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14
The Home Circle for Our Young People
Conducted by MRS. G. B. LINDSEY- — ■.■===
Eat Anything
Without Fear
Tightness of the Stomach Caused by
Undigested Food Stopped with a
Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablet.
When you feel as if your stomach
was being tightly choked —when the
pain is intense and you break out in
a cold and clammy perspiration and
there is a lump in your throat and
you are weak and nauseated —all you
need is a Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablet
to clear away the wreckage of undi
gested food left in the stomach and
intestines and restore you to your
normal self again. And this can all
be accomplished within a few mo
ments.
x-JU- %
You May Have Often Envied the
Hearty Eater! Why Not Emu
late Him?
Thousands of people have learned
so well how sure and dependable
Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets are for all
stomach ills that they now eat any
thing they want without fear of dis
tress. They are never without a
package at home and at the office,
and upon any indication that the
stomach is a little weary, they take a
Stuart’s Tablet after each meal for a
few days until the digestive organs
get rested up again.
This is a splendid plan to follow
and always results in much good. The
appetite is improved, the food is rel
ished more, your sleep is more re
freshing, and your disposition will
make you friends instead of enemies.
For Indigestion, Sour Stomach,
Belching, Gas, Coated Tongue, Intes
tinal Indigestion, and all Stomach Dis
orders and Pains —or for Loss of ap
petite—Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets are
invaluable.
Use them freely—they are as harm
less as sugar would be —and are not
to be classed as “medicine.” They
have no effect whatever on the sys
tem except the benefits they bring you
through the proper digestion of your
food.
All Drug Stores sell Stuart’s Dys
pepsia Tablets. The price is 50 cents
per box.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup
Has been used for over SIXTY-FIVE YEARS bv
HELIONS of MOTHERS for their CHILDREN
WHILE TEETHING, with PERFECT SUCCESS,
I‘ t ?^TH?S CHILD ’ SOFTENS the GUMS
ALLAYS ah PAIN; CURES WIND COLIC, and is
the best remedy for DIARRHCEA. Sold by
Druggists In every part of the world. Be sure
and ask for Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing SyruD/ 9
and take no other kind. Twenty-five cents a bot
tle. AN OLD AND WELL TRIED REMED Y o x
ME Ilf Dnnif From the Bar-Room to the Pul-
IlKafV DUUn pit and Mission Fields of Africa.
The author is the son of a former Chicago sa
loon keeper; converted, but not until he fell into
the depths of sin. He becomes a flaming Evan
gelist—a live wire for God. Later, makes 3 trips
to darkest Africa as a Missionary. 36 chapters;
each a well of living water. 400 pages in cloth.
Gold lettering. 40 illus. of life in Africa. Agents
wanted. Price SI.OO, 12c extra by mall. Address,
BEV* FEED WEISS. Dept. 24. Shenandoah, lowa.
The Golden Age for December 12, 1912.
Sit down: -we’ll try the rhyming play.
Can you guess the word I do not say?
Who will tell me what little 80-peep
Went hunting for? Her woolly .
Who’s read what Robinson Crusoe
wrote
About his island and his ?
What creature lives in a den of rocks,
And steals the farmer’s geese? The
And what is it runs about the house
When all are asleep? The little .
And what one do you like to pat
Upon her head? Nice .
And what one does the pussy cat
Like to catch and kill? The ,
a baby wears soft tiny socks.
But horny hoofs has the patient , .
1 think you all Have had the measles,
That rhyme well with the funny, .
Now who among you ever did
See a frisky, little woolly ?
I have seen colts jump, haven’t you?
But that’s nothing at all to the .
VIOLETS FRIEND
“No writing of letters, this glorious, sunshiney afternoon, Jean. Come, let
us go somewhere.”
“But, if we go calling, we will still be indoors most of the time.”
“No need to go calling. I know of the dearest little back street, where
grow giant oaks, and you know you are almost a Druid, when it comes to
worshipping these century-old trees. You’ll come back home with your hair
so wind-blown and your arms so full of 'frost tinted leaves, you’ll look just
like a picture for a modern magazine cover.”
“Well, then, all my communication with the ‘long distance’ friends today
must be by wireless, and when they inquire, ‘where art thou’ I’ll have the
same old excuse, Eve ‘tempted me.’ ”
Like “Chianti wine” was the air, as we walked down Eldorado paths, strewn
with autumn’s gold. Overhead the sun poured a golden flood upon the inter
laced boughs, whence fluttered the gorgeous leaves, like summer’s last pen
nant. Jean was all delight, and presently exclaimed:
“Oh, what a quaint little house!”
“Yes, and in it lives the quaintest little woman you ever saw, and she is
Violet’s friend.”
“Oh, do let’s go in. Would it be intruding?”
“Intruding?—she doesn’t know the meaning of the word. Why, she will
greet us so cordially, she’ll make us feel we are her dearest friends.”
A few moments later we were seated in comfortable rockers in a spot
lessly clean room, and Jean was chatting away as merrily as if she had never
had the blues, and never been bored by the conventions.
When the talk drifted to fancy work, that subject so dear to the feminine
heart, the little woman said:
“Now, you must see my newest sofa cushions —just in this room.”
“Oh, how beautiful!” exclaimed Jean, and indeed the deep orange, the
crimson, and the faint lavenders, rivalled the autumn splendors without the
windows. “And what exquisite work,” said Jean, as she took up first one cush
ion and then another for inspection.
“And this,” said the little woman, “is the hope chest for my boy’s bride.
He’ll be marrying some day, you know, and I’ll have this ready.”
“And she may be a suffragette, and not appreciate all this,” said Jean.
“That’s true,” sighed the little woman, “but then, my boy is all that I
have.”
“And I truly think he was right ungrateful not to have been a girl,” said
Jean, as she unfolded the beautifully embroidered sheets, the monogrammed
pillowslips, the tablecloths, doilies, napkins, traycloths, etc. “Just think
how much your own daughter could have appreciated all this lovely drawn
work? Why, it is more beautiful than any I saw in Mexico.”
“But you mustn’t go before you see my chickens —Violet always has to
see my chickens, when she comes.”
We follow’ed into an immaculately-kept poultry yard, and as Jean looked
round at the little colony houses, coops and pens, so scrupulously clean, she
asked:
“Why, who does all the work?”
“I do,” answered Violet’s friend, but Jean looked incredulously at the
little woman, and her little hands, which looked as if never hardened or soil
ed by any labor. Jean shook her head.
“I see breakers ahead for the daughter-in-law, unless she, too, is a miracle
worker,” she said to me, sotto voce.
“You will like my Games,” said the little woman. “Here is the rooster —
conceited thing—l call him Teddy. He thinks he rules by divine right.
That Black Minorca, isn’t he a beauty, and with so much dignity. I call
him Woodrow. And this big old fat Plymouth Rock, is Taft. I have about
two hundred chickens in all. But, oh, no I never sell any of them. We
eat all we want, and I always divide with my sick neighbors—but I couldn’t
bear to sell them.”
From the poultry yard it was but a step into the flower garden.
“How beautiful your chrysanthemums are blooming,” said Jean.
“Yes, and the frost will soon get them,” said the little woman, and before
Jean could protest, she had filled her hands with the stalks laden with their
golden globes of bloom.
“I have a fine collection of ferns, and of roses, but ferns are my favor
ties,-- pow, isn’t this littlp one a dear, and growing so nicely in this small
A Rhyming Play
CHAT
And what one would you scarcely care
To meet at night? A big biack ?
This one makes a cunning lair,
And has long ears, the timid .
A river in Africa called the Niger,
And on its banks roams the fierce
wild .
Os a beautiful animal I will tell,
and its home in the East —the swift
•
You’ve heard of the purple heilotrope,
It rhymes with the graceful .
What one would surely make you
laugh
With its long neck? The tall .
Unless you can save your pennies, you
can’t
Go in and see the ,
To slam the door is a very bad habit;
No such thing does the little .
This is the end of our rhyming play,
Will you guess the fishes another
day?
PIUS CURED AT HOME NEW BY
ABSORPTION METHOD.
If you suffer from bleeding, itching, blind
•r protruding Piles, send me your address,
and I will tell you how t» 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 requested. Immediate relief and
permanent cure assured. Send no money, but
tell others of this offer. Write today to Mrs.
ML Summers, Box 676, South Bend, Ind.
MONARCHS
Are Grinding Home Ground Meal
For Thousands of Farmers
There is no reason why you too, should not save
money grinding your own meal, and make
money grinding for others with a Monarch —
the finest French Burr Mill in the world.
Foreign ground meal is some times dangerous,
home ground meal is always sweet and nutri
tious when ground with a Monarch Mill from
good dry home raised corn. Write us at once,
stating the kind and amount of
power you have, and will tell you
something interesting
lijfWVA about meal and feed
J sri u cl g ‘
SF3OCT, WALDRON & CO.,
Ecx <34, Muncy, Pa.
Celebrated Effectual
without Internal Medicine.
ROCHE’S
Herbal Embrocation
will also be found very efficacious in cases of
BRONCHITIS, LUMBAGO
and RHEUMATISM
W. Edwards <fc Son, 157 Queen Victoria Street,
London, Eng. All Druggists, or
E. FOLGEIU * CO., Inc., SO Beekman St.. N. Y. J
Make $75 to S2OO Monthly
NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY
'T'HAT’S what a position with McConnon’s is worth to you.
* Most reliable terms and best profits. We have positions
Open now for the right men who areambitioustohaveabusiness
of their own. No matter where you live, write for our plan to
start you in business. Free Course in salesmanship worth
many dollars to any man. This advertisement will prove the
foundation of your fortune if you answer it and take advantage
of the opportunity it will bring you. For full particulars write
to McConnon & Co., Winona. Minn. Mention this paper.
One Stroke Gets the Water
Steam, gas or hand power. Dealers
and agents wanted.
E. Z. FORCE PUMP CO.,
Winston- Salem,_N. C.
Grasses, clovers and other crops grow splen
dony Wilcox Co., Lands
averaging only sl2 per acre. Here are oppor
tunities of a century. No better stock coun
try even in Kentucky. Lime, climate, rain
fall, winter legumes the secret. Come. R. E.
LAMBERT, Darlington, (via Allenton), Ala
bama.
CASTING PEARLS.
Bob —“What did the lecturer say
when you threw those cabbages at
him?”
Dick —“Oh, he said, he had hoped
the audience would be pleased, but
he really hadn’t expected they would
entirely lose their heads.” —Selected.
4. 4.
HER CONTRIBUTION.
Visiting Philanthropist: “Good
morning, madame; I am collecting for
the Drunkard’s Home.”
Mrs. McGuire: “Sure, I’m glad of
it, sor —if ye come round to-night yez
can take jny husband.”—Selected.