The ledger. [volume] (Gaffney City, S.C.) 1896-1907, February 15, 1907, Image 7
-> 4
I
Sour
StomacH
No app?litc. loss ol strength, nervous-
i, bad b.eath, I
i, and catanh j
to Indigestion,
.is ncv discov- ^
^ices of digts- I
ilthy stomach, !
Vnov/n tonio '
;s. Kodol for j
iot only re ,eve indigestion
but this famous remedy i
all stomach t, ubles bv cleansing,
^fying, sweeps ? and strengthening
iucous rncmlr. ■ t! stomach.
S. S. Pail, of Ravf . W Va . says:— |
«trebled wth -.-mr sfr'a for twenty years. ;
cursd ns and we are r. v/ using it in milk i
nens. headache, corstip
rncral debility, sour n
stomach are all
if,l r< i
sreser/.s i, - natu
^ as th
Ibtncd th .
\reco;. t.ve prope
sia
lyspepsia
Calm age
Sermon
By Rev.
Frank I)e Witt Talmatfe. D. D.
i . _ . .
Los Angoles, t'al., I'eb. 10.—In this
tlinate that a penny in olden times sooner tvasi the king lilterated than he tliau we ate j over tn he •
would lilre a laborer for n whole (Tny, commanded that all the prisoners in | eftf i,. r 0 f m y people. I must teach
that funeral cost in modern money at Compter should In future have a Are
least a half million of dollars. At Stik- and food to eat. Thus Is it with motL
knra the tombs for these sacred buils of us. Cod locks us In Jail in order
were cut out of the solid rock a quar- that we may sympathize with the
ter of a mile long. The sarcophagi, or world s prisoners, lie lays us upon
huge coffins, in which the embalmed la?d.s of slckne-s iu order to teach us
bodies of these bulls were placed were to help the sick. He exiles us iu far
cut out of one monster stone thirteen
feet long, seven feet wide and eleven
feet high.
The Egyptian Temples.
Then what beautiful temples were
erected for the worship of these Egyp
tian animals! Never in nil the wide
off Midian lands in order that our
hearts of 'ove might beat in sympathy
with the suffering hearts of our fellow
men.
But there was still another reason
them not to l>e wasteful. Cod will al*
ways give us enough to eat and
clothes to wear, but waste is a sin.
It should l>e a crime In man's eyes, as
it Is a sin in Cod's sight." Thus Moses’
struggle for* dally bread scattered
away many of the foolish notions he
had about Cod' providence and care.
He learned that Cod meant man to
help himself. When Moses led his peo
ple through the lied sea. methlnks he
often went through the camps and
why Cod shut Moses np in his Midian kept a watchful eye upon how his poo-
exile. It was to teach the future emnn p j ( . lived and what they did and how
sermon the preacher shows that as wo j-| ( j imve then 1 l)een more beautiful cl pa tor of the Hebrew race the great they cared for the temporal blessings
lessons of patience. No man Is lit to i which Cod had surrounded them,
be a true leader of men unless he can
todol Digests What You Eat.
only Rrl: virs i-d ; n, sour stomach,
belching of e?.s, r.\c.
spared by E. G. C « . T & CO.» CHICAGO.
For ail* by
iberohre Dreg Co.. Gaffney; D
Allison, Co.vc.ena
Moses' exile was necessary for his buiuiugs than those ancient temples
practical training and development as c f Kardusseh and Philae and Aboo
a great leader so there are periods in Simbel and Kom Umboo and Adfoo
our own lives when we seem to be and Esnek and Karnak, where the
hopelessly sidetracked by suffering, pharaohs worshiped, anti Medeenet
trial or misfortune, all of which are
needed to briftg out the better qua 11-
Haboo and Luxor and Kurneh. Truly,
like Paul standing on Mars hill, when
we see these huge structures we can
keep his temper under control and be
willing to wait. ‘‘Patience is but lying
to.” once said Beecher, “and riding ortt
the gale.” But one of the hardest tasks
on earth Is to be willing to lie to and
do nothing. Thus God fitted Moses for
tie* i ' our nature. The texi Is Ex- ex ,.| fl | tu *<Ye men of old Egypt, I per- his great leadership ov**r the Hebrews
odu.s )■ 15. But Moses lied from the r(1 j ve t| ia t in all things ye are too su-
ie Rhode Island Reds
by teaching him the lessons of pa
tienee down in faroff Midian lands.
He made Moses Just learn to wait.
One year passes, then I wo years, then i •' ,>u l " ' ''
five years, then ten years, then tuon- 0 ■' ,,n 111 >s ° ''
ty years, then thirty .’.ears and then
forty years. All this time Moses was
brooding over the Injustices which
face of Pharaoh and dwelt In the land j^i-sUtious!” Why, the ‘great hall of
of Midian." pillars" at Karnak looks as though the
Hunger and hardship prove torture p||| ars fond boon hewed out of the very
to all men who endure them, yet they t . eri p.i- t ,f the earth and set up in long
entail the greatest suffering when they roW3 f or the dome of the heavens to
assail men who have once dwelt in ros j upon, so massive are they. Each
the palaces of, luxury. It is harder to OU(? 0 f those columns is covered with
be a pauper after one has once been a t j u . mi(S , exquisite carvings. So in- were being perpetrated upon his peo
silk robed prince than It is to be a pan- |i n |te are these carvings that, like a pie. But not until twoscore years had
per when one has always been aeons- j ira j r j,, f U n () f sv ild flowers, tbeir indi- passed did God say to Moses: “My
tomed to w ear rags. Moses would not V i ( i lK1 | beauties are lost in the multi- son, go to Egypt, and I will he with
have felt the hot, blistering sands of tude ,,f the wonders. Do you wonder, thee Go up, and I will make thee an
the desert as he did. nor would his ttm j^ t |j e pernicious iniluences of such emaiK ''■•■tor for an enslaved race."
parched lips or his blistered tongue heathen worship, that God said to Oh. how some of us are chafing at the
have been so distressing, if his desert yioses. the adopted si>n of Pharaoh’s fact that God is keeping us iu Midian
1 journey when he was tleeiug away daughter: “Come, my child—come to exiles of inactivity! We want to do
from Egypt to the land of Midian. Midian lands. Come into the quietude something to aid our follow men. but
near to old Mount Sinai, bad been tak- 0 f a desert exile. Come and learn of God Is saying to us as lie spake to
on by a man who had never been any- n)( . a nd hear the duty required of Moses: “My child, be patient. Thou
thing else but a Hebrew slave. Mo- tbee." Now, my friends. Just as Moses canst never be a liberator of thy fel
so*, it is true, had been born of a i ia d his Midian exile to learn of Hod's
slave, but he had been accustomed to thoughts and God's ways, we, as God’s
luxury through the adoption by which children, should have dur Midian ex
ile became the son of Pharaoh’s daugh- nos.
ter. The finest garments crowded his (jod had another purpose In arrang
wardrobe The most costly viands i U g the events which culminated In
ia one and the same bird, utility with were iu bis larder. The richest of pal driving forth Moses from Pharaoh's ! that you have never learned to gov
the fancy qualities. I have had the Reds aces w ere his domiciles. The most palace. The adopted son of Pharaoh's cm yourself, you have never learned to
y e ^ rs *, an ' 1 V' t ‘‘' °^ ler learned ssiges conversant with all daughter bad t<> Ik.* taught by bitter wait when It is best to wait?
£.rfaVo l L*' d ; W expcrk-ace wh»> U w» .. suff.T |
The Uses of Labor.
Some women grumble because so
much of their time lias to be spent iu
bending over the kitchen stove, and in
making the dresses for the children,
nud in sweeping the doors, and in
making the beds, but remember that
by these daily struggles of life Cod is
teaching you that, though lie is will
ing to help you, yet he also expects
Mon. it seems
our lives have to
If You Read ThiB
It will he to learn that the l< i«ling mocM-
cal writers and teacher- ot all the several
schools of practice recommend. In the
strongest terms possib'e. each and o\cry
ingredient, entering into the coiuisisitlen
of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Di. overy
for the cure of weak stomach, dyspepsia,
catarrh of stomach, "liver complaint,’’
torpid liver, or biliousness, chronic bowel
affections, and all catarrhal (liw'a'-' s «f
whatever region, name or nature It is
also a ■peeiflo remedy for all such chronic
or long standing eases of catarrhal affec
tions and their resultants, as bronchial,
throat and lung disease (except consump
tion) accompanied with Severe coughs, it
Is not so goiid for acute colds ond cobgh*.
but for lingering, or chronic ca«fle it is
esiKjciallv efficacious in producing per
fect eurcs. 11 contains Black ij^n. ark.
Golden Seal root, Bloodroot. . (one root.
Mandrake root and Queen’s root all af
which are highly praised as remedies for
al! the above mentioned affections b> such
eminent medical writers and teachers as
Prof. Bartholow, of Jefferson Med. Col
lege: Prof. Hare, of tin* Univ. of Pa.;
Prof. Finley Ellingwood. M. I)., of lies-
nett Med. (killege. Chicago; Prof. Jobs
King, M. D , of Cincinnati; Prof. Job*
M. Scuddcr, M. B., of Cincinnati;’ Prof.
Edwin M- Hale. M. D., of liahneinana
Med. Coll . Chicago, anil scores of
others eon ill> •mini nt in their several
scIkmiIs of iiract ice.
The roldeii Medical Discovery ” is the
r- ,
■M
be spent in the store. The butcher's only medicine put up for sale throng*
bills and tlwMbnker'a bills and the doe- druggists for like, purms. that has urir
^ A , . ,, , such prtifcMttl/mal endorsement—wortli
tors lulls must be met. But. reuieiu- nioro than any number of ordinary testi-
ber, GimI is developing you in this monials. Open nubliciiy of its fiirmulfl
struggle for daily bread. He Ls saving is the best possible guaranty of its merit*.
, . A glance at this published formula will
to you: “Son. 1 have made the.* after gh |; w that jp-dical Discovert’
my own image, hut thou must earn contains no poisonous, harmful or habn.-
thy food by the sweat of thy brow, formingdrugs and no alcohol—eheinicaDy
By the thorns and the weeds I am
making thee more and more to learn
that the harvests come from me. 1
am God that givetb all, but it is by
the sets] planting and the hoe thou
dost bend tin* knee and worship at my
shrine.” Canst thou not thank God be
cause Moses had to tend sheep down
Solve the difficult problem of combining
' y witu
low men unless thou dost first learn ln „ th( * lttm l 1 of *** Midlanite8 1 ' v
But I canuof close this sermon wltb-
to govern thyself. Thou must abide
here in faroff Midian until thou dost
learn this truth.” Tell me, my friend,
is not the greatest obstacle retarding
thee from mighty usefulness the fact
pure, triple-retined glycerine being used
instead. Glycerine is entirely unobjec
tionable and liesides i> a most, useful age*t
In the cure of all stomach as well as broi-
chial, throat and lung affections. There
Is the highest medical authority for its
use iu all such cases. The " Discovery "is
a concentrated glyceric extract of native,
medicinal roots and is safe and reliable.
A booklet of extracts from em.nent.
medical authorities, endorsing its ingre
dients mailed //’<• on request. Address
Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y.
out driving home one solemn warning
which should sink into every heart.
After tliis long Midian exile, after Mo
ses had led the children of Israel
through the Bed sea. after lie hail giv
en to the Hebrew people the Ten Gom-
mandments of Sinai, what did Moses
do? He sinned, just as so many other
i ptisiu lore wore nis leaeners. i no experience wruat it was 10 suner injus- j Buffon. the great French preacher, i
of dollars to find out which was tne ^ attest m couches were his resting tlee before he was lined to be the : , m( .e said: “Never think that Gel's de- j ^ I1
and to get the finest in the country, and plnees. All Hint wealth and love could emancipator of a Hebrew race groan- lays are like God’s denials. Hold on! i imo tempt.moils or meir gie.n me
the Re<ls fill the bill, and 1 have as’ fine give were lavish ‘d upon him as a child, ing and suffering amid the tortures of n 0 ld on! Hold on! Patience Is gen- ! work » on know ,h '' sud ’ Katl s J or >’ f
stock as can be found in the United | a boy and a man Now as a handsome Egyptian slavery. He hud to lift to ins!” Aye, patience is more than sim- I s i une o down by the rock of
■ Chapped Lips j
States; not only the Reds, also Buckeye
Beds, M. B. Turkeys and Toulouse < ieese.
T* all who can do so, come and -sre my
birds.
CHEROKEE POULTRY YARDS,
E. R, CASH, Prop.
r*t> ws-unki-Tues
3*
prince and as one of the keenest Intel his lips the chalice of woe filled with
lects of the wo Id. as an epicurean, his own scalding tears and drink the
who looked upon the rarest luxuries of cup of sorrow to the dregs Ix-fore he
life as his necessities, we suddenly was fitted to wipe away the tears from
find him a hunted fugitive, fleeing the eyes of his fellow men. No man
from his foster mother's home with a can truly sympathize with a sick man
pie human genius. Gospel patience Is ^‘nbah. «»' ^od said to his great
the acme of gospel faith and trust. It ^ w ^ iv ‘* r ; ■' Mo,PS - ho f th , 01 ' ^
is resting our faith on Christ. It is the 8inD< **' thou canst not enter into the
divine faith which says. “Though all )li ’.. iny ,
things may seem to go against me for
the time being, yet God is making all
of us have bad our Midian exiles.
Many of us are today in the full swing
price upon his head. He Is charged unless he 1ms first been sick himself things ultimately work together for of our work. After i,oil k88 tit
led us for our task shall we fail him?
Will he refuse to let us enter the prom
ised land at last because of our faith
lessness? It was but for a moment
'IS*
A
Fire,
Life,
with the crime of murder. But, worse No man can truly sympathize with the au( ] therefore we can afford to
than that, his crime is aggravated by t wr unless, like John Howard Payne. wai t. j, ls t to wait for his dear sake."
• the fact that the murdered man was fie has not a place to call his home. Tii 0ro i s an inflnito lot of Christian
an Egyptian who was cruelly abusing or unless In the winter night he has philosophy to be learned In these ,
one of the Hebrew slaves. In other gone to the rooms of a tenement where quaint words of the Hoosler poet. The *nd under strong provocation that Mo
words. Moses was hated as the cham- there was no fire in the cold stove be more I study them the more God f 08 *’ ut ,kat nioment excluded
plon of an alien race, that race a race cause the coal bln was empty, or into s p 0a k s an ,i teaches me the lessons of
of slaves. As an Egyptian prince he a hut where he hears his little ones p a tj 0 nco which he spake to Moses in
had da red stand up and espouse the crying for something to .eat and he his yn,];.,,, ox lie:
Accident,
Health Insur-i
cause and the rights of the Hebrew has not a five cent piece to buy a loaf
slaves, who were the unpaid laborers of bread to ease the gnawings of their
of the kingdom of the pharaohs. hunger. Ah, yes, Moses In that Midian
exile, bv bitter exiierience, learned
os«s assing*. only too well the injustice which the
I want to dwell this morning on the Hebrc , v po( ,p, e in K *ypti tt u slavery
blessings which came to Moses life la had to suffei . ; Lot ns study for a llt tie
hLs forty long years ot exile iu the
It ain’t no use to grumble and complain;
him from the triumph. Lot ns, too,
watch and lie vigilant, for God is strict
with those who have been near him.
We may miss our earthly rest, as Mo
ses did, but may we never miss the
land of the Midianltes. 1 want to
■peak about the blessings which came
to Moses In midlife. The period he
spent in Midian extended from the age
of forty to fifty, and from fifty to sixty,
and from sixty to seventy, and from
seventy to eighty. These twoscore
years of Moses’ life were In some re
while the bringing up of this marvel
ous boy of the east.
Boyhood of ^oses.
He was developed In his early days,
as some of us were by our parents, as
a hothouse plant. No rough, sharp
wind was allowed to touch him. He
breathed no had. vitiated air. His pal
ace bedroom overlooked the wonderful
It's just us cheap and easy to rejoice. , . , „ .... . ^
When (tod sorts out the weather and heavenly haven to. which he went when
God burled bis body and whence he
came to’ rejoice vv|^h* our Lord In his
triumph on the Mount *>f Transfigura-
jtion.
[Copyright. Ui07, by Louis Klopsch.)
sends rain.
W'v, rain.'.-^ my eholc*.
Tn this existence dry and wet
Will overtake the best of men.
Some little shift o’ cloud ’ll shet
The sun off now and then.
There ain’t no sense, as I can se*.
Immortals sich as you and me
A-fuultin' nature’s wise Intents
And lockin’ horns with Provldene*.
Thanks For the Weather.
But have most of us learned the' Wgicldes.
Christian lessons of patience? Like Winfaipeg.
James Whitcomb Riley, can we thank to lf overnight. The yarda
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and
Face
Come along with
all this weather
we are having, :
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Where a Kingdom Is Sold Daily.
Winnipeg is where they do tblnga.
This is really the place where the fron
tier was abolished by the real estate
A kingdom Is sold daily In
An army Is marched in by
ance
gpeots the most momentous of all ~~ „ ,
Moses' career. Moses spent Uls first rtver duriugUhe long hot ( , od for tlie ra | n as W( qi as the sun- ot llle Canadian Uaciflc railway alone
forty years as a beloved prince to he saw the princes and priu- When things go all right, then * n Winnipeg have over - miles of
Pharaoh’s palaces. The second forty cesses lounging intheirb^its.being pull- ' we arf » R n t when anything goes trackage, and tliej need it. T e 1mm-
years he lived In the laud of the ed along by the slaves. Life seemed to be ^ng we have not learned the lessons grants come by battalion-Englishmen
Midianltes. The third forty years of ma,u ‘ »P. f< > r ,I,H n,os ' P art » of Inu , sic of gospel patience. Then we speak lu ^i' 8 - Scotchmen in bonnets. Breton
, his life he spent lu the wilderness with an< * dancing and merrymaking. I he words wtfifh vve ought not to speak French in blue coats, Geimans,
* the Hebrews, leading them from the grounds in which the lad Moses and t j 0 things which we regret all the Swedes. Norwegians, Austrians, Men-
— ^ a scene of Egyptian enslavement to the used * 0 P* a - V " enk 8 dream oi beauty, u f our lives. Naturalists tell ns nonltes. Galicians—all manner of fur-
crystal gates of the Jordan. It is about B e( -‘ a,|!, 6 clotlied all people m igi l (y vvlngcd eagles have five folk and wild. There are fifteen
tij e second epoch of Moses’ life that I wer<> cloihed. Lccauae he was sometimes been slain by Uie little hum known languages in the Winnipeg
would speak today. kindly treated ull people, If they be- ming birds. These smallest of birds, schools and a lot too late to classify.
In the first place, God had a purpose l iave themselves, arc kindly treated. y 0ll could crush in your hand. When you see a stranger, you cannot
In permitting Mokes to be driven Into ® ut ODe dl D’ k, ‘ wns disillusioned. have been known to perch themselves tell whether or not he Is within the
exile. It was to teach him that God’s "hiking again by the river upon fij e Beads of the mighty king.- of range of human speech. You bitterly
thoughts are not as man’s thoughts Now, instead of being a child, a j r There they have sat and peek reflect only that he is one of those who
nor God's ways as man's ways. The was n man in middle life, or about ed an( j peeked until tht*y have pecked have wiped out the old frontier, lost
great Jehovah seemed to say to th® forty years old. \\ bile he was walk- j u ^ 0 brains of the eagles and turn- It forever to those who love the wll-
future emancipator of the Hebrew tog along the river bank he saw an bled their dead bodies u^wu Into the demess. Emerson Hough Iu Outing
•"^ce: “My son, 1 want to take you .Egyptian overseer begin to abuse one du <q Thus a quick temper the luablli- Magazine,
away from the palace' of Memphis toe slaves. Moses was noted for ^y g 0vern ol | r auger iu Pule things.
and the temple of Karr ik and all the to s meekness, but he raised his staff bare been known to absolutely nullify Spider That Change* Color of Eye®,
repulsive heathen wt whip of the and smote the Egyptian and killed him a q^q’^ influence for good. We are M. W . Strickland of Singapore recent
Jones J. Darby
RED SEAL
j CREAM|
I
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FOR
Up-to-Date Jot Print-
ir\<? ( call at thf
LEDGER Office.
Gaffney, S. C.
BeWKt’s Safe*
Ptrl
FOLmHONEMCAR
Egyptians. I want you to lie alone to tos tracks. I hen what happened/ a |] r |g),t ^hen everything is going all ly had a strange experience while alt-
with me out In the desert sancis. I Moses ceased to be a prince. As a right. But we are all wrong when any- ting In a garden at Buitenzorg, Java,
want to talk with you and have you fugitive slave, he was tracked from thing goes wrong. Thus God exiled Watching a captive spider remarkable
talk with me. I want you to learn Pl aee to place. As a Hebrew fngl- Closes j n Midian to teach him patience, for the possession of a pair of eyes
about the God of Abraham aud Isaac ^ ve * ^ ad tlee death as a rab- Th U8 God j H holding many of us in oh- which glow like gig lamps amid a
and Jacob. I want you to be truly to* runs from the baying of the S( . ure positions until we learn to gov cluster of smaller eyes, he was amaaed
my child and not be a worshiper of hounds. By bitter personal experience ern ourselves. to note that the gig lamps slowly
cows, and bulls, and rams, and croco- teamed only too well what the poor But again I learn that God sent changed In color from brown to grass
diles, and cats, and Hons, gnd frogs, Hebrews had to suffer under the agon- Moses toto his Midian exile to teach green and back again to brown. Fur-
and fishes, and hawks, and falcons. It l*tog strokes of the Egyptian slave blm the practicalities of life. Moses ther, as If to Increase his astonlsh-
1s almost an Impossibility for any man toasters. My irleuds, did you ever by his education was a sage, but Moses ment, the creature proceeded to change
to live In the contaminating spiritual H top to think that God has sent you was a theorist. For many years he the color of its eyes alternately, there
atmosphere where his loved ones are totter troubles lu order to make you bad been a cloud dweller or a vision- by exercising a most uncanny fasclna-
worshlplng false gods without having sympathize with those who are trou- ar y dreamer. In all probability In the don over the mere man. There was
his own spiritual ears dulled. Come, toed In life? Did you ever stop to temple of Karnak he had learned all something so diabolically deliberate In
my child, to the faroff Midian lands, ttonk that God has taken away your the theories of government. But theo- these changes as to make It seem that
MronoNErHAR
•Ioim tlfcw oowtfH susd bwale longs
Where In the stilluess of the day and little child to order that you might
In the stillness of the night I can talk become a gospel emancipator for the
with thee and thou caust talk with sufferings of your fellow men? The
me.” Thus God led Moses far away l and8 Midian to which you go are
from the Egj’ptian temples toto the toe sacred places where man comes to
quietude of exile to order that Moses contact with God. hut also where the
might learn of him and study what sympathetic heart of man learns to
God wanted him to do. th rob to uuisou with the suffering
Was this not a very wise plan? hc ar t s of his enslaved brothers and
Where to all the world was the abom- ^ters down to faroff Egypt
ry and fact do not always nest as twin the actor took a genuine pride to the
Bisters to the same cradle. He had de- performance. 8o far as la known, this
veloped his head, but not his bauds, change to the color of the eyes occore
So God, in order to fit him for practi- only to certain species of dacks and
cal leadership, made him work with then only under the influence of fear,
bis hands and Ids feet as well as with while to the spider It would appear ai-
hls brain. When Moses went down m0 8t to be voluntary.—Westmlnater
toto the land of Midian, he not only Gazette.
had to go to work, bnt he had to hire
himself out to do the work of a com- Hi* Church Record.
KIDNEYCURE
r Jldaaya and Bladder Right
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We guarantee
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Fbksh Huylerh,
PARKER'8
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Cleanm and bMatiflM th* hate
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Never relit to Beetore Ora*r
Heir to it# Youthfel “
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AN N ER SALVE
th® most boating salve in the world.
FOLEYS HONiT^TAR
Ihr ehUdront oafo, turn. Afa
and WHISKEY HABIT*
cured at home with
out t>*la. Boo t?f£5r' toation of heathen worship mad® more Learning to Sympathize. mon shepherd. Have you not heard Dp. Edward Everett Hale, cbaplahi
b.m/woSllby^ld! attractive than to old Egypt? When It Is only when a man like Paul has how he helped the daughters of Reue! 0 f the senate, takes a sort of fatherly
OOoe kx M. Pryor Street, we stand amid the ruins of Memphis, beea the chief of stoners that he knows to water their flocks? Interest to the members. He once
we find there that the sacred deity how to lead others Into the gospel Methlnks I can now see him goard- as |(ed a certain senator with a good
was worshiped In the form of a bull, peace. It Is only when a woman has tog his sheep down to the pasture deal of solicitation If he was a church
These bulls were allowed to live for stood by the casket of a d sar husband lauds near Mount Sinai, where God member. The senator was glad to be
twenty years. Then they were pnt that the la fully equipi>ed to carry a was one day to give him the Ten Com- a b| e to say that he was. Two or three MMINQ’S NEW DISCOVERY
to death and their bodies embalmed comforting message to the newly wld mandments written on tables of stone, days later, according to the story, Dr.
tike those of kings. Then, with great owed heart. The story la told that His clothes are coarse. His bands yj a | e recurred to the subject and asked
ceremony, their bodies were carried many years a-ro King Henry of Eng- are callous. The shepherd's staff Is In Gj e name of the church. The senator
to magnificent tombs, which tombs land. In disguise, was arrested by the his hands. “Why,” I hear him say to jj ave a name Two or three days later
thereafter were looked upon as sacred* royal guards us a thief for prowling himself. “1 never knew It was so hard aKn | n p r . nale remarked with regret
shrines. Herodotus, the Greek hlsto- around the palace grounds and carried as this to earn your dally bread. In ; tliat ^ad looked up that church and
rlan. tells ns that during the reign of Jff to Jail at Poultry-Compter. There my foster mother’s home we never that he wag g()rrT to And that It had
Ramese* II. the funeral of one of the h« stayed all th<* night long to his worried about our dally food. In the burned down twelve years b®-
bulls coat over $50,000. When yon e®- damp cell, shivering and hungry. No king’s banquet we used to waste more , fore RD( j never rebuilt
Will Surely Slop That Ceuph.
ELECJRIC BILIOUSNESS
THE BEST POR
.IOUSNESS
AND KIDNEYS
Bucblen’s Arnica Sab
The Best Salve In The Wi