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ffttlkltlftl* it Mi? mm mm mm JJUinint AMU lHUN-lHb MOST EFFECTUAL GENERAL TONIC Grove's Tasteless chill Tonic Combines both in Tasteless farm* The Quinine drives out Malaria and the Iron builds up the System. For Adults and Children. Vou kndw what you are taking when you take GROVE'S TASTELESS chill TONIC, recognised for 30 years throughout the South as the standard Malaria, Chill and Fever Remedy and General Strengthening Tonic. It is as strong as the strongest pitter tonic, but yoq do not taste the bitter because the ingredients do not dissolve in the mouth but do dissolve readily in the acids of the stomach. Guaranteed by your Druggist. We mean it. 50c. There is Only One "BROMO QUININE Xook for signature of B. W. GROVE on ? Mean Hint. "That was a strong Bcene, my dear; It nearly took my breath away." "I noticed your breath was still stronger, my dear." A 25-YEAR CASE OF ECZEMA CURED Mr. Butler Edgar of Danville, Pa., irrites: "I have had an aggravated case of Eczema for over 25 years. My hands were unsightly for a great part of that long period. 1 have used seven 50c. bottles of Hancock's Sulphur Compound and one jar of llancock'B Sulphur Ointment. I feel as though 1 had a brand new pair of hands. My case has been such an aggravated one. Hancock's Sulphur Compound has cured me and 1 am certain it will cure anyone if they persist in using it according to directions." Hancocks Sulphur Compound and Ointment are sold by ail dealers. Hancock Liquid Sulphur Co., Baltimore, Md.?Adv. Has to Be. "I wonder if Diogenes could find an honest man in these days?" "Certainly. In the poorhouso." For Galled Horses. When your horse Is galled, apply Hanford'B Balsam of Myrrh and you on n knun nn wnelrlni* rr? 1 * * *M . uu nul XI J II uuu II your horse 1b not cured quicker than by any other remedy, tho dealer will refund your money. Adv. Solution. "That young man has been sowing his wild oats." "Then no wonder he looks seedy." I^B-MY-TISM Will cure your Rheumatism and all kinds of aches and pains?Neuralgia, Cramps, Colic, Sprains, Bruises, Cuts, Old Sores, Burns, etc. Antiseptic Anodyne. Price 26c.?Adv. Women, like tho plants In the woods, derive tholr softness and tenderness from tho shade.?Walter Savage l^andor. DOKi YOtm iikao Ariipir Try Hloka' CAPL'DINK. It's liquid ? pl<-airant to lalif-?ITfolii Imniwllnlr?rtxxl to prevent Blek Ilriulnrbe* and Nrrruu* llcadachea al?o. Your money back If not aaliMfled. 10c., Sc. aod Kk. at medicine htorr*. Adv. Many a romance has Ita happiest ending in dlvoreo. Keep Hanford'a Balaam In your home. Adv. When you moot n man of few words It's a safe bet he ia married. WANTSI>?Agent* In cvi-ry locality; eo mottling fnnd?Ileal Heller; large tlamand for gooda: ootid today for KKKK particulars. IIA Kit IS NOVKI.TY CO.. KKNDKK. KY. KODAKS & SUPPLIES rlultlD also do htifheat claaa of flnlnlilng. r|W\ Price* and Catalogue upuu rcqueat. S. Galeaki Optical Co., Richmond, Va. Doa/lprc of this desiring to buy IVvaUCl 3 anything advertised in its columns should insist upon having what they ask for,refusing all substitutes or imitations VfinAtf DEVELOPING and fffL* MJUA& FINISHING ililllv Write for our price Hat. Complote atook I fin k of Boatman Kodaka and Huppliea. Cr?^ w. I. VAN N KNS A (!4I. *8 M, Try on Street, Charlotte, N.C, A School Of The New Buildind- mrt~ 500 Siudents^jyy V^ ^^MDAVIS-WAGNER BUSINESS COLLEGE. ^ 114 WEST MAIN ST. <r NORFOLK, VA THI NEW fRINOH RIMIDY. Nd N.l NA THERAPION ffiSkr.Tti lpeat aoccra*. cuara chbonic wiahhh lost viooa A vim ainaav. huddii, uimaxi. blood toisom. Pit aa bithkb mo. iituooiiri or mail St. rotr I era bdimbkaco. ?0. hkbbmam sr. nkw von or lvm am u?n? toiomtu. wbitb roa FREE book to Da. La Ct.rso Man.Co,HAvaaaxocaUn. Itamtstkau, Lombon. Kmo. tutmwii?aoikta?t*i.?miroaaor baby to tabs THERAPION tcc THAT TRADI MARKID WORD * THIRAf 1BN * |ft ON ttf uOVT.RTAMf AFfUBD TO ALL OINU1RE pACAKT(k Charlotte Directory ^1/ f1> r| 1 |# O Hlifh Orada IV UUSAVLoV F"liiiahlii(f. Mail '"WarBSimw ordera given special Attention. Price* reaeonabte. Nervine prompt. Ootid for Price I.ist. liimiia amm artma. EtoHWW. a. c. ^^TYPEWRITERS TSHWlly Mow, rebuilt and aeonnd hand. El? (JO up nod guaranteed aallafaetorj. We aalI Buppltoa for all mekae. We rv / pair all niakee J. B. ISATTOB aCOETABT, ItuMM. I. C ^MONUMENTS rirat claaa work. Write for prlcee. rL^^RMHklMbtiri Marble I Granite Compenf Charlotte. Merlh Carolina 2078 An ezoelient remedy for all blood dlaeasee. Price 50o and 91.00 per bottle poet paid by Parcel a Post. CHARLOTTE DRUG OO. Cer. Trade and Ceileee Ma.. Charlotte. V. X / \ RELIEVES PAIN AND HEALS AT THE SAME TIME The Wonderful, Old Reliable Dr. Porter's Antiseptic Healing Oil. Prevents Blood Poisoning. An Antiseptic Surgical Dressing discovered by an Old R. R. Surgeon. Thousands of families know' it already. UUV* mm l> tui mil VVUTIUCC JUU VUll l/X^ PORTER'S ANTISEPTIC HEALING OIL it the mott wonderful remedy ever discovered for Wounds, Burns, Old Sores, Ulcers, Carbuncles, Granulated Eye Lids, Sore Throat, Skin or Scalp Diseases and all wounds and external diseases whether slight or serious. Continually people are finding new uses for this famous old remedy. Guaranteed by your Druggist. We mean it. 25c. 50c. $1.00 " That is LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE :very box. Cures a Cold in One Day, 25cj Call Again, Please. Hlx?Jones says he gives employment to a large number of men. Dlx?So he does?other people's collectors. Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CASTOHIA, a safe and sure remedy for ! infants and children, and see that it 1 Signature of In ITso For Over SO Tears. | Children Ciy for Fletcher's Castoria Youthful Slayer. A case of "precocious violence" Is reported from Newark. N. J., where a twenty-months-old infant, supposed to ' have been Jealous of his baby sister, j two days old, struck the baby a blow i with his list and injured her fatally. < nRADACIlR AND nil.lOUS ATTACKS Caused by Malaria removed by the uao of Kltxlr Ilnbpk cure for such nilmontii. iHQlyseif mid whole household had suf fl very much for some time with , W rial Fever. 'Elixir has ctTed us perfectly, so that wo enjoy at present the best of health."?Jacob Eb- , erly. Kuirfax Court House. Va. Kllxlr Unbelt 60 cents, all druggist* or 1 by Parcels Post prepaid from Kloczew- 1 ski A Co.. Washington. D. C. Signs. Hilly?Do you believe In slgnB? Milly?Yes, indeed. Hilly?Well, last night I dreamed j you wore madly in lovo with mo. What 1b that a sign of? Milly?That's a sign you were dreaming. Chafing Hives. This troublesome skin affection is dilllcult to diagnose at the outset. Bo on the safe side, therefore, and whenover the skin is irritated use Tyree's Antiseptic Powder immediately and avoid further trouble. 25c. at druggists. Sample sent free by J. S. Tyree, Chemist, Washington, D. C.?Adv. Whom She Preferred. A lady suspected her two sons of carrying on a mild flirtation with one of the servants, a bonny Scottish lassie. In order to arrive at the truth of the matter Bhe pressed the bell, and when tho girl answered it spoke to her. "Tell me, Jane," she said quietly, "which of my two sons da you prefer ?James or Albert?" "Weel, ma'am," replied the blushing Jane, "they are both nice, though I think of the two I prefer James; but for u real guid spree gio me tho master."?l<ondon Tit-Hits. Skyscraper Cities. Opposite the postofflce, in lower Broadway, New York city, there has Just been completed a building 780 feet high, which will provide working quarters for 10,000 people. If all the men and women employed in this one "skyscraper" should uttempt to go uptown by the subway at the end of the day it would tnke the ten-car ex- J press trains, running ut the intervals I now established. 15 minutes to haul ; them awny. Though this happens to > be the highest structure in the city, there are others nearly as large; it is ono of the dozens that accommodate 4.000 or 5,000 people each, and one of hundreds that accommodate more than a thousand each. The number of these great buildings is steadily growing.?World Work CUBS' FOOD They Thrive on Grape-Nuts. Healthy babies don't cry and the well-nourished baby that is fed on Grape-Nuta is never a crying baby. Many babies who cannot take any other food relish the perfect food, Grape-Nuta, and get well. "My baby was give'' up by three doctors who said that Hie condensed milk on which I had red her had ruined the child's stomach. One of the doctors told me thut the only thing to do would be to try Grape- j Nuts, so 1 got some and prepared it us i follows: I soaked 1 Vi tablespoonfuls In one pint of cold water for half an hour, then I strained off the liquid and ! mixed 12 teaspooufuls of this strained j Grape-Nuts juice with six teaspoonfuls of rich milk, put in a pinch of salt and . a little sugar, warmed It and gave It to baby every two hours. "In this simple, easy way I saved baby's life and have built her up to a strong, healthy child, rosy and laughi ing. The food must certainly bo per1 feet to have such a wonderful effect. 1 as this. I can truthfully say I think It Is the best food In the world to raise delicate babies on and is also a delicious healthful food for grown-ups 1 as we have discovered In our family." Grapo-Nuts is equally valuable to the strong, healthy man or woman. It stands for the true theory of health. "There's a reason," and It Is explained in the little J>ook, 'The Road to Well vlUe." in pkgs. Ever read the above letterT A aev* I Me appear* from time to time. Tbe> are peaalae, tree, aad (all of fcnraaa '. la tec eat. jm ' 7 ' ?H ROMANCE BEGINS IN CHS; ENDS IN OLDNEW YORK Metropolis Has Real Soldier of Fortune, and He Married the Girl to Whom He Owes His Life. HERE IS ONE OF FEW WHO ESCAPED CASTRO Recent Wedding of Prospector and Pretty Spanish Salesgirl Revealed Charming Love Story That Had Its Inception In Venezuela and Ends in Four-room Flat on the West Side of the Big Eastern City. George Morrow Smith, white. tWrtyone, prospector, New York city, etc. Maria llioida, white, twenty-seven, sales girl, Venezuela, etc. THAT'S the way it appears on the marriage license record at city hall. New York. And at flrBt glance you, would have a hard time imagining a real, dyed in the wool, soldier-of-fortune, heroic-maiden romance behind the wedlock of George Smith, prospector, irtid Maria llioida, salesgirl, liut, have patience. Tho George Smiths?yes, Maria's Mrs. George now?live in a four room flat on the lower weBt eide, happy, contented, comfortable, quite settled after two weeks of matrimony. Goorge, though he still gives his occupation as prospector, is just now working as a draughtsman in an engineer's office. Hut it's not with the domestic affairs of the George SmlthB that thlB story deals. ' It's with the pre-nuptials, decidedly speaking, and those began In Caracas, Venezuela, JubI before tho overthrow of Cipriano Castro by the revolutionists almost Ave years ago. George Smith told a clerk in the marriage license bureau something about it two weeks ago when he and Maria Ailed in their application blank, which was the first step toward becoming Mr. and Mrs. George Smith, and the clerk had a good memory. And here it is as George Smith told it, with the help of Mrs. George. Captured and Jailed. "I sailed for South America from New York because I thought there AfKn No One Remembered the Name or Whereabouts of the Former Keeper of the Caracas Prison. might be a chance for some fun. The revolutionists were 'raising roagh house' and Castrp seemed to be on his last legs. Some of us made a mistake about Castro, though; you could never tell when he was on his last legs. "I made up my mind to that after 1 had Joined the rebels a little while and had been captured outside of Caracas. "YVlth a batch of Spanish-talking Venezuelans, they hustled me Into the city and threw us Into prison. I think they picked out the deepest, dirtiest 'pen' they had for me. It was a single affair, with no windows, and the entrance through an iron grated door. Luckily It waa too dark to see the food I was eating, and in time a fellow's taste gets dulled, so I managed to live. "The hole they kept me In was reached by a long, slanting hall that ran to the upper grouud outside the ' city prison, In which were confined most of the prisoners taken by the government. At the top of the runway there was a sentry, but there waa none at the door. They couldn't stand it down there. "After a while I found out that the sentry above was one of the regular prison keepers, and not one of Castro's paid soldiers. He used to bring my food and water to me once a day and shove It through a scrt of grill in the bottom of the cell door, which war battened on the outside with u bar. The grill was about 14 inches square, and I spent a long time trying to got at the outside bar to slide It back. Could 1 do that, 1 often thought, I could work myself through the opening and have a chance to get free. Hut it wasn't any ubc. Captor Teases Prisoner. "Sometimes when the inan came down with my food I'd ask him In Spanish, of which I'd picked up a little, what was the news above ground, and he'd toll me how many rebels had been killed that day by the government troops It seemed to please him a lot. for the reason, I guess, that be believed It would be dishet..'teulng news to me. Once or twice he told me that prisoners had been taken up to be shot by the dictator's order, and I wondered when it would come my turn. "I had lost track of the exact number of days I had been in prison? one does sometimes?when one morning the old keeper did not come down with my pan of food. In his place came a native girl. 1 tried to crack a Spanish joke with her and got mixed, and finally fell down on it and she laughed. Man alive! You don't know what there was in that laugh. It was low and rippling, and?and?" And George Smith broke off in confusion and shifted hlB feet awkwardly on the brand new red and white rug in the living room of the George Smith flat. "You see," he explained, "it had been the first laugh 1 had heard in Venezuela. They didn't laugh in the revolutionist army, and in the prison nobody laughed?as long as they Biayeu sane. rm not counting that other kind of laughter. "So it sounded pretty good and cheering to me to hear that girl giggling at my bum Spanish. And when Rhe came the next day I tried pretty hard for that laugh again, and got It. After that she always brought my food down mornings. And in time I began to think by the taste that 1 "I Started Through the Grill and Stuck Half Way." could have borne to look at It?and still eaten. Smile Charmi Him. "I learned she was the daughter of the sentry np above. And the dampness of the dungeon made him cough, so that was why he sent her down In his stead. And one little thing led to another, and?you know how It is with a girl, even when you're in prison and wondering if you're to be led up to be shot that day or the next morning. "I shall never forget how It happened. Lord, it was hot that day! sne Drought in the pan of food and Bbe opened the grill In the door, and ?then she forgot to slide back the bar, and giggled. 'Tomorrow,' Bhe said In Spanish, 'the rats will eat your dinner.' And then, before I could speak, she was gone. "Well, all that day I waited. The old keeper had let her come down with the food because ho thought the grill was too small for a man to go through. If It hadn't been he would have not dared, fearing I might dash through as she opened It to admit the jfkn. And he wasn't far wrong. When night came, hot and stilling and black as those southern nights can be, 1 started through the grill and stuck half way. For an hour I worked back and forth, twisting and turning, and then, with the flesh rubbed off in places and the blood running down Inside my clothes and my head bursting in the heat, I slipped through with a jerk and was clear. "I went up the incline on hands and knees. I knew the night sentry would be on duty. The girl had told 1 me he was a young man. 1 had thought she had turned crimson, but I wasn't sure in the darkness outside the dungeon door. If It had been the old fellow, her father, I would not have worried. It would have been easy to shut off his wind, but?it was a young man. Helps Him to Froedom. "I came level with the ?iirtnco nt the earth. There he was, not five feet distant, looking at nte. He moved swiftly toward me and I gathered myself for a desperate leap for his throat. And?my heart stopped. Through the darkness low and muffled came the sound of a musical little laugh. "It came to me In an Instant then. And I knew that that blush of hers had been real. She had lured him "I Bent Down and?and?" "Kissed Me," Said Mr*. Smith. away, sent him on some fool's errand, herself promising to hold his watch until he returned. And with the way of men when women speak, he had taken the risk. Then I bent down, and?and?" again Mr. Smith stumbled In embarrassment, but Mrs. Smith, with that quaint accent of her race, shouldered the burden for hint. "Kissed mo," said Mrs. Smith, simply. "Yes," Mr. Smith admitted, "and I'll never forget It." with another reddening of the temples, "and then I started to get clear of the rest of the prison. The section where I had been confined was separate from the main t t tiers of cells, set off by itself in an i inclosure surrounded by a low atone wall. There were two sentries on the i outside, but I got by them and out beyond the city. "I did not know Just where the revolutionary army was. and so I held ' northward, traveling mostly at night, until I reached Cura. There I got a mule and continued on a long trip to Orumaco. 1 thought 1 would try and J " cross the Gulf of Maracalbo, to Mara- ; caibo itself, but decided it would be safer for me to try to reach the Dutch ? island of Curacoa. Finally I got passage, and after several months worked my way back to lioston. "Once there 1 tried to get in touch ' with the girl who had helped me out of what 1 learned afterward would have been certain death, as one by r ono tho prisoners were taken up and 2 shot, and it would have been only a matter of time till the arrival of iny : ( turn. I wrote letters, but 1 did not j know her name, und of course, as I f j should have known, they were never J | HpI i UPrtiH TlL'ft VPI.M 1" "- **- ? I vm. * ??w j tut o iairi ? IICU 111*3 trouble was over 1 made another trip to Caracas, and tried to find some trace of her, but with no bucccbb. No one there remembered the names or whereabouts of former keepers of the Caracas prison, and after two weeks of futile search 1 gave up the quest and shipped back to the United States. Finds Her In New York. "Since then I have worked at engineering jobs In various parts of the country, and though I never expected to see her I never forgot that low laugh In the dark at the dungeon entrance. It was not until three weeks ago, when 1 went into a store to buy some handkerchiefs, that I froze in my tracks. There, leaning over the counter looking at me. w as the girl. "She knew me at once, and?she laughed, Just as she had laughed as Bhe let back the bar at the grill, and as she stood thus that black tropic night when she was all that lay between me and freedom. And? and 1 j asked her right there, and?well, here we are." Hut there Mrs. Smith took up the story. ! "I>o you know," Bhe Bald in good English, though with a soft accent, "he did not even know my name. Imagine asking a girl to marry you i whose name you did not know. Hut Just the Bame," she added naively. "1 accepted. j "You Bee," she went on, "after the ( overthrow of Castro my father was forced to leave Caracas, and not long afterward he died. 1 had no mother, j Arturo," and here Mrs. Smith blushed, "would have married me, but 1 did not love him. You know he was the one? \ the night guard whom I sent to the j city stores to bring me some fruit as I A 0^ 1 ^ I; She Glanced With Dark Eyes at Her Husband?"I Am Very Happy." | * 1 I soon as I heard Mr. Smith get through | c the hole In the dungeon door. I i "Why did 1 help him to get free? 1 f loved him: why should I not?" I f She shrugged her shoulders. "1 came t to America." she said, "and I went to j work. See, I have learned much of t English in the two years 1 have been g j here. And now?" she glanced with | dark eyes at her husband?"I am very \ happy." a i And as she laughed that low, whla- ? ; perlng little luugh. It was not hard for f tho reporter to see in the thick dark j of a tropical night a tall man emcrg- ' 1 ' ing from an underground passageway c and bending swiftly over a sentry in 1 skirts who held up a mouth to meet ]< > him. j j ( Eggs and the Empire. t A writer in London Opinion bewails | e me destruction by vigilant pure food c authorities of three and a half tons of c eggs. Ho thinks a shade of sadness r will invade many a heart at this appal- ' ling waste of valuable material, and s says that had a general election of the s antique pattern been a-foot theso eggs li would have been valuable. To this he v adds: "The majority of laws on tlio 1 statute book of Great Hrltain and Ire- r land have been built on rotten eggs, f They were the most forcible and pun- | 2 gent political argument less than half o a century ngo, and few orators stand- n lng on hustings could withstand their C aromatic appeal. We may swank s about our naval supremacy and dance a flattering pas souls of satisfaction be- j cause we rule the waves. Your egg b Is the true empire builder. Without ' n that?aided and abetted by Its life-long n pal the rabbit skin?the faces of our ! j( laws and law books would assume a ; ]j completely altered expression." a n New Source of Electric Energy. p An Kngllsh electrical experimenter, j, J. A. Hnrker. has made the announce- 0 ment that when two highly heated car- w bon electrodes are placed in the fur- a nace at points of relatively different a temperature a flow of electric energy j, may be detected. v intmational ' SONMTSOiOOL Lesson By E. O. SEEDERS, Director of Evening Department, The Moody Btblo Institute, Chicago.) LESSON FOR JULY 13 MOSES PREPARES FOR HIS WORK. LESSON TEXT?Ex. 2:11-25. GOLDEN TEXT?"mossed nro the neck; for they shall Inherit the earth.** ilatt. C:5. Meekness does not imply any lack >f aggressiveness; it does not imply a nildness of temper. Moses, we judge rora a study of this chapter, was not is yet "meek above all men." In last week's lesson we considered he birth, salvation, nursing and trainng of Moses as child. After Jochebed lad nursed Moses (v. 9) ho was retimed to Pharaoh's daughter and "be ame her son," thereby obtaining all he rights, privileges and training of he Egyptian court. I. His Qualifications. (1) He had a ;odly parentage and an early godly raining. Do we appreciate the trenendous advantage of the child who is veil born and well trained? True, environment is not all-sufficient, but it is i great asset. The psalmist emphaii7.es this when he exclaims "thou hast jiven mo the heritage of them that ear thy namo." Ps. 61:5. (2) Moses had a knowledge of the conditions. Horn and nursed in a ilave's home he knew of the oppreslion mt Israel. Reared in Pharaoh's ourt, ho knew how the Egyptians eared these same Israelites (Ch. 1:9, 0). Moses saw (v. 11) the burdens orne by those of his own race. Heart of Sympathy. (3) Moses had a heart of sympathy v. 11). Seeing an Egyptian tasknaster evilly entreating a kinsman doses' heart rebelled and at once he lew to his support and defence. Our .ord was "moved with compassion." t. like righteous indignation impelled he Master to drive the money changers from the temple and to de lounce the hypocritical Pharlaeea. doses had not, however, learned selfestraint, and that he should express lis sympathy at the proper time and n the most effective manner. (41 Moses was brave and zealous, r. 12. Hut he acted before God told lim to act. He "looked this way and hat," but he did not look upward. (5) Moses was educated. We have ilready seen how he was taught by his iwn mother and that he received the raining of the Egyptians, Acts 7:22. lelng brave and mighty in deeds was lot enough; he was "mighty in words ^ ind deeds." Thus he was prepared to itand before Pharaoh (not tho father >f his deliverer, but another Pharaoh, r. 24), meet him on an equal footing, ind intelligently combat his religion vitb that of Jehovah. , (6) Moses had assurance. True, ha lad not as yet received God's call (see ^h. 3) for particular work and his reiance upon force, his tit-for-tat policy vas not God's method of working delverance. But Moses was obedient, ind as he obeyed, God honored each itep of his faith. Moses' Mistake. (7) Moses was meek. e. g., teachible. To us this was his greatest aslet. A man may be well born, well rained and know tho needs and the esources at his command, but if he ack a teachable spirit he is doomed o failure. Moses made a mistake vhen he slew the Egyptian. At a later late when he had learned of God he indertook the same task and no dificulties daunted him. The change rom a prince's position at the court o one of nn humble nhmihopH o <ino >ised calling, was as essential as had >een those 40 years at the Egyptian ichools. II. His error. Moses endeavored to vork relief by the strength of his own irm, a mistake many Christian work rs are constantly making. Our warare is not with carnal weapons, doses had no warrant for killing the Egyptian. He was not obeying any ommand other than that of impulse. The life of Moses had been miracuously spared, nor had he been subect to slavery. Yet he did not know lod'8 method nor was it God's opporune time to strike tho blow for delivrance. It is true that the sufferings t the Israelites increased and that no >ne seemed to heed their cry. But God emernbered. III. His pilgrimage. Some one has uggested that Moses entered another chool of patience which would cause lim to exercise all of his meekness .hen he married Zipporah, Ch. 4:20-26. t is true that his father-in-law was nore generous and proved a bettor riend than his daughter, Ch. 18:137. Moses gave evidence that he recUt/. ~n 1? -i KU1I.CU 1119 pilftl Mil (.-IliiruCltT in IDA ames ho gave to his sons, v. 22 and 'h. 18:3, 4. The Christian needs contantly to be reminded that ho Is but pilgrim and a stranger here below. IV. A summary. Again we have rought before us God's wonderful method of preparing his chosen instrument for tho carrying out of his prom- ^ sea. Not all, of course. Is recorded. A ife is saved and preserved. It receives brief period of instruction at its most critical stage from the hands of :s own mother. lie becomes proficient i all of tho learning of a rich and pulent court. Then comes a time 'hen a definite crisis of responsibility, sense of persons relation to the poor nd oppressed of his own blood, forces lm to make a choice. He Is coninced of his own Incompetence.