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OUR HOUSEHOLD
CONDUCTED BY LIZZIE O. THOMAS
BLACK HEAD IN TURKEYS
It seems as if this is to be a
regular “turkey year,” from the
etters that are coming about their
safe. I, too, have caught the fever
snd have some in my small incu
>ator. I have been told all sorts
>f hard luck stories about hatching
turkey eggs in incubators and may
iave one to add to the list.
I have been writing all the year
to the big turkey raisers and es
lecially about black head, all seem
o think that indigestion in turkeys
s too often called black head, like
■ny form of bowel trouble in baby
chicks is called while diarrhea. Hut
ny opinion is that it does not mat
er what the name is if it is fatal,
ind indigestion in turkeys and baby
thicks is to be avoided.
As I quoted in a recent Journal,
'rom Mr. Delano, the way to avoid
lisease is to keep the premises free
from contagion. Turkeys and chick
ens should not run on the same
vinge, and any ground should be
ilowed almost every year, and
Wanted in something that must
lave at least one more plowing. I
lad my extra ground in corn last
rear. It had been ip rye the winter
>efore, and now if it ever gets dry
’rough it will be planted in rape
’nd sunflowers, though the late
season may make me change to
teas and corn. I have had a great
pany letters about ipecac, and I
U/ve asked the big reisers what
spy thought of it. Most of them
ay that if the turkeys are infected
he ipecac may help the strongest
o survive, but it seems to me, from
vhat I have gathered in these let
ers, that it is not used much ex
:ept in California. Here is the for
ppla: From the time that they are
wo weeks old till they are three
nonths old, give two teaspoonfuls of
>owdered ipecac to twenty. Mix it in
Heir mash, and they must not get
vet or chilled.
In a recent Progressive Farmer,
L H. Wood says that a 'third of a.
easpoonful of crushed, crude cate
ihu to each gallon of drinking water
vill be found beneficial in prevent
rig blackhead. This should be used
he? first three months after hatch
ng. If possible, move houses tn
lew ground. It is a nuisance to
Minister Mistaken
For Liquor Runner;
Funeral Is Delayed
NATCHEZ, Miss., April 11.—The
uneral of a Clayton, La., citizen,
leld here Saturday, was delayed
ilightly when members of the
Natchez police force, on the look
>ut for rum-runners, through a mis
ake, seized the automobile f a
ninister of Ferriday, La., who was
in his way here to conduct the sery
ces. it was learned Sunday. The
ninister and several friends making
he trip with him were released im
nediatcly when their identity, was
istablished.
It "was stated the mistake was on
iccou.it of the similarity of the min
ster’s car to that of a liquor ma
thine the nolice were watching for.
13-Year-Old Georgia
Girl Ends Own Life
SUMMERVILLE, Ga., April 14.
Found in an unconscious condition
Friday afternoon in a, vacant house
near a. turnip patch, where she had
gone to pick a mess of greens, Miss
Era Dee Myers, thirteen years of
age, youngest daughter of Dr. J. M.
F. Myers, of Trion, died early Sat
urday without having regained con
sciousness.
The girl's death, it is said, was
due to an overdose of morphine,
taken supposedly with suicidal in
tent, a brief note having been left
in which she said she was going to
sleep and would never wake up.
Dr. Myers has been a practicing
physician at Trion for many years
and is a large property owner.
Miss Myers is survived by her
father, stepmother, three sisters and
three stepbrothers. Funeral serv
ices were held at Pleasant Grove
Christian church, near Trion, Sun
day, the Rev. L. H. Reavis, of Sum
merville, officiating. Interment was
in the Myers family cemetery, near
Trion.
Extradition Papers
• For “Big Paul” Huhn
TALLAHASSEE, Fla., April 14.
Extradition papers were issued by
Ihi governor today for I’aul Huhn,
iM'a "Big Paul,” who is under ar
rest In Terre Haute, Ind., in con
nection with the cigar factory rob
bery at Tampa on March 29. The
papers will be mailed direct to the
governor of Indiana. It is under
stood that a detective In. charge of
the investigation of the case, and a
Tampa policeman, will be sent to
Indiana to bring Huhn back to
Florida.
THIS WOMAN’S
MARVELLOUS
_RECOVERY
All Due to Lydia E. Pink
ham’s Vegetable Compound
Truman, Minn. “ I was badly run
down and had pains in my side and
back; sometimes I
couldn’t hardly
move around in
bed. My husband
got me Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vege
table Compound,
andaftertakingii.
1 was so much;
better I could doj
all my work again.
1 do my house
work, have a gar
den. raise chick-
■■
|>
tajl .
Sk |
ens, and in harvest time 1 worked in
the field and helped pick corn. Some
times Ido chores and milk. 1 took the
Vegetable Compound beforeand after
mv four-months-old baby was born,
and it has always helped me wonder
fully. I believe there is no abetter
medicine made for women, and I hope
every woman will give it a fair trial. ”
—Mrs. August R. Wieperhoft, R.
No. 2. Box 84, Truman. Minnesota.
Women suffering from troubles so
common to their sex should give Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound a
fair trial.
The Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound has relieved women of such
troubles for the past fifty years. For
sale by druggists everywhere.
THE ATLANTA TRI-WEEKLY JOURNAL
have to plow a yard, but it is better
than a flock that is diseased from
contamination, and plowing prevents
gapes.
One asked me the symptoms for
blackhead, and I am giving them,
for there are many this year that
may not know them. Those affected
are droopy, sleepy and seem to be
too listless to move about. These
are also symptoms for lice, so be
careful to keep them greased with
carbonated vaseline, or whatever
you are in the habit of using for
lice. I have told you so often how
to grease turkeys that I will not
use our valuable space to tell you
again. The same remedy, catechu
(pronounced kat-e-ku), is good for
the sleepy, droopy chicks that have
diarrhea. This disease is called
cocidiosis, and attacks chicks after
they are three or four weeks old. It
generally, comes from infected and
dirty roosting places. It does not
take long for a place to get dirty
with a brood of chicks. I have
mine to roost in, or on a paper, I
can burn it every few days.
Use the crude catechu dissolved in
water. Give the chicks all the but
termilk they will drink, some tell me
that a level teaspoonful of baking
soda to a quart of water will cure
them. I have so few sick chicks
that I have to have to tell you
what others say. and from flocks
that I am called on to help out
of trouble. I have forty now from
six weeks old to two weeks old, and
took off a hen two days ago. She
hatched sixteen out of seventeen
eggs, and not one chick has died
this season. My chicks are all ages
and sizes. I keep the remainder aft
er selecting those to ship to people
who have ordered. All come from
the same lot and in that way I
know how those sent off should get
along. Please don’t lose this paper.
The Journal does not keep back
copies, and every word that I am
writing this morning is for'the good
of your flock. In a previous paper I
said to put the young ones on a
floor. I mean that for only the
first few days. My turkey pen is
not floored, and will be scraped and
soaked with a disinfectant, the. stock
dip and coal oil, several days before
I use it.
METHODIST PASTORS
ASSIGNED WORK IN
WMNFEHE
WINTER PARK, Fla., April 14.
The St. John's River Methodist
Episcopal church, northern branch,
closed, its annual conference here
Sunday following the reading of the
appointments, by Bishop McConnell,
of Pittsburg, who presided during
the week’s sessions..
According to reports presented, it
one of the best years on record
for the church. The churches at
Miami and St. Petersburg were ex
ceptionally far in the lead, it was
disclosed.
Tlie folloxvlng appointments were
read for the coming year;
Miami District.
S. E. Idleman, superintendent;
Allapatah, J. R. Hoch; Coronado,
W. F. Ernsberger; Davie-Alfred
Evenden; Daytona, D. Stratford
Scading; Daytona Beach, D. H.
Rutter; Deland, Lawrence Rad
cliffe; Eau Galjie, N. H. Kendall:
Felsmere, J. O. Johnson; Florida
City, O. M. Freeman; Fort Lauder
dale, Alfred Evenden; Homestead,
W. S. Gray; Indian River and
Georgianna, N. H. Kendall; Lake
Worth, Addyman Smith; I.arkin, G.
E. Bennett; Melbourne, Luther B.
Clark: Miami Parish, R. N. Mer
rill, F. A. Hamilton, Jesse L. Mer
rill, F. W. Taylor; Naranja and Key
Largo, William J. Carter; New
Smyrna, W. F. Ernsberger; Orange
City, Lawrence Radcliffe; Rock
Harbor, O. M. Freeman; Redlands.
W. S. Gray; Wabasso, E. I. Get
man.
Jacksonville District.
J. J. Treadwell, superintendent;
St. Augustine, Arlington and Gil
! more, R. J. Derr; Bellevue and Cand
ler, W. E. Searles; Davenport, W.
' R. C. Orwick; Eutis, M. A. Soper;
Fruitland Bark and Okahumpka.
Mrs. H. E. Soper; Hastings, I. H.
Howell; Jacksonville, Fairfield. J. F
Pickard; Livingston Memorial, E.
W. Strothard; Perry Avenue, to be
supplied; Snyder Memorial, A. J.
Price; Lake Como, G. W. Carlin
Lawtey and Saxton, W- L Powell:
Mount Dora, E. L. Price; Port
I Richey to be supplied; St. Angus
tine, G. B. Thomas; St. Cloud and
Browns Chapel, William Landiss
St. Petersburg parish, E. E. Rey
nolds; Ninth Avenue, F. N. Lap
hom; Emory, J. T. Pender; Sebring.
L. A. Griggs; Taft, L. M. Parker;
Tarpon Springs. C. G. Nelson; Win
ter Park, Harry Ingham; Zephyr
hills, J. W. Johnson.
Tampa District.
Tj. H. Shumate, superintendent;
Oldsmar, Canal Point, Immokalee
and Palmdale, William J. Thomas;
j Fort Myers, lonia and Brewer City,
P. E. Ramsey; Oldsmar, G. H.
; Northrop; South Bay, Bell Glade
and Okelanta. E. F. Connolly; Tani
i pa, Central Church and Palma Ceia,
I E. E. Carr.
( Special appointments: R. A,
' Cairne, field secretary, conference
| claimants fund. Miami. Left with
! out appointment to attend school:
B. J. Gooden and L. C. B. Moffatt.
I O. T. Uslemas, superintendent Anti
• saloon league of Virginia; S. E.
Lawson leave of absence for one
I year.
John D. Suffering
With Severe Cold;
Confined to Home
NEW YORK, April 15—A delega
tion of Standard Oil Company of
New Jersey workers, calling at the
office of John D. Ro kefeller, Jr..
Monday, to invite him to a xvage
conference banquet at Newark to
morroxv night, xvere informed that
Mr. Rockefeller xvas confined to his
home xvith a severe cold, and xx’ould
be unable to see them.
Even though he should recover be
fore the banquet, a previous engage
ment probably xvould make it im
possible for Mr. Rockefeller to at
tend. his associates said. The dele
gation, S 3 strong, and representing
plants in Bayonne. Jersey City and
P.ayxxay. had hoped to persuade Mr.
Rockefeller, during the banquet, that
the xvorkers deserved a 10 per cent
increase in rax- and a representstix e
on the company's beard of directors.
AUNT JULIA’S COUNCIL
A Friendly Meeting Place for All Tri-Weekly Journal Readers
Dear Aunt Julia and Cousins: Will you
kindly let a lonely South Carolina widow of
thirty-five join your happy band? I get so
much comfort out ot the Letter Pox. The
letter by W. Nettler Ferguson was just
wonderful, I think. I have no father or
mother living. 1 am very lonely and I
want, all you cousins to write to me. Please,
Aunt Julia, publish this little letter, as it
is my first time to write. Lov. to all.
(MRS.) ANNIE B. BELLOTTE.
West Union, S. C., Route 1.
Hello, Aunt Julia and Cousins'. Open the
door and let another stranger join your
happy band. As there are married ladies
writing to your corner, I thought I would
write, I live on a farm, and like farming
0. K. 1 believe 1 would like city life best,
though I have never lived in the city.
Cousins, if some one has the January issue
nf the Illustrated Companion will you please
send it to me? 1 will certainly appreciate
it, and if anyone has “Tried for Her Life,"
I will exchange "Cruel as the Grav|” for it,
as it i» the sequel. Some of yo| cousins
come over and spend the summer‘with me
and we will pack peaches, as we [live just
half a mile from Mauk. They have three
packing housed and six peach farms. I
want to pack this summer it I can
get some one to keep house and attend
Io baby. I guess 1 had better go before
breaking the rules. I would like to hear
from tlie cousins, as 1 am not so very old;
will be only twenty-nine the 20th of July.
Who is my twin?
(MRS.) W. 0. WHITLEY.
Mauk, Ga.
Dear Aunt Julia and Cousins: Here comes
another Alabama boy to enter your happy
band of hoys and girls. I am 14 years of
age. I have blue eyes, fair complexion, and
my home is on a farm in Cullman county in
the northern part, of Alabama. I go to a
junior high school, and am in the seventh
grade. If any of you Cousins wish to write
me, let the letters come and I will answer
by return mail, because I love to correspond
with the boys girls.
BERNARD ANDERSON.
Arkadelphia, Ala., Route 1.
Dearest Aunt Julia: I wMtder how you
are enjoying life. I am 0. K. Listen! 1
am sending you some of my pretty moon
light. seed. I hope you will be pleased witli
them, and trust they will .do good. I have
planned to have a beautiful flower garden
this summer, and I will send you some more
seed if the flowers do well. Ixtvingly,
(MRS.) ROSA JURELL REED.
Pendergrass, Ga.
Dear Aunt Julia and Cousins: Will you
please admit two Florida farmer's sisters
into your happy hand of boys and girls?
You are so jolly we couldn't stay out any
longer. Casrie Lee Felton has dark brown
hair, black eyes, medium complexion, ago
twelve years. Who has her birthday, No
vember 14? Wilmer Altha has dark brown
hair, blue-gray eyes, medium complexion,
age between twenty and twenty-five. Who
can guess? Who has my birthday, February
25? All you little cousins write to Carrie
Lee, girls preferred. If some one will send
ns the. song called "Poston Rurglar,’’ also
any kind of flower seed, we will return the
favor in any way we can. Our father is a
farmer—only five of us in the family. We
won’t take a subject this' time, but .if we
were to it would be on "Mother,” for she
is the best friend anybody ever had. We
must go before we break auntie's rules.
Hoping to hear from all the cousins who
care to write Your nieces and cousins,
(MISS) WILMER A. STEADHAM.
Atmore. Ala.
(MISS) CARRIE LEE STEADHAM.
. Walnut Hill, Fla.
Dear Aunt Julia and Cousins: At last I
have picked tip courage to knock for admit-j
tance into your happy circle. Give me a
seat by some of you lively cousins and I
*ill soon feel at borne. Wake up. Georgia
boys and girls; the other states are nearly*
ahead of us. We don't want to be slack
ers when we have such a nice, sweet auntie,
so let’s get busy and do better in 1924.
Don't you all agree with ine? We have
certainly been having some cold weather.
You cousins ought to have been with me a
few days ago, and I would have treated
.you to a fine snowballing.” Come again,
Miss Swearingen; your letter was fine. Mr.
Snow, I wouldn’t worry if I were you, as
this is Leap Year and you can never tell
what will happen. How many of yon
cousins like to read? I am a lover of
books. I would like to exchange with some
ot the cousins. If anyone has the song,
"When You and I Were Young, Maggie,”
would you please send it to me. I would
appreciate it and return the favor in any
way possible. I will describe niyself and
resign my chair to a more gifted writer: 1
am a girl of sixteen winters, brown bobbed
hair, hael eyes, fair complexion. I would
like to exchange letters and photos with ail
you boys and girls, so everybody write.
Best wishes to Aunt JtiliS and all.
(MISS) MYIITK I-, MITCHELL.
Wayside, Ga., R. F. D. 1.
Dearest Aunt Julia and Cousins: Will you
plea e admit a Florida boy into your happy
band ot boys and girls? I like to read The
Journal, and always turn to the cousins’
letters first. I am eleven years old. and
am in the fifth grade. Con . on, more of
you Florida cousins, and don i. let the other
states get ahead of us. Love to all.
LEWIS GRAHAM,
retry, Fla.
Draw- Aunt Julia: Will you take a Flor
ida girl into your happy band of boys and
girls? I am a new subscriber for The. At
lanta Tri-Weekly Journal. I got my start
of chickens when we lived at Winter Gar
den, Fla. Some of jny friends gave me
some biddies. When we left there I had
five biddies Then my father moved and
came in twelve miles of Deland, Fla., and
took homestead in Lake county. Then my
hens began to lay and set. I raised seven! v
chickens in 1923. This year I get fifteen
eggs a day from two dozen hens. The
lakes ate pretty in Lake county, and fish
>t K is good. Who can guess my age? It
is between six and fifteen. I am in the
fourth grade. My birthday is on Decem
ber. 2d. How many of you like to go flower
picking? I do, for one. I enjoy picking
tlie different kinds of wild flowers. The
wild ferns in the swamp are three foot
high, and the sweetgum trees in tlie St.
John river swamp have already put out
their leaves this spring, if any of you
want me to toll you anything else about
Lake county write me and I will be glnd
to do so. T would like to hear from every
one of you.
MISS GRACE ORA ELMORE.
Beresford, Fla.
Dear Auntie: Will you admit a Georgia
girl into your circle, as I enjoy reading
the cousins’ letters so much? I go to
school at West View. I am twelve years
of age, am in tlie fifth grade. I have never
been out of Georgia, but, have relatives in
other states Do you cousins like to go to
school? I’ll say I do. I live near a
church and enjoy going to Sunday school
and preaching, as I believe everyone should.
Will step out by saying good-by, Aunt Julia
and cousins. I ant.
MISS LOUVKINA CHRISTOPHER.
Duluth, Ga., R. F. D. 2.
Dearest Aunt Julia; Will yon admit a
Georgia girl into your happy band? I have
written before hut wns not admitted into
your 1 appy band of cousins. I am another
farmer girl, and enjoy farm life fine, for
it’s almost spring now nnd it is beautiful
on a farm. Cousins, don't you think Aunt
•Tulia is th? dearest lady on earth except
"mother?” 1 do. T surely think most all
of you do. I won’t take a subject, but
as. I ant afraid Aunt Julia will not print,
this one I will hurry on. I am going to ask
a favor. All wlio care to write n sweet
sixteen girl Just let your letters come this
wa J- MISS TLORINE BROWN.
Woodbury, Gn.
Dearest Aunt Julia and Cousins: Here
comes five Jolly girls to join your happy
hand Os boys and girls, Annie Mne has
written before and received just lots and
lots of letters from tlie cousins and entered
tliegi very much. She promised to answer
all but got. so many she couldn't, so excuse
tier, cousins, and al! of you that didn’t get
an answer to your letter take this as an
answer, lie all believe in plenty of paint
and powder. Cousins, don’t run for every
body says wo are real cute. Well, «.•
must bo going and if we see this in print we
will come again. Guess how old wo ar., wo
are ail between one am) fifty. Each and
every one write to us. please send mail sep
arately. Five Jolly kids.
i MISS) EMMIE BOLTON
(MISS) ANNIE MAE DAVIS.
(Miss) sadie davis,
< MISS) Il IH DAVIS
I MISS) I ILI.IAN DAVIS.
Atmore. Ala., Route A.
Dearest Aunt Julia: I wonder if you
I will let a lonely north .Georgia girl into
your merry ciA-le of .folly cousins. I road
the splendid Letter Pox and think it fine
My father lias been taking The Tri-Weekly
Journal over a year. I think tlie Lotte-
Box gets more interesting every time I
read it. I arn a lonely girl, nineteen years
old. I have one sister and one brother
older than my«elf. Mr mother is dead, she
I September 28 t f
t *n
country life fine. Well, auntie. 1 n 111 make
my letter short. I wilt close Your new
niece and cousin. BEULAH TEAGUE.
Ellijay. Ga., Route 4
Dear Aunt Julia: Will you allow a little
Georgia gir! in your happy circle? I enjoy
reading your good letters. I live in Col
quitt county. Georgia, and go to school at
May school. I am only eight years old.
and in the third grade. My school j« out
.and my teacher promoted me tn the fourth
gride. My teacher's name was X! -s G'n.iis
Daniel. Aunt Julia, I hope to see a
the column. Tour cousin
KI BY LEE MAY.
Kou'e J, Moultrie, Ga.
i Dear Aunt Julia and Cousins: Will you
• admit another boy from the dear old Em
pire state into your happy band? Thanks.
1 J enjoy reading The Journal very much. I
• always turn to the cousins’ corner first.
And, oh! such a corner! full of sunshine as
it is. Aunt Julia is surely carrying on n
grand work, helping us to make new friends
in different states. If it were not for her
. kindness, no doubt we would 'never have
heard of each other. I, too, live on a farm,
and enjoy flie pure country air, full of the
fragranee of Ihe lovely flowers. I love to
lie near the rippling brooks and tlie singing
birds. (Mi, I’m not criticising city life one
bit, for "life is just xvlmt one. makes it. any
where.” How many of you like to go to
Sunday school? I do, and seldom miss a
Sunday. My! Snell an echo ringing! "De
scription! Description!” If 1 didn’t have
an iron nerve I would run away. Here
goes: 1 have black linlr, blue eyes, fair
complexion. My age I will leave for you to
guess. Cousins, I am starting a "Journal
Friendship” album. All you cousins from
different states who would like to be re
membered as my friend through tlie future
please send your photo. I must go, fur
"visitors should not make their visits too
lengthy.” Good evening
(MR.) HORACE WATKINS.
Eastanollee, Ga., Route 1.
I’. S.—Has anyone tlie song, "They Go
Wild, simply Wild, Over me?” I would pay
for it or exchange music for it. Write
first if any of you have it.
Dear Cousins: Kind words are as the
breatli of the dew on tender plants; they
gently fall upon tlie drooping heart, refresh
ing its withered tendrils and soothing its
burning woes. Bright oases they are in
life’s groat desert. Who ran estimate the
pangs they have alleviated or tlie good
works they have accomplished? Izmg after
they are uttered do they reverberate in the
soul’s inner chamber, nnd sing low, sweet
strains that quell all the raging storms that
may have before existed. And, oh! when
tlie heart is sad, and, like a broken harp,
the sweetest chords ot pleasure cease to.
vibrate, who can tell the power of one kind
word? One little word of tenderness gush
ing in upon the soul will sweep the long
neglected chords and awaken the most pleas
ant strains. Kind words are like jewels in
tlie heart: never to be forgotten, but, per
haps, to cheer by their memory a long, sad
life; while words ot cruelty are like darts
in the bosom, wounding and leaving sears
that will be borne to the grave by their
victijn. Kind words are balm to tlie soul.
They oil up the entire machinery ot life
and keep it in good running order. I
haven’t room for the poem, for I fear I've
already broken the rules. Write to me,
cousins. I have lots of pretty poems I’ll
send to you upon request. An old cousin,
(MISS) LUCILE BLANTON.
Weir, Miss., Route 4.
Dear Aunt Julia and Cousins: Will you
let a little Tennessee girl join your happy
band of boys and girls? I have never writ
ten before, and I do hope Auntie will let
me come in. I see most of you describe
yourselves, so I believe I will. I am sweet
sixteen; have blue eyes, medium brown hair,
fair complexion. I am a sophomore in high
school. I will not take a subject this time,
but if J should it would be “Friendship.”
Maybe if I am admitted I will come again.
I hope all of you boys and girls will write
ine. I will bid you all a sweet good night.
Your niece and cousin.
(MISS) RUBY SETTLE.
Dover, Tenn., Route 4.
Dear Aunt Julia and Cousins: Will you
please admit three Georgia cousins into
your happy band of boys and girls? Please,
cousins, move over and give us a seat by
Aunt Julia. Our oldest brother takes The
Journal, and we are always glad to get the
paper so we can read the cousins’ letters.
Veler is between fifteen and eighteen; birth
day is April 29. Ardress is thirteen years
of) age; birthday, March 3. Dayton is ten
years old; birthday, June 9. All of yon
. cousins write to us, for we want to get
lots of letters. Oceans of love from your
three cousins. We will try to answer all
mail received. Please send mail separately.
(MISS) VELER MARCUS.
(MISS) ARDRESS MARCUS,
(MR.) DAYTON MARCUS.
Tiger, Ga., Route 2, Box 10.
Dear Aunt Julia and Cousins: Will you
admit, a Tennessee boy into your happy
circle? I have never written before. I am
a little boy, eleven years old. Our school
is out, and I passed to the fiftli grade. I
am going to ask a favor. If anyone who
has the verses, “In Flanders Field. Where
Poppies Grow,” and the answer to it, pleasa
send it to me, and I will return the favor
in any way I can. Your new cousin,
OLIN JOHNSON.
Pleasant Point, Tenn.
Dear Aunt .Tulia and Cousins: I have
; started to the store, but thought I would
stop for a little chat. Oh! spring is com
\ ffx: the trees are beginning to put out
(Tittle leaves. I will be so glad when Easter
I Sunday comes. I have just finished read
| ing the Letter Box of the A. T.-W. J., and
I enjoyed it very much. Will some of you
■ cousins send me some flower cuttings, and
i yard flower seeds? I will return the favor
( any way I can. .Some of you take subjects,
I but I will not take one this time, as this
jis n*- first visit. All you cousins write
iIo me. I will answer all I can. All of you
■ send me your photos. My age is between
nine and fifteen. My! what a long visit.
I must go. Your new cousin.
MISS LULA PEASE WINDHAM.
Butler, Ga.
Dear Aunt Julia and Cousins: Pardon me
for coming again so soon. I want to thank
you for printing my other letter. I am
twenty-eight years old, considered, by some
' of the cousins, as an "old maid,” but my
i heart is young yet, for I can love. Love is
probably the most interesting tiling in the
, world. Perfect love casts out fear, and it
also casts out doubt. Love, being tlie
strongest force of all forces, is that which
needs discipling most. Love which knows
no control which is not criticised by the in
telligence and which will not form for itself
wholesome habits, is as dangerous as tlie
torrent which will not stay in tlie river bed,
or the fire which becomes* a conflagration.
('I here can lie no love without faith. Tlie
; desire of the flesh is not evil of itself: it
is the soil from which love springs. With
; out the earth in which to grow, there can
be no lily. The Bible informs us that love
is the greatest thing in the world, and that
i God himself Is love. Thus, both from the
( flesh and from the spirit comes the con
| firrnation of the importance of love,
| I The old cousins’ (as somebody may < a;l
: them I letters are so Interesting. I surely
> feel like somcliody will call me an "old
I maid.” But when we see and hear of so.
many unhappy wedded boys and girls we
I can thank ourselves for our life nf single
blessedness. My mother is in the state hos
pital for insane, and I take care of the
; home for father. I am the oldest of eight
children, who are all growp but two little
j boys. I will close. Some of von cousins
; write to me.
(MISS) ELIZA BRADLEY.
{ Kershaw, S. (’., Route 5.
Dear Aunt Julia and Cousins: I am writ
i mg again for admittance into your happy
( circle. My other letter was printed, but
( m.v name was printed wrong. It is Dean
! instead of Bean. IVliat are you cousins and
Aunt Julia doing those windy March days?
1 m sure lots of the cousins are in school
( but. Um not. My school was out one week
flgo today. I have finished grammar school
and am ready for high school. I think every
boy and girl should strive for an education.
It will make life much easier. [ am asking
1 a .„ rs,vor t,f s ” nll ' oll ’' t‘> send.mo the linok’
I ’I he Luck of the Kid.” 1 will return the
favor in any way I can. Some of tlie
cousins take up much space in describing
li< m-c les. I think It would be much more
: interesting to Ml this .spa. e in writing on
some good subject. I will onlv sav I’m
sixteen years of age. and my blrthdav is
August It. Have I a twin? If so write
me. Thanking Aunt Julia f or this short
■ star, I will go. asking everyone to let the
letters ami cards come to
(MISS) INA MAE DEAN
Agricola. Miss., ]t. F. D. 1. Box l.">.
Dear Aunt Julia",ml Cousins I would
bke to join y.ff ir happy .-i-.le ,f ro „
ttnn room for a "town” boy. I was born
nn * l in Philadelphia, though I’m not
qu:'o ra sod yet. I am between thirteen nnd
twenty. M.v birthday |« September 10 I
am a blonde. an<| i ast VPBr WHs in tb( , SPT _
enrh grade at Douglas (Ga.) s< liool. I have
not attended this year, but expect to *-o
next year, as it is m.v ambition to
lawyer. I get very lonesome down hero, as
I love the snow, please print this letter as
soon as possible, so some of the sweet Dixie
| cousins will write to me I will answer al!
of them. Your sratnful cousin,
(MR.) CHARLES I.’. SACREY.
Alma. Ga.. R. F. D. 2.
Dearest Aunt Julia and Cousins- I have
” r ’*‘ n thought Os writing to your Letter
Bov. but haw been putting It off. I have
never seen a letter from this part of Smch
( a-nltna. I am fifteen years old. i ;•_. to
sclmo! and am in tlie eighth grade 1* like
to go to , ■- \vho has n
September 2d? If I have a twin, please
" rite to ■■ I will be going W
” I* .ise, a 1 you <>ii:s:ns, wr te to ni°
, XX ch lots of love to Aunt Julia and the
cousins,
(MISS) DAISEY BELLE CATCH.
Camden, S. C.. Route fi. Box 41.
Dear Aunt Julia aud Cousins: Will y..u
please open the door and admit another
stranger into your happy band of boys and
[girls? My father does not take The' Jour
nal. but I have a neighbor that takes it.
and I enjoy reading Aunt Julia's and the
cousins* letters, also the continue stories
, and Dorothy Dix's talks. I n > nn.-uher
. conn - leker and
I about four m '*-s from ’ wn. I go
io s hoc md Uke j- great’y. I .m In
i the sixth grade. I think everyone ought
DOROTHY DIX DISCUSSES LIFE
TALKS ON HEART AND HOME
Tlie Greatest Gift a Woman Can
Have Is the Saving Ability to
"Laugh It Off” When Things
Go Wrong—Happy the Man
Who Gets This Kind for a
Wife.
A MAN told me the other day
\ that he did not marry until
lie was forty-five years old
because he was determined not to
i marry any woman who did not have
a sense of humor, and it took him
■ chat long to find one.
A wise man! A
very Solomon
among' m en!
May his tribe
increase! It is
a million times
more important
for a woman to
have a well-de
veloped funny
bone than it is
for her to have
a Grecian pro
file yet when
men go to mar
ry they pick out
a girl for a wife
because she has
J
melting Diack j
: -yes, or soulful blue eyes, without
, ever once observing whether the
said eyes look on the funny side <f
life or take a dark, pessimistic,
bilious view of it. Which is one of
the reason's that domestic life is-no
merry jest to the average husband.
A sense of humor is desirable In
a man, but it is absolutely essential
for a woman to have a sense of
humor if she is to be an agreeable
side partner, because a woman’s ex
istence is made up of little, nagging
things at which she must either
laugh or cry, and if she can’t laugh
them off, they get on her nerves,
and she goes to pieces.
It is the neurotic, haggard women,
who can’t see a joke even after it is
diagrammed for them, who fill the
'nsane asylums and the sanitariums
nnd divorce courts. The women who
wear the smile that won’t come off,
and whose laughter is set on a hair
trigger, get to be fair, fat and forty,
and you couldn’t pry their husbands
away from them with a crowbar.
It is tlje lack of a sense of humor
that causes women to make trage
dies instead of comedies out of
trifles.
Take the servant trouble, for in
stance. Wnmen worry themselves
sick over the mistakes ot a green
maid, and it never occurs to them
that the very blunders that they
are shedding tears over are scream
ingly funny contretemps that they
pay out money to see imitated in a
sketch on the vaueville stage.
Os course, no one grants the soup
to be reasoned with sugar instead
of salt, nor the waste-paper basket
to be put on the mantel as a parlor
ornament as a perpetual thing, but
the mistress who can get a laugh
instead of a sikc headache out of the
mistakes of the Norah or Dinah,
fresh from the bogs of Irel md or
the >i fields, saves her own
f-ce and that of the maid whom
she later trains into being a good
servant.
Moreover, a wc... . i a. sense
so humu. . .. e curse off -f
even had cool:.:;g, for there is not
j one of us who would not rather sit
down to a boiled dinner with a jolly
woman, full of good stories and
funny little anecdotes, than to at->
tend a banquet where the hostess
to pro to school nil they cnn. Whitt do you
cousins do when yon are not in school? I'
read, crochet and on Sunday go to church
and Sunday school. Can any of you cousins
guess )ny age? I am a Georgia girl, be
tween 12 and 18 summers. To the one who
guesses my age I will give some flowers.
Dell, I guess I have written more than I
will ever see in print, so will slop for this
time. Will be glad to answer all letters
received. So, by-by: love to all.
MISS CIDDIE PIERCE.
Rhine, Ga., R. F. I). No. 2.
Dear Aunt Julia and Cousins: Will you
please admit me into your happy band
again .' I wrote about a year ago and m.v
letter was printed, lor which . I want to
thank you. I ha vs learned to read xvell
enough by this time to read the cousins' let
ters by myself, and I always hunt that page
fiist. I live about three miles from our
school house now, but I don’t mind that
much. I surely like to go to school. I had
noi missed a single day since Christmas
until Our school closed. '.March 14, on ac
count of smallpox, and 1 guess wo won’t
have any more until summer. I live about
I a hundred yards from Indian creek, and I
enjoy sitting on the bank and watching the
water run on and on. and when it gets
warm enough I will got into it and run
some myself. Some, or all, of you cousins
must come this summer and go fishing
with me, and, Aunt Julia, come, too. I
have for playmates and pets a little sister,
five years old. and a pig and two white
cals. Well. I guess Aunt Julia thinks this
enough of the kind, so I will quit for this
time, hoping to see this in print, also to
hear from some of the cousins who care to
write to a Utile boy, eight years old. Mv
birthday is September 19. I made one bov
friend when my other letter was printed.
He was a sailor lioy. He wrote me and I
had mamma answer for me, but i never
heard from him again. His name was
Charles F. Wilson. Would like to hear from
Il ini again. Your cousin.
(MR.) COLEMAN THOMASON.
Carnesville, Ga., Route 1.
Dear Auntie and Cousins: Some of you
may remember (he cousin no here in "the
I; >nd Os the sky" who had to stay a t home
w- > ie t ' me , ’ f ' cn " so of a crippled heart.
XX ell. I do not have to be a shut-in all
the time now, fo r the Father has blessed
me with great improvement jn health. Then
the state board for vocational reliabilitytion
! .it Kolpigh has for nearly ttvo years boon
I p.ijing for a wonderful course in illustra
tive drawing for me, so I have considerable
reason to be happy. A few days ago I
tried to get in touch will) a cousin whose
letter I rend several years ago. Miss Loe
Britta Fowler, hut my letter wns returned
to me. If any cousin knows her address
or the address of any other Crippled per
son in North Carolina over sixteen years of
age, I would thank them to write me about
the case , ir to notify tlie rehabilitation
board which I have mentioned. Good night
RAY N. MOSSE
Ellijay. N. C.
Dear Aunt Julia and Cousins: I wonder
if you will permit a girl of eighteen sum
mers to join your happy band of lmy« anil
girls. I live in western North Carolina.
Have lived in this state almost all mv life.
1 I have never lived in any other stale rx
' copt Georgia, nnd there not x'erv long. So.
i of course. I love the dear old “Tar Heel"
| state best. I am not going »o school like
! most of the cousins. I taught school last
| fall and winter. It Is a very trying job.
’ but I like the work fine. l’apa has taken
j Ihe Journal a long time, and I always
i road the Letter Box and enjoy all the let
ters. They are very interesting where each
I one takes a special subject to write on.
' My father is a physician. My birthday is
( July 4. If I have a twin would be glad
ito hear from you. Hoping to hear from
I lots of the cousins. Adieu.
< MISS> LUCILE PATTON.
Murphy, N. C . R F D. 2, Box 59.
D» a r Aunt Julia and Cousins: Please
I open the door this rainy morning and let
me slip in Just for a ehat with the merry
: cousins. I will promise not to stay very
long. Yo«, 1 geo thorn i« quite a crowd of
oi'sms in the circle this rainy miming.
Cousins, what are you all doing this rainv
[ wontlior? Sitting around and reading. I
suppose. t.'HS'ns. the letters are getting
more inf'-rosting ovary day. so come mi
i with your letters, boy-. Why don’t more of
yon wr:to? )’• n are Otting the c -is get
all the Pin otit of the cozy corner that
Aunt Julia has made so cozy for us a!’.
; and iet'a make it one joyous place, ami
tr> to ca-n friends through Auntie’s kind
ness. Lot's make this y.-ar a happy one
for us all. We can by being kind to all
we meet, f.r I think k ndness is tlie great
est thing on earth. Don’t you all think
| so? Bernice Beaty, your letters are fine.
; Come on with another one! Good letters
can cheer one up when they are lonely
and sometimes I got very lonelv. How
many lonely rnn«ln« are there in Hie jolly
band? Jest write ’o me anti I will assure
yo»i an answer. E:rst. I want tn thank all
th© r'tg ” q r x * )ho rp qr v pur
esting letters I received, and also thank
was gloomy and peevish and whiny,
and who fretted with her children
and spatted with her husband.
Whether a woman makes a suc
cess or failure of matrimony de
pends altogether on whether she
has a sense of humor or not. If
she can see her husband as one of
the most mirth-provoking, side
splitting, uproarious human jokes |
that nature ever perpetrated she
will be happy, and he will bless |
heaven on his knees for having |
given him the paragon of wives. But (
if s’ e sees him as an Awful Prob- (
lem, or a subject for reformation, i
neither one of them will ever knoxv (
a. happy hour, and the marriage wiil I
either end in a. divorce court or a
long endurance contest.
The women who wreck marriages
are the ones who take their hus
bands seriously, and who get tragic
every time their husbands look at
another woman, or play a little
poker, or fail to come home at the
appointed hour, and xvho weep xvhen
their hus'badns forget, an anniver
sary, or fail in some little attention
they their due.
The women xvho keep their hus
bands enslaved from the altar to
the grave are the women who laugh
with their husband over their little
faults and peculiarities. They make
a joke of their husband's weakness
for a pretty face; they have a dozen
funny stories to tell about how they -
helped their husbands out of
scrapes, and, instead of feeling ill
used and assuming the pose of a
domestic martyr when their hus
bands forget their birthdays, they
go out and buy themselves a par
ticularly nice present, which he
pays for without a murmur because
' he knows that a wife with a sense
of humor is worth anything she
costs him.
A sense of humor is even more
necessary to a mother than it is to
a wife. The humorless woman takes
her children too tragically. They
wear her out, and she alienates them
from her by her ceaseless nagging
because she thinks that every little
foolish thing they do is full of dire
ful significance. The mother with
a sense of humor knows that youth
is as subject to certain follies as it
is to the mumps and the measles
and the whooping cough, and that
it must go through these experi
ences, as it did through the cycle of
infantile diseases, but that they are
n.ot fatal if they are carefully
watched.
She may not approve of all the
manifestations of flapperism and
jellybeanitis, but she knows that
the remedy for them is laughter and
not tears, and so she keeps her
I young ones in bounds with good
natured ridicule. Nor does she
break her heart with dismal fore
bodings about the terrible fate that
is.hound to overtake boys and girls
who do not dress and act as did
their grandparents. She has seen
too many silly young people develop
into fine men and women to borrow
trouble worrying over what is going
to become of the race.
In its last analysis, a sense of hu
mor is just the sense of proportion
that enables us to see things jn their
true relation to life. It is the thing
that keeps us from making moun
tains out of molehips, and that gives
us the courage to smile instead of
cry. Happy the woman who has this
gift, and thrice happy the man who
■ gets her for a wife.
(Copyright, 1924)
’ Aunt Julia for printing my other letter.
' Hoping to got lots ot letters from all the
cousins, I will answer all. An old cousin,
MISS LYDIA MORGAN.
Culberson, N. C., R. F. D. 2, Box 15.
Dear Aunt Julia: Will you admit two
more Georgia boys into your happy band?
We both live on the farm and like farm
! life fine. We can grow almost anything
(down here in old Bullock that we wish
( '1 lie best of all is sugar cane and sweet
( potatoes. We both like hunting and fish
ing. Have any of you cousins ever been
sjipe hunting? We both have. We surely
had lc(ts of fun. But now spring time will
; soon be here, the blooming of tlie year,
while everything seems to smile let us all
smile and wish for pence and joy. Who
can guess our ages? Between 18 and 2G
years. We will be glad to heir frfom any
lot the cousins. We will answer all letters.
( Please send mail separately. Your new
I cousins,
MR. ROBERT E- CEE,
MR. JOHN NESSMITH.
Rocky Ford, Ga., R. F. D. No. 1.
Dearest Aunt and Cousins; Please pardon
me for visiting again so soon, but please let
me explain. I had a letter in the Council
a few days ago and had several guessing -it
my age. I have received so many letters
I that it is impossible for ine to answer them
I all. Several guessed my age correctly. I
was twenty the Bth of October. AH those
who didn't, receive an answer don’t get out
of heart, for I may get around after a
| while. Oh, move over, cousins, please, and
let me have a seat over here by Bessie and
Flossie Craig, of Fairmount. Come again,
girls; your letters were fine. Also Horace
| Edwards, of South Carolina. Your letter
| was fine. You wanted a rather small wife.
I’ll not take any subject this time. If I
; were to it would be oq “Kindness;” but. 1
will not take a subject this time. It I am
admitted I will not come again until I am
i an old maid, and that won’t be verrt long,
i just next, winter. I wish to thani/ Aunt. ;
( Julia again for printing m.v other letter. |
( Cousins, don't you ail just think that Aunt i
•Tulia is a dear? Just look ar. the hands'.
\ Well, I have almost broken the rules, so I’ll
be going. Hello; Ida Garrett. I almosi
missed seeing you. I remain an old cousin, i
(MISS) RUTH PICKARD. j
Adairsville, Ga.
Dcnr Aunt Julia and Cousins; Have boon
reading the letters in the Letter Box for a
: long time, and enjoy them very much, so
will you please Jet me come in and join
j yon all? I haven’t written before, but hope
to see this in print. I live on a farm in
south Georgia, Dooly county. I read lots,
and enjoy reading the stories in The Jour- (
' nal, also talks by Dorothy Dix. How many
cousins (girls) have registered and are
going to vote? I’m twenty-one, but haven’t'
( just don’t care to vote. Who has my birth-j
day, January 4? I will describe myself; li
have brown hair and eves, atn five feet tall
; and weigli 110 pounds. I would be very
! glnd to get letters from all the cousins. I
will answer them. I have stayed long (
enough, so I’ll go. Lore to Aunt Julia and
cousins. Your friend.
(MISS) MARY BOWEN.
Vienna. Ga.
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( THURSDAY, APRIL 17, 1034.
Preparing An Acceptable Home
Formula
J. R. D., Bartow, Ga., writes:
I am preparing to mix the fol
lowing fertilizer. What is the
analysis of the same and would
you suggest a change in it: 1,000
pounds of 16 per cent acid; 500
pounds of 7 per cent cotton seed
meal, 300 po’ ' js of soda and
200 pounds of "it?
If you mix t her 1,000 pounds
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Prominent Mobile Men
Included m 75 to Be
Tried on Liuor Charge
MOBILE, Ala., April 15.—An in- j
dictment, returned by the federal
grand jury, containing 75 defend
ants and including prominent per
sons already under charges of con
splrflcy to violates thA pronibition j
law, has been set for trial next Mon
day in the court, it. was announced;
at the federal building today.
' This promises to be the most in-1
teresting of the trials growing but,
of the liquor expose in this city, and j
it will probably take several days to
conclude. The defendants in this)
case are the persons xx’hom the gov
ernment men claim to have been
members ot the alleged ring in this
city. The list of defendants in the (
case include county and former city ;
officials and several of the other
prominent men xx’ho were Indicted
last November on charges of con- 1
spiracy. The reason for including l
all these defendants in one big case,
the government officials state, is to
prevent a repetition of testimony of
the government men in many of
the cases. The special grand jury
which was In session last xveek and
returned this indictment is said to
have probed certain matters re?
garded as “connecting links” in the
charge of the existence of a general
conspiracy in this city and county
in connection with the liquor traf
fic.
Other persons who were reindict
ed and who reported Monday to
make bond were P. J. O’Shaugh
nessy, former chief of police; Rich
ard Chrisman, convicted several
days ago of a charge of possessing
liquor, and Jake Ackerman. All
were released on SI,OOO bond.
Park Committeeman
Impressed by Scenery
Around Clarkesville
CLARKSVILLE, Ga.. April 15.
William C. Gregg, of the National
Arts Club of New York, who was
recently named by Secretary Work,
of the department of interior, as
one of the members of the Southern
Appalachian National park commit
tee, had just completed a prelimi
nary visit to the Appalachian Moun
tains in North Georgia. While here
he was the guest of Louis B. Magid,
chairman of the Southern Appa
lachian National Park association.
Mr. Gregg, in company with Mr.
Mira BfflßEl
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A* wJ rxIK/Al si JL UTL ante« d agx r.o defect .n v orkman- < vou Yf’** I!l ‘* mv g
ship and material, tha* they wdl kr-epaccurate tirnr-and that the ;' t l p j/vob Ji’eS “mooth ■
case will give 25 years’ itisfactory service. ORDER TODAY. • mui o n«« U«n pa»d. * •
Kill mu iKlMJift, JL,illMllllOi -
J \ Bp I
FARM EDUCATION
BY DR. ANDREW M. SOULE
obtain a mixture containing ap
proximately 160 pounds of available
phosphoric acid, 80 pounce of avail
able nitrogep, and 36 pounds of avail
able potash per ton. This would be
equivalent to a 9-4-1.75 formula. Tne
only change we suggest is that you
use 100 pounds of muriate of potash
in place of the kainit, thereby rais
ing the potash content of your for
mula to 3 per cent. You may add
100 pounds of earth to maintain the
s, indard weight of 2,000 pounds per
ton, or you may divide the 1,900
pounds of material thus obtained in
*o four equal parts and apply at
I that rate per acre.
Magid. visited all the important
points between Cornelia and Clay
ton, Ga. Mr. Gregg left Clayton
for Highlands, N. and the Sap
phire country, when he is to return
to Washington and make his pre
liminary report of North Georgia to
the Southern Appalachian National
Park committee.
Mr. Gregg was more than delight
ed over the wonderful natural scen
ery of North Georgia.
B,
I
I
'[
Tablets) is more natural and thor
ough. The effects will be a revels
tion-—you will feel so good.
th* s test - You will
1 appreciate this difference*
. E w ® V»«<l For Over
Thirty Yean
' Chips eff the Old Block
Nt JUNlOßS—'Little N?a
The same N? in one-third doses, B
candy-coated. For children and adults. S
SOLD BY YOUH DRUGGIST wj
44
1
Mineralized Water
Routs Chicken Lice
No dusting hr spraying. Birds dclouse
themselves. Amazing lire remover keeps
birds always lice free without the poultry
raiser doing any xvork simplest, easiest,
and best method ever discovered.
Live Tabs, Is dropped in tlie chicken’s,
drinking water. It conus out through the
oil glands and every louse or mite leaves
the body. No Injury to hat-habiliiy or
flavor of eggs or meat; is harmless to
chicks and does not affect' the ulumag'-
A few days’ treatment at the start and
then a little in tlie drinking water each
month is all th-'t is nc'-cssarv.
A Trial Costs You Nothing
To introduce I.ice Tabs, the J .alufiratory
is making a special guaranteed offer nf
two large, double-strength SI.OO packages
for the price of one. Just send your
name ami address, and pay the postman
SI.OO and postage on delivery. If after
30 days trial you are not absolutely sat
isfied, your money bank quick. Writ#
today to Lice Tab Laboratories, Dept.
127, 315 S. Waiiasli Ave., Cl)ica.go.
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WfiiKlaMy
Relieve Your Sufferings
Money-Back Guarantee-
(If you «ro suffering from Pellagra; or hav#
any of the iiymptorna of Pellagra, anch •»
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throat and tongue a flaming red, with mueh
mucous and choking, write today for our
FREE 60-pago Pellagra Booklet, which wilt
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No matter what you base tried. Pellagra
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You Taha Abtofute/y No Rith. A
Send For Free Booklet
American Compounding Co.,
Box 587-L ***■
5