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M AKDEIiSOn INTELLIGENCE! Fonded August 14-, 18e? US Vorth M?Sm ?ta-t 15DEK80T?? fl. C F* Wi GILLIAM BANKS W. W 8M0AK - Entered According to Art >A Ccu mau Seeon?.CUM:MairLM?2Zzz/? eke Fostoflice nt Andino*, B. C. FtiHim Every -Weekly Edition oa Tuesday a? Friday Mornings I I , ffllj I I?. II? , Ll ? I .Waekly Edition- ?1 SS psr Teat Edition-IMP' pet annum 81a Months; $1.26 for Thrw IN ADVANC? Member of the Associated ^Preas au J Raeetriag Complete Daily T?legraphh A largs circulation than any ethel Pewapaper tn thia Con gresslonal DM numvi?v aft!torial - ..? - - - Wi Easiness Office -, v - - . - Wi - -?-?.??S = - - ?? local News. SSI .oeiety HgW*'v^^"ki.''-?'-4- -'"Itt i ? I 'I I?. ?. Ul I ? ? JPhe InteUJgencsr ls _d?Hrered bj Sra^,ano4d1\)e &wa to Tho Anier eon Intelligencer,. .... Ta? Weather. Washington, May 14.-Forecast: South Carolina-Cloudy Friday, prob ably showers on the coast; Saturday! MjEHtMlTO -r. . V?T I ; THOUGHT F0B THE ?AT ^ I Our portion is not large, indeed, Jiut then how little do we need; I For Nature's calls are few; An this the art of living iles, *T> .w?ili- ut? ii?ufij ihr.n ?tny snnicc, And make'that little do? J -Coltojr&..J Thc Pendleton Farmers* Society Is getting lively in its old* age. '.? 'O''" ? Atlanta was full of the ?hricer?, and ftOW tho HhTlnerx a.ti\ full nf AHc.nl? No sir, Hot even a > chaw nf . sun cured, if you are to Join th? Methodist itinerants, j Greenville Is gating^'w^e thn^ At lanta aboufj tryinjr to h?ve ? finger ia every pie. j j-c Ex-Gov. Comer of ^mbnm? wai' bot .what his name implied.' Mc bas. in stead, mad* hi? exit. Lo7e laughs at locksmith? . and pranks with Jokesmtths. Gen. Cokey jj baa just got married. - ' o? ? Detective Burns made a good raes tn Georgia. He was seeking not..-in office, but an office building . Huerta, matead' qt waiting tor the A. ?. C. iucjl?ior?. uuuu?? cal! a C. A, B. and get out of M?xico. Auder son, may have a novel exper S.-\nco of 0 negro bains t?t SLtur der while fte court was In sesi?n. .' ? * - fttv griffith will mako some poiiti. .dans take khelr.owu medicine ip.po^j bia. It [used to. be "Doc Stanly,'* Sensato advocates in Spartan are very much Mn in .th* Afr ov?r same quirk ? tn tile law that eras found in Anderson. , Thfs matter of no ralo la getting; ?0rxOiu> Witt? ?i?u? iujiiier?. Tuc small grain' crop will be hurt lt there J? not rain right away. ' -- Happy ia that omeo bolder who can go .through the campaign thia =um mer a? a holdover. Fried chicken ym\ taste good to ram. The only kind of thing that Ed Do C-smp ever plowed looked like the he loved animal of the' democratic party,! when that psViy'W'is'iipt in .power. CongrcRsman Wyatt? Aiken (has in troduced lu congress1 the Anderson j county conveUtkMiJ^ullQn endof ... L ,,:-.v., ? ?r -A-. stoaefe ts -try lng te do saaae. iAr n?atrtvfcU In ta? PttVtmjWl - - . .-. . . r but Forman Smtih yat wares oat expansive piece of cloth ever : Anderson 1912 pennant. oars out of tbn state take th? caty convention sm ? hi?., state a? a toa ot Bless?. Not at ail. not No issues were raised. It ta to the governor to take that ii the crows. DON'T ACCEPT RI/MORS In (bc platform of one of the candi dries for mayor published in The In telligencer this morning he states "1 feel that a 40-year contract is toe long"-with the utilities cotnp?nj . We a?rce. with .-.lbj*. ganUennm When thia matter was first agitated tatt fall?tbe .public JAfc^u ..carton ?niiri-ct: WHS l**d ?DtO IWHI-VIIII- thst the utilities company actually asked xor a 60-year contract, and an exclusive con tract at that. What arc thc, facts?/-<B The company has a flre-je-r con tract. That la all. What kind ot contract la lt? lt waa stated in council by gentle men who were banging back on the proposition that the rates are fair, by comparison with other cities. What else doe? this contract do? It permit? the city to bay the water work? riait now if |t wishes to. Is there anything unfair about that? If : any body wishes municipal ownership th?w u the chase?. -45'yisrs f hence, but now. . ??It^?frmtti'nne^fty f tJtrWe^yW'conrr^ the other to Columbia, and each baa a tea? year contract ? Against five years in Anderson, We have given a great ?eal'of study to thia proposition, and feel sure that this candidate for mayor has let him self listen to what persons who are either ignorant or. ?ciirsrin- h;re. b*en spreading around for month?, and ha? not inquired for himself. We wil 1 admit that the utilities com ' any has a franchisee, or permit, to engage in business riere for a period of 40 year?. But is ts not aa exclusive Instala*. Any other company th?t wishes to can come in here, lt wah rumored last fall that'this was to be an exclusive franchie*.: ; And where would i be the- justice. in < asking -any company .to came i?..henfi,and ?n*md ooaty !n- large amounts and say that it should i be put. out of business at any > time lt might, suit the whim of fickle and unreasoning politicians? fc?: We wiah to bring these) matters, for,we wj?h to see justice done a ,com pany which baa it In its power ip help Anderson. And just in this connection we wish to say that the public seems to haye paid little attention to the details at tho c/*?*ri?c?. but '?fe ih??k lt sufficient that it Insure* a reduc ?as of 1? "'?sd .'*-?. S'S? cent in raid and that It gives a tower rate, If we are' not mistaken, than an indepen dent concern doe? in 8parl<??burg. al though In that city larger customers aye given more consideration than the small consument. We have no more interest in the utilities company than we have in the gas company. And yet we have never heard one word enid against the ga? company. We are proa? of their sue ??eta tn Anderson. Many a poor j housewife blesses the day when maa for cooxing putpoaes waa brought to town. We have beard pf no wild la ii'.nt aWut granting a franchise for fifty years to >hls company^ which, if we mistake not, is but one, of many owned by a syndicate. Ana tno rate for ga* as published under whooping headlines at the time so that nobody ennld h?yn feUed to know it, $1.80 per i,o?w tubfe'rteV I r 5 \ h ila* anybody in Anderson ever in vestigated to see whether or not that rate was all right t We believe lt to be fair, And we believe tue electric light 'rate to be fair. We have no criticism to make of people who will come in here and spend tb**Ir money to build up thia town when they ro main within the bounds of reason tn ?hflr ru?reci anal ?j*y? 20o4 ?eTV?C?. We helle ve. that there ia an honor* abl? net of men In the field for of fice in this city. If they will atrip ibis matter ot all pr?judice, study it ?ft lt? merits and cut out the allega tions and rumor? and ',thj?WMr? and stick to what the fted Jf> |Q^ft truth In'the ' matter, lhe9R^?MRhcm~ soiree will admit'PflHgi 'dust about aa good i conlra??^^^ x**r?. any umimii??^mtmmmimmng tafe $9&# great deal better rate thant (l oTt'S MO ?N THE WAR idte men do not make rich ste E*? ?OWABH J lie. Fuss the; Word .* Tomorxow. some of thom have for a ten year period. Of courue this discussion of the en tire matter is merely academic as there 18 no issue in lt except whether or not the city wishes to buy the water plant now. Why not get ' some Uve, Jdtpgressive matters' fot ttfs|u?sty4?| Wash are we to b? a *cftyT *Svnen/|rje^we to have paved nt reeta? When,'and how? "-???il?.?Q?h#???i I .1 .n ,.. THE MODERN COOK Of courue^ the*'best place^ to^ teach dpmeett?i science fe J? the kitchen. No better cooks over lived than the black goddesses of the old. time Southern kitchen. But they were wasteful. When one thinks the matter over that is an lr jvltable conclusion. They were good cooks, but anybody can make good chicken dumpling with a pound cf elegant, fresh country but ter. All paragraphers like to jest about the kind of cooking taught in domestic science schools, but we protest. Young women of today haven't the materials at hand with which to cook, aa their ?mothera had in lavish abundance.- W< Jthink the domestic science school at Anderson College, for example, ia great institution, teaching economy Jua /well .as. cooking jwA. Are. jmerous. others. We publish the following as a sam- ' pie or the klud'dr huffibr tba** is band ed out bris?me brigb^wUs under thej! mistaken; Mea that they, ?r? ' both truthful jinki Just: -j MA Cherryvale woman was delighted When sh4 hired 'a cook who had taken domestic science course, Bf rs. F. D. Moffett writes. The first day this up to-date maid announced : 'I can't make flaky pastry unless I nave a .marble slab.' 'Where ls your spatula?* was the next question. A call waa then KL*? ava ct ia u?vtt vuoiutvuiutiU? t tum was followed by a plaintive request for a pastry tube, a. bread mixer, a grapefruit knife, a rotary cream whip, an egg s?parator and a glass rolling pin. ?hej tatkeo of balance? rations ?bd garnished dishes with parsley and curled celery, till the man who foots the bills \ peremptorily ordered more grub anti less alfalfa. Yes, the do mestic science pupil is hunting an other job! where true worth is ap itlated. ii i? , > T, . MAU, OrtRER H0V8K8 j <a; J ..*?..-? 'V? '.Tts i The mall order; bouses are; largely, fakers, piey?'bave,a.<ew-leaders <an which thfey make special prices that terhpt and titus earn for them the re putation ?r selling things at a remark |ebiy lowj price. But'the cost of the catalogue; the postage or the express? and the other 1 terna that figure . into the final Icoat which, comes out or, the purchase?'- pocket, ?di of these tbinss Will eventually make the article cost almost ag much as if it were purchas ed from a store In' the nearest mar ket. And it is not always that thej gooda purchased from mail order] houses give satisfaction. The parcels post ?aw may havel helped mail order . houses somewhat, j but business In general has been stim ulated. So much that the outsiders j have not injured local merchants. ' LA8T. OF THE PALMETTOER j Death of jl. k,Ueh^*t Flehens Last Eaaley Progress. Mr. James A. .McKee, the last tnem ia south {Carolina of the,famoue''Pal metto Rs?isscn: o? tha ??sskis V.'ar w? 1846-48. dted at hts home oh six Mlle Creek, ten miles Wiest Of Piekens. on Saturday .^afternoon. May the 9th, and wae buried with Masonic hoaera At *??H Mile church on Sunday afternoon. Ser vices weir conducted by Rev. B. P. Murphreet of Crow Creek. Mr. McKee waaia hts slat year. Had been practically an Invalid for several years. He' ie survivra Irv hut wife and live grown children as folio we: J. L. and W. P. ateneo, of this county, James McKee, ot Pall River. Kansas. Poster Marshall McKee, of A nadar aa. Okla., and Mrs. A. A. Hopper, of this county. lt waa our rieasure soma six waeka since, in company with rios. ls. P. Mc iCravey and Sheriff R, R. Roark of Plckena, to carry Judge J. J. If arlin. iet'Sajt Point, Qa., who waa a com rade of Mr. McKee In the Mexican War and le only two yeas younger than i&tf|p*7R? see him. -. They, had not met tefoty> in sixty-six years. i OwtA^thO death of Mr. McKee. Judge MartacHa the sole survivor of,the Abr ?H^t)a?fir.Ths>e were two or ?Sn ' jqp'Tuibrn Of the regiment . Still lUMufiitow months ago? one of them O O O O O O O O O p O O O 9'$..%.%% e BAPTIST*NKW8 1 . oooooooooo 00000000 (Krim) (lie iL'ouri.r) The tonlract ft ir thu ?ow W.e?tmlo* ster Hawttft '.liuuh, Hev. M- M-"Wf low, paHihr. wal? to bave bec? let on May twelfth. The .?da?*-' tt;W|p| about *1<0<>0. Provfeiqo wt? betuAdo for'a nu>d?fp:Sun4**ohool ?nditM seating ^%??*3Hrm(b*&*?*>^^ Pastocr3vaqg(/H8t O. L. Orr baa been in fi good .nioatln?Twjth BvotjberJ L. S.'S'fcal?y snd thc nuffa?ri ?ii^lerl church. I nion county association. Evangelist T. M. Martins ls assisi- I lng Pastor W. D. Wakefield and tho I Second JtuptUt church., Columbia in I a series of evangelist le services.- I Dr. E. S. Alderman, pastor of the I FirBt Baptist church of Spartanburg, I spent last Sunday-in Yonkers, N. Y., I where he was pastor for many years. I Dr. W. T. Derleux'supplied for Dr. Alderman. Pastor B. L. Kueley of Hones Path was in our office last week and gave us the unwelcomed hews that because of long continued illness he had been compel??d to bring bis good wife to the hospital in. Greenville. . Sh? type I been sick for many wet*s.". Wo great ly trust, that thia change will be for the better and that very soon the good woman will be jin tho-Biidat of h?r. lo v od work again. ' In* 1 We' nr??di?me ,*ririiftBv'tiffi i w'lLiilntvWM^ei^Vfatiflutr^firft for Pastor Kuglejrv Dr. J. H. Thayer Winand his pas torato ut NVllUamstenrflibe tastJKn-, day l? ?VflKfc?^a?foo f??idwins Wednesday uigbt f?r he was with hie people a,t pip? midweek sgryice. H?\ wm W^.WMytri^f^Mfe?? ei mouth In louisville. Ky., end on the first of June they will take" up"their hew work at Lan caster, Lancaster is preparing for their coming by building a modern two-story parsonage which when fln^ lshed will cost nearly $3,000. Dr. Thayer ls attending the Nashville Con? volition. Jesenh D'Amienr tonk an nxnniuilvo bite by cracking a $300 pearl with his teeth while eating clams in Amagan sett, N. Y. , r ADVERTISLH6 TALKS (By Phelp? Sdsseen.) II lill > Vi I I lill iii/t*' o*.< BUSINESS BU?LDIIMJ A successful sgleaavan mast have: ambition. WW. oanaott ,th,i?k; ? doed alb completion.. Tho jhpuglu mest.be, 1 riven, or compel led by some other force. Ambition awaaenjj^^glre^ ? direction and purpose,to,effort, spar- ? pens thn intellect and rend?ra^on? fl more capable' of ? cuttiifc his 'w?1 fntn difficulties and hewing1 dowp tWt'lii?r?, ? riera to euccess -. Ambition also generates ' the ' steam' of enthusiasm and tr there io asy cse .1 thing mor? necessary ? th?? annthey't^ *h$ success pf a saiesracn, it ls enthus iasm. Emerson says.that nothing of importance was ?vcr accomplished in ina world without en*kmdaam. Cheerfulness ls a positive quality.. ? grouchiness is a negative. Cheerful,^ fl ness ls, to the customer what sunshine fl is to the plant hie. A pleasant smile remoVea obstacle*, removes objections and Inspir?e confidence.- No one I likes to do business with a grouch'? | We all >vish to deal with the man wno. fl t8 pleasant. ! " ? Apropos of this positive quality. Cheerfulness, I would quote the old old expression, "The ?p?s?it and *?Erfl pessimist, the difference ls droll, the optimist, sees the doughnut while tho j peetmlst' seq? the hol*?> industry, pers?v?rance and persia-Jfl ttnce. these are the positives ot Dip |fl Wlti ' I believe that ail. of us under- J ?iSSi ?hat -t?? pC,3i: -;t;^i arc the ones that spell .?peces? for the. I salesman. The salesmai and lack of success is.traceable to the negative every time. .ltW?*-^ a perqbn knows .?re >? -which are the negatived' then the only steps necessary to sud?eta" a?e to' ed-1 ucate and'develop the positives. Regardlug Industry. . pers?v?rance fiau pc?"5iK*~-DC?, w??? -n?y'-xiiai Innre j can be nb success without work. Furthermore, there ls f?? Ilde of busl- ; ness In which pcrseverJ&ce and per sistence are not nerecs?^y is?rs U??V salesmanship. ". 'I have'Hi?de a great ????> ?u?c-o uu. I have never vet hi ar. ?ivan me Instante .'right off the saying is. Even though .the. eos- ? ?temer has determined eoifte'?b?. ?omer the order, he wama to be coax-j v.d or .'drummed" to a qttjrtttln To educate means to draw out andi the process ls very simple. To devel- ,', op the muscles of the body wo must j < oat the right kind i>t'Wt**n& a?so *k- j I orclse the muscles s^tei^lflcally, a?? - h to 4o. th)?; to natural 'Sw, * *a d?rr?P \\ ?plng these mental rause!^. tlg^?a- 1 Kvtdy speaking, we must f?ti#r briese } i name natural taws, we tr.uai feed the i mind on the right kind of food, which j! is knowledge OD.1 ... .- i t exercise,ll the poeiUyes seien: < t?^JHSwW^he tr?? uhy-li sicall v. possesses phyr.lcal ' f/n?ar?nc* ; r I he ono who te develops* < 13 thepne*?*i lives ot thinking miad . te Abe. one efl I ability, the one who bas developed, bia I ; feeling mind ta tho ? :?:ty. {< The ?ne who ls developed 1? ^h* wi;t j. i* t*r? Vt.e?ii Ot ?vt"i.j ? I The man may have the enduKlac? ol < a Jeffrias, the ability cf a Socrates. 1 Bind the relablMty of ? Lincoln, hut if 1 bf> ht tacking lu action, whit doec ir? ) t Unecht to? It ls plain that so chain < sae be stronger '.han its we*h?t link 1 and no maa can be si?-ong?r development af thsea four <M*1UTY, BJBUAOliJTV, ?NDUK- \\ liKC^R and ACTION. U THERE'S one thing nice about money your money; you can spend it where you please f^M?f^^^B^tf?MM^,'i;: ?V\ for any kind of merchandise you L^flU ff ; please. Sp far as we are concerned | h\sm^ with it; our one object is to maUe B RjS^| ! sure that if y ou spend it here y cu':-1 Wf?^wBf? m : shall get tbe greatest possible. H WBS^SK?S^'-<,y> ' value for it. It may be $10. or $25. f??s^^^??wS^ for a suit, ii may t.e 25 cents for a U^m^l!^ m cravat; or anytVng else we sell; ii \ Wi?MI?^?i thc arno jr?t you pay here isn't as Brasil ^SWai^ important to us as the value we } 'If you care to know what a policy (jJ^P^^l^' // . of that kind produces in real value, , Y?f fks ^ ?\ ?? S come and see our suits. Start at 'W^V^? u .$10. $12.50. $15. $18. $20, V H ? ; S J? " , $22.50. ?25-. and study the result ^ aiSr . j. for value, We k.now what we've -\j .! < j^^^^^? ^ I vtone in that line and we'll leave it ' t isfet^^ ? . to your judgment. - WMMMAW, Here exclusively you'll find Stein Bloch Smart Clothes, $18. $20. $22.50. $25. and such quality at $15. as character izes our EVANS FIFTEEN. Special attractions in oxfords. Snow oxfords, almost un reasonably cheap, $3.50; Howard and Foster's $4. and $5; Hanans. $5.50 and $6.00. Straw Hats that are the latest "craze." Split straws, $1.50. $2. $2.50. $3.... Mackinaws, !$2. $3. Sennits,' $1.50, $2. $2.50. X$3. Bangkoks, $5. Panamas, $5. to $7.5.0, ; . . ' ;,V: ? "' ' fr Order .by. parcel* post . We prepay alt charges. > . ^; "The Store wifh a Conscience'' WW*-'/. Sunday Sehen I THE LESSON FOR I PREPARED BY DR. Z. TH Luke Hill 15, 19-31. The Pharisees, who were very covet ous, took much offense at Christ's doc. trine of wealth. We saw that our Ba viour taught that money waa a trust from God : and "that as his stewards, men should us? it to make friends for Christ and do so by using lt for thc benefit of men. It this doctrine was practically carried out, much lesa money would be spent in personal ag grandizement and more in all those ways: which are, for the saving, better ment, upd development of humanity. There-would be less profits coming to tjTaf^M$h and larger wages to the la? borei*. t'crhaps the landlord's house would not be so fine, and perhaps tho laborer's bouse would be better. It was a doctrine Itke thia which the IPhsf^Bees scorned. What they be? It.vrd In. waa wealth "used fer personal BwMfv'VOw^r and gbvy. Of course, ii.nnft With tuch ease went the rub. ot the laborer or slaves who made the wealth aud the misery of thoe??w>tw cCuru ?e? rt-j wOrk ut Wuw wirv ohaucv to work. But tbs Pharisees did not core for these. He looked on the con. dUtOa as a proof that they were vuf tnrine from tbe displeasures of a righteous Cc-?, end hts on the uwym/ of two. ric m .tn aO a s*s ..e. hrnnf' .>? Q?>d*? fSVO!" UPC? ??iS?. ?t was to this state of mind that Christ spoke in the parable of Divis and La syus . H coAtaina the most terrifile ut tiran en that ?aa ever spoken against godless wealth. 'The parable ia too familiar to! need recounting. Two scenes are given, an aertbly and an eternal. In the. earth ly Scene there are brought together (treat wealth., fud luxury ou the one tide and the "most abject poverty on tho other. Ac-tordlng Lo the popular inception of that time this rich man sad every evldsnoo that he waa the favorite of heaven and tito poverty of; Iha.poor ihan gare,proof to all that Son himself waa against him. But in irz*M\-4b" Ahrahsm/s bosom. That is, ibey. carried hun to the gre? /.east In Paradise and placed htm o? .Uia a***^ >r coach bf honor at Abraham's sltfc' fina the rich man who ha* enjoyed ijres tn heil, being to great torment, bt* alead that '^xnrua tv, ?en i to ?aaa: ?OTld he had enjoyed plenty, while LautarbB had hui hardship*, but tiut iow things wore being evened up; ? Department 3?A?- ?7, 19H. JODY ?N BAPTIST COUMER I . r -?i-:? ' . ? . ' leas, but who were living in the error that had so blinded him; and he now pleads with Abraham to send Lazarus to them to warn -them. But be waa told that if these brothers were not warned and instructed sufficiently by SW??B' laws they would not bc con vinced by one from the eternal world.? Lessons.;. 1. Tho parable must not be pressed too far. lt ls only a figure of speech, lt lg not a history. It ls not a kodak visw of the other1 world. It'was made, not seen; end mace to teach nome les sons. Thc details were shaped so as, to teach these lessons most oowerfui ' ly. For instance, the seeming close ness of the saved and the lost to each j other tn this parable and tho conversa . tlon of Abraham and Div CST were not Untended to teach. I thii?k. lb?? such lie actually the case In the other world. nnEjnhat auch conversations take '.place. These details were arranged I so as to m&ko poworful things Abra j ham said to Dites; and again because T Dives ?poke pwyiriE?y vt- al? Lrc-thsrs ls uo indication that he waa getting better in heart and would c??.-r a while come to where God could take him out of Hades. But that touch ara?? added in order ic brisg out-the ? Tait that his brothers alrcci^ had would hear Moses; 2. The parable teaches not what does happen, bat what can frppftW?U. that la so far aa the Heh and the poor nre concerned. It does not mean for us to understand that every ?ich y?r son has hts Tafe, and that every poor, miserable parson, at death, la carried I to Paradise.... Tba PtfaHae?s thought Wfaftievery rich man. because he -wae j rich, had evidence of acceptsfcce with-. God; and that great poverty itaelf wa* two classes tn ive draw* Uu scenes in bott and w* aa? waa. io. Pei commend a necessarily a Poor men can ? poor(thhiks God's thoughts after liini." i}^?i.,^|Ulat4ireis who wept to register' J bod's will in good laws, win work to I Jmn??yA !}?? ru?f;?ttt^>?? yv* t??~ '.'"'?>-T ~~.t ; also, (if not, why not?I he will legtc i "late as to make luxury a shame. 4. The parable uringa out some things that Christ certainly believed about eternity and thc other world. These for instance, (1- Angels como for those who. are his and bear them to their home; (2) Men immediately after death enter into Joy dr sorrow; there 1B no sleep until the resurrection Cc) That the wicked go into unbear able punishment; (4) That there is change for the better passible fdr iySgJ?iWho are lost; (S) That Ufo and and this life alone is tho time for repentance; (6) That God has done ali that ts p^e8aary.hyVt.^nd.^9aw..io*'^ ?ead mea to, ^pentancc and if .men re ject: Moses, a>jtj*jf? <$$rt, bis orbssV his gospel and his church, it lu nat possible to arouse them;, they would not repent IX,the;dead arose nrid toidi th? tu to do so; and (?) Tho re is no such place aa^rgatwy. ' . :.'5. Our Bnviour reco?s!ze?5 la thean parables the principles of comp . tioa: Eternity will even up thc in e.iualWoe of time. This principle batt been woeered nt, but lt can stand moro than sneers so long aa lt can point to 6. .Th?re IB certainly that in this parable that warns mea against rest ing ia luxury and wealth. Such a i state has the. power of deceiving a linar, so completely that the gospel-1t .-9*1? ^?not y?t "Ey sens? In hi? peart. L. ?.. i'i'^r?t??? ?ncumn ?xen and m [eternity thia fixity of character is un 'changeable. - No mari will ever cross lover the Hgulf between him and <lfc"-1 ' other, whether that other be am 1^21