The intelligencer. (Anderson, S.C.) 1915-1917, October 05, 1915, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3
"Does Advertising
To ?? TIi^?ttgM Tested
We are going to apply the "Acid test"
to this question as it relates to our busi
ness; and to do that we propose to adver
tise in the Daily Intelligencer for a month
or so, naming SPECIALS of Known Val
ue at prices that mean SUfcSTANTf?L
SAVINGS to the Thrifty Shoppers.
Everybody know* that QUALITY is, arid always has
been the keynote of this grocery, so it will be unnecessary
to emphasize that point-?suffice ft to say that at any time
a purchase is not entirely satisfactory in every respect
your money awaits you here.
So, we will sell the following named SPECIALS at
prices named until Tuesday night next, for CASH; after
that time, other SPECIALS will be announced?for
CASH also. Remember please, that a SPECIAL is on
sale ONLY during the time advertised at the SPECIAL
price. After which time, it will revert to the regular
price.
"Three for a Quarter," meaning 3 packages of the regu
lar 10 cent packages of the justly celebrated Sunshine
crackers and cakes?the "Quality Biscuit of America,"
made in the Bakery of a Thousand windofvs. Q(J
(Fifty odd different kinds) 3 for . . . . . . *?%>C
Corby's Pullman Bread?the 19x3x4 inches?Two of
which are more than equal to any five cent loaves in
quantity, and which are baked in the most scientific and
^leanest Bakery in the World. These loaves sell for
13 cents, or 2 for 25c regularly?Special per ?1 .?\^
loaf (limit two to a customer) ...JL VrG
10 lb bucket of Standard make Compound Lard, regu
lar price $1,10?Special (limit one to a eus- aa
tomer). . . . .
Lyles' Golden Syrup, heavy and absolutely pure syrup.
-*Wiis is a high grade syrup and well "worth the \ ( *
regular price of 30 cents, Special per can. .. aCiajC
Large size No. 3 cans of whole Virginia Tomatoes, this
year's pack,; regular 10 cent.value. Special
3 for. .. i? .. .
Selected Fish Roe (canned) very fine for breakfast!
regular 20 cent value, Special 2 cans 25G
The celebrated Imported White Rose Ceylon Tea (comes
in iiie Original package) Grown and packed in Ceylon.
Regular price 30 cents a half pound, Special
(None better at any price).
Dutch Tea Rusk (In original package) very
.prescriber* by many Physicians at per pack
age . . . . .*.".
Domino Fancy Head Rice, in original package,
per package, 10 and. ...
Among other Standard lines of QUALITY groceries,
we carry the following White Rose canned goods in both
fruits, and vegetables. There is nothing m the canned
line that surpasses this line. Heinz pickles, condiments
arid preserves; Beech-Nut, Pea-Nut butter; Armours,
Ubbys, Morris & Co. meats and canned goods; Blue Rib
I bon extracts; and many others whose names are synony
mous with the Very Best in their lines.
Our delivery will be all that.you could possibly expect:
Our wagon will he "Johnny on the Spot" Now, K you
care to have QUALITY groceries at a BIG SAVING
watch this paper every day for our ads.
25c
fine and
10 c
25c
Phone 66 etary and often.
UGENEt^VERETT
Phone 56 2S9 Greenville
"iiinfni Hill?
AT THE &U?U EVERY-,
THURSDAY
AbtahUtr *<*' ted Striefr felws
Hotel
TTnyiiiMViiyn
Opposite Capitol and Union Station DC
Renowned Vor its High Service und Low Rates.
EUROPEAN PLAN
Bam p? *r wittomt p t j&O ?>
JfeOK r* *r with sttt $2.00 -4*
All Room* Outside
BfaAUtfcs-tbeM&ft
W. T. KNIGHT,
B? REVJjJ. DODGE
DELIVERED AT CENTRAL
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
SUNDAY
STRONG APPEAL
Compassion of Jesu? for Masses
Caused New Departure in
His Minutry.
Sunday morning the Ho v. D With-j
erspoon Dodge, pastor of the Central
Presbyterian cnureM; delivered a very]
impressive missionary sermon which
was well received. There was a
splendid congregation present and the j
Rev>. Dodge's sermon has been the |
cause of much comment.
The text is as follows and then the
sermon in part:
"But when He saw the multitudes,
He was moved wit.i compassion on
them, because they fainted, and were
scattered abroad, as sheep having no
Bhepherd." Matt. 9:86.
"Jesus is at a new juncture In His j
ministry. 80 far, He has been going
about the cities and villages of Gali
leo, teaching in their synagogs,
preaching the gospel of the kingdom,
and (dealing every sickness and dis
ease among the <people (verBe 35.) He.
ht? had His twelve disciples with
Him, but they have not so far taken
any definite part in Hl? work; they
have merely looked on while he did
the work singlehanded. Butj now
the work Sias become too large for
Him to do alone, an"" He prepares [
the twelve for an evangelistic mission
among the multitudes of the people, I
an account of which mission we have '
in the succeeding chapter.
"That which caused the new depar-I
tu re in the ministry of Jesus vvas His I
comnass'on tor the masses of the peo
ple in their pathetic end neglected
condition. He had begun with the
synagogs,' In which were the scribes,
Pharisees and chief priests, foremost
representatives of the existing insti
tut le-3 of religion. Tads was the pro^
per parting point for Him as the
herald of a new order, and He shows
His wisdom by beginning there. If
He could win th? allegiance of the j
recognised authorities in religious af
fairs, He would be saved the bitter
work of opposing them and the enor
mous task of first tearing down In or
der that He might again build up Hie |
kingdom. It was also loving and:
kind in Jesus to begin here, for as
conservators of the best traditions of
the past and as the representatives
of the moat beneficent Influences of
former days, they deserved some rec
ognition from the Founder of the new
and larger order which was to he
built on the past.
"But His work with these leaders
of religion was unsuccessful. They
regarded Him as an Innovator, and
wanted none of His teaching. . They'
looked upon Him as a subverter of
true religion of which they were the
infallible guardians. They first be
come suspicions of -Jesus, then they
oppose Him, and finally they perse
cute and kill Him. So when Jems
finds them .unwilling for tho new
movement, and at the same time 'need
less of the painful misery of the com
mon people. lie turns His eyes from
tl oui, llf -a them up npon Ute neglect
ed multitudes, ha^ compassion on
them and sends Ills disciples out to
mlc'stcr to their needs, both physical
and spiritual.
"We have in this Incident tte abid
ing type of the history of progressive
movements in religion. In religion,
as |n everything elso, people are di
vided Into two classes, the conserva-,
fives and the progressives. The
first are always content with things
t-ai tftey are, lovers of tradition, with
uialy. eyes turned toward Uw past,
afraid of anything new, opposed <o
change of any kind; and worst of all,
generally enjoying a shug comfort St
th? expense of the down-trodden mul
titudes ta whom they should be min
istering. The page* of history give
no uncertain answer on this point.
The other classes, While retaining a
hig'i rega*d for the past of which it
is he heir, believing that every pro*
phet has apofcen for them, every poet
6RAH0NUIUSE? SftSE
TEATOWN RM3
She Mixed SuTptfar with it {to
Rette?? Color, Gloss,
IC
Common garden sage brewed Into a
heavy lea wi?-i Sulphur and alohol
adue?> will ta. A gray, streaked and
faded hair beautlfull dark and luxu
riant, remove every hit -of dandruff,
stop ) scalp Itching and falling hair.
Just a few applications will proie a
revelation if your hair is facing,
gray or dry. scraggly and thin. Mixing
the Sage Tea and Strrphor recipe at
home,, though, Is troublesome. An
osilor*way is to get the ready-to-uee
tonic, 'costing shout S? cents a large
bottle ai,? drug stores, known as
"Wyetb'a Sage and Sulphur Gonv
pound," thus avoiding S lot of muss.
While wispy, gray, fadei hair Is not
sinful, we all desire to retain our
youthful appearance and attractive
ness. By darkening your i#wr <Jm
Wyeth'? Sage and Sulphur, ?0 one
can tell, because it does so naturally!
so ?van?. Yon Just dampen a spongo
or ao&3>rnsh ojth it and draw this
through your hair, taking one small
Strand at ? time; by morning all
gray harre have disappeared, and, er>
ter another application or two. your
hair becomes beautifully dark, glossy,
soft and luxur'.anL
dreamed for them, every artist paint
ed for them, every lawgiver promul
gated the abWlpg principles of truth
and Justice fpr'lh'eni. is at the same
time ready te^hulld upon these foun
dations sopio 'greater building, as
these find their fulfilment in its la
bora. It wisely has an eye to appre
ciate the vast, but its vision Is more
of the present and still more of the
future.
"The churches of today' are con
fronted with this identical situation.
Our tot to cast in a new day whtch
calls for pew methods. We live in a
revolutionized political world, in a
changed industrial world, in a new
social world. The world today 1b
? larger world than the world of our
fathers; and there is need, of a lar
ger work, on the part of the church.
What shall the church do? Shall it
take the lead of the Pharisees? Or
Shall ft follow its Lord? In particu
lar, the political world of our day
has corruptions about which the voice
of the Ood of righteousness ought to
"b<> heard; the social wo.-'i is infested
with rottennesses that need purifying; j
the industrial world is guilty of in
justices upon which the Ood of Jus
tice cannot look with complacency;
and most of all, the religious world
la in many ways still regarding itself
only as the conservators and defen
der's of the past, wasting its time in
an apologetic ministry, when It should
take some things for granted as prov
en and launch out into the deep to
catch the larger fish. Is not the
immanent spirit of the C'.irlst knock
ing at the door of the church today
as the historic Je?us knocked in the
daya of His flesh, saying to it in the
word; of Jehovah of old to Moses,
"Command the people that they go
forward?'*
"Surely if Jesus looked on the mul
titudes with compassion when He
walked our earttf, He looks on it wiUi
no less compjfjBfion today. Our world
is a sight.to draw His compassion.
The picture winch our text gives us is
"jut a miniature picture of tho world
whitfai has Its lifo size in the condi
tions which |ils disciples are sent to
the uttermost parts of the world to <
change and to replace with, the new
order of th? kingdom of God. Many,
even of His followers, are Indifferent
and unconcerned about these condi
tions; but He has compassion on the
multitudes. Ot?iers perhaps look on
tho multitudes with scorn and con
tempt; but Jesus has compassion on
the multitudes'. He sees that they
are torn and fleeced and lacerated,;
faint, weary, exhausted and scatter
ed abroad, as sheep without a shep
horp thatT.iave beeu pursued by the
wolves and robbers. And Jesus has
compassion on them, and desires that
they should have leaders who Shall
bring them safely Into the fold w?ero
they too can enjoy somo or the fruitc
of civilisation. '
"In order that He might inspire men
with a desire-to save these lost sheep,
Jesua set two powerful motives be
fore them. , The first, was the uu
manitarian motive. Just the 'sight of
men scattered and helpless like sheen
be a sufficient motive to rouse H 1b
followers to active efforts for their
relief. This motive always appealed
very strongly to Him, as the record
tella us how He had compassion on
tho Ignorant masses whom He taught,
on. the hungry crowd whom Ho fed,
on tlr? ieper whom He cleansed and
healed. And.it 1b a motive whldir
should appeal to everyone of His fol
lowers. If any man have not Tils
spirit, be is none of His. "Let. tb'
mind be in you,"rjlhe apostle sa; s.
"whtch was a||0V||n Christ Jesus. '
The Christlan.xaan or woman woes*
heart Christ Ja*, touched needs no
divine command to go wherever
there is need in relief of It; his heart:
of love is as responsive to need as is
the stringed instrument to the toiic'i
of the master musician. The very
fact that there is ignorance, sickness,
misery, spiritual destitution among
the multitudes fires tr > true follow
er of J?sus Christ to go to the ends
of the earth on a mission of ministry
to ttiat need.
"The other motive which Jesus
presented to the minds and hearts of
' His'followers was the divine one; Ho
appealed- to-them in behalf of a pro
net, seal for God's glory: "Th? har
vest is plenteous, but the laborers 'Are
few; pray ye:therefore the Lord o?
the harvest that Ha send forth lab
orers Into His harvest." The harvest
is God's harvest. He has matured it
in many cases without our help. He
now asks of ua that we toave a euffi
dent love for Him to go out and gath
. 'or in that which is ready for the pick
ing.
"The humanitarian motive is a
strong one, but it Is not sufficient by
Itself. Experience has prov*"' it.
There has been much effort at '-.rial
uplift which has been divorced from
roUglon, and H has fallen through.
Hero is the weak epot in much of the
.socialism of our day. Being built
upon none but. a human bssis. It in
yisjhlj 'degenerates into selfishness,
wbich^of cout-se always means death.
When men get God out of tVelr
thoughts end plans, time waits like
th? Tinder taker" for the body of death,
who** e&ftaquifrs and interment duly
I follow. .So Jesus wo id have His
followers to posse s the upward look
and the f?r vifliortV?rring them by all
of f.ie motive i?-?itttnde. love.and
the fear of accountability for their
ete-Aartlship; ' ft* they responded (to
His call for^raor?rs. But when w?
borne to reaihte the precious Father
hood of our God, and took upon oar
selves as co-workers with Him, w*
have reached the plane of live high
est motive which can appeal to the
tinman heart, and vhis no doubt is
the naotlv* ubhh Jesus intended to
j?Kace before us,
"Jesus went to tfje aeart of the mat
ter whan He told His d'yoles to pray
the Lord of the harrast Co send forth
laborers into Hie harvest. Prayer
solves eU of the p'obiems of U?e king
dom. For one cannot pray without
thereby pledglug CilmaVM :o do his
fart in t re effectuation of tb: purpose
for which he frays. If Odd's rich
children were praying for the aalva
>n or the multitudes, do n>u think
t5?at there would be any lack of funds
with Walch to send the laborers who
SEED AFTER RAINFALL
SOMETHING OVER 3,000
POUNDS SOLD IN PAST
FEW DAYS
TOTAL OF 8,000
Rough Estimates Are Made By
Furman Smith, the Seedsmen
?Others Sales Also Good.
"Why the people have Just been
taking out alfalfa seed ferociously,"
stated Mr. Furman Smith, tiie sceds
ronjn, yesterday -when asket about
seed business since the rains of a
few days ago. "You know that
drought was playing havoc; the farm
ers could not sow their alfalfa, did
not have a stand of turnips, could not
plant their fall gardens and could
not prepare their land for winter
oats, t?beat. winter cover crops, etc.
They are all happy now, or seem to
be, and wit hcottov. at 12 cents per
pound everything is going good.
"Since the last rain I have sold 3,
S00 -pounds or about 60 bushels, ot al
falfa seed. Before then I sold at
least 5,000 pounds which makes a
total of 8,000 pounds or something
over 30 bushels. It generally takes
about 85 pounds of seed to the acre,
therefore, my sales represent an
acreage of something like 330 acres.
Most of these seed havo been Bold
to larmrs In Anderson county, too,
although I have sold a great many In
Abbeville county. I believe your es
timate of approximately 200 acres in
alfalfa in Anderson county tUls fall,
which you published in Tho Intelli
gencer a few days ago, will be about
correct."
Geisberg's Potato Chips Fresh,
and Crisp Daily, Phone No. 733.
arc volunteering out into the harvest
field ot Ood? No; Jesus here nut His
finder on the weak spot In tho lifo of
His followers. They are not praying;
they s re "laying up their treasures on j
earth," and so the (harvest year after
year is ungarnered.
"Oh, may we see this world through
the eyos of Jesus Christ, may we as
sume the role that He discharged, to
minister and not to be ministered un*
to, and may we have tJhat "heart of
compassion" which the apostle pray
ed that the Christians in the early
days might havo.
"Yes
You are m better shape
than you thought. Paint ap
plied to your house will pro
tect it frosa snow and ram
that wQl soon be her*.
We carry the largest and
best stock of paint in the
Piedmont to select from.
Before you boy
Anderson Paint &
Color Co.
132 North Main
?47.
Um it like a cold cream tad
dry Kffl-emft eruptions
right up.
The moment rou nnply bold-sulphur
to sh Kehhtg' t#r broken out stria, 'the
itehlng stem and heating begins, say*
a reDf-wncd dcr-naiologiBt
. Thi? ii-?i-fui?i???k- liSpnur made *nto a
thick creftn; effect* wich prompt relief,
visa in Aggravated Ecr?ma., that it is
a never-ending source of amassment to
physician*.
For many years bold-sulphur has oc
cr,-te4 a. secure) poeitiea fa Abe iressV
}Sv,fnt of cutaneous eruption a by reeson
/J its cooling, Paras! tc-destraying prop
?rtfr* a*d nothing has e-*r beert found
to take it* plsoft in relieving irritable
land inflammatory onVttlons of the skin.
I While not altVnys establishing a perma
nent cure, yoi in every Instance, ft
hsumUttteiy subdues the Heftiftg imita
tion and hotus iko K.?zema right up and
I it is'often yenrs later before airy ?rup
tion agaia manifest* itself.
*?Any coed druggist will supply au
?muco of ho?c>?uipuur, Whleh ?houId be
applied to to* affecie? part? Ilk* the
ordinary raid ovewn? It Un*t tf?jpt**S
an* and tite prompt relief sffordod is
verv welcome, particularly when tJi?-f ?&
?r.ia is acconpaaled with torturous itch?
Contrary
To what some people would have you believe
this is not a high-price store.
Evidence
We furnished last week?St. Mary's?Ander
son's new Hospital with Sheets, Pillow Cases,
White Quilts, towels and Blankets. Quality at
a reasonable price was what they w.inted-^we
got the order.
Our Staples
Are just as particularly chosen as our high-class
goods. You'll lind here quite a variety of all
that's new and good.
And
We'd like to have yo? give us a .chance to fill
your orders?we can do it.
New Dresses for
Today
hi I
U.V.?
$1.50 to $25. New Shirt Waists for Today
$2.50 to $5.00.
HTW^^HBI If, III ) J-J-WHBWttJJj II
We are far better prepared to eeH you the buggy
beet suited to your needs than any other dealer in
die Piedmont. Why? Because of oar great as
sortment off STANDARD makes of baggies. Look
at these:
ci
"BABCOCK" "MOVERS*
TYSON & JONES" "ROCK MILL
?'NORMAN'*
^$9
"STUDEBAKER" "TKORNHILL"
"KElS^ruCKY,,
Can you beat this Kst of High Grade Bugg?es and
Wagons? In truth, yon are booed to few op that
you cent.
We are selling these vehicles for either Cash, or
On Terms, or we wfll trade them for Mules; ? ffacS
we will trade any way that suits you. If yr.-a have
any male? yea want to trade or svl? bring them in,
we wOl buy tivssn cotright for Use Cash Or we wffl
trade PqgfJfiM) Wagon* or Harness, etc., ancl treat
you fair and s^ruare, too.
ie
Dealers m Melee, Horse*,
and Harnes?.
it