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14
Tetter Took Her Hair Off—Tetterine
Brought It Back.
Bell Haven Orphan Home, Lulling, Texas.
This is to certify rthat I have tested the
merits of Tetterine among the children of
this home and find it to be a success. One
little girl had a very bad case of tetter
on her head, which had taken most of her
hair out. I could notice some improvement
after using the second application, and
after one week's treatment all traces were
gone and her hair commenced to grow
back. I can earnestly recommend Tetter
ine for all skin diseases. Yours respect
fully, Miss Jennie Clark, Supt.,
Bell Haven Orphan's Home.
Tetterine cures Eczema, Tetter, Ring
Worm, Ground Itch, Infant’s Sore Head,
Pimples, Boils. Rough Scaly Patches on
the Face, Old Itching Sores, Dandruff,
Cankered Scalp, Bunions, Corns, Chilbrains,
and every form of Skin Disease. Tetterine
50c; Tetterine Soap 25c. Your Druggist, or
by mail from the manufacturer. The Shup
trine Co., Savannah, Ga.
ASwiciirs
DISEASE
11l Do you ever feel all tired out?
I Or as if you were going to die? I
I I | Do you feel “blue” and ready to
I| | give up? Are you physically or
\LI I mentally overworked?
i I / If so, your liver or yoar kidneys are
I// out of order —diseased. You are In
J/( danger of Bright's disease and other
1 serious affections. Bright’s disease is
Vwv '*** especially dangerous; it could be kill"
i n £ you and 5 -011 jnierht not know you
had it. You should start at once to tak e
Dr. DeWitt’s Liver, Blood & Kidney Curt
This efficient remedy has cured thousands afflicted
like you. It absolutely CURES by first cleansing and
stimulating the liver, next purifying and enrich
ing and restoring diseased kidneys to healthy action.
By the use of Dr. DeWitt’s Liver, Blood & Kidney
Cure you will regain health and strength and the
world will seem brighter. If your druggist cannot
supply you, accept no substitute, but send Si to us
and we will send the bottle of the medicine to you,
I transportation prepaid. Address
The W. J. Parker Co., Manufacturers,
Baltimore, Md.
MUSIC RY MAI I A postal to us, will
muaiu DI HIAIL. bring our list of latest
music, and one piece free by return mail.
ARNO MUSIC CO.,
63 Peachtree St., Atlanta, Ga.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup
Has been used for over SIXTY-FIVE YEARS by MIL
LIONS of MOTHERS for their CHILDREN WHILE
TEETHING, with PERFECT SUCCESS. It SOOTHES
the CHILD, SOFTENS the GUMS, ALLAYS all PAIN;
CUR.ES WIND COLIC, and is the best remedy for DIAR
RHOEA. Sold by Druggists in every part of the world.
Be sure and ask for‘‘Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup,”
and take no other kind. Twenty-five cents a bottle.
Guaranteed under the Food and Drugs Act, June 30th,
1906. Serial Number 1098. AN OLD AND WELL TRIED
REMEDY.
C&n Cancer be Cured? It Can
We want every man and woman in the United
States to know what we an? doing. We are cur
ing Ganeevs, Tumors and Chronic Sores without
the use at the knife or X-Ray, aud are endorsed
by the Senate and Legislature of Virginia.
W« Guaranta® Our Cures.
THE KELLAM HOSPITAL,
1617 West Main, - - Richmond, Va.
Physicians Treated Free.
Neat, clean, ornamental,
convenient, cheap.
Lasts all season. Made
of metal. Cannot spill
or tip over, will not soil
or injure anything.
Guaranteed effective. Os
all dealers or sent pre
paid for 20 cents.
HAROLD BOHERS
160 De Kalb Ave.
Brooklyn, N, I.
Send for The Mission Girl
OUR GOOD CHEER
'‘FOR THE GOOD WE ALL MAY DO"
Conducted by TESSA WILLINGHAM RODDEY, Long Veach, Miss.
HER PURPOSE WAITED.
By Ella Wheeler Wilcox.
Down the long vistas of the years she
gazed
With eager eyes, expectant, and alert.
Somewhere her Purpose waited; that
great work
For which she was created. In her
heart
Burned the deep longing to achieve,
achieve —
To lead some glorious effort for re
form!
To feed poor starving minds with
loaves of thought,
And hungry hearts with love; to cheer,
to aid,
To aelp humanity to nobler heights
And purer altitudes. She cared not
how
IS or thru what paths God led her to
her work,
She was prepared for sacrifice and
toil
And suffering, so be it at the last
She might attain her Purpose. Night
and day
This thought was dominant; it had
shaped her dreams
And colored all her actions, and it
grew
To be a wall, which shut her duty out
And hid the hearts of dear ones from
her view.
A good man starved for love beside her
hearth,
And little children wandered from the
home
To find their pleasure elsewhere, and
to learn
Life’s mysteries from other lips than
hers.
She dreamed of leading hosts to Hap
piness
The while her own were hungering
for her care.
biie dreamed of fame and glory while
dear Love
Sat in the solitude and pined to death.
She waited for her Purpose, and knew
not
It dwelt forever lonely at her side
And wept because she would not un
derstand.
CHAT.
CHILDREN are queer, quaint and
sweet, and I can get more real
pleasure from them than from
grown folks any time. The other day
a small girl in blue came to visit with
me until “brother” could come to
carry her home. I finished my morn
ing duties and lay down for my usual
twenty minutes’ relaxation before be
ginning dinner. She lay down beside
me, on a cool, white bed and, after a
moment of silence asked, “Do you
know Mother Goose and all her peo
ple?” I said “Yes, indeed, I’ve known
Mother Goose a long time.”
“Well, do you know ‘a little hus
band no bigger than my thumb’?”
“Yes, I know him; I am well ac
quainted with him.”
“Well, do you know ‘Humpty-Dump
ty went to town’?’
“Yes, indeed, I have known him
ever since I was small, like you.”
“Do you know Mother Hubbard?”
“Yes, I surely do know about
FOR FEVERISHNESS AND ACHING.
Whether from Malarious condition-*,
Colds or overheating, try Hick’s CAP
UDINE. It reduces the fever and re
lieves the aching. It’s Liquid—lo, 25
and 50 cents at Drug Stores.
The Golden Age for July 29, 1909.
Mother Hubbard; she is one of my
very earliest acquaintances.”
“Well, do you know about me old
woman who lived in a shoe?”
“Yes, indeed, I remember her well.”
“Well,” she said, after a moment’s
thought, “do you know about little
Miss Muffet?”
“Yes, I know her real well, too.”
“Let me hear you tell about her,”
she said.
I very promptly began—
“ Little Miss Muffett
Sat on a tuffit,
Eating of curds and whey.”
“Oh, no, indeed,” she interrupted,
“that is the old-fashioned Miss Muf
fett; she played out long ago; don’t
you know about the new Miss Muf
fitt?”
“No,” I said meekly,“ I don’t.’
“Well,” she said, sitting up and
pushing her hair carefully back, “I
will tell you about new Miss Muf
fett. Now you listen:
“Little Miss Muffet,
Sat in a parlor
Eating of pink ice cream;
Long came a spider,
And gave her a start,
And, oh, how Miss Muffett did
scream.”
“Well, that is a new version of it,”
1 said, very much amused. “Who
told you that? I am afraid Mother
Goose knew very little about pink ice
cream.”
“But she knows about circuses and
clowns,” she said.
“Does she? How is that? Tell me.”
“Old Mother Goose
Got turned aloose
In a circus tent one day;
She cauguu the old clown,
And threw him all down,
And got all his waddin’ away.”-
“Who told you that?” I asked.
“Nurse”; she knows all the new
fashioned pieces; she said she would
not say the old-fashioned things. Now,
how do you know about Humpty-
Dumpty?”
I know about him like Mother Goose
tells about him,” I said.
“Humpty-Dumpty went to town;
He rode a little pony;
Stuck a feather in his hat,
And called it Maccaroni.”
“Well, that is the old Humpty-
Dumpty. Nurse tells us the new- up
to-date things; she tells us about it
this way”:
“Humpty-Dumpty went to town,
He got full of booze O,
He came home glad,
His wife got mad,
Her temper lit a fuse O. ’
1 was amused, but determined to
tell my friend the kind of nursery
lore (?) her little ones were getting.
Then she asked with a toss of her
head:
“Now how do you know about ‘I
had a little husband’?”
I quoted:
i had a little husband
No bigger than my thumb;
I put him in a coffee pot—
There I made him a drum.”
“No, no,” she exclaimed; it is this
A REAL BLESSII7G-
What a blessing is perfect health!
What enjoyment there is in feeling
well! Life is all pleasure, and work
is but play. But if one is continually
ailing, life seems scarcely worth liv
ing.
Thousands of women suffer, continu
ally or periodically, from the ills or
weakness peculiar to their sex. Pain
kills pleasure, hinders the performance
of their daily duties and makes them
most wretched.
Countless women, suffering such ills,
have found relief or cure in that old,
reliable medicine, especially prepared
for w r omen, —Wine of Cardui. Thous
ands of these grateful ladies write to
tell what Cardui has done for them.
We recently had this letter from
Mrs. Annie Vaughan, of Raleigh, N. C.:
“I cannot find words to express my
deep gratitude for what >our wonder
ful medicine, Cardui, did for me, for
I sincerely believe it saved my life. I
was sick and worn out, almost unto
death. My sister finally persuaded me
to take Cardui. Before I had taken 5
bottles I was well and strong.”
Cardui is a pure, vegetable remedy,
which acts gently and naturally on the
womanly system. If you are nervous,
weak nr sick, try C-irdui. Get it at
once. ’Tw ; H helii "ou.
A’ js in *I.OO bottles.
(UNDOLPHJOSI
Says About
BUGGIES
1 ■ s
» > a
'w.
- *'. ; J- 7 " J&f
“I believe I have the best baggy
proposition that was ever offered in
the South. I will build any man a buggy
to order and ship it to him, freight pre*
paid. I GUARANTEE that it will suit
him as to style and finish, and that it will
outwear and outlook any other buggy at
anywhere near the price.
“The Rose reputation of half a century
for sterling integrity and for paying back Efl
your money immediately if you are not jfl
satisfied, is behind this guarantee.
“I am sure you will be glad
to get aud look over my big
BUGGY AND SEWING MA
CHINE CATALOGUE.
FREE copy will be mailed
you if you will write and ask
for it.” Yours faithfully,
RANDOLPH ROSE,
Os Chattanooga, Tenn.
822 Chestnut Street
CURE NO PAY—in
B ■ wUIICU other words you do not
BB B B our small professional fee until
■ ■ ■ cured and satisfied. German*
H American Institute. 24A Walnut St.. Kansas City. Mo.
w