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Quickly
Cured
Without Pain, Great Cost, Operation
or Trouble in the Secrecy of
Your Own Home.
Trial Package By Mail, Free.
Every druggist carries Pyramid Pile
Cure in stock. Why? Because pile
sufferers buy it in such quantities that
the druggist is compelled to supply the
demand or lose this class of patronage.
These little cones perform their du
ties so quickly as to be almost an over
night relief or cure.
Testimonials, unsolicited, come to us
daily of the great success Pyramid Pile
Cure is making.
Cases of ten and fifteen years have
been cured after a short time by these
little healers.
No worry is necessary, the dread of
pain and hospital and operating table
is removed.
Don’t be skeptical, buy a box at
once and give yourself relief. It will
not take months to prove their value.
One or two applications is all the
proof you will need.
Any druggist, anywhere, will supply
you, or if you prefer, send us fifty
cents and we will send you a box by
mail in plain wrapper, or send us your
name and address and we will send
you a trial package by mail free. Ad
dress Pyramid Drug Co., 152 Pyramid
Bldg., Marshall, Mich.
Can Cancer be Cured? It Can
We want every man and woman in the United
States to know what we are doing. We are cur
ing Cancers, Tumors and Chronic Sores without
the use of the knife or X-Ray, and are endorsed
bythe Senate and Legislature of Virginia.
We Guarantee Our Cures.
THE KELLAM HOSPITAL,
Ifls West Main, - - Richmond, Va.
Gipsy Smith, Campbell Morgan, A. C. Dixon
Cork, Moorehead, Moule, Stelzle, Trotter, Mullins,Gray,
Mott, Torrey, Orr, Erdman and Speer are among those
whose addresses have recently appeared in our
Three
- Mot*. CHRISTIAN WORKER’S MAGAZINE
T rittl 10c copy ,|1 a year. Practical Bible courses, helpful
25 Ctft arti lea on Bible themes, methods of work, and deeper
Christian life; reports from evangelists; practical and
perplexing questions answered; world n-ws at a e'ance -.notes and pug
gestions; usable illustrations and outiuus. Nothing like it in the ■
country. SPECIAL—From now thro’ Dec. 1909 for sl.
THE INSTITUTE TIE, 80 Institute Place, Chicago, 111.
VOICES OF YOUTH
CONDUCTED BY THE EDITOR.
IF I WERE SANTA CLAUS.
If I were Mister Santa Claus,
I’d go around, I know,
More times than only once a year—
The years are awful slow.
And Santa doesn’t have to go
To school, as children do;
1 often wonder what he does
For twelve long months, don’t you?
He does not like to play, I know,
For he is old, they say;
He is too fat to jump or run —
His hair and beard are gray.
Perhaps he loves to smoke his pipe,
And watch smoke-circles rise
Till they are lost among the clouds
That float across the skies.
Perhaps at night he dreams he rides
Behind his white reindeer,
To carry lovely gifts around
To children everywhere.
If I were Santa Clas —dear me,
I’m awful scared at night!
I do not like the dark, and I
Cry when there is no light.
And though my sleigh might swiftly
glide,
I'd be afraid to go,
All in the darkness of the night,
Across the shining snow.
And so, if I were Santa Claus,
The children would be sad;
I couldn’t go ’round once a year,
And that would be too bad!
MARGARET A. RICHARD.
*
CHAT.
Merry Christmas to my bright cir
cle, as we gather around our Voice
of Youth fireside for the yuletide feast.
I trust there is not a sad heart among
you, when this morning, with all its
intended joy and gladness comes to us,
proclaiming anew, “Peace on Earth.
Good Will to Men.”
Our good mother, over in the House-
For COLDS and GRIP.
Hicks’ CAP UDINE is the best rem
edy—relieves the aching and feverish
ness—cures the Cold and restores nor
mal conditions. It’s liquid—effects im
mediately. 10c, 25c, & 50c at all drug
stores.
The Golden Age for December 24, 1908.
hold, gives us an interesting account
of the first Christmas celebration and
its tragic ending, which will give you
some idea of what it once meant to
honor the birth of our Savior, or to
serve Him in any sense as to that.
We, who live in this day of relig
ious liberty, freedom of thought and
action, can scarcely catch at the hem
of the garment of understanding, *in
our efforts to realize what those days
of suffering and sacrifice for the sake
of truth meant. And yet, now, as then,
“Right must ever fight its awy against
the world. Truth must walk alone in its
Gethsemane. Justice must bravely
face its Calvary, if it would still live
in triumph after all efforts to stay it.”
This is a bright, happy world if we
make it bright, but very, very hard, if
we forget and make it hard. Our own
weaknesses make the stony way. We
often feel disheartened, grieved, dis
mayed, when we have made our hon
est, earnest effort and failed. And we
catch ourselves asking the question,
“what’s the use?” Why make the ef
fort, when everything I touch goes
wrong? Why shouldn’t I succeed, or
have things I want as well as others
do? These questions often come as
we face our share of disappointments.
“Why should I suffer poverty, sorrow,
lonliness and failure, when I seek to
be fair, good, kind, sympathetic, help
ful and just?” These are hard, large
questions for our young heads, and
yet, I remember quite well, when, as a
girl of fifteen and sixteen, they came
to me with fully as strong fore? as
now, and far more unanswerable, rea
soning in my then unreasonable head.
Human nature-doesn’t change. The,
same thoughts and feelings are in
young heads and hearts today. Lest
they bear bad fruitage in your lives,
let me, on this Christmas tide, help
you set them aside and be happy.
There is something higher, purer,
more to be sought and valued, than
the approval of the world, or mere
money value. Know you are right.,
have the consciousness of work well
done, of absolute loyalty to your ideals,
of faithfulness in all things, and there
will be a joy springing up in your
heart an dlife, making happy, satisfy—*
ing your “highest self,” that is fir
greater than any approval the world
can give or money can buy.
Merry Christmas again, from your
LITTLE MOTHER.
REMEDY FOR LIQUOR AND TO
BACCO.
Officers of Anti-Saloon Leagues of Several
States have endorsed a plan of mailing out
free prescriptions for the relief of the liquor
and Tobacco Habits, that is being carried
out by F. Gray, 753 New Ridge Bldg., Kan
sas City, Mo. Either prescription can be
given secretly, and filled by local druggist.
The only request made is that you enclose
stamp when writing for them and do not
sell recipes but give copies to friends.
CHRISTMAS THOUGHTS FROM A
VISITOR.
Dear Boys and Girls of the “Voices
of Youth” Department of Our Dear
Golden Age: I have been thinking for
some time that I would, w r ith the per
mission of your “Little Mother,” give
you a short story, which I think you
will enjoy and which may tend to
strengthen and encourage you in the
right. The story is a true one.
A few years ago a number of young
people were assembled at a family
residence on an autumn evening to
BS|i)KS
FOR REVIVALS
Sane Evangelism. Rev. W. Wistar Hamil
ton, D. D. 16mo. Price, 75 cents net,
postpaid.
Howto Grow in the Christian Life. Rev.
W. Wistar Hamilton, D. D. Vest-pocket
size. Price, leather, 25 cents net, post
paid ; paper, 10 cents net, postpaid.
The Helping Hand. Rev. W. W. Hamilton,
D. D. Price, leather, 25 cents net; post
paid ; paper, 10 cents net, postpaid.
Practical Ideals in Evangelism. Charles
Herbert Rust. 16mo, 338 pp. Price, 50
cents net, postage, 8 cents.
The New Evangelism. Rev. Cortland
Myers, D. D. 12ino, 85 pp. Price, cloth,
35 cents net, postpaid ; paper, 20 cents
net, postpaid.
A Study in Soul Winning. The Christian
Conversationalist. Rev. R. W. Weaver.
16mo, 128 pp. With introduction by Rev.
E. M. Poteat, D. D. Price, 50 cents net,
postpaid.
Saturday Afternoon ; or. Conversations for
the Culture of the Christian Life. Rev.
Wavland Hoyt, D. D. l(3mo, 302 pp. Price,
25 cents net; postage, 5 cents.
PAMPHLETS
Work With the Unsaved. RSV. C. H.
Moscrip. Leatherette. Frice, 5 cents
net, postpaid.
Handbook for Inquirers and Converts.
Rev. C. L. Jackson. Price, 10 cents net,
postpaid.
Every Crsature. Rev. M. T. Lamb. Paper.
Price, 15 cents net, postpaid.
: ' TRACTS
Send for our catalogue of Small Arms,
containing a complete list of tracts for
revivals.
American Baptist Publication Society
AT I. ANT A HOUSE
37 S. Pryor Street, Atlanta, ©a.
H. C. ROBERT, Manager
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