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Quickly Cured at Home
Instant Relief, Permanent Cure—Trial
Package Mailed Free to All in
Plain Wrapper.
Piles is a fearful disease, but easy to
cure, if you got at it right.
An operation with the knife is dan
gerous, cruel, humiliating and unnec
essary.
There is just one other sure way to
be cured —painless, safe and in the pri
vacy of your own home —it is Pyramid
Pile Cure.
We mail a trial package free to all
who write.
It will give you instant relief, show
you the harmless, painless nature of
this great remedy and start you well
o nthe way toward a perfect cure.
Then you can get a full-sized box
from any druggist for 50 cents, and
often one box cures.
Insist on having what you call for.
If the druggist tries to sell you
something just as good, it is because
he makes more money on the substi
tute.
The cure begins at once and contin
ues rapidly until it is complete and
permanent.
You can go right ahead with your
work and be easy and comfortable all
the time.
It is well worth trying.
Just send your name and address to
Pyramid Drug Co., 92 Pyramid Build
ing, Marshall, Mich., and receive free
by return mail the trial package in a
plain wrapper.
Thousands have been cured in this
easy, painless and inexpensive way, in
the privacy of the home.
No knife and its torture.
No doctor and his bills.
All druggists, 50 cents. Write today
for a free package.
being confined at work in the day
time enjoy a circus or some other pro
hibited pastime. This same mother’s
children may indulge in pleasures just
as questionable.
Before judging others we should re
view our own thoughts and acts, then
if we are blameless we can throw
stones.
MUDA HETNUR.
For Physical Exhaustion
Take Horsford’s Acid Phosphate
Especially recommended in physical
and mental exhaustion, nervousness
and impaired digestion.
DEATH OF THE FIRST-BORN.
This beautiful extract from J. G.
Holland’s novel, “Arthur Bonnicastle,”
will be read with deep and tender in
terest by many whose experience it
truthfully portrays:
I stand in a darkened room before
a little casket that holds the silent
form of my first-born. My arm is
around the wife and mother, who
weeps over the lost treasure and can
not, till tears have their way, be com
forted. I had not thought that my
child could die —that my child could
die. I knew that other children had
died, but I felt safe. We lay the
little fellow close beside his grand
father, at last; we strew his grave
with flowers, and then return to our
saddened home with hearts united in
sorrow as they had never been united
in joy, and with sympathies forever
opened toward all who are called to a
kindred grief.
I wonder where he is today, in
what mature angelhood he stands,
how he will look when I meet him,
how he will make himself known to
me, who have been his teachers? He
was like me; will his grandfather
know him? I never can cease thinking
of him as cared for and led by the
same hand to which my own youthful
fingers clung, and as hearing from the
fond lips of my own father, the story
of hi* father's eventful life. I feel
how wonderful to me has been the
ministry of my children —liow much
more I have learned from them than
they have ever learned from me—how
by holding my own strong life in
sweet subordination to their helpless
ness, they have taught me patience,
self-sacrifice, self-control, truthfulness,
faith, simplicity and purity.
Ah! this taking to one’s arms a
little group of souls, fresh from the
hand of God, and living with them in
loving companionship through all their
stainless years, is, or ought to be, like
living in Heaven, for of such is the
Heavenly Kingdom. To no one of
these am I more indebted than to the
boy who went away from us before
the world had touched him with a
stain. The key that shut him in the
tomb was the only key that could
unlock my heart, and let in among its
sympathies the world of sorrowing
men and women who mourn because
their little ones are not.
The little graves, alas! how many
they are! The mourners above them,
how vast the multitude! Brothers, sis
ters, I am one with you. I press your
hands, I weep with you, I trust with
you, I belong to you. Those waxen,
folded hands; that still breast which
I have so often pressed warm to my
own; those sleep-bound eyes which
have been so full of love and life;
that sweet, unmoving alabaster sac
ah! we have all looked upon them,
and they have made us one and have
made us better. There is no fountain
which the angel of healing troubles
with his restless and life-giving wings
so constantly uses as the fountain of
tears, and only those too lame and
bruised to bathe, miss the blessed in
fluence.
*
CURIOUS ANIMALS.
Children like to look at pictures.
Here before me is a book of animals,
birds and fishes. Let us chat a while
about some of the curious ones.
First is a beautiful bird, the great
crowned pigeon. Its length is 27 to
28 inches and the bill is two inches
long. Its head is adorned with a
large, elevated semi-circular crest.
Its color is greyish blue and rich pur
ple. This bird is found in many isl
ands of the great Indian group. It is
abundant in New Guinea, and in most
of the Moluccas. It builds in trees;
lays but two eggs. It is good for
food, flavor of flesh, said to be deli
cious. It is not easily domesticated.
Next we turn to Birds of Paradise,
beautiful almost beyond description.
Their feathers are used for ornamen
tal purposes, to adorn the head-dress.
The Japanese, Chinese and Persians,
import them for the same purpose.
These birds are designated by name
which imply a celestial origin and the
Indian considered them really super
natural. There are many different
kinds of them. They are seen in
flights of thirty or forty, guided by a
leader who soars above the rest. Some
of the names of these birds are: Re
gia, King’s Bird of Paradise, Tristis,
Graple Bird of Paradise, Magniflca,
Magnificent Bird of Paradise, Cirrato,
Crested Bird of Paradise, Nigra, Gor
get Bird of Paradise. Then there are
Superba, superb, White-winged, Fin
catu, black, Aurea, gold-breasted, Ven
dis, blue-green, Alba, white,
One of the most curious of animals
is the opossum. Here is a picture.
The mother has suspended herself
from the limb of a tree by her tail
and her young are in her pocket. This
animal is familiar enough in the
south without further description.
Next we find a serpent charmer
with snakes all around his neck and
body and snakes, big ones, dancing
about him.
We turn on and find curious bur
rowing owls and prairie dogs and
their mounds, Next are sea-lions, ani
mals with head* like dogs but with
The Golden Age for December 15, 1910.
j GIVE MOST POWER T 3
I AT LEAST COST W
I AND LAST LONGEST JAII
B T 7"OU know there’s a great difference in horses —
Y and it isn't all in the size and looks either. Oue
horse will start in willingly and pull strong fl
B and steady for hours. lie'll take the hard fl fl B H
stretches with a dash that always gets over them. ■ I J h BB
He’ll stay on the job from the time he's hitched B * ■ I
B till he's sent to the barn. W
Another horse that's just as big—looks just as
good—starts out just as well—can't hold the pace.
B He hasn't the stuff in him. He usually gets stuck
in the mud or half way up the lull —is always tired I
B out before the work's done. "B
It s the same with a gasoline engine. You can't go just by looks.
B Because an engine starts out well, is no sign it can hold the pace. B I
B That must be proved.
The 111 C line offers engines of proved ability. Through years
B of service,' everywhere, under every condition,
I I H C Gasoline Engines 11
B have stood the test. They have demonstrated by actual experience B
that for every use they are just the kind of engine you want
I H C engines are made in various sty les and sizes, from 1 to 35-horse
B power—for pumping, spraying, sawing, grinding, threshing, and opera- B
B ting machines about the house and dairy.
B Why experiment when you can be sure?
It doesn t take an expert to see the many great advantages of IH C B
B construction. You can see at a glance how 111 C cylinder construction B
B gives more power on less gasoline—how the IH C style of governing
B gives steadier power and economizes suel —how the 111 C cooling sys
tem prevents deterioration —how, in every way, 1 II C construction is
B simplest, strongest, and best. B ■
Go to the IH C local dealer and let him prove to you why an IH C B
engine will give you most service, most satisfaction, with least attention,
B and at least expense. He will show you just the engine to meet your
requirements. Talk it over with him next time you go to town Or, if
you prefer, write direct for’catalogue and full information.
INTERNATIONAL HARVESTER [~„ ~~~ “——
COMPANY OF AMERICA I H C Service Bureau
(Incorporated) The Bureau is a center, where B
B CHICAGO the b est ways °f doing things on
USA the arn1 ’ an( * data relating to its
u o A development, are collected and
distributed free to everyone inter-
ested in agriculture. Every avail-
able source of information will be
used in answering questions on all
farm subjects. If the quest ions at e
sent to the I H C Service Bureau,
t lic-y Wlll receive prompt attention.
THE BEST XMAS PRESENT
IS A GOOD BOOK
Everybody loves a good book —it is the most appropriate and ac
ceptable Xmas present you can give. Write us whom you want a book
for, whether boy, girl, man or woman, and we’ll make a selection for
you that is bound to please, or better still.
SEND FOR OUR FREE BOOK CATALOG
and make your own selection. We carry all the latest fiction and the
best works of all times. There isn’t a book published that we can’t
furnish and our prices are the lowest to be had.
COLE BOOK COMPANY
“THE BOOK SHOP.”
69 Whitehall St. - - - Atlanta, Ga.
web feet and very short legs.
Os all queer animals, the porcupine
is one of nature’s greatest curiosities.
Here is his picture with his quills
bristled out ready to defend himself.
Next we turn to a picture of oriole
nests suspended from the limb of a
tree. And here are some trojans.
These birds resemble Birds of Para
dise for beauty of plumage and are
found in Ceylon, Java, Sumatra and
the hotter regions of America.
MATTIE HENAN.
Alabama.
BUTTERMILK PIE.
A buttermilk pie is made by some
women and looked upon as a delicious
change from the usual apple, peach
and lemon, which are always tasty,
but sometime* become noterMm*. A
buttermilk pie is made by rubbing to
gether two tablespoons of flour, three
fourths cup of sugar and pinch of salt.
Into this slowly stir one pint of but
termilk, flavor with nutmeg and bake
in one crust.
WINDOWS OF HEAVEN NO. 9.
Send us twelve names and addresses
of music leaders or teachers written
plainly and we will send a copy of our
latest and best song book, No. 9, to
you. JOHN B. VAUGHAN,
Athens, Ga.
Apple Custard.
Pare and core the apples; stew in a
little water until tender; pour over
them a custard made in the usual
manner, bake until the custard hi
done*
11