Newspapers / Jackson County Journal (Sylva, … / Feb. 28, 1913, edition 1 / Page 5
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o f.. J mi msmmttteM ha tvm i s v . .. . . ' - - 1 r J lonw' ASHINGTON, DMllHlM WITH THE arm JoMttaJ- lJ Li W ij "ii in ESIDEiSllAL Jmjlip 'ixiakirii Southern Railway 1 Company Pem tar Carrier blth a South Offers SpeciaILow Rates tickets sold February 26 and March 1, 2 and 1931, fitialHmtt;-Harch 10 3, Tickets may be extended in Washington 'to "April! 10th, 1913. Stopovers granted in either direction. Se3 large Bills'Advertising Special Train Service. paifs:-from "Sylva, N. C. to Washing on:-Individual Tickets $16.90; Partv fairs -25 or more- $11.15: party tickets may not be extended beyond limit of March 10th, 1913 For further information call on, or write the undersigned. A- 5,- J. H. WOOD or District Passenger Agent flsheviile, N. W. V. DORSEY Local ffgeni Sy vay, N. C. ; ! - , ". I i t ; -.v?i,hs5wt !I!II!1U4 1 1 1 1 III 1 1 1 li ffl 11 .nS" VlfVP M I'll 1 1 1 1 TmTffTrrTr Doubly Glad is the Man Who Smokes "fe.-f iT -M i7 1 m& mush a - . " fan- J Glad to smoke this pure old Virginia and . North Carolina bright leaf with, its natural tobacco taste. Aged and stemmed and then granulated. Tucks quickly m the pipe rolls easily into a cigarette. ' " With each sack a book of cigarette papers FREE. And smokers are glad to get the free pres ent coupons enclosed in each 5c sack. These coupons are good for a great variety of pleasing articles cameras, talking machines, balls, skates, safety razors, china, furniture, toilet articles, etc. Many things that will delight old or young. - As a special ,offer. during January and February only, we will send our new illustra ted catalog of these presents FREE. Jusi send as youuame, aud address ota a postal In every sack of Liggeti 4 Myers Duke's Mixture is one and a half ounces of splendid totacco and a free present coupon Crmpfrni ttom Uut i Mixture may be assorted with tag from HORSE SHCE. i.1 .. TINS LEY'S NATURAL LEAF. GRANGER TWIST, and -.oh-ton s from FOUR KOSESC H Un aonbl coupon) PICK PLUG CUT. PIED MONT CIGARETTES. CUX CIGA RETTES, ana ote tagi v coupons issued by us Premium Dept. is 2 1 1 1 VA U this cock properly heldt "Poultry Secrets' '-tells hovt to carry fowls and other secrets far more important CJARM 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 dways say the Farm Journal helped to make them so. Their potatoes are larger, their milk tests higher, their hogs weigh more, their fruit brings higher prices,v because they read the Farm Journal. Do you know Peter Tumbledown, the old fellow who won't take the' Farm Journal ?' By showing how NOT to run a farm, Peter makes many prosperous. Nobody cr.n go on reading the Farm Journal and being a Tumbledown too. Many have tried, but ail have to quit one or the other.. 4 : The FamtJournal is bright, brief, " boiled down," practical, full of gumption, cheer and sunshine. It is strong on housekeeping and h- 'rne-making; a favorite with busy women, full' of life 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, 32 to 80 pages monthly, illustrated. FIVE years (60 issues)' for $1.00 only. Less than 2 cents a month. No one-year, two-year or three-year subscriptions taken at any price. The Farm Journal BocMets have sold by hundreds of thousands, and have ma;le a sensation by revealing the SECRETS OF MONEY MAKING in home industry. People ail over the country are making money by their methods. POULTRY SECRETS is a collection of discoveries and methods of successful pou'.irvmon. 'It : ivcr. Folcli's famous mating: chart, the Curt us ma hod 'of citing one-half more udcis than cockerels, Dover's method o: i:;-: ri: : ?rt':itv, aud priceless secrets of breeding;, feeding, how to produce winter egg's, etc. KORSC SECRETS exposes all me: hods of "bi: h- ophigf," "pluirffincr," cocaine and Caroline doping;, and oiher tricks of "jjyps" and swiu 'lerc, a ul enau'.-s rr.ycneto tell an unsound horse. Gives many vuuablc trainiii secrets. CORN SECRETS, the sreat Ni:V hand-book of Prof. Iloiden, the "Com Kiu," shows hov to el ten to twenty bushels more per acre of corn, i: '1 in protein and the best stock-lecdins elements. I ictures nuc every process piaia. EGG SECRETS tells how a family cf six can make hens turn its table scraps into a drily supply of fresh egs. If you have a back-yard, get this booklet, Vearn how to use up every scrap of the kitchen waste, an J live Letter at Jess cost. THE 4 BUTTER BOOK" tells how seven cows were made to produce ho'.f a ton of butter each yer year. (149 pounds 13 tlie avrrr."r A i e- -op -.er. (t it, weed cut your loor cows, and turn me ood owes into record-breakers. STRAWBERRY SEC: ET3 h a revlnti.m of thedis- coveries ?.nd methods of T.. T. I'armcr, the famous expert, in growing lu.-cio'.is full Ftrav . s almost until snow flies. Kow and when to plant, how to ; r;;:ie, h -v to remove the blossoms, how to ct ihiee cios iu two e us, CvC. GARDEN GOLD show- h-.-.v rt.-il-e"yorT hnckyard supply fresh Vv etah'.. r and ii , l.ov : . do your pro; cry Id i Is, k- . j .1 1 (.Li.rla! I -i jv.: ;..ur u:piuo. How to j!..;:t, c:.uiutc, harvest a. id u.urkci. DUCK DOLLARS t-J'.s l o v l!-,--reat Wcb-r duck- farm ie r 1j:-Io:i r-ake- ever- v?:ir r c; : ; l-.t. h on ''..C'J-O duck l.:i 's. 'l'.i.svthv p..y t:iv.ui ociier t iij.il . Iuckciu, and just HUV they do everything. TURKEY SECRI-ZT3 discloses f.;l'y th- methods of librae Vove, the smo.s I -diode Island key-m-m," who sup tdics idc Vv hde I' : ' e Thau! .-.dvi;. ..::!:ty?. 5, it iU how to lu. 'e, to set ctr Ts, t hatch, to i-ed.ni-.! c:iic i-c ih- y .unj;, to pre- .akc a lauey-iuiica r.. -I-. ' S the n: -thods by -, ... ,!.iiy :r :m i " V. iiic -ra's L..h quanliiics .1 to i" -.i. l .t sickiicss, to iatt-n, ana jiu to The MILLION EGG FARi'l vhit h T. M. I-.-t'r ma v.r SiO.v'Oo r-es. Al! hi. u -. a-ra;.-: - . .:' ! I "ml," an h..v 1- otcr l-i-'I-D he:; o: egg, especially in w'mir. DRESSAVvK?NCi SELP-TAUCMT shows how any intelligent woman can dc.d mi anl r.i d..e her clothes, in the height of fashion. The aiiihcr has d-.-ue it si.: she was a jirl. She now has a successi'd dn .iriki: M.dd: d.ment and a school of dressmaking Illustrated wiii. ci; -.rj:a...s. SMALL I FARA1? is a clear, imnariial siatement of both advantages and drawbacks of farmin;-. h dp th.use w ho have to decide this important question. U warns yu of dangers, swindles, and mistakes, tella how to star-., c.iuh.r.ient nlcd, its cost, chances cf success, ho w to get government aid, etc. These booklets ere 6x9 inches, an.i profusely illustrated. Farm Journal FOUR fail years, & with nnv ftn of fhese hooktLS . S-.'viiJ. iCi The Booklets are NOT toIJ sepriLl7 or-ly wiii F-r3 Journal. - ' Be sure to say li'IIlL'II booklet you v ent. 1 no Wfeat Oar Folks Say About F. J. "I have had more help, encouragement and enjoy-m-r:t out of it in one vear than I did out of my other papers in ten years," says C. M. Persons. " It is a queeY little paper. -I have sometimes read it through and thought I was done -with it, then pick it up again and lind something new to interest me," says Alfred Krogh. "Farm Journal is like a bit of sunshine in our home. It is making a better class of people out of farmers. It was first sc::t me as.a Christmas present, and I think it the choicest present I ever received," says P. R. Le Valley. "We have read your dear little paper for nearly 40 years. Kow we don't live on the farm any more, yet I still have a hankering for the old paper. I feel that 1 belong to the family, and every pace is as dear and familiar as the faces of old friends," says 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 W. S. Cline. "I live in a town where the yard is only l5x 18 feet, but I could not do without the Farm Journal," says Miss Sara Carpenter. "I et lots of books and papers, and put ihem 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 you make it less interesting, so I can have a chance at my other papers? " writes John Swail. "If I am lonesome, down-hearted, or tired, I go to Farm Journal for comfort, next to the Bible," says Mabel Dewitt. "Farm Journal has a cheerful vein running through it that makes it a splendid cure for the 'blues." When coming home tired in mind and bodv, 1 pit down and read it, and it seems to tive mc new inspiration for hie," writes G. E. Halderman. "We have a brother-in-law who loves a joke. We live in Greater New York, and consider ourselves quite citified, so when he sent us ihe Farm Journal as a New Year's gift we nearly di-w-d laughing. 'How to raise hogs' we who only use bacon in gUss jars! 'How to keep cows clean' when we UFe condensed rr.iik even for lice pudding! 'How to plant onions' when we never plant anything more fragrant than lides cf the valley. I accepted the gh. with thanks, lor we are too well-bred to look a g-:t horre in the mouth. Soon my eye v r.s ccu.yht by a beautiful poem. I began to read it, then when I wanted the Farm Journal I found my husband deeply interested hi an article. Then my oldest son began i.o ask, 'Has the Farm Journal come yet?' He is a jeweler, and ha.-n't much time for literature; "out we find so much interest and uplift in this fine paper that we appreciate our New Year's gi:t more and more," writes Ella B. Lurkman. "I received 'Corn Secrets' and 'Poultry Secrets,' and consider thera worth their weight in gold," says Y". G. Newall. "What your Ejnr Book tells wouid take a beginner years to learn," says Roy Chancy. "Duck Dollars is the best book I ever had on duck raising," says F. M. Waraock. "If vour other booklets contain as much valuable information as the Egg-Book, I would consider them cheap at, double tiie price," says F. YV. Mansfield. "I think your Egg-Book is a wonder," says C. P. Shirey. "The Farm Journal beats them all. Ew-ry issue has reminders and ideas worth a year's subscription," writes T. H. Potter. "One year aero I took another agricultural par-er, and it took a whole column to tell what Farm Journal teils in cue paragraph," says N. M. Gladwin. "It oucht to be in every home where there i a chick, a child, a cow, a cherry, or a cucumber," say.s I. D. iiordus. 0 WILMER ATKINSON COMPANY, PUBLISH! 3 FARM JOURNAL WASHINGTON QUA HI?, PHILADELPHIA, &9 I Spocial Combination Offer of The Jackson County Journal The Jackson County Journal is regularly $1.00 a year. If you subscribe NOW we can give you the Jack son Couaty Journal for one year and the Farm Journal FOUR years, with any one of the Farm Journal BOOKLETS. ALL FOR $1.25, snd to e . ery subscriber whose order is received before the edition is exhausted he publishers of -the Farm Journal promise to send also their famous ALMANAC, "Poor Richard Revived' cr 1913. provided you WRITE ON YOUR ORDFR, If in time please send the almanac." If you are now taking the Farm Journal, your subscription will be MOVED AHEAD for four full years. (If you name no booklet, Farm Jouraal.will be sent for FITE years.) - To get BOTH papers, fill out order herewith and send it to us, NOT to the Farm Journal.. Jrckson County Jnornal, Sylva, N, C. I accep. your special offer. Please send me thh Jackson County Jodrnal for one year and Fatm Jour nal FOER years, with thiQ honViPt . a all for $1.25 J Ik V tlllV .i.vv. w f My name is . " i i i i Address St Louts. Mo 3 Arr you now taking the Farm Journal? (WriteMYes,Mor',No) - - - - : i . ... .-. V- T--l.. .- . : V.;--"-vV' ."'": ::: 1 -.
Jackson County Journal (Sylva, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 28, 1913, edition 1
5
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