Newspaper Page Text
12
Sc
EPILEPSY
St. Vitus Dance, Stubborn
Nervous Disorders, Fits
respond immediatelyto the remarkable treat
ment that has for 38 years been a standard
remedy for these troubles— Dß. KLINE’S
A Ann GREAT NERVE RESTORER. It is
dfaaVv prescribed especially for these dis-
DaUla eases and is not a cure-all. Its
DUilie beneficial effects are immediate
Evaa and lasting. Physicians recom
| (66 mend it and druggists sell it. To
prove its wonderful virtues, we will cheerfully
send, without charge, a FULL $2.00 SUPPLY.
Address DR. KLINE INSTITUTE,
Branch 91, Red Bank, N. „
BOWEN
EMPLOYMENT AGENCY
Has good reliable help for ail positions.
HELP FURNISHED FREE.
We also furnish Positions.
248 Brown-Randolph Building ATLANTA, GA.
The Law of the White Circle
By Thornwell Jacobs
A Stirring Novel of
THE
Atlanta Riots
“A book to stir the
passions, a book that 1
powerfully grips the
pillars of sociallife.’ - —
Tom Watson in The
Jeffersonian.
“One of the gieatest ■MRbgI&L {R
novels ever written by a jP’Bwlraf
Southern man. It is vivid,
telling, powerful." — John
Trotwood Moore.
“From just such writers,
men of authoritative
thought the South will
be awakened to what
is necessary in this negro question—just such books 8S
The Law of the White Circle, which we should
welcome, read and study."—Birmingham Age-Herald.
This novel is absolutely unique in Eng
lish Literature and with the exception
of none is the only attempt to be philo
sophically accurate in handling this all
absorbing race theme. It is a virile, hon
est, red-blooded presentation of the great
est factor in American life.
Price, $1.25 Postpaid.
Special offer: We will send a copy of
this book postpaid to any subscriber, old
or new, who sends us $2.35 for a year’s
subscription to The Golden Age, or for
$1.60 we will send the novel and extend
the subscription six months. Address
THE GOLDEN AGE,
Austell Building, Atlanta, Ga.
-droning Made Easy
S AaxFor $2.50
s aves Fuc1 ’
Saves Time
I Saves the
* Ironer.
For Further Particulars Write to
SMOOTHING IRON HEATER CO.
Sumter, S. C.
Agents Wanted.
Wash Your Clothes
Without Rubbing
No lyes or acids. Send 10 cents in
stamps for enough to do 4 ordinary
washings.
AGENTS WANTED
The Ideal Mfg. Co., 185 Cavin St., Ligonier, Ind.
—TAT DRUGSTORES 50c I
This little doggie This little doggio
used. used none*
Astyptodyne Mange Cure.
VOICES OF YOUTH
I am dreaming, sweetly dreaming
Os the days of long ago;
Os a home upon the hillside,
Os a stream with pleasant flow.
On whose banks I used to wander
In the days that are no more.
I can see the children playing,
See the wheat fields broad and
green,
Hoary oaks and stately pine-trees,
Sighing in the night serene;
CHAT.
Dear Boys and Girls: I think it was
a shame I couldn’t be a fairy queen
last Saturday, with power to pick you
all up by the wave of a magic wand
and set you down on those beautiful
picnic grounds by the side of that
cool little babbling stream and re
freshing spring, where the whole of
our beautiful suburb, College Park,
met in a “big family picnic.”
The day was ideal; just cool
enough to make baseball and other
games delightful for the larger young
people, and the swings a luxury for
the smaller ones. Then, there was
the branch to wade in. Think of it!
And off went those children’s shoes
into mothers’ lunch baskets for safe
keeping, while they made us wish we
were children again as they paddled,
in their childish glee and freedom,
first into the shallow, then into the
deeper water. And that dinner!
Don’t those of you who live in the
country ever imagine that it wouldn’t
have compared most favorably in
deed, if not surpassed, any of those
all-day singing association or Farmers’
Union dinners that you have attended,
for I have had the pleasure of all,
and I can safely say it would. And
it was especially at this time, girls, I
wanted you, for there was 'that small
army of Georgia Military Academy
boys, in their grey uniforms and
brass buttons, that always seem so
alluring to a girl’s heart, and not
more than half enough girls to go
round. Now I know you wish I could
have used a wand. They even
brought their band and surpassed
themselves, which is saying much, in
the rendering of quite a nice program,
every note of which added its part
to the pleasures of a very successful,
happy picnic day. So, to those of you
who live in small towns and have a
pretty grove near by, let me advise,
don’t charter a train and go away off
somewhere, but just have a “com
munity picnic,” where you can get
acquainted with your neighbors and
neighbor’s children, and they can get
acquainted with you and have a free
and easy day of it, if you want to
have a general old-time good time.
I hope now, since school days are
over for a time, that my boys and
girls will improve their opportunity
THIS WILL INTEREST MANY.
F. W. Parkhurst, the Boston pub
lisher, says that if any one afflicted
with rheumatism in any form, neural
gia or kidney trouble, will send their
address to him, at 704-35 Carney
Bldg., Boston, Mass., he will direct
them to a perfect cure. He has noth
ing to sell or give, only tells you how
he was cured after years of search
for relief. Hundreds have tested it
with success.
The Golden Age for June 2, 1910.
CONDUCTED EY MRS. G. B. LINDSEY.
m HILLSIDE HOME
Amelia Polver.
I can hear my mother calling
To the children who would roam,
Standing in the doorway calling,
“It is evening, dears —come home.”
So I dream as I sit lonely
Os those childhood days of yore,
Vainly for them I am yearning,
For they can return no more.
My life bark has drifted onward,
From that fair and flowery shore.
Carrollton, Ga.
S® SSU
of talking to us and overrun the
space allotted to them.
Tell us all about the closing exer
cises of your school, and don’t forget
to investigate this contest proposi
tion. LITTLE MOTHER.
Dear Little Mother: A sweet little
story with such a beautiful lesson of
sacrifice and sympathy, has come into
my hands through an old paper that I
want your boys and girls to read it.
Possibly it will give them some of the
suggestions of what we might do for
others—a means of lifting, or sharing
burdens —that it did me.
The teller of the story was a work
ing gin, a member of that vast horde
who must work to live and she says:
I was the shabbiest girl at the of
fice. It was no one’s fault and no
one’s shame that we were poor—l had
intelligence enough to know that. I
knew, too, what a sacrifice mother
had made to pay for my tuition at
business school. Still the knowledge
of my shabby clothes forced itself
upon me, particularly my old black
skirt.
Oh, if you knew how I hated that
skirt! Mother had cleaned it and
pressed it and cleaned it, but it seem
ed “bent” with age, and all the office
girls looked so fresh and pretty in
their trim business suits.
I imagined all the first morning
that they were pitying me and felt
them looking at my shabbiness, and
during noon hour I was so miserable.
But when I went back the next morn
ing I noticed that one of the girls had
on nearly as old clothes as I did and
she was so nice to me I fancied she
was glad I had come because of our
mutual poverty. Not until after I
earned enough money to buy some
suitable, nice clothes did I realize
that the “poor girl,” as I thought her,
had drifted back back into the pret
tiest, most tasteful clothes worn by
any of the girls. She had only borne
me company at a most trying time,
and she knew, because her fellow
workers all admired her, that the lit
tle object lesson would keep them
from hurting my feelings.
The day has come now when new
clothes are usual, when I may even
achieve an appearance that is known
as “stylish.” But in my office when a
girl comes in, shabby, painfully sensi
tive, as I was, I “bear her company”
until the better times shall come.
When I had finished I said what an
unsually unselfish and thoughtful
girl, wish I could be like her.
BLUE EYES.
*
GIRLS’ ‘GOOD TIMES” AND BAD
MANNERS.
I wish to tell you of an incident
that illustrates the lack of courtesy
V LINE
■yT
lllllliro anu
Votan Coffee under ordinary cir
cumstances would be the highest
priced coffee on the market, quality
alone considered. Our geographi
cal location; the fact that we have
no railroad freight to pay; the fact
that labor, port and importing ex
penses at New Orleans are compar
atively low, —these facts all enable
us to save in cost -what we expend
in securing quality.
In 1, 2 and 3 lb. cans.
VOTAN is a coffee of the high
est obtainable grade, prepared
and packed with the sole end
in view of pleasing; the con
sumer, and priced so moder
ately as to add substantially
to this satisfaction.
/T: * ;• •. . 7.'. .
wr'-io.;;, .tv ww•'
Jllllllinm MillllH
VOTAN TEA shares with Votan
Coffee every word that can be
said of a high grade beverage.
Don’t be a follower of the “one-tea
idea.” You will find in this fa
mous blend several of the most de
licious teas grown. Your favorite
tea is daintily incorporated in the
Votan blend. Order a package
to-day.
Packed in }, i, and 1 lb. ca
nisters.
* 11 iTTrnrro 1 8
THERE IS AN EXCLUSIVE |
AGENT IN YOUR TOWN
I (// not write us.)
The Reily-Taylor Co.
I NEW ORLEANS, U. S. A.
A PRACTICAL REASON.
A Connecticut man tells of two Irish
men from Boston, who, while driving
through the state named, observed that
many of the barns had weathervanes
in the shape of huge roosters.
“Dennis,” said one Irishman to the
other, “can ye tell me why they al
ways have a rooster an’ niver a hin on
the top of thim barns?”
“Sure,” replied Dennis, “It’s because
of the difficulty they’d have in collect
ing the eggs.”
&