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12
5*
Headache?
Want to know the quickest and
best way to stop it? Take
Dr. Miles’ Anti-Pain Pills.
They are the best because they do
not leave any disagreeables after
effects. Just simply quiet the nerve
irritation which causes the distress.
What is equally important they do
not derange the stomach —only a
pleasurable sense of relief follows
theii* use.
"I am in fairly good health, but sub
ject to frequent heavy, cloudy head,
and occasionally dull pain. I get relief
with one or two of Dr. Miles’ Anti-
Pain Pills. They are very beneficial to
me and I do not like to be without
them.” D. F. LEWIS, Cleveland, O.
The first package will benefit; if not,
your druggist will return your money.
SINFUL SADDAY
By Thorntoell Jacobs
*‘M ak e s an ideal
/ — —present for a boy.”—
/ A X Epworth Era.
/ \ “Full of action and
/ ig-W i entertaining.”— Nash
j ville Banner.
“Will be read with
y Interest, not only by
II O' children, but by
grown-ups all over our
Southland.”—Christian
Observer.
•‘Far above the av
erage of boys* books I
in living interest.”—
Our Monthly.
”An exceedingly at
tractive picture of
Mfe.”— Charleston (S.
C.) News & Courier.
The story tells of a
Mttio cotton mill or
phan who, with his
brother, Little Pard-
ner, get to the Thorn-
well Orphanage, where
gwwggspaig with scores of comrades,
the story develops into a
thrilling narrative of
baseball, ambition,
■ fl schools, medals, bird
nests, Christmas bonfires,
fojgSMßSHpti and hundreds of such
things in which any boy
i is born interested. Santa
Claus is investigated, the
baseball game with the
“town nine” is won, and
through adventure and combat Binful
Baddy 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
era. Price 11.00 postpaid.
Special Offer: With The Golden Age
oao year (old or new subscriptions), only
M.H, postpaid. For $1.60 we will send
the book and credit purchaser with six
months subscription.
THE GOLDEN AGE,
Anatoli Building, Atlanta, Ga.
Don’t Wear a Truss
RT S PLASTR-PADS aredifferent
from the painful truss, being made
self-adhesive purposely to hold the
rupture in place without straps,
buckles or springs—cannot slip,
so cannot chafe or compress
against the pelvic bone. The
®t obstinate cases cured in the pri
cy of the home. Thousands have
ully treated themselves without
tn work. Soft as velvet—easy to
nslve. Process of cure is natural,
use for trusses. We prove what we
say by sending you Trial of Plnpao
a HIHk vr rtnrr.V absolutely FT.ee. Write TODAY.
Address—PLAPAO LABORATORIES, Block 132, st. Louis, Ko.
WANTED —Manager, Man or woman
for each County to introduce WHITE
RIBBON CONCENTRATED NON-AL
COHOLIC FLAVORING in tubes. Saves
half the cost. Everybody buys and reor
ders. |2.50 per day salary and commis
sion. Also local agents 50 per cent com
mission. J. S. ZIEGLER C.,
76 Plymouth St., Chicago.
©GOLD WEDDING RING FREE
Send for 10 packages of our beautiful
silk and gold embossed post cards to
distribute at 10c pkg. Return us the
$1 when collected and we will send
you by return mall this very fine 14K
gold filled heavy band ring, not
the cheap kind. Address.R.F. MOSER,
81) Household Bldg.. Topeka. Kan.
VOICES OF YOUTH
CONDUCTED BY MRS. G. B. LINDSEY.
The Washerwoman ’s Song
Eugene Ware.
In a very humble cot,
In a rather quiet spot,
In the suds and in the soap,
Worked a woman full of hope;
Working, singing, all alone,
In a sort of undertone:
“With the Saviour for a friend,
He will keep you to the end.”
Sometimes happening along,
I had heard the semi-song,
And I often used to smile,
More in sympathy than guile;
But I never said a word
In regard to what I heard,
As she sang about her Friend
Who would keep her to the end.
Not in sorrow, nor in glee,
Working all day long was she,
As her children, three or four,
Played around her on the floor;
But in monotones the song
She was humming all day long:
“With the Saviour for a friend,
He will keep me to the end.”
CHAT.
HAD YOU ever thought, boys and
girls, how little there is that, we
are absolutely certain of in this
life?
Yesterday, the sun was shining beau
tifully, the atmosphere, warm and
balmy, with not even a hint of its
changing. This morning we awake to
face thick sombre clouds weeping
themselves away while a chilly pierc
ing wind penetrates the whole being,
yet there is light and we know that
behind the clouds and chilling blast of
November there is the same warm
sun shining that gives the heat of that
“hot day in June”.
Such is life, and we must not let
the dark days overshadow and mar
the bright ones, but rather let the
strength gathered from the bright
warm days reach out and carry us
unsaddened through the shadows that
come, not only across the sun’s bright
face, but across our lives in many
ways, for just as the sun is hidden
behind the clouds, when we least ex
pect it, so sorrow often drops its pall
over us without a mpment’s notice,
a home filled with joy and mirth, one
hour, is shrouded in gloom the next.
How thoughtful we ought to be of
those who suffer, first, because our
Saviour so taught us and because He
said, “As oft as ye did it unto one of
the least of these, ye did it unto me;”
and, second, because we have no lease
on the joy of today. It may be our
time next.
Watch to slip in a word of helpful
cheer into some suffering heart, and
you will bring joy into your own.
Here is Agnes Tyler with us after
such a long silence asking for the de
bate; thanK you for the response to
my call and I hope many more of our
young people will let us hear from
them and make it possible for us to
have an interesting debate. lam sure
you will all enjoy Muda Hetnur’s visit
from th 3 Household with this inter
esting little story. Come often we are
so glad to have you.
Let your letters about the debate
come in fast.
LITTLE MOTHER...
Dear Little Mother and Circle: lam
so glad you are thinking of having an
other debate. That will be grand, and
I should be delighted to help all I can.
The Golden Age for November IQ, 1910.
Just a trifle lonesome she,
Just as poor as poor could be;
But her spirits always rose,
Like the .bubbles in the clothes,
And, though widowed and alone,
Cheered her with the monotone
Os a Saviour and a friend
Who would keep her to the end.
I have seen her rub and scrub
On the washboard in the tub,
While the baby, sopped in suds,
Rolled and tumbled in the duds,
Or was paddling in the pools,
With old scissors stuck in spools;
She still humming of her Friend
Who would keep her to the end.’
Human hopes and human creeds
Have their root in human needs;
And I should not wish to strip
From that washerwoman’s lip
Any song that she can sing,
Any hope that song can bring;
For the woman has a friend
Who will keep her to the end.
I have a recitation called “College Oil
Cans”. How many of the cousins have
' ever read it? Have you, Little Moth
er? It is a temperance piece, telling
of how a boy, or a crowd of boys,
would fill their oil cans with wine, and
how it caused one of the boys to learn
to drink, and so wrecked his life and
later caused the death of his little
girl.
I think that whisky is the greatest
curse that ever came to this great
“Southland” of ours.
I go to a little town near here ■ to
take music lessons, and always, on the
way to the teacher’s home, I have to
pass a dispensary. There is always
“some going in and some coming out”.
Those going in look as if they felt a
little guilty, and those coming out —
but I shan’t try to describe them; you
can imagine how they look.
I noticed that those men, or at least
the most of them, looked ragged, and
I could not help but wonder if they
did not have little, hungry children at
home.
It is bad enough for any one to
drink, but when they offer it to others,
it is worse. I heard a young man say
the other day that another boy was
trying to get him to drink with him,
and when he refused, called him
“mamma’s boy”. The first boy replied,
“Horace, I have no mother, and can
not remember her; but it sounds
sweet to be’ called her boy” The sec
ond boy did not drink either, and
begged the other’s pardon.
If once refused, if once we say “No”
to evil, it is easier next time.
With love to Little Mother and the
circle, I am,
AGNES TYLER.
Perry, S. C.
THE GAME OF AUTUMN LEAVES
“If I just had as many gold dollars
as these yellow pear leaves I would
be so rich. I could buy everything I
want and could travel and give to the
Eczema? Use Tetterine.
“I have been troubled with Eczema on
the face for nearly two years, and a few
applications of Tetterine and the use of
Tetterine Soap has entirely cured me. I
cannot say too much for its praise.”
Myricks, Mass. Mrs. S. A. Haskins.
Tetterine cures Eczema, Dandruff, Itch
ing Piles, Ring Worm and every form of
Scalp and Skin Disease. Tetterine 50c;
Tetterine Soap 25c. At druggists, or by
mail direct from The Shuptr-ine Co., Sa
vannah, Ga.
SReal French jw
Drip Coffee can ft
® not be made Jj
HP unless the cos
W fee itself is j)re- w
j)ared, blended J||
and roasted ae-
S cording to the- ||
famous French
method. Use
IiUZIANNE COFFEE
fFor Fofal, 'W
French around
Sja «
Reily Taylor
Hew Orleans,u.s.a.
The Law of the White Circle
By Thornwell Jacobs
A Stirring'Novel of
THE
Atlanta Riots
‘‘A book to stir the jHflpt '.
passions, a book that fl fl
po»v erf ally grips the H fl
pillars of social life.’’— jHHgjoaFv ~^dfl r
Tom Watson in The fl|flfl ' >
Jeffersonian.
“One of the greatest
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 this negro question—just such books as
The Law of the White Circle, which we should
welcome, read and study."—Birmingham Aga-Berald
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 Ameriean 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 12.85 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.
SHOPPING,
household and personal, by a buyer of
taste and experience, done for and with
patrons. No charge. Special attention
g ; ven to trousseaus and babies’ out
fits. Highest reference. Miss Grace
Way, 4 West 103rd Street, New York
City.
5 Christmas Cards CDtp
Send only 2c stamp and receive > Ml
5 very finest Gold Embossed
Christmas Post Cards FREE to introduce post
card offer.
Capital Card Co., Dept. 146, Topeka, Kan.
FREE to You SI.OO
Box of Larks rheumatic remedy will be
sent you free. Use it according to direc
tions. If it cures your rheumatism send
us SI.OO. If not, you owe us nothing.
The Larks Co., Dept. 6, Milwaukee, Wis.
Okra and Tomatoes.
Wash a quart of okra and cut In
thin slices, peel a pint of tomatoes,
and slice; put in a granite kettle and
let simmer gently for half an hour;
season with salt, pepper and table*
spoonful of butter.