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NEVER CAUSED
RHEUMATISM
I WANT to prove it to your satisfaction.
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The Law of the White Circle
By Thornwell Jacob*
A Stirring Novel of
THE
Atlanta Riots
“A book to itir
lb* laMions, a book
Utat powerfolly <ri>*
the pillar* of eeeiel
life.’’—Tom Wat ion
la Th* Jeffersonian.
“On* es th* treat*
•at novel* ever
written by a Soath*
era man. It ie viv
-14, telling, pewer
tuL’’—John Trot
weed lleore.
“from jut meh
writers, men of an*
thoritativo thought, the South will bo awak
ened to what is necessary in thia negro ques
tion—just such books as The Law of the
White Circle, which we should welcome,
read and study.”—Birmingham Age-Herald
Thio novel is absolutely unique in English
Literature and with the exception of none is
the only attempt to be philosophically accu
rate in handling this all-absorbing race
thome. It is a virile, honest, rod-blooded
presentation of the greatest factor in Ameri
can life.
Price, fl. 2 5 Postpaid.
Special Offer: —We wjjl send a copy of
this book postpaid to any subscriber, old or
now, who sends us |MS for a year*a oub
aeription to The Golden Age, or for SI,BO
wo will aend the novel and extend the aub
aaription six months. Address.
THI GOLDS* AU,
Anatoli Building. AOasta, Ga.
a
IK &
Somewhere in a book I’ve read
What some writer feller said
’Bout a country overhead—
’Bout another country,
Where there aint no pain ner pride,
Where nobody’s ever died,
‘N’ all hands is satisfied,
In the Other Country.
Where the wind don’t never blow,
Where the cold don’t never grow,
‘N’ all things aint thus ‘n’ so
In the Other Country;
Where there aint no more of toil,
‘N’ the fair c n fertil soil
Comes exactly up to Hoyle—
In the Other Country.
Where the weeds is all choked out,
‘N’ the spindlin’est doubt
Can’t be found nowhere’s about
In the Other Country;
‘N’ the posies we shall see,
Bloomin’ fair ez fair c’n be,
Haint no thorns fer you ner me
In the Other Country.
The Wonderful in Nature
This is a grand old world and could
not have been created by any but an
Omnipotent God. While we wonder
at the marvelous, yet there is design
and a cause for it all.
With thunderings of grand sublim
ity the voice of God is heard in many
of His works. In thunder, in the roar
of maddened waters dashing down
the rugged mountain sides we recog
nize God’s majesty.
From reading and from pictures,
shut-ins are made familiar with Na
ture’s mysteries. The magazines show
these things, and with post cards and
stenoscopic views and aged and infirm
can travel over the world sitting
around their fire sides. For instance,
let us take up The Pacific Monthly
and scan its pages and mark with a
cross the paragraphs and illustrations
which strike us. An article on Arte
sian Waters in the West is particular
ly interesting. This article was writ
ten by N. H. Dartin. We learn that
“vast areas of desert lands have been
already reclaimed by tapping arte
sian waters, not only for use in irriga
tion, but for stock and domestic sup
ply. There are many districts in the
Vest in which surface waters are so
scanty, or of such bad quality that set
tlement is entirely dependent on the
presence of underground supply. The
most valuable and wonderful artesian
district in the world is in Eartun,
South Dakota, where many thousands
of square miles are underlaid by a
thick sheet of water-bearing sand
stones.”
We find a picture of a representa
tive artesian well in Southern Califor
nia. This well irrigates an orange
grove. Next is the picture of a well
in Salt Lake Valley. The Mormons
have many such wells for irrigation.
A well in Pecos Valley, New Mexico,
has a 300-gallon flow. A most won
derful well is one of the famous wells
of the Walla Walla Valley, Wash. A
typical high pressure well at Woon
socket, South Dakota furnishes power
for a large flour mill. Jordan well at
Rosswell, New Mexico, flows 600 gal
lons a minute. It throws its waters
high; it is an ever-flowing fountain.
Orchards of apple, pear and orange
trees are irrigated by these wells and
water is supplied to cattle and for
rendering fields fertile and for mov
ing machinery.
Man, inspired by God, works won
ders. Tunnels and means for carry-
The Golden Age for October 31, 1912.
The Other Country
By ARTHUR H. GOODENOUGH.
By MUDA HETNUR.
Aint no lamentations there,
Nairy fear ‘n’ nary care,
Ner the shader of despair,
In the Other Country;
‘N’ they say thet folks like me,
Ign’rant, shif’less ez c’n be,
Angel faces sometimes see
In the Other Country.
Ign’rance ‘n’ shif’lessness
Aint exactly a success;
Like ter quit the hull durn mess
Fer the Other Country?
Aint no satisfaction here
In this mundane atmosphere;
Everything aint out of gear
In the Other Country.
‘N’ I think thet by ‘n’ by,
If ther’ aint no reason why,
Like ez not I’ll hev a try
Fer the Other Country;
Yes, ez sure ez fate iz fate
On sum undecided date
I’ll up stakes ‘n’ emergrate
To the Other Country.
ing water show this. The great double
tunnel on the new Shore road to
Yellowstone National Park was built
by the reclamation engineers and the
dam at Minidoka. Mindoka Projects,
Idaho, both show wonderful working
of man’s skill prompted by God’s
wisdom. Tremendous cylinders are
laid as methods for distributing water,
where conformation of land, and dust
like character of soil, makes ditching
impracticable.
Now let us take up the stereoscope.
We will first view Niagara in sum
mer. We imagine we stand on the
great suspension bridge and take a
general view of the falls. Then we
will take a look at Horseshoe falls
and Rainbow. We can easily imagine
the winter scene of Terrapin Tower
all coated in snow and of the snow
effect near Horseshoe falls. Now we
see snow banked Luna Island and an
ice mountain by 'moonlight.
Some beautiful waterfalls of Y. A.
P. are Aspry falls, on middle Gard
iner river; Gibson falls and Tower
falls. The Yosemite falls of Califor
nia are beautiful falling from pre
cipice after precipice. The Multno
mah falls of Oregon, the Shoshone
falls of Idaho, and the Christian falls
of Alaska can not be rivaled in scen
ery, but the very prettiest of all pic
tured falls are Minnehaha falls near
St. Paul, Minn.
Now, readers go with me to the
Garden of the Gods, Colorado. We will
enter the gateway and walk leisurely
In the lovely green valley. We will
visit the wonderful Balanced Rock,
however I have heard that this won
der has been worked on by man with
cement to prevent its falling over.
While in this marvelous garden, let
us view the Temple of Zion. Its
rock consists of hard sandstone, which
resisted the hammering and chiseling
of rain and ice, air and heat during
tens of thousands of years.
Among other natural curiosities of
the west are a petrified tree stump;
the Devil’s War club, and The Twins,
which are two heaps of rock some-
Tetterine Works Wonders.
Rev. C. P. Laboury, Centerville, R. 1.,
writes. “I enclose two dollars to get some
of your Tetterine. It has done wonders on
three persons to whom I had given a little
of my small supply. They were radically
cured of Eczema.”
Tetterine quickly relieves skin diseases in
cluding Eczema, Tetter, Ringworm, Black
heads, also Itching Piles. 60 cents at drug
gists or by mail from Shuptrine Co., Savan
nah, Ga.
ajj Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use
CT in time. Sold by Druggists. El
fjUjfrqL'V impart the deliciously fragrant
flavor of Fresh Ripe Fruits and
Berries. Best housekeepers and
jy A professional Caterers use only
jsgj* ””• “Sauers." All flavors. At grocers
Hytj “l oo * & 25c * Write for our booklet of
choice cooking receipts—free.
Sauer’s Extract Co., Richmond, Va-
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Reference, Commercial National Bank
YOURHEART
a Does it Flutter, Palpitate or
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CAN CANCER BE CURED? IT CAN!
The record of the Kellam Hospital is without parale)
in history, having cured to stay cured permanently,
without the use of the knife or X-Ray over 90 per cent,
of the many hundreds of sufferers from cancer which
it has treated during the past fifteen years.
We have been endorsed by the Senate and Legislature
Virginia. We guarantee our cures.
Physicians treated free.
KELLAM HOSPITAL
1617 BV. Main St., Richmond, Va»
what resembling people. We could
view for hours the scenes in Yose
mite Valley. The Royal Arches, the
Three Brothers, and the Sentinels are
grand to behold in pictures. What
can they be in reality?
Nature and Man’s Skill are best
shown in the Grand Canon of the Col
orado. Seemingly inaccessible places
have been conquered by skillful en
gineering and modern appliances. The
Hanging Bridge, Royal Gorge, Colo
rado; the railway under the huge
Hanging Rock and many road ways
along the steep sides of the precipices
show what man’s skill has done.
Other natural curiosities of the
west are Geysers, or boiling springs.
Some of these are: Constant Geyser,
Riverside Geyser, Old Faithful and
Giant Geyser. These are in the Yel
lowstone National Park. Hot Springs
“A LOVELY PIANO.”
You ought to see the letters we are
receiving from the enthusiastic mem
bers of The Golden Age Piano Club.
Here is a sample from a South Caro
lina lady:—“The lovely piano came
yesterday. Am just delighted with
it; so are my musical friends. The
tone is so full and sweet, and the case
is lovely.”
Another member of the club, a
gentleman from Florida, writes:—
“The piano is simply a marvel of
beauty and tone, as also action. We
are all delighted with it.”
Write for your copy of the beauti
fully illustrated new club catalog.
Address Ludden & Bates, The Gold
en Age Piano Club Dept., Atlanta,
Ga.