Newspaper Page Text
14
Difficult
Breathing
“I could not lie on either side, my
heart fluttered, and I was so weak I
could scarcely walk. Dr. Miles-
Heart Remedy did wonders for me.
I can sleep, eat, and do more work
than I have in ten years.”
AGNES LEWIS, Lawrence, Kans.
Short, quick breath—when going
up stairs, singing, or when you are
angry or excited means that your
heart action is weak.
Dr. Miles’ Heart Remedy
is a safe, sure remedy for these
symptoms. It strengthens and
builds up the weakened nerves and
muscles.
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
gs. Jk Keyboard”—all
Ek Yours f r 17 Cents
frJgggSfea a Day!
We announced
this new sales P lan
fOh recently, just to
Wj * eel the P ulse °f the
people. Simply a
Ng*. 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
thai J ‘he Era of Universal Typewriting
is a\ ind.
A Q hi*r of a Million People
a. I* kking' Money with
CUVE-R
Typewriter
i ne 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, Ga.
<«■ NO cure no pay- m
■gZvUIIEU other words you do not
■N ■ ■ pay our small professional fee
■ ■ until cured and satisfied. German.
B American Institute, 984 Grand Ave., Kanaas City, Me,
Prayer in Garden of Gethsemane
(Continued from Page Ttoo)
it has. The practical lesson that
comes from this to me is that if Jesus
had to submit Himself without reserve
to the will of His Father that He
might accomplish His mission on this
earth, that we, poor, imperfect hu
manity must sumbit ourselves to our
Father’s will that we might accomplish
our mission upon this earth. There
is nothing more certainly set forth in
the Scriptures than that God has a
plan and a purpose in every human
life. Search the regions of the earth,
search the islands of the sea, the king
doms of heathen darkness; search at
home and abroad and nowhere in all
the earth is there one that ever breath
ed the breath of life that God did not
have a place to fit him in; a mission
for him to serve his day and gener
ation.
But this is true in a double sense of
every child of God. The moment that
a man or woman is born a child of
God there is an increased obligation
on God’s part to that man; to that
woman; an obligation of guidance, of
help,
Somebody says, “I am afraid to
trust the will of God.” It has not been
long since a good Christian woman
said to me, “I am afraid to make a sur
render of myself to God because I
am afraid that God would send me
somewhere that I do not want to go.”
“Where are you afraid God would
send you?’ I asked. She said, “I am
afraid He would send me to China.
I have always had a kind of feeling
that if I should make an unconditional
surrender to God He would send me
to China.” “Then how do you dare
not make it? Do you know God? Do
you know the judgment of God, the
unerring judgment of God? Do you
know the power of God, the unerring
and the ability of God? Do you know
the loving heart of God? Could such
a God send a poor helpless lonely girl,
His child, into a place that she could
not be for her good and for the best?
Is that like God?” I have had some
experience about this matter. You will
pardon me for relating a bit of it.
Even when I was a college boy I knew
that God called me to preach, and
one day I walked alone sixteen miles
through the cold to tell my old pastor
and my mother about this drawing
that I felt, which I could not explain
in any other way than that God was
calling me into the ministry; and my
old pastor, now in heaven, put his
hand upon my shoulder and said, “You
might just as well yield; that call is
from God,” and yet I went on fight
ing it. I had my ambition to be a
doctor. I had worked hard and strug
gled, battling against all sorts of odds
and difficulties to be a doctor, and I
finished my career as a student in that
line and never a day from the day
of that call passed over my nead that
I did not feel that knocking upon my
heart, and I was afraid. Finally, when
I entered upon the practice of medi
cine I entered with this call into the
® Here you are
I MR - farmer
when you buy a machine for
llwWAWft* setting >ut
TOMATO, CABBAGE, TOBACCO,
HhBF Sweet Potato, Onion Slips, Etc.
Mj hflW you ou K ht to get the best there is.
8 1/ Masters
MBW Plant Setter
4s the one that puts the plantdown
MBwW to its p oper depth and gives it half
BgK'W a tea cup of water or liquid fertilizer
Kuf right at the root and then scoops
the dirt up around the plant, all
■ks] done at the one operation, without
any stooping whatever. Write to
day for price and full particulars.
County Agency to First Purchaser
MASTERS PLANTER CO.
7 171 So. Water St., Chicago, 11/
The Golden Age for March 24, 1910.
ministry upon my heart. When I
would go to church I would feel it
more than any other time. A few
years rolled by. God blessed me in
this world; in its good things. I had
a pretty little home and a good prac
tice, but this leading continued and I
was afraid. I was afraid I would not
be successful.
“THY WILL BE DONE”
But finally God came and called me
in away that I could not resist. He
called through months of prostration
upon a sick bed and I yielded then to
this long call. My friends came about
me and said, “You are losing your
mind.” They actually got it in the
papers that I was losing my mind be
cause I was about to give up my pro
fession and enter upon an untried sea,
one for which I had not prepared my
self. But I stuck to that resolve; I
dared not take it back. I went out
into the world without a single soli
tary ray of light. Abraham himself
never looked upon a darker world
than I looked upon when I got out
of that sick bed with everything that
I had swept practically from under
me, and not knowing whether I could
preach or whether anybody would lis
ten to me, and I had nowhere to go.
There came to me just at that time
an old country preacher who is now
in heaven, and he said, “I want you
to come out to my church and hold a
meeting.” I would have gone any
where. I started in that country meet
ing house and I preached two weeks.
After I had finished preaching those
two weeks and started home, one of
the deacons of the church came and
said, “We have made a little thank
offering to you; it is in the buggy;
hope you will enjoy it.”. I thanked
him and got up in the buggy and
started home. I had the same negro
man who was driving for me when
I was a doctor, and we were both won
dering what that was in the buggy.
As soon as we got out of sight of the
house I got hold of it, and it was an
old turkey hen in a sack, and she
was so poor she died before I got
home.
That was a dark day. That meet
ing was about the most stupendous
failure I ever saw, and if I had gath
ered up all the tears that I shed dur
ing those few weeks and months, I
would have a flood of them, but I am
glad not a one has been preserved.
During this last year that early strug
gle has been constantly before me,
and the shame that I feel today that
I ever was afraid to trust God! When
I think of the friends I have, of the
friends at home and the friends
abroad, the friends the world over,
oh, how was it that I ever was afraid
to trust God.
And so, my friends, I can only say
to you as He submitted Himself un
der the trying circumstances of that
hour to the will of His Father, so let
us every one this day, no matter what
difficulty lies before us, no matter
whaf dark valley we may have ahead
of us, let us trust the ability, the
power, the willingness of our Father
to guide us aright, and say “Not my
will, but Thine, be done.”
THIS WILL INTEREST MANY.
F. W. Parkhurst, the Boston publisher,
says that if any one afflicted with rheu
matism in any form, neuralgia or kid
ney trouble, will send their address to
hirti at 704-35 Carney Bldg., Boston,
Mass., he will direct them to a perfect
cure. He has nothing to sell or give,
only tells you how he was cured after
years of search for relief. Hundreds
have tested it with success.
WISHED FOR DEATH
Terrible thing to be so sick, that
death would come as a welcome re
lief from suffering!
How much, then, must one be thank
ful for a medicine that relieves such
misery and brings one into a less des
perate state of mind.
Cardui, Woman’s Relief, has done
this for many women, and may be ex
pected to do so for many more.
Thousands of ladies have written
to tell about their suffering, and how
it was relieved by the use of Cardui.
Among this long list of letters writ
ten, stands forth Mattie Campbell, of
Ratcliff, Texas, who says: “Two years
ago my health was bad. I suffered
untold misery. I ached all over. Life
was a burden to me. At times I
wished for death, to end my suffering.
“At last, I decided to try Cardui.
1 took one bottle and it helped me.
I took 12 bottles more and now I can
say that Cardui has stopped my suffer
ing and made life worth living.
“I would not be placed back where I
was—not for this whole world rolled
at my feet.”
Try Cardui. It contains not one
grain of dangerous mineral ingredi
ents, but is purely vegetable, and a
safe, reliable remedy for young and old.
Sol d pvprvwh ere.
A
BEAUTIFUL
COMPLEXION
LUXURIANT HAIR
can be had by any reader of this paper
who will use, for a period of three months,
Astyptodyne
(Medicinal) Soap (Toilet)
Quickly relieves pimples, blackheads,
blotches and dandruff.
If your local druggist cannot supply
you, send 25 cents for full size cake,
postpaid to any address.
Satisfaction guaranteed or money re
funded.
BURGESS COMMISSION CO.
Agts. for Georgia and South Carolina
CHARLESTON, S. C.
SBWtOW
fl IP AlO Acress2so?“X e ea!„ a !
U U LJ/1 dant Rainfall. Nearest Trop
ical soil to New York. No
Frost. No excessive heat. Manati the
finest harbor. Land worth five times as
much, but we want settlers. Write Now.
SANDERSON, 206 Palace Bldg., Minne
apolis, Minn.
SDWamtiso
You »o Know That
telegraphy, shorthand,
BOOKKEEPING
are taught at the old established
f V* Southern Shorthand and Business
University, Atlanta, Ga.
A. C. BRISCOE, Pres. I. W. ARNOLD, V.-P-
* _ J
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrnp
Has been used for over SIXTY-FIVE YEARS by MIL
LIONS of MOTHERS for their CHILDREN WHILE
TEETHING, with PERFECT SUCCESS. It SOOTHES
the CHILD. SOFTENS the GUMS, ALLAYS all PAIN;
CURES WIND COLIC, and is the best remedy for DIAR
RHOEA. Sold by Druggists In every part of the world.
Be sure and ask for “Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup,”
and take no other kind. Twenty-five cents a hottie.
Guaranteed under the Food and Drugs Act, June 30th,
J**® .Serial Nupibt;l ' loys - an OLD AND WELL TRIED
REMEDY.