The Golden age. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1906-1915, May 01, 1913, Page 11, Image 11

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

Whittemore's TlSboe PolWws FINEST LARGEST VARIETY tSRWROi illgpusHlli SZSMt a IflU Shs iI lOwl | HEES I iSIIMIi ®W® SMMw'iM llte CL jjS "GILT EDGE" the only I adies’shoe dressing that positively contains Oil. Blacks and Polishes ladies’ and children’s boots and shoes, shines without rub* bing, 25c. "FRENCH GLOSS,” 10c. "STAR” combination for cleaning and polishing all kinds of russet or tan shoes, 10c. "DANDY” size, 25c. "QUICK WHITE” (in liguidformwithspongejquick ly cleans and whitens dirty canvas shoes. 10c. & 25c. "BABY ELITE” combination for gentlemen who take pride in having their shoes look Al. Restores color and lustre to all black shoes. Polish with a brush or cloth, 10 cents. "ELITE” size, 25 cents. If your dealer does not keep the kind you want, send us the price in stamps for full size package, charges paid. WHITTEMORE BROS. & CO., 20*26 Albany Street, Cambridge, Mass. The Oldest and Largest Manufacturers of Shoe Polishes in the World. Church n T“U ■ O llgr BELLS Memorial Bella a Specialty. - Broadway Central Hotel Corner Third Street In the Heart of New York Special attention given to ladies unescorted Special Rates for Summer. OUR TABLE is the foundation of our enormous business. American Plan, $2.50 upwards European Plan SI.OO upwards Send for Large Colored Map and Guide of New York, FREE. TILLY HAYNES, Proprietor DANIEL C. WEBB, Mgr., Formerly of Charleston, S. C. The Only New York Hotel Featur ing American Plan. Moderate Prices Excellent Food Good Service Bad breath? Feel tired? Headache? will fix you up. 25c a box. Guaranteed. Stores or by mail. Brown Mfg.Co , Greenville, Tenn. phanages, free industrial teaching— not to speak of the magnificent church charities and home missions. And how little of this was there fifty years ago? The old, cruel meth ods of dealing with prison criminals and with the insane—these are being done away with —pulled down like the old-time, disease —breeding tene ments, and better ones erected in their stead. Is It a Beginning of the Millennium? Is all this a beginning of the Mil lennium? If it is, it is a fair com mencement for the thousand years. If so much can be achieved in less than fifty years—what may not nine hundred and fifty more unfold? What Shall Follow? What shall come to a race that is developed and bettered? Here are a few things it is safe to foretell. Hu man life will be lengthened—the av erage length is constantly increasing as we learn the laws of health and also (and this is important) the pow er within that rejects disease —will be understood and used. Taxation shall be lowered, because wars will cease —and thatj greatest drain on a nation’s resources —a stand ing army—a big idle navy—millions in battleships—built to prance awhile on the ocean and then to rot or to serve as targets to be shot at by idle sailors. All thi svast, costly array of useless men and machinery and armaments for wholesale murder will be done away with. Earnest movements to that end are now being carried for ward. The nation’s tax money will be put to use for improvement of lands, of rivers, of roads —to help men to live more easily and in great er comfort. Cheaper Living. Science and earnest research will open ways for greater production and cheaper living. People will learn how to keep well nourished on simple food. This will promote health and long life —and do away with drugs, which are poisons in the end. The sense of unity—the feeling of brotherhood, will increase and make us esteem it a pleasant duty to help each other, and then secure the pur est happiness. Religion—broadened, modified and progressive—but still the religion of Christ, the necessary new birth, will spread over the world and enter into the every-day life of men. There are many other things to fol low, too many to touch upon now, but think you such progress such changes, constantly increasing through the years and centuries, will fit this earth to be a heaven as Revelation intimates? Will Christ at His final coming find this earth and the people on it fitted for Him to dwell upon with Him and the saints He shall resurrect? MARY E. BRYAN. WHAT SHALL BE DONE WITH THE WAYWARD BOY? Yesterday I was told of a mother — a widow —who was thinking of send ing her son to a reformatory because of his disobedience and idleness. The friend who told me said: “I am afraid the mother is much to blame. She is one of the nagging, complain ing kind. She thinks it spoils a child to praise him. This boy is a kind of genius. He is always projecting and trying to invent something. His mother scolds him for idleness. She wishes him to work steadily in the field. But don’t you think the idea of sending him to a reformatory is dreadful? It will make a criminal of him.” On the contrary, it might do him good under the circumstances. He might learn a trade which would suit Ism 1 etter than farm work, and he The Golden Age for May 1, 1913 would be taught obedience and indus try in a wise and kind way. There is a school farm at Hapeville where there is a kind of military discipline that boys lean to like. The farm cov ers twenty-five acres and the dormi tories are neat and comfortable. There are workshops where the boys bottom chairs and mend their own shoes. There is a canning factory and an out house with shelves filled with fruits and vegetables put up by the boys. There is a grist mill where they grind the corn ana wheat they raise. They art said to have plenty of wholesome food and good school tuition and kind, wise training. They learn self con trol and respect for the rights and wishes of others. They rarely remain more than one year and most of them are releaesd before then on parole, which means that though at liberty they are kept in view and must report to the reform superintended at stated intervals. If a mother has lost in fluence over her boy and there seems no way of controlling him the school farm may be better for him than home. But it should be the last re sort. If the mother is incompetent, friends should help her understand the boy and put him the right way. THE BARGAIN COUNTER. The bargain counter is dear to the hearts of many wives—and it is “dear” in another sense to their hus bands. It is responsible for much dis agreeableness in the home, but it is with us and with us to stay. What will the suffragists do with it, should they get the vote? The alluring newspaper advertisements are the Arts cause of the trouble. My, how seductive and ingenious they are! Not much wonder that the average woman follows their lure. At 8 o’clock on bargain day the stores are besieg ed. Pushing and elbowing, trampling on corns, scowling and often an ex change of sharp words are features of the bargain day mob. A sensible woman tells bargain hun ters to ask themselves: First —is the article really a bargain? Remember that 198 cents is only two cents less than two dollars —that forty-nine cents is only one cent less than fifty cents. Next, can you get along without this so-called "bargain? Nothing is an economy unless you actually need it. Is it a standard article or simply “made-to-sell”? Look out for narrow widths, “small sizes” (that is, not “full size”). Is it ready to wear and Put on? What does it need done to it? Be ware of soiled tub dresses that won’t stand washing: stick to underwear that is meant to be washed or you will be more than sorry. Write down the sizes of the persons for whom you are shopping and carry a tape measure in your pocket if you have doubts of the sizes being full. Is your bargain sale in a small town? Be sure you can get greater bargains in last year’s styles in the big city shops. Don’t come home with a bottle of perfume that is far from sweet, but that will do for a present for some body, yards of ribbon which never can be matched, strangely figured silks that can do duty only as linings, spools of silk of broken lengths, soil ed gowns that must meet their Water loo on washday, gloves and mitts and shoes that won’t fit, to say nothing of a lot of odds and ends that “may come in handy some day.” Think before you let one cent go over the bargain counter. He —No man is as black as he is painted. She —And no woman is as white as she is powdered. YOURWNGS i / Mt 1 I (h i I M JI /m 0 1 ARETHEI WEAK OR PAINFUL f Do your lungs ever bleed ? Do you have night sweats? Have you pains in chest and sides ? Do you spit yellow and black matter? Are you continually hawking and coughing? Do you have pains under your shoulder blades? These are Regarded Symptoms off Lung Trouble and CONSUMPTION You should take immediate steps to check the progress of these symptoms. The longer you allow them to advance and develop, the more deep seated and serious your condition becomes. We Stand Ready to Prove to You absolutely,that Lung Germine, the German Treatment, has cured completely and permanently case after case of Consumption (Tuber culosis), Chronic Bronchitis, Catarrh of the Lungs, Catarrh of the Bronchial Tubes and other lung troubles. Many sufferers who had lost all hope and who had been given up by physicians have been per manetly cured by Lung Germine. It is not only a cure for Consumption but a preventative. If your lungs are merely weak and the disease has not yet manifested itself, you can prevent its development, you can build up your lungs and system to their normal strength and capacity. Lung Germine has cured advanced Consumption, in many cases over five years ago, and the patients remain strong and in splendid health today. Let Us Send You the Proof—Proof that will Convince any Judge or Jury on Earth We will gladly send you the proof of many remark* able cures, also a FREE TRIAL of Lung Germine together with our new 40-page book (In colors) on the treatment and care of consumption and lung trouble. JUST SEND YOUR NAME < IUHB GER MINE CO, so i fee Block, JACKSON, MICH* All 11 . n Ain beseiged All About Oregon a Oregon, but am a busy pastor. Have been all over U. S. and have preached and lec tured over Oregon for ten years. Know It from every man’s point of view, tl is the finest home country in the union. I have nothing to sell, not connected with Reales tators or Railroads, and can furnish, una dulterated, all the information you want. Write inclosing $1 and will write ten let ters if necessary, E. H. Hicks, Albany, Ore. I GUARANTEE TO CURE Malarial Fever or Chills and Fever for SI.OO or refund your money. If you do not think so send for proof. Send SI.OO by mail. 21 years practice in Passaic. DR. ALFRED C. PEDRICK, Passaic, New Jersey. The Celebrated Effectual Remedy without Internal Medicine. ROCHE’S Herbal Embrocation will also be found very efficacious in cases of BRONCHITIS, LUMBAGO and RHEUMATISM W. Epwarps & Son, 157 Queen Victoria Street, London, Eng. All Druggists,or E. FOI'UEKA * CO., Ine., IO Beekman St.. N. Y. CAN CANCER BE CURED ? IT CANI The record of the Kellam Hospital is without paralel in history, having cured to stay cured permanently, without the use of the knife or X-Ray over 90 per cent, of the many hundreds of sufferers from cancer which it has treated during the past fifteen years. We have been endorsed by the Senate and Legislator* 9f Virginia. Wo guarantee our cures. Physicians treated free. KELLAM HOSPITAL W, Main St., Wfchmonrf, Va. By Emanuel Swedenborg, “ Heaven and Hell,” 624 pages; “Divine Providence,” 605 pages; “Four Leading Doctrines,” 593 pages; “ Divine Love and Wisdom,” 598 pages. Sent to any address on receipt cf postage, 6 cents per book or 14 cents for the set The American Swedenborg Printing and Publishing Society 3 W. 29th St, New York City. 11