Newspapers / Jackson County Journal (Sylva, … / May 2, 1913, edition 1 / Page 5
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: v - 1 'J ' v X.- ; ' ' T. , .."- x . l-'"v. . .i' .. r '72. n: r5"- ?- fv TT A a. If .1 V V". -3 , v-.r v, . : - S " - v ; S:' x ss 3 , .. -X -; fc t V J . . . ' III M .i. I I ' I , 11 MAKE nw : ir i a - 1 H? ' Li: -&'.; .59 '-'5' 5!' "' 'S 3 :5 .-.- :r - f 3 : - D " 2 " y-z:5 p &'p ; b 2. 3.- " . B o t o "- . B ' z 2 w 2 v' B n a o B O 08 rf JO P cv CO 3 CD CO o CD O D CO o o o O ; P 3 ; o 1 0 CD rt . B o. D 05 a CD - CD P D 3. CO a CO 3 J -a o r& 3 TfflSWAY How's This?; We offer Cne Hundred Dollars Re- der the age of seventeen smoking a cigarette to inquire of him from Cure. - : F. J. CHSNIir Cz CD.. Tcicao. o. TVre, Oo XLT.lz?zi?Vl--"z I own P." J. NATIONAL EANX Or CCXZJZTwCE, ' ' ,.v Toledo, O. Hall's Catarrh Cure 1 taken internally, feting directly upon the blood and mu fous surfaces of the system. Testimonials pent free. Price 73-cents per bottle. Sold t? all Drugfrtsts. Take HU'9 Family mia for constip&Uon. PUNISH CIGARETTE SELLERS ward for any csro cf Catarrh that : u j u u cnzot be cured by Hill's Catarrh j Wn0m U was obtained, whether sold or given. And refusal to give information is punishment by im- Cheney frr the izzt 15 yz:zt end beUev DnsonmenL Conviction of a dealer aim perfectly l.c:icr-t"o Li cJl -business ... , ransactiens and financially ablo to carry AVU0 Sells. Or any DerSOn Who 0veS put cay cbha.tic-3 rr.- o Ly Lhs firm. . , , cigarettes to a youtn unaer seven teen is made a misdemeanor with imprisonment up to a year. Vith these penalties and with the ma chinery for obtaining information there is no reason' why the use 'of cigarettes by boys should not be materially lessened. The judges of North Carolina can do a great work in calling attention to the new ma-! chinery of the new law, and many ! of them have already done so. And when there is a conviction of the sale or giving to boys of cigar ettes sentences to imprisonment of 1 the offending parties will be a: most healthy thing. The law is a j excellent one. Now let the officers 1 and the courts see that it is strictly enforced. News and Observer. A curse of young irranhood iV the cigarette and that-ibises so is recognized by the anti-cigarette laws to be found ,in the statute books of many states while as Legislatures assemble there are being passed ad ditional laws to curtail and put an end to an evil which is vitally af fecting the life of this nation. Life is the serious thing which is being affected by the cigarette, for its evils are transmitted from gen eration to "generation. But there is yearly m this country an immense property loss from the cigarette and the match accompanies it In re ports of fire after fire the statement is "caught from a cigarette thrown aside" and how" many millions of dollars have gone up in smoke be .cause of the cigarette can not be estimated. Life, health and prop erty all join in calling for an end of the serious menace of the cigarette. North Carolina has for years tak en notice of the cigarette evil and the Legislature has passed laws to suppress the evil ; The General As sembly of 1913 materially strength ened the previous law by ) making provisions for securing ; testimony from youths tinder seventeen seen smoking cigarettes and by impos ing severe penalties" un C those who sell or give away cigarettes or materials toT make cigarettes to boys under seventeen years of .age. The added machinery for enforcing the law greatly' strengthens it, and if the authorities perform their dut es i will go a long way towards remedying the evil. ' What is heed ed is that the age limit be increased and that the law be made to apply to all youths, under ; ; the . Tage of twenty-one. X f'yj-f': The new JaaittHe dtoy o police officer who s a youth; upt THE DANGER AFTER GRIP lies often in a run-down system.- Weakness, nervousness, lack of ap- petite, energy and ambition, with disordered liver and kidneys often follow an attack of this wretched disease. The great need the greatest need then is Electric Bitters? the glorious tonic, blood p irifier ' and ; regulator of stomach, liver and kid-' neys. Thousands have proved that they wonderfully strengthen the nerves, build up the system and restore to health and good, spirits after an attack of Grip. If suffer ing, try them. Only 50 cents. Sold and perfect satisfaction guaranteed by, All Druggists. ;ure - UN- X&m ' y ... You can make, or have your painter make, sevftn illons LEAD, ZINC AND LINSEED OEL XPAINT, by i addii; ; v gallon SEED OIL at the price; of LINSEED OIL. to 4V gaUq' L. &. MIXED REAL PAINT, , v v " X':-X J The a gallons of Oil cost about - - ' v The 4 gallons of L. taint cost about; T 1 v The 7 gallons of paint will .then cost .T; - - $9.95 THIS WILL BE ABOUT $1.42 PER G : .l J.ON. If you only need a few gaons of paint, then buy 3 la its of Oil t V add to eaeh gallon of the L. & M. SEMI-MIXED EL PAINT- YOU SAVE ABOUT 60 CENTS A GALLON. Money Saved Eyeryjime You Buy . SYLVA CASH STORE GET THESE Money-making Secrets WITH TC THE Farm Journal E a ir ir I - - Jt 1 S XT Is this etch properly held t "Poultry Secrets1' tells hovo x to carry fowls, and other secrets far more important. 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 fouimillion 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 so. 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 showing how NOT to run a farm, Peter makes many prosperous. Nobody can go on reading the Farm Journal and being a . Tumbledown too. Many have tried, but all have to quit one or the other. V The. Farm Journal is bright, brief, " boiled down' practical fuU of gumption, cheer and sunshine. It is strong on housekeeping and home-making, a favorite with busy women, full of life and fun. for boys and girls. It sparkles with wit, and a happy, sunnypirit Practical as a plow, readable as a novel. Clean and pure, not a finerof 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 &i.'oo only. Less than 2 cents a month. No one-year, two-year or three-year subscriptions taken at ar.y price. . - THE HOME KITCHEN " v Paint your kitchen ; walls and woodwork white above the wains coting. It keeps soiled hands away. ! Its cheerful brightness is always inviting: One quart of Turpen tine - added to one-half gallon of L. & M. Semi-Mixed Real Paint makes 3 quarts of the highest grade of pure paint, and it is enough toV aint a kitchen and two more rooms. ' For outside painting the7very Wh est grade of long life paint is made by v adding three quarts of pure Linseed OU to each one gallon: of L. & ; M. Semi-Mixed Real Faint Solcl bV Sylva Cash Stored: ' , The Farm Journal Booklets have sold by hundreds of thousands, and have made a sensation by revealing the SECRETS OF MONEY MAKING in home industry. People all over die .'country are making money by their methods. POULTRY SECRETS is a collection of discoveries and methods of successful poultrymen. It gives 'Felcli's famous mating chart, the Curtiss method of getting: one-half more pullets than cockerels, Boyer's method of insuring fertility, rind, priceless secrets of breeding, feeding, how t produce winter eggs, etc. ' HORSE SECRETS exposes all th- methods of "bish oping," "plugging," cocaine and gasoline doping, and other tricks of "jiyps" lind swindlers, and enables any one to tell an unsound horse. Gives maiiy valuable training secrets. CORN SECRETS, the rreat NEW hand-book of Prof. Holden, the "Corn King," shows how to get ten to twenty bushels more per acre of corn, ri.h in protein and the best stock-feeding elements.. Tict urea make evtyy process plain. EGG 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 looklct, learn how to use up every scrap of the kitchen waste, and live better at less cost. f THE "BUTTER BOOK" tells how seven cows were ,made to produce half a ton of butter each yet year. (10 pounds is the average). A:i e-e-opener. Get it, weed out your poor cows, and turn the good ones into record-oreakers. STRAWBERRY SECRETS is a revelation of the dis coveries and methods of I.. J. Farmer, the famous expert, in growing luscious fall stravlerries almost until snow flies. How and when to plant, how to fertilize, how to remove the blossoms, huw to get three crops hi two years, etc. GARDEN GOLD shows how to make your backyard supply fresh vegetables and fruft, how to cut down your grocery bills, kc?p a better table, and get casa for our surplus. How to plant, cultivate harvest and market. DUCK DOLLARS tells how the ?;reat Weber duck-. farm ne Boston makes even- year 50 cents each on 40,000 duck lings. Tells why ducks pay them better than chickens, and just HOW they do everything. TURKEY SECRETS discloses fully the methods of Horace Vose. the famous Rhode Island "turkey-man," who sup plies the White House Thanksgiving turkeys. It tells how to mfciq, et to batch, to feed and care for the young, to pre vent sickness, td fatten, and how to make a turkey-ranch PAY. The MILLION .EGG-FARM fives' the methods by which J. M. Foster made over $18,000 a year, mainly from " eezs AH chicken-raisers should learn about the Rancocas Unit,"" and how Foster FEEDS hens to produce such quanUties of eggs, especially in winter. ; DRESSMAKG 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 girl. - Shefcnow has a successful dressmaking establishment and a ' school of dressmaking. Illustrated with diagrams. SHALL I FARM? is a clear, impartial statement of both advantages and drawbacks of farming, tt help those who bavto dedddthis important question. It warns you of dangers, swindles, and mistakes, tells bow to start, equipment needed, its cost, chances of success, how to get government aid, etc. TJuse booklets are 6x9 inches, and profusely illustrated. - Farm Journal FOUR full years, ' with any one of these booklets . TfelMkWar HOT soli MTaratdr oalr wttk Fara JoarmtL Be sure to say WHICH booklet you want. of books and papers, and put them aside . The onlv paper I seem to have m my bands n Tournal." I can't finish reading it. Can't you both for $1.00' What Our Folks Say About F. J. "I have had more help, encouragement and enoy- mnt out of it in one year than I did out of my other papers in ten Jcars," says C. M. Persons. - " It is a queer little paper. I have sometimes read it through and thought I was done with it, then pick it up again and lnid 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 sent 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 vears. Now we don't live on the farm any more, yet I still have a hankering for the old paper. I feel that Lbelong to the family, and every page is as dear and familiar as the faces of old friends," says Mrs. li. W. Edwards. "I fear I nejrlect my business to read it. I wish it could be in the hands of ever farmer in Vi rginia," says W. S. Cline. "I live-in a town where the yard is only 15 x 18 feet, but I could not do without the Farm Journal," says Miss Sara Carpenter. - " 5. "I tret lots for future reading, all the time is Fart 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 goto 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 body, I sit down and read it and it seems to give me new inspiration for lh'e," writes G. E. Haldennan. "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 usthe Farm Journal as a New Year's gift we. nearly died laughing. How to raise hogs' we who .only use bacon in glass jars! 'How to keep cows clean when we use condensed i milk even for rice padding 1 'How to plant onions' when we never plant anything snore fragrant than lilies of the valley. I accepted the gift with thanks, lor we are too well-bred to Jopk a gift horse in the mouth. Soon my eye was caught by a beautiful poem. I began lo read it, then when 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 cptneretT He is a jeweler, and hasnl much time for literature; butwefioji so much 1-; interest and uplift In this fine paper that we appreciate onr New Year's gift more and more," writes EUa B. Burkmaav "I received 'Corn Secrets' and .Topltrv Secrets. and consider them worth their weight in gold," says W . G,.NewalL "What your Ess Book tells would take a beginner years to learn," says Roy Chancy. ' , . "Duck Dollars is the best book I ever had on dack- raising," says F M. Warnock."" . "If votir other booklets contain as much valuable information as the Egg-Book, 1 would consider them cheap at double the price, says F. W. Mansfield. , : ' 'I think your Egg-Book is a wonder . says C P. Shirey. -1 ''The Farm Journal beats them all. Every issue has reminders and . ideas worth a year's subscription," writes T.H.Potter.; - ' . , . "One year a?b I took another' agricultural paper, and it took a whole column to tell what Farm Journal tells in one paragraph," says N. M. Gladwin, " 'y- "It oujht to e in every homo where there is a chick, aTchild, a cow, a cherry, or a cucumber," says I. L. Bordus. WIIMEB ATKINSON COMPANY, PUBUSHE3S FARM JOURNAL. WASHINGTON SQUAR2, PHILADELPHIA. wmsx mum rr xi -i i i i J' 4 v 1 . - rfll .1 - ':4--r.x- -'r y : - 7 .--' -'- J' iX"--XuX' . . . . , - . . . -v t . . . .- ..;'.- ' .- : ' . ' ' - v: :: .- , - - '.e'-l
Jackson County Journal (Sylva, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 2, 1913, edition 1
5
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