Newspaper Page Text
22 (llg)
FREE LAND.
Another allottment of very choice valley
fruit land, is now ready for distribution.
Write immediately to the
Jantha Plantation Co., Block 1508, Pittsburg:,
Pa., lor application blanks. The
only requirement is that five acres be
planted in fruit trees within five years.
Authorized improvement companies will
plant the trees at reasonable prices,
and market the fruit for the owners on
shares.
?00 ARE LNV1TED
To Join the Presbyterian of the South
Piano Club. The plan is sensible, economical
and convenient. Club members
not only save money on their pianos,
but are protected and even Insured in
every particular so that dissatisfaction
is impossible. Study the club plan
carefully and you cannot fail to see
that it represents an unusual opportunity.
Those who have already joined
and have received their pianos express
themselves as "Delighted with the
piKUUtt auu cue ^iau.
The club gives you the benefit of the
"purchasing power of lis oue hundred
members." This means a saving of
about one-third in the purchase price
of your piano- Terms are made to suit
the convenience of the individual member.
The life Insurance feuture Is Ideal.
It is veil worth your while to invest!,
gate the club carefully. Write for catalogue
and full particulars. Address
Ludden & Dates. Presbyterian of the
South Club Dept.. Atlanta. Oa. _ _
Red Letter Bible Free
1,000 very fine Red Letter Bibles to be
given away for a slight service. Grand
opportunity to get a good Bible without
cost. Write immediately for full partlculars
free.. Household Bible Club, 810
Jirkmn Street. Topeka. K?.
^ SHETLAND PONIES
to our young
salesmen. Open to
hoys and girls. None
Bttlf over 21 years of age
Mr VI to compete. JOHN A.
Ms if YOUNG & SONS. Nurserymen,
Greensboro, N. C.
w>muiufKtgrrLawn^Fnrm Fence. 8?lldirect
tiipi'tnir *(iu.?rsonty ^manufacturers' prices. No
x<nu. Ourcntnlon is F??e. Writetor It today.
UP-TO-UAIt MfG. CO. 100S 10th SU, Terre Haute, lad.
W. T. Hardle Wm. F. Hadle
Robt. T. Hardle F.ben Hardle
WIS,I,I AM T. HAItDIE Jt CO.
Cotton Factors A Commission Merchants
098 llravler Street, Cor. Dryadea
NEW ORLEANS, LA.
Sydnor & Hundley
s Leading In 8
FURNITURE
a And e
CARPETS
RICHMOND. = VA.
Via Bristol
And The
Norfolk & Western
Railway
The Short bine Between
NKW ORLEANS. BIRMINGHAM, MEMPHIS.
CHATTANOOGA. KNOXVILLE,
?AND?
WASHINGTON, PHILADELPHIA. NEW
YORK.
Solid Train Service Dining Car.
All information cheerfully furnished.
WARREN L. ROHR,
Chattanooga, Tenn.
Western Passenger Agent.
W. B. BEVILL,
, General Passenger Agent,
Roanoke. Va.
pquLTRYflONE PULL BXLE
19 160 Feet Long for 75r
tsllr&Ww 19 QalvanUed Pooitrr Smimi.
11 fr ><3jtilfiaP wwirt ro*
' kin .45 w? ?-ir? A(.
a
THE PRESBYTEBIA!
Household
i i ' '
??
o ?
01*1'OJiT U MALE S LN 0>E'S 110ME.
Often Overlooked and Seldom 1'ullj _
Appreciated.
It Is ourselves, not our opportunities
here or there, that need to be liner.
Say it over to yourselves a dozen times
a day. "it is not my opportunity which
is too small for me; it is 1 who am too
small for my opportunity." We lay
too much stress on surroundings; we
mistake the measure nf their value
Look careful} into the lives of great
men and women, and you will iind in
nine cases out of ten that their surroundings
were not as promising as
yours and mine, writes Anne Bryan AleCall
in the Woman's Home Companion.
Those of us who fail at home, who
make a failure of our home relations,
will probably continue to fail in the
city. T'be lack of punctuality ;the want
of consideration for others; thq weak
sense of honor; the lax regard for
others' rignts; the narrow or selfish
tendency; the timidity and self-consciousness
and sensitiveness?these are
faults not of our surroundings so much
as of ourselves. If we have not overcome
thein at home, we shall carry
them all with ub into our larger surroundings,
and they will be the cause ~~
there of larger mistakes and failures.
East or west, far or near, there will
never be for any of us wider opportunities,
nobler responsibilities, than lie
right iu our hands at home. The opportunities
and responsibilities of
daughter, sister, friend, hostess, wife,
and mother?when you have named
these, you have named nearly everything
in the way of opportunity that
can come to any woman, and they all
lie within compass of home acres, and
are hedged about generally by our own
dooryards.
The keenest test of a woman is not
what she is outside but what she is
In her home; not how brilliant she is,
but bow wise; not bow clever, but
finally, always, how kind; not bow capable
of competing with men and women,
but how capable of inspiring them.
Home is often not ideal; but if that
is true, and if the home is ours, then
the fault is in part ours. A home is
a thing always in the making. We are
daily responsible for it. We may finish
the houses we live in, but we shall
never have done making our homes.
When we realize this more fully there
will be less of the longing for the larger
existence that lies outside, and a deeper
appreciation and love for what lies
all about us in the home.
We shall understand more fully then,
too, Ruskin's ideal of the woman who,
whether she has a home or not, is a
home. In his "Sesame and Lilies," second
chapter, you will find that ideal
set forth in these lovely lines:
"And wherever a true wife comes,
this home is always around her. The
stars only may be over her head, the
glow worm in the night-cold grass may
be the only fire at her foot; but home
is yet wherever she is; and for a noble
woman it stretches far around h?r. hnt
ter than ceiled with cedar or painted
with vermilion, shedding its quiet light
far, for those who else were homeless."
STAINS ON HOUSEHOLD LINEN.
Various Kinds and IIow to Remove
Them.
Before sending household linen to the >
laundry It should be carefully exam- ?
lned for rents and stains. Stains that
will be "set" when allowed to come In
contact with soap and hot water can
often be removed if fresh. By some simple
means and will not require a power
* OF THE SOUTH
Ask Voui
Ask your doctor how often he p
for children. He will probably
him how often he prescribes a tc
answer, "Very, very frequently.
non-alcoholic Sarsaparilla as a to
The Famous /
The Rayo Lamp is the best and;
for any part of your home.
It is in use in millions of families,
it famous. And it never dickers.
In the dining-room or the parlor the R
tire. It it a becoming lamp?in itself and tc
or library, where a clear, steady light is nee
The Rayo is made of solid brass, nickel
finishes. Easily lighted without removing shi
Ask your rloslcr to tbow you his line of Rayo lamps; <
Standard Oil
(Incorpo
roister!
HITS THE SPO
The explanation i
they areimde wih
est care and evea
ient has to pass ,
of our own labor,
theres no hit orz
Royster Fertilizi
Sold By Reliable Dealers
F.S.ROYSTER Gl
SALES OFFK
Norfolk.Va. Tarboro.N.C.
Baltimore, Md. Montgomery, Ala.
Macon. Ga. Columbu
The olMi'avri r (formal Remedy
without internal Medicine.
ROCHE'S
Herbal Embrocation
will alto be fonnd very efficacious in case* of
BRONCHITIS, LUMBAGO
and RHEUMATI3M
W. EDWAiirit * So*. ir-T Qnren Victoria Street,
Ignition, Kmc. All l'rmritUlr.or
K. luioaaa a iu.. no li.vka.aa s?.. n. T. ^
/*GREIDEK?S FINE POULTRY
a. M Book and ealmdar for 1911 eoutalae KO
patra. II varlnlea pure brrdAloolorrd plain.
oth.r IMnatratlona, draorlpttooa.
mjjra IoouMloro and brooder*. Lev prion on all
atock r?> Hov to rolooaad make bona lay.
Orl my plana. Tbay all aay It'a treat?
thla book?only lb orate.
B. H. OIITTIKB Bot ltd Itv. 9a
[ January 31, 1912
r Doctor
describes an alcoholic stimulant
say, "Very, very rarely." Ask
rnic for them. He will probably
" Then ask him about Ayer's
nic for the young. jJUrifc:
ZcXy? Lamp
most serviceable lamp you can find
Its strong white light has made
ayo gives just the light that is most effec>
you. just the lamp, too, for bedroom
drd.
Slated; also in numerous other styles and
; or chimney; easy to clean and rewick.
w write for descriptive circular to any agency of the
i Company
rated)
FERTDJZER
I
T EVERY TIMEi
ftr-fl
s simple; ra |
'/ the great- II I
ryingred- la
the test /# ///
atories; 111 I
xiiss 'about a jl
ws. I I
Everywhere n j \
JANO CO J I
ces m m
Columbia.S.C. JJf
5partanbur$.S.C. Off
s.Ga.
??? '
5 Acre Bag^w
FREE
I vnnt 1000 Fwtnm In frxu, LomU V\ ^
Ian*. OkUhnma. Artrann*. Mlanital- \
ppl and Ohio, to plant 5 acres of land yi \
ari'h mv CHrjH
VIRGINIA GROWN KING SEEO
a ?tra?n of the King Se^ that prom aes
fo rr-vr a o?n-wt*ion ;n rUnatatn I oro- kJI
imHvtaati. Mv ohf-<* It to prova 'he
raf^v an-1 y.T?mte a demand for * ? tu?nre.
Baat tha WmvII and low Prlcon bar pro- PJOyfJI
duc?n< a hale to the acre in ?ph? of 'he Weevil;
and by mak'aflr * ha lea Inatead o* 3. thereby jflv
ib* oc a oaie extra prom, write postal quick. mpv^VJ
T.J. KING Richmond Vs.
Le< fix Htd rod (one d the orooi now In hmn<\
k'Hn< cA wir U'eet N C. Stock. Have MO errIked
reports el tttl tests, they will amsie vets.
ORGANS
|d^yy| 4WO PIMNOa
I Pars, sweet loss, Superior ms%
I HksoUts itrlos We sell afreets*
I factory prices. Write, stetlac wkMb
catalog; la desired,
W l MlnMn Wish COw KKW. li