Woman's work. (Athens, Georgia) 1887-1???, March 01, 1910, Page 11, Image 11

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MARCH, 1910. Agents Wanted: You don't need to talk; you don’t need money. This is the chance of your fife. Write to-day. Box 321, Port Townsend, Wash. 5000 lady Agents’ Addresses copied from 1908 letters and classified alpha betically by State and Town. Price 60c. per 100; >5.00 per 1000. I guarantee them correct. Ad dress. T. W. Campbell, 84 A St., Elgin, 111. Boys: Gold Cuff Buttons Free Sell 5 Ideal Kutfe Sharpener* at 25 cents each, sharpens Knives, Scissors and Skstes. You get a beauti ful pair of gold cuff buttons. Bead 81 and get buttons with the 5 sharpeners, also irstruction by return mail. Superior Ni velty Works, 150 W. Monroe st. Cbicigo.ill. Post Card Collectors. year’s members!ip in our exchange. Members receive BeautiEl Post Cards from all over (he United States in exchange Special offer: We will send every yearly member six beautifully co’ored New Or leans views Free. Address, Crescent Post Card Exchange, 711 Camp St., D.pt. B, New Or leans, La. biquid bice Killer. deat e h to Insects on Poultry or Stock. 50 cents per gal lon, Lice Powder 20 cents per pound. Warrant ed O. K. Both Formulas, how to make it, 50 cts. ELLA KILCHER, Fairfield, lowa. f ALL WOMEN suffering from female complaints, who will write to me, can learn of a simple remedy that will positively relieve even the most stubborn, chronic case, permanently. Un til now, it has been sold only on a doctor's prescription, but if you write at once, I’ll tell you the secret, and it will COST YOU NOTHING. The information will be sent in a plain sealed envelope. A. W. MOORE, P.Q.B. 75, MADISON CO,, NEW YORKy t*f A jkITEn ■ or gentleman of fair ed ft All I EUI ucation to travel for a flrm of 8250,000.00 capital. Salary. 81,072 per year and expenses; paid weekly. Address, with stamp, J. A. Alexander, Athens, Ga. AAAI/A TADIETC for Chronic Con- AuAV A I AoLtl O stipation, the New Cathartic. Nothing nke it. An ideal vegetable compound. The most reliable, positive anl lasting remedy ever offered to the public for Constipation and its attendant maladies, such as headache dyspepsia, piles, coated tongue, loss ol appetite, bad breath and akin, nervous ness, cold feet, mental depression, “blues," rheumatism. They preven' paralysis, apoplexy and typhoid fever. Guaranteed to give satis faction or money refunded. Sold 5,0(0 to one physician in Texas, as No Others g ve him such results, 25 cts. ner box 5 boxes for 81. Woman’s Friend: Home Local Treatment. The greatest medicine on ear h for all woman’s ills, especial ly Ovarian Irritation, Leucorrboea, etc ,81 per box. Dr B. H. Painter. Manfr.. Middletown, Ind Eyes Cured Without the Knife Grateful Patrons Tell of Almost Miracu lous Cures of Cataracts, Granulated Lids, Wild Hairs, Ulcers, Weak, Watery Eyes and All Eye Diseas es—Send Your Name and Ad dress with Two-Cent Stamp for Free Trial Bottle. The cures being made by this magic lotion every day are truly remarkable. I have repeat edly restored to sight persons nearly blind for years. Ulcers, wild hairs, granulated lids disappear almost instantly with the use of this remedy. Weak, watery eyes are cleared in a single night and quickly restored to perfect health. It has repeatedly cured where all other remedies and all doctors had failed. It is indeed a magic rem edy and I am glad to give this free trial to any sufferer from sore eyes or any eye trouble. Many have thrown away their glasses after using it a week. Preachers, teachers, doctors, lawyers, engineers, students, dressmakers and all who use their eyes under strain find with this Magic Lotion a safe, sure and quick relief. If you have sore eyes or any eye trouble write me to-day. lam in earnest in making my offer of a free trial bottle of this lotion. lam glad to furnish proof in many well-proven and authen tic cases where it has cured cataract after the doctors said that only a dangerous and expen sive operation would save the sight. If you have ej e trouble of any kind you will make a set ious mistake if you do not send for my great free offer of this Magic Eye Lotion. Address, with full description of your trouble and a two-cent stamp, H. T. Schlegel Co., 2961 Home Bank Bldg., Peoria, Ills., and you will receive by re turn mail, prepaid, a trial bottle of this magic remedy that has restored many, almost blind, to sight. LADIES’ MONTHLY FRIEND. At last a protector has been invented which absolutely does away with all the anxiety, worry and inconvenience in cidental to Monthly Periods. Women! the VICTORIA PRO TEC TOR is a Godsend! Simple, durable and adjusta- IM| ble to any figure. No wash rj ing, no soiling of clothing. C J Physicians recommend it,as it Jr is sanitary and gives much relief. Price to introduce, 81, Victoria prepaid (in plain package) Protector to any address. (Regular sell sl prepaid in ing price $2). Send now while plain package, the offer lasts. The Victoria Supply Co., P. O. Box G 123, Chicago, Hl. ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ Mgr? | 1 i (Culture, i ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦ ♦♦♦ For Woman’s Work. THl© Effienemtt Lnffe o Principal State Normal Elementary School, Athens, Georgia. (Continued from last month.) MPORTANT as is the work of the school, however, it sinks into insig nificance beside that of the home. I It is impossible for the schools to pro duce healthy men and women unless home conditions are what they should be. For this reason, I believe we should have training schools for par ents as well as training schools for teachers. In such schools parents should be taught the simple laws of hygiene; there they should learn what kinds of food the growing child needs and how to prepare this food; how much a child requires at differ ent stages of his development; the value of fresh air as a preventive of many disorders; the need for abso lute cleanliness in the home sur roundings; they should know what diseases are apt to assail their chil dren, and most of all, they should know how to safeguard their little ones against disease. All of these things and many more a mother should know in order to be sure that she is doing her part toward making of her child a healthy, happy and efficient man or woman. Even though the mother has en joyed this training which will enable her to look after the physical well being of her child in the home, and though the teacher may intelligently and conscientiously take up the va rious questions affecting his welfare at school, one thing more is needful to assure greatest effectiveness in the work of both home and school: this one thing is a full and sympathetic understanding and cooperation be tween parent and teacher. As I have said, this cooperation be tween school and home can best be brought about by means of Parents’ and Teachers’ Clubs. These Clubs should have regular and frequent meetings, and out of such meetings will come much that will prove of mutual help to parents and teachers in this important work of child train ing. The problems which will come before this club are manifold. The teacher on the one hand will present the questions which have perplexed her, or questions which she needs to have answered in order to be of most help to the child. It maj’ be that for some reason the child is not progress ing as well in his studies as he should; he begins to look anaemic, listless, and ill-nourished. Inquiry into home conditions probably re veals to the teacher some cause or causes for this state of affairs. She finds that he gets too little sleep, that he is allowed to eat whatever he pleases, and at any time he pleases; that his school lunch is a matter of little or no consideration, etc. She shows the mother the effect of thia on the work her child is expected to do at school, and together they may find a remedy. Sometimes the case is reversed: the child enters school from a home w’here every condition has been fa vorable for his growth; at the time of entrance he is full of energy and life, but after he has been in school for a short while, his ever-watchful mother notices a change. He be comes passive, indifferent to play, and begins to lose interest in the things about the home. A consulta tion with the teacher, or a visit to the school, reveals conditions which ex plain the whole trouble. She finds the schoolroom to be crowded, badly ventilated, poorly lighted; the pu pils are held down to lessons in books, with few if any chances for relaxation, and the teacher perhaps Woman’s Work. By Laura M. Smith, has never realized the dangers of such conditions or noticed the effect of these upon the’health and efficien cy of her pupils. A friendly consul tation between the mother and teach er in this case may result not only in making it possible for this indi vidual pupil to do his school work with greater safety and ease, but may be the means of saving numbers of others from disease and inefficien cy. Together the parent and the teach er may consider other important questions relating to the welfare of the child. It may be along the line of his moral training. Whatever the deficiencies or needs of the child, neither parent nor teacher should hesitate to consider these frankly, without fear of wounding or giving offense—since it is only by unreserv ed consultation that the highest good of the child may be attained. The parent who fails to receive and profit by the advice of the teacher is stand ing in the light of his or her child, while the teacher who puts her own feelings before the welfare of her pupil is failing to live up to the high est duties and privileges of her pro fession. At every step we are im pressed with the necessity for thor ough cooperation between public authorities, parents and teachers, for safeguarding the physical, mental and spiritual welfare of the child. A well-known medical authority has said that the whole efficiency of the child is dependent on three things,—pure air, pure water, and pure food. Another authority has expressed the same thought by say ing that the future success of the child is dependent upon red corpus cles. The number of children we see about us every day, who are diseased or crippled for life, reminds us that we have been all too negligent in these important matters. One child out of every five is suffering from some defect of hearing; one out of every three is handicapped for life by defective vision, while one out of every ten dies from the effects of tuberculosis. These are only a few of the things which cripple children for life or take them off at the time when they are entering upon the period of great est usefulness, and yet all of these things are preventable! (Continued next month.) Our Appreciation of blessings is too apt to become dulled by use. “If the stars should appear one night in a thousand year,” writes Emerson, “how would men believe and adore, and preserve for many generations the remembrance of the city of God which had been showi I” But since these envoys of beauty come out every night and light the world with their admonishing smile, it is only now and then that we pause to gaze upon them with wonder and gratitude. It is very much the same v ith the blessings which we owe to the life and ministry of our Lord. We breathe an atmosphere that is permeated and sweetened by His gracious influences. We live in the midst of great, beneficent in stitutions of which He is the Creator. For the ideals that lead us onward, the hopes that inspire us, and the faith that comforts us in our sorrows and strengthens us for our duties and conflicts we are indebted to Him. And yet there are many who enjoy this, blessings year in and year out without a thought of gratitude to the great Giver.— Ed. S. S. Magazine. Woman’s Work has a very at tractive agency proposition for someone in each county. AO'OnlC Sell our Fountain Pens. No capita "Kull'Oi required. Big profit for you. Larges Mfr’s, in U. S. Postal brings inside prices. Em pire M. O. C0.,6 Algonquin Bldg., Saratoga, N.Y A Fountain Pen Offer. AU guaranteed. 15 cents for ink crystals extra Smith & Company, Hopkins, S. C. WOMEN 10 DO SEWING Can make six an hour Material sent free pre paid send adcPmssed reply envelope for full particulars- universal co. Dept. 220, Walnut St., Phila , Pa. Rail Qlrnno or any Liver Disease. Write tn Dull OH IlGa ALL about it. will tell of a cur e FREE. Address, EDSON COVEY, R. F. D. Lansing, Mich. IIfIMST marr y unti l you have your friends UUlf I character told from their handwrit ing; send specimen and 11 cents to Gordon Gor don, Hyde Park, Camden, N. J. SflVpQ Yfllir Tppfh Thread cutting thimble OflYCa I UUI I CCllh_ sells like wildfire. Sample toe. Catalogue free. W. I. Burgess &Co , Box 122, New York City. Monkey Wrench. Perfect working watch charm. 25c. J. Bedford, Gleaham, N- Y. BURT’S 20 Kinds B’. BUPKRB Grand Prize.—St. Louis, fl A 111 lAQ Gold Medal,—Buffalo. UAnLIAOi FL F. Burt, Taunton, Mass. Wn Tl tP d 500 Wonle ” t° use the new per- Huiiitu. fume, "Sweet Lotus,” nothing like it. Send 25 cts. for Large Bottle, Postpaid. Fremont Novelty Co., 910 Security Bank Building Minneapolis, Minn. SQE PER WEEK AND ALL EXPENSES to man •J = ■ with rig to introduce our Poultry Goods: send stamp K LILKA A MANF’G. I’o,, Dept 57, Navasota, Taxa* 100 Post Cards of Yourself, $1,65. (including cut, prepaid). Agents Wanted. POST CARDS OF YOUR TOWN, $4 per 1000 (Orders filled in a week’s time.) Big money in these even at ic. each. If haven ’ business Stationery send 6 cents for samples. Dozen views of Historical Winchester, 15 cents Mention this magazine. HENRY’S QUICK PRINTERY, WINCHESTER, VA. I adlDCi f’s P er week easily made doing pretty, 1-UUIUo, simple fancy work at home. Send dime for sample and particulars. A. G. Fros & Co., 907 Ellis St., San Francisco, Calif. lAJE UAVF IT A great re-order getter. " r RMIC 11. Sell one or more in every home. Agents wanted: either sex. Write now for particulars. W. B. Gedney Company, Dept. 4, Lebanon, 111. TRY Dr. George’s Bust Developer that never fails you. Costs but $3 for complete treatment, with directions in full how to use; sells on its own merit and does not need advertising. Send money by Registered Letter or Post Office Order (no stamps taken) to The Dr. George’s Medica Co., 616 N. F. St., Muskogee, Indian Territory. Sil K RFMNANTS ladies desiring to purchase OILI\ fl EM HAH 10. S|lk rem nan t s for fancy work, write for our price list and free samples. Mail Order Bazaar, W, 1326 Herkimer St., Brook lyn, New York. AGFNTS clear 50 per <st. selling my egg sep arator Something entirely new. Send for circular and free information. Address, J. H. Freshwater, Graham, N. C. Write (li THEY SLIDE—NO SCRATCH for 19 p .k;. I - NO kick. lara. Bl GLIDING FURNITURE SHOES V take tie phee of casters. . Beds, and Furniture wi 1 move easily sad not wea carpets, nor scratch floor V’TamwHMlallFWjy Men and women agen wanted to introduce the ' —* and other practical article The Fair Mfg, Co., 908 Fifth St. Racine, Wis. |An for 50c. worth Choice Garden Seeds in lib to introduce our sure-to-please noveftie ■ U for 1909. Bolgiano’s Seed Store. Baltimore Opreparation cleans perfectly Kid Gloves, Silk Ribbons, Neckties, Etc. Send 4 cents in stamps for sample. Address," Sales Mgr., Box 966, Warren, Ohio. I AfilCQ Something new, C-Curity Placke L**UluOi Fastener, the greatest device for an absolutely Perfect Placket ever invented Send to-day for free descriptive circulars. Agents wanted. Sample fastener, postpaid, 35c. The Cen tennial Mfg. Co., 329 West Taylor, Stockton, Cal. I A lET Q ■ Do you wish to go riding, Im M ICi ■ driving, boating, walk ing? If so. let me hold your hat on; it can’t blow off. My holders are ornamental; no unsightly holes in hat; don’t rust in the hair. They are a 1 the rage; price 25 cents. Indiana Supply Co. Rensselaer, Indiana. STOP, LOOK, LISTEN?" and use Mason’s Antiseptic Corn Cure, the won der of the age. Guaranteed under Pure Food and Drug Law. Sample box by mail 10 cents. Agents can make good money selling this corn cure. Address, The C. C. Mason Mfg. Co., 7 North 38th. St., Philadelphia, Pa. K smell cures foetid odors of feet. I* I 1111 nose, mouth, armpits. Post free. I 111 50c. Lady agents wanted, B. U I 111 Seebach. Pe-u Ills. prjETET Solid Gold Laid Ring. If you “ FCELELa Will send us the names of two of your fl iends and 12 cents for postage, pack ing, etc., we will send you this elegant signe t ring and our jewelry catalogue Initial engrav ed 3 cents extra. Ktil & Cox, Dept. A, Box 277 Yonkers, N. Y. PLAYS OF ALL PUBLISHERS. DECORATIONS and FAVORS for al occasions. Catalogue FREE. The C. E. COOK CO.. Bergen. N. Y 11