Newspaper Page Text
12
* | VOICES OF YOUTH ~ to
CONDUCTED BY THE EDITOR.
FREE TO THE
RUPTURED
I have a new simple home cure for rupture that
anyone can use without operation, pain, danger
or loss of time, and I want you to use it at my
expense, lam not trying to sell you a truss but
offer you a cure that stays cured and ends all
truss-wearing, rupture-suffering and danger of
strangulation forever.
Send no money. Mark location of rupture on
diagram, answer questions, mail to me and begin
"7 | your cure at once.
I | Or. W. S. RICE,
I /\ 1020 Main Street,
f / 1 Adams, N. Y.
I \y)
m |T I Cause of Rupture f
1 RIGHT j| LEFT /
Name
1C
4ddress
MRich Easter Cards flip
INCLUDING SOLID COLD, SILVER ISB IB
AND GREEN BACKGROUNDS. ■** v
different; ererjone ricalj colored; some worth up to 6; ' j ver7
d of Easter dwign, such M Batter Chickens, Children, Flowers,
ssea, Angehi.eto.,every card w.th an Easf„ Q„„mg on it. Thi beet lot
~ , ?-«ter Cards eTeroflered-jott as our Christmas and Valentino
Curds, of which we sold fire millions. Biggest and Best Eaitter Catalog sent
fnee, illustrating Easter Cards and Booklets at Ba-gain Prices. Send your orders
to us; we are specialists in Beae—t cards and give bizgeet value for your
money. ELLIS ART CO., DEPT. 366, 638 LAWNDALE AVE., CHICAGO.
jppsrMsiis ISiie
fcikvV—-jC '.imp, if 3 T OU
fyZfy" use TRAGIC FISM LFEE. Best fish bait
evei discovered. Write to-day and get a
WSP' box to help introduce it. Ae-ents wanted.
. J. F. Gregory, Dept. 4, St. Dcuis, Ico
FALSE DOCTRINE.
The late Dr. Theodore Wolf, profes
sor of chemistry at Delaware College,
set officeholders a rare example of un
selfishness by having his fees as state
chemist greatly reduced on the ground
that they were exorbitant, says the
Philadelphia Record.
“Dr. Wolf,” said a Newark man,
“was a delightful lecturer. I often
dropped in to the college to hear him,
I’ll never forget one of his lectures on
quack medicines.
“He told us about a nearby patient
of his, a man who dosed himself with
about a half-peck of pills and two or
three gallons of quack medicines ev
ery week.
“There was nothing the matter with
the fool, but all this silly medicine
swilling, and Dr. Wolf told him so, but
it did no good.
“Then Dr. Wolf appealed to the
man’s wife to stop him, but she de
clared that it couldn’t be done. She
had quoted at him again and again,
she said, the verse in the lithurgy that
pointed out his sin, and
“ ‘But where,’ interrupted Dr. Wolf,
bewildered, ‘where does the lithurgy
say anything about quack medicine?’
“She was prompt with her reply.
“ ‘Prom all false doctoring ....
good Lord, deliver us.’ ”
K
Wash your flat-irons in soapsuds and
" dry thoroughly, if they at all trouble
you by dropping blaclf specks.
A WOMAN’S HEART.
Do you know you have asked for the
costliest thing ever made by the
Hand above —
A woman’s heart and a woman’s life,
and a woman’s wonderful love?
Do you know you have asked for this
priceless thing as a child might ask
for a toy,
Demanding what others have died to
win with the reckless dash of a boy?
You have written my lesson of duty
out; manlike you have questioned
me;
Now stand at the bar of my woman’s
soul until I shall question thee.
You require that your mutton shall al
ways be hot, your socks and your
shirts be whole;
I require that your heart be as true as
God’s stars, and as pure as his
heaven, your soul.
«
CHAT.
My Dear Boys and Girls:
Uncle Sam plays us some right bad
tricks sometimes, and that was what
be did with my last letter to you.
Just how he scampered off to some
hiding place with that letter I can't
imagine, but any way he did, and
since he is such a privileged charac
ter, there is nothing to do but accept
ii; but it made our department look
rather forsaken in the Valentine
number and at the same time put
quite a long wait between the first
letter of my trip and the second, but
since you did finally get it, I will be
gin where I left off and tell you some
thing about “the many points of in
to est and beauty in St. Augwtine.”
It is quite a blending of the ancient
and the modern, both as to the archi
tecture and the plan of the city, since
part of it is distinctly old Spanish
designing, while the other is modern.
It gives one the feeling of stepping
across the centuries in an hour’s auto
ride, for most of the little ci 4 can be
seen in that time. Going up from the
depot, with the palms nodding to us
on either side, we passed Flagler’s
beautiful deserted home, the property
of the poor, unfortunate wife, who
now makes her home in the State
sanatorium for the insane. Then that
imposing memorial church and
mausoleum built for his daughter;
and as one is given the history of it
all, the great truth is borne in upon
us that money can neither buy nor
hold happiness. It may cover up the
heartache from the eye of the cu
rious with the highest art of which
man is capable, but the wound, the
unsatisfied longing of the heart, is
still there, and the multi-millionaire
must suffer as much and ofttimes far
more than the humble owner of a
tiny cottage and a small income. Just
a little farther on we came to the
Ponce de Leon, and on the opposite
side of the street the Alkazar. Words
fail me in attempting a description of
these picturesque piles of brick and
mortar, these wonderful conceptions
of man carried out in such extrava
gant beauty by the use again of Flag
ler’s money. The Ponce de Leon, of
course, is the more imposing, being
built after the model of some palace
of the Old Country, with its court
fountains and hand-carved wooden
statuary —nothing is left out, it seems,
that the mind could possibly suggest.
Yet the Alkazar is a beauty, and its
central fountain and ”ny rustic
bridge over the miniate, e lake, to
gether with the vine-covered arches
and profusion of tropical plants,
The Golden Age for February 24, 1910.
make one stand spell-bound, en
tranced by the picture wrought out
before them.
From the wondering over all this
magnificent grandeur, think of going
to a little cabin built three hundred
years ago by the Indians, out of that
strange formation of shell and sand
into rock called cognina. It is one
room, with stairway going up from
the back side into another room up
stairs, and the is hewn out of
mahogany with an old-time broad
axe. There is also a hand-made ma
hogany desk, which belonged to
Turnbull. A sofa, also hand-made and
over three hundred years old. There
is a fine collection of ancient curios
too numerous to give in full, hut one
of the strangest of them is a chair
made out of the natural jaw-bones of
a whale, and, regardless of its grew
someness, is a very comfortable rest
ing place.
From here we went to one of the
prettiest orange groves of Florida,
heavily laden with the golden fruit.
The road leading to the grove for
about seventy-five yards is guarded
on either side by immense moss-cov
cred trees, whose branches intertwine
overhead, forming a perfect arch, and,
as the softened light filters through,
you do not wonder that this is known
as “Lovers’ Lane.”
The old city gate and weird war
breathing Fort Marion were the next
pl-cts on the list, and it was impossi
ble to keep down a strong creepy
It e'.ing as we were piloted through
tfce different departments and into the
blackness of the inner dungeon, and
were told of the skeletons found
there only a few years ago, closed in
and chained to the wall, and then
were carried to Oceola’s cell and were
shown the steps dug out with his
hands, by which he climbed to the
grating above the door, where, for
hours each day, he sat on the ledge
formed by the massive wall and
watched those within the fort. Just
here, at the foot of the stairway that
leads to the top of the fort wall, we
were shown the tiny imprint of a baby
Indian’s foot, that was left in the ce
ment with which the stairway was
being repaired while the Indians ivere
imprisoned there.
A visit to Anastasia Island, the
light-house, wireless telegraph station
and that beautiful snowdrift-looking
beach finished the more important
things of St. Augustine, with the ex
ception of the little, narrow streets,
especially Treasury and Charlotte,
over which the Spanish porticos hang
so close together that the occupants
need only sit out each on her own to
visit with her neighbor.
The pretty little park, in the center
of which are the Spanish and Ameri
can monuments and old slave traders'
auctioning pavilion, forms the con
necting link between the old and the
modern St. Augustine. All of which
is worth a trip to Florida just to see
them. But this letter is too long
already, so I will tell you more next
week. LITTLE MOTHER.
Tetterine Cures Itching Piles Quickly.
"One application of Tetterine cured me
of a case of Itching Piles I had for five
years.
Baynard Benton, Walterboro, S. C.
Tetterine cures Eczema, Tetter,
Ground Itch, Ring Worm, Infan.s’ Sore
Head, Pimples, Itching Piles. Rough,
Scaly Patches on the Pace, Old Itching
Sores. Dandruff. Cankered Scalp, Corns.
Chilblains and every form of Scalp and
Skin Disease. Tetterine 50c; Tetterine
Snap 25e. At druggists, or by mail direct
from Tbe RlwpP’lpe Co., savannah, Ga*
The Beauty
Os Firm Flesh
Lies In The Power Of„Rieh Blood To
Keep It Ever Clear And Clean.
Stuart’s Calcium Wafers Free.
The secret of firm, strong, supple
flesh is—good, rich, constant flowing,
blood. When hollow cheeks appear
and hidden pigments make the eyes
look like burnt holes in a blanket, the
blood is sick and out of tune.
The effect of impure and pure blood is
seen at once on the face.
Impurities fill it with poisons, the
flesh harbors these poisons, and the
lungs can not eliminate them as they
should.
It needs a purifier. Stuart’s Cal
cium Wafers give to the blood
through the same channels as food all
the strength and stimulus necessary
to remove the impurities and to make
rich corpuscles which will feed the
body or fight its enemies.
Time was when poor blood purifiers
had to be used, such as herbs and
roots powdered 1 ; minerals, etc., but
thanks to latter day achievement the
Stuart process gives to the system
the full rich strength of Calcium Sul
phide, the greatest blood purifier
known to science.
These little powerful wafers are
prepared by one of the most noted ex
pert pharmaceutical chemists in the
world and so far as science is concern
ed no expense has been spared to
make them perfect.
They contain Quassia, Golden Seal
and Eucalyptus, each a most powerful
aid to the blood of man.
Thousands of people use these wa
fers with religious zeal, and their tes
timonial evidence is an unfailing
source of interest to one who reads it.
Melancholy marks every suffering
woman, yet one should be armed with
this knowledge and make up one’s
mind to try Stuart’s Calcium Wafers
at once. Every druggist carries them.
Price 50c, or send us your name and
we will send you a trial package by
mail free. Address F. A. Stuart Co.,
175 Stuart Bldg., Marshall, Mich.
FINE POSTJCARDS FREE
A Big Package Sent to All Our
Perders Who Write at Once.
To any reader of this paper who writes
immediately and incloses 10 cents, we
will mail a set of ten most beautiful post
''•aids you ever saw. Ten very finest
Floral, Easter and Motto cards, all diff
erent, in exquisite colors, silk finish,
beautifully gold embossed, etc., for only
10 cents. Thirty cards, all different 25
cents. With each order we include our
plan for getting a beautiful Post Card
Album and 40 choice cards free. Ad
dress: The Art Post Card Club, 703
Jackson St., Topeka, Kan.
"THE HOTEL WITH THE LOCATION’*
<3elfc>ers JEuropean Motel
ATLANTA, GA.
STEAM HEAT IN EVERY ROOM
Cor. Broad and Marietta Streets,
Rates: 75c, sl, $1.50.
3940 Bell 2469 Atlanta