The Douglas enterprise. (Douglas, Ga.) 1905-current, September 23, 1916, Image 9

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It’s Foolish to Suffer You may be brave enough to stand bnckache, or headache, or dizziness. But if, in addition, ur ination is disordered, look out! If you don’t try to fix your sick kidneys, you may fall Into the clutches of kidney trouble before | you know it. But if you live more carefully and help your kidneys with Doan’s Kidney Pills, you can stop the pains you have and avoid futuro danger as well. A Georgia Case fj. M. Pitts, 218 East Ave., Cedartown, Ga., says: “Kid y com plaint came on me suddenly and before X realized it, I was In bad shape. My whole body swelled and I was wea' and ex hausted. I had awful dizzy spells and head aches and really thought I would be better oft dead. Doan’s Kidney Pills cured me and I feel that I owe my life to them.’’ Cat Doan’s at Any Store. 50c a Bos DOAN’S FOSTER-MIL&URN CO., BUFFALO. N. Y. -CONSUMPTION- Did you know that hundreds of sufferers with consumption, asthma and thelr kindred troubles are getting relief b/ using Lung- Vita? Are YOl: using it? If not, you are depriving YOURBKLF of an aid that will multiply your chances for health. Lung- Vita is not an experiment, it has proven its worth. BRONCHIAL ASTHMA Mrs. Minnie Baker, 1317 Grundy Bt., Nash ville. Tenn. says: “1 can truthfully say Lung-Vita cured me of my asthma after twenty years of suffering.” Don’t neglect this help, get a bottle TODAY. Your drug fist, or ir he hasn’t it by mail, prepaid. 'ifteen-day treatment 11.00; thirty-day treatment $1.76. NASUVILLB MBDICINB 00., Dept. B, Nashville, Tenn. -TAKE LUNG-VITA - PREVENTION better than cure. Tutt a Pills if taken In time are not only a remedy for, but will prevent SICK HEADACHE, bUiouiness, constipation and kindred diseases. f utt’s Pills Powerful Combination. Tim was a protege of Mr. Blank, a well-known lawyer. He was often in trouble, but by personal influence with the courts Mr. Blan£ managed to have him let down easy, so it became a matter of talk that he did not suffer greatly in being arrested. “How is it, Tim,” someone asked one day, “that you are arrested so often, but never go to jail nor pay any fines?” “It’s just this way,” Tim replied. “I have Mr. Blank for my lawyer, and what he doesn’t know about law I tells him.” The world’s turpentine output ex ceeds 25,000,000 gallons annually, the United States being the greatest pro ducing nation. It is natural that those summer furs should he popular with girls who have knuckles on their necks. A Woman’# . A Problem How to Feel Well During Middle Life Told by Three Women Who Learned from Experience. The Change of Life is a most critical period of a woman’s existence, and neglect of health at this time invites disease and pain. Women everywhere should remember that there is no other remedy known to medicine that will so successfully carry women through this trying period as Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, made from native roots and herbs. Read these letters: ■ Philadelphia, Pa.—“l started the Change of Life five years ago. I always had a headache and back ache with bearing down pains and I would have heat flashes very bad at times with dizzy spells and nervous feelings. After taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound I feel like a new person and am in better health and no more troubled with the aches and pains I had before I took your won derful remedy. I recommend it to my friends for I cannot praise it enough.”—Mrs. Margaret Grass man, 759 N. Ringgold St., Philadelphia, Pa. Beverly, Mass. —“I took Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, for nervousness and dyspepsia, when I was going through the Change of Life. I found it very helpful and I ave always spoken of it to other women who suffer as I did anc have had them try it and they also have received | , ||||[il|||||||fli| good results from" it.” — Mrs. George A. Dunbar, 1 17 Roundy St., Beverly, Mass. Erie, Pa.—“l was in poor health when the f|®u%V %% < Change of Life started with me and I took Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, or I think I -W'sfjj should not have got over it as easy as I did. Even Im|J] now if I do not feel good I take the Compound and it restores me in a short time..* I will praise your remedies to every woman for it may help ‘ themes has E. Eisslino, 931 East n . * — * No other medicine has been so successful in relieving woman’s suffering as has Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. WomeAnay receive free and helpful advice by writing the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn. Mass. Such letters are received and answered by women only and held in strict confidence. Q-BAN DARKENS GRAY HAIR Gray, streaked, prematurely gray or faded hair quickly restored to original dark shade by shampooing hair and scalp a few times with Q-Ban Hair Color Restorer. No dye—perfectly harmless. Q-Ban acts on roots —revives color glands—makes hair healthy, grad ually changing all your gray hair to an even natural dark shade, making entire head of hair clean, fluffy, abundant without a trace of gray showing. 50c a big bottle by parcel post. (Sold by most druggists.) Address Q-Ban, Mem phis, Tenn. Adv. Fitted for the Game. “He pitches his voice too high.” “Yet you must admit he has a catch in It.” COVETED BY ALL but possessed by few —a beautiful bead of hair. If yours is streaked with gray, or is harsh and stiff, you cau re store it to its former beauty and bis ter by using “La Creole” Hair Dress ing. Price |I.OO. —Adv. Soon Diagnosed. “What is auto-hypnotism?” “It is what makes fool people walk in front of ’em.” To Dnve Out Malaria And Build Up The System Take the Old Standard GROVE’S TASTELESS chill TONIC. You know what you are taking, as the formula is printed on every label, showing it is Quinine and Iron in a tasteless form. The Quinine drives out malaria, the Iron builds up the system. 50 cents. If you think there is a demand for labor at high rates, go out and seek a job. Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for infantß and children,%nd see that it In Use for Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castoria For years an almost unsalable prod uct, New England hemp, has leaped into popularity and is now a great industry. SOAP IS STRONGLY ALKALINE and constant use will burn out the scalp. Cleanse the scalp by shampoo ing with “La Creole” Hair Dressing, and darken, in the natural way, those ugly, grizzly hairs. Price. SI.OO. —Adv. Difficult Person. “Bliggins is the sort of man who gets angry if you don’t agree with him.” "Yes. And he’s wrong so often that if you do he hasn’t any respect for you.” Sties, Granulated Eyelids, Sore and Inflamed Eyes healed promptly by the use of ROMAN EYE BALSAM. Adv. Sixty miles of thread woven from the fiber of a species of Italian nettle weighs only two and a half pounds. ■4 Germany’s normal meat supply is CO per cent pork. TRAINING TODArS MSM GIRLS When to Encourage and When to Neglect the Child. “CUNNING” AGE IS PERILOUS Little One Then Is Apt to Receive Too Much Attention, and Not Enough Later, When It Is Needed. By SIDONIE M. GRUENBERG. Every child is sometimes in need af encouragement, and every child can profit from wholesome neglect. But we are very likely to apply our neg lect when sympathetic attention is most needed, uud we are just as like ly to bestow admiration at the very moment whefi - calmly ignoring a child would do him the most good. A new baby is always interesting, and usually receives attention out of all proportion to his needs, and also out of all proportion to his special merits. Still, he may escape without receiving any real injury from the eyes and hands of doting friends and relatives. But when the child gets to the "cunning” age it is different, espe cially if he happens to be one of the “irresistible” kind. For then the child must receive all kinds of sense stimu lations and opportunity to exercise his muscles. But there is no special need for him to become conscious of his own charms. Indeed the greatest charm of childhood, its utter uncon sciousness, too quickly loses its bloom just because we find the cunning tricks and the awkward speech so irresisti ble. A mother of three was comparing notes with a mother of four. The first observed that the youngest had reached the point where she would call mother and nurse and the older children to witness everything she was doing. At first this was looked upon as just a little cunning trick, then it became a nuisance. Finally the mother began to have misgivings’. Perhaps, she had thought, the child is getting too much notice. What had happened was that the child, having derived much satis faction from the approving smiles and admiring remarks of the elders, had acquired the habit of depending upon these manifestations of affectionate re gard for her own comfort and happi ness. The mother feared that perhaps the child was becoming too conceited. The other mother had had a similar experience, but she thought that it was only the youngest child that passed through this stage. The young est receives attention from the adults, as did the older children, but he gets the same kind of attention from the older sisters and brothers. If the youngest child In the family is spoiled more frequently than any of the others, it is probably because of the overstimulation of his self-regard no less than because of the various in dulgences showered upon him by the other members of the household. He suffers for the want of an opportunity to work out some of his own problems in his own way. When the child gets to be in the neighborhood of nine or ten years, when all the eunningness of childhood has worn off and before the new inter ests of adolescence have made their J'iCA fr r '’•& p Tearing Bessie’s Book Was Readily Forgiven Because Jeanie Was So Young and Did Not Understand. appearance, he is likely to be least at tractive. It is now that he reflects most completely the manners of the elders, and it lias been observed that these reflections are not always of a most agreeable kind. One can, there fore, understand that people are likely to overlook the girl and boy at this period. If they are the older children in the family the younger ones take all of our attention. And if at this age they are the youngest the parents are likely to have grown somewhat weary and the novelty has worn off. Thus it happens that at the very time when the young child can find enough to keep him busy exploring thd qualities of the objects and materials he finds about him we intrude upon his mind with irrelevant praise of his awkward performances in a manner that draws his attention from the out side world to his own feelings, his own likes und dislikes, his own moods. Hut later in life, when the child comes to he concerned with questions of mine and thine, when he is wondering about relations between rnan und the outside world, when he longs for the power to give expression to his uneasy stirrings, we leave him to his own resources, we let him flounder about as best he can, we allow him to take his dfsiiiu sionments from the hands of unkind strangers and unkind accident. When sympathy and encouragement are most needed the supply is apparently ex hausted. The demand that the youngest makes upon the other children must be con sidered chiefly from its effect upon the youngest. Bessie happened to he “sensible"' and accommodating as a child, so that , there was no difficulty whatever in getting her to make con cessions to the younger Jennie. Tear ing Bessie’s book was readily forgiven, because Jeunie was so young and did not understand. Bessie would take a dose of bitter medicine just to encour age Jennie. Bessie stayed home from the picnic or the party because Jeauie would cry because left behind. Bessie divided her apple and her cake because Jeanie wanted more after consuming her own. If Bessie suffered from this excess of sacrifice and “considerateness" it was probably in the direction of becom ing mqre and more indifferent to the things that a normal child should care about. But the injury to Jeanie was the cultivation of the attitude that took for granted the satisfaction of every desire and every whim. To have al lowed Jeanie to cry after Bessie went We Leave Him to His Own Re sources; We Let Him Flounder Around as Best He Can! to her party, to have reprimanded her for injuring Bessie’s property, to have left her without more cake after her own was eaten, would have helped her more than the indulgences she re ceived. A household consisting of adults and children of various ages is a complex establishment to manage, and it takes thought and'tact and insight to allot to each what is his due. And in con sidering what is due to children, we must not overlook their share of edu cation —the education which comes through neglect and disappointment, as well as that which comes through sympathy and encouragement. MISSOURI MOTTO WORLDWIDE All Persons Want to Be Shown, Thus Proving Themselves Human Beings. The Connecticut youth who bit into a golf ball displayed a thoroughly hu man curiosity. He wished to prove for himself whether what he had heard about the deadliness of the core was true. From the time manufacturers began making the present style of ball they have warned people against its danger. A boy begins his experiments when against the admonitions of his parents he burns his Augers on a hot plate. He continues them when he takes his first watch to pieces to see how the wheels go round. A Californian, who declared that snake venom could not possibly be fatal to a man, recently permitted himself to be bitten by a newly discovered serpent scientists de clared was deadly. He succeeded in proving that the snake expert was right. Many folks have always mis trusted sea stories about the man-eat ing proclivities of the shark. Before another year has passed there will be those who will insist on more proof than has just been furnished on the Jersey coast. The motto of Missouri is the motto not of a state, but of humanity. All want to be shown. Men undertake ad ventures in political, social and busi ness life, risk their lives in scientific experiments in unknown, dangerous lands because they believe that they can succeed where others have failed. If they did otherwise they would not be human.—New York Sun. Japanese Politeness. Mr. C. E. Donohoue, the brilliant war correspondent, who succeeded In wiring the fullest and quickest de scription of the Portugal revolution by hiring a yacht and escaping from Lisbon to Vigo, was kept in Tokyo recently much longer than he wanted. He \yas making a survey of the East, intending to reach the Russian front via Serbia, and had trouble in making the difficult journey. He tells this story: ‘‘A little Japanese policeman who had been watching me glanced fur tively at a conversation handbook, and then crossed and spoke in Eng lish “ ‘How do you do,” he said in care ful tones, ‘sir or madame, as the case may be?’ ” Why Orchestras “Tune-Up." “Why,” asked a visitor to the thea ter the other day, ‘‘do members of the orchestra always worry people i»osses sing nerves, like myself, by tuning up their instruments?” It is all a matter of thermometer, according to a musi cian. The temperature in different parts of the building is differeut and the instruments have to be tuned in tiie temperature of the place in which they are going to he played. As a rule, the air in a theater becomes warmer as the performance progresses and so the instruments have to be tuned sev eral times. W. L. DOUGLAS “THE SHOE THAT HOLDS ITS SHAPE” $3.00 $3.50 $4.00 $4.50 & $5.00 acTd vv<?nhen Save Money by Wearing W. L. Douglas shoes. For sale by over9ooo shoe dealers. Jf- fL The Best Known Shoes in the World. A gSjk W. L. Douglas name and the retail price is stamped on the bot- *»., fcfjSk tom of all shoes at the factory. The value is guaranteed and AKPEif ™ the wearer protected against high prices for inferior shoes. The Aal retail prices are the same everywhere. They cost no more in San SSataWgaL AjgSg Francisco than they do in New York. They are always worth the ' | ’he quality of W. L. Douglas product is guaranteed by more * than 40 years experience in making fine shoes. The smart 1 styles are the leaders ifi the Fashion Centres of America. / vi They are made in a weli-eauipped factory at Brockton, Mass., / fc;, '/ by the highest paid, skilled shoemakers, under the direction and .Ju / supervision of experienced men, all working with an honest j -Ly of-' determination to make the best shoes for the price that money Ask your shoe denier for W. 1,. Douglas shoes. If he can- l££~ * not supply yon with the kind you want, take no other /I —--V3FI make. Write for Interesting booklet explaining liow to BEWARE or mf j get shoes of the highest standard of quality for the price, pSSy SUBSTITUTES Wy by return mail, postage free. »■ W HH » c L °°K FOR W. L. Douglas LTin th.W~S name and the retad pnee $g QQ $ g 6Q 4 52 00 stamped on the bottom. W. Shoe Co.. Brockton. Mass. Her Failing. First Modern Girl —I can’t quite make up my mind about Dollie. There’s something queer about her. Second Modern Girl—l’ll tell you what it is—she has an effeminate streak. —Life. Dr. Peery’s “DEAD SHOT” is an effective medicine for Worms or Tapeworm lu adults or children. One dose is sufficient and no supplemental purge necessary Adv. Biblical Geography. A Chicago kiddie recently “stumped” his mother with this query: “What’s the Miz?” “The Miz. dear? I’m sure I don’t know. Where did you hear about it?” “At Sunday school. The superin tendent said God made heaven and eartli an’ all that in the Miz!” THIS 18 THE AGE OF YOUTH. You will look ten years younger if you darken your ugly, grizzly gray hairs by using “La Creole* Hair Dressing. —Adv Putting Out Gasoline Fire. Experiments by the British Fire Pre vention committee show that ttie best way to put out a small gasoline Are is to spread over the burning liquid a mixture of ten pounds of bicarbonate of soda and twelve pounds of common sawdust free from chips and shavings. Wright’s Indian Vegetable Pills have stood the test of time. Test them yonrself now. Send for sample to 372 Pearl street, N. Y.—Adv. He Would. “I’m thinking seriously of starting a moving picture theater.” “Well, there’s good money in that business.” “It isn’t the money I’m after. But I would like to see m.v wife and chil dren once in a while.” TO hold “its place in the sun,” is the avowed purpose of a great nation’s conflict. To hold “its place in the sun,” is the object of every business in the great fight for industrial and commercial supremacy. To be able to hold “its place in the sun," is the supreme test of an asphalt roof. It is the sun, not rain or snow, that plays havoc with a roof. If it can resist the drying out process of the sun beating down upon it, day after day, the rain or snow will not affect it except to wash it clean and keep it sanitary. Certain-teed Roofing takes “its place in the sun” and holds it longer than other similar roofing, because it is made of the very best quality roofing felt, thoroughly saturated with the correct blend of soft asphalts, and coated with a blend of harder asphalts. This outer coating keeps the inner saturation soft, and prevents the drying out process so destructive to the ordinary roof. The blend of asphalts used by “The General” is the result of long experience. It produces a roofing more pliable than those which have less saturation, and which are, therefore, harder and drier. At each <?f the General’s big mills, expert chemists are constantly employed to refine, test and blend the asphalts used; also to experi ment for possible improvements. Their constant endeavor is to make the best roofing still better. The quality of CERTAIN-TEED is such that it is guaranteed for 5, 10 or IS years, according to thickness (1, 2or 3 ply). Experience proves that it lasts longer. Behind this guarantee is the responsibility of the world’s largest manufac turer of roofings and building papers. General Roofing Manufacturing Company World’s Largest Manufacturer of Roofings and Building Papers New York City Cbiceco Philadelphia St Looia Bo.ton Cleveland Pittsburgh Detroit San Francisco Los Angeles Milwaukee Cincinnati New Orlaani Minneapolis Seattle Kansas City Indianapolis Atlanta Richmond Des Moines Houston Duluth London Sydney Copyrighted 1918, General Hoofing Manufacturing Co. Ask for and Get Skinners THE HIGHEST QUALITY SPAGHETTI 36 Page Recipe Book Free SKINNER MFG.CO. OMAHA. U.SA LARGEST MACARONI FACTORY IN AMERICA THE HIGH QUALITY SEWINI MACHINE NEWigOME NOT SOLD UNDER ANY OTHER NAME Write for free booklet "Points to be considered before purchasing a Sewing Machine." Learn the facts. THE NEW HOME SEWING MACHINE CO..ORANGE,MASS. PflU F» R [S' STANDARD of EXCELLENCE 'SOUTHERN MADC CHATTANOOGA BAKERY CHATTANOOGA, TENN. fißffilfillan DITCMKnds Hats, Mire, Bun. nuuanonnuid w«outdoor*.it*and&. W: N. U., ATLANTA, NO 38-1018. Prepared. Church —What has become of the members of your church choir? Gotham —Enlisted and gone to the front. “Well, they know how to fight, all right.” Chilly, in Fact. Singleton—Didn’t you find it pretty hot last night out your way? Wedleigh—No! I arrived home lato and got a very cool reception. The General makes one third of Ameri ca’s supply of as phalt roll roofing. H is facilities are unequal ed, and he is able to produce the highest quality roofing at the lowest manufactur ing cost. CERTAIN-TEED is made in rolls; also in slate covered shin crles.Thereisatypeof CERTAIN-TEED for every kind of building, with flat or pitched roofs, from the largest sky-scrap er to the smallest residence or out building. CERTAIN -TEED Is sold by responsible dealers all over tbe world, at reasonable prices. Investigate ft before you decide ob any type of root.