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12
RHEUMATISM
A CURE GIVEN BY ONE WHO HAO IT
In the Spring of 18931
Wi» was attacked by mus
cularandlnflammatory
gjKWk rheumatism. I suffered
R'l £ras *4% as those who have it
f ZIP' know, for over three
i ( -V®sgpn years, and tried almost
everything. Finally 1
V HU found a remedy that
wHWT .<<s|eW cured me completely
and it has not return
ed. I have given It to a
number who were ter
ribly afflicted, and it effected a cure In every
case. Anvone desiring to give this precious
remedy a trial, I will send it free. Address,
Mark H. Jackson, No. ilt James Street, Syracuse, N. Y.
Mr. Jackson is responsible. Above statement true.
Low Round Trip Rates
via
Southern Railway
FROM ATLANTA
DETROIT, MICH., $23.20.
SPECIAL TEN-DAY RATES.
Cumberland and St. Simons, Ga.,
SIO.OO.
Atlantic Beach and Pablo, Fla., $12.00.
Tickets on sale for Saturday trains
to August 27th, limited to reach original
starting point ten days in addition iu
date of sale.
Local sleeping car Atlanta to Bruns
wick on 11:10 p. m. train, open for oc
cupancy at 9:00 p. m.; also sleeping car
for Jacksonville and new electric light
ed coaches.
SPECIAL WEEK-END RATES.
Warm Springs, Ga $2.85
Lithia Springs, Ga 85
Austell, Ga SO
Flovilla, Ga $1.75
Indian Springs, Ga. . ..$2.25
Mt. Airy, Ga SI.BO
White Sulphur Springs, Ga SI.OO
Clarkesville, Ga 3.00
Clayton Ga $4.30
Demorest, Ga $2.85
Dillards, Ga $4.65
Franklin, N. C $5.50
Tallulah Falls, Ga $3.50
Tiger, Ga ...$4.15
Turnersville, Ga $3.40
Wylie, Ga $3.95
Brunswick, Cumberland, St. Simons.sß.so
Atlantic Beach and Pablo, Fla $10.35
Tickets on sale all trains Saturday
until August 28th, good returning on
any train until Tuesday following date
sale.
SPECIAL SUNDAY RATES.
Warm Springs, Ga SI.OO
Indian Springs, Ga $1.25
Tickets on sale for Sunday morning
trains until September 4th, limited to
date sale.
For further information apply to
Southern Railway Ticket Agents.
J. L. MEEK,
Asst. Gen. Pass Agt., Atlanta, Ga.
JAMES FREEMAN,
Dist. Pass. Agt.
BOWEN
EMPLOYMENT AGENCf
Has good reliable help for all positions.
HELP FURNISHED FREE.
We also furnish Positions.
248 Brown-R&ndolph Building ATLANTA, GA.
nAIQV Fl V 1/19 I FD » ,RCed «t-
Lf/\|O I ILI IMLLEK trMti and kills all file..
MNeat, clean, ornamental,
convenient, cheap.
Lasts all season. Macle
of metal. Cannot spill
or tip over, will not soil
or injure anything.
Guaranteed effective. Os
all dealers or sent pre
paid for 20 cents.
SAROLD SOBERS
150 De Kalb Ave.
Brooklyn. N. Y.
Can Cancer be Cured ? It Can
We want every man and woman in the
United States to know what we are doing.
We are curing Cancers, Tumors and
Chronic Sores without the use of the
knife or X-ray, and are endorsed by the
Senate and Legislature of Virginia.
We Guarantee Our Cures.
THE KELLAM HOSPITAL,
1617 West Main Street Richmond, Va.
Physicians Treated Free.
FOLDING BATH TUB
y Weight 14 lbs. Cost little.
Some used for 5 years, still
good. Write for special offer
SgQKKES&fiKr N. Y. BATH Ml'G. CO.,
(Established 1900)
102 Chambers St., N. Y. City
VOICES OF YOUTH
CONDUCTED BY MRS. G. B. LINDSEY.
What man has power within himself
To break the chains of sin?
Can he by power or strength of will
Aspire the day to win
When he shall stand forever free
Above reproach or shame,
Without a fault or failure here
Or aught against his name?
What man has been, so he will be
As long as time shall last;
He has no power to change his course,
Nor hope his dangers past;
Thus men sail out upon the sea
To try their fortunes there
Till death o’ertakes them, every one,
And stops their earthly care.
X
If this were all that mortals had
To occupy the mind,
No hopes beyond the troubled sea,
We should no pleasure find;
The busy truant officer found in a
house-boat a group of children who did
not come to school. She began an in
vestigation. The father could earn
four dollars a day at his trade, but
had been conquered by whiskey so
that he seldom had work, but for the
most part swept out a saloon, cleaned
the spittoons and did chores for food
and as much drink as he could get.
This intelligent, hard-working mother
had become discouraged and could not
send the children to school because
they had no shoes, poor clothes and
little food. The truant officer, who
had developed the qualities of a “min
istering angel,” arranged to supply
food for the family, placing it with a
kindly-disposed neighbor, so as to be
secure from the drunken father. This
kindly help and encouraging words
gave the mother new hope, and soon
she was able to have her children in
school, and with the help of the older
ones, who found odd jobs of work out
of school hours, rays of sunshine be
gan to brighten this home.
On the next visit of the truant
officer, not to look up absent scholars,
but to encourage the mother, the fam
ily had moved. Following the clues
given by the neighbors, she found
them in a house at some distance
from the river. The children were all
aglow with the excitement of living
in a house for the first time in their
lives. True, it was a cottage of the
worst type, in poor repa'r, but it was
a house. The mother was full of
buoyant hope, the children were all
helping her, even her husband was
affected by the change and worked,
sometimes bringing her at least a part
of the money. Her oldest boy was
making a good record at school and
was proud to call the truant officer
friend. The officer found it worth
while to tell her boys and girls to
come to her with their difficulties at
any time at the office or her home.
Te:terlne for Ring Worm and Skin Dis
ease.
Varnville, S. C., July 17, 1908.
My wife uses your Tetterine for Ring
worm, also uses It in her family for all
kinds of skin diseases, and she thinks It
a good medicine. There is no substitute.
L». R. Dowling.
Tetterine cures Eczema, Tetter, Ring
Worm, Old Itching Sores. Dandruff,
itching Piles, Corns, Chilblains and
every form of Scalp and Skin Disease.
Tetterine 50c; Tetterine Soap 25c. At
druggists or by mall direct from The
Shuptrine Co., Savannah, Ga.
The Golden Age for July 21, 1910.
OUR ONLY HOPE
John "Francis Olmsted
A Hero Prom a House "Boat
Sy Reb. Frank Fost r.
So we might all discouraged be,
And curse the very day
That we were born into the world
A helpless bit of clay.
But men who’ve learned to trust the
Lord,
Who in His mercy gave
His life a ransom here for all
That He might sinners save,
Have something in the very life
To help in times of need,
To buoy up the burdened heart
When it’s about to bleed.
What matchless love the Father had
To give His cherished Son
To die for men so deep in sin,
And helpless every one!
So, then, if we but walk with Him,
And have our sins confessed,
He’ll lead us on to realms of light,
Where we shall ever rest.
Her position gave her opportunities of
usefulness and friendship, which she
felt that she could not deny herself.
She could do without “pleasures” and
postpone “duties,” but needed these
luxuries.
A few months later she called again,
but the family had gone. She was
directed to a better neighborhood.
Her knock brought to the door the
mother, who welcomed her with great
joy and proudly took her in to see the
carpeted, comfortable room, a home
furnished from the second-hand shops,
but a home to be proud of, and far
removed from the rotting, miserable
house-boat.
The truant officer had arrived home,
eaten her supper and settled herself
in a comfortable chair for a restful
time after a long day’s tramp and
some discouraging vexations. The
bell rang, the girl went to the door
and announced a barefooted boy. She
felt inclined to tell him to call at the
office tomorrow, but rallied all her en
ergies and said, “Bring him in.” He
proved to be the second boy of her
house-boat family. The family were
in trouble. The fathei' had fallen
from a building and been brought
home lame. Severe cold weather had
come on suddenly, and this boy, who
wanted to .keep in school because his
brother was doing so well, had no
shoes. Could she help him?
She would try, and so took him to
the cast-off clothing room, which she
had found it wise to establish, and the
hunt for shoes began. One pair was
too large, and, although almost a
newspaper was stuffed in them by the
boy, in an effort to make them do, it
was evident he could not keep them
on. The next pair were difficult to
squeeze into and almost as difficult to
take off. It was evident they would
not do. But at last a pair fitted per
fectly—seemed to have been made for
him —but, unfortunately, they were
girls’ shoes. He put them on, thrust
his sturdy hands into his pockets and
looked at her, his face wrinkled with
trouble. Then he took them off and
set them down. She said: “I am very
sorry, but I have no more. Os course,
I know the time you will have with
the boys if you go to school in girls’
shoes. But you can not go without,
and it will put you back to wait.
Now, when you are a m.an, making a
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6307 Clyde Park Avenue, Grand Rapids, Mich
The Law of the White Circle
By Thornwell Jacobs
A Stirring'Novel of
the
Atlanta Riots
“A book to stir the WSEHr
passions, a book that fl K
powerfully grips the flfl£„ ' % T4hH|H|
pillars of social life.’ ' ■
Toni Watson in The g||sosr
Jeffersonian. .?■ ;
“One of the gteatest
novels ever written hy a
Southern man. It is vivid,
telling, powerful."— John
Trotwood Moore.
‘From just such writers,
thought the South will
be awakened to what
is necessary in this negro question—just such hooks as
The Law cf 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.
LADY WANTED
To introduce our very complete Fall line
of beautiful wool suitings, wash fabrics,
fancy waistings, silk handkerchiefs, pet
ticoats, etc. Up-to-date New York Ciiy
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instructions in neat sample case, shipped
express prepaid. No money required. Ex
clusive territory. Write for particulars.
Be first to apply. Standard Dress Goods
Co., Dept. 985. Binghamton, N. Y.
good living because you went to
school, it will not matter to you the
snap of a finger that you went in girls’
shoes. What will you do about it?
You are welcome to them, and I have
no others.” He drew himself up, set
his teeth and said, “I’ll take them.”
Next morning as he reached school,
he met a crowd of boys, who noticed
and yelled “Girls’ shoes! Ah! Ah!”
He gritted his teeth and went on,
reaching another gang. Again they
cried, “Girls’ shoes! Ah! Ah! Girls'
&