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OUR HOUSEHOLD
CONDUCTED BY LIZZIE O. THOMAS
THANKSGIVING PEANS
Are you planning your Thanksgiv
ing dinner? I suppose it has been in
your mind, off and on, all the fall,
but the time is almost here and i
some of the preparations can be
gin.
Turkeys are so high that it is ex
travagant to think of one for this
month and another for the Christ
mas dinner. Some would prefer it
now and "trust” to a cheaper price
by Christinas, but if 1 may judge
from the many letters telling of mis
fortunes among the turkeys even
after they were almost grown, and 1
from the reports of the buyers sent [ :
out by t>«e big commission men, j
there will not be a large supply. I t
Some around me who have always!
sold ( thirty or forty dollars worth
have engaged breeding stock from
me, and 1 shall not have one for
the holiday trade.
If at either time you decide on an
old ham baked I would suggest that
you wash and trim it carefully the
day before, let it soak in water
enough to entirely cover it and the
rtext day put it in your roaster, fill
it With water, put on .the top and
ebok on top of the stove. It retains
a flavor and the juices that are sure
to be lost if it is just boiled. I know
that a regular ham boiler is fine, but
they take up too much room on the
stpye and are not so easy to handle.
. Remember that the ham must be
Ittit on in cold water, cook moder
ately fast and allow twenty minutes
to the pound, and also remember that
if it is to be served cold it will be
better flavored if it remains in the
pot-, or roaster till it is cold. Skin
it. and if you serve it whole put it
qjl. the platter with the fat side up,
dotted with black pepper and whole
cloves stuck in it.
I told you last year how to bake
a turkey, and it has been a real p’as
ih’e to get the letters from the house
keepers who followed my directions
and had such nice dinners. This time
I . shall give you a recipe for some
of the left-over chicken, or turkey., j
FARM EDUCATION
BY DR. ANDREW M. SOULE
Seeding Hairy Vetch and Oats
Together
D. J. 8., Dublin, Ga., writes:
Please tell me the best way to
plant hairy vetch with oats, and
how to fertilize the crop. I also
wish information about growing
pecans. Are they subject to dis
•ease? When is the best time of
the year to set them out?
Hairy vetch may be planted any
time during this month in your sec
tion of Georgia. We have always
found the relative early planting of
both vetch and oats to be a desirable
practice. It is our policy to sow
three pecks of oats with twenty
pounds of vetch. This is an excel
lent combination to seed for hay
production. Oats hold the vetch up,
and the quality of the hay is very
fine indeed. Good yields may also
l>e anticipated, if the crop is planted
on land in good condition. We would
drill the oats and vetch seed ip to
gether. If the oats are planted late
in the season, seed in open furrows.
Fertilize the crop with iIOO to 300
pounds of acid phosphate and 100
pounds of kainit, or manure salts.
On thin land, add a bag of cotton
sped meal, or some other desirable
carrier of nitrogen. It is all right
to -inoculate the vetch, if you so
desire, though we have not thought
it necessary, as a rule, to follow this
practice with the relatively large
seeded legumes.
Pecan trees do best on rich, well
drained soils. This applies both to
the removal of surplus moisture from
the land and to land drainage as
well. A great many pecan orchards
have been planted on thin, poor land.
This is a mistake, and will always
prove to be an unprofitable invest
ment. The pecan is a rapid grower
and needs an abundance of plant
food. Young trees should be fertil
ized with one to five pounds of a
formula containing four per cent
nitrogen, ten per cent phosphoric
acid and four per cent potash. Old
trees should receive from fifteen to
twenty pounds of this formula. Ap
ply the fertilizer in circles around
the trees. The fertility of pecan or
chards should he kept up by the usa
of cover crops. Certainly the legumes
are satisfactory for this purpose.
It seems now as though it would be
necessary to spray pecan trees in
order to control some of the diseases
which attack them. We would not
set pecan trees closer than 60 feet
apart in either direction. We would
plant only the best, standard varie
ties. Use only budded stock. The
varieties recommended for your sec
tion of Georgia are Stuart. Curtis
Bradley. President, Pabst. Aliev, Sue
cess and Teche. The Frotscher is
highly favored in southwest Georgia
The Moore, owing to its productive
ness, is also a competitor for chiei
place. Set the trees out any time
after they are defoliated. Fall plant
ing is good practice. If you can not
set your trees out at this time, then
get them out in January.
Cultivation of Tobacco in Georgia-
E. D. S.. Georgetown. Ky.,
writes: How many counties in
MY DAUGHTER
WOULD CRY
AT EVERYTHING
Nervous and Irritable. ByTaking
Ly diaE.Pinkham’s V egeta bleCora
pound Became Entirely Normal
'Clinton, Wisconsin. —“My daughter
was in a very run-down condition, and
11111111111111111111 l was i rr itable, and
1 111 I would <"■>’ every
111
was so weak an ‘i
nervous. As Lydia
0 ** E.Pinkham’s Veg-
W etable Compound
had helped me
li when 1 was a girl
Hi HHillll 1 pave it to her tc
}L build her up. and
1 the results were
>. all that we could
, , , i .‘wish for 1 wish
that every mother with growing girls
Would try it for these troubles girls
often have. 1 had taken it my sell
before rnygirl was born, and she was
one of the nicest babies any one coulc
wish to have. 1 recommend the Vege
table Compound to women and girls
and cannot praise it too highly “
Mrs. I. A. Holford. Box 48, Clinton,
Wisconsin.
Mothers can depend upon Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound to re
lieve their daughters of those troubles
they so often have. They know fron
experience the value of the Vegeta
ble Compound in the treatment ol
these complaints and many, like Mrs,
Holford, give it to their daughters.
THE ATLANTA TRI WEEKLY JOURNAL
Chicken a la king: cut, up tender
baked chicken, free from gristle or
skin. Try to make gravy enough,
when baking the hen, and put in
the saucepan two tablespoonfuls of
butter and when melted add the
same amount of flour. Mix well and
then add the gravy, if you have no
gravy use fresh milk. When well
blended add the mmced chicken,
three minced hard noiled eggs and
two minced sweet peppeis—green,
let the entire mixture boil up and
then serve in a deep dish. I know
that many people serve it on toast,
but there are more who prefer to put
it on the bread for themselves. This
is a delicious dish for a luncheon
during the holidays. If you should
have 100 much gravy let it cook a
little longer for it must not be in
the least "soupy.”
Sometimes there are hunters, or a
lot of men, who to use their own
expression, are “fed up” on salads
and such things. 'Phen is the time
to use that beef tongue that you
have been planning so long. You
may have to speak ahead- to get the
tongue, so I am going to tell you
how to fix it from the beginning.
Tongue a la Italian
Let it be a good sized fresh beef
tongue. Wipfe it well and place it in
boiling water until the peeling can
be. removed: dipping.it in cold water
will hasten the work. Then parboil
for one hour. Place in a deep bak
ing dish four tablespoonfuls of but
ter, one onion sliced thin, allow the
onion to brown slightly. Place the
tongue in the dish and pour over
it the juice of an orange, salt and
pepper it well and cover it with a
layer of tomatoes and place two
slices of lemon on top of the toma
toes. If the tomatoes do not have
juice enough pour over it all two
cups of hot water. If the liquid
gets too thick add hot water and
keep the tongue well basted. Bake
two hours and the tongue will be
well done and the tomatoes a. deli
cious sauce. Serve, with mashed
potatoes or spaghetti.
1 Georgia raise Burley tobacco?
What kind of soils are best suit
ed to tobacco? How -should to
bacco be fertilized? What will
a. barn cost large enough to
house the. tobacco from ten
acres?
Burley tobacco is not grown in
Georgia. Our people are especially
r interested in what are known as the
- “bright leaf” tobacco and the
> i “shade’’ tobacco. Shade tobacco is
f i not grown on a very extensive scale,
tilts cultivation being practiced chief
’ ly in two of our counties which lie
’ along the Florida border. Bright to-
- bacco, however, is grown with sue
’ cess through the lower half of the
, coastal plains area. It does well on
’ sandy phases of the Tifton and Nor
’ folk series. These soils are gray on
1 top. Most of them have a yellow
1 subsoil which tends to become heav-
- ier and may be tinged with a red
? color at a considerable depth. The
• Tifton sandy loam contains some
1 pebble, and, on that account, occa
) sionally goes by the name of “peb-
• ble” land. These soils occur over
1 relatively large areas and are not dis-
- ficult of identification.
1 In 1917 Georgia grew only 350,000
• pounds of bright tobacco, which was
sold at 23 cents a pound. The crop
3 that year was worth SBO,OOO. In
‘ 1924 Georgia produced 30.024,502
pounds, the average price of which
was 21.82 cents. The value of the
■* crop was $6,551,659. The eight-year
‘ average indicates a sale price of
• 22.12 cents per pound, with a gross
5 outturn for the crop in that period
; of 15,324.722 pounds. The yield per
3 acre varies, but the average for 1924
‘ was not far from 750 pounds. There
3 were 40,000 acres devoted to the cul
tivation of this crop in Georgia the
past season.
! The cost and size of barns needed
to cure bright tobacco vary mate
“ rially with location and the type of
■ structure desired. Blue prints and
specifications for such barns can be
I obt; tijed free of cost from the Geor
gia State College of Agriculture.
‘ In the cultivation of bright tobac
” co, one must be careful about using
• much vegetable matter.
b While it is true that decaved
, or organic materials are helpful to
s this crop, the best results follow
t applications of this kind to the land
t the year previous to that in which
1 it is to be devoted to tobacco. It
.. requires skill and Vare to produce
e i high-grade tobacco, \ut when a crop
. is produced, it will as a rule sell for
( a very fair price. Commercial fertil
>l tzers are used rather extensively
s with this crop. A good formula to
i, use is one containing 4 per cent and
upward of nitrogen derived from two
f or more sources, 8 to 10 per cent of
e phosphoric acid, and 4 to 10 per cent
I- ? f P°J asll - Sulphate of potash is pre
•t as a earrier of this element,
n ne Ingh grade formulas are applied
to our thinner and sandier lands, and
the low grade formulas to those that
are of better grades.
Plant Food Value of Corn Cobs
>. -I. 8., Buford, Ga., writes:
How much fertilizing value do
22 lU I -. C< L bs contain - and how
should they he treated to get the
nest results?
A ton of corn cobs contains verv
little nutriment. Analysis show’s
them to contain only about 6.4
pounds of nitrogen, 1.4 pounds of
| Phosphoric acid, and 13.2 pounds of
I , potash per ton. You will thus see
I 11 hat they run low in plant food
value. It would take them some
(time to disintegrate in the soil So
T.l do not think they would furnish
any appreciable amount of fertilizer
to a growing'erop; certainly not the
first year they were applied to the
land. It would hardly pay to grind
r Jhis material for the purpose you
d .have in mind. and. if you burn the
i cobs, you will certainly destroy all
the nitrogen they contain and there-
> by lessen whatever plant food value
they have to that extent. If one
a had a lot of this material on hand.
3 the best procedure would be to scat
i- ter it over the surface of the land,
d which should then be broken to a
e good depth. ]f the breaking can be
•] done with a tractor, or a large disc
0 plow, this material could be buried
j quite effectively. Covered into the
e ii soil in the manner indicated, the
□ ' cobs tend to decompose rather rap-
L|*'ll> a,ui - in event, will exert
“'some very slight benefit on the crops
s to be grown on the land next sum
-3 , nter, A ton of corn cobs possess so
f little fertilizing value that it would
3 1 hardly pay one to haul them very
d 1 » r -
s Bomb Is Discovered
l ’ In Newspaper Office
\ SAN DIEGO, Cal.. Nov. 19. A
' bomb was discovered in th? editorial
, g i rooms of the Union-Tribun.' here this
n frernoon. fifteen minutes 1 efore the
time set for it to be exploded.
< The bomb was in a suit case left
II , beside a desk.
** j It contained four sticks of dyna
j mite, electric batteries and a clo’x.
AUNT JULIA’S COUNCIL
A Friendly Meeting Place for All Tri-Weekly Journal Readers
THE LETTER BOX
FOR THE BOYS AND RIRLS
“Help for the Helpless—Kindness to
All Dumb Things”
Rules
No unsigned letter printed
No letter written on both sides of
paper printed.
All letters not to exceed 150 to
200 words.
Dear Children:
I have, had a request for a letter
box filled with letters from all the
cousins who bear the name "Inez,”
these cousins to write briefly of
their home, their age and how they
spend their leisure time.
Os course I do not know how many
cousins we have with the name of
our dear little girl at the Berry
school, but J would indeed be glad
to have an issue of the letter box
with letters from these cousins.
Please if your name is "Inez”
write it in the lower left-hand corner
of your envelope, just as 1 have
written it in this paragraph.
Lovingly,
AUNT JULIA
hoar Aunt Julia and Cousins: I am asking
admittance again after an absence of nearly
a year, and I wish to apologize to some of
the cousins who wrote to me, but didn't get
an answer. 1 did not think I would get so
many, but yon all write again. 1 will try
to do better next time. Well, T see some
are describing their ideal. 1 don't care so
much about looks, and .till I don't, want a
real-ugly one, but. above all, I don't want
him to drink or use profane talk. But 1
am like some of the other cousins: if we
wait for our ideal, I am afraid some of us
will be old maids and bachelors. Don’t you
cousins think so? Well, 1 won’t describe
myself: will only say I am between eighteen
and twenty-one. .My birthday is October 12.
Cousins, come on with your letters. Lots of
love to Aunt Julia and cousins. Your
cousin,
(MISS) MAUDE CHANCE.
Dozier, Ala., Konte 2.
Dear Aunt Julia: Here comes a good-look
ing cousin knocking for admittance into
your council. And, oh! what a jolly crowd'
Bill Snow, your letters were fine. I will
not. take a subject this time, as I don't
want to break the rules and stay too long.
I will describe ntyself and run before every
one else does. Here goes: I have black
hair (bobbed >, gray eyes, medium complex
ion, age between ten and twenty. Anyone
who wishes to write to a jolly kid, just, let
your letters come to me. I bid you all
adieu.
(MISS) RUTH BRACKETT.
Cornelia, Ga.
Dear Aunt Julia: How are .all of you
cousins? I suppose most of yon are going
to school. I go to Haralson High school.
Miss Bertha Sammons, of Eatonton. Ga.. is
my teacher. How many of yon know
iter? I am in the tentli grade. Aunt Julia,
I wish you could be here to help me ea<:
scuppernons. They are surely good. lone
Weldon, Hahira, Ga., do you know Mr. Law
son? Isn't he your school teacher? His
wife is cue of my old school teachers. She
boarded with its and taught near here. We
have a Chevrolet car. How tnayn of you
have kodaks? How many have visited
Stone Mountain? I surely would like to.
How many have seen Aunt Julia? I am a
blonde and have bobbed hair. I am sixteen
years of age. Who is my twin? Mr
birthday is March 4. All of you cousins
please write to me. If you haven’t time
to write a letter please write a card. A'l
who can please send their pictures too. Love
to Aunt Julia and all. .Miss Alma Addy,
Senoia, Ga., R. F. I)., No. 1.
Dear Aunt Julia and Cousins: Will you
permit] a lonely South Carolina girl into
your hjtppy band of boys and girls. I just
couldn't, help writing to the letter box, as
I have been a silent reader of tbe good
old Journal for a long time. I sure do
enjoy reading the letter box best of all.
I sure do think it's a lot of help to the
young people. I will describe myself, but
you must not run. I have blue eyes, blonde
hair, and it’s bobbed, too; I am 5 feet tall,
weigh 160 pounds, and live in the country.
1 like country life just. fine. My birthday is
March HI. I will leave my age for you
to guess: it is between 16 and 20. Tim
one guessing gets a Christmas present, and
a nice one too! Well, I won't break the
rules the first time 1 come, so I will dose
for this time. If you want to get an
answer lo all your letters, just, write to
.Miss Flora Crawford, a new cousin. Cow
pens, S.
Dear Aunt Julia and Cousins: May I
Join yonr happy band of boys and girls?
As I am tired and would like to rest a little
while. I will take n seat by Aunt Julia.
What do you cousins do for pastime? I
read and help mother with the housework.
Like meet of you cousins. I live on a farm
and like it fine. How many of you cousins
like to go to school? Count me for one.
When study ami school are over.
How jolly it is to be free.
Away in the fields of clover.
The honey-sweet haunts of the bee.
Away in the woods to ramble,
Where merrily all the day long,
The birds in the bush to ramble
Are filling the summer with song.
Away in the dewy valley.
To follow the murmuring brook.
Or sit on its bank and dally
A while with a line and hook.
Away from the stir and bustle.
The noise of the town left behind;
Vacation for sport and muscle.
The winter for study and mind.
There's never a need to worry.
There's never a lesson to learn,
There's never a bell lo hurry.
There's never a duty to spurn.
So play fill the face grows ruddy.
And muscles grow bigger, and then
Come back to the books and study,
M e’ll find it its pleasant again.
Mell, I will dt-scribe myself and go. T
and Hi years old. blue eyes, fair complex
ion and weigh 106 pounds’ All of you cous
ins write to me. My birthday is June 15?
Have 1 a twin?
(MISS) LUCILE PONDER
Cumming, Ga., Route 2.
Dear Auntie and All: Here comes a little
girl begging admittance to your happy
band. I wonder what you cousins ate doing
>ese flats. I. like most of the cousins,
live on a farm and you know it is work
time witli me. I guess most of you ail
are going to school now. JI v school won't
slnrt until the last of October. I am in
the fourth grade. Well. I will describe mv
self and hp Koillt , , # ~, tpn , p . I|s o|d
and hate light hair and blown eyes. 1 must
De oil. All you cousins write to me. Love
t 0 al , i - l-'I’SS) LOUISE BAIN.
< edar Bluff, a Lt.
Dear Aunt Julia and All You Cousins:
Move over ami give me a spate to warm
I have been taking The Tri-Weeklv Join
,a/"r al,n, ’ sl a year, and have enjoyed
leading the letters from you cousins Wliat
I cousins been doing for pastime?
r bp '“'’ aotnp f “ u< y work and
Hive been reading some story books also
I live in the country and like it. fine I
see most of yon cousins have a Mtbject, but
I will not take a subject, as this is mv
? 'b” 1 !' ,O ' vri,p - Amu Julia, w,. cous
ins would be gald to gm a i„ t , )f
Xe'd'H A " " f V °" ,O " S ’' nS " ritP '» ™p
... ion-- ! Sb for * summer va-
eek ’ u ■."'‘‘"J C '”"'b'd and stayed a
mvseif "'*«■ I "ill describe
‘bob-led liKht br '” Vn
eves' t',,l "’“'l'‘'-'ton and light blue
Lvht’i '"l''"'' ' S is mv
( MISS) GEORGIA MAE TUEIT
Imltan Trail, N._t’.._R. F D. N.‘. 1
I'e.ii- Vnt Julia and Cousins: Move over
o’’ "nd : \"m n'i.:*"' "T 8 SPB '
Hon 'si t ’ ' 1 can falk ’o all.
wonder „h.t all’ Jf v’n ZlW’and 8 'Bin' 8in ' 1
ins are doing 111PS!p da -,-. t "' 1 np "’. ’ °" S ’
s ' -
“-ore «a, t 0 |>o hear<r . J ]
Do tmu co, "in?! L ,rCh 1,,05t Sll rh< ’
not missed but one Sunday since January 1.
.""’I would not have missed that one
1 see m'xt' '\ ! f' PPn '”' ata
leer ar t ' k. ar - '’king a h>'>-
1 wi’l ot . Meal hosbands.
(•ike a subject th•< tune but if I
"ere t 0 ir would he on -R nXss ” If
nouki* have °r >°b Ch ° CSe ideal h «sband he
and ’own.’ "m >P a seD^eman - good, kind
tobacco f'r , must ,Irink "or chew
bear H''ui T' Sre , ' T ° f blnss 1 cannot
He mu t not .."’ p Profane language,
le must have a ( hnstian heart, but it
dte-nt matter about the color of his eves
with"t r / Or t t here ; ’ rp j " St ” tr "*‘ - T " l,ns men
With orou-i ha r an I eyes there are <- r ,
Macs ha r am! eyes or of ,ny other coin.
Daley, of Bennettsville, s f. nhat
has become of you? Please answer my ’»r
’pr. I tm jus* m old couiun, hav? med: m - *
THE QUESTION BOX
FOR EVERYBODY
Rules
: - ■■■— l ■■
1. All questions must have full
names and addresses signed. If it
is desired that names do not appear
in the paper, add your initials or
some chosen name in addition to
jour full name.
2. All questions must be written
on ONE SIDE of the paper only.
3. No legal or medical advice can
bo g'iven, either in the Question Box
or by personal letter.
4. All letters requiring personal re
ply MUST inclose stamped, self-ad
dressed envelope.
5. Letters for the Question Box
MUST NOT be included in letter for
Aunt Julia's Letter Box. lhe ques
tions must be sent sapartely and
must be addressed to Aunt Julias
Question Box, the Atlanta Tri-
Weekly Journal, Atlanta, Ga.
Dear Folks:
Now is the time to save the leaves
from the fall roses as they shatter.
You remember what attractive sach
ets we made for Christmas using
our "Potpourri.”
For the readers who have not
made this delicious sachet we will
give our recipe:
Dry your rose leaves .in the sun
if possible, never in the stove. When
thoroughly dry put into quart jars,
to each jar of rose leaves, not pack
ed tight, add a half teaspoon each
of cloves, cinnamon and allspice,
these spices ground of course. Screw
i on tops of jars and shake well so
j that the species will permeate the
leaves, let stand for three days then
add one teaspoon of azurea sachet
powder close up for a week then put
into your "rose jar,” if you are lucky
enough to have one, or make into
sachets, using China silk for covers.
Cordially yours,
AUNT JULIA.
Ollie L. R.:
If you get a yard and a quarter
of 45-inch linen you can make a
27-inch cloth for your card table and
four twelve-inch napkins and have
some small pieces of linen that can
be used for centers of crocheted
mats. You can get a nice quality of
this linen for from 75c to SI.OO per
yard. Send me a stamped, addressed
envelope and I will send ’you sam
ples.
Jerry:
Yes, frankly I do like the nick
name "Jerry” better than I do
Geraldine. You might, however, call
it an abbreviation rather than a nick
name. As a rule I think nicknames
are foolish.
Mrs. Le C.:
Put your fat in your skillet while
it is cold and allow the two to heat
together and you will not have that
disagreeable odor of frying though
i your house. There is frying and
! frying and some is less indigestible
I than others, but on the whole I
i think the less fried food that either
: children or grown-ups have the bet
: ter off they are.
! Bess:
i Wash the white woodwork in your
' house with either white soap flakes
. or the pure white soap dissolved in
warm water. This will keep your
1 paint in good order and any strong
er washing solutions will certainly
, yellow and disfigure your paint
George:
■ If you cannot afford to give your
s^e rJi n g silver, you can get
“ the plated in fine designs and it will
t wear for years and years and before
, it is "shabby” you will be able to
. replace it with the sterling silver
Send me a stamped addressed en
[ velope and I will send you descrip
tions and prices and when you make
j your selections if you will send me
' n r ! tlals - v °ii wish used and a
l O l toff,< ; e . money order to cover cost
and mailing I win be „ laJ to attend
io this commission for vou Re-
I member you cannot have engraving
one at the last minute ° before
< hristmas. wiulv
eoinp ex, oll To tb e one writing
"ill seirl a photo of myself and t th
<>->e m.v age, whieT a t, e ?"e en °fo?r
- and etghtoen. w iH ;ln ,ner miTnni "rL
• p| 'e<l. so come on boys and girls ami I t
tJ-oiir cards and letters fly to ’
i (MISS) FANNIE DAILEY
l hmo, S. €.. R oll te 1. i'au.i.i.
I oiildn t stay away any longer, so here l am
ImiVho’’ 8 3Pr <’o-e on,
on A “? st . s ' a,e t'° ' Vri,e in
: a i ftUtin?'*' '"r f J nPSI HD ' l bpst "nnbng
n d ftslnng ground there is. Then -we have
te, upon acres of the best orange groves
friTf t,IP Witb ,beir KOlden
r, t upon , )PUI Tbe mosl fainoi]s *
h P % f ,be .‘ lnl on is in Florida, which i,
uhe Mhcr springs. I ii vp on , v fO ur miles
■lhe 11 .- m.l l . Sr, ' , '" S and ?*’ tlle,P oftfn
lern ,on ? 8 ° VPr " aler - 1011 n°r“'-
T.L J ' '.’ O “ e anrt s P end ,hp "inter with
,»« Pn< , HP r lts "onders and you will come
[ H g e'" t<’ ‘'T ln , tllP bpst count y tl>ere is in
' < nrchV- ''; I 1 ’ h,nk - , ”nr town has four
ihurches ami have a fine school, which has
> He enrollment of 1.100 pupils this term
mere also are some fine poultrv farms
in this county, which is Marion. The coun
ty is putting hard surface roads over it so
we are progressing towards being the gar
den spot of the world. I hope to get. lots
of letters, so you cousins get busy and vou
. will get an answer. Find enclosed a quar
ter for Inez. I heard from Mount Berrv
• .Aunt Julia, and I hope to se 9 the school
I .some Ume. By-by, from a Florida cousin.
" ritp *'-> t.MISSi MAE JONES
' Ocala, Fla., R. A. Box 131.
I Dear Aunt Julia and Cousins- We are
. two jolly school boys from the dear old
■ rtate of Georgia, seeking admittance tn
| your happy land of boys and girls. This is
■ our first letter tn the letter box. so we
won t take a subject, but leave that space
for a more gifted writer. Our ages are
, l.etween 14 and 19. Joel's birthday js
August -8; Gordon's birthday is January 4.
' \v Te ",’ p a (win .' Come on with your letters
. Me will answer all letters received, and
"ill send our photo to the one guessing our
; I lease send mail separately. Good
wishes to all, Joe) Mood. Haralson, Ga
Gordon Nixon, Haralson. Ga,
j Dear Aunt Julia and Cousins; M'on't vou
please let me in again after an absence’ of
| a year? All the while I have enjoved the
lp tt p '' Hox so much. I wish to thank Aunt
.tuna for printing my other letter. f, )r I re
ceived so many nice letters and made a ] o t
or friends. I will not < hoose a subject, as
I am not a gifted writer: but if [ Should it
would lie on - Mother Nature.” Everything
is beautiful now, as autumn is Iw
gtnntng to turn the leaves bright red
and yellow. I guess all you cousins have
i enjoyed your vacation. I have, but I am
always glad to begin school again. I will
, soon complete the seventh grade. I will go
| now. as I do not want to break Aunt Julia s
; rules. I am expecting lots of letters from
! you cousins. I would appreciate photos, too
;as I have started a friendship album. So
let your letters come to an old cousin.
(MISS) MARY EDNA WILSON,
r ranklin, Ga., Route 3.
1’- S.—l inclose 5 cents for Inez.
Dear Aunt Julia and Cousins: Will yon
admit another Alabama girl into yonr happy
I circle? I have long wanted to be a cousin
. but have found it a task to get up courage
enough. My father takes The Journal and
I I always read the Letter Box and enjoy it.
I am in first year high school and belong
to the Girl Scouts: I am thirteen rears old.
1 have dark brown hair tbobbed i, brown eyes
and a few freckles on my nose. I lire one
{ mile from Georgiana, on a farm, and like ft
fine. I want all you cousins to write me
for I enjoy letter writing and will answer
all letters. I<ore and best wishes to Aunt
Julia and cousins.
(MISS) OU IDA DAVIS
Georgiana. Ala.
Dear Aunt Julia and Cousin’: Will you
please adm-t a lonely soldier boy into rour
happy band of hoys and girls'.- M'bat .1 >
you cousins do for pastime? I work In the
ordnan. e repair shops and I like rhe work.'
fine. Mr age is beineen t ■m’r and thirty •
t h, TP ’'r-swn hair and exe«. complex! »n I
nrddy. Tq the first cousin from M-n stale 1
DOROTHY DIX DISCUSSES LIFE
TALKS ON HEART AND HOME
Four Tests for a Girl's Love—How
Cun a. Mol her Wishing to Break a
Match Wean Her Son Away
From the Girl?—Shall She
Marry the Dentist or the
Minister?
DEAR MISS DlN—Something
like two months ago I asked a
girl to marry me, and she re
plied that, while she liked me better
than any other man she knew, she
did not know whether she loved me
enough to mar
ry me or not.
She still seems
unable to decide
this question,
which is vitally
important to me.
('an you tell
any method by
which she may
determine h e r
real sentiments
! concerning me?
J. W.
Answer: It i.s
I unfortunate that
1 the poets and
Bl
KFj
•awn., -ssaraw «MMn
novelists have, set an almost impos
sible idealistic anil romantic stand
ard for gauging love. According to
them, a, lover must he afflicted with
chills and thrills, and hectic fevers.
He or she must tremble at the. sound
of an approaching- footstep, and be
ready to commit suicide at the mere
thought of being parted from the I
beloved one. Noml no really mental- |
ly balanced person ever experiences [
all of these symptoms.
He or she finds placid peace and
happiness in another’s presence;
finds congeniality in another’s so
ciety, but there is no wild rapture,
no especial thgills, and so he and she
doubt that it is love that he or she
feels, -whereas it is in reality the
quiet, steadfast love that outlasts a
hundred tempests of passion.
There are many Mays in M’hich a
woman can test her feelings toward
a man. One is to determine jxhether
she likes him better present or ab
sent. If she thinks of him more ten
derly M’hen he is away than M’hen he
is with her, it shows that he is not
really sympathetic and congenial,
and she likes him more than she
loves him. If, on the other hand,
she believes herself in love with him
M’hen he is with her, and doubts her
love when he is away, it indicates
that he has a physical fascination
for her onlj'. She does not love him
M'ith a love that lasts.
Another M’a.v a girl can test her
love is by trying to determine her
own reactions to a man’s conversa- ’
tion. Any woman can listen on for
ever while a man tells her how much -
he loves her and how wonderful she
is, but if she begins to be bored M’hen
he switches the conversation to him
self and commences to monologue
about his own interests, then she
merely likes him. It takes love to
make a woman M’ant to hear every
thing a man thinks about himself.
Still another test of love is when
a girl begins to feel motherly to
ward a man, and worried about
whether h e gets the proper food, and
puts on dry shoes M’hen he gets his
feet M’et. That shows that in her
heart she regards him as her prop
erty.
But the acid test of love is M’hen a
girl prefers spending an evening at
home M’ith a man to having him
take her out somewhere. That is
indisputable evidence that she has
picked him out for a fireside com
panion for life.
Perhaps these pointers may be of
value to your lady love in reading
her own heart. After all, the line
who writes to me I will send mv picture,
and will answer all cards ami letters I get.
I have written to the Letter Box three times
before, but was not admitted.
(MR. I OSCAR C. SNOM’.
Fort Benning, Ga., I’. (». Box 585.
Hello. Aunt Julia ami All: Be careful not
to let (he door be open any longer than
necessary, for there is a rather cold, rainy
breeze blowing this afternoon, an<| I don't
wish any of you cousins to catch eold-.
M’bat do you cousins do for pastime? For
myself, i help mother witli the housework,
crochet and make tatting. I want to ask
a favor. I want you cousins to send me a
gingham scrap four inches wide and six
incites long. I want to make mo a friend
ship quilt. Who Ims my birthday. February
14? Yon cousins can guess ntv ago; I'm not
under fifteen and nor over twenty-five. I'ni
still blessed with a father, mother.’ foil
brothers and three sisters, which I consider
h great blessing. Here is one of mv favorite
poems, which 1 wish to see in print:
The Love of God Takes Care of Me
At home, at school, at play,
M'herevet* l may go or stay.
Those words i aluays seem to see:
"The love of God takes care of me."
It s easier to do right things
M’hen something in mo sings and sings
For then 1 bear as well as see
"The love of God takes care of me.”
I often listen for that song
M’hen something tempts me to do wrong
BYtr 1 am safe as i <an be
If love is taking care of me.
M’hen all about me is the night.
If clouds are dark or stars are bright
Across the sky I seem to see
"The love of God takes care of me.”
If some one else is lone and sad
It always helps to make him glad
To say. ‘‘Don't Jet yourself be blue,
J he love of God takes care of you.’’
M’hen Jesus said that God takes care
To number every little hair
I’tn sure He meant that, largo or small.
lhe love of God takes care of all.”
I am sure yon will agree with me. auntie
that this little poem is worth a place among
the council poems. If anyone cares to write
to a brunette, let your letters come to
'MISS) MYRTLE SMITH
Greensboro. Ga.. Route 4.
Dearest Aunt Julia and Cousins: Ts vou
don t Jet me in J will take mv place" in
lhe waste basket, for this is my third at
| tempt. il don’t remember how I signed
mv name the other times hut I am jipt
the same now that I -r.< ti.cn. only a lit
tle older.) Cousins. | jj VP j n a ] onp |,
place where birds are most of mv companv
and friends and I have al wavs loved
them, no matter where I go. (I don't star
at the same place all of rhe tinw.i Doves
are my favorites. They moan on the house
where I stay and sometimes wrens build
nests Inside, (iften there are d-ovos r>*
partridges in the yard.
. RED BIRDS
Reclining on the sunny steps of woodland
cottage is a pleasure,
M’ith my wild pets of’ beauty so rare
Flitting from tree to tree, or sitting con
tentedly on a bough,
But pretty red birds, I'm lonely when
you're not there.
M’hen morning dawns. In sunshine or rain, i
1 love to see the ever-gay red bird and j
hear it sing:
It s presence makes life more bright and
lovely,
It makes home more homey just for Its
sweet voice to be beard.
If anybody would like to correspond with
me I would be delighted to hear from
them.
(MRS.) T.LEM'ELLYN (GOSSETTI HOLT
Opelika, Ala.
Bargain SALE!
V OLID cold effeet
guaranteed 25 W JF
vr,-s. Richly engraved. _
t.a .road mode, with famo'» '"j? FREE
t.eai-ard Regulator. Aojust- r.nntn.
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Tasted to nm SO touri on J * * ° ' ” * '
o W n a do Dr a- “ ii ’
S EI 0 NO MON EY G<>oD
penman SALE SQ 37 Mwer back
r and Y«ri ri«k nothing
RRADLEY. NEWTON,
SATIRDAV. NOVEMBER 22, 1024
between liking ami loving is a. very
thin one, and there are no more sat
isfactory marriages than those in I
M’hich a perfect friendship exists be
tween a husband and wife.
Dear Dorothy Dix: My son is in
fatuated with a young girl who is
not settled in her ways, and when
my daughters try to tell her about
the seriousness of marriage she
throws up her hands and answers
that she doesn’t want to hear all
that. Please advise me the best way
to part them before it is too late.
ANXIOUS MOTHER.
Answer: It is a serious matter to
break off a marriage, and a mother
might well hesitate to interfere un
less she has some better reason than
merely that a young girl is gay and
frivolous, and doesn’t want to re
gard matrimony from the. duty
standpoint instead of the romantic.
You see, husband or wife is as ab
solutely a matter of taste as whether
you like onions, or pink’ is more be
coming than blue to you or not.
Therefore, the kind of a girl whom
mother would pick out for a wife
for her son may be the very one who
would drive him to drink, while the
girl of whom mother disapproves
might fill every need of his soul and
body.
Nor can any human being tell be
forehand what sort of a wife a girl
will make. We have all seen flighty,
I flibbety-jibbety hoydens settle down
] into the most domestic of wives and
mothers. We have seen girls who
were wildly extravagant with papa’s
money become, tightwads with their
own, and we have also seen domestic
girls who had got enough domestic
ity and who refused to go in the
kitchen after marriage, and M’e've
seen prim little Puritans turn into
flirtatious flapper jvives.
So, inasmuch as those who marry
have to live together, it is a pretty
good idea to leave it to the victims
to select their own poison.
As for breaking off a match, the
only successful tactics are diplomatic
ones, and the use of them depends
upon the personality of the individ
uals. Sometimes absence does its
perfect work, and you can break off
an engagement by parting a couple.
Often giving them ove..loses of each
other’s society will do the trick. A
little judicious ridicule is generallj’
effective. But the one sure way to
make a match is to forbid a boy and
girl to see each other and to keep
nagging them about each other.
♦ ♦ *
, Dear Miss Dix: I am a girl of
I nineteen, and am in love with tM’O
(gentlemen. One is a dental student,
and the other is a theological stu
dent. Which shall I marry?
BERTHA.
Answer: Depends on which you
want saved, your teeth or your soul.
It is a, pity you don't live M'here
polyandry exists, so that you could
have both. Surely, Bertha', you do
i not consider that you are much in
love with either when you can’t tell
M’hich of two men you care for the
most, and M’hen you are willing to
let their professions decide the niat-
I ter.
In your particular case, however,
I should say that your chances ot’
happiness would be greater with the
dentist than the preacher, as you
i might not care for the obligations
I imposed upon lhe wife of a clergy
man, whereas the dentist’s M'ife has
no handicaps unless she is jealous of
the lady patients.
DOROTHY DIX.
(Copyright, 1924.)
__
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Attacks Theory 1 hat
Methusaleh Was Only
80 Years Old at Death
WASHINGTON, Nov. 19.—The
theory that the ancients made their
years far short of the regulation 365
days and that, therefore, Methuse
lah was not 969 years old when he
died, M - as attacked here today by
Prof. C. S. Longacre, of the Church
of the Seventh Day Adventists, a
teacher of Biblical exegesis.
Referring especially to an analysis
by Prof. Russell T. CraM'ford, Uni
versity of California astronomer, who
he said had recently placed Methuse
lah’s age at 80 years, Professor Long,
acre said if it were true that the
ancients reckoned their years by |
monthly cycles, Adam was 77 years r
old when he died and M'as only nine j
when Cain was horn.
“If Professor Crawford has trou
ble believing that. Methuselah was
969 years old when he died,” said |
Professor Longacre, “what is he go- |
ing to do with Enoch, Methuselah's
father, by making him' only live
years old vvhen his son was born, ac
cording to Professor Crawford's own
monthly cycle computation.”
Tenant Is Found Guilty
In Slaying of Planter
NATCHEZ, Miss.. Nov. 19. Ed j
Carter, a negro charged with the
killing last August of Papl -Tohn-(
son, plantation owner, near Selma,
Miss., mi'is found guilty here last (
night of manslaughter. Carter, a
tentmt on Johnson's plantation, ad
mitted the killing, pleading self-de
fense. He fled but surrendered aft- i
er having been chased for a w*eek
by bloodhounds on the promise by
the authorities that he ; would be
protected from mob violence. The
jury deliberated one hour.
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1 1
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eases.equipped with theflner:
worm gear motors.rieh tone I
machineo—at less than hn;
the standard prices—end Ik
worth of records FREE.
Send No Money
Junta poataJ with your natw
and adareea. Only a Itaritej
Tiuinber of machine* atoinp* <
on this extra-liberal offer,
Batter art quickly. This k
a life*timn opportunity.
DAVIS. 314 W«st43rd
owt. 11x97 CNic* r
PELLAGRA CURED
to STAY CURED. GUARANTEED REM
EDY. Cures where others foil. FREE
BOOK on request. CROWN MEDICINE
COMPANY Dept. 16 Atlanta, Georgia
iCiittiQ Soiiwth Action Clipper*. Fine BtrherCo reb.od rMltSdl
Bert-.r Sbeet* SEND NO MONEY Ny Po.rm.n 11.95 en<f
I’m JO Data If not Mlnfactory. return in Jood coodiHon andMMBMO I
rritw .HI href ended. STERLING CO BALTIMORt. Mff. !
STOP KIDNEY TROUBLE
If you Miifirr from Kidney or Bladder Trouble,
back <»r leu, ache, to prove you can qliirkly b<
rid of these troubles I will send you a $L size
of mv famous Kavona <’omi»oiind. jxjstpaid and
, witho * <o t or ob!l"iition. If It cures you tell
your friends and pay im* what you think is fair.
Otherwise the leys is mine. Merely send your
name fodav for this liberal introductory offer.
THE KA NONA CO., Dept. IGB, Kansas City, Mo,
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UNDERGROUND TREASURES
HOW and where to find them; particu*
lam 2c. Model Co.. Dept. 63,
Como Bldg., Chicago. lIL
5