The Danielsville monitor. (Danielsville, Madison County, Ga.) 1882-2005, February 13, 1925, Image 5

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

, , eOLLIERS SUNDAY SCHOOL • • . We are £ till having Sunday School Cillers and fi*e work is going on. Lr superintendent is one among L b e e t *o carry on good works; he ' just simply make the weak C + "r- he has so many times stood "am? beirired and pleaded for the Ju that I almost cold hear God “Well done, thy good and faithful sen-ant. I will say he is rod's blessing to our community. n e always brings something to en tourage and interest the people. _ We have other good workers in our Sunday School, who are hard to . Vr L. O. Chandler is a Regular atendhy in God's works He this commttnity os superintend ent. for a long time oefore Brother Collier, and did fine work; sorry to he ar him say he could not attend and assist as he has before on ac count of getting older and his health not as good. Mr. Dickerson is one of our great helpers and is always cheeerful and agreeable and the best part be is the oldest man in our Sunday School and prayer meeting and is there on time always. Mr. J- 0. Chandler, son of Mr. j o. Chandler, I think, is one of the best young men; he is a willing worker at any good work; he looks for something to do and does it with willing hands; it does not matter with him, if one of the leaders are absent, he takes his place and never says a word —always glad to do something. We have seven teachers: Mr. Dick erson; M l v. R. S. Collier, Mr. J. 0. Chandler; Mrs. Jones; Mrs. An thony; Mrs. F. C. Tiller; Miss Thel ma Johnson. All agree and carry on the good works. We have a good man y to attend but we wish for as many as can come; there is a work for every one in our community ir we are to please God; so we are ask ing everybody, little, big, old and young, to come and help in our Sun day School and prayer meeting. We are always glad to have the Comer people with us. It makes us feel that someone else is thinking and working for the same place Heaven is the place. Why should we be such a peculiar 3 eople? We cannot find the path that leads to yesterday!. It has been trodden for the last time. We may look upon it with pride or with regret, but the past is the past; there is no road leading back to it, known by men or angels. For the sake of those who are younger it might be well to ask what, we would avoid and what we would do, if we could find the path that leads to yesterday, so that they may have occasion to echo our unavailing wish to have our yesterday back a sra:n. If I could find the path that leads to yesterday, I would conserve my time. Time—what is it? “Time is the stuff that life is made of." Each of us has al! tl ? time .there is, but we need to remember that time wasted is tence, only time used is life.’ People speak of “killing time . ” After all we cannot kill time; time kills us. It is said that we waste time. It is not time that we waste, but. opportunity. The trouble ia that *we cannot catch up with the time that we lose. Some of us have been chasing time that we lost at twelve years of age or twenty years of age of thirty or forty years of age, yet if we were to live two hundred and fifty years we would never overtake it. The dollar you lose may be found hy some other person, but no one found the day you lost. If I could find the path that leads to yesterday I would seek not to be happy, but to be useful. One of the saddest sights on earth to look into the faces of crowds in town or in the coimtry as they hurry by madly chasing after happi ness. The most of them think it can he found in wealth or in a fortunate marriage or in anew house, or in some higher position, or some exalt* er ‘ place of influence Many there be that search for hap piness, but few there be that find it, he-'a’ve for the mod oart they seek it in the wrong place;, they seek it along pathways of selfishness wkere along pathways of selfishness where it could not breathe. Selfishness is misery and death; service is joy and life. If I could find the path that leads to yesterday I would endeavor to find that path of file which I was made to follow. “Thou wilt show us the path of life,” says David in the six teenth Psalm, and the same may be said by every one who seeks guidance from God. Many people hurry thru the years and never fi id the path of life; they have not the least idea where they are going: but they are driving like John; their days are a' mad rush through work and w-hii-1 of amusement. Seek to get a clear idea of the meaning and purpose of your life. Have worthy and definite objects in view. Know where you want to go and how to get there. To know your goal—that brings peace to the mind and success to the life, if anything can. The question for us in youth is to discover not what will suit us, but for what we are suited; in other words to find out and accent God’s plan for cur life. We have no time to lament about the past. We cannot find the path that leads to yesterday. We cannot go back into the past a single inch. We cannot live life over. But the past is not useless, even if it is changeless. It speaks with clear and singing voice, warning a gainst the errors of early days and setting up danger signals along the journey of life. Leave the failure o'” the past as a dream; be a hero in future life. The past cannot be changed, but the fu ture is in your power. The only un sullied pages in the volume of your life are the pages you have yet to turn. lam firmly convinced that the highest good which ever comes to an other through the touch of a friend and teacher is that which comes out of the life one lives, not out of the few moments spent together in real Bible study. If all the men and wo men in our classes see is you and me and nothing of Him who sends ns, we might as well never have tried to teach at alt. Come, come one and all; we will welcome you, and if v.c- happen not to show you welcome as you think we ought, God will certainly welcome you, for I know He is with us in our Sunday School and prayer meeting. Take no ones word for it but corn'' and see for yourselves. ■—A member of the S. S. Eastikgs’Free '$ £fiEjL}k*2f * Hastings’ is giving away Absolutely Free, 5 Seed Packets of BcauHrul Flowers to each 1925 customer. Hast ings’ beautiful, new 112 page, 1925 Catalog shows these flowers in full natural colors. The front cover pic ures the great Stone Mountain Confed erate Memorial This Big Seed Book is the Standard Planting Guide, with valuable culture directions and accurate descriptions of all kinds of seeds, plants and bulbs. It has over 250 pictures from actual photographs and is bigger and better than ever. Brim-full of informa tion, it’s the most useful Seed Book ever published. You need it for ready reference al most daily. Be sure to write for it today; a post-card will do. It comes to you entirely free by return mail. H. G. HASTINGS CO., SEEDSMEN, ATLANTA, GA. MONEY LOANED by The Federal Land Bank at 5 I*2 per cent is now available. As it takes some 60 days to close a loan, please seeß me at once if you need money on your land. This is not only the cheapest money available on farm lands, but the farmer practi cally fixes his own terms of payment, and can never be called upon to pay the principal sum, except at the rate of SI.OO per SIOO annually. CLARENCE E. ADAMS THE DANIELS V It.* ta munuOK. UANIELS VILLE, GA, * * * r ******* * SHILOH LOCALS * The singing given by Miss Annie Mae Baxter Sunday afternoon was' enjoyed by 11 present. Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Tyner and children of Danielsville were guests of Mr. W. W. Tyner and family Sunday. The B. Y. P. If. at this place is progressing nicely. Mr. Horace Beatenbough spent Friday evening with Mr?. G. H. Tyner. Misses Minnie Will Fowler. Pau line Bruce and Orie Du Hey 'in-3 with Mirs Annie Mae Baxter Suiidav. Mrs. G. 11. Tyner was the ’<st of Mrs. Teat one evening last wees Miss Alpha Long sprit Sunday af ternoon with Mr. and Mrs J*e Scarborough. Mrs. Julian Bennett is on the •■' list; we hope to report her better soon. .... Mrs. L. D. Evans had as her guest Sundaa, her sister, Mrsj. Eula Sorrows and children frm near Eoyston. Mrs. Oscar Philips and children fluent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Fortson and family. Mr. J. F. Miller and children at tended preaching at Oak Grove Sunday. Mr. Roy Benton had the misfort une of, getting his arm badly hurt Saturday night. Mr. J. C. Chastain of Franklin county spent Saturday night with Mr., and Mrs. L. D. Evans and family. Miss Annie Mae Baxter couldn’t return to her school at Ila Monday on account of bad weather. The Madison County Singing Choir will meet at Shiloh Baptist chuck the first Sundaf afternoon in March. Everybody is invited. MONEY TO LOAN On Farms and other Real Estate in the Comer territory. GHOLSTON BROTHERS SHINGLES FOR SALE at Moore’s Bridge by J. E. Vaughn, Comer, Ga ~ Rt. 4 N, 1-8, 4t, pd Practical Nurse Tells Mrs. IT. E. Snow, of Route 1, near Paris, Tcnn., teiis the story of her experience as follows: “I am G 2 years old and I have been a practical nurse for more than 20 years, tak ing mostly maternity cases. One of my daughters suffered from cramping at . . . She would just bend double and have to go to bed. The Woman’s Tonic was recommended to her and she only had to take about two bottles, when she hardly knew that it was . . she suffered so little pain. “M y youngest daughter was run-down, weak and nervous, and looked like she didn’t have a bit of blood left—just a walking skeleton, no appetite and tired all the time. I gave her two bottles of Cardui. It built her up and she began eating and soon gained in weight and has been so well since.” Cardui, the Woman’s Tonic, has helped suffering women for over forty years. Try it At ah d.uggists • Something New All The Time That’s Our Motto: This week we expect to receive more new beautiful silks: A pure Silk Satin back Canton Crepe at 1.83 yard. Other pretty silks ‘English cloth’ in solids and stripes at 1.15 yard. NICE M ATERIALS, for the new frocks for early Spring; of spring flannel, Stripe Crepes, narrow and broad stripes and cheap pongees at 49c yard Indian Head In guaranteed fast colors, special 39c yard Out New Ginghams in the newest patterns for the spring are the prettiest we have ever shown Prices Lower 27 inch at 10 and 15c yard 32 inch at 19 and 29c yard Come to us for the BEST Values in / town iii ii na ■i wi hit fir Psmmt&L* ** W. A. Rowe Cos. C2?3m. 3r* CaS-si. T Children Cry for ■WWAW"""' T 'T -- ' ’y To avoid imitation*, always look for the signature of proven directirns on each package. FbyitCUW* everywhere recommend ft