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12
BOSTON
I—
GELATINE
Clear ascryst al
pure assnow-The
richest, tendercst and
most healthful jellies
are. i from
Crystal Gelatine.
'Ao home should
be without if.
../■wu jU' Jufi- 1 J'di-uigwggi
i ;. -' -’ r
j
io I I
COMPANY i®jr
Each package makes
two full (marts.
You can eat this
djiinty jelly when
you caii afford,
no otherdessert
Fine for children as
well as grown-ups.
Poes not curdle and
is delicious with
fruits You should
ty it this very day.
Ask your grocer.
Send his name and
we will mail you
tree sample package
I Crystal gelmine co.
121A Beverly St,
! BOSTON, MASS, j
We Pay Your Fare Both Ways to Florida
If you buy Celery Ferms property—ten acres—you get
your railroad fare both ways. We have 60.000 acres in
the finest section of Florida, a place where one crop of
fiotatoes in 90 days will pay for the land and put money
n the bank. Rail and river transportation, the best
market, the earliest market, where the owners of the
Colony help every man to success. We want lOOOfami
lies in the next sixty days and make concessions that
will bring them. Don’t wait to write tomorrow—
DO IT NOW !
FLORIDA HOMELAND COMPANY
46 4 Atlantic National Bank Bldg. Jacksonville, Fla>
The woman in every house makes
the moral and mental atmosphere of
that house just as the sunshine or
rain effects the natural atmosphere
outside of it
VOICES OF YOUTH
CONDUCTED BY MRS. G. B. LINDSEY.
Ah, child with your lightsome spirit,
And happy beaming face,
And your glad young life surrounded
With tender love and grace.
There are tears in the eyes of your
mother,
I saw them dropping slow —
You can never unsay the words you
said
One little hour ago.
life is so blest for you, darling,
The path stretches wide and fair
But need you forget the dear home
love
And mother’s patient care?
fa-
O, the careless words, the impatient
My mother 'sang me a little song
when I was quite small which made
an impression on my mind, so I take
it as a leading thought for my talk
to the little children today. The song
was about a little snow bird hopping
about cheerfully singing chick-a-dee
dee. Two little sisters watched him
from their window when little Emily
cried out when she noticed his bare
feet:
“Oh, mother, do get him some
stocking and shoes.
And a nice little dress and a hat, if
he choose.”
But the bird replied:
“I thank you, deal’ child, for this wish
you express,
But I have no occasion for such a
fine dress; •
There is one, my dear child, though
I can not tell who,
Has clothed me already, and warm
enough, too.
Good-morning! O, who are so happy
as we?”
And away he went, singin his “chick
a-dee-dee.”
Yes, that little song impressed God’s
providence on my child mind, and as
ny subject is “The Clothing of Anti
nals, it came back from memory’s
storehouse as an introduction to my
chat.
Yes, children, God left nothing un
lone. His works are all perfect, com
plete in every way. He clothed those
of his creatures who are not gifted as
s man, with mind to clothe himself,
md his children. Birds have feath
ers and animals have hair and fur.
The tiny bird’s first have a soft down
on their bodies, but their mothers
shelter them from rain and cold. As
they grow older their feathers grow.
They are provided with oil with which
their feathers are made water-proof.
The hard skin on their feet protects
them from cold. They can fly, and so
are not confined to the cold earth, but
can sleep in the sheltering trees. The
evergreen foliage breaks the wind and
rain in its force, and as their feathers,
Eczema Seven Years—Cured by Tet
terlne.
"I had Eczema on my chest for
years, and the torture was almost un
bearable. One of your salesmen offered
to pay for the Tetterine if it did not eure
me. I used less than three boxes and am
entirely well.”
Clem Kinard, Ruffin. 8. C.
Tetterine cures Eczema, Itching Piles,
Dandruff. Ring Worm and every form of
Scalp and Skin Disease. Tetterine CTo;
Tetterine Soap 25c. Your druggist, or
by mail from the manufacturer* The
Shuptrine Co.. Savannah. Ga.
The Golden Age for August 11, 1910.
MO THLR
The Clothing of Animals
Chat by Tluda Hetnur.
tone.
Their mission is cruel as a blow,
Yet you can’t unsay the words you
said
One little hour ago.
Some day, when the fingers of silence,
On those grieving lips are laid,
And you hear neither welcome nor
greeting
Though your heart is SOre dismayed,
You will think of the wounds you gave
her,
While in vain your sad tears flow,
For you cannot unsay the words you
said
One little hour ago.
—Selected.
being oiled, prevent the water satu
rating to the skin, they keep warm.
Animals, too, are clothed already.
Horses and cows have smooth hair
which turns water, and their skin is
very thick, though their owners
should provide them with shelters, for
they need protection and kindness.
The wild animals are taught by in
stinct where to find shelter and com
fortable quarters. Some go into
caves, some seek dense forests of ever
green trees. . Some go on the south
side of hills or rocks, so that the cold
north winds will not be so severe.
Sheep have warm wool and hence
they Can thrive in cold countries. In
summer their wool is too Warm, so it
Is cut from their backs and woven
into cloth for man's use.
The turtle has a shell which an
swers for clothes, and a home, so has
the snail and various other creatures.
The snake changes his dress every
year, and a long skin is often found
lying out somewhere jttSt like the
ghost of a shake.
Birds are variously and beautifully
clothed in many colors and varieties of
feathers. There are red, blue, yel
low, brown, drab, black, white, speck
led, and ever so many more kinds of
birds. Then some have long, flowing
feathers like the birds of Paradise.
Some can open their tails like pea
cocks and turkeys. Some have long
wings and can fly very high. Some
do not fly very much, but make nests
on the ground and pluck their feath
ers to line their nests to keep their
little ones warm.
The furs of some animals are covet
ed by man, so these animals are hunted
and killed and robbed of their warm
clothes.
The skins of animals furnish man
with shoes and various useful articles.
Birds are robbed of their beautiful
plumage for man’s gratification.
The porcupine is clothed and armed
with defensive quills at the same time.
Dear Little Mother: How are you
and the Voices this bright, sunshiny
afternoon? Happy, I hope. Was it
the contest kept you so busy you
couldn’t chat with us last week, or
did you just want to give us the lesson
coming from the little story?
William Galloway, I thank you for
your interest in this “Naughty Girl,”
and if I were only close enough, I
would make you laugh a few times
and shock you some more times with
A WOMAN’S APPEAL
To all knowing sufferers of rheumatism,
whether muscular or of the joints, sciatica,
lumbagos. backache, pains in the kidneys
or neuralgia pains, to write to her for a
home treatment which has repeatedly cured
all of these tortures. She feels It her duty
to send It to all sufferers FREE. You cure
yourself at home as thousands will testify
—no change of climate being necessary.
This simple discovery banishes uric acid
from the blood, loosens the stiffened joints,
purifies the blood, and brightens the eyes,
giving elasticity and tone to the whole sys
tem. If the above Interests you, for proof
address Mrs. M. Summers, Box 576, South
Bend, Ind. . ... _
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
powerfully grips the
pillars of social life.’ —-
Tom Watson in The
Jefferionian.
’One of the gieatest
novels ever Written by a
Southern man. It is vivid,
telling, fdwerful." — John
Trotwood Moore.
“From just Such writers,
meh Os authoritative
thought thfe South will
be awakeried to what
is necessary in thii ntgro qutition—just such botsh aS
The Law of the White Circle, which we should
welcome, read and study." —Birmingham Age-Herald.
This novel is absolutely ttfflqu* !n Eng
lish Literature and with th® exception
of none is the only attempt to be philo
sophically accurate in handling this Mil
absorbing race theme. It is a virile, how
est, red-blooded presentation of the greftl
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.
my rag-time music and my foolish
ness; then, when your head burst
because you laughed too much, 1
would bathe it and rub it for you till
you went to sleep and slept off the
shock—See? Be jolly, William, and
not too “solemn-Cholly.”
But —well, if I were a shut-in, I
don't know what I would do. I am
glad you are so contented in this lot
that seems so hard to those of us
who can go where we please—no, not
every time, because—well, you know
there are different ways of being
“shut in.” Nevertheless, I am quite
sure my cool spring is most as nice
as your big mountain.
I think we might have some new
members during vacation, don’t you,
reader? Drop in and let’s help “Little
Mother” make our department very
interesting.
YOUR NAUGHTY GIRL.
A “PAGE” FROM THE LEGISLA
TURE.
Dear Golden Age: lam less than a
dozen years old but I have been elect
ed to the legislature, or in other
words, I am a Page in the legislature.
I like my job very well, only I get tired
of hearing the representatives quarrel,
because that is nearly all they do.-
There are some of the members that'-
can not agree with anyone, or any
thing, and they get up there and quar
rel like “cats and dogs” or little boys,,
instead of grown-up men. The other
day they got to quarreling so, the 1
speaker could not keep order and we
adjourned before ten o’clock. There
is one of the members which reminds
me of Oom Paul Kruger, the famous
leader of the Boer army. He is called
the “Watch Dog of the Treasury” and
he surely does “bark,” With lots of
love for the cousins. A PAGE.
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