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. Let Us Arise. , ] , Rev. Gpo. Studson Delano, D I). ( I Matthew XXVIII:7 , "And go quickly, and tell his 1 diciples that he is risen from the ( dead '' ^ One by one; in groups, in congre- 1 gations; in multitudes, this Easter tho fr?nr nnarters of the J-raj, ^ earth, out of all nations, tongues, and people gather there, who answering a chord in the harmony of souls, respond to the anthem "Christ is Risen." Flung back today are the curtains 1 -.1? i 1 hung over human thougnt in uie;"Whirl of centuries by the warfare of minds. Flung back! . Gently drawn back, by the hands which clasped in prayer at Gethsemane when Jesus j' the Ixuman revealed himself as Christ the divine: drawn back gently, that the light from Love's altar may fall upon r.ankind without a shadow; that no sound so low as the touch of fold on fold, may mar the melody of earth's glad song, "Christ is Risen." Where, today, are the idols of Egypt, the gold, the glitter and the pomp; of Babylon? Where are the hosts of; Rome, the seers of Greece, the vaunt, j +>.,-s orinrv r>f fnnri nhilosoDhies? Where | liiC V- j . are the conquering armies of Israel; the marvelous magnificence cf her temple, and the grandeur of her ritual? Sits Samuel in the temple today, or does Joshua lead the hosts? in rhnrint here. JUUtS ^awai iiuv *** or Juno fill our minds with fear? Kay, nay. Not one of these, or all combined, could bring the joy, which * mind to mind, and heart to heart, eye to eye, soul to soul, sweeps o'er the earth, for?Christ is Risen! Jesus! Only a human waif tossed: nr* Hnwn Palestine for about three! ?* C4AAU V4.W ~ years. Only the despised and rejected sen of a carpenter; only a man without a home. He sat by the road in dust and heat, wayworn, hungry at times, bowed down with grief. His was the hand which beggars touched in friendly grasp; His was the voicei 1 3 x ~ ~ * T_Tin' nrQO ] which sinners iovea 10 ueai, mo vra^ the eye which the sorrowing saw with joy; His the heart with which the lowest could speak, and the weak of mind full know. T'was Jesus that the children loved; their little griefs He bore, their joys He made His own. Can it be that one who washed the . feet of humble men inspires the world j to prayer today? How fares the world when one from whom His comrade? fled in the hour of his trial is the motif of the souls desire? Out from Gethsemane calmly went this One in whom the love of God had joined into invp for man. Out from the scene of man's greates woe He walked a conqueror, and, by the way of the cross and sepulchre, He has walked with humanity since that hour?Christ is Risea. Let us arise! Clear as the bugle's ? call from mountain top on frost-toned B air, rings for man the call of the V Christ, "Watch ye here." "Walch while I pray." This is the voice of God today; watch ye here while I pray. And is it that man needs less to watch than did the men of that Gethsemanc night?who slept? Needs less to watch? When may man safely cease ' 1 ? ^ M ^ O I "watering wnen tne son 01 man uecua must give His life while showing mankind the way to avoid sinning? Not to-day may this watching cease, while we sing with all our souls, Christ is Risen. Not tomorrow, lest the melody of heaven be caught from us in the discordance of the world's untune. Never may we safely cease watching, fr>T- thp soul's 2-rowth towards full har mony with God needs the all of ourj | lives for its care. Not the all ourj ? lives that we live as dreamers of a future heaven, but the all of our lives that we may bring forth from the kingdom of heaven within us manna of righteousness which will make human life heaven life. Hear you the call of Christ for stout hearts and true in the battle against error? Let us arise from all doubt j a::d fear, all the droning of souls content with less than heaven, let usj gird on the spirit of Truth; draw deep ; draughts of inspiration from the hal1 lowed fountain of Easter, and connner the earth for the Universal Fa ther; the Universal Saviour, and the j Brotherhood of man, against the army j of disputants who deny God's full divinity. The perfectedness of God's way has never heen set before man more sacredly or heroically than by the | work of Jesus Christ. In maintaining j His faith in the Universal Fatherhood of God agajnst the prevailing heath-; enism of Israel, and the idolatry of nations, He brought before the world the Universal Saviour, and showed nnd tn man as a Father of Love and Truth. The onward reach, the struggle 'c an apprehended purpose, was perfect in Jesu?. His life pierced like an arrow through c' " c" v.'::1 f :v<s ;.IU1 liic d.;!*I:,:o.-s of ere lis';:, tie lived, dial, and was resur rc-ted, co show to man that under one iaih .rtiood, the whole world became sacrcd. Christ was humiliat d into our condition that we m.^'i he exalted u to his. Christ was crucified with man that man might rejoiu- in beiiu; crucified with Christ. Both the depth to which He went to seek nuu, and ihe bieight up to wbi'h He would carry man, were set for h in tMe cross, and repeated in the resurrection, Alas for the men who looking at the crucifixion, and beholding the resurrection, go Dn teaching the inhumanity of God, and the total depravity of man. As we look back through centuries to the first Easter morning, we see God's Chosen One, his Christ, standing there in the centre of a picture around and into which humanity mer- i gcs by force of His presence. We J hear him proclaim a sacred law winch; not only did not contradict the reigning law but corrected and perfected it. We touch his gentleness which persuades; his goodness which evokes love. He knew and felt with men in all their needs; His burning zeal compelled events; no vice was spared by Him; no penitent was refused by! Him; He was the soul's Easter; the j coming forth of man from the dark-, ness of self into communion with the Universal Father. . Now, while the grand story of Easter is sung to us in Anthems from j souls in the Infinite Father's presence, | we turn our eyes instinctively to that ] crucifix which, burned into the life of humanity by the fires of love, rises be-1 fore our spiritual eyes when we look beyond the tangling net of man?made crude towards the Divine God. We behold the sweet, grave, patient, pathetic eyes of the Holy One. They are wondrous eyes, those of man's Saviour, j and their challenge of love, of har-. mony with God, compel an answer of, loving harmony from us. We are thrilled with the eloquence of those eyes as they close to earth's first life and look into the realms of continu- j ous spirituality; We are pierced with their appeal; they say to us: "Be one, j as I and my Father are one." Who can see those eyes look down from Calvary , -?? A- * * x - * ?!ir n ~ J n I witnoui longing to De one wun wu: Who, among all those who teach and,! preach doctrines controverting the, Love Divine in those eyes, can refrain from kneeling at the cross on j Easter morning and praying there, O Thou Divine One, forgive our innrmaties, and by the strength with \vMr?Vi Thrtn hnrp the nross for ns. help us to begin a realization of j Thy prayer?"That they may be one, | Father, as we are one." Eas.ter! hallowed moment in the , span of eternity, thy essence( is Love; thy voice repeats for all j time: "As for God, his way is perfect; the word of the Lord is tried." Let us arise! "Man's soul was not made by God to be held in bondage by dogmas of human devising. Let us arise!" God is our fath-er: let us bow to Him, not to the falling spores of decadent theology. The Universalist Parsonage, Mountville, S. C. The Aristocratic Montenegrin. The Bulgarian may not have a liking for domestic service, but he is a bom agricultural laborer. According < t a recent traveler, if you give hun a barren piece of land he will make it blossom like the rose, while his Mntenegrin brother will stand and look on. On the other hand, the Montenegrin placed in a drawing room always behaves like a gentleman, while the Bulgarian in the same environment j cannot help being a boot. "But then," j says the London Chronicle. "It is said the Montenegrins are the descendants of the Servian aristocrats who fled to the mountains to seek freedom. The explanation is thin, but pleasing. Of one claim to culture however, MoDtenegro cannot be deprived?she established a printing j nrpss at Obod onlv twentv vears after j printed beautifully. But the Turks i made "pi" of everything, and the press was not re-established til! 1S32." Yellow Pine Turpentine. i Turpentine from west-ern yellow pine, says the department of agriculture, can be put to the same uses as that from the longleaf pine of the southeast, which furnishes the bulk of the turpentine of commerce. Western yellow pine forms enormous forests in the Rocky Mountain and Pacific Coast States, while the supply of longleaf is fast melting away. A product very similiar to turpentine can be"obtained also from pinon pine, another tree common in th-e southwest, Careful tests made by the department have shown that the yield of turpentine and rosin per season from western yellow pine in Arizona is onlv two-thirds that from the southeast ern pine, the difference being due to fact that the season of flow in the west is about i'." weeks, and in the south about 33 weeks. During the /* *. \V ? ? 1? t- * ,? x. t . . . . . . ... tj rx- j i i ^Bgge^aaiBMgasBifflHBsaMggBaffii I Join the "don't "d^r tt anw r\ i uuy yyjuL ruiu tui were disappoint Don't take a ch; And remember tl make the better1 Insist on an imm< There are more than the world's highway: testimony to their Prices? runabout $52 ?town car $800 f. comj lete equipment. Phone, write or ca Summer's Mr. Farmer, I Kr GoodGasol Well, I have them, the CLARKE, one of the newe I The gasoline engine is no 1< a real necessity on every fa the good features of the be dapted, and the objection They are the very best thai skilled workmen, and are s as we are not controlled by me or write me your want; personal attention. Respe< J. M. Swindler, 910 Doctors Use It Dr. Evans. Ex-Commissioner of Health, I says: "There is almost no relation between skin diseases and the blood." The skin must be cured through the skin. The germs must be washed out, and so salves have long ago been found worthless. The most advanced physicians of this country are now agreed on this, and are prescribing a wash of wintergreen, "* "* ~ * ^Ar> A/??7nmQ tttymoi ana omer lugieuiciua mi ci.uvi.u and all other skin diseases. This cornround is known as D.D.D. Prescription for Eczema. Dr. Holmes, the well known skin specialist writes: "I am convinced that the D.D.D. Prescription is as much a specific for eczema as quinine for malaria. We have been prescribing the D.D.D. remedy i for years." We, ourselves vouch for the D.D.D. | Gilder & A COMMON ERROR. The Same Mistake is Made By Manv dewberry People. It's a common error. To plaster the aching back, To rub with liniments, rheumatic joints. If the trouble comes from the kidneys. It's time to use Doan's Kidney Pills. TT nmnf of m prit. I jnj;i C is UUlltiUl/lUg wvi ? ? W. P. Shealy, 426 E Main St., Laurens, S. C., says: "My back was in bad shape and I was hardly able to get about. I was advised to try Doan's Kidney Pills and did so. One box brought me complete relief. I recommend this remedy highly." "When Your Back is Lame?Remember the Name." Don't simply ask for a "* "* ? ^ ? -1- ir? Iv fnr Kidney renieuv?ctstv uionu^nj xw* | Doan's Kidney Pills?the same that j Mr. Shealv had. 50c all stores. Fos- j ter-Milburn Co., Props., Buffalo, X. Y. j tions in the South had virtually ceased, some operations were carried on in California to meet local needs. " * "A1 cnnfiiprn bill Willi me remi-ii ui ? product to to the California market, th-:' western operations were abandoned. The results of a chemical examination of the oils of western yellow, pinon, digger, sugar, and lodgepole t- i :~-u ~ j pines which have just Deen puuusneu by the forest service in an official bulletin show the possibilities of the rosin and turpentine from western yellow and pinon pines as a supple-1 ment to the present supplies. Economic problems of markets, transportation, and labor remain to be- solved. Information as to how the forest service secured the yields upon which the analyses were based is given in another bulletin on the possibilities of ~ Mrttnl I western pines as a source ul ua?a*j 'to*'" -. I worry club." day. Thousands ;ed last year, mce this time, sat the more we we make them, jdiate delivery. 220,000 Fords on >>?the best possible excellent worth. 5?touring ear $6oo o. b. Detroit with 11 upon Garage. I 1 ===~ =? low You Need a j line Engine best made. It is the st things in this territory, anger an experiment, but * 11 e rm. In our engine an or st engines have been aable features eliminated, t can be gotten up by old at a moderate price, a trust Come and see i and I will give you my ffullv. J J i Main St., Newberry, S. . lis for Eczema Prescription for eczema and absolutely guarantee that it will take away the itch the instant you apply it. If you are suffering- from any form of skin trouble we would like to have you come to our store, for we have had the agency of this remedy for so many years that we can tell you all about D.D.D. Prescription and how it cures eczema. In fact, we are so sure of what D.D.D. will do for you that we will be glad to let you have a $1 bottle on our guarantee that it will cost you nothing unless you find that it does the work. For that matter a trial bottle for 25c OUgnt to De enougn to aDsuiuieiy yiuvts tne merits of the remedy. Drop into our store anyway and we will tell you all about this great remedy. Weeks. * DRUGGISTS ENDORSE DODSON'S LITER TOXE It is a Guaranteed Harmless Yegeta.. ble Remedy that Regulates the Liver Without Stopping Your MYork or Play. A dose of calomel may knock you completely out for a day?sometimes two or three days. Dodson's Liver Tone relives attacks of constipation, biliousness and lazy liver headaches, and you stay on your feet, j W. G. Mayes sells Dodson's Liver ^Tone and guarantees it to give perfect satisfaction. If you buy a bottle of Dodson's Liver Tone and do not find it the safest, most pleasant and suc; cessful liver remedy you ever took, this store will give you back the 50 cents you paid for it without a question. This guarantee that a trustworthy ' 1 druggist is glad to give on Dodson's J Liver Tone is as safe and reliable as j i the medicine, and that is saying a lot. j I I ? I I AN APPEAL TO MOTHERS. The United States government di-! t ; , rects its energies to destroying tu-: i berculosis germs?it causes its soldiers to be vaccinated against typhoid fever, and this precaution is com mended. Why not Mothers us-e all j possible precaution against the little' one having Croup? Gowans prepara-j tion scatters all inflamation when ap-} plied externally. Then why not buyj i today, and have for emergency a bottle in the house ready to give relief to the little sufferer if croup develops in the night? The wise mother will do this. Gowans is guaranteed, and often when Croup develops or threatens a doctor cannot be gotten. Gowans gives the mind ease. You feel you have done your duty. All I druggists. >!, .rr-, 2oC. i [ t 111IIMI M~ IIIIII ! III IIM French Marl Is the Natio of the i mmmmm mmmmmmm * ? ? *># _ _ /WEJN wften rrencn mar- s< ket Coffee could be had F nowhere but at the old h; French Market in New Or- L leans?a hundred years ago ?it was widely known. Andrew Jackson, Henry Clay and the gallants of the old South were enthusiastic 1 ~ 4-V, T7 ratipll 1UVCJ.3 Ui. lino laig wivx x iw-n-n coffee. Today the identical, historic French blend is per- q petuated by a C n Unique Hygienic Roasting Process and genuine old French Mar- 0 ket Coffee is packed in air tight, hermetically-sealed tins n <md delivered anywhere in the world in all its freshness e and delicious aroma. r In the South, especially, t Raich Mar: Perfect Process of 1 Roasting and Packing I The celebrated French Mar- c ket Coffee process is quite diff erent from the ordinary roast. It drives out a larger percentage of gums and oils, while retaining and intensifying all the aromatic and beneficial qualities of the coffee bean. T*Via io /Irtnp at PT. X lie gliuutlig J o uvuv uv ?... actly the right time to hold ^ the full, delicious flavor that t i 1?1 in?mi? China &C Bluel Ptates 5c, Blue! Bowls 5c, II71 - /I 1 fl wnite tups ana aauc< White Plates 10c, no\ Lapanese Cups and Sa Decorated Cups and S n AA AAP Pitpliairc (Ullldd T CldCd} 1 lll/UU Oy Glass Fly Leaf now J If you want anytl ? - ? (Glass it will pay you Goods at the same mo m/fAYES' 1V1 Book & The HOUSE "< MSB A AND |h W HIGHEST MAR F 9 H mil FOR RAW Fi SUS m H raJB Wool on Commits list mentioning thl inuu uiuitc o rn .e"a.b"'* junn ??n! I E, & UUi luuisvii 1 1 ' ket Coffee mmb mmmmmmmmmmmmmmaa nal Drink South -V orrAot i<3 tVi** demand for rench Market Coffee that it | as become " The National ~)rink of the South French Market Coffee Unlike t i* /s .1 All Uthers The smooth, exhilarating uality of French Market loffee is totally unlike ordiary coffees. The French Market Mills ave the great advantage ot hie first selection of the best f the Pan-American coffees. These fine coffees have ever been exposed to the injurious effects of a cold northrn climate. The berries are ich in everything that goes o make a perfect coffee. ket Coffee J ias always been such a fea- ~ ure of French Market Coffee. The market-men ot ttie rrench Market think nothing >f drinking 10 to 15 cups a day >f this deliciously aromatic md refreshing beverage. At Your Grocer's? A!_ T! Ai T: in /ur- a lgiu i mo But you must be sure to let the genuine with the picure of the French Market on he can. Trv it once, and you'll igree "There is only one real )ld French Market flavor." French Market Mills (New Orleans Coffee Co., Ltd. Proprietors) . , New Orleans (77) ???? ilass Sale Pickle Dishes 5c Covered Dish 25c irs 10c, now 6c v - - - 6c i ucers - - - 10c aucers 60c set, 40c rumblers, lamp, 25c 1 A - - - - - 1UC lung in China or to see me. Better mey at | S Variety tore. .,000 things HIDES IKET PRICE PAID JRS AND HIDES