FKiJJAI, MAI OV, A917. LEMON JUICE IS FftECKLE REMOVEF Girla! Make This Cheap Beauty La tion to Clear and Whiten Your Skin. Squeeze the juice of two lemoiu into a bottle containing three ounces of orchard white, shake well, anc you have a quarter pint of the besl freckle and tan lotion, and complex' ion beautifier, at very, very smal cost. Your grocer has the lemons an<5 any drug store or toilet counter wil! supply three ounces of orchard white for a few cents. Massage this sweet ly fragrant lotion into the facp, neci arms and hands each day and se how freckles and blemishes disappear and how clear, soft and white the skin becomes. Yes! It is harmless.?A dr. ^ ' LIFT CORNSOR CALLUSES OFF Doesn't hurt! Lift any corn or ' callus off with fingers 4'M*/ .8 g Don't suffer! A tiny bottle of Freezone costs but a few cents 'at Any drag store. Apply a few drops on the corns, calluses and "hard skin" on bottom of feet,N then lift them off. , When Freezone removes corns from the toes or calluses from the bottom of feet, the skin beneath is iff r?inV n-nH healthy and never sore tender or irritated?Adv. iOL MAKES WEAK WOMEN > wrn * Positive?Convincing Proof We publish the formula of Vinol to prove convincingly that it haa the power to create strength. n Cod Liver sad Beef Peptone*, Iron " sad ManfaaeeePeptocalea, Iran and Ammonium Citrate, Lime and 8oda ' Glycerophosphate?, Caacario. Any woman who buys a bottle of Vinol for a weak, run-down, nervous condition and finds after giving it a fair trial it did not help her, will Have her money returned. You see, there is no guess work about VinoL Its formula proves there is nothing 19k it for all weak, run-down, overworked, nervous men and women and for feeble old people and delicate children. Try it once and be convinced. \p. B. SPEED and Druggist* Every i Don't Proi Your Liver to Action Nil OwreofliM Biliousness, Const I p*. tion, Sick Hnatfsohs, Quickly. IV* Griping or Pain. Guaranteed. The organs of digestion, assimilation and elimination?the stomach, liver and bowels?are closely allied, and the proper action of any of these crsnns Is largely dependent upon the correct functioning of all the others. "Whipping" your liver Into action. ?!th calomel or forcing your bowels ..1th Irritating laxatives or strong r-.thartica Is a great mistake. A beti.r, safer plan is strengthening and toning the whole digestive and eiiminai!ve system with Nature's Remedy ; "It Tablfets), which not only brings )-".mediate relief, but genuine and lastv benefit. It acts on the stomach, .Vver, bowels and kidneys, Improves igcction and assimilation, overcomes * I Piousness, corrects constipation and v iekly relieves sick headache. , Get your system thoroughly cleansed l1 purified for once; stomach, liver r ?d bov.-els "working together in vig tous harmony, and you will not havo jt> taI:o rncdlcina every day?Just tako cno NR" Tablet occasionally to keep your system in good condition and al%;r""S feel your best. Remember it is c-atici.' and cheaper to keep well than \ It is to get V.'0!1. Get a 25c bcx and try it with the w.derstanding that it must give you greater relief and benefit than any bdwel or liver medicine you ever used or no pay. Nature's Remedy (NR Tablets) is sold,, guaranteed and recommended by your druggist. McMurray Drug Co. ?mhqol Lesson !By REV. P. B. FITZWATER. D. D? Teacher of English Bible In the Moody J Bible Institute of Chicago.) 51 Copyright, 1919. by WMtern Newspaper Cnlon.) i : i LESSON FOR JUNE 1. t . FAITH, WHAT IT IS AND WHAT I IT DOES. ! LESSON TEXTS?Hebrewi 11:1-40; 12: At I GOLDEN TEXT?Ye believe in God. beI Ueve also in me.?John 14:1. ADDITIONAL MATERIAL?Matt ?* ! 13; Mark 2:1-12; Ron. 1:16-17; 8:21-30; S4; 1 John 6SL ? . ' PRIMARY TOPIC?Story of a Man Who . I Believed in Jesus. (John 9:1-34.) kl JUNIOR TOPIC?Heroes ?rFaith. i INTERMEDIATE TOPIC-Ths Victory ?f Rdth. ' SENIOR AND ADULT TOPIC-The. , Place of Faith in Religious Ml*. In Hebrews, chapters 1-10 the grounds of faith are clearly set forth. , In this lesson its nature and glorious triumphs are displayed. 1. The Nature of Faith (11:1-8). L Faith is the eye of the aonl, enabling It to see the InvlMble (v. 1). It is not merely intellectual assent to that which commends Itself as being reasonable, but it Is the soul's attitude toward God. ? 2. Faith seises the things of the future and lives and walks in their power in the present (v. 1). 8. It enabled the "elders" to obtain a good report (v. 2). It made God's promises so living and real to them that It became the dominant force In their lives. 4. Faith enables us to understand how the worlds were made (v. 3). No man was present when God made the worlds, so the foundation for our knowledge is the Word of God. The one who has faith vpholly believes that Word. II. The Triumphant Victories of Faith (11:4-38). 1. Faith of the antediluvian saints (w. 4-7). As representative of this period three men are pointed out: (a) Abel (v. 4), who displayed his | faith In his worship. He took his ,[ place before God as a sinner and ofj fered.a bloody sacrifice, thereby showIng that he looked forward to Christ's it atonement, which Js substitutionary? a life for a life, (b) Enoch, who displayed his faith in his walk in fel' lowship with God (v. 5). fc) Noah, who by faith stood loyal to God Id a j time of uliversal apostasy and wtck, nedness (v. 7). Noah's task was a stupendous and difficult one. .He exe' ctited It in the face of many a sneer bat Jfo/aith carried hlra through, securing, salvatlofi for hlraself and his/amii^ "" 2. FaltE of the Hebrew g&Tnh (vt. 8%8). (a) Abraham 7vv 8-10. 17*19). Abraham went out' nol mowing whither he went, but he knew that the Lord had spoken and that was enough. By faith he offered up Isaac, believing that God was able to raise him up from the dead and fulfill his promise that in Isaac the promised seed should obtain, (b) Sarah through faith received strength to conceive seed when she was old, counting him faithful who had promised (w. 11,12). (c) Jacob by faith pronounced a' i DroDbecy concerning Joseph's sons (v. 121). By faith he penetrated the unseen and pronounced destinies which should be -experienced by them both. . (d) Joseph by faith foresaw the entrance of his people Into the promised, land -and mdde them swear to carry Bits bones there for burial, for even'Ms body , must not be left behind In the land of judgment and death (v. 22). (e) Moses (w. 23-28). Faith th the hearts of his parent! caused them to disregard the king'* decree. Faith caused him to turn hit back upon the honors of Egypt and Identify himself with his enslavec brethren. III. Faith's Grand Exemplar (12: 1. 2). Christ taking upon himself humav nature and passing through the trial* of life to a triumphant goal Is th? supreme example for us. Those whc fix their eyes upon him will (1) laj aside every weight To run with sue cess all burdens must be cast off Things which raajr not be sinful i* themselves. If they Impede oui progress must be laid aside. (2) Laj aside the sin which doth so easllj beset us. (3) Run with patience th< race set before us. (4) Looking untf Jesus. Our eyes must be steadfastlj fixed upon him. Having him as oui example ^fe will endure the cross. T* follow Jesns means suffering am trials. Love as a Word. Love, even ns a word only, emisI stand nlone. It Is, one of the grenl monosyllables of our jfreat language T T4- lo +H<\ fnvlclK1 o rrt*n*?1 fn. XL ?.T* tuv uiMOiint 1^1 U1IIH tlon of life. With its invisible c^rds viewless bnt potent, it draws hearts together over eternal spapes, and holds them together In an indissoluble bond In Time and Eternity^ The Wonder of It! "Lord, when I look on my own lift It seems thou hast fed me so care fully, so tenderly, that thou cansi have attended to no <>ne else. But when I see how wonderfully thoi hast led the world, and are leading It, I am amazed that, thou hast hac! time to attend to such as I.M?St Augustine. > Why Man Fallu. Me.n '.oulcl not {all so low were ht not so great. It Is the tlbused God ti a man that tarns him into a devtl. ;J FAMOUS BROOKS-SUMNER ? j INCIDENT 63 YEARS AGO j Sixty-three years ago Friday, May ! 22, Col. Preston S. Brooks, then a' member of the lower house of con-' gress, severely chastised* Senator i Charles Sumner of Massachusetts for' certain aspersions cast on Senator.' Butler, also from South Carolina,' and an uncle of Colonel Brooks. The' following story from the New Orleans Times-Picayune will be read with interest today on this the 63rd j - * - ? i- Li-L i anniversary oi an incident wmcnj fanned into consuming flame the heated passions between the North1 and the South: A paper was being circulated in this city authorizing a call for aj mass meeting of citizens, irrespective of political affiliation, to be held in Lyceum (City) Hall on the evening of the 29th of May, 1856. The object of the meeting was to adopt resolutions expressive of the sympathy of New Orleans for Col. Preston S. Brooks of South Carolina, then a member of the lower house of con-J gress, and making manifest its con-! viction of the justification of Colonel Brooks' assault upon the Hon. Char-' leg Sumner of Massachusetts, on the1 22nd in the senate chamber at the capitol. This affair was the senea-' tion of the day and, it was said, did more to hasten the war between the1 North and South than even the ques-' tion of slavery itself. All over the South the conduct of Colonel Brooks' in this chastising Senator Sumner' ; for the ridicule and sarcasm which the lattet heaped unsparingly upon Senator Butler was universally palliated, if not applauded, from the fact especially that Senator Butler was an uncle of Colonel Brooks, and .ws . absent from the senate at the time .the language resented was used. It ! was recalled by'the New Orleans pn-l 4 ' ' M pers that Colonel Brooks, had served i gallantly in the Jlexican war, where he had a brother killed. He was rep-! resented, by persons who knew <*nd! 'had seen him in congress, as a splen-' did specimen of man?open, generousheatfed, kind and chivalric, in-r, capable of a dishonorable act on1 feeling. He was 30 years of age, re-1 markably fine looking, very popular . jn congress, and was said to have], been 6n good terms with and liked by ! many of the most violent abolition-1 ists. Senator Butler, on the other , hand, was an old man, with long white fakir, and venerable in appearance, while Sumner was quite young ( enough to be his son; and thi3 fact, probably added greatly to the provocation, which The Delta observed, "must be great indeed to have induced such a man as Colonel Brooks to punish Sumner in the way and at the. time and place he did." "The illustrious example given by J Henry S. Foote and Thomas H. Ben-j ton," said The Picayune, comment-! ing upon the Brooks-Sumner affair, "in' their famous senatorial rencon- j tre, appears likely to have many imitators, and official life in Washington is every year becoming less digni-, fied and less agreeable. A short time, since, Horace Greeley, a professed! non-combatant, was violently assaulted by Mr. Rust of Arkansas, j who had an easy victory over a very weak individual, who was inferior co, him in physique. It appears that! Mr. Greeley reviewed one of Mr.' Rust's speeches rather severely, butj his remarks were not such as to de-j mand the very harsh penalty exacted! for them." Col. Preston S. Brooks took ex-j ception to the following language used by Senator Sumner in his speech of the 22nd: "With regret 1^ come again upon the senator fronr South Carolina, {Mr. Butler), who, omni-present in this debate, over-' flowed with rage at the'simple sug-; gestion that Kansas had applied for' admission as a State, and with incoherent phrases discharged the loose expectoration of his speech, now upon her representative and then upon her neoDle. There was no extrav agance of the ancient parliamentary debate which he did not repeat fior was there any possible deviation from truth which he did not make.; But the senator touches nothing which he does not disfigure with er-; l ror, sometimes of principle, some-! times of fact. He shows an incapac-l 1 ity of accuracy, whether in stating j I the constitution or in stating the law, whether in the details of statistics,; or the diversions of scholarship. 'Hq can not open his mouth but out there J ! flies a blunder.' i "But it is against the people of f ! Kansas that the sensibilities of the senator are particularly groused. 'Coming from a State, as he announces, aye, sir!, from South Carolina, he turns with lordly disgust to this newly formed community, which he will not recognize even as a 'body politic.' Pray, sir, by what title does he indulge in this egotism? Has he read the history of the State which he represents? He can not surely have forgotten the shameful imbecility from slavery confessed throughout the revolution, followed by its more shameful assumptions of slavery since." Mr. Butler, the aged senator and uncle of Colonel Brooks, was absent in South Carolina on a visit to his family when this language was uttered. "On the same day," said the Washington correspondent of The Delta; "Colonel Brooks waited at the Porter's Lodge about an hour and as long on the next morning with a view of meeting Mr. Sumner and attacking him. Failing in this, he entered the senate chamber jyst as that body adjourned, and seeing several ladies present, seated himself on the opposite side to' Mr. Sumner. ( Soon all disappeared but one. He then requested a friend to get her out, when he immediately approached Mr. Sumner, and said in a quiet tone of voice: 'Mr. Sumner, I have read vour sneech with Treat care, and as much impartiality as I am capable of, and I feel it my duty to say to you that you have published a libel on my State, and .uttered a slander upon a relative, who is absent, and I am / come to punish you.' "At the conclusion of these words, Mr. Sumner attempted to spring to his feet, showing a disposition to escape, but > was struck by Colonel Brooks a backhand blow across , thj head with a gutta percha cane nearly an inch thick, but hollow, and he continued striking him right and left until the stick ^ras broken into fragments, and Mr. Sumner was prostrate and bleeding on the floor. Noone took hold of Colonel Brooks during the time, so quick was the operntinn hnf imfnpHinlplv nftprwarrin Mr: Crittenden caught him around' the body and arms, when Colonel Brooks said:' do not $rish to hurt: him much, but only whip him.' No ^ne knew of the anticipated attack but the Hon. H. A. Edmondson of irginia, who happened not to be pre-| Bent when the attack commenced. It was reported on the fctreets for several days previous that Mr. Sumner would be armed when he deliver: p Copyright l?? *>T R. J. Reynold* '| Tobacco Co. | ed his speech, and, .that if occasion' i required it, he would use his weapons i He was not armed when Attacked by! 1 Colonel Etrooks today. It ft said, also'l ! that Mr. Stimner gave out, before he' i 'made V speech that he would be! respo ole for anything he might ] say. A ter his arrest, Colonel Brooks , sent t- the office eft Justice Hollings-j < head and tendered ms oond and se-' < j curities to appear and answer any;, charge preferred by the grand jury, j But the justice, deeming the bond: ] premature, discharged him upon his < parole of honor to appear before him' j ^vhen required. .Subsequently Colo-', ; nel Brooks was complained of by i i William Y. Leader, on whose oath < : Justice Hollingshead required Colo-j i . nel Brooks to give bail in the sum of j < $500 as security for his appearance i \ 1 | * when called upon. The m^st intense < excitement, of course, was produced: ] amongst the negn/' worshipers, and ] they were making very fierce threats and working assiduously to have Colonel Brooks expelled from1 the house.'.' The Courier's correspondent added: "About a dozen senators and many stranger^ happened to be in j the chamber at the moment of tiie ] fight. Sumner, I learn, was badly 1 whipped. The city is considerably j excited, and crowds everywhere are < discussing the last , item. Sumner 1 SAVE TIRES S do not ruin tires if properly repa Let us examine and advise j casings. ' ' j Tube repairing, 25c. up; Cai MARTIN an At City < r y ... .. ,? _ PUREE > I I rT , - . ? HAS JUST BEEN EQUIPP ' WITH MACHINERY FOR A KINDS OF MACHINE WOf . Weathers < | K OLDSMOBILE an4 CHAM ; 525 Broad St ; i f ' ' - ' ' - . . . i i i = , ?1k g^t the Prin V" You'll hunt; |[||j8fl?- * get so much ||P^ puff you'll \ twins! For, Prince new to every man ? made cigarette. It1 pletely. That's be f And, right behind this qt Wf . grance is Prince Albert's fr K which is cut out by our e We tell you to smoke yo pipe or makin's cigaretteToppy red bags, tidy red half poand tin hamidors? pound crystal glass humit top that keeps the tobacc R. J. Reynolds Tobacco ( . . >: cried: 'I am most dead! I am most dead!' After Sumner fell between ' # two desks, his own having been overturned, he lay bleeding and cried ^ out: 'I'm almost dead.'" " J / "? While Mr. Sumner's friends in the . East werje piling up resolutions of . condolences with him, the friends of > Colonel Brooks in every State ? ^ throughout the South, including Mis- -'' sissippi and Louisiana, did not'stop ,, $ it commendation, but proposed the ' 6; jestowal upon him of visits and sub-' : fj'$ stantial token of the high apprecia- '; ? non in which they held his vigorous ' ^ issault upon the Massachusetts sena-' :or. CaneS were the articles that seemed to predominate, "not.^only," remarked The Delta, "because they supplied the place of the gutta per- -* / ; sha, one which was shivered upta Summer's back, but on account ' of > 7 jeing strikingly symbolical. Of *ttt. lim again.'" . . , FUND DRIVE EXTENDED. W . ( \t . I < New York, May 25.?The Salvation Army home service fund camr?oi?m fnr tlS.OOO.AOO which VIM t* :ontinue from May 19 to 26, has . . j?9 been extended until next ^esdaj' ; " because unusually1 bad weather .sp* ;hroughout the country hindered campaigners, it was announced here xmiglt. 1AVE MONEY ~ ired. ron before throwing away your >?* . 60c. op. d PENNAIL jarage. ^ /'S frf OTjr\0 "3 Vr otUf ED NT OF TOW* ONERS LL . omi noHfT 'M IK mn & Gerrard lit SERVICE STATI0I Augusta, Ga IAY your smoketaste ^ flush up against a listening post?and youH J ice Albert call, all right! -.J a jimmy pipe so quick and tobacco joy out of every vish you had been born : i Albert puts over a turn fond of a pipe or a home > wins your glad hand comcause it has the quality! . ^ lality flavor and quality fra- . - < eedofn from bite and parch ixclusive patented process. ur fill at any clip?jimmy -without a comeback 1 tint, handsome pound and and?that clever, practical ' v ior with sponge moistener o in tuch perfect condition, Winston-Salem, N. G ' H | < ''W ' 3 m sj*oS ' '. i