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I Don*3 Push The horse can draw the load without help, if you reduce friction to alrmm nothing by applying MicaAxl to the wheels. No other lubri cant ever made wears so long and saves so much bane power. Next time toy Mica Axi.e Grease. Standard OH Co. Calm age Sermon By Rev. Frank De Witt Talniatfe. D. D. Los Angeles. Oil.. Feb. 24. — The preacher gives in this sermon an Ideal of a consecration to the work of preach ing the gospel and of the obligations arising from a consciousness of a di vine call. The text is I U^rinthians. lx, 1(*. “Woe is unto me if f preach not the gospel.” in the Pitti palace of Florence is a wonderful picture, supposed to have been painted by Michael Angelo, called the “Three Fates.” There sit the three ' sisters of mythological fame—Ootho, | spinning the thread of life; Lacbesis. ' holding the thread of life, and Atropos. with her long, sharp shears, cutting the thread of life. It is thought that when Michael Angelo painted this pic ture he used the same model for all the three faces. Whether that is true we know not, but one fact about this pic ture \v«- know—it is a most impressive and suggestive picture. The artist has depicted three women at their daily tasks, going on in their work serene ly, rcmors'des.sJ.v and absolutely inde- or when we buried u little child or dur- God. and he seems to say: "1 must ing the hours which succeeded our preach. I must be a preacher of Jesus yielding to a heinous sin that Christ Christ on account of my special gifts, appeared unto us. We can remember Woe Is unto me if 1 preach not the gos It as yesterday. Jesus rose up before pel.” us as he came to Paul, saying, “I am Jesus whom thou hast persecuted." And so realistic was the divine revela tion that no argument could ever prove There Are Not Many Pauls. “Well,' you say, “if Paul bad all these characteristics 1 do not wonder that he should want to preach the to us that Jesus himself did not appear gospel. No wonder thai every moment Sour Stomach Ho appetite, loss ot strength, nervou> nees. headache, constipation, bad breath, general debility, sour risings, and catarrh of the stomach are ali due to indigestion. ITedot relieves Indigestion. This new discov- represents the : atura! juices of diges tion as they exist in a healthy stomach, combined with the greatest known tonio and rcconstruct'.ve properties. Kodol for dyspepsia does not oniy relieve indigestion and dyspepsia, hvt t“is famous remedy ' pendent <>• all outside influences by helps all stomach t* u s bv cleansing, piorifying, sweetee ng and strengthening the mucous membranes lining the stomach. fAr. S. S. Ball, of Ravei • .v I. W. Vi . says:— “ I was tr ufcled » i' . . . ferine: yjt.'fs. Kodol cured me s- i v; ■ arc w using it in n iik for baoy.’‘ Kodol Digests What You Eat. RolWr* only R' ‘ves d sour stomach, be.ckirg of ga.-,. otc. Prepared by E. C. Q< /v‘T r & CO., CHICAGO. .-or sale oy Cherokee Drug Co.. Gaffney; L O Allison, Cowman*. NOTICE OF SALE. ®T virtue of a decree of partition asd sale of the Court of (k)mmon Fleas for Cherokee county in the •ase of Didiema Blanton, et ai. plain tiffs vs. Joseph M. Runyan, et ai. de fendants. I will sell at Gaffney, be fore the court house door, during the legal hours for sales, on salesday. Monday March 4th. 1907, the follow- mg described property, to wit: All that certain tract or parcel of iand lying, being and situated in •herokoe Township. Cherokee coun- W. (formerly York county) and State of South Carolina on tltp wat ers ^ unto us as he appeared unto Paul on the Damascus road. Paul Not the Only One. Nor is Paul the only man who has hail this revelation of Jesus Christ. Scores and scores of eminent Chris tians have had it. ■ Luther had it, and Wesley had it, and Finney had it, and Thomas Chalmers had it, and John Buuyau had it, and John Newton had it. They have had it the same as many of us have hud it. The greatest trouble with many of us in Christian work is that we are not obedient to the heavenly vision. We do not say with Paul, “God forbid that I should glory, save in the cross of Jesus Christ.” We are trying to teach men lessons for this life, but we do not emphasize and keep re-emphaslzing the essential doctrine that through the blood of Jesus and in no other way fan we be truly cleansed of our sins. We have had this revelation come to us, but we have been pushing it more and more into the background of our lives. A young minister once said to Mr. Moody: "What makes the difference between your success and mine? Ei ther you are right and 1 am wrong, or 1 am right and you are wrong.” "Well,” said Mr. Moody, “I do not know what is the difference unless you tell me, for I have never heard that he was not presenting Christ to some one he should feel that those were wasted moments. But I am not a Paul. I am not a John Mitchell Ma son nor a Jean Baptiste Massillon. I am as dumb as a sphinx whenever 1 when be presented to you the facts of the gospel. You almost then gave your heart to Christ, but you have been lighting, fighting, against that belief. Ever since then y >u have been fightiiip back the call to go and work in Cod's vineyard. This is your Damascus road This is the moment when you ar; standing face to face with Christ Th' i the supreme moment of your sur render. Blinded Saul, yon arc to lie- conn* the missionary Paul. Go forth, thou blasphemer! Go Birth. I say. to thy martyrdom. Go forth to thy per sedition. Rome awaits thee on oart!,. but a heavenly coronation is ahead A Lazy Liver stand upon my feet iiefor; an audi-1 To save souls f-ir Christ is from iien.-e- ence.” Perhaps you are right, my , forth to Ik* th\ absorbing passion. friend, but If you cannot speak like angels. If you cannot preach like Paul. You can tell the love of Jesus, You can say he died for all. Perhaps you can say this as a con secrated nurse, like Florence Nightin gale. Perhaps you can sing it as a singing evangelist, like Philip Phillips or Ira D. Sankey or P. P. Bliss. Per- haps you can pray it, as did your lov ing. gentle, Christ-like mother. I do not know what your talent may be. bother it Is the tongue of a John :>.;ininerfleld or the pen of a Clay Trumbull. But one fact I know—that you have a talent, and, like Paul, yott must consecrate all that talent to the service of Jesus Christ. "Woe Is unto me if I do not surrender all my tal ents, body, mind and soul, for the spreading of the gospel.” Would that we all, like Paul, might be willing to surrender every talent that we have of body, mind and soul, [Copyright.* lOG, by Louis Klopsch.] PHYSICIANS DISAGREE. which they may be surrounded. When you watch those three faces you in voluntarily say: "Yes. 1 can understand how men who did not recognize Grid’s . . , , liiiixl h, the- a„v,-mmont of tbo world i I™ ‘ 1 *'> nn.ustor r«pl,«l: „,„y Ii.tvo old „ tlio,- look'd at tills • }»:; 'take a ttroa* dealout of tile death „ , i Iih tales are rulim* our lives. of ( lmst * 5111,1 1 ,l0 not lnake anything man cavalry was on the march. tin* cradle They I do not think it has anything j captain halted at the home of an old childhood's hours to tl0 tbe gospel. I preach about i Moravian. When the door was open- the life and not about the death of ! ed he said: “Father, show me a field Jesus.” “Well,” said Mr. Moody, i where 1 can sot my soldiers a-foraging. Different Opinion^ on Cooper’s Re markable Success Hid by Cincin- nati Medical Men. Cincinnati. O.. Feb. 28.—The as tonishing sal« of Cooper's prepara tions in this city has now reached such immense figures that the medical fraternity at large have become forc ed into open discussion of the man and his preparations. The phsician.s as a whole seem to be divided with regard to the /oung man’s success in Cincinnati—some beng willing to credit him for what he has accomplished, while others as sert that the Interest he has aroused is but a passing fad which cannot last, and which will die out as quick ly as it has sprung up. The opinion of these two factions is very w' l] voiced in the statements made recently by two of a number of physicians who were interviewed on picture: ‘ I They meet at guide* us through i They grow for ns the orange blossoms of tb • marriage altar. They lower the ! bars f the great fields of usefulness : in wbi li we are to labor. They plant the tr< >• out of which our coffins are ! to be made. If we heed their eom- ' mam!'! ’ . we shall do our work well. If ,v( i. i a deaf ear to their behests, then uuut ii-iable misfortune and fail ure will be ours. There the fates sit, spinning om’ i!i’ - ead of life, holding our thread of i::< and with their long shears entlin. * thread of life at the brink of the giav*.’” Titus men have felt the overarching iufiuences of life about them, and they believed they would never get away from the* place to the service of Jesus Christ! God j r subject, cannot ask of us to do any more. FTe Dr J. E. Carass whop questioned has a right to ask of us to consecrate ! abo" f the matter said: “I have not as much as that. There is a story told | a believer in proprietary prepa- that manv years ago a troop of Ger- I ratlon s heretofore nor can I say that The 11 in them at present But I must admit that some of the farts re cently brought to my notice concern ing this man Cooped have gone far I towards removing the prejudice T had form“d against him when the un ‘what do you do with this: He bath We must have food.’ - Tin* old man 1' nrd of demand for the preparations borne our sins upon the tree?’ What said: “All right, my friend. Follow do you do with this: Tie was wounded \ me.” So he took his staff aud led the for our transgressions, he was bruised 1 soldiers on for about a mile, and they for our iniquities, aud with his stripes were we healed?’ What do you do with this; ‘Without shedding of blood there is no remission?’” “Oh,” an swered the minister, ‘T do not preach on those passages!” “What do you preach?” “Well,” he answered, "my sermons are moral essays. ” Thdh Mr. Moody replied, "My friend, if you take the blood out of the Bible it is all a came to a fine field of barley. ‘There is just the field we want.” said the captain. “Lot us stop here.” "Have patience,” answered the old man. “I will show one which will suit your purposes just us well.” Sn he led the troops on about a quarter of a league farther until they reached another field of barley. After the soldiers had gath ered the grain the captain turned to first sprang up in this city. Numbers of mv p.itients whom I have treated for chronic liver, kidney and stomach trouble have ‘net me after taking Cooper’s remedy and have stated positively tiiat he has accomplished wonderful results for them 1 notice articikarlv in eases of stomach troii- b 1 that the man has reliev'd several eases of years standing that proved v ry obstinate in treatment. “I am the last man on earth to >*!and in the way of anything that m-*- prove for the public good sim ply through professional prejudice, and I am inclined to give Cooper and them. Sometimes men with this belief tried of McEnUri branch^ fining *eir f lands of H. K. McSwaiu and others. ,I1< * , ‘ iu our da >; sometimes try to evade Beginning on red oab corner; thence the duty to which God has called them. N. 38 12 W. 137 poies to post oak; But whenever they do so these men thence W. 54 poles to pine, old cor ner; thence S. 42 E. 104 poles to fence corner; thence N. 51 E. 28 poles to the beginning, as per deed from Jane L. Bechtler and C. E. Bechtler to Jacob Runyon, dated 5th day of January. 1874 and recorded in E. M. C. office for York county on myth to mo.” “But,” answered the the old man and said: “Father, this will of the life those fates had made for ,jjan - “ I t!,illk that the doctrine is un- do. But the field we passed had bet- 1 preparations "credit as deserving true. Mien,” said Mr. Moody, “I ad- ter grain than this. Why did you bring to some extent the popular demon vise you to get out of the ministry us to this field?” “Because,” answ’ered | stration that has been accorded them very quick. 1 would not preach a the old man, ‘the other field was not in this city." sham. If the Bible is untrue, let us miue, and this Is.” Beautiful! Beau- ! Another well known physician who stop preaching and come out at once tiful! The old Moravian did not want i was the^ opposite view of aud attack it. But if these things are the soldiers to rob bis neighbors, so he ^ ^_i true, and Jesus left heaven and came let them rob him of his own field of into the world to save sinners, then let ripened grain. But. beautiful as that us lay hold of it and preach it in sea- sacrifice was I cau tell you of one still son and out of season.” So say all more beautiful. It is the child of God true ministers of Jesus Christ. i taking Jesus by the hand aud leading Fitness In All Things. ! t*e Saviour to his fields and saying: are unhappy in their work and do not make tin* most <»ut of their lives. They are like the late Henry S. Frieze, the beloved Latin professor of Michigan university. God never meant him to he a Latin professor. He was born to be a musician. All his desires seemed January 24th, 1874, in Deed Book, to call out, “Let me linger by the *T." pageg 687 and 688, and contain- piano keys.” President Andrew D. *ng. as tier said deed, thirty-seven White once said of him: "Though It But there was another fact besides Here, Mastoi. Here are my fields, that revelation on the Damascus road takc * tbeui ‘ 1IerG 18 voice - use ,t ' which was driving Paul forward as a ,i, ‘ re ^ ,et , 14 8 l ,ea ^ 4or minister of Jesus Christ. All men who t,iee ‘ Here Is my hand, let it work for and one-fourth (37 1-4) acres. Said has been my good fortune to hear all are converted to Jesus Christ are not thee. IJeie is my foot, let it run its Iks. Wylie, deceased. TERMS OF SALE: Cash. Pur chaser to pay for papers J. Eb. Jefferies. Cl’k. C. C JMV Pub. Feb 14-21 and 28. LETTERS OF ADMINISTRATION. Mj J. E. Webster, Esquire, Probate Judge. Wb< ■reas. Mrs. Mary M Harvey h*'? mad<> suit to me, to grant her letters of Adminstration of the es tate and effects of Mrs. Diana N. Beard late of Blacksburg. B. C., de ceas'd. The«e are therefore to cite and ad monish all and singular the kindred and creditors of the said Mrs. Diana and hearts to develop along the linos N Beard, deceased, that they be and for winch they were born and for anoear before me. rn the Court of which God equipped them. Probate, to be held at Cherokee lived In Germany he would have been men who wear the black cloth of the a second Beethoven. So passionately c i eP g y would make a far belter suc- Wanted to Undo His Wrong Acts. There is just one more thought, and was he devoted to music that at times he sent bis piano aw ay from his house in order to slum temptations to abridge bis proles -orial work.” We find men like Henry Simmons Frieze in every department of life. They ure like John Tyndall, who tried to be a civil engineer when he was meant to be a physicist. They art* like Matthew Simpson, who wished to he a physi cian when God intended him to be a minister. They are like James Rus sell Lowell and Walter Scott, trying to be lawyers when God meant them to be poets and literary men. Happy, ♦hrlce happy, are the men who allow the inward tendencies of their minds which now has this citv in its grip. He said: “I ran only liken the pre sent state of affairs to a certain kind of hnllucinaton. For want of a bet ter name I might catl It ‘Cooper- mania’ The people of Cincinnati seem to be firm In the belief that this man Cooper has health corked up in a bottle. “Rome of them imagine that he has comoletely cured them of various ills bidding from their statements. It Is beyond me to sav why the eltv has srone crazy over the man. It mav be safely put down. I tntnk. to one of the passinc fads that so often attack the American public. “Roner or later the people are Iwund to regain their senses and will the« realize the renuratiTe nhvslclan is th- one to whom their health had May be only a tired liver, or a starved! fiver. It would be a stupid m well aa savage thing to beat a weary or starved man because he lagged iu his work. Bo in treating the lagging, torpid liver K Is a great mistake to lash it with stroag drastic drugs. A torpid liver is but aa indication of an ill-nonrished. enbv blad body whose organs are weary with over work. Start with the stomach and allied organs of digestion and nutriuon. Pvt them in working order and see h#w quickly your liver will become active. Dr. Pierce’s Golden Misdical Disrovoor has made many marvelous cures of "liver trouble” by its wonderful control of iBe organs of digestion and nutrition. It re stores the normal activity of the stomaak, increases the secretions of tho blood-mak ing glands, cleanses the system from pH - sonous accumulations, and so relieves (fee liver of the burdens imposed upon II by the defection of other organs. If you have bitter or bad taste In the tmm- Ing. poor or variable appetite, coated tongae, foul breath, constipated or irregular bowels, feel weak, easily tired, despondent, froqnaat headaches, pain or distress in " small of batfe.” gnawing or distressed feeling in stomadk. perhaps nausea, bitter or sour "risings - ha throat after eating, and kindred symptoms of weak stomach and torpid liver, no mBI- dne will relieve yon more promptly or eare you more permanently than Doctor Pierce** Golden Medical Discovery. Perhaps ody a part of the above symptoms will be pram* at one time and yet point to torpid liver er biliousness and weak stomach. Avoid all hot bread and biscuits, griddle cakes aad other indigestible food and take the "ftoidee Medical Discovery ” regularly and stick to Its use until you are vigorous and stroog. The B Discovery ” is non-secret, nvn-aloa- holie, is a glyceric extract of native medici nal roots witii a full list of its ingredkmm printed on each l>ottle-wrappcr and attested under oat.b. Itn ingredients arc endorsed and extolled by the most eminent medical writers of th<* age and are recommend'-d to cure the diseases for which it is advised. Don’t, accept a substitute of unknown composition for this non-secret medic OF KNOWN COMPOSITION. NOTICE OF FINAL DISCHARGE. Notice is hereby given that on S«k- urday, March 23rd next. I will appM" to Hon. J. P. Webster. Probate Juds», at his office at the Court House *■ Gaffney. S. C.. at 10 o’clock a. m.. Isr a final settlement and discharge an Administratrix of the estate of Wfei. Young, d^-ceased. All persons hold ing claims against said estate nnurt appear and present the same at or l>efore that time or ho forever bar- r«od. Mrs. E. T. E. Youna, Administratrix estate Wm L. You*e deceased. Pub. in Gaffney Ledger Mch. 1, t, 15 and 22. 1907. Court House. Gaffney, C. C.. on Wed- aesday. March 13th next after pub- i One of Happiest of Men. cess in building a brick wall than they then 1 am done. I believe that Paul do in CAjKC-iiaiiii^ the word of God from was intensely :.ud agonizingly anxious besq he entrusted.” a pulpit. 1 have a giv .t deal of sym- to preach the gospel of Jesus Christ In the meantime (•oop'T meets sev- pathy with that shrewd father who, because of bis years ol wasted gospel era’ thousand neonle daily, and only when his sou came to him and said: opportunities. He was as some of us smiles when statements of the above “Fatie r. 1 had a divine revelation last arc. He did not give his heart to God character are quoted to Min. His night. G id w.in: me to be a minister in his youth. For years hi* opposed the of Jesus I'hri. t. f ir vi*iywhere about teachings of Jesus. H<* ridiculed the me i kept m* r g the two letters blaz- miracles as shams aud trickeries. H«* ing at me—‘P • ., P. C.. P. C.’—‘Preach may have clapped his hands in Joy Ghrist.”' “Gii no.” s-iid the father, when he heard of Christ’s trial and “Those two It'ters. *1’. C.,’ which you crucifixion. After the crucifixion he sav. - do not mean ‘i’l*' . m li Christ. They ga\e up some iime to persecuting the ^ house canvass some years ago meant for <>u ‘Plow corn.’ God meant followers of the lowly Nazarene. “Ob," j politician had come to a pros- you to he a funner. H<* never cut you 1 think 1 hear him say after his con rotis looking farmhouse at a cross- out to be a minister.” * version, "if 1 cuu only live long enough road when fie observed a comely There Is no profession, as I well to undo some of the awful results of voting woman standing at the gate. know, about which so many mistakes those persecutions! Oh, If I can oul.\ Rul.ing up his horse, the candidate . .. . . .. . ..... ... - *i -14.!.... for the people s favor gracefully lift- his hat in salute to the young wo man and oolitely asked: ‘No doubt, madam, your estimable charitable work still continues to be very e\P nsive Fate of the Poor Doq. (Rochester Herald.) Champ Clark* relates the experience of a western politician who was mak- sire made as about the ministry. Young live long enough to go into those cities men, full of zeal, full of the desire to where 1 have derided him! My Lord save souls, full of ambition to serve and my Christ, wilt thou not let in<* Now, Paul in the words of my text is God, all of which aspirations are laud- live long enough to testify for thee?" (husband is at home?" Ucation thereof, at eleven o’clock in glorying i*i the fact that he has conse- able, rush into the ministry without "Woe. woe, woe, woe, is unto me if I tfie forenoon, to show cause. If anv crated his brain and body and soul to considering whether they have the tal- preach not the gospel." Ob. my friends. “Yes.” responded the woman. “Might I have the pleasure of see*- Miov have, why the said Administra- ific work God had intended him to do. ents needed for success iu that sphere, do you wonder that Paul said he was ing him?” suavely inquired the poli- Mon should not he granted. Given undor my hand, this 26th Bar of February. Anno Domini. 1907. J. E. Webster, Probate Judge. He seems to say in this chapter: “Some Many a man who would have made un the chief of sinners? Do you wonder tieian. •‘IT DeWitt’s » Salve For Pi!fj* fyurms, Spree. FOLEYS HONEYHCAR Cures Coldst Prevents Pneumonia lOLEYSHONEMM Stops ttxm coufflo and Keols Wn-ifb He’s down In the pasture abury- in’ the dog.” came from the individual at the gate. “I am very sorry indeed to learn of th d°ath of vour dog.”’came In sym- uathizing tones from the candidate. “What killed him?” “He wore hisself out a-barkn’ ait people think I sacrificed my joy aud excellent lawyer or physician or stock- that in agony he cried out In his letter pleasure when I gave up my life to broker becomes an inellicient minister, to the Corinthians, “Woe is unto me if gospel preaching. Why, sirs, I could do and, as a humorous professor once said, I preach not the gospel?” After years nothing else If I tried. My greatest en- “rushes against the pulpit and stuns spent iu stilling the gosi>el invitation, Joymeut iu life is not to be found out- himself for life.” But there never could when at last you come to kneel at the * n (,a44nev k,ed K er Mch. 1 and aide 0 f gospel ministry, but inside, have been any doubt of Paul's voca- cross, canuot you cry out as did Paul: *• 5 ' 0 ‘‘ Why, sirs, If I were not allowed to tiou. He hud all the gifts and qualities “Lord, receive me, the chief of sinners. preach Jesus Christ I would be the that are needed to make a man sue- Lord, Lord, give me an opportunity to candidates,” said the woman most miserable of all men.” Then he cessful in winning souls. undo the wrong I have done thee, uses these words of my text: “Woe is Paul was more than silver tougued. *Woe, woe, Is unto me tf I preach not unto me If I preach not the gosjtel of What he said was just as marvelous the gospel of Jesus Christ.’ ” Jesus Christ.” I want to show you as the way he said it. Jean Baptiste One night in an eastern city an ear that Paul was one of the happiest of Massillon was the greatest preacher nest preacher was making hLs closing men because he was allowed to be a France ever produced. The proud King plea. He swept his hand over the au- missiouary of Jesus Christ and that he Louis XiV. paid him the greatest com- dience as he said: “There is a inur would have been one of the most mis- pliment that can he given to any mes- jerer in this audience. The Lord has I enable of men bad he not surrendered senger of Jesus Christ. He said, “I sent me to bring him to Jesus. Will all his energies—lK)dy, mind aud soul— have heard many talented preachers iu you receive him?” A man arose aud | to be a naming evangelist of the cross, my chapel before aud was much pleas- said: “Yes, I am a murderer! I am Paul had an absorbing passion to ed with them, but every time I hear here for this message. I killed a man preach the gospel because, in the first you 1 feel much displeased with my- fifteen years ago.” So today I am go- place. he hud a revelation of the divine self.” Great was the pulpit eloquence ing to have my lesson come true. If Som e Dont’s For Farmer*. (Hartsville County Messenger.) Don't burn your stalks. Don’t use a one horse plow to break land if you can run a two- ’ rse plow. Don’t fail to run a harrow over your land several times after break ing. Don’t let stable manure lay out In the rain. Keep it under shelter or haul it out and spread on th» land NOTICE OF FINAL DISCHARGE. Notice is hereby given that m. Wednesday. March 20th next, wa will apply to Hon. J. E. Webster, Probate Judge, at his office at the Court House in Gaffney. S. C.. at IB o’clock a. m. for a final settlemewt and discharge as executors of the es tate of Mary L. Ervine. deceased. All persons holding claims againat said estate must appear and preseat the same at or before that time orfc# forever barred. > W. H. Smith. T. B. Butler. 4 * Exors. estate Mary L. Ervine. de ceased. Pah. in Gaffney Ledger. Feb. 22a4 and March 1, 8, and 15. 1907. Fire, Life, Accident, Health Insure once Surety Bonds. Jones J. Darby PARKER’S HAIR BALSAM ClMnw.-i and bnautifiet tUa Sala. J’lomotci a luxuriant growth. N*ver KaiH to Restore Orw Hair to j- i-.ithful Color. Cures scalp ti hair falling flOc, ami - 1 ilmggata fHfc JGH SYRUP KENNEDY’S liXAT.. ..ONEMAI ftsd Clover Blossoni <ind Ucid . o on Every personality of Jesus Christ. He could of a Massillon. But greater, far great- there is a blasphemer among you the every few days. cured at homl witb. ,iever ^ et a ' va . v fr0UJ his Damascus er, was the logical power of thejjospel Lord has sent me to tell him that he Don’t expect to make money by end WHISKEY HABITS lit? v t?a l yy ct # r 11 out pain. Book of par* road experience. lie had felt th© message he brought to the French may yet become a preacher of the gos- md! Christ touch. lie had stood face to court. After his sermons had been pub- pel. Office i<HN. Pryor street face with Jesus. He had seen Jesus, lished Voltaire, the great skeptic, used “Oh, no,” says the blasphemer, “1 He had talked to Jesus. He bad heard to always keep one of the volumes up- am not to be a minister of Jesus j Jesus talk to him. No sooner did this on his study desk, declaring that they Christ! Why, I have despised Christ, divine revelation come than there were the words of “the preacher who I have persecuted him. I have done sprang up in him a longing desire to best understood the world, who had all I can to drive back bis influence.” go forth and tell to the world what he the eloquence of the academician, the Ye*, my friend, I know that you are had seen and how his Christ could be- brilliance of the wit aud the logic of even now blaspheming Christ. But come the world’s Saviour. Paul’s Da- the philosopher.” So with Paul’s writ- you are not going to do It any longer, masons experience was like that which Ings. He was not only an orator and You are Saul, afterward to be known ■ome of us have had during our past an organizer aud an ecclesiastical as Paul. Your hair Is gray. You are lives. It may hav#heen during eome statesman, hut a powerful and con- over forty. But you are fighting revival services In the village church vlncing writer. His epistles will be against your better and your nobler of our boyhood days or It may haw read by Intelligent men for all time. self. Five years ago you talked with been during a season of awful sickness These powers he held as a trust for tome Stephen, You were confounded planting cotton vear after vear on th a same land without change or stable manure. 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