The Golden age. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1906-1915, October 23, 1913, Page 12, Image 12

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12 The Home Circle for Our Young People = Conducted by MRS. G. B. LINDSEY = SF fNO CUReX W w Ino pay J 19 I TONIC 1 FOR ■Malaria In All Its Forms I and for the most obstinate cases of g I chills. Wards off fevers and liver g I troubles by keeping the system toned I lup and vitalized. Oldest and best | I General Tonic I ft for family use. Contains no arsenic ft or opiates. Pleasant to take. Harm-c || ft less for children. Sold and guar- zO ft anteed by your druggist. ■k Arthur Peter & Company, ftk Louisville, Kentucky Organize a sWasJ&Mxd! M- 'LL ? Musicians— I , , Amateur and Professional write for our interesting plan for or ganizing bands and orchestras for public entertainment, Schools, Col leges, Churches and Sunday Schools. For 37 years we have been manufacturing the famous Buescher Musical Instruments. Our “Tru-Tone” Instruments are known the world over by musicians great and small as the best that money can produce. Your Instrument Given Free As organizer of the band or orchestra, we will make you a present of the instrument upon which you perform, the price of this instrument to depend upon the cost and elaborateness of the band or orchestra out fit. This! s a unique offer and a rare oppor tunity. Write at once for full particulars free. Address BUESCHER BAND INSTRUMENT CO., Elkhart, Indiana. AGENTS WANTED tlttllll B* every town to self wlWßwJlron Fence Easy, profitable work for spare time. No capital required. Write for Agency and Free Selling Outfit. Home Fence Co. 808 Main St., Cincinnati, O. pPHURCH FURNITURE sO? Chairs, Pulpits, Pews, Altars. Desks, jrn] i —n I Book Racks, etc. The finest furniture made. | 111 Direct from our factory to your church at L===J I wholesale prices. Catalog free. C'VwjSSsk DeMoulin Bros. & Co., Dept. 82, Greenville,III. XgSS-'"' 1 Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup Has been used for over SIXTY-FIVE YEARS by MILLIONS of MOTHERS for their CHILDREN, WHILE TEETHING, with PERFECT SUCCESS. It SOOTHES the CHILD, SOFTENS the GUMS, ALLAYS all PAIN, DISPELS WIND COLIC, and Is the best remedy for infantile diarrhoea. Sold by Druggists in every part of the world. Be sure to ask for “Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup.” and take no other kind. Twenty-five cents a bottle. AN OLD AND WELL-TRIED REMEDY. ORPHINE WHISKEY wiai isaavsa and tobacco HABITS cured without pain or restraint. No fee until cured. Home or Sanitarium Treatment. Bookletfree. CEDARCROFT SANITARIUM, Box 1001, Lebanon, Tenn. 4) Most comfortable, serviceable and stylish hat X* ' for dress or business. Knockabout Felt, flexible sweatband, with outside silk band, can 111/ be rolled Into several shapesand worn as illus* tJi bated. Weight, 3 ozs. Sizes, 6% to 7k W In black, brown and gray mixture. l~f ■ tfSSBiiHK Botas represented I will refund your “feggEffill 59c. and You Can Keep the Hat. Sent postpaid s)c. , Free Catsl.e. I 1 " ’ GEO. J. BUNGAY, 28 S. William St., New York. THE GOLDEN AGE FOR WEEK OF OCT. 23 Uplifting Helpless—a Prayer Hymn By Elam Franklin Dempsey, D.D. Uplifting helpless hands to Thee, — Baptize us with Thy power, And send us forth with energy,— Victorious ev’ry hour. Bravely we bear the soldier’s part— ’Mid dangers calmly stand, — Endued by Thee with might of heart, And ready strength of hand. A boy finished his education and looked around for employment. He was a bright lad with healthy organ ism and a resolute heart. His father had given him all he had tc give, and the boy took his bundle and turned his steps toward the city. There was nothing about him to insure success, apparently, that ninety boys out of a hundred did not have. Young as he was he had some rules. He would keep out of bad company. He would go into no business that was not re spectable. He would not be idle. He would take any business, even if the pay was poor, that would give him a living. He would try to make every position a stepping stone to some thing better. Whatever he did he would do cheerfully, and do it well. His uncle often told him that civil ity was a poor man’s capital. He had some of that stock, and he proposed to invest it. He trotted around a week, asking the sterotyped question, “Do you want a boy, sir?” Nobody wanted a bey. Endurance was one of his traits and he held on. A man kept a small seed store just off Broadway. He wanted a boy, but he could not pay much. Position, not money, was what the boy was after, and he thankfully accepted the place. The work was hard, the pay poor. He shirked nothing and never grum bled. His cheery, smart way cf do ing things attracted the attention of the bank where his master kept his account. He was offered a place in the institution. His heart bounded at the offer. He was too honorable to take advantage of his employer, so he went to the store and talked tc him. “I don’t want you to go,” said the man, “but you are worth a great deal more than I can afford to pay you.” The next week he was installr ed as a check clerk. The business of the bank was very large. It was mainly with marketmen, and the checks were small. Out of a hundred, not tw r o would be over ten dollars. The work was immense. One day a porter said to the young clerk, “Your work is hard and your pay small, you can never rise in this bank. A new bank is to be opened Monday; they want a check clerk. Why don’t you apply?” “I know you very well,” said the officer; “I would be very glad to have you in the bank, but I cannot pay you any more than you are now geting. You will have to take the lowest round of the finan cial ladder, and I don’t see what you would gain.” “I see,” said the dis cerning lad. “Give me the position and I’ll run the chances.” In four months he kept the individual ledger. In six months he was a bookkeeper. In a few months he was receiving A STORY FOR BOYS Serene, on life’s rough battle-field, We strive against the wrong,— Our might to Thy will we yield, And through dependence, strong. So lowly and dependent, we, So high and helpful, Thou, That men behold in us but Thee, And, then, in worship bow. teller. In ten years from the time he first entered the bank he was elect ed cashier to one of the largest mon eyed institutions in New York. He had marked financial talent. He learned the principle of banking. He knew every principle that under laid the system. He had the intui tion of a woman. He was an influ ential and judicious adviser. He took the measure of a man at a glance, and seldom made a mistake. He came earlier and left later than any of his associates. He lent a helping hand to every department. If a clerk wanted an hour’s absence, he supplied his place. If a young man was bothered or in trouble, he would assist him. With the customers of the bank he was eminently popular. As it neared three o’clock and the rush became uneasy, in his pleasant way he would say, “Don’t crowd, gentlemen, don’t crowd; you shall have plenty of time.” When discounts would be denied or ulgy customers were to be dealt with in the bank, the young teller was put forward to do the unpleasant work. His bland and pleasant manner disarmed the disappointment of half its stings. LEARN TO FORGET Every night as the sun goes down let all the disagreeable happenings of the day slip out of your mind and sink into oblivion. Blot them out, annihiliate them, and permit no res urrection. Go to sleep with thoughts of pleasant things in your mind, and begin the next day as though it was the first day of all your life, the last day, the only day. If anything disagreeable intrudes, at nightfall blot it out. Then if an other day is given you make it better than the one before, Remembering only the things that are lovely and lovable. To- forget—that is what we need. Just to forget. All the petty annoy ances, all the vexing irritations, all the mean words, all the rankling acts, the deep wrongs, the bitter disap pointments —just let them go; don’t hang on to them. Learn to forget. Make a study of it. Practice it. Become an expert at for getting. M. L. GATES. THIS WILL INTEREST YOU. F. W. Parkhurst, the Boston pub lisher, says that if anyone afflicted with rheumatism in any form, neu ralgia or kidney trouble, will send their address to him at 701 Carney Building. Boston, Mass., he will direct them to a perfect cure. He has noth ing to sell or give; only tells you how he was cured after years of search for relief. Hundreds have tested It with success. Learn Nursing at Home We positively guarantee to train You to be a Professional Nurse and assist you to positions. Learn at home in your spare time. Write to day for our very interesting literature. National School of Nursing, 331 Lake St.,Elmira,N.Y. Be Better Dressed For ess Money Better dressed because the . head designer and cutter in _/ our Tailoring Department holds the highest prize from the New York Tailoring Assn. '-sr I 'A for superiority of st vies— because the Colonial Woolen Mills are located in Lawrence, JfffZ [|//W \ Mass., where the finest wool- wahr , rrtj \ ens are made—because in Zfej? tti 1 I JI \\ Lawrence we get the newest VjM I V//' fabrics and patterns ahead L of the rest of the country. I 1 to Man” T® —— I U Less money because you U 'AI l'l buy dirc< t from the mill — J, |\M I'l because you are your own 1 UU \l agent and save about 20% — I wh V because the finest woolens I nvi .1 produced in this country are ■ m n made in Lawmrs at lower ; 1 fl |l prices than elsewhere. i I \V ■! j Tailored to Order — * i || $11.75 J t j And Up To $30.00 W ! Free Guide _ v . -linurciir-cxaaEh-xirtE'Ecr -MaancwKzsxjaßDßO t oFashionable Dressin g Send for Guide, Catalog, Style Book, Self AL asarcment blanks and Samples. Our guar an.ee bond—absolute satisfaction or no money. C xnnlote outfit with easy and accurate self m-aa’.rement blank, tapes, etc.---ail free. Find out f ;r yovrnelf how you can make your money do more—buy better clothes for less money. 1 Write today—at once. Colonial Woolen Mills j Dept. 83 Lawrence, Mass. ci ■ .w..wrill«inr ir-.i ■— ----- , SAVE YOUR MONEY. You could spend thousands for internal blood remedies and take them till dooms day and that tortuous case of Eczema, Tetter or other parasitic skin disease will remain. These are purely external trou bles and need external treatment. Tetter ine, the great healing ointment, is the sci entifically correct remedy. Applied direct to the affected parts, kills the germs, soothes and heals. 50c a box at drug stores or by mail from Shuptrine Co., Savannah, Ga. Y (If there ever was a perfect pre- ft scription for Indigestion and other X Stomach troubles, that prescrip- Z tion is Currents Di-Pepsi-Tone, J the direct result of prolonged effort Z to discover a quicker-acting, abso- Z lutely dependable, and altogether X harmless remedy. Z Pepsin, Caripeptic, Charcoal, f Phenolphthalein, Ginger and 2 Calcium Carbonate were found to • be unequaled by any other diges- ) [ tive or restorative agents—these < 1 ingredients constitute the Di- ' [ Pepsi-Tone formula. No other ' 1 remedy has a similar formula. Curren’s Di-Pepsi-Tone is absolutely 11 guaranteed to give the quickest of relief 1 > in every case of stomach distress, chronic 1 1 or acute, or your money back. Try it with- ' ' out delay. 40 Tablets for 50c. 100 Tablets for? 1.00. Sent postpaid on receipt of 1 price by GREAT NORTHERN LABORATORIES, I Dipt. 0, KALAMAZOO, MICHIGAN. i ' F The Moneu- I BacK Remedy for]