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* | VOICES OF YOUTH I
CONDUCTED BY MRS. G. B. LINDSEY.
You are buying for
church
DORlgKb'
About that Organ.
If you have the money; if
you’re raising it, or only
planning—write for helpful
suggestions.
ESTEXBrdttle&t
BOWEN
EMPLOYMENT AGENCf
Has good reliable help for all 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 hook that S&sßa'<
powerfully grips the ■
pillars, of soc ial life ’ — ■HHM
Tom Watson in 7>.v ? '
.Jrjfersonian. ~
“ (inf of the greatest Si
Horril written l,y a
Southern man. It vivid, re .1
Trotwood .Moore.
"From
men of authoritative
thought the South will
be awakened to what
is necessary in this negro question—just such books as
The Law of the White Circle, which we should
welcome, re ad 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.
For God’s Sake Do Something”
We have answered this cry
If 1 " l in our new book •‘Fight-
MMISKMBHBMifd t,le Traffic in Young
' HI (;irls ’ b.v Ernest A. Bell. V.
s ‘ histrictAttorney Sims and
jgf, r 7j WE WPFW HI others. The mostsensational
Bril'’-* indictment of the White
Slave Trade ever published.
It tells how thousands lof
PT. TZ'lKV®®Sßufl s’ oun t? girls are lured from
their homes annually and
I TaFWlWfflral sold into a life of sin and
shame. The Cincinnatti In-
Hr VMsmtl jll quirer says “Os all the books
K’ ' 7YES MM of the season the War on the
I®“' l : White Slave Trade is the
most helpful: it should be
fc.’ fread bv every man. woman
■ LllSfflffl and child.” Agents are mak
ine. froni S 8 oo t 0 $17.00 a day
selling this book. Over 500
1 ' lll coulo ouf get out e; Hsne| pages. Many pictures. Price
$1.50. Best terms to agents.
Outfit free. Send 15c for for
warding charges. Book sent to any address postpaid
upon receipt of price. American Home Supply Com
pany, Pope Building, Chicago.
T> Increase the value of your 498
boy’s education by giving him V
a broader training than your I
public school can offer.
W will give him a thorough preparation for M
■ college—with Military Training. Also H
||| Commercial Courses. Largo buildings.
M Gymnasium with swimming pool. Ath
letic field. Board, tuition, etc.,s2so. Two rag
aS from one family $450. Lower School,
HH with separate dormitory for boys from 10
nL to 14. For catai-''; address Rev. Walter Milohsll.
B. 0., Rector, Box I, Ctiffieston, S. C.
THE CHILDREN'S RED-TIME
“Hark! little folks! the clock strikes
seven.
Come; it is your bed-time.”
“Oh! sister, wait a little while,”
Their childish voices chime;
“I’ve drawn a house; it’s nearly done,
All on this side my slate,
And here’s a woman and a pump
To finish near the gate.”
“Which is the woman, which the
pump ?
That point is quite obscure.
This? Well, I’m glad you showed me,
dear;
I should have missed it, sure.”
“You jes’ wait, Lula, ’til I done
Lookin’ dis jogfry fru.
And puts my dolly in her bed,
And den me’ll go wif you.
“Now I is reddy; tate me up;
CHAT.
Dear Boys and Girls:
Mrs. Bean has given us a splendid
little story this week that I am quite
sure you will enjoy.
She is a great friend of young peo
ple and most of her writings are to,
and about them. These stories hold
always some thought through which
she hopes to brighten or better their
lives. Your vacation is here now so
read over the list of valuable prizes
we are offering and send in your name
at once, the sooner you begin the bet
ter premium you will have time to
earn before your schoo' opens again.
Don’t let this opportunity go by. Just
a little determination and hustle will
mean success. I am expecting a “full
house” on the letter line right away.
Let us hear from all of the old mem
bers. The more the merrier, you
know.”
LITTLE MOTHER.
1 guarantee by Croup Specific to Cure
and cure quick. Let me make known to
you the best remedy to be had. Sample
free for the asking. Write Dr. J. M.
•’hristian. Hazelhurst. CH.
Dear Voices:
If you Will l®t a stranger come in
and express himself, why here I am.
School closed last Friday night with
a “dandy good” exercise and a
speech by this honorable stranger was
one of the features. You should have
been there, for 1 made a louder noise
I am sure, than some of the “Voices”
are making right now. I am quite
sure some of them have lost their
voices altogether, can’t even give a
stage whisper. Bartlett Kelley, you
are a fine boy; I know from some
things I have heard through a mutual
friend. Wish you’d hunt around and
find that voice and speak out in
“meetin’ ” because I enjoyed your lit
tle ta’ks.
Persistence seems to have lost his
“persisting” powers. Wake up Per
sistence and let us hear the sound of
your voice. What do you say to enter
ing the contest? It seems quite an
array of prizes to me.
YOUR NEW VOICE.
CALL S I ONES - liver
or Stomach Ailment Cured.
" AVOID AN OPERATION
Have you Pain or Distress in Pit of Stomach, Pains 2
nours after meals, Right-side pains or Backache’ Snells
of Indigestion, Sick Headache, Biliousness, Colic. Jaun
dice, Blues, Constipation, Piles, Soreness, Fullness or
Oppression over Liver or Stomach? Iffbu have anv of
these symptoms you need the “SECRO-SOLVO-TONE”
Treatment. Write for FREE Booklet. CALLSTONE
"“.cHi'XaS’ilu - S - Ag “'■** ”
The Golden Age for June 9, 1710.
S© SiS)
tiy S C L.
Tate off mine shoes and ’tockin’s,
And put me up there in my kib,
And ’tart me nice to rockin’.”
“There, papa! please pull off my
boots,
And I’ll put back the chairs;”
And then six pattering little feet
Go scampering up the stairs.
The little white robed figures kneel
And lisp a tiny prayer;
Are tucked in with a good-night kiss
And left to the angels’ care.
Now quiet reigns throughout the
house,
Since early morn unknown,
And with the quiet comes the thought
Os other wee ones gone—
Two merry darling ones who climbed
The “gold stairs” long ago,
One laid beneath the summer flowers
And one beneath the snow.
WEIGHTS FOR THE DAY.
By A. L. B. -
■EXT Friday would be Longfel
low’s day at school, and Emmie
had been carefully reading his
N
poems in anticipation of that event.
She wavered between “The Old Clock
on the Stair” and “Children’s Hour”
until this morning, when she decided
in favor of the former. She had
seated herself at the head of the stair
case, where the old clock stood, with
its ponderous weights and its long,
Quaint hands pointing to the lofty
figures on its dial-plate.
This old-fashioned time piece had
descended as an heirloom to Emmie’s
mother from her grandfather. Now
the long hands were motionless and
the great weights of the clock moved
not like well-regulated machinery;
still it had a peculiar charm for her,
and as the morning sunlight, passing
through the blinds, kissed its quaint,
round face, she imagined its deep,
sonorous voice pealed forth on the
early morning air, in no mistaken
tones, “Forever, Never, Never, For
ever!”
Emm.c was so absorbed in her
musings that she was unaware of
Aunt Edith’s approach until she laid
her hand on her shoulder and re
minded her, in a sweet, gentle voice,
of the unperformed household duties
wlrch fell to Emmie’s lot on Satur
day.
“Oh, Aunt Edith, it is so humdrum
and monotonous to wipe dishes,
sweep, dust and darn. How much
pleasanter to keep company with this
antiquated time-piece and prepare for
Longfellow’s day, which, you know, is
next Friday.”
“No, my dear,” Aunt Edith replied,
“you will have ample time to prepare
for that occasion. Present duties now
claim your time and attention. Re
member, child, as the clock has its
w’e’ghts, so you have your weights,
which are the little burdens that come
up daily. Our hearts are unlike the
clock, which has to be wound up only
once a day or in e'ght days. Lest we
grow inactive or disordered, we must
every moment wind up our hearts by
prayer. We can, by watching and
praying, ‘lay aside every weight, and
the sin which doth so easily beset us.’
Take up each duty as it comes, and
lift your heart in prayer for grace to
perform them, however humble they
may be. These duties, which are so
distasteful, when performed for con-
I?!
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NEW ORLEANS, U.S. A.
WANTED —Good men and women agents
at once for “Roosevelt’s Famous Hunt
for Big Game”; also for “Traffic in
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per cent, commission. Outfit free. Send
15c for mailing. Both outfits 25c. Also
district managers for easy payment in
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Chicago, 111.
The man who habitually mixes cop
ious tears with his sentiment is like a
water-core apple—looks best on the
outside. —Cleveland News.