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\' - " ' >0' ., ", : BP x ' - ( " Tff? <PUL<P1T. AN ELOQUENT SUNDAY SERMON BY THE REV. A. B. SIMPSON. Subject: The Gospel of Tears. * i r New York City.?The famous head of the Christian Alliance, the Rev. A. B. Simpson, on Sunday preached a notable sermon, having for its subject "The Goscel of Tears." The texts were: Jesus wept.?John 11:35. And when He was come near He beheld the city, and wept over it.? Luke 19:41. Who in the days of His flesh, when He had offered up prayers and supplications with strong crying and tears unto Him that was able to save Him from death, and was heard in that He feared.?Heb. 5:7. Who has not wept? . Weeping we begin life as helpless babes and, amid the tears of mourning friends, we pass out to the grave. Tears are the badges of sorrow. How can they be the expression of the Gospel, the glad tidings of great joy and divine love? And vo* rorjpmnticm has trans formed the curse into a blessing and made a rainbow -of our tears. "Jesus wept." This little phrase, 1 \ the shortest in the Bible, has more in It than all the books that man has written. A single drop of ink could write it, but all the world could not contain its depths of love. It tells me that my Redeemer is human. Tears are human and the tears of Jesus proclaim Him my Brother and my Friend. He is the great heroic Head of our fallen race. One has come to us who is "bone of * our bone" and "flesh of our flesh" and has the right to represent us; who is ~~ on/? apie to riguv UUI w l uugo auu. ? oiir lost heritage of happiness and blessing. When God determined to save this fallen world, He did not send some mighty angel. He did not come in His own awful deity; but He stooped to become a man that He might meet us in-a gentle human form of which we should not be afraid. How the , Roman Catholic clings to,the tender j? - \ sympathy of the virgin mother, but we do not need even woman's tenderness to Introduce us to the Father's heart; for Jesus Christ, our Saviour, has a heart both of woman and of ^ man. He has been an infant child like us. He has traversed every stage of the pilgrimage of man from the cradle to the grave. He has been everywhere that we have been. He has felt everything that we can feel. [ 9 He knows our natare. He bears our i - name. He wears our humanity. And for evermore the Head of this uni-! verse, the King of Xings, the Lord of angels shall be a ,Man like us, our Friend "that sticketh closer than a brother." Oh, what a gospel of comfort we 'find in the humanity of Christ. You can come to Him to-night as you * would toJthe gentlest friend, the most intelligent father, the noblest man you ever knew; and though we have ; sinned and gone far astray, "He is not ashamed to call us brethren.w They tell us that He is able to sympathize with our sorrows. He wept those tears for others. He saw two breaking hearts before Him. He felt their agony! He groaned in spirit ? and was troubled and at last He broke down altogether and burst into a flood of tears. How we thank Him for those tears. J . This salvation is not an ior me pearly gates, the streets of gold and the glorious Heaven that is coming bye ah.d bye. We need a lot of it down here in this broken-hearted world amid our poverty and pajn, our sickness and death, our broken friend; * ships, our wrecked homes, our wrongs and sorrows and, thank God, He has 4t for us. He has experienced it and He has not forgotten it and still in His heavenly home we are told "He z .. is able to be touched with the feeling of our infirmities." He was a child and has felt every childish sorrow. He had the hard ']'* ' struggle to support His-mother at f Nazareth and He knows all about hard work and hard times. He was despised and scorned and He understands the sense of wrong and sting ? of insult. He was deceived, betrayed ' and murdered and there is no wrong or insult can come to us that He has J- not borne and is still ready to bear for us. Yes, He has felt the awful weight of sin, for there was an hour when He sank under His Father's (4 wrath in punishment ior the sins of s men. He knows the cloud of spiritual darkness. He knows the weakness and agony of death and. He is with us in it all. Blessed Friend, how we thank God for Christ and sjf, what a gospel of love and sympathy J and help speaks to us through the | tears of Bethany, li The tears of Jesus tell us that He i * understands our danger, our destiny L and our estate. He shed those tears over the grave of Lazarus. They IB meant much more than a sense of bereavement. He was not weeping because He had lost Lazarus. He was not weeping because the sisters at [, Bethany had lost their brother. He knew that Lazarus was coming forth agafh in a little while and that the > sorrow would be forgotten in the glad reunion. Oh, no, He saw deeper than that. Hevsaw in the grave of Lazarus every grave that had been opened and filled through earth's forty centuries and that would be filled in the twenty centuries that have passed since then. He saw all the horrors and agonies of the battlefield, the ocean wreck, the lingering deathbed, thA sronree of famine 93a pestilence !and the ravages of the king of terrors with the millions and billions of victims that he has smitten in the past six thousand years; and as He saw it all, realized it all, and the vision J loomed in lurid horror before His p Omniscient eye, He realized the fearJ ful curse of sin and His heart broke jj down in agony and sorrow. Nay more, He saw a sadder sight, 'j&f He saw a deeper grave. He saw the eternal grave beyond all, that we be Jr hold in death. He saw the death that n? never dies; the fire that never is quenched; the yawning gulf of endless woe into "which the sinful soul ?y must sink forever. It was the sight I of that horror that had brought Him $from Heaven to earth. It was the T.,* thought of man perishing in everI* lasting darkness that had made & pv?v glad to live and suffer and die, and as it all rose before Him as through a glass in the tomb of Lazarus "Jesus wept." Oh, that we might realize it as He did. Did Christ o'er sinners weep And shall our f rs be dry? Christ never thought or spake of eternal punishment in cold, hard words. He did ii with a breaking heart. He did it with tenderness and tears, but none the less He did it; for none knew so well as He that eternal sin must bring eternal hell and that all we know and fear of death is but a paradise compared with that second death? * * * * whose pang Outlasts the fleeting breath; Oh. what eternal horrors hang Around the second death. The tears of Jesus tell us of His atonement. He did not come down to earth to weep in helpless sorrow but to rise in almighty strength against our doom?and rescue us from it. "When Hercules came to the place where the helpless virgin lay bound upon the rock and the dragon was coming to devour her, her parents and all around were frantic with tears, but Hercules cried, "This is no time for tears; this hour is for rescue," and he slew the dragon and saved the maiden. So Jesus came, not merely to weep but to help, and by His own tears and His own agony and His own blood to meet our peril and our penalty and save us from eternal sorrow. And so we read of another instance of His tears in Heb. 5:7. These wtre the tears of Gethsemane and the anI guish of His passion. These were the ! tears that we deserved to shed. ThesT | were the pains that we deserved to I suffer. But as our great Substitute i and Sacrifice, He bore our sins in His [ own body on the tree, and having j paid the penalty and satisfied tne | claims of justice, He comes in the glad message of the Gospel to announce our pardon and salvation. 0 Christ, what burdens bowed Thy head; Our load was laid on Fuee; Thou stoodest in the sinner's stead, Didst bear all sin for me; Jehovah lifted up His rod, 0 Christ, it fell on Thee: Thou wast sore stricken of Thy God, Thv bruising healeth me. Hindu mythology has a strange tale typical of the atonement, the story of a dove pursued by a hawk until in desperation it flung itself into the bosom of Vishnu, one of their deities. But the hawk demanded satisfaction, declaring that the dove was her lawful prey and that Vishnu must not only be merciful to the dove but just to its claims. Then Vishnu, holding the trembling dove in her bosom, bared her breast and bade the hawk devour of her own living flesh as much as' would compensate for the dove, while $11 the time the dove lay j fluttering there and knowing the fearful cost of her deliverance. Yes, we are safe within His bosom, but oh, the cost to Him. "He saved us, Himself He could not save." He wipes I away our tears, but in order to do I this He had to weep when there was no eye to pity and no arm to save. Don't you think the least that you could do would be to thank Him and give Him your heart, your love, your grateful tears? We have yet one more picture, Luke 19:41., He was entering Jerusalem from Olivet. He had just turned that point where the whole city suddenly bursts upon the traveler's view. As He gazed upon it in its singular beauty, there arose behind the scene another vision that a few years later was to fill all that ! valley: a city besieged, cruel Roman legions around on every hill top, the narrowing cordon of destruction, a breach at last in the walls of defense, j the breaking in of the brutal conqueror, the streets running with blood, the Temple rising in smoke ana names, ine suae?.s ui mumcis, maidens and little children in the cruel grasp of the conqueror, and then, a long train of captives going forth to distant lands while behind them lay a plowed field of desolation where once their beautiful city had been. t And as He saw it all and how it might have been prevented if they had only received Him, He cried, "If thou badst known even now in this thy day the things that belong to thy peace, but now. they are hid from *- v.. 4. thine eyes." it was xou iuie, uuu even yet He had for them His tears. These tears tell us of Christ's compassion. They tell us how He longs to save. They tell us that He is here tonight with infinite pity and power to wipe away jrour tears, to wash away your sins and make you happy and holy through His love. But they tell us also that if you refuse and reject Him, there may come a time, there will come a time, when He can do nothing for 5*011 but weep. They tell of a judge before whom was brought for punishment his oldest friend. 'As he stopd up to pronounce the sentence upon him, the memory of their bo>*hood days together came upon the judge's heart with overwhelming force and he broke out in floods of weeping. "My friend," he said, "how can I, by a single word, consign you to a felon's cell and a life of banishment from home and friends and all that earth holds dear? But I am a judge and must be just. Why did you force me to do this thing?" And they wept together, but it was too late to save him from his fate. Prom that scene of weeping, he went forth a doomed, ruined man to spend his das's in fruitless tears. Oh, sinner, beware! lest some day on the Throne of Judgment you look in the face of a weeping Saviour and I Uim mv "Mnw often would I have gathered you even as hen doth gather her brood under her wings and ye would not. Oh, that thou hadst known the things that belong to thy peace, but now they are hid from thine eyes." Separated, Man Dwindles. Separated from God, man dwindles; he is nothing. He was made to have magnitude and be in flood, by having great inspirations roll under him and through him. Existing in mere selfhood he cannot push himself out any way to be complete as from himself. There is nothing, in short, but religion, or the life in God, that can be looked to for the complstioa ;?! > soul.-ff-HcrBti $ i ?&aell. --* y i FITS, St. Yitus'Dance :Nervoos Diseases per- ! I manently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free. ; Dr. H. R. Kline, Ld.,931 Arch St.. Pbila., Pa. I During the courtship it's tempera- j me-r.t; after marriage it's a case ot I temper. How's This? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward ! for any case of Catarrh that cannot be i cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, 0. j We, the undersigned^^ have known F. J. j Cheney for the last lo years, and believe ; him perfectly honorable in all business ! transactions and financially able to carry \ out any obligations made bv his firm. .Walding, Kin nan & Marvin, Whole- j sale Druggists, Toledo, 0. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act- j ingdirectly upon the Wood and mucuoussur faces of the system, l esumc-niats sem iree. i Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. j Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. | i A man finds out that he has a lot; of relatives living when he suddenly j strikes oil. j FIFTEEN YEARS OF ECZEMA. Terrible Itching Prevented SleepHands, Arms, and Legs Affected ?Cured in 6 Days by Cuticura. "T 1 ' ?noorlTT fiftoon UP3T*. The JL UdU cucuia ut.ai ij j affected parts "were my hands, arms and legs. They were the worst in the winter time and were always itchy, and I could not keep from scratching them. I had to keep both hands bandaged all the time, and at night I would have to scratch through the bandages as the itching was 90 severe, and at times I would have to tear everything off my hands to scratch the skin. I could not rest or sleep. I had several physicians treat me, but they could not give me a permanent cure, nor even could they stop the itching. After using the Cuticura Soap, one box Cuticura' Ointment and two bottles Cuticura Resolvent for about six days the itching had ceased, and now the sores have disappeared, and I never felt better in my life than I do now. Ed wara Worell, Band 30tb, U. S. Infantry, Fort Crook, Nebraska." Investigating committees cannot harm honest men. IRRITATED EYES Get worse and worse the longer you let them go; Leonardos Golden Eye Lotiou cures innammation and soreness without pain in one day. Cooiing, dealing, strengtnening. Get ".Leonard! s'?it maltes strong eyes. Guaranteed or money refunded. Druggists sell it at 25 cts. or forwarded prepaid on receipt of price by S. B. Leonard! A Co., TamL-a. Fia. There is more or less charity in the heart of every man?usually less. 4f *IV | 4 every t HIS OWN A 600-page Illnstrat* ^ * valuable information, s and cure diseases with The book contains anal fil ia irriage; rearing and i Jlk iei, besides valuable p etc. Will be mailed, p iii I dress on receipt of SIX 1 ATLANTA PUBLI yk: 116*118 Central A t\\ XJ0BP8 We do ali kinds of Printi CRESCEr GREATEST HE> Non Poisonous, Non Ii : 5 pain from any cause. As Vf e^eet milk. Cures burns Alf cures sores and inflamma wSp fowls?cures cholera, sort guaranteed. For Sale by all llrst-Ci&u Dealers. Jlfgd. by CRES ! maim? PAn cirra^rp I ruusisl V/K \JJUKVIVU I IN THE ROUGHEST WEATHER I AND GUARANTEED ABSOLUTELY I ^\xWATERPROOF z2(Kx;'fNi \V\ , XO/AlK POMMEL Wm r/SSkSLICKERS s352 ThlstrcdemaH* ft KflJ \f\ Y\ and the word j \/i\ TOWER on the ! V\Y w\ buttons distinIflW y4l \ / 9uis^ *bls high \\\ V \ \f y j ' grade slicker from \ *? ? M\/ I the just as good t ? ?/ / brflndi 2 y\ a j Towtt to boston u"o a wrwiu# j ?wt? UMOtAN CO kt?>?ce T??0"'0 CAN* TOUGH LUCK. "Gse whiz!" said the nervous pas- j senger, "you only just missed that man back there." "Yes, I know it; and that's the second I've missed this morning, confound it!" returned the chauffeur, indignantly. "Must be something wrong with the steering gear."?The Chaparral. Because of tho !9?99H B8899CWbk a * TUMORS t Overwhelming Proof th Vegetable Comp One of the greatest triumphs of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is the conquering of woman's dread enemy Tumor, The growth of a tumor is so insidious that frequently its presence is wholly unsuspected until it is well advanced. So called "wandering pains'' may come from its early stages or the presence of danger may be made manifest by excessive monthly periods accompanied by unusual pain, from the abdomen through the groin and thigh. If you have mysterious pains, if there are indications oi mnammituuu or displacements, secure a bottle of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, made from native roots and herbs, right away and begin its use. The following letters should convince every suffering woman of its virtue, and that it actually does conquer tumors. Mrs. May Fry, of 836 W. Colfax Ave , South Bend, Ind., writes : Dear Mrs. Pinkham :? "I take great pleasure in writing to thank you for what Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has done for me. I also took the Blood Purifier in alternate doses with the Compound. Your medicine removed a cyst tumor of four years' growth, which three of the best physicians declared I had. They had said that only an operation could help me. I am very thankful that I followed a^friend's advice and took your medicine. It has made me a strong and well woman and I shall recommend it as long as I live." F F Haves, of 26 RugglcsSt., Boston, Mass., writes : Dear Mrs. Pinkham:? "I haxte been under different doctors' treatment for a long time without relief. They told me I had a fibroid tumor, my abdomen was swollen and I suffered with great pain. I wrote to you for advice, you replied and I followed your dir ections carefully and today I am a well women. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound expelled the tumor and strengthened my whole system." Mrs. Perry Byers, of Mt. Pleasant, Iowa, writes : PUTNAM Color more goods brighter and faster colors than anj can dye any garment without ripping apart, Wrli ^41 SC 'MAN ^ DOCTOR $ sd Book, containing .hotving hovr to treat Ck'd simplest medicines. Var ysis of courtship and Ck*A management of child- \fr rescriptions, recipes, lTA!i ostpaid, to any adTY CENTS. Address |T!!l SHING HOUSE, X ve? Atlanta, Ga. \t/ ?lwT|PJfiCai! ill" 1 II'U on os. ng at Reasonable Price* ylT ANTISEPTIC VLER KNOWN TO SCIENCE. rritating. Allays Inflammation and stops strong as carbolic acid and as harmless as instantly; cures old and chronic sores; ition from any cause on man or beast. For > head and roup. Satisfaction positively CENT CHEMICAL CO? Ft. Werth. Te?fc XT* TC IN REFERENCE TO JC" Aw A 0 JOHN It. DICKEY'S Old Reliable EYE WATER It cure* tore eye* and granulated 11 da. It strengthens weak eye*. It eoois and soothes a sore eye. It refreshes and strengthens a tired eye. It don't hart when applied. It feel* good?children don't dread it The genuine always enclosed in a red folding box. Avoid imitations or something recommended ]nnt m good. For chronie sore eye lids, sties and diseased condition of roots of eye lashes, use Dickey's Old Sellable Eye Salve. At all stores or by mail Sets. DICKEY DRUG CO.. Sox 50. Bristol. Yens. <m en nn ttTTVQ JJU AW The most complete Saw Mill built in the Southern States, Gainesville Iron Works, Gainesville, Ga. se ugiy, grizzly, gray hair*. U?? " I ' ;-.Tv ',V '-> .-.*r * . - >.v v:- ri ' ' ' ' at Lydia E. Pinkham's j b ! ?ound Succeeds. Dear Mrs. Pinkham :? j * "1 was told bj my physician that I j had a fibroid tumor and that I would j have to be operated upon, I wrote to *j 3'ou for advice, which 1 followed carefully and took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. I am hot only cured of the tumor but other female troubles and can do all my own work after eight years of suffering." Mrs. S. J. Barber, of Scott, N. Y. | writes: * Dear Mrs. Pinkham:? "Sometime ago I wrote you for advice about a tumor which the doctors n.'SM,!/] t/"> lip removed. ' uauu^iic tTvu*\? * v ?? ? Instead I took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and to-day am a well woman." Mrs. M. M. Funk, Vandergrift, Pa., writes: Dear Mrs. Pinkham :? "I had a tumor and Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound removed i it for me after two doctors had given me up. I was sick four years before I began to take the Compound. I now | recommend Lydia E Pinkham's Veget- i able Compound far and near." Such testimony as above is convincing evidence that Lydia E. Pink- . ham's Vegetable Compound stands ' J without a peer as a remedy for Tumor ! Growths as well as other distressing ills of women, and such symptoms as Bearing-down Sensations, Displacements, Irregularities and Backache, etc. Women should remember that it ' is Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound that is curing so many women Don't forget to insist upon it when some druggist asks you to accept something else which he calls "just as good." Mrs. Pinkham's Invitation to Women. i Women suffering1 from any form J ; of female weakness are invited to i j write Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass., for advice. She is the Mrs. Pinkham who has been advising- sick fromen free of charge for more than twenty years, and before that she assisted her mother-in-law, Lydia E. Pinkham in a&yising. Thus she is especially well qualified to guide sick women back to health. FADELE. r other dye. One 10c. package colors all fibers. They te for free booklet?How to I?ye, Bleaca and Mix Coloi QQViwyw f A Tribute t< j X By Dr. Henry w n???? O you remember what 2 be fails into an e I name with small capi i cheap encomiums of t ous Latin as "princep i ItlOIMI M There is some trui J they are wasteful, ex praise is to be lavishei what adjectives shall i richer, more subtle and sustaining viand On roast pig a man cannot work; < talcen of it immoderately. But bacon ' It strengthens the arm while it satisfies . icately salt as the breeze that blows fi j blue smoke of incense, wafted from a < I nourishing, a stimulant to%the hunger y ! bloom and consummation of the mild ] j nobler fate than juvenile roasting and t ' perfection surpassing nature. ' And when we say of one escaping | | bacon," we say that the physical basis j life are still untouched and secure. TTTl- _ J. 1 J 1.^?^ + /N VYliaL cuuiu uave uecu ucilci uiau u J eaten by firelight? True, we had no ? j we never mourned for them. We made j tin cans and- th cover of a kettle; and fi j viceable as the porcelain of Limoges or ' our boiled potatoes with butter; our tro { ? j ^ Side and Centre ! ' lAtlaS Engines LARGESTOCK LOMBARD Foundry, Machine and Boiler Works and Supply Store, AUGUSTA, GA. Light SAW MILLS i LATH AND SHINGLE MACHINES, i ' SAWS AND SUPPLIES, STEAM AND GASOLINE ENGINES. Try LOMBARD, ACg?STA (At 39-'07.) . W. L DOUC $3.00 & $3.50 SHOES ggg=SHOES FOR EVERY MEMBER ( THE FAMILY. AT ALL PRICE Off non {To any one who can 1 Douoia* doom not I )#"o? Man's $3 AS nCWUnta (than any other ma THE REASON W. L. Douglas shoes are worn in all walks of life than any other make, is b excellent style, easy-fitting, and superior we The selection of the leathers and other materfc of the shoe, and every detail of the making is the most completeorganization of superintendej skilled shoemakers, who receive the highest wa shoe industry, and whose workmanship cannot If I could take you into my large factories at E and show you how carefully W. L. Douglas shoe would then understand why they hold their si wear longer and are of greater value than any < My $4 .00 and S5.00 Gilt Edoe Shoe CAUTION! The genuine have W.L.. Dough No Substitute. Ask your dealer for YT. I,. D I direct to factory. Shoes sent everywhere by inai . ' J Wery & Company succemors to avhry a McMillan. 1.08 Boatb Forsyth St., Atlaat*, Qa. - x ?jlll kinm of? MACHINERY J Reliable Frlck EngIne?T~ Boiler*, aU Sizea. Wheat 8?parator*. /l7w -i> ' . 1 Large Engines and Bollara supplied promptly. 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Dyke. | , *,| Charles Lamb said about'roasi pig; cstac r of laudation, spelling the very tals and breaking away from the he native tongue to hail it In sonor- \ s obsoniorum!" th in his compliments, no doubt;'but cesslve, imprudent. For if all this 3 on plain, fresh, immature roast pig, we find to do justice to that riper, ' , "broiled bacon?" )ften he cannot sleep if he have par- ,J 'brings to its sweetness no sitiety." the palate. Crisp, juicy, savory; derom the sea; faintly pungent as the :lean wood-lire; aromauc, api>cu?u6, vhich it appeases; 'tis the matured little pig, spared by foresight, for a irought by art and man's device to a p*eat disaster, that he has "sav^d his and the quintessential comfort of his ur supper, cooked in the open air and dates?they had been forgotten?but a shift to get along with the tops of rom these rude platters (quite as serSevres), tfe consumed our toast, and ut?and, best of all, our bacon. (Ot LIU 1IV1 U>l'k/V?WW ? WW w , _ _ _ box of Pax tine with book of instructions and genuine testimonials. Send your name and address on a postal card. Kzx a ww cleanses HjJ jfi WTSU C and heals gPM Sft 9 SgB^mucous IT Mm 1III b ^ '~u fections, such as nasal catarrh, pelvic cntarrli and inflammation caused dv femiisine ills; sore eyes, sore throat and mouth, by direct local treatment. Its curative power over these troubles is extra{ ordinary and gives immediate ~eilef. Thousands of women are using ana recommending it every day. 60 cents at druggists or by mail. Remember, however, IT COSTS YOU NOTHING TO TRY IT. THE It. PAXTON CO., Boston, Mass. ILAS A ^ THE WORLD JSJBwL r prove W. L mako 9, melt B& - ?nk Z3.SO ehoee ifflBuftfrS-tu Islftfi inufacturer. HA s are made, you lape, lit better, L_ other make. it oannoi be equalled at any prtee* is name and price stamped on bottom. Take ouglas shoes. If lie cannot supply you, send L Catalog free. W.L.Dousl&s, Brockton. Mau. . $1.00, retail. i r v. . ; , og