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12
The Home Circle for Our Young People
Just Six Minutes
to Wash a Tubful!
This is the grandest Washer the pPjy IT
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run that it’s almost fun to work it.
Makes clothes spotlessly clean in Joßm/
double-quick time. Six minutes ff
finishes a tubful. |l I f* ha
Any Woman Can Have a JtJHlSglggk
1900 Gravity
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30 Days’
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the wonders it performs.
Thousands being used. X \ \
Every user delighted. // Mr&l * \
They write us bush- Jhf wk ifa
els of letters telling Eg W|
how it saves work
and worry. Sold on little payment*. Write for
fascinating Free Book today. All correspond
ence should be addressed to 1900 Washer Co.,
1132 Court St. Binghamton, N.Y.
SCIENTIFIC SWEEP MILL
This No. 6 triple geared, double act
rajafcs. ing sweep mill has more capacity and
f ' will do better work than any other
il II jjJh l 1 H two-horse mill; it
UW?' TURNS CORN
TO DOLLARS
AgjjfcpSiggffi Avoid waste, and make
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v W&gSMRaB: for engines of any size.
Send for free catalog,
THE BAUER BROS. C0. .80x 555 SpniNGfitLc. Ohio
“A SALOONLESS NATION 1920.”
This beautiful and very popular song is
in our great temperance and prohibition
campaign book, “Songs and Sayings for
You.’’ It also contains about 50 pages of
stirring facts and thrilling incident. In
addition, there are such songs as “They
Need a Little More Religion,” “Is It Noth
ing to You?” that melts the soul to tears,
-and “Hooray for Prohibition,” a powerful
chorus that stirs the crowd mightily.
Mrs. Mary Harris Armor, the noted South
ern orator, recommends this book enthusi
astically. Fine for rallies, conventions,
Unions, etc. Price 25c. Special, 5 for sl,
12 for $2.00. All the money goes into the
fight on rum. Order today of Rev. L. L.
Pickett, Dept. 8., St. Augustine, Fla.
Raise Money For Your Church Society
WRITE US for our plan by which adies can quickly earn
money for their Missionary Society, Ladies’ Aid, etc. Any wo
man wanting to earn money easily and in a dignified manner
for any purpose whatever will be interested in ou r proposition-
Modern Specialties Mfg. Co., 130 High St., South Bend, fad.
FARM OPPORTUNITIES.
East Texas and the Coast Country
of Texas and Louisiana are the only
remaining areas in the United States
where fertile land and opportunities
for small farmers and industrial loca
tions can be obtained at reasonable
prices and terms.
Address for information and litera
ture. Industrial & Immigration Bu
reau, Southern Pacific, Sunset-Central
Lines, Houston, Texas.
FREE TREATISE
a ■ n Al ■ ■ The Leach Sanatorium,
a S SW B ■B" Indianapolis, Ind., has
| ■■ ■ B published a. booklet which
gives interesting facts
about the cause of Cancer; also tells what to do for pain,
bleeding, odor, etc. Write for it today, mentioning this paper.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup
Has been used for over SIXTY-FIVE YEARS by
MILLIONS of MOTHERS for their CHILDREN,
WHILE TEETHING, with PERFECT SUCCESS.
It SOOTHES the CHILD, SOFTENS the GUMS,
ALLAYS all PAIN, DISPELS WIND COLIC, and
is the best remedy for infantile diarrhoea. Sold
by Druggists in every part of the world. Be sure
to ask for•“ Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup,”
and take no other kind. Twenty-five cents a
bottle. AN OLD AN® WELL-TRIED REMEDY.
le, serviceable and stylish hat X**
business. Knoekabont Felt, .
and, with outside silk band, can •
kM*/ dc suiiea into several shapes and worn as illus* QC,*
bated. Weight, 3 ozs. Sizes, 61$ to yk v'i
W >2, *n bleek, brown and graymlztere. If
JLdSS3j2BSa Bot as represented I will refund your IgSKm
•®®®WgHloO 59c. and Yeu Can Keep the
XHHPLn, Hat. Sent f»st/aid s<)c.
Py Free Catales.
CEO. 9. BUNGAY. <8 S. William St.. New York.
THE GOLDEN AGE FOR WEEK OF DEC. 18, 1913
The errors of an evil world
With critic eye we scan,
And to Perdition would consign
Our fallen fellow-man;
Just Heavens wrath we would call down
On all that steal and kill —
And wholly ban and blot them out
But God is patient still!
We wax indignant when we note
The rise and growth of wrong;
The tearful homage which the weak
With revolutions kindling fires
We feel our bosoms thrill —
Impatience claims us for her own —
But God is patient still!
HOW 1 SAW SANTA CLAUS
One Christmas Eve, when I was
about five years old, I had my first
glimpse of Santa Claus. My mamma
put me to bed quite early that night
telling me “All little folks should be
in bed and fast- asleep when Santa
Claus comes ’round.”
It seemed that I had been asleep but
a little while when I awoke, and who
do you suppose I saw standing by the
fireplace? Why, Santa Clause! I al
most held my breath for fear he would
disappear. He looked so nice dressed
in fur with a cute little pointed cap
on his white hair. He was all covered
with snow and on his back was a large
bag filled with toys.
He looked at my stocking that I had
hung by the fireplace before I went to
bed, and then opened his bag of toys.
Such wonderful toys —lovely dolls with
long golden curls, trains of cars, balls,
cute little lambs that could cry “Baa,”
chairs, drums, clocks, horns and every
kind of toy that dear old Santa Claus
could make.
He filled my stocking and hung it by
the fireplace. How nice it looked there,
so full of good things to eat, and oh!
how I wanted to jump out of bed, but
I w T as afraid Santa Claus would dis
appear if I did.
He went towards the window, and I
saw a large Christmas tree —such a
big tree! He trimmed this with stars,
silver balls, candies, popcorn and little
fairies; and under it he put a lovely
big doll (just like the one I had writ
ten to him about) and a doll’s high
chair, her little table and a set of
dishes, her dustpan and brush, and
her trunk.
Then he put the bag of toys on his
back again, walked to the fireplace,
“and laying his finger aside of his
nose, with a cute little nod up the
chimney he rose.” I could hear his
reindeer, and by the jingle of sleigh
bells I knew he was going.
I jumped out of bed, ran to the win
dow and looked out: there was dear
old Santa Claus, with a sleigh full of
toys, driving away over the housetops.
But the cold night air pouring in on
me waked me sure enough, for I had
been dreaming.
I awoke early Christmas morning,
and dwas soon playing with lovely toys.
And although I have never seen Santa
Claus since that night in my dreams,
' I know he comes every Christmas Eve,
' as on Christmas morning I always find
j the presents he has left me the night
before.
And now, little children, if you are
Conducted by MRS. G. B. LINDSEY
GOD IS PATIENT STILL
—Arthur Goodenough.
The real wrongdoer in his sin
We scathingly condemn;
What share has he with decent folk?
What part or lot with them?
With rash resentment waxing hot
We spurn him for his ill;
Forbearance is a thing forgot —
But God is patient still!
A thousand years, ten thousand years —
A million years, or more
He has beheld men sin the sins
Their fathers sinned before;
Inflamed by hatred, greed or lust
Men seek to maim or kill
But Heaven is gracious toward us all,
For God is patient still!
not too fast asleep next Christmas Eve,
you may see jolly old Santa Clause
filling your stockings.
A. M. E.
JUST A TIP.
As most readers know, Captain
Jack Crawford was at one time chief
of scouts of the United States army.
He has been a soldier in the Union
army during the Civil war, an Indian
fighter on the frontier after the war
and a popular lecturer and poet for
the past quarter of a century. Cap
tain Jack is of the Buffalo Bill type,
a picturesque personality, land al
though he was born in England, com
ing to this country when a boy, there
is no more devoted or enthusiastic
American from the pines of Maine to
the everglades of Florida, or from
the rock-bound coast of New England
to the Golden Gate of the Pacific.
This volume of his poems contains a
number that have not appeared in
previous editions, from which we se
lect several for quotation. That Cap
tain Jack is an optimist is shown by
his poem “Just a Tip.”
There isn’t much in this old world
But sunshine after all;
The and tears, the hopes and
fears,
The wormwood and the gall
Are all mixed up and when I come
To analyze the whole,
I find the sunshine dominates
My heart and broncho soul.
Ye grouchy pessimist whose eyes
Reach not to skies of blue,
Join eyes with mine where God’s sun
shine
Will meet your lengthened view,
Then let your face reflect it back
WOMAN’S GREATEST TROUBLE.
Big Sandy, Tenn. —Mrs. Lucy Can
trell, of this place, says: “Every two
weeks, I had to go to bed and stay
there several days. I suffered untold
misery. Nothing seemed to help me,
until I tried Cardui, the woman’s ton
ic. Although I had been afflicted with
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Cardui helped me more than anything
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is woman’s greatest trouble. Cardui
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it overcomes that weakness and brings
back strength. In the past 50 years
Cardui helped over a million women.
Try it for your troubles, today.
Only a Mother
Ever Knows
Most Suffering Is Unnecessary
In this time she has learned that
most suffering of women will yield to
skillful treatment, and she comes to you
with a message of help and healing you
cannot afford to ignore. Be well, and
so fulfill the mission of wife, mother
and companion.
Send No Money To Her
but describe your case fully, that she
may give it intelligent attention. Write
today and get her booklet and a trial
treatment free. All correspondence is
confidential, so you may write freelv
Don’t suffer when you may be well.
Dr. Luella McKinley Derbyshire,
Box 146, Fort Wayne, Indiana.
A DOCTOR’S ENDORSEMENT.
Physicians as a rule are rather slow to
endorse proprietary remedies, but they are
quick to recognize real merit and often
give their highest endorsement to a pre
paration by prescribing it in their prac
tice. Dr. M. L. Fielder, Eclectic P. 0.,
Ala., says this if Tetterine: “I know it
to be a radical cure for tetter, salt rheum,
eczema and all kindred diseases of the
skin and scalp. I never prescribe any
thing else in all skin trouble.” 50c at
drug stores or by mail from Shuptrine
C©., Savannah, Ga.
RUB-MY-TISM
Will cure your Rheumatism
Neuralgia, Headaches, Cramps,
Colic, Sprains, Bruises, Cuts and
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L Extra weight36lbs. Pair 6.1 b. pillows?!..ls.
NEW. LIVE, SANITARY FEATHERS. Best
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AMERICAN FEATHER & PILLOW c%>(rante Ufontnrl
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Write for Free Catalog.
PURITY BEDDING COMPANY
Box 244, Dept. 4, NASHVILLE, TENN.
We Want Salesmen.
To increase our sales force at B
B once we offer extra liberal contracts to en- ■
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I McCONNON
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■ 315 Third BSSS
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■ Winona, '
Minn. V
the suffering most
women must bear.
A mother who is a
physician and a
successful special
ist wants to help
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