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A CURE 6IVEN BY ONE WHO HAD 111
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VOICES OF YOUTH
I see you now as I saw you then,
As last within your eyes the lovelight
lay.
I feel again the touch of your hand
That changed my night to day.
I hear once more your beauteous voice
As its sweet tones rise and fall,
How it makes my drooping heart re
joice
Because —you are my all.
CHAT.
My Dear Boys and Girls:
Here I am really, after all these sev
en weeks of invalidism, that bids fare
to hold me yet a good while longer
in its grasp before I am myself again.
I wonder if my boys and girls can be
as glad even for this much recovery
as your Little Mother is? It is so nice
to be able to chat with you again. For
these have.been trying weeks to one
so accustomed to mixing and mingling
with the outside world as I am.
It seemed not so hard to be patient
under the fire of severe pain as it does
now during these slow days of conva
lescence, for a typhoid fever battle
has by no means been won when the
fever itself has been conquered. It
is so treacherous that you never know
when ever so small a mistake in eat
ing or over-exercise may throw you
back into its clutches, for a harder
fight than the first one. With this
sword of anxiety continually dangling
over my head, while I fight the too
bold desire to run away to the woods,
and to eat everything in sight, either
of which, I am told every day, would
snap the delicate thread by which that
sword is suspended and let it down
in full force upon me, you can well
imagine that these beautiful autumn
days that you are enjoying so, as you
romp back and forth to school, have
their trying as well as their glorious
ly inspiring side to me. I love the
autumn with its red and yellow for
ests, chinkapins, hickorynuts, chest
nuts, ruddy fall apples and cool, brac
ing air.
How the thought brings back my
childhood. Some of the brightest
spots on that page of memory are
those rambles for hickorynuts and
chinquepins through gloriously radiant
forests, painted by the master artist
as no imitator has ever been able to
copy them.
To ramble on and on, "close to na
ture’s heart,” until tired out physical
ly, then to drop down on the hillside
just where the clear, rippling, dashing,
waters of a brook could be gazed into
while I dreamed the happy distance
enchanted dreams, of when I should
be a grown-up in my own home, with
the school boy sweetheart as its
Prince Charming—but, ah! how far
from the realities are we so often in
our dreaming.
And, yet, if I could steal away this
beautiful afternoon to such a hillside
with such surroundings, I am quite
sure there would be something of the
same old dreaming spirit upon me, for
after all, we are but children grown
up, and the future is as unfathom
able to the grown-up as to the boy
and girl; God has wisely made it so,
for could we look ahead and really
see one after another the trials, the
heartaches, the disappointments, that
lie often only a few days before us, we
The Selden Age fer September 29, 191 t.
CONDUCTED BY MRS. G. B. LINDSEY.
A MEMORY
By Julia I her son Lane.
I reach out my arms to enfold you,
They clasp the impalpable air,
Then to my soul comes the bitter
truth,
That —you are not there!
And though you ne’er can come again,
And I shall see no more of thee
Deep in my heart I’ll hide the pain
And be glad for memory.
would, through the dread of them,
fail to have strength for them when
they come.
We cannot understand why mis
fortune or sickness should come to us
and yet when these things are pass
ed, we can look back so often and see
how our Father has used them to
bring us some special blessing or
guidance that we would have missed
but for the trial. So, I have tried to
be patient through this unexpected
illness that came when I was so un
prepared for it, seeking each day to
learn His purpose in it all, feeling
sure that in His own good time He
will reveal the why, that is so hard
for the human to grasp.
But I have missed the chats with
my little circle and have watched each
week since I have been able, to see
who would come up to the help of
our over-worked Sister Margaret.
Those were nice letters last week,
and I am so glad to welcome again
our sweet spirited Agnes Tyler, who
gives us something worth while to
think of. You are right, little girl; a
friendship that must be obtained by
any kind of deceit is not worth the
having and will not last, for we can
not always deceive, sooner or later
our "two faced” friendship is sure to
come to grief.
It is far better to cultivate a frank,
open, conscientious dealing with every
one. We can be true without being
brusque or harsh, candor and sincer
ity in all things never fail to call forth
the admiration of those worthy, or to
be desired as friends.
It takes a brave spirit to be always'
honest under all conditions and yet
remember, boys and girls, Agnes Tyler
is right It is the first little decep
tions that finally wreck and ruin your
lives.
Every mother should seek to make
her daughter her companion as your
mother has made you, Agnes, and
every daughter should make a confi
dant of her mother and so should the
fathers and the sons keep close to
each other, confiding and advising
with each other; there would be fewer
unhappy marriages, fewer reckless
boys, and thoughtless girls to be criti
cised by the careless, gossiping, long
tongue, if parents would do their duty
more in these things.
But I am talking too long. Remem
ber, I am far from well and will ap
preciate more than ever your newsy,
helpful letters.
Your same
LITTLE MOTHER.
n
Dear Little Mother and Circle:
It has been a long, long time since 1
have been in to chat with you. I won
der how many of you remember me.
I have been keeping up with the story
of Trial and Triumph.” Isn’t it
grand? The last time I wrote to our
(Tis often said A
fejust as
ood as
UZIANNE
,et no such .jgSfe
'gumentprc
ail, to wean ksSSfed*
ou from
aouf time-tried
XLRjZIANNE
SS&CI COFFEE
(WiheßeilyTaylor'
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 ffswi ,
po erf ally grips the
pillars of social life ” ;|||Sg|s|' JMHjHQj
Toni Watson in 77i<r
Jeffersonian. f&SSSjf. ‘ . jPM . ,
“One of the gieatest
novels ever written by a
Southern man. Il 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 this negro question—just such books as
The Law of the White Circ'e, 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 +o 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.
page was last October, when I wrote
a little story, entitled, “Annie.” Do
you know the first or at least a tiny
part of that story was true? I have
been reading a little story, entitled
“Deceived.” Don’t you despise deceit?
If there is anything I dislike it is a
deceitful person. I think we should be
sincere in everything we say and do.
I do not mean that we should never
have fun, but that and deceit are two
very different things.
I once heard one girl accuse anoth
er of being “two faced,” as she ex
pressed it, and the other replied,
“Well, I’ll be honest with you. I am
‘two faced.’ I don’t mean to be, but I
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