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The Home Circle for Our Young People
Tuberculosis
Its Diagnosis, Treatment and Cure
.tMsasS£, Free
NEW TREATISE ON TUBERCULOSIS
By Freeman Hall, M. D.
This valuable medical book tells in plain, simple
language how Tuberculosis can be cured in your
own home. If you know of any one suffering from
Tuberculosis, Catarrh, Bronchitis, Asthma or any
throat or lung trouble, or are yourself afflicted,
this book will help you. Even if you are in the
advanced stage of the disease and feel there is no
hope, it will instruct you how others, with its aid.
cured themselves after all remedies tried had failed,
and they believed their case hopeless.
Write at once to the Yonkerman Co., 5759
Water St., Kalamazoo, Mich., they will gladly
send you the book in English, German or Swed*
ish, by return mail FREE and also a generous
supply of the new Treatment absolutely Free,
for they want you to have this wonderful remedy
before it is too late. Don’t wait—write today. II
may mean the saving of your life.
CAN CANCER BE CURED ? IT CANI
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,
•f 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
St Virginia. We guarantee our cures.
Physicians treated free.
KELLAM HOSPITAL
1617 IK. Main St., Richmond, Va»
HEUJ Dfinif From the Bar-Room to the Pul
-11 fa W 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 $1.00,12c extra by mail. Address,
BEV. FEED WEISS, Dept. 24, Shenandoah, lowa,
Pleasant.
Small pill.
Quick action.
Complete relief.
f
25c a box. Guaranteed. Stores or Dy
mail. Brown Mfg. Co., Greenville, Tenn.
SELL TREES U ee - 8 ’ shade tr-M ’
. Fruit trees> pecaa
roses, ornamentals, etc. Easy to sell. Big
profits. Write today. *
SMITH BROS., Dept. 40, Concert, Ga.
Thou art an angel, I hold true,
Come our spent strength to renew
Ere nocturnal shadows fleet.
Thou dost oftentimes impart
Rest unto the weary heart,
And, therefore, we name thee sweet.
I was sitting at the front window
the other morning reading the morn
ing paper, when he came along. Os
course, we look at few people as they
pass, but this man interested me more
than the newspaper. . His hair was
long enough for him to be a poet or a
philosopher, but there was no poetry
in his general appearance. He was
a picture of homelessness, of want, of
days of tramping and nights under the
sky. His clothes were old and greasy
and his face hopeless; and yet there
was a something about him that ap
pealed to me. Perhaps it was be
cause he looked like a new arrival
from the country, and my mind darted
back to the home on the farm, or in
the village from which he might have
started, as so many boys do, but fare
better.
He came up the steps, and I met
him at the door.
“I am hungry,” he said. “Can’t you
give me something to eat?”
“Yes,” I replied, “if you go back to
the kitchen the maid will give you
something, but what is the matter?”
“I have tramped and tramped these
streets for work,” he went on, “but I
can’t find anything to do.”
“How long have you been tramping
“for work? For a year or two?”
“Well, to tell you the truth, strang
er, I have been at it a good while.”
“But you were not always in this
condition. Come, tell me all about
it.”
“No, I was once as proud a young
man as walked the streets. I came
from a country village with good rec
, ommendations and got a nice place in
a real estate office, and for a while
everything went well. But I was in
a boarding-house, and didn’t know any
body, and at night—the devil’s in the
night; if Iwas a preacher, I should
preach about that city where there will
be no night—'but as I was saying, at
night I got to going out with fellows
that were a little wild, and then be
gan to drink some. I didn’t think
there was much harm in it, and you
know a young fellow in the city doesn’t
want to act like a goody-goody boy
just from the country, as though he
was tied to his mother’s apron strings.
The boys soon laughed me out of go
ing to Church, said that they used to
go, but their views had broadened out
since they came to the city, and a fel
low must be liberal if he is going to
live in Chicago. Well, to make a
long story short, I was soon on the
down-hill road, in the broad road as
we used to hear in Sunday School. I
thought all the time that I could turn
around when I wanted to, but some
how I never wanted to.”
“But you look as though you had
just come from the country now,” I
said.
“Yes, but let me go on. Last Christ
mas I thought I would go
down and see my mother, and
all the folks, that it might
brace me up and help me to
The Golden Age for February 6,1913.
Conducted by MRS. G. B. LINDSEY-.
SLEEP
By MARGARET A. RICHARD
Adrift on the Street
By GROPHO
Yea, ’tis sweet to find glad rest
Os the body on thy breast,
Heart-rest found is sweeter yet.
But more sweet is this than all;
That when thou dost fondly call
And enfold us, we forget.
reform when New Year came. I had
written lots of nice letters home and
mother and sisters were just dying to
see me. But do you know, when
mother* opened the door and took one
look at me, she fell in a dead faint.
She knew it all. When she came to,
she didn’t scold, but it was like the
judgment day.
“They tried to make me happy, but
I didn’t feel happy. A man who
makes a hell of life can’t feel happy
in a nice home; I know that even some
of the preachers say there is no hell.
But, stranger, do you know that a fel
low who has been going in that direc
tion for years kind of feels that he
will reach the place after a while, and
when a man goes from bad to worse
all the time, where else can he go?
It’s no use to talk to a hard case like
me about everybody going to heaven,
for I know I’m not going that way.
“But do you know the hardest thing
I had £o bear down in the home town
was when I saw my old sweetheart
on the street one day. She was so
handsome, so splendid-looking, and
married, and her husband was with
her. I tell you, stranger, I’ve never
had anything which cut me up like
that. I’ve had the door slammed in
my face when I was starving, and had
policemen club me out of nooks and
corners where I had fallen asleep aft
er a hard day’s tramp, and every day
I see all these happy faces while I’m
utterly miserable, but to see that
woman whom I loved when she was
a school-girl, and who was to be my
wife when I got enough ahead to set
up housekeeping, to see her the wife of
that old neighbor boy, and me only a
wretched beggar, it was more than I
could stand. It was like the pangs of
the lost. Why, do you know when we
were all young together she wouldn’t
look at him. He was sober like, no
dash in him, you know. The girls
didn’t take to him, and we left him
out of our set. But he has come on
wonderfully, is a banker, I’ve fi'fard,
and they live in a fine house in his
town. And I’m a framp, and asking
you to give me something, just as I’ve
asked thousands of others.
“But then, I’ve never done anybody
any harm.”
NOT A DAY IN BED.
Gramling, S. C. —In a letter from
Gramling, Mrs. Lula Walden says: “I
was so weak before I began taking
Cardui, that it tired me to walk just
a little. Since taking it, Ido all the
housework for my family of nine, and
have not been in bed a day. Cardui
is the greatest remedy for women on
earth.” Weak women need Cardui. It
is the ideal woman’s tonic, because it
is especialy adapted for woman’s
needs. It relieves backache, head
ache, dragging feelings, and other fe
male misery. Try Cardui. A few
doses will show you what it can do for
you. It may be just what you want
SEED BOOK
NOW READY
est quality field and garden seed. Fresh,
hardy and true to name. Write for free
copy at once.
SHUPTRINE COMPANY, Savannah, Ga.
? » /ah. "<l
IT PAYS TO
Land
Mjjjryt with
Red Cross Dynamite
UPPER view shows how big stumps are
completely blasted out and shattered
into kindling wood. At the same time,
subsoil is thoroughly broken up, creating the
best conditions for maturing crops. Lower
view is the SBOO-per-acre celery crop grow
ing on former stump land, in less than a year
after clearing.
FREE BOOKLET
Explains how to safely and profitably use
Red Cross Dynamite for blasting stamps and
boulders, tree planting, ditching, subsoiling,
excavating, road-building, etc. Write for
name of nearest dealer, or expert blaster, and
Farmers’ Handbook No. 388
DU PONT POWDER CO.,
Wilmington, Del.
Pioneer Powder Makers of America
Established 1802
! 4 - -iTt-^ L ' 11
I LET US SEND YOU
■ the Knox Recipe Book — and enough
R Gelatine to make one pint —enough to
U try most any one of our desserts, pud
dings, salads or jellies, also ice cream,
ices, candies, soups, sauces or gravies.
Recipe took tree for your grocer's
name—pint sample for Ic stamp.
CHARLES B. KNOX CO.
| 301 Knox Ave. Johnstown, N. Y.
NEW BEAUTY IN A.
ONE WEEK
Ladies everywhere are learning the
great value ofßeautiola, the remedy X
that removes brown spotsand Freck- v. *** *
les, modifies Wrinkles and aids in perinanenly
curing Pimples, B’ack Heads and all Facial
blemishes. Price 50c per box. Agents wanteid.
BEAUTIOLA COMPANY, Dept.,4, Beautiola Bldg.
2924 Olive Street, St. Louis, Mo.
POSSE NORMAL SCHOOL
OF GYMNASTICS
46 St. Botolph Street, Boston, Mass.
Courses of one, two and three years.
Positions for graduates. Similar
courses in Medical Gymnastics. For
particulars apply to
The Secretary.