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12
The Home Circle for Our Young People
NINE CENTS
a Quart is the cost ci Ice
Cream made from
Jell-0
Ice Cream [
Powder [
You cannot make Ice Cream at that
price by any other method, and you
cannot buy it for three times nine cents.
To make lee Cream from Jell-0 Ice
3 Cream Powd r, you simply dissolve
the powder in mlk and freeze it.
Everything is in the powder.
There are five kinds: Vanilla, Straw
berry, Lemon, Chocolate and Un
flavored.
: Each 10 cents a package at grocers’, r-
I Send for our beautiful Recipe Book. I
I The Genesee Pure Food Co., Le Roy, N. Y. I
=][=lF== :Jl= ,
TETTERINE OR TORMENT.
It’s left entirely with you whether you
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gusting case of Eczema. Tetter, Ring
worm, Itch or Etching Piles, or spend 50
cents for a box of quick relief. Tetterine
acknowledges defeat to no case of skin
disease. More than one box may be nec
essary, but it conquers in the end. 50
cents at drug stores or by mail postpaid
from Shuptrine Co., Savannah, Ga.
Srerybody’s
earing Them NOW”
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Pearls and Maline
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If you’re notdelightedwith
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and Dynamo Maline bow
(water proof) all for 5Cc
Any store or direct. Writ(
today. State color wanted.
BEST SILVER CO
JepL C. J. 83 Chambers St, N. £
SPECIAL SCHOOL FOR FEEBLE
MINDED CHILDREN.
Parents and guardians of children of
arrested mental development will be
interested in the work of the Stewart
Home and School, a private institu
tion for the care and training of chil
dren of backward mental development.
The School accepts children of any
age above five years and provides men
tal and physical training under teach
ers who have been specially trained
for this particular class of work. Each
child is under the daily supervision
of a medical specialist who has devot
ed his entire professional life to the
study of the physical and mental de
fects of these unfortunate children.
Home influences are thrown around
each child and every means known to
science is employed to develop them
in mind and body to a point where they
will be a pleasure both to their parents
and to themselves.
The annual catalogue shows the
splendid facilities afforded by the
School and contains much information
that will prove interesting and in
structive to parents. Interested par
ties should address the Superinten
dent, Dr. John P. Stewart, Box 26,
Farmdale, Ky.
Some day, somehow, I know not when,
The time will come when I must say
Farewell to all below, and then
My mortal frame shall pass away
My spirit, too, will take its flight
And soar beyond to a world unknown
Either to endless day or night
To Heavenly rest or hellish gloom.
But this I know, if I but will
To choose the ways that God doth
make
He will His promises fulfill
Nor e’er will He my soul forsake.
And as He lengthens out my days
(Every boy and girl has a talent
or a special work for which they are
fitted by our Heavenly Father. What
is yours? Find it and improve it if
you would be a success in life. —Lit-
tle Mother.)
Rosa Bonheur was born at Bor
deaux, on the west coast of France.
Her father, who was an artist, had
fallen in love with and married one
of his pupils, a beautiful young musi
c'an. The father was only twenty
two and the mother still younger when
their first child, Rosa, was born. They
lived with Rosa’s grandparents. The
family were poor and as soon as she
was old enough the little girl used
to help her mother with the house
work.
Rosa was a strong, sturdy little girl
and was allowed much freedom.
She always had a number of cats
and dogs for playfellows. She was
fond of taking long walks by herself,
and often caused her parents anxiety.
But she always came home safely and
in good spirits.
As the years slipped by, two broth
ers came to keep the little girl com
pany. They found their sister an in
teresting playmate, and entered into
their games as heartily as they.
Old Nanon, who helped in the work
of the house, used to shake her head
and say that Rosa was “ a terrible
child, who could be taught neither
prayers nor catechism and who had
actually only learned her letters from
the gray parrot which had a knack
of repeating the alphabet.”
The little girl was fond of sunshine
and freedom and sometimes played
truant and spent the day in the great
woods listening to the birds and
searching for flowers. At school she
was often punished for making sketch
es of her teachers when she should
have been busy with her lessons.
Rosa loved animals and when she
was only a little girl tried to draw
them, and so her father began to give
her drawing lessons.
Her father, Raymond Bonheur, was
a portrait painter and each of his
children, as they grew able helped
him in his studio. But Rosa had the
most talent and did the best work.
Although the mother was not strong,
she managed to give a few music les
sons.
Their first home in Paris was over
a bath house. Rosa was so lonely
without her animal friends that she
sometimes used to slip across the
strhet and pet the queer wooden pig
in front of the butcher’s shop.
Not far away was a boy’s school
which her brothers attended. The
The Golden Age for June 19, 1913
Conducted by MRS. G. B. LINDSEY
MEDITATION AND PRAYER.
ROSA BONHEUR
By HARRIET G. BROWN.
He strength will give for all my needs
And fill my heart with love and praise
And keep me from unrighteous deeds.
Then help me, Lord, each fleeting hour
To trust in Thee, and Thee alone,
For grace and strength and light and
power
To lead me safely to Thy throne.
Then as I there behold Thy face
Naught of merit, Lord, would I claim
But say a sinner saved by grace
Redeemed by the blood of the Lamb.
—W. D. LITTLE.
May 16, 1904.
master noticed the lonely little girl
and asked her father to send her to
school with her brothers. Rosa was
used to playing with her brothers and
did not at all mind being the only
girl. She entered heartily into the
games and was soon bn a friendly
footing with all the boys.
When the mother died in 1835 the
home was broken up. Rosa was sent
to boarding school, her two brothers
to another, and the little sister Jul
iette was cared for by a friend of the
mother’s at Bordeaux.
Rosa did not get on very well in
school. The other girls laughed at
her on account of her carelessness in
dress and her love of boyish sports.
She scribbled over her books and
made funny pictures. One day she
found a sword and played that the
beautiful rose bashes were the enemy.
The lawn was covered with lovely
flowers. When the mischief was dis
covered, Rosa was sent home to her
father.
Rosa was placed with a seamstress
to learn to sew. The long hours and
the indoor life wore on her. She
did not do very well with the sewing
and disliked it very much, and so
her father took her away. She spent
much time in the studio with him.
He began now for the first time to
give her regular lessons. She dress
ed in boy’s clothes and went with
him everywhere. Those who knew
her well called her the “Little Hus
sar.”
Soon she began to copy the beauti
ful pictures in the Louvre. For about
four years she spent most of her
time there. She worked early and
late, hardly stopping long enough to
eat her lunch. But it was work that
she enjoyed, and knew that she was
leraning a great deal by studying these
beautful paintings. Her copies sold
readily and for good prices, and so at
last, to her delight, she was able to
help care for the others.
Her first two pictures exhibited in
the French Saloon were a study of
sleep, and two rabbits nibbling a car
rot.
A few years later special attention
was attracted to the exhibit when the
works of Raymond Bonheur and his
four children were side by side.
Rosa Bonheur won the third class
gold medal in 1847. When the di
rector gave it to her she said, “Thank
the king very much for me and deign
to add that I intend to do better next
time.” . Three years later she won
the first prize.
Raymond Bonheur was director of
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