Newspaper Page Text
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The Home Circle for Our Young People
Conducted by MRS. G. B. LINDSEY== ■ - - ■■■
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UETIEI WEAK On PAINFUL 1
Do your lungs ever bleed?
Do you have night sweats?
Have you pains in chest and sides ?
Do you spit yellow and black matter?
Are you continually hawkins and coughing?
Do you have pains under your shoulder blades?
These are Regarded Symptoms of
< Lung Trouble and
CONSUMPTION
You should take Immediate steps to check the
progress of these symptoms. The longor you allow
them to advance and develop, the mote deep Seated
and serious your condition becomes.
We Stand Ready to Prove to You absolutaly.that
the German Treatment, has cured completely and
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who had been given up by physicians have bcenper
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Let Us Send You the Proof—Proof
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We will gladly send you the proof of many remark
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together with our new 40-page book (in colors) on the
treatment and care of consumption and lung trouble.
JUST SENS YOUR RAME
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/a
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“Every man has a hobby of some
kind. What is yours?”
“Keeping away from foolish people
who ask me that kind of question.”—
Pittsburg Post.
Dreaming of you in the gloaming
Os your dear love-lit eyes—
Bright as the sheen in the dawning
Os star-gemmed tropic skies;
Dreaming of you in the gloaming,
Where glint the pale moonbeams,
Where mem’ries of you come homing—
■An angel with curls of gold!
Dreaming of you in the gloaming
Days all balmy and fair,
Forgotten the sorrow and roaming,
Lotus-laden the air—
Julia and the Maple Tree
By FLORENCE EVANS.
One crisp day in early December,
grandpa and Julia, wrapped comfort
ably in warm coats, stopped for a mo
ment under the maple on their way
to the village.
Julia danced through the leaves,
laughing to see the wind whisk them
away as she stirred them with her
feet.
“Oh! grandpa, see!” said Julia,
“they are turning somersaults down
the hill. Say, grandpa, I’m going to
play I’m a big bunch of leaves, and
your stir me up a little with your foot
and over and over I’ll go turning and
turning just like the crimson leaves.”
Julia hopped up and down, the
thought was such a jolly one; and as
sion as grandpa smiled that sweet and
tender smile of his, she knew he was
willing.
“You don’t think the frozen ground
will hurt you, do you, Julia?”
“No, indeed!” and Julia pulled her
red tarn down over her ears, and wrap
ping her scarlet coat closely about her
she lay down whispering, “Your little
girl has gone, grandpa, I’m only a
bunch of red maple leaves.” How the
blue eyes twinkled under the red tarn,
and those rosy lips were so beautiful
that grandpa stooped and kissed them.
Then he threw over her an armful of
the crimson and gold leaves, stirred
the bunch of beauty with his foot and
away went Miss Julia.
The leaves flew in all directions, but
Julia went straight down into ’ the
orchard, laughing and shouting all the
way. She soon came back crying,
“Oh grandpa! it was lovely fun! Could
I do it once more?”
Julia’s mother came to the top of
the hill just as they were finishing the
last game of leaves. She had heard
the child’s laughter ring up and down
the country lane, and she wondered
what the two were doing.
“Oh, mother!” Julia cried breath
lessly, “did grandpa tell you what
we’ve been playing? Oh! we never
had such fun. Dear, suz me, though,
it’s rather hard work. I wish I could
sit down some where.”
Mrs. Merill laughed, and grandpa
said, “Well, how would you like to
sit down up there on the maple
branch and play you are the last red
leaf left on the tree?” Grandpa lifted
her up, and she sat there, contentedly
swinging her feet.
Julia’s mother turned and left them,
calling back as she ran down the
lane, “Don’t forget to call at the office
for the mail.”
“Grandpa, may I sit here until I get
rested?”
Certainly, dear, you can stay until
the wind begins to paint a red rose
The Golden Age for February 13, 1913.
Dreaming of You
By AUGUSTA WALL.
Dreaming of you in the gloaming
Recalling days of old
When mem’ries of you come homing
An angel with curls of gold!
Dreaming of you in the gloaming
Where dusky shadows sleep,
Through billows of cloud-seas foaming
The stars of memory peep—
Dreaming of you in the gloaming,
Ah, dearest, your presence gleams,
And I hear your footsteps coming
An angel in beautiful dreams!
on your nose. I’ll know then that you
need to scamper to keep warm.”
“Is that the reason the leaves turn
red, ’cause they are cold, grandpa?”
“No, dear, green is the color of their
working dress. When the leaves are
green they are working for food for
the trees.’
Julia’s eyes opened wide, and she
said, “I guess you are just joking,
grandpa. I never heard of such a
thing.”
“No, dear, that is the truth. It Is
another of Mother Nature’s wonderful
secrets. Did you think, Julia, that
we are the only kind of living things
that labor? Everything that is alive
has some sort of work to do.”
“But,” interrupted Julia. “I don’t
understand a bit how a green leaf can
work for food. Really, grandpa, I be
lieve you are joking with me.”
Grandpa smiled, shook Miss Julia
by the shoulders, and told her to draw
in a big breath.
“Now then,” said he, “with what did
you fill your lungs?”
“Air,” laughed Julia, almost burst
ing with the effort she had made.
“Well, child, that is the kind of work
a leaf does. It breathes in some
strange and wonderful way that we
can not see, and it takes from the air
a something called carbon dioxide,
which nourishes the tree and helps to
make the sap blood that runs through
the branches.”
Julia said, “My!” Then she said,
“My goodness! I never heard such a
funny thing! But,” said Julia, with
much emphasis, “what is the matter
with them now? Are they lazy, tum
bling out of their places and rolling
down the hill? How can the maple
live without any little mouths? Oh,
grandpa!” she said, excitedly, “don’t
you suppose we could catch some of
that stuff and poke it into the maple
KANSAS WOMAN HELPLESS.
Lawrence, Kans.—Mr. J. E. Stone,
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FAIRVIEW FLORAL COMPANY, Eox 806 Springfield, Ohio
tree and bring back green summer
again? Could we, grandpa? Why what
are you laughing about, did I say
something funny?”
Grandpa tossed his girlie up a foot
or two and then gently lifted her down
until her feet touched the frozen
ground. “It is time you left the ma
ple branch. The cold has painted a red
rose on the end of your nose.”
As they walked down the hill grand
pa said, “You don’t suppose Mother
Nature wants us to interfere with her
work, do you? She has taught the
tree that something dangerous to its
No time wasted. Iron
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one hand on the iron,
thq other to turn and
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standing out at sides