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12
The Home Circle for Our Young People
NINE CENTS
a Quart Is the cost of Ice
Cream made lrom
Jell-0
j Ice Cream [
| Powder [
You cannot make Ice Cream at that
price by any other method, and you
cannot buy it for t hree times nine cents.
To make le ■ Oieara from Jell-0 Ice :
Cream Powd r, you simply dissolve
the powder in milk and freeze it.
Everything is in the powder.
There are five kinds: Vanilla, Straw
berry, Lemon, Chocolate and Un
fiavored.
: Each 10 cents a package at grocers’. =
| Send for our beautiful Recipe Book. I
} The Genesee Pure Food Co., le Roy, N. Y. j
n-
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup
Has been used for over SIXTY-FIVE YEARS by
MILLIONS of MOTHERS fer their CHILDREN,
WHILE TEETHING, with PERFECT SUCCESS.
It SOOTHES the CHILD. SOFTENS the GUMS,
ALLAYS all PAIN. DISPELS WIND COLIC, and
is the best remedy for infantile diarrhoea. Sold
by Druggists in every part of the world. Be sure
to ask for “Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup.”
and take no other kind. Twenty-five cents a
bottle. AN OLD AND WELL-TRIED REMEDY.
• v This Is your
OPPORTUNITY
CARTOON, COMMERCIAL ART
COMIC, CARICATURE, FASH! N
\l c®jS|agoSsib AND magazine illusteat ng
tte MS TAUGHT BY MAIL. You can earn
from 820 to SIOO or more, per week,
m.*" *L J as illustrator or cartoonist. Our
U L J practical system of personal in
/adividual lessons will develop your
dggg* AEy/ talent. Anybody who can learn to
CT fPta write can learn to draw. Send for
M£flF ®§&T|||| free catalogue today, and learn
jpggjfogjU gg how the I. S. D. turns out prac
jbs. tical artists. Dept. 16,
INTERNATIONAL SCHOOL Os
DRAWING, Washington, D. C.
A FAMILY NECESSITY.
Very few families, If any, are entirely
free from occasional visits from some sort
of skin trouble. It is so easy for Willie
to get poison oak. and baby Is so often
troubled with chafes. A few applications
of Tetterine will relieve any kind of skin
eruption from the simplest abrasion to the
worst case of eczema, tetter, ringworm,
pimples, rashes, also itching piles. Price
60c at drug stores or by mail from Shup
trine Co., Savannah, Ga.
New Source of Income
for Ladles' Aid Societies and Similar
Church Organizations.
The task of raising CHURCH FUNDS is often
burdensome, principally on accountof a scarcity
of NEW PLANS that are UNDOUBTEDLY SUC
CESSFUL.
We will be glad to submit to you a PLAN that
we GUARANTEE SUCCESSFUL, very profitable
and continuous.
Every member of your Society will become
an '"\thusiastic worker.
V.ite us about it. Loarn how to make your
entire membership help to provide a steady in
come. A post card request will bring you full
Information.
CENTRAL MFG. COMPANY,
212 Front Street, lowa City, lowa
LOWER’S
PURE BLOOD REMEDY
Gives entire satisfaction in the treatment
•f Blood Poison, Paralysis, Catarrh Rheu
matism, Malaria, or any Blood or Skin dis
ease whatever.
Purely Vegetable. Can be taken at your
home. Write for booklet.
ROBERT H. LOWER,
P O. Box 252. Hot Springs, Ark.
Morphine whiskey
VIII milk and TOBACCO
HABITS cured without pain or restraint. No fee until
cured. Home or Sanitarium Treatment. Bookietfree,
CEDARCBOFT SANITARIUM, Bex 1001, Lebanon, Tcnn.
THE GOLDEN AGE FOR WEEK OF SEPT, 11
When I can in the sunshine bask
Os thy sweet smile ,and not a mask
Can hide thy face, prepared I ask.
Keep me through the shadows.
When friends prove fals and leave
my need
To crave for some new love to feed
My hungry heart, yet will 1 plead,,
Keep me through the shadows.
When Death’s dark presence heed
less, shall
Spread o’er my soul his ghastly pall,
Dear Girls:
All to ourselves we will have just a
little chat this morning about
Flattered Silly Girls.
“Every one else likes me; it is
only you who find fault with me,”
says Alice, half in tears of indig
nation, when her best friend, who
loves her and sees her faults, wishes
to have them corrected, because of
that very love. “If I w’ere so bad as
you make out, it is odd that others
should care for me,” she adds, as the
demonstration which is to prove you
horribly unjust when you counsel her
to more diligence and purpose in her
life, to less devotion to dress and less
desire for universal admiration. She
is surrounded by flatterers who fool
her to the top of her bent, and she
cannot be persuaded that you, who
have known her from infancy, under
stand her a little more thoroughly,
perhaps, than those who a month ago
had not heard even her name; still
less can you make her believe that
the very things for which they flatter
her are those mos needing reform,
and that characteristic which they
laud as graces you are rights to de
precate as dangers. That languid
pose and lazy grace—'some
flatter her by the hour together for
the delightful refreshment of her
quietness as against the turbulent vi
vacity of Rosalee. But you know
that this languid pose, this lazy grace,
is the outcome of an indolence which
cannot meet the smallest difficulty
nor overcome the least obstacle, nor
exert itself so far as to perform the
most necessary duties. On the other
side of the room a knot of flatterers
gathers round Rosalee, and pass
es its time in extolling her spirit and
smartness, her energy and life; while
you ni the sorrowful recesses of your
consciousness, know that all this is
as purposeless and unsatisfactory as
Alice’s more confessed idleness,
and that neither lias any other object
in view than retain the flattery
which has become like the breath of
their nostrils to both, and without
which it seems to them that this
great and glorious gift of life is in
vain. Try to inspire them with nob
ler view’s, higher aims, truer bearing;
they will turn against you—the one
fretfully, the other angrily—and ask,
with incredulous disdain, how it is
that every one else in the world is
blind but you, and so blind as to mis
take black for white and good for
evil? They prefer their flatterers to
you, their friend. Alice nurses
her indolence, Rosalee is satisfied
Conducted by MRS. G. B. LINDSEY
A PRAYER
By RICHARD A, BROYLES.
From out the depths, hear Thou my
call,
Keep me through the shadows.
O Lord, I know in life’s strange fray
These changing moods ,this haunting
flay
Os man’s deceit, so let me pray,
Keep me through the shadows.
So much to bear, so much to bear,
A wearied heart, a deep despair,
O God, my God, hear this my prayer,
Keep me through the shadows.
CHAT
with her shallowness, w’hile the w T orld
about- them extols the grace of the
one and the vivacity of the other, and
w’hispers to them cautiously that you
are jealous of their social success
and annoyed because no one praises
you.
GUARD THE CHILD
The moving picture show has come
to stay with us, it seems, and it is
a most delightful entertainment for
all those who care to enjoy it. There
are also great possibilities in the
moving pictures in an educative way
for children. But there are grave
dangers in them, too, that affect the
morals and health of a child. If only
pictures of a legitimate nature w r ere
allow r ed to be exhibited the moral aid
religious character of the child would
show r great improvement. Each town
has the peculiar power or authority
to pass laws of its own as a prevent
ive measure to suppress objectionable
pictures that would be likely to hurt
an impassion, able mind and so cause
lasting harm. Let the public guard
the morals of the children and there
will be fewer criminals.
In a recent school composition
on motion pictures, a little boy
in the fifth grade said that to
see the Indians fighting so hard
and killing men made him so sick
that he had a headache. Another boy
said that seeing so many pictues of
w’ar —Ind’’ans, funny pictures, etc.,
had made his brother “a little out of
sense and spoiled him.” Still an
other boy said, “You see men robbing
houses, and you learn to rob houses
and people.” And another boy said
that he liked war and murder and
burglary pictures best. One little boy
in the sixth grade said, “The moving
pictures make me decide that I am
going to join the army. It makes you
feel great to think that you once
served for your old, old country.” One
fifth grade sentimental girl says that
the pictures she likes best are the
love scenes, where the girl runs away
without her parents knowing about it,
and when they find her. A third
grade girl says she likes to see beau
tiful vaudeville and a lady smoking.
And the average show abounds in
this class of pictures and they are
sure to work harm to a sensitive,
nervous temperament and so make
lasting impressions that hurt the
child. On the other hard, pictures of
religious, historical or geographical
scenes would eliminate this danger
and have the desired influence on
the pliant mind of the child, and make
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LET ME CURE YOU 1701717
OF RHEUMATISM FIVLL
I took my own medicine. It permanently
euled nr* rheumatism after I bad suffered
tortures .or thirty-six 3 ears. I spent S2O.
000 before I discovered the remedy that
cured me, but I’ll give you the benefit of
my experience for nothing.
If you suffer from rheumatism let me
send you a package of my remedy abso
lutely free. Don't send any money. 1
want to give it to you. I want you to see
for yourself what it will do. The picture
shows how I suffered. Maybe you are suf
fering the sanu way. Don’t! You don’t
need to. I’ve got the remedy that will
cure you and it’s yours for the asking.
Write me today. S. H. Delano, Dept. s#l.
Delano Bldg., Syracuse, New York, and
I'll send you a free package the very day
I get your letter.
Gallstones
Stop colic, pains, gas. End Stomach CDEE
Misery. Send lor 56-page Liver Gallß'iok IHEC
Oallstooe Remedy Co., Dept. 466, 219 S. Dearbtrn St., Chicago
HfHT fNO CUReA +
ply Lno pay/ H
r^CHILL^V
I T °N IC "
Malaria
In All Its Forms
and for the most obstinate cases of
chills. Wards off fevers and liver
troubles by keeping the system toned
up and vitalized. Oldest and best
General Tonic
for family use. Contains no arsenic H
R or opiates. Pleasant to take. Harmr M
tL less for children. Sold and guar- ML
& anteed by your druggist.
Arthur Peter & Company, Mjpm
TO BE A S LUSE
We train you AT HOME, furnish uniform and
tssist you to 1 ositions. Very easy terms. Write
gTv djior free trial le.-,son and book containing state
uents from women we have successfully trained.
L IXational School of Jilining, 229 Luke St., Elmira, >i. Y
- BOOKKEEPING
fcr Business,Phonography
TYPEWRITING and
I trfLWrS* TELEGRAPHY
WILBUR OWTH BUSINESS COLLEGE
»«*• and SurcMSor.CoßHercial College Ky. EniYerUty
It*i President has yearn of experience in mercantile
*nd banking business, also 32 years educßting 10.00(1
young men and women for snore**. JKttf'Enter now.
Address WILBUR B. SHITIf, Lexlngion, Ky.