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14
Weak Hearts
“I was terribly afflicted with my
heart. At times it seemed to miss
every other beat. I took Dr. Miles’
Heart Remedy until my trouble was
all gone—it has never returned.”
R. R. PENN, Springville, lowa.
One person in every four has a
weak heart. Some are born weak,
some become weak from disease,
others by over-exertion. If you have
palpitation, fluttering, irregular pulse,
short breath, oppressed feeling in
chest, smothering or faint spells,
you may know your heart is weak.
There is nothing better for a weak
heart than
Dr. Miles’ Heart Remedy.
It has brought relief to thousands,
it should to you, even in cases of
long standing.
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 Olivex’ 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-
©■ i
«<1
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
people of known financial standing
■ho were attracted by the novelty of the
An impressive demonstra-
the immense popularity of the
Typewriter.
confirmation of our belief
■LEra of Universal Typewriting
of a Million People
I- ■■ M° ne y w * th
HH
i"'- Ba/‘d Visible Writer
M- Typewriter is a money
■t from the word “go!” So
■Fi that beginners soon get in
■Ft” class. Earn as you learn,
■machine pay the 17 cents a day—
■lbove that is yours.
Bever you are, there’s work to be
■tnd money to be made by using the
Mr. The business world is calling for
■er operators. There are not enough
: ■supply the demand. Their salaries are
■isiderably above those of many classes
W workers.
WAn Oliver Typewriter in Every Home”
F 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.
■ SMAAHDtn NO CURE NO PAY-m
i - ■ K VvIiLU other words you do not
MB I I P a y our sma ll professional fee
until cured and satisfied. German.
■ American Institute, 984 Grand Ave., Kansas City, Me.
gers”—“The Scien
t i fi c condensed
Keyboard”—all
Yoursf rl7 Cents
a Day!
We announced
this new sales plan
recently, just to
feel the pulse of the
people. Simply a
small cash pay
m e n t —t hen 17
The Prayer On the Cross
would not at once give Him his heart
and life; but we are ignorant. Even
those of us that have tasted of the
love of Jesus are ignorant of its great
depths and its great scopes, its
great possibilities. We are igno
rant, and Jesus, as He looks upon
us, must feel like a parent does when
he looks upon the erring deeds of an
ignorant, blundering, stupid idiot child.
But lastly, the final result of this
prayer. Was it effective? At first
glimpse I would say no, it was not, for
that mob waxed more vile immedi
ately after He breathes that prayer
we are introduced in a scene of
gambling; they are gambling over the
garments of the Son of God that He
had worn, especially that seamless
garment of His disciple. Almost be
fore His prayer died away they were
gambling, and added to that, see the
revelry of the crowd; they mocked
and jeered, railed and spit upon Him.
The whole place was scorned by a
wild, howling mob; you would think
that the prayer hardened their hearts,
and doubtless it did. I have seen a
piece of iron, a huge ponderous thing
upon which no hammer could make an
impression, the more you hammered it
the harder it got, after awhile taken
and put in the furnace and the bellows
turned on and then I have seen that
same hard impenetrable piece of iron
turn into a fluid that would run like
water. So with these men. At first
the hammering resulted in their hard
ening; but after awhile something
took place that they were not expect
ing. Pentecost came; the Holy Spirit
had not been given in His great burn
ing, fire producing and fire resulting
power. But watch just a little; a few
days passed by; these same people,
many of them, are gathered in Jeru
salem, and all at once there comes
from the upper chamber these disci
ples of His who had been in that up
per room and the fire of God’s Holy
Spirit had been kindled in their hearts.
A man began to preach and the fire.
The Lady From Alabama
the great painting, pausing with her
hand on the blue curtain, a picture of
girlish loveliness, about to reveal a
study of Spanish heartlessness.
Rose drew the curtain swiftly, for
the second time that night, clasped
her hands lightly across her green,
gray-toned evening dress, and stepped
back, with artistic reverence glowing
in her black, mystic eyes.
Oh*! the indefinable horror of the
thing! The pallor, the waness, the
sickness of death was there! The
lurid flames of Gehenna, bursting from
the floor of the prison of the Inquisi
tion was also therein depicted.
The greatest of art critics might
have been excused a mad reel of soul
and mind, on his first vision of the
diabolic masterpiece. It seemed as if
the old Spanish monks, or the creator
of the House of Usher, from some
far off, unseen spirit vale, had dictated
each startling brush-stroke, each line
inferno, that caused the very teeth of
the beholder to chatter. Not in all the
galleries of Europe or the new world,
could be found a thing so faithful to
the subject embodied.
Again Rose drew the curtain and
walked to the piano-bench, determined
to resist its psychic appeal. A score
of Beethoven’s “Moonlight Sonata,”
The Golden Age for March 31,1910.
(Continued From Page Tlvo)
(Continued From Page Three)
kindled by the bellows of God’s eter
nal purpose began to burn and as this
fire burned the hard iron hearts of
these cruel men and women were
pricked and they got tender and melt
ed and ran in tears and agony until
finally they cried from the depths of
their hearts, “Men and brethren, what
shall we do to be saved?” The prayer
of Jesus is heard; their hearts have
been found; their consciences are
lashing them, and now they seek His
face and are saved, three thousand of
them, in one day.
We talk about a revival in this
country and somtimes I am afraid we
have about talked it away. We spend
all the time in talk. I am just as sure
as I am of my existence that if that
revival ever comes it is going to be
through the burning, convicting, con
verting work o of the Holy Ghost of
God. All the pictures of the cross
that can be drawn, all the preaching
about it will never lead one soul to
Christ, much less the soul of this na
tion, until the church of Jesus, fired
with the passion that fired His heart,
fired with such a passion that self and
selfish interests, even family and
friends, are of secondary interest;
such a passion that will lead men to
leave everything behind and go to the
rescue of a lost world, whether at
home or abroad. Until the baptism
of the Spirit falls upon the church we
will never see the great national yea,
world-wide revival. Our prayer to
God should begin today, “Lord, give
me the far sweeping passion of Jesus
that overlooks home and home-ties,
friends and friendly relatiionships,
state interests that overlook the na
tion; give us the passion that takes
in a world horizon; not bound by city,
state or country, but with eyes on the
Kingdom of Heaven and its progress,'
may the fire so burn within us that as
we come in contact with a lost world,
the hardness of heart, the ignorance,
the prejudice may be melted and
burned away before us, thus hastening
the coming of the King.
stained with ivy, lay open on the
piano rack, and the grand piano called
to her, from all its ivory throats, to
resist the mood of art, with the mood
of music.
She smoothed the blue velvet of the
carved Chippendale bench, with rest
less, white fingers, the blood scarce
pinking the polished tips, longing
through every fibre of her soul to draw
the blue curtain back from the sub
lime painting, and resisting that long
ing, with all her force of will. And
she inherited the iron, unconquerable
will of the Churchills.
Once more, with a heavy sigh im
pelled by some mysterious force, out
side of herself, she looped back the
curtain from the painting—and stood
fatally fascinated.
The figure in the great painting was
not calculated to give repose to the
soul—like Magrath’s “On the Old
Sod,” or Whistler’s “Portait of My
Mother”—but it inspired something
-diametrically different, something eter
nally tragic. There was that in this
picture which would lift senuous pas-
DO YOU HAVE CATARRH,
The almost universal bane of mankind?
Xhen use Dr. Christian's Catarrh Balm
uaranteed to cure. Free sample. Write
Dt. J. M. Christian. Hazelhurst. Ga.
TO YOUNG WOMEN
You may be laying up for your
selves much future suffering, by not
treating your ailments promptly, (be
fore they have a chance to become
chronic), with that well-known female
remedy, Wine of Cardui, —about which
you have so often heard.
Look ahead, and plan for a healthy,
happy life, by preventing female
trouble from getting a foothold.
Try if that famous medicine, Cardui,
which has helped so many others, will
help you.
For young girls just entering into
womanhood and young ladies whose
life duties have not long begun, Cardui
is often of vital importance, giving
them strength for daily tasks.
Read what Mrs. Mary Hudson, of
Eastman, Miss., says about her young
sister: “While staying with me, and
going to school, my young sister was
in terrible misery. I got her to take
a few doses of Cardui and it helped
her at once.
“I have taken Cardui myself and be
lieve I would have been um’er the
clay, if it had not been for that won
derful medicine.
“Now I am in better health than in
three years.”
T-v Cardui.
BOWEN
EMPLOYMENT AGENCY
Has good reliable help for all positions.
HELP FURNISHED FREE.
We also furnish Positions.
248 Brown-Randolph Building ATLANTA, GA.
Q. COTTON CHOPPER.—
at. — Chop your cotton by this
\\ machine. Price sls. One
\\ hand and one mule can do
\\ I as much work as ten
\\ hands and four mules by
W tWflLyaw- the old way. Chops cot
v, ft ton on the bed. a level or
raMbrftsE'’ in the water furrow. Also
ehops small cotton. Write
for particulars TO-DAY.
Southern States M’f’g. Co.
gMvkr.jrif Barnesville. Ga.
FINE POST CARDS FREE
A Big Pack&ge Sent to All Our Readers
Who Write at Once.
To any reader of this paper who writes
Immediately and encloses 2 cent stamp
we will mail a set of five most beauti
ful post cards you ever saw. Ten very
finest Floral, Birthday and Motto cards,
all different, in exquisite colors, silk fin
ish, beautifully embossed, etc., for only
10 cents. Thirty cards all different 25
cents. With each order we include our
plan for getting 50 choice cards free.
Address The Art Post Card Club, 703
Jackson St., Topeka, Kan.
Can Cancer be Cured ? It Can
We want every man and woman in the
United States to know what we are doing.
We are curing Cancers, Tumors and
Chronic Sores without the use of the
knife or X-ray, and are endorsed by the
Senate and Legislature of Virginia.
We Guarantee Our Cures.
THE KELLAM HOSPITAL,
1917 West Main Street Richmond, Va.
Physicians Treated Free.
f.l IRA 10 Acres
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.
Don’t throw your
Shabby Hat
Send It to us. W e make old hats good as
new. Panama, Soft and Stiff - Felt hats
cleaned and re-shaped, 50c—Felt hats dyed
25c— Sweats, Bands or Bindings, 25c—Stiff
Straws cleaned, bleached and pressed,
35c. Special attention to mail orders.
ACME HATTERS
100 Whitehall St., Atlanta, Ga