Newspaper Page Text
14
llg
Better Than Spanking
Spanking does not cure children of bed
wetting. There is a constitutional cause
for this trouble. Mrs. M. Summers, Box
576, South Bend, Ind., will send free to any
mother her successful home treatment, with
full instructions. Send no money, but write
her today if your children trouble you in
this way. Don’t blame the child, the
chances are it can’t help it. This treat
ment also cures adults and aged people
troubled with urine difficulties by day or
night.
DRINK
VITA SPRING
(Aikaline Chalybeate)
MINERAL WATER
For Stomach, Liver and Bowels
Vit>a Spring, Shelton, S. C.
CANCER c b a e n CURED
Scores of testimonials, from persons who
gladly write to those now suffering, ail tell
of perfect cures. My Mild Combination
Treatment destroys growth and eliminates
the disease from the system. FREE BOOK,
“Cancer and Its Cure.” and 125-page book
of testimonials from CURED patients tn
every State in the Union. No matter how
serious your case, how many operations
you have had, or what treatment you have
taken, don’t give up hope, but write at
once for my books.
DR. JOHNSON REMEDY CO.,
1235 Grand Ave., Kansas City, Mo.
DO ADC V Cured: quick relief; removes all
vlXuiol swelling tn 8 to 20 days; 80 to 60
days effects permanent cure. Trial treat
ment given free to sufferers; nothing fairer.
For circulars, testimonials and free trial
treatment write Dr. H. H. Green’s Sons,
Box X, Atlanta, Georgia.
Can Cancer be Cured? It Can
We want every man ami woman in the United
Sia’es to know wba.l we a’e do ng. Weaecur
ing Cancers, Tonies and Ch onic Sores without
the use of the kn ife o ■X- ay, and are endorsed
by the Senate and Leg : slain-e of Virginia.
We Guarantee Our Cure*.
THE KKLLAM HOSPITAL
1917 West M«in Richmond, Va.
Physicians Treated Free
Clarke Memorial College
X i* .• ' ■>
: sh« j ms w-W s ?If is s ■jrvaM> i
§. .--dftt"-- -- h
• BBL ...’W..-.
The Place for Your Boys and Girls
A new College. Nicely furnished.
Health unsurpassed. Rates the cheapest.
Fathers and mothei s make no mistake by
sending their boys and girls to us Strictly
a religious school. Write for catalog.
S. B. Culpepper, President, Newton, Miss.
T-his handsomelooo Shot kih>
■ kIL absolutely free to au/ boy
Rl
who will send
f /A/ ua4o cents for one
J LJj of our Samples, and
£’ Te ns a fe * hours
his spare time tof
111I 11 n This Rifle
t*•****’' is great for Target
11 sstEt practice, and is sure death to small
fame and rats. with dQ cents, stamps gr mopey ord
FRAZIER SUPPLY CO.
Suite 404, Wetherbee Bldg., Detroit,
Mich.
FOR SALE.
The printing material of the Demo
crat at a bargain, because of the
death of the editor and the loss of the
subscription book. Bainbridge is a
fine opening for a tri-weekly. Address
Mrs. J. M. Brown, Dawson, 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;
CURES WIND COLIC, and is the best remedy for DIAR
RHCEA. 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.
OUR GOOD CHEER
“FOfl THE GOOD WE ALL MAY DO"
Conducted by TESSA WILLINGHAM RODDEY, Long Beach, Miss.
MORNING GLORIES.
There were eight of them this morn
ing
When I looked out my door,
All waiting there to greet me
With their purple glory
I’ve nursed the vines so closely,
And watched them green and grow,
Now they greet me every morning
With a purple glory glow.
I kiss them all each morning,
They’re the sweetest things I know,
As I find them in the freshness
Os the purple glory glow.
I thank God for the flowers —
He gives them to us I know,
To teach us lovely lessons
In the purple glory glow.
Flowers are the souls of nature
As they green and bloom and grow,
And they lift our thoughts to Heaven
On the purple glory glow.
—TESSA W. RODDEY.
*
CHAT.
YOU Good Cheer Folks will be
envying me, when I tell you
who came to see me last Sun
day—about two in the afternoon. Why,
you could never guess who, so I will
have to tell you—no less a personage
than our good cheer helper, George
W. Wheeler, Hattiesburg, Miss., his
lovely wife, and tnree fine, splendid
looking sons. I was so glad to meet
and know them —the visit was cer
tainly a pleasant surprise to me.
George Wheeler has a fine, good face,
showing him to be a man w’hom all
can trust —he is an enthusiastic W. O.
W., and never fails to speak a good
word for that order. He spoke with
earnest feeling of ‘‘The dear old Sunny
South; he was in Memphis, but had
no opportunity to meet Julia Coman
Tait. Mrs. Wheeler is a pretty, slen
der, graceful, cheery lady, and I cer
tainly received a most pleasant im
pression of her. The three boys are
fine sturdy fellows. The older one is
an artist of wonderful talent, so his
parents tell me. The younger is the
mascot for the W, O. W. Lodge, of
which his father is a member, and
we are soon to see his picture in our
own loved Golden Age. I am sure I
hope these fine people are so pleased
with our coast country that they will
decide to come here to live.
I have had a visit from a dear de
lightful quiet friend. I was ill, and
she was ill during her visit, but in
stead of getting cross over it, we
smiled instead, and a fellow feeling
made us wondrous kind to each other.
Another bright little friend flitted
in and out recently; her stay short,
but to us, sweet, and I hope both
these girls will come back soon for
longer visits.
The dear young brother, who joined
the church recently, and became such
a fine, earnest Cl.istian is ill, has
been ill for several weeks, and I ask
all to pray for his recovery. To the
many friends to whom I owe letters,
I will say that my illness and my
brother’s illness has prevented me
Hick’s CAPUDINE Cures Sick Head
aches,
Also Nervous Headache, Traveler’s
Headache and aches from Grip, Stom
ach Troubles or Female troubles. Try
Capudine—it’s liquid—effects imme
diately. Sold by druggists.
The Golden Age for September 16, 1909.
writing. It is almost impossible to
get the copy I am under contract for,
off to the various papers and maga
zines, and I can find so little time for
letters.
I hope the Alabama friends, who
went to the Springs in Kentucky for
health are doing real well. I hope
they are home again now and fully
restored to health.
Rosa Cartwright, I sent the two
papers you asked for. I hope you
received them promptly; let us have
some more of your beautiful thoughts.
Thinking beautiful thoughts helps us
to live beautiful lives, and we can
live nobly if we think nobly. A life
beautifully lived is a long sermon beau
tifully preached.
T. W. R.
HELPFUL HINTS FOR A SICK
ROOM.
Don’t whisper in the room where
an invalid is; if you have anything
to say you don’t wish the invalid
to hear, wait until you are out of
the room to say it. The sibilance
of a whisper is annoying to weak
nerves.
“Don’t “tiptoe’’ in an invalid’s room;
walk softly, but not on the toes, as
walking on the toes shakes a room
very perceptibly, w’hile the whole foot
makes a trifle more noise, but no
shaking.
Don’t be always doing something
around the bed; arrange the bed as
it should be, about three times a day,
and then keep your hands away from
it, as the rustling and shaking con
nected with a handling of the bed
clothes annoys any one. Don’t speak
of other cases of illness’ in a sick
person’s presence; speak of bright,
cheerful outside things, read bright
paragraphs. Some sick people think
you are not sympathetic unless you
ask them all about their ailments, and
listen with patience to a long and
many times exaggerated account of
their various symptoms and aches,
but this old silly type is fast giving
way, and when you do find one you
have to behave accordingly, but even
then try to be bright and cheerful as
well as sympathetic.
Don’t call on sick folks when you
feel blue, or have a cold or cough.
Don’t carry food for an invalid, unless
you have consulted with the nurse or
physician as to what should be given.
Don’t dress in deep black when call
ing on an invalid, and should you
carry flowers, don’t carry too many
white ones; have a lot of color in the
nosegay. A blooming potted plant set
in a sick room .gives a lot of pleasure
and interest, especially if there are
buds just about to open, and a sunny
window for the plant.
A globe of gold fish given by an un
cle to a small girl during an attack
of fever did more to bring about a
reaction than all the medicine and
nursing. Once a dear old lady was
in a very de n ressed condition after
a severe attack of grip; nothing inter
ested her; she would lie for hours
listlessly, not paying the slightest at
tention to anything, her family were
in despair about her; they tried flow
ers, fruit, pictures, everything it seem
ed to them, but could get no attention
or interest. One day when the physi
cian had said: “I have done all I can
do, she must be roused some way, or
she will go into fever; this condition
can’t continue with any safety,” an
old lady came in with a lot of quilt
USE OUR MONEY
Establish a profitable anUlasting- business Bl £ tt
of your own. Be your own boos. We B Sh M ffi r
furnish everything, including Sample Out-
fit valued at $3.56. We began with noth- | IlfE
ing; are now worth $100,000; what we did |llj I IBF
you can do; we will gladly help you. Big bmhUmmS
Catalog, Plans and Sample Outfit ■ APMTC
now ready and ALL FREE.Write now.fi El fc IM 8 3a
Consolidated Portrait & Frame Co, f 1 " 1 *■! h ■
290-10 W- Adams St., Chicago, HL
HOME REMEDY
Mrs. Tempie Clark suffered for
years, before she found relief in that
popular, successful woman’s medicine,
Wine of Cardui.
Mrs. Clark, who lives in Timberville,
Miss., writes: “Cardui has been worth
more to me than a carload of silver.
If it had not been for Cardui, I would
have been dead. I love a dollar, but I
have never seen one that I do not
think as much of, as I do of a bottle
of Cardui. I now keep it in my house,
as regularly as I do coal oil or coffee,
and have done so for years.
“Some years ago I jumped off a
horse and had a mishap, and for about
four years after that I suffered in
tense agony. At last I was induced tc
try Cardui, which cured me, and now
I am well and happy.
“I am sure Cardui will cure othei
sick ladies as it has me.”
Cardui is for women. It acts spe
cifically and in a natural manner on
the womanly system and has been
found to relieve pain and to restore
woman’s health.
If you are nervous, miserable, or
suffering from any form of female
trouble, try Cardui. What it has done
for other sick ladies it surely can do
for you. Sold by all first class drug,
gists, with full directions for use.
“THE NORTH POLE FOUND”
We have the best book that will be
published, giving the most complete
and authentic account of the finding
of the North Pole. Everything will be
told in the most fascinating story.
Agents wanted; outfit free; send 10c
by first mail to pay postage. Do not
delay, act at once. Be first in the
field. Will give you the best terms.
PHILLIPS-BOYD PUBLISHING CO.
Dept. 6. Atlanta, Ga.
patterns, bright and pretty, and sat
down by the invalid and began talk
ing to her about them; she spread
them all along the bed, and the invalid
began to watch them; finally she ex
claimed, “Oh, that is such a pretty
square!” and the tide was turned; she
showed a lot of interest in all of them,
and was impatient to get strong
enough to go to the old lady’s house
and spend the day, and try to piece
up some squares; the children brought
her pretty scraps each day, and she
treasured each one, keeping them to
look at and study over until she could
get to the old neighbor's house and
piece patterns all day.
We who nurse never know the men
tal processes of our invalids and so
can’t realize what seemingly insignifi
cant things can turn the tide for or
against them, but we should always
remember to never antagonize or co
erce a sick person, persuade, if possi
ble, but never compel unless absolute
ly necessary; even with children use
gentle measures as long as you can
without breaking the doctor’s rules.
MISS PATIENCE..