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USE OUR MONEY
StabHsh a profittMeaninastiiig- business A gj~gi ft
of your own. Be your own boss. We ga 3 n A I
furnish everything, including Sample Out* ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■
fit valued at $3.50. We began with noth- 9 Ilf E
ing; are now worth $100,000; what we did FsSJT LIVE
you can do; we will gladly help you. Big
Catalog, Plans and Sample Outfit 1A E UTC
now ready and ALL FREE.Write now.fi 11 ► N 9 X
Consolidated Portrait & Frame Co. ** Fiß iJaaiiß
290-10 W- Adams St., Chicago, 111.
BABY SAVED HER
M I was sick for three years,” writes
Mrs. Nolie Jones, of Russellville,
Tenn. “ I had a doctor and took medi
cine regularly, but grew worse, until
last spring I was past going out and
was just skin and bones.
“One day I noticed my baby playing
with one of your Ladies Birthday Al
manacs. I picked it up and from it
learned of your Wine of Cardui.
“I have taken 4 bottles of Cardui and
am well and hearty. Weigh 145
pounds. I believe Cardui saved my
life and I hope all women who suffer
as I did will try it.”
Cardui is a pure, vegetable medicine
for women. It has been found to re
lieve or cure nervousness, headache,
backache, pain in the side and other
female ailments.
If you are suffering, try Cardui at
once. Thousands of letters come to us,
from grateful women who have found
relief in Cardui. If it has done so
much for them, it surely will help you
—just one more. Try it.
All reliable druggists sell Cardui,
with full directions for use inside
wrapper.
N. B. We will be glad to send you
one of our Ladies Birthday Almanacs,
if you will send postal- card, asking
for it. Address: Chattanooga Medi
cine Co., Chattanooga, Tenn.
CANCER c b a e n CURED
Scores of testimonials, from persons who
gladly write to those now sufferiQg, all tell
of perfect cures. My Mild Combination
Treatment destroys growth and elimiuqtcs
the disease from the system. FREE! BOOK,
“Cancer and Its Cure,” and 125-page book
of testimonials from CURED patients in
every State in the Union. No matter how
serious your case, how many operations
you have had, or what treatment you have
taken, don’t give up hope, but write at
once fpr my books.
DR. JOHNSON REMEDY CO.,
1235 Grand Ave., Kansas City, Mo.
MHCir RV MAU A p° stal t 0 us > wil *
lUUdIV DI Hl AIL. bring our list of latest
music, and one piece free by return mail.
ARNO MUSIC CO.,
63 Peachtree St., Atlanta, Ga.
DDADCVCured; quick relief; removes all
UlXviOl swe ning in 8 to 20 days; 80 to 60
days effects permanent cure. Trial treat
ment given free to sufferers; nothing fairer.
For circulars, testimonials aud free trial
treatment write Dr. H. fi. Green’s Stiffs,
Box X, Atlanta, Georgia.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup
Has been used for over SIXTY-FIVE YEARS by MIL
LIONS of MOTHERS for tbeir CHILDREN WHILE
TEETHING, with PERFECT SUCCESS. It SOOTHES
the CHILD, SOFTENS the GUMS, ALLAYS all PAIN;
CURES WIND COLIC, and is the best remedy for DIAR
RHCEA. Sold by Drug-g-ists in every part of the world.
Be sure and ask for “Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup,”
and take no other kind. Twenty-five cents a bottle.
Guaranteed under the Food and Drugs Act, June 80th,
1906 Serial Number 1098. AN OLD AND WELL TRIED
REMEDY.
RRESTORIA SAIA£
Makes Nursing a Pleasure
Guaranteed preventative and cure for Sore
Nipples, Inflamed Breast, Cuts, Bruises,
Ground-Itch, Risings, Boils, Sprains, Ingrow
ing Nails, Corns, all kinds external eruptions.
Every household should have a box. 50c.
a box postpaid.
international Drug Co., Box 12, Jacksonville, Fla.
OUR GOOD CHEER
“FOR THE GOOD WE ALL MAY DO"
Conducted by TESSA WILLINGHAM RODDEY, Long Veach, Miss.
OPPORTUNITY.
This I beheld, or dreamed it in a
dream;
There spread a cloud of dust along a
plain.
And underneath the cloud, or in it,
raged
A furious battle, and men yelled, and
swords
Shocked upon swords and shields. A
prince’s banner
Wavered, then staggered backward,
hemmed by foes.
A craven hung along the battle’s edge,
And thought: “Had 1 a sword of keen
er steel —
That blue blade that the king's son
bears —but this
Blunt thing!” He snapped and flung
it from his hand,
And lowering crept away and left the
field.
1 iien came the king's son, wounded,
sore bestead,
And weaponless, and saw tne broken
sword,
Hilt buried in the dry and trodden
sand,
And ran and snatched it, and with
battle shout
Lifted afresh, he bowed his enemy
down,
And saved a great cause on that he
roic day.
EDWARD ROWLAND SILL.
CHAT.
B LITER to hunt in fields for
health unbought
Than fee the doctor for a nau
seous draft;
The wise for cure on exercise depend,
God never made His work for man
to mend.”
So wrote John Dryden lorfg ago. We
think we are so up-to-date, or “down
to-date,” as a man said recently, and
we foolishly, and with vanity believe
that we are far in advahce of what
others have been. In all conceit we
believe that as we grow in years we
grow in finer knowledge, subtler sci
ence, larger vision and fuller capac
ity, but we have only to turn back
ward the pages of history and biogra
phies to find that we are wise only in
our own conceit; that all the secrets
of nature were shown to people long
ago. We don’t find out new things;
we only know what others have known
before. The mantle of wisdom that
rested on other generations has fallen
to us, and we only fold and fasten it
differently; and some of us are not
large enough for it to fit. Some of
us have to labor long to learn the art
of wearing while others, alas! how
many of us, only reach out with grasp
ing fingers to barely get the hem of
the garment; and many only hear the
rustle, as the wiser ones walk by. It
seems to me the years have laid that
part of the mantle that covered Wash
ington, Lee, Mrs. Browning, Milton,
Pope and others, into soft, firm folds,
as too sacred to touch commoner clay
—but laid into those folds are the
sweetest perfumes of memories, holy
and high; and the fragrance comes out
to us with each rustle* of the mantle
and makes us long to keep in touch
Hick's CAPUDINE Cures Sick Head
aches,
Also Nervous Headache, Traveler’s
Headache and aches from Grip, Stom
ach Troubles or Female troubles. Try
Capudine—it’s liquid—effects imme
diately. Sold by druggists.
The Golden Age for August 5, 1909.
with the folds—ah, just to breathe the
fragrance from the folds that covered
Washington and Lee; ah, only to hear
the rustle of the mantle that envel
oped Browning, Ruskin, Lanier, Poe,
and Harris.
Ah, Lanier and Harris! Methinks
that mantle would exhale the fra
grance of every southern flower and
shrub that lends its sweetness to ev
ery southern breeze!
Where is one worthy to wear the
mantle of our own Washington, our
matchless Lee? And as we turn about
in our thoughts for an answer to this,
we realize that we are not so far
ahead as we think. We may flash
wireless messages from continent to
continent, and anchor our airships in
density of ether; we may connect
worlds with our steeds of steam and
steel, but that is only material growth,
not ethical development, not soul, not
spirituality, and when we pause to
consider the real needs of life, we re
alize that the greatest need is soul
need, and we wul also realize that we
haven’t it.
“In the beginning God created the
heavens and the earth,” and “God
never made His work for man to
mend.”
TESSA W. RODDEY.
*
OUTDOOR LIVING.
Living outdoors is very easy and
simple and delightful if we could only
learn how to do it, and it is easy to
learn if we could only make up our
minds that we can learn it, and real
ize how necessary it is to health.
1 remember ten years ago, when I, a
busy wife and mother, was told by a
physician, a nerve specialist, “you stay
in the house too much; you must get
outdoors.” I wondered how I could
find time to stay outdoors. There was
breakfast and straightening up me
house, putting the kitchen in order,
getting seven children dressed lor the
morning; getting sewing done, iron
ing, starching, washing, all the thou
sand and one things a woman who is
a real home keeper, finds to do, but
I had to obey the doctor or leave my
little ones motherless, so I studied out
away to work outdoors; we had a
side porch; I had no screens, so I cur
tained it; and here every morning I
dressed the children; here I washed
dishes; I moved all the laundry things
outdoors and washed in the shade of
a tree, trying to learn not to care if
the neighbors looked at me in my
washing clothes.” I soon found that
I could take the clothes off the line,
lay them on a table in the yard and
fold and press them out under the
trees; a charcoal furnace to heat the
irons and boil the kettle made this
outdoor laundry easy. I soon found
that with a small old safe, a large ta
ble, a chair or two, I could pick veg
etables, wash them, pare fruit, sew,
sort and pack eggs, work and mold
butter, beat up eakes, and lots and
lots of things in the bright, cheery
outdoors. The children were less cross,
and I kept in a better humor; I did
more work, and as my work was all
done out of the house, I could keep
it in company order easy. We hung
“wall pockets” to the tree, large ones
made of oilcloth, and in them kept our
sewing utensils, can openers, screw
drivers, files, meat cutters, saws, egg
beaters, and anything that we used
out there often. I kept a spoon, knife,
fork and measure out there, and an
other in the kitchen, and a shelf made
to the tree held many things needed
DEAF 25 YEARS
Can Now Hear Whispers 9
I was deaf for 25
years. I can now
bear a whisper
eftajk. i i with my artifl- WMafiSr
ciai EAR DRUMS
in my ears. Vou dedicated Ear Druaa
cannot see them p at . j u iy 15,1908
in my ears. I Can
Not Fool Thom for they are perfectly
WfeCWW comfortable. Write and I will tell you
TEgsSSg a true story —How I Got Deaf and How
A I Made Myself Hear. Address
c. p. way CEO. P. WAY
Inventor 8 Adelaide St.. Detroit, Mich.
in our outdoor work shop. I brought
out my machine often and sewed out
there; the children found more to
amuse them; there was less danger
of falls and bumps, and I found my
self gaining flesh and losing that tired,
worried expression that was wrinkling
my face, and making me much less
attractive to thy “Lord and Master,”
who has an eye for a pretty face.
Now I am in a position to hire every
thing done, and four of my children
are in colleges, and the other four in
fine schools near me, but I still live
outdoors, and keep my servants im
pressed with the benefits derived
from outdoor work and keep things
arranged for them to do most of their
work outdoors. We have a “sun room”
for winter use, planned in away to
catch all the sun possible, and we use
it almost constantly all winter, and I
can’t too strongly urge outdoor liv
ing. MRS. BYRD.
THE POOR YE HAVE WITH YOU
ALWAYS.
Speaking of a farm or large estate
owned by capitalists, and opened up
and operated for the purpose of giving
sanitary homes and conditions and
living wages to the needy, ignorant
poor, reminds me of one year I spent
in the west. Some people had en
deavored to build a railroad and had
gotten several families to leave an
eastern city and go with them w r est to
work on the railroad. One man had
a shabby boarding house, another a
third class store, another a school,
and by the end of three months there
were at least fifty families, and many
single men boarding about among
them awaiting the road to go througn,
expecting the town to build up and
work for many people to result, but
when a certain mine failed io pan out
as expected the company decided not
to build the road, and said nothing to
these disappointed people about trans
portation back home. Some of them
tried to raise hogs; some of them
opened up small farms; some of them
raised a few cows and horses, but as
a whole, they were a sorry looking
crowd, and as poor as people get to
be, and the problem with them was
how to get the necessary food to keep
the body alive. They had been in this
A Sufferer For Twelve Months.
Every other had failed; “We had
just as soon be without quinine as to
be out of Hughes’ Chill Tonic. One
of the most wonderful cures of chills
and fever came under my observation.
A man suffering for about twelve
months from a most obstinate attack
of chills and fever tried every remedy
that he could heai- of, all to no pur
pose. I persuaded him to try a bot
tle of Hughes’ Tonic; from that time,
over twelve months ago, he has not
had a chill.” Sold by Druggists—-50c
and SI.OO bottles.
Prepared by
ROBINSON-PETTET CO., Louisville.
Incorporated.