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* VOICES OF YOUTH x
CONDUCTED BY MRS. Q. B. LINDSEY.
Nervous Headache
“I know from experience that
Dr. Miles’ Anti-Pain Pills will
relieve severe cases of headache
quickly.” MRS. GEO. S. HENRY,
Sullivan, Wash.
In many persons the least excite
ment, exertion or irritation causes
headache. They cannot attend
church, theatre, places of amuse
ment, travel, or mingle in a crowd
without suffering an attack of head
ache. The nerves of the brain are
easily excited, and this irritable con
dition causes pain. Such persons
should take
Dr. Miles’ Anti-Pain Pills
before starting out, or on the first
indication of an attack. They
invariably relieve all such misery.
The first package will benefit; if not,
your druggist will return your money.
Full-Blooded, Old-Fashioned
American Dominiques
Th* ideal general purpose fowl. The
Hardy ©ld "Deminecker” stock from
which the Plymouth Rock came. Splen
did layers of large, rich eggs. Tender,
jwley meat. Strong, vigorous fowls. The
eldest and best American breed. Rose
e©mbed (best for eggs in freezing wea
ther). Clean yellow legs. Easy to raise
on account of robust, hardy constitutions,
developed by a century and a half of
eareful selection.
Bggs from prize-winners (F. O. B. At
lanta) $3 per sitting of 15. Eggs from
high-class utility stock, $1.50 per sitting
of 15. Inclose remittance and address
your letter plainly to
ATTACOA POULTRY YARDS,
Office 104 Edgewood Ave. Atlanta, Ga.
GENUINE RUSSELL
BIG BOLL COTTON SEED
For sale at following prices: 1 to 5 bush
els at $1.50; 10 to 20 bushels, $1.25; 25
bushels or more at SI.OO per bushel. I
also have Mebane’s Trumph.
G. FL PARK
Alexander City, Alabama
RIDER AGENTS WANTED
/Bcyj i n each town to ride and exhibit samolo
Bicycle. Write for special offer.
We Shift on Approval -without a cent
OMSgffS deposit, allow 10 DAYS FREE TRIAU
ttzz/n >4 and prepay freight on every bicycle.
WfafJaF Js3bS&=- FACTORY PRICES onbicycles, tires
and sundries. Do not buy until you receive our cat*
Hogs and learn our unheard of prices and marvelous special offer.
Tires, coaster brake rear wheels, lamps, sundries, half prices.
MEAD CYCLE CO., Dept. 5 . 3 05 Chicago, 111
FREE to You SI.OO
Box of Larks rheumatic remedy will be
Mat yeu free, Use it according to direc
tlefts. B ft euros your rheumatism send
M 11.00. M let, you owe ua nothing.
The Larka •&., Dept. •, Milwaukee, Wle.
Can Cancer Be Cured? It Can
The record of the Kellam Hospital is without parallel
in history, having cured to stay cured permanently,
without the use of the knife, over 90 per cent of the
many hundreds of sufferers from cancer wlichit has
treated during the past fifteen years of its existence.
We have been endorsed by the Senate and Legis
lature of Virginia. W» Guarantee Cur Cures.
THE KELLAM HOSPITAL
1617 West Main St. Richmond, Va.
Physicians Treated Free.
Bewicen mr“ | |
CHURCH & SCHOOL f" I | ZRI
Catalog Freo. ■■■■
AMERICAN BELL FOUNDRY. NORTHVILLE, MICHIGAN.
Special discount to readers of this publication.
“Moments make the year, and trifles
life.”
It was only a little word
Spoken to one in pain,
Yet sweet as the song of bird
It returned again and again.
It was only a few simple flowers
Touched with the breath of spring,
Yet they whispered of sunshine and
showers,
Os new life on the wing.
It was only a tender caress,
A touch of peace and calm,
Yet upon a soul’s distress
It felt like healing balm.
It was only a gentle letter,
From out the heart of a friend,
Yet all the hours grew sweeter
That the message had been penned.
CHAT.
Does the reading of this little poem
taken from the treasured things of my
scrap book make you realize in any
sense how very important are the lit
tle things, the “trifles” of life?
Go back, read it over again, study
every verse carefully and see where it
does or can apply to your life.
It was the little word of truth, so un
usual in a child of his years that help
ed to build the character of the great
est man our nation has ever known.
But these, little things must come
from the heart with a pure motive if
there is real value to them.
George Washington spoke the truth
under the test of a trying hour, not for
effect, but because there was truth in
his heart, and though he was naturally
expecting punishment for the “little
act” that had suddenly become a se
rious offense, yet he dared not violate
even in his childish heart, the princi
ples that governed him then and made
afterward one of the greatest men of
American history. Whether the story
as given by his biographer is true in
detail or not, which has been question
ed, yet the lesson taught is the same.
Through the little things that come
into our everyday lives do we betray
our real character. The way you treat
mother or sister, father or brother as
a child, will give you an insight into
the kind of man or woman you will
make. When you catch yourself doing
little things that your own conscience
tells you are wrong, conquer them at
once, before they become fixed habits.
Throw off the quick temper the dispo
sition to deceive in things that seem
“too small to amount to anything,” the
easy drifting into little stories for fear
of being punished. These things are
forming your character that you must
meet the world with as a man or wo
man. They will grow until you will be
known either as a hypocrite, or a per
son governed by policy, an untruthful,
dishonest or unstable man or woman.
And to just that extent that you have
conquered them you will be recognized
as being noble and honorable, true to
friends and duty, one that can be de
pended on in the real deals of life. You
will not have to declare to the world on
which side you stand. Your friends
and the busy world know you even bet-
TO DRIVE OUT MALARIA AND BUILD
UP THE SYSTEM.
Take the Old Standard GROVE’S
TASTELESS CHILL TONIC. You know
what you are taking. The formula is
plainly printed on every bottle, showing
It le simply Qulninic and Iron In a taste
less form, and the most effectual form.
For grown people and children. 500,
The Golden Age for February 23, 1911.
TRIFLES
It was only a warbling note
From one of God’s sweet birds,
A little earth-breasted blue-coat
Singing his songs without words.
It was only some soft fleecy clouds,
White as the wings of a dove,
Slowly sailing in crowds
O’er tne infinite blue above.
It was only a sentence or two
From the page of a favorite book,
Yet all the long day through,
A heart fresh courage took.
It was only—so on and on,
For life is a chain of rings,
And earth’s purest pleasures are won
by heeding the little things.
—Exchange.
ter than you know yourself. If you
would be valued as worth while and
really honorable you must be so in
your own heart, doing nothing you
would condemn in another.
Speaking of Washington and think
ing of his birthday, which every true
American delights to honor, carries me
back to my first visit to Mount Ver
non, and I wish I had the word paint
ing power that would enable me to
picture it to my boys and girls as it
impressed me then.
Os course, you are familiar with the
picture of the home itself and of the
tomb, but the interior of that histori
cal, old colonial home has to be seen
to be appreciated.
It gives one rather an uncanny,
creepy feeling to stand and look at the
bed on which George Washington rest
ed his tired mind and body during the
great struggle that was helping to es
tablish our free government; to see
the desk at which he wrote oftentimes
far into the night; the old hair covered
trunk, that held the fancy “finery” the
men of that day wore; the arm chair
in which he sat before the large open
fireplace to think out the momentous
problems of state and the “bureau” as
they were called in those days, before
which he stood to arrange his periwig
and adjust the jaunty three-cornered
hat. All these things possess a weird
sacredness that is hard to describe.
And then, when you turn to the old
clock on the stairs that rang the hours
for action to him all those years, see
the old musket, and the sword that
were his closest friends in those trying
days, even the gloves that shielded his
hands from the biting cold, you have a
strange sense of nearness to this great
man that you have never felt or known
before. And again, when you visit there
your feet touch the same walks that
his have trod in those beautiful, well
kept grounds. They lead you to the
old stable, the old carriage house, in
which the family coach, with its high
seat, is still housed. The dairy the
deer garden, the beautiful flower gar
den of “ye olden time plants,” the
spring from which you are permitted
to drink from an old time gourd, and
last, but by no means of least import-
Tetterine Conquers Poison Oak.
I enclose 50 cents in stamps for a box
of Tetterine. I have poison oak on me
again and that is all that ever has cured
it. Please hurry it on to
M. E. Hamlett.
Montalba, Tex., May 21, ’OB.
Tetterine cures Eczema, Tetter, Ring
Worm, Itching Piles, Old Itching Sores,
Dandruff, Chilblains and every form of
Scalp and Skin Disease. Tetterine 50c;
Tetterine Soap 25c. Your druggist, or by
mail from the manufacturer, The Shup
trlne Co., Savannah, Ga.
PILES CURED AT HOME BY NEW
ABSORPTION METHOD.
If you suffer from bleeding, itching,
blind or protruding Piles, send me your
address, and I will tell you how to cure
yourself at home by the new absorption
treatment; and will also send some of
this home treatment free for trial, with
references from your own locality if re
quested. Immediate relief and permanent
cure assured. Send no money, but tell
others of this offer. Write today to Mrs.
M. Summers, Box 576, South Bend, Ind.
A TRIP OF GREAT EDUCATIONAL
VALUE.
Traveling is being looked upon
more and more each year as an edu
cator from an educating point of
view and a general broadening of the
human mind. People that spend their
lives in ohe community are, as a gen
eral rule, narrow and have no thought
beyond their own community;
The traveler you will find not Ohly
broad-minded but interesting, and the
contact with people of other sections
of the country, the familiarity with
their modes of living; their commer
cial life and their social and farm
life, makes him an asset to the com
munity. To the business man, travel
ing means new ideas and improved
methods. The farmer, in traveling,
will always see something that will
give him new thoughts and new ideas
which, on his return home, can be put
to valuable use. The teacher and pu
pil are, likewise, greatly benefited.
The pleasure seekers certainly can not
spend their time or money more prof
itably.
The great West of this country ap
peals to all phases of life. There is
no section where nature has been so
liberal in providing points of interest.
The wonderful Rocky Mountains, with
their awe inspiring canyons and snow
capped peaks; the South California
Pacific coast, where nature and man
have combined to make a veritable
flower garden; the great cities that
have been built within a generation
by the indomitable will of man; the
Yellowstone National Park, where
again nature has provided us with
beauties which can not be described.
The wonders and beauties of this
Park have been so recognized by our
National Government that it is main
tained “for the benefit and enjoyment
of the people.”
A trip through this wonderful coun
try is being arranged by the SEA
BOARD, where the comfort and pleas
ure of our patrons will be the first
thought. This trip will start from At
lanta on June 9th, 1911, and will con
sume approximately thirty (30) days.
Denver, Colorado Springs, Los Ange
les, Santa Barbara, Paso Robles, San
Francisco, Portland, Seattle, Yellow
stone National Park, St. Paul and Chi
cago will be visited. Special Pullman
train will be used, dining car being
provided for meals en route. The
cost of this trip, from Atlanta, will be
$300.00, one to a berth in Pullmans,
and $275.00, two to a berth in Pull
mans. This cost includes railroad and
Pullman fare, meals en route, hotel
accommodations, sight-seeing and side
trips. The expense for four days”
stay at San Francisco is not included.
Detailed information concerning
this attractive trip can be had upon
application to Dr. Joseph Broughton,,
Fourth National Bank Bldg., Atlanta,
Ga., or Mr. C. D. Wayne, Assistant
General Passenger Agent, Seaboard
Air Line Railway, Atlanta, Ga.
*RI4-a Like hungry wolves
* 1311 MllC a ny time of the year
if you use Magic-Fish-Lure. Best
fish bait ever discovered. Keeps you busy
IML/Lj pulling them out. Write to-day and get a
box to help introduce it. Agents wanted.
J. F. Gregory, Dept. 1, St. Louis, Mo