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Your Garden Should Have
BLUE ROSES
(Violet Blue)
SOc We are introducing this beautiful color,
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SIOOO REWARD
for proof of fraud
Mt. Airy Rose Co., Dept. 31
Established 1868.
Importers and Introducers
Over 100 acres. 20,(XX) feet of glass.
MT. AIRY, PHILADELPHIA, PA.
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VOICES OF YOUTH
CONDUCTED BY MRS. G. B. LINDSEY.
combination
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Rejoice, my soul, tho’ the day is dark;
Sing a glad, sweet song like the rising
lark,
That hearts may hear who are sore
and sad,
And the sweet refrain may make
them glad.
What, th o’ storms break and billows
roar ?
My haven is peaceful here on shore.
What mean tossing boats far out at
sea,
While all is quiet here under the lea?
The wild birds shriek in the piercing
gale,
And the raging sea sends back its
wail;
But the heart firmly fixed on its God
above
May rest secure in His holy love.
My song is a pcan of gladness bright,
CHAT.
I am quite sure that all of you have
heard of the great Passion Play of
Ober Ammergau, but few of you know
the origin of it, so I am giving you
this week this interesting story of it,
that it might be well for you to clip
out and put in your scrap-book.
THE PASSION PLAY.
From May till September, this year,
the Passion Play will be presented in
the village of Oberammergau, in the
heart of the Bavarian Tyrol. This is
the only miracle play that has sur
vived the ages. It has been given
every ten years in fulfillment of a vow
made in 1633. A severe plague had
broken out in the villages and the
valleys, but this village had been so
isolated by nature that it was saved
from the dread disease.
The story is familiar. Caspar
Schuchler, a native, working at
Eschenlohe, a village at the foot of
the Ettalberg, where the plague was
raging furiously, was seized with sud
den homesickness. He returned to his
native village by night over the moun
tains, unknown to the Ammergauer
authorities. Three days later he lay
dead of the fell disease. Forty of the
villagers succumbed to the same
•cause. Then, in the words of the
Scriptures, “they cried unto the Lord
in their trouble, and He delivered
them out of their distresses.” They
registered a vow in solemn assembly
that every ten years they would per
form a play which should set forth
the life and death and mediation of
the Redeemer. From that time, it is
asserted, the plague was stayed. The
vow has been strictly and religiously
kept at the beginning of each decade
since 1680. Two or three extra rep
resentations have been held between
the interval of ten years, notably in
1815, tor the purpose of celebrating
the peace; and in 1871, in order to
conclude the series of performances
Tetterlne Cures Ringworm.
Wysacklng, N. C., June 2. 1908.
Enclosed you will find SI.OO, for whPh
nlPMse send me at once Tetterlne. It Is
a dead shot on ringworms.
W. S. Dudley.
„ r Tetter T. ures Fezema. Tetter, Ring
Worm. Itching piles. Rough. Scaly
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Dandruff. Cankerel Scalp, Runions
Ch 1 ' >s ind evorv form of
and Skin Disease. Tetterlne 50c;
1 ettArine Soap Your dnjecrlst. or
by mall from The Shuptrlne Co., Savan
nah, Ga.
The Golden Age for June 23, 1910.
A Song of Gladness
Julia Iberson Lane.
SS SS)
As I dream of a land that has no
night,
Where happy hearts sing a glad,
sweet song,
Where they have no sorrow and know
no wrong.
Blow on, wild winds, o’er southern
sea;
From doubts and fears my heart is
free;
My prayers go up through heavenly
space,
And my thoughts are fixed on my
Master’s face.
He will care for me through my short
life —
Be at my side through storm and
strife,
And bring me at last to His Home
above,
Where all is peaceful and God is love.
which were interrupted by the Fran
co-German war.
The miracle plays of the old days
had a painful mixture of the sacred
and the profane. In the years 1840
and 1850 the good parish priest, An
ton Daisenberg, stripped the play
then enacted of all that was ignoble
or farcical. He left on record that he
“undertook the production of the play
for the love of his Divine Redeemer,
and with only one object in view—
the edification of the Christian
world.” He successfully attained his
end. Since then philosophers, learned
divines, artists of the most cultured
and highly civilized nations of the
world have flocked at each decade to
see the famous Passion drama.
Its valuable influence locally in the
evolution of the common life of the
Ober Ammergauers is a most interest
ing study. The “Story That Trans
formed the World” has kept these vil
lagers in unsophisticated simplicity
and purity of life. The material civili
zation of some of the foreign visitors
does not deteriorate the villagers, be
cause of their simple pious zeal for
the great Passion Play. The actors
are chosen from the villagers them
selves. The intrusion of a stranger
into the play would be strongly re
sented. Occasionally strangers have
settled own in the village and en
deavored to take part in the play, but
they have not been allowed.
Many thousands of Americans will
witness the play this summer. Many
have felt they never cared to see it,
but those who have seen it declare it
to be reverent and simple, and wonder
ful. Even the Christ part, it is said,
is followed by the vast audience with
out a thought of irreverence or blas
phemy. Anton Lang will again take
this part; he is a simple potter by
trade. It is the tradition of the vil
lage that the part of Virgin Mary
must be represented by a woman be
tween twenty and thirty years of age,
and therefore this part is never played
twice by the same person. Most of
the other parts will be taken by actors
who performed in 1900.
Dr. John Clifford says of the play:
“To me the day stands out with
luminous distinctness as the one on
which more than all others I felt (he
reality of the Christ of the Gospels,
Hie depth of His matchless patience,
the greatness of the price He paid for
the world’s redemption. I was over-
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
poaerfuJly grips the
pillars of social life ’ -
Tom Watson in The
Jeffersonian.
' One of the gieatest
novels ever written by a
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 z/i/j negro question—just such bools PS
The Law of the White Circle, which we should
Welcome, read and study."—Birmingham Age-Perald.
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.
BOWEN
EMPLOYMENT AGENCY
Has good reliable help for all positions.
HELP FURNISHED FREE.
We also furnish Positions.
248 Brown-Randolph Building A T LANTA, GA.
come by the sight of that serene
spirit—insulted, wounded, suffering,
obedient unto death, ‘even the death
of the cross’ —and wished to get alone
to think and pray.”
DO YOU HAVE CATARRH,
The almost universal bane of mankind?
Then use Dr. Christian’s Catarrh Balm.
Guaranteed to cure. Free sample. Write
Dr. J. M. Christian, Hazelhurst, Ga.
A PUZZLING EVENING.
Nothing produces more fun and
amusement for an evening party than
the simple game of evolution, where’ll
you are to transform one word into
another, changing one letter at a time
and always spelling correct dictionary
words.
Thus, to transform Pig to Rat in
three moves, we might proceed as fol
lows: Pig, pit, pat, rat; or pig, rig,
rag, rat.
East to West —East, vast, vest, west.
Dog to Cal —Dog, cog, cot, cat.
Soup to Fish-Soup, sour, pour,
pout, post, past, fast, fist, fish.
Road to Rail —Road, goad, goal, coal,
coil, toil, tail, rail.
Milk to Hash —Milk, milt, mist,
mast, mash, hash.
In using the puzzle as a game, the
company first agrees upon the differ
ent pairs of words to be transformed,
and then sees which player can make
all the changes in the fewest moves—
the number not being previously spec
ified. Some words take more moves
than might at first be supposed.
Thus, the reader will, I think, find
that Rose can not be changed into
Lily in fewer than five moves, al
though Shoe may be transformed into
Boot in three. The latter could not
be effected under four moves were it
not for the fact that the third letter
is the same in each word.
To test your cleverness, transform
the following pairs of words in three
moves each; it looks easy, but will re
quire some mental gymnastics:
Cat to Dog, Boy to Man, Wood to
St
ah