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I The most obstinate case of Eczema can
be quickly and completely cured by the
application of Jleiskylls Ointment. It
hlso cures Blotchy, Hough and Pimpled
Skin, Ery'sipelas, Tetter, Ulcers, and all
other skin diseases. Before applying the
ointment, bathe the parts affected, Using
llelskell s Medicated Soap, llelskell’s
Blood and Liver Pills tone up the liver
and purify thp blood. Your druggist sells
these preparations. Ointment, soc a box;
Soap, 2&e a cake; Pills,2oc a bottle. Send for
book of testimonials an# learn what these
wonderful remedies have done for others.
JOHNSTON, HOLLOWAY S CO..
531 Commerce Street, Philadelphia, Pa.
I YOUR HEALTH DEMANDS |
That you read these two books thought- fl
fully. Sent to any one any where
I FREE
k Wt
XZwS -CTM _
Dr. Hath- I jOflflß
away is <Mfl *
widely J
recogniz- /fc-A
ed as the great- ffl X
est scientific spe-jjZZu
cialist of
day, and he has traced all the various fl
ills to which flesh is heir back to their fl
basic causes in these two books written I
especially for the two sexes. No one ■
should be without this scientific knowl- H
edge of cause and effect in health, and I ,
of EFFECTIVE CURES! It will be ■
mailed free to anyone. If you are a H
sufferer from any chronic disease, write fl
Dr. Hathaway freely and fully, and he fl
will give you a scientific diagnosis of fl
your case, absolutely without charge, fl
Write at once and be sure to ask for fl
these two invaluable books. Address
DR. HATHAWAY & CO.,
80 Inman Building, Atlanta, Ga. fl
A Successful Combination
The Combination Oil Cure for cancer
and Tumor is a recognized success. Be
ware of imitators. Write today to the
Originator for his free books. Dr. Bye,
316 N. Illinois St, Indianapolis, Ind.
riSKT 7 E¥E DISEASES,
I viz: CATARACTS, CORNIAL UL-
CERS and GRANULATED EYE LIDS
I > for which we doctored for many
I FYE C-tJHE - vears without success, have been
1 j turedbyAßNTZ eye cure
Mrs. Henrv Drebuff and Mr. Pet?r Moscos. Des Moines,
la.: Mrs. Joseph, na Mackill, Crookston, Minn. It cures
Conjunctivitis, Pcervgium, Pink Eye, Wild Hairs and
Closed T -ar Di'ts—T stimonials free. 50c a bottle or 3,
$1.25 at Drug r'srs. Opticiansand ARNTZ OPTICAL CO.
101 Sixth A'. . I) s Moines, lowa.; and PEERLESS OP
TICAL CO., Jobbers, Chicago, 111.
watch will be yours. If you find not as
represented, return the watch, we will re
turn your 50c. If you don’t live near ex
press office send cash with order and 25c
for registered mail. Write your name and
address plainly; state if ladies or gents
size is wanted. Write for catalogue. THE
STANDARD JEWELRY CO., NO. 407
Main Street, Winston-Salem, N. C.
ARE YOU SURE
That the ice cream you buy is strictly 1
PURE ?
Do you know that the makers’ hands
were clean, flies excluded from the factory,
and freezers and other utensils kept in
Sanitary Condition?
Why take any chance where your health
is concerned ? Why not
MAKE AND FREEZE YOUR OWN ICE CREAM
In 10 MINUTES
FOR Ic. A Plate with
Jen-0 ICE CREHjn Powder
■ It is so easy. Simply stir contents of
one 13e. package into a quart of milk and
freeze, without cooking, heating or the ad-
■ dition of anything else. This makes two
quarts of ice cream, clean, pure and whole
some. A good ice cream freezer can be
■ bought for a dollar or two which will last
■ for years, and will soon save its cost.
2 packages JELL-0 ICE CREAM Pow-
■ der for 25c.
■ Flavors: Chocolate, Vanilla, Straw-
■ terry, Lemon and Unflavored.
Sold by all good grocers.
The Genesee Pure Food Co., Le Roy, N. Y. j
Why pay sls to S2O for
a gold filled watch
when you can buy
one at wholesale for
$10.50. This watch la
gold filled and guar
anteed to wear 20
years. Hunting or open
face, the movement is
American made, and is
a fine timer. Cut out
this ad and return with
50c. Watch will be
sent by express C. O.
D. Examine at office
and if you think it a
bargain pay the agent
SIO.OO and charges,
IF I WERE.
If I were a little girlie
You need never wish, my dear,
For someone to play with you—
We would be a jolly pair!
Searching through the fields for flow
ers,
Climbing fences in our way,
Wading, barefoot, in the branches,
We would run and romp all day.
If I were a little girlie,
We would slumber in one bed,
And, till sleepy, we would talk much
Os the stories we had read.
We would make our dollies dresses,
Bonnets, cloaks and hats galore,
Such as never two glad children
Made in all their lives before.
If I were a little girlie,
“Oh”! (more closely did she curl
Up beside me). “Can’t we ’magine
God made you a little girl?”
MARGARET A. RICHARD.
Columbia, S. C.
THE SALOON IN OUR TOWN.
By T. E. Richey.
Our churches, schools, manufactor
ies, dry goods stores, family groceries,
hotels and such like, build up the
town, rendering it attractive to home
seekers. But what about the saloon?
Has it qualifications entitling it to
the fostering care of our citizenship?
Let us see.
First, as a commercial factor it is
a failure. Real estate agents do not
advertise the town as having two man
utories, an electric light plant, wa
terworks, two banks and six saloons.
The saloons, though bringing a reve
nue of $6,000, are not heralded. Why?
Because they greatly damage the town.
The loss from drunkenness, pauper
ism, insanity, disability, sickness, liti
gation, imprisonment, liquor men’s la
bor, property destroyed, etc., so far ex
ceed the revenue accumulations,
these dwindle into insignificance com
pared with it. The estimate is that for
every dollar received in revenue the
real lost to the country is $16.50.
No wonder, then, that Lord Shaftes
bury said: “Impossible to relieve pov
erty until we get rid of the curse of
drink.”
The Kansas supreme court branded
it: “A Pandora’s box sending forth in
numerable ills and woes, shame and
disgrace, INDIGENCE, POVERTY
AND WANT.”
The national supreme court de
clared: “If a loss of revenue should
accrue to the United States from a
diminished consumption of ardent
spirits, SHE WILL BE A GAINER A
THOUSANDFOLD in the healtn,
WEALTH and happiness of the peo
ple.”
Strong words these. Human lan
guage could hardly characterize the
saloon more severely as a COMMER
CIAL MONSTROSITY. Yet it is cor
rect and applies equally to our town
and to the nation.
It is a mistake, too, that alcohol is
a therapeutic agent. “The American
Practitioner” says: “Common sense
should teach us that, if alcohol is poi
sonous enough to the human cell to
cause degenerative changes to take
place in its protoplasm, when the
protoplasm of the cell is already sat
urated with a tubercular toxine, al
cohol, will only hasten the degenera
tive changes A cell saturated with al
cohol loses to a great extent its resist
ance to other toxines.”
The result is that alcohol vitiates
the blood, inflames the stomach, over
taxes the heart, destroys the kid
neys, hardens the liver and softens
the brain.
Our town’s history amply confirms
these facts, the death of many an-
The Golden Age for May 28, 1908.
nually, standing as demonstrative ob
ject lessons in proof.
Again, alcoholic liquors are abso
lutely void of food virtue. The fa
mous Dr. James Edmunds consistent
ly said: “I can no more accept alco
hol as a food that I can chloroform
or ether.” Why he could not is evi
dent, for alcohol produces corruga
tion of the softer animal tissues, it
causes coagulation of the albumen
and it impairs the solidifiability of
the fibrene.
Then there are other reasons, but
these suffice. It is plain, then, that,
instead of having food virtue, alco
hol is a disease and death breeder.
This fact our town’s sad history
furnishes hundreds of demonstrative
testimonials to establish. ’
And now, as to the ethical side.
Every feature of the saloon’s influence
antagonizes society’s interests. Drink
has been characterized correctly as
“the parent of crime/’ “the nurse of
crime,” etc. Hence, the famous Dr.
George B. Cheever said truly that: “It
tends to break up all social order;
prostrates all barriers of law; sets
fire to all violent human passions, and
whelms all institutions of blessedness
—domestic, civil and religious—in a
blasting, fiery tide of ruin.”
A more correct detail of our town’s
experience could not have been given.
So, here we rest the case.
And now, finally, alcoholic liquors
destroy the soul. The inspired apos
tle declared: “Nor thieves, nor cove
tous, nor drunkards, nor revilers, nor
extortioners shall inherit the kingdom
of God” (1 Cor. 6: 10). With all the de
praved millions of Satan the drunk
ard must go down to the fathomless
abyss of woe to plow the fiery main
through the endless ages of eternity.
Think of it! Oh, mortal man, think
what eternity is! Who can describe
it?
“Tell all the sand the ocean laves,
Tell all its changes, all its waves,
Or tell with more laborious pains,
The drops the mighty mass contains;
Be this astonishing account,
Augmented with the full amount
Os all the drops that clouds have
shed,
Where’er their wat’ry fleeces spread,
Tnrough all time’s protracted tour,
From Adam to the present hour.
Still short the sum, nor can it vie
With the more numerous years that
lie
Embosomed in ETERNITY.”
Tremendously awful thought! Yet
such is the duration of the drunkard’s
doom beyond the tomb’s confines. And
how great the aggregate of these
from our town in the years of the li
censed saloon’s existence! We
at the thought and bow our heads in
ci. vemy the salocn is the mon
ster cf an age of veritable history,
whose frightful mien we dealy see
under whose destructive power we
daily groan, and whose palpable work
ings of desolation and woe are more
weird and impressive than any pen
of imagination can portray. This mon
ster is brainless and thinks not; he is
heartless, knowing no pity; he is eye
less, seeing not his own desolations;
he is earless, nor hears the lamenta
tions of his victims; he possesses
powerful instincts, but only to decoy
to bind, to sting, and to kill; his maw
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 on 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 foncirculars and tes
timonials. >
Address: F. J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, Ohio.
% Sold by Druggists, 75c.
Out of Tune
An ache or pain is a discord in
nerve harmony. There is a strain
or irritation of some nerve, caus
ed by the existence of some un
natural condition. Pain subsides
only when nerve harmony is re
stored. Dr. Miles’ Anti-Pain
Pills soothe the nerves, and in
this way relieve pain and distress.
When you consider that all pain
is in the nerves you will under
stand that treatment must be
through the nerves.
“My wife and daughter use Dr. Miles’
Anti-Pain Pills for pains from any cause,
with best results.” _
R. B. HOPPS, Ex. Agt., Jessup, Ga.
If they fail to help, your druggist will
refund the money on, first package.
25 doses, 25 cents. Never sold in bulk.
MILES MEDICAL CO., Elkhart, Ind.
- ■■ >
I ■dflfe ’ -
? ■■ ■ • ■
\ ■ 1
MANSTON ENGRAVING CO., Atlanta
Will make you a cut this size for sl, zinc; $1.25,
copper. Bell Phone M- 3980 34% W Alabama.
[Stearns 9 Electric 1
RAT and ROACH Paste I
is guaranteed to rid the house, barn or store of fl
cockroaches, rats, mice, water bugs, etc. Sold I
at druggists or general stores everywhere, or ■
sent prepaid on receipt of price.
2 oz. boz, 23e; 16 oz. box, SI.OO.
STEARNS’ ELECTRIC PASTE CO., Buffalo, H.Y., U.S.A. |
gs Your Baby Teething?
is no need to dread baby’s second
ter— the trying teething period —just
Keep its system in condition to make
teething easy and save sleepless nights.
Teettiina
(Teething Powders)
was first used by Dr. C. J. Moffett, a graduate
of Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia; in
his extensive and successful treatment of chil
dren’s diseases incident to teething and summer
complaints—a standard remedy for over 4(1 years
throughout the South. It contains the elements
recommended by the most advanced medical
sciences as necessary for removing the cause of
disease and keeping
baby’s system
in condition to
make teething
easy. Z'W' V 1
In nine out
often cases a
ofcholerain- y/KcWi
fa nt urn that 7
prove fatal
from ordinary
neglect and subset '©X
quent treatment, the"'\
use of Teethina would J *
■ have saved the child.
■At all Druggists, 25c \
Or from I //),
Dr. C. J. Moffett Ml/).
■ Medicine Company, ' ///ugh
St. Louis
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fl “Mother’s Booklet.” U , (fl
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