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14
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Argo Red Salmon can be prepared in
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t JIT I life and sayings
Aw I’l I It sells very fast, 1,000 agents
w/ — Kl| wanted at once, also carry our
100 page catalogue. SIOO per
I 111 I mF month easily made. Circulars
I| |, ’ | free. Write to-day.
| K I IB 1 Jenkins 01 Scott Co..
Atlanta, Ga.
When writing advertisers please mention
The Golden Age.
Among Summer Normals of Mississippi
“What makes you go to Mississippi
so often?” a genial friend is asking.
That’s easy. Mississippi keeps
treating me so royally. Her people
are so strangely generous as to keep
on inviting me back to talk to them,
“even to the third and fourth genera
tion,” and I love to talk so well
(honest confession), that is, to people
who are good enough to say they love
to hear me, that I naturally follow
“the line of least resistance.” But
anyway, when I was invited last
March to lecture before each of the
four summer normals in Mississippi I
decided to dedicate one week in June
to renewing old friends and making
new ones among the teachers —those
marvelous moulders of men! For, if I
could speak only one more time —and
die —I think I should choose as my au
dience those who, whether in the pul
pit, in the school room or on the lec
ture platform, are to touch and teach
and inspire the plastic minds and
hearts of our glorious boys and girls!
Enterprise of College Boys.
This lecture course among the
summer normals of Mississippi is the
fruit of college boy enterprise.
Messrs. J. M. Kenna, R. B. Gunter, J.
T. and M. C. Ferguson—four of those
400 magnificent boys at Mississippi
College, Clinton —formed themselves
into a lecture bureau of their own and
arranged with State Superintendent
Whitfield to supply a course of three
lectures to the summer normals. I
was invited to open the course, Mr.
Will Powell Hale, of Jefferson City,
Tenn., that charming impersonator,
who hails from the land of “Bob”
Taylor and Langdon C. Hayne, will
follow, and the course will be closed
by Hon. Joseph G. Camp, of Georgia,
who, I verily believe, is the embodi
ment of the most splendid type of or
nate, finished oratory that I know in
America today.
I. I. and C. at Columbus.
My first normal was at the famous
I. I. & C., at Columbus, over which
Dr. A. A. Kincannon has presided for
years with such conspicuous success.
I did not get to meet the eight hun
dred girls whom he has been leading
to nobler womanhood —for commence
ment was just over, but I saw enough
of the handiwork of this great Chris
tian educator to make me congratu
late the University of Mississippi
whose chancellorship he has just ac
cepted after having been called the
second time. They have talked about
making him governor of Mississippi.
But he answers: “No. I would rather
make governors than to be one. I
would rather train the trainers of the
future than to carry on my shoulders
the uneasy head that wears a ruler’s
crown.”
Mr. Kincannon yields at last to the
repeated calls of the University, be
lieving that these calls show him to be
necessary to the enlargement of the
work of that old and honored institu
tion.
My audience at the Columbus Nor
mal was composed almost w’holly of
lady teachers, and I found on arrival
that Mr. Gunter had asked for a vote
between my four lecture subjects:
“Climbing Upward,” “Smiles and
Heartthrobs,” “Scattering Sunshine”
and “Schools and Fools,” and really I
felt satisfied with their selection of
“Scattering Sunshine” and did my
level best to scatter that necessary
and delectable article. It just suited
such an audience, you know —for girls
are apt to get homesick —anxious to
see their mother, their brother —and
somebody else’s brother. So many
gave me generous assurances that the
message meant something definite in
their lives that I came away feeling
The Golden Age for July 4, ldo7.
Informal Notes by the Editor.
that my visit was not in vain. I had
the great pleasure here of meeting for
the first time State Superintendent
Whitfield, who has just been called
from his magnificent leadership of the
educational forces of Mississippi to
the presidency of the I. I. & C. It is
a coincidence that Mr. Whitfield suc
ceeded Professor Kincannon as State
superintendent, and now follows him
as president at Columbus. He says
“Kincannon is a fine man to follow.”
Starkville and the A. & M.
Just to be on this glorious spot
again! The flowers were yet bloom
ing in my heart which were planted
there during my stay of four weeks
among the college boys and the loyal
people of Starkville during the win
ter. Whom should I meet on the way
but Mrs. Hardy, the beloved queen of
The Story Telling Club at Blue Moun
tian? And there waiting at the A. &
M. were her bright little daughters—
Ellene, the lovely little maiden of
fourteen, who put a garland of violets
around my shoulders when I lectured
at Blue Mountain —and Mattie Crump
ton Hardy whose literary genius has
already been budding and blooming in
The Golden Age. And there was the
distinguished uncle of these bright
girls, Dr. J. C. Hardy, of the A. & M..
and by his side his gifted young wife,
whose face carries “a corner on sun
shine,” who says that The Golden
Age is the brightest paper published
for the home in America. To be in
their home again was like being at
home again, and there at Starkville I
had the great joy of being guest in the
home of Philip Cramer, the prom
inent Hebrew gentleman who, during
my meeting in February, acknowl
edged Christ as the Messiah and ac
cepted Him as his personal Redeem
er, and who since then has been a
flame of fire in guiding others to
Christ. What a joy to greet Stark
ville friends on every side! My au
dience at the A. & M. was the largest
of all the Normals, and before deliver
ing. my old time entertainment
“Smiles and Heartthrobs.” I had the
exquisite pleasure of being presented
to my audience by Professor A. H.
Ellett of Blue Mountain College, who
himself ought to be on the platform—
because his felicitous introduction
and his mirth provoking “sandwich”
given at my special request, just about
took the “shine” off the lecture of the
evening.
The Foot-Prints of Lamar.
At Oxford I felt like I was not only
on historic ground, but almost on
Georgia soil, for I was walking in the
foot-prints of L. Q. C. Lamar, the fa
mous son of Georgia and Emory Col
lege who blessed and honored Missis
sippi so long by his residence and who
illustrated in Congress, in the Sen
ate, in Cleveland’s Cabinet, and on
the Supreme Bench of United States
all that was great and luminous in
American statesmanship. I saw the
modest house that he erected when a
young man, shaded now by the beauti
ful trees which he planted with his
own hand. I saw the court house in
which he thundered defiance at the
minions of misrule during the shad
ows of reconstruction, and I felt the
moral and patriotic tonic of his great
name that seemed yet to stir in the
very atmosphere around me.
Dr. Hume, the genial and gifted
member of the University faculty, who
was directing the Normal at Oxford,
showed me every possible courtesy.
Mr. Ferguson, who managed the lec
ture course, was grieving because there
were only one hundred and forty
teachers present, but what the audi
ence lacked in quantity, it verily made
up in quality. “Scattering Sunshine”
f To make Ice Cream In 10 min- j
utes for 1 cent a plate. Stir
contents of one package ■
I jeii-o Ice Cream Powder I
■ into a quart of milk and freeze, without I
I heating or cooking. Simple, isn’t it ?
Saves the cost of eggs, sugar and flavoring. ■
■ Saves measuring out ingredients and cook- ■
■ ing. Does away with all uncertainty, and in- *
■ sures the best and purest ice cream possible g
to produce. Failure impossible. Nothing to
add except milk. One package costing 13c.
makes nearly two quarts ice cream.
Flavors: Chocolate, Vanilla, Strawberry,
Lemon and Unflavored.
<i A If your grocer
does not keep it
send us his name
and 25 cents for
two packages by
>- -■■■■- - A mail. New il
ustrated recipe ■
book mailed
The Genesee Pure Food Co., Le Roy, N. Y.
P. S. Delicious Cream Pudding can
also be made from Jell-0 ICE CREAM
* '
Costs but Ic. an hour
/V',. to run
-AND-
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Made
1 Eas *
H PRICE ONLY $2.00.
This little smoothing
iron heater will save you many times its cost
in time, fuel and strength, before the summer
is over. Write for particulars to
SMOOTHING IRON HEATER CO.,
Sumter, S. C.
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GUARANTEED FOR 2O«YEARS
ARGO ARGO ARGO ARGO ARGO
ARGO ARGO ARGO ARGO ARGO
FOR THE WORK OF
THE MINISTRY
By T. HARWOOD PATTISON
Elaborated by his son, Harold Pattison
12mo, 558 pages
Price, $1.50 net; postage
15 cents
The last book from the pen of Doc
tor Pattison, containing chapters on
“The Call to the Ministry,” “ Ordina
tion,” “The Minister and His Study,”
“Finance,” “Ministers and Collat
eral Interests,” etc., with the final
chapter by Rev. Harold Pattison, “Is
the Ministry Worth While?”
OTHER BOOKS BY DOCTOR PATTISON
The Making of the Sermon. 12mo, 402
pages. Price, $1.50.
The History of Christian Preaching. 12mo,
.425 pages. Price, $1.50 net; postage, 15
cents.
Public Worship. 12mo, 271 pages. Price,
$1.35*
The History of the English Bible. 12mo,
281 pages. Price, $1.25.
The Ministry of the Sunday School. 12mo,
272 pages. Price, SI.OO net; postage, 10
cents.
The South Wind and Other Sermons.
12mo 288 pages. Price, $1.25 net; post
age, 10 cents.
The Bible in the Twentieth Century.
12mo, 56 pages. Paper. Price, 10 cents.
The Making of William Carey. 16mo, 40
pages. Leatherette. Price, 10 cents.
American Baptist Publication Society
ATLANTA HOUSE
37 South Pryor Street, Atlanta, Ga.
When writing advertisers please mention
The Golden Age.