The Atlanta News. (Atlanta, Tex.), Vol. 8, No. 43, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 11, 1908 Page: 7 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 22 x 14 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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SOPHIA
KHTLE5EN
HEALTH VERY POOR-
RESTORED BY PE-RU-NA.
Catarrh Twentu-five Years-
Had a Bad Cough.
Miss Sophia Kittle sen, Evanston,
Illinois, U. S. A., writes:
"I have been troubled with catarrh
for nearly twenty-five years and have
tried many cures for it, but obtained
very little help.
"Then my brother advised me to try
Pernna, and I did.
"My health was very poor at the time
I began taking1 Peruna. My throat was
very sore and I had a bad cough.
*Peruna has cured me. The chronic
catarrh is gone and my health Is very
much improved.
"I recommend • Peruna to all my
friends who are troubled as I was."
PERUNA TABLETS:—Some people pre-
fer tablets, rather than medicine in a
fluid form. Such people can obtain Pe ru-
aa tablets, which represent the medici-
nal ingredients of Peruna. Each tablet
equals one average dose of Peruna.
Man-a-lta the Ideal Laxative.
Manufactured by Peruna Drug Manu-
facturing Company, Columbus, Ohio.
Free Cure for Rheu-
matism, Bone Pain
and Ecxema
Botanic Blood Balm (B. B. B.) cares the worst
cases of Rheumatism, bone pains, swollen
muscles and joints, by purifying the blood.
Thousands of cases cured by B. B. B. after
all other treatments failed. Price tx.oo per
lame bottle at drug stores, with complete
directions for home treatment. Large sample
free by writing Blood Balm Co.. Atlanta, Ga.
GALLANTRY.
s
Weary William—Excuse me, miss.
Out I see that you have had a tiff
arlth your lover, and he has left you.
Allow me to escort you home instead.
Saved From Being a Cripple for Life.
"Almost six or seven weeks ago I
became paralyzed all at once with
rheumatism," writes Mrs. Louis Mc-
Key, 913 Seventh street, Oakland, Cal.
'It struck me in the back and extend-
sd from the hip of my right leg down
io my foot The attack was so severe
that I could not move in bed and
was afraid that I should be a cripple
for life.
"About 12 years ago I received a
sample bottle of your Liniment but
never had occasion to use it, as I
hare always been well, but some-
thing told me that Sloan's Liniment
irould help me, so I tried it. After
the second application I could get
up out of bed, and in three days
xrald walk, and now feel well and
jntirely free from pain.
"My friends were very much sur-
prised at my rapid recovery and I
was only too glad to tell them that
Sloan's Liniment was the only med-
icine I used."
Selfish Etiquette.
Some rules in an old book on eti-
quette seem to encourage a practice
commonly called "looking out for num-
ber one." Here are two of them:
"When cake is passed, do not fin-
ger each piece, but with a quick
glance select the best.
"Never refuse to taste of a dish be-
cause you are unfamiliar with it, or
you will lose the taste of many a del-
icacy while others profit by your ab-
stinence, to your lasting regret."—
Youth's Companion.
We Reiterate.
That for more than fifteen years
Hunt's Cure has been working on the
Afflicted. Its mission is to cure skin
troubles, particularly those of an itch-
tag character. Its success is not on
account of advertising, but because
A surely does the work. One box
Ift guaranteed to cure any case.
•The Housekeeper presents two re-
cipes for cooking sweetbreads. In the
first they are stewed white and in the
second they are stewed brown. In-
gredients—Two sweetbreads, one pint
of veal broth, seasonings, one ounce
of fiour, one ounce of butter, two yolks
o? eggs, one-sixteenth pint cream.
Method—Soak and prepare the
sweetbreads as in the second recipe,
stewing them for an hour in veal
broth with a seasoning of mace, white
pepper, salt and a very small slice of
onion. Press them till cold, trim them
and strain into a bowl. Melt the but-
ter in a stewpan, stir the flour into it
and let it cook without browning. Add
the strained veal broth and stir till
well boiled, then remove from the fire
and beat in the yolk of two eggs or
some cream. Let the sweetbreads
warm in this without boiling, then
dish them and serve, garnished with
slices of lemon and sprigs of parsley.
Ingredients — Two sweetbreads,
three-quarters of a pint of brown sauce
and tomatoes.
Method—Soak two sweetbreads in
warm, salted water for an hour. Put
on stove in cold water, and bring to
boiling point. Take out sweetbreads
and rinse. Put on again in fresh wafer
or white stock, and allow to simmer
gently for an hour. Drain and press
sweetbreads between two plates with
weight upon top of them. Trim neatly
and cut into thick slices. Put the
sweetbreads into a stewpan with
three-quarters of a pint of rich brown
sauce, and let them get quite hot. In
the meanwhile pour boiling water over
some tomatoes, skin them and place
them in a buttered tin with buttered
paper over. Bake till tender but un-
broken.
* HOUSEHOLD HINTS. *
Hot sunshine will remove scorch.
Hot tartaric szid will take ink
stains out of white"cloth.
A package or envelope sealed with
white of egg cannot be steamed open
i Even delicate glas3 can bfe safely
washed in very hot water if slipped
in edgewise.
Insects like neither salt nor alum
and enough adheres to the carpet to
keep them away.
Saturate grass stains on children's
pinafores, etc., in paraffin and then
put into the washtub.
Burning oil is spread by water. To
extinguish it throw down flour, sand or
earth. The idea is to prevent the oil
from spreading.
Starch should be mixed with soapy
water, for thus the linen will have a
more glossy appearance and be less
likely to stick to the iron.
Clotheslines and pegs will last much
longer if they are boiled for ten min-
utes wh^n new. It is a good plan -to
repeat the boiling occasionally. ,
It is not generally known, but to
prevent cakes from burning place a
Mttle bran at the bottom of the tins.
This will save a lot of grumbling and
vexation.
Italian Cakes.
Half a cup of butter, warmed but
not melted, and the same quantity of
sugar, beaten to a cream. Add one by
one, beating continuously, four eggs,
whites and yolks. At the last beat in
very hard half a cup of pastry flour.
Pour this mixture to the depth of half
an inch in a shallow buttered tin and
bake in a moderately quick oven for
10 or 15 minutes. Turn upside down
to cool; spread thickly with a firm
Jam or jelly, preferably strawberry or
raspberry, and then overlay this with
stiff chocolate icing. When firm, cut
into odd shapes, squares, discs, dia-
monds, triangles, etc.
Rag Carpet Without Sewing.
Tear rags about an inch wide, cut a
buttonhole in each end, lay one strip
on the other so that one hole is over
the other, take the end of the lower
one and draw it through the hole of
the upper one tightly, and it will look
as if sewed. Now take a large cro-
chet book and crochet as if making a
common round tidy. You can make
it as large as you want and quickly,
can be washed in a tub, and with care
will last a lifetime.
Lyman Salad.
Select long green peppers, cut in
halves lengthwise, remove the seeds,
and fill with grape-fruit pulp, celery
and apple finely cut, and pecan nut
meats broken in pieces, using half as
much each of celery and apple as of
grape fruit, and allowing three nut
meats to each case. Arrange on let-
tuce leaves and garnish with may-
onnaise dressing.
Anything—Almost.
"Mrs. Rucksher is a woman who
seems to be willing to do almost any-
thing for the sake of appearance."
"Yes—but she draws the line at
wearing inexpensive hats for the sake
Iif making her husband's task easier
when he has to face the assessor."
To Pack China.
When moving, a new way to pack
china that is valuable as well as dell-
cate is to wrap each piece carefully
in parafflne paper and sink it in the
flour barrel. A delicate -piece of
Wedgewood china and a piece of val-
uable statuary were packed in this
way, and neither piece was injured. Of
course, the flour barrel must be reason-
ably full of fiour.
To Prevent Moths.
To keep moths out of upholstered
furniture, sprinkle well with benzine.
It will not spot or stain the most deli-
cate colors, and the unpleasant odor
soon passes away in the air. When
It is known that the moth miller has
entered a closet, burn a tablespoonful
of gum camphor in the room, closing
the door and letting the clothes remain
in the fumes.
The Entire Family.
Grand Pop used it for Rheumatism.
Dad for Cuts, Sprains and Bruises.
Mammy for Burns, Scalds and Aches.
Sis for Catarrh and Chilblains. I use
it for everything, and it never disap-
points any of us. It surely yanks any
old pain out by the roots.
Hunt's Lightning Oil is what I am
telling "you about.
When Burning Rubbish.
When burning vegetable refuse, old
papers and rubbish in the stove or
furnace, throw a handful of salt in the
fire and there will be no unpleasant
and disagreeable odor.
Gleam of Hope.
Orville Ardup—Ah, here comes that
infernal bill collector!
Caller (producing folded document
with alacrity)—I am glad to hear you
say so, Mr. Ardup. I've been here nine
times without having been a collector,
you know.
Deafness Cannot Be Cured
by local applications, as they cannot reach .the dl
eased portion of the ear. There Is only one way to
cure deafness, and that !s by constitutional remedies.
Deafness is caused by an Inflamed condition of the
mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this
tube.is Inflamed you have a rumbling sound or im-
perfect hearing, and when It Is entirely closed, Deaf-
ness la the result, and unless the inflammation can be
taken out and this tube restored to its normal condi-
tion, hearing will be destroyed forever; nine cases
out of ten are causcd by Catarrh, which Is nothing
but an Inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces.
We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of
Deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured
by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free.
F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, 0.
Sold by Druggists. 75c.
Take Hall's Family PlllB for constipation.
Waited for a Man.
First Cyclist—What's in the band-
box, Bill, and where's the girl?
Second Cyclist—That contains my
puncture-mending device. I get them
mended quickly and well without lift-
ing a finger.
First Cyclist—Tell us!
Second Cyclist—That box contains a
lady's skirt and picture hat; when I
puncture I've only to don them and
wait!
First Cyclist—By Jov§, that's clever!
NO SKIN LEFT ON BODY.
For Six Months Baby Was Expected
to Die with Eczema—Now Well
—Doctor Said to Ufe Cuticura.
"Six months after birth my little girl
broke out with eczema and I had two
doctors in attendance. There was not
a particle of skin left on her body, the
blood oozed out just anywhere, and we
had to wrap her in silk and carry her
on a pillow for ten weeks. She was the
most terrible sight I ever saw, and for
six months I looked for her to die. I
used every known remedy to allevi-
ate her suffering, for it was terrible
to witness. Dr. C-— gave her up. Dr.
B recommended the Cuticura
Remedies. She will soon be three
years old and has never had a. ■Mgn
of the dread trouble since. We useu
about eight cakes of Cuticura S^ao
and three boxes of Cuticura Ointment.
James J. Smith, Durmld, Va., Oct. 14
and 22, 1906."
COMMON PHRASE.
m
'Something hard to beat."
WHEN HE CAME HOME.
Mobile Youth Evidently Not One to
Trifle with Truth.
Booker T. Washington, Tuskegee'a
famous head, said recently in New
York that the thought the closing of
saloons of the south would be a good
thing. And to an objection he replied,
with a smile:
"Oh, what a vague objection!
Vaguer than the answer of the Mo-
bile woman's son.
"A youth of twenty or so, he cele-
brated Easter in the unclosed saloons
by drinking large quantities of egg-
nog.
"The next morning he came home
to breakfast red-eyed and pale. He
ate nothing. He only tried, with many
grimaces, to swallow a cup of cof-
fee.
" 'John,' said bis mother, severely,
'what time did you come home last
oight?'
"The vague youth answered:
" 'Bed time.'"—Los Angeles Times.
DR. TALK8 OF FOOD
Pres. of Board of Health.
"What shall I eat?" is the daily in-
qniry the physician is met with. I do
not hesitate to say that in my judg-
ment a large percentage of disease is
caused by poorly selected and improp-
erly prepared food. My personal expe-
rience with the fully-cooked food,
known as Grape-Nuts, enables me to
speak freely of its merits.
"From overwork, I suffered several
years with malnutrition, palpitation of
the heart and loss of sleep. Last sum-
mer I was led to experiment person-
ally with the new food, which I used
in conjunction with good rich cow's
milk. In a short time after I com-
menced its use, the disagreeable symp-
toms disappeared, my heart's action
became steady and normal, the func-
tions of the stomach were properly
carried out and I again slept as sound-
ly and as well as in my youth.
"I look upon Grape-Nuts as a per-
fect food, and no one can gainsay but
that it has a moat prominent place in
a rational, scientific system of feed-
ing. Any one who uses this food will
soon be convinced of the soundness of
the principle i«pon which it is manu-
factured and may thereby know the
facts as to its true worth." Read "The
Road to Wellville," in pkgs. "There's
a Reason."
Ever read the above letter? A new
one appears from time to time. They
are genuine, true, and full of human
Interest. -
Don't Poison Babip.
pORTY YEARS AGO almost every mother thought her child must lava
' PAREGrORIG or laudanum to make it sleep. These drugs will produce
sleep, and A FEW DROPS TOO MANY will produce the SLEEP FROM WHICH
THERE IS HO WAKING. Many are the children who have been killed or
whose health has been ruined for life by paregoric, laudanum and morphine, each
of which is a narcotic product of opium. Druggists are prohibited from selling
either of the narcotics named to children at all, or to anybody without labelling
them " poison." The definition of " narcotic " is: "A medicine which relieves pain
and -produces sleep, but which in poisonous doses produces stupor, coma,, convul-
sions and death. "9 The taste and smell of medicines containing opium are disguised,
and sold under the names of "Drops," "Cordials," "Soothing Syrups," etc. Yon
should not permit any medicine to be given to your children without you or
your physician know of what it is composed. CASTORIA DOES NOT CON-
TAIN NARCOTICS, if it bears the signature of Chas. H. Fletcher.
Letters from Prominent Physicians
addressed to Chas. H. Fletcher*
Dr. J. W. Dinsdale, of Chicago, III., says: "I use your Castoria and
advise its use la all families where there are children."
Dr. Alexander H Mintie, of Cleveland, Ohio, says: "I have frequently
prescribed your Castoria and havo found it a reliable and pleasant rem-
edy for children."
Dr. J. S. Alexander, of Omaha, Neb., says: "A medicine so valuable and
beneficial for children as your Castoria is, deserves the highest praise. I
find it in use everywhere."
Dr. J. A. ITcClcllan, cf Buffalo, N. Y., says: "I have frequently prescribed
your Castoria for children and always got good results. In fact I use
Castoria for my own children."
Dr. J. W. Allen, of EL Louis, Mo., says: *1 heartily endorse yonr Cas-
toria. I have frequently proscribed it in my medical practice, and have
always found it to do all that is claimed for it."
Dr. C. H. Glidden, of St raul, Minn., says: "My experience as a prac-
titioner with your Castoria has been highly satisfactory, and I consider it
an excellent remedy for the young."
Dr. H. D. Bcnner, of Philadelphia, Pa, says: "I have used your Cas-
toria as a purgative in the cases of children for years past with the most
happy effect, and fully endorse it as a safe remedy."
Dr. J. A. Boarman, of Kansas City, Mo., says: "Your Castoria is a splen-
did remedy for children, known the world over. I use it in my practice
and have no hesitancy in recommending it for the complaints of infanta
and children."
Dr. J. J. Mackey, of Brooklyn, N. Y., says: "I consider your Castoria an
excellent preparation for children, being composed of reliable medicines
and pleasant to the taste. A good remedy for all disturbances of tha
digestive organs."
GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS
ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT
sunilaringthe
ting foe Storaac&s
Infants /Children
Promotes DigestionJCfeaffr
ncss and Rest.Contains neiSher
OpiunuMorphine nor Mineral.
Not Narcotic.
Stt^pe ofCffdIkSfiMuELKliMtll
PteupkLi Seed"
JkdeffeSJk-
Austletd +
Mm Stti'
Aperfect Remedy for Ccfnsflp*
tion, Sour Storakh.Dtarrt«a
Worms .Convulsions .Fevmsfi
ness andLoss OF SLEEP.
Pile Simile Signature of
NEW YORK.
Signature
l under the frhod j
Exact Copy of Wrapper.
The Kind You Hate Always Bought
in Use For Over 36 Years.
TMC CENTAUR COMPANY, TT MilUT ST 1ST. WCW TO** CTT .
The Little Things.
"You shouldn't," the doctor ad-
vised, "permit yourself to be worried
by little things."
"Good heavens," replied the pa-
tient, "I wouldn't if 1 could help it,
but how is a man who has married
a widow with six children going to
get around it?"
In a Pinch, Use ALLEN'S FOOT-EASE.
A powder. It cures painful, smart-
ing, nervous feet and ingrowing nails.
It's the greatest comfort discovery of
the age. Makes new shoes easy. A
certain cure for sweating feet. Sold
by all Druggists, 25c. Accept no sub-
stitute. Trial package, FREE. Ad-
dress A. S. Olmsted. Le Roy. N. Y.
Both Sides of the Argument.
"Does your wife prefer rugs or car-
pets ?"
"Well," answered Mr. Meekton,
"rugs are more convenient. But it
Isn't as much fun to watch a man
struggle with them."
Don't Delay.
Save a possible serious spell of fever
later on by cleansing your system now
of its accumulation of impurities. Sim-
mon's Sarsaparilla will do it. It makes
fine blood, fine appetite, great strength
and grand ambition.
When death, the great reconciler,
has come, it is never our tenderness
that we repent of, but our severity.
—George Eliot
Hicks' Capudlne Cures Headache,
Whether from colds, heat, stomach or
nervous troubles. No Acetaniltd or dan-
Serous drugs. It's liquid and acts Imme-
iately. Trial bottle 10c. Regular 25c and
50c at all durggists.
Repine not; the disappointments of
to-day often prove the blessings of to-
morrow.—Thomas a Kempis.
If You Have Common 8ore Eyes,
if lines blur or run together, vou need
PETTIT'S EYE SALVE, 25c. All drug-
gists or Howard Bros., Buffalo, N. Y.
A good life is the readiest way to
procure a good name.—Whichcot
Smokers have to call for Lewis' Single
Binder cigar to get it. Your dealer or
Lewis' Factory, Peoria. 111.
He that despiseth small things wit
perish little by little.—Emerson.
Mrs. Wtnalow's Soothln* Syrup.
For children tofthin*, softens thsguras, /educes tn-
flsmmsUoa, sllsyt p*Jk, cur** wind ooUu- toes bottla.
The fairest of all things fair on
earth is virtue.—Shakespeare.
So Polite.
"She hasn't any cause to be snip
py with me. The last time I saw her
I'm sure I did the politest thing 1
could."
"What did you do?"
"We were on a car and when a
man offered me a seat I said to her:
'You take it, dear; you're the older.'"
Actual Facts.
For upwards of fifteen years Hunt's
Cure has been sold under a strict guar-
antee to cure any form of itching skin
troubles known. No matter the name
—less than one per cent, of the pur-
chasers have requested their money
back. Why? It simply does the work.
SICK HEADACHE
IcarterS
Between Doctors.
"Was the operation successful, doc-
tor?"
"Entirely. I charged |600 and his
executor signed a check for it with-
out winking."—Kansas City Times.
CARTERS
IVER
PILLS.
parker's
hair balsam
CXacMa* and besmifiet the h
rnooM s Juuiltol growth.
~ " " to Bsstore Gray
PILES
relief. IB A Si^FLE CUM.
n at druggists or T na
tempi* FREE. Artrtiws.
"ANAKE8I8"
Tribune Bide.. Ksw Youc.
<t CQQ PER DAY K'iiS'Sffi
*11 - (No acheme, fake or fraud.) Our Ann is
well known and reliable. Infoi
free. Bend postal today. ADAMS * J
Dept. D, Cincinnati, Ohio.
OPIUM
W WooU0y,lK.DnAt
and Whiskey Habits
treated at borne without
JHK1
'•RBt
WooUey, JL.D., AU«nta,Ga.,lQBN.
WANTED— LA DISS TO MAKB APRONS:
dosen. No cost to get work. Material*
Unclose sfanipetl addreaaed enrelo]
ome Apron a Dress
Los Angeles,
PATENTS
ney. Washington.
free. Terms low. Highest ref.
i. Patent Attor.
i. D. O, Ad ice
WIDOW8*under NEW LAW obtained
PENSIONS bV22Sg«it.M©.Ra •*
W. N. U., DALLAS, NO. 22, 1908.
If aOicted with)
sore eyes, use >
Thompson's Eyo Wsfer
6
W.LDOVGLAS
MEMBER OF THE FAMILY,
MEM, BOYS, WOMEN, MIBSES AND CHILDREN.
ZJfitSSS&SgVSiSXgiCS"S
arm of Mtf m* ra/m thmn amymtkm*
mho— fit th worid to-dmy.
«-AVTioar. w. l.
Bold by the
bated Calal
og free to any
Malaria Makes Pale Blood
The Old Standard GROVE'S TASTELESS CHILL TONIC, drives out Malaria and builds up the
system. You know what you are taking. The formula is plainly printed on every bottle, showing it
is simply Quinine and Iron in a tasteless, and the most effectual form. For adults and children. 50c.
1
Positively cared by
these Little Pills.
fCAl
Immm They also relieve Die-
WI7TIE tressfrom Dygpepsia.Io-
nl llfPMn digestion and Too Hearty
Si I VFR Eating. A perfect rem-
Bfl edy lor Dizziness, Na
sea, Drowsiness, Bad
Taste in the Month, Coat-
ed Tongue, Pain In the
Side, TORPID LIVER.
They regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable.
SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE.
Genuine Must Bear
Fac-Simiie Signature
/$£*&
REFUSE SUBSTITUTES.
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The Atlanta News. (Atlanta, Tex.), Vol. 8, No. 43, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 11, 1908, newspaper, June 11, 1908; Atlanta, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth329808/m1/7/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Atlanta Public Library.