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Beautify the Complexion
IN TEN DAYS.
Nadinola
■ i £ CREAM, * . un-
% equaled bear ner is
jST endorsed by aousands
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-■ remove reckies,
n *£'"K2 l ’* pimple.,, liver-spots,
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the worst case in 20 days, and restore
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SI.OO, by leading druggists or mail.
Prepared by NATIONAL TOILET CO., Paris, Tenn.
OPERATIONPREVENTED
The True Story of a Lady Whose
Doctor Counseled an Opera
tion, But Who Cured Her
self at Home, After all
Other Treatments
Had Failed.
Only a weak woman who has actually
experienced it, can realize the shock that
comes vith the doctor’s words: "You
must have an operation.”
Frequently the doctor is right, but
sometimes he is wrong, and finds it out
after, or during, the operation, when it
is too late.
Many women have (found that, by
taking Wine of Cardui, they have been
able to prevent an operation which their
doctor had thought necessary, owing to
the wonderful curative effect Wine of
Cardui proved itself to have, on their
organs and functions.
Os such is the well-known case of Mrs.
Blanche E. Stephanou, of 1228 S. 42nd
Ave., Chicago, 111., wife of Lawyer John
Stephanou, President of the Greek So
ciety Arcada, of that city. In a recent
letter, describing her case, she writes:
"Five years ago, the birth of my baby
left me in a very bad state. I suffered
with a constant backache, and had such
a miserable bearing-down feeling every
month. I also had a pain in my side,
and am almost unable to describe how
miserable I felt.
"Os course, living in a large city like
Chicago, I received treatment from some
of the finest doctors in the city, which
did me no good. After spending hun
dreds of dollars, my husband engaged
one of the best women specialists here.
He suggested an operation right away,
but I would not consent. After suffer
ing like this for years, a very dear friend
advised me to take Wine of Cardui, and
from the very first bottle I can truth
fully say I began to improve. I have
now taken eight bottles and look and
feel like a different person. My pains
are gone, I am getting stout, eat well
and can now wear my corset, which I
have not been able to do since I was first
taken sick.
This letter proves that it is sometimes
best to try the Cardui Home Treatment
first, before consenting to an opera
tion.
If your case is like it, why not try
Wine of Cardui for your troubles?
If you need special advice regarding
your case, write us frankly, giving symp
toms and stating age, and we will send
you Free Advice, in plain sealed en
velope. Address Ladies’ Advisory Dept.,
The Chattanooga Medicine Co., Chatta
oga, Tenn.
Argo Creamed Salmon, Scalloped
Salmon, Cutlets or Croquettes, are
among the most tempting of dishes.
Argo at all grocers.
When writing advertisers please mention
The Golden Age.
THE LAST LT. AT.
Oliver Wendell Holmes.
1 saw him once before,
As he passed the door,
And again
The pavement stones resound,
As he totters o’er the ground;
With his cane.
They say that in his prime,
Ere the pruning-knife of Time
Cut him down,
Not a better man was found
By the crier on his round
Through the town.
But now he walks the streets,
And he looks at all he meets
Sad and wan;
And he shakes his feeble head,
That it seems as if he said,
“They are gone!”
The mossy marbles rest
On the lips that he has pressed
In their bloom,
And the names he loved to hear
Have been carved for many a year
On the tomb.
My grandmamma has said —
Poor old lady, she is dead
Long ago—
That he had a Roman nose,
And his cheek was like a rose
In the snow;
But now his nose is thin,
And it rests upon his chin
Like a staff,
And a crook is in his back,
And a melancholy crack
In his laugh.
I know it is a sin
For me to sit and grin
At him here;
But the old three-cornered hat,
And the breeches, and all that,
Are so queer!
And if I should live to be
The last leaf upon the tree
x . In the spring,
Let them smile, as I do now,
At the old forsaken bough ‘
Where I cling. z <
COPPER.
If you go to the famous Red Jacket
shaft, for instance, you find the most
powerful hoisting machinery in the
world, huge engines of as much as
eight thousand horse-power, which
reel and unreel drums of wire cable
that wind down a straight mile below
the surface. These engines hoist ten
ton cars of ore one mile at the rate of
forty miles an hour, or from the bot
tom to the top of this stupendous hole
in the ground, in ninety seconds.
This is the deepest mining shaft in
the world. Apart from this fact, per
haps the most interesting feature of
the Red Jacket shaft is in the theory
that it is possible to detect the effect
of the earth’s revolution in a hole as
deep as this. No less an authority
than President McNail, of the Michi
gan College of Mines, has explained
the belief that nothing dropped in this
deepest of mining shafts can ever
reach bottom without colliding with
the east side of the shaft.
“This is due to the motion of the
earth,” said he. “The article dropped,,
no matter what its size or shape may
be, will invariably be found clinging
to the east side of the shaft. One day
a monkey wrench was dropped by a
miner, but it failed to reach the bot
tom and was found lodged against the
east side of the shaft several hun
dred feet down. We decided that to*
make a proper test of the theory it
would be worth while to experi
ment with a small, heavy, spherical
The Golden Age for June 27, 1907.
body. So we suspended a marble tied
with a thread about twelve feet below
the mouth of the shaft. We then
burned the thread with a lighted
match in order not to disturb the exact
fall of the marble. About five hun
dred feet down it brought up against
the east side of the shaft. When min
ers have fallen down the shaft the
result has been similar. Their bodies,
badly torn, have been found lodged
against the east side of the shaft. A
carload of rock was dumped down the
deepest mining shaft in South Africa,
but not a particle of it reached bot
tom.” —From “The Story of a Copper
Mine,” by Ralph D. Paine, in Outing
Magazine for June.
AS TOLD BY AN ENGLISH WOMAN.
"When you have seen the Golden
Gate you will not wonder at the differ
ence between Turkey and California.
But keep moving ” poor Mrs. Jona-
than was getting awfully tired —“and
go north now past Shasta and Hood
and Ranier, and their lesser satellites
of snowy peaks, to Seattle, a city sit
ting on more hills than Rome ever
knew, and take a steamer for the in
side passage to Skagway. There you
will find a new land of the Midnight
Sun with fiords no less grand and
gloomy; or turn from the shadows to
the sunlight and stop in Southern Cali
fornia. You have seen the Riviera?
Yes?” Mrs. John didn’t give Mrs. Jon
athan time to even nod an affirmation,
but was going again. “You will see a
fresher and finer one there. And you
will hear the old, old mission
bells ringing in the new.. Such flow
ers, such scenery, such fruits, such
sunshine, such —but pardon me, I
promised not to rhapsodize, didn’t I?
Turn eastward now, going through the
Mojave Desert, stopping on the way to
stare and stagger before the awful
magnificence of the Grand Canon I
told you of, and to see the petrified
forest, as a reminder of ruins older
than Baalbec and Babylon. At New
Orleans, a little southern Paris, take
steamer up the Mississippi—though
down it is quicker—for a thousand
miles through the land of cotton and,
the cane, and thence into the Ohio,
and for another thousand sail through
a picture valley to Pittsburg, where
the iron works and money make Titian
and Vulcan and Tubal Cain look like
thirty cents, as you Americans say.
Then there are the coal fields of Penn
sylvania; the gold fields of the far
West; the great plains that seem to
have no end; cities that have risen in
a night to wealth and power; colleges,
whose buildings are sermons in stone;
men and women who in science and
art and literature ”
Mrs. Jonathan took a long, long
breath.
“Good gracious!” she exclaimed, “I’d
be dead before I had done all that.” —
From “See America First,” by William
J. Lampton, in Outing Magazine for
June.
At a recent evangelistic service at
Glasgow the preacher cried, “Now all
you good people who mean to go to
heaven with me, stand up!” With a
surge of enthusiasm the audience
sprang to their feet —all but an old
Scotchman in the front row, who sat
still. The horrified evangelist wrung
his hands, and addressing him, said,
“My good man, my good man, don’t
you want to go to heaven?” Clear
and deliberate came the answer:
“Aye, Awm gangin’, but no wi’ a
pairsonally conducted palrty!” —Pres-
byterian Journal.
The grocers are buying Argo Red
Salmon because it takes no argument
to sell it and the customers come
back for more.
SILVER
ALUMINUM
JELL-O MOULDS
A leaflet explaining how to get them
will be found in every package of
Jell-O
THE DAINTY DESSERT
(Approved by Pure Food Commissioners.)
A 10c. package ■
«of Jell-0 makes
A enough dessert for
a large family.
Sold by all grocers.
« Illustrated Recipe
B Book Free.
The Genesee Pure Food Co., Le Roy, N.Y.
Visit our booth at Jamestown Exposition.
HEADACHES
iWte INDIGESTION
/MMED/ATBLY
iAW CURED BY
HICKS’
GAPUDINE
TRIAL BOTTLE 10* AT DRUG STORES
theGreatEnglishßemedy
BLAIR’S PILLSBH|
■Safe, Sure, Effective 50c, & 81- KSniffinl
In a Pinch, use ALLEN’S FOOT-EASE
Ladies can wear shoes one size smaller after
using Allen’s Foot-Ease. It makes tight or new
shoes feel easy; gives instant relief to corns and
bunions. It’s the greatest comfort discovery of
the age. Cures swollen feet, blisters, callous and
sore spots. It is a certain cure for sweating, hot,
aching feet. At all Druggists and Shoe stores.
25c. Don't accept any substitute. For FREE trial
package, also Free Sample of the FOOT-EASE
Sanitary CORN-PAD, a new invention, address
Allen S. Olmsted, Leßoy, N. Y.
FOR THE WORK OF
THE MINISTRY
By T. HARWOOD PATTISON
Elaborated by his son, Harold Pattison
12mo, 558 pages
Price, $1.50 net; postage
15 cents
The last book from the pen of Doc
tor Pattison, containing chapters on
“The Call to the Ministry,” “ Ordina
tion,” “The Minister and His Study,”
“Finance,” “Ministers and Collat
eral Interests,” etc., with the final
chapter by Rev. Harold Pattison, “Is
the Ministry Worth While?”
OTHER BOOKS BY DOCTOR PATTISON
The Making of the Sermon. 12mo, 402
pages. Price, $1.50.
The History of Christian Preaching. 12mo,
425 pages. Price, $1.50 net; postage, 15
cents.
Public Worship. 12mo, 271 pages. Price,
$1.25.
The History of the English Bible. 12mo,
281 pages. Price, $1.25.
The Ministry of the Sunday School. 12mo,
272 pages. Price, SI.OO net; postage, 10
cents.
The South Wind and Other Sermons.
12mo 288 pages. Price, $1.25 net; post
age, 10 cents.
The Bible in the Twentieth Century.
12mo, 56 pages. Paper. Price, 10 cents.
The Making of William Carey. 16mo, 40
pages. Leatherette. Price, 10 cents.
American Baptist Publication Society
ATLANTA HOUSE
37 South Pryor Street, Atlanta, Oa.
When writing advertisers please mention
The Golden Age.