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12
The Home Circle for Our Young People
Conducted by MRS. G. B. LINDSEY
IMMEDIATE EFFECT OF GREAT KID
NEY REMEDY IS SOON REALIZED.
According to my experience I do not
consider there is anything to equal
Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root for kidney
affection. Twice it relieved me when
I w r as completely helpless.
The last time I was traveling in
Texas, when my kidneys became ef
fected, and for ten days I suffered ex
cruciating pain, accompanied with se
vere chills. Several years previous,
having been relieved of a similar at
tack, I naturally sought relief as be
fore, from Swamp-Root.
After using four of the large size
bottles, I was completely restored and
went on my way rejoicing and prais
ing Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root. This
was three years ago, and I have had
no indication of the return of the af
fliction.
Yours very truly,
J. C. SMITH, JR.,
108 Johnson St. Jackson, Tenn.
State of Tennessee
County of Madison ss '
Subscribed and sworn to before me
this 13th day of July, 1909.
P. C. STOVALL,
Notary Public.
Letter to
Dr. Kilmer 6 Co.,
Biosfhampton, N. Y.
Prove What Swamp-Root Will Do
For You
-Send to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Bingham
ton, N. Y., for a sample bottle. It will
convince anyone. You will also re
ceive a booklet of valuable informa
tion, telling all about the kidneys and
bladder. When writing, be sure and
mention Atlanta W T eekly Golden Age.
Regular fifty-cent and one-dollar size
bottles for sale at all drug stores.
Will Cue That Cough
Don’t fool yourself into the belief
that a n c!irht cold” cr a n cold in the
head” is but a little thing. Every
"cold” is a fever, ard unchecked,
may result in death. W hen you apply
l IV A L>
you cure your cough ar.d your lungs at
cue and the same ti ne, through inhalation
and absorption. Ihe healing, antiseptic and
germ destroying vapor.? are inhaled with
each breath. It cleans away the sore 3
and inflammation, sets the lungs moving
strong and true.
Always have a jar on hand for instant
use —don’t wait until you are attacked to
send to the druggist for it.
“Please send me one hall dozen jars of
your Vick's Croup Salve, which I have
found so excellent for the past few years.
Enclosed find $1.50.
MRS. WM. H. KNOWLES
Pensacola, Fla.
At your druggist's or by mail.
25c., 50c., SI.OO A
Economy suggests
the Dollar Size.
Vick’. Family
Remedies Co. s <4*.
Grewnboro, ■ N.C. AiaySirgAJ
.. ei|npAa||bcn curs no pay-«u
■ I oilier word., you do not
|SK ■ ■ our small professional fee
■ ■ until cured and satisfied. German.
FMwrttp IneMtute, M 4 Qrand Ave.. Kansas Olty, Me.
Let my love to thee
A deep, deep river be,
Pouring its waters silently
Into the deep blue sea
Not like the noisy water
Which falls from the mountain side,
Then hushes its voice forever
Slipping through meadows wide.
Rules For Contest
& C for best true story of the intelligence and faithfulness of any
dumb animal. Story to contain not over five hundred words;
IH written on one side of paper only. Contest closes the last day
\JvIU of March. Second prize a nicely bound book that will be worth
perhaps, more to the winner than the five dollars. Only requirement, The Gol
den Age must be a regular visitor to your home and you must not be over
eighteen years old.
A Valentine of the Fifties
“Cull choicest flowers from the lea
And bind them In thy hair,
Scarce fairer would the blossoms be
Than she who did them wear.
“As the flowers, too, thy life may
fade —
Man’s days are short and few —
Prepare then now, while death’s de
layed,
So heaven may meet your view.”
Time, it seems, changes all things
save the tender cupid-taught thought
of youth and maiden. This same wise
little cupid worked out long years
ago plans of attack that need hut lit
tle coloring with the shifting customs
of the fleeting years to keep them ef
fective in this continuous battle with
hearts. This one is quaint in its
wording, and yellow with age, yet it
breathes from off the old-fashioned gilt
edged paper, and raised rose-wreathed
envelope, the stirred admiration of a
young Northern school teacher, away
from home his first time, for my
sweet mother, away back in the fif
ties, when she was filled with the joy
and brightness of young girlhood.
I had often heard her speak of this
poetical “yankee” school teacher, and
his sojourn in her “neighborhood”
during the latter part of the fifties.
Had heard her quote, with a touch of
reminiscent romance brightening her
dear eyes, these acrostic verses, which
carry her maiden name and initials.
St. Valentine’s beginning of another
of those many romances that the war
of the close following sixties ended;
and had heard her, with a touch of
sadness, speak of the farewell poem
that marked his going back to his own
home state, and closed because he felt
she would have it so, their correspond
ence. But not until with a greater and
more sacred appreciation of every
thing that has ever touched the life
of one we loved, than we can know
while they live, as l went through her
keepsakes since she bade us farewell,
did I ever read the touching, beautiful,
age-stained “missives” that came be
tween.
I found myself, as I read, trying to
over with her after all these
years the things she felt when those
words were fresh and the first of their
kind to fire her happy girlish heart
with their delicate, yet sincere, tribute
to her purity and beauty. I could see
“the old chestnut tree” referred to in
The Golden Age for February 15, 1912.
TO MY VALENTINE
By MARION DURHAM
Not like the summer fountains,
That summer clouds bestow;
Not like the rill from the mountains,
That drains December’s snow,
Let my love to thee
A brimming river be,
Pouring it waters perpetually
Into the deep blue sea.
one of these letters, “the white house,”
one of whose inmates was so much
appreciated, and “the fireside in your
sister’s home,” and seemed to see
the color come and go in her pretty
face as word by word of that delicate
old-time writing revealed a sincere
admiration in terms no more to be
doubted or compared with the flattery
of today than you would doubt the
throbbing of your own heart, or com
pare the sacred truths with mere
comedy.
When I had finished this one which
seemed to be the climax, I tried to
imagine her answer, for he had said,
“If I am to be cast aside as an ar
ticle not worth considering, deal gen
tly, please, for you know the sudden
gust often breaks, while the soft
breeze simply bends,” and knowing
the unselfishness of her heart, her
habitual thoughtfulness for others in
every detail of life, it was easy to
see the “bending of the soft breeze”
in the remaining letters, until this
farewell came.
Farewell.
We must part, we must part,
We must soon part forever;
The ties that have bound us
Soon distance must sever.
Though man may be friendly,
And woman may smile,
My thoughts will turn ever
To one free from guile.
Oh, hard is the fate,
When friends have proved true
Os the unhappy one
Who must bid them adieu!
But when strong affections
Do reign in his heart,
’Tis hard from his loved one
t orever to part.
What grief and what anguish
His sad heart doth swell
At thoughts of the parting
No one’s tongue could tell.
I must wander, must wander,
Uncared and alone,
Throughout this broad world —
No place is my home.
No fond one to soothe me
When I’m in despair,
Or with sweet, loving yoice.
To calm every care,
WITUniIT OPIATES
IVIIIIUUI NARCOTICS
FOLEY’S HONEY and TAR
COMPOUND
STOPS COUGHS - CURES COLDS
For CROUP, BRONCHITIS, WHOOP
ING COUGH, LA GRIPPE COUGHS,
HOARSENESS and ALL COUGHS and
COLDS. It is BEST and SAFEST for
CHILDREN and for GROWN PERSONS.
The Genuine is in a Yellow Package
For sale by ALL DEALERS Everywhere
LADY WANTED
To introduce Dress Goods, Hdkfs. and
Petticoats. Make SIO.OO to $30.00 weekly.
Best line —lowest prices—sold through agents
only. No money required. New spring pat
terns now ready. Samples and case free.
STANDARD DRESS GOODS CO., Desk 32 B,
Binghamton, N. Y.
Free booklet —of vital interest —Farm Dem
onstration work —Farming for profit—The
best plan known for reduction of acreage,
diversification and rotation- —The best im
proved farm seeds —earliest, most prolific
and largest yield, the only way to produce
4 bales of cotton and 45 barrels of corn per
acre. The proof—not mere claims. Send
name and address to Sugar Loaf Farm,
Youngsville, N. C.
n CHEAPER THAN EVER!
Every Kind of Woven Wire Fence,
also Wrought Tron Picket Fences,
Gates. Etc. Write (for freeCataSojj
Enterprise Foandry & Fence Co.,
IGO7 £. Hr.tk St.. indl&Eapolls. lad.
** fmiT bWbcm W
For Furnaces, Factories, Cotton Mills, Lumber
Mills, Lime Kilns, Residences and other build-
Jngsofevery description. Special shapes made
to order. Delivered prices quoted to any
point in United States. Factory. Killian, S. C.
WRITE FOR PRICES TO-DAY!
KILLIAN FIRE BRICK CORPORATION,/
Charleston, S. C- !
mea^mmmsammmnaunmnmw
FOR SALE.
North Carolina seed peanuts, cow
peas, Mammoth Yelloy 'Soy Beans,
Chufas, Velvet Beans, etc. Good stock,
quick shipment. Write for special
price list No. 81. Hickory Seed Com
pany, Hickory, N. C.
Si Healthful Delicious p
H? Dependable Economical gP
I Codfish 1
I in New and Better Form I
H Don’t bother any longer with over- M
H salted, unpalatable, unwholesome, dried m
H| cod, so difficult to digest. Use §f
I BurnhamS Morrill I
I Fish Flakes 1
|l| 10c —two sizes — lsc Ji
|j|l Codfish in its most modern, sanitary, conven- vMj
IHI ient and palatable form —cooked fresh from the WM
ocean —mildly salted —immediately packed in to
air-tight, parchment-lined containers and ready M
WM for instant use in making delicious FISH J|
BALLS. CREAMED FISH. FISH ffi
H CHOWDER, etc. H
Keeps In Any Climate
At grocers everywhere, or mail us 10c and 11
|j|s receive a full size 10c package, prepaid. I
Hnf Write to-day for FREE BOOK of recipes by the fg||
JHH editor of the “Boston Cooking School Magazine.” jgj
H BURNHAM & MORRILL CO. il
Portland, Maine, U. S. A.