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* VOICES OF YOUTH *
CONDUCTED BY MRS. G. B. LINDSEY.
WANTS OF THE WORLD.
AGENTSJWANTED —Male and Female.
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FARM SEEDS.
Write Vineyard Farm, Griffin, Ga., for
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Send a postal to Minard’s Liniment Co.,
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Oh, rare as the splendor of lilies,
Vnd sweet as the violet’s breath,
Comes the jubilant morning of
' Easter, ,
i A triumph of life over death;
' For, fresh from the earth’s quick
i ened bosom,
Full baskets of flowers we bring,
( And scatter their satin soft petals
j To carpet a path for our King.
v We have groped through the twi
ll light of sorrow,
I Have tasted the Marah of tears;
But lo! in the gray of the dawning
Breaks the hope of our long
silent years,
And the loved and the lost we
thought perished
Who vanished afar in the night,
/ Will return in the beauty of spring
( time
( To beam on our rapturous sight.
(
(
( Sweet Easter-tide pledges their
] coming,
( Serene beyond trouble and toil,
j As the lily upsprings in its fresh
( ness
( From the warm, throbbing heart
CHAT.
ALTHOUGH Easter comes much
earlier this year than usual, yet
we have had some bright,
balmy days as advance guards to her
ald the awakening of Nature’s beauti
ful children to life and duty.
And though I do not feel that we
should wait until Easter to speak of
and rejoice over our Saviour’s resur
rection, since to the Christian He is
a risen Saviour always, and to the
sinner He may be if his heart will
only accept Him; yet there is and
should be a rejoicing in our hearts
over the awakening, the quickening
to life again of all those things that
Nature has kept buried away through
the cold winter months, with the
stone of snow and ice locking them
in so securely.
It is a veiy forceful way our Father
has of typifying the resurrection of
our Saviour and His Son. The same
life lies sleeping in the tomb of win
ter, that breaks the bonds, buds,
blooms and grows on to greater use
fulness and beauty when the fullness
of the days of sleeping are over.
Christ died in body, so far as the
natural man was concerned, but the
Divine Spirit within, the real life, only
slept that it might awake to a greater
life than even He had yet known —
the fulfilled promise, the victory won
and the Father glorified through that
death and resurrection. Hence, I say,
while we, as His children, should re
joice always and should make our
lives a daily reminder to those about
us that ours is a risen and not a dead
Lord, yet it seems a pretty thing that
we should also rejoice with our great
mother, Nature, as she “rolls the
stone away.”
We have a true-to-life story from
our little shut-in, Harlow Meadow,
this week, that I sincerely hope may
preach its sermon to every reader of
these columns.
Let your letters come fast now,
boys and girls, remembering that
through them you may cheer and
strengthen a heart somewhere that
The Golden Age for March 24, 1910.
LA STER-TIDE
Margaret E Sangster, in Harper s “Bazar.
of the soil.
And after all partings, reunion;
And after all wanderings, home;
Oh, here is the balm for our heart
ache,
As up to our Easter we come!
In the countless green blades of
the meadow,
The sheen of the daffodil’s gold,
In the tremulous blue on the
mountains,
The opaline mist on the wold,
In the tinkle of brooks through the
pasture,
The river’s strong sweep to the
sea,
Are signs of the day that is hast
ing
In gladness to you and to me.
So dawn in thy splendor of lilies,
Thy fluttering violet breath,
O jubilant morning of Easter,
Thou triumph of life over death!
For, fresh from the earth’s quick
ened bosom,
Full baskets of flowers we bring,
And scatter their satin soft petals
To carpet a path for our King.
needs you.
I am looking for those subscrip
tions, too.
YOUR LITTLE MOTHER.
A MISTAKE OFTEN MADE.
Dear Little Mother and Circle:
That it may possibly help some boy
or girl, I want to tell you of what
came to two young people whose
prospects were once so very bright.
Nellie Hamilton was a pretty girl,
with bright blue eyes and beautiful
auburn hair. Her parents were not
rich, but good livers. They thought
a great deal of Nellie. She did not
want for anything. They taught her
to be kind and true and never to do
a thing she would be ashamed for any
onse else to know.
Jack Durwood was Nellie’s sweet
heart. He was brought up by Chris
tian parents, who always taught him
not to use bad language, keep bad
company or take the social glass. He
was a bright, manly boy, and for
awhile remained true to his parents’
teaching and was loved and respected
by all who knew him. Months and
years passed, and he grew to man
hood. He began to associate with
bad boys, who would curse and drink.
The temptation was too great for him,
and he, too, fell into their habits. He
knew of Nellie’s great dislike for
whiskey, and he tried to keep it all
hid from her, for he loved her almost
as dearly as he loved his own life,
and she had often told him that “lips
that touched liquor should never
touch hers.”
For some time Nellie was ignorant
of his wayward life, and believed him
to be the truest and best of lovers;
but ere long she began to notice his
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a TiS|||||
I -IT
EUGENE ANDERSON,
President Georgia-Alabama Business
College, Macon, Ga.
He has sprung into great promi
nence in the educational world
through his plans for keeping his
graduates in employment for life. He
has also attracted widespread atten
tion through his practical training de
partment, in which his students are
said to be able to make more money
than their education costs them.