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Information
Today.
All Samples perfect refinement and good
*aste. This valuable wall paper portfolio
ontirelv FREE. Mail post card.
Tho Cha*. William Stores, Inc., Dept. 32,
New York City.
Why Druggists Recommend
Swamp-Root.
For many years druggists have
watched with much Interest the re
markable record maintained by Dr.
Kilmer’s Swamp-Root, the great kid
ney, liver and bladder medicine.
It is a physician’s prescription.
Swamp-Root Is a strengthening
medicine. It helps the kidneys, liver
and bladder do the work nature In
tended they should do.
Swamp-Root has stood the test of
vears. It is sold by all druggists on
its merit and it should help you. No
other kidney medicine has so many
Erlends. _ _
Be sure to get Swamp-Root and
start treatment at once.
However, if you wish first to test
this great preparation send ten cents
to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton.
N. Y„ for a sample bottle. When
writing be sure and mention this pa
per.—(Advt.)
Government Overcoats
All-wool government overcoats, \ slightly
...->rn, but in first-class condition. These
. • .its bar* been renovated, cleaned and
pressed and a first-class
tailor would ask $75.00 to
make one from the same class
TVk of material. Men’s sizes from
/Fr *T\ 3(5 and U P- Tlle Bmall 81zes
/il(* •l\ will make the warmest coat
(MV* •\ \ your boy ever wore and are
IvM \ jnst the thing for school. Any
of these coats should wear for
/ g 5 years. Our price $8.75.
I I \ These coats dye a beautiful
I black or dark blue, which we
II 1 will have done for you if you
so request by the largest
B dyers in Chicago for $2.75
K H additional to the first cost of
Jfc •H. 88.75, but the cost of dyeing
must accompany the order.
•$8.7 3 Each A# a matter of good faith
mail ua a deposit of SI.OO, balance on de
livery. We always ship overcoats by ex
press, unless otherwise instructed.
Kingsley Army Shoe Company
3858 Cottage Grove Ave., Dept. K-206,
Chicago, XU.
USE SLOAN'S T0~”
WARDOFF PAIN
on can just tell by its healthy,
stimulating odor, that it is
going to do you good
Uw- F I only had some Sloan’s
I Liniment!" How often you’ve
I said that! And then when the
rheumatic twinge subsided—
after hour- of suffering— for
got it!
Don’t do it again—get a bottle to
day and keep it handy for possible
use tonight! A sudden attack .may
oome on—sciatica, lumbago, sore
muscles, backache, stiff joints, neu
ralgia, the pains and aches resulting
from exposure You’ll soon find
warmth and relief in Sloan’s, the
liniment that penetrates without
rubbing. Clean, economical. Three
sizes—3sc, 70c, $1.40.
SloariS
Liniment
(Advt.)
Cured His RUPTURE
I was badly ruptured while Lifting a trunk
several years ago. Doctors said w only hope
of cure was an operation. Trqarcs did me
oo good. Finally 1 got hold of something
that quickly and completely cured me. Years
have passed and the rupture never re
turned, although I am doing tujrd work as
a carpenter. There was no operation, no
lost time, no trouble. I have nothing to sell,
but will give full information about liow
you may find a complete cure without oper
at ion, if you write to me. Eugene M. Pullen
Carpenter, 189-G Marcellus avenue, Manas
quan, N. J. Better cut out this notice and
show It to any others who are ruptured—
you may savs a life or at least stop the
misery of rupture and the worry and danger
of aa operation.—(Advt.)
SLOWING UP IN WINTER
Lack of outdoor exercise, and
heavy meals in winter disturb di
gestion. The bowels should not be
clogged with undigested, poisonous
waste matter. Foley Cathartic Tab
lets cleanse the bowels without grip
ing or nausea, banish biliousness and
headaches, bloating, gas, bad breath,
and sweeten the stomach. Ammie H.
Flemming, 404 Palmetto St., Mobile,
Ala., writes: "I recommend Foley
Cathartic Tablets. I feel like a well
woman today. My trouble was con
stipation.”—(Advt.)
PEACH & APPLE
TEP ETE’S AT bargain prices
I I* &■ Hartal TO PLANTERS
Smail or Law Lota by Expres. Freight or Parcel I'oel
Pear Plum. Cherry Berri.s. Grapee Nut» Shade and
Ornamental Trees. Viner and Shrulw Catalog FREE
VENN. NURSERY CO. CLEVELAND. TENN
H kl lLtl J i 1 I
2 FALLING SICKNESS
LiJfjtjKP*' To ali ttfferere from Flu. Epilepsy. Falling I
or Nervous Troubles will be aaot AB* I
fsOLUTELY FREE a Urge bottle of W. B Peebe’a Treat- I
I aeat For thirty years, tbowaads of offerers bare ued W. BL I
I ftatrtTtftVml ~ ! tt IT—"— —Girt Expreuaad P.O. I
! Address, W, H. PEEKE. 9 Cedar Street, N, Y. |
VUiVIt W toil, (b lar g e nnmbers, with the
Now. Folding. Galvanised Steel Wire Trap. It
catches them Hke a fix -trap catches files. Made In
all sizes. Write for descriptive price list, and free
booklet on best bait known for attracting all kiada
offish. J.F.Grejpry. DepL2l3, Lebanon,Mte.
■kRIARAU Created One Week
FREE. Short Breath
. Illlajl U I in s relieved in a tew
k ■ hours, swelling re
duced m a few daya, regulates the liver,
kidneys, stomach and heart, purifies the
blood, strengthens the entire system. Write
for Free Trial Treatment. COLLUM DROP
EY REMEDY CO.. DEPT. fi. ATLANTA, GA.
THE ATLANTA TRI-WEEKLY JOURNAL.
BRITISH LABOR
MOVES FOR IRISH
PARLEY ON PEACE
LONDON, Dec. 16.—British labor
today began an offensive for peace in
Ireland.
After a long forenoon session an
executive commission, representing
the labor party, arranged to send a ,
deputation to Premier Lloyd George
in the Interest of peace. The com
mission heard the report of Arthur
Henderson and bther laborltes who
recently investigated conditions in
Ireland.
Meanwhile there was reviving in
terest in peace negotiations. Some
of this was due to the letter of Fath
er O’Flanagan to Premier Lloyd
George. Lloyd George, while reject
ing O’Flanagan’s offer, left the way
open for O’Flanagan to continue ne
gotiations.
Business is reviving in Ireland as
a result of reports that railway
workers will no longer refuse to op
erate the roads. Only in the south
western district is there paralysis
In many cities shopkeepers have
boarded up their windows and sought
the comparative safety of the open
country.
In Cork the exodus of business men i
has left a serious problem in the
feeding of the population forced to
remain. It was believed the military
might have to undertake some meth
od of provisioning.
Troops continued in full control
there today with additional forces re
porting almost hourly. There were
no official statements as to the plans
for extending the martial law dis
trict.
NEGOTIATIONS NOT STOPPED.
.. .. BY BURNING OF CORK
BY WILLIAM E. NASH
(Special Cable to the Chicago Daily Mews
Foreign Service, by Leased Wire to
The Atlanta Journal.)
(Copyright, 1920.)
LONDON, Dec. 16. —The events in
Cork have not had any effect on the
course of the negotiations for peace
between the British government and
certain private Irish citizens. A tele
gram was sent last night to Father
O’Flanigan permitting him to talk
with Arthur Griffith In Mount Joy
prison as requested, and to com
municate by cable as much as he
pleased with Eamonn De Valera, in
New York.
It is hoped In this way to prove
that Father O’Flanigan really does
represent the moderate elements of
the Sinn Fein. The prison conversa
tion will, it is believed, turn about
the proposed meeting of the Dail
Eireann of Irish parliament and the
Irish attitude with respect to it.
The British cabinet now seems td
be convinced that this is_ the only
way out of the Irish crisis. It in
tends to offer no basis for delibera
tions, but to let Irishmen —both Sinn
Feiners and Ulsterites —define con
structively what is best for Ireland.
Strange to say. however, the view
persists In the foreign office here
that Ireland really does not want in
dependence after all. The officials
solemnly assure this correspondent
that four-fifths of the Sinn Feiners
would be content with autonomy less
comprehensive than that of Canada.
Whence this optimism comes it is
hard to say.
Poverty and Pellagra
Go Hand in Hand, Says
U. S. Health Service
WASHINGTON, Dec. 16.—Poverty
and pellegra go hand in hand, the
United States public health service
concludes after a three-year study
of the disease in the cotton mills of
South Carolina.
the income fell the disease
was found to increase and to affect
more and more other members of
the same family,” says an announce
ment by the service. “As the income
rose, the disease decreased and was
rarely found in families that enjoy
ed the highest incomes, even though
this highest was still quite low.
“Differences among families with
th esame incomes are attributed by
the report to differences in the ex
penditures for food, intelligence of
the housewife, and ownership of
cows, gardens, etc. Differences
among villages which were econo
mically similar are attributed to dif
ferences in the availability and con
dition of food in local markets
“A recent statement by one of he
largest life insurance companies in
the United States indicates that the
food standards of southern wage
earners must have improved re
markably of late for the death rate
from pellagra has fallen from 6.7
per 190,000 in 1915 to 2.3 in 1919,”
Twenty Americans Are
• Still Held Prisoners
Os Bolsheviki Forces
WASHINGTON, Dec. 16.—Twenty
American citizens are still held as
prisoners of the Russian Bolshevists,
it was said today at the state depart
ment. Included in this number is
Mrs. Marguerite Harrison, sister-in
law of Governor Ritchie, of Mary
land, who went to Russia as a cor
respondent.
Most of the prisoners are detained
at Moscow. At least one of the
Americans, according to latest ad
vices, has been held in solitary con
finement for nearly two years, caus
ing his health to be greatly .under
mined. |
The state department has made
repeated efforts to secure the Ameri
can’s liberation through Scandinavian
and other channels, but without suc
cess. Efforts are being continued,
but officials said that to disclose
their nature would defeat the work
of liberation. Some of the American's
have been charged with espionage,
while others have been held as host
ages as a Bolshevik protest against
the imprisonment of “political pris
oners” in this country.
Keen Rutter Farming Tools ~ (Sil
for Real Farm Work 1 1 nit
Keen Kutter Farming Tools j
are just the kind of tools that !■ H' l
warm the heart of the man I fff B/l
who uses them. - ' / A s
Fifty years of actual study and ex- *** I! f ||| I
perience has taught us how to ! s
make them better than any<other V / ij I
line of farming tools on earth. • ’ M l Sj;i|
Perfectly pained, hand picked I Jill I
handlesand fine!) tempered, steels I
are both fashioned to make Keen Lpf li
Kutter Tools look well, servo » h! gjf ifill
better and last longer. //r'/ Iff jf/f B l
The Keen Kutter zig zag tang, Lp' l '!/ I Illi
welds the handle to meta! so firmly o - l| yw/ B/ 1 .
that Keen Kutter handles can w.J* f |i|||
never come loose. , mil
Your money back if you are not /p'/j I
satisfied, is the broad Keen Kutter Lp,/ A 1 Jw El I
guarantee Jw/ H I
Simmons Hardware Company
,l The recollection of mp/ •$ filly,
QUALITY remains FP// * II! f Ml
long after the PRICE W'./ ji ' |Il I
*» forgotten" K/ Vll I
—E C Stmmune np I «M jSi 1,1 wi Iffefor -l
Trade Mark Registered. 1 I i '’cl -
fl
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■JL \ W
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M its
W# WWW
Youngest Politician
Worries About Job
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15 1
,4 JihLcrf
_LOUM LUDLOW
WASHINGTON—Louis Ludlow’s
job comes and goes, just like any
big politician’s. He is nersonal page
to Vice President Marshall and hails
from Indiana. After March 4, it
is likely some youth from Massa
chusetts will unseat Louis.
Cotton Mills in Shape
To Make More Profit,
States S. C. Senator
WASHINGTON, Dec. 16.—Cotton
mills of the south and New England
were declared by Senator Smith,
Democrat, South Carolina, in an ad
dress in the senate today, to be in a
position to make greater profits now
with cotton selling at a low price
and with their products cut 33 1-3
per cent, than during the recent
days of 40 cent cotton, when, he said,
the profits of many mills amounted
to 300 per cent.
The South Carolina senator charg
ed that the mills had not reduced
the prices of their products to cor
respond with the drop in the price
of cotton and also in many cases, in
the wages of workers. The price of
raw cotton, he said, had declined 200
per cent, while the prices received by
the mills for the finished products
had fallen only 33 1-3 per cent.
The senator upbraided those who,
he said, had declared “let the farm
ers take their medicine,” in the form
of falling prices
“Many millionaires were made dur
ing the war,” he continued, “but not
one of them came from the farmers.
You stand here haggling about anti
trust laws, breaking the hearts of
the farmers when thousands are suf
fering."
Senator Smith declared there was
as much or more profiteering today
“in dollars” as there had been a
year ago in "commodities” although
no word of criticism was heard. He
quoted Secretary Meredith to the ef
fect that the farmers already had
lost more than $5,000,000,000 this
year through shrinkage in the values
of their products. I
$ 1,200 Stolen From
Representative Salmon
ROME, Ga., Dec. 16.—The home of
John W. Salmon, one of Floyd coun
ty’s representative in the legislature,
was entered by a burglar, and $1,200
in currency was taken from a cigar
box in a closet of Mr. Salmon’s bed
room, his home being at Armuchee, a
village nine miles north of Rome. The
thief entered the house through a
window in the living room and made
his way into the closet where the
money was secreted. The owner be
lieves that the thief was someone in
the’ neighborhood who had learned
that he kept money in the house.
There is no clue to the robber.
Mr. Salmon is one of the largest
land owners in the county, having
purchased thousands of acres during
the past summer. He is heavily in
volved in litigation concerning some
purchases and therefore kept money
in cash at home instead of depositing
it in the bank, where it might be sub
ject to garnishment, or attachment.
Sow Runs Amuck
With Deadly Pistol
PARIS, Tex.—Shortly after Jess
Bramblett, a farmer living near here,
and his neighbor, John Hampton, had
finished shooting five hogs at the
annual killing, they left the still
loaded automatic pistol in the hog
lot while they helped the negroes do
the scalding. They intended to re
turn and kill some more hogs.
Evidently when Jess and his friend
returned to the lot, an old sow wal
lowing in the mud thought her time
had come. She grabbed’ the auto
matic in her mouth and began chas
ing the men.
Fearing the teeth would release
the clutch, Jess and John fled for
their lives. Just as Hampton reached
the fence the first bullet went off
and grazed his shin. The next found
a lodging place in Bramblett’s leg.
Both vow that hereafter they will
use the old method of knocking hogs
on the head with an ax when the
annual hog killing comes around
again.
The Country Home
BY MRS. W. H. FELTON
Spool Thread
This seems to be small talk on a
small subject, but it is a fact well
understood that a firm by the name
of Coats —thrifty Scotchman, born ar
Paisly, In that Scot country, about
1808-9—have been the great leaders
of the civilized world in manufac
turing fine cotton sewing thread.
Coats’ thread has been on the top
of the market for more than sixty
years to my knowledge.
The operations of this sewing
thread extend to almost every coun
try in the world.
If you buy a genuine article oi
Coats thread you will get good meas
ure and it will prove to be whatever
it has promised to be.
These Coats brothers. Thomas and
Peter, were honored with knighthood
in their, own country.
They were public-spirited and gave
large amounts to benevolent under
takings.
When I have occasion to buy sew
ing thread of cotton, whether white
or colored, I go home satisfied I have
good material to work with, whether
coarse or fine.
The men were so careful, painstak
ing. using only the best cotton, that
their monument in the civilized world
is the excellence of their manufac
tures.
Something About Coal
As I look at the fast diminishing
heap of coal that I had placed near
my convenient side door to be han
dled easily if we had a sleet storm
or wet snow, by these aged hands
of mine, and remember that I paid
at the rate of sls per tone for it,
and will doubtless pay that much
when I buy again. I felt inclined
to know or to try to find out some
thing about where coal came from,
and if it was the scarcity of the coal
which had run the price up to famine
rates in this section of the country.
It it has not grown scarcer it
certainly looks like the coal barons
are putting the handcuffs on us.
To begin with, I discover that
some of our great railroad systems
own very extensive and valuable
coal properties. A few years ago,
in a fearfully hard winter, many
trains of excellent coal cars packed
high with cbal, were switched into
various places, and kept there until
the people grew desperate. Whib
such things were going on in my
part of the country and some of x my
neighbors took a ramble In the coun
tryside and counted the switched off
coal cars. In the meantime the peo
ple in Cartersville, some black and
some white, concluded to save them
selves from freezing to death; burned
up a good two roomed tenant house
for me which happened to be un
tenanted. So I have a lively remem
brance of that coal excitement.
I find there is plenty of coal in
the world and America has consid
erable. to her share.
Coal' is described as the most im
portant of all rocks, and is univer
sally classed as of vegetable origin.
There are two kinds, anthracite and
bituminous coal.
The use of coal does not seem to
have been known to the ancients, and
I never saw an anthracite coal fire
until the year 1875. We burned wood
exclusively in Georgia, where I have
lived for more than eighty-five years,
until we> found it cheaper, in the
early ’Bos, to get it by the carload and
burn it in our farm home. We could
purchase it cheaply at that time. It
was a long step to sls a ton, but we
have been stepping long and running
hard for several years to keep our
selves and pay taxes to the railroads,
that seem to be the coal profiteers in
Cherokee Georgia.
When coal began to be used in Eng
land in the thirteenth century, it was
called sea-coal, because it had to be
imported by sea. I have neither time
nor space to tell our Country Home
readers the various theories about
coal, how it came to. be packed in the
earth and how vegetable matter ac
cumulated, got packed in close, and
■hen got covered up in what is called
the “bowels of the earth.” There
are coal fields nearly, or quite, all
over the World. In Canada, coal
fields appear to be small, but there
are enormous deposits in various sec
tions of the United States. We are
said to have coal fields in the United
States in a space, or spaces, eighty
three times greater in expanse than
the entire coal fields of Great Britain.
The Apppalachian coal fields ex
tend from northern Pennsylvania to
central Alabama. We have coal
fields in Dade county. Georgia. The
northern interior fields in Michigan
cover more than 11,000 square miles.
There are 490 square miles of an
thracite in east Pennsylvania. There
are large coal fields in Illinois, Indi
ana and Kentucky. There is a wide
coal belt that reaches from lowa to
Texas. The great coal fields of the
unexplored northwest may furnish
immense deposits. <
Doubtless there is coal within
reach by boats and railroads every
where in this country. ,
At sls per ton it can make billion
iires by the hundred at that price.
Economy Must Be
Farmer’s Watchword,
Declares Dr. Soule
ATHENS. Ga.. Dec. 16.—“ Georgia
needs a normal agricultural produc
tion in 1921.” said Dr. Andrew M.
Soule in speaking to 190 county agri
cultural agents and home demonstra
tion agents assembled in annual con
ference at the Georgia State College
of Agriculture in Athens. "The most
essential thing for next year is eco
nomical production. The cost of crop,
especially cotton, must be held to a
very low point. No one can tell yet
the price for which the 1921 crop
will sell, but the farmer must be
prepared for a low market.
“The greatest factor is economic
ally growing a cotton crop and mak
ing at home our feeds and food sup
plies. Georgia farmers bought $65,-
000,000 worth of feed and food crops
which could have been produced eco
nomically in this state this year.
We have not put enough emphasis
on the home garden, home poultry
and dairy supplies in the past. Our
corn crop this year was approxi
mately 30.000,000 bushels less than
the amount necessary to supply Geor
gia.
"Normal production seems to be
the best method of getting back to
normal conditions. We should in
crease our supply crops to feed our
2,894,000 people and 4.700,000 domes
tic animals in order to produce our
cash crops in a most economical
manner.”
Others addressing the agents in
session were Director J. Phil Camp
bell and Miss Mary E. . Creswell.
Governor-elect Thomas W. Hardwick
addressed them Wednesday.
Chicago Physicians
Start Fight to Issue
Liquor Prescriptions
CHICAGO.—A suit in equity to re
strain the district federal prohibition
director, Ralph W. Stone, from re
fusing to issue prescription blanks
for alcoholic liquor to physicians as
required by doctors, instead of a lim
ited number each month, has been
filed in the United States district
court by Dr. E. P. Murdock, presi
dent of the American Protective Mied
ical fraternity
It is alleged that the eighteenth
amendment merely forbids the use
of alcoholic liquors for beverage
purposes and places no restrictions
on medical uses.
It is also averred that the Volstead
enforcement act does not limit phy
sicians as to the number of blanKa
on which prescriptions for -whisky
and other alcoholic mixtures may be
written.
The first reuling In connection
with alcoholic prescriptions limited
doctors to 100 a month, but later Na
tional Prohibition Director Kramer,
at Washington, ordered that more
might be issued if need for an extra
supply could be shown by any doctor.
It is said that Mr. Stone has placed
the’burden i of proof on doctors and
that the suit is brought to determine
whether he has that right-
DISCS KEEP OUT FOREIGN RATS
S'-/ A
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‘ ' A.' - S
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NEW YORK. —Here’s the way New York health officials are
preventing the invasion of foreign rats —by placing metal disks on
the hausers of all trans-Atlantic steamers. They take no chances
with bubonic plague-infepted rats, which are often carried by ships
from one country to another.
Judge Gary Denounces
Efforts to Stir Up
Trouble With Japan
NEW YORK, Dec. 16.—Denouncing
what he termed “a vicious and de
liberate effort to stir up trouble be
tween the people of Japan and the
United States, Elbert H. Gary, chair
man of the board of the United
States Steel Corporation, declared
In an address here last night at the
annual dinner of the Japan society
of New York, that should the two
nations clash, “the people of this
country will be more to blame than
the people of Japan.”
Assured that he liked and trusted
the honesty and integerity of t]ie Jap
anese, Mr. Gary added:
“They are building navies as a
last resort against attack without
reason.”
Baron Shidehara, Japanese ambas
sador to the United States, and Ro
land S. Morris, American ambassa
dor to Jqpan, were among the guests
who included many professional and
prominent American business men
and Japan bankers and merchants
from cities in the east.
Suit for $331,500
From Poker Party
At Norma Talmadge’s
NEW YORK. Dec. 16.—Suit for
$331,500 filed against Louis Krohn
berg by the state revealed today
members of the poker party' at the
home of Joseph M. Schenck and his
wife, Norma Talmadge, in which
Krohnberg was accused of cheating.
Suit was filed by Bird S. Coler,
commissioner of public welfare, un
der a law which permits, the collec
tion of five times the winnings at
any game of chance, to be distrib
uted among the poor. Krohnberg
was alleged to have won $66,300 in
various games with Schenck, J. M.
Silverman, Harry Silverfleld, Samuel
Lewis, Charles Pillar, Hyman Korp,
John Mack and J. H. Mark,
I Have Already ly.. •'
Given 25 Autos
Here are 2 More I
Fully Equipped
I Will Ayrnyr Deliv-ov-eci
Two Ford Autos Freight Paid
February 28, 1921 f
Write Me Quick Every Minute Counts—
February 28th I am going to give a new Ford Touring Car and a Ford Roadster to two
people who are prompt and energetic in following my instructions. No matter who you
are or where you live you may have an opportunity of owning one of these splendid cars
by answering this ad today. I will send you full instructions about it. Send no money.
Thousands of Dollars Will be Given
In Grand Prizes and Cash Rewards
Ford Touring Car—lst Grand Prize. 1920, the First Grand Prize Car went to Clara B. Wil-
Ford Roadster—2nd Grand Prize. son of Kentucky; Second Grand Prize Car went to
H-D Motorcycle—3rd Grand Prize. . Thomas Pientock of Wisconsin. The minute your name
Cabinet Grand Phonograph—4th Grand Prize. and address, plainly written on the coupon with cor
tnd in addition to these splendid Grand Prizes, I will \ y m -!l you , wiU b S
also give away in this contest thousands of dollars in ®contestant with a fair and
Cash rewards, and Special Prizes and Minor Prizes. °PP° rt nnity to get one of these cars FREE.
These will include several SSO Bicycles, Genuine Dia- .Tw’J 01 °
mond Rings, 14-Karat Gold Watches, Phonographs, -, contest, and the ones who will win arc
Silverware, Clocks, Musical Instruments, Money Re- w ea aKe *
wards, etc., etc. Just your name and address and cor- a •» j
rect picture solution on the coupon below start the lYlQll ttlQ COUpOTI 1 OCldy
whole thing. Every one will be well paid in cash re- '
wards and commissions if he takes active part in Get your entry to me just as quick as the mails will
this contest, whether or not he succeeds in getting carry it—that’s the first and most important thing
one of the Ford Automobiles or other Grand Prize. for you to do now and you must hurry—Act Quick!
(Prize duplicated in case of a tie.) ’ Clip out the picture and send in your solution, with
your name and address, right away. If your solution
7
I /save lv±any with a credit of 1100 0 votes as explained below. I will
In my previous contests I have given away 25 Auto- also send you full particulars and everything neces
mobiles. In my contest which closed October 30th, sary for you to go right ahead.
■■• Cut Out and Mail Coupon ••••••••■••■■••
Find Five Faces —Get 1000 Votes
.-Z—ln the picture are a number of hidden faces. See how many you car
f J- find. Some are looking right at you, some turned sidewise. You wii
find tk ern upside down and every way. Mark each face you find wit’
-a pencil, write your name and address plainly on the lines below, cli
xij-x out this coupon and mail to me now. If you find as many as five o
Ja CZ/l' ' the hidden faces I will enter you in this contest and credit you wit
1,000 votes. Send me this coupon today SURE.
'- D. W. BEACH, Contest Manager,
"it —A. FARM LIFE, Dept. 7212 Spencer, Indiana.
Dear Sir:—Here is my solution of the picture. If correct, enter nu
1 ~ '-n * n y° ur Grana Prize subscription contest with a credit of 1,000 votes
I want one of these cars —send me full particulars.
Address
SATURDAY, DECEMBER IS, 1020.
Germany Sells Almost
Half as Many Toys in
U. S. as Before War
WASHINGTON, Dec. 16—A “made
In Germany” Santa Claus will return
to America this Christmas and fill
almost half as many stockings as
he did in 1914 just before the world
war.
Import figures of the department
of commerce disclosed today this re
markable “come back” of Germany
into the American toy market.’
In 1914 Germany sent $7,718,854
worth of toys into the United States.
During the war Germany, of course,
lost her position of toy leadership
in this country. This year German
importations of toys total $3,803,484,
or a gain within two years after the
war of about 50 per cent of the
American toy trade it was predicted
she had lost entirely.
At the same time Japan has made
great gains in the American toy mar
ket, increasing from importations of
$435,000 in 1914 to $5,075,560 this
year.
The United States continued to
increase its spread of American toys
in foreign fields. In 1914 United
States toy exports were $809,120,
which increased to over $2,000,000
in 1916, and about $3,000,000 in 1919.
Figures for 1920, now incomplete,
indicated exports worth about $3,-
500,00 0.
Grave Digger Quits;
Dig Your Own Is Plan
EY GEOEGE WITTE
LSpecial Cable to the Chicago Daily News
Foreign Service, by Leased Wire to
The Atlanta Journal.)
(Copyright, 1920.)
BERLIN, Germany, Dec. 16.—“ E
very citizen about to die must be sure
that he will have a grave before dy
ing and, if necessary, dig it himself.
Our grave digger has resigned be
cause the pay was too small and we
oanne. afford to get a new one.”
This notice, posted in the small
town of Peukert, in Wurtteipberg,
TECH TOURISTS
PLAN NEW TRIP
AROUND STATE
A sweeping tour of Georgia In a
special train, that will touch at
thirty-four cities and towns in the
week of January 10, has been planned
as an industrial move to follow the
Georgia Industrial Tour of last
month, when 127 Georgians spent a
week in the north and east, in the
interest of a Greater Industrial Geor
gia, and a Greater Georgia Tech. The
schedule of the special train, just an
nounced; averages six towns and
cities a day—in itself a remarkable
achievement in schedule-making by
the traffic departments of the various
railways.
The party will be headed by Gover
nor Hugh M. Dorsey and K. G. Math
eson, president of the Georgia Schoo)
of Technology. It will include busi
ness leaders, bankers, manufacturers,
newspaper men—a -personnel similar
to that which swept through the
north and east in November. Up
wards of 300 will make the. tour, aug
mented by parties traveling from one
city to another with the tourists.
Following is the itinerary:
January 10—Leave Atlanta (cen
tral time), 8 a. m.; arrive Marietta
8:30 a. m., leave Marietta 9 a. m.,
arrive Acworth 9:30 a. m.. leave Ac
worth 9’50 a. m.. arrive Cartersville
10:20 a. m.. leave Cartersville 10:50
a. m„ arrive Rome 11:50 a. m.. lunch;
leave Rome 1:50 p. m., arrive Cedar
town 2:30 p. m., leave Cedartown 2:50
p. m., arrive Carrollton 4 p. m., leave
Carrollton 4:20 p. m., arrive Newnan
5:30 p. m., leave Newnan 6:15 p. m.,
arrive LaGrange 7:15 p. m.. dinner;
leave LaGrange 11:30 p. m.
January Columbus 1:30
a. m., breakfast: leave Columbus 9:30
a. m., arrive Richland 10:45 a. m.,
leave Richland 11:15 a. m.. arrive
Americus 12:15 p. m., lunch; leave
Americus 2:30 p. m., arrive Cordele
4 p. m., leave Cordele 5:30 p. m.. ar
rive Albany 6:30 p. m., dinner; leave
Albany 11:30 p. m.
January 12—Arrive Thomasville
(eastern time) 3:30 a. m.. breakfast;
leave Thomasville 9:30 a. m., arrive
Quitman 10:30 a. m., leave Quitman
11 a. m., arrive Valdosta 11:35 a. m.,
lunch; leave Valdosta 2 p. m.. arrive
Waycross 3:45 p. m., leave Waycross
5:45 p. m., arrive Brunswick 6:45
p. m., dinner; leave Brunswick 11:30
p. m.
January 13.—Arrive Savannah 2:30
a. m., breakfast; leave Savannah 1
p. m., lunch; arrive Millen 3:30 p. m..
leave Millen 3:50 p. m., arrive
Waynesboro 4:50 p. m., leave Waynes
boro 5:10 p. m., arrive Augusta 6:30
p. m., dinner; leave Augusta 11:30
p. m.
January 14—Arrive Dublin 5:30
a. m., breakfast; leave Dublin 9:30
a. m., arrive Macon 11:30 a. m.,
lunch; leave Macon 2:30 p. m., arrive
Milledgeville 3:15 p. tn., leave Mil
ledgeville 3:45 p. m., arrive Eaton
ton 4:30 p. m.. leave Eatonton 5:30
p. m.. arrive Madison 6:15 p. m., din
ner: leave Madison 11:30 p. m.
January 15—Arrive Athens 1:30
a. m., breakfast; leave Athens 9:30
a tn., arrive Elberton 10:30 a. m..
leave Elberton 11:30 a. m.. arrive
Royston 12:45 p. tn., lunch; leave
Royston 2 p. m., arrive Toccoa 2:45
p. m., leave Toccoa 3:15 p. m., arrive
Cornelia 3:45 p. m„ leave Cornelia
4:05 p. m., arrive Gainesville 5 p. m„
leave Gainesville 6 p. m., arrive Bu
ford 6:30 p. m., leave Buford 6:50
p. m., arrive Atlanta (eastern time •
7:50 p. m.. dinner.
GALLSTONE TROUBLES
A new booklot written by Dr. E. E. Fad
dock, Box 55201. Kansas City, Mo., tells
of improved method of treating catarrbnl
inflammation of the Call Bladder nnd Bile
Ducts associated with Gallatonea from which
remarkable results are reported. Write for
booklet and free trial plan.—(Advt.) ,
throws •an eloquent sidelight on
what conditions are in small com
munities in distant parts of this
country. In another town where the
authorities are more liberal, they
have passed an ordinance providing
a grave, hearse, four hacks Mnd a
tombston® for eacM 'ltizen whf lies.
ASPIRIN
Mame “Bayer” on Genuine
/ A \
pAVUm
Warning! Unless you see the name
“Bayer” on package or on tablets you
are not getting genuine Aspirin pre
scribed by physicians for twenty-one
years and proved safe by millions.
Take Aspirin only as told in the
Bayer package for Colds, Headache,
Neuralgia, Rheumatism, Earache.
Toothache. Lumbago and for Pain.
Handy tin boxes of twelve Bayer
Tablets of Aspirin cost few cents.
Druggists also’ sell larger packages.
A’spirin is the trade mark of Bayer
Manufacture of Monoacetlcaoldeeter
of Salicylicacld.—(Advt.)
gleasantwayto
teak up colds-
EVERYONE in the family can
! rely on Dr. King’s New Dis
covery, the standard remedy
for the last fifty years, to break .
up coughs, grippe and stubborn j
colds. No harmful drugs. At I
your druggists, 60c and ?1,20. J
For colds andarugh J
Dr.KingY
New Discovery
Sallow Skin Not Pretty
Constipation destroys the complexion
making it yellow and ugly. Keep th
bowels at work cleaning out the syster.
daily by using Dr. King’s Pills. The:
do the work thoroughly and gently
Buy a bottle today, 25 cents.
n Prompt! Wont Gripe
riKiiiffls Pill r
t Ends Stubborn Coughs |
x in a Hurry |
T For real effectiveness, thia old
X home-made remedy has no equal,
Easily and cheaply prepared. y
You’ll never know how quickly a
bad cough can he conquered, until you
try this famous old home-made rem
edy. Anyone who has coughed all
day and all night, will say that the
imm®diate relief given is aluuut
magii*. It is very easily prepared,
and there is nothing better for coughs.
Into a pint bottle, nut 2 ] / 3 ounces
of Pinex; then add plain granulated
sugar syrup to mnke a full pint. Or
you can use clarified molasses, honey,
or corn syrup, instead of sugar syrup.
Either way, the full pint saves about
two thirds of the money usually
•pent for cough preparations, and
gives you a more positive, effective
remedy. It keeps perfectly, and
tastes pleasant—children like it.
You can feel this take hold instantly,
soothing and healing the inembranea
in all the air passages. It promptly
loosens a dry, tight cough, and soon
you will notice the phlegm thin out
and disappear. A day’s use will usually
break up an ordinary throat or chest
cold, and it is also splendid for bron
chitis, croup, hoarseness, and bron
chial asthma.
Pinex is a most valuable concen
trated compound of genuine Norway
pine extract, the most reliable rem
edy for throat and chest ailments.
To avoid disappointment, ask your
druggist for “2% ounces of Pinex”
with directions and don’t accept any
thing else. Guaranteed to give abso
lute satisfaction or money refunded.
The Pinex Co., Ft. Wayne, Ind.
FREE TO SICK
If you are Buffering from Blood or Nerve
Disorders, Rheumatic Fymptoinß, Stomach or
Bowel trouble, Skin Broken out or rough ..nd
lore, Sore Mouth or Tongue, Dizziness,
Sleeplessness, Loss of Appetite, Weak, Ner
vous or a General Rundown Condition—these
are danger signals that you should heed.
Write at once for the most reliable and val
uable information on how to rid your «,vs
tern ot these troubles and regain strong,
vigorous health.
We want you to prove for yourself,. as
thousands of other sufferers have proven,
that the ARGALLEP TREATMENT is the
most pleasant, simplest and safest method
of getting permanent relief. Don't take
chances. Those troubles may indicate that
you are suffering from
PTILAGEA, ASUEMIA, CHLORO
SXS, DZBILITY, NEURASTHENIA
or some other serious derangement of the
system that needs immediate treatment. No
matter what doctors or others have told
you—no matter what you have tried—all wo
ask is a chance to show yon wbat the
ARGALLEP TREATMENT will do. It Costs
you nothing for this FREE PROOF. »<■
will send to you FREE and Prepaid, without
obligation on your part, a
FULL SIZED SB.OO
TBEATMENT FEES
Thousands of sufferers have accepted this
generous offer and write us that they are
amazed at their rapid recovery} to health.
Inst send yonr name and Address—NO
MONEY—we will send you the $2.00 All-
GALLEP TREATMENT, full directions, and
valuable and important information—all
free—ir. plain wrapper.
‘ARGALLEP COMPANY
CARBON, HILL, Ala.
Dept. 802.
S, q
big Mewl 1
tnd Pillow g
! pictures of 1
*w«. all fully 9 I
t firm of our 2 I
Factory-to- 2 "
OOK- 9
inted S
»a>.-prle«. 51
onorrooney
frumaoßoy 2
QuaUtt/ana 2
or letter to- 9
EvarywMru. 9
9MFANY 2
1
Watch, Chain and Two Rings
/ . Xj/jl 8 Manyodierprc.
W’Tl’/Zs J miiuns Writrtnday-
The. Wilson Seed Co.
Dtp' C u Tyrone. Pa.
3