Newspaper Page Text
14
Jig
A SPECIMEN
Jell-0
Dessert.
With the addition of fruits and
nuts and whipped cream, or cream
sauce, Jell-O can be made into a
great variety of fancy dishes very
easily and cheaply.
The least experienced of house- |
wives will find no difficulty m pre
paring this simple dish :
FRUIT SALAD
Dissolve one package Strawberry or
Raspberry Jell-O in one pint boiling
water. Slice two oranges or two bananas,
or any fruit desired, and when the Jell-O
is half set, stir fruit into same and set
away to harden.
A hundred or more different
dishes can be made from the seven
Jell-O flavors*
i
V X*7 IJ '
WJW
®Wl!O'w
FYf\
H
V--vI
I( i J
jEy
All grocers sell Jell-O. 10 cents.
Illustrated Recipe Book, free.
The Genesee Pure Food Co., Le Roy, N. Y.
wb—kmihi ii iwiii iiH«iii»3CTaM»wriMnMri?i»T ■■ '■urr
T| IT l"k HP IT O Brooks Rupture Ap
|< II M I lll< Bi pliance. New and
£% U a A VJ Ls wonder ul No more
obnoxious s rings or
pads. Safe, durable and cheap. b> nt on trial.
Measurement blanks and full information free.
C. E BROOKS. 8416 Brooks Bldg., Mai shah, Mich.
DO YOU SUFFER WITH
ECZEMA or TETTER?
If so, would you be willing to pay 5*
•ents t<> to be lined?
Then lake the at! the of tbousand,-
wbo have used
YOUNG’S
Tetter and Eczema
Remedy
It positively < ures the most aggra
rated .-ases of K'-zeina. Tetter, lien
Ring Worm. Dandriiif. and Falling Hail
If you really want quick ami pertiui
neni relief, semi •’<>< »i SI.OO for smai
or large bottle .lire, t fr.eri our labors
lory, or ask your druggist; but don
fake a substitute. I heir is nothin;
"just as good."'
Address.
YOUVG’S LACORATORY
08 Pl nt Ave. Way cross, Ga
AGENTS CANINE IN ONE fe=*
$75 monthly.
Rolling Pin. Nine articles combined. Lightning Seller.
Sample tree. EvHSHEE MEG. CO,, Box btfb Dayton, 0.
OUR GOOD CHEER
“FOR THE GOOD WE ALL MAY DO"
Conducted by TESS IE WILLINGHAM RODDEY, Long Veach, Miss.
“A man upon a stall may find,
And passing, turn the page that tells
A grief—then changed to something—
else,
Sung by a long forgotten mind.
But what of that? The darkened
ways
Should ring with music all the same;
To breathe my loss is more than fame,
To utter love, more sweet than
praise.”
—Tennyson.
Build with stone well, but with flesh
better. And that kind of marble,
crimson-veined, is indeed eternal.
“But if you can fix some conception
of a true human state of life to be
striven for, —life for all men as for
yourselves—if you can determine
some honest and simple order of ex
istence; following those trodden ways
of wisdom, which are pleasantness,
and seeding her quiet and withdrawn
paths, which are peace;—then, and
so sanctifying wealth into ‘common
wealth,’ all your art, your literature,
your daily labors, your domestic af
fections, and citizens duty, will join
and increase into one magnificent
harmony.
“You will know then how to build,
well enough; you will build with stone
well, but with flesh better; temples
not made with hands, but riveted of
hearts; and that kind of marble, crim
son-veined, is indeed, eternal.”
—Ruskin, in Crown of Wild Olive.
Ycu see we have one of the greatest
men of letters, a man whose strong
impress on art and literature will
never be effaced, to agree with us that
work done in human lives, if nobly
done, is far better employment than
work to lay up treasures of gold and
silver and precious thingsi. To be
the architect of a life, of a mind, as so
many parents and teachers are, what
a vast opportunity for good! We can
be architects, in away, of the lives
about us. We can help them to good
thoughts, to higher ideals, to better
conditions. We can bring hope, kind
ness, peace, consideration, cheer —all
building blocks in the structure of
character —we can help to fit them
into place in some lives. We can
leave them there a part of the struc
ture. To build into human hearts
and lives; to have them build into our
lives; to have some one come when life
seems dark and leave with us gleams
of light; to have some one come
when the hill is steep, and push us
over a seemingly inaccessible way;
to have some one catch up when the
way is lone, and help us with cheer
ful companionship; to receive a letter
when the thoughts are turning into
gloomy grooves, and have the letter
call them back to hope and brightness
—all such things are building blocks
to pave up the structure of character
ana life. And how many lives would
fail utterly, and crumble and fall,
without these blocks of support.
Then, when you know you can
build into lives and characters, be
sure to find building blocks that will
help and support; strong and durable,
and light and beautiful; and just as
many of them as you can find —hope,
courage, kindness, sympathy, love,
belief. Encourage yourself to find
The Golden Age for December 10, 1908.
Uthem; encourage yourself to keep
them; encourage yourself to pass
them on to all you chance to meet.
To keep them, and at the same time,
pass them on; that sounds paradoxical,
but all these good things I have men
tioned are so blessed, so full, we have
them in a beautiful sufficiency to keep
and to pass on, the more we keep.
Give a man a dollar, and he has the
dollar, and you haven’t it. Give a
man hope and encouragement, and he
gets hope and encouragement, and
you have more of it, generated by
your effort to pass it on. And so it is
with love. The more love we give
to others, the more we have within
ourselves. Good creates good, lives
on good, and leads to blessings and
benefits. Then let’s strive to be good,
to have our lives reflect good, and
give others good. And the beautiful
cheer goes along with the good; and
so we have our lovely motto, Good
Cheer.
TESSA W. RODDEY.
n
Dear Good Cheer:
Thinking the world is good, or think
ing that the people are good doesn’t
make them good. We must work to
make them good, to improve them.
So many notes of pessimism and hope
lessness have been struck in the let
ters reaching me this week, that I am
inclined to believe the pessimism and
hopelessness arises more from the
lack of effort to benefit people and the
work, than from efforts that fail.
The question that has come to us
down the ages, that permeates the
vast present, and will go unanswered
through the future is, “Whence came
the tares?” None can answer it, yet
all know that the tares were sown
along with the wheat, and.that the
faithful, unremitting care of the hus
bandmen can barely avail to keep the
tares from choking out the wheat.
Notice in your flower yards and your
fields, that you must plant the flowers,
fertilize and cultivate them in order
that they may grow, but the weeds
come up and grow vigorously without
help. Even so, we must plant the seed
of good, must fertilize it with constant
prayers, sermons, songs, works and
all Christian influences to keep it
strong enough to withstand tbe evil.
But don’t fail to believe that Good will
ultimately prevail. “God’s in His
Heaven, all’s well with the Worlds.”
But remember, too, that, even as good
has come from and through evil, that
it can come from and through evil
again. Do you remember that even
the grand consummation of Calvary
had it’s Judas, it’s betrayal, it’s crown
of thorns, pierced hands and feet and
cruel crucifixion? The everlasting
question is “Whence came the tares?”
The perpetual question is “Why Can
Good Come From Evil?” Neither
question has been, or can be, or will
be, answered, until we are led into the
fitness and the fulness of the Life
Everlasting. But don’t think that you
make anyone better by merely think
ing them good. A thought is not a
deed. A word is not a deed. You
must first see them just as they are,
(don’t let your moral vision get
warped) and then study how to help
them. But be strong in the faith that,
as the greatest good of Christ’s eter-
Salt Rheum and
Itching stopped with first application. Guarantee
of complete cure or money back. Write now for
Free Trial Treatment and valuable booklet on
the cause and treatment of skin diseases.
Mulceo Chemical Company,
Department 2 3 27 Thomas Street New York City.
Gipsy Smith, Campbell Morgan, A.C.Dixonfc
Cork, Moorehead, Moule, Stelzle,Trotter, Mullins,Gray, B
Mott, Torrey, Orr, Erdman and Speer are among those ■
whose addresses have recently appeared in our ■
- m<T CHRISTIAN WORKER’S MAGAZINE I
Trial I 10c a copy ,$1 a year. Practical Bible courses, helpful B
25 CtS articles on Bible themes, methods of work, and deeper S
J Christian life; reports from evangelists; practical and B
perplexing questions answered; world news at a <r!ance :notes a n d su g- ■
gestions; usable Illustrations and outlines. Nothing like It in th® B
country. SPECIAL- From now thro' Dec. 1909 for sl. B
THE INSTITUTE TIE, 80 Institute Place, Chicago,lll. B
MIGHTY FINE DOCTOR
“I had a mighty fine doctor,”
writes Mrs. Hattie Cain, “and he
advised me to take Cardui for my
troubles.”
Mrs. Cain’s case was a strange one
and rather unusual, in that she had
suffered so long before she obtained
relief, so it makes it all the more
interesting to learn how, at last, Car
dui relieved her.
“For 16 years,” she writes, “I
suffered dreadfully. I would have
to have a doctor every three months,
and Oh! how I suffered! I would
cramp and have convulsions, till it
looked like I would die.
“My doctor said an operation was
necessary, but I said I would rather
die, so he advised me to try Cardui,
which I did. I began to mend right
away, when taking the first bottle,
and now I have been well for 7 years
and can do more work and walk and
go where I please.”
All reliable druggists sell Cardui.
It is a standard remedy on their
shelves, for which there is a steady
demand, due to its genuine merit.
Full directions for use accompany
every bottle.
Try Cardui.
Hrs. Winslow’s Eocthing Syrrp
e been used for over SIXTY-FIVE TEARS by
ELIONS of MOTHERS for their CHILDREN
HILE TEETHING, wiih PERFECT SUCCESS It
OOTHES the CHILD SOFTENS the GUMS,ALLAYS
di PAIN; CURES WIND COLIC, and is the best
ernedy for DIARRHCEA, Sold by Druggists in every
-art or the world. Be sure a id ask for" Mrs. Wins
jw s SoothiiiK Syrup,’* and take no other kind,
Twenty five cents a bottle. Guaranteed under the
food *nd Drills Act, June 30th. 1906. Serial Number
W AN OLD AND WELL TRIED
Anti-Pain Pilis
for Headache
And Other Pains
Doses
//25 Cents. Ift
f/125 Dom»
HEVPR SOLD Z
11 *** ®ulk
reX
Ta k el
one;
ofThese Little Tablets
. AND THE PAIN IS CONE.
&