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DR. S. W. ARROWOOD,
62 McDaniel St., gives
free.treatment, free exam
ination ; guarantees a cure
fordropsy, tumors, cancers,
old sores, nervous indiges
tion, rheumatism and all
diseases of the blood, lungs,
liver and kidneys; diseases
of women and children a
specialty.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup
Has been used for over SIXTY-FIVE YEARS by
MILLIONS of MOTHERS for their 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 DIARRHCEA. Sold by
Druggists In every part of the world. P>e sure
and ask for “Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup,’’
and take no other kind. Twentv-five cents a bot
tle. AN OLD AND WELL TRIED REMEDY.
sinfuTsadday
Thornlvell Jacobs
"Makes an ideal
.s" x. present for a boy.”—
/ \ Epworth Era.
I \ “Full of action and
/ \ entertaining.”— Nash-
IiIiLiBSiMbL Ville Banner.
/ / “Will be read with
' / interest, not only by
XJL children, but by
grown-ups all over our
Southland.”—Christian
Observer.
“Far above the av
erage of boys’ books
in living interest.”— 1
Our Monthly.
"An exceedingly at
tractive picture of
life.”— Charleston (S.
C.) News & Courier.
The story tells of a /
little cotton mill or- *
phan who, with his dF
brother, Little Pard
ner, get to the Thorn-
well Orphanage, where
Bwith scores of comrades,
the story develops into a
thrilling narrative of
baseball, ambition,
schools, medals, bird
nests, Christmas bonfires,
and hundreds of such
things in which apy boy
is born interested. Santa
Claus is investigated, the
baseball game with the
“town nine” is won, and
through adventure and combat Sinful
Saddy comes to be a youth of parts.
The book is beautifully illustrated with
thirty-five pen sketches and twelve full
page wash-drawings. Cover in four col
ors. Price SI.OO postpaid.
Special Offer: With The Golden Age
one year (old or new subscriptions), only
$2.25, postpaid. For $1.50 we will send
the book and credit purchaser with six
months subscription.
THE GOLDEN AGE,
Austell Building, Atlanta, Ga.
LEXINGTON, KY„ 437 West Second Street
Campbell - Hagerman College
Resident school for girls and young women.
Board and tuition, S3OO. New buildings. Every
convenience. English, College Preparatory,
Junior College Courses. Music Expression.
Physical Culture. Students the past year from
16 states. For year book apnly to
G. P. SIMMONS, Associate President.
But, what if I fail of my purpose here?
It is but to keep the nerves at
strain,
To dry one’s eyes and laugh at a fall,
And, baffled, get up and begin
again—
So the chase takes up one’s life, that’s
all. —“Love in a Life.”
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
tor relief. Hundreds have tested it
with success.
“Fever? What? It took me by the
throat. It stared down through the
inmost bars of my soul. It made me
suffer, as I can never remember to
have suffered in all my life. Every
step was a groan. Every breath a
prayer, for another vision of you. I
feared that I would never see you
again. I have hated, hated, hated the
long desert before me —without you. 1
despised the years that were to be. I
saw no hope in all the gray, grim
world. Did I not love you? Did I not?
Or have I described the emotion so
clumsily, that you cannot grasp its
meaning?”
She was silent. They rose and took
the broad white walk towards the
great gates, their young heads turned,
their hearts beating wildly. In this
unreal world of magic, of stars and
roses, of romance and fragrance, love
even for them seemed a possibility.
The Ghost of Chance floated down
the dim-lit woodland path after them.
He had been present at their first
meeting.
“And how can I unmask a woman’s
heart?” she sighed.
They paused by a fountain, ringed
with pansies, and listened to the gen
tle plashing of the waters on the
old, time-worn flagstones. She was
white now as the stars, burning like
ivory towers, in the soft, southern
heavens, and the diamonds rose on her
breast, swiftly as she drew in her
breath.
The great evening star seemed
wreathed in white bridal flames. The
night held its passionate breath for his
answer.
“You need not unmask your heart,
Proserpina, I know the divide is too
great. I am only forgetting for the
moment.”
She looked at him with new-born
wonder in her widened eyes. Could
this man be the same who had storm
ed at the “system”, by the banks of
Millwood creek, not many weeks ago?
“You need not unmask your heart,
Proserpina,” he repeated, touching hex’
bare arm, with something like a ca
ress. “The love is all on my side.
Who am I, that you should love me?
Can the noble princess step down to
love the peasant? With an offered
love must go something more, and I
am but a beggar beside your wealth.”
“Not often,” she said, stooping to
pull a purple pansy, her manner
strangely gentle. “Just often enough
to keep faith within the world, for
there is a nobility of soul not weigh
ed by gold. It would not be stepping
down —to love you, Pluto,” with a note
of understanding in her voice, “but
stepping upward, out of the grave of
the unloved, to discover and value the
inner depths and possibilities of an
imprisoned nobility.”
They left the fountain, tossing its
silver water threads to the stars.
“No.” he said, with a gasp of hope,
that he dared not trust in his voice.
“I didn’t dream you could look at it
that way, Proserpina.”
She slipped the pansy through the
lapel of his coat.
“Yes—yes—I do —God be good to
me! Love and Death are great level
ers. My pride has been humbled in
the dust. I have been lead to see much
I might not once have seen. There is
that within me that craves a true,
noble love, and I have prayed to be
spared the grave of the unloved,” she
said, pitifully, making a vague gesture
through the night, with her bare, beau
tiful drm.
“Your purse may be that of the peas
ant Pluto, but in that first strange
meeting, I was given a vision of crush
ed hopes and hidden yearnings that
bespoke possibilities that needed to
be unchanged to make their possessor
rich in both noble manhood and gold.”
He watched the starlight fall across
The Golden Age for June 16, 1910.
WHERE WILL YOU
SPEND THE SUMMER?
Why Not Try Winona Lake Assembly, Situated
on Beautiful Winona Lake in K orthern Indiana ?
In Chautauqua features equal to Chautauqua, N. Y., in Bible Conference and
Sunday School features equal to Northfield, Mass. Largest attended Assembly
in America. A series of rich Literary and religious entertainments.
Bathing, boating, fishing, golf, tennis, and all innocent amusements. Fine *
Mineral water. Six large hotels, numerous boarding and lodging houses.
Write postal and secure free the beautiful Year Book, giving all necessary in
formation. Address
PUBLICITY BUREAU, WINONA LAKE, INDIANA.
| AGNES SCOTT COLLEGE »
3 DECATUR (6 miles from Atlanta) Georiria. Two trolley lines. ))
,V One of three Colleges for women south of Pennsylvania admitted to membership in “Associ- ft
ation of Colleges and Preparatory Schools of Southern States.” U
JJ • $350,000 subscribed for endowment and enlargement. SIOO,OOO in new buildings this year, ft
Catalog on application. F. H. GAINES, D. D., President. '1
SPECIAL SUMMER RATES
Write for full information TODAY. Big new catalogue free by mail. 37 colleges in 16 States;
$100,000,00 in equipment; model office department: actual busii ess training; earn while you
learn; positions guaranteed, expert specialists; individual instruction; we also teach by mail.
Better buy a postal and write me TODAY.
ARTHUR C. MINTER, General Manager
Draughon’s Practical Business College
Atlanta, Ga., Macon, Ga., Montgomery, Ala., Knoxville, Tenn., Greenville, S. C.
All of all
the best Music
In Edison Standard Records you get all of the shorter
selections in the purest, most lifelike rendering. ’
And on Amberol Records you get the same pure, lifelike
reproduction on longer selections than it is possible to get •
with the ordinary Record, without hurrying, without crowd
ing or cutting out important parts —because Amberol
Records play twice as long as Edison Standard Records.
ToZ? EDISON
PHONOGRAPH
gives you not only all kinds of music but all of all kinds.
There is an Edison Phonograph for you at whatever price
you feel you ought to play.
The s2oo er ° la Does your Phonograph play Amberol Records? ■
—ls not, ask your dealer about our money-saving
combination offer on Amberol Records and the /BL ■
1 attachment to play them.
I There arc Edison dealers everywhere. Get complete
ill catalogs of Edison Phonographs and Records from InT
your dealer or from us.
Edison Standard Records 35c I A
Edison Amberol Records (play twice as long).. . 50c |
Edison Grand Opera Records 75c to $2.00
Z* NATIONAL PHONOGRAPH COMPANY
\ f 149 Lakeside Avenue, Orange, N. J.
THE ECONOMICAL ROOF
cos t is usu ' II
flk ally about the B
[giSg!, same as wood shing- 1
les, an d Cortright Met- I
al Shingles outwear all other I
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plate and either painted both sides ■
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Write for dealer’s name. If we haven’t an agency in I
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promptly sent to those actually in need of roofing.
CORTRIGHT METAL ROOFING CO.,
54 N. 23rd Street. Phila. 132 Van Buren St., Chicago B
15