Newspaper Page Text
14
Heart Trouble
from Childhood
J‘l suffered with my heart from
girlhood; could not sleep on left
side. Eleven bottles of Dr. Miles’
Heart Remedy removed all these
troubles, and brought complete re
covery.” MRS. H. C. CRUSE,
San Francisco, Calif.
The life of the body is the blood.
It runs on and on, carrying nourish
ment and gathering up impurities as
long as life lasts —the heart makes
it go. When the heart is weak it
cannot do this, and spells, pal
pitation, short breath, indicate that
it is doing its work imperfectly.
Dr. Miles’ Heart Remedy
strengthens the heart nerves and
muscles, and restores normal action
to the heart.
The first bottle will benefit; If not,
your druggist will return your money.
A SIOO Typewriter
for 17 Cents a Day!
Please read the headline over again.
Then its tremendous significance will
dawn upon you.
An Oliver Typewriter—the standard
visible writer —the SIOO machine —the
most highly perfected typewriter on the
market—yours for 17 cents a day!
The typewriter whose conquest of the
commercial world is a matter of business
history—yours for 17 cents a day!
The typewriter that is equipped with
scores of such conveniences as ‘‘The Bal
ance Shift” —“The Ruling Device”—“The
Double Release”—“The Locomotive Base”
—“The Automatic Spacer”—“The Auto
matic Tabulator” —“The Disappearing In
dicator”—“The Adjustable Paper Fin
gers”—“The Scien
t i fi c condensed
Keyboard”—all
JIL Yours f or f7 Cents
a ® ay •
announced
this new sa -l es P lan
kft ' recently, just to
the P u l se of the
people. Simply a
small cash pay
—- men t —t hen 17
cents a day. That
is the plan in a nutshell.
The result has been such a deluge of
applications for machines that we are
simply astounded.
The demand comes from people of all
classes, all ages, all occupations.
The majority of inquiries has come
from people of known financial standing
who were attracted by the novelty of the
proposition. An impressive demonstra
tion of the immense popularity of the
Oliver Typewriter.
A startling confirmation of our belief
that the Era of Universal Typewriting
is at hand.
A Quarter of a Million People
are Making' Money with
TFje
OLIVER
Writer
The Standard Visible Writer
The Oliver Typewriter is a money
maker, right from the word “go!” So
easy to run that beginners soon get in
the “expert” class. Earn as you learn.
Let the machine pay the 17 cents a day —
and all above that is yours.
Wherever you are, there’s work to be
done and money to be made by using the
Oliver. The business world is calling for
Oliver operators. There are not enough
to supply the demand. Their salaries are
considerably above those of many classes
of workers.
”An Oliver Typewriter in Every Home”
That is our battle cry today. We have
made the Oliver supreme in usefulness
and absolutely indispensable in business.
Now comes the conquest of the home.
The simplicity and strength of the Ol
iver fit it for family use. It is becoming
an important factor in the home training
of young people. An educator as well as
a money maker.
Our new selling plan puts the Oliver
on the threshold of every home in Ameri
ca. Will you close the door of your
home or office on this remarkable Oliver
opportunity?
Write for further details of our easy
offer and a free copy of the new Oliver
catalog. Address
The Oliver Typewriter Agency
114 North Pryor St., Atlanta, Qa.
M N 0 OUH "• PAV-ia
. B ttfcLV wilty otb»r word* you do no*
oar Biunll professional foe
■ ■ until cured and satUfiod. • arm so.
VAmerloan Institute, Qrand Ave., Kenans Oltjr, Mo.
in disagreement, that the will of her
husband shall prevail; she resigns
herself to his will, though it may not
be in keeping with her judgment.
Take another illustration: A church
may be resigned to a certain kind of
operation, though its judgment may
not co-operate with that thing that is
to be done. Jesus was resigned to
the will of His Father; but more than
that, He was identified with the will
of His Father; He agreed with His
Father, and in it He and His Father
were one. It was not a mere bowing
of the head and a submission of the
will to the cross; it was the volun
tary going of Christ to the cross,
paying the penalty for the world’s
sin. Jesus and the Father were one
in identification. It must be so in
order that Christ may have any part
of the glory or the triumph. Unless
it is so, the Father is seen and the
Son is lost sight of, for it is the Fa
ther’s scheme of redemption, and the
Son has no part. Hence Jesus prayed,
“Father, glorify thy name.” “Blend
thy name with the glorification of the
Son, that the glory of the Son and
the Father may be one.”
It is said that those that stood by
at this juncture heard a voice; it was
the voice of God from the heavens,
the voice of the Father. Listen: “I
have both glorified it and will glorify
it again.” This is the voice of the
Father in answer to the plea of the
Son. I think He has reference to
everything that has transpired since
the fall of man in which the glory of
The Lady Trom Alabama
pl icable. It has been dictated by hered
ity. My grandfather, Jeremiah
Churchill, peace to his abnormal ashes,
was a good trencher-man, and you, pa
ter, are a moderate trencher-man,
while I, Von Bulow Churchill, require
only enough food for life. I am irre
versibly scientific.”
“There is much in what you say,
Von Bulow, and I perceive that you
have diverted my mind from abstract
metaphysics to table economics.”
Von Bulow raised his shoulders,
wearily.
“Table economics, pater, have a
commonplace habit of repeating their
demands three times a day’”
“And metaphysics only in great
moments?”
“Exactly.”
“But, my son, we have performed the
functions as required today in this
perfectly conducted household, and
our servants are performing, I pre
sume, unless they have skipped off
to a barn dance. Could you suggest
any better plan to spend the hour
between now and 9 o’clock than to
vivisect the sentence that I have se
lected from the works of Joseph
Glanvill?”
Von Bulow drew on his cigar with
more vigor.
“It is certainly,” he admitted, “the
most fascinating of metaphysical
subjects; but just now, pater, my
scientifically developed ear heard
Rose open her grand piano. Ah, lis
ten, listen, listen, listen! Isn’t that
melodious?”
Rubinstein’s Melodie in F floated,
with slow, moderate movement, like
some full-webbed swan upon a slum
berous ocean, out into the magic air
of the night.
And the performance was more
The Golden Age for March 10, 1910.
Perfect Man, Plus God
(Continued Trom Page Tiro)
(Continued Trom Page Three)
God has been manifested. I think
He means to say to Jesus, as He thus
prepares Himself for the cross, and
to the world, that have been looking
upon Him and hearing Him, that
every triumph of the past, even
through the Old Testament dispensa
tion, that glorified God the Father,
also was to the glory of the Son.
UNITY OF FATHER AND SON.
I believe also He looked ahead and
saw all the triumphs of the Church
in all the world in the centuries com
ing, and He meant to say, “We are
blended together in this work; my
name and the name of the Son are
one in the glory that is to be re
vealed.” And then He looks beyond
the Church era, through the millen
ium, where the will of God is done,
and on until the final culmination of
time and the spreading open wide of
the gates of the City of God; He
means to say: “In all this triumph
your name and mine are inseparably
linked together in one.”
My friends, are we today adding to
the glory of the Father and the Son?
Or are we, through inconsistencies,
bringing reproach to our Lord and
the Kingdom that He came to estab
lish? Are we worthy citizens of this
Kingdom whose throne is in our
hearts, or is its glory dimmed as men
look at our lives? God grant that we
may grow daily to be more like the
King, who is our Pattern, after He
rescues us from the clutches of sin
and the wages that come to the ser
vant of sin—death.
than mechanic.
“She changes moderate to largo,”
mused Von Bulow, his eyes on the
stars, “and produces weird, scientific
effects. I don’t recall that tempo
rubato is written upon the score of
this little classic, but she inserted
a mental tempo rubato and interprets
her own psychic mood. I should say
that she is sad tonight, and therefore
her playing is very slow and solemn,
as, if —as if she was trying to build
some dreamy, new tone-picture out
of an old favorite.”
“Would Rubinstein approve of that,
Von Bulow?” asked Mr. Churchill, as
he paused in the shadow of a column
to strike a match.
“No; I shouldn’t say that he would.
He was very orthodox, I believe,
pater, and his musical trains were de
signed to keep the track, and not
scamper off into the weedy fields.”
They listened to the music, coming
with almost orchestral effect,
through the open upstairs window.
Von Bulow noted that the white net
curtain trailed like a bordered ban
ner outside the window sill, and that
his father’s step had decreased. He
was walking in largo.
“I like to think,” said Mr. Churchill,
“that as I pace this long gallery,
built by my father, that I am keeping
step with the Lovers of Truth.”
Von Bulow eyed the stars serenely
enough. He was a good listener.
“I hear the voice of Socrates,” con
tinued the elder Churchill, ‘“warning
me, ‘Now I, Callicles, am persuaded
of the truth of these things, and I
consider how I shall present my soul
whole and undefiled before the Judge
in that day.’ And, my son, I heed
the voice of Socrates, because he was
a lover of truth, because ‘the long re-
A REAL BLESSING
t
What a blessing is perfect health!
What enjoyment there is in feeling
well! Life is all pleasure, and work
is but play. But if one is continually
ailing, life seems scarcely worth liv
ing.
Thousands of women suffer, continu
ally or periodically, from the ills or
weakness peculiar to their sex. Pain
kills pleasure, hinders the porformanee
of their daily duties and makes them
most wretched.
Countloss women, suffering such ills,
have found relief or cure in that old,
reliable medicine, especially prepared
for women, —Wine of CarduL Thous
ands of those grateful ladies write to
tell what Cardui has done for them.
We recently had this letter from
Mrs. Annie Vaughan, of Raleigh, N. C.:
“I cannot find words to express my
deep gratitude for what pour wonder
ful medicine, Cardui, did for mo, for
I sincerely believe it saved my life. X
was sick and worn out, almost unto
death. My sister finally persuaded mo
to take Cardui. Before I had taken i
bottles I was well and strong.**
Cardui Is a pure, vegetable remedy,
which acts gently and naturally on tho
womanly system. If you are nmrmuu
weak or sick, try Cardui. Get it at
once. 'Twill, help you. *
At all druggists tn SI.OO bottles.
Here’s a Bargain.
I want, to swap five (5) gallons of
Vita Spring water for any case of Dys
pepsia or Indigestion which it will not
cure. I mean what I say—it you will
drink five gallons of Vita water and
it does not either cure or greatly im
prove your case it shall not cost you
one cent. Now, how could I make an
offer like that if I did not know posi
tively that Vita Spring water will re
lieve nine cases out of ten.
Here’s my offer. You deposit SI.OO
with me for the demijohn. I will send
you five gallons of Vita Water, fresh
from the spring. You drink it then
return the demijohn to me. Write me
honestly what the water did for you.
I’ll take your word for it.. If the water
wins out I keep the dollar, if it fails I
return your dollar without question.
Mr. S. H. Rush, Blackville, S. C.,
writes: —“I have suffered with Indiges
tion and Liver Trouble for nearly ten
years, and during all that time I have
never had anything to benefit me as
much as Vita Spring Water.”
Mr. E. V. FinlaysJn, Charlotte, N.
C., writes: —“I have suffered with Indi
gestion for a long time but after drink
ing two demijohns of this water, I can
eat anything without bad effects. Your
water surpasses all remedies for stom
ach, liver or kidney trouble.”
I have received hundreds of Ifi
like these. Try Vita Water and I will
have a similar letter from you. Ad
dress me as follows: —N. F. Shivar,
Proprietor, Vita Spring, Shelton, S. C.
WANTED —Manager, man or woman,
for each county to introduce White Rib
bon Concentrated Non Alcoholic Flavor
ing in tubes. Saves half the cost. Every
body buys and reorders. $2.50 per day
salary, and commission. Also local agents
50 per cent commission. J. S. Zeigler
Co., 62 Plymouth St., Chicago.
DRUGSTORES 50c 1
Thia little doggie This little doggie
used. used none.
Astyptodyne Mange Cure.
FARM SEEDS.
Write Vineyard Farm, Griffin, Ga., for
description, etc., of Cook’s Improved cot
ton seed, Marlboro corn anu Appier oats.
These are well known, and recommended
by the different state expt, farms, as
the best on the market. We plant no
other and gin no other, and have our
own machinery to keep them pure. The
Government has bought large quantities
from us for distribution, which proves
the character of our product. Cotton
seed |l, Oats |l, and Corn $2 per bu., f. o.
b. Griffin, Ga. Orders filled promptly.