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RECIPE FOR
DIXIE ICE CREAM
( Can be made and frozen in 10
minutes at cost of
One Cent a Plate.
Stir contents of one 13c. package
Jen-0 !GE GBEIIH Piwto
into a quart of milk and freeze.
No cooking, no heating, nothing
else to add. Everything but the
ice and milk in the package.
Satisfaction guaranteed.
This makes 2 quarts of the most
delicious ice cream you ever ate.
Five Kinds : Chocolate, Vanilla, Straw
berry, Lemon and Unflavored,
2 packages 25c. at your grocers, I
or by mail if he does not keep it. 9
Illustrated Recipe Book Free.
w. The Genesee Pure Food Co., Le Roy, N. Y.
Famous for its beneficial
results in Indigestion, I
Dysentery, Diarrhoea,*]
Hemorrhoids, Eczema, and
all diseases of the stomach, I
bowels, liver and skin.
It *s~~_ , ,
Increasing the appetite and insuring rapid I
convalescence from any illness which has ■
weakened the system and lowered vitality. I
RELIEVES PROMPTLY HEART- 1
BURN. SOUR AND FULL STOM
ACH AFTER MEALS .’. ]
Dose: Tea to a tablespoonful.
If not for sale by your local druggists I
we will make you trial shipment on re- ■
B ceipt of price (SI.OO pt. or 6 pts. for $5.00). ]
Medical testimonials furnished on re- ]
B quest. ]
I MATCHLESS MINERAL WATER CO. I
I Wells: CBEENVIUE, ALA. Offices: ANDALUSIA, ALA. I
B Address all communications to Andalusia, Ala. 9|
With a few cans of Argo Salmon
in the pantry, and an Argo Red Sal
mon ook Book at hand, the house
wife is always prepared for unexpect
ed company. Argo can be served in
many different ways.
Is Your Baby Teething?
I There is no need to dread baby's second
I summer—the trying teething period just
I keep its system in condition to make
I teething easy and save sleepless nights.
Teethina
(Teething Powders)
I was first used by Dr. C. J. Moffett, a graduate
■ of Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia; in
■ his extensive and successful treatment of ehil
| dren’s diseases incident to teething and summer
■ complaints—a standard remedy for over 40 years
| throughout the South. It contains the elements
■ recommended by the most advanced medical
I sciences as necessary for removing the cause ot
■ disease and keeping
I baby’s system
■ in condition to
■ make teething IlgSfflfs
lln nine out ft. Adi
■of ten cases «// j \
■ of cholera in-
■ fantum that "M.
I prove fatal
■ from ordinary
I neglect and subse-
I quent treatment, ‘
I use of Teethina would \ F * / w
I have saved the child.
|At all Druggists. 25c \
■ Or from \ - , a , i/h ,
Dr. C. J. Moffett fl/fl.
1 Medicine Company, .flfllUi
St. Louis
■ Write for our free ( f*
Booklet.” flflP * , (fl
bfWAi
content of religion should be taught
in this spirit, while those to whom the
scientific standpoint is not a merely
technical devise, but is the embod
iment of integrity of mind, must pro
test against its being taught in any
other spirit.”
As to the “teachers” these further
questions are asked:
“Where are the experts in religion?
and where are the authoritative teach
ers? There are theologians; do we
want theology taught? There are his
torians, but 1 fear the day has not
come when the history of religion
can be taught as history. Here
precisely is one of those fields of clar
ification and criticism where much la
bor needs to be done, and where the
professional religionist is one of the
most serious obstacles to reckon with,
since a wider and deeper historic
knowledge would overthrow his tra
ditional basis.
“There are preachers and catechists,
but, unless we are committed to some
peculiar faith or institution, it is not
exhortation or discipline of this sort
that constitutes religious instruction.
Tneie are psychologists; but is intro
spection Ot.r aim? There remains in
deed, tne corps of faithful, more or
less we.i prepared, hardworking and
hardworked teachers. This brings us
to the crux of the whole matter. Is
re.igion a thing so specialized, so tech
nical, so 'informational’ that, like
geography or history or grammar, it
may be taught at special hours, times,
and places uy those who have proper
ly 'gut it Lip,’ and been approved as
persons of nt character and adequate
professional training?
“We do not find it feasible or desir
able to put upon the regular teachers
the burden of teaching a subject
which has the nature of relig
ion. The alternative plan of par
celing out pupils among religious
teachers drawn from their respective
churches ami denominations brings us
up against exactly the matter which
nas dune im st to discredit the church
es, and to discredit the cause, not per
haps of religion, but of organized and
institutional religion: the multiplica
tion of rival and competing religious
bodies, each with its private inspira
tion and outlook. Our schools, in
bringing together those of different na
tionalities, languages, traditions, and
creeds, in assimuiating them together
upon the basis of what is common and
public in endeavor and achievement,
are performing an infinitely sig
nificant religious work. They are
promoting the social unity out of
which n the end genuine religious
unity must grow. Shall we interfere
with this work? Shall we run the risk
of undoing it by introducing into edu
cation a subject which can be taught
c.nly by segregating pupils and turning
them over at special hours to separate
representatives of rival faiths? This
would be deliberately to adopt a
scheme which is predicated upon the
maintenance of social divisions in
just the matter, religion, which is emp
ty and futile save as it expressed the
basic unities of life.”
I?
Argo Red Salmon took the grand
prize at the St. Louis Exposition, the
only grand prize ever given at any
World’s Fair on Salmon.
(’/SBNICo Operative School
Pl»nt*Spici»l R. R.
1 BEDFORD, VIRGINIA, .
Th© Golden Age for August 6, 1908.
~—
t ■' -SPr'*
./
BESSIE TIFT COLLEGE, FORSYTH, GA.
FOR GIRLS AND YOUNG WOMEN.
Faculty composed of University trained teachers. Home-life that of a large family. Every
Section of dormitory under supervision of a teacher. Every student under counsel of a sei f gov
erned companion. Equipment complete and best approved in every department of instruction.
Expenses at estimated co=t of furnishing- the best advantages in each d epart nv nt.
For beautifully illustrated catalogue, address C. H. S. JACKECN, President.
K 1 JAj IT J H l l k ITI L1 J >RM
I
(Six miles out of Atlanta) . . I il
g Military system; excellent discipline; healthful I ...igF • - I ]
location. Fully prepares for Annapolis Naval I iZ|
Academy and West Point. Strongly endorsed V. • wW/ ■ f'l
by President K. G. Matheson, of Georgia Tech. \
For Catalog, write ..
G. HOLMAN GARDNER, Principal.
Box 22 DECATUR, GA. //
IVHHHMBHH9BMBfIfIDHBHHNBMHBHBQHBEOMBHHBHHKBHHMBHBBMHHKBMBBBBBHBBMaBBBDBMKBEBMEESBHBMHBHBBBHHB3BfIBHHHHBHBBMBP*
STATE NORMAL SCHOOL
Athens, Ga.
Three Dormitories, three Academic
buildings, a new Dining Hall building.
Infirmary and trained nurse. Thirty
rpWl p fi ye officers and teachers. Seventeen
L|||l Si dJ IMB | fflWi I I departments. Tuition free to Georgia,
students. Expenses kept at a mini-
< mum. New catalog just issued.
E. C. BRANSON, President
' ri <i j ■ vrinw"'»»Yß,...
I ORATORY LANGUAGES JsM
/<' “L'/kwBS eiV .■ Faculty composed of leading American and | Tx-.- '. ?-5
■ fl European Artists. Teach mest advanced 1 sfe- d'v
■ ■ and approved methods. First st ssion begins M fei-*
I I Sept. 15th. For full information add ess H
Ji ill livffl.r J*--., ■ I Win. S Cox. Pres .or Geo. W. Wilkins. Sec. I ga—
H Peachtree and Broad Sts., Atlanta, Ga.
Iwl' -JmlkiwjtaX iMTOWwIaI
Full College Courses For Catalo S and full l
with Music, Painting Infortna,ion address B
and Elocution. 66thSes- JohnV/. Gaines, Pres, N
sion Begins Sept. 9,’08\ L or V/m. S. Cox, lugr. |
'-I n u ■ imum ———
I” f ■ 11J i|i■k lOj
f p
j T Magnificent buildings, costing SIOO.OOO Elegant appointments. Refined and ChristianX
1 ’Hm™ 1 home- Pianos and furniture all new Ideal location near the mountains. All college j\
m . / courses. Conservatory unsurpassed. Teachers from 'he best schools of Europe and II
America. Opens September 18, 1908. For handsome catalog, address M. W HATTON II
O- W- ANDERTON. Presidents. Florence, Ata. Jtcasil
American Cotton College “Sg*
For the education of Farmers, Clerks, Merchants, Warehousemen, Cotton
Buyers, Manufacturers, and all othdrs, young and old, enabling them to classi
fy and put the correct valuation on 18 Grades of Cotton. Thirty-day scholar
ships in our sample rooms, or six weeks’ correspondence course under expert
cotton men will complete you. Big demand for cotton graders and cotton buy
ers. Session opens September Ist. Correspondence course year round. Write
at once for further particulars.
131 Hancock St., Milledgeville, Ga. -<* 7-
rA®IASF K A RY- F A TH E VVORLD ’ S best
_2z___l£z_z! BABY MEDICINE (Liquid)
Cures all Bowel Complaints —Makes Teething Easy
25c and 50c a Bottle, all Druggists, or BABY EASE COMPANY, Atlanta
Maxwell House Blend Coffee
B 9 The most delicious cup that ever graced a / T7:-
|B—iS]mmU—B] dining table. Packed in sealed cans only. CUP
ull fl i AY/ ASK YOUR g r ocer FOR IT. U^^ UALITY
Cheek-Neal Coffee Company,
Nashville, Tenn. Houston, Texas.
15