After a day of investigating addi
tional statements made by Peter D.
Treadway and Marie Phillips, under
arrest here in connection with the
killing of Henry T. Peirce, manu
facturers' salesman found beaten to
death in his apartment last Mon
day. detectives working on the case
declared they had cleared up all
doubt as to the identity of the two
men alleged by prisoners to have ac
tually killed Peirce. One is referred
to bv Treadway and his girl com
panion as “Alf” Smith and the other
as “Jack." «
The police have found that the
two men, who are missing from their
usual haunts in this city, are well
known local characters. A descrip
tion of them has been sent broad
cast by the police department and
tonight a report was received that
two men answering the descriptions
were seen in Cincinnati. The Cincin
nati authorities have been asked to
investigate.
Treadway and the girl were put
through further examinations. They
continue to stand by their story that
they were having a party in Peirce’s
apartment when the \fwo men en
tered, held up Peirce and when he
showed resistance, hit him with a
pipe wrench. The girl and Tread
way also «held fast to the story that
the two men compelled them to drive
to Wheeling, West Virginia, where
they disappeared and left the couple
almost penniless.
Detectives looking up Treadway’s
career said it has been established
that he never was a boxer. He had
assumed the name of “Young West”
and had his photograph taken in
prize ring costumes, detectives said,
to make a “hit” with girl acquaint
ances.
Red Cross Planning
Greatest Christmas
Ever Given Poland
(Special Cable to the Chicago Dally New*
Foreign Service, by Leased Wire to
The Atlanta Journal.)
(Copyright, 1920.)
WARSAW, Poland. —The American
Red Cross expects to make this
year’s Christmas celebration in Po
land the greatest it has ever at
tempted on the continent of Europe.
Five hundred thousand presents will
be distributed. Os these 24,000 will
go to the orphans in the city of War
saw. The 6.000 soldiers in General
Hallers’ Polish-American army are
to receive new suits of clothes; in
fact, 75,000 such outfits are being
made in Polrsti factories. This
means a triple charity. To the
workers, the plant owners and the
ultimate consumers.
Everybody who can provide work
and raw materials in Poland today
is a welcome guest. All the cotton
and wool used in these suits has been
imported by the Red Cross. The dis
tribution will take place through
hospitals, asylums and orphanages.
In each large center a Christmas tree
will be provided. A special effort will
be made to provide General Hallers
men with complete civilian outfits,
including toilet articles, shoes and
underwear, so that they need not hes
itatae about going back to the United
States whenever they choose. A con
siderable number have been forced
to remain in Poland because of the
impossibility of buying clothes.
Another great effort will be by the
Red Cross made among the re
turning refugees in Poland’s eastern
provinces.
Rains Damage Rice
SACRAMENTO, Cal., Nov. 27.—Ap
proximately 800,000 bags of rice, val
ued at between $1,500,000 and $2,000,-
000, were lost in California as the
result of the seasonal rains, accord
ing to an estimate made today by J.
H. Stephens, president of the Pacific
Rice Growers’ association, which is
checking up the loss. Mr. Stephens
said the 1920 crop was estimated at
4,000,000 hags, and that the loss will
be about 20 per cent.
From Cannon’s Roar
To Typewriter Rattle
|g||H
\ TO#/A
\. JA/y/USHAI
WASHINGTON.—O nee the
wicked staccato of machine guns
dinned in her ears, but now Miss
Victoria Janushai hears only I?he
rattle and tap of typewriters.
She’s a stenographer in the office
of the Lithuanian national coun
cil here. She was one of Russia’s
women soldiers against the Red
army. Miss Janushai was arrest
ed by the Reds for an anti-Bol
shevik speech and joined a band
of Red deserters and with them
entered Kolchak’s army. She
fought in some of his bloodiest
battles.
Rural Civilization
The first important consideration
for us to get clearly itno our minds
-—and just as clearly Into the minds
of our statesmen and leaders from
cities and towns —is that it is really
our privilege and our duty to develop
here In Americ/, and in every other
civilized nation, a splendid rural—a
distinctively rural —civilization.
Too often the idea has seemed to
be that the farmer exists merely to
suppl food and raiment for an urban
civilization. The farmer has been
long enough called “the backbone of
the nation.” It is time to realize
that he is also to a great extent its
heart and brair. The aim of society
and government must be to develop a
civilization equally rich, beautiful,
varied, and vital in both town and
country.—Clarence Poe.
CAMEO- f D KT
BROOCH f EL &
With This Beautiful, Stylish Serge Skirt
No Money! fIBB
STUNNING BARGAIN!
This beautiful smartly-styled Serge Skirt
i-ent to you without one penny in advance.
So sure are we this is the greatest bargain SaMB
you have seen that we want to send it to
you at our risk. You will wonder at such
superb value for »o little money. The rea
sun is we have Just a small, special lot of
I hose handsome Serge Skirts—so you must ImA W
rush your order. Just send your name mid
dze—not one cent of money!
BLUE OR BLACK
5E RG E SKIRT
$2.95 Prepaid
lade of finely-woven, splendid quality, mix
■ I serge. Full cut in season’s latest de
■ gn. Two stylish pockets trimmed with ?£ 'tty
■ ittons nnd braid. Belt lined with sateen; tffi-jfsi:
large buttons in front. Back finished with
'•■oft shirring. You will be absolutely de- g?
lighted with the appearance and wonderful
luallty of this skirt. The unheard-of low
price will astound you! Think of It—only
$2,95 when the skirt arrives—not a penny
now. You simply cannot afford to miss
this sensational bargain. Write your name. :
address, waist size, skirt length and color
desired on coupon or letter and mail To
!,AY - t S /c'*- « w
Hips are extra full. The picture does not
do justice to the beauty of the style. You
i u;st try it on to really appreciate it. Snap
this bargain up now—while it lasts.
ALL SIZES
I
Sizes 22 to 46 waist, 34 to 40 length. Extra watet size from 31 to 39—53
■cuts extra. Special extra size from 40 up—9sc extra. These made to order.
Be sure to state color desired, waist and length size. This, with your name
and address on the coupon, is all we require. Don’t send a penny with the coupon.
Remember, you can send this skirt back by Insured Mail at our expense if you
don’t think it is the greatest skirt value ever offered.
—— —— —— — ——
Atl. T.-W. Journal | Order Coupon | Nov. 16, 18, 20, 1920
U. S. Supply Co.,
Skirt Dept., Atlanta, Ga.
Send Skirt prepaid by return mall, C. 0. D. (Cameo-Brooch Free). I will pay
n arrival, but will return if not satisfactory.
Waist <Length Color
Name
Address
Town -
STILL LOOK FOR
WOMAN IN OIL
MAN’S SHOOTING ■
ARDMORE. Okla., Nov. • 27.
Search for Mrs. Clara Smith Hamon,
charged with shooting Jake L. Ha
mon, millionaire oil operator and
Republican national committeeman,
who died here yesterday, was vigor
ously prosecuted today. (
Authorities declared they were
convinced the woman had fled to
California. Reports were freely cir
culated, howeve'r, that she had not
left Ardmore. Two men notified
county officials today that they had
seen the woman here.
County Attorney Brown, wljo filed
charges of shooting with intent to
kill against Mrs. Hamon in face of
the victim’s claim he accidentally
shot himself, announced today no
further legal action would be taken,
until after the funeral. He inti-,
mated an inquest might be ordered.
Brown said he was considering
changing the charge against the
woman to murder. (
Hamon’s body will be in state in
convention hall here until Mondav
morning. The funeral will be held
from the First Presbyterian church
Monday afternoon. Burial will be in
Rose cemetery.
Twenty Killed in
Airplane Bomb Blast
ROME, Nov. 27. —Twenty persons
are .dead or missing in. a series of
explosions of airplane bombs at a
munitions factory at Vergiate, forty
miles from Milan, a dispatch to the
Messagero today said. The explo
sions werq continuing.
Ministers Are Fighting
Dancing in Schools ’
HUNTINGTON. W. Va.—“ Dances
in the public schools," horrors, sav
the ministers of this city. Because
the Parent-Teacher association ad
vocated dancing for students under
supervision of the faculty, the min
isterial association threatens action.
BU®
z /|\ x 1 i sz i 11 z /nv‘
"Pape’s Cold Compound" is
Quickest Relief Known
Don’t stay stuffed-up! Quit blow
ing and snuffling! A dose of “Pape's
Cold Compound” taken every two
hours until three doses are taken
usually breaks any cold right up.
The very first dose opens clogged
nostrils and the air passages of the
head; stops nose running; relieves
the headache, dullness, feverishness.
“Pape’s Cold Compound” costs only
a few cents at drug stores. It acts J
without assistance, tastes nice, con
tains no quinine—Insist upon Pape’s!
(Advt.)