The Golden age. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1906-1915, April 22, 1915, Page 12, Image 12
12
The Home Circle for Our Young People
Conducted by MRS. G. B. LINDSEY
Save Half
On Your
Machine ■
f 4W|
Buy your sewing
machine now, save half, and get it on easy
terms, through the Religious Press Co-Oper
ative Club. We have engaged a large num
ber from a leading American manufacturer,
securing prices very little above actual cost.
By buying from us you become a member of
a big buying club; you get your machine at
carload-lot prices, plus the small expense of
operating the Club. You save all middle
men’s profits, agents’ commissions, salaries,
etc.
We Give Yon Thirty Days Trial on
any of these machines. If you are not en
tirely satisfied that it is the equal of any ma
chine regularly sold at double the price, re
turn it to us, and the trial costs you nothing.
Easy monthly payments if you keep it.
Six Superb Sewing Machine Bar
gains are shown in the Club catalogue.
Prices range from $12.95 to $27.80. Latest
model —the best that can be manufactured
at the price. All fully warranted for ten
years.
Sign and Mail This Coupon Today. Get our
catalogue and investigate the Club plan that saves
you half on your Sewing Machine.
Religious Press Co-Operative Club
102 E. Carolina Ave. :: Clinton, S. C.
FREE CATALOGUE COUPON.
Religious Press Co-Operative Club.
102 E. Carolina Ave. Clinton, S. C.
Please send me your catalogue, and full details
of the Co-Operative Club Plan that will save me
half the price on a high quality sewing machine.
Name .... .
■■ Address
EARN big moneyl
Taking orders for -»ur Fruit I
Trees, Ornamentals, Roses, Etc.'
/ZggfrJrT. JSS. Light work. Permanent! ob. No
capital required. Experience
notnecesaarv. Thisisyourop
.portunity. Our business has
MNIMK been established 28 years and
" stands high with the public.
Writ* today.
SMITH BROS.,
V Dept. 45, Concord, Ga.
■■■■ ■■ rbwti wr'wwT-riw -mi ■—»■■■■■ ■ mi innr w—■*—
m■■ ■■ are b y a sys-
■Hs B H tern disorder ; the
HJM H M Mi outbreaking is
merely Nature’s
danger signal of the
■ ■ MHi MH internal conditions
which exist. To cure the protruding, itching or
bleeding, the INTERNAL CAUSE must be over
come. Dr. Leonhardt’s treatment has cured
when operations failed. SEND NO MONEY.
Try this treatment at our expense. DR. LEON
HARDT CO., IGO Forest Avenue, Buffalo, N. Y.
SOME VALUABLE SECRETS REVEALED
lIUVY to keep lemons fresh for three
months; how to keep flowers for weeks;
how to keep eggs and butter fresh for six
months; how to make hens lay <ll through
the moulting and winter seasons; th* eas
iest way to keep setting hens, pigeons and
poultry free from vermin; how to hatch
three times as many pullets than cockerels}
how to rot any stump In five weeks so
that it can be torn to pieces with a pick
axe; how to banish mosquitoes; how to
home-cure beef; all for 25 cents, which is
my complete charge for the above and
other inside valuable Information that will
help you wonderfully. I do not sell prep,
arations; satisfaction » guaranteed. I'rof.
W. C. Woodward, Box 115, Clementon, New
Jersey
MELON SEED GIVEN AWAY
Most Watermelon Seed old unfit. Our new
Kleckley red meat, sweet as sugar, melts on your
tongue, finest on earth, rich ground once net SIO.OO.
To introduce will mail postpaid any farmer U.S.A,
four ounces receipt .14cts. Peund up .50cts.
pound delivered. Fancy Sudan Grass same way.
Stamps will do. Write for exact special low de
livered cost direct to farmers anywhere U. S. A.
Frost Proof Carolina Cabbage Plants. Finely
ground Rock Phosphate, Stock Peas, Soy Beans,
Cane Seed, Millet, Clovers, Grasses, all Farm
and Garden Seeds. Superb Quality. State exact
pounds and ounces wanted. Do it today.
Nashville Field Seed Co. Nashville, Tenn.
IF THE BABY IS CUTTING TEETH
USE
Mr. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup
A SPLENDID REGULATOR
PURFIYVEGETABI.E-NOT NARCOTIC
CLARKESDALE
(As Seen by an Autumn Sunset.)
Clarksdale, Miss. —S. Burton Lucas.
Nest’ling on a fertile delta,
W here the yellow ‘‘Sunflower” flows
Fring’d by fields of rich alfalfa
Clarkesdale “blossoms like a rose.”
On the bridge, the river spanning
Gazing on the prosp’rous town
All her wealth and beauty scanning,
Capped by sunset’s golden crown.
W bile he throws his glowing colors
Lovingly about her homes,
As fond hands a warmer mantle,
When the child of evening comes.
One may dream of fields elysian.
A CONVICT PARDONED
The writer of this narrative once
made application to the governor of
the state of New York for the par
don of a young man who was con
fined in the state prison for a term
of years. He was a sinner. Reader,
you are a sinner; you are guilty; you
are condemned; you are in prison;
you are shut up in darkness; your
soul wants liberty—the liberty of the
sons of God. Come then and make
application to God for pardon. Make
it now. He will grant it to you if
you apply aright. This young man
was of a wealthy and respectable
family, but he had formed dissolute
habits. He used strong drink; it had
overcome him, and under its dread
ful influence he had sent a fellow be
ing almost instantly into eternity. He
was sent to prison; it brought his
father’s gray hairs down with sorrow
to the grave, but his mother lived.
She could not give up; she felt for
her son; she pleaded for him, wept
for him, and hoped for him as a
mother only can weep, and plead, and
hope. She lived through the energy
of her sympathy and her purpose to
have her son restored to her bosom.
Perhaps your mother has wept, and
prayed, and pleaded for you before
the Lord. It may be that she now,
every day, prays and weeps that you
may be pardoned, and that you may
be set at liberty from the bondage
of evil. O will you not weep and
pray for yourself!
We made application for his par
don. The governor asked us on what
ground we sought it? We presented
the case in as strong a light as truth
would permit.’ We pleaded the death
of the father, the age and tears of
the mother, and the affection of the
broken-hearted and only sister. We
presented a petition, signed by some
of the most respectable citizens of
New York, and argued his cause in
the best way that we could as we
plead your cause before God; “Fath
er, forgive them, for they know not
what they do.”
There were about two thousand
convicts in the state prisons; the gov
ernor said that the great number of
applications for. pardons perplexed
THE GOLDEN AGE
Just beyond our mortal ken,
For the scented air is laden
With a subtle power as when
Beings from a distant aden
Converse with the souls of men.
Here the piper might his music
Whisper thro’ the swaying leaves
While old Autumn’s artist fingers
Brighter hues for nature weaves.
As the dying sunlight mingles
With the moon’s first lambent beams
Comes again the question hoary
Asked by those we wiser deem,
Which beholds the greater glory
Eyes that see; or hearts that dreamr
him very much. How different is
your case? Christians plead for you
in the name of Jesus, and Jesus
pleads for you himself. Your case is
not perplexing to God; he knows
it; he is acquainted with the thou
sands and thousands which have been
presented to him for pardon; he
knows that you need pardon, and if
you come in the name of Jesus he
will grant it. Repent of your sins,
and come and plead that name, that
blessed name—
Angels and men before it fall,
In hell, or earth, or sky;
“Jesus, the name high over all
And devils fear and fly.”
If you repent and believe, he will
pardon you; he has promised to do
so. He will not hesitate; you have
his word for it: “Seek and ye shall
find, knock and it shall be opened
unto you.” “In the day that ye seek
me with all your heart I will be
found of you: him that cometh to me
I will in no wise cast out.” How
the sure promises of God come up
before us! O sinner, may the Lord
help you to turn unto him immedi
ately !
The governor told us to come again
in the morning: We went at the ap
pointed time, and the pardon was
granted; our hearts leaped for joy,
and we thanked him. But Jesus never
told any one to come the second time
when he went for pardon and sought
it in the right way.
We returned to the city. The next
day we went to the prison, presented
the pardon and were conducted
through the prison-yard to the rear
of the premises. The young man
was summoned by his keeper to leave
his employment and appear, just as
the Lord summons you when he says,
“Come unto me, all ye that labor
and are heavy laden, and I will give
you rest.” We then conversed with
him, as we had promised the gover
nor we would do, before we apprised
him of his pardon; we found him
penitent. He said his sufferings had
been a benefit to him, that he had
reformed, and that he had deserved
his punishment; but begged for par
don. We exhorted him, as we ex-
hort you, to flee the wrath to come
and to lay hold on eternal life, and
then told him that he was pardoned;
(Continued on page 13.)
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373 St. Louis, Mo. jg
RUB-MY-TISM
Will cure Rheumatism, Neu
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Sprains, Bruises, Cuts, Burns, Old
Sores, Tetter, Ring-Worm, Ec
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used internally or externally. 25c
CANCER CURED AT THE KELLAM
HOSPITAL.
The record of the Kellam Hospital ie
without parallel in history, having cured
without the use of the Knife, Acids, X Ray
or Radium, over ninety per cent, of the
many hundreds of sufferers from Cancer
which it has treated during the past eigh
teen years. We want every man and
woman in the United States to know what
we are doing. KELLAM HOSPITAL, 1617
VV. Main St., Richmond, Va. Write for
itorstnro
GRANDMA USED SAGE
TEA TO DARKEN HAIR
She made up a mixture of Sage Tea
and Sulphur to bring back color,
gloss, thickness.
Common garden sage brewed into
a heavy tea with sulphur and alcohol
added, will turn gray, streaked and
faded hair beautifully dark and lux
uriant, remove every bit of dandruff,
stop scalp itching and falling hair.
Just a few applications will prove a
revelation if your hair is fading,
gray or dry, scraggly and thin. Mix
ing the Sage Tea and Sulphur recipe
at home, though, is troublesome. An
easier way is to get the ready-to
use tonic, costing about 50 cents a
large bottle at drug stores, known as
“Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur Com
pound,” thus avoiding a lot of muss.
While wispy, gray, fadded hair is
not sinful, we all desire to retain
our youthful appearance and attrac
tiveness. By darkening your hair
with Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur, no
one can tell, because it does it so
naturally, so evenly. You just dam
pen a sponge or soft brush with it
and draw this through your hair,
taking one small strand at a time;
by morning all gray hairs have dis
appeared, and, after another appli
cation or two, your hair becomes
beautifully dark, glossy, soft and lux
uriant.
April 22, 1915