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14
TO CURE ECZEMA.
The one infallible method by which
Eczema can be quickly and permanently
cured is by the use of Heiskell’s Oint
ment. For half a century this great remedy
has been the means of curing skin diseases
es every nature. Erysipelas, Tetter, Ulcers,
Pimples, Ringworm, Blotchy Skin, Erup
tions, Rough Skin, Salt Rheum, Scald
Head—all yield as readily to the marvelous
curative virtues of Hehskell’s Ointment
as the dread disease—Eczema. Before apply
ing the ointment, bathe the affected parts,
using Hbiskell’s Medicinal Soap.
Hetskekl’s Blood and Liver Piels tone
up the liver and cleanse the blood. Oint
ment, 50 cents a box; Soap, 25 cents a cake;
Pills, 25 r cents a bottle—at all druggists.
Send for Interesting book of testimonials to
Johnston, Holloway & Co., 531 Commerce
Street, Philadelphia, Pa.
Make Your Own CONCRETE BLOCKS.
Save dealers’ and manufacturers’
profits. Big saving in cost. Sand,
Portland Cem.nt and water, only
materials required. No expe
rienee necessary. We furnish
complete instructions and a
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and up. Buildings erected
are handsome, durable, lirt - |
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quire neither painting nor ' .■ ~L
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home at small cost. Investigate. Concrete machinery
catalog free. THE PETTYJOHN CO.,
664 N 6th Street, Terre Haute, Ind
I YOUR HEALTH DEMANDS I
I That you read these two books thought- ■
fully. Sent to any one anywhere
I FREE /W
Mr!
Dr. Hath- I |
away is
widely
recognia- jrhi SwllO
ed as the great
est scientific spe
cialist of
day, and he has traced all the various
ills to which flesh is heir back to their
basic causes in these two books written
especially for the two No one
should be without this scientific knowl
edge of cause and effect in health, and
of EFFECTIVE CURES! It will bp
mailed free to anyone. If you are a
sufferer from any chronic disease, tvrite
Dr. Hathaway freely and fully, and he
will give you a scientific diagnosis of
your case, absolutely without charge.
Write at once and be sure to ask for
these two invaluable books. Address
DR. HATHAWAY & CO.,
80 Inman Building, Atlanta, Ga.
TA A IQV CIV VII I FI? placed anywhere, at-
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HAROLD SOMERS
149 DeKalb Ave.
Brooklyn, N. Y.
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; The seventh Summer session offers sixty |
courses in over twenty subjects, by a full fac
ulty of experienced instructors, through eight
weeks.
REDUCED RAILROAD RATES.
A fee of $5.00 gives teachers an op
portunity to increase their efficiency.
Write for full information to
Peabody College for Teachers,
Jno. M. Bass, Sec’y. Nashville. Tenn.
V
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erywhere,
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N.Y., U.S.A.
THE BOY WHO SAYS “WE.”
Don’t laugh at the boy who magni
fies his place. You may see him com
ing from the postoffice with a big
bundle of his employer’s letters, which
he displays with as much pride as
though they were his own. He feels
important and looks it, but he is proud
of his place. He is attending to bus
iness. He likes to have the world
know that he is at work for a busy
concern. The boy who says “we”
identifies himself with the concern.
Its interests are his. He sticks up for
its credit and reputation. He takes
pleasure in his work and hopes to say
we are in earnest. The boy will reap
what he sows if he keeps his grit and
sticks to his job. You may take off
your hat to him as one of the future
solid men of the town. Let his em
ployer do the right thing by him.
Check him kindly if he shows signs of
being too big for his place, council
him as to his habits and associates
and occasionally show him a pleasant
prospect of advancement. A little
pride does an honest boy a heap of
good. Good luck to the boy who says
“we.” —Berkeley Reporter.
A SATISFYING THOUGHT.
Men are usually reticent about
those things which affect them deep
ly; their religious beliefs and their
family affections. Now and then they
will talk of them with their most in
timate friends, and it happens once in
a long while that a man is so full of
a sacred experience that the need to
speak of it overcomes his reluctance
to expose his inner life, and he con
fides in the first acquaintance whom
he meets.
Major Harrison had passed through
such an experience one cold March
day, and as he returned to his usual
work in the court-house, ne stopped
in the room assigned to the news
paper reporters. Only one man was
in the room at the time, and the ma
jor drew a chair near him and sat
down, hardly noticing the nod of rec
ognition, When the reporter finished
what he was writing and looked at
his caller, the major began to talk al
most as if he were thinking aloud.
“This has been a sad and a pleas
ant day for me,” he said. “I was mar
ried thirty years ago to-night, and my
wife died last December. I have just
been out to Greenwood to lay some
flowers on her grave. While 1 was
there I got to thinking about old
times.”
His voice trembled but he contin
ued:
“Our married life was happy. We
were together on every anniversary
of the wedding but three, and then I
was in the army.
“I can remember the day when 1
was married just as distinctly as
if it were yesterday. I was working
on the Herald then, and had made ar
rangements to stop earlier than usual
in the afternoon. The morning
passed slowly, and 1 became so impa
tient that I couldn’t work. I stopped
at half past two o’clock, and went
home and dressed for the wedding.
Then I went to my wife’s house, —or
rather the house of the girl who was
to be my wife,—and 1 reached there
at six o’clock, although the wedding
was not to begin till eight o’clock.
“At last the bride was dressed and
started to come down-stairs with her
bridesmaids. I can see her now. She
wore a silk dress of some color be
tween white and lavender, and had
on a veil, and some flowers at her
6 A YARD OF FP>l^P T “ is beautiful picture,
m _ ever offered, 1 yard long, on heavy copper plate paper,
Y W teu eau Hf u l‘colors; a handsome ornament for any
r home that you win alwa ?B be proud of. To introduce
AZ? -JL vC ; our B P lfcndld hon ie magazine which has a half million
readers, we mail this grand work of art, all charges
paid to an y° ne s end ‘B« 10cts. for trial subscription to
Aa A ’ The HoUßeho,d - Wealso have other “Yard” subjects,
f Comprising Violets, Puppies, Kittens, Little Chicks,
t \| u Pansies. We send 3 pictures and one year’s subscrip-
tioD to our popular magazine for 30c, or all six for 50c.
• Ml Send at once before they are gone. Address
HOUSEHOLD PICTURE Dept.,
579 Jackson St., Topeka, Kans.
The Golden Age for May 7, 1908.
belt, and her bright blue eyes were
sparkling. She was slim then. Af
terward she grew stouter, for she was
the mother of a large family.
“I ran up tne stairs, and met her
on the landing. Sue asked me how
she looked, and I said what any bride
groom would say under the circum
stances, and she seemed pleased. Yes,
we lived happily together for a good
many years.”
“I can understand how this has
been a sad anniversary for you,” re
marked his companion. “But you
said it has been pleasant also. How
was that?”
“No, it has not been altogether sad,”
the major explained, with a smile.
“While I was standing by the head
stone to-day I thought of all the years
my wife and I had together—the joys
we shared; the happiness of seeing
our children grow up into manhood
and womanhood. And then I thought
how cold the grave was, with the
winds blowing over it from the bay,
and if I believed that that is the end
of it all, it would be intolerable. But
I did not think of my wife as there in
the frozen ground. I did think, in
stead, how pleasant, how satisfying,
it is to believe that there is something
beyond the tomb.”
The two men were silent for a time.
When they did speak again it was of
commonplace things.—Youth’s Com
panion.
HOW MEMORIAL DAY CAME
TO BE.
When, early in May, 1868, General
John A. Logan, then Commander-in-
Chief of the Grand Army of the Re
public, issued the order creating a
Grand Army Memorial Day, —“and it
was the proudest act of my life,” he
wrote later, —he called into official be
ing what had already had many a
local habitation though no name. How
had the custom grown up? What sug
gested his action to “Our Jack.”
General Chipman used to attribute
it to a Cincinnati soldier, who wrote
Logan a letter describing the decorat
ing of soldiers’ graves in Germany;
and General John B. Murray has ad
vanced the claim of a celebratioi? held
at Watertown, New York, in the May
of 1866, as being the incentive for a
national memorial day.
This latter story has it that the
body of one of the soldier sons of the
town had been brought up from the
south for burial in the little church
yard at home. The grave had been
dug beneath an apple tree, and just as
soon as the solemn rites were over
and the last shovel of earth had been
thrown upon the mound, from its low
hanging branches came floating down
hundreds of the wnite petals of its
blossoms, as if in honoT of the boy
who had laid down his life for his
country. Among the friends who had
gathered there were several of those
who had played their parts in that red
flame of carnage that had swept Pick
ett’s Division from the field of Gettys
burg, and one of these, according to
General Murray, took the story to Gen-
There is more Catarrh in this section of the country
than all other diseases put together, and until the last
few years was supposed to be incurable. For a great
many years doctors pronounced it a local disease and
prescribed local remedies, and by constantly failing to
cure with local treatment, pronounced it incurable.
Science has proven catarrh to be a constitutional disease
and therefore requires constitutional treatment. Hall’s
Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Tol
edo, Ohio, is the only constitutional cure oil the mark
et. It is taken internally in doses from 10 drops to a
teaspoonful. It acts directly on the blood and mucous
surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars
for any case it fails to cure. Send for.circulars and tes
timonials.
Address: F. J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, Ohio.
Sold by Druggists, 75c.
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Will make you a cut this size for sl, zinc; $1.25,
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MORPHINE and Opium Habits cured
painlessly at your home (for $10.00)
by entirely new method. No cure, no
pay. Write today. DR. G. W. PAT
TERSON, Suite 2, 82 Central Place,
Atlanta, Ga.
Quick Relief For Skin Diseases
Tetterine quickly relieves the itching and
promptly cures diseases of the Skin and Scalp.
Eczema, Tetter, and Itching Piles yield readily to
its antiseptic and healing qualities. The germs
are destroyed, preventing return. Tetterine is a
fragrant, antiseptic, and healing ointment, the
finest prescription ever discovered for skin and
scalp troubles. Ask your druggist or send 50 cents
in stamps to The Shuptrine Co., Savannah, Ga.
Healthy
f Happy V
Babies |
abfcl Mother, you know u
the summer will H
’ be a trying- time
for your teething
baby —a period of
i and sleepless
\ nights for you unless you
) di► t / take the precaution to keep
A baby’s system in condition
LV f to make teething easy.
> Teethina
(Teething Powders)
The prescription of Dr. C. J. Moffett; graduate
of Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia;
contains elements recommended by the most
advanced medical science to remove the
cause of disease and keep the system in con
dition to make teething easy. For 40 years
the standard remedy throughout the South
during the trying period of teething, colic,
hives, etc., in children.
In nine out of ten cases of cholera Infantum that
prove fatal from ordinary neglect and subsequent
treatment, the timely use of Teethina would have
saved the child.
At All Druggists, 25 Cents
Or from
Dr. C. J. Moffett Medicine Co., St. Louis, Mo.
Write for our free “Mother’s Booklet.”
Frlny 1 * 11