Newspaper Page Text
June 23, 1909. TH
EARN $7 DAILY SELLING
Fir.. ?:': on earth. Write for special
agents and dealers terns. DR. HAUX
SPECTACLE CO.. St. Louis. Mo.
National " "A
Fjr Giuatry ani
Suburban Homes
Gives all the advantages of a city
water works, and furnishes fire
protection, which reduces insurant)#
rates.
Aystesas furnished for use with
hydraulic rams from spring or
aruM, ?r auy mi or power
pmmp from well. Capacity 140 gallema
*p.
Seal sketch ef your bulldlmg
Gentler to 111 infra tlon, giving depth
of weD er fell to spring or braneh,
oaf we win estimate es to cost.
EKE IS out GUARANTEE:
Yon purchase * National Water
Supply Br?t?tn, Install it aooordinc to
directions furnished br us. oaerate it
for one year, and if at the endof that
time yea are not satisfied in every particular,
yon can retain the system to
us. and we will pay the freight charges,
and refund to you in cash every dollar
you have paid us.
Write now while you think of it.
The cost ie email compared to the
eemfort It will give you.
Address carefully as follows to
insure prompt attention:
GRAHAM DAVIDSON A CO.,
27-611 E. Main St.. Richmond Mm
Via Bristol
?AH? THE?
Norfolk & Westers
Railway
Tha Hurt Llaa M?nm
MEW ORLEANS, BIRMINGHAM, MEM
PHIS, CHATTANOOGA, KNOXVILLR
?ANI>?
WASHINGTON, PHILADELPHIA, NEW
YORK.
Solid Train Sarvlca Dining Car.
Ail Information akaarfully forilakai
WARREN L. ROHR,
Western Passenger Agent,
Chattaneega, Tenn
W. B. BEVILL,
General Paseenqer Agent.
Roanoke, Va.
%
E PRESBYTERIAN OF THE SOUT
NOW TO PREVENT TYPHOID.
During the next few weeks many people
will develop typhoid fever. All of
these people will have to undergo a long
illness and about one in ten will die as
a result of the disease. The summer epidemics
of the disease usually begin to
appear about the first of July, showing
that the germs are taken into the system
about this time.
While some cases of typhoid will develop
in spite of all preventative measures.
yet a large major.ty of the cases
can be prevented by the observance of a
few simple precautions. To prevent the
disease the real cause must be understood.
In plain terms no person can contract
typhoid fever unless he swallows,
in some manner, some of the excrement
of a person who has or has had the disease.
This is most often done in water or
milk that has been contaminated with the
germs from a typhoid case, but the excrement
may be carried to the food, or
even directly to the mouth on tne feet
of flies that have fed upon it. Sometimes
the disease is contracted by eating
raw fruit or vegetables that have been
soiled with the germs, or oysters that
have come from polluted waters. Those
who nurse cases of typhoid often contract
the disease by carrying the germ into the
mouth on the fingers, which they have
failed to wash after waiting on the patient.
The two danger points in the country
are the well and the dry closet. If these
are safeguards, the danger is rendered
much less formidable. Information regarding
these points is contained in tho
publications of the State Health Department
at Richmond and will be sent to
any one asking for them free of charge.
A CURE FOR POISON IVY.
In a recent article on this subject a
Missouri physician states that the simplest
and most effective remedy for Ivy
poisoning which he has used is simply
a stiff lather made from common yellow
kitchen soap. He says: "With a shaving
brush work up the lather and paint it,
with the shaving brush, over the part
affected. Put on layer after layer, until
you have a coating one-sixteenth to onetenth
of an inch thick, and there let it
remain until the pain, swelling, smarting
or itching has disappeared. As a rule,
If U.,i - m ? * -
it tones uui a very icw flours 10 pcriBCt
the cure. As you see, this remedy is
within the reach of every one, and means
neither delay nor cost of a physician.
The poorest and commonest (rosin) soap
seems to be just as efficient as a better
or more costly soap. The cure is doubtless
affected by the potash or soda of the
soap, and by the coating of lather preventing
the access of the air to the poisoned
part. Toilet soaps and others which
contain so little free alxall that they are
not effective, should not be used for mis
work.-'
Yet this one thing I learn to know,
Ka;h day mr re surelv as I en
Hut doers are opeiled, ways are made,
Ruide^s are lifted er are laid,
l-y some groat law unseen and still.
"Not rs I will."
?Helen Hunt Jackson.
A
H. 29
It's not always I.
5 1 temper? I |
That causes a horse to II I
balk. It may be a Sore
CI 1 J T*
onouiaer, a nruise or a L|
Strain?maybe Colic or
Bots. Dr. Tichenor's
Antiseptic cures all of
these troubles.
AT ALL DRUCCISTS s
23 and 30 Cents
Alto in quart bottlea.
<iw
r:j
Bring Us
Your Savings
? AND GET =
3 1-2 Per CentkPer Annum
on Deposits\$1.00iand upwards
%
Whitney-Cential Trust
& Savings Bank
616-618 Common St.
NEW ORLEANS, LA.
I AM NOW PREPARED TO DO YOUR
SEASON S SHOPPING.
Whether you want STREET SUIT,
EVENING or RECEPTION GOWNS, or
WEDDING TROUSSEAUX, get my samples
and estimates before you decide with
whom you will place your order. With
mv knowledge of corrort otvioe
with taste and good judgment, and the
personal interest I take in every order, 1
am sure I can please you. I guarantee
perfect fit and satisfaction.
MRS. CHARLES ELLISON,
Louisville, Ky.