Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, April 16, 1913, Image 7

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ELLA WHEELER WILCOX in this letter—the second of the series advises a schoolgirl about her studies and her attitude to her teachers. By ELLA WHEELER WILCOX. Beatrice Fairfax Says Women Need Diversion as Much as Men Do, and Gives Advice on HOW TO KEEP YOUR WIFE CONTENTED MANY HUSBANDS MAKE THIS SAD MISTAKE: r-pU a Schoolgirl: You tell me you hate Latin and as!; me if 1 think you should spend so much time on a dead lan guage when there is not time enough for all the things you long to study. My ideas of education for girls do not coincide with that of many pco- Had I a daughter ! should begin to make her a linguist as soon as -he could talk; and her schools would he selected for that purpose in the main. It well can is all very to say we travel the world over with only the English language in our brains and on our tongue’s end; but I assure you. my dear girl, travel is intensified in pleasure and profit ten per cent by every lan guage we know. Besides this, fa miliarity with other languages m gives a woman qT ; > v •' i numberless op- portunities for enjoyment, for usefulness and for shining as a planet a m o n g stars. If you are look ing forward to a social c a reer, nothing can be more valuable to you than ac quaintance with languages; and if you are expecting to be self-support ing you will find a linguist who reads and writes two languages besides English has many more desirable i hances for gaining a good salary than one who knows only English. Therefore, I would advise you to apply yourself to your Latin earnest ly : and then it will be less of a labor to acquire the French, Spanish. Ital ian and German - one or all of them. But unless you mean to study some language I see no benefit in your giv ing time to Latin. R< thorough in English and study its niceties. Do not be stilted or pedantic, but no matter what sort of slang and (oarseness your associates may in dulge in and think it “smart,” in the Ymerican way of applying that word, avoid all loose and sloppy language, as you would avoid soiled clothing. The rarity of good English (or good American) among our high school and college graduates is shocking and humiliating to one who takes pride in being an American. The rarity of well placed voices is equally shocking and ear-bruising. An important part of your educa tion should bo in learning how to use your vocal organs in speaking. It ^s being taught by specialists today; and you should consider it an imperative duty to begin now in this course. Find time Saturday, each week, if you have no other free hour, and get the rudiments of voice placing, be fore you form bad habits of speak ing with a nasal, or a throaty, or a heady voice. An agreeable speaking voice is one of the greatest charms you can cul tivate. In your association with other girls you would feel deeply hurt if any i one accused you of being common in your looks or actions. T h e n j avoid the com- \ inonest qualities possible in a hu- man being—jeal ousies and gos sip. Tea cl} yourself | to praise freely \ and criticise rare- : ly; and when you have a criticism to make, make it only to one whom you feel can be helped by your words to over come a fault —never behind the back of the offender. Learn to sympa thize with your schoolmates i n their trials, but also learn what is harder still: to rejoice with them when they sur- ichievements. or win which you may be ELLA WHEELER WILCOX. pass you in any any prizes for seeking. Root out enVy and jealousy from your nature, and know in so doing you will make yourself more lovable and more " admired than by attaining the highest school honors. Character building is a greater work than brain building. Be ready to share your best friends with others, and do not be one of those exacting and unreasonable girls who wants no one to love or be loved by her friends but herself. In every community and school such types are common, and it always savors of pettiness and lack of broad and noble qualities. Just as each flower in the garden has its place, so each friend and acquaintance has a place; and no one should crowd another. Be helpful wherever you can. and he appreciative of the hard work your teachers have done and are do ing to fill their positions. Teaching is one of the most trying and nerve taxing occupations, and if you show consideration, affection and courtesy to your teachers it helps to lessen their troubles and gives zest to their labors. Even as a pupil, remember, you have something to give as well as something to receive. ] _Att e Bobbie’s By WILLIAM F. KIRK. Pa j — T HIS morning Pa had his breakfast erly, at the same time 1 always have my breakfast to go io school. The reason l*a had his break fast so erly was beekaus he didn't go to the banquet last nite which was gave by the Bowling Club of which Pa is a member, lie didnt go beekaus he sed he was going and Ma said he wasent. I cud see that Pa was kinda cross while he was reading his morning paper, bee kaus Pa never likes to get up erly. Pa, I sed to him, I wish you would read me sum of the spoarting news be fore I g<* to school. 1 don’t get a clianst to see any papers at school & you al ways take the paper away with you when you go t<> the off is. Reed me something about Billy Snifth and Al- perman, I sed to Pa, & see if there is anything about Bill Smith & his Atlanta Club, beekaus I want to see them win the pennant in the Southern Leeg. Please don't b-nther rue Bobbie, sed Pa. I am reading the market news and don’t want to be disturbed by any fool talk about baseball. I suppoas, Pa. sed, that all your mother & me will hear all summer is baseball, baseball. I nev- ver could see anything to that gaim Pa sed. You must have changed a hole lot since last season, Ma sed. wen the Crackers was at home you hardly ewer got home in time for anything but a (oald dinner. < *. 1 used to go oust in a while. Pa sed, but I have made up my mind that I am thru bothering about the Grate Nachinal Gaim. I sec that there is danger of moar trubbel in the Baleans sed Ma. that another of them eastern Princes has ran off with play In burlesque anything thare about crazy a goll that used in the United Stat Doesnt it how fast Brady is pitching this see son, f asked Pa? 1 loald you onst n< to bother me Pa CASTORS A For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Sears the Signature of 1 FULL OF SCABS Vhat could In- in«»r** pit Pul than the II lold of in tlijs letter* from A. It. Am. We havr been using »«« r ferine. It* he bast on earth for skin ailments. Mrs. 5. C. Hart *a* a sight to *ee. Her face was a mass of scabs. Tctterine has cured Cured by Tetterine retterine cures ecsema. ground* itch, rime rm and alt skin troubles. Its effect is gl B 50c at «lrueei»t8. or bv mair SHUPTRINE CO.. SAVANNAH. jA sed, now you hurry up & git vure breakfast finished and go to skule. If you ast me another question about base ball I am going to use the pam of my hand for a bat. Pa sed, and preetend that you are a baseball yureself. So I finished my breakfast & on the way to the skule hous I bought a pa per. I Ihot that if 1 got to skule erly, I cud git the prin-ciple to read me some hing about how the players was git ting along at the beginning of the seeson. The prin ciple was thare wen I got thare & i gaiv him the paper and ast him if he would plees reed me some news on the spoarting page. What do you want me to reed the spoarting page for. the prin-ciple ast me. I want to know if Brady’s wing is alright, I toald him. Brady’s what? said the prin ciple. His w ing, ! sed, his whip, I mean his arm. I am sure I am not in-ter- ested In the person you sped; of, sed the prin-ciple, and beesides I think it would look a lot better for a liddel boy like you to come to skule with his skule hooks under his arm than to walk in heer and show me a vul-gar spharting page. Thare was newer a grait man, the prin-ciple sed, that started erly in life reading spoarting pages. Do you sup poas. he sed to me, that George Wash ington would walk 12 miles to buy a newspaper with a spoarting paig In it? No, lie sed. wen he walked 12 miles for sumthing to read, it was always a law book or the work of some grate mas ter that he brought home with him. I am sur-prised and dls-sapoint-ed in you, Bobbie, he sed. give me that paper and go to your s£ut. Study yure jog- raphy lesson, lie sed, so you wont tell aggen to-day the way you did yesterday that Brazil was the capitol of Florida. So I went to my seet and studied my jografy until the rest of the skol- lers cairn, but I noticed that wile 1 was studing the prin ciple was all the time reeding the paper I had brot him & I was almost sure that it was the spoart ing page he was looking at. All of the kids made mis-takes in their lessons all the foorenoon. I gess thay was all thinking about baseball same as me, beekaus wen the teecher asked Reddy Blake who was the graitest liv ing Amarikan outside of Rusevelt Red dy' sed Billy Smith, and wen teecher asked the hoy next to him who was the graitest Living Amarikan he sed Otto Jordan. The teecher dident know what to think Sc the prin-ciple got auful meer and gave all of us a skoalding. He sed ho dident have any little hoys, hut if he did have he heaped thay would not grow up to he silly & go crazy over baseball. After skule was oaver some of us kids was going hoam & wo heard two men ouarling about baseball. We cud beer them a biock. Billy Smith is going to have another pennant winner this yeer, sed one of the men. You are crazy, plum crazy, sed the other man the (Trackers will he lucky if they finish in rle 1st divishun. I doar.t care to talk to a lunytick, sed the 1st man. Neetber do l, sed the other m&n. Good nite! Wen we got close to the 2 men we seen who they was. One <d the men was the prin-ciple of our skule. The other man was Fa. Don’t Tie Her Up at Home All the Time By BEATRICE FAIRFAX. A GOOD many husbands labor un der the idea that if they give theft* wives a good home and are generous in money matters they are doing a 1 that should be expected of them. "Woman's place,” a man argues-, is at home. She should be quite happy attending to her house and children; they should fill her life. As for me—I am a man of affairs—it is necessary that I ?ee life from all side?.*’ He expects his wife to be perfectly content in the narrow confines of the home circle. If she grows dull and unattractive he finds recreation in the society of some other woman. Too much of any one thing is bad for everybody, and too much home and babies is bad for even the most do mestic of women. It is very easy for a woman to get it into her head that the houre and children can not possibly get on with out her even for a day The Difference. Her husband, who should be the one to get her out of her rut. is too much absorbed by business, politics or out side pleasures to notice what a dull routine her life is. He is vaguely aware that she is not attractive as she used to be, but as long as his meals are good and he is comfortable he does not much care. He loves her, of course, but in a very prosaic, take-it-for-granted sort of wp„v. He would miss his comforts more than her companionship if she went out of his life. Sometimes he wishes discontentedly that she would be as gay and viva cious as young Mrs So and So, whom he met the other day. He does not realize that she is swamped with household cares and a growing family. It is absolutely necessary that the mother of a family should have relax ation. The father has* his business, with its varied interests and excite ments. He probably belongs to a club of some kind; lie has plenty to keep his mind alert and interested. But the mother sometimes for days does not get away from the house and children. Her husband comes hpmo, reads his paper and goes to bed. H*r life goes on day in and day out in the same old grind. What She Likes. How tired she gets of eating and in many cases cooking the dinners she orders day after day. How she would enjoy out to dinner once a week, dressed in her prettiest clothes and dining with a husband who paid her the little attentions he used to in the courting days! The relief of getting away from the house and even the beloved babies for a while would be great. A woman likes her husband to talk his business matters over with her. She likes to give advice, but that does not trouble her in the least so long as e listens gravely to her suggestions. If husbands could only appreciate No man would endure the monotony f a w oman’s life for a week. And yet she finds it dull. Their pet accusation is that she is “unwomanly” if she makes any effort outside the home. Well, Mr. Husband, the way to keep her happy and satisfied is to remem- V4* that she. as well as you. would like to see a little of the world. Take her out and give her a good time once in a w hile. Daysey Mayme And Her Folks Woman's place,” a man argues, “is at home.” “As for me,” he says, “I must see life.” Hunting a Husband By VIRGINIA TERHUNE VAN DE WATER. Naturalist—-Do you take any interest in stuffed birds? Gourmand—Only turkeys and chickens and clucks, and Things like that. * * * “What puzzles me,” said Uncle Snooks, as he looked up from a book he was consulting, “is this: If a man is standing on the side of a hill or moun tain. how is lie to settle in his mind whether it is on an acclivity or decliv ity? According to my dictionary here, the former is a 'slope up.’ and .he lat ter ‘a slope down.’ I’ve never yet seen a slope up that didn’t slope down.” * # * “Yes, ma'am.” said Harry, the out-o' work man. ”1 know I look like a strong man, but out of my fifty years of life I've spent more than sixteen years in bed.” “Why, you poor man!” replied the lady, sympathetically, handing him a copper. “What has been the trouble- paralysis?” “No, ma’am,” said Harry, “jest a reg’lar habit of Bleepin’ eight hours a day, ma’am." 0 * * The lesson’ in history was in prog ress. and in vain the teacher coaxed her class to answer. At last she bright ened up. She had reached the star pu pil of her litlie class. “Now. Tommy,” she said. "Mary fol lowed Edward the Sixth, and who fol lowed Mary?" Yes. Tommy knew that, and his an swer was swift. “Her little lamb, teacher.” he shouted, triumphantly. * # * The story is told that when M. Poin care. .he new- President of the French Republic, first entered politics one of his youthful political opponents taunted him with his youthfulness. “I may be young.” M. Poincare re plied. “out I promise you that some thing shall be done every day io wipe oui that disadvantage.” An Englishman who had been for a tour around the world was much an noyed by a report of his return which appeared in a local paper. This report ended. “His numerous friends are surprised that lm is unhanged.” He did not know that the offender v.as the compositor, who, in setting up the report, had omitted a letter “o,” thus substituting the word “unhanged” for "unchanged,” which the reporter had written. A particular old gentleman, pulling something out of bis soup that should not have been included among the o’her ingredients, thus addressed ids cook: “Josephine. I am much obliged f< r \ our thoughtfulness: but next lime kind ly mve it to me in a locket.” W HEN Beatrice Minor and Rob ert Maynard were seated in the pleasant living room, there was a moment of awkward silence, broken by Beatrice, who asked: “Have you been well since you left Pleasanton? I have heard of you occa sionally through Mrs. Robbins.” “Yes,” replied the man, “very well, and happier than T deserve to be.” lie stopped, blushing confusedly, then, within an effort, continued: “That leads me to my reason for be ing here this afternoon, Mrs. Minor. I owe you an apology. When I last saw you I was under the influence of liquor.” Beatrice felt her own face flush with I embarrassment, but she waited. | “I was unhappy,” the man hurried on. "There is no denying the fact that, although t had become engaged to a i dear girl, I was fascinated by you.” “Please! Mr. Maynard!” protested the 1 widow’, shocked. “Don’t stop me!” he continued. "I am sober now-, so let me eat the humble pie that is my portion, and that I must eat if 1 would be comfortable in my own mind. Yes—I was very much taken with you. You must know that you have a manner that attracts any man to whom you choose to be kind. And I was hon ored by being one of these for a while.” He Eats Humble Pie. "Surely,” objected Beatrice, “you do not mean to intimate that I fried to attract you, or that I tried tfo make you pay attention to me!” “On tlie contrary,” declared Robert Maynard, “the fact that at times you seemed to avoid me. piqued and irritated me. You know men always want that which is beyond their reach. So I made a fool of myself.” “By admiring me, you mean?” queried his companion. "You are hardly com plimentary." She smiled as she spoke, but there was a hint of acerbity In her tone, and the man wds conscious of It. “Ah.” he begged, “dear Mrs. Minor, don’t misunderstand me! And please bear me out! I want to make a clean breast of the matter. "I thought myself in love with you. I was lonely, and when you discouraged my attentions r was angry. Then I met Miss Damerel frequently. You know how lovely she is. I asked her to mar ry me: She accepted me. “Then she went away to the country and I was left without the charm of her presence, and suddenly I found my self caring a great deal about you. 1 saw that you were tired of me, that you doubted me, that you disapproved cf me. And one day when I was unhappy I took more liquor than I should have taken—and I called on you and said many things for which I now apologize. Will you pardon me?" Beatrice thought quickly, but there w-as no perceptible pause before she re plied: "Certainly, I pardon you. And I am more than willing to forget it. Moreover. I consider that the matter now’ is none of my business.” “Because I am engaged to be married, you mean?” he asked. “Well, let me explain that I found, when I went to the mountains where Miss Damerel was staying, that, after all, she was the one woman in the world for me. Then I w’as heartily ashamed of my behavior while away from her.” Beatrice's sense of humor asserted itself, but she repressed it. The words “How happy could I be with either Were t’other dear charmer away!” said themselves over in her mind, but she did not allow them to rise to her lips. Instead, she gave heed to what her companion was saying. "We arc to be married in ten days you know." he went on. “and, of course. my dear little girl wanted to send you cards for the wedding, but I asked her to wait, for I wanted to make my peace with your first." “You did not tell her that, did you?” asked Beatrice abruptly. “Oh, no. Indeed!” Maynard replied. ”1 told her it would be best to wait until I could learn from Mrs. Robbins where you were. So I wrote and asked her.” “We came into town last week,” said Beatrice, to fill in the sudden pause that followed his speech. Please accept my hearty congratulations on your happi ness.” She had stopped thinking of this man and his affairs, and was wishing she dared ask him about his brother. But she was afraid to trust her voice. As If in reply to her thought Robert May nard spoke suddenly. “Paul’s Wife Is Dead.’’ "I was shocked to hear of your mis fortune by fire, and of the accident to poor Paul,” he said, heedless of the ex pression of pain that swept across his listener’s face. He was one of the men who like to impart news, and he hud come to tell. “It was strange that this accident should have happened to my brother just when it did. For on that very morning he hail received the news that his wife was dead.” “Dead!” ejaculated Beatrice. “His wife?” “Yes—I thought you probably had not heard of it. She led him a dance all right, neglecting Ids only child when it was a tiny baby, so that it died at less than a year of age. That woman made an Inferno of his home when she was in it, and stayed away from it as much as she could. “At last she ran away, without the shadow of an excuse. Poor old Paul waited until lie was certain that there was no chance of ever having her before he got a dviorce from her. And in less than a fortnight after he got his divorce —in fact, just when he had completed the entire business—she dropped dead of heart disease out West somewhere. So—a merciful Providence freed him at last. Poor old chap! I hope he will have some happiness yet in his life be fore he dies!” Beatrice tried to speak, but her tongue failed to do her bidding. Her bands and feet were like ice The room seemed to swim before her eyes. The sound of the children’s footsteps in the hall roused her from her stunned con dition, but, before she could speak, Rob ert Maynard arose hastily. “I must go!” he exclaimed. “I left a taxi waiting down below for me. Good day. Mrs. Minor! And thank you! And please come to the wedding!” He shook her hand quickly, and, be fore she could find words in which to ask the question that trembled on her lips, he was gone. Robert, the Chaperon. “Cook,” said the mistress, “I saw two policemen sitting in the kitchen last night.” “Well, mum,” replied Bridget, with an unabashed smile overspreading her features, “yez wouldn't have an un married lady be slttin’ with only wan policeman, would yez, now? fcjhure. mum, the other wan was the chaperon.” CHICHESTER S PILLS ^ TIIE DIAMOND RRA.ND. a DrnccT«t.''Askf IBM O' r- r , »JT of roar * - rnfClu.ai£».Ti!R’« diamond iirand pill*. y«in known as n**st.Safest, Always Reliable SOLI) BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHFr BRING » OUR FILMS 1*0 US and we will develop then) free. We are film specialists and give you perfect results arid quick delivery. Mail us negative for free sample print. Enlargements made and colored. Pictures framed. Chemicals. Cameras, 13.00 to $85.00. Fre»h films to fit any camera—guaranteed not to stick catalogue. Quick mail order service. E. H. CONE, Inc., “A Good Drug Store”—(Two Stores)—Atlanta. CHANGES By WILLIAM F. KIRK. a* P INK Morning comes with petals in her hair, As fragrant as the kisses of a bride: Bright noon comes marching with its dazzling glare To scatter spears athwart the countryside The purple twilight follows dreamily. Soothing the senses like a mother’s breath: Each of these changes through the years we see, And then comes Night—and Death. How many, many changes have l seen Dawn. Noon, the purple Twilight and the Night. How often have I watched them with a queen, Dear queen of love who made my years so bright. Still shift the scene and still the seasons whirl, And eagerly I watch them, for I see In every tint the tresses of the girl Who smiles and beckons me. By FRANCES L. GARSIDE. W HEN all of a family start out together, it is one of three oc casions that calls them: A family reunion, a. visit to the photog rapher for the purpose of perpetrat ing a family group, or a funeral. (i It was the second of these occasions that w’as causing Lysander John Ap pleton to walk up and down impa tiently waiting for his wife and daughter to get ready. At last they appeared, and the sight of his daugh ter caused his wrath, which had lodg been smoldering, to burst into 'flam-'. She wore low shoes and silk stock ings. though the day was cold. Her skirt was so tight she walked gin gerly, and her hair was so combeti, that only enough of her face showes* to prove she was not afraid to foul with her complexion. Her large hat was adorned with a long feather, and the skin of an ani mal which she w'ore as a fur was Q 0 draped as to show her bare chest. ■ Now, what'makes you rig yourself out like that?” he thundered. “If you want to look decent, why don't $oci dress as your mother dressed when she was a girl?” He scolded louder and longer, elab orating and emphasizing - , and de nouncing the horrors of modem dress, so absorbed in his eloquence he did not notice that his daughter had k\Ct the room. He w*as still clawing the air and storming, after the manner of the male worm when it thinks it is turn ing at last, when his daughter re turned. On her head she wore a poke bon net of such depth that her face looked as if at the next turn of the sub way. Her hair was plastered straight, with a circle of bow-catcher curls that suggested a snake charmer Her sleeves were large and volu minous, and her very full skirts swayed just enough over immense hoops to show that her feet were clad in heavy, cumbersome arctics. But it was her waist that was most, appalling; so squeezed, so small that had she swallowed an apple it would have showed up like a big button at her belt. ‘ I am ready.” she said, giving a curtsey that displayed lace-trimmed pantalettes that reached her ankles. “Do you think,” roared her father, “that I would be seen on the street with you looking like THAT?” ”1 am dressed,” said his daughter, making another curtsey, “as mother dressed when she was a girl.” Lysander John threw himself ou' of the room. Reaching his den, he shut the door with a crash. There was no family group perpe trated that day. Addressed to Women That Backache of Yours Is one of nature’s warnings when all the joy of living has vanished because of trouble peculiar to womankind. Don’t disregard this warning. Don’t procrastinate. Now is the time to take steps to regain health and strength. Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription UBNEIB IIIIIMI mi— MBM— ■! M11MKBMMSaBTa 1111 TTMBBWHnMBBMWMMBMMMMMWW MO ALCOHOL MO NARCOTICS Has been recommended for over forty years as a remedy for ailments peculiar to women. Thousands of grateful women have testified to its effectiveness. You, too, will find it beneficial. As made up by improved and exact processes, the “Favorite Prescription” is a most efficient remedy for regulating all the womanly functions, correcting displacements, as prolapsus, anteversion and retroversion, overcoming painful periods, toning up the nerves and bringing about a perfect state of health. ' This tonic, in liquid form, was devised over 40 yerrs sro for the womanly system, by R.V. Pierce. M. D., and has benefited meny thousand women. Now it can also be obtained in tablet form—from dealers in medicine, or send 50 one*cent stamps for a trial box. Every woman ought to possess Dr. Pierce’s great book, the People's Common Sense Medical Adviser, a magnificent thousand-page illustrated volume. It teaches mothers how to care for their children and themselves. It is the best doctor to have in the house in case of emergency. Over half a million cooies were sold at $1.50 each, but one free copy in cloth covers will be sent on receipt of 31 one-cent stamps to pay the cost of wrapping and mailing only. Address Address Dr. Pierce’s Invalids Hotel Buffalo, New York A Case In Sind ”l wrote to you about *i* month3 ago tor your kind advice in regard to my ca*e." writes Mrs. Lizzie White. ‘‘At times I was hard!:* able to be on my feet. I believe 2 had every pain and ache a woman could have. Had a very bad case of uterine disease. Ovaries were very much diseased end my back was very weak. I suffered a great deal with nervous headaches, in fact 1 suffered all over. I fol lowed your directions as closely as 1 could, and was , well rlresed with the results. I have taken your ‘Favorite Prescription’ and‘Golden Medical Diacovery’ for about three months aud can now eay that my health was never better. 1 can highly recommand Doctor Pierce’e remedies to any woman suffering from female disease, and I do recommend them to every one J see. Have induced several to try your wonderful medicines." Address furnished on request. * TWO MORE DECATUR PEOPLE JIN THE ARMY OF QUAKER ENTHUSIASTS Quaker Herb Extract is the name of the great remedy which is curing | so many Atlanta people. The num- ! her of persons who have al-! ready expe rienced the curative pow - ers of this wonderful medicine would make a small army. Two more al ready ca ne to cheerfully add then- testimonials to the long list already published. Mr. and Mrs R. H. Kelly, cf De catur, Ga.. R. F. 1). No. 1. both suf fered with indigestion. During that time she had pains in her stomach, bloating, dizziness, belching, etc.. and always taking medicines which did them er benefit. They pur chased a treatment of Quaker Ex tract and began taking it regularly according to directions. They it first noticed very little benefit. Then they began to improve more rapid ly. This Improvement continued until now .Mr. and Mrs. Kelly haw used two bottles of Quaker, and say if is the most perfect medicine they have ever taken. They have both gained about twenty pounds on first treat mer.t. If you are still suffering from ca tarrh. rheumatism, kidney. live.*, stomach or blood trouble?, and are too skeptical or prejudiced against medicines in general to allow your self to begin a treatment, just cal' on a few of the people whose names have been published and investigate in any manner. Then come to Goursey & Minin's drug store. No •J!) Marietta Street, for additional proof. Quaker Extract. $1.00, .*» for I $.’.50, or 0 for $5.00. Oil of Balm, 25c, or 5 for $1.00. We prepay ex press charges on all orders of $3.00 or over.