The Golden age. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1906-1915, May 01, 1913, Page 14, Image 14

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14 CAN BE PERMANENTLY CURED IffigMyk By the “Schuiiing Rupture Lock,’’the wonderful, scientific discovery of the age, it’s holding power can be regu -1.1 ted by yourself at will. Endorsed w by leadingphysiciansas Nature’s true method. No leg straps, springs or other annoying features. It’s worn with the same comfort as a pair of old suspenders. Nature’s healing process never interferred with, etc. Price within reach of all and it is sent on trial. O°Write onr Institute today, for onr free booklet, if you want to forever rid yourself of rupture. Sehuiling Rupture Institute 100 West Market Street Indianapolis, Indiana Monarch Mills « 0 ™ THE up-to-date farmer, instead of “go ing to mill,” owns his own grin ling mill and does better grinding and and saves money. He also grinds for his neighbors and often makes enough profit to pay for his mill. He owns a Monarch Mill—the finest French Burr Mill in the -t_— world. State the kind and amount of power you have, and v,e will tell yon som thing Inter- |’ ■Testing about feed and n,ca l grindiog- SPHOCT, WALDRON & CO., ~8ex434 Muncy, Pa. LET US" SEND YOU the Knnx Re cipe Book WS and enough Gelatine to make one pint lough to try most any f our desserts, pud , salads or jellies also ream, ices, candies, s, sauces or gravies. lecipe book free for your racer's name pint ample for 2c stamp. A2.LESB.KNOX CO. 3CI Knox Avenue nstown New York rffcßsaassasTwt fissßs cmuhv' or kusiio nuts * AwtfiKA, mo I * Wig ms «■— THAN IN ANY W 12 hois lorim MI, I - -iii-i ■ =-.-«■---r-, w t •■W'-tfsex- 1 ■ ■ From Field to Home never touch human hands Washington Crisps TKt assist QUALITY or TCASTEO OWN FUXCS, ffl TH 111 "I I if *• Fir** in the HOMES of his Countrymen ” (176) | j| yy OUT OFF g h?nigh cost of living UEHf From the Bar-Room to the Pul- 11 C of DUU I* pi t and Mission Fields of Africa. The author is the son of a former Chicago sa loon keeper; converted, but not until he fell into the depths of sin. He becomes a flaming Evan gelist—a live wire for God. Later, makes 3 trips to darkest Africa as a Missionary. 36 chapters; each a well of living water. 400 pages in cloth. Gold lettering. 40 illus. of life in Africa. Agents wanted. Price $1.00,12c extra by mail. Address, REV. FRED WEISS. Dept. 24, Shenandoah, lowa. MR. MAXWELL SUFFERED. J. R. Maxwell, Atlanta, Ga., says—‘‘l suffered agon.v with severe eczema. Tried six different remedies and was in despair when a neighbor told me to try Tetterine. After using $3.00 worth I am completely •cured.” There is nothing else like Tetter ine for skin diseases. It quickly and per manently relieves Eczema, Tetter, Black heads, Pimples, etc.; and also itching piles. Price 50 cents at drug stores or by mail from Shuptrine Co., Savannah, Ga. DAISY FLY KILLER tracts and kills' all a^el * Neat, or namental, convenient, K cheap. Lasts all Be a s on. Made of metal, can'tspillortip ? H over > w ‘ a Dot soil or injure anything. Guaranteed effective. Bold by dealers, or WfesM—n— |.t:: paid for sl. HAROLD SOMERS, 150 DeKalb Ave., Brooklyn. N. t MALARIA DRIVEN OUT drances, and facilitates intercourse with heaven. “If the Lord our leader be, We may follow without fear; East or west, by land or sea, Home with Him is everywhere.” Second, I want us to look at the ministry of angels. You will notice the order of their ministry—he saw them ascending and descending. Ex acaly this same order is used in Christ’s address to Nathaniel, “The angels of God ascending and descend ing upon the Son of Man.” This clearly indicates that the first order of their ministry is to commu nicate our needs to God in the affairs of life. The business of the angels is not the business of God revealing this is reserved for Christ. He has no partner at all with him in that business save as He imparts revealing power to others. The angel is not God-revealing. The angel is primar ily for the purpose of ministry. Third, and last, I want us to see the providential oversight of God in the affairs of life. “Behold, the Lord stood above it.” How important for Jacob! How important for us, that we should remember that the Lord is above all our systems of thought and teaching, to accept or reject; to keep oversight of us; to direct in the min istry of comfort, guidance and vic tory. IV. His Confession—V. 16-17. This confession is in two parts. “Surely the Lord is in this place, and I knew it not.” “This is none other than the house of God, and this is the gate of heaven.” We see here that Jacob, at least in part, caught the meaning of the dream. He was brought to see the presence of God, and that the presence of God made that place the house of God. Would that Chris tians today might realize the same truth! Then our homes and places of business would be as sacred as the Temple. Then the home in which I live is to me, as a child of God, just as .sacred as this church building. Now I know, that there are some peo ple that do not like this, and that is just the reason I am enjoying it so well! The desk behind which you work, if you are a child of God, my brother, is just as sacred as any church altar that ever was built. I know men and women who are awfully care ful lest they should desecrate the house of God, who never think about dese crating their own homes. They find it not at all uncongenial to live like cats and dogs at home while they live like decent saints when they get into a church house. “Thou hast been with me in the dark and cold, And all the night I thought I was alone; The chariots of thy glory round me rolled; On me attending yet by me un known. The darkness of thy night has been mine day; My stoney pillows was thy ladder’s rest; And all thine angels watched my cough of elay, To bless the soul, unconscious it was blest.” V. —His Memoial. —V. 18-20. No wonder Jacob took the stone up on which he had pillowed his head, and set it up as a memorial to this Chills and Fever quickly cured and the entire system built up, restored appetite, clear brain, good digestion, renewed ener gy if you take The Golden Age for May 1, 1913 “The House of God—The Gate of Heaven” (Continued from page two.) JOHNSON’S TONIC place where he had received such a blessing! It is a good custom to mem oralize places and experiences of great spiritual importance. If we practiced it more we would have more expe riences to memorialize. Vl.—His Vow— V. 20-22. “Os all that thou shalt give unto me, I will surely give the tenth unto thee.” Here we have the beginning of what afterwards became the tith ing system of the Jews, which required that they should pay one-tenth of their income to the Temple. Our Lord him self endorsed this system in Matthew 23:23, when he said, “Ye tithe mint and anis and cummin; this ye ought to have done,” and whenever Jesus says that about anything, rest assured it is endorsed —for “ought” is ever his endorsement. What a wonderful experience Jacob had; how rich and full in its meaning. Jacob never lost its blessing, he car ried it with him in all the after-ex periences of his life. May we have our Bethel, and carry with us in all our life experiences, the consciousness of Christ as our leader of Mediation between ourselves and God! PRACTICAL SUMMARY. 1. A Disappointed Mother! There you have her photographed in this story we have gone through together. I do not know anything worse than the disappointed parent heart. Oh, how this proud, self-seek ing mother pictured her son, with the birthright and all that it entitled him to. But now all her plans have fail ed —she has looked upon her boy for the last time. 2. No Place and a Birthright Equals Hell. There Jacob was, with the birth right and with his father’s blessing, and yet being sought after by Esau who is going to kill him first sight! But there is something going on inside of Jacob that is a great deal worse than that, and that is, a bad conscience, for he knows he has cheat ed his brother out of his birthright; and down deep in his conscience there is an awful cyclone raging. It would be far better for him to lose his life for Esau, if he could only ease his conscience. 3. The Best Place to Find God is Where no One Else Is. Somehow we are so constituted that just as long as we can get to any one else, we will keep away from God. But you just get away from people to where God is, out there, as Jacob did on the rocky plains! Nobody to meet, nobody to speak to, and advise and plan with; nobody but God! When a man gets to a place like that, he is just bound to talk to God. 4. For Every Cry of the Soul There is a Ladder, an Angel, and the Lord! It will help us if we keep this in mind. For every 3ad aching heart, there is a ladder, an angel, ana the Lord. 5. If we Have Had our Bethel, Let us Make our Confession, Erect our Memorial, Pay our Vow. We certainly ought to be as good as a Jew, and especially a Jew who lived way back there in that day and time. If Jacob was willing to do that for God, what about us? 6. God and Ourselves Equals any Emergency. I am reminded here of a story in the life of Frederick the Great. On one occasion he was in a very lifficult The warranted remedy, con tains no alcohol or harmful ingredients. Liquid 25c and 50c, Chocolate Coated Tablets 25c at dealers or direct. Ad dress “Johnson’s Tonic.” Savannah, Ga. C?THI\ J YtexasY ✓ \cu«/\ \ (J / J*’ position, and called a council of war. He found his generals very despond ent, on counting up their small num bers as compared with the host of the enemy. The king, drawing him self to his full height, looked around the council chamber and exclaimed: “And how many do you count ME!” It is said that the Duke of Well ington once said that he considered the presence of Napoleon with his army as good as forty thousand addi tional men. So it has been well said that one man with God on his side, is in the majority, no matter how many may be against him. How much do we count the presence of Christ. How much does Jesus count to me? Does Jesus plus ourselves equal any emergency that we find in ourselves? Can he do it if we will let him? If he can’t let’s quit all this business and go out and play tiddle winks or something else. Thank God we know he can. We have tried it, seen it, and know it to be true that Jesus is equal to any emergency if we will unite with him. PINEY WOODS SKETCHES. (Continued from page 9.) needy person in the village. There had also been a change in the boys’ life at home. Instead of teasing their younger brothers and sisters, they would now sit down and help them with their lessons, and help do the chores around the house rather than leaving it for someone else to do. The wonder soon wore away in the village and all became accustomed to the new order of things, but the boys never forgot. Years have passed away, and the leader of the “gang,” “Gran dy,” sleeps beneath the sod, awaiting God’s final call for service in the Re deemed Society above. Yet he still lives in the lives of the boys of whom he was leader. The “gang” is scat tered abroad now, yet they are all successful and happy in their life’s work, having early learned the lesson of blessedness of service. 40,000 CHILDREN AT WORK IN COT TON INDUSTRY. One in 10 of all the wagerearners employed in the manufacture of cot ton is under 16 years of age, accord ing to the Bulletin of Manufactures just issued by the Census Bureau. The National Child Labor Committee points out that the textile industries are still the largest employers of children in factories, for this bulletin based on the census of 1910 shows 40,221 em ployed in the manufacture of cotton goeds, 11,111 in hosiery and knitting mills, 9,942 in the woolen and felt industry ana 8,143 in silk factories. The bulletin shows also 11,035 work ers under 16 engaged in canning and preserving and 78,951 scattered among seventy-seven other manufacturing in dustries. The largest percentages of factory workers under 16 are found in the South Atlantic States and Alabama; the next largest in Rhode Island and Massachusetts. It should be noted that these figures do not include the great child-employing occupations such as mercantile establishments, messen ger service, home-workers and street trading. A NEW CANCER BOOK FREE. A Revelation to Cancer Sufferers. Re sult of lifetime study and over 12 year* remarkable success treating cancer with medicines by one of America’s most emi nent physicians. Illustrates and show* absolute proof of permament cures effect ed. Why cancer should not be neglected; symptoms of different kinds of cancer; valuable suggestions and full particulars of the Doctor’s Combination Medical Treatment, etc. The book is FREE while this edition lasts. Write for your copy today. Address O. A. Johnson, M.D., 1320 Main St., Suite 301, Kansas City, Mo.