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Better Than Spanking
Spanking does not euro children of bed
wetting. There is a constitutional cause for
this trouble. Mrs. M. Summers, Box 576,
South Bend, Ind., will send free to any moth
er her successful home treatment, with full
instructions. Send no money, but write her
today if your children trouble you in this
way. Don’t blame the child, the chances are
it can’t help it. This treatment also cures
adults and aged people troubled with urine
difficulties by day er night.
cial secretary, at the same salary you
have been receiving, but stay you shall
—at home.”
The girl’s calm face flushed with
sudden tenderness, and she turned
and put her hands down on Miss
Crane’s shoulder.
“The only things I have ever found,”
she said with a mist of tears in her
eyes, “on this earth, which made me
believe there was a heaven somewhere
in the universe has been your love and
your home. And whether you can un
derstand it, or not, Aunt Caro, I have
felt a thousand times, that I had rath
er be with you in the old home, and
live on a crust, than to endure the
loneliness and heartache, which were
my portion while I lived and fought
for the next step upward, among
strangers.”
“Then, why did you not come back
to me, my child?”
“Because I thought I had been a
burden on your slender resources long
enough—in fact, too long.”
“But now, you feel willing to stay,
Nell? This fortune which has come to
me, so unexpectedly, has changed your
point of view, has it not?” There was
a pathetic tension in Miss Crane’s
voice, which went to the heart of the
girl like a knife.
“I will stay on any basis, Aunt
Caro,” she said, as she stooped and
kissed her lightly on the forehead,”
that will make you the happiest, either
as your daughter, or financial secre
tary.”
“Well, I think the finest way,” Miss
Crane said, to cover her emotion, as
she led the way into the library, “out
of our dilemma, would be for me to
make you an allowance, and then for
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The Law of the White Circle
By Thornwell Jacoba
A Stirring' Novel of
THE
Atlanta Riots
“A book to stir
the passions, a book
that powerfully grips
the pillars of social
life.” —Tom Watson
in The Jeffersonian.
‘‘One of the great
est novels ever
written by a South
ern man. It is viv
id, telling, power
ful.”—John Trot
wood Moore.
‘‘From just such
writers, men of au-
thoritative thought, the South will be awak
ened to what is necessary in this negro ques
tion —just such books as The Law of the
White Circle, which we should welcome,
read and study.”—Birmingham Age-Herald.
This 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
theme. It is a virile, honest, red-blooded
presentation of the greatest factor in Ameri
can 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 $2.35 for a year’s sub
scription to The Golden Age, or for $1.60
we will send the novel and extend the sub
scription six months. Address
THE GOLDEN AGE.
Austell Building. Atlanta, Ga.
JOIN THE GOLDEN AGE PIANO CLUB
fl
you to do what I want you to do,” and
then she added, humorously, “when
you feel like it.”
“Amen, Auntie, with all my heart.”
Nell returned with a laugh in which
her aunt joined, and then they both
experienced the relief which comes
from complete understanding.
Afterwards, Miss Crane closed the
folding doors, which transformed the
library into a cosey room, with a
bright fire in the club house grate,
and a brown bird dog asleep on the
white bear skin rug.
Nell had paused by a great crystal
bowl of jonquils, which stood on the
library table.
“I feel like these came,” she com
mented, as she touched the yellow
petals lightly, “from our old home,
Aunt Caro, did they, not?”
“Yes,” she answered with a smile.
“Mrs. More says that we moved by
bringing our tooth brushes, night
gowns, and a boquet of flowers.”
“Well, they fit in—l mean the flow
ers, not the night gowns, with all the
immensities (that’s the lower floor
view, when the curtains and doors are
off duty) —and the elegances, which
includes all the “beautiful furnishings
in four rooms, just like you do, Aunt
Caroline. I hope that 1 shall not be
the first imported thing to create a
discordant note. Let me look at my
self in this panel mirror,” she added,
as she walked over to one between
the book cases, “and see how I har
monize.”
Miss Crane came up behind the girl,
and as she laid one hand on her shoul
der affectionately enquired, “May I pro
nounce the verdict?”
“You may have that privilege,” Nell
returned, as she drew herself up to
full height, and smiled back into the
eyes of the girl in the mirror.
“Well, there is not a thing in this
home,” Miss Crane said, in a tone of
warm conviction, as lovely as you are,
and but two things as precious and
priceless, and one of them is a por
trait, and the other a letter written
by the dead master of the house to
me.
“Then the gift of the fortune,” Nell
said, impulsively, as they both turned
back to the fire, “means that Mr.
Gray’s death ended a romance, Aunt
Caro?”
“Perhaps, only I am not going to
confide it to you today. Instead, I
want you, if you are not too tired, to
go with me as soon as I have had a
talk with the cook, about the dinner
tonight, on my first ride in the carriage
to see some old friends. I don’t want
to go in the tonneau —it is to impres
sive and immense. I want to begin
to balance the blessings with which I
have been so richly endowed. Look
over this check book,” she continued,
as she took her purse from the table,
and took out the book; “and see if I
have forgotten any one. You know,”
she added, from the doorway, “I have
not drawn any checks as yet for my
self, and before I do, and indeed, be
fore I sit down, to the table in Pow
hattan Gray’s home, for the first time,
I want to feel like that I have begun to
justify his trust in me, that the con
secration of his wealth has been in
deed inaugurated.”
Miss Crane turned away with the
last words, and Nell sank down in one
of the great leather chairs, before the
fire. The girl watched the red and
yellow flare of the flames in the grate
for a while, and then she got to her
feet, making a dramatic gesture with
her right hand in the tense silence, as
if seeking for some relief from the
emotional strain of her mood.
The Golden Age for November 28, 1912,
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“No wonder Mr. Powhattan Gray
loved her,” she breathed. “Who could
help it? She has a heart as big as all
out of doors —and she is just as certain
to justify his great trust in her, I
know, as the sun will shine tomorrow
Oh, heart of mine, remember, remem
ber that character mates destiny—
sometimes.”
Nell finished her soliloquy with a
qualifying word, and catching a re
flection of herself in the panel mirror,
as she crossed the floor, she bowed
with witching grace.
“The first act in the home drama,”
she averred, to the girl in the glass,
“has been played, my lady, “and the
curtain is down and the lights blown
out But the stage will be set again
tonight for your part, at eight o’clock,
and if you dare, you can snub the chief
counselor, that is if he will be good,
and let you.
(To Be Continued.)
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This IVill Stop Your
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Mix one pint of granulated sugar with
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Take a tcaspoonful every one, two or
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15