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HELPED HER SISTER
Young girls, at the critical age,
often require the help that Cardui
Will give.
Cardui acts gently and safely, in
away that will mean much for
health in future years.
Cardui has been found to relieve
or prevent female pains, such as
headache, backache, sideache, etc.,
and to act effectively on such symp
toms as fitful temper, nervousness,
tired feeling, and other symptoms
that are common to young women. ■
Mrs. Mary Hudson, of Eastman,
Miss., writes: “My young sister,
while staying with me and going to
school, was in terrible misery. I
got her to take a few doses of Car
dui and it helped her at once.
“I have taken Cardui myself and
believe I would have been under the
clay, if it had not been for that won
derful medicine. I was in a rack of
pain, in my back and low down, but
the first dose of Cardui helped me,
and now I am in better health than
in three years.”
Try Cardui. It is a purely vege
table. gently medicinal, extract, es
pecially recommended for female
troubles. Sold ”
RECEIPT THAT CURES
DEBILITATED MEN-FREE
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should have a copy. So I have determined to send
a copy of the prescription, free of charge, in a
plain ordinary sealed envelope, to any man who
will write me for it.
This prescription comes from a physician who
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vinced it is the surest-acting combination for the
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I think I owe it to my fellow man to send them
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a 1,000 to 1,500 Shin.
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lots of comfort in the fact that we
can meet, and sing, and pray under
our own “vine and fig tree,’’ instead
cf scattering out here and there each
Sabbath into Methodist, Episcopal and
Presbyterian churches. We love these
churches, the members have been
kind; we have worked and worshipped
with them —but that isn’t like coming
into our own. And now that we are
to make a beginning, we want to work
on firm, sure lines, lay each stone with
the utmost care—and hold fast to
“the hope that abideth.”
The beautiful text gives us comfort,
“Casting all your care upon Him.” We
feel that we have only to do the work
laid down for us—that Jesus was the
“Author” and will be the “Finisher” —
we have only to keep to the faith and
“do with our might what our hands
find to do.” Help us and uplift us
with your prayers and letters of en
couragement.
TESSA W. RODDY.
n
THE WORKING ARISTOCRAT.
Dear Good Cheer: Mr. Roosevelt —
yes, he is Mr. Roosevelt now—this is
March the seventh —has been interest
ing himself in trying to find out why
there is a seeming discontent and dis
satisfaction, and general lack of am
bition and indifference to social suc
cess on the part of some Southern
people. If my idea is worth anything,
you can have it, and that is, that the
conditions result from poverty, pov
erty brought about by the Civil War.
The men and women of the South,
reared under Southern conlitions, were
utterly unfit to cope with the poverty
that lasted so long that the people
became apathetic and hopeless, and
resolved to resign themselves to a feel
ing of satisfaction with conditions,
rather than a continual hopeless fight
to change these conditions. This
resignation resulted in a second gen
eration of men and women who really
did not know just where they be
longed, whether to the aristocratic or
the working class. Before the war the
aristocracy disdained work and lived
up to their ideals of elegant leisure,
devoted to pleasing and entertaining
themselves. Art was considered, mu
sic criticised, sports enjoyed, litera
ture aimed at, but very few did any
thing worth while.
A few orators, about one out of a
thousand, a few poets, about one out
of ten thousand, a few novelists—
many pretended, but no one did any
thing worth while. After the war
men faced situations that appalled
them, and women met adversities with
a nerve tension that argued ill for the
second generation. The second gen
eration has arrived, they are doubt
ful of the place they belong in, their
parents were aristocrats, but they are
working people, and their idea of aris
tocracy excludes work; yet, work they
must, or starve; so they feel that they
must keep themselves out of view un
til they can build up to the old order
of things. However, the problem is be
ing solved by the third generation.
They say, “We are descendants of the
old Southern aristocracy, the old cul
ture, etc., but we are descendants of
people who worked, too. We will
solve the problem by combining the
two. We will be aristocratic work
ers, who will accomplish something in
art, music, literature and statesman
ship, instead of aristocratic idlers, who
For HEADACHE—Hicks’ CAPUDINE.
Whether from Colds, Heat, Stomach
or Nervous Troubles, Capudine will
relieve you. It’s liquid—pleasant to
take —acts immediately. Try it. 10c,
25c & 50c at all drug stores.
The Golden Age for March 18, 1909.
SisterWomanMTl
± READ MY FREE OFFER I
M My Mission is to make sick women well, and I want to send you, your daughter, your Y \
Sister, your mother, or any ailing friend a full fifty-cent box of Balm of Figs abso- L -Wy
lutely free. It is a remedy that cures Woman's ailments, and I want io tell you all A a
about it — just how to cure yourself right at home without the aid of a doctor—and ths \
best of it is that it will not in the least interfere with your work or occupation- Balm of A.
Figs is just the remedy to make sick women well and weak women strong, and I can provo
it let me prove it to you I will gladly do it, for I have never heard of anything that
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Therefore, I want to place it in the hands of every woman suffering with
any form of Leucorrhca, Painful Periods. Ulceration. Inflammation, -
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Growths, or any of the weaknesses so common io women. I. *• 1
This fifty-cent box of Balm of Figs w
will not cost you one cent CEaMHf /
f will send it to you absolutely free, to prove to you its splendid quail- F '
ties, and then if you wish to continue further, it will cost you only a few W
cents a week. Ido not believe there is another remedy equal to
Balm of Figs and I am w illing to prove my faith by sending out
these fifty-cent boxes free. So, my reader, irrespective of your
past experience, write to me at once—today— and I will send
you the treatment entirely free by return mail, and if you so ~ I ""
desire, undoubtedly I can refer you to some one near you who can \
personally testify tothe great and lasting cures that have resulted t~v. X .•‘"'S .
from the use of Balm of Figs. But after all. the Very best test 1
of anything is a personal trial of it, and I know a fifty-cent box J •)■
M of Bahn of Figs will convince you of its merit. Nothing is so
U convincing as the actual test of the article itself. Will you give 3S
Eg Bahn of Figs this test ? Write to me today, and remember I will
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MRS. HARRIET M. RICHARDS, Box 248 D Joliet, Illinois.
READ THE WORKS OF DR. BROUGHTON
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