Fort Mill times. (Fort Mill, S.C.) 1892-current, July 06, 1911, Image 4
DONT NEGLECT YOUR KIDNEY8.
Kidney troubles are too serious to
" neglect Slight ailments are often
forerunners of dangerous kidney 111PB
- mm and should be treated without de
tor- T. M. HarBr
l5? ler'315 E"5th
'anner of slmllar
attacks. The
cant and" Irregular In passage and
my back throbbed until I could
scarcely stand the pain. I began using
Doan's Kidney Pills and was helped
from the start I gradually Improved
and when I had used eight boxes, I
f; was entirely cured."
Remember the name?Doan's.
For sale by druggluts and general
storekeepers everywhere. Price 50a
Foster-MUburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
HADNT 8EEN IT SINCE.
?8he?Tou ought to see that man
la evening clothes.
He?I'd like to; he borrowed my
dress suit three monthB ago.
A New Sensation.
Little Jean had vtBlted one of the
large summer amusement parks for
the first time, and with (be courage
j>." 'i possessed only by those girls whose
# playmates are boys and girls older
than themselves, sh* had not hesitated
when Invited <.o take a ride on
fone of the "thrillers" that abound in
such places.
To her mother, or. her return from
the park, she confldtjd the emotions
she had experience! as she swept
round the curves of the "figure eight"
with her elder brothers.
"Mamma," 6he said, "when I went
round those awfpl turns so fast I felt
Just as if I had freckles on my
stomach!"?Youth's Companion.
Playing Blind. V
This la a funny little stunt enjoyedallke
by old and young. If one has
never tried It Is very amusing to
find anything with your eyes shut or
to Judge distances.
Sl, first place a piece of paper on the
floor before you, shut your eyes, walk
f backward two steps; then try to walk
y Ort the paper and pick It us. Then
tick a pin In the wall about four feet
up and try to pick it off blindfolded.
Stand about five or six feet away from
a table; shut your eyes; then try to
walk up to It without knocking
against It?Woman's World.
FOR MALARIA, CHILLS. FEVER
Colds and La Orlppe take Elixir Babek,
a preventative against Miasmatic Fevers
and a remedy for all Malarial Fevers.
'1 have used 'Elixir Babek' for four
years for Malaria, and found It all that
Is claimed for It. Without It I would
be obliged to change my residence, as
I can not take quinine In any of Its
forms.?J. Mlddlcton. Four-Mile Run.
Va. Elixir Babek 50 cents, all drugKsts
or Kloczewskl & Co.. Washington,
C.
A Quaint Thought.
'' Miss Geraldlne Farrar, seated In
^ her deck chair on the George Washington,
regarded a half-dozen urchins
playing on the sunny deck, and then
said with a pensive smile:
1 often wonder, considering what
charming things children are. where
all the Queer old men come from!"
Important to Mothers
Examine carefully every bottle of
CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for
Infants and children, and see that It
In Uae For Over 30 Years.
Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria
The 8ame, but Different.
"When it con.es to the task of taking
up the parlor carpet, do you run
away from the job?"
v "No, I beat it."
*
Hoods
g Sarsaparilla
Cures all blood humors, all
eruptions, clears the complexion,
creates an appetite, aids
digestion, relieves that tired
feeling, gives vigor and vim.
Get it today in usual liquid form or
chocolated tablets called Saraatabs.
Make the Liver
Do its Duty
Nine times in ten when the liver is
right the stomach and bowels are right
i* CARTER'S LITTLE*
LIVER PILLS
gentlvbutfirmlveom^^^^WM
?\?32y,iv" -MSmm
W Cures Lm-JBBF | "IE
tipatson, In-11V E R
diction,
mnS Distress After Eating.
WALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE
Canninu Uur ^ionatiirp
uuiuiut inuji Beemsmmv*
* ''*& I * LtOUIDREIIfcOY for CHIIOREN S ILLS
V I Makes Teething Easy
ffftT&i : It RECOMMENDED FOK
- 1 jCotiatipaUoo, Diarrhoea. Ooaralalou*.
IftBbs^ I /Colic, Socr Stomach, etc. It rteeuo/t
3s, HE?- I / Worm*. allart Kerrniituieee and Cold a I
WHWV 1 It ai4a?c?aUoo It make* Tccthltjf eur,
MH IT. t promote* Cbeerfuloeea and Modaoea
',1 WWfli MnV/WtllfCm I
HkX '!i?SW*?fc?'
I?tt
An Artist a
BY CARL
??
(Copyright, 1011, by Aaato
It was known to the Shefflelds, the
Durhams, the ChattertooB and all
other country families for five miles
around that the little farm known as
Roselands had been sold to some one
In the city, but the name of the buyer
had not transpired. Roselands had
been owned and occupied by an old
recluse for years. His hobby was
growing roses, but he would never
sell or give one away. They simply
budded, bloomed and faded.
On two occasions Miss May Sheffield,
who was by all odds the bestlooking
young woman who drove past
Roselands had stopped and tried to
melt the old man's heart, but It was
in vain. Had she been red-beaded
and cross-eyed, and had a big mouth
and a nose tilted up at the end. he
could not have been more surly with
her. Neither praise, flattery, smiles
or cash would melt him. Red roses?
pink " roses ? white. ro6es ? roses
enough for a duke's wedding, and yet
the passersby could not have one of
them.
When It was known for certain
that the old recluse had departed,
and that the buyer was coming down
from the city In a few days to take
possession. Miss Mary put on a determined
look and said:
"Well, I'm going right over there
tomorrow afternoon and get some
cuttings from those rose buBhes. I
don't believe the buyer will care. At
any rate I'll chance it."
"He's probably a married man,"
said the mother, "and you don't know
what his wife may say about it."
"If she's mean enough to say anything
I'll offer to pay. Why, we've
given away cuttings and roots and
bulbs by the cart cload."
At two o'clock next afternoon, after
a walk of a mile. Miss May arrived at
Roselands. She had brought a knife
j along, and she loRt jo time selecting
! the bushes and making her cuttings,
j When she had bundled them up she
i took a look into the cottage through
a window, and was amazed to find
that a lot of new furniture had been
moved In Weeds and grass had also
been cut down, and It was evident
that the buyer was ready to take pos
She Lost No Time In Selecting the
Bushes.
; session. If the trespasser had delayed
a single day longer?
And then she heard the chug of an
auto, and lost it as the machine
stopped at the gate, and there came
{ the sounds of men's voices and the
i barking of a dog. The buyer of Roselands
was at hand! Should the girl
walk out with that bundle of cuttings
under ner arm, and her chin held
high In defiance? No, of course not.
| Should she go without the cuttings?
Should 6he break her way to the
fields In the rear through the rank
grass and weeds? / A shed with vines
' climbing over it, and the door stand
Iing nun open inugui uei cjk, emu u
few seconds later Bhe was concealed.
A good looking young man, talking
i with his chauffeur, came up the path
and unlocked one of the doors and
entered. Half a dozn trips were
made by the two, and when they
came to an end the hiding girl knew
that the chauffeur had driven away
lone, and that the master and his
dog were Beated on the doorsteps
i within 15 feet of her. She scented
1 the smoke of a pipe, and she heard
! the man say to the dog:
"Well, old fellow, we are here at
?last. Wonder If we are going to be
lonesome? We'll put In a few. days
cleaning up Roselands and then we
must to our canvasses."
"An artist, eh? That's what Miss
May had thought as she peered at the
man's face through a crack In the
i shed. He had brought the last of his
effects, and was- going to stay right
j there. Now. then, was she to get out
unseen?
"No rain for a week, and everything
around here wants water?" continued
I the man. "We must put the hose on
and wet down. You look out for
trampR and I'll take care of the roses.
And say, Carlo, be a little careful as
to the dogs you get acquainted with
around here. They must be up to the
mark. They say a man Is Judged by
his dog Something In the shed there?
Go and see."
The dog had scented the trespasser,
and now he ran down and stuck his
GEN. LEE AND JEFF DAVIS
Mrs. Burton Harrison's Description of
the Two Great Leaders of the
Confederacy.
Our most Illustrious caller that
' spring was the commander In chlef ol
the Army of Northern Virginia. General
Lee came one evening, and after
a pleasant talk with my mother and
me. arose to go, we escorting him tc
' the front door. It was broad moon
light, and I recall as If It were yes
terday, the superb figure of our here
standing In the little porch without
saying a few last words as he swung
his military cape around his shoul
ders. It did not need my fervid lm
agination to think him the most no
I blo-looklng mortal 1 had ever seen
| As he swept of? his hat 'it h jecond
and final farewell he bent do'.n and
kissed me. as he often did the girU
he had known from their childhood
At that time General Lee was liter
ally the Idol of the Confederacy. Hlc
moral grandeur, recognised by all
hfta Into the region when
nd His Dog
| (
JENKINS
?????? ,
elated Literary Prow.)
head into the shed and barked an
alarm.
"Only a cat, old boy," said the man, '
"and you needn't drive her away. We j
want a cat to make It seem home like. ;
May be a coon or a rabbit, from the
way you bark. I'll come down and
help you rustle It out Here?"
"You needn't put yourself to any !
great trouble." said Miss May Sheffield
as she appeared In the open |
doorway.
"T?thunder!" exclaimed the artist."
as he fell back In amazement
"Sir," said the haughty girl before
him; "you called me a cat!"
"I?I?by no means." I
"And you called me a coon!" .
"But I?I never meant to." |
"And you called me a rabbit!"
"YeB, but you 6ee?"
"And yon ordered your dog to buslie
me out!"
"But I didn't know?"
"And when 1 am hustled out you
swear at me!" | .
"But my astonishment?my sur- j
prise?"
"And now I am expecting a blow
?from a club!"
"Miss?young lady?my dear?"
"But as you haven't hit me, I wish
to thank you for your clemency and
bid you good afternoon!"
And with head held high and the
gait of a duchess, the girl swept the
fluttering man aside and walked to
the gate and up the road. The dog
followed her for a few paces In a
wondering way, and then returned to
his master, to be addressed with:
"Carlo, have we bad a pipe dream,
or have we actually seen the queen of
her sex for 00 miles around?"
Carlo went down to the shed to see
If anything more like that was lingering
around, and finding nothing
returned to be asked:
"But who In the devil can she be. |
and what In the devil did she want
here? Came on foot and went away
the same way. Can't live so very far
off. No roses out yet. Was she after
cuttings? Let's take a look. Why.
here's a bundle of them! We came
home Just in time. She heard us and
went Into biding. Must have known
she was a trespasser and a thief, and
yet how she stood up to me! Wnsn't
that an awful bluff, old man? Well,
Well! There are a few things to be
found before we settle down..
Mr. Tiklns was only a day or two
finding out what he wanted to know,
and then he appeared at the Shef- I
field's, not as a caller, but as a bearer
of burdens. He bad three rose bushes. |
They were, as he explained to Miss
May, partial repayment for calling
her a cat, a coon and a rnbblt If
she still felt aggrieved she might send
father and brother over and dig up
all, but a single bush. He had ex- j
claimed "thunder!" at the sudden :
sight of her, but there were lilies and !
tulips and pinks at Roseland, and
would she take them and forget the
word ? i
Miss May's chin came down by
degrees, but It came down.
One evening In the late fall the
dog Carlo wasn't so very much
astonished to hear his master say,
after coming home at a late hour:
' "Well, my old friend, we'll be going
back to town for the winter soon,
but next Bprlng Roselands will sure
have a mistress. It was you that
discovered her, and 1 want to tell you
how much obliged I am. Heigho!
How she did stand here ani blufT!"
The Boy Problem.
J "The boy, like the tariff, the football
rules and the suffragette, Is an eternal
problem. He Is a never-ending source
of discussion at teachers" conventions,
family councils and sociological confer,
ences. He is blamed for many things
which he has nothing to do with; and
Is sometimes, though rarely, given
credit for things he does not do.
?V-~ ?lllAlom nt th?
I suauy, ouwcTcr, n?c umv?. ..._
boy Is adverse. Where there is one
optimist to see his good points, there
are ten pessimists to bewail his faults.
Perhaps the strongest and most unprejudiced
adverse criticism at the
present time comes from the field of
business life. It is very common for
a business man to complain about the
boys that come into his employment. |
They can neither write neatly, spell j
correctly, nor cipher accurately; their
personal habits are none too admirable,
and they have little politeness or
respect for superiors. So say many
large employers of boy lnbor. If these
statements are all true, surely there
is something wrong with our boys.?
William T. Miller in the Atlantic.
Origin of "Buncombe."
In historic Buncombe county. North
Carolina, was originated the phrase
"talking buncombe." for in this mountainous
country years ago. Col. Edward
Buncombe founded his famous
hall, and placed the words "To Buncombe
Hall. Welcome All" over his
doorway. The expression, "I am talking
for Buncombe." meaning Buncombe
county, became current hereabouts
by home folks, but unregenerate
strangers have uaed It to signify
political blarney or exaggerated
raise?"In the Land of the Sky," Joe
M Chappie in National Magazine.
Claim Great *ge for Tree
The village of Remborn. in Germany,
has a linden tree believed to be
1.200 years old.
"envy, nor calumny, nor hato, nor
pain" ventured not to assail hint We
i felt, as he left us and walked ofT up
the quiet, leafy street in the moonlight.
that we had been honored as
by more than royalty.
We went often to Mrs. Davis* recep
j tlons, where the .president never
failed to say kind words In passing,
j and sometimes to tarry for a pleasant
I chat. Always grave, always looking
I | as if he bore the sorrows of a world.
? he was Invariably courteous, and
sometimes playful In his talk with
very young women. These entertaini
rnents of Mrs. Davis, held In the evening
between limited hours, were attended
by every one In deep mourning.
The lady of the Confederate
White House, while not always sparing
of witty sarcasms upon those
who had affronted her, could be depended
upon to conduct her salon
I with extreme grace and conventional
> ease. Her sister, Margaret Howell,
aided to lend it brilliancy. I have
always regretted that my path in life
>' and that of Mme. de Stoeurs have dl,
verged so widely sines.?Mr*. Burton I
i Harrison, In Scribosr,
ToCet - p
Its Beneficial Effect*
Always Buy the Genuine
Srarfas{
an G h
ta?&NNA
manufactured by the S
(JUfODNM flfi SyRUP^L "
6old by all leading
Druggists
One SizeOn[y,5(K a Battle s
WHERE THEY DRAW THE LINE E
Naturally Men Disapprove of E<travapance
When Their Own Purse n
Ib Concerned. v
Mrs. William 13. Leeds, who took b
Mrs. George Keppel's house in Lon- h
tlon for the coronation season, came h
from New York with 40 huge trunks, fi
all the same size, all mounted with a
shining brass, aH claret-colored, and h
all as lustrous as the body of a motor b
car. e
Mrs. I^eedg, as her 40 trunks imply, h
dresses very beautifully. She spends h
a large amount on her wardrobe, and t
discussing the fact that woman's ?
dress is so much more expensive and c
so much less durable than men's, Bhe (
once said: a
"We women dress foolishly, and we I
will continue to do so till men disap- s
prove; but"?she smiled on the men t
at the table?"no man in the world (
ever disapproved of dreat extrava- i ^
gnnce in a yoninn unless she hap- ?
pened to be his wife. ?Detroit Freo t
Press. t
UNDERTAKING FOR MISSIONARY.
"There are a good many thankless I i
lobs." | i
"Such as trying to make vegetarians (
of the cannibals." ,
Worrying Happiness.
The bishop of Manchester, speaking
at a meeting at Church House, Westminster,
said the secret of happiness ;
was to have a sufficient multitude of
worries.
The man who had only one worry,
a blind that would not be pulled up
straight by the servant, or a coal
scuttle the bottom of which was always
coming out. found his way to
the lunatic asylum. Hut the man who
had no time to dwell upon his wor
ries, becaust^he had to go from one to |
another, and back again and round
and round like a squirrel in a cage,
could be a perfectly happy man.
Shocking!
Miss 1)., a teacher of unquestioned
propriety In all Its branches, is In
the throes of commencement, and to
the best of their ability was entertaining
some young men?the suitors of
her fair pupils. They conversed on
some beautiful flowers in the drawing
room. "Yes." exclaimed the ol dlady; > i
"but if you think these are pretty, yon
Just ought to go upstairs and look In
the bath tubs of the girls' dormitories.
They are just full of American beau- j
ties!"
Heathen Nations Invent Nothing.
Bishop Thoburn, who has been a
missionary in India for 50 years,
and knows India better than any other
living American, says: "If you visit
the patent office at Washington, you
will see six hundred Improvements <>n
the plow. India lias not invented on<improvement
on the toothpick in two
thousand years. The nations without
God have no inventive faculty. They
are almost universally the savage, un
enlightened nations of the earth."
HEART RIGHT.
When He Quit Coffee.
2-Jfe Insurance Companies will not
Insure a man suffering from heart
trouble.
The reason Is obvious.
This Is a serious matter to the husband
or father who Is solicitous for
the future of Ills dear ones. Often
the heart trouble Is caused by an unexpected
thing and can be corrected If
taken In time and properly treated. A
man In Colorado writes:
"I was a great coffee drinker for
many years, and was not aware of the
Injurious effects of the habit till I
became a practical Invalid, suffering
from heart trouble, Indigestion and
nervousness to an extent that made
me wretchedly miserable myself and
a nuisance to those who witnessed my
sufferings.
"I continued to drink coffee, howpver.
not suspecting that it was the
cause of my Ill-health, till on applying
for life Insurance I was rejected on account
of the trouble with tny heart
Then I became alarmed. I found that
leaving off coffee helped me quickly, so
1 e.nit it altogether and having been
attracted by the advertisements of
Postum I began Its use.
"The change in my condition was remarkable.
All my ailments vanished.
My digestion was completely restored,
ray nervousness disappeared, and,
most important of all, my heart steadied
dow n and became normal, and on a
second examination I was accepted by
the Ijfe Insurance Co. Quitting coffee
and using Postum worked the change." '
Name given by Postum Co., -Flattie
Creek, Mich
"There's a reason," and it is explained
in tne Utile book "The Road
to Wellville." in pkcs
Ever rend the nbnre le<terT A no?
one nppenre from time to time- Ther i
pre tree, pad foil of homap
Iptereet.
UTTING IT RATHER NEATLY
lece of Humor That Lifted Diffident
Professor to the Highest
Summits of Joy.
It Is told that after Professor Ay)un
had made proposal? of marriage
) Miss Emily Jane Wilson, daughter
f Christopher North, he was. as a
intter of course, referred to her
ither. As the professor was uneom
lonly diffident, he said to her: ,
Emily, my dear, you must speak to
im for me. I could not summon
ourage to spenk to the professor on
tils subject."
r>ono la In the Mhrnrv " n.ilrt the
idy.
"Then you had better go to him,"
aid the professor, "and I will wait
ere."
There being apparently no help for
t, the lady proceeded to the library.
"Pnpa's answer Is pinned to the
ack of my dress." said Miss Wilson,
s she re-entered the room.
Turning around, the delighted suitor
ead these words:
"With the author's compliments."?
luccess.
iABY'S HAIR ALL CAME OUT
"When my first baby was six
lonths old he broke out on his head
fith little bumps. They would dry
p and leave a scale. Then It would
reak out again and it spread all over
is head. All the hair came out and
is head was scaly all over. Then his
ace broke out all over In red bumps
nd it kept spreading until It was on
lis hands and arms. I bought several
loxes of ointment, gave him blood
nedicine, nnd had two doctors to treat
dm, but he got worse all the time. He
lad it about six months when a friend
old mo about Cutlcura. I sent and
;ot a bottle of Cutlcura Resolvent, a
ake of Cutlcura Soap nnd n box of
lutlcura Ointment. In three days
ifter using them he began to improve,
le began to take long naps and to
top scratching his head. After taking
wo bottles of Resolvent, two boxes of
)lntment and three cakes of Soap he
vas sound and well, and never had
,ny breaking out of any kind. His
lair came out In little curls all over
lis hend. I don't think anything else
vould have cured him except Cutlcura.
"I have bought Cutlcura Ointment
ind Soap several times since to use
or cuts and sores and have never
mown them to fail to cure what 1 put
hem on. I think Cutlcura Is a great
emedy and would advise any one to
tse It. Cutlcura Soap Is the best that
have ever used for toilet purposes."
Signed) Mrs. F. E. Harmon. R. F. U
I, Atoka, Tenn., Sept. 10, 1910.
en 5 Luyig.
"Ren," said his friend waking up
'rom a reverie in which he hnd been
?azlng abstractedly at the shiny expanse
of Ren's skntin'-rink-for-flles. "Is
there nothing you could do for your
baldness?"
Ren, by the way, Is only forty.
"No, lad!" he replied with de
cislon. "Fifteen years ago I was
courting strong, and I tried lots o
fhtngs. But about that time t' prince
Df Wales?Edward, you know-?came
to open t" new hospital, and I said tc
myself as soon as I saw hint llftin
his hat to t' crowd. 'Ren, my lad. tha
ran give It up as a hnd Job. and snve
thy brass. If there was owt 'at 'ud
cure a bald heead they'd ha' cured
tils.'"?Tlt-Rlts.
Why He Qalt.
"Haven't I the privilege of making
uiggestlons to the man fixing the
awn?'' she asked, with tears In her
trolce
"Why. certainly," he assured her.
"Well, just because I made a sug
;estion to him he threw all his tools
in the wheelbarrow in an nngry manner
and went away without saying a
word."
"Why, what bad you said to make
liim act like that?"
"I Just asked him to plant a few
nice dandelions in the lawn."
Cannot Be Right.
"What is the right thing to do when
your wife asks you for money nnd
you haven't got it?"
"Under tliose circumstances any
thing you do will be wrong."
TO DRIVE OUT MALARIA
AM) HI II.I> I ?' THK SYSTEM
tho o.'l Standard (IKOVK> TASTKI.BSJ
l! 11 I.I. TONIC. Vnu know what you are taking
The formula la plainly printed en erery bottle
showing It Is simply (,'uinlne and Iron In a tastel?ws
fortn. Tho (Julnlne drives c ut tho uialarls
and the iron builds up the system, bold b7 a),
dealers i?tr 30 rears. Crlce M) cent*.
The really great never seek noto
rlety, neither do they like to'have It
thrust upon them. They are too buBj
to want to be taken notice of.
For COLDS and GRIP
Hicks' C'ariTtKE ll the t>est remedy?re
llesesthc nohtng and fevrrlshness? cures th?
Cold and rest ores normal conditions. It'<
liquid efTeets intmei'iately. !"? ., 25c., and 50c
At drug stores.
If ><>u want to ho up with the larl
in the morning, beware of the swal
lows at night.
Constipation rati?c? many serious diseases.
1* i? thoroughly cured by Dr
Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. One a lu::ative
three for cathartic.
None are so tdlnd ns those who art
visionary.
w^wm
Doctors know
that Oxidine is a
most dependable system-cleansing
tonic.
Most useful in stirring
up lazy livers, sluggish
bowels and kidneys,
weak stomachs. Its effects
are quick, sah;,
sure and permanent.
OXIDINE
?a bottle proves.
The specific for Malaria, Chilli
and Fever and all diseaaea
due to disorders of liver,
stomach, bowels
and kidneys.
60c. At Your Druggists
tub nsnssKa !>sro oo.(
V *00, Tazai.
__ !
Jehovah's Suffering
Servant
Sunday School Lenon for July 9, 1911
Specially Arranged for This Paper
I.KSSOV TEXT Isaiah 52:13; 53:12.
MEMORY VERSES- 53 41.
GOLDEN TEXT?"The Ix>rd hath laid
on him the Iniquity of us all."?Isa. 53.5.
The lesaon Is from the second part of
the Rook of Isaiah.
Whenever written It belongs to the time
of the exile. Just before the return.
It brought hope. Inspiration. Instruction,
life, and light In the darkest period In
the history of Israel.
God's peculiar people were In exile
among heathen populations. Their
homeland, Palestine, had been devnstated.
Jerusalem lay in ashes. The
temple was a heap of ruins. The na- j
tlon was like the stump of a mlgMy
tree which had been cut down. The
tree had been cut down because it re- i
fused to bear the good fruit for which
God had planted It. Hut In captivity
the people had been learning their lesson,
and the time had come when It
was possible for a new shoot to
spring up from the barren stump, and
a renewed nation to take up its appointed
mission. But In order to do
this, the nation must be made to see
clearly what they must be and do, and
the deepest motives toward this end
be Inspired within them. All this Is
a parable for the world.
It throws no little light on our lesson
to realize Its relation to the
prophecy as a whole. According to
all critics the whole lesson really belongs
to the fifty-third chapter of
Isaiah, the fifty-second ending at the
twelfth verse. The prophecy consists
of 27 chapters, of which the fifty-third
Is the central one, making the whole
prophecy to consist of three sections
First, the first thirteen chapters are a
trumpet call to the captive Isrealltes
who have been "hanging their harps
on the willows," unable to "sing the
songs of Zlon," to awake to faith in
God, and obedience and loyalty to
him, and to be prepared for their de
Uverance. Second: Chapter 53 presents
the means by which the redemption
can be accomplished, the
heroic service of his people, and the
supreme self-sacrificing love of his
son. Third: The succeeding thirteen
chapters present the results of the re
deeming nation, and the redeemed
world.
The service of God was a comrnis ??
it'lfnooo nn/1 nrnnhesv for God
i upon earth." Israel was "elected not
to salvation, but to service," or rather
as In the case of any individual, the
nation was elected to salvation that
I It might be of service. It was neces i
sary that the "servant" who was to
carry out God's purpose of saving the
world should be a nation, from the
condition of the nnclent world. "Of
all possible combinations of men the
nation was the only form which In the
nnclent world stood a chance of surviving
In the struggle for existence."
The servant of God was the nation of
Israel.
Jesus Christ did God's service for
the world's redemption by bearing the
sorrows and sins of man. His suffer
Ingr, were not because he himself had J
done wrong, but in order that he
might save us front them. He bore
them on his heart and sympathy. He
bore them away by his healing power.
He bore them as the martyr and the
hero suffers that he may save the oppressed
and the wrongfd and persecuted
from their sufferings. He bore
them away by transforming them Into
character. He bore them by giving
his life for our sins, so that by re
moving sin he removed most of the
griefs of man. Christianity has been
^htnf nriuer in removing the griefs
and sorrows of mankind.
The prophet foresees these things
fulfilled in Jesus Christ. The picture
in these verses is almost a photograph
of what took place five hundred years
later. He was oppressed, his sufferings
were unjustly inflicted on him.
RetAl the story of his trial. He opened
not his mouth in protest. He submitted
to the wrong.
Jesus was put to death with the
wicked on the cross, and they thought
to bury him in a criminal's grave.
They appointed his grave with the
wicked, but by a striking providence
the same authority gave permission to
a rich man, Joseph of Arlmathea. who
provided him with an honorable burial
In his own rock hewn tomb.
Yet it pleased the Lord because he
saw the good to be gained. He shall
see his seed, his spiritual descendants,
filled with his spirit and carrying out
his plans. He shall prolong his days.
I He rose from the dead, ascended to
heaven, and is the everlasting leader
and king. Of all kings he Is the most
glorious. Of all kingdoms his is the
largest, noblest, best beyond all compare.
This far off vhtlon of Jesus, and of
1 the redeemed world, i one of 'he
strongest proofs of a revelation from
Ood. Professor Ramsey declares that
the Bible is unique among ancieru religions
In that "to the Hebrew prophi
fts. nnd to them alone, the better age
lay always in future."
"The best fs yet to be.
1 The last of life for which the first was
made."
We see In this lesson the one source
of power for saving man. nnd trans
forming the world The path of un
selfishness Is the path to power. i ne
business of all followers of Jesus Is to
be servants of Jehovah. to do as far as
In thpm lips thp same kind of service
that Jesus did
Rivulets and the Rivers.
All are to he men of genius in their
degree?rivulets or rivers. If does nor
matter, so that the souls be clear and
pure; not dead walls, encompassing
dead heaps of things, known and numbered.
hut running waters In the
sweet wilderness of things unnum
bered and unknown, conscious onlv
of the living banks, on which they
partly refresh and pnrtly reflect the
flowers, and so pass on.?Rusk;n: The
Stones of Venice.
Dally Thought.
If every one did an act of dally kindness
to his neighbor, and refused to
do any unklndness. half thp sorrow of
this world would be lifted and disappear.?Ian
Maclaren.
I nc rrcdiiri/ vnvo v<
Taking Into account Australia and
all of the islands of the tropical seas,
the world may have 10.000 million
aires, outside of North America And
Europe, Russia excluded. The United
States alone must have more mil
llonalres than the total for contlnenti
which contain two-thirds of the people
in the world.
Tho??> who discourage us the mnsl
In an undertaking are the first to teli
us "I knew you would succeed," when
i . we havo attained success.
TOO BAD.
' f Jt
Edith?Papa wouldn't let me marry
Mr. Stingy because he smokes such
cheap cigars.
Edward?He can't say that about
me.
Fldlth?No, he says you smoke too
expensive ones.
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IWUtlL
the best
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*
?
OWES
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To Lydia E. Pinkham's
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Scottville, Mich.?"I want to tell
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vftp" ym I live on a farm and
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T") 1 of this paper de1\6&QCVS
*ifi"8to buy
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St. Augustine's School
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For catalogue, address
REV. A. B. HUNTER, Raleigh, N. C.
W. N. U., CHARLOTTE, NO. 27-1911.
(Discouraged
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lit by letter, free. All correspondence
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rrce, M. D., Pres't, Buffalo, N. Y.
ulate and invigorate stomach, liver and
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I r: . r;
Restores Gray Hair to Natural Color
MOVES daxdiu rr a.vu mi ur
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' 't"r'' r" re.iHtinat'le.
4?:r *?TUH>. 4 H.tKl.f>Ti?V . c.
"'fecit' pV . 'i Thompson's Eye Water
Charlotte Directory
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Vour old machine c?m be made as good as
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a Great Pianist
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Educate yourself, your
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I $400.00 to $950.00
j | Convenient terms if desired.
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? Southern Wereroom:
i 5 Wetl Tr*Je Street, Charlotte, N. C
! C. H. WILMOTH, Manager