Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 39, Number 4, 14 November 1913 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
lrlE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TLLEGUAM, FRIDAY, NOV. 14, 1913
I:-
NANCY CROOK DIES AT RIPEJDLD AGE Sister of Late John Fletcher Medearis, Succumbs At Olive Hill.
Man and Woman Struggle For
Baud House; IJAWIMANY LEADERS
Home ror Years
IHuerta to jHUERTA BUYS RIFLES
MAY OUST MORPHYj Quit Post
BORN IN N. CAROLINA
Member of Methodist Church and Spent Most of Life in County.
Nancy Crook, sister, of John Fletcher Medearis, who died at his home In Greensfork three years ago on hlB hundredth birthday, died this morning at her home in Olive Hill at the age of ninety-four. She came to Indiana with her widowed mother and four other children from North Carolina in 1829. The journey was made in two one horse spring wagons which contained their entire household effects. The road to be traversed was rough and wild and U required a month to make the trip. Settled Near Salisbury. The family settled near Salisbury and John Fletcher Medearis and an older brother with tne help that the younger children could lend, built a cabin and established the new home.
She was married early In life and !
since her husband's death has been living at Olive Hill. Like the rest of the large family related to her by more or less distant bonds of kinship she was a member of the Methodist church, forming a connection with it early In life and continuing her interest in its work until the time of her death. Funeral Services Sunday. Of the five brothers and sisters only one died before reaching the age of 87, while one lived to reach the century mark. Funeral services will be conducted from the residence In Olive Hill Sunday morning at 9 o'clock. Burial will be In Centervllle. Her brother, John Fletcher died at his home in Greensfork, September 16, 1909, while his friends and relatives were gathered frpm many miles distant to celebrate the event. The excitement of the day proved too much for him.
After twenty years of struggling and? saving to purchase a home for thern- j selves, Mr. and Mrs. Gabriel Abrams, !
until October 7 residents of Red Key, have at last secured their own abode. The property was purchased and Mr. and Mrs. Abrams built the little three room dwellings themselves and have now completed the structure with the exception of papering and a few minor changes which will be made later. Mr. Abrams has been In such had health that he was able earn little although he worked on a farm where he was allowed to keep chickens, a cow and a team of horses. When his health became so poor that he could no longer work he decided to move to Richmond. Coming here with $300 on October 7, he found rent too high and the next day bought a one room, one story shed at 69 Bridge Avenue. He paid $160 for the shed and lot. He and his wife immediately secur
ed lumber, saws, hammers and nails and wpnr to work with- a will. Thev
a - 1 t .1 V. , .... . K i
wiiicn iorm ine rear ui tut? uuuse. The house is made entirely
of
smooth boards nailed to a frame work. The boards are fitted close together but do not afford proper shelter for cold weather. The Abrams have the unique idea of papering their home with paper matrixes which are used to mold the plates for printing presses. Head of House HI. Mr. Abrams overworked himself in order to have the house completed before cold weather set in. As a consequence, he will be unable to do any work at all for several months, according to a physician whom was called in yesterday. Mrs. Abrams is seeking employment which will give her time to go home at noon and prepare a lunch for their thirteen-year-old son, who is attending school.
Heelers "Sore" At Political Leader.
Orders 45 Pieces of Artillery and Ammunition.
O'GORMAN MENTIONED
Not Likely That "Big Tom" Foley Will Be Sue-cessor.
MEXICO CITY. Nov. 14. General
is expected to resign within
tw en y-four hours. An important conference i nw ef-
inir on at the national palace. Cradge O'Shaughnessy hel-eves :ti in pi-rtn.it j
oBi'O'.mcpment is to be made by the
j government in a few hours. An im
portant dispatch w.s tent to Washington shortly before noon. This gave a summary of developments the past twelve hours.
TOKIO. Nov 14 In addition to purchasing 2'1.0(H magazine rifles and 15.t'00.-'0 rounds of ammunition iu this country General Huerta has placed orders for 45 pieces of artillery.
CHARITIES RECEIVE $270 FROM APPEAL Response to Letters Not Encouraging, Committee Members Say.
YOUTHFUL ROBBER WANTS TO RETURN Harry McDonald, 15, Pleads to Be Taken to His Father.
Kindling Wood for sale. Richmond Furniture Mfg. Q0t 29-2wks
ADDITIONAL NEWS OF SOCIETY WORLD
A pleasant surprise was given Mr. and Mrs. Frank Klnert and daughter Miss Vera Klnert, who are leaving soon for a permanent residence in Indianapolis, at the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Lycan, 303 North Twentyfirst street last evening. Cards were played at five tables. The guests were Messrs and Mesdames L. Massey. Will Massey, H. Meyers, Philip Roser, Edward Chiles, William Luddington, Sam Bishop, Mr. C. A. Sehi, Misses Daisy Osborn, Grace Mead, Dorothy Ryan and Fannie Mackey.
Mr. Harry Kepler was delightfully surprised at hiB home on South Twelfth street last evening by a number of his friends. Games, music and dancing were enjoyed until a late hour. A luncheon in two courses was served. Those present were Misses Ruth Powell, Marguerite Brucker, Margaret Kepler, Marie Graham, Helen Faul, Marjorie Morgan, Messrs David Wallace, Vern Reid, Claud Hoover, N. Russel, Harry Kepler and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Kepler. Mrs. Carl Baker of 314 Randolph street assisted by Mrs. Oren Miller, entertained the Jolly Stitchers club at the home of the former, Thursday afternoon. The time was very pleasantly spent with needlework and music, after which a two course lunch was served. Those present were Mesdames John Hutchinson, Edward Klute, Elmer Ford. Will Stevens, Will Plummer, Keever Barnes. George Smith, Will Hlpperd. Oren Miller and Carl Baker.
Because he did not like school, Harry McDonald who haB ganed the name of the "boy burglar" in this city, left his home in Dayton when he w-as thirteen years old. He says he now regrets the two years he has spent "on the road" and wishes he were back with his father. For the last two years McDonald, now fifteen years old, has "roughed it" over the states of Ohio, Indiana and Michigan. He says he has never stolen anything until he came to Richmond and then only because he had no prospect of work and was out of money. He is now afraid to write to his father and does not even know where he liveB or if he is still alive and he was not in good health when he left, the boy says. After he had worked for short times in a number of big cities in Ohio and had been employed for a year in an automobile works in Detroit, McDonald came to Indianapolis. On account of the car strike, he says, he could obtain no work. When his money was spent he determined to start for Columbus, Ohio. "It was too cold to ride very long and so when I got to Richmond, I thought I would spend the night here," said young McDonald. "I 'bummed' some fellow for fifteen cents and had a good supper. Then I was looking for a warm place to sleep and saw the place back of Reynolds grocery. I went in and broke into the store because it seemed so easy. I ate a pie. I would have eaten more but I was not hungry. I opened the cash drawer and took a few pennies that were in it. It is the first time I ever broke into any place." McDonald will be sent to a reform school where he is firmly convinced he will not be treated kindly. When he was told otherwise, he replied that he had met some boys who ran away from reform school and they had told him that the overseers are cruel and the food is scant and not wholesome. He says he would rather have a good home and a place to work for the winter than "bum" but best of all, he says, he would rather have his father receive him Into his home again.
ACCOUNTS ARE SHORT
cers Owe Eaton $1,821.63.
EATON, O., Nov. 14. According to a report filed with the state bureau of Uniform Accounting by Inspector F. H. Doyle, there is due Preble county from present and former officials the sum of $1,821.63. One claim, representing an alleged unauthorized charge, is against ex-sheriff William S. Boner, and totals $235.44. Another for $564.51 is against ex-Recorder Charles G. Oldfather for an alleged unauthorized charge for making indexes. Boner is now a resident of Middletown, O., and Oldfather is located at St. Augustine, Fla. During the second term served by Boner a shortage was shown and a sensation developed following his disappearance. He returned later, however, and the matter was adjusted. In each of the two cases of over-charges the money was drawn in regular order, but at a time when a new law became effective and made the bills illegal.
i With a third of the letter apneal- ! ing for funds to keep up the charuai bk work for the coming year. haint been sent out by the finance committee of the Associated Charities, the Tt-sponse to the special campaign (or funds has been small, according to members of th committee. Only $27i ha been received so far. j The committee desired to rais $?.- 000 or more to carry on the work for
DAVIS RECOMMENDS CARDING OF TYPHOID
That cards of warning bearing the words, "Typhoid Fever," be placed on all houses where a case of the disease exists, will be one of the recommendations which City Health Officer Davis will make to his successor. While typhoid Is contaigous as is scarlet fever, it is transmissable by contact. Dr. Davis said he believed it would be easier to stamp out epidemics if dairymen knew of the presence of typhoid in a house. If a card were posted he said they would refuse to leave bottles a& where other diseases exist.
HOLIDAY APPOINTED
POLICEMEN JOIN STRIKE OF LABORERS
CHRIST CHURCH, N. Z., Nov. 14 More than three thousand armed policemen are on strike duty in Wellington and Auckland where a general walkout of workmen has occurred. More arrests were made today because of the nature of strike appeals being circulated.
J. F. Holiday, stenographer of the Wayne Circuit, has been appointed a member of the committee on frauds of the National Shorthand Reporters association, by the president, Charles W. Reitler of Denver. He received notice today from Edward H. Eldridge, of Boston, secretary of the organization, that John D. Carson of New York is chairman of the committee and F. A. Carlson of Chicago the third member. The committee is supposed to investigate any shorthand courses which advertise that a proficient shorthand reporter can be made of any person within a short time for a small deposit of money, as these are usually frauds, Mr. Holiday said. The committee has other work in that line with which to deal and works entirely by correspondence.
NEW YORK. Nov. 14 Will some kindly disposed person please take a list of steamship sailings around to Charles Francis Murphy, Chiefton of Tammany Hall? Mr. Murphy is game. He knows how to take defeat. When asked if it is true that he Is about to resign his self imposed task of managing the affairs of New York city and New
Inspectors Say Former Off i- i Fmi,e6. But members of Tammany Hail
are anxious to raise the cry "The Chief is dead! Ixmg live the Chief! And, if judging from the talk in the vicinity of Fourteenth street, the Tammany minor leaders have their way, Mr. Murphy will either resign or be bounced unceremoniously into the cold. Already Tammany Assembly District leaders, district captains and ward healers are excitedly discussing a probable successor to Mr. Murphy. Tom Foley, former sheriff, is the name most frequently heard but as a matter of fact, there is little probability of Foley ever becoming the "Chief." There are several reasons for this, the main one being that Foley has had too close an association with the underworld has too many friends of questionable character, to permit his occupying an office always the center of attack for the metropolitan press. The name of United States Senator O'Gorman has been linked with that of "Big Tom" Foley, as a possible suc
cessor to Murphy. Senator O'Gorman late of New York State Supreme Court may not like the linking of hia name with Foley. Whether he warms to the suggestion that he succeed Murphy only Gormon could say. In order to "free" Charley Murphy, Tammany Hall may have to change the personnel of its Executive committee. That committee may remove the leader of Tammany at any time it pleases if it pleases. But the present Executive Committee of Tammany Hall is composed of Charles Francis Murphy, or rather Charles Francis Murphy absolutely controls every member of the Committee, which shows just how clever .Chief Murphy has been. In the days of "Dick" Croker, James J. Martin, who has since quit Tammany Hall, was a member of the Executive Committee, and at many of
! its meetings, he very frankly and
quite plainly told Croker just what he thought of him. But there is no member of the Committee today who would dare tell "Chief" Murphy what, he thinks about him. j
TO RUSH SHELLS. RICHMOND. Va. Nov. 14 The Richmond Trodogar Iron Works which has a contract for furnishing J400,0o0 worth of big shells for the navy including the 13 inch projectiles has re-
It is believed Huerta will announce i eeived orders to rush the full amount
his resignation to congress tomorrow ; for the year and request the selection of another tir.cit ' tpi rr.ptPM i inf$ cut
j KI. PASO. Texas. Nov. 14 Rail-! the winter. Every effort will be mad
j road and telegraph lines connecting 'the city of Chihuahua were cut late
Thursday by a detachment of General Another chapter in what is believed Villa's rebel army. The city is thereto have been a manipulated claim by fore cut off from all communication J. Ed. Moore, the real estate dealer j with the world today, and is besieged who disappeared from here several , on all sides. No food has reachvd months ago, was brought to light j Chihuahua in three weeks and the again todav. Before leaving. Moore ' federal army of ten thousand men will hnH fiiri Vuim against the estate of i probably have to surrender because
CASE POSTPONED
to secure this amount this month. Th campaign for funds closes November SO. The member of the committee believe that twice the amount on hand from the campaign, should hare been received by now although It la possible, members stated, that many will respond to the first set of letters who have not been heard from. yet.
Will C. Converse, deceased, for $134
It had been set down on the issue docket to be heard today, but as the attorneys for the receivers of Moore's estate desired a postponement, the case will not be tried until later. Freeman and Freeman, attorneys for the estate of Will Converse, claim that Moore showed them a balance sheet which showed he and Converse did not owe each other anything. Later he filed the claim for J134.
of starvation.
I
Price's for all those nice fresh Meade '
hi Pri,. Mi..,,.. h.HH. i r Ben Davis apples as you would for
QUALITY POTATOES You would not pay half a much
other Sweets.
AT BOSTON SUNDAY
H. L.. Haywood, of Richmond, will speak In the Unlversallst church at Boston Sunday morning at 10:30.
Grimes' Golden, would yeu
The "Russet Rurals." are to the potato family as the Grimes' Goldea and Jonathan are to the apple f am fry. If your grocer has not my potatoes in stock, call 2441 and leave your order. L. D. HAWLEY
GET THESE Money-making Secrets
Farm Journal
WITH THE
Eczema and Itching Cured. The soothing, healing medication in DR. HOBSON'S ECZEMA OINTMENT penetrates every tiny pore of the skin, clears it of all impurities stops itching instantly. Dr. Hobson's Eczema Ointment is guaranteed to speedily heal eczema, rashes, ringworm, tetter and other unsightly eruptions. Eczema Ointment is a doctor's prescription, not an experiment. All druggists or by mail. 50c. Pfeiffer Chemical Co.. Philadelphia and St. Louis. A. G. Luken & Co.
HIGH SCHOOL BOYS GET GOOD JOBS
That the commercial course of the high school is complete in itself and the graduate needs no work in that line to complete his knowledge of business so that he may hold the positions that are offered him in a creditable manner is manifested when K. R. Helman, head of the commercial department of the high school is not able to fill positions from the students taking the course because they have not had sufficient business training to enable them to accept the offers made by prominent men of the city who are in need of office help. Mr. Helman, who has headed the department at the school for the last two years, has filled more than sixty positions, the students accepting them in all branches of business In the citv.
ATHENS, Nov. 14 Another war between Greece and Turkey has been averted. Announcement was made here today that a Greece-Turco treaty was signed last night.
TEACHER-MOTHER WINS BATTLE
NEW YORK. Nov. 14. Justice Seabury in supreme court issued a writ of mandamus ordering the board to reinstate Mrs. Pelxotte, a teacher in the schools of this city who had been dismissed for absenting herself to bear a child. This is a big victory for all women teachers who are married.
HEARS ROAD CASE
'MOTHER, DON'T BUY EGGS NOW!'
V" pre eggs today?'" in-v!f-on her daily markrocer. s a dozen," replied
f.ve cents a dozen, Mir cents a piece!" ex-
"How ir"-h quired a !" eting of r "Forty-t ' the grocer"What! Fthat is almo.'t
claimed the ho.jspwife
"That's not bad is it when you consider that one egg is the product of a hen's daily labor and four cents a day is cheap for labor," put in the clerk smiling. "Well, I'll take a half dozen anyway" dryly remarked the shopper.
The suit of Philip Htpskind and Sons, contractors, against the board of county commissioners, is being heard before special Judge Smith, of Portland. The suit is of a friendly nature to decide whether the county or Hipskind shall pay for the repair of the Liberty pike south of Richmond, where it was washed out by the spring floods. Hipskind claims that the road should have been accepted several months before the floods occurred. The portion of the road washed out had been completed and was being used as a highday six months before.
ALL LIQUOR FOES CENTRALIZE FORCE COLUMBUS, O., Nov. 14. A conference attended by representatives of practically all temperance organizations of the United States with the prime purpose of amalgamating the energies and centralizing the resources of the various bodies in the national campaign against the liquor traffic was held here today as an aftermath of the Anti-Saloon League convention which adjourned here last night.
CHARGE AGAINST BOY
An affidavit charging that Russell Goodwin, of Cambridge City, is delinquent and a truant from school was filed today in juvenile court by Truant Officer George Bishop. Goodwin is thirteen years old and refuses to attend school. Bishop charges that ho is responsible for the other truancies from the Cambridge City schools.
BLAZE THREATENS VALUABLE BOOKS
CHICAGO, Nov. 14. Nearly a half million volumes and pamphlets, many of them rare and priceless, were threatened with destruction by fire today when flames attacked a record room In the John Greexar library, on the sixth floor of the Marshall Field building in Wrabash avenue. A book case containing several hundred pamphlets was destroyed, but the blaze was prevented from reaching the book shelves. Damage of $2,000 was done to the interior of the library. The origin of the blaze is not known, but it is attributed to spontaneous combustion.
TRY COOPER'8 BLEND COFFEE For 8ale at Cooper's Grocery
1
PL
r
It this ntk frtftrly ktU f "Ptmltry Sterrts" tills A H tarry frnult, mnd tthrr it (Tits fur mtrt smftrttnt.
There are in the United States 1,031 women architects, designers and draftsmen.
Gloves Any Length French Benzole Dry Cleaning THE CHAUNCEY CLEANING CO. Phone 2501 1030 Main Auto Delivery.
Put Yourself To Sleep ! Put yourself to sleep nights repeating my Phone number, 2441. Then
your grocer will not supply you
my "quality potatoes,"
if
with
me
call
L. D. HAWLEY
SPECLAL Cream to whip. Try our Coffee roasted today. H. G. HADLEY Phone 2292
APPEAL TO WILSON. WASHINGTON. Nov. 14 The president was today requested to use his good offices In an effort to settle the strike of trainmen on the Sunset division of the Southern Pacific railroad.
FORGET-ME-NOTS Nhtn you think of "high quality potatoes" think of me and ask your grocer, or call 2441. L. D. HAWLEY
INDIA TIE A,
Unblemished Unquestioned Unassailable
The original exponent of pure tea;
With a Reputation
not a tardy convert
A scant teaspoon makes two cups. Steep five minutes only Published by the Growers of India Tea
FARM JOURNAL ("cream, not skim milk") is the great little paper published for 36 years in Philadelphia by Wilmer Atkinson. It is taken and read by more families than any other farm paper in the WORLD. Its four million readers (known as ' Our Folks ") are the most intelligent and prosperous country people that grow, and they always say the Farm Journal helped to make them bo. Their potatoes are larger, their milk tests higher, their hogs weigh more, their fruit brings higher prices, because they read the Farm Journal.
Do you know Peter Tumbledown, the old fellow who won't take the Farm Journal? By showina how NOT to run a farm.Peter makes many prosperous. Nobody can go on reading the Farm Journal and being a Tunflbledown too. Many have tried, but all have to quit one or the other. The Farm Journal is bright, brief, "boiled down," practical, foil of gumption, cheer and sunshine. It is strong on housekeeping and home-making, a favorite with busy women, full of hfe and fun for boys and girls. It sparkles with wit, and a happy, sunny spirit Practical as a plow, readable as a noveL Clean and pure, not a line of fraudulent or nasty advertising. All its advertisers are guaranteed trustworthy. The Farm Journal gives more for the money and puts it in fewer words than any other farm paper. 3 to 80 pages monthly, illustrated. FIVE years (60 issues) for $1.00 only. Less than a cents a month. No one-year, two-year or three-year subscriptions taken at any price.
The Farm Journal Booklets have sold by hundreds of thousands, and have made a sensation by revealing the SECK.ETS OF MONETMAKING in home industry. People all over tlie country are making money by their methods. POULTRY SECRETS is a collection of discoveries and methods of successful poaltrytuen. It gives Fetch's tkmaus mating chart, the Curtis method of getting one-half more pullets than cockerels, Boyer's method of insuring fertility, and priceless secrets of breeding, feeding, bow to produce winter eggs, etc. HORSE SECRETS expose all the methods of "bish-
and swindlers, ana enaDies any one 10 icii an
opinr,
tricks of
ryDS
unsound bsrsa. Gives many valuable training secrets.
CORN SECRETS, the jrreat NEW hand-book of Prof. Holden, the "Corn King," shows how to get ton to twenty bushels more per acre of corn, rich in protein and the. best stock-leedmg elements. Pictures make every process plain. EGO SECRETS tells how a family of six can make hens turn its table scraps Into a daily supply of fresh eggs. If you have a back-vard, get this booklet, learn how to use up every scrap of the kitchen waste, and live better at less cost. THE "BUTTER BOOK" tells how seven cows were made to produce half a ton of butter each yer year. (10 pounds is the average). An eye-oprner. Get h, weed out your poor cows, and turn the good ones into record-breakers. STRAWBERRY SECRETS b a reveladon of the discoveries and methods of U. J. Fanner, the famous expert. In growing luscious fall strawberries almost until snow flies. How and when to plant, how to fertilize, how to remove the blossoms, how to get three crops in two years, etc.
GARDEN GOLD shows how to make your backyard
supply fresh vegetables and fruit, how to cot down your grocery
bills, keep a better table, and get cash for your surplus. How to plant, cultivate, harvest and market. DUCK DOLLARS tells how the jtreat Weber duckfarm near Boston makes even- year W) cents each on 40.000 ducklings. Tells whv ducks pay them better than chickens, and Just HOW they do everything. TURKEY SECRETS disclose folly the methods cf Horace Vose, the famous Rhode Island "turkey-man." who supplies the White House Thanksgiving turkeys. It tells how to mste, to set egg, to hatch, to feed and care for the young, to prevent sickness, to fatten, and how to make a turkey-raach PAY. The MILLION EGO-FARM Hves the methods by which J. M. Foster made over SISTOO a year, mainly from eggs. All chick on-raisers should learn about the " Rancocas Unit," and bow Foster FEEDS hens to produce such quantities of eggs, especially in winter. DRESSMAKING SELF-TAUGHT shows how any intelligent woman can design and make her own clothes, in the height of fashion. The author has done it since she was a girt. She now has a successful dressmak iog establishment and a school of dressmaking. Illustrated with diagrams. SHALL I FARM? is a clear, impartial statement of both advantages aod drawbacks of farming, to help those who have to decide this important question. It warns you of dangers, swindles, and mistakes, tells how to start, equipment needed, iu cost, chances of success, how to get government aid, etc Tht booklet or 6 jr inchtt, and profusely illustrated. Parsn Journal FOUR fuW year. f 1 AA with any one of tbc booklets . DOtll 101" )1.VU TVsBeaUatsaM KOT seat sisanlalj aafj wttfc turn J raat Be sure to say WHICH oJUM yu want.
What Our Folks Say About F. J. "I have had more help, encouragement and enjoyment out of it in one year than I did out of my other papers in tyears," says C. M. Persons. It is a queer little paper. I have sometimes read It through and thought I was done with it. then p k it up agana and find something new to interest sic," says Alfred Krogti. "Farm Journal Ls like a bit of sunshine in our home. It is making a better cla t4 people out of farmers. It was nrt sent me a a Christmas present, and I think it the choicest pieseut I ever received," says P. K. LeValley. "We have read your dear little paper for nearly 40 vears. Now we don't live; on the farm any more, vt I Mill have a hankering for the old paper. I feef that i bekig to the family, and every page is as dear ana familiar as the tacas of old fitcuda, ta Mrs. B. W. Edwards. "I fear I neglect my business to read it. I wish it could be in the hands of every farmer in Virginia," says Y. S. Cline. "I live in a town where the yard is only 13 x IS fet, hot I conld not do without the Farm Journal," says Miss Sara Carpenter. "I Ret lots of books and papers, and put them aside for future reading. The only paper I'seem to have in my hands all the time is Farm Journal. I can't finish reading it. Can't voa make it less interesting, so I can have a chant at my ether papers? " writes John Swail. "If I am lonesome, down-hearted, or tired. I jo to Farm Journal for comfort, neat to the Bible," tays &abel DewitU "Farm Journal has a cheerful vein running through It that makes it a splendid cure lor the "blues." When coming home tired in mind and bodv, I sit down and read it and It seems to give m new inspitauoo for hie," writes C. t. Halderman. "We have a brother-in-law who loves a joke. We live In Greater New York, and consider ourselves quite citified, s when he sent as the Farm Journal as a New ear's gilt we neatly died laughing. 'How to raise bogs' we who only use baron m glass iarsl 'How to keepcowa clean' when we use condensed milk even for rice padding I 'How to plant onions' when we never plant anything snore fragrant than li'.ies of the valley. I aorepted the gilt with thanks, lor we are too well-bred to look a gift horse in the mouth. Soon my eya was rssght by a beautiful poem. 1 began to read ft, then whea I wanted the Farm Journal I found my husband deeply interested in an article. Then my oldest son began to ask, 'Has the Farm Journal come vet r He fs a jeweler, and hasn t much time for literature; bat we find so anach Interest and up! ut in this 6n paper that we appreciate our Jew Year's gift more and mure," writes Ella B. Bui k man. "I received "Corn Secrets and 'Poultry Secrets and consider them worth their weight In gold," says W. C. Newall. "What your Eg? Book tells would take a beginner year to learn," says Roy Chancy. "Duck Dollars is the best book I ever had on dackraising," says F. M . Wamock. "If vour other booklets contain much valuable information as the Egr-Book. I world consider them cheap at double the price," says P. W. Manaoeld. "I think your Egj-Book is a wonder," says C P. Shirey. "The Farm Journal beats them all. Every isMie has reminders and ideas worth a year's subscription," writes T. H. Potter. One year a?o I took another agricultural paper, and it took a whole cohin-n to tell what Farm Journal tails la one paragraph," says N. M. Cladwm. "It ought to be in every home where there is a chirr, child, a cow, a cherry, or a encumber," says I. D. Boras.
WILMER ATK3N30N COMPANY, PUBLISHERS FARM JOURNAL.
WASHINGTON SQUARE. PHILADELPHIA.
Special Combination Offer Rural subscribers of the Richmond Palladium. The Palladium to Rural Mall subscribers ls J2.00 per year. If you subscribe now. new or renewml. w rive you The Richmond Palladium for one year and The Farm Journal Four Tears, with aar oc of tae Farm Journal Booklets.
All For
If you are now taking the Farm Journal your subscription will be moved ahead for four full years. (If you name no Booklet, the Farm Journal will be sent for Five year.) To get both papers fill out order herewith and send it to ua. not to the Farm Journal.
Richmond Palladium, Richmond, Irvd. I accept your special offer. Please send me tSr PALLADIUM for one year and FARM JOURNAL Four years, with this booklet ALL FOR $2S My name Is Address Are rea now taking the Farm Journal 7 (Write "Tea.- or "No.")
i
2E 3T V- - -r-ttr St,..-
t
